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

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THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, L LOSS ANDBAIN, onarmRl. I was taken sick & yoar ago With billous fever.’ And sit upon the musty floor and weep, My doctor pronounced mo cured, but | Holding a baby's dresses in her hands. 1 gotsick again, with terrible pains in my | 1 often wonder grandma loves ta sit back and sides, and 1 gotso bad 1 ©ould not move! 1 shrunk! Of Biessed Memory. 1 often wonder mother loves to creep A handsomo faee across whoso features fiit The phantoms of alove she would recall, Up to the garret where a cupboard stands, pear troos wore also in blosom, and ripe strawberrios which had grown in the open air. ““The fact,” says The Debats, “is miraculous in the latitude of Normandy."” A. H. Pard, of Pekin, 11, has a curious relic in the shape of & gun that was made in- Germany 249 years ago, It is a very curiona Alons where hangs a picture on the wall— | weapon, and on the stock is a German in- seription, which gives thy name of its owner. The letters are inlaid in gold on the stesl bar- THE YOUTH'S COMPANION From 228 Ibs. to 120! ing for my liver, but itdid me nogood. T did not expect to live more than three months, T began to use Hop Bittors. Directly my appetite returned, my pains left mo, my entire system seemed re- newed as i several bottles I am not only as sound as a soveroign but weight more than I did before, To Hop Bitters I owe my life. Dublin, June 6, '81. R. FrzraTRIOK. CrAvER 2. Maddon, Mass., Feb. 1. 1830, Gentlomon— 1 suffered with attacks of sick headache.” Neuralgia, female trouble, for years in the most terrible and excrutiating, man- ner. No medicine or doctor could give me relief or cure until I used Hop Bitters. “The firet bottle Nearly cured me;” The second made me as welland strong as when a child. 0 And 1 have been 8o to thisday.” My husband was an invalid for twenty years with a_serious Kidney, liver and urinary complaint, !“Pmnouncod by Boston’s best phys- i cians— *‘Incurable!” Seven bottles of your bitters cured him and I know of i)‘IIQ *‘Lives of eight persons” In my neigfiborhood ‘that have been saved by your bitters, And many more aro dsing them with great benefit. ““The almost Do myracles?” —Mrs. E. D. Slack. HOW 10 Ger 81ck.—Expose yourself day and night; eat too much without ex- ercise; work too hard without rest; doctor all the time; take all the vile nostrums advertised, and then you will want to know How to get well, which is answered in three words—Take Hop Bitters from eminont phy- a sicians, and has long ) foremont As an invigorant, Tostottor's Stom} | bre i ach Bitters has re- RILIBRATED Geived 116 tmosk pos: 2 itive endorsement A\ o ng stand: ard propriotary remedies. 1ts prop ertios as an altera. = tive of disordered * conditions of the stomach, liver and bowals, and & _pro- ventive of malaral diseases are 1o loss renowned. STOMACH For sale by all Druggists and Deal- ¥ ar,to whom apply tor’ Hostottor's Al- 1 manac for 1884, BITTERS. BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS, An excellent l]!pn(lzlmi tonic of 8 exquisite finvor, now used over the whole world, ' curcs Dyspepsia Diarthaa, Fever and Agte, and all disorders of the Digestive Organs, few di impart a deliclons flavor to a glass of champagne, and to all summer drinks. Try it, but beware of counterfeits, Ask your grocer or druggist for the Kb)nnlnc article, manufuctired by DR, J, Q. B, BIEGERT & BONS, J. W. WUPPERMANN, Sole Agent. orvesng Buseessor o J. W, Haxcox, b 651 Brosdway, N. Y. . HENNINGS i IMPROVED G, SOFT ELASTIC SECTION GORSET tod " 2, Ve peites offior Coraat i Wil oy JNO. H. F. LEHMANN, Health is Wealth AND _BRATN TREAT- for lysteria, 1 Nervous ) guarantoed L Conyulsions, Fits, 1 he, Nervous Prostration ¢ ml'(" by llmll;m' worth of personal jewelry, and he names ten, | well as the physique of those long exposed to of aleohol or tobacco, Witkefulne ion, Boftoning of th y and leading (o aturo Old Awe, Barr: m either sox, Involuntary Lossos and Bpormat. orrhaea caused by ovor-axertion of thobrain, ol abuso or eyor-indulgonco, Jach box co ouo month's troatmont. £1,00 a box, or iz hoxes for §5.00, sent by mail prepuid on receipt of price, E SIX BOXES mpanied with 35,00, we will our writton guaranteo to re- fund the money if the treatmont does not effect woure. Guarantees issued only by F. GOODMAN, Hole Ageut for Omaha, Neb. c. DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S AT PREVENTIVE AND OURE. ZJOR EITHER SEX. Th remedy belng Injected 10 the seat She heaso, requires no of OF DAUSCOUS, urial of pofsonous medicliies to be taken intern’ iy en 1 aa s proveative by sither sex, 1t Iy fmpossiolo to contract any private ; but 1b the oase of those siready unfortunately aflicted we guar- antes three boxes to cure, o we will refund the e e for o P el 8 pev Box. o AWRITTEN GUARANTEES #sued by all suthorized agente. Dr.FelixLeBrun&Co SOLE PROPRIETORS,? ¥, , Sole 1 o7 S o e gt e 19 by 8 | - Youraic Beue Co, Mavsuars, Mic | foot aud four inchos is admitted. 1 had been doc- | 1 wonder, too, that sister, pale and sad, by magic, and aiter using |my, jittle lips in voiceless death are senled — " | The lovers bones bleagh on a battle field ralgin, | are 200 ladies rol, and aro in old_style German lotters not actually produced in modern lotters. Whaita ‘st thogate, and, waiting, ssems to| " A "Avery Sr. of Bibb gounty, Alabams, has & hat that he asstires people is 110 years hear The footfals of e brave, herolo lad old, having been worn by his grandmother in Who nevermore may woo her waiting there. |20y "Y1 %7 VEE 6 SRR o praserved. Mr. A.'n family has two other rolics of ancient date: One a powder-gourd used by their great grandfather in the revo- The haughty squire .sloeps now a lasting | Jutionary war, and the other a chest over 120 sleop yoars old. The recent, tribute sent by the King of Anam to the emperor of China, consis of: 1. Two elephant's tusks, 2. Two rhinoceros’ horns, 8, Forty-five caties of betel nuts. 4. Forty-five oaties “grains of paradise.” 5. The populsr utility wrap Is the long ul. | Six hundred ounces of sandal wood. 6. Three ster. :\In::rw: r:mm '»l :Inm»;»“wogd.o 3 ;m * ; andred pleces of native silk, 8, One hun: Wb 877 f soilats romatnin | HET oden of white silk. 8, One hundred Agt SAPUI Ploces of raw silk. 10, Une hundred pleces of The newest tablo linen is embroidered in | native cloth. heavy white silk flos, A New York correspondent reporta in The Perforated cork bonnets trimmed with fur | Allgemeine Zeitung an astounding discovery. aro the latest French fancy. He stater that in the virgin f of Sonora, Bonnets with oloth crowns and velvet brima Inpmvh-cn of v:e‘-t:ml exh’n. oz M-«;l"-‘; are the favorites for demi toilets. ona, & pyramid has been found mensurl T.ong, ornamental shell Hair pina are made [ 4,800 foet at it base and rising to the helcht drommy with Khine stones in the curved ends, [0f 700 feot, | A carriage road winds about thia enormous structure from base to summit. Now Vork gitls carry stout w. tick®. | T face consists of granite blocks earefully Their grandmothers carried long, broom- | gut’ and porfoctly Rted together. Nob far aticks, bt " glnhnt u:‘nlxlurhhlll‘rhl?h. :;‘ are !‘.uhl, “ Lace nl arniture for bonnet oneycombed with cells of various sizes, al this ul::n:o:x.w mh: tFimming of real point [ cut out of the solld rock, They are withont upan elegant velvet opera capotes. windows, several are on the same level, and For a reward of $10 the women of Stephens- the walls are adorned with fantastic shapes ville, Texns, nnfllfl{ met and pieced and [ and symb quilted a quilt without speaking a word. e ‘Next month leap year will bo hers, and then |~ Writethem a Letter To-night, the witls will have & right to ask for what they | Don't go to the theatre, lecture or ball, w-nf and widows can pass their plates for But stay in your room to-night; second pieco of pie. Deny yoursef to the frionds that call 3 color for evening as for | _ And a good long lotter writo— T i erapo. compored. & | Writo to the sad old folks at hormo, frotty il worn Tt weok at an ovening party, | Wh whan the day is done, 208 o of 3 » bodice, paniers and back drapings wer s (OO it R ottt BNvOY.) And broken-hearted women live to weep. - —— HONEY FOR THE LADIES, a peculiar shade. i o Mim Alico Honrn of Now ¥ork, found | hont sy sribble, *Fxcose my e D nront, tp-tood 0ut 0 the streot, AR e NS YN Akbdrioe found a policoman, returned, and bagged the e follow just ax he was leaving. Do s RTINS, Artlficial "‘-l'wl&(;'{ sy n:'m'.uhl‘:.u?: w,'\'"h they lost n,:hsr needed sleap and rost, urse—are the , and are ary nd every breath was a prayer prosant stylo of close ?fifin‘ garmenta, u.y: 'n'.f.g ::‘m! vgu‘l;l l:-vu n.::.- delicate babe t er WOman_one mee oir tander love and care, e fofully and wondorfully made. 5 "“ t:h T i Ohi 1 has taken polson on account | Don't let them feel that you've no more neo u(fi h‘\'fi‘ffifimun, Thop:lrln in that city [ Of their loveand “'{','.’.”] wise; Riv soem to be gotting worse and worse. ‘o | For the henthmwu inglly Sk vo fon't believe. that even a Boston girl would [ When ago has dimmed the eyes. ¢ Tt might bo woll to lot them belleve G i acoount of .4 Milwaukee | o7 Ty ooy Torgot thom e~ That you doem it & pleasure when far aws; Advicos from Manchester, England, are to | "Jor 9 eor 0o Write! Y the efboct that three large woolen factories,em- loying 700 looms, are in full blast, in the { Don't think that the young and giddy friends Ku]m (‘fi completing by the 20th inst. a stock- |~ Who make your pastime gay ing for & 8t, Louis girl to hang up on Christ- [ Have half the anxious thouzhts for you mas eve. That the old folks have to-day. Silver fox is not much worn, owing to ita | Tho duty of writing do not put off; serishable quality; but its still more expensive | Let sloep or pleasuro wait, L::nlplnlon,‘l(unlnn Neble, ias takon 164 place, | Lest the letter for which they lonked and 50 the womian who ean get that for a trimming longed fools happy. Thesilver fox is in tho same| Be aday or an hour too late, fratwjolprts For the sad old folks at home, Tho hoels of alipners for house woar aro as | ¥ i b 016 ks R Bowter, igh aa naual, but are. gradually’ broadening, | A ook Taet WrRitE Whkes o Thie toes are Jengthening, too, and are not em. | AT CHEIE bo Meaki ot e 1o broidered as formorly, bt aro adorned with & Soahm R i littlo rosotte of satin fibbon of tho same color ture s thiat of tho dross worn, ,,Volvotaen,both plain and brocaded,isshown ades ronze, scarlet, garnet, = " T roual bty and in langely wod foe wholo | MSitting Bull continues o lend himstlf to Da- Gostunes, tho trimmings consisting either of | kota church fairs, broad bands of fur or of Astrakhan, In fur| A Gotham thief has just been sentenced black fox is tho favarite garniture. to five years in the penitentiary for stealing a Tt was o Wall stroet man who had the au- | preacher's overcoat, dacity to give his bride a set of imitation | Say what you will against the church fair, poarls, —Tho frant was not discovered untll | the managers aro always ready o give & man Bfter tae honeymoon, when madam, thinking | a fair chanoe to spead money Judiciously, sho would oxchango the ift for RomOthing | - 4 maxa oditor insists that tho dovil has i amonda, had 6 ool Jowelr undocsvs | ki Ax i nformtion comanfron er, headquarters, we must accept it as settling pedowolors aro ploased o announe, for o tho heation, mefit of all whom it may anxcen, thab din- | 74 iy gaid that whenevor a stranger drops ten mond ear-rings are no dnger sot firmly 0 the | oty ity a church collection basket the - dea- gar, but aro allowad Wiy slightly, the mo- | gony axe uch they are being honored by a visit ourse, . the sparkle. Honan anesat o Jast 2 Title gold as poasible] from Jey Gould, o ¢ ghono nre ot 10 I ot to deteact] from their | “Providential death” was the verdict re- et turnod by o Brownaville (Toxas) fury in the A favorita ylo of owsley I of muggabfin- | £ L b e oo ished gold with scattered jowels imbedded in 9 e the rough surface, Handesome bracelets are | At Anconn, in Italy, 100 priests have he formed by uniting the roughly-rounded or | meotings with a view to organize a strike in roctangular platos, and linked sloeve-buttons | the event of the failure of their efforts to have of this style are well liked in the form of a | the amount paid for saying mass incroased. trofoll. Kora scarf-pin a little sword with | Eight women are on trial in Connecticut richly jeweled hilt is stylo of which few |for riot. So determined were these brave fe- young men are ashamed. males to hold a Sunday school that they lit The hair is_gradually being worn higher, | erally went at it with hammer and tongs. and ~shingled baags" are the Jatest style: o | Hence the riot and hence the trial. these the front hair over the forehead is cut| The following advertisement appears in in three different lengths, regularly graded. | Washington paper: ‘‘The prayers of God's After this has been done a bushy effect is pro- | people are most earnestly requested for the Quced by putting the hair up loosely in curl | thorough purification of a young church Japers once » week, or oftener f required. | whose pastors and officers are ‘inveterato to- Fiiton, each timo the hair is dressed the layors | tobacco users, much against the wishos of its must bo separated and combed up and down. [ members.” Tho new “Spanish mantle,” whichis to take | On some of the New York and Brooklyn the place of the hackneyed fur-lined circular [ linos running street cars that are heatod, the with those who seex for novelty in attiro, is | conductor provides a shovol and poker, which very boeoming to tall, slender ladies, This | he must take homo with him when he’ ceases wrap is uncommonly elegant and graceful, and | work and bring back when ho resumes. He is mado of black brocaded velvet and trimmod | must also replace broken lamp chimnoys. He around tho entiro garment with black Russian | could easily carry the souls of all these corpo- fox. Around the nock i very doop collar o | ation in his veat pocket. tho wamo fur, which covers tho shoulders 1ike | T any other placo than Washington it acape. Thewrap is linad with dark red|would create a public scandal for a clergyman lnlun h, and is much too heavy for street wear, | ¢5 pload in behalf of persons guilty of such holng designed especially for carriage use and | yractices us those of peusion-claim swindlers, an & garment o bo thrown aside in a boated | 13 there it appears duite the thing or an ex: room. chaplain of the senate to come out in defense A Broadway dealer in diamonds says there | of tho meanest rascals on the continent. The Ta New York who have 34,600 | malaria of*Washington affects the morals as | —— IMPIETIES, Jika M lv.mlurum l.nd“Mr-. Gould, \{\:umu its influence, ndividual property in diasmonds, sapphires, | Burdette: Tho watcher in church, His rubies and emeralds oxceeds $200,000. Moo | neck is fitted on a glob socket and turns clear than forty New York ladies can each lay | around, He sees everything that gooson, i £ £50,000 worth of jowelry, and plonty [ Tiio man who comes 1n Iato does ot cscapo of them have $25,000 invested. ‘““You can | him, and itis vain for the tenor to think ho sea how roadily & woman of great wealth can | got that little note to the alto conveyed be- accumulate gems whon I tell you that Van- | twoen tho leaves of the hymn-book unobsery- bilt's Christmas bill at Tiffany’s last year was | od, The watcher saw it~ He soes the hole in #42,000. T saw the check for that amount | the quarter that Klder Skinner dropped in the drawn by the millionaire in favor of the jew- | plate, He sees that Deacon Slowboy has but elor.”| one cuff. 1f the door swings he looks around Little girls this winter are’ woaring regular [it; if the window moves noiselessly he looks litklo Rod Riding Hoods, thair clonks belng | up. Ho kees tho atrangor in his helghbor's fashioned exactly sfter the model worn by the | pew, and ho rces Brother Badman, “sitting unfortunate heroine of the famous nursery lo- | away back uuder the gallery, furtively take a gend, The fashion has also extended to peo- [ chew of the inhibited fine” cut. All things Plo of larger growth, as many young ladies are | that nobody wants him to seo the Watcher sees. seen wearing long ulsters and close-fitting | He sees so much that he has no time to listen, Nowmarkets made of ladies' cloth of the dark- ent shado of cardinal or Vandyke red, Most of these wraps are unadorned, but a fow are seen trimmed with fivo or six rows of very narrow black velvet ribbons, This is usuall when the cloak is worn over skirts of blac| velveteen, The bonnet or hat is also of black velvet, and black ?lovu are a fitting accompa. niment, though & o ——— Song of the All 'Wool Shirt, My father bought an undershirt, Of bright and flaming red-- “All wool, I'm ready to assert, Floeco dyed,” the merchant said. ““Your sizo is thirty-eight, I think; ow dariag womon have ap. ¥ous alao la Pty appeared wearlng—in uttely bad taste-n| A forty you should got, Rlr of long Swedish Kid gloven of a shade| Sinoe all ool goods are bound toshrink corresponding with that of the ulster, R WAt foeyve Wk, LA "That shirt two wesks my father wore— BINGULARITIES, Two washings, thut was all-— kv ) Fromforty dowh ta thirtyfour Violats were n bloom on Dec, 1in Nor-| 1 wom 1t thone doo oot wich, Cona. But when 'twas washed again, Tacom, W. ., labus to havo fresh rasp: [ My wifs snid now iowill ouly do berrics in the market. for littlo brother Ben. A horse that wears shoes weighiug sixteen pounds, in traveling » mile, lifts 24,000 pounds, New York has a club called the *“Titans," which none of a tallor stature than six A fortuight Ben squoezed into it - At last ho said it hurt. W put it on our babe — the fit Was good ns any shirt. We no'er will wash it more while yet Wo sea in flickering light, A buttonwood that was a vigorous tree dus- For if again that shirt is wet ing the revolution still stauds on the farm of "Twill vanish from our sight, George Banger, Canterburg, Conn. It is 70 ——— feet high, the trunk measuring 16 feet in cir- CONNUBIALITIES, cumference two feet from the ground, aud it e is sl 2 - e A e T R (o o Hov. Mr. Sl mamed four couples In the negro cemetary in Amaricus, G, 18 | o bt Toe that B, ¢ Fte of 10 kiots a codar troo which was planted at the Boulut g | A0 hour for that Shipp, negroe's grave about ten 0. 1t burst| A young man in Cincinnati has agreed to et of thi croare A0 oy %% | narry s irl there on condition that sho earth, The pitcher still encircles the bottom | Welkhs 120 pounds on a certain day, which is of the cedar, and is without a crack, The | %8roed upon, tree fills the pitcher completely and s about | At Brownsville, Mo, My, Gralam and his elght or ten feet high, san opposed Lizaio rahaw's marriago to Jolhu On Nov. 20 @ fine branch of lilao was | Westbrook. John horsewhipped both, and !:.hnd i s Hcdu- at Steep Hill, in the | the wedding was assented to. of Jersoy. On the 3 LG Lreo were 1AnYy Miss Eleanor Butcher, d 20, of Louis- other branchies {o full flower, The applo aud | vills, Ky., macried Edwa-d Brierly, agod 10 FOR 1884. HE COMPANTON presents below the Announcement of its Fifty-Seventh Volume. Tts unusual character, both in the range of its topics, and its remarkably brilliant list of Contributors, will, we trust, be accepted as a grateful vecognition of the favor with which the paper has been received lllustrated Serial Stories. by more than 300,000 subscribers. A Story of English Rustic Life, by The Foundling of Paris, by -A Boys' 8tory, by The Covenanter's Daughter, by A Story of Adventure, by My School at Orange Grove, a Story of the South, by Marie B, Williams. Thomas Hardy. Alphonse Daudet. J. T. Trowbridge. Mrs. Oliphant, O. A. Stephens. Science and Natural History. Eoceatricities of Insanity, by Common Adulterations of Food, by The Home Life of Oyster:, and Otler Natural History Papers, by ‘Wonders in Ourselves; or the Curi- osites of the Human Body, by Insost Enomioes of the Garden, the Oréhard and the Wheat-Field, by Demons of the Air and Water. A fascinating Series of Papers on Sanie tary Science, by The Youth of the Brain, “Speech in Man,” “Animal Poisons and their Ef- fects,” and Other Papers, by Btrange Ways of Curing People. A Description of Curious Sanitaria,— the Peat, Mud, Sand, Whey, and Grape Cures, by BY ALFRED TENNYSON, Dr. W, A. Butler. Dr. J. C. Draper. Arabella B. Buckley. Dr. Austin Flint, Jr. A. 8. Packard, Jr. R. Ogden Doremus. Dr. W. A. Hammond. o ‘William H. Rideing. Encouragement and Advice. Hints for Poor Farmers, by The Failures of Great Men, by A Dietary for Nervous People, Hinta for Country House-Builders, Druggists’ Clerks. Their Work and Opportunities, by The @ift of Memory, and Other Pa. pers giving Instances of Self-Help, by A New Profession for Young Men. The Opportunities for Young Men as Electrical Engineers, by Thrift Lessons Learned from the European Peasantry. Novel Papers on Household Economics, by At tho Age of Twenty-One. A Series of Papers showin? what great men had accomplished, and what they proposed doing, at that period of their lives, by VICTOR HEUGO, . THE EARL OF LYTTON (Owen Moredith), WHITTIER, J. G lllustrated Adventure and Travel: Shark-Hunting, by Four Amusing Stories, by Among the Moonshiners, by Outwitted. An Indian Adventure, A Honeymoon in the Jungle, by ‘Wrecked Upon a Voleanic Island, 8tories of the Cabins in the West, Adventures in the Mining Districts, The Capture of Some Infernal Machines, by Perils and Escapes of aVolunteer during the late War in Cuba, by Breaking in the Reindeer, and Other Sketches of Polar Adventure, by An American in Persia, by the Amer- ‘T. B. Luce. C. A. Stephens. J. Chandler Harris, Lieut. A. Chapin, Phil Robinson, Richard Heath, E. J. Marston. H, Fillmore. ‘William Howson. Juan Romero. ‘W. H. Gilder. Original Poems. /', B. ALDRICH, | DR. CHARLES MACKAY, - And Many Others. Reminiscences and Stage-Driver Stories, by Stories of Saddle-Bag Preachers, The Last Days of Women of Fashion, by My First Visit to a Newspaper Office, by Banker Peers. Stories of the English Nobility, by Nights at the Boston Club. Rem- iniscences, by Queen Victoria’s Houschold and Draw- ing-Rooms, by Child Friendships of Charles Dick- ens, by his Daughter, Our Herbarinms ; Adventures in Col C. B. Winder. James Parton. Dr. W. A. Hammond. Calvert Vaux. E. L. Patch. Samuel Smiles. Thomas A. Edison. Helen 8. Conant. Edwin P. Whipple, Anecdotes. Rose Terry Cooke. H. L. Winckley. James Parton, Murat Halstead. Edward Walford. Dr. Charles Mackay. H. W. Lucy. Mamie Dickens. the Editor of the Chinese Stories of Menageries. ibition, by and. Issued Wee&l Subscription L ican Minister Resident, Teheran, China as Seen by a Chinaman, by 8. G. W. Benjamin. ‘Wong Chin Foo. American, Incidents con- nected with Menagerie Life, and the gafiturc and Taming of Wild Beasts for x| 8. 8. Cairns. Boys Afoot in Italy and Switzer- L The Adventures of two Eng- lish boys travelling abroad at an ex- pense of one dollar a day, by Nugent Robinson. and rich, but she made him give her a house and lot before she would consent to the union. Alma (Kas,) News: Our printers declare that they will print no more reports of wed- dings unless the usual custom is observed of presenting the printer with a crumb from the ride’s cake. J. Covington and his bride, of Columbus, Ga., loft home for a bridal trip to Louisville two weeks ago, and Mr. Covington and his wife are both dead at their Georgia home by smallpox, somewhere contracted in their jour- neyings. The newspaper foreman got & marriage no- tice among a_lot of items heated ** Horrors of 1883, and when tho editor loarned that. tho om's i was only 87 a week he said it §ml better remain under that head.—Norris- town Herald, had Jacob Wallowi herself, gent to prison in New York for breach'of promiso of marriage. While his lawyers were arguing in court for his release she went to jail and was married to Wallo- witch, An English bride, a Miss Emma Jessel, has had a wonderful wedding cake. On top, done in sugar, was a representation of the meeting of Rebocea and Abraham'’s servant at the well, the grouping modeled after Vernet's celebrated ure, The cake was four feet high and weighed 927 pounds. The cover on top lifted off so that the cake could be cut. Wedding invitations are engraved on small note sheets in round English script; the church and roception cards are enclosed. How to word the invitation when the bride is a widow is often a problem. It would never do toput “Mrs,” before the name. The difficulty is usually gotten over by using both the maiden and married names A widow may, if she chooses, wear whits, but orange blossoms and a veil are denied hur a second time. ‘The social event in Portland, Oregon, on the 20th ult., was tae marriage of Law Yep, & wealthy merchant, He is a widower, 45 years of age. He sent atrusty nephew to China to select a bride for hiu, and from & number of portraits that the tephew mmled to him the uncle made his choce. He made] the custo- mary preseuts t the parents, and they shipped their daughter to Portland, After tho marriage corempuy thera was display of fireworks, and the celebration was kept up for some days at a tost of 82,000, An old-fashionel wedding took place in Rantoul, Wis., Ias week. Tho groom was Mr. Albert King md the brido Miss Bertha Gruett, daughter o Henry Gruett. The cir- emony took place sn Thursday, and dancing, amusements, stc., arolonged the festivities for three days. ' Ono if tho prime features of the fostivitios was a wostling. match between n Rantoul girl and agentleman of Chilton, in ra younger than * | which the girl suceeded in throwing the Chil- tonian three succesive times. C — Belive in Hero Worship, Davesvorr, bwa. — Zhe Democrat furnishes this ibm: In our schools a little girl, who aid she worshiped her papa becauso he harried her mother, and was ash ed by the teacher if she believed in hero worship,answered: do believe in Sait worship, because Saint Jacobs Oil savediny little brother's life when he was sickwith sore throat, and it cured mamma} neuralgia,” s tho peoplo that the scheime was got up by om thlr business on as as plumbing. Do It \‘llll Pleasure, uggists,of Waterloo,lowa, with pleasure say that 34 wives tho best satisfaction any liniment de sell, Everybody who buys will have nobther. This remedy is & An Oregon pap our-hour Jennie Martin, a widow with nino children, | 1 vertain cure for alhclies, sprains and pains. lecting them, by My Pine-Apple Farm, with Incidents 6 Florida Lites by Biiwigs of the English Bench and Bar, y & London Barrister, i A% Sghool with Sir Garnet Wolse- 16y, and the Life of a Tage of Honor in the Vice-Regal Court of Dublin, by Student Waiters. Some Humorous Incidents of a Summer Vacation in the ‘White Mountains, by A Young Lady. C. H, Pattee, W. L. Woodroffe. Nugent Robinson, Child McFPherson. The Editorials of the CoarpaxIoN, without having any bias, will give clear views of current events at home and abroad. The Children’s Page will sustain its reputation for charming pictures, poems, and stories for the little ones. ., ,/APECJAL OFFE To any one who subscribes now, and sends us $1.75, we will send the Companion free to Jan. 1, 1884, and a full year’s subscription from that date. < . l , Sbarpton P, 8175, Spoimen Copes Free, PERRY :‘,‘lfi.‘L& (0., 41 Temple Place, Boston, Mass. ‘When You are in Trouble. Don’t be dismal! Your liver is torgid, perhaps, and you may be said o be bilious. The way to help you out of the difficulty is to'take Brown's Iron Bitlers, which sets disordered livers at work in good style. Don't be cross and angry! Your digestion is bad, and that upsets your disposition. If you will try Brown's| [ron Bitters, you will find the diges ive difficultics driven away in short order., Don't be despondent! You are weak because your blood is thin, and you cannot face trouble, or think you cannot, Brown's Iron Bitters will put iron into {our circulation, enrich- ing the blood, making it a royal red color, and giving you the strength you nced, The troubled, the weary, the de- spondent, the nervous, the debilitated and the bilious find rest, repose, re- freshment, and reconstruction in the use of that prince of Tonics, Brown’s Iron Bitters, The druggist charges a dollar a bottle forit, 10 Paris is still the paradiso of playwrights, M. Meihac, five of whose comedies are now being performed in Paris theatres, received in the month of October 310,000 in author's fees, — A bad taste in the mouth means a bil- ious attack, Swnaritan Nervine is the oure. “For 13 years I had Dyspepsia,” wrote Albright, of Columbus, O. ‘amaritan Nervine cured me,” Drug- gists all keep it, §1.50. ( Flantation Philowopby: Foar ain't based on {udgment, A hog will run quicker from a brickbat den he will from a_gun, Yer doan hab as good & chance ob findin’ out what kin- der stuff a rich man’s made outen as yer do do poor man, fur we doan know do quality ob de aig till it broke. I's 'spicious ob de man what is always claimin’ ter bo workin’ in do intrust of udder fokes, 'caso he forces me ter ono ob two conclusions: dat he is eder a fool ur & liar, —Arkansaw Traveller. m 18 UNFAILING \ nnn INFALLIBLE IN URING ( Epileptic Fits; Spasm, ¥alling Sickness, Convul- slons, 8t. Vitus Dance, Alcoholism, Optum Eating, Seminal Weakness, Im- potency, Byph§ * Serofula, and all " Nervous i Qlood Diseases. 2o Clet #Lawyers, Literary Men, Merchants, B Tadles and all whoss sedentary émj t causes Nervous Pros- tration, frregula 18 of the blood, stomach, bowels o kdneys, or who requlre a nerve tonic, appetize: or stimulent, Samaritan Ner- vine Is iuvaluabie. procltm it the nmt“ Wonderful 1" fgor- ant that ever sustain- @Hflflm $1.50, at Druggiste, The DR. 5. A, RICHMOND, ] P»m orvetors, St. s0seph, Mo ed o sinking system, MEDICA “¢or testunontals auG CHCUIN Sena SAMmp, (18 AN & b AT N e N T e COINC EAST AND WEST, Elegant Day Coaches, Parlor Cars, with Reclin | Solid Trains of Flogant Day Coaches and Pull ing Chiairs (:eats froo), Smoking Cars, with Re. | man Palace Slecping Cars are run daily to and viug Chairs, Pullman Sloepin Cars and | {rom St Louis, via, Hannibal, Guincy, Keokul B i 3 run daily to and | Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Albert 14a , Chicago & Council | Panl and Minneapolis; Pavior Cars with Rec Moines, (hicago, St. Jo:| Chairs to and from St Touls and Peoria audt a. Oniy throtigh lino bo: | and from St Louls and_ Ottumwa, ‘Oaly” o h Chicago, Lincoln & Denver. Through cars | change. of cars between St Louis and © ween Indlanapolis & Council Bufs via Peoria. | Moines, lows, Lincoln, Nebraska, and Dens All connections made in' Union Depots. 1t 15| Colorado. uown as the great THROUGH CAR LINE, 118 niversally admitisd to be the Finest Equipped Raliroad Iin tho World for all Cinsses of Travel. . J. POTLER, 8d Vice-Pres't and Gen'! Manager. PRRUKV AL, LOWIRLT, (en, Pass. Ag', Chicage.( HENRY LEHMANN JOBBEROF Wall Paper and Window Shades. EASTERAN [PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, . - 2 OMAHA NEB, |SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our CGround Oil Cake. 1t 1s tho best and cheapest food for stock of any [kind. One pound s equal to three pounds of corn tock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, instead of aad be in good marketable condition in the spring. ‘meri unning down, will increase in we'gh woll as others, Who use it can testify no charge for sacks. Addross NS D OIL COMPAN Dairyn Try it and judge for yoursolves. . Price $26.00 per 7 I and g fon youreive & il 6.0 ot J. O. PRESCOTY N. P. CURTICE. J. 0. PRESCOTT & CO, Wholesale and Retail Music, Musical Instruments of all Descriptions, CHEAPEST AND MOST RELIABLE HOUSE In thho State. CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK OR SEND FOR PRICES, NO, Farnam Street - - - - ONAHA. IANOS & ORGANS! s IR

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