Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 2, 1893, Page 20

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

g ————— T“F OMAHA DAILY BEE %UVI)A\ APRIL 2, 1893-TWENTY PAGES. | public men than any other in the United | all combine in presenting a scene which patched sals of the horring-ishers smack ABOUT B] gF“‘ ol' Bl,H' “0 States, and Mr. Bissell is not the only post /IOV ‘I \‘I“"TH ThMpl l‘ will be equally impostig by day or by night 0F H)RP l( V H HFR H" K white against lllu‘~l |f;:'»t(x|:-lnv:vl «:‘II'IU:: master general among them, The firm dates yiap sppudinl e iy adlands and hills, 1 the sweetest bt :....k to 188, when Hon. Orasmus H - The establish et the Mormon shureh ring known to man are wken e / < .. | Marshatl, the inost famous of western New ) 7 e | ot o ey Awny herring fishors of the novth are hore Pointers on tho New Postmaster General, Hi S Tt L s e gt i | The Magnificont Pile of Gray Granite | 1\ iH St i “revelntor was o native of | Peculiar Habits and Oustoms of British Hopelons atd e ey ey are woddon, | gong Quesr Regulations that Governed Ealy Characteristics and Habits, ake public offico. ~ His third partner wa sared o Oity. Vermont, boru Deoember 2, 1805, Amid its o Deo strong fs iron. They' remenious fleg it o « opublic ofice. His third partner was Reared in Salt Lake Oity. rugped hills and impenotrable forests Joseph Toilers of the Deop. strong as ron. T tremendous Military Officers and Men. vt Millard Filimore's lnw Smith roamed and dreamed his carly days groupitiis of stavtlin ey ’ o o g Pull away The family moved to Ohio in 1815, | gl i i ' ASHE, A PLAYED PYTHIAS TO CLEVELAND'S DAMON | jTnorq fecains Ay N DIMENSIONS, EQUIPMENT AND DECORATIONS | luter to New York, settiing near Paloy . | EXGLISH COASTWISE SIGHTS AND SCENES | Are simple and peice Hail as his postmaster general, afterwards were pirates want appolniing. tim_ United States judae s It is protty well settled that Joseph did “not Ut ILh Wit T8 \voble & o | successor” o Roscoe $Conkling's father. eonceive the faea of Mormonism, He is — Dadpliil LR Mow e Looks, Acts and Talks—Masterful, | Nouly il gubsequent members of the dowing All Previous Undertakings | classed by biographers as an indolent and | Geaphie Pen Pletures of the Way & Unlque STELBIA T Close-Mouthed mud Smokes Clgirs fitms © d nding in diret line from of the Mormons, and from Ity Lofty :u;‘ yv‘}.uu J rl.‘;” ,.'_,:.,‘ 8 |{ of a [‘,”,“'”;“' Féosis Livetusoveritble, Badnsis tHoy o Tnt u, Ministers Woro Not Allowed to Drlok -Trite rshall have held sc rta which enablec 4 1rds to profit by the S IRANLIGH o] & 0o ettes—Hiis Life, 1is Wife and ‘;‘ |‘! '\I‘\ L "\‘ h 2 held ok ‘H b, ’:.,’:". Towers Moroni Blows n Silent id “.m(,:n.'.- 8 ‘mé‘ln nl‘“w[-..\.&x .'.;x Dt “ :p'n roods Over AlL W Ywell Brawny Kace of 1% Expluaatt f Why € Martials Mis BuMado Home, of therm, Hon, T ; Tas b Trumpet—Mornion History. in the hands of Sidney Higdon and a man by t Above six foet in height, broad and Adjourn Early in the Afterno named Spaulding. Joseph's tutors were do as their burly mates, with legs corded liko a Some Amusing Rules. a district attorney but a member of congress - i ¥ \ veloping a_plot to give the world a new r —_ man’s, and bare o’ the kuees: with arms ind his widow is now the wife of Senator ki g, erooked and flest i Burraro, March 80— [Special Correspoud- | 1d Wolcott of ¢ lo. Mr. Rass was Bis ‘T'he world might be searched in vain for :m‘u!. Spaulding had “un«uf a rl" [Copyrighted, 189, fKECHHIRY v “‘,'\‘ Hay ] -l\,y\\"‘ : ‘\‘.‘h | el into Risdords hande Ve dmmion | Loxvox, March 20.—[Correspondance of | the waist, and tanned by sait. sun vud wind | | Lyman K. Bass was not only ence of Tur Bre n wecks ago he | scll's fiest partner, and Grover Clevely a land cqualing America as the paradise of | ¢ 500, FRIARCR b COBy O et Liko all other human Inventions, the laws . v - oined the firn fte is term ¢ "y . N " was only Bissell of Buftalo. Now heis I s Yia i “‘*_ A ‘(‘ h‘:“‘y‘f M{ isms. They are not confined topolitical life, | §n question and w brief toid | THE Bee]—Pilgriming in many lands, Lhave | to the color of the mottied alder bark: with sell of the Un States. 1| refer to it 5 and left the firm | Religious life s honeycombed with them. | about several nations of people who resided | been much among their waterside folk—with | Wide jaws, half-toothless mouths, sunken | Ject to chauges from to age. A few of new postmuster general, who has lived here | named Clevel Bissell. The two men | Mysticismand materialism, rationalism and | between the Isthmus of Darien and the ex- | the fishermen of Algiers, who are a conglom- | Gieuks, wves blueblacic and fiashing from | the fundamental peuciples of military law for forty odd years, his fat round checks | did a ve arze business as confidential | the higher criticism, flourish side by side, | tremities of North America. These nations ks, Italinns, Spaniards and | paeved with oo ine i brows bushy and | remain unchanged, such s absolute obedi- Dlushing unsceh in his profitable law oftice, | #Avisers und counsel to corporations and in | whije sect rabio. good. bad and indif, | ere at war, and finally the great battle of (£ thia danew f Sicily, g FORaed TolatitpAn o et VL NRERGtY TN pront UAg,to Wiists 16 the d B your thoy trere obliad oy e hes | Whilo sects innumerable, good, bad and indif- | Gumorah was fought at o spot whe i with the fishermen of Sicily, gloomy | creased foreheads, and great, wide, saffron and his greatness going to waste in the des- ' ¢ h partner. Mr. Cleveland remained a member ert air of the corporations he has counscied | o tho firm throughout his tevm as mayor of | Of recoguized creeds. No matter how weird :,..\u were the Laminites, who were the | and Apualian fishermen, those most majesti & Mead i N ' a legal way to the tune of something like | Buffalo, but retired upon his election ns gov: d startling enets or theorie ¢ heathen of this country, and the Nephites, | sluggeards o th 0S¢ 0! e | gaAre heads crowned by once black hair, | dergone many transformations since the “{IAY‘I:;:::I\‘-\ i ln s wondorful how cvents | ernot of Ne .\r\’:".-ulu»',\'\'u!‘nr Bissoll whero ::t ml |§nl>l‘|”flkl'l\'|}l\' 'w:] ":n“l 5 Im.,l,!,'w(nl:\l\;-|||::.(-\ who were the Christions, e battie re .([:I:,:\” ’nn-r :l:n::.\fl\r' Wis 85 "l:l t's Ihyl Ty o I L1 ifilEeht Akl 5 ¢ 4 ho has been over since, ¢ the head of the : Mot £ » | sulted in great slaughters in fact, the nation H O e or gy s | Mmal's, which is matted and knotted upon the AP, WhIGh b o ayiny i of Y18 | and vheivs laxurlantly of Nephites was destroyed, with the excep. | With Biscayan, Breton and Cornish fisher- | shoulders, and frequently to the waist -aud power of one mortal pulls up the othrers | g G et i TR St d The free air of liberty is a great promotor | tion of & few, among them' Mormon aud his | men, superstitious and sodden above all | ¥ou liave but the faintest picture of this | Red sea abont him Benjamin Hareison raised led religious enterprises. Every | son, Mor I'hey were righteous men. | others; with the brave, kind men of Clad alf-animal who subsists upon kelp, duls Coming down as far as the time of Richard A Big Lawyer Outslde t Courts, e ek out 0 walf } N fifs wand and faivylike he crveated na L b yoar vocords » breaking away of some | God directed them to make a record of all | qugh, at Galway, and those along the won. :» e A and - na Craw fish that 11 of England, the old, musty, military rec- those important events upon golden plates 1 buyers, who come to beaches A i ! Lam told here that notwithstanding the b tional reputation v his old ¥O | fuct that the new postaaster general has | leader from the restraints of theology or th 1d buryhem in the carth to b discoyercd | Hones iy QUA8L: with the stern yot tender 1 voON t St Louis ! iscoy fisher folk of Manxland ; with the lazy fisher friend, W. Noble of St AUIS, | heen making from £40,000 to 250,000 a year at | aisipline of dencminations. In most cases id transluted at a future for Miller, his law partner, and a score of | the law, that he has never had a case in | the leaders of new religious crazes ave not Smith had little dificulty in uncarthing in others. Cleveland opened his lips in 1854 and | court in his life. Still he has been a membe the forests near Palmyra” some wonderful | pecpuite to our onet Hine He f - tes, which, however, not b 1, bug | roruiia to olr cast shore fishing Heets; with They drag out the same horrible liv ok ch, however, not being gold, but | the cap-and-tasseled pescadores of Cuba Ip B BN i Gt s copper or brass, served as well, for the | {ieanide % \ys: awith the | Delp make the Britishnavv: or turn traitor hicrozlyphics were there, These, through | siatey ol of L bbm s bt the | to the brood of half piates behind, becom : 3 t the power of inspiration, Joseph Smith deci- | jgtiod with any fraitage of thedecp which will | o e [0St vemorseless of coast guard, or eI LU L i bttt R CLA U Hors s ront han 5, Gorporation Cases | ing place.’ After sixty years of travail, per. | Pherad, and from vhemn “The Book of Mor- | barely sustaln life; with the crofter flshior of | fiaw the bag. oy g, officers, = And customs to be obs e army, or- mont and other men whose names we iohieern aman on couttucts, dud his | gocution and prosecution, moral obloquy and | Mon+ is said to have originated. - Other his- | the north Scottish und Shetland consts: and | o llinttioss — doreadaton . | Gatned atid mad hardly know how to pronounce. css to form a sound judgment on crime, it is now a recognized iustitution, in | terians cliim that the book was written by | with our own brave Gloucester men who visk | (et of e e aeot! i it matters has caused his advice to © thé west. | others, so that there is no certainty as o | their lives upon the Grand Banks, and the | Geushter o “Hiosom Friend i sourht in many of the lurgest railroad trans - : hat its actual ovigin was. It matters iit- | ‘Quoddy fishermen whose chiof quarey is the Mr. Bissell and Mr. Cleveland have been us of vecent years. He s boon pres e T e Lo and the | tiCyhowover, (n the light of thu' fact thut | ixihg i BN ira couimclors to $ i Groves ot two railronds and is stillat the head | Apart from the erimes committed and the | theve is o *Hook of Mormon.” Smith and his | bt ’f““‘) it counselors for YOI, &G GXOVE | G the” Buftalo Southwostern, which he | abominations practiced by Mormon leaders Fare HRATItelo AIMETIEY IR NaourTE | ‘rl“'“l "" it 5 'I'w ‘:" "|~'~“‘ mut "“ organized, for which he obtaine the | in l'vr.m the wmr f heroic o f-s11¢ nlhl' lavge and devoted following, Mormouis stands closer to him than his new postuiaster | vichtof way and for which he conducted | manifesied by the followers of the prophet | spread rapidly over the 1 and New general. He was known in the newspapers | the appraisil by which the road was leased | Joseph commiand admiration. ~ And the peo- | England seates. Proselyting then. 1 now, during the campaign of 1854 us “osom | to the Ericand its stock brought up to par. | ple of the west, particularly, appreciating | was openly and zealously carvied on A SHE I thig 4 4 | : He organized the Buffalo Geneva road, | the hardships endured and the dificulties "Thia Boolk of Moriion’ 86t onlyn snoped ‘l'l"‘ AL I -“'I"“j‘ of ucople, "1t is in hless, contemplating her marvelous | they have thoueht proper to eall unto them, now a branch of the KReading system, pro. | overcome, may honestly rejoice with them at | book for many thousands of neonle by helr cabins and homely social lie. It is in ty Lestic propor : hating | then being at Dirham, the 17th day of the VoS oot ol 1 thot . hefs 5 I Y he 3 many thousands of people, but it is | gheir voices and looks. In renose. it sits o | ¥ were practicin v together here, Were | cured its charter and was its fivst president, | the dedication of their'm ut temple in | literary curiosity, and one of the ravest | g 568 DILTHLVT. RAUGE IS Lot b et | ysale use 1 was not altogcther an | month of July in ninth year of the reign called the Damon and Pythias of the Buffalo | Ho also organized the New Yori corporation | Salt Lake City on the 6th It is o monu- | products of the curly press of intorlor New | it faces pitifully. Roused intosome great bar, He has been associated with Cleveland | of the Lelizh' Valley paiiroad. His present | nent fo the labor and devotion of the Mormon | York. Tt is an octavo of s pages, and was | beu Y 10 storm, in taking fish, o in sav- | God during his years of prominence, and the fact | fonncction with the Lteadime system would | people extending aver a period of forty years. | printed at Palmyra by B. B. Grandin in 1850, | {hese Hahormen, Bat S the oiiet houee, | 4om could not wait upon the Afeican mis- | pation, state, or condition thoy may b, shall that ho I A EGH RGOS oH be hard to discover, but, without exception, A souveuir of the upproaching dedication, | It contains about one-third as much matter | thare is something hunted. hiuntod weario sions for u little, and roact to and succor | B abudivhit toour lavt the king, to Wis cons int he hus not been b wn o the | g yiipoad management has been remark: | issued by the Union Pacifie, gives an inter: | ug docs the King James version of the bible L reaihe A AN o o e | suchus theso Thing thoy ean for £t i body and geods. people has come from his queer taste for | yp| reessful. He has a faculty forgetting | e history of this many-towered temple Sovihg Wit ]\‘wlllhvlmdn T l‘}' i (Al ar “. .‘,..\_ :., be read Beauty of the Ocean., N eI tharak ,;”‘ 7 keeping himself out of sight. During my | quickly to the bottom of biz matters and is dy as 151 a general conference decided Moving West, 1 the lines of their faces, in the tremulous tviding bon the ter thus anvouncine the absolute sove stay in Buffalo I have chatted with close | @ fi tiator. Hence by tactand | that a templo should be built, Nearly two | Late in the s Smith and his followers | 1ess of their voless, and in the it which | ancient St Ives unother remarkabio pieture | SEGinLE and powerof the lui the followluge friends of both men and 1 fiud that M. Tis. | UInIE he seens to e far botter i for | years clapsed before definité action was | moved westward, Sectlements were formed | 81i1es from thew eyes, that ull their brave | iS'vours. Tt is of one of the most interesting | 1M Wit ) like character ura 3 5 _ A postmaster general than most persons have | taken, aud on February 14, 18 sund | at Kirtland, O., and at Independence, Mo, | 414 hearty ways cannot hide or disguise fishing ports in Europe. ‘The bay itself faces | APRC1G A sell lias in the past preferred to be one of the | guinosed, Lam told that the Dostofice do. | wis Mmeasured and lald off. According to | in both places they thrived nud increased in They Are n Sad People, 0 north. ~ At your fect are purple heather | | 1X. Item-rrhat no one ba so hardy a8 to stage managers vather than a chief actor in | partment was the portfolio he wanted and | the orizinal design Tomple block wis to con- | humbers, not so miach from proselyting s by | 1y is as if the sen, from which they aving ferns parted from the crystal HECOUNEGL AR ATLS PN ALELLIE PACon the elevation of Cleveland to power. It is t he said to the president he would like | tain forty acres, but later on this areq was | the influence of theiv patient industry v spered : « vater by giistening sands. o the vight and | for anythine t It in such contest or de : b L[ live, had whispered in secret to ; not,pencrally known that in the struggle | (HUher thi or to bo secretary of the iuterior K Uto ten acres, its present size ouderful econouy, m\n;.;» crooiedn PAIIC A e S B0 L east the green hitlocks of the eastern stiore. | Date sy’ sl e Siad thise Wity waro the eveland 6 i 158 lough he didn’t care much which. April 6 e twen annive £ business affairs provoked vigorous | g S a Py ik b hen the broad, yellow beach of Portheock ion shall be hangeds and 0f any one e LT DR DB S0 S of the churetl,work had adevneed sufficiently | prosecution. Smith was tarred and feath :(”,mr_;.{":“"l} St A ';‘“,Il:fll',‘l ing, or the foresind. Dominating this is the | Shall proclaim his own name, or that of his Wilson . Bisscll was one of the chief Somaglitng About Hix Hubits. to allow the laying of the coruer stone and | ered and many of his followers hurled into | [ing the spectar han of fate. coming closer | Ereat hendland of Peduolva. Beyond, leam- [ Wrd oF iastor so asto catecia sistig of tho directors o tl veland forces and T laReT S th Gl BB Prohbne this coremony was performed by the full | the Mississippi to drown. In 18840 the | 1o'tiio inner vision every time the fisnerman-s | 10 like a field of gold, are’the magnifieent. | Bh NIEEY A ) AR e that to his y the democratic vie- | voteo of the cigarette. He smoke hierarchy of the church. e foundations | docimated band settled in Huncock county, | heart grew glad. In whatever degree this | $4nds of-Porthminster: and, farther still, the f drawn and hini tory was largely due. He was Mr | santly, and uses the Russian and Turkish | Wore coinmenced Juno 16, 1953 and finished Iing H\mu they founded o new 2 i universal, it ‘secms to me to bo more | Beadland and recky dslet of Godrevy, with | X, item-hut ro one e so hundy us to cry Cloveland's private and personal ropresenta. | Vericties, and with his bii head us byck: | July 23, 18 hie_eapttone of the temple | Nuuvoo. A temple was started and €000 | warked mong the ishormen of Englan, latter's white lihthouse setéameo- | shvol’ wnder bt of osini s head, sind o8e ground the littlo cignretics o ot | was laid April 6, 1502, with impressi 000 expended on 1t, but 1t was not complet IFeland A Stotinia tHan L Rive ievat Tatnd » between the purple of the sea walls and | (it heor they that shail e tho beginindrs of tive all through the campaign, and it fell to | 4 smatier till it looks as thougeh he wis | ices and in the presence of the Ly The city flourished, and as the Mormons | it olsewhere revesled. I beliove Dickens | the tremulous blue of the ocear tho sic iy shall ikewise be UoloataHints that regulate military organizations are subs rate race of Gre ence to orders from suporiors, unflinching ferent, are to be found beyond the boundaries | myra, N. Y., is now located. The contending | #nd voiceless as Gypsy dogs; with Chinggian | colored ears sot stiaizht out from behind like | ravery and the like, but the minor regula- dirty “wing-and-wing” sails; and theie | tions that govern military bodies have un- days when King I‘h4 wh started out to cap- produce great men, and how the elevation to ture the Israclites before they got across the ords reveal some very curious things in in their carts from London refuse ( army regulations. The following even unworthy of sale to mendicant and men of the ¥ Azores, who, transferred | crouching manibenst of the town taken from the append to American coasts, prove the most valuable And the childton of theso? Milit 0 | above sordid motives, and the salvation o s RIS G 1k Daniel Manuing and William C. Endicott | 0f the bat' for twenty-two vears und has i ey seok to disburse has also in view their Boeamo nutiona quantities, and now through | 1S o fortune. of "something than | fiyneial salvation. Of the many genuine S ! 8 \onderrul executive | Gutive: movemants. of dubBious’ OMEin and his second cabinet utterance we \bility and - has mad his wmoney | ehgrgeter, Mormonism is entitled toa lead considerable intercst and amusement by army men. The pretace reads as follows iberation ¢ 1st such o one as 1 have B pietured was the most perfect type of wild and simple human beauty 1 ever beheld 1l gy ving, all along the grand Maiane coast to &5 10u80 fE Virar, bredRtod Ay Ehew S mist-wreathed erags of wild Manan et T el ey s et Do nENEnE In many years of intercourse with these | junocont of four: fo EOlINaL COINE: BiG lowly folk I have been continually impresse rowed me across Loneh Swilly to where hor with the almost indetinable and wholy inde- | faghier's work lay, mending seines, like an | of England aod oth carls, barrons, seribable sadness that secims 1o brood ove r 10D han-brwat's man: while' T st | bartonetis und ex need knights whom constible of . Thomis Do Mowbray, carl of tingham, Mareschall Friend Bissell,” and the two, when they L or God's nineteenth contury civiliz iestly, That allmannerof persons, of what huge headland above A Romantic Marringe. his lot to nuilify the scandalous stovies sent | sucking the end of a taper rather than | Semblage ever gathered together in Utah prospored envy aud distrust spread among | guiw gnd felt this at the old fishing port of Before you, the silent, shimmering bay, | {heir bodics afterwards be hanged up by the out concerning his partner's past life. H He smokes while he talks and o | Immediately after these ceremonies the | non-Mormons. ‘Kascals of every grade flocked | (ieat Yarmouth when he ereatod cnof his | With @ few white-winged fishing Tii'a foot nato 1eds cxplatnod thas the word had been among the foremost in secur conve st He iy simplo | WOrk of surmounting the capstone with the | W the neighborhood. Dissensions arose in | greavand tonder heart, the pathetic char. | SCarcely moving, it scoms, the distance is so [ 114 f00t ot 11 exptinod that the word Mr. Cleyeland's nomination for sheriff, | an | ners, and is, 1 find, | figure representing the augel Moroni was | the temple. ‘These irreconcilable elements | fctors of the Pegeottys simple, tonder, | 8reat from the heieht where you stand; the | glavelh was the sia mayor and governor, and he had almos very popular with those who know hitn well, | Proceeded with, 'This ficore is of gikantic | eventunlly resulted in the massacre of Nauw- | yrye, scorning basencss, resolute in i e e GBI andl sl here were iy daieers of muting in tho much to do with his first nomination for the | He his been a club man for years, Hoe was | Proportions, being 13 fect 5y inches in | voo, the death of the prophet and the flicht | manly attributes, majestic in suffe rythimie veachos of incoming Udewaves, | anis in those days and o suppress such ideney as Daniel Manning, but he was | president of the Buftalo elub. the me > | height. Tlic idea’conveyed by the statue is | of the Mormon remnant. Hardly had ti ; ToNE ‘ i miles in length, advancing and retreating 8 o b sia ) s | 1t of th 1o clud, the most im L A 5 X forgiveness, and through and over all outbreaks the ving rather rigid regulas ted with the eyent, In the Chi- [ portant institution of the kind in Buffalo, | that of a herald, or messenger, in the act of | crossed the river iuto Iowa thau’ the tor pathetie thread of sadness, quivering like anid breaking softly upon the shelving sands | Yo, pravailed i cago convention of last June Mr. Bissell was | for a longer term than any one else and they | POWing & trumpet, an embodiment of the | was applied to the temple and to thel endless plaint i a melodious, though mourn- | 11 DY ridges of spavkling spume: and her HhREND o1 sliaryns to ratse kT aE equal in command with William C. Whitney, | tell of seeing him engaged in a three-legged | fact of Moroni bringing the gospel to the | abundoned homes, - ong. to tho west, o groat Junblod tmass of gray— | o iniinon of St GeoHe, or. ANy other t0 Ariw He did most of the planning and the ex-s race up there with a Buffalo bank president, | ¢arthin this latier duy dispensation. The T'he sufferings of the members of the faith- | 1y this experience stranze and tender, | 14 St. Ives crouching in a little pocicet” of | {GAE {he peopls ant of The army to g0 10 retary of the navy did most of the executing | He never was a member of the fast set, how- | figure is admirably proportioned and its pose | ful band on the bleak Iowa prairies iu the | woird and sad, pictures of fishing towns and | e rocks, like a4 mass of mossy stone insome | any place whitsoover, wider pain thid those and ot all the crodit, although he would | over, and now that heis married he. 1 o |3 ul. It is made of hammered copper, | Winter of 183 is one of *the saddest | | a reaches and coasts innumerable, | Shadowy glen, sleeping away the centuries, | who thus mike thense tuins shall be have shaved it gladly with the Buffalo man | devoteda husband that he is the subject of | i #ilded witi pure wold leaf, and surmount | chapters in - western history. Theirs 0y master's brust. are | unconscious of the thunderous sea, driwn and et nd il theie goods and ifthe Iatter had been willing, Mr. Bissoll's | much good-natured jesting, ing its crown is an incandescont lamp of 100- Bwoteallofl blood trom ¢ the Mike | gt S o ihIRMR metiony. . Hete ave s fow DRV TN AT RS GEAVB NS, neritage be forfeited o the king 3 name was scarcely mentioned in- the news- candle pow The placing of the orna- | sissippi to the Salt Lake vall of their outlines | Aside from these, and half a hundred mor n men were plived ou the wateh those pers, and very few persons knew then or A Word About Mrs Bissell, mental spives on the other towers was con- | The wanton destruction of their property. - o b picturesque spots b bLevoIbo hamer days they w od to attend strictly to apers, and very ¥ then or s n e ; AT Saks bE NGl deele Saric picturesque spots that cannot even be named, ] 5 v now now the measure of bis political power. Murs, Bissell has been living in Buffulo for | tinued till all weren place, each being pro- | the fl\ acres and the hardshivs endured 3 &S there are the sieepy hamlets and sand shotes hu?:m»‘fi Jlowing cheerful regulatic He is now and nas been for nearly a decade few years, but she has made herself | Vided with electric lights; the tower walls | rendered —explicable, if they fail to The mighty southwest of Ireland Kerry | of orange from Blackpool to Wihitehaven, | With egard to dorelict picket 1 Bl 0 titha creat ganerals in. tho' democratic ery popular heve and [ find that she has | Were washed, pointed and received the | Justify the crimes subsequently perpetrated | coast, with weird Bray Head, and majestic | along the Irish sea; the mites of villages | illustrate the spiviv of the discipline thas arty, yeL when it wus anuounced that he | many admirers and friends. She is both | finishing touches, and gradually the scaffold- | by themselves in Utah: | St. Michael's mount upon Great Skellig | specking the sides of the winsome sea-combes | Provailed ad been chosen to succeed John Wanamalker | pretty and accomplished and she promi ing was remoyed, leaving the building, so far | "Mormonism hus scen_its best days. It is | rock, darkening along the eastward land: | of Somersct aud Devon: the 4 ry one shall well and duly perform mang democratic captains asked: “Who is | be one of the leading social figures of thi as the exterior was concerned, completed, | shornof its .plumage: .Its path is oue of | ward horizon; and at justto the north | among the fleets and homes of the fisherme 18 watch fh th army aud arlu ihenumboe Wilson S. Bissell 2" miuistration, Let me tell you how she lo and with nothing to mar the sight and study | decay. 1vis utterly inoapable of maiutain- | of the great. liners way. the spring mackerel | of Donsnee. Faimouths iymonih and and “that He Shail Temain the fall Tunited The new postmaster general, according to | Mrs, Bissell is tall ana well rounded. Her | Of its magnificent beauty. ing its supremacy in the midst of modern | fieet—irom Kerry hamlets, from Manxlund | quay; the countles aunts in the | torm, unless by the ovder or permission Of the statements of those who know him here, | dark brown hair is worn combed straight A Mighty Undertaking. surroundings and the search lights of educa- | and from France, altogether from 3,000 to | seething chines some TIsle of | him Defore whom the witeh is made on pain i8 one of the closest-mouthed men in public | back withouta crimp or curl, She has beat Although forty vears have flown since the | 1% Bub its temples will stand for ages us | 4,000 uently so densely massed | Wight; the drearier reaches of the English | of hasing his head cut ofF. life. He has always kept himselfin the | iful teeth and handsome blue eyes. She 1as | oommencoment of the sttotire they (o e | Monuments to an amazingly potent, though | that water cannot be seen from ‘4 fishing | east shore where the battles with the st One of the most unique and exacting back ground. and even in Buffalo he has | 4 good tailor, but in dress she foliows Mrs, | foryineheeiient of the Straebure they Go not | misguided, zeal s thousands of seagulls whist- | and tides are ever fierce and str codes of military rules ever constructed was been rarely talked about. e has not the | Cloveland's taste for simplicity, She earrics e o ooy b raiions. their white wings above: | wild, wailing, wooful coust from Yarmouth | that prescribed by ISine Gustavus Adolphus widest of acquaintanceships, but he is a | her head high in the air and gives one the | Gopcuenon the walls hod ;‘;‘;;" i it b and to the west, a sea horizon of rose and | to Whithy. which has secmad fated to be the | of Sweden, The main object diselosed in companionable man, broad-ninded, witty | inpression of strong self-reliance and great | Woremen on the walls had overtaien in their ST ik orarige where the setting sun still shows a | scene of the ocean's saddest tragedics: the | the opening chapier of these articles, as and a good talker, except where his own | energy, determination and ambition N b B akaaty e e ChC Ty on thora e T flaming edge; while more than 10,000 lusty | red roofs, the breezy shores, the gleaming [ they ave called, was t provide a set of rule: affairs_are coucerned. Mention these and Torier dopartment, 1t should. be remeni | . IWIh KO OAFiONS face Whd. pu men, under a third as many flashing cruten- | sands and the tossing spray of Coldingham | that should provent the soldiers and oficers he shuts up like a clam and either stops T tho oot b FEMOML | p d hat trundeandental, tender aniile upon t¢; | liFhis set amidships of ‘the smacks, are | and north Berwick, around to the south of | from bems sacrilegious and profane. The talking or changes the subject. There {s o8 much of ‘s romance connsoted | Lorecs 100 that untll the completion of the A S A P | silently “shooting” the great brown scines | the mouth of the Forth: the snug town and [ introduction reads s follows: No coms Wa i tinkar anllBissell with the postmaster general's marriage as | complction of the Union® Pacific railway, | guelryeibook: cross and rosur for the night. g harbor, the quaint old strects, the luscious | mander nor private souldier, whatsoover, Tn this respect Postmaster General Bissell | With that of President Clevelind. Mrs, | surts stone had ta e hauied by on tenmn fes | She is meditating on her—Easter bonnet. Matchless is that picture, ever tinted by | fish-dinuers and the sereaniing fishwives of | shall use any kind of idolatry, witcheraft, ot will be found {:u-.um-n-m from John Wana- | Bissell's maiden namo was Louise Sturgis, | the quarrics, twenty miles distant. Every See her kneel before her pew, the near presénce of fisher folik and their | Newhaven: the almost somber silence ever | inchanting of armes whereby God is dise maker. Our last vi and she cowes from an old family which is | Salp Laker of the age of 35 years and down- Lift her eyes, so heavenly blue, SLOHT nipped home: TR fulvm hruium; film\-‘.- Illz;vli ”.‘{r Hu’\'kllm\v i the | honored, upon pain of death. nerally read i well known in dierent parts of the uuion. ardmacalls, d SR o To the altar, with the decorations on it: Shetland’s most somber sea wall height, | rocky walls, the steely blue of the German If any shall blasphome the name of God 18 5 0n0AY sotiool t0 grent posial i) | OnebRARCHOEI lives ntMaistold O. nudl | 4 AL rocallé, as i boy tho cutiats spect B e RGO onscn mighty, mournful Iittul head. It is the | ocean, the wwful storms aud the great di whothor dritnk oF rober, the” thing _boing re to the s one of Mus. Bissell's relatives there has o big B e Wit the ik of suint wnd shge, White mountain of the Norsemen, on cheerless fishing towns of the east coust, | proved by two or three witnesses, he shall suf= forms, and from his store to the chances of re has o big | underneath which was suspended by chaing e Nor s PO i fortune making for young men. Mr. Wana- | brick house in the most fashionable part of | ;4 yionster roc from the mot STt e As she fondly dwells upon her Euster bonnet. | count of the luster of its slate formation. | from Aberdecn to Lhurso; the brown bk lfl_ll\p“wnl ey e € " maker is aman of many ideas, of much [ the town. Another branch moved quently took four days to bring a single rock See her to confession go, Its highest crag rises fully 1.000 feet above | crags, ' the emerald slopiugs —and the [ L% SRS GETTE, G ST 008 shrewd common sense and of a lively appre | Mansficld to New York city, and Stey from the quarry to the Temple block. With a step sedate and Slow the sea, but the legendary habitation of | shadowy, —moanful —fissures of - the | e Shuil forthiwith bee convented hefore the eiation of the valuc of the newspaper man in | Sturis is one of the unknown well-to-do men | the yoad wis strewn with the wreckag Seelk the penitential stool and k Noent g Dol alinost decaohied, allf litking | Stetiand and OFintey #hotosi syith thele ligommigsionol of tieall o be examined the way of helping on himself and his | of the metropolis, He would be called rich | wagons and carts unable to bear the. strain Hear her *fess™ its sea front into a point as sharpas a church | Duteh and Norse color in faces and ways; loe shall heo' con- He bad a first class newspaper man ata | outside of New York. The branch to which put on them. When the locomotive reached i elepliants to pins, spire, is not m than three-fourths that | and the drear, gray rocks and pufiin-haunted ‘0 4§ to lose his salary of 83,000 a year, which he paid out of | Mrs. Bissell belongs comes from Ge the quarries, however, there S ~ul|..u.|m ing on her—Easter bonnet. elevation. It is quite accessible after a £ misty Hebrides, where the ALY hoked In:*!“ his own pocket, by the way, in the person of ‘\ ::n(l Mrs. Bissell first caine to Buitald to T R e T B e Tab3hie nratty waid ator rough s lumfo, ind ilxn]im-h e launts :.;‘.\‘.r, s Lo fisher butles all | pr unadvisedly, TR A Marshall Cushing.and the correspondentsand | teach music in the Buffalo seminary. | pounis could have been formerly, and She is glddy—that we'll own of myrinds: of ‘sea fuwl. Horriblo®indecd | hisl posislance the serond offense bec <hot to dewths news gatherers wore always welcomo at his | She had early shown a - great | \molo teain load of great granite biocks | Butshe's fanotent. il stuko my life upon it} | MUSEbe tho place i tine of storm. But ) ratitions of the People. The Swedish kine and statesman was oftice. Through this hisadministration was | taste for music and it was here | polled into the temple grounds every few Lebhiorthaose tribiflowers ant Nlugs, away down there below the sea s often as | ‘the customs, folk lore and superstitions | much opposed to sseinz his chaplains. drunk better advertised and better presented to | that she had in part earned the | Jays during the building season, 5 For V;m L \:‘\I\l;ll;'ll:'l""ji: e calm as u dighland loch, W the which have been the natural outgrowth of | Quring tine of prayer and he promulgated the people than that of any postmaster gen- | money which took her to Germany and Ditaanalons ot haE e e [LL] SISt ReR UL Read Aol HuleioK et ot their voeation have been practically ehaug the following regulution’ covering ‘that, Ims anc derstand o e | France. 're her i o 0 voice o ; 4 i T ) waste, moor, hillock, ess for half a thousand years, and their | portant dof . e v L A i fis G L L fice are worthy of note. Its whole length, 5 = ; i s el CRs il 2s o o | Skeye if A : Sk wny sinister e found drank or drinking his best Washington investments, If Post- | Grange. Sineg the thno she and Mrs. Clove- | yuiluing towers, is 18535 feot, and the wideh | . Rov. . 1. Clark, the originator and pres. | DY - the = ceascless = gnuwings o o | In Skye if oman crossis the water Showld preach or b reads master General Bissell does not change the | land-had veen’schoolmates at Wells colleze | gy There are six towers, thres on the east | identof the Christian endeavor movement, LEIMENGola I PLOsIPILos 129 erywhere. | where fishing is in progress, and_among the & prayer the first offence shall be character he had here he will do differently. | she had planned and w Lund studied | 41d three on the wost end of the structure. | i8 @ Canadian by birth. hs and tarns show without copse or ver- | Newhaven men if the name of *Broun, vely admonishod by the commissionos He has never had much to do with the new with the idea of be professional | BIBRO PO t Al dure. Sha ) Sei W that of an old Newhaven reprobate who was clesiistl and for ‘the second fault bo papers and has, I am told, cut shy of them | singer. Whenat lust sho was fitted to ap. | QLLCE measurements may be summarized us | Rev. Dr Morean, Dix, vector of Trinity | whe R aver roDb e naniere | the impersonation of bad luck and once lived | Duishod whe st fokenr o and has apparently rather feared them. Mr. | pear in public 4s 4 professional, one of hee ows: e L e o D a_fishing station; there a dreary hamlet. | among them —be mentioned, fishing will Adolplius thoueht that it was not, wise to SR Matnon L al, on To end of To ta o > Episcopal churci at Coopers- | Yonde e 1 {th Ash-curer = X How ever smimon solaiers to drink ana ‘anamaker was always accessible and I | first engagements was as a soloist at g Ta end of To top ot '“ | \ [ Yonder a gravelly beach, with fish-curers | 4t once discontinued. Skye and Hayris | allow even the common solaiers to drink and have always been impressed by his honesty | Buffalo orchestra concert, While i that | retent of central cast towiee “oioe, shires, | fown N, M ae a meme s futher, | 4t their sodden toil; beyond, a weir fishermen have been known to beat their | carouse during time of prayer and entered and his pinin, practical common sense, Ho | city she was the guest of Mrs. George Sicand, | 11or s of o e ft. 335 ¢ pbr | Ueneral John A, Dix, 4 with a herd of seals turning theiv shining | wives dreadfully, not from any ill-feeling, but | his solemn protest in the following languae dmew how to'deal with men ana he seldom | wife of one of the members of the Dissell | Teizht of side eust towers. . 188 (. oo g, [ The American Baptist = Year - book, | sides to the low, red sun. — Over all, a filmy, | to propitiate and attract the fish SALL drinkines and feastings shall in thg talked with a person long without making | firm. Mr. Bissell moet her nd it was | Heizhtof side west towers o182 . 104 fe, | Just issued, furnished the following statis- | dreamy, tender’ presence: for in the bricf All British fishermen note carefully the of prayes given over upon pain of him o friend. Ho understood how o brush | a case of ©love at fires Sight' on bath cis To top of | ties: Baptized during the -y 32 days before thedark, long winter scts in, it | first person upon whom their eyes alight in ishment 3 aside details and make the other men work | and the >w8 of Cupid drove the Geddess 2 rock work. | total membership, 83,160, a guin of 113,- | is the fisherman's “peerie summer” in the | the worning. Their luck for the day will Speaking of these peculinr old regulations for him. The new postmaster gencral has | of Musicoff the field and Louise Sturgis, the | et aer i waiis il botton o100 it | 854 ordained ministers, 24,7035 churches, | Shetund Isies. depend on whether the person is well or an arimy ofiicer suld tho other day that while had to deal with books and legal questions | music teacher, became Mrs. Wilson 5. Bis- | Thicknies of wills at top ke # jja8800:4 Vions, ., 4hs. 3 Fishermen of the Solway Shores. favored. A clereywan, a pig or a cat sowe of them seemed rather ridiculous, they more ;xllmn with the managing of men, and | sell, the wife of the rich Buffalo lawyer and | Thickness of huttresses... ... A _ ‘l( V. Ilnu Faun of the Fifth Avenue Strange. quict, Godfearing souls are the | The most areaded of all object 5 fleets ar would m\)n-'w.nw e MI the l’“‘w“'i he will nov start out with the sume ad- | the future postmaster general, i e wholo rests upon a foot 3 Baptist ¢ h in New York asked his con- | genormen of the Solwiy Shores. ether | Sailing out of the harbor, e signt of | aay. Anc that reminds — mo of youtages Wanamaker's experience in- bis LSS e feot thick md. 16 fotr deep. The: buding | Ereation to contribute 825,000 lasty Sunday | shermien of tho Selway shores, whethor | (500 or the discovery of the footpring of & | & e guer g Wi rogard store guve him. o Blisell ome at Bafal . R Vers BTN ran BLO1aRD foat and vost upe | 10 convert the heathen. The contribution | ¢ 'weum and brac and vale hasa reminder of | fat-footed pevson in” the sand bodes, all | to the duties of 4’ court mur 'he two postmasters gencral the ob- | Mys. Bissell, of course, 1D Ben/tonohs. | syards ot $5:500,0005 COSEUR™ | oy went around and the tion footed “',;fi,:'.',,',“::.:,h';‘ and valobas a reminder of | | L0 0 ul fuck s and to uster the name of You Kuuow it is the rule Uit iio court nvir posite in appearance, Bisscll weighs twice | ng upon her marriage, but at her home hove | A circular staivway in each corner tower | UP 0,000 in cash. And still the haathen | \iviin the sound of Solway's tdothunder, | @ ciereyman or any four-footea beast on | tial ean lold o itor in tho any then i hlaa R F TS \ b S LT ow one naturally feels like inquir- as much us Wanamaker and he tips the beam | she has always had 4 musical eicele round | extends from the busement to the very | P ¢ e At o FH ek slad ook board i fishing boat would - render the o nuturally fools like lnquir. 8t about 300 pounds. tlis massive skull could | jer, and at the capital she will form a fea- | top; the steps, upwards of 200 in number, ar Father J. J. Nouri,- the Armenian priest | Cumberland, in the brave old houses by offender subject to bodily peril and at leasy | I I RLSIG S0l PRASS, Yo Eba, tuin W aker's head and the br ] ORI ¢ it Wat the cvidence in @ court contain Wanamaker's head and the brown | gure of its musical as well as of its ofticial | all of solid grdnite cut by hand, built into the | Who recently gave a circumstantial looking | from Roman walls. (iant frames have theso | 408 oy allihionsriaf suugeks AL LGy Tantinlioiae A8 HonAl avAR ARSI he walls of B nt would not touch | society. She has o fine voice, and she has | massive walls and the gigantic newel post of | description of what he claimed to be Nouh's | folk, and wondrous height, wide fair brows. All wlong the west consts of Cornwall, |auriiul case 13 uwlwuys raad o Retng e walls of Mo inium were it boxed | sung 02 anumber of entertainments for | solid masonry: the only wood work is a | Ark, which, he alleged, he had discovered on | predt blue or hazel eyes and leonine heads of | Scotlnd and eeland they maje hettor use | prosenc iy e L0 Cas s e up inits cente llh Bisscll's avms are as | cnarity. Hor home here is o fine old-fash- [ wainscoting of heavy ouk, crowned with | the top of Mount Aurarat, has been ad- | faxen bair. ©always remembor them with | Of the deeaded cat” They seeare favoving skttt it Dl around s Mr. Wanamaker's calves and | joncd brick residence of two: storics and a | wolding und relioved by hund rail; the Sudged jnsano and commitied to'a hospitalin | their ‘apparent’ lertness ' of attention, | Whels by buring it afive in tho wunds o e | e g crrors, ant U ke sure, that 4 5 thighs measuro almost us much in cir- | pian roof. There i3 a tower in the | whole giving an impression of the time-defy- Napa, Cal an. “ungousoloys - habiy “and attitude of [ scdshoro, wish iks hend opnoaltc she desired i W HHCAS0S HAYA 1O Benithis et b cumference as does Honest John's waist. [ g of the front, and this forms | ing custles of the middle ages, built to stand, Riley, pastor of an Ohio | hstening. For it is said these folls can hear | course of the wind. Up in the Shetlands QORI 0 (T Mm' Amaker is about five feet eight; Bissell | the entrance on the ground floor. It is situ- | without crack or quiver, for a thousand LR e e e A T B s s e e and Orkneys fishermen weara ks bolv i\w practicable f m““: 0 ! n;::: |I1': hu\r'slT.hvl:( in his prockings, Both are | ated o Delaware svenue, surrounded by | years. The building is lighted by electricity, | nights igo he called upon the Steubenyille | from the Irish sea—which brings the harvest | Containing dricd offl of three dittereit e el ' the succeeding mm*ll.l,fll-]"_' n, both dress in black and are | beautiful grounds, and is the house in which | heated by hot water and equipped with five | town constable to quiet a gang of toughs | of fish and often terror and death—for | Mt ; a0k ehiid D | A3y 60 ¢ it 1 heard not long simple in their tastes. Jumes N @latthews, the famous editor of | appar who had entered the church, and when the | twenty miles away! e l‘ O nRHaneea LAl SRS HORE | e i rirant son for putting an end Lo Cle T TR the Buffalo p.;.-‘, |\\:~u m’ul died. Post Intertor ish. lavter failed in his mission the pastor Long before this, if you are standing or }:"”.:t l\”"v’w‘x‘l H‘l‘\l; wi ,m”.» i l\”. R, t#in the afternoon, It master General Bissell bought it a couple of MR SHED bt i shed » whole crowd e cliffedge above ancie lownoas: you | N0RbeIS WAt StOID R iK0 8 EUINOOR L ] ‘ t Buffalo 1 hear many compurisons | yenes higo. wnd e b i bed i i j\'r\\ | The marble-tiled baptismal room in the | thrashed the whole crowd. i the cliffedge nbove ancient Bow 3 prosperous fishing village wits griven by a gentleman who had evidently of Claveland aud ‘Bissell, and tho new nost | §onss 460, § hia Sy o sl | basement is grand and impressive in all of he British and Foreign Bible society | Will seo the fishers, waist deep in water F T T A ey PR T read up on the subject and was well A ko o2 Sonkt H el stantiul way which harmonizes with its | jts appointments. The capicious bronze font | since 1504 has printed and distributed \- | Purryine on the tigh 1g of their uprisht mong 5 a | posted. He said he had followed the master general seems Lo be t 1 ] aster general seems 1o be in most ways the | big rooms and its old-fashioned. chagneton | o i I e . ; \ Am ong many fa aporstitions and twi . 4 ] ¥ K ) haracter rests uvon the bae of twelve life —sized | 851,581 volumes of the sceripture nets, which for ten miles below seem like stio © ba the earliest win brother of the president. Their lives | Sinee he has been in it he and. Mes. Bissell i i pures whic ; Al to 1 curious weather om W1 have found | question clear back into the earlies : i the and Mrs. Bissell | hronzed oxen, a reminder of a like feature National Bible society of Scot tiny fences of rush; and away seaward witn ! lish milit records and have run close together, They squalled in | have given jmany quiet little p \ € iure in Hible society of Scotlund has dis. ) : to be universal with British fishermen are | Fngl nilitary rds and had found their cradle about theesatio Ume away | pumber of musicalos. nd sho has ahoy ot | the house built by Solomou, which “stood | tributed 12,710,820 i the Hiberaian | Y0 ss you can sce thom scuvrylng up | b M ol Wt s Taen oint with the | it there stated thot the primary reason fon e 4 anes s k number of musicales, and she has shown her upon twelve oxen, three looking toward the | Bible society, 4.0 + the Pruss from the ebb-slime and sands tow t frsrreglil > 1t Ul suspending court wartial proceedings at 3 back in the '40s, Both {came of fairly-well- | gelf a most entortaining and. ecomplished h g 1 4 T : S || i nother smack. 1 ko o | il in to-do familics, Bissoll's parents bewg per- [ hostess L W d | north, and three looking toward the west, | Bible societ 9,801 copies, and a hundred | #nd the shore heu to your unpr 4| Aonto dRotHor stk 16 & | oelock in the afternoon was that no man in R e viotior. nrid sending Ritm to 8. R e ot LR N LSl oleiug toward the sonth, and | other bible societies have for generations | ars come the fuint reverberations of a | G WE I ARECE BV » | thearmy was supposed to be sober after that at Yalo. Both wero bacholors till they were | wertt rosee e ict, that Mr. Bisscll | three lookiug toward the east, and the sea | beensweiling the total annul output hoarse roar: und soon, like u pillur of flame | SREEE NS BURGES O Liking a | hour iu the day. ALl gentiemen of the olden 40 years old; their wives avoof about the | fiud it not been for his wite. 1t 1a siid thae | VA8 8ot above thom, and all their hinder | The Rev. C. I, Tyndall of New York is | 12 the play ¢ fght, the great mist- | /b SLOKCS BF b LG 1 B B deth 2 1p | timo were ot supposed to be fit for Sanio ago and the o Firls went Lo Sohool | Cloveimn o ham oo L iat | paris woro inward. Hlis Livee oo bias & | the st person 16 fllustyato. his scrmons | Do of tho advaucing waters is il (o s a1 SRR e gL L togethe Both families have one baby it v o, buL e refucad meb, pasition | pavement and base of fine white warble. " A | with-menageric offects. He used a stuffed | 2¢otlind to M D CRU AL P 10 s leave the ope v oand path wn bnpending battle or somcthing daughter, aud the littlo girls aro of about | heford ho hud et his fate. MWeh bis ey | Sualler room on “an upper floor, respiendent | Lion as his latest inspiration, and to- make it | SO and moves oward you like a lurid ML YRS cnd, nftox It'was therefore the same age. I chatted last night with an | riago bis tastes have changed, and he wiil | o Pue and gold, is paved with an artistic- | more impressive had it fixed up with a roap. | ¢loud above a run ki LN SIN R i ab sea is the wor AL AL d inexpedic Attempt to hold court " 4 i i ally d 1ed native-wood mosaie, the blocks | ing aparatus which enabled it to emit a soul. | Ments wore the brilliancy of the phenome martial proceedings after that hour, and the old lawyer friend of the two men. Said he: | 44 it ohito ¢ 3 and nothing is 85 wmu e aded as o lo unythine to oblige his wife. She hus | being no more than an inch square and finely | corrodine sound like that of & il ey | 18 greatost ¥ ¢ Cwoman ashore, Tf i mop o | rule stll holds good, although 1 verily bes “Mr. Cleveland and Mr, Bissell have been I o) v aliaoet inseparable over sinco the Intter was | Laurully great soctul nuibitions, and when | polished. 'White und gold' are the pro- | tearin iis way threngh s kioits b Preceding the advancing cloud along the e rdiman o Tl A men Tyt hHe BraUi Ghohy ARy CoaIER osinRAns and guve her the chance to | yailin, lors throughout, and A great deal of information is given in the vof uwallot water five miles AR eA R tatantl martial of the prescn’ day that ave capable chief clerk in the oftice of Lansing, Cloveland | g i Y i S b bals o anfor & Folson in 1670, Whon Mr. C leveland wis | Seouiry, these \‘1'1-"1;'.‘.:‘1.“4..'x"f.-1‘:'»;'.-]‘.".[.‘» fous vuts, Judiclousty uibuted | n logue of Pennsylvanis university fonts und hisscs o bubkof | e Dreawming of anchors i | of transicting busticss s luto as 4 or 3 Siacted sherif of Erio county ho wanted Mr. | Whether this story of Mrs, Bisscll's persuns: | brightnoss. Notabis Is this the cuse heAing | which will uppear'soon. It shows tha tho | JEUW® GO, SEEW BERE SR S SRICH ken oking-elass on tod " [ kleoklnthontiorhng Bissoll to become his deputy sheriff, but the | {ve powers is true or not, it is an interesting | overond wid siie docorn iy Yhizh | oiversity covers forty-one acres; its real | o "holiowing water hosts becomes deafen- | & veritablo puuic. "o ¢ livel N ” e clerk thought he saw better things ahead in | one; and 1 give it for what it is worth LA 1and suledecorations of large hizh | estate and endowment fund is valued at i 4 thow m ieeh L nth ) | Aldively intercst in Michigan university is T PR R e s 5 havis] room on the north side, which is ox in Yy i i W | being taken just now all over the state on after he became tho law partner of Hon isitely | nearly £.000.000: it has 2083 students in the wlly peri N1 Phon Suenes of Awful Grandour, quat e man a1 fiat witl ceount of the crisis in its financial affairs. Lywan K. Bass and threo years later Mr —_—— well as in every appointment. 8o it goes reonly 903 siudents; the total number of | That passed, while you thrill with the | Joeality Jthine is morc unpropitious than | The fricnds of the university have been Cleveland joined the firm.” The two men There are three thiugs worth saving from foandation to summit —cverywhere are | professors in 1551 was forty-four, while there | mystery and awful grandearof the spectacle, | Sence of wonen wherev hing is | fighting for recognition, and public sentis were scen together almost eve : Time, Trouble and Moncy—and De Wity's | Symmeiry, solidity, richuess and purity are at present 200, the great tide head is 1SLOT YOuL A true | in progress; and no fisherman will go to sea | ment has at last been aroused to the necess called each other *Wils' and ‘G Little Early Risers will save them for you, here are four | wunting the bas Phe railroud branch of the Young Men's | tide-hore. such as breaks u Aly into | when the dead body o of their number, | sity for immediate lutive relief. The Mr. Cleveland married the daughter of an- | These little pills will suve you time, as they [ MeBt and cach excepting the top, Chvistian association in New . York city, | Minas and ot i e i or tamwily, lies unbur | resignation Dr Abel of the medical CAKPENTER. chaste, hurmonious and natucal in color as | various departments, while in 1881 other of nis law pavtners, Oscar Folsom, | act promptly. They will save you wrouble ws | divided iuto rooms of varying size Inis | inats statiscics for 1892, shows a total men 1y, cylind i AL A8 AT Arrow Engat Lo Wakeway, | department to accept a chair at Johus Hoj Wilson Bissell was the best man, and when | they cause no pain. They will sive you | HPPCr orissembly voom vecd the whole | bership of 2,462, Of these 342 are brakems \er the fieth, and s to cizht feo - Kins university at a much larger salary, fole the pre postmaster general married | money as they cconomize dottor's bills. the Luilding, except the towers 02 engineers. 174 firemen, 168 conduct at, which sweeps past with a bellow Busy people have no tune, ana sensible peo | lowing close upon the resiznation of Bro Louise turgis in February, 150, My UESRELEE ) ing 120 feet long, 8) feet wido and 5 e el G cler Ihe total attendance on hrick like that 100,000 const ple have no inclination to that make | Belser, who was atteacted to the University and Mr: ud ‘wero tho st of honor i LT R ARahNiahan: Treland: ] Sagie 1A & okl bt el i tho | meotings at il diTeront places was 2% horns howling in unis close i its | thom sick_ a dy § f ke | of Colarado by e i Kind of an fud ucos \Wils' snd ‘Grove’ to cach other, aud it s | Loy & Biory Kiniec 10 him by 1he late Cardi- | is of graceful sweop; i 1s railed with bronze, | ‘his shows u gratifyine lucroase on the | waves brilliautly ivfully-swept | Litte Karly Risees does not interfere with | now that the continzent fund of the univer- ikely thist no oue i the cabiner will have | Lah,Livigerie about those who are more | and s reachied Wi clicaiar stairways i | preceding o intevesting itom 1s the | prismatic colors i way tide s in, | theivhonIth by eausing nausea. piin or grip | sity must be increase i the university is to more influence in the ndministration than | 4o urolic o pope is of two Jesuit | each of the four corners I'ne elevated | statement’ of the libravian that, out of 15,416 I'his is tne picture that comes to me from | ing. These little pilis ave p tin action | reiain any vut the youngest instructors and fathers I v ¥ Wilson 8. Bissell.” el oprom buris who Preachica 4 two | stands for the priesthood at cither end, the | bovks virculated among them, oily 7001, Treland's cragg The eastern shore | and results, vegulating the stomuch and | tutors o K ecks re 0 & convent in Algiers, dur- | choice hand-carved decorations of dais and | 52 per cont, were works of fietion: works | of wild | is a succession w0 that headaches, dizziness and -~ - The Hlsscli-Cloveland Law Firm, Ing which the good nuus found o time to | balcony, the broad auditorium, the artis- | of literature, biography, travel xl.m.m ARl iy R eI 5 are prevented, They cleanse the Oakland, Cal, high school girls have The old law firm in the Weed biock, Buf- [ Wmakea rochet for the cardinal, being en- | tically paneled ceiling and frescoed fricze. | railroads follow in order of popularity. It is | and of pilgrim-haunted shrines, Over to the | blood, clear the complexion and tone up the | struck, They huve refused to read in mixed falo, of which Mr. Cleveland and Mr. Bissell | €aged in two novenas for the pope's conver- | with innumerable vermanent lights mingled | said that the rage circulation of city | west are wilder shores, huts, round towers, | system. Lots of health in these little fel- | class an unexpurgated edition of “‘Hawmlety" were wembers bas probably seut out more | sion. in the coruice, aad five depeudent chandeliers | livrarics is above 99 per cent fiction, ® | fisher cabins; aud here und there the | lows, which Prof. Burrill had ordered, !

Other pages from this issue: