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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1888 —SIXTREN PAGES A GHRISTMAS PRESENT 3 Our $65 Plush Sacques, at ...$50 OF A INICH $60 « o B45 SEAL PLUSH SACQUE | = &0 - - 341 IEEEEET Will be Appreciated. If the Garment you “ BBE « i e P29 purchase is the wrong size, we will cheer- “ 8§30 4 i . 926 fully exchange it and guarantee satisfac- i s v O &) - HEYMAN & DEICHES, 1918-1520 Famam Street | The Largest Cloak, and Suit Hfouse in the YWest. N 7 e l,|,., ml in M“,,h,‘,, can 1,.-‘..14\ lnn\ forth in the southe Mho | the title of “‘champion il of Lake Y D U1 QINE FQ [ and by that flickering light the dance | ds four years hence, draws is very similar to that of patchouli. Magnolia and Japonica are the newest Jim Orton ‘was imported from Council | ness houses in Omaha will extend from the shells. Men are huv- | They couldn't imagine atailed little LI B LA by e Bluffs to furnish the music, which he | Hickory to Seward strect, and from the Johnny Martin of Sioux City to fall ill and sutane, - Meplisto and | gow Ohristmas Wae Spent Thirty- | did from an antiquated fiddle that he | river to Thirt venth, and Liucoln, uling and distributing fresh : ity k ) . Ita Journey From the Sholl to the | LG L MGkl %thars are carrying the | die, but s post mortom sho o ; B L ey touk ik had brought with him from the cultured | Fremont and Nebraska City will be the Table. Noils outside to the whurf, These L s Littlo , Josephine and Marie ¢ 4 state of Indiana. A dance then popu- | thriving suburby : shells o them for safe kecping. sty ussinn bodices and gimps, and Gro iy L & e iCtantob Tlmbyof susadch Au cagle on exliibition in_a Bridgeort, | Siuh effocts of drapery are some of the new EhR L UEUE P o L b s \L AND DItA and either buried to lime or used in | (Au eagle on extibition in a Bridgtoart | foaturas of 1voneh tei zowns. SOME OF THE GUESTSAT THEBALL | the first number on tho programmo, MUSICAL AND DRAMATIO. BALTIMORE'S OYSTER INDUSTRY. | jiliins rondbeds. The men and women [ Gon siore window escaped, aud My ing | ) 0000 Gin goves with leather and it may hare bo stated that the pro’ who develop the muscles of their arms | gyriking machine and was killed. The ma- | 8nd fin re wirm and not at all unt o . gramme consisted of a man with a large Mme. Scatshl is sl ging in Russi by shucking oysters, ave paid by the | chine registered the blow at 150 pounds. ing to L They are also economical, as | The Ball-Room and How it Was | mouth and powerful lungs, and when MiA8! OALRAY "\ ”‘*”“" ‘“;‘ “»‘“ i . ¢ Mme. Cotre! s to rejoin the MeCai @he Various Processes of a Canning 86 W re expert in the The 5 , & o | One patie will vi Lighted and Decorated — A James tuned his_violin and struck the ey rilon and those who are exper ¢ The poople of Wapella, Il recently saw | “p Ui g Bt St vl e e e r...u.\;..»‘l.m 0011, nderson is to bogin a threo weeld's Establishmeut—The Army K art make comparatively very good | the town of Midland City, tw E it 4 Dance at the Farm House 3 J ence to the usual bouquet of cut flowers. SRUENb RIS e and led the crowd i ia: e wages. hoy comprise the greater | tant, suspended iu the clouds. The mivage | SHCC ol ekl 3 ke caught his partner and led the crowd Fomity R piDy S 1“'1‘; 'l“;"‘" Lk pact ol Ane fores employed in & canning | was'so vived that the observera could son 5 [:f(:. o ';1‘,"’. e - on Seward Street. in the mysterics of the “French Four,” | ARG 1 I\\“R‘.l.\hn e Wikestihs n Baltimore. F o 1 train of cars approach and leave the Mid- bl ' kerchlef. At the hour of midnight refreshment oiris play at the Windsorjth: establishment. From these rooms the ul T ademy of Arts of Berne ha £ 1e hour of midnight refreshments P NOW Y LHo V6L 13b3 Ation: 1o Academy o orne MWL : ew Y o week beginuing Janu- oysters are “]‘"" to an ‘“‘J"‘l'“"fl h“xl bt i (T il odl SosmbGL | ot ]» 70 for painting inoil to Miss Edith Omaha's First Christmas. ue »‘U“““- ";H<1 us there were il Home of the Oyster. apartment in skimmers; large galvan- | A snow eyelone recently visited Rondout, | Bouney, an Amor Yl Tho first prizo e o old. | chairs and’ tab Mo guoests range Iy i0E 8 hrealCbionior NReDATLITE ALTIMORE,Doc. 18.— | ized iron with holes in the bottom | N. . Whon ubout fifty foot from the groun | of’ last monti was carriod oft by an Engiisn = EL HIZ memory of the old- | (homgelves on cottonwood benches 2 i B L SR ) to allow the liquid to flow off. They :."fn‘«vl:','. l’;‘f'l‘h':“';m‘\f::'_l"‘y‘m";“ ios 8NOW | \oman, » m est inha it in Oma- | along the sides of the cabin and de- | few days. el Ha aro then washed and immersed in | g4isL ARG % ARG o with anow ¢ o Tailormade ro gowns are still £ hadoes not go back any vn\u;::.\l tho ropast, e | Tis reported. that Miss Sara Jewort is ro- ] 3 . water in order to free them from the | objects on the opposite side of tho street | YOZU¢ o > bodic further than the year | , Many of the i c S her health, and will reappear on In common discourse, | particles of shell which may adherc. | could not be discerned. ot oo B A L 1854 when Kking of | i1 their common, everyd: the stage next season. Baltimore is usually | Now they are measured out and ar To New, Yorl 148t woek a/pab skyo terriar | sape; collneotibon, ool e IEE R e e g ‘tenderfo fresh from the Maric Gordon, who was Mrs. John T. Rays ussociated with the | ready for packing. gave Lirth to six baby skyes and the owne s & Pnroatetioca i 12 yy un | eff ] 1o the porticres of nd off the stage, is_star hrough the S The oysters are sent about the coun- | presented one of them to a friend. The | wut opera It cmer t 25th of December of | the front entrance and blossomed before [ cities of England in *The Princess Diana.? land of the oyster, | ¢py either canned or in bulk in barrels | puppy was too young to even drink mifk, and A Ty / that year may be con- | the astonished assemblage in a white [ Georgine Junuschowsky has joined tho and, in fact, that | orkegs. To fill the barrelsis an ordi- | was in a fair way to starve to death, wh ; S e T e e el the Ricl Oht vest and white 5. All the boys and | Bostou ldeal comic opera company, of which rah industry | nawy tusk, For canning, the tins are | Petcatwhich had rocently bocome o moth 3 D i sidered the fi hrist- | vl thought it was an apparition. her husband, Ad Neuendorff, is musical di- P el y. Thavwas but thir Aside from this dance of M. Snow- | rector. A took pity on the orphaned do e seven : & o obtained from the can manufactor! it v b T ¢ the operais in bluc forms an important Kitlenswhiot puss wastonkisk i ver brocade, aud is ined with tea-tose | four years ago, but there was only a | den’s, quite a number of young folks | Julia Marlowe appoars to have made a ! 3 genuine suceess in Boston, whose critics which is a business in itself. They are | 7 o " 6 ¢ b | ) rom her while she was asleey d | ) ‘ ! u r o part of hor business. One can s cely | iy the well-known oblong form and'open | substituted. When the mother cat ok blsSLelinmontiv tuEs biotd dozen or so_ rude shanties, dilapidated | eame over from Council Blufls and went | FRuiine suess b toston, whoto oritios ELGHC o1 | strt o ures which would not be allowed | D to @ farm-houso tk near where | thingg ubout i pass a Dblock in the central portion | only at the end where we see the small | next morning she seomed rather puzzles e el rohe ; ] of the city in which there is no | di The oysters are pourcd into the | the change, but took things rather plilosoph- o ChatY : R % e e e cop | the corner of Sew nd Saunders Miss uy Bloomfield has appe: slgn indicating the sule of oysters in | cans through these holes with theaid of | ically, and now tho adopted dog is fed, cared “IA\l';:fi-«:w‘hfid‘ soic 3 ol the lightest o | to exist in the city now, even on .hmlx street is now. One_ of the young men, | conjuction with Mue. Bssipof in 1 P hape or othor. A considerable | ® funnel made for that purpose. A for and watched over by the big cat. f ‘\_“_’\Imim‘“‘ N:"“ ‘“::J“I!“::;l o pitul avenue. Among the men re- | now an old gray-haired gentleman, who | Shé scored an unequivocal success. "somo shape ot othor. A considorable | yound plate of tin is soidered over the ————— { Stiicrs Snie string of resohuds | S1ing in these wreeks of houses were | was present party, was saying | people know that the lady 15 a cousin ot extent of ground in the eastorn part of | 00,0 and we have the completed can HONEY FOR THE LADIF wade in chenille combined with silis Dr. Miller, Samuel D. Rogers, Alfred | the other day that they played allof the | Moriz Rosenthal. the town, together with the adjoining | of oysters that we are accustomed to buy e P = any of the late 5 Miss Mamic Davis, a talegraph operator at | D. Jones, A. J. Poppleton and their antiquated kissing games that were | Herr Possart has been playing at the Les- wharves, is dovoted to this business. | at the grocery. Tho boxing for ship- | Silver disc tulle is scen on many of the late - gucisonville, ~ Flu, ' Js g merited I o mi wer known. *“Among them,” he eon- ater in Berlin in Bjornson's *Ein Horo are situated the principle canning | ment is the last station before'it beging | evouing dresses. so beeatise lity to duty in re- 51 : tinued, “‘was the ‘Needle's Eye,’ where | cment,” and is renorted L have wou a ore are situated the principle o £ | its railway journcy. Wooden boxes of | _Two colors compete for popula ar £ at hor post during the entire season ristng of 1854 was warm and | you sing: triumph. The theater itself is one of the factories whose variousbrands and trade- | 300y {red size are lined with filled | 8recn and navy blue. of the yellow iever epidemic in that city. plensant. The trees were still in leaf, | The ncedle's cye, HESttiobb L) marks have obtained a reputation all | cans so that a narrow space is left down “'I'hlu;lm:rl f‘(i'\vfiicru:‘mit:e:f the pallid gray- New dua d lml‘luw‘ 1s show a predil- | ghe grass was green and the flow It does supply ¢ b 3 e 0 A e e green seel ection for stripes. The latest stripes are | = e The thread that runs so true. Dot ofoountey Tholloutovawhichy jthie .“".“{' wl“utf“s], “"“{,”d & SteiP | Umorellas are very slendor, but the han- either wide or narrow, and are saen i such | were blooming. There were no o e e o i oo the oyster undergoes from the unload- | Of A e e P ey e ia | dles aro shorter and loss ornate. fubrics as faille francaise and velvet, the | ing houses and every family put up | romember most distinetly. o Tt was ono | Apasets "l ne J de Rien,” and ing of the barge until it is found on the | ! ar. . 8aW. 10N CONMURC U1 Chartreuse, pist af shades are | Silk being m most cases of lighter ue than S ¥ > . QUL ) GHATRYA ) was one | achie a distinet success. tablo i inland city, is interesting, | made artificially and the manufacture | ;o 5uiar colors for evening dresses. the velvet. their own meat in good old Puritanical | in which we sang at the top of our voice: Jane Hading and the rest of the French lo in on inland olty, s nterosting. | o thig g ancthior branoh of Industey | Pohuler folore Sr onRECtnect, 0| o uo S e cowns, | fashion. [t was *killing time,” and | !Won'tbave noneof your weaviey wheat, | company are on thoir way to San Franciseo. The canning establishments, for the | pavtially dependent upon the oyster | gaccordeon pleating isugain coming i > trimwiug gives the effect of | the men cut up the meat and stuffed | T won't have noneof your barley, y are still drawing good houses, though most part, are each located immedi- | trade. After being packed in tho 'box, | "poughaired, black monkey-skin muffs and Cooy sre Wyt lynnen, w into mininture flour sacks out | ¥ hust wo and got somo dough L rolco R os e foc AT S ately beside the wharf toenable an easy | the whole is covered with sawdust, the | vandyke collars are again in high favor. ‘:: bow und x'\\vh: Norifa 1‘ tr e iy i o nd bake a cake ro'x Charl o 'm_klm o access to the cargo of the boats, The | lid nailed on. and all is then ready tbbe |~ Girdies, odalisque sashes and antique bro- vl OIStV Ob L0 C G PO duacs Brou ‘“There was considerable dancing and Joblon of “\THat Faolls Revenga wharves and their surroundings present | & nt by freight or-express to the various | cades are among the fashionuble noveltles. it 0 ‘] A L‘-:vn summer we ) by osculntion connected with thi me, Porieks Tava “David Garriok” snd the cities of the country. In the costumes of the present day, noth- uckles are disptayed in the shops in a va- I'here was no celebration that year. | which made it all the more interesting | “King's Pleasure,” 18 contemplated at the 8 busy scene. Down the river the | "7y g difiicult to appreciate the scale | ing plays a more important part tha , [izioty of haneat ihoyiarc med v iously of re were searcely enough people 1n | and entertaining. Tliked these kissing | Fifth aveno theater, Now York, boforo the passing vessels may be viewed. Inthe | upon which this business 1s carried on, | sudging from recent importations | T R e S e N S S Nt Afow games. I guess all the boys did, | conclusion of the engagement of Edwin LaH ol el : and the girls, too. There was an. | Booth aud Lawrence Barrett. ©pen space in front are anchored alarge | without a pen?lml view of the process. | jewelers, pink coral will be fashionable ere | andold ivory surrounded by a natrow e i he ooth anc FESIBIS G number of oyster-craft either disabled | The number of people earning a living | long. - of cuamiel or semi-precious iridesceut stoncs. et " other game wo pluyed this same | “Tho Yeomon of the Guard” is still at the on the market or being fitted out fora | i this _industry is enormous. The Long cloaks, bnnlcrfixl \?nh fur]s, are cut N & Sow hieaa few ladies in town, enterta )ir | night. It was called ‘Measuring l\u‘\gll(ll ‘?‘rl ln-a ‘qu( (-,nl‘“;‘.z l!l,:u :'Prmr!\l,m;'\olm cking ¢ v - | diagonally open, instead of straizht u 1 e oy oig . ring the day the adoles- | tape,’ where a boy 55 ork, and reports from England s Booth Pucking company alone has be- | diagonally open, inste: straizht up and | and point pattorns exquisit neighbors. During the day the adoles- | tapo.” where nboy and girl face ench | Yarlt, agd tenots from Ssiand, sow, i trip. The oyster beds themselves are | yyeon fiyo and six hundred employes | down. White flouncing laces exhibit a mesh as soft | cent millionaives fired firecrackers, and | other and clasp’ hands. First t b e e i e e quite a distance down the bay, so that | Quring the oyster season. Theso insti- Small toques and turbans are still popular, | as that ot Lyons tulle and have iutermixed | at night there w: small pyrotechui- | stretch their hands to the right and | moath of January s said to amount to $20,000, each vessel stays out from two to four | tutions do “business with the more ‘)““tl become some faces better than large ‘ .‘;' Milancse, ‘?hnlmh'mli] old |".‘"", cul display. e then tothe left, and overy time they [y o g e I T T T weoksat a timo. Specimens of the [ distant markets. In Baltimore and | RS = Lo i taces | burfaces b IOUENG ubon their dwinty | wWhilo the exhibition was not so | stretch thoy kiss. This was my favorito | aqho is gencrally callod, has Just ontored ©orews that are creating somuch trouble 2"’,‘“51'0‘{;‘;“’“‘1” ““d‘busmc“ pnr&.‘m‘m and many handsome patterns are being im- | The hair is now dressed a good deal lower fi‘l'j“f':\M:."‘I“'j:“ giion.ion ?1:”\;:‘_&'"&“”[’ game. ..l]h,"""c,t,'h lly sp king, I 11.““ > | upon her eighty-first_year. Itis more than #0 the police at the oyster-fields may o ( [n .lr t@ busigens t‘ oS | ported. LAl o Rso T TAR Mot ARG OB eIt x]\. jencel \t 0° sthol -‘17‘ lln‘cvnpulu.\l,nml,. tape to last o large | sixty years ago that she .mfm;:y her IIlrsl - be loitering about. The dredgi many of the oysters are bought in the | "y oo (watches are characterized hy | quite covers the nape of the neck, but it ol grounds, it was nevertheless [ dry goods house a year. f pearance upon the stag rury Lane as B i A LLDEIAUOUL, he dredging | shelf or fres shucked at the place of ' ) 05 an ayine Some of them are scarcely | should end there unless curis are worn, in | 100ked upon then as something posi- ‘We hadasupperabout 11 o’clock,and | Juliet, afteronly three weeks of preparation. ds done mostly in the interest of private | sale. The places here where ‘‘fresh pigger than the thumbnail 7 | which case they should either reach the | tively wonderful. ; thonibhaibovaina pir s shi ot iuhomt | rte A Rh AN ot N e I Voru iDLy, gpartios who own and send out the ves- | shucked oysters by the gallon, quart or | “[yresses of crepe de Chine or oriental silkc | W4ist or be a mass of soft ripples, falling Most everybody around here in 1854 ]md brought some Christmast gifts, ox- | theater, announces i special revival of Sh sels. The oysters are put on the mar- | Pint y be had ‘are innumerable, and | qre much worn by young girls. They are | half way, lived across the river in Council g *h youth select 's “Critic,” in which Ada Reban, James \um\\uu 1 uu\«m is ||||ll\- in [Special Correspond- Prancaise, > 25th of last mouth, in Do e 5 5 even more plentiful thansaloons. Every @ s ablo and will stand wear. S puffed empire sleeves are much | Bluils, and that city had quite o celo- own g I remember v v ) rew, and other members of ered and aro brought to Baltimore in | eonfectionery, displays & sien inviting | gathers ot the waist. Pongeo silk aprons | th the slcoves is an os v | pift” ns a greeting, and consequently | and I presentod her with a horso. shoo, Juecn 0 | arges by the purchasers. At the wharr | the wayfaver to partake of that delicacy | have revers of velvet at each side. curles rtially around one zing captured about everybody that “1donot know how the other residents ] § Max Maretzek, yhe veteran o stor, will hey aro shoveled into large iron-bound | in any style he may desire. ““An oyster | Furs of all kinds_are worn without much | idornenth, On : © ! waiit anywhere, from Om of Omaha and vicinity enjoyed them- e ! i th top of o \ - Y shortly celebrate his fifticth ary of buckets holding a bushel and a half, | with v drink’’is not an infrequent ' preference Possibly good, heavy furs, | =% s i oro, Mrp. V aim Snowden had just com- | selves this, the first Christmas evening e ™ h r of the event and are hoisted from the hold by means | motto, while even out-door stands may ; which are genuine, a avorites [ FanseduiN .Gl doton iy tod alarge and commodious log hut | in Omaha, but 1t doesn’t scem to ma | L8 IRresos . 0 ncial diehts in- of a steam derrick. These buckets ave | be found dispensing this general com-| The champion jumper of Scotia, Neb., isa | " cott and three otl t Tenth stre outh of Turner | that I 1ad 50 nice and enjoyable o | yond to offer him a bene Mr. Daly and than placed upon barrows and wheeled | modity. At the end of the oyster season " woman. Ina contest last we he jumped y Sk & ig dauce. It w time since § Mr. Stanton are ta an active part in the nside where the oysters are distributed ming e t us y nine feer two inches w! ve H Lo el ) he fir { 3 itude ever Although this was but thivty-four angements, and under their auspices the mong the shuckers. In some cases o > of its plant in putting up | Crepe is very popuiar cortainly is given in Omeha and it was attended by | y ago, there has been a wonderful | Maretzek jubiico should be u succe ramway with small iron cars is used | fruit and vegetables. The retailers I . A thr aricty, with almost | private ope s Billroth stands | about everybody. The house had not J s 4 he party just alluded The latest of s idol of the Vennesa s, and the | yet been en y completed and there | to took piace are now business houses, | public is Fraulein Renard, fo dly a mem- for this purpose. satisfy. themselves with clams and i i ¢ line, is especially in v . | high in continc v Sho scems to Long rows of stalls in parallel lines pins, while the confectioner sup- | ‘The passion for green hus brougit the de- | fact that hie has here 2 the opposition | ypare no doors and windows in place. | and the residences aro for miles avound | of the r of Tierh gxtend through the working | plants his oyster fork withan ico-cream mand for emeralds up with a rush, Jewelers | 1o the adiission ofs nodical scliools | My, ~ Snoy was thirty-four foke ) it wasonly the blaclk, deso- | Have eve p - favor—youtlh, £o:d {oomc. At o n‘lzlmvcnh-ul height | spoon. VICTOR ROSEWAT '.'.\'.'.\.-”“" the green stone is remarkably pop- | miakes his c t American ludies sl m"m. stele, ;_m Had portieves | Iate prairie. The men af that date who {3‘.\"“:;' IY0ICa 1 markablo drimitio n_evory sta is placed - L A ! at tie doors in the form of quiits lived in the miserablo houses have soen | HIf { : o ) : ito ed with old rose-vatored | QUIto n ensution in Wi and wa | g iser ok : e e S ey # shelf upon which the work is per- SINGULARLTIE Sl e P e ol rospwatered | wented upon by all the leading papers | e s delivnte tbrie ut the windows, | thivty-threo Christmas days come nd 1 Ko cfures 0L 0. o AL EID Rl Al grmad, Beforo stands a man or —_— | favorite combinations for ball or opt - and when the dancers arvived they | go, and the solid blocks of magnificent | endurance and longevity rivals the Lite Mme, woman equipped with a hammer and | 4 pow yoleano 18 reported from Tobasco, ~wraps. For Nervous rostration { drow aside the curtain and walke business houses built up around their | Anna Bishop. sharp pointed kinife, who dexterously [ yfox It spurts forth large streams of ; Pretty Little Bulgarian hoods made of Use Horsford's Acid Phosphate. rectly in on the seenc of fostivity. | former abodes and extend away out LU npolss off the edge of the shell over @ | rod water. | cremm-white camel's hair bordered with gold e W, G Northfield, Miun,, says: ‘ 1t was the gvandest and most ¢nthusi- | into what was then the rness, but sick headache, wind on the stomach, Ptiip of iron, opons it and drops the [ An Towa boy got !sticed up in a beef- or silver embroidery are worn with opera | d it o Jrvous prost C s cong ed inthis | these men have grown with the eity | hiliousness, nausen, ave prowptly and yiter to o tin buckst standing at bis | cooler for fovrieen oues, aui his. tocth - cloals, k 50 in combination with other rom- | city. ~ Mr. “Suowden had once more | and aro occupylng residences to-day | agreenbly banished by Dr. J. H. Me- de. The shells are dropped upon the | chottersd uptil they are worn half down. Ina Drake, aged twelve, of Badus, Dak in indigestion, it las proved assatisfac- | rushed the style by wing candles | which are almost palaces, Tean's Liver and Kidney Pillets. 256 b3 of land, thereby winnint, ' 0ry as could be expected. around the sides of the house for light ' When the sixty-cighth Christmas @ vial. loor, while the worthloss oysters are A spring of natural cologne has broken plowed forty acr GREAT ART SALE TO-MO A. HOSPE, Jr, 1513 DOUGCLAS ST. BIG - PICTURES, ~ LITTLE « PICTURES, ~ EASELS, Albums, Photo Frames and Novelties, Must be Sold on Monday, December 24th, 1888 A. HOSPE, Jr, 1818 DOUGLAS STREET