Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 04, 1896, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE OMAHA DAILY JB.EE : SATUJUUAV , JAN UAH V 4 , 18.00.
MONEY FOR THE EXPOSITION
Senator Alton Introduces a Bill Looking to
the Transraississippi Show.
PROVIDES FOR A GOVERNMENT EXHIBIT
Hill Hefrrrcil to Scimlor
Committee--II In to llo
\i \ ) tiy Otlirr Mvuwiiri-H Xeeen-
< ftiiry to
WASHINGTON , Jnn. 3. ( Special Tele
gram ) Tlio first active movement to mnlee
the Transmlsslsctppl exposition at Omaha a
r-onlllvtr snccWf wa taken today , Senator
Allen Introduced In the senate n bill appro-
pi latlnp $ GO,000 f r the construction of a
BO.'crnment building nt Omaha and providing
'or a government exhibit , an at Atlanta and
Chicago. An additional appropriation of
$2.,000 Is provided to cover transportation of
M the government exhibit to Omaha In 1S9S , at
* " which time the TransmlMUslppI exposition
Is to be held. In the event this bill , which
was referred to Senator Thurston's committee
on International expositions , paiueB , It Is to bo
follfw d by provisions In the- sundry civil bill
to cover all expenses and probably some
thing In aid of the exhibit. It Is thought
ln this connection that If the tariff bill becomes
(
comes a law th-ro will b ; considerable lib
erality hewn In the way ot promoting the
Interest of th ? whole country , not only by lib
eral appropriations forot least two expositions
now designed to bo held , but In the way of
public buildings. Should the tariff bill fall to
become a law It Is feared tint ther ? will
bi a Rood dual of cheeseparing legislation on
the part of republicans , who do not desire
to ermilato the legislation during the Fifty * '
third congr.BS. It IB und rstocd Senator
Allen's action today was taltcn after a talk
hail with Senator Thurston previous to the
' -UpporluYe of tlio latter for his home , and
with the understanding that the bill would
be- referred to Senator Thurston's commute .
Should thf amount at present provided bethought
thought not sufllclent It may bo amended In
committee.
TO SHLI , THE PACIFIC ROADS.
Not content with two bills looking to the
settlement of the Pacific roads' Indibted-
ncss , Senator Allen proposes to take a hand
In adjusting this troublesome question by
presenting bill Tuesday contemplating the
government ownership nnd operation of lhesi :
roads. Ills bill will provide that the secre
tary of the treasury shall compute
putetho Indebtedness up to July
1 on the subsidy bonds , from which he shall
deducted the amount In sinking fund , this
to bo certlfl d by the secretary of the treas
ury to the attorney general. On the receipt
of' the certificate tlio attorney general shall
begin milts In equity or other proper Judi
cial proce dliig In any United States cir
cuit court through which territory these
roadw run. To the proceeding nil persons ,
coiporatlons and Individuals having righter
or title t propsrty sliall bo made parties
( to tmlt. Then , after reciting the manner
In which the sale la to be made , the bill
further provides for the government to bid
it In on prior liens and after proper deeds
are madp the gov.'rnmeiU shall own and
operate thc.v ? roads same as Individual cor
porations , charging no greater freight or
pj.isitigw tariffs than , necessary In the Judg
ment of th ? sec.otary of the treasury to pay
operating expenses and ken > the property In
Ilfst-claM repair , arid for the purpose of
carrying out the provisions of the act the
secretary of the treasury Is directed to coin
nil sllvsr bulllc-u nww belonging to the United
States , Including seigniorage , at a ratio of 1C
to 1 , and cover the sama Into the treasury ,
this money to bo a legal tender having the
B-imo form or effect as those Issued under
act of July 14 , 1890 , commonly called the
Sharman act. Senator Allsn does not ex-
piftthla bill to pass , he- Bays , but ho antici
pates .that the exposition bill will , and this
will give htm a right to malco amendments
to the bill reported by the committee on Pa-
clflo roads.
Congressman Gamble of South Dakota In
troduced a bill today establishing a military
port at Pierre and appropriating 1100,003
therefor. Ho also presented a memorial from
tlio city council of Chamberlain as-klng for
the passage ot a bill to tallow the city of
Chamberlain to lease , sublet and Improve
American Island , In the Missouri river , which
was donated to the city by act of congress.
SOUTH'OMAHA'S POSTOFFICE.
The bids on the South Omaha postofllce
Bite are now before Secretary Carlisle , with
a recommendation that a special Inspector
bo sent to South Omaha to look at the
properties offered , with a view of E-clectlng
a site. This recommendation has bc ° n made
by .Supervising Architect Alken to the as
sistant secretary.
The comptroller of the currency today gave
out abstracts of reports of condition on De
cember 13 ot the nine national banks of
Omaha , and eleven national banks In the state
of Wyoming. The Omaha statement shows
total resources of $17,664,734 , principal Items of
\r \ which were : Loans and discounts , $9,16l,64D ;
value of securities and real estate * and mort
gages owned , $2,123,654 ; reserve , $3,270,423 ,
of which $1,250,322 was In gold. Principal
liabilities : Capital stock , $4,100,000 ; surplus
fund and undivided profits , $428,206 ; deposits ,
13.324,160 ; notes ami bills redlscounted , $76-
C87 , and bills payable , $110,000. The average *
reserve held was 31.29 per cent. At the < date
of last call , September 28 , total resources were
$18,195,415 ; loans and discounts , $3,922,785 ;
value of securities and real estate and mort
gages owned , $2,001,401 ; reserve In banks and
In .hands ot reserve agents , $4,102,259 , of
which $1,588,277 was In gold. Principal
liabilities : Capital stock , $4,150,000 ; surplus
funds and undivided profits , $507,846 ; deposits ,
$8,143,379 ; notes and bills rcdUcounted , $95-
C38 ; deposits , $8,143,379 ; notes and bills ro-
dlscounted , $9r > , G38 ; bills payable , $90,000.
The average reserve held was 37.20 pr cent.
The Wyoming statement shows : Total re
sources , $3,361,803 ; loans and discounts , $1-
833,315 ; reserve. $507,054. of which $172.730
was In gold. The deposits were $2.041,289 ,
nnd the average reserve held was 25.57 per
cent.
The following1 transfers In the Fifth cav
alry are ordered : First Lieutenant Fred W.
Foster , from troop A to troop M ; First Lieu
tenant Nathaniel F. McClure , from troop M
tc troop A ,
Fifteen days' additional leave Is granted
Contain Thomas S , McCalcb , Ninth Infantry.
Vho following transfer ) ) In the Twenty-
fourth Infantry ore ordered : Second Lieu
tenant John It. Scyburn , from company I to
company C ; Second Lieutenant Harrison J ,
Price , company C to company I ,
> Secretary Carlisle has appointed Daniel n.
Gaff of Omaha a watchman In the Treasury
department ,
HM.U.I , CHANCE 1 < 'OH IH.SAnilEEME.Vl'
Onnnilliui unit AliiNluui llnuiulnry Sui-
veyx I'riieUc'iill- Siiini1'
WASHINGTON , Jan. 3. General Duffleld ,
the chief ot the coast and geodetic survey ,
today presented to tlu secretary of state the
joint report on the Alaskan boundary which
vfls agreed upon by him and the Canadian
representative , Mr. King , at their molting
'at Albany this week. The report probably
will not bo made < public until It Is trano-
milted to congress , but It shows a practical
agreement between th ? survey ) of the t\\o
governments and may have tli9 effect cf
.partially quieting the appr'henslon of trouble
over the boundary. The greatest difference
between the lines run by the engineers for
the two governments Is but six fe t seven
Inches , or fifteen seconds of longitude. In
view of the two surveys , General Uufileld
l .dces not hesitate to express the opinion that
" thcic can b no serious dispute between the
United States and Canada over the boundary ,
lie paid ; "The line Is as plain from the
ticaty 01 though It had been recorded by
died and map , "
The two commissioners , who mot at Al
bany , had no authority to fix the boundary ,
but only to recommend from the- surveys
which have bo n made the linen to bs defin
itely established. The ratification of their
work remains for another joint coimiiUnjaii ,
and Secretary Olney will duubtleis recom
mend to congrei * nn act for the appointment
of a commissioner to represent theUntteJ
Etateu for this purpose.
Gsneral lluflleld Is confident that the lirlt-
| ih can flnd no grounds upon which to base
a claim to the gold field * of th > Yukon river ,
sines a UrltUlt engineer , Oglttby , In 1893 ,
after very careful observations , marked the
Unki ot the Yukon and. Forty Mile creek |
where then- streams are crosi d by the llli ?
riic-r.cllnn , and hi * matin urre verified by
the fulled States survey. The only potsl
blc ground for contention which General Duf
field foresees Ii fnrnlUiul by that phrase o
the Hustlan-Ilrltlch treaty that nt no poln
shall the boundary be more than ten marine
leagues from thn shore. The United State
go\urnmcnt Intcrpr ts this to mean contl
ntntal lcagu g , while Kngland might con
lend that ten leagues from the Islind shore
was contemplated , a construction whlcl
would deprive the United Slat s of a valua
bio strip of territory If sustained.
t.'i.\.v\ci-2 : co.M.Miriii : .vrni , AT SEA
Silt or Mnnlierii UN Ycl Uniililc ti
I tench nn AurocmiMil.
WASHINGTON , Jan. 3. The senate ( Inane
committee did not conclude Its consideration
of the house bill today. The failure was due
to the fact that the sliver majority of the
committee was unable to agree upon the
terms of tlu substitute which they propose
to report for the home bill. The members
favorable to silver. Including Senators Veer
hces , Harris , Vest , Jones of Arkansas am
Walthall , democrats , and Jones of Nevada
populist , were In conference for a full hour
before the rest arrived , but they found the
task of preparing a bill to which al
could agree somewhat more complicated thai
they anticipated and were compelled to nul
for more time. Senator Jones presented the
draft cf a bill on the lines suggested In these
dispatches last night , but ame of the mem
bers dcslrrd further time for consideration
It was male appuont. however , that th
differences were not radical as Its \ still be
lleved by the majority that there Is no In
surmountable dlfilculty In the way of reach
Ing nn agreement on the section of the bll
providing for free coinage.
The republican in mbers of the committee
were In conference for several hours , de
voting a greater part of the time to th
tariff bill. The republicans arc dls
posed to give moro attention to
this measure than to the bond bill
Thpy consider that the- latter measure ha
been virtually taken out ot their hands , n
tht majority Is against them , but consider I
possible that the tariff bill may be so
modified as to get It through. Consequent1 !
they are directing thslr energies to thl
end.
IMIOTECTION OH EXTERMINATION
I'roiioNiil for SVIIIlim ; tlio Soul 1)1111
oultlc'H In HorliiK Sen.
WASHINGTON. Jan. 3. In the house
tolay : Chairman Dlngley of the ways am
means committee Introduced a bill practlcdllj
Identical In all respects with that reportci
from the committee In the last congress nit
thorlzlng the presidtnt to conclude negotla
tlons with Great Urltaln , Ilussla and Japan
for the appolntm nt of a joint congresslona
commission , to consist of not moro than
three members from each nation , to Invest !
gite questions affecting the fur seal herd
In the North Pacific and B ring sea , and to
consider nnd report what further regulation
are necessary for thslr preservation.
Pending the report of the committee the
president Is to conclude a modus vlvend
with any or all of the governments named
providing for new regulations or tuspendlni
"
or altering "the regulations established b'
the Paris tribunal the modus vlvendl to
expire January 1 , 1897. The provisions o
the- act of April 6. 1894 , providing punish
ment for violations of the articles of a wan
of the tribunal of arbitration , are made ap
pllcablo Jo all violations of the modus vl
vendl. If the latter b > not conclude ! am
put Into operation for this year's sealing
sccEon the secretory of the treasury , will
the approval of the president , Is outhorlzpi
to take and kill every fur seal fcund 01
th ? Prlbylon Island , and the skins to be
sold by him to the best advantage.
ENCOURAGING A PACIFIC CARI.E
Sonnlor Iliile Iiitroiliioox u SiiIiNiil ;
Hill In | In.Semite. .
WASHINGTON , Jon. 3. Following were
among the Important bills Introduced In th
senate today :
By Mr. Hale Authorizing th postmastc
general to contract with the Pacific Cabl
company for the construction of a telegrapl
cable bstwccn San Franclso and Honolulu
Hawaii. The United States Is to pay th
company annually a sum qual to 4 per cen
of the amount expended each year by th
company. The contract Is to continue fa
twenty years , nnd the line Is to be completec
by July 1 , 1897. It Is also stipulated tha
the government may comc-lnto th ? ownership
of the proposed line by paying the- cost prlc
for It , with 5 per cent added.
By Mr. Allen Recognizing the proposec
Transmlsslsalppl exposition to bo hld a
Omaha In 1893 , and providing for the erec
tlon of a government building and for a
government exhibit.
rntotitN to Wc-Mtcrii IiivoiitorM.
WASHINGTON , Jan. 3. ( Special. ) Patent
have been Isaued as follows : Nebraska
Malachl A. Carrlkcr , Nebraska City , specu
lum ; Albert Phillip , Stanton , beet harvester
Iowa Jcoph Hanson , Inwood , feed mill
Newell J. Noble , State Center , ventllatior
mechanism for locomotive and other belle
furnacc-3. South Dakota James C. Larson
Big Stone City , combination tool.
HniiNo SoKNloii Liixtt'il Five Mlnutex
WASHINGTON , Jan. 3. The session nf
the house today lasted five minutes. The
chaplain offered prayer , the Journal was
read and approved , a message was recIvai :
from the senate , and then the house ad
journed until Monday next.
EXPERTS AT CHEMISTRY.
( iormniiM Lend the "World In tlio MyM-
tlvlNiii of tlio I.n It oratory.
"Made In Germany" Is now the ricognlzei
trade mark for chemicals throughout the
world , says the London Telegraph. The dyes
and by-products derived from coal tar have
become a classical Instance , or , as Bacon
would have said , a glaring example. As wJ
have stated , the fatherlanders have captured
these trades from us. Go to Elberfield , anil
what do we see ? At the Fnrbenfabrlktn , be
sides first class works , we are shown a
laboratory unsurpassed , perhaps not equaled
In London , and employed In research or In
tlio business there or ? sixty high class
chemlstt' . In the Badltche Anllin und Soda-
fabrlk scv.'nty-elght chemists are engaged.
An expert witness told the Gresham com
mission that six skilled chemists was the
maximum number employed In any English
color works. If , Indeed , there were so many.
These nun are unceasingly active In research.
The price to pay for progress Is eternal
vigilance. Kvery hint from England , France ,
America , or Ialy { Is tried ; every now ma
terial test d ; every hopeful process patented ,
rho great works at Hochst made In 1S90
from 1,700 to 1,800 colors ; they employed
3,000 hands , seventy chemists and twelve
engineers. A firm In Offenbacn with 300
workers Iwd forty-five Investigators.
The lesson that has been drlv n home In
the fatherland Is tint Industrial processes
carried on upon a large scale give gro-it
charces for discovery. Just as gas making
; ave aniline ao the soap boilers' lye yl lied
odlne , the waste of Halt gardens bromlr.o.
ino motner liquors from the springs Caesium
and rublJtiini , the acid chambers selenium
and thallium , the mlncg and mMallurglcal
works gallium and germanium. Therefore
: he "chemlker , " ' on the other side of the
Ithlne , In always looking out for something
new. Ho found It In the benzldlno and azo
ly-s , the former giving Congo red and
chrysamln , "the moat Important discovery
of modern times so far as cotton dyeing Is
concerned. " In short , as Dr. Oatwald has
said , It Is now a firm article of belief tint
'the secret of German Industrial chemistry
a the recognition that science Is theb st
iroctlce. " In England It Is generally to be
feared there still lingers faith In "the rule
of thumb. "
An Old Soldlvr Cured of Cliroulc
Dlnrrlioeii.
During the war John L. Hase of Mill
Jreek Ml. , contracted chronic diarrhoea , which
nconveiilenced him very much , and at times
; reatly Impaired his strength. He cay ? ;
'On ? dose rf Chambjrlaln'i Colic , Cholira
and Diarrhoea Itemed ) ' has always relieved
ne , ard two dotes eab d me to that I could
at once go about my huilness. I always
keep the llemedy at hand. "
The Hoot on tlio Utltcr l-'oiit.
In hunter's lore there Is an Idea that the
ackal Is the lion's provider ; that he locates
he game and takes the lion to It. This su-
icrstltlon has no more foundation than U
ound In the fact that after a lion has ilaln
his quarry the Jackals always attend and
valt the conclusion of the repast , In order to
pick up tha leaving * .
) 11 in i utM'M nt i iT'ptr unit i nt i\
1 ALISADtS BfcAUH MENACED
Fnrposo of a Measure Introduced in Oon
gross Recently ,
WOULD PRESERVE HISTORIC SCENERY
I'cilrrnl Covcrnmrnt Itciitirntrtt t
Set . \linrt Sonic of the Territory
Adjacent to tlu Hudson
tin n I'nrk.
WASHINGTON , Jan. 3. ( Special. ) A
fortnight ago Congressman Falrchlld of New
York Introduced In the house cf reprcsenta
tlvcn a bill which Is Intended to preecrv
the Palisade ? of the Hudson. This measjrc
Is the outcome of agitation which has bee :
going on In the states of New York am
New Jersey for several years over the de
structlon of the Palisades by quarrymen , who
are blasting away the etone for street paving
purposes. Last winter the legislatures o
New York and New Jersey authorized th
governor of each state to appoint com
mlssloncrs to suggest such means ao to then
might seem expedient for the purpose o
locurlng the action of the national govern
inent In acquiring and setting apart the
Pallradcs on the west uhorc of the Hudsoi
for the purposes ojf fortification and rcser
viitlon.
In conversation with Congressman Fair
child concerning his bill , he said :
VIEWS OF THE DILL'S AUTHOR.
"Business Interests have gradually acqulroc
possession of thousands of test of river front
age , and the adjoining land , and have cstab
llshed quarrying plants for the crushing o
HID trap rock , which , unices restrained by
legislation , will within a few years destro ;
the beauty and symmetry of the cliffs.
"Tho removal of stone from the talus o
the Palisade ? has been In progress for man }
years ; the title of the landowners on the
summit of the cliffs extends In most case
only to the vertical edge. The land betweei
the cliff and the water front , which Is coverei
by the lalur , and Is from 400 to 1,000 fee
In width , Is owned In small parcels , many
of them being only sixty-six feet In wldtl
on the river front. During the past tlilrtj
years the right to remove surface stone
from the slope has been purchased fron
tlmo to time by contractors for furnishing
paving blocks and In later years for erecting
stone breaker * and furnishing broken stone
for concrete. The removal of the. surface
rock Involves necessarily the stripping o
the timber from the slope. This denudation
of the rocky slope , when occurring In de
tached small patches , dot ? not materially
affect the grandeur and beauty of the Palis
ades , as seen from the river and 'from the
opposite shore , but where , as In a number
of Instances , wide strips of 300 to 400 fee
have .been denuded from the base to the
top , the beauty of the scene Is greatly
marred , and these scars remain for years a
blemish on the landscape.
SCARS OF YEARS AGO.
"Vegctat'nn Is of slow growth on this
rocky slope and the scars which were made
twenty to thirty years ago , whsn paving
blccks were most In demand , are now al
most as bar ? of vegetation as when left by
the quarrymen. The present government , for
the preservation of the Pallsad's , Including
In that term the talus as well as the vertlca
cliff of basalt from 50 to 250 fe't In height
above the slope , has been Instigated by the
beginning of operations on a larger scaleby
firms of contractors who desire to make the
obtaining of concrete ston ? from the talus
of the Palisades a profitable enterprise , am
who , in carrying out their object , care
nothing either for natural scenery or the
annoyance and discomfort caused to r sldent3
of another state by the constant heavy blast
Ing.
"Independent of the world famous pic
turepque beauty of the Palisades , the his
torlcal associations that will be blcndd In
the proposed National park arc worthy o
consideration. At the northern end of the
Palisades In Rockland county In the state
of New York and facing Irvlngton and Sun
nyslde , the homo of Washington Irving , as
well as SUepy Hollow , where he lies burled
will bo found Tappan , where , on October 2
1780 , Major Andre was hung as a spy. Tfif
actual place of execution lies on the rlgh
of a lane , which runs from the highway o
Tappan village to Old Tappan , and about n
quarter of a mile from Washington's head
quarters. These still exist In the shape o
a one-story building , erected In the year
1700 , and situated near the road from Sne
den's Landing or Paramus , as It was then
known. Washington's Tappan headquarters
wMnh will rlnilhtInss wllpn thnv hpnnm * mih
lie property , be made as Interesting as those
at Newberg , are close by the ridge of the
Palisades , whre the American army lay In
camp , when Andre was led to his death.
SOME HISTORIC POINTS.
"The ferry landing at Paramus connecting
with Dobb's Ferry , where the Father of his
Ccuntry had still another headquarters In
the Livingston manor house , was the
place where , In 1776 , Lard Cornwallls landei
his division of Lord Howe's army after the
battle of Long Island , and before ho was
out-seneraled by Washington nt Trenton.
"Just youth of Indian Head and "tho di
viding line between the states of New York
and Now Jersey and In Bergen county , near
by th3 ravine called Alpine gorge , which
In the revolution was styled Closer LandIng -
Ing , was where General Earl Grey disem
barked bis dragoons who , on the night ol
September J7 , 1778 , committed the foul crime
known as the Hackensack massacre. A few
miles below Alpine Is Englewood , remarka
ble during the revolution under Itu name
of Liberty Pole , and where many Inspiring
efforts of American patriotism occurred. The
most marked feature In Its annals was the
march thereto of General Anthony Wayne ,
who , with his Maryland and Delaware foot
regiments , the artillery and Moylan's dra
goons , made it decldely unpleasant for the
royalist refugees , wlioro fortified Jjlock houses
on the woody plateau of the Palisades were
a constant menace to the revolutionary cause.
GRAND SCENERY RUINED.
"Somewhat below Englewood was the- point
on the Palisades where Washington and his
staff watched the fall of Fort Washington
In 1776 , but now the Carpenter quarrleo are
In full swing for closs upon a mile with
dynamite blasters ruining the grand prom
ontory , and at Its foot , anchored at the
long wharfj. ttlgs and barges galore awaiting
the work of the huge stone crushers breakIng -
Ing Into concrete the beautiful cliffy.
"Fort Leo , called after the eccentric revo
lutionary general , Charles Lee , Is about a
mile from the Carpenter quarries , and was
under the command during our struggle for
freedom of General Nathaniel Greene. This
strong redoubt was built upon the heights
In 177C , and remained of great strategic
mportanca until Cornwallls1 unsuccessful at
tempt , with 0,000 British troops , to capture
Iho garrison , who safely got away to the
Delaware through the Valley of Hacken-
sjck. "
CoHcn. GrorvliiH : In California.
An experiment In coffee growing Is to be
made In the San Joaquln valley , California ,
which , If MicccEsfnl , may mean that coffee
Ranting will becomean Important Industry
n the state. Colonel Charles F , Crocker , a
wealthy rancher of that rsglon , has just se
cured from the various party of Central
America 1,000 yearling coffee plants , and will
soon Imvo them set out en his estates In the-
valley. It will bo at least six y ars before
; ho result of the experiment can be known ,
Cxperta are somewhat doubtful of IU suc
cess. Thty say the soil and sunlight are all
right In the San Joaquln valley , but the
nolsture necessary to the successful raising
of coffee Is lacking.
Woman' * ICIiiKiloin In KiiNxIn.
In the government of Smolsnsk , Russia ,
there Ifa large territory comprising quite
a number of populous villages which has
eng borne and the name of "Woman's Klng-
dpm. " Every spring the male population
emigrates en masse to sek work In the
neighboring districts. Then for many monthi
ho home government Is wholly In the hands
of women , The council and Its chiefs arc
women , and they attend to public affaire
o satisfactorily that female sufTrag'nts
verywhere may point wtu | pride to this
; reen cauls of woman's sovereignty In the
endless desert of man's tyranny.
For throat diseases and coughs use lirown'i
Bronchial Troches. Like all really go > d
nng ! , they are Imitated. The genuine arc
old only in boxen. ,
HOI , I , AMI'S llOltlUIH OK 1)HT
ClrnnlltifftH of Hie I'Inco Mo
itolomtim to VlnlOi flJj
It Is sheer desecration to write about Hot
land unless you use a new pe'n and freshly
broken quire of paper. You may not feel s
at first , says a correspondent gtjtjhc Hartfon
Courant ; perhaps In the arorganco of you
Anglo-Saxon superiority you may even laugh
such an Idea to scorn. Hut only nt.iy In th
country three days , and unless -.you. are n
paragon ofall that which tradition , hns callci
the cardinal virtue- after godliness , your con
science will give you such n succession o
sharp twinges that you are ready to go to
any extreme In order to explaet helnou
crimes and join company In the lovVest place
with the people- about you , whose tutelary
divinity Is the everlastingly clean , Ant
what a tyranny they arc under , to be sure.
Al ono can say Is that they seem to rc.illj
enjoy their fanaticism. They certainly re
sort o the most fanciful means of satisfying
the demands of their soap-and-water fetich
From Rotterdam to Haarlem , from Schevln
nlngen to Utrecht It Is all alike. Anywhere
you can see buxom housemaids so wrappci
up In their zeal that they spend a whole day
with pumice and sand paper , putz pomade
and chamois , a-scrubblng the brass door
plate , staircase and front sidewalk , which
has hardly recovered from a previous appll
cation of hot water ; children spend thel
play hours sweeping dead leaves Into the
canal ; weak old men are busy touching ui
the green flower pots In the windows , In cacl
of which grow exactly three geraniums like
an Inverted equilateral triangle , while ovc
all presides the good mevrouw , the aqueou
despot of her own household and the hlgl
priestess of the whole cleanly cult.
STRANGERS FEEL UNEASY.
Now , this highly developed sense of neat
ness and order Is a fine thing to sec existing
In any race , but It has Its drawbacks. After
a trip on the choppy North sea and a four
hour night ride afterward you are consclou
of being anything but n welcome visitor , as
you land at the hotel lii Amsterdam. Long
ago , when the > steamer was executing Its
wildest dance , you began to have some doubt
ns to your ultimate prescntablllty. When
you landed , perhaps , you mode tome furtive
attempt to arrange your disordered apparel
when but you see even the conclergs and the
irald Eiilfllug disdainfully and handling your
traps as If they were cholera Infected , your
assumed jauntlncss wilts Instantly , you rush
away with rage In your heart , but end by
humbly bowing to fate ; and you throw ofl
your ruffled garments , n-ever appearing until
n dress suit and white tie have taken the
place of your training and present personal
Inclination ; you are being watched as n sus
picious character , as you mlnclngly tiptoe
down the tiled corridor to the dining room.
Yes , Dutch cleanlless may ba Interesting
even enjoyable to look upon , but It Is some
thing to be observed from a distance , not
actively participated In. It Is too severe n
test for your belief In the perfectness of
early training and present personal Inclina
tion ; the tendency to cre-ep unoE > tcntatlonply
through sldo streets Is also developed to an
alarming degree.
But It Is the most d llghtful thing In
the world to stroll about the streets ol
any Dutch town and to watch what goes
on about you. The oinals and the windmills
do not surprise one you would .be surprised
rather at their absence , but In ( the scroll-
shaped gabl s of the house's , Uiq long per
spectives of graceful willows , the * glimpses
you occasionally catch of s.-\ndcd floors am
niching fireplaces , all glowing from the peat
fires , you have a succession of simple am
charming backgrounds for genre pictures of
a c rtaln type , that are a delight and a
relief after the superficial beauty of the pen-
orama of Paris life or the , somber , smoky
tints of London. There Is ; iothrig ( splendlc
here ; It Is all quaint and homelike and "Just
d ar , " from the doll-house royal palace down
to the little horses the dapper cavalry cfll-
cers ride so atrociously. , f
THE PEOPLE ARE ATTRACTIVE.
That Is what makes Holland so attractive
to everyone. W-a liketo see the .canal boats
with their muslin curtains and .carved rud
der heads being turned Into , homes Int'teai '
of serving as dens for half-cladi pirates as
they do at home ; you. approve strongly o
the- young lieutenant -who . .arranges th ? EC
of the drummer boy's coat tails.a.t morning
Inspection at The Hague , and it Is also go- <
to sea the farmers tucking the long dusters
under the cow's nicks so that they will not
catch cold : ay then lay on the damp gnus
The pictures you have seen In the Dresden
and. Paris galleries the genial , almost com
ical scenfs of the Dutch life of past days
luvci endeared you to the country unawares
The rollicking topers and broad cheeked
ruddy country women who crowd the can
vases of Tenters , Dow or Jan SUcn are
much pleasanter acquaintances than the
languid 'peasantry ' of Watteau and Nicholas
Pou.SBln ; you are sure they will become goo ;
friends as well , and whsn you see then
In real life unchanged even In cos
tume , you greet them most .cordially . , men
tally at least , Inscribing their names nn <
that of their country nearer , your heart than
any other except the one 3,000 miles away.
Nowher else doeo one -enjoy such a rea
homo feeling. Their language Is absolutely
Incomprehensible , and some of their cus
toms are- not modole-d exactly after Ameri
can Idctas , but all the 011110' you go about
with a pridein old Barneveldt or William
the Silent , and a hate- for the Spanish race
In your heart quite as Intense as that fell
by any sturdy burghtr besldo you ; and you
doff your capi to cheer as lustily as thebtsl
of them when the little queen rides along
from her little palace to the park out to
ward Schevlnlngen.
One of the mot delightful days we spent
In Holland was at Delft , & suburb of The
Hague. You take the tramway at the- hotel
door the car waits while Its conductor
comes down to show you the best way ac-
cross a mud-puddle , and In an hour's time
you are. there. The ear jogs leisurely along
through the city streets , halts for a mo
ment at a draw over a canal , while a clumsy
barge , whoso red sails flap helplessly In
the motionless air , creeps through , poled
along by a couple of boys , In ample trousers ;
then the bridge Is closed again and you con-
tlnuo on your way along a macadam road
that Is a continual delight In Its straightness -
ness and cleanliness. On each sldo stretch
away a succession of brilliant green fields ,
marked off Into squares and rectangles by
ditches or rows of willows. Speckled cattle
and sheep lumber heavily away dully scared
by the rattle of the cars ; their keepers look
up from their comfortable resting place ? ,
: mt , unless the beasts have gone , quite be
yond recall , settle- - themselves again , per
fectly confident that ho honor of tlielr charges
will prevent any trespass on a neighboring
Freehold. In the distance a windmill is busily
whirling , Its long wings stretching up per
haps a hundred feet Into the air.
THE FORCELAIN FACTORIES.
In Delft Itself , the chief attraction for the
stranger Is th ? porcelain .factory. You
cave the tram at the Ou < Je , Kork. as they
call It , cross the parade grpund , where Wll-
lam the Silent lost his life ; and ten , after
hreadlng a maze of narrow lance : , arrive at
li door cf the building lif qileJtloii , Once
nslde you are taken to a jBbrl of anteroom
where you are us-ked to rep/fir / and leave
'our canes or umbrellas. Heroijs displayed
he magnificent collection ° frr'W)0 old Dlft
\are , presented to the flnn'by the late King
Yllllam , I forgot the value pllce upon , lt ,
but It was something faboldus , especially
since In It are preserved examples of all
he antique shapes and shades , of color that
node the ware to famous in bygone day ? ,
nd which rorvo as models now. , , Every piece
s perfect , too a "first , " 'Vq .they are the
mere valuable on that accou'nt. .By the way ,
never buy any Delft that Is not 'of the darkest
olmde of blue. That color jo the rarest and
he hardest t& get perfect/ ' D.Mng greatly
uperlor to any other , " " n <
An IiKli'iicnilcMit Sinn ,
W. H. Miller , a minor living on Soldier
reek , In Oregon , Is an extremely Independ-
nt man. He owns a rich ledge , from which
le can easily get | 10 or $12 worth of ore
every day , and have plenty of time to sit
around and talk about Venezuela and the
arlff. He could 'sell tils property for a
argg sum , but ho declines all cfftrs. He
Ives all alono. and his wants are few , "The
etlge will stay there , " lie says , "I own It ,
'in as Independent as a hog on Ice , and I'm
: appy and contented to stay just as I am. "
Work of tin. Mulln.
LEETONIA , O. . Jnn. 3.-At Grnftoi , near
his place , last nlt'tit , two Itnllan brothers ,
who slept together In the same bed , were
awakened by three masked men , two of
whom held one of the brothers whlU the
hlid stabbed the other biother to death.
lobbery does not nocm to have been the
notlve for the crime as ev ral hundred
ollarc In the house was not touched. It In
lelloved the deed wua InutlcaUd by lite
lufla. The three men escaped.
TORN THE SWITCH , MARIA
Comforts and Conveniences for House
keepers Hearing Perfection ,
REVOLUTION IN THE KITCHEN IMPENDS
III Electric CooUlnn
Street Cur llrnkcn Injiirloun Ef
fect of Electric l.lKlilH
on the 11 } ON.
Eicctrlc cookery Is In Its Infancy. Yet
the time Is nearly approaching when the
kitchens of all well-managed households will
bo run by the mysterious fluid. Electricity
will take the place of fuel In the ranu * . the
department of the cuislno will bs lighted
by the same ngtncy and It Is entirely con
ceivable that a small electric motor will
be made to serve for such purposes as beat
ing eggs and mixing griddle-cakes.
Already electric cook stoves In a number
of patterns are on th ? market. You can
even buy an electric chafing dish , which
may bo attached nt n moment's notice to
nn ordinary electric light wire In any house.
These chafing dishes arc made In one-quart
and two-quart slzss , nickel plated. All you
have to do Is to make the attachment by
a plug switch , turn on the current , and al
most Immediately your oysters are begin
ning to stsw or your eggs to frizzle.
Before long householders will take el c-
trlclty regularly for domestic purposes , just
as they now take gas. Hut the more subtle
fluid will be made to serve for cooking und
heating as well as for lighting , says the
1'hllJd Iphla Times. The convenience to the
housewife of being able to rely upon one sys
tem of wires for fuel for cooking and for
warming and for Illuminating the dwelling
will bo enormous. She will flnd It particu
larly delightful to be rid of a hot kitchen
In the summer-time.
Nowadays the , kitchen Is apt to b ? the
dirty part of any house. To keep It really
clean Is almost out of the question. The
coil used for fuel blackens es'trythlng with
which It comes In contact ; ash's make mere
dirt , and smoke blackens the celling and
walls. In the electrically-conducted kitchen
of the near future It will bj quite different.
There will be no coal , no ashes and no smokf.
The range will b ? ready for cooking at a
moment's notice , with no time and patience
wasted In the laborious kindling of n fire.
The turn of a switch will start the current ,
which may be shut off agajn when n.o long r
wanted.
THOROUGHLY TESTED.
An electric kitchen In full operation was
exhibited at the World's fair In Chicago.
All sorts of cooking were done. In It , Includ
ing the roasting of joints and fowls , the
broiling of steaks , the baking of bread and
cakes , etc. , and the r-suits were extremely
satisfactory. The only reason why this
method of cookery has not already come Into
general use Is that electricity , as a substi
tute for fuel , costs more than coal or oil or
gas. The difference of cost , In fact , Is con
siderable , but It has so many advantages
as to bo worth the price. Some day processes
will be discovered by which electricity can
be produced more cheaply and then even poor
people will be able to afford decide ranges
and heat.
Meanwhile a good many people who are
able to pay for the luxury are buying elec
tric culinary apparatus. It Is undeniable
thot th ? kitchen thus equipped Is a joy and
n blessing free from dirt and noxious ga.sen ,
and cool. Think of the happiness of a
kitchen that Is always cool ; of a cook who
is not red In the face and soiled as to clothIng -
Ing ; of a fire that requires no kindling ,
blng turned on or extinguished at an In
stant's notice ! Why , under such conditions
llfq assumes a new lU'pect from the point of
view of the housewife. w
Wllh the Introduction of the electric ichafing
dish ends the era of the alcohol lamp , with
Its disagreeable odor and liability to over
flow and set flre to the tablecloth. Similar
In Idea Is < the electric teakettle and stand ,
admirably adapted for 5 o'clock Tea. The
stand Is connected with an electric wire ; a
turn of the button , and presently the water
for the beverage that cheers without Inebriat
ing Is singing In the pot. Takeoff the tea-
kcttls and you have In the stand a suitable
apparatus for making coffee in a bachelor's'
apartment , or for various uses'ln the nursery
or sick room. In hospitals electric con
trivances are particularly adapted for heating
food , warming bandages , etc.
The electric range looks very different
from a range of the ordinary kitchen pattern.
It IB more like a table , with a cupboard be
neath for warming dishes and a shelf above
for such supplementary articles as the chafing
dish and coffee pot. On the table will be
ue-en , perhaps , a porcclaln-llncd pot for boilIng -
Ing or stewing , a griddle- and a broiler , while
the ovens stand on the floor alongside. Ovens ,
pot , broiler , etc. , are attachable to wires
when wanted for us ? . Overhead the aklm-
inors and other small utensils hang from
pegs on the wall.
It Is said that meats roasted In the > elec
tric oven have all the qualities of meats
cooked In front of a flre , and they do not
require basting or watching. They arc
cooked more evenly and In lew time , while
retaining a largo percentage of the nutri
tious juices. Dread is baked In the same
apparatus Ideally. No culinary process is
mora difficult than to broil In a first class
manner. The coal stove Is usually not In
suitable condition , and the gas often Ignites
the hot fat and bums , the food. The electric
broiler doss Its work without singeing the
[ oed , smoking It or burning It. The escaping
juices are collected unspoiled In a pan be
neath , to that the cook can readily baste
the meat.
Electric cook stoves are made In portable
shapes , like gas stoves. Urns for beating
water are Mid for use In hotels , restaur
ants , barber shops and other places where
lot water Is constantly required. An or
dinary electric light wlro supplies the ca-
orlc. The electric sad-Iron Is a boon alike
.0 the- laundress and housewife. Tin cur
rent supplied to it by a wire keeps It at a
constant temperature , and thus no time Is
est In changing and reheating Irons. Ono
ron may b ? ucad continuously , and no coal
> r gas steve Is required. The Iron never
> cconus overheated ; It always remains clean
and bright and does not require wiping to
irevont the foiling of the fabric.
The timeIs destined to arrive before long
vhen houses will bo warmed In winter by
electricity. What the electric lamp Is to
artificial lighting , as furnlthed by the candle ,
oil Of gas , the electric heater Is to artificial
icatlng. Iut the problem In this case Is
very different from that of electric cooking.
i"or the latter purpose the object aimed at Is
o provide an apparatus that will localize
ho heat as much as pot > ! bl3 , confining It to
ho spot and not diffusing It through the
surrounding air any more than can bo helped.
On the othff hand , the Ideal heater for
narmlng a duelling or other building would
be Itself cool , the hcnt given off by It being
diffused it ? much as possible.
Of court ? , this 1 > scarcely practicable , tin
the- electric heater Is n great linprov men
In this respect over the ordinary stove o
ndlAtor , which , while Itself very hot , Is ap
to warm the air only In Its Immediate neigh
borhood. Stoves and radiators , too , are uu
lovely objects to the eye. Klcctrlc heater !
on ths other hand , occupy little space am
arc easily concealed , Some day men heatet
will be distributed over the \\nlls of thca
ters and concert hall ? , forming , It may bs
pinels In the wainscoting or Included In th
scheme of ornamentation ,
STREET CAR I1RAKES.
E. J. Wcssels lays great emphasis on th
Importance of Improving the braking o
street cars before any further development
are mad ; In electric city traction. It \\n
comparatively eaty to apply air brakes t
cars making a maximum speed of twent
miles an hour. This was and Is being sue
ectffully , done In many places with cnttr
satisfaction ; but with the advent of In
creased speeds and ho.ivy rolling stock n \
factor ? have to be dealt with In the con
structlon of the olflclent brake. It Is quit
puMule that within the n xt two year
a speed cf 100. miles iin hour can b ; nttalno.
on Interurbnn roads. In recent Impcrtan
railway construction , the weight of rail
solidity of road bed and other features lea
to the belief that this foundation tins bo"
laid In order to secure a sp ed which wll
leave steam trains behind. The ultlmat
success of certain electric roads will hlng
largely upon their ability to maintain a
higher speed schedule than lias provei
practicable on the steam roads which thr )
parallel. Mr. Wessels maintains that th
street car air brake will be the last and only
resort of managers operating cars nt these un
usually high cpterls. Much has been salt
about the electric brake , but It has not ye
reached the commercial stage. An Inclden
happened lately at Havre , Franco , whlcl
shows how easily an electric car may b
controlled and operated by even the device
nt present available. One of the cars wa
running at normal speed along the ftroa
when n child , -1 years old , suddenly ran rlgh
In front of It when a yard away. The motor
man could not , of course , avoid passing eve
the child , whoso body somewhat dodged th
fender , but he pulled up the car In half It
length. The child was safely taken out fron
under the car through the movable flee
panels , with a rather serious wound on HIP
head , and suffering from shock , but alive am
likely to recover. Had such an acclden
happened In this country , wlrre city author
Itles are not sulllcleutly altvo to the 1m
peratlve necessity of compelling the strce
car companies to adopt the bist available
brake , there seems little doubt that the
child would have besn Instantly killed.
SIGNALING AT SEA.
Many attempts have been made to perfec
a system of electric-light signaling for use
on sen or land. In almost every case , how
ever feasible the plan proposed might seen
on paper , when It came to n practical tcs
It failed entirely. The faults are said to
have been remedied In an electric signaling
sjstem Invented In this country. The device
employed Is a sort of typewriter , d liver
Ing Its message , letter by letter , In midair
or at any distant point. In gigantic characters
of light. No other background than the sky
Itself Is required. It Is said that signals
Hashed by this syttem are visible with the
naked eye for distances of from ono to three
miles , according to the \\eathor , and tha
with a glass the tlgnals may be easily reai
up to ten miles. The keyboard Is manipu
lated precisely as in an ordinary typewriter
Its function being to switch In or dlrec
the current through a i-crles of distributing
wires , which are carried In a cableto the
monogram or display frame. Thus , If 01
the keyboard the A button Is pressed , the
lamps of all the members of the nionogran
entering Into that letter Ehlno out slmul
tancously , while all other lamps upon the
display frame remain dead. And so en for
every letter. The observer follows the let
ters as they flash out one after another to
spell out the words of the message. This
Is , In fact , a sort of visual telegraphy whlcl
can be made to convey Intelligence In any
language possessing written signs.
INJURING THE EYES.
An English paper states that London oculists
lists are up In arm ? against the very serious
danger to the community caused by the elec
tric light. Several eminent eye doctors are
agreed on the point that unless n atop Is put
to the exposure of uncovered electric lights
In the streets and In shops and oUlces nearly
all the population will become blind. Ex
perts are BO greatly exercised In the matter
that they even suggest that Parllainen
should take It up and prohibit the use o
plain glass globes for electric lights , unless
they bs properly shaded. Commenting on
this , a London electrical journal says : "Ii
la not customary to look at the sun , and not
even the most enthusiastic electrician wonh
suggest that naked arcs and Incandescent
filaments were objects to gaze at without
limit. Cut naked lights are not usually
placed ro as to come within the line of sight.
The filament of a glow lamp , on the other
hand. Is more likely to meet the eye , but a
frosted bulb Is an extremely simple and com
mon way of entirely getting over that dlfll-
culty. The whole trouble can easily be
remedied by the use of properly frosted or
colored glass globes. In any case , how
ever , the actual permanent Injury to the
eye by the glowing filament Is no greater
than that due to an ordinary gas flame. "
ELECTRIC TANNING.
A new method of tanning by electricity ,
which Is claimed to be suitable for both
thin skins and heavy hi ( ley , and to require
only from three to fix days , has been worked
out by Herr Folslng. The tanning pit con
tains 15,000 liters. Electrodes of nickeled
copper are fixed to the walls cf the pit In
which the hides are hung , so that the cur
rent has to pass right through them. Light
cowhides were found to require seventy-two
hours , heavy cowhides five days and heavy
oxhides six days. The > latter would require
about a year by the- old process. The color
of the leather Is not oven when commercial ,
unpurlfled extract Is used. Herr Folslng
lays stress on this , and he himself uses an
oak extract , with a little- hemlock extract
added , which Is cleared and decolorized by a
special electrolytic process. When this IB
used the color Is exceedingly good and bright.
WIRES UNDERGROUND.
Happy Boston ! Five-sixths of Its over
head wires have been placd : under ground
and the other sixth Is rapidly going there ,
Wo have made some progress In this direc
tion here , but we do not go ahead In the
Boston fashion and get It done. We can
t'how a street or two cleared of overhead
wires , but Boston has within two years
placed 055,000 feet of cable under ground , and
removed with their metallic burden poles
which supported 1,000,000 feet of overhead
wire.
Acts at once , never falls , Ono Minute Cough
Cure. A remedy for asthma and that fever *
IMi condition which accompanies a severe
cclil. The only harmless remedy that pro'
juccs Immediate results.
Echo Answers "Why ? 99
Why eat Rochclle Salts , Ammonia , Alum , or
Lime with your bread , biscuits and pastry ? Why
use any baking powder that's not healthful or
pleasant J Why pay a more-than-it'e-woith
price for it , when
Calumet
Baking
PERFECTION Powder
IN QUALITF ,
JIODEKATION , . , ,
IN PRICE > a EO wholesome nnd inexpensive ? $1,000 i/you
can trace a taint of fmpiirily in it ,
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
CALUMET BAKING POWDER CO. , Chicago ,
Huge Petition ,
Thousands of Mothers
Would Sign.
Every Little Village
and Small Town.
of in
To be Represented on
Enormous Roll.
lie il IrU-Hfl
- RGB-
iraat Work of Faine's
Celery Compound.
ii 1 Land.
If anothsr hugh petition , like the famous
ono now golus round , the world on quite another - ,
other mission , wcra to be signed by all tha
men , women ajid children who have been
cured of disease or saved from n weak , nerv
ous condition by Palne's celery compound , It
would take a stout conveyance to carry th
enormous document from city to city.
Such a growing testimonial would receive ,
additions from every tiny vlllagfi and aaiall
town , not to mentlcn the cities , on Its Journey
across the United States.
It would bo signed by thousands of women ,
no longer tortured by uleeplesiuuss , pains In
the back and slds , continual headaches , neu
ralgia , dyspepsia and Origin's disease.
Thcro would be fully as miny men who had
bfen permanently cured of kidney and liver
dl."aas23 and rescued from chronic bad health ,
by means of this great Invlgorator.
, A vast number of children would be repre
sented to testify to the ability of Palne'a
celery compound to ra < tore a healthy appe
tlte , to take away that constant tired fcellng-
and to- purify the blood of harmful humors.
The number of testimonials for Palne'a
celery compound from men and wcmen. . ot
high standing In every Plat * in the union
that Imvo already been published would 111 ! a ,
largo volume. These testimonials have been
written without solicitation. They have bwn
published verbatim as they were received.
Necewarlly the testimonial * that have pub
licly appeared have been but one or two , her *
and there , taken almost at random from an
enormously largo number that every day anil
every week steadily Increases.
Besides , It Is to b ? remembered that not
cno tithe of all the magnificent cures fairly
duo to Palno's celery compound ever get be-
youd the knowledeg * of the immediate family ;
that , In fact , few people have any apprecia
tion of the number of families throughout
the United States where Palne's celery com
pound Is kept constantly on hand and Is be
ing taken or has been taken by oomo one of
lt < i members.
Palno's celery compound has already done
an enormous work. It has eaved lives. It
has saved health. It has saved IIOITKH.
But Its work as the greatest nerve and brain
strengthener and restorer the world has
known Is only well started.
It k > not beyond the reach of thei most
modest household , while a much greater ex
penditure will procure nothing clso sa ef
fective.
Paint's celery compound , theremcPy that
makes people well , Is within reach of all !
Searles &
Searles
SPECIALISTS IN
Nervous , Clirojic
und
Private Dlscisu
WEATMEJI
BEXUALLY.
All Prltuto IMxoiiso
uuil nlaurilomuf MOIL
Treatment Iiyui4ll
coiiDUltutloii frou >
SYPHILIS
Cured for lift and tht polios tliorouuhlr i
cltanied from tba iviUm. PII.IJH , KIHTUJ-A
end RECTAL ULCEIU3 , HYDIIOCELU AND 5H
VAniCOCri.T3 ; permanently and iuccusfully
cured. Method new and unfailing.
STRICTURE AND GLEET
liy new method without pain ar cutting.
Call on or addrcti null stamp ,
Dr , Searles & Ssarles ,
AMUSEMENTS ,
THF rRFIRHTOIJ T i
NIL uiiLiuii luiiii TWO I
TCI.IB3I. / TIMES
Pnxton K liurttcHs , Mur.t. * mm m , , |
MATINEE TODAY 2i30.
' TOW OUT 8115.
UETUIIN ENKACiEMENT
FRANK MAYO
And the Herald ( Square TluutfL Company , In
Pudd'nheadWilson
I'rlce Lower lloor , 11.00 nnd Jl.CO ; Ilnlcony ,
Wo anil 75o ; , Gallery , Ke. Mallnro 1'rlct * Sic ,
We , 75c and I.OO.
Comlns Jon , 6-8 "A KAIMIOAD TICKI3T. "
' BUN. AND MON.
BOYD'S JAN. 5 oud 6
Special Cheap Priced MatlncoSuttday
: neaKeincnt of Elmer E. Vunco'u Original and
only legitimate conu-dy clrumu ,
THE LIMITED MAIL
With His wonderful Ileatrlcc.
OVEItiri.OWl.NU WITH UOOli TIIINfJS.
Tlio Kreutett mentation , the m : t wonderful
lay and the greuttnt nutt-lly of tliu ace ,
Elegant piologrui ! > h of tlio beautiful Ileulrlc *
hen wiry lady utiuijlne each performance ,
The tale of neat * will open Butuiiluy morning
rlce - c , Me. 75o unj l.w ,