Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 22, 1884, Page 2

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2 [ e ——————————————ll ITHE DAILY BEE;--()MAH,\. SATURDAY MARCH 22, 1884 IMPORTANT 10 - Buyers ofall Classes. CANNON BRO'S & CO., Tiave ostablished thomselves n Omaha to ansact A general brokerage and busine e will buy all t wholesale or retail, and guarant e 8 we can buy cheaper ne advantage of hav t hy one who will work for ¥ interest andnot trust to a morchant who has cthing he is anxious to be ridof. We will also eprompt attentior to selling anything entrusted s, and gooks con to us will be carcfully eoked ta, Corresponden ited g4 Hoterences —Omaha Nationsl Bank, McCague bro's Bank. Address 1118, 16th St P —~WITH=— 100X FALLS BRANITE. 1d your work is done for all time to time to come. WE CHALLENGE This Lite ts What We M 1ot oftaner talk of nable ¢ And raror of tha bad on And sing about our hapy And none abont the & We wero not mada to And when grief sleeps to wake = Bright happiness is standing by This Tife is what wamu days, nos. frot and «i 1et's find the sunny Or be believe $ A ligh thers I8 in every sonl That takes the pains to win it.} Oh! there's a slumbering good in And wo nay wake Our hands contain the magic wand This life is what we make Then here's t those whose loving hearts Shed light and joy abcut them! Thanks be to them for conntle gems Wo ne'er had kuown withont them Oh! this should be a happy world T all who may partake it; The fanlt's our ¢ t in not— This life is what we make it. B HONEY FOIt (H LADIES, Pansies are fashionable for corsage bouguets. Azaleas are popular flowers for church and home decoratin { a Fifth BSOS, in the window ins ovor sixty Waell, we sup o with the re carry fane. nhandy in flir nd crimson hyacinths aro worn a aine from the Delt of a walk droess, y aro somotimes tied with pir and Blue ribbons Politics will be wo lively early this fall that they iy causo the young men to neglect the 0 ter hail bottor mako all possible the oyster season before itis over. dy ways she never knew what truo happiners was until her husband lost his Tast dollar atd she had to do her own house worke Probably becauss wo long as ho had & dollar in his pocket he would keep himself A handsome_ combination of color in a folt tablo searf i of son foum and wage groon, the Iatterin a band bordered by o running vine of yellow jusmine, the scarf finished by a cut fringe of both colored folts, Dr. Dio Lowis wrote to a lady tronblod with cold feot a6 night that she should hold tho bottoms of her feet in cold water of an inch deep just before going to b o threo minutes, and thon rub thom hard with rough towels and the nakoed has The World to produce a more durable material for street pavement than the Sioux Falls Granite. ORDER FOR ANY AMOUNT{OF Paning Bl MACADAM! filled promptly. Samples sent and estimates given upon application. WM. MoBAIN & CO., Sioux Falls, Dakota. ‘18 JIUST, U Nog 138 SIN0LS INIM00D "“.[EIZ-I:!HO-I-S T AN @YVMNIL HAVI - HNOH qoN ‘“eqemQ tor of Application oy for Liquor NOT by given that Mra. H McCoy did upon tho 1t day of March, A. D., issd, file hor wp- plication to th ity ouncil'of Omahn, tor Hoanse to se d vinous liquors at between 20th and 22d streot, Popploton aveniio, 2. ward, Omaha, Neb., from the day of o 1854, the 14t duy ot A, Taws U8 Of March, 11 'there bono objeotion, remonstrance flled within two weok' from Mar: 1684, tho aid lceusa wilbo grantod MRS, H McOOY, Applioant. Tno Omata Boo nowspapor will publidh Kho abeve notice once each woek for two wicks at tho exjonse of tho aoplicant. Th city”of "Omalia Is ot t0 be . ETT, City Clerk. Matter of Application of Ed, O'Connor for Liquor License, NOTIC Notice iy hereh hat E1. 0' tho Lith day of Marom, oD, e Notice iy herel or protest holst A D, no hi $0 the Mayor and City' Counci of Oahay "5 gnadt, bpiritois aud vinous lique s 1th day of f there bo no objeotion, remonstrance or protest filed within two weeks from March Dol rthin two weeks trom Maroh 16th 8. 5. 1554 ED. 0'CONNOR, Applicants. £ will publish the above two weoks at the expense The city of Omaha Iy not to bo erowith, 9.3, L C. JEWETT 19 26 1 ewd City Clork. Mattor of Application of Henry Puadt, for Liquor nse. The Omalia Bee news notice onoe each week for ot the applioant NOTICE. Notios Is hereby given that Henry Pundt did upon the 3000 day of’ Maseh 4. B Tana o 10, % Jhloation to ‘the mayor and city council of Omatie lor liveiise to sell malt, spirituous and vinous lanor ALNo. 1215 Faruam street, 3d Ward, Omaha, Nob., frons the 11tk day of April, 1834 to the 11t day of Oct 1 ‘there be no_objection, remonstram o within two wesks from March 2uth, 4. D 154, tho waid license will be grauted. MENKY PUNDT, Beo newspaper will pubil fi'( e w i o o the ppllcant. Tho city of Omaha w ok Lo be ith, B2 Lowk J.J. LC.IEWETT, City Cles '8 GRAND EXCUKSIONS leave New Yor in April, May and June, 1881, PASS. By aTAr A due et :m‘h il g irlog GOOD BERTHN. TOUKIST 1 OOOK'S 1 ‘The Omaha ‘W Brosdway, N. Y. A wewke. pPojrTeIIe A tall, slim terr into an umbrella-s artistic. On $L Onit pi fow cat-tails, & number of butterflies or a sim. ilar dosign, and fuwston a large bow of ril) on ono xidd; eithor a doep crinwon color or 1 1ook best. cotta jar turned nd, and mado be had for from tor.colloziate wenerally aconnf ground in This call is a4 & pendant to the per conferance ored by slutions have fallen to the aquence of the refusal of nearly oges to sgree to them. The new confarence ia expoctod to do little more than deul with the general subject of inter-collegiats contests, and possibly limitiog the employ- mont of trainers, About two years ago a sche at Athens, Greece,for the b fording students who had graduated from American colleges an_opportiuity of perfecting them wolves in the Gireek language, practical ac quaintance with the people and’ localivies de weribod in text books being deemed invaluable to this end y of intore colloge athlatic conteste vious New York Harvard, whose re all of the vas started de r chool, and to pay h lary whilo ho was away, vlod t send ¢ receive instrictions free, ch st far_has pursued an independent nngs each weok | of his contrib; been which t; anel during f nds in I, have been prose o wemsons frequent excursions have made to places of historic int The was from the start a complete success. W. W, Goodwin, the distinguished lir Hartford college, appeals for an est of which rs which will be elf. The groat bon tudy of the Creek, the weon from the fact that ¢ little from the go that Plato or Demosthe w roturn to Athens, conld ¢ pers with little difficulty, y would b puzzled by modern ideas ms of thought. fors s company for five woeks at the Baldwin Thea- tre, California, amounted to railroad fares of this com- 1 retarn cost over $7,000; W for extra bagpage. San Franciser thix includes $1 Thero will be two companies made up of Wallack’s pesple on the road this snmmer, lod the ‘‘Batsey,” the oth Coghlan will act with ipany & few wecks o will leave for Furope, and her place will be supplied by o well-known leadine Indy A mob stormed the ticket office of her ma- Josty's oper n Francisco the other day. v nd doubtiess con t the fact other mob, The sixth Musical Festi Music Hall, O May 2 Materna, Miss Emma Winant, Herr ann Winkelm: Anil Searia, Mr. Theodore de, Mr, Fi Remmertz and Mr. Max Heinrich The chorus will number 600 voices and there wil be 150 musicians in the orchestra. The con be undr the direction of Mr, Theo- M rogrammes include sev i from Wagner's sption,” Hand: R and and behaved like any May festival of the Cincin will begin in th on May 20, Christin ¥ 8 ann, et s Brahms ymphony. Egypt. o sthoven's fifth R All in the Family, Do I remember that night when we stood ath the big trea on the hill 1 1 should thin f it still, T would * the branche ht moon'shone down thr . ‘V"Hr»,v«-‘ P'hat my heart strangoly Dudding lov o look #o fair thrilled with sweet T heard Miss Jonks the other night Whosa room is thirty-four Proposing to her litt :\ Ax I had heard before, o, in tender tones, the tloor, And sit beside me in this ¢ And give to me your paw Now kiss me pretty, little dog 1 hoard hor oft repeat; 1 love you very, very much You are so awful sweet!’ “How thought I, “‘were I that dog! My years aro thirty-four “1Igo and call, and then, perhaps, Sho'll ask me for my paw!” [ Yonkors Stat RE OUS, Spring goods are_ already displayed in tho up-town stores, and straw bonnets and hats are seen at the milliners’, although as yet none havo appoared on tho street. There s plenty of timo to Kaster to choosa one's spring cos- tume and bonnet. dos are seon in the now In?mrlml lo chickens and ducks, also frogs and real turtle A New Orleans bride has introduced the fashion of wearing long white silk gloves in- wtoad of white kid, especially in warm wonthor. The white silk gloves look prottier, fit better, and are_much easier to got on or off; besides theso advantages, they are not so w and hand-shaking doos not soil them so This bride wore a pair of fine ivory white Purisian silke ;i]u\tw reaching far above the elbow, and embroidored from the wrist in a running dosign of orange blossoms, The effect was vory protty. Fans form an impos oration of all room t t feature in the dec- Palmleaf and Japanese r, and very pretty ones n be \nm, asod for three o fi A wall-pockot for grasses or merely for ornamont may be made ont of good-sized Japaneso fan. Choose ono with colors to mateh tho furnishings of the room, and faston it to the wall with small invisible tacks. A corner is the best place to put it, taking care to bring the edges inside. A bow of ribben is placed at the bottom and it may be further ornamented by a few pea-cock feathers caught in the how By the by, it is rumo surely going out of fashion that the haie will bo worn brushed plainly b from the forehead, Wdilo bangs are not for women who possess low, pretty foreheads, they are an absolute necessity for we ho possess high, ugly foroheads, There can be no denying the fact that when the hair is arranged ~prettily and becomingly over the forehead, it greatly softens the out- linos of the face, and lends an additional charm to it 1t is all nonsenso for people to say that the mest sensiblo women wear their hair brushed smoothly back from their brows, T'he most sensible women are those who know what is becoming to them. If they look well with their hair banged or curled they we: 03 if they do not thoy fail to follc vailing fashis nd dress their hair plain The Greci; mot has gone entirely out of fashion excent for streot woar. 1t is almost impossible to wear the hair on the top of one's hend with the fashionable hat of the period. Very fow ornaments are worn in the hair. Those that are worn are mostly silver or am- ber hairpins, Musling are revived for ovening wesr. aro fine and gonerally piqued in floral dosigns. Tournoures and hustles of all kinds aro surely going out of fuxhion this spring, A curved stool is placed in the slart i a couplo of theso steols, are shown in foral patterns, There are alse some very fine checks dinplayed. Inch stripes of black and gold are also to” be found, these being used for plaited skirts as last year Sating will be ch worn. Gray walking suits of oue color look r rkable well. Great discrotion should be exercised in the mattor of frimming with any color; slight touches of red or bluo, in the way of liniugs, are «quite permissable, however. We are threatoned with the English walking hat of several yeurs since. Dottod veils wro not nearly as popular as those made of plain Brussels net. This net ia 8o very fine that it can hardly bo seen. 1t comes in brown, black, red, dark blue and green, ng overskirts will be fashionable on all spring gowns, Tho majority of them will be with: ng. Tight fitting polo- naiso made ¢ and trimmed with bands of feathers down the front, will be much worn, Flowers will trim all the new spring hats, to the exclusion of feathers. Gold {rmh princosse honnet are much worn just now, hey have strings; of broad marcon ribbon velvet, of th d that bangs are this spring, and nocessar’ *Her Stylish Olothes, Lot a woman be humpbacked, frockled and blind, With warts all over her nose; Dres hor in soalskin, velvet wnd silk, Aud her boauty all lios in her clothbs, — EDUOATIONAL. Sowing i now taught in the public schools of Spriughield, Muss. A gentloman who refused to disclose his namo bus given Yalo colloge 850,000 for u dor. mitory. ‘Thero are 219 studerts at the Texas state | S university thirty of thew youne women, who aro clused with the men, Ninoty per cent of all the children who on. tor 6 fubilo sohools’ Tecing wadarthe age of L4 yourn. Thoso do not profit by the brass or. nameuts, :md retire without kuowing how to road, write or cipher, Miss Annie Newcomb, abrvad, has marvelous tathematioal povers and computes an eclipse with the saue ousy that & Viasar girl slips chuuk of guin inty , who Is now studying ing, Many young ladies of high soclal position Bavo 8ot & novel faabion, which s kT L of taking privato lossous in - dressiukiug, This originated first as & sort of revolt ugainat tho enormous prices asked by fashiouably wodistes for the creation of their daitty robos, “Lot the goud work go on!" Forty lady studeuts have, during the pres. out yoar, eierod upon & course % wtady'v: the Parid hospitals. Of these only thres or four are Freuchwomen. There wre some glish sud Awericans, aud oven & fow uegresses but the Russian is the unationality most nuw. erously roprossuted. Thiee fowals caudidates ve been succomful iu the examinatiou for professorships, The Columbia Gollege Athletic associatior fssued last week an invitation to ..nn.ml:: college associutions’ to weet in New York March 2ith, three delegutes iepresenting each aud confer upon the regulation of in. These atoad, or perhaps Silks for wpring woar her slipper when she sees the teacher approuch. _l| There are 450,000,000 Christians now in the world; at the end of the first century there were only 500,000, It 15 estimated that during the present ce ry 150,000,000 bibles have been printed, in b ditterent languages, There are more than eighty chimes in Lon- don, striking the half and’ quarter hours and making Sunday a day of melody. he Congrogational churches at Campus, Ivanhoe, Batavia, Galva, Summerhill, Wili- and Odell, Ilinois, are in the midst of rovivals, attended with good success. \ploted 5,000, and will e dedi- c Th st It has an organ that cost eatad March $3,000, The clergymen of Indi; that funerals shall ha private; that_ there should be no pub pxhibition of deceased poople,and that ministers should not he required to attend at the grave, Tho first Jewish settlors in Now York camo in 1654, and for 170 years there was but one synagogue 1n the city. Now there are 31 syn- agogues in the city, and an estimated Jeowish population of 50,000, The new Baptist church at Salt Lake has heen comploted, and tist gontloman his yme responsible for the support of Rev. 1, DeWitt, D. D, the well known ev t, to labor there for an indefinite period, The ministers of Cincinnati, members of the Evangelical Alliance, have resolved to inviw Dwight 1. Moody to come to Cncinnati next winter and hold a three months ser meet- ings at Music hall, Mrs. Waring h Newman's New York church $100,000, the appearance of the recent troubles revoke the clause and directed that the money, at her decease, he spent according to Dr. New- man’s judgment, David I, Whitmer, still lis have resolved ing in Missonri three wit. cato di Mormon protended to interprot. Tho bishops of the Am church have beon invited by bishops to participate s gue to bo held at A memoration of the ury. 1t in said accopt the invit The Cathol Episcopal tho Seotti directory for 1881 shows that in Groat Britain, exclusive of Iroland, th are 2,492 priests, 1,621 churches and_c ably more than 1,500,000 layien, This repre sonts o growth in 40 years of 1,422 churches and achools, or 35 each year, Thore i3 now 1 church or convent for each 162 squaro miles. The Catholic population hus increwsed thren times s fast s the wholo people, and now constitutes about 5 vor cent ol the whola. —— She Stepped Kight In, Heo put his hat upon the stop Beoside him in the aisle, Tho gallery was filling up With peopls all the while. A stately lady came along, Who further downward sat, Aud, heeding only ~acred song, Stopped straight into the hat. The hat was just a fit and held Her foot with sullen grip Uuntil he pulled the beaver off With many a crack and rip. He took the korry looking hav And homeward sped his way, Aud he will wear a brand new hat To church next Sabbath-Day. MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC, Remenyi, the violinist, gave great delight to tho people of Havaua, Cba, Mume, Patti is to sing only six times in Lon- don during the coming season thero, Mr. Irviog will fultll & ten weeks' ongago. ment in Eneland and then return in the fall to Awerica, Gounod's new opera, **Soppho,” will be pro- duced for the first time in the Grand opera house at Paris in May, ‘The Boston Ideals have added Offenbach’s “Barbe Bleue,” to their repertoire, and will siug it in Chicago during their next appear- ance, Mume. Valloria does not sign with the Abbey mpany in New York, but returns at once to Europe to fulfill envagements made there for the spring season. Miss Minnie Palmer has extended her 1.on don engagement until May 31, and then will play in Edinburgh and Glasgow, She will re. turn to New York in Auvgust, Ulara Morris brought her season of eighteen weeks to & close on the Tst inst, Miss Morris ilayed ten wooks out of the elghtoen, and ought home §25,000 for her own little share, Anderson re-opens at the London in September with *Komeo and . Mr, Terriss will be the Romeo and Mus. Stirliog the nurse, The whole company will be strong. My, Edwin Booth last Monday commenced & two weeks' engagement at the ourteenth Btreet Theatre, New York, durivg which he will appear as Hamlet, Richelieu, Shylock, King Lear, Bertucclo, and lago, _Strauss’ new comic opers, “A Night iu Venico,” which has met with great success iu Germany, huy been secured for this country by Mr, Jawes C, Duff, who proposes to proiuce it about Easter,at Daly’s Theatre with ustrong cat, elaborate scenery and handsome cos tumes. Pock's Bad Boy was a failure in Milwaukee, where Peck’s Sun, the paper which vriuts the ! absurd stories, is published. The munager foraably remurked: “The sudiences i ATil ] waukee jumped on our necks.” The Cream City goes up ten pegs in our estimation, ' The recsipts of the Emwma Abbott Opera And 1 kissed you ten times then and there Ah, those were sweet kisses! Nover since have 1 pres Such riby Then I diow y bing bre And hugged y d fonts of delig Lose to wy love-thr ith all of my might Now to_think, after all. you are not t o to anothor for life! , all 1n sorrow to pine, you will become his dear wife, . T shall gocrazy! VIl do something rash! at stay— I know what I'll do; ask your sweet sister if she wants a mash, And then 1] take her stead of y — UBIALITI CON ¥ Froderick Mount Cari Mrs. ceived a 100,000 cl presents, Ata wedding in Hannibal, Mo., the hx;i«l march was played on o mouth organ. **Com- ing events cast their shadows before. Abraham Fisher, of Knox , Indiana, has been married fivo times. He isnow 96 years of age, and his prosent wifo is 16, “Don't get married during Lent, 'says an ex- change. No, don't: there’s a plenty things to repent of. [ Burlington F'r Tf your best girl strikes yon with a feather fan beforo you're wed, she will, after marriage, place in the church of Elenezer for their he- | roie dip, It will, however, very likely be an Eben-sueezer church next Sunday S ne has discovered that “Gosh” is | swearing, meaning “My Lord,” and was used by Eliot in his In: Bible. Mr. E commended for not using a stronger e whiie engaged on that work. caleulated to make a m indulge i words, it is writing a book in the | vuage.—|Norristown Herald., The blunder of a homely spoken but sincers brother at a prayer m eting tho other evening caused a ripple t for a fow ments. I{- , I want to b A Split Doors. y one looked at each other in surprise for instant, and th ’ ates Ajar, itly respon with a happy A 8t. Joseph minister is out in a card in which ho declares that Col, Tngersoll quoted the Bible correctly when he said the Lord made woman fre ih of Adam, and that Mr. @ is the person w morant of the Heby nstead of Col, Ingorsoll. winister is the Loy, A, D. Abk and xcholarly man, and he furni lowing literal translation from the Hebr idge for themsel was intended to be ised to fall Jehovah God a deep m the Adam, and he slept, and He o frow his ribs aud he closed flosh in it« place. And_buiit Jehovah God the rib which he took from the Adwmn into a w and brought her to the Adam, And said t Adum thia time it is bone is from my bor flosh from my flesh. ' 1 be called woman_ from man was taken this one And so, continues Mr. Abbott, it appears that Mr. Tugersoll, however ipnoraut b be of Hebrew, he has got his ‘hone MAX MEYER & CO., | Dr. CONNAUGCHTON 103 BRADY ST., DAVENPORT, I0WA, U. 8. A. Established 1878—Catarrh, Deafness, Lung and Nervous Diseases Speedily and Permanently Cured. Patients Cured at Home. Write for *‘Tue Mepicar-Missionany,” for the People, Free. onsultation and Correspondence Gratis. P. 0. Box 292. Telephone No, 226, HON. EDWARD RUSSELL, Postmaster, Davenport, says: ‘‘Physician of| wea abtity ana Marked Success.” CONGRESSMAN MURPHY, Davenport, “<iten: *An toonovrable Man, Fine Success, Wonderful Cures.”—Honrs, R #0 5. IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO OIGARS, TOBACGOS, PIPES: SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 8izes from $6 to $120 per 1000. AND (HE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CICGARS: mately, The Plumb Between the starlight In winter's desponi 3 Adown a glistening snow-clad way My love and I were romming The night-hreezs And mingled with its tresses, And touched her fuir cheok here and there With dainty light caresses, od her sunny hair, It suddenly across onr pat With waters dark lingly upon the hrink haud in mine she truste u g ‘s hydrant’s bus T DROPS, An Indiana jury sent in a written verdict of “Blode to peces hi the biler bustin. Old Winter's body lies moldering in the but his soul is March-ing on, rcinnatian, on arriving in V 0, 0X- claimed: *'tireat gooseberry, how this reminds me of home!” ors say that people would be healthier ate moro_onions, Undoubtedly they would, 1t wonld keep them from going out nights. Tt will comfort the man who has again taken his ulster out of pawn to know that in Florida the orange trees are full of blossoms and black- borries are nearly ripo. Tt was Boveo who said: “Choerfulness is an offshoot of goodness and of wisdom,” Sometimes it is, and sqmotimos it is 5 shoot of about eight glassos of beer. hit you with a hroomstick on the head.—{Chi- cago Sun, Nlassing women who never get married by their complexion, it is said that there are more blonds than' brunettes smong them, This osed to be due to the preference of marrying men for brunettes. ¥ut perhaps the women who do not marry fado out. Miss Maria Mason, of Elkton, ) broken off her engagement with her betr because the latter wished to postpoze the wed- g until the bill reduciug the prico . rage licenses should become a law. The pres 24,50, aud the proposed law re s notjyet passed the | ture, however, At Norfolk, in England, a fortnight there was a wodding at which the officiaty clorgyman was a gentleman of % years of age. Ho has held the living he now holds for 71 yoars, Itis belioved that this tenu parish is unequaled for length in the history of the English church, A couplo in Georgia have flist been married after heing engagod for forty years. ~She said whe thought it best for young people to thor- oughly know each other’s characters and men- tal peculiarities beforo univing in the irrevo- cable bonds of holy wedlock,— [Rockland (‘ourier-Gazotte. / loin Fssex Contre, Ontario very last moment repented of her promise aused the utmost constornation among her frieuds and all presont by replying to the mentous question of the offic “Wilt thou this n in a clo 1 decidec for, but when given Mr. ) very satis pprimanded he apparently ico was not procesded with, , March 8 7 p extending ' ra ust rosulted in a . In 1843 Miss Mary thres llo of the connty. Thore wis one Juhn Gross smong her admirors, to whom sho was moro than partial, and, counting on him, +ho rejected other eligible offers, Gross, how- over, wanderod off and for ton years wis not Leard off, when oue day he retirmed bronzed boardled, and expected to find his former rred. True toher heart she "Lhey became once moro en- o ich with no effect, aud Mon- peri rriu; d of t ly the lady, still nn. brate lier sixtieth toss_began thinking of the ade up his mind that the s should come off at last Ho found she waus and od the vows mado forty birthday. w gone by und long-deferrod nu if Mary was willing. they have just ses yours ago. e— Vernal Verse, While vernal poets gush, ‘The streats are full of slush — And sidowalks 'neath a stratum lie of mud, mud, mud, But spring is in the air, The trees now gaunt and bare Will soon begin to show the starting bud, bud, budy When gaily springs tho grasses, With sulphur aud molasses — Fond mothers will their tender offspring doso, ose, dose. And maidens young and fair With joyful hoarts prepare To make their heart-ensnaring Easter clothes, clothes, clothes, The yellow msple sap Will‘shortly bo on tap And when the saccharine stream begins to flow, flow. flow, Tho grocer will display As “just avrived to-day” The cakes of sugar mado some years ago, 'go, [Somerville Journal. —— IMPIETLES, Mauy a thing keeps Lent that has no busi- ness o do so, That §5 bill, for instance. [Salem Sun, "The spiritualistic medium will endure more exposure uud still retain some vitality than a1y other cieature in the animal kingdom *‘My dear,” said Mr, Muckleham tohis wife, ““¢hoso hams 1 bought the other day are so badly spoiled tha “What a p y," bis wife replied ess we'd better so Ark nd them out to the charity hospital.” sas Traveler, There is said to bo considerable dissatisfac- 800 in wauy church choirs in New York City wuso of the attempts to cut down the sala- of the singers, Many of the best soloists have given notice of their inteution to leave. Thoy Will not siug so lo, People generally like to take their Monon- gahela hot The Ebenezer Baptist chureh, f of Pittsburg, profers it cold. Sixtesn colored persous were baptized the other day among the ruuuiug ice in the Mononguhola river whilo tho weather was below zaro. These bersons of color ought to oecupy # promineut .| iust left, “T'va got the s t they cannot he’eaten.’ | §! G A gambler in Wyoming has been fined $25 for disturbing the pe by killing two men, ably uked o very moisy revolver in- of a uiet bowie-kuife or air-gun, @ is one clothespin factory at_Avocs whicli alone turns out 50,000 pi # thespin as a cure for snoring seems to hold its place over all other kuown remedies. rding to a correspondent “a full orches- rain Florida nothing more than a fid- dler and & piano pounder,” In this section of the country u ‘‘full” orchestrs is synony- mous with too much beer, A rural friend wants to know what is the best thing to feed hogs on. He might feed them on_the ground, or, if he wishes, in a trough. We never did approve of fixiug up mahogany tables with marble tops for hogs, “‘In tho spring a yonng man’s fancy turns to thoughts of love, n in San Francisco in the spring an old man’s fancy turns & thoughts > lamb, mushroons, mint sauce [Sin T o0 Pest, tle late in the season, but we pning friends a by ble method of making a hot bed in a short space of time, This is the W Avply a lighted mateh to the bed tick- ¥ Derr ur grip?” a Philadelphia drummer asked his colleague who was looking very dis- mal on the tram. “No,” replied the man from Market strect, looking sudly at the pret- ty girl three seats in frout, whose side ho had [Burlington st N. and groeu pe Hawkoye. Tulking of the Chicago Eye, it may be re it Tias consclidutod with Chica k of course must be something immiense 1f it could now get the rest of the features of the face, a pair of St Louis feet, and some **Life” from New York, it would bo one of the biggest papers on rec ord. A. Logan addressed the students of a s collego the other day, and it is said that his appeal in behulf of education was ing in the extreme, **Young men.” said ember that education works powerful in favor of all greatness. If it wan't for edu- cation, thero wouldn’t be no differeuce be- ans I charge yon t) I wa'nt for gra thera wouldn't grammar, and | wman what don't talk pr to ridicule,” I is ulways subject {Arkansaw Travoller. — Him, She Loved Knott. Says Reuben Knott unt, u languaga burning b “Matilda, do you love me, dear?” Says she: I love you, Knott.” he Loved Him his fair, t “Oh, say not s0!" again he cried; **Oh, share with me my lot? Oh, say that you will Lo my b Says she: “1'll wed you, Knott. *“Oh, cruel fair, to servo me so! I love you well, you wot!” “I could not wod *‘For then I should be Kn A light broke in on Renben's wind As in his arms she got; She looks demurely in his face. And says: *‘Pray kiss me, Knott!" “Troy Times. | ——— GULARITIES. SIN Another woman has been tattooed in Cin. cinnati for a dirous. Thoro ate five tattoood persons now in the United Stases, 1t is declared on good authori that only fwanty.four white alsahants have beer secuted in Siam in 1,352 year Of this number it will hu. safe to wager that ut least fifty will be travelling with Awerican circuses in less than tWo years, Hiram Jacobs, the oldest citizen of Sturgis, : d the novel experience of being buried & fow duys ago in # *cofin made of vod from & walnut tree of his own planting. o troo was planted upon his returs from tho Black Hawk wa 3 — Handsome Wall Lamps, Tho fasaion now is decidedly in the di- rection of wall lamps. Some are of great beauty. Two of a set are opal-tinted lass and two rose-colored. The sconces in which they are fixed are fittes frames of mirrors, with beveled ed, These, in their turn, are framed in brass, beautifully chased. These lamps are placed near the four corners of a pretty | drawing-room, the opal-tinted and the red alternately. As the wall paper is a pattern of daisies in gold and pink on a warm am color, the etfect is very good. Candles with pink shades are scattered about the room in pairs, and at atable in a corner a low reading lamp * Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and i Brigands. LUy ASTERN PRICES AND SAMPLES S pa i} o o R fPLAOY: W H RICE 53 ¥ N AN s ) AR 7 SR LA D W. G- E A (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) I.UNMMEBIERE, LIME AND CEMERNT. Office and Yard, 6th and Douglas St (Jmaha Neb. ' Henley, Haynes & Van Arsdel, WHOLESALE— NOTIONS, HOSIERY, GENTS' FURNISHING “—AND— Fancv Goods, 1106 Farnam Street, OMAHA, NEB. " » MUSIC! MUSIC! MUSIC! J. C. PRESCOTT, GENYRAL MUSIC DEALYE, KOLB AGENTSFOR TIIE CELEURATED DeckerBros, Sohmer, Harrington, Wheeloek, AND FISCHER PIANOS, Estev and Packard Organs. E=Z°Call r write for Catalogues and prices. Lowest prices and best instruments, 1509 Farnam Street, Omaha Neb, J. O. PRESCOTT. DEALERS IN 14l House Buenishimg Goods. Stoves, Furniture, Crockery, &ec. Agents for the celebrated economy Cooking and Heating Stoves and the BEST RANGE, NO. (15 NORTH SIXTEENTH ST.. - - - - OMAHA. NEB. LOUIS BRADFORD, DEALEK (IN ulmber. Sash Doors Blinds Shingles Lath FETO0.; LOW PRICLES AND GOOD GRADES ~'" and (fet my Prices befora bawug elsewhere. Yards. z2irner 9tk a3 fdanaiag Fvn and Danpiux alw Grerman ID. Wyatt, LUMBER MERCHANT! FAU CLARE LUMBER YARD. 1024 North Eighteenth Street, Omaha, on Street BE. W. DIXOIN, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Lumber, Lime, Lath, Doors, Windows, Etc. as good avd low a3 any M the city. P'a14e try me, Car Line, Grries aud pric HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wil Paper and Win EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED; sheds a softened radiance upon books and writing materials, 118 FARNAM STREET, OMAHA NEB,

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