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DAY MARCH 1880.~-SIXTEEN PAGES. I THE: OMAHA DAILY BEE: SU 4 — - § | NEW NOVELTIES i i o NEW NOVELTIES i oy { | . i } cevmNacan { \Ch'ld ’S -t B,, K. & Gu Mens’ and Youths' UINATens Suits - 4 SUITS. i T N et a ! 11 1] P BROWNING, KING & CO 3 ’ ) | Largest Manufacturers and Retailers of Fing Glothing in the World, | | We take this occasion to invite all to visit our store and look through our matchless stock of fine lé | . . . . y * Spring Overcoats and Suits; every garment of this season’s make. ‘ i ‘ The great favor with which OUR MAKE OF CLOTHING has been met by the Consumer is a l CONVINCING FACT that we can give our patrons no music sq charming as LOW PRICES FOR 4 ' FINE CLOTHING. ‘ * ‘We have hundreds of rich, select and novel styles of patterns, that you'llnot see in any other house % ! in this city, and no matter how exacting your wants, rest assured that the style which you're anxious 3 to procure is here, if anywhere. We have Good, Low Priced Clothing, and we also have that which t is fine and elegant enough for any one. OUR STOCK IS IMMENSE, SO IS OUR TRADE. it ] These and other things easily enable us to name the LOWEST PRICES FOR THE BEST CLOTHING % MADE AND SOLD ON THIS CONTINENT. Remember our motto: Money cheerfully refunded if goods ;‘ do not suit, and the Best Goods at Lowest Living Prices. All goods marked in plain figures and at 2 | one price. ; | ¥ i} BROWNING, KING & COMPANY, | s‘ - Southwest Corner 15th and Douglas Sts., C maha, Neb. S‘ b [t sty A TS . ’ a | Y NOVELTIES o e _| ELEGANT LINE | 8 Ll | oF I8 PANTS| | I SR B ey i 8 -~ - :1 THE VENCEANCE OF THE CZA R | 50 oo o oo s vors | soud i sotreh of nitn, " those stockaen | howorsn good-asd tho oniy comprain | DON'T CARICATURE TAE COW, | & character, nd tho renson vies in the | th o siyle s nationalistio. 1t doos not | % day. If we remained over time we | were placed on an average of about | he could make was that he was not al- make it an 1mitative art. Jongoyiof miropsatedunit butibnly) 1 were given the IxL\sl:. d'r:‘e tu'itr indfllcso '.wmxp_yl ;nilus[h‘mn eac : _otlhenn 'Thu_:lv lowed lulu'sl( mlw q\lu:tiflu uil,)mlr culn- ‘t‘!'mbubly ‘“0 }fr"iwh otiPanahratina ?w:t'.dml";:t‘x)x';d(;n tl;ilat)::‘\;’gik;tfl&ttg;c: h A Former Slberian Exile Relates d_ulnnuunsl?‘mau t;o b . ‘m llmlm;“cs' u: cg:::: e(wm"(‘) w _ l‘ifv‘ ; mnl:' 291:1\1!15‘."111?0 or Nl’Ll)‘" \:3 00:"' ry :3 Some of the Inconsistencies of the u); :sAzxrorio“Eus‘:s“nqu itshuw“'""dmm gn was of a conventional style it His Bxperience. ?;gl;xgul‘i?x?'_igt‘)‘ 1:;.5,'5. \::'i'll;ifll\vxi‘slh.&s@lxfiz ;‘“:f;n ?rl gl:ou‘ulitf. iu:nli(h;l ?'{l‘::«l‘]i;g ):«e.:: :a{-‘z?lvul ;‘L":,l,:';:‘v’?hfi’t ied z::z,::ir:l%‘:lv:}; Decorative Oraze. f-?tnl{ggt;a"r' £ ;:;:‘n Lu:?x;-tlg.\:l&;fl;x::é‘ig L‘.‘;‘L“&i.,"'zs“.‘;iii}'»‘vé?n.;'u"i-’;l“ lnf-f]t‘ffl%g%: was | i —— covered with w\um:m :\'r;:f; 'e“ i:“sluu)- )“é uwzrlm‘l;:.us. one mh i prison x; )KAI I‘;v“ % i“er i()";""; ! ‘n ) .' r.; u)\e.m n: “:-c“:rln(::::mf:q nmucv:i iof s°.!3‘3"" hat it woun d be short-lived. | { | D e et DT bt xma'w‘f"ul i) dxoys«linafifigs’tin'gctlh’::da:i?w[l r»f»z:s e b w0 e moatiolithe miiatanal| & e S haiiina o oot onsyinithiai|isim bl vitolgbudyy toprastico, Thelsoas { ’ 1 the Marc wome harder weapon, = Muny of my | us ?'ny I:I|1gélilllxxltbnlilI.lu.nwl! ;‘zfi,..gg.-.n {mm{y boyond dogreo, ‘stavted on il ing to Designing. km,v‘a ,,,,}:‘m.l,z.' T e pe | [(ETCH T (e St Py i Frin ol ‘ comrade “Early in the travel,” said Mr. Nur- | homeward journey to Poland, finally rn e eir taste. T e i o 1 " :‘i‘;’xf.mm!sLY DISAPPEARED. hower, Yine |n-;a oners, by the {aliuman rlcm:fling Eh o ER oot nAton vl thont iy RS Frrs el L.Icfif’wfi‘ :hc; u:e'“ f{){rm‘}m_ ne]:lmr‘o“‘_‘DW::""?:;R“”“"?!Iifl’;fl"‘:&_[‘&é‘;fi i g With a Rod of Iron. treatment they received, ssemed to lose | loss of one. decoration or a color,they would ans ““When the time came for the march to that more women do not seek it. There has llved in this city for some | .. W] all respect for themselves and those it Following is the paper on “The In- | yiohably, ‘b i i it 2 Siber ' re on hand not more 4 i e ARt <55 P ly, ‘beeause thoy liked it.’ | a charming occups . timo, suys o Mason City, Ta.,correspond- | Sioeriit thore wore o b on broughy | around them. Modesty was & virtue | SHE PLAYS A PITIABLEROLE. | consistencies of Decovative Art” read | There is jast as much a right and a ur;:i\:.“"f’l:)fi:l;;‘,,‘.‘:;‘;:"v"--?H:’fl.‘.’; ; ont, a native of Poland named William | from Warsaw. I think the rest must | ubrecogn ed. No one was allowed e e before the Western Art association last | wrong in the use of forms and colors for | but I could nover design.” Designing | ) - ARgAl arsane 2 moment. to attend to private wants or | Peculiar Eocentricities of Beautiful [ yp W0 B0 eSS 00 ORI 00 B | decoration as thero is. in the ase of . Nurbowers. During the uprising in that | have died in prison. : Hehaiee b A ol and Brilitant Harriet Richmond, | Monday evening by Miss Kate M. Ball: yation as there is in the useof | docs Aot moan tosit down and chew cut | country in 1848 he was among those who | *‘Tafterward wished a thousand times | (85 €% % 4 Y “If we study the best specimens of | Wordsin language, and designing for | of the end of a leud pencil a pattern. ¢ spent the night boy s s and Harriett [, Richmond, the young, fathers were thrown yogether in ono | eutitul and brilliant wife of a New o with boneds oy | York lawyer named Allen, was sen- avelers might lie | tenced to the Bridewell yesterday be- ETRiEey i Y ‘on- | 41y purpose that has not a foundation | When an article is to be written on an pottery we will find that shape, con- | 5¢'knowledge to work from, should be subjoct, the writer goes to the ubm,g § nl,l'lu‘lim! and enrichment or decoration | treated in the sume manner as are writ- and learus what the authors say about use. A pelnrey iug;}ll‘rom the illiterate. that subject,---he collects ideas, His : notinterfe “The at amount of American | part is sim, slothe ? i and | with in any way, and if in decorating it | travel in Burove has ra the stand- ,",'."fi;.;':“,fi"l',‘.].'.l':',“fifc ‘,3.‘,’(‘1":!,,-:1('??5»’%;": - Chi- | e wish torepeat the unit of design, the | ard of art in this country. Boing 0ss0- | neraneomment b Set in oo ! down on the ground. Tho walls and alspatch to the New York World: | youitition will not entor very Targely | olated with the good must elryars | Srrangament. o in design—-tho de himsel{ and his companions are fully as | Sigl ues ware cxamined by & PASICHA | opilingy wero daubed with mud and Richmond hns been creating & | into the effect, inasmuch as the vaso | Much of foreign nroduction hus beon | frach must study the thowghts of othor tervible as anything related by Mr. | to make the journcy on foot. Then grense, whilo in rainy JMeather. tho uzbance m_Uu“.u'?mfi{IL ‘l-*"‘:‘f‘ll;:“! boing round wo can seo but & small por- | hrought home by the travelers, and our | his D IMET 1 A e - to_mulke the journcy Dir (1 a1t R patla veeks. She avrested many | tion of 1t at a time. But we must re- | merchants import the same class of | panging inating is ri i Ferng o : chains were pliced ob us. Euch hand | B U B GRS, P eonons wer | times, but her beautiful face, big browi | membor that it is round, and anything | goods, We. are growing wradul angings=prigiputing 1o sarerga ety “Soon after our capture,” he said in | was attached by a chiin to the opposite il b sonfous tears have. always se ) ) g | A [ ng gradually. | said “there is nothing original under DoR, - Inta RAlED) 105 T et hin condition we passed our | compelled o spend their i ghts oyes and copious teurs have always se- | put thereon will bo forcshorte o0 | The time will come. when we will dis- | the sun,” and one is froquontly foreis relating the story of his exile, Yorders | /26 #1038 B8 CHCRa T 00 M the | Coutinuing his narvativ Nur- | cured her 45'"8«}.""}'1}"" Y orcol. | e in different positions, Ther card some of “the inconsistencies. We 1o nressed. with the truthiof s came to prepare for awip to St. Pete e i ablechodind imen were s said: W weve each of us pro- | Her name figured in column afier col- | iy, decorating it wo must_consider thess | will see the utter absurdity of decorat- e voul aomtinualiy f SACHEE burg. We wero conquered robels and | octi™ o 109 60 0A the ablo-bodied | vided with a chango of clothing ad | Wnin of sensational news in the Wash- | facts. A vase is an-orna- | ing a wooden bowl with'a landscape offccts produced - by tho same knew what fate awnited us. Any of us | wwomen in another, while the feeble | when we came to a stroam every | n ;‘"!-r “{'L{x‘l.- ~l;u“::‘r:l"lmhl A [‘Nl;)‘_ me_u.t.L:‘n.u] v\jnllhl]» hacuealistio treat- [ and freming it, a bowl that might sug- It is not unusual to see pate who outertainad doubts about it had | men, women and children wore loaded | was expocted to wash the suit he was | o8 FEHE O MR O, G atdonnt | Ment that would wot be consistent with | gest soup, or a batler of bread; also tly ulilke drawn by childven i Forks & 64 g i BAVY. and d to the huge | wearing and put on the other one. L AL O 1IAG. f a useful objeet, Objects that are much | puinting a landscape on an immense ‘parts of the city. It i them quickly removed by the intima- | into henyy carts and driven Lo 50 | Wilth and vermin would be found among | capital. - Last fall she was charged with | iy use, that arc scen constantly, should | snow shovel,and tying it with o ribbon, | e tere bohils OF the oity. IL ' also iz 4 4 el ate g out of the stockade, AR v & ing o) i 3 N gy ey L0 Al g 2.0 L4 L ) rue that you may spend an eveoin ¥ tion which accompanied the order that When atl was ready the gate swung | 15 10 their worst forms. Loathsome | dttempting to blackmail one of the most | he of a simple charae 50" that we | and worse still the dccorated dishpan (J«uiguiug" R “““L i aaReco mn‘; i . e i 3 ce »u | that this had happened to me. fought for her indopendence. When | thab this had happonod tome: | the patriots were at length over- |, "\naneh to Siberia we were all 1 whelmed by the superior numbers of | turned loose in a large stockade. An the Russian forces he was taken pris- | offic was stationed at a certain point oner and sent to Siberia, He remained | and as we passed, one by one, he wrote there for two years. The sufferings of | down a description of us. Then the which the weary down,many were without even that,and | cause she ‘had been d the prisoners were compelled to lie | could not pay a fine of #2 it would be o good time to bid favewell ) W08 roidy bho. Ciscases weve contracted during the | Prominent meu in the country. She | il noc tire of them. Table ware, such | whose associntion suggests the unplens | afteswards find i ; ! to friends and relatives. The day he- | 024 1 wo were porioitied to broath |y ok, which torother with the harsh | Wits arrestod for vagraney but’broved | as plates, cups and suucers, should | ant worl of the houso maid. aftorwards fiud - tho KremmatoLE foro our journey was to negiu we wore | containing provisions were placed ag | treatment killed several of the prison- that sho, 08 SuIploved dn [bie Lepnd msu;:‘pll,\» decorated unld_ the ¢ pcoration | Wo will not make bunglo boards out of - ! all mustered into a large, open space in | the head. Next came the prisoners on [ €S A e 00 almoat ¥R Y:| o o Ve 0QRYONMONRIR LS R TARLL rolling pins, nor put the thermomoter CARRIED OFF THE TRUCK. )f the “One of the most pitiful and cruel nes in the whole journey comes back of nting of flowers, butterflies, | on kegs. Neither will we use draperies - for weeks, until finally she became | phiyds, fishes and inndscupes of china in- wn.a.«‘?um ¢ isno need of (]n'ml We | How a Negro Thicf Escaped From a ora this persecution and left. ( yoded for use is of the worst kind of | will not cover up the whole cornor of u Constable, e This last time she hus beenin Chicago | yuq, A placque intended to decorate | beautiful picture and lose its effect by | While waiting at Decatur for the only three weeks and arrvested (5‘\11' our walls should be treated in an en- | hanging a fanciful picee of silk on if, | train to Huntsville a constable came in times. Her first offense broaking | giyely different manuer from a plate to | and eall it n picture drape—a picture | from the country with a negro, says the Warsaw and there we found our broth- h_mlv. mul\ behind thlnml v,h'\.!_v:u_( nfith 1 ~ § el { o sick. As we marched out in single filo |8 whole y ers and sistors, wives, parents und | G O SO Yo Twith the | to me now. The liitle child of or frionds waiting us. I eannot vecall the | ooiiior containing our deseription and | the women who was following hev hus scone, evon at this vime, without the | 4s"each one passed a check was made | band into exile got sick. She had car ame, 1 cannot tell you | ried it many days. Oue afternoon it teavs springing to my eyes. 1 will not | opposite his the windows in n house where she was 2 N A e o ), i o ) 4 i L ttempt to describe it. My mother [ what a teveible fecling oyer | RreW Worso ang A Dtaat Al horphaha fleeukadionioniable; sbhe Rpmandgalitsil nppdsno dray h ;| Dotrolt Froe Pross, Tho ollloon wanted ! attempt to . Y A O : 5 5 y unacq . g ply decorative, the latter is useful, and We will not make a sugar bowl in | something to eat befor ki hi vory tight for | me with the clank, ¢ 1k, DIED IN IER ARNS, had gone in n cab on some inexplicable ! ¢ something to eat before walking his oame tomo and hold me vory tight for | 8 M Gy SRR BT gniiad | She teled to conceal its death until ¢ K ol 1 A oab on some Aex| should be treated in a manner that is | the shape of a man’s hewd—the hat | prisoner over to the lockup, and he v amoment with her head buried on my 2 8he tried to congoa A 4eah b @lice Justice Lyon was puz= | eongistent with its u To being removed we dip into the bead, | handeuffed the man toa baggage trucls, e on the long journey. Mounted Cossacks | grocknde wa hed so that it might by the 1 v ircumstance aud discharged | 100 potatoes on o plate conts St - L \der, Then she gave me her - , 4 aiden. " Bame | 1 iaana NI LS sl A ies Y ChrEed | and potatoes on a plate containing dec- | not 1o get brains, but sugar—nor make | He then went over to the hotel, seem- e | ? shoulder, Then she gave m o [ AuireuRdoc g on. ail_gldes, - Boins | ba nroperly b An officer discov- | her. ‘She was then taken to the Deten- | oyutions such s the povtrait of 1 floy & milk pieture designed tn tho shape of | ing to fool that il wis safo bad soedre 4 PARTING BLESSING AND TURNED AWAY. [ mothers whose children were too small | aped that the child was deund, however, | tion hospital for the insane and held in & & L 0 pe is absurd, ‘The | a cow, whose tail twists into the handle, | The negro was asked what he had | ien in use [ and whose mouth is convertod into the | been arrested for, and he explained i or bird, or lands late has Tiataw, daya . she waa found | LLate s i, but then dis- watehing | to walk wera given the use of hands | ind going up to the wmother suid | custody for: one wee “The Cossack officers wel and feet, But should she grow weary | poughly T all this time, and if any were too long ) A B PN ’ v :d with food, und any de- | spout of the pitcher—two objects that o riv ¢ sbout choir leave taking thoy were ;:n‘sll:‘vlw‘x: u::l‘:‘]ii:'l“:'li‘!filu{:lllll!l«!i‘\lcl.ml;.':-.:‘: A-(\;,"h,tl,,l,‘:, e R e ;'l'l'lt'?".m?_;f:_“":h‘i‘":‘(fi'fl‘l’fifi ’;"'I‘:U':':J“l::__;‘; sign put on that surfuce should be of a n!lgunw' v lunuh sant lhin";'s to us. t:lxlfntntu l).‘«l;‘,.:r‘.dll‘tuwuy‘:rl :v:::v:jallx‘am?h'igfl by aside. poor women cut 5o deep quite as fast,” again discharged. O T R et e (IR SRR A MBS ; R 2041 “The following morning & number of BY THE DRICPING BLOOD ho was on_hor kuncos tn the snow, | o st arsosh was ut tho instanco of | Gacomiin. TG (ntariorof o i il | felntlo had ot thing, many | much alike, and ho assericd that he huge wagons. drawn by from four to | one could follow tl patiway in the thlm m‘mld on\l,x':ulxxx|v\:l hzr-k at | her landlovd; George Dodgoe, of No. od with the fluid contained in | of art that is much abused is color, We | under the legal Bcoushtion. F(‘.q,:. ¥ elght horses, wero pulled up in front of [ S00w. When it was impossible for hor [ her whon tho ofiicers wore not, looling. | 154 W ol vonuo, He called In the | it and should be freo from any pattern. | as w people have no feeling for color, s | homesick, however, und sighed for the & our prison. Lrom eight to a dozen | to wall farther, even under the lash, - 'n.nl hing h 1.0 'mun_ !1 Ijh‘l body | police Menday night and complained straw or a blade of grass were to | the orientals have. We mast learn the | bosom of liis family, % prisoners were loaded into each of [ she wasloxded into one of the carts in [ from hor grasp the ofcer hunded it to | ihat thewomun wus raising o disturh- uto our coffee we would immedi- | fucts of the harmony of color and upply |~ “TPhen why don't you go horaet" 3 these, and we started for St. Peters- | tho vear. G e :'h':‘:}fl"“ saying: ‘Go fl.\w'll'l':l“"‘-jn"‘:ll‘rl‘ ;:":";.ll‘l."?;}m:': _The wll‘t‘ti]';ll‘:)ku in remove it, but the decorative art- | our knowledge. The result is not always the colonel, burg. The wives and children of the | ‘*'We trav about ten miles the | there.” Then turni . the woman | her bedraojif door and a ed her. ist sometimes puts it there to stay. Is | satisfactory. One strong feature of an | - *Can’t git away fr " { captives in several instances accom- | first forenoon and then halted for din- ;”l"“: e ;’:‘Llh'f‘::h‘l:;Lgllx'Lf: h‘:;l 4840 I“\""('“ .!‘}m ‘unh"uml went Fi,[lu-]r (I'ull. it consistent? Again, a butterfly mount- | English resideuce or R e [y n.:-l.-f’,:.x;,“ by {rom 015 4000 Arigl { panied them, Those who preferred | ner. Wesat down on the ground and auried I he i s0d his whip t‘lu)”m'm })“0 A -Demeae all et [ing on a cup ‘could searcely have | trality of color, yet abounding 1 glow, “Can't you carry the truck on your ¢ ! Voluntary exile to soparation from their | Were given some bread und watcr-—-not | and suid: ' Slothing, who refused 10 ,hoss: but | strongth cnough o 1ift the cup wero | or what is knowh us bloom, while our | shoulders” s L " § loved ones wero periitted to choose it, | bearly so much as we wanted, for wo Getun,! Matron Hotlang prooceded to dro one to take hold of the wings,hence the | Aimerican houses have some very bad | ¢ boss,” said the man as he lCEE A This was the only humano act exhib: | Were very hungry. Then the march | *'She obeyed. 4 She was then taken to court idea of a butterfly being used for the | combinations of color, in spots, often | leaned forward, **doan’ talk 1o me about | 4 itod by the Russisn government toward | began agaiu. Already the chains by he rest of us could say nothing. | wanted o send for Fanny Davenport, | handlo of a cup is ridieulous. rything in'the roam suttors | an ‘ai gistin’ ahond! 'd hay 8 its captives. their constant chafiug had swollen tho | We hardly dared t weep. In this way | the actress, claiming that she had been | “SiNcither should we deliberately tirn wion with them, 80t hare & Bull waek an’ Bahbar thousth SN “Until after our arvival at St. Petevs- | ankles and feet so that on muny the | the bodies of all prisoners are disposed | & member of the *Tosca’ company, but | 4 dish into un object fii for nothing “The markets of America furnish to- | of that trick. Wid your kind m"s“, § i burg we were given substantial food, | shackles were covered up. Yet no oue | of who die on the march. ‘We have no | the justice would not “~k‘"] to uny such than to be hung on a wall and wmads | day some beautiful examples of s shun I will now take a walk,” e | and our treatment, although sometimes | daved to murmur, To doso meanta [ time for funcrals,’ was the reply r yarn and she was sent }"' 0w t0 uwiit | 416 medium of a portrait, flower-picco | decorations—our wall paper He shouldered the truck and dis- 4 sovere, was nothing to what we after- | cut from the lash and no volief from | ceived byoneof the exilesy the coming of the Brudewell stage. She | op undscape, It is o great and good | —being very fine; howeve appeured in the darkness, and hall an e | . ward endured, the torture of the shackles. permission to bury a friend suys she ‘had been also a member of | thiyg for vhe sake of outline to develop | often that we are throw hour later, when the constable came i ; “When we reached St. Petersburg he first ctape or stockade was| KFrom St. Petersburg they took the | Rignold’s English company about ten | upt fonestly and cloarly, This is not | with thom. Owing to thejy around and learued what had ooourced | @] ‘ the men were compelled todou gray | reached before dark. The officer who | route that is still traveled—through | yeurs ago, and played Queen Kathering | yyopy of a ‘moral duty that every urt [ only the vory rich can pufchal all bo oould say was: e | trousers aud_Dblouses, a heavy skull | had i the morning tuken their names [ Moscow and Nijni Novgorod to Tomsk, | to Rignold’s Henry V., and she called | however humblo, should be kept withiu | The Lincrista-Walton pattevas are | - *Dog-gor but I'm 1o luck! I I'd : cap and low shoes. Then, in groups of | and deseription stood within the gato | their acstination. They were all placed | herself Ada Richmond. its own lines and be independently de- | very fine, being in imitation of pressed | fastencd him to that freight ear he'd \ from six to twelve, we were locked up | and as the prisoners passed by another | in a large enclosure and each were us- - veloped, for thus only can it be per- One of the costliost wall de- | hev gone oft with it just the same,snd p in u dungeon so dark that we could not | ehock was placed ovposite their names. | signed to duties. To William fell the ¥ fon's Bule. fected. It is ce "l picture I evi saw wus that of the | the railroad would jhave come ond} we N/ e our hunds before our faces. These | This method was continued throughout | lot of going into the copper mines, and | Philadelphia Record: waking has attaine sms to us ng-room of Samuel Tilden’s house | for 85,000 2 dungepns were each about seven feet | tho entive journey, aud should aman | be, with a dozen of his comrades were | (a few months henc to be possibly its bighest development, ramarey Park, Now York, The en- T 1 square and fourteeu feot high. We | die a long black mark wus rlm-od oppo- | taken to a shaft and lowered down. Tn ?) -~ Haye you un) " pottery lllulnlmg is us yet in a low stato wall is covered with carvings in When we know that 'glnw is trans were given bread and water,and oc- | site his name, and when the final des- | this mine he remained for about five *Yes, mi James show the | as an independent art, as is proved by |-satin wood. It cost 50,000 for the | parent it is hard to believe there is such casiovally a dish of some weak thin [ tination wus reuched if any had escaped | months. Duvingihis time he newer saw | lady the Wagner slop cans.” the great efforts constantly made to give | carving alone. It has a vich offect, yet | & thing as a window blind, 4 |