THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUffPAY , JUNE 10. 1888.-SIXTEBN SIDEWALK PAYING. Pertinent Remarks Concerning the City's ' Sidewalks , Xlio Old Plnnk Sidewalk Mnit Go- One of the Pavers MnkCH a IMnln Btntcmont of Knot * Tor fubllcfttlon. A stroll about the liuxlncsi part ot the city nliows every day nn tnrrei\sca nctlvltr among the pavers , lnnlmo.it any direction can be seen now sidewalks , among which the granolithic pavement aeems to predominate. In another inonth Omntia will bo second to nona In street and Mdewnlk paving. It IN a Milled fact the old plank sldownllc must go , in every few cities can they bo found except In the lumber countries. The writer of thli article , whlln .in-oiling oliout the city recently , had hl.i attention attracted ton gam ; ot men wfio M ore laying n granolithic tide- walk on ono of our prominent Htrcets and stopped to watch the oparntlon , which U quite Interest ing , and when llnlshed innVesafl nno a nldewalk ns can bo found anywhere , \\hllo watching the paving process the writer made the ac- qunlntanco of one of the men , to whom the writer U Indebted for ( ho following narrative which Is wholly true , and can be Bubstnntlntecl. Tlio gentleman In question ts Mr. John 1'rleii , of No. 121.1 Cnss street , ha works at present for the Van Oourt and Ilenctllct 1'uvlnq company. Mr. Fried , has llrod In Nebraska for over seven yearn and for nearly four yours he has lived In Omnhii. for thrco years hu has worked for the Oumlm IliubVlro rnmi > nnyhavlug recuntlyJeU their employ , to wort for the PHVIIIR company. Mr. Krlounays : "For more than live years I have been a terrible suirorer.niy bend seemed to be aching constantly , especially between the eyes , and my none would stop up , llrst on one side , then on the other , often both nostrils. Then I began to notice singular noises In my cats- roaring or buzzing fouudH they appeared to tun to bo , und Homutlmes sounds like whistling and hammering. About this tlinn my thioat "No be gan to give mo a great deal of 1 rouble. I would always bo hawking and bemmlnu and trying to clear my throat , often raising little hard lumps , nometlmus of a greenish , at other tluus of u yel lowish color. 1 would often have pulus in the chest , ex tending to the right nliouldcr blade. When drawing a long breath I could hearn kind of xvhcezlng nolso In my chost. And sometimes It Would seem to 1110 as It I was .Teathlng through a sponge I Bcomed to bo able to hear tliu nlr passing through. I began to four tnnt I wns going into consumption. 1 nas more llrmly convinced of this when , before long , 1 com menced to cougli u kind of hollow cough. Tim nliarp pains ifl my chest would extend around to the email of my back. "Try to prevent It as 1 might , I was forever catching f resli cold. 1 never was without them. Mucus would run from my nose , mid qulto fre quently my nose would bleed. At my woik I have to stoop over quite f reiiuently. uud w lieu I did so I would become dizzy and everything Boomed to swim before uiy oyos. A ! night my sloop did not refresh mo at all , und In the morn ing would feel ns tired and languid as when I wont to bed , "My stomach was alTected. too. I would sit down to the table with what seemed u good ap petite , but after a mouthful or two my appetite Would loaro me. Everything would seim to Hour on my otouiacb. There would be almost constant belching , a disagreeable , bitter taste In the mouth , and ut lust 1 cot so 1 didn't care to loakat food. I lost llesh and strength rapidly and was al ways feeling tired ; had no ambition. Kvory step Itook and whatever work I might do was done vrltn an effort , and after working a whllo or walking a block or two my head would perspire and my limbs would ache as If 1 had done some very heavy work. I had heard considerable talk about the success of lr. McCoy In such cases und rend several of the testimonials publlshud In the dally papers and concluded I woulu try him. It was with mnall holies , however , for I had tried uoven dif ferent physicians and tried about u barrel of patent medicines and was about discouraged. I \lHttedhlsolUcelnHamgeblock and consulted him. After a careful examination he told me I had catarrh and that ho could tieat me suc cessfully for It. 1 was Impressed U 1th the Idea that h knew hi * business and started treatment uud I hare not been n bit sorry that I did , for bo lias mady a nmv man of me. 1 Imve. no moio of the symptoms I told you of , and In short , I feel better today than I have forllvo long years , and I owe It nil to the skill und success of Dr. McCoy , and do not , hesitate nt all to ra-oimuend him to anyone \\lio is sulTortug from catarrh. Mr. Fried , whoso poitralt graces the column above , resides at No. 1-f ) Cass street , and In M Illlng to corroborate this statement to anyone doubting It. TWENTY-ONE QUESTIONS. A Few BymplomH of Disease That May Provo Serioiw to You. Do you hnvo frequent ills of mental depres sion ? Do you expcrlonco ringing or buzzing noises Iu your cant ? Io ) you foul us though you must sullocuto whinnying down ? Are you troubled with a hacking cough nnd general debility ? Are your eyes generally weak and wiitcry and f roquently litllained ? Does your voice Imve a husk , thick sound nnd a nasal Hort of twang ? Is your breath frequently offensive from borne unuccouutiible cause ? lluviiynuivdull , oppressive headache , geuer- ally located over the eyes ? Do you hiiY to liawk und rough frequently In the eiroit to clear your throat ? Are you losing j our t > eir of nme.ll and Is your BPime of tnsto becoming dulled ? Does your nose always fceUtopped up , forc ing you to lirt'iitho ihioiiKh your mouth ? Do you frequently leel dizzy , particularly wlion stooping to pick anything elf the Hour ? _ Joes ) ovi-ry ilttlu draft of air anil every alight change of tuinperuuiro give you a cold ? Am you uuiioyed by u constant deslro to hnwk and spit out nil endless quantity of phlegmi1 Io you rlso from bed as tired nnd wealcus you were the night before nail feel atj thuiigh you wanted to llothoiH foiovor ? IH your tlnoat lllled wllhjihleKin In the morn- Ing. w hlch cnu only be dls < nursed after violent coughing and hawking and oplttlng ? Do you occasionally wnko from a troubled Bleep with btnrt and feel us if you had Just escaped a horrlhln death by choking ? 11 uve. you lost all Interest In your railing or bustiiuftt or former pleasures , all ambition gone , nud do you fool incllirerent whether to-morrow Unas you nllve or dead' Are you troubled with a dUrlmrgn from the JiiNiil Into the throat , sometimes watery and ox- reiulve. Mimettmcs mucus , thick , Btfcklnij o whatever It touches , M > mctlmei bloody , and nearly always mitrld und olToiisivolr Tliu nlmvii iiro mime on lie ninny bymptoms of catari h and the heglnnlni : of lung troulilen. Not ouu c-uso In a hundird will have ull of them , but every one aireetfil will have u few or many of them. The gieator or more Hinloua your syinp. tomn , the more iliumorouH your rondltlou , Thti classof dUease Is treated very successfully by Dr. lr ( > > y or Ills Hssoclatos. The miiny cubes re ported Ilinniuh the columns of thedally iiapeis proves thts.und eathiitutement mibilslieil la sub- f taut lally tliu name us gU en by the patient cured. Dr. McCoy uud his us-ocliite tibii no secret nos trums , but cure dlsoaxo by their aklllfiil combl- uatlou of the best known remedies , applied iu the most approved manner , and by using the latest and must highly recommended appliances known to tuo profesidim. They thua produce re- milts tlmt iiicnt for themselves Iu tlie miiny pa tients cured , und WtY asBiuo our readeis thitt these eminent phyMclans hu\o achieved u htio- i-ess iu curing disease which fewer no other doc tor * can duplicate. DOCTOR . J. CRESAP McCOY , Late of Bclleyuc Hospital Now YorK , HAS OFFICE No , 31O nnd Oil RaniRO Building , Corner I'Uttenth and llarney sin , , Omaha , Nub. , \Yhere all curable cases are treated Medical diseases treated skillfully. Consump tion , llvlpht'atllsetibeDysphnaia , Khuumutlbin , und nil N KUVOUB ldlSA6i.S. ! : All diseases m < - rullar to the sexes u specialty. DATA It ft 1C 1 CONSULTATION at olltce or by mail , II. Olllce- hours -Utolla.m , toip , m. , 7 to 8 p. iu , . Sunday olllce hourx from 'J a. m. . to 1 p. m. Con enuondonco receives prompt attention. Jlanydbensas n treated successfully by Dr. McOny through the malls , and U Utlius posiiblo for those unable to make a Jouruer to obtain HUCUl'BJFlHi HOSl'lTAh TUKATMBNT AT Til Kill IIOMKH. No letters auvr r d unless accompanied by 4o All r.iall should I * addrotted to Dr. J. Cmiap MeCcy , Itooras 31 J fliul Ull. lUtutfs building , Uuiahu. Kfb. SLIPPING OVER THE BRINK , StorloD .of People Who Have Hoaohod the Limit. A FAMILY OF CENTENARIANS. An A ceil Georgian Not Tired of IJT- ! Ingnt lUO-Dlctl nt 1 Oil-Lived 111) Years Old ARC Notes. Old ARC and AIsoliol. From tlio Nlnctconth Century ! Tho. records of centenarians prove tlmt many do well ns total abstainers , but tlmt many also do well wlio take alco hol in some form or other , niul for the feeble typo of constitution which is never destined to such length of days certain moderate amount of alcohol stimulant is , perhaps , one , of the greatest blessings they enjoy. Of centenarians , who corUvlnly were not abstainers , the following instances may bo mentioned : Cardinal do Salin , archl > lshoi > of Seville , died in his 1 10th cnr in 1785 , with every faculty except his hearing unimpaired. lie imputed Ills green old age to a sober , studious life , regular exercise , and a good con science , as well as a pint of the best sherry at each meal , except in very cold weather , when ho allowed hlmsolf a third more. Mauklin , the actor , who lived 107 years , two inonth'sanU ten days , up to forty lived , his biographer states , very irregularly , drantl hard , sat ui > late nt night , and took violent oxerciBO. Subsequent to that period ho proceeded by rule. Ho drank tea , porter ter , wino , punch , and ate fish. llcsh , fowl , etc. , until he was seventy , but ho never drank to excess. His usual quantity was seven or eight glasses of wine. Ho was always moderate at his meals , never abstemious. At 70 ho gave up tea be cause it disagreed with him , and his drink with 1m meals for the last forty years of his life was white wino and water made very sweet. Philip Lnroquo , who "wont to bed in toxicated at least two nights every week till ho was 100 years old , " and Thomas Whittington , who lived to 107 and was a "habitual drunkard , ' 'are two further instances. Whittingtoii drank nothing but gin , of which compound , until within a fortnight of his death , he took from a. pint to a pint and a half daily. _ AVoudcrful longevity in California. On the subject of longevity some ro- murliaklo facts are given in Hubert Howe Bancroft's "California Pastoral. " The mission records show the dale and approximate nee at which the Indian neophytes were baptised , and , there fore , the statements given may bo ac cepted as good historical evidence. Many of the natives reached the ago of eighty or ninety , while not a few of them numbered their years at over 100. Indeed , Father Martinoof San Mi guel , wrote that there wore at that mis sion several Indian women of more than _ 00 years of ago. At Los Ancelcs , An tonio Valdes died in 1850 at the go of ninety-two , and in 1858 Guiula- lupo Romero at the ago of 115. An Indian woman , Maria Ignacia , reached the ago of ninety-six , another Indian reached 102 , while a third died at 137 , having danced at a fundnngo a short time before his decease. Maria Mnr- coliniL Dominquoz died in 1SG-3 at the ago of 107.Vhon the Jesuits were ex pelled from Mexico , in 18G7 , Ursula Madriuga was twelve years old. lie died at Monterey in 1850. Justiano Roxas , an Indian , who died at Santa Cruz in 1875 , was baptized at that mis sion in 1702 ; in the entry of his baptism t is noted by the oillciating priest .hat he was then at least forty years of igo , thus making him 123 at the time of his death. Eulula Perez , who died in 1878 , claimed to be 1-10 years old , but did not seem so or present any satisfactory proof to sustain the claim ; a careful ex amination of the facts seems to prove that she was not born before 17GO. An Aced Pensioner. Congressman O'Donnoll of Michigan is quite elated over a pension case , says the Washington ( D. C. ) Capitol , which is remarkable in its way. Three years ago John Batcholdor , who resides in Mr. O'Donnoll's district applied for a pension. His case was hung up in the pension olllce , and the prospects were not bright. Two weeks ago the friends of Batcholdor wrote to Mr. O'Donnoll and called his attention to the fact that the claimant is upward of 103 .years of age , and that 'Ins claim must bo ad justed ut once if ho was to derive bcnc- llt from his allowance. Batcholdor claimed a pension as the dependent father of a young man killed at Pitts- burg landing. Thcro was borne Haw in the evidence , but Mr. O'Donnoll soon hccured the necessary nflldavlts. The i-aso was put through. Batcholdor is on the rolls at last , and is the oldest man drawing a pension. An A rd Georgian. Those who have boon residing in Bainbridge for the last forty or fifty years are familiar with the bent form of an aged negro man , who indus triously but laboriously crept about the cily , wiys the Mason , On. , Tele graph. HIH name was Gcorgo McGlll , and ho was a former Blnvo of Colonel Daniel McGill , an enthusiastic agricul turist and one of our most prominent legal lights. Colonel McGill says George , who died last week , was about throe-fourths Indian , and possessed many characteristics of the red man ; while ho was notoriously cruel to ani mals , liu was remarkably kind and gentle - tlo with children , often getting up by dnylight , or even at midnight , to ap pease their cries with a mcbS of "big liominy , " pot or peas. A Family ofCentonariniiH. Talk of longevity ! Here is n well authenticated little story of a family of centenarians in Hungary , oil paintings of govern ! members of which are now in the possession of a family at Aix-la- Clmpollo. At the back of the lifo-nizo picture of the old gentleman there is an inscription in quaint old-fabhioncd Gorman to this effect : "Janos Robin at the ago of 172 years Grneci Ritus ; has Iwsoii married 1 7 years , was born and lives at Szodorn , his children , two sons and two daughtero , are still alive ; the youngest of them is 110 years old , and has two great-grandchildren , of whom ono is thirty-live and the other twonty- bovea years old. " The inscription ul the back of the old lady's picture is "Sara , his lawful wife , ugo 10S , born at Szodoru. " And this happy family ac tually emigrated from the scene of his long labors as a tiller of the soil , and ended his days , if the old chronicles are right , in some corner of Silesia. Not Tired of Ijlvint * at ISO. There wtia a rojtort going the rounds of the papers u few days ugo that Sylvia Duhois , probably as old as any person now living , was dead , A Now York Tribune reporter , hearing novoral con tradictory reports about the mutter went to her homo on Sourlund moun tains , about ton miles from Flemington N. J. The road leading to her houbo ( which wus-bullt for her by the Presby terian church ot Flemingtpn ) is u mere briillu path , and the bctmery in the .neighborhood U ua rugged and wild as f it were in the midst of the Rocky mountains , instead of within n few nlles of the finest cultivated land In the state of Now Jersey. Her youngest daughter , who lives with her , came to he door , and in answer to a question oplled that her mother was in. The , louse , which is n small structure , is dlainly but comfortably furnished. Seated by the steve in the one room of , he second story was Sylvia herself. She s a colored woman about five foot nine nchcs in height , and weighs about ono lundrcd and fifty pounds. She claims 0 have been born in mi old tavern near Jock Mills , on Sourlnnd mountain , hlnrch 6 , 1708. Her parents were slaves , ler mother the property of Richard Jomplon , and her father was owned by ohn Balrd. She was sold when about two years old to Michael Dubois , and stayed with him until about twonty-flvo year old , when ho set her free. She was \t thattlmolivlngatGreatBond. Penn. , vlth her master , and when she got her emancipation papers she started on foot hrough the woods , with her baby , 1 bout one year and six months old , in ICT arms , for New Brunswick , N. J. There she found her mother , and tvod with her several years. From sfow Brunswick she went to Princeton o work for Victor Tulano. She was there when Paul Tnlano , who aftor- vard became distinguished ns a philan thropist , was born. After a long while- she visited her grandfather , Harry Uompton , or , as ho was bettor known , Tarry Putnam , who had boon General Rufus Putnam's body servant and aftor"- vard the noted colored flfor of the Con tinental army. At this time ho was iving at and keeping the old sporting lotel on Sourland mountain , which was mown as Putt's tavern , a most disrepu table dive , where pme tights , dog lights ind cock fights were almost of daily oc currence. At Compton's death Sylvia inherited ho property and continued to "run" he hotel In the same way her grand- athor had until a few years ago , when some one set fire to it and it was burned a the ground with all its contents. Since that time she has lived at her ircsont home with her youngest daugh- or , whom she rails her "baby Lizzie. " 'Baby Lizzie" is now eighty-six years old , and Is upright and hearty. At the close of the Interview Sylvia was asked f she was not tired of living , and re- ) licd : "No , I ain't ; I'd like to live nn- ) thor hundred years yet , and I don't enow but I will , too ; my tooth are good , ind if I can get enough to cat , I don't { now why I should die ; there's no use in dying you ain't good for anything nfter you arc dead. " Died at 1O2. Mrs. Fnnnio Massey died hero re cently at the ripe ago of 102 years , says a dispatch from Parkcrsburg . Va. She was born a slave in old Virginia , jut was freed some years before the > roclamution of emancipation. For the wist sixty years she has boon blind , ; nused by being put to work too soon after the birth of her daughter , now ilxty years old. The two have been liv ing near each other for many years , but the "old mummy" remembered her daughter only as a child of two weeks old , having not been able to see her sinco. The old woman had the full use all her other powers up to the time of lior death. She remembered distinctly .ill the prominent men of the llrst part of the century , having belonged to per sons in Virginia whoso homos wore fre quent visiting places for the early states men of Virginia. At almost the same hour Mrs. Mossey died Mrs. Pey ton , nearly as old , and alfao a former slave , was being buried. liivod 11O lcar.4. A notable death , that of Grandma Mary Barnoman. occurred in our midst recently , says a dispatch from Ames , la. Her relatives claim her to have been 119 years old last March , having been born in Sussex county. Del. , in 170 ! ) . Up to within two weeks of her death she would sit in her chair most of the day and rest peacefully at night. It has only been about two years since she re turned from visiting her eldest son in Indiana , now nearly ninety years of ago. For many years previous to that time most of the diiv would bo occupied either with some kind of needle-work or her bible. She had boon for over eighty years a member of the M. E. churoh. She always seemed pleased to have her friends call upon her , and until the lust two years was at times quite talkative. She seemed to remember distinctly in cidents of the revolution and having scon the red. coats and General Wash ington. Old Ago Notes. But newspaper reports say that : The senior admiral of the British navy , Sir Provo Wallis , is 100 years old. Mrs. Jane Bruce , who completed the 100th year of her life in April last , died at Hartlepool , England , on May 13. Jaeko Martin , a French-Canadian , died at Kecsoville , N. Y. , Tuesday night of old ago , being 102 years old. A peasant has just died in Austria- Hungary who WIIH 1J2 years of ago. Ho loft a faon aged 115 years and u grandson of eighty-five. Thomas Bowman , known us "Uncle Tom , " the oldest man in Culberland county , Pennsylvania , died recently at Mount Holly , aged 10'J ' years. Rosolto Washington , of Louisville , claims to bo 121 years old. She says her mother was half Indian and her father u native of Guinea. Mrs. Annstasia Parsells of Pumrnpo , N. J. . has just celebrated her 102d birthday. She witncbsnd the funerals of Generals Washington and Grant. Charles Clondonning , near Bakers- town , Alloghnny county , Pennsylvania , has just celebrated his 100th birthday in the midst of his live children and all their living descendants. Mrs. Betsey Avorill , of Now Preston , Connecticut , rcmombors all her birth days since she was live years old , and , as bho lias reached the discreet ago of 10"i , has justaccnturyupon her memory. Dr. Agnew says that no man has lived to bo 10(1 ( years old since biblical days , and that all such reports como from ig norance or mihtakcH. Out of twenty cases ho investigated not one proved to be authentic. Mrs. Margaret Burnett of Rod Oak , Ja. , died recently in her 100th year , She was born March 18 , 1780. Until the stroke of paralysis which came a few days ago , Bho was in full possession of her faculties and had never boon sick. The death of Mrs. Phoebe Travis , frequently mentioned as the oldest per son in Now York state , took place at the residence of her daughter , on Travis creek , Steubon county , May 15. Her ago was 104 years and 6 months. An inveterate tobacco user in Wesl Virginia , 111 yenra of ago , who smoked a pipe every day slnco ho was sixteen years old , has just died , and this sad event should teach American youths that nicotine will kill the strongest man if ho only uses it long enough. There was a very enjoyable event re cently at Wllliamsport , Pa. It was the celebration of the venerable Adam Hart's 100th birthday. Children , grand children and great-grandchildren , together ther- with u largo number of frionda made the occasion ono never to bo for gotten. Perhaps the oldest negro in Alabama is Uncle Nero Kooncu , who belonged iu .gluvcry times to .the KoOuco family , .in Henry oounty Ho was in town a few ' dayss'incopndupon being interviewed , stated that < ha > was 103 years old , had JQOII married nine times , was the father of 117 children and hud been preaching olghty-six years. Ho still has good use of. himselfand ( about as active as ahoy. His last wife is living , and is sixty- seven youra old. Norman MaoDonold , of Big Bras Dor , 3npo Breton , is dead , aged 110 years. Ho was the last known survivor of Waterloo , having fought in that battle under Wellington , when thirty-seven years of ago. Ho was born In the Isle of Harris , Scotland , in 1773. After serving in the British army in various Kirts of the world , ho emigrated to S'ova Scotia in 1823 when lifty-livo years old. Charles Crawford , who lives near [ 'airfield , Benton county , Mo. , was born in Baltimore on February 20 , 1788 , and s now in his 101st year. His third wife died last February , ngcd soventy-thrce. Recently ho rode a spirited horse from ils home , which is ten miles south of Warsaw , to this plnco , ate a hearty Hnnor , sat for his picture , chatted with ils many friends , and , as evening ap- > roachcd , mounted his liorso and rode ill on a cantor as easily as a man of sixty. Fntnotis Painters' Nloknnm cs. Perhaps no class of men haVe been so frequently known by their niclc- namcs , says the Chambers Journal fern n their case the designations deserve 10 bettor name as the disciples of art , especially the Italian painters. It may o that the bohcmlanism of the craft , ts uncouvontionulity and freedom from ceremony , lends Itself especially to this iractico. Certain it is that many of hobo who know something of the mmes nt any rate by which' celebrated artists are usually' known , would find their powers of recognition taxed to the itmost were they to see a catalogue of some famous gallery , the Louvre , for sxamplo , where the painters nr.o all dcs- gnsited by their real names and where , nstead of the familiar Raphael and Ti tian , they must look for Santl and Vo- colll , and in place of Porugino and Cor- rcggio , they llnd Vanurnl and Allogrl. rhoso may servo as specimens of too easily multiplied classes of designa- , ions : the ono to which we might add Michael Angelo and many others of esscr repute , showing the ex clusive use of the chris- , iun name long after surnames itid become customary ; the other , in cluding names no less famous than Da tfinci and Veronese besides a minor , lost , instances of local appellations. Jlnudo Lorraine , the gre.it landscape ! winter , may bo taken as an example "of ) iio of the many artists who combine , hcso two somewhat commomplace sources of uncon volitional nomenclature. Others inherit their names in a some what , different manner from what is ubunl. Thus throe names high in ar- istic fameiroveal to us the profession of the fathgrs pf the most celebrated bearers. { The brothers of. Pollinnolo , workers in , metal as well as painters , were , it is generally assorted , so called rom their father's profession of "poul terer , " whfch'tliis word signifies. In view of this cli'cjumstanco. perhaps , wo may imagine Uint the familiarly with victims displayed in the paternal shop liad something-ito do with the excel lence of the quail modeled by Autonio on the bron/o gate of Florentine Bap tistry , of which VuHsari says "it wants nothing of life but to try. " Another family trade , which would seem tel l > remise equally little in regard to art , uve to Andrea Vunnucchi , whose per fect execution gained for him in his own day the title of "the faultless , " the appellation of del Sarto ( of the tailor. ) Tintoretto , again , is the diminutive ap plied in childhood to the son of Robusti , a Venetian dyer ( tintore. ) A modern Dick Tun > i' > . The lone highway robber mu = t have escaped from the clutches of Uncle Sam as the United States mail and thirteen of her brave citizeiib were relived of their valuables by a single robber while on their way from here to San Angelo yesterday morn ing , says the Dallas ( Tox. ) News of May 18. As there were too many passenger for the stage an extra hack was sent with it. When the stage reached a point not far beyond the Nicholas pasture , about noon yesterday , the stage driver was ordered to halt , which ho did , and re mained at a stand until the hack drove up , which was about one hundred yards behind , whereupon the passengers were ordered to dismount , which order was promptly obeyed , and standing up in a line , the robber , after placing caps over the heads of all of them , quickly and uninterruptedly relieved them and the mail pouches of their valuable con tents. After this was done he hold them for nearly four hours , waiting for the other stage going from hero , but on account of the bad and muddy roads it failed to make its appearance. The robber per mitted them to depart on their way , giving each enough money to buy a meal at Willow Waterhole Station. Also a cortlilcuto written on a drum mer's card , in words as follows : I hereby certify that all of you arc honest and bravo gentlemen , but that you are not armed and prepared to defend - fond yourselves. STAOK Koniiicii. During the performance the bold rpl > - bor asked the stage driver what had become - como of that smooth-faced fellow who drove the stage lust fall when ho robbed it , and for which offense Mr. Nowson was so unfortunately convicted by the United States district court at Waco. Ho also said : "Thoy havon't got mo yet. I am a dandy , ain't IV" The robber and his norse were com pletely masked , so It was Impoisiblo to recognize him or the color of hifl horse , but Mr. Ellis , the stage driver , who also drove ono of the stages that was robbed last fall , says that , judging from the stature , pistol and voice , ho feels confi dent that he it ? the sumo man. The rob ber took money only. Ono of the pus Hungers saved $01) ) by secreting it in his mouth , where ho had to hold it for four hours. The flherill and throe rungord loft Rulllngor this morning to see if it iu possible to'acconiplish anything by pursuing the jobbers tracks , which , on account of tho.abundanco of the recent rains in this section and the muddy con dition of the soil , ought to bo very dis tinct and easyito follow. A Horsd Rnco to Help n Ohuroli. Macoy Bros , , the well-known horso- trainera -liverymen of Vnrsnilles , says the Louisville Courier-Journal , have a yearlirrg by Mobsenger Chief , dam Cuckoo , that they are willing to wager any amount from 810 to $100 can boat any yeurling in Woodford county on the truck , and owing to the strictly religious community they make the fol lowing novel proposition : Touny church member owning a yearling , who is opposed - posed to hotting , they make the propo sition that if thoirC'uckoo yearling wins the race the loser is to come to the church attended by Mr. Mncoy on the Sunday following the race ana deposit the specified amount in the contribution box. Should the Cuckoo yearling bo beaten Mr. Mncoy pledges himself to do the sarao for their church. Smoke Seltlonborg'fc Figaro and get the best 5-cqnt cigar in llm world. Max Meyer & Co. whoicaulo.depot. Burlington Burliifnn The Burlington takes the lead. It was in advance of all lines in developing : Nebraska. It was in advance of all lines in establishing dining-car service between Missouri river points and Chicago. It was in advance of all lines in giving the people of Omaha and the West a fast mail service. It was in advance of all'linos in running Its trains from the East into Omaha proper. It was in advance of all lines in reducing the time of passenger trains between Omaha and Chicago. It was in advance , and is the only line by which you can leave Omaha in the morning and arrive in Denver the evening of the same day. It has been progressive in the past. It will lead in the future. ' Travel and ship via the Burlington. Ticket Office , 1223 Farnam Street. Telephone JC7 Depot on Tenth Street. - Builingw Route0 TO GET OO1 > \ii Omalm Mtlkumn Says Pay n Good Price. OHAKA , Juno 10. To the Editor of L'liu Bii : : : What a fuss about ; i little nilk ! The long article in Sun Jay's 3BK might lend ono to tliinlc that a tor- uido Is coming which will sweep away every cow and milkman in the county that could not provo up a record of milky whiteness , if we did not know that all that is needed to produce a > ; inic in any line of business is a smart reporter and the novcr-laoldng "toati- nonials. " The old saying is male true igain always go away to find out the lews at home. Ono of the aggrieved , who claims to "always milk his own cows , " says : ' 'We always supposed it to be a fixed fact that milkmen's milk is adulterated , " and adds the unqualified assertion , with not a shadow of evi dence , "the milk is adulterated. " When a man talks like that there is lit tle use to heed what ho bays , and when you sift out this element , and a few oth ers who are positively sure that every devil in hades is or was at seine time a milkman , the balance can be reasoned with. The writer of this desires to "testify" that ho has sold milk for twenty-live years , fully half of that time here in Omaha ; that during all that time not a drop of his own production has ho passed to a customer that he would not iiimsolf drink if need be. Will our ox- commission man say as much of IUH eggs , chickens , fruit , etc. , sold to Omaha people during his business years ? No one line of industry includes all the honesty or excludes all the dis- honcstv. I am not particularly proud of the motley conglomeration of humanity en gaged in supplying this town with that infantile necessity , milk , yet exhibit B shows by analysis that at least one dealer is honest enough to sell above the standard , and out of the hundred or more there may bo another , possibly ton , twenty or fifty more who are just as square as a "commission" or any other man. People mostly gut what they pay for , and their expectations should bo on an oven piano with their outlay. One would hardly expect to bland before a 15-i'ont lunch counter and get tlio en tertainment of the Pax ton. Cheap things if vociferously demanded will generally come nt homebody's hands , but ought the vouifurant to complain if they aroehdap all through. Modern soiMoty under our magnificent electric light system largely fashions its own members. Few people , and they are year by year growing fewer , possess the moral stamina or social position to line out a course of action and grimly follow it in the face of all obstacles. The mass have their actions controlled as are thuir thoughts by the to thorn unresist ing course of events , honest if they can bo. and anyway honest us they can be. Everybody seeks to got the very bast things at the very lowest price , and in the surambltj for "business" ho who can fashion a cheap thing into the sem blance of a j'ostly one , and miiko a suc cess of it , is counted smart by the sumo crowd who would send him to the gal lows or prison ( Dr. Wood ) if caught at it. it.To To sell milk cheaply , and Uioroby please customers is the front end of this wail from people who have unwittingly , maybe , tolled It on. The mural dilTer- ouco between seller and buyer is mi croscopic , and a change of places would hardly alter the situation. Tills may lie best shown by facts with which all are familiar. Three or four years ago some of our ' 'host citizens" formed an association with president , vice president , secretary , inanugror , etc. , and all the corporate paraphron- alia for such things made and provided , to remedy this ovll of costly and vile milk. With a great flourish of trum- uots a contra ! plllco was established , suggesting an indolllnito number o ( branches- , wagons were built and num bered , and it WAS given out that the town was henceforth to be supplied with delicious cream and butter , sweet and wholusomo milk , and all so cheap. The lucky holder of a share ( price 825) ) was to have his pure , sweet and wholesome milk carefully delivered at a his door , nt the rate of twonty-two and half quarts for $1 the public ; were in vited to join , and retire in short order the deceitful milkman , and \vlmt \ is the result ? Tjielr secretary tolls th story akira , ekim , skim ull the timo. Has any milkman ever treated them worso-than they treated thomt > olros ? This could not be objected .to If only themselves were involved ; but thev sold this ' -vile btulT , " this ' slush , ' to others not in the ring , and of course under the fraudulent representation of uoiiuiuo goods. Send 'nm to prison , Dr. Woods , it is a clear case , and the first one proven. Now about sick cows and poisoned milk. My experience is that about the first thing a sick cow does is to stop giving milk entirely. It is a provision of nature to protect her offspring. Sci entists and theorists may find it ditTor- cntbutldo not. As the animal re covers and the functions resume their normal action the milk returns , but then it is neither sick nor poisoned. As to eating poisoned weeds , etc. , I never to my knowledge hud an animal poisoned in that or any other way in my life and I have owned first and last thousands of them. Dairy cows to pro duce milk in regular quantities must be fed o daintiness , and then their own tastes and instincts are the all hulllcient guard. Should one accidentally eat a little unwholesome food it would bo ex creted , not secreted in the milk. Tlio trouble is not with the cows , but is in cident to all large towns , or as we like to flatter ourselves , to cities of the met ropolitan class. Milk brought from long distances is ( lilHcult to handle and should be run in on special early trains at 4:150 : a. m. instead of 10:30 : as' is now done. When we reach 2-50,000 very likely the roads will make this change , when this trouble will end to give place to some other. Troubles never end. While you are running to the ground one piece of villainy another is being hatched. ITow to regulate this matter is not an easy thing. It is certainly to the in terest of every honest dealer as well as the consumer , to have nothing but pure , wholesome , carefully handled milk sold. A license and registration at a low cost , so as not to bo burdensome to small dealers ; a milk inspector supplied with the best obtainable instruments , and arrangements by which his sam ples could bo analjved ; the withholding a license on second conviction , would seem to bo a good starter. The chief protection is in dealing , as you would in any other line , with reputable - utablo persons , and if you have no con fidence in anybody you must out and try using the inspector and analyzer till your confidence is established. Don't hold your dealer responsible for a careless cook , or for violent changes in the weather. Mill : is a perishable commodityand there is a mountain of dilVcronco between00 = and 80 ° in pre serving milk. Use bright tin or earthen warn of a size sullleient to hold the milk in as compact a body as possible , and small quantities never can bo kept too close tea a generous chunk of ice wnon tlio tlior- momotor registers above 80 ° . With sufficient care tliero need bo no trouble in keeping twelve or oven twenty-four hours. There is hardly a dealer of any ex perience who has not time and again rucoivod both Icicles and compliments from the same can of milk. It shows the difference in people. Strange as it may seem not ono dealer In ton knows to any certainty the cost of his mill ; . IIu fixes his price by his competitors and too many make up de ficiencies in "ways that are dark. " Tlmt consumers may know soiiVJthing of the cost of producing milk the year through I give below both production and expenses for the twelve months ending May 31 , 18S8 : Oost of 1-Ved , : i50 cr Uioor 1,154 ! ( tt Inuiiluntul Mi U3 Tuxes , interest , tiisurujicc , depre ciation of stock , etc i.eoo oo Total W47IJ 05 Amount of milk produced , .Vi.aiS quarts Making a cost at homo of .Mle per quart , which at sixteen quarts for $1 leaves O.Hlc , or ninety four hundredths of one cunt pur quart for delivering. .Seven cents per quart is as low as good milk cun hu retailed and jiiitiuu done all around. MILKMAN. A Kea Phenomena. The Anchor Line Aiiuhorin , just ar rived from Now York after a quick run , says the Glasgow ( Scotland ) Chron icle , reports as follows ! About 850 miles of the American const , und on the borders of the gulf stroum , the ves sel passed through a phcnonuna which , although frequent on a small hcalu , are extremely rare on such maximum grandeur of scale us that which en raptured the obc.ervor.son the Anchoria. After the vessel had been running twenty-four bourn hi a dense fog , the water around suddenly became so lumi nous that the mllo- long shoals of small fish dart ing around the vessel seeking refuge -from the sharks. and other devouring onumjes , gave the sea the ap pearance of a vast cauldron of boiling jewels , while the furrows of foatn ( rom the great ship's bows rolled in such bhr/.ing masses of light violet flames 03 rendered the smallest thread in this ship's rigging as clearly visible as a bright sunshine , and enveloped the vessel in such a mass of dazzling light violet-colored glare that the engines had to bo slowed a few hours until a storm of wind , bursting out from the northwest , cleared oil the fog and broke the whole visible surface of the ocean into flying crests of llame-liko. foam of such brilliancy that the whole ocean seemed ablaze with the fleeting , flashing flame , the whole horizon line having the appearance of an immense bolt of light-bluo fire. In short , the whole phenomenon was such an ono an is rarely scon , the oldest and widest traveled seaman and olucors never having seen anything at all to compare II with it. This beautiful pyrotechnic dis play of nature lasted from 11 p. in. until : ! : : ! ( ) | > . m. , until lost in the eclipsing light of dawn. 1319 Farnam St- No.ra.1 whlto India I.lnen Hnlt , trimmed with heavy embioldery : special value at Jl-.ttJ. Wo keep constantly on hand thw moat coin- pletti Block of Ladles' Heady made dreiutes , con. Hlhtlng of the follow Ing , Ladles' whlto and colored - ored Wrappers. Ladles' whlto Suits , Ladles' Hntern Hults , both Trench and American : Ladles' half und all Wool Suits , and Ladles' black uud colored ttllk Hulls. Hull department on second Hour , Tulco eluvatar. Jlall orders tilled. Kpuclal Value In liluck Hiitln 1'arasols. trimmed - \vlthHpanisli Iaio < l'i Inclit.ii wide , natural w oed btli ks , linings black and colors , ut - ' , tiM andi''J : BUe.'JO inches. p ciul Value in Illack Hatln Parasols , very heavy sutln , trimmed with beautiful UpanUfi Lacoli Inches wide und lined with extra quality of Sunset fllk In ull shades and they all liuvo natural wood hundlns , atl.2fi , M , X > and 1.1. liluck Lare Covered 1'arasols at tlA and fJ. We maku H special mention of jllack Hatln I'nruvils covered with Illack All 811k K.icurUl Lace and lined w ith very handsome Buruet bilk , blzii * ) Incliea.iit i.'i/iil. Illack .Morlo Silk I'urusolu trimmed with Illack Spanish CulpureLucofi Inches wide , lined with Illack Bilk and they all have Illack handles , at 1'n'rasols covered with Hint Lace , H-oll lined and we know they are cheap ut the following prices : IM ) , * J , * . ( , K.75,14 and * . ' > . Novelties In I'uraboU at from tt.OQ to 7W. We claim that we run save you from Si to CO per cent on fancy I'arusols. .Smith A : Aucelfs I'AKT 1ILACK IIOBIHItV for [ jidles1. Children's und Men's wear are giving en tire Butisfaction , our only trouble is to get them fast enough , They ore the only Vegetable Dyed lllu < k Hosiery Iu the world uud the process does not Inlurn the fabric In the. leant , wlilch cannot be Mild of any other fust black , for they are mineral dyed , ( live them a trial und you v.Ill wear no other kind. We never deviate from our stlctly ono price , cash system , whlch Is a Kiiaranteu that you will get the lowest prices tlmt Ills po&slblu to make on llrst das * goods. We huvu no Hush in our stock. Thompsoii , Beta & Co , .1319 Farnam St. I