Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 17, 1890, Page 3

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THEWALL FLOWER AS A WIFE Bome Advice on the Subje an Eas'ern Contemporary. WOMANLY GRACE AND BEAUTY. How Feminine Charms Grew Out of Modern Civilization—\ Little Women and Dress—Coming Etyles In Gowns, Wall-Flowers and Wives, We have received the following in- genious and rather pathetic note, says the New York World: ou kindly tell me what a zirl can do 1o es the dreadful doom of a “wall- flower!" When a girl has scores of girl triends, but does not take with young men, what would you advise her to do? In other words, how can she render herself as pleas- ant and agreeable to gentlemen as she 18 to ady acquaintances! Should a girl who 18 refined, pleasant, amiable andsef good family expect 1o marry a gentleman, in the true sense of the word, or should she muarry an ordinary but a good man who can support a wife nicely, but who is in no sense a com- panion for her! By answering these qaes- tions you will greatly obligo A WaLL-FLOWER N. Y., Feb. 13, So much depends upon the individual givl that it 1s quite impossible to gen- i ice to fit an v ial An observation of the neglected girl in her unwelcome role asa *‘wall- flower” might disclose some of the lacks of which she is uuconscious. Asa rule givls who are popular with mates of their own X )t to commen 1 themseives to sensible and right- rted young men. Perha s Al- 1y maiden 15 not as nutural, as viva- ious and friendly with young men of her acquaintance as she is with her @irl friend: There is a great charm in uaturalness. Constraint, self-con sciousness, an absurd imitation dignity, tend to make the cullers of sweets in the **rosebud garden of girls” pass on to other flowers thut are more inviting. There is o homely adage to the effect that ‘‘they who would have friends must show themselves friendly.” The oud question is easier to an- swer. No woman should think of mar- rying a man who is “'is no sense a com- panion for her.” Companions all that this implies of congen and harmonious mental, moral and af- fectional qualities, is one of the ends and finest characteristics of true marriage. But our young friend should not mis- take mere gentlemanliness fer the sure ks of a gentl 0 many girls accept correct dressing and agrecable manuers as the sign of *'a perfect gen- tleman.” This1s but tbe outward show- It is the man behind and beneath these externals whom the woman must live with ifshé 1 ies him. And n or- dinary but good man” makesa very fit husbana for an ordinary but good woman, nown spe How to Marry Well. What girls should never forget is to be neat! Not primly so, but daintily so. The girl well got up, with irreproach- able gloves, and shoes that fit, though ber gown be only cotton, yet if itbe well turned out, may compete with the est, while the slovenly dresser, who scorns or lorgets to give attention to details, is passed over by the aiscon- tented eye, though her gown may be a masterpiece cf Worth A girt should learn to put her gown on properly, says the Ladies’ Home Journal. Nocréature living takes more heed of externals than your orthodox man. He may not know the price, color or material of your clothes, but he will iknow to anicety whether you are well or badly gowned. One special point upon the girl who desir do) to range themselves weil, to make good marriage—is to be gentle. The craze for vivacity, for the free and easy style that borcer so closely on the man- ners of the demi monde that distin- guished the society of ten years ago has qr()\'luunliull_v died a natural death. Now-a-¢ men are sensible enough to look for comfort in their married lives. And suvely the knowledge that one’s future wife has a heart as tender as it is sympathetic should, and does, £o far to arrange a man’s decision of who shall be the partner of his daily life. would impress . (as all girls Cuming Styles in Gowns. The question is not yet settled b yond a perndventure as to what the prevailing styles in gowns will be, says the Ladies’ Home Journal. There are rumors that a little more bouffancy will be given to the skirts of summer gowns and some of the latest importations show the bip paniers of a decade ago. Sleeves will be. more mode in their proportions and plainer in theia outlines, a modified, reduced gigot being most favored. It is reported also that sude forms in the back will run to the shoulder in- stead of the arm scie and in line of darts; there will be one seam in front also running to the shoulder. Bodice seams will be corded again on dit. Rufles will appear in various widths, gometimes arranged in groups up the front. Mauve and amethyst shades are ex- ceedingly fashionable, and many gowns have a colored 1ront, which is edged with flowers or a ruche of the color, and the color is reveated as trimmings for the neck and sleeves—a fashion which has much to recommend it, since the dress is completeiy altered by the substitution of a differcnt color. lmpartinence Rebuked. is the tashion of some women to Reep visitors waitiag an unconscionable time for absolutely no reason at all but to gratify a cay or fad of their Heaven knows where they got the idea, but some of the dear creatures imagine that it is a canon of high-bred etiquette to let a caller cool his or her heels in the parlor for half an hour or so after the servant brings up the card. 'Chis impertinence is most often offered by women to women, A superb young woman who bad high birth and abundance of money saucily told a girl in her set recently that she always kept callers waiting twenty min- utes before she appeared, says the Pitt burg Dispatch, The girl who receive this valuable piece of news called upon the golden calf a few days afterward. She sent up her card and the footman returncd with the message that Miss'—— would be down in u few minutes. The caller took out her watch, and when geven minutes had expired wrote upon one of her cards: I have been gone just thirteen minute Leaying this card on the table, the young lady took her ceparture. dhe Oldest in Americu, It is no small honor to be the oldest literary society for women in Ameri This honor is claimed by the Ladies’ Library assoc ion of Kulmazoo, Mich., says a writer in the New E nd Man guzin Thirty-seven years ago, ih Jauuary, 18 when the commonwealte of Michigan was in its teeus, and thy beautiful little city of Kalmazoo barels It | able to stand_aloas—and men's hand- | were full with clearing lands and build- fig homes and finding bread for thair a number of earnest women the little village met one day to solve the problem: ‘‘How can v nish inteliectual food for vurselve our children in this new land? a vital g They had come of them, from New England hom inherited tastes not easily la they 1booksand lecture were nd lecturcrs sea money, searc clear for o What one could not and when earnest women organ help themselves d their cl who will predict failure? The imme- diate result of that afternoon’s wc was the organization of a society whose avowed objects were the establishment and maintenance of a ecirculating library, und: the promotion of literary n the town. From that day to this, a period of nearly forty years, the association has been in active operation and has deviated not one hair’s breadth from the original objocts. The means have varied with the growth and | ncement of the town and the °nts of the age; the end has me. stion. do, many might ldren, requi veen Andalusian Girls, Andalu 1 girl is almost invari- petite brunette, and although wre plump and many are too the majority huve exauisitely strical “tapering limbs, well de- loped busts and the most dainty and ined hands and feet, says the Lon- n edition of the New York Herald. arding these feet Gautier makes most astounding disclosures that “without any poetical exaggeration, it would be easy here in Seville to find women whose fect an infant might hold in its hands. A French girl of seven or eight could not w he shoes of an Andalusian of glad to of Sevillian won The ably not ull stout, sym if the feet :n really were so mon- strously 1 fifty yoars ago, they are sono longer. [t is discouraging to sce a man like Gautier fall juto the vulgar error of fancying that because a small foot is a thing of beauty, therefore the smaller the foot the more beautiful it must be. Beau v of feet, hands and waists is a matter of proportion, not of absolute size, and too small feet, hands and waists are not beautiful but ug We might as well argue that since a man’s foot ought to be lurger than a woman's, therefore the Jarger his foot the more he has of manly beauty. If the Anda- lusian wome 1ly had feet so small that a baby might hold them in its hand they would not be able to walk at all, or, at least, not gracefully. But it is sely their graceful gaitand car- riage for which they are famed and ad- mired. Makinz a Weapon of It. The latest device for feminine com- fort and pence of mind is the patent pedestrian umbrella holder, which en- ables a lady to suspend the article at her side, sometking after the fashion of an officer’s sword, says the New York Sun. This ularly desirable nveution for chilly duys when one de- sires to keep both hands inside a muff, or for shopping excursions, when one hand is luden with samples and the other is required tolift the dress at ill- swept crossin Then, too, the aver- age woman is so inclined to put her um- brelia down at her side when buying a ticket in a station or making a pur- chase at a courter and never think of taking 1t up again. Now all these awk- ward situations and discomforts are avoided simply by wearing a safety chuin about the waist from which de- pends a chatelaine with a short sheath encireling and supporting the umbrelia just where it fastens when rolled up smartly The chatelaine hangs from either side just far enough back on the side of the dress to prevent the um- brella swinging when walking. When not in use the sheath arried in the pocket, and the elaine, and all are of si or nic , some- t after the style of the key ¢ worn by men. Womanly Grace and Branty. All people agree that beauty lies in health and proper vigorous proportions, to speak roughly, says E beth Bis- land 1 the Cosmopolitan Magazine, and yet women so fragil as thistle-down and consumed with a wasting disease, have at times a beauty more potent than that of the rosiest young maiden. Helen, the daughter of the gods. was most devinely tull and fair and Cleo- patra was *‘little and black,” it is said, and kingdoms were thrown away for both of the There 1s one thing very certain: Thoe amount of feminine beauty in the world has ased enor- mously since the days of Helen and the Serpent of Old Nile. Men do not leave their homes and fight ten years for even the most radiant heauty todays nor do the great conquerers thini the world well lost for any modern:smile. In the days of Helen, and even of Cleopatra, beauty was far more rare than n Women in all but the wealthiest classes were illy protected from the discomforts that destroy beauty and havden and conrson feminine loveliness. They did hea manual lahor, were poorly fed or protécted from wind and weather, und, like the peas- ants of muny of the Latinnations today, while they may have had a certain beaute du diavle in the first flush of youth, the radiance quickly died and left them ugly servants and beasts of burden. Therefore, when a woman arose who possessed the true beauty that age canuot wither nor custom stale, men went mad after her, fought to possess her, and possessing her thought the world but a bubble in com- parison. Selection of this sort was, of rse, constantly at work improving type, and the survival of the fittes by age, litted up the general of beauty. As civiliz grew, woen no longer trudged with heavy burdens through rain and bolinding heat after nomad husbands, and their feet grew delicate and bighly arched. The richer wives vesigned the cc r labors to their servants, and used their fingers only to spin delicate threads, to make rich needlework, to spin, to thrum the strings of mandolin and lute, to curl the silken tresses of their infants and to smooth the brows and bind the wounds of their lovers and warriors. The palms grew, like Desdemona’s moistand tender; the nuils, no longer broken with coarse lubor, gleamed like the delicate transparent macre of a shell, The skin, protected from the sun and wind, grew fair and clear as rose leaves, the lips ruddy and soft, Their hair, carefully washed and tended, wound itself” into vine-like curls, and took the smooth gleam of #ilic. Sufilcient food gave rounded contours; long hours of soft slumbe sprinkled the dew in the violets of their eyes, and the movements of dauce and guy motion made their limbs slender and supple, and at last the modern beauty was evolved, e An Absolute Cure. The ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINTM is only put up in larae two-ounee tin boxes, and is wu absolute cure for all sores, burns, wounds, chapped hauds and all skin erup: Wil positively care all kinds of piles. INAL ABIETINE OIN Sold by Goodman Drug company at 25 ceuts per box—by mail 80 ceats, th age plane tion | it to | A ROAR LIKE NIAGARA, A Graphic Description of a Great Western Prairie Fire roit Free Press: It is high noon August day. Whew! but s down on t ¢, witherin blood of seems to boil how the summer ir scorch X ing the sh i n and animal until We have turned into this grove of cottonwool h for shelter as to prepare and eat voonday meal. There are one three—five—sev ten—trees, covc ingaspace of a quarter of an acre. Here a spring bubbles up from strata of sand and gravel, and so many thousand animals have come here to slake their thirst that the curth is bare of grass for the space of two acres. Not exactly bare, but cropped off so short and trod- den under foot so often that it is oniy a thin carpet to cover the soil The paths radiating away through the dry and waving grass are like the spokes of a wheel. Ah! but water touches the spot on n day like this when one has been in the saddle since sunrise. Each man of us ays so by word of mouth, and e horse says €0 1n his look of relief aiter his thirst has been quenched. Whisk Braody! Champagne! They would have been flung aside with a feeling of dis- gust. miles to—" re no signboards on the urn which way you will and the horizon descends to th ng grase. We are drifting on a vast in- land a sea of earth and grass and dying flowers—both grass and flowers ) their lives to the weeds of ther. One muy huve com- y and comforts, and ne may be ce tain that if he holds true to the com pass he will come out safel foeling steals over him that he lost—driven he nd and wave and cu ils that horse?”’ sprang up to sec one of the a vet niny an nding with his irand poinged due west. While he looks us fixedly as if his eyes had lost their power to turn, his nos- squiver and dilate with excitement. watch him a full minute. He was the first to exhibit alarm. but now one horse after another throws up his head and looks to the west. *It's fire, boys!’ Had it been night we should have seen the reflection. Had there N strong wind the odor would have come to us sooner. here is only a gentle eeze—languishing, dying under the fierce sun, but resurrecred and given a new lease of life at_intervals by an un- known power. But now we cun | see the smoke driving heaven- wards and shutting the = bluz of the west from our vision— now the horses show such signs that no man could mistak A great wall of flame fifty miles in length is rolling toward us, fanned and driven by a breeze of its own creation, but coming slowly and grandly. It tukes me two or threc minutes to ¢climb to the top of one of the trees, and from my elevated posi- tion I can get a grand view of the wave of fire which is driving before it every- thing that lives and can move. We work fa Blankets are wet at the spriug and hung up between the trees to make a bulwark against sparks and smoke, the horses doubly secured, camp equipage piled up and covered, and before we are through we have vis- itors. n or twelve buffaloes c thundering—pass the grove—halt and return to its shelter. crowding as close can, and shoy presence, Next c The prair rent. We all high no fear at our three or four auntelope: eyes bulging out with fear, and their nostrils blowing out the heavy odor with snarp snorts. One rubs against me and licks my hand and I rab her nose. Yelp! wolve and tr serpents rac Yelp! Here are a half dozen who crowd amoug the buffalos mble with terror. and a score of over the open ground to reach the wet ditch which carries off the overflow of the spring. Last to come, and only a mile ahead of the wave, which is licking upeverything in its path, is a mustang—a single an which hassomehow been sepa his herd. He comes from racing to reach the grove tire sh cut him o nd his life. With ears laid pointing, and his eyes fixed on his gol, his pace is that of «u thuaderbolt. He leaps square overone pile of camp outfit und goes ton rods bevond before he can check himself. Then he comes trotting and crowds between two of our horses with a low whinny, There isa roar like Niu 1. The smoke drives over us in a pall like mid- night. The air scems to be one sheet of flame. The wave has swept up to the edge of the bure ground nud is divid- ing to pass us by. We are in an oven. The horses snort and cough and plunge —-the wolves howl and moan as the heat and smoke become intolerable. Thus for five minutes 1 then rel comes. The flame has passed and the smoke is driving away. In their path is a cool breeze, every whiff of which is a grand elixir, In ten minutes the grove is of smoke that we can sea every the earth again. A queer sight it It has been the haven of ref: snukes, lizards, gophers, prairi rabbits, coyotés, wolves, antelopes. deer, buffaloes, horses and men—en- mity, agtipathy and hunger suppressed for the nonce that all might live—that each might escape the liend in pursuit. For half an hour nothing moves. Then the mustang flings up his head, blows the last of the smoke from his nostrils and starts off with a flpurisb of his heels. The buffaloes go next—the deer and antelope follow, and in five minutes we are left alone. For fifty wiles to tne north, west and south there is nothing but black- ness—a tundscape of despa. Away to the east the wall of fire is still moving on and on—impla lentless—a fiend whose rvest is death und who: trail is desolation. befoge the to runs for nose 50 SR, For bracing up the ne the blood and curing sick h dyspepsia, there is nothir Hood's Sarsapurilla. e How Long Do Birds Live? How long do birds live? This is an interesting question, for everybody ad- mires birds, and any information re- garding them is_generally acceptable. Those who have investigated the matter tells us that some birds are very long lived; for instance, 1t is asserted that the swan has reached the age of 800 years, says a Brooklyn Standard Union. Knauer, in his work entitled ‘‘Natur- historiker,” states that he has seen a falcon that was 168 years old. The fol- lowing examples a cited as to the lungu\i!f‘ of the eagle and vulture sen cagle, captured in 1815, and ready several yoars old, died 104 y afterward, in 18 a white-headed vu ture, captured in 1706, died in 1886, in one of the aviaries of Shoenbrunn ca: tle, near Vienna, where it had passed 118 years in captivity, Paraquets and ravens reach an age over 100 years. The life of sea and marsh birds sometimes equal that of several humun gene tions. Like many other birds, magpie live to be very old in a state of freedom, but do not reach over twenty or twenty- five years in captivity, The domestic purifying lache and g equal to rs cock lives from fifteen .hm enty yours, and the pigeon about &4, The nights ingale It butten ¥ s in eaptivity, and the blackbigd fifteen. Canary birds reach an age of from twelve to fifteen 3 s in the cage, but. b fyit liberty 1n their native islunds v much more advanced nished ac partiay who | 1ghs when they sl 4 1 have Dr. Bull's Cough We are ast new remedies for Know the people wi Syrup Kings are like stars, the They have headachts, cuts meaner men, and are Just as suro Salvation Oil. o and set. hueta like 10 call for - CENSUS BUAEAU PLANS, Wonders of Gatnering Information About the Greatest of Countries Electricity will do the counting. By that wonderful fluid agent, for the first time in the history of the world, the population of a country will be enumar- ated in the year of our Lord 1850, Thr months from the presentdate the census bureau will have thrown into the field an army of 45,000 men, which will sweop the United States 1 of information on pretty nearly every imaginabl ject that hasa statistical beari pondent of the Denver hen a deluge of facts will to pour into the two huge offices her: where 2,000 clerks will be industriously engaged in sifting and resolving them into intelligible shape. As the super- intendent himself says, the story told by the reports of the agents of the bureau will follow the least important indi- vid in this vast land from the cradle to the grave—nay, more—{rom them you can estimate your chauces in 100 before you were born of being twins or triplets, and can caleulate the probabilities that were in favor of your turning outa boy or a girl, They will v that you had only two chances in throe of sirvivin your first year of life, and from that time on they will figure upon your lease the snblu until at length the ghou of these gathered figur sor re morse, joyfull you in his ex- habit of *‘causes of death.”” Notcontent with discovering the and | of-your birth, insist upon knowing f are sprang, what your A and yhere your father and mother wer born.” Also it will r re informuti as to whether you are married, or divorcea; how high above level you live, in what great draina basin ‘you dwell, what the low: of cold may be from which you suffer in the winter, how hot you find it in sum mer when the thermometer touches 1ts top noteh, and how many other people live with you in your house. As for the house, ‘you will" be compolled, under penalty of a fine of $100, to say whether youown it or not—f you do own it, whether or not there is a mort, it, and supposing that there is one, the why you borvowed the money on the property. The census is much interested in your private affair see, and if you have @ barn aroy house, you will have to tell similar facts about that, even to the value of the cows and the tools in th ru. All this is merely the beginuing and does not touch upon the great subjects of agri- culture, manufactures. mining, tran portation by land and water both of peo- ple and of freight, fisherles, taxation, and so0 on, all of which will be gone into in the most exhaustive manner, the very processes employed in at least twenty-two of the manufacturing iu- dustries, for instanze, baing given with the fullest detail. "And yet all this massof information will eventually be conden into aljput twenty-three volumes, which will be entitled the tenth census of the United States. Now, how are all these facts gath- erved? [tis ver when the thing is once explain To begin with, the whole of the United States is divided into 175 distr These districts are necessarily of v ng sizes, it being intended to ters so that the work to be done in any one distriet shall be as nearly equal as possible to the labor required “in any other. For instance, Philadelphia one district and Massachusetts is other district. But then, the census of the Bay State will not be more trou- ble than ‘that of the Qu for the reason that Massachuset census of 115 0wn every ten yeal nd the machinery for that purpose is al- I well organized theve that the will be much simplified. York city is also a district and likew Chicago, the four districts mentione being 1 in respeet to popu- lation. Mach district has a person 1n chay it entitled a supervisor, appointed by President Harrison, and under each super is u regiment of umerator: 10t cnumerator s i district of hisown, so ar- ranged as to contain from 1,600 to 2.000 It is his business to go persor family in his district and 1k schedules given him by the supervisor with the information fr the households \tion. that is, as which compose them in ail the dotwils us to personal history ete., before spoken of. He is allowed oune month to do this work 1f it i rural parts and two weeks in c: a city of 10,000 or more, the labor being more easily accomplished where people live close together. In payment for his rvices he received 3 cents for each live person reported on and 3 cents for each dead person who has departed this life at any time during the census year, from the 1st of last June to the last day of the following May. The enumerator also gets 15 cents for each ory or institution and 20 cents for each farm visited. An entirely new de- parture in census taking mude this time is in providing enumerators with “family schedules,” keeping the infor- mation about each household by itself. Finally, the completed schediles are mailed by the enumerators to the su- pervisor to whom they look as their chief. The supervisor is responsible for the accuracy of the schedules, and, if they are lacking 1 any respect, he sends them back to'the " enumerato) But, il they are all right, he forwards them to the superintendent of the cen- sus at Washingson. Lo Sl There is nothing like Dv. Thomas' Electric Oil to quickly cure a celd-or relieve nhoarsb- ness, Written by Mrs. M, J. Fellows, Bure Qak, St. Joseph Co., Mich. to the membe With your name and address, inailed to the Bwift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga., i3 necessary to obtain an interesting treat- ise on the blood and the diseases incidemnt to it ss 8kin Eruption Cured. One ofmy customers, a highly respected and fnfiuential citizen, but who is now abecot from the city, bas used Swit's Specific with cxcellent result. He says 1t cnred him of a ekin eruption 54t he bad been tormented with for thirty years, and hiad resisted the carstive qualltics of wany other medicines. v Bonzur Cizee, Drv, odls Coly, Debn MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1890. 7 Have you used PEARS'SOAP? PAL NEURALGL ara like mag TATICAIHE cansing the pi Internally taken in doses of frc ir! pasms, Sour Stori adachs, Nausea, to sixty arising from change of diet or water or A CURE FOR ALL BOWEL COM (:0ps in halt A Flatulen e, H Nervousn sther caus LAI Max Meyer & Bro., Coraer 16th and Farnam Sts, | Continuation of our Great Closing Out Sale ifundreds are bein derful Bargains we are ofiering on Everything. ALL D/AMONDS RETAILED AT IMPORTER'S PRICES. WATCHE gold, stem w Ladies’ fince solid gold and weled movemen v $13. All oiher watches i l JEWELRY—Cha HALF former prices. ' or Gentlemen's arr inted good timers, heavy hunti trom $ NTS. and all 5 made happy on account of the Wo 1- & cased, solid 5 upwards, casea Watches, proporrtion ne,Lockets, R nzs and all other jowelry at about Clocks are gol DOWN FIGURES—$9 CLOCKS go for # selecr fron Sco them, i » »and fine quadruple be appre ch, novel Warer Se £, Krair, Soup Tureens, Biscuit Jar. rmmenxse line G sn beingrold at abour 50 CEMXEPS O Eeautiful b nud Sal Cak ands, tndividual Cnstors, Napkin Holder i, Cups, etc 1 wares, in a st assortment of Lamps ever shown in ¢ ond description is ou [ ated ware It original 1 and Nut Bowls, patcerns, DOLLAK, NTEL 9. our MARKED styles to dma Il of which are The (New) Omaha Medical and Surgical Institute scs. Bost, Faeill and Romedies { quiring Medieal or Sury Appuratu Treatment for cirevlars curely packed. no marks to § tonts or ser 1 history of 50 £ Nervous Dis Corne ETCHINGS, ENGRAVINGS ARTIST SUPPI | MOULDINGS, FRAMES, 15613 Douglas Street, B [] Nn WANTED ISSUED BY CITIES, COUNTIES, 5CHOOL DISTRICTS, WATER Corresnondence solicited. companigs, ETC, N.W. Harmis & Company, Bankers, 183-165 Doarborn Streot, CHICACO. 70 State Stroet. BOSTON. ALL KINDS OF DESIRABLE PA- Business Paper, i and Unim- n Negotiated, Improved proved I’ hased or On CORPORATION BOND3, Correspondence Solicited. Wo also rece ive and sell Veal, Hay, Grain, Hi Green and Dried Frute, Vege have to ship Write SUMMERE hants, 174 4 M, Mention Omaba Bee, NINETY It ate Makiog o Hlitic polscn rem v. Kyphilis. Gleot & Omaha Medical and SLirglcal Institute - £ & 5.0 - ] . DISEARE e, with q| v 9th and Harney St rd und Attend ) Foot Cursature iduey, Bl OF expross so Call and consnlt ts, Omaha, Neb. EFEMER! EFHALLE' B KIMBALL, UF PIANO: G SHEE' ON, & DAVIS & OFGANS I MUSIC. Omaha, Nebraska ISCHROEDER & D EAN, GRAIN, Provisions™=Stocks Basgmsat First Nationa! Bai, 305 South 13th Street,. ~ NEBRASKA NATIONAL BANK Omaha. U. 8. DEPOSITORY, OMAHA, NEB, Capital...... SurplusJan, OFFIC HEsRY W, YATES, LEwis & Jas W.Savaor, W, VL MonsE; Jors 8, Co R [ Pr - Cor. and A General Hanking 1st, 1890. ..., ND DIRECTORS sident REED, Vice President CUsHING, J N H. PATRICK, W, . S HuGn THE IRON BANK, am Sits, <o 400,000 57,600 .3 shie Business Transacted, TMADE BY CHAYNES £ (o BOSTON A MV 51 € DE | ER: l 3 COMMERCIAL NATIONAL™ BANK, gapital, 400,000 Surplt W W 40,000 Directors ~R. M. Morsoman, G . Garneat, Jr. A. Henry. E. L G Maul, Vpres s L3 Wil Hopkins, p A, MiliATd, cashier; Hryant, assistiit cashiier OMAHA MANUFACTURERS, Boots and Shoes 5 NDALL, JON & CO, Successors o evd, Jones & Co Whiclesale Manafacturers of Buts & Stoes Agents for Boaton Rubber 8hoo Co.. 1102, 114 and 1108 Earuey Stroet, Omahs, Nebrask Officers and M. Hiteheoek M And, inms, A, ¥ F. 1l “Browars. STORZ & ILER, Lager Beer Brewers, 1581 Notth Eighteenth Sireet, Omana, Nebrasks, Cornice. EAGLE CORNICE WORK Manufacturers of Gaivanized Iron Cornice Window-caps And mstalilo sky izhts. John . 108 and 11) South i0th stn ___Artiats’ Materia A. HOSPE, Jr., Antists’ Materials, Pianos and Orgas, 1513 Douglas strect, Omahn, Nebraska. ___Coal, Coke, Eto, TOMAHA COAL, COKE & LINE CO, Jobbers of Hard and Soft Coal ™0 Bouth 1ith sirest. Omabia, Nobr NEBRASKA FUEL €O, Shippers of Coal and Coke, 314 South 13th street, Om: Nebrasks, o i Clgar: o G DEAN, ARMSTRONG & CO, Wholesale Cigars. 408 North fth ‘eet, Omaha, Neb, pestbe b el Dry Goods and Notions, M. E. SMITH & CO., Dry Goods, furnishmg Goods and Notions Hello™ 1499, EILPATRICK KOCH DRY GOODS €0, Tmporlers & Jobbers in Dry Goods, Notions @ents’ Furnlshing Goods. Cornar 1ith and Warnoy Furniture DEWEY & STONE, Wholesaie Deaiers w Furniture, Farnam 3t, Omaha, Nebraska. CHARLES SHIVERICK, Farnitare, Omabn, Nebraska. ___Grooerles. MeCORD, BRADY & CO., Wholesale Grocers. 13th and Leavenwcrth streots, Omaha, Nobraska. = Hardware. HINMEBAUGH & TAVLOR, Builders’ Hardware and Scale Repair Stop Mechunies Tools and Buffelo Scnles. 1005 Douglas stroet, Omnha, Neb. — e Lumber, Eto. JOHN A. WAKEFIELD, Wiholesale Lumber, Ete. IO e Tar AT eackne (ATl Comae Cla snd Quiroy White Lime. CHAS. R. LEE, Dealer i Hardwoed Lumber. Wood earpet th and Douglas . cel » ISSOURI MINING €t Hingzs g Snipors o Hand and Sot €02 LOUIS BRADFORD, Dealer in Lomber, Lath, Lime, Sash Doars, oto. Yards—-Corner 7th and Douglas, OMos Lum FRED. W. GRAY, er, Lime, Cement, Etc., Ete. Corner th and Douglas strects, Omaba. T millinery and Notions._ 1. OBERFELDER & CO., 5 & Jobbers in Millinery & Notions 203, 210 and 212 South, “Notiol " ROBINSON NOTI! ¢ Notions and Furnishing Goods, 1124 Harney s° ahs. SOLIDAT NKLIN. Wholesale Refined and Lubricating 0ils, Lotc, Omaba, A 1L Bishop, Maoager, = = Lol ey CARPENIER PAPER CO., Wholesale Paner Dealers, Carry nnice stock of prioiing, wrapplng and writing Spec 1100 RIVen L card paper. et ] Safes A. L. DEAN General Agents for Hall's Safes, 2J South 10th §t., Omahs. H. HARDY & O Jobbers of Toys, Dolls, Albams, Fancy Goods, h Furolshing Goods. Cblldren’s Carriages. 108 Faruam sirest, Oualin, Neb. OMAHA JOBBERS DIRECTORY, Aqicnlt’llmulcmcnls, Wagons, Carriage WiND ® rome con Steam and Water Supplies, Hallidey w.ni will ad 92 Jones 3t., Omabs, ¥. Munager. BROWNELL & CO, Engines, Boilers and General Machinery, Shectiron work, 12131218 Len _____tron Works, e XTON & VIBRLING IRON WORKS, EPOHEHI and Cast Iron Building Work, wabk, goneral founiry, machine. aud k. Office 304 works, U. 1. I 3 atreet. Omab OMAHA SAFE & IRON WORKS, Manf'rs of Firg and Burglar Proof Safcs, Vaults, Jall work, Iron shutters and fire cscaped Q. Aridrees, prop . Cor. Wik aad Ja:kaoi SLa. Sash, Doors, Etc, M. A, DISBROW & €O, Wholesale meoufacturer ot Sa:h, Doors, Blinds and Mouldings, Brauch office, 128 and lsard stre __SOUTH OMAHA. UNION STOCK YARD CO., g 0f South Omaba, Limited,

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