FHOW THE PIPE ORGAN GREW Orijii txi DeTilpc:t t! Whin!.., ?rt ANDEAN - PIPES, BAGPIPES AND FLUTES Vs"k Jfoder Instrmnent a Box of v Whistles, with Incidental Elah- . ratlo Meehstnlsn Faelll "' tale Manipulation. It U written down In the "Book of ruaay Btorles, Heal aad Alleged." that a pious old woma.fi of Scotch Presbyterian antecedents, heart ee a church orpaa for the first time. Care it a her opinion that It wag a pretty Vox of whistles, hut an awful way of wor shiping the Lord. Many a true thing ii aid la Jest anfl raaay an apt characteriia tloa la blddea under the disguise of frivolity. Bo here. An orpin It a box of whistles, all that Is needed to make the description complete It to add that the whistles are of many kind and are sounded It me chanical meant instead of the breath of the player. What 1 beyond that, relates the New Tork Tribune. is detail and libera tion. There are pipes in which the Im prisoned air If set to vibrating to at to generate a tone by a Jet blown into the end o that It Implacrt, upon a sharp Up at an orifice near by. Those pipes have their prototypes In the tor whistles which boys cake by carefully withdrawing the bark from sectloas of willow or alder twin and fashioning tbtm In a war too familiar to need detrriptlon. These are the diapasons the foundation of the lnttrumeal. There an other In which the aerial vibrations art caused br the trembllug of a tongue of metal which covert a narrow aper.ure in the pipe and emit the imprisoned air in puflt under pressure of the bellows. This it the "beating reed." and Its prototype In the plarland of the country boy is the stalk of the pumpkin or squash trimmed of It leaf (but no at to leave the small end closed) and provided with two lateral silts producing a narrow tongue which vibratet in the mouth of the blower and cunt the green tube to utter a raucout note dflight ful to the car of the runic auslclaa. Then there are other pipes In which a metal tongue vlbrater freely through a slot, ac complishing what rigid Up and striking reed accomplish, but producing musical epeeeh of a diSerent quality from cither, Thlt Is the "tree reed." and so far at the records go its primitive home was China. Come Anrlrnt Wlilatlen. These are the fundamental principle underlying organ construction, and they are all to be- found In primitive types among , the ravage and exotic instruments in the i Metropolitan Museum of Art. Here is a group of single whistles or pipes gathered ) from different cases. Those who made them were the aborigines (to speak popu-) larly) who at some unknown time (not. necessarily very long ago, however) in habited the islands off southern California, Tern and Mexico, and the present inhabi tant! of India. These Instruments are of bone, pottery, wood, and wood and gourd combined. Some have no finger holes and produce but a single sound; some have several. The ToKcc flute and the Algoja : of India are of the latter kind, and can, by courtesy, be called flageolett. But names need not trouble us. The prehistoric whistles of the California islands, whether only two centuries or two millenniums old, Invite the same line of thought. Such thistles have been found the world over. In France they have been picked up along with relict of the cave bear and the cave Dan, and are therefore held to date back to the stone age is civilization. But the US that it la rudely made of bone It no xt of age in a whistle, for the IncVsiB of South America make bone whistles today. First-Blush (Copyright, 1KW, by Frank Bullen.) A great many cheap naeers have been leveled at the newspaper reporters of America for their eagerness to do their best for their Journal, usually taking at first the shape of a palpable absurdity in representing the newspaper man as asktng tbe Just arrived guest, while yet on board the steamer that has brought him over: "Well, Mr. Blank, and bow do you like America 7" Personally 1 do not believe that any reporter ever asked such a ques tion at such a time. After the visitor has been in town twenty-four hours, yes, per haps, and in that I eee nothing at all to w-onder at. Tbe American reporter being usually a man whose mind has the sensi tiveness of a photographic plate is accus tomed to gather his impressions with llght-nlng-Uke rapidity and it is tbe most natural thing In the world that be should credit other people with a proportion of the same quality. Journalists know well that first Impressions of a place. 11 re corded promptly, are most valuable, be cause they are liable to be much nearer tbe truth than when a few days later the znlnd has become something of a pallmp nest, which It may take months of quiet to Interpret. As far at I am concerned 1 have not been asked what It considered the stereo typed question at all and I am rather glad, because now, being invited to say some thing on this subject, what I desire to say is not likely to be anything but what I really 'feel, not refracted through the prism of another man's mind. The first impression I have received is that of lavlshness In every direction, the next 1 that of a high-toned courtesy shin ing through abruptness of speech and cruel ties of manner, as lf upon a rough British stock had been grafted the punctilio of the Spanish grandee, bereft of its inslnceritv. Next I would place atrenuousness of life la all departments, I liave been told several timet that Boston Is quiet compared to New York, and quietnest itself compared with Chicago. That may in some measure be false modesiy, but I am Inclined to think that thera must be considerable ground for It lf it is so, all I can say is that to me. who know- most of our British cities ex tremely well, the philosophic calm of Bct ton looks very much like a fury of exist ence, and that even in thlt weather. But I cheerfully admit, wonderlngly, too. that the folks who are engaged In this, to me. life and death struggle have, in tbe mlBst of their apparently desperate haste, nothlag of flurry about them. They give me the im pression that It would be no easy thing to get them rattled." And that Is a great thing. To keep one's head perfectly clear tn the midst of ruch a complex mass of ur gently pressing activities, to catch the fleeting moment for doing thlt, that or the other with graceful ease and calm brow, at 4f the worker did not know that to mist it would mean disaster, thlt mutt surely In dicate tbe possestloa of great Qualities, qualities which I believe exist nowhere In tuch universality at they do in the United Btates of America. In spite of thlt feeling I alto have a dim and Inchoate idea that for thlt intensity of life and this ma jestic serenity of demeanor, reminding one of the outtide of a hlgh-prctture cylinder la a quadruple-expansion engine, a price must be paid- And I feel that thU price Is high. Yet occasionally I meet a man who Is certainly in the lsssedlate vicinity of three-score and ten. but whose eye it undtmmed, who bears himself as alertly and holds himself at erect as any young ster ot them all. And I feel strangely moved at this wonderfu,' spectacle that of ana it a only a short time arro. rospara- I tlvely, that these sane Indian made their j Cutet out of the bone of their encmiet i (lain In battle. But primitive man also J made whistles out of bone The ancient i-gyptla&c, who had flutes with the cm- boachure at the side, like the modern transverse flute, as we'l as flutes with the embouchure at the end (flutcs--bec. break Cutet, they are called). called the instru ment "ecbt ', the Romans called it "Lbis." Both words mean the same thine the leg bone. As usual, legend comes up with an ' "M ora eUner to hide the grimaces of explanation. Once upon a time Diana took lbt or to brace the muscles la 'blow the leg bone of a deer, drilled holes in it. ' ,c "aese instruments were not flute and. blowing in it, imitated the hissing "Icily speaking, but instruments of the aound made by the snakes on the bead of , boo kind. Ttey had vibrating reeds in a the gorgen Medusa. Thus originated the flute. Rellr of the Muse Ane. There is a theory that not only instru ments of the flute kind, but music Itself may have originated la primitive man's ob servation of the sound made by the wind blowing across the open ends of broken reeds. Mere speculation, of course, but if some of the bone whistles found in caves and thought to be relics of the stone axe are really whittles and not somethinc else ther show- n fcnnw-inrir. nf t,, . r producing sound. It Is the mians emnloved in blowing arross the tube of a hollow fcev or the mouth of an empty bottle. These relics of the ttone age are little bones, phalanges with holes drilled in the sides across which it Is supposed the cave man thrilled hit breath. But a veritable bon whlstle. a bretk-fiute, with tkre finger holes, has also been found among remains of the cave bear. It maker had knowledge of pitch up to four tonet at least. A considerable degree of civilization is to be assumed before baked clay would be used for flutes, and such a degree was pos sessed by the inhabitants of Mexico, Cen tral America and Peru. Many pottery whittle have been found In the graves of the Aztecs and Toltecs. some of them fan- j tattle caricatures of animal shapes in form, i which may have been mere toys, some more obvitusly designed for artistic purposes. A eignificant fact in connection with the Mex- i lean and Peruvian instruments is that they i give out the five note (pentatonic) scale. This it the scale of the popular, as it was of the old clatslc music of China, Japan nna Blum t.nfl if Prrf rvvr. fin,i is vivid enough, and he chooses to Ignore : the fact that the pentatonic scale repre- ! & tr, n,,ii .-A1 is neither a racial nor geographical indica tion he may find in this circumstance more evidence in support of the theory that Buddhist monks from China discovered America 1.000 years before Columbus. Apropos of the popular estimation in which tbe musical pipe was held by tbe Aztecs, Engel makes the following statement doubtless on the authority of one of the , "ugab" of Genesis, which word the King old Spanish writers. James translators called "organ" In the "At the religious festival which was held j account of Jubal, but which the Old Testa la honor of Tercatlepoca a divinity de- i ment revisers wisely changed into "pipe." plcted as a .handsome youth, and considered The Peruvians had a syrinx of fourteen second only to the Supreme Being a young pipes, bound side by side, in pairs of equal man was sacrificed, who, in preparation for the ceremony, had been instructed in the art of playing the flute. Twenty days be fore hit death four young girls, named after the principal goddesses, were given to him as companions, and when the hour arrived in which he was to be sacrificed he ob served the established symbolical rite of breaking a flute on each of the eteps as he ascended the temple. Grouping tbe Pipes. A desire to extend the register of his instrument, or a rudimentary appreciation of the consonance of certain tones, would suggest to early man the simultaneous em ployment of more than one pipe. For me .. - ... 1 1 V . I ... double pipe with double mouthpiece, the I scale of one pipe beginning where the other . left off. or, going back to the primitive plan ' of blowing across the tops of the reeds, be j might bind any desired number of them together. For harmonic purposes he might Impressions a man -who for more than half a century has held his honorable place In the Ameri- Cf,n.faClJ0r, th. 1unrcsaaf of Wta all its details of life. tnd now at eventide .kuuu .u .u.i-u.. he will feel glad that be has not retired to the rear, and in cosey, slippered ease from some snur retreat has watched the great forward march. It is often said. and with truth, that this is the day of young men. Without any controversial in tent I would point to your old men, and ask L 1Z ... v ioea ot me comparative purchasing oowc B SDU wane couoa uu, inur u ur The thought wnnot be repress that when of money here and In Europe is turned up style art ticking, at J7.D0; the other a; such a one receives the inevitable suifl- kak Th .f , . p ... , , .. mons to fresh activities In another sphere Ti" r j arJclct , WM alr maUre" " vblcb lE whtre in the history of the world can there 11x18 lf, pessary, having been for many be found such aa array of old men bear- ,eftf" a cl0F" obs"r of the price of com . -i , - modules at aonf. imt i .m r,. jus uiruBcive. so gajiaauy us mey oo id the sight of all today among you. . Now in view of this astoundlnc thlnr apt to (to me) the price to be paid is dwindle. Still there must be in such a race as this a great residuum of failures. At so early a date I caxtaot speak of the statistic! of suicide or of lunary. but I cannot help feeling that there must be a very large number of such cases. How- ever, this being an Impressionist sketch, I do not propose going Into details, es- peclally of so sombr a character. One thought more in this connection must be noted before 1 proceed. It is that if this people upon whom I gare with unstinted admiration as they pursue their high pres- sure avocations in so calm and gracious a fashion ever do become excited what will their excitation meaa? lf they do what they do belag quiet aad unmoved, what would they do in a hurry T And thinking thus I look back at home and contrast the foul sperch and frantic anger of my own people when hindered or thwarted in any day during their deliberate performaace of certala duties, with the fact that as yet throughout all the truly amazing activity I have wltacsscd tbcBe last few days. I t , 1 -V, , . . 1 lD,'lr have not yet heard one angry word or the hErlnK filled with gold at almost fabu use of an oath on the street. But perhaps !U8 cosU Because hot bread and ice cold the hereditary in&uence has something to do with that. This generation may be bear ing the fruit of the politeness which was bred of a knowledge of a very present pen alty to be paid for the use of insult or foul language to another in lost ot life or limb by the prompt action of the lasulted cne. The note of lavishnest- This is perhaps the strongest . Impression made upon a European stranger arriving la such a city as Bostoa, for instance. He sees with ever growing amazement gigantic piles ot build ings built In most costly fashion, as it their Wlrt.,. vn.ir nnt how to Kr.end enmirh .. - 4nf .t ..n.rt. ment store on any ordinary day and findt It crammed through all Its doren or so of stories, its acres of floor spacet, with gooda of utmost value plied in msuntalnous heaps whlrh are rapidly melting away under the steady stres. of, purchase by the huge ,rnni Vit mm. nrtA m. In fancv he sees crowds that come and go. la faacy he sees a steady cataract of wealth descending Into the coffers of the firm and again flow ing forth la no less lavish expenditure to another set of seekers after wealth. Noth ing at all like It is to be seen anywhere else la the world. If he entert a hotel, everything is on a colotzal scale, especially tbe prices, unlest he fiad hit way dowatowa to less detlrable stopplae plaeet. For every shilling or fraac . v v accusiomeo to tpena .k aw uv muti pc pj-rjire to tuntmuie a dollar hem in his hotel If U be a high- THF OMAHA DA3LY BZEi SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 1903, unite the two pipe and p.ve th-a a singU mouthpiece which would enable htm to pity in two voices. Egyptians. Assyrians. He- brews. Greeks and Romans, among the great peoples of historic antiquity, ail had i tnese double pipes, and there are few pret tier pictures among the rtllcs of the an cient civilizations than the representations of the players on the Greek dlaules or the Reman tibiae. The bandage about the cheek 60 freeuentlr (.era m inr-ee rrtare 1 (Oretk "pherbcla " Latin "Captstrum" i mouthpiece at the end There is a Greek diaulos in the British Museum which was found in a tomb. It hut six finger boles: consequently it gave out seven tones at least. The double Alaskan whittle Is probably nothing more than a call. The doabl pipe from Syria has a pair of beat ing reeds in !s mouthpiece. and thus represents one of the fundamental principles of the organ mentioned at the j outset of this excursion through primitive organ-land. 1 A bunch of tubes of dlflcrsnt lengths bound together so that they can be moved ! , Pa" tDf mouth of the player and he can blow into any desired one constitute th Syrinx or Panpij. Why Syrinx Why Panpipe If you want to believe a folktale ' of the Greeks you may Sua a satisfactory answer. The great shaggy breast of Pan i once burned in passionate desire for one 1 of Diana's nymphs named Syrinx. One day be met her in a glade. She repulsed his i advnnccs and fled. Pan pursued her and 1 thought her surely his victim when she found her Sight stopped by a sedgy brook. The nymph uttered a hasty prayer for ' . succor and was transformed in an Instant 1 into a clump of waving rieds. Dolorously Pi.n sat himself squat betide his metamor phosed love, then cut a bunch of the reeds, put them to his capacious mouth and breathed out his hopeless passion in a ttraln of melody. I'ljir of I'an. In a general way It may be said that ! where bamboo Cute6 are found, therr also ! P1?" of Ptn re played. A simple lDrtn' tfct tlmplei.t that can be imagined, It that found in our own south. It is so tiIEf1- and ?',Uial thil U k-.aot c,1 lD, tbe .r n ! Georgia negro carries about in his pocket, are closed ty tbe Jolal it one cad, and cut in length to gir? out the first three tones i of the major scale. With these, and the aid of his voice to supply all other needed tones, will he whistle himself "a fit of mtrth" like any Elizabethan carter. He I calls his performance "whooping on the ! quills." The syrinx is in all probability the i length. One series was open nt the bottom. the other closed. A stopped organ pipe sounds an octave lower than an open pipe of equal length; therefore the Peruvian "huayra-puhura," as it is called, had four teen notes through its pipes, and but seven lengths. An interesting principle utilized In the stopped and open diapason pipes of the organ is thus seen to have been applied by the people destroyed by tbe Spanish conquerors. iBMrinenti of the Far Cast. Another step forward toward the organ Is shown in the rude instruments of the far east which bring a number of pipes together and subject them all to one blast n .U fwnm .V... ..... V. . L . , connecting them either rith the mouth- piece direct or by inserting their ends In n wind reservoir. Here we meet again the uaeful gourd. Now, however, It is not a sound box, as in the case of the stringed Instruments, but a wind chest. In th How America Looks to an English Traveler. cUbs one. But then everything that he will receive for his dollars will certainly be cor- rcspondlngly higher in quality and quantltv. strangely enough, once outside the hot'el aoors and wandering among the stores thU of riiimot rv -nOT .. -- - ... B0 L "' l 7 ' ' v , n"ar re 1 nil. 10 "r, t.rt,cl" 08 voull! Purchased J7 a?lZ c "s , A,0J J a bound , . kjuuaiiv iuots aigner, wntle the taste displayed Is in most instances far greater. 1 could give verr mtnv i-im. -,,.. ' "r 7 " jie 10 T "" r Pfice to one, that of the cost furniture. After tbe most careful exam-1 lotion lnto Quality and price on both tide ' 01 tb Atlantic. 1 deliberately state it as ; ' I'Mlel that for furniture of eaual oualltv ln 'cry respect the cost la Great Britain would be more than double what It is here, Then there It a lavlshness la food. The bill of fare in any of your large hotels is enough to stagger any European. But it dots not startle any of you. How you do t to be sure; Adowa that bewilderlac mare of fruit, soups, fish. fowl, flesh and f ,,etI J?? Psophlcally absorb- i0f:: w"n tbe f,13, ot copious draughts of w,Bter- ,uDcJt?t to Meal to a8t lhe '"rage slow-movlng Englishman ! f"1"'. rerflfP8 to explanation of this P"C"JJ , . . t0Wi ,n lhe beJore f, J0UT. ,tvlnK " Nh l1'"' ?hber " hf ,of trala or muscle, ?' " Bcfaed E't quantities ..J af.te you ttke u ,th '"mi, ii must ne tne main reason of your superb stamina and account too. partly, if not wholly, for the straare fact that of every doten persons one meett oa tne street anywaere eleven give you a j i i. . i . - ii. . water, to say nothing of all manner of strangely Indigestible disbes at short Inter vals play havoo with the teeth and have made American dentistry a household word tor skill and costliness. Lavlthness in religious matters, also. But here the business Instinct thlnes brightly ia that there is nothing unusual in constructing an edifice for spiritual pur poses at a cost to make British Noncon formists stare and gasp, yet getting tbe outlay back by letting off a large portion or the building (which has been ererted with a view to that end) for purely sccu- f '"". -K i yourselves enat "e mammon of unrisbteo' nss aad maklag him contribute lavishlv toward the support of excellent causes with which he has ro sympathy whatever. Frankly, ia conclusion and while I rec ognize that it needs almost complete mea- EVhraa t dda to enjoy n e , Z7 . . fc l" '"V tai ana physical regeneration to enable n a oig American city. I must admit that I see nothing at all to hinder the great re- puuuc irom running the earth unlest It undergoes a rapid dry-rot. a sudden descent into Inaptitude- Aad that doei not seen; at all probable. You kaow how to work aad you kaow how to rest. You scoop ia moaey by bucketful and you spend It royally, recognizing that there it at much pleasure ia spending at getting. May you never forget that not only vim, puth and lfTel-headedneii. but rlghteousaeat tt re- quired to exalt a cation. FRANK T. BULLEN SALE Dining Tables Regular New Tlan Price. 55 OP Price, n oo li 00 H DO CO 00 Oak Flemish 20 Round Oak ., Oak . Oak .. 30 00 sB 00 K 06 SO 00 " vv 1" - , i Oak .. i: oo Folding Beds Regular New Plan Price. Oak 71 00 Price, EE Ml J ak 16 00 Couches Regular New Plan IT i Price, Price U oo si so Sa oo cs ;o r.o oo s oo is oo is 1! 00 7 DO 20 00 13 75 16 00 10 75 40 00 El SO 7 00 4B 00 40 00 29 00 25 00 1C 50 Leather, very large .. V el our Davenport These give you an idea of the difference In price. We will "be glad to have you see our assortment of a hundred couches and pa ' oa lae values. m ' IJ3V 6(lUCtl0nS I I 111 our rc" MW 'e oaTe PJBCeo coa stantly about fifteen pieces of furniture, on which the price of each piece Is reduced $1.00 per day until tbe article is sold. Many of our customers are taking advantage of this opportunity to pick up bargains at their own price. Mattresses We are making two mattresses that are highly tatisfactory to our customers. One as good as tbe ordinary J20.00 mattress. Ask to sec these goods. organ this wind chest is supplied with air under pressure by the bellows, la the simple mouth organs the player's lungs supply both air and pressure. Instruments of this una usually have free reeds inserted la the side .hich .ouna when the ventages lhe f8' c li , f " bove. alB0 on liie f lde of tbe P'1'"' nrc closed by the fingers. The air is drawn "ugh the tubes, not blown-as is the case milu me r . i ua.-uu.uw. w -tingulshed trom the American organ. The most perfect of these instruments is the Chinese "cheng." with its bcautifullv lacquered cup. out of which sprout tbe i curved tubes in graceful group, wnich may be seen in any of the Oriental shoos In Broadway. To this little instrument by the way. the music of the Orient owes a tremendous debt. From It organ builders learned the principle of the free reed. Kratzenstela, a Russian organ builder of tbe time of Catheriae II, got hold of a "cheag" saw the possibilities of the freclv vibrating rted and utilized It In one of hit shops. Thence it spread all over the world and out of it grew tbe reed organ, tbe accordion, mouth harmonica, toy trumpet and all the instruments in which the eouad generator is the little tonrue of metal vibrating In a slot under direct pressure of the air. Simple whistles, pipes with vibrating reeds, pipes with free rwds, pipes open and pipes stopped are now standing in a wind chest waiting for the mechanism whlrh shall relieve the human lungs ot the task of supplying the air. or at least make a continuous and steady pressure possible. That device, too. is as old as the hills. For thousands of years the people of the Orient have carried water In the skins of animals. Also they have carried air In The the same way. so that by squeezing the elastic leathern bottle tbey might cause the pipes which were inserted to utter molodloiifc speech. Behold the barp.pe which, under the name of "sumphonia," w-at part of the orchestra at the sound of which all people were commanded to "fall down and worship the golden image thlt Nebuchadnezzar tbe king had set un." Pipes of different kindt and varied vo.res, wlod chests, bellows what more is there la the grandest of church organs? Mecha nism to facilitate manipulation. AforLlnB Mtht and Day. Tbe busiest and mightiest little tb'.nx that ever was made Is Dr King's New ( Lite Pilli. These pills change weakness Into I strength. llstleEsneta into energy, brala fag lato meatal power. They're wonderful I In bulldlag up the health. Only 25c per j box. Sold by Kuhn & Co. I LtnOIt AU IMH'STIIY. The Federal Asphalt eompanv. ar nr ganlzatlon which controls the usphaltum beds in four counties 0; Kentucky, has Jutt been organized with a capital str: k f X5.OO0.O(, U.KW.000 of which has been pa d in. ' Baron Krupp. the head of the grett run J works, hat declared his ar.nual income for the purpose of taxation tt be UJZJ., 0 aX,0 raarkk. There are SyOJ emj.l yesj .. - ... A . I OF GREAT REDUCTIONS INCREASING SALES. The philosopher says tint two bodies oanuot occupy the saiue space at the Siiu ',i.lt.. This has been fully demonstrated in this store during the past two weeks. The ciicitu us quantity of furniture we sold during August has been replaced by the new ...,s that have been piling in upon us bought, in nearly every case UXDEH THE MAKKET for cash ,nnd will be s-l at a very slight margin of profit over the cash cost under the new plan. Our prices will be the lowest the very lowest in Omahafor good fxtrmtve tfure wil le no question on thii point. If you expect to buy furniture this fall you are invited to visit our store this week and look ovr the new styles not necessarily to buy. but to LOOK, to see the beautiful new goods. All owr furni ture is marked in plain, large figures and it will be a study in art as well as of value for tboe in terested. We can give here but a partial list of the hange i f values. Chiffoniers, Dressers, Dressing Tables, Cheval Mirrors I A car load of these goods from the best f maker n the world Mahogany, natural. dark Colonial, highly pollthed and dull wax finish, Blrdseye Maple. Curly Birch. Wal nut. Wax Oak, Austrian Oak. These goot are the very highest quality of workman- ship and our "new plan" prices place them within the range of medium and low -priced roods. Read over the partial list and come ! unfl m. thK law tirip" if noksible. Regular New Plan Price, Bureau, colonial design, like cut .'. $109 00 Bureau, natural mahog any 75 00 Bureau, dull mahogany... 100 00 Bureau, birds' eye maple 75 00 Bureau, birds' eye maple SS 06 Bureau, birds' eye maple, large oval glass 45 00 Bureau, mahogany 3S 00 Bureau, oak 35 00 Bureau, oak 27 08 Bureau, oak U 0 Bureau, mahogany, C0-inch mirror 155 00 Cheval Mirror 45 00 Cheval Mirror 40 00 Cheval Mirror 54 00 ChiSonler, mahogany, high colonial 115 00 Chiffonier, mahogany ... M 00 Chiffonier, mahogany .... 55 00 Chiffonier, gentleman's wardrobe 100 00 Chiffonier, mahogany .... 40 00 Chiffonier, mahogany .... SO 00 Chiffonier, mahogany .... 35 00 Chiffonier, birds' eye maple 75 00 Chiffonier, blrdE' eje maple 55 00 Chiffonier, birds' eye maple 4E 00 Chiffonier, birds eye maple 30 00 Chiffonier, oak 46 00 Chiffonier, oak 26 00 Chiffonier, curly birch .... 86 00 ChiSonler, oak, very wide Zi 00 Chiffonier, oak 24 00 Chiffonier, oak 10 00 Price. J74 00 54 50 72 00 tt 00 25 50 ZZ 0B 2? 50 26 00 22 00 14 ; S 00 54 50 29 00 45 00 60 00 C3 50 45 00 t 00 20 00 24 00 2H 50 69 00 42 00 S7 50 24 00 26 00 21 75 29 00 26 00 1C 50 7 50 Shiverick Furniture 1315-1317 Farnara Street CATALOGUE MAILED FREE. of the Krupp work. Of this number COW are artisans, and 15.0W cicrka. ft ur.ions of San Francisco, and is now turn- ing out material as fart as 2.000 union car- renters can rlace it oa the buildings In two , cJUes. It gi-es employment to 160 nu oa 1 mill men. , Severa, business men of Fall River nre plannlnp to raise by popular .pubscr,p I. n money to purchase a loving cup for Mat- thew C D. Borden because of his agacl'y in averting several disastrous strikes. The men who have been consulted think that O0,(i0 can be easily raised for the purpose. Typographical union No. C of New Ynrk adopted a resolution to impose a fine of Xi on any member found wearing a nonunion hat. clotbing or shoes, or who may forget his obligation to other craftsmen and use products of any kind that are not union made. In answer to. a petition from eighty-one labor organizations and six central unions In Greater New York, the municipal as- rtmbly unanimously adnpted resolution? to be sent to the Rapid Trans't comm'.i ,B!on. recommending tnat inwer car tares ne a paramount consld.rctlon In awarding the contract for the tunnel from Manhattan to Brooklyn. Returns from the year's total of ship building r.how that for he last twelve months more tonnage was launched than In any year In previous history save two. there blng more than 4 k OX tons added to the American register. In addition, all the ship yards report orders sufficient to keep them busy for a year or more. Yards on the great lakes turned out more than half the total. In NVw Orleans, since the victory "f the machinists, the blacksmiths and black- I smiths' helpers heve secured the r.lue-h 'iir day ana an advance ,n wages. In fact, all nd J .uieitM-i apo lat 3Uy wbec I btf a tutog y our Hair Oro tr I a ac U o eoaul kevnr hrart tLmur b itt tatr a. rvrr ; Jisacit icKlSXT,iu.Lftr. iri.l.roa TAKEH" FROM THE MORNING COMBINGS And mail thera to Prof. J H. Austin, the celebrated scalp and tkin specialist c years rtan Ing and national reputation, who will send yoa absolutely free a diagnos.it of your spec..' case after making a minute exam.e.tioa of our hair under bit specially constructed and pr v. erfnl micro&copc There is no charge whatsoever, and ia addition be v. ill send a special pre scription for yonr case pat in a little box. also ABSOLUTELY FREE. Wots va ore cured cf dandruff, which is the foreroaner of baldness and grew new hair. Pp! Aust.n ,iLks that you tell your iriesds aViout it SEND NO MONEY. Jf von are already par v cr totally bald write and fiad the cure, WRITE TO-DAY. SEND 2c FOR POSTAGE. PROF. J. N. AUSTIN, 14 McVickir's TheiUr lullding, Chicago, III. FURNITURE during the last week. This furnitnre Iihs !. i, Sideboards, Buffets We hi.ve rft vcl SO rew pafrrns of Sideboards Anu ag them ere some great bargains. Regular New Plan Prlee, Sldebotrd. Weatherod Oak t ii 00 Side Buffet, Mahogany. Colonial 109 0 Sideboard. Oak 65 00 Sideboard. Colonial Ma hogany If 08 Buffet. Weathered Oak .... M Sideboard. Oak 45 08 Sideboard. Oak 35 M Sideboard. Oak 36 ( Sldetoard. Oak 45 00 Sideboard. Ouk Zl 00 Sideboard. Oak 30 00 Sideboard and Combination China Ce.se 40 00 Sideboard and Combination China Case 75 00 Sideboard, Mahogany 45 00 Sideboard Oak 95 00 f 59 BS ( HI M 21 09 3f 5 2 ; s n o 24 M 21 50 2 54 5S 00 ST &0 :c oo Odd Parlor Pieces Rockers Regular New Plan Irlce. Price, Divan 10 00 5 75 Divan 15 00 10 25 Sofa S5 00 5S 00 Comer -Chair 25 08 16 00 Rocker 9 00 4 75 Rocker. Mahogany 12 W) C 50 Rocker 15 00 It 00 Rocker 7 00 4 25 P-ocker 22 00 15 50 Rocker 55 00 JI7 50 j Rocker 40 00 24 i trades are said to have bettered th!r con dition. Street railway employes, witho t striking, have changed their honrb from twelve anl fourteen to ten and tn ami a half, and wages have bsen advance.1 from 12! to 16 cents per hour. Dayton metal polishers, as a union ir Individuals, will have to pay ?5SS us cu s in the injunction proceedings brought against them by the Manufacturers' niso- J elation ot Dayton. O. The costs were ln- curred In hearing the Injunction proceea- ings, and were in favor of the clerk, sber-ft and witnesses.. The fees nf the wltncsus alone amounted to J101. The costs stand as a Judgment against the defendants and are a lien upon property and nvmey in vested in building associations. During the period of about four weks from the 5th ot P-ptember to the early part of October all the way from 15.0(0 t 86,'xi) men, women and children are buhlly on gaged from ftunrlse till sunset p cklng the bUissoms from the great hop fields of Cali fornia. In Samnoma. Sacramento. Mendo- J clno, Alameda, Yolo, Yuba and Ean Joaqu n i counties hops ore extensively md succes- tuny gTiwn. The plantations ot the state combined would form one enormous ares of 7.5C0 acre, a far-reaching txpane of valley land, noarly twelve miles pquue, and containing more than 9.OO.0C0 hop vines, yielding in a favorable season al most t2.CKO.0m) worth of dried hop. The returns of the state labar bureau from the labor organizations of New York state for the months of April, May and June show that employment was better than It has been in those months in any one of the rst five years. Only 2.3 per cent of unionists were idle throughout this quarter, as compared with 9.4 j,er cent in Go. 19 W and 3 7 rer cent in 1' 99. whlrh tru the lowest percentage fnr the sec nd quire if!,Jf. mK l"v' .w"1 htthert . recr.rd(d ty the Bureau nf Inb-.r. ' "viurmin J Statistics- The idleness at the enl of ( 1 BTba r.td t,er STOP DANDRUFF AND YOU STOP BALDNESS, Junr 3 H. ATrrt.McVlcler'f Tht.ter Hide, ChlcFo. hlK If II1T on. ft mi tit. tiim.1 tm ran m . hit, V n . ttifn ffcl ' im m lotry yocrirrirtlf, aiu r Iter nonta irratnifnt 1 !. tuc. i wrumirn uuruu lus j rver ucui 1 cia t loapjuy rtor J. n. Arms. Ode,., Iieak hn. -w,cu j-oo "err trlrtnp mlrrmcfirle rnmlnutlon Ho- lau tynhtr 1 uui't.t a cor ot tn-atnieni trc.m you lor nj Otinttrujs aiiC 1 ast utmutr count eiurauucaf. Jor 3 n J.rrnx Chlac link liiurEMD 1 am lTtnren the tMid nf Jb1t torSldner Auitra'.la. Irarrx vl.U n. a i Iran. l.a ttr -a p nchl uoin.mT liras, rlet.1 l.rw St is ntipa, ami of c-jurrr i hja (rralcful tu lnf Auntlu fur the rurc. 1 wjUi au iijrui. (i. I- VXUJ, iHirr idrr alout. lltor 3 It. arrnr rttp Ii" k : . wi M-iiilt i,nlni.t,.l i..i.u. a........ 131 Dressing Tables Regular Nw Pian Prlca. I'rjee. Natural Mahogany, large oval a irror 6 06 4 y Bird (&' Maple, larif oval mtrn r SO W t . Bird's-Rye Marie, larct oval mirror M W I i Burl Walnut ft W ' Curly Birch' 7 0 : " i- I Mahogaty irlpliente air- rors 4 M ?. v ' Marie 1C j. . Mtr-e 10 M Oak II H . " Mtb'.ganv ... HO PC 2 j Brass Beds, i Enameled Beds Our line of Enuaxlei Beds Is without doubt the best mahe in tbe United Sta."r The styles are the roost dainty and the Atallk 4b .i,hl..4,.l. .1... t T1- ..1. . 5o'tb,s flkC,ory because of their quality, arl I made them a proposition for tblr rttl-e line far tbl territory whereby we are able to make jirlee 30 ptr pent less than regular Regular New Tlan Prlev.. lrtce Light Blue Bode IS M 14 " Bunk ant Oampoeite Bed. 98 N 15 it Light Grean BwJ 16 64) 12 0', New CoraMlt, the WM m.o b4 in the worM ..at oo 2:; OP All Brass 45 0 2: Pi All Brats CO 00 4 0 All Brass 48 00 2i "0 Our RfelciS of Enamol and Braes Beds have been bo great that we have been un able to keep our sample on the floor. Uc Curtains Regular New Plan Price. Trice Brussels Lact, hundsome, bhowy pattern T14 00 tlO.OO Brussels Lace 10 00 7 00 Swiss Tambourne. hand some pattern C 5 .5 00 Irish Point, plain renter. J open work border f. 50 5 00 Portieres, reversible, two tone, handsome patterns, cord e4ge 6 01 S 00 Portiere, plain route--, haaiMisc border, new colorings 9 OO 7 00 New Silks, in plain Portia cross stripe, aluo orien tal colors Tire Scroens, tapestry pant-Is t 00 3 75 Tire Screens, tapestry pan els, in mahogany frames 5 00 3 00 ..See our new designs In Screens from 11.50 up to 735.00. June, lfKU. was less than It lias been at he ccTes ponding date in any ear since .S:, with the single xtjtlon of 1M; th- ie. ceniage of unemp.oyed members of li.brr unions having been, lor the day ment onr-d, 10K in 1K. 2.C in IWrt and 11.9 in 1W1 The Clc-icr Debtor. Ohio State Journal, i ahan't call again for this Wilt" rld the ooHoctor, angrily "Mr time is worth money " "Hew much is yojr time worth?" asked the debtor adroitly "Well. 1 get i: a day," Enapped the col lector. "How much U the bill?" asked the debtor. "Four dollars." said the collector, rrjch encouraged. "Let fcee?" .said the other, figuring rap idly on the back of an envelope, "my -line Is worth J4 a da. or twice as murh as yours- ou ve already taken up about twu da- of ray lime with that bill, or tjj equivalent of J6. The bill is , your two days' time are worth 14, so that makes us squarf Good dayt" A Ieiiernle Jtlau, Cleveland Plain Dealur: "Ne, Gladys Mc G(Kgle,'' he naid In his 4 tip and narnnst voice, 'life without yoa would 1 of littje use to me. "Do you mean that you wrxtM take the suioidc route te ofcatte W' the fair girl murmurod. "Yon," he answered, "you have guessej "Revolver or roi-e?" Nrtthr." "Gas then, or inlson " ' He r.hook Ms auburn loeks and smiled tt tier battled air "What then would yarn do?" 'Gladys, he slowly atinwerod. "If you take no rhanres cf oa to let a ma- T j. f .(.t T ... .... i. ... ... . . a Rna Ltd nf ni- 1 wui vu ttimk vnu f cir ihr j-uurrrnJlr turn' tiitif a eet U J CWeap.. .f hair at Pncrett rrr nnds "Vi gea ntr, luilt, tiorr urt Ii una t 'cud It cofl IimituC U GEUKjI. wrA, Iirer t Maul.