16 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY. . NOVEMBEK 15 , 1891 TWENTY PAGES. How Fair Prices Are Possi ble With Easy Terms. FURNISHING A HOME , Progress end Mothoda of n Croat PJonoor Orodlt House. "TIIli PEOPLE'S" NEW STORE. A ( itennlic IMnltllshinent Wlicro All tlio Noc.ls of the Clerk nnil .Mechanic Arc Mel us WeI ! in Those of ( lie Millionaire An ) thing Tlmt Is Accessary for Housekeeping M.iy He Hud on Time for I'rliTS ( lie Same ns dull. "There I found this credit. " blink * ; iCic' 'liiel/th It vint but natural to expect tlmt in n country founded largely upon credit , or , in other words , based on the integrity and inherent possibilities of tlio people for ' 'the pursuit of happiness. " what Is known as the credit system should have Bprung up as a part of tlio commercial arrangement. Despite what may supcr- fii-lnlly appear this is not a nation of millionaires. It was established "of , by and for the people , " and though in oc casional instances great wealth may ap pear to exercise an undue tnllucnco. in Iho final Hsuo on every question itisthu average man the professional man , the mechanical man , the laboring man who has the say. Tlio chief aim in H' j of the ordinary man is to have a comforlnulo lioino , and it may bo said in general terms tliat most of the world's great struggles and of the legislation of the apes has boon diiootod mainly to accomplish tlmt pur pose. U was that which was back of the baron's demand on King John for Mngna Chai'ta , and it was the essential princi ple bet forth in tlio immortal Declara tion of Independence. Credit is the freeman's prerogative , and moro than ntiytninir eKe nuts every man on an equality. The historyof the extension of commercial credit has in every instance been contemporaneous with' the recognition of the individual rights 'it man. Under the Grecian and Roman republics this idea was the very foundation of government , and when it was sub\ cried they began to dotiiy , and finally were overthrown. Tlio agoniz ing writing of the Russian porfs through nges ; the perturbation ! ) of Poland ; the otruggloH through generations of tno home-loving Hibernian Gieenlaloof the of trade situated between 13th and 1 Ith streets , especially on the south bide. There is not in any city a square that in ono glance convoys a more compro. honsivo idea of the diverse and mingled Interests represented in the rapidly conducted and far- reaching business transactions of the commercial world today. Then- Hands of hands have been engaged in various parts of the country fashioning the fabrics and pro ducts of industry that are being sent out to the various quarters of this vast and nmn/.lng country. The throngs remind ono of the busy thoroughfares of Chit-ago , only there isoven more of the evidence of small barter and trade , for n'- most every other man or women has Borne naekago or suggestive evidence of now-tn-ido purchase. Great express wagons are coming and going and the pavements are Uttered with cases of tnorchnndi o and ponderous packages , while immense trucks are in the rear of the towering establishments load ing and unloading. With its high and wldo front , for what was formerly two big buildings- have been thrown into ono , the established credit house of Tlio People's Mammoth Install ment flouso does not suffer by comparison with any of it's sur roundings. Il gives at once an impressionof spaciousness , of trans actions on a largo scale , of liber ality and generous dealings , that is not dispelled but rather on1 hanced and strengthened by closer and moro intimate acouaintance. Tlio front is pressed oriole , uni form , not showy , but pleasing.and tliore is a certain something in the architecture anil general - oral olToct that gives the etrect moro of a domestic exchange , a house hold bazaar , than a warehouse or sales house. The expanse of plate glass gives an air of lightness anJ an inviting character - actor to the place that is quite dilToront to anything else on the busy thorough- faro. Fifty feet is tin enormous front age , moro than three times that of the average dwelling , and it extends back the full 300 feet of depth to Ilnrnoy street , on which there is another front- ago. The Ilarncy street warehouse being - ing used exclusively for packing and un packing , and storing such enormously largo quantities of merchandise which it is necessary for so largo an establish ment to carry. The area is enormous , and there is no other establishment in Omaha which can compare with it. Marshall Field's , in Chicago , is n big concern , but all the general household emporiums of other cities are now dwarfed by comparison with this elegant and ample emporium of the people , ex tending from ono street to another and occupying the bronnost and widest blrotcli of the ( 'outre of tlio square. The situation of the establishment on the main business thoroughfare , with cars passing every few minutes to and from great Union Pacific andBurlinglon & Missouri River Railroad stations , and only a few minutes' ride to the Chicago & North western and Missouri Pacific MR B. ROSENTHAL , President and Manager of the People's Mammoth Installment House in his private office. of our chairs and tables , the story of art itself , but it is the story of the human race. It has gone upnnd down lluctuat- ing with the varying fortunes and intel ligence of nations and people. Skipping the Indian and Oriental races with their sculptured utensils and rich col ors and their divans and rich fabrics , art in furniture had already reached crcat development when the Egyptian led the world. IIo had his beds of co- ilar supported on feet carved , painted and covered with the finest draperies , as wall as chaiis of turned wood , and vases , mirrors and small articles of con venience were in the greatest abun dance. Tlio Greeks living so much in public and holding their dwellings and wo men in small esteem contributed but little to the development of furniture , but the Romans carried the art of household decoration to a point where fancy seemed to have reached its limit. When Homo foil all that had been ac complished in household elegance fell with it and for centuries the industrial nits were dead. Slowly , after the Dark Ages r.nd Charlemange , the bench became - came again a nhair , the armor chest a couch , woman's ascendancy began and the comforts and conveniences of the household began to rceeivo attention. To the thoughtful observer , whether or not intent on purchase , a rnrnblo through such a largo and complete es PARLOR FURNITURE DEPT , as seen looking east from grand stairway. ocean , the graveyard of misery's evic tions ; and oven slavery's embittered civil strife , have all more , than anything ese ! grown out of the desire of the peas ant's heart-longing for a homo and indi vidual recognition. The denial of polit ical rights as well as of credit to all not actually possessed of property has boon ono of the most prolific disturbing ele ments of the world's his-torv. Under the kind and bonollciont institutions of this fraternal land , like Bertram's fate on EUangown.il's height , "tho dark has turned light and the wrong been made right , " and hero the man of every birth mav lind himself a homo in complete se curity and furnish it and rest himself in comfort and content. It i significant and suggestive that' was in the city of Omaha , the gate city of the west , that two great factors that have since contributed so greatly to the comfort and indopuiidoneo of ind'.vidual man had their rlso the purchasing of houses and lots on easy payments and the establishment of the method of pay ing by Installments , known as the credit system. They have each exorcised a strong influence , not only in building up homes , but in furnishing and establish ing them. The credit system practical ly holds the same relation toward mov able property and po'-sonal effects that the building association does toward real estate , and it IB on this account that the credit Bystoni appeals moro generally to the largest number. Year after year tlio business conduct ed on this principle has extended , meet ing with such recognition and popular favor that It has found imitators and spread into other branches , but it is among the pioneers of the trade that it is found preserved in the most satisfac tory methods , and distinguished in this category is the long-established and miccossful credit house of Tlio People's Mammoth Installment HOUPO , itlo-iU7 : ; Fni-nam street , which has had a contin uous and uninterruptedly prosperous and popular career for years , during which it has not only held the public esteem and conlldonco , but fixed a stand ard for upright and liberal dealing that has hiinlts inlluonco upon other houses and put the ouslness upon the highest mid most honorable plane. A GREAT EMPORIUM. Extension and Imnrou'iiient of Tlio IVo- plu's Miriiiuotli Installment llonso. Even the most casual passor-by on Fanmm street , that great throbbing artery of the city's business activity , cannot fall to notice thochango that 1 a * intcly taken place in the exterior tip- ' uranco of tno busy utoroa and bazaars depots , the Council Bluffs South Omaha Sherman avenue and Walnut Hill motors passing just ono door west , just , around the corner from the Paxton and Mun-'iy ' hotels , in the immediate vicinity of all the leading b.inks and telegraph ofliccs , makes it the centre to which not only the people of Oaianabut hundreds from various parts of Nebras ka and Iowa daily find their way. In deed , it may bo said that the convenient ' credit system of The People's Mammoth Installment House hab fully as great an appreciation outside of Omaha as in it. The number of regular customers from Council Bluffs and Soiilh Omaha , and other parts of Iowa and Nebraska has boon increasing with every year , and no other trade has boon found moro mu tually satisfactory. If the exterior of this extensive os- tablismont is prepossessing , and a key to the thoroughly buaincss-liko and comprehensive character of the trans actions oft tlio concern , the interior is even moro so , The vast bpacos occupied by single departments ; the hundreds of bedsteads , the thousands of chairs , the vistas of curtains , the avenues of wardrobes , the tiers of tables , the counters laden with hodding of every description , extending quite a * far as tlio eye can easily meas ure , and the whole fntorobting aggrega tion broken and varied hern and there by displays of pictures , exhibits of sil verware , clusters of bronv.es and statua ry , intiUn upono superb andbotvlldorlng spoctaelo of the artistic industrial achievements of the present day , made at once available to the most ordinary moans , that when seen makes anyone glad that ho or she is living in tlio fa vored age and the favored land they are. ATTRACTIVE FURNITURE. Ancient nml Klegnnt forms Adapted to Modern Con\enlenee \ an I Coin'ort. It is a curious fact that the history of furniture has boon contemporaneous with the political independence and the material prosperity of the avornpo man. Even archttouturo does not toll the ups and downs of mankind so thor oughly ns the objects that are identified with lib dally life and domestic com fort. ' No popular error is so common as the ono that articles of domestic use in the household have had a steady develop ment through the centuries , and boon elaborated from the simplest terms lo those moro complex and luxurious , such as are now found in the great empori ums. Not oaly U the aui-y of ouo fm-tiltare. tablishmont as that of The People's Mammoth Installment House , with its avenues of elegant and serviceable nioes- fcorics of the homo , its congregations of chairs , its accumulation of bedsteads ana beading and an aggregation of a varielv of almost every Known article of furnf- turo belonging to the household , it is in the highest degree interesting to con template the suggestions of achievement in the way of human comfort which they convoy. Though furniture may not bo as im portant as temples or monuments , it. nas taken years full of' intense human in terest in the movements of the world to produce these things. Relics of the Crusades and of the Renaissance may bo soon in the forms of a single elm it * . Cnat have been the changes since in Gothio times in the ono great hall used for every borvico there witH-but a single chair , occupied invariably by the muster of the house , and never surroud orcd by nun except , to some superior. Uncom fortable though it was. and not to bo compared with some of the easy affairs at "The People's1' , in which ono sinks almost at once into a doze , it was never theless the scat of honor. Remarkable has boon the revolution , since oven the proporous ate their meals from a cloth spread on the floor whl'.o partially sup ported by cushions , of which the fa'utouil remains a relic. * , I In the basement and throughout the flrbt floor , but moro especially in the I salon on the Farnam Street front , of the second floor there is to bo found at The People's Mammoth Insallinent House sucli n diversity of housoholl furnish ing as is seldom seen under ono roof. Everything that belongs to the comfort and convenience of a homo , fiom a steve or the humblest kilchon utensil to statu ary or richly upholstoiod divans and lace curtains , are to bo found hero , not restricted to the wealthy alone , but available to all and the most moderate income by means of the credit system. Tlio array of attractive furniture takes in a variety of styles , ns well us diver sity of forms , and anyone wishing an exquisitely udholstored parlor lounge , the equal in style of those , in the very finest houses , can have it as easy as the plainest and most practical dining room chair. It is no unusual thing for younc people just begining housekcopin ? to bo fur- nihsed throughout entirely from The People's Mammoth Installment IIouso , as they find muchfmoro convenient , can make satisfactory arrangements and can have better facilities bv selecting everything needful at ono place under the s'amo loof. Many a pretty and happy homo has had its begining in The People's Mam moth Installment House estnblismont. HOUSEHOLD ( CONVENIENCES. AH the Necessities of the Kilelien and Ta bleware In Profusion. In no part of the great establishment of The Pooplo.'s ( Mammoth Installment House , is thorn bo much to interest the housekeeper as the basement , which is given ever entirely to the convenien ces and accessories" the kitchen and the varieties of china and tableware belonging to the dinner table. in that foundation of domestic econo my the steve all the best and most convenient makes are found , notably the Peninsular , the Universal and the Es tate. They are of diiloroiit sizes and furnished with all the latest appliances and conveniences. Some of thoni have what is known as the "patent kick" for opening and shutting the front and bake oven doors with tiio foot. Others have gaii7.o doors , which give ventila tion in halving and have an advantage of which caioful housekeepers are well aware. Some of these stoves have tak en first prizes for making the finest crust on broad baked in them. The "Model" is the best and is all that its name indicates. With these go boilers , copper and tin-lined , boiling pots , with inner granite - ito surfaces ; coal hods that will not break , and various aqato-lined utensils , nil designed to facilitate in cooking and aid in that cleanliness which an eminent authority declared was next to godliness , end in which Iho truly good housekeeper delights. In tubs , clothes wringers and baskets and clothes boilers there are almost as nuch impioveinont as in anything and t is indeed wonderful to fieo how inven- ion has kept pace with the ago oven in .hose important details of the neither household. Quito important improvements have boon made In oil stoves , the latest of which is the now process , ranging from ono burner up to five. The improved are crunr.uiteed non-oxplosi\o and are as great un institution as any homo can possibly have on hand especially for the hot summer weather , when a continuous hot coal lire is not only trying to com fort but unnecessary. Almost one entire siclo of the base- mcnt is taken up with china and table ware and toilol sets. There tire French china dinner sets of 125 pieces and Gor man china sots in white and gilt of IliO pieces , each in graceful shapes and tasteful dot-oiation. Such is the variety in dinner sets Unit they range from $1 to $150 a set in piueo. The collection .also includes many beautiful salad and other largo dishes in Louis XV. designs , and pretty and dainty after dinner cofleo sots in a vari ety of shapes and colors at the most moderate prices. 'Tnero are sots of really good looking and sorvircnblo American granite ware full sots of 112 pieces that come as low ns $0 , and others that run ns high as ? $42. Separate tea sots that vary from $3 for flfty-six.pieces up to $16 , all exquisitely decorated and highly ornamented. In toilet ware there is an assortment thatalmost makes choice dif ficult. The English sots , of twelve pieces handsomely decorated in floral designs , run from $0.50 to $25 a set. Miiny of thorn have fluted tops , and the handles and shapes are the very latest , often copied of ancient and elegant models. Hall lamps abound in all the conveni ent arrangements , white and tinted , at from $1.75 , while there is also a fine array of ornamental piano lamps , with fancy umbrella shades , such as are now so fashionable. They practically malro n parlor , so far as style is concerned. Some in nickel and some in wrought iron , and they como from $1.50 to $ < > 0 , much , of course , depends upon the shade. They have centre draft burners and adjustable springs. Table lamps , with duplexburners and a bewildering diversity of shades , como anywhere from $1.25 to $10 or $12. Although not all included in this de partment , any mention of the wealth of household accessories found in The People's Mammoth Installment House would bo incomplete without a mention of the bric-a-brac. It includes statuary , Furnltm-o Department , na eoon Looking North from the cntranwC to the elevator. inviting charmler without fonts that are deep and comfortableno matter what may bo their wood work , while fofas , lounges and ot tomans alwnys increase the air of luxury. The contro table may bo round oval or oblong , according to taste or the preference for the various fashions' . Cabinets , too , a o osontinl , and hanging brackets with .itllo ti-lllrsto put on them , do much to break the monotony of the walls. All these and many EOIO access series of tlio parlor are to bo seen at The People's Mammoth Install ment House , in the greatest dl vorMty and profusion , so thntthcn is no character of purse or variety ty of tastes that cannot bo suited The parlor suits range in prices from $ U5 up and generally contnli six pieces. Tables vary in size am pi-loo almost as much as in form and according to the prevailing tendency chtiiis nro seldom alike. Some of the sofas arc benutlfu form and the lounges are models of ease and upholstered with the beautiful stuffs that in design tun appearance often rcsoniDlo tapestry. As for the chairs , no matter for what apartment intended , they nro bewildering. Immediately upon entering are double rows of funoj rockois , omo with plush scats and backs , others bound and orna mented with burnished metals ex tending the length of the store. Then at the back , nt tholeft , flanked by sofas and divan are the Jlno upholstered hair and spring chairs , some of which aio triumphs of the upholstered art. An article that is now often introduced into the parlors though moro generally scon in the library , is tlio escri toire or writing desk , and of these many are soon in the forms that nro largely reproductions tions of the French court periods. BED ROOM FURNITURE. The ( iratidest DNplny Ihor Shown in Oinnhn. Not ono of the accessories of the bed room is wanting. Every article can bo found in some department of the estab lishment. The number and variety of bedsteads on the first floor alone , not to speak of the hundreds stored away above and below , excites curiosity as to how there can bo such variability in in dividual tasto. They are in walnut , light and dark oak , mahogany finish , etc. Some are plain , others show carved work , and they are in all sizes and single and double. The English oak bedstead made in ' ho style of the XVI. century appear at present to have the greatest inn , and a pretty piece of furniture it is. There are also bureaus and dressing tables and wardrobes in tlio greatest variety. The wardrobes range from $7.50 up , some fine iloublo ones , with pinto-glass doors , being $25. It is , in deed , wonderful to see what a suhtantial and good-looking piece of oak can be turned out now in the bhnpo of a ward robe for $8 or $10. Entire bed room suites range from $15 up to $500. This , of course , does not include the chcvnl glass , of which there are many , some of HIGH ART FLOOR COVERINGS. Varieties tflimrs nml Carpels Tlinl Will Wenr Well. It lira boon said that ns charity ntonoa- , for n mullHudo of sins , fco a good carpet makes up for whatever else IH missing In a room. The walls may look b.iro , the chairs may bo old , the sofa dingy , and thoto may bo very llttlo In the room , but If the cnrpot is good the place looks comfortable and furnished , with n now carpet it only takes a few additions to make n room look elegant. It makes tl'io toilet of a room and without it nil is wanting , just like a lady otherwise well dressed who srolls and "gives It all nwnv" by wearing shabby shoes. The color of n cnrpot. should always" * be chosen in keeping with the general design of the room , the wall paper , the furniture , etc. , and there is hardly a tint and few known designs that cannot bo found In the Immens-o cnrpot depart ment of The People's Mammoth Install ment House , covering 10x110 feet , the space of a good-si'/od store. Everyone according to taste , but In geneial the color for a dining room or hall hhould bo darker o - Inoro "solid' * than for a parlor , while that for a bed room should , If po-s'.blo ' , bo lighter than cither. Whenever the carpet covers the entire floor it is usual to have a deep border , thus giving It something of a rug-lino character , though some prefer Iho entire pattern plain and un broken. Whatever the carpet deter mined upon , whether rich or the lowest in price , n suitable border can bo found at "Tho People's" to accompany it , anil It is well to go the additional expense , for , as a rule , the carpet is as much en hanced by its border as is a jewel by its seUing. All the varieties of carpets manufac tured the Wiltons , the MoquottcH , the various Brussels and the incrrains. not CARPET DEPARTMENT , Third Floor. groups like Faust and Marguerite , Romeo and Juliet , the Fisher Boy and Fisher Hut , and bisque , chtnn , and va rious figures and ligurantos , as well as vases that do so much to give an inte rior a cheerful and roflnod air when judiously disposed. Through various parts of the buildings are scattered pastels , oil and water colors , engravings and a most intorobting collection of iiie- turoi , suitable for the walls of parlors and diawing looms , all selected with taste and care and like everything elbe available to any purchaser on the easiest possible terms. ELEGANT UPHOLSTERY. Artihtlc Accessories for the Jrnulng ) I'oom and Itiiiuloir. The only thing that can limit the splendor of n drawing room or parlor in those days is the length of one's ' purse. But It is possible for anyone , through the inducements offered by The Pee ple's Mammoth Installment IIouso , to have a parlor bufllcointly elegant and at tractive for all ordinary demands. No parlor is complete or can have any thorn largo and expensive. Like Iho sealskin sucquo and diamond ear-rings , the ehoval ( jlass is ono of the luxuries that every woman without ono looks for ward to. DINING ROOM FURNITURE. Arlistlc and I'lc nnt Sltluhourdi of Ihery Imaginable Kind. There are at present in The People's Mammoth Installment House no less than bovonty-llvo different patterns and styles of dining room suites , no side board , no table , no group of chairs alike. Some of the sideboards are handsome - some massive affairs in the style of the ( -.flooiith and sixteenth centuries , many of them with the drawers plush lined and oxydi'/cd handles. The sideboards alone range from $ ! l.75 up to $150 AH for dinini : room tables a good ono is Mild for.50. ! ! The many corner china clos ets lira an Interesting feature to the householder who visits this department. No other character of furnitmo excels in varied constnotion ! or interest that intended for halls. Tno hall racks , homo broad and elaborate and others tall and witli catch-all raised seats , are a study in themselves and represent all the graduations from $7.50 up to $200. An Important branch of the furniture dopai tment is the curtain and drapery room , on the third floor. A gentleman who had no idea of purchasing happened in there on another nrittor on Thursday Ho uas astonished to notice thorn uif- packing borne curtains now in material , a sort of knotted choose cloth and ox- qulblto In blue and brown co or combin ations , 'lliero were rows of blue bilk stripes above and below and a nai row chenille fringe border. They were just the curtains ho had brcn looking for. They Were by no menus common. With his prejudice ncninst installment houses grontly scattered ho nevertheless wont to several large establishment ) * , expect ing to find the Mime article. Failing uvurynhore became hack in a few hours , but too info the curtains wore gono. and he left feeling like kicking himself for his piocrnHtlimtion. The curtain display IH really excel lent , and the selections .show taste and include many novelties and entirely new tilings not to bo found elsewhere. There i a largo colloetloi of lace cur tains , ranging in price from DOc a pair up , and sumo very attractive ( ortiores na low ad 3U.6U to mention druggets , mattings and so on , are to bo fouuu in the immense and interesting stoolc accumulated in this , ono of tlio modt important departments in The Poodle's Mammoth Installment House. The ingrain , one of the most sorviccal/io and economical carpets any * one can nuy , which can bo had hero , by the way , anywhere from 18 to 85 cents a yard , Is within the means of anybody. No ono need have a Imroorunattractivo floor when good serviceable carpet can bo had at such a price. It conies in exceedingly - coedingly neat designs , mixed anil mossy , mottled and geometrical , accord ing to tasto. Thorc is not much danger of getting an ugly one , as some ono skil led in taste has had the selection of thorn- already. Almost every housewife knows what a the qualities of Brussels carpets aro. It is made by weaving into a llnon body loops of woolen threads , three to a loop customarily , and as they are dyed in the wool the color is lasting and "wears forever - ever , " as the saying is. Some beautiful designs in Tapestry Brussels at "Tho People's" range from fifty cents a yard. Though others may bo moro luxurious under foot , tbnro is no bolter carpet for the average householder than the Brus sels , and by proper pudding when put down it can bo made as soft as any anil moro durable than some others. The Brussels , thoucrh once not many years ago rarer than it is now , is used alike in the cottage : of the mechanic and the palneo of the millionaire. It is not too rich for the poor and not too poor for the rich. Like the Axmlnstor and other varieties , Brussels carpet Is now made as good in this country as in Europe ; indeed , some think bettor. All the marked improvements 'n carpet manufacture are distinctly American. Whoever seeks beauty and style in a carpet should go to "Tho Peoples" and get a moquuttc. In a moquotto the loops , which in a Brussels are loft double , are cut and sheared , making a soft , velvety surface , in which the foot sinks and which also admits of moro delicate dvos and moro intricate put- terns. All the attractive designs of re cent years , such as those floral arrange ments of crossed roses mid Illlios seen , as it were , through a huge magnifying glass , are to bo found in tl > o largo col lection of The People's Mammoth In stallment Hoiif-o department. Some of thorn are just the same as the early designs of ai lists llko William Morris which first appeared in carpets costing 3d and oven $10 a yaid. Tno majority of them , however are entirely original designs no\or boon before. fl seems titling that the carpet should bo a thing of beauty , and it must bo said that while progressive In dustries like those of Philadelphia and Now York have made serviceable floor covering available to every man , the lessoning in price has not been al Iho expense of boautv. The carpctH at The Peoples1 credit btoros will bo found at tractive bth In designs and colors , and in a uniety to suit the greatest multi plicity of tastes. Just as a carpet may have IH ( asso ciations in a homo worn by the babe nt ulny or nn aged mother's knuos la prayer , so every ono of its original ami early associations nro of the most sacred chnrnu'or. Originally carpels were made cxcluslvdly for churchoH , just nu Turkish nij.'H for uonorations were made only to ho used for prayer. "THPENINSULAR" STOVES. "Tho Peninsular" hard and soft coal healing stoves , of which "Tho People's" carry n complete line , have n national reputation , ate guaranteed to glvo per- * feet hatifcfnntioa in ovoi-y respect. If vou want to fee the lingual line of Ural * cliisi boating stoves at Iho lowest prices you want to uo to the People's Mammoth * - moth Inilallment Home. _ _ 15 ' 3517 ' Farnam Street.