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0 e THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER ' 20. 188".-—’1‘WELVE PAGES 3 60 inch Amazon cloths—worth 81, OUR PRICE $1.25. French broadeloths, hand sponged, 54 inch—$2 per yard, colors and black. Combination Roby q Soutach braided, with plain Amazon cloth to match, Faney plaids, checks and stripes with ple nin English serges to match. Silk and wool combination robes in CornerDodgeand 16thSts the chotcest colors and latest designs. | 5001 b wrap that to seo will bo,_to g KELLEY, STIGER & CO. admire; #5.00 15 the price, A similar | o 500 3.00, worth wve to offer this coming weck some | wrap is on sale in Omaha at £65.00. Wo | & 0ed oo ik decided bargning in their cloak de vo the newest and latest styles in LADIES: SILK MUBLL ment, v son sale Mon lans and hose front newmarkets, | 75 dozen ladies' all-silk handkerchiefs them better value for the price named | obe 5SS ish seal plush e ave the leading garments in the | and mufllers in Japanese and CHinese than is shown by any firm in the city. sacque, with lig ver fur collar, Wi x.\n\:v-l)um in price at $14.00, | silk, Chinese erepe, brocaded silk, BRING SAMPLES AND COMPARE QUALI- | cutts, and fur down the front: price ), $18.00, $19.00, 822,00 and $24.00. | ete, in all shades, at oue pric 158, )00, This garment is on sule at other | Stripes, ;.I ids and 1 worth up to $1.50. i our pri aces for Our sales on plush KUl ! We have o genuine Alaska our pric acques have | beyond our expect The extrem: we are | sacque, London dye, gu i Our pric g tions and we feel confident from the | asking for p\u.r is 5,00, #100,00, #1 » best black Satin \ for patronage given us we offer the | FINE FUR TRIMMINGS, MUFFS, SETS, ), $250.00, and the g yard; regular value of this qual- [ et value in plush & to be found ke the best goods that 1.60. - Only four picces of this t L] .00, money. Our prices are at least 25 por ¥ for Monday. one. Intending purch: cent fower than any house in Omaha BRING SAMPLES AND COMPARE QUAL- luctions in order to reduc wrices from other dealers, for compar- | will sell sealskins, In children’s cloaks, 1y ind will offer a wrap at $ ison, it will prove positively that our | with gretehen skirts, and misses’ new- A full assortment of colors in lmh- A wrap at $18.00, cheap | prices are the lowest. markets, with capes and hoods, we show Francaise ut $1.85 and $1. t other UR TRIMMINGS all the new designs and latest patterns. in the following fur Beaver, black | We have reduced the son all ot black marten, chinchiila, lynx | children’s and misscs’ cloaks fron Kk, long light lynx, black lynx, red | cents to (81.50) onc dollar and a half, selling at #37.50. $42.00 is , grey fox, raccoon, nutrin, American | making our children’s cloak (h']).lrllm-ul fora wrap that would be Australian oppossum, silver hare, | decidedly the cheapest place in Omuha nin at $47. $50.00 is | black hare, blue hare, blue coney.blac” | to buy either children’s or misses’ FUR SETS (LO\ ANI) MUFF.) Otter, black brary black mavten,black lynx, lynx back, long light lyng, red fox v fox, nut hossum, ete. SPECIALDRIV TALDRIVES 100 black Rus ir muffs, 75¢, actual value 81,25, ) black Coney .muffs, #1.50, value ) fine seal th mu rly sold for & Tmitation se ine closely), , 82,871, regu- ot (resemble the BILKS! V Three gy \ln\lm)u lu ACK FaT FRANCAISE for Monday. We seal skin teed, our 500, §200.00, rments are 0 be made for the are attracting and astonishing every \ps we est prices for ALL SILK FAIL CAISE named in this i 50 pieces cheap at $1.2 The shad cy work net, win houses ment, $32.00 buys a wrap in our cloak spartment this coming week that < would be 1) (hl m at 3 sapph our price for a wrap soid elsewhere at | coney, black Persian lamb, cloaks, Come and examine our cloak brown, navy bluc, black, cream, pink | § »wn the list with an ele- N MUFFS! MUFFS! | department. and white, in the foilowing furs: Corduroy velvets for rlish walking Genuine Alaska seal, beaver, black juckets and costumes, P bear, black marten, chinchilla, lynx 100 picces broadeloth finished cloth, back, long light lynx, black lynx, red . b4 inches wide, (full measure) HEAVY fox. grey fox. monkey. raccoon, nutriu. WEIGHT, solid colors and mixtures at oppossum, silver and black hare, black Y coney, ete., ete. 80 children’s grey and white Coney collar and muff sets, $1.25, would be rd Corner Dodge and 15th Sts. cheap at . Corner Dodge and Fifteenth Streets. AR Mol Acholdd s B LR — (CINENTS R THR Coon, a young republican leader and | thatisa wedding cake!” replied: “T | “adopted a Japanese girl, who cared ]‘A\“l)h\’h Ol‘ “Ih MT\R lawyer, and there have never been so | meant wedding,” and which brought | for Blm i his illness. 1ike a daughte many disappointed and blue young men [ matters to a crisis immediately, House is a very clever men, one of the in this part of the state as tonight. In | More shrewd ill was the young lady | most brilliant men T éver met. but has Co-education and Marriage — A | every town in which Nellie spoke and | —and more ing—who told her ad- | been bed-ridden for years, and pecu- Strange Story. :‘::. "::;.1 ‘}‘.‘y’li."l‘ her ent campaign | mirer that she was a mind reader, and | liarly dependent upon the tenderness vs. Some of | could read what was going onin his [ and ~thoughtfulness of his adopted — them be m\d.\.m.u thecanvass | mind at that moment; that he wanted | daughter shown all those high, CURIOSITIES OF GCOURTSHIP. | progressed, and” worked like beavers | to propose to her, but did not know how | fine qual which he aseribes to the Ioidicicatihe polls all day on Tues to do it, which, of course, relieved the | heroine of his little story Mr. Coon, although a strong d | young man from his embarrassment per- AT AT Proposed to Him—An | Grant man und republican, was the very | mancntly, S 0 DTSR O ANOG: Agbdi o ChunieL Tananate first to offer his services to Miss Cook, | A very bashful man having suceeeded | New York Star: Th o5 Lt b and they having been aceepted, he | in winning a wife, alady relative teased | romance over the marviage of the ni Wedaings—A Halo' of" Ro- threw himself heart and soul into her | him to tell her how he over plucked up | of the late President Arthur, Miss ance. can v e up his law practice | courage enough to propose. Ellen Botts, of Savannah, to Mr . L ANEN for nearly a month, and worked day and | “Now, tell the truth, N——," said she; | Blaikie. The xeitement of the earth- ; night for the fuir young eandidate. He | “did not the lady have to do the court- | quake injured her 50 much that an Wedded. Wit hor eongsnt b re was a certainty Kate Vennah. 1 adviser, and there’s | ing for you?™ R GEE I R U L L ahis oW ihir how tans nightahonpant | e cwered the gentleman: | of her losing her sight. She immed- Connting e wons for o sl Tost, apurt | 10 Knowing Tiow many nights o spen N-no.” answered the gentlema He Thought ! S{ai% FEOVBREINELY ronds in | “but Town she hed over the hard | iately sent word to Mr. Blai who From evers sout they stand. - Heart lnown | 45, FEIRE S GEREN SO Pl | plaves for e eoted over the | Gl Seottand, releasing him from the "feel no need to speak one word, | hundred disappointed yow And this seems to be the ladies’ mi engagement. He refused to accept it, at sea’s solemn Vo with those massiv 1 th t steamer to urge an immediale marrviage. This ex- and some republicans throughout the | sion in courtship—to smooth ov ¢ the | and came here by the ne ause of Miss Nellie's deter- | hard plac 1 sunlights fulls mination to wed, there isnone todispute ey g 1 ion of his fidelity produced a ne nnhn-' than the light' from his dear [ Ny Cook's ¢ Jenition aud | HeThought She Proposed to Him. | vous rcaction in Miss Botts system favor.and eve offering con- | New York Sun; There is a great ¢ which ended in the restoration of her ! o iAW avor.an v I 5 ! 4 i ..mu love; that, with delight sur- gratelations. “The date of the marringe | of fun in and corner of Cc eyesight. The young couple go to ‘otland next month. The Marriage Fee, Concord (N. L) Monitor: “What do you ask for marryi u\uph *asked o Manchester b n oof a well- o y the n'hN' that to the 'plied the divine. It is q<l0.|n<l lleg of prepossess- | gometimes move when the groom fecls ince, in looking over proofs | aspecially generous.” “Tll give you s list of students, detected | §3'und that's all T can vas the vor in her name, and hastened | merchants final offer, to which the man said: “All right,” and the time for the ceremony was fixed, At the appointed hour the man pres sintended at the parsonage, but be- fore the trying ceremony was begun as- tonished the minister by saying: i 7 ell uni New York, just now And joy too keen, her lover, leonine, is not yet announced. o Shivers to think. Till death, yea, after i o “'l‘l‘i" “‘l“ ‘l:"“l{;‘;h‘:’;":“"""""X"L“"““("‘: mine A Strange Story. s weel he beg g B His ¢3 R AT e G| A ot 3 e One day, nt breakfust,” Archbishop | term an |\‘]]rl\:.)wn_‘( tof ~uuh-m~ 8 Whately told a remarkable story of o [ issued by the vegis ng the resi- woman who married, when young, a sol- | dence of cach person enrolled in the L and was wreekod with him'on the \"““""“i\‘- Qocasionally vy itk e list, Severaldays ago one crently pliced against his lips, wove at last; and see! the woman's | ! life dic Ttself stands still and listens while he [ const of India. All the crew and passen- breathes, <My wife! gers were supposed 1o have been lost. except this one woman and an - oftic ducation and Marringe. who saved her. She was very beaut Phil ““Hotbeds of [ ful, and he educated and married he flirtation™ 'y usual opin- ¥ In time she heean widow, and ion of ¢ i sehiools. As a | turned to England. He had left he matter of f it is us to note the | his money.and she was well re wide differen in the relation of the 1 sexes that exist indifferent institution There may or may not be schools where | ing to | question 1 the regist in blissful ignorance of the sion, and whose mind evidentl dering in matrimonial channe v she was g harged sol- married to a the student nm there cerf | dier. The mistress approved and aske _“No, indeed,” replied the gallant woman here is pretty sharpat a burg schools wher not at all to him. When he wasintroduced, [ €ial with some little emphasis, his face | und she thinks $2.50 is enough for this i Hal o, R after looking steadily ut him_for some | at the same time becoming the very em= | job,” That amount footed the bill. gagements, and in due time get mar- | minut she went up and fet bodiment of great expectations” and ried. One instance is given where as | shawl. Do you know that shaw vh'n;mfl anticipations of the approach- CONNUBIALITIF many as 40 per cent of a vin class | asked. “Yes," he replicd, “I ing leap year. - v ona ; S be el off to tako lifc’s. journoy to- | tomy wite wHor we Were “Well, then. I should liko to change | o Mrs Langtry offers o $100 cup for the best gether after passing the preliminary [ am your wife!” she excluimed. She [ my name,” said the fair visitor, witn a arviers of deferential and integ itching smile on her face. At Gardiner, Mo,, at a recent wedding the took him bac 1d he drank aw: all g Pl I ' groom was but nineteen and the bride was caleulus in company, and these mar- | his senses and her fortune, and finally Oh. you would!” gasped the young | gixty, riages are said to have turned out well. | died, after making her life miserable, = | man, his countenance radient beyond | “mhe Jatest thing in connection with New The mingled r all expression. alvy and good-fellow York church weddings is to have one or ship of the cluss-room scemed to glve Curlosities of Courtship. And then the young lady undertook to | more pews reserved for family servants, 0od opportunity for that full and | Chicago Tribune: A Californiaminer, | ©Xplain matters move in detail, much to | A marriage engagement is announced be -Picks-the-Huckle- The-Man-Who-Tukes- ir acquaintance which ought to pre- | having amassed quite o fortune, was re. | the great discomfiture and mortification | tween “The-Squay cede matrimony, better opportunities | turning by ship to New York to revisit | Of the assistant, whose hopes blossomed, | berr Runnlng and probably than ave offered by the more [ old friends and to find himself a wife, | Ploomed, and were blasted in the short | the-Cake.! e " guarded intercourse wich sovicty sune- | A'young womin on bourd the ship, s space of a minute. o tioewatiing thinty-five ears, for, Loyl tions. Young men and young ‘women | in in the capacity of nursery goserne Graffto make bor his students become good comrudes and | to the family of 4 merehant on bour An Aged Bridal Couple ) 3 2 - N " . | Captain Alfred Schley they stay good comrades, understand- | pleased him much by her neat and [ San Francisco Chronicle: 31 2 O | "Gnidl the wedding g0 off ! ing one inother thoroughly after they | Modest appearance. Ho thorefore intro- | Freed, a_ wealthy relict of Dr. Freed of | «ybodt as smosniy o Such aftuin have settled down to life's business to- | duced himself one day.and broke the | Kansas City, aged sixty years, and an | gooft. Tne only hitch that oc gether. Such cases as these are not, | ice of his purpose with one reckless | octogenarian named Hector Mt'!,n-nn. \\)un the pair stood up to be unitec owever, typical. A great majority of | plunge: **Madam, my name is —, my | engaged in the real estate business, By her marriage Miss Clara Louise Kel- the co-edu nal mlh-g s ave more | parents and family reside in New | eloped a few days ago and were - | logg becomes the niece of Madame Patti' after the pattern of Boston university, | Hampshive; [ have property amounting | ried in Los Angeles. The woman is | brother-in-law. fThis is considerably neaver where, as one might expeet, perhaps, ! to & 00,000, and expect to engage in worth about $100,000 and McLean has | Patti thau Miss Clura has before been able from the non-marcying reputation of | business in'——. Tam a perfectly nothing. The widow married him | to approuch. el icht the Hub, no attachment, no especially ate man, and I can under the belief that he was wealthy. 1)\“‘-"‘~ lmlr-}m-m-fx (l'u\ de];:—'.)l‘v intimate’ intercourso, not the faintest | roforeuce 0 testify 1o my e He gave as o bridal present a $40,000 | ful activity inthe marri St na R f q, ying and giving in mar- suspicion of a flirtation between stu- Tam unm check, signed by himself, which, it is | japeare now going on with a profusion o dents of the opposite sexes has been vill you mar, needless v, is worthless. The | gisplay pproached in New York city. known since the foundation of the [ lady took in the cha of her suitor | couple returned to-day and will go to | ¢, A, Swineford has returned from Alaska school. The after-fortune of every once. “Thank you,” said she, I | housckeeping in the palatial home of | to Baraboo, Wis., to marry a young lady with student is accurately known through | will,” and on landing they were forth- | the wife. whom he has loug been in love. ~ After the the full records kept by the graduating | with marvied. yedding haand nisibridewill. goito Alaska classes; and a yeur or two ago the only u..u the Princess Louise of Savoy | Ma Swineford is a brother of Alasku's marringe that had, within the annals ‘overed from her humiliation | Philad e . taken place between ex- h ving offered herself inmarriage | of an American or an Englishman to a students was that of adaughter of the | to Charles, Duke of Bourbon, only to | Japanese woman is not so rare an occur- lite Bishop Gilbert Haven, whose ac- dive a grave but positive rence as the critics who have been | clothing and wus committed to juil by the quuintance with the man who beeame | few women ecan understand, Ladies, | writing about B. T. House's clever | justice of the peace whom he had retained to her husband was formed after her suc- [ however, are permitted to assist a bush- | noveletto scem to think,” said a diplo- | marry him. urred was ringes With Japanese Won luhia Record: *The mar kota bachelor succeeded in getting v love out of her father's house, sted when he stole back after her cessful graduation. ful wooer when mat_who spent years in Japan. ‘A | Miss Nellie Cooke, the blue eyed and gold- & S Bither ho fearaihia fate too much number of such “marriages have oc- | en haired heroine of the late eampaign _over . She Lost the Electio Or his desert too small, curred in the past ten ov fift the school _commissionership of ~Wayne A Wolcott, N. Y., dispatch The Who feurs to put it to the touch I may instance ns_conspicuou: county, N. Y., has abandoned politics for announcement was made o that And win or lose it all thatof one of the sceret matmony gud I8 4eon in bedome the bride Miss Nellie Lucretia Cook of this village, | Such wasthe case with the young lady | American legation to a Ja A, s Rl romialag YOUD & who led the democratic host who assured her lover that she could | of noble blood, and still mor = =o Wayne county almost to v r) make a beautiful cake, all filled with | perhaps, the marriage of th Mr. Dwight L. Moody, the evangelist, has canvass for school commissioner on [ fruit, with a ving on the top, and when | another attache of the American lega- | started on an evangelistic tour through the Tuesday, is soon to wed William L the astonished swain exclaimed: “Why, | tion. House himself,” he continued, | west, not to return again until. the holiduys. South Omaha Is To The Front! The child we always backed with our voice and money, is getting there, Remember that we are the pioneers in South Omaha; that we have been with her ever since she was a cornfleld! We know every foot of her soll and the value thereof. We have the largest list of choice BUSINESS AND RESIDENCE LOTS DON'T FAIL TO GET AN INTEREST IN SOUTEL OMATITLA Aloug with the men that represent the Hundred Millions. Call at our office and let us give you some pointers Get prices and then come to us, and we will sell you lots in the vicinity at from 10 to 25 per cent lowe. han you can get them elsewhere. M- A TUPTON & CO, 309 S. 16th St,, Opp, Chamber of Commerce. Telephone 854, 3,50 for ladies’ fine Curacon kid shoes, B, ¢, D, B and B E widths, C. S, and opera styles, worth $4. 1.50 for ladies' fine French kid hand turned shoes, B, ¢, D and E widths, S, and opera styles, worth $5. .00 for ladics French Dongola hand sewed, heavy sole shoes, worth $6, MISSES' SHOES, Corner Dodge and Fifteenth Streeta, 8¢ for misses' folt slippors. worth &1, Corner Dodge & 15th Streets, BOOTS & SHOE 1.95 for men’s solid seamless shoes,in Wil atipos Sl bl $2.00 for misses’ Curacon Kid button £2.50 for men’s calf button shoes,**war- M ranted.” One price to all, CAMELS HAIR UNDER- £3.00 for men’s all calf senmless shoes, | UNDERSHIR WHITESHIRTS WEAR 8100, : all styles. L LINEN COLLARS 10¢ Two cases men's genuine camels! W A . A" c hair, stamped on each shirt and £4.50 for men's fine calf lac CASHMERE SOCKS draitcte. Hils UndcswanwiN AV $1.50 for missos’ grain b $2.00 for misses’ goat L n shoes MEN'S WHITE UNDERWEAR 49 tton school 200 dozen men's extra he v merino shivts and dr de and nicely m"ulu d, . regular pri ale price button nml'n'uu;:rv &lx!||\fl.. orth 85, n.. 500 dozen men’s eashme socks, fine quality, and_ was bought late #5.00 for men’s fine calf “Wauken- full regular made and assorted col- this scason for half the actual values phast shoes, ors, sale price 224c worth 40¢. Our salo price #1650, well worth #6.00 for men's genuine kangaroo | MEN'S UNDERS $8.00. R — hand-sewed shoes, lace and congress, One case men RO LE AR SRR ezl 16 dozen meu's odd undershirts, i SO0 TAE TEn A . fine searlet and old gold, mixed, o .00 for men's call boots. Men's | MEN'S I LANNEL SHIRTS, #1. BOYL NDERWE boots, $2.00 and $2.50, 200 dozen men's heavy al wool blue | BOYS' UNDER BOYS' SHOES flannel shirts in all sizes ;200 for boys” calf button "shoes, sizes , regular pric MEN'S SCARLET UNDERWEAR 8¢, | MEN'S STREET GLOVES, 50c and 856, Jorsey mloves at, g Men's dog skin glovdd #1 e, 60c and 90c. worsted mufe worth $7.00 One case b, shir A fine Scotch woo) and drawers at 50¢,well wort] ale price * calf sonmless shoes, con- A gress and button, worth $3.00. Two cases men’s all wool scarlet $3.00 for boys' fine calf button shoes, medicated shirts and drawers, This worth $3.50, lot is extra good value, sale price 82.00 for youths' English grain shoes, | 85¢, regular price $1.25, wort $2.50. ND SLIPPERS. Men’s light castimers mufllers .00 for ladies’ warm lined and felt Py e iy callmors muetep slippors, ; Men's all silk croam mufflors, in 1.25 for ladies’ fine cloth warm lined :lve different patterns, at 90c, slippers, ) s lot s a gpe worth $1.50, AND BOYS' KNIT CAPS, 89¢, 100 dozen men's and boys’ fine “oo‘i knit caps, in all desirg rable colors an 34 all sizes, ot d They are worth 160! $1.50 for ladies’ fine felt beaded slip- pers, worth $2. $2.00 for ladies fine fur trimmed slip- luuu worth $2.50. Corner Dodge and 15th Sts DID A CLRSI‘A REST U)O\ m“ r) :fl::\‘.‘.‘1\.‘1,“\1',"]“""&“:;' nity l'li\‘|‘rh|;:l\\'lllil'h 1s termed “insido property.” Many her hus- ¢ factories will be built in Omalia next 1| year and the outlook is promising indeeds The r estate deals for the week, accords to warranty deeds filed, are as fole band to confess his crimes and appe to his heavenly Father for forgiver The Strango Tricks Nature Played at Two weeks ago Mrs. Stevenson became rational, and on > of the Home of Jas. O. Stevenson. sician o change of secne for the sick resolved upon, and yesterday nily startedfor their former home W York state. RE 10US. A FAMILY OF CURIOUS FREAKS. A Three-Legged Lamb, a One-Eared Total e i 10 s . " rd Onlf. The one hundreth anniversary of Method- The building y TS issued uuuu.l e pasi Colt, a Three-Horned Calf and a0 5 Brooklyn was celebrated last week. week are as totlows One-Legged Boy—A Supply Cardinal Gibbons has returned to Balti- | Monday, Nov. for a Dime Muscum. more from his extended trip through the Tuesda, Wedne: {a, nor |)\\\ o8t R an Dix has served twenty five | Thur or of Trimity church, New York id Hunn is the oldest living grad o college, and the oldest elergy “The old adage that “lightning never | ¥ strikes twice in the same place” isat [ | Hev. D last disproven, providing the stc ] Total. .. of & | man in the Unite tos. farm laborer med George Evans, who In the Presbytery of Los Angeles, Cal.,six for the past week has 1 ving at | new churches fully organized were received | € ¢ Spotsford to Maurico rtlctt AR A L] i true, | and cnrvlled at its last session. the w3t of lot 12, bk AT o 1 Plans are being made by the chief archi- ford add, Evans bears the reputation of honesty, | teets of Rome for a handsome synagogue to | Suin and while his tale is a strange one, | beerceted in th nal City W there is no reason to doubt its Rev. J. Leonard Cornin, the pastor S Heiim ) : of the Con tional chureh in Terre Haute [ Hanne Sci Bt ity. His story is as follow ! ! Ind., has applicd for admission to the Unita stated last nighttoa B. rian fellowship. : Marie H ond and Tushand 't uorter that for the past three years he ldest known Jewish '““‘“*‘ Cib0rire LD G LB 1R SO /RN A4 l:: been employed by Mr. Jumes Q. £ Selby's Heights, wd.. ... . 850 Stevenson, a well-to-do farmer living in OB Sl 0 Wk i R Towa, about sceventeen mile s.uull\ of "he .h wish and \ln ummedan New Year extending w 133 ft to alley . Council Bluffs. During that timenature | dis ocured an the s dute this sear, apd o has dealt unkindly with his former | the sultan and the chief rabbiof Constanti- | ~ M Swetnam, blk 8, employer, and the rules of gencration | nople. wd.... 2,506 have been most culpably disobeyed in- | The Preshyterians of New York city are Vi AU A5 0o toss than four fredke and | talking about raising a fund of £1,000,000 for | 12, blk 14, in Hanscom 2, o ids . i ministerial velief and s desired to have the .Lum\‘\l Swetnam lu ( possible candidates for dime museum ; 5 : M imount. pl b the centennial of fame, have first drawn breath on his | Presbyterians in 198, % 4,000 farm. During the spring of 1855 a lamb | = 657 ¢ e quostions likely to arise before Poampt -q'_l,,m..h AidAwitoRtoltin was born having only three legs. It | the next general conference of the Methodist | Rust, lot 9, in Washington square was a healthy animal and straightway | church, says the New York Christian Adv OB B e 3,000 beeamea great favorite with Mr. Steven- ibility of women to sit in con- | Taucy V Fitcheet and husband to Min- son’s children and was given the ex- ) B et ) aulted position of the family pet by New Yorl Rl South O Tand Co o James. - The South Omah I Kunel, lots 7 and 9 blk 49, w d.... 1,820 Larmon P Pruyn and wife to the pub- Tic, the s 80 £t of lot 4 blk 1 of unanimous consent. The animal, now a | £50.00 for a full grown sheep, hobbles around on his | Protestant Fpis T ARG : be built on Tenth avenue and One Hund two front and one hind leg in astate of | 5 m 0 G “ T is to be modeled after pe perpetual enjoyment. Even his wool, [ gt P..,‘., t Rome. o d 5 ) up mnu- present time, has been con- | s 4 i 2 ers i ""I")""_'.'“ ‘,‘"l"“ “i"]‘l* threo yearsof age. nd received the be and the et al to James ] uring the following summer a grey which indicato his position 08 te of tte court, wd 50Q mare was delivered of a foal, well Ihl Catholic church. He is the sc priest ensen et al to, Homie In- {ul'x]m;(l \\‘1'1(11 (h:x v,\l'u]llliu]n that |1|:\t;u'(': o ”_m‘" l(l,lfmI oftice, the }" “uun‘ntl (‘:\ llnt 10 blk 2, Boggs & 3,600 had forgotten to supply her with bu sig s of L ils add, Wd.ooon , e e R ol right side | of St. Paul which some | Augusta Kountze und wife to Fanna of the head was as smootly drawn as on | Americans propose to set up in native | Fixa, ¢ 40 ft lot 3 bik 10, Kountze 3d s body and there was no hole {o even | ¢ity of Tarsus will tuke the practical shape | add. w d. . 1,000 A (enl g Neuiaia raining school for orphans, of which | S 1 Rogers and’ wife to G A" Krosh, ark the spot where that ear should be. varea great many in Silicia, About the n 1g lot 5 and 6, bik 69, 12 \} 1“1.-;11.. coine den, l-.\\;x:‘tln- ?A.I».{m-x 300 8 year havo been pledged, a sum sume | Foncier add, w d 400 of considerable remark in the neighbor- support_about fifty children, Dr. hood, nothing particular evolved from it = Howa sy is the president of the board Total. except the giving of a nick-name to Mr. | of manaye Stevenson, who to this day is known b, esle the sobrioquet of *one Limbed Stey EUBLEL But the superstitiously inclined, in the | Record of the De neighborhood found rencwed cause,dur- | Past Week —Building Operatio ing the following fall, for Building Permits. MARKET. The following building permits were issued, yesterday by Superintendent Whitlock : W. M. Wind, cottage, Twenty-first, near Center s ! anouneing | Notwithstanding the near approach of win- | R. W, Gibson, two-stc their belief that a curse rested upon the | top when deals in realty and building opera- |, Wirt, near Twenty-first. house of Stevenson. This new fire brand | 4ohq are supposed to cease for a while, the | G00rge A. Shannon, cottage, Newton, h caused the {diotic wisdom of be- | Pois 7o Supbescito cme Jor & WEES B0 | ncar dwenty-fourin, in things supernatural, to loudly ul‘yl‘“‘d" ey e el cold weather makes perceptible difference so | © dwelling, Twenty-sixth,near Walnut %o their ranks, was the birth of a calf | for as dickering in dirt is concerned. Of F S = during the spring of the present yoab | €OUrse, it is to be expected that there would our permits, mim ing , which shortly after developed info n | belittle or no building done, and yet permits frenk of the first magnitude | were issucd last weck aggreguting over by the disocvery that it had $0,000. three distinct horns, The third | Architects and contractors all express the :u-n; \\-n;-- ‘nll in the middle of the ' opinion that the building operations during | oo orehead and grew just below the eyes, | ar 1888 will fur exceed those of 1887, ot Rabublic After a time the subsided, but a i, s Boen e | was 1o e et e licas Ol ey new impetus was given to scandal- | petent workmen. Excellent | Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Lamb, of Toledo mongers eight weeks ago, to continue have been paid and there hus been no | are in the city the guests of their dwaghter them in their previous opinion id ' g plication from good men to obtain work | Mrs. P W. Hodson. openly expressed belief in the intc refused. Skilled mechanies have been in G. I Swift began the construction of a ence of supernatural powers to cau great demand has been an abund- | 25,000 ton ice house near Cut Off lake yesteps their neighbor humiliation and suffe ance of work for the common luborer. 1t s | duy. ing. This event was nothing more nor estimated that build cat least #00,000 | A meeting of the board of education was less than the birth of amale infant behind their contrats, and work will be re- [ held last night at which time bids, fof having but one leg. The child lived sumed at the earliest possible day next | school furniture were received. The mattef but a fow hours and was buried on the SPring Ifthe winter should prove a mild | willbo decided on Monday. : » tongues TOsEINE WHEBO ss will be made during the AL DR {"'}“- I'“' longue! of the gossips wagged ; 3 ie board of county commissioners met uriously, and it was even intimated o great present need is more small cot- | yesterday. The county attorney was authore that Mr. Stevenson receiving pun- tages which can be rented at fr t n §15 to §25 | ized to employ ssistant to hélp him in the ishment at the hands of God for crimes per month, Such homes ave very searce and | disposal of th minals no waiting tri 1 awelling, half story Linn Bros., of Norduway, Mo., are in the committed in the past. Finally one old attention of investors is particularly | in the county t to the count; tea table gossip felt herself called upon lled to this fact. The attention of outside ced ¥100. The county treasure to inform ‘*Sister Stevenson” that a Mechanics is also requeste Let them thor- to cauncel delinquent taxes if / investigate the truth of the ubove sent and then come to Omaha and make ts of the count, J. J. Casey was justice of the peace for the Bight] the e v elerk was ordered 1o a iso for bids for furnishing the county was in South Omaha and in | drug store with medicines. curse rested upon the home of r hushand, and so worked upon A ~of the lady, who was in s large proportion of real estate deals u most delicate state of health, as to made last w FIVE HUNDRED MILLIONS OF DOLLARS Are now held by the Life Insurance Companies of the United States as banking or investment portion of premiums paid by the policy holders of these institutions. A large part of which sum, says Commissioner Tarbox, of Massae chusetts, in report for 1884, “has no just relations to life insurance,” and further says, “if insurance and investment are the object, each can better be got inits separate place than by a combination which impoverishes the investmeng and does not IMPROVE or CHEAPEN the insurance. THE PROVIDENT SAVINGS LIFE INSURANCE CO., OF NEW YORK SHEPARD HOMANS, President. ( Eighteen Years Actuary of the Mutual Life Insurance Co., of New York.) Is the only regularly incorporated company in the United States that does a strictly life insurance business unmixed with investment features; it is thus enal'ed and does furnish life insurance at more tfn 50 per cent less than it competitors, The security is unequalled, no company in the world showing as large ratio of assets to liabi . The company is endorsed by the leading actuaries in the country, and its popularity is attested by the fact that only four of its competitors wrote as large a business in 1886, three of these do not confine their business to the United Statesy For further particulars call on or addres: E. B. HALL, General Agent, 12 Arlington Block, Omaha, Nebraska, A few good agents wanted for city and country work, R S S S S e