Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 11, 1882, Page 7

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‘ |} 19 . s i 18 [ | ! » o ’ 1IE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDA V. APRIL 11 188.. T G & C. RNIEW- DRY GOODS STORE 1307 Farnam Street, BETWEEN 13th and 14th STREETS DRESS GOODIDS Black and Colored Silks Nuns' Veiling, Brocades. 51 W IEIELIT E GOOIDS. Allthe New Novelties in Ecrnand Pearl Shades, EHEOSIE IR X . A Large Assortment of Llegant Styles. HANKERCHIEFS AND LACE NOVELTIES WORTHY YOUR ATTENTION, EFANS, “T00 UTTERLY UTTER” 4 Wo want you to call and Examine Goods and Prices. GARRABRANT & COLE, 130’{ Zrfiv‘arr*»r_am 8t u “FUNONTHE BRISTOL” AdmittanceFree $1.00 1.00. 1.00 1.00. 1.00. 1.00. 12 yds. Lensdale Muslin - - 12 yds. Fruit of Loom Muslin - - 16 yds. Fine Brown Muslin - - - 21 yds. Prints - - - - 20 yds. Dress Goods - - - 14 yds. Ginghams - - S - 20 yds. Crash Toweling - 3 - - 1,00 8 yds. Lonsdale Cambric - - - 1.00. Renfrew Dress Ginghams - - - 10. 8-4 Pepperal Sheeting Blea ched - - - 2 9-5 Popperal Sheeting Bleached. - - - 2T 10-4 Pepperal Sheeting Bleached - - - 30 L. B. WILLIAMS & SONS. 7 Having Tmnorted the above from Spain andfrom fiist Hands, we are enabled to make ths above low prices. WE LEAD IN LOW PRICES. Tokeep these Geods out of tha hands of our compstitors, we will not sell more than the quantity named in any one bill. OUR I0c'RIBBON DEPARTMENT Is far ahead of anything yet offered in this city. “OUR EASTERN BUYER.” Is Sending us Lots of Bargsins. We shall open in a few days a regular " 10c. Department. That will aston’sh you when you see it. See the Line of Qonts' 26¢ Fancy half Hose, L. B. WILLIAMS & SONS, 1422 and 1424 Dodge Street. EpsoLM & ERIcESON WHOLESALE AND RETAIL JOBBERS OF WATCHES, GLOCKS, JEWELERS' 001§ AND WATERIALS| SMITH AMERICAN ORGAN CO.’S ORCANS. Spectacles of the Celebrated STAR TINTED MAKE arejsold ex clusively by us, DIAMONDS IN LARGE VARIETY. u line of Bheet Music, Eastera Prices Duplicated SEND FOR OCIRCULAR. EDHOLM & ERICKSON, WHOLESALE JEWELERS, Opp. the Post [Office OMAHA, - . - NEB SCENES IN SAVANNAH. A Typical Southern City— The Black Pall of Misery and Burglary. The Business Season Dismal Fore= bodings Survivors of the Rebellion, Correspondence of The Boe. Navassam, Ga, April 2.—Savan- nab from which | out doubt one of the prettiest cities in the extreme South and here in the homes of many I write is with- outhern gentlemen of means and plantation owners, who live in beautiful residences. The numerous city parks—there being one at the square— distingui nd intersection of overy Savannah asacity of ease, home comfort, and porhaps T may say idleness, A 1 deed who cannot afford is poor in- park at his Some of the streets have double rows of trees in the middle and all of the streets are composed of deep eand. The people hereare cither very rich or very poor as a general rule, and we fly from the one extreme to the other when we walk through the lanes and back streets and see the hordes of negroes who seem to have no visiblemeans of support. The city is not as large as Owmaha by ten thou- sand yet has seventy policemen whose chief occupation is arresting negro housebreakers, As an evidence of the extremities to which the courts are resorting to in order to check robbery, a negro was recently sentenced to the penitentiary twenty years for stealing $120, front door, During the winter Savan- nah does an extensive business shipping cotton and receiving guano for the use of cotton-growers during the next season. These branches of business over the town — I might say the whole south—relapses into what is called the dull season— the summer season—and business, shipping, ete., is only resumed in the fall, Many large houses cischarge their clerks after April 1st and hire them again about September 1st. All who can afford it go north to ‘‘sum. mer,” New York, Penusylvania and Mussachusetts being the favorite sum- mering places. The poor among the whites stay at home and die of yellow fever or malarial fever, and the ne- groes stay to eat watermelons and have a good time, Jacksonville, some 200 miles fur- thersouth, has had a very large num- ber of northern visitors during the winter just closed, but they have nearly all left for the north by this time, as the hot weather began to be felt early in March. A DISMAL FOREBODING, The winter having been so very warm and the summer having set in 80 early, it is the opinion of your correspondent that there will be a great deal of malarial fever in the ex- treme south this summer—not to mention any fever worse than that. The great amount of extra sloughs and ponds left by the Mississippi over- flow will not make things any more hopeful in Tennessee, Arkansas, Mis- sissippi and Louisiana, and while it is hoped that the dreaded yellow fever may not visit the south, it will cer- tainly be remarkable if it does not. THE SOUTHERN ARMY. One of the most noticeable features of the southern cities which 1 have visited (they irclude Mobile, Augusta, Macon, Atlanta and Chattanooga) i the enthusiasm manitested for itary organizations. These militia companies or ‘‘state guards” are “ready” at all times, and a member of one of the Bavannah companies told me that the company captain was the old captain that led the said com- pany through the rebellion, It appears that many of the militia com- panies in the eouth are these same old squads reinforced by new material. WHAT TO DO AND HOW TO GO, Pleasure travel in the south is over for this season, but next December should any of Tue Brk readers wish to see the south, I can assure them that the visit will not be profitless, and on leaving Omaha by the Wabash route and stopping a day at St. Louis, they can take the Cairv Short Line to New Orleans and then follow around the gulf via the Louisville & Nash ville railroad, vlsiting Mobile and Montgomery on the way. Should they prefer to leave out New Orleans the most direct and hest equipped route is the Cincinnati Southern to Savannah and the Waycross Short Line from there to Jacksonville. The ho- tel cherges are reasonably high, but not extortionate. J. F. M. —_— BEAUTY UNADORNED, How an Artlst Looked ' pon His Idea! in the Form of One of Louisville's Loveliest Women, Louisville Courier dournal. Beauty unadorned has ever been held as the supremest idea of the beautiful, particularly when it related to the human form. Modern envel- oping is very far away from it. The Greeks, in their flowing garments, came ncarer to the idealization, the loose, clinging robes defining and re- fining the figure. This style of dress heightened, if anything, the interest always attached to the handsome form of & woman, The angularities of the limbs were rounded and chastened, as viewed with the soft fabric tenderly twining itself about them. The step was free and graceful, the carriage re- al, the ensemble purely poetical. his is well enough iu its way, but it took a painter, a modern painter— aye, a Louisville painter to throw garb of Greek and all other garbs to the wind, and feast his eyes upon as fair asight asall the gods of high Olympus ever looked upon The gentleman in question is still a wielder of the ‘‘mahlstick” in this city. He is a thorough artist, a lover of the good and the beautiful, and one who never dissociates these quali- ties, welded as thoy be, by sympathet- | - io affinities, This same regard for the sublimities in nature and art brought him the experiences to be related here —experionces, by the way, as true as the tendril to the dumb, unsightly wall whose blemishes it clothes 1n beauty, For years he had watched with increasing appresiation a fair uung_ girl of this city bud from out r bib and tucker' into a modest face, and had seen her blossom thence a peerless Penelope, whose suitors were 8o nuinerous that Cupid was ever filling his quiver with fresh arrows She was over medium height, attrac tive in manner, and witha form whose superb completeness has not been of- ten surpassed. This was the fato that waved him on, entrancing him in its beauty, and s far above and beyond April morning was beyond and above a transfer to his canvas. To his ar- tist soul, thomgh, the garments that surrounded her was & profanation, If Joel Heart's *‘Truth,” that pulsing picce of marble, was shrowded in stuys and skirts and v the desccration would not have jarred his fincr feel. s more than did the parading ven-descended gifts, guard a8 they wero, in the hide alment of modern costumes He longed , to look upon her as soio die porting water-aprite, with noth hide or mar acurve or line magniticer t physique, With this pose uppermoet in his thoughts he s od the advice of a married lady friond who was also a bosom confident of the young lady. He explained years ho had watched the ual rip- pening of her charms; how he had prayed to paint just such a figure. It seemed to him to embody an ideal, which, if made to live again under his plastic brush, would leave him lit- tlo more to desire upon earth, To his 1hflamed imagination the repro- duction could not but be a master- piece It would name him among the masters, Fame, the glow-worm in the dusk of an artist’s life, would crown him, This was his argument. The woman, won over by his earnest- ness, promised to piace the proposion before her young friend in its most favorable light. She did so, but the girl hesitated. It was not a refusal. It was only delay, and flattery was the Joshua that made her halt. Aguin the matter was suggested and again she asked for time. A third time she was importuned and the sub- tle compliment decided her wavering intentions and she consented. The information was given to the artist and he was delirious with delight over the early consummation of his dreams, Arrangements were made that the un- veilin®@ would occur in her own par- lor, with the artist the only audience, the married friend to occupy un ante- and prepare the young girl for the or- deal. The night for the event at last came. With feur and foreboding the artist was shown into a Chestuut street residence. He was welcomed by the 18 con briefly on uninteresting subjects, not touching on that which was most in their thoughts. The womaun arose abruptly, turned out the gas, disap- peared through a doorway, and left the visitor to watch the weird figures flashéd from the fire upon the wall. His eyes are attracted to the glowing amber coals, and he sees there— —Blooming 1ipa n the leaping red And oh Tocks where the coal liex, hile in the axhes' soft, gray bed, r down below the leaping red, Ta the twilight tlsh of soft gray oyes, And the dark locks float on wavesand riugs, And kissex lie on the lips like dew, And the eyelids, like an angel's wings, Half hlt(lhn love-light shining through " The grating of a quickly-drawn door roused him from his reverie. The transformation left him speechless. The great double parlors had been thrown into one, and the vision of his life had taken shape and habita- tion, The glowing chandelier, sub- dued light upon our heroine, as she stood in an exquisite pose, roseate as a chubby cherub, a delicate lace scarf modestly falling about her. She had taken position in front of a dark cloth of velvet that brought her form into magnificent relief. Titian’s un- approachable colors never told iu line or tone a more perfect physical story, her head poised gracefully, eyelids dropped in maiden reserve, the lips full and parted with excitement, the face and neck and arms a riot of rosy blushes, the bosom hoaving rhythmi- cally, the soft rising and falling as ravelled moonbeams ona wimpling wave, until the spectators must S)uvu sighed with own poet laureate: My heart is athrob with pulsing unrest, Alnd 4 by Oh,bury snow of your breast, And e fromen to death.” The pictare was sensuous, but there was no sensuality in the enjoyment of the artist. The young girl’s sacrifice was made at his request, and the ask- ing was born of a love of his art. It was only the materialization of his ideal. There was nothing of gross- ness in the exhibition, Artistic devo- tion on one side, & morbid love of ad- miration on the other. No more taint or mmpurity in it than the im- ~ mortal soul, which rises and soars above the clay about it. A moment more and shp had gone, and “Whe It seemed like the c muste, NERVOUS DEBILITY, Curas Guare; 9 pr, £ 6T B Y catmaent— A wpecitic for Hys Dizziness, Convulsions, Nervous Hoadache, Mental Dopression, Loss of Memory,Spermatorrhua, lmpotensy, Involuntary Emssions, Premstare Old Age, caused by over- exortion, self-abuse, or ovor-ndulgence, which loada Lo misery, dechy and death, ~One box will cure recent cascs, Ea h box contalus one month's trcatment, One dollar a box, OF #ix boxes for v dollary; sent by mail prepaid on receipt of grico. W uaranice six boses to curo any With each arder received by ug for six boxo: companied with five dollars, will send the chaser our written guarantec to return the money it the traatment doos not off-ct u coro. €, ¥, Goodman, Druggist, Sole, Wholesalo and Rotail Ageut, Omaba, Nob.' Orders by tail at rogular price. lawly KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. The Most Buccessful Remedy ever discov ered, a8 it is cortain in its effects and does not blister, KEAD PROOF BELUW. Also excellont for huian flesh, FROM A PROMINENT PHYSICIAN, Washiogtonville, Ohio, June 17, 1881, Dm. B, J. Kxxvaii, & Co.: Gents—Reading your ad- vertisoment in Turf, Field and Farm, of your Kendall's Spavia Cure, & d having & valuable and u, cedy horse which had been' lame from tpavin for cightoen monthe, I sent to you for & bottlo by express, which i six weoks remoyed all lameness and eulargoment and a larg. splint from another horse, and both horses are to-asy ss60und as colts. 'The ove bottle was worth Lo me one hundred dollars. Kespeettully g H. 4, BERTOLETT, M. D. id for fllustrated clrcular giving ' pesitive proot. Prico$l. Al Drugists have it or can ket itfor you, Dr. B, J. Koudall & Co?, Pro- pn..wub.nwm.-n Fails, Vt BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. dewrly YL HTTY Lot R D. 8. BENTON, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW ARBACH BLOCK. W. J. CONNELL, passed ng of exquisite ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, sow bk ine, . W, erhes Pldsbih X eraham Strocks.| school girl, with blushing morning him as the opal-tinted mist of an | g k- [ 18 the only 1tno mutual merned friend. They talked | 55 - TyssevTey, one CTFI0 Kansaa, or whicl winta 810v0 na O FRANSYERS Y CARRIAGR Ko huddling In i1l passenger 1 and vontilsted ooschor 1pon Past Fxpr ine DAY CARS of unrivalod miagnifcence, POLIMAN PaLAO® SLxRPING Caxa, and ourown world-firaous Dusixa CAws, upon which meals are sorved of un. surpaseod oxcollonice, at tho low rate of Sxyax=y Fixe Cxrs raci, with ample sime for heslthta onjoyment. Mrough Car hotween Chicago, Peoria, Mil waukeo and Missouri River Pointa; and sloso con noctions at all polnta of Intersaction with other 5. W ticket (do not forget this) directly to ever Jlaco ot mportance in Kaneas, Nobraska, Bla- ills, Wyoming, Utab, 1dsho, Novada, Caltforr. s, Oregon, Washington Territory, Coiorado, Arions and Now Mexico. Asll beral arrangemonts regarding baggage ae any other 1ine, and rates of far always as ow ae competitors, Who fralah but & ithe o #he oom: o Dogn and tackle of sportemen fros, Tickets, maps and folders at ul principa offices in the Unitod States and Cann: R. R. CABLE, Vice Pros't & Gon. Sifin& ffiw & Pa;n"ifis EATILIEO.AID. THH SIOUX CITY ROUTE Runa s Solid Trala hrough from Council Blufts tc 8t. Paul Without Ohange Time, Only 17 Hours —IT N— LI MILES THE SHORTEST ROUTE PROM COCUNCOIL BELUFFS TO ST. PAUL, MINNEATOLIS GULUTIT OR RISMAROR and ali points tn Northorn lows, Dakota, Thie iine Iy equipped wl o improved Westinghovso Automatic’ Alr. and Millo Platform Couplor nnd Butfer: and for SAFRETY AND COMFORT Pullman Pa n ian Bt. Paul, vis Cou Blufte and T, o Union Pacific Transter at Coun- cll Blufts, at 7:85 p. m. daily on arrival of Kansas st Joseph and Council Blufts traln from Arriving at Sioux City 11:36 p. m., New Union Depot at 8t Paul at 12:8¢ noon, TEN HOURS IN ADVANCE OF ANY{OTHER ROUTE, £& Remember In taking the Sloux Clty Route youget a Through Traln, The Shortest Line, the Quickest Timo and a Comtortable Ride in the Through Cars_betwoon COUNCIL BLUFFS AND ST. PAUL. £47Sce that your Tickets read via the “Sloux City and Pacific Rallroad ** 3 8. WATTLES, J.R. BUCHANAN Buperintendent., Gen'l Pasy, Agent, P. E. ROBINSON, Ast's Gon'l Pas, m{‘., Missourl Valloy, Towa. W. E. DAVIS, Southwestern Agaut, Councl Rinfla lows THE KENDALL PLAITING MACHINE! DRESS-MAKRRR' COMPANION. 1t plaits troc 1-16 of & 1 inch to width in the coarsest folts or finest silks It doos all kinds and styles of y laiting in use, No lady that docs hor own dress making can afford to do without ono—as nice plaiting s never out of fashion, if soen it solls itselt, For Machines, Circulars or Agont's terms address CONGAR & CO., 118 Adama St._Chicaro TIL 1880. SHORT LINE. 1880, » 'EKANSAS CITY, 3t Joe & Comneil Bluffs IRATTELC.H.TD I8 THE ONLY Direct Line to 8T, LOUI3 " AND THE EAST From Omaha and the West, No chango of cars botweon Omahn and bs. Louls, aud bus one between OMAHA and 2 S X R y Daily Passenger Trains WAAGHING ALL EASTERN AND WESTERN OITIES with LESY CHARGES and IN ADVANCE of ALT: OTHER LINEN This entire Iine la equipped with Pullman's Palace llurln' Palace Day Conches, Milier'a Satoty Platlorm Coupler, and tho ceiobrated W house Alr-bral 437 300 Ahat your reads VIA nANSAS OITY, T, IOS‘PH & COUNCIL BLUFyS Ba /| 11. ‘'via B8, Joseph and 8¢, Louls. ckote for sale a4 all coupon stations In dhe OO DAWES, oo, Bk b e’ Mo A O.DA A lon. » Gon, Pass. and Ticket Agf.‘. 84, prg? Mo, AxvY Boroiy, Tickob Agent, 2R 10%:1 h::.hlm‘;l‘:m . RUARD (Jonel W OIAA‘&A. NE PILES! PILES! PILESI A Sure Cure Found at Lastl 2 surdyoro DBy OB BB g ana Ulcerated Piles hus boon discovered by Dr. Wil- liam, (an Indian remedy,) callod Dr. Wil sm's Indian Ofntmont. A #ingle box haw cured the womt chronio cases of 26 or 80years standing. No d gufler five minutes atter applylng this ul soothing medicine, Lotions, nstru: ad eloctusries do moro harm than good, Alliaw's Olutmont abeorbs the tumors, llays the intenso Ltehing, (particulasly at night aftor gotting ware in bed,) 6t 8 & poultice, gives in- yant and paioloe reller, and I propared only for Pilos, itching of the private parts, sud for uoth i s, oad what the Hon, J. M, Coffinberry of Cleve: and says sbout Ur, William's Indian Pile Olat- ment; 1 have used scoros of F o8, sud 1t o Yor rice, ¥1.00. e VEENRY & CO., Prop'ra, CLeVALAND, OHIO, . joodinan, Tormisby 0, ¥ O 'llrflMu\dhthvlr r sBADND, s We are propared to furnish sand of the very Lest quality or bulldiug purposcs to any part of the city, ¢ reasonable prices, or st tho pit. In: quircdat the pit 36th and Oalifornia Sts, Cook & Isaacson John G. Jvacobs, (Formerly of Gish & Jacobs,) UNDERTAKER CLEVES BROS, ARCHITECTS. public Bulldiogs, Churches, Residences, Stores [ overy btyle. Att gt D @iven to Patent Office Drawlugs. th 'T.,‘m Block, Omaha, “WINE OF CARDUI" four tlmes 1 *\7 niakes a Luppy Lousehold, BRASHI] SPRING AND SUMMER STOCK ~OF— Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s| CLOTHING Ready for Inspection —AT— POLACEKDTS Palace Clothing House. fl’lE LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED 1316 Farnam Street, Near 14th, Marifood. o~ X =\ CLOTHIER! Is Now Located in His New Store, 1308 FARNHAM STREET. One Door East of the New York Dry Goods Store. - AND OPEN FOR BUSINESS. NEW STOCK OF SPRING SUITS! LARGEST VARIETY OF BOY'S ‘AND CHILDREN'S SUITS EVER SEEN! CERPRICES WAY DOWN.” CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK. L. BRASH, - - 1308 FARNHAM ST. tues-thvr-smt BASWITZ & WELLS, OPERA HOUSE SHOE STORE, Under Boyd’s Opera House. Are noW daily receiving large Stocks of SPRING GOODS ! And invite the people to call and examine Goods. Good Goods! Low Prices AND SQUARE DEALING AT THE “QOpera House Shoe Store. » 3 ‘ Ry USIC DEALERS., B8 OMAHA, NEB. zotai szwereyrouse MIUSIC HOUSE in Omaha. Visitorscanhere Genersm for the find all novelties in SIL-|pineqt and Best Pianos and VER WARE. CLOCKS, Organs manufactured. Rich and 8tylish Jewelry, prices are as Low as tho Latest, Most Artistic, 20 Eastern Manufacturer and Choicest Selections in| Pianos and Organs sold RECIOUS STONES and [for cash or instaliments at Bottom Prices. all descriptions of FINE ™ A" aprBNDID stock of WATCHES at as Low Pri- |Steinway Pianos, Knabe ces as 18 compatible with Pianos, Vose & éon’s Pi honorable dealers. Call [anos, and other makes. and see our ElegantNew| Also Clough & Warren, Store, Tower Building, m:ll’_lnci,n (I)':'lgpa.n;, Bmlgt corner 11th and Farnham ot a1 to see us before pur- Streets chaging. MAX MEYER & BRO,, MANUFACTURERS OF -SHOW CASES Large Stock Always on Hand. 6p"exn'a. House Clothing Store! Daily Arrivals of New Soring Goods in Clothing and Gent's Furnishing (oods GOODS MARKED IN PLIAN FIGURES,, And Sold At “STRICTLY ONE PRICE!” 1 lling the Celebrated Wilson Bro,'s Fine Shirts, known '-l’ t;? B.fis'lIE ?itting and Most Durable Shirte Made. 217 80UTH FIFTEENTH S8TREET, (ucae

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