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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBKR 28, 1894 ©EEIEBBEIIEEEIEIGEEEEEEEGIGEEEGIEEEIEEEGIGIGEGIEIEEEEEGE THE VALUE OF CREDIT Is clearly defined to every housekeeper at the GREAT CREDIT HOUSE, THE PEOPLE'S FURNITURE & CARPET CO. It is the only Cosmopolitan Establishment in the land, and the only house that is not tarnished by the old objections to instalment concerns, We have the confidence of the people and intend to maintain it by adhering to the old principles upon which we built up our business—Goods at lowest prices, Fair Dealing and Most Liberal Terms, One Price and that the Lowest. Every nook and corner of this vast establishment is packed full of New Goods for the Fall and W inter Season, Furnish Your House and Make Everything Snug Before Winter Sets In. s FURNITURE—CARPETS “% LN i g s Never before have such low prices been asked by us, and at the same time we gladly and cheerfully extend credit tv all. A call is invited, even if you do not buy, OUR FURNITURE will surely interest you. We carry the LARGEST, FINEST AND MOST VARIED STOCK IN OMAHA. For instance: Parlor Set. Dining Room Set. Bed Room Set. pwm: hil“l\’@“u?flv'&‘i‘fh“fc‘}f:;rk‘lg:ujw{gh“:::,:fil.:;{“' ‘We have a dining room set, consisting of an Taste and elegance here. It is of antique f g w0y elegant sideboard, large, well-made and nicely oak, and the set contains ane full-slzed bed, Ing is in tapestry. finished. and holding a splendid bevel mirror; large dres<or, with 18x20 bevel mirror, combi- PRICE. 818.00. an extension table, of oak, and eight feet 1n i .4 A " 6 pieces, solid cak frames, upholstered in length, Then there uve six oak chairs, high ntion un\t_x-mund, two cane scut chairs, ono brocatelles. backs, with cane seate, rccking chair, or small table if peforred. PRICE, 824.50. PRICE. 824,50, PRICE 819.75. e have other styles at that price and up- We have other styles at that price and upward. Have anothor style at that price and upward. e — In Carpets we lead the city—our stock is finer, better, larger and more varied than ever. In our Carpet Department you will find an assortment that will NU astonish you, Our Fall and Winter offerings are marked by the choicest colors, most artistic designs and many of the patterns are exclusive they cannot be duplicated elsewhere. We have the costliest Velvets. the cheapest Ingrains, We are prepared to meet every taste or purse. Now a few prices: . Seventy-five cents a yard and up- a yard and upward. All the choice Standard mak Fall dosigns. Strong \ ward. Lower grades at corre- colovs, finest designs, with many of the and durable. Twenty-five cents a yard spondingly lower prices. patterns exciusively ours, and upward. SKILLED UPHOLSTERERS ALWAYS READY TO SEW AND PUT DOWN CARPRTS. This Department is well worth an inspection. UPHULSTEHY u U We can anounce a fresh arrival of Lovely Lace Curtains at One Dollar per pair and upward. A superb assortment of beautiful Chenille Curtains and Table Covers, Come and see them. 5 NO OTHER HOUSE can in any way approach us.in this line. ~ We have always bzen leaders and never fo'lowers, Our line of Cook Stoves, Ranges STUVE DEP ME LT . . and Oak Heaters is unsurpassed in variety, quality and all that goes to make up a first-class article in this line. Stoves are just what you want right now and we are glad that we can make such prices on stoves just when you need them. EASY TERMS, $1(L()(l‘\‘\'nl'll| (;(f Goods $1 week or month, Presents Given Away This Week. $25.00 worth of Goods. Vi 0. vorth of goods, set silver plated tea- : $1.50 week or $6 month With :p.l.m:? worth of goods, set silver plated tea. ; $50.00 orm of toan With 25.00 worth of goods, beautiful bisque figure, Ay $2 week or $8 month. With £50.00 worth of goods, a handsome picture, With $75.00 worth of goods, a genuine cak cenire EE N J3I7 F / - Gl G 2.50 week or $10 month. h of Goods, ‘With £100 worth of goods, an elegant oak rceker. 3 week or $12 month. Send 10 Cents (o Cover Postag » o $% week or $15 month. © 066660606 EHEIBIEEEIEIEIEEIEEIEBIIEIBIGEIEEEEEE @ FORMERLY PEOPLE'S MAMMOTH INSTALLMENT HOUSE. 2323007 AXE SATTRay pviving $200 worth of Goods, Chinamen and using them as photographlc |and there are flags, banners and umbrellas | combinati The government is perhaps I | tries be satisfied with the position their |a rich man of business. Our Kings 1ked fo. 'l‘ E HICHB“D RS AT HOMF materia Milllons ‘of these cartoons were | connected with it. It holds ita regular meet- | the only disorganized part of the country. 1 A Jealth grants them and consider the spend- [draw eminent men, poets, writers, artists, AUV 4 | circulated, and the people were urged to | ings, and it forces members to join its or- | Every city, every state and almost cvery ing of their money as a suficlent occupa- (o their table, and the Intellectual part of drive the foreigners from the country. This | ganization if they are not amenable to per- | province is packed full of different unions, tion, seek an employment of some kind in 1y was the prominent one. This Is also. caused the viceroy of Nanking and the cen- | suasion. It has the power of life and death and all branches of Industry are banded to- . the service of the country in order to secure (changing now under the influence of tha ive | T2 scvernment a great deal of trouble, and | over its members, and the members mix | Eether. Our labor umions are nothing in § i - | & position, because & man who Is “nothing” | times. ~We see in many houser o o Becret Societies of Ohina Control the Empire | they “naa to Dl ey indemnity. This | thelr own blood with wine and swear to up- | comparison with those of China. and. ths | Beautifully Desoribed by Count A.Bern Is not sufficiently honored. ~ Therefore not |which s more an unplessast duty n:):le"z ; 3 ;i ke . old 1 the | BOvernment has to bow down to them. The stoff of the Royal Household. only the management of the household, but | recreati. Large dinne 4 T Ravol spring an organized rebellion broke out near | hold the order to the death. Among & ners i suppers. end Incite Revolution, Canton, and the soldiers were fighting there | punishments for treason to the order fs the | barbers united some years ago and made the also the education of the children falis 1o |often excced the ‘means of thors wi give at the time that the Japanese into | having the ears chopped off or the head cut <-|n‘|;:~rur' cu:nc“lu |;-|—m:»I |‘n t]t-glz‘m\ ‘OT‘”“: ]_i:u\-]l:“v\ Tlr m; \\lt‘-nlnm I m;» hll-uu u.l;: :'l_mm', ung nobody likes to remain behind Core. Thie recent troubles in the Shantung [off, and the divuigence of the secrets of the | Public examinations for their children, They [ e FAMILY TAE FATHERLAND hile the English woman is above all {his friends and colleagues, 50 many THE ARMY IS HONEYC'MB:D WITH THEV | province, where tho people refused to re- | order is death. The members have thelr own | Bad before this belonged to a rather dospised I TdE HERLAND | inings’ wite and helpmate of her ‘hosband, | meopie saoher honaplotB0CE, Gid so many : spond to the call for troops, was backed up | signs and passwords. You can tell, it Is said, | 1455 They stand now as high as any other —_ the G Is the first of all|comfort than forego these invitations, which by the Koloa Hul, and there is a large branch | whether a man belongs (o the order by the 3;;"?;::!;1:21y)‘;i"‘iuw(“‘liy.:;): 1~4‘:-';rf‘ll'vulx'xli;nm“:},‘.r:: The German Love of Home—Sphere and fo rare un:llh"(ln\l:'ll;{c;"u::lxul:‘;; oo 1;}'3?1"'.& ftion: 1““‘1‘;}‘ dml‘; "mll\lin!" Koloa Hul Soclety, Which Caused the Mis- | of the organization in Manchuria, and it ex- | way he enters the house, and I am. told that Dt R b rarrarn N saraclemnlugy e ! £ fortunately rare, divorce. though | fro 08 n life. ut even || = ¥ Aok s a B! a ee; pulls Work of Women—Sacredness of the rendered very ¥ by our laws, which bear | materialism has Inecreased in this respect, slonary Kiots of 1891—Triad Soclety ists In great strength in north China. It is | they stop a moment at the G or and put the | yjoe™) ILs out of your ears, or trims th:m S i 3 the lax character of the last century, s not [ literature and science and intellectu 1"c 5 ) The 4 80 organized that In case of the fall of Peking | left foot first. In sitting down they point f0'8ult; (. The Chiness Jike to bavs the baoks Fawlly Tie—Soclal Cheer and Mex- particularly frequent. This is due to the | versation still hold a large 0 ,m~ Ll B dis clillions~The . Jay. a simultaneous rebellion would be brought to | thelr toes together and keep the heels apart, | 13 34l The Chinese like to have the backs riment n Chiarncteristic, Rt at_ marriages are chiefly con- | socloty. . Many sl (o Ehinatts “k”f";,’;;’l‘l"’; WRNId 0L she Bmplra, the front in nearly every state in China, and [and they have a way of ralsing their trousers they are shaved. This takes a good deal of tracted by al affection. Of course a [and wit, and the tendency {o g¢ sl 1 vhich is known onl. he breth ¥ 1o defend one's the government might fall at one blow. cks which 13 known only to the brethren. | time, ana the barbers concluded that it kept number of marriages are settled in Ger- | own opinion fs perhaps one of the sldes of the It Is hard (o understand much about the | They are bound to help any of the order | thom ‘too ‘busy during. the Loy, ebt Mike dov many as elsewhere for the sake of Ge haracter i 9 | s n days. e love of home is found iion y as elsewhere for the sake of mon jerman character which does not alwa: (Copyrighted, 184, by Frank G. Carpenter) |present trouble without knowing something [ who get into trouble, and they have secret union called its members together all over L L B At s not be openly avowed. | make it popular to strangers, » The Chinese government s greatly alarmed | Of the different Chinese states. The country |signs by which they ‘can mark their houses | the empire. . Thes asecn 8 bk tenon moveh | évery nation, but perbaps it s nowhers 20 |white, for instance, in France it. fo mer THE FAMILY TIE 18 SACRED. over the repellion that Is belng fomented | 'S divided up into cighteen provinces, and |so that their familles will escape in case of | it impossible for you to get your ears cleancd | StrObE as with the Germans. The longing | generally recognized that parents chogse The family tis Is sacred. [a Qoir.ane there may be eald to be almost elghteen |revolution. At dinner the arrangement of| during. sin cortars days of the year. Li|for the old home follows them everywhere. |suitable hurbands and wives for their ohil extends also to thy pocred in Germany, n@ In nearly every state of the emplre. The | different peoples under elghteen different | (he cups on the table allows their callers| Hung Chang is great enough to slap the | While the Englishman takes his home with |9ren, the principle in Germany is that the [ of ‘the syme e *ECF family. Members Peking Gazette Is full of the reports of the rulers, more or less firmly bound together | who belong to the order to know that they | cheeks of the Chinese officials who eall upon him into the most distant lands—his b young people eeck each other after the in- [ pop it me:;‘t f';"')"'&l «\vi'lmuy among the arrest of members of the Koloa Hul soclety, | Under the one Peking ~government. — The | are members, and there are a thousand little | him. Ho neles s generals et down on | i DR < il anSbohIBIhotNe] o) inationt ot LhUIRINsaTTA Lt AIcendy: (thelled ences (Famllontag), tad " tnastor,confens and exccutions are taking place’ in many | [ONTOR People of many of these states do things which no one else would notice which | thelr knces, and i the emperor duee nat | DeIng everywhere an English homethe §igoment s considered serlous and. binding. | trignds to assist the peocer Lo ope EPRerAlY Of (e clties, 1 Ts now death ko bolong 1o | boynteTRATd each cther. “Tho ‘coalle of | enable them to recognize each other, take away his big cloth boots he will con- | German easily loses his national customs, |The relations between unmarried young | family, ‘The German oo (RS 3 A clong nnan could hardly make his way In e tinue to kick them out of the room. He | He s mor o men and women are somewhat restricted n = o dalid, 0] this soclety, and the heads of the members | Peking, and the Cantonese provinces have a | ~The ,T,f‘;‘“‘,,:“ch'fgbf,;“;‘p,';“x:;{,‘”,:;;r;:c",’ would not dare, however, to do anything | ew 'uuym:n:;::-":mb.:: :;,l:p,l,,\?l.l";z:"n:: ",': In liberty and bound to certain forms. The | 4fita, &40, ioUse Wherever he mects even a are hung up outside of the cities as a warn- | different dialect from those in the western e t the | #&ainst the union of the wheelbarrow coolies, i %4 | young woman Is considered to find her chief : g They swear to defend each other against the b Ins, the rec 5 The relation of children to thelr g DANEAR UM hal Rl BN o b e (S0 P o0 * | home remains, the recollection of the father- | Jouis | i 4 el parents, Ing to others. Notwithstanding this, the or-| nan Is said to have twenty GiTerent aialucsy, | Police, to hide each others crimes, and they | 814 he has stopped some of his greatest im o8 in.ghe houss as beln to lisn mother, | though it has lost much of the old Tigidit ¥ provements after they have cost him hun- | house, be it ever so small, keeps alive in his |as sympathizing friend to her brothers home | o e, s o £ Banization steadlly increases, and. it is being | and the people, while they care a great deai S mesiratokiliton e aske O e OT4ST | ireds of thousands of dollars because certatp | heart, Forelgn natione 1ars recognized this [ for the holidaye, and as her father's bright | & sir o oap ity and. thiwila ey EiSagliod dnom (e diasatiacted. BoMlers wia | for Liale aWn Aonaiand Sor/shiely il e tart b government, and they | 9f the trades unions objected. - These wheel- | | using the word “fatherland” cspecally for | 814 Intelligent ' companion, - sweetening his | f Shta Syemiasiol for the stale u'.ul(‘;:::::; 8 o | have no interest in the government and sup- . T e, In fact, one of the 3 8 2 elsure hours, o e R ot mf R ly: Is sald to Have | pord i unly oa e necessary evil, The family | have published manifestos against it, and are Efléu‘,‘,f,fé‘fi‘dné"oi ("m:nlllnud m:yr are one of | (e German's country. Truly the Swiss wil But we now live in a time of transition. ":2 "f'.:; fxfi“‘!l)“'fi?.ili”"’u"’;“""’ frrsttedbyy 1 bad ita origin among the soldiers of the(ana the cian form the busle of Ohiners 80- [ dolog 4o now, _ Bame of the chiets of the.oxder | 1,6 eveat ohstacles In the ‘way of ‘rallfosd!| nOC Dilss his glaclers more than. (he Batie and new Ideas aro making way Which open & | grown up cpidrer vesot g i loTILY Al Hunan province, which is one of the most clety, A great number of the punistments | a1 g S0 e traneling arciand. e counttyf pugafug, of the March of Brandenburg his sandy | larger activity to the fair sox, ' Deaconesses | s lons as feorc oo mother lives (he houde rebellious of the Chinese states. The Hunan :“d(";‘w::"l;li.rfmfl: ‘;"!‘(““l!e;e”:l; “v’:fhn'f:"“y"ol Yoy ACheTaATR 44 ggmm":’; o ANKERS GUILD. heath with the dark lining of firwood in | Institutions, which exercise their beneficial | remaing the center of the family, also for B DA ATty hnc A courag Foithodbunist Baca)iz: Yiem (829 Claans | meTIbATR AT eR oih ek e AR ||y cakarn off Ohlie bavata iullal and 3t Tan Do mih Already the old Germana yung | \nfliences all over Sormany yand - be- | the married childre fiERes ol thousands of them were employed |in’ China thai enywhere, elae In. the world, | - Drive our the Terianr st 1o oy coacto, 18 Gepends very much upon them w for the | with fenacity to the inherited plece of land | Jond, BT frontiers aihitie anar T (o ie e heushioldidass not onty In putting down the Kaiping rebelllon. After | If a man makes a fortune his forty-second | one branch of the Triad soclety ates ba sl :‘Tr”m‘::lfi;z:ph;.r“uul‘n)j»ni(lyv‘l 000 banms 1n the | Which they defended to the utmost against | {he sick, to visit the poor and to bring to | man home L‘;fi;:: *aiso . this the war was over numbers of them were | cousins "r:‘-ml\n:." parts nll lhe‘ empire woop | to 1684 A. D.. or twenty years after the cop- | War. There Shanghai and Tien-Tsin, and | thelr encmies. In this home the woman, |both the glad tidings ‘of the gospel. We | much of the good old hab kept on in the retinues of the different vice- | o B¢ n man Sete to support and | quest. They have been working to Overthrow | their members all work together. They have | even before she was raised and ennobled by find all classes of soclety represented in |in the present age, espe 2 notably so by the Viceroy of Nag.|ICIP tiem. It & man gets u position he.Is |the Fovernment ever since, and tney he connections With other. panks of ihe | Oheistieeiy, Lo : . ve | these institutions. ~Higher schools for girls | towns, whers. the family does o corom roys, and notably so by oy o¢ Nan- | supposed to take his own family in first in | great hatred of any(hing which s not purely ire, and they fix the rates of Interést and | now read with meide Teoriment Place: W | ang seminarica for fomale. teashor s pro- [like in the United States and FEnglead e king. A few years sgo an attempt was |the choosing of the subordinates, and nepo- | Gninese. It in safy to 1oy o the hrenrrare AR e RN s e iAtiaa0 | nawire onien, A aaimORY, BIYER. DY | pare ‘women for & Iarger acsivity, s dorie | Lecu br g Dnlted | latesy ngland, made to dispense with their services, and | {ism relgns supreme. y : |millions In China that outside of the govern- | 4"ii1a” and thers are silk gul.ds and ail core merality. o {ha. pid Qoreann i Loany |FECony ® number of influential men have | tinos very insuficlent accommodation for the IR Gr (he soltiers aot” toeotior ana | THE JAY GOULD OF CHINA. | ment officlals there are not 100,000 Chinese | or ot theturors unions. BT, aLeha g pArashy. o ;};“’Jv .u(,xf[\, started a ‘‘gymnasium,” as we here term (he vants, yet we find many who lok baclk nized this soclety. By others It Is sad to | of' Cocy " oice. [xagitn 0 aion; tha fay Goula ¥ho would fiEht for the emperor. jorhey keeb | “Those unions are very Tigd as o their own | tay upon the woman. The letters recently JEpar athosis | wbie Taun and Greek islon a servico of forty or fitty years In the have been founded about sixty years ago, | worth $30,000,000. He was keepingl400 Tola: | kiny. Lor oyiney, MUst bave a ruler of some | men and they have waged war against published of Moltke and Bismarck show how | yp 8Lt Preparatory to the universty for|same family. d 0 X ping! s | kind. but they know he ir o Tartar, and [ modern machinery. In some nstances they | Suoiened of Molke a Blamargy ki young women. The admis:lon of the latter (0| The great day for the German home is but ft undoubtedly had fts great impetus | UVes, and his siaters and his cumie vad hh [ they hate nim. In every Chinese state’ capl- | peor pymgChinery: | 1o some instances ¢ Cormans. i dus”to too thimeee "<y E¢AL | our universities s only & questian of time, | Chrianne by s, or U the houschold gathe through these’ men at Nanking, and today ‘\‘\"F'::” ”':“k“‘?: t‘r::nlllr:':‘m:;"ffl grmflml{,‘:"\'“ there Is a Manchu army as well as a|trary to their wishes, and a horrible case mothers, Whoever s acquainted with Lo | Yet according to German ideas all these round the fir tree with its shining lights, \ts membership runs well up into the millions, | income. He- w: g s ; Ol o8 PIE | Chinese army, and the Tartars are neither ad- | occurred at Shanghal & few years ago, where | |ite of (he great poet, Goethe, knows how | M0ES are only meant for the number of © German Christmas tree, which has nowt | i tancige. about 40 yeare | caired “nor. foved. , The Omperar, n fach Ju | an reeimar. s o Aoy T AE0. where ) . unmarred women who have no home and (found Its way fnto many other eountrien i and it has its secret meetings in every clty and as an instance of how strong family | p . , i 2 | !mportant was the {nfluence exercised by | gre obliged to earn thelr bread. The home p £ of China, It {s avowedly against the Manchu | Ruthority Is, he obeys his mother today. in n"""” P AT R e Rt AR e s chlet placw. | roored 1 gnotiiiution with s, and despl | comprise the Gers in this respect it Is done away with Iy in the largem ; and it he should fall, all of his horses and | defoands of the mem, amd they concluded to : : 4 Is always considered the woman's chief place. | rooted in the hearts of the peaple. - g Ep gtk Aed ite matto In'iChink for the| BNSTR LS5 MRl cbUations, snd - ng| 2% or TRiMEG (o harer Bt Tty | abiodnof the e, aad: ther.ocucla more | i Tven' 1y (e hearte of ron svalAm I Wo have now, thank God, ' number. of | (hs poof mas ek spare his last cen "KU Chinese.” 1ts members swear 10 be faifhtul | long ago he replieds = oUF to dinner not |1y, nty up again. than 100 men in &ibs shop, - These © | model wife and mother, helping her husbana it d,:'m‘."r'm.':.lv“prr{er"m:'filll i P o : present. when- he snterild bue. m S | } vel e with the home | Christmas the tree must 3 A LOW TAX RATE. L. s ‘;},,.cem.d',.g_, shey sprang .',I,.n:fi, ,‘:I"": to I)tn‘; in submission to God and in un-{qutles, The influence which the woman ex- | Th, writer of these lines remembers .I‘«'»‘\','.'.“(. It will be surprising to many Americans to [ and commenced Ming him. They had a ‘1:;"'“' 'hultllulqel his p(rl"dll‘lrh«:s »ltu-n N;r ercises on the mation by the training of its | mus spent on the At ntic on one of the know how cheaply the government of China | leader and this leaderfwould not let one of | ¥ 98, i dEien. L0 T e ohdres | future members as mother is considered to be | North German Lloyd steaniors 11 weathén Ix run. Taxes are lowsr perhaps (han 1n any | e men g0 wway dom the piace without | 18P, O Burope, and iraining ture im0t only her chief duty, but one 8o grand | was very rough. but the Chrstims (r was Initiated by the drinking of hot wine mixed | Whose feet were no bigger than the fists of | Other semi-civillzed country on the globe. | showing his teeth. 1(11his. teeth and gume AR AR gty anr AR Tt bigh ARS Imporiany ""’(',,':',',,“;,',',,*'::,’,',,,"“}'-‘3,',1:,’: fe " thelees llghted. People wil remembe with the smoklng blood of a cock which is (& biby. She ruled the whole 400 of How | The ol euron of tRm i L b ot b P N ) oite | glance 1nto the imperial castlo, we fnd the | e o faysi I am glad that 1 had & |of thelr ohildhous wir ’J,f,,’”'fifi":,‘,‘-’“f,’" Kkilled at the time, and the ticket of member- ;l::lls”'ril;::_i\l:z.w-";:l\. t};:“w probably the acre. The emperor nominally owns all the | bite. The plot wasmotten up on the basis | irst woman -11; Germany surrounded by & |mother. who was not one of the modern | father called them into the room where th Ship 1s @ small card of llnen, or callco.| These clans of China are very much like |land, but in eality the peapla have as much | that there is B0 ceptsbipunisment in Ohina ( SAURY. BrEap of oblldren. i P s it "ot ‘the. hae, "but ey | fEsents were laid out for ¢ Undeeet stamped with a few characters, two of which | those of Scotland. Every family keeps its | Of & right to their farms as we have, and they | for biting. The employer was bitten to e o ! ERap v'|" 5 x‘ r, |of associations oul ,“ the ’.om«, but who | lighted tr Also the servants are called | TG Pt 3 i | pedigree 1 o b nd sell their real estate, glving deeds | dcath, and the matwor finally came to the | the oy of the nation; and their education | belonged to me and watched anxiously over | und. reesies Thoce Eifta. Even in housel are “China, These cards are diligently | Pedigree, and the reason why the Chinese | buy a glving i o vel e A reets, though not entirely, yet to a great |my childhood There may be just a little ere thes 0 el o O o| hant to be carried to their own eountry fs |for the same. I took & photograph of a|°4rs of the governmemt. It made a great ) . tiere are no children the Christey Ipoked for by the offclals, and the man who | it iy "weilh me wued ety Thats Ban i [ Dhinces gaaa 1 b B missionary had | fuss on paper and plibMshed memorfals con- [ €Xtent, In the lands of their mother, Em- [narrowness in this view of a woman's duty, | tree fs It and wealthy pec ften Invi ha3 one upon him is immediately arrested. | The clane have thelr fouds, Just iike somo of | bought some latg at anking, and which he | COTDINE it, but onlg)the man who took the | Press Augusta e g o e own Rt e b jenortsighted not to recog- | the children of one or more poor familjek, The. soclety numbers among its members | the mountain famiiles of Kentucky, and they | was carrying to Shanghal to be recorded a; | Airst bite was punishédsand the union gained | €Very night before retiring to rest she passes |nize its lofty side. and® we hope that the | to give them presents on t Yy which come | i through the nurscries, and so far as her|progress of time will not quite do away with | memorates (hat God so ) e world ¢ large number of army officials, and the great | 1Y for each other with bows and guns. |the American consulate, during my trip with B other duties allow her to be present at a |the good old tradition, he gave his only begot 5 ,‘,‘,,yb;‘d'; Every family has its ancestral hall in the |him down the Yangtse-Kiang. It was as od he orselt the eve yers v v R Vi BONEY 6 HRoking, who died not loag axv, | town or villege aeer where Tt by 10 the BIg 88 four pages of (nia nowspaper, and was QMK l‘ CAA{M G arslpeas BN 1ha. eVERLES DrayaCe MUSIC IN THE HOME. plalien o show love t6 b Rolahbor oVhat & was, for a time, an active member. It may |all the different members of the famlly meet | covered with stamps. China pays no tax on But also In humbler spheres the woman Music has a great place in the German |brings true light Into the 1. PAr ve been this that made his capital the cen- |and worship their.ancestors, The members liquors, and it is said that the taxes do not relgns as queen in her little kingdom. When [home. There is hardly a home where not | gy ter of their operations, but toward the latter of a rl-‘vll combine together to punish those | amount to 75 cents per head of the popula- the wife of a landed proprictor, her imterest | 0ne m ber at least is endowed with this where the household gathers for family wors part of his Ife he became lax in his support :”.“J th\:' 1;uur"e<l the family, and there are | (jon, A large part of the revenue is col- Windew Cleaning. lles In the welfare of the workingnien and |&ift The greatest masters of music were | sfifp and does mot eit down to table ‘:m..,..‘ of the soclety, and, it is sald, finally dis ib‘l‘“k"‘;Ml‘l'";’:’"d‘“'“:'.’;;'ng'““;f;:""‘::iflfif‘.0‘{ lected from the taxing of salt, and there are | The business of window cleaning in New | of the servants to whom ahe proves a I-w'v ans. Hu’m n!;m!“lln s nu:l Jimple | asking for God's blessing. This in Germany, H h . “ | Chi p 8 import and export taxes collected on goods | York has Increased 50 much that there are | faithful friend In good and bad days. When | German song, how deeply moving the Ger- [ijke elsowhero, 1s only to tound amoni obeyed its orders. Within a week of ”""'é&'::;»':;’»fi";:.‘:finfl:\".'k and the 400,000,000 or | payying up and down the rivers. 1 saw. ous 50w employed In the work men who do noth- | e Wife of & professor or an offcial with a | Man hymn (“choral”). = The gt of MIEING | peopla who truly seck th Lost, ) AMONE time he died very swddenly, and it is cur- v e ® 8D the NeSe DEO- | toms boats everywhere, and the river police | | ey kit ‘o8 mindow - dlednt large number of children, she must often |18 widcly spread in our nation, and excel- | hapny that we have an increased numben rently belleved that he was polsoned. The | oy 052808, TARIIE: (B fary e . . e - e onservatories, which are also an at- | of guch Christian b ; Is quite extensive. The people understand 3 use much diligence and Inventive genius to [lent conservator, a f such Christian homes In Germany, o e Kol o | THE KOLOA HUL very well just how much taxes they ought |Tegular trade. The concerns engaged in this [ moye the moderate income of (he fathes | traction for forelgners, cultivate this art for A. BERNSTORP, next viceroy played fast an with the y | The secret societies are run, however, in- b h b business make contracts for a year or for . We find her therefore in the|Ohurch and home. A favorite recreation | Berlin, Germany. ociety, and It Is sald that his action was, to | s ever, in- | to pay. They are thoroughly organized, and | suffice e find her therefore in the O o «n:m extent, the cause of the riots agajnst | I6Pendent of the clans, and the Koloa Hul is |any radical increase, Such: as muct come | longer periods, The windows cleaned are | kitehen, or occupied with needle and thimble. 1.:.-“':,'.. :"'u'l';mn‘: " a0 u:"m:{“::m’.\""“ r"j;"f)'.’”"['; ———— e the misslonaries in 1891, only one of a large number of them. The|from the present war with Japan, which is | mostly those of banks, stores and ofces, | dedicatitg her best strength to the material Eranan: [EL/AS I AR 100 LM i Bounty More Thau Skin Deep, K" oldest soclety in China Is the Triad society, | probadly costing them $1,000,000 a day, is al- wants of her family, and therefore some- | Perml . lence ® now that beauty is not sk A LITTLE REBELLION, : 4 AP i f but there are some houscholders who have A J - bit of garden Is carefully cultivated—one ki L | known as the Sam Hop Wul. This is said | most certain to create & revolution. 1 have times without sympathy for the higher in- often sees families sitting together on the . She can tell you that half the charm L WA¥ told at Nanking that this weoret so- | 0 have Been (he cause of the Taipiag e | seon diemant catireest, of the revenues got- | thelr house windows cleaned by regular | yoroats of her husband, quiet and modest |n Daicond and Wben. tma aliome ns uitat 1ot & pratty taoemal lasht the M 00 clety had threatened the viceroy that if more | bellion, Which lasted for years, and cost(ten by the empire of China, and in no case | cleaners. One window cleaning establish- | society. belooy; Do e g B lly with him on |18 & matter of little muscles and a complem money was not paid :7‘1) the -oldhlen |hry&vnma 10,000,000 lives. It sprang up in the | have the amounts turned into the general | ment has upon its lists eleven private houses; | THE HOME AND FAMILY an excursion and to s/t with them in a [l1abyrioth of nerves, and that the curves of would cause hln: lru'u e "?:ly mobbing the | south and spread all over the empire, and had | government been greater than $150,000,000 a | it takes none for less than 156 a month. and | Work I8 the leading e at In the lite of [ public garden listening to music. the lips, the glance of the eyes, the droop of forolgners. Shortly after this the “Devil's|it not been for Chinese Gordon and Li Hung | year. This would be a small amount in - | the prices range from that up to $25 & mouth. | the man in pany. Men without profes- |~ On the whole, soclety is simple. In tholr lids, are a matter of the prevalent u Ploture Gallery” wus I-;\Mi This was wade | Chang the Tartar dynasty would oertainly parison with the indemnity that Japan Wil Prices, of course, depend upon the number of | sion are a rare except Their vocation | times & yery good example was given in this certain small muscles in obedience w': 5D B vile otricons ehargiag the mission-|Nave been overthrown. The Besd of this re- | probably demand If he i vieriod A ihia | windows and the mount of work to be [as oficials, oficers, profesiors, eic., natur- | respect by our soverolgns. How simple were | provalent aspect of the fuind Moreover, ith killing Ohis [ | windo d rk o ficlals, y | resp A aries and foreigners wit! o hoinese ba- | bellion was a Chinaman who gave out that | war, and the Chinese emperor hos indeed, a | done. For example, for one bank with a |ally takes up the greater of the'r life. | the parties given by the Kings Frederick | (hat the uge of these organs of expression hag M.rl ':tul |"'Pfl'l:‘:l"l’h'"“‘:‘.‘°(;:': eg:ml:"‘h'aw;.a“;; younger hml'her of Jesus Christ, | thorny road before him. considerable number of windows the charge | The first question one pu a man in | William 1L and IV. of Prussia; hardly as |come down along ancestral lines, and thy and’ cutting off thel And Ll | Snd had been sent to this world to reform | The greatest danger arises in the character | | $35 a month; for one Broadway corner | Ger any I8 “What s he?” Even men of | much was given as would now be placed | the mold of the featuros themselves s = pod with stealing the eyes of desd and live | Cbina, The Triad Soclely Ddas ita lodges, | of the Chinese as regards social and labor | store $25 & month, means, who would perhaps in other coun-|on the table of & nobleman, Bot (0 speak of | question of heredity, erm ether & to the soclety under penalty of death, and| *I don't know whether I can go or not. I each soclety has its executioner, and any | MUst first go and ask my mamma.” the commands of the order. Members are the diamonds which decorated her cap and a truly Ohristian home only existh e ) s e A S0 et o Ao e e o e e