Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 7, 1894, Page 16

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THE OMAHIA DAILY BEE: BUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1804 FROM BASEMENT TO ROOF Our entire establishment is stocked with the newest fall goods. Handsome new designs for little money. We’'ve the same great bargains in almost every department to show you. We could commence to enumerate all the good things we have in store for you. Come and take a et SEE OUR GOODS, GET OUR PRICES AND OUR TERMS. We assure you it will be of interest to you, g (A Body Brussels, price elsewhore $1.15, Plano Lamps pric clsewhore $12.00, Th G t I Sl e fln Earth Bedroom Sults, price elsewhere $18.00, Pleturos, price elsowhore 83,50 Our price 59c Our price $4.87 e rea Bs uv . Our price $9.48 Our price $1.47 Qur price 67c Our price $7.20 Our price $17.456 Our price 95¢ Core— T ESTATE (AK ' 1ding Beds, price elsowhere #18.00, Sideboards, price clsewhere #18.00, Our price $28.68 Our-prae sS40 "7 TETRINEEG, RE—- Our price $9.50 Our price $9.68 N AR SRR L Ty . Read the Official Test. Antlque Rockers, price clsewhere §2.60, Pillows, prico elsewhere 81, Cook Stoves, price elsewhere §950, Ingrain Carpets, price elsewhere 80¢, —This Ia to certify that T havo made a sories Our price 97c Our price 47c [ ik v d s, ot e S i oms , d Our price $4.97 Our price 19c al parts of the stove would act under a high read heat. 1fired the stoves repeatedly until thoy were red hot all Caoled thiem off ns rapldly ns’ possibie, - Undor those most § vere tests the expunsion and contraction did not affect the Hall Racks, price elsewhere $12.50, Blankets, price elsewhere $2.50, plates In the least particular, Ingrain Carpets, price elsewhere 7° unges, price elsewhere $12.50, Our price $5.87 Our price 8dc [ i Hibwahane S TR A : | ‘ Our price 45c Our price $6.90 pive, giving excellent draught. Teharged one of them with one and one-half small bucke T T || PSS SRR [ (011 of ()1 sack on Theliy eveniie Tuno i ] o When the fire wis making lirgo shoets of fume the . serow registers inthe nsh-pit were closed, the poker-hole Center Tables, price elsowhere §2 Comtorts, price elsewhere 81,75, ot Tae ¥ kPl i L SO b to i o of the i i ; Parlor Suits, price eslowhere §3 ginglo Lounges, price elsewhere 88,50, test. Our pl"ice $1.49 Our price 79c Until the following Thursduy afternoon at 4 o'clock the ‘ ‘ { ; : y 4 OuP price $19.45 Our pPice $8.89 body of the stove continued 1o bo 80 wiurm thut s hand could 1ot comfortably be lala wpor i to ) 7 X e e caol off. Tl oxls from the original chargef of slack above refer, ere visible until 10 o'clock und 15 minutes of the evening of that day. Tollet Sets, price cisewhere 87.50, Portieres, price elsewhere §8.50, It will therefore bo seen that this stove ally held firo S5 v £ B Purlor Suits, price elsewhere §40.00, Estension Tubles, price elsewhere $7.50, yntinually for tifty-three hours and fifteen minutas. This is & Our price $2.80 Our price $2.89 J et guaalyii g v b o il Our price $24.50 § Our price $3.80 CONRAD'BRUNE, Supt. 3 The 1894 improvements on Estate Oak increase fire keeping B ey e RV e £ et s TR 3 and cconomy of fuel 15 per cent above the results indlcaed. Hanging Lamps, price elsewhere 87.50, SOLE MiE?ITS Fa] 0”1““] : — B Cucronters, |1riv|w‘l~l':\hvru31 l;n\~\l-l~‘hllw!-.hrn'v(-,lh:\\lwro‘.L’u‘. Our price $2.90 | o e Our price $ ; Our price 54c EASY TERMS. ; EASY TERMS, $10.00 worth of goods, é 4 $10.00_worth of goods, $1.00 week, $1.00 per month. : $1.00 week or $4.00 per month. $265.00 worth of goods, ) 00 worth of goods $1.50 week, or §600 per month $1.50 week or $6.00 per month. $60.00 worth of goods 3 $50.00 worth of goods $2.00 week, or $8.00 per month 3 . T week or $8.00 per month. 75.00 worth of goods G (g s $75.00 worth of goods $2.50 week or $10.00 per month ity o - $2.50 week or $10.00 per month. $100 worth of goods, $3.00 week 0r$12.00 per month FORMERLY ?EOPE’S MAMMOTH INSTALLMENT HOUSE. g 3100 worth of goods $2.00 weck or $12.00 per month. R on 31K 00 i per. month Send 10 cents to cover postage oa big '94 catalogue Write for'Baly Carriage and: Stove- Catalogues, mailed free. -~ Open Monday and Saturday Evenings. $00, Whns g $4.00 week or $15.00 per month. . = g | 5o auy in their longed for union. So devoted arq they that Prince George can not bear to led his wife be separated from him for even a dag, T ITY OF PE]'I\'G have roofs of blue tiles. They were used In | ducks about the city for sale. They sell all | have no sidewalks, and the rude Chinese | streets. The strangest sights to me at first | \v NN v 7 ; 1A the past as watch towers, and they have | kinds of fruits and they are adepts in the rais- | carts sink up to their hubs as they move | entrance were the nomadic Mongolians, who MANMED AMUD AL many port holes for cannon. There are | Ing of the cholcest of vegetables. They | through the city. There are no water | rodo into the city on great camels or drome- thirteen gates which lead Into the city, and | bury their grape vines in the north in the win- | closets, The streets are the sewers, and the | daries, which were covered with wool from | I Quty compels him to travel, Princess May the tewers and the walls near these are | ter, and you can buy your nuts by the | most degraded savage of our western plains | six to twelve inches long. These come from ieaves even the dearly loved new baby bes Queer Sights and Strange People of the | Plastered over with proclamations and bills | bushel. As {o cats, dogs and rats, I did not | has a greater regard for the exposure of his | the cold reglons of Mongolla or Siberia, and | gy piq Tnyades Palaces and Hurls His Little | hind_ and follows the sallor prince where- : much like a theater bill boerd. The gates of | see any sold in Peking, and I don’t believe | person = than have these pig-tailed, silk- | during my visit to the Chinese wall 1 passed L | ever he goes—remembering how nearly theld Capital of the Eastern World. Peking are merely holes through this wall, | the better <es are accustomed to use | dressed, gaudy, fat Pekingese. The city | caravans of these camels marching in single Shafts Among the Nobility. | separation was for life. and they are about as wide as the ordinary | them. I am told, however, that such cats | has absolutely no sanitary improvements, and | file and fas together by sticks thrust This same }“\,q,;y traveler, speaking of mm‘x ul:il pcr:mps twenty feet high. They | ag are sold in the south are raised and fat- | the street lamps are framework boxes bm;“kwl 'hrmulzn :h§~ nm»k HE~ll\ lnlfx!l!;:v;rnr(m(s\r:: wly ;;w m vll\ {xul ;;)‘I.wln;l ;hm n by members of are lined with stone and are beautifully | tenea especially for rket, ane with white paper, and they are seldom | were loaded with great bund s which | 'S PRINC: | the roval families of Europe when the quess MARKETS, BANKS AND STOCK EXCHANGES | 5ic, o™ “niley ' ‘elosed at night with srest | ooed A AT e D 0 Am that | Nghted except during foll moon. It is ab- | they had brought down from the north for HAPPY MARRIAGE OF ENGLAND'S PR'N tion of marriage is decided for them by thein doors sheathed with iron, and they —are | poced by the people, to give herole proper- | solutely unsafe to move about in the night- | the dilettante mandarins of Peking, and were lders, said the Princess Alix of Hessa, paved with leavy slabs of stone. The walls % ¥ 5 E anc & same | time without a lantern, if you wish to keep | carrying back brick, tea and coal to the > Quen Victoria's granddaugh is sald o Great Government Departments—How tho | of Peking are tweniy-seven miles long, and | oo (0, (hose Who feed on it and the same | o clean, and you have to balance | Tartars and Russians. Many of these were | Princess Allx of Hesso Sala to View with | bo desperately reluctant to wed the czaraw Chineso Desp.se Forelgn Natlons—The | the area which they Inclose is irregular in | eTect I8 produced by bears’ meat and the | ¢ o 4 2 o da of the mud. | ridden by Mongol women, who, In coats Aversion Her Coming Nuptiuls—Bru- | viteh, although he is the most brililan® s ground-up bones of wild tigers. These in the d o bab! . oo S ilant RiRat ot North Ohlna—! » shape, and it consists of two big parallelo- hmm m}g,” e R lfrw g e of one story, and the | pantaloons and fur caps, rode astride, and in Culity of MbGLEt G rana Die AL’ partt dn’the wold grams, « The one at the nort wver epa e ook more like | Other cases by men, who were clad in sheep- : Her reluctance s probably the Slimlest und Most Interest CADItA] of Ching, for it contains the Targar | I Peking, for the people certainly B o ian the. offoes of & | skins with fur caps pulled well down over Toward His Wifo pet. lnlare the LOrana. Dubhess: Sergegonen clty, the great government departments, the | Feason to Increase thelr courage. ~Another | opoyq"cppire their flerce Tartar eyes. I saw hundreds perience. She, before the development of foreign legations, and the imperial city, in | Queer article that you see In the Peking | ™ yoni one morning to visit the state de- | of Thibetan lamas in their gorgeous robes | Alix into womanhood, was eicily the most CCopyrighted, 1894, by Carpenter | Which, surrounded by from 5000 to 10,000 | Market s false halr. =~ passed several | parument, and as I looked at it 1 thought | and I met many Mohammedans from the More strange, romantic eplsodes occur In | hogytiful woman in Europe, and it was con The destruction of the Chinese army at | Unuchs, the emperor lives. The lower par- | Places where long-queued Chinamen st00d | op gur great building of th: State, War and | West part of China. the palaces of Europe than can be found ir sidercd a great match for thiz poor, pretty allelogram joins the Tartar city. It has half | beside a board upon which were hung 1ong | Nayy, which cost, you know, more than $10,- BEGGAR'S BRIDGE. all the no o s library 't aaid | princess trom ‘the lttlo: obsdtire’ pALE Piayang, in Corea, and the crippling of their | o Gogen temples, including (he Tempie of | bunches of black Chinese locks. Each of | ouboco. e which y all the novels of a circulating libra aid | ¥ v the little obscure principality it r 000,000, and which is the' biggest granife [ 1 wish you could see one of these Pekingese ¢ 2 passed his life in confidential | Of Hesse to marry into the royai femily of fleet at the mouth of the Yaloo river, in- | Heaven, which was burned down not long | these was a false pigtail, and it is said that | pyilding in the world. The street was a | streets, and the queer sights upon it. They :.»;”(\": “":I'I'\ "“_T‘_‘ hisilite]tu-donfidential |15 i ok i ok atia d SN MR dicates that the Japanese threat that they | 480, and which Is now being rebuilt of Ore- | one of the ohlef articles of export from Corea | mud puddle, and 1 hugged low, shackly | are filled with a stream of yellow humanity PRI WAL LOYS 1 B ler great beauty. “But she has paid & will march their soldiers into Peking befors | 81 Pine. to China is human hair. The Chinese braid | pujldings till I finally came to a gate at | of all classes, ages and sexes. You pass Apropes of th prince of Wales' formal | heayy price for it,” said the gossipy nare I ity i msens an idle ons. The The Chinese city Is where all the mercan- | extra locks into their queues, and they often | which a dirty officlal was standing. He | gorgeous officialy on Mongolian ponies, the | denial of the duke of York's secret marriage | rator. “Serge is the typlcal Itussizn, who tilo business of this great capital is done. | patch out their queues with silk thread. shook his head as I entered, but I pre- | backs of some of which are decorated with | at Malta,” continued this gossip, ‘here . | requires very litiie oh 4 . 2 4 s b alta, gossip, “here is the | requires very littie scratching indeed (o show: Yaloo river Is the boundary between Corea | It is cut up Into narrow streets, and it is | I might write a full lotter about the queer | tended not to see him, and pushed my way | arrows, and you know they are on thelr way 1 ; orlacs Ganh e und court. | the Tartar. He has all the savage Instincts and ‘China, and as it is now the Japanese | filled with all sorts of stores, It hgg mar- | things shown In the Chinese part of the city | in. I entered a court, which looked for all | to the shooting matches outside of Peking. “l":c ‘"[‘.” of Prince George's love und court- | ;" poler the Groat, and. they are only k¥ practically control the country. The terrl- | kets of all Kinds, and its fur market covers | of Peking. I could tell you of a vast busi- | the world like a barn yard surrounded by | You go by silk-gowned mandarins in carts, | SHID of his present wife. very slightly in check by the opinions of a tory of North Corea fs very poor, and the | SVoral acrec. 1¢ bas its wholesale as well | ness done in gold and silver paper, which | low, wooden stables, with heavy tiled roofs. | who acowl at you as you peep Into the littic | No one here in America can fmagine how | more elvillzed modern world."” Ohfaese wil have to bring thelr suppiles of | 25, 18 Fetail fur market, and I have gone | tho Chinese burn at the graves to furnish | This court was filled with donkeys, horses | glass windows in tho walls of thelr vehicles. | completely Queen Victoria rules in her own | Some years ago, before Prince George ; out at § o'clock fn the morning and found | their dead with money to pay thelr pas- [ and dogs, and half-naked children sprawled | You seo echolars with spectacles as Lig 88 | gunile. Oyer her kingdom she may not ruie. | ¥a8 married, he was vieiting in Athens, food with them if they attempt’another In- | perhaps a thousand almond-eved merchants | sage to heaven. I could show you shops | in front of the doors to these buildings, | trade dollars, and everywhere you go you ar "W | The Grand Duchess Serge was there, and vasion, The Japanese will not need a large | dressed in gcrgeous silks moving about | selling nothing but coffins, in which single | Which were, in fact, the offices of the de- | assaulted by beggars, I remember one boy | But merely reign, but in the circle of her own | yory Vicased to see again her kind, pleass army to keep them out and they can now | LDTOUBl great beds of furs of all Kinds. | articles of this kind cost as high as §4,000, | partment. The buildings were filled with | who followed me day after day. The weather | kinship she reigns paramount, and rules | ant ish cousin. At a bail at the palace center their forces upon China. Peking is | L1¢ furs are piled upon the ground, and you | ana where the dutiful son often buys his | clerks who wrote away at bare tables, the | was bitterly cold, and I shivered in my fur | with a rod of iron, e night they danced the cotillion together, e ms Fard to reach, The ground be. | olh buY ssbles for about §2 a skin and Uger | father a coffin and makes it a present to tho | light coming in through latticework walls | uister. This boy was naked to the Waist, | 1o show you how exacting shé is, even in | and anything more cnchantingly Leautiful y 10 me . - | skins for $75, which will be worth twice that | ola man years before his death. T could tell | backed with white paper. They scowled at [ and his arms had been cut off &t the | gefails, the duchess of Edinburgh-osister of | than she looked it would be hard to imagine. tween it and the sca is as flat as a floor and | amount anywhere else in the world. You | you "of stores where thousands of dollars | Me as I looked, and.one of them gave me to | shoulders. Ho held a pan in his mouth and | {iiq prosent czar—once took the Hberty af | One would have supposed that any husband It the Japanese can be landed on the east | 40 ':fi !“hh'_?':""[“]' ET}"M fl;"’ frflrhfl‘)k{m" worth of incense or joss sticks are sold "nd!m.u:ul‘lhlm } had "fi“e.' uioe. on, 1 lull‘uw):‘rl :\w,la\vlu‘hlulx‘ his ‘«T‘dy n-"fl Way | presenting lherself before the queen one | would have been adoringly proud of such & coast of the Gulf of Pechili they will be chien Cuse Top1ovool, of the kind | gyery month, and I could ‘take you into es- | Dext visited the famous Hanlin college. It | and that to show me his mutllation. 1 Was | piorning in a neglige, and so offcnded th: | lovely wife, but the ugly tempered Serge Within @ few days' march of the great | Shik our ladies use for long opera cloaks. | {yiiihmenta’ which sell nothing bul birds | as worse than the state department, and | glad to give him two or three cents to be | punciilious old sovercign that this descend. | chose only to be furiously Sealous of her The only thing that s Gainese clty Is a city of banks and of | o4 golq fishes. There are big stores full of | €Verything about it was shabby and going | frecd of the sight. ~Another beggar, Who | ant of the emperor of all the Russians recclved | evident happiness, and coming behind her Chinese capital. The only thing that pre- | stock exchanges.” I visited one morning the | 00 €014 fishes Whcre B1C M EUTes FHL 2 | o seed. I tried to get into the board of | has been long in Peking, 18 a man who has | o more Invitations (o visit any one of the | chair, where she sat beside Dbrince George vents them from gotting near it by water is | silver exchange. 1t was a room like a | fufiitare, Mnc, shobs Which Wake HOTWMAE | punishments. where the horrible cruelties | an iron skewer thrust through his cheek. | poyal residences for throe entire ycars. Wlloe for honforn 10 that o EueaRIE the big forts at the mouth of the Peiho | Darn. and the people were buying and sl | DUt Borcelain stoves, There 4re places WRere | wiich the Chinese government metes out to | This skewer is a foot long, and Is about as | " Prince Gearge is casily the handsomest, | being danced, he pinched her bare arm Hver. ¥ Thass are manned with Krapp ang | I8 socks just au they do cn Wall street, . by welght, ; its rebels and criminals are passed upon, | big around as your little finger. He twists | cleyerest and best young prince in Europe. | until the blood nearly spurted from the y vellng and howling and pushing each other | lshments where coal dust is mixed up with | o, "5 b ¥ : 3. 8.1 s y pr ; ope, : Dk / g er and where torture is common, but I was | it this way and that and keeps the flesh | ana Princess May has fow supcriors ans. | skin, Every one knows how terrible Is the Armstrong guns, and Li Hung Chang’s army | like mad as they did so. It is a city of book | mud and eold in lumps the size and shape | giopped ac the door and was positively told | ragged and sore. He beats on a gong as he sk i s R I it ¥ T b Ral Bl R LS s B e bake DAL AL ko m sl sniece, Dipib Ree L - a > beats on o : where, royal or nonroyal, in all the sweet | suffering caused by nipping the muscles B e w0 1 Fibenavon. thay Iand. oy | atoces, and ihare {Aeisom Il“uf'shwl;‘;‘h e et ton ha i ot eniokony| that I could not go in. It was the same | goes through the streets, and you are glad | qualities befitting a woman. The two wi and flesh at the back of the arm, and the will have to fight what remains of this army, | €Ontain no other shops. We have the idea | Ereat markets fol chic : with all the government departments. They | 1o pay him to keep out of your way. There | near of an age, and were playma ’ h ) Rt i W A 4 ¢ y ar of an age, and were playmates and com- | Grand Duke Serge, like all the czar's but a victory would mean the capture of | (Bat the Chincse merely live upon rice and | and flowers, and all sorts of toy stores, and | could not have been shabbier had they been | is one gate in Peking which is always | rades from childhood. S0 fn course of time | tamily, has fingers of iron. The poor girl on rats, and that their chief industries are | stores for the selling of paper and cloth. | kpuocked up out of odd pieces of old Noah's | erowd 9 anc e of th . “ L ¢ : st Peking and the practical subjugation of | (o making of matting, of fans and of silke, | Thers are lock peddlers by hundreds, and | ark. andl evory(hing was Ay and the s | orer of the e A o o ot muaia: Rume shos S Desap Lo cDrackar thals| sane s s (end tall hack Ut SARCE AN Ohina. The truth Iy that China dces a vast busi. | hardware establishments, and if you are very | ture of ruin. = The only really new things in | has been glven up entirely to beggars. U 15 | was sctwoen them | COUhdants knew how it | most fainting with pain. George made v Peking is perhaps one of the least known | ness, and she produces all sorts of commodi- | hard up and In want of a meal I can show | the city seemed to be the clothes of the | full of the lame, the halt and the blind, and | But after the fashion of sensible, practical | the collar, but a glance from his cousin rec cities of the world. 1 have pald two visits | tles. Nearly every ome of these Chinese | you a little hole around the corner where | officlals, and I laughed again and again as | men with festering sores, women without | o1d people, the queen was not occupying her- | strained him. Serge pissed on, and the to it and I spent a month n it six years | "LTeef8 contalns shops of all kinds, and the | you can get camel's meat soup and mule | T saw these mandarins bow down In the | eyes, and persons possessing all sorts of | seif much with thoughts of love-maKiE OF | fanee wan fnished somehow: Prifice George During the spring of this year 1| Np'D business of Clina is not the supplying | roast at low prices. There are places for | mud and go throughithe forms of the Chinese | horrible diseases crowd together upon it. | young folks' fancles. She considered May a | flushed and angry, and bitterly distressed ago. I3 i of goods for the forelgn markets, but the | gambling, and dime museum shows. There [ court amid their filthy surroundings. They | They push their way from it into the city healthy, amiable young person, well suited for | for his pretty cousin; she, white-lipped and prowled about its streets for days and de- | making of those required for her own people, | are restaurants of every description, and | are among themselves, as far as words go, | and threaten to cut themselves if you don't | dignities and responsibilitles; ahe Knew her | resporats jooking. an one almost ot the end voted myself to making a study of the town | They lave as many wants as we have, and | opium Joints without number. There are, in | the most polite of‘all nations, and they look | give them alms. Side by side with these | people would like tho helr to make an Eng- | cp o oo Son Smot & e bail and ita people. 1t Is an immense city. 1t | (MY reauire as good goods. ‘The mobles | fact, siores of every sort and description. and | upon us as boors and barbarian beggars walk the gorgeous officials, and | lish marrlage, and she thought It hikh time | oo ae e on e e e wos concluded contains about 1,600,000, but these are scat- | yiosd 1 G 'L’;;;:,“’\‘,:"Jh- S:}{I‘L‘nu“'l‘“‘lflv 4r¢ | the best things in China come to Peking. FALSEHOOD AND DECEIT. poverty and wealth march (ogether in pairs. | Clarence scttied down and gave up his last | jor arm all down the back had already tered- over an area of twenty-five square | pictures. The art displayed i most o the THE SON OF HEAVEN. e ::(lll:lilr()‘!h;Il:_“ru:,opll;mb:;lliwb:lnulr they Thate da a0, r:gfzf‘;;“'*:]fl;‘fl,;‘;‘ ahase tho foolish firtation with the Princets Helene of | (urned groen as If from some horrible bruise. miles, and the people as & rule lve in fpaintings is sbominable, but they are pic- | The most intereating part of Peking, how- | Wil conquer the whorll and 1 doubt whether. | CONTERSIS BTE 85 BER, @G lor MITEHIGRIAY | Orleans, who us a French Catholic princess |~ Now that little Alx has grown up to one-story houses, Tie city I surrounded (Wre: nevertheless, and the Chinese pay | eYer I8 the big wartar city. = il the | 0 Rl fn, enaw anything. of the Jareat | Condition could not be worse. These Chineso | by Partlament for Englond's futuse consort oven mare Jovely then her-besuiifiME by walls which were buillt hundreds of | ood money for them, 2 AT livse fos Ot heayen | ese victories. The court officlals distribute | Aré as industrious as any race on the globe. | Nobody dared whimper. When grand- tutly e oor AR years ago and which must have cost many A BUSY MART. the emperor of China, to whom all his sub- | all sorts of lies,:and they have probably | They are peaceable and easily governed, and | mamma says certain things are to be, no one | o o worldly point of view, only, for to be millions of dollars. These walls are in g0od | I wish I could show you the markets of | jects must bend thelr knees. It contains | told the people thabithey nave whipped the | If the celestial officlals, Including . the em- | of the family presumcs even faintly to mur- | oot LM A" 16" 8 great rise In the condition with the exception of one or two | Peking. You can get as good meat thcre | the thousands of Manshu oficlals, the for- | Japanese on bothi(land ‘and sea, and that | Peror and all his court, could be wiped from | mur. world for @ princess of Hesse, but it 1s come places where the floods of last winter under- | ag you can In New York, and thers is ng | eign legations, the government departments | the mikado will besbrought to Peking. The | the face of the globe, the people would | (Clarence knew quite well that Helene and | FORC SEL & MEECET N B0 A1 Sicnowing mined them and carried parts of thelr fac- | finor mutton fn the world than that of morth | and all the paraphernalia of this queer [ Mmajority of the iritizens of the quickly grow rich and China would be one | he could never marry, May did not dare re- what her sister's private life has been, i ings away. It is hard to give an American | Gyjua, The sheep are of the fat-tafled va. | Chinese court. It is the most interesting | Capital really bellewe that Anierica is sub- of the most favored spots on the face of the | fuse the offer of the future king of England. " i ; ) very distrustful of all Russians, and enterg® an ldea of one of these walled cities of 7 i o ity on the face of the globe, and its sights | ject to China. (They think that Colonel | €arth. While as for George, he made no comments ery China. The walls of Peking are sixty fe:t riety, end I saw many which had tails weigh. y on the face e gl bon hel ed life with many and great . Rk at the Dot o JST, feot | ing over a pound. Tt is quoer how they kill | really beggar description. From the walls :‘\«-nhy llx‘nm u"u‘n:r capital to pay Uncle B x;lll_llnln ;.‘:1;;-1"1;,; :!1:‘|Innll’vaa] .’1..1,|.Ynnd re. :::l.'l:l\-l,fg""‘“"' 41 4 L thick at the bottom. They wou the s v sel ST the whole city looks like an immense orchiard, | Sam's tribute to dliefr emperor, and this, I mained persiste ith his ship during al — B e coatry voaor bty wtreet Jamd thae | the auimals which they sell. They have no y mwad( ) [VEPS Pw i e frbe . 3 . ¢ pe one-story buildings | am told, is their apimlon as to every foreign the galet and rejoicings in honor of Clar- The Six Natious, s as tall 04 o four-atory house. ' They are | AUEHer louses, and a shecp is otien | WA Refe WO SN SRectiory, PUARE | foguiion. They have nicknamed the atreet e oty enco's marrlege. In the Interior department at Washington 30 wide at the top that you could run three | Duchored on the ground in front of the shop, | Yoify& MU0 ANORTG O nclosure filled with | upon which the forelgn ministers live '‘the i\ il Suddenly fate took a hand in, however, und | there js most valuable manuscript on the sallroad trains side by side arcund them, and l"“‘ "‘fl Plood lies on the ground while you | (W e, 80, o € ted with yellow tlles. | Street of the subject mations,” and they would Wil & s S fate is even less (0 be gainsaid than royal | giy Nations. 1t was compiled and written by they are o solid that the cars would move | DWY. There ave all sorts of fish, and t T Ts the fmperial cily, in the innermost | consider it a disgrage-to ask our minlster to now Better Hereafter. grandmammas., The duke of Clarence, who | uxyerts in the bureau of ethnography, and more smoothly over these tracks than they | Are lwiys sold alive. No Chinaman would | S Ue "% v M 3 brick’ pen inclosing sev- | dinner, and 1 venture that Colonel Denby | Chicago Tribune: It was Mr. Tankersley's | had seemed moody and distrait all through | s intended to be printed at some time in o on the |nn¥§ lines ETI\\rrn'.\‘u\\' York k:i x' “g K{ ‘J’ ““Ii-“:'”r‘\ r‘“;‘ "’““‘“ o | eral square miles, where the emperor lives, has never been m:‘ Intimate terms with a | first nomination for &;fllre and he \\iun unfa- Im& ull‘n-nmw;v!-‘w: ~|iw'l';"’l klmj" m-'..l‘n:. the fuiui The work x; a rumx;hw lgl:nrr; and Chicago. hese walls are fa fnside e8y {han § ‘Whole fi a time, tho | ... lad hy eun e 18 s dozen high class Ohinese officials, This, I | miliar with some of the time-honored customs | and dinners of the betrothal perlod—suddenly | of e six Nations, contains a fuil vocabula and out with bricke, cach as big as a | Ch peddlor will pull the fieh gut of the ;:;:“,.:”\Tnjulin e h\:Iwu(“‘(‘ll":nlzz’mny\‘m‘r);-l know, will seem strange to Americans, but | and traditions that pertained to the position | succumbed to a slight cold, and then his fam- | u¢ (heir tongucs and dlalects, enters into & adollar bible, and the space between fs | Weter, lay him squirming on the bloek, and {447y will follow this with & special letter | It 18 actually the truth. hie occupied before the community. ily learncd fop the firet time through the rav- | minute study of their religious ‘belief and filled with earth and stones, %0 rammed | Cut a picce of quivering flesk out of his side | Goleribing some of his antics. He is kept | Peking Is a most cosmopolitan city. We | -Hence it was that when he had invited all | ings of hiv delirium how deeply his affections wer of worship, besides describlog fully down that the ages have made the wholo | for you while you wait. He does not kill | qeiSFVAnR SORE B0 S0 ot ori® ala 'you | have in America only the Chinese of South | the loungers in the saloon, numbering about | were engoged by the pretty French exile, and | (ieir social customs, 1t is said that the one #olil mass. They are hullt, In fact, | the fieh, and after yi € through he throws | oy live in Peking ffty years and not | China, These come from the hot countries | & dozen or 8o, to take a drink at [ how far matters had gone between them be anuscript may lie for yeavs without belng much Iike the great wall of China, and the | it back into a separate pail of water and | ¢oo hjan, He really knows nothing about | &t the southern part of the empire, and they | hls expense he carelessly handed a $10 bill | fore the dictum went forth for hix marriage it lito the printer’s hands unless some of bricks of the two are wlmost exactly the | walts for anotker customer to take oft the | pig ponple or his surroundings, and he is a | Are small and lean in comparison with the | over the bar. with May. After a swift and fatal decline | fnierent< himeelt sufficiently in the matter to same. 1 have before me brick Which I | rest. One of the chlef meats 9kl is pork, | sore of u puppet who stands still or dances | People of the north. They dress differentl “Thank you, Mr. Tankersley,” said the | the two lovers and playwates found the ob- | \uve (he work begun upon ft. When coms Dbreught from the great wall. It weighs | and you s=2 hogs trotting about through the | when his highest oficlals or the old em- | and they have a different dialect and dif- | bartender, dropping the greenback into (he | stacle to their happiness removed beyond“the | picicd the book will make several volumes wbout twenty pounds. It in blua-giay In | streets of Peking, They wellow in the puds %# dowager pulls at the string. ferent habits and customs. Peking is frozen | till, placing his elbows on the counter, and | reach of ail carthly dissppolntments and dhdadhes ubflirdd color, and It is covered with patches of | dies right under the siadew of the em- | * Ny better Wea of the condition of the gov- | UP for six months of the year, and you can | regarding the luckless candidate with amia- | hopes, and they who had resigned ther More Light on History. white lue wmortar just lke thosa that I | peroi’s palsces, and they are tbe dirtiest | erpment of Clina could be gotten than by | have ice-sledging on the Peiho at Chrls ble condescension. selves to life-long sorrow and scparation were Washington Star: “1 wonder why Ner@ gvvk' in the broken plucew of the walls of | hogs in the world. These are -all sorts of | a trip thiough this Tartar city. It is one | Mas. I found the people of every Chinese ——— re\(n;;ueu"nx‘.;lu url“::’:-f::i”"l:'fl:mnln.p. S 'u»l)uh,\n “mne!w“"nunm.g?” sald the in, game for sale I the markets, 4nd . oldest towns in the world, It was | State different, and the Gialects are as various | o 'e Calle, all the roman d mong | man who has time to kill. THE IMPERIAL CITY. Het. wnipo Knd quall And, squirrels o Olent e o0 poare butore Curut, | 88 the languages of Burops. Here in Pokiug | OPamberiaia’s L"‘n:.'n.c.':;',m Sat i | e JOTNILes, nan A0 Dest Jaory romass | OTAST mhamet sH3 SHS LEDOIWARER In approaching Peking. long before you get The Chinese arv (he best rulsers of | and it has been the capital of millions for | You fnd represeutatives of every Chinese i R g e O R :,“.,‘u"" l'l\n ‘km' hlv {hme v:i. i-‘-rfi :-.nl- A slgh, “that )mlxhhni\edl:z cur:xlmunu;'- on e tmmense towers | poultry ia the world. 'Phey have Quck | ages. It ought to be the greatest city on | Hate, and there are celcstials from all the would ra % uchess of York, and o s | the virtuoeo's enthusiastic egotism. He ?nl‘ehu'x:‘.‘n'i o 1he tap of bty walk over the | farms ane goose furws, and they kiow ail thia Tuco of the glebe, but (here is no spot | DIE cities. Thibet, Mongolia, Manchuria and gy doctor 1 know of " ays Mrs. Hattle | foollsh tale about (he secret marriage in | it s a matler of course, Fe ud réad v » tan ho Lo ! 4 ng y M 3 Ruow 8} . ! t Afghanistan are all tributary to | Mason of Chilton, Carter Co., Mo., In speak- | Malta, have wsmall conception of what | eritics say aboul u player's setting the worl cgates which eater the el Theke towers | about artificlal incubation. They scll great | more Althy and slhny and foul. The city | Parts o o Ton ot Ohambetinin'n: Dalle, - Cholern. AR | B e e oune Tasttle who fo | Ceicion sex gUont 8 BESt AT ERY SN tall «8 & Lig New York flat. They les of dited geese and dried Jucks, ' Knows uothing of modern improvements. It | CUhina, and people of aypalf dozen religlon h appines i it X n fire, and though nu:al:lnc stories ab.zn the wall, aud they | and tuey carry qul.'l‘ baskets full ofdried | is cut up into wide atry Yut the roads | jostle eack otter sx th0¥ wade through the | Diarrhoea Remedy, For sale by druggls some day to govern Eugliud have found | was all

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