TflE OMAITA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY. PKCEMBETi IP. 1004 FLOPPINC BULL'S ROUND UP InTtiion of the Haunts ef Haitian ia If cm Una and What Game of It, SEVERAL PRIMITIVE FUNERALS HELD A Cothor'i Reminiscences of What Was Probably Moat ElfeetlTO Lynching; fsmpolga Ik tho Wt. "It la a story of which little has been told. Mont of ua who rode with 'Flopping Bill's' vigilantes hav left the atate or crossed tha great divide. Those who have remained are reticent," said an ex-cowboy the other day. "As to the thirty or more desperate horse thlevea and cattle rustlers who operated In northern Mon tana In the early 8s well, bleaching bones on the wind-swept pralrleo tell no tales. "In 18S8 tho cattle and horse business In northern Montana was becoming more and more unprofitable, for the reason that there were organized bands of horse thlevea, who had stopping places from tha Canadian line to Mexico, and who made more money In the business of stealing horses and live stock than the real owners could in rais ing them. Of course more horses than cattle were stolen, because they were easier to get away with, and In those days were worth a great deal more money. The steal ing became so serious that the cattlemen of northnrn Montana were forced to do something, and In the fall of 186 they did It. When the cattlemen start to do any thing they do It up brown, and It was so In this case. "The tale of the hanging of road agents of 1SW-64 by the vigilantes of Alder gulch has been told so often that It haa become known from one end of the world to the other, and Is looked upon as the biggest thing of Its kind which was ever pulled off In Montana. This Is a mistake, and the rowboye of northern Montana, during the year of 1S86, from September to No vember, hanged and shot more men than the vigilantes of Alder gulch ever dreamed of. This may seem like a fairy tale at this time, but It la, a fact, and there are men In northern Montana at the present day who have the papers to prove the assertion. "During the fall round-up of the Judith, In the fall of 1885, It was decided to do aome hanging. Who proposed the mat ter, or by whom meetings were held. It Is not necessary to state, as one of the leaders of the cowboy vlgtlantea Is now a prosperous stockman within a few miles of old Fort Maginnls. Another Is a pros perous sheepman living near Ubet and another Uvea In Butte, after having spent, a number of years abroad. And there are others, but the matter of the real ex termination of the rustlers was carried on under the dlreotlon of 'Flopping Bill' Cant well. . " 'Flopping Bill' was a desperate charac ter himself, and worked against the rustlers because it paid better than to work with them. From September, 1885, until the weather became too cold to ride, 'Flopping UlU' and his band of horse thief exterminators worked, and when they had finished there was no count of the men whose candles had been snuffed, but there are men In Oreat Falls today who can name at least twenty-six of them, and It haa always been estimated that about thirty people were hanged or shot by 'Flopping Bill's' band during that fall. "The first performer in the bloody drama of extermination was a half-breed near Fort Maginnls. Some one believed he had stolen a ateer and butchered It, and one nigni aunng August, lsso, ne was taken near tho ranch of Reese Anderson and strung up to a oottonwood tree without a chance to aay his prayers, If he knew any. That was the beginning, and shortly after 'Flopping Bill' called for volunteers to search for horses which had been stolen from the herds of several well known stock men. The requisition was made upon the round-up, which was camped upon the Musselshell, about sixty miles above its mouth, and reckless riders and desperate men only were chosen. Catching? On. a ua jKjave iiiuuo ct nam riue mat aay, and by night they came to the cabin of a man named Downs, near the mouth of the Musselshell. Downs kept a sort of trading post, and was suspected of being In league with the thieves. It was early daylight when tho posse surrounded the cabin, and when Downs came out it was 'hands up I' A search of the corral and vicinity discovered twenty-two "D. H. 8.' horses, and Downs was asked to explain. He saw that he was up against it, and gave a full list of all the men connected with the 'rustling' business,' and Indi cated where they had their rendexvous. The Missouri runs swift and deep where the waters of the Musselshell enter it, and the banks are high and steep. A rope was placed about the neck of Downs and a convenient tree was looked for. Some on spied a large grindstone which stood alongside of the cabin. " Tie it to his neck and drop him In the river,' was tha suggestion, and It was carried out literally. Today tho big round grindstone, with tha hole In tho center. Ilea In the bottom of the Missouri, near tha mouth of the Musselshell, and if time and water have not proven too much for tho hempen rope, the neck bones, at least. To climb the social ladder you must climb Into your Dress Suit. You'll . bo able to climb higher If you climb Into a MacCarthy Dross Suit a suit that is tho product of our tea special Dress Suit tailors auit . made from tho finest qualities of ' Un dressed worsteds. Dress Suit Worsteds, French worsteds, German worsteds or Crepe Weave worsteds of our im portation, with only Im ported Satin . da Chlue and Black 811k Linings used. Function togs with that distinctly arlstocratio ap pearance, $60, WO or 175. MacCarthy Tailoring Company, M40 at I t I St. Next door to Wabash Ticket 0oe sLLV i Ml of Jim Downs are the grindstone's com panion. "Armed with the Information derived from Downs, the posse rode south to the mouth of Ixxlge Pole creek, where there were several 'rustlers' located, and' In tho early morning light three of thorn were captured and strung up on the same Cot tonwood trees which surrounded tho cabin where thy had lived. One of tho hempen ropes with whli-h the hanging was done swung in the breete for many years, and perhaps is there yet it was up to five years ago. Some of the cowboys in the posse began to get more than they had bargained for and wanted to quit the busi ness, but 'Flopping Bill' pointed out to them that they would be hanged by the civil law if their share of the impromptu hanging was known, and that, together with other cogent reasons, prompted thorn to remain. Only One not Anir "The next bunch of rustlers was located along the Missouri. They passed as wood choppers, and a large number of them had a rendexvous at Ixing John's bottom on the Missouri, a short way below the mouth of the Musselshell. Flopping Bill's" posse came upon the camp early one morning and was discovered by the horse herder, whom they promptly shot, and charged upon the camp. There was a blockhouse with a stable attached, belonging to the rustlers, but most of them were asleep In tents, and when the shooting began one of them was shot while getting to the blockhouse. Once there they defied the posse, and It was only by strategy that they were dislodged. While the posse kept a hall of bullets against the house one of the cowboys, sneaked up through the grass and set fire to the stable, and It, In turn, fired the blockhouse. Just how many rustlers were killed will never be known, but there were at least eleven In the house, and six were taken prisoners, while one escaped. "The or.e who got away was Dixie Burroughs, a half-breed, and well known to northern Montana. Burroughs man aged to get away from the house, and was stopped by one of the outer guards, but dropped behind a log, and at the fourth shot managed to get his man and escaped. Who the cowboy was that was shot has never been divulged. He was burled where he fell, and a hint given that nothing was to be said about It. That night 'Flopping Bill' went away, and during the night n number of men rode up to the camp of the cowboys with six prisoners, and In th morning their bodies were decorating the cottonwooda on the ent side of Long John's bottom. 'Flopping Bill' came back and said the men who had taken the prisoners were a posse from Miles City and nobody Inquired further." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Tomorrow we place on sale boys' knee pants, extremely heavy, all wool, oges 4 to 14, the kind that sells for one dollar everywhere, our sale price 39c. Not more than two pair to any one customer. If looking for useful Xmns gifts for men or boys bear In mind that our assortments are most complete and our prices will bo found lower than elsewhere always. Ne braska Shoe and Clothing House, 26th and N streets, South Omaha. NARROWEST AND CR00KEDEST Snakcllke Railroad in Arlsona I'sed for Transporting Ores from Mines. Between the mining towns of Clifton and Metcalf, Ariz., there runs the steepest, nar rowest and most tortuous railroad In the world. Passengers as well as long trains of ore are raced down dizzy grades, dragged up steep Inclines, swung around sweepinpr curves and carried In safety In a snake like course over one nf the most pictures que bits of mountain land In the country. The compact and sturdy little engine which draw the precious metal from the. mines In one town to the smelters In an other or which puff and steam up to the front or back doors of the homes of mine owners and "workers," there to await the mistress of the house as she prepares to take the entire family to market or make an afternoon call, run on a twenty-Inch gauge. It will be readily seen how narrow is this railroad, which winds up to the very peaks of high mountaalns, hangs suspended over deep canons, and borea Its glittering way through miles of solid rock, when the twenty Inches are put side by side with the standard four feet eight and one-half Inches. From the mines to the smelting works it Is pretty much down grade. The pluck- little engine, with Its train of eighteen or twenty heavily loaded ore cars, each guarded by a miner in picturesque garb, who takes this opportunity to secure a little fresh air and sunlight, hugs the moun tains for miles at a stretch, thenr suddenly swings Into a desolate valley and tears along a river bank until it Is forced to climb a alight Incline to a bridge which stretches over a yawning canon. There are three of these bridges from Metcalf mines to Clifton smelting works, and the trestle work ranges from 12S to 135 feet In height. From mines to smelter Is twenty miles, so circuitous is the route; the trains tear down the mountatn side at the rate of sixty miles an hour, with power at the low est possible gauge. Heavy brakes are used on each ore car. and the locomotive, al though a powerful little puller, Is seldom called Into service on this downward trip, which Is made for sixteen of the twenty miles with brakes on full. Automatic dumping cars are used, and In fifty-four minutes from the time the train starta from a mine with Its load it is ready to start on Its backward trip empty. lTp, up, up the train climbs, the ascent never being less than degrees. It reaches in sections such heights that the brain turns dizzy at the mere thought. From a sta tion In the valley. In the little village of Metcalf, the cars seem to be clawing the mountain sides In a perfectly perpendicular line, and as the lanterns swing out when the train takes a loop the traveler seeing It for tha first time would be readily excused for naming it some new mountain terror. The trip back to tha mines consumes nearly four hours, for the little engine which waa literally pushed down the moun tains by the weight of Its train, Is now obliged to pull the empty cars up grades which test Its timber to the fullest. An Idea of how winding Is the route will be gained when It Is known that Clifton Is but five miles from Metcalf as the crow flies, but as the railroad Is obliged to wind Its w'ay It Is a trifle over twenty miles. To get tho credit even within this limit whole mountains of solid rock have been tun neled. For nearly one mile the Morencl railroad carries Its trains through Inky blackness. Jagged rocks are overhead and on each side. A passageway was literally hewn and hacked through these rock mountains, for it was deemed dangerous to use dynamite in many places, as the nature of the secret gas pockets therein was unknown. Two and a half years It took to complete this tunnel, but when It was finished It cut nearly five miles off the route Chicago Chronicle, Attention, Sheet Metal Workers! All members of local union No. I are re quested to meet at Labor Temple at 1 o'clock p. m.. sharp, Sunday, December 18, to attend the funeral of our lata brother, Quatav Huhn. By order of committee. Presbyterian day Thursday, December 22 at Bhook's Jewelry Store, 406 South Fif teenth street. Ladles of tho First Presby. terlan church will receive and wait on customers. CROW INDIANS ROOST MCI1 Eeoccnpy the 8it of Tort Custer, from Which They Were Drmn in '78. VILLAGE FORMED ON PARADE GROUND Old Cnlef Whit Earth Hlte th Pipe In th Commanding Officer's Quarters History of a Famons Post. Tha Crows have come Into their own again. What was once the site of old Fort Custer, one of the moat famous military posts of the northwest frontier, where the United States troops for a quarter of a century held In check the fierce red men of the mountains and plains, has reverted to the original owners of the lands, and the Crow Indians now gather to discuss the ancient glories of their tribe. Th9 parade ground has become an In dian village. The barracks have been dis mantled and hauled away, to be used In constructing Indian huts. The command ing general s fine residence Is now the domi cile of old Whlte-Earth-on-the-Forehead. who stables his favorite pony In the grand reception room where formerly gathered the military chieftains of the white army. Already more than 100 Indian shacks have been constructed from the materials taken from the old fort, and dally the tal men gather round the historic old ruins, fighting over some choice piece of timber. Irony of Circumstances. It Is the Irony of fate that the site of the old fort, wrested from the Indians by force of arms, should In time return to the keeping of the Identical band of In dians from whom It was taken, and who today are making their campfires Just where their tepees stood before General Custer was massacred and before the per manent Invasion of the "Crow country" by the white soldiers. After Sitting Bull and Raln-ln-the-Facs and their 6.000 Sioux and Cheyenne war riors had exterminated Custer and his lit tles band of 20 soldiers of the Seventh on the brown hills of the Crow country, the government war officials determined to build a stronghold which would overawe the natives of the northern plains. An expedition was sent out to find a suit able place, in the very heart of the new post. Just two years after Custer died a fort bearing his name was built about ten miles down the Little Big Horn river from where the monument stands which marks the resting place and bears the names of the gallant soldiers who rode with Yellow Hair to a frightful and glorious death. At tho confluence of the Big Horn and the Little Big Horn rivers, on a high bluff which commands the country in all direc tions, was the chief village of the Crow In dians. In the spring of 1878 long wagon trails and large bodies of American troops came up the Big Horn Valley, and aoon small flat-bottomed steamboats pushed up the Yellowstone and thence into the Big Horn, coming to anchor at the Crow vil lage. Moat Extensive Post In West. With scant ceremony the Indians were driven from the traditional home of their great chiefs, and before the snow fell that winter Fort Custer was well under way. In time the new post became the most ex tensive In the entire northwest, and many expeditions went from the shelter of Its barracks In Wyoming, Montana and other states. The stream of settlers that pourel into the great northwest owed Its protec tion from the Indians more to old Fort Custer than to any other army post along its line of travel. That which the Indians failed to accom plish with tho bow and arrow and scalping knife they have effected with the plow share, and by accepting to a certain ex tent the civilization of the white man have rendered unnecessary the close proximity to their homes of an army post. When the call to arms came In the spring of 189S the soldiers at Fort Custer were sent to Cuba, and the post Itself was abandoned. A small guard was stationed there for some years, and last summer the work of dismantling was begun. When the post was abandoned the build ings reverted to the original owners of the ground, and so the Crow Indiun tribe became the proprietor of tho old fort. The Indian agent, Colonel S. O. Reynolds, has been distributing the building materials contained In the different structures to those Indians living in tho vicinity, and as a result many old bucks who have lived in tepees all their lives will this winter for the drat time spend the cold months within a small shack, tho walls of which were formerly some part of tho barracks or even "officers' row." On House Standing. Over on "officers' row" there Is just one house standing. Years ago tho com manding officer of the post lived thera and many military functions took place within Its walls. But now the new owner, Whlte-Earth-on-the-Forehead, proudly passes his red plpestone calumet around the circle which he and his friends have formed within the large dlningroom, while the favorite "calico" pony of the old In dian stamps his feet and eats his hay in the big reception room and watches his reileetlon In the French plate mlrrora which line the walls. Just within the confines of the post, off toward the south, is still to be seen the old stage coach and the station at which the vehicle ended its long Journey from Chey enne. 600 miles away. Both the stage and the station are in a dilapidated condition, but the former will be removed to the agency and preserved as a memento of the early pioneer days. In Its pulmy days the old fort boasted of a haunted house, and every stick of timber In that building remains on the original site. Not a brave on tho reservation will accept a piece of the house which was formerly "bad medicine" to them, and the Indian agent says he can do nothing ex cept burn the debris of the structure. Remains of the waterworks system are on every hand, the Iron hydrants lifting their heads even among the tepees of the Indian village on the parade ground. But no water can be drawn from the pipes and the supply tube to the standplpe Is dry and twisted. Even the earrings of the old cannon which commanded and protected the pump ing station In the river valley was left In position when the troops started for Cuba. One wheel is broken and the iron tires have fallen from the felloes, but the ammuni tion box Is yet Intact. The magazine is being torn down by the Crows and the bricks are being removed to some of the new Indian houses, where they will be used, to build chimneys, the very first the Crows have ever used. Establish a Cemetery. A mile above the old fort tho Indians have founded one of the above-ground cemeteries, the dead being wrapped In blankets and deposited on high scaffolds. There was a time when the Crows burled their dead with the weapons and trinkets owned while alive. But when the craze for elk teeth eroai the Indian climbed the scaffolds, un wrapped the bodies and secured tho elk teeth, which they sold at good prices. No more teeth are burled with the dead now. The old fort and the new Indian village atand on the dividing line between that part of the Crow reserve which will be opened to the white man next year for settlement and the portion which the Indians reserve to themselves. Of tha former there are about l.ttiO.OOO acres. Before tho tepee of tho chiefs, as far as tha ays can poo, both tip and down tho Bl Horn river. Is a magnificent valley, milea wide and mure than 100 miles long, which some day will be one of the garden spots of the world. But at present old White Earth sits smok ing his pipe and gazing witn contented eyea over the land which haa returned to him and his after being In tho hands ot the whlto mm for a quarter of a century. St. Louis Republic STOLEN KISS LOST HIM VOTES Defeated Candidate for Offle Yields zolnlonsly Foil. Tho far-reaching effects of so light a thing as a atolen kiss may at some future time turn the whole world topsy-turvy. It was a stolen kiss the other day that cost State Sentaor Meyer of Carbon county, Mont., his re-election and turned many votes from President Roowevr k-BUhough he really didn't need them In the Yellow stone valley. So great danger lurks In a kiss It may transmit disease germs: It may defost a candidate for office. Senator Meyer, who Is a married man with a family, met Miss Orovea of Red Lodge in the street Just after dusk and Imprinted a passionate kiss upon her lips without permission. The In cident aroused a storm of Indignation In the atate, became a public scandal and overshadowed the Issues of national and state politics. "Beware of stolen kisses" hereafter will become one of the Important working rules of campaign managers. It was Pascul who said: "If the nose of Cleopatra had been shorter the whole face of the e;irth would have been different" which shows that momentous events sometimes may flow from a very trifling cause. The perils and pleasjures of the smuck reluctant can hardly be overestimated. In gnlnintr the klscs of Cleopatra, Antony lost an empire. Some years ago an English court laid down the law that "when n man kisses a woman against her will she is fully en titled to bite out a piece of his nose if Fhn so pleases." An Australian who stole n kiss from a pretty girl fared -ven worse than Senator Meyer. To begin with. li waa brought before a magistrate and fined. Thn he was horsewhipped by the girl's brother and harried into brain fvrr by his own wife. ' The clergyman of the parish condemned the affair In a sermon and the press reviewed It with hostility In print. Finally the caterpillars ate up every blade of the malefactor's wheat crop. Yet things will go by contrarif. It is on the records that a stolen kiss once brought a man Into possession of a for tune. This offender, an obscure butcher In Sydney, N. S. W., was prosecuted by his pretty victim for assault. lie was heavily fined by the locol magistrate and the press gave sensational reports of the case. This publicity attracted (he notice of a firm of solicitors who had been ap pointed trustees of valuable property which had been left to the man by a illstant rela tlve twenty years earlier. They had failed to trace the heir Until this newly acquired newspaper notoriety revealed his where abouts and secured him his heritage. Whenever and wherever the value nf stolen kisses has been appraised by courts opinions have diverged widely. Mrs. Mag gie O'Boyle, 25 years old. red-lipped niu! a widow, sniffed her scorn openly w- n Justice Fitzgerald of the Chicago K Yards police court assessed Joseph BiMnnl gan 110 and costs, or 111.50 In all. for a purloined smack at her chwk. She said J400 would have been nearer the mark. Down in the blue grass region recently a verdict for 700 was rendered against a kiss thief. In Rochester, N. T Charles Drobblo was compelled to pay $400 for klsfclng Mary E. Dimple, his stenographer, only once. In San Francisco pretty Adele Nelson sued Tor $10,000 because her em ployer kissed her against her will. Mrs. Sarah Slayton of Richard Center. Wis., appraised three stolen kisses at $.",0CO each, or $15,000 for the lot, to enforce the col lection of which she aued David G. James, a prominent Grand Army man, but the Jury decided against her. "Kisses given In reluctance are a price less commodity,", was the dictum of an Omaha Judge. On this theory he sent to Jail Miss Fern Atwood, a very good-look ing young woman charced with having "kissed a man wilfully and without his consent." Passing Captain Henry Hit, an army officer, in the street, she suddenly caught him In her arms, and before he could cry "Help!" or "Robbers:" she had Imprinted six resounding smacks upon his ruddy cheeks The captain, a confirmed bachelor and austere as a monk, was scan dalized. Judge Zimmerman of St. Louis recently handed down the legal opinion that public kissing is not a crime. Miss Ida Ooodalr having been arraigned for that alleged of fense he set her free with the remark that he saw no harm in It, and would therefore not punish her for kissing her best young man In the streets or public parks. Chicago Record-Herald. REMARKABLE OCEAN VOYAGE Canadian Sails Aronnd the World In Dngont Caaot to Make Good a Boast. John C. Voss, master of tha Tlllkun, la a Canadian, now In London. In 1901 he left Victoria, Vancouver island. In a salt ing yacht weighing two and a half tons. Intending to go around the world In It. He succeeded In his object. It was a long cruise, because Captain Voss Is a born explorer, and he visited many strange out-of-the-way spots, besides touching at all the continent He completed the circle this year, and has now come back across the Atlantic to give a lecturing tour In England, "What made me start on the trip?" suld Captain Voss to a reporter. "Well, because everybody said I couldn't do It not In the Tlllkun. It's a, canoe, really, and the In dians on Vancouver Island dug it out of a single tree. There's big trees In British Columbia," There were two men in the boat at the start, but, unfortunately. Captain Voss' mate fell overboard and was drowned. After that the gallant skipper waa the en tire crew. Nothing can upset the equanimity of Captain Voss. He will tell you of tha most alarming, lonesome experiences In tha same friendly, matter-of-fact way as that in which he speaks of the weather. Tho se cret of the survival of tho Tlllkun and its cheerful owner waa the use of a aea an chorCaptain Voss' own patent Ho has sketches abowlng tho Tlllkun climbing the most appalling seas or moving in a trough with vast mountains of water on every aide; the sea anchor trailing behind kept the boat safe were the aea eevr so furious. "After my mate left me, and when I wa alone," aald the master, "I used to set the aea anchor and then go below and Bleep till next morning. I never had a drop of water coma aboard unleaa I wanted to." One effect of the aoa anchor, which was a cone-shaped vessel made of canvas and wood, waa to raise the boat as It crested the waves, keeping them from breaking over it. Captain Voss made a thorough Investiga tion of that most romantic region, the South sea and its Islands. Very gingerly, with ammunition ready and a camera near at hand, he approached the Ul tenanted by cannlbala "A very bad reputation soma of these Islands have," suld tho cap tain, "and a woman waa oaten at one of them just before I landed, notwithstanding tho protest of a missionary. Cut a Eu Ad EASY UAY OUT OF I If you are undecided what to mas, call and let us fill out an order to him then your trouble is over. ATo.. s. WHAT WE CARRY: Dunlap and Stetson Hats, Neckwear, Hosiery, Gloves, Bath Robes, Fancy Vests, Underwear, Mufflers, Umbrel las, Canes, Suit Cases and Traveling Bags. ropenn is ns safe among cannibals ns he Is ; in London, providing he doesn't Interfere 1 with them." Captain Vosa met tho captain of a ship which had been wrecked off one '; of these inlands. The natives treated the; survivors splendidly, but when a boat put j out from the Island to hall a passing , steamer it was fired on. It was many months before the party got away. The Tlllkun started with six months' pro visions and three months' water supply. But on leaving Sydney the captain forgot one If his two tanks. Consequently he and his new mate ran dangerously short of water. They had 4,000 milea to go before a fresh supply could be obtained, and oven drinking so little as a pint a day this were bound to cxhausr their stock long before the distance was covered. But Captain Voss is the equal of Captain Kettle In re sou i oe. "Rolled oats," he said, "saved our lives. Soak rolled oats in water and eat them, and you do not need to drink." Thus the water supply waa eked out. LARGEST BANQUET EVER SPREA Thirty Thonsand Provident French People In a Twelve-Acre Banquet Hall. The greatest banquet of modern times was spread in a twelve-acre hall in Paris a few w.teks as;-?. The occasion was the convention of the National Federation of Mutual Aid and Saving societies. Thirty thousand delegates were present. The ban quet was held In the gallery of machines, covering twelve and a half acres of ground and with a dome 1) feet high. The presi dent and other highest dignitaries of the French republic ate with them; and then. In after dinner speeches, these 30,000 provi dent French clerks, atlsans and workmen and their wives and daughters, were told what they knew already that they aro so much the hope of France that the, govern ment is willing to become their patron and partner, and to this end haa endowed them with a special "director of mutuality" In tha ministry of the Interior. Never before at auch a banquet had al most as many women aa men sat down a thing In Itself epoch marking. The decorations of the central dome of the gallery of machines occupied 200 workmen a week, and 8'0 wagons were needed to transport the material. There were 4,009 tablecloths and 30,000 napkins. There were SO.otio plates; piled together they would have made a column three times higher than the Eiffel tower.a nd the knives, forks and spoons would have made a raetalllo line twelve miles long! The bill of fare Itself was a proof of what can be done by mutuality and co operation, when you ccnslder that It cost each Individual only 70 cents, wines, li queurs, coffee and cigars Included. Aperitif (eyo opener), "wine of the pon tiffs." Hors d "Oeuvres Olives, whipped folegras, illletes fsplced cold sausage meat In tiny pots), mousse of ham (chopped and whipped up In a cream), sliced Aries sausage, but ter. Entrees Cold ham, truffled pressed meats in Jelly, Strasbourg sausages. Roasts Beer, English style; bresse chick ens with water cress. Vegetables The famous ealado Rusee. Desserts Assorted cheeses and fruits, nuts and raisins, little cakes. Coffee, cognac, Benedictine, white Cura cao. Wine, red and white; beer, milk, mineral water. A glass of champagne, special clg-ara Parfstaus heve been making wonderful calculators concerning tha material of this banquet. Had all the sausages been stuffed Into one, It would have made a sausage as big aa a house. The rounds of roaat beef superposed, would have reached to the first platform of the Eiffel tower. The napklna and tablecloths would have carpeted tha Place de la Concorde tho largest public place in the world. It was the monster salad, however, that most Im pressed them This waa a "salads Russe," composed of 126 bushels of young vegetables and chopped ham mixed In mayonnaise a salad so apocalyptic In Its proportions that tho president of tho republic went to sea it mixed. So It was also the greatest formal and orderly banquet of the world, almost dou ble that of the record breaker of the ex position of 1800, when the mayors of 19,000 : French towne sat at a monster meal be- I neath tenta in the Garden of tha Tulllerles. Wise ero. Nero was playing- his riddle while Rome was burnlns. "Why do you select auch an unusual mo. ment for practice T" asked tho Roman sen ator. "Because I am quite aura thst the neigh bors won't say I disturbed them," replied Nero -"hlcsso News. Methodist day Tuesday. Deremher Co at Bhook's Jewelry Store, 405 South Fifteenth street. Seward Street M. E. church ladlea will receive and wait on customers. Knllstod for I. He. "Can't yr do a little aomethln' fr an old soldier?" whined Tired Tiffins. "Well, I don't know," replied tho portly rltlsen. "If you can ahow your discharge papers, I may do something for you." "I hain't beon discharged yet, b.,," re plied tho hobo. "It's a soldh r of fortune I am." Houston Chronicle, Have Root print iu Omaha Neb.. C. II. FREDERICK CO. Leadinf Hatters and furnishers 1304 Farnam St. I Deliver to the order of. "3 "olllSP'llPli M ' OLDEST ESTABLISHED WHOLESALE GROCERY IN WEST. Paxton & Gallagher Co. Gas Coffee Roasters, Tea Importers, Manufacturers and Wholesale Grocers ALL. GOODS BEARING OUR NAME ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED. TRY THEM AT OUR RISK. A BOX OF Uacle )ca.r CIGARS will make a desir able Christmas . Present. A PERFECT SMOKE. 12, 25 and SO In box. For sale at all firstclass stores. HENE a CO., Makers, iw d.ui. si., OMAHA lemptd ihe appetite refreshes ou through and through I M SOITH ON A II A, I'll ONE Asrents: IlUfO F. Bils, 1324 DoukIhs st., Omaha. Phono 154Z iee Miicneu, council uiuns, i Put in Your Application If w-e have'nt Just what yon want In the ehapa of a vacant offlco room right now, It will only be a question of a Uttle while till we can fit yon out with exactly what you require. Tut In your application with a description of your wants and as soon as ottlccs are available of the kind and price you name, we will notify you with an Invlta tton to come and look at them. Remember that offices in the Bee Building; are always in brisk demand and none of thorn stay vacant very long. It Is first come, flrat served other things being ejual. Put In your application and make sure of being among thoee first erred. It C. Peters a Co RENTAL AdENTS GROUND FLOOR THE BEE BTJILDINQ. . give a gentleman for Christ like the one below give it 1 .190 ' 8. none bu.