THE OMAHA DAILY BEE ; SATURDAYS MARCH 31 , 18JM-TWELVE PAGES. IRRIGATION'S ' CROWNING ACT Will Illumlnato Dakota Towns nntl Cities Besides Feeding the Soil , DYNAMOS RUN FROM ARTESIAN WELLS ticnrcli Affrr n Hidden Trrmurii of NIOO- ( ) ( ) ( > llitrliMl on nn Inlnnil Tlio ( 'rjatul Itlver Country Nrws of thu Went. A now use has been found for artesian wells In the Dakotas. It will tint In any way Interfere with their utility for Irrigation purposes , but will Increase their valuu In that section to n very large extent. Before being turned Into thu Irrigating ditches the water aa It springs from the wells Is to bs tif > ed an the motive power to run electric dynamos , says the Chicago Post , so that they will be an Important factor In electric light plants for the towjis and cities of the Da- kotas. Through their use In thin respect It lias been found that the cost of Illumination may bo reduced to a minimum. Experl- mcntfl have been made with a number of these wells , the results of which have shown that they ore nn excellent source of power nnd that the generation of electricity through their IIRC 18 economical and Inex pensive. One well at Redfleld , S. I ) . , was sunk to the depth of 1,030 feet and glvoa a ( low of 2,027 gallons of water per minute. The bore of the well Is lined with six-Inch plpclng from top to bottom , outside of which Is an eight-Inch pipe to airvo as a ( strengthening casclng. The entire volume of the water from the" pipe Is thrown sixteen feet above the piping , and when a two-Inch pipe Is In serted and the flow confined to It , the water Is thrown IfiS feet In the nlr. This gives a pressure of 128 pounds to the square Inch. When the well Is closed entirely the press ure la 105 pounds to the square Inch. This flow of water has been turned on n water whrcl of fifty-horse power , to which has been attached two dynamos , and thofc furnish both arc and Incandescent circuits for the Illumination of the city. These dynamos have been found to give Htcady light , and the whole experiment hns been shown to be a pronounced success. When tho. growth of the city demands an Increase of power It Is claimed the ( low from the well will be amply sufficient to work n wheel double the power of the present one. The cost of the complete construction of the well was but $3,000 and Its value for Irrlga- t.ng purposes has been In no way dimin ished. The well Is but ono of a number which have been utilized In the same way. The nupply from" all of them appears to be In exhaustible and their multiplication does not appear to diminish In the slightest degree the forte of the flow from these previously In existence. They can bo Increased In definitely. The plant now In operation at Kedlleld Is paying 15 per cent on an Invest ment of SIC,000. SIC,000.A A BIG STAKE. Mr. W. K. Smith of this city owns a farm of Foine 300 acres on the west shore of Sauvle's Island , on which thcro Is said to bo a treasure of $100,000 burled , and along- tilde of It a big trunk full of bottles of whisky , says the Portland Oregonlan. The particulars In regard to the matter were learned from Mr. Smith himself a few days ago on the steamer Kellogg. During the past winter , Mr. Smith stated , Bomo parlies had been boring holes all over bis farm In search of a treasure burled there. The work had been done at night , and the neighboring farmers had seen the lanterns flitting around the place and mls- laken them for Ignes fatul or Jacko'lan - terns. The treasure , wjilch Is by some said to bo In a trunk and by others In tin cans , was burled thcro back In the 60s by a stranger , who afterwards had the misfor tune to get Into the state penitentiary , and the further misfortune to drop dead of heart disease In a hotel In this city soon after getting out of prison and before ho had time to recover the coin , which Is mostly In $50 slugs. While In the penitentiary this un fortunate man revealed the secret of his treasure to his cellmate , and also furnished hini with a rude map or plat ot the ground , Intended to show where the treasure Is lo cated , the bearings of certain trees , stumps , etc. , being ghcn as witness marks. This plat does not appear to be definite enough , as the fellows have been boring all over the place , till It begins to look like a big pepper box. box.When When asked why he had made no effort to rccoven this treasure himself , Mr. Smith Intimated that ho had not been In any need of the money , and , as for the trunkful of whisky , It was Improving with ago and would kecp best where It Is. The holes liored , he says ) , are eight Inches In diame ter and twenty feet In depth. NOT'SCi ' BAD AS REPORTED. The breaking of the Indian creek reservoir la entitled to rank as a disaster. It has In volved 'tho company owning the reservoir In great loss , has caused much damage to the railroad company , has shut off traillc and has caused Idss to many persons who can Illy af ford to bear It , says' the Boise Statesman. However , the loss will not bo so great as lias been feared. The Orchard Farms com pany will be able to catch enough water for all purposes during the present season , and for a comparatively small sum It can rebuild the dam so that no pressure ot water , no In roads of gophers can put It In danger. The railroad company , with Its crews of inen _ ready at hand , will repair Its tracks at much" less expense than the average observer would mipposo possible. The Interruption of traffic cannot bo remedied , but the gap made In the revenues will soon bo lost sight of. The ditch companies whoso works have suffered will bo able , to repair them for a few hun dred dollars. This they will quietly do , glad the damage was no worse. Those who were driven out of their homes by the water have Buffered great Inconvenience , but that will bo forgotten ns soon as the event shall have passed Into history. No death has resulted from the flood ; no enterprise has been stopped ; no Industry has been destroyed ; no family has been ruined ; and when communi cation shall have been restored everything will run on as before. CONSOLIDATING TWO ROADS. A statement 'comes from reliable sources , imys the Denver News , that the Elk Moun tain railroad .and the Crystal River railroad nre to bo consolidated and pushed through to completion. These two roads have been con- Rtructcd up Crystal river from Carbondale on the A pen branch of the Hlo Grande , and are each In a half completed state. Each has had the usual amount of financial and legal troubles , and for the two of them In that section at the present tlmo thcro Is no earthly use. United thcro would bo a strong company and a profitable piece of road , which , from the day of Its completion , would have all the traffic It could handle In the form ot marble , slate , coal , timber and precious ores. There Is strong hope that the consolidation will bo effected. This Crystal river country , as It Is called , Is ono of thu richest mineral sections In Colorado , It contains the celebrated Yule creek marble beds , which In quantity and quality are unsurpassed In the United States. A railroad Is alone needed to render them at once productive. In addition there are vast deposits of fine bituminous coal , ex tensive beds of the mosf excellent slate and Jnrge tracts of timber , as well as lodes ot gold and silver ore. Largo Industries would follow the completion of this road up Crys tal rlvor , and this section of the western tlopo would enjoy a speedy and substantial growth In wealth and population , These are not propitious times for rail road building , but It Is seldom that so varied and attractive a list ot natural re sources nwalt productive development on the completion of a few miles of railway. The grading Is all , or nearly all , done , and not much Is needed except the Iron and rolling Block. The surest and quickest way for those who have already put their money Into the enterprise to get It out again Is to com- jilcte the line. illCH PLACER DIGGINGS. Some wonderfully rich placer diggings are being worked In the upper Big Bend of the Columbia , says an eastern Washington ex change. 0. B. Williams nnd J. W. Me- Crcary arrived a.t IlovcUtoks on unowshoes from French ( reek , making the sixty odd miles In , three days. They luivo taken out considerably over $6,000 from the Consola tion mine , the result of four men's work clnco December 1. The pay.utreals I * twenty-five feet wide nnd with throe Milfto can easily work between thirty and forty men. By actual teat the gravel averages clear through the p.iy streak , $15 a day to the man , and thcro arc no mo 3,500 feet ol the mine yet Untouched. About n quarter of n mile below the Connotation the Vandal people have struck a bonanza. They have a tunnel Into the bench and have struck thn rltn rock of nn old channel. How much they have taken out so far In unknown to Messrs. Williams and McCrcary. Williams went Into the tunnel the day they left and the owners , as an Illustration of the mine's wealth , cleaned up about $100 off the bed rock while Williams was standing In the drift. COLORADO. The Montgomery mines , near Alma , may employ COO men this summer. Las Vegas business men are talking of starting a woolen mill for the manufacture of blankets. * A flow of gas wan truck nt 202 feet In the nil well at Colorado City. It Is light thus f.ir , and the drilling will be continued. The Last Chance , Crcede , Is outputtlng seventy-five tons a day , which Is being shipped to a smelter at .Mansfield , Plttsburg , Pa. Pa.A A email shipment from the Copper Rock extension In Poverty gulch , Goose Creek dis trict , to the Tcllurlde smelter returned $ 'JO ' gold. gold.Tho The cheese factory at Jefferson. In the South park , Is running , but on a small scale. Its business will Increase with the opening of spring. The force on the Champion and Hamburg , at Tellurldo , will bo Increased ns rapidly as more room Is opened up , BO as to krcp the 120-stamp Bear Creek mill running. The machinery ! or the Primrose wool scouring plant at Trinidad is being rapidly put In place , and the News says It will bo In operation by April 1 , when It Is expected to do a large business. A rUh strike Is reported In the D. II. Hill mine on the north spur of Mount Lincoln , near Alma. It consists of four feet of lime , with a foot of quartzlte In the center. It averages eight ounces gold. An excellent ferry across the Grand has been established on the Plateau canon road from Grand Junction. It is known as the Mount Lincoln ferry nnd Is under the su pervision eif II. C. Durham. The cable Is Inch nnd a quarter steel. The boat Is of sufficient size to hold four loaded wagons Hesperous Is the name of a new town on tho. Rio Grande line near Durango and In the Immediate vicinity of the celebrated Porter ter and Ute coal mines. The pay roll of these mines Is $6,000 ° a month. It Is the nearest station to La Plata City , from which It IB nine miles distant , with a line of stages connecting. Manager Horsey and the lessees of the Marlon property encountered an ore body the other day. The strike Is a good one , while not very heavy silver. Its value is In good Iron pyrites which makes It desirable aa smelting ore. The strike was made at n depth of 1,020 feet , making Its working ore body the deepest In the camp. Fifty-five car loads of wheat and flour were .shipped from Berthoud , during the week ending March 51. The wheat Is shipped principally to Texas points , while during- the week consignment of flour have been made Elizabeth , Sallda , Leadvllle , Pueblo , Colorado Springs , Aspen , Denver and Central City , Colo. , and to Marqulz , Tex. Tex.Lake Lake San Chrlstobal Is a beautiful sheet of water near Lake City , on which it Is pro posed to float a steam yacht this summfr. The lake Is about three-fourths of a mile In width , with several small Islands In dif ferent parts of It. As a fishing resort this lake Is known far and wide , many kinds of trout and in great abundance being caught there. OREGON. Baker City has a new box factory. Hop-pole.s are already being set In Marion county Uncle Sam Smith of Angora , Coos county , has just .harvested 'a BO'/4-pound rutabaga. A Salem man has a violin he claims to be 204 years old , and , of course , a Stradlvarlus. GranV _ county's bridge across the Nortli Fork t'Canyon City Is to be of steel , and cost $9,600. Nehalem wants a shingle mill , and says It has an Inexhaustible supply of the best cedar timber. The shaft of the Olllo Woodman Is down 140 feet , and the ore Is the best ever found In the mine. Recently many cattle have died In portions tions of eastern Oregon and the disease Is supposed to liavo been that known as "blackleg. " Eggs are selling for 10 cents per dozen In AahTand and a fifty-two dozen lot WOH pur chased last 'week by one of the grocery firms of the Granite City for 7,4 cents per dozen. The squirrel pest Is so extensive In the northern part of Marlon county that farm ers are paying 5 cents reward on their scalps In addition"to the 5 cents bounty given by the county. The Portland City water committee has asked for"proposala for the construction of four reservoirs to cost over $500,000. It has ordered the sale of $1,500,000 bonds to carry on the work. L. A. PIckler , Malheur county surveyor , lnui been up'on the Owyhec to measure the distance over the river to the now bridge. It will take 303 feet to span the river. The county court will advertise for bids for the construction of an Iron or steel bridge. During the past three months the sales of butter from the Falrview creamery , Tlllam- ock , netted to the patrons 29.1 cents per pound for butter fat. As the average amount of butter fat In the milk was about 4 per cent , the price Is equivalent to nearly $1.17 per 100 pounds for the milk. The foreign commerce for Puget sound for February , as reported by the customs de partment , shows a total value of exports amounting to $647,669 , Including G7li,810 bushels of wheat , worth $361,090 ; 7C.240 bar rels of flour , worth $189,603 ; 1.41S.63C feet of lumber , valued at $14,684 , and 80,000 laths , valued at $140. The Imports of dutiable goods were $57,614 ; free of duty , $26,097. Value of merchandise Imported In the dis trict and transported to Interior ports with out appraisement , dutiable $12,272 ; free of duty , $178,226 ; total value , $190,498. THE DAKOTAS. Cattlemen west of the Missouri river re port slight losses of stock during the re cent storm. Animals that were In good condition stood the storm well , but some of the poorer ones succumbed. Spearflsh has a miniature tin smelter for testing the stream tin of Bear gulch. It satisfactory results follow , a twenty-live ton smelter will bo erected for the reduc tion of the extensive deposits of placer tin found In that locality. The cement factory will start up with their force Increased to 110 laborers. The demand for Yankton cement has Increased beyond the facilities ot the present plant , and It Is rumored that another extensive factory will bo erected hero during the coin- lug season. The farmers of Brown county at their Institute resolved that the reports made In the east of the damage caused by the un called Russian thistle In this region have been greatly exaggerated to the detriment ot our fair state , and that by thorough cul tivation and other proper methods wo will bo able to nucccssfully deal with the weed , A colony of Dunkards from Wulkerton , Iml. , numbering 350 , will start from that place the latter part of the month for their future homes In Towncr county. N. D , A largo number of the party will buy farms , while others will rent or file on government lands , and still others seek employment through the first season with the intention of Investing their earnings In farming land. Hot Springs merchants have Incorporated themselves Into a union for the advancement of the Interests ot that city and county. They Intend to have an electric street rail way , a home for commercial travelers whoso tongues nro worn out , and a national hospital for disabled soldiers. They will also advertise .resources of the county In building stone , coal , gypsum and climate , organize excursions In the states east to bring visitors ! and will otherwise bestir themselves generally. WYOMING. The coal mines at Newcastle nro now being worked to the fullest capacity. Work Is about to begin on the property of the Falrview Mining company at Silver Crown , Ranchmen In from the Big Laramle state that small bunches , of sheep may bo seen along the entire road , A rich gold vein has been discovered near Lowlston In the South Paes country , Pros pectors report that It will bo the richest find ever discovered In the Rocky moun tains. Blxhop Tnlbot of Wyoming has $10,000 with which ho will begin work on the new cathedral at Laramle. A stage line from Rock Springs to Lewiston - ton , In the South Pass country , the rich new gold district , U projected. Two hundred men will leave Rock Springs for Lexvlnton as soon ns the snow will per mit. A new road 1ms been opcad from that city , which makes the distance to Lewlston seventy miles , a saving ot at least fifty miles over the old route. WASHINGTON , Sprague's creamery will bo ready for busi ness April 1. A new tannery has started up at Nasel , Pacific county. Contracts liavo been let for six new brick blocks at Harrington. Two new shingle mills nro ncarlng com pletion at Cosmopolls. The Everett paper mill will ship 100 tons of paper to Australia. They make their own fiddles along Toutlo river , and a good ninny of them. John Elwood has bought l.COO.OOO feet of logs at Whatcom for the Blalne mills. A distillery to make alcohol from wood Is being projected by eastern parties at Aberdeen. Thcro are In the state 263 branches of the National Farmers Alliance and Indus trial union. Crews are being Increased In the logging and shingle camps and some large contracts are being signed. A company has been organized In Mon treal to turn the offal of the Frazer river canneries Into guano. The salmon season which will open April 10 promises to bo more than usually active on the Columbia river. John McClellan , a famous hunter of the Wlllapa , has caught a cougar measuring ten feet nlno Inches from tip to tip. A Washington story teller , Ella Hlggln- son of Whatcom , has been awarded first prize by n New York publishing house. The prize Is worth $500. Andy Johnson of Wlnlock has been given n contract by the Northern Pacific for 20.000 ties. They are to replace old ones along the Tacoma-Portland line. The Toledo Railroad and Improvement company has been Incorporated to build a railroad from Toledo to some point on the Northern Pacific. It Is expected to use the bicycle system. R. Gamwcll of Falrhaven ships about six orders of fresh fish dally to points In Wash ington , Dakota and Minnesota. He has standing orders for l.fiOO pounds of halibut and 1,000 pounds of cod twice a week , but finds difficulty In getting the fishermen to 'bring In a sufficient quantity. Near Hcsscltlnc Martin Engleson has 2.COO bushels of wheat In one bin that was threshed before the first snow. It was not bone dry , but It was called dry , , and part of It was sold for No. 1 last fall. . . . The other day .ho had carpenters at work- shingling the roof of the granary to protect the grain from the spring rains , \vhen It was acci dentally discovered that the wheat was burning. When uncovered a few Inches a column of steam would escape , and the work of removing It to another bin was at once "commenced In hopes of saving a part of It. There ore 263 local alliances of the Na tional Farmers Alliance and Industrial union In the state of Washington , branches of the association being found In eighteen of the thirty-four enmities of the common wealth. It Is strongest In Spokane county , where there are forty-seven alliances. Whit man county comes next with thirty-seven , followed by Lewis county with thirty , Stevens with twenty-one , Lincoln with twenty , Cowlltz and Thurston each with fourteen , Garfield with thirteen , Kittltas and Whatcom each with eleven , Pierce and Chehalls each with eight , Okonogan with seven , King and Douglas each with six , Clarke with five , Columbia with four , Yaklma with one. MISCELLANEOUS. Electric signals are being put up by the railroads at tlio street crossings In San Jose. After nine weeks of boring the Healdsburg Trust company has struck water at a depth of 280 feet. The miners of the Agva de Lobo district , sixteen miles east of Tres Pledras , N. M. , have organized as Camp M9lggs. Considerable excitement has been caused by the gold discoveries at Tlckelvllle , Utah. The ore runs $20 and can be treated for $4. The Spokane Indians will soon bo located on the Coeur d'Alene reservation In Idaho. Cottages have been erected for their accom modation. The recent slaughter of eleyen buffalo In the YeJIowstone National park by a single hunter has justly created much Indignation In tlio Montana press. The San Francisco S. P. C.A. . has un earthed a plan for n fight between a Hon and a grizzly bear at the Midwinter fair grounds and will prevent It , Largo coal fields o'f an excellent quality are being uncovered In northe'rn Arizona , and Phoenix Is hoping to soon have an abundant supply of that kind of fuel. The first year's work of the Utah beet sugar works was pronounced a success. It has been decided to put 3,500 acres In beets For the. coming season. Tills .will bo all the factory can handle. Senator Stewart of the commltte'e on mines nnd mining has favorably reported his bill amending the mining laws so as to require that $50 Instead of $10 bo expended annually In work upon each twenty acres of placer claims. There Is an abundance of water for Ir rigation about Eddy , N. M. Although the acreage Is Increasing , the demand for water will probably not keep pace , because the farmers are learning that less Irrigation and more cultivation are required. The number of paupers constantly ar riving at Salt Lake from the west has made relief work very burdensome In that city. The unfortunates are said to bo returning eastward from San Francisco , not finding " there a city of milk "and honey. In February the Trcadwell gold mines , Alaska , shipped $44,951 In bullion. The expense of handling the 20,487 tons of mill ing ere and 324 tons of sulphurets from which It en me was $27,811. The profits In the past nlno months were $372,000. The merchants and business men of Salt Lake City are making active efforts to cre ate a popular sentiment In favor of using asbestos of homo manufacture. The move Is ono that will Increase the wealth and Independence of the territory of Utah. The Utah Portland cement plant at Salt Lake City has started operations. It cost $50,000 and has a capacity of 400 barrels a day. The company will pay out for help over $ GO dally and consume eight tons of coal In the furnaces every twenty-four hours. State Veterinary Surgeon Holloway of Montana has a scheme to dispose ot the surplus horses of that state , and there are many. Ho proposes to slaughter them and export the dressed carcasses to countries where horsemeat Is consumed. It In esti mated that Montana has 100,000 horses that would bo available for this purpose. Extcnslvo efforts are to be made to ship the first "product of the Salt river valley From Phoenix this season. A dealer named 3. Goodman has asked the Wells-Forgo Ex press company to glvo htm a living rale , and on his part agrees to ship from this valley 4.000,000 pounds of fruit during the coming season. Hitherto local dealers have been content with shipping a few thousand pounds annually to points within easy reach. Mr. Harold of Plttsburg , Pa. , has a con tract to sink ten artesian wells In south Santa Fo county , Now Mexico , for the Hy draulic Placer Mining and Irrigation com pany of New York , Ho has five car loads of machinery and Is prepared to surmount all obstacles In securing water for operating ho thousands of acres ot placer gravel In south Santa Fe county. Ho will sink 3,000 'eet ' In hopes of striking artetlan water , but f this falls to flow then n series of wells will bo put down and pumps used to lift the water Into elevated reservoirs. The Enterprise Reservoir and Canal com- las been organized In Utah to construct a reservoir lit the head of Shoal creek , at a lotnt known as Little Pine Valley , In Wash- ngton county , Utah , with a capacity nut- Iclont to Irrigate tin area of 6,415 acres of and. The estimate Is based upon , a calcu- atlon by which the capacity of > the reser voir Is shown to bo 2,758.145,277 gallons , which will give a depth of sixteen Inches.of water over the entire- surface of 6,415 acres if land. The reservoir will be one mile long > y half a mlle wide , and the average depth ot water will be about forty-five feet. STORIES OF THE WAR Every Page Beploto < with Material for Dramas and Novils. HOW GENERAL CLEBURN DIED Klllnl While Ilriullnp tt Confetti-rule ClinrRo Ono i > f Jinny 'llirlllliiK Slurlcii IJni- ImlmtMl In tlio "Century U'nr Hook. " Among tlio stories of war which Impress themselves upon the fancy there ore some which , by n certain striking qunllty , nro so vividly pictured upon the mental screen that they become fixed forever. Such la the story of General Clcburn'n death ns related by nn eyc-wltness. It np- pears that a certain desperate charge waste to be nmila which Involved the passing of an old-fashioned rail fence , behind which at short range the federal troops were massed In a strong petition. As the story goes , there was some doubt expressed about the ability of the confederates to pass the fence In question , as It was the focus of a tre mendous fusillade. Cleburn. who rode a thoroughbred hunter , placed himself at the head of the charging body and rode at the fence. The road be fore It was sunken , and as ho rode down the embankment upon the opposite side ho gathered his horse for a mighty leap. The steed rose gallantly and beautifully to the Jump , but as they reached the high est " point and paused i pparently In midair a" ' withering volley pierced both horse and man with a hundred wounds , and they sank dead across the top rail of the fence. General Cleburn's hat had fallen off and his sword.arm was raised In a gesture of command. The death stroke had been In stantaneous , and while his soldiers swarmed over the fence beside him and madly , con tinued the charge so gallantly headed the dead leader still sat erect In his saddle with his eyes wldo open , and fixed upon the enemy's position , Jils sword held rigidly above his head. Such arc the stories the veterans love to tell , and such are the vivid pictures em balmed In the records of the civil war. Those who delight In listening to the recital of gallant deeds find endless store In that standard history of the great rebellion , the "Century War Uook. " Every page Is replete with material for war dramas and novels beyond the flight of Imagination to compass. Here the great leaders , the commanders on both sides , de ploy their forces again In action or unfold the maps and plans of those tremendous campaigns. Here the private soldier tells with glee how "Uncle Ullly" rode plain and erect at the head of his glittering staff , and "no man looked so much a commander as did the fatherly general. " He tells also of the hot days when march ing with footsore pace was an endless agony only forgotten when the enemy's works lay before them. He. tells of the games and routine of camp life the forbidden raids upon alien barnyards the "SOIIE of homo and the death " " of "my chum" as they lay "behind a log upoi the skirmish line. " And all this Is told by the southern soldier as well as by him who came from the northland. We catch a glimpse here and there of the reality which lay behind the meager newspaper reports of the period. We see the self-sacrificing women at home tolling In fields and shops that their loved family hero might give up his precious life for a principle. We see the terrible anxieties which beset the aching yet stead fast heart of the great president. We are told of deep-laid plots and successful coun ter plots. We grasp more clearly the meaning of the mighty word "freedom" and realize In some measure what It cost. The "Century War Hook. " as Issued by The Bee , Is a revised edition of the stand ard history known as "Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. " In the revision the great aim has been'to evolve from this huge mass of data , figures , and detail an Interest- ins , graphic and comprehensive story In popular shape. Nothing has been eliminated which Is of vital Importance , and the revision has In many Instances , as regards particular nar ratives , but rearranged the matter In more attractive form. Nine hundred of the best Illustrations are retained , and these alone without a line of letter text will vividly tell the story to the ordinary reader. For students of history , as well as for the younger generation , the book Is Invaluable. It Is an educator without a peer In respect to the salient facts of that momentous period of American history. To the vet eran soldier the book Is already well known , and the only reason It has not been hitherto placed upon the library shelves of every loyal American household has been the necessarily high price placed upon It In the original form. This drawback Is happily removed and the work as now Issued Is brought easily within reach of the most moderate purse , The terms upon which the ' , , 'Ccntury War Book" may be obtained will be found else where In this Issue. OLD PRESCRIPTIONS FAIL. Sura Thing ItcnicdlcH Applied to a Utility llnrst * . The crowd had gathered about a horse and buggy In the middle of the strcot , says the Chicago Tribune. The horse had balked. "TIo a < trlng around his ear , " said ono of the bystanders. "It gives him some thing else to think of. I never knew It to fall. " It had no effect. "Blindfold him , " suggested another. A bandage was tied over his eyes and an effort made to start him. Same result. "Back him. " "He won't back , " said the exasperated owner. "I tried that. " "Try him with an car of corn. " The ear of corn failed to move the ob stinate horse. "I'll see If I can persuade htm some other way. " said thu exasperated owner of the animal. Ho took , a whip and belabored the beast with it till somebody threatened to liavo him arrested. Then ho kicked him a while. All In vain. Finally a benevolent-looking old gentleman forced his way through the crowd and said : "I have seen a great many balky horses started by building a fire under them. Can you get some straw or shavings ? " A boy was gent to a neighboring furniture Etoro for some excelsior. He came back presently with a huge armful. It was placed on the ground under the liorso and a lighted match touched to It. As the first feeble ( lame rose from It and the smoke began to curl about his legs the liorso unbent a little. Hn turned Ills head , took a calm survey of the situation , and when the combustlblu stuff burst Into a big blaze he moved forward about six feet , In full possession of hl faculties , and without any unnecessary haste , and stopped again. And the elegant buggy was damaged $2fi worth by the flames before It occurred to anybody to scatter the blazing stuff. And then an old colored man In a faded suit of second-hand clothes and a hat with the brim half gone went out and sp-iko kindly to the high-spirited animal , rubbed his nose , patted him on thu neck , climbed Into the damaged buggy , and Hulil , "Oil along , sonny. " And the horse moved of ! at a brisk trot , with his head high In the air. A Mounter Ainuthynt. A huge amethyst , weighing twelve pounds and measuring nine Inches by Ilvo In thick ness , was found recently by Billy Norwood ; says the Helena Herald , Norwood dis covered the stone on Granite creek , his at tention being first attracted by the bril liant display of colors sparkling In the sun light. The color takes the most beautiful shade , -a violet blue and a pinkish purple , In ono hexagonal prism , which will measure about four inches , A variety of tints are shown through thu balance of the stone ac cording to the mixture of peroxide of manga nese. when It was formed. This particular specimen is of the hard est variety of quartz or rock crystal , cut ting plate glass almost as neatly as a dia mond. It Is more valuable aa a beauty specimen , probably , than for commercial purposes. _ dona to llainv. A local paper of Moravia , Cayuga county , N. Y. , eaya that Qeorco Duuiore , a prosper- OET SATURDAY , MARCH 31st. 1500 Fancy Cheviot Two-Piece Suits at The goods were bought from M. Sampler Sons & Co. , of New York , at 50 cents on the dollar , and will be offered on Saturday without regard to actual values. Boys' Suits , ' & 1 7 150 Union Cnssiraoro Suits , ngcs 5 to 12 at SI.75 Suits $2.OO 200 Checked Cissimero ; Suits nt.$2.OO Worth SIl.CO Suits $2.6O 200 absolutely All Wool Brown Mixed Cheviot Suits at.$2.5O Worth $5.00. Suits $3.OO 200 suits , two shades dark and me dium color at .S3-OO Worth $6.00. Suits $3.BO Hich grade Cheviot Suits , cannot bo bought in other stores lor less than $0,50 ; our price on Saturday" S3.5O Suits $3.76 Handsome Brown Striped Cassi- moro Suits at $3.75 "Worth double. 15th and Douglas. CONTINENTAL ous farmer , who has been n resident of that town nearly eighty years , has never been outside the township , The well known vil lages of Courtland , Homer , Uenoa and Aurora are within ten miles of Moravia , but Farmer Diimoro has never been In either ono of them. He has n brother and a sis ter who have lived eight miles from his farm fo > - over sixty years and he has not seen either of them for forty-five years. A neighbor of Dumorc's , Nathan Tuthlll , 71 years old , has lived at Moravia fifty years and was never Inside the village tavern or postofllcc. He has lived half a century In ono house and never slept or nto a meal In any other house. He never tasted liquor , beer or tobacco and never wrote a letter or signed a note or other obligation. Another neighbor of Dumorc's Is Seth H. Webb , aged S3 years , who has been town clerk for fifty- four consecutive years. FEWER HOUHS , BETTER RESULTS Productive Cuimrltjr of Workman Invnrl- [ ihly lilrrpuscil. There are still some here and there who seem to bellcvo In the old maxim of Illche- lleu that'workmen ore to be compared with mules , who are less spoiled by work than by repose ; but , on the whole , the beneficial ef fect of reasonable repose Is now generally admitted , and , according to the Contempor ary Review , nobody would think It wlso or profitable to return to the very long hours of the early part of the century. And , hero again , what Is good for ono nation has proved good for others ; all have alike bene fited In productive capacity by abandoning long hours of labor. When Air. Scott , tha eminent Scottish shipbuilder , opened a yard In France , he reduced the hours of the French shipwrights from twelve to ten , nnd says ho found It advantageous so far as ho was concerned. Indeed , he raised their wages in consequence from 4 francs a day to 414 francs , BO that they must have dona more work In the shorter day than In the longer ono. When the hours were reduced to eleven In 1872 In Canton Olarus , the manu facturers prophesied ruin , but obtained 89.15 per cent of their old production In the first ytor , and moru than their old production In the next. The eleven-hour day was Intro duced Into the rest of Switzerland In 1878 , and Dr. Schuler , the factory Inspector , ex tracts the following results from the books of a spinning mill whose machinery was too old to bo speeded except very slightly : In 187C-7 In twelve hours thu mill produced 372.18 ko. of yarn per 10,000 spindles , but In 1&79-SO It produced 3SS.88. In 1881 the Swiss factory Inspector reports a tannery and a watch factory as having voluntarily reduced hours to ten , and having In both cases found the same quantity produced In a day nml an Improvement In quality. The textile manufacturers ot a particular district In Bohemia reduced their hours In 1870 , and , wlillu they got at first u little less product in the ( Lay , they soon got more than before. M , Frettfe , window-blind manufacturer at Hamburg and Durlln. who had reduced Ills hours to nlno In 1890 and found the step profitable , reduced them further to eight In 1892 , and obtained from a majority of his hands an Increase ot the quantity produced without any loss ot quality. . I HAT A manufacturer's en tire stock of men's Fe dora and Derby hats at less than cost of manu facturin. Men's ' Fedoras. $1.00 , worth $1.75. $1.25 , worth $2.00. $1.50 , worth $2.50. $1.75 , worth $3.00. All this season's shapes in blacksdrabs and browns. Men's Derbys. $1.00 $ ; worth $2.50 $ $1.10 $ ; worth $2.25- $ $1.25 $ ; worth $2.50 $ $1.50 $ ; worth $3.00 $ 15th and Douglas. CONTIMTAl CABLE SIGNALS. A Novel AppiirutuM IiiHlullcd In Now York City. A highly Interesting ami novel system of apparatus Is now lielng Installed by the Third avenue cable railroad of New York city by mentis of which It will be possible to signal or telephone from practically any point on the line of the road to either of the power stations. At the Intersection of every other cross street , ns a rule , manholes have been built between the tracks , which contain an electric apparatus , known as an "au tomatic , " which Is connected with the elec tric cable running between the tracks to the power stations. Each of these manholes Is numbered and 1ms a plug switch , by means of which a portable telephone can bo thrown Into the circuit. . If desired. In the engine room of each power house are two gongs on which the signals are sounded , the smaller gong for one portion and the larger for the other portions of the road. AH the road lias three divisions , the largo gong Is used In connection with an electric annun ciator operated automatically which Indi cates to the engineer In charge whether It Is the up or the down cable that Is to bo stopped. The llrst signals are always sent out by the conductor of n car , who only uses the apparatus when the cable must bo stopped. ' When such an emergency arises ho ralncs the cover ot the nearest manhole , lifts the handle of the automatic and replaces the cover. In this manner the number of the box Is transmitted to the power Htn- tlons , where It It * printed by an Instrument resembling u stock ticker. Immediately upon the receipt of the number of the In- Ntrumunt from which tlio Hlgnal was sent , the wrecking wagon from the nearest xta- tlon Is sent to It. This wagon carries the portable telephone uucd In communicating with the flvo telephone ami two power sta tions. After the trouble has been remedied the automatic U acaln used to signal the engineer ; ono stroke meaning to stop the cable , two strokes to go easy , three strokes to go ahead all right , and four strokes stands for ( Ire. All the dcllrato parts of the ap paratus , which are few In number , are In closed In a tight metallic case protecting them from tha dampness and dust. The ontlro system IK operated as a closed cir cuit , HO that In case any portion Is Injured the danger signal Is given at once. A Ili'MrrxInt ; Mru iiro "Out In Missouri , " ald a western mem ber to the Washington Post , "they tell a good story about Senator David It. Atchl- Bon ot that state , who had the honor to bo president for tlio duration of ono Sunday , by vlrtuo of his position as president pro-tem po re of the senate. There was a good deal of discussion about bringing KoHsiith to this country , and much talk about the great Magyar. A bill had been Introduced In con- greim to defray his expenses , and was then before the senate. The word Magyar was dinging In everybody's cars , and U hud not escaped the attention of Senator Atchlson , though ho didn't know what It meant at the time. Tlifre was talk one day In the cloak rooms about the 'Magyar/ and the pro priety ol votlui ; lor a bill to pay his ex- NOTIC J. These suits are all cut in the popular double-breasted shape. New goods made for this season's business by M. Sampter & Co. , of New York. A WATCH On Saturday with every $10 purchase of boys' clothingwe will give a stem winding nickel watch , a good time piece , which Details , Jv. en THIS OFFER Is on every $10 purchase of ' . " boys' clothing. . . . . i . _ , 15th and Douglas. penses , no ono denying that he was a great orator and a friend of this country. " 'Well,1 said Senator Atchlson , after a short reflection , 'If , na I take It from bis name , ho Is related to the Magulres of Ken tucky , ho Is n good fellow , and I shall vote fer the bill. ' " Illooily ItuttlcH of ICnropi ) . Linear tactlca and firelocks contributed more lavishly to the death roll than the skirmishers and breechloaders of modern times , sayn the Saturday Review. At Blen heim England lost some 23 per cent and her enemies about the same number. At Moll- wltz the Prussians lost IS per cent , thu Aiislrions 28 per cent. At Kolln KrcdtrlcU force suffered to the extent of 37 per com. whllo their victory cost his enemies only 14 per cent. At Kormlorf , the bloodiest battlo. of which wo have any record that we may rely upon , tha proportion of losses to tha total forces engaged rose to the cnormoim total of from one-half to one-third. Kuiicrs- dorf was almost as destructive to human life , and Frederick lost 35 per cent , against 2C per cent of the allies. With the advent of Napoleon and ( ho lopscncd formations of the revolutionary armies , lo8se3. first diminished , but at Aspern the Austrlatm left nearly 28 per cent ot their men on tha battlefield and the Krench , although the bul- IctliiH denied It , are said to have been weakened by one-halt after the battle. Uoroillno , too , deprived the Ilusslaim of 3G per cent and the French of 25 per cent. During the Na | > oconlc ! wars wo find the losses lower , although after Klgny the Prussians were weaker by aa many as 20 per cent , and the victory of Waterloo cost England rather more than that proportion. When , however , wo turn to the campaigns which succeeded the lull ot exhaustion following the downfall of the first empire , wo are confronted with no such bloody records , In splto of the Invention ot percussion caps , rllles , nnd oven rilled can non. The allies at the Alma only lost soma 6 per cent nnd the Russians M per cent. Inkornian , however , was as bloody as Waterloo - lee , but It was n ntrugglo In which tactlca played a very small part. The losses at Magenta and Solferlno wore comparatively slight. Although the consequences of Konlg- gratz weru Immense , they wcro cheaply purchased by the victors ; whllo In 1870 , not withstanding that both Hides wora armed with breechloaders , the losses navor np- proachcd the hugo totals of some of the battles of the early century or of thosy of the seven yearn' war. At Worth , It IK true , one-sixth ot the total forces engaged were either killed or wounded , but at Oravelotto the proportion was only one-eleventh , and at Wolsuunburg oiio-twclfth. Children Cry for Pltchor's Castorla. Children Cry for Children Cryfoif _ Pitcher's Castorla *