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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, "APRIL 21;. 1801-TWENTY PAGES. 13 SOUTH OMAHA LAND CO, NEW ADDITION will have our agents on the ground on Monday and Tuesday at 1 p. m., to show the property. Lots 80x180 and 688x130. This property lies immediately South of Spring Lake Park, BUY DIRECT FROM FIRST HANDS AND SAVE MlDDLE MAN’'S PROFITS. row e | SPRING LAKE PARK. | LAST PIECE IUCI'% Lots in blocks 188, 189 and 140, overlooking the park, are stitl unsold and are the finest lots in the addition. We THIS IS THE o L) P o K0 | [ T PET = erty to be platted, and as it is { ’ o 80 ; AR J fs s H = covered with On Twenty-fourth St., [z : S [y 3 % ro vhich LI ] |21 e P ‘ \ from whie R Ttk b ——1{3— ~ | BRAUTIFUL Sidewalks and | == = = - - N\ AN | i ] \ 6 | 8 | [ 4 ' e 5% - i M a BF alng A — &1 = R A { and slopes gently to the east, i v e ,l . . s 2 ol is the finest picce of ground | | 2 13 . 13 7 TR, 3 Mhave been extended to this prop- [l S ,“g},, e e | Nleay | [ x platted by them. erty. g 9 | 4 | T 3 T s 2 % ’ c — 7 = = { |~ |[Prices for Inside Lots It is conceded to be the most [EESI RS g 10 P [ |- Y| x beautiful natural park in the | & ¢ == = 7 ~ | - 0 WILL BE FROM west. The company has ex- Sl s R | O GRS [y PEISRS SN R | SO AE N (R I = pended over $30,000 in im- Iif o g " I AL 400 t 800 provements in the park, consist- il T P s (e i f i (0] ing of two lakes (which are fed ,i‘ : SEEC AN 5 1 I s u 3 B » 1 2 | 27 by natural springs) one of wic h 3 | | 6 1 13 < s : H— |——| }— T . : And for corners 65x130 15 1,800 feet long, fountains, av- 1) s 0 (EEr | . x enues. driveways, gravelwalks, el e 7| SRR —| 4 — : i dancing pavillions, pleausre “ il ‘ (Ul i la el i} i IFROM hoats, rustic houses, ete. a 13 6 (HI 6 Pt = 1 | = e S Blocks 129 to 187, between 20th 1 7 n 7 S 700 t() S] OO() and 23rd streets, were sold four 1 [ 1 8 = b ALY O years ago, and are now built up | ey ] == S — g i ; f with the finest residences in the ] - — Terms, one-fifth cash, bal- city. The lots now offered for o ST 35 Gl en 4 T fi ance six equal semi-annual sale lie between 20th and 16th A | | T payments 7 per cent interest. sireets. SPECIALNOTICR | [i]) ]OHNSTON & COMPANY, A ents day, April 14, at 1 p. m. Since that time we have sold the lots segvin Al e Cor. N, and 24th Streets South Omaha. rore—— PNTD \ \ rardens will soon be opened. The picnic | years, selecting in turn each city in which \ \ spire to ascend a peg or two higer n the [ it did not exist in this city, and that if it had | record of the accounts of wife murder b* CERM \I (thLl'J HUU“\HT. :'r:unkuls \;vil\ ‘lm“rnl:ml p':fmuw \lm(l-l I‘LVN { {lt«?;s‘li"l“"ll"t:";:"l hill-" L?in‘m;\ln) m‘-m the THE llALIA\ F 0:\ \l A. sm'-m scale. e L private assassination as one of its objects, ho [ drunken husbands published in the which fell last fall as the wail of the winter's | fesi, so did_St. Joe, Atchison, Leaven- T'here is another class of Italians who are | knew it would be discountenauced by 'the | papers since Jan. 1, 1550, The agg wind drowned the last note of the final | worth and Kansas City. But the buna not of the hard-working order. They deal in | majority of Italians residing 1n this cit number, she says, is 5,004, waltz, The leafless trees shall be decked | dropped out of existence too—Kansas City fruit and make a living through a great deal | This opinion was shared by a couple of |~ The Sultan Abdul Hamid at present Lias in How it is Indulged in the Festive Gather- | with verdure, and troops of merry laughing, | again became tired. She had what she con- | Wh.re They Live and How They Eke Outan | of patience, able-bodied standiug in the | well known Italian citizens who have resided | nis b ch m five wives, thirty favorites, e feasting, happy folks will seck the pleasures | sidered a magnificant team of turners. But, among the most Pros- | of whom s entitled o be called princes: ings of the Race. which the woods afford. fine as they were, the Omaha team beat them Existence. winter over their carts, These vehicles may | perous of our people, and who greatly regret | and nearly throe hundred female slaves, the BEn There will be picnics almost without num- | every time, winning the first prizes for al- be seen on almost every strect of thecity. | the approbrium whicn has been cust upon le being guarded by a staff of upwards ik ber, but those of the German socicties will | most evervthing and these same trophies now They are loaded mainly with bannanas. | their countrymen. ,000 persor sun of summer or stamping in the blasts of | here for years, who a occupy every Sunday throughout the season. | decorate the walls of Germania hall where S LEY, | When trade is brisk the vendor makes from ——— Nt Newby. living nino miles sout THE FORTHCOMING SANGERBUND. A A e A e e e e e THE ROTTEN REMNANTS OF DAGO ALLEY. | 375ou per day, the profit from which is at IMPILTIES. of ‘1.;:‘“}‘\) ”",,,,':‘ why 'A.""f,f.’{“ .‘.‘".'Ll.'.':l}x‘l;‘-f?.fl,,:: ing to their friends are the following Missouri then formed a_state bund and of least 50 per cent. NG RO BRIt TaNa LAt A i Hativet The Concordia, Mennerchor, Leiderkranz, | course Kansas City has now a chance to win : Many of theso peddlers took up quarters | Rev. John Gaily was deposed from the | yand ‘suihosed to have boon killed. at the How Nebraska Germans Manage to | Plattdeutscher, Turners, Switzer Gesang | some laurels. The Procession of Fruiterers — The | some time ago in the alley above described, stry by the Mausfield (O.) United | paetie of Shiloh, was not dead, and had re- Sing and Turn Outaide the Verein, Saxonia, Swabian and Baierische | This necessitated the organization of a [ Men Who Sweeps the Streets and | but -have since moved to other parts. byterians for drunkenness. AR ol i ko \ 5 3 vereins. | state bund i Nebraska which is now e A e A number of ‘thom may be found on Four- | ujt is o far cry to righteousness! shouted | ¢y 1 Furet of Donver hus been ranted a Defunct Missouri Val- Many of these are vocal organizations and |in a healthy condition. It _ com- AeEloroe ‘WhichiLiabors teenth street between dJones and Leaven- | tho minister. “Mamma,” whispered httlo | qcoco it 08 OSEVEE S8, ook STaRion & ley Bunds. in the meantime are studiously rohearsing | prises the cities of Omaha, Fremont, Colum- the Railroads. worth, aud when they start out in the morn- | Johunie, “1 guess they heard him, though ! | $1vOFco from his wifo Isabelle. Sho took a for the grund Nebraska Saugerfest which | bus, Grand Island, Kearney, Lincoln, Hast- ing they make a small procession with carts «Beer and religion won't mix,” says Rev v.";-l 2 _\‘ e e u Hntss atstey -‘“1' will be held here next August. This will be | ings, Nebraska City, Plattsmouth, West I propelied by human equines. WL Tabrans ClarmansT dtharanloans With him as his wife when Hurst discovered distinctively a German celebration and wili | v 1 Point, Norfolk and several other pla revive a custom which, of late years, in this | number of fests have beer rega- | her. She had even substituted her new Jaeger | “hubby's” name in her marriage certificate. A Aunother colony of Italians resides on « German societies are more numerous today held. the next The Italians of Omaha are, practically | pourteenth stre tion at Hartford, Conn., and Re between Pacific ana Pierce than they have ever been in the history of | section has not been observed. baving been set for Plattsmouth. Henry | speaking, an unknown quantity. As a rale, [ streets, The majority of these, however, are “‘}" 80. ki (5 hobbani) sala e Har: The jury in the $25,000 suit brought by Omaha. Not only are they more numerous, Wherever there are Germang, there also is | Kummerow, the young man who had charge | they associate with but few people except | married and have a little personal property | ., ':Dar am oue road to hebben,'" said the Rev. | Henry Baus, a carpenter of Woodhaven, N but they possess a large number of members | S0ng to bo found. There also™s likely to be | of the Omaha turners when they won their | ¢ co= oo™y o0 eion e o™ o o vo 1 upon which they pay taxe Poindexter Granberry, ‘‘butde folkses “9' Y., aizainst Rev. Aloysius Steflens, pastor of 7 sury of oach thero is to be | discovered a socioty devoted to the study of | prizes in the Missouri Valley turnerbund, is | \2°% SELOWD MALOUALY: . At various seusons of the year, the Italian M"{‘;*_""“’I“"‘.‘ an’ likes to be wid de crowd | St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic church in the fud in the treasury of cach there Is to be | 4y, 'haqutiful vocal pieces which have fallen | director of the association. no well-known orgauization, are not identi- | op;ation 1s ereater than it is at'others, At | nebber st thar. 3 village, for ulleged alicnation of his wife' ~Jound a good-sized and always incroasing | from the pens of the German song-writers. | On next Monday night there will bea { fied with the professions, and, as a rale,make | such times the hands who find employment | The refrain of a rollicking hymn sung at a | affections, awarded the plaintff £1,000 dam- Sy 3 b These societies as a consequence are to be | meeting of The Bears in rmania hall. | aliving in selling fruit or working 1n the [ for the greater part of the time on western ( colored church goes like this: “I've been | ages. "Tho objects of these socioties aro varied. | found in almost every city of Nebrasia, | This organization is composod of old and ex- | gircot-swooping gane at night. railcoads find ablding plsoss. They arosithor | lempied, ['vo been tried, I'va boou to the A man in Texas a couple of months ago got 3 i ATt Next August they will assemblo in this | perionced turners whom' years and avoirdu- | *Jep o lantioe srhat s fnown as waiting for something to turn up or are tem- | river and been baptize a divorce from his wife, chased the man who Some aro devoted to music, some to gymnas- | Gk SRR, TERY VL S8aT okt ear bt OfF the bars, AL theso meet. | FOralongtime what was known as Da | porarily disabled. They always depend upon | “A preacher who was rejected by one of | stole his wife's affections through many tics, some to benevolence and all to sociabil- | opts\which will be given either in the ex- | ings, how they undergo a little exercise | alley was the great Italian quarter. This | ap agent generally of their own countrymen r parishioners, preached on this sub- | states, and killed him, was tried for murder ity. This last eloment enters into everything | position building or coliseum. They will | for the suke of old times, thoroughtare, if indeed a thoroughfare it may | and who, of course, speaks both English and | ject the following Sunday: *You ask and re. | and acquitted, and then romarried his di- the German attempts through organization. | form a chorus of about three hundred voices | In these meetings they keep up the idea of | be called, is a block loug. It extends from | Italian. He secures employment for them, | celve not, because you sk a-miss.’” vorced wife, followed up the ceremony with If he attends rehearsuls of the quartette or | ono hundred of whicn shall be se- | abear, lling everything by o name sug- Thirteenth to Fourteenth, betweon Jonesand | ¢harges —them = a - commission and in The nickel and dime saving bank craze is | the sinking spell. tbe larger gesangverein, a friendly conver- | lectea from the local singing societies. | gosted by something peculiarto that animal, | o BUSRE R & 08 IR S FRREI GO (0 | every way looks after their interests. | so deploting tho country of small change that | George Bellamy, a young druggist of No sation must precede the excreise. 1f hevisits | These will sing tho songs of the fatherland | The president 1is called the brumm- | Leavenworlh strects. = Until recently The agent is on good terms with [ ministers are beginning to think thatitis | man, Oklahoma, jokingly proposod marriagoe the class of the turuverein, the fatigues of | which are sung everywhere on the globe, | bear or the bear who roars with authority, | lined on either side with a row of rageed, | railroad contractors, and is respected by | hurdly sorth while o take up a collection to Miss Emma. daughter of D, J. 5. Ganoon tho bar and pole and horse' ave lessened vy | together with operatic selections from the | The ofiice is Alled with B. Mohr. The vice | rotten and rusty rookeries which did not | them as possessing influenca over his men Moody said to the Bostonians the other | last Tuesday, and she jokingly consented. Intervals for rest and interchango of thought. | latest German works. - Tho prograumme has | president or second brumm bear is Mr. Hoff- | have a counterpart in Christondom. They | Which no other person could excreise. Tho [ 4 MO0UY 3410 10 the Bostonians tho oth County Judgo' Case tied' the knot, and o At benevolent meetings, the element of good- | not yet been decided upon, but will bo in | meister. The secretary is called the scratch : d here are 50, ¥ wh 3 Gl same kind of agent acts with the same ante-dated. A. D. Jones' historic hat. | o) 16y gencrally for Chiname custom has Jed to serious misunde fellowship always predominat So notice- | July, when Prof. Dworzak will personally | bear or kratz bear and 1s sustained by Emil | 2 - 5 ity before able is this fact that one cannot but be im- | visit all the German singing socioties of the | Stein. Mr. Benuefeldt, the tarnwart of the | They had been tottering to their fall before vressed with the method and thoroughuess | state end hold rehearsal with them of the | turners, is the ornungs bear and is endowea | the government started to build the would be Christians in ten minu could get into heaven by so A Philadelphia man s if 10 side door tered the case on record. Then Bellamy said e thought the thing a joke, and wanied to be released, but he was not. . This rstanding, roposed | the impression having gone abroad that the: 15 it is an economi- s ’ 3 & of the race in seeking to advance itself and | numbers to be sung. with authority over the cubs, postoftice. They were tottering even when | Italians are important to this country on [ ¢al idea to habitally affect a white necktie. Pllnln‘r\ ,’\\-lun:nl_,fl'\\ ‘-]1” imllu_l{lln‘llmlhl_h at the same time pluck the flowers of ple This fest will be a source of expense The meetings are a source of great amuse- | the owner pulled them together, put them on | labor contracts, which is in contravention of | BY this means he gets the “‘doninie’s dis. a., has arranged to sell his wife to John ure wiilo the members aro yet able to appre- | to the Germans of this who, however, | ment to the turners and are now being in- | wheels and sent them off tor depraved | the law. It was doubtless a mi Whitmore a brother miner. indorstand. | countinall the stores, 1t avera : \e purchase rlate both their color and perfume. have decided to hoid it for ‘the sake of the | dulged in many of the larger castern cities, | Prposes in some other part of the city. ingof the system which led Special Agent | cent Muss Sita WMol Dersks, s denyeanald “This charactoristie of thio German 1s less | eity, th pleasure the gathoring will fford | Several turuers will be iniiiatod ot tho next | | ‘Their companions on the north side’ of the | Lister %o buiieve that ‘certain well-anown | Tho Troy minister who dofonded tho | d8UEILer of the parting couplé, Mrs, Adatc- nppreciated than it deserves to be because it | and for the cause of wusic. The visitors be- | meeting. ulley remain, They aro innocent of paint | corporations of this city were engaged in | Mixon-MeCarthy prize it in that town has | 500 loves ILUmMOPe £ Iore /iR “ahe doos Is not generally knawn, The average citizen | come the guests of the local organizations, The old Tenth street Stadt theatre has | and guilty of grime. Their broken windows | violating the law has little time "to study the peculiarities of | and to accommodate thom a considerable sum | Jong been a thing of the past. But in the | are patetied with fiauncl shirts and the doovs | There arc b 3 those about him, especially when they, like | must be raised. Thero is no doubt, however, | rear of the excavation upon which it once | are hung with broken binges. In some | gawod in the manufacturs of chalk and com- | ministe ¢ Mrs. Louisa Caroline Young of Salt Lake himsel, are busily engaged in the affairs of | that it will be obtained, because all the sing’ | rested, stands the well remembered Sunday | places the steps have disappeared and where | position statues and acticles of house orna- | Rev. Dr. Ellis of California replies to the | 15 trging to get a divorce from her husband, everyday life. But even then, when it is | inx socletios of the city are enthusiastic over | garden, The trees are budding and the res- | they remain they are crooked, halting and | mentation, who aro said to be doing a thriv- | charges of embezzhmg church funds by ad. | 1'VilE V. Young, They have been wedded possible, the German is likely to de- | the fest and have imparted their enthusiasm | taurant and balconies on end aud sides recall | unsteady. In these wretched structures | ing business. These peddiers may be scen | mitting that ho used the cofn but withoat | but & Suort time, and just as the plaintiff is vote a few moments midway to their brethren, who can help them with | the nights when the place was thronged with | domesticate the largest contingent of the | atall times of the yoar, and although they | criminal intent, He claims it was part of the | Bbout to become a mother, as a result of the the forenoon and afternoon in their money if not with their voices. | light-heartea youths and maidens and those | sous of Italy. These dark-skinned immi- | know but little of the English lang Loy | plan to lift the church out of debt union, the husband and prospective father Ing a short est, and These vocal societies bave been | of more sedate aspect, whose whole attentiou | grants are as a rule unmarried, The 1 and wil not been hauled'vp for heresy, They don't ‘\“,“"_'“l'“- -"‘-]““““'_‘ 18, sauad about half a dozen Italians en- | seem to draw the lines quite so fine on Troy | €iVe feast in Lonor of the barg : ¢ have | make a number of light but renu: 0 A Dainhit cdunts: Bersaylvenis alans skips ont and leaves his wife to subsist upon Indulging in a siight lunch. There are some | enumerated above and constitute | was directed upon the play. littlo need of a cook. In winter they mak among the humboler classes. nan Who Knows nemrto reansyivania clorgy- | the charity of strangers, As ho has $500 in Institutions in the 1argo cities in which the | what is known as tho massenchor. | What peals of laughter and bursts of ap- | solid meals out of macaroni, In sum- [ In the S se of wmusic there ure about a it devote bank and @ salary, she prays alimony. In Pueblo, John Weatherhead, an express- men aro allowed tev minutes in which to | This was organized last year when all the crensed his incomo by over %00 last ye partake of a glass of beer ana a small sand- | ganizations assembled for the purpose of c from the sale of eggs alone. Enterprise’l r- | plause greeted the we chorus, the gri ll-sung balla ue stale bread from | dozen y get sid d or | mer th 5. They play a vari Garneau | or the wit of the popu “bakeryy (A pot of of wind and string intruments, especially this | ypii™ CI SIS OF SEES Boue. man, was_standing on Union avenuo talking Wich twice a day, with results tothe em- | ebrating German day in October. Prof. | comedian from the neighboring 'saloou and a w harp, and enjoy a falr share of patronag s : Vs, LD . to a friend, when his wife came along. She ployer which more' than compensate for the | Dworzak was elected musical divector and | There is little doubt that the amusement | melon from one of thefruit jobbers They play, with the oxpression | There is an Iipiscopal chureh in Chioago | walked with the ereatest unconcern and on imie which has been so employed has siuce been conducting the rehearsals with | days of the old place are over, and it will, it | gives them a meal for auday. peculiar 1o a race of people who are musicians » tendency of which is so *high” that the | Loaching her husband pulled a aouble-edged Indecd, the same system obtains in several | the view above outlined. is feared, be a long time before another At night they are mot fastidious alb as if by intuition, and are gradually making | POPIe are saying it is mercly a quostion of | .. id_slashed him across the back of Dmaha institut though not in 8o formal ‘Lhere has not been a sangerfest here in [ sort wili'be able to catch the hold upon the | their couches. A gunny sack filled with hay | friends among the music-lovers of the city Umo when the cougregation will hold service | ¢¢Teck, Tho wound proved quite serious, a mauner. The privilege is not abused. ten vears. As long ago as t there was an | German heart which was long maintained by | and thrown upon the, tleor, gives the slum- The Italian population of the city has been | I the great tower of the Auditorium build- | g0 ioh ot dangerous, but Weatherhoad re. men roturn to their desks refreshed the sas organization kuown us the Missouri Valley | that primal temple of the muse, berer o couch of downm. Sometimes he di- | estimated at from five hundred to ‘two thou- | V8 fuses to swear out & warrant, The pair have as the soidier renews the march at the given | Sangerbund. It comprised the German sing In this connaction, it may be stated, the | Vests himself of his enter clothing, but fre- | sana, but 1,000 would b a fair estimate for *'1 didn’t see you in church last Sunday,” | not been liviug on the hest of terms, order after ho has had his ten minutes' rest | ing societies in the states { Nebraska, Mis- | Doutsche Gescllschaft, the frustees of which | quently he does not. -k tho latter w i ay, e | the number who now resi nd Kansas. These beld biennial | have charge of Germania hall, have made ar- | saves ‘a great deal pd; timo espec here. Asar said the country clergy ) an old color ht the end of each hour's walk along souri, Tow e if, | these do not like to be svoken to about their [ Woman. “Were you ill#" “Lor' bless m : . : highway, saugerfests and the second of these was held | rangements for a series of summer come- | in the morning, ho imust awake countrymen. They regard with susbicion the | she said, *I'd a like to be, for dem chickens | A 31r> Ours e B> umatism. When there is a mixed gathering of sexes | in this city. A building was specially erected | dicttas in German to be given on Sunday af- | attend te the duties of the da; man who attempts to obtain information from | Wouldu’t roast afore I could sit dare to hab I have a personal knowledeo of cases of nnd generations for social purposes, this | for it at tho northeast corner of Capitol ave- | ternoons, vrobably in the hall last mentioned, | In one of these structures, at one time, | them on the su peculiarity of the German is more pro- | nue and Fitteenth street, where the Grand The performers will include the well-known | not fewer than thirty-five Italians w ally futile, resulting In the admission that hounced. ~ At the ball, the masquerade, the | opera house now stands. The association de- | quartette, Mr. and Mrs. Baurer's and Mr. | quartered. Some of ;these were fruiter they know nothing about the matter and the | of church, “‘thattwenty-fourth hymn is my | PY Chamberiain’s Pain Balm afterother rem- party, the pienic, may be found the parents | cided to hola the following fest iu Lincolu | and Mrs. Puls-Ahl, who played here several | some laborers in the [amber yards, others on | admouition to see some other person favorite, ' *Indocd,’ said the clorgyman, 1 | edies were used without any benefit. I have suid children even from the tenderest years. | and the undertaking was there quite 8 sue- | years ago, and all of whom were greatly ap- | the railroads aud otbersstill members of the | The fate of anumber of ltalians in New | suppose you have pleasant associations with | been handling the Pain Balm for the past It may be that the father and mother still like | cess also. preciated. Thoy have played a couple of | will-o'-the-wisp brigade which nightly § 3 ject. The attempt is goner- | de doxsol y pronounced on rheumatism in this vicinity that have been 15, said the good old lady, coming out | immediately relicved and permanently cured S ud | Orleans recently, sharpens the suspicion of | it s, sho said, “I have; I was put to | five years, and have never had any custom to recall the days of youth when the, Kansas City then secured the prize | seasons in Newark, N. J., and it is sald have | silently remove the aecumulated dust and | almost overy member of tho race whon | sleep with 1t until I was six yoars ol express anything but woras of praise for tho In the pleasures of the dance. Their childron | and — shortly before the time for | found fame and a fair share of fortune, The | filth fron: the paved ‘streets. Of the last s svoken to by a stranger on the subject. They medicine. 1t has bean my experionce that feel that to be addressed on the subject is to any customer who once uses Chamberlain's are permitted the same pleasure they once re- | holding the fest arrivea, announced that she | performances will commence in Muy. mentioned class therd &re about fifty. They Hughes, a young man who has served for themselyes. Toso great an extent | did not have a hall large enough in which to S have been working, at the ‘business | be classed with the men who murdured the |t Mimou or Lk OVARECHS | g Balm will have nothigg ol 1s this carried out that it has several times | hold tho concerts, and. roquesting that the e S for the lust six years, © Although Italians are | chief of police of that ¢ This feolingis | cused by Rev. . B. Thompson of Mount | 2Zi0 in need of such a medicin been noted that parents, children and grand- | fest be put off for & year. treets Beloug to the People. not especially sought for this employment, a | experienced by e heleading men whoseem | Yernon: 1. in'a letter received. be o nraun® )tter, postmaster and aruggist, Elm Ci children Lave floated over the waxed | This request surprised the Germans here, New York Tribune, greater percentage of them than that of any | to feel keenly the lynching because it at onos s % 8 RPOIY floor 1 German halls in this city to the notes | who could not understand why the Missourt Y 0 nent member of the Con wational chureh of Another deoision of the courts sustains the | other nationality seems to find it congeuial. | refiected on " their country u of the same orchestra. What is a source of | singers could not erect a hall of th e e § zger and all-round e 0w, as 5 1P vople. | They are paid 15 cents an hour. Exceptin | country as members of a socioty and as be I e A AN L SEEE S A R Tenry W . a machinist of Wilkes- pleasure 10 the father and mother is not de- | had been done in this city. There was no | [PEOTY that the streets belong to the people, | pai’iveythier, they work not fower thats ten | yond the pale of the law. ¥ fraud. Hodenies the oharges in.toto. For | Henmy PR S FYe i nied to their children uor tnelr childrews | fost, consequontly, when the proper time ar. ud that a city ordinance caunot legalizo | and sometimes as many as fifteen hours. | ° Tt must'bo admitted, however, that it is | L7 [Foolts past he has b DETARINE IS | (5008 Rob » £250—850 down and the childron, siveld, and tho Missour! Valloy saugerbund | thoir obstruction. A provious decision de- | They aro appreciatod by the contractors be- | with Taliaps as 1t 1s ‘with ovry othor na- | Soiuits racos oftho minlstors of | yolance in installmonts of 85 per mor Recontly in tols city there was found a | went out of existence clared illogal many of the obstructions which | cause they do not idle. They smoke their | tionality. They comprise good. bad and in. | ° e Roberts paid the 0 down, but dofaulted most remarkable iustauce of this character- | Tho move of themassenchor inst August, | havo long annoyed foot passengers, aud the | BOFFibly black pioes, indulge’ in but little | different men. - Tho Faco elaims it saould not | DeWitt's Littie Earry ltisors for the Livor, | s sontiie. SR A RO istic. Thero wero two classes of youthful | howwever, hus resulted in the establishment | B® e r mmon Dleas | Sinall talk, and apply themselves studiously | be held respousible for the crimes of & fow. ot ol o g the west thit he should como on and elaim male gymuasts, and two, one of women and | of a Nebraska sangerbund, which will be | geueral term of the court of common pleas | 15 yhg dirty work they are engaged in. Thoy | It also holds that it 15 in o the CONNURIALITIES. his wife if the contract was not lived up to. tbe othier of little girls,goiug through athletic | less expensive, tend more to local acquaint- | has just expressed tho opinion that the streets | sleep the greater part of the day and early in | main composed of law abiding citizens, Its e v shad Roberts bas fled, and the matter coming to exercises of various kinds, while about the | ance and good fellowship, and be much more | are already inadequate for the use of the = the evening are fresh for another night's | members rogrot t public and cannot be given up 1o other pur- | Work. Asa rule, theso men are notspend- | when one of them at they are maligned s astray and assert that walls sat aged mon and women who them- selvos thirty, forty, perhaps fifty Iy maintained his is not the only instance in which Ne- Jesse Lockwood, aged seventy, fatally beat | the attention of the authorities, a warrant X his wife at White Plains, N. Y., after an at- | has been issued for Miller's arrost on the Y 00! ve 1aid down princint thrifts. Yet it Is not apparent what they do | it is unjust bocause the proportion of their 5 s y : round of desertion before, had gone' through the s braska Germans bave beew compellod 10 soek | POSSS. the courts bave laid down priciples | v, "ineir money. They never emy criminals to the population s less than one. | W¢k Of £¥ip. K SR exercises, The performers were happy | amusement without outside assistance. under which citizens can obtain rellef from 1 it iy personal decoration. Their clothes | half of one per cont. Because his wife pullea his whiskers and A Rellof for Tth the spactators were happy, especially those There was until a few years | the evils which they have long endured, and poa b 5 matic Pain, are dingy and rusty and savor of | Theexistence of a branch of the Mafia in | Prodded him with a hat pin, Dr. Bohauuou, In many cases persons subject 10 rheumae manufacture beyond the sea, Neither do they | Omaha is scouted by the best Italians. One | Of Stamford, Conn., wants a divor - ! : i put their money {uto real estate or homes. | of them yesterday said the strength and im- | A wealthy Whito Plains, N. Y., girl who | W30 have got prompt reliaf from pain by wisely outlined. as did the sangerbund of the same name, | G0 away with many of the discomiorts of | Some of them, of course, send monoy to Italy, | portance of tho association had boen entirely | eloped withi a ( hman, finds tha ppLyan v -l Ry J The warm weathor has brought indoor | The societics in the bund, however, were de. | travel along the pubiio thoroughfares. but as & rulo they make no demonstration i | exaggorated. He had resided iu 1taly nearly | he 1s not divore n bis irst rife and fa | S0t & ATORdS B e e festivitios to a close. There will be no more | voted to athletic pastimes aud wro called x —— - — disposing of the wealth. The wonder is, how- | all his life and had heard of the Mafia for the | not likely to be, O TR0 18 Dy s 2008 AR s ] balls this seasou in the Gierwan halls. The | turners. They beld turn fosts every two [ Sce Potter & George Co.’s ad. page 17, | ever, that they do not become wealthy and | first time only three years as~ He was suro | Mrs. Hel Y ,‘,’_,."d;‘;‘;h“ B & (ORPIIE ST who saw their descendents following them | ago also, & Missouri Valley " tur- | it only remaius for them to make an earnest 50 faithfully in the path so skilltully and so | nerbund. This comprised the same states | endeavor to have the laws enforced and thus u Gougar says she has kept s