t OMAHA SUNDAY BEE JEST.ABMSIIED JU1SE 11) , 1871. O tAIEA , SUNDAY MORNING , SEPTEMKEll 30 , ISO L TWENTY PAGES. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. fS f S SS SS I r Boston stare is teeming with bargains from top to bottom. Each department tri s to offer b'gger inducements than ths othsr , halding friendly rivalry for your trade Tomorrow's immense tempting money saving bargains are the results of the limited power of Boston Store s ready cash money in the merchandise markets. ' There isnot another house in America that can show bargains like these we do tomorrow. BARGAINS JUR BASEMENT Visit Boston Store's Cloak Dep't on the - ijouiiil Mour unit H.'O ill tlio ltil- CMt lltlll fMtlVIK' K yKli I.III'H' | | ( UlU.lU * , Jookcti null -Mills For loriorrow , Monday , We will Tixhlblt in our now tloak department on the pecond floor 2,000 choice , now , stylish sample cloaka long , BtylUh Jackets and golf capesno two garments allkb In this lot , each one a per fect and Irreproachable fit and finish. All Tery long and many of them Prince oC Wains atyla , made In choicest-beaver , kersey , chev iot and covert cloth. These sample clonUs ciiCme from lvo * of the finest cloak iiranutn < . nrers In New York. Many of them are Im ported samples , and wb Imve bought them at a great discount , so enabling us to offer exceptionally great bargAlhs In new style cloaks. They all go In lots at ? 10.00 , ? 15 00 , JJB.Oe , $35.00 and 150.00 eacli , worth from $25 to $100.00 a plocp. The Minetto , a beautiful Jacket made of eoveri cloth * In oxford snades , extra long , iwlda lapels , go at $3.95. J1.98 , WORTH $10,00. 300 of the latest style golf capes oil tale t"raorrow for $1.08. Tills capo Is made of fine quality beaver cloth In blue and black , 3G luches Ion's and 110 Inched sweep. This Is i the greatest bargain ever offered In tha "cleat line , > > , - CHINA'S ' PRIMEVAL HIGHWAYS Celostnb Are Htimp red in War b ; Irc EXTENSIVE RELAY MESSENGER SERVICE The Ilecirtira at Ticn-Tnln uiul the Sciuiillil lluCa or fiirinurs Men ntiil Women n Cuttle Country ( ilrls iiuU I * lloir They Lauk. < jlWriehted , U91rrank a. Curpcnter. ) Tha most serious question which Is troub ling China tpday , ln herwar , with Japan Is that of transportation. She has a big popu lation , but it la.Bcattered over a country one- tiUril Urger.'tlmn the whole United States. This vast cxtfuit of territory has only ono railroad , about 200 miles long. This runs through one ot the most sparszly settled parts of It , extcjiaing from the city of Ticn- ffsln 'to the point where , the great Chinese .wall Juts down Into the sea at the head f the Gull of Peclilll , All of the traffic of the rest ot the country is carried on In boats , carts and wheelbarrows , and China has no means ot transporting largo masses of men or provisions to feed them. The roads are jriore- like ditches cut through the Holds than anything clso. Thiy are full of ruts and'in the rainy eeason'they are turned Into rivers. It Is said that there are 4,000 roads in the empire , but I venture to say that not one Is ' snacadamlzed ( and the great highway over .which the caravans pass in going to Mongolia Is the bed of a rocky mountain torrent , and Iho brick tea , which , to the amount of thousands of tons , Is carried Into Hussla and Thibet , Is taken over mountain paths so rough that only men con travel over theiq. V\II the InlonnatlW- dispatches and malls yhich go to the caHtl | ot China have to bo carried over < Jlghur J.-nnd before the telo- Kraph lines wcron'njv'lrljQ Peking important certs waa sent from all purls ot the empire fcy messengers with relays of horses. Such a messenger service exists In BOITIP parts ot China today ' , and It Is said that Ktblal Kahn had 300,000 horsis which he Bled for this purpose , and his relay stations numbered 10,000. Borae ot the provisions for Ihe palace at Peking are brought by relays 'Irotn Tlen-Tsln , and today the courier service between China am ! Thibet Is by ponies. Kha couriers travel night and day. Their Clothes are sealed on them when they start nd these seals cannot bo broken until they liave delivered their messages. It Is said Itint they are lilted from one horse to an other at tha station and that they come- , Umet die on the way from fatigue. Nearly all th money transactions of China [ re done in sliver , and I saw boxes ot Ijiulllon packed Into curls and shipped from | Sn town to another. Tha bullion was [ BUl d up In Fine boxji , and such as I saw being shipped out ct Peking did not have ra to guard U. I was told at the inks , Ivowev ri tbt all money that was ant far Into th Interior had to pay a oa > Ei.Ualou to the- bands ot brigands and fibbers. A certain luni was given to some connected with these bands and they inted an escort to go with the money , robbers In China have a sort ot trades Ion , and there seems to be tuch honor j \c Chinese thieves that other bands will f Coolest caravans which have puld toll to ; rrobbera. Some parts of China are full brigands and north ct Corea there are all rts of Guerrillas. TUB SKAT OP TRADE. The two greatest cities ot North China nr . fou know , I' king nd 'fl n-Tiln , and tbcs Very good yard i Bleirclfofl Muslin , worth 7ju. All thii best STANDARD CALICOS Very heavy' SIIAK13U and Cnntoii "Flannel Splondt'd dark color OUTING FLANNEL Elegant 12ic quality DRAPERY SATEENS jv heavy blenched and unbleached C n nt on lannol Best quality APHON"unil DRESS GINGHAMS All the nowcst patterns go Windsor hi B/illiaiitines y < All the 23c imported ! , , , L 0 * I a-rti * - lirK' ami OHt Sateens-f" W PlhlfT Whok-nml black ground tffc I Dress" - Mrji Sateens < All the double napped ff& I Sanitary Mnf Flannel BOSTON STORE , fl.fj ( are the most Interesting points In the present struggle. If the Japanese could take them , the war would be practically iottled , and the Chines" would change their rulers from Tar tars to Japs. Both of these cities are not very far from the -Tlen-Tsln | s flbout flfty miles back up tho-Peiho river , and. Po king lies about eighty nnlci to tha north ward. Uotli cities ar froztn up during the winter , and from December till Mirch there la no communication except by rui' ' * curia and ponies , which go overland from Sli.ingnal and Cheefoo. I made jovesnl trips tlili spring from Tien-Tsln to Peking , nnd It will give you a good Idea at th sluiatlim In Phlna for mo to describe the eomieetfoiis or trunk lines between these two mlthty cities. Prklng Is. you Know , the capital of the great Chinese empire. It contains between 1.000,000 and l.f.Ofr.OOO'people. . It Is wlidro the ruler of 500,000,000 almond-eyed mortals lives , und It Is the grcateht beat of government on the Globe. Tlen-Tsln Is the home of LI Hung Clung. It la the Now York of North China. It li the pnrt where are landed all the gooda which Mipply these hundreds of millions of the north and of those which are carried from it far beyond the borders 9 ! the great wall Into Manchuria , Mongolia and the great prov ince of 111. Its Inhabitants number more than 1,000,000 , and upon Its wharves goods are stacked like hay , aggregating In value every year hundreds ol millions ol dollars , These two cities ar ? about as far apart as are New York and Philadelphia , nnd the land between them Is as flat as the floor of a ball room. All of the supplies of the capital. Including those for the nobles and the court , come first to Tlen-Tsln , nnd there Is a stream of goods Tlowlng continually from one place to the other fully as large us that which passes over the railroads between New York and Chi cago. Through \\hat channels does It flow , and how long does II take to go from on ? city to tht > other ? I tra\elcd nearly two whole days und nights In making my Journey by land , and the > average trip by way of the Pellio river is from four to five days. These two cities have not even a. decent wagon road connecting them. The slow freight is a wheelbarrow , and the fast express is a Mon golian pony or a Chinese cart. THC HOUSE BOAT. The Pullman car Is a house boat on the Pclho river , but this lands you only at the city ot Tung Chow , nnd you have to make the remainder of your Journey by donkey or cart I have traveled both ways , and I ran a race In my house boat with the boat of Sec retary John W. .Foster down the Peiho. We both had American tligs floating from our nmsthfMds , and my Hag reached Tlen-Tsln first , The Pclho river winds , about like a snake. It cuts In and out at places like the teeth of a saw , and there ara points where you can leave the boat , walk a half mile across the fields and take a nap before It gets around the bend to where you are. These house boats are for hire at Tlen-Tsln and at Tung Chow , and It costs from $10 to $20 to make the trip to Peking , Each house boat baa a lot of sailors and a captain , and you carry your own cook and your own pro visions. My captain was over six feet In height. He was clad In wadded blue cotton , and his gown reached to his ankles. He lived In the back of the boat , and my quarters were in the middle. I slept at night under a piece of matting , and my servant cooked my meals. When the wind was In the right direction we put up the &I1S , and when it died down the sailors pushed the boat along wllh poles which they dug Into the bed of the river or fastened long ropes to It rnd dragged U along by walking on the banks. W did not know how long the voyage was going to take , and we consid ered ourselves happy In bavins made It in ( our days. The Chinese- cart Is a surer means of loco motion , but U U by no means to pleasant. The roads are full of ruts. The Just iweepi over you In storms a'hd your bonca ire racked with the Jolting1 ot the cart. I doubt whether there Is a clumsier vehicle In the world , and certainly no other could stand such roads. The Chinese cart has two wheels , each sa big as the front wheel ot a buggy , and each has a weight about ten times as great. Tha wheels have massive Iron tires. Their spokes are as big around a > a base ball club , and the wooden axles re as big r * rour arm where they coiuo AH woolj.co jjafl no Sanitary Wool B'JO BLANKETS Very line flccco wool WHITE BLANKETS Host quality fleeced striped and plain color and scai'lot California ' Blankets Worth from $0.50 to $8.00. 2000 pairs hi h SILVER GRAY. WHITE 2EBKA and RAINBOW BLANKETS a pair IN ' OUR DEP'T Finest prude , extra heavy tfR EZ quality plain ilsnff& ) BLUE SHRUNK FLANNEL , y | j worth -tfic , coos ut Double width ia .aa' California Flannel affO in all colors , worth ! ) Sc , ut U fea > > t9 _ - f Flno line . WHITE FLANNELS. At 15c , 19c , 25c , 35c , 49c and 75c yard , worth throe times the price. ,16th and Douglas , C through the hub. The shafts are as lifrge as telegraph poles , and they are fuM ned directly to the axle , and the body of lho cart rests upon them without s'prings. The bed of one of these carts Is flve feet long and four feet wide. You can not stretch yourself out flat upon It without re-ating your.Jfbt' ' upon the shafts. There Is no seat connected with. It and you lie or sit llat on tlie'lloor. A llttlo box-like wall runs about the edge ot the cart , and there Is a blue canvas covering three feet high stretched over it. Sitting upright , your ht.id almost grazes the roof ot this , and It would be almost Impossible to put a seat of any kind v.-ltliln the vehicle. Bach of these carts' ! Is drawn by either one''or two mules , \\hlch are fastened to the cart by a harness ot rope and rawhide. When t\.o mulea am used they always work tan dem , as the road Is too narrow for a t\Vo- , liore team. The driver sits cross-legged on the shafts , and directs the mules with a pair of rope lines and a long whip. LIVE LIKK CATTLE. It. was In such an outfit that I went to Pckltip. I had two carts and four mules and the trip look me in the neighborhood of forty-eight hows. I paid $18 for my carts , and I lud gieat trouble in getting them oti account of the examinations vylilcli were going on In Peking. I had secured two at $12. While they were being brought to the hotel one of tlie mandarins baw them and he forcibly seized them for borne student friends of his and I was left ojt In the cold. The next duy I had my Chinese servant g" out on the road about ten miles beyond llio city. He waited there till two good carts came along and then smuggled these Into the hotel in a roundabout way. , so that the mandarins could not tee them. We started at 4 o'clock in the morning , and after snnio tea and toast by ihe light of the candle I inspected my outfit. You will not nee more villainous lares in any rogun'a gallery than those of my mulelei'i-.i , and an for the niulos , Itanium's woolly horse had a coat of silk compared to theirs. My" tedding and mtn- bles were put Into one carl and my Chinese boy crawled In on top of them. 1 took the second , and befote daybreak we were ready to start. We dro\e for tnllfs through the city of Tlen-Tsln Just ut dawn , and had a chancb to se how the poorest ot these 500,000,000 people look when ro-islng thcmselven for another day of their everlasting hustle. Men In shrepskln coats , locking more like animals than humans , tilled the btieets. Already coolies were pushing bar rows over the rough pavements , and other laboiers were carrying mighty loads on poles across their shoulders. In the suburbs we rode through lines of hovels out of which" disheveled Chinese men and women crawled and looked at us with blinking eyes. We passed tha homsa at thousands ot squatters , and as we drove along the river we saw that It was lined with little kennel-llk sheds made ot bamboo matting. Many ot these tvero not larger than a dog house , and those the side of a hogshead looked palatial beside them. Many wcro bait cylinder * of matting just about largo enough to cover a cider barrel and long enough for their own ers to crawl in and sleep. A screen of nigged lil-ie rottnn formed the front ot these huts , and all the cooking of the own- era had to bo doni outside. U was cold and I shivered In my overccc.it. I taw one family lighting n Urn. lliey bad no matches and were trying to Ignite the need with a flint. Another hut bad a Jlnrlklslia In front ot It. This was the size of a baby carriage , and Its top wajs a foot above the root of the house. In some places there were holes dug in the earth and matting placed over them. The walls ot the city formed the back of many of theia begcnrs' horoei , and others were built against the banks ot the river. You find beggars * c artero outside ol every ChlneSe oily , but there uro few pi ares where the poor suffer more than they do In north China. Tien-Ttln Is as cold as Minneapolis , and these holes covered wllh straw malting are the homes ot thousands. THU APl'IAN WAY. Piunlng these we went over the Pelho river on a bridge ot b ali and then drove through suburb after suburb , until we came out upon the great plain , and began our trip over the Chlnoia AppUn W y , The Applan W j ! Whit * fraud ! Wb t UNDERWEAR Hi _ Tomorr w Bejim the Groit ale of Laiiea' , Moa'a and Chi ! 'rat * Ondaiwdar. UNITED STATES CUSTOM 3 HOUSE SOLD 'EM ' lf the OrrnU-Ht Muck Iligli ( Iruilo Iliulrr- wourlivi'r Shown in Alnrrlfii 1 > un't J'ull in Iluv lour Winter nuppiy o. IJndiTHriii-Toijiurruw. Alt these garments are [ made from the finest Australian wool , free from normal wool , matlo In Stuttgart , Germany and are recommended by all physicians for health. They are free from all Irritating substances and will not scratch or Irritate the most tender skin. skin.LADIES' UNld.V , SUITS. The ladles' highest grade imported sani tary wool silk lllumlnalcd'fronts ] , silk cro cheted necks , silk taped combination suits , with pearl buttons , goods lhat could not be bought at less than $10.00 In a regular way , go tomorrow at 11.25 , $1.08 and $2.GO. The finest gnidu or Indies' Imported nittiirul wool vests und print * ( won't shrink1 , silk .bound front , worsted f\\ \ laoa buck , curved sluuvi's \ \ anil ixti"iiwla | overlap In blni IT. MO finer coeds oicr maUi- , your choice for. . . . Chlllren' ( < i and mtsios , fiunl- tury wool night poun * , vests and pants , till worth I2..W , go tomorrow ; it. . . . 1'uro wndl mlsseq. ' und child ren's Jersey ribbed oombl- 11 atlun bulls. HOI Hi Jl.SJ , at Ladles' pnro lamb's wool , bilk trimmed vests und pants , 4"ocach. All the highest Krndcsof color . , ' } ; ; ( niiumil wool men's whirls uiiu drawers , none flni'Hn tlm norld. uiiith i..OJ , go attl.SU. ' UJ H B All thu IIICII'N Imported 1111- dunvlmr ill tins customs IIOIIMJ imirliusL1 in Mini cury nntiir.il tfriiy uiul Tinicy Hint tied colors , worth up to 82.50. go ill 75o. , All men's $1.25 wool underwear goes , at rAnd 50c. , And a-big lot of men's fan.jy ( colored under wear goes at J3c. BOSTON STORE , N. W. Cor. 10th nnd Douglas. a travesty on the name pf roadi It was filled with ruts , and the dust was kne'e deep. Here "and there stood a rigged roadinaker , who. ptetended to keep the mgaway In order , prnnothed-tbe > diit dovin Into the ruts ih H lonK-h.imllpdflat hoe , making It so that a c-irt could get a luplultr without being awurp of Its danger Th < 5 road In many Ijjacea was so nanow that two carts could barely pass , and nowhere was It much wider than tlm average American nlley. It fol lows the telegraph lines , an ] In some places It has been built above tlio surrounding country Hero and there a protons" was made of repairing If , nnd gangs of boltlJers and half-naked coolies were ' at woik curryIng - Ing dirt In baskets and' , spreading It over the holes. There must have been thousands of these workmen. They probably got less than 10 cents a day us wages. They worked under overseers , and they sang as they worked. I was much Interested In the way the road was pounded down. A round disc of metal or Ftone about three Inches thick and as big around as a tobacco keg was raised by eight men by means of ropes , which were tied to holes In its edges , A ninth man sang a song as the gang worked , and ata certain note they \\ould pull on their ropes , sling the disc high In the air above their heads , and let It fall with a thud. In other places the road v.as pounded down with mallets , and the stones were crushed by half-naked Chinamen , who raised heavy sledges high In the air and brought tliem down \\llh a tlnimp. I was surprised how fast the men worked and what great quantities of canli can be- car ried In baskets. They swarmed over the road like bees and each human ant added his mite to the pile. The road was made entirely ct mud , and there was no pretense of macadamizing or any sort of a permanent structure. The roads grow worse from year to year and they areby no means so flno today as they were 300 jears ago. The ninety-mile ride from Peking to Tlen- Tsln vtas through one continuous stream of carts , wagons , wheelbarrows nd men. Many of the wheelbarrows had donkeys hitched in front of them and men. pushing behind them , and on some parts of the great iihln they actually use sails In , order to help the wheelbarrows along. I got a photograph of a scene of this kind and the stiff wind which was blowing materially aided this Chinese freight car on Its way. There were hundreds of mandarins riding on donkeys. They were. dressed In silk gowns of green , yellow and blue , and some of them sneered , turning up their yellow noses , and make faces such as ara only possible to Chinese physiognomy. SQUALOR REIGNED SUPJ1EMI3 , We passed many villages. The farmers of China da not live- upon their farms. They have squalid houses bunched up together with fences of mud about them , and there are no signs of comfort anywhere. The houses are of sun-dried brick , plastered with mud and roofed with long rows of reeds , which are tied In bundles and laid side by side on these rafters and then are plastered with mud. These roofs reach about a foot beyond the wallt of the houses , and you have usually to duck your head If you wish to got under thorn. The ImtB of the poorer clauses are often not more than fifteen feet square. There arc no windows facing the street , and the only sign of life IB a thin wreath of blue'smoke that curls out of the mud chimney , 'of the shape of a gallon crock , which eUn&s on the roof. It would be very bad taste' to look over the fence of a Chinaman's house , but I was forced to see Into tome of the yards as I stood , up In my cart- when riding by , Dirt and equator reigned supreme. There was no ? grass and no flowers. Gaily dressed 'lioys and girls ran In and out of the gates. They wore clothes of the most horrible color * , and the brightest of green Is the favorite. The little babies hive their headi shaved In spots. nd the girls and women lather themselves with rouge and powder. They stick paper flowera' ' la their hair , and they hobble about on tfcelr' heeli , turning their pitiful little feet upward and not touching their loci to the ground , We roast coffee every day , Our coffee Is fresh. Our teas arc all new crop. Everybody Is talking about the superiority of our teas and coffees. Try us and you'll never buy tea and coffee anywhere else. LOOK AT THESE PRICES' 3ino Broken Jnvn and Mocha , 3 Ibs. for 25c Good Rio Coffee 20c Fancy Golden llio 23J < Jc No. 1 Mocha and Juva 26c O. G. Java 30c PLANTATION C iYLON , the very best coffee thnt-monoy can buy 33c Gunpowder Tea 20c to IJ5c I'inhoad Moyuno G. P. Tea 37 c Uncolored Japan 17c to 25c Very Finest "Wiro Loaf Jap.25c to 38c Regular GOc find $1.00 English Breakf act 30c and 40c India Ceylon Tea GOo to GOc f y Boston Store is now tlio longest fruiAtt alors in Omalia Wo Tiny by tlic car-load , Family trk/lbo as well as liotels and dealers supplied byus. . SOB these prices for tomorrow : MIXED NUTS ( Oc lb. LEMONS 15c doz. PLUW1S 8Oc box PEACHES ( Oc doz YOG , SOc , BANANAS 5 for IOC and 9Sc- CAE.YFORMJA CRAPES , 2 ibr. . for I5c. PRINCE CHARLIE'S BOYHOOD His Cays of Ex'lo Spent BsascLiag it ia tlio Coantrj in Frarce. DEIERMMEDTO RECAPTURE THE THSONE ICzpertrnvo In iCngltiutl More Kiimmtlc Than tli.it of tin ; L'.m.iHirt Klnn Alfred t'ur- ueil from I'lnco to I'laca He Ki- ciipus tu the ( iutao uT u Servant. Bonnie Prince Charlie was the name given to Charles II. of England , third of the Stuart kings , who reigned over Cngland , Ireland , Scotland and Wales. The eldest son of an Bngllsh king Is al ways christened and called the prince ot Wales , as the present successor to Queen Victoria is now known. But so full of frolic , so llghtheartcd and so good looking was this young prince that ho was everywhere known as "Bonnie Prince Charlie. " gance. Charlie was used to plain clothes , that he might play tennis or race through the forests , to eat with tha huntsmen and help cook the food , but here. In the French court he had to wear velvet and satin , big hats and waving plumes , silk stockings and gold buckles. He liked It all until he heard that his father , Charles I. , had baen beheaded at the tower in London then he knew that he Donnle Prlnco Charlie was no longer a little exiled lad , but the king of four coun tries greater than hib yqung h'Dst and cousin , the king of France. . , - , DUPI3ATJ3D J3Y > CIbto\VELL. } But how could he 'proclaim hlmself , king ? The country was in the hands of Oliver Cromwell , who represented the Calvlnlstlc church , a man who Insisted that there was "no dUlne right of kings , " and that the country should be > governed by two Parlia ments Just as it is today. Charlie had no money to raise armies ; his cousin could not help him , for that would put the two coun tries at war , and when men are kings they have to remember their country first of all. The only relief was to go to Scotland by way of Holland , so the English couldn't catch him , and beg the men who vere true to the Stuarts to follow him from their country Into England. The Scots did this willingly , and Prince Charllo passed Groin- well , who was In Scotland , and worked his way Into the heart of England. Many of V f 311 " -V. - . . r CHARLIE AND HIS SISTERS. Troubles came early In life to the young prince the kingdom was In a turmoil over church troubles nnd. as Charlie's mother waa a French Catholic , she -was exiled Into Paris , where * hd lived with toer young nephew , Louis XIV. The prince himself was put Into the care of a man In the country and grew up with his brothers In the lull enjoyment of country life. Nona of the usual court restrictions were about htm. He learned to swim and shoot and hunt like any English squire's son , and his rough life stood him In good stead In later days , when he needed all his muscles to help hlnr. But his mother , who was called Queen Henrietta , was pining to see him In Paris , and ho was cent there to her. He was then about 14 , and the glitter and polish of the French court dared him , He was not uied to all this elegance and ceremony , where the little king , t ho was afterward to be called "the Grand Monarch , " was beginning to practlcB all bl etiquette ana extraTa- OUR CO3-T a OW Y CLEAN Thr- daintiest , cleanest , brightest and most appetising lunch room In ( ho country , Is right down In our basement. When tired and hungry , try a cup of our delicious cofteo with whipped cream. It's only Be , but It's fine Or a plate of Boston baked beans , ( that's our specially. ) \\'o make nice sandwiches , and have all kinds of pics , cakes and cookies and they arc just simply delicious. Our Hcdcl BARGAINS TOMORROW. A cake of soap given free wllh every pur chase. A 25c looth brush wltli each 76c purchase. GOo Perfumes . . „ . . . , . . . 19cpor oz. 25c Bottle Cologne lOc 7Cc Eatr Brush ' 35c ; FR.ESCXM . PTIONS. Brine ; your dooiors * prescrip tions to us. We will ( III them from the surest drugs and for much less money than al other druc : stores. the nobility there were loyal to their king ana Joined his army. But Cromwell came down upon him with hundreds ot men at a little town called Worcester , Hero he routed and killed nearly all of Charlie's men , and the young fellow had to taKe refuge at n house near by. In this house there were many secret places , -where they hid him at night , but when Cromwell's soldiers were looking for him In the day Prlnco Charllo had to lie Oown In the fields In a dirty suit ot clothes , with his face all stained , so they wouldn't ' know him , for these soldiers knew all the secret closets In the house , and had he been there In the daytime would hava captured and beheaded him. This house was called tha "White Ladles , " be- causa It used to b.e n nwmeiy where the nuns wore a white habit. TUG ATTEMPT AT FLIGHT. Onu , morning he tried to escape from the country In the disguise of n peasant , and another young lad , Itlchard 1'endcrlll , went with him to chow him the way. They came to a miller's first , and the miller cried out : "Who goes there ? " "Neighbors , " answered Ilicliaril. "Then If ye are neighbor * , stop , " said the miller. But they knew & waa la Icagus with TOMORROW - We will sell a hundred hand * soniely decorated Toilet Sets , Bought since the reduction of the tarilf at these Bar gain Prices : S1O.OO KiitflhU I Tollot Sots , f S 8.OOTollot Ur * ow Tollot Sots , f S 6.0O Kngltsh Tollot Sots , $ 4-50 KnjjHsh JNOW Tollot Scits , Each. White Granite Cups and Saucers , 6 and 7 Inch PLATEIS , 10c Retinncd c DIPPER , Assorted Colored Salts and Peppers , BOSTON STORE BIG SHOE SALE Tome row Bcs'.ou Store Electr'fi.s Omxha Sho3 Buyers with Acot'ier Shoo Sain. fi.OOO pairs Indies' flno French kid custom made , plain toe , button Bhoesvortli $4,00 , go at $1 fiO. $5.00 LAUII5S1 SHOES , $1.08. 1.000 pairs. Impurted hnad turned and hand welt shoca , worth Jfi.OO , KO nt $1.08. A Jobber's stock ot men's , women's -and children's i-very day shoes and slippers at 19c , 25c , 35c. f c. 75c , $1.00 , and $ l.CO diiair. all very blR bargains. ' ' * IlflSTON STORE , N.V. . Cor. 10th and Douslas. Jroinwcll , so they ran as hard as they could , On through crooked lanes , fulling over stones for It was pitch dark they flew , until hey came to a stream. Itlchard couldn't iwltn , BO Chnrllc had to swim across with ilin , thus taring them both. Hut thu fllRht v.ns of no good , The roads voro guarded lit every turn , and every one till of suspicion. The boys had to turn jack , s\vlin the stream , creep past the nlllor'n and-get back toVhlte Ladles. " The army xtas nil about here , and the rlcnds of the young king were distressed o know what to do. The first night ho re- urned ho had to Mile In the boughs of an oak tree all night. One of his father's noble men , who loved the handsome , bonnlc young irlnce , sat there with him , holding him n his arms and keeping him from falling nit , for he v , as very weak. This tree has jeen for years ono of the sights of England , t is called the toyal oak of Lto cobel > and all the poets have sung its fame. I'rlnce Charlie at last escaped to France , lUgtilscd a u man servant to n lady who -was traveling , lie had to eat with the servants and bo on Jolly good terms with the black' smith mid- hostler for fear of being dis covered. Ten years he was exiled In France , but at labt his throne was given him. 1I& was only a young man then. He married a Spanish princess , unil was BO good naturcd and full of fun , even aCtor his troubles , that when people didn't use his old name they called him "Tho Jlerry Monarch. " Umbrellas made of oiled paper are used In Corea. ! Chicago's Mjwjule Temple has a population of 5,000 , and nfty Janitors. The nnmml-tnxcH of the world aggregate the enormous aum ot ? 1,350,000,000. The Illialgiir reservoir , a great artificial lake III Iiidla , said ( o Mold ubout 1,011,000- 000 culilc feet ot water , acts aa a feeder to the Nlra canal. It la formed by a masonry dam 103 feet high ami 3,020 feet loiif. The longest tunnel Is at Chemnitz. In Austria , and tlio deepest utteslan well ever bored Is at I'esth. In Hungary , 8HO feet below the surface of the earth , whcro the temperature of the water la il5& degrees Fahrenheit , ' vOn \ . On his Dorsetshire ( England ) Msta'to Lord Allngton has a "white farmertj7 Is BO callled because every unma'on | | If Is'white. There are white horses , white cows , white donkeys , white hares from Siberia , and a white pygmy bull. The dogs and the cats are white , and so are the rats and mice. A writer In a Philadelphia paper asserts that tlio eastern cltlce , by boring artesian wells , can tap undei ground rivers from the Allcghcnlcs nnd thus securea pure nnd bountiful supply of water. Though Brooklyn Is surrounded by salt water , It derives most of Its fresh water from driven artesian wells , and Its purity Is exceptional. The most expensive dress that has been worn for many a day was one lately pur chased by the famous Mrs , Mackay. who paid J50,000 for It , the gown betnq embroid ered with pearls disposed In a tasteful de sign of Jloners and trailing leaves , Even this did not c-quul the suit of the celebrated fop , George Vllllers , the first duke of Buck ingham , who , going as ambassador to France , In the reign of Charles I. , took with him a suit of white uncut velvet and a cloak to match , both covered with diamonds , a feather uiailo of dlnmontlH and sword , girdle and spurs set with the. same gems , the whole costume representing 11,000,000 ot the present value of money. Little HoyWhuff ) the use ol BO many1 queer letters In words ? Lpok t that "c'1 ' In "Indicted. " Little dlrl I guess thoie la Just put In so mothers nan gel an excuse to vend their chlldrena to school and liayo a llttlo peace. Sol Smith Kussoll has made his appear ance as Dr. I'anglocs In "Tlio Ifetr-at-Law , " and the Toronto Journals agree I hut the comedian Is not misguided In his ambition to step from the humbler , homelier character parts Into those more delicate role * which Mr. JiKcrftoa'a Ut tM made popular.