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) | | THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, i AP o QF’P’I‘F‘WRER 23, lSB&-SIXTEEN PAGES. e e AL e e AP W O Js,.fl-x«».*—x.—" S YOU CAN COOK A Meal, or Heet a Room For ONE CENT LIMAX WANTED EVERYWHERE. One responsible resi- dent business man in each town will be given the sole and exclusive sale of —THE— Climax Stove Cartridge. All printing matter FREE! Handsome Colored Lithographs,! Circulars, &c. We ask no honus. ‘We give exclusive ter- ritory in proportion to ! the number of Cart-| ridges bought. Large' money to be made quickly. A $20 Oil Stove will not do one-quarter the work of the CLIMAX STOVE GARTRIDGE. nes as much to run THE FUEL OF TO-DAY and FUTURE! Why Pay Exhorbitant Prices for Coal? When by Using the * * WHAT IS IT? Asthis will be a question upon !the tongue of everybody to-day in Omaha and elsewhere we will an- 'swer it atonce. Itis a cylinder of wrought iron and cast iron fllled with NON- COMBUSTIBLE and INDE- STRUCTIBLE ABSORBENTS, as per cut. 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YLV $ XVKI'T) 94 CONISN TOTI SNOLLOEYIO ©SEANATHLY V) §owo gy Hry 1aded jo 30a1d ® uo 210 amos uy -, W JIAY) YOS 0} J| MOJIY ég- One pint will burn from an ;3_3 hour to an hour and a half; Z_é“ half pint from forty to fifty-five E gg minutes. Smaller quantities %i;: of oil poured on the top of the 1 JUOLHYNS [10 R CRE RIS TR Cartridge will give the same degree of heat for shorter periods, as the party using UREERETH .l may desire. CALI, ON OR ADDRESS ALL COMMUNICATIONS TO CLIMAX STOVE CARTRIDGE CO,, 220 S. 16th Street. INCIDENTS OF THE ALTAR. Matrimonial Fits and Misfits Faith- fully Recorded. THE BARBER AND HIS BRIDE. Looking for a Wife —A Dismayed Bridegroom—Goodwin Wrote His Love—A Romantic Gretna Green. Goodwin Wrote His Love. Chicago Tribune: It is rumored in theatrical circles that a pretty actress has begun a suit for breach of promise against Nat Goodwin, the comedian. The story goes thav thoyoungwnmuu in uestion won Goodwin’s heart some time before his wife, Eliza Weathersby, died, and that, in anticipation of being a widower, he asked he to become his second wife, Goodwin went to Kurope during the summer, but returned sud- denly, because the ‘well-known lawyer retained by his affianced bride called upon him, it is said, to keep his matri- monial engagement. Since then he has avoided New York City as much as pos- pible. There wusa veport current a few wecks ago that he was about to marry a society girl who resides in Buf- falo. He took the trouble to contradict this story through the press, and he is said to have assured the actress who had a prior claim to his hand that the only foundation for the report was that his father, whois a Boston sporting- man, was anxious to have him marry a wealthy woman. He has now retained one of the most noted attorneys in New York to protect hisinterests. As he has the reputation of being a writer of unusual al llily in the line of love let- ters, the ach of promise suit will be of unusual interest A Romantic Gretna Green. New York World: Twothings tended to make Harper's Ferry popular with young couples in the past. There was some romance in having the ceremony performed amid such wild scenery. It was the most convenient spot runaways could reach. The marriage laws of Vir- ginia are very strict; and ten years ago the marriage laws of Maryland were corvespondingly lax, On payment of the fee a license would be granted the plicant, and the contracting parties {xam;cl\'«_s might be absolutely non- existent. Harper's Ferry is connected with the upper valley by a railroad, a branch of the Baltimore & Ohio. As Maryland was just acro: the Potomac, this was the most acce. ble point for lovers whose parents l(ml(ed too coldly upon their wooing. building of a parallel ru.ul has lessened Harper’s Ferry as a Gretna, so that its g m v ngeos has probably depnrw\l a My fir rge of a church was in this place, and as my home was convenient to the depot | was very often called’ upon to marry these runaways. The bridge crossing the Potomac was the spot gen- erally selected. and for the reason that the ceremony must be performed in Maryland. It was in the center of this reat iron structure and amid surround- fl. s a8 romantic as can be found any- whars that the knot was usunll; tied. The early morning train from the upper valley usually brought the runa- ways. Sometimes they had ridden hul all night to escape and catch the early train. They were easily spotted L‘e train by the conductor or train hudl. and as'a kind of l{mmen\. ex isted between them and the telegraph operators, an offer would scou be made to procure the license and arrival in time to allow them to return on the next train. The bargain was soon struck, and as the insurance was the important part, the fee charged was generally gauged by the size of the prospective groom’s purse. The iicense arranged for, the next step was to find a preacher. kven the street urchins had learned to know the status of these couples, who arm in arm wandered listlessly about the street, and offered to the preacher for them. The marriage ceremony was generally performed on the railroad bridge cross- ing the Patomac. It was nece: y to go on the bridge in order to be within the bounds of the state of Maryland, whose authorities had granted the license. A marriage on the bridge al- ways attracted a crowd, which would gather 1n spite of the attempts of the | i fimony; weaith no objoct on the lady's part, couple and the minister to outwit them. | but she must be of an _affectionate disposition 1t was amusing to the crowd and annoy- | #nd domestic in Ler habits, - Addr in f‘“;l‘." ing to tho minister to meet with a uce, Honorable, lock box Philadel- groom of more than ordinary stupidity, Each afternoon the who chose his own way of answering the | the postofiice alwiys questions. of letters addresse These letters hotel, but Me. tial, and it soon beeame known hotel that **Honorable 000 and that his name insuve its for Ashland, where he has v It is not known whether will be in her The affair has the ustomed piace aused much talk bride or not. in the city. Looking For Globe Democrat: Oriental hotel of Philadelphia a days buck shows the name of J Brooks, who took commodious quarters oo the second floor, which he still occu- pies. e is on the other side of three score, with a tinge of gray in his_hair, has a benevolent face and is slightly bent. He seemed to people around the hotel to be a man of means, talked agreeably and made friends. Since his arrival this advertisement appeared in Spape ATRIMONIAL—An elderly sessed of ample means, (¢ acquaintance of an intellig Iady, who has no incumbrance, ra Wife. The register of the fow ik find entleman, pos- es 1o form the t, middle-aged with & view to pafter a caller at ived a bundl i ‘“‘Honorable. went to the Oriental Mme. Ponisi's Little Romance. Pittsburg Post: We do come across dramatic things as we go about in real lhife. There is Mme. Pouisi, for twenty ears a depictor of stage matrons in tho Brooks was too confiden- in the ' was worth #300,- Wallack company. At the agoe of thirty Brooks admitted this much Mme. Ponisi w a remarkably hand- when closely .\_\u“unnml by a reporter, some and fairly successful actress in | and further said that thn: notice was in- London. Sho played sentimental and | serted in good faith. Woeday he wis even tr those « Her | Pluntly asked whether he had the notice husband was a German singer named Poni; But while he was ng his voice in opera, she was falling in love with t for munh years, family, so I thought T one of her mimic sweethearts in the drama, and the upshot was that she eloped to’ America, where she. lived | Would marry, But T'll ho blessed if 1'll with her companion amicably until he | tell you another word.” Mr. Brooks died. Later she became Mrs. Aright | comes from Deleware county, and the ing the prompler ut Wallack s veports of his wealth are not exagger- The na > has now run along | ded. He is brother of the late the prosent time. Mme. | Nathan Brooks, who recently died, kes it a practice to go to many | le#ving an enormeus fortune. His ad- S T T 3y TP (o tisement for a wife has brought him, one of these excursions sho vode with | 80 far, ninety-seven ansy hieh he reads at his leasure and intend mswers reenwood cemetery, ter the burial stopped with two | ing one by ono until he is suited. He women friends ot a wayeide inn o re. | i8 & man & good common sense, and fresh themselves with cool beer, The | g€t a good deal of amuscinent out of pliice ehosen for hurial Was a iy ro- his large correspondence, but is thor- oughly in earnest about selecting a wife from the numt He says that he will settle 65,000 on the lucky ecorrespond- ent. spectable but rather humble The man who came forward table to take the orders was old, guished looking and portly. He g at the aged actre: She -:\/m\ AL hun There wus a theatrie pause. he man of the beer garden was none nlh * than the ex-singer Ponisi. Husband and wife were thus accidentally brought to- Bridegroom, Chronicle: Last Satur- day Hw‘u‘t Bristol, a llt'h\ y clerk em- ployed in Croshy & Co.’s grocery house, went to the depot on the arrival of the pether after an absence of twentyyears. | V. & T\ express train and met a lady t was such o meeting as we are apt to | whose ouce lurid blonde hair had been regard as improbable when we sec it on | bleached by the frosts of nearly sixty the stage., But in this case nothing | winters. He escorted her toa lodging thrilling came of it. The husband | house on South A cet, where he re- served the beer, the wife drank it, and | quested her to tarry until his return. that wus all there was about it. She waited in vain until after nightfall, and growing wear, ascort to mater The Barber and His Bride, Cincinnati Euquirer: There was a | messenger to the ) was tittle smack of romance iu the marriage | employed to inquive as to the cause of of My, Joseph F. Weisenstein and Miss | his detention, Bertha Prothero. The groom isa well | The inquiry was met by the reply known barber, and tne bride a talented | that Bristo! had departed on the even- young teacher in the Clifton street | ing train for Califor The venc school building, Springfield. O. She is very highly connected. Her people ob- jected to the barber’s attention, but she encouraged it. Last night the barber able lady was dumbfounded on the ceipt of this sturtling news, # patched & note to the gr requesting an interview. re- by had a customer hall shaved when his | called upon the lady and in answer to lady love appeared at the door. He ex- | her anxious inquiries about the levant- cused himself to his customer, saying | ing deliv clerk the lady was in- he would be back in a moment. Once on the sidewalk Bertha told Joe that she was ready and wanted to be married atonce. Joe was only too glad of the chance, and, forgetting all about his customer, he went with his sweetheart to a minister and the twain were united. The couple took the 10 o’clock formed that he h'\vl drawn the pay due him from the firm after the arrival of | the express train, packed his trunk and departed without giving any satisfac- tory reason for his sudden decision to shalke the dust of the Comstock from his shoes. This diselosure drew forth the follow- n use Aay from 8 licst informat’on gladly given. CARTRIDGE Which enables the burning of ORDINARY KEROSENE, COAL OIL or HEADLIGHT OIL, in any Cook or Laundry Stove, Parlor Stove, or Open Grate, FURNACE, or any other heating construction, WITH ABSOLLUTE SAFHERTY. 5 You will produce the same amount of heat at a cost of 75 per cent less than coal, with No Smoke! No Dirt! No Ashes! No Smell! No Danger! No Soot! No Trouble! No New Stove Li ining Every Six Months! AGENTS |Cleanliness| Safety! ICANVASSERS CHEAPNESY! \w A N TED YOU CAN DO A Day’s Washing or Ironing For Four Cents MALE AND FEMALE EVERYWHERE. We offer you a chance that comes but once in a lifetime to make money. Industrious hardworkers can make from $5 to $50 a day easily. Room for everybody. Lib- eral inducements offered. Be your own employer, and, cons sequently, master of the sit- uation. Call upon or write to us at our oflice, 220 S. 16th St.,and we will offer you every assis- tance in our power. NO TIME TO BE LOST! Make up your mind what , territory you want. How the Stove Cartridge will take the place of coal: It will Bake, Roast, F'ry, 3oil, Stew; it will give heat for was] ing and ironing—and all a cost of about 1cent an hour. And no dirt, nosmoke, n 0 ashes—nothing but the most perfect cleanline: ing confession from the lady. She said ~]u' had heen corresponding with the clerk for some months, after g an advertisement through the papers from a person representing himselfl as a youne man in search of a wife. The clerk had agreed to marry her, and she had come ull the way froin Chicago to perform her part of the con- tract. Her perfidious lover had met her at the train. escorted her to the lodg- ings sho was then occupying, and she had not seen him since. fter hearing of his absconding she of course realized that all hope of his marrying her was folly. The lady said in.conclusion that she was wealthy, and owned real estate in Chicago, for which place she de- parted last evening, a sadder and in all probability a wiser woman. Acquaintances of the levanting lover account for his action on the ground that he was struck dumb with amaze- ment on discovering that he had |1h~dg.-\l himself to marry o silver- haived woman old unml;,'h to be his dmother, as he is only twenty- and concluded the best way out of the serape was to abscond, whereby he probably lost a snug fortune. It is ed that he had his mind made up the arrival of his fiancee to take befor the course he adopted, provided the zoods when received were not up to the Standard of the sample packuge ceived some time previous—in the shape of a photograph of a comely parently on the shady side of thirty. Richard H. Stoddard's Marriage. Joseph B. Gilder, in the New York Critic thus writ of Richard Henry Stoddard’s marrviage: *“When Mr. Stod- ds met the women he was to marry. he had printed ad ready published or rath it his own expense) a volume ‘Footvrints.” The poems were santly noticed in two or three magazines, and one copy of them was sold, As there was no call for the re- mainder of the edition it was committed to the flames, Incouraged by his sue- cess the young poet saw no impropriety in beconiing the~husband of a young lady at Mattapoisett. Elizabeth Bars- tow was her name, and the tie that lmmni them s o common love of s at twenty-five (some his first moeting with Ta ' Stolman that the penniless poet and the shipbuilder’s daughte were made one by an amiable gentleman of this ¢ the Rev. Ralph Hoyt, ‘who found it easier to marry to praise his vorses. the poet than A Long Wedding Tour. Town Topics: The v original wi ding tour of Mr. and Mrs, Sigournc has_termi aged on time. When the were married in liuflulu. in 1882, the wedding cards re: “Mr. and Mr Sigourncy at howme T hursdays in Sacra- mento, Cal.,, beginuing May 10, 1585, They. arrived promptly on thé date specitied, wedding tour of six yes they had explored whole known thing lik vy nearly world at a cost of some- 000, Childreun were born to them during this long period of ab- sence—twin boys in St. Petersburg, a girl in China and another boy in Brazil. :\.nv they are keeping open house in .mlmnm and enjoying a new sensa- tion in not having to get up early to catch trains and make steamship con- nections overnight. A Chicago Romance. Chicago Herald: There is a wedding to be celebrated on the north side some this fall—a wedding with a romance. The father of the prospective bride is a physician. He was married some years after entering practice_ and his first- born was a daughter. ~She has grown up from the ctadle under his wnwhhfl 1 eare, until now she is a beautiful and | trict Attorney Daniel N. Lockwood, of necomplished young belle. About o | Buffalo. The trial is soon to take year ago she Amm.uml to bestow espec- place. 5L inl favor upon one of the many suitors CONNUBIALITIES. for her hand. Like the careful father that he was, the physician began to in- quire into the antecedents of this young William E. Brigham, a_Boston newspaper man, is spending his honoymoon with _his bride in a carriage drive of the state, The man, He learned that he kunew the I o dr ) dols tour is to last three weeks. family el ‘.“,'“ ”l‘;‘.t."“ h;-'f]“."".{m Joseph Chamberlain is not engaged to Miss the boy’s birth. For a fe this world | Endicott. Her fiance is a young lawyer of the period of his advent into this Massachusetts. It may take a retaliation ac of care the physician had watched his caveer with interest, but then he lost sight of him, as mother and son were both doing well. When the boy ap- peared as a suitor for his daughter’s haud, the physician resumed the close watch of his care Last week he be- came convinced for the second time that the mother and son were both daoing well, so he gave the required consent, and a brilliant wedding will be the re- sult. to convince England of this, however. Mr. Olof Flack and Hannah Anderson were married in a balloon at Beloit, Wis., the bride coming from Bergen, Norway. The parties are well counected and the marriage was a social event among the Norwegians of the city. The average school life of the woman teacher in the West is about two years, and the farther west she goes the less time she teaches. What does she do? Die! Oh, no; not a bit of it. She does something almost as common as dying though. 1t you marry your landlady’sdaughter and do not change your boarding house, you must puy board aliée samee, This pleasant fact has just been demonstrated at Newark, in a manner highly satisfactory to the landlady, and will serve as a valuable precedent. Thomas Hair and Ella Wolfe, of Hopwood, wanted to get married, but the parents of the girl, who is but l'lxhtecn years old, ob- jected, as Hair is blind. Thereupon ' the couple drove to Oakland, Md., and were wedded. The groom is a graduate of the Philadelphia Institution for the Blind, is a fine violinistand a member of the Uniontown opera house orchestra. Circumstances often favor even elopers and such proved the case lately in England, when the mother of the girl telegraphed the police authorities at Bolton to ar child, who was a passenger on a train that would pass there. She mentioned the lameness, that the police might eas) tify her. Curiously enough there turned out to be two lame girl passengers, and the wrong one was arrested. The other passed on and got married. After a few weeks' acquaintance a well-to- do New Yorker and an Ottawa widow be- came engaged The wedding was arranged to take place last Wednesday and the guests were assembled at the church. But the groom failed o appear, and later the news was announced that he was a passenger the A On Law. Notes and Queries: In an old maga- zine we find 1t stated that until the year 1770 this law was in force in Eng- land: *Whosoever shall entice into bonds of matrimony any male subject of her y's, L means of rouge, white paint, -~ Spanish _cotton, steel corsets, crinoline, high-heeled shoes or false hips, shall be prosecuted for witcheraft, and the marriage declared null and void.’ It is very evident, however law did not do away with the articles which it wa leveled, and, if the law were now in foree, in England or here,a great many od. Perhaps this « ins the origin of the word “witeh” as applied in an endearing manner hy lovers to their sweethearts, as **You little witch,” ete. that the eithe; witches would be discoy She Didn't Burn That Letter, New York World: About four o Prof. Franklin W. Linsley, of W Y., a graduate of the Albany *hool, went to Akron as pr cipal of the Akron Union school. He [ night before on a train bound for New resided with Prof. Jones, and it was It is supposed that he was spirited =001 noi bout town that Mrs. Jones | Off by his peopie 1n{‘x'.T.-:'r‘.‘l;‘:v.,;if.;,::ou"h' and Prof. Linsley were on exceedingly | 81 for damages fo g 1 M v On blizzara Monda z Geol intimate terms ‘with each other. At nbissara Monday yocum Georgs Oosiue, of Hicksville, L, I, found u beautifui face downward in the snow. She was moan- ing in great distress. Mr. Cosine took the young woman up in his arms and carried her to the nearest pharmacy, where she found stimulants and extra wraps. Mr, Cosine’s interest went further—he hired a sled and escorted the lovely maiden to her home. Rewarding him, the rescued lady, Miss Mary McEwen, has become his wife. The wedding took place on Sunday evening of this weak In Duteh India there are young men so eager to be married that they write to their friends in Holland to find them wives. The the same time Prof. Linsley attention to Dr. Rose C, V esteemed lady, who h Alkron for about two yes rumored that she w 4’ great a much 1 practiced in s, and it was as soon to become Jones left his reason for the that the school nad supplanted him in his and that their rela- “When wife, act, he stated candidly prineipal wife's affections, lations in_his house were such that he could no longer endure it, and he pre- W no ) 3% 0 ] friend select a willing lady, conforming to ferved living “apart rather than sce au- | {15’ guostions in the lotter, ' A photograph other occupy his Ir‘m"‘ufl head of the | of the chosen one is_enclosed in the reply, (“m;l‘l ] ien school closed lust June, | and after the lapse of a few months a soiled rof insley left-band glove, with a power of anrlm) received from the far-away bachelor The friend in Holland marries the selected bride asa sort of legal deputy for the actual groom, and the young wife departs in the next India muil steamer to bring happiness to the lonely man in the far East. The mar- riage is as binding as if the bridegroom were present, and it is never repudiated. Mrs. Mary Moore, of Brooklyn, has re- ceived a package containing a lock of her own hair, and with it a notice that Heury C. Willett, o confederate lieutenant of Mo phis, had left her $5,000. She lived at Gety, urg when the battle took place there, and the heutenant, who was one of the wounded cared for in her mother's house, fell in love with her. She could only be a sister to him and all that, but finally consented vo let him have a lock of her hair. The lawyer who wrote informs ber that Lieutenant Willett never married, and left a dying request tnat her ringlet should be returned to her. Mrs, Moore, who isa widow, keeps a boardin house, and this money will be tantial benefit to her. The bridesmaid and the usher have gone went to Wellsburg on a vacation, and while there wrote sever: letters to his betrothed, in one ¢ he confesse Jones were of a criminal nature. He added, furtherthat if the doctor wanted him after that he would be all that a husband could be, and would try to make her happy. = Dr. Wilder sent hima reply post-haste resenting his proposal, and told him he was frce. She was aware that dings for di- vorce were contempl in the Jones family. She saved his letter, and a few days ago tho professor returned to take charde of his school, He went to rayer meeting one night with Mrs, ones, The doctor was there and dur- ing a solemn pause in the devotional exarcises she sprang up, letter in hand and read it aloud. The prayer meetin, then adjourned. Next day the bow of education preferred nharsel against Linsley, who will be defended by Dis- out of fashon for the present. Stylish wed- dings this fall will be so conducted that the bride and groom shall have no rivals for the attention of the on-lookers. This is & step in tlie right direction. The regu n society wedding has become of late such an expen- sive function that more than one young man matrimonially mclined has dreaded the bitl he must pay for a supper to ushers, 3 presents to the same, etc. And the paterfamilias whor has to foot the bills pertaining to a daughter's. marriage will be glad to have the extrava- gance of the ceremony reduced to a mini- mum, With bridesmaids and ushers elimi- nated a fashionable wedding may yet become a reasonably inexpensive pastime. There should be a new set of command- ments. All of the old ones have been broken. A small boy of three, who is decidedly i® roverent, on praying *“God bicss " added “and make him a good boy; if youw can’t just warm him up.” The preachers having come back from their vacations, Chicago's churches, as well as Chicago's liquor saloons, will 'be wide open hereafter on Sundays. Old Gentleman (watching a littlo boy fishs ing) —Do you go to Sunday school, littie boy? Little Boy—Yes, sir. Old Géntleman— Then, of course, you don't swear! Littla Boy—No, sir; notwhen I'm fishin', I wude dcnl ketch nothin’. A pastor some time since sought financial help for an important char ity. Among those whom he asked to give something was o lady who unfortunately bore a vinegary face. She declined to give moncy but promised to *‘lend her countenance” to the cause. He retired in disinay. Mother—Why, Bobby, you are very late from Sunday school; did ‘you come directly from the church! Bobby (with consciontious rectitude) —No, ma; the teacher told us that cleanliness was next to godliness, so after Sunday school was out some of the boys went in swimmin g. Rev. Charles Poundtex (who has been writing his sermon, looking up suddenly): ‘‘Maria, will you take the children out of the room for a few mmutes! Mrs. Poundtext (in surprise) : *‘Certainly, my dear. But— are they annoying you!" 'Rev. Poundtext: ‘‘Not at all, but I have just dipped the mueil- age brush in the ink well and I would lile to be at liberty to make a few remarks!" Church Choir Soprano (who sings during the week in comic opera, to tenor)—“I de. clare, Mr. Highsea, I'm mortified half to to death! Do you know that while we wera singing that anthem 1 forgot myself and d at that old pald-headed Deacon Heavywate, in the front row?’ Mr. Highsea "Tho deacon wili be indignant.s® No, he wont—that's the worst of it. He forgot himself, loo, aud made a reach for the pulpit flowers.” e 1t s & ally Settléd. Lincoln Call: They say that there are some very funny and some very chaunges going on in Omaha newspaper circles. Colonel Al Sorenson has left the Herald. Colonel James managing editor. Colonel Calhoun ig editor-in-chief. Colonel Smith surren- dered the combination to the safe in the business office to Colonel Matthews. Colonel Tom Pitzmorris will go round about the state instead of ~ writing **Hound about the state,” P, It is said that Mr. Rosewater will tuen £ his magnificent new building into & grand hotel. In this event Colonel Sor- enson becomes managing editor of the bill of fare, Colonel Tom Fitzmorris will be associate editor of the continued stor; called “The Register.” While Colouo{ William Annin will be editor-in-chief, Coloncl Fred Nye will surrender the re- publican hemisphere of the World and come a regular guest of the hotel. This change in newspaper circles, while. not officially announced, is practically seitled, e An Absolute Cure. The ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINTMENT. nly put up in large two ounce tin is an absolute curu for old sol :mund. “31‘”"’ d all A0ns. 8itive). uure |l b Ask for tho luomy T, B T. Sold by Doodmunnu(b. B m per box—by mail $0