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b AR AAAAAAAAARAR AN ANl A o4 & A A A AR AR PR 1 "HE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. _ msm l{.\"l'ABLI HED :llTNl‘l 19, ]R'Irl.i OMAH INDAY .\IOI{.\'INH. MAY 20, 1894—TWENTY PAGE SINGLE COPY FIVE Corner 15th and Dodge. MoST EXTRIORDIANY | (. (O ‘; AMPLE BARGXAINS, [ ITEMS. AL 5 beds TO SHOW YOU HOW MUCH CHEAPER 'BOSTON STORE"” SELLS GOODS THAN BARGA!NS > EG 4 OTHER FOLKS DO. EXA INE THESE BARGAINS. CRITICIZ T THEM, v0 ANY- EVERY OSNE 3 BARGAIN B CTy b THING YOU LIKeE TO COMPARE THEM., YOU MUST ACKNOWLEDGE THAT 1O Such s never have been offered before, e S b i - i GNE ELSE BUT "BOSTON SFORE" CAN OR WILL S0 NEARLY GIVE GOOD e e e alsa i ever secn. Cr ‘87‘“”}“ D‘AY argain i) GOODS AWAY. 2 real Jup Hubutais, 23 in. plain ; Blk. Surahs, Satin Tricotines | Skirting Silks, cte., former price die, 49¢, 65 and e yd. Your choice entire “lot" ... S el Colored Moire Antiques, former price i : : 19 in. Swi A 1, $1.05 and 8180, Youe ot extive St ¢ and light colorings: the exact copy of our $#1,00 on salo on our bargain square. L Best Calicos. Lonsdale Muslin. | { Chidrens' $1 Lace Caps bl Tanle 0“ c!fllh and Cream Silk Chantilly, Oriental, ¢ L . | & Gisod ot bhst - grades: 1000 childvens' lace caps. bonnets Point de Venise and Pointu’Irlande, 3 ; L e o o3 T e vard wide, bleac hed mus- and hats, all the worth up to Tic, Silk Veiling. ... Yard and a half wide, S i e lins, includiig Lons- c lutest styio, clegantly in marble and dark S dale and other leadin embroidored; worth c c c 25 s Silk Windsor Tia colors, worth 25e, ch us all . other weil brands ...... g $1.00: goat...... [ ] ] Goes at known brands. 4) PIECES : 50 Fimces Imparted French Novelly Dress Goods Thousands of yards—pure silk and wool Vo) e oS avabiatiy 5 .;?]I},E””‘A” WOOL WITH \IIIL',)IIXVILIIP,S’: PlN CHECK GLORIAS : i - 3 Il A s shown, .\\4.-|lh up h.! f._.‘l _\A\Hl.‘ %n X b Worth 69¢ yard: go at 25¢ yd. . The a yard, Changeable effects: worth 81, go at 50e yard Ladies' Lizit and Da:k 500 Ladies’ Handsome French Satcen LADIES' LISLE THREAD and Ladies’ Richelieu Ribbed N “ “ l \ ) ) L) s Handsome Silk Em- PE Ladies’ Waists WAISTS, VESTS In black grounds, with With Watteau back In_white and colors, small ..,hum! e worth $1.75, go at worth $1.50, go at Saaiabiies R b R6Y BoRth IN OUR BASEMENT IN CUR BA.EMENT N OUR BASEMENT s LT IN OUR BASENEAT. 200 Pieces Very Wide Tmported . ¢ 3 2 1 . IN OUR BASEMENT ANKOUR DA IILENE 100 Pieces ieces Very Wide Importe 500 Fieces Beautiful Tinted 40 Pieces Light and Dark Ground Thousauds of yards fine 1ec 25 Pieces, double fold, fine quality WOOL CHALLIE 3 SW'SS I.AWNS : PR"“ED CASHMER S, e figured CHALLIES R EiNiB0ola Y ch With floral designs, worth fabrie, worth 23c; go at zc | Wordh 2003 go . i g eombintions of fowers 15e yard, go at woith 124c yard, go at.. S <, T N | empire. Far beyond the Chinese wall, on | the rate of exchange with one of these boxes are about the size an »e of our old red | enough ifoney from his friends to pay his HRS] l \l l.R l\ \I‘BR\ I \ ness the operation of the—to them--incoms CHl hSE BlO\tY BAGS the borders of Thibet and in the wilds ot | Of balls strung on wires, which form the = conts, ?:«‘whnm:/m:f\’tlr?.n Ly |vfurl' holes of | last year's debts. All firms here have to \ ). )4 & ALDAIS 5\4 | prehensible art by which thought .‘!lg’;m' i N L Mongolia you find strange people wearing | Slates and pencils of the celestials. It is | about the size of the tip of your little fin- | settle up at the close of the vear, and it is Dollzed_and repeated in ever enduring English and American cottons, and many of | Wonderful how fast these men can figure in | ger running through them. They are strung | the greatest disgrace to go into bankruptey. e R R L L h the huts of the Thibetans in the Himalaya | this way. They push the balls this way and | in strings of 1,000 on ropes of twisted straw | Bankrupts often commit su'cide, and the An el A e D | mountainsare rooted with-tin pounded out that ]\\ullxl el aristocratic, long _finger- | and at the end of every 100 a knot is tied in | son feels bound |»)x-.~_\-hlxl> father's debts. | Liberty of the Press Found a Footing Be- | light of r””,' A2 i Hee helraitel tre i 1d | American coal-oil cans. I see our coal ofl | nailed yellow hands, and in less time tha o string to ma ol count. These cash | It is the same with other relatives, e B . erran e et Ao o How tho ' Greatest Empire in the World | SRCHECR TS, SO0 (hrougn”the streats | you could put down the fisures.they give ya | oo SbmE to marke the)count. These fash | Nebts of any member of a family are dis. fore Statehood Was Achieved. Ighbintitneipresy ot Nebtasica il SIS Manages Its Moncy Matters, of these interior Chinese cities, and there | the result. They are always sure of them- | and the viceroys are exjected to turn.them | Erice to the whole family, and rich men (R b TR LG R Lt 0 is a great oil reservoir at Shanghal, where | selves, and if they make a mistake the firm | out. They cost at the |present time more | having failed will go to work at the most this shoct paragrandit ¢ reading mate the petroleum s stored awaiting s ship- | by whom they are employed expects them to | than their face value tg make, and copper | menial occupations in order to pay ub. BI& | THOS, MORTON'S EARLY-DAY ENTERPRISE PG ARG D ment into the interior. V¥ have been send- | make it good. They are under heavy bonds, | of this kind Is, in fact, here dearer than | failures are always punished by law. If ter et In the territory of Nebrag ;‘-V PRig WHERE ALL BANKRUPTS ARE BEHEADED | ing in the neighborhood of forty million | often running up into the hundreds of thou: | gold. I saw such coing being made some | the amount is from $1.500 to §5.000 the bank- D o LR he Lith day ot CIOYEN gallons of coal oll to China every year for | sands of dollars, and there are few default- | years ago at the big mint at Canton, and I (Tupt is banished. and If it runs above that |, . o paladium Saw the Light Nigh ho advertising columns are mostly age some time, and many a Chinese home along | ing Chinese cashiers. These ‘‘compradors” | watched a new maghine turning them out | amount his head is taken off. — There is not L [ Y o the Yangste Kiang is lighted with the | and “shroffs,” as they are called, keep track | at the rate of seventy a minute at the Kiag- | Much discussion about the matter and the Forty Years Ago—Som“thing Abou cupled byo BEc Louls s limas endon "h“:& Five Hundred Millions of Pcople Who Do | fluid that flows trom the pipes of the Penn- | of the Chinese markets for the foreign firms. | nan arsenal the other day. The copper went | LW is that the bankrupt who becomes such the First Number - Red-Lotter T hat rou the llEntior a elorlhukgNES sylvania wells They have cashiers’ or bankers' meetings. as | nto the machine in the shape of a hoop, of | from unavoidable ¢ircumstances is decapl- Day for the Territory. braska day is now in posses:on of the pros Business in Copper Cash, A RICH COUNTRY. it were, every day among themselves and re- | about the width of the iron hoops which we | tated just the same as the fraudulent one. prietors of the Nebraska City News, the China contains between 400,000,000 and [ POt later on to their mas They know | use on cider barrels, and stamps which | There are no lay a5l no Juries 410 the legitimate successor of the Palladium, 500,000,000 at - people " With fis. teibutary | all about the standing of different Chincse | wrken threagh oty by n piate cut the | Judges or officlals of the town pass the sen- it B e ol provinces it s sald to have the enormous | banks and firms. In speaking of them they | metal into round disks, stamped the charac- | LCRCES: Sometimes the bankrupts v as’ 2 ellevue tha st news- Sometimes th nkrupt arry It was'at Bellevue that the first n The Pipe of Pence After the Verdiet. OLD MUTUAL LOAN ASSOCIATIONS | population of 527,000,000. Since the begin- | (ivide them into four classes. If they say a | ters upon them and cut out the central hole [ heavy chains for Wweeks through the streets, | paper in Nebraska was ever published. And | 4 4o50n Indlans, wrapped in blankets, sat ning of our government we have coined all | P2RK 18 & number one bank 1t 1n jure o be | in each coln all at-a single stroke of the Ab ‘;'l“r';’jlu”"";’h s faniue 4! | pity "tis that the founder of the Palladium | iy siience in an ofice in the Hyde block las —_— . told t 461,000,000 silve ot in- 2 he go they call it num- | mochine was worked/by s yen | A0k dniEequentiy O e heaen out | could not have livet see wh st | e g 8 ced the pipe of peace, told) about 481,000,000 ailver dallars, net tn |50 805 80, S SO0t T ot b mon | machizes 1¢ n‘r’lfc:-\egx);edpe? steam, but even | oL oU i bankrupt can save encugh out | COUld not have Iived to sco what his first | evening and smoked the pipe of poace, suys i tat C| d 01 0 N of e fa » he can somet s buy off the | puny effort has brought forth Himself a | the Spokane Review. It followed the vere Chineso Stook Exchange Presents Scenes | If the whole could be gathered together and | JOf lon 1a cloudy, and It four, you had better | out only about $4 worth of colns an hour, | o€ the fullure he can spinctincs buy off T o o inter, unaided except by a boy, | dict in the Sischimoo murder case in the carried to China there would not be enough It is even worse at the gther Chinese mints, | 1 0 ™ 0% roditors forgive their customers | he first brought light and wisdom to the | UPited States court. ~ When it was ans Familiar to Americans, to give $1 to each of its Inhabitants. China THE DEFT COUNTERFEITER. where the coins are bast, and the copper | guet? jait CRETOTE (T, TR T nnual | now great state of Nebraska nounced to the Indians in waiting that the ;T guu-r»nllli\ »*\uw[uwd_ l‘lr.b: l\[xl) [vw[xj; 1 be- Chinese bank notes are more like promis- | @00 the labor makes the production of them | cottjament day, which always comes at the It has certainly been proved (arbitrary | JurY b reacher a verdict, the prisoner's Moyl ion n"‘;:;‘:l"::f.'.\r‘f‘ It s @ rich coun- | sory notes than our bank notes. There a loss to ‘;.u men who ('xm["flm by llu; EOVEFIL | cloge of the year, has his friends come 0 | and prejudiced courts to the contrary not- m}"'»“ |m' T ‘;r‘l"rl \I':'f“';““;e“ffl“‘:;:"'; ¥ 2 UiRG A VAL Q10 0 | not and never has been a tional ba ment or the viceroys that they mus Msh | gether and start him anew clear of debt. withstanding) that the press Nebraaka | B:PE=0EE PraAss EANS A, o8 WHY_ FINARCIAL PANICS ARE IMPOSSIBLE | do ‘its business. It is true there are many | Gng motes ave. not used as-currency to anyg | 50 many cash within u certain date. The re- | SRS U0 T80 L kel o some way s | nust e free and untfammeled. From | Whaceo. " Then while the jury was belng millions of poor, but there are also millions | gytene’ he banker merely writes th | Sult Is that these cash are often made Of | ¢hop'is kept shut until he announces his | newspaper accounts taken from east, west, | Polled the Indians sat in silence and awaited iyt Fi»lf"'éff!""“.??‘}.&"‘3.“.'3.'?;“,&31 \tu::'r):“]“\\u]rl: amount on the note and puts his private | SPurious metal, and I have seen some of them | fajufe or gets the funds to continue. This | north and south, letting alone comments the result. When Colonel Winston entered Frank G. Carpenter Tells About the Colos | L mornh re few countries where Jewelry: | seal or chop over it. Such notes are made | Nhich Were so poor that 1 could break them | prevents there ever being a great panic in | by the state press, it would seem that the | e little room a few minutes later with the B e T il | out for@ll sums from five to twenty thou- | I tWo with my fingers, At the present rates | China, The actual standing of the different | verdict is unanimous, lacking on att prisoner, Simon Sischimoo, the boy's face tial Banking System Whose Antiquity T have seen since T came here thousands of | 5and taels, and the Chinese banker never | 9f exchange I could byy. 2,000 of these coins | merchants and —business men is known The founder of Nebraska journalism was | Was wreathed in smiles. He grasped his Dates. llack 2000 B. C.—Many 1 have secn since L came here thousands of | goes back on his signature, He pays the | for one of our dollarsf and It would take | at least every twelve months, and there Is [ an unassuming man, and, ‘as often hap- | 00 father's hand and spoke in the Tndian B e ot r e oW S iy | Motes when they are presented, in silver or | tWeNty to equal the valie of a little Ameri- | no chance for a man to continue a long | pens, his name may go untaught and un- | (MIEU The disconsolate expression left brocaded silk lined with furs, and nearly | gold. The silver is usually pald according | can red cent, and you ould buy a pound of | career of fraud and failure. The pride | sun While difering radically politically | the old man’s face, he smiled, and shook; iy fyery other woman you sce outslde of fhe | to welght, In lumps the shape of a toy bath | them for a nickel:" I sent my Chinese serv- | which the Chinese take in Keeping up the | from The Bee, he was always found on the | his boy's hand warmly, =~ Then, while Stmon e :!""I‘* ““" 'x e “;‘,]:‘ % ‘_‘I“l‘; 1 sk | tub, ranging in value all the way from a | 8nt for $10 worth of tljese cash today, and i reputation of their towns, their business and | side of the workingman, the poor and the | Was shaking hands with others of the circle, pansa “1"'\‘\“-” “‘k :‘("‘l {"5‘] “'" ol _-r‘":l dollar up to $50. The usual size is worth | he came back loaded. His hands were full | thefr families is very remarkable. I met at | oppressed the old father applied a match to the pipe. SEopXHEhted UM by Frank. Q. Carpenier.) covered with silk, silver or &eld embrodered | about 850, and it weighs about five pounds. | and his shoulders were covered with strings | Canton oae of the richest men in China. His | ~Thomas Morton published the first paper | A few whiffs were taken, the smoke being HANKOW, China, May 1—(Special Cor- | her fair and her silk headdress 1s often | The Eold is made in long, thin cakes, and | of cash. name was Houqua, and he s said to be wo ever printed in Nebraska. The date was | ¢Xhaled through the nose, then it was Im;sml respondence of The Bee.)—The silver ques- | decorated with rows of pearls. Both sexes ‘\*l"“\\-lvl!:'yl:n‘r-'.\ lln~1- The |,.:,.;\, ’»‘“mm* SHYLOCKS AND USURERS. 3\-“'-"r”l"’"' H I“:'m ';<“; r';':’y I“\'u\l‘nl;””\ In .'v‘rm:nwr“\\, 1\]-]1 A Sopy of it iy suill | & ‘;::!'ll - (‘;“f;‘r'”‘l"n l“«:’: ';\“ "”'13"1'“:: :“"')'; R s W s private seal eve plece o e . A ican and other foreign securities, exta s old eased and yellow, and he b he circle was unmoved by emol tion Is a far more Important matter out | Wear "“1;’ ':l':““‘ ““Il & ;" "‘"’ i ’\H:Mm I’; he pays out, and even \m. \‘lv\’h'»n '1”|1‘.,: Tle banking system of Ching is the oldest |y "o, nnores ahout 400 of his poor r e in ‘(“ o8 |,t.'1|\- fl'vr,r. hed ”nlniuizl :n:.'l or interest until each had gone through the here in Asla than it has ever been in Amer- | €Xpects to out his daughters with gold | gre”maryeq’ thus with India ink. Eve known to man. According to Chinese records | my oy fathe S aihs YAy G of | th i e e s ceremony of peace; th they arose apd 0 A mpry | GAbantBLLoC L Qb hig AAUENLOER. WILIL RO e marked s d k. Every 1 ing Lo exe records | myiy man's father wa Jay Gould of | through the great fire of May 1860 remony of pea ien they aro fca. The Japanese are trying to uphold 'rl;:: \”quk u”u.‘nhlh.. l'h‘]ll\“w’(hll ‘{,f-”.’;,.‘.i‘.f*“, big bank or company has a man who takes | H€r® \\;u_ h.m!xj’x’-r diseount (xwll :1.\;).“\: ".“T' iton. At the time that the British gun The leading editorlal reads as follows: | Tushed out to get their certificates for fees, Ahalfiend of the financial question by raa- | P conange.in Al all of the silver dollars that come in and | 2% far back as 2600 B. O, and the interest | yoaty came before the city they demanded | “The Palladium office was the first news- | Which amounted to $15 for each witness. i S ancia s Yy T money as a rise in gold rather than a fall In | go¢ “hem” into holes made in A board, so | 1aWs of China were made long before Colum-.| 41" indemnity of $6,000,000. They threatened per establishment put in operation In e ing their prices, but the five hundred odd | silver, and I hear everywhere the question, | {ia e [0 holes made in a board, 0 | ;" giscovered America, There were S to bombard the city if this amount was not | braska, and the present number the first Able Financiering. millions of Chinese do their business In “.\ “1 ‘f“_r. makee f“"' ‘*l""]"l"__ ”'l‘j> ,’,"““" face is just level with the board, He then | 1ocks here 1,000 years hefore the real Shy- | paid in forty-eight hours. A subscription | ever issued in the territory The ‘first One of Spokane’s bank presidents has a coppet cash on a silver basis, and the cost [ 148 the change When they heve a4 GQUBBECT | takes a’brush and water and washes them | 10ck was born in the mind of Shakespeare, | paper was passed around among the Canton | printers in the office who have set up the | habit of taking an airing each evening om of their Imports are now Just double what | Ju, in fact, s e th (he tise | as white and clean as though they had | A0d nowhere on earth gmong civillzed people | capitalists and Houqua put down his name | present number afe natives of three differ- | the front end of a sireet car, absorbing the a , in fact, so surprising to many of the | y.. " oo Gl Y o will you find higher rates of interest paid, | g, 00,000 and pald it over to the col- <1 5 X g o o they ‘were @ fow years ago. 1 cashed 350 | people that they are selliog thelr §old ornnc | JUst come from the mint, “He now stamps ; ] g0 {n1era: DAl r $1100000 and paid it over g nt states—ONio, Virginia and Massachu- | ozone and throwing off the cares of business A Al 50 | people that they are iis chop on each of them, and this means | More money borrowed a ¢ debts con- | lectors. In the donation he said he “gave | setts, namely, Thomas Morton, foreman, | while chatting with the motorman, The in gold the other day and received $100 in | ments. They are bringing out the gold | (u GIOP Bh SHCR Of avment | Any ons | scientiously paid. The legal rate of Interest R i (n s o ot o AL AL BRI AMEOELQR, Sarpnap, | OIS GAMHIE NI Aihe S CHRAR I bricks they have hoarded and the <country is t guarantees their payment. Any one A, y | $200, Columbu: : A. D. Long, compositor, Vir- [ other night he met a genius, a his match, silver for it, and American dollars are now b;'l' . h “3 «1“ T ot 8 Y who has been in China will see the neces- | !0 many of the provinces of China is 30 per | beloved wife, $800,000 as a thank offering for | ginia; Henry M. Reed, apprentice, Massa- | The story was too good to keep and finally, quoted in China at 212, The imports g dralned af its. gois, sity for this. There are no shrewder coun- | ¢ent and in others it is 36 per cent. Still | the prosperity which had attended him in | chusett reached the Spokane Tribune, which pubs bave to be bought with gold and sold for HOW THEY DO IT. terfeiters in the world than the Chines millions are lent, I am told, in the jxmw,v! busir and $100,000 in recognition of the At the very time our foreman had the | lishes it as follows 7 7 s price & e The Chinese are a great business people. | and they are especially adept in the plug- | call loans In the seaport towns at & and 6 | fidelity of his son, press ready for operation the following per. After the usual exchange of courtesies sliver, and the prices must, of course, be | ptl¢ TRneRe ate &, BEiah BUnbest REOR | Bing of coin. They will bore holes in a sil. | per cent, and all sorts of money transactions sons were—not by invitation, but providen- | the motorman sald doubled for the merchants to come out | raquire a great deal of money to do their | ver dollar and insert other metal which will | are entered into. China had a system of - thally, present to witness its operation “Mr. Blank, you consider yourself afinans require a g | Lo T i ) Mr. Bl y even. The prices of labor and of Chinese | trading. The city of Canton absorbs about | Mmake It weigh the same as a good dollar, | building and loan associations long before we a2 N 1Y o namely Excellency T. B. Cuming, | cler, I suppos products have not risen, and the thoasands | 3.000,000 of silver dollars a year. It takes | and they are willing to chip an atom of sil- | began to exist as aination, and all over the governor of Nebraska, and Mrs. T. B, Cum “Yes," replied the banker, “I guess I amy, millions to do the business of Shanghal and | ver off a large number of colus in order to | empire there are associaiions for the loanimg — - ing; Hon. Fennor Ferguson, chief justice of | or I could not hold my job. Tientsin, and there are scattered over this ke good wages out of the sale of the dust. | of money, in which (he uml‘-n.’n members A New Ground for Divorce. Nebra:k F. Ferguson, Rev. William Well, you don't know anything about land thousands of native banks which do a | The other day an American got a silver | pay so much a month and the joint capita Out in San Francisco a sensitive husband | Ham It the Otoe and Omaha mission, | Ananclering,” the motorman made bold to plies of cottons and other foreign things | regular banking business and some of which | dollar in trade at Hankow, and attempted to | is passed from one member to another from | is suing his wife for divorce because she [ Mrs. Willlam Hamilton, Major James Gate state. “But my ‘bos (ref'rring to the are charged double prices. They cannot un- | issue notes. There are 400 mative banks in | Pass it at the bank there. He was told it | year to year, so that each gets a chance to | bleaches her hair. In his petition he says: | wood of Missouri, Bird B. Chapman, candi- | president of the street car company) I8 a first derstand it, and they won't pay them. They | Peking, 300 in Tientsin and hundreds in | Was not good, and upon his questioning the | use it for a part of the ten years during | ~ Bleached or artificially colored hair is | date for congress from Nebraska territory; | class financier. he 1s. Why, do you know think they are being cheated and they | Shanghal, Foo Chow, Ningpo, Hankow and | matter the Chinese cashier sent for a candle | which such assocfations usually run. There | easily distinguished as such and does not | George W. Hollister, esq., of Bellevue; A. | that every Sunday he advertises for a serve ’ ) ¥ | Ganton. 'All of the big cities have their | and lit it. He then held the coln over it, | is no place in the world where capital com- | appear natural, nor docs it decelve any per- | Vandergrif, esq., of Missouri; W. A. Griffin | ant and Monday twenty or thirty girls ride E N stock exchanges and in these the brokers | and, lo! In a moment it began to melt. “Tho | bines mors readly than in Chi The | son, but it is perfectly patent and noticeably | of Bellevue; Arthur Ferguson of Bellevue; | out to his house near the end of the line can't afford the goods, and they go back | meet daily and buy and sell ke our bulls | sides fell off, and in the center there was | bankers have their gullds or associations, | conspicuous. It is regarded by the majority | Theodore 8. Gilmore of Chicigo, 11l to get the place, but find madam can’t see home aud cut up their old gowns iute | and bears do In Wall street I saw 1,000 | a plece of copper. The counterfeiter had | which fix all their rates of cre and inter. of right-thinking persons as an Indication | Miss Mary Hamilton and Miss Amanda them, 80 the ride back and repeat the pants for the little girls and petticoats for | Such brokers pulling, hauling and scratching | Split a genuine coin and had hollowed out | est. Every city has its glearing house, which | of a loose, dissolute and wanton disposition, | Hamilton of Bellevue The st proof | Journey several time fore they are finadly at each other in the stock exchange in Pek- | the two pieces on the inside so that the | settles up the business Between the banks at | and is regarded.as and commonly held to be et was taken by his excellency, | told that the old girl has decided to stay & ing, and 1 am told that many of them have | copper could be fitted Into them. They | the close of each day, and the native banks | a practice never affected by modest, pure r Cuming, which was taken from | while. ow, tha''s financlering. Fifty cen recently lost great sums in betting on silver. | were then patched fogeifter so meatly that | issue circular letters pf eredit to travelers | and respectable women d read by his honor, Chief Jus- | paid out for advertisements and $8 or $9 America, and it will act as a sort of pro- | The Taotol or Chinese mayor of Shanghai | only the experienced ear of the Chinese | going through the empire. There are big The husband claims that he is mortified | tic ‘erguson. hus quietly and uncere taken In for car fares to swell the annual " 3 [ | P tective tarlff to stimulate home production. | has lost, it is sald, $600,000 within the last | Shroff could detect the fraud banks who push Chinege patent medicines, | and humillated on account of the change usly was the birthtime of printing in | dividends of the boss's company." There are now on foot a number of schemes | three months in buying silver, and he has, In BUSHELS OF MONE and little ones who logrt out sums which we | the color of hisswife's hair. He adds lellevue, Neb ebrated. Thus was the The banker saw the point, told the story fact, speculated himself out of office und his : Americans would b k worth while “She 1s a brunette naturally. Her hair (s | Nebraska Palladium inaugurated into the | on his friend, and the “boss” is looking for place, will shortly be fill:d With a new ap Silver dollars will not pass in interior | borrowing. There are grades union of all | of a chestunt brown color, which, in its nor- | public service. This event, although to | that particular motorman with blood in his pointée. In all of the treaty ports the for- | China, and outside of ports silver is tuken | sorts and even the begars club together and | mal state, I8 modest and becoming, and har- | Sorue it may se unimportant now, will | eye ists themselves are seriously considering | elgn as well as the native business is really | entirely by weight. The only coin current | gre bound by the rulestof thelr union. Fars monizes with the natural color of her skin | f ch in history which will be re e —— bow they can take advantage of the present | done by the Chincse. ANl of the foreign | In the empire Is the copper cash, of which | ers combine ‘ogether fg buy cattle. peddiers | and eyes. Since we married she has against ¢ g fter those present on this ooy v b ugh x situation in the bullding of factories. The | firms have Chinese cashiers, and these men it takes 1000 to make a dollar in silver. A | buy and sell the oustom of particular streets | my Wishes and protests with intent to are no more Some women make very weary, ' make all of the calculations and handle all | thousand will weigh about nine | 1o . . R S b0 wanis fo & vex noy, exasperate and shame me, dyed 0 is Issued from Bellevue. | sald the first agitatress I asked one X e e il their fellows, and a man who wants tc get ¥ v empire now has a forelg rai o some- | \ha money. When you go into a bank the | pounds, and ten of our dollars changed intc changed its shade a con amid the far-off wilds of | Wwoman if she bilieved in woman suffrage, thing like $300,000,000 a year. Heretofore | English clerk will eall @ Chinaman to figure Straw or ¢ y 2 e very wake of | and she didn't know; she'd have to ask hep more than half of this has consisted of im- | out your exchange for him and it will be ports. The goods have been shipped into | the h.n.ll:.m Mllm 'ul!l ay you );ur Il‘nn.-' If you make a deposit or pay a bil! it is a Interesting Facts Gleaned. and milions of Chinese farmers who are now coming to the cities to buy their sup- won't buy at all. They simply say they the boys. The result will be u great falling off in China's imports from Europe and for the manufacture of foreign goods in €hina, and some of the Chinese capital warried and has perbaps. not enough money | her hair and to buy & wife will go 1ato une of these loan | spicuous and showy would- form a fair wheelbarrow load of | Sosouia ‘,",g,“ R A% & oousequence ot this artifielal solorin hen ) might aimost | husband money. 1 see lots of money earried on iy L s she has been obliged to paint her fac in its midst We have taken joint DId you find out how long she had beem wheelbarrows through these Chinese citie SAFE BUSINESS, METHODS. secure an artificlal color complexion In keep ou with the aboriginal occcupants i married?” askod the second agitatress, “Yes. Three wecks, to market with strings of these copper | but found the dealer's store shut and was sination has given ber s giddy, fast and dark children of the forest and pral- | Oh, never mind, 1 guess she'll do to call coins slung over his shoulder. The cash | told that he was closed untfl he could get l sporty appearance.” | rie, whose curlosity prompts them to wit- | on _wm in & year or two." cash would weigh nearly 100 pounds, and the open ports of the country and from thence carried in junks, on camels, on wheel- | tosring it carefully by ringing it before he barrows aad 1o Chinese carts all over the | accepts it, and estimatiag the amount and | Chinaman who handles every silver dollar, | and a common sight is a coolie going out I tried to buy some pictures at Kiukiang, | ing with the artificial color of her hair. Th soll. Our e I8 frequently visit R P