Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 27, 1889, Part II, Page 16, Image 17

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    "It
sm . *
* l „ „ ( - - -
16 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY , OCTOBER 27 , 1889-SIXTEEN PAGES.
Rumors began flying thick and fast about four weeks ago in the Chicago money market that certain Michigan Furniture Manufacturers were financialy embar-
* / * * * N * * * " * C * * * * .J * J * "J3 * * * AM < ww * wi ww * * ' v v nv v.
assed , it was an open secret that they had to raise thousands of dollars in a few days or go to the wall , large buyers were immediately wired for , and our eastern
buyer arrived the following morning. "Without going into further details , we wish to state that before sundown we had purchased $40,000 worth of goods for less
than half their Va lue , and the cool cash had been passed over the counters of the Citizens' State Bank. . The consignment made J 3 car loads which has been arriving
all of last week , and every dollars worth will be on sale , begining to-morrow , Monday , Oct. 28th ; for postiy ely'one week only , at such x > rices as would astound any
buyer. Be sure and attend this sale , as you may never have such an opportunity again , No dealers supplied during this great sale. We wish to add that Drices on
every dollars worth ot stock has been made uniform with goods purchased.
48O Chamber Suits . $12. 5Q , worth $25
672 Chamber Suits . $17 , worth $3O
179 Chamber Suits . $2O , worth $35
88 Chamber Suits . $24 , worth $4O
61 Sideboards . $12 , worth $24
98O Bedsteads . $1.45 , worth $4
11O Bureaus . $7 , worth $14
367 Center Tables . 90c , worth $2.5 ®
1750 Chairs . 25c , worth 65c
88O Kitchen Safes . : . $3 , worth $7
21 Dining Tables . $2.75 , worth $5
1025 Rockers . $1.45 , worth $3
18 Bolls Ingram Carpet . 25c , worth 45c
25 Bolls Brussels . 68c , worth $1.25
7 Bolls Stair Carpet . 16c , worth 40c
1OOO Window Shades . 35c , worth 75c
If ?
16
OPEN AT NIGHT. TELEPHONE 727 : B. ROSENTHAL & CO. , PROPRIETORS.
HIE MAKING OF THE CITIZEN
Can't Bo Accomplished by the
Machine Method.
'
ITHE SCHOOL AND THE STATE.
' Children Need Fullnr Instruction in
the Principles of Government ,
in the Kthlcs and Econo
mics oC Social Ill'e.
True CitizmiRhlp.
\VntttnJnr \ The Titt.
' 'xtn a country whore the people govern -
orn , it is too obvious to need argument
Jttrnt al ) the peoulo should Know some-
khing about government , Either there
faro certain principles of government in.
' which wifjo men and practical men are
Agreed , and such principles can bo
' .learned and should bo taught , or gov-
ornmontlsa mailer of chance lo bo
hnanagod at Imp-hazard. Does any ono
fboliovo thai affairs of government are
Iho only occupation in which rational
men engage whore study and the ex
perience of others are of no value to
learners i1
Since any male citizen of suitable ago
may become n legislator or an olllco-
lioldor , while every clti/.on has an ap
preciable influence upon Iho political
life of his neighborhood , it is evident
that every citizen of the United Stales
ought to have some intelligent compre
hension not only of the essential feat
ures of our own government , national ,
state and local or municipal , but also of
the fundomontal principles of political
ethics , political economy and political
Bclonuo.
Wo got our supply of citizens from
two sources immigration , and the
growing up of American children. Wo
nro keenly alive to the dangers thai
threaten our government when igno
rant and immoral foreigners nro made
citizens by hundreds and thousands.
Our United States laws are explicit in
requiring evidence of fitness for citi
zenship , before naturalization papers
nro granted.l'It shall be made to ap
pear to the satisfaction ot the court ad
mitting such alien ( a ) That ho has re-
bided in the United Slates at least five
years , * * * ( c ) and that during
that time ho has behaved as a man of
good , moral charotord ( ) attached to the
urinciplcs of the conslitutlon of the
United States ( o ) and well disposed to
the peace and good order of the same. "
This is the law. How safe wo should bo
from the pernicious effect of much igno
rance and vicious anarchism which now
trouble us. if committees of good
citizens had attended at our courts
of naturalization and had forced home
upon the consciousness of all olllccrs of
the law who have power to grant nat
uralization papers the will of the people
plo that tills wise law bo obeyed 1 But
in practice thcuo provisions oi the law
nro a dead letter , us any ono knows who
has bat for a few hours in any ono of our
largo cities and has seen the purely
mechanical method of making Ameri
can citizens out of foreigners , ignorant ,
reckless , too often manifestly unmoral
and besotted. The process is "mechani
cal" because it is usually conducted in
the interest of one or the other of the
party machines. " By Its agents the
luaclilno brings these undeserving can
didates to court and pays tuulr way
through , that it may "vote thorn" after
ward. The shame , and the danger to
our government , are manifest.
But the grpat majority of our citizens
come to us not from the immigrant
steamships but from the public .schools !
What are our schools doing , to rrovido
the United Stacos with citizens intelli
gent enough upon matters political , and
patriotic enough , to secure the perma
nent success of our form of government
" the for Ihe ' '
"by people , people11' !
'rho obligation of the- state to main
tain the school , wo hear often enough
emphasized. Is Iho obligation of the
school to support the state by using all
right moans to train good citi/.cus as
frankly recognized and as fairly mot'i
In our school system , is there a largo
enough place made for those studies
which promote intelligent patriotism ,
voluntary obedience to law , and public-
spirited interest in public affairs ?
In Germany , it became a fun.dninontal
maxim of slalo policy a century ago ,
"What you would have como out in the
life of Iho nation , youmust put into the
schools and the universities. " The
wonderful vigor of the national lifo of
Germany in these last decades , is dP
redly traceable to her observance of
this law of self-preservation applied by
the stale to Germany's eaucalional sys
tem , in which patriotism is steadily and
systematically inculcated , and the fit
ting of young men for the proper dis
charge of public duties has an import
ant part.
In America wo have boon slow to
make room , in the curriculum of our
schools and colleges , for the studies
that emphasize the demands which pop
ular self-government makes upon the
citizen , as well us Iho blessings il con
fers.
fers.Of
Of our form of government , as of
everything else that is precious in , life ,
it is true thai "if wo would preserve it ,
wo must love It. " And intelligent study
of the underlying principles of govern
ment will stimulate a just pride in our
own form of government , and will fur
nish a rational basis and a sure support
for that loyal spirit of true patriotism
which is the strength of a nation.
Iloro wo see the value of that great
tide of consciousness of national lifo
which swopl across Iho continent with
the recent celebration of the centen
nial of our conslitutlon. As wo recall
the struggle for independence , wo are
grateful to the heroic founders of our
national government. Wo love our
country moro intelligently and
more truly , as our thought
is fixed upon the cost and
the value of our national lifo ; and it
augurs well for our country that the
imperative demand arises from the
young in BO many of our inslilutions of
foaming : "Give us fuller instruction
in the duties that fit men for citizen
ship in the principles of government ;
in the ethics , the motive powers and
the economics of social lifo in the
duties of American citizenship. "
All colleges which deserve the name
now furnish full instruction in such
themes. But important as is the Inllu-
once of liborally-oducntnd men upon
Iho lifo of America , it is but a small
percentage of our voters who in their
school studios reach the college course ,
or oven the high school. It is most
important that all future citizens , girls
and hoys alike , in all our schools ,
should have elementary instruction in
the principles of good citizenship. It
Is the mothers of our boys , and the
early school-life of our boys that large
ly determine the life-bias toward good
citizenship or bad * citizenship , for the
great mass of our voters ,
An inlolligont , public-spirited moth
er is almost by necessity the mother of
patriotic sons and daughters. Given
good mothers , In this respectand good
eons follow. To the ambitious mother
f Jf ff Folding JSeds $24- * rorth
I $ Folding Htcd * $ $ . . * > . „ . : < . . . ; wet tit $5
25 Foltling JBedn $ dk ? worth $75.00
$ ® tb JKooheaiti'8 $ ' 5 worth & 1O.0O
J 0 Ktiokrasea $7.50 worth , \
lYardi'obps $ f . 75 , wort1 * $
" ' ' " ' " ' " ' " " " '
' 25 Zonnges $5 . . . . . . . . . . , $ J0.V0
fcoitiiyei * $7..5fP " . . . .worth $ lfa > .00
< * $ . ? Jjoiiuf/es $ &O wvrth $
$ Jttrlor Siiitn § 24.50 : . .it orth $
JPurlor Suits $32.50 worth $5
25 Is irfor Suits $ 5 worth $05.
500 JPtlloirn 35c worf'hJ'
95O Conifot'tft 7o ' . worth $
3tf & Jflititkets $ ' . ' worth
I M0 SwiiiiM & 2.-44P -worth f.
i
who askud the witty English uivino
lhow slits could make sura that hoi-
boy sliould ono day boconio a bishop.1
lie repllod , "First , crut him bora rifjht. "
This yoes to the root of Uio mutter ,
And the nott Htcu , that wo may
liavo us ninny boys as possible
curly trained in" the priiiuipics and the
spirit of fj"fJ citizenship , is to sue that
mothers , bibtcrs and teaohors of young
children arc intelligently awake to the
responsibility of residence among a
self-governing people. Tlin girls and
the women of our country should all bo
( as wo believe many of thorn are ) intel
ligent patriots , with clear knowledge
and sound convictions upon matters of
public interest , in the state.
The state society organized with
reference to rights and corresponding
duties , obligations and corresponding
privileges is founded upon relations of
justice. Every man is born into the
state , and no man can by any uossibility
get out of the slate , for' he must always
bo in relations of right and wrong with
other men. The state is founded on"
morality. In the moral convictions , in
the ' 'conscience" of its individual citi-
/cns , lies the strength or the weakness
of every government. The moral
training of its young citizens is thus
seen to bo vital to the slato. In the
earliest bchool training , principles of
social morality , of regard for the rights
of others , of public-spirited interest in
the welfare of others will mark the
school that is training good citi/.ens.
In his school-life , the conditions are
so essentially dillorcntfrom those of his
homo life that the boy virtually begins
his social lifo whoa ho enters school.
At homo , in the family , lovo.solf-donial ,
was the law. In , the school , as in the
state , considerations of justice , of equi
ty , of impartiality , must have the lirst
place. "What relations with others ,
my equals , arc possible for moV'Ss the
question thebchool-ooy | is practically an
swering , day by day , whether or not ho
puts it into words. The way in which
ho carries himself among his school
mates , the standard of honor and of be
havior which ho accepts and helps to
form , will go with him through lifn.
The school , by its tone and spirit as
well ( IB by its studies , determines in no
slight degree the nature of those rola- .
lions with his follows rfclations just
and harmonious , or saltish and discord
ant which are to make or mar his lifo
as a man and citi'/en.
Teachers , with whom rests the re
sponsibility of fixing these standards in
school lifo , will nol Irain their pupils
Intelligently for the duties and respon
sibilities of citizenship unless they have
themselves given limo and altontlon
and loving thought to the principles of
sound government , and to the
demands which popular govern
ment if it succeeds must
constantly make upon the citizen.
' The study of the history of our coun
try , with emphasis upon shining ex
amples of patriotism and disinterested
goodness ; patriolio songs in the school
room ; patriotic selections for reading
and declamation' , those help toforin the
true spirit and tone in the school , But
more than this is needed.
There should bo in all our schools
( apd in a ' 'grade" not so far advanced
that most cliildron leave school before
they roach it , ) simple , clear , convincing
teaching of the elementary principles
of government , of the purpose and de
sign of law and government , of the ul
timate foundation of all government
upon justice , equity , righteousness ,
upon the moral law , and of the supreme
authority of that law ever majorities as
well as minorities , however ' /roo" the
form of government may bo. Every
younp citizen should early ba taught
that a majority has a right to do what
it plcuses , only when it pleases to do
jigm s
\\liat is right ! Even in his early school
da > s , every future citi/.en oliould learn
to fool the solemn responsibility which
rests on every citi'/.on of a free slate to
govern himself , thoughtfully , volun
tarily mid strictly.
If with Mich u course in the olhics of
citizenship a teacher combines studyby
the pupils , of th'j oilices , the forms and
the proceedings of our own govern
ment , local , slate and national ( begin
ning wii.h the local ) , an interest is al
most invariably awakened which the
toaehcr will Jieed to direct and keep
within bounds rather than lo slimuiate.
Later in the course , more detailed
study of theories and forms of govern
ment will find their place , with history.
The elements of political economy will
comextill later. Higher institulionsof
learning must give constantly increas
ing altention to studies which prepare
the way , by greater intelligence on
those subjects alike among voters and
legislators , for more discriminating and
scientific treatment , by our stale and
national legislatures , of the delicately
adjusted yet all-powerful forces with
which our present system ( V ) of taxation
deals.
Hut whatever may bo done or loft un
done by our colleges , lot Americans sots
lo il that in the great system of public
schools which is so closely connected
with our national life , there bo early in
troduced , steadily pursued and strongly
emphasized , biiuh studies as lend di
rectly to make moral , intelligent , loyal
citizens , who understand and love not
only their rights , but also their duties
as citizens of the United States. Our
highest interest depend upon Ibis. So
only can government by the people bo
carried on with hafoty to the people ,
and it is an unquestionable maxim of
government , as deserving of attention
in directing the peaceful policy of
national education as at moments of
crises and manifosldangor to the stale ,
"Salus populi lox suproma , " ' 'Tho wel
fare of Hie people is Uio highest law. "
When 1 Wiia iwaiity-tlireo.
, SiiiVCIIIC.'KI'O ( i'a\\ \ \ ,
Ah , mo I wliut cluuiiies limo has wrought ,
I'm ' forty years to-day ,
And looKing back o'er trials fought
They Boom an tfo away , .
Anil though ttioworlil is just as fair ,
It doa > not Hconi to me
That I enjoy It u.4 fred from euro
As I did at twonty-threo.
U'hono'or I uioiaa boyhood fi'lcad
'Tis true wo tilk.aiul luugli ,
Somutimea u joUyvavcnlng Hpouit
In olil-tiimi sonpiAml chuff ,
Hut It Bomohowluoks itmt lioirty zest
And merry , soulful lee ,
\Vtiun lifo acoaiecli but u round of Jest
And I was twdnty-throc.
I BOO my Iricmls 'of ' youthful days
Grow wnnUlod.old and iray ,
Whoso fulteniifcrsUp too miroly says
That youth has ( pissed uway.
'Tis then I rualizoithut tiiuo
I Ins dealt tlia-uunio with mo ,
And faster aownililll now I climb
Than up at twunty-tliree.
My droatns are of tJceiies of long ago ,
When lifo wasiull uoforo ,
nrlght as a plain ot untarnished snow ,
With wondrous things in store ,
Ana so I dream of the uast and gene ,
Not of what il Is to bo ,
Llko the castles I built , which lay beyond ,
When 1 was twont.v-thrco.
There is ono face , though , that will fair re
main ,
That to mo can ne'er KI-OW old ,
As 1 list once more to that sweet refrain
That came from a heart of gold ,
And though others may eo my wrinkles
deep ,
I know that she sees in me
The lever sun gave her heart to keep
When J was twenty-three.
October , 16SO.
, To allay pains , subdue inflammation ,
heal foul bores and ulcers the most
prompt and satisfactory results are ob
tained by using that old reliable rem
edy * Dr. J. H. McLean's Volcanic Oil
Liniment.
THE NOIWIWIND.DOTH BLOW
Does It Presage a Long Cold or
Mild Winter ?
NATURAL PROGNOSTICATIONS.
What It ltc < ] iilrc < 4 in the Way of
Money to Shelter Alortnlt 1'Vom
the JCIcors of the \Vlntiy
in Uniahii.
The Needs \Vintor. .
As winlor ( .approaches , Iho question
arises as to whether or not it will bo a
long and severe ono. As a mailer of
facl , any kind of winter is severe
enough for the poorer classes , but , in
some cases , the amount of suffering is
materially lessoned by the mildness of
Ihe weather. '
L-ist winter was an exceptionally
mild one , and , for the greater part of
the time , Ihe days were warm and
pleasant. Hence the prevailing onin-
ion that the coming season will bo a
very cold one. Farmers assort thai the
shucks on Ihe corn are thicker than
usual , which is regarded as an
infallible sign of a severe season.
Along Iho river banks Iho * muskrats -
rats have built llioir homes much
larger lhan usual , which fact
is considered as a never-failing
sign thai Ihe intelligent little animals
are fortifying themselves against a long
biogc by cold weather. The lain tors
who chase game ever Iho hills in Ihis
vicinity claim thai Iho few squirrels
which are lo bo seen in tills locality are
working very hard lo store up provi
sions for the coming season , while some
stockmen claim that even the cattle nro
putting on an extra coat of hair for the
purpose of protecting themselves against
the chilling blasts.
But all these signs or indication * are
of the old-fashioned klndnnd , while re
garded as beyond ( incHlion by the oldest
inhabitant , do not agree with Iho signal-
service department , which maintains ,
as a rule , that Iwo extremes in weather
do not necessarily follow ono another ,
and that ihin win tor is as likely to be a
mild ono as last , while there is yet n
strong probability of its being a cold
one.
one.The sign of the corn liusU and mubk-
rathoubo does nol count wilh Iho sig
nal service officer who miles on his
record of rainfall , temperatureand the
state of the barometer. When all
those have failed , ho gets out of his
dilemma by assorting tnal it is next to
linpobsiblo to predict weather four or
Jive days ahead.
But , applying the rule of chnnco ,
which has governed weather matters
for so long a time. Iho probabilities are
greatly in favor of a cold winter. And
Iho Ihoughts of the chilling blasts
swooping down from the north lends
ono to shiver and think of how they
shall bo mot ,
As compared with last winter , the
expense attendant upon the securing
of bodily comfort will doubles * bo
much heavier-this feason. This pre
sumption is based , of course , upon
the supposition that the mercury
will bo lower than during the
winter of 1888-81) ) , Not that
there is any noticeable advance in the
cost of the necessaries of lifo , for in this
respect matters nro nearly equal ; but ,
181 Plusli Hookers $8.75 , worth $16
90 Plush Rockers $12 , worth $22.50
4LOO Plxish Parlor Chairs. . . $3.75 , worth $7.50
9 Hall Backs $6.5O , worth $15
12 Hall Backs $1O , worth $2O
7 Ladies' Writing Besks $10 , worth $2O U
1O5 Pictures $2 , worth $5
4OO Heating Stoves $5 , worth $10
35O Heating Stoves $9 , worth $16
226 Heating Stoves $12.50 , worth $22,5O
1OO Heating Stoves $15 , worth $3O
461 Cook Stoves $9.50 , worth $16
169 Cook Stoves $12.5O , worth $22.5O
4OQO Joints Stove Pipe lOc , worth 20c
2OOO Elbows 6c , worth 25c
5OO Stove Boards 75c , worth $1.5O
simply , for the reason that the quantity
consumed will be much greater.
House rent is lower tliun it was last
year- Collages , which formerly brought
$20 per month , now rent for $17 and
other dwellings are in priportion.
The completion of the suburban lines
of street raijway wrought a decided
change in this direction , as the labor
ing classes began an exodus to the out
skirts of town where cheaper rents
could bo obtained. This prompted
property owners in tlip center of town
to lower their rents in order to hold
tenants. Hut houses alone are not a
sulliuicnt protection. One must have a
fire , and , as wood is altogether lee ex
pensive in this locality , the price of
coal must bo considered.
At present , hard coal is worth $0 and
810 per ton , while the best grades of
soft coal may bo purchased for $0 and $7
with cheaper grandes at prices ranging
all the way from $ .50 upwards.
The supply 01 : hand at present is
equally as large as at any previous seas
on and unless something extraordinary
should happen , there will probably bo
no scarcity. A severe and cold season
would doubtless , however , raise the
price.
Clothing is quite cheap although there
is no noticeable falling oft" in the best
grades. A very good comfortable suit
can bo purchased at any loading cloth
ing house for from $12 to $18 , while ono
can purchase cheaper grades at prices
as low as $8. An overcoat of good
serviceable quality can bo boughtforl-
or $ lfi with or withouta fur collar. Un
derwear is very cheap , suits ranging
from 75 cents per suit anU Howards.
In the line of bedding and clothes
prices are away down at prcsoul. Com
mon prints can bo bought at 3j cents per
yard while a fair quality of cotton llan-
nel is advertised at the same figure.
Twenty yards of bleached muslin can
bo bought fora fcinglo dollar. Oilier
household nocogsilics of like character
tire in proportion. Shoes are cheap
and a pair good enough for anyone can
bo bought for Klt.fiU , while thu cliildron
can bo supplied for $1.50 and upwards ,
with foot covering for the infant toddlers
dlers al a much lower rale ,
Provisions just now are very cheap.
Potatoes sell al iitfriJi ) cents per bushel ,
while good ilrsl-class flour can bo bought
for $3.i ( ! ! } per 100 pounds. Other eat
ables are in proporllon. Fresh and
salted meats are very low.
To these who can afford to do HO , it
may nol bo out of place to say thai , as
regards coal and provisions , now is Uio
limo to lay in thu winter stock. Should
the weather change and the winlor become -
como very cold these figures are liable
to rnpldly advance and the cost of living
bo greatly increased.
WHITE AND SILENT NUNS ,
A. ItnllKloiiM KiNtorliood Whloh Is Vol
untarily BpccolilusH.
As noon strikes from the clock-tower
of the little Notre Dame do Refuge al
Anglot , a band-bound village near J3a-
yonno , every day , there Jlles forth from
the porch a notable procession. It is
readily perceived that it is componod of
women ; but whatever may bo beautiful
or graceful in this , womankind is care
fully hidden.
Each figure is olotl od in coarse white-
flannel skirt willi a capo , carrying < il
the back a largo black croos. Head and
face nro completely enveloped in a
hood of the same rough mntorial that
composes the dross. The hood pokes
out In fronl funnel-like , ho that , unless
one moots the wearer directly in front ,
there is no opportunity of looking on
her face , nor may she regard the face
of her Kind ,
Chanting in low , monotonous notes ,
thu melancholy proccfabion , looking
neither lo right hand nor to the left ,
with , heads bowed and hands crossed ,
shuflle nlom. in llioir .sabots , lill they
reach the door of Iho refectory. When
the last lias passed in , the door doses
upon them , shutting out even the tem
porary darkened glance of the living
world ihey have jusl enjoyed.
These are the nuns known as Iho
Bornardinos , a religious sisterhood
founded nearly sixty years ago by TAbba
Ccstac , writes [ loii.-y W. Lucy in the
English Illustrated Magazine. The
peculiarity of their vow is , thai they
voluntarily resign the privilege of
speech. Excapt when they join in a.
chant or murmur llioir prayers , Ihcy
never open their lips to speak , and :
through the long year they hold noi
converse wilh human being. At thirl
boL'inning , the founder of this strnngut
order proposed lo the nuiiHitliat at least
once a woolc they should accept relief *
from their vow and celebrate Sunday by.
indulging in conversation. Uuu-
enamored of their now luxury , they
declined the suggested amelioration ofr
their lot , and remained silent allJ
through the year.
The foundations of the buildings con- ,
ncctod wilh Uio order wore literally built ;
upon the sand. Between the village oJ'
Anglot and the sea there lie plains of1
sand , with hero and there a pine trot *
braving the blasts from the Bay o
Biscay. *
Half a century ago there dwelt hero ,
housed in a straw hut , an old man who
earned a pitiful living by growing a few
vegetables. There was no one to dis
pute his torrilory , and little by little ho
scraped logolher a few porches oH
garden ground. L'Abbo C'ostau
found him hero ono day dying inx
the solitude of his hut. IIo removed
him to a place of shelter , and , in order
to satisfy the yearnings of Iho dying
man , ho undertook to look after his car
rots and turnips. L'Abbo had already
started a refuge for fallen women and ?
it occurred to him to engage them uiiou
Iho old man's ' pinched garden ground.
Accordingly , half dozen of Uio women ,
wore dispatched to the sand dunes , and
there , in solitude , with the boa an ono
hand and the diblant village on Iho
oilier , they began Iho work which
to-day has reclaimed many acres of
valuable land. Whore the monotonous
Hand heaps stood thera now lies out *
strolchcd a smiling garden.
Ilclr lo u Jihlloii.
Cyrus P. Berry , an employe in the
water power machine shopH , for *
murly a clerk in the Portlan.l custom
houfio , says a Biddoford , Mo. , dispatch
to the Now York Times , received in
formation to-day of the death of an
uncle in California , by which ho will
como into possession of * 1 ,0)0JOO. ( ) ( The
deceased undo was Silas Kmcrbon , of
Mountain View. Cal. , who wont to that
state from Harrison , Mo. , at the time of
the gold discovery. IIo leaves prop
erty ustlmalod to bo worth 910,000,001) ) ,
Tliny OfTitr u Variety.
tHoch ester IIo raid ! They have come ,
the happy , careless. wiggling
prophets. Wo knew they would bo
hero with their cracked goosubonos ,
their muskrat nets , wet buiiiinor , jump
ing chipmunks and sun spotu. They
predict a long , cold winter , an open
winter , a wet winlor , a snowy winter , n
dismal winter. What comfortable ,
bolf-containod follows these weather
prophets are. If you want to llnd them
inriulro for "I Told You So. "
An AI > Hiiliiio Cure.
Is onlv pul up In largo two nur.oo tin boxoi ,
ana Is un absolute euro for old sore * , burnt ) ,
wounds , chapped hands , and all nkin nrup.
tlous. Will nositively euro all kinds of nilus.
Ask fortho OKIOINAL AUlEfI N15 OINT
MENT. Sold by Ooodmau Uruif ce.-muuy ut
25 conti ) > or box by uall U'J couts.