Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 13, 1900, Page 9

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THIEL OMANnLA ITHUKSDAY IEmseR 1 1900 4000000000000 0000000000000 \ thelr hea i AT Thy Sioriayd oriese | SO (Y INVE UIdV, (NY WNERY GC.S% BWISH{ K \ef. The old fallow siipped SMALL ng L4 . Rhody, a 1 , t ry | darkness opening out of the light v A feliow slipped ] . Y n both 1 and th b for la ot- | singular stillness close at hand t of the okl “‘ - ! ESSENCE OF ROSES, t T T o G sl e e s Y SRS i Searle Fever } b e, he was t's & hard road spa b e desy ' . : By WARRIETT PRESCOTT SPOFFORD : OF A9 01U | Yo 've 160 WITE i ’ , Diphtheria, | # 8- | b who sells the 0 neo, O n I A nd offere A ! d 0060006008086 068400606060650656060600060 need of it. It's an he has take ‘w}\mv | th seven devils Shin ook Mkt *’f'“‘hzn;mg b by with There's a ast \ ou Vhe " ath aga Wopyright, 1om r DL | tenderness i her heart and biding It under A . . : of tears |laat! Saily, 1 orter hAve saved you from | be said Cough th ‘ b p Humphr chers \ fe had hardly | (¢ fo the B og You sa \ ty ‘ ) - ever d gl bou it 1, an' there a " 1 ' it Pan was “0, Humphrey, there hasn't been a day 1 Yes, sir, 1 and epidemles of m the depth th You & the first one, my son—h'm . ' : h kbaw WAB | Baver't Bedh Mk 3 WaE Witk 9 W ¢ ' oilier * contagious : - . M Niles' h . whore Sally,” he murmured again with stiffen- ! ! ¥ 18 of . ko SR 2 e I'a ik Ad Mather At gt L s . A 2 el t ye v ' 4 during the past i . . p 4 you know." : y h bttt o) BN O L A be said | your wiil h iz, but 4% * year and it be. the You Y ald h Ber, with th / A t e vy L LR A for it to v you'v steal 99 ¢ mes neces. bewu . \ i | F¥€ B t LA ot iy pressit § b sy to adopt e : ol gl 3 L i 3 i u | t v 16 «bout the law It t be heaven I saw Ui AR g KR b : bonepe | S0 i o & 8 ot oroughwint : W o e beven 1 pehed o that even t f " in . : o s ki disinfecting child was lovel t ron e o e B ' i P Witk & doep amiile growing toto b b i She used to come down to the port { fecling t Iv ! noth " 1 f ot Th eyelids fell a trifle L i ‘i,,‘ \ Boxt that chanced to ¢ : - 1 A dingerous d that gave her a breath of p . y o & and catching on the slipping tide, with salt| & 5t want. 1t rad cures stomacn t diseases I [ ) lal 6y . Ninety-five per cent. of (hese discases can be om lhl, bar '.r]\ ‘l f \' ] a hard , had DIAMOND DIES LD NOw prevented by proper use of disinfectants i ey o8 i roeamers ot | o MMM i oot BT e v heae, | TP RO S S rarely failed her, The basket that hame and trout ve TR DR. CEO. LEININCER'S brought was always a store of ht to |t b one wh ) A the children, who knew her nnd e For.mal.de-hyde had wanted sved the odors thal her wares d | ( \ GENERATOR » lonely wisery in a madhouse | | wh (using solidified Formaldehyde) offers the fused. When Jerry Johns, the burly Scotch Although Sally had soothed him in his | LA o Lt people the only safequerd against the spread peddier, lumbered along with his lustres | wid nd now that t ames were | s APAWR HEH i of I contagious and infectious discases, By and bombazi and smuggled laces, athes, tended him s half-im es et the proper use of the generator you avold naug hildren hid whero they might, | yot in some inexplicable way he v . ] | { & danger of Small Pox,” Diphtherla, Scarlet lest they should be sent off in his pack.| yearning was still her witely love; he was | Fever, etc., entering your home., In the but not to the naughtiest child of us all,| the husband of her youth, and she fared il | gh, nothing excels my cousin Leste for instance, would ng patiently, as if expecting that one | Sally Lavendar basket have been any he should be releasea from the spell, | sort of threat & out from the dis ise he wore Ilvl} The w wonderful things in that|be again the splendid being he once had | basket There we not only the “diavolo seemed to r At any rate, he will 5 of the chicken bone, dressed in red she sald once to Aun, “in that other couns #kipping across the table, and the try when we got there. And you can't made of a hickorynut and boxes m wonder at me looking forward to it—an'| burdock burrs and choice bits of spruce less'n mothin' here!" gum and tiny pitchers carved from cherry | Sometimes Humphrey had long, heavy stones and peach pits, but there were the slumbers of a day and night, and it was most deliciously perfumed cordials and in such opportunities that Sally would get dried rose leaves ready for § pourri and little glasses of made from sea moss and w s of pot-|down to the port with the basket of her nge Jam accumulating treasures, being able ordi- | iter berries | narily ne to take Humphrey with her | and there was cand lon of sugar | nor to leave him behind, while none of the and clder that made the mouth water be- | contents of the basket would have been forehand. Standing at her side and peep- | disposed of had he been aware of it, for ng into her basket as she sat down with|he concentrated on them all the interest it on her knee while your mother brought | he might have felt in the affairs of. the her a cup of tea, was like making ac-|world at large, had he been himself Quaintance with far forelgn countrie | Perhaps you would not have wondered A concoc and long One of the web wire, | tore Lost Vit Y and surely © : i T until it fs ani o rich and orlental to the childish faucy|at this, had you ever tasted a certain cone | finger. and then e mpien 11 ke were the scents serve that Sally made of rosehips and whare allofhars (411 Of them all, however, the rosewater might | p, frsyoe creasing in diameter T be called her the <hape of the wir icy, or her sweet and flery cherry cor- ecialty; she had the most of | gia) cure you. Wa give or had you drenched a corner of your [P i DAY SR [t sare nesc sase of rafun her little revenue from that, but she often | tire fn the cologne of her compounding | ! 06 Tat be "“F"S(_.“:x‘;llv.ui}lmmu. (0 luin wrappe £ave us a tiny flask of it that made our up- | And none of these things did Sally ever DR AT SHEM N ‘JA’)\( 'RE‘M V‘“c(i‘ "9, Dearvors per bureau drawers rtoof garden of | refyse Humphrey, although she could not s s ooy Tan g S0 Zib Fden for months, and we put a drop or two | help crying when sho came home one day which are so 536, Soh Romang, Neb, by Jas. Forsyit, of it on our handkerchiefs nduys, or gave and found the whole house as if a storm had blown through it, and discovered that he had brought in the school boys and had made away with everything she had pre- pare 1 from the salo of which she had expected to satisfy their simple wants for half the year. 202 N. i6th. Kuhn & ¢ in Council Biuffs by sists and Douglas, . DeHaven, EN FEMALE BEANS oitn, K Con i the flask to one another on birthdays and r coived {1t back when our own birthdays came. I distilled it myself, m'am,” said Sally in pretty breathless way very dro And it's fresh. Aud I think it's sweeter that ¥0 much of it's from wild rose the wayside and the new f the sweetbrier leaf--that gives it a tang you don't often tind in rosewater. T don't kunow what I'd do without still Twas grandmother's and hern afore her. I'vo used the bottles you give n m. And I've stretched a bit of bladder over thy mouth, an' the kid of the gloves you give me, too—and it was kind of you, m'am -and I've tied it with lit- tie missy's ribbons. An' don’t you think it looks real tasty? I guess it'll bring me in quite a tldy bit of money, maybe cuough the winter's coal. For you know, m'am, can't expect--1 can't let—0, he's 50 poorly. But he's as quict now as a baby. He's like Hailde 6d bel u dear child—" And sho paused, lfting her | Yot that would bofall them appalled her In swift fancy. The essence of roses that beautiful brown eyes to my mother's face And my mother knew ‘that then' she \\.m[“‘]';‘l'; ":ll_,'l,','{"':',‘,'i‘ ";,,:.hu,“‘:'(‘m}.flw‘;':,t,-:m.; 0 The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signae thinking of Polly, the little sprita who bad | o WPICH HELE She, SUabied therewdit ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his scemed mote eif than child, and who, it | NI 0 OB BNEE Dermest the can te 0 ) perfonal supervision for over 80 years. Allow no one :;’["'l“:;‘l;:‘:;'{"“““"';“"“' if ";“”‘"“v"l"‘\'l ‘:I':\\H:-m the carved trifles, signified n‘ulhmg fi"\)/, ]B 07‘{97‘ }'a‘@ saved ou Jrom lf n to deceive hrey's madness, had yet shov . -y you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and o z like the e Name beside those dainty vials of perfume and of fl' | ” S & & N ) “Just-as-good’’ are but Experiments, and endanger the somethlug Iike the ethercal flame of that|(SHiC® (Ue THALY, vials of Dertume and of e 593"!""',9 s 8 bt L ) y strange insanity of his and of his mother's ¥ ¢ health of Children—Experience against Experiment, girl and housewife, and made the children befora him. [ suppose all the shore people thought, a8 1 knew my mother did, that it |} P A » monstrous fact that boys 'he said suddenly and loud and clear, “‘there's The Klnd YOu Ha,ve _A}.\Va,ys Bought ol blew about her as she walked, guess the headache he'll have tomorrow, | before the was fortunate for Sally that her Polly was | 1 by the po: or of a Polly!" And then Humphrey was gone. Bears the Signntura of t may and to thinness that an o that a new er me time a 1 returned a lctter thanking the Humphrey saw her cry. He knew it | was on account of his misdeed. Heo could not understand that Sally should deny him anything, but the sight of her tears wrought him to a fu He rushed to the little still in the pantry, to destroy it partly in temper, partly perhaps that its products should never agaln tempt him to hurt her, partly with irresponsible out |break. “Oh, Humphrey, Humphrey! Don't, don't touch it! Oh, the still, the still!’ 1| cried Sally, throwing herself before him, For there was not another still to be found and if anything happened to this the SANGERN for In as if t ey turned to lool * and | poc le dear creetur, will be all the|were be at rest. But Sally nover loft off missing| Humpbrey turned to look at her and | poor litt a tibic il o arms|paused with the hammer in his lifted | life of that sort he'll ever care to have.|still fivo up the river, and that, of | 1t was little Mather at the gate with us that passion of tears and Kisses after the |BAnd. and Sally gently loosened his fingers | An' it was only in the way of an accident | cource own boys were in danger, who broke into a wail of sorrow. But Sally o ahdikhs alvive Tt ka bans [N they AronDaAt b AGAE R A NNG Db BB | W akial’a fxt a 0 & community subject sat looking into the clear space as if she | 1‘,,:‘]|]1.’.V ‘ll}',.,"‘:,t.. A ,.,‘:‘:] sh {.,‘ of ]:;,‘l:‘,:;“!.um about her shoulder and led him| ‘‘‘An'—an’ if it was,' said Ir I dor 'i" ich a lizing influence, and she journeyed after Humphrey into that infiuito tn some blind way as if sho had horself de- |4WAY, her 1ips still trembling, her face | know—really—hm—I don't know what | moved 1l send a constable at once distance. frauded her ha in giving her birth, | White And from that day Humphrey made | we're going to do about Humphrey for truction of that tool of evil, and ‘;nlnllh) ;"IIT moed, since Humplrey was her father bimselt the keeper of the miserable little el ")‘"“' fUAvILARIAR. ARAID 1600 N Y sother. hur. | One day during a cold snap last winter | {4 (4 But Humphrey himselt was quite enough |#ffair, and although with none to molest | we don't watch out!" said Anu shary Ry o rodd ol e Woman's Home Companicw, 1 saw | in those day .TH’T\AH\ e ;?,t‘ him, compassed In one all the watchfulness | “Humphroy'd orter b restrained and | rying in as soon as she heard of it.’ “You S0 “h‘]“m"" i ‘;r'”‘”‘ry SHAN v M In Use For Over 30 Years. disordered blaze of his brain burned down | Of three heads of Cerberus there's no doubt about it ‘ aro all off, 1t is nothing of the sort. She Il CIL RED 10 BTCETY SRR FRLher o8 Tur Ccomrany 7rm Thcer Mew vomn ciry nto 1mbesil Nt hle rages oves, | ‘I like to treat the boys,” he said half [ *It would kill Sally if he s, said Miss | s a poor woman who sells herbs and dis(ils ¢ he followed his wife round like some | Vhimperingly to Sally that night, waking m_u;*l\”l 1 e re : water p o by aint e ] ousehold anima geiting to eat unless | her from sleep to say it 1 kil me | t never heard that rose w 0! A PP P PP PR SOY R getting everything but his love for her, | 'hough she meant to hide her future store, | the shore who agreed A s And 1 K her—I am very foud of | AN ~\“ He w out with her on rambles throug “They're good boys, Sally. They thought | an a e that h ' her— 1 buy & at deal of her 4 "\ st wood and lane in quest of her simples, |he jam was fine. So did 1. They put the [ And although their hu at I know you refused to join our tety, (X3 W protecting her from any chance trouble | TOCWALCT on their hair an' slicked up. [them ‘hey were in @ staie of alurm, 1ike| but you necdn't boast, of buylog stimu- | i} W by the mighty strength with which he|They like the cherrybounce. I'm—I'm a | that of.a brood when a hawk hovers in the | lunts, Emily,” sald my aunt. "\ vy would have fallen like a wild beast on |!tte—Warn't just the thing to treat boys | air Stimulants!” exclaimed my mother, out | A3 W anyone who annoyed her aching things W , Sally? It sometimes makes me | *I don't care what Jo says' Mrs. | of all patien Sweet little Sally Lav- | A W beyond her and rying bags and baskets | (*€! s if—-as 1f, you know, the | Byrnes, letting her flatiron cool when Libby | endar's essence of roses! 1 gave you a Jar n w—— FOR W filled with the berries and herbs and flowers | WOT!d Was going round the other way. 1 [and Susy Wayne ran in next morni I'd | of her potpourri pola —— \o/ P Sttt ol thought—aficrwards, T thought—'twould | ruther see my Her t home without Yes, And it is recking with alcoholt | U W “It is like Una and the lion," said my | V@YD vike them silly. You listeniug, [a breath in his hody i | “The poor, weak cologne she makes her- w mother, when down a woody way one sum- | S4¥? 1 like to treat the ha "hey're | You keep still, | | ) 54 mer day we met her and her BEY com- | age our Polly was. Sully! What's | dry, and it'd c With that still, I suppose, where she | (¥ / W 3 eeUBUL b S0l & 880 Nt Moy + of Polly | you'd orter Ie makes th brandy that has torn the m ~ fipen o i *| And then Sally could endure no more and | dcar inncreent? ! hearts of & o mothers in Juu- village "\ e :M F kel e or with. | broke into bitter weeping, and Humphrey, [a man'd war who are © boys turned iato livtle | 43 z = Pk '”.l“ ”’f“”_'”_’\ X “:":h “‘m"”ml“"" 1‘1\». Ling up In bed, took her in bis arms and |of that chiid beasts by her ations—"" n The Bee has mad il fe t ly it ; W Do HAmDLISY. for ehe ran ol ehk | irookwt {5 ana'itro, Wia eyes blazi K ow - 6 Pameln PaRIT tan ML ““{u i P 10 Bee has made special arrangements to supply its readers with the now famous W rienced the hot pang of seeing that | ht that streamed over NG break 1 ‘- 15¥ You may call it ridiculous,” said my | X3 little '\m.m knew of Humphrey s iju 1,“,‘-“4'\.- 1 m ..‘.n«‘\m‘- W i‘v king & ’,x.h:‘w i down the qrsia \“n o) '1“;1 :‘rm:m"- at- ‘_!Q"\‘ o s W conditiun, and, although the pang had |* FF S U8 pause of her sobs, Sally | Llossoma there v Httle 1 tinto vila) 88 tn her Krint my | T W conceal it »ugh - th a ‘H‘ T.ond a .,,\, freed herself aud pulled lu“ ey'll coax ‘Hm 1 n‘ 1 3 tre 1 y usin Lester and 1 fol- "'\ Nyl Kows." sha 1aid iom, wih ‘8 g of P8 TOUN to uppar b L b shoud | ome even when v seen bim cking cidr | AT W w e whn e aud my o oo alons | 110, S e o ey | U, 8 MFOACRw wlder, too, DA | o' ik wagon whose ood-aiared aeves | vy together, “I'd have died to keep it dar et LRI LY w4 Sopaltion offokersy hdndpedi, Lt R LU L e M which 1s an ectual reproduction of the Ereatest of all the World's Expositions, tow in progress in Parls, France. It \M S0l AR Any B0 ke MatHo MAL |icr stonsy an that thass Aftartinics ol auon | Carioe b o e gHe bl ARG el UL A\ conslsts of 20 elegant portfolios, each containing not less than 16 origiual balf-tones, printed on the fincst qualiy of &t the open window and saw them going | 4iience when for long spaces he uttered no| Aund with this sort of feeling abroad 1 - : 5 ey pa beavy coated plate paper, 12x14 inches In eize. The full series will embrace about 330 of thess superb orizinal half- “‘ bomo in the warm su ‘what a life HISI BIE MANeA MILE S Hierata | thie itant it w Kat it P W e ': A cons n o reproductions, each representing a separate and distinct view of the Expoeition grounds, bulldings, exhibits, and W time—yes, a lifetime oi—of Worrow, as| iiie than B {hay haa P or. At molng de > the Fort| ¢ GRS e do- | 0 all the wonders of this vast collection of the world's greatost accomplishments in art, literature tngenulty and fadus W you may say, Humph Lavendar made | \ny rate, now she could hear a cock crow | the Pe I ‘ b ter- | VY- Each view Is accompanled by a graphic and beautifully expressed description, written on the spot by the diatin o for Sally when he married her 1 the night and the far clarion calls from | still, anc 1 the 1 ot S “"'l‘] Hhagre b poet and artist, Jose de Olivares. Thess descriptious are n featurs of special significance and value, “An’ married her bein’ knowin' to it |y to farm replylng without starting in| In th my Aunt| | tion, had thrans aiae| X dIferag altdgsther fram the usual pro forma faot-notes. ACCOMBARYINE WOPKE ot thls. ohmeatter L said Ann A8 B R e B T A L S RERARR i m All of the 350 superb half-tone views to be printed in the PARI DREAM CITY are direct reproductiose trom W “Knowin' to wha vid little Mather, | ygain; she could hear the boatman biow | the an a which i been ruined i the] J5 the original photographs of Maurls Bar, the oficlal photographer of the French Goyernment, and of the distingutshea \Y 80 named in noble defense to a p . his horn for the draw of the bridge to be | ji A r (A AR oo borne to tho| M\ Neurdein Brothers, of Parls, the most colebrated art photographers of Kurope. They embrace not only a COMPLETR \by the boy having just come In from driving | gpened, and the echo flute it off to mere ¢ b e ol “v“'l o " ,'\ REPRODUCTION OF THE EXPOSITION FOR SPECIAL AMERICAN CIRCULATION, but they also include about 100 WV homo a cow | ings of musi he could hear the f ot 1 5" ehan et il ‘“.:‘:“'u"‘l“i""ll ‘”.; m: . very flue and Accurate mpecial views of the W Knowin' his mother's son hadn't no | Haliis iR e B . \ it B . bl g n 4 Eiive W right to marry no one S| AL IRNE e ; b Art Gallc f ti E t \W Ao one, my dear. That in 10 pay e e v it Jrasn ot tho littl gars allicries of tiie Exposition “Any ono or no one, it's all same ids flock up like & troop af 4t 3 Lar Lrnaat TapEm o GRROEAES RAML Mo W know as much as your father some day.” | (hat had grown to be tortu | in from the corner wher # duex i ;'_';”‘.;:: W ‘But, all the same,” continuved Iry, ignor p 12al to be thankful for. | siool her her wered china, th 4 i AL 4% |tanaep b R l G C ll t' V¥ ing his wite's frritation. “I can't, no I ‘|u hap !ll.l.u brey would e | wa I ekl JeR ,,f“', e d the Oya cerman oliection w can't really say that Humphrey was to—to And it that never came 1 twice al I o AR BOHNE) 3 \/ blame, that is," a little dry cough punctuat why there was all heaven an o able joruns that th ) A “" oy AL that Loaned by the Empsror fram the - ::I como to the—the conclusion caro, the worry lec ¢ 4 L 39 Aesrisd ": “: W “'Oh, well, he knew he 1e wrong more'n ! logs SOrTOW N m ne 3 : . ! ot G R T s b T oy " s —— Y A dark face whose ia ant \dy once, an' might agai But goodn it | h vdow, looking upon her | | 4 and These splendid original fe ] ] o [ 7Y of (3 . JR A0 DLGLE ARRID L wood g UYL IuikIa8 uph uek Ik 1 Wi oves. on hers viih 4 ahenwilrtesr oy Special American Edition e Parisian Dream City w that you got, Mather to herself (he texts that | could not affc ) for pen 1 P N Ty (iTanaat nen in the great ——— - —_—— T W alt. Humphrey sive it to me ¥ &ave bor re 8nd | men like themsely s SN e an ma L e ol lr Heasy. st and they oannot bo obtained through any other source. W on the birds' tails to catch ‘em art of grace for ow, and her | on loug 18 voyages of cal i AMlde ool » ST i AN AN B B W it up in papers for me it 1'd be good not till clasped round Humphrey, | It is plai bat the |and T B } R v Tmiks ahoal Bl 1 eolet te Biva it P RENH St SRR ; 3 1 ool .01 The work 18 introduced to American readers by Froderic Mayer, Edftor of W Dave. Taln't no good sle last b t tion, accompanlied by an Introductory § from Hon. Ferdinand W. Pe ! w “What the reason you're goin' to give it| Dut were other wakeful peop i A ause out | a e States Gove to Dave!" h Ight. Iry Hodge was not | of their very en 1a n N iy o The cir i f this magn | Am an Edition is confined in this | ely t adern (17} “You can't get near enough, you know,"|sleeping. “This is really—as you might | takes ) o I Y |8 of The Bee. The regular price is 25 cer row America -\ said the rosy urchin, looking up in a wonder- | say-really he kept saying to hiwm | was one of t f wh 1 o | l'\ ers we are enabled to eupply it to our read fre t ? ing simplicity and opening his red, pudgy | without getting any further; while even | simply for the ") : gust| G bandling Seven parts are now ready, and will be fo » cach, a 4 fist that, with all its hot moisture aud | Aun tossed and turned in her dream. For | for something to be About ) Tl e ""““n M companied by the coupon printed elsswhere ' grime, Aun could have kissed, alw 478 | that afternoon their only son, Mather, the | she seeked v he knew, of | fr § Ghildren At ths anih adi thel N arhamed though, she was of the passion of | rosy little lad who had longed to catch the | hox beggy of s wade, ¢ ¢ Lhe M8 1atinet o P | g i 5 3 L. 5 i P s v % ¥ B I s it Reg oo S pe s e s | TEEEEEEERRE ECECECEECCECECCEECECECRRELEEDN

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