Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 4, 1887, Page 12

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e o i 4 8 K AMUSEMENTS. | Boyd’s Opera House. KIRALFY, ONE WEEK. KIRALFY. ‘Commencing. Dec. 5th’ WEUNE%DAY and SATURDAY, _MQTINEI:II BOLOSSY " KIRALFY'§ ™ —————————| OAANDEST SPECTAGLE e DOLORES, Grand Opera HMouse. . LESTER M. CRAWFORD, Lessee and Manager. Thursday, Friday and Saturday, December (5th, (6th and (Tth, SECOND SEASON IN OMAHA OF NATIONAL OPERA, CHARLES E. LOCKE, Proprietor and Manager. Four Performances of GRAND OPERA IN ENGLISH The strength of the list of Principal Singers, ete., will be seen from the following announcement— SOPRANOS. TENORS. My, FURSCH-MADI, ELOI SYLVA, g . BERTHA PIERSON, CHARLES BASSETT By s'mien, author of the Reigning Parisian AMANDA FPABRIS, } AND l;.\\ RTON MeGUCKIN SOPHIA TRAUBMAN, BAS! And EMMA JUCH. FRANK VETTA, CONTEALTOS: ALONZO STODDARD, CLARA POOLE, AGNES PERRING, ANDI V BLACK, WILLIAM MERTON, i e 777”[‘)[&‘“' LI',I)L\:(;'I'U.\'. A And WILLIAM LUDWIG KIRALFY, e KIRALFY. WILLIAM HOCK, Stage Director. AV HINRICHS, Musical Conductor; Newton Gotthold, — o e GRAND CHORUS AND BALLET. Miss El C N\ 75 Voices. . 40 Dancers. "n‘ eanor Carey, PRINCIPAL DANCERS—Amelin Franchi, Giovanni Cammerano,, Mlles. Cicondino Cappelletti, Riva, Galvagho, four See- tartists, (A ¢ ond Dancers, twenty-four Coryphees and eight Male Pantomimists, s THE NATIONAL ORCHESTRA OF PIPTY MAGNIFCENT SCENERY, COSTUMES AN ¢ MUSICLANS. | SCENERY, COSTUNES AND . KIRALFY, THE REPORTOIRE Success, La TOSCA. S AND BARITONI and oth, See the Worl Al NICODE. KIRALFY. ¢ Evening, Dec. 15th, Saturday Afternoon. Dec. 1ith, entation of Verdi's Grand Opera in 4 ac Goldmark's Grand Opera ins acts, the 3 S TTTATDA Queen Of Sheba, =| Friday Evening, Dec. 1ith, Saturday By y . 4 i ening, Dec. 15th, Kiralfy's Groatest| Rubinstein’s Grand Opera iu 4 acts, Elaborate production of Gounod's Grand Opera in 5 acts, e speotacular Pro- NERO. FATUST. duction, but al s noble play withat, | ORCHESTRA, according to location. rad f hi BALCONY, pa by . i ) KIRALEY. 2 Gra“d Ba“ets 2 KIRALFY. deuall veuima e PRIVATE BOXES, each seat...... scenic and me-| K2¥"Tho Sale of Seats will commenee on MONDAY, | SR — - - " Nou only Bolos $2.00. $2.50. $3.00 L i ical effects. y m be accompanied by cash, A5 g ) 3 Gra i - L andidir . M. CRAWFO RD, Box Office, Grand Opera Honse, It o pro i = X T Bias. attended ton th otvedd and the tiekets mailod o held W order, as iestod Gro a0 SN OIS elie Wt WoR e Deonitly . i 4 ALLW A SMENTS will be made to have all the late s held every evening during the 8eason, allow! ple th e dopoit LAY Al NS e wll the late trains held every evening during the season, allowing ample time {o reach — e = S "‘4 IR = 3 i > ? o IANGED 1T ‘llpnn (!}«-x)l.ficl\‘(l their surprise _can well When their chief was dead the des- | be ima ined when they found there a s she gives. She expeets fo he ory day that she is the most ador- yond to Cheyenne the thousands of ad- able woman on earth. and she is sure to nturersandadventuressesfollowed the convinee an man of the fact. It never teack and went to yenne and Lara- | If Women Are Jealous the Men Are | cuters her happy head that another onoral Brisbin Gives a Graphic | poradoes fled from the vigilantes of [ people more savage than themselves. |5, > 78 were & e o DDY - O @ ioti ‘i Do ona and tooke refuge in Colorado, | They looked with wonder at the rows of o ”‘\.‘ “"d _l";‘ ings were plls ;l to Blame. woman could be as charming as hevself, Description of Old Julesburg. Mont ge L BillinEsand e VA S . | down the sandy pla n appeared, or that she could be displaeed in the but in less than two ycars llhvl t;wnhh{ b »*'tl “-* s in i wia W I and soon it was almost as silent and de- e affections of any man she lo Sl G Sanders and his vigilantes had hunted | months before that paths in the wilder- | (e as if it had never been the abode ; Wit wiia dinet bee Thdl 56 INTERESTING ~ REMINISCENCES | down and shot o ln:u‘l ed d SRR L e \:llx‘;xu llu-y(Im:Ll-,;-‘n_m u‘l‘l:‘itn SO B DE B s SO SAYS ELLA WHEELER WILCOX Ay ':\ll':l(:i|“I\Lt‘im|"«‘1]“l|.x “,“!..r‘.::(.l. Lo dow O Tow who survived | hunt in the spring not o Tiving white | ©ge AU PR e 1t with e kriowa How o lcesp her lova, inkavest abandoned the rond and became quict | man except old Jules Benard Was on | g,y Lane an1 Stuttering Brown only | Different fypes of Women Who Are | and o Brei e thibe e and Incidents of the | i Leeabiding citizens. that sandy plain of the desert, g Hai o A : : andia 4 s » at he finds e he ! Uil LHEH R DICIES VA0 Wheto they wotmnad: the Haw|odew old bullaings remained. They | Never Susceptible to Jealous Fe other women dull in comparison with 8 A O RIS S Ot OLD JULESBURG. Tall ”"_ Oy Lol Vleeming | had seen Julesburg in its palmiest T SR G % horself, and she lends him frecly to her BacUiolEWasinbelu € vas named after Jules Benard, and like | (& hey - suw_ 0o city teeiig | of yip and excitemens, and_knew L3 3 Cyzi O friends, e s will” retur ) wa ! ) with human beings and containing ) ls, certuin that he will retwn Constructed. its progenitor was destined to suffov | 1 e hieme it wore naw nnd | foot of it. - We rodethrough its d SERADTESSRtE L ygRE R gladly to her. —_— great changes, [n the winter of 1 e O 1ot "oourhs. thoy | Strcets and saw hundfeds of old chim- S Tha majority of women who lead a Fonrr MCKINNEY, Wyo., 20/ || thaainnsnnderitiennatedswarstonil|ELER S fata Bar cova el noyE andieninediadoba walls. Il‘hn chip- Written for the RecCopgrighted. monotonous existence live in their - [Correspondence of tlie _o1a , Little Dog burned m.\_pl:uw:, and ov- | jriont wagons filed through the strects mulnl\rl‘_u‘: h‘.n l:nlug'm l!m hn.n-"u‘mll n Very few people make a proper dis- aginations,and grow morhidly sensitive. o ; e hat | €ril Unitd States soldicrs (sowe say 08 | g oing wostward, with supplies for the | £ vightened at our approval Hew 45 55 between jenlousy and cnvy, Many & man ruing the poace of his Julesherg! How many memorics that | p,pyy as tw ) were killed while | £ MO i from his perch in the old bank i pEan i i ¥+ | household fory ver by neglecting to spenk fronticr posts; long lines of railroad ] se which his hungry- teams loaded with implements and ma- re used a d | They and though we were the lirst visitors he h, fnonymous term: ive name recalls to Nebraskans of the time wnd the town. It was re- ng o« the word of pr when they were young and the country | built, but did not amount to much until ouded with implements and Wi~ | over seen in the place. Here a great | confounded every day by able sy B e sitwie s hie Vo rimea e d wus young and the great Union Pacific | the winter and summer of 1867,when the O e el ian s | real estate agent had flourished, there | and writers. Yet they are as unlike as | hearund hestowing'it upon some chiitnee urtesan had lived and held anival every nights yonder Juck lo and his~ bandits met at] J ! Dt to plot their deeds of blood and | ¢hild of noble parentage. — Envy is Union Pacific railroad was completed to a point on the opposite side of the river. Here at the terminus of ller or stranger. The man who fails to notice the care- ful toilet his wile has made for his sake a wild animal and an insect. Jealousy is often the misbehaved o0ss the conti- jostled ench other, and all day and night fong bull-whackers shouted with bra: lungs to their toiling and patient o railroad was building ac nent to California. OLD JULES BENARD the road a town sprung up that com- R 3 PR Ayt i g and compliments the good taste in dress hon had e e banle of the | Dletely sclipsad the old Juleshurg. The | 0F cxploded theiv long whivs with & | yobbery: beyond the wall was_the once | always buse born and plebeian. Jeal- | exhibited by some neighbor, sows the Platte and lived like a hermit. No- | new city, as it was called, had a wonder- | ¢ "ot strangers stopped and turned gilded'den of infamy where 850,000 had | ousy often suff untold agonies in | seed of jealousy in m\;.l,llmim.v.l heart. Dbody knew him as Mr. Benard, only as {"‘ F!"““"l“‘z In e Yoon 1567, 1t 1w | around to see who had been shot or ook :“‘“‘:‘ “’;‘"”‘”;“\‘l '::;L":’ w';]‘}’l!"‘;;“‘l“‘t over | silence, or kes bold Dblows in the \?mmm LRI HElEV O ad 3 £ rom nothin, o 4, inha DB s s Sl e 4 J L J se where eight me et i B Shanraee and appreciated by man, W ) Old Jules;and o would hardly have | 2% Rothng. o RGN0 g0 | refuge in alarm in the nearest obe | at” one time had been killed in a bloody face. Bnvy stubs in the darkness and | GpRdbi T i TR An Englishman who was oory pack. Jealously to be, mus |} visiting our country went to see Jules- 1o s herself cheted out of her birthright this happiness has come to her. row. So it went on for hoursuntil, tived, | behind ti s o e we turned away from the place that had | 1 from sods cut from the river bank was & TLIE WAYS OF THE PLAINS. witnessed such horvible deeds of blood; | e £ i o v VeArs t and WICKEDEST CITY F LT = e e where, if honesty and morality ever still standing only o fow yours ago und EDH UILT He never could learn to distinguish the | same. they must ut once have clasped continent. Its tales of crime | difference hetween the noise made by a B ! o the known himself if somebody had called him Mr. Benard., His old cabin built t look in the fac . Envy can without ever having looked be- »alous of whatever and whoever yond its own reflection. alousy may | may stand between her and that de- Spring from self-depreciation; envy | $ired joy. Ihave known two mothoers who were jealous of their own children. is still there yet, if some vandal has not | on thi i hands and departed forever destroyed it. How he lived on one | Would fill a volume, and are still relatep | yovolver and the popper of a bull- | deqd eity of the pluins.” must spring from self-ndulation. el el torniblot A SthE My, seemed to knom, but he managed tosub- | 41 over the workiROuy t’)fm‘__v—‘gf”::;;;li:; whacker's whip. £wo or throo times he 3 e S BRisnIN, T heard it once remarked of & worldly | soom. T falt the gre iy sist somehow on what fish he could cateh s 2 1 GLEIBILAE [ihad bepn startied by tha sxplosion bt b ——— Jle who courted admiration, but | both women. In each case the hukband . ; 1 houses, ov dens of prostitution. Of the | ox-gad and had darted into the nearest IMPIETIES £ : ¢ ; with an occasional rabbit or grousc. | 4,000 inhabitants 600 were women of bad | saloon to be out of the way of w he Aol ghed at love, that she was a steange nu.] 1 the \\Ih'l for her off- from the hills. He ono -of those | roputation. The roughs from all over | thought was coming bullets. Hisfriends | 1t a good thing for aman to belong to the | paradoxs sho coutd not love, ot spring. Sho wasa sovondary considor- s and | church, but a poor thing for a man to think | hibited intense j BUION O EeOel ANt T Ol SO0 WSS adventerous French pioneers, who oc- the United States and — Canada | had rallied himon his nervousne i y il Jeeatbatles 5 7 S casionally ,.«-...vu-m.} far boyond the | Mocked to Julesburg, and it be- | ko made up his mind that next time he | that the church belongs o him. numerous adm bestowed the 1 dren were caressed and - appr A ; ne a prodigy of and | would stand his ground, The next day A Denver elergyman has preached a sev- [ attention upon other ladies. This was Ay AN ho TG ion of the misuse of lfish belle had never other illustrs word. Thi: wickedness. A - despe of it | he was walking down the street when [ mon to burbers. His text probably was.- [ bu that it was the only place he ever lived | he heard a pop, pop behind him, but “Phis is the haircomb; let us kil | the borders of civilization and led lives of T isolation and solitude. Only a fow years mother remark one day that she would ago our country wbounded with these | in where they had “a new murder for | kept on straight ahead, when presently him." 6 known love, thevefore she could not l]u'\'n:r:[h]u\‘ll lml \.\\ul‘x 'hlnr' l‘lrl-:\l:\'n'll ;n\. o Who. were seattered all over the | brenkfast every morning.” Everybody | he felt a sharp pain in his leg, and look- [ Phe man who can hum a hymn while i know jealousl 18 wasiatm plyienyipus | pourdthie hud oncoitoid ROk il She thought another woman beautiful or nd “the soft note of the | ing around was surprised to see two fel- | ing a stove-pipe is good enough to walk right | of the power w ich any wor 1 possessed west but they are nearly all dead now or he clashing of bow lows pegging away at each other with into full membership into any church without | {6 "qriw her admlrers from her side. interesting. TPoor man! Of course such g el knoy iotsanaily, o€ butiuwoigho could he heard at all hours of | vevolvers, He was seriously wounded | Provation: o Hewven? St Peter— | She desired tohe a monopolist in the ihough eliadiientored hix mind. and arc left, Jules Lammeroux and Peter | the night. There was no luw, not even | and laid up for weeks with o sore log. | yoomSoet s Al ] have w warrant | MTairs of the heart—u Jay Gouldess in withiwhat secrecy mysthehinye guarce Amnoretti. vigilantes, and only occasionully when | Tt is noedloss to say when he got well | semust vour Muster for allowing people to ional market, and she resented 1 ol ““’;" Ry > | hos Benard was well born, educated, and | the military interfered to put down & | he never again attempted todistinguish | be born naked. Lt the interference of any small dealer or of such a !n.‘ll .“\ 1") i(hiu::ill; a gentleman, Some cly misfortuno | mob was hing like order. the difference between a bull-whacker’s The minister asked all who were tr; dabbler in the stock of Love. ) s -\-\v:”m“:u‘:]“w darkened his life and he fled from civili- Fancied in wiped out in blood, | whip and the ¢ of a revolver, but | livea better life to stay afte Men exhibit this sort of feeling toa s R zation to bury himself in the then wilds | and traged were —of | took cover at the fivst sound of either, | service for a short seuson of s dogree. though their broud und busy [ LM is full of sensible and noble duiics of Nebraskn, Ho seemed only anxious | daily occurrence. Rvery device | An English lord who was in New | and consequently he had no v 1 prevent them from carrying it to | 5 10 given to unteusoning doaioua 1o cscape the face of his fellow men and | by “which money could “be my York heard of Julesburg.and he wanted | prised when a_couple of well known poker | the extent which mars the progress of thine o lAIe VRO U8 A0 WOLE, O nurse his great sorrow whatever it was | 1ost or squandered to see “‘some of that sort of thing, players walkedforwardiand took tlie £ro0t | woman everywhare, Lor oW imeUR S s it silence. lossness and prodi know.” So he came out, and w Pk T have heard physicians of excellent [ Amd the Woman WO reect No campmecting can be successfully held in the neighborhood of good fishing, accord- ing to the testimony of a venerable Meth- odist bishop; and yet if there is any ciass of When gold was discovered in Cali- | where supreme. vere I atthe famous little city. Writing to fornia and the rush overland took place, | nightly and men driven to desperation | member of the British parliament, it brought thousands of travelers near | by their losses committed the most hor- | he said: **Here, in the heart anding deery cae or Wi o, | and devotion which standing deery each other with rancory ool ians are notoriously envious of another; authors, actors and even of jealousy. SLER WILCOX. his longly cabin, His hut stood on the | rible crimes. Land rose tofabulous [ of the American desert, I [ liars that especially nced the converting in- | business men often forget that - the RELIGIO Platte river, near the California cros: values and a few fect on one of the | have found a city only a few months | fluence of the gospel it is the class that [ world is large enough for all, and that ing, just below Julesburg. The old man | principal streets would bring thousands | old that polls 4,000 votcs, and s a very | catehes a fish so loug success was never obtained by pulling | Battle Mountain, Nev., wants o parson. was kindhearted and honorable, but he | of dollars, only to be sold next day at | city indeed. All languages are spoken, . TR q down another man. The town has 700 inhabitants, mostly miners. 214 ot relish the. invasion of Tis rer | an advance of 85 or 40 per cent. Lums | all'kinds of business carried on, and [ 4nd tells the noighbors that it is s long But this feeling which takes rootin | Ilinois has a Presbyterian ehureh com- treat. Still he stuck tr to his home and | ber brought $100, $200, and even 8300 | ey ed overyone with kindnc ry conceivable fashion of dress worn. self and divects its venom toward other | posed wholly of women. They have just sand hos- | per thousand, and canvas tents would | The buckskin-clad frontiersman and the i chievements aud pos ions | built a neat edifice and paid for it Clara’s pupa_somietimes used a “big D, [ T80 and it bove fruit in this wise: Aunt Eve took | PPOPY itality who'came to his rude cabin. He [ sell for as much as good houses would | aborigines interest me most, and I shall | the baby for a row on the 1 in Central | 15 n0U jealousy. It is only foolish cnvy The full text of the warrant for the arrest hunted a good deal and sold game and | bring in ordinary times. One young | have many a d story to tell you of | Park. Thero were several ladies in the boat | —the meancst attribute ‘of the human | of John Bunyin has recently been discov- document of gréat interest grogation in San IPrancisco J terian church —which culiarity —two thirds of the furs to teavelers in - exchange for flour | man rented o building for | these qu )N‘ll.r‘)h‘ when T return. who looked dreadfully prim. After a long | mind, the little fox which spoils the and cornmeal, One day an old friend | $1.000 per month, .and people [ Winle this English lord wi siti Silence, the litte mite suddenly pointed 4 | vines, the rat which undermines the who chanced to eall on Benard was aston- | thought he was crazy but he put faro | Julesburg the Indian chief. chubby finger at a beautiful white swan, and [ wall of a noble character, the moth | that of the Fiv shed to find in his house some | tables in it and rented them by the | Tail and Big Mouth, au snid in a great big voice: “Ob!look at that | which destroys the beautiful fabric of hw-‘hj!!“’l":;“l chairvs and o lamp. Soon afterwards it [ night. His profits on the building were | the fame of the city came to se dam bird ! Tl 1 AT (VTGS L1V Eben i SHRIN was reported that the old man had been e $2,000 per month. Another for a | well as his lordship. The Engl -toa funeral at a neigh, | 304 the companion of hate. noodad in tho presbytory of Montana for thit induced to ac a position of trust | few dollars bought some tents at a gov- [ made them many presents an W days pgo Rov. 1., Beck. | the unworthy child of love A bon ot v e While the cen with the Over Stage company as i eanment sule and rented them out at | cordially invited to visit the Indian en- | of Carlisle, Pa., was stopped by four foot, | Who ought to be governed and chastised | ters of population ure overcrowded the ou agent. The hermit was now about to | $100 per day. Food of all kinds was cor- | campment near by. Curious to learn | pads, one of whom sprang into the car, before he works harm to his parent. posts are poorly supplied. become & man of business and his in- | respondingly high: potatoes sold at 25 of the red men he went with an With w strictly seriptural expletive the Love may exist without jealousy, as a rted that the 19 urch_ es- telligence, honesty and politeness cents o proter and an escort. The chicfs | erend gentieman quickly veached under one | man may five without offspring. — I3ut t receives yearly in tithes about charmed every oue with whom he came | $15 and #20 per hundred; corn $10 and | received him with great honor, | 0f bis coat tails as if to diaw a revolver, of | jealousy eannot live without love. any OF this #15,000,000 gox sala fn contact. A more kind heavted and | $12 per bushel; beef 50 cents per pound | and learning he was a great man from a | 8t least scven ehambers, from his hip pocket, | 311000 than an infant can be born with- | ¥ics of cleraymen, and the remainder goos o L8 AT AR 3 L g 08 6 8 ) when the fellow in the carriage jumped and ¢ - | O als, sohools, church buildings and the harmless creature than Benard could | and hams 50 cents per poune, Servant wished upon him every by followed by his jough compane | Out purents. As the rule of the world | kel not be imagined. n the In- | girls ot #10 and $15 per week and me- [ distinetion in their power. When he 48 s . is that people beget offspring, so it is [ k¢ dians loved und vespected the good old | chanics would not work for less than $5 | was about to depart Big Mouth as he | the rule that love begets jealousy. 'm-mmm.;‘.]::yr":‘l:.\.'i;.»:j.'-r;\"\"“"“"“f_‘,‘.;“ of pound or 315 a bushel; flour was Av course,” said Micky Doolan, man. In those days there wason the v day. Out disorders and | said he wished to make his ne i from b hunting expedition, “it isn't | 1f women are more joulous than men, A ators and 105 with neting Platte wild speculations grew an organization | lordship a suituble present in return fov | for me to be criticisn’ seripthural charackters | it is only because they live more wholly hes ovganized, minis A DESPERADO NAMED JACK SLADE, the like of which was never before seen | the presents he had made them, and the | aw’ their actions, an' it's’ more than likely | in the atmosphere of love additions e are two who, with his band of it- [ on this continent. A band of men | ve throats, had overrun the whole | leagued themsely of the Platte Valley. Slade { pretense of pre: P » ho Jthe that Noah kucw what he wasabout, but 1 | Th y great honor he had done them in Lt s P O e « “Wihat the divil be yez talkin’ about now (" we types of wome \\'hn;u't')||l*\-'|' .\\n.wu;lnihl'- 1o jealou ¥ \jlul'ulluu re n‘mlmyx n..\'\‘m-u‘um! II{|“AI| but really | war ot vl be Yo el One is the perfectly humble being. ut- | the union embraces ministors who deny Proposed to Benard to join his band,and | for the purpose of DAl N e e oA Inquired his wife. L cali} help thislen wan | ¢or1y dovold of individuality, who lives | dumeutal dootrinesctho porsos o e Holy s might have been expected,he refused | ing their fellow Bogus courts | whom he gave to him 63 a wito, and | wd ave. conforred an everiastin’ boon on | in u state of wondering amuzement that | Si¢ h ity of rogencration, il 0 do so. Doeply inconsed at his refusal | were set up with the power of life and | dsked him t3 take her back to England | humanity, un’ more than lik ved 'imsclf | she should be the recipient of her lov- | iif e R e ey Slade and his cutthrs 8 s ' | 4 great dale of bother, if he'd leftall the [ er's least regard. She is grateful for a k: . by confession, $15 together under the | visiting their camp. He then led for- | TAl orde 5 death in their hands; onero tuxes Th i g vas o P " 1 Bricl ; 8 a1y v . The Englishman was horri- Ledls ] 5 Jovement to_restare the Old Brick SWORE THEY WOULD KILL HIM. were levied and collected by force and :;‘.'.:lh h]‘f"'. -.1.!.“.:1\'-., nite nd large | Polecats outside of the ‘arrulc to be drowned | smile, and overwhelmed at a_word of o e, Vit which is supposed Jules was warned, but disdained to fly. [ erimes of robbery and murder were 1 it ntirely. praise. She finds greater joy in loving [ {0 ho the oldest church in Vi nia, has been family in England, and he knew not Oue night the bundits_went and, suv- [ winked at whe 5 3 The Dallas Times doesn't like the theology | than in being loved, ~and 8 | 100 the olcest tho rostoration is nearly & 9 when . 4le. - Ashor to do. Ho was afraid 10 ] WS cowboy ovangelist who is wrestlin | funy —ocho - of | the - wmaseuline | compieto. Ahis cliurch was built in 16 his present lest he should | \iih the Texas sinners, and takes him to itinually for two cen rounding the old maws house, bound | could * divide tho spoils. Honest him hand and foot. They then, with a | labor and | legitimate business were A ) ers, ; h o . i siness offend the Indians, and he sought | task for saying that “'hell is full of Campbel- ferocity unknown to any but grieviously burdened and licentious- | the interpreter's advice and | ek Lo hiodists.” It says: ‘‘Come out | id mutilated his body first Y 1 was occupied mind in alf her opinions and i " 15, She is-willing to be the tat he- [ turi th his feet, to eat the crumbs which Within the last ¥ ness and gambling permitted to go P i sate hi from his | of that. cowboy! Comeup out of the depths | et B loa h ting off his ears, then his seot free. Dragzod Viguors weva soid g | DCEged him to extricate hin fOf B2 | 0 wuch barbarism? Preach good will; preach | full from his table.to do his most menial | 53,45, found thelr way (o 16 then his | fingers and nose, | soldiers, teamsters and employes every ,,,‘!t‘.;. .,M;'“,.l,“\:l ever do to refusa | lofeipreach hope! Put away the instru- ) labor, She has the nature of a serf, the [ B0 UGE R0 riven from then is and so continuing to mutilate and sep- | time they were and they were | 1o ‘valuable a prosent,and offered for 8100 | Bents of tortus (i up our awful chawn | devotion of a dog, and ifhe descrts her | flind and want, i Joclanders sate him ioint by ot ‘s alnd vageal Ran T A pie S 4 present, M1 of ever-burning fir 1o shricks o # or women (as ho usue SHa 0 Anc il beloug 1o the best of arato him joiut by joint until he died. | dragged into “dens of prostitution and | 1g vake the gl off his hands, which his | b b siulluby into auiet the mouns | (05 OLHCT women (s bo w ually does) sho | Luthera 1 belong 1o th Slade, it ‘is said, finally shot him [ there robbed of tl never complains, s in his will she finds [ navian Ch e Methodist E 967 of population; in 101; in St. Louis, oue t, one to cachi 10, o each 17,5005 in n Pittsburg hard earned | lordship gladly \....L and fled back Im of the datned ¢ Preach heaven; preach that through the head fo end his sufferings. [ money. It they e S8 lship g pld, aad | 0 | oftho damued] Broaoh TEEISRL IR surb. Her nature is mild, The desperado of the civil authorities, so (‘1‘”';‘1:). J‘“illl:];\fxz"h.‘;"mm oft h::.l‘;m::‘\:fl‘t“ e ¥ thiod ists, Baptists, all may | patient and constant, aud deyoid of pus- HAD JULES' EARS DRIED were fined und locked upas pris- :}' o ’,i‘-, sin their lodge and would | reach, if the t and pleasant road of jus- | sion and intensity. and he carried them in his pocket. Af- s and kept thare until thote. Hnes [ 110 Indisnain thelr lodge 00 Tnent | ice aid love and fair play togiaa s allowed | Tho other type of woman who knows ter taking a drink at the bar Slade paid. ~ Theatrs hurdygurdies, "“"l l:]‘: g um‘“d R here on earth no jealousy is quite her opposite. She Would affor the harviflea bar-keapor his |.and danco housos were kept anen all | o1e Hved to bo a tho o is o radiantly hapay full of X t e The willow ware Of every _description vietim's in pay I drinks. For- | night, and veal as well as mock trage- TIE GLORY OF JULESBURG shomn i 8o many windows offers a choice self-confidence,egotlsm and satistaction. | koo, one to ewch 16,500 tunately for. humanity Slade went to | dies were hourly enacted. -The Indians | soon departed. It was, of all others, | for presents that, to Use a shop worn pxpres. | She is pleased with life, and with her- | each 8350: in Indiauajo Montanu, whero he met two old fricuds | of the plaing heuring of ‘the fume and ! the ephemeral city of the plaius, and its | sion, must suit evory wste. self. Bho loves deeply, und demauds as | and i Columbus, oue,lo OVER -Sjie Owing to the lateness of ths soason we findourselves overstoeked with fiue and medinm priced overcoats, and in- order to rednee the quantity we propose to sell most of them within the next 10 days, and have made prices that will insure speedy sale FOR INSTANCE Our $ 5 overcoatsnow gofor $ 3.00 " 8 “w " 5.00 e 9 “ " sluo " Io i “" 1.50 i I5 " " |0|00 " 20 “ " l4l00 1] 25 " “" Ialon We have reduced in the same ratio all our Fur and Fur Trimmed Overcoats, and if yow need one you will find this the best opportunity yet offeved this season. We have had such & grand success of our $10 SUIT | Sale that we have just added a few more styles of desirable swits that ave selling at other stoves all the way from 14 to $18. We place them all in once lot and sell them at one price. $10 We also have a fine and large as= sortment of nobby styles in swits, which we ave offcring at cut prices, We Really Have No Compelition nQur Boys’ and Childrens' Department For our line of Boy's Suits & Over- coats, 1s very complete and our price of §1 for a nobby boy's jachet antd pants, in ages from £1t0 13 years, i Rhard to beat anywhere. THE New York& Omaha TTIHNG (1 ONE PRICE CLOTHIERS, FURNISHERS And HATTERS For Men and Boys 1308 Farnam St. — e g

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