10 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE * . SUNDAY MA * 22. 1887.--TWELVE PAGES. JIAN'S ' PHANTOM OF DELIGHT , Woman Created For a Helpmate and No a Biral of Man. POSE ELIZABETH CLEVELAND { Tlie Frinnlo A c I'Htslmrc'H Miss Van Xaiult Women ns Itivjuitt- ors Gossip Tor ttiu Ladles , Wninnn. JJ. A , A. , m 3'iwp'e nor. ' Most flattered ntid least ousted of tlio race , Dropt for u whim anil followed for a lace. Loved for tlielr lollies , their duvollon scorned , In presciico slighted and in absence inonrncd. Their heart > < , their characters , by men ntmsed ; Wio nuvor think their help should ho re fused ; Heated by kinirs nnd trampled In the mire , The best nnd worst they equally inspire. Cursed for their weakness , hated when they're strong ; "Whatever happens always In the * wrong. Tact Is their Renius. Add jet one thliiK more. Woman Is lost , wlion woman proves a bore 9 Wmnnn , n Helpmate , Not n Rival. London Queun : Tlio old contest re specting the rnlutivo intcllectunl powers of the members of two sexes lias been revived in thn journals of the lust week in consequence of a lecture on the sub ject delivered lit the lloyal institute , Al- uermarle street. It cannot be said that tiny new light upon the mental distinc tions between men and women by Mr. Komanes ; but the careful consultation of authorities and examination of evidence necessary to the compilation of n lecture on the subject precluded his accepting the belief , now current in some quarters , that men and women are equal in mental powcrsand that nothing but the tyranny of custom and the inequality of education lias established and continued the mental < 11 He re n ccs associated with sexual dis tinctions. The natural distinctions between the intellectual faculties of men nnd women cannot bo ignored by any impartial ob server. It is mere childishness or fatuity to maintain , as is done by some of tlio persons who wish to bo regarded ns strong-minded women , that , if equal educational advantages were bestowed on the two sexes , and the result of the long tyrannical reign eliminated , equal intellectual powers would bo possessed by equal numbers of the two sexes. It would be no loss absurd to argue that tqual bodily powers would result from equivalent training. The distinctions , mentally and bodily , are the results of natural causes beyond the control of man. In those countries , such as Scotland , in which boys and girls are educated to gether , every experienced nnd observant teacher knows that the girls have quicker perceptive powers and learn much more rapidly * than boys of a corresponding spending ago. They are more pleasant nd easy to leach , nnd are much more satisfactory as uupils , but , arrived at a certain age , this pro-eminence is at an end , for , arrived nt adolescence , tlio power of amassing knowledge isgrorter on the part of the male. In many intellectual pursuits , more over , women in civilized society have ad vantages over men of which they could have availed themselves had they pos- ecssed the power or the will. The num ber of girls taught music is out of all proportion greater than that ot boys. v\o have constantly u vast number of ladies who are brilliant executants , but "wo seek in vain amongst the great com posers for the name of oven a single woman composer. Moznrt , Handel , licethovcn , to say nothing of scores of others , can be matched with no names of women. Again , .women arc highly emotional , nnd lovers of poetry nnd poetic litera ture ; hundreds have essayed the art , but with a single exception , and that not n ntrongly marked one that of Elizabeth Barrett Browning none have ever taken n position in the highest rank. In one intellectual pursuit alone can they be said to have equaled the other sex as delineators of character in works of fiction. As novelists women are un questionably in the front rank. To say nothing of the numerous lessor lights , Miss Evatis ( George Eliot ) and' Charlotte llronto may bo placed alongside of Thackeray andDickens.and lose nothing by the comparison ; and at the present time our most popular novels are in great part written by women. This faculty for writing fiction may depend upon two conditions. The sharp , quick perception of a clever woman gives her a great in sight into character ; she appreciates more readily than a man the hidden springs which actuate motives , and she delineates with greater accuracy the liner impulses which escape the more general observation of writers of the other sex. Then , again , as portraycrs of female characters women have the im mense advantage that they understand the motives which actuate their sex , which are. ns they say with -great amount of truth , inscrutable to men. Such characters as that of Mrs. Pqysor could not have boon conceived or deline ated , by a masculine writer. So well is this fact recognized that if n female nov elist of high class elects , as did Miss Evans.to publish under a musculino title , the very accuracy of her delineations of female character betrys her sex. Hut the contest as to the relative intel lectual superiority of the two sexes is one 01 the most ynin and useless charac ter. Nature never intended that there should be this contest. Woman is the complement , not the rival of man ; they are respectively equal In their own spheres. The one is thn holnumto of the other , and it would be an evil day for the world at largo , nnd for the happiness of the human race , when men and women were pitted against the other as rivals ; ( each sex would sutler , and it is dilHcult fto say which would be tbo greatest loser. Man is pro-eminent in bodily strength and physical superiority , no less than in strength of intellect and concentration of power. Woman excels in quickness of perception and in the hither moral qualities of the mind , no less than in phy sical beauty and grace. Viewed as n whole the true nature of woman is fully equal to that of man , but it is on other tinea ; and those uro no real friends of the sex who seek to place one- bnlf of the human race in opposition to Oho other , and to set up an unnatural nnd jnpossiblo rivalry , which would only bo niccittsful in aggravating the evils of lifo that already exist in too great numbers. Concerning iloumrkalilo Women. Now York Sun : The best wishes of hundreds of thousands of intelligent men und women follow Miss Hose Eli/.abtith Clovi'lnw ! from the editorial desk to the schooh oom. Miss Cleveland has won an cnyinblo reputation in literature , particularly In the department of historical criticism. Slie has gained something better than that the honest respect of everybody ca pable of appreciating earnestness of pur pose , independence of judgment and un swerving loyalty to high Intellectual aims. And she has earned something better even thuu that thu sincere grati tude and good will of a multitude of readers who have come to regard her ns almost a personal friend , without ever having seen her face or heard her volco Thi ) last is the best trcasuro within the author's roach. This sentiment of per sonal esteem nnd friendliness if. inspired by no writer who dues not write from the oul. if it is trtio that Miss Cleveland's future work is to bo chioll.y in the liolit of study und exposition , whnruin she has already ihoirn herself at her bent , wo cotigratu- L > t the ) oung ladies who uiay now took V „ forward to her teachings in the lecture room as a source of profitable ing truution and keen intellectual enjoyment. Hie Age of Women. When rtors a woman cease to bo young , or rather to be entitled to that epithet ? This is the delicate question which a French prefect hastindertakon to answer. Some years ngo a ceitain will left the sum of 10,000 f rancs.tho interest of which was to 1)0 given nnnuilly to a young un married woman of the working classes , who , by her capacity and peed conduct , should be in a position to marry with the help of a little money. In carrying out the will , it became necessary for the pre fect of the Seine to determine the exact significance of the words "young wo man , " and he has decided that they in clude the period between 21 and 30. At ! JO , then , an unmarried woman may bid adieu to youth , and resign her.salf to be an old maid. This extremely ex cathedra pronouncement may win a feigned or forced assent from the candidates for the Hiirbet-Hntitol pri/c , as this kind of prix Monthyon is called , but it will meet with only contemptuous rejection from the sex at' large , ut least that portion of it which has passed the fatal limit. A wo man is ns young a.s she looks , just ns n man is ns young as lie feels , and a really capable woman is never SO until she is 40 or married. Bliss Van Zanrtt. Pittsburg has a nearly parallel ease to that of Nina Van Znndt. During. the trial of W. T. Lavellc , who was convicted Tuesday of robbing the 1'an Handle freight cars , n pretty girl named Vnnnio Hill , lila alHanccd , sat by his side in court Yesterday she applied for a license to marry him. The register refused the license because Lavellc was in jail and could not be present when the license was granted. Miss Hill will now try to secure a now trial for her lover , so that he can bo released on bail nnd thus be enabled to get a marriage license. Fail ing in this , ahe will patiently await the expiration of his term of imprisonment. which , it is thought , cannot exceed three years , nnd marry him then. She is thoroughly determined to marry him sooner or later. Women ns Inventors. New York World : The world has not given woman due credit for her inventive faculties. Few persons icalizo what an important role she is playing in the de signing of numerous articles , useful as ornamental. Tlio records of the patent ollico show that fully 1,1)00 ) patents are claimed by women. Moreover , not n small number ot patents granted to men are really for ingenious devices and ideas that have originated in a fcminino brain. The women of Now Vork have been granted more patents than their sisters in any other state. The women of Massachusetts , Ohio , Indiana and Wis consin rank next in order. In machinery women have done much. Almost daily improvements in sowing machines corn's from her brains. In the model-room of the patent ollico , side by side with Elias Howe's machine , is one made by a Miss Uosputhal. It is n handy little contri vance which can bo put inn lady's pocket and screwed on to any ordinnry table. It is so dainty it looks lit for thn work room of a fairy. It will be a boon to persons traveling where it is impossi- * bio to take a largo machine. Ma chinists pronounce it practically perfect in construction , but it has not yet been put upon the market. The first submarine telescope was the production of Mrs. Sarah B. Mather , of Now York. Mrs. Montgomery shows n section of a war vessel provided with n series of iron plates so constructed as to resist shot and shell. There is also in the model-room an engine of olTenso as well as defense , in the shape of a breech- loading gun , credited to Miss Uuth Goshan. Among the moro peaceful in ventions by women are a car coupling- pin and an improved railway for street cars. A life raft is a contrivance of a Mrs. licosloy. An appliance for raising sunken vessels has been patented by Mrs. Emily Tanoy , of Pennsylvania. She has also contrived n syphon pump. Mrs. irackolton , of Milwaukee , ' claims to have made 200 women self-supporting by means of n useful little portable kiln for tiring decorated china. This can bo at tached to any gas-pipe , and is an im provement in the usual method of heatIng - Ing , alibi ding a much more equable tem perature. Miss Mary Bj-oughton , of New York , discovered a new mode of forming air chamcers in dental plates for artillcial teeth. Miss Amelia- Bird de sired to make a noise in the world , and her genius soared to steam whistles. Mrs. Caroline Brooks , of Arkansas , has patented some lubricating molds in plas ter. Mrs. Brooks will be remembered ns the butter artist at the ccnntcnnial , her lovely creation of lolantho attracting much attention. She now has a studio m New York. Mrs. Sarah Ames , of Massachusetts , patented the bust of Abraham Lincoln. Of what the patent right consists does not clearly appear , as artists generally con sider such things creations rather than inventions. Mrs. Cornelia Beaumont , of Ohio , has a patent lifeboat to her credit. Mrs. Martha J.Boston has boon very suc cessful with her pyrotechnic night sig nals. She is an example of what pluck and perseverance can do. At the death of her hmband his papers were in a chaotic condition nnd his designs not fully perfect. Unaided she brought them to a point where they were practi cally valuable , and she remained almost ten years introducing them in the vari ous foreign ports. She has been rewarded for her perseverance by a fortune. Among the queer inventions is an instrument for restoring facial symmetry by Miss Fannie Batchelder , of Massacnustts. The numerous patents granted to women include lire escapes , dust brushes , baby tenders , devises for killing mosquitoes nnd other insects , window washors.glovo fasteners ; food preservers , washing ma chines , cow milkers , cooking stoves , corpse preservers , bustles , face lotions and all Kinds of garments. Gnnalp For the Ladled. ' Elizabeth Stuart Phelps is at work on a woman suil'rago novel. Miss Frances Willard will take up dress reform at thu end of the temperance sea son. son.Mrs. . Mary Manes Dodge is graceful nnd well dressed. She talks with great Vivacity. Miss Mary L. Booth , editor of IIarper'3 Bazar , is rather largo. Her complexion is dark , and she is a deliberate talker. Miss Jcanotte L. Gilder , the editor of the Critic , is tall , dark , and masculine in her dress and gait. She has u brusque was of talking. The Crown Princess of Germany is very benevolent , nnd her chief delignt is in promoting schemes for the education of the unfortunate classes. Queen Natalieof Sorvia.was accounted the most beautiful woman in the king dom. Her husband , from whom she has separated , is a marvel of ugliness. Mrs. S. S. Conant , who is the temporary ary editor of Harper's Bazaar during Miss Booth's absence , is rather stout nnd dark in complexion. Shu is n pleasant talker. A woman teacher in the Now York Normal college declares that she can feel already the inlluenco of the appointment of iwo women as commissioners of the board of education iu the greater respect shown to women. There is n printing house still in pros perous operation in Franco wjiion was established in 163 1 with girls for com positors. The wo * k is chiully on Greek and LiUin classics. Twenty-four deaf mutes are among the skilled type setters. Miss Middle Moriran , live stock reporter for thu New York Tiroes , is very lull and slender. Her complexion is neither light nor dark. She dresses with great plain- , , * * * y ytfi < ness , and \t \ a delightful talker. She speaks French and Italian with a charm ing Irish accent. Mrs , Aguow and Miss Dodge , the lady members of the Now York board of edu cation , pay particular attention to the sanitary condition of the schools they visit. 1 hey attend especially to nil mat ters relating to the comfort of the build- intrs , and notice little defects which es cape the attention of men. The janitors are said to bo dismayed when asked to show the cellars. Harper's Bazar tells of n clergyman dying who left u widow nnd two daugh ters. One of the daughters was an in valid , and the other undertook to pro vide for the llttlo family. Hearing n number of housekeepers regretting that they coulrt not have nice fresh caken for breakfast , she called on her friends and took orders for muffins , for the making of which she had a good rccelpo. The mullins were baked and served promptly in time for breakfast. Her orders In creased , and she now has a largo estab lishment nnd u comfortable income. J1ONKV FOU TIIK liADIHS. The bang , In hair dressing has resumed its sway. Large hoop earrings are again getting into tavor. Plcot-cdged ribbons excel all others In pop ularity. Corduroy is n favorable material for tailor- made jackets. Nobody who Is anybody wears lisle thread gloves this spring. There Is something very lady-like about a hand o four queens. The really proper reds are two only , Am aranth and old Bordeaux. Ladles shoes must match In tint the prevailing - vailing color of the gown. Malzo Is asserting Its claims to bo consid , civd a fashionable color , Miss Itoslna Emmet , tlio artist , is soon to marry a son ol Mrs. John Shut wood. Beads , or to speak by the card , jets , are fashionnblo foundations for bonnets. Velvet Is used either plain or In soft , irreg ular folds on the brims of round hats. Sttin-flnlshed , eros grain , gauze nnd taf feta ribbons are much used in millinery. Mrs. Springing remarks that she would rather fool with a bee than be with a fool. The newest additions to flower jewelry are the "Bermuda Illy , " and the "New Zealand" rose. rose.A mother of male twins enthusiastically- rcteis to her treasures as her "sweet boy and boy. " Indian's never kiss e.ich other , and no one who has over seen an Indian can blame them much. Work and Leisure suggests rent collecting a proper and remunerative employment for women. If you wish to see n crass widow In clover , watch tier when she grabs a rich widower by the arm. Pure always was an unbecoming color.and rcchrlsteuiUK It "heliotrope" does not Im prove It , It Is said that the tan shades of cloves have lost their popularity , and that coal grays are in favor. Basques are declared notsultablofor young women , and are consequently not woineven by grandmothers It Is said that a sermon Is always short to a woman who wears a new bonnet at chinch for the llrst time. Skirt draperies tend to loner , limp nnd straight liurne-Joneslsm poudes and watteau are out of fashion. Bonnet ribbons are coining In again. They are not tied , but caught bow down with a jewelled bar of gold. " The latest novelties In bonnet nnd scarf pins for ladies' wear are a combination of pearls and diamonds. The very latest thing In sleevollnks simu lates the coffee bean : each bean must be ot a different colored gold. There nru fifty female school supervisors In Maine , and they all perform the duties of their ofllce In an efliclent manner. Mine. Melba , the young Australian prlma donn , has been engaged bv Max Btrakosch. She has created quite a sensation In Purls. The Bombay Gazette has broken the Ice by employing sixteen Aimlo-liulinn giils as compositors and a woman as proof-reader. Ella-Wheeler Wileox wears no color but white Indoors. She particularly affects the Kate Oreeuaway stjlu of cut In these gowns. Women portrait-painters are becoming so popular In Now York city that those ot the other sex are preparing to seek more prolit- able Holds. Elizabeth Stuart Pholps' woman suffrage novel is delayed by the 111 health of the writer. Sue is troubled with Insomnia and nervousness. Although curious combinations of all sorts of colors are allowable this spring , women should not dress as 11 they were imperson ating hartoiulns. The man who reports tornadoes for the sig nal service has just been married. Ills re ports will be founded laruely.upon personal experience hereatter. A woman doesn't know half as much about voting AS a man does about rocking a cradle , yet there are more women who want to vote than men who want to rock cradles. Ono of the strongest points In the loveabil- ity of a woman Is that she doesn't whistle. It Is the husband who has to whistle when she hands him the -bill for her bonnet. Mrs. WhlttiBV wears no jewelry except a diamond comb. She largely regulates the fashions ot Washington. She may make the profusion ot jewelry unfashionable. The Htioots of Canton are only three or four teet wide and when a woman with a bustle ou gets Into one of them she has to go clear through before she can turn around. The rage for silver handles for canes , um brellas and parasols has reached such a stage thai designers are almost at their wit's end for new ana novel patterns to satisfy the public. The bigger the parasol the moro stylish Its bearer. The parasol of to-day needs an athletic to carry It. They should match the toilet , even If to do so they must be made of Scotch tweed. Mrs. Susan Sullivan , who was recently left a penniless widow at Pierce , Mo. , walked from that place to Chattanooga , Tenn. , with her nvo children , the youngest a babe , whom she carried In her arms the entire distance. A California woman , In trying to make a cradle for her baby , hit on an Idea and in vented an orange box. She now runs and owns the factory which makes nine-tenths of the orance boxes for the 1'acltio slope. Miss Mary Tilllnghast , who has just com pleted a woudnrful memorial window for Grace church , Now York , was once paid 31:0,000 : by Vnnderbllt for designing an orlglnlal tapestry hanging for his nouses. The honored guest of the Women's Na tional Press association at Its regular meetIng - Ing was MIHS Uolley , the author of "Joshua Allen's Wife. " The originality of this writer's style is attracting considerable de served attention. When Jacob Schoelkopf , the millionaire tanner of Buffalo , took his wife around to look at ? 500,000 residence which he recently bought , her only critlscUm was , that she was ufruld that It she lived there sue "would have to keep a girl. " Fifty thousand copies of Mrs. Cleveland's portraits have been sold Sucn is the rage for them that the orUlrfal photographer has a call for about two hundred a day. She Is regarded ns the greatest beauty tuo white house ever contained. Hero Is a good word for the women : An English statistician has discovered that mar ried men live longer and live butter lives than bachelors. Among every 1,000 bach elors there Is 33 criminals ; ameHg married men the ratio Is only 18 per l.ooo. A youug married woman In Iowa goes out t-vf-.ry moonlight night and takes lone strolls \vltttliu trliost of a former lover , who "talks ns naturally as he did on eartn. " Her hus band llnils It Impossible to become jealous of a thing he can't st > o ; so the posthumous love at ! air means no trouble. A Now Lisbon , Ohio , girl , while disrobing recently , was pulling off her stocking with considerable exertion , as her foot was damp. It came oil unexpectedly , and her hand \ > as released with such sudden force that U struck her under the chin and caused her to nearly blto her tongue in two. There Is a moral ro this tragedy. Mrs. Gertrude Garrison , editor of the American Press association , Is of medium height , and has a slender , graceful llyure. She U Incllnoeu to be a blonde In complex ion , Her eyes are dark gray. She is de cidedly pretty , drevsfa well , and Is probably the best "all round" wcniku newspaper writer In the profession. . Too newest styles la scarf-plus are very small nnd Include fllU , spiders and others of the Insect tribes , wltli' luminous eyes , wings nnd backs of pearls , diamonds , or rubtM. A dainty pin Is shown of { opals In a cluster of diamonds. A brilliant pin nnd destined to bo very popular Is sot , with jacinths anfl dia monds. A most unlmtof'ln displays a floweret ot moonstone sot with diamonds. It Is nowadays quite the proper caiior for young women to mak their own gowns. The fashion obtains particularly In Knelnnd and even extends to the royal family , the princess of Wales herself setting the ex ample. The > oung. princesses are belnic trained to u complete uiitlerstandltii : of the art , and not only make gowns but wear the gowns they make. The , "Society of hndy Dressmakers" Is luecllug with marked suc cess. MUSICAL AN1 ! ) DUAS1AT1O. Miss Fanny Davenpoit closed her season last nlnlit In Brooklyn , David It. Young hns written n comedy called "The Ago ot Tally.1 Kdwln Booth played to 84,470 one night last week In Indianapolis. Harry Asklu has been cngaitod as box book keeper for Colonel McCul.is' | season In New Vork. The sum of 84.3CO clear wont to C.W. Coul- dockis the result of his benefit In New lork last week. Clara Morris travels with a doctor in at- tciulauco. Nightly this physician Is on duty In tbo wings. Walters. Sanford. the star In "Under the Lash , " Is n Philadelphia boy and a son of the minstrel , Sam Sanferd. There Is to bo a now conservatory of music In Paris. Its funds will coma from individ uals , not from the government. ' Her Atonement" will bo the Decoration ucrk attraction at the National theatre. Ihere will bo an extra matinee. Mrs. Langtry has had her hair cut In boy fashion. The experiment , In the opening ot connoisseurs , has not proved a success. Mlnnio Maddern's company recently gave the lirst dramatic performance over seen In Prescott , ArU. The receipts were STOO. PiUtl Itosa Is the only soubrette Lotta ever found sufficiently to her liking to cntiust with her bright comedies , "Zip" and "Bob. " Mr. Uobert Buchanan's play of "Sophia. " based on "Tom Jones , " has passed its UOOth consecutive representation at tUe Vundcvillo theater , in London. Emma Abbott will add "lluy Bias" and "Alda" to the repertoire ot her opera com pany for next season. The cnmpony will not travel west of the Mississippi river. Marcus Mayer will bo tendered a brncfit In San franclsco during the engagement of Sarah Bernhardt. San Francisco is a great place tar Ireaks , and this Is one of them. Although the season Is practically over and tlio Inter-state commerce bill has reared Its horrid front , tlioro ant 100 companies stilt on the road the usual showing at this time ot the year. "Hypocrite" Is the title of n now comeJy- urama written by Mr. Lawrence Marston , which Is to be produced at the Fourteenth Street theatre In New York on Juno G , at the cioso of the run ot the "Old Homestead. " A proposition has been made In a London paper that the words "vVay Out" be painted in large letters with luminous paint near the exits ot theatres to guide the audience in case the lights should bo suddenly extinguished Mine. Pattl has diamonds enough to adorn half a dozen European sovereigns , but the jewelry she wears with most delizht and never parts from are two inexpensive bangle bracelets , from wtilcfi depend small , colden disks with Uebrewjvords engraved "there . fl upon. J Genevlove Ward and W. II. Veruon have nrrivbd In London. . Miss Ward Is nt tier country house at 'Slmnldln , in the Isle of Wight She will start on a tour of the pro vincial theaters of England , in company with Mr. Veruon , about the middle of August. ' ' I Eight principals of the company that Col onel Mapleson has arranged for his season of Italian opera in London are American- Emma Nevada , Mine , llastreiter , Marie Engel of Chicagoi ) Mlrtnlo liauk , Louisa Pott I , Lilian Nordica , Tercsma Adams , and Votta of Philadelphia. Maurice Bernharilt , who was to have Jolnok his mother at Omaha , and accom panied her thence lo California , appears to prefer the pleasures of Now York to the dusty delights of a transcontinental trip. He may be seen late every afternoon In Central park riding In a hansom and Industriously pulling n cigarette as he indolently leans over the apron of thu vehicle. Princess Beatrice , youngest daughter of Queen Victoria , has composed n tc nival can tata , "The Sunny Mouth of May , " In honor of the fiftieth anniversary of her mother's accession to the throne. This Is not tbo first attempt of the princess at musical composi tion. A "Kyrie" written by nor has been given in St. George's chapel , Windsor , aud fat , Paul's cathedral , London , Slgnor Verdi has been fullillllnq ; a promise made to the children of 'St , Agatha his country homo that ho would write sumo music for their favorite songs and cames. "It Is no easy task. " declares the veteran composer , "to satisfy my little friends. Many of the most famous passages in my operas have cost me far less trouble than Urn Doll' and tho'Little ' Song of the Soldier' which I have Just finished. " The Pall Mail Gazette makes the statement that the melody known as "Homo , Sweet Home , " can be found , note for note. In Cur- zon's "Monasteries ot the Levant , " published In 1848. Curzon was secretary to Lord Stratford de Itedcllffo , when ho was British minister at Constantinople , aud the air is set down In the book named as an ancient Arabic love song. Sir Henry Bishop's music ot "Home , Sweet Home , " as set to John Howard Payne's words , was published be fore 1SW. Mrne. Sellna Delaro , an artist who has won distinguished success on both the lyric and the dramatic stage , has been In falling health and In want for a lone time past. Her friends have been preparing to give a per formance for her benefit , which will probably take place at the New York Madison Square theatre ou next Thursday. The play will bo "Fashion , " a comedy written by Mine. Delaro that has never been acted ; so the event will have a double Interest. Encouraged by his London season of Ital ian opera , plvon at reasonable priceColonel Mapleson Has prepared to come down like a genial and mulling wolf ou New York city next fall. He will brine with him the greater part of the company which is now singing in London , and will probably settle down at the Academy of Music , where ho Intends to give a season of opera ot two months' dura tion , at prices calculated to draw the mass ot the people. His hUhest prlco will be $3.10 , and trom this the rates of admission will run down to 50 cents. Over 115 women ami girls belong to the ballet corps ot a Paris theatre. There are three stars , ton llrst subjects , twentv-two second subjects , three divisions of coryphees , or leaders , two quadrilles , divided Into four sections , the ' 'walkers , " and the Infant class , or "rats , " The pupils receive 40 cents each time they appear , thn young ladles of the quadrilles tiom S20 to 840 a month , the cory phees from $50 to S6) , the subjects , or those who dance steps oqtslde the ensemble fig ures , SfX ) to 8100 a year , the stars from 35,000 to 80,000 per year. Those last named amounts are less than tlio salaries paid In former days. The organization of the erand opera ballot dates frerii 171' ! , and was do- cieed by Louis X1N. The eranfl inonnich even wrote the regulations' for the tlrst ballet corps with his own hand. S1NOULAK1T1E8. The remains of a mastodon , of the largest size has been discovered about twenty miles from Atlanta , ( in. It takes the tusks' ' of 75,000 elephants per year to supply the world's piano keys , bil liard balls and knife handles. A bald headed Italian and a red headed nciuo were amoncr thu curiosities in an Al bany police court a few days ao. A colored man , who Is UV5 years old , and who once blacked Washington's shoes , was discovered the other day in Nashville , Tenn. The Santa Catania mountains In Arizona are covered with petrified turtles , lobsters nnd clams. The mountains are 10,000 feet above the level of tlie-eei. A monster shark thirty-five feet long , twenty feet In circumference and weighing over four tons , was captured recently In Monterey bay , on thu Pacific coast A peculiar storm occurred nt Bedford , Pa. , one day last week. For litteen minutes hall , rain and grasshoppers fell together , and In such quantities that tno earth was covered over nearly a mile square. In Chesteriield county , Virginia , recently a colored candidate for ollico wa * defeated because he wore a uhllo shirt. It was the only Immaculate ra < of that kind In thu rtls- rrlct , but It was too much for his fclloir citi zens , and they scratched" him. If a box six feet deep were tilled with sea water aud allowed to evaporate under tlio sun la C oHiing Co , ± 3OS EACH PURCHASER OF GOODS TO THE AMOUNT OF To © Fxeeeaauted. Ticlret THE ffiW YORK AM ) OMAHA CLOTHING COMPANY 1308 FARNAM STREET. ONLY THINK ! A depot on the grounds and a five minute's ride from SLHiSL HEIGHTS Will bring you within 4 blocks of the Union Pacific Shops or melting Works. $250 TO $550 Will buy a home in this addition on small payments and if you study your own interest you will not pass this opportunity. REMINGTON & McCORIYIICK , Carriages to accommodate all 220 South 15th St Stationary & PortableEngines Locomotive and Stationary Boilers , TtinJm , Steam Heaters , JFot lt' < itt > r Bollcm , Steam tltnsrators , Steam I'limps , Dodye Wood Split Pulleys , Anne SI iJUnt/ . Wagons , Road Scrapers and Bale Ties' Agents for the Improved Corliss Engine Prompt.attention given to all orders. Get our prices before buying. BROWN ELL d CO. , 1213-1216 Leaven worth st. , Omaha/Neb. / OMAHA RUBBER CO. , O. H. CURTIS , Pres. - J. HURD THOMPSON , Sec. g& Treas Wholesale © Retail. iisr STOCK : "Fish Brand" Coats , Bulbs , Douches , Hair Crimpers , Nursery Sheeting , Spoculnmi. Air Pillows Brushes , Drill A Duck , Hair Tins , Navy lings , Sjiortsmcn's Goods , Air Beds. Brewer's Hose , Door Mats , Hals , Oil Clothing , Stamps , Air Cushions , Caps , Dress Shields , llorso Covers , 1'acklng , Stationer's Gum. Anti Haulers , Capes , Drinking Cuix , Hose , B. B. & P. Oo.Palls , Hvnhons , Aprons , Carriage Cloth , Eiastlo Hands , Hose Couplings , Perfection Box Sytin . . ttoons , Atomizers , Cartridge Bags , Klnstlo blockings Hosol'lpes , ' Pencils , Swimming Jac'kCta , Bands , CatheUrs , Erasers , Hose Keels , Ten holders. Synnjol'Perfection Bu J Bandage Gnm , Clothing , Face Bans , Hot Water Bottlos.Pcssarlos , Thiitiblca , Baptismal Punts , Copy Book Sheets , Finger Cots , Haversacks , Piano Covers , Throat Bags. Balis , Carpeting , Flower Sprinklers , IcoBngs , Pipes , Tubing , Bath Mats , Ceraont , Floor Scrapers , Ice Caps , Pipe Stems , Tumblers , Bath Tubs , Clothes Wringers , Folding I'ails , Inkstand * , Plant Sprinklers , Toys. Bed Pans , Coat * "Fish Brand" Foot Balls , Invalid Cuehlous , Pure UuUbcr . , Tcctli'gRlngiiPadJ , , , , Punts. Tobacco Pouches , Bed SllCCtS Combs Force Cups . . , . . uuiuua , Lined , Pistol rockets , Itolls , B.Il.t P.Co. BeltingComb Cleaners , Krult Jar Kings . Hose Trotting Belt Hooks , Corks , Funnels , I.aco Cutters , Battles , Urinal" , BellowH Cloth , Cork Screws , Gas Tubing , LlfePrcscrTcrs , linbtisr Dam , Umbrellas , Bibs. Curry Combs , Gloves , MacVinlosh Goods , Kulera , Ventilating Soles , Blankets. Cuspadors , UossainorCaps , Hatch Boxes , JtcpalrlngCIoth , Wagon Aprona , Boott& Shoes , Cigar Cases , - - VMWU , Martlngalo Klngl , Hhaft Kuhbers , , Wagon Covers . , Boys Caps , ChalrTlps.it Buffers , " Coats , Mats , Shoes fc Boots , Wagon .Springs , Boys Coats , Diaper * , . " Waterproofs , Matting , Sink Scrapers , Weather Strips , BonKloa , Ulaiicr Cloth , Galtar Straps , Mirrors , Scoops , Wobblng , Bracelets , Dolls. Gun Covers , Mlttena , btiootlng Coats , WadlugTantl , Breast 1'amps , Doll Bodies , Gutta Percha , Nipples , Kllng shots. Water Botttca , Breast Shields , Doll Heads , Gymnasiums , Nursing Bibs. Holing , Window Cleaners , Butlers , Door Bauds Hair Curlers , Nursing Bottles , Biionuo Bags , Wringer Bolls , Boston Ileltlii c "CoNe Ktiblier nnd Cotton Belting , Pucking and Hose. Kolo agents in Omaha. Leather IJeillng- ; Pure Oak Tanned. Manufacturers of "PEUFKCTION BOX 8Y1UNGE3. " Manufacturers of "FISH BRAND RUnitER GOODS. " OMAHA RUBBER COMPANY , 1008 Farnam St , , OMAHA , NEB. . Unit Ordcra Solicited and will Bocclre Promut Attention. there would be two inches ot salt on the bet tom. Tnkine the average duptli of thu ocuan to bo three miles , there would bo n layer of pure salt SCO feet thick on the bottom of thu Atlantic. Seventeen years atroMrs. Hossana Dennis , ot Tlflln , O. , died of dropsy. The other dav when the body was disinterred It was found to be thoroughly petrllied.wltb the exception of the feet. It was so buavy that ton men were required to move It. A plcco chipped f loin the oody resembled flinty lunestono. Uurlnc a severe btonn at Heels , 1'onn. , large flocks of wild geese and Uucks tlylny noithward were driven down , and then they were attracted by the light of the coke ovens. Many birds fell upon the ovens and flound ered around , dazed by the liijlit or sinned by the heat and about teu yecso and twenty ducks wore captured. The Amerlcuj ( Go.Recorder ) tells of n pet- rifled strawberry which was Kiown on thu place ot the Messrs. Hoys , near that city , nnd which was watched carefully by them dtirlnz the stage of pcrtrllicatlon. After it had be come hard It was taken to a jn\\flier's and made Into a breastpin. It Is beautifully col ored , and weighs two ounces. Twenty years ago John Flynn shut himself Up In his house near Marquette , Mich. , and remained there for twenty years unril taken out by ofllcera the other day. Ho lived with his sister , and has a son who hasn't been out of doors in nine years. The younc man was hidden and couldn't be found when the ofllcors searched tlio house. Flynn was un kempt and dirty , and fought the pincers like a tiger. Au old cavalryman says that a horao will never stop on n man Intentionally. It Is n standing order with cavalry that hhould a man become dismounted liu mut llo down nnd bu perfectly still. If lie does so thu entire - tire company will pais over him an i he will not bo Injured. A hone notices whore ho Is KOlnK and U on tno lookout for a firm founda tion tn put his foot nn. It Is an Instinct with him , therefore , to step over a prostrate ) man. The Injuries caused by a runaway horse are nearly always Inflicted by the animal knock- Inn pcoplu ( town and not by hlsstepiiliiK on them. them.Mr. . Trotter of Charlotte , N. C. . reports'a case of n cit adoptingOUIIK rabbits , nud c.ir- In , ? for thorn as Iiorown oINprinij. Mr. Trotter's little boy found a nwt of young rabbits and carried thorn Into the liouso , when thuv were taken In c.iro by the cat which had lost her kittens Uut diy : before. This motherly fellnu nursed nnd nuturod tnoyounir r.ibolts with as much caw us aho had bestowed upon her own kittens , nnd they seemed entirely at ease under the euro of the foster mother. Unfortunately , how ever , another cat about HID house found thn young rabbits nnd killed them , Tile walls of tlio mamma c-\t were touuliliiK for several dayf alter the losj ot her adopted family. Mrs. Atkinson , ot Alleidiany. entered her nursery yesterday und was horrlhed nt what she saw , The family cat had attacked her .six-year-old child , who was lyinu' hick on the bed. The cat was slttlni ; on the breast of thu boy. Kach of Its fore paws was firmly hxed in the child's cheek nnd Us mouth WAS clued to that of the boy. He was fitruifgllni ; ns rauclt as ho could , and with one hand was trylnc to push the cat away.As soon as the animal saw tbo laUy U allowed Uuht , It scratched thu child's lace In a terrible msn- ner , and springing upon the mother bit her In the shoulder. She finally beat It oil by Rtabbini : It wltli a palrof shears. The mother found the rid Id unconscious , Her erica broiuht assistance , and after restoratives had been administered the child was able to talk. MM know nothing except that the cat had vvakrned him up , trvinjr , ns he said , "to take my bientli. " The llttlo follow Id in a UiuiMrlous condition. Operates In Back Numbers , ' 3 Now York Tribune : Nearly cvcrvono in Now York has heard of "IJack Num ber" liudii , who puts nwny every day lifty copies of ouch Mow York newspaper to hull them to customers yours hence at 500 to 5,000 percent profit. It is reported that ho once received $700 for n sln Io newspaper. Recently liu was culled upon by some Kansas mun , ninonu whom was Senator InRalls , whoasUod his assibtnnco In procuring n complete lilo of the Lenv- c'liworth Journal for the two years that IB wits under thu inanagoniontof John Hon- dorson. during the notation that resulted in tlio Luuompton constitutional council * tlon und the establishing of Kansas as a free Mate. The lilo was desired for the Kansas Historical Hoclaly , aud they were willing to pay 110.000 for it. For sick headache , female troubles , neuralgic pains in thu head , take Dr. J , 11. McLean's hitttlo Livc-rand Kidney. ,1'illuti , . 80 cents'a vial , . .