Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 15, 1883, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE- ATURDAY, SEP {EMBER:15, 1883 JOS. GARNEAU| RACKER COMPANY DUDEST CRACKER MANUFACTURERS IN THE UNITED STATES, Our Factory, 12th and Jackson Streets, is the most complete establishment of its kind in this country. Our Goods are the best in the Market. —— | FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. N ebraska. VISITORS TO OMAHA ALWAYSHASK FOR GARNEAU'S EAGLE BRAND OF GRACKERS AND YOU WILL GET THE BEST. Our exhibit at the State Fair will be the finest displuy of Crackers, Biscuits and Cakes ever seen in Angd the public generally desiring to examine the workings of our institution will be!welcome‘ JOS. GARNEAU Cracker Company, - - - - Twelfth and Jackson streets. Advertising Cheats!!! l ‘It has become 8o commonto write the ‘beginning of an article, in an elegant, in- ‘teresting manner, ““Then run itinto seme advertisement that we avoid all such, “‘And simply call attention to the mer- iits of Hop fiim:u in as plain, honest terms as posible, ““To induce people ““To give themonetrial, whichsoproves their vlTun that they will never use any- Ghm% else.” “Tur ReMEDY 80 favorable noticed in all s, “Yl‘cpl‘i’giou- and secular, is “‘Having a large sale, and is supplant- ing all ether medicines. ““There is no denying the virtues of the Hop plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bitters have shown great shrewdness “‘And ability “In compounding a medicine whose virtues are 5o palpable to every one's ob- servation.” “No! “‘She lingered and suffered along, pin- ing away all the time for years,” . *The doctors doing her no good;"” “And at last was cured by this Hop Bitters the papers say so much about.” “Indeed! Indeed!" “How thankful we should be for that medicine.” A Daughter's Misery. ¥ “Eleven years our daughtor suffered on & bed of misery, “From a cnmyliutiun of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble and Nervous debility, “‘Under the care of the best physicians, *‘Who gave her disease various names, “But no relief, “And now she is restored to us in good health by as simply a remedy as Hop Bit- s, it we hiea ahunnadtor yoars e fore using it.”—Tur PAkENTS, Did Shejie? Father is Getting Well. My daughter says: "Hflw-m bettor father is since he used Ho Bitters. “ilola well atter bis long suffer S LT ani A, bty sufariog frvee HBURBIX.A I Have Found It! Was the exclamation of & man when he gob & box o Kureka Pile Ointment, which 1s & simple and sure woure for Piles and all Bkin Discases. Fifty conte by The American Diarrhaa Cure « L over . Diseriaess Dyvoniary, and Chale l)ulfi&‘mr and Ague Tonic & Cordial, Bt kmpossible to supply the rapid sale of the same. BURE CURE WARRANTED For Fever and Ague, and all Malarial troubles, PRICE, $1.00. W.J. WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 16TH ST., OMAHA, NEB. For Sale by all Druggists maed DUFRENE & MENDELSSOHN, ARCHITECTS M‘Im T0 OMAHA NATIONAL BANK "JOHNC.JACOBS. | Formerly Gisb & Jacove | tree then ‘When I am Dead. When I am dead, T would not have the rudo and gaping crowd Amunil me gather, and, 'mid lamentation oud, Tell of my virtues, and with vain regret Bemoan my loss, and, leaving me, forget; But would have the fow of kindly heart, Who, when misfertune came, so nobly did their part, And oft by thoughtful deeds their love ox- pross— These would I have, no more, no less, When I am dead! When I am dead, T would not have tho high and stored stone Placed o'er my grave, and_then be loft alone; But T would hnve sorae things 1 once did love, Ero I did leave the joyous world above, Placed o'er me, And each succeeding year Tid iave my friends reiew them, and ofé linger near, With loving thoughts upon the dear one laid below, And talk of timen doparted long ago, When I mn dead! When T am dead, Forgivo—On this I pray far'more than all The anguish I have caused, the deed beyond rocall, Think kind] So poor a su Thi; on me s T lie so still ct for an angered will, uk of some generous deed, some good word spoken, Of hearts bound up T found all sad and broken; Think gently, when this last long rest i mino, And guzo wpen wy form with looks Lonign, When 1 am dead! Franklin P, Dal; p the Guardian, | — SINGULARITIE _The camvhor-tree is to bo cultivated in Florida, A ’{rlmn turtlo caught at Cedar Key, Fla,, weighed 600 pounds, Maoals, of Moberly, Mo., recontly rous man a cow weighing over 3,800 pounds. A wan of Virginia City has an_electric stove, from which the articles have to hic be lifted during chiefs, Some camels were turned loose in Arizona sixteen years ago, They have o multiplied ax to be troublesome, and aro to be hunted down, Daniel Burkett, of Big Creck Gap, East Tennessce, who is said to be 19 years old, mlgm only 30 pounds and is ouly "18 inchos storm with silk handker- Soven catfish measuring from nino to eloven inchen in length were found recently by workmen in ropairing an old hotel in Dallus, Tex., under the floor of the hall between the bath'tubs, A wild popper bush measuring fourteen foet aoross the top and forty-two foet around is rmm on an island in - Churla Apopka lake, in Florida, The bush is only 2 years eld, an bears an immense quantity of fruit. Old Fancy, the war horse rode by Stonewall Juckson, 1s tenderly cared for at the Virginia Military Institute “at Lexington. He s a handsome sorrel of good form, but his joints are stiff. Heo is 80 years old, On MeDonough street, Atlanta, there is a cat with six lnT-n. The sextipede is the prop- erty of a Mr. Johnston, The additional two logs are just behind the cat’s front legs, and are joined to them by o thin skin. The cat movos with ease, and is not at all awk- ward, The longest bridge in the world is in Chin Its roadway is seventy feet wide o feet high, “There are 300 arches, and each the pillars, which are seventy-five feet apar bears a pedestal on which is the figure of a lion twent; foet Long, aud made out of one block of The people of Brooklyn, Conn., deen their the most beautiful tree in New Eng hundred years ago its top was cut off bushing in” hayseed, and the young out off many branches near the Some of these have grown to lonth t and are very large, Eastman, who lives negr Raleigh, N. C., and is & well-known farmer, has » pair of curiositios in the shape of two setter dogs. These are perfect in form, but ins ead of 5“, allowance of four feet, Dame Nature has only arble. o use in ground. of sixty fi Dr. , C, UNDERTAKER. G v s Lo Thi given them two each.’ o they are compelled to walk erect, “‘stand up like a man,” so to speak. These queer dogs can be scen any time at Enstman’s mill, three miles east of Raleigh. Two colored men began digging a well about two weeks ago in the yard of an electric light company in Philadelphia. The ground became warmer a8 they descended, and at a depth of twenty-four feet boiling water poured in and drove them out. About thirty feet distant is an old well into which the hot water from large boilers has boen blown, and it is believed that this hot water has so heated the surrounding gravel and_sand that all the water filtering through it is heated to the boiling point. A rose farm is o new Georgiaindustry, Two gardeners in the vicinity of Savannah planted three acress In rose trees. This year thoy sold 2,000 trees to parties in the north, and had orders for 50,000, which they could not fill. The trees moet with a ready sale at from £10 to 820 per 100. Over half a million trees are unmml[y imported into this country from France, England and Holland, and the Savan- nah News says it has been demonstrated that Georgia has a better climate for the cultiva- tion of rose trees than that in the south of France, Henry Harris, of Morriwether, Ga., claimed to have s bullfrogs on his place which made a business of swallowing c])lLLl'llA and ducks, Thim. Last week, hearing ong his ducks at the poud, he ran down in time to capture an_im- mense frog that had nearly finished swallow- ing o young duck. Mr. ‘Harris placed the frog, Which was one of the largest ever seen in that vicinity, in a box and carried it to town, where xhibited it to the awe-stiicken na- tives. The legs of the duck were just visible in the throat of the croaker, He intended to make a tour of the nowspaper offices in that portion of the state to exhibit tl nonster,but t died before he get sut of town, 7 em— Clean, I b Tho cholera brings commotion And putrid doad 1t soon will ¢ S0 keop CON An Ohie woman, thirty-two years old, has sued a boy of eighteen for breach of promise. After & German wedding at Leavenworth, a charivari party appeared and was invited into the house, when its members were attacked with knives, three men and one woman being badly cut. The Rev, Owen O'Brien, of St. Stephen’s Church, Brooklyn, hvd the pleasure of marry- ing his father, Mr. Thomas O'Brien, to Miss M. Hurley. ‘Wonder if he had the courage to kiss his stopmother after the ceremony was performed, An advertisement in » Lyons, France, pa rer, aays & young lady, 21 years of uge, o member of an honorable hmll{' offers her love in marriage to the iman who will come to the ald of her parents. Age or looks are of no account, but he must have & good establish- ment. Youug Amdrew Hall, of Brooklyn, whose mother 1# wealthy, has married » negress, and the family are eudeavoring to have the mar- riage set aside on the ground that he is & lun: tic. But Andrew vows he is not a lunatic, and that he would rather lose $200,000 than his black Mary, Miss Henderson went to Pierre, Dakota, to be married to J. D, Scott, but Scott died be fore the time set. At the funeral Miss Hen- derson told her sympathizing friends that Seott was the fourth man to whom she had beon engaged, and that all had died before the time fixed for the nuptials, At recent weddiug of a Troy lawyer, be sides numerous and costly gifts to the bride there was one to the 1, couslsting of & pol icy of accidental insurance dating from noou of the weddiug day and expiriug at uoon of the day following. Upon its face, in due form, was endorsed a {ssion to marry not ug one thne during the life of this The marriage of Canutto Pecei, nophew of the Pope, with Miss Bueno, will take pl Paris this month. Mgr. do' Rende will | it, and Mgr. Cataldi, the perfect of the ponti- fical ceremonies, will represent the Pope, 1t is Mgr. Cataldi, who, for a great many years' has been the Pope's agent for all his family af- fairs, and a sort of intermediary between the Pecci and the Holy Father. ——— Here and Yond I walk in the crowded city, And the pavement pains my foet, And nothing but piles of buildings Shut in the stones of the street; But 1 ouly see the meadow And the wood 50 cool and sweet. T walk in the crowded city, And mix with the noisy throng, And the din is liko to the beating Of a great, incessant gong; But 1 only hear the brook flow And the brown wood thrush’s song. T walk in the crowded city, And daily the many grow more, And fill up the street like a mill race As hither and thither they pour; But T only see a cottage And a maiden at the door. 1 walk in the crowded city, And buy and sell in the mart, But still in its crush and clamor I feel that I have no part; For the sweet, fresh life of the country Forever abides in my heart. 1 walk in the crowded city, But soo the green meadow still, And look through the piles of buildings "I'o the wood that crowns the hill, And alone with the cottage maiden 1 wan-ler afar at L e — HONEY, FOX ly blea that which Father Time has operated on. A young lady calls her beau **Honeysuckle” | becaiise he is always hanging over the front | railings. Hindoo veiling is light, soft, and lovely for | summer drosses, and for evening toilets in all seasons, Bouquets are now worn on the corsage, not ab tho belt. They should be large, loosely put together and of only one kind of flowers, A lrilliant shade of plum color and an- other of rich dark blue have quite taken the lnhu'«uf strawberry and terra cotta in popu- arity. Any dress for the autumd, so very elastic are the modes will be fashionable if it fits well, has light sleeves and well draped to a narrow tournure, In the tar west & man advertises for a wo- man “to wash, iron, and milk one or two cows.” What ddoes he want his cews washed and ironegl for?—Oil City Derrick. ‘Woolen muslins are to be had in all possible shades of color—old coppor, terra cotta,crush. ed strawberry, and all the new colors as well asall the classical ones. A man makes au awful row if his wife takes his razor to trim a little maize on her little tog or sharpen a lead pencil, but he thinks it is all right, and scoffs at her, if she shrieks her fee- bfis protests when he takes her little ewbroid- ery scissors to cut a cooper telephone wire, “Don't hurt the scissors at all,” ho says. Tt is almost impossible to distinguish the new velveteen from real velvet, so silky is its surface, and 50 soft and even its face. The dark colors of this material ade very handsome anp they make both stylish and_wear-defying Walking skirta; the now brand, it is clalined, being proof agaiust rain spots, and warranted never to fade. Very long gauntletted gloves of Suede and wash leather will be worn this autumn for driving, shopping, and with walkiog cos- | tumes” The hindsomest are not of the lately | tushionable pale yellow or tan shad but | come in dark green, nze, n, olive, and | Uther quiet colors, slightly stitehed with pale | 1d silk, and having the gauntlets lined | with the same delicate tint. | One of the features of dress trimmings this autumn is the cutting of the edges of skirts, tunics and palonaises into turrets, Vandykes | and scallops-—a fashion 80 popular last season | in lighter fabrics, Tweed dresses are made in | this manner with good success, the blocks or poiuts being lined with s nd turned back Yometimes to show & bright kilting under- neath. Some of the blocks are quite broad, and not only trim the foot of the skirt and | They'd bett Wi i tunic, but are set in full double rows around the edge of the long pointed bodice in regular Elizabethan style. Shopping at Saratoga is uuusually brisk on the closing days of tho season, and it is said that many ladies of fashion linger late to get Dbargains in laces, parasols, rugs, and fancy ar- ticles at the shops that are about to close. Most of the summer store are branches of New York houses, but one enterprising New Orleans firm follows customers to the Springs with a choice stock. Rather than re- pack and reship their wares the merchants mark down their prices to figures that tempt visitors from the inland towns to buy. Fruits are the favorite devices for ornament- ing both brocaded and vprinted dresses, and bonnets and hats. Now that those luscious productions of the orchard are to be admired inall their perfection, they are more than ever closely copied from nature. It seems as though ladies had been arranging their dessert upon their headgear. Apricots and peaches are tastefully combined with walnuts and grapes, and apples aud pears appear nesting in moss and foliage, et ST greon al- monds, plums and nectarines, ——— The Indian and the Trout. “The morning sun in splender shone On the mellow park of the Yellowstone. The president at the break of day Had packed his duds and moved away. A brave Shoshone chief camg out With his willow polo o s for trout. It was halj-past 6 when he cast his line, And he kept on g till half-past 9; And then ho baited his hook anew And patiently fished until half-past 2 The meanwhile swearing a powerful sight For fishing all day with nary a bite. And he swore and fished, and fished and swore Till his Elgin watch tolled half-past 4, When a big, fat trout came swimming by And winked at the chief with his cold, sad eye; “And do you reckon, you pagan soul, Y s ateh us trout with a willow pole? lent taught us manners while H us in the latest style. You've no idea how proud we feel To be jerked ashore with a Frankfort reel?” The red man gathered his dinner-pail And started home by the shortest trail, And he told his faithful squaw he guess'd nove still farther west. ts didn't come fooling about, ads of the giddy trout. | — PEPPE T DROPS, The melancholy days have come, the sweet- est of the year, Female suffrage and the Keely still matters of the future. The postal notes look as if they had been printed by & **blacksmith” on a cider press and soft soap used in place of ink. There was a touch of frost in Virginia on Monday moming, but the political thermome- ter down there keeps steady at about 200 Fahrenheit. 1t is said that when jams ho sees nothing bu Tats, m\filglu—eyu-l fikh an sters. That is what c 80 much stock, Jay. 1t was a happy thought on the part of our Government to purchase the Y ellowstone country and convert it into a National park. It belongs to all the people of the United States, the poor as well as Ll‘m rich, and all it costs for a man living inside of civilization to wo there aud return is a thousand dollars or nd perhaps his sealp.-—Norristown Her motor are y Gould has the jim- water snakes, Water ther marine mon- os of ‘‘watering” Water pity it is for poor setts man hus inven hotels which not only but which ki " e him out of b ave him and pay his hotel bill. ~ The inventor of such a contrivance could sell ‘em for $6 apiece The Fur The chiefs of the Fire Departments re- commend the great pain-banisher, St. Ja- cobs Oil. Matthew Brady, Esq., Chief ngineer Fire Department, San Francis co, Cal.; W. A. Hart, Esq., Chief Eugi neer Fire Department Portland, Oregon, endorse it. It conquers pain. Is, ever Fal ONMAHA DRY HOP YEAST! = Manufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co. Housels eepers ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL. 'Sjey 13Ky CORNER 15TH AND DAV PORT STREETS, OMAHA, NEB. Rstablished in 1838. THE LEADING ' |Carriage Factory 1409 and 1411 Dodge Street, NEBRASKA. PIANOSKCORGANS On Long Time--Small Payments. At Manufacturers Prices. A Hospe Jr 1619 DODGE STRE (arriages, Buomes, | u-trated Catalogue furnished free upon applicatian MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-CLASS b, Mm% LI ! Office 1810 and 1920 Hamey Strect andfeas . 13t swest, —~OMAHA, NEB ) A.HE. DATLEY, ' MANUFACTURER OF FINE Buggies, Carriages and Spring Wagons My Repository is condtantly filled with a sclect steck. Best Workmanship guarantoed. and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Omaho \, A

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