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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY. JANUARY 1, et TS S g S 1891 IXTEEN PAGES. : Y ~ [~ RIS GIAYS The postoffice will be open today between the hours of 10a. m. and 12 o'clock, noon, and the s will make the usual morning deliver Articles of incorporation of the Pe candy company were filed yes- Theé incorporators are = Ed yeke, M. S Van Deusen and F. H. Suydam, und the capital stock is fis 850,000, sputy Sheriff Grebe returned from yesterday, where he went for the purpose of placing Dan McGinty in the reform school. Mr, Grebe reports 278 inmates in the school, 190 boys and eighty-eight girls, A South Omaha and Council motor collided at the intel Howard and Fourteenth streets at 1 o’clock yesterday afternoon, but no dam- age was done aside from shaking up the passengers quite lively. Dr. R. W. Connell has returned to this city from Cincinnati, where on Christ- mas he was r dto Miss Katie Walsh, daughterof the late John Walsh, well known in this eit The newly wedded couple have taken up their residence at 2580 Harney stre 3luffs *tion of dye to color the beard s may be desired, is Buct or the whiskers, It never The best and su brown or black, ingham’s dye ails, Life of N, Y, able contract than ever before offered by any company, See this bond before investing. YTy Wenstrand, gen’l agt, 31214 Brown blk. Dr.Birney, nose and thr e, The License Board. The board of fire and police commissioners met yestarday afternoon as a license board. The following licenses were granted: Hans Schuman, corner of Thirticth and Spalding streets; John Murphy, 1113 North Twenty- fourth street; Fritz Bloomer, 1601 Leaven- worth street: W. W. Gill, 223 North Six- teenth : John B. Bohn, 1822 North “hris Jens The Hom Issue o more de: Beebldg. South Thirteenth street; 1113 South Sixth st Bouti Tenth street ; Ing street; t; H. Woblste 3 Owen Bixteenth street; ner Thirtieth s Meder, Peter T Arthur Roth ) Nelson, 20 Schuman, Spalding st North Sixteenth str ,711 North Sixteenth str South Fifteenth st F. A, Bulc et; William Darst, Iler, 1112 Harney South cnam street rederick Fifteenth strect Bixteenth stree Ing street; Gus C The case of Thom phy rotest has been filed, will be he onday at? p. m. In the protest case of Henry Rolph, 2050 Poppleton avenue, the board learned that Mr. Rolph had been kecping the front door of his saloon open on Sunday fore- noon because there is a_ bacber shop in the rearend of the same building with the saloon. The board ordered Mr. Rolph to either remove the barber shop entirely or place a solid board partition between the sa- 1oon and the t Poppendick, 200 Frank Swoboda, 1 Charles Boufiin d on next nsorial apartment. In the cases Charles Heber, Frank Jobn J. Shuman, Gottlieb Wueth- Kasper S5ts hav was set for Monday and Aveust Schultz, in been filed, a hearing anuary 5, at 2 p, mn. Poople will not when they know t| Cough Syrup. She stood at the gate in the late a new cough remedy lue of Dr. Bull's spring twi- light, and m she said good-bye, she felt neurazia kiss her rosy cheek; smiled, mother had inv in a bottle ef Sulvation Oil. Witk S Among the many real estate agents in this city is Ge Paul, 1609 Farnam streot, who has a very large list of choice cityand farm property for sale, He makes a specialty of placing loans ou improved property. For collections of rents, notes, &¢, he makes low rates. [If ou have any houses to place in the hands of a rental agent call on him. -— Dr.Birney, noseand throat. Bee bldg, SPORTING, Pat Allen's Benefit, Pat Allen, recently defeated byJack Davls, was tendered a bonefit at Germania hall, South Omaha, 1ast_evening, which n in something $150 for the benefic The go between Pat and Davis was an ceedingly clever exhibition, To the . B. Rifle Club. I hereby challengo any momber of the Council Bluffs rifle club to shoot me a mateh for from $25 to $50 a side, two hundred yards, Off hand, at & 2-ring target, twenty to fifty shots each, This challenge will be'loft open ten days. A forfeit of $10 has been left with the sporting editor of Tie B . A. FuLLER, Match Shoot Tiis Morning. W. E. Nason of this city and Dorsey Bur- gess of St. Joe, will shoot a fifty live bird match at 11 o'cleck this morning at Pickard's grove for £50 aside. Afterthis special event there will be a number of sweepstakes matches, Mr. Nason having about fi dred live birds, Car 11s will leave Collins' gun store ut 10 o'clock for the shooting grounds, A Cut-Off Island Matinee, There was a savage dog fight for &0 a side at Cut-Off island yesterday afternoon, which was witnessed by about oue hundred sports of the short haired genus. The pups were Barmey Cuming's brindle Barney and 1 Robinson's black Billy, both weighing thirty- eight pounds. At tho twelfth scratch, after fighting one hour and forty minutes, Barney failed to come up, aud the fight was awarded to Billy. Indoor Ball Tonight. The Eden Musees and West Omabas will play indoor ball this evening. The game will be in all likelihood close and exciting, as both clubs will have their strongest team in the fleld, The following is the battery order: Musees. West Omahas. Linuhan, 2 Nelson Bowman, Remuao Grand jeun. » Hu m C sub The Standing of the Billiardists. The Palace billiatd tournament cathe to a close yesterday afternoon, Mr. Hale winning the first prize. The final game was betweon Messrs, Beck aud Parrish, the former win- ning by a score of 200 to 189. The standing of the contestants is as follows: Flayed. Won, Lost, 4 [ Magner, | 1 8 Haleo took first, $25; Reck second, §10,while Cabn, Parrish and Maguer tiea for 'thind, ‘which will be played off fua triangular game. T'ho tournament was & most gratifying suc- cess, aud has gonealong ways toward re- awakening a beultny interest in this beauti- ful game. Mr, Dounnelly, the proprietor of thJ’um parlors, has a tournament upon & large scale in view for the near future, et L, Among H andchildren. J. R. Dodds, editor of the daily and weckly rbor State 'of Wymore, Neb., says: I ave seen the magio effect of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in cases of croup and colds among my grandehildren, We would not think of going to bed at night without a bot- tle of this remedy in the house. Chamber- n's medicines are growing more popular ere every day. e Dr,Birney. noseund throat. Beebldg. A LARGE DEPARTMENTD STORE, Hayden Bros. Have Made it a Marked Success, No one thing goes farther toward establishing the commercial value of city than the su of its business houses, Omaha is to be congratulated in this regard. Notwithstanding the great number of large business firms located in her midst, disasters in the line of commercial venturesare rare and of minor consequence, Among the larger business houses which have opened their doors to the public may be mentioned the dry goods establishment of Hayden DBros., corner .of 16th and Dodge strects. These gentlemen began business in Omaha about four years ago ina smull double store building which so0n proved too s A fine brick and stone structure with half a block of front and four stories in hight was erected for the accommodation of their fine department store. This, too, has proven too small in which to transact the immense volume of trade enjoyed by them. A new building is now in process of evection which will join on to the present structure and beone and one- times its size and two stories ! The present building will ised two stories, making the completed structure six stories high and basement, and having a floor equal to three and onc-eighth w A tuilding which if reduced to onestory would covor nearly three entive blocks, Many of the articles sold in this great commercial bee-hive ave imported di- rect from foreign countries, and all goods are purchased in original pack- ages and from first hands, thus avoidin, the costly middle men and giving their customers the benefits of well bought goods, Besides their large retail trade, which, embraces e requisite and many of the luxuries necessary to the needs and comforts of the family, They do an extensive wholesale busi- 088, embracidg goods from every line rried by i artment, like all other: big store, is growing rapidly in populs nd business trans- acted. It can be fair d without dis- aragement to any business house inthe that the great department hotise of yden Bros., is the most successful business enterprises in Omaha. This g is a monument of what cov- business ctly honor with methods, coupled ble dealing, will do. e -— Dr.Birney, nose andthroat. Bee bldg. e .—— THE MEDICAL PRROFESSI0ON, Spreial Preparation, Special Work and Success Go Together. A liberal education is necessary in this age of progress to the accomplishment of success in any work of life, But in the mad e for p nd power it re- auires specinl preparation to insure a place upon the upper rounds of the ladder, ling is this more ap- parent than in the practice of medicine. That medical men are aware of this b is attested by the large number of bright physicians who are de- voting their entire attention to the | WOMEN WHO RUN TOWNS. | Many of Them in Kansas and They Kuow Their Business, CAKE ~ AND MUNICIPAL REFORM. They Can Talk on Either With Equal Facility—Mrs. Gladstone's Mince Pies-Can Women Keep aSecret? The pessimistic prophets who so con- fidently undertake to define for us wo- man’s true “sphere’ suy the present in- dications are that she will rate into o sexless, undefinable creature too dreadful to contemplate, But who shall s The granting of municipal suffrage to women has made some startling innovas tions not onty possible but actual, writes a Wichita, Kan., correspondent to the Philadelphia Press. It is no news to Mrs Kellogg, the lady who has been the assistant attorney-general of the state for the last two years, fills the offi as any of the stronge ha ranks high among her brethren at the bar. She is a handsome woman and very popular with the social as well as the official circle at Topeka. All the world knows that the entiro aldermanic body of the town of Cotton- wood Falls is feminine, The same is true of Oskaloosa. At this place two elements were fighting for supremacy. The party known as the *‘anti-prohibition” party on the very eve of election got out a ticket composed en- tirely of women, intending it merely as a demoralizing agency in overthrowing the plans of the “law and order” faction. But the “law and order” worker “tho woman ticket, much to the ch of the perpetrators of the joke, Mrs, Salter, the mayor of Argonia, is administering the affairs of that town for the second official term. She is said to have attended to her public and social duties, to have performed all her house- hold work, including washing, ironing and cooking, for a family of five, and to have increased her family from five to x, all in one year. She is a nervous little thing and hor 0 ently afraid that her ppearance might not be all that a discriminating world demands, for a bevy of women took her off in one corner and adjusted her drapory, picked out her frizzes and generally looked her treatment and cure of diseases peculiar to certain portions of the humin omy. anat- By thus limiting their practice enabled to devote their entire of specific dis- and to selc remedie: best adapted to their alloviation and cuve, Many of the most, blo discoveries known to the vrofe re been made by t same sp They are the hope of the hopeless, for from thom must come cure, if it comesat all. They ob- tain results; they cure. Among the most wecossful medieal experts and specialists in the west is Dr. J 1. McGrew of this city. His reputation extends from Nor- wiy to Alaska and thousands of patients all over the country rise up to call him blessed. Wity is dise of a ite nuture and nervous disorders, gentleman is a thoroughly read, conscientious physician, whose mar lous cures attest his mastery over di ease. His office is at the northeast co ner of 14th and Farnam streets, Omaha, S Dr.Birney, nose and throat. Bee bldg. AR ) Fine Horsos in O ha. Some of the finest steppers in the west are owned by Omaha gentlemen, who, while laying no elaim to being turfmen, delight ‘in a good hovse. Tho proper care of this noble animal is commanding more attention than used to bo bestowed upon it. Good warm blankets now form an essental part of a stable outfit, and he best informed are adding specially arced foods to their list of necessi- The equine anatomy is just as sus- ceptible toderangement ns the human organism, To counteract these, alter- natives, laxatives, etc., are necess To meet this want The F. E. Sanborn Company have placed before the public their Standard horseand cattle food, an article which supplies the need com- pletely. Thoroughly harmless, yet powerfully effective, it is the grandest discovery of the day. Horsemen will find it on sale by all dealers, e Dr.Birney, nose and throat. Beobldg. S iR A Successful Firm, A. Clark & Co., com- mission merchants, sss0rs_to Morse, Clark & Co., 608 South Thirteenth street, are proving themselves the right men in the right place. Their business has steadily increased until the volume of trade enjoyed by them is equaled by perhaps one other commission house in Omaha. Beside dealing in all kinds of commission goods, Messrs, Clark & Co, make specialtics of A1 butter, fresh eggs, poultry and game, v butter department is always full of the choicest creamery butter, a fact much appreciated by the grocers of the city. They are also the largest dealers in game of all kinds in the wes Mr, Clark is a thoroughly experienced, hon- orable dealer, whose success is well mer- ited, S Poor Farm Employes. At yesterday’s meeting of the county com- missioners Superintendent Mahoney of the poor farm was authorized to employ two girls at not to exceed $20 per month each, one clerk at $30 per mouth and one male nurse at a salary of $20 per month, each of the above employes to be boarded and lodged at the expense of the county. Thosame reso- lution authorized the engineer, J. W. Russell, to employ a fireman at salary of §0 per month and board, Mr, O’Keeffe's resolution to allow the superintendent ana the engineer to select their own help was adopted, This resolution also provides that the superintendent shall have full control of the building, ‘The usual number of sppropriation sheets wero presented and passed. Theo county clerk was instructed to adver- tise for putting gas fixtures into the new county hospital, The bids are to be opened January 1, 1891, The board adjonrned until next Thursday ofternoon at 2 o'clock, e SRR Mr, Willlam T, Price, a justice of the ce at Richland, Neb,, was confined to his last winter with a severe attack of lum- bago, but a thorough lTpchtlon of Chamber- laia’s Pain Balm enabled him to get up and g0 to work. Mr, Pricosays: *‘The remedy cannot be recommended too highly." Let anyone troubled with rheumatism, neuralgia or lame back give it a trial and they will be of the same opinion, — ———ee 1602 Sixteenth and Farnam stroets is the new Rock Island ticket ofice. Tick: els Lo all points east at lowest rates over before she mounted the platform, The poor little mayor was badly fright- ened, reading ina voice alittle abovea husky whisper a short sketch of the sit- uation in her town. Mrs. Lowman, the mayor of Oska- loosa, was present at the same conven- tion. She is ry protty, womanly- looking woman, appearing much too young for the motkerof a_ twenty-two- year-old son who accompanied her, The towns under petticoat govern- ment are the butt of the facetious para- grapher. 1t is writton! *T'he men of Oskaloosa,who have been accustomed to_slipping little ‘presents’ into aldermanic pockets will now have to change their methods, since no man can hope to find a woman’s pocket.” “At the last meeting of the city cil of Cottonwood Falls the time w vided between a discussion of str lamps and a new recipe for making ungel food,” ete, Kansas issaid to bo the banner state for organizationsof women. Every town has its equal suffrage local society, and there are over a hundred woman's clubs in the state, One of the most prominent and suc- cessful clubs in the state is the Hypatia at Wichita. 1tis now in its fifth year and numbers fifty members, Hypatia was organized after the pattern of Soro- s It has handsome club rooms of its own and meets fortnightly. 1t is a part of the general federation of woman’s clubs, moeting every two years, and which will meet in Chicago in 1802, Hy- })uliuh‘rquf'nll‘y entertains other clubs rom sister towns, and is very popular in consequence, The equal suffrage women are concen- trating their forces and expect at the next constitutional convention to strikea blow atthe word *‘male” in the suffrage clause of the constitution, Mrs. Laura Johns, the state president, is a sweet-faced, quiet-looking woman whose personality is anything else than that of the typical female suffragist. The farmers’ allia of Kansas, the body that has inaugurated such a polit- icaf revolution at the recent elections, swears by the name of Mrs. M. E. Lease, who stumped the state allsummer in the interest of its candidates. This lady has 1 d up in the public with the ve- locity and brilliancy of a rocket. She is a magnetic speaker with a tongue that n lend itself to eloquence and patriotic forver, or scathing sati e and vindictive abuse of her opponents, Mrs, Lease is a pale, delicate-looking woman and rather prepossessing in ap- pearance, notwithstanding the fact that an ungallant Texas editor called her “a lantern-jawed, goggle-eyed nightmare.” She is a lawyer, and enjoyed u lucrative practice before her alliunce with the farmers, Mrs. Lease is own sex, but sh affections of her part Speuking of the farmers’ up the thought of farmers’ wive: If any one should conjure up a picture of sod houses and dugouts, of privation and -poverty, let him clear his cob- webbed brain at once. That picture be- longs to the remote age of the sixties, The average Kansas farmer lives as w as, if not better than, his Pennsylvania brother. The present prosperous condition has been achieved by hard work, however. The motto of the state, “Ad Ast s the history of ever ssful farmer, It depends on the ma ket now whether the Kansas farmer burns Kansas coal or Kansas corn in his furnace, The women on Kansas farms are,many of them, independent of that slavish condition which requires o woman to ask her husband for every cent of money she wants. She ofténer makos her own money and spends it, too, The corn and the oat cropsare sometimes failures, but the chicken and turkey and butter crops rarely ar Many women, starting from small be- ginnings, manage successfully flocks of sheep and herds of fine cattle indepen- dent of their husbands’special inter- ests. Five years ago a lady living in ane of the larger towns was told by her physi- cian that if she wisned to live she must continue to live out of doors most of the time. “Leave off your corsets and get onn faym; raise pigs und chickens—anything ) will keep you in the open air.” r husband bought a farm close to ong'ef the nearest railroad stations, so not popular with hor as a firm hold on the brings (I : Cream Bakin Powde% Dsod {n Millions of Hom « 08— ars the Standard. that he might attend to his business in town, the ¢ There Lee and ned a fo buzzing about full beaut gave this wom She planted s of buckwheat and catnip. wasa tolorable house on a young orchard, which w plum trees, The boes these plum trees when in wd bloom of early spring nan her inspiration. a plum orchard and a fow She read up on bees and poultry and began businbss, It is afact in the smalle: time invalid well as health Mrs, that this industry, begun st way, now pays this one- in good round dollars as and restored vigor. Gladstone's Pies, A lady onco asked Dr. Parron what day it wis pro pie. “Bogin the worthy d or ortherivis meaning, for oper to begin eating mince on ‘0 Sapienti roplied octor, whereby, wittingly he conveyed a double few invocations could be more appropriate than the summoning of wisdom and discretion to one’s aid in the consumpti plex dainty. I gal ntry o bid a lady to look to her d jon of such a highly com- Jut Dr. Pare had too much gestion; he was simply reminding her that mince pie i one should tas| the eccl Christmas holiday, a day wh from o i Logically, after its name vent, compound mince made given to me in warranted to s Chrisimas pie, and that te it fir nber 16, tical of the h talkes ymn sung during ad- 10 should adjure the Twelfth ht, but according to an old rule England_this summer is keep until spring. This beginnin, rule, by the by, if the personal mention lends interest in her family for gene in her me to me writes a corres ful he mother’s college, and Philippa Fawcett and other lights of Cambridge brilliancy clouded by it **Boil u neat skin it and chop it as small as pc vounds of fresh b chop three Gladstone, who is vice ick' hall univers seems adstone’s, used \tions and pre- kitchen every Christmas, through a Newn i spondent, for M president of and who inherits her ion, whether with or with- swing every mouth- has introduced pie tho yeomen’s here it is) eaten by Miss , is Mrs, ( y wh mental not to have been oporific influences, tonguoe two hour: h very fine, three pounds of good bakeing apples, four pounds of currants, washed clean, 'picked and well dried, and one pound of raisins stoned and eleaned; mix all these well of powdered sugar, mace, half an togoether with one pound half an ounce of ounce of nutmeg grated, a quarter of an ounce each of cloves and cinamon and one pintof French brandy. Make & rich puft the pie put in a and orange cut in small piec haye to spare and add no cit use it,” paste, and as you fill ittle candied " citron what you cover up in an earthel ron or orange until you Can Women Keep a Secret. Every woman is not trusty an than is every women as men Browne in In truth it may be doubted if Henri Journal. there are not there are men, parted to more but quite as many are so, writes Juniag the 'Ladies’ Home man, more tr) . Secrets ty women than e seldom im- persons who do not inspire confidence; they who tell what they call secrets to dozens of persons, without knowing much about the out forming any positive opinion of thoir persons, with- discrimination or reticence, are not apt to have any circle of their mere babblers, to bstow some munications b) secrots, Such secrets from the entire acquaintances. They are , gossips, tattlors, wlhio try importance on their com- y declaring them to be communications are usually commonplace, or of so little con- sequence as pression on the mind; to make ro distinet im- needing to bo labelled private, lest they be thought to bolong to the the public, Besides, the communicators are prone to the habit of repeating their stori can persuade t pronouncing them confident to ever one they 0 listen to them and then al, To any to whom thoy are thus disclosed tho stories are all ready familinr, and polite- ness alone prevenis the recipient from immediately saying as much, and delicacy formed of thei; Candor compel these, when in- r confldential character, to acknowledge that they are by no means new. But tl most part—take notice of this. abbling their hear their cur sume an inju some confounded woman their confidence; that women never keep a sec in any m such a dunc falsity. t. Nell A London le coming quite re, their falso r sides of the water that M he babblers—men for the They go round, and when they le, they like to a nd to assert that has betrayed an That women should owe, putation to is the best evidence of its rent t rdd air ie Grant's Li tter writer says: It isho- generally known on both Sartoris and her husband do not live together, but there has been much deferenc her father’s me hown to emory in refraining from publishing the particulars of the sepa- ration. They her that there are rally s0 honovable to isreally’ no reason why the public should not kuow about it. The marriage turned out un Sartorls mado womun-like, determined to of Mr. and Mr. Sartoris happily. Although Muvs, na open complaint, but, make the best of her life, the father of her hus- band, who is a man, all of ar old English we matters out, Mrs, son to give he Hampton and royul old English gentle- the olden time, became used to_the linjustice which his son was doing her, and with his wife. a good oman, sought to straighten When they failed,he artoris a Ilondon home, forced his > about annum or & country pla settled £7,500 pe PATTI M Muie. Pattl an: mburgh a few days i man called upon of conversation, est to both, was Soden Mineral cach obliged tg use, ulth different purpese. These wonder erers trom Coughs, Colds, diseases Obtain the §¢ must have thys| Bir Morrell M vice, not only 10 publis EETS GLADSTONE. d Glrdstone were both In 0, and the great stutes- n v mous sing 1 pl which se 1o be of Inter- the relative merits of the Pastilles (Lroches) they wer ful Soden Mineral but to the vast army of suf- Throat and Lung nuine mported article, which ignatare and testimoulal of encle with euch box, cated; the pretty dears not only master the language in” a short time—quite as L quickly and as easily they make a con- "WELCOME' A little over four years ago the Nebraska Clothing Company threw open its doors to thd public. Beginning at the sams locatiion it still occupies, at the cor. of 14th and Douglas Sts, one small room 33 feet wide by 7o feet long, we have scen it grow year by year, reaching s covering more territory, reaching up, taking in more floors, until tuil.‘ly it occupies a store P half block long, three stories high anda basement, The history of our store for the past 4 /¥ is simply the history of Omaha on asmaller scale. As she has met and overcome ui»\'t‘u‘]“v' her pathway, grown, reached we, until today we enjoy the distinction of clothing more boys than any other house west of Chicago. Each succeeding year has brought us ney: mers and an increase of business, last year being no exception, for when our doors werdn it on Wednesday night they were closed on the most successful year's business we have ever ¢ We intend to make the year just begun still better, And to make a good beginning we will on at special sale on Friday and Saturday about 300 “Big Boys'” Suits as {ollows: out and proud covered more territory, r 11 At $4.75—64 handsome fancy striped cheviot suits, sizes 14 to 18, worth $7.50. At BZ.50—61 very handsome neat gray all'wool striped cassimere suit worth g10.00. At BZ.650—;:2 elegant all wool brown striped cheviot suits, s At $O.0O0--58 very nobby all wool gray plaid cassimere suits, ‘'square cut coats,” as" the large sizes are all sold we offer the remaining ones, sizes 14 to 17 at $9.00. They were §12.50, sizes 14 to 19, P zes 14 to 19, a §10 suit, These are the cheapest suits foryoung men and boys ever sold in Omah:_ Nebraska Clothing Cond Cor. 14th and Douglas. 4 {OMATH = onher, He givesa similar income to his son on the condition that he shall live separately from his wife and sce her and their children at stated times with her consent. I understand, too, that the old gentleman has written his will, and that the arrangement will be continued after his death, the principal of his es- tate to go to his son’s children after the douth of their parents. A COMMERCIAL COLLEGEY Gerr 15 Rebel. The German girls are beginning to complain with considerablo bitterness that American and English girls are en- croaching upon their pre: , writes a correspondent of the Chicago News, Very many Americans and English send their daughters to Germany to be edu- 14, siivor 4 A " motalgy quest of the hearts of the susceptible German officer, The number of army officers in Germany with American and English wivesis very large, and the fad appears to bo increasing. In Dresd particularly the English and Americans are in great demand; the native madchen bo sho ever 50 preify) scoms to have no i A L AT S m Ay 00 AMUSEMENTS, for a peeuliar style of fominine by the Borlinor admires brown TERM & 0f new student v at I loontle ) por month. o admitted. Short 1 1 0'c Prof. O her. 1t 82hool nd taught Ly Seud for circulars. hair and a dark, clear complexion; these | o - ¥ A P g . . Two Great Holiday Performanoces, features argue amiabilty, fidelity and Fogtorma gentle breeding, they claim. The Ger- THIS (NEW YEAR'S) MATINEE AT 2:30. an girls complain that the natural adepts in afy rt—that they scem endowed by na- ture 1 the arts, the audacity, and the confidence of the average young widoy, By the way, the wifeof CountWalder- see is an American, and she is the only person at the German court who de clines Invitations to dances on Sundays and who is permitted to do so without offense. HIZ ORIGINAL AND PEERLVBS Gk CORINNE b In the New Operatic Burlesquo —( CARMEN. ) THIS (NEW YEAR'S) EVENING AT 8:15 The Celebratcd Burlesque MONTE GRISTO, JR, Matinee prices 50c and 7 Sl THE OPPORTUNITY= - —(0F THE SEASON 0 facilitate matters, | 4 we have divided jour immense stock of |fine custom made, | SUITS AND OVERCOATS |into four (4] lots and 'marked them at prices| that will insure a speedy |sale As Brave as Joan of Arc. The administration of posts and tele- graphs of France has decided to add a grant (o the subscription opened for the purpose of erecting a modest memorial to Marie Biard, who saved her country during the Aranco-German war i manner which the most unsentim person can hardly refuse o re heroic. When the Prussians inv. partment of the Seine-Infe the campaign of 1870-71, Mavie Clemen- tine Biard, then aged twenty, acted as Evenlng prices 2c, Ld §L.00. = 1’ < Threo Nights B O U d S Oammuucéi’ng’ MONDAY, JANUARY 4. A Great Attraction. The De Wolf Hopper Opera Bouffe Co.. In Byrne & Kerker's Charming Comic Opera, an assistant to her aunt, who was chief GRSTLES lN ‘[’HE AIR postmistress at Postal com- . munication was interrupted in the dis- [ ho Most Powertul Company of Comedians to Amerlc SPARKLING MUS MAC Prices as usual. Box she trict by the invasion, whercupon M Biard carried the letters herself every i period of two months TFIC NT CAST! n Saturday, s nee of about twenty-five | g " ONE NIGHT lages between Dienpe and Rouen, Tho enterprise was full of pain an |$16.00] Sunday, January 4. evil. The snow lay thickly on the o 05 0 ry | Tonds and flolds; tho Gorman patrols | O4/2 Succes fil/ Season E want to call your were everywhere, and in order to avoid —OF THE~— them the "girl was frequently obliged either to make long circuits or to lie hid for hours in a wood, She was arrested three times by the enemy, but succeeded in escaping on each oceasion, After the war the government offered to promote Marie Biard, but she preferred to re- main with her aunt. She died from rheumatism, contracted during her per- ilous nocturnal expeditions at the time of the war, The ()l&- attention to the SUITS AND OVERCOATS |we are offering at the above named price. Look in our window; come in and we will show them| to you. Remember the price, $15.00. Greatest Play of the Age. W, Gillette's Musterpicce, HELDBY THE ENEMY Presented by a Most Powerful Castand all New Scenic Effects. Box sheets open Saturday. Prices as usual, The Grand = Spegial. FOUR NIGIUTS COMMENCING SUNDAY, JANUARY 4th, Wi, Fleron's New York Standard Theatro ton and Adaptation of Alex. Duma Five Act Iay, —THE— Clemenceau Case. of Brunettes, The children playing round ths cradle of our race were all fair. The ancient Jews—even they—were almost to a maa air haired. Theold ks and Romuns sprung from the gods, were sunny haired, as were also the Venetians, as tuskins tells us, Why have all these people changed? Why haye we, in these islunds changed? [’11 tell you sir— it’s all the liver. That's what’s the mat- ter. Ionce asked a physician why it 1891 I'roduc. that red had such Relgning Sensation of Parls and New York ::f‘;\) \ln J ir r knew MISS SYBIL JOHN sTONE whether or x hi His oning 12a. Gustavus Lovick. Chas. Kent 1t farth and the entire o0 of Win. A. Iir L0J. The reserve sale will iglnal compuny ot tell you why, but dark-haired peoplé must arveful of what they y 12 is the whole thing in a nutshell. ven sent us golden-haired women in olden times, when we were good, and the Are You Thinking About G4 XNAS P [mparid EDEN MUSEE. Will Lawler, Manager. Cor Hthand Parnam An MOUN devil sent us cooks in _modern time NEW YEAR'S WERK Y T whenwe were bad, Our grandfuthes THE NEBRASKA TRIPLETS & livers are ruined, and we inherit their | gixmonths old—cute, cuuninz, pro tty, artf, bile, which turns our hair black, In| e Jurreite Tr [ T | Ireland, by the way, even as late us the | Wethersand Curtol, Ui coon toum, ' woeny the sixteenth century, dark-haived men | §ad's host of attraetion 3 | were 0 unusual that such men or women THAT SWEDE-SEE HIM | Ve ; had Duluth (black) prefixed to their other beautiful canarics, o names, | alking Parrots frow 12,50 - 4 -3 > » i up. Ask seor for Cook's Extra Dry Tm- Plumbmg,btc;un & Gas Japancas Goldul 489 perial ¢ Once used no other will LRl 2 or $1.65, suit. Its bojuet is delicious. FITTING, | MAX GHRISLER, De.Birney, nose andthroat, Bee bidg, " ROBT. D. DUNCAN, 2628 Davenpor l 417 S, 15th St,,Omaha.