Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 12, 1890, Page 20

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20 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE:TSUNDAY OCTOBER WOODS, thermore, instead of appealing to the ’ fine stolen sl while ho wis N N A. I, Robinson tn Chicago Tribune, code, the host who had been_so ly | waiting a chance wrun them off, MRS (,l \\] STR\ LDR]‘,\“ October wo where late the green robbed took the turnof affairs witha | body 1 save myself, knows that Of summerslivery was seen, philosophic resignation truly admirable. { this room exists. ; The Frost King laid his finzers cold, After the f great struggle against | Ho smiled cynically, and lifting the AT 2 And lo! & thousand hues unfold the terrible disuppointment -~ which the | lamp, gazed around at the slime on the A Vivid Vision in Which Futurs Honors That vie with rainbow's mingled sheen, to his hopes had brought, he | reeking bricks, Then he made a little Wero Beheld, The maple stands like Orient Queen w close to his friend, and wished him xri-([|1r‘|1t motion, and said: Among the oaks of somber mien, tjoy. *The swords—the r _)»lm's——l have for- And lindens tint with yellow gold Verot was both touched and awed by | gotten them. Hold thislamp a moment, | AN QVATION IN NEW ORLEANS. October woods, the stre change that came ovor | bleas T W g " {4l Eyes serens Bauderet's face and manner, It wasa mechanically aceepted the prof- —_ 6‘:’:1;‘:;:4]'3{;.14&‘ln‘.‘.‘.'lr\: 'fl,- Sous \T.n’wn, slow, mysterious transformation of the | fered light; but ashe did so something The Story Told by the Widow of the Whereon 18 writ in manifold man. Flis Im tookon an inscr wblo | in Bauderet's look, or in his movement, The havsh threat of the winter bold masiof qulet, almost yut him on his guard, or rather startled Great General Who Ll To seize upon your bright demesne, behind which something him o little, Armics of the Union “\mm woods ! urablo depths of poignant suff “You'll not be afraid to stand here a w Victory. N 4 ng., In his eyes at times burned a light | momeat, while I go fetch the swords,will TOR TSOBEL which startléd Verot and buunted lis | you?’ —_— ums at ni H:- placed peculinr accent on the word In a beautiful house on Sixty-sixth By Maurice Thompaon. Love predon “afeaid,” and Verot felt his blood tingle | gtrect, in New York, surrounded by com- in r ponse to the insinuation, ou shall soon have your test of ~.\ill 08 well Bauderet’s conduct was | “but if y as aware of nothing | you'd better les his impending nupti without it.” Not long since, it was while yet the {mh‘.' + excitement ran high in connect- | on with discoveries made when the old Bauderct house on Bourbon street, New | {60 Drileans, was torn down, I was told the | much b story of Augustin Verot. the ten It was in the year of 1839, that this ‘ spring time, young man, rich, gifted and h ety 1@ pussionate young s and fort and luxury, the center of a large ; cirele of friends, Mrs, Julia Dent Grant are going back after we .|.‘.,.\ Is spending the declining years of her take the lamp. I can wait |life. She has saf it means to pro- vide for herself munificently and enable by LA b *This is not n ples her to entertain her friends and often nd the wild fluting of the | sncered Bauderet, again letting his e large companies of the public, as be- rd. weep the loathesome 1ittlo cell. | aoimos the Uhsei time (as is now known,) SOl Wmgletsg il moldering |0 s tho wife of the foremost c some, eame to New Orleans to spend awinter | piyderet went frequently to see an old and the pule rings of fra. | Of the age. Ivery Thursday is set apart with Charles Marot Baudere negres voudoo charm weaver, and slowly strayed in the .nm, damp | for the reception of those who wish to guaintance he Iad formed procur her a phial of hideous call upon her, and it is said that cortain Tho two men were of the same poison ¢ liquid, thick, rauk, stand th like that,” said | persons, among whom is G or I'll stamp you into [ man, visit 1 \eral Sh ons and the ¢ every week when she | tho floor ; bl et cds all steeped A coward would do fhet," retoptad |2 110 oity. Her lile ls varl u ding two or thres light | What by occasionul visits to her chil- .8, and pausing in thelit- |dven who are boyond the sea—Mus. and and Colonel ads of renzy-bearing, made from the he the their tastes were similar. Verot had | en tad been captured by Bauderet’s wit, [ 000 learning and subtilo personal charm. | fngether for many days. Among the | g In turn, m.l vet’s imagination wu Afric m\n\rlm)wm ors this liqued touched {nto singular activity and [l L “"l;l‘it”“““"“ “itl”‘(i: meant | tlo doorway. “I have some doubts of | Sartoris living in'T sympathies bor ny by, Verots mag. | 00 oW Relptass lind. Its you honor, or ought tohaye” | Fred Grant in Viema ns minis aetic genius, oction was attended with the most His YlstBper wae tas ter to Austrin—and her son Ulysses, It is rare indeed two young men, poets | golemnly horrible of rites and incanta- A 5 . blats A4S MAs | wholives ona farm about forty miles both, find such an overmastering mu- | tions, Ut e out of New York. Mrs Grant is modest backward s Verot said, ; udsiet rotrente o more stop ) o tual interest flowing between them. | T was tho night before Isobel and ideret retreated one more step | gnd somewhat shy in her nature and no s ke o S BRI o night before d then, with o flendish leer, laid his hand ok L e Their friendship became at once a pas- | verot's wedding day. Bauderet ap- | oy tHa fieavy sKutiars one would suspect from_association with sion. When Bauderet left Paris rear’s sojourn ther se from his new rome to New Orled months with him, Thus it that carly inthe autumn of 1 arrived, after a pleasant voy took up his abode in the Baude sion on Bourbon strect, vles Marot Bauderet, as some of dors will remember, was a bach- | hlue eyes and § elor orphan, oceupying the' luege, silont | the ere Dl\l house all alone, suve that he was rounded with man, ithful slaves, “Ihe' housd was o Low, frspreading, bty Flnunn brick strueture, whoso immense- | ness was not physical frailty, however, thick walls and small windows gave | for he was noted swordsman, pos- it H"ulhlw appe Vines clam- | gessed of extraordinary nervous energy. bered over it from base to roof,andit | "It was late in the night and the lamps was embowered in - dusky trees, Sur- | wore burning low, the flames flickering rounding it wasahigh br 11 topped | faintly and faltering in their b with a picketing of jron, The gates | soclkels among the pendant “' Sl GU, G Ll illiants, when Bauderet arose ~and ng loc hmn within, They were attended by statuesque keepers as blackas night, Buuderet was descended from a family her that ~|u~\.n~f|vv cighty e lady in the land;™ that later, remarked in & [ itk Gen the **first in compan, 1 Grant, she visited ever, b city in the Union, and received at- tentions such as a queen might envy; and then made the journey around tho ruest of all the courts jeared tobe in better spivits than uswl; [ “%05 aftor o' | e hind somme rare old wine brought ini6 You cted a prom- | he fibrary and ho and Vevot sat up till t he should | jyte drinking and smoking, while they spend some | papmmitt 1 themselves perfect [lu-dum i bout | jn converiation. Verot Although, as I have said, their tastes , and milar, no two men could ha nan- Koin personal appearance Zerot and Baude tall, athlot command, but [ shall take my own time to obey,” tone of constrai tement, *‘How should you it in this littl boudoir until your bride comes to yo aflash’ the meaning and the pu pose of Bauderct's words and move ments leaped through Verot’s mind. Already the door wasslowly swinging shut, So frightful was the (hmwht with its :llow n.nlmfllmn' while | 6 ite . that the ole . uek o 1 reole was dark, slight, blick-eyed, | i) Purisian stood for o single’ moment erious-looking, possessing the g Af an old sol- 4 reception of and Army of _the Re- public, given by Mrs. Grant, and formed heracquaintance. Matters relating to the.Grand Army ealled him to visit her several times ufterwards, until he be- camo sufliciently acquainted for her to lay asido, somewhat, her natural ro- serve and speak more freely of herselt and her illustrious hushand than she oth- - erwise would, The clergyman related . verot lot fall the lamp w the following incident of oneof hisvis ing brazenly on the brick floor, re-| “&on {he lust occasion that I visited mained sputtering and burning there | poy house, T ventured to speak of the \\'A!]l:l strange, funt !J‘““ _ll,_:hl. Some tender wd with which the old sol- thing likea death chillshivered through | giops remembered hor husband. when the uir. : s she told of her earnest love for the mem- One long bound the Pe n made, | japsof the nd Army and the lifelong aion Was pre members of the ( paralyzed. d night, forever, Augustin Verot. t your dreams be sweet,” said Batider Slowly, steadily, the door, which was in reality section of the mas- sive wall, swung round. ich, clal my dear old fellow, it is grow- ou must not be dro morn., One more v of huccancers, His wealth was the 15t one—the best that Cubn ever gave | Uitering ~a low, harsh cry of | gfeetion with which tho general re- sult of ancestral piracy, murder and {‘, S lips of man, and then to your 'l;:;;ijl‘flxxl'«l l:" s he was caught be- | yqpded his old comrades, She proceeded ) pine. In the young man’s blood burned | dreams osing door and the jaw of taint of wibrilied pussion, and in his | *'Fo fetehed from a little hanging cabi- brain o lawless imagination held high | et asmall ivory box curiously carous s poems were, like those of | and mounted in” gold, out of w Poe, Baudelaive and Villon,» suffused | 1ol two large oscuros separately wri with something that suggested madness; | pod in - silver foil. One of th but the young man_showed no signs of | handed to Verot, at the same timel anunsound mind, On the contrary, he | jngy the other. to speak of the great friendshipof the people of the south for him, saying that just before the meeting of the” national republican convention, during General Grant’s sccond term as president, the general used to bring her a largo num- ber of letters daily from prominent men in the south, pleading with him to allow the door There was a strugglo lik of wild beasts, the men panting in the tearing and st Presently a body was heaved and flung; it fell in the centerof the cell, > the fighting rowling and eir brutal a8 brillianily, fuscinatingly sane and | Sho B e A DIt T ae and lay ghastly and motionless beside | pisnamo to o beforc tho convention for N T T i [ it of npricclesslobsontng | o fast-dying’ lamp famo. Then the | 4'chind thmes This led how to rolate the WO, GOl L wand, ™ | ponderous door went to with a dull tle into society, and entertained scarcely following remarkable _circumstance, atall, in the general meaning of thie which, so far as I know, has not before ntily brushed the almosy | hump and asharp click of the hidden word nds, rarely more than | plack eigar across his nose to inhale its | *PFIv&- + : been made public. 1t is so interesting one at a time, wero admitted through | fragrance, and instantly rocoiled, for feipionitheirlyalstonson %‘_‘%‘."‘,‘b"l“{ that I think it ought to be known by his portentious looking gates and_into | there came from it o strange, insinuat- | Of the cell panting and quivering, the | {he whole nation. Her story was us his luxurious twilight parlors and dusk- | fng wa unbearable stench, white froth clotted on his lips; the other | 114y dim library. Ho was a connoisseurof | “That is nothing,” laughed Bauderet, | 189 1imp und lifeless within, A *CMy early homo was in the south in wines. clgalrs and old bool 1llelsr‘nukud vith a hollow, brutal Hng in his voios | o mystery, which for nearly fifty ch. men? which s smal city ot that most incessantly, rurely drank to ox- | thatstartled Verot. *‘When you light | voyvshad hung over the old Bauderet | S0 it havingattained t D cess, read medizeval poetry, and in his ,mu dismlu""‘* mm the smoke Veraa R Wbl whon' ihe as one or Lhe yreut utuh m lhe umunm touching almost all the relations of life. ?1\;“((, ;ufi.w .“Sum,..-.mu bou- | cme in the coursoof their work toa s th‘,\ouuw ;)vm)luu[ my uulu'uut- When Verot arrived Bauderet met v et }:m’.;\nufliz\‘hg"y“_""fi'oo"{h :&l;;_lru]!‘urlv‘l‘“: ance a visitto New Orleans was the R ot Al Py .t sives he middle ol ch lay reut ove ife time. T he Bl i,‘.i.‘fi[,,f;i’,’}‘b'h,“'fllfl,f,_,,,fi oabward PTG, Letpraon skelotoh clothed in rotten garmonts, | Spoubevent ofa lifo time. ~Whon ono young Parisian_at once folt that somo | of atrocious evil that fi This was tho body of Charles Marot | zh1q to spend a few days there ho was e R O e e i B Baudoret, whoso ' sudden disuppenrance | S sy of us atl, A1y pessie. b T o | O e about the timo of the marriago of Isobel [ 1O ECTY 0 I (58 DO T Dust- inhisex- | pearit! Des Champs to Augustin Verot had | pass made the journdy to Now Orleans thut Baudere! s not prossions of affeetionto joy over 0, “mm.mn.q.q\..mm~ flven ris to to many wild stories, In | noarly evory oar, and it wns the great: : but soon enough the mys et, so absolute had been the mystery, | age A it R b fod adequately expliined. Baudere was in love. I \\'hulu nature was ab- sorbed in the ne ion. and—and—-" Mademoisclle lh Champs s the Something in Bauderet’s @uughter of a retired planter whose l,.‘,llcd_lu\f ot home was but a few steps from Bauder- | same tim et's gate. Recently the poet had met | A man her. Tomeet her was to love her, and | hupied now hecould find room for no other.| strain inh thought. Isobel Des Champs was the | with that g]h subject of his most cloquent conversa: tion, his strangely melodious poetry curiously brilliait sketches in w | colors, “You know hm\ I feel, Verot—you Verot found Bauderct’s house a very | know how I feel, 3 palaceof enchantment; so vagueand yet Again the Parisian essayed to light o cffcetive were the impres the cigar; but the thing was not possi- by its vich tape its ble. e flung it aside, after inhaling any furniture, its dim one intolerable draught of its s and pictures and its solemn silonce. “Ha, ha, ha!” laughed 3 young patrician Frenchman had been | you have less cour o than I sup- sccustomed o old houses, buthere, in | posed; but, then, you Parisians, ag I've this city of the new world, his creole | often told you, are & degeneratese.’ that not the faintest clew to the missing man had ever been found, until this re velation by the workimen Ll‘n‘ulgmlc thing Immediately after the discovery of Bauderet’s skeleton, inquiry was begun as to the whereabouts of Verot, who was traced and found, an old man, widowed and childless, penniless and friendless, on the island of Corsica. story, as [ have told it to the velief from the long hideous being, he fc Rnaar mw inmy mind and became quite absorbed with the wish to make the visit, “‘One night T had adream. Tn my n I seemed to be in the city of New s, and the people came out in masses to do me honor, I was invited to dine with all the leading persons of the city, and feted until it secmed that the whole ecity had turned out to do mo honor. The populace brought great volls of carpeting and spread i b walks, and the enthusiasm w g as though a queen was rec the alty of hersubjeets. But all tho time scemed to me that while all this was nd [ was permitted to re- ceive the hohors as if no one else shaved them, yet another was present, and his as the real occasion of the en- option that was tendered us. ST married I Grant, and the fortunes of war placed him where h 510115 iy s ouk Lokt ap- sympathy, while i 0 it made his heartalmost sink. ing in his coffin, ready to be might have' had such a . His face was white, which comes in extreme moments to a dark countenance, and his_eyes, strangely dilated, burned with a dusky, deep-set brillianc str vet had relaxed his whole lat once into a state of col- lapse, from which nothing could rally him, He died in his seventy-fourth year, muttering with almost his last breath: “Isobel, Tsobel, it was all for you! I 1 in my honor, him the grave he meantto give me. It was a close and silent tomb, but at last—at last—it—has—given—ahl— up given—its—secret!” aiL friend had given him the freedom of one |~ Verot bid risen, and how stood tower- | D, Birney eurcs oatarel, Beo bldg, | kindness of 1 bled him to placo that scemed filled with anantiquity far | ing above his host, his magnificent frame SURER SLUARE & the south, as thought, under the g""-‘\l‘\ than the Roman buildings of | expanding and a determined look in his Wood Like lron. most lasting obligati y neve rance could bhoast of—cven the most | fine, fair fuee, The jarrah wood L specios of eu- | scemed to tive of ruined in old Provence, 'n Australia, says | tude. Bauderet was see Lsobol D the young vi esnu Baudt ch-quwnb desel %\n'\' willing to meet the beautiful g Thut cigar was poisoned!” he ex- | calptus native to weste ) claimed, with drumatic energy of cx- | the Kew (Iing.) Bulletir main dif- from pression, g ficulties in connection in this | they 8 \n\l kno ade a o ke 10 Bauderet, with | country ave the cost of freight for such quruf the south, When 'wo visited {muediate concern, stooping und pieking y timber from Australla and_its in- [ New Orleans my girlhood dream all it up. e whlch makes it difficult | came true. The entire populace of New on he in the least disappointed | ™ g putit o his nose. | for ordin: lish earpenters' tools to | Orleans turned out todo us honor, They When he saw her; indeed, her loveline “Why, that is strangel” ho erled, | Work it. Tho “treo which produces it | unrolled @ rolls of carpeton tho 80 far sury l.wl_»m ation, so dwarfed | vy, 'm Rt ian . " | grows generally to a height of 100 feet, | w as though the flag stones werenot all former visionsof muidenly attractive- 1 steadily. search- | and sometimes 150 feet, It is found only | good enough for us to walk on. Wo that Verot was struck to the heart G slowly in western Australia, :nding overthe | were the g of the leading men, and Y rst glance. Bl e R i s R ale el oAt ion: wter portion of t itry from the | of the city itself, and were feted by ev- If Tsobel captivated Verot, it was not One & that his deadly purpose | Moore viv to King Ge s sound, | erybody, as though everyone was trying loss of loveat first sight, for the hm«\~ had been discovered;the other lnew | formi rinly the forests of these | to outdo the othe Never did any per- risian did not Lnlv to impress | that death was looking for him in e ceording to Baron Mueller, | son receive a greater ovation, and I ngination in turn, From tho mo- o to havo Vorot 1, of course, ly alter ptions, felt L. " The two men lool into each otiwr’s eyes; s | when sel e o ndraea i SRR SR A 8 »ted from hilly localities, cut | conld not help feeling that it all came ment of their first meeting they were | (I D i 8 OV 3 when the sap is least active and subse- | from the gencrous rts of the unlun_mw, s everybody could plainly SHow shall we settle this?”he de- | Quently carefully dried, it prove people, as a token of their appre Joo, Bave only Bauderct, 8o 1088 10 tho | manded, in a hard, dry tono: pe i i ) of the general’s kindness to Gene nfatuation of absolute devotion was he Baudere sels constucted solely twe laughed of italte ) pufled lazily at his cigar five years of constant seevice, remained shrugg his shoulders as if the matter | perseetly sound, althol not coppered ‘. woro of very light consequence to | Lt has been tried in threo places in S Grant, ther s no evidence of pride ov him, , and_ after having been down soven | elation, but simply ~a mannee that “ think the best way to settle it is to | yeurs the trial samples were tal showed how she dwells on the memo 20 to bed and sleep it off,” he remarked, ' that a report of their condition | of her illustrious husband, and what an with a half yawn ht be sent to k From certain | inexpressible privilege it was to have “Scoundrél ain, murderer!” ex- spondence botween Kew and some | been his lifelong companion, Mos, claimed Verot, permitting for the mo- | lcondon vestries it appears that jareah | Grant belongs to the American people, ment his indignation to master Liw, | has 1 been used by the Chelsen | whatover concerns her concerns them *you shall answer to me now puving the King’s Road, and | also, and this simple which has "Oh, certainly, if youwish,” sai® Bau- | by the Lambeth Vestry in the West- | not been told before, Possc n in- deret, calmly, *my Sword room is but a | minister Bridge Road. terest that nothin roman and his army,’ “In tho rel point of whi that ho could see mothing of Isobel’s dazzling beauty, could hear nothing but the rich, low music of her creole voico. Soon enough Verot was in the seventh heaven of n suceessful courtship—not courtship, but love-telling and~ love- listening—while poor went right on in blissful enjoyment of his imaginary lordship of Isob The autumn sped; the winter went adream; and out fashed tho o blooms, ot poured the mockin songs, heavily drooped the roses by the Tho breezes from the gulf were ion of the stor, cory 1 is as related by Ms. tand fragrant; the sky was like a | SkeP from here; follow mo It you're 1ot | - pr. Birney, noso and throat, Boo Ldg. | Shat s it aad 1 ::n.-l‘,‘}u Ao gm{tl [v_'nllv violet i t ~‘>ullw‘_:.|nll\l‘ >t followed, but not without a Ho Died Withont Re £ interest, do I > world,” world with u wavering mist-dveam of | otyunge sonse of insecurity. It was as In the R N R o — spring. 3 if some treachery werd ubout to be B MNR O 1‘”““ Dr. Birney, noso and throat, Bee bldg. The gh;\n N0 BRI wching for \“"j‘ sprung upon him ‘at every step while | | opti st B T B oraoer, todayart for Funoo, whon, one morning, | they passed through two or three dim | [ty who had reashos thovimaof | Miss B koM glant he informed Bauderct that he und H»- rooms and along n oW, NArrow passige | sovent b leg s od 1h l‘:'l age | Miss Elis Bt A Missouri nieih, bol were tobo mavrled, and would, 8ot | qetygen dnmp brick walls, then into 8 | 37| snasial 1o thaN o onk i o, (N. | is now visiting this wsompinied by sail within a fortnight to make Paris their home, L) spe m an intellizent man, and of strictly | to \l. New York World. upright life, but somewhat eccentric in | in Lewis county, Missouri, on Murch 9, his opinions, t his death he left these Until she was nine yearsold sho written instructions to his childr n ordinary child, but since then sho al to be as simj loped “rapidly, and now, in her sible. 1 donot desire any ieenth year, ven foot ei ¥ body. would half “inches tall and weighs and siléntly Lo my grave, | pow Hor father issix feot onc and her mothe feet the 0 injunction of the deceased was | None of her velatives on either side by | strictly observed, ‘There were no r t bare windowless little room. : o here,” sald Bauderet, stopping At first Bauderet was stupified by the | elose to one of the dismal walls, “this announcement. He guzed almost va- | doesn’t look like a door, does ity cantly into his friend’s oyes, whilo his | * 1[o fumbled a moment about o certain | ™08 et face grew deadly white. Not a feature [ spot, pressed u hidden spring, and M)}\l:l_fl\.\ f' moved, however, nor did the quiet smilo | nmh.-J open a low shutter disclosing | paliglons serv| quite go from his thin, fiem lips. It was | another coll-like apavtment, dank, | be tuken qu an wdmirablo exhibition of that self-con- | geimy and ill-smelling, Into this Verot | and without trol which in those duys was so much | followed him, Thoy. halted, and faced cuitivated by gentlemen who were in the | each other, a little lamp cal he ‘is hbit of settling all matters of personal | Bauderet lighting up thelr drawn and | jous sorvices at the coremony. Goo Doen R0MMQ tore exlenild Ij,‘ i _Rhe disagreement at the point of sword o | ghastly fuces, D. Hursh, ason of the de , pro- | quite bashful and s A muzzle of pistol, WW can sottle our little troublo here | nounced a brief culogy, after which four | (e Ceniiirul and Of course Verot had counted the cost, [ without the slightest fear of being in- | sons bore the remains of their parent to | gy 1ty yards, double width, to muke and fully expected a duel; but he was | terupted. This is whero .as [ have | the grave. i Ll A pleasantly surprised to find that Baud- | heard, one of my reckless k nsmen, who L, 5 ' o eret would not demand & weeting, Fur- llurm-:rly owued the house, used Lo con- 1 Dr. Biwney cures caturch, Bee bldg, Dr. Birney cures caturrh, Bee pldg L , OCTOBER 12, 1890-TWENTY PAGES —l I/A 7 7 7 7| 'q} WRITTEN AND EDITED BY k7 7| r/ manners in society; behavior; alltoldina chatty manner by one of the brightest writersin the land. 8 ;/ CONTENTS FOR THIS DEPARTMENT IN THE OCTOBER ISSUEL: \\:‘ pe HOW TO LEARN TO TALK WELL; A MISTAKE YOU MAKE; I b HOW TO BE PRETTY THIS FALL: SAYING * GOOD MORNING;” |\~ ,j MANNERS WHEN AT CHURCH; MY GIRLS’ MOTHERS, :; ) For One Dollar Instru ’/A | sending your subscription, or one year only will be giv %\‘iflflfl‘ NINNINANINNININANN € 7 MRs. MARGARET BoTToME, Z/‘ Prestdent of the Order., ;4 A NEW DEPARTMENT IN THE ”'LADH ES HOME OURNAL d interest Bottome, ~Thiz offer must positively bo mentioned when the founder and P4 INNINININININN tircly devoted to the best interests of the order of the « King’s Daughters to every “King's Daughter” in the land, It will be written and edited by Mrs, Margaret ssident of the Order, who in this department, will give each month i\\ "u\lk;" similar to those which she made famous last winter in the drawing-rooms of the best New York louses, G‘ L Is a department which \S is read every monthby i~ ‘We will mail the Journal from now to January 1, 18g2—that is, the balance of this year |\® FREE, and a FULL YEAR from January 1st, 1801, to January 1st, 1892. Also,our (\~ hanasome 40-page Premium Catalogue, illustrating a thousand articles, and including ** Art Needlework (S ns,” by Mrs, A. R, RAMSEY; also Kensington ArtDesigns, by JANE S.CLARK, of London. k& CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY, Philadclphia, Pa. and of striking l« U i~ ~ thousandsof girls who (S b]uy the Joursar for 15 & this feature alone. )%~ t‘@ Izvuy point ina girl's I\ life is here treated: W what is best for her to |\¥ wear; most becoming ‘\\ D NJ L IRV (SIS 70 Maline, Milburn % Stoddard Co ———(ARRIAGES: Special Sale During Next Thirty Days. R EROSHRORIES Harney and 13t/ Styreets, and Ninth and Pacific Strect by the Teg 8l {lio twenty-lirst session ] A. D, 1880, proposi ion Thirteen ution of section as umended shal Wit o 50 as to read a ndies of thesu, iy of hir i ndmong shaTl ave writse s ballot the followlng: llu proposed amendment t 4 10 the sul of an net entit nner of propos onstitution and submitting Approv submitted to the gui for approval or reje f of July. of the state pendence of the United States th dred fif By the Governor, JOHN M. BENIAMIN R, COWDERT, [SPAL.] Becretary of Stat August 1dim tion 1: Thatsection thirteen (13) of ar cle six () of the constitution of thestateof Hu\ Tmients to thit sild propos dmln to be leld on tho 4th day ) THA YER. PHROOLAMATION, EAS. A jolnt resolution Srary Tith, ¢ to the G amendment shall re it ction1: That at the general election to —— 13 ll.()l LAMATION. 1 Dropo ( : Jfour (4] und 3 Vulx (6]0€ tho constit ton of said st .H tion nded shall Tead as follows, to-wit old on the Tuesdiy siceeoding the first vion 1 That scetion rticle six B! St tho constitution of tho stite of Nebraskd s follows: , i il i W A preme court mendment to the con 1 cone {tivo l | in words shald I | neo | ot Tanors Ag s b a0, JTCAhaLl it ve.or TR I 1 .ur..m.n..n A in this state I enses reluting o revenue, eivil cases in [ Tare STl provide by law for the enforcement | which tho stateshallbe u party, mundamas { of this provision.” "And thero shall also it 1 S, i Ap ol uor printed 0 the consti- to provide A Hebruney anend- liied voters ho one hun- | ‘E—r\ (Ew CoLLAR 'K‘ INCANDESCENT ELECTRIC Arc Lights and Motc * Light plants for \ [ LY I —ZEye and Ear Su 1310 Dod fitved, Stroot. Spectacies LIGHTING, rs. N, ¥ rgeon— accurately fon bo separately subm of thisstate for their appro mendment to the con words as nd keepin » elootton on fhe bullot of »d wmends written or ments to the con gm.n printed the words: to the constitut uficture, ntoxicating yor Iy ho writ ten or printed on the ¢ for the proposed \mxlmu, the words: I Wi i, 8110 tox feating Hguors w ate shall be lleensed sainst sadd propose sitlo and keoplng fors x T s ik loveriie Shull b0 Usansod whi ulating by law See. i I either of the sald proposed amendinonts shail bo approved by w majority voting at the sild el tute scetion twent lm’\Imwmmu\uunuulth . I John M. Thayer, of Nibraska, do hereby dance with seetion one [1] articie (15] onstitution and tho provisionsof the wet to provide the minner of pndmenta to U rnor ot and submitti AR R ba° Vb runry 13 it sald proposed amendment Wi e subs mittud to the qualiiied voces of thie st for Jber, A. proval or relection at the Do Beld on the 4th duy of 180, In witness whereof I hereunto set my hand, 80 L0 Do adlixed tho great seal of th and e state of Nebraska, Done at h any of July. A, D. 1800, and the r gtite, and of tho indopenionse of the U nited Stat husdred fifteentn Ty the ( nor. JOUN'M. THAYER. BESIAMIN R, COWDERY, ) [SEAL) Becrotury of State. August 1d3m L Well Perman DON '1' GIVE\UP! OURNEW B Ntw BOOK Guaracteed Tovimos CIVE UP DON'T§| 1 by Taw, i L i fol o jui cs of the cted by the electors thoir” terms of of) inaficr prov all be cieeptag for a poriod of hat seetion five tion of this there shull t wree G4) Jud supreme cou n shll b electod for the term of W0 for the term th te umr' o ARG reme court for th 'rovided, that the judyg ey wore rge ot constle voly elected undcr the pi That each person v n favop amendment shall havo wiliion og printed upon his ballot the fo For the proposed idm e nt to theconstls tution relating to the nun of suprend™ ernorof teen (15). of ¢ the et entitled ner of proposing o stitation and sabn, S whereof I have Lerunto set 1 Slaten the JOUN M, THAYER ary of State, PRENCH SPEGIFI(T, 4 tC fl\ ua| -fime'\y&l“ nR"m"m" Al RSE 'gn’: : ortrealmentlails. Fulldirections with each pars: Price, 0ne dollar. Soe signatureol E. b r STAL. For Bale By All Grugglsts. FHEqscunin r":’r;u ..m.,..; omaiien watt & poo Addrsssormiival Ellmoifllm‘-un

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