- " ' ' ' " " n " u w i i i n v B MWMnMMBMH M MMmaBMHHHM 18 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE SUXDAY ( , MAY 4 , 1890.-TWENTY PAGES. THE WORLD OF FAIR WOMEN. Bomo of the Striking Olnractjristicj of Brilliant Kato Pield. DAURAY ON ACTRESS-WORSHIP It IlcBiiltfl from Intcllcul , Good Looks mill Personal MngitctlHm AVonmit nn < l Her Wntuli How MM. Jjcillo Siiuuceilril. Kuto Field , wlio Is clmntctcrlzed by n prominent jourimlist na the very brntn lest woman in the United States , Is at caoy woman to Intorvlow , writes a Now York correspondent of the Philadelphia American. Slio throws herself buck it lior Btcamer clialr which litis gone al over creation and ti part of Canada with her , crcwHos her small foot and begins tallclii } , ' us slowly as if dictating to a typewriter , giving you plenty of time to jot Homo of her opinions. "I sympathize with the intorvlowor , " she s.iid to mo , "for often as a journalistic relaxation I interview homo one. " This brilliant , audacious , aggressive woman talks much as she writes in clear , caustic style and with a smllu on her lips oven when dealing the most cutting blows. She is a curious mixture of cll- plomacy and fearlessness , now veiling her rail sentiments under the most pol itic of utterances , anon Hinging prudence to the winds. She is assertive , and sots forth her ideas with an air which seems to say : "That's ' what I , Kato Pield , thinks. You can like it or not , as you pleacc. " Katherlno Van Arnholm , a very tal ented and beautiful Chicago singer , was nrebont ono day when Miss Pield was laying down laws for using the voice , which the artist at once discovered to bo absolutely worthless. Mine. Van Arn- liuitn is always ready to discuss the regu r lation of the voice , and although she was a comparutivu stranger to Miss Field , at once joined is-iuo with her. "How do you dare , Miss Pield , to say- thus and r.o about the manner in which ono should use the voice in singing you , who cannot use it properly in speaking , oven ? " "And prnv , "who are you , " Sharply asked Miss ield , "to dispute mo in this fashion ? " "Well , " said Van Arnholm , "I may bo very small potatoes compared to Miss Kato Field , but I know something of the voice and I tell you you are all wrong. " After this tilt the two became great friends. Another woman who dares to differ from this distinguished feminine uuto- , oral is Margaret Sullivan of Chicago. She was breakfasting with Miss Field not long since in Washington and was pouring milk in her tea when Kate cried : "How can you drink milk in your tea ? Don't you know that it's leather ? " " 1 like leather , " was the calm reply of Mrs. Sullivan as she proceeded to drink her tea. Miss Field's signature is perfectly con sonant with the character of the aggres sive woman who penned it. There is a dash of business , a smack of conceit , a propensity to light and a tendency to lay 1 ho law down pretty sharply visible in this signature. Any ono who has overcome come in contact with Kato Field would expect jubt such a list from her. " * AutroMi-Worship. I have frequently boon asked to explain - plain the cause of the undeniably su perior attraction and fascination the women of the btago possess over women in private life , most especially as "ac tress-worship' ' is not alone confined to men , actresses now receiving just as many letters , lUnvorsand attentions from the gentler box. I think the problem easily solved. Personal magnetism is ono of the Ijrst requisites of a successful actress. It is a nioru powerful factor oven than beauty itself. Rachel was noted for her plain face , no ono would cull Uornlwrdt beauti ful , and yet the peculiar animal magnet ism of cither 01 these artistes could do inoro to hold an audience than the com bined beauty of Langtry and Riibsoll. Secondly , a successful actress is , as a rule , possessed of more than ordinary intelligence , and intellect is the only nobility. Take this given magnetism and intelligence , add to thorn real , or borrowed , beauty of "make-up , " sot it all in the most advantageous and attrac tive frame of the stage , surrounded by a halo of romantic situations , and Is it to IHJ wondered at that men and women alike are charmed by this dazzling in dividuality , For women the actress has a special charm that men do not understand , for ho possesses that which all women huvo , boon clamoring for since the dark ages personal independence ! By this I do not moan moral license , butonly what I huvo wild personal independence that places her on an intellectual equality with men. estrange to say , mobt actresses appreci ate attentions and admiration from women more than from men , and are most fluttered by them. I naturally Imvo not in mind the proverbial dude's adora tion for the proverbial chorus girl , but the honest appreciation for the legiti mate , intelligent artists who loves her art apart from the thought of what it can bring her. I'lvorv ' actress has a peculiar seductive atmosphere about her that seems wafted from the breezes in the world of art. Is it not Longfellow who wild : The vtoilil of art Is 1111 lilonl world- Tito win Id 1 love , mul tlmtlfnln would live In , Just so long as art can charm the world just so long will wo have actress-worship. "Woman and 11 or Watch. Perhaps a woman can't sharpen pen- oils and throw stones in just the ortho dox way , but who can take care of a watch to the queen's taste , and her in- vontlvenepH as to the number of absurd and ridiculous ways of wearing it is only equalled by that displayed by man in formulating excuses for going out be tween acts or getting in Into from the club. Her ministrations begin with winding the watch , which she never thinks of doing unless she Is going shopping or on u journey , bays the Kew York Sun. Thou if she doesn't break the mainspring Bhe tucks the watch inside of her dress , where the multitudinous hooks and buttons scrape and scratch the case , and whore it re quires u half hour's Investigation when eho wants to see what time it is. At hlght when she takes her dress olT she forgets all about it , of course , and bends it wlils'/lng under the bed or bureau ut ? she throws back her bodice preparatory to wrestling her way out of it. If it stops she isn't at all disconcerted. With u serenity born of long experience she picks it up and shakes it until it ticks again. After nil It is only the unusually care ful woman that vvenra her watoh inside lior dross , for the intricate fabtentngs of the fashionable bodices render it well nigh impossible. She has the happy fashion of tucking It In the pocket of her cloak or dumping It into the bottom of the bag nil * ; arrioa about with her , and which usually contains everything from curl papoi'fl to her marriage cortUleuto , or tucking it away along with hulf u hundred bumplos , her lutch keya and small change , In her portomonnnio. Jewellers Imvo wlso instincts , notice quickly and cater well to sweet woman's whims. They understand that there is no use in remonstrating with women and explaining that it is their own fault that their watches never keep accurate time and are constantly in need of repair. No ; they philosophically set about making little purses aud card cases with u separ ate apartment for the watch and an aper ture In the outside through which the hands may bo seen ; they sot them in the bracelets to bo clasped about the wrist ; introduce them into the handles of um brellas ; they bury them in the heart of flower petals with u pin at the back , and last of all they huvo produced the wo man's dear delight the chatelaine. This octopus arrangement of silver or gold pins on ut the slue or slides over the bolt or winds girdle-wise about her waist , but in any event it keeps the watch swaying and banging against ail the other knives and smelling bottles and shears and things with which she burdens - dons herself In u perfectly delightful way , which is warranted to thwart the purpose of the Ixwt disposed timepiece over manufactured. There Is only ono other way In which she shows her ingenuity to bolter ad vantage than In the manner of watch management. She can think of few more things to do with u cross baby than she can with n watch , but not many. How Mr * . Leslie Succeeded. Shall I conllde to you that t , who claim to be a business woman , and at the same tlmo appreciate the comforts and lux uries of life as much as most persons , I lu.vsclt have made it a nractieo for vears to rise at 7 , no matter how few hours I had boon in bed , refresh myself with u cold bath , breakfast , and bo in my oillco al ! ) o'clock or teen after , there to re main , generally lunchconlcss , until 4 in the afternoon ? writes Mrs. Frank Leslie in the Ladles'Homo Journal. 1 do not enjoy it nearly so much as I should a different order of things , but I had a sacred trust to fulfill ; my husband had left it in my hands to rehabilitate his name , and build up again u business shattered through no fault of his. It was a gigantic undertaking , and I throw my self into it so completely that I thought by day and dreamed by night of nothing else , and was for a time no longer a woman , but an embodied idea. Of course I succeeded ; that sort of ef fort generally does succeed ; but , without a particle of bolt-conceit , I will say that I do not think many men in my position would have boon able to make that suc cess. A good many women could huvo huvo done it as well as I , no doubt ; but few men could have borne the ordeal. The Ilonitty ol' the Matron. The notion still hold by certain shal low women that maturity is ugliness is ono of the most incomprehensible pieces of nonsense of the time. Hero is a fair muddler in ono of our contemporaries complimenting Mine. Albani on having overcome her matrouliness and on the renewed girlishncss of her appearance. From this I should judge , that women who live on public exhibition fear noth ing so much ab development , says the Now York Truth. If they can only stay all their lives in u lisp ing and glutinous sweetness and pot grow they are satisfied. To get on in appearance , or in character , or in strength is u calamity. In this oxtruor- .linary view of things u green coddling is better than a ripe pippin. Women who exhibit themselves have but ono standard of merit and that is youth. Poor creatures , they do not know that Lho pretty girl ought to become the liandsomo woman , and never reaches her splendor until she is u matron. They cannot comprehend the fact that lixed beauty lias no existence except in death , ind oven then only when the embalmer lias put in his worlc. The law of beauty in life is the law of development and at tainment , and the beauty of a matron ind the beauty of a miss differ from each ) ther as ono star diil'ors from another in glory and , curiously enough , the older the star the more beautiful it bo- comes. Women who think of nothing but how hey shall stay young are women of charactorlesb minds. All things con sidered , the greatest woman is she who can grow old gloriously , and defy time vith something bettor than enamel. 3ut your woman who is professionally on exhibition lias got to bring to the mar- tot what the public most desires. And t is u patent fact that the mob would athor look at the pubtrynoss of youth .ban . ut the perfection of personality. It s tliis popular instinct that makes ox- liblting women starve themselves , enamel themselves , prison themselves , estrict their functions- suppress their nincls , and crucify their bodies. Athletic Girls. When wo moot boys and girls , cspoci- illy girls , outside a gymnasium , wo won- lor if that sort of training is doing them rood , says the Boston Herald. Cerlainlv hero are no visible evidences ; they walk ilong as meekly as lambs , and I have yet 0 see a girl or woman jump on or oli'a street car or spring over a muddy crossing , though bo many girls can do moro than that in 1 public hall before thousands of spectators. In seeing those youilg vomen exercising with Indian clubs , I vondcred why any any ono should be un graceful if such a drill as that wore poa- ilblo , why girls do not curry themselves letter than they do , and if I had ever not these limber and graceful creatures n the street. The young women who umped ever horizontal bars and swung .honibolvos like acrobats , head down- vard , showed that proper training might lovelop any woman Into a model of nthletlo grace. It has been a scorn ind roproadh for women that- they could not climb u stone a wall nor un upstairs without losing their breath , nit all things are possible under -this raining , and , in spite of petticoats , no gymnasium pupil can now hoaitato to go lown u lire-escape nor to cross a Hold oc cupied by cows of u too inquiring dispo- ition. This good , if no other , grows out of physical development , and though the children of today still look tig thin and mlo tib ever , the children of tomorrow ire bound to show grout Improvement in joiio and muscle , thanks to this now culture. There are other ways of 1m- iroving the human race , but until the vorld dares undertake them send the veuklings'to gymnasiums and lot them earn how to use their arms and legs. AVImt to Touoli Voting Women. A mother writes to. mo : "What shall touch my daughter ? " This ono hu- wrtant and tremendous fact , my sister : That there is no huppinuus in this vorld for an idle woman , suvs Rov. T. ) o Witt Talmago In the Laities' Homo rournal. It may bo with hand , it mayo ' > o with brain , it may he with fo'ot , but vork she must or bo wretched forever. The little glvls of our families must bo tavled with that idea. The curse of our American society is that our young vomen are taucht that the Ural , second , bird , fourth , lifth , sixth , seventh , tenth , Iftloth , thousandth , thing in their life Is o got Homebody to tnko cure of them. nstead of that , the first lesson should bo how , under God , they may take are of themselves. The simple faet s that a" majority of them do huvo o take euro of themselves , and that , too , ifter huving , through the false notions of their parents , wasted the years In vhlch they ought to huvo learned how uccoasfuUy to maintain thom olves. It s inhuman and cruel for any father or nether who puss their daughtora to womanhood having given thorn no facil ity for earning thalr livelihood. Mndamo do Stuel said : "It is not these writings that I am proud of , but the fact that I huvo facility in ten occupations , in any ono of which I could make u livelihood. " Wo should touch our daughters that work of any kind , when necessary , isuorodlt nnd honor'to them. It is u shame for n young woman , belonging to u lurgo family , to bo inelllclcnt when the mother nnd father toll tholr lives away for lior support. It is u shnmo for u daughter to bo idle while her mother toils nt the wash tub. It is as honorable to sweep house , muko beds or trim huts as it Is to twist u wutch chain or embroider u slipper. . Ilcnuty on All Fours. The other duy I uccidontuUy run across ti member of the now school of physical culture for women , whom I tnko to bo the Biimo women who recently made u man rich by letting him prescribe hot water by the quart three times a day us the great catholicon and beuutifier , Bays Chatter. "Is it possible , " I asked , "that there are ladies who will walk around and around tholr rooms on their hands and knees " "Hands and feet , " she said , interrupt ing me ; "on their four palms. " "Thero really are such ncreons ? " , "I am ono , " said she. "And are there ladies who Ho on tholr backs and gesticulate with all their limbs , like an overturned beetle endeav oring to right himself ? " "Yes , yes , " she bald ; "and it's most Ixjnoltdiil. You don't know how bene ficial it is. " "Will you kindly toll mo where your sense of humor is when you are engaged in these most peculiar performances ? ' ' "I don't know , " mild the lady. "I think it must ' bo wherever it belongs. Why ? " "Oh , nothing , " I replied , picturing in silence to myself the utter impossibility of my locking my chamber door and transforming myself into a circus of such dimensions. Breaking the silence , I asked : "And do you go up and dqwn stairs on all fours , us some do1 "Oh no , " she replied with u sigh. "It is impossible for most persons to do that. Ono must bo ulono in u house to make it possible. It is u pity , for it would be very beneficial. As wo can't do that wo are ordered to tnko carriage rides over the roughest roads in town. " Nine "Women to Uiio Man. All travelers who go to Paraguay speak of the remarkable preponderance of women over men , writes u correspond ent of the Now York Tribune. The estimates differ greatly , some writers making the ratio nine women to one man , and others four or live to one ; but the country is inhabited mainly by women , three-fourths of the men having boon killed in the recent disastrous war. .Women are the workers in the Hold the common laborers. Every peasant woman raises the mai/o and mandioca required for feeding her fam ily. Men cut wood , tend cattle , drive to market and smoke cigarettes , but the bulk of the farm work is done by women. The tea and tobacco industries are almost wholly carried on by women. Paraguay is u paradise for lazy men , for they are lords of creation there , and women not only wait upon them submissively , but labor arduously under u tropical sun for their maintenance and support. Immi gration is ardently desired in order to effect u restoration of the normal pro portions of the soxos. A progressive railway policy , it is assumed in Asun cion , will involve the speedy settlement of the country , and will open the way for an era of prosperity. Certainly un happy Paraguay deserves , , after all its misfortunes , brighter prospects in the future. The pathos of its history touches every sympathetic heart. It has been the unhappiest of countries. Unless all signs fail , it will have peuco and prosperity hereafter. THUMB NAiij NOTEBOOK : . A Curious Practice < ! ' tlin Marine .Re porter of the Massachusetts Mercury , Ono hundred years ago ninety at leubt , to be exact the Massachusetts Mercury was one of the most influential journals published in the United States , and numbered among its contributors many of the leading men of the day. It was started January 1 , 175 ( ) , as u tri weekly by Alexander Young and Samuel Ktheridge. In the course of a year the junior partner retired and Thomas Minns cume into the establishment. They tried to make the Mercury high- olusb and "immutably impartial , " al though , Hudson sa s , it bueumo u little excited over u controversy on tbo orga nization of the "Illumlimti' ' in Kurope , in which the Free Masons of this coun try boenmo u party. Rov. Dr. Morse preached a sermon on the subject , which was published in the Mercury , and Dr. Joseph I'artlett of C'harlestown , roplio I on behalf of the nuiions. Warrnn Dutton was editor of the Mer cury in 1881 , when the ntiine New Kng- lund Palladium was appended to the original title. Among its contributors was Fiilior Amufi , who , in an easay on newspapers in KS01 , strongly opposed the descriptions of murder , in the public prinK In 1S28 Young and Minns retired and G. V. II. Forbes took the paper. A year later it was passed ever to K. Kingnuin , when it become pjrt of tiie .Sentinel , and was finally ab-orbod by the Boston Ad vertiser. It was Henry Ingraham or "Hurry" Blake , a Mercury reporter , who was among the tlivt to glvo prominence to shipping news in the Boston pros * . Ho gave his whole mind and energy to his work , and the Palladium fur surpassed all its rivals in the excellence of its shipping news. On u scrap of paper , or. oftener , on his fingernail , Blake would jot down the 'Igures ' given him tiy returned sea captains and store the facts in his mind , and then trot backto the otllco and net it up. IIu always sot his own matter , und , sujt Hud son , "it was u cariosity to &oo him at work at his case. His motion was see saw , mumbling , to himself some words , intelligible only to Blake or Neptune , with an occasional look at an old scrap of paper or at his fingernails , for the de grees of lattltude und longitude the most beautiful figures of rhetoric to him. The story of I lurry's excitement when the clipper ship Hero , Captain Fox , came across in fourteen days , is oft- repeated In old-time journalistic history. Far better than the harsh treatment of incilicliie.s wliicli liortibly Kripu the putieat and destroy the coating of tlto stomach. Dr. .1. H , McLean's Chills und Fever Cure , by mild yet oiTei-tlvu action will euro. Sold at 51 } cents a battlo. KmnemliorH the Ucvoliilloii. The oldest person in West Virginia , if not the oldest person in the nation , is "Aunt" Surah Guddess , u negro woman of Oroide , this county. She remembers the breaking out of the revolutionary war und was u slave in u Virginia fam ily ut that lime , guys u Grufton. W. Vu. , dispatch to the St. Louis Republic. Friends who know her pluce her ago ut UiO yours. During the entire winter she has lived ulono and cured for herself , with Hie uld of neighbors. The residents of the vicinity recently erected n small house for her , nnd all contribute to her support. The old woman Is still vigor ous und her mind is clear. Coatcs lloiiHu , Kuu. City. Absolutuly tire proof , l-'luost uiul largest hotel lu ICuubOi City. Uuexfolffrd lu lU u ; > > I > oiutiucut3. HMOKIJ. This Doctor DOCH , Hut Admits It's n Dreadfully Had lluhlt. 1'rtjxiifilor Tht Omci/irt lift , The tobacco habit , In common with ninny other usages of our t 0 nnd tlmo , serve ? as n check upon our advancing civilization , lest perhniM wo should rlso too. rapidly In the scnlo of mental aad physical cxcollcjico. As n ruco we arc great with It , bat wo would bo greater nnd hnpplhr without It. Used otherwise tluui incdlcliwlljvtho prnctlco cannot , really , bo too severely ponsurod. As a drug , how ever , It holds a High rank lu the list of roino- dial nRonU < The primary effects of tobacco on the human system are to depress the ttorvo force , wcnlccn the heart and relax the mus cles. Such results are sometimes to bo de sired when the functions of certain organs nro exalted by disease , but when we nro lu hi the "even tenor" of health , never. Tobacco smoke U n local Irritant , producing Inflammatory secretion In the glands of the nose nnd throat. This vitiates mid partially occludes the nlr p-issu cs , and clTorts at expelling - polling It Increase the iuflaininator y trouble. Some persons nro especially susceptible to this , but ( is a rule , habitual smokers keep up n moro or loss constant spewing of foul In spissated spltllu. It is claimed tobacco of Itself never causes organic dhoaso , but only function : ) ! disturbance. Well , what of t'ui tl Wo live ou our functions , and that It docs not cause organic disease is opi'n to doubt. An organ's "function" is the work it 1ms to do , if that work is poorly doiio or not done at nil , what becomes of thu organ I Docs It suitor nothing for neglect of duty ! Tobacco relaxes the muscles I that is , It makes the strong , resisting inusclo weak and Jluccid. This inilucuco Is , of course , most marked in the young , uud in those prodhposcd to nervous disorders. But it affects all alike , differing only in the tlegrco of its harmful- ncss. Under Its power the mind is ns torpid as the wilted muscles consequent to the sense of rcposo felt while smoking. The spirits of the smoker Hags nnd ho loses his buoyancy nnd vivacity. Brain workers , if they use to bacco , find tholr work done to more ndvnn- tairo during intervals of abstinence from the habit. It certainly makes men sociable to smoke , but the most agreeably sociable per sons nro these wno do not use tobacco. In the process of smoking , an oil is evolved in the combustion of the tobacco , and being car ried in the smoke , tills oil deposits on the skin. So if .smoking gives unction to the manners , it gives unctuousness to the coun- tcnnncc. It produces u tobacco cured skin. Beyond uuy question of doubt smoking is injurious to the eyes , causing nmblyopia , or dimness of vision. Tills it effects not by di rectly injuring the optic nerve , but by sur charging the line blood vessels , thus causing n watery effusion into the tissues of the eye nnd interfering \yith the refraction of objects to thu ucrvo disc. And again it stimulates the tear glnnd , the secretion pours out in undue quantity , itching nnd rubbing of the eyes follow , mid give them u rod and inflamed nppcarance , red "windows of the soUl. " Do you think the soul looks out through intlamed eyes } If it docs it Is u very miserable looking soul. Clergymen , lawyers or singers think perhaps they can smoku with impunity. But by this means they arc robbed of that sweetness of voice , clearness of com plexion , nnd brightness of oyc , which are at tractive hi all , tint powerful in the public speaker or singer. But , pcrhapj , ono thinks in these degenerate days there lire few who appreciate "supi'rual bcaut3nnd "majestic mon. " Butnotso Wo should strive to bo us acceptable as nature will make us. Man pays instinctive houiago to whatever approaches preaches the idc.il of natural perfection. Again the tobAecb habit confirms the mind in the bondage nf the Ilesli. Every little au- noynnco must be met by the solacing pipe , cigar or cigarette. There is not much play of intellect in tlio face of the excessive smoker. His mind is seen not to dominate the body. The lffcs | of the face fall into space denoting apathy , and a desire for not too much mental woilc. The use of tobacco in any form cannot bo practiced in moderation. Ask the theologians if you can sin' moderately within lawful bounds. We arc.just ? ns amenable to the laws of the tlesli as to tlie laws of the spirit. When wo smoke wo go * "tho way of all Ilesli. " Wo try indeed , to effect a compromise between the good and evil inherent in our nature. Does ( Jed tcmporbc with the devil t That it is nn nm lcm : habit wo Imvo seen. The person who use 5 tobacco as a disinfectant will soon liavo need of a disinlectant. The smoker is a marked man , a disligured man. We see then how much is sacriilced to the subtle inllncncc of the cigar. Now , I have said but little for or against the delicious and iicriiicious. weed. It is very useful medicinally , whether in one torni or nnother , and it is to bo hoped that , in the not distant future , when wo smoke it will bo upon the advice of our physician ; that wo will go regularly to the doctor , and have him prescribe -'cigar" as he would u remcdj for "la grippe.1 Gentle rvitdcr , the writer aims not these shafts at you. Ho belongs to his ago anil kind , und owns "the soft impeachment" ho smokes himself 1 But thcpicturo has not liocii overdrawn and the question con fronts you : Will you continue to use tobacco , or will von abandon thu baneful drug/ / I'1. 1C. M. , M. D. Imported Millinery. 123 North IBth Street. LATESf MESSCUKeDbTrert'ii'tt. * WI-IW..UUBUIA3 EAR CUSHIONS r M h | . | rt bcinl .ll.linellj. foalorttbla. 8o t fal wkcreall u < ll . r iu UllutrMoJ book & Proof ! . Acianii or 1U1 calf , UXSnOX.8l Vnvlwii , 11 , V. TIII : natmn o. " The flcure 0 In our dates will make A long itty. No man or womnn noir living will over data i document without using the figure 0. U itandi In the third fOnoo In 1890 , where It wilt remain ten years nnd then reeve up to kccond pUce In 1000 , where It will real for ono hundred years. There U another " 0' ' which 1ms also coma to stay. It Is unlike the figure 0 In our dates In the repec' thnt It has already moved up to first place , where It wilt permanently remain. It It called the "No. 9" High Arm Wheolcr A Wilson Sewing Machine. The "No. B" was endorsed for first place by the experts of Kuropo nt tha Paris Etposition of 18SO , where , after n jovcrccontc.it with the leading ma chines of the world , It was awarded the only Grand Prize Riven to family sewing machines , all ctlicrS on exhibit having received lower awards of gold medals , cto. The French Government also recognized Its superiority by thedeconUlou of Mr. Nathaniel Wheeler , President of the company , with tbo Cross of tbo Legion of Honor. Tbo "No. 8" Is not nn old much I no Improved upon , b-jt is an entirely new machlna , and the Grand Prlza nt rnrlslvas nwarded It as the grand est advance In s > i ! nK nmchluo mechanism of tht ago. Tboso who buy It can rest assured , there , ( ore , of having tbo very latest and best. TYITEELEU & WILSON M'F'O CO. , 185 nnd 187 Wabnnh Avo. , Chicago. P. E. FLODMAN & CO , 220 North 16th Street. Uccolvcd Alarpo stock of now style oIcKant Cases brass and japaned , nlcnlyor- namentud. from 4jo to S.X ) . Klosant I'linoy DogCnllati , lurni'ss , Whips , etc. , from 3o to U10.W ) . Imported IJlrd Seed 10c lb. , JIookliiB lllrd Food of n su lierlor quality , fresh , prepared pared every wool : , chuapcs In the city , We lb. Geisler , 417 South 15th Street. Omaha , Neb. GILBERT BROTHERS , TAXIDERMISTS Specimens cnn bo sent ns safely by mill or express. Send for prices. 815 North lOlli btreet , Ouinhu. Established 1858. A. SIMPSON. . J. . BldOHprlnRiittachuicnt. No horse motion. The oldest nnd largest carriage factory in Oniiihii fundlno work , using the celc- bratctl spring washer axle. Drafts and estimates furnished. Fine repairing a SllCL'illltj. 110 ! ) and 1J11 lloilgo St. , Onmlia. ALLAH LIKEOCEAN STEAMERS Passage to and from Great Britain and an pails of Europe. Montreal-Liverpool route , by the waters ol St. Lawrence , shortest of all. Glasgow to lloaton , to Philadelphia. Liverpool to and from Baltimore. Thirty Uteamora , Clnaa excclelor. Accommodations nnsnrpnsscd. Weekly sailings. AIjIj&N & CO.Qen. WoBt-AR'ta. C.I.Sundell , uumcr. 112LaSnllo at. , Chicago , IIU Desk Blotters , Pads , Ink stands , Pen Racks , Erasers - sors , Pins , Clips , Rulers. CHASIj t J3DOY , MiKUS AM ) STATIOXEItS , 12NGUAVKIIS AND PUINTEUS , 11 South Kith Street. J-S-Tx- > : * -x- x$300.00 Agents Wanted ! Portraits Enlarged to any size. Writ * fol SpMUl T.ra * MI Citilofn. . CUejgsElotrleLteht Zahrglsg Ci. 815 to 253 . Ilandolph St. ClllCKk'O , * " The ONLY Lawn or Garden Hose MADE which will stand 4OO POUNDS PRESSURE. Buy T E Best , IT WILL Last Longest. A linso which will do good worlc In mrnt rltli-i , will tint clvn aooA sntNfuutlon In Onmlm , on account of tliu uvtrcinu lil h Dn wnro. Wlillo uoulon complain of other hose buhiK returned In Innro quantities Uooiinsu It N . not stroiiK nonili to Htnmltliu pressure. "KIHII 1IKAND" Is guaranteed 1 to f stand the highest pressure. For nlo by nil dealer ! * , or OMAHA RUBBER CO. , 1OOS Farnam Street , Omaha , Neb. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. The Omaha Medical and Surgical Institute. rortlio treatment of nil CHItONIO AND Simr.K'AI. DISUASRj. llrncoi , App.ruicoj for deformlllei mil Trusses. Host Kticllltlei , Appirttus and Ui'inuilU'i for * urco Hful Troitnionl of every lorin of CIIVIYU ro quIrlntcMctllenl or SiirglPilTreitmont. NINKTV IIOOMS If Oil I'ATK.VTS , lloinl nnd AUuiulnnca lluit AccommciiliiUoin . Wrllo for clreulnriim Dofurmltle 1 mid Ilracus. Truaiei , Glut ) KiH't Curvnturoi nt Kiilnc. I'llos , Tumors , Cancer , Catarrh , Ilnmcliltll , Inlml itlun. Klc-ctrlcltjr. rnralrnli , llpUuii'r , Kldnur , Illi I ilcr , Kjro , Knr. Skin nnd llloo.l. nml nil Mumle-il Oi | riitloni. DISIUSKS OH' WOMK.V n specialty , llouk > ( DIsenKCS of Wciiucn Proo. We Imvo Intuly mlili'il u l.yliu-ln Oapiirtinunt for Womnn Ilnrlni'onllnumcnt ( ( Strictly 1'rlvnte ) Only Hollnblo Mecllcnl Initltutti Mnklnjin Specialty of I'UIVATIJ DiaiJASlIS All Illoort DIHO.IIOI iwccesafiilly trunU'il. Hilillltlu | i > i > lson removed from the fly.itom without moroiiry New Kcitonitlva treatment for l < o of Vital 1'unror. 1'nrtlu * miitilo to visit in may bo ire ili'il nt homo by corrospomloiu'i' . All communications conlldnntlii ! Medicine or Instrument1 * acnt by mull or oxproi * id curdy pnckod , no marks to Indicate contents or xcmlcr. Ono personal Intorvlonr preferred. Cull nml coimili 113 or send lilsti/ry of joiire.itn , nnd wo will send In plnln wrapper our HOOK TO MIIN KKHIC ; upon t'rlratj Special or Nervous Dlsu.i.ies , linpotcncy , Syphilis Uleot nnd Vnrlcocelo , with iiufsUun Hit. Addron Omaha Medical and Surgical Institute , Corner 9th and Harney Sts. , Omaha , Neb. Set of Teeth on Rubber FOR FIVE DOLLARS. V Dr. R. W. Bailey Dehtist ' , , Paxton Block , 16th and Farnam Streets. fn fnxr Our offices have recently been en- ' larged and more fully equipped with all the latest facilities for dental work. We malce a full uppei- or lowerset of teeth on rubber for five dollars , guaranteed to be nb well made as plates sent out of any dental office in this country. Do not be prejudiced by what others may say against us , but come and see us and examine our work ; it will all bear inspection. Teeth extracted without pain or danger , and without the use of v chloroform , gas , either or electricity. Gold and silver fillings at lowest - - * est rates , gold and porcelain-faced crown , teeth without plates , etc. All work warranted. JJR. 13 AILHIY. Dentist , Paxton Block , 10th and Farnam. Open nvunlngs until S o'clock. TiiUu ulavatoron IGth street to tlilid Hoar. Mention this pmiei. Stove Repairs and Water Attachment For all stoves and ranges of any description. Gasoline stoves and gas burners cleaned and repaired , work guaranteed , ItobortUhllR , Prop. Omaha Stove Works ( J. Al. Kuton , Mangr. Repair , Etchings. Emerson. Engravings. Hallot & Davis. Artists' Supplies. Klmball. Mouldings. Pianos & Organs. Frames. Sheet Music. 1513 Douglas Street , Omaha , Nebraska. 3C tOTvtocl jTVrmrr" " * XO , ' 07 Improved July SO , 1889. WITH ' LADIES' SriNAl No , 4 ArMIAIICI BELT , ATTACKED. Dr. OWEN'S Electro- I dalranlo Belt and fiaspcneorr will Citra thofollow- InRdUeascaandaUotb' nrnnrannrvouacharactcr ! Ithcu. nin | | mi of any UndSciatica. Paralysis lCnllcWfiplnalI > l3oaac lHt.VHuB' Olscaso. 1'ilcs , Heart 3- * Dheosea , Lumbago , General and CoBtlrcncss , Kidney DUcasoa.NorYOusncss.Trcmbllmr , iia Ilody. and nil dlseaaca caused from Jndlscrotlou In Youth or Married Life , Ncrvona Prostration , Personal Wcalnesa or Kxhaua. tlon , Female Complaint * . In fact all uorvtma illscuscspcrtalnlne to filalo or Fcutalo. Wo challenge the World - - - - toproduco a belt that will compare with It. ThocurrcntUunucrthocontrolof tha wearer andcanbcraaJo Bujponiory. mita or tttranu to suit any complaint ; this cannot ho done with any other belt. The Suspensory for wcaVness of menlsconnoctcddlroctlytotho tfat ferii. the dl k are BO ndjnutod that bymsansof our. appliance. thoWH r n bo carried to anyjparf o t ho l- ' \ t oMeatw\tireatettf Improvement BaokVlow. 10 QMvanlo cells with 100 Scgrooa ol Galvanic Veils , with 4on decrees ol strength , hits n I'anitIiw ana AC// 'aba On en Jlolt ill not a Chuin , IPirn or 1'ottnia licit , or a , The OWEN ELECTBIO BELT & APPLIANCE CO. , 806 North Broadway , St. Louie , Mo. and 826 Broadway , Northeast Corner of 12th , New York City.