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T s ¥ I»V iy ok | * THE DAILY BEE---OMAHA, ATURDAY JU 3, 1883, HONEY FOR THE LADIES, Two new plaided zephyrs make jaunty ten- i costumes. Flowers are extravagantly used on dressy ‘bonnets and hats of every ¢ i en.” All we've got 0 say is, if she can she's mighty smart. Fold basket straw bonnets, trimmed with fiame-colored lace, and fancy silver straws and | velvet intermingled, are the newest fancies in French millinery, | She sang, “T want to be an angel,” and b swore that she was one already. this blushingly demurred. Then he married her. Denturrer sustained. ggestion of silver throughout ah entire Hask Sosturte ives » boautiful aud uncomanon effect o this sombre dress. This combination is charming in *“half” mourning. 1t i too early to predict just what style of | sarasol will be fashionable the coming season, | Pt they will bo worn, as usual, just_high enough to rake out a man's eye.—Rome Senti- nel, Flour may be used instead of corn-starch in Jemon jelly for the filling of layer cake. Stir all the lumps out and use a little more, say one-third more, than you would of cor starch. Wide sash ribbons in gold and white or silver and white arein high fashion for evening wear. Quite often & length of it is used also for a ‘waiscoat to be set inside the cutaway bodice of plain silk, Two cases of biting by women have occurred 1n Miseouri, and both of them were, only & lit: tle less painful and dangerous than the bite of asnake, The Missouri woman must be decid- edly vonomous, A Philadelphia widow, who was engaged to an undertaker, refused to marry him when she was told that he made his deceased wife use an old coffin mounted on rockers for & cradle. Camden Times. “T don't like to have my hushand chew to- baceo,” remarked a young married lady, “but | decampers than they have at the hands of | ! | resembles Tput up with it for the tin foil is just too handy anything in doing up my front crimps,"—8omerville Journal, Professor to a young lady student—*‘Your merk i very low, and you have only just pass. | od.” Young lady—'Oh, T am so glad.” Pro- | fesor, surprised—"Why?" Young lady—* doso love a tight squi ~College” Ex- | change. The Chinese and Japanese styles of head- dress arein high vogue among the ultra-fash- ionable women, and the stars and heads of the pins they use to thrust through the top-knots are often studded with diamonds, rubies and pearls of rare value, Delicate white muffins are made of one cup of sweet milk, the well-beaten whites of two eggs, two and a-half cups of flour, one heap- ing teaspoonful of baking powder, a pieco of utter the size of an egy. oven. Close-fitting perlines, high on the shoulders, ota o IR Ton. 1 s (aae] it aeaM around, but the most stylish are those with the back h let in long, and the fronts tied Toosely and trimmed with a mass of lnce and irlbbnn. n. ‘A Gorgis girl is engaged in the task of eat- ing four L.mflmm., two hundred groun ap- plew and two bottlos of pickles a day.” St may get along all right with the pickies and the green apples, but the onions will make her hand in her A base ball team composed of women has been organized in a Pennsylvanin town. The only trouble they will experience will be to S0 8 mab to pinpire the gasae, bt s deal and dumb who could stand’ the jar on his nerves might get a good job umpiring for that team Sleeveless jackets and hodices open, quare, or heart shape, and made of embroidered vel- vet, brocade, or of gros-grained silk in pale blue, mauve, or. shrimp-pink, hand painted, and edged with lace, will be very fashionably worn over evening dresses of white lace, em- broidered muslin, veiling, batiste, and other Tight fabrics. Among the most costly fabrics for summer evening toilets are zephyr brocades and broca- telles, with brilliantly colored exoties on dark grounds; magnificent Indian tissues, woven ‘with threads of gold or slver; heavy ottomans in all the new and artistic shades; lampas, with satin stripes figured with velvet flowers, and damasks, with huge singlo flowers or bon’ quets in clusters, raised on sheeny wati grounds of primrow, pincapple, clunumon, and golden brown, 'tea rose, shrimp-pink, ‘cameo, mauve, and endless shades of green, There seems to bo no end to the variety of high-priced, high-toned, high-colored parasols, Alargo sised ‘o, «s-uf to private view from among & mujtitude just imported, was made of _strawl satin, trimmed to the h of twelve inches with three rows of t gold lace. The ferule was surrounded ith & Wreath of brilliant flowers, showiny gold and dark red poppies, bright bine ragyed lors, and dack_groon leaves. The Il ws of gold-colored satin, with a hand-puinted Greenaway design executed on_one of the “Loud" as this was in style, it was positively quiet and plain compared with Inany of the other sunshudes exhilted. Flirtation, ‘What is flirtation? Really, How can I answer that? Yet when'she smiles I see ity wiles, And when he lifts his hat, Tl meeting in the balk room, *Tis whirling in the dance; With something hid beneath the lid Beside a simple glance. *Tis walking in the hallway, JTia rotig on the stair; *Tia bearded lips on finger tips, (If mamua {s not there.) *Tia going out for ices, o oo *Tia lipa that speak of plays next week, eyen that talk of love, "Tia ! 5 ke 1%y e *Tis lifted eyes and tender sighs, And that is—no, not all, *Tis parting when 'tis over AR one fgoen home £o sivep; ‘Tra s, my friend, best joys must end But'one goes home to Weep. ; ~Ella Wheeler, PEPPERMINT DROPS, Our June rains, like the quality of mercy, are not strained, or else the holes in the strain- er are very 1f you wish to steal in safety go to Washing- ton, 1 you would ke to try. your hand st murder better move to Kentucky or Chicago. * “Crowded out to make room for more inter- esting matter,” remarked the editor as he shoved aside a plate of beans and tackled a a strawberry shortcake, “Proud of it!” ke sald. *“‘Of couse I am. He sto) four days at my house and 1 was taken with the dellshum tron Shows T'n elirium tremens, entertainer, doeen’t it!"—Boston Post. A snow-white hen in Arkansas hatched out five black chickens and killed every one of them after they left the shell. She didn't want the other hens to eye her supiciously Ik about her. ““What is 80 rare as June days?” asks an change. Nothing, positively. 1t has been supposed that March days were pretty raw, butsome of the days of the present month have been about as rare as one could wish for. Humwan nature is pretty much the same the world over, Even in France, when a woman rushes out in the front yard bareheaded, the chbors all know that u strange chioken has put in an appearauce, or that the dog has chased w cat across the verbena bed.—Atlanta Constitution. A young lady was caressing a pretty Span- iel and murmuring: ©1 dolove o hich. dogl? “Ah!” sighed a dandy 1 “Would t 1 were a dog.” retorted the young lady, sharply, “‘you'll grow."—Geor- jor. * “That's a nice lifo Fair to his son Jim, u lead,” said Senator ou are running after | 1t's not my fault that 1 | Tun, them.” “Whose faplt is it, then?" ““Tt's their fault. 1f they would stand still so T coul up, [ wouldu't run after them so much!”—Te o 'exas Biftings, 0 roport comes that"s gambling houso tn vy e Fl oy el account of heavy losses, The have been good for protection against burglars, but what o Bake in a quick { O Th When thou dost mount thy box and swing thy The high shoulders are usually fulled ;l‘h Just like it does when culling taffy from nation, E not recognize his old name if he meets it in the road. The undertaker will become o high- toned after a While that the public will lose all g for his feelings and eall him pro- | fessor. “When the postal clerk fn the postoffice at | Charlottetown, Prince Ed#ard’s Tsland, post- marked lettor addressed to Saskatchewan territory the other day in exploded, blowing the stamp out of his hand and tearing the let- to pieces,” says an exchange, [t is thought | bable that the address on the letter ex- ploded, There should be sor ution taken about allowing such n katchewan” to pass through the The mayor of the city of Moscow, in Russia, made some remarks the other day, which were distasteful to the czar, who, it seems carries his head pretty high since he had a crown }xlla'«l upon it, and the latter banished him orthwith, Probably if the Moscow mayor was having as much trouble with the saloons of his town as some of the mayors of this country have, he will think the banishment came in right handy to help him out of his muddle. ““How's yer gal co ‘‘She's ober ter San An Snodgass, what's jes' come from dar, done tme dat she's got stagostruck.” ‘Is dat “Yes, Mr. Johnsing, i fac'.” When am she ter play? right smart while yit, 1 reckon, kase de wheel ob annuder icle brake two riba when de stake struck her.,” *‘I n prehended yo', Aunt Malviny, at fust, ebene Galveston News, “‘A German has invented a safe its Jock being tampered with, thr doors, seizes and drags and lar, and handenffs and ho to be conducted to morning.” scom- Good e which, on % open its him in_ readiness the police court in the | This sort of a safe may be very | this country is in need of is some contrivance that will nail the cashier. as he is going over | the back fence in the direction of Canada, | with the funds of the bank. During the | past year or two the financial concerns have | suffered more at the hands of defaulters and | burglars. A juryman in a Nebraska town was fined the other day for simply drawine s little | whisky through a rubber tube, from a flask in | his pocket. The juryman was hot about it | and it seems he had a right to be hot. There he had sat upon the jury for nine days with- out a drink, and still he was expected to keep his nerves quiet enough so that at the end of the lawyer's harrangue he could go quietly away with the rest of the jury and ncquit the man who had killed another while on a drunk. ‘man in such a trying position as that should be allowed to take something to quiet his nerves, without the court dropping onto him with bothfeet for *‘conten Peck’s Sun. - —— to Theodore Thomas. BY J. P, D, wre! of all musicianers Thon art the boss, with a long pri Apostrop v B, stick, With gold tipon the further end of It And of thy hired men some two or three Begin an easy sort of playing on ® various instruments on which they Do perform, a funny feeling goes a Crawling up and down my spinal column, A huttered stick, more Vivacity thy little club, and all The other boys keep chipping in, as when To ope the jack-pot's stardy bands we strive, And of the holding two ten spots are found o be the upmost hand, But after while Lost thou the circumambient atmospliere Like thunder pound, and opened is the pot, And every one comes in, and chips pile up, With anxious zeal the fiddlers chase their bows Across the desicated bowels of The feline lately gone beyond the ringe; Like a high pressure engine flies the arm OFf him who the seductive trombone works; And all the while the roster witn the big ‘rench horn doth blow th' internal revenue From out its sheeny convolutions deep, The ophicleide ophiculates, in turn, “The hautboy hautboycots, 'and the bassoon Bassooniously bassooneth, whilo t Great hass viol doth basely violate, ‘Then thou dost swing with sgether with the shelving, counters, spoons, Napkins, knives, forks, kitchen utensils, cook, Awnings, delivery wagon, w Billi receivable, mortguges, de Rights, titles, dignities, fran Corporeal and incorporeal Hereditenients and all the other Property, real and porsonal, wnto “The aforesaid bakery appertaiving, T have and liold themylor thingown and to Thine helrs forover mot, . For a that timo I want o rise up in my seat and howl, And haller “whoop,” and get throwed out and go Glab f0ll 68 Kanhaxiwhisky and getran Into the cooler's deepest recoss dark, And get fined and make an idiot of Myself in general. But T do not; For in a soothing Way thou coolest off Their rampant fire, shutting them down so slow 1 hardly know they're gone. E'en so at night, An T have stood upon the boundless plains, And ween the affrighted train go rushing by, ‘And in the sleeping car there did ropose A girl from Omaha—Ah! thus I've heard Her gentle snore grow fainter and fainter on The troubled air, Gl at the horizon “Twas lost, and T was left alone. —Denver Tribune. RELIGIO Bishop Laval, first bishop of Quebec, is to be canonized. Brigham Young aaserts that 20,000 converts, mostly females, will join tho Utah saints this year, Tho next meoting of the Southern Baptist convention, in May, 1884,will bo held in Balti- more. The Presbytery of Idaho covers an area_ of 100,000 square miles, with fourteen churches and but two ministers. There are ifty Methodist churches in Wash- ington, with 12,008 communicants aud 12,245 Sunday school scholars, The First Baptist church of Chicago will be fifty years old in October next, and the event will bo celebrated with appropriate jubileo ser- vices, The United Presbyterian church of Scot- land, which has been _reporting . decline in numbers for a number of years, will thix year be able to report a lurge Increase. 1t s understood that Mr. D, L. Moody will conduct evangelical services in Boston under the auspices of the Young Men's Christian Association during the summer montha. Some of Broaklyn's best citizens are making preparations for grand - celebration on the 25th inst., in the Academy of Music, of that city, of the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher's sev- engioth birthday. The Episcopal convention at Indianapolis on the 6th instant, elected the Rev. Dr. Knickerbooker, of Minneapolis, Minn,, bishe for the diocese of Indiana. DF. Knickerbock- er was formerly resident of New York The Universalist church has at the present date twenty-three state conventions, 939 par- ishes, 719 churches, 30,238, members, 633 Sun- day schools, and 51,708 scholars. There are 780 churoh adifices, worth 86,445,000, and 713 ministers. "Phe General Council of the Reformed Epis- copal church at its session in Baltimore, ap- proved a report from the general committee, Fecommending & suspension of the publication of the amended prayer book, and referred a revision of it to the committee on doctrine and worship. The' Pope will hold a consistory at the end | of June to fill up the eight vacant posts of Cardinal in the sacred college. Tho total number of these dignitaries should be seventy, s fixed by a bull of Sixtus V., in 1856, i memory of the seventy elders who governed the peaple of 1sracl and the seventy disciples of Christ. * | July 8, The curtain is to rise at 4 o'clock, an Tocks in the burg- | §: [ kom M MUSIC AND DRAMATIC, Tom Karl, the te at Wor. | chester, Mass, John MeC'ullough has engaged mins for next season, Miss Rosa Rand will be Joseph Jefferson’s g laddy next seasd g alvind returns to Ame « Margaret Mather. , will s Ellen Cum. ext season yo fea to support M Theodore Thomas permits no recalls, The oncore fiend ase bear this in n | Helen Bar actress, is the tallest wo- | man on the American stage, She is six feet one, Henry E. Abbey has engaged Mme. brich for hix next opera season. ceive 81,250 for each performance. f all sacred compositi wic, has been prblished Senff, in Leipaig, arrangod for fonr bands, Mume. Nilsson's first appearance after her return to England was in concert at the Royal Albert hall. The audience numbered 12,000 and was very enthusiasti Bay the performance end at 10, Tawrence Barrett closed his season last Fri- day evening at Colorado springs, presenting “Franesca da Rimini," his last appearance previous to a tour of Europe. The total receipts of the Thomas concerts in San Francisco, just ended, were $51,000; total expenses, 838,000, The guaranteed fund was 000. The total audience was 30,000, F. (', Bangs and wife (Agnes Leonard) 1 to return to the stage next sea. son, and have asked Mr, T, Slater Smith, now | managing ‘‘Ranch 10, to ‘take the husiness direction of their starring tour. John McCullough's new pla is founded in the era of the 'S of Egypt. The chief role emnon, head t, being taken by the star him. £ the somber sort. Tt irginius,” The American prima donna, Marle Durand, red in the title role of *‘Gioconda™ at rden, London critios pronounce her an nctress and o singer of great power, who came upon the stage without a “‘hand” or recognition, and left it amid vehement ap- plause, ', W, Couldock, the veteran actor of New York, has gone with Joe Jefferson to Brunswick, there to cam o lake. The two actors will fishing for salmon. Mr. Couldock says that he expects to play in ‘Hazel Kirke” up to the end of this century. He is now nearly seventy ars old, Miss Nevada, whose real name is Nixon, is wnid to bo “almost pretty,” and her accent’ is spoken of as “strougly Californian,” watever that may be. Her recent [debut in Paris in “The Pearl of Brazil” was quite successful. The correspondent of New York Tribune ways that “in some respects she comes nearer to Eatti than any other cantatrice of the day.” Giross cavelessness on the part of the prop- ty man at the opera house in Dens er, is the planation made of the alleged attempt to poi- eska, . A vial of phosphorus and awodt oll. e 5y e e Barrott 1n piay: ing Hamlet, was handed the actress to serve s & sleeping potion in rmulerimfi Juliet. On removing the cork the liquid took fire, and the vinl was handed over tothe manager. Sir Julius Benedict thinks Malibran was the greatest prima_donna he ever heard, and Mario and S es the greatest tenors. | ini he ranks “with country church | “Faust” he regards as the greatest opera, and xays none have been : w i worthy of mention, “I1 Trovator bish;" “Aida” and ‘‘Carmen,” “‘trash,” and “Pinafore,” “rot.” Yet Sir Julius is a genial and good natured old ventleman. During the first act of “Old Shipmates in Denver, ut the pera house, quite o scene occurred, A parrot had been borrowed. The bird, when he became aceus- tomed to the novel surroundings, commenced to display its accomplishments, to the amuse- ment of the audience. *Lamb chops or bread- ed veal?” screamed Poll, bringing forth a loud ‘-5l to which the bird responded with “Shut up —you make me tired!” following this up with a volley of oaths, The bird had to be carried off. welf, o — Do the Meel the arth? The eagle plucks the raven, . And the raven plucks the jay, oraciois craving et fulls o prey. The big fish dines at leisure Upon the smaller fry, And the minngw eats With pleasire The poor undonscious fly. The miser skins his neighbor, The neighbor skins tl’:lu poor, Aud the poor man ASie 1o Jabar Spurns the beggar from his door, And thus the world s preying, The strong upon the Wi o the precious sy o earth is for the meck.” ———— SINGULARITIES. A, N, Meals, of Moberly, Mo., recently sold o circus man’ & cow weighing over 3,800 pounds, Three hundred snapping turtles were taken out of Yelbow Breeches creek, Cumiberland county, Pa., in one day, recently. There is a peach tree in an orchard near Tulare, Cal., ou which are growing about a dozen mectarines and w large number of penches. A ocurious freak of uature can be soen at Solomon Marsh's farm, near Norton, Knnsns. "The curiosity is a calf born without oyes. The calf in perfectly formed, active and all right, with the exception that' it has no sign of an eyeball. Towa takes the lead in the matter of twins, Nine hundred and fifty Tows mothers per- formed double duty Inst year, adding 1,900 to the population of ‘that thriving state. It is sald to be the easiest state in the Union to ac- cumulate family in. While examining the waterworks of Rock Tuland a few days ago, Mr. Holly found in the pumps masses of accumulated dend fish, tur- tles, chunks and other trash. A *‘sucker” was found in ono of the pipes that measured three feot nino inches long and weighed over fifty- one pounds. A Calvepns (Cal.) man msserts that he killed tho Iargost rattiesnake on record last week. Tt was nine feot in length and twelve inches wround; it had twenty-four rattles that could be counted, bosides some that were worn off, and the rattles wero three inches across. He was killed only after being shot thres times, John Fleshen, of Money Creek, Tllinois, has an old rooster that has recently adopted w brook of young chickens that were deserted by their maternity. He constantly guards them, scratches for them, and ot night covers them with his protecting wings. W. R. Polston, of Nashyille, Tenn,, has a throe-legged bay colt, which is now over a year old, and of which The American says: Except- iug the fact that he possesses one leg less than othier members of hix species, is . perfectly formed animal, A young man writes to The Courfer-Journal that he kuows of & Kentucky gentleman “iwho has hair on his chest about” eight inches long, which appears about every two weeks, remains one week, and theu disappears, only to reappear aguin. This hair is of « light shde of green.” On McDonough street, Atlanta, hevo is o catwith six logs. The xextipede is the prop- erty of . Mr. Jolmson, onal two logs are just behind the cat's front logs, and od to them by a thin skin. . The cat moves with ease and Is not at all awkward, | will open collection of precious stones | which are to b hown. at majority | . Dr.J. T, Duryea, who was on ight and shining light " among the Troy, now of the Central Congrogationa | chureh in Boston, declining a call o another | pustorate, says: *Boston iy the hard on the plauet to do honest work in gelical church. tarianism has the tual lead here, and if & man is in a hurry vesults he'd better stay awav.” | Moxuok, Mica., Sept. 25, 1875, | rying to clwo the gmhing Sooe for months past, but failed. Fiducate. the policn b6 pla M.udlm.mda.’vl“fl.mo“"h{ gunbling deus. el Sl Sus—1 have been taking Hop Bitters for inflammation of kidneys and bladder. 1t has dene for me what four doctors failed to do, 'The effect of Hop Bitters seemed like magic to me. W. L, CARTER. " { much to the The of the native princes of 1.\.1...‘(...\.-].,..mimu to Jend their finest jewols, and among these | are some of the costliest i’ the The world rgy of | collection will ho especially rich in dinmonds | dian way of v other day sides. keys sat licking the te for days. Iiually the cat was put back, and then there was great joy. It licked all the little monkeys, andtlebig ones took turns hug- ging it until its tongue stuck out. The big trees of California are supposed to Do hoary with age that must be counted by centuries, bu:“&- are mere babies in the stretch of eternity beside the venerable relics of ancient forests that still thrive vigorously fn wud the mion | | oiled silk. The n “ [ gine supplied by » | of the Salvation army Asia. There is one known as the Bo_tree, in the sacred city Amarapoors, in Burm which European travelers say can claim a well authenticated age of 2,171 years, historical documenta keeping a trustworthy record which show it was planted 288 B, A Chagrin Falls, Ohio, man Is workin fiying machine, not of Darfus C pattern, but of the electric motor syl ome of the 1, a4 the revolving wings, set atan angle ke & wind-mill, for instance, are old, while s are dec ‘lll'l”}‘ new, and to practical. The frame of 5 be made of small tabular bamb on a and combining great steel and bambo Who visits us in summer's heat? Who bores us often on the street! Who frequently at home we meet! Who sails around on pinions fleet? Who takes in every free-lunch treat? Who dines with poor and the elite Who always gorges on fresh meat? Who never deigns to take treat, But always stands upon his feet Whenever he's inclined to eat? ‘Who should 1t be but that petite Little biter, with the sweet Name Mosquit? Boston Cou | —— LT Love at first sight in Los Angeles led to marriage in five hours and & complaint of bat- tery in neven d: A sixteen-yon d girl, one of the members an eastern tc ried a riegro the other day. A pretty faney is to ornament the broad sil- | ¢ ver knife used to cut the bride's loaf at the wedding. Make a pretty bow with long ends of white ottoman ribbon, abont an inch and & half wide. Miss Annie May Rhodes, a belle of Augusta, o married My, Walter G Roylin, of Norfolk, Va., at her home, last Thursday, had 11 brides-maids. At a marriage which took place a few weeks at Newport, England, the bride was a widow aged 82, the bridegroom » hachelor aged v | 80, and the bride was given away by her grand won. Mr. ( ger, Jr., kon of United States Di Sanger, of Massa- chusetts and Miss Susan E. 11, daughter of the Iate Hon, Harvey Jewell; were married in Boston on Thursday last. f the peace of Decatur, TIL, re- ed twenty-five c mony, it being all the groom The bride, however, agreed to make up the rest of the fee in black- berries as soon as they are ripe. At & weddi was very diliatory in arriving at the church, a lady remarked concerning the affair; “Well, the idea of that woman being late in gotting lere, she has been waiting twenty-xix yeurs for just sich a chance as thi!” Mr. Houry Deringer, who was maried in Baltimore on Wednesday last, is the grandson 1 namesake of thelate Henry Deringer, the inventor and mannfacturer of the famous pis- tol called “The Deringer.” The bride was dressed in deep mourning, but not, however, for any one of the wany victims of the deadly weapon, A wedding of two prominent correspondents urred in Washington on the 19th. Mrs. Mary Clemmer, who for twenty years has written letters to the press from that city, was Huds . He it the d in Washington e correspondent of the Boston Herald. Miss Eva Cunningham, a niece of Mrs.Gen. John A. Logan, recently fell in love with Ser- geant 8. S, -vecond infan- try, stati ., and se- cretly ma vhen he heard of the affair, which creat: gres ciety sensation, had the pair summoned, in the presence of the household the marriage ceremony was ngain performed. ngressman R, Graham Frost, of Sf about to become related to the E ocracy through the marriage of his h K. Beresford Hope, eldest son of & wealthy member of the British parlia- ment. Mixs Frost is at present in England, the guest of her sister, Mrs, Molesworth, nee Jenuie Frost, wife of the eldest son of Lord Lewis Molesworth, of Cornwall, WThe grand judy of Erie county, Pennsy vania, recommepled that married paupers in the \anlmuw, permitted to occupy joint s instesd of being separated. “The poor direct re altering the building to meet the ndation, but the' work Was stop) ay, owing to the discovery of a scheme among wbout one hundred unmarried inmates to marry and secure the extra com- forts, the project being to marry each other ac- cording to Pennsylvania law, which recog- nizes simple declaration before witnesses & legal marringe. The ages of the parties ranged from eighteen to eighty. ~Dispatch to Phila- delphia Times, ol gl L A Strawberry Blonde. T'm in love with a strawberry blonde, And she wears those colors which muit The times and herself—in Which bond Sho has, T thiuk, taken the fruit. Her eyes they are dreamy and sweet, And her lipe—they are stzawberry, tov Fill my eart with rapture roplote When she calls me her darling du-du. When the sky s ax fair, aud not less Than herself -and it cannot be more When the weather i not in stross— As sometimes it i out of door 1 she leads by its slender gold chuin + On a walk her frisky tan pup, The onvious girls can’s refraln From letting their noses go up. Of a strawberry flavor throughout, ‘With a hint of the fruit in her cheeks, She was made to go crazy about, And is all that my high fancy seeks; She sweet as the strawberry is ‘That grows in the wild mountain field, And my heart overflows with the bliss Of knowing her pa is well heele ——— Home items. . v own fault If you rem: k when you can Get Hop Bitters that never—FAiL. The weakest woman, smallest child, and sickest invalid can use hop bitters with safety and great good. Old men tottering around from Rheu- matism, kidney trouble or any weakness will be almost new by using hop bitters. ~My wife and daughter were made healthy by the use of hop bitters, and I recommend them to my people.—Metho- dist Clergyman. Ask any good doctor it Hop the best family medicine Ague and Billiousness will leave every neighborhood as soon as hop bitters arri My mother drove the paralysis and neuralgia all out of her system with hop bitter."—Ed. Oswego Sun. —Keep the kidneys healthy with hop bitters and your need not fear sickness. Toe water is rendered harmless and more refresh- Iug and reviving with hop bitters in each draught.. The vigor of youth for the aged and infirn inhop bitters. ——— The Lincoln institute of Philadelphia will | continue its good work b ing school for Indian ¢ ts change to Idren. Vith Crook e wonderful | o subdue the bad Indians and schools like that | at Carlisle and such as the Lincoln institute will become for the education of the child of good lution of the Indian probl significant fact Siver Creexk, N Grxts—1 have been very low, and ha tried_everything, to no advantage. { heard your Hop Bitters recommended by 1did, and now am around, and con- stantly improving, and am nearly as | W strong as ever. H. WELLER, to frecze when it's cold; suffer from oxcessiye perspiration when its warm—use Brown's Iron Bit- ters, nar- | ts for perform. | ¢ g in Harlem, Where the bride | EDUCATIONAL, John Hopkins university conducts five jour. nals devoted to original ‘scientific investiga. tions, physical culture, of gymnastics. The full endowment of £200,000 for tl been secured. Tn probably ther place | Strobeck, ¢ | course of study in the schools. n the number of graduates at West P | year. Tt has four out of fifty-two. |" The Harvard Faculty apart for graduste stndents mext year four scholarships of the value of at least 250 each, The average cost of every school Tllinois was £1,836; in Ohio, $1,800; York, 82.584; fn Tennessec, $202; in 91:in North Carolin, $130, and in Carolina, 847, Tt is #aid that there are one hundred and thirty-two pianos in the publ ton. ~ That accounts for the condi average Boston mind that has been the schools of that city. young women, gradustes of Cornell university, ttered through nearly every state in the Union, are just now engaged in a terrific struggle over the election of an alumni trustee, The Methodist Episcopal church controls forty-two colleges and universities and four theological schools, The Syrcuse university, to which Bishop Peck gave all of his property, has now in_operation three collegas b arts, medicine and_fine arts—with an gate of three hundred and seventy students and a property worth over §500,000. Some further examinations of children in termany for short-sightedness confirm the ear- ness prevails, Of 45,000 children who re examined in schools of all grades more than one-third were found to be suffering from it, while in some schools the proportion was 70.80, and in one—the gymnasium at Heidel- Tt is announced that a Choctaw Indian is soon to graduate from au eastern college. It is expected that the experience he has had in hazing at the college, and getting off the col- lege yell, will mako him one of the most des. perate Iudians of his tribe, if he decides to return to his old haunts. An Indian with the polish and grace which a college gives, ought to make a holy terror. ArpaY, N. Y., June 15.—The graduating exercises at_Vassar college, at Ploughkeepsie, Wednesday, there being a class of thirty-nine graduating with the laureato degree, one from the school of painting, and five from the school of music. OF the westarn raduates there were Rose Jennie Baldwin, of ndianapolis; Mary Cooley, of Dubuque, Ta.; Pomeroy ‘Ciitler, of Girand Haven, A Anna Hubbell Lathrop, of Rockford, 1ll; Mary Sudduth, of Normal, Tll; Mary | Comptan” Street, of Council Bluff fa,, and Sarah Holmes gan, Vassar commencementjelosed without a vale- dictory this year, becanse the graduating class made a formal protest last February against the hoyor system. The trustees voted accord- ingly to grade students by their general pro- gress, instead of by th special attainments in scholarsnip. Even this did not suit the grad- ating class, which asked for the course pursued at Smith college, in Northampton, Mass., of excluding the graduating class from the stage altogether on commencement day. The action of the trustees, as it stands, is worth some- 'thing as a concession to the simple fact that the continuous strain of women's colleges, rum\in‘; their studies day in and day out as tho colleges of young men do, capped by ex- aminations, has had very serious results upon the health of students ‘in institutions where the standard is high enough to make their studying amount to much. hreadway, of Pontine, Mich- IMPL JTIE! Kittridge, of Chicago, in making ations for his marriage, sold a green ot to a neighbor, who talks of returning it, hecause every time the door opens it cries out, "‘lv] n the book agent!” It utters what others WA Brownville, Tenn, has invented a iral Wind-mill to be used in running street Vi He probably got his idea | from the spiral wind-mill in oper |in & Brooklyn church, and he thought is one would be used i it ought to i & street car ot ledst. Louisville Courier- paragraph “'A Receiver Prayed For. It won't do any harm to try the experiment, per- haps, but ville brethren might just as well save their breath, Everybody who ever had any experience with a wound-up_in- surance company knows that most receivers are past praying for.—Chicago Herald, The assista ishop of Kentucky (Dudley) says of quartette choirs; “My brethren, a fashionable quartette choir seems to me like the quaternion of soldiers set to guard St. Peter in Herod’s dungeon; the vigilance is so unceasing that only an angel from heaven is equal to rouse up the slumbering spirit of de- votion and speed its steps toward the Jerusa- lem where they Would exclude him.” A London paper illustrates the force of pre- i’uvlina by & story that a very low church min- ister was reproving his curate for having taken part in a wedding breakfast, “‘But, sir, said the young man, in amazement' ‘‘our Lord himself was present at a wedding feast in Cana!” “That's perfectly true, young man,” answered the parson; “buf in my opinion he had much better have stopped away, Auhlry is told about the ordination of a fouug English clergyman, whose. naimo was Salter. Nature had gifted him with hair which was the reddest of the red. Feeling that in the solemn ceremonies of his ordination this red hair might be the cause of irreverent mirth, especially as the ritual prescribes that the bishop should touch it, he determined to dye it black for the occasion, which he did, e bishop_afterward _expostulated with the | authority of the rubric in the prayer book, which says: ““Tho Pralter must b read in the churches. A New Hampshire paper says that while a Rev. Mr. Stocking was on his wedding jour- ney last summer he occupied one of the pulpits in that state. He was & very little n when ho gave out his text: *‘She what she could,” the ladies of the con smilingly accepted his apology, in | Bia. wile, for not ha Ata t south camp meeting the elo- quent divine said: “The wheels of the right- eous shrick and groan s they toil up the hill of salvation and over the ruts of temptation and bridge of dumnation, and have toscrowdge pretty lively to get up at all; but the sinner, with greased wheels and_flying colors, slips down'%o taration 1ike s dose of oil, with » Hp and & whizz, and raises no dust ‘whatever."” Now who says oratory is & lost art? asks Life. e— The germs of disease are neutralized by Samaritin Nervine, $1.50. A correspondent, Mr. 8. L. Morgan, Walken, Mo., s amaratin Ner- | vine cured my boy of fits.” You can get t: |it at drug gation ehalf of ng paired herself better. s of the ra- ical philos. et prevaile. 1t is & perfectly pure vege: Jembrac the three " tonic and an ¥ tive. It forti body against dises invigorates and re vitalizes the torpid | | eyos | 0 many, I concluded to give them a trial. | DUFRENE & MENDELSSOHN, ARCHITECTS REMOVED TO OMAHA NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. Cornell univessity is to have a professor of A new name for a teacher have decided to set | Something over 800 young men, and several ly reports of the great extent to which this | = in propelling souls to repentance ournal heads a news hapless Salter, and alleged against him the |* ophy which at pres- | YAS THE BEST STOCK IN ONARA, AND NAKES THE LOVEST PRICES, Important Improvements. Have now been finfehed in our store, making it the largest and most complete [ | | | | gchonl of philosophy, at Princeton, N. ., \.m." 3 the world but | rmany, does chess form a regular | |, North Carolina leads all the southern states ] t Poing this In the west. Anadditional sfory has been built, and the five floors all connected with two HYDRAULIC ELEVATORS. | One exclusively for the use of passengers. 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CLARK, Painter & Paper Hanger SIGN WRITER & DECORATOR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL WALL PAPER WINDOW SHADES & CURTAINS, Cornices, Curtain Poles and Fixtures, { PAINTS, OIL & BRUSHES, 107 South 14th Street, NEBRASKA | | b " W. F. CLARK, WALL PAPER, PAINTER, PAPER HANGER AND DECORATOR, KALSOMINING GLAZING And work of this kind will receive prompt attention. CORNER SIXTEENTH AND DOUGLAS, - - OMAHA, NEB,