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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1893)
.10 . THE OMAHA DAILY BEE ; RUN DAY JULY 2. 1803-SrXTEEN PAGES. MAGAZINES OF. MIDSUMMER An Entertaining Collection of Eominiscdnoos , Adventure and Comment. MARK TWAIN AS A FAKE REPORTER The Author' * Vlow/i / on the ( Jenry r.nvr A. Curb nn the Grmvth of Cltlen The In * flux of Krrnch-Cnnndlnns Ilelleo- tloni on the DuyVn Celebrate. D.in doQulllo , onoof a number of famous newspapermen who made Nevada famous In the Hush days , glvcs'tho ' Callfornlan recollec tions of Mark Twain. According to Dan , Mark Twain was fond of manufacturing- Items of the horrible style , but on ono occa sion ho overdid this business , and the dis ease worked its own cure. Ho wrote nn account of a terrible murder , supposed to behave have occurred at "Dutch Nick' * , " n station on the Carson river , where Empire City now stands. Ho made a man cut his wife's throat nnd these of his nlno children ) nf tor which diabolical deed the murderer mounted his horse , cut his own throat frdm car to car , rode to Carson City ( a distance of thrco nnd n half miles ) and fell dead In front of Pete Hopkins' saloon , , All the California papers copied the Item , nnd several made editorial comment upon it n.s being the most shocking occurrence of the hind over known on the Pacific coast. Of course , rival Virginia City papers nt once denounced the Item ns n "cruel nnd idiotic hoax. " They showed how the publication of such "shocking and reckless falsehoods" dis graced and Injured the state , nnd they made it ns ' 'sultry" as possible for the Enterprise nnd its "fool reporter , " When the Cali fornia papers saw all this and found they had been sold , thcro was a howl from SIsKl- you to San Diego. When Mark wrote the item ho road It over to me , nnd I asked him how ho was iioing to wind It up so ns to muko It p'latn that It was a moro invention. "Oh , it is wound up noxv , " was the reply. "It is all plain enough. I have said that the family HVcd In a little cabin nt the cdgo of the great plno forest near Dutch Nick's , when every body kriowa there's not a pine tree within ten miles of Nick's. Then I make the man rldo nearly four milrs after ho has cut his throat from car to car , when any fool must see that ho would fall dead in a moment. " But the pcoplo were all so shockod'nt first with the wi.olcsnlo throat cutting that they did not stop to think of these points. Mark's whole object in writing the story was to make the murderer go to Pete Hopkins' sa loon and fall dead In front of it Petohavlni ? in some was offended him. I uould never quite sco how this was to hurt Pete Honkins. Mark probably meant to insinuate that the murderer had been rendered Insane by the kind of liquor sold over the Hopkins' bar , or that ho was ono of Pete's bosom friends. Today not a man in a huii'lrcd in Nevada can remember anything written by Mark Twain while ho was connected with the En terprise , except this , one Item in regard to the shocking murder at Dutch Nick's ; all else Is forgotten , oven by his oldest and most intimate friends. A Thrilling : ( experience nt Scit. The creat four-masted American sailing ship , Sheimhdoah , while coining homo from lilverpool last March , had a lively experi ence with waterspouts. When within GOO miles of bandy Hook , savs St. Nicholas , the wind suddenly changed , a great bank of clouds just ahead parted , and there , comlm ; down , driven before the gale , appeared six great wntoispouts at ono lime. Ono rushed by , Just clearing the bowsprit and head-sails by a few yards. Another came at her amidships , threatening to.carry tlio main must away , and the captain Just avoided by quickly turning the ship toward ' uid ) around it. There were two more near ones , nnd us they were too close to run away from , the big ship was "luffed11 up and Bleared rlzht between them. The 'ahlp vns saved , but what her fate would hav'o boon had she bcou.s.truck by ono can only bo im- nglnod from the captain's description of the watcnqwut that passed us torn. Ho .says it soelnod td bo fully twenty feet fn"diameter , and of solid water reaching to the clouds. Durlug the same mouth the steamer Pquu { hud n still more uncomfortable ox- pqrlonco with these wandering giants of the ocean , near the Bermuda islands. There she mot a cyclone upon whoso outer cdgo thero. hung a great number of spouts all dancing" and plrouotting hero and there ; twisting and turning and balancing to partners us if en gaged in nn elephantine quadrille. The captain became bewildered , for whichever way ho turned his steamer , ho was headed elf by the surrounding water spouts. At lust , Just ns ho imagined ho had steamed safely away , two of them made n rush , headed him elf , nnd struck the star board sldu of tlio steamer's Iron bow a tremendous blow. Then thcrowas n commotion Indeed. > The broken columns of water dropped In tons on the for ward dock , smashing the pilot house and brldgo ladder , tearing down thirteen ventila tors and dashing to the deck two sailors badly wounded. The ship staggered and rolled as the weight of water poured over her sides in a Niagara of foam and spray nntt for some tlmo she could make no head way. iWhllo the two spouts were having their frolic with the sorely beset steamer , the others were whirling about as if dancing In glee at the commotion they Imd caused. From the black clouds above there shot down blinding streaks ot lightning , which , although they missed thn ship , so filled .the air about. I'ler w ith electricity that it settled upon the metal tips of nil the spursr glowing and sparkling there steadily with the beau tlflil light known .is "St. Elmo's fire. " A Cuili Upon the Urowth < > ( Cities. The great troublowlth American municipal government , writes Bnrr Fcrrc-o In the En gineering Magazine , Is the lack of homogene ity In the growth of great cities. Each city htnrta out Independently and on a better plan than any other , and yet with very llttlo thought of profiting by the experiences of older ones. American politicians mo apt to plume thuinsolvchon the advances they Imvo made In their own departments , and some oven go so far as to point with prldo to the growth of their particular city. Yet Svlth all our boasted progress thn fact remains that the best governed cities , the jiiost ably developed and thoroughly broad ened municipalities nro the old cities of the now world , In which the necessity for new growth und complete chungo from the old have 'been 50 wholly recognized ns to compel the Introduction of a new order of af fairs. Nothing of the sort Is to bo scon > in oven the most active communities In America , Now York cannot nnnox other districts because - cause lof.il politicians interpose objections which have no foundation save tholr own selfishness , Boston Is hemmed in with so- culled rival municipalities tlmt hug their civil privileges nnd Imagined independence with absurd pretentious of might nnd power. Philadelphia has , In truth , added vastly to her _ territory nnd stands qulto distinct nmong seaboard cities in this respect , but slii > is wanting In the , motropoiran spirit and capability of development which ulonu would make this Increase of territory valu able. In the west a different fooling may bo noted , nnd this , as well us their moro rapid rate of Insrouso , tends to make our western titles moro prosperous , as well as moro mod ern , than our eastern. Tlio Author of " ( lulllvrr. " Between 1714 nnd 1720 , for n dozen years , writes Mrs , Ollphunt In the Century , Swift remained In Ireland without intermission , altogether apart from public life. At the latter date ho went to London , probably Deeding a chuugo of scona after the shock of Miss Vunhomrlgh'a death , and the gruvlous louse ho must have had that it was ho who bud killed her , ami it was then that "Gulll- rer" was published , Tlio latter portions of It- which the children have rejected , we are glad la have no space to dwell upon. ThoM M iUterneus , pamlou and misery of them uro beyond parallel. Ono would like to have any giound for believing that the Houy- hulling and the rest cnmo Into being after Stella's death ; but this was not the caso. Khu w.is only u woman , and wus not , after ull , of such vital importance In the man's oxtsienco. Withdrawal from the Ufa ho loved , confinement In it narrow sphere , the dlapi > olntiiu'nt of u soul which foil itself barn for greatness , and had tasted the high excitements of po er , but now hud nothing to do but fight .pver the choir with his arch bishop mid glvo occasion for u hundred nnuo- dotoa iu tlio Dublin coteries , hud nmttirod the ungry passion in him and soured the sweetness of nature. Few pcoplo now , when tht'V lake up iholr ' 'Gulliver , " go bo- youd Brobdluguag. Thu rest is like a suc cession of had dreams , the confused mis eries of n fover. To Chink thnt In a dnfinory , that calm sent of ecclesiastical luxury , with in sound of the cathedral bells and the chor isters' chants , a brain so dark nnd dis tracted , nnd dreams so terrible , should have found shelter ! They nro nil the moro bitter nnd appalling from tholr contrast with the surroundings among which they had their disastrous birth , fourth nf July Colnhrntlon * . The fact that our heroes foueht for freedom - dom against almost hopeless odds should be brought to mind , and their names should bo hallowed In uerpotual remembrance , writes Julln Ward Howe in the Forum. But. if wo would crown tholr conquest , wo must glvo moro attention to the good for which they died thrtn to the mere circumstance of tholr death. The ordinary procedure of mankind Is qulto the opposite of this. They are proud of iho military success , cureless of the civic and ethical gain. Even the Christian church accentuates too much the death of Its founder , Is too llttlo concerned with the truth for which ho really gave his llfo. A Lent of prayer nnd fasting , with dramatic 'repetition of the betrayal and crucifixion' ot the Blessed One , may merely bring with It suggestions of devotion nhd gratitude. But far moro important would bo rt Lent of study of the deep meaning of His words and works. It makes ono sick at heart to think of the formal rehearsal of great events by these who have tie understanding of their true significance , nnd can therefore claim but n small part In tholr real benefit. i\lls or Chinese Coinii'tltlon. It Is the duty of this government , Thomas J. Geary , author of the Chinese law , assorts In the California ! ! , to protect American labor against unjust and degrading competi tion , no matter whence it comes or what Us form ; and the labor that will bv its iiresonco lower the standard of labor that has heretofore pre vailed In this country , and whoso main tenance is demanded by thobest _ Interests of the land , should not bo permitted entrance , no matter from what country it comes. On the Pac Iflc const-wo have experienced the evils of Chinese competition , and demand that the bars bo put up on the Pacific so thnt no moro of these people shall enter , and wo are ready to unite with the people on the Atlantic to protect them from similar evils.affecting them. Wo do not confine our objections to the Mongolian rnco nlono , but bollovo that nil other classes or races threatening similar consequences should bo treated likewise. The Chinese law of May 5 was Justified by the circumstances prevailing In this country ; was In accordance with the treaties made between this government nnd China ; im posed no undue or unjust hardship upon the Chinese people hero , nnd was a proper and Just oxcrclsu of power on the part of this country. American interests In the far west , the maintenance -American civilization and the Just protection of American labor from Chinese competition , is of moro consequence than the profits of the Chinese trade , or the maintenance of missionary stations in China. The law should bo enforced. Wo cannot afford to have the declaration nmdo ttiat this government cannot enforce Its laws against an alien race in our United States. French Cittmdnin Competitors. It is clear that tlio mass of the Canadians who are settled In Now England , says a writer InJIarpcn's , are not rapidly becoming , proprietors of the soil , their holdings , ac cording to their own i-oports , being very much below the average per capita assessed valuations in-tile six states , us'appears from the census of 1800. They remain operatives in the mills and. factories. . . A few Of them are storekeepers ; fewer still are phvsiolans and lawyers. Recently .tho French-Cana dian press in the United States , and cspac- lally in Now England , has rapidly devel oped. This is a pretty sure sign tlfat the active politicians nro taking a decided in terest in the Fronoh-Caundiun vote , and are prepared to avail themselves of the custom ary electioneering methods for the purpose of socurincr it. In' 1SS7 there were in Now , England 10,800 French-Canadian voters ; In 1839 tbo number had increased to 23.405 ; In 18UI it hud grown to bo ! ! JJTO3. In every ono of the six states , except Vermont , votes equal in number to thdJ Qlkrjrrcuch-Canudian vptowoyld suQlco to reverse the political supremacy If they should , bo transferredIron ! the _ prevailing party Xoi the minority. In the proMdontial election Just hold this vote played an im portant part , especially.- Massachusetts. It In said that most'of tho' French-Canadians voted for the "do'mocratlc candidate because of tlio injuries inlllctcd on the farmers ot Quebec by the , McKlnloy tariff. However thnt may be , it is the fact that the French- Canadian "voto was a matter of much solici tude to the politicians of both parties , and it is Its growing Importance In American poll- tics that makes the immigration of interest in this country. 1 oil or 11 Morality , It is a fundamental maxim" , In this country atileast , writes James W. Clarke In Donahoo's Magazine , thu all moii uro and of right ought to bo equal before the law. If , therefore - fore , wo are to applaud , the suppression of faro banks , policy shops , book making , pee ! rooms , lotteries' , newspaper missing word contests , und all other opportunities for petty speculation on the part of persons with lean purses , by what perversion of logic shall the great national gambling den known as "Wall Street" bo Justified ? Is there in this mutter of gambling ono law for the poor and another for the rich ? Is it true that the risking of a dollar by u mechanic or a day laborer In the Louisiana wheel of fortune Is immoral , while the risking of millions in a wheat corner or a railroad stock , involving thousands of innocent stockholders In ruin is a ligltimato und pcrioctly moral transac tlon ? If this Indeed bo so , modern moralitj Is Janus-faced , and the rich man's virtue is thopoor man's vice. Well Drusgod Troops , In his "Side Lights on the German Sol- dlor" in Harper's , Poultnoy Blgoiow writes ; "Tho Germans are very thrifty in iholr habits , and no ono visiting a German barrack - rack 'room would suspect tholr military authorities of extravagance , , yet In rcgari to uniforms they acorn to us extremely lib crul ; each soldier hus llvo uniforms for vary Ing degrees or work. Thu most Inexpensive is the coarse linen ono used in summer abou the barracks , and the most valuable ono I : that which ho'woars on extraordinary fos tlvo occasions , us , fur Instance , the grand re view of the guards in the spring of the year , but beyond all tboso which ho wears at inoro or less frequent Intervals is the uni form which ho puts on when the emperor Issues his order to mobiluo for war , Mhen Is taken out the absolutely new uniform , nnd with this ho marches to the front. The troops that marchc'd to the frontier in 1870 looked ns though ready for a review rather than for the dirty work of campaigning , " .HOOKA .l.Y7 > 1'KltWlllUAT.S. "Tho Inheritance Tax , " by Max West , Ph. D , ( Columbia College Studios In History , Economics and Publlo La wVol. IV , No. 3) ) , is n scientific discussion of a present day sub ject. The first two chaptfr.i uro devoted to nn exhaustive review of the history of taxes upon trunsfcrsof property after the death of the owner. Ho shows that such imposi tions have oxtstod in ono form or another slnco the tlmo of the Roman- empire , It not previously in Egvpt , They now exist Iu most countries of continental Eurppo. iu many widely separated parts of the British empire , nnd are fast beinjr introduced into Iho comjnonwcallh of the United States , In treat In : , ' of Iho law of Iho inheritance tax Dr. West makes some not very compli mentary criticisms on tlio decisions of cer tain of our juit ea who have declared the tux to bo unconstitutional. Ills discussion of iho economic theory of the { nhorltanco tax Is novel ami Instructive. If any criticism Is to bo made , it is that , in classifying iho va rious arguments for Its support , ho has boon unfortunate in choosing u short designation. For example , "tho buck taxes nigumunt , " "tho lump sum argument , " convey to iho or dinary reader no moaning ut all until ex plained nt length. Yet to any out ) who will road Dr. West's monograph this will soon become intulllglblo. The appendix showing the comparative fiscal Importance of the re turns in various countries is a valuable compilation , In the "Financial History of Virginia" ( Columbia College Studios iu Hlslory , Eco nomics nnd Public Law , Vol. IV. , No. U Ur William Z. Rlploy hits carefully traceJ thtf fiscal development of that , the oldest of the American colonies , irom the earliest settle ment down to iho period of the revolution. The greater part of the work Is taken up wlih a sketch of the sources ot Income of Iho colonial government. The statement nn page 16 that the federal constitution forbade the Importation of slaves after IbOJ is , however - over , an error , for that Instrument simply provcntoJ congress from abolishing the slave trafllo before that tlmo. The chapters on hard money and on paper jnonoy are most interesting reading and would furnish food for reflection for some of our populist advocates of unstable currency. The llttlo biolc by Henry Irving composed of four addresses tlollvoroJ before the colleges - logos nt Oxfonl nnd Harvard Is ono of Inter- rjst In Its particular lino. The book is called "Tho Drama" and baa the great merit of being written by ono \vho knows what ho Is writing about from his own actual uxuorl- oncc-and observation of really great actors wltliwhom ho was personally acquainted. Tnlt Sons & Co. , Union Square , Now York The bright colors In which books used to bo bound are coming in style ngaln , "Tho Endoavorors of Mnplo Orovo" Is bound In bright old-fashioned blue , the tint of the sky , and Is a very readable story of the So ciety of Christian Endeavor , showing whoroln Its members sometimes- fall as well ns the great good they do In the world. The book Is written by Hattie Sleeper Gardner of Omaha and is for sale by Mogcath Sta tionery company , Omaha. Jonncss Miller writes very sonslbly In her Monthly for .lulv of "Tho Husband of tlio Solf-Sui > portlng woman , " showing that the fact of a womin'a bomg Independent uced not make a homo unhappy , but thnt it Is extremely - tromoly likely to bring about that state of affairs. Mrs. Miller seems to think It is moro the husband's ' fault than the wife's If unlmpplness Is the result , as U Is only the exceptional man who could got "round the dinicultics likely to cnsuo. Wo nro just In receipt of volume thirty. Inw-blndluR , of the series ' 'American State Hoports , " Issued by the Bancroft-Whitney company. These reports nro valuable nnd convenient for reference , containing ns they < * .o decisions from .courts of la t resort of different states , classified and divided ns to states nnd as to subjects. The publishers will continue the scries imloilnttoly at the rate of six * volumes per annum. Son Fran cisco , Cal , "Cruel Fato" and "Plighted Troth" nro the two latest Issues of the Abbott 5-ccnt novels. Springfield , Mass. Carlyle W. Harris1 mother has Issued In a neat volume a collection ol the writings of her sou together with his assertions of inno cence of the crime of wife murder for which ho was electrocuted. The volume also pre sents valid reasons for the belief hold'by ' the mother of thu iunoconco of her sou , J. S. Ogllvio , Koso street , Now York. George MacDonald has Just written a lovcl which ho calls "Heather and Snow , " Joutul In cadet blue embellished with snow- Hakes and heather or very pretty pictures of these boiutios of Scotland. As for the story , It Is fresh am ) strong and free , with a minor strain of sadness and a glorious woman as a heroine" Harper Bros. , Now York. A very pretty llttlo volume bound In white cloth is "Bits of Blue , " by Wesley Bisso- notte. The poetry is Just right for a sum mer day , light , daint/ and dreamy. Charles H. Korr&Co. , Chicago. Henry James In his "Picture nnd Text" thinks that the drama of the future will consist largely of scenery and stage effects nnd that the art of acting is one lost to the world. Harper .Bros. , J.NOW York. Gilbert P.irker appears at his best In his Translation of a Savage , " published in a recent Lippincott. The plot is unliiuo and the Interest unabated to the end ot a most impossible love story In which Mr. Parker's wild game flavor'appoars more or less prom inently. M. C. Ayers , editor Daily Advertiser , pub lishcs in book form a collection of editorials entitli-d .Phillip Brooks in Boston. " The volume is a very neat one , with an introduc tion by Kov. W. J. Tucker. The editorials regarding the work and character of the eminent divine have appeared in the iVdvortisor during the last live years. The current number of the Hallway Record contains on the Ilrst page a very roailablo poem of some length by Cy Warman , the Colorado poet. It is in the line of newspaper experience and is called "A Reporter's Ho- port. " Omaha , Nob. The Literary Digest for the week contains a protest from Katherine Parsons against woman suffrage , in which she says that il women bring up their boys as they shoulO that no man will over beat his wifo. Astor Place , Now York. James Dwight. M. D. , has Just issued anew now book on the proper way to play lawn tennis. This author is well known author ity on this gamennd as it.is seven years since ho first jvrotoouthe subject the book will bo welcomed "warmly.- " The numerous Illustrations will'bo u help to these who wish to study tennis scientifically. Harper Bros. NOW York. , t Brander Matthews is moro silly than usual in his "The Decision of the Court , " which ho calls a comedy but which is nol in the least witty and is utterly without 'nterest or object visible to the naked eye , Harper & Bro. , New York. In "Tho Idler Magazine" for July wo mid a "good story" by Hudyard Kipling "The Logs of Sister Ursula" . The Idler's club discusses the question , "Shall wo have a dramatic academy ? " The club's opinions are generally the most interesting feature of the magazine and this month Is no ex ception to the rulo. S. S. McClure , Broad way , Now York. Frnnk'Leslib's Popular Monthly for July is lillod to the brim with things of interest to its largo class of readers. Among the moro prominent articles wo notice "Donna Eulalia's Marriage , " "Greenland and Its Mysteries , " and "Metropolitan Life in Sum mer. " Mrs. Frank Leslie , Fifth avenue Now York. Godoy's Magazine lor July has a water color portrait of Miss Florence Pullman am also ono of Mrs , Chatflold Taylor , "A F.ac1' In Fiction , " by Albert P. Southwlck , In i story which is original in plot and full o iiitoi st to the close. The Antl-Oleo News has a strong plea for the Nebraska "bossy" in this week's issue quoted from the Columbus Creamery Mes sengcr , Philadelphia , Pa. > Amelia E. Barr writes a story , "A Singer from Over the Sea , " in which a man's sol- llshucsa is the cause of the wreck of a woman's career anil llnally of the death of hiii child. Of course , the man repents before fore ho dies and his widow marries another old llamo and all llvo happily-over aftor. Thcro are ono or two good characters In the book , but taken as a whole it is of no par ticular forco. Dodd , Mead & C ) . , Now York. "Bothla Wrav's Now Name" is the latest work of Amanda M. Douglas and is a story of love , sutToring and real llfo without son- salionallsin or objectionable features. The story Is of moro than ordinary length and the plot is not intricate , still the book is very readable and will suit a certain class of sentimental young ladles who are fond of a nice love story. Lee SllopardMilk street , Boston. Lady M. Colin and M. French Sheldon have just published a neat llttlo book on etiquette , "Everybody's Book of Correct Conduct. " Harper & Bro. , Now York. "Silhouettes from Life" Is a story of Ne braska In the early days by ono Anson Uriel Hancock , who undoubtedly must have lived In this state as u pioncor , as no ono but an actual settler could so vividly describe the appoaraneo of the muplo sugar trees and the "camps" where Iho luscious sap was belled down and sugared off. These Immense for ests of maple trees , which thu oldest inhab itant remembers vividly , have LJIMI gene fbr some years , and now wo borrow our maplo. sugar from N < sw York nnd Vermont. Verily the old days were the happiest , when wo grow our own maple sugar , Nebraska is a great Htato , Mr , Hancock ls > a gonlus and ilolion is often stranger than truth. Cuarlos II. ICorr & Co , , Chicago. All the Klndcrgartners will DO delighted with the issuance in book form of "Froubol's Loiters , " with explanatory notes by the oJltor , Arnold II. Itolnomann. Thu publica tion of thesn letters has been In contempla tion for years , and tholr nppearancd at last in such neat nnd attractive form will bo greeted with enthusiasm by the myriads of followers of this great patron saint of kin- dergarluerlsm. The book contains n beauti ful sketch of Frau Froobol , who still lives nt the homo in Hamburg , Lee & Shppard , Milk street , Boston , A pamphlet by Luoion S. Merrlam Is de votee to "Tho Theory of Final Utility in Us Holutlon to Money and the Standard of De ferred Payments , " Pursuing Iho theme with great minuteness , us to detail and with accurate logic the wrilcr nevertheless falls essentially in practical results , his study being founded en crude notions of what the full and correct purport of what money Is and ought to bo. All similar studios be long unuor the head of economic dialectics rather than practical economics iu fact this science is faulty at the base and no amount of line-haired trimming of the branches will supply Iho water needed at the root. Amorl- uan Academy of Political aud Social Science , Philadelphia , Mental exhaustion and brain fatlguo Promptly cured by Brouio-Seltzcr. SOME OLD . ' 'E8GLIS1I INNS A at Hostolrica for Morrj"Tfovolors in the Mellow - low Ooajihing Ddyfc SCENE OF1 NICHLO JlCKELBY'S ' MISERY Three of the Most Ambient Inni of Ilnglnnd , from 300 to SOd'feari Old , Which Are SUllie Resort of . . . . . I.JSM.1 LONDON , Juno 10. [ Correspondence of Tnn BBB.J There Is no place In England where such a flno example of the very nnclont stono-'built village may bo found as nt Broad way , the "Bradweh" of 503 years ago , which nestles against the lower slope of the northwestern face o'f the Cotswold hills , overlooking the lovely vole of Evosham. The niany-gabled Lygon Arms , a delicious resort for American nnd English artists and other genuine epicures of food , scenery nnd charming antiquities , is tho.most ancient of all the structures of the slumberous old mountain town. The precise structure standing hpro today is known to Imvo boon occupied ns nn inn for upwards of 500 yoars. It is charmingly picturesque without and Us Interior Is most quaintly arranged , with odd nooks and cor ners , while the first floor of the east wing has a line old room with a curiously carved chlmncy-picco in stone , other interesting ornamentationand a wondrous lot of charm- \ns \ traditions about the great folk , some on desperate business , like Charles I. In 1045 nnd Cromwell In 1051who have lodged with in it. Broadway itself is iho sweetest old English pastoral village idyl to bo found in England , and to mo this ancient hostelry , with its Tudor chimneys , Us many gables and dormers , Its stone and iron flnials , mul- Honed windows and bays , Us flno old Ingles' and fireplaces , with Us stone walls , thick ns a fort's , massed with creepers and vines , is its warmest and mellowest pago. Thu "Now Inn" it Invent 443 Yonrn. The oUTcathcdral city of Gloucester pos sesses several very ancient inns which nro still In use , two of which are regarded as among the most interesting sights of the place by all foreign travelers. Ono of these , the Now Inn , is an extraordinary rello of very ancient times and deeply interesting from its great ago. its historical associations and its extremely picturesque character , its architecture having many features in oom- 'mon With the larger and distinctly Moresque inns of Spain and Portugal. Readers of history will recall that the splendid south aisle ot Gloucester's magnifi cent cathedral was built in 1318 by Abbott Thokey , during the period of whoso abbacy the body of umrdeipd King Edward II. , which had boon refused lutcrmont iu the abbeys of Maltncsbury , Kings\\ood and Bristol , was givon1'bi3riUI within it. Great pilgrimages'to Edward's tomb , and wonder fully increased revenues to the then abbey church resulted. / hen-throngs were .some times so otormousj that the city could not shelter them , andr , lfoy.wero obliged to en camp at night outside tlio gates. A shrewd old monk , named0'JblliiTumius , taking proper advantage n-tlia'sltuation , in 145U , under the abbacy aitd , With the sanction and assistance of the Ruinous abbot , Thomas Seabrolte , built tljo , Now Inn , which at the time doubtless had , no .superior ns a public hostelry in Europe ; Ihluk of taking your case in your inn , asi'you3 ' cati do in the New Inn of Gloucester toilay , in a tavern which has survived "the changes of .443i years nnd never bqon closedinlllayfc K Sboluulon ot TIUs 1'loturciqiio Tavern. The qualnt'blcTjflacVis ' so cunningly hid den" behind1 tlio giliri ' . .wallsof Northgato street that'tbe casual straggler not having it in actual questt would bo fortunatn indeed if his glauoorpenotrated the deep , dark nrch- way separating it from the strcot and fell upon the old world scene within. lean never forgot my own experience , when , wholly ignorant of the spot , and of all of dear , old Gloucester , for that matter , I had como after u wearisome tramp down from the Mulvern hills , and without object or purpose was loaning against the corner of this same dark : archway for a bit of rest. Turning In a vagrant way to depart , a coaching party dashed gaily past mo through the archway. My eves followed the caval cade , and then my Ieg3 followed my gladden ing eyes. What an exquisite pleasure was Iu that sense of original discovery of a place so picturesque and old I How hesitatingly I tiptoed about that line and ancient court yard , feasting on this and that like a covet ous intruder ; and-when I found that those wcro anybody's pictures for the reckoning of oven three penny worth of entertainment , with what delight did I luxuriate at the bow window of the flno old coffee room , ordcrin this and that which I did not want , an tipping the waiter so Immoderately that ho sent another , and that ono another , but tax- nig them all with questions so that they gasped between answers , and finally wound up by settling an advance score , which re moved all doubts of responsibility , if not of Insanity , while ordering my luggage to Us quaintest old room with the loquacity of a bridegroom and the bravery of u lord I Around the entire three stories of the Inner court , which Is Very spacious , run galleries upon which all the dormitories open , pre cisely as with the Spanish patio or court ; while the half-story'of the peaked roof Is broken into dormers , hooded with pretty til ing , and their faces sot , like the border of an old woman's cap , with simple but wondrous ornamentation. The most picturesque of old stairs and landings load from ono story to the other. Hugo Iron ornamentations , many cast with sacred emblems in view of its oritr- Inal pilgrim character are found promiscu ously attached to the doors , windows and ceilings , angles and bows. Diamond shaped panes in leaden frames are common , Case iiiont and'little swinging windows are every where throughout the structuro. Niches for ofllgies and carved crosses have not yet boon hidden by tlmo and chuugo. , Evoryllims Queer , < Junlnt anil Old. Opposite the street nrch\yay Is another lesser but picturesque archway , with the entire tire facade of Iho rear sldo of tlio quadrangle above showing as quaint and dreamful a sccnoof rest fulness and antiquity as can b < found la Europe. Through this is roachoc ho stable yard , now restricted to accommoda tlon for sixty horses. In oldou times U coulc caio for hundreds ot animals , as folk of qual ity in the time of fhVKing Edward pilgrim' ages Invariably came on' noraobaok. Every thing about the Nevr Jim Is queer and quaint and old. .Never ql owHoro was aeon such n radiant jumble of pJUjornors ( , llttlo arches protruding upper stories , peepholes o windows , gables , dfllcis' , ' "ostrles , " tap rooms and wealth of vln'di lltH foliage nnd grave unctuous waiters ! and chubby chookoi kitchen maids , housemaids and barmaids ti heighten the inys Mlfa/ . cheer nnd charm of this typical old ISrjgJ lynu. The "Unlearn" MuUall'umaui by Dlokom Dead old Bowes/.irv"iorthcrn ) Yorkshire , alongside what inHform"Jr times WHS callec the Great North nuil , > possesses ono of the linest specimens o/i jlw ( ample r adslOo inn : of the olden cpaoh'liw 'fays to bo found In al England. Tjio villagb und this inn have nlwaysliad for md/thd/welrilost / fascination of any provincial sjwv in Britain , thougt lx > th hamlet and 'lilil are now dreary am desolate beyond doscrlution. The old inn hero , now called , the Unicorn , was Ilrst known us the Georgo. Eight coaches , bound either to London pr Glasgow , daily changed horses in Us great yard In the good old coaching days. It Ivto this Inn that Charles Dickens , with < \ great and merciful motive in llction , repaired wftb his friend nnd com panion , Hablat Browne , a few weeks before Christmas of 1837 , where the two remained while Dickens secured material for "Nicho las Nlckloby. " Ho had letters to a yeoman of the place , soon to shiuo as one of the Immortals of llo. tiou as honest "John Orowdio. " Ho repre sented himself as agent of a poor ) vldo\r de sirous of placing her only hey Iu a quiet country school. In this way he secured ad mission to a number In the vicinity , though shut out of some by the wary masters. The "school" seeming most aultahlo as a proto type of them all , from the personnel of Us savage owner and his family , with wild and desolate physical suirouudiugs in keeping with the hopelessness of the school Ufa of the IIIHCO Itself , was the Uothoboys hall , still aland Ing InBo wes hardly ft stone's throw from the otiolont Unicorn Inn , the house beIng - Ing now occupied by "old man Bonsdold , " husband of the veritable Squoer's daughter , Fanny Squoors , known In mo ns Mary Ann Shaw where "Nicholas Nlckloby , " his pro- logo Inmlsory , the wretched ' 'Smlko , " and scores of other helpless young llvos. nro de pleted ns having undergone nn almost Incon- ooivnblo llfo of servitude , starvation and cruelty. Accuracy of Dlokoni * Doicrlptlon. Investigations showed thnt the horrible picture drawn was not an exaggeration , nnd bore out Dickens' own statement in the original preface that ' 'Mr. Squoors nnd his school nro fnlnt nnd feeble pictures of nn existing reality , purposely subdued nnd kept clown lest they should bo doomed impos sible. " Tins , Dickons' second , and in some respects his greatest , novel was begun In April , 1833 , nnd llnlshod In October , 18'l. ) ! At the appearance of the Ilrst part ho ran nwny from London , ns ho always did , to remain In hiding until a distinct measure of public favor or disfavor was shown. In the case of "Nicholas Nickloby" his forgivable skulking was of short duration. The first day's sale of the Ilrst part exceeded 60.000 copies. Not six months had passed before tho" torture and cruelty to helpless scholars in these remote prison pens wore abated , nnd before the last chapter of "Nicholas Nickloby" had boon road , public fcullng , which In many portions of the country barely escaped expression In riot , had annihilated ovor.v child-hell of the Dothoboys Hall variety in England. If you came from London to Bowes over the same coach road na did Nicholas Nlckloby , when , Hearing thn end of his dreary Journey , "nt about 0 o'clock thnt night , ho nnd Mr. Squoors nnd the little boys and their united luggage wcro put down nt the Goorga and Now Inn. " you would have come by the old coach road from London to Edinburgh and Glasgow. An Otd Iloinin Hl lt\rny. On leaving the nnclont city of York you would Imvo struok into n highway S.OOO years old. Masses of Roman legions have swept , tide on tide , back nnd forth over the same stone road. Stern Agricola , the courtly Tacitus and Emperor Sorvllis him self , have ridden toward the unconquerable North upon it. The latter loft 60,000 , of his irmy doud nmong the Scotch mists nnd mountains , nnd with his face sot toward iomo and homo only reached York to die of ils wounds and chagrin. It Is the great Roman road of England. Wntllng , or Walthllng , street it is called. Away in the north of Yorkshire , a few miles above Cattorick bridge , ono stem of this highway goes on through Durham and Northumberland , nnd thence to Edinburgh. The other swings around to the westward , traversing Westmoreland and Cumberland , through Carlisle to the great Roman wall , which once protected Britain from the Cale donian hordes , and thence , In a more modern coach road , winds through the olden iovors' haven , Grotna Green , to Glasgow. On this western stem , between the rivers Tecs and Greta , at the eastern edge of Stanomoor , nearly surrounded by dcsolato moor § and in the northwest corner of York shire , lies what Is left of Bowes. It is dihleult not to wander away from a description of the old Unicorn inn nt Bowes , among the literary and antiquarian thimrs of interest in its neighborhood. The Inn itsolfmust not bo confounded , oven under its old name of the George , with the George inn of Greta Bridge , six miles nearer York , now used as a corn mill. To disguise the exact location of Dothoboys hall , Dickens made Squeers ( Shaw ) travel with young NIcklobv three miles from the George Inn at Greta bridge to the supposititious "Hall , " followed by the "cart-load of infant misery. " What they really did do was to dismount nil tocrothor from the York and Jarllslo coach within the inn yard of this very Unicorn , and' then sh'ver along the crooked , cobbled single street of Bowes , until they arrived at the "long , cold-looking house , " a little way bsyond to the west , and "a tall , loan boy ( poor Hmiko I ) with a lau- torn in his hand issued forth. " The Un'corn ' , which seems to have com pletely escacod the attention of English antiquarians nnd travelers,4 Is not only re markable from Its associations , in having boon the most important inn near the bor der , between Yorlc and Glasgow nnd Edin burgh in olden times , but in also being the largest of .thoso nnclont English roadsldo hostelries still extant which wcro called Into existence by the necessities of travel in the old coaching days. Near Where William and Malcolm Ilnttlod. At its very door the Royal Mall began the ascent over the great north road of weird , dreary and vast Stanomoor , peopled only by , wltchand warlock ; silent over save from ihowllng tempests ; and with no semblance uf humans upon it , save at its desolate top , where William the Conqueror and Malcolm of Scotland fought dreadfully and long to decide the boundaries of their respective kingdoms ; nnd then wisely stopped and feasted , sonslbly deciding that on the very spot should bo raised the great Uoi ( now Rero ) cross , or "Cross of Kings , " on ono sldo of which was graven the imago of William , and on the other that of Malcolm ; but 800 years have catun these old faces away : nnd none others will be soon until Kirkby Stephen , nestling in the valley , on the other sldo toward ancient Penrith and Carlisle , Is reached ; allot which gave travelers' cheer at the Unicorn a special zest not unmixed with n thjge of dread. Its form is of a double quadrangle , each fully 100 foot square. The ono next the street.has Its entire front open to the great inn yard thus formed. The two sides abut ting the street comprised respectively the inn proper a long , two-storied and garroted stone structure , with a perfect maze of curi ous old rooms approached by outlandish stairs , entries and landings , and rendered additionally bewildering by countless niches , cupboards , alcoves and blind panels : and the other a huge brow house , with dozens of granaries and store rooms behind. The side opposite the street provided offices and sleeping accommodations for guards , post boys , whips nnd all these Inn helpers concerned corned In working the coaches , or dealing with the tired cattle of the many travelers on horseback , merchandise packers and wagoners passing between England and Scotland , n , century ago. In this quadranglu are also many open stone sheds , with tllod roofs , stone feed boxes and neat , slanted cobblestone floors , where private vehicles and wagoners could find temporary shelter in great numbers ; and In the center of this quadrangle , sot about with stone drinking troughs , Is the most tremendous ancient pump I have found In England , still creakingly serving the scanty uses of the present degenerate days , The quadrangle behind the inn yard is formed by what remains of the ancient stone stables , where scores of pairs of post tioraos could have found comfortable quarters and as many moro carters' and packers' cattle have good shelter and euro. ejiTlio Old KltrliiMi "nil Tiny Tnprooin. In the hostel proper the huge old kitchen must have qulto equaled the famous ancient kitchen of Old St. Mary's hull , Coventry. There are still to bo scoa a half dozen coffee and breakfast rooms , low , with deep win dow scats , quaint , cupboards and odd old oak paneling , wiioro guests were served in par ties and groups Instead of in a common hall. 'There ' are tons and tons of load in the roof gutters , about the window frames and stilt firmly holding the ancient tiny panes of glass. Little old parlors and sitting rooms , with curious windows and most ancient stucco work , are still recognizablej but most inter esting of nil , and illustrating the customs of that early time , is a tiny taproom opening into tno rear of the inn yard. It has low oaken settles built stationary into wall and floor. Its huge flrepluco Is full of tiny cranes for steamingkottlos. . In oqo corner Is an oaken bed , inclosed in a closet' like frame , where landlord and barman could not only retire nt night completely from sight , but also lock himself In against up roar and disturbance ; and the window to this room is a low , portly bow , in the center of which , nb3\-o a tiny stout shelf , is a single hinged pane. Through this the stable men , hangers-on" the Into night travelers , who might bo uonost or otherwise , were served with usquebaugh or Jorum only after they had deposited coin of the realm and the latter had reached the hostel treas ury , a great buckskin bag within the dark recesses of the barman's fortified > od. Now the Dill Tavern Moeini Ueucl. A wonderful told curio { is the Unicorn a Bowes , all unknown to the people of Eng land themselves. Like the village it Is duad in its shell. Its oaken timbers , as these in Raleigh's old homo at Youghal , Doom everlasting - lasting ; but its moaning belfry , Us empty stablea. its crumbling dove cotes , Its forlorn brow houao , Us empty taproom , its grass- grown inn yard , and even its present occu pancy by a strange creature half plowman and half schoolmaster , who stares llstessly up nnd dbwn the Rroat North ronil for oeca slonal victim In wandering bicyclist , less froqucmt literary tramp , or yokel from the near fields , nil serve to otnf-hnsUo by con trast the cheer and stirring nays that once were hero , .As everywhere In England along its grand old highways where atnnd these crumbling monuments to the mellow coaching days , there remains but mournful ullonco where there was nn army of helpers and hor.iokcop- orsj where the bow-logged jwst boys , In tholr high chokers , high hats , hugo button * nnd gorgeous waistcoats , led llvos of positive re nown ; where the tinkle of harness brasses and clatter of hoof wcro endless ; where "Rule Britannia" from shrill-keyed bugles enlivened the constant departure nnd arrival of coaches ; where the smart cry of "First pair outl"sot-tho inn yard nnd stables In high commotion ; nnd where , through the livelong day and night , n great roadsldo inn , like the Unicom , was the brightest , live liest , cheeriest , most harum-scarum nnd de licious place to bo found In nil the length nnd breadth of "Mcrrlo England. " lCixiA.ii L. WAHBMAN. A pure article of clmtnpagno Is a healthy beverage. Got Cook's Extry Dry Imperial , 40 years' record. Dlcksmlth How do you account for Miss Muchcnsh never having married ? Kajonos E sy enough. Sho's to blamed stingy oven to entertain n proposal. Lucius Langdon Nicholas , who has Just married Mrs. Ulshop , mother of the late mind render of that name , is said to bo grout- great-grandson of a Russian emperor. The marrlngo of Mr. Frederick Ayer of Now York city to Miss Case of Paris , whoso engagement was recently announced , will take place , It is said , In Paris this summer. "How often , " ho said , with intense sar casm , ' 'do you oxpoot to bo outraged this sum mer ! " "Oh , dearl" she answered , "don't talk that way ; you know I dcsplso arith metic. " An engaged couple of Bluoflold , W. Va. , recently ran /ootraco. . The woman won , and then refused to marry her lover on the ground that she did not vt Ish to wed an in ferior. Ho 1 shall never marry until I moot a woman who Is mv direct opposito. She ( on- couraglngly ) Well , Mr. Duffer , thcro are numbers of bright , intelligent girls right In this neighborhood. Maude ( speaking of nor finance ) I don't bollovo any other young man living has suuh a tender way of malting love as Tom. Knto Yes : that's what I always used to think when ho was encaged to me. Sweet Sixteen ( daughter of n widow who is still young ) I want to" marry so mnchl But if I should hapocn to like a man and mamma didn't like him , she wouldn't lot mo marry him ; and if mamma did like him , she waukl probably take him horsolf. The duke of York and the Princess May nro going to sot an example to young couples starting in llfo. The royal pair will keep house in a llttlo cottage at Sandrlngham , which contains besides throe bedrooms only two small , sitting rooms nnd a study or ofllco for tbo use of the duko. It is simply fitted up with light and inexpensive furniture , and Is altogether a modest very dwelling. ' I shall never believe there has boon much romance in your llfo , Mr. Bond. " "Woll , there has. I proposed to nn heiress by mail. She accepted mo by tolcgram , which an error of transmission made a refusal. I wont west. When I returned her father hud failed and she had married n poor man. I recovered the amount of her dowry , with Interest , from the telegraph company , but lost it all when she sued mo for breach of promise. " According to English gossipers Prince Francis of Tcck , brother of the prospective bride of the duke of York , Is to marry Miss Nellie Bass , a daughter of the wealthy brewer. The British public is Hkoly to re mark : -'Ero's ' a state hot things" If this rumor turns out to bo well founded. The Idea of the future king of England being allied to hops and malt is likely to shock the shoopkoopors Into a series of violent fits. The young woman , however , hos lots ot money , and Francis has none , and it is very likely thnt thotnatch will bo mado. , ' A , prominent lawyer of Buffalo , says a paper of that city , , tolls of a compromise ho once made on behalf of a certain railway company with an Erie county farmer , ' whose wife had been killed at a railroad crossing , A few months after the tnrriblo bcroavo- mont the husband , who had sued the com pany for ? 5,000 damages , came into the ofUco and accepted a compromise of 9500. As ho stuffed the wad of bills in his pocket ho turned to the lawyer and cheerily remarked : "Veil , dot's not so bad , after all. 1'vo got flfo hundrct tollar , and goat teal better wife as I had before. " Mllo. Isoh , I ho young telegraph operator in Tifiis with whom the second son of the czar. Grand Duke George , has fallen In love , is said to bo a beautiful girl. She is the last descendant of ono of the oldest noble fami lies of the province. She is poor , however , and was obliged to earn her living. She chose telegraphy and became the head of the Tillis station. There the grand duke met her when ho was sent to the Caucasus for the benefit of his health. Ho was first Introduced ducod to Mllo. Isch nt a ball at the house of the provincial marshal of nobility. It is said that the czar and cznrina favor the marriage. of their son and the young woman. EDVC.IT10XAZ. The women of Massachusetts have con- cributod $2,428,078 to the educational institu tions of that stato. Princeton university has conferred the de gree of doctor of philosophy on Edwin J. Houston , professor of science in the Boys Central High school of Philadelphia. Senator Stanford acted the part of a wise man in building and endowing his great uni versity during his lifetime. It is in opera tion. It will llvo , oven though Us founuor bo dead. Nothing was loft to chance. The president of Harvard college and the minister of the Ilrst parish in Cambridge award annually to poor am. ' dosurvlmr pupils who uro preparing for Harvard college ana whoso parents donot llvo in Cambridge , nine iroo tuition scholarships in the Cam bridge Latin school. Applications should bo addressed to Frank Bollcs , secretary , Cam bridge , Mass. The great university nt Polo Alto will bo the most * enduring monument to this re markable specimen of the prosperous American , The senator gave to it the Palo Alto estate of 7,300 aoros , the Vina ranch of 5,000 acres und the Gridloy ranch of 21.0QO acres. He made U a rule that the trustees offer the highest salaries for instructors and ho made it u study how to muko his young pcoplo happy. The students live in cottages , twenty in ouch , and the girls' cottages uro only ono mlle from the cottages of the young men , There are calls and piano playing iu i the evening , study in the day und millions for instruction all the year 'round , Imagine an institution with such unlimited supplies of money ; with over 7,000 aoros of ground about the university , a vineyard of ! ) , GOO acres included in Us possessions and a a museum with real old masters and repro ductions of all the world's greatest works of art. St. Louis manufactures increased more rapidly during the eighties than these of any eastern city and it Is tho-honio of several of the largest and best equipped factories In , the world. Visitors to the World's fair should make tbelr arrangements to visit St. Louis on Iho way and"remain In the city at least long enough to see Us magnificent com mercial and other buildings , und to partake of the hospitality which has made the city famous throughout the entire continent. I AM SO HAPPY ! BOTTLES Red 4 O OF JI * L JB T Relieved tno of a severe Blood trouble. It has also caused my hair to grow out again , as it had been falling out by the handful. After trying tnany physicians la vain , I am so happy to find a cure in S. S. S. O. H. EuiEiiT , Galvcston , Tex. SCI TDpQ Ity forclnp out perms of ill- * ' * -/Iv- * -'caso&nd the poison as well. ( S ty It Is entirely vegetable and harmless. Treatise on Hlood nnd Skin mailed free. S SWIFT Srmno Co. , Atlanta , Oft- I WAS I WAS PAT. I PELT MEAN. I TOOK PILLS. I TOOK SALTS. I GOT LEAN. Handsome Woman Can Uoao Fast. Homely Nlon Look Better If Thin , Try Dr. Edison's System. No Dlotlnj. Band worth Twloo tlio Money. omen of II. M , llurton , Hardware , Unry St - tlon. III. , Jan. 14 , IftXI. Dr. Edlton DonrSIr : I urn wollplonsod with your treatment ot oboilty. The band It worth twleo the money it cnst , for comfort. I h iv reduced my woluht tun pounds , \rolRh 231 now , aim J. did weigh 21) , Vouri truly , II. M. lluiiTON. They Are Doing Mo Good. linrlvlllo , III. , Mar 2-1. 19) } . l.nrlnu A Co : Incloioil llnd IJ.V ) for which plOM * genii mo tlio other two liottloi of Dr. IMlion'i Obas- Itr I'llls. 1 Imvo mod ono multlilnk her nro ilotni tbo nork. B. M. HAMv , I' , o. llox 71. Talk So Much About Your Pllla. I'eorla , 111 , Juno 19. ISO ! . Dear Sirs : After ho.irln ? ono at mr frlcniU talkie Such nbout your Obailtjr 1111 * nn J Ilia bo no 111 ball deriving from them I think I nllltrjr thorn mrolt 1'lcnso Bond mo 3 botlloi C. U. I ) . , nnil oblige , J. SIUKllls. 4001'orry Stroot. Fool B'ottor and Weigh 13 Pounds Losa Ooslion , Ind. . Sept. 13. 191) Oontlomon : Incloioil I souil you II , for which you will plraso Bond mo three bottles of tlio o'jo ilty pllla. AmtnklnE the fourth bottle and foul very mucti bettor nndroluh 13 pounds Ion thin irhon I bo/aa taking thorn. 1 will contlmio your trontmonU ilns. J. C. McCov.v. South tilxtlt Stroot. An Individual whoso holzhtl ) 6 fact Much ahouldwoUa 113 pound I fi feet 8 Inches " " 1GO " 6 feet 10 Inches " " 1JO " Dr. Edison 9nya : "It nay be well to point enl tlmt In my oiporlor.co , which Is necessarily Terr consldprablo , many troublesome skin dl > ouHO suou. ocpniouiti , nrono. piorlasls , utlonrln , oto. , nro prim arily causoil by oboslty. and n the -fat nndflishls reduced by tlio pllla nnd Obcilty fruit Salt nn1 tU action ot tlio band thoie aaootloni Imvo almost mnKlcMly disappeared. " Iho Oboslty Fruit Salt Is used In connection wltn the I'llls or Uands , or both. Ono teaspoonful la tumbler of watoriaakos a dellcloni soda. Taitos like champalgno. . The bans cost fS M oaoh fomnyloturtli up to S3 1 Incitesbufor ono larger than ) ! Inoaoj add 10 cents , extra for inch uddltlonal IncJi. i 1'rlco of Krult bait. 51.00. IMUiil.GQ I'or llottlo , or J Dottles lor f 100. Bent by Mall or Express. , , . , Cuttlilj'outmidkoep It. andaoud far our full(1 ( coluradlnrtlclo on oboslty. MENTION ADDUESS EXACTLY A3 GIVEN UEU W. Loring & Company 2 Hamilton PI , Dopt. 20 , Boston. Man , 115 BtsU St. , Di'pt 2J , Chicago , 111. , to W. 2Zna St. , Dept U , Now York City. For sale In Omaha by Snow , Lund & Co. SJBT : OJP Teeth extracted in morning ; , New onea Inserted afternoon Rama day. Perfect flt sua , an teed. 3rd Floor. Pnxton ttloole , JOllt nnd I'urnnni Stroot. Elevator on 10th Strcot. Telephone 1035 , BUINQ Til- IBYITU YOU. DOCTO R SPECIALISTS nn. F. I , . SHAlll.lW , Consulting Surjoon Oraduato of Hush Modloal Oolloxo. ( DON- I ! . ) I'or tlio treatment ot CHRONIC , NERVOUS ANI > PRIVATE DISEASES Wo cure Gutarrh , All DUoasos oftli * No o , Throat. Oliost , Stomach. Bowrol * and Llvor. Blood. Skin and Kidney DIoa oi , Female W nltue oH CUKED. , "ffiliS ISTUKA , KISSUIH3. pormimentljr cured , without the use of knlfo. lliwtiiro or canstla. All nmliulluH of n prlriito or dollc.Uo niUuro , of cither BOX , positively euroU. Cull on or addraiu , with stamp , for Circular * , Free Hook and Ituclpes , nv Qaavla ; A (5 ( < ui lflc 118 Houth inth Ht. , ul beanes bflaries , a , OMAHA , N Next , Door to Postoffloo. Omaha Loan and Trust Co 8A VINOS BANK. SIXTEENTH AND DOUGLAS STREETS. Capital $100.000 ; Liability of Stockho.dart , $200.000 5 PER CENT Ml oo bankuocounts