THE OftlAEA DAILY BEE , 8TODAY ? ± AUGUST 31 , 1890-TWENTr PAGES. ' WHEN TOU BUY OF THE MANUFACTURER MEN'S SUITS. Handsome YOU SAVE THE MIDDLEMEN'S PROFIT , BUT THAT IS NOT THE ONLY ADVANTAGE IN BUYING . OF US. WE NOT ONLY MANUFACTURE OUR OWN CLOTHING , BUT WE MANUFACTURE | J TO SELL AT RETAIL IN OUR STORES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES. THIS PLACES US IN Well tailored All Wool Suits , in latest Fall styles and Souvenir THE POSITION OF YOUR MERCHANT TAILOR IN REGARD TO TRIMMINGS. WORKMANSHIP fabrics . AND WEAR ; FOR WE CANNOT THROW THE RESPONSIBILITY FOR INFERIORITY UPON ANYONE made for , this market. In fit and finish equal to mer FOR THE LADIES. , . . ONE ELSE , AND TRUST TO OFFERING YOU ANOTHER MAKER'S GOODS THE NEXT TIME chant tailor's work , at but a fraction of their prices , Business Dcaultful Souvenirs for the jjontlomcn. - * YOU WANT A SUIT. and Dress AttrnctlTO Souvenirs for the children. WE GUA.HANTIS.IS OUR. GARMENTS , AND LEAVE THG Suits made at our factory at factory prices. See Given to each visitor at our formal * QUESTION OFOUR CLAIM TO IxOWliST PlilGlUS IN OMAHA. TO YOUR prices and garments in our windows. opening Wednesday , September 3d. r f OWN GOOD JUDGMENT. * FALL OVERCOATS. \ f * ' * 4 All the new Fall patterns and cuts just in. Stylish , proper , durable , and at prices to suit every purse , Trotisers from $2L tip Browning ; King & Co ! All worth twice the money we ask , We maufacture them to sell as leaders. OUR SPECIAL PRIDE IS THE MAGNIFICENT CHILDREN'S Department. where we have more goods , more room , and more variety in children's wear than any other house west of New "York. The entire second floor ( reached by ' * , . " new safety elevator ) is devoted to this department. Handsome reception room and ladies' toilet room attached. Ladies are requested to utilize these accom modations wlien down town. They are always welcome. SPECIAL SALE ON SCHOOL SUITS THIS WEEK. Gents' Furnishings. Browning ; King & Co. An entirely new line of every article of Gents' ' Furnishings , Underwear , Collars , Cuffs , Shirts , Gloves , Socks , Ties , Silk Handkerchiefs , etc. We take great pride in this depart ment , and greater pride in the low prices at which we sell the articles. THE WEEK OF THE FAIR ISTHETIME WE HAVE SELECTED TO ADVERTISE OUR NEW STORE TO THE PEOPLE OF OMAHA AND VICINITY. NO ADVERTISEMENT IS SO GOOD AND NO IMPRESSION IS SO LAST ING AS THAT MADE THROUGH THE MEDIUM OF mXTRA.OR.DIN.AR.'Y Formal Opening ! Our Hat Department VAlxUBS. THESE WE GIVE THIS WEEK IN EVERY DEPARTMENT. THE LOW PRICES ARE TOO NUMEROUS TO QUOTE , FOR THEY EXTEND TO EVERY GARMENT AND ARTICLE ON OUR THREE DOUBLE FLOORS. WEDNESDAY , SEPT. 3. FORMAL OPENING ON WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMBER 3 , DAY AND EVENING , A HANDSOME Deserves a visit before you buy your Fall Hat. The Fall SOUVENIR TO EVERY PERSON VISITING US THAT DAY. STORE OPEN EVERY EVENING. Day and Evening , and winter styles are just in. Soft and Stiff Hats at prices Everyone Invited , that are new to the Omaha trade. We allow no one to undersell BROWNING KING & CO. , . , sell us. S. W. Cor , 15th and Douglas. " " IN THE BALMY SOUTH , /A. Glympse of the Belles Boyoud the Mason and Dixon Line. BRILLIANT AND STATELY WOMEN , Fair Dnmsols to "Whom the Mnscullno Heart Is Wax Men With Do- llrluin Trcmoiis mid Saluta "With Slow Fever. : , Wnirn Sni.mun Srnixos , W. V" . , August 23. [ Special to TUB BKEj-"But I don't ' think our mon would llko It I" Two jOft brown eyes nro looking up Into yours , lid these words are coming out from two rosy lips. It's tbo hello of the White Sul phur Springs giving you her opinion as to what "our men liko. " From her youth up her brother has bcou trained to wait on bcr ; also from her youth up she has been trained to glvo you the pretty Httlo thank you , the affectionate llttlo nod , the caressing word that Is so delightful to the heart of mnn , and which makes all the difference between the woman nnd the shirt-front. HOW TUB SODTIIUP.N DELLn LOOKS. It Is the shirt-front that she thinks "our men" wouldn't llko much. The shirt-front in all Its glory and grandeur stiff nnd im maculate. And to bo n llttlo bit subtle , she is deploring in it the Influence of the whlto linen. She stands up , nnd with her hands behind her , llko the picture of Dorothy Teu- nunt , says , "How would I look In a shirt and jnckutl" Well , it's a funny thing , but you don't conjure up n picture of bow she would look In a shirt and coat , but you sco In stead how she does look in a white mull frock , n broad sash about her waist , n bodice that Is V shaped at tbo throat both back nnd front , nnd gives you a tantalizing glimpse of a white throat , n head crowned with soft brown hair , and n half French , bale Ameri can fdco glowing at you. TUB WATS OP 1'AIIt SOCTHnnXEHS. She has a happy tlmo of it this bcllo of the Whlto Sulphur springs for llfo here Is a scales of dances , mint Juleps , nnd admiration. She can dance until bcr satin slipper Is worn threadbare and doesn't tiro. She docs not " * > ij | | 1r so many juleps , but she manages to Im bibe them as a bird might , her pretty face showing above tbo bunch of green llko the llowor that It Is. Sbo is ndorod by young and old , and the secret of her popularity lies in this fact , that sho'll glvo up a dance with the man whoso heart Is all her owu to hobble through ono with old Tom Gordon , who will persist in dancing , though ho has a wooden log , but who fought alongside of papa and vonco saved him from being killed during the vrar. She has a femlnlno Interest In frills and frivols , but , llko her English cousin , rather inclines to cotton frocks and to wear tier lost gown on ono occasion and the ono that was new lost summer on nnothor , whllo the "real old ono" frequently describes the limits of her wardrobe. Of course there nro women hero who dress superbly , much moro magnifi cently than nt many of tlio northern watering places , but they nro the wives cither of to bacco kings or railroad capitalists. Tbo toft southern speech and the pretty southern gal lantry Is infectious , am ) hard-hearted , cioss- gralnod old brokers find themselves saying pollto nothings nnd making awkward but vrcU-rnonut bows to whoever may have at tracted their admiration. The northern man is ns wax in tbo hands of the southern woman tind if she had fought the war sho'd have won .it , for she never would havoglvmi up whllo there had been a mnn to compliment. She jdoesn't tight bcr lee with the tlcrco weapons /of sarcasm and wit , but with the pIUuil ro- nuest to bo told nil about something , because "you kuow so much" nnd the coquettish in- fiulry , "Now stop thinking about all the Croat problems that are In your mind and toll mo how you think f lookl1' ' Undoubtedly In Jbo south the f cmlnlno clement it the stronger , and in the hands of its women llcth salva- tion. IICU U3IXn3 ENTElirjlISE. In the first place , they are not ashamed to Oo honest , womnnly work , and in the next place , the neighbor who doci not have to , vorlc recognizes the gautUlty ( that's a good ild-fashloned word I ) of the worker , and the girl who saves the money to got her mull gown by selling tbo early strawberries or raising a bed of violets and sending them to northern florists to bo coined Into gold. Is not less raspcctcd because of It , but la applauded by having people say , "What a clover girl Jlra Gordon's Nannlo Is. " You can't but ad- mlro this regard for the worker , and you can not but think that to work fnr womanly bo- ionglngs nnd in a womanly way is tbo best method of encouraging men to work , surronnso WOUTIILESS > tnx. The best way to make a lazy man n busy ono is to force him to roallzo that the women of tbo family have no Idea whatever of earn ing his trousers for him ; but whllo things look dark are willing to do the best for them selves and the children. If ho Is a strong , capable man bo can got his own broad and liU own belongings. Cut unfortunately tbo southern women who have mnilo money have lavished it too many times on worthless , lazy mon. A woman said to rae the other day , "Did yoxt ever know n successful southern women who did not have three or four other people to keopi" I bad to confess I did not , and added as long as there nro old woraon and children it was all right ; but when it came to big , lazy , bandsomo men I wanted to rise up in my recently acquired English flesh and knock down every man who wasn't old enough to put In an aged men's homo , wbo lot a woman take euro of him. Invalids and drunkards would of course bo debarred from this combat , for women have been taking care of drunkards ever since tbo world began , and probably -will contlnuo to do so as long ns the world lasts. I really bellovo tbo average woman would rather nurse a man through an attack of delirium tremens a bad , human man , than take care of n saint throughh an attack of low fovcr. CUICICENSNI ) INFANTS. But to return to what's going on hero. If anything , the Julopsaro slightly sweeter , tbo whisky used in thorn has a moro oily taste I mean this In a complimentary sense , for the whisky that rasps the throat h not conducive to tbo 303-of a julop. It must go down in a slow sort of tobboggan fashion and all the whllo you are smelling the spicy llnvnr of mint and wondering who first discovered it , and who inndo the first combination of whisky , mint , and sugar , inivo It its title , and made it ono of the great seductions of the south. You may go declaring you do not llko thorn ; you may have an English prefer ence for brandy and soda ; you may announce that the campagno cup scorns to touch your heart In n faclnatlng way , but onto your foot is on the natlvo heath of the southern girl you meekly bow down to Juleps , accept the ono that is sent to you after the morning dance , and wonder how you over thought anything else worth drink ing. Next to the Julep comes the consumption , of chicken , and though you think chicken a peed thing in its xvay , and undoubtedly healthful , It does seem surpris ing to see thcso southern women take It meal after meal and prefer it to the jucleat steak , the most underdone roast beef that over was served. Do they bopo to become angels In thlswayl Are the feathers growing out of their shoulders , or do they think some special virtue lies In it that will niuko them young forever ) If ouo wera honestly asked what Is the chief Industry of the south , ono would hon estly have to reply the infant ouo , for no body has lesa than four children , and most people run thirteen and llftoen. At a wed ding given near this place not very Ions ago. the great desire of the bride was to Isoop an old darkey , named Aunt Lizzie Howard.away from bcr , because sbo possessed a inystlo power known as "tho laying on of hands , " and which ensured tbo happy couple a hoiij- sotno and healthy pair of babies before the year was over. A uou > ninovr'i SHOCKING riCTDiiB. Everyl Jy that is , everybody that la In the swim , l having her photograph taken by the amateur , the result being inoro interest ing than artistic. If the artist has any tool ing of tenderness toward hb subject the pic ture will bo a positive failure ; for his "desire to touch her foot , place each hand Just so , to turn her f aca Just as ho thinks It ought to bo which requires nn immense amount of labor the result Is usually ono where there Is a blurred lot of femininity and a lot of ruffles shown. But Just take a Jolly party who are In for a good tlmonnd , saucy Alias Port who between you ami mo , is a Yankee leans against tall Tom Bovcrly , whoso robot father was killed In the lost war , In the position of the Huguenot lovers. Because John Wlllais fell in love with his wifowhen ho painted tbat picture , it goes without saying that be fore a week's over tbo Bovcrleys will bo re garding Miss Pert as a "nlco llttlo thing , " Jack will bo adoring her , nnd the old story will bo worked out with the nhotograph machine. Commonplace , isn't itl Do you think It isl Never whllo the world goes round 1 There is a saucy widow here who thought sho'd show some of. the girls how they looked when they drank a llttlo too much , so sbo posed In a hammock as bning in a drunken slumber with a French novel In her lap nnd a lot of empty bottles on the ground about her feet that photograph is equal to llfty torn- pornnco lectured , and It ought to bo bought up by tbo Women's Christian Temperance union ( and the rest of the alphabet ) and ills- scmlnntod as a warning to tbo young women of the Innd. A woman who is n noted house keeper didn't propose to bo left out of the photographic craze , so while the amateurs were nt work she sent out , berne by the blackest of Hobcs , a tray covered with glasses of foamy cgg-nogg : this was too good to ba lost , so ono of the girls was quickly popped Into tbo hammock , and behind IHT stood the dusky servitor with her snowy beverages. It U un necessary to say that this came out beauti fully , and the effect of it was such that the work stopped , and the people had time to look at each other from some other than the standpoint of the camera. ITor pure outrag eous lovo-nukinir I would commend the general - oral youth to photographic apparatus ; bis opportunities are many , mid ho ha ? Httlo wit if ho deus not know how to make the best of thorn. thorn.WOMAN' WOMAN' THE CIMWS OP CREATION1. But here everything returns to woman- she is supremo. And I will tell you why men llko southern women. Because they are affectionate ; they novcr lose an opportunity to give a kiss , say a pleasant word , or to do n kindly dcod for the man who rules their hearts. Because they do not gossip very much , homo , children nnd husbands usually forming a world big enough for thotn. Because , whllo they nro Intelligent woraon , they don'tquito llko some of tuo latter-day hooks , they don't understand the mystery of Dorian Gray , nnd they adore a love story. It's love , love , love , that makes the south ern girl go round every girl expects to pot n husband and to love him , nnd she's seldom disappointed. Like Lady Amanda , she orlcs "gracious heavens I" nnd throws horaclf Into the arms of Lord .Mortimer , nnd way down fcouthin Dixie Lord Mortimer Is always ready to receive hor. And ho ought to bo , oughtn't hoi BAU Dr. Dlrnoy cures catarrh , Boo Wdf * . , Vcrj- Close to It. I asked an old colored man who was rolling cotton In a warehouse In JIacon , eayau mi tor in the Now York Sun , whether iimny of his race didn'tsycculnto moro or loss in the staple , and 1m promptly replied : "Jloaps of "cm , sail. " "Did you over buy any futures your- BOlfV "N not V.nollysali , but I cum mighty clus to Itonco. " "AVlmt stopped you ? " "Do purlooco , sah. " "Hut why ? " uKuso I "was gwlno out of do yard nt night wld 200 pounds of cotton on my buck. " Aniioiiucoiiirnt. C. B. Moore & Co. have been appointed wholesale agents for tbo celebrated waters of Uxcclslor Springs , Missouri. - IT MS A FULL TACHION , Experiences Daring a Two Weeks' Outing in Central Now York. EXCITING SPORTS AND PASTIMES , Undo Si Goes to Church , Kills a role- cat , ia Almost Caught for a Sticker and Enjoys Him self Generally. The boys nil know rno when I came back and took my seat at the old desk. Evidently I haven't changed much , in appearance since I started on ray summer vacation. And wha a vacation It was. Away less than two weeks still so much was crowded into that short space of time that it seemed as though months had dapped slnco work was deserted for pleasure. I have been to Now York not to the crowded city , but to the country in the cen tral part of the state. Away from the rail roads , surrounded hy lakes and woods and glens , It was Just tbo place for rest. And I rested , although retiring1 to sleep every night thoroughly fatigued. But It was a fatlguo which did a man good and made his rest the sweeter tind bis snovo the stronger. I " " with the "douiinlo" of "put up" n coun try church nnd so was received Into the 'highest social circles" of the llttlo village. I say llttlo village because whllo it has 3,700 inhabitants , 1,700 of them nro underground. The cemeteries nro crowded nud now 01103 nro being laid out , whllo the town Itself has the appearance of being la the sear-nnd-yollow-leaf stage of life.Vhlto heads and gray hoards predomi nate , and everybody takes life easily. Youug men nro few and far between , and push and enterprise are thing } of the almost forgotten past.Whilo While tlio town has no railroad , it has the ghost of ono n grade. Seventeen years ago the road was begun , the line .graded , iron bridges built , and then the projectors became discouraged and abniidonea the enterprise. I walked along the roadbed , across the rotted timbers of a b rid go approach , and thought of the dead booms whlcu. were laid awuy so tearfully when the r.Ulroad was abandoned , and the solid Iron of the bridge boomed a monument to their memory. Sunday I wcntto meeting with the preacher In the old "onn ness shay. " Out In the coun try , with no other structures in sight save the horseaeds and the grave stones , stood the ctmrcii. But on the road leading from the four points of the Compass stiiugs of ve hicles were drawing u\i and depositing tuclr human freight on the- front porch of the mooting house. The people stopped and chatted , juld visits to the grave yard sur rounding the church , 'and then tiled In and took their seats boforoftuoipulpit. When I entered tno plain-looking building end was ushcied Into * the front now , I was given a genuine surprise. Spacious , hand somely carpeted , beautifully decorated , over } thing harmonious , heated by steam. With possibly one or two exceptions , there Is not a church In Omaha which can compare witbtbU "mcctln" house" in Now York. And still It is located In the open country , away from all business and residences , unit the congregation comes from a radius of seven miles. Evidently going to church Is moro a "part of business there than In the rushing west , Death seems nearer in a "deml" town and the people are evidently pro pat Ing for the "great change. " Speaking of death reminds rno of life In surance agents. I mot ono while I was away who was a dandy. Ho was fishing and BO was I. AVe wcro on the banks of tbo beauti ful Kouka lake at O-go-ya-go. The flsh didn't blto very hard and tha Insurance jKcnt was disgusted. Ho walked over to mo mid opened conversation. I kept on flihing , Ho said ho bellovod ho had seen mo hoforo , I shook my head. Ho thought 1 was inU- taken. I still nodded negatively. Where did I como from ] The westl Did I carry llfo Insurances ! All thli time 1 kept ou fill ing , but when ho spoke of Insurance I saw the fish leave in shoals. I bnuled In ray lino. Then ray new-found friend began angling for mo In earnest. Ho baited his book with the clangors or railroad travel , but didn't got n bite. Then bo changed tackle , referred to lake disasters , stoainbout explosions , drown- iups , etc. I was still shy. Ho spoke of heart disease , apoplexy and typhoid fever. I nib bled just to show him I was sorry ho was playing In luird luck. 1 will never repent of my rashness. Ho booked mo , There was no more fishing fnr fisii ; ho had a human on his hook and ho played hard to lund him. It was an exciting struggle , lasting all day in spite of my utmost efforts. When the steamer was re.tdy to leave ho was still bent on his nefarious work nnd continued it during the passage toPcnn Ynn. There bo reached for mo with his landing not , but 1 escaped him. His parting words wore : "I can take you to my oftlco and insure you in ton minutes and you'll ' have live minutes to catch the train. " I caught the train , but uninsured. I met a man from Denver. Ho told mo nbout the great west , with Denver right in the center of it nnd the only prosperous city in the whole region. When ho found I "was from Omaha ho. got mad and wouldn't talk , "Tho laJy from Chicago , " was taking a trip and ran" across my pathway. She didn't scorn to bo having a good time , Once in a whllo .sho brightened up when Informing anew now acquaintance of her place of residence , "the city that's going to have the world's ' fair , you know. " She advertised the Windy city by comparing everything she saw with Chicago sights , and the only time she mani fested real pleasure was in passing a pig sty , when sue remarked that the air was "do- llghtful , so like Chicago , " The east Is a great country. It's the place for sports , Think of two weeks shooting woodchucks , snnriiur frogs , catchliiR turtles , hunting hen's eggs , going perryliig , attend ing a church picnic , feeding a threshing mn- chlno , milking the cows , killing a polecat , swimming in the mill pond , wading In marshes for cattails , going to town for the mail nnd fighting mosquitoes at night. There's a full vacation for you. UNCJLE Si. Dr. Blrney euros catarrh , Bee Udg. J'Kl'J'EItJIZA TJUIl OPS. Very few ] persons can hold their own on their lirst sea voynge. Odd , isn't ' It , that a knight can bo entitled to tbo degree of A. M. 1 "Great cry and little wool" Is the way a birth Is heralded in New Guinea , The professional diver seldom falls In busi ness , but ho is continually going under. 'Crops are short this year , " remarked the convict ns the barber took off the hist hair. Spain lial made Morocco como to terms. The emperor says there will bo no Moor trou ble. ble.Tho The English have bough tall the American breweries and are now going for tuo Becrlng sea. sea.About About the first thing that strikes the mnn who runs aaway Is tbo scarcity of places to run to. The nickol-ln-tho-slot machine never robs Itself. When It is not , working It keeps the nickel. The poet Is ati idyl fellow , nnd that's prob ably why the public stanza verso to being ode by him. A love letter Is never so Interesting to other people as It is to the lovers themselves , but It is a good deal moro amusing. The reason why they kill spring chickens is because they are of no earthly use except la n commercial way after they quit laying. Timid Wooer Gladys. I've Leon calling on you for a long time. Gladys ( yawning ) Yes , longer than you can Imagine. Why , that clock is at least half an hour slow. "I'arUor , " cried his lordship to his valet , "listen ; there Is a band approaching tosor- cnado us. Can you catch the tunol" "You nro wrong , mo lud , " returned Parker j "that Is not a band-it ; Is a rcosqulto. " A fashion writer sayi thnt a person who Is well shod , well gloved , and whoso headgear is what it should bo is always certain of con- sidcratlon. It may bo remarked with still greater truth that the person who Is "well heeled " has a mortgage on tbo cntiro visible supply of tbat article. Dr. Dlrnoy cures catarrh , Boo Dldg. Drink Exo.'IslorSpnngs MUsouri waters. THE LOYES OF THE OTOES , An Aforotirna Drama With All the Embel- D ishmeut of a Modern Setting. HOW EAGLE EYE WOOED WILD GOOSE , An Indian Story or Hcnl Ijlfo That Rivals Shakespeare's Tlomco * anil Juliet The Tragedy * ofGrcegsport 1HI1. NEBRASKA. Cnr , Nob. , August 30. [ Special to TUB BEE.I Away back la the tlmo when Nebraska City and the surrounding country was yet in its swaddling clothes , and the white mnn was a stranger here , a real drama of llfo was enacted upon a rude stngo , the scenlo effects of which , being furnished hy nature. The actors in this real drama of llfowhich was witnessed by your correspondent's in formant , who was at that time nn attache of old Fort Kearney , were untutored in tbo flue art of the mimic stage , for they were aoori- ( jines , who claimed tribal relations with the Otoes and Pawnees , and ia those days had their abode comfortably , and sometimes un comfortably near Nebraska City. The drama was a rough imitation of the parts of Uomoo nud Juliet , nnd Its tr.igio ending not unlike tbo last sccno at the tomb of the Capulcta. The fair Juliet in this real drama was known by a name not so euphonious , but probably more appropriate , for she proved the "Wild Gooso" of the chase , as well as the Wild Geese of the Pawnees , nnd her Itonioo was a bloodthirsty Otoo Indian , known to the natives round about as Hog Mouth. Ills Indian title was moro rcilned and harder to pronounce , but wus abbreviated by tbo settlers to plain Hog Jiloutli for con venience sake , because his strikingly hum- ] some fcatuics suggested the porcine patro nymic. The other star actor of this star company was ono Eagle Eye , a I'awuoa bravowho was known as the laziest Indian in the territory , and yet the smoothest tbief in all the settle- mcnt. mcnt.Whllo Eagle Eye loved the Wild Geese of his tribe with all the fervor , n lazy , thieving. Indian was capable of , yet It was no circum stance when compared with his hatred for the handsome Hog Mouth of the Otocs. The latter gentleman owed hln facial de formity to a midnight attack nt some earlier period , nnd ho possessed a secret Dullovothat Kaglo Eye should bo held re sponsible for his deformity. It was apparent that wnllo they wcro both in love with Wild ( Jooso , they had 110 love for each other , and it occasioned llttlo talk In the village \vhou Kaglo Kyo crawled into the settlement ouo line morning with his body punctuiod with holes , for It was known that Hoi ; Mouth c-.irrlcd a wicked knife. Nor was It a surprho after Eagle eye had recovered , to learn that Hog Mouth's ugli ness had Increased and that ho was minus ono eye. Hut thcscsklrmlshcswcro only tbo advance agents of a grout throc-rltig ci rents perform ance which waa nbout to tuuu place. Wllk Goose was partial to the Otoo bravo , and bcr I'awnco admirer sought for bloody revenge. Ono night In the full of n year hi tbouaily CO's , Wild Geese stele from the tents of her people to meet her picturesque Otoo lover. The wandered along tlio towering blutfs that skirt the murky Missouri on Greggsport bill , unconscious of the fact that behind them death lurked in the person of Eagle Kyo. The attack must have been quick and < lo- cislvo , for when the dead bodies of Hog Mouth and Wild Geese \\cro found thy next morning there wax no evidence of a struggle. They had mot a swift and sudden death at the hands of the murderer. Eagle IS.VQ disappeared from tuo sccno of action and \vo uuver ngulu neon in the sottlo- incnt , but it was generally believed tbut ho had met his deserved futo nt the bands of his own people. Hoi ; Mouth and Wild Geese were burled together xvhoro they were found , with a complete - plote outfit to start housokeLMiIng In tha happy hunting grounds , nnd their bones re mained undisturbed until n short time ago when their burial place was needed for mod ern improvements , and it is believed tbat tha skeletons recently unearthed at that spot wcro those of the murdered Indian bravo aud bis dusky fitincce. Dr. Birnoy curea catarrh , Boo bldj SXXG ULAJ1111 EH. Mrs. Jacob Yerick of Jackson , Mich. , haso sunflower sixteen feet high nud still growing. A fifteen pound pumpkin has grown in a trco in ox-Shorlff Moore's garden at May's Lauding , N. J. Texas has a double-headed cat. It is per fect in form except the two heads. It has four eyes , four ears and two mouths. Georgia beats the world In babies. The wife of Will Lcnnon , a painter , in Macon , has given birth to a child weighing forty pounds. A largo chestnut tree , measuring eighteen feet in circumference at the base , was struck by lightning In Mr. Mercer's pasture field , near Frederick , Mo. , nnd split In the cciiiur from top to bottom. There wus no storm ut the time. A drake owned by aNoveniInkI5orks , coun ty , Now York , man. killed and devoured four teen chicks in ouo day. During the summer sixty young chickens nnd ducks Imvo been tnlssucl. and It is nufo to say that they wcro gobbled , by his drake.ship , Abncr Dorsott , n nopro living In Hickory Mountain township , North Carolina , bus the largest beau of any person In the United States so far as heard from. It Is thirty-two inches In diameter and gives Abncr a decided "top heavy" appearance. Mrs. McGlll of Suit Lake City went to market and bought n cockerel for her Sunday dinner. She found In Its crop a nugget , of virgin gold tbat sold for $5. Besides fruits and vegetables , Florida raises rattlesnakes in grout abundance , A farmer -who lives near Tampa says ho has killed thirty largo rattlesnakes In his neigh borhood within n few months. The lust ono wus 7 feet 4 Inches in length. ThoTarana Tribune vouches for the veracity of the farmer. A game hen died on W. It. Gamble's plnco at Cuthbcrt , Ca. , n few days ago. This hen had reached the ago of fourteen years , lackIng - Ing only n few weeks. Sbo continued to lay eggs until a year before she died. For sov- crul months she had been totally blind. The skeleton of nlurge amphibious animal was uncatthcd nt ShellvilloUnl. It measured twelve feet from the cranium to the tip of the tail. Tlio Jawbones nro four foot long. The fore Icg3 are five feet In length , but the hind logs mcaiuro hut eighteen Inches , and are jointed only at the hip. Tbo toes are ilvo Inches long. * L'wo ' strong tusks project from tbo upper Jaw , nnd on the skull are two horns of three tminchos each. The skeleton was found In a stratum of clay twenty fuot below the surface. It wus Impossible to preserve It entire. A roninrkablo vegetable or horticultural curiosity is to bo exhibited at the next state fair In California. Several wociis ago a grapevine growing in close proximity to an apple trco was found to have a bloom similar to those on the tree. Finally a hamlsomu npplo has developed , which will ho exhibited as above mentioned OH proof of an abnormal growth which seems to bo natural grafting. H < niry Wlcs , the clerk nt the natural gui well nt Fort Wnyuo. Ind. , h tbo possessor of a remarkable cnt , which ho knopt at his home on west Main street. The other oven Ing the cat g.ivo birth to ilvo kittens , all alive. Ono peculiarity about the litter is the fact that although thorn are llvo kittens , they aio all together from the middle of the hack to thulr lulls , There scorns to ba a union of flesh and vital organs , which uro united In u peculiar manner. The kitten or kittens lias , 01 havo. live distinct heads , and ten front foot , well developed , There nro but five hlrid feet , each klttuu having one. Tlio Mlno Slumeso quintetteBCCIII to bo perfectly heulthy. A Notnblo ICcport. "For disordered moiisturatlon , ntiarmla and sterility , It may properly bo termed a spoclllc. " Eitruct from Dr. W. P. Mason's report on the waters of KxccUlor Springs , MUaoutl. Dr. Blruoy cuioa catarrh , Boo bid ) ; .