Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 14, 1890, Page 20

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE SUNDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1800--TiliRPY- WO PAGES, AMES REAL ESTATE AGENCY 1607 Farnam 8t,, Omaha, Neb, Investors' Agents, &) : i REFERENCE—~OMAHMA NATIONAL BANK, in] OUR ATTENTION [s Especially Divected 1o 10 Lots on 31st A ve., Between Farnam and Douglas Sts., NOW OFFERED BY US UPON REASONABLE TERMS, AT $3,000 PER LOT. They are owned by Charles Turner, Esq. and for Prices, Terms, Lacation, Title and Value, are positively the Cream of Choice Residence property in Omaha. We shall be pleased to show you this Desirable Residence Location | at any time convenient to yourself, and remember you take no-chances in the purchase of this ground, for the Neighborhood is Established. AMES REAL ESTATE AGENCY 1507 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. Investors' Agents. REFERENCE—OMAHA NATIONAL BANK 3 [ ; %o Q 3 QCMOKR ! children and other persons interested in | there, and she brought out a box and we | horns of - papew-or -ood attached to | thoss isles at the east of the anciont now stock of shoos sho_brings. o sunp'e B0 G MO o iies sy Lo NN Y Ghle | oo apoe L st A B | e e e T thaT Th [ ortd hien toata b Sdaa e pomon: THE TINY LITTLE TOOTSIES. | o,k of shoos sho trings a sumpo Sun. It was opposed however, by sev- | and chatted, and had the most awfull bible refers wheén it speaks of having | so polite and so mincing, and also these three pairs of stocking The lasttims Lo oral lerigymer nd by ono or' Wo_or- | jolly moritig imaginable. Doliy didut | one's horn exalted. Tho higher tho | sumo litle luies of the' citios, s civil- — sho ad on six pairs il orlerol i g ; ranizations of wome know before that mamma smoked, and | horn, of course, the greater the appear- | ized, with their adorable cour i pairs of shoos to went in hor new oport. The Oigarette Habit Provalont Among the | “"Tha chiaf renson advanced in favor of | was frightened to death when Nell sug- | ance of dignity. Among the mncient Potito and Prtty Footgear of Some Well | Py ia G 0nn (0 M ot e (e fonst par excellence, It was she who intr duced the gay footgear. Her soles ave beautiful, whether dressed in a slumber slipper or o Louis XIV. Mrs. Hurriet Hubbard Ayer comos from Chicago with as pretty i fool-seT P Crispin ever dreamed of. Her boots are o Radt o e BN e e made on a Chineso last, No. 14, and her taste runs to ved, which’ she wears with scarlet, roso and crimson, or rich black ace, Cultured Hub Ladies. thochange is a practical but deplorable | gested i Jows tho veil was but little affected, the | Mrs. Staniey to 4 moricwn Hyes. Kuown Women, one which has been repeatedly fovced | — I know of amother case where mother | custom being for women to consovt freely g P G0 Eli Rl 1 o upon the attention of those who depl | and daughter hold cozy chats over their | with men > Henry M. Stanley and her mother, q with the misfortunes of the young. The | cigarettes. They have lived in Europe “For ages past it has been the fashion | Tennant, in a way that must maks their | THE MARRIAGEABLE AGE OF GIRLS. MRS. STANLEY TO AMERICAN ~EYES. | (o0 plainly sot forth by Mr. Gerry (a good deal and acquired the habit | for women toseclude themselves in times | ears tingle, says the New York Press, of the children’s society, Who is onc of | there. *‘When we have no company I ) of mourning—more particularly when | Somuch was said about the beauty of } . the principal advocates of the change, [ always join my husband in a cigarette | the mourning was for a deparfed hus- | the younger lady at the time of her en- | New York's Legislature Will Bo Urged in this case, which he recently cited: over the coffec at dinner. He likes it— | band. The Hindoo widow today is se- | gagement to the great explorer, and able Ages—Gossip of Prominent “T know of u case where a man had | says it seems so much more social. cluded for life. In the mourning veil | American ideas of beauty are so diffor- : i or 55 i e ; Skt ent from those which prevailin England —Of Interest to the Women—Facts of Interest wronged a girl, but was veady to make | course Ldo not cave to defy the preju- | worn by widows among our people is to ) s jEiscailindnglandy ey for the Fair Sex. roparation by marvying her. " The girl | dices of my friends by smoing i thoir | be found asurvival of this ancient mode. | that dis pRal eI AApREe i air Sex. ce i was under the legal age, and though she | presence, 50 I do not.”” This i “From being intended for the purpose | ing Mrs. Stanley what I hoard her de- The benuteous Sadie Martinot, who was soon to become a mother, yet a | highly-bred woman who has li ch | of hiding the woman, the veil was modi- | seribed by a Murray 'Illlllsl"nml.) leader, i i has literally tramped on human hearts, Girls Behind the Counter. justice of the peace who was [abroad. | ; fied among the old Romans and Greeks | Ha 50\'}"-1"‘["("’“‘5’l”"ull'sl\:nn;u}h 1‘{1‘““' Woman will have the world at her | has a pair of foet intended for that pur: 11 were asked to give a sot of rales or | 45ked 1o perform the ceremony refused | While buying a box of cigars last week | soas to become an article of graceful | t00 much of the color of good health.” | faot “till the sun growscold.” Volumes | pose. She wears a No. 2, AA width, 1t I were asked to give a sot of rules ov | ¢4, s, saying that it would bo a viola- | at a prominent deuler's a_young lady | drapery flowing from the back of the | But that is the Englishman’s special | o oo B8 BE &P A0 0 o SO | IR P SRR st and. made. i suggestions for girls whose days are | gion of thelaw. A bill was introduced | came in and asked for half'a pound of | head. "Nowadays a further stage in its | type of beauty. The woman that is it has been carved in marble, stamped | 1Avis at anoxponse of G0f. She orders spent bohind the counter, they would | Just winter changing the marriageable | best Havana tobacco for cigarettes. She | evolution has transformed it into a mere | strong, robust, and healthy, who sets T i talized in poetry | \NCLY pairs a year—twenty for the read something like this, writes Kate [ ago. It was referred to the judiciary | pnid $1.25 for it, and carefully remarked | shadowy protection for the face, de- | her foot squarely down on the ground fon canvas and immortalized in poetry | jai eight for ovening wea one pair Tannatt Woods in the Ladies’ Home | committee, where it still slumbers. | that it was for her brother. [ asked the | signed as a prescevative of beauty and walks with athletic instead of miuc- | and song, says the New York World. | of Turkish leather s for the toilet Journal: Someboey or something should be done | dealer if many women patronized him, | ulists say that, even in this shape it is | ing manner, is just what suits him. Be- | All nations have been to tho front with | and one pnir of French goat for the Remember that all the time spent in | to awalken that bill, as it provides the | but he said that they did not come to | most destructive to the eye-sight. sides, I cannot imagine that after his ox= { 4o pogt foot forward, but the French, | street, With white toilots she wears the store belongs to your employ vemedy that is needed to prevent a vepe- | him. They prefer to buy from their > _— nce in Africa Mr. Stanley would f o =008 5 paniard and the Avabie | Draided slippers in flowdr-tintod satin, y behind the counter wins | tition of such cases as that I have men- | druggists. Peasant Women in Japan. grapltipiiany ule thoral nasityg i He Attt o REL AR & e i linut g nee iy a black hand kid even the most captious customer. tioned and others could speak of.” Here is an incident told me not long | The peasant woman, clad summer and | ¢ fe, or any woman who was not | have been forced to admit that the | wity patent vamps made on a Louis XV, That gossip about young men, or with A broader statement of the views of | ago: *‘One night last week, about 12, T | winter in the same dress of blue cotton, 1 solid, after the English type. [ New York woman has the most classic last. them, is unbusiness-like, and, under the | the supporters of the pending bill is | was slowly sauntering homeward, and | ana harvdly distinguishable afar from that «LI;L- l\\' s 'm;r foot on earth. Carmencita’s famous feet are dressed circumstances, rude, that they believe that under all eivcum- | passing a‘swell apartment hotel, hap- ¥ it the theater is A 4 e deai Lighnint : ; Lillian Russell has a trim, slim foot | by a Havana shoecmaker—the one man ver'attempt to instruct a customer: | sar ‘narriage 18 botter than illicit | pened to glance in the windows 'of tho | 1°F ll‘.‘;;‘"‘]‘"“' f““l{ Jeats, Lis dalr An & | Simportant if true,” and so shockingly [ LSS Tt hes bttty S 1000 | T ordition who in lept. posted. a0 while you may sugyest, or politely ques- | intercourse. Under this theory, proba- | first floor. The sash curtains were a | Knot like hers,and is clad in avobe of the | awful that I wonder some of our Mu Aoata ral alices at.a tima. for wiiiand| $e ' moyemeniat ot itliottonpt ating tion, the desivability of this or that. bly, England has for centuries main- | trifle open, and there, in a soft white | same color—the y nt woman who is | Hill dames do not rush down ll)'flm I 7.0 {!: LG BRI AL T danscuse. This slipper artist is a man Do not say, *“Here, Sade, hand me your | tained the limit at the extremely low e, st a very pretty young woman, | daily seen bowing over her toll in | erett house and tell Mr. Stanley that he | she pays never less than 8120, and fre- | of excollent taste. 1o Kiows the colos pencil,” to your neighbor. age of twelve yeal It is argued” that | cigarette in mouth, her” head thrown | the tea fields or in the liquid mud of the | has made a serious mistake in his mar- 200, : | that suit the béauty and style of his Never say, **No, we haven't got it, in this country of mixed nationahties six- | back lazily on her easy chair. She was swales, protected by a rough hat on | riage. If Mra, Tennant, with Ioglish the Duke Alexis handed beauti- | sinuous customer, selects * his own a short, crisp tone; far better a polite | teen i3 too high a limit, and that it | evidently just going to bed, for her hair | days when the sun burns, and having [ tasto, choose to wear a many-col-| ful Mrs. A, C. Bottner out in the dance | materials, makes them up and Car- “1 am sorry to say we do not have it in | should be reduced at leasta year. Offi- | wasloose—magnificent hair that aimost | her head completely enveloped when fored scarf to the theater it 18 | he paid her a great many pretty compli- | moncita gots her dancing dresses to stock.” cers of the children’s society say that | swept to the floor. She did look com- | the north wind blows by a dveadful | offset by the = fact that she has|ments, the preitiest perhaps being this: | macch them. She takesa No. 2 A last Do not thrust a_package at a customer | cases continually come to their attention | fortable and sweet enough to eat.” muffler, alw: s | bred her daughter with suchnoble quali- Iadame, if I had not seen a con- | with afull toe, low vamp and a very as you would a pistol in the face of a | inwhich the present law has proved a | A clever young woman, who writes | the almond eyes to view--the small ties of mind and heart as to win the | firmation of the story I should accuse | high Spanish heel. They are made oi highwayman. bar to the removal of the stigma of dis- | stories and poems, says: funny peasant woman of Japan, wher- | most distinguished traveler of his age, | you of having found the Cinderella slip- ! flexible hand-turned soles of very fino Never throw down goods with an air | honor from the name of young women | “Yes, I smoke cigarettes occasionally. | ever'she may bosought for, even in most | and that is all there is of it. By the | per.” d ; ; satin de Lyon, and generally without or- which seems to say, “I don’t care | and of their offspr For obvious re If Iam tived and nervous they are very | remote districts of the inteviov, is in- | Way, while the London papers were ex- | = Of ull the Vanderbilt ladies Mrs, F! red- | namentation, They cost hor $7 a pair, whether you buy it or not.” sons they are unwilling to render public | soothing in their effects. I do not | contestably more refined than our peas- [ tolling Miss Dorothy Tennant’s heau orick has the smallest and shapeliest | and she kicks her toes through fifty Remember that the purchaser often | such casesin detail, but they arestrongly | ‘parade’ it, because society is supposed | ant woman of the west, writes Pierre | they seem to have "“"“‘1{ overlooked | foot, i pairsn year. She has o weakness for seos more in the seller than she thinks, | of opinion that the law in" this respect | to disapprove, -but in my own room | Loti in Harper’s Magazine., She has | hersister, who, now that she ison this | “Mys, T, J. Astor had a most beautiful | carmine-red stockings, with which and refined young wemen have made | should be changed. alone, or in the company of intimate rotty hands and pretty, delicate feot; o | 8ide of the water, is pronounced the foot, and her shoes were madoe from o | she wears nearly all her dancing shoos~—— valuable friends for life by their cour- The opponents of the measure believe | friends, I see nothing objectionable in touch would suffice to transform | handsome member of the Tennant | njss’s last, ; rgeant painted her porteait ho tesy to an accomplished customer. that a change in the law would do | it.” her into one of those ladies that ave | famil Mrs. Paran Stevens’ foot is one of her | took exception to this whim, but the Always remember that your duty to | more harm than good. While they R painted on vases or transparent scroer R best featuros. Her ankles are remarka- | suple-jointed model only yourmn\lluym' demands your be: - | are willing to admit, most of them, Veils a Survival of Barbaris and there would be little left to t oAt Rl S Ll ';K QN biy slender, and she buys her shoes by ld her Spanish attendant to say, *1 vice, and duty to yourself also. that the law may work hardships and in: | Rene Bache in Kate Field’s Washing- | her of mannered graces, of affec P Mrs. C. P. Huntington, the wife of the | the dozen—all low cut, pointed sho ar what pleaces me; he can paint'them Seek to be ‘s model saleswoman, and | justice in some few cases, they ton says the wearing of veils is the sur- | of all sorts. She almost always culti- [ capitalist and railway magnate, s a | ith medium heels, in blucks silk, satin, | to please his own fancy.” Tho red stock- some one will soon recognize your mer- | that hasty and ill-considered mare vival of the barbarous custom of seclud- | Yates a pretty gavdenaround herancient | strikingly handsome woman of a rich | suado and hand-glove kid, with a turned | ings, however, went into the splendid its. X of children should be in general & YIRS SEREUS QNeYO S o | cottage of wood, whose int yriental type, says the New York Press. | gole as thin paper. Some of these | portrait. Carmencita has a job lot of Dress modestly and avoid cheap jow- | prohibited. Marriages contracted in | 1% women, “Chinese ladies are never | ,ighad with white mats, is scrupulously | Sho is a brunette with luxuriant hair of | shapely shoes and slippers aro embel- | odd shoos in her truuk, the ‘mates of elry; the best ornaments are promptness, | extreme youth, they apt to | seen abroad any more than are . Her houschold utensils, her lii- | satiny sort, magnificent large dark eyes | Jished Wwith cut jet or metallic embroid- ich have been stolen ‘or borrowed by politeness, a well modulated voice, and | turn out badly. They make more di- | women of condition among the Hindoos. cups, her little pots, her little | and fine complexion. She s in appes ) ; artists, advertisorsand moc strict attention to duty. vorce cuses than any others. To prohi- [ In Persia, Turkey, Egypt, and other { dishes, instead of being, as with | ance the type man _ whose | My, Admiral Le Roo, who was a rag Some of them hav Have your hair neatly combed, your | bit such unions would prevent many |lands similar habits are observed. fus, of common eavthenware, | Photograph = might b labeled wuty when she lived in Baltimore, , and the tonsts that have beon of- teeth well brushed and finger nails tidy. elopements and secrel marriages, Among some of these people, however, | daubed with brilliant flowers, are of | “An Odalisque’ or an “Eust-{has shoes from which many and manya lin the Carmencita slipper would Customers are often repelled by untidy | ~ The matter will probably have a prom- | the custom of seclusion has taken on an- | transparent poveslain ated - with | ern Beauty.” - She looks like the | toast has boen drunk. She'is now wear- | fill o volume and a vat. clerks of aither sex. {nsns place 1n $ha Attantion of the lagie. | other phase. Tha wombn, when permite | thoas Hght anaigad paintings that bear [ most self-indulgent of s, and yeb'| ing mourning for the second time. She — Remember aiways that you abe su- | lature and some interesting hearings | ted to go out, earry their hiding with | witness of themsolves to a long heredity | She is possessed of g ol lives at the Victoria. She is still henu- Good News tor Reading Girls. perior to circumstances only when you | may be expected in committee, The bill | them in‘the shape of a veil, At the be- | of art. She arranges with original taste | ter and of exhaustless energy. She is & | tiful and charming, and her tiny black | The friends of Miss Constance Naden make yourself so. The most selfish, ex- | which s(ll\lfilumh“ in committee fixes | ginning this is an opaque cloth wrapped [ the altar of her humble ancestors, | Very clever woman mentally and she is | Spanish ties are the envy of the women | dispute the statements made by Her acting employer will gladly recognize | the minimum marriageable age of males | around and avound the face and body, | Finally she knows, how to arvange in | often her husband’s advisor as well o [ and the admi 1 Spencer that hor death was caused by the merits of an eficient cle at eighteen years. ten or mory yards often being used for [ her own vases, with the least spray of | companion. Their mutual devotion and | Sylyia ( ‘wears No. 8 stockings, | exceptional mental development. It Frown down with womanly scorn the ' e the purpose in the orient. verdure, slenderbouquets that the most ”l:”ll' U"J"{'"‘?‘Wf *_'m"“ “‘,i"" s ocloty | the smallest ladies’ size woven, and itis | was "the strength and vigor of her nonsensical title of “saleslady.” It isa Even Boston Girls *moke 'Em. “The custom of hiding away women | artistic among our women would hardly | might “Ilhudt vod “",‘ hougr I‘l' ,;::" 14““1'1 the opinion of dukedom and shoedom | brain which kept her spirits even and grand thing to be a woman anything; if | Do Boston women use cigarettes? The | having as its ovigin the anxiety of the | be capable of composing. Infian, " t0omlo. many, & OURE 09uple.1h | thaynorlsk upp vas made in | allowed herto work without evil effocts, you are true and good woman, . good | query is often put and sometimes an- | W& o keep his trensure for himself,is | She may possibly be more honest than | their honcymoon The fine now house | the prottiest and sm: slipper that | She wrote for somo hours cvery day, clerk is infinitely moro respectable than | jwored, Generally the answor is in the | Wndoubtedly of Asiatic derivation. ‘It | her sister of the citics and her lifo may | Which M. Huntington is building attho | ever eutored the Casino. mostly on philosophy, and rose from hor a so.cailed “saleslady,” and the term has iR Y the answor1s in the | goong never to have been dependent | be more regular—from our Buropean ‘;"'.':«L‘",“ i ‘l“_“']"“l’“‘ 4 1(‘,‘"‘.' ol Mes. John € Calhoun has very par- | workas fresh as w she sat down, ashoddyish ring which is totally un. | Begauve. The fact is, however, that | upon degrees of civilization, but merely | point of view, of course; she is also more giret lanpoilia thahamesnl Lormoallun g feet. So hus Mrs, Levi H Mor- | Her health up to within eightecn American, many more women than anybody sup- | upon ‘o instinet. It is but a step | reserved with straugers, more timid, [ Vanderbilt L AUSI Tit Aliney. \ James Robe ¢ has a | months of her death was excoptionally Outof 200 clerks in a large establish- | poses do smolke, says the Boston record. | from Germany, where any res with a sortof mistrust and dislike for ;\ hg'nl"o"'k;*'l"jft-*-*:“""; lhn' ar | eat little foot, and Miss Nellie Arthur | good, and the disease which terminated ment, the favorite with nearly all of the | They ave not found among the shop | woman may walk the strects of afcity the intruders, notwithstanding her | he will enter l“k ik dnto the hotbed. has the smallest pair of feet that the | fatally was one common alike to the customers isa young woman who in- | ladies and working girls, but in the [ midnight with impunity, to France, in | amiable welcome and her smiles, 8 lhiqn‘n, and socloty ;*111! aaly With | whito house hus known since the days of | dull ind gifted. Georgo Eliot, to whom variably dresses modestly in black and | Hanks of the more elogunt and culturdd. | which country a girl i considered to | In the villges of the interior, far | &nXicty to sco if ho and Mrs. Huntington | Dolly Ma : Mr. Spencer compares Miss Naden,lived H A 4 charming mantors that it is a | S8id o charming girl a fow days ago: have sacrificéd her reputation if she is | from the recent railroads and from all V\};“ fl'l;\u“lw\'l\{t.\ S pirakans.] lh;mu _There is nothing prettier in boote than | o the age of sixty d, though shoe positive pleasure to visit her depart- | “If1sit up late Talways smoke n cig- | seen in the act of taking a stroll at high | modern importations, in places where [ Who L untington best—but | Emma Abbott's feet. She is callod the | suffered” from henduches, was no’ worso ment, arette before going to bed, 1 should not | noon with her own brother. For how, | the millenary immobility of the land has [ ¥ery, few veople know him at all—say | queerest, best customer in the boot and | than u vast number of women who sel- —_— g0 to sleep for hours it I did not.” forsooth! is a stranger to know that it is [ not been disturbed, the peasant woman | *'00" right now, and very emphatically. [ shoe busingss. If the cantatrico is going | dom open a book. Mes, Montaguo Bui- To Reduce the Marriageable Age, “We had such a very jolly time the | her browther? has probably changed Eub little from to he married i he orders ' ler, Miss I nd Miss Alvord all Renewed prossure is to be brought | morning after the —* ball,” Twastold | *TheTurtars seclude their women, but | what must have been several centuries 3 white slippe twenty pairs, cule. | have ordinary good health, Miss Fawe upon the legislature at its next session | one day last winter b blonde with the | they do it by wrapping them up, because | ago, her most remote ancestors A resident of Richmond,Va., hus come | All the rest of the order cett beyond the averag: to secure tho passage of a bill to reduce | most innocent blue oyes and_complexion | thoy are a moving peoplo and must carcy | whose soul, vanished in time, | into posssssion of a revolutionary relic | light top button boots mado on u No, 2 - the marriageable age of girls to fifteen | like a roseleal. “Nell and Dorothea | the seraglio with them. In Africa the | has even Coased to hover over in the shape of General Daniel Morg: ‘“~ B last. They ure made to measure al- Natural Gas Giving Out. ears. Sucha bill was considered by |stopped with me all night because | Moors disguise theladies of their barems | the family altar. At the barbaric pe- AP SRARR S5 MEUAE0N WAMLSs HOFEML S | vy It is sald that the end of next Junuary he fudiclary committoo last winter, but | they live out of town, you know, | inlike manner when the latter venture | riods of our wostern history, when our | mess chest, which is estimated as being | *'Noet women have thelr shoes made for | will in all probability see the ond (f it was never reported, Itsadvocates were | and in the morning afier breakfast, [ abroad, whiie in Syria women wear long [ mothers still preserved something of the | 125 years old, The chest is mude of pine, | their fect. Miss Abbot has hers made | the use of natural gue for manufacturi g members of the New York and other | which we took about 12, Nell said: *Has | veils which ure elevated above the tops | grand and wild rudeness of primitive | heavily vibbed with iron, and is closed | for her drosses—a pair for each. purposes, as the suply is practica' y l\ot.—'h)lhu for the prevention of cruclty 1o | not somebody a cigurette?’ Aamma was | of their heads by wnat might be called | times, thero lived doubtless yonder, in | by an old-time pouderous lock. - When she is to be wmeasured for a * exhuusted, An Effort to Reduce the Marriage- aughed and

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