Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 28, 1895, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

E “' RRMFV 0]; BR“‘ “V the estimates. He had seen milllons voted | reaches itself and it Is aleo a_sad symptom |order. It will occur some time during the F\M‘) W V 0 \'V \ls fast, provided with colls of rope, h,.rm.-»lnrl » AL ' M ALN | With only efght people in the house. “Six |of the growing antipathy of English work- | month of August. “Thb place for holding it | I'} \b \ " AMR and thormometer, we crossed the Knowy m.»r,l‘“R H Y FI‘,AST 0" 0A >\ of those were asleep, and one was epeak- | men to the church and religlon. General [ has not been chosemiibut either Omaha or and began the ascont of the steep comb or 1 il {ing, and 1t would have been better, both | Booth is always desirable game because he is | Beatrice will be gecided upon, with the ridge that lay to the east, completely shutting for the man himself and the country, It the | fl’lnud md‘ mu” \;«nu r‘u;- reet representati chances In favor of fhe latter place, If de- \'\m !- aks lrmnh\l w. Two hours of painful {stics jen i yeaker hal been at he a4 in bed.” | of aggressive Christianity. sirable rallroad rated'¢an be obtained 9 i climbing over beds nf loose rock that were b arl " Oharacteristics af' ‘Labm: Conspicuous in | #r MRS BR Deeh IJM:Q n!rvyllml My Burns, | To get away from Hyde park let us take b The Region Brought Into Prominence by ||l 4y ts SLaft At Ahy THOMGAL RPeMght &8 O Qatbering of the Olans of the World of the Political Contest. ‘s 1ot made up of nobles and fools. They | traln, as the writer dil the day following, for | Alpha camp, Waodmen of the World, Is the Bannock Row., the crest of the ridge, no wider than a horse's Corn. ate o0 clever by hatf o how could they | Knebworth, Lord Salisbury travels this way | preparing to obtain fodge rooms which are back, and which, sweeping in a semi-circle to BN P continue to fool forty millions of people.” | When he goes home after a hard day's work. | to be used exclusively by it the south, joins the main range at (he south HYDE PARK, THE WORKINGMAN'S FORUM | This prepared the way for a thrust at a|So doa lot of their lordships, for If you kept >t DESPERATE BATTLES OF BYGONE DAYS side of the middle Teton. Louking eastward | KING AKSAR-BEN AND WIS RETINUE certain lish weakness which the speaker | your seat long enough you'd be whirled | The uvlrrvulwlm, sesslon of the Independ- through a mile of superlatively clear atmos aah called “hereditary subserviven Bt which | through a part of Bngland so thickly peopled | ent Order of Forekters will convene in — Flon ook (8 Srowhey ARL manouth b M Is really the worship of tit ' place, and | with greatness that the palatial residences | London on Augustid. The delegates to the 5 1S S.000 1 bl el ot o b L B LU - | which constantly, when it comes to voting, | and large estates in it are commonly spoken | convention from the ted States sailed A Valleys and Scente W foot from the glacler valley at mual Nevelry — The ~Amelfornting the | makes the British workman his own wopst (of as “The Dookeries.” How many dukes | from New York on July 20, ‘ at to J "”,-."v"f"“[y": ng in a polnt as sharp sformation—m Tollers—Qunint |encmy. “If a member of the Stock exchange | are oa the train today [ nelther know nor | el « of Former Words cannot convey the lmpression one Wb awd: Sunidients: { eame fo ask your suffrages he wonldn't have | care, but the occupant of the same compart The supreme commandery of the Masonic ndian Wars, gets while viewing that awful spire from this | to vindicate himself from paltry charges as | ment with myself volunteers the remark that | Knights Templar will be in convention in point. Tts size and appalling helght are simply — I do. He wouldn't have tc tell the rent he | he saw ex-Speaker Peel get aboard | Boston during the middle portion of next — overwhelming. In an experience of ffteen pays nor how he gets the money to pay it “well,” 1 Sbserved, I sume he had | month. A great' many rgembers of the < B o | years of mountainserin v e i P ; LONDON, July 23.—(Special Correapon- | His long-tailed cont would awaken reverence | moneanon s e o o ydkar | Nebraska commanfery are already making | The district of northern Wyoming to which | FEAES L e i“;';’.‘\;:‘y‘..f‘v: L Never before have the people of Nebraska Genceof The Dee)—The needs, aspirations | and his top hat would be an object of Wor- | «xh rather likely: pension of £4,000 a year | Preparations to aitend. A special train, | the eves of the country are now directed by | (housand feet of naked, cold granite, with evinced such zeal and taken such an fne and Idiosyncracies of working class life in ;‘Izfllv :«un ;r;!n ; ;nu f", discent arising, Mr_ | ($20,000), and he wasn't speaker more than | Which will stop at a number of places of | reason of the warlike attitude of a small bund | not a spear of vegetation nor vestige of #oil on | terest for the success of an event as they England have been strikingly i A pde= i _‘”}‘:;',fi .“'.‘,‘f e at wes, | about ten year “I'm opposed to that,” he "K‘I" gl i i “‘"' carry thein to the | of Bannock Indians is famous as the thoater | th \\V;wl«‘m ountain l.\'h_\, snow and granite | have over the Feast of Mondamin, which i liate emse tinued, as I supposed he would, for my re- | Place o nven y erate an ¢ ¢ i1 | the only elements In this wild pic h the “falling of the evidence of late owin to the | “Why" said he, “I met a man the other da ntinued, as I supposed he would, for my re A of many desperate and tragic encounters with will begin with the “falling of the sun on strong llght thrown upon the situation by | who said, ‘Mr. Burns what do you think; | MArk was intended to draw him oUt—SI'M | (. 00ygar fritz Wirth of Custer post, | hostile redskins, It has also achieved unen ‘Descending gently, we encountored the | (ne 17th of Seplember next under the eye a w end of {l Iy e fully in th this great contest at the polls. The result | I was out walking yesterday and Mr. 8o and | & conservative gL ,;l"v"'l“f:-,:,'l“”L",',:‘ Qrand Atmy of the Republic, has received | viable notorlety as the abiding place of rus- | amphitheaser-lige valley, reserbiing. in con: the mightly and omnisclent ruler of the of this great battle the reader will know, | >0 2 member of Parliament, epoke to me, 4 ' - "% clinatlo A check for $16 from Frauk B. Blair, post | tlers, who thrived by preying upon the herds | tour the half of an oyster shell with its | Knights of Ak-sar-ben, within the city of 1 th 1 y has to pay them And by an inclination but he will know better how it was brought | " gHe T1ag SEAES Teally elnted v . A|of the thumb of his right hand toward his No. 1, of St Loult, o ussist in Getraying | of rypcumen small point broken offt, It is Oiatis g 0 you; you don't sa 0. A 1 the expenses of burying Leopol! Kunit p alm e same in long about, what causes were at the bottom of | member of Parliament spoke to you!' own stomach, which he might perhaps be ex- | (he SXprares B0 BIEHIE Frorait R ey According to the dispatches Jackson Hole is | Wit 4108 e A Already there Is much preparation and it, and what it may presage for the future Yes, he stooped down form his horse, | cused for regarding as the part most feel- | o, iy wug at one time a member of the | the ceater of the present disturbance. The | rope, to "siard. agsinat acoldents, -was planning. Cltizens are vielng with each when this series of letters shall be finished. | and, sa a nd--G o afternoon.t' ::»“.‘(l{‘} ‘:'I’;'.":‘;“:"‘ g ”I‘:\"'I‘_"”!’l‘l “"““"' " | St Louts post locality 1s chiefly notorious as the former | put fto use, but the glacler, having a g ther in the variety of designs and pros s, 2 . Amazing. Did e 8p N you ace— L hat e o paying ’ € .- 1 d sses to spe 3 To make English affairs clear to the average | - Amazing. Didn'h he "\h,p Pk vllp. to 5s done, by his bWh hampie kelt e o) Jooted | TELFEAL OF & gang of horse and cattle raiders, | SOb0 & M"‘l;” B oy O A | fusion of decorations in their laudable amble herican, tc ng to the minds of S y ¥ . The South Omaha Maennerchor elec o leader o was ckson. It | erossed diffculty o wer . 2 American, to bring to the minds of my fel ‘Thus 1 quizzed the poor fellow,” said | When cld England shall come fully under |, L 'VI‘_\'\’:YH (:h““” N 'K" ki prasl the leader of which was o 1 Jackson. It | FOSEEC Sl Sy ek and the ascent | 10N to do homage to the beloved Mondamin low, citizens a realizing sense of what work-| Mr. Burns, “and it was some time before he | the advanced sway of the United States, these | gt " Glc MWorkainkn vice, pROsIGARYS Al B | eutin {.m! jthe “euplicnical locailty Was | Lol our path proceeding over a mass of | and the pulssant potentate of Ak-sar-ben. ing s conditions are in a land which has | saw that T was poking fun at him, for he | abuses will, no doubt, be corrected. And | veriens, Paul Henni, treasurer: | son's lak s I",”.h‘\’_ I8y {-“'l"j P se rock, to seale which entailed the grentest | Battallons of sturdy men will be engaged in at once much to teach other lands and a |really felt, as masses of cur workmen do, that | jsn't that time surely coming? e ot Orattss | S01US 1ake why undoubtedly. cuFlstened by Rat (o 1its AN AN AR 11 . : cal "to learn from others—this is my | such a man, occupying the positior he did, | At a station outside of London a third man | Potars iR ; L tographer Jackson, an Omaha ploncer, who [ jailil 10 (00 B0 elached, would rush | Crecting and decorating the hundreds Be se; and for the present 1 can think of | had conferred an honor upon him, and had | entered our compartment. Here were three | @ o= SXDISER COFLHBFH| NYRMINE I o BIISis | downithy wiope Witk irfeslatikle veloity fils [{4ESrce, fioets; coniioniaty S UEN SR SRS better way to seck its furtherance than by | placcd him under obligations by merely con- | op g d spent seven years e h ‘ ndent | ment surveying expedition. Jackson's ke is | 0% e with echoes and threatening | which promise to_trans e city Inta wking the read accompany me, with | descending to speak to him {m"’ :I)',"‘,h“r'""‘l‘”‘,' ,‘,‘ tHare "" :;:,r'(“r & \‘I‘)‘ll|:|lllil(;] '“‘ 1ge ’\ "' l‘V”] I""l'lll" one of the sources of Snake river, is fifteen [ IS the valley i eal 1 threatening | which prom nsform the city inta & states, anothe heel e shorte: rder of A Fellows, of South Omaha, has | i i f to carry the entire mass of loose rock to | wilderness of color and beauty in honor of eyes alert and ears open, In a little tour of | STUDYING ENGLISH LIFE. period, and the other—well that was me, | nstalied the following officers for the ensu- | ' h of Yellowstone National park | h the bottom o servation object ints shall be a 1 is almost walled in by mountalns rang the mythical King, Mondamin, The banners N OrKink olhss baiasiiashier, rinited B e | Hrde park Is proverblally the best place In | and I was going to Knebworth, and at Kneb- | jng torm: Noble grand, Cora E. Morrison; : it £ & 1 ass st ¥ London to study English life, particularly | worth I had the pleasure of taking tea in the | yice grand, Emma Nelson; sccretary, Cora nE Mis Cons erywhere=Magnificent [hile 11 from 7,000 to 14,000 fest high. It is an ir DANGEROUS CLIMBING t Ak-sar-ben will flaunt and flutter every: canvass Is at its height, Hyde Park, the | € ¥ L4 4 Yreat workingman's forum, viewed in all | NATKIOE class life. The scene on By grand house where Bulwer Lytton wrote his | Gosney; financial secretary, Abbe Jonte; treas s Sunday afternoon glories; then, a brief [ {7CPR0GR /8 S EEYS eame, yet always | famous novels, and where at different times | urer, Nellie McCoy; planist, Villa Schindel t slate aFeste o AbaE, precipitous T ey OO R ingileh village, | Yaried in its incidents, always fresh, always : Queen Blizabeth and the prinee of Wales had D, e et cabnay, | malnder of the distance scarcely n fo0Us | yphropriate to the, king's royal advents 9 Vi 1 (evesting | vibrant with great issues, always vital with | joon dined and slept. It is still in the Lytton | Rev. T. F. Stauffer of Lincoln, chaplain of | 1" buf . o DFORTERYcauil LE MAdE ItHaUL 1t OLsvs T e 0 “IAJ"- ”{‘W ml :rlruw 1]-"' an int P8 | |ife and pregnant with su ness. My | family and the I \' ey AN LG ORaRE oF T Westaswil It is all but inaccessible, and for many years | forty or fifty feet wide, filled with deep | Thousands of dollars will be expended in object lesson at the end custa 545 %0 8 W y and the Lytton y are descended, | the supreme lodge er of orld 1| the Jaekson rustlers occupled it secure frem | blue i were frequently encountered, con- | beautitylng the city. d the carnlval will i i ’ of English | CUStOm is to go early and prepare myself for | 4ol o oyalty, by " ed . 1o s s Oma dges during the coming Rt BarstbH ‘ Mgty SRULLYANE L LHE (01 AT T 1T Amerlcans tho most tamillar of English the rougher Cn‘riences which fie beyond by anc l:.’fli:‘r‘r;? :f(‘m“xyl bt it is rented now, | vialt ieOminKLaRSR dutlig L LN sporate purstirs. he pio. | PHtuting chatacles of & most dangerous’chat. | surely surpats any similar demonstration ever rakdd . taking a chair not far from Hyde park [ L Bl i i Al ¥ gt g Te Jackson, nicknamed on," was the pio- | acter, and which, without the rope, would | attempted, aye, even dreamed of here. A hasn't entirely pleased us. Well, he ) TK | joan millionaires. Thus, we seem to be get- | Omaha lodge cn Monday evening, and Teuw er h d catile th'ef, 11 as the mos| y p I d Gk Well, he | Grr and watching the good-looking, well 3 4 ge on Tuesday ovening. neer horse and catile th'ef, as well as the most [ have been simply impassable. SWEEPING OVER THE. STATE. domen't entirely " suit the English peoble: | groomed and handsomely dressed people who | UNE possession of this country, little by lit- | tonia lodge on Tueaday cvening, successful one, of northern Wyoming. He is [ “Up, up, over nearly vertical walls LD AL ol Pt i How el s Hahiln e . S Fota i The enthusiasm fs not confined to the b ) s are to be | Ho e part . lounging place between | te, and who knows but that the American R onular member of | %44 to have been one of General Crook’s | snow and ice-robed granite we toiled found Ta” the Fanks of bis teflow. workmen. | Make this part“a lounging place between | (it 16 Who KGOS, DOL L IS SRR | Mrs. Mattte Thies, a popular member of | S50 1 i "country. in' . campaign of | ing, after & disperate struseie, an alitude | metroplis. It I extending throughout the But in our view he stands up in the moil | PERRE, CRuval RRd - EOeE e Chie | together, with the lion nsido. Teutonia lodge, Order of ‘the World, died g ; rgle, | motrapoli. " 1t 1t extending iraughout, tne and ferment of politieal agitation b WOERRT | of this breathing place of the great city. I HENRY TUCKLREY. | this city on Thursday last will Jend 1%, Subbore. tn s Deetiat or NS to ‘tho respect of inteliigent Englishmen, | ke to look out fiest for those who resort o | 335553253035220099993322003 | Three hundred copics of the Western Rec oo, It only by the prosence of thel people and that which brings him the curses of the | the park ":;(l;:f ::h:;‘vlv'. Tellgicus visws. One R¥ 3222092 | .4 Graer of the World, have been sub. 3 4 : AR Gt ML Lo more reckless, Is that his advanced views are S oG 3 4 s e 3 ] . of the festival. 0 2 2 scribed for by Omaha lod AL { ’ 3 T i “Conmonance. with moderate methods, | €ATly opening his box of curios 1" 1| % ANTE ROOM ECHOES ¢ x N, . . % o he_inauguration of the revelry will be Great and far reaching are®his schemes of | i} "‘» what are we to have this afternoon? | ¢y ; Omaeha lodge No. 200 will hold its ann o ”“, ey svanini | eptember 17, when reform! but not being a! to these f)\v dun“eimlsz (h[nz‘ 4:1' dn_’ Iio"u-'vhw' 3333323300033 2I33I3232338I33 | picnic at Lincoln on Thursday, August ; . ”\lmm":j“-.\“(-”|I-:|p\:\“ m\\: n”\\”.v,‘...-‘ the, |.{;:. at W single leap, he Is rrvnll'l;l k‘u vpr‘nnrln “w;_y"”"“ ’vl'n'n 2:_‘3:“ i :T‘l; |';:k m::*lm'"m' The biennial sesslon of the international | A fiper\.‘\l traln on nlm‘ B. & M. railroad will SHERIDAN Topanes Sy Ly o] LELATL l:ul‘ em stea " tep, ta ittle b bR h- bihedeicL) o et carry the excursionists. X W s ' C ad- ‘\\hm“r'.";u l."-lxynn:"thn' HLnn? his :u-wm, that he has the most important subject that | Supreme lodge of Good Templars, the thirty- | % : — X 2 < 3 ing city in the state, each representing the meanwhile, to that party which, in its com- could possibly engage our attention?” ‘‘Very | seventh in number, which was recently held ordia lodge as completed the ar- PAR § . .-‘A“Iu\r s ~_ur its particular section. They Poation. nd by s acwlevements, I most | (e e said, “hut there couldn't be any. | in Doston, was tie best attended in the his- | ra ents for a pienic at Kessler's park on v o (¢ Y will surpass anything of the kiud ever secn likwly to favor advanced measures John i Eonter, ‘“,'ll,l'[:"l"“‘f'zy'"“'l‘y"“‘i“" el :i tory of the order and one of the most en- | Sunday, July k A 5 2 he. Apscial. Teatiireton WeanMiyROIINE s today s g Insta a reck- his ould g ! i : g R X LY ; sday l"’.“'[“““”’h"’r I8 1 striking instance of & reck | {finupirad that nis specialty was (he fourth | iovable. Representaiives were present from | A yory enjoyable musical entertafnment by 2 ing, September 18, will be the military, bis Mo e Tasnt changed his views, but | commandment, and that this had reference | almost every country in the world. Among | was given by Social lodge No. 1 Ancient ke o - Lo 5 o ‘xfx:»lw';.p:”dv nlnlyn'llJ; e, '“m‘.:, will furnish threo years In Parliament have greatly mod- | 0 Saturday, not Sunday. He also expounded | the various items of interest of the scssion [ Order of United Workmen, in the lodge 5 p ! ANBUASEBOrEeOUR DA RS R VALY military H o years it and haste in swhich those | the prophecies, and in a bricf conversation ho [ s “the address of Rig Forthy (G rooms on last Tuesday evening. At the =T mpany fn the state will be represented, e e o ey hmve . likewise | to1d me more about the United States than [ | ¥22 the adtr ght Worthy Grand | 'l oiigjon of the program a dozen dance L S I . togother with the bulk of the United States mf,m’,, Wi that In England, of all countrics, | ©Ver knew. He seemed to find all the great Templar D. H. Mann of New York. He drew | nymbers w enjoyed. The program was E o\ 1 Y T :v‘\m-]« lccated in - Nebraska, while every one who wishes anything brought to pass nations in the bible, and to be able to sort | attention to the fact that though a loss of [ as follows: musical organization, every band and every 2 v GhFtaTnL: or Hebity Y it , Jand Ligt p bicycle rider will be' invited to participate. Ot know fust as well how to wait as | them out without uncertainty or hesitation. | membership was reported, it should be put | QFETTULE: . e \y{ “ () I\f' . But. Thursday Bight wil. wiiess (k6 = 2 ) ,.mvn..:; of water elght |n:1~_~ in f‘,”‘ hoand A thousand feet from the base resort to | where, and every window and every doore two to three miles wide. ~Around it are bead- | {1 rope became nccessary, and for the re- | way will display some rich artistic design s O nie | Our nation, he said, was the last. Not only . Dworzak § u Bow to woric, Johns Burns'alays. reminds | " a5 S R, (RIS ot over [ down-as o galn, when the experienco ot | I : i sandarson RS $ S ; I, ; qulminating glory of o earnival, wien the soclally, and vastly inferior in culture and|WHI be. He found it in 13th Revelations BlOrERtIsAong WL HE DARVILOLY oA T) i i 3 Parsons : 2 i Foart. ot Monfsiin. which e Soss g IR Boeviny’ oloquenbe. Tha. times, too, are dif- | Ve are the two-horned beast. “From being a | was taken into account. Banjo i % voot K ) : Feast of Mondamin, which will close \;|Iu‘\‘1lncl forent” from. those Which startei Bright | lam at first “we dovelop into a dsagon.' In | Josoph Malins, R. W. G. C. and honorable | BonEs.gryisisocoronrrne Byl Wyl : AR where the youth and beauty and fashion of on his great coreer. But the great commoner | w8 JATKIMENt Whis horrible development has | guporintendent of missions for eastern | § ¢ ¥ N Miss. Loudbeck y 7% pabt all the state will gather, making a scene of of today 15 no more advanced for his age {5 QLARNG GO ORR AW e AV 100K COF | oy sphere, In his report gave an oxtended | Zither” ..l Apollo Zither Club enchantment wondrous fo bebold than was the great agitator of forty years |\ Ffoc, “;," have told me the time, LpkebT L & G ALl M. Arre companist. il 5 This will be a_grand epoch in the history U0 Wil oD, L Juieaant, ust an| DUt L diG0iC AT, a (ime was preséing me rerort of the vafious GRnd Iodgss bontribul- | gus progrem wonpdip with & wety pretty ? ot the city, eclipsing any former TRootal likely as the other to settle down finally into ‘”‘{‘_""‘ ‘_”(;".A Gl \"",”v" ing to the mission fund, and dwelt on the | rendition of a soug entitled “Spring Has function in both magnituds and splendor, a respectable sort of moderate liberal. | v he great battle ground of all | generosity of the grand lodges of Scotland ne,” by a chorus of five little girls who and_not uniike the splendid carnivals of Bright bogan by denouncing royalty, and in | "eU8lons and of no religlon; lkewise the |und the grand lodges of the British | were under_the .diregtion of Miss Latey mediaeval Venice or Florence, when those the end he could have had a peerage. Cham- | SFONIG on which poverly flaunts its rags, | iz to other parts of Europe he sald, [ They were Ella May .l Clarice Draper, old world cities laughed and danced through Heciem feit heir Lo Bright's Birmingham in. | Strugsling alent its prurilities, budding | ¢ "Iy pleasing to find that this last year | Roberta Stri low, Mary Taylor and Inez - - $ A dlean mirth: and: mousie:. - BUDH HaElabEad fluence by going Bright one better in all his “,'m,l’,,“Q'h">'“"|_1'""';I*‘m’ljj,‘"“‘(;‘l;‘f"; G -‘1‘"‘“_"'; the lttle grand lodge of Iceland, in the | Laty. The protiingss and charm with which e e ¥ | wlitter and color; such a throng of beaming great schemes of reform. A dogen years | i, (T SIRHE R TS SRR, TS unelploved | Arctic circle, has taken the matter up, and | tHeY sang O aieriilne but he T Tn evidence In hie. | of 13,200 foet at & point on tho south side of | fAcen: such a wealth of floral and artiflclal ago “’"“'“"'l'l‘“':' a 'r'“‘l';‘ ‘:::““1"‘: Bna- | shameless concelts, the anarchist his wila [ e very first remittance I recelved this last \1,'.“" el ”g'}h\‘ W Tne tories of that expedition a ing Bull | the peak, daccration y“l”" ks ‘:"““'I“‘"“”‘iml“"“l“ 7 cracy as the most dangero %= | theorles of revolutios Aty o | year from any grand lodge collection was [ MTS: e G | o Shma and bis horde of savages. He was a giant in [ “Here, toward the east, the face of the | gptol SFEUIEC of boefore will be Omaha's land. “Todey he s in line for an earidom. | ,corlh ::II:I,lx’x‘nwlt\}\":wrl“."xl| Yoon | from this remote juriediction, where all the | e, L. Bdwardy{ 0. Hochmazy H, nture, standing six feet two, and weighing | mountain sweeps down in'a long, unbroken | 2HOW Of jollity, and represent just what Ne- S0 ara there many who are saying (hat Jobn | uufon and biasphemy, and histant peddimg | (1568 Wilingly contribuied Tageer. o 300 mounds, Hiy hair was of aunset hus and | slops of®gincler-polished rock for 6,000 feet, | Draska can do as one of "t agricultural Lords, But the other ovening when I saw | Of Orangos and ginger'pon, and all sorts and | “ON the confinent Weelt the grand lodge of | The Bohemian ym, d pliakoa of the Harie brand, The Sumber of | mialioh @8 1he Bass & saorg ot Alpins likes | fiiyihe detormination ok HIVIESER o o “Was addresslng his constituents In | conditions of men and opinion, there are, no | SWeden has contributed well each yvear. It} gokol, will give its txcursion and | his Killings could hardly be notched on his | fringed with lofty pines. And at this point | e qual of any scend of the Mardl Gras or Kiine doubt, many just grlevances denounced. and | has also raised and expended about €600 | picnic to West Point o "™ The | rifle stock. He knew every ravine and water | defeat stared us in the face at every turn. | 1o (i Of A LR | b § TNy many seeds of wholesome truth given to the | ($30,000) in home and missica work durirg the | Second Infantry bhnd ‘wi taken along to | hole in tiie region, so that though his opera- | A thousand feet above our heads (owered | oo qocion ™ 0ia oustoms : and banners TALKING IN THE OPEN AIR. summer breezes, But the breezes wers absent | Past two years and has gained rapidly. The | furnish music. A spe Wil carry | ous wera extensive, frequently running oft | bare, rocky pinnacles without crack or crevice | 41 desi&ns and customs and vehicles and The Battersea style s open-air meetings. | last Sunday. It was swelteringly = hot. | grand lodge of N y has sent a contribu picnickers, leaving Webster street | and disposing of 200 head in a bunch, he man- | to afford hold for foot or hand, and as ver- | Jré/R: FUEE LG ECHRE :‘ -sar-ben, will This Is a great country for that sort of thing. | Coarse looking men, overcome by heat or by | tion for each year. Denmark has made a|depot over the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missour! | aged o elu until late in 1592, when | tical as a plumb-line. 1t might be pos- | {il ! RSO SRt wglishman is a person of few fears. | drink, lay in uncomely attitudes all about, | contribution each year—the last coming too o ralliosd at 8 b'clock and returning | he ndu ¥ ariff to take a | Sible to make the ascent fiom the north | {EF b RrevioUn. taien. atfLIsiBLES He isn't even afraid of pneumonia. He will [and the crowd, which fumed and perspired as | late for balance shoot. vacation in the Idaho penilentiary. Tscaping | side, but we had no time to reconnoiter, for | Wi he a8 chaft in the Dbalance compared stand for hours without an overcoat, and | London crowds seldom do, seeme i R e : Lt A few months later, lie returned to the scenc | It Was already 3 o'clock and camp was a [ Wiih the vast outpouring of the people of With only a pipe for warmth, and just as|be less good natured than u ore | (Danish speaking). has contributed each jear;| Degree of Honor lodge No. 42, Anclet | of his exploits and ran up againet a deadly | £ood distance oft. We were completely | .,y S N AL T Niely as not will remark upon the sultriness | inclined to loil and doze than to lock wits in expended’ other: ‘conslderable sume=1n |(Oraer: of United’ Wo of Exeter, has | ghower of cowboy bullets. | baffled A e e Sl L LR of the atmgsphere, while the thin-blooded [ forensic display, less tractable under the | home mission work and aliows 25 per cent of | (ustalled the following officers, the csreiin HISTORIC GROL | A hundred miles to the southeast, shim- b ittt SR s o American by his side will be shivering for | time-worn gibes that are flung about, and | its tax to district mission werk being conducted by ) artz of Falr The range of meuntains forming the east- | MCring in the blue, stood Fremont's Peak,| 0 (00 Mo Cel BAEEEAt 0LV LA e, "That's how 1t wa at Battersea | altogother just a Hittle more likely at times | ~The grand lodgs of Germany, No. 2 (Gar- | mont: ~Past ehict’ of honor, HMis. O 8 |crn wall of Jackson's Hole, or Lake, cast | LIRS 81008 B Ios) of others. whose (13 Crl o vriads ot schemes ailenlALYANEY When John Burne stosd on a platform in the | to make business for policemen. man e Jodge of Germany, No. 2 (Gar | Crane: chlef of honor. Mra. O. W. Pation: | iheir shadows over the routé taken by Geu- | ¥lant forme stood out in faultloss definition. | oo, "but'the feast pri AL long English twilight and addressed his con- THE PEACE OF INDOLENCE. man sporking) s conirlbuted for exh of | jady ‘ot honor, Mra W. F. Bucki chict of | oral’ Crooig's oxpedition ‘against (o Indians | ~ FORCED TO RETREAT. Yices, but the Tenst ot ManAUR I RS Stityents from 8 0'clock to 9:30 on the Issues | But there was no outbreak. All swas In | t0 late for inclusion In my statement of ac- | sorc’me St Wiliiama: finin Gt oecaiver. | in 1870, On_the val e castern side | “Beginning the descent, we were 500 st SUL A IO Q the day. Chiefly, however, 1 must say, | the old vein of remark, and the end was that | sounts. I agreed to mission the more south- | Mrsiin: svcorder. Mise d:ssio Pluz; usher, [ 41 close to where the town of Sheridan naw ji\cionad i AIBLAdIng sl oW/ RLOTIH I Avay honor. Every particlpant will put his or 3ban John Burns, for he uses his own name | peace which slways follows & weariness of | efn parts With the procosds of the second | \ew o' b Lesier; inaide watch, Mra. T. B, | Soaroe O eeral OO O rontt with retn. | peats of it annarotlishinne and s ¢ | her native ingenulty to work and contrive very frequently. “John Burns has been your | the flesh. The czar of Russia got his weekly | year's collection and this is now being done. | [farmers outside watch, W. F. Buck e o e e oeln | Tavee: Dlocks ot atons that camy thandering | Something in'innocent rivalry. that willsuea servant for three years, and he expects to | drubbing, and I don't suppose he cared for it | “All the lodges under the new grani lodge | On the same evening Exoter lodge No. 11 o et Y Town the motntais tide with the velooicr of | pass their nelghbors. It will be a memor- b0 B0 avar Gk |V Bt Miar majeaty) Kish, (A4d the Geomng | o BWiterriead have oAy e 0 I S e Viallon Workmen, tnatullad | (a'p0d 1he conotnitation of the Indisns 00 o 'Rilict 1 had often with the xfiocity of | able scene with all this gayety, music, fire- ponny during thoso three years by writing, [ princes who fatten ‘on English rates were | generously, and, lastly, the few subordinate | the following: Pasc master workman, M. L. | 5" Custer and his bra e s ['Boraribia Among the - Al of o es | Works and picturcamueness. § speaking or in any way outside of what you | treated to the usual dose of back-handed [ lodges lately formed in Holland have also | Rogers: master workmin, Jacoh Pfug: fore | vaoruited command movid forward the hos- | on the Matterhorn, but never realized before ORIGIN OMPTHE KNIGHTS iy him for his work in the House of Com- | compliments, and still they live and maultiply. | coniributed, e illiam Cqurtwright; overseer, R. R. [ gaort/{od, Commant moved ornd sene of | now the terror that such an exhibition can in- | In order to th : Page “ejohn Durns pays 10 shillings a | Soclalism had the best representation by far | “In Asia (he grand lodge of India, com- | Willums; financler, J. C. 'Wilsoa; receiver, | jjaughtor and made hot haste for tho Bril- [spire. The snow, completely wetting the r bors et e Kol me A S S Week ($2.50) for five rooms.” ‘“John Burns [ —it usually has. People listen and secm | posed mostly of Beitish soldiers, gave well | J. N. Cox; recorder, W. F. Nevens; guide. | joh “possessions, pur: T vain by ‘men | randered the descent far more dangerous than | ancent order, (1o following 1tion AR EthA) o Svorked. on your strests, and been taken | ImPressed, nor can there be any question that | o year ago, but I have not yel heard the | W, . Buck; inside watch C. A. Bickeli| ihirsting to avenge the death of their com- | the elimb had been, and compelied the use | e mombers the Diawing Jeiten By NS R T o acl. and you have ‘elected him, and | 4MONKst men and women of the lower orders | vesnit of the list collection, it taken, outside watch, W. J. Compton ] |of” the rope continually. However, w | e mombers of the order, Is published: il re-aloet him, to the highest place in | i England, and even amongst the intel'ectusl, | “From Africa we had a good coniribution [ The cercmonies were Intorspersed with| “proum the cr of Cloud Peak on this | reached the glacier in safely, which termin N I A _l'f"‘" your gifl {John Burns' record of work | this theory of life is making headway. There | from the grand lodge of Central Soutn | ziod music by the Ancient Order of United | range one may view with a field glass Ola | ated the more difiicult portlon of the descent, re=In_reply to yaur dstter ofiinguiry mes is more ¢ ¢ ganda bneld o le quart L \ roc c) arding the Ancient Order of the Knights of o co yei ocks the bottom out of | 1S more of a soclalistic propaganda In Eng! Africa a year ago, but have not yet heard | Workmen male quart Fort Kearney, twenty miles from Sheridan, [ @nd proceeded to cross the field of snow, 8 Tor tiree years knocks the Botton out B | than in ourcountry. *London has a great | of the later Collee Ishshme -— ey IS T Serian: | which had become, during ous absence, lit: | Ak-sar-ben, 1 beg to stato briefly as follows: Ay ey e ™ pammment. | Influence on English life. particularly “In regard to the propagation of the order | % R CONTENTION NEARLY ENDED | (R0 WEER W Goe ks wera on tho old | erally covered with blocks of stone, rolled | In the year 1540 the Knights of Ak-sar-ben middle el e emphasising | his | EUEIISD thought, - for England s so smali [ in Burope, much credit is due to the well [ yuwt Day but Oue of the Chicaxo inan traii, but were sbandoned soon after | hither by the jar consequent of the thunder (5t ow from Mexico in quest of the Seven ! o e his owh name. while | BCOBTaphically that what ‘is being thought | known missionary, Charlotte Gray. 2 Aalking Maote massacre ‘of Captain Fetterman and 100 | 4ccompanying the storm. Without an acci- | Citles of Ciboca and the Kingdom of Quivera own l"fl""! ;“ x" fiu 0" 3 the letter | AN agitated at this center propels itself “The membership in the juvenile branch GAG Sl { day but one | men, on December 22, 1866. To the north dent we reached camp at o'clock, thor- | (Nebraska), of which the reigning king at all the time he shametully oloe A Rt e | With ittle effort to:the remotest extremities. | of the order, as well as the adult, shows a [ CHIC AGO, July 27.—The last day but one | T8 B0 BEeeties (o, TH00F the Littte Dig | CUEhly drenched and cold, and considerably [ that time was Tatarrax. —This expedition \ h, fl::‘n :]’f“l"hl'e‘ “:;n “l‘: w;m‘m‘n_lml train- | With the other denunciations which cn Sun- | slight decrease in the sections affected by | of the Harvey-Horr silver contention began [ pyo¥ B5 A€ B 1o tktone rivers, where, in | €5t down by our failure to reach the sum- | reached the southern boundarles of this state Is & man of the pecple, Wit mo mehoo mmon, | 4. afternoon waken the echoes in Hydo | the late financial depression. this afterncon. Mr. Horr opened the day’s [ December, 1875, the first blood was shed | Mit- A large fire, however. soon dispelled | somewhore batween the countles of Gage and g, N B er “spoken | Park ono iears, happiiy, an occasional de- [ “All through the United States the order | talk with a comparison of wages and cost cf | which led (o the disastrous Indtan war of the glogm aull Kerved;in o KEgRL meamure Lo L UrIAN. L Faiher cBAQIlI-nARE NSRS, T e wernacular, these fea. | hunclation of Old Nick' and the vices and | is neither galning nor losing members. products during the yeara from 1860 to 1890, | tho following year. South of this point and | QI b1 ApIEIY . | pedition, and after the Knights of Ak-sar-ben save in . sins which curse this modern Babylon, and | “The membership, according to the report, | gy sh le preparcd by Statlsticlan | almost due east of Cloud Peak is the Rosebud Whether the Teton be Inaccessible or not | had set out upon their return to Mexico, re- tures of his address would have been ug-| \jose again, are seasoned b e 1 560,005, of which the juve oL |jasisnowoginia dable Drensredy; ol bt hitheater in which Crook and his eom. |1 @M not quite prepared to say. It s no | mained to preach the doctrines of Christianit gravating ard quite unpardonable. But his | oS BER I AT6 seasched “’m,"‘(,‘y“”w“p“'u“," (AL 00, (ot o e Sliventle chrsash; ioareoll (D Wl gL S W ith \naafiux'nlll Ix»rh“s‘ AmpaIsRtn dn wiish ,c’l‘l"‘(’h, and his M- | yountain for the novice, however, for failure | (o tho nativ o erenes et Chrsaaly A s | o s 158,595, 360 take: ndex, or 100, it showe: , of e 17, 1876, e redskins, | oo 5 i e L e evel BSATeh hasahs, o fagst; thet 1,',,::.'5,':.!:':}; aspirations and prayers of people as good | ‘“There are eighty-four grand lodges, repre. | 1 1500 i e . wages 159, and | Who, elght days Iater, annihilated Custer and | SCRaIly awalts any but the most skillful, | years before the landing of “the Pilgrims, was good enous! and brave as any to be found on earth. | senting 12,590 subordinate lodges, composed | N3t I 1380 DEICEs o vagos 1 Mr. | checked Reno. On this desperatcly contested | Afio CYER Such o ohe W redir TY AD- | §ixty-eight years before the discovery of ,‘:':{'_:"‘l')":‘*';fi'r\'(:““;"l;‘“;g:pgé:‘"m:::"fl;“fl’: “What a wonderful city London would be,” | of nearly all the nations in the world.” e B R et atino Hms T | fleld fought many officers. well known in | Phance known to the fraternity to overcome | iho " Hudson, sixty-six yeats before John . 00 | exclaimed one devout eering | All of the officer: cept 9 00RGRAE 8 i 4 Omaha—Colonels Royal, Miils and 0. ODALA0 9 s STRnCs [igmit ed o river S Bt 308 1T 1 | COLAPER IR ol et & s |, M o L ohcory pt th i et | oy o e n s che oy an | B ity o the WY | LS 1 okt e, T | e’ i BTl e e s ¢ 3 ! Christians. Why, It would be a heaven in | quite a contest, four candidates, represent. | Prosperous as it wé Kl D¢ | being frightfully wounded. The commana Ml e e e ars before the birth of Sha o save N‘""""‘;"‘v Ay '52)"‘:‘“"{" ":i_:"“‘('r"f“" itselt—so much So that we wouldn't want | g three countries and two statos, being | of the crime of 1873." He ’;’K"“;"l"“[‘_‘:‘"" held its ground after an all day's battl on, ‘but beyond this point all paralletism | FCE, THOC ymm‘(i'.' gl‘r‘lk::fil the: uf‘,'é'.’.i‘: Wiiich you hear in this ¥, om | any other heaven.” No one could doubt this, | nominated. The fight finally narrowed dows | these ctatistics were more appliable 16 € | against overwhelming —numbers.’ Eleve . country surrounding the peaks Is rug- | Of Spain und Germany ~were occupled by GIoAL statoamen. 0. in 600 parliamen. | 00h 8t anY Tate, the first part of it; and | between Mrs. Margaret McKinnon of Scat- | conditions under discussion than those of Mr. f yours bhefore 2,000 brave troopers under com- | yog' una’ wild beyond the power of words o | Chatles V. The country through which the hon= He ) l'“ ed, |f‘ 1"1' 0 l’l“‘l"l""_‘i though it didn't seem to be very impressive, | iAnd and Miss Anna M, Saunders of this | Sauerbeck, quoted by Mr. Harvey on Thurs nd of General P. E. Connor penetrated | gon oo 5ot Cy M region becomes more | OTable knights traveled was teeming with tary b"",‘ o it et B e 116 waan't at"all’ o my;thinking an’ ipappre: | Atate. Withiall Burope' arcayed agsinst heridiy, as Mr. Sauerbeck’s figures were made | the region and routed thousands of maraud- | oo i) 8y BC Fop fallroads already pro. | Interest, and, according to history, fabulous Roiebery's government only seventy tmes. | priate idea with which to season and modity Miss Sunders came within three votes of | from prices in England. ing Sioux on Tongue river. Jected, 1t will doubtless rival, as a pleasur- | Wealth was found within its borders. There The sraaan o hed %o frequently supporied | the jargon and bedlam which are let loose | oblaining the election. The new officers| Mr. Harvey in turn took up the matter of the THE GRAND TETON. % mround. the famous National park. itself, | A¥@ DOW In existence in Nebratka very rare 14 libarals was, he . because they had| ., sunday afternoon in Hyde park. are as follows: prices of wheat for a series of years in reply 3 . e Y Ll pal and precious relics of the expedition of the 0 frequentl7 been on the side of the work- | *" Y T T Directly ~ west of Jacksen's Hole The scenery of the whole Teton country is | v o s s a atrons ‘leatima The center of interest in one group are a| K. W. G. T., Dr. D. H. Mann of New | to Mr. Horr's statement on Thursday that the | 0" ghaqows stretching across the | intensely Interesti It bre forests, | KDIBhts of Ak-sar-ben, found in the western ingmen. " Thin a0 strong tesimony | couplo Gf ounw Tolows, very unwempt bt | Yorki F. . W, 0. ..'S. Orouhyaten f | rmer ha recetved an mueh for s produce | ity " 8T, ST, UG U crtiuaily mmvard and torminaing i | P O e e, Thets s 4 aword and other 0 S 3 quite making up in conceit what they lack nada; R. W. G. Coun., Joseph Malins of | iy gold as he had received before silver was | Lo B0, P50, o i PRl LMl [ i oy rauty ite Soen | Telics in the libsary of the Nebraska State {nfiuence on the election had the | RVS, CANLER NP U0, Sottelt MASL thev 1ok | Bngiand; R W. G, 8. J. T. Miss Jowsle | Hyonerised. For answer he quoted the | MIOURIIE. e | mmamter pedk o eihe scattered groves of individual beauty; its dep | fijgrorical soclety, found abont thirty-five working classes = In general accepted | cugtomary Haydg park chastisement to “Bill | Forsythe of Massachusetts; R. W. G. V. T, monetized. BOr AneN e e etlared tha, | f25E¢ blercing the clouds to a height of 14,200 | and rugged canons with massive, precipitons | milas northwest from MeCook in this state ft! “It was not a question whether . 5 o - rs. Marg: <innon of S ;' | prices from ye: 0_year. e d ‘ feet. The giant monolith which caps the | walls; its turbulent and varied cascades; its | jp,, e knowh T W, sadil! P AT L T2 o o working, | Booth” aa” the cal Wi TC thix were.an | Mrs, Margaret Melctungn ot Scotlipd. 1. W: | foargument of e Hore wera (hote whizh | i enmich rertmbles the.famous Alpine | extensive, snow fckds with broad paichen of | bt o eath ‘hil atimuing 10 preach the man's millentum, but whether his votes and | el PHGEE SRR IC WOWS Casily pass unno- | ' w "G, (reasurer, George B. Katzenstein | 1ad been used in ail timo a8 408 bi wark of | mountain that it has been named the “Mat- | virgin white gracefully trimming the 10fty. | gospel to the natives of Nebraska within the speeches had been for working class improve- | ot vpoi kind. - No man in England is more | 0f California; R. W. G. Chap., T. Wilmer [ Lyraniy. The . Degiaration ‘of. indepence terhorn of America." Mr. William E. Owens | needle like summits, together form a com- | present territory of the county of Franklin, ment.” Here was sense, and a further In- | po ni e, O TR 0 Bagland 18 more | ook of South Africa; R. W. G. M., D, H. | %as the proper answer (o such argime nts. | of Cheyenne, one of the few men who have | bination of grandeur and beauty which may [ and probably there his grave will yet be stance of the sobering influence of place and | ool Booth. He serves as a lu:n."’iml ';m' Howard of Montreal; R. W. D. i.. Mrs, | Mr. Harvey proceeded by saying that the | explored the region, thus describes it not be described.” v found. 'l-nv‘:;:‘r-“'ll‘fih:n;\:f,;k‘m ‘:."\:s': ".:[7::"":':1’:" for the coarsest of Hyde park disputants, | APRa Harris of lowa; R. G. A. S. Mrs, | proper index of prices was to measure them “At 4 o'clock in the afterncon after a day THE BEAR RIVER BATTL! To again verlfy the above, T am at liberty hoodwinking the poor laborer by prospects They set him up, knock him down, snd con. | ABna M. Saunders of M CW. G, |in articles of international uses. Tables | of frighful climbing, we found ourselves on | From the heights reached by Mr. Owens quote a passage from one of the early his companions, the , looking south historians, v ‘One of the discoverers of and promises which are wholly impracticable. Then he pricked another bubble, and my iR R S R | G., John' Stanford of Wal 7 sen. | made up by gold men even cn these articles | the west brink of the Teton canyon, a wild | and S f_,"d"',,,.:K"""r‘:’"’”““.';m_ tinel, J. Turner Rogers of India; R. W. G. | showed that they were lower than in 1 gorge of appalling depth and awful grandeur. | west, can disccern the valley of the Bear | Quivera (Nebraska), however, lingers within English workman is a pretty rough sort of | M8 §. A. Huger of Florida. Referring to Mr. Horr's argument touching | From our feet a slope of forty-five degrees | river whereon was fought ~ne of the most | 0UF gaze a short time longer. A Franciscan admiration for him rase by great leaps. He | o customer. especially. if he fs ove of a jon | , THE Rext session of the lodge will be held | the measure of value In buman toll, Mr. | over beds of bowlders and ancient glacial mo- | desperate battles In the frontier history of friar, John of Padilla, who accompanied the had striven for remedial legislation, he said, | ni has lnst Ml chances by had pabis: 1o | In Zurick, Switzerland, on the third Wednes- | Harvey quoted from am article by Mr. Horr | raines fell swifty away to a snow-fed river | the army. Along it in 1862 the stampede to | KChIERIS of Ak-sar-hen on that memorable but there was no effectual remedy for men thas, in that case, a mein spirit and a \.,,' day in June, 1897 in a New York paper in reply to a corre- | at the bottom of the canyon 3,000 feet dis- | Montana had reachod larg, proportions, | expedition, away back in 1540, announced his who were lazy and shiftless. They need | dirty tongue, Joined to a brute courage M'h.,f = s . spondent suggesting; tge making of =0 much | tant, p Caravant of every kind dotted the Bear | Intention of remaining in the land of Quivera mever expect under any government to be|makes him almost equal to anything. Any |y, ‘“""; Y ~\|‘_’» ,1 Woodmen of \lhe‘ World, | york the equivalent ofsa dollar. - Mr. Horr de-| “We camped on the bank of the river In u | Fiver route. - The Indians became excaedingly { 10 teach the natives the doctrine of Christ supported without work, or to get a fair|man in England who raises o | NALUAKRL A58 SIRT AR 8 FR0 YO Ak day’s wage for loss than a falr day of labor. | decency and tries to help the poor ls pre- | % hermanent headquarters of the Woodmen clared the 4 a . | grassy plot amid a te e 2 | troubles A s CHO¥Y]in a more humane fashion, and thereafter e s o b a0 contoin. | ey U St o o 204 ) b, b, S T ST BV W Ho had kept In view. he declared, not |destined to the hatred and curses of that | oy e o nomt it he el of othey ORCHARD HOLMES REGION the preparation of our evening meal plisrims were constantly menaced. 1 D R N sche s e — A Rra his e 3 o year op sstilit L o of . merely the good of one class. but of all fsort of man, and his kind, unfortunately, as | joes| camps and a bullding 1s now assurel. | And the Great Nataral Wenlth of the Our camp at this point was extremely pic- | t1e FAIf OF, the VERX OPER orlives Dek His few companions, with all their worldly classes; had labored, and if they re-elected | General Booth knows, is somewhat numerous. | (soasequently. there will be at least . two South. turesque, pitcled as it was amid solemn pines, | TSI - CECE 087 00" T0" puntsh them, | Possessions, again sought more clvilized pe- him, should continue laboring, both for the | Tolay. on this great Engiish debating ground | coroee Tueriy boetoinge oo the gronats, na| The natural wealth of the south exceeds | the somber canyon wally rising hundreds of | PRC%0N, KNG tarted In January. and shordy | FIOn%, apd darknows gain fell “upon the workingman and for soclety in general. | the leader of the Salvation army is chal ! J { feet on elther side, and broidered at the brink ey 3alt HR . of Quivera (Nebraska), for a period of Execedingly wholesome and timely was such | lenged by an enemy who Is equally mis. | Aretort ooer ot U otiod Wostmn Relg the | Ahnk o€ sy Sther SN of the country and | ik mammoth banks of snow, affording the | #71°F Passing he Salt Leke Valler, plun arly 200 years.” ¢ teaching as this. It undoubtedly indicates | guided, though more respectable. His name | Ap e er O e e a hen i | Lhe developme ok that wealth means the | birthplace for a hundred cascades that leaped | g’ o blinding snow storm. For thres days the true line of working class development, | 18 held up as a by-word and hissing by e Modern Woodmen of America are also | enrichment of the entire nation. This wealth and nights the troopers plowed through huge e noisily over cold vertical walls of naked gran- | 4 D 3 d SOUND MONE ALKS TO NATIVES. though there Is, unfortunately, much agitation | means of a formal demonstration gotten up | LM<!"8 l‘;fl "“““,:f'f,." headquarters and It is | is as yet practicaliyoiu uched. A re-| o .'Ay(hlru:ulul test high. K aE QAR 1A ‘,{"” #, 3By, teparaturs siead Iy descending. B R ATIVER in England which s not in harmony with it. | by & troupe of trades unionists, With ban- nn'(\‘nl all improbable that they will do so. markable combination:of the advantages of REnR A T e e The force comprised 0 men and seventy 4 o rre - Goig e YEBARS' PROGRES! e g B Rk SRR e - .| . None of the details of the Woodmen of the | all other countriesiis’found In this section | g . Reg: - Jong g five of them succumbed :o *he cald in the ¥ Holk n oncludes His THREE YEARS' PROGRESS. uers fying and drums beating they have|worid headquarters have been completed yet. | and almost every known agricultural product shelter of a huge log was arranged, and a | parch of 140 milcs. The remainder of the TReough Georgla. Regarding the real progress of the three | larched for miles, their leading banrier pro- | Members of the committee having the work | yiolds abundantly om its soll. 1t la the | Jerk® PUe of Wwood collected with which 1ol gallant bind struck he friified Indian com CORDELE, Ga., July 2i.—Secretary Hoke years, It had surprisel him, he said, that | AIINE ERAL they Protest against the hy-|in charge, consisting of John G. Kuhn, W. B. Y O orth and furnishes | TCPIEnsh the fire during the night. Having | on Januar 29, 1863, and aficr a ght of four [ Smith today concluded his bricf tour of the within the first half of that time he had |” 4 be Balvation army, ete., el Wood, Willlam Owens, J. H. Maloue and | foresero bt er the sntire cotton crop of the | 20 bedding, it was necebsary to keep Up a | hours destroyed the hostile band ats otk e AntE R ot e (M seen the House of Commons declare for an ! A WASTE OF POWDER. J. H. Minds, are working on the matter, ‘";d‘ ;( s ~|‘|P e | ; o ‘hl % | good fire throughout the night. We retired There is scarcely a trail or wagon route | faund_monay. i oigbthour day for the miners, also for a | Sweating is alleged in Generai Booth's | however, and they promise a bullding that | “orid: It aunuslly pours oo e e ey |t 1 may use expression—at dark, with | within sighting distance of the Matterhorn of | *4dressing a crowd of several hundred people ten-hour day for London tram-taen, and the | PrIoting office. The printers® laborers he em- | will be no disgrace to the order. Several | MArket 500,000,000 pounds and swells the rice eight-hour limit had actually been estab- | Plo¥s are paid less than the union rate of | hundred dollars will be spent upon it and it upply by 150,000,000 pounds. The pounds of lighed in that time for 40,000 workers in | VaKes. S they say, and the orators, men | is to be of unique design and will embody the | L0P3€°0 it yearly produces are also measured | depths of that canyon mentally welghing the | to that region will traverse paths hallowed | Savannah and Albany poured in their crowds the government arsenals and dock yards. | 20§ Women, ring t hanges on this crime, i A Nomen, riag th o R e higain OF WOMONALE, by millions. Its forests of hard wood will| chances of success or failure for the morrow, | with memorles of brave men who preceded | of excursionists during the moruing and they The poor law had also been humanized, so | i o€ FROOKIAY Shows for eral hours, In connection with the erection of these | firnish raw material for many factories to| the full moon rose tranquilly over the granite | them in years-past. Muny have “gone over | soon overflowed ine little city Extraordi- that aged people were belng spared the dis xrv';n "fb .ru;n lm.‘u‘nlm stern vln their wrath not | yogdquarters a word may be said about the | Manufacture costly furniture and fine wood | battlements of the Th Tetons, completely | the range,” but whether living or dead thelr | hary preparations had been made by the com- grace of poor house clothing, and were occa- n-ny.u...:; Salvation army, bat "n‘nlln"llu “nd | \woodmen of the World building, which has | Work of all kinds. , The possibilities of this | filling the canyon with its mellow light end | deeds are revered by the pionecrs of the | Mittees of the Cordele Sound Money league, slonally regaled with such delicacles as to- | po SONS FERRVARLICAR, 0 KEROERL A8 S| been agitated for some time past. The order | Feglon are great. The poet aptly says: touching with a hand of gold the snow-capped however, and the visiting thousands were bacco, snufft and strawberries. This was | anh soout a clrealar finds its way . iata the | has a building fund which is gaining such | “'What skillful artist ere could choose pinnacles that stood like sentinels on the promptly handled and well entertained. A laughed at by the crowd, who evidently | drowd. stating that the London Trades' comn, | Proportions that the \dea is becoming promi- | To paint this land, ity varied hues brink of the gorge. monster barbecue and several hundred water- couldn’t swallow the whole story. I think | cil, the highest labor authority in London, | Dent again. It is said that several localities | Unless to mortal It were giien A MAGNIFICENT SPECTACLE MILWAUKE to the [ melons were provided with which to feed the they resented the strewberries. In fact, | having Investigated the charge, finds thai | are being considered as desirable si‘es for the | To dip his brush in dyes of heaven.™ multitude, and during the morniug hours the they often laughed at Mr. Burns, generally, | thers s no ground for it, aud. so certifies | bullding. Whatever site is finally chosen | A!l information as to this fertile section, | yion of nature's wild beauty than here lay | The new bulldiug at the Dane County asylum WAl aue of Teshxiiy R gosn At too, in sympathy with his pungent thrusts | throush its secretary. Thus fhe meeting is | the members of the order promise a bullding [ how to reach it, its location and facilities | peore me. Chere may be deeper canyons t an | at Verona was struck by lightning at mid- 2 belns sseted & g at onthroned wrong. As, for instance, when | a waste of powder, to sey nothing of sweat, or | that will be a credit to Omaha. for shipment of produgts and the best means | yhix. and perhaps more beautiful. but there | night end entirely copsumed. Superin e i thaeriting iabea ot Wik he showed the necessity for home rule, by | of the money it cost those misgul tollers of tablishing yourself there will be [ are none wilder nor more rugged; and save nden win, who was fighting the fire on ‘w”l peop] At + 'wu.f hm.‘«i, Ge .;' eclaring that often days of Parliament were | o hire four bands and to pay $1 each to| The State Annual Picnic association of the | promptly given by addressing George W.!|for the golden sheen of the world-renowned | the t. was brecipitated to the Eround with | capinet representative discussed the ousrency vecupled by discussing trivial affairs in Ire- | about twenty perspiring standard bearers. | Woodmen of the World is beginning to make [ Ames, ral agent, 1617 Farnam street, | Yellowstone canyon it were difficult indeed to [ falling walls and fatally hurt, The patients | issue in elaborateness cf detall and with Jand, while only minutes could be given to [ What it shows is that labor sometimes over- | preparations for the anoual picale of the | Omaka, Nebraska. choose between them. After a hasty break- | were moved to the other buildiugs in safety. | vigor and force entirely new to them. nothing save the star-studded firmament for a | America that does not possess trag \ | Bathered here from all over southern Georgla, covering, and as I lay there in the awful | historie interest, and the soldlers now ordered | Trains from Americus, Abbeyville, Columbu; “I have never seen a more glorious exhibi- | Evening Wisconsin from Mac Ws., 32y

Other pages from this issue: