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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1893)
22 TUB OMAHA DAILY BKK * SUNDAYJUPttlL 10 , 1803-T\VKNT \ Y-FOUR PAGES. WALKS' RURAL ENGLAND Historic Remlndora Afforded in Every Qnar- tor of the Old Sod. SPLENDOR OF CASTLE AND MONASTIC RUIN Qrnphlc Sl < rtrlir of Mint Nutnlilo Mllngn anil l.miil uipiOncu the AlililliiR t'ltieo ol iniliiir : ! * lllinttrlniin lloiiil- Witkciimn'a Letter. tCn ) > I/rfo'if / ' l , I ONDOS , April -iCoirosponUctROot Till ! RKK ] It ii no wonder that tlio cooklci of a IJrltcm'shcMit , bo ho Iilsliimn , Scotchman or niiglUhm.ui. tin ill with fmk-less nftcxticm ns ho recalls , inatij foreign land , the immu- dlato tuvltontnt'iit of tlio homo-spot tint Kino him birth \ Seicho hut cottci's cl.lhl , and know In his ioiitlitnlo hours enl > the fk'reoaml liuttfiil iniitrs of penury thcro Is still uiiUillibli'ciinrm In ttio foirUvvattl visU centering in the cm Host Htltlsli home1 It IsbcciuiPMii.il Knirlnml iiml it is almost r < | im\ ! ) true of iui.il Scotland and Ireland - Innc'iil fiverj " .quire auto la so undo it In. ; In Its a o , association nnd natural vvinsomo- ncss that those vvlio possess it , or those uho have left it and , for the iihs.'tuo , hold it more Intensely close and pi felons , \\ill Justly biook no bellttti me nt , any mete than > ou vvoulil let some smart stianjior e-oiiio Into join home1 and sued at join sweetest and most I'liitishtil if simple1 , bolongliiKs-bcMUtl- lied In olTort , hallowed by time and use , cnen moie te inletly love-cl for jourown errors and shoi tiemiiiiB'J without pitching both him and his aits Incontinently Into the higli- wa.v It is such alic-uitiful countri , sui-h a well kept and delicious old garden , such a siuil- In } ? l.uul In sunshines ami SIIULJ and eomfoit.i bio one in btoim ; and wltlnl fives to the stian 'er within it iu h a st-nso of constant Inteitst. < oiilc ] d with dose human comp in ionshiptml qjmpithlos. tint entile .mil pris and incapable of lute-test In any hind but his own though one he , lin lannot now- and then ropicss a kindling enthusiasm , bo here and thine pi uked into su ret admit ation , in this place and that llnd 'ciulet and assoiiathu jnteust In less than a thieo houis journny , on an Knt-'libh dnin Ma\ time , what innuinoiahle scenes of inteust of Stirling quality ami of rcstfulncss and teposo lltsh upon \ou fiom join carnage window ' Still moro pi itefullv fcastful ate the things ono will scu and feel , as innumeiable hamlets , stc'.ulliiKS md h.tlls mo pissed Gloiious old in inoi houses Hash from patks and demesne fousts 'Ihatchud roofs of vill.iKCJ IIOIULS , j allow with lichen , are varied lure and thcto by led tiling A\enues of ai.- cient elms , boedi and limes give tempting istns above1 btoad loads , ttssalateil witli llflhts and sbadis and as pi.ii anil smooth as some old itithodt il lloor Cropped hedges ivitli trim , tnii fields ptvo pi tie heio and thc'io to clowns , lolllni ? awav In billowy lulls of heathn , spanjrlcil with the | 'oldcn asphodel , or wide meadows and tmj matslu s vvbete llamis the \dlow m niijoltl , or whcie the fiiiKtH me nets are so dense and hluo that theh sut face seems like a hicc/cup- ple'il pool Ilawthoin lanes uio white abo\e and beneath as builts of diuen snow PI cat m.isses of ImnejMicltlo tiall fiom copse and lieeliro , and In , mound and above all this Ma ) time natuio ho ncn , tluushcs and blackbhds , bltrh aboio the icating of iour tiain , Hood all the ela.v with soup In the tumrndous object lesson and his torlo renilnlcr which euh tin ) bit of the faeo of LiiKland affotds , theie is a no mote impiessivi studs than that of Hnqlish vll IIIKUS nml llieli folk 'Ihese Milages aio the most delightful of all objects in ovci.y panoramic ramic imal stone Closei stuelj io\eals countless hidden beauties- o\en ago , ind decay heio possess n moutnful bouity and chatm to the aitlstic and vagi.int mind Ami their quaint , cjuiet folk , of whom I sh ill particularly sneak in another at ticlo , though reminded as dumb and sodden ly many , still piov ido one of the most iutoiestiiij , ' fcociologic studies to ] io found inanj land AlthciUKli m.inj eluinctetistlcs of English villages dlftet in ditTeient suites , or inelitTer- cnt parts of the simo shlio , thej all lca\o the snttto tvplcul pututo in the memory , when consldeted as a part of the landscape I no\cr jot canto to an English Mil lire , and I have \isiteit hundreds on foot , that it had not the same geiicial massing of picturesque effects as all otheis ' 1 his , too , whatever Its iclativo topographical situ.ttion. It was just the s line whither nestled In an Avon , \Vhatfc , Uerwent , or T.imar vale , dumped upon a btee/j soutliein down , halt hlduen in the shadows of a midland hill or peak , toppling along the edee of rapped chine"or flowetj-bum or wedged Into the stony face of some dteaiy iioitltcin moor 'Jhcto it stood , e\cr a distinct and ehninc- tenstic picture in itself Atiftof low , out lying cottage" , liny splashes of white and pray and red at either side , became lost toward the center in luxminnt shiu'-beiv Uhcrt a low pablcs , qu lint and old Then another mass of foil IRO , denser and of darker hue Tfien a jumbled mass ol higher gray and ted i oofs and outjuttmgb of moro pretentious structures And llnally , the highest mass of foil igo dominated by pei- haps n biHlcmcnted roof , abo\o which always rises a lingo , square , centuiies olcl tower that tells of the English palish church fiom Lind's End to the misty Chev iot Hills. I sometimes thinit , wonderful and compact a stotehouso of hlstotic iclks , of gammed alt and of splcndoi in cathc'ltal , eastlo , hall and monistic vuin , as old England tuily is , that after all the aw cutest pit t of ono's w in derings is oxpeiienccd away I'tom the beaten Hues of tr.uol nmon these gri\ old nests. w hlch the ccntui ies h ivo softened and be m- tllled oen In their ago and dcciy Come- with me tln.iia0'rantlj , into a few of these lorcly old homo spots of mial Utig land Not far to the north of damp uml giinn Lhetpool Is pictty OrmsUuk It Is half \lllagoand hilf town , fet the spindles nro humming lieto as almost o\etyw heio in Lancaohlio and Voikbhiio Two huge , white toads loulin ? from gieen fields , which were impisbiblo mosses in olden times ils ing to a guntlo ominoueo Intoisoct the placu n d tluoidutet piow th of 400 > e b almost jjldes fiom Mow the nestling , ancient homes , he quaint old shops , the sleepy , lestful imib and the tiistoiiccliuuh itself. The old chuidi looming ubo\o the rci. tiles of the cottage roofs is curiously sut- mounted by sepai.ito tnwcts and steeple the pile sogiay , niollow and l\\m tssed as tc. Itnoluntatily suggest a gi'antii. tieoloppod off in its lower tiunk , whoio the huco battlemented - mented tower stops , out of whoso edge , whet o the steeple tlses his spioutod a second end slendei tree The tt.iditlon goes that two capricious maiden slbton , dcsltous of raising some stciod mcmonil , agreed upon erecting upon Otmsldrk a towci nnd stuoplo , yet , disagreeing to uniting and connecting their work , they llnilly expanded all their wealth and cnetglbs upon both , each in dependent of the othei The onliest of the renowned Derby s and Stanleys aio butioi : heio MossIteliencl slumberaus , gr.ue the entire plac'o is a wondtous plctuio of ten tier icposo and is but one of sootes of win some L-mcashtro Milages blending low lying and hustaci in the pi > as\nt landscape between the thundcioiis towns of mills Wh.it precious old oils of gray and sun shine and crecniiie the hilf deserted vil lages of Ccickermouth mm Hawkshead up hciuinlho English lake legion , the fomier in Cumboiluud and the latter Just inside Lancashho , where tint countv pushes its rugged arm up among the si ars , foils and pikes of the English Alps' Cockcimouth Itself , wheto Wor.lswotth was bom Is but ono of the many quaint old Cumbriin Mi lages will h seem as ancient and mossy as the rocks out of which they weto hewn It is n sweet , dim , dteamful ami songtul old spot , for the Derwent ther swoops melodi ously by and the Cocker ther from which iheillngo derives its name. Is emptied Into llio Dei went at the Milage side Wotdbworth's father. John \Voiitbworth , vas an attorney horu and law agent to Sir ames Low ther , aftei\mls ; the earl of onsdalo. 'Iho house when ) the poet was ' 0111 Is n long , two story , hipped-roof state- me , standing at a comer of Mainsticot and \ioeesscd alley , and must hiuo been re- ardecl ns n stately affair in its time A .or of nine window s In the socon t and ellit I1 the Hist story faeo the street , which is shut off by a massive stone \vall , with wldo eoplui ; and monumental projections at regu lar Intervals awl at the corners. In the i t"4 - nrcix between the street wall nml Iho house nro several portli trimmed thndc trees ami the ample garden lit the rear extern ! * to the baiiles of tlio love'l.v Di-ivvcnt Ilnvvkshcud lies tnlilvvav between thn nueeti of the Knglish lakes \\lmli < tmete1 ntiel 1'onlstou water , ueiir which iiiav ho found the lioininf John Kuskln.nml nestles prettllv boslilo the beautiful i : ithvvalto U'titer It is b.v far the most iintuiuo village lu the ; luleu country The old school house Is standing just \Voidsworthloftlt it Is no moio than a tltij stone dungeon , with vvielo , low vvliidnvvs.ii single bio.id , low door nnd a whitewashed school room Interior , where u tall man would be In danger of bumping the celling bcMins with his head 'I he schoolboy , \\oids\voith. rut his immo Into his desk , anil the se.iiiod old plank Is neeoidinglv prlod us n pieeious tolle livery one will lemeinber the good olel elnmc , Anne TASOII. with whom Wotdsworth lived , and who was so inui'h a mother to him during his boihood'3 elajs at Hawkshead Her cottage is still standing , anil " DIP MIOW vvliltc-church upon the bill , " made famous in tin1 "Pielude. " st'inds as the n in n near Held Aiouud It the sheep and lambs aie grazing Hut the olel llfo went outof Hawkshead with the haiullooins , jou | will never llnd mine thin u seoio of vvoishlp- ers at seivleo within it. and the Ineunibenc.v is so u-diici'.l that the vlllige rector himself t Ings the i lilme of bells vv hie h rails the dim old toll : tliat lemaln to this all but deseitecl sliiinc Heio ngiln arp t.vpes of villages , ono In tiiu ninth and anothct in llio west riding of Yoikshne , neither like llio scoies of sunnj h unlets In ti ndor Yoikshlri ! vales , but standing pi iml.v and stoutlv against the shuildei Ing 111001 s ilell int of change anil the tempests ol ee-nturies Comewlth mo over dip.iij St.itiPtnooi s wilds , anil look down theio upon dead old Hoivcs I lie-in lies the sinuous shell of the ancient village a winding , cobbled glass gtown stieet of half a mile in length II inked bv luined housps half of whose thatched nvifs have fallen In Par to tlio east thne.ve catches a glimpse of the classic doin tin of KokobTo \ the noi th , the dells and fells wl e-o Hews tin1 rivi-i Tecb To the south , the glen of Ciieta , whcto thatilvei tumb.es and sings Th it hiitic1 lour- , stone strue tuie , the Hist at Howes fiom the die-la biieigo vv.ij , wctiil and ghostlj under huge s.vca moies , was fotmorlj another Dothcbojs hall Kli h ml Cobdcti ouco owned it and made it his homo 'J lieu thti I iiieorti Inn , with its acics of outbuildings empty and mossgiovvn O- poslto , another silent inn , the Uoso and Ciovvn ' 1 hen , facing westwaiel , a little Nuiman chure h Neai it , thn lulus of a Norman castle Behind these iiilns , the ancient IJomati station of Savatiae , wliete ais lem.uns of baths .inn an aqueduct Ttien , loofed and unioofe-il hovels on either side to tne westward , w heio jou will see , still standing just as Dickens clescilbed a vciitablo Dothe hoj s hall in his "Nicholas Isicklebv. " "a long , cold looking house , ono story liiith , with a few straggling outbuild ings behind , aiid.ibaiu aiiel stable adjoin ing " 'I lie other is Iliworth Seen at a distance it seems a half eioiliied line of lagged giav , cut In another Hue of gray above which is the lofty , elieaiy HawoitH moor There is but a single street , closes sometimes extend for a house length to the light and left The .vaid wide pavements ate series of stone stalls and platfoims Ho neath the lattot aieshadowj shops and liv ing looms All stand open Hut few in h ibitants aio to boeon Up , up up , fet a half mile jou plod , and at 1 ist leieh a tm.v open spice The houses nio sot atound clobe-lv Qu lint shops and ancient inns eiovvei It at all soils of cuiious angles 11ns is the head of the v Illago topogiaphicallj , in habitations ami in aristoenae > Not for its attiactivoness , but because it seems uu outlet to somewbeie , jou puss into u little court behind the Hlaek Hull inn It Is a ma/o of angles and wynds. Suddenly anotliPi open spice conftonts jou Hcroato an old , oblong , two stoneet stone house , with a few j.uds of glass plot at its side , n littio stone chuich , attached to , lather than blended with , a gtim Noi man tower , a gtavcjaid cluttered with crumbling stone , the vvhoi > baiely covei- Ing an acio ol giound These were Hawoithpaiso r.geehurehand church- vaid , the eirthlj r.nd Imal homo of the Hrontcs , and their living eves ever icslecl on Haworth moor , which uses immediatclv above the chmch-jaid liUo a wallof lounUeei stone Como to such as these in the summer time only 'llien Heeej clouels straggle over and between the hills , as if shadowy hosts were maishaliug behind Mm hoi I/on Hcie ami there splatches of color ho against old walls and house ftouts The heather blushes fiom the undulant green of the moors And one can then easily imagine bits of Apulian pastoral sceiioij here in the shepherds and their Hocks , like cameo reliefs on beds of dazzling emeiald , with a peispcctivo of bil- lovvj lines and mlstv clouds , Over hoio in Northamptonshire , Just nt the edge of the guidon shito of U'arv , ick , is ancient mossgiown Click , sleeping under its thatches bcsiilo Watling stieet , most famous of Rom in loads 'llicio are both lest and de-light m old , old Click , rest , because it is ono of those English - villages lages which stands just ns It always stood ; where the 10u of the vvoiknday world's ac tivities never comes , wlieio the oU piush chuuh , the gravoi.ml , the decajeel manor house-s , the huge stouo dovecotes which house 500 families of doves , tlio thatched .m laboieis cottages , the ivied and mossy walls , and the simple village folk , all invite to quite and teposo Not leu miles away jou suddenly como upon the daintiest ami most llower-spinglcd village In Ijiiglaud It is a tiny collection of tlppondeiiiles upon the manor of Ashby St l.edge-is , but theio can noivhcio else bo lotiiid such flovvpi-embovvoicd homes Just at the not them edgoot this , the whole foi m- iug astiikingbick iound to thosieiobioidcij of ono of the Jinest wide , high ovciaich- ings ofani lent ash tiees I line over seen , flist appeals a huge wall , high , thick , ivy- hung and iiinssj Suimounting this is n vvoiidc'ifullj pictuicsquo old gatehouse with two stories of chambers and an attic the voiitablo mooting loom of the couspliatois in the noted Guy Kivvkcs gunpowder plot ot iwr > over a c-apielous aichway , which foi mod the ancient solo cntiaiico to the do main Hehiml this ate other eiiuiabloout- bullellnijs , half a thousuid jeais old nnd in pel feet ni.ue To the light and higher shows a lului , sepiaies Not man tower ami llio mossj loof of the pailsh chuich Behind and above all aio the in.iuj missivecables of this most sploudidlj f.tntastie manor house within the Un'l mil ml il md sillies How gloiious an histcnic lomanco could bo wiought within Ashbv ht hedge-is' glim and ghostly old walls ! In the western nnd vvcstoinmidland shire. of Uiigland aio scoies of am it-ut villages of lesttiilni-ssaud beaut.v , hidden co > fioru the globe trotteis' loii'nottcs in the simnj hol lows of the verdant hills" Old Broadway "Htadwph' it once was , from the she-phc-rds' 'euttib on the mounto I welds clown to the most fiuitful vales of nveshani ' Is a lovely tipo of them all All its houses are pic- tmc'bejuo Indeed , heio is ono of the few ancient stouo liutlt villagc-b of olden Kng- land , left piecisely as its m liters built nail thowav fiom HiXl to fiOdieatsago On every side aio liurh pite'luul , g ibled roofs , with wondciful uoni and iten iluiUs , mullione-il winilowb an I bs leadeel casc-inents e'on- Uliinig the orUi'ul glass , and huge , tall , stone chiiunej st icus-all weathered to mobt Uoatitlful eoloib I.ow stone walls In fiont incloso little old- vvciild gaulens with clipped ntiel faiicifullj shaped jew tiees Its iiunintost of hostel- lies aliDund in bits of dot ill , old oak doms and hinges old glass and c.ibement fasten ings and most cuiious chluinov pieces , plas- tt'i ceilings and pine-led rooms Llveri house Ins 11 Ulieaded multloneil windows with misslvo vvooJ lintels liibido and huge baulksof oik , loUffhh bitiait.cl | and molded over the ingles and litoplaecs In these suu0- old inns and in h ilf the liuiro stone fuimhouses touiidabout , tiadition will tell vou Chailes 1 01 niuabeth passed a night lluw wio of them to do so if they hau the foutirg time and will Kimvit L WAKPVUN W'.1ll ( ) ; ( In rriMiiliiniK. Offeied oy Liggett & Myers Tobicco Co ot St Louis. Mo 'Iho ono guessing newest the number of people who will attend the Woilds fair gets * .VWO the second * 1,1 etc Ten St ir tobacco tags entitle you to guess Ask your dealer for piutlculars oa send for elu ulai _ In Table Hock , Neb the wife of the present ent lepublU-an | > ostmastcr , whoso tcini ha * about expired , has appealed to the adminls- t.t ition to lot the otUco iomain In the family bccauso she Is u stalwart democrat. Her case Is not unlike ono that attracted EOIIIO attention in Entlaud ; iccontly The occu pant of a desirable postmastofiihip there was about to bo retired bccauso of having reached thu ago limit , and his wife applied for ami olnutuca the place ) . RECASTING NEW ENGLAND Mighty Changes Wrought Within the Im | Forty Yean. IS IT DECADENCE OR DEVELOPMENT ? ' . Traii'Torm itlmi In I'npiiliitliiii , I'nlltlrc , In ilu try , IMiirntlciii mill Ili'lliildii Tint mill I'rcvmMit Condllloiin ( 'nmpiirrcl Wind of llio future ? William DcWItt Ilii'lr In Al > rtl forum New ling ) md is belli , ? trnnsformnd In pop ulation , politics , Industry , e-ilucitloii , and religion NInotj-eight per cent of the otlg- Imil population were of English extraction : ind romnliied so dow u to the beginning nf the piesent century Political llfo was Intense , local 1 , ami almost sociillstlc in its minute to- gulatlon of ptivnto nlTnlrs by public author- Itj If n woman was a scold , if a m in was n loafer , thej were lined If a dealer was con victed of "sclllni ! sttoug water nt divers times to sui-h us were elrunlc with it , he knowing . thereof , ' his sttong water was elo- llvpied into the hands of the deacon for the beiiellt ot the poor , and the man who "abused himself shamofullv with ell ink * ' was compelled to stand in n public ; place with a sheet of piper on his bick whereon the word "eliunkaid" was wiltten in gieit lotteis Wltn this seaiehlng sovoiitj in ile iling vv 1th oflcnscs vv ithlu their ow n b ulj theio was combined the most sublime com ugo m opposing Intel lereiico and eucroicli- ment from without Uven in its infaucv , the colonv of Mass uhusetts Haj h id tin ; audacitj to answct the cleniand ofChailesl foi its chin tor bj in iMiu bullets n legal ten der of the value of a fai thing apiece , th it the-io might bo plentv in c ise of need Agilcultuie was the almost unlveisal In- dustii'loni this as a bisls vjeie elcvel- opc-d giaduallj commune and the aits As Colonel T W Illgglnson has s ild "it is not jet llftj veais suite the people In our coutitij villages lived bj fai mine , the men making then own sleds , shingles , ax- lianflles. scvthes brooms , oxbows biead ttoughs and moitais , thn women caidlng , spinning hrtiding , binding and elveing 'J hc-j sat aioiinel gieat Hreplaccs with hang ing ciane llmlogs , and spitstutued In hand 01 bj clockwoiK , thej undo their own til- low candles and used , oven on festal occa sions-voodeii blocks or law potitoes for eindlesticlts , tl.ov ate ftom pewter kept blight bj the wild scouting tush ( equisu- tutu ) . thoj Qoctored their own diseases bj llftj diffoicnt wild herbs , nil gathered neir . home nnd all put up in bigs for the winter ' or hung in dticd bunches , thcv spun by hour glasses , they used cllils or had noon maiks atdllTetont noints on the faimln many cases they did not sit down to regular meals , but each took a bowl of milk and helped himself fiom a kettle ot mashed potatoes or Indian pudding , soip was made at home so weio cheese , peail ash , birch , vinegar , cider , beer , b iskots , stiavv hats ; each faun was a taetoiy of odds md ends , a village stoic In itself , a laboiatory of applied nice hanks ' Education was plain and practical The Mlhpe school gave the iiidimcnts of celuca- tion to all. .rid theaeadcmv and college IHU'd fen piofcssional life the chosen few Eveiy- thing eenteied in lehgion The meeting house was the center of the town , the bible i w.is the st ituto book of the eomtnunitv , the minister was the censor of sodotv , n.embei- ship in the church was the condition of stitTtajTO in the state In visible form for half a century , in its invisible spiut for a centuiy and a half moic , the biblical com monwealth cndtiicd Within the last Imlf- centuiy the change has coma. C'uiiiiilliiu Todav ono qu.utcr of the population is of foieign bitth , another quuter of ibicign puentago , only ono half ( fifty-two pet cent , by the last census ) tu'o natives of native liientage ) The population varies in the dilTeient states Maine still has tlnec- quaiteis native of native paientage ; New llampsluro and Vermont , each tlitee fifths , Connecitcut , one-half ; Massachusetts and Hhodo Island , only tvvo-Hfths One tentn of the total population are Mcncli- Canadians , who aie coming at . the ra to of10,000 a ye ir , with tiaditlons of marvelous piolillckness stimulated by'itoyal cncouiagement as long ago as the davs of l ouis XIV and fostered bv legislative grants to latheis of laipo families dow n' to the ptescnt dav ; fottified against lapid as similation by the tiiplo umor of linguago , customs anet religious taith , and inspited by dreams of a New Trance when Now England shall bo ijo inejto The Intensity of lee .i ! no htie-al life which found expression in tlio town meeting isbolnjrsmotheied in the ward caucus , dlluscd over the state , and absorbed in the nation Selectmen , nldetmcn and tcp- icsentatives of the state legislatuicsaro fie quently chosen without the slight est lofcience to their views on town , city or state affaiis , but solely beeiuso they belong to the national pirt\ which happens to bo in a majotity in the locality Poor land and rich w ater , em- igiation to and competition from the west , rapid icadjustment duo to tirift' legislation , false pi idc and social ambition on the put of the natives , havoeomhined to malto iiiann- factui ing the leading indubtty , and then to turn it over , togethe r with elomestic seivico and manuil labor of all kinds , to foici nets The natives in the towns and cities , as a inlp , aic either living on interest and lent , or aic tradesmen , commercial tiavelers , clerks , bookkeepers , agents , teacheis anil piofcssional men. Education Is ornamental rather than prac- ttiMl. It tclles on classes in phvsical culttuo ami elaiicing for tlio development of phvsical vigor , instoid of on choies and outdoor spoils as foimeily It Ills bovs and gills to get their living in orna mental and commcicial ways It does not impiess the dignity of m tntiiil labor and the identity of the useful and the honorable Manual training is irood as f.ii as it goes ; but it is by no means an eeiuivalent lor the ptac- tlco in actuillv doing things that needed to bo itouo which the boy got on the old-fash ioned fium Heligion has not th.it prisp on the com munity as a whole anil on the concieto icla- tlons of every d ly lifo that it had formeily Instead of llio ono paw ai fill Puiitan chuuh , practically identical with the community which it served and luled , wo have a multi tude of ihal scctb , each intent not so much on building up the community out of itself as on building mi itself out of the community Su ing souls for heaven rather than estab lUhlng the kingdom ot heaven among men is too ftequently the chief concern Since the davs of Joimthm Edwaids , discussions about vlt tuo have taken the place of declai- ations of duty Hisinteiested benev olence has been cultivated moio than effective benellceneo Willingness to be damned for the gloty of ( Joel rather than loadincss to ho criticised and misiindetstood in the seivico of men has been the test of ro- ligluus ehaiactcr hot n Misfortune. The tuming-in upon self which followed the ovc ithiuvv of tno Puiitan theociacy was not altogether a mislortuno This Is always thotesoitof strong spans when the out w aid wet Id goes against them It ! s what the Stoics did when the lopublics of the ohl wet id went down It has deepened Now Eni'land thought and life When the Now Enu'l indei pi apples with the teallties of the outer world in earnest , as in the stmgglo foi indepeii lenco and in the conflict for slavety , tie Is ineslstlble Hut it t ikes a great piovo- cation to chaw him out of his shell At pies- ent ho seems to have nothing pai tlcular on hand Extiemo subjectivity and individual ism c ha rac tellies thoieligious thought and llfo of Now England ted ly By this I mean not mcioly that he does his own thinking on lellglous subjects , whlcli is the very essence of Puritanism and highlv desliablo , but that ho has come to think too much about hirn- sclf , his private piospeets his ihincesof probation hero and hereafter , and doe-s not think enough about those objective social In stitutions and relations on which the salva tion or spliltuiu well-being of society as a whole and of each Individual member hct and now depends 'Iho fotolitnor , on the other hand , brings with him a religion moro compact in organ ization and moro Btionglv Intrenched It authorltv than that which the Purltar. hi ought to these slim es Hut the Uomin Catholio chinch , In sotnu of its branches , is already feeling the Inllucnco of our free thought and ftco insti tutions It is us unfair to siwa of the American Catholio church us a whole today as it is to speak of American Protest autism as a whole. Thcro is a Kouianlst clement lit thullonitvnt'.uhollt' church which Is thti blgotoil. lmjJicabk | > fo of every thing ftoo , ovorvthlnif nrogrosslvo , ovcry thing Amotlcan I ntuut'nlmnst ' mty eve'ry thing human and divine * that does not cmanito from the Vatican And thern Is a Catholic' element in the I turn in Catholic' church which Is as broad and lojonint nnd candid and truth-lov Imj an I patt lotle us anv th it can bo found ! amongPiosbwtotlansor Unlttrlans or AgnostK's I knur ) D nobler ttntam'Mit of the : | xlltloal and Intollectuil attltudo of the true Chi Istlan clnlrch than that in.itlo by Bishop Spildlngnl the laying of the corner stone of t'.o Catholic University : Altltmlo or tlin C.itliollc Church. "The tendenev rtf our ago Is opposed to blgotty , and as wo lese faith in the Justice and oflloaey of petsecutlon wo perceive more cleat ly that true religion can neither bo piopigated nor defended by vto lenco and Intolerance , by appeals to sectaiIan bitterness and natloml hatred The special significance of our American Catholic hlstorv lies In the fact th it our example moves that the churoli can thilvo where It Is neither piotected nor persecuted , but Is slinplv loft to Itself to intnago Its own affairs and to do Its own wotk Such an expeiIntent had never ueen madovvhen wo became an independent people , and its suc cess Is of woilelwlde import , becius" this is the modem tendenev and the position toward the chinch wlih h all the nations will sooner or liter assume , Just ns thov all will be foieed Hnallv to accept popular tulo The pieat undeilylng principle of elomociaoy , that men ate brothers and h ivcequ il rights , and that Co 1 clothes the soul with fioodom , is a ttnth taught bv Chtist , is a ttuth ,110 d limed bv the chutch To be citholic Is to hodi.iwn n it only to thn love of whitevoi ls good and be lutiful but also to the love of vvhatovet Is true , and to do the best wotk the Catholic ehuicli mast lit heiself to a consttntly dunging environment , to the chatacterof eveiy people and the wants of eveiv ago We must iccognl/o th it though the truth of leligion bo uinlnngeiblo the mind of man Is not so and that the point ot MCW vaties fiom people to people and fiom ape to age Science Is the widening thought of man , walking on the hvpothesis of utnvois il Intelligibilitv tovv.u tl univeisil intelligence , ami tdlgion is the soul escaping fiom the labyrinth of m liter to the light and love of the Intlnitc , and on the heights thov meet and ate at peace Lotus , then , teach ourselves to see things as tliov ate , without ptco < .ctipatlon or misgivings , lest what is should ever in ike it impossible fet us to believe and hope in the bettei Hi it is to be Whatever the loss all knowledge is gain 'I ho evils that spting fiom enlight enment of mind will Hnd their lemedv in giettei enlightenment Men haVe ceased to cat o foi the bliss theio liny be in Unormee , and those who ehead knowledge if such theio still be , aio as fai nway fiom the life of this centurv as the do id whose bones ctuiiiDlcel to dust a thousand ycais ago Those who pi ilse the bliss and vvoith of ignoiance aio sophists Stupidity is moio to bo ehcaded than malignity , for ignorance , and not malice , is the most iiultful cause of human miseiy Let knowledge prow , let truth picvail binco God is God , the uni- velse is good , and the moio we know of its laws the pi liner will the light way become" This is a long way in advance of the ideas of the i elation of chuich testate state and of the niiiul of m in to the ttuth which the early Putitans enteitamed , and it would not bo difficult to Hnd Piotestant bodies In New Enj'l md toelav which fall tnr shot t of this high sense cf the siciedncss of things soculai and the divinencss of things human and the eeitain benellceneo of the icsults of sdentille ic search and eiitic il inqultv Weto such Catholicism as this to supeisedo Puiitanlsin in New England the transfounation would not bo in all icspcxts a loss As to population and the power which le sides in the majullty , the piedomln mco of the descend uus of the Ft ouch and the lush who h no .11 lived since ISIOovci the descend ants of the Pilgnms nnd Putitans who came pi ev ions to lihlO is a foicgono conclusion 'I his fact should warn us against all appeals to taco prejudice and icligious fanaticism Not thus can wo avert the iiilluenco ot those who before the yeir 1'JOJ will constitute the majouty of Now England's population AMuit Will l > e thu Outcnnu ) . * Will the native or the foteipn ptcdom- inato ! We must answer In detail The per petuity af American political institutions is wellassuied. That assurance lies not in the exclusive eonttol of native An.eileans , but in the intelligent ami he-it ty ptttidpation of forelgnets in theadminlsttation of local gov ernment Oflicial i expansibility and active .pirticipition in political work is the best school of politics , and our Iiish citizens aio blight and eager leuncn in tint school This activity is not evidence of sinister oc clcsiastic.il schemes , but simply the expres sion of a lacl il instinct long icpiessed The Tiencli have less disposition and capacity lor politic tl life , but they aic eminently peiceablo and law-aiAiHn . Jndustiially , the foreigner will conquer Manual labot tends to v Igor and icpioducuon , easy ways of getting a living tend to do- terioiatlon and steiility Haul work , steady pavieguhu savings and largo families aio giving to the foioigner the industiial fiituto of Now England it is easy to petcieam fiom milk , not so easy to get milk fiom cream You em make good stotekc'cpeis and insurance agents and millineis and typu- wiitcts out of the sons and daughters of the f miner and mechanic You cinnot m.iko goal salesmen and peed faimeis'vvlve's out of the sons and daughtci of mechanics and bookkeepeis False industiial standtuds and social pride aio fast lobbing Now Eng land hoys and girls of their industiial in- heiitanco The Amciican ideal of free secular educa tion by tlio state Is too deeply looted In Now England to be ovcithiown The right of the family and chuich to dotemiino the leligious education of their childicn must bo fiankly admitted Protestants must recogtmo , 10- spect , and perhaps emulate , the genuineness of the Catholic s concern foi the iclipious tiaining of his childicn Notwithst Hiding the obvious haidship of double taxation , the Catholic must rccognl/o and accept the 1m- piacticabilitv of anv form of state aid to ec clesiastical instruction in a community of such a diveislty of filths as Now England Lot the publics and t ho piroehlal school stiug plo for existence froelv and fairly , side by side If thogc-iduatcsot thopatochi il schools piovo cquallv intelligent and moie devout , the Protestant clcigy will have to establish paioclual schools lor their people If the graduates of the public schools piovo to bo equally virtuous and hotter equipped for practical life , Catholic lav men will offer their priests the altcin itlvoof publioschools free or something ceiually valuable if they must pay for them. iic > MH'iiti t Success. The religious methods of bothnatho and foreigner will h.uo to bo modified in older to enduto If the liomanlst element in the Hornm Catholio church piedominatcs and undertakes to make the state subservient to the temporal Intciests of the chuich , then the Uoman hietaicby will fate no bottci than did the Puritan theociacy Fieo discussion in the state and the scientific method in the school aio absolutely fatal to ocelesl istie-al ptetensions If th Catholic clement in the Uoman Catholic cjiuich picdomtnates , nnd that chinch proves-Its power to administer to the spliitual { needs of plain men and women moro helpfully than the aiistocratio and speculative Protestant societies it has a laigo caiccr of ifeotulness Dofoio it and will desetvo the best wishes of all who have at he.ut the wpltare of New England The Piotestant churches must lise above the spit it , if mit the foi m , of see- tai lanism These srets stand for the spec i.il emphasis of partlfliilar aspects of Cluistlan Xalthand Hfo , tlieH h.no their justification In the eiicumstanwi * . which called them into belugas protests jigalnst eiior or witnesses for neglected ti atl , und In their appeals to diffoicnt tcmpeiainents , dillerent clegtccs of mental cultuto and social refinement ' | ho mischief of sectarianism lies not so much in the different aspects of truth and llfo for which they stand as in the lack of lesponsi- hlllty for the wolfaio of society , which In difteicnt degrees , is common to thorn all They seek first to pet adherents and contrl buttons out of the e ommunlty , rather than to put intlueuc-o and Inspiration into It Ibis Instinct of self pieseivation , as ills tinct fiom the impulse to social service , is the inevitable icsult of the feebleness consequent upon the minute ) subdivision of the chuich It Is less manifest In cities , where sop irate chut dies would bo a necessity apatt fiom soctailm divisions In the countty it is tatul to the laigest usefulness A church that is so small that it is compelled to think of itself first , to legate ! other churches as rivals with It for subsistence and to depend on chanty to keep Itself allvo , e-annot bo great in spit it nor iKiwoiful for good. The modem Protestant church , like Us Puritan predecessor , must assume tesponsi- bllity for the well being of the whole com munity lu which it is placed Competition must gUovvuy to co-operation. In country villages the weak ehmvhiM must bo loft to nturvo to dentil by the withdrawal of mU slonary aid from the feeblest In every town whoio thcro nro moro than nre. ncedod or can bo unstained The tt omer of those churches In oich town must bo strongthinod by the absorption of the'vvetkor. bv the lmptiiv-uii"iit of the quality of the mlnlsttv which this consolida tion will niitke possible ) , and by the direction of olTort to the eoneroto problems of the community In which it is placed The church lit oich town must measure Its suc cess by its sorvle-o , by reforms In locil poll- ties , by Improvements In ehirlt > nnd sinlta- lion , by supinrt of libraries and schools , by the sweetening of family llfo and thoioflne- ment of sociil Inteiroutse , by the icspect It inspires for honest toll and the standard of tlglitcousness it milntalns , not merely by the number it draws into its fold and the conttlbutions It sends to the denomination il tieastiry Yet all this must be done , not as the Puritan tiled to do It , by law. under consttalnt through the state , but by love with fieedom thrjugh society In each town the first of the sect th its tlses to ttils conception of Its duty should h ive the tight of way It thereby will piovo its claim to bo the worthy successor of the Pin-Hut s ( I llll r I.MB/ ( Whether the transform-Ulan of new Eng land Is ie'tulodas ; igiinora lens depends upon the point of viewTint llio avoiapo inh ihltant is bettor housed , bettei clothed , better fed , better Infoimod , is of couiso bo- vend dispute That with the development of comini ice theio has been a eoiiespoml'ng ' development nt the commercial vlitues , all gltdlv leeopni/o Mm cinnot live without moid , and the mote bicid hf has the hotter Yet in in cannot live1 by lucid alone With the tnatoilal gain theio his oomo. temporal al ilv at letst. a spliituil loss The New Englatidor feeds less thin formeily upon 'every word tint piocoedoth out of the mouth of God" ills spliituil needs Hnd less complete sitisfaotion toil iv th in fet in- oily 'Iho ettlv Now Englander dwelt in constant communion and intim lie fellow ship w itn God He s uv all things sub specie ) a'temltatis No doubt his iippiehc inlon of splilluil things w.is one shied and nairow and his oxpiession of them etude and intol- etant Hut he did sec spliitual things and made others see anil feel theii icallty His dnilv duties , his household toil , his woik of fai m and stoio and shop weio all pcifoiined under the pi eat Taskinastet s eve Into the humblest home Into the homeliest details , theio came the high sense that the infinite and eternal God was to he gloiillulbv fidelity or dish inoied bv neglect , and thcicby the life of the Now Em-lander was lifted out of the pettiness of his in itoilal and tompoial limitations and set In the huge and noble1 fcanii-of the Divine puipisu , iiid pi in Life to film w is vveiith living , becMiise1 It was lived In fellowship with ( , od Ho beiiove-d and ptactitcd the docttino th.it "imn n chief end is to glotify God and eiijov Him foi over ' The ellioctncss nnd intensitv of this im- medi ite communion with God was facilitated for him by the absence of phvsical science and liistoiic.u ciiticism Thepissige fiom the confines of his little practictl woild to thotluoneof God in tieivcn waseasv because - cause the gieit Intel veiling legions , which to our minds are occupied by philosophy , science , history and ciiticism , piosented to himthetmio transpucncy of almost empty spice That these clouds should ha\c conic betwe < n our eyes and the puiely transi en- dent God ol the Putitans is neither 0111 mis- foitune not our fault It was a nceessiiv coneoiiit int of the development of hum in iiitellijeiue That the ch inge she ild bring with it tcmpoiary loss of icligious foivor ami of theoloju il eeititude w.is alsoinovi table That thejo losses should dampen onthusiism and dimmish intetcst in lilo mi-rht b ivo been anticipited , oven if one litii not seen it vviittin in the desolation and decay that have btiickcn the domestic and soei il life of so manv once hnppv homes and hopeful villages It is futile for us to 1 iment these clouds , is though thov weio a scicen devised hv the evil one to hide God fiom out eves ; it is use less to tiy to find the Puiitan s tianscendent God once mote behind them They aio too Uncle foi unieisonin. ? laith to penctiato Our t ist must be to Hud our God , not behind these clouds on the tluonoof some heaven 10- mote fiom eat thin space and time , but to find Him in that beneficent oidei which science ineieasingly lovouls and thioiigli that be nevolent putposowhich histoiy piopicssHely unfolds As with all sue'don ' access of know ledge , the opening of Now Eng- lind to the influence ot the Ric.it vjoild without has bioupht with it for the time a spuitual fall When , however , the flint of this new Icnovvlcdiro slnll ho lully ssimilated , when the complexity of our now industiial. social and political conditions is fully masteted , wo mav hope to sec lestoied the old Intensity of faith .md enthusiasm of lifo which made gieat and gloiious the souls ot Pilgiim and Puiitan ; yet without that uiitovvnets of mind and limitation of MCW- ivhich rendoted nuny of their acts ignoble and lepulsivo. In the conflict of ideas , in the stiuggles of institutions for existcnee , the fittest will survive If the native Now Englander loses his intense inteeest In locil aflaiis because they aio no longer so simple as thov used to bo , if he shhks hard wink in faun and factoiy for soft places In offices nnd stoics , it ho seeks polish lather than power in education , if ho loses the tiutness of Puiitan moiality without glining the Inspiration of altruistic ethics , if ho w laps his icligious aspnations in the napkin of Individual salvation or hides them within the confines of sectaiian exclusiveness - ness , then the descendants ot the Pinltans and their Institutions with them will polish fiom the land If , how over , ho tikes up the problems of town , city and state , not less but moio eageily beeauso thov aio memtieis of a mighty nation : if ho is willing to do his sluiio of the rough , haul woik , if he edu- cites himself for service i.Uhcr than for bhow , if ho puts the enthusiasm of hum in ity behind his motalitv and sets the ideal of social seivico befoio his leligion then it will matter little whether the lineal descendants of the Puiit.ms constitute a mijotity or a mluoilty of the population 'I he institutions of the Puiitan thus appteheiided , invig- oiatcd and sust lined will survive hv viituo of their intiinslc fitness , and will enduio as a poipotuil bli'ssmg to whatever i.ites of men may hereafter dw ell upon these shot es Unlike Hie Diricii Process ] ST < ) Alkalies OK Other Chcmicnls nre used In tlio propiratlon of W. liAKER & CO.'S peakfastCocoa < nlnnltitrlu pure anil soluble. \\Rtmorc \ \ than three tlmea , the ttrenyth of Coco i lulled Ifewitli btarcli , Arrowroot 01 -.J ' Sugar , and Is fnr inure eco nomical , coittng less than one cent a cti/i. It is delicious , nourishing , and EVSILY BIQESTl'l ) . Sold LyOroietrs OTcrjnlier . W. BAKER & CO. , Dorchester , Mass ( from J7. S , Journal c/'Wici/if ) 1'rof.W.II I'fckCjMlioinakeBaBiicciallyofI Ima H Ithout doubt treated nnd cured more csets than anylivmgriijslclaii ; liUBiirceeglsastonlehin Iil\olicanlofcasei8nf50jcnrs'etnndlntciire'illyliim ; ) HuiHililicliCBa aliiablcnrk onlliisdiscj'eulilclilio f cnild uith a largo bottle rf lila absolute cure , free tn anyeuffticr\\liomiyecndtheirI'.O andi\iirepeail. : dress. VV o uih ic aiiyoiiu u ishln a cure to aililretH. 1'rof W. H. J'LtKL' , Y. D. , 4 Ctdar t , , > cw VorU. ARE TROUBLING YOU W I'll , como mi 1 liivvu the noin nliiDl bf int not ) -1 11 rce of en iru and trim oia.irr , netal witli uptlr if our 'I'KHtbt tlciS Wi'iiCrvoLKSof I'Ail c.l V- , * bh-llicibcillu tlio uuri.l If yoiiil jiio' uuu 1 ifl iJ < wo will leMyuu so uu la Ivia t y ja vr tat to ilo. UCJi.i ) M'ucnci.na or i.u. cii.AsSHs nuvt 1 1 n ui1 I'laln , uoLe , bluoiir wriltuiUnji Max Meyer & Bro. Co Jewelers and Opticians , FOURTH ACE. nil- sot Dit R sM-ktsn inn m HHL > RI ru- i.viION L\UI IN mi CANNON'S Mount , HIE SOLDIFR MCTORIOt'S At rt'R US1NO Then a soldier JOIIANN 1IOH 'b M VI I Full of stiange oathi and beaided like the } \ml , The soldier fierce and bearded Jealous in honour , Midden aiul quick Then befoic cannon is > .ut.u.Ld , in quail el , I ! e wins for heha Seeking ( he bubble icpuiation by strength qi afTed ' Even'in the cannon's nioutli. O/Johann / HolT's famed Malt Exunct. \V. H. Lamb , M.D. , of Phil.ulclphia , says : "I Invo used JOIIANN Iloii's MALT r\IKACT f i the past five v ears m my pi.Kliec1 ami find it to be the bcit Health Restorm ; ; IXvetUire aiui Tome Nutritive known. " l'iiirntaer. < uri , \ \ tit tinil nalii4t $ linpo K ( till Mini illfiiiiiiiliitiiii | fit. 1it Nt upon the Utiiuliir , Mlililiiiiiut luiM' tin * ! ; . ; MII tui c. of" .1OII V.NN III''l''oii tlio m < k Intivl. / booL cntitlcj ' Slnl cspcirc Steven eb < f Man " I cautifull ) illustrated , icnl free n application. EISKER & RflEWDELSOfJ CO. , Solo Agents , New York. Has much to do with the milter of whether you are bccominRly dressed A very few men can wear most any width of collar , the build ot tome absolutely requires that a high collar be worn , while to many a low collar only is suited. You may be one of the latter sort If so we wish to call your attention to some low collars we have just made You will like them They are Cteefi Brand , Jlllampa , Narrow ; 25c. Very Narrow. Coon Brand , Ramonl , Harrow ; 2Oc. I Euclid , Vary Narrow , THD mormncu smnT. . ff npTT ffifW & ffi It Will Fit nnd suit You. ILLlLli , tUUo & tU. EXACT SIZE COMMCILFAtir THE MERCANTILE CIGAR , BETTER THAN EVER1 Mitilo of tJm llnost qunllt of Iluuum Toluitco tliat can bo bought. r < | iml In i \t o rcHpi ct tn tbo tri t lujportitl clgnrs , Mauufacturtd by JT. J { . ItICK MKJECA riLK CIUAK TAC OUV , ht. LouU OF OMAHA , ABSOLUfELY INCANDESCENT ! FIRE PROOF , ELECTRIC LKM fl PERFECT NOT A DARK VENTILATION ! OFFICE IN THE BUILDING KIBflT AND ELEVATOR 08 VAULTS SERVICE , , ' 'o DIRECTORY OF OCCUPANTS : ID BASEMENT icco'o : riDHMTY Tllllpr COMI'ANY. Mort i.'u l.Olllh CM ) MIA ltiVI : , I M V I'l. AND lit ! Mtltlt A QAYLOIU ) . MorlRi.0 Loans , Kuil 1(1.1 ( H mill'lUM'IMI CO 1 s'.ito ' uml InMir moo SI I I'll ! N A e KOVVi ; llulieit Me'l'l ii.hAMX' ) ' e ) t'oul U r e V VI I'ltni.l , , court UolimUu , eUarsanfl \ \ \CKOrt' , siAVIAN & lil.M'DIUI' , Hoin- ' 1 ob icco Inctuii 1 } pu ritcrs aniluiiplleb FIRST FL.OOR : iur : ni"-iNr-s ornc n I1 T KlvKMinUO. I reset ) I'llnter. UKNCKAI. UUN AND TUII T OO. si'i'ini\n : NDTNI 111 i , nun DIM , AMI mi AN vv vnn : VVDUKcovn1 \\v wibniH.N UMON riMiiitAi : : > n ejit I ItANO L ItniA'l S i. CO , Coiiti ic-tors SECOND FLOOR. MAi-SACllUSI.riS MUTUV.I , Ml MAIM MAN A HOIIIIIVS A e t. ( c ) I' II Md'VIAM , Insintutoi I'iro Insuranco. v * ni.durrnit. i , iw enice. MAMIAI PAN 1,11 i : INHUUAM. 1 I e ) . It-AAC1 A DA VIS Livv Oil ! i il A WAe.MII. DH ( Jll VUI.I | { t ) IV\ \ \ I iil : IiiMiriiei | < Uo iLMj ; Ki..vnia ; oi ! i i : i'ii-\iii : ; , NHO md i ejuirAiii.i : THIRD FLOOR. l.CJUl I Y I'OtMCI' . NO W I'XTI'K'K Uiioin fl ) - > MI i IN-l'UANCiOO : l'l | { > \ IDl.N -AVI NJ.s JIl I- .i A.n ' ' ' lilt - . 1C I'A'l l'i\ ; . N.ljU-\MI ( UK AN I.O\N A.Nt ) I'ttUM'C'U M .j- ) s llll ! I'V'AN L W HnillitAI VII T.uvv Ptf , Hit c M It PKVt'KHVlAN Atli ruoy. I Mi : Ull\M Afl'IIAl.T I'AMNU floor'o . h-lA.OI/l ( I HIU CO I eiUIlY t otlir , Koiiin NO T. / FOURTH FLOOR. > \cn ic MuniAi. urr : AND MI1TUAI , MI n INBUBf ' , INM-KANCI : eo. ANt'I ( U Sl'AIM.l I'OV I.NI e tj I'l. " N MUTUAL 1.11 I. l HtAN ] | ( I. COn nitn nun iiii r. ti \ vi rv co CM\II k Tl I'l.i : AM ) IMir.MM I'V'e-'ij ' A M ilOl'KINg i ourt hiono/r ipheir IN I'l UNA I'lUNAI. I'UIII.IbMIMJ ANUI'OIV 'IKAI1 CO. A i . Ml ANOIt , "JlenoT ipheir AI.IA VKlOltl I.IIIIH UNirKMCOM.r.Cll.N ( ( } AND Uni'OUTINOI AUI.N'OV J K. IIAOKKNItnun , Miinufaoturer * ' Agea 4 \ 11 \ c * " * * ' " v * " ' . " J M IIUU.NNMt. Kenlliu AgJliey. FIFTH FLOOR. AHMY S , Iii'AUl\Mi.NT ) : : | SIXTH FLOOR. IIFI : nniTuui . .IOOMI. M 1 9. " . ' ? F.VV. : ! ' ! ' . ° .H.A.IN f'o _ 1 t OMI'UM.NCl KUOM KAVIII ION LOAN d. 1 KIJSI Ill i. iniMDitrr : , An-imcct CKKVV-l.r.VIOK CO , l.uli'luii u MANUrAtTtULKs AM ) UJNiUMnilJ AS- WAi.Ti.it IMMONP. : iiuiier1- SOC1ATIUN. l ) . - . ( JOVKH.NMl.M1 I'lUNI'lSlJ on- ' SEVENTH FLOOR. UOYAI , AKCANUM I.ODOnUOOMd. | A few more elegant office rooms may be had by applying to R , W. Baker , Superintendent , office on counting room floor n , t o t n .1