Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 25, 1888, Page 16

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THE_OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 25 1888—SINTEEN PAGES. HEYMAN & DEICHES, 15181520 Farnam S Largest Cloak, Suit and TFur House in the West. Sealskin Gloaks and Fur Goods, |DressesandCloaks We exhibit the largest line of Fur Garments ever shown in this part of the country. The FOR LADIES', MISSES' AND CHILDREN Having the largest variety of styles and materials to select fro display embraces: pSeas.rlskin garments of every description. Fur lined Circulars, Newmarkets, etc. Fur Col-/ we are enabled to offer better inducements than any other house. lars,Cuifs, etc. Fur Rugs, Robes, Muffs & Boas. Sealsk in Hats & Caps for Ladies & Gentlemen.| cannot begin to mention prices. Fur Trimmings, all the latest novelties. Ornaments, etc., etc. ])11 e S g G 0 O d q - -~ e Also comple ete line of Plush Goods in Newmarkets, Cloaks. SPECIAL NOTICE! AL BL.OO 0B e i nest goods made. Sealskins have advanced 45 per cent. Wemade large purchases before the advance and offer & the best garments at the formsr gow prices. The advance would be $40 to $50 on each sacque. At 6 .3 evgsirh efiff%{-gfg, Di‘ggs 1’&?&:‘ sltslogr:slg FULL STOCK OF GARMENTS ON HAND. pattern in each piece. This week at $6.30 per pattern. 48-inch BLACK HENRIETTAS, three different E~rersr Crarrment Cruaranteed as Represented. ATt SO snaiities worth $1.25. 7 s pe. SEALSKIN AND PLUSH CLOAKS REPAIRED AT SHORT NOTICE. 9% Mail Orders Solicited. flhow HE\VON THE FAIR \VIDO‘V. of education and the surrounding com- | gossip Soon the stories became slang ]NCIDENTS OF THE ALTAR :):(lll\l\‘:ll' party leavencth the whole :?:A{;nll‘l:.l]?:sfiv‘}*g'n‘: they lay on a marble Mury‘“:(‘lltl m\‘i‘nr‘\)‘ ‘1:1“1:‘:::‘?3'::: "\‘:\'vh:mm'} munity ono wn-)-,n-lnw ml]mbimnu have | derous, I;unho .{.»um not be v,r:m;'ll oio il . had limited schooling. Ignorant peo- | heir author. A faction arose which 3 S “T'he winter's Tale” Mr. Dougherty sadly ple scem to have an inborn dislike for | ndeavored to get up & select school i Ah‘lmvrrl in & Fix. - ‘-"'"7 '_l”'ffl :0 ?l:\"({-‘ - ;vn. awinter's tale of the coldness of her The Valloy and Mountain Residents | those who are their superiors in natural | or a young man, and ruin the northern | Hits and Misses ot Various. Matrl - | Philadelphia Ledger: One Allen, of = Chicago Herald: Joscph Chamber | heart. talents and education. The following | womin’s business. The community R New York City,nfter visiting hissweet- | lain1s not the only oue in the world | Prenton has a pair of juvenile elopers. The adventures ol began to take sides, and the interest in- monial Ventures. heart in Rockland county, New York, who is willing to travel hfl\f‘r.l'll thousand | girl, who s the daughter of n wealthy mer~ A NORTHERN SCHOOL-MA’AM BRoAuBANLLE’ rapid rate. People living the other evening started for the house | Tile8 for a wife. - Mr. Moy Chung, of 10 | chant, is aged thirteen, and her companion g Chatham square. of ok, is about | but three years older. Ileearncd $4 a weolk ARKANSASTEMPEST IN A TEAPOT. | will serve to illustrate the matter. Sh in the valley, and belonging to the big | CUPID'S MARKET QUOTATIONS. ta S AR L Ll % ol T = was o widow with two children,and had | family before montionsd, 3 (lo"- Q of a l_nuul c'o spend the : emainder of | to start to far-off China to wed the girl pz‘;r:alth}‘r,lnx‘-l;n‘arn:‘*ltdu!rfx‘.c(.‘ hé‘}:‘r ‘\rzz{rlllt;l‘m"-rr : come from n'small town in northern | termined that the school ma'am should — the night. The two dwellingsareabout | of his choice, though she s not his third | S0 SE A Northern ‘School Ma'ams Bout with | Illinois. A land agent in this place [ go, while those residing in the moun- | Horoes and Heroines of Connublal | a mile apart, and Allen decided tomake | Choice, Venrs ago, when Moy Chung | 750 0 05 00 00 e aine the Scandalmongers and How | had induced her to take charge of a [ tains stoutly declared that she should | Eplsodes—Haps and Mishapsof the | & “short cut” across lots and through a | fjes & 1H1te boy, he v nrdon af Chang | ner. discovered o' small tin box n the ot She Galned the Victory—The hotel at ome of the lit- | remain. Both sides were about aqually Worildis Clent iams— AL FIago saed. A dog objected to the proceed- | Wi with the elies to X of the butter. It was opened and found te i M & Yy g Obj L Wi with the elaest daughter of that PEblARNEs Oaptaren tle ~ summer resorts that are | matched in numbers. It became ap- 2 ing and atiacked Allen the momont he o oite vemeed 2t | contain a “reminder to some unmarried ostiaster Captured. located at various points in the moun- | parent that something had to be done to and Divorce—Connublalities. tl Sy TThe brate was bonten LI G S L, the | christian gentleman of his duty.” The not —_— tains. He offered a house of fifte silence the slanderous tongues. The o bt ‘,o"muwd to worry Al {l“z“l‘:“‘: L:‘"l‘(‘:’d"l:“rf“l‘“'““dm‘:";’l‘(.: 2 ):’::5 n’:ifrom 'dn girl t‘mlhu‘en'vvm of age, goo ishel ' 55 SRt " vas aske: s ghter's hy ing @ ent. seke i) A Frontier Romance. rooms, furnished throughout, for 810 [ schoo! wus suspended. A lawyer was Married and Didn't Kuowslt. the owner of the property and his son | by Moy Chung, but the t\digen Nemis LRUCAO L I L £r RO ce. per month. She accepted the terms | called from Ozark by the northern New York Sun: Anollo Vivian Cas- | appeurcd, each carrying a revolver. | hinted at the fact that housckaeping. A Portland, Me., groom gota decidedly- OZARK, Ark., Nov. 20.—[Special Cor- [ moved into the hotel in the midst of | woman. In the consultation he said Sun: ¢ ORIy ot 115 b toi BE oo otn x| Dintsciatitiieilach thathosele spingre: ||| novel reception ou returning from his wed. respondence of Tie I Cousider- | winter with the intention of opening | the whole matter depended upon her | tellanos, a Cuban cigarmaker, has dis- [ (00 OF TGS SHC0 ~,amw“ - “}p‘i;'(f qmmllmuurv even n; (‘mr"“'h"“fl Moy glng‘u‘lp He was received with outstretch ablé interest is being aroused in this | the place for tourists in the suring. | gritand determination. Finally, after | covered to his surpriss that ho is mar- | Wil Siiiness havo you here? | manomld bt ot hor hana et ntl | e clersyimn ot orgators, ncluding part of thé country over the number of Th(‘u{mlmmfl) was one in “'l_ h ig- | meeting with considerable trouble, she [ ried to plump Susan Henry. Lastsum- | Going to steal some ~ of my | count in the Sing Wang bank Chang | Man gave acheck to a chum to pay all the exs bt ed Tari e iiea 'ag _ | norance was the prevaiiing discase, and | socured enough admissable evidence, as | mer they frequented a bath house at | chickens, were you? It is lucky for you 0 e penses of the marriage, but the chum, instead mproved farms ‘yot listed as home- | giic'docided to muke an effort to allevi- | ohe thoushnt, K Seeptaad rilee > you v for Wi would be both pleased and happy to | bensesof the. il stead lands. Some of the farmers have > conditi V- | she thought, to warrant the arrest of | the foot of Twenty-second strect, New | that the dog aidn’t eat you up.” I guess | become the father-in-law of Moy Chung. putting the mouey to its intended use, b ate the condition of the poor sufferers. | the male scandal-monger, before men- | o 200 P~ FETVEOORT FIECS TEY we will take you in charge until we can | Ty dec 7 the heurts of the | Weut off and had a ‘good time” with it. lived for over twenty years upon prop- | Thero was no public money to pay 4 | tioned. on the chargo of siander. The | York,and one day, while they were in | o000 “constable.” ‘The dog was | youthfel tovers. and: tenrs Toll on the | - At the marriage of Dr. William May and erty belonging to the government. In | regular teacher, so she decidéd to start | examination was set for an_carly date, | their bathing suits and he was sitting [ cijjoq off, and notwithstanding the ivf,:'ll’l’"""_‘;"‘cl'};‘""':ml},; o Moy tan }I:fi Miss Amy Draper in New York last week, somo instances trausfers have taken | 8 select school, with the tuition at 81 | and as the day drew nigh the interest | with his feet dangling in the water, he | young lover's protestations, ho was atory. One day Moy made a resolve to | Lo room went against all procadent by hay- = ey f 5 ? per month for each scholar. A canvass | became intense. Whel he day ar- | joking! g e stres take v i 5 s £ i ing a number of married men for ushers. place without the party of the fir Of the neighborhood resulted in socur- | tied both furtions wore orasont 13 fail | Jokingly asked the poprictress of tho | takou hold of by the farmer and his son | seek a fortunc wmong the occidentals. | Whon expostulated with he very simply and having apy legal right to - | ing cnough scholars to afford her n | force dotormined to see fair play. Many | SUhIng establishmentto marey him to | aud fed fnto the, kitehen, Tho re | Thore wasa snd purtingvowsof cterval | seriously explained; “They are my best Othees, principally wealthy men living ° écmfortablo livelihood. Besides this | of the mon wero armed, and it would | Susil. Mrs. Overpoek told them to | SERERR T HC RN (7 REC MRS | constancy uttered in the cholocst, Chi | ienis Can b no v e e bt g in this place or in the vicinity, have s6- had several bourders. Among the | have required but a small start to | Join hands, and then said: SHurElariie hen(the farmersiwite;wiol| momy g inen] Moyisatlod By | Tie | amtcrasyl to ot CARATIS was a\vory Tasus cured ront for tracts of land for which EUests nt her hotei was o littleold bach- | have oreated o free-for-all fight. A | “Doyou take this woman to be your | pad met young Allen, recognized him, | ooy ive yeurs ago. He came to thiscity | {00 bl Vidding, too. they have'nover-oven paid the home- L‘llor, wlhu was- the lord and saster of | host of witnesses were on hand, thus | lawful wedded wife?” In n fow moments the whole matter was :wl;;o:m ‘tstsnul:lxi‘s):l:g:‘v: is n!{ 10 L‘i):x[h:\‘;;; William Huntley, the young man who ran stead fee theonly siorerinitbe placs. By virlue.j randering the procesdingilong iandite: | I lido, understood, and the members of the | Square. Love nerved the youth to high | #W8y with a girl named Hrown from the 0 s e : of his position as the only storckeeper | dious. Liitle by little, and with many And do you take this man to be your | family insisted on Allen remaining with A6aT 1 within a year he was | ©0W0 of Maine, and who was caught the next The fancied socurity of these “squat- for miles around. he “had securcd | vexatious interruptions, tha slanderous | lawful wedded husband?! them'the rest of the night, which he | genceal manager. cnshier and. inter. | 48V by the girl's father and unmercifully ters is somctimes rudely’ disturbed. the appointment of postnaster. Con- | stories were traced to n common soures 1 do.” consented to do, > R S At He wae | Pummeled, ran away with the ssme young Now and then a keen-witted individual #equently the little bachelor was a man | —the widow who lived by the store. Al- | *‘Then you are man:and wife. % preter for the estabiishment. He was | woman a'fow days agoat Fergus Falls, e c d BOTHO R ot Ga Rt b X A NOYALeLE EX R ? q h ¢ un- R prudent, and every year Moy Chung [ Minn., and went up into the woods of Star who is coghizant of the -facts and pos- po % it I e neighbor- | though the schoolma’nm failed to win LLL"‘Y‘”"""‘ wasTmavied thal un, omance and T““‘"" was a gainer by $5,000. All this while | lake. "This time Brov vowed that he Tus. & hood. i8 ()\(“4\‘\0!1 always exci CASH S| Pares r o) o y C i s SaRL YV stead a nice farm upon_which consider- soemed 1o have bueh selectod tosoutle the | beeame quiet, shound. the. Hitle. poct: | brought up before Judgo Morgan. who | smarsny fom ot | ten-chest chars “, s on ,"}“,,""”",“;“ 41 | Who' tooke hian 0. Porham, where ho wak able improvement has been made. The momentuous questions that would now | master wero married. They live hap- | held that the marriage was valid, and came to Chicago morc than a | i ‘missives counily 'u“,,d;’,“fl‘" “this | bound over to the grand jury. original sottler can only elaim pay for und then createun argumentamong the | pily in the big hotel,” while those who | ordered the Cubrn {0 pay his wils 8 p | yearngzo with a crowd af patont. medic | S e cnmay Wi Joritobee i Sing the improvements. He must compon- | DaUVes: were once so eager to drive the school- | week, and *not to foget it.” ne venders. Ho called himself “Hole- | Wing. All was going along smoot EDUCATIONAL. sate the homestender for the land or | A widow occupicd a dwelling near by ( ma’am out of the country, now strive to A - in-the-Day.” He made his headquar- | when & now trouble Srose thut thre it the store, who, if Dame Rumor was cor- | sccure her favor. Such is human nature Matrimonial Confusion. ters in the city, but alarge part of his | aned disastrous results, Chang Wi | Dr Leland iiller of Sheflield, Mass., has R B hi .| rect. had moved there for the purpose | and such is life in this odd old state of | St. Louis Globe-Democrat: - **Many | profitable business he secured by muk- | whe the father of another danshter, | EiVen #0,000 to Williams college to establish As way be supposed, this ontin- | of winning the postmaster for a hus- | Arkan amusing incidents are mat with by & Ing excursions uto the coun et b P e e el ona Hin{AmerioauRnistor s litor wally ceusing trouble. Several years | band. But that influential little gen- PRIN SUN DAY LAW in the verformauce of rites [ tary to Chicago. One day last summer, | fiances of® Moy Chung. . She, like her | c2ue"e ®goz man named Dacus, who, by the | tleman ignored the good things so near | The poople of this country are deter- aid a reverend gentle- | when the Indians were encamped in the | giiter. was o beauty: and when iyoung, | o 1owa college ionens the newcolloge year: way, was the author of one of the num- | At home and sought the company of the | mined to have an outward semblance of he writer. It was not long | northwestern partof the city, Christina | Quong Loi met her he fell in love With | my ons Vime oo aants ffan cyer belore ot erous nisworics of the Jumes and | northernschoolma'sm. Bolnga north- | morality on Sunday, even " if they can- sinco I was called fo officiate at d i Scbmidt, & Gorman maiden whose | Ber at first sight. They became on- | of whom ara in the coliege Younger boys. homesteaded & splendid | €F7 man himself he wasatways welcome. { not induce “other sinners” to seok after | 4ing Which was impromptu. home is at 55 Burlington street, | gaged, and were happy until old Chang 5 ounger boys, homesteaded a splendid | {o would plov d 3 e C L T A tomanai i altons fBoverali{risidsEa Mr. A. L. Barber, class of 1567, has given 0 e would play dominoes with the the genuine articles. There are some | Vited groo Py and several friendshappened along that | {7 suddenly remembered that, nccord- farm occupied by Mr. Sisk. The latter | dren and sit up till the littl r AL & 2 £ neighbor was asked to as s wa Pretty Christina ith her el £3,000 to the Fairchild professorsbip fund of 3 bt e little ones got ringent laws for woel day observance. o ¥ hristina, with her r hines " daugh y A et TR | e i A & stringent laws for weel day observance, e e e aalenal e, anlag ing to Chinese law, the younger daugh | Oberlin college, conditioned on the comples ad built a nice houso uvon the land, | sleepy. They would b put to bed, then | buy thoso that govern the - Sabbath | COUPle both having been married, were | rounded checks and flaxen hair, made & | e could not enter the motrimonial | Son of the fd o £ besides otherwise improving it. When | the postmaster would ¢ domine»s | g, s g | anxious to get out of town to avorda | decided impression upon the young | giate Stihorialde 5 5 v ['s cith pla) are doubly so. Some of them s D hetemer 78 CTIEs e S DS A ! state until after her elder sister had be be heard of the move made by Dacus, | With the school mi'am Gll far toward | aro considored simply riduculous. A | churivari. - Thoomergency groomsman | Sioux, His attentions were so marked | como a wife. Then Quong Loi wrote to pedsclazedltietibay otlahob vield pon midnight. This was kept up until it | popson is positively” prohibited from | Was verdant, and grew so embarrassed that Christinaan turn lost heart. Be- | Moy Chung, be: seching him to return X ) began to e e considerable interest g y Lges 3 v | that he completely upset the nerves of | forelong**Hole-in- lhu»l)u\ 'was wearing 3 ¢ the de i 3 AT T et ; playing any kind of game on Sunday Blelyar [ 3 at once and marry the maiden of hi seisionwithoubi Ount Shelcours wisi andiouctosit for musement. This jncludes croquet, | the bri desmaid, “She had two tasks on | on his tinger Christina’s gold ring. and | cj Moy was in a dilemma. Hero | Obio to Which e Just_bec sppeaiod to, and bofore the matter was | rhe other widow, meanwhile, was let- | marble -mumblepog, jack-straws, arde! | her mind—one, to arrange her bustle, | he had given her a tin-type of himself, New York making 85,000 a | Several petitions have been pr setled Mr. Sisk hac oulletl hole iy it 2 IaE L ot Mo e 2o & ety of other ine | the other, to fasten a bouquet to the | which made him look quite fierce and | year. with o prospect of - ine his decision is awaited with conside rable through his body, while his house bore | o510 Vent her feelings sought the : 2 l‘hmeui fine for rid. | groomsman’slapel. She got these mixed | warlike, as he grasped his trus le in g the amount every year, | UXiew: themarks of cold lead. Auother case oc= | woinpuny of other women. There | i o past & house in gallop on | AP ber mind, and pinned the bouquet | his hands. Heoften slipped away from he resigned his position and |, “'So far we find that undergraduate women curred th 1 in which eighty acres of | A iddle-aged souple i 3 RS S e e 1 P first on her bustle and then tore it im- [ his dusky comrades and went to see the | y, ac! < (i have the necessary ability to grasp the sub- ey ¥ 2 a mi 1gred couple in | Sunday or for shouting or yelling. ¥ ¢ A A 2 went back to China he would have to ele Neolledars i1 improved land passed from the hands of | (" o onmunity who consoled . her s patiently off and pinned it to his coat | paleface maiden at her home. *‘Hole- | yoi b the provpective wealth. If | iects presented in tho college course,” says w non-rosident into the possession of a | 4o COTM o, fonemes. her MAKING TIE BEST OF IT. tuil. They upset the furniture and [ in-the-Dny,” howcver, loved firewater, | ha vemained heve fone hunrts wouid be | Arhr Gilman in the secretiry’s annial re- er. The latter had rentes £ ce L J gl it (o o B YL 5 ridec il ol DRt ) 3 LR Loxy cre s port of the society for the collegiate instrue- poor 'l::l.‘{n .‘ll ‘l\umlltu;.( 1‘51111“,.:'.‘1 l\ll".h‘" northern school ma’am was a ba Although peopie have Fte"dw‘mlfl) tripped the bride while adjourning to | just as his ancestors did beforo him. | gud, Ho thought it all over, and love | tion of women, miore wencrally known 45 the g » o AEE | poster, and that she ought to be run | eXercised over the alleged stolen | the parlor. : This grieved Christina exceedingly. | riumphed. *Yes,” he said, “I am | Harvard anncx. “They exhivit great dili- in the _count A lunch had been providedon atray | She had a German's love of home and | yoing' back to China next month to ric; they do ot break down aying his rent he discovered that the | 570 ihe commu Ly . hallot boxes 1 ) © inity. The man was | ! S ADOXCE i Jaed Wolongad to Unolo Sam. —Thove- asplendid male gossip, while his wife | immediately ~south, thoy had time | close at hand. and when I asked for the | would not ugree to become the Sioux’s | juurry the girl of my choice.” Moy burden’ of a rational amount of upon he put in a cluim and sccured the & big sinner of that sort among |t enthuse _over the presiden- | ring the assistant memly handed me | bride. ‘‘Hole-in-the-Day™ re by | Chung is a dapper little fellow. He property. women. Al were cqually ignovant, | titl election. ®Reliable election news | a biscuit. iz his mistake, for want | the Great Spirit that he Honldineyer dressed in & nobby suit of the latest the board of Au old resident of the county saved | /o c G malicious, and man :ould not be obtained until late in the | of a better pl he awkwardly put the [ drink firewater again. For many moons | ¢ nd wore a derby. Ho said that | New Y. ls for $1,108, l)ufa home by chance. He had | 00500 e consultations the week, I thi 't of the state there is | muflin in the groom’s pocket, took the | he kept his word, and both he and ¢ had cavefully weighed all the ques- 5 & 00 AR ALk ived upon o mountain farm for aquar- | "8 e quite'n sprinkling of republicans. In | ring from his mouth and handed it to | Christina were happy. Abouta month | tions in the . and had made up his ;e school ‘“‘,*"*v‘, 0005 the bride, at the sume time pouring a | ago some one gave him a bottle of red | mind to go to China, Would he return | ok {insuticn without sceuring a = a % .| oue voting precinet of the county an in- ght, A friend cailed | Presently vague stories began to cir- | torosting ‘neident oceurred Saturday | glass of wine from the bottle at hand [ liquor. He forgot Christina. He for- | afger his marriage? Certainly. Ho ; A s sl iti i ' rs, fur- and told him that un- | culate in the neighborhood concerning | evening succeeding the election. A | into a dusty picce of lovely Scvres | got the Great Spirit. He wanted to | was an Amer Sitizank mowi and v T going to homestead | the school ma‘am. = As is often the case | yyion lnbor man furnished one anvil, a a. Perspivation stood ouf in great | fight, and in Southworth’s saloon, 185 | could return to this country with his 7 W05 corporate 1d gentleman got up at | in remote regions there was a widely | Goemocrat another, while the republi- s on his forchead, and as soon as [ North avenue, he undertook to execute | hpide. Mr. Chung will sail about two | 5chools, §102.000; 1 5 for workings midnight and y saved his hiome by | extended network of relationship exist- | cans supplicd the posder. ~Every tim seremony was performed he looked | a war danceon themangled and blooded | weels hence, men, §10,000. beating his opponént into the court among the people in this purticular | an explosion shook the ground the en- = ) envelope in his hand containing | remuins of the bartender, Holesin-the- st Bouse on the following morning. Dis- They were clanish to'an unren | tire crowd would yell for Harrison. my fee, broke the scal,and, I guess, | Day was thrown out of door . R Among the popular colors aro rush and lultluulwrfl”n\llhl' ownership ot prop- -3"]"‘ nhatene believed SIDNEY GREGG. | thinking either that ho had earned it | two wee vas heard of him, Sk % geraniumn leat o Mricane,a neutral erty are linble to occur at any moment, 4 inbly did n en hat it was intended for him, putitin | T 7, 8 inded ( T = buy | amber-gr ¢ brown of a rich ws thero seems to be_considerable “ime dividual member of the big fam- NS R TR e e B e R s B o o A it o onrey | Eolden tint; vieux vert, an old, dull grecn; " homestead land in this part of mmon enemy of them all. | Gurard college was the first institution os- | velopo and fled. Tho couple missed the | tears and sighs, that she knew ho had | furmine tome, comnitted suede, verdiora beauk (Ul roldon eroon fos ey el anens, is fiot long vefore the school | tablished on alarge scale for the purpose of | {r4in by the‘delay, and when the noise | been killed. To-duy his body was found | [n g suit for divorce i St. Lous the plain | mebal e landaom calon for toa o s Occassonally northerners meet with o | ma'din begun to detoct, by the actions | manual instruction. ~ Another Philadelphin | of dozensof inharmonious instruments | floating in the river at the North ave- | (ff. Mrs Attty Hiere. testiicd that her hus | b0 luatogany. s rich brown 1o the 13 ood deal of opposition when they en- | of her acquaintances and the inhume illionaire proposes to imitate Mr. Girard |y .0100"he happy couple’s slumbers that | nue bridge. His face had been horribly | band once pawned ber wedding dress for a | marck shade of other duys: etrusque, @ BeRNet (b hatle in thie part of the |able stories which came to her in fr d found an institution for the education oF | ight I believe the groom would almost | disfigurcd by a propeller’s wheel, but by | drink of liquo ol ahado betwoen gold and tans e, @ ) Y rich feather color; saurienne, o moss green; stato. This is more apt to be the ease | ments, that she and the postmaster amount to be st apart for this purpose | have shot the groomsman. A little | Christina’s narrow band of gold on the | The course of true love never did run o when the settler happens to be a person ! were being made the subject of much aid o be $5,000,000. ven of embarrassment let loose in u ' dead Sioux’s little finger, the remains b smooth, Mr. Dougherty, who is in love with § and occante, a dull red HOSPE'S + SPECIAL - PRIGES - ON ~ ART - GOODS! JUST THINK OF IT! |BIG CUT ON EASELS' ETCHINGS ARTISTS’ A Picture, in slsgant frame, BAMROD EASELS, worth $2.08, any. - ".......... $1.00 | AND ENGRAVINGS. MATERIALS. aRxBO T BAMBOO EASELS, large size, worth $6.00, now ... .. $2.25 ¥ apzestatock swest of @hicaso at i ol GRS PR SR A fine Picture, 22x28. for OAK EASELS, formerly $9.00, mow - .- - .- ... $6.00 " 4 . A oAl ’ publisher’'s prices on Parchment. | Paints, Brushes, Placques, Panels, Arty 80O subjects to aslect from, BRASS EASELS, formerly $15, now.-...... ... $8.00 Satin Japag Holland and India |ists’ Painting Outfits in Oil and Water A fine Oil Pamtmg, in heavy gllt $ 1 7 5 FINE ROPE BRASS EASELS, 01y A $5.00 Paperi AlSO’ Etchings on print Colors, Pastell or Crayons. frame, foronly . Easels in Bronze, Silver and Gilt, from . Decorative articles for oil and water $1.50 upwards. paper, ranging from $1 upwards. | cojor painting at reduced prices. An elegant Chromo. . frame, only ans(f'gfi: ;{:ng?s';:Efcrzggobgigféogfig Water GColors and- Oleograph at Studles for painting from 10c and ups - & great reductiors. Frames in gilt, hardwood, bronze, Look atour 22x28 Photographs made to order at one-thlrd under any " fine subjects, for................ $| Each competition. 10,000 subjects to select from. white and gold, at lowest prices. A.HOSPE, Jr., 1513 Douglas Street. -~ Prices for This Week Only. -- Call and See. in a Turmoll. e —

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