Capital city courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1885-1893, January 23, 1892, Image 3

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CAPITAL CITY COURIER, SATURDAY JANUARY 2,j, 1892.
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LI
EXPENSIVE LIVING !
! r
No mnllcr what other do or ny, we Mill
give ,utt the
Newest and C UnpS
Bust Grittl us of 011VJLJ
At LOWER PRICES than others.
You can save money by buying your
Bonis and Shoe of
WEBSTER & ROGERS,
1043 O Street.
"The foremost of our periodicals."
OOMMAHDIHO
ZVERY GREAT
CENTRE 07
THOUGHT AHD
ACTION IN
THE WORLD,
AiampUcopjrwIth
will b isnt foi
25centi.
IX KDWIK AUNOLD,
Tick Fouitm I the, most Instruct!,
tha mort tlmnly, thn largest nnd
thn handsomest of tlio mrlffwH.
The Noxt Number Especially Good.
TALES FROM
Town To pics
READ BY ALL MEN AND WOMEN.
I'm III Intuit 11 rot day of ltioeinber, Mnrrti,
lutib iniit Hepteinber.
DELICATE, DAINTY. WITTY,
INTENSE.
r.very rrptitnbln news nnd book stand has It,
Price, single number, no UKNTS. wtt.Ofl
ii:u vkak, piintiigf) i'iti:i:.
TliU brilliant Quarterly reproduces tlio liest
stories, sketches, hurlcHtUcs. ivnemR, witti
cisms etc , front tliu bnck iiunihcrH of tlmt
much tnl bed-about New York Society Journal.
Town Tones, which Is published t t t4p. Sub
scrlptloii price, SI m per year
Too two publications "Town Topics " and
"Tales riiox Town TofiCH" together, at the.
low club-price of $3 00 per year.
Ask your newsdealer for them or address,
TOWN TOP1C8,
St West 83d Street, N. Y. Citj-
Santa Fe Route !
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe R. R
The Popular Route to the Pacific
Coast.
Through Pullman and Tourist
Sleepers
Between Kansas City and SAN DIEGO,
LOS ANGELES, and SAN FRAN-
CISCO. Short Line Rates to
PORTLAND, Oregon.
Double Dally Train Service Between
Kansas City and i PUEBLO, COLORADO
SPRINGS, nnd DENVER. Short
Line to SALT LAKE CITY.
The Direct Texas Route
Solid Trains Between Kansas City and
Galveston. The Short Line Between
Kansas City and Gainesville, Ft.
Worth, Dallas, Austin, Temple,
San Antonio, Houston, and
all Principal Point
in Texas.
TheOnlv Line Running Thiough the
OKLA'UOMA COUNTRY. The
f"mly Direct Line to the Texas
Pan-Handle. For Maps nnd
Time Tables and Informv
tlon Rcgaidlng Rates
and Routes Call on
or Address
E. L. PALMER, Passenger Agent,
411 N.Y. Life Building,
"Prtita Til
lractlto. In
othtr word, wo
will inch yoa
MtKK.tud tun
you In builntii,
klnltldiyoucAn
ripKUrcitlicrlu
tliiMltn. V
cm ami will, If
yotij fai,tt(h
frnwulfkljrhotr
ornrn fYmu Hf.1
(OHIO a day
t tlilart,aitl
nioit yott gt
On. Itoili ic,
II pri In ny
nrl cf Anttrlra,
JOU mil rem
innr it lioiiif.
.(tlfliup nil your
urn, vr ar
lUumrnlt Ulilt,
to Hi work,
Wnt ffr ft
cw ml li hat
boati provtil
ovtr iiihI otr
nmIm, Hint vint
pay I ' for
ffrry workir.
laty to learn.
NoIrMablll
tr rtiiilrtt)t
lirimnibli In
dutirr onlrnve
eiry f r mrt,
large, eiiccf
tuit yon,
fiimUliliir v
rj-lltl(T. TMiU
on of h (rml
(tlilri ftirwanl
la UMful,lnvnt1vprtmt. that fnrlchn allunikfri. J I U
wobatl lh rrralttt opMirtunltjr laborinf popl brvr
Known. Now It lit llmr. i'ay mnlat. lull rarilfttUrt
lrr. Ilnirr urli nt iiiicp. AHimi. 2i:IClK
MTl.NHO.Vti: ('iIIuk AMM.rorilauUtluInf),
JSm 5j&c
I
NIKYDIDNOTHGItiN.
he-IRS TO THRONES WHO NEVER
WIELDED THE SCEPTER.
Ictnttrka'.'lc t':uer Kecullrd tot Coioieo
Hun with Ihn Untimely Heath uf Hit
Hiihe of Clarence , Mlxtnrn of Wur,
Homiuicr, Hrmiitnl iml IHsuster.
It limy be fairly wild of tliu t-ltUxt wn of
tliu Prince of Wnlrs nnd heir presumptive
to the throne of Orcnt Britain that nothing
In life hucntm It tin like tliu leaving of It,
He citinu Into tht' world prematurely. He
wai of weak ht'itlth and lacked moral
stamina. Only the shadow of rojalty pro
tected blm 011 tuoiv than one occasion from
--'
CLAtlKKCK. I'lllNCK CiniltdK.
the IUtll' light of a police court iiuulry.
Addeil to the ti handicaps ho was weighted
down by the title given him, for all the
Dukes of (Jhirence known to KngllHh hln
ttiry have. Hitirered eltlirr through folly or
misfortune.
But for the last few weeks of his exist
ence he baskeil In the minshlueof popular
approval and spoutaneoiiH loyalty. Ills on
giigement to Mary of Teck, a princess nil
tive to British will, endeaied liltn to those
who Home ilay expected to become his xul
Jeets. They (iilt Miieci'lng ut him iih "Col
law anil Cuirn," iilTect Innately dubbed him
"Prince. IMdy," and enthusiastically de
clared that "Albeit Victor wasa good ileal
ofaiuau after all." Death has chiingcil
nil that, however, llanllyhad the breath
left the piKir young fellow' Ixxly when
speculation nnd tumor i-tiovc with Inile
cent haste to tear aside thu veil that ol
Bcure the future. While the bereaved
tualdeti who hopisl to be a bride next
month wept by thecorpseof her betrothed,
her name was ulieady being coupled in the
public prints of Loudon with that of the
new heir presumptive, Prince George, the
second and sole surviving sou of the Pi inte
of Wales, Thetcnsim for this is shown by
the following paragraph, published tint
twelve Iiouih after tliu Duke of OlnreticoV
demise:
O11.I11U '.11, imt, Alexander William (ienrtrc
DulT, wlm was then earl of I'lfe, hut who win
silhseiiieutly ereated dilku of Fife, imurlid
I'riiueHS lmln Vlitoi'la Alexunilrn DaKuuir,
eldest diiiiKhter of the I'rlneu and I'rliHessof
Wales. Of this miirrini;u there w as liorn on
Mny 1, IHlll.u diuntliter, who nan christened
Alexandra Vldoila Alberta IMwIna Uiulsit
Dull. As tlio Hiueesslnn now stands. In tliu
fenl of theileatli of the Prince of Walesimd
Prime lleolge. the limine of Kiil-IiukI would
fall to thu wife of (lie Duke of Kife, and after
her death to l.ail Alexandra Dulf, herdauxli
ter, wlm Is not jet a j ear old. This Hsslblllty
Is not viewed with etiianiinlty by tlio tnuiiiliera
of tliu liohliit), who Isdiuxu that all thu heirs
to thu tlinnio should Ihj of the full blood ro)at.
It is hintisl ery brouilly that a mnrrliiuu Ihj-
tweeii I'tliue detune and Princess Victoria
Mary of Teck will Im arranged.
If Mitch an arrangement Is to bo carried
out it will not lack for precedent. Some
thing over it Uitrtci- of a century ago
Nicolas was heir apparent to the throne
of Russia anil the AleMiniler now ruling
was his younger brother. The two one
afternoon engaged In some rough sort of
HiuitMMueut and Alexander struck Nicolas
a blow, purely by accident, that laid him
on his death In.mI. The carowil. was at
the time lietrotlieil to .Marie, daughter of
Chi 11 Inn, king of Denmark, and the at
tachment of the two was very great. The
Danish princes mourned her lover sincere
ly, and then for reasons of statu became
the wife of thu new heir. Thu result was
hardly to be expected. Alexander HI and
his empress have lived together Inliappl
ness and harmony for more than a (punter
of it century, and last fall the royal couple
celebrated their silver wedding with great
magtiiliceuce.
A tinge of romance Hiirrotuided and Il
lumined the last days of the Duke of Clar
ence, hut In tlmt respect he was by no
means singular. English history teems
with wonderful tales of heirs, apparent or
presumptive, who never placed the crown
upon their heads. Harold was nothing
more than a claimant when he headed the
Saxons and went out to meet that other
claimant, William, iiud to sink beneath the
might of Norman valor. There, too, nru
the Arthurs, almost as unlucky, in a way,
as tlie Clarences. Arthur, duke of Brit
tany, could hardly be termed an English
man, but he was to all intents and pur
po-ies the rightful heir.
His uncle, the doughty Richard of the
Lion Heart, wits minded to go crusading,
nnd before he set out ho named tliu lad,
son of his brother (leoll'ioy, iim his succes
sor. Aunt hi r brother, .lohn, lie placed in
power during his iili-cine in the Holy
IjiikI, .lohn soon seized the crown, gave
out that Richard was dead and made
things unplciiMint for his nephew of Brit-
MUIIIir.lt OK IMIINTK AltTIUMt.
tuny. Rlchaid's return upset thu plot, but
Ills death gave .lohn it new oppoit unity.
He ascended the thione ami waged war ill
the kingdom's Fieueli possessions against
Ait litir, or rather uguliist Aithtir's umbl
tlons advisers. The lad, then but sixteen
ears of age, was captuitsl at Pnltou, nnd
while b lug li.tnsferusl by water from uuu
prison o another was slain by his well in
strut ted custodians.
, Another Aitlinr was the son of Henry
VII, Tliuclrcuinstunces of his brief cateer
itiv rather olwcuie, hut thu conswpieucea
of his early demist wen mighty, lit hl.i
plucu theiu appeared as heir appaicut that
notable personage who was to rule Eng
laud as lleiii) VIII, who was to become
thu hushaud of six wives, the father of
three sou'ivlgiiH the weak Edward,
"Bloody Mary" nnd renowned Ell.abeth
mid the founder of a new religion. Iiud
Aithttr lived but that opens up it Held of
Kculatlon almost Illimitable and nut
within the scope of thlsnitlcle.
Most famous, lunuver, among tUott'
mmww
--- - .; -J f
heirs who never mn.' thaillademofdomln
ion was that m.ignllli cut soldier who llg
tires among the great captalusof the world
as Cdwatd the Black I'll tire. l'oruiuarti'i
of it tent ury he was the iltvad meteor of wm
that scorched and desolated the fair Held"
of Frame and Sxiln. On CrecyVt bloody
plain he llrst itpptoved himself ;i gallant
knight, nnd when victory rvsled with the
English he knelt to receive tho cougrattl
hit Ions i f his father, the vullautitml politic
I'M ward lit There, too, lie assumed tin
motto nnd crest of. lohn of Ltixumburg,
the blind king of Bohemia, who fell In
battle, and from thence date thu three
ostrich feathers uiul the "Ich Dleit" that
distinguish the Princes of Wales,
His warlike career, thus begun at (he
Mgeof sixteen, took on nuw luster ut Pol
tiers, win re King .lohn of France ylulded
himself a prisoner. W his father'n vice
roy he ruled nil the conquered laud be
tween the I. ol.-e and the Pyrenees, and iih
Prince of Attiltalue he kept up the most
gorgeous court In Christendom, A Spanish
campaign, undertaken on Mmlf of Pedro
the Cruel, shattered his health. The bril
llaut warrior, the sagacious leader, the
"mirror of chivalry" lieeume an Invalid,
ninl the last si jeara of his life wuro npenl
in enforced retirement. Ills father sur
vived him hut it brief while and the sou of
the Black Prince succeeded lo power.
Can the general Ions, nf the exiled rUuiirtH
he tailed he Irsupparc nt? That is it mooted
fiufstlou, even to this day, for there now
exists In England a society formed for the
purNise of restoring thu deposed family to
the throne. The doubt goes back even U)
the time of .lames (I, lllssccojul wife was
.Mary Beatrice, princess of Kste. Their
four children died jotiug .lime 10, 11188,
"was Isirn that prince afterward known us
the Pretender." According to isipular
opinion, then Inllniucd against the tuoti
inch, this was a supposititious child pro
cured from some base source and placed In
the position of heir apparent. Twenty
days later William, prince of Orange, un
ified England and drove out .lames. The
suspicion regarding the Pretender and his
branch of the family remained so strong
that when the ciowu was entailed on the
Elect ress Sophia and her descendants In
1701, paillameut dellbeiatuly Ignored the
claims of llfty seven ktsoiis who, had no
tptestlouof legitimacy arisen, were better
entitled to the throne according toall rules
of pteicdeuce.
I.Ike England, France ulso furnishes lint
ublu examples of those "born to thu pur
plu" who iicvcrtulcil. Mystery hasalwajs
surrounded thu case of that unfortunate
...... u. ...... .. .... .... - V ....,,...
youth w hose parents, Louis XVI and .Marie
Antoinette, lost their heads during the
I'lencli levolullon The Dauphin, as he
was called, is supposed to have been pol
wined in .Itme, ITU"i, hut at various times j
people have claimed his name, and others, i
still more itiiditclous, have asserted, even
iucouils of law, that they were his pro
geny
Melancholy Indeed was thu falu of the
two heirs npp u ent of the Bouapattu family.
ThO llrst was Napoleon Joseph, sou of Nil
CONUHATIII.ATINO TIIC 11I.ACK I'lllNCK.
poleon and Maria Louisa of Austria. Af
ter Waterloo and the abdication he waa
taken to Austria anil created duke of
Relclictadt. He tiled of melancholy mid
ennui In IKII, when barely twenty-one
years of age. Thu end of louls Napoleon's
twit is well known. He met it soldier's
death In Kuluhind nnd sleeps beside, his
father at Chiselhttrst.
Thu scandal is still fresh that Hurroundn
thomysteilotm taking off, cither by mil
cide or murder, of Rudolph, heir to the
Austrian ci own, and just now Spain and
Mexkoitre agitated by tliu machinations
of those friendly to the Carllst pretenders,
nnd to the descendants, of that Iturbldo
who was shot after holding court for it
year in the halls of Moute.uma.
So it will be seen that in many of their
nspects the lives of those who Imvu not
reigned arc not without elements of ro
mance, tragedy mid ailvetituiu.
Fitiin C. Dayton.
lllitetney hi Tern.
A recent census of Limn, the capital city
of Peru, disclose the tiiitllug fact that
about one third of thu total population of
inti.iKK) Is unable to read or write. These
(Iguies have ittariucd the Peruvian author
Itles, and the advisability of iutioduciiig it
compulsory education bill, appiopriatiug
mi uiioimous sum of money for public
schools, seinlfree academics, etc., Is being
seriously discussed,
Notables and l.llrratiy-e.
All tlu notables stem to be drifting Into
llteratttie. Ihsiks are now threatened by
l.angtry. I'attl, Mary Anderson Nitvnrro
and Beruharilt. The fashion seems to have
been set by thu self constituted censor of
"society" eligibility. Witrd McAllister.
Two Olils with l.lelj Tongues.
Mis.s Ada M. Crawford, eighteen yeitivt
old, nnd in thu employ of thu E. C. Howe
company, directory publishcts of Phlladcl
phln. Is put up by -
her acipialutauies
us thu cbiimploii
stump Hiker of
tliu w oild When
she llrst tried her
hand at stumping
envelopes for thu
company she did
l.f.oo in an hour,
nnd shu can now
do il.tmti. It Is all
do u u with her
tongue, too, it she
uses no sponge,
and an odd fait
is that when liusi
ness is slack shu
I.S1KI.I.K (lAIIIIIVI.lt.
gets dyspeptic, but the
tuoiv stiimps she Niks the
mole she cats
lllld thu better slit feels,
When this story was published In New
York most of thu joung women in tliu ofll
lesdeelaied the thing could not be done,
but Miss I'.stc lit (iniilliier, of it large busi
ness house in Unlwislty plate, declared
she could beat It. Shu had never run for
an hour at a stretch, but could lick nnd
htlck seventy stamps r minute. "Nuw
Yoik doesn't knock uinV, to Philadelphia
In anything," shu said, "and I will nice',
MissCiawfonl in a match nt stamp lick
lug for any amount at any lime and place."
Shu is now in practice, and so thu world It1
likely to have u stump licking match.
THE SWEET DV AND DY,
lit the hnppy thutiit-eoiulug there'll be nothlnK
to pnwokc,
Ilutwcr)lodythoiiidinllwcarit llithl and eimy
)okei
Thu si ores of qnliu distressing tlilimst Intl pitln
ut every tiny
Will In Hint blissful nfttirwhllu Isi hauMied
faraway,
There'll bono broken cables thou our wishes to
defeat.
And when wo pay our nickel wti shall always
Ket it seat!
Nor shall wu hnvn to wave Isith arms to cnlili
lhtifimuitn'e)e,
llu'll stop for us unstuniiled In thu sweet by
and by.
The felltitt with tho iilxurolte, oh, lie will not
be theie,
Hut In the other plnee.) oil know. Will any.
ImhI) t are
For slut u he's fund of Hiitokhitf 'twill Ik holtvr
far that ho
Htiull tra where he imty mnoko and Hiniiku
through all eternity.
Tliu limn wlm on I ho crowded street kevpt
turning In thu left
It pleases us to sityof hU sweet faro wo'll bo
berertt
And women who with pitritsols itro JnbbliiK itt
oureje,
Tlioy luwer can eomu near us In tha sweet b
and by.
And alio who wears a iiiitiumotli lint while nt
tliu theater,
Oh, then Is when with ghoulish ulco wu'll have
thu lauuli oa liert
For whllo thu one nhu tortured wilt tlio peiulr
gates pass through,
St. Peter, with an awful frown, wilt say to her
"(In lo."
Thu Isirtvi who tell us stories wo hnvu beard
bundled times
Andl(ing haired, entry poets with their soft,
Insipid rlijlms
Aud llkow leu all thu llithcrmun who llo and lit
and ll
They'll uutur moru disturb us hi thu sweet by
iihd by.
Thu biokelt elevator and
turned,
thu brldgu foreer
Thesu uiilKitmes will uowheru lit that
dlseertied.
city b
Hut this will pleasu us more than all tho Jnspor,
gold and pearl
We'll no mure bino tobnttlu with thu awful
sertaut girl.
Thu ko man and tliu coal tuitn-ll will till our
lieat Is with mirth
To know that while they may connive to own
the entile earth
Cannot possess, when litter on their tbnushnll
comu to die,
Tho merest, liny portion of tlio iwout by nnd
by.
Tho man whosa)s, '
I lold )oit so," and forlu-
. ..,v. ...
I Tho summer chump i
I ciioukIi for ouV"
nittuly, Iiki,
who asks us, "l It hnl
Will Isitb liu but led; and
hotter ut, thoj'll
shut out eteiy olio
Wlm whistles "t'oiuindes," "Aunlo Itoonoy,"
Johini). (lei Vourdiuil"
And It Is pleasant Just to think no woman
tlieru shall eomu
Wlio uliltuou eaith In publlo uter lojed with
iheuluggum.
Oil, tliu plaeu will bu delightful, and It's worth
our wlillu to try
To git a lead pipe cinch upon tho sweut by
and by.
-Chicago Trlbuno.
All from Olio ll.
She was it pielt) little thing, and It was
plainly lo Is seen that shu had not been
mairletl long. She tripped Into it . Monroe
Heuue grocery storu and said to the pro
prietor:
"My husband (theie was it great cut
phasls on thu word hushaud) bought it
couple of hams here some time ago,"
"Yes, ma'am," said thegrocur.
"They wutu wry nice; very nlcu Indeed.''
"Yes, nia'atn," ussuuted tho grocer.
"Have you any moru like tlieiuf"
"Yes, nia'uin," said the grocer, pointing
ton row of tenor it do.en hanging huh
pended from tliu ceiling.
"Are you sure that they art from th
ami) plgr"
"Yes, uia'aut," said thu grocer without it
quiver.
"Then jolt may scud me two more nf
them," and she tripped out of thu store its
she had tripped in, and the grocer laughed
a wicked laugh, Brandon Bucksaw.
One ItoHsoii
WHY IIIIIIINb l)llN'r TlIltN UP
AT IIINNCIt.
-.Itttly.
Iluw lii Keep IIo)h on n I'iiiiii.
He told his sou lo milk the cows, feed
the horsc'i, slop the pigs, hunt t lie eggs,
feed the calves, catch thu colt and put him
in thu stable, cut plenty of wood, split
kindlings, stir the milk, put fresh water in
tlio creamery aftur supper, nnd to be siiiu
nnd study his lessons before he went to
lied. Then he hurried off to the club to
taken leading pint in theiicstlou, "How
to keep boys on the farm "Covington
((in.) Euterpiise.
llepariilloii.
Jones I say, colonel, your dog bit my i
child, and you'w got to make reparation.
Colonel Brown-All light, .loues, I'll
make suitable teparatiou. You (sadly) may
have the dog.-Yankee Blade.
Tim Maiden's Cbolie.
"I can ussuiu villi that lam it bnclielor
from choice."
"So I supposed; hut whose cholt ur" - Life.
Jjjifipj) L.
Jffi
as. ti
w" i -
$C?yi si i
Telephone 1 6 Tt ywKSSKMSBMmm riil vrt"TcH
Moving Household Goods and Pianos a Specialty
IN IT ALONE.
Now We Cut Profits in Two.
Having
late lirm of
purehased the interest of Mr. Sanderson in the
Parker & Sanderson, which ended with the old
year, I have decided to offer
SPECIAL
in al
ines of goods" for the next
Ladies will do well to look up our bargains
Street Wear and Party Goods. Remember the old
at the old tand.
BARI
looy
1 1 (Ml v Wi r RSSSrEi
s li IJM tmnJmm
Ji2lll!f o iSPwSSfcb'
1 II r. i HZbT l i-rriHii'
nil V iffiflfflrl a fcr)kWft
A SENSIBLE GIRL.
When he thopped on his knee to tell the old, old story, the young lady reminded
him how much mote comfortable It would ho for him if he look a scat, especially as
tlieru was such a comforliihlu chair so close at hand. That Isn't what toting ladles arc
supposed to say nccoitling to the modern novel, hut It is what every level bended girl
says of our Hue easy chubs ami the more slic knows about them the Mirer she Is that
they tire remarkably well made, wonderfully comfortable ami phenomenally cheap.
Itt all these Important particulars they are matched by our Divans, Tetc-n-Tcs.
Lounges and Rocking Chads, which are
fee menu
A. T. Gruetter & Co.
124 to 134 North 13th.
Opposite Lansing Theatre.
German National Bank,
LINCOLN, NlUi.
O.K. Montgomery, President.
Mcminn II. Hcliiiberg, Vice I'resl.
Joseph ll.ielimur, Casblcr.
O. .1. Wilcox, Asst. Cashier.
Capital
Surplus
$100,000.00
30,000.00
Transacts a General Banking Business
Issues letters oreredll.diawilraftsoii all pnrls
of the worid.lFon Ign collections n specialty
Telephone 225.
OW
"WiigTlTjMM S Wiiief
BARGAINS
Thirty days.
in Fine,
reliable'
PARK EI?,
O STREET.
offered at ridiculously low price. Come nnd
Canon City,
Rock Springs,
Vulcan,
Mendota,
Scranton,
Anthracite.
Vj
,!,
1
M
?vi
I
f
.
OFFICE .A
1001 0 Street. '-d
n
v