fii.tHHHii - "V * * E- ' r"3"1 * . - ' -THE OMAHA : . ; * NOVEMBER 4. ' 188a-SIXTEEN. PAGES : ' . ' ' . r'---1' : ' " ' , ' - ' ' I i' ' . . ' . : . .V $ . ' : . " . ' AMONG THE ELECTRICIANS , Gossip of Telephones , MotorsWlroa , and Batteries. FLASHES FROM THE DYNAMOS. A. Wonderful Street Cnr Propelled by a fctorntfo Mattery Motor 1'ull pcscHptioti of tlie 8yM- tent In Now York. . A Wonderful Cur. St. Paul Glpbe : The electric car which Is running on Fourth avenue , New Yock city , is propelled by an clec- tric'motQr ' , or rather by two of them , and the power is derived from storage batteries. The car is eighteen foot long frontdoor to door. The platforms nro about four foot wide , rather more roomy than thrive of the .stahdaid struct car , which has a sixteen-foot body , and so the total length of the now cur is about twenty-six feet. Instead of four wheels it has eight , on two trucks of four each , -placed well out towmd the body and attached by "If ing- bolts , " just us the truck of an ordin ary Htcam railroitd car attached. This enables it toa-ounda short cur\c easily und without jarring. Instead 61 oil lamps , the car has elec tric lights , a group of thrnq in the center - tor and ono at either end. Over the driver's head on either platform ii a big electric gong , With which to warn oil the track the driver of the Blow dray who won't got out of the way. This boll the drhor rings by touching a push button on the platform with his foot. The current , as well as that for the lights , eompsfrom the storage batteries which operate the motor. These storage b.ittorlos occupy the space under the scats. The panels on tno outside of the car , below the windows dews , op < Mi outward on hinges and ex pose a place on cither side largo'onough to hold four big wooden trays eight In all each of which contain thirty-six cells snuaro boxes of hard rubber. Each cell contains a number of plates of load , arranged in positive and negative groupsand also contain the ' 'solution , " which is nine-tenths water and one- 'tktilh sulphuric acid. { Vhen those trays of cells are placed in position in the car , they are con nected automatically , so that all the cells in one side of the car constitute , in elTet't , ono storage button * . Kaon tray , with its contents , weighs about live hundred pounds , BO that when a car is ready to start it has aboard about two tons of storage battery. The company has a "btation" and a "plant" tit the Eighty-sixth strootdopot . of the Fourth avenue lino. The "sta- IJJt tion" is , in oflect , simply u big room in lj which it houses the car , loads it up with 11 } electricity , makes repairs , if necessary , 1 $ otc. The "plant"at the "station" con sists principally of two covunty-horso- powwr steam engines and two big dyna mos , such as generate electricity for I ? incandescent lights. lljj The current is ono of low olectromo- tlvo force and will not hurt anybody. The storage batteries won't nlow up or tip the car otT the track , or sting any body to death. A man may take the full force of the current from the dynamo name through the ends of his flngorbo ami not feel it a tenth part as much as ho would that from the ordinary med ical battery. Suppose the electrician wishes to start out the car , eight of the trays spoken of are ranged on benches , on either bide of a bit of track in the stationon which fttands the car. Four arc on either side , nnd the benches are just of the right height bo that the trays may readily slide from them into their places under the car seats. Tno engines start up nnd the dynamos begin to revolve. The oloctrio current which they generate travels along wires to the tray cells uud fills them up. It's like pouring water Into a soncs of pails with a hose. If the batteries are empty at the out- Eot if will take about six hours to fill them , and then thov will run the car about thirty miles , but as there are two sets of battorips for the car , and will bo for each ono when there are more cars , the luittorios will bo charged at the end ot each trip , and so it will not take long to Jill them. When the batteries nro full they are elid into their places under the scuta , the panels are closed up and the car is ready to start. The motors are on the car trucks. They do not difTor materially from other well-known motors , excepting that they nro designed especially for the work they do. They have two puirs of brushes , " that Is the shoots of copper 'which rest on the revolving part of the motor , and which convoy electricity to it. Whom the motor is reversed ono pair is thrown off automatically and the other pair is brought into contact. On the truck just below the motor is n counter Bliaft , which lias n glared wheel which cngnges a pinion or little geared wheel on the motor. It also has a toothed wheel on the axels of the truck. Thus the motor moves the coun- lor shaft through geared wheels and the counter shaft moves the axles of the truck with a chain bolt. The proportions tions are such that the motor revolves about bC\cn times to turn the car- wheel onco. Now the car is ready to go on. The driver ho was just an ordinary street car driver a few months ago , but ho has boon trained to run the now car and ho likes it the driver stands in the same place as he would if he were holding the reins. At his right hand is the brake , which has a wheel instead of a crank , and at his left , on top of a square box which rises from the flour , is a lover. Inside the box is the "governor , " which is a device for turning as much or us little electricity as may bo wanted to the motor. With the lover at the lop the driver may turn on the full force of the batteries , p. little force or may turn it olt altogether. Or ho may reach down , turn a switch and solid the cur- rout in the other direction , * o the mo tor , will pronol the car backward. > The conductor rings the boll , the driver turns his lever one notch and the car begins to move slowly out of thn feta tion ; another , notch and it goes merrily down the avenue until it reaches a hill. Still further the lever is turned nnd the car climbs the hill as easily as if a loco- mothe woio pushing it. Some ono signals to got aboard or a team coinob dashing out of a side street and buck goes tno lever as easily as you can turn jour hand. The diver applies his brake , and the car slows down or cornea.to a stop almost at unco and with out u inr. , . Anil DO the round trip is miulo. The car is under bettor control than a horse car. It can make twalvo miles an hour if it is desired , and if it loses tlmo by getting into u blockade it can make it up much moi'o eabHy than can ono drawn by n pair of horses. An Klcctrlo Mountain Ilallwnjr. A correspondent of the ( Condon Daily News in Lucerne sends to that paper an account of an electric mountain rail way the first of its kind which has recently boon opened to the public ut the Burgcnstoek , near Lucerne. Hith erto ( ho says ) it has been considered im possible to construct a funicular moun tain railway with a curve ; but the now Hne up the Burgonstook has achieved that feat under tno superintendence * of Mr. Abt , the Swiss olecitrlcal engineer. The rails describe ono jfrm'd ' curve formed upon an attglo of 1113 degrees , and the journey is made us steadily and smoothly as upon any of the straight funiculars previously constructed. A bed has boon cut for the most part out Of the solid , rock in the mountain side , from the shore of the Lake of Lucornp o the height of the Uurgonstock 1,830 feet above Its level , and ,800 feet above the Level of the sea. The total length of thn.llno la 038 motors , and it com- tnoncos with a grnndient or J53 per cent , which la increased to 63 nor cent after the first 400 meters , nnd this is main tained for the rest of the journey. A single pair of rails is used throughout , with tno exception of n few yarda at half dbianco to permit two cars to pass. Through the opposition of the Swiss government each car is.at the present imo only allowed the half distance , , nd they -insist upon tHe passengers ihanjjing , in oidoc , a1 * * they say , teA A old collision or accident. I have iiadea number of Journo.is up and down ho mountain in company with an en- inecr , and the experience is sufficient i prove1 that the prohibition is alto- otiior unnecessary. The motive power , leetrlolty , is generated by two dyna- nos , each of twonty-llvp her c'power , .vliich . are erected upon the River Aar t its mouth at IJuochs , thrco miles way. Only olio man is required to nanago the train , and the movement of ' 10 cars is completely under his con- -ol. One dynamo is sufficient to por- prm the work of hauling up and letting 'own the cars containing fifty Or sixty icrsons. At the end of the journey , omplotod in about fifteen minutes'at .n . ordinary walking speed , the car : ioves gently against a spring buffer , nd is locked up by a lever , without loiso and without jolting the pasbon * jers. This interesting undoi taking ias been carrie d out at a costof 23,000. A New Klectrlo Disease. Chicago Journal : Not a little uneasi- ess is said to have been caubed in ccr- .ain manufacturing regions by the out- ) ieak of a peculiar disease in persons vhoso duties necessitate constant work- ng under electric light. The disease , vhioh is known as electric prostration , " ; iy.s siege to the subject's throat , face nd temples. Some very severe cases f it are reported from Cronsot , a town n France , a largo number of men being copt at work in that town in a factory \horo metals are boated by an electric urnaco. The strength of this furnace s OVM100,000 candle power , and , while .ho . heat it ) not in itself sufficient to hurt ho men , the intense brilliancy of the ight brings on the "electric prostra- lon. " The first symptom is said to bo i painful sousition in the throat , fol- owed by irritation and inflammation of .ho eyes. The victim's skin , mcan- vhilo takes on a copper-red color , while ho pain in the eyes is followed by cppi- nar discharges of toard for forty-eight lours . After four or live days the vie- , im'H skin peels off in places and ho is ) tliorwiso made to feel the unpleasant ature of his situation. The general outbreak of such a dis- 3aso as this would involve serious con- lOquences. The number of men whoso nnployment brings them into contact ivith tno electric light is enormous , and H calculated to increase at the same ate as the comparatively new agent upplanta the old moans of illumination ivnd becomes used as a motive power. Some claim that the electric light is destined ultimately to supercede gas is lighting power entirely , and should his bo the case a malady springing di rectly from contact with the now power ivould bo a grave matter. The only remedy so far applied in cases of "electric prostration" has boon the wearing of a shade over the eyes by the erson affected by It. Thia , however , while it relieves the direct strain on iho eyes , does not mitigate the gravity jf the other symptoms. The great minds that gave the oleo- ric light its being are naturally the ones best calculated to provide a means of remedying any unpleasant consequences - quonces that may bo entailed by its use. To a mind like Mr. Edison's the discov ery of a cure for "electric piostration" should bo a simple matter. The malady boars an evident resemblance in homo 'eapocts ' to the disease known as "color blindness , " the victims of which are workmen whoso duties entail n constant scanning of parti-colored lamps at night. The entire subject Is ono that demands the attention of scientists. The oloctrio light is far too valuable an ngent to be retarded in its advance ment by a drawback which a little care- 11 ! study by those most familiar with it hould remedy. Electric Hallways. Electrical World : The discussion which took place ut the American insti tute of electrical engineers on the in pur road by Mr. Frank J. Sprnguo , : nado it evident that oloctrio railway practice is yet far from the point of bo- 111 ? standardized ; and from the state ments made it would also seem that uni- 'onnity of practice , such as exists in other systems of traction , is still far in the future. It is not necessary for us to take up the criticisms that wore made on the electric railway in Richmond mend , as Mr. Snraguo was amply ahlo to take care of himself and defend hlb work. His acknowledgements , how ever , of gome weaknesses , as well as the revelations as to the cause thereof , pointed directly to the fact that in elec tric railroading , as in electric lighting , or any other application of elec tricity ! hasty work ig apt to show itself in the very shortest tune. On the other hand , much of the trouble caused at Richmond , relating to the cars , must be sought for in the great lack of regular attention , nnd as Mr Sprague states , probably no other piece of mai'hinery in the worhl could bo maintained in operation with as little care as an electric motor. Mr. Sprague still adheres to the statement made by him.bOim < time -ago and received with considerable doubt , that he will soon produce a machine which ho will bo able to cloau by Cashing it down with a hobo , and an armature which can bo left to soak in n barrel of water over night. This reiteration makes it evident thai wo shall soon see the machine about which BO much curiosity isnatuiall * . aroused. The- interest manifested throughout the discussion nnd the large attendance which its announcement at tracted , show that the subject is upper most in the minds of many cloctrioa engineers , and will furnish teed for more than ono intcicsttiig meeting. Trlod to Trnile Wives. An Indianapolis special to the Philo , dolphia Presb says : "In a divorce suit filed at Lafayott the plaintiff , Lena Christoller. allege that thrco months after marriage hoi husband went on a spree and made i trade to sell his wife to Jacob Deuierly In return CbrlatolTei * was to rocoi\o Demerly'a wife. The trade was perfectly foctly satisfactory until a few daj afterward , when Uomurly called at the house and ChristotTer attempted to dc liver the 'property. ' "Tho plaint lit refused to be dohv cred , and this so angbrnd tholiusbant that he threatened to kill her if she did not leave the house. In great fear shi left the promises nnd hag since coutin uod to reside with ( in aunt. The do fcndant is quite' wealthy and his wife an intelligent and a ratherprcpos&Cbsihg woman. , NCIDENTS OF THE ALTAR , Mated mid Mlsmatoa Couples , Tholr Joya nnd1 Sorrows. MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE ITEMS. A MlnlstQf nnd Ilia Cinching n Dnfco MnlrtaRO by liot Tried to Trudo Connwblnlllcfl. Olfls Portlin Bonnie Hrlilc * . Philadelphia Record : The Warrou County ( Pa. ) fair inunngors will have , \\o couples married on the grounds. Dno pair has been already faecured. [ 'hoy ' are John A- Luna and Sophia A. Anderson. These presents will be pivon ! o each couple , when spliced , by busi- icss tnOn of Warren : A white satin redding' ' dress * , u solid gold wedding ing and a paitof hand-made nodding ( hoes for the bride ; a sot of silver calves and forks , a rocking chair , a Oilet sot , n photograph album , a flilk hair pillow , a box of toilet soap , u &il- er button hook , and u bottle of shoo dressing , a water sot , a silk high hat ind a pair of white kid gloves for the gioojn , 11 box of uigurs , a sack of Hour , v wash tub , washboard and broom , a chamber set. pair of infants' shoes , a sitting-room lamp , tuo pounds of baiting mwor , a silver napkin ring , a cakq itand and two boxes of French crystal led fruit. Mrs. Cleveland' * Engagement Itlng. Chicago Herald : Mrs. Cleveland's on- Dag mont rinc is not , aa is generally supposed , the noauliful diamond which she wears just above her wedding ring , jut is a largo , old-fashioned seal ring , which now adorns the president's finger. There is quite a little history ittaelied to this ring and the way ft iiuno to bo bestowed upon Mrs. Clovc- and. and.A A few dnys before the departure of Mrs. Folsotn and her daughter for "uiopo , it will bo remembered the iroaldont went to N w York for the mrposo of Booing and bidding them ; oou-by. It was upon this occasion that , ho piesidcnt llrst definitely asked Mri. Cleveland to become Ins wife and fixed the date of their marriage immediately ipon her return to this country. Tak ing from his linger the wal ling which 10 had worn for \cars , and which had jcon originally a gift from Mr. Folsom , , ho president placed it on her finger , in- .onding , almobt immediately thoi oaf tor , to forward her the handsomest diamond which could bo found. This plan Mrs. Cleveland hofbolf ultimately changed , is she decided it would bo lebs lilccly to ittract attention if , during her stay ibtoiul.she wore the old heal ring which mil belonged to her dead father. On llio day of her marriage , as is well cnown , Mis. Cleveland received a mag- tilicotit ring nnd necklace of solitaries rom the president , diamond pins for the hair and breast from Secretary tVlntnoy and Mrs. Whtnoiy , in addi- , ion to numerous other small gifts of a similar natuto from others. But. curi ously enough , the first diamond ring vhlch Mrs. Cleveland over possessed vas a tiny little star of diamonds , which iho wore on the little finger of the right uvnd on the occasion of her rarrriage. L'his ring was the gift of a friend in tfow York , who had known Mrs. Clove- and from early childhood , nnd who , learing her'montion the fact that she ind never owned a diamond , sent the ittlo glittering star from Tiffany's the day before her departure from Washlng- , on when she come on to bo married. This friend was among the number of those who came on in the same train jnd was present at the ceremony. A Muclity Married Man. New York Commercial Advertiser : Pittsburg has a divorce suit that has brought out a queer history. When Lice surrendered at Appomattox there was among his captors one Win field Scott Whitluch , who felt called to help further in subduing the rebellion by marrying a Virginia girl and settling down to farming. In two j ears , however - over , ho grow tired of it , and loft be tween two days for northwestern Now York , not troubling himself to take his family along with him. There ho soon wood and won a girl ju&t out of college , and with her spent three years before sighing for fresh fields and pastures now. But hov time came. Without a farewell ho went to Pittsburg , and six months later married there a third wife , who proved so attractive that ho remained with her for fifteen years , un til 18 2 , when ho disappeared after the old fashion , and since then , save vague rumors that ho has boon seen in Mon tana with yet another wife , the Pitts- burg partner has hoard nothing from him. A year ago it was borne in upon her that ho was dead , and to i nsuro his being to legally , aho brought suit for the annulment of her marriage , with the result of finding out that she was only one of several who had grounds for'divorco from him. A Minister's AK * d Hrlrte. Chicago Herald : A wedding entirely out of tno usual run was that of Rev. John Holston and Mrs. Matilda Pierson ot Marshall , III. The groom is forty-two jcura old , of medium height , rather slender , and weighs about one hundred and fifty pounds , while the bride is nearly six foot tall , weighs fully two hundred and fifty pounds , and is close to eighty years of ago. She has a son who is bovoral voars elder than her now husband. Holston claims to bo a preacher of the Campbollito denomina tion. Ho has lived in Wabash town ship a little over three years and has occupied himself dually with holding revivals. Mrs. Ilolston Is an old resi dent of Wabash township and owns a good farm. Ilolston has been at the Piorson residence much of the time during the last two years , making that his headquarters during his revivals. Ho and Mrs. Piorson started out yesterday ' day morning ostensibly for u'buggy ride , as they had oftori done before , but came to Marshall , procured a license , and were married at once by the county judpo. They drove homo immediately , and no one in the vicinity know any thing about the marriage until It was announced. Catching a Duko. Chicago Tribune : Another duke has been caught , it is said , by another American woman , or vice versa , as the case may bo. The duke in question is the duke of Norlolk , u young widower of 41. The. lady is Miss Virginia McTu- vish , and she has as much and as good American blue blood as her alllanced husband has English. In this direc tion , indeed , honors are easy. The Mo Travishcs htvvo the Seotts of Virginia on the one hand and the Cart-oils o Maryland on the other as sources o their nristociaoy and proofaof pedigree Any woman who can claim Wintield Scott and thp Carrolla of Carrolton ab the main brandies of her family tree i blue-blooded enough for any duke , BO a least Americans will think. It Is also to bo noted that she has money enough . to maintain her sUU < in first-class bhape. She will have $30 , 000 a jear for pin money , which rep re Bents an English capital of around mill ion. Both , by blood and by cash , therefore , she Is amply qualified to look after , the housekeeping of , Arunrto Castlo. Thije6jpther MqTavlshes , aunts .of hew , havp-also hiynacd the peerage and taken ca\tiycs. \ It appears to bo n way tno tyoT/i.vlshcs / hnvo but Miss Virginia , wlip lia typical blonde , car ries of the pnjfnlor / beauty among thorn alland , can buy nnd sell all thrco of hot * aunts. This , \rosh success , whllo it illustrates a. ijo w craze of America u woman for titles , and at least its com pensation , fpr e McTavish has caught iv-rcal clean , l > rjghslmon puro.unsollod Duko. nnd not one of the off-color kind , like the Ham.qifjloy's capture. Mnrrlt'Kcs lij Lot. Paris Register * : Many marriages' take place annually in Naples because of money loft , according to last will nnd testament , by benevolently disposed in dividuals , to endow n certain number of i. irtuous poor girls with a small sum of money as an outfltaml when these girls , sav twenty or thirty , present tliom- selves to the trustees as candidates for that dower , and the will provides only for blx such marriages , all the girls must stop up to the urn nnd draw a lot. Of coin so. out of the twenty or thirty girls who have qualified , only six can bb the lucky ones. Those six are not entitled to the dower until all the legal arrangements for the marriage are gone thiough. There are Always plenty of young workmen , either day laborers Or mechanics , who are ready to accept a girl's hand and 100 or 150 francs dower , for she has had to go through a rigid examination as to her honesty , neat ness , virtue , otc. I very often sOo the announcements in the daily papers of such mairiages , and last Sunday one of these announcements attracted my attention mote than usual on account of the length of time the testator tater had boon dead whoso funds were to annually benefit thcbo virtuous girls. I translate the advertisement literally as follows : "MAUIUAOKS The trustees of the Monte Capalno Chapel of the Church of San Sahadorof Piotia-Santoin ( Naples ) make known to the public that on the second Sunday of September , 1S88 , at 1m. . , lots will bo drawn for three mar riages , each successful person receiving the bum of lli'lf. , left by the will of CVbar Cnpnldo , who died in Kill ) , and loft such sums in favor of thrco young women who will qualify themselves , which qualifica tion must take place on or before the ( ith of September , . The following are the qualifications : 1. They must be do- scendantb of the testator ; 2. They must bo marriageable ( whatever that may mean ) ; tf. Thov must bo honest and poor ; and , 4. They must be over twenty- live years of ago. Now hero \\o have a provision made dillorontly from the usual run , in that the candidates for this lottery must bo the poor descendants of the testator. Just fancy that will made for'such a pur pose by a man who died ton years be fore a Pilgrim placed his foot on Plym outh rock , and that it is faithfully car ried out ! _ _ _ Dr. AVrlKht's Two \Vlvci. Philadelphia Press : There was a remarkable - markablo rolirantid in the life of Dr. O. W. Wight , wfio 'Uicd ' at Harper hospi tal , Philadelphia" Dr. Wight was ono of the most noted sanitarians of this country , an author , minister , lawyer and phjsician. " When quitq\oung he mot Miss Sarah Whitmoro , and after a fahort acquaint ance became engaged to her. Her only relativei , her .mother , died quite sud denly , anu thisJipstcnpd Dr. Wight's narriago. Afteenmurringe ho learned , hat his wife was > nn insane epileptic ot ; ho worst type.'and that her friends md purposely'Kept the fact from him > y refusing to lot him see her when in , hat condition. When the doctor wont , o Indiana ho secured a divorce. Ho ind a guardian appointed for his wife , and when he married his second wife they adopted the first wife as a daughter ind caicd for her. on the death of his second wife the ileptic was placed in charge of sisters charity in a Wisconsin retreat , the doctor paying all the bills up to the day ol his death , and she is still living. The doctor was always very reticent ibout himself , and although he lived in Philadelphia many gears' , and was De- Tail's health ofllcor , this sad chapter in " : iis history never leaked out hero till : io died. Some Curious WoitilliiR Fcos. The Rov. J. B. McGohoo , of Jackson , tfiss. , once married a couple , and two ihickons was his fee. The groom had .led the chickens behind the parlor door before the arrival of the minister , and after the ceremony ho pulled for ward the door and pointed behind it with the remark , "Here's your pay. " Some time ago the Rov. H. R. Folder , of Lander Parish , La. , married a couple and was rewarded with three stalks of sugar cano. In these two instances the marrying business was a "failure" for the minis ter , whether it was with the parties or not. not.It It would bo unfair to expect , when a $5 man marries a $7 girl , that the groom should give $20 to thootllciating minis- tot ; still are people in bettor circum stances us considerate us they should beef of the pay to which a minister is fairly entitled , who takes a long ride on u cold day to accommodate a loving couple ? The 'IMOW ' SHOE' ' Has obtained ft reputation wherever in troduced for "CdllUKCl STYMV'PKK- I'KCT FIT , " OmrroiiT AND DUUAIIII > 1TV. " They hntfcho superiors in Hand Turns , Hand -Wyits , Goodyear Welts , and Machine Sofrod. Ladles , ask for the Lunuwv" SitoW. Try thorn , nnd you will buy no other. StatiB Line. O U ' To Glasgow , Uclftijit , Dublin nndLltcrpool From New York Every Tuesdav , Cabin passage J3.1 and Vf > . according to location ut 8tite room. KxQurqlon * tt > to ( * ) . Steerage to and from Kuropa at Louext Hates , AUSTIN IIALDWIN & CO. . Onn'l Agents. Kl Uroaa-vay , New Varlc. JOHN HLKOKN , CKSn'l WeHtern Agent , 164 IlandolpU St , Chicago. UAKItV K. MQOIIRS , Agent. Omaha. Reduced Cabin Ilatcs to Glasgow Ex hibition. . TAPE WORM REMOVED sgwrtETt M PROF. BYRON FIELD. TOPEKA. KANSAS. ' * * * > + > * > * * * * i Burlington | < Route ' iTh lurllngton takes the lead. ft was in advance of all lines in developing Nebraska * It was in advance of all lines In establishing dining-car ervice between Missouri river points and Chicago. It was in advance of all lines in giving the people of n I-1 ! , Omaha and the West a fast mail service. v * It was in advance of all lines in running its trains from . the East into Omaha proper. fl It was in advance of all lines in reducing the time of Tt passenger trains between Omaha and Chicago. It was in advance , and is the only line by which you can feave Omaha in the morning and arrive in Denver th * evening of the same day. It has been progressive in the past. , it will lead in the future. ' ' V " ' , Travel and ship via the Burlington. Ticket Office , 1223 Farnam Street. Telephone 250. Depot on Tenth Street. Burlington Builinojon Route RoufR i i c a H u Fall Announcement ! OUR PRICES. MATTRESSES , $1.95 AND UP. CHAMBER SUITS , $17.5O AND UP. LOUNGES , $6 AND UP. STOVES , $9.76 AND UP. GASOLINE STOVES , $3.76 AND UP. CARPETS , 25o A YARD AND UP. PABLOB SUITS , $36 AND UP. BUREAUS. $7 AND UP. HANGING LAMPS. $2 AND UP. HALL TREES , $5 AND UP. CHAIRS , 45o AND UP. BREAKFAST TABLES , 8295 AND UP. CENTER TABLES , 61.6O AND UP. EXTENSION TABLES , 660 AND UP. BOOK CASE , $7.5O AND UP. BEDS , $1.95 AND UP. SPRINGS , $1.60 AND UP. PILLOWS , 45o AND UP. * OUR T $1O worth of goods for $1 per week or $4 per month. $25 worth of goods for $1.5O per week or $6 per month. $5O worth of goods for $2 per week or $8 per month. $75 worth of goods for $2.50 per week or $1O r > er month. $10O worth of goods for $3 per week or $12 per month. i Come at once to avoid the rush. No trouble to show goods" Parties desiring to purchase entire outfits will be given special rates. Everybody invited to inspect our goods , terms and prices. Peoples' Mammoth Instalment House THE LEADING CREDIT HOUSE. ' 613-615 N. 16th St. , bet. California and Webster. ' B. BOSENTHAL & CO. , Propr , Open evenings until 9 o'clock , Telephone No. 727. 1 Works of Mitchell & Lewis Company , Limited/ RACINE , WISCONSIN. n , Where the Old Reliable Mitchell Wagon is Made. SEND FOR PRICES HMD CIRCULARS. THE "BUREKH" . Carriage. "EURBKK" Two-wheel Plmetoi. THE EUHEKA CO. , KOCK FALLS. ILL. THE COMMERCIAL Corner Dearborn and- Lake Streets , CHICAGO. Thh IIOUBH has Just been thoroughly refitted1 m a cost of over il.looo , muldug it tar better tlmii any hotel of the naiau prlco In the \ \ eat I'.ltnator. oltx-tilc lights- bath rooms , and ull moiloril Improvements. Rates , $2 and $2.BO Per.Day. IncltdluemeaU. Centrally located ; accoulbl * to alt rttiluay stations , t tie * t era MiU bo ln ' hoiisej. Street car * to all points ut the city. bjwtlul ta' j to l"ofos lou l