t \ If 10 TII1D OMAHA DAILY 'BISK ; SUNDAY FEBRUARY 5 , 18D3-STXTEEN PAGES. MEMORIES OF A TRAVELER Interesting Bits of Observation by Wnkoman in Foreign Lands , FROM ALGERIAN MOSQUETO SCOTTISH POET Tt nnydon'n Deception Homlnlsrrnce of Coll" ynr A 1'oot IMncovrreil In n Section llnml SlornliiK In Vonlcn MlimtrcUy Nut Demi. LONDON , Jan. SKI. [ Corrosiwndcnco of Tun BEB. ] No one who has visited Algiers will over forget the lovely though diminutive mosque of Sldl Abd-el-Hhaman , which stands above the garden of Marengo and overlooks the sea. Its surroundings nro charming , and within Its little cemetery are eucalyptus , mulberry and Jig trees shading the quaint old tombs. The Inner chapel Is a sort of a shrine from being the burial place of num bers of Moslem saints , Pachas nnd Deys ; and a wondrous number of sacred relics , em blems nnd carvings , with lamps , ostrich eggs , embroideries , grotesquely decorate the columns , walls and hang from the ceilings. Moro than 1,000,000 francs have been ex pended on such gifts nnd tokens. It is in this little mosque that ono will pee so many Arab women. The glittering nllk balks hide their faces , but there Is a constant atmosphere of perfume , an endless tinkle of concealed and half-concealed Jew elry , a continuous murmur of of musical voices in prayer , and a ceaseless rustle of woman's attire ns they come , goer prostrate themselves In their devotions. The latter nro certainly solemn and impressive , whether down among the old Usher-folk at the Grand mosque with the Malekl rite , or hero where the wealthier Arab men and women come clad in the richest textures of the Orient and laden often with Jewels which would pur chase a king's ransom. The Moslem must pray llvo times each day. Every act of prayer begins with these words from the koran : "Pralsu bo to ( Sod. the Lord of all creatures , the most merciful , t'io Lord of the day of Judgment 1 Thco do wo worship. Wo implore Thy aid. Direct us in the right wn > . " This , and other pas sages are repeated , led by the tiialib , a sacred scholar and an old man. In the nature of responses. The faces of all are toward the east , their Mecca. At each mention of .the name of God , every worshiper prostrates himself so that seven parts of the body the head , hands , kneesand , feet touch the sacred carpet together. TriinyHOii'H l'ullnd Trick. The booksellers of Scotland , nnd particu larly the second-hand booksellers , dealing in curious and valuable works , of which there are very many In Edinburgh nnd Glasgow , do not entertain a very kindly feeling for the memory of the late Lord Tennyson. They clto many little unpleasant character istics of the laureate as a man , but their particular reason for unfriendliness lies In the fact that , as they Insist , ho was oven more of a Shylock than Ituskln In all his re lations with booksellers , and that not many years since ho nearly caused the ruin of ono of their number. Air. Konert Forrester , bookseller ot the Hoyal Exchange , St. George's square , Glasgow. A stranger ono day sauntered Into Mr. For rester's shop meanly clad , grlz/led and un kempt and betraving all the ordinary marks of a seedy customer beneath a f rousted slouch hat. Ho was very anxious , ho said , to get a very cheap copy of two of Tennyson's poems as gifts to iwor folk who were not able to pur chase them. Ho was shown several copies of the cheapest copyright English editions , but these were far too dear. Hadn't Mr. For rester something within his means , perhaps ono of those cheap American reprints ? Oh , yes , ho had two copies , loft by some family returning from America , but It was Illegal to sell them. That would not matter in so good n cause. The grizzled stranger pressed the purchase , and finally secured the two copies for four shillings. Ho was none other than Ix > rd Tennyson himself , and through the unmanly artlllco ho succeeded In mulct ing Air. Forrester to the extent of : io01 Itolirrt Collyer'a Mint or. Everybody In the United States knows , or knows about , bravo and good old Robert Collyer , who , though for a quarter century ono of our greatest of preachers , works In Ills study besldo the very anvil on which his 'prentice days wore passed before ho became n full fledged Yorkshire blacksmith. Ills master was ' 'Owd Jackie" Birch , the village- smith of quaint old Ilkloy , In Wharfcdalo. When you stand by its ancient church of All Saints' and look in upon its mossy graves nnd the Runlo crosses , your hands will grasp the bars of Us hugo Iron gates. They were forged on "Owd Jackie's" anvil by this same stout hearted ' -Yorkshire blacksmith. " And somehow as one turns away from Ilkley the feeling comes strongly that there was wrought into these rods and bars a hero grit more Impressive nnd imperishable than is revealed in all other monuments or tokens left in Wharfednlo , since the days when the Itomans trod these pleasant ways. IrUli Clmructnri. There Is an old quatrain among the Irish peasantry , the origin of which , for the spirit of Inslstlvo prophesy it contains , might fairly bo attributed to the provident genius of ono of the characters to which It refers : While Ireland Is ould Ireland You'll have foruvcnnoru The boi'oiiKh and the corr.ig De.sldn tlio cabin door. The bocough was the wandering minstro ! nnd story teller of Ireland , Ho had keen scent-for every spot whcro geniality ami generosity nourished ; but poverty , oppres sion and sorrow have long ago withdrawn the scant cheer that once gave him place. The bocough Is gone. Hut the other one , the corrag , who requires no raiment , food or housing , remains within the shadow of the Irish cabin door. Throughout Conncmara nnd particularly In a former tramp dowi from the Balllndoon district to Cloghmore nnd the sea , 1 saw ono of these silent , dried- up old fellows trembling in the wind by the door of every hut or cabin I passed. To my fancy each ono took on n separate individuality and seeming. This ono stooi" there defiant , as if repellant of your ap iiioach. That one had a saucy air , as if tc intimate that a line , "right" blackthorn wa concealed about his person. Another seemed decrepit and weary from silent vigil on there in the bitter mountain wind. Another was bent and leaning as though It conic stand there no longer. Another seemed to beckon to the passer tocnter. or to hint will weary gesture that you may keep upon youi way. And many , very many , stood boweil nnd sadly attentive as If listening In reve rent solemnity to endless talcs of want and woo that come in hopeless tones from the half-starved souls within. The corrag Is but a tall bundle of limbs o : osiers , set before the door to break the bur of the savage mountain blasts , "tho oulil man of tl > o branches , " the peasants called it ; but ono sometimes feels that this In sensate typified protector of the Irish cabin was the only object In gulso of human thai ever got thus near the man-neglected , God forsaken peasantry of this pitifully eondl tloncd land , Htimlilo ( lomloln I.lfo In Venice. To my mind a scene in early morning or Grand canal in Venice , Is far moro Interest Ing than ono In the early evening , when tb _ faded aristocracy of the city are moving ubout' with appaicnt llstlessncss In the ! private black gondolas , decorated with thci. owners' coais-of-arms , propelled by private gondoliers In ridbulous liveries , or at night when the canal In general Is wholly nnd offensively n show object to opencd-mouthed strangers. In the very early morning , while the gray Is yet upon the water and the gurgling of the tides Is like the chuckling of night Imps in the dark retreats of the lowest arches - - ml angles , then it is that the oddest and most fascinating processions pass and re- pass away down there In the shadows be neath your window , Scores of little , long barges loaded with vegetables from the flat , outlying Islands nvo on their way to the market at the Ktalto. The sails nro red. with blue tips nnd yellow center ploces , anil most grotesque figures of Madonnas are painted somewhere on their gaudily-colored stems. These barges are propelled by iwles In the hands of men In purple , pink , blue nnd orange garments , and very often a bareheaded peasant woman is piled In with the vegetables. Hero nnd there u sandalo , n lighter and moro graceful bark than the gondola , darts by. It U rowed by two men , with tasselcd caps , like the His- cayau llshcrtncn. A half dozen goats are tied head and tall to the gu&waloiand women and children are milking thcso on tholr way to the tinxt customer Bat-ens with soldiers speeding to or from guard-changing , fill the stmdowy way with a din of chattorlng profanity. Hero are Jour nuns with bcwed heads helm ? rowed on some errand of mercy. Again whole families of the lowlier classes , especially pious through some common bereavement , nro setting out to be present nt some very cheap and early mass , Hero comes a crowd of boats with villagers , vegetables , fowls , flagons of milk bestowed In dewy wisps of gr\ss , rolls of butter In last year's sweet , wluto corn husks , nnd numberless and nameless stuffs for the mercalo. They nro from the mainland ham lets and must have been astir at midnight. Following thcso Is a curious procession of gondolas piled higher than the gondoliers' heads with household goods ; and the people who are thus "moving" follow In their own gondolas , suggesting n funeral of household gods cut short In Its cortege , There are friars with hugh baskets In their gondolas setting out to the markets to buy and beg for their brethren and the poor ; tired fishermen with boat loads of gleaming fruit of the sea ; sailors subdued and sullen after an all night's roysterlng on their way back to their dog's life and the ships ; mcs- semrers with the night's collection of tele grams ; bakers In white linen caps and shirts , with boat-loads of black , brown oind whlto bread ; water-carriers with huge casks and flagons of drinking water ; nutchors , Icemen , grocerymon , all In boats making their llrst morning rounds ; and all of them down there upon the water in the shadows seeming like some weird and silent maskers in u dream. Spoiling u I'ont. . Scotland has never been moro thrilled In expectancy or dlssappolnted In outcome than in the carcor , so far , of her at onetime time most promising of jwcts , .Alexander Anderson. There Is a penny homo paper called the People's Journal , published at Dundee. It encourages contributions from country homo folk and the lowly strlvers In towns. AlkMit twelve years ago some tender heart rhymes , rugged and rough but with a masterful pathos in them , among which were "Cuddle Doou" and "Jcnnio wP the Aim ( crooked ) Teeth , " were noticed in this sheet over the name of Alexander Anderson , widely copied and commented on. Then came a poem which electrified the Land o' Cakes , and which will ever remain as much a heart song of the entire Scottish people as any verso ever penned by Hobert Burns. It was called "Castles 1' the Air. " and hero Is the first stanza , as I recall it from memory : The bonnlc , bonnle bairn wlm sits poUIn' a the nee ( nslips ) , Hi'i-ln11 the lire wl his wee round face , phlii' ut the pnflln-towe ( Iliiino-ilnrts ) What sei's hi ! iliiTrV lla , the young dreamer's biggin castles 1' the air ! Rov. George Gllfillan , pastor of the United 'resbytcrian church at Dundee , ono of the many editors of Burns , hunted up the un known genius and at first brought his per- ionality to public notice. Ho found the poet to be what wo call in America a "section- land , " that is , ono of a gang keeping rail way-tracks in repair ; "surfacemen" they are ailed in Britain ; and this strapping young 'ellow who had given Scotland its finest fire side poem for a half century was earning but three shillings , sixpence pence per day. The discovery caused immense excitement .n . Scottish literary circles , and Sir Noel I'aton , her majesty's limner for Scotland , .lalntcr of "Oberon and Tltania , " "Light of the World. " "Christ in the Garden , " etc. , at once took the surfaceman bard under his lowcrful patronage. It resulted In securing for the poet the appointment of assistant librarian in the Edinburgh university .ibrary. That seemed to end the man's genuine poetical career. His rhyme , iippcaring at long Intervals , is stilted and scholastic. This is held , in the deepest resentment by those still fondly crooning "Cuddle Doon" nnd 'Castles [ ' the Air. " I tell my Scottish iterary friends they must lot the man sup at learning's fount for the terrible ' 'drooth" that was on him ; that then ho will nod and doze ana hibernate ; and that by ind by ho will sing like a prisoned bird across the years in memory of his lowly hours. But they will not believe me , and insist that tha next poet who is given n lifo position in Scotland will bo "bro't o'er the heckle-pins sairlyl" Irish MlnitrcUjr. The minstrels of Ireland nro not all gone from the highways and byways of Erin. The mournful harp and plaintive pipe may have given way to the breezy banjo and crooning violin , but the songs which these accompany are the songs of Ireland still. Down by the rotten Clad- dagh wharves of old Galway town , I re cently came upon a rapt audience enthralled by the dulcet notes of Tim Brennan , the "wandering minsrhel of Tlppcrary" ono of the sweetest singers I ever heard , and ono who would have been great were It not Cor his love of "tho cinder In It , " as they aptly term the west of Ireland mountain dew. I had seen Tim many , many times before in Ireland. Our tramplngs had brought us into the same relations of artist nnd responsive auditor so many times that , as ho tipped mo n comforting wink of recognition , and I noticed that his violin had been re placed by the temporary though ample musi cal makeshift of n banjo wrought from the head of an ancient Irish chum , In the pause following his .ballad , I felt emboldened to toss nlm back his wink with the query : "And Tim , why didn't you bring the churn with its head ? "Faith , yor honor , " ho replied In a flash and with n winsome smile , holding the churn head banjo aloft so all could see , "faith I never argue wid a lady an' , yor honor , a bould Irish wooman stud at its other ind 1" I had got u taste of his sprightly and never vicious wit , and ho as quickly got my shilling for that same ; moro power to the quick hinges of that nimble tongue of the wander ing minstrel of Tippcrary 1 . WAKEMAN. I'ortrnlt nil u Cotlln I.III. James Clarcback , about 45 years of ago , was recently engaged nt Herrington's Cor ners , ten miles from Klmirn , N. Y. , in resur recting the remains of Mrs. C. M. Herring- ton in order to bury them in another place. The body had been under ground for tlilrty- iivo years , and In digging for it Clarcback struck a great deal of water. Ho reached the remnants of the outer box surrounding the coffin , nnd when ho pulled them out of the way ho was greatly astonished to see what appeared to bo Mrs. Hcrrington'a body , apparently un disturbed and so llfoliko as to convoy to his mind the belief that a living , breathing woman was before him. "I tell you I was scared , " said Clareback to a correspondent , " and I nearly fell over in a faint in the gravo. When I made an examination , however , I discovered that it was not the body I saw before mo , but an exact photograph of it on the top of the conin lid. I then raised the collln and opened it. With the exception of the head , it contained only a few crumbling bones. The bead , however , was perfectly preserved. The bones were covered with flesh which had petrified , the whole being as uard as a stone , whllo the hair had grown to an un usual length , nnd was very abundant. " The coffin lid was exhibited to a number of people. It was made of cedar and con tained an exact and perfectly clear repre sentation of the deceased woman as she ap peared when she died thirty-live years ago. Just how to account for this no ono knows , but In lieu of any better explanation that made by the grave digger is accepted. It is to the effect that the water flowing through the grave must have raised the body so that It was pressed against the cofiln lid and the action of the gases arising from the body in conjunction with the nature of the wood , forced the picture to appear as it did on the outer side of the coftln lid. lirave Mlulntorf. There are two ministers of the gospel in Providence , R. I. , who work for their dallj bread. Ono lights and extinguishes lamps the other drives a horse car and each 1 : honored and respected among men. Rov. W. H. Bullock Is the lamplighter ant Is in the employ of the city. His work.lles largely In the fluid lighting district nnd being' a conscientious cmployo of the city ho Is never caught without oil In his lamps although ho knowoth not the hour when the inspector cometh. The church of which Pastor and Lamp lighter Bullock presided over ls > the church of the Disciples of Christ. Its congregation Is not composed of million alres , but hard working men nnd women with whom the pastor Is in touch becausi ho is one of them. JIo lakes no salary for his sermons nnu li > has probably baptized married nnd buA-d moro people than unj dozen pastors of Providence. Before ho * as ordained to preach the word of God Mr. Bullock was a soldier ana a policeman. PAPERS FROM MANY LANDS Inlquo Collection of News Publications Made by a Hastings Man. 10W THEY HANDLE NEWS IN ICELAND tamplrs or Nennpapor KntnrprMo In Coun- trim of Which Mnnjr 1'ooplo Hnro Neror Ilennl Killtorlnl * In l.tuiRimRr * That Ara Oliler Tlmn the I'jrmnlils. .Mr. E. N. Haincnof Hustings , Nob. , has ho distinction of belli } ? ono of the few nows- > ai > er collectors In the world j probably the only ono In the United States. In Germany hero nro a number , ono In particular pos sessing u collection of over O.OJO. The con- unts of thcso collections , however , are clas sified as belli ) ? scientific , religious , secular , sic. , lu character , while Mr. Hamcn's idea ins been to secure a representative copy of > apors printed In each written languano In world. For three years ho has been engaged - gaged In this work , and now his collection lumbers hundreds , representing sonio llfty lu looking over the collection ono Is struck > y the typographical inferiority of the Kuropean papers to those published In this country. Almost without exception the > aper is light and soft , while the Ink used seems to have boon much diluted before islng. The press work Is poor and the oreniiin of any second rate olllco In the union could probably "mako up" in a moro attractive manner. The advertisements are 'ully twenty-live years behind the times , the fonts used precluding any artistic display. Ono of the most' prominent papers In the collection is the Paris Figaro , familiar to all readers of THE Urns' * foreign cablegram's. : t is a six-column folio , soiling for three cents , printed on poor p.iper in a not very irtistiu manner. The "want ads" are a very natural feature and coihidcriiblo spaeo s ffiven to a theatrical department. A characteristic column is headed Sport in Unglish and is followed by the names of a long string of racehorses. \\'ith the UolR'inlan paper , liens Noroda , the unfamiliar press censor's stamp is seen , much like a postmark , on the nargln. This p.ippr is printed in 1'ragno' ind has as great a fondness for supplemental ' inserts" as a western weekly. The Jlirudinsko Noving differs from the Torinor in not having the censor's stamp on the margin. Instead , tliero is a yellow stamp about the si/o of the now Columbian stamps which was stnclc on the paper before irintlng. The Algemei'ii Handolsblad , or ' N'ow Amsterdam Courant is a six-column folio remarkable chiefly for its advertise ments of liquors , hotels and sowing ma chines. in low Dutch. Do Koophandcl , published at Antwerp. resembles the French papers In quality or .Minting. A prominent feature is a list of .hi1 arrivals and doparluros of the myriads of steamships which come to Antwerp , all chronicled in Flemish. The most noto- .vorthy German paper is the Unrlin Tupo- blatt. It is a small , poorly printed paper with three wide columns. About a page of idvortlbcmcnts Is admitted without any at tempt ut display. With it , as in most of the continental newspapers , the lower third of i couple of pages is given up to a serial story. The Tagebliitt is most noteworthy 'or its supplements ; Ulk , a satirical paper ibout the sl/.o ofl ifo ; a daily amusement paper , Famillen Blatt ; Zeitgeist , and a commercial supplement. The Pester Lloyd of Budapest , Austria , 3 as nearly like an antiquated German- American weekly as anything. The Nemzet of the same place , a Hungarian l > aper , is larger than TUB BEE , , yet with only live columns. It is i a six- page publication and , contrary to .tbo gen eral rule , has some very gaudy .advertise ments. In this collection nro n number of Greek tapers published In Athens. Ono , with an ndeciplierablo name , is an Illustrated four- column folio , printed on line paper in Greek characters. In ono a good picture of Glad stone appears , followed by a biography. All articles are followed by a facsimile signa ture of the author. It seams strange to think of lifo insurance advortismcnts nnd ex planations of comic pictures in the language of Plato and Demosthenes. Following a Greek flaily naturally comes a Latin magazine , Alavdra , published at Aquilic , Italy , Uio.town Julius Ciesar chose as the headquarters of his cisalpine forces. It is a university magazine of sixteen pages , and altogether is not larger than half a page ofTiiEBnu. The three copies sent were shipwrecked and still show traces of salt water. This is believed to bo the only Latin paper published. The Gaelic Journal of Dublin is another remnant of an almost dead language. It compromises with the super seding language by publishing part in En glish. A love story In serial form has nn English vocabulary at the close of each chapter. The Spanish papers resemble the English Journals. An almost startling feature of a couple is a funeral advertisement on the last page Hanked by patent medicine ads , El Liberal claims to have the largest circula tion of any in Spain , and soils for a penny. The usual continued story is found at th bottom of the lirst and second pages. Th Portuguese papers , published at Lisbon , lire mainly given up to advertisements of steam ship lines. The Journal of Commerce is a pooly printed seven-column folio , nnd in typographical execution could bo outdone by any frontier weekly. In Constantinople the Levant Herald Is published in Turkish. The Arable print looks , like shorthand run riot. It apparently is printed backward , the fourth page of an English folio being the Turkish tlrst. A big green stamp was put on the paper before printing. A curiosity is the Sina Hapa Woceklyo Taouanpahn , whatever that may inoim , published at Fort Totten , .North Dakota , for the Sioux Indians. It is an Illus trated Catholic monthly with a children's department in English. The Armenian papers published nt Con stantinople have numerous "scare heads. " The Armenian character Is a little moro like a hen track , if possible , than the Arabic , and the effect Is dazzling to the eye. The usual olllclal stamps are utllxcd. An Arme nian paper from Asia minor with the date 1804 was very neatly executed. The common peculiarity of the South African Boor papers is the number and variety of the cattle advertisements. The South African has In addition an advertise ment for Beecham's pills , while Our Land substitutes ono of a New York lifo insur ance company. A Welsh paper published at Uli.vl , Wales , whose name is composed mainly of y's and d's , is of about the same general style as the weekly New York Tribune. But ono Hebrew newspaper Is published in the world , the Hamagid of Berlin , n weekly. The Hebrew Hoview of Paris Is n monthly which reads backward , but has a French title in the usual place. The Romanic language , ouco spoken by mil lions , but now confined to some half u hun dred villages In Switzerland , has two papers , the Gasotta Romonscha and the 11 Sur- sllvan , published at Chur. The latter Is a very small sheet , so small , In fact , that an American would hardly think of using It for shaving paper. Quito n contrast Is a regular blanket sheet published at Copenhagen In the Danish lan guage , whoso name Is omitted as it would Ull nearly two lines of Tun BEE. The Kat- shin Shimbun of Tokto , Japan , is a radical , progressive paper which Is said to have a very largo circulation. It Is profusely Illustrated and some of its cuts would do credit to a Lincoln paper. Witli true orien tal thrift the margin at the fold of the paper Is closely filled with type set In smaller size. The Siamese papers from Bangkok nro refreshing tn their light faced , airy typo. The Government Ga zette has n wonderful creation of pagodas , white elephants nnd gorgeous dragons incor porated In its head. The gem of the collection is the official paper of China , the Peking Gazette , bclfovod to bo about the only copy extant In the United States. It Is the oldest paper In the world , nnd n newspaper man always approaches preaches It with the sumo feeling that actu ated Mark Twain at the tomb of Adam , so awe-Inspiring is the though tot its 1,400 years of lifo. It Is about the size of a pocket mem orandum book , ten inches by three nnd a half , printed on an almost gossaiQCr thick ness of doubled paper , In black typo three- eighths of an inch high. It has a yellow cover with red letters , the cover being gilt edeedipapcr. Another Chinese paper form- Ina Itilto n contrast , f printed nt It Is fully llvo fm ( ' { | niiK nnd three wldo. nrliitud on onu alitii , Jmvltitf a su | > i > lomctitui Insert. 11 I A Mexican sclontlflo monthly has two covers , ono salmon-colored of heavy putter , nnd tfoir i inner a vIvM ruby of lighter grado. ' Tire wrapper Is mldressod In Volnptik. The oniolal orpnn of tills latter IniiKunL'o Is a sinitll t > ljL'ht-piRe : monthlywith hut a single eoluiffnVrlnted | In Now York. Another Now YI > TCipov ) Is the Jewish On- zotto , n oonsolUVUloii of Jlftecn periodicals. It Is a sixteen-page , six-column paper with paso "ads'1 whlch'ldoft strung ; In the squ ro Hourow letter used to. express the Jewish- Uorinan Jaram , The appeal to advertisers , however , Is In fcotd Anglo-Saxon , and under neath the head Is the , familiar ' 'known cir culation. " Curiously iiiouuh , the only Syrian panur In the world oomes from Now York. The Swedish periodicals from Stockholm are of n very neat order , the Norwegian from Christiana being exceptionally good. The Caucasian , Qruslnlan and Koumnninn papers from Caucasus are Interesting , some being dallies. The Tnrtars also have a dully. The Polish Oazoty Handlowii looks decidedly familiar In Its Koman typo after the aimless Aralilo scrawls of the 'four preceding speci mens. Native Opinion of Uombay , India , la u small four-column bi-weekly published In Hindoo and English , now almost thirty years old. Apparently there was too heavy i blanket on the cylinder of the press portrayed trayed on the last page , for the Impression was so heavy that the typo was almost ininchod through the , paper. In Jerusalem are a number of papers with the yellow gov ernment stamp stuck on before printing. One , the House of Jacob , Is published in the German-Jewish vernacular. The Persian Iran is better printed than ono would ex pect , and the Itala Is n llttlo larger , hav ing four colums to the former's three. A unique feature Is the map on the last page , about as dllTcrent from nn American railroad time table map as ono could imagine. The Scharaff. is u lithographed folio , two of the four pages being given up to Ideal per traits. But two papers are published In Icelandic : ono In Hoykjavik , the Isafold , and ono at Wlnnopeg , Canada. The Isafold is n small three-column sheet with a serial story on the bottom of two pages. The Hawaiian Islands are represented by n number of papers obtained through Glaus Sprcckles , the sugar king. Hi-sides the Hawaiian , a Chincso and a Portuguese paper are issued at Honolulu. Nearly twenty Italian papers were obtained from Home. One , La Ossor- vatoro Homano. is evidently religious in tone , for underneath the head appears the papal coat of arms , and the llrst column of the ilrst page Is headed by a Latin prayer for the safety of the pojio. La Tribuna is published in the Koman dialect , the entire insiilo being given up to a colored political cartoon. These hundreds of papers were in the main obtained through the banks located at the | ) oints of publication. Mr. Hamcn , being a bank clerk , found no trouble , in eliciting a courteous answer from his correspondents in all parts of thn world. .301110 few were ob tained throw'.i collectors In Germany. The postage stamps from the packages sent would in themselves form a collection of no small pretensions. It is interesting to note the ad- ilrcssos and road the inclosures in some of the answers received , handmade dictionary English and geographical ignorance each beIng - Ing prominent. C. 11. A. l&i'lttTlKS. Dean Hole tells of H'Sundy ' school bov who answered the qiiostion | "What proof have wo of St. Peter's repentance ! " with "Please , sir , ho crowed three times. " His sister , wlulo teaching in'thounday , school , asked her class what was meant by the law and the prophets. A bright little girl immedi ately responded , "If yp i please , ma'am , it is when you sell anybody up. " At a certain service the rector , squiug there yas only ono alms dish provided , uslicd a rustic to bring a dish from the dinbig'iinom table of the rec tory and pass it up and down both sides of the north alslo. Vhen the command was carried out , the rustic yhlspcred in the rec tor's car : "I've dine ( as yer told me , sir. I've taken It down yerfsidoof the alslo and up t'other , but theyHMnono of them have any. " Judge of thvqrthy rector's amaze ment when ho discovered that the dish was f ull of biscuits 1 ? i i 1 * Roberta. Ingergoll : * Not long ago I was dining with somo.-gcntlClncn. Next to mo sat a minister. Ho was talking a little on this subject. I finally udked him : "Now , " says I , "you are talking so much about the apostles nnd the Lord and those things. Will you answer mo a question honor bright ! " Ho said ho would. I said : "Which would you rather spend an evening with , ono of the apostles or Hobert Burns ! " "Well , " ho said , "if I tell you , you'll tell on mo. " I said : "Then I know what * your answer is , because if you had been going to say ono of the apostles you would never toll mo not to tell on you. " "My erring brother , " asked Rev. Mr. Coldtoa. "why do you persist in drinking rum , when water , cold water , is so much better ? " "I guess I know more about how good water is than you , " answered Mr. oish- forth. "You temperance people have 'oa of the delight of a good , nice , cold of water the next morning. " "I have a great plan for raising me oy for the missionary fund. " said the unmarried deacon. "Wo will have every woman In the church give a nlokol for eacn year of her age. " "It will work better , " said the married deacon , "if wo have every woman contribute a nicKel for each year she lacks of forty. " * * In the dining room of an English hotel a scriptural text is hung on the wall , ns fol lows : "Walt on the Lord and Ho shall exalt thco to Inherit the land , " and along- tldo of it is a warning from the landlord , reading ; "Watch your hat and overcoat , as the proprietor is not responsible for them. " * * Cuinso The Rov. Dr. Thirdly forgot him self yesterday. Fangle How was that ? Cumso In reading the scripture lesson ho said : "Yea , man dleth and wasteth away. Yea , man giveth up the ghost and where is ho at ? " * * A Sednlla preachoradvortises "good niuslo and short sermons , " dovotlnzour en tire thin and onoriloto the ciirofuUtiuly of patients Inter ests and wul- furo , wo are on- uliloil to per form the nolilo of rolltivln ? hu man rtiurorliii In the most oirectlvniiontior. IP AUK THHVKn'lM ' OF ANY NERV OUS. CHKONIO Oil PUl- VATH , DISEASES YOU Havo'lhtf'boneflt ' of our abil ity , ojpciflotico. und skill if yon wUj'oaly lot us Hy cither poruonal or written application , that you wish to consult , Hu US. CONSULTATION FREE , WE CURE CAYARRH , All Dis eases of th .ljlose , Throat , Chest , Stomach , Bowels and Lived Blood , Skin and Kidney Diseases , Fomnlo Weaknesses , Lost Maiihood CURED. PILES FISTULA , KIB8UHK , permanentlr cured without tbe u t ot knife , IInature or cauitlo. All raaladlei of prlratoor dellcato uaturo , of cither tax , ponlttvolr curod. Call on or addreu , wltn itamp for Circular ! , Free Uook and lleclpei , DR , SEARLES & SEARLES , MS S. 15th St. . Omaha , Nob. Neit Uoor to I'OitoiHce. nform.itIon re * MTUAIUIIT ( aitlllii. ndor * Co 0 < JciillL , JJU * 'MOTHERS' FRIEND" i MARS' ' CHILD BIRTH EASY. Colvln.Lft. , Doo.B , 10BG. My wife used MOTIIER'O rniEND before her third confinement , and nays uho would not b without It for hundreds of dollaro. HOOK. BHADriBLD REGULATOR CO. , ton IAU TAUBnuaoi T . _ Time and Tide Wnlt fur no man : nor do ths fearful ravauos of and Private Yield to the 111 Olrotod efforts of these who d not thoroughly undurstund tholr nature the remedies which will effectually oradlos thorn from the system. The ability , tlio ox- purlunui' , the skill of Drs. Betts & Betts combine to place within tliolr hands , the power to spoodlly and permanently euro those obstinate maladies of a ud rcndor thorn the most successful ns wall ui the moat popular Specialists In the United States. In the treatment and euro of Uioso diseases whloh from tholr dis tinctive suuuialty. Send 4 cents fora copy of their Illustrated new book of 120 pages. Consultation free. Call upon or address with stamp. 119 South 14th St. , Cor. Douglas St.- , OMAHA. NEU. W. BAILEY OKISTTI T. Full SeLol Good Teetli on Coed L A. P&RFBGT Teeth extracted in the mornlnlng and new teeth inserted the same dny , so that people living nt i distance can come to Omaha and ramnln but one day , in getting fitted with now teeth. Wo espoolallj Invite all who have found difficulty in getting a good fitting set of teeth to try us onco. Wo guarantee a fit In all cases. PAINLESS Extraction of tooth by the wonderful local unajsthotio used only in this ofllco. Perfectly hnrmloss nntt works like n charm. Tooth filled without pain by the atost in vcntlon. Teeth Without Plates The greatest discovery in dental np- nllnncos of the past fifty years. Stay linn in position ; no covering in the roof of the mouth. For All Kinds of Dentistry when you wnntit done first class nnd fern n Reasonable Price vlBltn Wide- Awake Dentist who keeps UD with the times. Cut this advertisement out rind keep It for future reference , you mtiy forgot the name nnd location. Remember , the name nnd oxnct loca tion , Dr.R.W. BAILEY Third Floor ol Puxton Block , (6ih ( and FarnamSireets , Entrance on 10th Stroot. TELEPHONE - - - - 1085. Industries By purchasing goods made at the following Nebraska Factories. If you cannot find what you want , communicate with the manufacturers as to what dealers handle their goods. AWNINQS , FURNITURE- Omaha Tent-Awning Chas. Sniverick & Co COMPANY. Flagi. llammocki. Oil V'urnltnre , Carpeti ana and llubber Clothing. Draperln. Pond for catalogue , lift Kara am it. IZ03 Farnam it. BREWERS , 'Fred Krng Brewing Omaha Brewing ASSD COMl'ANY. Our UoitUd Cabinet Guaranteed to equal Boor dellrerml to onr outilde brand * . Vienna rart of tUa cltj. 1W7 Kjtport Uottlod Iloer. Jackioniu DellTCrcd to famllloi. FLOUR. S , F , Oilman. Omaha Milling Co , , ' 101J-li-17N. ICthit. Omen and Mill. C. B. Blaek managtr. Ill ) N.Ulh it. "B SAY ! BUY A CAKE OF SOAR apd thank me for calling your alter/tier / ) to U. " MANUFACTURED ONLY BY N.K.FAIRBANK&CO. CHICAGO. PERCENT S.E ConJS p,0- [ INTEREST AVlNl . . . . PAID ON i > 777L4VDIRCC.TDW i3 - nrfV > MTOa't 3JMof < jc u-'ej'UV ' ' ' ' . ao.wy N , tw flSH Satwt UlPQSMa _ CAPJTflL 100.OCO.OO JHMiuutmi Ttioj L KIMA LL 18 1G Doug/as Street , Onicihci , Nob. Tlio-cmlnpnt speplnllit In nnrvoiu , chronlo. prlvntn , hi lOil , kln anil urlnnrjr dljpmii , A rciwar and rccMoreil criuluiue in m-illcliic. nn ill iilomii nmi oorllllcntui ihow , is still tro itlnx with ilia if n-ii > ml iue- cuss cntiirrh. lost nmnliuuil icmilnnl wp.ikno . nU-lil ( OMOI unit ! ! f.irim of ( irlv.tto | < IHI N < > unr.'ii rjriiBCil. Now truiummit for loin of vltnl | ) wnr. rurtiai unitblo to viili mo nur b truinl nt lionbr curroMionilunce. Muitlolno or Inilriimonti float by mill oroxiinm itoourolv p.ioijl , no uuri n unlioili JonU'iitsor Condor.o iiuriunnlliilnrrlo-v prufornjj C > inullatl > in fro . i'orro pi lo in MI in' ' riiritrili Uook iMyalorlOBOf Llfo ' oni froa. OtlloJ huU4'Ju.m toO | > m Sun tiraMn.m to Urn.o' ' > ut iui | > for roplf Dr. 0 Clce Wo the fu- 111OIIS ( ' 111- o I u n of O mull n. IIIIH over 1,000 stiito- in o n t s from gin to ( u 1 pnMon ts who hnvo beenciirod V"- . - Ono of jbo most successful physicians In Omalia to day Is Dr. U. Hoe Wo , who for the pust to years hna boon doing moro good for siilToi-ini ; humanity tliitu ull olhor specialists In the country. The doctor can succossf nlly tioat yon by innll and cure you , as ho h is donu thousands of othurs. with Ills wonderful Ohlmiso reme dies. Do not dulay until your illsoaso Is bc- yonil nil hull ) , but write to him If you oiuinot call iiDon nlm at ouuo , and ho will Klvo you his candid opinion of your onso. Kxainlnu- tlons free und It will cost you nothing to cJn- niilt with htm. Question blanks sent uuon ap plication. Address , DR. C. GEE WO , 6W N. ICUiSt. . Omih : OF CntJDE COCOAS BOLD AS "BOTjUnl.H" -BEST ( AND COE9 FARTHEST- la Manufactured on Scientific Prlnolplos. Highly Digestible and Nutritious , known all otor the clvlllzecl Olobo as the Pern' of nil Cocoas : , IRON WORKS. Paxton & Yierllng ilndnstrlallronWorks IIION WOIIK8. „ . „ „ , . . , „ „ „ . „ „ Wrougb nC Cut Iron pairing of nil klndi oC building work , J ngln i , I maclilnerr. 711 B. Hta brtu work , etc. 1 it. Telephone l l . Novelty Works , Mont complete puntla the wait lor Unlit manu facturing ncl all klndi ofeloctro-platlng. Cbai * Mfg. Co. , W plug \V - tr , Neb. Tlio Boaaon for IMl'OHTKI ) , 11AKTX MOUNTAIN tANAHllCS l dimm > nclng.Vu will roocln tlio first lot .InmmrjrKUIi. Tlioru will bn Imiiilrcdi , of t nimrlo * to aulo"t troiuj bulnit perfectly nnd thoroughly trnlni'rt Ihi'y will tin thn bostnf tlnoonnon Di-cprollt Uvlll clmiiKO with swrct lioll noloi [ nnit loiw twllli. Wo K'lnruntoa ' full Niillafnctl'jn nnil dhlft to liny l > ulnt liy lui'rc'n with mifi'lr I'rloo will iHij.-I.V ) paoh nml o tra linn Bclectuil Blimers f I . ' * ) Fo- mull's $1 Geisler's ' Bird Store , 400 N. 10th SUOmnlin. ARE TROUBLING YOU ! Wcll.como ntid Imvn tlinm oxamlnmt by our optician i rcuof clmnro , unil. If nOL-oisury , llltoil wltti ajtalrofi our 'M'KiVKGc rilNSlKC ) rAfll.Ka or 13VI ! ( Jl.AS * I HH : Ilio best III tlio World. If ymiito not licio.1 tflmsoi I wo will lull you Koiinilnlvlsu jrcni wlint to < lo. 1101,1)1 M'KUTACLKS or KVK (11.A8SKS h'llOM MJM HI' . I 1'lnlii , snioku , uluo or nhlloHiatus , for prutoctliu tbe i eyes , troinojua pair up. MaxMeyer& Bro. Co' Jewelers and Opticians. Faruiun and FlftooutStrcot PRINTING. I SEWINQ MACHINES Reed Job Printing Now Noble 1 Lincoln Two of tlio bolt m - COMPANY chtnoi on the marktl. Mada nnJ told lo lit * lloo lr Jo \ > j Chu Mf * . Cu. , Lincoln. Neb. SOAP. I Page Soap Co , Uaoufacturenof Onto * totp. Ill Illckorr it. SYRUP , I WHIlt UAU. Farrell & Co , Carter White Lead Co Jilli.proierTti.ralac * Corroded and mttert ma it and apI * butter , Blrlollf pure nblte Iea4 rnp > , molantt. Cor , lia ( Omaha 61U tail ftraiia.