Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1887)
THET : SUNDAYNOVtiMfififc 'W 1887.-T WELYE PAGES. UNION Sewing Machine Easiest Running Sewing Ma chine in Existence , 1609 Howard St IN THE FEMININE DOMAIN , What Makes a Lady Lines to a Shy Young Woman. WOMEN OF THE FRONTIER. > . Mnldon AtiHiirnnco Society Some 1'rof'cMHlonnl Women Fcnwlo Viol In 1st H Prominent Col ored Women. ( ilnon to u Very Sliy Young Woman. False Violet , I sought for tlico That I illicit know If thou dltm bcnil so low , . Pioinpted by tender modesty , Or show ! 3 will disclose thy subtlety ; Looks tliut nro shy. Thou Itnow'st do win mine eye ( This truth , fair niuld , I challenge llico , Deny I ) And so , jlncc It bccomcth tlice , And charms my heart Thou dost affect this part , Thus , all thy sweet simplicity Is art I What Maker * n Itcul Ijiuly. Ilnrpor's Ba/nar : There seems to bo in the minds of most young people launching forth into society to-day nn idea that a curtain manner is necessary if oiio would bo "good form. " Just us the girl of the ] ) oriod haw learned to hold her shoulders squarely and straight , to dress in tnilor-mado gowns and cultivate a fondues' ) for out-of-door sports , BO Bho bcoms to think that her dignity is im periled by being frank and gracious , and above all kindly , in manner. She expresses her opinions freely enough in her own "wit. " She can laugh and talk and smile and bow where eho fools Mire of her audience ; but would HIO voluntarily turn to some less prosperous - porous sister to make her feel wel come and hnppy and at her case in iv company of comparative strangers ? Would she think it worth her while , or indeed even "proper , " to answer the petition of a little street Arab with a kindly word in a gentle tone ? Would she thank the servant who rendered Iror some passing Borvico ? Would she give a word of sympathy here , a word of good cheer there ? Would she as hostess make her table or her drawing- room bright and hnppy for all her guests , dilTusing the charm of kindness , which is the root of all graciousncss , and make ot her slightest hospitality something for which her family anil friends wore happier and hotter ? And yet all of thcso things suggests the true part of n lady the lady as opposed to the lower-bred woman , the woman with out kindness , graeiousnoss , or tact. The true wozn&n's part in life is to make these around her happier and bettor , and how is it to bo done if there lingers tiny prejudice against natural kindliness and sympathy with one's fel- low-boings ? _ A Mnitlon AHmirniicn Society. Washington Critic : The Maiden As- mirnnco society of Denmark aims to pro- vitlo for ladies of well-to-do families ; Kholters and cares for them , and fur nishes necessary "pin money. " The noblemen for the association is pccu- liarily for this class as soon as a female child is born , enroll her name in n cer tain association of noble families , pay ing a certain sum , and thereafter a ttxcd annual amount to the society. When the girl reaches the ago of twonty-ono , she becomes entitled to a fixed income and to a suite of apart ments in a largo building of the asso ciation. with gardens and parks , in habited by otncr younger or oiaor nooio Indies , who have , in like manner , become - como members. If her father should Jio during her youth , and she should iesire , she has bholtor in this build- UNION Sewing Machine MAKES BUTTON HOLES 1609 Howard St ing , and , at n , fixed time , her in- como. When she dies or marries , all right to income lapses , and the money paid in swells the endowment of the association. Her father may have paid for twenty years , when , by marriage , she forfeits all right of insurance. This advantage enables the company to charge lower premiums and makes the burden less to the father insuring. Ho has the pleasure of feeling that his small annual payments insure Ids daugh ter's future and may give her a comfort able homo after his death. Itisobvious that the chances for marriage among a given number of young women can bo calculated as closely as thoic of death. The plan has worlied well for genera tions in Copenhagen. Who. of all our American philanthrop ists will start such an association in this country for the benefit of maidens of all classes of society. Women or the Frontier. Mrs. O. O. Howard in Daughters of America : The wife of a recent governor of a far western state use to take her blankets and go cautiously out , after nightfall , to some sheltered nook , there to sleep with the stars for company. Her husband was obliged to make long trips to some distant mining camp. She has recently presided in her husband's homo at the state capital while ho filled the highest olllce in the state. And that capital has sprung from a few dugouts to 76,000 inhabitants since her days and nights of danger on the river blulf , and her children , yet in their teens , have been enjoying the educational advanta ges of a state university. Another bravo woman , afterward the wife of a county judge , was seized by an Indian lover , who intended to place her upon his pony and carry her away with him. She gave him a quick blow with the rolling-pin that she was using , then pushed him with all her might Out of the door andagajnst his pony. Then she snatched her rille , took the cap-box from her pocket , where she always carried it , and , fitting a cap to her gun , aimed nt the Indian's heart. In the meantime ho had mounted his pony , and now foil upon his face on the pony's neck. The cap snapped , fortu nately , but she pursued him , determined to kill him. She was a good markswoman - woman , frequently killing antelopes and other game. The Indian , seeing her determined air , lied. Her husband said that if she had killed him there would have been no escape for them from the fury of the savages , who wcro camping near in largo numbers , his only conveyance being a blow ox-team. Small Women in Style. Now York Letter : A recent work on physical beauty asserts that the ten dency in women of the present day is toward smallncss of stature. Bigwomon , in fact , are going out of fashion. This being the cnso , by all means lot us have materials that present designs suitably adapted to the human figure as it actu ally exists , nnd not ns it may appear in the imagination of manufacturers. Plaids of any description make a. woman look shorter than she actually is , in the same manner that stripes , when they arc narrow and elongated , produce nn appearance of slondcrncss. A skirt made in imitation of a colossal chess board of variegated hues cannot bo either pretty or graceful. A very tall woman , or ono slightly above medium height , can wear a plaid of moderately large checks , but if she bo short and dumpy , or even tall and fat , lot her eschew such patterns as the abomination of desolation. Nevertheless , BOOH our streets will bo filled with poi-ambulating checker boards and btrlped awnings ; for , of course , fashions are invented to bo worn , and , consequently , women will adopt them whether they are suitable or not. Women Worth Their Weight in Gold. Kew York Mailatnl Eriiitm Mrs. John Minturn is worth $2,000,000. Mrs. Joseph Harrison , the widow of UNION Sewing Machine Does Embroidery in GtienilleSilk Arasene , Kensington Stitch , etc , Equal to Hand Work , 1609 Howard St the man who built the first railroad in Russia , has $4,000,000. Mrs. Kate Terry is worth nearly $0- 000,000. Mrs. Tlioma A. Scott counts her wealth at $5,000,000. Mrs. John Jacob Astor is worth about $3,000,000. Mrs. Edwin Stevens , of Now York , has $15,000,000. Mrs ! Hetty Green , of Now York-is worth about $10,010,000.- * - Mrs. Robert Goolot , worth $ ; ! .000,000 owes her fortune to hardware. Mrs. Jayno , the widow of the patent medicine man , is worth $ , ' { ,000,000. Mrs. Marshall O. Roberts is the eight- millionaire widow of a mining king. Mrs. Martin Bates was loft $1,500,000 which her husband made in dry goods. Mrs. Jane Brown received from her husband's estate about $4.000,000 , which was accumulated in banking. Mrs. Josephine M. Ayer. who guts her money from patent medicine , i- , esti mated to bo worth $4.000.000 to $5,000.000. "First Tm los" ! Xow Mving. Mrs. Grover Cleveland. Mrs. Julia Gardiner Tvler. widow of President Tyler. Mrs. James K. Polk , widow of Presi dent Polk. Miss Rose Elizabeth Cleveland had Iho place for fifteen months. Mrs. Rutherford B. Hayes , wife of ex- President Hayes , was there four years. Mrs. Julia Dent Grant , President Grant's widow , lived eight yearn in the white house. Mrs. James A. Garfioldwidow of Pres ident Gnrllold , lived only six months in the executive mansion. Mrs. Harriet Lnno Johnson , the niece of President Buchanan , was /or four years the mistress of the executive man sion. sion.Mrs. Mrs. Patterson , the daughter of Pres ident Johnson , did the honors of the white house while her father was presi dent. dent.Mrs. Mrs. Somplo , stop-daughter of Mrs. Tyler and now an inmate of the Louise homo , was the head of President Tyler's household. Mrs. Ellen Arthur McElroy , the late President Arthur's sister , was the hidv of the white house during several months of each of the three years and a half while he was uresident. Professional Women. Chicago Mail : A con ucr. - sense woman , who p"9 M. D. after her name , told mo tins the other night : "I have but ono objection to being a professional woman that is the peculiar" estimation in which my own sex holds mo. I know they don't mean it , but I fool it some times until 1 have to turn my face to conceal the flush on my checks. Do you know that the average society woman acts ( is though she thinks that ono of her own BOX who has a profession has no social rights ? This average so ciety woman would not admit this , of course. And perhaps she doesn't really mean it. I would sometimes like to put on a dress from the dressmaker's latest pattern. But if I do my patient looks at mo in a sort of inquiring way. I think sometimes if 1 should follow the style of Mrs. Dr. Mary Walker that some of my otherwise good patients would like it bettor. Why is it ? I am not railing against my own sox. Believe - liovo mo , I would not bo a man if I had the power to make the change. But women are so cruel without intending to bo. A friend of mine asked mo to attend the reception last Wednesday night at the Columbia thcatro , and I wont. While I was there I was con stantly reminded by his other lady friend of my profession. I was constantly appealed to ns to my opinion of the effect of an exposure which her own folly had created , and when wo wont out of the theater I had to go homo with her and leave a porscription. 38KNION , KNION . . r\ 3uion t Sewing Machine Sews Backwards and Forwards Makinp Perfect Stitch Jther Way , 1609 Howard St Sometimes I am asked out to dine , and my hostess inquires of me if I think her own food is good for her. She doesn't think of my health. T am a professional woman. How often my heart has ached at this treatment. I know that soilie professional women bring this upon themselves. But tho-io of us who would like occasionally to take a woman's hand for some other purpose than feeling her pulse are stared at if wo do it. " _ I < 'einalo Violinists in lloston. A correspondent from Boston writes : Female violinists are to bo the rage this winter.t The coming of several fairgirls who can'mako the catgut sing with skill and power lias stirred the ambitions of our local amatouresand the dear things are seen daily going to and from the rooms of their teachers with fiddle- boxes in their hands. The banjo , that hnd a furious fit of popularity a year or t\yo ago , has gone out of favor with the girls almost entirely , but the violin is on the steady gain. Fine violinists among the dear creatures are rare , of course. Violin playing is hard work and it taxcs a girl's strength greatly. The mvif.C'le-1 of a man are needed , as well as a tuun's endurance. When you find a Birrs who has the physical stamina 'ro'nuirod for vigorous play ' ing she " isipt to lack the del'i- cncy amft lie finemcnt that go with artistic exiyhiUon ' upon the king of in struments , 'There are plenty of girls who are fitsoiiiating to the very last de gree with a violin in their hands , but the eombinlvtSon of grace , physical power , nnd oulful performance is very rare , say Jrhos'o ' who have observed. TerodinU Tiia , the Italian damsel who will spon bo hero with her violin , is paid to bojjtjautiful enough to secure an instant and l/usting triumph on the con cert stagt'ltinl \ yet I inn told that she is not the cqutfl'iiH ' an artiste of several of the AmeVic'a'u girls. Ono of the leaders among the latter is Miss Belle Botsford , a Boston , | girl who has had live year's training in Paris , and who was licard .slightly in concerts about hero last sea- son. Hes health failed and her parents took her last winter to Wyoming , where the climate restored her to health , and -she will soon make her appearance in the Beaten symphony concerts. Prominent Colored AVotncti. Mr. T. Thomas Fortune is ono of the ' ablest and best known colored jr n in the co'.istry. ' Toll me something , " Mr. Fortune ' was asked a few davs since , "about the women of your race who have done the most for 't ' and for themselves. " | "Colored women have hardly had opportunity - ' portunity to do much that is sensa tional , " ho replied. "Thoy haven't hnd time. But still there are several who are prominent among their own people ' nnd who have earned a solid reputation. Take Washington , for instance , colored women of the best class there don't take much to marrying. They get along better than the men and usually devote themselves earnestly to their work nnd succeed well in it. The most prominent colored women in Washing ton , in the best sense of the word , are the teachers such women as Miss M. B. Briggs , professor in English in Howard university , s most talented lady , or Josephine J. Turpin , of the same school , who is a frequent contributor to papers , or Lucy Moulton , who is the ollloSont principal of a big training school , or Mary K'alle or Marion Shadd all highly cultured women , respected and es teemed by these who know thorn. I "In Philadelphia there is the skillful woman physician , Dr. Cnrolino V. An derson. She is the daughter of Will' j iam Still , a wealthy colored merchant and one of the directors of the under ground railroad , of which ho has writ ten the history. His daughter is a regu lar graduate of the medical department of Howard university , and enjoys a big i practice. Philadelphia is the liomo of numberless other women of character UNION Sewing Machine Simplest Machine Ever Manu factured and Lasts a Lifetime 1609 Howard St and ability. There is Mrs. Funny .Tack- son Coppin , the lecturer , who devotes most of nor time to the institute for col ored vouths there , and Mrs. Gertrude Moseilo , who used to conduct thou u onion's department on the Now York Freeman , and who has written for the Philadelphia Times and the Philadelphia Press , as well as for papers published in the interest of the negro race. Mrs. Moselle is a mem ber of the Woman's National Press as sociation , the olily member of herraco. Mrs. Frances E. Harper , the temperance lecturer and writer , has lived much in Philadelphia also. "In Boiton one of the best-known colored women is a modiste , whose ef fects in fabric , form and color have color have inado her rich. "Other colored women who have a wider reputation than any of those are Marie Solika , the prinia donna soprano , who was born in Natchez and whoso voice is of such sweetness , purity and compass that musical critics have called her second only to Patti. Mmo. Solika has taken nor.stor's place in concert in Boston and ban sung before the crowned heads of Europe. "Mmo. Nellie Brown Mitchell is an other musician with a mechanical turn of mind. She has invented and patented two or three appliances now in common use by musical instructors. Equally well known in another branch of the line arts in Edmoiiia Lewis , the sculptor. She is an Afro-Indian , and was born in Now York state , but now has her studio in Rome , where she has plenty of com missions and has done some line work. 'Tho Old Arrowmakor and His Daugh ter ' is ono of her best known produc tions and is owned in England. "Ida B. Wells ' loin , ' whoso suit for damages under Mississippi laws for being forcibly thrust , out of a passenger car in Moinaiiis by three or four white men brought her before the publio a few years ago , is probably the best known of colored women journalists , and Miss M. E. Lambert , of Detroit , is a poetess of genius. The wife of Rev. Frank Griinlfo , of Jacksonville , Fla. , formerly a Miss Forton , of Philadelphia , is a young woman , but already widely known. " HONIOY FOH T Fiii Ml-v/osl Viach serges make useful dresses. Tulle is in the ascendant for evening wear for young girls. Stcol gray alpaca and mohair are the popu lar materials for traveling suits. The census of England and Wales records 7,078,000 women as wage earners. lied , gray , brown and green in softened shades ure the popular colors for felt hats. The newest Imported French hats and bonnets have lower crowns and wider brims. Plainness to severity is the rule in the newest and most approved models for skirts. ' Did you ever sco n stuttering woman } ' . No ; a woman's tongue hasn't time to stutter. The corsage of a fashionable woman's ball dress doesn't coino high , but she will have it. When u girl gets to bo twenty-flvo or more , it's just as well not to give her any birthday presents. Polonaises with only n bint of looping will bo worn over velvet and antique broclio moire skirts. Honncts show n decided tendency toward the poke shape , tmd in some thin tendency is fully developed. There is nothing so handsome and becom ing in cold weather as a trimming of fur on a cloth or velvet dress. The long-haired raven-black monkey skins for muffs and Van Dyke collars will bo in high favor this winter. The old-fashioned watered silk is coming back Into style , and is much richer iu effect than the modern niolre. Shot cloths are now woolen stuffs woven in two colors , so as to give the "changeable * effect now so fashionable. Ono reason why the homely girl takes the scholarship pri/.o is because she looks into books moro than into mirrors. The reign of glitter in dress will soon bo UNION Sewing Machine A Blind Man Can Thread It , A Child Can Operate It , 1609 Howard St. over , bends nnd beaded trimming nro rapidly being driven to the background. Seventy-five thousand women in Now York city earn their livings by decent occu pations apart from domestic service. In rich costumes three fabrics are now often employed , n favorite combination being brocade with roped silk and velvet. Plushes of two kinds , ono with long , fleecy pile , the other short and velvety , nro used for many of the handsomest short wraps. There is n peculiarity nbout the I rish sorv- nnt girl which may have occurred to you. Her cousins nro all of the masculine gender. The Little Hock Clipper chronicles n most nstoiiishing fact. It says there are four linns in that city which have women us silent part ners. ners.Ono of the very latest designs In brace lets is a scries of golden knots , each knot being set either with n ruby , sapphire or dia mond. The number of women who walk for exor cise regularly in Now York is increasing so rapidly that the doctors are beginning to complain. Sleeves nro gradually taking leave of the theaters nnd house dresses nnd the long gloves of tinted suede nro made with three button slits. Whlto watered silk dresses , but in clinging prlncesso style and frequently laced down the back , are fashionable gowns for brides maids' wear. The wife of Kobcrt P. Porter is said to have nindo S2XX ( ) during the past year writ ing for the newspapers , without neglecting her homo duties , either. The manufactured trimmings which have been ignored for years nro now in full fnvor ngain. Passementeries were never before so varied nnd so effective. Mrs. Emma P. Ewigg writes that shobo- llovcs that 50,000 women could earn n good living in this country by the manufacture and sale of homo-made bread. Between the nges of thirteen nnd eighteen years n girl knows something. From eighteen to twenty-flvo she thinks she does. After that ago she wishes she did. The latest in the way of millinery oddities is n bonnet of "pinked" leather , much re sembling these of last year , made of em broidered kind or chamois skin. Only 8,000,000 women in this country have to work for money , nnd all the rest of the women get their money for nothing. What in the world are they kicking forl Everything Russian is now the fashion : Muscovite dresses , Byzantlno galleons , gold Btuffs , Uussian colors such is the arsenal from which the prevailing styles are drawn. Ex-Senator Tnbnr's first wife , who laid the foundation of his fortune , is said by the cor respondents to bo living quietly in Now York. She is about forty years old , and Is worth $500,000. For n walking-dress , and useful in nil weathers , nothing is better than dark blue smooth-faced lady's cloth , made with n plain round skirt , a panel braided iu black on the left side , and simple drapery. The new plaids bear but little resemblance to the Scotch plaids of other seasons , many of these being only line lines of plush or vel vet which cross each other at different angles nnd often uro mixed with a slender gold thread. The jersey in its reformed state grows con stantly in popularity. It comes in nil shades mid divers shapes. Pretty gray ones have n voko heavily embroidered with narrow , Hat braid set on edge nnd the same is repented ou the sleeves. The latest novelty In slippers consists of nn openwork pattern stamped out in patent leather ever a white or tan colored ground. These slippers come quite high up on the in step nnd have n big bow set across them in the Louis XIV pattern. In nn autograph album Siunnno Brodan wrote : "Thero is nothing more difllcult for a woman than to make up her mind to enter into the thirties. " And underneath it Aimee Decclcosnid : "Yes , there is. " Making up bcrmind to get out of the thirties. " Ostrich feather bens nro among the taste ful novelties of the season , they nro inudo of the feathers in their natural shades , or all black , or clso black and white together. To wear with them are entire bonnets of the feathers , made to Ho flat like fringe , or in small loops in rows. The most becoming dresses for girls from twelve to fourteen years of ngo are white nnd checked stuffs , which mnko the long bodices worn nt that ngo look much shorter than they really nro. A short tunico simply looped behind with n jacket bodice is werner or a separate out-door jacket. The newest ribbons nro the most hrllllant nnd effective decorations for bonnets nnd ' " UNION , Sewing Machine. Customers Praise It , . Competitors Curse It , , Suppose You Try It , 1609 Howard St hats , ns well us for accessories of the folloi , that have boon in vogno for.years. They arc , In fact , n rovlval of a fancy of forty years ago or more , but produced in g/eater variety and effectiveness than over. Dark Uussian Clrcon , terracotta nnd pohlon brown nppcar to bo the prevailing colors just now for promenade costumes. Broadcloth is the fabric par excellence for thcso suits , and In most cases there is n coat to match , stylishly braided nnd bordorcd with u narrow band of silk astrakhan. White ami black striped silk underskirts nro worn with bodices nnd full ovordrcssosbt black light wool , foulard , surah nnd bongn- line. or polonaises of those fabrics. Then the looping and slushing nro so managed ns to show the striped underskirt in panels and around the bottom jn front nnd nt thusldos. Gray , which Is so fashionable , is not a becoming - coming color , but then it can boNjombined with reds , browns , tans , pnlo blues , hello- tropes and all the hcconunlng similes of yellow - low nnd rose , while gold , silver nnd jot nnd many tones of colored bonds nnd tmsol thread brighten It up ns prettily nnd becom ingly ns could bo desired. For evening wear nt homo nro pretty Hen rietta cloths 111 light shades , the texture as soft us silk and beautifully lino. There la great variety in the formation of the dainty gowns made of thcso fabrics , some bolng fin ished in slniplo tailor fashion , with plain skirt , braided across the front , nnd n clove- lilting bodice , its only ornament being a braid collar and vest. There Is no place where women show los $ scnso nnd discretion than in handling rloa , furs. Succeeding n season , when If their sealskins reached the ground the woarern i were happy , cimo : the era of bobtail sncquos ' . nnd abbreviated visiles. Women took to the 1 furaiors' great loose dolmans , paletots with [ overhanging slcovors , and oloultH they could ) wear with comfort forycars , and had whittled out of their vast possessions some skimmy little wrap of the prevalent style that Just ' rested on their bustles behind. During the present season pclorlnos of fur , plush or velvet are BUfllciently warm tor the promenade , ever walking dresses of < cloth. All the newest of these , worn by best-dressed women , fit as snug ns possible , ) and are devoid of the high or oven slightly \ fulled shoulder , effects which nro wholly out of duto. Some of the now pelerines nova ' long panel fronts , n style certain to obtain r fashionable favor In ninny varieties of the season's visltos nnd other short wraps , the ( style proving becoming to many figures foi . which the plain round capo is unsuitable. IMPIETIES. A band of bunko-stcorcrs call themselves n salvation nnny because they prey on the streets. Speaking against long prayers , Brother Tnlmadgo says : "When Peter was endeav oring to walk on the water to moot his Master , and was about sinking , had his supplication boon as long ns the introduction of some of our modern prayers , before ho got half through ho would have been flfty foot under water. " The small child is to the front again. Ho hnd boon nnuchty. The naughtiness of youth and the naughtiness of ago nro widely different. "If you do that nobody will love you , " the tender mother told him. " 'Tain't so. I know ono who'll like mo , " ho answered , "Whol"'Satan , ho likes the bad ones. " A little girl , walking in the publio garden on Sunday with her mother , began to play on the grass , and was Instantly restrainedto her . " can't I the chagrin. "Why run on grass , mamma ) " she exclaimed. "Because the po- licoinnn will make you go off if you do. Don't you see the pnliccman over thorol Besides , It is Sunday , and God doesn't want you to play. " "Oh , dear. " said the little girl , "if it wasn't for the policcmans and God what nlco times wo could huvol" It is not rare for children to take up tha political battles of their fathers and to feel inoro aggrieved ever the defeats of tholr elders than they do themselves. A certain Minnesota gentleman who had been pledged an ofllco by Governor McGill , and , Ilka many others , fulled to get it , tola his wife in the presence of his five-year-old son of his disappointment ana his opinion of the govornor. That1 night the mother , while putting tha boy to bed , took occasion to caution him against using homo very strong words that his father had. Before kneeling down to say his prayers , the child inquired of her if it was always wicked to swear. She replied that she thought there wcro times when God would forgive pcoplo for profane language when used under strong provocation. Then the child prayed : "Forgivo mo for all my sins , keep mo while I sleep and d n Governor McGill. " JACOB E. TROIEL & COMPANY T * ( 7 * > 2709 Leay nworth street. Would like to call the attention of the [ public to their full assortment of JEWEL STOVES and RANGES , manufactured by the Detroit Stove Works. Special Attention is Called to the Sovereign Jewell , the Best and Handsomest Heate'ran the Market. inches. By means of these improvements all the cold air of a room is drawn in and heatedthus insuring an equal temperature all over the room. These stoves are not higehr in price than any ordinary heater , and the heating capacity is double that of any stove made. We guarantee any stove sent out to give entire satisfaction , we can refer you to more'than fifty of the best families of Omaha now using the Jewel stoves in any case of which they are criving entire sat isfaction. Call in and see us and pur stoves , which are in price , appearance and economic use of fuel , the superior of any stove in the market. JACOB E , TROIEL & CO. , 2709 leavenworlh Street. . . '