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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1891)
J2 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE , SUNDAjf , NOVEMBER 29 , 1801-SIXTEEX PAGES , WHERE STATESHEH DINE , A Look at the Famous D \ ncj Rooms of Wtobington Dignitaries. ! X IRAV AGANCE OF THE CAPITAL Hotiotor Hlnnforil'H New Dining Itooin ntul HH lioi'cirnthms \ Kltolicn AVnllrd AV'ltli Chlnn Wlicro \ \ utuimiikcr 1C. Us. 1'Ot l > n Frank ( I. Citrrenter. } WASIIINCITO.Y , P. G. , Nov. 'J7.-1 Special Cor- re.pondonco of TUB IlKK.J-Tlio consross which meets In a few days Is full of poor men. Four-lUllM of the newly elected members hnro nothing but tholr salaries. Senator Kyle has h iroloforo considered himself well pnld nt JI.OUO iiyoaraii'J Senator I'effor was working for $23 \vcok when ho had the luck to Jump into Sonntor lugalls' $ . ' ,000 Job It Is mid that ICnm of Nebraska never earned over $ oOO a yo.ir and thu most of the alliance men expect lo clear inoro this year than over boforo. They have boou trotting over Wash ington looking for cheap boarding houses nnd the criticisms of the high prices of board tuid lodclng tire augry and loud. It u cd to bo that a congrimman could llvo well In Washington on * l.OJO n year. When congress llrst mot the members wore well paid nt fciln day anil In 1315 the nation con sidered It a hi ? salary grjb when they In creased tholr pay to 81"WO " year. Now tbov potttf.UOO and Hud themselves poorer than tholr forefathers wuro at $1,500. Prices were never BO dear In Washington as they aio now. A ooiigrcssinati cannot get a ruspactabla ten- room house for leas thnn $100 a month and market prices have doubled since the begin ning of the last congress. i City of the Itioli. WnAhington Is rast becoming a city of thu rich. It Is n town of millionaires who have coma hero to spend their inonoy. A poor senator has no chance to entertain on his salary nnd thocost of dinners nnd receptions Is onormouH. The prospects are that the com ing season will be inoro gay and moro ox- travncant thun over. Many now houses ha vo boon built nail some of the wealthier cltizons are adding great wings to their old houses for the purpose of ontort.uiilng. The matter of Dining rooms alone Is becoming an Import ant feature of Washington life and the dinIng - Ing room Is now ono of the largest ana most beautiful of the statesman's house. Senator Stanford rents n house at Washington , but ho has added to this , at his own expense , a wing comprising a dining room which 1ms cost In the neighborhood of $10,000. and which , though simple In its construction for the wants of a hundred millionaire , is a fair typo of the tendency of tbo times in this direction. This dining room Is now being furnished for the winter , The wall and colling decorations have boon catnplnted. Numbers of elegant oil paintings liavo been hung in It , nnd the floor alone remains to bo stained and polished. It is an immense room. You could crowd a good-sized two-story house inside of it ana you could turn thn biggest Broadway amy loaded v/ith barrels arouna In it without touching the walls. It is ever lltty feet long and inoro than twanty feet wide , and it has a Croat swelling bay window In the side of it which loolcs out upon Seventeenth street , and from the recesses of which you can trot a view of Farragut square. The celling is , 1 Judge , about llftecn loot high. It Is p tinted a iloli- cnto cream which warms into a pink uusted with gold us it meets thn Mdu walls of pale blue and silver. These side wulls nrb ot n beautiful imported paper of silver flowers on this pale blue ground , nnd the general effect of the room Is u most harmonious ono. There is nothing gaudy or extravagant in its make- Up. The chandeliers are of brass nnd the globes upon them cud not cost , I venture , moro than fiU cents npleeo , though they har- inonizo perfectly and nro beautiful. The fire place lii the oud of the dining room Is of wood painted n rich cream , nnd on the right and the loft of this , facing the door , nro two beautiful statues of whlto marble of Paris and Achilles , .These stand on pcdostals of black marble , nnd they catch your eye as you enter the room. The pictures on the walls are fine oil paintings and most of thorn were Bent on from California for this room. Sena tor Stanford has not seen the room as yet , and ho rnvo orders for its construction before k'jo loft Washington for California. ciuitor Stiinlord'H Dinner ) . There are many dining rooms In Washing ton wliicli have cost more than that of bona- tor Stanford's , but 1 doubt Ifthero are any which will ho so effective or in such good tnsto. Sun ford is R rich man , hut ho does not bclluvo In extravagance or in the gaudy display of his wealth. Ho has the best of everything , but ho wastes nothing. Ho is very charitable nnd very free with his money but his tastes nro simple and he spends but little money for moro show. The dlnlncr tabla in this dining room is of plain mahog any and you might find one equally as line looking in the house of n well-to-do mer chant. The chairs are of simple pattern cushioned with red leather nnd would cost , 1 Vidgo , loss than $10 nuiceo. The table is very Jumll fur so largo a room , but it is plenty blbr enough for tlic senator's family and ho has a commodato as largo a number of guests as can bo served In the whlto house dining room. This enlarging will be clone bv moans of foldmi ; leaves of whlto plno which have boon stained to the color of mahogany. Those loaves nro niauo of boards about four teen inches wide and about llvo feet long , snu they are so put togolhar that they cnn ho screwed to n f raino work aim placed right over the small dining table , and then being supported at the ends by temporary logs they form a now dining table resting on and ever the old. The tuhlo cloth will coma to the floor and on such a table Senator Stanford can entertain fifty-two guests at dinner nt cm a time. By this additional table or cover being made of sotsof , folding leaves bo can make It as largo or as small ns ho pleases and have the tublo to suit his com pany. An Interesting thing in connection with the now dining room is the butler's pantry. This runs nlong the sldo of the room and Is to constructed that It would bo the delight Df any housowlfo. It Is about twcnty-flvo feet long and twelve feet wldo and It has shelves of white plno as beautifully umdo ax those of the library and enough in number to hold the dishes of a good sized china store. There nro two dumb waiters which go from the kitchens below to this pantry nnd in ono lido of it there la a sink lor the washing of dishes which is as big as the largest foot bath and which hns a draining board all around It so that thu whole is as big as the top of a baby's crib. This draining board is of stained pmo anil everything connected with the room Is ns clean aud as neat , as a plu. Some of the finest aI Hirers In Washington ro given by Senator Stanford. Ho does not give a great many nor does ho entertain many people at a tlmo. The first dinner that President Harrison took outside the white- bouio was at Stanford's ' table. At this tlmo the whole country was unsnciied for novol- tlei and though It was February Senator Stanford bad aomo rare California cherries to place before his guests. These are gotten bjr express nnd the great part of the fruit ml the wlno used ut the .senator's table comes from California. Flowers ami greens are sent aeross the continent and floral pieces arc made nn there and am shipped hero with Bpongec attached to thorn ana with directions to express messengers to water thorn on the way. All of the nuts that the senator uses come from his own farms and bo servos California olives to hU guests. These como from South California and nro sent in keg * . They nro of the choicest variety of course. It is the same with the wines. Many ot these served at bis table como from his own vineyards and thoucra ho always has ono or two foreign < . \lnos nt a dinner ho bollovos In thouio of homo products ana bo ls making great Improvements In fruit and wlno culture. Not long ago ho brought two of tbo most noted ulmmpaguo makers of Franco to Cali fornia and he employ a thorn there In making champagne. These men are studying the California p rapes and are dovotlnir them- IOITCS to the production of a line California jUampacino. Homo N'otoil Dining Itoomii. Mr. John K. McLean it building an 1m- dlniac room at the back of bis bttt Washington bouso fnolng McPhcrson's square. This dining room is Ju t opposite Chamberlain's restaurant nnd It will bo , 1 Jtuigo , as big a end as Stanford's. It nns a largo oiy window In the Muo and will bo beautifully lighted. Another big dining room will bo that of Kotmtor I > useni ? Halo's , or rather Mrs. Xncli Chandler , for I am told that the big bouso which has boon built on the corner of Sixteenth and 1C streets belongs - longs to Senator Halo's mother-in-law. This house will probably bo open this winter. The decorators nro now In It. It Is thu biggest liouiso in Washington and probably the most expensive one. It must cover iiQiiartcr of nn acre nnd It hns enough windows for a blir female - male seminary. It Is n great oblong , colonial building of cream rirlck aud drab mono with a semi-circular entrance In the middle facing Sixteenth street. This entrance has bo.iutl- ful decorations In tbo way of stone columns nnd the whole houio Is tasteful to an ox- tromo. It cannot have cost loss than ? ! 00- 1)00 ) and looks as though It nmy hnvo cost several - oral times that amount. A little further up Sixteenth street from this nouso is Scott's Circle n llttlo further back from which on Khodo Island nvuniio Vice President Morton lives. Hdro Is nnoth- IT big dining roon which Mr. Morton built especially for his Washington dinners. It was finished nt the opening of the last con gress nnd It has cost much moro than tno din ing room of Soinlor Stanford. It was stated at tbo tlmo It Was built that It cost something like * 10,000. It has n celling ot panelled O.IK which meets the sldo walls In an arch-shaped cove and below which rising from thn floor Is a high wain cottniK. The plaster between these is decorated in rod and the designs for It and for the oik carving were made especially for thi ) vice president. The mantolpinco In the Stanford dining room could bo built , I should think , f jr loss than $100. That In Vleo 1'roi- ident.Morton's must have cost nt least a thousand It Is of carved oak with a great mirror ever It and It has a lire-placo In which you could roast nn ox. The bay window ut thu sldo of the dining room is another feature. It , is made of enormous .sheets of plate glass and of mosaic glass which were especially mode for Mr. Morton for this purposo. The floor Is inlaid in patterns nnd the culinary arrangements of thu establishment nru like these of a hotel The kltchon is walled with tiles of whlto china and the nshes uro carried out of the house by a small railway. Dining HOOIIIH In Mahogany. Some of the host dining rooms of Washing ton are those of private citizens. The house of Mr. John Hay , the author of the Life of Lincoln , is ono of tbo tlnost nt the capital. Its interior decorations are in the lineal of carved woods. Tuo hall Is In South Ameri can white mahogany , nnd at the right of this as yju enter the front door. Just opposite a great lira-place , is n dining room of rod ma hogany. This is panelled and wainscoted in this wood , and the wainscoting contains blocks blgonough to make the most beautiful olllco desk vou have ever scon. Great ma hogany rafters cross oaeti other over your head , nnd the supports of these nro carved columns of mahogany. Out of a red tnatiog- nny nlcovoyou look through plate glass windows dews out tinon Sixteenth atieot and Lafay ette park , nnd at tno end of the room fncing thu door there is a great lire-place as big ns that in Sonntor Palmer's Slii.OOO log cabin near Detroit , which is surrounded by n man tel wonderful In its curving nnd wnich hns Ingle-nooks at thu sides , where vou can .sit and toast v our feet before the coals. Senator" Sawyer has a beautiful dining room in his big brown stone house on Con necticut avenue. It is liku that of John liny In that It is inlaid with mahogany panels , but It has a frio/o of palntinas in oil iu which cuptds and pea-fowls are pjaylnpr together above tbo bald lioid : of the senator as ho oats. The colling is beautifully panelled nnd the room is decorated with raio bits of line china and plate. It is lighted uith lumps of crystal nna wrought silver audits haneinps were of peacock blue during a part of the time mat ttio senator has entertained in it. Mrs. Senator Hearst's dinintr room will nut bo open this winter ns she is in mourning. It was llnished last year nnd itis n beauty. The room Is finished In the style of the Dutch ro- nnlssanco and the woodwork Is of well smoked old oak. The celling is paneled and the walls nro covered with stamped leather. The dining table is twenty-six foot long or it may be extended to that length and the whole apartment Is ROinbio in tbo oxtiemo. In addition to this there is a suppar room in the basement for lisa during recaptions nnd this is furnished In California redwood and its lloor Is of a line mosaic. Itoonn with Histories. Many of the big dining rooms of Washing ton are rooms with histories. The walls within which Postmaster General \Vananm- kor washes down bis boifsluak with ice wa ter and cold ten nave held nil the belles and beaux of Washington fora generation. It was in It that Tillm liYulinghu.Vbori and her father entertained President Arthur when the gossip was tnat the president was to mar ry tno daughter of his secretary of st Uo. It had distinguished owners befuro Froliughuy- sen bought it , and Secretary Whitney made it thu social center of the Cleveland admlnls tration. It was ho who gave tbo room its decorations which It h is to a largo otiont to- dav. Ho made the woodwork of ebony black nnd hung its walls with brocaded satin of a rich old red. Ho had gorgeous tapastrins hung on the walls and his sideboard spaiklcd with silver. His tables were loaded wltu champagne to n greater extent than .Mr. VVunainuKor's are loaded with nppoliuaris nnd his recaptions were gayer and his dinners equal if not superior to tboso of 1'ostmnjior General Wananmkor. Just across Lifavotte squarn within a stone's tnrow of the whlto house in an old faslnonod mansion of the color of Jersey cream lives Don Cameron of Pennsylvania. His house Is the old Tavlor mansion and Its dining room has entertained all of the states men and diplomats back to the days of Henry Clay. General Winilold Scott was dined in It nnd Daniel Webster often stncic ins logs under its nmnogany. just next to it Is Hlainu's house which was a famous plneo of entertainment when Commodore Rogers owned it and the climnir room which lilalno uses for hU diplomatic ) dinners was uc'cl by Secretary Sowiird when ho was at the head of the stnto department under Lincoln. The dining room Is on the ground lloor nud its walls nro bung with crimson tap"- > try and the sideboard Is of old oak. The chairs are upholstered in led leather and with Blatno at the head of the table the dinners are always a success. Daniel Webster gave his big dinners within a stono's throw of whnra Ulaiuo now holds forth. Ho lived beyond his moans aud tnough be did bis own marxotlug bo was always in debt. The house he had while ho was secretary of state was the Corcoran tnnn- ( .Ion on the north indoor LaftiyeUosouaro.mui Mr. Corcoran's autograph letters showed that Webster borrowed largely fiom him. I'ostiT null Kliei'Minn. Secretary Foster has routed tbo house which Senator Payne occupied Just opposite the Portland flats on Vermont avenue. His dining room Is at tbo back of the house and It looks out on n beautiful lawn. Ttio secre tary Is rich and ho will probably entertain considerably this winter. Just below him lives Senator McMillan of Michigan , in a house which ho paid $ SOOOJ for , and which Is beautifully llnishod in every respect. All of the Justices of thu supreme court are en tertainers and tno dining room of the supreme court justice Is more important to him than his parlor. Senator Hvarls had a boautlful alnlng.roou ) in his house on the corner of Sixteenth ana K streets and bo gave many stag dinners in it Ho Is noted us un entertainer and during bis term us bccromry of state ho spout four times ns much an bis salary In keeping up his table , John Sherman nus n very plain dining room in his 1C street houso. Like Senator Stan ford ho gets nil bis preserves from his coun try homo and ho given many dinners nnd good ones. Fit INK G. C.iitrivmi. : How to l rutitrati ) Uliouk Formers. Talking of chocK forgorlcs , BOUIO con-o- Bporulants of a tlnmiulnl paper Imvo boon BiijrguHtliigdilToroiit plans for preventing the "raising" of amounts on checks Onu iu to ndnpt the color of the check for the amount that is drawn upon it , using ono color for HUIUS under two llgurct ) , another for wuina under two ilguros , another for HUIUS under three IITiiros { , another for Bums under four Inures , and ditto rent tints for dllTeront thousands. But a system Is already in vogue in Germany which works well in practice , and has the additional advantage of sim plicity. At the edge of all checks a lablo of amounts is printed , and before Issuing a chock ttio drawer is expected to tear oil all amounts , above that for which the chock is drawn. No household Is complotd without a ciso of Cook's Extra Dry Imperial Champagne. Iff tbo boat sparulhiK wine made. HARNESSING HIE TORRENTS , Utllzini ; Mountain Strjarai to ProdaoJ Electricity for Industrial Ua3. GOLD HILL'S CHEAP METH OD OF MINING , Wonderful \Vntor Power Devel oped Amid Wyoming' " Trca- Nliri-Stored IllllH. SMUTOCH , Carbon County , Wyo. , Nov. 2" . ( Special correspondence of Tun flKi : . ] When Colonel S. W. Downey came back hero tbo llrst of the week on hU way homo to Larumio from Gold Hill , ho was moro sun- gulno than ever ever the prospects for a sue- cesslul test In ttio operation of the Kdlson svntum for working the inlnos there by elec tricity us described In last Sunday's UKK , During his visit to the camp thu colonel took special p ilns to study tbo water supply for power nud purposo. In the neighborhood of his stamp mill Just llitlsbing on Ar.istra lake , Colonel Downey had surveys made that show conclusively thntsuniciont water power CUM uo developed to run dynamos that will operate many stamps besides furnishing light and power for the minus that ho Is working. Three lakoj , Arastra , Nloba oud Loman , can bo tuppod to furnish nvator supply. A survey already made shows a 18 ! ) foot pressure , but this can bo easily Increased to over iiOJ. Ono of these natural reservoirs , Lake Lennn , can bo utilised for water stor age and to an oxtcut that enormous pressure can bo developed. The lairo can bo raised inoro than lllteun foot and at a trilling cost to hold water for winter uso. Arastra Creek , that Hews Into the lake of the same name and not far removed from the mill site , Is a typical mountain stream that thunders down the slopes and ioapj over pieclpltous cliffs , all the while gaining In force. Uy d'- ' vertlng the waters from these natural storage reservoirs the volume and power of tliu stream can bo grcntlv It creased. But while Cob nel Uownoy satisfied that ho can com man I abundant water power to operate uis own mill and work the group of mines in the immediate vicinity that lie con trols , his plan is moro wide reaching than that If the Edison system proves practic able , nnd of that ho is convinced , the colonel's intention N lu organic a company that shall furnish light nnd power lo work ail tbo mines In the Go.d Hill district and treat their ores. To curry out such r. project some central point must bo selected where great water power can bo secured. From past and recent lnvestlg.it ons nnd actual surveys such a lo cation has been ll\ed upon. That is on the Patriot placer claim , situated on both sides of South Brush creek , and extending 1UO foot below tlio Junction of Uold Hun crook with the Brush Mid 000 leot abovo. This claim , embracing lifty-Ilvencres , immediately adjoins the Bonanza placer , and to the south of itthnt forms part of what is known as the ( jrcunvillo towiibite , the lower camu in Gold Hill , where is located the present and only postotllcu in the district , called Goll. A mill site has boon graded on the Patriot , where ten or moro stamps nra to bo sot up in the iioar future. To furnish water for the boiler , plateetu , of the urojeclud mill , n dltcti lias been surveyed that will give a 17-J-foot pres sure. For the purpose named tins ditch waste to bo only two and a half feet wldo and three feet deep , but it could be so cnlurgod us to take out all tliu water of Brush creek and In- crcaso both the volume and power to a won derful degree. In addition to this , it nas been shown by a survnv made within the past few dayb that North French creek , u considerable stream and of reat fall , cm bo turned into boiith Briibh some distance nbovo the Patriot ditoh. Tnis would bo an easy and cheat ) pioo of engineering , only involving the con struction of a ditch about half a mlle long aud the estimated cost not to exceed 31,000. So favorably impiessed was Colonel , Downey by the opportunities and natural ud- vantages possessed by thu Patriot water power that 1m has made overtures to ( jrcono iSrob. & Co. , who own tlioao lights , looking to mi alliance of Interests and concerted ac tion The chances are , though , tn.it the Greenes will either carry out such a project on their own hook , else make an effort , to en list capital to aid them. It must not bo mistrusted for a moment that these plans , us recently discussed in Tnu BCP , are In any .sense visionary. Enough bus uoon demonstrated to enlist the cooperation tion of capitalists and so mucn encourage ment has Colonel Downey met with that it is marelv a question of ti short time wheu u practical test will bo made. In order to pre pare the miners nud secure concerted action among ihom and such concessions as nro rocjiusitc ; in making a test , tlio colonel un folded to tnem his plans in part nt n miners' mooting held last Fiiday niirht at Gold liill. In a carefully prepared address delivered on that occasion and treating of matters that were common to them all , Colonel Downey made those observations : "Tho starting of this first stamp mill is an important event in tno history of the camp While ii is not a large one , It inaugurates the work of development mid ph.ces the district on thn list of producers , thus elevating it to n position of importance in the eyes of tliu mm inu and commercial bodies ot the country- There Is no apparent reason why there snould. not bo 1UU stamps running in this district by the 1st of September next , and within three years .100 stamps. That a consummation so desirable is not only possible but probable is duo no less to the presence of iuo\hausilblo bodies of ncn ore than to the advantages provided oy nature for thuir development. Thu magnificent , forests that darken the slopes of these hills offer at your very door all the limber that could bo desired fora great milling camp. There are thousands upon thousands of acres of it and probably the demand of generations to como will not exhaust it , ns the only timber that will bo needed , in all likelihood , will bo for timbering up the mines nnd lor building purposes. This appears to bo n soir-ovidont proposition when wo consider thu immoasurublo power available in our lakes nnd streams , u power so vast that It is no exaggeration to assert that it would sulllco to run by moans of electric motors all the stamp mills that could bo put in during tlio next tun years , though a continuous porcossion of wagons laden with machinery was marching from the manufactories to Gold Hill. In Illustration of what may bo clone by means of the electric ! motor aud to demon strate thu fact that lightning is our power , that all the elements will contribute to our success , let mo ulto the following data ob tained from the Kdlson Feuorat Elootriu company : " DnNVi'.uColo.Oct. 10 , 1SU1. To COLOI.ISI , S. W. DiiWMiv , Laramlu , Wyo. : Dear Sir- In accordance with your request , wo submit tojo'i the following approximate estimate for an ulectrlo power transmission plant for running your mill near Saratoga , Wyo. : " 'It is asiumcd that you will build founda tions for dynamo and motor , furnish poius distributed monk' the line , mid do unv neces sary \\orit in the way of clearing away tim ber or brush from thu line. With thuso qx- captions , wo nro to furnish all apparatus and material and sot up thu entire plant , includ ing line work , operate It two weous and turn it ever to you in complete runnlne order , " 'To develop II horse fly power on motor pulley for running n mill the following plant will bo required : ' "Ouolio kov. 1,000 volt dynamo with base frame , regulator , ampere motor , volt meter , lightning nrrestors , switchosbiM uare , cables and station material. " 'Ono 45 kuv. ( .10 H. P. ) motor with b'iso frame , starting rheostat , ' am pore motor and lightning arrostors. " 'The necessary line work from dynamo to motor n distance of two miles. ' 'The nbovo plant complete will cost about (7,000. This ostImam does not include the necessary water power to run the dynamo. " > Wo should bo glad at unv time to Investi gate this question mure carefully and make you a definite proposal for whatever plant you may decide upon. Hoping to hoar from you again In rogara to this matter , we roinaln"yours very truly , KIIISO.N GKXEIUU Ui.Kt-ntioCoMi'vNv , Porluviso H.U.E , Agent , ' " -There nro points on North ana South Druih crooks wnure 400 and 500 bone power can easily bo obtained from the natural How of the streams. Uy putting in motors , this power can bo readily transmitted to the vari ous mines now or ut unv future tlmo to be developed , no that tburo will bo practically no need"of wood for fuel and no1 the slightest necessity for hauling the ro olsowhcro to have the precious metal ' * * fractod. Thus these xvho operate the mlilUHaro guaranteed the most ccononomlcnl nlcJtlloJ known of trolling all the frco gold ciuirt'mines. / . It scorns beyond dispute that , bolr > 4' relieved of the expense of transporting Hie' * ore for u long dls- tanco and 'rult being obliged to use any fuel , our OIIM can ho treated for not to exceed $1.50 per ton. * * Referring ngnltiito'tho Important part these sti-rmns play In Xh future of the cam us that encircle the mountain , docs there not scorn to have been sonlo design In tbo operation of nature by whluh' ' the mineral district was made the heart bf'the ' water supply of the entire surrounding region , the fountain head of the sttcanis Without which the treasure hidden in these vwilts of nntuio's own con struction would bd as unattainable a.s though It was stored In the mountains of the moon ) The stious that have been thrown ever the gioat hill like n winding-sheet , to nppal until the Creator's own tlmo the gold seeker from discovering Us secrets , now molt and trickle ilown to form North Drusli creek , South Brush crook , the Medicine How , Pass creek , Uock creoic , Mill crook , Douglas utvok , LI buy , French , thu North , South nnd Middle forks of thu Llttlo Larumio , and other streams , that make nossiblu the recovery by man from this mountain the silver and gold that luvo lain thuro for ncos , to be given to tbo world nt Its highest stage of civilization nnd wnon the precious metal would ba more necessary nnd more potent for good than nt any otner tlmo in man's history ! Dues It not.seem that when the old Snowy" , whoso burden of wealth so loug remained undiscovered , begins to pour forth bur streams of silver mid uold that wern frozen in her rock-ribbed fast nesses before the uhmlng seraphim was placet } on guard at the gates ot Eden and thu sentence of death was passed on the human race , wo may bollovo that the daxvn of the mlllcnlum nnd the pnidon ot Adam's seed is not far off I * * * You who have attacked these mountain ranges to wrest from thorn the treasures of which pro-Adamltu sultans only dreamed , would do well to endeavor to realize thu ex traordinary power with which man is today endowed. If he has explored the plains beneath - neath the ocean's billows , counted the stars that whiten the remotest portion of the coiosthit sphoio , weighed the planets , spanned the earth with lines of steel and oven nnulv/cd the notion of the nralu which In three minutes' tlmo witnessed in a dream the detailed events of three years' llfo , what have you to fear in the task you have under taken if you bunt * to bo.ir upon It In connec tion with the means nlVorded vou by modern science , all the energy and force of mind you possess. "Tho crystal streams whoso music is almost within our hearing enable you to command the lightning and with it as your co-woruur to explore these hills to their innermost denttis , to discover in each niece of quartz the minutest trace of gold , to lift it to the surface and separate it from the parent rock and to mould into bricks am1 send forth for eoinngo nud n career of usefulness tlio metal that is lovllost of all in the eyes of men , whether It is dust in the pan , money that secuics life's comtorts , the ornnmont woin by the woman you love , or the decoration of an ultiir dovotea to the worship of Him who stored It in the hills He created nnd sus pended amid the clouds and the blue mountain mist. " All thuso preparations for milling on ulnix'o scale mean something. They show , If noth ing else , that the claim owners have confi dence in ttioir nroperties and intend to uet out the oro. Nobouy would doubt Colonel Downov's Intention to push things , lie has some valuable claims that are fast attaining thodlstinutioa of being worthy the name of mines. IIU tun stamp mill be ready to start up somewhere between the 1st and 10th of December. Slumps would begin drooping before that save that Superintendent "Jack" Martin is a conscientious milling as well ni mining man and lu.scoulldcnco in Gold Hill is so great that uo won't talio auv risks through which a mistake might bo made and the first clean-up fail of being an honest and prudent ono. Therefore the ma chinery will nil have to be in llrst class shape and all needful preparations made bjforo the stamps buuiu pounding away on the gold- studded quartz. The shotting that will bo made nt the end of a thirty day's run will be a good ono. It will bo trio best ndvcrtiso- mout there could bu for the district. The llrst brick will bo but duo of a series of many to follow. , SuperiutondentMartin isn'tn visionary man and when ho iays tliu run will avoriiro $ ! i)0 ) a dav for the ten slamps ho comes prottv near slzim ; it up. But should the amount bo no moro than $ iM ( ) a day that is : i big thing. Meanwhile work is being vigorously prose cuted on tlio claims whose outputs are to bo run through the mill on Arastra hilto. Half a milo from there is the Leviathan claim oa which a shall 10-i feet deep was sunk. It H located on the slope of a high bill. Going down thu hillelguty fcoln tunnel was stnrtou that had been driven fifty feet that taps the vein and shows a better grade of ere than that in the shaft , and nvcragine twelve feet In width. Uy the tlmo the tunnel reaches n point below wl ere the shaft was put down a duptlvof IIJO feet will bu attained. With this amount of ere in signt thu ten stamps could bo supplied. Tnuro Is already a lar o quantity on thu dump and it runs from $ Jl ) to $1(1 ( to thu ton in cold. A good road has been built fiom the Lovituun down in the mill. On \Vvominu elaini n shaft has boon erected to that work there can't bu iiiterfoiod with by the storms that will soon begin to como Illicit and fast and the snowfall bo onor- mous. Ore bins tire also building. A depth of lorty-live feet has boon attained in tlio shaft that was put down along side the vein from which quartz can bo picked otf contain ing gold nuggets of good size. When down thirty foot , in addition to the load proper , a streak of crevice matter about two luchos wide came In. This In creased in width until now it averages about three foot wido. The gauge and orevico matter prosuects ricli. Tno distance from the Wyoming to the mill is throo-qunr- lors of n milo , but a good road has boon con structed with u favorable grade so that ere can be easily hauiod. Surprises have been so frequent In the Acme and Lakestdo claims on Mineral Hill right near the Greonotownslto that it now takes n good deal to exclto the minuis , es pecially as rcg.iids new discoveries on Iho Acme. A week ngo Greene Mro.'s & Co. broke with a Massachusetts outfit bcause the rcpsentatives of the latter would not fulfill tholr contract for the Immediate Drool- Ion of .1 stamp mill. Immediately after that , n running the Acme tunnel nud when In about 1UO fuet a rich vein was cut. This s owed four feet of quartz and clecomnosocl ledge matter that pans well and is evidently rich. On the strength of this now discovery nn of fer has noon mndo to put in a stamp mill bv people who will take their pay from the proceeds - coeds of the clean ups. In tunneling for a distance of 145 feet or thoreaoouts , lor dis tinct stroaics or gastios of quartz and gango from three to sixteen Inches wldo , and rich In mineral have been cut. Tboso feeders , as they are called , Indicate a big load , whose value as yet can't oven bo estimated , but will undoubtedly prove rich. On the Lakeside when the tunnel had been drlvon llfty feet n contact vein thrcoiuul : i half Inchuj In width was discovered thut iins ) into thu mountain. Several small 30.11114 liavo also been cut In going 140 foot. Both the Ai-nio auu Lnkoslilo tunnnls show work that would bo regarded as creditable in any mining < : imp. lvory toot Is timhqrcd. At the month of the Aomo and all the way Ihrough uro piles of quart/ and crevice mai ler. This is superlpi-io that taken from the lifty-thruo loot slulU and on u mill run of 1,100 pounds of which ? il in gold was ob tained imrly thU month The Gold Hill dNtt'lct ' will soon have a second postotllco and at the upper camp near the Downey mill , < At a miner's meeting n few days ngo ttiov decided lo name ' .ho new ono Altamont , thai < ( > llior bolus christened Gold bv Iho postoatco. department. i' GliOltdK F. CAXI8. lfT-0- I'atronfza'Iliimo ' industry , nnd specify in your jihrohasos that you want goods made In Nebraska factories and pro duced by Nebraska soil All wtilsklc-t and splilts ot any kind manufactured by Her & Co. and the Willow Sprinss distillery are made In the stnlo and fiom Nebraska grain , consuming : iOJJ bushels par dav. Insist upon your dealer furnishing homo made goo Js ; they are equal to the host and cobt no moro. Assist homo industries. Dr. Blrnoy cures catarrh. Boo 1'rooruNiliintloii. Puox : "Did vor fulher lick yor , Jlimnlol" "Von. " "Did yer put the Josraphy In yer pants 1" "Vop. " "Then what yorcrvln' furi" "Ah h h I didn't have tlmo to got mo pants on boo-hoo ! " Fine as silk llnttur'.s ( iunu.ni Pills. I Thi ? ' week we arouse the alert bargiin hunter an < l startle drowsv competition bv iiiau < niratinf our season's HOUSE-CLEARING IN MID-SEASON. As the season advances every clothing dealer finds his lots broken , that is , all sizes , all cuts and all colors of a certain cloth arc not in { the lot. We may have your size in a sack suit but not in a cutaway in the same cloth or vice versa. Our very hc.ivy season's trade has broken someol our lots a couple of monMis earlier th in u-uil. Hence this On the three floors where our separate departments are situated w e have placed th ? "Odd Lots" on separate tables and marked them so as to clear off the tables this week . Hie Gfoih can't possibly U-t out this week. Your selection should be made early. WE NEVER HAVEADVERTISED A FAKE SALE. Our record 1 = ! in your recollection , and our OUR OHRIbTMAS GIFT. pride is to maintain that record. Wo have procured a number of handsome piettiro story books which wo propose to jjivo away in our Children's dopiirtmcnt. FIB3T FLOOB- there [ except ulsters ] . They are in OUR SUNblllNl * . motions , kerseys nnd chinchillas. , A paper covered , handsomely Ou the front tables have nil wo placed illustrated , ( - book l-niigo , nrintod on the broken lots of Men's Suits. If you TIIKUK IS NO JUGGLING tinted paper In largo , dear Ivpi' , CUD find your sixo in the ulot'i ' and out With figures but a BtraiR'tit mnrlc original stories and original illus thut suits you , you cun'savo about ono down from our former very low prici's. trations , quarter of the former extremely low There are among- those about forty fur 'mrolmso price of the sniit. trimmed overcoats that the fur on tliom On another table wo pluco nil our odd alone Is worth the price wo ink for the T 1 1 is K ASV suit pants and broken loin. Tlio prices garment. 1MO pages , 112(1 ( stories , 271 illus were from W.fiO to 39. Wo make them trations , beautifully bound in boards SECOND , cloth buck , iUumlrmU'd ELOOR ' about . ono fourth less. cover , tinted ' heavy paper , o.vol- THIRD FLOOR- CHILDREN'S DEFT. lent press work. MEN'S The marking down has boon done in ItOMK 1'IOTUUIi HOOK. OVERCOATS. 12 10 , ! > ! the aiiino mtuinor on the broken lots pages ! ( stories , U70 illus The broker * lol& in our overcoat de and odd garments among our boys' and same trations style , printed as "Tlio and bound In the partment have nl'-o boon separated from children's garments. C'holco of cither ICasy of the Bool above : . the regular lots Tlio ni/os run from S3 There are only a few of each kind so with each purchase of $5 worth of to .10 and all the different styles are they must bo taken advantage of early. any kind of goods in the Children's department. Samples of thuso books may bo BROWNING KING & GO. soon these in books our show windows. Any of , . will mn ko a neat and ' , lasting C'hristmas present , South-west Corner 16th and Douglas. row , if' i-iii'li k , anil HO < o not tin-in ID last u tlinn n few dais. PETER A. SARPK'S ' DIAMOND , Takau From His Mother's ' Grave He Wors it Till His Death. TRANSMITTED TO J. STERLING MORTON. Story of the Jen-el nud How Its Owner I'oorco.l Its Hurial and KcMiii'i'cet ion 1'or Km uro Generations. The following story of the famous Peter A. Sarpy is rolatoil by Hon. J. Storllnn Morton. Mr. Sarpy was ono of the old-tlmors of the territory , for whom S.irpy county was uaniod. Tlio bc.uitiful bluffs thnt rise so majesti cally from the Missouri at IJollovun , on that summer day loolcodvhllo the dow lay still upon them , like a blriiiK of gigantic omornlds just fnllun from the clouds. Thu air was still and supreme soliUulo locked the landscape In hazy , drowsv rest. ( Jolouel Peter A. Sarpy mot ma up baul : of tno old mission house , by the grave of the j ruat Omaha chlof. Bit ; Elk , lhat morning. Ho was buoyant and his eye glistened with the exuberance of health anil Kood spirits. Ho was ill-eased neatly , and upon his bro.ist I noticed , for the first time , u holituiro diamond , which gleamed and llasbod with striking brilliancy. "Colonel , " said I , "you have been adding to your jewels , " and , looking steadily nt the goiii , "is that something now I" "O no , my friend , " said he , "that is old , very old , and I will toll you about it if vou will listen , and what is to como of it in the noreafter , if you will. " aik'iiif.vinj ; mv assent with preat alacrity , ( Jolonol Harpy proceeded ns follows : "Many , many yoiu's nye , when St. Louis was a villnge , my good Catholic mother died may God lest her soul in peace - in that town. Wo children tollowod her remains to tbo cemetery and laid thorn quietly In the pravo nnd wept until our cyoi would" weep no more. And then shortly after I came up hero to Nebraska among the Indians to trade und my brother , John U , , remalnod in St. Louis. "But a few years ago I wont down to St. Louis to purchase coodi and ono afternoon after I had been there several days my brother said : 'Peter , 1 want to sue you pnvntoly in the counting room to talk about the dead,1 a'.id so 1 went m and John U. &uid : Vetor , this city is growing very rapidly. It is stretching out to the south and the west and the mirth. It needs moro room and tlio old graveyard where our jnotlior is buried inubt bo given up \Vo must move her re mains to nuolhor resting spot , and wo will do it toetnor while you ui-o hero. U'o will do It tomorrow. ' "And so the very next day wo wont out to mother's grave nnd carefully ivo bronuht the collln to the light and lifted it up tenderly on to a blor. It was sadly decayed. It looked HkoDUiik wood. The top win moved n little to one side mid 1 could not restrain n desire took In. As 1 did look the sunlight streamed In und I saw something gleaning thoro. At once I roinomboi-od the diamond which my mother had always worn und which had been burled on her breast , and I reached in avid took It out , nnd this is it which you see. It is mlno , and when those bright days como i feel voung again , and renieinborldg my mother I put It on and wear it , lor It makes mo a hotter nmn. It Is n charm , sir , and t'lo memories which It brings to mo nro brighter and richer and moro precious than all the gonis in the world , for they are the sacred recollections of a Christian mother , n Uoiy woiiiui , whoso to.icliines wcro purer than any diamonds thnt ever glowed. "And now , while men thlnlt I am nothing but un old Irdlan trader who sees nothing In the future , who believes In no destiny for this beautiful Nebraska ol ours , I know , sir , that not many vonrs will come nnd go bofuro I , too , will bo called to another llfo in another world. And then these fertile lands , these vast plains will have ueon settled up nnd somewhere In this Missoorl valley , perhaps In sight of where wo now stand , a giuat city shall linvo boon built up and thoie will ever and ever go-up the humof contentful Industry. Then I may have been in my grave many years , nnd with me will have rostnd in dark- iioss this gem. And having no children , no kinsmen , as the land ( Ills up with many IKioplu and thn cities grow , vorv likely some day tluy will ttrnre to youastlmv did to brothur John about our mother , nnd say : Hero , sir , your old friend , Peter A. Sarpy , Is iu ttio way. Thu city needs room , sir , and you must talio his old bones uwiiy ' And If so. do It ; do it decently and kindly , as I unow you will , but remember this diamond. Peep Into my old collln. It l < ; i pure gem , llrst water , and will surely llasli whenever yourojocuu bee. Then vou roach In I'll bo H till and snatch the diamond out and put it on and wear it. "The voars will roll on and the people will still Hood In nnd this shall bo one of the grainiest gardens of the world und you will have grown old , too , and hecomo a cition of some great city , away out on what wo now call the plains , und then death will rap at your door and you , too , will come into thut other Ufa In that other world. Toll your boys to burv this stone with vou. Hut not many years more will have followed the trull of those which have already gone into the sluUowy hunting lands before the boys will bo called upon by the authorities to move your bones nlo You will have gotten In the way , too , arm they'll toll the bovs to work the old man move liliii and make roam for the city of the plains. Tell the boys when the time comes to rnnch Into your coflln and ngidn take ID Is giUtur.Ing jewel out from the grave. Toll oldest to put it on nnd wear It , and bo buried with it too , leaving Innructlona for Us resur rection again. "And so , .sirwe'll keep this diamond glit nmone the generations to como. It shall bo burled nnd raised and worn ami hurled again , until finally It shall ho hurled for the last time away oil in some of the isl ands of the Pncillc , whom the west shall nave been found and settled in full , nnd Mindly perfected. "I tell you , sir , this cry for 'Iloom , moro room , ' for the living , for the many people , for the great cities , will never coaso. And lo. this diamond go on from grave to crave , from generation to generation , irlcaminn' ' and llnslmir lorovcr like a star In the shield of ono who shall always bo a pioneer in the vanguard - guard of progress and civlll/atlon. " Colonel Sarpy stopped his speech and In silence wo walked to the old trading post. Hut there was the element of wophccy nnd the Irresistible power of prescience In that summer morning talk of Colonel Snrpy wliieh makes it .sing in my ears nnd thrill In mv veins even unto this clay. Ho looked into the future as into a mirror nnd saw tno face of today and tomorrow us clearly and plainly us a child sees trees and Jlowon shadowed in u pure brook. Dr. Blrnoy cures catarrh. Bee bldg. OK OTIIKll DAYS. Intotvstlnjj ItcuilniKociiocsofOld i u-t Kearney by a Veteran. After an rbsonco of twonty-flvo years I re cently paid a visit to the spot where the above named land-mark once stood. The post was abandoned about twenty years ace , and were It not for the few big cottonwood trees still standing around the parade ground it would bo impossible to Identify Its former site , wire fences , corullelds and groves hav ing almost obliterated every trace of what was once an important strategic point on the ulnins. Fort Lcuvonworth , Fort , Kearney , Fort Laramie and Fort Bridgcr stood for many years as sentinels guarding the great overland mall and emigration route between thoMfssouri river and Salt Lako. Considering its former prominence and importance I hnvo often thought the government ought to place a monument to mark the place In the center of the parade ground because in n few years Its very location will become a matter of con- JBCturo and dispute. Senators Matidor ou and Paddock are hereby made a special com mittee on the Fort Koarnov monument , . The land Is now owned by n Mr. W. O. Diingan , an old veteran of the rebellion , who stopped three balls for the Union , receiving therefor the princely pet.slou of $12 a month. Mr. IJungnn kindly accompanied me in my efforts to discover s > omo of the old lines anil land marks. Where the row of long cavalry statues once stood , there is now a hnavy growth of cottonwood timber. INota vustlgo of any building lomnlns , nnd it was in vain that wo searched for the exact location of the sutler's store. As I stood upon its supposed slto , my mind ' reverted to Incidents and scenes of'thirty years ngo. The little buek room ( or "tho ofileers' room , " as it was called ) was once moro Illlod with the genial .spit Its who used to congregate there , John Heth ( pence to Ins ashes ) , IJr. O. L. Miller , Cioner.il liobert Mitchell , Jack Aleriovv , f. h. Jioyd , Phinens Uurteh , Frank doff man and u long list of old- timers xvhom I could name , living and dead. Just how mimy "jack pots" were opened in that little old room will never be known , but it Is certain that no similar room in the west ern wilds over witnessed moro good fellow ship , to say nothing about pointing morals or adorning tales. Hut p ist Is nil Its fiiino"thu ! M'iy spot Whmo nmiiv u tlmo they triumphed Is forgot ! Dr. Miller was appointed sutler in the ( all of 1W1I , succeeding John Ilnth. O. P. Hur- ford furnished tliu cupltnl. which consisted largely of poods bought of John McCormlcIc at high prices and on long tinm. I conducted the business of the llrm from 18111 to 1811(1 ( , during which tlmo tlio not protlts amounted loavur $100,000 , exclusive of numerous gov ernment contracts. "Subtraction , division nnd silence , " with a llttlo "I nil nonce , " wont n long way in those days In procuring con tracts. 1 recall , for Instance , ono for ! 3,0X ( ) cords of wood at 20 per cord nnd another for r MI tons of hay at $10 per ton. The price paid by the govornmsnl lor corn ranged from $ .1 to fl per bushel. ( This Is where thti "Great Ainerlean Desert" idea camu in ) . I never was nblo to figure out the oxaut porcontngo of profit Iu these ventures , hut Know the contractors didn't lose anything. JOHN W. Huous. Dr. Birnoy onron catarrh. Bee bldjj1. Wo pom ! tlio nmnnloiiH KIT. . lleinu.ly CALTIIOS frMam. . . . . > KuariuiKollmt \ I'ALriio ' * will [ STOIlll.ohuruw . ' . - KmU.luni , I C'tntK Mprrmutorrlit .lurlroctla I nud IlKhTOUK 1.4.t \ ( car. Use it and fav i/liitiifed. AdltfM , VON MOHL CO. , , Ho1 lurrlriu ift U , ClKlAltll , Ohio. WflHTED SPREE OUTFITS , liuusuliolili > I'lmruo ' fur Out" . nt. HO it A Y 4 'rnns on nil LflDY books onluri'il. No liivuntmcnt ro ( jiilreil t.ioinfioo purmomhcim & 0ENTS. bomuilo K'iriluairliitloniiiidlliiaraj . tcrinn , uililruM Mnilnit oipcrlriifo , If nny , nnmii ami nuuiborof boukn Hold.vto. H , D THOMPSON PUB CO. , ST IOUIS. Mn I'rimipt llrlli-r I.ulluu C'nrr. 1 villtrucl M'.lll.l I ! < < > lo liny num-rrr Hi > rf i.rl'tinii | ' loinlaicu Himill wi'iiK ( Kirlii Anxi' | < III > < uru I.OMI iiiiiiiionii , iuiu : iuiib , Varli' < i < - < - liiiiiiili-iiivr. . CIU8. h IJAla , llu /l JUr.l.Hi ll-cl. A UUNIMNKMirUUHH KU.I.HK u uiini 1 i.r..t.t KIlADIGATOIl Curiif nil dliHtiui uooiuiu It klili tliu inlcrubu or norm. I'm up nml rut > llo < l In . ' . tl nn M ulitii , tha InUorit , tedium. Unit ntirwhari prpaid on rocolpt of price or U O " Walnut t uUJrantou 'J euro. The uutilla trmlu uti'l ' juu Lurl nupiillwl by til ) Klnilor ttnu Com puny Omaha , C. A Molo'ior , M iward Moreriaal K 1 * hiiykorn , South duiiha , A. L ) . ro lur. uml M J Kllla Cuuno II lluU < . IIIADAM A , RUPPERT SAYS "Any luily can have a porlVut coi by the USD of my I'ju-o JJIeach. " Madame A , Rupport's ' Face Bleach Can bo liked u life time without harmful of. feet , though this Is not ncccbiury , as when the complexion h.isonuu bemi cleared by It , H remains so. KiPCUIes. moth , pimples , bliioUheads. JIx- ui < v > lyc > iciliicss or o Inoss. und in faet all bUIn blemishes aio quickly eradicated by It It duos not tiiKe a month , hut In a few days It will slionniiilurfiil Imnroxemenl. One bottle , f.'j or three bolt us for * " > . Call or send Go for bonk , "How to lie Uuautlfnl. " MME. A. RUt-PERT , G East 14th S root , Now York. Tor sale In Oinnlin hy ni > roirosuntattvp | , MRS. J. BENSON , 21O South 15th S.root , OMA.I-IA. NKB. SKATES Anyboyornlrl iiiulcr in run Imvo n flritrliKs pilr of limit's fri-o. without onn crnt of , money on ' VITJ msr Killilltluim If jou unt , u pnir wiltii nt nnra tn TTl.STKE.V I'lUHL 10. , 311 Urorlioro 81. , ClllUlim , III , . liin'ti. filertiimt I eitcorrhvnn unrod InUdnvshy thu li'runoli Itummly entit led the MNU ft dissolves nenlpst and Is ab sorbed Into thu inllniiiod parts. Will refund inonny If It does not uuro , or ciiu es 8trleturo Uuntleini'ii , huro Is u riMlnhlu article , tl a imuUiiao. or 2 for f. per mall prepaid SloCor- mlck.t Luiul , Omaha. N , M , RUDDY , THE ONLY PRACTICAL OPTICIAN ' 'III South nth St. , rnnmmSt Thoater. EYES TESTED FK.EE O'nssos Kitted to ruuunly all dufeuts of nyi- JJBlit. .St.oo' ' bpeet.iulos of gnaraiiteuil quality * 1 mid up. Solid ( JiH Spurt iiiliH mill Kycglnsso ! , ? I and iipvvurd. Oooullst's proscriptions fo glassiM Illlod coriuctly H tine clay us loceived AETII'IOIAL HUMAN EYES INSERTED. LoDuo's Periodical Pills. The Fiuni'h rumvdy mas directly iipim the eemiralivu organs and euros mipprusslon of thu mensuH. U-'or thruo for * ) , and can bi > mailed. Ninuld iiiiHiiisiddnrlnipreiiiniioy. ) ; .lobbun , dmgiflsts uid | the publlo suppllml by Uoodniau DniifCo. . Omaha. UNION DEPOT HOTEL. corner 10th and Mason Htrcnls Ninr ImllilliiK. now furniture ) , ovnrr tliliu llr < el.is llnmt lonitlim In thu iltjr , nil minium III I'rovonirnti. btuntu Hint , dim , c'nll Hull" Halt iiml llurliur Sliop In ci/iiiiociluii Kloctrlo ami Culili Onrn tn miy | inrlr tliu iltjr I'ry 111 iiml bo run dnuuil Hi it wo Imvo tliu I'list ' homo fur Iho iminii ] w t "f i liin i/i > Unto from I , ( * l t o > | it ) pur i Enslly , Quickly , Porinanently Hoatorod. \Vcmkiifi > , NI-I-I IIIIIIU-MI llrlilllty. ami nil tlm train of ovlla fnmi enrly umirMjr Inter oici'suci. tbo result ? of ciTi-rwork , ilcknciis , worrr , elc. 1MM ( trongtli , duvelopniont , and tonu xlvi-n to uvery nnian und iKirtlon o * the body , blmplo , natural mcihiHl . linmi-uiato lniir | < itumcnt Men. 1'ailurii liiipo lblo 2.t" J refi'renii'H. Hook , oiiilauutioua Bud priKifs matloil ( > valud > fruo. AiMrr > s ERIC MEDICAL CO , , DUFFALO . Y Wicn I Bajr rnro I do not inran munilo ttoi | lli-m fora lima unil tlion have tlieui rututn a aln. 1 mean a raillcnl cure. I lm > o mula Iliad HOIKof KITH , l.l'L JXr.SY or I'.U.MNOMUKNKSS a Mil-long rtutljr. I warrant mjr ruiuwl/ curu Ilia vrornt ca > v > . Jlocaui * ulhora Into fuiioJ Ii noremu'i'ornijtnawreuililiiif i uru. Kc-nil at urea fur u tr atlu > auil a 1'rixj Untile ol lujrInfallibleremwly. duo lUiirnMaml 1'c.itOHlco , ll. U. HOOT , .11. l ) . | IH3 I'vitrl hi. , N. V.