Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 31, 1883, Page 2

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THE DAILY BZE--OMAHA SATURDAY MARCH 31 UFFER no longer from Dyspep- sia, Indigestion, want of Appetite,lossof Strength lack of Energy, Malaria, Intermittent Fevers, &c. BROWN'’S IRON BIT- TERS never fails to cure all these diseases. Toston, November 26, 1831, Brown Curmicar Co, Gentlemen years T have beenagreatsufferer from Dyspepsia and could get no relief (having tried everything which was recommend- ed) until, acting on the a friend, who had been benefi Brown's Iron Drrrees, | bottle, with most Previous to taking Birrs, everything | ate me, and' I suffered greatly from a burning sensation in the stomach, which was unbearable, Since tak: ing Brown’s Inow Birraws, all my troubles are atan end, Can eatany time without any disagreeable re- sults, 1 am_practically another person. rs. FLynw, 30 Maverick St,, E. Boston, BROWN'’S IRON BIT- i . TERS acts like a charm removing all dyspeptic N ' on the digestive organs, O — symptoms, such as tast- ing the food, Belching, Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn, etc. The only Iron Preparation that will not blacken the teeth or give headache. Sold by all Druggtsts. Brown Chemical Co. ‘Baltimore, Md. See that all Tron Bitters are made by Brown Chemical Co., Baltimore, and have crossed red lines and trade- mark on wrapper. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, FALLLY & HOES, . Woestorn Agents, Lafayette, Indiana, TEE A TERNT REVERSIBLE | HEELS ~FOR— Rubber Boots and Boots £ud Shoes OF ALL KINDS, PERCT. To Thelr ADD Wear. 60 center pi: % ( | | ] % It Every Corsot is warrauted satis- ‘actoryto its wearer in every way, or the monoy will be rofunded by £ the person from whom it was bem;.fll s only Corset pronounced by our lead! iolane : o e SR Sl PRICES, by Mail, Postage Pald: &M‘I‘ll::l.n everywhere CHICAGO CORSET CO., Chicago, Ik (5 K& & rernierons OMAHA , NEB. e scnasm e e i g ’ Bhoes “‘gt{-;\l -.;:l wora g B Tyt FPOHETRY OF THE TIMES, The Un-ec-:du—t;m Bex Home is & woman's only sphere And if she hasn't got one She ought to find one, that is clear, Though it may be a hot one, Unleas the plans of Providence Mot seriously miscarry, A girl endowed with proper sense Proceeds at once to marry. Her husband s her master here, ‘And she to him should truckle, Content to chronicle small beer, And sobbing fools to suckle. Poor girls, they say, have many cares; T really can't see through ity They ought to marry millionaires, And why, then, don’t they do it? Some women say they should be free To work as they are able. This world of ours, it seems to me, Ts getting quite unstable, Of all the modern woman's ories The worst abomination— Quite sacrilegions in my eyes— Is * Higher Education!’ As year by year the men advance In various kinds of knowledge, She laima the right to have a chance, And wants to go to College, Dear me! dear me! what can we say, Except ‘L'll see you later !" Not this day, but some other day, ‘Wo may co-educate her. M.ra-N D-x, L. L, L. D, D, D, The Pioneer. Fill up your glass, O comrade true! With sparkling wine that cheers, And let us drink » bumper to The sturdy pioneera— The hcnest men, the women fair, Who, years and years ago, ads to dare n history show. They had their uses then, and now They have their uses, t00-- For, Ob! they live to tell us how, In eighteen-sixty-two The summer was the hottest time That ever scorched our state; And then, with earnestness sublime, They hasten to relate Tales vast to contemplate! And speak of bitter wintry woe! ‘Why, meroy sakes alive! There fell a fifteen foot of snow In eighteen-sixty-five! Three foot of water in the Platte ‘Was frozen ten foot thick — And, seeming not content with that, Each man and wite and chick With rheumatiz took sick! And thould wa smile? The years gone by With martyr lives are strow: We're gaily treading, you and I, The path which they have bewn— Hewn from the desert and the mine, Posterity to cheer Let’s toast them in the sparkling wine— Drink to the mem'ries dear! Drink to the pionee: Lady Fiorence Dixle, BY “'NUMBER OME." As Ludy Dirie sauntered out One day thro' Windeor Park sirs, She took her big San Bernard dog, That he might have a lark, sirs. Bhe walked and mused on Lund League Fund And Fenian agitation, Till the bracing oir of something quare Stirred her imagination, Events of late nad rlum unstrung The nerves of L:dy Dixie; 'Twixt Ezans flight and dynamite, The times had been quite risky; She whispered Parnell was safe in—well, As also like empirics, And with this strain upon her brain, She tumbled in bysterics, vision ought two dumsels dressed in green | B the back, sirs. md out half loth alf-closed lashes, she'd nearly take her oath Thess huge maids wore mustaches Bhe also vows and this indeed Al contradiotion staggers, The fingers of her neat kid gloves Bore traces of their dagger: e dneelons, - 1o, The moral to my song is plain— That all such married ladies From politics might well abstain— Stay home and mind the bables; And I’l a hurbaad they have not An no 8an Bernard pup, Alrz They should capture an Invincible, Aud do the blowing up, sir Dublin Nation, HONEY FOR THE LADIHS. *A landsoape girl” is one who puts two tinta of t on her face. The designs 1 bangle bracelets and lace pins are in Moorish and Rensis. sance devices, You can b t that there is any beauty about walking dresses which show tho shoe, Very long jersey gloves of cashmere of fine Austrian wool, devoid of buttons, come in all the dark street shades to match the costums The reigning beauty of Ireland s & Bel- fast mill-gicl, Crowds, is 1s said, surround the mill daily to see her as she takes her departure, An Ohio woman who eloped with a ounger man now wants to return to her usband, She says the new man snores even worse than the old one, Pigskins are now utilized for ladies’ kia gloves, and Mrs, Parvenu was greatly shocked when she made the discovery, It i Yalhotly awful when one comes to of it. Ohenille and silk piping cards plaited to- gether to imitate twigs are fashionatle for small bonnets. A cluster of pompons in many colors like & bouquet is the trim- mivg. Every year about this time one hears a Rreat dn{ about dress retorm, and yet one never can discover where it comes in, What do they reform—the skirt, waist, flounces, sleeves or buttons? A cunningly-shaped little poke bonnet is a novel design for breastpins, It is made of tinted gold, and blue or red enamel is arranged flkc aribbon around the minia- ture crown, ‘I'be whistliog craze ia spre the women of Texas so npldl& t! now estimated that not less than among t it is 30 Tu cent. of the entire female population whistle like mockiog birds, Canning oranges is the latest Florida ides. It was started by two maiden ladies who, finding no market for their oranges, conceived the plan of canning them like other fruit. 1t was & perfect sucoess, Large baskets of artificial violets are now used to decorate the center of the table at dinner parties, and are sprinkled with & perfume somewhat lLke that of Tolets to heighten or make better the raud, A large rosette or bow of velvet ribbon, with & square or horseshoe buckle of Btrauss pebble, 1s worn on the left side of t! Ibd.l'-'l Just lb.d"ov ml?m. dOme: strawl y oer soariet and garne shades are worn with black satin dreases, ‘The newest brocaded Ottoman silks are in designs of fruits and flowers, and the ld-ol:olth. tlirmnlon l'll.l make as reat havoo wi a plums, orap frapor, and various buds’ and blosoms & did last season with heads of bensts the effect they prodnce is little short of hideous, giving them the repulsive appear. ance of smallpox marks, Fortunately they nre too ugly to last long.~ [N, Y. Star, “Bangs on a cirl give her an unruly 1ook, like & cow with & board over her face,” says & Kansas paper. The girl who doesn’t wear her forehead bald-h aded after this remark will demonstrate that she cannot be insulted, A beautiful girl of cineteen summers, well dressed, and modest in demeanor, has been sent by express fro - Selma, Ala., to New York. A tag, marked O, O, D, 845, was fastened by a blue ribbon around h r neck, Her express receipt placed her value at 85,000 The dark tartan.like tweeds and chevoits are called Braemars; those in fine checks, in sutdued but bright shades of color, are known as Invercaulds; and those of a dark brown, with faint dashes of gold, scarlet and dark green in the woof, are styled Oraigievars, A novelty in lace is the Pompadour pat. med net, with a fine pesrled edge and a raived figure in silk n wslin; the designs in flowers, mch as fuchsiss, lilies of the valley, and other pendant fl ,wers, are very effective Spring rerges and baeket cloth mostly in plaids, in or irregular pat- terns and in quiet, neutral tones of ecrn, fawn color, aud psle ciunamon brown, en. livened by dashes or intersecting hair li are k | are to take charge of Baptist churches in 00. of some bright color. Broken snd fa checks are more in use than the shepherd’s plaid or “‘inch” blocks, A well dressed and very stylieh womsn stopped in a Oleveland restaurant to ge! Ler dinner, and the waiter handed her a bill of fare and a peacil to check off what she wanted, She made a few marks on the paper and handed it back to him with auiu a flourish, She had checked off the ate, headli; two depsrtments and the price of She couldn't resd and was too proud to say 8o, A western widower, baving probably ascertained that Maesachusetts is burdened or blessed with 80,000 superfluous women, has written a letter to Governor Butler re- questing him to select & wife for him, ana send her out to Utah, prepaid. He ex- plained that he has everything requisite for housekeeping, including two children, and sends directions for reachng his be- reaved home, s'ipulating that the applicant shall pay ber own fare. One of the unsettled questions of the age in the right of the male Dude and of e female giddy thing to carry on sweet converse in the theatre, jarring the har- mony of the music on the stage or making strange Interludes in tho players' lines, In s New York theatre this week a gen. tleman who mildly remonttrated with a talking fiend was told be would have his head punched, and before the authorities the fiend upheld his right to prevent apy- body from hearing the play, and the ques- tion is unsettled, Tallor-raade costumes are growing more and move in favor, They have now ar- rived at perfection in the way of fit and finish. Bome of the costliest of these have the bodice-lining of soft and pliable, but exceediogly firm, ribbed silk, Promenade costumes, more suitable for carriage and visiting use, are now eschewed for these etylish and more appropiiate anits of tweed, ladies’ clotb, cheviot, flannel, Bodices with crenelated edges are still in favor, The tabs are trimmed in many different ways—with braid work, cordings of silk, aud paesementorie, or with em- broidery or beaded applique ornaments laced in the center of each block, Pointed hodices, very narrow at the sides, are much worn, with the overdress or tunio applied to the under side of the corssge, and not gauged to the outside as formerly, The round baeque is cut very short and the postilion baeque is cut with the center seam opening over o shell pleatiog or a double pleat inserted in ench seam, The Grand Duke Viadimer has just giv- en = costume ball at St. Petersburg. Thereto went a certain princess, one of the loveliest and fastest of her eex, in the airy costume of a Russalka or water nymph, a ht fitting pink tricot, a few yards pioked out with water When this princess ap- prees th. to ‘MA utes later the grand duke stalked up to the princess, «flered her his arm conduct. ed her to her carriage. er———— RELIGIOUS. The Presbyterian churches of New Orleans are now entirely free from debt. Over 863,000 has'been secured to establishing a denominational house by the Unitarians of Massachusette, 8t. Paul's Episcopal church, Syracuse, N. Y., is about to build & §60,000 house of worship and call it the cathedral for the diocese of Central New York, The Episcopalians propose to e divinity school in Colorado. be almost impossible to get p. the east, aa the field 18 a hard-working and underpaid one, Thirty persons united with the Congre- ational church at Riochmond, V., last unday, and ten persons united with the church at Bellow’s Falls, At the Metho- dist church, same place twenty: united jwith the church on probation, three were received by letter, and ten were baptized. Bishop McNamara has organized the first iodependent or Reformed Oatholic church of Chicago, with headquarters on Cotton Grove avenue near Twenty-ninth street. They are now bolding o series of meetings every eveniog, The Young Men's Christian association, of Brooklyn, is in rare ¥»od fortune, hav- ing received o legacy of $400,000 'With this sum it is about to build a palatial building, which will have the usual advan- tage of blh:r free trom debt. The work of building will go on at once. Now there is a grand opening for young clergymen of the Baptist psreuasion who want to do hard work on pay which will probably mot be very princely. Twenty such men are wanted for Mexico, They towns whose population is wot over general thing, churches of ¢ are not much ssked for, The gentlemen ‘who want to fill these fields of labor should be able to preach fluently in Spanish, HDUNATIONAL NOTES, rd| "EERSON & HILL PATENT IN- t | Samuel Alexander ‘The University of Georgia is to have a school of technology if Chancellor Mell can raise the funds. The Wisconsin Stat o enactment of th compultory education law in that state th school attendance increased fnlly 10,000, A Kentucky schoolmaster got a verdict of $17 the other day in a suit brought against the trustees for demages from a cold eaught running after them to get his pay. Huxley says there 1s nothing so difficult to do as to write a good elemencary book, and there is nobody 80 hard to teach prop: erly and well as people who know nothing about a subject. A callfor an educational mass state convention, to be held at Frankf on April of th ens of that state, includ. ing Governor Blackburn aud others, rep- resentiog every calling. ‘The statement of a certain Dr, Bowker before the Massachusetts House of Repre- sentatives is creating » good deal of amuse- ment among Harvard men, According to this oracle, Harvard University makes a practice of selling medical degrees to stud. ents who spend their time in wing, ing base ball, going to the theatre and getting drunk.” EX niversity of Michigan—A goniometer .“:l‘hm purchased for use in con. nection the Instruotic better fllustration of the despotism | the furnlshed of fashion could be —at least to my |—than is found in the prevalent terrs cotta vells, Op most faces I think Journal says that | Loans school, Formerly the time' of study . in this department was limited to two years, of six months each, These six months have been lengthened to nine, and this, it in hoped, Is merely a preparatory step to lengthening the course to threee years, and requiring a diploma or & thorough examin. ation {or entran Dr, Stanley Hall, a prominent Boston educator, finds s number of defests in our common school system, which he construes to mean that too much sttention is given by the teachers to the routine book course of study, and not enough to the elucida- tion of the lessons taught, In the course of his investigations into the condition of the Boston achools, which are considered to be among the best in the United States, he found that ‘‘eighteen per cent. of the scholars had no knowledge of & cow, far. ther than that gained from pi tures; sixty. one per cent, of those examined had never seen an ant; sixty-five per cent. had never seen corn growing; ninety per cent. did not know where their ribs were nor exactly what they were, while only six per cent. were ignorant of the location ot their stomachs. Some of the children etated that flour came from the grocer, who gets it directly from Ged; othere said that meat 18 dug from the ground or picked up_from the meat-tree,” From this state cf facte, Dr, Hall arrivid at the conclusion that the aduption of more of the kindergarten method was necessary for the instruction of the young. REMEMBER THIS. If you are sick Hop Bitters will surely ald Nature fo making you well when all else fails, If you are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffering from any of the numer- ous diseases of the stomach or bowels, it 1s your own fault If you remain ill, for Hop Bitters are a sovereign remedy in all such complaints, If youare wasting away' with any form of Kidney disease, stop tempting Death this moment, and turn fora cure to Hop Bitters, If you are sick with that terrible slokness Nervousness, you will find a “Balm in Gilead” in the use of Hop A FEW BARGAINS Houses i LOTS, Farms, Lands- BY WHOLESALE GROCERS Flour, 8ait, Sugars, Canned Coods, and OIGARS AND MANUFACTURED TOBACCO, 5= A E" JE ONLAEIA. STEELE, JJHNSON & CO., AND JOBBERS IN All Grocers' Supplies. A Full Line of the Eest Lrands of -® D LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO0. gonts for BENWOOD SAILS AN B. s DEALERS IN e HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK GO. Fire and Burglar Pr>» NAULTS, LOOKS, O. 1020 Farnham Street, - = NNEIEB Bitters, If you are a frequenter or a resi- dent of a miasmatic district, barricade your system against the scourge of all countries—malaria, epidemic, bilious and Intermittent fevers—by the use of Hop Bitters. If you have rough, plmple or eal- low skin, bad breath, pains and aches, and feol miserable generally, Hop Bitters will give you falr skin, rich blood, and sweetest breath, health and comfort, In short they cure all diseases of the stomch, Bowels, Blood, Liver, Nerves, Kidneys, Bright's Disecase, $600 will be paid for a case they wil not cure or help. That poor, bedridden, Invalid wife, ister mother, or daughter, can be made the plcture of health, by a few bottles of Hop Bitters, coating but a trifle. Will you lot them suffer? BEMIS 16th &Douglas St. HOUSES AND LOTS Wonotice the Marriage Fund, Mutual Trust Association, of Cedar lhnldnx Tows, highly spoken of in many of the leading papers of the state, ‘‘Monoy for the Un. married” heads their advertisement in another column of this oaper. £3-3m No. 19—Full ot aud new house, ©3Prooms, two below and ono up-stairs. Eight foot celling below and rovenabove. Brick foundation, cellar, etc. A bargain, $600. No. 18—Largo two story house, 10 rooms, two targe collary, grod welland clsterd, barm, etc., on Wbster and WESTERW 52d street, $6,000. No. 17—Lot 50x185 feet, new house of two GBHNIGE wnnks || rooma brick foundation 160 barrel - cistern .on - H;{mll]tg::mt ne-“’o:v Ol?lzgflnvenls’;‘ f’flt 0. jouse aud lot on 17 near Iron and Slate Roofing, house 5 room etc, $1200. '“w Lot : w 0. SPECHT, . - Proprietor. |neariotasiten. > @ o Fstivg] 500 No. 21--New houseot 7 ro half mile west of Turntable Sau dersSt. $1000. No. 5—House of elght corner lot, treet cars on oarn etc. lot 1111 Donglas 8, - Omaha, Neb MANUFACTURER OF GALVANIZED Entire West will be promptly shipped. All Our Goonds are Made to Office Corner 13th and Harney | ANHEUSER-BUSGH w, Brewing { | £ Association, CELEBRATED KEG & BOTTLED BERR. e THIS EXOBLLENT BEER SESARS | RELINSMO FOR ITSELF. # Orders from any part of the State or {t the Standard of our Guarantee, GEORGE HENNING, 8ole Agent for Omaha and the West. 60x165 feet $2500. Iron Cornices | DORMER WINDOWS, FINIALS, Tin, Iron and Blata Rooflng, Specht’s Patent Motallic Skylight Patent, Adjusted Ratobet Bar and Bracket elving, I am the veneral agent for the above line of goods, IRON FENCING, Crestings, Balustrades, Verandas, Iron Bank Kailings, Window Blinds, Cel- lar Guards; also GENERAL AGENT FOR Vacant Lots. ng—mmlmnmmmmo No. 351—Twenty five lote In_Parkers addition ust Gorth of the end of red street car lino 400 easy terms. No.850—Four lotson Delaware 5. near Hans- com park, $650, No. 831—-One haltlot on South avenue, near nue, $550. No. 340—Eighteen (18) lote on 21st, 22nd, 23rd and Saunderastreet, noar Grace, §500 each, and on easy berma. No, 346—Six beautiful residence lots on Cather- 1ne street, near Hanscom park, $4,600. Twelve beautitul residence fots cn Hamilton street, near end of old streeb car track; high and sightly, $350to §700. Soveral acro and half acre corner lots on Cum. ing, Burt and Californis_streets, in Lowe's seo- ond addition and Park Place—near Academy of Sacred Hea Lots rospect Place” on Hamilton and Charles street,+ust west of the end of Red Street Car track and Convent of the Bisters of Poor Clare, 0ne and one halt mile from postoffice, and ono iaile from 0. . shops, $150 to 8600 ach, 5 n SIDE BLIND STABLISHKD 1888, Stroch Poor Clare Sisters in Shinn's addition, each, and on very easy terma. Lots in Horbach's lst and 2nd additions, = Shinn's, Park Place, Lowe's 20d addition, Regan's - = | Lake's, Nelson's, Hanscom Place, Redick's ad- WIDE SPRING ATTACHMENT—NOT PATENT te,, OMAHA CORNICE WURKS, Tin, Iron and Slate . Roofers 810 South Twelfth Street, mar 7-mon-wed-ri-me. RUEMPING & BOLTE, Proprietors. MANUFACTURERS OF Ornamental Balvanized Iron Cormices, Iron S8ky Lights, Ete. OMAHA, N€B, PERFECTION HEATING AND BAKING 1s only attalned by using CHARTER OAK 8toves and Rangas’ WITH WIRE tAUZE OVER DOORS, For sale by MILTON ROCERS & SONS O A E.A. +#XM all-m el A. J. SIMPSO N. Lote 'In *iCredit Foncler addition” fust one. quarter mile south-east of Union Paclfic and B. LEADING nd M, R. R. depote, §260 to $1,600 each, very easy CARRIAGE FACTORY rms, 1400 and 1411 Dodge Streot, aug 7-me 6m Omama, N Nebraska Loan & Trust Company HABTINGS, NEB. Oapital Stock, - - $100,000 JAS, B, HEARTWELL, Prosident, AL cuuxa'vm-#mm-n. K. O WEBSTER, Treasurer DIRECTORS, Business Lots. Threo good business lota on DodgelJncar 12th street, 22x120 feot each, $1,600 each, or $4,500 for all, oasy terms. Fwo good business lobs on Farnam stroot, 33x 66 foet each, with frame buildings theron.renting for about 8400 per yoar each; price 4, 1 44x132 feet on Farnam near 10thstreot, corner did Warehouse 1ot on Unlon Paciffe right of way, north of track and east of Nall Works— belng 132 feot north trontage on Mason street, by about 100 fect west trontage on 16th . I VAL BB ER TR 8ASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINGS, LIME, CEMEN Near Union Pacific Devot. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLFSALE AND RETAIL DEALEB IN Lath, Shingles, Pickets, PLASTRR, BTO SWSTATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY OMAHA KB Farma a7 wild isods o Douglan, Sarpy, Oswald*Oliver, - 4 E. 0. Wobster Jas. B. Hoartwell, D. M. McE] Hinney, A. L, Olarke, Geo. H Prats, on {mproved city and country,projerty a4 low rates of {nferent. First Mortgage Loans a Specialty BEMIS' NEW| CITY MAP, FOUR FEET WIDE AND SEVEN FEET LONG, WITH EVERY ADDI. This Co furnishes & permanent, home Lnstitation where Bchool Bond sand other logally T SINEHOLD, y GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES MANUFACTURER OF Window Caps, Finials, 8kylights, &c. ’ THIRTEENTH STREET, - . . OMABA, NEB {ssued Municipal securitle to Nebraska can be be negotiated on the most favorable terms mado on improved farm i all wellsettien countics of the state through rieponsible; local corresponents. Rtk oy ms wiee. JOBS0 m' he ouly life authorized by her and which will ot be & “Blood and Thuoder” story, such s has boen and will be pp! lished, bus a trus life by the only person who ls in n of the facts & taithful and devoted wife. — Truth s more nter- ssting than ficsion, A gents should apply o1 ter- dlory st cace. Se. 7 m.fwflunpc,boot. ¢ Loote Mo TION RECORDED OR CONTEM- PLATED UP TO DATE. “‘OFFI. CIAL MAP OF,THE OITY.” EACH, $6.00 GEO. P.BEMIS, Real » thorough knowledge of the nutrition, sad by a careful appl! ne well s of di and govern the o) cution and Hom atkmbwly HENRY LEHMANN, WALL PAPHER, WINDOW SHADES BOLLN & SIEVERS, HENRY BOLLN &G0 Have brought to this clty fr Ditrs & Go% Now York, th city, aliof 'which are guaranteed to be fresh and true 0 the nams, v Prices will also be as low as any Responsible Dealer can Make, Lo ¥ HENRY BOLLN & (0, JOBBER OF EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED. I8 FARN -. OMAHA 0. 1500 Douglas Street. Cor, 16th ‘and California 8t, OMAHA SEED DEPOTS. om the farms of Lavdredth & Son's, Philadel Inrgest stock of Garden and Field Beeds -:-fl::rg'fi:fo:l? this mar 16-e0d-tf

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