Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 30, 1887, Page 12

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Oslebrated Singer, Jenny Lind, Dying in London. STRUGGLES AND TRIUMPHS, —_— sical science. At the close London nd re‘u:lled a crisis which compelled extraordinary enterprise on {he part of Mr. Lumley, the v of Her Majesty’s theater, The whol eratic troupe, headed by Costa, thg con- theatré and +| duetor, established themselves at Covent gar- any Lind, the silver-tonged soprant » in 1850 and 1851 created such ex- samong the music-loving pop- of the United Sta is dyingin , No. 1 Mot ns, Bol- ‘W., London En , where she has d for years with Otto Gold- ghmids, her husband. The older gen- pration of to-day will recollect distinctly siuger’s tourof this country snd o lar interest which her appear- | in concerts ‘excited. ‘Mrs. Lind- midt has for years been.in priv- yet she is ‘rémembered as the | of the most remarkable 0 voice evep. heard. Of this fact seemed herself to have been well for it is related of her that whea one recently complimented:in her nce Christine Nilsson as being the d’s first soprano, Jenny Lind inter- d the remark that she herself had “8n organ that had never been excelled. gt this may have been occasioned by ousy born of her life on the stage. Jenny Lind, who has universally m known as the ‘‘Swedish Nightin- ” was born in Stockholm. There t0 be some confusion about the of her birth. Some authorities this as February 8, 1820, while otl insist that she came into the peid October 6, 1821.° At any rate, her introduction to the troubles of this mun- phere was not under the most, picious circumstances. Her father & teacher of languages, and her ir varied the duties of maternity those of keeping a school for youn, . Consequently Jenny was left ‘very much to herself, and grew up with- uch to relieve the monoums of a h existence. But she found sur- for her sorrows in song. When she v‘.:yatl{mly thre‘e years old to ‘-&lg ‘was her ruling passion—every melody that struck Nk cor was_ retained. with ‘an accuracy which caused general ad- ‘miration; eo work was done without ac- 3 mlng it with her clear voice, and no n during frequent illness ln-e- her from finding consolation One day when the ‘ehild_was about eight years old, In.hln:be ,;Sw sh nc‘tlreu. ac- dentally er ,_and was 8o by the talent and native skill Jenny in the manage- ment of her voice thatshe strove to the eyes of the child’s parents to treasure they possessed. Mrs. Lind, with the prejudices against the ) to a woman in her tion ), would. not listen at first to_any proposition from Mrs. Lundberg. How- ‘ever, the actress finally induced the mother to take her child to Herr Croe- jus, & music master living in Stock- He, upon hearing the little girl [ sing, was even more astonished than “Mrs. Lundberg and instantly deter- \ minedto present her to Count Pucke & candidate for admission to the jcal school attached to the Royal ‘theater, of which the count wasthe manager. After some tuition Creelius ‘took his pupil before Pucke, who, meas- uring the gentle little“creature with ‘astonished eyes, at once demanded of Creelius what he meant to do with such rely had nothing to fit tage. Creelius undertook to the matter with Pucke and finall, o permission for ‘' the chil sing. He awaited with fidence the result, and scarcely she eung ten measures until the it became as enthusiastic as Pucke id gave his permission for her en- ce to the school. She was then rul under the care of Erasmus Berg, ® profound and skillful . musician. Af- ter studying under him for several the Stockholm public was aston- one night at the appearance of a child in & vaudeville performance. ‘This was Jenny Lind, who at once be- came a favorite, and the prospect of her in _song. - growing into an operatic star was ex- |- lnflu[fly flattering. But when about 14 years old her voice failed her and ‘she was compelled to retire from the ‘stage. Croelius, her old master, tried fo reawaken the tones of his favorite pcholar, but could not. At length her returned, but it wae not the voice once had, nor had it yet acguired ‘wonderful beauty and purity which irked it in later years. After a con- tour through Sweden she secured Sun enough to take her to Paris, ‘where she submitted her talents to foia, the famous teacher, who, how- y told her that she.must not ex a great singer. He told he 8. , to rest for three months and B return to him, - Jan:{ managed to through the period of her proba- on, though all alone in the great , and then again visited Garcia. % her hope, and she went in- tric n“w work and flnlllg i d iciently to return to Stoc g im, When in Paris Jenny met Mey- i erbeer, the celebrated composer, and ;‘my‘u later he invited her &jo{n opera in Berlin, and in 1 she i rwfio Prussian capital, At first e but little impression on the =. a8 _her voice had not yet re- e But one evenlns when she 2 .dh:fln&!n ‘‘Robertle Diable,” she ol it had retugned, and, inspired 3 consciousness, sang the music of Alioe with such force and power that electrified the public and astonished r, who from that moment re- her as the first of sin om this point her ou progress fi repid and her reputation was thm‘xjhwt Euro) She ap- Ppe in quick succession in all the pean capitala save one—Paris— n visited the United States, and Oanada. Jealousy and in- prevented her singing in the B metropolis. When Meyerbeer met her in Paris he recommended most warmly to the director of the mie de Musigue, who complxh;s maestro's - request her at the r, Halevy and i dlmwr“‘hllmal,l appearance. le. tz, the then reigning queen of demie’s musical corps, waathe ress of the ll‘l;omr.nd she forbade moe on the occasion. aa offer was made to this gratuitous was 20 offonded b) that she d never consent htfiuflnm nd's voice wke a soprano of . Ita compass was two and The ¥ notos espe- dcl‘l‘mohwn.ln- at her command. Her kable in its den. Lumleyhad but oné resource— viz.: tosecure Miss Lind at any_price. She had formed cnn!‘omuhh London and on_the continen which Lumley had to T Thnd, Lasmley atiompien to sovu e; m| re for her lm’ulaxnt‘e support. In this he 'was only partially successful,” and Miss Lind found herself pitted against a very strong ition, which she finally van- 3|I|lhefl and won the favor of $he Lon- lon public, Her I rance on the ratic took place 18, 1849, o causé of her rotirement is siid to have been __man t': the objecti she m:nmhd e roken off. fiflofl denti- rt le Diable,” “Der Freischutz,” “Norma,”. “Lucia di Lam- mermoor,” ‘La ia del menw‘" Spontini’s “Vestale,” ‘and. Mozart’s “Flauto Magico.” After her retirement from opera she continued to n(n% in oratorios and con- certs and was on the continent thus en- gaged when in 18490 P, T. Barnum, the well-known showmn concoived the idea of bringing her to this sountry. After considerable ‘hegotiation he reed to pay Miss Lind the then aston- i‘u‘iflng price of $1,000 ‘each for 150 con- certs, he to have the option of closing the engagement after 150 had been given. 'his _contract was modified after o time. In addition Mr. Barnum was to pay all her expenses and those of her servants and attendants. She stip- uluted that she must be accompanied b; Mr. Julius Benedict (now Sir Julius the London composer and director, an 8ig. Belletti, the Italian baritone. Mat- ters were -arranged with these artists, and Mr. Barnum,then deposited with his London ‘bankers 187,600, the amount which it was estimated would be necessary tocarry out his part of the contract. After- the engngement with Barnum Miss Lind refused several of. fers to sing in London, but under the management of the enterprhhl{ Amer- ican she gave two concerts in Live: 1 ust previous to sailing for the United tates. With his usual repicacity Barnum had used every art to adver- tise the eomlng of the Nightingale and the people of this country were wild to sep and hear her. She arrived in New York Sunday, September 1, 1850, and thousands of people were gathered on the docks to greet her. At 12 o’clock that night she was serenaded by the 200 musicians of the New York Musical so- ciety, who were escorted to the hotel where she was noqping b¥1 about three hundréd firemen clad in their pictures- que uniform and bearing torches. For weeks after the excitement continued unabated, and Jenny Lind’s rooms were thronged by visitors, including all the celebrities of the day. Barnum had offered a_price of 8200 for an ode, to be sung by Jenny Lind at her first concert. umbers of compo- sitions were offered, but the following, written by Bayard Taylor, took the Erize and was set to music by Julius enedict: 1 greet. w:‘uxlhurt full of the land of the wes Whol?l banner of stars o'er a world is un- rol Whose omp;l'm o'ershadows Atlantic's wide reas! And opens to sunset its gateway of gold! The "flé‘:" the mountain, the land of the 6, And rivers that roll in magnificent tide— Where the souls of the mighty from slumber awake, Andd?:‘llllnw the soil for whose freedom they Thou :rndle of empire! though wide be the loam Thl:h severs the lands of my father and ee, 1 hear from thy bosom the welcome of home, For song has & home in the hearts of the free! Andlongas thy water shall gleam in the sun, And long as thy heroes remember their SCArs, Be the hands of the children united as one, And peace shed her light on tho banner of stars! Jenny Lind’s first public concert was e\i,ven in Castle Garden, New York, ‘ednesday evening, September 11, and was attended by about five thousand persons. She continued under Barnum’s manageraent until June 9, 1851, during which she gave ninety-three concerts. They went from New York to Philadel- hia, and then visited Boston, Provi- lence, Baltimore, Washington, Rich- mond, Charleston Havana, New Orleans, Natchez, st Louis, Nashville, Louisville, Madison, Ind., Cincinnati, Wheeling and Pittsburg, returning to Philadelphia and New York. The receips of the concerts were 8712,161. of which Miss Lind received $176,675 and Mr. Barnum $535,486. % A few days before ‘the first concert Barnum told Miss Lind that he wished to change their contract because he wus convinced that the concerts were going to be a greater success than he had an- ticipated. He told her. he wished to give her not only the 81,000 previously ed uPon, but, after taking out ,600 & night for his expenses and ser- vices, he wished to give her half.the balance. She was, of course, surprised and delighted, and at the suggestion of Barnum she secured a lawyer to look after her interests, and after much uibbling by him the new contract was &gned. with the conditional priv- ilege on her part of terminating it «after fifty or 100 congerts were given. = Miss Lind had with her as pri- vate secretary Max H. Hjortzberg, her cousin, who constantly annoyed Barnum with proposals to ehange the contract— probably at first without Miss Lind’s authority. He had also some influence with his cousin, and finally after endur- ing much annoyance Barnum agreed to consent to a cancellation of the contract uj the payment of & oertain forfeit which the altered documont had em- braced. When the company fiually reached Philadelphia, where arrangements had been made to give the concerts in building which had been erected for a circus, Jenny Lind, uuder the influence of bad advice, refused to sing there, as she said the building was but a stable. Then Barnum consented to & breaking off of their relations, and she under- a concert tour of a portion of the country under her own management. In this she was quite successful. Had she remained with Barnum he _would have bmu’ht her to Chicago. During Miss Lind’s 1ast tour she visited Syvacvse, N. Y., and while there she gave Mn.?. N. Crawford, no"'r.ll Mhl gl::-co. nu; erreotype from which the portraif which ornaments this column is taken. Miss Lind’s tour lasted but a few weeks. then she rotired to Nia Fulls, and aftorwards went to Nortl mxon. Mass. ‘While at the latter e visited Boston and was mairied to Otto Gold- schimidt, the German com; r and pianist,to whom she was much attached, and who studied music with her in Germany. * Duriug ber trip under Barnum'sman- idevoted to . [ gh‘:l ket, ‘“There s half & months earnings, but I am deter- mined to hear Jenny Lind.” The song- stress of the circumstance and sent her secref with a 820 gold piece 1o be given the girl. The young woman cried with joy when she received the gift and heard the kind words with which it was accompanied. ’ In Washington Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, General Cass, Colonel Ben- ton, and many other notables, including Przfidant lmore, called ngon Miss Lind. Upon hearing one of her songe in the concert-hall Mr. Webster sig- nify his aj on rose from his seat bow. Miss Li: Washington, and while at Mount Ver- Hbrary, with the astogrann of Washings w aut ‘ashin, ton on a fiy-leaf. Tmr:n?amenm of th‘o- great man she treasured highly. At Natchez, Miss., while the steamer was taking on fuel. sang before an audience of about a thousand oomgossd of a small number of l?tuflr‘{lu:‘mmfla greater wrtéon: of gathering ng negroes. Buf she sang with as much care as if before a of the severest critics, At Madison, Ind., a speculator in- duced Mr. Barnum to mi for one_ con- cert under a guarantee of $5,000. When the company arrived there they found that the performance was to be given in & pork packing house,the only build- ing of suitable size in the place. The singer, however consented to appear, which was a little surprising in the light of her objoctions raised against the accommodations in Philadelphia. In Havana the people objected to the high Kl'lcel charged, and fore Miss Lind had sung a note she was eted with a storm of hisses. She calmly went at her work and finally conquered the grejudioes of her %udiencn, who before er singing was finished went wild with enthusinsm. They recalled her five times, but she each time responded with a very cold bow, nor_could she be induced to sing again. When she had finished four concerts she refused to make another_ en, ment to appear, and, though the entire Havana public and press imrortunad her to retreat ;mm her position she stubbornly re- Aftor her marriage she, with her husband, returned to Europe. They | lived in Dresden for some time, and in 1856 returned to Iondon, where they. have since been, with the exception sof such time as was taken up bv concert tours of the provinces. Three children were born to them, one daughter and two sons. Their home for years has been a house covered with vines and surrounded by trees and flowers, but Jenny Lind has been for a long time a confirmed invalid, and would ver rarely see the casual caller. To @ Americans who knocked at her door to y their respects, the servant, who has ived with her for the t thirty years, delivers the message that ‘‘Jenny Lind wishes them to say that she will never cease to love the American people with all her heart.” She recently had a troke of general paralysis, which, how- ver, left her brain unimpaired. In private life Jenny Lind has been a most charming woman. She is very charitable, and even up to the date of her recent illness was in the habit of, without material recompense, giving musical instruction to a class of poor young women. When on the stage her munificent and genuine liberality was almost prodigal. The immense pro- ceeds of her American tour .were the establishmentof a free-school system in her native land, ' When in America she also dis- Lmed of large sums in charity, . She eard of a society in Sweeden the ob- ject of which was to take unfortunate childrcn out of the hands of - their par- ents’ by whom they were compelled to steal, and place them in better circum- stances. mevolent people subscribed annually for the support of these chil- dren, yet the means for this purpose were small, She at once gave a per- formance, but insisted upon ble prices, which returned large proceeds, which were devoted to the purpose named. Upon the death of Mendelssohn, No- vember 4, 1847, Miss.Lind was much affected and she immediately took the iniative in a movement to render a worthy tribute to his memory. A con- cert was given in London, December 15, 1848, in furtherance of this idea. ‘‘Elijah” was the work chosen by Miss Lind to do homage to her departed friend. The serious part of the work was written expressly for her by Men- delssohn. The receipts exceeded £1,700, and led, with subsequent additions, to the foundation of a permanent scholar- ship, the first scholar elected, six years later, being the English, composer, Sir Arthur Sullivan, and author of “Pina- fore” and other simil ——— NOVELTIES IN ME) The latest thing in English made braces sent over here for spring orders are broad in ::u web and have an air of solidity about em, One of those smart fellows has turned out a miniature rule in silver to be worn as a charm on a chain and having on one side the words: ‘“‘Let's measure that yarn." The trade in dickies was all but paralyzed when cheap shirts and high vests came along, but business in false fronts has been some- ;vhlt revived by the victims of the Jaeger ever. All sorts of things are to be found in cane handles, some hold a pipe, others a cigar cut- ter, while one is & pistol stock with & barrel in the stick, for which .cartridges to fit are provided. Traveling handkerchiefs are made buff and blue centers with some shades borders, con- trasted, corners either plain white or. bright colors, others with printed corners. A gov- elty is in printed damask. ‘The band bow of white lawn will continue a popular article for an indefinate period, Next to the lever sleeve button, it will always be respected as the greatest foe to profanity now on the earth. # New embroidered handkerchiefs are one- quarter inch or one-half inch hems, with two- colored embroidered inside figures and extra corner figures; others simply corner embroid- ery jockey cap and whip, white horseshoes with colored nalls, ete. ‘The attempt to introduce colors in men's dress for evening wear might }un as well be abandoned. The gentlemen of are too gallant to take from the ladies their special prerogative in the matter of ball and. dinner costumes. | turnin o New winter glovers are fino angoras with subdued two color back stripes and i Scotch knit in soft elnahm hfllw HIS EARNINGS AND: EXPENSES. ’ How He Spends His Momey—His Pri- vate Life—A Glimpee in His ‘Workshop at Home—Who His Friends Are. LONDON, Oct. 15.—[Correspondence of the Ber—Copyrighted.]~When Henry Irving was leading man in the Theatre Royal, Manchester, a very modest lodg- ing served his, turn, and he never dreamed of the luxury with which his peculiar genius would endow his future home in London. Good industrv and good luck combined have brought him & home more gorgeous than ever an English actor beheld, except upon the stage—a palace beyond the ambition or the conception of either the would-be aristocratic Shakespeare or the pam- pered Garrick. When Irving settled in London as & character actor, now some eighteen years ago, he was not regarded as even a possible, much less the probable, Elisha on whom would fall the mantle of the Keans, Macreadys, Phelps, and the other great Shakespearians. These used ‘ to live in cosey houses in old-fashioned streets, and thought themselves lucky if they were invited to dine withu knight. The times have changed. The actor is now the owner of a palace and the patronsof aristocratie amateurs and other small fry. Your Richard III. of last night sleptin a mansion, breakfasted withthe prime minister. lunched with & bishop, took tea with & duchess, dined with a prine, and supped with the wits and fops of Upper Tendom. Henry Irving told his audience on the closing night of a recent season that his receipts for that season had been $180,000. The margin of annual profit requires some spending. The cost of his two boys’ education at Eton, where evory lad is supposed to inherita title or be the son of a millionaire, will absorb an appreciable slice. The scene painter and stage upholsterer claim a small for- tune over each g\ny presented. Theold book collector plunges his hand deep and often into Irving’s pocket, but that is a mere flea-bite, One day he saw an old work that contained plates of cos- tumes. Irvl:s fancied it and bought it, though he had not quite all the cash in his pocket at the moment,férits price was #3860, I think it was $700he ‘gave at a sale for a Shakespeare: serap-book. These little knick-knackscome not so easily into the hands ofiless favored mortals than the prosperousactor mana- er. Irving has for several yearslived in a suite of rooms at a streetcormer in New Bond street, as it might besthe first floor corner of the Hoffman house. Then he built himself a house at Hammersmith, of the latest fashion withoutand within. The chambers at Bond street have been retained, and it is there tha$ his chief work was done; there he : evolved those masterly conceptions thgts have placed him at the head of living: interpreters of Shakespeare, and there-he -acquired the means of carrying out: his ‘magnif- icent designs. is dining room was conventionally furnished, save for afew bronzes and other artistic gems, mostly related to his own art. His study then and now proclaimed the man, and al- ways will, - Irving is first and foremost a student, a consumer of the midnight oil. His nature and his art blend Fer- fectly. "It wasa queer notion to_fill its windows with churchy stained glass. gorhla%c l‘?e lrt‘alsults (‘if disorder “l){ld ggledy-piggledy are less perceptible. This sanctum is wont to have a chaotic character; books find their way fromthe shelves to the Mfoor, and there lie in gypsy-like defiance of inartistic prim- ness. A table crawls out from its proper corner into a harum-scarum position handy for the workman student who seems to have been testing its strength by the piles of books and man- uscripts heaped upon it almost anyhow. Many a play in manuscript finds its way to Henry lrving. Not afew he has bought and paid for handsomely. One at least he bought from an American in America. Whether he expects to put any of them on the stage. is another matter. He has not done with Shakes- peare yet. About the walls hang a gallery of intings, engravings, and sketches of is many eminent friends—actors, ac- tresses, statesmen, poets, a noble army of notables, and among them his Ameri- can comrades are conspicuous, Ellen Terry’s strangely sweet, expressive face gleams out from various disguises, charming in all. Rossi contributes a signed yortrln of himself, ‘‘a 1’amico Irving.” The place isa vertible mus- eum for its interest, and & Noah’s ark for its delightful disorder. It may be that a hat ‘been pop on a bust, or a coat flung overa precious folio on the floor, or a pile of oifinr boxes tipped over a bundle of Mss. But the rich ar- tistic tone of the place. with its true odor of hard-work sanctity, isitself its finest ornament. The Hammersmith home was lon, the building, Whether the dainty notions of the master demanded un- wonted pains or changes of design I know not, but the result is a home of which the owner may well be proud; the same elegance in furnishing, the same profusion of art handiwork, of costly books, vellum snflqnala lordly bindi in tooled morocco, and work- ing editions meant for serviee and not for ghow. In summer the beautiful {.f"""“ is a favorite rendesvous for in- mlleot and beauty, and it would be ha;«: name & en Ftnv more 80 after than those of Henry Ivving, e While he evidently revels fa the lux- urious, Irving’s keen pergeption of the fitness of things keepe' his tastes and their gratification severely within bounds. Though in his‘dwess he is studiously elegant and fashionable,there 1s & marked quiet in his bea: which takes off the suspicion ul. di other-words, Irving is & true in demeanor, and gains in ity by his :pplronti absent air, o is fast ,but he is now in his fifties. One m* friendsi is John L. Teole, an old school comedian, or per- hqulnnmhtha more correct word. These two struggled hard in their early [ were always good chums, and Irv- ing never forgets his early friends. Several have been in his company ever gince it was formed. For a briel while there was once an English baronet among them, nothing of "an artist, but enerous and the baronet Was poor. ron the baronet mar- i AM&LAmnrlun, and no doubt will appreciate his ’s kindness. Another of Irving’s old time comrades met with a fatal accident at rel |— not in Irving’s theatre,but Irving’s Ml‘ ng ot the righ er of his old the unrivalled ’ 904Ul benedt . In ntleman was time. ‘Anoth friends is Reeves, teuor. At Sigy Rey brothers had been making s great stir in England with their ritual mani- 1 ons, and their tricks with the cabinet they carried with them. They had vimted Manchester.and their tricks had been discovered by two 8:“‘5 &ctors then on the local boards. o these was Frederick Maccabe. whose entertainment, ‘‘Begone Duli Care,” is known in America. He and Philip Day, comedians both, set to work to practice the cabinet feats, and when they could do them neatly they gave nml-%luk displays in a hall. One Ash Wedn , when thé theaters were closed by law, -it was decided to rlvel iblic exposure of the Daven: n the ofim hall in_ the town, an that occasion Henry Irving red as “Rev. Dr. Ferguson,” that being the name of the plausible divine who had done the talking for the Davenport brothers, Irving was made up to per- fection; wesaw the soft-sawder showman before us, with the same big white tie, the same nasal twang, and the same—or R_erharanll[shtlylmproved—el uence. 'he ghosts duly walked, the l?o‘pe- re- leased their captives, and the pious ejaculations of Rev. Henry Irving were like sweet streams in a very dry land. The echoes of our boisterous laughter come back as I recall that delicious treat, and of all the great tragedianss repertory, there isno part I should so much wish to see again as his Rev. Sanctimonious O. Ferguson. GEOFFREY QUARLES, il RECENT INVENTIONS. A machine for engraving designs, letters, and res on ivory, metal, glass, etc., has recently been invented. One of the devices proposed for the Paris exhibition of 1889, is a mveu.% platform ‘which will convey passengers at the level of the %t;or and grounds through parts of the n. exhibitio A Danish firmt have introduced a non-con- doctor of heat for water-pi and_boilers, principally made from sawdust. The com- ition can be moulded into the required form and applied cold. It does not injure the metal in contact with it, and water or steam leaking out will pass through it with- out spoiling it. Mr, McCallum, of New York, has devised & method of ventilating drains by means of the flow of the running sewage. His system consists of dividing the sewer into sections by means of shafts to the surface and valve 80 that as the sewer flows it creates a draugh! which chan the air in the sewerand mixes it with fresh air before it is dis- charged. A new material for excluding dust and draughts has been brought out. It becomes pliable when heated, and can thus be fitted to the outlines of doors, windows, and 8o on, It retains its shape on cooling until softened bg’l\ot wal Tin. The composition is en- closed in llet of maroon-colored cloth, ‘which is nailed to the frame of the window or the stile of the door. e s ey Do not disregard a cough. It isoften the symptom of the most fatal diseases, bronchitas and consumption, use Dr. J. H. McLean’s Tar Wine Lung Balm. 25 cents a bottle. OMAHA Modical and Surgce Lnseiwe, N. W. Corner of 13th and TREATMENT OF ALL CHRONIC and SURGICAL DISEASES. Braces, Appliances for Deformities and Trusses, Rlin factlities, apparatus and remedies for sucoess- 1 trentment of every form of disease requiring Medicajor Surgical treatment. Forty new rooms for patients; best hospital acoom- modations in " oat. s on Deformities and B: BOOK ON DISEASES OF WOMEN FRER! Only Rellable MEDICAL INSTITUTE MAKING A SPECIALTY OF successfully treated, o e FpaimentTor Lou of Vital Eower. us iy treal at home, p e Omaha Medical and Surgical Institute, or Dr. MNonamy, Cu. 131 & DodgeSrc, Propristor Omaha Business College, 1N WHIOH 19 TAUGHT Book-Keeping, Penmanship, e--m;‘-.---. Telegraphing 8end for College Journale 8, E. Cor. 16th and Cavital Ave. PRIVATE Dis Inslst upen sueing the Trade Mark or you may be deselved. THE MICHIGAN STOYE COMPANY, Detroit, Chicago, Buffalo. FOR SALE BY Milton Rogers & Sons, Omaha, Neb. stoves I Beware of merchi X loves In Preference to w SGARTANDE have od 'AKGRCY OF Are INTRINETED In selling less deairabio stoves. Nobody Reads This WITHOUT WONDERING HOW WE DO IT. On Saturday, October 29th, We will make a special sale of 1 2 Dozen Children's White Merino Underwear at1 25 15c Hach. These ar:w fi:: s:;:gl: :el:.‘v;":'(:ds. The sule- price is not half what they are worth. Call and ex- amine quality. ‘We lead in making low prices, but do not follow. THOMPSON, BELDEN & (0. 1319 FARNAM STREET. Blogest Baroams m Omahal GROCERIES WAY DOWN! 100 1bs Best Minnesota Patent Flour. .82 7 Flake.. 2 1 1 12 gt 05 27 bars Union Boap. 24 bars White Russi 21b can Corn Bee! 81bs Raisins, Stick Candy, Tb Btick Candy, 3 I Fruit Jellies, 30-1b o above are only a few of our many bargain o s ::d let us prove ,thn ‘we are the cheapest grocery house in SayusKESSS8SSSES BEEEEsssszss HILL & YOUNG, 1210 and 1213 Famam Strect FURNTTURE Carpets, Stoves, Houss Farnishing Goods. WEEKLY AND MONTHLY PAY- MENTS, JACOB E. TROIEL & CO., 2709 LEAVENWORTH 87T, Carry s Full Line of Jowel Baso Heators & Ranges lvar‘ Stove is Warranted. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Rt onest Dealing, Prompt Delivery, and PFrices as Low ble Deale: JACOB E. TROIEL & C0., 2709 Leavenworth St. RILEY & McMAHON, Estate and Loan Brokers, 310 South 15th Street, Omaha, Neb, Bome destrable trackage lota 8 acres good trackage, cheap. Good in all parts of the citys A tine acre in Washington Hill, Goods, as any Hespon: lhmuma'-mmnn:,mul w&mh r:li m

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