Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 8, 1884, Page 2

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T THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA, FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 18%4. THE DAILY BER-~OMAHA, SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1884, Wa hiavs gpent over gmofimm in defending our right to the Durham Bull as our trade.mark, Undoul e ja to-day the most valuable Buli Now it stands to st we S R fch he in the representative, wasn the BEST Smoking Tobacco ever made. kwel 1l Durham Smokin , ‘ ol the M‘: , Ifilfly because | 8, An: b made. All dealers have it. 20K Por Trade-miak of tho Il on every PACKAGS. i 188G S IMPROVED SOFT ELASTIC SECTION GORSE The Season's Ontch. and been converted, so when you want milk Sundays now you'll have to come in the back iy, In a certain fashionable Tondon church Iadies bring their dogs to divine service. They find them so much more appreciative and weil bohaved listaners than their husband, -{Bur- lington Frae Pross, A Rev. Mr. Kirkland, of 'Lexan, is paid so pootly by his congregation that he worked in a saw mill during the week. A few who have hoard him preach wish that he would work in the saw mill Sunday. ““Are you going to the funeral this after- noon, Mra, Flip?’ asked one lady of another, on Broadway, *‘Well, yes—I rather guess T will if my husband don't bring me home some matinee tickets,” replied the latter. A colored elder was fined £5 1n Washington on Monday for throwing a girl out of the church and and down a psir of stairs at a re vival, The girl testified that she became in- terested in the services and began to shout A gocd old man up in Epping, N. H., went to prayer-meeting the other night, and un- wittingly foll asleep. He was called up to offer prayer, and, being dutifully vunched by his better half, bellowed out: “‘Gol-darn it, Betay, kindle it yourself,” Rev. Charles H, Eaton, of New York, preaching on gambling said: “To put down ambling it will be necessary bo stop raffling n church fairs, and for ladies to give up offer- I"f( small odds on races in yonder park. No n Farowell to the gay ball entrancing, 00d-by to the lancers 8o fin For the present adien to all dancing, No more as the belle can 1 shine During Lent. The waltz and cotillon must slumber, The grand Saratoga can rest, And the partners I had without number May leave me to solitude blest During Lent, AR the bean that are sighing and dreaming Who called me a frivolous flirt ‘When unconsciously smiling and beaming 1 gavo them the glances that hurt Before Lent! Vet still there Is one youth delighted, And I am as happy ae h He won where the others were slightod When poppod he the question to me Bofors Lent, And my love he can dance like fairy, Ho'n going to waltz me throngh life; No wonder his step's light and airy, He's taking tho belle for his wif After Lont. There's one thing, however, that's jolly, Though leap.year, I didn't ask him. He said, “Will you marry me, Molly?” ¥ Antvrered, ¥ grose 1 will, Jem, After Lent, e —— minister who could justify these as a harmless HONEY FOR THE LADIES, form of gambling is in no condition to cey out Motz against gambling saloons, These little things are the devil's kindling wood.” A Mothodst preacher in New York recently asked his congregation: **Whon shall Chris- tians love one another!” This is about as hard a conundrum as could bo propounded. Per- haps oneimportant stop in that direction would bo for one young lady Christian not to wear & more expensive sealskin ncque than her sis- tor Christian; and the malo Christian should not make a prayer half an hour long and then soll his fellow Christion a pownd of meat or butter two ounces short. Mrs. Stevins, of Auburn, Ky,, has a scrap quilt made of 14,285 pieces, At a recont ball in London a lady wore a dress studded with dead robins Vassar girls have a firo company, but it does not follow that they use gum hose. Some silly New York girls part their hair at the side and their names in the middle, A New York lady writes to The Sun to say that her husband annoys her very much by snoring, and wants to know what she can do about it. Dr. Deems insists that kissing is an Ameri- can weakness, but we reckon the doctor never has noticed married men in this country,— [Rockland Gazotte. A Buffalo woman will not answer a tele- phone call until she has fixed her hair, washed hor hands and brushed her teoth, She must be employed at the exchange, Plaited and kiltod skirts remain in voguo and the polonaise is usually open in front with the two edges trimmed with bands of fur, a fur cape and muff taking the place of a wrap. A Cincinnati woman gave her soal skin sacque to be sold for the benefit of the flood i A Beauty's Two Beaus, “I've got two beaux,” she said, “‘twobeaux"— (Sho warbled 1n'the choir) ““The tenor and the basso both Yours traly do admire, “ alternate; whon fears are scarce ‘As truths in screeds of Vennor, Aud stripling voices fit the day, 1 patronize the tenor.” “‘But when ’tis night, and horrors threat My timid soul to lassu, T crave a voice that frights the foe, And utilize the basso.” Yonkers Gazette. . | sufferors, Her husband is a bruteif he does not buy her new one, Possibly the lady had e an oyo to that, PEPPERMINT DROPS, ly ke e Theltn ca tht sends the Eleotricity an notixm through the body, and can be recharied | stant by the patient. $1.000 WouldIN Dr. Honxn—I wasn foted with rheumatism ani cured by using & bolt. To any one affticted with that disoaso, { would y, buy Horne's Electric Belt Any one can confer with mo by writing or calling at my store, 1420 Douglas strect, Omaha Neb. WILLIAM LYONS, * MAIN OFFICE—Opposite postoffice, room 4 Fren e block. & For ralo at C. F. Goodman's Drug store, 1110 Famam 8t., O Oeders Ailad 0 0 FORGES, TOOLS, o K FOR 116 - GRANITE. And your work is done for all time to time to come. WE CHALLENGE The World to produce a more durable material for street pavement than the Sioux Falls Granite. ORDERS [FORIANY AMOUNT OF Pavng Bl —0R— MACADAM! filled promptly. estimates given upon application, WM. MoBAIN & CO. Sionx Falls. Dakota DISEASES OF THE EYE & EAR J, T. ARMSTRONG, M. D., 0"5“11-' :.a‘::‘ Aurist. ikt Do Batior. o b, Coaigivan sk “Thin ana_T1ouy e strects. © 817 a0d 219 North Main 8t., 8t. Louls. y WHOLESALE DEALERS IN 5% IPAPERS, (V55 ¥ BOARD AND PRINTER'S STOCK Black Kgyptian lace s extonsively used in differont widths over draperies and flouncos of satin, The finor black lace, tulle and net aroarranged in_gracoful draperies over both silk and satin toilots. Tn the State of Maryland marriage is logally binding only as long a3 the contracting partics are satisfiod with each other. This arrange- mont i said to bo s great safoguard against dour bread. [ Burlington Froo Press.s A Chicago hook agont claims that his wifo will not Jive with him on account of his bisi- ness, Wao don't blame her, Whon she smacks him' in the faco his choek is 8o hard tht it noarly, breaks hor fingers, —[Chicago Sun. Handkerchicfs for deml-toilet are of the fin- ont and whitest of cambric, and have bordors of humming birds, embroidered in brilliant hues or geometrical homstitched designs, with knots of bright-tinted Howers embroidered upon them. Chicago is making prepaations for the con- ventions. All the lamp-posts are being firm- 1y resot, A rure early spring day, served up cold, will 060 & ploasant rememberance whon we aro in the midst of the well-cooked days of mid- summer, A_San Francisco man waa recently found dead with a bottle of water clutched in his nerveless hand. The jury rendered the ver- dict, “‘Death by drowning.” The word dude haa different meanings in different localities. In New York they call policeman a dude who won't club a man to death when he gets a chance. The following curiously worded advertise. ‘ment appeared in a recent issue of & St. Louis poper: *Wanted-~A comfortable room for young man four feet by ten.” With Tom Ochiltree making faces at Prince Bismarck and John Finerty gratiug his teeth at Gladstone, this country present a terrible eastorn front.— [ Atlanta Constitution. Our court has taken active steps toward the punishment of crime, and we hope that _after awhile oven kalling & man will be rogarded as & misdemeanor and puaisnable by 4 fine. — [Arkansaw Whoop. Wo do not beliove the report that Keely ays his motor will be runniug when a democratic president is elocted, Keely would not say anything that would seud the stock down to forty degrees bolow aoro. ‘With her senators falliny her governors kissiog pri ministers gottivg up bogus interyiews, would seem that poor old Missouri is becos ing giddily sensational in her old age. *I'wo hours to the next train out!” ejacn- ated the man who had got left. ‘How in thunder shall I be able to kill the time until then?” Bnt he readily accomplished this by girls boing crazy for ve thewm their choice 1 a 8300 sealskin sacque and a plain $10 engagement ring, and nino out of every ten uhfln and a majority of widows will choose the ring, says an old bachelor. Boware of the women with premature gray hair, saysa Washington m t is estimated that in that city there aro five thousand ladiey with snowy bangs and curls, and the whiter- headed & woman is the naughtier and more dangerous sho i in that locality. Persian shawls with au elaborate silk desi on a novel ground are cut up into_visites, an their fine coloring ]mxducen an effoctive wrap for the carriago and for ovening woear. Che ille of all the colors in the pattern makes an appropriate trimming of fringe. A Swiss girdle of velvet pointed above and below, behind and in frout, is worn with a lmlnud yoke, and pointed cuffs to match, on light cashmere and surah dresses. Young rls wear & full gathered skirt with such a out of their chairs, o donno, aud her it Samples sent and | & §1, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. Graham Paper Co,, i ;5 upper grocery ng . 2 T, B B ress, and put bands of the velvet straight around the skirt. A Roxbury doctor, who detests curl papors, quaintly says that he never could see why any woman should find it plensant to look like the dovi in the morning (having in mind the pa- por horns prujecting over the forehead) for the sako of resombling & noeress in the afternoon. —[Boston Transcript. A Japauese woman drosses her hair onco in overy four days, The luxury of hearing one's wifo, with the ends of hor hair in hor teeth, and her mouth full of hair-pins, talking about the kitchen boilerin the morning before the mirror, is nover enjoyed by the Japanese hus. band more than twice & Woek.—{ Puck. The thief who stole a looking-glass from house in this ity the other day might have known that it would bo the first thing missod by the women, 1f he had been sharp ho would have stolon the kitchen stove or tho mop—gomothing that they wouldn't raise so much fuss about. > Lillie Dovereux Blake has carried her woman's rights ideas so far as to_write a love story in which the girl proposes to tho m: and marries him, To carry out the ide should have the girl get drunk, boat the murder him and finally bo Hanged for the bloody act. It would serve as & warning to musonline girls. Tt ds atated that dark haired women are prefersad to blondes by marrying men, To Uphold this theory, & Chiosgo physlolan has recontly published statistics showing that in the area covered by his researches blondes are fronorally admirod by poots-wud palators, but runettes more frequently capture the wed- entering a barber shop and waiting his turn to be shaved. [ Lowell Citizen. ‘With Yollow Calf and the revolutionary Manitobans at Winnipee, Kl Mahdi kickiug up dido in Egypt, the Canadians trf'in to crawl out of the cracks, and the Irish climbing out at the top, we think that Mrs, Victoria should stop writing books and go to meading her imperial shoe, —President Arthur eays that the happiest hours of his life were spent in the school room. The unhapplest bours of some boys' lives were also spent in 0ol room; but the period the president rofers to is when he wielded the rod, and when he felt its power as a corrective element,—[Norristown Herald, A Frenchman writes to the New York Star: 'Mr, Bismarck will affront the United States. Very good. So shull we then take him into the hauds and play onhim the hose now. When that he cannot love the hog American, then shall he defend from the powerful I} American his bald head. Bismarck, bah “Mr. Ryan,” sald a Chioago commissioner to an applicant for the renewal of his liquor licanse, ‘T thought you had resolved to quit tha business and dovote yourself to the work of temperance roform.”” “It' thrue, every wurrod yor sayin',” returned Mr, Ryan; “but that was befoor I'knew the convinshun was to mate here.”— [Brooklyn Eagle. Sho was mad. *‘Yes,” she cried, *‘youmade a fool of yourself at Brown’s last night, you mado o fool of yourself on the street-car, com- ing home, and"you are making a fool of your- self now.” Then she seomed torelent, ““‘but no, k‘ she 7“184{ g uu.(ll‘n nirt to say chn] you make a fool of yourself. Inmy anger I am ding ring than do their light hairod sisters, forgetting that YOI T, RaR s A Street wuits are madoe quite short for this | Ho is now drunk.[Cincinnati Saturday month, but little trimmed. Those who are | Night. devout lonten followers usually dress in black | Don't expectorate on the floor; it soils the made soverely plain, with plain linen collar | Brugels, and makos the wearing of overshoes and °"~"1 a cross aud chain the only orn- | yocassary, Try the ceiling or squirt over the ments; the capote is plain, with perhaps a fow [ transom, Wipe your feot on the mat, if you small pompons ou; the black kid gloves, the | Liave to bring ono with you. Hoavy men wil “'l"']" 1:."} or ‘(l‘"k wrap, and & prayer book | ot sit down too abruptly in the raw silk,hand- seldom lald aside. painted cushion arm chairs; it weakens the Arnuy fashion is to announce a birth by | springs. If you must put your feet on the sending to friends handsome illuminatod cards, | marble bop tablos, have a sponge ready to wipo Tn Paris the color of the | up the stuins, Do not smoke; nothing is more denotes the sex, a palo blue card, em.- | offensive to the roporters than the odor of a blazoned with dark bluo and silver letters, | cigar—a poor one, Or evon a good one,unless ing for & boy, and pate pink with roso and | you have its mate. ~ Accompany all religious silver for girl. In the loft corner are tho | botices with the regular advertisiug prices. father's cout-of-arms and a monogram, and the | Not as a matter of business, but as a “guara particular sign of the zodiac dominant at tho | tee of good fuith.”—[Bradford Suuday Mail timo of tho child's birch, - - —— QCONNUBIALITIES, Frank Gregory, of Great Beud, Kan., sold his wife for $75, A young woman of Moundsville, W, Va,, has -{n with a tramp, properly inscribed. Jowelry apperas un more than ever in 100 e 0t e, Samies pert. Bob: heur of plain gold, however, is now replaced namrow bands set around the outer half with llblldu of wome xzmll‘x‘tl.l:rn, 6mfil dia- mends being the most popular, Or else one large diamond is sunk lnt?ltln solid luntl?ur mhr numd:l.d‘V|mnl|":i ]-wol.’ lufuh as & but- oup, & A 4 mlx:lslux .I .urA.vu‘lhlm the ly prosen and slen to all round wv:llh!luy dlmndan.‘mhll:l and cm:.rf iy youullu‘fy"" reprasenting the initials of the 1t in strange, for Instance, what epregious asses men and will make of thems i danolois tho figures ‘of e young pwfin who are selected as leaders a) B e e 04 that are ¥ o o german one night Wera thor fu silken ribbons, in upa Of thres Abreast; on the side thres driven by & man, and on the other thres mon driven by & lady. " In this form, to polkn nuln.hthoy 34 f:nw o‘::. :lnd ‘l.:' l.lu“l:ull» room other. ne can jne how ul absurd thay looked, and. yot. the figure was oy pyt o R KL R Y i tioa.~{Now York Star, o IMPIETIES, P Sy “Sal” uh:‘ & young girl, ha.:iduu :‘ut of the Carrle Wilcox, of Bradford, Pa.,, has re- :munwd her religion to marry her Hebrew lover, A fifteen-year-old Denver girl, who eloped to meet her lover, took an eight-months-old brother with her, It is rumored at Victoria, British Columbia, that Chinaman worth $200,000 is about to lead to tho altar a white girl, with the con- sent of the latter’s parents. The wedding which has attracted the most sttention at Ionia, lowa, of any for some time past was that which uvited in matrimon; ‘ou, the Chinese laundryman, and Owaens, a young colored woman. Two women were married to oach other in Virginia vecently, It may be all right for the present, but after & while - think of it the children will each have two wof and no father —[Kentucky State Journal, Louis Harrison and his little California sou- bretts, Miss Emua Shults, who fa_playing in “Skipped by the Light of the Moon,” were married the day before thele departure from {:dn Frauclsco, much to the lll-flm of every- y. Lieutenant Danenbower, who narrowly es- caped being frozen to death in the Arctio re- s, 16 to be married at Oswego, N. Y., on 12th fnst. 1t 'is ted that bis sur- rous may be troj enough forever thereafter. A young man sends the following advertise: stone, ylvia o dancers bons, oo | one of which is the common size. ment to the Noston Globe: “Wanted, by handsome, virtuons young man in eaty eir. cumstancos, of brilliant talents, refined tastes and loving disposition, situation as son-in.law in & wealthy family.” A Georgla coupla devotsd thelr honeymoon to killing o hundred rabbits and salting down the meat for future neo. This may not be as ploasant a way of spening the honeymoon as a tripto Niagars, but it will keep the wolf away from the door for some time, When a man marries a naturally shrewd wo- man his success in Jife is more than assured. Tho six weeks' bride of n straggling youn, shysician in this city has more than donbled Fet husbiand's practice by the_neighbors’ children foeding them on mince ple. gram, Mr. and Mrs, Tsanc Banister, of Philadel- phia, celobrated the (lat anniversary of their marriage, at thelr honssin Chestnut street, on Wednesday evoning. There weie prosent all the surviving ohildren, with grandehildren and great grandchildren, and_a large number of relations and friends. The couple were married at Mount Hope, near Middletown, N. Y., on February 27, 1523, e The Blizzard. casionally inviting to the house and [Chicago Tele- Toreas ugly and old, Some five or xix ages ngo, Found the North Pole too frigidly cold, And startod south on blow. He met, in the course of his tour, Miss Cyclone, old Tempest's pet ehild; The vixen made love to ths boor, And they wedded, this couple so wild. A contury or 10 rolled away, When a son to this pair fortune sent; The Hurricano taught him to play, The Whirlwind its aid to him lent, The Blizzard—for so he,was named — Waxed preater as time spad away; For his sharpness ho soon becamo famed, And is famod for it down to this day. [Boston (lobe. —— MUSICAL AND DRAMATIO. Savannah has the oldest opera house in the United States, Minnie Palmer will retnrn to America after another provincial tour. Lotta is playing to moderate houses at the Opera Comique, London, Edwin Booth will next season travel under the management of R. M. Field. Levy. the cornetest, is now playing in a beer saloon One by one the roses fail. The daughter of Ole Bull appears to have inherited some of her father's genius for play- ing the violin. Miss Oder, an_American prima_donna, will make her debut in Pans_at the Opera Com- ique, in Gounod’s **Mirville,” London Truth says Mary Anderson is no better player than many an actress earning $4 a week in a stock company. Mr. Theodere Thomas' orchestra will assiat at tho public examination of the students of the New York Colllege of Music at Steinway hall on 31st inst, Mr, Carl Rosa is about to establlsh an opera house in Liverpool, and for that purpose has {mrvhnuod the Royal Court Theatre there, pay- ng about £40,000 for it. Mme. Modjeska’s husband, the Count Bo- zenta, mads her a present of a pair of $6,000 diamond earrings the other day, from the re- sult of asale of some prize cattle on his Cali fornia ranch, Mary Anderson has decided to play in Ger- many,” That is right, Mary, and when old Bismarck comes out of his box and asks for an introduction just say & good word for the American hog. Mrs. Langtry’s season in Now York has been a complete success, Her next engage- ment will begin at Niblo's Garden on‘Apri; 28, when she will app: Galaten in “Pyg malion and Gulatea. The latest attempt at theatrical manago- ment in New York was made by Mr. McGiv- ney, ex-hack driver, undertaker, and saloon keeper. He backed Miss Blackburn in Salmi Morse’s “On the Yellowstone,” which is one of the Pike's-peak-or-burst sort of plays. Mc- Givey is now busted and John Stetson’is with- out a rival, Speakivg of the complaint against the high | prices charied by opara managers, the Chicago Current says: ‘The question is, how can the prices be reduced? 1f there were a multitude of Pattis and Nilssons, their competition for public favor would bring about the desired re- duction, This same result would be reached, in a groat measure, also, if the public wero properly educated up to the appreciation_of music for its own sake and would attend the opera, not no much because of curious interest in the performers, personally, as, because of the adequate rendering of the music in hand.” Tho papers have indulged in & good deal of rot about the alleged boauty of Mme, Marcella Sembrich, the prima donns. If they, were to tell the truth, they would say that Mme, Sembrich is a stout, -short, round-faced, near- sighted, red-cheeked, short-nosed, full-busted ludy, with a pleasant’ and intelligent expres- sion, but with no haudsome features aside from a low, broad brow, and very white, oven teeth. If Mme. Sembrich were not Mme, Sembrich —if she were not the great siuger she is, she would never be mientioned as being more than psably good-looking. There aro precious low hatidsome women in grand opera now. Patti holds her own better than_any of her contemporaries. Nilsson is moasive, robust, and cold as & Swedish snow-drift.” Gerster s squat and Dutchy, Scalohi was nover wooused of personal beauty, sud Minnio Hauk, never handsome, has grown obese. Tnings have, in short, come to such a pass that he who is blind loses nothing at » performance of grand opera. —[Chicago News. el The Skeleton at the Feast, Oysters on the half-shell Seo the bill of fare Tenderloin ateak too. Juicy, rich and rare, Butter on the side dish, Crackers on the plate: Irizzled sweet potatoes, Better never ate. Canvas back preparing; Celery in stow; Churlottes russe to follow; Almonds just a few, One small cup of coffee, “I'hen a vivarotte; Caesar! what a banquet! Testh hogin to whet. Wont there be a slaughter On the food to night? A cockroach in the water! Gone's my appetite. ——— SINGULARITIES. The negroes of Jamaica tebr off the husk of the cocoanut with their teeth, The ul.umlsliun well Lohaved baby is in# museunt at Dallas, Texas, It is petrified. A lady in Willimautie, Conn., dodged the measles for eighty-four years, but was caught last week, Mrs, James, of Brockton, Mass., no was married when she was 16, and has twenty-seven chilaren, Now Orleans has just had a baby show,with nety-nine infants on exhibition, The first ize was won by a seven-months-old baby that weighed thirty-one pounds. A cane made from a rail said to have been :l:m by Abraham Lincoln in 1860 was among o relics displayed ut the recent . celebration of a golden wedding in Chicag A cow belongiug to Joseph Abbott, of Met- amora, T1L, recontly gave birth to five calves, The four smaller ones died shortly after birth, A cow-horn measuring four feet eloven inchos in length, and eighteen iuches sround tho base, is on exhibition at Monticello, Il and iy -ur]mmd tobe the largest cow-horn in the world, A catamount four and a half feet long, that has Leen ougaged for some time past fn the darkoy's oceupation of stealing hens aud geese about the sides of the chip the spider began to cast a web for the shore. He threw it as far as possible in the air and with the wind. It caught on some blades of grass, Then turning himself about the spider began to haul the chip toward shore, During the burning of & London music hall a cat exhibited remaikable pluck and devo- tion. Her kittens were Lehind th the stage. She was repeatedly dri the smoke, but succoeded in rescueing three Kittens, She hurried back for the fourth, but returned no more, _After the fire the charred remains of cat and kitten were found lying side by side, Mrs. Sleight, of New York, has for pets a black-and-tan pup and a your alligator, The %0 have a great liking for each other and are together all the time, The dog has left his woft cushion to sleep on the hard floor with his friend. When the dog is called to the dining- room to be fed the alligator creaps after it ut- toring peculiar gutteral sounds, showing its displeasureat being left alons, One of these days the alligator will swallow the dog. Bavtisone, Md,, February 20, - [Spocial.] - Laura La Varnie, known in all musenms and circuses as tho tattoed woman, gave birth Thursday night in this city to & boy baby, who bears upon his body all the marks pos- sessod by his mother, The boy is & bouncing little fellow, and both he and his mother are doing well. Dr. A. Trego Sheitzer, of this city, attanded the woman in her confinement, and ‘'was very much surprised when he fouad the babe's skin marked as if with India ink. Upon it are designs of flowers, leaves, an an- chor and chain, an eagle, and other figures, A number of doctors of the ity have been called in to see the babe, and all have expressed sur- prise at the curious reproduction of the marks on the mothor's skin, e e— The Dimple on Her Check. Within nest of roses, Half hidden from tho sight, Until a smile disclosos Tts lovelinoss aright, Behold the work of Cupid, ‘Who wrought it in l%renk The witching little dimple- The dimple on her cneek! The sirens’ lays and glances To lure the sailor night; The perilous romances Of fabled Lorelie, And all the spells of Circe Are roft of charm and weak, Besids the dainty dimple— The dimple on her cheek! Ware these the golden ages Of knights and troubadours, Who brighten olden pages With tourneys and awours, What lances would be broken- What silver lutes would speak, In honor of the dimple The dimples on her cheek! Samuel Minturn Peck, in the Manhattan. et RELIGIOUS, Easter Sunday occurs on April 13. ‘There are 200,000 Catholics in London. Charlotte, S, C., has a colored salvation army, New York City has one church to every 5,000 inhabitants, Pere Hyacinthe, accompanied by his family, has arrived at Los Angeles, Cul. He goes from there to San Fraucisco, There are 000 Campbellites in the United States, They have 5,000 churches and 8,700 preachers, ~ They are strougesu in Obio and Indiana, A site has been se:ured at Lutterworth, in England, for the monument of John Wycliffe, wWhich, it is intended, shall be seg up to com- memorate the five hundredth anniversary of his death. . Among the stained glass windows that have arrived from France for St. John's church, n tho City of Washingtou. is oue ordered by President Arthur, as a memorial to his de- coused wife, An American church is soon to be built in Dresden, the necessary funds having been raised at a series of piivata theatricals recent- ly viven under the auspices of the American colony in that city, There are about 96,000 ends in the The Hag the Larcest Stook in Omaha and —id:akes t Lowest Prices. Furniture® DRAPERIES ANIC MIRRORS, Just received an assortment far surpassing anything in this market, comprising the latest and most tasty designs manufactured for this spring's trade and covering a range of prices from the Cheapest to the most Expensive. b Parlor Coods Draperies. Now ready for the inspection of cus-] Complete stock of all the latest tomers, the newest rovelti s in stylesin Turcoman, Madras and Suits avd Odd Pieces. Lace Curtains, Ete., Ete. CHAS, SHIVERICK. 1206, 1208 rnd 1210 Farnam§'. — OMAHA, NEB. PASSENGER ELEVATOR l To All Floors. ‘ Henley, Haynes & Van Arsdel, ~WHOLESALE— NOTIONS, HOSIERY, GENTS' FURNISHING LN ) - Fancy Groods, 1106 Farnam Street, - - - - - - OMAHA, NEB. W. A. CLARKE, Superintendne Works 17TH & 18TH STREET3 Proprietors. Omaha U.P. RATuWAY RICHARDS & CLARKE, | Iron S DEALERS |IN MANUFACTURERS OF AND United States and 392 mesting-houses. Quaker meeting-houso in Bui eyville, Me. shortly have a bell, which will be the used by the Friends in America. The Baptists of Detroit are making prepara- tions for a national meeting to be hold in that city in May. The auniversufy meectings will begin May 20th aud continue seven days; from six_hundred to a thousand delegates are ex- pected, Montreal has a far better right to the_title of **Jity of Churches” than Broukly: Itnot only supports sixty French Catholic churches, bt the French Cathedral situated there is the largest church building on_this contiuent, 1t is built of limestone, and 15,000 people have often been assembled under its roof. A number of Moravians ot Bethlohem, Pa., a3 also_five of the students in the_graduating class of the Theological seminary, have volun- toered to go as missionaries to Alaska. It is probable that o missionary, who unde:stands the Fsquimaux language, will be transferred from Labrador or Greenland to Alaska, as preacher, as soon as the new mission ib es- tablised. Among the adherents of the Mormon church in Utah are 50,000 of Scandinaviun and Lu- theran stock. A special effort is being made to restore them to z:hrimuniny The Presby- teriuns are working through Norwegian evan- gelists, The Methodists have appointed a Norwegian missionary to Salt Lake, where he has erected a church edifice and opened a school. The Swedish Lutherans have sent a minister, who has gathered a congregatios and a Danish Lutheran clergyman will soon commence operations, The latest revised statistics give the Roman Catholic population of the United States as (3,628,176 this year against 6,396,854 lust yea) There are 13 archbishops, 57 bishops, b, priests, 1,651 ecclesiastical students, churches, 1,150 chapels, 1,476 stations, clesiasti 4 mies, 2,582 parochial schools, 45 attending the parochial schools, aud 139 hux)‘luL. These figures sho crease of 280 priests, 217 ecolesisti dents, churches, i colleges, 20 acudamies, 41 parochial schools and 19 asylums, but a de- crease of 1) ecclesinstical seminaries, — EDUOATIONAL. will + pupils asylums There are eighty American students attend- ing the University of Berlin this year, New York state has 1,675,100 children of school age, but only about 1,000,000 attend school. . Tho Massachusetts house has passed a bill furnishing free school books toall pupils of the public school, At the recent examination of law students in Tokio only seventeen out of 1,017 candidates satisfied the prescribed tests. One of the best Greek scholars in this coun- try, during a recent lecture on the benefits of a classical education, stated that there does not exists & graduate of an American college who l)ruperly affix the accents to a page of printed Greek. — Humor in the Stomach, Much of the distress and sickness at- tributed to dyspepsia, chronic diarrhoea and other causes 18 occasioned by humor in the stomach. Several cases, with all the characteristics of these complaints, have been cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla. Other cures effected by this medicine are s0 wonderful that the simplest statement of them affords the best proof that it com- bines rare curative agents and when once used secures the confidence of the people. R A Michigan father objects to his son taking up the study of physiology, which is in the regular course of the schools. The authorities insist. ‘The parent thinks ho can seloct what studies he chooses for his boy, and will take the matter into court, o — from th; families in the uslghlorhood of Ackloy, Iowa, ft t A5k Tge, wan roosaily onpiured 1a » bonp The Boston bird show ambraces nearly 2,500 8 eutries. 1t contains a Frazilian macaw that can repeal the first thirty lines of the Decla- » ration of Independence and a canary that whistles ““Yaukee Doodla,” hardly kuow 'lllAlt ;lu world would do without Boston, ortlaud man put » large spider on a floatiog ohlp 1n & jond, —After whlking all Howstord's Acid Pho Specific Virtues in Dyspeps! Dg. A. JENkINs, Great Falls, N, H., ays: ‘1 can testify to its seemingly almost specific virtues in cases of dys- pepsia, nervousness and morbid vigilance or wakefulness."” — A new post of the Grand Army has been organized at Ottumwa. Steam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS,, Mill and Grain :Elevator Machinery MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Celebrated 'Anchor Brand Dufour Bolting OCloth) STEAM PUMPS, STEAM ' WATER ANDJGAS PIPE, BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. ODELL ROLLER MILL. "TIIK 9377049 TTIIA0 We are prepared to furnish plans and estimates, and will contract for the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Mills, fremStoue to the Roller System. . §3™ Kirpecial attention givea to furnisning Power Plants for any pur— pose, and estimates made for same. (General machinery repairs attended to promptiy. Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Ner PERFEGTION Heating and Baking s only attained by using CHARTER OA¥ Stoves and Ranges, AT WIRE GAUZE OVER DOORS Fer sale by %, MILTONROGERS & SONS 3 OMAHA = 0, M. LEIGHTON, H, T, CLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & C0.) Wholesale Drugpists | —DEALERS IN— Oils. Brusnes. Qiass. : 12740304 Paints.

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