Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 17, 1894, Page 11

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! THE_OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1891, T E and mm by the sald state. tiiled the lowlands and swamps that were b the duty of the auditor ended with the cer- Fonrth—That provision shall be made for | providentially placsd all over these water tification, but in view of tho interests in- —— I”‘" establishment and nmintenance of a rys- to retain the rains and melted snows | ] y‘ } volved and the possibility of greater loss be- . tem of public sehools be cpen for the lakes throughout the year, but H Moderats but Steady Growth of Omaba | falling the stockholders, he has published the | The People of Utah Building the Founda- | to all the children of and free | Which now runs into the lakes in floods and r ; result of his examinati hoping 1t will 3 from seetarian control on to the Gulf of Mexico. Associntions, serve as a warning to Investors. The Tili« tions of £ tatehood, VICTORS AND SPOILS While there are apparcntly somne facts to 1 nois is one of the broad guage national con- > R o substantiate the Register's theory, there are ‘a4 cerns, about which much has been written of 1 Nuv; 'h;u] the f":.(”" nl“ U Hyh ]\‘I‘\‘l‘ b “{lll" others which it is somewhat hard to recon- | i late. It sought business in the highways and | local branches ot the great national organiza- | cile. Mr. arkson's experience extends | — > " THE SEVERE TEST OF HARD TIMES | L. " of western and sonthern states and OLD PARTY LINES ARE OBLITERATED | yions tne ,‘“' £ political interest centers .In | ovor a ppriod of forty years, and yet It wa ‘ YOU DO NOT VISIT our Display of Furniture, Carpets, f made loans with that reckless distegard of the race for the control of the new sta only a few years ago that for several year Stoves, Dra og, ote., v s o ev . consequences that distinguished Louls The figures in the more recent elections will | In succession the rain fell in such torrents | 1 "w,‘, L dody "3‘)‘}.w‘ll miss one ot the events ot \ Profitable Lessons of Experience—Statistics | Menage of Minneapolis in handling other | Sallent Features ot the Constitution to e | throw some light on this feature of the situa- | as Lo greatly retard the u of the | he season. ook in our windows—see the prices marked 5 of Association Progress in Other people’s money, According to Auditor Gore, Adopted Next i~ Ropablicans aud tion. In 1892, at the first general election after | flelds and many crops were injured by there—then come inside and sea the variety of style, the States-—An Liinols Consern and SR epen.” The sasecistion's, sarstag cariial e e D B ety aves "bungos | Jiat [ha. Breseuc sk of slolature \n fow make, the goods, and above all the finish. | Iis Sand Banks. which it puts at $777,196, 18 in reality less —After the Spolls. (rep.) for territorial delegate to congress. | 89/l I8 due to a period of unusual drouth Our Credit System offers you, with other advantages, this . than $316,330. It has $65.000 in Joans in Ten- amatesn At the last general ele i, the re- | We have had no real soaking ra mbers | eral y fon, in 189 publicans obtained a majority of the m ns for sev- rs, such as affect the d-ep wells and great advantage: y bad o o . 4 e Ha0 rdpasty; bt one GEIRE of WHIGN -1 e antage: you obtain the goods, and the payments are | | Bullding and loan assoclations in Omaha | collectable under the state law. It has a 1. of the legisiature, but the aggregate vote | Wnderground streams. Particularly In south- | l“_i\d' 80 easy you do not miss the amount. If you have never are not making cny great strides at the pr lgyn. fl-\*'d:l‘"’l‘nl\n‘fl;hvfi’in;: l1:,"‘1 ]'H‘m::!‘rf In a previous number it was pointed cut { throughout the territory &till showed a demo- :”"*‘1‘ 'l” l“““:‘_ ”'m‘:h_:‘ “‘uv I”: ::-';‘:‘.}‘,\, | tried it, do so onea; you will ever aftter. i ent time. They are, however, doing con- | pay” the costs e iher | that the spirit of dissension in Utah between {‘ff:‘}v..f".‘,‘l".jy.‘ w,‘.‘x’ n“hs”.ln 1'»";1. ‘:v‘:iyv”;‘l: Wb Del MOTheS CoUmL - WHo their | We have furnished mora homes with goods of all descriptions i siderably better than holding their own. | words, $95,000 was loaned on lots worth ntiles and Mormons as such had been muc- | i Ve €OCCOn e In a plurality ml:« tiled that were able to eultivate their ‘. than all the furniture houses combined, just because we dea i Pl are v [ 5,000 2! ollected since | ceeded y ol pe z," \ 2 L4 . . s elds with any reasonable degree of sugcess q . o N % | All the older associations are growing slow! about $16,000. Although it collected since | ceeded by an “‘era of good feeling,” and of | of about 1,000 for the republican candidate. 8 2z N bad with you fairly and honestly, furnishing you goods at a reason- 3 but steadily, . Many withdrawals are re. | orsanized $142,252 as an expense fund, the ex- | the two causes which are assigned for this | ~ But after all the most that can be Inferred | poCqine Of the exciss of molstire, JWe have v ¥y R ) penses exceeded the amount by $23,9 1o doubt the weather eycles will bring an able price and Keaping faith with the public. i ported, due to the stress of the times, but [ Ppiee, EXCECORE FIe ern recelved §: ge, ono—the official declaration against | from these figurea is that during the present | oun 0”2, 4 Maiteet VSR T, BUNE en et et e Vi “ - the new membership, as a rule, excceds the | ay compensation in direct violation of law. | Polygamy by the leaders of the M:rmon | DY ",‘l‘v ""I”"”“]‘”"Q‘ }""' parties are ory | the Register's theory will fail to “hold b " ] withdrawals, A goodly number of the latter | The figures certainly justify the action of the | church and its avowed acceptance by the | Syery”, PARRGed: AIw CRUle PIOR re | Water Rirh BAENey FunNITURE. GA.‘PETS. take out the savings of two years or more to ;';f,‘.'.x\“;‘r,‘.:."',lfl‘i.fi\"_.f::,ry.‘::;”‘:Iv..‘»lr::»'«‘f measures | laity—was reviewe The other cause men- | heoause of the unusually large number of MUSIC AND CREMATION. L VUV VLR [ —— meet current obligations, ang almost in i m blice e LVANIA, | Honed was the readjustment of political par- | voters Who have not yet permanently identl (Mt : . “ varlably relnvest In new shares, Others arc [ ASSOCIATION WORK IN PENNSYLVANIA. | yes 1n the torritory. Thia fs largely a | fled themselves with either party or thought | Hlow the New System of lsponing of tho | Ant que Chamber Suits from. . $7.50 | Indrains from........... 1le obliged. to draw thelr surplus through lack | The bureau of statistics of Pennsylvanla | ooneequence of the first, and, like it, re- | out the questions which(divide them. Na’ Dead is Managed iv Now York | Bedsteads | $1.4 | reports 1,239 assoclations fn operation in the tional issues were so long practically ignored e edsteads from . ... ......$1.40 | Brussels from, 416 of employment, or to moet some unusual de- | giato ~ Complete returns from 1079 show | Quires some retrospective analysis 1o the tetritory, and ths Mormoas formed 80 | . Liere 18 & chiance fot & fair feminine fov Shabie SEIS I mand. The most remarkable feature of the | 238,985 members. The receipts from Until very recently, as is well known, the | 1o 1% Lerrory: And L8 o lon, that 1t | ellst to found a romance on cremafon in Springs from.......:... 900 Velvets from........... 690 ] business at the present time is the prompti- | sociations for the year past were $31 v , | voting population of Utah was nct distrib- | will be strange if, as Individuals, they are | these days, and she can make the ¢ tude of monthly payments, the per cent in "“‘I as: "‘{*"'f 1,079 are 3("- ;1.‘—“‘- ;;‘: “:‘l“ uted, as elsewh . v 4 uan | and profits amounting to' $74,710,419, the arrears being really less than during the flush | U0 BIUE B0 s diociations were 35,85 times of past years, ‘This is particularly | 310 and the average loans of 809 were $1,0 @oticeable in th case of borrowers, com- | In all this co-operative banking system the | local existence in that territory. One of inat Mattress)s from. ... $12) Body Brussels from....... 58¢ eat politi- | not glow in attaching themselves permanently | Ing scene in a crematory as grand and beau P §7 F o cal parties of the natlon, but was divided | to either of the present parties. They mani- | tiful likes without overstepping the Fold ng Bads...........$7.50 | Ma(s from............. 10e into two parties or factions having merely a | féSt DOW a lively interest in natlonal Qués- | 1y of probability. Over at Fresh Pond in Extension Tables from.....$3.25 | Hempsfrom............ 1le tions and there are many signs that they are | ere, between the gr as st these days, says the New York Sun, the sim- 3 seeking to prepare themselves to vote upon .:~ Saratively few being backward In their pay- | losses were but $51,015, clearly testifying to | these, the people’s party, was composed | these cue e ntelligehtly. But the slow- | ble Nttle brick furnace of old has grown into | onts, conscquently very few foreclosure | the prudenco and skill of the managers. | aimcst, it not quite, exclusively of Mor- | ness of this process makes the Mormon voto u temple—a two-story temple, With the walls sTovEs c“lNAw‘nE E'c suita have been instituted. (shnle mingle merles HoCi e e eavits com. | Mons, and its gdversaries declared that both | yet an uncertaln factor. The republicans | Lo o ok iy L R B B o 9 i The reasons for this favorable condition | panies now running on a life ¢f not longer | 1ts policy and the votes of its members were | claim President Woodruff e n! Gy | teady to well ont’ Rossint's “Stapat. Mater," . are chicfly due to a greater degres of vigi- | than twelve years. The greater number of | directed by the clergy of that seet. The | oor% 0f the Abomieac FOTER WLk GENEE | or “Dor Gesang der Gelst ueber das Wasser, Ranges from. o oeas oo DIEEYOlI0 RIS T s o e HTIBLS lance on the part of the directors. During | associations, however, are perpetual, issulng | other party, calling itself the liberal, in- Pat sades he srominence | PY Wagner, if the mourners wish it. Every " B 0 0 [} e 0 ew series Of shares sdch year. ‘Tho magn! the church leaders) and others of prominence | o& toit & cating Staves from $2.75 % Tea Sets Trom $2.89 the ora of inflated values and rapid realiza- | neW series of shares ench vear. TG WAERE | cluded “all those, of whatsoever previous | are supposed to be democratic. Thoughtful Sunday afternoon there 18 an orean rocital 3 Sfrom ......52.1¢ e Sets Ceen s uvaee i { tion on investments, fictitous valuations were | {iae Of thIS PP 18 BSOR, B St accumula- | Party afiliations, who were opposed to the men of all partics agre that for the present B e ey Enclutten nuhaesy utinica Laundey Stoves from. ... ..$2.90 § Dinner Sets from.... ....$4.85 i ccepted for loans, and the assoclations found | tion of ove 000 fo embers of | Mormon church, Naturally this aticn | at least Utah must be ranked among the b StikioN 5 g ] o ¢ accopted for loans, and the associations found | tion of over $100.000,000 for the members of ou church. Naturally this situaticn | 4¢ deast Utall must be manked GRERE NG | flowers sometimes to heap on the ‘itle uras Gasoiing Stoyes from. ... ..$1.98 § Banquet Lamps from. ... ..$2.54 themselves, when the tide receded, with con- | this state’s societies cannot be over sev! was calculated to arouse bitter prejudices | (FVVS o lone feld for ofther side to | full of ashes that stand abou! in the niches Base b [ i p . Bierabl sk st wieckuse on (he wrong | J6bT: & Wonderl Tecird 4 (BHEL and S | dna (o piace in the forground quertions ot | ATonts, 4, Szl Bk, L, e o Sometimes there. will be n funeral during ase Burners from. . . .. . .$42.50 § Piano Lamps from. ... ..$4.87 b T on | denial. tiotly politica The A 4 ARAUQY. 8, . SR : prndet the afternoon, and ther 2 org eeita aters 24 9 0 Qp) aide of the ledger. The assoctations which [ AERIak, L of these associa- | Strictly political. The tieral party, at NBBRASKA AND. GUTAR the atternoon, and then he orian reoal | & Ol Heaters from.........$4.25 | Lemonade Sels from. ... .. 950 provided reserve funds for just such busi- | (it WRCETAR O Mact that 1,239 socleties | first insignificant, increased as Gentiles con- | qyo yigitor to Utah will find other matters | the body that fs soon to be inciner ated in a J ness contingencies managed to ease up the | now in operation have assets estimated at | tinued to settle In the territory, and ulti- | of jnterest as well as politics and statehood. | large, cieanly furnace room back of the beau BAMS losses. But the lesson, costly as it was, was | $103,943,364, and the $100,000,000 returned to | mately became quite strong in the larger | The recent and rapid development of its pub- | tiful hall, where the visitors may peep $10.00 ) ,T e i meeded to stir the directors to a realizing | members In various forms since the system | tong In the spring of 1890 it carried the | lic schoo' system, its remarkably successful | through the holes in the door of the retort 00SToRshabRepHi(ieS: 5 > b vided grand total twice as large 8 #1.00 per weck or .00 por month sense of thejr duties, and they have profited | Pegan provides & ‘.“”' tontl banka i Uhis | Municipal election in Salt Lake City after | beginnings in certain lines of art—such as | and admire the perfection tuat has been 25,00 worth of gowds, A ! BT 1) (614 yaiuations and Hilghi/pans | Stathe caplial ot he MALIGRATIBAORA.N the fiercest campaign in its histcry, Upon | music and architecture—and the importance | reached in the ari of sending dust and ashes R #1.50 por week or 16.00 per month. have been outlawed. Conservatism took the | *if - fully 97,600 homes of wage- | {he Tencuncement of golygamy by the church | and diversity of Its Industries —all can hardly | into space. There are 550 niches in the two Or 880,00 /worth of kuodh, 2 ] Dlkce of Infation, and the reault ls seon in | . T4 represents fully O 80 oo et ienat | lle leaders advised the dissolution of the | fall to attract observation. The laat 1 | great rooms of the stone assembly hall, and 800 Wattlioe Recu oL wes K 0F 88,00 SO THGR N . Tt Ymuroved ohuractsr of loans emphasized | Sirners, and the report eatimaics thal L el | people's party. — This was soan afterwards | feature should especlally interest | already people are buying them as the others re 1 B0 aar Wk or 810,00 e Jnoatas 4 B Grosupt paymenta. oo Secured. them, through building effected, and at the pext clection for de braskans, because it promises the upbuilding | purchase lots in cemeteries, purchasing them §100.00 worth of zoois, The o 20! ccessiully owed | ReTsons who secure B gate, in 1892, that party presented no can- | of a nearer and wider market for the prod- | six and twelve at a time in advance of any 3 00 por week ot B12.00 por month. The chaff has been successfully winnowed | FECER, o Take your oholos. It o v J from the wheat. What i left is on firm | *30C8UONE o o o didate Uots of our state which will repay closer at- | demand for them, Each family decorates i's y s $200.00W0rth of Eo0 18, ¥ | ] foundations, The home builders who have, UNDIVIDED PROFITS. The liberal party, however, continued its | tention than it has yet received. There are | niches uniformly, so as to distinguish them heads you win, tails wa lose. #4.00'par: Weok 08 916,00 por: oM 3 through mutual co-opcration, secutred immu- Ohio_assoclations sre having trouble over | vrganization longer, because, as its mem- { many other facts which link the two com- | from those of their nelghbors. Sometimes nity from landlordism, are the nucleus from | undivided prefits. A majerity of the sec- | bers said, they were not yet ready to trust | monwealths together. Thelr development has | a single one is purchased by a man or woman which prosperity will ain an early im- | retaries insist on carrying an account un- | Mormon pro ana, as their opponents | heen quite uniform, and the same great con- | Whose views upon the subject of cremation tinental highway which unites them has been | are not shared by his or her relatives, and an fmportant factor in the progress of both. | sometimes out of a larga family oniy two or Historieally, too, the connection has always | three will provide themselves wiih nich storm of unusual severity unscathed, the as- | are equally firm in maintaining that they | in office in certain parts of the territory soclations have little fear of the stress of | have no warrant in law for the prictice. | and desired to remain s As late as th ,‘ petus, Having passed Migh o financial | der that designation. The state inspectors | declared, the liberal leaders were entrenched soclations have little tear of the Atrees ot | Ono clause of tha Ohlo law reads: “As- [ November election of 1595, therofore, the | peon” eiose The. earlicat annals of Doth, | the others preferring the old-fashioned mods of new business when the clouds roll by, Soclations cannot carry any portion of the | liberals, though then confined to Salt Lake | t\naed with romantic tradition, merge in each | of interment in the earth. ABOUT KICKS AND KICKERS. current net earnings as jndividual profits ccunty, maintained their organization and | hor© Who does not know that our own The management of a modern crematory 5 Bhe) ofiithb privilages whicl u ‘sharenotder:| TUe. inspectors clalin fhat there must S| nominkiedchndlaatert T suoRtly SRIEE Gawiirls faf' Bonénos Waki GMEIAALlY (oaly e | cersmiony, iy dow a8 much & tiatier it Reutin ] O axhriiasy 310 realaten, & dajpk | 1 oczister diktribttion of wiiipe net BATEL] (et s Tadlor Goodwih expreigsd i1t FWS .l Motmon ‘village-iof 'WintertQuartersy's It as trie 0l siyle burial. When a death oc- 3 tavariably exercises 18 to roslater a KICk | fige (o the stocklolders, and the statute | woke up one morning to find that the Nib- was from here in the spring of 1847 that | curs in New York the body is given in charg 1 y escribes e anne: hich era party d d ¢ tak isel it it were Ritinds: hetoalculated: on. He: does not atop | PIainly. presctit the manner in which | eral party had Brigham Young's first party set out on its | Of an undertaker precisely as if it were not thy me is to be made. The division of | tion in Salt Lake in January last to fill a + o 3 T lertnk t to consider why it does not come up to th anuary las & | S lias 08 Journe tearch of the | to be cremated. The undertaker r it as the e gs must be either semi-annual anc 6 LeRiEIAture oS 2 | pathess, y mark. He Imagines that the mere paying of | (Ne_ earnings must by A vacancy in tho legislature “there was n rthat the | he would for the grave, and takes It 1o the A or annual. In making these divisions there | liberal candidate, and the test was ex- | promis and. And it was here that th & : s Pk O probably never att:nds a meeting Of the | . "oxpenses actually incurred during the | cratic candidate of Nebraska, but soon to become the first | jon. UG RN WAV (O (IS I are, or direotors, who give their time to the asso- | yon “DI4*3h Smount, to be determined by | Two Tecent incidents will serve to lilug- | settlers of Utah. Brigham Young and his | Joe TEISR PCCTC B iy (edvesy tlet, fu { elationgratultously, but ho watches the re- | (il 0 %0 Ciciiics,” for the fund £or | frate how rapid and yet how extensive has | companions wore three months and seventeen | £ § SLCRCE O S NN M one ports as a hawk docs its prey, and If it is not | .o, jent losses, as provided in section 5, | been this efacement Gays in reaching Zion. Today the traveler | mal rito ot incineration, In only on peared.” At an el Formarly Pesple’s Kammoth !nsta!lma\fiirllousn. Send 10 cents for postage on Big *9% Catalogue. i . e P PO en (baltey S i§ apn Han. Lb sy £ne. oag Write for Baby Carriage Catalogue—Mailed Free. satisfactory in gains, he develops a pedal | U “ i B per cent © 4 . t cf former party | e Journey—from the same Florence | has the church ceremony becn celebrate 4 b X ee VAt that would(astonlah a protasstonal 1o Shallatiisdst gl ner oaL ol arne | ey uguat 1L the republicans beld s party | T 85 e Jourey o e i more than | over the ashes after the cremation. That Goods sold on payments in Couneil Blufis & South Omaha high kicker. Sometimes he waxes hot and e ATk adiito: EheuRtOBkhoIars | Lit ot - Battdis pLERERS UL AN TRt ATENO] K100 S v i | happened a year ago, in the case of & young Open Monday and Saturday Evening Withdraws, or masticatds the ear of the sec- | 088 must bo distributed to the sgckholders | bill at Saltalre, the famous new pleasure | thirty-six hours. And this momentous BT tioran L thextrioal tarlyiiHax P Y 8s. | w body was burned and the ashes were then arricd—in a casket, if the reporter's mem ory is correet—to one of the largest of th | Episcopal churches in town, where the ric officiated in a service that was precisely the L same as if the body ad of ashes, had been before him often the funeral a dividend, and no portion of the same | resort on Great may be held as undivided profits. The secretaries contend that it is very qificult, it not impossible, to distribute the net earn- fugs to, all stockholders without leaving over a smal) fractional per cent, Thee inspectors insist that when such a balance exists alt lake. change Is at once the measure On the platform from which the addresses | and _the type of progress, not alone were made were several well known former | for - Utah, but for the whole vast trans- liberal feaders, together with President Wood- | mississippi empire. For between the oX train ruff of the Mormon church, Jeseph F. Smith, | of the Mormon scouts which balted on the one of the First Presidency and a nephew | desolate sands of the Salt Lake basin and the t of the founder of Mormonism, and others | locomotive whose whistle sounds through the must be placed to the credit of the con- | of that faith. One of the retary. Like many other nuisances, this kind must be tolerated. If hs would take himself off to some quiet corner and wrap his gray matter around the fact that every f director 18 equally interested with him in the profits of the busin and equally anx- fous to increase the income, and devotes no small part of his energy to that end, he n strongest party | now transformed and verdure-laden valley | D¢ SRl Sy e oy iy FROM b tingent fund. spezches was made Mormon bishop » history of western civilization L RYIEIRNE P aoe ; A pight probably discover that the era o S pesc as made by a ‘mon bishop | lies the history A ected he crematory. h is a :nfi“ p:,,“m et AAICunn (betaitaRt: o ,’{ ASSOCIATION NOTES. from Provo. Judge Goodwin, who also CHARLES 8. LOBINGIER pamns 8 "x‘”‘j‘l':: I‘f’m‘l’_““,fi,‘ i R O R Lah \hlon oL There are 378 asscciations in the city of | delivered an address, alluded in most friendly ———— S tore IBs oaskel Taxtaiwhile DIRECT FROM THE TANK. o e oee™St loan ascoclations realize | Cirelnuati, the oldest of which was started | terms to the venerable President Woodruft | NOTHING NEW UNDER THE BUN. | Y% celebrant stands behind it and the mourn- the responsibilities they place on the offi- | in 1866, ~ They have 100,000 shareholders | and other Mormons who were present s Sather before it. With the strange wall s cors of the associations. The time and abil- | and handle $30,000,000 annuzlly. The other incident is feund in a recent | yioses Was an Electriclan and Joseph a ‘;;‘;m‘} cround. all cut with rows or niches 0 Bollers o aanti N Briinesn 3 ity used in managing many of the associa- There are 452 associdtions in the oity of | republican specch made by John M. Zane Single-Tazer. and dockes with scores of urns and vases of et i s y ) > 3 tions would command large salaries from reg- | Philadelphia, with 105,000 members, $42,000,- | at Salina, Utah. ~Mr. Zane is the son of L L B0t A 3R for Co n and Feed Mills, Baling i rators, Creamerics, &e, OTTO GASOLINE ENGINES 9 apital, $17,000,000 of annual income | ex-Chief Justice Zane, under whose admin- nee e atartiing Qigvery MAL Tosph | melal e suarhls, And Wih the ik Ll 500,000 of annual profits fairation ‘the anti-Mormon. legistaticn was | In E8Ypt was the original single taxer ex- | ing, the scene ls as Impressive at at any erest to know th in Tllinois | most rigorously and unreclentingly enforce ve astonishment need not greet the funeral of any sort that we .nn\‘ e butlding with | As an Instance of what even some Gentil 1¢iiherlaacinoliglons v Otlsg alr e onY ek ular corporations, but in most the officers give their time without hope of | end ¢ reward, Ask the officers and directors of 1t s of i some of the Omaha associations the amount | there are 563 Hay, Running Se of the cases | 000 of y v revelation that the ancient prophet Moses they would charge for work they are doing | total assets amounting to § Of | regard as extreme views on the part of the | wag probably the father of electrician l;\.f-n ull. w’ d jumvmw ‘-‘:.’:( Ry Stationary or Portable. b for the associations without pay, and one | the number of assoclations thirty-five are | judge, his famous “segregation decision” is | " ‘bpijadelphia Reeord King Solom L o thaT cankat aphasis 8 1105015 P B 1o 20 H. P, 3 oud be surprised at the fgutes, The fact | national and the others locals, -The na- | cited, in which he held that each day of | M T Wi mH0aa e | ipE- e 0L the) faat IthAL 1y ¢ it for Catalogue, Prices, oto., desoribing work to be done, 3 that there are 80 many business men inter- | tionals have assets reaching $5,217,835 ontinued polygamous relaticns constituted a | d¢clared there Is nothing new uuder the sun. | lald upon the HpOTA £ the corpse Chicago, 245 Lake St. HE OTTO GAS ENGINE WORIK 2 o associat A building end loan assoclation was or- | distinct offense for which the ’ The theory that electricity, which this age [ this means a last examination of the cory 7 4 = 3 S 3 estad [n the operation,of the assoclations Haiog v 0 h gthe tull penaltl i other safcguard axainst burial Omaha, Sheeley Block, 150h & Howard 5ts, 330 & Waluut Sis., PUILADKLPHIA, PA shows that the principle of the associations | #anized at Ponca, Neb., recently. William | of the statute might be applied. Yet, in the | prides itself upon as lts own peculiar glory, ko ”‘““: 'of Bwedish Hors 2 BA. ¥ meets with their approyal. One of the most | Lister was chosen president, W. W. Cooper, | speech above referred to, the younger Zane | is as old as the ten commandments, and was apable of withstanding intense | "= o = - 1 1 successtul business men in the city was | Secretary and treasurer, and Willlam Grath, | made a special plea for the support of the | well known to the Israelites if not to the ‘i“l_"w,,' the coffin before the y asked the other day why he was such an | Frank Bowes and George Koffman directcrs. | Mormo He told them that the persecu- | ppoenicians, has been’advanced by a shrewd an out. Sheets of 1 satur- 5 3 enthusiastic worker in the loan association The Edgar, Neb., association closed out | tions of their fathers in Missouri were al- | pLiblical student, C. B. Warrand. As Piazzi 3 ik \m“‘ Sl o N ranks. “My first dollar was saved through | its first series in six and one-half yeors. 1owed and abetted by a democratic governor, | Smyth has sought to establish the wonderful | #hed WOE & BHCI 6 5040 s put upon HOUPIDERE™ , my membership in a loan asscciation, and I — and declared that the most obnoxious features | astronomical genius of the old Egyptians by | the €rae B0 NACE T S0t e spabtlrce. 3 belleve that there are more like me, who, | ALLISON’S TRAIL oF GRAVES. | °f the anti-Mormon legislation for Utah were | g thorough investigation of the great pyra- | wa€4e BNEI0 TR (0 00Tt atmost as if Vit Gerstho prescr 4 when they learn the value of that first dollar, ot of republican origin. It seems safe to | mid, so Mr. Warrand has brought modern | &% “‘:r“‘a m‘:“ ‘My’s casings, and & mummy tion of & ‘“""""”"li‘.""' Wil aul M, 4EC you ol siiag K o v , o' D1 5 g, 2 s S Eaoe e s casings, and a | yous or discines of e o, o8t Manhod. ki k N B0 savt more, 0 QF A Desperado’s Path Marked with the ; then, that no political party In Utah | science to bear upon the ark of the covenant | j; wpat it looks like after that. Even the Y, Ininati tho Bk, Sominas. Emissin, Nervoss Deotiee: 4 THE SOCIAL SIDE OF IT, Mounasing Vic will hereafter seek to thrive through hostil- and the temple of the anclent Israelite Boan wrapped up, o that uo part of the gnumm,\mnu-sa ) ‘Marey, Kxhaosting Dr. Varlcoecle and. [ Editor Rosenthal of the Co-operative News, G T ity to th® Mormons, and it Is quite as prob When Moses built his box for the com- | head 1s WIMBDEC up. Constipaiion. Cinolnnat). said, in & recent address: “Tne | The man who told the story, between the | able that none will command their undi- | mandment fablets he rejccted the common | “iue S AHIEL ) 1ified upon a eatafalque, CURIBHTE clennies the ltver, tae Kidneys and the urtnasy building assoclatioh® is the great home | Puffs of his cigar, was from Texas, says the | vided support. cedar and other native woods, and chose fir Jfi ‘H:".k“mm" N Ealy, a0 Rlx with Itk BEFORE ano AFTER organs of all impurities. B i3 maker of the country. The United States | Kansas City Times. “Clay Allison's life was CONSTITUTION MAKING. wood, whieh had to be imported by the [ O¥ &8 FREE QRO TN (e furnace rc CUPIDENE trongthona and reatorcs amall wonk orzana. 5 3 commistloner of labar, 1n Iis statlstics upon | a tragic romance,” ho began. “Clay Alll- | Under the enabling act delegates to a con- Phoeniclan merchants from the southern | RERISH (% S IECEE Nk T on ' line with prosie roason suffarers o nck cured by Doctors ts beoausa ninaty per.cent are troublad with j s subject, just compiled, estimates that [ "ol o esporado. He lived In the Red | vention to frame a constitution for the new | part of Europe. Now, fir happens to be the | o Goors of the retorts, and it is run up to Umoniass, A writt oo 3 money retnemed | Q00 ot Tt & Der- ; 400,000 homes have alrcady been established statp are to be elected next Novemb best known nonconductor among all the Thenithe. Loty (R KKe manent (ure, $1.00 4 Dy il Send for o1 Agsa gl 3 titauwn Thin medium. - And s yet . the | FIver country in the Panhandle, Hia trig- | Hate are to be clocied next November. Dut | UEC iuner ‘of various tmbers. Further. | 908 6 (808 AT ST A Doy, ohs Address DAV P 5 Hox Y676 San K Gl For nale by bullding assoclation Is coly emerging from | gor fngor was busiest in the early ‘sos. [ g Sonjeation ekt is nel to, meot until | Sl Noges had this fir box lined inside and | SRS A ihes brick Ea) GOODMAN DRUG CO., 1110 Farnam Street,Oniai:a. : tho experimental stage. These statistics of | His record was twenty-one. He boasted of T R 8 abos o L Jutside with beaten gold, thus converting e will not be submitted to the voters until | Outside with beaten gold, t L and then orange yellow, to a temperature Norember ot i e n0 phe aroters U0 | theg Atk of the Covenant into a very ex- | i, (06" "9 560 ‘degrocs Fahrenheit, All now in progress for the selection of dele- | Pensive, but very perfect ,""“"‘ Jar, or | L Mare present are at liberty to look GATox hudiithcen ia considlarable discussion | Storage battery for eloctricity. Qold 18 ane ,y,ougp e eyelet holes in the furnace b nomination by nonpartisan conventions, but | 500 or Tesla,” declares My, “,"““‘ could | iitie they see. The first Tart of the body i mot have improved upon Moses’ Or and gold | 13 lttie they see. To% K TN o ahdomen box.” The carbon in the fire of the ark of | g ciqiors see the middle of the mummy the covenant charged the strange battery. | (o™i, "tyat 15 all ~ After a time nothing Adron Improved tipon this by the butiding of | Sk in that ts Wk SIS0 OIS MG tew poles fifty ells ( 150 feet) high. These poles | o\ "or white ashies of that which was so0 Comumissioner Wright are the first compiled | ji, Twenty-one dead men, whose graves Dby the government upon this subject. were scattered from Dodge City to Santa “The 400,000 new homes mean that many | pe, I myself saw him kill Bill Chunk, a familios of wige-carners and workingmen | bad man, who shot people just for the fun of taken out of the tenement house, freed from | secing them Gl *The two men had no ie landlord_and established in social inde- | couse for quarrel. They were the prize R R 0 TARing the Haual. avoraes of oo | chuso. tor quarrel, "Ehey wero he [Prie | the advocates of selsction through the regular persons to a family, this means better health, | Tt was a spirit of rivalry which ma®e them ty machinery are very active, and in Salt better moral _surroundings, better educa: | gwear to shoot each other on sizht. Their | L2Ke county the latter plan has been adopted, tlonsl opportunities for 2,000,000 people, and | fricnds bet on the result of their first chance | lominations for delegates having already been this in turn means a great uplift to cur | rencon: They met one night at a cross- | M2de by the republicans were ecovered with beaten gold and gold L P common cltizenship. The tundamental prin- | rosa o in Now Mexico sl sat down ai | There is much less discussion, efther pri- | chains were hung from the poles to the ark— | 32t & tine Befe &, WER U ot : ciple of the bullding association 15 co-opera- | tapics opposite each other, with their drawn | Yately or In the press, about the substance | & method by which: the prophet secured a |, fie WIS fOr Ahe auiiah okt AEIHICL OO A tion, mutual helpfulness. Who can e L o sting ‘on thelr laps beneath | Of the new constitution than one might | complete and powerful electrical connection, | Hitle as the cusiomer Lo, AR K mate the soc'al influenco of the lasting | their napkins. A plate of oysters on the | Raturally expect. There seems to be Sgme ars 'at mporied“marble 00 (ROMeLALS bogod by the, ! Eloctrie Tolta « Fellow Sufferer.” Bolas Sure” Guacks, wnd who have mnu YOU whio hivegiy p in despair, say E “ 1 amdoomed, fhere 3 no huoe' for e o you | aay, Wi are'iking (nio 4 om ; araraar QLI Upon & SHOrel 8 fen of sick ks and mistortunc, P, sud KOUBRSBLE! TILLESNOPE] TEERE 1S A g PERFECT HANHOOD RESTORED rita mo n (ll bstory of oo ase nd for GUESTION LISTS ard 100 Pag Dok, My rescurees i bt 5 e, 10y Thiava cnred th waands., 1 CAS CURK YOU. Twonty year bt o ‘Crayon.' i .”-.!.u rawli i gen- | His sons were Killed, without wounds or i e urns the rich ZD e e O v oteroiy 5 L L Rei e 4 friendships that are formed through the | g ot S eral impression, howeve o 2tk 5 4 of bronze. Upen these urns the rich may % o " e ¥ 5 " \ell had just been set before Chunk, when | eral impression, however, among the best | bruiscs, by fire breaking out of the ark . Ll Bohk et s B e (R mever U (1D, U lou ordenad1 & iriehly 1 eter viay diroct yon to HEAL 3 regular weekly moeting of directors at the | pe dropped his hand a carel fashion, | informed that the constitution will contain Iny \.,",.M Warrand has asserted that in *l\vn-l as m‘"'l & ‘h,‘y'dxv\[;:r-\; \1:.',.),"“7'\\1'. Dr. N. E. WO0D, mem CHICAGD MEDICAL' & SUKGICAL INSTITUIE, 30'Van Buren St. Chicago, e assoclation he:dquarters? ana sent a ball at Allison beneath the table, | little that is unusual, and also that it will | order to deal death from this apparatus | 18 nAmEs, © iy g : ““The_building asscciation 1s a great uni- fler. Every rcligious creed, every pelitical party is represented in the assoc’ation mem- bership, yet mothing is ever heard ', U p deed, they order put upon them Quick as a leap of lightning Allison’s gun re- | follow the older type of American constitu- | Aaron had only to remove the costly camel's | \HS apd, LA e R Ol J Dlied, A tiny red spot between Chunk's | tions in belng restricted to general provisions | hair carpets, which were almost perfect non- | WEEL SE0ES: O ¥ eyes marked where the bullet entered. The her than the later tendency which is to | conductors of electricity and make the cul- choose to pay for. The little black boxes MANHOOD REQTOR T vhicl escribed above are the oues in e L0 Cure i Hery ous diseases there of creed or party. Tl ; dend man lolled over on the table and was | Incorporate much in the way of specific legis- | prit stand on terra firma. That several :"““‘:':: (o rdn:.p'\x.’,:-lu AbAYA gte. Lin onss b disas ore of creed party e association vith his face downward in the dish and cipate and restrict | membe evolting tribes of Israelite: ch the company de $8hos 0. mwmll A : e hp bl oy TTacogarot MAGAION | atil Wikl his face dowuward.in the dish of and thus 1o anticipate and restrict | members of revolting tribes of 1 ea fUbIBR 00 QR e ot Jomamation 4 oysters. the work of the regular law-making body. were thus elcctrocuted is also a matter of Uy over exerti ] R bl AL TR o e Allison was a large cattle owner. He | One of the questions concerning which | record in the bible. In building the temple, jmani o0 oA urA aTe, uE. B 1) 1he (DI ot helpfuness and tho BUTeSt | wont on a drive to Kansas City once and | party lines will probably be drawn in the | Solomon found that copper would do as well | S50 WIPRR B0 GHE B iors the dead 18 e e R nt and | while here fell in love, married and took the | convention s that of a clause regarding boun- | a8 gold. He had the temple covered with | Gh 000 Byoouca it is a rule that it must WER ORP. AN 1T CB1NG. D et ID, bl only, recently | woman to his home in the wost to live. A | ties. Industrics, such as beet sugar factories | copper, and copper water pipes led to the | JEHLOR CREEICE ™ No cofin carried to a Lot iho huilting assoclation as & soclal - | child was born to them—a child whoso face | (one of which Utah already has), it will be cisterns inside the temple, On the temple, or | b2 tarown WA S B0 Srom there IEE Yarions lagus o oatin i Ihosnig was as beautiful as the face of a cherub, but | a part of republican policy in the mew state | rather on its roof, a number of gilt spears | w '"OT 00 T va Durchased are therefore very B i PR, BA _Jff‘{,.:‘-;“'\(: whose poor little body \‘«'uuih;xrnhl) deformed. | to subsidize by bounties, while the democrats | Were placed in vertical positions, n;\lm ]m-’ R maioa oAtk sue | e | features of soclal entertsinment. It re- | aflpie 161 0 the cbild with the great love | will oppote these and ‘enaeavor to- pronibit | Leen 0 twenty-four feet high. All these mains for the local league to develop the them by constitutional provision, curious facts may not be convincing, but | chasers of these twisted and misshapen form his supersti- e . and. (hls demind 1s always ‘DIRT IN THE HOUSE BUILDS THE HIGH« ! ometimes no other urns are used, as in carriod i t JACE W ; 1 by 0 el i<, CHICAGH ¢ plain wrapper. Nitross NEMYE S ERD Co. . s Bold in Omaba by Shernman & McCopnell, Kunn & Co, and V) ers & Merchant, druggists, 7 a . certainly compel us to wonder if, after . wiclal features cf the associations in each Woman suffrage will probably have advo- | they cer! i complied with, though if they leave it to the o -~ ¢ tious mind read a meaning as significant as i A s M all, some of the laurels of Franklin may not i e w = : community. ~ In the English building 80- | uat of the messago which the divine hand s in the convention. - In Utah this would | &1 JomC 8L (G (CE employes it will be dealt with in the sam AY TO BEGGARY.” BE WISE IN TIME AND USE cloties social entertainments are very com- the restoration of an old rather than the T D ate on the palac s of the of old 3 Al way mon and successful. Excursions, plenics | fh ‘l,'“h‘).':m"' (';ul(" h,“'t\',l:ug{" ',,.{‘,":fi”,|’el;“' creation of a new policy, Women voted there St pr—— Town's Water Supply. 3 and conventions of the membership of those | Ieoe on o 4 under the old regime, and their disfranchise- 4 " Royalty and the Struddle. 3 socleties aro very frequent and useful.” kL "o ('lrrnnlll(un:m:"grlflh Juit 8 | ment was a part of the legislation against | Hawkeye: The lowa State Register has | ., .\ omoirs of the home and court life ' ] TOO MANY IRONS IN THE FIRE, T tha birth of his ohild. fell betors | (ho Mormons. 1t would not be strange, | lately’ been engaged in u discussion of the | iy g peror Napoleon and his family p President Dudley of the Missourl League | his deadly pistols. He was complstely therefore, if the latter should be found adyo- | water supply of lowa and has reached the Mme. Junot recalls an incident which ought 3 b of Local Mutuals has been looking up the | changed. | eating a revival of the system. conclusion that the state is golng dry. It yl'l‘wns‘ Hrergprieons, le,”‘,”m‘“ methods adpted by some secrotaries in that “In the new life which followed he de- Not all, however, of the provisions of the | claims that at one time the streams and | . "rrosent time who ride man fashion L i state. He says there are 100 composite secro- | voted himself with absorbing energy to his | NeW Instrument will be left to the conven- | 3 eq and forests and fields, were well sup- | “One day,” relates Mme. Junot, “I arrived HANDSOME PEOPL' 3 Tarlos I Missour| who. are managing mave | business Interests. He became rich in time, | ton. It is usual in the admission of<new | flicq" with water, Editor Clarkson says: | at Queluz just as the princess of Brazil was than one association, and who, for the pur- | Ten thousand cattle on the Texns ranges bore | States for the enabling act to prescribe cer- | iy have lived in lowa nearly forty years— | getting out to the chase, and when I boheld Oaly Those Wi pose cf gotting as many salarlés as possible, | his brand. A few years ago he was driving | (ain clauses which must be incorporated in | gince May 1, 1855. At that date wells of | per equipped in her extraordinary costume 1 o 9 Tncrease. the number of assoctalons undes | from his ranch in 4 heavy farm wagon to | the fundumental law. In the case of Utah | pure and coél water were obtainable in six | fancied 1 saw a grotesque vislon before me. Have Good Teeth, their management, thereby Increasing their | town. The front wheels jolted into a deep these appear to be somewhat more extensive | o twenty feet all over Grundy county's un- | She had a black horse, very small, I all . - SEARLES& L o 4 income without regard to the fact tbat they | rut. Allison was pitched headforemost to | @nd explicit than heretofore, but this is in L A anon equalled prairies. Tcday the wells of that | Portuguese horses, but sufficiently skittish county are from 140 to 200 feet deep, and | 1o intimidate a good male equestrian. all of the almost impassible sloughs of forty | my amazement the princess mounted him 1 could sell more shares of stock in one of the | the ground. His neck was broken. The part due to a desire to insure the removal assoclations conducted by them. and thus | team jogged -n into the distance and left him ' of conditions which bave so long operated strengthen the assoclations now in existence. | lylng there dead and alone upon the prairic.”” | to keep the territory out of the unfon. Fol- BAILEY . ruxissnia 2 SEARLES, od floor Paxton Block, 13th II\VI";‘u:;u::I Bt years ago are dried up and as hard as the | astride, and, giving him two or three smart “Telephoue, 1083, { The socleties, President Dudley says, have —e—— lowing are some of the most important of | hardest portion of the most heavily trav- | euts with the whip, she made him prance i ondu Gesnne iy I | many vampires sucking the blood of the Fooled Hix Better Half, | these requirements eled roads. Ditching, tiling and tamp- ?L‘a..«“...'i. .::uanm‘o' Btaet o1 lill‘lle l.:a‘L:w SPEGI!ILISTS. {udflv‘ ":::'-‘-:L-".l.'um-‘:::t::“u;:"::g]..furt,l ':.': 1 frugal money saver, and what is needed is | A little man with a bald head and an in- | “The constitution shall be republican in | Ing those sloughs now ryshes all the rains en set off at a full gallop, like a heac rpee) baa 1 s and then ] gallop, ad s fs taken. Fillings without paln. All work h laws that will free the assoclations from | oftensive blue eye drifted into a Main street | form, and make po distinetion in civil or | and melted snows tp the gulf, and the | long yputh of 15 just broke loose from col- hronis Waranted. Use D aihag's Deoth ot 1 those so-called Napoleons of flnance. Ncth- | galoon and threw & half dollar on the bar, ~Political rights on accounts of race or color, | Water supply s stegdily, sinking into the | Jege. /She appearcd so ridiculous that I had Nervous 1 ing too severe, Mr. Dudley thinks, can be | s " W5 i o e * | except as to Indians not taxed, and not | earth. If the water supply has sunk 100 | qificulty in preserving the gravity indis- WE Tvous g = = satd of the dishonest wecrotaries, and nothing e e aaet™ ko aaid b repugnant to the eonsticution of 'the United | feet or more during thg. past fory vears, | peusable to my diplomatic dignity.” Private good of the honest ones, for they have it I8 A M e A States and the principles, of the Declaration | how much lower will jt gipk during the next e ) undor their power under the present laws of | | The, schooner Mad “"h‘,'; S st 43 he of Independence. And sald convention Shanl | forty years It the ‘hurfdce water s not A Vanishing Lake? CURE AND INVALID CHAIRS, | that stute to do as they please, e s o o samns. 0 880 provide, by ordinance irrevocable without the | Fetained or maintained, to, restore the pres- | “Vanishiog lake", otherwise Haw pond, a Special 4 { AN ILLINQIS NAPOLEON "I am," replied Shorty, with dignity. consent of the United States and the people | €t Water levels? Nothing earthly 18 w0 l- | gneet of water seventeen miles east of Cor- iseases The state audilor of Illitols, vested with | “You,< scoffed the big man, *‘why, you ©f 3aid state portant to lowa prosperfty as an unfafling | o 10"l " i, but wonderful, being re- - | supervision of bullding and loan associations, [ never had a cent in your life. Your wife Firsi—That perfect loleration of religious | WAter supply, und Fhe time Was aerived | 00 O { the greatest natural curl- | 1 weeding out the insolvent Napoleons in the nat's all Tight” said Shorty, “mebbe babitant of said state shall ever be molested | RO LB CARPTE O SRICHAL ROV CNC Py iilining lake” trom (he fact that cvery | _€atareh, all Riaeaass of the Nose. ] 1‘“"“'5"'.' 5‘&“'“}!"}";.:1‘?«)" u.:.lu: con- | she m.e-d but 1" fux money today. :u pacwon or |xfl»|nrly on gooount n".' :u- or | gnly certain method of restoring lowa's un- | year, some time botween the 10th and 20th | Threat, Chest, 8tomach, Liver, Blood inced that the Tilinols ng and Loan as- | “How'd you get It? her mode of religious worship; provided, that | o D o . 4 4 e e L) It : . Sociation of Bloomingtan was §ecayed 1o the Well." Feplied Sharty, “I don't know ga 1 Polygamous or plural marriages are forever | “Wih g, rertiity t May, Its waters become terribly agitated | ~8kin and Kidney Discases, Lo eu Mr. Clarkson thinks" thé , and certified the facts to the attorney | mind teliin’. I had a couple of bad Teeth PprohibRed. e 18 no question | and within a few minutes totally disappear, Manhood and ALL FRIVATE DIs- 4 o oss of water sbyldhe lakes thrc 1g_ (hrough m with 4 &re E I general, who fa irected Dy law 1o wind up | aw’ ahe gimmo enough 10 ket ‘em pulled.” | +Second—(Here follows e provision regara- ob supian, O maisrshaians daken R InED: | Ak e 1 et Tioin. | BADES OF MEN. Elagic Buckngs, betormity b ; 3 e aftirs of any wsoalation, reported lnc | ©Didu’t vou gat ‘em pulied ™ tng, the dispasition of government lands.) and thas also will evestually dry up the | ity have disappeared, but this Is the only one | Gall en or addross Crutchen. Datteries. dyving mw . lfl'Awn“ “.l-ll 5 . o rl:nu: ure, ) l.wlnhr . er hrvp cents for Third—That the debts and liabilities of | lakes of the state Ifyhei natural condition | whioh anpually fills up and goes through Df Searles & Searles 1416FARNAM ST THE ALOE & PENFOLD 0., | allegations some un- o filty. Ses | maid territory, under authority of the legis- | of thelr water sheds are.wot restored by the | such curious performance . OMAILY, NEbB. 108 Farnam Btreet, Opposite Vaxton Hoteh

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