Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 9, 1888, Page 13

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o ~ - =y 5 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUN _ DECEMBER 9, 1888 —SIXTEEN PAGES, @ <> <> STORE NUMBER 1+=2-/BROWNING, KING & CO. > D <@ <> STORE NUMBER > N>@<t> £ The Stronghold for Reliable Clothing At Manufacturers Prices. You will Find it will Pay to Buy Your Clothing Direct from First Hands, We are the Largest Manufacturers of Fine Clothing in the World. ' And by Purchasing of Us You Save all the Profits of Middle Dealers, And Get at all Times the Lowest Prices---One Price. All Goods Marked in Plain Pigures. - BROWNING, KING & CO. Largest Manufacturers and Retailers of Fine Clothing in the World. E SIS HPRIAD S. W. Corner 15th and Doug‘las‘F Sts., - - - Omaha, Neb. fstorr NUMBER OB O U< OB FANCIES FOR WOMEN FOLKS. ‘Wise and Foolishish Achievements of the Fair Sex. PULLED THE DENTIST'S TOOTH. Wanted tobe Artistand Ran Away in Male Attire—The Story of Two Women—Women's Clubs and their Success. A Palpable Hit, Detroit News. Mo the congress marched the women and filled the rustling church, And not a man could there be found with- out the strictest search. There were women in the organ loft and women in the aisles, In the gallories, on the platforms were wo- men’s plumes and smiles, There were women in the corridors and women at the door; Such o multitude of women was never seen before; Still at the ample entrance they jostled by the score; ‘While up the street with twinkling feet came several hundreds more, “That tatl gird's from Nebrasky,” an old lady to1d tho bard— That tall girl from Nebrasky hit the poet mighty hard. He said to her ““For heaven's saké, aro there no men about!” And liex cool,insouciant answer quite knocked the poot out. 4T guess,” she drawled as she looked o’er his hrinking mother's son, xquisite inflection, *' guess that there o Fuli softly to a corner the poet's footsteps crept— In the langnage of the prize ring, *‘She hit him, and he slept.” Ran Away in Male Attire. New York World: Miss Laura Ritter, a young woman dressed in male attire, was arrested on the streets of St. Louis a fow nights ago, and now it turns out that she is a farmer’s daughter, and lives near Springfield, Mo. She is something of an artist, and attended Drury college, at Springfield, where she captured all the prizesin the art department. She aspired to new kon- ors, and begged her father to send her to the St. Louis art school. This he was not able to do, and she ran away, dressed in a suit of her brother’s clothes, and with $0 of his money. She walked three miles one night to the railroad station and reached St. Louis without being detected, Her intention was to secure work in a photograph zl\llcrg and attend the art school evenings, but she tramped the streets all day visiting photographic alleries without getting a situation. glm ulso tried groceries, bakeries and barber shops, with no better success. She says that at home she used toshave her two brothers and cut their hair. The young woman will be held for her father, She is a Rosa Bonheur in make-up, Her hair, which is cut short, is raven-black, and her eyesarcof a grayish-brown. Dark trousers, a col- ored gingham shirt, a black slouch hat, o di sack coat, much too large for her slender frame, and & pair of large heavy shoes, which seemed too great a welght for her little {oot to carry, made up her attire. She wore neither collar nor tie, In conversation she displayed consid- erable intelligence, but back of it all there was strangeness of manner Pos- siblyiit was the influence of her peculiar posi . Her mauia is ars, and she seems willlng to do anything to perfect berself in that line, "While in jall she ot costumes, whether for summer, winter seas ide or for traveling. er, the finest of china, linen noticed some prisoners being taken | peeping from behind news papers,feath | enjoy the perquisites that are now tho | and the tiler, who was on the lobby or | —solid silve through the jail, and remaled: ors, furs aud contentedly occupicd fem- | common preperty of every-day police- | landing on 'which opened the doors | for the tables and bed chambers, el ORI ySL of RO i mioat 1sa gooi Eubiact fov/w sketoh? | {ninity. men. i : both of the lodge-room and that where | gant furnishings in_the parlors and | Women's new couts are either vory lonk or Sho was handed a sheet of paper and in | The Somerville club is the best known | After having been in service for a | the voung lady was, gave the alarm, | fairly good in the private parts of the | Yory shorl. | Who pytlos of Hos MEEOT0C afoew moments had made a clever rep- | of women's clubs in London. Its dues | brief time she will find out that letters | burst open the door, uml._ with a light house. ~ The private dining room is on | j.qqgor else ave cat quits short at the back Fostn tationT ot bhelHoBneY are still only $2.50 a yout, and it mom- | intended for married women are mailed | in one hand and 'a sword in the | tho first floor, just across the | Gid'a fow inchos lon ger in front. bership includes the duchess of Ports hly‘tlho i40|lll!l%l'sb84l as S“-’]‘i‘-’o'(ill‘{lzil"g ?f}'f, ‘:l‘l:l){’lv\ru«l”!:) the terrificd inlul' 31,3;1_1 {_rum] the ,-lmue' dining Foorn There The Story of Two Women, mouth, Lady Gray and a number of ti- | the husband’s absence, and she will also | fanting lady. e w soon joined by | This is the only room on the [ yo0-y0a0rd of school commissioners. Mrs. Globe-Democrat: Two stories of | tled folk, with Mrs. Millicent Garrett | learn the motives of the reputable busi- | the members of the lodge present, and t floor used by the fumily of the [ Aynew and Miss Grace H. Dodge have bean beautiful women appear at the same | Fawcett, Francis Power Cobbe, Lady | n¢ss man who has his private corve- | luckily, forit is asserted that but for dent. The parlors are used for | on the board some time, but recently a third time. One is from Chicago, and she | Harberton, Dr. Elizabeth Garrett An- [ Spondence addressed to the pluce wiere | the prompt appearance of her brother, Land the entire family or “living” | lady, Mrs. William G. Rice, has been clected took to the fashionable plan’ of secret | derson, as well as a contingent of med- | he buys his cigacs. Lord Doneraile, and other cool mem- | rooms are on the second floor. There | toa membership. mon on the New are now three cigarette smoking, and now is a beauti- | ical students, young literary women, There isno end to what might be | bers, her life would have fallen a sacri- | ave, perhaps, half a dozen of these, The practice of American trades women ful idot; the other'is a San Francisco | bookkeepers umls-lf—dcpendéntwomcu learned by v fice to what was then estecemed her | s C a sitting room or two | who organize themselves into protec tive as- furnished its rooms | When once initiated into the busine: crime. Finally the matter to the circular “library room,” | sociations ons seoms to ho galning woman, who took a sponge bath every | of all kinds., It ha morning, and a four-mile walk after | in the prevailing aesthetic taste. It lunch. The latter is the mother of two | has its shelves filled with a formidable children, and although thirty, looks [ array of books and subseribes to a long like eighteen. Moral for the ladies: { list of papers and magazines. It ar- They will also have the advantage of | promised by initiating the lady in the | where the president sits during his | ground everywh A very largo soci getting all their own mail direct from | mysteries of Freemasonry, and from | business and working hours,and soveral | this kind has just been foruied among the hands of Uncle Sam himself, as it | that time women became cligible to the | handsomely furnished bed rooms and [ factory givls of Vieuna. y were, and if an internecine war among | ovder. dressing rooms. An elevator carries ‘Thc‘mer} in fl\lr (4 [:‘lt:(_«'t:}!:‘;:nr:t':zlewg: 1f you wish to preserve your youth and | ranges a regulur program of lectu the carriers thomselves could be Life in the White House. the family down-stairs nt meal time, | fbo, Soan S0 & Rk TEL TR0t benuty, take Tong walks and regular | and debates for the winter, and tea is | averted the gitls might own the town, |y e % g linel: ™ Peraps Iy | 224 When they go down for othor pur- | s cars or down over tho cape, and - the flat baths; but let cigarettes and other silly d to any members who happen in | They would “own it to such un extent | Milwaukeo aps lady i K f 5 ses if they desire it; as o rule they | poa completely covers the chest, hanging fashions alone. The Chicago woman fternoon at 4. The real life of the | that in a comparatively short space of | readers "“'"'2’.?.,.1.:.‘:"“?,"”lfi,"2,“,'.4"”,'{",;',‘,'.':'."'.?: vall up and down the broad, easy and | down below the Kneos. hg has, however, the most imitators and | club is in these informal droppings in. | time the mailservice would be practic- | OL Lis eXpel ORI rison | luxuriously carpeted stairs and through - followers, and tha San Francisco woman | In one corner they are discussing | 811y erippled, and the postmaster would | Will huve when she veaches Washing: | ¢he handsome and al turactive cor- SINGULARITIES, ton as of the president. e o D annrondant. ) ridors which lead th to the dining has the most admirers. There s no | Buddha, in another bonnets. The Som- | have so little confidence in his carriers ! Vi i reason why a beautiful woman should | erville has a wider range. that he would be obliged to deliver his 1 and parlors on the first floor A piano manufacturer in New York named T atters, even i lve ing apparel and move into a house com- > L ek be beautiful till sixty. b prary 8 avea c own letters, even if they were to go out | In& ipparel L | ady, for | Anton Dull fell through the elovator shaft of Aobe e e qutl(:::fixa:zllsmml"t i:vfllxzmlhri\l'\cim;h:?l of town. pll-u-{\' furnished and filled with beds o +d is able f(, re- | his establishment from the fifth to the first She Fulled the Dentist’s Tooth. Bond street is practically, though > T and """"“"rz "l".“'j' il ""j‘u_‘.‘i'l'i“]‘l- 10 misiress of the white houso of | floor. Inorediblo as it may soem Le was #04 New York World: A novel election | not profess limited to authors and How Women Becoma Masons, O AnC oo g LtensL s of Wiia | all the caros of housekeeping—if he is | 1aJarec. ot w0s i 3l Paso, T rofossi Yome! is-| New York Worl 'he publication | OF ty of these huve to be brought along aid for i A “Jumbo” jawbone has been exhumed bot was paid at Bl Paso, Toxas, a few | professional women. It attracts a vis The p or provided aftor she gots thore? Thip | WoL Paid for it ot Sambot Jalhonospins shobe OKBIE days ago. A fow weeks before election | itor by its cheery open fires. of this story that women have osti SViofts 5 e vo foat fr 3 ke s a democratic dentist was operating upon | The Bloomsbury club takes in women [ been allowed * to ~peer ~behind the | 18 & ubestion vers ofton nsked and with HONEY FOIl RAH LADINS T LR I the ivories of the wife of a leading re- | fond of out of door life and gets up club | Yeil = of ' mystery which envelopes | /L £5 uchmen and w i s e e long and threo feot wide. The grinders are publican of this city. A discussion led | walks and_country trips the season | F'reemasonry husnow added new intc he Tosca stick gains favor siowly. and & hall inches above the other to n wagor, the torms of which were | through. It has a fine gymnasium and | s6to the legend thut once on a time a [ 095t of and puyment for the - nec that if Cloveland wero elected tho lady | women practice there daily. 1t has a | Woman was initiuted into the order. [n [ bhe KILEROR B GInRE = Om, o should return to the dentist for more | good billiard room. the offico of the grand sccretary of the | 184 carious lads tant Al the cabing dental work, while if Harrison was vic- |~ There are several good clubs for men | Grand lodge, 1 the Musonic temple, | 52 &68 TREERACT VLT BOTRCS Gt Bk torious the dentist agreed to allow the | and women jointly, asthe Albemarle | hangsan oil painting ofa woman dressed | Fluges at @ ) ¢ 1 for under- Surah has goue out as a mat ‘The hinge of the jaw is twenty inches wear, Round hats as well as bounets bave low A curious scene, a Maine ox change, crowns, “was that of o t zoro morning on the plonel Ham farm, in Lewiston. The pro- Iady to oxtract one of his (tho dentist’s) | and Junior Denison. London women | in Masonic regalia. [t was presented to [ the president 18 not. ' The cabinet Pis =-Diarotsll holds Il onra a8 0n8 of the fa) inor s ont hayie, o had over two e e P SR i itary | Colonel Ehlers, and is a portrait of | cers are furnished horses, carriagesand el dee . . acros to out, and bencath the riog of the companlied by some frionds, went to the | ness, and married women for the chance | legend. Shoissaid’to huve reccived | government expense, ~If the presidont | RAnOIOLNE. 0 b b0 0 oL | 8 worth putting down. dentist’s office to claim the wager. | of meeting and drinking tea with girl- | 4bout the year 1735 the first and second | Wantany of theso thingsho must, sup= | o 05 S0 0RG. i e An encougter hotwaon i kingAshor quds B § 3O - " L degrees of Freemasonry in Lodge No., | ply. . them self, ero is a i K 3 5 < bass ook pluce near Orlando, Fla, {\.:xu}xer !lv“‘)d(‘l:"'i:;"{ifliliznilr)lttzlle 8pe0 ho od friends. 4 Doanraile Tratons i e cum. | stable _near tho white house, atleavy veils are much worn, to the detri- | Pno fight was provokod by the kingfisher. ators seomed | \at the lady £ S SE paer LIT & Doneralle, Iroland. Tho oivoum- | YOS GBR, G0 o' 0o, MUl | montof oyes wnd of hoalsh, Tt sunic ita talons into tho biss, intonding to would really claim the forfeited tooth, h 8t I Eiderdown petticoats are quite popular and | carry tho fish off, but the task was too great, but as sho showed an_inclination to do | Philadelphia Record: It has been | lished in Cork in 1507, and it is | Plen ‘14-?.&'3'1;': for. "s‘"‘;g*l‘l';{; bub GVery | will bo much worn this season. and, as the bird could not frec itself, the 50 the dentist adjusted his chair, took | whispered, faintly but clearly, that the | claimed that they were substantiated I"\'Jd ORYNR S fhickss M o J"]‘:”’ A The long, round boas have given way in | bass found little trouble in drowning it. his seat and pointed outthe molar which | pestal service may be reorganized under | by an eye-witness to the ceremony, | And o ; olls a horse or ony, | Paris tothe bous with flat end Mrs. Robert Owen of Poultney, Rutland O hil to (ill it. Whoever sells a h riage to the president of the United States expe to get about 25 per cent Ve h recently o and two girls, The healthy and robust, Her es will be | county, Vt. dren-—two alive, and It is said that white cloth d much worn in Paris this winter, lounces, both od and plain, a he proposed to sacrifice, the new administration, First comes | Subsequently they appeared ~ in The lady seized her forceps, where- | the rumor of the discharge of many let- | a memoir published by Spencer, the upon her female companions all fled | carriers, and then follows the startling | celebrated Masonic biblopole, in Lon- from tho room, Sho fastened tho for- | roport that the servers of mail nve t bo | don. Mrs. Aldworth, nee Elizibeth st, | more for it thas ho would if he sold it { worn upon oo dressy costumes, hoxs (ldoas, ohild la giaan MoAthR: ke, cops upon the tooth and gave a pull, | replaced in part by petticonted femule | Leger, was the youngest child and only | Sisewhere. ~Of coprse prosident [ Bonnots made up iu_dark greon velvey, | GUen s Ewave qhidirep, o oldgst belug fl i) with copper ornaments, ure tylish ter Intland gave birth o twins Novem several honses, Whether Genéval Ha e nr imaniin s e an s rison will bring any with him or buy | yeliow color is gaining grownd in New The forcepsslipped off. Then the den- | letter carriers, This is an urp.xlling daughter of the first Viscount Donc tist told her she must give the forceps | prospect, und the possibilities of trouble | of Ireland. The lodge in which she ber 18, 1556, and birth to anotl bor 14, 1333, gava a little twist, instend of merely pulling | for unwary young men and frisky old | was initiated was an_aristooratic lodge them is not kuown. Possibly he will e DU e R at the tooth, and he showed “her how. | 1nen seem’ to be limitless. consisting principally of the gent .16 QU SO, 0\ S Waat (1l iadtat Again she grasped the tooth, gave tho'| Imagine girls toddling around the | and most respeethble and wealthy in- }:!"L-}H'l'.;‘;“‘ Pl :fi:.:i"»'.'f.l ‘:‘h‘“"’}“lf‘j',“-;“{f 98- | ara worn, magiug loose frow U frout of the Yass Quesier: requisite twist and pull, and, tothe | stroets carrying bags and bundles of | habitants of the country around Done- virod was vorched astonishment of the onlookers, she held | letters. Imagine the awful possibilities, | raile. The ! communications were the tooth up before them. and also the great advantages that will [ usually held in the town, but during — be thrown in their way, Kvery time a | the mastership of - Lord Doneraile, Women's Clubs, vencrable business man, who has grown | brothor of Mrs. Aldworth, the meet- | b Philadelphia Times: The talk of a | gray during the years he has served as | ings were held; at Doneraile house, his club house for women in New York | deacon and a dutiful husband, shall get | residence. Spencer relates this story is huving its periodie revival. It will [ a little square envelope, daintity | of the affair: | come to nothing. There is no organi- | scented, the female lettar carrier would *‘It happened on this particular oeca- zation in the city with energy enough | wink a sly wink and the venerable mer- | sion that the lodge was held in a room to shoulder such a project. Fuglish | chant would be obliged to hand over a | separated from another by stud and women have shown themselves thus | dollar at least or take a trip outof | brickwork, ‘Fhe young lady being far more clubbable than their Ameri- | town. If he should not scttle up the fe- | giddy and thoughtless, determined to can sisters, There are two or three [ male letter carrier might go and inter- | gratify her curiosity,and made arrange- women’s clubs in London which | view his wife. In this way the young | ments accordingly. With a pair of embody most of the features over which | girl of to-day may secure a brilliant | scissors—as she herself related to the And he need not after he gets through his teem in the xpect much of them There 18 a decidad tendency to dress ch y feet from the I . A o from Ove Lo twvelve seary [a Giresnay ground. T'ho “'sly one” rushed at o lad who white house either, for Washington | gowns. attempted to dislodge v, and afterward avements are hard on horses, as Prosi- [ Long sealskin cloaks « ving away to | jumped over him to the grotind and made off. ent Cleveland’s big seal-browns show. | the short scalskin ja I'he Louis XV | Tt was finally run down by the hounds and The president is also obliged to furnish | J8cket i also in voguc killed. The animal will be stuffed inasmuch his own driver. Albert Hawkins, a big One of the novelties mhosiery has a Van- | as it is thought to be thoonly fox over caught colored man whom Grant brought here | dyke point on cach side formed of combimng- | in Chester county which ~had climbed & bofore he bocame president, s still | 1038 0f LT ST S ‘”\"V' : . i r vhite 50, 48 ns ablia are somowhat 1ORE! i h @ discovere: y :1“.:‘.“:," at the whit +-1gHE0, & “"l 'f‘“ Lave been of late. A tendency to velvet | Gaines, Guorgid, ¢ it, What to us 2 "{ bl s ]”’ 4 \‘)- and wil collars is to be observed in the bodices, was ind a curiosity. \ veritable probably ) ngaged by Mr, Harrl- Masculine-looking tailor-made costumes | rain tree, At?2o'clock on s Thursday, be son, but if he does it will be at s own | ywith double-breasted badices und man's col | neath a cloudless sky, itwas in active irriga- expense, for the government does not | jar ana scarf, are still worn in London, tion, and again on Sunday, near the same pay Albert hour, we visited it under similar civeum- - s and found it still doing business at air is worn very high over th ), New Yorkers argue. The is no | future for herself. mother of our nformant—she removed Inside the white house Mrs. Harrison if the brow in 'r-:ul'l London, 'I'y stund, The tree stands about ploasantor way of geMing rid of au | The female letier-carrier will also bo | a portion of a brick from tho wall, and | ill fiud employes waiting 10 bo ro-on- | s & tendency to 8 revival of the catogun, se naido of tho cematary: hete afternoon 1n London than by spending [able to utiiize her position in other | placed herself so as to command a full | gaged and paid for their services, The | A v o the park, We not. botanists it at the Victoris club, whose house on | directions. I1f her fellow should open | view of everything which occurred in | steward, who hus charge of the kitchen | verticai strips of blended. siudes, sofleuli | anouii to know what kind of a tree it is, but TVaiag 3O O e Jiltohell | foward the back of tho leg to a pale, solld | SHOVE!, Lo know what kind of u tre I8, bt Old Cavendish street is a club house correspondence with other girls she | the nextroom. She thus witnessed the | and dining room, the color. the strict sense of the term. The Vic- [ could find it out and go und pull their | first two degress in Masonvy, which was | bates who sweep and dust and cook and 8 Alu e e gt oo | BES00 - KROMG toria is not alarge club, and its rates | hair. By aporopriating leters ad- | the extent of the proceedings of the | attend to the table and table ware— e P gt N AR — are high enough to restrict its member- | dressed to the pretty girl who lives a | lodge that night. they ave all private employes. Down 1t is made of leather and is ROt '?:,'\""\.‘,'::lr,\,ull.::,hl:,:,r;,‘lu of this ship to women of ample incomes, but it | fow doors below her she can find out all | **Becoming aware from what she heard | in the bascment, if you pass at the | yvery pliable. is thoroughly organized and takes | about the red-headed chap who calls | that the brethern were about to sepa- | Proper time, you sce the laundry work A novel use for the boa of fur, feathers or state for worthless med: for the cure of & very genuine pleasure in its recep- | there so frequently, and settlo forover | rate, she felt alive to the awkwardness | Of the white house going on. Al these | Lace is to attach ous end of it to the hut or | Ff Toat wnd tung disewsos i tion parlors, its library and reading | her suspicions that the red-headed man | and danger of her situation and began | employes are, however paid private bonnet in the back, bring it down to the nape | ¢, new California discov Y for consump- rooms, its tea room and its pretty suites | is none other thun a collector for an in- | to consider how she would retive with- | Of course, there is & yearly apprapria- | of the neck, and twist it around the throat | tion and kindred complaints they wuul:lnfll of bed rooms where country members | stalment clothing house, from whence | out observation. She became nervous [ tion for the contingent exvenses of the | once or twiee, this pleasant remody find relief, It is rees lodge on trips to town, and where unat- | came that new silk dress.’ If the female | and agitated and nearly fainted, but so | White house, but this is intended more | ‘‘Passementorie stocliings” are among the | gmuended by ministors, physicians and pub- tached women sometimes board tho year | lotter-carrier is smart she can also draw | far reoovered herself as to be fully | to keep up the furniture and furnish- | Bovelties in howlery. ‘hey are very showy. | lic speakcrs of the Goldeu State. | Sold wnd round, Dropin at 8 o'clock on ‘an a weekl ipend, the price of her | aware of the necessity of withdrawing | ings generally than to pay the cost of A handsome black stocking has the entire | guaranteed by Goodman Drug Co. at $l & bright day and you will get an eye-fill- | silence, from many of thealleged board- | as quickly as possible. Being in the | the president’s living or the hire of his f".,il‘l,w..'&i‘étr'fis“‘ While ad gt Weadn. ip ““'}‘;fi'.‘m}f:i“fnf.‘i'ufi?" we of catarrh will ing vision of violoks in brown "ll' ing-house keepors, who bave so many | dark she stumbled and overthrew some- | servants. Tho word trosscau 1o longer points exclu- | speedily suecumb to CALIFORNIA AT yollow tulips nodding over the heads of | boarders who come home late at night. | thing—a chair or some ornamental One thing that Mrs. Harrison will | sively to matrimonial garmenture, but is | CUKE. Six wonths' treatment for $1. orus in silver dishes, dancing eyes ! Thus the female letter-carrier may ! piece of furnilure, The orash was loud ! find is a completely furnished house | now used o iudicate auy particular selection | mail §1,10,

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