nebnewspapers.unl.edu › lccn › sn99021999 › 1893... · THE OMAHA DATLY HGEt MONDAY. 22, 1893....

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THE OMAHA DATLY HGEt MONDAY. 22 , 1893. Sm WHO ARE CHUMS Oleo Tics of Friendship Between Members of the United States Bcnnto. PARTY DIFFERENCES CUT NO FIGURE Itcpnhllcunn nnil DcmncruU Alike Via With Kncli Other In Kmitlntliif * Dnnion- niul 1jtlil.n Home Nolnlilo In- itnncoi - ou Ilccord.- Of . the stnid find noble senators who nro to often described ns nt deadly odds on political measures ninny nro warm friends and oven chums. The benuto Is- tx body of goodfcllowBhlp ; not only thivt , but of rail comradeship. A senator may- be nt political logpcrhcads with his chum , but that is no bar to real com- panion.ship - ; in fact , Recording to the Washington Post , the most noted cases of "chums'1 have been between men of opposing faiths. The most famous pair of chums the ecnato over know wore Senator Edmunds- nnd "Old Roman" Thuvman. When the tall Vermonter and Mr. Thurman wore both senators ono or the other was always chairman of the committee on private land claims , which has a com- mittee ¬ room In n quiet part of the gallery floor. They both loved n glass -now and then , and ono never refreshed himself without the other. Mr. Edmunds , on starting up- stairs ¬ to immplo the contents of their private brown jug , would stop nt the door of the senate , give a tcrrillc cough , when Mr. Thurman would look up , tuko out his big red bandanna , blow a blast to match Edmunds' cough and nod his head vigorously a couple of times. Then his tall form followed Edmunds' and pretty soon the pair would como back nrm-in-avm as happy as if their most im- portant ¬ bills wore all signed by the jiresldent. When the spirit fired Mr- .Thurman . first the little comedy was re- pented ¬ , the bandanna giving the signal. Talk about chums , and the first sug- gestion ¬ is "Cameron and Matt Butler. " They have been the Damon and Pythias- of the senate for years. No ono knows how it began or what the secret of it is. But Cameron and Butler are insepara- ble ¬ , and when the wives of both arc nway and the senators have to stay in Washington Butler moves down nnd stays with the Pennsylvania !!. They nro always pointed to as an instance of how political opponents can live to- gether ¬ in brotherly love. Cameron and Butler arc said to liavoa perpetual pair , and probably if ono were taken away the other would forget and still observe his old pair. Minnesota nnil Iiullnnn Mix. Another couple is at first sight a queer ono. It is that of Senator Tnrpio- of Indiana and Senator Davis of Minne- sota. ¬ . When Mr. Turpio speaks Mr. Davis is always to bo found close under his nose listening to the words of wis- dom ¬ that fall from the Indiana senator'sl- ips. . When Mr. Davis addresses the senate Mr. Turpio returns the compli- ment ¬ and sits close to the Minncsotan- nnd takes in his wise counsels. Their intimacy dates back to three years ago, when the committee on Pacific railroads rondo a trip In the west. Both men had to go , and during the time they managed to discover they had kindred interests , a sentiment that few men in the senate had. Mr. Turpie speaks seven languages , and is a line Greek and Latin scholar. Senator Davis .has Greek and Latin atf his tongue's end , and if ho addressed the bcnuto some time in Greek it wouldn't surprise those" who know him best. Ho- is also n most ardent lover of literature , especially that of ancient Greece and Koine. This is the foundation of the Turpic-Davis comradeship.- nuil . West- .A . now pair of chums appeared at the extraordinary session of the senate.- Mr. . . Wolcott of Colorado has taken Uonry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts under his wing in a. fatherly manner that is very amusing to watch. Mr- .Wolcott . is very young , but ho is smart. The Wolcotts and Lodges nro intimate socially , Wolcott coming from an old Connecticut family and being a graduate of the same stamp ns Lodgo. Even before Mr. Lodge was elected , Mr. Wolcott went to the door- keeper ¬ and picked out a scat for Mr. Lodge right close to him , where he could keep his eye upon Lodge and guide him with his own experience. Since Mr. Lodge took his scat the Colorado man watches over him with a solicitude that is really touching. Wolcott nnd young Senator Dixon , who is ono ol the senate wits , are also good friends , nnd- hinco Lodge has joined them there is a- threecornered intimacy that is very strong. They represent the rising , en- ergetic ¬ republican interest. They nro three of the best orators on the repub- lican ¬ side and a trio worth watching.- j . Mnlno mid Maryland. There is a strong friendship and inti- macy ¬ between Mr. Gorman nnd Mr. Fryo that dates 'way back to ' 811 , when they wore both members of the committee on rules and had to organize for the conduct of the Forty-eighth congress. They huvo always kept up the friendship that was started then. Nothing over seems to- runio it , although it is something of a- cross to Mr. Fryo that Mr. Gorman does not lisli. Mr. Gorman and Mr. Fryo have a standing pair , and a man lias to bo pretty good friends with another be ¬ fore that comes to pass. The fishing is the only drawback , but Mr. Fryo used to make that up with Wade Hampton when ho wan in the senate , and now that ho is going to bo in Washington again , if ho fuels equal to it , Fryo and Hampton may resume their old tr.ips to the provinces for salmon fishing. General Hampton isn't very well , but fishing works wonders with a man- .Fryo . certainly doesn't lack for close friends. Another resourceof his is Sen- ator ¬ Chandler. When there is a long session , when Mrs. Fryo has gone to the camp in Maine woods and Mrs. Chandler has gone homo to Now Hampshire , Chandler sends for Fryo , and they keep house together. Then they send for Senator Plntt of Connecticut , who lives nt the Arlington , and the throe spend ull tholr spare momenta together. They play , It is said , the simple llttio game called "High , Low , Jack and the Game , of v. hich Mr. Fryo is past master nnd- 1ms taken thirty-second degree at the very least. If Mr. Fryo isn't fitted out with chums to suit all the needs of Ills inako-up , then ho is insatiable Anyhow , ho has the pick of both sides.- Mauilonnn . IV III ho I.oueuomc , Senator Manderson of Nebraska wll bo desolate when the next emigres ? meets and General Anson McCook is no- on hand in the chief secrotary's chair'- Mandorson and McCook are as thick as two school girls , and their wives are the unmo. They generally spend their sum- inora - near each other , and the two gen- erals ¬ fish nnd go on long trips together. When Mandorbon has a moment to spuro ho is in McCook'a ollleo , and if either has a atory that the other doesn't know by heart it is something very late. This pair becomes a quintet very often with the addition of Senator BlaukLuru of Kentucky , Senator Squlro of Washing ¬ ton nnd Senator Ilnwloy of Connecticut.- Of . the old war horees Senators Sher- man ¬ nnd Hoar arc ns intlnmto ns men of their caliber possibly can bo. Their long service naturally forms ono bond , but the strongest is that of blood , both being descendants of old Roger Sherman , who has given to the union morb legislators , probably , than any ono man of his direct descendants.- Shoup . of Idahoand Pottlgrow of South Dakota have n common bond In their western hustling times. Gray of Dela- ware ¬ and Walthall of Mississippi are rather chummy.- AllUon . nnil Halo Fraternize. When Senator Halo was charman of a committee nnd had a line room ho never was to found there. If anybyody wanted Senator Halo of Maine the attaches knew that ho was to bo disc < vorcd in Senator Allison's room of the committee on ap- propriations. ¬ . Mr. Halo's room was just as line ns Mr. Allison's ' and the senator had nil the comforts of life nnd many of the luxuries in his own quarters , but then Senator Alll&onof lown was not there , and , ns a llight of stairs intervened between the senate and Mr. Halo's com- mittee ¬ room , the pair agreed to Hock in Senator Allison'd apartment. They are the soberest and most solemn looking pair of chums in the senate. There are a lot of thorn who have not the attributes of comradeship. Mr. Brice Hocks by himself except when ho finds Mr. Gorman. Senator Stewart joins John Chnmbcrlin and the congenial spirits of the epicurean establishment when lie isn't writing free silver poems and blank verso , and there nro several others , llko Mitchell of Oregon nnd Jones of Nevada , who arc apt to bo in the name locality. The Apollo , Senator Gibson of Mary- Ir.nd - , has no need of a chum. Ho is too much in demand with society , nnd when ho has any spare time "Charley Gibson"- is good enough company for Senator Gibson. David Bennett Hill was without n Jonathan until Edward Murphy , jr. , of Troy appeared on the horizon , and now the ex-governor is lonely no longer. Most of the now senators haven't had time to choose their chums , but every- man likes Senator Lindsay of Kentucky and his good nature , will make him the privileged friend and the comrade of the entire senate. The individual who can resist Senator Lindsay's sinilo is capable of any deed of darkness.- a . LOVELY LURING EYES.- IVlicro . Pally Dances Will Delight Spectators mid Kxlitblt a Grucuofllodlly Movoniciit. Striped shawls nnd a multitudinous variety of bangles distinguish thedaugh- ters - of northern Africa. Such was proven to bo the case when the Chicago contingent came to take their place in the exhibit of the Algerian nnd Tunisian villngo on Midway plaisanco. They have no fault to find with nature , those Tuni- sians. ¬ . Dark , lustrous eyes beam from a face of a cop brunette hue. There is u grace of bearing , a dignity about them that commands respect in those who DO- hold it , and a general air of "touchmo- notishncsa" - that is admirable in a high degree.- A . round dozen of the beauties chal- lenged ¬ inspection in Chicago yesterday a round dozen of Algeria's crcrno do- la crcme. They have been picked from scores and hundreds of Algeria's finest , and the result is a galaxy that yields the palm of beauty to none of the peris- of the plaisanco. There is Yamina , as- an instance. Ynmina is the danscuxo par excellence of the party , the Ellsler- of Algeria. Mr. Bloom , who is in charge of the display and who is fully qualified to testify , avows that Yamina is the most perfect specimen of feminine beauty ever put on view in Chicago. Inspection shows justification for Mr. Bloom's paralyzing assertion , Yamina is a little above woman's middle height , with just enough of Olive in her complexion to make her unusual , but not enough to disfigure her exquisite physiognomy. There is n depth in her dark brown oycs , a depth of intelligence as well as- of ordinary , everyday beauty. Yamina talks French like a Parisian , dances like a premiere who has devoted nil her ex- istence ¬ to stnnding on ono too , nnd oven in her robes of travel distances all com- petitors ¬ in form and feature. Nothing precludes the possibility of Yamina's marrying nn Italian count or an English duke during the world's fair saving hoi- own sweet will. Then there is Baya of Tunis , who is n shade darker than Yaminn , but who still could pass for a dark brunet. She , too , will prove a cnptivatrix to the wander- ing ¬ oycs of the multitude in this world's fair year , nnd half n dozen others charms will turn their white sisters green with envy.- Mr. . . Bloom's taste in feminine beauty has been most catholic. The specimens ho brought with him squatted on the lloor in a littlo.cirolo yesterday and re- sponded ¬ "bon jour" in their broken French. In their midst was Ouclui , a cool black nogress. Oucha's uvoirdti- poise is no trilling matter. No casual spectator would take her for a premiere daiiBcuso. But so she is , and Mr. Bloom is authority for the tale that she can deposit her UOO pounds on the boards without causing a quiver in baldheadr- ow. . Clinging to the knees of Khatoura , the matron and chaperon of the party , were her two boys , the toys of the party , at the sight of whom Oucha's white teeth showed themselves in ull their fullness. With the women wore thirty-eight men yesterday. There are nil sorts und conditions of Algerians in the party. To- M. . Sillco they all look up as tholr guide , philosopher , und friend. M. Sillco is a merchant in Smyrna , but the glare of the footlights bus blinded him to his commercial pursuits. lie is the Duly of- Smyrna the prince of all theatrical malingers. Without hia supervision und countenance the Algerian villngo had boon a gross failure. Ho embodied the confidence of the scheme , and when ho raised his standard in Purls several weeks ago premiers und actresses Hocked to his side in shoals , i Dances will bo of dally occurrence in the Algerian villngo. They will bo of the bonsuul orlontul order , the perform- ortj - trusting to tholr own gruco of body movement for attraction rather than to the poetry of motion. Men nnd women will join hands in the performance , nnd- a Biimptuoubly adorned theatre is well under way wherein the performance will tnku plnco. In addition to the theatre there is a bazaar of many shops , and a- cnfo under Mr. Bloom's particular cnro , whore Algoriun cookery will receive a thorough illustration. No restaurant on the fair grounds will bo more exquisitely finished , und ns nn olfshoot tables will bo sot in u garden outside , whore visit- ors ¬ may drink tea nnd cogitate.I- Cconomy. . . Whatever else you hoard , says Har- per's ¬ Bazar , do not Include in the list old medicine bottles. The cost of these when perfectly now is very trilling , nnd the futility of saving them against a pobsiblo errand to the chemist's is very apparent. Nor should tacka taken up when you remove carpets from the lloog for the annual or semi-annual shakin bo put aside for a second ubc. A now paper of tacks should bo used whenever u curpot in rclald. FREAKS FOR THE BIG FAIR Specimens with Which the Exposition Man- ngemcnt - Have Been Hooded , EVERY COUNTRY TOWN HAS A CURIOSITY Whatever In of T.ocnl Fiimo In Various Jlural DlUrlcIn M Considered liy the Owners for Kxlilhltlon Wlilo Mango of UlOccti- ."And . It will bo exhibited at the World's fair. " That is the usual form for closing n description of some provin- cial ¬ marvel , or some freak which has filled the eye of Its discoverer with amazement. From ono end of the coun- try ¬ to the other there have como up to Chicago reports of curious things , or an- nouncements ¬ concerning them , nnd the people directly in contact with the curi- osity ¬ have expressed ns their apprecia- tion ¬ of the wonder-compelling qualities of the thing under discussion that it would bo exhibited at the World's fair , says the Chicago Herald. Perhaps 200 copies of that familiar ro- pint - of the Ulster County Gazette , which contains , among other things , the report of the death of General Washing ¬ ton , have been carried up to Chicago and tendered to a busy management as the one thing marvelous for which the coun- try ¬ has long been looking. Of course the copies are for sale nnd it is ono of the most dilllcult of tasks to mnko the owner believe no ono will give him any money for the curio. Somehow the idea seems to have gone abroad that the World's fair was simply an exhibition of the strnngo nndscurious things that have been cumbering the shelves or crowding the buildings of the rural inhabitant , nnd the ambition of the owner is to bring it to Chicago and exhibit it for the charmed contemplation of the million visitors. Ono day n man climbed into the ele- vator ¬ at the McNally building nnd nskcd- to bo lifted to the director general'sr- oom. . That officer was too busy to BCO him and ho came back the next day. That time ho conllded to the young man in the outer ollleo that ho had a curi- osity ¬ for exhibition at the fair , and then ho never had a ghost of a show to got into the inner room. But the clerk didn't tell him much , and so ho came back day after day to see the chief ofil- ccr. - . After lie had spent a. week in the city ho got mad and went away. Ho told the clerk at his hotel that ho had a fish with two tails and if the darned Columbian exhibition didn't know a good thing when it saw it ho didn't care.- Ho . would go homo and ho would take liis marvel with him. Hen With n Unckwarcl Stop. Another man wrote about twenty let- ters ¬ from Hannibal , Mo. , to say ho had a white Leghorn hen that always walked backwards , and ho wanted to got her a place where she could instruct the pub ¬ lic. Another man in lowiv had a Shet- land - pony so small that he had her shoes made from $20 gold pieces , and ho wanted to place her where she could bo seen to the best advantage. A funny thing about it is that in each case the local papers inform their waiting readers that tno thing whatever it may be will bo exhibited at the World's fair. Some "constant reader" or "old sub ¬ scriber" of a paper in lower Illinois favored his local editor with n private view of the biggest potato that had ever been raised , and then carefully covered it up from the sight of common men lest ho might not bo able to cinch them into paying a quarter for a view of it at Chi- cago ¬ , and made the customary announce- ment ¬ that ho would como to Chicago with the wonder. Still another Egyp- tian ¬ paper tolls a waiting world that "Mr. Fitch Bartholamow , the popular and successful farmer of Riploy town- ship ¬ , has a razor that descended to him from his grandfather. It is believed to have been used by George Washington in Valley Forge , and it will bo taken to the World's fair. " A Bradford , Pa. , paper declares that the heavy steer owned by a certain es- teemed ¬ citizen , and which has been in the habit of winning first premiums at each county fair for years , will bo shipped to Chicago and exhibited at the great exposition. A Mississippi man , having removed to Kentucky , and hav- ing ¬ in his possession a billet of wood two feet long in which is imbedded thirty bullets received in the battle of- Shlloli , is promised by his local paper a- "cordial reception" when ho takes the curio to the World's fair. A Wisconsin weekly paper tolls of a wonderful piece of patclnyork by the wife of ono of "our leading citizens , " and concludes the de- scription ¬ with the same old story of its destined descent upon Chicago. There is a club-footed boy in Borrien county, Michigan , who can whistle with- out ¬ opening his month , and ho will "bo exhibited at the World's Columbian ex- position. ¬ . " There is another boy in In- diana ¬ "who can throw a stone from a sling with such precision as to hit a small mark at a distance of fifty yards , and all without opening his oycs. His father is going to take him to the World's fair. " An old will in n Pennsyl- vania ¬ county which deprives the public of the court house grounds and vests the title in a family long known as "poorer than skim milk nnd not any too careful of other peoples' firewood" has been found among the effects of a lately de- ceased ¬ lawyer , and it , too , ia coming to the fair. Gun and Choeso- .An . old soldier in Kansas has the musket ho carried with him from the beginning of trouble at the sack of Law- rence ¬ to the surrender of Bragg at Mo- bile ¬ , Ho writes that ho will take 8100 and a pass to and from Chicago , good for ninety days , for the relic. Ho adds that he knows of lots of people who will llko to see it. There is a machine at Rlpon , Wis. , built by a boy of 12 , which so wonderfully pares and quartora ap ¬ ples that it fits no other nloho in cre- ation ¬ than that afforded by the timely coming of the World's fair. And there la a cheese at Republic , O. , so big that all the neighbors and half the people from Sjncca county will look for it at Chicago. Sometimes the curio rises into the realm of high art. Thrco sisters sang so well nt the closing exercises of u high school in Iowa that they will4- "doubtless bo secured for singing at the World's fair , " if ono may credit the chronicles of a weekly paper from the honored town. An infant prodigy from northern Indiana , a little lad who could rcclto "Thanatopsis" at the ago of 4 , and who la still able to hold oven largo audi- ences ¬ entranced with hia eloquence , though ho la not yet much past 10 years of ago , is confidently expected to adorn the World's fair. Tliero la a picture of Columbua discovering America , painted by a wee girl in the public schoola of Carrollton , 111. , which will bo hero if the friends of the youthful artlat have their way. Wheelbarrow * nnd Pumpkin * . Some things nro described with a good deal of particularity , that no point of their excellence may be overlooked. A Nodaway , Mo. , man has made a jack for lifting'wagons while the nxlcs nro in process of It Ifl such n euro filler of long-folUvnutB that It IB offered for exhibition. Another Nodnway county man , flFWTby the spirit of rivalry , has Invented n wheelbarrow "that the bottom will drop out whenever wanted ? " nnd that , loo. l'li ] asserted by the sorely puzzled editor-will bo on hand or rather on the ground. A Knukakeo man , not under ircstrnint , has made a curious decoy Yluck which entices all the water fowl in tho.llnvnna marshes ; nnd- ho writes that ho will , if properly en- couraged ¬ , bring it to Chicago and ex- hibit ¬ it all summer. Ho doesn't want anything sniil { about It , for his people think ho ought to have bettor terms than thpso lie demands. But if ho can get transbortntlon to nnd from the city , board at olio of the near hotels , ad- mission ¬ to the grounds and half of the gnto receipts ho will como. And the decoy will como with him.- A . Kansas man has a new system for burning corn cobs in n common cook stove , nnd ho wants to exhibit that. Jlo writes directly to the national commis- sion ¬ and will iinvo no "truck" with sub- ordinate ¬ men ns correspondents. From the snmo county comes n proposition to exhibit n bquush that has lasted two winters "and hasn't n speck on it. " And lots of jnyhnwkcrs , it is assorted , will expect to BOO that symbol of longevity in the Agricultural build ¬ ing. A faded Hag , made in 1801 , for the local military company , and which for thirty years has reposed in n bureau drawer at the homo of the donor in Bat- tle ¬ Crcoit , Mich. , will bo sent to the fair if guaranty for its return will bo given nnd n good plnco prepared for its proper exhibition.- If . a man had all the letters received by fair officials from exploiters of thcso- nnd kindred freaks ho could start a paper null. And , if in addition , ho had all the newspapers that in the last thrco years have promised fame and fortune through a conjunction of marvel nnd the World's fair if you had nil this , too , you could run that paper mill to the end of timo.- As . to the letters , not one in a hundred have been answered. But when the projector brings his curio in person some ono has to see him. A careful citi- zen ¬ came all the way from Paducuh , Ky. , with a garment 400 years old. Ho showed it to several newspaper men and was by them referred to the director general. That was their way of getting oven at ono grand stroke with both bore and official. The man ux pooled to sco his garment described in full in all the Sunday papers , und was grieved when none of them said anything about it , for ho knew many people would bo inter- ested ¬ in that sort of thing. But , as a last resort , ho went to the director gen- eral ¬ ; and if ho didn't make a trade with him there is now on the way to Paducah a very much surprised and grieved and withal respectable old gentleman.- lllblo . that Sunlvcd Fire. There is no system in the letters , and system cannot well bo followed in writ ¬ ing about them. Ono describes a bible which went through a fire ' 'whoro every ¬ thing else in'thehouso was consumed and it left lying unharmed on the parlor table. " The next tenders the services of- a "lucky stone" that was never , known to fall. Nine months ago the Fourth of July oration of a speaker in Clay county, Indiana , was promised a place in the ex- position - , and soinoAvhcro near it may bo expected the recipe for making vinegar which has proved so popular in Dodge county , Wisconsim A printer down in Missouri has , setf "thrco columns of leaded long primer in n day , " and his employer is sodolighted with him that lie bespeaks fdr hi $ speedy compositor "a place and a chance to show himself in the World's fairJJ , Some country editors catch the humor of the craze. An Iowa county auditor , who made a mistake in his figures , dis- covered ¬ ithimbolf and made good the loss to the public , is promised by his local paper a sure place in the World's fair. The Mankato woman who stopped Jed Brookor when ho got on u whirl is con- sidered ¬ worthy a place in the exposition. A delinquent subscriber to an Indiana paper , who'has lied about paying up till the editor got out of patience , is pub ¬ lished as the biggest prevaricator in the world , and urged for a place in some competitive examination at the World's fair. A railroad engineer who knocked a calf off the track with force enough to kill its mother is spoken of by- a Roodhouso paper as a fit candidate foV honors. And a gravel road contractor who promises to finish a highway be- tween ¬ two Iowa towns by the Fourth of July is pledged a section for self-exhi ¬ bition nt the fair if ho keeps his word. The man who could gather together the things that have DOCII offered for public view nt the fair would have u col ¬ lection of freaks bigger at least than any harbored in ull the dime museums of the country. But as the fair is to be a show of quite a difi'ercnt character , all those marvels will doubtless bo left with- out ¬ the gates. TREASURE tTNEARTHED. The Loot of 1'IrntoH Found on a Texas Island. For several weeks a party of workmen , under Henry Shannon , a Quintala mer- chant ¬ , and Charles Newman , a coast trader , have been searching on Padre Island , Tex. , for a treasure , said to have been buried there moro than a genera- tion ¬ ago by smugglers , slavers or pirates.- Mr. . . Solomon Ciovoland , a prominent citizen of Volasco , returned from Padre Island and reports the searchers much encouraged by finding a number of ancient foreign coins and medals of un- known ¬ value at a spot marked upon an old parchment chart that is said to have recently come , by accident , into the pos- session ¬ of Shannon and Newman. The party is now engaged in locating the other places marked on the map. This .is very dilllcult to do because of the con- stantly ¬ shifting sands on the Island , and the cutting oil or adding to the banks by the action of the sea currents , About eighteen or twenty years ago an old sheep border on the Island stumbled upon a cache of several hundred gold coins and took them to avillacroon ; the Rio Grande , where ho was robbed and mor- tally ¬ wounded by Mexican bandits. When found ho barely had life enough loft to toll of his loss and express regret at not being ubfqo return to the Island f where ho bald lie , loft a wagon load o' silver bars ana money that ho intended removing as soon ins ho could got a cart. Since then many individuals and parties have prospected there without success , but the present haunters nro convinced that their newly discovered chart will lead them to fortunes. Mr. Cleveland bays all the ooina and medals1 ho saw were made boween 1000 und 1780. The workers are keeping their movements as secret as possible , and had been away from Volusco boveral weeks before any- one knew where they wore , and they were not much pleased to sco Mr. Cleve- land ¬ , who was on the island on business and mot thorn by chance. Busy people have no time , and sensible people hayo no Inclination to use pills that inako them sick n day for every dose thev- take. . They huvo learned that tno use of- Bo Witt's Llttio Early Klsors does not In- terfere ¬ with tholr health by causing n ausea pain or griping. Thcso llttio pills are per , feet in action and resulte , regulating the stomach und bowels so that headaches , diz- ziness ¬ und Inssltudo are prevented. They cleanse the blood , clear the complexion and oiio up the system. Lots of health in theuo- littlcfellotva. . I300K8 AND PERIODICALS , "llio llcfproo , " n Journal devoted to ! ' Annd lll ° cjcllnjr trade , Is colobrnllnfj Us null natal day with n leader recnllliiR i ° J'ino when It required the combined efforts of Its editor nnd ofilco boy to carry Its paper from the paper house to the press room each week- ."American . Investments" for May once moro has Its counsels to offer to those fortu- nate ¬ enough to have menus needing Invest ¬ ment. It is published nt Buffalo- ."Astronomy . ami Astro-l'hvslcs" for May sends forth Its usual rnys of knowledge to the students in these most noliular of nil ak truso subjects. Carleton College , North- field , Minn.- A . timely nrtlclo In the May number of- "Iho Homo-Maker" tells us how to live nt the World's fair, this Issue being designed ns a World's fair edition. Its leailW article , "Tho Islands of the 1'acllle , " by H. 11. Ood- dard - , Rives particular attention to Honolulu and the Hawaiian Islands. Homo matters receive n peed share of attention , thus fully Justifying Its tltlo "The Homo-Maker. " 1. Martin iMlller , New York- ."Patent . Medicines Journal and Proprie- tary ¬ Articles Advertiser" for April has Just nrrlvcd from Its place of Issue , over the sea- .It . is n Journal devoted mainly to the Inter- ests ¬ of dealers mid ninmifnuturcrs In the drug nnd surgical Ixmdon. For Rcnerol popularity "Homo and Coun- try" ¬ offers nn excellent collection of enter- talnliiR - articles in Its May number. Among the subjects Is "A Utopian Socialism , " by- M. . Jules Cairn , describing n primitive gov- ernment ¬ without poverty , property , politics or religion as found nnd Investigated in the course of his travels In Summatr.i. "Inven- tion ¬ of the Tclcscouo , " by Sophia ICano , and "Origin of the American Aborigines. Do the Indians Descend from the Jowst" by Samuel Javos , besides a variety of other choice selections and ioems , help to fill Its mnkoup. H is profusely illustrated. Joseph W. Kay , Now York. The second number of the Quarterly Illustrator , for the months of April , May nnd Juno , makes Its bow to the public after having boon accorded the most Mattering commendations from artists , publishers and press throughout the country. Few Illus- trated ¬ magazines have won popular favor so rapidly or so deservedly. This unlquo Jour- nal ¬ contains the cream of artistic Illustra- tion ¬ , and for those who deslro to cultivate n refined tusto and to become influenced by that which rcllects culture in the highest , wo recommend The Illustrator. It Is a model specimen book of the various modes of workmanship and classes of finish In art , and affords the means of ample study for the dilcttant. The illustrations consist mainly of copies from celebrated paintings , and the articles are ably written and presented In the dress of the very best typography. Harry C. Jones , New York. The May number of University Extension has among other things the concluding nrtlclo of a series on economic consump- tion ¬ in a broad and abla manner. The writer Is Edward T. Dovlne of the Univer- sity ¬ of Pennsylvania. The American Society for Iho Extension of University Teaching , Philadelphia. The Bookbuyer for May brings us its usual summary of American and foreign literature , with a fair quota of illustrations and news from the world of. letters. Charles Scribner's Sons , Now York. Book News takes us out fora May walk through the world's Holds of literature and wo see the new books marsiiallcd by the soul's mental doorway like so many living beings on canvas a literary panorama. John vVnnamakcr , Philadelphia. Ono of the best intellectual feasts of the year is presented In the current number of The American Journal of Politics , in which "Tho Social Scheme of the Salvation Army"- is treated in a masterly way by George E. Vincent ; "Tlio Question of the Nineteenth Century , " by Hon. Edwin W. Jackson , is n clear , vivid analysis of the political and social status of the day ; "Somo Fictions in- Finance. . " by Edward Meade , and "Currency- Heform , " by William Knnpp , touch the silver question and finance in general , while "Tho Claims of Civil Service Reform on President Cleveland , " by Andrew J. Palm , the editor of the Journal , sustains the high standard of this magazine. The Arena for May is up to its usual high standard. Among the leading attractions of this number is the closing arguments in the Bacon-Shakespeare controversy , by Hon. Ignatius Donnelly and Prof. Felix Soliciting , in which it is evident that whether Mr- .Donnelly . has succeeded or not In establish- ing ¬ his claim ho has at least made n strong case as the champion of the Baconian- authorship. . In the line of social nnd eco- nomic ¬ problems wo find "llailway Tariffs , " "How to Introduce the Initiative and Refer ¬ endum" nud "Women Wage-Earners" handled by able writers.- "Monte . Carlo" is the tltlo under which "ono of its victims" endeavors to get even with the world by victimizing the reader under a flashy title to a rcallv dull and unin- teresting ¬ volume treating the dry mechan- ism ¬ of rules and methods in which Its dead games ot chance nro played. The games at best are for Idiots nnd but for the fascina- tion ¬ of largo sums of money changing hands would be very unattractlvo indeed. N. C. Smith & Co. , Chicago- ."Tho . Conquest of-JVIoxIco and Peru , " by- Klnnhnn Cornwallis , is a long story in blank verso. What object the author has gained by reciting this historical narrative in verso wo fail to perceive , us it not only becomes moro tiresome to the reader , but detracts from the force and dignity of the subject. The very essence ol poetry is force und con- centration ¬ is absolutely essential to the psychologic effect. It is well written and to such readers as favor story in verso will bo- a treat. The Dally Investigator , Now York- ."Aro . Men Gay Deceivers ? " Is the title under which Mrs. Frank Leslie writes in hoi- usual racy style a deep philosophy of nothing and bits of serious nonsense. As to the title "Arn Men Gay Deceivers ? " nobody cares about the decision and ouly the entertaining of the car and the casing of the mind with u pleasant , gossipy gurgle of words renders the fact nt all acceptable. F. Tennyson Neely , Now York , The Abbot fi-ccnt novels are out with a short story "Tho Man Who Vanished , " by- Fergus W. Hume. It Is written In a very attractive style , a glance through Its pages showing it to possess an unusual fascination.- Springiield . Publishing Company , Spring- Hold , Mass- ."Blue . nnd Gray" for May is brim full of its usual Interesting war rcmlnlsccncps , presented In short stories , sketches , poems .and illustrations In largo variety. In fact there are so many ono scarcely knows which to mention , The Ofllco Men's Record Is a quarterly Journal devoted to Improvements In oflico work and the interests of ofllco men. The Ofllco Men's Record Co , , Chicago. " 1'ho First Millennial Faith" Is n con- sensus ¬ of historical evidence to show that the "satisfaction" theory regarding redemp ¬ tion originated with the- monk Ausclm ut the close of the first thousand years of the Christian church. It Is a book of much interest to theologians , but to the everyday thinking world it points out the place of u ford to a stream that Is already perfectly dry ; it is the formal grant of a concession which progress 1ms already incidentally achieved as the result of broader discussions- .SaalfloldtmdiFitch . , Now York. The Hand Book of American Republics Just issued by the Bureau of tno American Republics , Washington , D , C , , Is probably ITS DANGEROUS that you stand on with a cough or a cold , and your blood impure. Out of just those conditions couies Con sumption. You must do something. lu the earlier stages of Con- sumption ¬ , and in all the con- ditions tbut lead to it , Doctor I'ierco'tf Uoldou Medical Dis- covery ¬ Is o certain remedy.- Tki . * scrofulous uirectlon of- ithe lungs , llko every other of Scrofula , can Lo cured ( t ? ' by It In severe , lingering rf.T' Coughs , all Bronchial , Throat- .if . ff < and Lung Affections , and ' * dlMjaso that can be reached through the blood , it is the ouly medicine BO ef- fective ¬ that it can be Guaranteed. It it doesn't benefit pr euro , you have your money back. Nervous prostration and debility are couquerod by it. Even with the worst cases of Catarrh , after you've tried everything else , the proprietor* of Dr. Bngo'a Catarrh Remedy will agree to pay you $600 it they can't cure you completely. the most valuable collection of Information In the Interest of the American producer that ha * oter been published , It reviews cnch of the republics separately , and in systematic form presents n digest of Its government , institution !) , customs , method * of tanking , shows the nature and volume of Its commerce , Its coinage , weights and measures , beside * n largo variety of other important Information. It Is also liberally- illustrated to further convey a proper Im- pression ¬ of local characteristics , The work fs elnssed as Bulletin r 0 , January , ISI'3- ."Iff" ' . Is the tltlo of n lirlof but very ex- pressive ¬ poem by Ella Whroler Wllcox In "Tho Onllfornlnn" for May. "Columbus Vespuclus and Magellan , " by Thomds Magco , and "Japanese Folk-tore , " by Helen Gregory Flcshcr. M. A. , nro among the mnnv attrac ¬ tive articles , nil of which nro handsomely illustrated , The California Publishing com- pany ¬ , San Francisco. The Humanitarian comes out tlili month with n good line of articles in the line of social piogress.- "Ooodform" . comoi out this month with a number of choice articles , chief nmoiiR them being "Black Laura's Conversion , " by Ade ¬ laide Schmidt Wayland. Homo nnd social matters recelvo n large share of attention. Chicago "Rapid Transit In the City of Boston" Is the leading nrtlclo in last week's Issue of "Tho Engineering Record. " Now York and London. The naval review in Now York nnd features of the exposition get the lion's sliaro of space in the last number of- "Graphic. . " Chicago.- Wo . nro In receipt of the May number of the Medical World , a Journal too well known to rcqulro comment. Philadelphia. The Draper's Record for April has made itsnppcnranconnd is full of Information relat- ing ¬ to the trade and nlso much that Is of general Interest. London , "Tho Omaha Clinic" Is out for May with n- flno selection of articles interesting to the mcdlcnl profession , chief nmong them being "Pcrforati Appendicitis. " " 'Oils and Fats' In Surgical Dressings , " "Dystoclu''and"Sonio ' Practical Observations upon the Origin , Communications and Distributions of the Cranial Nerves. " "The Boar that Captured a Thief" Is ono nmong n variety of charming talcs for llttio ones appearing in the last Issue of Our Little Ones' Nursery. The Russell Publishing Company , Boston. Under the title , "Tools and the Man , " Washington Gladden presents the substance of a series of lectures ho had delivered to the students of the Now Haven Theological seminary , Cornell university nrd other col- leges. ¬ . It presents a clear review of the present status of the ideas of socialism in distinction with those of other Industrial movements ; it also defines its relation to Christian ethics nnd is ull In nil an ; iblo dis- course ¬ , showing the nuvnnced thought of the nay in this direction , lloughton , Mifilin & Company , Boston , "Tho Kentucky Leader" of Lexington , Ivy. , has come to us in forty-page pantaloons , saying it is fi years old this May ; It's a pretty big fellow for its ago nnd wo congratulate it heartily on its growth ns well as on the en- terprise ¬ it displays. A reduced size copy of Its original edition ornaments its pages nnd also a largo engraving showing the Cox printing press on which it is now being printed , and also its extensive prlntery located in the new quarters erected especially for the Leader. The latest additions to Cassell's Sunshine Scries of Choice Fiction ( parer , fiJ ( centsnro"- English , Pharisees , French Crocodiles and other Anglo-French Typical Characters , " by Max O'Roll , author of "Jonathan and His Continent , " "A Frenchman in America , " etc.- An . important article of special interest nt the present lime on "Tho Bering Sea Ques- tion" ¬ has been written for the May number of the North American Review by Hon. B.- F. . . Tracy , ex-secretary of the navy. Gen- eral ¬ Tracy makes n powerful and almost un- answerable ¬ statement of the legal grounds on which the American claim rests. Archibald Forbes is engaged in the preparation of two articles , ono on Bismarck and one on Von Moltke , which will portray the moments in their careers when they were at their greatest. Much new and interesting material will bo used. The articles will bo carefully illustrated and will appear in McClurc's magazine.- To . Casscll's Unknown Library has Just been added "Squlro Hcllmaii and Qtlicr Stories , " by Julian ! Aho. These stories are unusually clever , nnd their , people are so much llko other ptoplo that wo can scarcely believe that tlicy belong to a nation of which know so very little. Scandinavian literature is , however , getting moro and moro popular with us , and this collection of stories is among the bpst yet made.- An . nrtlclo which will attract much atten- tion ¬ , because of its unique historical value , is announced to appear in Harper's Bazar for May 1! !. It is entitled "Cradles and Lend- ing ¬ strings , " and was edited by the late TWENTY YEARS LEADER !!! Cot.tfis , Pleurisy , Itlicnnmtlsm. Sciatica , Lumlmffo Hack-Ache , nnd all Kitcrnal Ailments removed quickly by which Is thoTnlyponOtJs'pLASTER thnt contains powerful ana cnrntivo modern Incredleuts YOT AHSOLUTELY HAFK and rOSlTIVK In Its action. Demon's Plasters Prcrcnt Fninmonla. It docs not cure chroulo ailments In a mln- nto - , nor does It create on electric hattcry or current In thosystem.nor will It cure by merely reading the label , all such claims are made by quhrkg and humbugs. UENSON'S Is endorsed by6.00O I'hyslcmnsand UruKslsts. CAUTION D n't t. dap.i ty unurupulotil Dru (| . ClsUHbofill.r rtt.ip trivh wliltb lhy r1ilmlju.t u go 4 rtillfrlh > n BENSON'S. Ottlhe Utnula. .> ln >} l rtllr kl Kttf lliem at torn , lor imer incUf. ' Theodore Child. The Illustration * wli' will accompany It are from models now . exhibition nt the Columbian oxposltUti Those models nro Included In what Is kuotv | ns the Uiudcln colloctlon , which hlhltPdnl the 1'nrls exposition oMSSfl , i which hns slnco been largely augmented. Hoi ford's Monthly for Mny conies to its tniirovoil | Barb nnd with Illustrations ' nhend of anything It hns published In if , line up tod.Uo , Ono of the bcit features" ' this rejuvenated magazine , now really "tl ' western magazine , Is Its Itambllngs. n scr ; of spicy editorials on subjects politic. ! ! , j , ernr.v. social , etc. , oto. A clover article. the Chicago Press club , nn intelligent inor gn |ih of Unrlylo In the role of lover , nnd if other of Napoleon as n moilel husband , cr. ploto the serious portion of the mngnzn ( Fiction Is excellently rojircsentril by Ati | ' I'ass , u story of Now Mexico ploncor llfo , F Anls , n Texan society story , nnd ny vnruij humoristlc sketches. Kvery line of tl ! Issue Is worth reading.o notice , ns t- npucudlx , nn tllustratcil Uclford's guldo Uhtcn o nnd the fair. 'C . .- nS D I. One dozen bottles of Johanf Hofl's Malt extract arc wort- a crsk of ale in nutritive aw tonic properties without intoxicating. . .THK OKNUINK Is Mvrnvs sold us JOIIAN.- tHOWS | MAI.T KXTItAHT. und must ho1 the stsmituro of "JOI1ANN HOLT" on- iiMc lubol- .Klbnarft . Jlo idnl on Co. , Agents , 1.V2 nnd 1- 'FrnnkllnSt. . . .Now Yolk. M- nil. . F. L. SKAIlI.l , Consulting Snrzoon ? Grndituto of Rush Moillciil Unllo o. | tUN- &ULTATJO.V ; vuiiU. ) For the treatment o- We onre Catarrh , AH Dlionsos of tlie- NOBO , Tliroat , Cliost , Stomach , Bowolj andJLiivor. Blood , Shin and Kidney Dlsonso ; Fcmnlo Wcaku'osses , Lost Manhood CURED. | ' TILES. FISTtir.A , KISSURE pornmnentlr cure * nit bout the ujo of n knife, llxotiiro or cnuatlo. All ninlnillcH ota. prlvnto or dcllcato nnturo , ot- cltlior BOX. pOHillvoty cured. Call on or nctdrota , with stamp forClrculnri , Fret Rook and Huclpca , Dr. ScarlEs & Scarlcs , " 08aJui SfBS.fc'- No ' ztdoorto Pojtot- llcc.SOUTH . Union Stock Yards Company , South OrnaliaiBC- BtCattlo IJo nndSIieop luariot la th vrai * . COMMISSIQN'HDUSES. Wood Brothers. " | Live Stock Commission Morchunts. 'J- Eoitu Omaha Telephone 1IJ7. Cilc jtJ | ( JOHN I >. UADBMAX , I WAIiTttR K. WOOD , MarUot reports by mall and wire cheorfiill ! furnished upon r.iiplloation. HMAHA U IbuklK & Jobbers Diieclorjj Importer * and Jobbcr * Wholeiale liquor dealori of millinernullonl. . j Mall order * promptly 1001 Karnara HI. filled. M3-22 ! a. lltl- i.PAPER. . . OILS. Carpenter Paper Co- Carrr Standard Oil Co. a full itoc't of printing mapping onJ- irrltliu [ loaned nnu lubricating paperi , cara- papori , etc. elli , ailo grcnio , otc- .PRODUOri . , COMMISSION. Branch & Co. Jas. A. Clark & Co. Produce , frulti of all Duller , cueeie , poultry and game. kludioitar >. 811 ti. UtU tftiuet. STOVE REPAIRS | SASH , POORS Omaha Stove Itepair | M , A. Disbrow & Co- 7OUK8. . BIOTO repalri Manufacture" of i . and water attaobtuonta Uuur. , blind ! tnt lot anr kind of Horn uuuldlutfi. Unudi ul- Ac udt. liUIUougiuat. * 12IU and llalt.

Transcript of nebnewspapers.unl.edu › lccn › sn99021999 › 1893... · THE OMAHA DATLY HGEt MONDAY. 22, 1893....

THE OMAHA DATLY HGEt MONDAY. 22 , 1893.

Sm WHO ARE CHUMS

Oleo Tics of Friendship Between Members ofthe United States Bcnnto.

PARTY DIFFERENCES CUT NO FIGURE

Itcpnhllcunn nnil DcmncruU Alike Via WithKncli Other In Kmitlntliif * Dnnion-

niul 1jtlil.n Home Nolnlilo In-

itnncoi-

ou Ilccord.-

Of

.

the stnid find noble senators whonro to often described ns nt deadly oddson political measures ninny nro warmfriends and oven chums. The benuto Is-

tx body of goodfcllowBhlp ; not only thivt ,

but of rail comradeship. A senator may-be nt political logpcrhcads with hischum , but that is no bar to real com-

panion.ship-

; in fact , Recording to theWashington Post , the most noted casesof "chums'1 have been between men ofopposing faiths.

The most famous pair of chums theecnato over know wore Senator Edmunds-nnd "Old Roman" Thuvman. When thetall Vermonter and Mr. Thurman woreboth senators ono or the other was alwayschairman of the committee on privateland claims , which has a com-

mittee¬

room In n quiet partof the gallery floor. They bothloved n glass -now and then , andono never refreshed himself without theother. Mr. Edmunds , on starting up-

stairs¬

to immplo the contents of theirprivate brown jug , would stop nt thedoor of the senate , give a tcrrillc cough ,

when Mr. Thurman would look up , tukoout his big red bandanna , blow a blastto match Edmunds' cough and nod hishead vigorously a couple of times. Thenhis tall form followed Edmunds' andpretty soon the pair would como backnrm-in-avm as happy as if their most im-portant

¬

bills wore all signed by thejiresldent. When the spirit fired Mr-

.Thurman.

first the little comedy was re-pented

¬

, the bandanna giving the signal.Talk about chums , and the first sug-

gestion¬

is "Cameron and Matt Butler. "They have been the Damon and Pythias-of the senate for years. No ono knowshow it began or what the secret of it is.But Cameron and Butler are insepara-ble

¬

, and when the wives of both arcnway and the senators have to stay inWashington Butler moves down nndstays with the Pennsylvania ! ! . Theynro always pointed to as an instance ofhow political opponents can live to-

gether¬

in brotherly love. Cameron andButler arc said to liavoa perpetual pair ,

and probably if ono were taken away theother would forget and still observe hisold pair.

Minnesota nnil Iiullnnn Mix.

Another couple is at first sight aqueer ono. It is that of Senator Tnrpio-of Indiana and Senator Davis of Minne-sota.

¬

. When Mr. Turpio speaks Mr.Davis is always to bo found close underhis nose listening to the words of wis-dom

¬

that fall from the Indiana senator'sl-ips. . When Mr. Davis addresses thesenate Mr. Turpio returns the compli-ment

¬

and sits close to the Minncsotan-nnd takes in his wise counsels. Theirintimacy dates back to three yearsago , when the committee on Pacificrailroads rondo a trip In the west.Both men had to go , and during thetime they managed to discover they hadkindred interests , a sentiment that fewmen in the senate had. Mr. Turpiespeaks seven languages , and is a lineGreek and Latin scholar. SenatorDavis .has Greek and Latin atf histongue's end , and if ho addressed thebcnuto some time in Greek it wouldn'tsurprise those" who know him best. Ho-is also n most ardent lover of literature ,

especially that of ancient Greece andKoine. This is the foundation of theTurpic-Davis comradeship.-

nuil.

West-

.A

.

now pair of chums appeared at theextraordinary session of the senate.-Mr.

.

. Wolcott of Colorado has takenUonry Cabot Lodge of Massachusettsunder his wing in a. fatherly mannerthat is very amusing to watch. Mr-.Wolcott

.

is very young , but ho is smart.The Wolcotts and Lodges nro intimatesocially , Wolcott coming from an oldConnecticut family and being a graduateof the same stamp ns Lodgo. Evenbefore Mr. Lodge was elected ,

Mr. Wolcott went to the door-keeper

¬

and picked out a scat for Mr.Lodge right close to him , where hecould keep his eye upon Lodge and guidehim with his own experience. SinceMr. Lodge took his scat the Coloradoman watches over him with a solicitudethat is really touching. Wolcott nndyoung Senator Dixon , who is ono ol thesenate wits , are also good friends , nnd-hinco Lodge has joined them there is a-

threecornered intimacy that is verystrong. They represent the rising , en-ergetic

¬

republican interest. They nrothree of the best orators on the repub-lican

¬

side and a trio worth watching.-

j.

Mnlno mid Maryland.

There is a strong friendship and inti-macy

¬

between Mr. Gorman nnd Mr. Fryothat dates 'way back to '811 , when theywore both members of the committee onrules and had to organize for the conductof the Forty-eighth congress. They huvoalways kept up the friendship that wasstarted then. Nothing over seems to-runio it , although it is something of a-cross to Mr. Fryo that Mr. Gorman doesnot lisli. Mr. Gorman and Mr. Fryohave a standing pair , and a man lias tobo pretty good friends with another be ¬

fore that comes to pass. The fishing isthe only drawback , but Mr. Fryo used tomake that up with Wade Hampton whenho wan in the senate , and now that ho isgoing to bo in Washington again , if hofuels equal to it , Fryo and Hampton mayresume their old tr.ips to the provincesfor salmon fishing. General Hamptonisn't very well , but fishing works wonderswith a man-

.Fryo.

certainly doesn't lack for closefriends. Another resourceof his is Sen-ator

¬

Chandler. When there is a longsession , when Mrs. Fryo has gone to thecamp in Maine woods and Mrs. Chandlerhas gone homo to Now Hampshire ,Chandler sends for Fryo , and they keephouse together. Then they send forSenator Plntt of Connecticut , who livesnt the Arlington , and the throe spendull tholr spare momenta together. Theyplay , It is said , the simple llttio gamecalled "High , Low , Jack and the Game ,of v. hich Mr. Fryo is past master nnd-1ms taken thirty-second degree at thevery least. If Mr. Fryo isn't fitted outwith chums to suit all the needs of Illsinako-up , then ho is insatiableAnyhow , ho has the pick of both sides.-

Mauilonnn.

IV III ho I.oueuomc ,

Senator Manderson of Nebraska wllbo desolate when the next emigres ?meets and General Anson McCook is no-on hand in the chief secrotary's chair'-Mandorson and McCook are as thick astwo school girls , and their wives are theunmo. They generally spend their sum-inora

-near each other , and the two gen-

erals¬

fish nnd go on long trips together.When Mandorbon has a moment to spuroho is in McCook'a ollleo , and if eitherhas a atory that the other doesn't knowby heart it is something very late. Thispair becomes a quintet very often withthe addition of Senator BlaukLuru of

Kentucky , Senator Squlro of Washing ¬

ton nnd Senator Ilnwloy of Connecticut.-Of

.

the old war horees Senators Sher-man

¬

nnd Hoar arc ns intlnmto ns men oftheir caliber possibly can bo. Their longservice naturally forms ono bond , but thestrongest is that of blood , both beingdescendants of old Roger Sherman , whohas given to the union morb legislators ,

probably , than any ono man of his directdescendants.-

Shoup.

of Idahoand Pottlgrow of SouthDakota have n common bond In theirwestern hustling times. Gray of Dela-ware

¬

and Walthall of Mississippi arerather chummy.-

AllUon

.

nnil Halo Fraternize.When Senator Halo was charman of a

committee nnd had a line room ho neverwas to found there. If anybyody wantedSenator Halo of Maine the attaches knewthat ho was to bo disc < vorcd in SenatorAllison's room of the committee on ap-propriations.

¬

. Mr. Halo's room was justas line ns Mr. Allison's' and the senatorhad nil the comforts of life nnd many ofthe luxuries in his own quarters , butthen Senator Alll&onof lown was notthere , and , ns a llight of stairs intervenedbetween the senate and Mr. Halo's com-mittee

¬

room , the pair agreed to Hock inSenator Allison'd apartment. They arethe soberest and most solemn lookingpair of chums in the senate.

There are a lot of thorn who have notthe attributes of comradeship. Mr. BriceHocks by himself except when ho findsMr. Gorman. Senator Stewart joinsJohn Chnmbcrlin and the congenialspirits of the epicurean establishmentwhen lie isn't writing free silver poemsand blank verso , and there nro severalothers , llko Mitchell of Oregon nndJones of Nevada , who arc apt to bo inthe name locality.

The Apollo , Senator Gibson of Mary-Ir.nd

-

, has no need of a chum. Ho is toomuch in demand with society , nnd whenho has any spare time "Charley Gibson"-is good enough company for SenatorGibson.

David Bennett Hill was without nJonathan until Edward Murphy , jr. , ofTroy appeared on the horizon , and nowthe ex-governor is lonely no longer.

Most of the now senators haven't hadtime to choose their chums , but every-man likes Senator Lindsay of Kentuckyand his good nature, will make him theprivileged friend and the comrade ofthe entire senate. The individual whocan resist Senator Lindsay's sinilo iscapable of any deed of darkness.-

a.

LOVELY LURING EYES.-

IVlicro

.

Pally Dances Will Delight Spectatorsmid Kxlitblt a Grucuofllodlly Movoniciit.Striped shawls nnd a multitudinous

variety of bangles distinguish thedaugh-ters

-

of northern Africa. Such wasproven to bo the case when the Chicagocontingent came to take their place inthe exhibit of the Algerian nnd Tunisianvillngo on Midway plaisanco. They haveno fault to find with nature , those Tuni-sians.

¬

. Dark , lustrous eyes beam from aface of a cop brunette hue. There is ugrace of bearing , a dignity about themthat commands respect in those who DO-

hold it , and a general air of "touchmo-notishncsa"

-

that is admirable in a highdegree.-

A.

round dozen of the beauties chal-lenged

¬

inspection in Chicago yesterdaya round dozen of Algeria's crcrno do-

la crcme. They have been picked fromscores and hundreds of Algeria's finest ,

and the result is a galaxy that yieldsthe palm of beauty to none of the peris-of the plaisanco. There is Yamina , as-an instance. Ynmina is the danscuxopar excellence of the party , the Ellsler-of Algeria. Mr. Bloom , who is in chargeof the display and who is fully qualifiedto testify , avows that Yamina is themost perfect specimen of feminine beautyever put on view in Chicago. Inspectionshows justification for Mr. Bloom'sparalyzing assertion , Yamina is a littleabove woman's middle height , with justenough of Olive in her complexion tomake her unusual , but not enough todisfigure her exquisite physiognomy.

There is n depth in her dark brownoycs , a depth of intelligence as well as-

of ordinary , everyday beauty. Yaminatalks French like a Parisian , dances likea premiere who has devoted nil her ex-istence

¬

to stnnding on ono too , nnd ovenin her robes of travel distances all com-petitors

¬

in form and feature. Nothingprecludes the possibility of Yamina'smarrying nn Italian count or an Englishduke during the world's fair saving hoi-own sweet will.

Then there is Baya of Tunis , who is nshade darker than Yaminn , but who stillcould pass for a dark brunet. She , too ,

will prove a cnptivatrix to the wander-ing

¬

oycs of the multitude in this world'sfair year , nnd half n dozen otherscharms will turn their white sistersgreen with envy.-

Mr..

. Bloom's taste in feminine beautyhas been most catholic. The specimensho brought with him squatted on thelloor in a littlo.cirolo yesterday and re-sponded

¬

"bon jour" in their brokenFrench. In their midst was Ouclui , acool black nogress. Oucha's uvoirdti-poise is no trilling matter. No casualspectator would take her for a premieredaiiBcuso. But so she is , and Mr. Bloomis authority for the tale that she candeposit her UOO pounds on the boardswithout causing a quiver in baldheadr-ow. .

Clinging to the knees of Khatoura , thematron and chaperon of the party , wereher two boys , the toys of the party , atthe sight of whom Oucha's white teethshowed themselves in ull their fullness.

With the women wore thirty-eightmen yesterday. There are nil sorts undconditions of Algerians in the party. To-M. . Sillco they all look up as tholr guide ,

philosopher , und friend. M. Sillco is amerchant in Smyrna , but the glare ofthe footlights bus blinded him to hiscommercial pursuits. lie is the Duly of-

Smyrna the prince of all theatricalmalingers. Without hia supervision undcountenance the Algerian villngo hadboon a gross failure. Ho embodied theconfidence of the scheme , and when horaised his standard in Purls severalweeks ago premiers und actresses Hockedto his side in shoals , i

Dances will bo of dally occurrence inthe Algerian villngo. They will bo ofthe bonsuul orlontul order , the perform-ortj

-trusting to tholr own gruco of body

movement for attraction rather than tothe poetry of motion. Men nnd womenwill join hands in the performance , nnd-a Biimptuoubly adorned theatre is wellunder way wherein the performance willtnku plnco. In addition to the theatrethere is a bazaar of many shops , and a-

cnfo under Mr. Bloom's particular cnro ,

whore Algoriun cookery will receive athorough illustration. No restaurant onthe fair grounds will bo more exquisitelyfinished , und ns nn olfshoot tables willbo sot in u garden outside , whore visit-ors

¬

may drink tea nnd cogitate.I-

Cconomy.

.

.Whatever else you hoard , says Har-

per's¬

Bazar , do not Include in the list oldmedicine bottles. The cost of thesewhen perfectly now is very trilling , nndthe futility of saving them against apobsiblo errand to the chemist's is veryapparent. Nor should tacka taken upwhen you remove carpets from the lloogfor the annual or semi-annual shakinbo put aside for a second ubc. A nowpaper of tacks should bo used wheneveru curpot in rclald.

FREAKS FOR THE BIG FAIR

Specimens with Which the Exposition Man-

ngemcnt

-

Have Been Hooded ,

EVERY COUNTRY TOWN HAS A CURIOSITY

Whatever In of T.ocnl Fiimo In VariousJlural DlUrlcIn M Considered liy the

Owners for Kxlilhltlon WliloMango of UlOccti-

."And

.

It will bo exhibited at theWorld's fair. " That is the usual formfor closing n description of some provin-cial

¬

marvel , or some freak which hasfilled the eye of Its discoverer withamazement. From ono end of the coun-try

¬

to the other there have como up toChicago reports of curious things , or an-

nouncements¬

concerning them , nnd thepeople directly in contact with the curi-osity

¬

have expressed ns their apprecia-tion

¬

of the wonder-compelling qualitiesof the thing under discussion that itwould bo exhibited at the World's fair ,

says the Chicago Herald.Perhaps 200 copies of that familiar ro-

pint-

of the Ulster County Gazette ,which contains , among other things , thereport of the death of General Washing ¬

ton , have been carried up to Chicago andtendered to a busy management as theone thing marvelous for which the coun-try

¬

has long been looking. Of coursethe copies are for sale nnd it is ono ofthe most dilllcult of tasks to mnko theowner believe no ono will give him anymoney for the curio. Somehow theidea seems to have gone abroad that theWorld's fair was simply an exhibition ofthe strnngo nndscurious things that havebeen cumbering the shelves or crowdingthe buildings of the rural inhabitant ,

nnd the ambition of the owner is tobring it to Chicago and exhibit it for thecharmed contemplation of the millionvisitors.

Ono day n man climbed into the ele-vator

¬

at the McNally building nnd nskcd-to bo lifted to the director general'sr-oom. . That officer was too busy to BCO

him and ho came back the next day.That time ho conllded to the young manin the outer ollleo that ho had a curi-osity

¬

for exhibition at the fair , and thenho never had a ghost of a show to gotinto the inner room. But the clerkdidn't tell him much , and so ho cameback day after day to see the chief ofil-

ccr.-

. After lie had spent a. week in thecity ho got mad and went away. Hotold the clerk at his hotel that ho had afish with two tails and if the darnedColumbian exhibition didn't know agood thing when it saw it ho didn't care.-Ho

.would go homo and ho would take

liis marvel with him.Hen With n Unckwarcl Stop.

Another man wrote about twenty let-ters

¬

from Hannibal , Mo. , to say ho had awhite Leghorn hen that always walkedbackwards , and ho wanted to got her aplace where she could instruct the pub ¬

lic. Another man in lowiv had a Shet-land

-pony so small that he had her shoes

made from $20 gold pieces , and howanted to place her where she could boseen to the best advantage. A funnything about it is that in each case thelocal papers inform their waiting readersthat tno thing whatever it may bewill bo exhibited at the World's fair.

Some "constant reader" or "old sub ¬

scriber" of a paper in lower Illinoisfavored his local editor with n privateview of the biggest potato that had everbeen raised , and then carefully coveredit up from the sight of common men lestho might not bo able to cinch them intopaying a quarter for a view of it at Chi-cago

¬

, and made the customary announce-ment

¬

that ho would como to Chicagowith the wonder. Still another Egyp-tian

¬

paper tolls a waiting world that"Mr. Fitch Bartholamow , the popularand successful farmer of Riploy town-ship

¬

, has a razor that descended to himfrom his grandfather. It is believed tohave been used by George Washingtonin Valley Forge , and it will bo taken tothe World's fair. "

A Bradford , Pa. , paper declares thatthe heavy steer owned by a certain es-

teemed¬

citizen , and which has been inthe habit of winning first premiums ateach county fair for years , will boshipped to Chicago and exhibited at thegreat exposition. A Mississippi man ,

having removed to Kentucky , and hav-ing

¬

in his possession a billet of woodtwo feet long in which is imbeddedthirty bullets received in the battle of-

Shlloli , is promised by his local paper a-

"cordial reception" when ho takes thecurio to the World's fair. A Wisconsinweekly paper tolls of a wonderful pieceof patclnyork by the wife of ono of "ourleading citizens , " and concludes the de-scription

¬

with the same old story of itsdestined descent upon Chicago.

There is a club-footed boy in Borriencounty , Michigan , who can whistle with-out

¬

opening his month , and ho will "boexhibited at the World's Columbian ex-position.

¬

. " There is another boy in In-diana

¬

"who can throw a stone from asling with such precision as to hit asmall mark at a distance of fifty yards ,and all without opening his oycs. Hisfather is going to take him to theWorld's fair. " An old will in n Pennsyl-vania

¬

county which deprives the publicof the court house grounds and vests thetitle in a family long known as "poorerthan skim milk nnd not any too carefulof other peoples' firewood" has beenfound among the effects of a lately de-ceased

¬

lawyer , and it , too , ia coming tothe fair.

Gun and Choeso-

.An

.

old soldier in Kansas has themusket ho carried with him from thebeginning of trouble at the sack of Law-rence

¬

to the surrender of Bragg at Mo-bile

¬

, Ho writes that ho will take 8100and a pass to and from Chicago , goodfor ninety days , for the relic. Ho addsthat he knows of lots of people who willllko to see it. There is a machine atRlpon , Wis. , built by a boy of 12 , whichso wonderfully pares and quartora ap¬

ples that it fits no other nloho in cre-ation

¬

than that afforded by the timelycoming of the World's fair. And therela a cheese at Republic , O. , so big thatall the neighbors and half the peoplefrom Sjncca county will look for it atChicago.

Sometimes the curio rises into therealm of high art. Thrco sisters sangso well nt the closing exercises of uhigh school in Iowa that they will4-"doubtless bo secured for singing at theWorld's fair , " if ono may credit thechronicles of a weekly paper from thehonored town. An infant prodigy fromnorthern Indiana , a little lad who couldrcclto "Thanatopsis" at the ago of 4 , andwho la still able to hold oven largo audi-ences

¬

entranced with hia eloquence ,though ho la not yet much past 10 yearsof ago , is confidently expected to adornthe World's fair. Tliero la a picture ofColumbua discovering America , paintedby a wee girl in the public schoola ofCarrollton , 111. , which will bo hero ifthe friends of the youthful artlat havetheir way.

Wheelbarrow * nnd Pumpkin * .

Some things nro described with a gooddeal of particularity , that no point oftheir excellence may be overlooked. ANodaway , Mo. , man has made a jack for

lifting'wagons while the nxlcs nro inprocess of It Ifl such n eurofiller of long-folUvnutB that It IB offeredfor exhibition. Another Nodnwaycounty man , flFWTby the spirit of rivalry ,has Invented n wheelbarrow "that thebottom will drop out whenever wanted ? "nnd that , loo. l'li ] asserted by the sorelypuzzled editor-will bo on hand orrather on the ground. A Knukakeoman , not under ircstrnint , has made acurious decoy Yluck which entices all thewater fowl in tho.llnvnna marshes ; nnd-ho writes that ho will , if properly en-couraged

¬

, bring it to Chicago and ex-hibit

¬

it all summer. Ho doesn't wantanything sniil {about It , for hispeople think ho ought to have bettorterms than thpso lie demands. But if hocan get transbortntlon to nnd from thecity , board at olio of the near hotels , ad-mission

¬

to the grounds and half of thegnto receipts ho will como. And thedecoy will como with him.-

A.

Kansas man has a new system forburning corn cobs in n common cookstove , nnd ho wants to exhibit that. Jlowrites directly to the national commis-sion

¬

and will iinvo no "truck" with sub-ordinate

¬

men ns correspondents. Fromthe snmo county comes n proposition toexhibit n bquush that has lasted twowinters "and hasn't n speck on it. " Andlots of jnyhnwkcrs , it is assorted ,

will expect to BOO that symbolof longevity in the Agricultural build ¬

ing. A faded Hag , made in 1801 , for thelocal military company , and which forthirty years has reposed in n bureaudrawer at the homo of the donor in Bat-tle

¬

Crcoit , Mich. , will bo sent to the fairif guaranty for its return will bo givennnd n good plnco prepared for its properexhibition.-

If.

a man had all the letters receivedby fair officials from exploiters of thcso-nnd kindred freaks ho could start apaper null. And , if in addition , ho hadall the newspapers that in the last thrcoyears have promised fame and fortunethrough a conjunction of marvel nnd theWorld's fair if you had nil this , too ,you could run that paper mill to the endof timo.-

As.

to the letters , not one in a hundredhave been answered. But when theprojector brings his curio in personsome ono has to see him. A careful citi-zen

¬

came all the way from Paducuh ,Ky. , with a garment 400 years old. Hoshowed it to several newspaper men andwas by them referred to the directorgeneral. That was their way of gettingoven at ono grand stroke with both boreand official. The man ux pooled to scohis garment described in full in all theSunday papers , und was grieved whennone of them said anything about it , forho knew many people would bo inter-ested

¬

in that sort of thing. But , as alast resort , ho went to the director gen-eral

¬

; and if ho didn't make a trade withhim there is now on the way to Paducaha very much surprised and grieved andwithal respectable old gentleman.-

lllblo.

that Sunlvcd Fire.There is no system in the letters , and

system cannot well bo followed in writ ¬

ing about them. Ono describes a biblewhich went through a fire ' 'whoro every¬

thing else in'thehouso was consumedand it left lying unharmed on the parlortable. " The next tenders the services of-a "lucky stone" that was never , knownto fall. Nine months ago the Fourth ofJuly oration of a speaker in Clay county ,Indiana , was promised a place in the ex-position

-, and soinoAvhcro near it may bo

expected the recipe for making vinegarwhich has proved so popular in Dodgecounty , Wisconsim A printer down inMissouri has , setf "thrco columns ofleaded long primer in n day , " and hisemployer is sodolighted with him thatlie bespeaks fdr hi $ speedy compositor "aplace and a chance to show himself inthe World's fairJJ,

Some country editors catch the humorof the craze. An Iowa county auditor ,who made a mistake in his figures , dis-covered

¬

ithimbolf and made good the lossto the public , is promised by his localpaper a sure place in the World's fair.The Mankato woman who stopped JedBrookor when ho got on u whirl is con-sidered

¬

worthy a place in the exposition.A delinquent subscriber to an Indianapaper , who'has lied about paying up tillthe editor got out of patience , is pub ¬

lished as the biggest prevaricator inthe world , and urged for a place insome competitive examination at theWorld's fair. A railroad engineer whoknocked a calf off the track with forceenough to kill its mother is spoken of by-a Roodhouso paper as a fit candidate foVhonors. And a gravel road contractorwho promises to finish a highway be-tween

¬

two Iowa towns by the Fourth ofJuly is pledged a section for self-exhi ¬

bition nt the fair if ho keeps his word.The man who could gather together

the things that have DOCII offered forpublic view nt the fair would have u col ¬

lection of freaks bigger at least than anyharbored in ull the dime museums ofthe country. But as the fair is to be ashow of quite a difi'ercnt character , allthose marvels will doubtless bo left with-out

¬

the gates.

TREASURE tTNEARTHED.

The Loot of 1'IrntoH Found on a TexasIsland.

For several weeks a party of workmen ,under Henry Shannon , a Quintala mer-chant

¬

, and Charles Newman , a coasttrader , have been searching on PadreIsland , Tex. , for a treasure , said to havebeen buried there moro than a genera-tion

¬

ago by smugglers , slavers or pirates.-Mr.

.. Solomon Ciovoland , a prominent

citizen of Volasco , returned from PadreIsland and reports the searchers muchencouraged by finding a number ofancient foreign coins and medals of un-known

¬

value at a spot marked upon anold parchment chart that is said to haverecently come , by accident , into the pos-session

¬

of Shannon and Newman. Theparty is now engaged in locating theother places marked on the map. This

.is very dilllcult to do because of the con-stantly

¬

shifting sands on the Island , andthe cutting oil or adding to the banksby the action of the sea currents ,

About eighteen or twenty years ago anold sheep border on the Island stumbledupon a cache of several hundred goldcoins and took them to avillacroon; the RioGrande , where ho was robbed and mor-tally

¬

wounded by Mexican bandits.When found ho barely had life enoughloft to toll of his loss and express regretat not being ubfqo return to the Island fwhere ho bald lie , loft a wagon load o'silver bars ana money that ho intendedremoving as soon ins ho could got a cart.Since then many individuals and partieshave prospected there without success ,but the present haunters nro convincedthat their newly discovered chart willlead them to fortunes. Mr. Clevelandbays all the ooina and medals1 ho sawwere made boween 1000 und 1780. Theworkers are keeping their movements assecret as possible , and had been awayfrom Volusco boveral weeks before any-one knew where they wore , and theywere not much pleased to sco Mr. Cleve-land

¬

, who was on the island on businessand mot thorn by chance.

Busy people have no time , and sensiblepeople hayo no Inclination to use pills thatinako them sick n day for every dose thev-take. . They huvo learned that tno use of-Bo Witt's Llttio Early Klsors does not In-terfere

¬

with tholr health by causing n auseapain or griping. Thcso llttio pills are per ,feet in action and resulte , regulating thestomach und bowels so that headaches , diz-ziness

¬

und Inssltudo are prevented. Theycleanse the blood , clear the complexion andoiio up the system. Lots of health in theuo-littlcfellotva. .

I300K8 AND PERIODICALS ,

"llio llcfproo , " n Journal devoted to!

' Annd lll ° cjcllnjr trade , Is colobrnllnfjUs null natal day with n leader recnllliiRi°

J'ino when It required the combinedefforts of Its editor nnd ofilco boy to carry Itspaper from the paper house to the press roomeach week-

."American.

Investments" for May oncemoro has Its counsels to offer to those fortu-nate

¬

enough to have menus needing Invest ¬

ment. It is published nt Buffalo-."Astronomy

.

ami Astro-l'hvslcs" for Maysends forth Its usual rnys of knowledge tothe students in these most noliular of nilak truso subjects. Carleton College , North-field , Minn.-

A.

timely nrtlclo In the May number of-"Iho Homo-Maker" tells us how to live ntthe World's fair, this Issue being designedns a World's fair edition. Its leailW article ,"Tho Islands of the 1'acllle , " by H. 11. Ood-dard

-

, Rives particular attention to Honoluluand the Hawaiian Islands. Homo mattersreceive n peed share of attention , thus fullyJustifying Its tltlo "The Homo-Maker. " 1.Martin iMlller , New York-

."Patent.

Medicines Journal and Proprie-tary

¬

Articles Advertiser" for April has Justnrrlvcd from Its place of Issue , over the sea-.It

.

is n Journal devoted mainly to the Inter-ests

¬

of dealers mid ninmifnuturcrs In thedrug nnd surgical Ixmdon.

For Rcnerol popularity "Homo and Coun-try"

¬

offers nn excellent collection of enter-talnliiR

-

articles in Its May number. Amongthe subjects Is "A Utopian Socialism , " by-M. . Jules Cairn , describing n primitive gov-

ernment¬

without poverty , property , politicsor religion as found nnd Investigated in thecourse of his travels In Summatr.i. "Inven-tion

¬

of the Tclcscouo , " by Sophia ICano , and"Origin of the American Aborigines. Dothe Indians Descend from the Jowst" bySamuel Javos , besides a variety of otherchoice selections and ioems , help to fill Itsmnkoup. H is profusely illustrated. JosephW. Kay , Now York.

The second number of the QuarterlyIllustrator , for the months of April , Maynnd Juno , makes Its bow to the public afterhaving boon accorded the most Matteringcommendations from artists , publishers andpress throughout the country. Few Illus-trated

¬

magazines have won popular favor sorapidly or so deservedly. This unlquo Jour-nal

¬

contains the cream of artistic Illustra-tion

¬

, and for those who deslro to cultivaten refined tusto and to become influenced bythat which rcllects culture in the highest ,

wo recommend The Illustrator. It Is amodel specimen book of the various modesof workmanship and classes of finish In art ,and affords the means of ample study for thedilcttant. The illustrations consist mainlyof copies from celebrated paintings , and thearticles are ably written and presented Inthe dress of the very best typography.Harry C. Jones , New York.

The May number of University Extensionhas among other things the concludingnrtlclo of a series on economic consump-tion

¬

in a broad and abla manner. Thewriter Is Edward T. Dovlne of the Univer-sity

¬

of Pennsylvania. The American Societyfor Iho Extension of University Teaching ,

Philadelphia.The Bookbuyer for May brings us its

usual summary of American and foreignliterature , with a fair quota of illustrationsand news from the world of. letters. CharlesScribner's Sons , Now York.

Book News takes us out fora May walkthrough the world's Holds of literature andwo see the new books marsiiallcd by thesoul's mental doorway like so many livingbeings on canvas a literary panorama.John vVnnamakcr , Philadelphia.

Ono of the best intellectual feasts of theyear is presented In the current number ofThe American Journal of Politics , in which"Tho Social Scheme of the Salvation Army"-is treated in a masterly way by George E.Vincent ; "Tlio Question of the NineteenthCentury , " by Hon. Edwin W. Jackson , is nclear , vivid analysis of the political andsocial status of the day ; "Somo Fictions in-

Finance. . " by Edward Meade , and "Currency-Heform ," by William Knnpp , touch thesilver question and finance in general , while"Tho Claims of Civil Service Reform onPresident Cleveland , " by Andrew J. Palm ,

the editor of the Journal , sustains the highstandard of this magazine.

The Arena for May is up to its usual highstandard. Among the leading attractions ofthis number is the closing arguments in theBacon-Shakespeare controversy , by Hon.Ignatius Donnelly and Prof. Felix Soliciting ,

in which it is evident that whether Mr-.Donnelly

.

has succeeded or not In establish-ing

¬

his claim ho has at least made n strongcase as the champion of the Baconian-authorship. . In the line of social nnd eco-

nomic¬

problems wo find "llailway Tariffs , ""How to Introduce the Initiative and Refer ¬

endum" nud "Women Wage-Earners"handled by able writers.-

"Monte.

Carlo" is the tltlo under which"ono of its victims" endeavors to get evenwith the world by victimizing the readerunder a flashy title to a rcallv dull and unin-teresting

¬

volume treating the dry mechan-ism

¬

of rules and methods in which Its deadgames ot chance nro played. The games atbest are for Idiots nnd but for the fascina-tion

¬

of largo sums of money changing handswould be very unattractlvo indeed. N. C.Smith & Co. , Chicago-

."Tho.

Conquest of-JVIoxIco and Peru ," by-

Klnnhnn Cornwallis , is a long story in blankverso. What object the author has gainedby reciting this historical narrative in versowo fail to perceive , us it not only becomesmoro tiresome to the reader , but detractsfrom the force and dignity of the subject.The very essence ol poetry is force und con-

centration¬

is absolutely essential to thepsychologic effect. It is well written and tosuch readers as favor story in verso will bo-

a treat. The Dally Investigator , Now York-

."Aro.

Men Gay Deceivers ? " Is the titleunder which Mrs. Frank Leslie writes in hoi-usual racy style a deep philosophy of nothingand bits of serious nonsense. As to the title"Arn Men Gay Deceivers ? " nobody caresabout the decision and ouly the entertainingof the car and the casing of the mind with upleasant , gossipy gurgle of words renders thefact nt all acceptable. F. Tennyson Neely ,

Now York ,

The Abbot fi-ccnt novels are out with ashort story "Tho Man Who Vanished , " by-

Fergus W. Hume. It Is written In a veryattractive style , a glance through Its pagesshowing it to possess an unusual fascination.-Springiield

.Publishing Company , Spring-

Hold , Mass-."Blue

.

nnd Gray" for May is brim full ofits usual Interesting war rcmlnlsccncps ,

presented In short stories , sketches , poems.and illustrations In largo variety. In factthere are so many ono scarcely knowswhich to mention ,

The Ofllco Men's Record Is a quarterlyJournal devoted to Improvements In oflicowork and the interests of ofllco men. TheOfllco Men's Record Co , , Chicago.

" 1'ho First Millennial Faith" Is n con-sensus

¬

of historical evidence to show thatthe "satisfaction" theory regarding redemp ¬

tion originated with the- monk Ausclm utthe close of the first thousand years of theChristian church. It Is a book of muchinterest to theologians , but to the everydaythinking world it points out the place of uford to a stream that Is already perfectlydry ; it is the formal grant of a concessionwhich progress 1ms already incidentallyachieved as the result of broader discussions-.SaalfloldtmdiFitch

.

, Now York.The Hand Book of American Republics

Just issued by the Bureau of tno AmericanRepublics , Washington , D , C , , Is probably

ITS DANGEROUSthat you stand on with acough or a cold , and yourblood impure. Out of justthose conditions couies Consumption.

You must do something.lu the earlier stages of Con-sumption

¬

, and in all the con-ditions tbut lead to it , DoctorI'ierco'tf Uoldou Medical Dis-covery

¬

Is o certain remedy.-Tki

.* scrofulous uirectlon of-

ithe lungs , llko every otherof Scrofula , can Lo cured

(t ? ' by It In severe , lingeringrf.T' Coughs , all Bronchial , Throat-.if

.

ff < and Lung Affections , and'* dlMjaso that can bereached through the blood ,it is the ouly medicine BO ef-

fective¬

that it can be Guaranteed. It itdoesn't benefit pr euro , you have your moneyback. Nervous prostration and debility arecouquerod by it.

Even with the worst cases of Catarrh , afteryou've tried everything else , the proprietor*of Dr. Bngo'a Catarrh Remedy will agreeto pay you $600 it they can't cure youcompletely.

the most valuable collection of InformationIn the Interest of the American producerthat ha * oter been published , It reviewscnch of the republics separately , and insystematic form presents n digest of Itsgovernment , institution !) , customs , method *of tanking , shows the nature and volume ofIts commerce , Its coinage , weights andmeasures , beside* n largo variety of otherimportant Information. It Is also liberally-illustrated to further convey a proper Im-

pression¬

of local characteristics , The workfs elnssed as Bulletin r 0 , January , ISI'3-

."Iff"' .

Is the tltlo of n lirlof but very ex-pressive

¬

poem by Ella Whroler Wllcox In"Tho Onllfornlnn" for May. "ColumbusVespuclus and Magellan ," by Thomds Magco ,and "Japanese Folk-tore , " by Helen GregoryFlcshcr. M. A. , nro among the mnnv attrac ¬

tive articles , nil of which nro handsomelyillustrated , The California Publishing com-pany

¬

, San Francisco.The Humanitarian comes out tlili month

with n good line of articles in the line ofsocial piogress.-

"Ooodform".

comoi out this month with anumber of choice articles , chief nmoiiR thembeing "Black Laura's Conversion , " by Ade ¬

laide Schmidt Wayland. Homo nnd socialmatters recelvo n large share of attention.Chicago

"Rapid Transit In the City of Boston" Isthe leading nrtlclo in last week's Issue of"Tho Engineering Record. " Now York andLondon.

The naval review in Now York nndfeatures of the exposition get the lion'ssliaro of space in the last number of-"Graphic. . " Chicago.-

Wo.

nro In receipt of the May number ofthe Medical World , a Journal too well knownto rcqulro comment. Philadelphia.

The Draper's Record for April has madeitsnppcnranconnd is full of Information relat-ing

¬

to the trade and nlso much that Is ofgeneral Interest. London ,

"Tho Omaha Clinic" Is out for May with n-

flno selection of articles interesting to themcdlcnl profession , chief nmong them being"Pcrforati Appendicitis. " " 'Oils and Fats'In Surgical Dressings ," "Dystoclu''and"Sonio'

Practical Observations upon the Origin ,Communications and Distributions of theCranial Nerves. "

"The Boar that Captured a Thief" Is ononmong n variety of charming talcs for llttioones appearing in the last Issue of Our LittleOnes' Nursery. The Russell PublishingCompany , Boston.

Under the title , "Tools and the Man ,"Washington Gladden presents the substanceof a series of lectures ho had delivered tothe students of the Now Haven Theologicalseminary , Cornell university nrd other col-leges.

¬

. It presents a clear review of thepresent status of the ideas of socialism indistinction with those of other Industrialmovements ; it also defines its relation toChristian ethics nnd is ull In nil an ; iblo dis-course

¬

, showing the nuvnnced thought of thenay in this direction , lloughton , Mifilin &Company , Boston ,

"Tho Kentucky Leader" of Lexington ,Ivy. , has come to us in forty-page pantaloons ,saying it is fi years old this May ; It's a prettybig fellow for its ago nnd wo congratulate itheartily on its growth ns well as on the en-terprise

¬

it displays. A reduced size copy of Itsoriginal edition ornaments its pages nnd alsoa largo engraving showing the Cox printingpress on which it is now being printed , andalso its extensive prlntery located in thenew quarters erected especially for theLeader.

The latest additions to Cassell's SunshineScries of Choice Fiction (parer , fiJ( centsnro"-English

,

Pharisees , French Crocodiles andother Anglo-French Typical Characters , " byMax O'Roll , author of "Jonathan and HisContinent , " "A Frenchman in America ," etc.-

An.

important article of special interest ntthe present lime on "Tho Bering Sea Ques-tion"

¬

has been written for the May numberof the North American Review by Hon. B.-

F..

. Tracy , ex-secretary of the navy. Gen-eral

¬

Tracy makes n powerful and almost un-answerable

¬

statement of the legal groundson which the American claim rests.

Archibald Forbes is engaged in thepreparation of two articles , ono on Bismarckand one on Von Moltke , which will portraythe moments in their careers when theywere at their greatest. Much new andinteresting material will bo used. Thearticles will bo carefully illustrated and willappear in McClurc's magazine.-

To.

Casscll's Unknown Library has Justbeen added "Squlro Hcllmaii and QtlicrStories , " by Julian ! Aho. These stories areunusually clever , nnd their , people are somuch llko other ptoplo that wo can scarcelybelieve that tlicy belong to a nation of which

know so very little. Scandinavianliterature is , however , getting moro andmoro popular with us , and this collection ofstories is among the bpst yet made.-

An.

nrtlclo which will attract much atten-tion

¬

, because of its unique historical value ,is announced to appear in Harper's Bazar forMay 1 ! ! . It is entitled "Cradles and Lend-ing

¬

strings , " and was edited by the late

TWENTY YEARSLEADER ! ! !

Cot.tfis , Pleurisy , Itlicnnmtlsm. Sciatica ,Lumlmffo Hack-Ache , nnd all Kitcrnal

Ailments removed quickly by

which Is thoTnlyponOtJs'pLASTERthnt contains powerful ana cnrntivo modernIncredleuts YOT AHSOLUTELY HAFK andrOSlTIVK In Its action.

Demon's Plasters Prcrcnt Fninmonla.It docs not cure chroulo ailments In a mln-nto-

, nor does It create on electric hattcry orcurrent In thosystem.nor will It cure by merelyreading the label , all such claims are made byquhrkg and humbugs. UENSON'S Is endorsedby6.00O I'hyslcmnsand UruKslsts.

CAUTION D n't t. dap.i ty unurupulotil Dru (| .ClsUHbofill.r rtt.ip trivh wliltb lhy r1ilmlju.t u go 4rtillfrlh > n BENSON'S. Ottlhe Utnula. . >ln >} l rtllrkl Kttf lliem at torn, lor imer incUf. '

Theodore Child. The Illustration * wli'will accompany It are from models now .exhibition nt the Columbian oxposltUtiThose models nro Included In what Is kuotv |ns the Uiudcln colloctlon , whichhlhltPdnl the 1'nrls exposition oMSSfl , iwhich hns slnco been largely augmented.

Hoi ford's Monthly for Mny conies toits tniirovoil| Barb nnd with Illustrations 'nhend of anything It hns published In if ,line up tod.Uo , Ono of the bcit features" 'this rejuvenated magazine , now really "tl 'western magazine , Is Its Itambllngs. n scr;of spicy editorials on subjects politic.! ! , j,ernr.v. social , etc. , oto. A clover article.the Chicago Press club , nn intelligent inorgn |ih of Unrlylo In the role of lover , nnd ifother of Napoleon as n moilel husband , cr.ploto the serious portion of the mngnzn(

Fiction Is excellently rojircsentril by Ati | 'I'ass , u story of Now Mexico ploncor llfo , FAnls , n Texan society story , nnd ny vnruijhumoristlc sketches. Kvery line of tl !

Issue Is worth reading.o notice , ns t-

npucudlx , nn tllustratcil Uclford's guldoUhtcn o nnd the fair.

'C

. .-

nS

D

I.

One dozen bottles of JohanfHofl's Malt extract arc wort-a crsk of ale in nutritive awtonic properties withoutintoxicating.

.

.THK OKNUINK Is Mvrnvs sold us JOIIAN.-tHOWS

|

MAI.T KXTItAHT. und must ho1the stsmituro of "JOI1ANN HOLT" on-iiMc lubol-

.Klbnarft.

Jlo idnl on Co. , Agents , 1.V2 nnd 1-'FrnnkllnSt. . . .Now Yolk. M-

nil. . F. L. SKAIlI.l , Consulting Snrzoon ?Grndituto of Rush Moillciil Unllo o. | tUN-&ULTATJO.V

;

vuiiU. ) For the treatment o-

We onre Catarrh , AH Dlionsos of tlie-NOBO , Tliroat , Cliost , Stomach , BowoljandJLiivor.

Blood , Shin and Kidney Dlsonso ;Fcmnlo Wcaku'osses , Lost ManhoodCURED. |

'TILES. FISTtir.A , KISSURE pornmnentlr cure *

nit bout the ujo of n knife , llxotiiro or cnuatlo.All ninlnillcH ota. prlvnto or dcllcato nnturo , ot-

cltlior BOX. pOHillvoty cured.Call on or nctdrota , with stamp forClrculnri , Fret

Rook and Huclpca ,

Dr. ScarlEs & Scarlcs , "08aJui SfBS.fc'-

No

'

ztdoorto Pojtot-

llcc.SOUTH

.

Union Stock Yards Company ,

South OrnaliaiBC-BtCattlo IJo nndSIieop luariot la th vrai *.

COMMISSIQN'HDUSES.

Wood Brothers. "|

Live Stock Commission Morchunts. 'J-

Eoitu Omaha Telephone 1IJ7. Cilc jtJ|(

JOHN I > . UADBMAX , I

WAIiTttR K. WOOD ,

MarUot reports by mall and wire cheorfiill !furnished upon r.iiplloation.

HMAHAU IbuklK & Jobbers Diieclorjj

Importer * and Jobbcr *Wholeiale liquor dealori of millinernullonl. . j

Mall order * promptly1001 Karnara HI. filled. M3-22! a. lltl-

i.PAPER.

.

. OILS.

Carpenter Paper Co-

CarrrStandard Oil Co.

a full itoc't ofprinting mapping onJ-irrltliu

[ loaned nnu lubricatingpaperi , cara-

papori , etc. elli , ailo grcnio , otc-

.PRODUOri

.

, COMMISSION.

Branch & Co. Jas. A. Clark & Co.

Produce , frulti of all Duller , cueeie ,poultry and game.

kludioitar > . 811 ti. UtU tftiuet.

STOVE REPAIRS | SASH , POORS

Omaha Stove Itepair | M , A. Disbrow & Co-

7OUK8. . BIOTO repalri Manufacture" of i .and water attaobtuonta Uuur. , blind ! tntlot anr kind of Horn uuuldlutfi. Unudi ul-

Acudt. liUIUougiuat. * 12IU and llalt.