Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 15, 1894, Page 13

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE SUNDAY., APRIL 15, 1894-TWENTY PAGES. 13 OMANA TAX VALUATIONS A ' —T— [ 2 P 3 AN \ ——ie e QI { pateon soromtoni 1o ot e | S (OWeRE DRSS GOCDS fow years the city af Omaha is confronted ! “0 O( 4 (R ! ¢ with unexpected obstfictions to profected i | Maprovements by the! #dden discovery hat | A line of muslin and Plaid dross goods, in its bonded Indebtednoss has reached its char cambric drawers, Scoteh style. They ave tered limitations. Then the public Is treated | trimmed with lace regular 25¢ goods 15¢ A line of plaid and mixed ssand embroldery, never to all sorts of theorkes-and plans for extri that will al- cation from the dilamma sell for less than 75¢, suitings There |s a recognized law of nature that | Monday for....... y ays sell for d5¢ a foundation bult UpoR Tooss sand 1s unsate, | Gowns, made of good hek This 1?.:\” 4 sl L L fovynic JAME A line of eambric and muslin gowns,all new styles in V and round AT a child that will be wntruthful, and no busi GorponN BENNETT ness man or community can feel safe with " ‘-,w‘ ‘u‘” ” B . dishonest employes. ;n“;ut, (o State governments, like national govern- [V “w]‘ i i anizations d e NV L and scientists as woll us Alists agre ¢ A g that & true conclusion cannot be derive a ‘,‘l"" Seimitod with sirable spring novelty, from a false premises. Tho. moral code of | SMbroidery, lace and in cha ble weaves, church and state treat lying and perjury as hemstitching : good Ao vitve vy 24c nses of the highest fature, and repugnant value at $1.00, Mon- Try and match them for every sense of honor. No fathe n trust day at 65¢c Al [l Diagonals and Storm Serge They always sell for Hde, ( prico 39¢ ments, are. o) antial yokes, trimmed with A line of Scoteh Chov- < to the weltare of all. Protection to life, lace iusertion and fots, the latost stylos ivl'n[u'rlv. nd nr..v ,‘T,..‘-ml enjoyment of the fancy ("'ll<il"-;l rdlw, y nd ought to soll for a—— honest fruits of toil, require some form of | never sold for le 3 P v Sei our price..... B ARGy | S g Tt o0 4] - e SPRiN g plAtl vevelves, - exaif eoliciripiivei i | only one complaint, a gentle moan that each | the cost of maintenance of such government h 0 | timo pierced the heart of the mother bent | should be borne equitably and willingly by | 1, (h'irer s \White, Dresses in fine ner. all. What would a community think of any | pratty'destions. ae e, san, o1 H0d Will she a few grapes?' timidly of- | one who, as a member of a business firm, | still hetter 49c . NOTIONS pands-—the Morse price-policy for fered the lady, V«h"' was ?L'.‘«T' up to th would suppress facts relative to earnings or DI'HIWIH.\ m and Chambray 'C P ' U tod 10 time. “I have some in my biket."” falsify the value of assets for the pur ressos, IR , $1.30, S ears' Unscented........100 ¢ of assety for the purpose 94 develops-—the matchless mer- | Cottues Souperirs: aining an . Biue Seal Vaseline ““Thank you, madame,” the workwoman re- | of CEE IR0 would be hooted out of | plied, “she takes only milk, and yet 3 members? Why, he SpflCifll sdlfl 0] vel“ugs ave taken care to bring a little of it."” society g LE 3waet Briar, Spring Flows ER Vibitlng to tho, need o tnfartunates | ““Shai tve we botoro us In our 1ot 8015 | A1l the mow and destrable cone|CANAISING moves on, unequaleds | *e teat tado Fricieh |, And yi for the confidences of others she told her history. She was a Mme. Vincent; she had Bath, Castile, Cocoa, Glyeerine S coits in vellin choice partnership? Every city and county in the ) s are in, making state trying to outdo its neighbor in falsi from ssortment to choose fron aps, choieo hroe victorious, triumphant, lost her husband, the joy of her life, who | ing accounts and assets to vecape its legiti- | at popular prices, Hove was carried off by consumption, Left alone | mate share of the general expense and thus } ties iy veilings are Butter Colored, of them fo with little Rose, who was her passion, she | defraud its associate members the L'Astero und Lu Lunguidoe Hooks and | Binding Ril this done? The first erroneous n on the part of those who s How s step s tak fishly urge an unreliable tax valuation sys had worked night and day at her trade of seamstress In order to bring her up. But months she Fino Dress Stay Darning Cotton Sholl hair pins Wave shell h er doz.. 8¢ ir pins,per . sic 88 came. For fourteen 3 { carried her in her arms, while the child | tem, whereby every ward and district inde- | dozen. e ) Pk Sies ) | became all the more ill and reduced, and | pendently returns its own valuation through | Shell Daggers, each-. (Og \\I A g [I \‘v_‘_ll‘hl'_"l Pins | fell away to nothing. One she, who who frequently are willing tools of | Tha Jatest novelties ar - o R never went o mass, entered a church, | the o Intorests are very large, and | © i oSk BOVCILIES A O IR TFOHE: ; ent, urling Trons....... GOODS. The finest and choicest stock of wash Boods In the city to select from. We men- tion oniy a few of the novelties. They will whom they favor by returning their property isproportionate valuations second step, after the people have been duped into confirming the selection of nd | such assessors by their vote at the polls, is when these men take solemn oath to make and implored the cure of her daughte There she heard a | at | voice, which told her to take her to Lour- | des, where the Holy Virgin would have pi on her. Being acquainted with no one, not knowing even how the pilgrims were 6 spools Coats’ Thread. Velveteon Binding. urged by despair Crescent Comb on salo at.25¢ organized, she had only one idea about the | returns at actual value of all property in TRMDE. Sou 16 Vit Weetheit) . HWIvel atik matter—to work, save up enough money | their district, and then deliberately go about iRGE S I LEols. i i g, for the journey, take a ticket, start with the | and divide the actual value by five, ten, or ams, stripe n gin, hams, serpentine ginghams, sergette, a new st. such other factor that their friends sugj thirty sous she had left and bring with her . material, finest Scotch ginghams, satin i but one bottle of milk for the child, not | “Why, that is all right,”” a large taxpayer thinking even of bringing a piece of bread | tells me. “These vales are just what the Vikibe, 0 auren; chaliiia s’ IFFaROHT aHLE8RE for herself. property will sell for under the hammer; TG 1itasts 5ile N b 1 “What illncss has she, then, the dear | and besides, we would be paying too much “.‘r'_"““““' g0 ‘"“\'“' of colorings In little one?” the lady asked. state taxes if the property were not kept serpentine crepes. Al on speclal salo “Ch madame, it is surely the carreau, but [ down. Monday. the doctors have names for them. At first [ Let us look into this. The pretense that D-] she had only little pains, and she suffered, | the actual value or what property will sell oh, so terribly that it would bring tears to | for under the sheriff’s hammer is one-fifth From the moving train, as the pilgrim l loved and flattered, she showed she took | your Jow the swelling has gone down, | or one-tenth of the ordinary value (the latter i and tie sick, packed together on the hard at pleasure in making this annual jour- | byt there is nothing left of her; her le factor being what Douglas county a y 3 ney, in which she satisfied her inclinations [ are only skin and bone. She is so thin, | claim to use), is preposterous. How By benches in the third class rlage, were Ll : ¢ atio) ry dlv 0 ']n S and her heart. and she is sing away from constant | assessor on any such theory divide the ¢ d finishing the Ave Mari Stella, which they “You are right, Sister. We will arrange | sweats.” money in our banks, bank stocks worth had just struck up when the train was leav- | things. I do not know why I bother myself | ~Then, as Rose had moaned on opening her [ per cent of their face value, by one-tenth? with this bag. eyelids, tho mother, all excited and turning [ Can the assessor under oath say that of dollars in our ing Orleans station, Marie, half reclining on her bed of misery and tormented by a fever of impatience, perceived the fortification. “Ah, the fortific she exclaimed In a Joyous tone. We are off at las Opposite her her father, M. de Guersaint, smiled at her Joy, while Abbe Plerre Fro- ment, who was looking at her with an ex- pression of brotherly tenderness, forgot him- #elf, in his pitiful anxiety, so far as to say in a loud tone: “Here we are till tomorrow morning. We will not be at Lourdes till 3:40. More than twenty-two hours on the journey. It was half-past five, the sun had just risen, radiant in the purity of an admirable morn- ing. It was Friday, August 19. But al- eady small, dark clouds on the horizon gave promise of a terrible day of Intense heat; and the oblique rays threaded the compartments of the railway carrlage, which they filled with a dust of dancing gold. Marle, In her anguish, had fallen back and murmured: “Yes, twenty-two hours. My God! how long 1t Is yet! And her father assisted her to lie down again in the narrow box, a kind of trough, in which she had lived for seven years. The rallroad officials had made an exception and ad agreed to take as baggage the two pairs of wheels, which could be taken on and off, and so arranged that she might be given ion “‘Here we are outside of Paris; an alring. Thus squeezed Setween the sides of that cofin on wheels she occu- pled three seats on the bench. There she lay an instant, eyelids closed, her face thinned and cadaverous, endowed with a delicate childhood in spite of her 23 years, And she put it near her, under the seat. “Walt a moment,” replied Sister H cinthe. “You have the water jug to take care of. It inconveniences you.'* “Why, no, I assure you. Let it stay there. It must’ be ‘somewhere.’ Then both arranged, as they said, their household in order to live there as com- fortably as possible a day and night with their patients. Their only trouble was that they were mot able to take Marie into their compartment as she wished to remain with Plerre and her father, but over the low partition they could easily communicate and be neigh- borly with each other. And, besides, in the whole car, the five compartments of ten seats each formed but one company, like a moving hall, used by all, over which the eye swept with a look. It was, between the bare and yellow wainscoting of the partitions, under the white painted ceiling, a veritable hospital ward, in the disorder ,and pell mell of an improvised ambulance. Half hidden under the bench, pots, basins, brushes, brooms and sponges were strewn about. And since the train did not take baggage, packages were heaped together here and there—valises, whitewood boxes, pastboard hat boxes and bags, a lamentable pile of poor, worn out things, mended with cord—and even the alr was encumbered, for clothing, packages and an incurable grief in her heart. of France and pale, bent over her. “My jewel, my treasure, Do you wish a drink? But already the little girl, whose dreamy ves, the color of overcast blue clouds, had what ails you? e just been seen, closed them, and she did not even answer, fallen back in her state of prostration, all white in her white robe, a final coquetry of the mother, who had gone to that useless expense in the hope that the Virgin would be kinder to a little sick one that was well dressed and all white. At the end of a spell of silence Vincent renewed the conversation. “And you, madame, it is for yourself that you are going to Lourdes? It is easily scen that you are_ill.” But the lady, Mme. ith a look all aghast, drew back sorrowfully in her corner, murmuring, I am not ill. Would to God that I would suffer less.” Maze and she had After hav- ing married for love a jovial fellow she had seen herself abandoned in the freshness “No, no. 1 were ill. Her name was Mme. of her youth, at the end of the year's honey- Always on the road, traveling for a moon. jewelry firm, her husband, who earned a great deal of money, had dis- appeared for six months at a time, misleading her from one frontier to another even took with him sev- eral of his companions in vice. And she the value of the million banks will sell for only one-tenth of their amount? Will any asscssor claim that the city water works which are paying over € per cent on a value of over $7,000,000 are not worth as much as the net earnings of one year? Now, let us see as to the other claim. Do we keep down our share of state taxes? The very proposition contempiates cheating the state, In other words, it is proposed that Douglas county, one of the members of the state organization, shall by fraudulent re- turns escape its share of the partnership ex- pense. The attempt, unpatriotic in its na- ture, infamous in its moral aspect, s by the light of investigation a lamentable failure, for following the example of the oldest and most populous county, the other counties have each joined in the swindling business, and universal perjury and falsification has followed. The state government as a consequence, instead of accepting these returns as made, winks at the deceptign, but for self-protec- tion steps in and, affer ascertaining the Iying capucity of each county (like a parent who takes the statements of erring children for what they are worth) acts on its own judgment by fixing a different rate of tax upon each county so as to equalize all the lies and place them on-a common baslis. Thus in 1891 sixtesn counties were taxed at a rate of 6% mills, twenty-one counties at 6 28 mills, one at 6% mills, nine at 6 6-8 mills, fifteen at 6% mills, ten at 7 mills, fourteen at 7l mills, and two at 7 2-8 mills on the dollar. In 1892 the rates were as follows: Fifteen at §% mills, twenty-threc at 6 2-8 mill, three at 6% mills, seven at 6 6-8 mills, seventeen at 67 mills, eight at 7 mills, fifteen at 73% mills, and two at 7% mills. The rates for 1893 have not yet been published, but I am informed that Madison county, which placed its valuation on an honest basis, is taxed only 1 mill, while the other counties are taxed at from six to seven times that nor did we ever many factory cost we pi of them, B8 Jackels §0.98 We will put on sale Monday morning 100 sample Jackets, only one or two of a kind. They are made in the latest possible styles in fancy mixtures, kersey ard clay diagonals, etc, some trimmed with Morie silk, others with braid in brown, tans, navy and black. You cannot match one of them for less than $15.00 to $18.00, Monday, pick at $9.98, Boys' Clothing |tLous This scason we are making a special cffort to clothe the boys. lemps in_one , Our Suits Suit Them. et s Missad! Husig[y OUR SUITS SUIT THE PARENTS' PURSE. Ladies' Children's and Every and a fit pos All wool cape two top e would be 1 for a car load We'll have an- eady Mon- at the owing prices. and| Ladies' fast black we'll gell them all, t00. |seamless hose, 12c. double the price of Ladies’ fast black, $1.98, Also, good w - SUITS FOR MONDAY. garment a re- cent style, a stylish fit, sslon cheap) bargains BUY Before Broken. with boot pattern, 15 Ladies' tan colored and seamless, 18 Ladies' extra fine charming even, in the midst of her marvel- g lous blond hair—hair of a sheen that sick- T us the deception concelved in fraud $2.28,3.98, 4.48, $4.98. neayiseapecied gAltired Syervgaimplyfiitds proves to be a self-delusion. But this false +£0, 0.90, 1.10, 1. thin black woolon dress, the hos- System of valuation does not alone imply e Tast. Diack. hose LD pital card with her name and num- dishonest n\(‘llmfl:ll. hmc::mgz;nx:‘ocl‘llml;vlfi: cholce from a largelinel .|‘,,u,,§‘.l 1"” “:,,, toe, 250, :;u'.‘“m.wm]x mulorml; car;‘;:nls', 3 or loose practices of vase lamps, large|Boys' bleyele hos vy 4 o sleeves and urtains. :;r ho: l" l;m“z R Zfl.‘?[.g and ‘;n utter disregard of public | burners, h'rm:nls oil ....‘,\:;ql seamless, fast black, full skirts, Monday, un-| co've", 6 ha herse exacted that humility, oaths which has scarcely a limit to its per- | they are good value atllc til sold Al remnants of car- _ not wishing besides to be any cxpense to Ricious influence. One lie always requires | $00- s g gy E R G #* her people, who had gradually become very a dozen followers to explain it away, and also tan colored, 18¢ $4.48. folls 0k par AN o S poor. And it was thus that she came to be 8 few acoreimors {0 explain the explana- Also, good values at|MOndOY at “there 1n a third class car in the white train ' eyond the damage inflicted on a city by 936 yard —the train for those who were very ill—the depriving 1t of the right to issuc bonds for J $7.48, $8.98, §! ; saddest of the fourteen trains that went to improvements, even when all the people iS008, S0.081 | oo s Lourdes that day, on which were packed to- desire them, it places the city in a false | Firty o Ny Child's at $10.00, now light. and. every year requires special ex- in high ¢ ladles Reefor Jnckots { $4.50 0 pair. vase lan the special ratio of AT gether among 500 able-bodied pilgrims planations to follow A nearly 300 poor wretclies exhausted by weak- D ationn that: may/ibe: decideadion; Fur=, |Loauliils [ealo xlinige ther than this, a comparison of relative | can't be bought $1.50. {one 10t of 64 table cov- . ers that sell for $1.75 for ness, bent with suffering and carted at full speed from one end of France to the other. Sorry at having saddened her, Plerre con- Also, good values at 5298 & §4.48. progress with respect to other cities or with respect to itself in various years becomes difficult and impracticable. ; Omaha's assessed valuation was 9ic. Only one to a cus- tinued to look at her with the gaze of an In 1869 eldest brother moved to tenderness. Ho $13,000,000. We then had only a village B t l Waists tomer. of 16,000 population, an incorporated area aflque amps s Jow nriosa oy Monday at A lot of miscellaneous was just thirty years old, pale, thin, with of eight and one-half square miles, not a dies' summer ribbed \ Ox6 feet, were § o £9°86'c$—ulelde a 2YL—1VIO3dS ¥NO i a large forehead. After having busied y o smallest dets mile of sewer, no water works, no gas Logles. iaummer. ¢ihbed himself with the smallest details of the Works, no electric light works, but one $2. 190t % 88c, 48c, 50c, T3¢ 9 and §7, your choice Journey, he wished to accompany her, rallway line, one national bank, no brick 10c. ol $1.28 {for i and he had himself received as an blocks, no postoffice building, a mere shell nx'\|,::f'.'.§’.-mn'f'...‘i".‘f..}'.:"'h-udi--»" ribbed yeats, ol o soust house, no bricks hotels, scarcely | o€ blsque. handpainted|adtes ribbed veats Silk Waists $5.00 eacn. ] | ssoo |Underwear, ' auxiliary member of the Hospitalite de v 1 few graded r i Notre Dame de Sault. He wore upon his a factory, ‘nlfl“ um;i\nru:l q:::‘”"t v’;' 5!:):(("*_ brass Yt:j‘lvl““:;?:’ brasy sell for 20¢, for L Is made of all wool | A very fine all wool Al oxira values for] An 04 ot of Tace cur cassock the red cross, embroidered with slresta; 400 3ok e time the. clty has ex- | fancy color oo cotton |material with |suit made with | Koy A AR teas s orango, of the stretcher bearers. M. de pended over $7,000.000 on improvements, | Nt SHE [0S pitacenuisedjaquble seauliand (dounleiiscati (ands | STATESA 0N S STARE aavis: Guersaint had pinned on his gray jacket franchised corporations have put in $10,- knees and war- | knees. Warranted v gray PO : 213 we sell so|Laates’ - knit drawers, | ranted not to rip. | not to rip. It not (nd §8.48. 250, R B Eraantar e b (IRrirs ROk I 000,000, nine railway companies have bullt | Never aid we sl sofladies kntt drawers @ . p. | not to rip nof .40 X lines here, over $5,000,000 have been put f FECl BER (! o ae, tor ko, *0¢ #e!! | If not satisfactory | satisfactory you EMILE ZOLA. appeared delighted to travel, his eyes look- & you get another, get another. s, a dozen banks into brick and stone bl busines estabiished adored him, she suffered so dreadfully over (Y ing out of the windows, and he did not seem | baskets that were hanging from copper have built up an 3 ! to be able to keep from bobbing about his | hooks swung from side to side un- | it that she gave herself up completely to | wholesale houses of every kind have been Extra value for Monduy In NI S10] ! amiable, bird-liko head, which looked very | ceasingly, 'In the midst of that rag religion, In fact, #he bad just declded o | established here machine shops and fac- pants. such as you puy 3100 a_palr tordJC 3 air, he desperately , stretched | 80 to Lourdes in order to supplicate the | tories of eve sort have located their 4 I 00 styles ’l‘l"“n’&'(‘)‘" and bright, though he had passed |.on tneir narrow mattrosses, which occupiod | Virgin o convert her husband and give | plants hore, 120,000 more people have come, b} Eé"" e RN o year. several seats, moved back and forth, racked | him back to her. 000 new residences have been built, rep: $2.58 B Monuny yone chotcs 4558 But In the next compartment, notwith- | by the rumbling joits of the wheels, while | Mme. Vincent, without comprehending, | resenting alone vver $30,000,000, an area of P [ % [] standing the violent swaying, which drew | those who were able to sit up leaned their | felt, nevertheless, that the misfortune of | sixten square miles has been added to the o Maluia, _yanue groans from Marle, Sister Hyacinthe had | PACKS against the partitions, supporting Mme. Maze was a great moral grief, and | original eight and one-half square miles— Y themselves by pillows, with pallid faces. [ both continued to gaze at each other—the | we announce to the world through the rn statements of assessors that the Hfum-l up. She noticed that the young girl | According to regulations, there should have | abandoned woman who was suffering agony | sw was in the full glare of the sun. been a nurse in each compartment. At | In her passion, and the mother who was | actual valuation of all property in the new ““Abbe, draw the blind down—let me sce, | the other end there was a second sister | dying at seeing her child die. enlarged Omaha is only worth $7,000,000 let me see! We must settle ourselves and | Of the Assumption, Sister Claire des Ange (TO BE CONTINUED NEXT SUNDAY.) | more than old Omala was with one-third Two able-bodied pilgrims were standing up L SE of the arca and onestenth of the population Plaid dress goods, in Seoteh styles. they are re 2 goods. ... Furnishing Kid Gloves, arrange our little household. o FRARS far i -|l-m1h . and were already eating and drinking, | BANK OF ENGLAND ODDITI in_1569. he black robe of a Sister of the As- | Indeed, at the end of the train there ES | “\What a grand farge! Shame on such stu- ’ sumption, relieved by the white hood, the | was an entire compartment of women AT T e pendous perjury and'lying! And what for? A line of plaid and mixe white veil and the white apron, Sister | tew pilgrims, pressod closely one against the ar o:" ,-' hich In u(h:.nNulnlnru.‘i,()l)ll»' Ostensibly to rob the te; In reality to ings that always sell for #ie Hyacinthe #miled with a courageous | OtheT. some young, some old, and all of the i the Au t Written in fnk. rob and cripple ourselves. Contrast the sl Troed A L courageous | G pitiable and repulsive’ ugliness. And Among (he curlosities which are occasion- | effect of an honest, yaluation that would Selivity, i Har youl nes igly [ g5 no one dared to lower the windows, on | ally shown to favored visitors are somo | Place our aggregate 'tix rate at % of 1 per This lot | sl Auparont o "“,d A ||:‘4r|r||| I“l’"l tresh, | acount of the consumptives who Were in’ the | specimens of ancient notes, a number of | CONt instead of at 7 that would require no : : 7 iis Lot '.“.,u- ne “.|‘,' sirable sl mouth andlin. tha depths of her beauti- | party, it began to grow warm, and the heat | tjom for denominations no longer in vogue, | SXPlanations or apologies, no excuse for dis Just one lot of fine Kid gloves that spring novelty, in changeable ?4:0 f ©8, which were always tender. She [ and ~the unsupportable odor which arose i B £16 i + | hone: turns of pgesonal property, such e weaves, at e | Jamy s Jorhaps, protty, but adorable, re- | seemed to lovsen tho folts of the road as the | FINN 48 {6 and (25, Thero s also care- | ws cash assels, and ho dissppointments In [ Seamless hose, threo pairs for 250, Try and mateh thom for ed, classic, with the chest of a boy, under | train sped on at full spe ully preserved the oldest surviving note, | Hmitations to public* improvements when All linen collars, t or 2 I i . @19 o llln;r"hu“‘lv:“. \ 'q‘:xl;-:.x“.r‘ a Iln;:y boy, \\:n:. At Juvissy the beads were sald. At 6 | one of the year 1699, the amount being writ- nlw‘l.\mml l;y lllul people at thoe .,’J“M box. ?::]lxlyu:nn;\ mlrlvln.;\:x;[:-mh for 20c. cost to import, certainly $12 a doz. 0 2 complexion, overflowing with | o'clock the train passed flying the station at | ten with ink, s S maniar e As stated at the putset, a truth can not Fine teck silk scarfs, 16c. 5 = A i g b he '\‘\v';““““ and junocence. Bretigny, when Sister Hyacinthe got up from | Another curlosity e l:u‘lll:l (\:;"u,‘,:;w'u]fi:‘:{. t upon a lle, nor gan what Is founded on | NoglIKeo ARLriA the prioe. has-besn $1.50 to Your choice for Monday, of tans, | Diagonals and Storm S beg op¥s It devours us already, that sun! T | her seat. It was she who directed the exer- | which was required for some transaction develop any other than fraudulent | $2.00 Monday price for your pick $1.00. I'hey always sell for 39 do Jam Iu tho cornor near thoe wister Mme, | greater part of the pilgrims followed from | in this case, 00, tho amount is written 'With | oquilise hssebsment dy? An honest and A YRRIDGY. T8 Sp Manasy Al B0, F knoes. She slowly lot down the biind. OF desk | my shldrens ahe AT R SRR pen. oo longest time during which a | can this be done?,,. Not Sirousn’ s fow | Monday three pairs for 5oc. i complexion and large and vigorews ook | I O et “hor axtrome youth rony oote has remained outside the bank i 111 | dogen incompetents ‘Who can' scarcely add | Fine balbriggan underwear, such as you A line of Scotch Choviots, th . ance, she was still comely, though st b e o e Joars. o M was for £25, and it Is computed | (o figures together, but through a central | pay S0 a garment, for 23c H 1 8Ly i NI e WAL omely, though she had | dered so charming and sweet, that the compound interest during that long | pur. P H S fy I3 T ST P TR T Y atest styles and ought to 49 da or « aymonde, whom she Again the aves were heard. And as they | period amounted to no less than 00, 4 with a sufislent corps of assistants i RO 20 _UNGREWRAT, sell for ibe; our price.. -, o c had made, as & matter of propriety, go | were ended; Plerre and Marle Interested | There is quite a labyrinth of vaults where | [0 CAnYsS systematically e part of the | sells for $1.00, Monday 76e. L lnto w frsi class carrlago Wi two cliarit- | themsclyes I two women. who ocou. | the disuscd notes are’stored until they have oity yader intelligent (direotion. o ladles, Mmes. Disagneaux and Volmar. | pled the two other corners of | reached the necessary maturity ¢ ve years. Irds ¢ o—— 8he, who Was herselt directress of a ward | thelr compartment. The one Who was.| They are eatimated (o “,f,,,’f,f‘_‘(:“?‘,“:l* i Birds that Oan Sew. L o in the hospfal of Our Lady of Sorrows at | sitting at Marie's fe as a thin blonde, | and number about T filling 13,400 | , SeWIng seems so lngenlous an art that it Loudes, did not leave her patlents, for | having the appear: of a person of | bo and were of the original value of | MUSt D€ reserved for the human specles outside’ on the door of the compartment | the middle class, between 80 and 40 years of | £1 0. The Bank of England note | fon¢: ~Yet the tallor bird, the Orthotomus hung a card of regulations, on which wore | age, and faded before her time. She kept | is'a legal tender for any amount in excess of | OPEICauda, and other specics possess the ele- written below her own name those of the | herself in the background. She was quite | its face value, but not for less. Thus a per- | N¢PtS Of it They place their nests in a :“;:I ;w X ni‘» \uzummmn’ who accom- nmfnim.uu \\‘Illh her sombre dress, discol- | son might refuse to take a £5 note in pay '\"ff;; l[\y‘]«'"“"r‘vh tlln;v' |rr\wrv to this end. anted her. ol a widow by a|ored hair, and her long, sorrowful face, | ment of a debt of £419s 6d, the olr - b ey plerce two rows of | Parvades r stor The se area rading is he. The s ) ople k p ruined husband, living plainly with her | which told of a complete forlornness, an infi- | matter of fact, nobody \\..T.:.| I::-“;'.(.“'m::?mi: » Mang the twe of the leal; they Pervades our store. The impulse of great u'””lm;.’ ls -I“'m' The store people know that the daughte on an income of from | nite sadness. Opposite her ehe other, who | as to do so. It must be remembered that | \N¢" Pass a stout thread from one side to stocks are vast, u‘«')'““d compare the prices are right—must be none but the lowest tolera- 4,000 to 5,000 francs a year, in a rear apart- | was on the same bench as Plerre, a work | bank notes are only legal tender as between | L1¢, Other alternately. With this leaf, at it » ment In the Rue Vaneau, she was inex- | woman of the same age, in black cap, her | members of the public, so long as the bank | Dot fat. they form a horn in which they ted here, . haustible in her charity. ‘She gave all her | countenanced ravaged by misery and anxiety, | pays in gold on demand. It such an unlikely | Noave thelr nest with cotton or halr. = Thea time to the work of the Refuge Notre Dame | held on her knees a little child of 7 years, | thing were to happen as the bank being un. | LAPOFS Of weaving and sewing are precede do Salut, whose cross she also wore on her | 50 pale diminutive that she appeared to | able to redeem its promises to pay, then its | DY, R Spinning of the thread bied ’ Carmelite dress of poplin and of which she | be se y 4. With pinched nose, and eye- s would at once cease to be legal tender ?l”l";":' A ihelh by baiating B 8. aak plders’ webs, bits of cotton and little ent Even as It is their legal tender qualities do 1ids, that had become blue, closed on its wax not extend to Ireland or Scotland, face, the child could not speak, and she had was one of the most active zealots. Of a of wool. Sykes found that the threads used for swing were knotted at the ends. Sixteenth and Farnam Streets, Omaha, Neb. somoewhat proud temperament, liking to be

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