Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 14, 1894, Page 16

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16 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, 1894--SIXTEEN PAGT a5s ¢ e | tside influcnce’ brought to bear o | o N VAN \ 1 | than 40,000,000 haws passel since 1883, Tn [ mer s quorpnpe T oA N1t to Mr. Anders but wt s had | areon a line with the window of the cab of . M1 BUREAU | stoutaide nfiuence brovghs to b i cor- | PERATIVE HOME BUILDING | the'ten sears of theie existence these asso: | THE SWEDES 1 CBRASKA 5 to Mr. Anderson’s, but when ho nad | are o o window of the cab L ) | tain cases - % A A LI ¢ ir existence these o \ » one mile he met him. I tears is | the locomotive. nally they are lighted, rather built, 10,008 homes, which are now his unsuccessful attempt to roach Columbus | Frain enters the tunnel at the east portal all r'vl“u,nx in most ,;.'.n by the .(.u-n tor whom e for provisions, and that his fumily had | the lights outside the Vulml‘l’lm n distance 3 p cusea have to stay whete they are. I 4 ol oo lil they were erectediby the building societies. : : 4 nothing but cors meal to subeist on. | Of b0O feat and those for 800 feot inside aro A Panacea for the Tils Aflicting the Indus- | Sased have bo ste¥, weme: on sust cease_ | Tmportanco of Effuctive Btate Bupervision T'he cost, of these houses his been about | History of the Pioneer Settlements in Polk | Mr. Tilly said that he had ome and | Switched off automatically, as well as tho trial World Think of an offieial of New York so steeped and Examination 32,000,000, throe-tourths of which, or &4, Oount o half sacks of flour and that he | alternate lamps for 900 foet farther into the i in ignorance as well as brutality as to pub 000,000, was puid ou in the city for material ounty, would give Mr. Anderson thoe full sack, An- | tunnel Theoverlap lamps, which altervate o and labor. Asa still more graphic illustra derson's face lighted up with joy at the [ With the lamps in tho first section, are left _ licly assert that it makes no difference to ] A t i > tho insano wha they cat! Tt is poverty of | sppe OTERS FOUND IN ILLINOIS | 1iog, itis estimated that the house thus prospect of getting something for his family | llehted while the train runs on to poitt PRESCFIPTION CF DOCTOR KATE FIELD | foou that muics povorty of blood poveriy of | SPECIMEN LOOTERS FOUND iles i Tonsen Comite ooy ot on. both | THE REWARDS OF ENERGY AND THRIFT | foliye e, fs she foue ras b, T, BUK. | or widle. socton e pub outy thy blood induves insanity. Commissfoncr — ter is u disgraco to his ealling and his coun. sides, and that they now furnish comfortable thay stacted forthwith, o foot, and from | Producing a dark section of 1,100 feet immece A o € Mime Com- | try. When my buveau is established there | How the Managers Speculated and Waxed hodes for 80.000 peaple. many of whom had e there carriod the stek of flour. through the | diately bohind tho train, which Is main LA bl G b AL y f will bo feswer insane and P pAupers. | Opulent at the Expaise of Thelre Lupes Viously lived inerowded and unhedlthy | The Hardships of Eariy Days Succeeded by | snowdrifts, suspended botween them on a | tained until the tunnel is passed. At the L kb s b L i, Prosperity and Comfort—Socinl and pole. F'rom that time on they had & suow | 8Amo instant that the lamps 1 the soccn t Building associations have been the means stortti thioo days out of evely:wapk until | of mid section are putout those in the W tmoltod | first scetion of 1,200 foet are lighted, so thns cab't stand the pressure, but poor men and women who have no fricnds to push s i st winter sevoral thousand peohlo 11v; An Objoct Lesson for the State Congention of Humanity- g in Washington were on the orink Aisic b miy starvation because the thermometer fell Bunking 1 adding at least 6,000 homes to the city of Religious Influences and the month of February,when tie s | twenty ces lower than usual. A fund s Reading, P, since the year 1866, according Experiences, and it made so much water in croeks and | _— wis T Uhis winter there s still to the Reading Pos draws that all travel was suspended for over | 2 heed by Kite Pl greater account of hard time The banking department of Nebraska has [ The Superior (Neb.) Building and Loan - a week, Mr. Anderson's family consisted of | " iCopyrighted by Kate Fleld Moru money hus been raised and a commit- | 46y pogun any two soon the work of weeding | association elected the following ofticers for T 5% i 1, | Bimselt, wife and two children and onoe sis “Trmy wishing brought happiness every- | ee of relief has been appointed v \ lanorous {nnovations | 1504: President, W. H. McCuilough; vice [ It the spring of 1567 Albert Seaver mado | or, the lattor now the wife of Olof Hult tof ) Years Lo o Slnn MALAL il and dangerous INNOVAONS |y, ugijont, Johu Reilly; secretary, C. B, Me- | the first permunent settlement in Polk | The mail for the scttlement was received | ERSUHESLIOWOECHAFAtYS which havecrept ito the business methods | Conneil; treasurer J. Briggs; counsel, | county, and a short time after Thomas Con- | 4t Columbus and they took turns to go for it [ CAlly by the trains passinz over an olecirics | T read that Washington is one of the most | of some build and loan associations | W, I, Buck nolly arrived, once & week. ‘They commenced their turns | ally connected tracie cir Ml the paris of {the | charitable citics in the union. I also authorized to do business in the state. That cretarios ot Nebraska nssociationsare | [y the year 1855 omigrated from Norra | Lh0 st week in Janua AU B B R AR LR o il mothers out of story books, and the | gy ten years ago o mass mecting was held | ghur aro dangerous mothods In voguo fs | Prepaving their roports for 180k, which nust g Tilly wos the fiest one. The snow was | tained by an ordinary lineman willenni not yet in_sight. So we must | t Sxmplo Cusess when t 1 lis reached a point 2,700 feed in tho t to proc playe t end for a following traivs Whien the train passes out of the tunnel at | the west end the lamps in the middlo sece tion are lighted, Thia is al dono automati body would have the happie s and our Declaration of independer ould come to pass, But there are wod at which #10,000 were raised to meet the be forwarded to the State Bauking voard Hellsingland, Sweden, o young man of en- | knee decp and the trip had to be made on e t8 of th By dol beyond question. Around the tested prin orgy and goo rhinents o name of | foot, no road to follow, and it took one day YeWitt's Witcl Hazol Saive cures sores al work out our own salvation in the old- | wants of the poor, caused by cold woathor. | bssond question. Asenttlo TSR PG| By g uitablo nssoclation of Eromont has | OFEY nd good_attainients by the uame of | foot, no Foud to follow, and it taok, one da DeWitt's Witeh Hazel Suive cures sor charity 7 Love, | ¢f opened a new series, for which there 1s a 3 10,000 e What are synonyms of Lewis Hedstrom. He made his home in the | £oing and one day roturaing. On his ceturn DoWitt's Witeh Hazel Salve Ires ulcers, If you had $1,000,000 to glve nway, ow woulll sou spend 1117 asked | Universal benevelence, good will 0T tion, | been woven the woof of speculation and [ SEEHEEE BN counties of Knox and Henry, in the state of a fricnd the ouher day ELb b s R A S L Lo LA B S B UGl Ihe demand for loans in Omaha associa- | Hlinois. In the year 1870, his health failing, in ake the bearings wdvent of 1904 8 fornishod by S “T would try to help 1,000,000 of people.” 0 o giving of atuis 18 th lask synonsim | rowed the cloak of beneficence, and struts | tions far exceeds theit income ha sold out his mercantile business in Galva, | then nbout ¢ 3 It to ten jcement that nearly every one of A b tongue of average humanit 1t is so mucn | abroad with the audacity of a lottery bond Under the law of Indiana three directors | Ill, and took a trip west to Nebraska, with | froin home ywhner of the hous . 1 TFution by the 15th < | easier to give a few dollars” to stop momen- | promoter. I'ne slow and conservative | atleastare required to swear to tho cor t- | Mr. 1 stay over night, as he : O | tary distress than to nvestizate the real | movements of honest associations are ove roctness of annial voports, Tiils is dosignod s dEUrOUS T atiempt U jouriey fdea of what ought to be done would con- | oyyige of the distress and prevent its recur- | ghadowed by the dash and swirl of th o throw responsibility on the directors anc A 4 dar ie venture was made and VOTL 15y STabeaw, felonds 1B Now: Yorc an | verioo s tomaie: Ale givine Lhgoaly Torms | D ncowod by the (dail gh A he | feck the provalent custom of using the | over tho trackless prairies ho decided upon | \wus succossfally. roach Rt n of charity in general practice. What is the | Speculate Pheir promises ave as attract- | nymes of prominent citizens as oMicers with- | the neighborhood of which Stromsburg is | after he reached home a snow storm st in What do' yol mrioAr result? Tlic poor nro luft fust where they | ive as molusses fn fly timo, und tho resuits | out requiring thom to familiarizo shemsclves | the conter, And in tho spring of 1871 ho | G. I Nelson mude the second trip and i et S MR 5 were. They are not belped help them bout the same. ‘That is, the investor is in- | with the business piloted to this new scttioment tho first | POUght two h eads, which he carried Imean that the Hebrews never allow | i)y, { are just so far additionally de- | vapiably stuck. To preserve and foster co- | “The scheme of loans ana investments,” | joviiimont o1 the whole distunce home. ‘The stable for G their people to starve, You never hear of | yoplized, as they look to others for further says the Chicago Herald, “by which un ¥ Jewish paupers or Jewish criminals, Though | aid reasonable returns are promised forsmall v are 100,000 ssian Jows in cl1-to-do citizens are themselves to blame ransactions are a fraud from the beginning THOPBLANE. Russia Well-to-d i 1ves to bl T t t 11 he b New Youl by Amorien by nocessity, | fOF the disgrace of want in this favored dis- | experience of other states is an object lesson | and in all their practices ' 4 trict, where the climate 1s so kind the | for the Nebraska board, as it confirms wha Aaigiay HGl i New York, driven to America by necessity, : Faad oina et N i d 1 Tt crson, : Are 1o beggars among them, miserably in 1872 Mr. Headstrom with his family made | laid the foundations of this prosperons set- Breatob P iaolouhe Ay D has been shown repeatedly in these columns AN ANGLOMANIAC. permanent settiement in Polk county tloment than: thelx: henrts’ doaive: to heas nany are. Whyt Because the | especially easy for the poor. The great ma- [ 14 Pl K attenLionloLitha or 5 T their raco havo cstablished o | Jority of tho siiforers aro nogrocs, 40,000 of | iad,Droushit to tho attent ot ot Bne ey e — With indefatigaple zeal and indomitable | the word of God read and to moot in reli RELIEVES PROMPTLY and o Jabor bureau to which tho noedy apply. | Whom live from hund to: mouth in wreiched | of hiunv'issocintions and tho vatious ques caroline Ticknoy in New England Magiatne. | perseverance Mr., H. worked up an_ interest | gious worship, It docs seem in the light ot 2\%, CURES QUICKEST, o/ 1 o) 1\ v W 3 o) - 4 alleys, ignorant, neglected, not knowing how | Yionubi sohames adopted to attract business, | MY 1ndy falr went over the sea and enthusiasm for the new settlement | the present condition of the community as ) wuW o to work because they have never been taught | 1y be promptly and vigorously checked, 1 when she came back to her owncountree, | among the people of Henry and Knox | though God's blessings have been showered W Wards over sl O o o work the Jew makes his way.” trades or anythine else. o’ the! horiest! mutunl - aasocistionsiwill b6 | Arel sl raro ot tho bruve and free, counties in the state of Tllinois. with the re- | more bountifully upon this settlement on RN - “Ifail o sce that you have answered my | Tnere never was a greater cruelty com- | yioueningo disrepute. s srrgo AT BLISERG TR L he years of 1872 and 1873 suw an | that account, Asecarly as the fail of 1571 a\BaEIoY mitted in the name of liberty than the sud- She sald that we had no leisure class, 1 den cmancipation of millions of slaves with Hiinois Statistic THut OUr COmpiany manners were green as influx of settlers at a rate that soon ex- | these pionecrs mot on Sabbath days to reud o W R hausted not only all the homestead, but | and consider the word of God. Some times IS % Iy n’l o at Jew can do Gentile | QU LK quy preparation for thele sub- | The mportance and necessity of strict su Beine; also all the railroad lands in the settlement. | they met in Charles Anderson's sod hou JAPANESE) san: do. o und that labor bureau Brought sistence, up to depend on mussa | pervision and examination is iltustrated by | Qursocicty only n valzar mass, 3 Founding n Town, and at other times in John Swenson's. Sot much for the last year and which universal | thought itself, many of these poor creatures | associations have become a mighty factor in | oy our uncoath speceh she 1 BRLatrans Jocated unid survoyod. and in the fall of 1z | then prayer would be offered up to the Most | ] distress s now making a necessity. The | were merely grown-up babies. That num- | the financial affuirs of that state. Accord- | And her horror <he couldn’t at all express Messrs, Hedstrom & Buckley opened the | High, togetier with the singing of hymns G R aiid Ry 500,000 immigrants a | bers should have drifted to the capital was | ing to the report of the state auditor 552 Wiien shio ropoitedly hoard us say *L Kuoss, fAvatatiel ot ol morehundion and fn | After thoarrival of C. Lundgren ho led the D HmiEran s & npueal, Massa Lincoln freed them and | sociations are doing business in the state, | And constantly calln gown a “dress the following year Mr. hedstrom com 0us ser until the arrival of Rey A New and Complete Treat conslating of year regardless of what becomes of them | Uyele: Sum would taie care of them. S0 | against 450 in 1892, Altogether they have ploted is. Testlonco—tho frst. dwelling | Srcders SUPZOSITORIES, Caphules Of Olttnnt Al tws SRS e o bHB it aVire 3 : Y < . A ” A Our civilization was sadly new, R T - g Tozes of Ointment, A ~falling Cure for Plies or what becomes of the Americans they r today, out of u population of 250,000 sin the | £75,000,000 of ussets, whereas the deposits in | {iG {1HRITIORN WIS SRR ERe 0 e o R R S | . The immigration during the months of nAtHro ahd di auen place. There should be a national labor bu- | District of Columbia, 75,000 are negroes. banks is bt 338,000, The totul | Xhd alinost ompletely lost to view, Mr. Hedstrom lived to see the town grow | Moy and June was so great ihat the people | with the kuife or fujoctions of car , wik.ch for 1803 wis 853 ,:.r.n.«l Of w[h:* | Because of the work they needs must do ana prosper until it contamed a population 4“}” ot find standing room wmside the du; oro hninful and toldon o perman ot e, i oo i R T A O Ty nie . sum §20,355,000 was disbursed in loans, £10,- of 1,900 and the sottlers ho had. lochted be. | 0ut therefore during the latter part of the | Fesul death, unn y endure state and territory, There unemployed men | 3vhat has the eovernment done to make 3 paid on matured stock, &,811,000 | Tt was wretelied form to be all in trade, O aio00 and the sattlers ho ad located b | cummor a school houso was ercetod in the | Hh.ietrible dissasa? = We guarantes o nud women could apply for work and, in | these people sclf-respecting and self-support- | profits paid on withdrawn stock, and for'ex- | And put us down on u lower, grade S Ao lo as v oo 1800 Si\ie ter of the settlement, about where the | benofits recetvad. 1 0 box, 6 for §5 by mail. Sewple ourse of time, labor would cease to be con- [ ing? Nothing. The vote they once had was | penses of all kinds, $031,744. New shares to }‘“f o truo nobility wouldu'c linve stayed AL g0 it i, 'ux"'{“'r m‘lw;lc;h‘ e he | ¢ house of Oscut Thelinder now stands, | £ree,:GuarintossJssued 1y our agotes . It would be prop- | S0 prostituted, owing to their benighted con- | the number of 0 were issued during nless it had been handsomely paid, b g 3 PtV R aLan To this school house, wnen completed, on CUNS”(’AT‘AG””“”"' Piles Preventod, o ! dition, as to lead to the disfranchisement of | the yeur, 146,796 canceled, and 745,545 | § Among the many thrifty and enorgotic | (oo e R KR e Y en o U 5 Japanose Liver Pollots L e acoll el oo, (s IERnON Bomant e year, 146, ,. an 5 | She shuddered to seo o coronet settlers that came to this scitlement in 1 'y Sabbath day could be seen crowds of | iho gront LIVER nud STOMACH REGULATOR nud everybody in the distric hat's ail col dged for loans, The pumber of shaves in | Ondow democratic locks of jet, were Mr. and Mrs. Matthow Samuelson. | People gathering from all points of the con BLOOD PURIFIER, Smuil, mild and pleasast to pass, all animuated with one purpose, and | iake, especially adupted for Chilren’s uso, 60 Dosos fashioned wi he stopped 4t the - it the s s reason to be glad on account of “How would you go to o1 don't quite kuow, though I've a general a view to select a loeation of a Swedish s tlement. After many wearisome travels ask them to help mic pioneer settlors. Amon R. Nelson's cow was a snow drift. The them wero Deter T. Buckley. N. | srow was packed so solid it carried both F. Peterson, P, Buckley, Andvew Far- | team and a heavy wagon toad son, Lewis Okerlund, Charloy Nestuo, Allen Nothing brings out in strong light the Peterson, Andrew and N, . Monson, and | characteristic traits of tho ploncers who operative home building as contemplated by tho state law is an important duty. The Work is found, in town or out; once given b £ veau at the cupital with branches in every Blunted by Foverty. | | gested in great centers, erly distributed.” A Sample. gress has done for the black race. It has rco reaches the cnormous aggregate of | Whicn mizht hive heen most fittingly set A eaches C ‘egate ) L who came from the vicinity of Altoona, Knox C My friend scratched his head, looked at | punished white intelligence for the negro's | 53 406,002 On the brow of some duchess (deep in debt). By it e S BEa s ¢ | that was to hear the gospel preached in the O eoita: P L L M s b L L 106, & i rollof that marve o heir so 3. Samuelson, {5 now ! GUABANTEES fssuod only 1 imivoidable ignorance and susceptibility to [iise figures present in relief the marvel: |y was out of tho question here, one of the leading business men. of tho com- | MoUer tonguc was the ouly place in [ S Y bribery and corruption. ous growth of these nstitutions and heir | XuH AR oEUT Al AR | Polk county during the year 1872, where rc Kuhn & Co., gents, Omu | me as though [ were quite mad, and went off to stuff himsell with an apoplectic New Whitt I th Sfonersdonct Noth 0 sv . i g | Whith e cof ssioners done? Noth- [ popularity as savings banks for wage | Norcould we boist of o Singlo poer, s Mr. John B. Buckley camein 1873 with a | ligious serv vere held in the Swedish Year's dinner. 1 sat down ard took up some | ing. What have white citizens done! AL | urners. Unfortunately the law makers of | And our seuson was quito the wrong tmo of | moderate capital to commonce with o io Eric JouNsoN papers, Here is the result of a few minutes' | lowed their poor brethren to live tike pigs in | Jllinois ¢id not, until a recent period, year now oncof tho solid moneyed men of the « - veatiike alleys where tenements should not be toler- | vide an adequate systom of state supervi s i R Frantiaity ated, an : child o fill our streets 3 Hald W & i St Licarned with r from her wiso discourse, ty. For 40 years Cook's Extra Dry Tmperial Scene—A police station in a great city. ated, and v bildren to fill our steets | sion. ‘Ihe fleld wus open to all comers ard | 1 Chrivd SiLh fegket trom hov wiko discourse, enumerate ail the early settlers and to | Champagae has stood the test for parity young man neatly dressed and seemingly re “‘l‘“l rowdies and our prisons with erimi- | no questions asked. As a consequence the | Xudionly provailed by qnmannorly force, notice their stcady advancement to financial | and its delicious boquet. spectable enters after midnight. He ad- | B4 stato was overrun with o horde of adven- | \Whon they came oves horo as & Inst rosourco. | success as farmers and business men would | el dresses the sergeant: Irat that mass meeting, held ten vears | yrers whose principal capital was gall 2 take up too wuch space. Suflice it to say IN THE ELLCIRICAL F. am a thief and want you to lock me up,” | 840, subscribers to a generous fund had de- [ Phe robbing operations of these adventurers | And they left to succeed them, a rude, wild | that this settlement is noted far and wids D SR L ELD, “What did you steal termined to prevent a recurrence of the dis- | heeame so scandulous that legitimate asso- rice, R G A “A pocketbook, I snatched it from tne | tress which then prevailed, the cry of ciations presented to the lust legislature | Devold of gontility, ause nnd grace, i s ~ The rc hand of alady standing on the sidewalk wait- | tution would not now be rinzing in and sccured the passuge of o law providing | \WHose only ol is w metal busc ing for a car, She was holding it in her hand | And money, mor id life would hi for state examination and supervision. justas if she were asking me to come and [ Stved. ‘Vhere should be an end to this gr Under tuis law the state auditor is chacged | o maiden fair, from these vandals flec Is located near the center of Polk county, | “Om € take it 1 knew that pockctbook meant | Wrong aud the quickest way toend it is to [ \with the duty of supervising all building | "Pis surely the only remedy i six milos northwest of Stromsburg and I'nove is a proposition well under something to eat, and, without thinking, I | estabiish my labor by . Already the | and loan association The mode of investr- | And get you againacross the sea, about the ne distance due west of | Seittlc to make use of the Snoqualmie fal snatched it and ran, 1 heard a seream, buy | district police know whe the miserably | gition and exami 18 thorough, and | For we need you not in your own countree, Osceola, the county scat. It is also the | for generating clectric power. These fu 1 didn’tlook buck. 1 found $4 and went toa | Poor congregate. A properly constituted | glyhough the work has been under way but —_— center of one of the most prosperous farm- | re within twenty miles of Seattie, and restaurant and ordered something to labor bureau could consider cases ndividu- | 4 few months it has revealed some rotten- RELIGIOU. ing communities of the west. though they are not of the Niagura orders) though so weak from_hunger I couid ha aily and devise the ways and means of re- | pessand caused a gencral overhauling of ac The Swede Home chur. nds on a com- | they would'be regarded as phenomenal in speak. 'When the food was placed before | form. The national government pays half | counts, Therbible has anis it manding but gridual rise of land, from | 4ny country but this. Experts have decided 3 me was glhd’ I had stolen the pocketbook, | the district taxes: being resvonsivle for the S prcielIlqarersy Vho bible has anannual circulation of 10, | \hich spreads outin u grand panoramic | that from 10,000 to 15.000-horse power can be 2 1 went to my lodging and paid my bill and | negro’s pitiable condition it should bear half e | i A 7 view the vich and well improved farm cam- | obtained from the falls easily, and this would thon I began to think whit I had done. 1 | the burden of this burean, if not the whole. As a result of the auditor's inquirics the | New York city has fifty-two Presbyterian | munity that surrounds it. It isa church | beample torun the street railroads and b : po e fingor n'at Iri . | American Building, Loan and Investment so- | churches with & bined BorsRibToth e ST N h R nliHEs oLS evtln in 5 couldn’t sieep, T couidn't do anything—-I sas | . We point the finger of scorn at Irish land : ¢ L 1 X churches with s combined . membership of | edifice that would \ ornament and pride | electric lighting plants of Seattle and ot othe FBIaE Sirat o teng «t | ciety and the National Building, Loan and i A ; s tniof. 1 folt there was but ono road for | 1ords fovejectng their miserable tenants, yet | ciewy and N . g, Loan and | 0,000, to any city. One-fourth of a mile west of | smaller towns, besides loaving a surplus to | A FULL SET ON RUBBER 00 me 1o take, and that to the police station. | heré, under the shadow of the Washington | Tuvestment company —of Chicage have | “ipyegro vis the large and handsome par- | be rented out for manufacturing purposes = 85 Here I am.”,, monument, 5| ud hungry negroes are hhun I'HHI’QHXH? insolven um“ |»!.nu. in sonage, with its spacious and well kept | A million dolla ufticient to chain the Teeth oxtracted painlessly in morning. “\What is your name and where did you | threatened with eviction because they can't | the nds o GeAvers) oL sicons During the tiwelve years of its existenco | grounds, coutaining also orchard, garden [ lost DOWOL. YL the falls, and this amount 8 NEW TEETIH SAME DAY, the church extension board of the Methodist | and park of forest and evergreen trees. | Will be suved every yeur Painloss Fill In p ——Now Procoss, come from " pay rent! What wild beast would so mal- rns were of the natioual variety, us distin- “My namo is Frank Hutchinson, Tam 22 | Lréat his kind? In the numeof God and | guished from the local =thelr aperutions not Southeast of the church 1s the general | Many of the eye diseases of the present | gijase and Crown work, finess and best as churches and expended £700,000. merchandise store of P. O. Chindgren, who | day owe their orizin to the mjurious influ- | fowestprices, Al wors wabrinted. years old and my home is " Mass.. | humauity let us prove our Christianity and | lmnmhmnv\d’m nru»\uuun x;fl(‘h r heac- | lpiscopal church, Souwh, hus isted 2,500 ore my parents live o i o | found labor bureaus throughout the country, | quarters. A brief summary of their opera- A\ is the postmaster under every ¢! 2 ad- | ence of artific 2! oWt 75 whero my parentsliveon a farm. Tam tho | g L O ol Jo. inaianifioant | tions will serve to omphasize the importance | The latest statistics, compiled by M. | il postmaster uuder evory changlng ad- | enco of artificial light, Mow that almost | ~paxton Bik., 16th and Farnam Sta, and Toarned ongraving. ohe foia memio€ | \when compared with the apoalling: destitu- | of state supervision and elimination of spec- | Fournier de Faix, o French statistician, give | HGIstation, There /s Biso s Blacksioith | every one aees Bh0 clecuiic WEbL Bt 1S emi- | g, Telepnone 1083 money and 1 thought T could earn botter | tion of New York, Chicago, Detroit, Buffalo, [ ulative methods. i tho number, of [Roman Catholics in the | Jith a cluster of private residencos % most English ophthalmic anthorities accor ha B ntate sie &) AURE Boston and other great towns. ‘I'he American was an ambitious concer W as 230,866,633; Protestants, 14 The first SR se e B il sl S LA S T eard o noeh ‘about it 'thovehs P e | S0 it 15 not hapny New Year to all. vet it | Ithad a_largo stafl of hustlors and u most nc glios U0l 0y bR asrom e s e e Lel | R el e B e S Bure to succeed. [ came here six weeks ago, | 15, il our power to help on the good time [ attractive array of promises of big profits. Bishop Taylor is a remarka three miles west of Osceola, Mr. Tilly lefy | placed and shaded, is infinitely Superior to 1 had some money saved up and 1 did not | WECH habpiness will be the rule. “Think the so promises were not wholly futlacious, | the missionary tield. ‘Though the *old s0d” 1n 1308, and made his tome | any other artificial’ illuminant, and that not think 1 would have any trouble ut all in got- | Matter over. KATE FIELD, for it appeal i flwf!'} "_“:’ returns that l‘."” age, ho is still vigorous and hearty J avound Altoona, Knox county, 1L, for the | only is it the best light for swong and ting a pluce. Maybe 1 wasn't as careful of — ”"”,"‘r:"l‘,“,“l"_ 'i:"“'f h_',“‘!“l‘m.:‘“h‘y‘_" ,“ll’“‘,‘ ""; been in “““l'”["w ' "r" "["j“_" time, but now | fist vears of his residence in this great re- | healthful eyes, but that cven eyes that are my woney a5 [should have been whon 1 first HER CHOICE OF A MAN. R o S U at it | b oopra il s of A felow ojcontinde sk ipubliggria/s th day of May, 1871, on his | wnduly sensitive or prone to discase mag in d 3 reached town. egan by pucting adver- vosperity. in 1802;1t claimed & mem bership of SR Journey westward to seck a new home, he | it work longer and with less risk and dis. tisements in the newspapers: but no ono BrosriN L e prosperity. in 1802, it clulmed a motbersbivof | ~Rov. S. A. Barnett, an Anglican clergy- | veached Lancaster county, this state, and in | comfort than with gas, candles or A A5, (00,0010 8 BU IGO0 (AR BALSRL LG 08 [ ma i who i Tinsifor Smanyiy, been doing | the month of August, 1871, he filed'on SEAHLEQ' scewed to want an engraver. Inever got | 1y 4 ful electric v cring device 3 g will not wed a millionaire, to be accused of AL n Saptember ¢ o QO 0 i A useful electric vegistering device is now By answers, el g S L nulre, to be used of ll‘_~ a :;ls in September of that year was [ gpostolic work among the poor of Eist Lon- | homestead iu I'olk county, and in Septem- | used in connection with ma Tl book-fold: 5 O G S O ) Money came in at the rate of &0,- | qon, says that the Anglican church does not T L by N i 3 X ) CDI A | raedita Rob £ e shodld chance to pass away a bit betors | 360 4 month and went itto the pockots of tho | tom Sy that the Anzlicuu church does not | bor tho followini year e located thereon, | ing machines. Tho eleetrical attachment p t l)](‘ IQIISIS % MR / ( ¢ over which the proposed Wash ington and Baltimore electric voad will enter v madly pursue at o reckless pa The Swede Home Settlement Baltimore has been decided upon by the company which will build the line MAKES = Wis e, Landurentinioheipos ftha nd has resided there unto this da, akes hold of the sheet at the same p 1 started 1o look for work, People were | A poor man's wite I'll never be, to bake and | minagers with equal facility. The salary | population in that region. The. second Sweuish setefor Tohn | R e A e IO eIy 50 busy preparing for the holidays that they Stew wnd brofl, Mstitorely et Oy a0 a0 D00 Tt o LR e O i e eaionie L aa i o | hag lvnyas fedicoivint ing g hoR tonms did not have time to talk to me. They | With haif w dozen' little ones to add to all my | dition to fat salaries, arawn contrary to law, : 0apacluyiotthess,Bl0/ch Swenseu.who/ el SLailn are arranged on the pressin such a way Stomed!to (hink thayTwas doing somoethis til. ERar Ve spoculated on prospec. | buildings of the seyen branches of the Catho- | in October, 1871, locatea on the land he still | that the gripper end of the shee comes in P ¢ 8 kL 8 BiSpIQITIng, . et 8 pon e h PSPEC- 1 Jic church in the United States is 3,374,000, | occupies, contact with the first fold gauge on the 1 had o vight todo bocause | morely asked |1 wiil not wed o landsome man, a “spore | fi¥e, (OBl Dronorly . Snciat w0 8 | Phat of the 46,13 Methodist churches is 12,- | The uird one in order was Charley Ander- | folding machine. Tho. consequenco. 18 tha i place. Allday long 1 we one, wo ¢ suit me 0] ‘ato variety thea > \ + tha B ORBROfIAEChbhG vho ctober came | befora the sheet. is startod ST e R e B e Indned B Suims on' Uniuproved property o0 that of uhe 3 ”IE\J“II:M‘.X‘I;Lnlll,\,l.l‘:\‘lfws son, who i the mouth of October came | before te slioet s startod into the first fold dida’t lose heart: until my money bey Tin'es two or three, worth scarcely one-third of the amount A hat 2 00 ReRDY -4 RaFKC ALk s < ; ollers, omatically cred to the I ) ¥ o ) torin ¢ 5 4,008,000, The fourth one was G. R. Nelson, who | sume end and sido used " in printing, and is run low. Then | found a cheaper A howely nan is not my style—a “dude” I | loaned. The acrobats and baliet girls made | *oFia Churehes is 4,059 4 - CLioalls e aa e o SOl ) ELE £ L g R D e el : would detest Pl Away with $150,000/0f she Amoricanls'money. Dr. J. M. Buckley gives this good advice [ ¢ame from Chicazo between Christmas and | djusted to the gauges with more accu / Monday night 1 spent the last mon ould not love a solemn man nor one who's | ynd the real estate securities shrunk to the | to public speakers: “The whote art of [ New Years und wmade his home in Polk 1 would be _possible were thoy placed PP TREATMEN 1 By MALL for something to eat. All the next d prone.to Jesv tune of §250,000. ‘The operations of the con- | MAKIng i good speech is to have something "“,‘l’_!lm' s bt manyialaitl .| there by hand. Sal ammoniac batteries are Consultation weut around looking tor work without a | Iwill not wed the man who scoks for years my | ¢ern during the past three years are shown [ pertinent and moving to say; to sy some- | the Year 1515 BrOTEDL FGHY SLCILIONS ‘%0 gestiotaunplyingigho SlactelaioURLeh D) At T O T B ha s Sl aa v loU e Y 1 %o be barefaced, aeliberatd robbery. Tho | thing all the time, to say iv vivaciously; and, | the piencers who wero laying the founda- | suficing to operate the attachment E on Wednesduy. [ folt as if I wis stavvine, | The vory siowness of his sult would always | managing clique’ conspired to flecce their | 1f it is a religious speech, to say it with re- | Lions to what was destined to beono of the | By means ot a new clectrical syst 1\ H 4 Tt was about suppor Linie on Wednesday bring me pain *" | victims, and - succoeded, pocketing the | ligious feeliig and to stop when every one | Most flourising Swedish - sevtlemonts i | {ng'gas lamps in the streets of b large cit i ovening, 1 was stundine on tho street, 1 | | Wi ROt wed the man who claims to love me | plunder, and leaving the bapless stockhold- | Wishcs you to go on. i\"lnl ska. In Il"r{'ll".‘[‘E" of "‘l FUAryaC: | can be lighted practically instantancously. A felt as if the pain from hunger would make Bt LS Not wed at all—until T get a | €78 to Whistle for returas. oMo doath of Rav. Dr. Adolph Jellmok at TAREn e L RATOC B CCONL A Butigiie/prssodiau g aneauing stanion) PHIVATE DISEASES e crazy. | coulin't beg. 1 tried to, but 1 3 L 4 Cash 1 P Site. Vienna aeprives the Jewish church of the ¢ o (Fots 2 the Tollowing | possibly miles away, and e thing is done. coutdn’t. Then I saw the young womdan and — s RS 5 ablest exponent of modern Hebrew homi. | fAuceln, During the svring the following | 7he siviking feature of the system is u stole her pocketbook. Here it 15, LUPIETL The National did not plunge into the hole | letics. He was born in 1521, and 1n 1836 be A les: MOVORtiIeut e e o neither underground nor overhead wives are | rank Hutehinson was locked up. The as reck as the American, nov becauso | came the leauing Jowish preacherin Vienna, | , Sharley Thiotandor from Lacon, M. B J. | uged. A wron box, with a cover flush next morning he told his story to the polico Most men who profess a belief in aestiny | the managers were at all shorton plunging | whose Hebrew population at that tino was i"" 1 ol ;“‘i‘l' i m: X u ; x:v)’l'l: 'fi“’; Al | with the ground, is buried at the foot of Dr, Searles and Searles, ‘¢ 5 180uBk, o court, ‘Phe judge didn’t know what to make | and an_indifference to fato when brought | Juslities, but because she funds were short. | Jarger thau that of any other European civy, | b3 LArson [on SHRES0H, (100 BEFEI | the lamp post. 1v is supphed with two sal " OMNANA N of it, nor did the polic face to face with a dunger or placed Income was not us great us the | Dr Jellinek was o profound scholar and an | from Altona, 11 = Later ou o the season | qmmoniac batteries and & sparks coil. The First stalrway sonth of postofiee, room 7. 1t 'my labor burcau wero a fact Frank | desperato situation seek to avoid rather | American, but what —did — come in [ able defender of his faith. His translations a3 ;.“,“"']", b ”’1'“‘“‘\""["_ Andvew | Tantern holds a sinall gas holder of about Hutchinson would not have sto.en that | than embrace the inevitable result of the | Was carefully hypothecated by the pluck- | and writings were voluminous, (AL “-1‘[17“\ r’u. Albonmin s lln llf'" u Ll two inches capacity, pivoted on a hiuge and —— pocketbook und one American citizen | event regavding which they have held such | ©rS: ‘The head and tront of the munagiug guist dlrect from Swadett, Oy dohnson and | held down by weights. Over ‘this holder is NEW BLICATIONS, - i e cliaue wa ia [ e ol « 3 Jonas Johnson from Mo e, 111, an autc ¥ s holde! " sim 0 B would have been suved from disgrace and | pnilosophical opinions. laue was | Willlam Smith, He obtained | it po'the guest and principal speakor at | “Among. thoso who came in 1873 wero: | 20 tutomati liglder, vory: similarito the o : s L '\ cnse I noint s reiated hy the Now York | f1t10 toa slice ‘of land, worth about #00, | 150 oo bile Eueat and brincpsl Ko | Amon; 5 I form alveady known. ‘This is conuected by i Hob na s o Totorionies o & | Tocated fn Wisconsin. ' A~ purling stream | tho, mecting of the New Xork Unitavian | poter Poterson from Altona, L, and Androw | ives runuiiig through the post to the bat AN il amas S et vald ind hinges upon the oxperiences of a | lochted . Wisconsin. = A purllug. st club next manth, has been the leading mn- | Gounglund from Missourt nilgAhly L 4 minister of the forcordimation: school of be- | foursed through it, and a dum site invited | jsrep of that denomination in Chicago since B | tersiialehaniho i musi ol Eheiglbyihiuye to . eane B0 R g 4 estmel 3 ccided 1o founc 3 Among those who camo in 1874 wer | bo-tig o lighter e Seene—A publi: park 3 N. 1. | fief on u Mississippi steamer in the good old | investment. Mr. Smith decided to found Robers Collyer came to New York fourteen | 1inensy 'gse whocamo in e | bo lighited, the lighter at the gas works L R AR L N (PR A miserable, delivious man is seated against | foshioned days of river tacing, when u negro years ugo. Mo, Jones was one of the active | ifherander, o o NE B OSCA | opens a valve conneeting one of the large Pamphi ¢ edition 10c. Addross tree with no covering buta blanket thro: e s . 4 MRS VBB BROs MLQROBNAN OROIOSCING AOKLY Ihelunder. gas holders direct with the gas mains. The | MO0 P o N - D g buta bla rown | sut on the safety valve and the' furniture and promoters of the Parliament of Religions, L ) ! ¥ Pryilliamson, Nowiandan. Gonn, aver him by o sympathetic woman. Elijah | oodworlk of the boat fed tho fire Exporiences und Kemintscences, result is uu increase of pressurc in the gas and contributed largely to the sucecss of SIS nt, colored, 18 suffering from aggra- | oo captain seeing & Hval bo If 2 milo | needed a few cartwheels to make it move. | &) ) 3 e ALGREAL 5 > Tl 3 P 1571 ha all over the eity that causes all the min Tue captay 0 riva balf amile | B 8 I e tional tonctudoc ey | that undertulang. A few weeksago ne cele- [ Mr. A, P. Tilly in the, fall of 1871 had puv vated small-pox, and as he chatters and 3 s ! tUire xns holdorsin tho lamps to lift up about d i anead began to eurse intrue old time style, brated his 50th birthday. He isof Welch | chased a horse tewn in partnership with | ture g i seroams hundreds of men and woman gazo | i ordersd. tar pine knots, navil stoses, | 1028 §13,000 to Mr. Smith of we dam site, [ oERi Bis AW blethday, He s of Weleh | chased a ovso oain b bartnersiup with | ono.cighth of an inch agins num s him from a noncontagious distunce. bicon, ete., to be thrown in to kindle the five | Laking the dam site us socurity, [Ihe state | for” twenty-thyeo years, Ho 1s an inde- | horse rike, in which the Buckiey brothers | Stor, and thus close the local battery cireuit Ouly this: When Elijah Grant presentea | M4 igherand the old bout trombled and S R AL R other labors acty s seuior editor of Unity. | in to put upalot of hay for the winter, | {IEhten, which tnelatele Bims i aad ] ] groancd under the pressure, the prea George M. Pullman hos had plans d Ihey had no sooner commenced their haying | g to bo maintained himselr av the Elizabeth hospitaland his | {rew neaver and nearer to the s Judge Grosseup of the federal court has Y 4 e S Hars increased pressure has disease was noted o was removad to the | S iae i and noves e por. | Abbolited u recelver for th National, and | for a memorial church to bo orected in Al- | operations when the vest of the horses died. | LG5 TH ol ‘seconds o insuro its effects i Yo ot i Tl S | R st M0 oppr: | asAERA S F cheaual 43| o wbmorpteninit i, e WAL | ghrstutl ol HOSI UG | ool e s Mo HOME o8 of the almshiouse. B o aTie Wlonfime captain tapped the | agaiust the locators, 1t was in this cours | 8Y¢ buried.” The contract for it hus already AT hare Wor' GATLERNS itesthov oy ianded systom INDUSTRIES One night tho attendant improved his op- | Brother Ane-sal » | that the bond lottery managers were con- | been let, and the work of putting in the | succceded in getting considerablo hay to A new sort of block signal is in use in the i) attendal D- | Brother Biank, what's ailing you? T thought | that y WAte ¢ foundutions is progressing rapidly. Whoen | gether in cocks, when tho horse they had | 4 0 ! : portunitics and got drunk, whereupon Grant hem fellows wh 5 victed two months ago, and the manner in s Weehawken tunnel in New ev. Inean b his dolivam drossed. hisclE and. waiked | Jou, 1S ons :In‘|‘vl|‘ m o :,I\: bat believes | U}k tne court read the riot ace to thatclass | SPFiNg comes the walls will go up, and before | last purchas fleo dled. W thll-m\ Hmanoy 1 e It 5 10 happen will happen no how 3 14, AR O34 pX PeCLes o n wil o to buy another horse with the recaime dis: AR Bata b P oLt A N al R 4 of financial parasites justifios the hopo that [ fall 1Uis expected whe ediiice will be unde y ! N T T T A 0 o I do,” replied tha clorgyman, drawing | P RN PREasiies Jastifes the hopo t cover. Wilhin u year the church will be | couraged. towever, they made arrange ound wandering alone Elizabeth avenue he | yjmselt up. *So Ldo, but 1 want to be as | Uhe National looters will b promptly and | © foh by ments to help the Buckloy brothers with wis driven into the park.where no onedared | jeay the stern us possible when it does hap. | YIEOrously dealt with, ready for use. The church is to be as | ments i 104 after which they were to —— to go near him. His escape was not disco yeod Them O | I 5 3 a ered by the almshouse oficinls until 9 o'cloct | Po" A Weett Thom Qut, laveer cities. It is to be built of red sand- | let Tilly and Mouson have the vse of a A faficiblsuntilda 3 e Ihe weeding out of the dishonest assocla- | stone with elaborate carvings. The style of | horse and theiv help to finish their stacking, | g g J& s 2o N IOSERIRELIP, . Fhal o fofused 1], Youus Bizgars—No. I cant say that 1 be- | tions in linols is to bo prosecuted activaly, | the church is suited to the surroundings of o | €. Jut as they commenced with stacking ) fl 3 b Hfection, and ot untit i junkman weey Of | liove in those bivle fubles. Iu fact, I take | The task is 4 huge one, owing to the fact | small city. The Jot on which it is being | their own hay thiero arose a very high wind, e AR \ bighor ground. that this is the first attompt atexamination, | erected ~faces the public square, around | and along with it came a praivie five, which > 99 P i ':\“t- Joo creature to tho pest house in | Deacon Poticrby--Yes? It history isn't | Tho state auditor is determined to @o 1o tho | which are grouped U0 county buildings and | i ten miuutes consumed all their hay,so thav | ® FRH EN D 127 Avaniad. e o L L ! ot e | wrong, there were some fellers in Noan's | bottom of the business. to wind up the in- | hanasome business blocks. Mr. Pullman is | all their work, doue under such tryi ¢ ° ° OmahaTent-Awning R on Lrank Sklato tho [cava o | gl A,”n".“,i i :y,_l\l \L‘,l;_‘v...\,l,‘,x“,m.u wou solvent and to lntroduco s uniform system | to pay the ontirocost of the bullding, which | cumstances, weut up in smolo i u\M: nos, 15 Bolan il S M I 1601 3 \ answer all purposes, but they rather made a | of aecounts whick 1 facilitate cxamin will be §70), e has already contracted hat sume year, on the 15th o emb y prepr Y « | £ acnounta which sylll faellitate-oxnmings | willshe ST0,000. e ias already contiantod blizzard that lasted | and harmless; every ingredient is of intamooks, Loll Elijah Grant's miserable condition migt lure 1. fr P Eht | failure of it tion herveafter. The evils which have crept | for & memorial window to cost $5,000, The [ came & snow storm and i rubber - glouing. | Lave boou pravented, 3 intd tho buildiog and loan businessin 1l | peopio of Atbion mave raised o Rusranteo | for iree days. Tilly and 1% L Buckley had | - recognized valuo anid in constant uso | Yo by atiod " 1ifs Omeint Brutality I’\n:ri- :-.\;»lb\\\u.u. I heard that Grab- | nois ure chargeable to the neglect of the law- | fund of §5,000 a year for the support of the | Just rcturned f"w n (\'u umbus, whore they by lllwlmulu':ul profession. It short Board of Estimate and Apportion. | Y0X had joined church making power. Nebraska provided agaiust | ehurch, which s to be Universalist in de- [ had luid in supplies of groceries and proyi :ms Labor, Lessons Pain, Diminishes = ment of New York city. Time, 1502, A P uagait ‘l!‘“l\vxu-‘;-tlx;:’n; e "."'x““\" just such ev nd it behooves the proper | Bomination. Both the chureh building and | $lons Lhgries Andarson was ot 4o luvls | Danger to lifo of Mother and Child. BREWERS. Barker, presidont of the Tax departmont lis business. pu shook dice to | ofiicers to enforce the law in lotter and [ the hundsome stained glass window are to | He started the day the storm commenced Ic Book *To Mothers” mailed free, con i Ty T ! T L R ALt b il S LLE DRI N, which member of the firm should Join.” | spirit. Ncbraska has eighty-five associa- | be memorials to My, Pullman’s parents, Columbus, which was the nearest market at | ¢ it SOy BT, IR0 T (oo B | Fred Krug Brewing [ OmabaBre #iajAss properly feeding and caring tor the insane tiovs with probably $4,000,060 in assets. The - - = that time, He was trying to cross the Platte L COMBANY | Connalssioner Porter—We have 5897 insan “'r‘“f'“: you manuge te pay off the | pumber is insigmficant compared with thut We could not improve tne quality it we [ FIYer ut 7:.\4. ¢],.; \\.‘l.n}n b cc H“|l|' { }.| “-“x'['x““'vf.‘ ti 1 nial o 5 ahottled “Cavinot | Guikantont to equnt patients, wnd we are estimating the expenses | CBureh debt? o must be remembered th 1 T f v WO | i yoke of oxen, but when hulf way across he 8ent by €xpress, charges prepald, on receip delivered o any |ontstdobrandy. Visnns patient 1 wo are estimating 1 pon { Dlinois. 1t must be remembered that the | paid double the price, DeWitt's Witeh Hazel O e oW OFIfL ant it was with tho | Of brice, 8150 par bottle. S dainesed, GRS | aukinedngacy Yieoa on the per capita plan. Churchworker—With one oyster supp business is in its infancy in this state. Very Salve is @ 1 ) AL expel 100 ¢ oD /) J o reatdont Barker Vou cone hore uskiug for Iivers thing, Tsuppose, was ou o grand | fow associations have been in existenco te | pr Ivois tho best saivo that exner an [ B ey o uscerded i’ exiricat “ BRADFIELD REGULATOR 0., Atsnta, Ga. Jucksou at 1lvorad 1o tamilios a 10t of money for charituble purposes, but 1t | seale R T s been retarded b VIIES) ROASN A0S 20 A9) ing tho oxen and getting back. Ho was ol by all druggists. 1 s vory littlo thit eharity gets, 1 am opposed & years. ‘Pheir growth has been retarded by — T v T M Y R T Rold by all drugg IRON WORKS ; i no; we flucd each cne that spoke of | the swindling methods of bogus associ to any diserimination agninst tho sane, und | 1 e'60! b being thin,” 102 Othow atates. Tho SIatihr Daro s As for the wholesale slaughier of | outany provisions, ang there was noth our committec found lats of it. The fnsane are A, far I e t properly fod, while in the* workhouso and o fectually shut’ out of Nebrw Those | birds, it has been decided that it isab- | the house for the family fo subsist on ex { Paxton & Vierling | ludusteial Lrn Works tentlury there s plenty for evorybody uck: Wife—~George, T wish you belonged | now operating in the state, with few exce, solutely no use ta cry out further against | few bushels of corn in the ear. 'This IRON WORKS. Manafackaring and rs wigstoner Portor Tt you st u H»‘.' to miy church 1:1- new minister is a man | tions, ure sound and deserve every possible | this inhumar aorifice to' fashion, | shelled by 1 and, @ried 1t In (‘uu stovo oven Wushi and cust iron [pairing of all Kiads of stund that proper food for the hospitals is ab- | yon would like sband—Not such a bi 1¢ agement o e w. hana AR A AR 820F4C & and ground it in the coffee mill, and with the wulld lng work, engluus, | machinery. 714 3. 144 solutely nocossiey, While It does not watter | Gted Mettodist as theother thon, is ot “No, | cesl e . e brover, | Pushion is u Moloch who lives in Vanity | GO0 SHG “thus procured they cooked cor SURELY CURED. b e aayhono 1448 nuch to the I hethe M have {3 ) | esee 8nad iaaking 10 0 At enco 4 p| sat | T o) Mense )l onur read ———— fauch, to tho, tusune whether they have | hg js very broad! ke belioves that Episcor ut 18 thorough exsmination. Securitics | £ 8irs and protestations and entreaty wmush, by which they sustained life during To s Epivon- Please inform your read === M hesident. Birker—Thero s diserlmination | Patians, if they repent, can be saved. should be inquired into, investments investr- | the score of cruelty are vain the storm. The storm commenced Wednes: | ers that 1 Lave o | m|~ remedy 1‘” the PRINTING. | SOAP, . lirection. Last yearyou sent seven Lag prprere gated sud every species of peculation, ' - day evening and lu anday morn above named diseas y its timely use 2 . . tlents to the Middleion syli whleh the | ‘Phere was never a time when so many | duplieity and unequal division of profits | e engagement ofi announ e, M. Tilly wag at that time liviog with | thousands of hopeless cases have been per- | Reed Job Printing | Pags Soap Co, Ity wlist puy for. | In ano gust s ot was | odd and fanciful little bibs and yokes | eliminated Jaltimore of ’\\‘ s Louiso \|‘_-.l.‘. 1ol ) Joh Bweoson, The suow had drified aa | manently hall be glad to send COMPANY Manutaoturers of Union ] SULLR ARG MME i Do H R A Joing and fichus and searfs of lace were used Assoctation Notes. RS T ey KRS 48 QVALAd BOPh WindowA B¢ 5 A% 1 twobott y free to any of your o Buildtng aoap. 113 1 lexory st Commissionevs Porter and Sheohy and | for brightening up plain gowns and |y tho city of St. Louis there are 220 of | ago. Miss Morris Is or way out, their first t as about thei | N Dr. MeDonald admitted that all this was | travsforming a low gown into a high one | these associations, whose invested capital | aod Mrs, Jc B, Morris of No. 207 neighbors above referred to, w ived three seud m press address, | BIR NEY S Gt “.'.‘ ""‘u ires ue, but “Lbey could not stand the pressure | at short notice, exceeds $27,000,000, aud through which more | Frauklin street, Baltimore. wiles distant—uoribwest Tiiystarted | 1. A ow Yorks . e Lelaa il ] 1 i Call on or address with stump for ¢venls + ook, receipts, and aymptom blanks, Rev. Jenkin Lloyd Jones of Chicago, who town by the dam site and issued a glowing prospectus, Photographs of houses yet to be were distributed. But the entervrise descent lumps ave placed at intervals of about 100 feel and divided into two scctions. T'he height of the lamps is such that they handsome us anyiin the state outside the | their hayine fivst reader © nif they will

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