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Show 15 it i-z v i rr i 1: s . Omaha will be the terminus of five Hues of railroad from the east. Forget other's faults by remembering jour own. Sitka boa.-ls a Lutheran as well &3 a Greek church. The auti-prohlbitioii'usts of Mas.ucliu-ffcetts Mas.ucliu-ffcetts carried the recent elections. " Miss Brarl Jon's novels have brought her $153,000. They were to bare a bull and bear en-ttertaiuiuent en-ttertaiuiuent at St. Joseph, Mo., lust veek, AWit oiie-half of the Wat choir felng-rs felng-rs of New York city are professional negro micstrels. : Only 143 bayonet wounds were ofll-tralJy ofll-tralJy reported from the field during the first three years of the rebellion. "When the Pacific Railroad and the Suer. Canal are completed, we can steam It around the world in ninety days. There are llfteen thousand printers In this country, of which about hix thousand thous-and belong to tho unions. Dr. Barnes, the solar surgeon, of New York, cauterizes cancers and the like by concentrated sunlight. A little girl in Pittsfield, Mass., recently re-cently asked her mother, "Did Jesus Christ get five thousand dollars a year for preaching?" A printer In Texas has dubWd his infant in-fant son Brevier Fullface Jones. That boy will learn from a long primer, and be a minion of knowledge. Chicago lawyers talk of making a discount on divorce fees where a large number of bills are wanted in one family. TLe Jlissionary society of the Methc-Oiut Methc-Oiut Episcopal Church has appropriated $3,000 for tiie Utah and Idaho mieeion forlSCS. Vrederlck Hudson, late managing editor of the N. Y. Jlrrald at $10,000 a year, began in that office as a messenger messen-ger boy at a salary of $'2 a week. The organic act of Iowa Territory va9 approved July 12th, 15. The population popula-tion was then estimated at 22,000. Now there is about ft million of inhabitants in the State. Count Bismarck has ju9t celebrated his "family day" by a dinner party, to which all the Bismarck were invited. This custom ii Jealously preserved in Pomerania and the Mark. The prairie fires In Kansas are raging with unusual violence this season, ow-ingto ow-ingto the drouth and prevalent high "winds. The flames aweep over the plains and surround the exposed settlements. settle-ments. "What is the reason of a blow leaving a blue mark after It?" asked au inquiring inquir-ing young gentleman. "It la easil v accounted ac-counted for," answered a medical student; stu-dent; foryou know that blew is the per |