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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, 1888—~TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. MERS. J. BENSON'S REMOVAL TO iB8th AND DOUCLAS STS. We take this method to inform all our friends and the public generally, including all persons from this state and surrounding states who orovose attending THE OMANA FAIR XND EXPOSITION, E That we have removed to the ncw 3-story hlock, west side of 15th, between Farnam and Douglas, where we have opened the vargest and Only Exclusive Fancy Dry Goods Stock in Omaha. and we cordially invite you while in the city visiting the Great Show of P. T. Barnum and the Magnificent Siege of Sebastoepol, To call and inspect our elegant stock of Fancy Dry Goods and Ladies’ Furnishing Goods at our new store. purchase, we guarantee to please you and save you money. Mrs. J. BENSON, - 210-212 South 18th St. ACHIEVEMENTS OF WOMEY, The Peculiar Tricks of Parisian Dressmakers. A GEORGIA GIRL'S SACRIFICE, A Fair Tricycler—Woman Inventors and What Made Them Invent —A Street Indicator— A Button Fastener.d The Fair Tricycler. “The fair tricycler, who attracts most attention hereabouts,” says the New York Mail and Express, *‘is an unusu ally tall girl who rides daily in Pros- pect Park, Brooklyn. Her fizure from the waist up is peculiarly lissome, and its supple bendings and curvings as she flashes by find appreciative behoiders. Her face is round, with long-lashed blue eyes, peachy cheeks like a two-year-old, and heavy brown curls that drop to her waist or stream in the breeze. And she wears a gown—a gown of silver gray surah which must have been fitted upon her sitting, as tailors fit habits while the rider is perched on a ho Every line of it belongs to the tricycle and would suggest the three-wheeler. 1t has o wide collar of blue turning away at the throat, blue cuffs and blue girdle catching up superfluous d.-n{)(-rms. With it goes a gray helmet with blue cord, and now and then one catches a hint'of blue bows on the riding shoes, Her cheeks are always flushed, her e, bright, and some people go to the p expressly to look atherand feel rested.” The Tricks of Parisian Dressmakers. Ladies’ Pictorial: Many ladies com- ing over here for a few days or weeks, and having a yearning to carry home some gowns from the magic city, shrink from the world-famous establishments on account of the expense. And there are hundred of dressmakers here who could—*‘and if they would”—turn out a costume every whit as elegant as those made by their big neighbors at a much lower figure. It is in dealing with these that the stranger should be very cau- tious, and, to use a ratherslangy expres- ston," keep the weather eye opon.” These ‘“‘little dressmakers” are full of tion, and the thing hasto be taken on trust, its shortcominus only being dis- covered in many cascs when many leagues of land and 1 lie between the swindling dressmaker and the confiding customer. Again, a not uncommon practice ie to add scores,often hundreds of francs, to the pri rreed on for a dress and depend for its payment upon the m’s natural dislike to fighting im a foreign law court. A Girl's Heroie Sacrifice. Atlanta (Ga.) Constitutio On Fri- near Hickory, North Carolina. nuel Burkley's ‘doz van mad and dashed among the fan , biting as he went., Tho eldest girl of Burkley, aged seventeen, secing the danger to which her little brothers and sisters were exposed, with great heroism caught and held the doz uutil the chil- dren could get in the house. Casting the dog as far from her as she could, she ran for the house, but was over- taken and severely bitten on the hip before she got into the house. She was also bitten on the hand while holding the dog. After thus getting away the dog bit two cows and then came back to the house, and when the children spoke to it through a window, endeavored to get at them. The heroic young lady ran to a neighbor, who shot the dog. A physician cauterized the wounds. Womean Inv ntors. One of the whims of fair women, says the New York Sun’s Washington corre- spondent, is to make inventions and get them patented; but if onemay judge by the records of the patent office, she is not influenced by the whim very often. During twenty-two weeks of this year 8,126 patents wore issued by the United States putent office, but of this number only fifty-three wore issued to women. The task of improving the machinery, the household utensils, the wearing apparel of people, even the corsots und garters of the ladies is generally left to masculine inventors, while working women, who might as well become inventors as not, continue to depend on hard toil and pinching thrift for aliving. Women are as quick as men to detect defects in tools they uso and the manufactured articles with which they are acquainted; but the woman worries along with what she finds at hand, while the man fiest con- siders how the article may be improved, and having discovered the way patents of paint to another, or from paint to varnish, it must be eloaned. Soap and water well applied with the hands will clean it, but the job is unpleasant. ttie Hloway went to a tinsmith and lon cup made of tin. A stout th *‘serab floor,” as she calls it, " cnded by wire pendants about two inches above the bottom of the cup. Then at the top and on one side a sub- stantial cup was secured that larce enougn to hold half a cake of laun- dry soap and leave some room to re. Now the brush could be easily cleaned. It was soused in a basin of hot water, rubbed over the cake of sonp and then brushed vigorously to and fro over the scrub floor, the amateur painter meantime holding the cup steady with hor left hand by a handle provided for the purpose. When the brush was cleaned the scrub floor was removed and the slops emptied into the drain, No provision for cleaning the handle of the brush was made, because a woman neat enough to want such a device as this would never get the handle dirty. Kate . Beaird was a Texas lady who did not like to run her sewing machine with a ti dle, so_she removed the or- dinary pitman and substituted a larger one, which she ran through a metal ewed fast under the edge of the ne stand nearly in a plane with the wheel. The end of thislong pit- man had a shepherd’s crook to make it fit the hand. A sort of pumping motion on this pitman runs the machine. Ada L. Winn was an Arkansas lady who wished for a better way to fasten buttons to a garment than the use of a needie and thread. She, therofore, took aslender wire staple and passed it down through the holes in the button, on through the eye of the button, if it were of that sort, then passed the staple through the fabrie, then through holes in the middle of a small metal plate provided for the purpose, bent the sta- ple sharply at right angles, and then passed the points of the staple up through holes in the edges of tho metal plate both tosecure them and to protegt the wearer of the fabric. Mary J. Watson was a California lady who had been bothered as a great many ladies have been elsewhere, by the difficulty of telling when she had reach- ed her destination when rid- ing on a street car. Car con- ductors are sometimes forgetful, rude and even insolent. Soshe devised a street indicator to doaway with the MATED AND MISMATED PAIRS, Haps and Mishaps of the Matrimon=~ ial Raffle. MARRIED THE GRAND-DAUGHTER. Cupid was a Printer's Devil—She was Married Too Soon—Annic's Young Man—Can't Have Bessie. The Modern Hamlet. Mercury, To kiss, or not to kiss; that is the_question; Whether 'tis betcer for a man to choose The righteousness of untasted bliss Or take to arms the blushing maidens, Aud, by kissing, ploaso them ! To swear to iss No more, and by this resolution end The tootliache, the aunoyance of chupped ips And onion's fragrance—ah 'tis a consumma- ion Doubly to be wished. To kiss, to hug; To hugi perchance she'll screami Ay, there's the rub! For in that soulful act what *dad” may come And boot us from his rented soil Must give us pause. There’s the respect That makes us all wittingly virtuous; For what wild youth Would draw evjoy- men From a rank cigar, when he himself Might realize it all by simply kissing? Thus booting does ot make cowards ot us all, And thus the native homes of girlish girls Are guarded o'er by their papas so well That the boys become discouraged, turn . away, And abandon the transaction, Married the Granddaughter. New York Times: A good deal of fun is being made in the newspapers of a rich old farmer up in the Connecticut valley, who, in his eighty-fifth year, has espoused a fifteen-year-old bride, and whno gives'the following account of the hereditary courtship which has at length resulted in this ill-assorted match: “I knowed her grandmam’and wanted her, but she wouldn’t see toit. She married my bitterest enemy and had a daughter. I courted thatdaughter when her folks wasn’t round, but somehow they got wind of it and I was dished under Miles O’Reilly (Charles D. Hal- | towara Mi pin) who was at that time editing the old’ Citizen. Mr. Roosevelt was one of Halpin’s most intimate friends, and a large stockholder in his paper. 'When Halpin died Mr. Roosevelt edited and published his poems. It was through lis connection with the Citizen that Mr. Roosevelt first mot Mes. Fortescue. Mr. Roosevelt's mother was a Bram- well, and the Bramwells aro related to the 'O'Sheas. more or less of each other, and it is not surprising that a friendship began un- der such circumstances should end as it has: Mrs. Roosevelt has writton a very great number of articles for the maga- zines, and somo of her pooms possess an excellence and beauty that it would be hard to equal. She was Married Too Soon. New York World: Judge Jamieson, of Chicago, of divorce-court fame, re- ceived a letter yesterday from a lady who resides in an interior town. On June 7she was an applicant for a di- vorce, and when she left the court room the lawyer informed her the decree had been allowed. *‘On his word,” she said, “I was married to another husband. ‘We were happy until July 4, when I got a lotter containing my decree. It was dated June 22. Consequently, I was married before I was divorced, and therefore was not married at all. Tam now in a terrible position. If it becomes public I will be socially ruined, and if my old husband knew it he would make it very hot for me,” whenthe lady waxed eloquent and pleaded with the judge to date the decree back in order her reputation. Judge Jami and frowned a great deal over the let- ter, and finally said he had a good mind to date the decree as the lady wished. An Octogenarian About to Marry . Chicago Tribune: Marcus de Cou- a vetired lumberman living at Evanston, has taken out alicense to wed Helen L. Warren of Stockbridge, N. Y. He is over eighty years old, and his bride-elect is thirty years younger. The venerable bridegroom has already been married three times, and his latest matrimonial venture has set gos- giping tongues wagging in the North Chicago suburb. He is an eccentric person. The de Coudres pier at Evans- ton is named after him. In his lumber business he amassed a fortune estimated It was, therefore, only | natural that the cousins should see | | Hrn\-id-- a beautiful trousses | vide the wedding | disappointment was s Dalton, and did not care te hear any reference to the subject ot mateimony. Accordingly she has brought suit in the supreme court of Kings county for breach of promise. He Oan't Have Bessie Bolisky. Neow York Sun: Six months ago Sam- uel Lowenburg of Meserole street, Brooklyn, began to make love to pretty Bessie Bolisky, whose parents live in Wythe avenve. Ho was so successful that four monthsago she agreed to marry him. Her parents promised not only to 1 for their aughter, but to start the young people in housckeeping, and give them a_snug sum in solid cash As the day appointod for the wedding approached, Mr. Low- enburg was surprised to receive infor- moration that the bride’s parents would be obliged to withdraw from their agreement, as far as the trosseau and other little matters were concerned, considering their daughter hersel! a suflicient trensure for any man, Mr. | Lowenburg thought so too, and readily ! relea d his prospective bride’s parents from their ante-nuptial contract, and furnished her brother with $30 to_pro- feast. But o fresh in store for him, for when the evening camo for him to claim his bride, he was told that he «could not haye her. He has now con- ‘sulted Lawyor Strauss, and will take legal proceedings to recover the 830 which he advanced for the wedding feast, and #8 which he expended on a ring. He does not fix dumages for the lacoration of his foelings. The Style in Virginia. A novel feature in the way of affairs of honor leaked out at Richmond, Va., it being nothing léss than one young Baptist minister challenging another to fight a duel abouta young lady. Mr. Tuscama is a Mexican. and J. Y. Wick- ers an American, and both are studying for the Baptist ministry at Richmond college, Mr. Wickers preaching twice a week. Mr. Wickers went before the police court this morning and begged protection from the vengeance of Rev. Mr. Tuscama. Mr. Wickers said that he and Mr. Tuscama were suitors for the hand of the same young lady and the lady was affianced to Wickers. He said that he made an engagement with the youn, lady to see her to church and it turne We teel sure that we can interest you, and if you much in the case. Suppose you two gen¢ telmen shuke hands and scttle your dife ferences here. Mr., Wickers. He is a Mexican and X aid of him. Justice Crutchfield. Do you intend to do Mr. Wickers any bodily harm? Mr. Tuscama. No,sir, 1 do not. I given the young lady up. The case was dism ——— Free to AlL The beautiful picture, “Will They Consent?” is a lurge magnificent en= graving, printed upon a sheet 19 inches wide by 24 inches long, Tt is an exact copy of an original painting by Kwally which was sold for #5,000. ] This elogaut picture represents a young lady standing in & beautiful room, surroungs uil that is luxurious, near a halfe 1’ door, while the young man, her lover, ig 0 in an adjoining room asking the consent of her varents for their daughter in marriago, The fine interior_decorations, togother, with the graceful position of the beautiful girl is in keeping with the sentiment of the picture, It must bescen to be appreciated, This valuable pictura is fitting to adorn tha wall of any ladies' parlor, and in order ta offer an extraordinary inducement to intros duce our Wax Starch, this costly picture will be given away, free to person purchase ing a small box of Wax Starch, This starch is something entircly new, and is without a doubt the greatest starch invens tion of the nineteenth century, (at least everys body says 80 that haveused it). It supercedes yiking heretofore used or known to ‘¢ in the laundry art. Unlike anvother starch, as it is coated with pure white wax and chemically prepared upon scientifig principles by an_expert in the laundry pros fession who has had years of practical expers ience in fancy laundrying. It is the firstand only starch in the world' that makes ironin easy and restores old summer dresses to theil natural whiteness, and imparts to linen @ beautiful and Insting finish, Please remember that the present you res celve with each box of Wax Starch, has never been sold at retail for less than one dollar, This great offer is only good for sig weeks, after which the_present will be omitd ted and the starch sold at the usual prico, Try it and be convinced of the whole truth. Ark your grocer for Wax Starch and ol tain this beautiful and costly picturo f THE WAX STARCH CO., Keokuk, lowa. e An Estimate of Sheridan. Globe-Democrat: Grant was made to be trusted; Sherman to be admired{ Sheridan to be loved. The whole makes up of the man was that of a great, im« pulsive, warm-hearted boy. He did not go labeled with his greatness, but with his tenderness and kindness, He had only to speak to his men to win them to do what he wished, He gave no orderg that did not involve himself. His boys expected victory because I’hil was with them. On the whole, the civil wag brought out no one who was so magnetid and magnificent as our Philip. Gran was tenacious and all-willful; Sherman a groat sn»um{;isc. and plapner of cams paigns but Sheridan was in battle h{ all odds the greatest general. So Gran’ reckoned him, and so will history doubt= less place him. But now we mourf him not as a general, but as a friend, —_— A Drug Clerk, Few people appreciate the experienco and education which it is necessary ta have 1n order to become a good, ‘‘ordine ary” drug clerk. Tho fact is that the pharr itist needs to know quite ag much about medicine ag tho physician, He must understand thoroughly tha character of the different drugs which he handles, what effect they will hava singly or in combination, aid the huns dred and one details of a business re- quiring great care and watchfulness and no little accurs information, This being tho se it is somewhat strange that some druggists will employ again. She went and got married and had a daughter. Says I, ‘Jonathan, 3 youwll marry this'n,” and settles down series of cards a little more than half | glum-like to wait for the youngster to as long asthe case. The cards are | grow up. Martha’s folks “watched me pivoted near one end to a wire rod that | close, and I began to suspect I'd have to runs across the center of the case. At | wait for the next family, when they one end of the route the cards are all | died---all of them died---and Martha turned to one end of the case. Leaving | was left without no relatives; so 1 it and on passing the first street the | popped the question and we were mar- conductor throws over the rear card in | pied.” the case. The name of the next street appears plainly printed across the top of the card. At the nextstreet another card is turned over anditshows the name of the next street, and so on. Re- turning up the route the cards are turned bm:K again one ata time, and A show the name of the street in proper | the Dublin F order as before. first wife. When she was fourteen or fifteen years old she made a runaway match with Captain Kenyon Fortescue, who was the grandson of the late Lord Fortescue. Captain Fortescue was quartered at the time at Dublin with his rogiment. His family was bitterly playful tricks which must be guarded against—slight but irritating devia- tions from the paths of strict commer- cial morality, all of which are artfully arrranged to augment their profits at the cost of the luckless customer. Par examplo—and this particular mode of deception is far from uncommon —one of these ladies will show you as a pattern a very handsome dress in ric! material, You are charmed. Of course the dress in hand does not fit you; it is cleverly designed to fit nobody. The obliging dressmaker, seeing that your heart is fixed upon it, offers to make an exact copy of the coveted gar- ment and at a very low price, The tempting bait is thrown out and the innocent fish bites. The orderis given. But, alas! when the dress is de- ivered, what do you find? The shape and style ave copied admirably, but the materials! Thin silk, cotton-backed velvet and satin, the commonest and poorast of ribbons. The entire effect of the costume is lost in cheap material, Unfortunately there is no use sending the dress back, even on the obvious plea that it is not what what was bargained for. The law will protect the ‘‘little dressmaker,” and right well she knows it, too. Tha mischief of the thing is that she has the power to seize and de- tain her customer’s trunks till the bill is paid, and this power she will not hes- itate to employ on the slightest pretext. Another most annoying device, but one which answers that purpose splen- didly, is to send home the dress at the last moment compatible with the actual fulfiliment of the contract. There is no time for examination, let alone altera- the discovery. That women can invent and patent their inventions is shown by a review of the patents issued to them. That three women should have patented three kinds of corsets, and four more should have patented four new kinds of bustles, and that one should have hit upon & combined corset and bustle, is not very astonishing. ‘I'he wonder is, rather, that men should “have, during the same period, devised fiva or six times as many new kinds of cach article, Ttis not even unexpected when ono finds that one woman has patented a new and useful plumber’s trap to pre- vent sewer gas from escaping into a house from a wash bowl. But when it is found, as the fact is, that one woman has patented a succossful hay press, and another a machine for making bar- rels, the right for which has been pur- chased by & great barrel-making cor- poration, it becomes apparent that woman’s intellect can grasp intricate mechanical movements and combine them for the benefit of the race. 1t is casy to guess how the majority of inventions by women came to be made. Something better than was to be had for the purpose was wanted, the only way to get the better thing was to invent and make it, A descr! tion of a few of the inventions as taken from the ent office records will illus- trate this. There is Nettie Illoway’s paint brush cleaning cup. What house- keeper has not been troubled with paint brushes? Plenty of housekeepers do a deal of their own painting, and when the one brush which the housekeeper owns has to be changed from one sort at $60,000. Many curious stories were told of his {)c(‘\lliuribiss. After he re- tired from business he got employment at the Deering reaper works at $1.50 a a His eccentricity took the form of giving all, or nearly all, the proceeds of his daily toil to the Methodist church. On the death of his third wife he was apparently inconsolable, It was hinted by some that perhaps his conscience might bo “reproaching him for not having shown her great consid- eration at times. His two daughthers, both of whom are widows and highly es- teemed women, have been assiduous in necessity for speaking to the conductor out that Mr. Tuscama had an engage- at all. It consists of an open case and a ment with her for the same evening. After returning from church they took seats on the porch. Mr. Tuscama, who arrived soon afterwards, was in a terri- ble passion, and the first thing he said was he would be avenged, and, address- ing him, said: Young man, if you don’t meet me to- morrow you are a coward,” In other words, the Mexican, who was very angry, challenged him to a mortal combat. He (Wickers) told him that he could be secn then. Tuscama re}vliml: ‘I will die to-n1ght or be hanged to- morrow. Wickers retorted by saying: “You can’t expect to monopolize the young lady’s attention.” Tuscama re- plied: “I am engaged to her for the pres- ent.” Wickers testified that about this time the threats made by his Mexican rival were terrific; that he became fright- encd and escaped through the back door of the house, and fearing that Cupid was a Printer's Devil. New York World: Mrs. Marion For- tescue, who was married recently to Robert R. Roosevelt, United States minister to the Hague, is the second | their attentions to the old man since daughter of Thomas O’'Shea, editor of | his bereavement, and were totally un- eman’s Journal, by his rroparcd for the surprise which their i ather had given them in the shape of a new stepmothe b e Y To Keep Milk Sweet. Pittsburg Commercial: Instead of boiling milk it is better to put it in glass jars—self-sealing fruit jars—set these in a h boiler or flat bottom containing water of a depth equal to two-thirds of the height of the jar. The jar must be left open. After the water in the vessel has boiled for at least ono hour the taken out and closed. Afte slowly they should be sot cool place. Milk thus treated will keep in a cool cupboard for two or three days during Annic's Young Man, Denver News: A breach-of-promise suit for $10,000 is_the pleasant prospect before Charles Dutton, the son of a oppossed to his marrying” Miss O'Shea, | wealthy farmer of Stony Brook, Long not from any fault of hers, but because | Island.” Miss Annie Daiton, a cook who the *Fortescues were rather bigoted | was formerly employed by farmer Dut- | Tuscama would take his life he had him Protestants and the O'Sheas Roman | ton, says that young Dutton proposed | arrested. Catholics. marr to her and was accepted. Mr. Tuscama, in_ his defense, said Contrary to the expectations of their | July 22 last was the day set for the ce that he was engaged to the young lady, friends, who had predicted an unhappy | mony, and when it came all was merr and when she broke the engagement ending to the elopement, the mar: in farmer Dutton’s house. ve D with him for Mr. Wickers it proved a most happy ome. Captain | Littel of Seataukel was to I him very angry* Fortescue died, leaving his wife penni- | formed the ceremony,but was two hours Justico Crutchfield, such weather as the present, and for a | less, with ti small clnildren to sup- | late. In the meantime Charles, who | out, did h untutored office boys 10 put up preserips weeck in winter time. Heating in a ng the | was accustomed to going to bed about as Mr. Tuscama. Yes sir. tions in_the :mee. The secrotary water bath does not separate tho case- 3 ng aliving in Ire- | soon as the birds sought their nests, Justice Crutchfield. Well, T must eay, | of the Wisconsin state board of phare ine, vendering the milk ropy, or 1d nwilling to live upon the | grew drowsy and was fast asleop when | that when a young man is engaged to'a | macy 3 overcd this state of seummy, as boiling does; nor does it | bounty of her father, with admirable | the minis! arrived. He could not be impair’ its nutritive qualities in the ! pluck’left home and came to the United | aroused, and the minister went away* least. | States. Hero she obtained employment | After that Dutton was not as loving did make So he cut you young lady, aind _another fellow comes along and cuts him out it is calculated to make him feel badly. I don't see e of a Chippewa Fallg druggist and very properly had him fined $50. HAHN'S GOLDEN DYSPEPSIA CURE A Warranted Cure for all Cases of Dyspepsia. OMAMA, NEB., August 26, 1888, DO NOT SUFFER ANY LONGER With that Disease Dyspepsia, as HAHN'S GOLDEN DYSPEPSIA CURE Will positively and permanently CURE the worst cases of Dyspepsia. Do not be afraid to try it, as every box sold is warranted to give satisfaction. FOR SICK HEADACHE, ACIDITY. OF THE STOMACH, Belching of Wind, Heavy (lump like) feeling in the stomach, will all be cured as if by magic by using ITahn's CGoldern Dysreprsia Cuzre. Price, 50 cents a box. For sale by all druggists. WHOLESALE---RICHARDSON DRUG (0. BLAKE BRUCE & (0. Manufactured by GUSTAV HAHN, Omaha, Neb. GALLION, ALA., Deo. 10, 1887, Mr. Hahn's, Druggist, St. Mary's ave. Dear Sir: After using two boxes of your Golden Pills. I have been cured of a very bad bilious attack and a gastric trouble of which 1 was sulfering for about two yeurs. 1 can strongly recommend them. Yours Respectfully, PRrOF¥. SuGNET, Ramge Block. Mr. Gustav Hahn. 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