T PART THREE. PRBES 17-20. TW KNTY--SKCON I ) YEAK. OMAHA , SUNDAY MORNING. NOVKRLHKR 20 , 1802-T\VKNTY PAGES. Nt'MBI'H 153 , 10 Minutes Walk To Business Center , Electric Cars .On Both Sides , Lois THR FINRST , THE. BRST. B Lote Already is the most beautifully situated addition within the one mile circle. It was platted August 26 , 1892 , ( \y\/Ft3 \ lTFR houses arc now being built on it , and nearly half the lots sold. " $40Oor $500 CASH , FOR LOTS BALANCE 5 YEARS _ IF DESIRED. FOB , I.OTS ON on Hurt Street. WEBSTER OR CALIFORNIA STREETS , . Bis count for All Cash. Property , Beyond Sells for Twice as Much. "Webster Street Now Being Macadamized and Parked. For further particulars either call on or address LOTS TREES 01 BEING Being Graded ui. TO SET ESTABLISHED GRADE.GHPAYNE. . President ; H , H. HARDERSecretary ; S. P , BOSTWICK.Gaslilar . , ' : OUT , COCKS Go and sec the Most Beautiful Residence Park in Omaha- B Hates.AVONDALE AJJFORNIA , ST. DLOCKC Money to Loan at Lowest Hates. To HIGH OUR COR3 IN EUROPE How tbo King of Cereals is Invading tbo Bnkories of Germany. ESTABLISHED INTERESTS IN OPPOSITION But Uuclo Jurry is Leading the Oonriueriug MnroU of the Maizj. IT MEANS TO AMERICAN FARMERS More Than Quo Hundred Millions of Dollars lars for the Corn Kaisera. COR.PEAL MURPHY'S GREAT EVANGEL Our Com I'KMlnrlV"i Hi Mui'li .Horo Tli.in All Ihn I'IIM Inns .Mi'luU 'Mliioil SOIIHI l'itiiU9 1 luit SinirUril ( Our HKIUIN , Nov. 5. ) Hi > ccIal Corrcspoudciico of Till ! Hri.J : Kxpcriinonitt mo bctnt ; muilo liero in Itorllu which ruomlso to bootu ImpJrtiuico to Uiu future prosporilv of tliu United Slixtcs , TiioKovonimcnl of Cicrma > curofully tcsllr.K thoususof our Indiiu oorn , niul Is consltlcnnc the uiloptlou of it as u fooil for llioCJennntinnny. Tills armj nov consists ol bT.UoU eolillors , uuu on it ua footing us total run a up to more thai . ' ,503,000 Tbo fnminu In Husslii tiab tiiu lit ( lOrinnny that she caiinut rely upon ttio cranarlos of tlio tv.ur to supply rye enough to feed bur ol- dlors , nnil ttio Uatigcr of a war with Kuisiu Ima led hur to carefully cxiimlnu tlic other food rejourcoi of the world , Shu Unous that It Is out of ttiu question lor her to hojio to ralso tuoiigh food for herself , anil If she must bo dependent upon other nations for livr bupply 5hu would profur to Imvo U conio from other puits of tbo world than F.uiopo , At liruaenl tbu i > tniilo food of tlio eoluicr-i Is rye , but tliu oxporlmonts which uro no\v ponif on incluJo inutnics of rye and pota toes , of r\eund jicatuita , uud , in fact , nil Boitn of posalblo coniblnullons. Tbo u ri- oultunsta o ( ( iormauy vloiv tbo situation with great olarin , and both they and the miller * , who unow that now nmcbincry will buvo to bo botiKbt for tbo crlmilng of maUo , uro opposing uny laaical chungo. The eav- eminent , However , Is lestlnc the inoltor scicqiillcally npd practically , and our Amer ican corn la bvUij ; submitted to moro expcii * jrtonts here thin uny which it uiii unavrKOuo 1-3 Iho Uiillnd .States , If It should bo ndoptcd us nn arioy food out1 exports of Ainorlcan corij U rnpiuly surpass in VHUO ! tboso of wheat , and tbo price of Indian corn ulll rUe ull over the world. An lucrcnko of oven ceojsji iuvuel ou cu' product would ndd to our wcitllli inoro tbnn $ IOJOi'0X)0 ' ( a year , urid U'0 riililiiK of Indiac cam will 01 oiico becorutj Jijoitj irolitablo tuaii tbo raUini ; of w1io.it , , Thg Ivii Jljiu fair.lno has shown Curopo that our corn Is tbo bust corn la thuovlil. . It ht > brcuk'bt tbo aitferelit countries to the ulflcroiit Kinds of uutUo , aud bo icsult is that our corn hns oeen snown to > o far superior tolbat raisea in south Hus- ia , in Snalu ana In Italy , and if UKUZCJ hi to i 10 used us nn nrtuv food it will bo tbo Amcr- can corn that is clio on , lntricilc < l I'MrlloK In Oii | > oxllliu , Wo hnvo no vast staudlnt ; nrmv in Amor- > cii , and you cannot underbuild at u Rlancc what im importiint tbinp the feeding of sucb u v.wt body of moil as the German army is. Tlio food has to bo of n certain character. H must bo a fooa which will Heop for weeks without t-poilinc , and it must bo capable of bciu ? transported IOMK dis tances without injury. Corn bread will not do this , but when mixed with mi in certain proportions its character is changed and it keeps very well. Tboso pioportions nro now Doing determined by tbo Kovornmont chemists mm b liters , and I am told that broad niado of ona-lhuM of corn and two-thirds of rye Is a success , bu-jli a bread tastes no iiifteronlfiom rye oread , and tbo soldiers ot one of tlio camions hero were led for ciRht days on such bread ( ind tboy did not Know it. After they were told what tboy bad been eatinc they found fault with it , but not before. Tbo broaJ is bemc testcn in the prisons and in every wav possi- bio to llnd Just how well it agrees with tbo inon , how long It will keel ) and tbo exact amount of its strennth-iiroducliiB power In comparison with rvo. The criiiu used is ( . round at the povoniiueut mills nod tbo brcnd Is made under tbo eyes of tbo govern ment olllclalb. In tlio nioantlnio all sorts of faults are boins found with Indian corn us an army food bv tbo rye and potato raiser. * of Germany , and ono charge , which bus bofin lately pre ferred , Is that It plvos tbo soldiers a d'iseaso. Tbu fiiomie.- liuilau corn olinr ed that Uiu Italian oldlci"3 wcio uflliuied with tills dls- ease and that the Koldior-t of .Mexico pot a soil of an itch from ontmp corn bread. They chained that our soldlars wera alTcctcd in the same way and that Midi food bud caused the same trouble in tbo armv of Frunce. Thcso complaint * wcro brniif-bt to tlio atten tion of I'oiiBtil ( ienor.il Kdwnids , who. bvtbo wav , is niiu of tbo most ufllclont , nnd prnc- tical ortlceis of our Uiplomatio service , and ho nipped thorn in the bud by writing to Iho various authorities of the dlffcient conntites on tbo suojeol. lie received tbo othrr dnv a letter from tbo French minUtor ofvar at I'.iris , and this Maiea that tbo French soldiers never had such a disease , and oven U they had had It , it could not have come from tbo u < eofconiHi food , for tbo nimy hail never used it to any extent. The Italian minuter of war replied that corn had been found a very good food for soldiers In that country mid the only trouble from it was when it was used in an tinnpo Mato. The Mexican authorities bad never heard of the dlscasn and no traca ol it could bo found in the United States. All of this informa tion was hud before tbo ( ieriaan government and i. encctunlly settled that question. u'urotnry limit' * ( Irriit V\orK. This movement for the introduction of In- di&n corn Into Huropa is being pushed by Secretary Uusk for all it Is worth , and the governments of Kurnpo hnvo learned moro about our Agricultural department during the present administration than they over Knew lH > for ) , Secretary Husk has liroi'uht the department so to tbo ft out in Kurono that tbo Itinilun govern ment has Just decided 10 adopt our ystom of crop reports , and vvbllo I was In St. Petersburg - burg tbc nsricultural oftlccis of tbo c/ar re ceived directions from .Scciclary Kuslt as to bow to do this , lleio in Cici'inany hiipfforts In the Diishlng of our American por.t have been f > upplo- mcntcd by the work ot bis agent for Ameri can corn. This agent is Colonel Cburlts J. Murpbv , who is laiown In America as "Coin j meal" Murphy , and who bai bopn tryinir to lutroittico AmcilcJii maize into the markets of Buiopo for aoino yoais. Ho has had corn exhibits r.t t no leading arrji-ulturdl and in- itustrlal ( xhibliionb of Kurono durlnrlho past cls'Ut years' and bu has been gotni ; among Iho haler of Scotland , Kugland an ] ports of tbo coatinunt and bbowluc them bow to cook tbU ; nealt Ho wont to lut.slu { and showed the people tbefe how to mix the In dian corn with rye to make tbo bread which was u ted l > y tbo JeDime tuffmu , uud ber [ loins what bo can hero to push the mattes wl'b the German government. Ho lecelvo- a salary of $ i,500 a year from the Aprlctils tural department , and tbis , with $1,000 for his secretary , Is all that the government is spending on this enterprise. The truth of the matter is that there ] should be a doon men hero instead of one , and that the very best and most practical business men of the United States should bo selected. They snoutd bo bent here with a good supply of raonov nnd the corn used for cincrimentlngbbould bo selected corn from tbo best soil and tbo best seed. Tbo bread should bo introduced tlnougti the best so ciety , much us William Walter hclps in- tioduced it at the dinner which bo gave to Bismarck and others , where tno onlv broaden on tbo table was corn broad , so made that it was as liuht and white as wheat broad , and it should not bo brought forth ns a starva tion food or n cheat ) rood. I chatted with Colonel Murphy last nlcbt noout his work and tbo prospects. Said ho : "Wo arc now maKlnc a broad of rye Hour and corn meal. Tbu proportions are one- third corn and two-thirds rye , and the bread Is fully as nutritious us thu rye bread. It Is moro alKCstlblo nnd at least ' , ' . " 1 per cent cheaper. Tne element of cheapness makes a great dlffotenco with the Germans , , and in this country ovorv cent counts. This bread has the same taste as tbo rye bread and tbo rye completely conceals tbo'taslo ol the corn. Com llrrail 4n ( in man Iliimni. "I have no doubt but that it will bo adopted by the army , and if it is it will bo used by tbo best disciplined fighting force In the world. 'Ibu Gorman BoVernment would save over ? , " ) , 000 a yonr by usingit4and its adop tion would mean n demand for this purpose aloifo of many minion bushels of our Indian coin every jo.ir. If it is used-ln th army it will soon be Introduced all over--Germany , Hvcry family in Germany has ono pr moio of its members In tbo nrmv , and this cheap and nutiitiojs food would iu this way reach to every hotiRo in the omniro. Already tbo mru/.o is getting a fooling amnni ; the people nt largo. There ore moro than tblrtv mills in Germany which mo grinding Indian corn for human fno.l , nnd many of tno bakers arousing using from : W to 40 per cent of nuuO with their rvo. Mhero are a number ohakcis hero In Herlln who nio selling it , and the corn Is making its way very fast. " "Is the cornmeal the same as ours ? " I asked. "No , " replied Colonel Murplly. "The brcna used in Germany must keep much loncer than in America. The , ayorairo German batting takes place only once u wock. and there is too much oil In Iho corn for It to noon so long If it Is gruund us It is ordinarily ground in tbo United Status. Tlio moit of this oil U in tbo Hula gorui at the end of the grain of corn , and we got rid of thin by cutting it out by a dcgcrmina'lng machine. It Is then almost as free from oil as rve , and it makes n liner flour than many people in America can reull/o. It will make the lineal of white ore nil , and It is being used lor caku baking hero with splendid re sults. "Vienna pastry Hour costs bore fS 7.r > por00 pounds , and the batno amount of line maizu Hour can bo bad for about ? 5.r > 0 , and many of tbo rakers are using it without the knowl edge of their customer ; , who suppose they are eating can us made from Vienna Hour , I found a baker in lOngland who was using our corn meal in this way. One day wben pas. sins a grocery store I was attracted bv a gaudy sign advertising a wheat prenatation which was guaranteed to bo excellent for puddliifn , 1 bad a strong suspicion that this was tome fnrm of Indian corn , and I bought a one-pound box ol it for 10 cents and took it homo id try it lor my Sunday dinner. Wo cooked it and wo found It was nothing morn or less than old fashioned American mush Havered with vanilla. "Hero In Germany this corn meal is being used In largo quantities by the restaurants as it thiu ening for sou us and Rravlo * . It is driving nut the Chliio a rice , wlucti does not trivo as good results and costs morn. Tbo Gmnatn like thick fcoups , nnd ( bo German housewife Is waking up to tno advantages of Indian corn " k ' oino Figuring un Corn , "When do you think tbu government wl | decldo as to the use oi the corn by the army f" " 1 don't know , " was(1jho replv , "but I expect - pect to buar from thorn daily. In addition to their exneriments on the bread they are oxptirimaiidnjr on a buscuit for the navy , which will bo composed partly ot maizo. Tbo army has its own mills for. tbo grinding of much of its meat and , as it is now , thg duty on imported . meal is so much greater than tnnt on raw corn tnattho most of tbo corn hero would have to be ground by Ger man millers. "Tho millers are watchingthe experiments carefully nnd they are ready to ony machln' cry the moment uny decided'movoment lint been made. As It is npw , Germany imports about one-third of its food supply , and I nope to see thu third madoup : Urpolv of Indian ' corn. Iu tha event of rf w'ur with Kussm the foreign supply of rye whtch Germany now gets from there would bo cut pft nnd tno Ger mans would bo materially crippled from tbo lack of It. IJy tbovav _ , young man , do you know anything about Indian corn ? " "I bavo planted it , oed and busked it. " said I. "and 1 ought to know something atisutit. " ' Well , what do you know about ill" As I stopped to t Ink , Colonel Murphy went on : "whatever you know , I can prob- ibly toll you somottin g moro. Our foreign orop is the biggest g aln crop of the world , and wo turn out semi tbinfj like 2,000,000,000 oushels of corn every earand wo have six slates which produce vor 1,000,000,000 biHh- els. have joii any i oa what that means * Forty bushels of she. ] cd corn it. a good load For a team of horses , and if you could load ihat crop iiDou waion , putting the noses of Iho norsts1 heads to the tailboards of tbo wtcrons in front of th < m , tbo line of wagons would reach nwiiv in a straight line for moro than ino.OOO mlles , If It could cross the oceans , it would go six times around the earth and have neatly 5,000 miloi of wagon * yet to spate. A ainplo year's crop of Amnri- can corn would make u road of wagons lorly- four abreast from No1.1/ York to San Fran cisco , and if this amount were loaded in ,103 ousbel lots In Irolght ears the train would roach from tbo west to New York , across the Atlantic ocean , across Uuropo and nearly to tbo 1'ucitlo shorts of Asia before the last car was on tbo truck. These cars would lorm four continuous freight trains from Now York to San Francisco , ana they would block up ull tbo trunk lines of the country. And thu most of thii corn comes from only BIX states , though corn can bo raised in nearly every state In the union , Out ot ovcry thousand acres of arable land in tbo country only torty-ono are devoted to corn , and if the , ) rlco Is raised by ibis Kuro- peau demand wo will have millions upon mil lions of acres of new corn fields. Suppose wi increaseoururcusonly one-tenth , this willadt { .Vj,000ooo to our corn receipt , and the mouoy received from corn'tiow by us is enormous. Com .Morn to Us Tlmu Ciolil nr Slltur. "Wo got more out of our corn fields over/ year than wo uo out of our gold , silver am load tninoa. Our corn receipts are greater than all tbo dividends of our railroad utocus. and ihov are moro than all tbo dividends of our national banks. AH it Is now if wo can get on Incieuso of ft ceiiu a bubbel op corn ' wo will add $100''JOpOUU ; ' to our receipts this year , nnd If vou could divide this Increase up among the families of ins United Slates It would glvo moro than fd n family. Our corn crop In Ibb'J was worth moro than 700.000- 000. and 1 expect it ta run into tbo billions when these people hero are eating corn bread. " The moit of thatU new to me , " said 1. "What moio do you know ( " "Weil , " connuued Colonel Murpny with a lau 'h , "I know tlut ( corn itself U n'to , ' us interesting a > tliu corn crop. Here U a plc- luio of a grain of corn wreath1 magriHed. wflicli will show voq moro about it than I can tellj-ou. It U a kernel of dent corn cut perpendicularly throuatt the middle. Tbero uro a number ot vanellss of Indian corn and this is ono of tbo best. You sen iiiiu racta kernel of corn Is made up of hundreds of little starch boxes , each of which Is nacued full of nutriment , and there are 'JJ.OOO of the o kernels in a bushel of corn nnd in our : orn product of one j ear wo bavo cnouph grains to give 77.0W 'kernels to even' man , woman and child on the face of the globe. " "How much corn do wo ship to Europe icwi" "Only about 4 per cent of our entire crop. Cho ueop'oof ' Europe know practically notn- ng of the advantages of Indian corn. I have been trying to introduce it in a do/en ( lllier- ent countries and in Scotland I hart a corn palaeo where I showed ovorl,000,000 ! visitors ho worth of corn ns human food. 1 IMVO bousands of children from the different ehailiable iiruani/.ations free meals nnd seine of Iboso insiilulioiib are now using Indian corn. 1 srot the pooolo of Glasgow to using t and In Ireland I know they nro now eating a great deal of Indian corn , wbleh they use n the form of mush , which they call 'stir ibout. ' "There Is a big Held for American canned : orn in Europe and the government ought to bo snowinir our corn and its use-i nt Iho dif- foronl exhibllions hoio. If arolall grocery establishment could bo selected in tbo differ ent cities and town ; In wtlch for a fnw weeks a good baker could prepare Indian corn for the people nnd KVO" ! It away , 1 be- llovo in a abort time Iho people of the va rious countries would got to using it and the outlay would bn ijuickly repaid In our in creased ex norts. " Tbore socn-.s to bo a dlfTorenco of opinion among the bikers hero as to the use of this Murphy broad Quito a number of the shops bavo tried It , bat owing to the use of Iho wrong reulpcj or carelessness of mixing it with ilia rye tboy have not had the best re bulls. The uumborof bakers iu Herlln using it at present is not largo. I matlo n tour of the bread sellers in the big central market this morninir and I did not find nsingln stand on which .Murphy broad was for sale , and ono old market woman confided to mo that it was not good , and another know nothing about It. Ono of Iho cooking schools buro whlcb tried it did not succeed very well with it , and 1 llnd that the brOad Is having almost as many downs ns It has ups. Every ono is walling until the government authorities iavo made their decision upon it , and upon this decision the immediate HIICCOSS of Ainoi- icau corn In Germany nnd among tbo Gorman people will stand or full. FlH\K G. CAllI'l'MI'll. Hartford Post : A rovoiond gentleman tolls this atorv of a little boy : Tbo boy was tired out from a bard ilay't. play , and when bo retired bo was too sleepy to say his good night prayor. His mother tried in vain to have him say It , nnd finally sent tbo father in. Ho found the boy just sinning Into n tired sleep and demanded that ho should pet up and say his prayers , The little - tlo follow nroso wearily , sank down upon bis knees by Iho bedMdn and began ; "O dear Uord ! please make papa say bfs praynrs some time when bo'H as tiled ns I am. Amen , " 4 , * A contentious church momhor In a western town I'ocontly attempted to have IIIB pastor disciplined for using ihe slang phrase "not In It" In the ruilplt. Hut the bottom dropped out of his charge when the clergyman pro duced a manuscript of his sermon and real ! this sentence from It : "In u word , my Christian hearers , the am was a minuturo world ; there was no form of Ufa that was not in it. " # * Tom Do Witt When Jack Ford was iu an Italian cathedral ho 11 ! his pipe at a sacred lamp before ono of the altars. Ed Stillman What did tbo nriost say ! Tom Do Witt "Holv omoko ! " In n church choir , the other day. according to the Chicago Tribune , the liltlo sopranc shook her list in inu teacher's whUkcrot face , "Your voice Is toner , " she Horcul ) hissed , "but your conduct , sir , is basn , " A French clectro-tnotullurcical company whlcb employs the Herault-Kilian uiuminlun process , asserts that it will bo able to Mill thu aluminium at a nrlcu equivalent to loss thai in cents n pound , provided It H in u position to dispose of a yearly output of il.OOU tons of tbo metal Thirteen railroads have their trunk llnoa In Omaha and furnish employment to S00 men In this city alone. SHE DEARLY LOVED SUICIDSS Strange Fa-r'intion of a Young Girl 'Rbo Prepsntly Visited the Mov uo. CURIOSITY THAT AMOUNTED TO DISEASE ruplo Mio U'unl lo s o Vli'tlins ill Sell- felnuclitt'r Duo liirt Who SIMIT Mlssi'il u I uiKTiil iinil . \l\\ayi II.id : i Uouijmit lor I hi ] C'nlll.i. Memories ot tbo morgue not the morbid nomoiies that deal with ghastly forms lying till and cold within tbc small , dtmly-llghlod bough double-windowed Inclosuro for the sulcido nnd the city's unclaimed dead , butllv- pg nnd breathing memories Induced "Undo 311" to talk of uuoor people who viait the the place. ' Uncle Eli" was in a communicative mood but Ilrit , of course , you don't know "Eli" and wonder who and what ho Is. Well , Ollus Gistor ns ho has boon known to tbo last jnnrtcr of n generation of newspipor report ers in Omaha as Just plain "nil , " has for nearly twentv-tlvo voars'p'orformed ' the last riles of the living to'the dead at the moriruo in this city. Hi * hair is fast : uruing a whitish-gray , but his eye is ju t ns bright us on tbo lint nlh-ht , jeara ago , when ho gave tbo nollce reporter bis Hrat "tli/1 on a big suicide or on a "lloatur" that bad boon found In tbc river. To the members of tbo newspaper frater nity to bavo thu friendship of "Kir1 is never to "got left" on a news Hem from tbo morgue. Tno oM man , for ho is nojr his threo-scnroof years.bas occupied acomfortn- blo bed in tbo morgue for many seasons , In order to bo on band In case of an emergency. Ho has seen Ihe husband weep over Iho dcud body of a wife , Iho molber mourning n f-on anil Iho father a daughter , until bo luu bo- eomo Indifferent , almost stoical. HP has longslnco icall/cd that t ars and lamenta- tlons will not IT store llfo. Ho has become something of n philosopher. Hilt wlthiU tbo o'd ' man has a kind , tender heart and many little tokens of respect for anotbot's gilof have proven him human us well as stoical. J'iclura n man about 00 , small in stntuio , but rather heavy , gray linlr and mustachi ) , ireadug about with u i.olr.o- less stop , saynir ! but little as a rule , and there you have "Eli. " The playhouse has for him no charms and his onlv dlvorMon is bis Teutonic tnsto for beer which extends to about two or three glasses daily , and now "Ell. " you can see < urlosll } Almost Dlnrnsr , The old man was turflntr n rest nfiarisomo hard work and as he sank'lnto H chair be be gan : "It's ( juoer Isn't it the odd desires of some people to ga/o on ihodead * Some , of course , call II morbid curiosity , hullo many cases of tbo kind of which 1 speak 1 think it gets to bo a disease. 'Something gets wrong with their gray mutter they got what you boys nowadays call 'wheels. ' " And "Eli" slopped to think and bis memory wont bark to years passod. "About tvvelvo years ago , " she medran "wo had the body of a suicldo hero whofbad , gene by tbo morphine route. The dead man's relatives lived away down nast and they wanton the body forwarded. We had placed the coruia In a casket and It was to leave that cvonmr. About ! l o'clock in the after noon a girl , who , I Judge , wasn't over IS or "J , came In and nstu'd to see the remains , She Becmed rather timid and afraldhko ai she followed mo to tlio place when ) Iho cas ket lav. Tbo ltd wut removed and us > ho looked down on the man's lace she asked : ' 'Ho took poison , didn't hoi' " 1 told her yes r.nd sbo said something about bis looking lovely and turned to go. ItclaUve ) ' 1 askeu , but bbu said no , 1 uort ot wondered. ' "It was tome time before another suicide wa brought in and tlin body had not boon placed In u ratlin yet , but put in tbu llttlo room downstairs , wbeu that young girl camn around aenin. Sbo didn't appear to ba near as much soared this time us she wont downstair * . In tbo room wore two other boilioi , but sbo onlv wanted to see tbo Bul- cidu and never looltoa at tbain. "VVoll , for about six years that same RlrJ came around every time wo bad a suicide or tbo body of any ono wbo bud luen murdered. Tbcn she scorned to sort ol disappear. Ono day tbo body of a woman , wblcb bait been found in tbo river , wns bronchi In and " "You rccoenlml your former visitor ? " "Xo , but she came in to BOO tbo body before - fore it was burieil. 1 asked her wboro sbo Intel boon and stio said she nail 02011 married about lour years before. Sho's ot qulto a fannlv now. ] sco her on the street occa sionally. Once in n ireat while she cntnos In now , but her husband , sha told ma , doesn't llko tbo idea. Her children arc all bright and healthy , " Tills Oiid Ilccinid u i : < < iiilnr Visitor. "ICIiV reminiscent mood recalled several o'.lier Instances of pcoplo who bad a morbid curiosity for Baying ni tbo faeos of the ( load , uut only ono other of a woman wbo wanted to view tbo corpses of tboso vine met death nt tbolr own bund * . The case was that of u woman , r.itnor oluorly , who * bncamo for about two roars a constant visitor , but nt wbom nothlna bus baen seen or heard for soinn time , "I reckon sbo c rae bore moro out of n desira to bo accounted odd than anything else , buti.liu crow tirad , I supposu. Ilavo any mon vUltorsl Plenty , but I KUBSS tboy I'omo around bocuuso they havon't anything else to do. Homo pcoplo lllco to have it to t > ay to tbolr friends and uc- uualutances tbat ihpy hnvo soon tbo body of someone wbo has been killed or Bhullled off. " llait u .Miinlii lor Fnnrrali. Slump Iii the llttlo crowd , listening1 to "Kli's" tales , was a well known undertaker located In tbo north part of tbo cltv. "I know of a queer ctwo myso'.f , " bo began , uflnr tbc old man bad llmsbcd. "It wasn't ' exactly similar to tha girl who wanted to son tbo btiicluos , tint siio him a mania Just as pa- cullnr. Klui was n ( 'OoMooklnjj girl and dressed quito stylishly. J noticed her llrst ono day us I w.u screwing on the lid of the class in tbo collln uovor. Funeral sorvtcos bad just conoinilcd and everybody wna de- blrnii bad taken a last loon nt the fuen of tbo deceased. The girl culim nlnni ; and laid a small bunch of roses on tbucolrln , i thought bor u friend or relative. Sbo wont alonp to the cemetery and stayed until tbo interment - mont was over and 1 tboucht uotbliift mare of it , I had another fu neral In oliarco n few ( lavs later n ml bho came again. Sbo wont through tbo same perlormanuo nnd nccompunlud tno body to tbo iTuvoyurd. for ovur a your nbo never missed n funeral , .Sometimes sha would brink'TO < M , and again only u few ponuilurni or suchllno. Cru yl Nut a bit of it. Suois living | r > Diibuque , Iu , now nnd ihowa no moro svinptonis of Insanity thun the ciuket over tboio. " That tburo Is no nccouullntr for tastes Is an axiom iierpotualod by tbo Irish woman who kissed tbo cow and tbo Idlosyticraciej of tno human mind uro us vailcfratud as the sands of the soasboio. To the believer in the bora- nltor ilcatn holds tbo key u tbo mystery of tbn threat future. JMuuv people visit the housoi of the ( lend und t'szo lonif and obrncstlv Into tbo stilled fcnturot as If to wring from tbom tbo bccrpt * hold tborcla , TbiR BCOIIIS to bo tbo most general cause of tha morbid U'lidmicy of tbo living to see Iho daacl. To realize a loved ono IvIiiK still in death , wbo but H bert time before was in uooil boalib nnd unlrlla , is to attempt. If Euch a tbum ucra possible , to fathom beyond tbo ) o.trnoy ovrr the river nnd learn that vyniub cannot ba solved this side of the bboro. To tbo general public Uioro Is a peculiar fascination iittacbcd to a Biitcldo , Tliu ID an or woman , bolluvt'i' or unbeliever , who ha tbo quality , sometimes termed Couraifo , Eoinotlmci cowardice , to face by their owi ( net the futuroujd llfo is n thing of cur iosity , whether\ curiosity bo u morbid ono or not. Men have been known to pay steady vitlts to n'avo.vurJs at witching hours ; others perform equally queer feqttl cases are innumerable ol friends ot tbo dead , calling In spirit meulumt ; and alt tbli for wbatl To lo&in tbtt wlikb onljr death ctn reveal.