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phalt pavement that may be ordered in this city during 1890. is cheap, because it i is clean and noiseless ) TRINIDAD Shecet million yards this year wholly on thc petition of the property owners Not a Yard of Genuine Asphalt Pavement laid by the Barber Company has ever been Replaced by other Material While on the other hand over one million yards of wood, Medina sand stone and granite have been taken up and replaced with asphalt by this company. our bid, arranged according to severity of traffic the street will be subject to, you ]m\ thiry days in which to l)ctltlon for choice of material for your street, blank pctmnns may be had upon npp]lcatlon to this office [428 Ramge Block] where diagram of streets may beseen and information che, fully given. SHEET ASPHALTUM. Five Y, Form (N 6th ot Pl S il 2 7th Av 8th oth 15’ Gy Form B $2 68 ¢ 68 rantee. Form Aol 10th . 2 68 11th r2thi .2 13 thEsEs 2 14th 15th 16th » Y o 15th 16th » & ® » EN 1) 17th The Barber Asphalt Pavmg Co replied to the attack and € him. he knew that G weapons wer be Strange to say Gilbert failed to hit him and when shalke he w self, self and at the next, shot through the he last night and asked him to tell me the of the naming of Denver city after him, replied that it was when he WORTHY T0 SUCCEED BECK. Studious Hebits of Kentucky's New Senator and His Great Ability, AN ACQUISITION TO THE SENATE. Few Men in the Upper House Who Are Known to the General Public— Denver's Godfather—Won- derful Memories, [Copyright 1590 by Frank G. Carpenter.) WasHING May 2.—[Special to Tue Brr. sle has jumped into the thick of the worlk of the senate and it is something of a question as to whether his constitution will stand the strain of his new position. He hias one of the hardest commit- tees of the upper house, and he is of course wmbitious to distinguish himself. I took a good look at him as he sat on his spte in_one of the red leather seats of the chamber today. His desk was covered with letters and docu- ments and his tall thin frame seemed more stooped than ever. As he raised his faco to vote upon & measure I noted that it was pale and sallow and his eyes scemed to have sunk en deeper under s high broad forchead. Senator Carlislo is fully six feet tall but does not weigh more than 150 pounds. His com- plexion mavks him as a man with a liver and cd full of the malarial retions which fill the air of the Ohio river Dottoms added to those which float up from the miasmatic Potomae. He has the student's stoop and he has never been a disciple of physical culture. He pays no attention to his dict and plods away day and night at his studies. He gets up an hour before the rising time of the average senator, which is at 8 o'clock or later, and he works in his room until ho goes to the capitol. He cats his lunch in less than ten minutes and he often works whilo he is eating it. When he was speaker he lunched in his private voom and it is said that he never took o lunch while the house was in session. He is not fond of so- cioty and he goes about just as littlo as he can. Heis a man with no recreations what- ever and his great brain Only Rests When He Sleeps. Still, Speaker Carlisle does not look much older now than he did when he came to Washington twelve years ago. He was then forty-three , the same tall, pale, thin, black-huired, gray-eyed, smooth-shaven, dignified man, He lived for years in board ing houses and hotels, and it has only been a short time since he bought o place and went to housekeeping. Ho paid, I think, §24,000 forhis home. It is located within three squares of the white house on K street and is in the most fashionable part of the city. Mus, Carlisle presides overit. Sho is u tall, well-formed blonde lady, possessed of fine so- clal qualities, bright and well educa She takes good care of Speaker Carlisle and 1t is due to Lier that he stands the strain of his work as well as he docs, Senator Carlislo will be a stronger man in his present position than he in tho house. He is more of & logician than an or- ator, and nis speeches are moted move for their thought than for their brilliancy of dic was tion, Spreadeagleism has practically died out in tho senaf Phe great speeches have hose of the lish parlisment, becow alks botween the senators uttered in a con and it is ideas rather than Carlisle will be at the head wen of the senate, He will versational ton words that te ) of tho southery y with Butler, Vest and Mor gan and will be the peer of any man on his side of the chamver, Me is in ~ chara than any of these men, and he will not have to wait like t year no lo lisle is undoubtedly other changes which Iy the past few from Arkansas have the same prominence that was held and Senator char thall is undoubtedly an able man, but he has not as 3 Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar, aire, Parwell,though he is a good man in cui- mittee, has no such pla was held by John A. Log United States a dozen men who have 1 and whose minds affect The average visitor te the capitol has to ask when told the names of the sixty other senators senate or the house, and their personality is unknown, posed to pos dom appe; this is Senator Payne of Ohio, who is known SHEET ASPHALTUM. Five Years' Guarantee, Form Form Y e Streets. 17th Ave 18th . 19th 20th, 218t 22nd i 2 48 2 48 2 48 27th, 2 48 cter more lilke Joe Brown of Georgia verage new senator for two to make himself felt. The change from Beck to Carlisle has been to the strength of the senate, and Car- of His Predecessor. ly be said of some of the taken place within Neither of the senators The Equa The same can 1 ars. General Garland, ational Wal- by ex-Attorney iray doesnot figure as o Thomas F. Bayard. cter as did iched the proportions of Lucius and the million- et e ¢ in the public eye as n. In the whole »is not more than tional prominence public legislation. enate the odd to whether they belong to the A numoer of the ess great ability, r on the floor, and an inst, cnators aresup- but they sel- e of been talked dent, and during the six ust closing has not made one speceh of any mote. Senator Eustis of Louisiana is undoubtedly an able man, He comes of @ long line of esmen, and he has written articles for the m ie, and has delivered classic speeches which show him to be a man of great parts. Still e nevel people of the caks in the senate and the country know but little of him. Barbour of Vi man who says but little, and ida, Wilson of Maryland and He fornia are among those good little senators who are to be seen but not heard. Speaking of Garland, Isaw him walking down I strect yesterday with a black slouch hat pulled over his smooth-shaven nut-cracker foatures. Hehas a law office near the Eb- bitt house and is, I am told, getting into a good practice. He once told me that he liked the law better than the senate, and he has bought a house here on Rhode Island avenue, = and has evidently settled tostay. He stfll owns, however, his estate near Little Rock, Ark,, where he has some hundreds of & of forest, and in the midst of this a log cabin whichhie called Hominy Hill. There are no roads which lead to this cabin, and it is in it that Garland spends his summer vacatious, Whe he enters it he gives orders that no mail or telegrams are to be brought to him, and he has all the pleasures of solitude. He bas cut himsell as far a5 possible off from the world here at Wushington, He does not go into so- ciety and does not take and will not read a newspaper. He got so sick of secing the daily journals at the time of the Pan-Electric scandal that he swore they were all bad and he would have none of them, and more than this, he sticks to his vow. Whether he will get into politics again it is hard to say. He still holds his residence in s state by this Hominy Hill property, aud it is not an im possibility that he m senate, One of Garland's law partners is G James W. Denver, a tall fine looking man of over seventy, who has made as much history as any man in Washington, He whs in con gress from Califoruia before the war, and though he s been an oppouent of the code, he Killed a Man in a Duel in California. He was secretary of state of California at the time and as such was at- tacked by & man named Gilbert, who was ed tor of the Alta Culiforula, come to the Again oral has brought order out of ch: doing this the officers who were sent west to organize the county seat of Ar failed to turn up & asked to appoint men in their orado was then Denver found a par going out to Pike's Peak he gave them the thority to select a county seat. chose the site of Denver and named it aft him. donated him one of the original s and hiad Denve it would have been worth a fortunc. rascall, Washington had three di for a good part of the wint ton Hotel by it with the looks twen his stru from the supreme court to his home on Mas- sachusetts shoulders ave stooped and he has lost thirty pounds during the winter. bettered south and its future, day that he thought Mississippi would event- ually be o neg would be forced to € dent of this that plantation in Mississippi, consisting of about 500 ner having on it forty-seven reg a number of fine horses, Justic ma a the whole for much less than it is worth and he says he has no desire to have friends rewain in tion is bound to be blacks at the expens whites them. the result wo coming from the capitol to the tre sengers came in until thy Geueral Denver SHEET ASPHALTUM. Five rs' Guarantee, Streets. Form Form 28th $2 48 2SUHEAVERIETIN e 2 48 2othe el nnnh 2 48 48 48 48 48 2 48 2GthPAVETEEN " 2 3oth 2 3oth Ave 2 JISHIE TS 2 31st Ave 2 48 2 48 2 48 ....... 248 ........ 2 48 2 48 48 © < » 1bert challenged allenge, though The Den accepted the Lbert was a deadly shot. ifles and Denver received s fire and shot off his gun into the ai started forward to hands Gilbert refured and stated that as bound to kill Denver or be killed him- At this Denver decided to defend him- bert fell, pierced neral Denver story He governor of General Denver I met Kansas in 1838, A number of governors tried to control the people and had failed when Buchanan appointed Denver and he While he was hoo county d Governor Denver w placed. Col- apart of Kansas and when of men whom he knew u- These men In the papers organizing the town the wes of been able to have gotten this, The however, who handled the judge, papers erased General Denver's name and put in his own and the result was that the gene- ral got nothing but honor. He is, however, rich and among his possessions is a three- thousand southern Ohio, where he has a pleasant howe and a big libra acre farm in the finest part of The effects of the grip are still felt in Curtin Governor Andrew G. ent attacks of i Lamar season Justice flend early in the ws older from the ef 1 saw him this afternoon riding Avenue m a red herdie, * His His health is not ¥ the gloomy views he takes of the He told me the oth 0 state and that the whites ate. He is so confl- ixious to sell his he is of the finest land in that state and ed cows and Lamar has a ificent homestead there and his lands ler the best of cultivation. He offers u any of his Mississippl. Said ho to w The infiuence of the present administra altogether in favor of the of the whites, and the not permit the blacks to rule Blaine been elected president 1d have been different and the will Had outlook for the south would have been better but as it is it ms Lo s dark as it can be and what will be the future God only knows? This conversation took place in a herdle in ry and us we went down Pennsylvania avenue pas vehicle was packed, At the transfer station opposite the white house a crowd of treasury clerks pushed theix way In and took the remainder of the availa anding room. Justice L ting at the extreme end of the door when a little white-haired old lady ap peared behind this crowd of clerks and begged the gentlemen to move up a little so that she could get o place to stand, The r was sit r the while Jus is by the sidewalk for as it to his home on Massachusetts they ne crowded I street car coming from the patent office to the treasury woman hobble up on crutehes and attempt to get in. in the car, two United States senators and half a dozen cong seconds after door of the car and did her. At this moment a tall, white-whiskered, dark the ¢ versation with his neighbor, towards the door, jumped to his feet, tender was se odds t was Joseph K noted southern general of the late war, cited ove in the newspapers stating that the to make 100 per cent off do this in or three-dollar p the others has sation amon, were talking one will look down on you all the better with all t was at the height of his p SHEET ASPHALTUM. Five Years' Guarantee, Street. Form Form S G Binney 8 $248 BUrdetiel e 2 48 Burtinit emab sni 2 48 Butlens, ey 2 48 California 21168 RS GapitoleAve T i R 2iE Center__ 2 48 Chicago oot eoh 2 68 2 IDavenport S e ay e 2! Cumings Dodgeltl oL o i o 2 48 D oug oSS iy 2 48 Dorcas : 2 68 2 48 The old lady did not know and she of the su- y rate. Yering her the kindness epted the seat. The justic 1 court stepped out and waited on the the next herdic which he took ame along five minutes later and rode e, This action of Justice Lamar is however a type of the politeness of the statesmen from the south who are here at Washington, 1t makes no difference how oldor how feeble a southern ready to rise in a street car and give his s 0 a lady. hanging outo the strap in order that some or general is he is aly ys at I have often seen Speaker Carlisle senator woman might have a scat, and I have at the same time seen northern senators spread out their legs and take twice as much room as ded. T remember one day in a seeing a little old There were a dozen prominent men luding two supreme judges, men. All of these men sat for twenty the cripple appeared at the not attempt to help yed man sitting at the extrme end of r, who had been busily engaged in con- turned his eyes He saw the woman and left his companion and lifted her up the steps. This man nty-five years old aud he was by all »oldest man in - the car. His name Johnston, and he was the The tailors of Washington a letter which b much ex- been published exp of every for a public man and that they are forced to tg cover bad debts. The only crchant tailoring fiem in town which s cash is one which is noted forits s and the overcharging of become the subject of conver- the statesmen. Soma of them about it last night, when Ben Butterworth told an_incident of his school days. It happened,” said he, “when T was studying law. Oneof wy friends urged me to get A New Suit of Clothes, I told him I could not as I had no money. ‘Get it on time, safd Lie; ‘the tailor will trust you.! ‘But,said I, ‘supposing Ican’t pay when the account falls due? *Well, said my friend, ‘if you your old clothes every d the chances crowd, 1f you will stand t of the world > of losing the wear are the tailor will be among the you buy a new suit of cl and you have only the good opinion of your tai Lie result was 1 bought the suit and circumstances were for tunately such that T was ready to pay for ir.” A new suit of clothes is a passport to nearly everythingin Washington, and Butterworth's story makes me think of General George Sher. idan whom1 saw strutting ubout the hotels adish pan. Sheridan was a g friend of Brady, the noted star route man,while Brady wer here Sheridan him for a little called upon e of Brady's ¢ that Sheridan was in t que e day d hi; is he dwessed {” said Brady. “He I though he came out of a bandbox,” w rey “He has on a new silic bat, new s patent leather boots, and he taking ic was 50 full that 1t was perbaps thirty secouds | town lu @ laudau, He wauts sowe wmoney, Asphalt PAVEMENT, 8248, B2.68 and $2.98 Per Square Yard. The attention of those contemplating the paving of their streets and avenues during the present year, is invited to the following exhibit of our bid of May 9, for as? These greatly reduced prices put a genuine Trinidad Asphalt Pavement within the reach of all. moderate in its first cost, the company caring for it the first five years free of cost to the property owner or the city; cheap, because the company has a contract with the city to repair and keep in good condition the asphalt pavements for ten additional years, making fiftgen years of assured comfort and luxury without additional cost to the property holder, repairs being paid from the general fund; cheap, because an asphalt pavement is repairs forever, wood or brick means an entire new pavement in a very few years, thus entailing a second paving lien against your property before the first one is more than half discharged. is a luxury to drive upon, a perfectly sanitary pavement and is easily, quickly and perfectly repaired; desirable, \\'I” cease to vote bonds for mtcr%cctu)nc, at a time when the wood and brick streets will demand 1L1>1\1n<r this will leave you with a \\'rcck ed and impassable street, vas the case for five and six years in Washington, and Washington's experience is to be repeated in this city very soon. /\mcnc 1 today,over two hundred and sixty miles of it now in use and growing in popular favor; New York City, Newark, Albany,Schene Ltuly Milwaukee, Altoona, Dun- kirk, Fort Wayne, Kansas City, Wyandotte and Wichita having adopted it during 1889; Buffalo has one million two hundred thousand yards, and takes an additional half SHEET ASPHALTUM. Five Yeurs' Guarantee. Streets. Form Form UBRE R CE Emmett | Stauhs 8t $2 48 BATNamyseee e o 2260 Frances R 2lA Eranklin e e o 2 48 GOV N S 2 48 Grantg o 2 48 G race e S 2 48 Hamilton | . 248 larney Suii mee 2 48 Elickory S sE e 2 48 Howard S eane 2 48 Half -Howard , ... 2 48 Lz . 2R GBI e fJackson e 2 48 Jones 2 48 said Brady, “and I'll bet you &5 th be here within two hours to borrow any v from £500 and upwards. He neverd except when he wants to make a then he puts on all the style he e Hehad hardly finished this remark before Sheridan came in, and he departed soon after with his pocketbook enator Ingalls s still wding the eulogy which t correspondent says he sillon. The senators genes explanation that he wrof A mplace Book ¥ and that his memory dropped it down his mouth when he was on the floor. In, never forgets a thing when he once wri and he has one of the best memories of the senate. Scnator Spooner has trained his memory so that-he nuo anote for a specch and he rc upon it to keep track of his engagements, He tells me that he can start out to do twenty things and he will come back having forgotten non them. His first experience ulti- | To vation was when he was had prior to this time made notes of the evi- dence as the trials progressed in order to make lis speech to the Jury. At lust o day came when he was overrun’ with work, His wife was sick and he was tived out. An im- portant case at this moment came up for trial, and he was so fatigued that Le conclude that he would not take notes, but would ar- range the matter in his head as he wentalong in the examination of w Thatmight Lie tried to remember the testimony found his head in a jumble. H6 > hi t to bed much wor morning, and he in despair when he arose to make bis to the jury. Ihe moment he began to speak, however, his fuculties asserted then Ives. The testimony me hefore his plainly as the handwriting on the wall in , at Babylon, and he won his case. aken a no ten, and he ¥ one can train bis > Kansas Cit vized from Mas- lly accept Ingalls’ > the matter down in Ago, nto nesses, suys he belic memory as he pleases. Fraxg G CARPENTER, 5 . Life will acquire new zest and cheerfulness return, if you will impel your liver and kid neys to th functions Dr.J. H i 1 Balm wilf stimu iom to' houlthfal .u\luu §l per bottle, their e L y of Abs he. In tho y 90 and 1791, when every othei house in the Rue_de_ Seyvres was & hospital, 0 mass was said daily in the church of St. Sulpice, says the Stutt- rart Review., tain nun to ¢ 1t was the duty of a cer- wse and refill the sacra- mental vessels, but as she was a very capable nurse, the demands upon hel time from the wounded and dying were great that she was obl 10 give but scant attention to her holy du- ties ubout th tar, One day, immediately after the cele- bration of the mass, the priest who had taken ill, He at once nun and accused her of having poisoned the communion wine. | jy I'he church officers were advised of what had occurred and had the arvested, They took the com munion cup which contained - | ) pected wine to a celebrated chemist and [ g apothecary named Boudet for analysis | A Boudet tested it and found pur rh which the n fulfill her poured into the chalice » mistake, Boudet expevimented in various ways with the libuor to try its effect upon a | oo healthy body, and convinced himself in the matter of the s 3 of the extract, His ed the im prisoned nun at ¢ his was the | | fivst opinion ever ac was a4 pi later, when al ng drink wus the result of Li :\.‘\L.UJA Asphalt As[yh Ut is desirable, because it because in the near future the Asphalt is the recognized standard pavement o Following ig Following is our bid for 1 SHEET ASPHALTUM. SHEFT ASPHALTUM Lowe Ave Lathrop | Locust Lake Landon Court_ » Poppleton Ave_ N Leaven worth 2 Mayne_ Mercer Ave Marcy » Mason Nicholas Paul Pacific; .. . [ ) Sherman Ave » n Pierce » Williams ‘Woolworth Pine » THE FIGURE ©9." The figure 0 in our dates will make a long stay, Ko man or woman now living will ever date & document without using the fgure 9. in the third place in 1560, where it will remain ten D to second placa in 1000, TIHIE Joagquin Miller in New York Independent, He tracked th yoars and then move where it will rest for onc : nother 9" which hius wlso come to st the figure 9 in our dutes in the respe cady moved up to first. place, w 1t will permanently remain, 9" High Arm Whecler & Wilson Sew . for first .u wco by the is Exposition of 1 ot with e deading it was awarded the onl Grand Prize given to family sewing machines, al sibors ou exhiit baving recetved lowee awards of gold medals, ote. &lso recognized its supe mm, by th Mr. Nathanicl Wheeler, Presidentof the with the Cross of the Lugic 0. 9" is not an old m: upon, but 15 an entirely new mac Grand Prize at P attered battle gates Of Phebos the storicd temple door of Delpli, experts of Europe ut t where, after a severs ling things he ) X upon him like a mantle gray. Still had he honors oft, uml great, “or goodly was his he d gencrous h|~ st | And mueh his eager ¢ Yet huppiness came no His wuy His wi And he grew fretted; e ‘Phat fate had hounde “AN, eursed of God s ; and bitter grew his bread. AL lust, outworn, he turned him, with seck his childhood’s home and che: s was awarded it . Those who buy it can rest fore, of having the very latest und beet. And there hr‘ sat him, all apart, selfish, stllen thing, God liad given him a heart ‘happiness unto himsolf So God instead had given b d where he sat \\nm[ and moaned H.--m ing frroancd Some scliish te stooped und The blecding waif to his own stately door. And oh, the rising sun he knew id all his after days! His .,.m soul widoned till it ¢ T g I the dear sun’s rays, »piness once more, Within the past few has become so prominent as i pr and such advances have B WIEELER & WILSON M'T'G €O, 185 and 187 Wabash Ave., Chicaga . FLODMAN & £E.C.WESTS NERVE AND BRAIN TREATMENT:— " Specifo for Hysteria, Diasinoss Fite, Neuraig, W ke il civelos, |||:u o one who will even within that doubly we H Kknown coll July 4, of the of the Harvard colle and a blue cove outlined its It was to and was d departm it .-.mm.; Amor GOODMAN DRUG GO 1110 Farnam Stroot, Omaha. mwr foulid F¥or LOST or PAILING (i u.:u and NERVOUR e contributors, 2, published later, and « Hul L \u} nson, but wus of the ! ses did 'lu r Passage to ‘and from Great Britain and a Montreal-Liverpool route, by the V0ol to and from Clang excolslors - New Coates House, 114 La Sally 8t