Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 2, 1895, Page 18

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, JUNE Y L L L LT e L SHORT PIECES BREAT JUNE CLEANUP SALE. % Of Carpets of every grade, remnants of Matting, odd lots of Lace and Silk Curtains, odd pieces of Furniture, a few Rorkufi Chairs, Fo!ding Beds, Bedroom Suits, will accumulate in a stock like ours as a natural rcsult of a EVery BuSineSS Man busy year's retailing. We will commence tomorrow to Ak Understands how we can sell the best ¥ \nnhur\- and House Furnishings at so low a price. During ll| i ear b 4 manufacturers were obliged to sacrifice their goods in ¢ 1 to carry on business, We v on the ground and bou carlond after Toad of Book Cases, Fold- a e a ing Beds, Bed Room Suits, (" and all kinds of Furnitu i ( p v below cost of production, Ilu 'n, too, we buy directly from the manufacturers in carloads, thus getting quantity, prices and discount and freight savings n from 10 to 20 per cent. These advantages aud benefits we are giving to our customers. We do not issue clrenlars to mislead the public, but endeavor to show you in the daily papers exact fllusteations of many of the bargains, and what we do not show, tell you how we can best serve you, and give you the benefit of Of them all. If you want something exceptionally good at a funny price otir cash putchas come and see what we have laid out for our June (6} eanup. This funny price will make you laugh and leave a good big margin in your pocketbook Oro of our Ouk Coushes— A nice Hnr Three p.e srdwood ) tique Mantel ¥ u 2 Burner ( June C.our Up Price...... N T T Al Rocker only... June T 3 Up'Price . ice. " Up Price... UG CISEH D DFIGe Y Our space is llmn d, so we can :Imw only a few of our wonder{ul bargains, all over our immense establishment; bu from them you will get an ilea of th: prices offerel, We Q;i\'c you our former prices and prices we will sell them for in our JUNE CLEANUP SALE. Carpets- Bedroom Suits-~ Folding Beds- Our all wool Tugrain, June clean-up s iy St o 42 00 Bed Room Suits, June elean-up Sale ........oeooeoioieians o $48.00 5,00 Combination Folding Bed, June clean-up Y Vo ooty SO8100 « Japanese Matting, June clean-up sale. .. AN e 2 0.00 Bed Room Suits, June clean-up sale ........ S e e 8100 .00 Combination Folding Bed, June elean-up Lede : Taren 132100 Tapestry Brussels Car JUUE CleOD-UD BAG. .+ ereerserssnsens 16 £50.00 Bed Rtoom Suits, June clean-up sale . 1 DR ; 34.00 .00 Upright Folding Bed, June clean-up sale... ... . . 22,00 l ARARPARAREARAASR e Oil Cloth, June clean-up sale 00 Bed Room Suits, June clean-up sale . e i .00 Mantel Folding Bed, June cloan-up Salo.......nsoosesvensesorsoisores 1400 e China Matting, June clean-up sale 20.00 Bed Room Suits, June elean-up sale e o 14.00 )00 Mantel Folding Bed, June elean-up sale. . . Ol o L. 1100 Our Terms Our Secret |Lov Prices, Reltigerators and 1c3 Boxs. Extension Dining Tables. Fiee to Bvery Customer, Cash or Weckly or Monthiy Paymeets. . ( SmallProfits otk gt Of Success: | Easy Terms A Good Ice Box— $3.75 Cood sfoot $2.90 L/ L] &1 00 week, 4 00 month Dining Table 820 00 worth—82 00 down o3ob A Gt R0 GOL R O ) v datuen Open Saturday and Monday Evenings, A Good Refrigerator— $5.00 ~ce T5¢ SIS G (T G S5l L] &1 00 week, ®4 00 month S O woren. e g 80 weok, 10 00 O VAR SRR e Ritchenilableliiirne s Engraving to every $50.00 purchaser. g10,00 purchaser a Plated Sugar Spoon; 1%7"We Are the Largest House Furnishers in the West. (#7"Whatever Others Advertise You Will Find Our Prices Lower. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%&%%%%&%%& =% =8 =8 5 =5 =% =8 % =8 % N PDTYV | ment. I think, however, that this has been | strect. At night the doors are open and it | clean and happy in its nursery, and whose N o AL THR DR D | must be taken by the ass: at the same | ac PROGRLSS AMID POV]LR[\ done in urtl]\-rd\m:l the ld.'slre for amuse- | is brilliantly lighted. It would puzzle a | husband was kept sober in its coffee hou ““‘, 5(”00[5 01‘ lHl_‘, l’l‘,UPLh time that the annual Lt i moade. U b T 08 ke ment may lead them where a desire for | stranger to determine what he had come | who explained that “H. H." the mark used and t st t t o secretary af " EDUCATION. i3 something above and beyond it may have a | upon. As you pass you catch stray glnp: on its belongings, stood for f heaven. f;,'ll ,}'f,",p]“1,(.:?‘1“0';":}.‘:,. ud ‘\',“,“., e The N ‘,‘n,“ AAIONAL) NOTRR: 2 5 cliance o reach them. Indeed, young men | of pletures and statuary and well fillcd houk- | As for the litile ‘woman whose heart con- are required 10 report 1o the board monthly | aites: for. welve. aauiionel. sthan Dot e e Hull House | have been known to frequent the free bil- | cases, and hear snatchies of music that ceived and whose brain directs it all, even 3 i Hpad 5 g nen esfor ¢ additional school_buildings. Significance and R “'1“ °f.“h3 liard rooms for months, who at length, either | think must have wandered here Ly m . | grateful, not-to-be-outdone-Chicago, —cannot A New Yor.k vIlluxlra:tmu 01: the ~Fad ;Il,‘n“\k‘"f.l. nu“rf”,l‘;{;“,l,‘}\" A ‘fh::, I”,‘ ',;v" }"" "”ml"" "”l”i"“ W) LR SRl L Movement in Chicago. out of curiosity or sheer idleness, have | The crowd passing in and out talks a: find a name good encugh for her. Evils in Public Schools, (WU SaL B ALONY (FERSOD SOr I prgtoUCHEnG Bulldings, 3 cessive days. Thus th hool board will | The ber of school Qdropped into a chair mear the door of a|might have come direct from the (o STACIA CROWLEY. e S s Ll R R R B R L Gt IR G AnbiTe d din al el A el O s R e e [ully advised as to all children who fail ie university of California is now SOCIAL AND INTELLECTUAL REFORM there were other things in Hull House than | ¢onditions of men,” women and children. RELIGIOUS, COMPULSORY EDUSATION INPENNSYLVANIA to comply with the compuls law. If the | forty-eight, Nearly every section of Cals secretary. ¢ 3 | ifornia is represented billiard rooms and other things in life even | YOU turn to the resident under whose es secretary of the school board shall fail to | ifo ALl < . _ more enjoyable than billiards. It may not | Plonage you are seeing the house, and ask At A = IR comply with the provisions of the law he \Il‘d':_""\:l};(‘““\l".lril'l[vlflql(!‘t'(plzr-h]lll-llml‘.[lrlmll in : 4 be all chance that the way to the billiard | I this a gathering place of the nations?’ | A handsome new Roman Catholic chure will be liable to indictment for misdemeanor | Andrew's university, Scotland, is sald to Fwo Encrgetlc Women Found an Onsts n | oo ied™ i} 0/un o reading room and by | But he answers cheerfully, “Oh, uo; we have | for colored people, to be known as St. Kath- | Docamentary Proof of the First Free | and toa flue of § S et nodanaLne A uENIENIOR AR INEEE ® Desert of Poverty, Crime and Un- | the doors of some lecture and class rooms, | 10, Chinese. erine’s, has just been opened in New Or-| . pupie School—The Natlonal Convens Accordng to the Times of Philadetphia | “"T1"\{ L NG O W versoers of Harvard, B (10 s Soise OF tha Work lialvesiaentst are a1l mentandE women "(‘“\\vm o in, and if it chance to be a na- | leans. on ot Densett gami e e the city must provide for 20,000 additional | president Ellot has offered a site for the pros culture both of brain and heart. They .lnj1{”"",“‘:‘?‘“"", night you are sorry in the| oz Bailey, a Maine manufacturer, said 5 . school children immediately, or else the law | posed college infirmary. It is intended ta not pounce upon the newcomer or the n!l—"‘.':'"’”‘“‘il your German vocabulary has |, 'po the wealthiest man In the state, has R dusatiensliiNotes, will fail of enforcement in that city. Like | e the Infirmery a memorial to the latq comer, either, and talk to him about his [ 25" AMON€ ““;n‘“l‘l‘“r"rl?, to vat, Brauteln’ | for years employed a band of evangelists to — conditions prevall in other cities of the | Dr. Peabod body or his soul. He having eyes and e D O L A D © diniDR | \ork in the small towns of the e. s and a vast outlay will be required to | The new register of the university of CHICAGO, May 30.—(Correspondence of| s aiiowed to come freely where he may see | Fon Yo 4! ;”l“‘_’m";‘“{ "‘;"j'*;" Yoy “]"‘f:‘ b iy 14 3 The New York legislature passed an act | give effect to the provisions of the law. | ifornia shows the total number o, Ahe Bee)—If you wish to keep up With the | and hear, and beyond a friendly Sreeting | yo sarry on an ialan sonverssiina. 1o “‘:"“:tmff“, ‘li’ljf(‘\.’x‘l':“:lg"f the fi‘t‘)":‘,:‘l" ‘s'[‘fi,fn‘,‘ to compel systematic teaching in all the THE NATIONAL CONVENTION. enrolled at the colleges at Berke times In this very progressive city you must | no more Is said unless he desires it. art exhibit room Mlle. Vallerie is holding a | is largely invested in western securities | SCho0ls as to the effects of alcohol and to The authorities of Greeley, Colo., and|lL1, of j*.‘“" B.808 are s onient STI AR IS ESH study sociology. You must not only have AMUSEMENTS PROVIDED, French reading; in the Octagon Miss SGrr | which now yleld little or no income, and |bacco on health, A similar law was enacted | Cheyenne, Wyo., have united in extending SHONR IeR Lo N Duerln AR ALY such knowledge of the subject as can be "5::':13)":4“!"'t‘hl‘““grd ruomu} ‘“""1‘ is a spa- | has a ‘f‘“«»‘srl;! l"‘”“:‘- and - in Iflh“ drawing | the Episcopalians of the diocese are wonder- | some years ago, but it not enforced, and | &1 ‘:“““;":l’l r\ t‘:w drl;xluu-.“m !mc mln— [ ibenti el s.fi‘“'.,.mv'}.m‘,v“fi.".,.,,.;.A"‘;: K rou | clous gymnasium, big enough to play a game | room Mr. Edward Gregg is lecturing on 2 L et : ¥ nioreed, 207 | vention of the National Educational associa- P ARS otk 0 galned from books and lectures, but you|or'yl YA (R SROVER o BIAY 8BRS | FOC in history. In-the kitchen Miss | W15 oW tie salary of Bishop Niles will be fitho superintendent of the New York CWY | tjon to visit thoso cities at the close of | ainheledCrire Inoiding thows s allnd jrng must have such knowledge as has been | he way of apparatus. There is a fencing [ Welch, A. B., is conducting a cooking class, o f 3 1 schicols has filed a protest against the present | the convention. The convention meets in | {oral amounis to 1781 grand gained by actual experience. To get this |club where marks, foils and gloves are pro- | #nd a cash girl's club is holding a meeting | A Roman atholic street preaching mis- | get, which must be approved by the city au- | Denver the second week in July, and I8 ex-| "yt hug been decided by the senate of the experlence you must be perfectly familar \»]( ded, and members of various clubs and |in one of the ‘!ml!s. M}sll Crim’s class in :‘\'g'r‘k ':”}“i:"ml“:’k’“r’“("(” 'l" ;‘l““‘:"“h“"*' thorities before it becomes a law. The super- | pected to conclude its labors by the 13th. | yyiversity of Michigan to hold elaborate ex- H 5 3 classes are permitted to use one of the halls | English and letter writing occupies the | V! e similar to that cf the Salvation | o000 " e the act ci .| The hustling cities on the north have ar- cises v i 2 with the city as set forth in Hull House | ¢asses are perwitted to use one of the balle | U8, "% 50 it goes stralght to the heart of | army, but it will not adopt the fantastic | Intendent says that while the act cannot pos- |\ g"to take the delegates on & special | mont to celebr from 1k ol OIS maps and notes. Tt e e Ity Tromsn sor ok he¢d | (o average woman Who can write three | methods of that organization. One of the | #Ibly accomplish any good purpose not al-| {r i hioh will leave Denver on the morn- | Angeil's firat quarter A R Theso locate the different races and classes [of a chance to play. - Intellectually the | times as fast as she can talk, and talk very | most promifient workers in the movement | ready adequately provided for, “it makes In- | jng of the 13th, stopping several hours at|dent of the university. A Sominittos Wek 20 oxtctly. that you know fust where to go | house has made extraordinary provision for | (43t indeed, to see the amount of time and | Wil be Father Ellfott of the Paulist Fathers | ordinate “demands upen the time of the | both points, and return to Denver In the fappointed consisting of ihe deans of the varis e, ool cant For instance, all|lta frequentars, ::Over 200" professors and |1abof some poar, toll-stiffencd fngers. must | church of New York Olty, who. ls an en- |pupll evening. A more fnteresting excursion could | ous departments to take the matter in charge to find what you wan '1 b 2 * teachers connected with the universities, col- | Put into a few badly spelled line thusiast on the subject of propagating Discussing this point and “fads” in gen- | not be made, and those who fail to accept | and prepare a plan for the celebration. It the dark blue parts of the map ShOW YOU | jleges and public schools of Chicago give| LECTURING UNDER DIFFICULTIES, | Catholicism among Protestants. eral, the New York World says: “It would | the bospitality of Greeley and Cheyenne | was also voted to ask the regents to appoint where the Italians live, and the red shows | their services free. The University exten-| On the night of my first visit Prof. Moul- A new religlous sect has been started in | po o good thing ifsthe legislature coula be | Wl have cause to regret it. a similar committee to join in the under- the Pollsh quarter. In the same way yel- |®on of the University of Chicago gives a |ton of the University of Chicago was de- | Missourl. The members elect an “angel” [ v & 000 LHNE it 52 FIRST FREE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. taking. Jow indicates that hora ive the selt-suppart- | COUTse of lectures each vear and the Social | Iivering @ leeture on”Shakespeare's “Temp: | whoso businces It 1y to fly o heuven every Induced every yoar to give heed to that 00€ | by means of an old deed exchanged be- | Germany has adopted the system of stparat. ) Sclence club provides the best speakers for | est. he audience would have made a | li v ; 3o W 3 g 0 Yl Al ARt ~|ing the bright pupils from the stupid one Ing poor, while the purple districts are - | pccasional Tecturs. If half a s IRl sl G L A O L B S BDCE “'(‘f“":l‘;:r‘;"j“ 00 uents e, {puplls in city public schools have ouly a {neen w0 of thavaarlierl puproRAnIg EE Bake e R LR hablted by what is known as the “rellef” | desire to study some certain branch they | attentive, however, and Prof. Moulton was | expected, the members had no dificulty | oY LW, Years in which to get any educa- | Ut % oholars belleve to be the first recorded | done not by the teachers, but by medical class, Othor races and other classes are [form a class and a teacher is provided, | learned and witty, as he always is. He 15 a | whatever in finding a man who was both | he oo o e et o | frec public school in America, supported by | Mol {ndicated by other colors. These maps were | NOt for charity, though, each member pays | fine reader, and as he read, “Be not afeard; | ahle and willing to fly to heaven a often the period of their school attendance to a| o WiP o oiion- namely, on the south side | Miss Nellle Temple, a graduate of Vassar prepared by residents of Hull House and |30 cents a term. —This pays for gas and the lsle I8 full of notses,” up through the | ag wag desired. But when he makes the | lowm e read. sariie s barely time at best to | BHe i hear Washington street, The | With high honors in 1882, has been engaged by, o oS § heat and removes the fecling of getting|OPen windows came the regular Halstead | e learn to read, write and cipher, and, In fact, | 08 FORIML FEAT, T GHE SR I street, | the University of Leipsic to assist Dr. Rataely s brings me to the subject of my story. — e, J ot ol . S A trip he insists on being absolutely alope. the greater number of them learn these ne riangular oc bounded by b e ks nes ¥ . | something for nothing. Every department | Sirect chiorus of crying children and fighting | & e hnd. Cornhill was, says the Bos. |18 American professor of history, fn the prep: . .‘,:‘l‘:““m’::""‘"“““]’g",rfl‘l:.r"y“‘!:“:e‘“;; in the house has grown from a discovery | 108%. When he reached, pafppec onasd Snary hings Yary Impariactis. BYSTRROM |iop Journal, originally devoted to the follow- | 4ration of & work on the United States. Misa made th 1 r o o ‘Sometimes a o anging instrue LABOR NOTES every minute, of school time devoted to any- B e beneficent | i Temple, it is sald, was pushe - the word, since every one pays for what he "‘x;uu";uusn natural and reciprocal social bk e thousand twanging Instru. thing else robs them of instruction which they [ In8 Public beneficent purp ;u o rvn«iw i um:‘lrnl“y‘n;l“ulu:mluy vliho. gets there, but it can porhaps be best de- SANITARY CONDITION Will' hum about mine ears,” The English shoe workers' strike has been | 50rely need to equip them for the work of m"\w‘}“:‘"c:;’r’t’“vlm e 1 R3s." (e | Fules of the nstitution prevented her election, 8540 8 'n sotial experiment. Miss Addams has given special attontion to | LNO bands in rival resorts were playing, one | compromised. earning honest )ivings, sohol.the first meeting house, occupying |, The University of Pennsylvania will hold POVERTY IN PLENTY. (i AddamaThaN slven ADSSIAL HAALOIO [iiTommy S Abking,inna ko™ othar, titHer |\ claveland {a about to adopt the Pingrse | e o AOdIatecare tie ciras.of the kohpals, | IR LIS ST COSIHOR At e oorner ot |icxaminations foF enirante o tho collageiine The Ninetecnth ward s the most densely | rallied to her assistance every mother In it, | Go.den Halr Was Hanging Down Her Back.” | potato plan. fliey. ssem .never (o, Iagpot hpon condilions. [ S ECOER SR BN abd ‘e tavern[Jubs In.oxer g soare DEoities jooated In-qifs populated district of Chicago. Nineteen dif- | Those women have made life such & burden | b ‘it the,, frivolous epectators noticed s Thoy proceed a8 it allthe sobaol hildren T nes building mow 15, Opposite | {€rent parts of the country. As the university distrit go: Ninateen os ien have made life such a burden | (nese ‘things; the real audionce was nitesy | Kansas City iron molders struck against | had before them the full period of education [ Where the Ames building now is. OPPOsite | gruyy students from almost every state in BBk onalltios are repruse nted by its | to the garbage collectors that even the extra | oplivious o them | a reduction and won their point. Which is granted only to the children of the |on Washington strect was placed the par- | iho"inion, these local examinations will en nhabitants and the sanitary conditions are | supply of d’'s in Miss Addams' name has not | [y the Fencing Cabinef s ance ell-to-1 sonage, the shop of Cogan, first merchant; Fiy cant 3 fane: M i o ke by " i encing club I witnessed some | Cabinetmakers of France want to form an | well-to-do. s Ui | able many applicants living at a distance :«;lll:‘l‘})lfi;:“lrt'fl;:(ulh:(]v! ‘.‘v'\‘l‘;,vn:l::llx",rmlIh:l(lTl }f;l:‘u hljul\l(’l.\‘lr:\xjfl'i‘x|tnl\;n‘v|v|h:l~”(l|b;‘r over- | doughty deeds that would have roused the |alliance with Ames craftsmen, “The patent fact is that our schools are | the ";'"k"‘ll':“f‘ yherer e "lx"» state | from Philadelphia to avold the expense of & o SBURILNE Sladahalt. fed nd [ oharR celings. = Mayor Swift has re-|envy of even your Dr. Desprecher and Mr.| The organized hatters in Newark, N. J., |unable to do adequately even the necessary house stands, and the armory. Near by WEIe | jong journey for the purpose of an examinas wholly neglected. How could it be other- | cently added to their woe bp appointing Miss | Muilen. One young Italian, whose eyes, in | are talking of another great strike e ket lies before them. They canno | the reat dock, the powder magazine, the [ (jon' “Tya examinations will bo held June 17 wise? Whole families live In one room and | Addams garbage inspector for the Nineteenth | his excitement, falrly blazed through his wirs | - o BRI VAR BEOR (815 XS, provide even rudimentary education for all | SPFiug on the hill above, the aqueduct, the | 4nq'yg, and will all be of the same character in thousands of cases the joint earnings of | ward. This gives to an already busy woman | mask, was s lithe and graceful as a tiger. | 1 ohc Dricklayers, sumbering 10,000, of St.| (e chijaren who have a right to claim it, | Ereat clstern and other safeguards agaiust| g those held upon the same dates at the such familics do not amount to §6 a week. | much additional labor, but it means a great | The Omaha young man dubbed him a trans. | “U\% are on strike for higher wag They turn thousands away every year and | fire, town bell, the town clock, the great |university in Philadelphia As you wander about through the narrow, [deal in the way of cleanliness and health | planted Romeo, and gave him the rose from |, John McBride and P. J. McGuire attended | jstruct the others very imperfectly. So long | Indian ceme only a few steps away from | The Philadelphia school board has abolished filthy alleys and miserable tenements you|to @ people who are greatly in need of | his button hole, which was the only lan. | the musicians’ convention in Cleveland. as this state of facts exists every suggestion | the earliest burial place of the whites; the | june examinations In all grades below the begin to understand the why and the where- [ both. guage they had in common, The increase of wages among the ORI | (o introduce other Instruction than the neces. | town house, the legislature, the criminal and | twelfth. Promotions in these grades will be fore of the anarchist, and go away feeling [ In art, literature and music Hull House KITCHEN AND NURSERY. wire and nail workers affects 6,000 men. | sary teaching of reading, writing and arith- | ¢IVil courts and the marshal made on term averages, utterly helpless and miserable. But this | maintains that the best Is the fittest and [ No matter how utilitarian the idea, the| Roustabouts on the Mississippi steamers | metic 15 distinctly wrong.” The meeting house having been planted in | The board of regents of the University Teeling of helplessness did not overcome two | it offers no other. ~The lectures and con- | grtistic is never lost sight of at Hull House, | recently struck for higher wages. The mat- COMPULSORY EDUCATION, 1632, Cornhill became one of the very earliest | of Michigan recently took the first steps brave women who fiye years ago came to | CCFts are exactly such as are glven before [ The kitchen s a copy of an old Eaglish | ter Was compromised. Philadelphia is confronted with a oondition | BLEeets of Bosto Starting from the site of | toward the reorganization of the homeopathic make their home In the very midst of this |audiences of scholars and musicians. inn, with low, dark rafters, diamond win- | The headquarters of the International As- P A o York, | L0, mesting house In Washingion, strest, the,anedics] - departinente The /Aenarimentriuas squalor and want and sin. They believed | And now how does Hull House appear to | dows, and a large fire place. Besides serving | soclation of Machinists 18 to be removed from :“"”" 1A &”"m?"*d 1" Ixfl. New York. | firgt great thoroughfare into the interior. |declared by resolution to be distinct and that social fntercourse could best express | the casual visitor? —In a reglon where space | juncheon, the foods cooked here are delive | Richmond, Va., to CRicago School accommodations are Inadequate. It 18| His conclusion is strengthened by the fact | independent of every othier department, and the growing sense of the economic unity of | 1 50 valuable that & foot or two is often |ered hot by the quart or pound for home ARL ; d estimated that 20,000 children are shut out | {pa¢ there are in the nelghborhood plctur- [a committee to draft a new eet of rules and soclety, and so moved in. the source of much costly litigation, and | consumption. The strike of the 8t. Louis garment work- | of the schools at the present time, because | esque old alleyways, notoriously crooked | regulations for it was appointed, Bhiak ot atemte I \afuence such a | ¥her® every. person and thing seems to be| In the day murssry are cleaniiness ana |in"SEALDS the ewesk AMop contractors ended | the school authoritles sre uaable o eupbly | streets, and” ten so-called gpubllo squares. | Luther academy, located at Wahoo, Nebs g cramped and squeezed in just as much as | comfort, and ch o s | 10 8 victory for thesatrikers. the necessary buildings. Notwithstanding | Just above are the three hills, Pemberton, | has issued its twelfth annual catalogue, give gommunity through its social life, where 4 harts and pictures of famous o ¢ gue, & the only gatherings w about the doors | Possible you suddenly come upon a vacant | Madonnas. In the parlors of the Jane club, Five thousand New. Jersey potters have or- | this fact the legislature has passed a compul- | Mount Vernon and Beacon. ing detailed information regard ng the college, Bt a R T e e a 2wt “the | lot, bounded on two sides by & woven wire | the home of fifty young women, who occupy | Eanized a national wnion, whic s been | sory education law, which imposes severe | Here also is Tremont Row, where lived pihross 8 nld Participans 1o woaghe bollse dras out the [fence at least ten foet high. ~This is the | fine flats under the Cchaperonage of Hull affiliated with the American Federation of | penalties on parents who fall to send their | Governor Vane, Governor Bellingham, Gov- THE VOYAGE e e O I ahe halls of | playground made this pring by - tearing | House, I found a bowl of roses, an open plano | L4bor: children to school. ernor Endicott, the second schoolmaster of bl Deating his wite et citidren "Bt thess | doWN two very low tenements. It is only [ with Mendelssohn's “Spring ‘Sons” on the [ London county cogmell has six bills before | _Under the new law every child in the com- | Boston; Rev. John Cotton, teacher of the Sam Walter Foss in New York Sun $eave women bolleved that the saloons were treeless as yet, but there are tents and [rack, a number of really fine pictures, some | the British parliament asking the privilege | monwealth between 8 and 13 years of age | church; his son, Seaborn, and John Hull, the | Out from the harbor of the Shadowy Shore Prave women belleved that the saloons were | awnings and hammocks and sand piles and | of them presented by tho artists who painted | of municipalizing the waterworks for §175,- | must atiend for at least sixtcen weeks in|mint master. “Here Tremont strect begins, | e wall into the gladness of the i 8 ool ¢ y had 0o rivals | byckets and spades and balls and tennis | them, and what seemed very natural consid- | 000. cach year a school in which the common |another great, but newer thoroughfare. The | A breath of spice from islands fur awiy S al m.:-lnvwn":!;en _hnd.’ homhl; and croquet, and men and women who are | ering the time and surroundings, a young| The machinery molders of Cleveland, after | English branches are taught. The law is | newer Shawmut, on a hill overlooking the fllurfi»"]wluq“mIv\@uv; the deep reas roar B MA many (womes. wbo requented | children again for the sake of the children. | man and woman holding a very confidential | a short strike, succeeded in obtaining a uni- | 8weeping In its requirements, excepting only | valley and the nelghboring ocean, was begun | T, NERINEES DY ‘:r’-‘-:":r-l;ak-:;"‘“E:fig'?u a sert them If something | Watching them you decide that each of the | couversation about the weather, no doubt. | form wage 8cale. The mini is | such children as are certified by parents or [ by the whites on the gpot where the red men v better were provided 8 L, Tty Is ol . nineteen nationalities has contributed its | The club is composed of working girls, and | $2.50 a day. uardians to be mentally or physically in- | left off. With broken wrecks, but still we cannol . - [ § ORIGIN OF THE MOVEMENT. share, but just let me show you how much | thelr expenses amount to $3 a week per| p, J. McGuire, general secretary of the | capacitated, or who live two miles or more | The school was startéd voluntarily in town stay, Ne : Chicago Is he crowd. capita, * S J y . . . ceting, April 23, 1635, 260 years ago. A volce beyond the storm calls evermore, | 0 child growing up in that district today go Is fn the crowd. =~ On the opening | APl carpenters, has lately addressed large meet- | from a public school, or who are being In- [ meeting, Ap ' ¥ & o ean complain that something better has not | 98y the gates were kept closed until a| No religious services are held at Hull | ingg in Chicago, Cleveland, Columbus and | structed in other schools or by private teach- COMMENCEMENTS. 3 been provided, for the two rooms into which | cértaln hour, but the children who were 5‘:‘;‘:&“:;;;“:”:;;’!‘:‘:“ r*;‘“.”‘"- hOn S:w adjacent cities. ¢ ers in the common English branches which [ oo 7 ot e T Eroste. % e s R Tomlins, who directed the World's fair chor- | Ve board has given the brewery workers to | The law ls bighly penal fn its provisions. | wity a program of exercises extending over | And on we sall, nor strength nor pu with them, much to the surprise of that | tfife s b 8 & ten-foot wire fence. It | C0 undertaken to train & chorus of | Understand that they- must withdraw from (A fine of §2 I imposed on parents OF | fye days. ~The preliminary s & base ball Tail, ! purpasq b 5 o X B avied W, Mave growa o Hull orded M0 fCfthold for climbing: %0 theY | 500 working people at Hull either the Knights of Labor or the federation, | Busrdians in every case for the first offense | oontest with the Yale nine on June 8. The il throogh the sunset of alluring seas | ouse, which aims to be and is a social e sand with thelr uaughty a ., 7 against the law, and for each succeeding | final exerci i) be held In Alexander ball, | - Through twlilght spiendors do” we driey ter abol hich th little hands, erawlgd under and od also offered prizes for the gs that will | According to Bradstreet's about 765,000 nal exercises will be. held in r ba u-'r':m:t. :r‘:nl:“e‘:omn-‘n:‘;- mAY group | BS AAAI aret ":,u"‘, or and opened 'he | best express, both in musle and words, (he | workers received increased wages during | Offenso the fine is §5. Thls fine is imposed | June 12. ' Theoant tate of Unpeturning, Saija. ) Gt Salepriees. ome life and aspirations of th tking | April, two-thirds of whom received th by the school board, but an appeal is allowed 1 he founding of . s, Hull House Qoes not make the common | Scheduled time, e pirations of the working | April, ved the same The silver anniversary of the founding o i s ople. without striking. to the court of quarter sesslons of the Proper | Carthage college at Cartha U, wil be mistake 3..:"-3:.“:»:'1‘.39,353&'5"S’“'.’l Am‘md’?::? clulruni:fl!‘r:': ::ll'lifl':‘" S The ;:Menu lpu \h:{lr o':uzlpennl and| The Prussian government has decided to | county. celebrated on. the 20th jnst. The exercises | Pittrburg, Kan., boasts of a growing g“-‘ P o ve thelr services. No public appeal for and Its Achlevements, “Wé Bjiread our saus to catch the Wind ang 5 establish state warehouses after the sub-| In order that the law may be fully enforced, [ will conclude with a banquet in Odd Fellows | church, where true Christianity is preachs mmm m&hnle who ean oaly | you come upon a house with a yard. | funds has ever been made, and many agree | treasury plan -advocz'ed by the farmi and that none may escape its provisions, a | hall. by Rev. Dr. Morrison, who will d’um reached t! it v desire for amuse-| Door yards are mot commop on It Wwith the poor woman whose baby was kept | alllances of this country. census of the school children of each district | Commencement exercises of St. Mary's | series of sermons on “Chrlst the Soclalist."

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