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o Published every morning, except Sunday. ‘I'he only Monday morning daily. TERMS BY MATL:— v ar., Month: « 500 | One IHE WEEKLY BEE, published ev ry Wednesday. TERMS POST PATD: One Year... Bix Months, 1.00 | One b CORRESPONDE All Communi oations relating to News and Editorial mat ters should be addressed to the EpiToR o¥ Tue Ber, BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Business Letters and Remittances should be ad dressed to THE OMARA PUBLISHING CoM- PANY, OMAHA. Drafts, Checks and Post office Orders to be made payable to the order of the Company, OMAHA PUBLISHING 0., Prop'rs E.ROSEWATER, Editor. Edwin Davis, M; of Oit; oltatatian T | Ager / John H. Pierce is in Charce of the Mail Cirenation of THE DAILY BEE. Haxmoxp is the medical Vennor of America, Scuoors for the people should be adapted to the needs of the people, NepraskA’s farmers propose to do their own nominating and their own The Omaha Bee 8 £10.00 | Three Months £3.00 | tant enough, L 100 school 00 | Gareeonths.. 23] Besides, 1t ought to have » beating OMAHA HIGH SCHOOL Trne Bee and some ot the Omaha people are coming to understand that Omaha has no high school worthy of the name, She has an expensive building, et preterea nilil! or, at least, next to nothing beyond, Omaha is large enough, and impor- o have a first-class high one that shall be a feeder and a traing school for the teachers of her | lower departments, besides being as | good a substitute as such a_school can be for the college in fitting its students for business and practical life. and an important influence upon the schools of the state, as in some sense the head and centre of our common school system, We ought all of us to be able to look up to it, as not only inan important sense ours, but as something also to be proud of—some thing adding largely to the culture and educational vower of the state, Tt 18 needless enough to say that as it is, we cannot, There are scveral obstacles that must first be removed, before such an end can be attained. First and fore- most, The Omaha Herald mugt either cease to decry the high school, as a part of our school system, or the peo- ple must come to disregard its in- ane and forty-years-behind-the-tines mumblings on the matter. Next, the wealthy and prominent citizens of Omaha must cease sending their children abroad for a high school home school; or else the masses must arouse and take the school bits in as they can—a manifestly better and more effective school than those out- side schools, to which so many Omaha voting. Brieur sparks of hope continue to be emitted ymm Washington by the electric wire. Tue Slocumb law doesn’t interfere with stewed oysters and soft-shell crabs, not even on Sundays. — “Mx name is Norvall! On the Gramyian hills (near Seward) my father fed his flocks.”—E. C. Carns a8 proxy. DENVER is about to be scuttled by the railroad pirates, and the spread of anti-monopoly sentiment is a caution to snakes. IN Nebraska the corporations en- sure to employes who vote against in- stitutions a free billet and the grand bounce. Tug primary is the fountain-head of republican- government. Corrupt the primary, and the first step is taken toward tainting the whole system. “Dip you have money enough to pay your hotel bills or did you leave your baggage at Lake Minnetonka?’ 18 the prevailing question among Oma- ha tourists, Tur eager interest which prospec- tive candidates throughout the state manifest in the crops and price of hogs has of course no connection with the farmers’ vote. Wirn three first-class hotels, an opora house, s new court houso, water- works and sewerage, not to mention a score of business blocks and factor- ios, Omaha's claims for metropolitau pretensions will rest on a solid founda- tion, ——— boys and girls aro now sent, 'he former is the better way. It is better that the children of the THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: ATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1831, the continental army it became the favorite headquarters of Washington. Mr. Field will put up on the site a building ten stories high, to be rented for offices, chiefly, though he pro- poses the three highest stories for a hotel, and is of the opinion that peo- ple will not object to a perch so near the clouds when a steam elevator is put in to take them up and bring them down, OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. The protogation of the British par- linment last week brought to a close one of the most remarkable sessions in English history. After nine months labor the only measures of importance which came to their final passage were m bill. The reion bill may in one sense be and bill and Coer said to have been a condition of the Land bill because Mr. would probably not have succeeded in retaining for it the support of the En- glish and Scotch constituencies if he had not accompanied it by the cre- ation of extraordinary penal machinery for the maintenance of law and order. To be sure, the Coercion bill led to obstruction by Mr. Parnell's fol- lowers, but their obstruction was, Gladstone education, and patronize their own |after all, a trifling misfortune com- pared to what the alienation of the their own teeth, send their children | English and Scotch would have been. to the high school, and so make it— | Everybody admits that nobody but Mr. Gladatone could have carried the Land bill under any circumstance; but even he could not have carried it if no attempt had been made to check the lrish ‘“‘outrages.” But the Coer- wealthy and of the common classes be | sion bill did not check them; in fact, educated together—so far as their educational attainments aro the same it increased the exasperation which ~than that they be trained separ-|led to them; and in the opinion of ately. Than this separate training, there are few agencies more powerful in fos- tering class aversions and hatreds, some of the best judges of Irish affairs was a sorry substitute for the vigor- ous enforcement of the ordinary law. that in nmnf' cases finally grow into | There is no doubt that the Land bill t labor difticul itself, But if the wealthy insist on such separate training, there is nothine loft for the masses to do, ies, if not communism | has been deprived of a good deal of its power as a means of reconciliation by being tacked on the Coercion bill, it to avail | The Irish members have learned the themselves of the provisions of the |meaning of obstruction and will sehool law and system, tax the whole bm,lmelitic to support it, and thus provide a training for their own children that shall be equal to that|" obtained in the aristocratic schools, | the imperial parlisment. Let Omaha obviate any such result, Let her citizens be cqual to the re- sponsibilities, as the commercial gen- probably continue it as a means of agitation until some radical change is made in the relations of Ireland to Already so moderate an Irish malcontent as Sir Charles Gavan Duffy has declared ter of our state and make herself the | that *‘the price of peace in Ircland is educational center, also, so far as our | the concession of not only their own common school system is concerned, She can doit. Wil she improve the| | opportunity and do it?—Hastings Ne- government and their own parhament, but their own military and naval braskan, forces and their own distinguishing Professor Willinms hits the nail on | flag.” the head. As an experienced edu- These are things which probably cater he is thoroughly qualified to ex- [ neither he nor anybody clse will ever press sound views about our public|see; but there will bo a powerful schools, and we fully agree with Irish group in the house of commons him that Omaha to hexself as the owes it | trying for them through the means to metropolis | which they find Englishmen most sus- of Nebraska to clevato the standard | ceptible—disorder in parliament, of her high school. Unless this is done the money expended in muin- Tie general result of the Freuch taining a high school in Omaha at|elections is to strengthen the mod- the public expense cannot be justi- | erate republican party in the cham- fied. The wealthy citizens of Omaha | " as far ag we can observe do not insist | vanced left will have a Their boys and | 8gainst both the morarchists and the radicals, and the lines of division be- on separate training. girls mingle and associate with the The left and ad- majority hor of doputies. THE railroad organs are agonizing |boys ‘and girls of the middle and|tween the two halves of this majority over the tortures inflicted on the farmers by the barb wire fence mon- opoly. As this tender heartedncss does not affect the continuance of stock watering and pooling it is cheap at half the money. —_— Mgr. Arcuisanp FOrBES announces his speedy return to America on a farewell lecture tour. He has a new lecture: ‘“The fighting men of the old world.” If Mr. Forbes delivers it to some of his old audiences he may have some experience with the fight- g men of the New world. TrE river convention, which meets in St. Louis in Octeber, promises to be a notable gathering., At the outset the (Hobe-Democrat urges upon the meeting to listen to no canal or other schemes which are caleulated to divert the attention from the opening of the Missouri and Mississipi from their sources to the gulf of Mexico. It advises the delegates to stick to this one poiut, and to let partics interested in other projects present their own schiemes 1o congress. R — Tue members of the cabmet can not, undor the tenure-of-office act of 1867, be removed, either by Prosident Gartiold or by Prosident Garfield’s covssor, without the consent of the ate, —New York World, No member of President Garfield’s cabinet would tak of the tenure-of -of his presence in wdvanta the cabin was distasteful to the president, and there-is not the least danger that the senate would be called ou to interfers in their bohalf, —— Now that S8t. Leuis and Milwaukee beer are on tap here at five centy a glass, it looks as though the cost of living would bo reduced 50 that peo- plorho haven't felt herctoforo Tike ooling away money on bread and other lnxuries will be enabled by this reduction in one of the staples, to - dulge in such luxuries as coal and crackers after awhile, — Laramie Boomeraug. This 15 all very pleasant, to be sure; but you ought to pattern after Omaha and encourage home industry. Ciicaco is always hospitable to monied men who come there, no mat- ter what their errand may be, The Chicago 7'ribune remarks: = *“The New Yorkers who come to Chicago are warmly welcomed. If they bring money to loan, we know that the gold will be transmitted into a seven-story marble structure; if they come to fore close mortgages, we know that hence. forth they will have an interest in the city’s growth and prosperity; if they come to buy swamp lands in the re- gion of the Culuym ) We see visions of vast manufacturing enterprises whicl will add to the greatness of the me. tropolis of the interio; poorer classes in the graded schools when the high school grade is|Y reached almost . every that can afford it, sends his boys and girls abroad, because the Omaha high | school is lamentably below what such have without the slightest friction. But|during the campaign. distinet than This indicates hat the new chamber will be more become less paront | antagonistic to the senate than the old was. It will be more vehement n itsdetermination to carry such meas- ures as theeducation laws, and perhaps schools are in other cities, both east |the Scrutin'de Liste. Whether it will and west. Just as soon as our high | school can command the talent and | b march under the banner of M. Gam- betta or that of M. Ferry, depends nocessary number ot teachers for the |upon the course of conduct pursued various branches of instruction. that | by the former. If he is ready to take are taught in high schools of estab- | office at the head cf a ministry, he lished reputation, the wealthy people | ¢an be as powerful as ever. But the of Omsha will ceaso to- patronuso tho | dsy is past for him to rule France as a schools abroad. Our high school has for some yoars | Prosident of the chamber, roi faineant from the chair of the His vir- been treated with step-motherly in- | tual defeat at Bolleville, where he was differenice —mainly on the plea that|elected for only one of the two dis- the funds at the Qisposal of the board | tricts, warns him that he is letting of education were insufficient to al-|power slip away from him. low the maintenance of a full faculty of teachers, The fact that the attend- anco at the high school was compara- tively sinall was also pointed to as a reason for limiting the number of teachers and paying very moderate salarios. Tt is self-evideut that the small attendance was the direct con- sequence of this false economy, Whether any improvement can be hoped for this fall is very doubtful, in view of the fact that our public schools depend largely upon the in- Should the present dead-lock in the city con- tinue for any length of time the in- come from licenses will fall short of the estimate, and the school board will be without the necessary means to maintain even the graded sehools, ———— Axorikr historic landmark will soon disappear before the march of im- provement. The oldest building in New York City and most interesting come from fines and licenses, for its historic asaociations is to be | tion of Canovas, throw whi eral triumph. The olections which took place in Spain a week ago Sunday produced the most general voting ever known in Spain. Out of a population of 16,000,000, voters to the number of 1,500,000 were registered. The con- test was between Don Mateo Sagasta, the chief of state, supported by the king, and the reactionary administra- This administration went into power on the 7th of Febru- ary. Sigce then Sagasta has been making preparations for the over- 1 it met last Sunday. The victory of Sagasta is an assured lib- He was supported by the advanced liberal Castellar and the progressive party of the country gen- erally, The socialist world congress will open September 11th in Berne. All the meetings will be public except those of a ‘‘business nature,” this ex- ception including everything of a pulled down this fall to make room | ®VOlutionsry character, so s to keep for a modern ten-story block, out of danger of the law. This is in Oyrun W. Field purchased the old fact but an adjourned meeting of the Washington hotel property, at the corner of the Battery and Broadway, the other day, and will tear it down, The old structure was built in 1742 by a British admiral for a residence, and was in its day the finest house in the country. During the revolution ary period it shellered most of the commanders of the British forces, and Major Andre was u guest under its roof just before he made his fatal Jjourney up the Hudson. After New York was occupied by revolutionary congress lately held in London, and the same persons will be prominent. Consul Potter, of Crefeld, Ger- many, has collected statistics of labor wages in seven localities in Rhenish, Prussia, which would seem to indi- cate that protection to manufactures in that country, has not operated to increase the price of labor. While theoretically a protective tariff ought to.bring the laborers wages above the starvation point, and make trade brisk, practically it has done none of these things, It is not trade and manufactures that are increasing, but Socialism and popular dis content, not werkmen's but emigration. The low wages, price of labor in Germany is positive- ly appalling, The average daily wages of carpenters and joiners, as ascer- tained by Consul Potter are about 60 cents, plasterers 85 cents, locksmiths 60 cents, journcymen tailors 38 cents, and boot and shoe makers 38 cents. The averago wazes of skilled workmen and mechanics ot all kinds for eleven hours' labor is bi» cents. laborers and farm hand Jearn 45 cents a day. Compare these seanty sums with the wages carned in the same oc cupations in the United States. As determined by the compilers of the forthcoming reports of the census of 1880, the a chanics here is 82 18 per day of ten hours, and of common laborers 81 21 for the same number of hours This is the average of 20 principal cities, Skilled labor is paid four times as much here as in Germany, therefore. From the tables of market prices of flour, butter, cggs, potatoes, beef, pork, and milk which Consul Potter has prepared, the cost of living in the German cities where he gleaned his facts would seem to be not much less than in the United States. This con- dition of affairs shows no signs of abatement. Wages sensibly di- minished last year, and no bet- ter times secem to be in store for the German workman. What wonder that the hopelessness of good times to come at home is sending thousands of families to this country, The cause of this commercial and labor depression is easily found. Onerous taxation, military require- ments and the policy of strengthening the whole of the empire at the ex- pense of its parts are weakening the resources of Germany. Until these are remedied no cure can be effected for the malady under which the Ger- man people are suffering. Common ce pay of skilled me- The report is cabled from Europe that Henry M. Stanley, the intrepid African explorer, lies at the point of death at the headwaters of the Congo. Stanley has easily placed himself at the head of African explorers. His stone was a splendid achievement, but predecessors had declared impossible. He crossed the continent by descend- ing the Congo; he thoroughly sur- veyed Victoria Lake and near- ly completed a survey of Lake Tanganyika. He ascertained that the river Shirneeyu is the larg- est affluent of Victoria Lake, and hence the true_beginning of the Nile, and established the fact that the Lualaba and Congo rivers are one, The young newspaper reporter pre- maturely turned inte a gray haired man by care and anxiety, has accom- plished more than any other explorer and left little to be done by his suc- cessors, His fame can ever be eclipsed, and his exploits never equalled. The harvest prospects throughout Southern Russia are so brilliant that if they should be realized the farmers think they will be able to dispense with any harvest during the next four years. The unprecedented abundance will be due to the abnormal quantity of rain which fell during the last two months, nor has it entirely ceased yet, 80 that in some places people begin to fear that they may have too much of it. In the governments of Kharkoft and Kherson the corn beetle has ap- peared, and in such numbers in the former that the imperial government 18 said to intend lending 100,000 rou- bles to the Zemstvo, or provincial land minating that insect. The Waostliche Post (German) secs in the Russian Judenhetze a return to the darkest of the middle ages. Of the same anachronism in Germany it says: “‘And in this respect the Prussians are justifying the name Freiligrath once bestowed on them, ‘West Kal- mucks,” They are trying to outdo the genuine Kalmucks.” The place of banishment for Mid- hat Pasha is not the same as that to which the other Turkish prisoners have been cxiled, It it is reported that he will be sont to the island of Rhodes. Specic payment is being resumed in Ttaly by degrees. ‘All the govern- ment employes wepo recently paid 3 per cent of their salaries in silver money of two-frane, one-franc and half-franc pieces, coined in home dur- ing the present year, The establishment of a line of steamers between the port of New York and Bordeaux is an additional evidenee of the growth of our foreign trade. The vessels of the new line are appropriately named after the fine wines of the Bordeaux district. Wine will no doubt make the bulk of their outward cargoes, and grain and pro- | visions will be their return freight. | This, if we are not mistaken, is the first effort to run a regular steam line from Bordeaux to an American first expedition in search of Living-|the United Stat assembly, towards the cost of extor- | Omaha and Sjonx City. By some means, and we have a faint idea what that means 18, Omaha and her business men have at last come to _their senses, and really ad- mit that there is such a place as Northeast Nebraska, and that the trade of this great section is worth something to the metropolis of our state. Heretofore this whole country was supposed to be tributary to Omaha, and that little or nothing need be done to hold it. The N. W. road was built on subsidy money be- cause the people called loudly for an outlet for their fast increasing pro- ducts; this road was built also, to hold the right of way, if Omaha should ever want to make an effort to bring this country tributary to them, after the state land grant was e hausted, the building of the ros further was so dilatory, and the trains run at leisure, freight exorbitant, the people being at the mercy of the Omaha capitalists. Much grumbling was done at the way things were managed, but little interest was seem- ingly taken by Omaha whether they had this trade or not. Sioux Citv saw the opportunity and immediately took advantage of it. The first move was to buy up the right of way of our one horse railway to strike t{w trade south of it, and immediately inaugurated improve- ments that are making a net work of railroads all through northeast Ne- braska that makes that city the gate- way for our products. The great de- velopmenta this section has made in the past two years, has proven that it was a wise stroke, and that Sioux City has taken from Omaha's grasp that which now willrequire both time and money to regain. Communities are similar to individ- uals, they will sell their produce and buy their goods where they can do so to the best advantage. As Nebraskans we wish to see our cwn metropolis have all the benefits of our commerce, but when their best business men can not sce the benefits of our trade until a rival has develop- ed the resources, then awake all at once and see where that rival has taken advantage of their tardiness, we can but look upon the transaction as a business one. But we are glad that Omaha has at last waken up and four.d out that there is a country that naturally is tributary to it, and’ lying 80 close to its doors, yet comparative- ly a stranger to it. Perhapsthey will make some extertion to still retain the handling of the products of this vast and wealthy portion of our state. We will see. MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC, Mr, Maguire has again assumed the direction of Baldwin’s Theatre, in San eistinger will shortly return to and will reapperin this city at the Thalia Theatre, Sarah Bernhardt will sive thirty-five i in his second great journey he accom- performances in all the French provinces, plished results which every one of his | She begins a tour of Europe on the 15th of October. Agnes Booth, Eben Plympton, and Dominick Murray will appear in’ Murs, Burnett's forthcoming play at the Madi son Square Theatre, Maurice Dengremont, the boy violinist, is now in Paris, but will soon return to New York and give his first concert at Steinway Hall, October The friends of Offenbach have placed a bust to him in the garden of the Pavillion Henry 1V, at St. Germain, in which hotel he occupied rooms while' composing his latest works. Mr. Adolph Fisher, violinist, will not return to New York before December, e has engaged to play in Paris at the Pas- deloups concerts and in Leipsic at the Gewandhaus concerts in November. Louise Pomeroy has been acting in “Cleopatra” and "“Led Astray” in Mel- bourne, following Miss Eytinge's example, She has also essayed ‘‘Nancy Sykes, but with indifferent success, as is reported. The Duke of Edinburgh with his fiddle, assisted by Mr. Arthur Sullivan and Mr. Frederick Clay, made some music recently at St. Petersburg for the czar and czarina, who forgot for the moment that they were prisoners of state, Rossi will sail for America on the 17th of September. He will be accompanied by Alessandro Salvini, the brother cf the great Italian tragedian, who, it is said, intends to study the KEnglish language with a view to acting in it. Miss Ciara Louise Kellogg will sing in public for the first time since her return at the Worcester (Mass.) Festival Sept. 29, Mr. J. P, Pond will be her manager, and already states that applications for Miss Kellogg's professional services are so numerous that they cannot be filled during the coming season. Mr, Rafael Josefly will leave New Sept 28 to begin his series of concer San Francisco Oct. 10, Mr. Joseffy will I e assisted by a full orchestra, and will, in idition to his m form pin’s E ming Liszt's “Hunt rian Fantaisie, ‘de Balello,” by ouvenir d’Ameri- Emma Abbott's stage kisses are presum- ably of a kind which the wsthetic Oscar Wilde designates unkissed. And yes nma is not an msthetic. To see her reach down from the balcony i ot of Gounods *“Roy L Bill Castlo by the nape of the ny abd take him out’ of the wet is onough to digpel the snspicion that Em Abbott drinks Florida water and cats canary birds, The English educational department is officially examining industrial schools on the continent, and will prepare an elaborate repert on the subject. The Elmira board of education is eon- i on to establish school muection with each of s of the city. The Louisiana state university at Baton Reuge is offering special techanical in struction to youny men preparing for the life of a planter or p untation mechanic, or Spicer, of the soldiers' orphans' tute of Philadelphia, wishes to try the experiment of military drill on th -pulpi1< of public schools, He*hopes to introduce it in the grammar schools of North Phila- delphia next winter, The Keokuk Library association offers a vrize of $20 to the pupil of the public schools who will furnish the best report upon the local botany of Keokuk and vicinity, and a similar prize for the best report upon the local geology and fossil paleontology of Keokuk, The introduction of the new branch nical engine -at Michivan uni- CSSATY @ Te-Arrange- ment of the engineering department. The increase in the teaching force and facilities for instruction will enable the university to offer several new courses of instruction. Mr. Vassar, the retired brewer, who founded Vassar College, appears to hive had some quoer ideas, He wakes it a con- dition of his bequests for establishing rnu- fessorships that they shall never be held by women. Thisis certamly a very pe- culiar doctrine for a college intended for women, and whose most distinguished pro- fessors have been women, The experiment in tesching industrial and decorative art in the Philadelphia port. public schools is reported to be & thorough- EDUCATIONAL NOTES. |ladics there say th ly successful one. Metal work, painting, wood-carving, hammered brass decorations, needlework, etc., have been taught in con- nections with the regular work of the schools, and the pupils have shown inter. est, perseverance and aptitnde, During the next term in the Cincinnati public echools techinical grammar will be abolished from all the grades up to_fourt} reader, and elementary l-ssons in Englich for home and school use will be substituted, Superintenc Yeaslee that he be lieves the time which has been devoted to r{rmmnuv in the first five yeare of school has been practically wasted. One hour a week isto be given to literature in the schools, and a~ system of letter-writing will be introduced in the twohigher grades of the itermediate department atthew Arnold says that_in the r of middle class eduacation Ireland ingland are about on a_par, and that the middle class in England and Treland is the worst schooled middle class in wes tern Europe. The secondary schools of vel v and disgusting,” badly mana; nd insufficiently provided. Nor ny general organization of exist- ing educational resources scattered over the country as is the case in Scotland, Everywhere, Mr, Arnold says, the boys are “addled and answered by accident. The new _course of architecture in the Columbia College School of Mines will be opened to students on October 3, the ex- amination to be held September 30, The courses for the third and fourth years have not yet been definitely arranged. The School of Mines from and after the begin- nine of 1882 will examine candidates on the following additional requirements: 1. The general principles of lh'n;(]i»l’: gram- mar, and on the elements of composition and’ rhetoric, equivalent to the amount contained in Quackenbos’' Treatise. 2. History, equivalent to Freeman's History of England and Patten’s History of the United States. 3. Phpsical geography, equivalent to (iuyot's Treatise. 4. Free hand drawing, equivalent to amount now required in the first year. 5. An increase in the amount of algebra, o as to include ten chapters ot Peck's Manual instead of five. 6. An increase iu the amount of ge- ometry, 8o as to include six books of Le- gendre instead of five. From and after the beginning of the year 1883, candidates for admission to the first class will, in addition to the requirements above speci fied, be examined on: 7. Physics, equ lent to Ganot's smaller treatise. 8. On the general principles of French grammar, including an ability to read Montmahon's Cours d’Historie Naturelle or its equiva- lent. 8. On the general principles of the German grammar. read Hans Andersen’s Maarchen or its equivalent, HONEY FOR 1HE LADIES, Orange color is revived. Plump gurls are again in fashion, Crinoline is surely gaining ground. mooth felt bonnets will be worn again iosling” green is a new shade of that color, . Auburn haired girls have come into fash- ion again, 2 Dark bronze green toilets are exceeding- 1y fashionable, Sright oriental striped surah is much used for trimming. Vanderbilt in his new house has silver- plated bath tubs. A salad of soft shell crabs and cucum- Dbers is the latest, Grecian bordered handkerchiefs in colors Indian red and dark olive green are sh. of A lady of South Bend, Ind., represents the Circassian girlin circus side show, An- other delusion hi.-pol]ud. Short transparent viels are worn which just reach the nose when adjusted. They are embroidered with beads of steel, gold or jet. A Marshalltown belle, observing Fore- Imuull'n beauty, said: “If I ain’t better ooking than that painted-up concern, 1'll kick myself all over the park.” Almond color and s-al brown will be a very popular combination in handsome dinner dresses of brocade, satin sublime or French cashmere, trimmed with plush or velvet. “You're a dear girl,” he sighed, after paying for two dishes of ice cream and three-fourths of a pie for her, and she thought him just too_awfully swect and affectionate.—Somerville Journal. Turbans are to be worn, and the new autumn shapes are very graceful and be- comine. The most stylish models are those made of black velvet having the crowns entirely covered with grebe feathers or ravens' bhreast, An atrocious looking scoop bonnet has appeared which is called **ja Republique.” A formidable looking gilt sabre adorns one side of the crown, nmrtlw head of a stern- visaged eagle peers from amid a cloud of lack lace on the other. While owa western tour a Chicago girl zave an Indian maidena pair of her red tuue. and was astonished when the dusky damsel emerged from the lodge an hour later wearing one of the cardinal casings a8 a skirt: baving cut the toot off of it for that purpo: Black gros grain silks begin to appear once again, cowbined with black watered silk or moire and satin striped fabrics, They have, however, never gone out of with certain class of the most onable ladics, who prefer quiet colors and plain, elegant toilets, mps of olid silk closely resembling the rich emwbroidery will be” among the ant of falldress trimings, With avy cords and elabrate v capecial purposes, ey the collar, cuff, plastron, rever or panel. Crockhet and wilk buttone will e greatly in us A the early fall is made ¢ straw, lined with bottle. The trimming s of two pheasant’s wingzs posed on f the On the left il ed toses veil d 1 strings of wson, cream color and d Mi Louis, i at the 5 Sulphur Springs, and the ) y dou't think she is so whilly Beautiful. This will be sad Mr, Ehenezer Amweg, the awa tive tenor, who is j skinning around St. Louis in a bro un trying to find out how much damages he ean lect fo ig licked by a pretty girl | brother and suitor There is a dearth in the fomi 1 A paper of that ] vl funny girls to make us siile all over, and lean and fragile ones to hang upon our arms, and petite blonde like to show themsel ves on sunny duys, | and stately brunettes, so beautiful io the | twilight. “We have wineral enough, and vleniy of coal and oxide of iron. The only ‘lack of resources are those potent civilizers of their pioneer brothers—the girls. me of our disconsolate maidens to-day way wish they had lived in Sparta where the time of marrince was fixed by law. If 4 man did not marry when he was of full age he was liable to prosecution, and so, too, ifhe v 1 above his socia | grade. Three children entitled a father to great immunities and the man who had four was exempt from taxes. Maidens were married without portiuns because neither want should hindera man nor es induce him to marry contrary to his in- clinations, Too Fastidious | Some would-be Byrons look on with dis- gust At the rhymes of Ecleetrie Oil *‘poet;” | But we have the best article known to the world And intend that all personsshall know it It cures goughs, colds,asthwa and e t h Brouchitis and complaints of that kind: 1t does not cost much, though rheumatics | it cures *Tis best Oil in the world you can find 2, 1w ncluding an_ability to | P CHEAP LAND FORSALE. 1,000,000 Acres =——O0F THE— FINEST LAND — N — EASTERN NEBRASKA SELECTED IN AN EARLY DAv—~oT Rat Roap LAND, BUT LAND OWNED BY Now RESIDENTS WHC ARR TIRED PAYING TAXES AND ARE OFFERING THEIR LANDS AT THR LOW PRICE OF $6, $8, AND $10 rkn AORR ON LONG TINE AND EASY TERMS, WE ALSO OFFER FOR SALE IMPROVED FARMS —T N Douglas, Sarpy and Washington COUNTIERS —_——— ALSO, AN IMMENSE LIST OF OmahaCityReal Estate Including Elegant Residences, Busines and Residence Lots, Cheap Houses and Lote, and a large number of Lot in most of the Additions of Omaha, Also, Small Tracts of 5, 10 and 20 acrce in and near the city. We have good oppor tunities for making Loans, and in all case personally examine titles and take every precaution to insure safety of money so invested. Be ow wa offer & smal list of SPEoraL BARGAINS, BOGGS & HILL, Real Estate Brokers, 1408 North Side of Farnham Street, Opp. Grand Central Hotel, OMAHA, NEB., A beautiful residence lot California between 22nd and BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE Yem, nico howse and lot on dth and Webster streets, with barn, coal houso, well cistern, shade and fruit trees, everything complcte. A desirable picce of property, figures low. GGS & HILL, FOR SALE &ims e e FOR SALE :Lw;&;z;fi::g;fi:‘:“ GGS L, FOR SALE Xilui oottt ots only $1600, BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE lavizizomsini o FOR SAL 23d streets, $1600, BOGGS & HILL, FOR SALE Sormer ot o cholee lota In Shinn's Addition, request to at once submit best cosh offer. BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE &5y tino: BoGls & HILL, RESIDENCE—Not in the market Ower will sell for £6,500. FOR SALE & ol ots Spiowe 34 sa dition $150 ach. BOGGS & HILL FOR SALE Ayery fne rusidence lot, to some party desiring to bulid a fine house, $2,300. BOGGS & HILL, of St. Mary's avenue, $460 to These lota are near business, surrounded by fine improve ments and are 40 per cent cheaper than any othe lots in the market. Save money by buying thes FOR SALE 0ot mitablc for ine rest denice, on Park-Wild avenue 3 biocks 8. E. of depot, all'covered with fine larg. trees. Price extremely low, $600 to §700, BOGGS & HILL. cheap lots A good an acsirable res A FIN BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE iignsiiny et lois. BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE i, i BOGGS & HILL, FOR SALE Sohsomsngies,, semer LOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE 98 lots on 20th, 27th, 28th, 2th and 30th between Farnhiam, Douglas, and the propos ension of Dodye strcet, range from §200 to $400, Im- haxe concluded to give men of small means, oilc 1ore chice to secure & home and will build housss on these lots on small payinents, and will well lots on monthly payments, BOGGS & HILL. Elid 160 acres, 9 miles from Hlfl SALE about 30 ncres very ch valley, with ruuning water; balance geatly rol piTinie, ouly 8 miles taom railaoad, §10 400 acres in one tract twelv per acie. BOGGS & HILL. tivated, Living Spring of water, 4o leyw. ‘The land i all first-class rich $10 per acre BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE 7:0ucresin onebody, 7 mile west of Fremont, all level | land, pioducing Keavy growth of 3, in high valley, rich soiland” § mics from railroad an | side track, in good settiement and no botter lan | can be found. BOGGS & HILL, FOR SAL A highly improved farm of 240 acres, 8 miles from city, | Fine "improvements on this land, owner not s practieal farmer, determined to sell. A good Opening for some man of means. LOGGS & HILL, FOR SALE 50 scresof land near ati- land Station, 8,600 near Elk. lior, 35 to §10; 9,000 acres in north part of coun- ¥, ¥ to §10, 3,000 ac 08 miles from Flor: ¢nce, 86 to §10; 5,000 acres west of the Elkhorn, #4 10 §10; 10,000 acres scattered turough the coun. ty, #6 to §10, The above lands lie near and adjoin nearly the county, and cai d payment, with the 4.and 6 vear's time. B¢ FOR SALE Seers fime resiaences prop erties never befere offered and not known in the market as Leing for sale, will only be made known ta purchasers BUGGS & HILL, IMPROVED FARMS ;" improve farms around Omaha, and in all parts of Douglas, Sarpy and Washington countics. Also farus in Tows. For description and prices call on us BOGGS & HILL. JQ Pusiness Lota forSale on Farnam and Doisg- lus strects, from $5,000 to $8,600, | BOGGS & HILL, EFOR SALE &'t 'is, st vest advanced of 2 000 each. BOGGS & HILL [FOR SALE jiisucin totegress o 2 business lots south side BOGGS & HILL. | FOR SALE it and 15th, #,600 cach. BOGGS & HILL. | 1600cres, ocy ered with young FOR SALE i s oy rounded by improved rms, ouly 7 miles from cit. . Cheapest land obaud. | BOGGS & XILL e busines. 1 $