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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, APRIL 15 18)4-TWENTY PAGES FIJ RN ITU EX = LARPL fSand DRAPLR[I I A S AN E IS N @S S SLASHING PRICES. orth Now | Worth Now | Worth Now Worth Now W 5 8 | Bamboo Tables..... $2008% Leather Dinersl $60082 Ingrain Carpets.......$ 40 $ 17 | Odd Laco Curtains....$ Vorth Now 0§ 125 & Butle) Trays vw. 800 3 Reed Rockers....... 50 ot ) LA Remnants, Ingrain.... 24 | Chenille Covers 00 % Tapestry Rockers..... 660 246 Cha t 10 00 20 Remnants Linoleum 38 [ Chenille Portieret Office Stools + 160 5 Child's Folding Beds.. 10 00 Remnants, Brussels. . i 18 | 0dd Lace Curtains 400 190 50 2 90 Book 9 5 er Su 50 00 27 Remnants Ofl Cloth., Chenille P ! Body Bruss:ls ¥ Chenillo P Toilet C : 0 ad ; 140 f Moauette Dotted Swiss Cheff r Lawn Cha Via 4 Book 9 sh & 05 § Mitre Rugs......... [ Sash Draperies 290 ¥ Ingrain Ry an Chenille Draperies Lawn Rock 5 Kitchen C it Erussels Rug v Snowflake Curtain Lawn S S 2 Plush Footstools Reed High Chairs China Closots, ... 5 2 Antique 3 ey Remnants Moquette. Silk Plush AFrriohals 2 Folding Chairs....... Baby Carriages....... b 0 Moguette Rugs 3 Lace Curtains Child's Rock 8 Ve o/ Chairs e 5 Baby Carriages . 4 Japanese Rugs . ce Curtains . Musie Cabine 5 5 a Chal 2 5 Baby Carriage 5 b Daghestan Rugs...... 26 | Frish Point Curtaing., Ladies’ Desk Steel Engravings..... 0 Extenslon Tables 3 Hemp glarpets Window Sha Brass Beds 50 | Plctures 3 tension Tables 10 00 5 Fur R TR Tovy i g Shade’ Roller Brass Parlor Table ol Rings i Folding Beds......... 40 00 22 f Hammocks. ¥ Bed Sets Bamboo Cabinets..... Wall Cabnets ¥ Folding Beds v + 15 00 O tomans. . ceesneee § Lambrequins At Medicine Cabinets.. ... Folding Beds i Brussels Carpets...... 1 6-4 Tapestry Covers Wall Pockots H Lunch Baskets....... Misfit In; . 4 Chenille Loops y Fiat | ¢ Duffets R Misfit Brussels........ LA v P e 15 00 Darlor O & 3 350 Clock Shelves Sham Hold W Door Mats...... Curtain Poles......... 05 @ | onye T rea Cheval Mirrors....... Kt |“" Safes. . o Ingrains . Sham Holders ! 23 i or this beautiful parlor rockersolid Work v i Pedestal v Sidehoards T tair GE, DraterPIng. Ao 3 o ok $3-8 .’;.u Diano polish_ Ko the now fash , Work Boxes. . { 5 Reception € VeV 75 Wardrobes g g Matting...... m-l Sockets ! y ",f $29 UL ULUDEC SR LS fon leather cobblcr teits: v duecd (rom #10.00. refary Bookeases 5 Hall Trees..... el Blacking (. 5 Art Squar 15 | Stair Buttons. ... 5oz | phish e Ead i 8 B0 ] s recolved AL ey Lony B Pce Ay . only | Gl Drass Basc Center 1 5 o Curtains. ... e T Stalr Rods. i 25 10 Monduyand onsiay oniv i be fiied STIVERWARE | STOVES o IPARLUHFUHNITUHE [T % wper Bottom Wash Botlers, former price y t ook only Dish Pans, former price nly This Week Former This Week Slashing Prices. Teakettles, former pric G i his week onl Only Price Only ird Cages, former pric 1y Prays s Gasoline Stove .52 T 1 s formor pr niy e O 3 > Faney Cup and Saucer, former price. ¥ ek only ilver-Plated Pin Trays Gasoline Stove ¢ 5 Yoy . 5.00 Prinwed 2 - g0 s e R Silver-Plated Pickle Dishe wsoline Ovens ST O g L) Moquette Couches. . .... RS 4 Lio "Tins, former price.” iy llver-Plated Cake Basket SUSSLERANBCR B S 4000 e\ CotioHeaty : o g Dinner Sets, formor price ; K oty {iver-Plated Butter Dishes 4-Hole Ranges.......... o\ 12,60 541 Plush’ Divans o fas Dinner Chudi X B thid Wi oy i : ; - L 2 Al g = AL 2 Hall m) former price. 5,00, this week only e Tea Ses. S s v-Hole Ranges. ¥ ik piece Parlor’ §iits)] e 23 IR O L AALE, ver. price 10.00, this week only Carving 5 . ot Laundry Stoves.. R 3 Corner Chairs.... SRR Banquet Lamps, - formet. price 2 /00, this Wik only Siives Plated it Knive Tt 10 oIl Heaters Larlor, Suits > e Slop Jars, formier price ) this week onl Eiver-pi I OlL" Stoves.ioicss . Bluah BATIh Chals i siiis: NI R BaLay forer . R s 00, Laln week only ilver-Plated $nives, per set.... Nt i Ol Stoves ) St Plush Reception Cl k et tormer i s we Silver-Plated Forks, per set ; Stove PIpe.ssesss Sl ; Single Loun ; R . ) o i " B Walnut_Clock g Craliee : S Lounges S ] X rmer et {111 o i Alarm Clocks v i Soveis = 500 odd picees of Parlor Farnitute reduced to half former price...0 5 this Bibh Work ok i e i Deninsuinr, Hanes.. /0 : price to close. This lot consists of Parlor Suits, Divans, T R R Plush Cuft Boxes.. BRI i Gasoline Stove : ouches, Plush and Tapestry Chairs and Rockers, &c. S s RS L e N s e S i o, - TERWS W[ [:[]NTH["_ e A 4l | Presents to Purchasers Y Enoraois Business, S omallSErodls Catalogue malled free, ORGUD No Interest Charsed. Cash or Easy Payments, e iy SRt RS mm l‘n:!h purchaso u” rorover 3”;;".:'. ‘w. P tl‘.n.u‘ ‘.”. \n,..u.‘l.v,\y.u rican eities. rt per w e We pay freight 100 miles, oxcenting on goots | With each usciiis of £ 0r over Yo recoivo i BORIone of i Worti e Tuir, con- Satisfactin Guarantexd. Complaiats Heard. worth of goods, $2.50 per week or $10 per el 8 rtised at speclal rates. Car Fare Pald 10 taining 217 photd phs, t A oW, nn1olding el i b Ay 3 o Al With each purchise of £ or over you sive an Tmported Bisque Orname; n ivepiay T | N (i 840100 e werlcon 1300 par. e ol 13 il one way'on Al purcies of §0 o over “'7,;:. ',.,I;;;,,,‘ ,;:%:,;:,l...’,ff.\.,,‘-;.,.. Ve i 1,.2.;."[}' i Ot RLE s Prompt Deiiveries. No Troudle to Show Goxds. r Far d both ways, 100 mi o) pur pac! ‘chise o! 0)or over you receiv, solid ¢ « . I anine (42 avparn dave anl o (lavs s, $1.00 per weelk or $15.00 pr Noveity Ol Heatirs, chasen of $200 oF over. 1€ you live over 100 miles e PSR A s i Wo close evenings at 6:8) oxeepl Mondays anl Satur days, nts on larger purchases, Featherstone. | a we pry our proportic worth of goods, $1.50 per week or $6.00 per. - Formerly the People’s Mammoth Ins '(')(11111’1(_,!’113 Ry < ! a ; ; resist the attempt to eject them from the n N AN ccunt s shing - ca, ore s another live news | ried down to the main deck. 1T shall never | the light and take the place of windows. ’“lh (.'R \\D [\R“\ 014 I \B“R it 0 o LAY whr Hb R e s methods, and these people, who have a civi- | morning after this cold snap. The sun rose | of these Japanese homes, and the people rely second reduction of 10 per cent. At the present time big cotton factories | lization about 400 years behind that of the | and painted the ice-clad ship with diamonds. on the warmtlt of thelr blood and a liitle box [h'rr:»n.\x;l‘:.'r-\ln|l.|:;l:uhs:::| Antonio have won have been establishes s e ce China of today, may yet outstrip them in | Every rope sparkled with a thousand pris- | of charcoal to keep them from freezing. g ¥ : : eir fight for o our: A Notablo V Through § 18 bayerd \'-‘ml({ni.}1[-,’4‘:‘(»'}1"{:1 st n(,"g T am | clyilization, . The, king_ and his queen “and | uiatio Huss and. the mastaPwere! ereat! nolea’| They: hover over this, warming their hands | Working Girls Assembly Expeots to Doubls | "o huitaing trades in Chicago are having HAIE VLR T e A G R L guns as good as | the thousand odd eunuchs of the palace | of precious stones. There was a fierce wind | and sit on their feet. They believe if they Tts Membership in o Year, trouble with the contractors. from America to Asia. those turned out by our government works, | now conduct all the business under the rays [ blowing and as the sun came up the fce | can Keep the extremities warm the rest of S 1% N000 UL Donvek Huve aocoptaa and the question of railroads is being | of the clectric light, and I understand there | melted and the sailors chopped it from tie | the body will take care of itself. They look, 0 oHENtD! 24 Weir tar e sitated by some e most progressive | is an American employed to build an elec- | hurricane deck and swept it away into the | nevertheless, healthy and happy, and it may The unfon carpenters of Galvesto ? I A 3 (e T e || S P 1 i AT s et T'took snap shot of them as we rose | bo that they are right. FULL TREASURY USED FOR GOOD PURPOSES | "o infon carpenters of Galveston tave men of the empire It may take generations jAPAN WHEN THE GROUND IS WHITE to bring the country to the state that Japan influence exists here as well as in | and fell in the ers and it almost freezes q Savarall e D e e T A a4 U teT e of the aluminum tip on the top of it. s already reached or ho revolution pre- | Cliina, but the people are more kindly, ad | mo in the remembrance as 1 look at It ST T i L ELUES (S (T cipitated by a war may come with a rush. | I hope that such arrangements can be made TR AR, st L S e B O ! ! g y A Daro Legged, Bare Chested Nation on | Siit"now both Japan and. China are torn | as to enable me to &0 Hight across the King : DRRAZE AT i Workingmen Muy, Bu SEDpaten e _ Minnesota unions are opposing the estab- SUlts—The New World of the Far East— [ with dissensions on the subject. There are | dom from one side to the other. It will | We came into the harbor here, however, > the Platte River Canal Enterprise, to o | 1ishing of a shoe factory in the state prison, How tia ROl nTa AT lOhA eI strong anti-foreign elements and an Ameri- | take several mule loads of money to pay my | with the sun shining. We got a splendid KELIGIOU. Taid in Labor—Notes from th avel roofers at Chicago won a strike S0P 0B, s ging i buyer for a big New York silk firm told | expenses on this trip, for the only coin in | view of Fugiyami, whose snow-clad beauty 7 World of Toil. st a cut from 35 cents to 30. cents an —Thelr Hatred of Forelgners. me this morning that he did not think it | circulation is the copper cash, and twenty- | rose 12,000 feet out of the sea through opal- | ‘o cpiician ehureh has one preacher in hour. < safe for him to travel over the country | five of our dollars in this would weigh at | escent clouds, and rode in sampans to the | ,ihe ChIsan chureh hat one preac! Loulavilie! union men will' mot attena while the elections are taking place. The | least 300 pounds. CRUICH (0 BlEC) ULV ERDIGERILEL 197 (IO S s e 0 03 0 (it R (o ez T theaters where nonunion musicians are ein-? (Copyrighted, 1594, by Fi Q. Carpenter.) bulk of the people of China are against the Irom Korea I may go to Siberfa and give { queer sights of Japan in winter. We saw population are Protestant Christian; 20 per The local working girls asembly gave a | ployed. YOKOHAMA, Japan, March 25.—(Special | foreigners and anti-forcign sentiment in- | & letter on the trans-Siberia railroad from heieleh \‘,"’d“““f;: rushing alon },‘,‘f; Biroet® | cent are non-Protostant Christian, and 72 | very entertaining ball last Wednesday even- | A Yonkers Iron firm which eut wages arisanondecelifot o fneal) = Underitnel|(oEaaNea Al Aus R Lisrati ot thedempiro il torminus Viad iyostook Sl mavilss Ly foniherwooden islogs, witugontyy hery belehitileree s e o o s iana Bagans: Ing and Increased the already splendid rep- | 10 por cent has voluntarily returned to the see the possibility of a revolution and they | direct for Japan and visii the Alaskn of | eves showing out of the well-wrapped face, | PEF cent arc Mobammedans and Pagans. | = . Q) e shiadow ot the snow-cladl mountain, Fugl- [ are isseminating all sorts of reporta‘aa. ty | that country, wheré ave the Kairy Afnos, | for sll the world like the velled maidens of wark 1 done In niiotegn countrivs, the gos. | UAUOR of this popular orgamlsucion for | OMGsese oG yami! In the heart of flowery Japan when | the wickedn:ss of the missionaries and of | Who worship’ bears and keep themselves, as | Egypt, and we saw her poorer sister caught pel preached in more than thirty languages, | B1Ving good dances. has ordered a general strike to commenco. the snow Is on the ground! In the land | the other: wred-oaded,” bluc-eyed forcign | far as possible, drunk from ono year's end | by the wind at a cortorsand hory Rl e 000 st anaheso] | LT lassersibiys afoctpaat izoaymiea) el | Aoz L0 ; of the rising sun with the sun left out! | 9evils," as they call us.’ Out in the country | to the other. My tour will be an out-of-way | brella torn from her ha ¥ storm; [ 20¢iaL an av having been organized in January, 1891 [ A Chicago liquor dealers assoclation has 4 districts about this place e oftel 1 | one from beginning to end, and I hope I | while she bent over and tried to keep her | $2. = h ! Surrounded by a bare-necked, bare-chested | (1o words ot Jaan 2 (\\'II(-I':u;fy n.h'-'”:':.f:fv: shall find much that is new and unwritten. | kimona from blowing up above her bare | ~The next general assembly of the Presby- | Since its organization there have bewa many | decided te patronize union made clgars exe b 4 o - | terian church (no cet in the First | cponsog e i clusively. and almost bare-legged nation on stilts, I | tells me mean “hairy barbarian” hurled at 5 ’ 5 knees, We Americans would freeze in Jap- | terian church (north) will mec changes in the membership, and al ot y AlTYer din/imy, ovorcont! as Tivrite: tons thol|lnes dna it the htrasth i ot that Ghndos AYELONTING OITY, anese dress, The common people of both | Presbyterian church, Saratoga, N. Y. | o foner working girls are now married | The Knights of Labor at ‘Albany have homes of the base burner and the furna cities I shall probably have to pocket many The trip from Vancouver to Japan was | sexes wear neither drawers nor undercloth- | Thursday, May 17, 1894, The open’ng sermo asked the park commissioners to employ Willis G. | and have ceased to be active members, e s taey ssetny an insult to avoid trouble. In Japan, where This organt va . PORSCD LISR QR A K WREK UDORS tiis purie. v Bl 3 i b s organization was founded ny ‘he hard Withintthe wakt thres weeku Iihave traveili iy DRt iasiye Slermant 16 in tho. by bomaan e & Wheeling unions are opposed to the con- cled 8,000 miles and have now mnearly | and I have special letters from the govers reached the other side of the globe. I am | ment, it is comparatively safe, and I shall on my way to Interior China, and a month | return here and make an extended tour in later 1 will be in the very center of the | (M€ MOSt out-of-the-way parts of the country. great Chinese empire. 1 have come to the INGTHEHEGRTIOR. CHINA, far east to tell you of the wonderful more like a voyage to the north pole than [ ing, and the long, warm stockings which [ will be by the retiring moderator, a summer journey acrosss the placid Pacific. | our maidens affect are unknown in Japan. | Craig, D.D. I took the Canadian steamship line, which | Both men and women wear shoes of white The report of Spurgeon’s tabernacle for | and patient work of Mrs, J. M. Kenaey, who ts belng allowed to work In mechanical Is the best and fastest that goes from Amer- [ cotton, which just clasp the ankles, and | this year shows 5078 members as against | yet retains her membership in the assembl ey hakcat Mas g apinauancen ica Lo thel tar. east, fandihad it beenisums |lwhicharenkeptioft tho/ground by (sandals | 5,179 last year. * Thereiave beon & wery |ifnq imeonaiitatas il 8 BEREEA | SnEk CEHOVC BuRecst (K thovibe g el mer there could have been no vovage more | of straw or of wood. Above these o the [ large number of deaths among the members | 41 18 TS Crs P T TS ) s e, AT e IR, oo sant. The three empress steamers are | waist there is no leg covering, except the | and ismis: but the number of [ BF MUcE 'nbertance are sonacored; Xt wes | unions are backed up'in this sentlment by ach as big as the best ships that sail the [ loose silk or cotton gown known as the sions s been large, over 200 | Mrs. “Honney .y '] i ¢ I";-*K*I 2n ‘| & number of the business men. The most dangerous part of my journey | Atlantic, and they are fitted up with all the | kimona, — This 1s fastencd at the front, and | having been baptized dtriag the year forky arvangsd 4ithobiivat & bally Cwhion | & aumberotsibisinessmeis i e changes that aro taking place. Asta is now | 5 oy "y PYobably bo among the Chinese. | convenlences of ocean travel. ‘Tho cabins | it is some times wadded. 1¢ I8 worn by Both | ot (e taaty o ternat ol Clositian Bne RS0 Ge OYa MR lhs ey, | A L B LEASRE RE M SHARRSE that are e plase:, EALle oHall akip he coast ports and push my | are lighted by electriclty, and they are twice | soxas, and as they push their way along the | qesnoe erecenih international Christian Bn Sinco that = Umo the haai'iheen || D0 stiomon agylaing theworking neor © of the great news centers of the globe. | way into the interior. I will visit many of those of the Atlantic lines. The [ streets the raw cold wind of winter drags the | jana. 0. July 11-15. 1894, Cloveland Bn- 5 fa N o . ermEotlonloaT iR ugRade making history faster than efther | large cltles, some of which are hardly are all English, and the ships form | folds apart at the front, and you can see | deavorers are hard at worle laying plans for he receiving considerable attention in America or Europe, and a wonderful change | Known to the average reader, and will part of the Britlsh naval reserve. They | the amorous snow flying about the rosy bare | the proper care and entertainment of the e A T i e AN 15 golng on among the nations of slant-eyed | yrovel LOOD miles or more up' the great | carry the British mails and receive a subsidy | calves of the muidens. expected thousands. It is expected that L O T LT G T T s s claimed that it will take some time to get it into operation The Ohlo Valle Trades and Labor as- further demonstrates the correctness of the theory that nothing helps so much to build up a union as does a full treasur 18-tse-klang river. I expect to visit the | from the English government. The servants % ¢ . 0 4 The assembly has never been stingy with n ¥ ichnaiadnpatis e 3 : o Englis ent. serva Among the poorer classes there are many | from 25,000 to 40,000 delegates will be in [ e Gssenibly s nove I humanity, which s bound to affect overy. old capltalof the empire, known' as Nanic: | arel Ohineseand you are waited:on in VO e e i e e A RIS T man, woman and child in Christendom. This ing, where the famous “‘Porcelain towe room and at the table by yellow-skinned ! j o0 pulled about through the city today Father Malone of Brooklyn, who has just | for (he INI. R haat A O DA land of Japan made the start and It has | Was and which is now ono of the centers | boya in pig talls and gowns, and you find [ Lo e R g At aa it | FEatheobalan ORIt at oo tho penent o lahororeaniantione: sz || WS, Qe Aoy ieden apd Laber s now on its feet the seven league boots of | Of the ‘II’"‘;""‘;'."‘\‘“I“f‘ pE R and I LEinaRt| Etnelnaeryicetan bettarStnangitnalitonitne 1% LR SR O R ARRSTENE RRCEuaen el schad i dmembesiiofis T membership, At the present time applica, | “Resolved, That we endorse and approvo modern progress. It s Jumping - atead R o et iR O I“.‘L‘:. A fir:',"d.‘,'l "“‘”;' o &:’}"Al'\";f'lfl":‘“ ,""{,‘:,‘I‘”IIT WR | only protection from the snow on the ground | tain educational funds, is a priest of marked | |y oS R R R T the resolition adupted by Typographical Slanitey S 12 S s O e RONNGIR 0L AN L0 anoa,, Ly On Jou Jraen you g0 to Turope. The | yag g gole of woven straw, not much thicker | ability, a strong republican, and a devoted T hotaalitha i qurineEt HaEa e union n that they were opposed to r...(‘y than people have ever jumped | I will take a trip along the Grand ca 8hip on which I crossed was the Bmpress of | than’s fat buckwhent cake. These soles or | friend of the public sehoal ssaton: 5t s ST pogiitin) souring the Summer | members of fabor unions Jolning the militia In the past and within twenty years it has | If possible, and will tell youghow this won® | Japan. Let me glve you an idea of her, | tHAR 8 fat buckwhent cake by straw straps, | he who won such wide fame by displaying | hagket picnics, the first of which Is to ho | Of this or any other state untl such laws grown more in civilization than the Euro- ll\lxru. stery of Chincse trade is managed. | Take the street in front of your house. It | i} TAUGS'S Are A6l B, ¥ SN AHEORA the stars and stripes from the steeple of his | given about the middle of May if the e enacted as will prevent the militia pean nations h advanced in centurl About v.ll\)nuhw‘ from n‘.n coast there is a press of Japan could be dragged UD | jength from the front. Here they meet be- | church soon after the firing on Sumter. | weather is favorable, These basket pienics | from being used to the detriment of labor I sce from a Japanese newspaper of this 1\‘”"1 sty i '-';”:;'-v\u‘\l ml-‘r l‘:w 'I.‘J ..I: :Luh(-r ilm; '\\unxl<ltlrl.-x;~- I\Iu-r \:;.|1.~rnr’m-‘; tween the two largest toes. They are used | He kept the colors flylng there until the [ aro always enjoyable and are given with | organizations.” orld” for his progressive ide: shall | houses and she could look over the roofs o 4 3 g % are yable Sy 4 rather as a protection from slipping than as | war ended. A pxpense to each participa Jecause S0or000 St Japan made last year 120 | spend some timo at nis capital, the city of | any of your business blocks of less than [ Fatherasaprotection from slipping than us Bt s BRAIL sexpase ip Soaally pRrsiAnLy Detaurg 000,000 postal cards at a cost of G0 cents | Hankow, which, with its suburbs, contains | seven stories. Soon Wear fnto pleces, Tho man T had today | o The Fenort, of the Board of Education | lirgo numbers take part in tio fin, It is per 1,000, 1 can hardly realizo it, and think | Iore than 1,000,000 people, and from thence | Her length s such that she would fll the [ RO6 Wedr Iutp pleces, 'he Faab f Bad (06A | of the Methodist Episcopal church s hows an | quietly whispered that at s £ 1l push my way furth lway f e end he block I i income of §§ of which §70,000 were col- | will take place before the May pienic Jill push my way further luto tne Interlor | rondway from one end ot tiie black to the | 10%,C%60, 0y Ik 385" ana b went for soma | Licome of 3, of which $70,000 we 5 A to Ichang, where Is some other, and if you examined her you would o rom the Sunday = schools an Puy for Stock in Labor, But there Is no doubt that the postal serv- derful scenery in the waorld The gorges | find her to be a great steel shell filled with lce here is as good and as cheap as that | of the Yang-tse-kiang near this point are | a little world, and run by some of the most - The Oldest C According to scripture, curses were known from the beginning of man. Hut the ear- liest curse the world has authentic record there must be a mistake in the figures. f iy found | bed loor-socket of of Iy found inscribed on a door-socket o miles entirely barefaeted. ~When we stopped | oyyrohos, The number of students as- I noticed him take wome straw rope, almost | Suici'*y 1 UGET S MeA B j : thick as a_clothes line, and tie a pi iroughout the ‘world, and of twenty-four | ing considerable attention in labor circles | Assyriol of the United States, and these people run | thousands of feet deep, and they are sald | wondertul michinery that the modern mind | 4% hick us o clothes line, and tle w pleco ihetighontthe warld iandaf twentyefoun( lni. aonwidsiabla 6l mployed are anxlous to | Pennsylvania, The inscription, which has their postal arrangements, paying for every- | (0 have no superior in thefr picturesque | can invent. You would fiad in her a | of 1€ to each of his bk red toos behind the studying for the ministry oF MISSIONALY | soo the mirt fy - The some talk of call- | been translated by Dr. H. V. Hllprecht of = Y s s grandeur. T will have my photographer | butcher shop, a bakery, a carpenter shop, [ (a“Hos |/ ound! it made him less liable y ] the university, calls down the vengeanes | thing In silver, moro cheaply than we do | with me hoth I the clties apd i the comr. | Chiness and o opean kitchens and a whole | (0% 1 Bai fougd Tork. “Thn. oamplate. lis:. of the wodieas | ing a public mass meeting of laborers to "¢ | of the gods, Bel, Shamash and Ninna, upon g oh o, | The banking - systems, | try. Leeving this part of China, L will | summer hotel of rooms for sleeping, catiug, | ‘O 5P Lo Japan are wooden stilts | thoro are 02 With oves 45000 cruderts [ Bow much stock would be subscrived for by [ B AP EPCR, G FhGAARE SN TR, dpon The proposed Platte river canal is recelv- | King on of Babylonia ) B, C., In the fcal collection of the University of i 5 o g 5 < R ’ . g o y there are with over 43,000 students, | tho workers, to be paid in labor. It § rallroads, telegraphs and schools of Japan | next go to the north and again visit amoking (ands reading, It permitied, "yl anout: thrae ngheat: high, Whioh are. Used |'aoar neosarty. ami orgonc a0 students, (:Msml Ko, I amor ekt ars 't | American collection Is said to Ay are managed almost as carofully and as in- [ capital Peking has 1,000,000 ‘inhabitants, | would go trom story to story, s 1 did, down | fike' sandate, and the common people wear | Shdgcbroperty and “endowments va A Y ¥ Moo 0 Lt b subaeribed | in Importance only by those of the British telligently as thoso of the United States, | 414 OF these T doubt whether 1,000 think | fnto the very bottom of fers amiere & PIALe | mackintoshes or rain coats made of straw, | gio'17y. 27| imeveral thougand dollars migh ibaer] museum and the Louvre, It is largely the o hat we Americans are anything else than | of steel as thick as your finger fs all tha ch makes them look for all the worl There are 100 perlodicals published In the | barharians. When I was there beforn Lo REota Gii i walipiann ROmAR 8 R AN JHoLch, Imakes togauliook Gk S0 Ehopnsrid clty of Tokyo ulone, and the newspapers | five years ago, I was told that the street | engines, which almost nolselessly but Ir- | oy’ om0 yellowsBinds with huma shaped are read by the millions. In business and | on Which all of the foreign legations are | resistibiy screw her on across the Pacifie, on | 1ike” puttor Dowis and agam. 1Ko, parasois manufacturing on a large scalo there is a | 1ocated was called the cet of the Sub- | the longest ocean route of the world. You | and a group of country neople would make movement all over the land, and reports of | 19t Nations.” and today 900,000 of the | would find that she carried enough weight | e fo SeouP of U:umlm it he could bring And, 84 repor people of Peking actually believe that the [ to load down 6,000 two-horse wagons, and | them to the Unitedd Stat With the new the elections, which are now taking place [ American minister to China and the minis- | it would probably surprise you to know that | niovement all sorts of forelgn costun have In the different provinces, show as ma ters from Russia, France and Buglind are | of this vast amount one-third has to be | come in. and I s hundreds of the ugliest of quarrels and as much bribery as though th it the capital to pay their respects to their [ made up of coal. It requires 2,000 tons of | qur blankets and carriage robes used as emperor and to give tribute to him. 1 will | coal to start out on such a voyage, and the | snawls by both men and swom They are take some trips through this part of China mer burns from 100 to 200 tons every | (he only colors in Japan which swear at s o oy al and will describe the Chinese of the north, . It is a big dwelling house that re- | the rest of their surroundings and are a blot a i) most of them have agreed that the plant TO COMPETE WITH AMERICA who are as different in th appearanc quires ten tons of coal a . This | on the picturesqueness of the prople. I note | O'Farrell, while the chances of Vicar Gen- | unions 3 first appeared on this continent. But the eral Mooney's uppointment s the successor | The strect car men of St. Louls have or- | st avpearud an (his continent, = But the of Bishop McNierney are considered to be wnized TR AN ARSI IO At B AN 800d by his friends, Pelephone girls at Milwaukee must wear | D N L T AR el black to be paid in labor, and it is thought that | MUsCun A LU R The recent death of Bishop O'Farrell has | stock subscribed to bo paid in this way would | Festie of the shecial expeditions sent. out mado another Roman Catholie see vacant | be entirely acceptable. None of the labor | DY {he university durhy A in addition to that of Albany. The ill-health | organizations have ay yet taken the matter | (8 W0 GF LAE Huphrates. | A Ao as well as the increasing years of Bishop | up along these lines, but if it is ‘1 H'.‘u r 2 g ) Ryan of Buffalo may soon render the ap- | the company would accept it, considera oy e oalibited gk pointment of a co-adjutor bishop necessary, | labor can be pledged to ist in the con- | Was awarded sey H; da)s; while the expectation of Poughkeepsie being | struction, Wihora Malet t1iie G row. made the seat of a bishopric is likely to be _ P TR T A T T s realized before long. Consequently the proy Ince of New York is likely soon to have four N new bishops. Vicar General John L. Farley | Strik 4 is already spoken of as successor to Bishop The American Railway union has 150 local ve, was exhibited at Chicago, where It w Bedford gl a it on a | Indian corn has been in dispute. Different authorities have located its beglnning in Japs had taken lessons of our ring poli- th 1, althougn nearly every part of the wor ough ticluns, A slower but as sure a revolutlon is going | Manners, and customs from the Cantonese | steamer uses on a single voyage cnough to | hat most of the people walk abont with on in China. The four hundred odd millions | Chinese, who come to America, as the in- | supply a town of 1,000 people or 200 fami- | their mouths open, and in the colder days 3 4 habitants of North are differcut | lies with fuel the year round, and it would | many of them cover their mouths with a sort of plg-tailed celestials are pulling the slits | goon 00 00 5 oni of Naples, Our Chinese | take as much coal to light her fires as you | of a pad and breathe behind this, of thelr button hole eyellds apart and it s | are short and small boned. The Tartars | use in a whole year. Thirty-twa Chinamen scom to care nothing for the exposure of the A somewhat curious Incident I8 reported The labor unions at Fort Worth will cel R e (VAR it (A SO DR AR ANt only a question of time how soon they will | and the Chinese of the north have many | are kept busy shoveling coal into her fur- | chost, and the gowns of both sexes are de from the village of Nicol Kaya, In the |y s qay of botany, metdorology, phils be putting their wonderful muscles, their | men six feet In helght and they are as | naces, and the shoveling goes on day and ledly decalle province of Kharkoff A peasant named with a very handsome wife, sold BOWnS, & ntly published by the unlyersity. Carpenters at Pittsburg are asking y y and history, Dr. Harshe sharp business brains and their 5 cents a day [ strong in intellect and pbysique as any | night from the time she starts till the end And still clothes are practically all that | Litvinoff AR R that mafze first grew In Cens habits of living Into competition with our | people in tho world, At Peking are the | of the voyage. keep the Japancse warm. They don't know | her to another called Lukianoff for the sum : 5 X xico, and was probably first culth of heat | of 160 rubles, giving a receipt In due form Ilionis Knights of Labor will join forc e AR N LA r the money. In a fortnight, however, he | With the popullsts, IR TIAVAR. SN RNB). S REMIS wished to buy her back, and her purc Palnters at Pittsburg will be reduced With the distribution and ' uses was quite willing, but the woman ref per cent on May 1 LAGR RIpRALEN it slght-hour, §2-a-day laborers as to the manu- | great universities of the empire and in some During our journey the engines were | what a good fire is and the supply tactured products of the world They have | of these they are now teaching our sciences, pushed to their fullest We had a head ) which is annually require in an American toal and iron in every one of their eightecn nd the big Chinese examinations of the fu wind the most of the way, and for twelve house I8 more n the average Japanese arovineces cy can do as good work as | ture will probably embrace geology and as- | out of the thirteen days which it took to | family uses in a lifetime. Their houses ore A e can, and they will work twelve hours for | tronomy as well as the essays of Con- | cross it was stormy In the extreme. As | of thin woodén boards made in frames, so | The cviginal husband referred the matter The molders at Cleveland, 0., have the plant, of which every part me-twentieth the sum that our people get fucius. The hatred of forelguers Is great | we neared the Aleutian islands it became that the walls slide Iin and out of one an the Zemsky Natchalink, who declined to in anted $2. per day When they enter the modern manufacturing | and the majority of the people would like bitterly cold, and the ship was cov 1 with her, leavin d ghts at every corner. ~ Pittsburg has 5,600 carpenters and three - race the question will not be one of competi- | to see the Americans and Europeans ex- ow and ice. The sallor in the *‘crow's | Therc is no plaster nor lath to add to their | clared ‘that it was no business of Lhelr fatinthE OATEhans? s ¥a (A 1a itts Little Barly Risers. Swmall plils, n. It will be one of existence and we will | cluded. nest. among the rigelng, nearly froze 10 | warmth, and the funer walls and partitions | Consequently the wife remaing with the maa | e 9% tht striking textile workers will | safe pills, best pilly. 1ave to bulld & protective Wrill barier about | Alfter leaviug North Chiaa I shall ail for | death and he was so cold he bad to be car- | are mude of paper, so thin that tiey let in | wio bought her terfere, and the communal authorities de