Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 3, 1892, Page 9

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PART TWO, THE OMAHA INTY—FIRS SUNDAY BEE. e | YEAR OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1892-SIXTEEN PAGI NUMBER 290, HAYDEN BROTHERS, CRAND SPRING SALE OF DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, FURNISHING GOODS, ETG e e —— | Wi C ~“olored Dress Goods. Linen Department. Special in Ribbons! Ribbons! Furniture Department. |House Furnishing Groceries. i New stock of Linens just opened. Pail jelly, 40¢. SDQCIaI fOI" Monday' Hemstitched tray cloths 50e. N Monday. The mest suecessful venture in a suc- GOOdS. s(r:x\{'l\n y preserve in sugar syrup, Monday we open to the trade the |, Hemstitched dresser scarfs ¢ and|Silk Department cesstul busin 124¢ grandest display of dress goods ever [3$1.00 A 1 No. 2. All silk, picot edge, only lc [ The Secret—First-class goods at reas- Raspberry preserves, 124 shown in the city of Omaha. We buy All white fringed lunch cloths § 4, FOR THIS SP L SALE ard. onible prices 1 SR California pitted plum o our goods direct from the manufactu 10-4 and 12-4 size, $1.50, $2.00, & =t e . 5. Gros grain, satin edge, only 8¢ | For this Week D:ROOM SUITES | 11100 complete with burnor and Evaporated apples, 10c. ers. This onubles us to give the cu 3.00, & 8 each. We will give you n good value. per yard. $10.50, $14.50, $15.50, 819, good maple % California evaporared peaches, 10, tomer the very lowest prices. Our line | 10-4 ¥ bordered, fancy colored [ &0t KT A O O O Blacks worth| No. 9. Gros grain, satin edge, only 7c [suites, $18.50 solid onk suit; suites at [chimnoy, 100, Salt Lake peaches, 8o, of Bedford Cords in plain, stripe and {lunch cloths, knotted fringe, napkins to | ¢, 3505 248 SESH i per yard. 7. oak fine fin e : Pitted cherries, 15e. fancy weuves is large and in'all shades, [match, $2.95 a set, worth $6.00. " "China dress silks in the vary best of |. N0s. 12and 16, Plain and fancy rib- SION TABL 00t,33.4 Serew drivers le. Svaporated raspberries; 1746 Lansdowne, Henrietta, Serges, Novelty A full line all sizes of turkey red, colors and 24 inches wide, sell at 1, [bons only fc per yard, 8-foot. #4.25 and & ate style pillar Can openers le. Imported Frenoh prunes, Funcy Stripe and Plaid in all new |turkey red and green, cardinal and {0 THeC ™ B 15 T T We uro sole agents in Omaha for the |tables, $8.50, 0, 0,25, $0.50, 810, good | Carpet tacks lc por box. Common Turkish paunes, shades. Giveusa call and we will make |cream colored, with colored borders, Chinn dress silks, 21 inches wide, sell | celebrated Fair and Square ribbons, |finish. fine work. " Clothes pins le per do. Calisornia apricots, 124c. you money lunch cloths at all prices. We show a [ o PR ERess B8, =1 Inches + S teknowledged to be the finest ribon in [ SIDE-BOARDS from £15 up to $30. e rall YO W HErS Raisins, 24c, 8¢, 3i¢, bc, 8te, 10¢, 1240 38 iuch Lansdowne, a beautiful fabric |large line of these and can suit you tn | % B RETRESRE 00 ted pon- | America. G Snu UREWRLE SO, M T e s v 1o S0 BB ELOR OXSIYV S Soda crackers, 5o in silk and wool, $1.25. size, quality and price, goei Tt ""’,g'r“’l b4) ,f;r‘\m"l‘:;"“‘, ‘N,cp L SES and srlum;s We can [else 10e. . O3ster crnclkars, 86, 50 inch English Tweed, makes a nice ket N1l AHRGEE THLRLIY: 86l s save you money on these. ” stal salts appers 23¢ eac Tmported chow-chow, per quart, 150, travoling suit, 81.38, i h s ety B | FOREWE S a VeI, L DINING ROON CHIATRS ~Oak high | e e Mixed! ploklan; perquhst, 1860 & 88 inch French Bedford Cords 78c. ¢ : d b Blab BEowh - Fed. an back, $1, $1.15, $1.25, $1.35, #1.45, 2 80 BLEAIHBYA 10/6a0hH: Potted ham, per can be. 46 ineh sitk finish Gorman Henriewa, |SPECial Bargains. it aSabll o) per cort saved on ail chafr and | iR SRnery o cach BBUtEI Y IhEbT IS the finest made, 75c. S vBI aTa WebRieR Pk rockers. : XCREHAOHET 6 ik Dok Deviled ham, e. 40 inch Novelty Suiting, all wool,nfco | N ew line plain colored Bedford Cord [yps ks Cayog 10 a1l ehudes, tho best inf o )00 as finealine of trunks and | New spring goods now all in and IPsBthpitiaile HEFBOR: Picnic hum, bic. patterns, 58¢. 1e yard. il bags as any regular trunk house in the [prices made to keep up our booming | i R C H igar cured ham, 9o, 40 inch all wool Serges. all col- | New line of colored cotton Bunting all country. ~We can save you money |business. Spoon holders d¢. Boneless ham Tic. ors, H0c. shades 10¢ yard. whether you buy a $2 trunk or u 830 one. Sugar bowls 4c. Bologna sausage, 5 86 inch fancy Plaids 25c. All colors best dress lining Cambric| Cloak Department. In valises and bags of all kinds we are Creamers 4e. Laver age, 5e. inch Chevron Suiting 2c. 3ic yard. showing o first-class line. Whether | Carpet Dept ad cheese, be. inch Henrietta 25¢, Full standard dress Calico, fast colors, & X S ¢ B vou want a cheap bug or something 4 Just received, a full line of Flemish Sapolio, e. inch English Cashmere 10c. 3ic yard, LADIES' WRAPPERS AND TEA [hice, come aud look over our line be- Monday you can buy an all wool extra | F8re: consisting of water coolers, beer rtin rints 23c 1. N fore you bu Monday you can buy Xtrd | mugs, jugs, spittoons and covered i 9081 | GRE 31‘ 311’ linen CrashiBe GUWNS. SPECIAL SPRING SALE ON super carpet for 5 per yard. _“{*};“l tankards, 50 per cent cheaper than ever Opr S‘tqv'elDep'arktmen t Black Dress Goods. VAT : ; : TRUNKS AND VALISES, |miss this sule. Also a good Brussels for | tori i Gt o Spit ¢ Replete with the very best goods the Y Sest 5¢ bleached or unbleached Mus. | We have just received a_large line of the same price. the human mind can invent, cunning Special p*ices for Mon=|iin in Omaha. § 77 | wrappers and tea gowns, all of the new- We have cheaper ones and we have Diuner se hands construct and artistict taste to . line of dress Ginghams in the | €5t Patterns and latest styles, inall wool | Art Department. them better and will guarantee the | covered dishes finish the most useful and ornamental day 8ie, 10e, 124c, 15¢, 17c, | henriett cashmeres, all wool challis, prices lower than can be found else- |a bargain at $1 cooking x!]\]m;'ulus the family of man z ‘ T PR S ginghams, lawns, and calicos, which we | 50 aosen fine momie tidies, drawn | Where in this city o 2 ; ever concieved 5 i § sEa LT y 3V will place on sale tomorrow at special |7 p d Stk Our opaque <hades, with the best | Toilet sets $1.95, different decors The Fuller-Warren Co.’s complete line A very fine 40 inch Nuns Veiling 63c. Uc grade Quting Flannel Gc yard. fous thread and stumped. only e each. ypring roller, are not paper, but the bast | tions. of coobs und ranges. = The Stewart cooks and ranges, which gers | have held, for the past filty years, and are now holdtug, the “Brcom thas An elegant 48 inch Nuns Veiling 85¢. PR X S W and £1.50 wrapper at & Ixtea fine quality 42 inch Albatross SEUSIRRHO I ATH IS AW TR EINER B BB raT ) s0c, $2 gingham wrapper at $1.37 40 ineh Tamise cloth, sublime quality, |Fine Goods at Manu=| Zepny: gingham weappers $1.: goods. for 25¢ each. Smyrna Rugs are still_being sold at half pr wve an elegant asse ed in c, 87c, L scarfs, drawn thread and stam beautiful designs, at 49c, 63c, well worth to § The Bell safety guard razor §1 erally sold at Gl on fing hemstitched dresser |MeNt Of them. g : Copper bottom wash boiler 59c. Sweeps the Glote” for cooking and o8c. , : duced from 2.50, in all sizes. 25 dozen fine hergstit (h: We have some special prices for lace | fobbet P010m wash o heating stoves. -{:.(,sc ?Mrf avery b(l:,\“,':,ms;“\. finish. facturers’ Prices. : L gntp(n:scm beautiful designs, at m“_min!s bty "fl"‘{“fs this AT » sLLngm\u] wine decanters 13¢, worth Cot'and “0:"1 cools nlnd Fingon g sy R L Lo B f LADIES' REEFERS AND BLAZERS. Pk i enlnch. | Linoleum, oil cloth-and matting, in al sas stoves, 1, 2 and 8 burners. quality. fine satin finish, 81.15. 50 picces R i TR o “‘L“;{:j;“]‘flf_"fp“'fll)’c"d momie splash- | 4ce, at very low prices, Interlocking tumbler jail padlocks,.2 Gasoline stoves, 1, 2 and 3 burners. _80 inch Crepe cloths, fine satin finish. |net tomorrow at 3c, ¢ 1160} " redbeed fioms 20, 19CHEL0NER. alls in all keys, 5¢, worth 50c. Tho Aurorn Process gasolino stoves 850. $1 and $1.25, actually worth 50c to 81. 1y m.iLuu;:u(«l .:‘?‘ld ; {O{I dozen 1|nc 11l l:ku‘.fl"s“ balls in a 4 T and ruanges, tho world’s best gsoline Cordurettes in spring and summer |per yard. b R () g colors only 8c per dogol : 3 Hair curlers 5e. vens, g . ¢ price SRR : 5‘l)|"i$c\‘< black dem flouncing, 9 to 15 | black $2, reluced from #4 We will continue w sell the finest em- Windsor Ties. !!e‘:\'\-‘\-"fi}.Jnx.('\' 10¢ and 15c. olzlc"i o ”B"l Bari 48 inch silk warp Henrietta 8125, inches wide, Monday 124c, 19c, 23 MR Ot roidery sitic in tho colmtry atd® Per | 50 aosen sateen Windsor Ties, only 3¢ | Best sperm machine oil jc. arness Department. The very best quality all wool satin [49¢. 57c, actually worth 25¢ to & Ladies' margu 1pes, in tan o ozen £pools. SaaLa T-on frame wringers $1.75. Our harness department is stocked finish Henrietta 8¥c. Sy yard. o |40 /inches long, £4 tomor former p Bed Spraads_ 5 dozen all silk Windsor scarls solid The Western washer $ Remem- | with one of the largestand best assorted 48 inch Bedford Cords for spring jack- 100 pieces black chantilly lace, exquis- | £6.50, in all $ize: % colors, only 10¢ each. ber this is the genuine. lines of saddlery in the city. Every- ews and wraps $1.10. ite patterns Ladies’ capes, 40 inches long, in black,| TLarge line of white crochet spreads )0 dozen nll silk Windsor Searfs, in 6-foot iron bound s thing is new and guaranteed to be e. Fine Bedford Cords for spring and |81.25 per yard. handsom: embroid While you are about it get the popular £ thing for -dress trimming. comes in Lacies’ cape newmarkets with detach- Imported Cushmer 3 cream, ecru and white. Point D’Ir-|able caves. Imported Cashmere 33c. lande is the latest spring style. Mon-| All the latest and newest patterns day’s introduction prices will be 123c, [$8.50, reduced from $12: 1d $3.50 cach. all of which & bruehes, harness oil, ete. 15¢, 19¢, 25¢ and 85¢ per yard. s burgain. Colored Table Feltfor | . o e Pocketbooks and Poini & Paris, for hat wiriming, 89c.|” Wo ate showing the largest and most SKL(;I E Rk Dioneriplatepiielsagh: Table Padding. 49¢, 57c, up to £1.25 per yard. complete line of ludi top couts in al a nnoain. Plate handles, the latest velty 1Ce, Hand Bags. . 50 pisces. fine: smbroldered, founcing [of the nowost fabrios; whish. W o 9 Fancy Work. R fall line of table felt which we will tan and gra, from 50c up 3 1] solid o nd hem- Coffe rds. nd'ton pots s represented. Call early and ored fringed bed spreads | gjyoled, for lndies’ and gents’, Monday | Hand saws 85c. eccure some of the bargains. For with- usually sold at 35¢ to 50c, ' cut doubt we bave some of the best ever * All color shelf paper, 24 sheets, offered. A full line of whips, curry combs, sumrmer und e itings 78e. 1.00. White Marseilles spreads $1.00, Cups and saucers each, 50 dozen fine undressed midget purses |at 37¢ per yard, worth 65c. plece cn sule tomorrow at a great re-| On Monday we startour soda fountain, ¥ Garden trowels 60 and 65 inches wide at only 3e. 5000 yards fine embroidery, neat and |duction. It will pay you to get our|Pure feuit syrups only, manufacturde in 40 shades to select from. 1 the new 35¢, 40¢, dle, Gle. 65e, 75e, S0c and $1.00 styles fine pocketbooks at e, 10¢, |exquisite patterns, at lc, 3¢, de, 8¢, 10, | prices and examine our stock before | our confectionery departmentunder the |shades out; wlso cream white, On | Squarcand round shouldered shovels | @ yard. ‘This 13 the best line ever shown 15¢, 25¢, up to $2.50. 124¢ and 15¢ per yard. buving elsewhere. supervision of Mr. Harry Druce. { Monday your choice $1.10 a yard. and spades 39c. in Omuha. HAYDEN BROTHEKRS, 16th and Dodge Sireets TINKTE 'R i LD | in the latter part of the twelfth century toa | eaitor did and the learned lineuist gave a | Had he boeu 1n the senate at tho time I am | ““) Lh\TEV l‘EfiTl”TlLS ! witty chat along the way is aehghtfy HOUD“ INK mighty unknown countrs. This Suga, tho | critical dissertation to t ithsonian In- ( sure he would not nave hesitated a moment | - LEMED 3 | stamped “New Yori," and ‘whose char 0 | © | “ntertainment fand you have spoken to the mistress of Bienbeim castle, professor said, was found under an ancient | stitution concerning it aud this is recorded in | to offer a sumilar resolution to that which I munners were c of hea TeN Biouck. Icelandic church ana it descrived mauy | the archives of the iustitution. In this puper | prevented coming blc(nrcthoih(l;uwc. At last 1]- A Focogizes he Julien Gor- = things connected with America a | be announced the sc-culled Novak (i. ¢, Cow- | I covld stana it no loager and I went to his don," a social star of the first magnitude IMPIETIE ' i irty | other things spoke of the White Shirt | an spelied backwards o genuine | home in Peunsylvama and told him the | Sherry Throws Open His Establishment for | abd the literary lion of the bour. Uuder her Btory of tho Great Ruuic Hoax of Thirty | {ird it SOt ere the Groat Ialls | Scandinavian runes aud said thatthe lan | whole story, but bickwards hise @ witch's Sherry Throws Open H:‘ &5 gracious guidance we pass flrst the “mar It is told by the Datroit Free Pross that a Years Ago Retold by Tts Author, of the Potomac. The proiess letter | guuge of the i ption was Icelandic of the | prayer that he might not koow the per the Orthopedic Hospital, where a w t ninister of a western church not long ago stated that ho had come from Norway to | cleventh century and that the trsuslation of | trator of the joku ux[uh} v.helln.\t “!\‘»m\- had nysteries of *ri |.am, h sacheda sermoa on card-playing and ab study the discovery of America in the light | the same into the English by Prof. Raflinn- | been spoken. As cared, the blow was g ton bevy at belles 1 '1ose he romarked : of this Saga and that he has been rewarded | son was correctly mude. Mr, Cowan tells me | painfully s hitn aud it was several 1 3 who gather eagerly around the Vill the breihren now in the house wh MOST FAMOUS FRAUD OF THE CENTURY | o siulying this ~White Stirt unic inscrip- J that Prof. H er this was firm in the | yea Lithe mention of uny. | JOURNEYING FROM MARKET TO TABLE | bang tons of beef and mutton, kow how 10 play poker please hold up thele tion on the northeast side of a rock known as | faith of the genuiueness of the inscription | thing S fan caused the ghost of ——— | at either are the game and fish stalls, | hands¢? Arcowbead rock, thirteen miles abcva Wash- | and that he defended it until ne learned that whero noult u 1o rise between fataer and son, a chill . » und game lo with scarce | He walted a minute and not a hand went | the Scandinavian discoverer was uone other | to both.” \ where the shiny scales of | up. Mi-Car ne Fete by the Amous | ryufiled feather: < Hon. Frank Cowan Tells How He Made the | inpton and two miles below the Great Falis. World Belleve the Icelanders Discovered Ho stated that the rock was covered with | than one of the boys in Washington and in a e g " otham’s Smart Set — St, shud and snapper gle: side witb *I am very much obliged,” ha said then, i ety s eatiaest JolinaonTs mosses but tbat in climbiug it he [ later report bo cevoted a page 10 tho unpar- ReminiscangoT Deadiook, (R T TR the plebeian smelt, 2 the veeeta- | “but I did not think so many of you knew g bad scraped these away ana had discoverea | donuble sin of perpetrating such a scientific | “There was one curious thing about this ettt bles, a carnival of cress and cabbage. ) Secretary at the Time, Icelandic characters cut to the depth of av | hoax. inscription,” contipued Dr, Cowan, “which Y of:¥alley Xy e are green peas and asparagus, 10mMato There was a sensation in the church, but cighth of an inch in the rock and each of Another queer thiug about the hoax was | aidea in makine it udittle more and in —_ strawberries, and all sorts of out-c the preacher concluded the services quietly these characters was three inches high. He | that boats ran cxcursions to Great Iulls in | mystifying ihe svientists, This the *W. : 5 d £ daintics, togother with suflicient evers sud afterwards a committee waited on him, [Copyrighted 1852 by Frank G. C i penter.) uvad dug under the rock and hud found there | order that tie people might see the scrip- iey’ witk the aate ‘1753 under it. A | NEw Yous, March [Special to TuE | vegetables to furnish forth a county fair. “*We came to ask what you meant by say- WasuixGroy, 0. C., Apri New York's great charitics A Kitchen Fair to Look Upon, ing that wo all koew how to play poker, respondence of Tne BEk.| o truly desorves the name thandoes | A¢ this polut we aro handed ovorflo 8n- [ Ny 'cesionganes 1ais fious 1AQUIrY. not ty, of the Orthopedio hospital, where crippled | other guide, who conducts s to tho kitchen | ““Fhe proschor latghed sotams, "oUY" t distinction of caste or | hizh up against the roof. Here aro long | “Dowy tar your PRER theviroofi . Here: 3 3 your Lempers ot the better hred o Reomiaiting where food is propared for cooking or | vou, brethren,” ho roplied.. Casy moy wr?é —[Special Cor- | some buman bones snd a g-eat quantity of | tion and the udvertisement uf one of thesc | great many of them argued that this man | Bee.|—Of el The zuthor of | o!d Komen coins. Hostated that be intented | lies botore me. It states that & lurgo and | imust havy belouged o the Braddocis exted: | gon m B v to give these coins and the teeth of the Ice- | commodious packet boat has been chartered tion and thut he had cut his name here as ne ooe of the most remarkablo hoaxes eVer | g qio'\woman with a cast of her remarkablo | to go up on Wednesday ana that it will take | went with Cencral Braddock. Rafinason in 1 : perpetrated uvou the American public was | gpitaph to the Smithsonian Irstitution and | visitors to sce the great Runic Discovery at | his letter sated that this inscription was | children, witho in Washiogton last week, This was the | he forwarded a photograph wnich he had | the Great Falls which is now the most inter- | made by some sharp metallic implements. Hon. Frank Cowan of (reensbure, Pa., the | taken of the inscription to the editor. His | esting lecality in America. but that cven the oldest reside “House of Heuling,” which owcd its exisi- | dressed for sorving. Al around tnis spot- 0WSs Bow to play poker 1sn't going to show son of Edward Cowan, who in 1561 was one | 4tticle 1s long and full of scientific Even the English Were Taken In. Georgetown could not tell him anyihing con- | aeo to the sympathies of a philantbropic | ancey w 14 oW '“j- ‘;' “}‘"-‘ couvenl- | bis hand unless he is forced to, and you of tho most distinguished United States sen- | |S5mS aud it reads as though it was pub- | (¢ oourse visitors to the Great Falls could | cerning it. We got letters from peoplo who | (0%, 6 (SO R B f PR | ences wauld delight the soul of the Omaha | know it s well as 1 do.” ! stng J lished in good faith and among other things 3 pretended to be descengants of Langley, and 3 growy L & A By arocslic,vos obashinligiting ane I'ie committee apologized and reported to ators and who in 1567 was appoiuted by | i transjoses the runic letters into Roman fil"\‘:E';?l‘,“‘;'x'_‘o:‘““:;‘{“""“"'L‘ ‘,’(\‘f Lheir report Of | Gne of the queerest thiggs o mo was o | Whose 5 President Jokoson as minister to Austeia. | characters as follows: Dosures the story was publisued again and | Which was received from o lawyer in most, Frank Cowan was his futher's sccretary Romih & trac untiL 1t g0t into, the ‘bools of | vide, Montgomery eounty, Mrvlind, who | \ioso | wrote to Prof. Rafinuson, demanding in be- wherein your envious image shiues ¥ down upon a table in tho midst sitthe ¢ aud bis assistants, ing & dinner that brings tears 10 your very staff embraces some of the names of tho faculty and imes aro directed by u board of | the other 1 was raised, abers and the preacher’s salary Boston Courier: Mr! Johnson—Have you during a part of the war and in 1560 he be- w.; such scientists as De Quatrefages, profe managers composed of some of the best | W ; - L 3 Bos, ¢ y clients, oTs of the land in | P40 ! considered, parson, this matter of cromatio: ! the private socretaries of Presi o of anthropology nt the Museam of Natural | Dalf of his clients, the -owners o e TR e s i 8 turn our ate SRR S 3 . parson, this matter of cromation § came one o v s b‘fi‘l} Do A A o it | and sround Arrowbead rock, whic krown of McAllicter’s “One Hundred and ain we :\b‘:\‘”‘{,r steps downward to the Parson Limberlip—As ter dat, boss. I's 1d tiers of botties, which > orthodox dust of ag Frenchman shows us how to secn somo days dis ver winter w'éen dent yohnson. Iu 1% ho madaa tourof the [ sy b /]"' K‘—;( ay| e globe, during which he entered tho westorn " published In 139 by D: Appleton | kiiow had no exisiancg, cuielde of Bl ew York. and It is spoken of 11 some | 8 scttlement for the trespass committed in [ Of Iate new rooms have been added and | g NIRMBAITA u wyar ef I'd hed a homypat'ic doso of ' 7 e PR Ve p removing the bones of this Ieelandic woman 1 T it morsc part of Coren and four years later he made bR \_\. 2 A ohs today. y removing the b I h appliances futroduced, necossitating dhisn CHRRAC T lorsc'f, 3 asocond tour of the world. He is a man of RIER RS NAYE l‘ posurcs of th hoax were Interesting | Buasu, her trinkews end coine, o L higvg ures, (ko burden of which tho | drog from the botiom of the bottle., - Ascend: | whir g Lcather's heen too cold for you,eh! this man's letter in my s ration of the ki had somo stingers that's ¢ But re 19 my question, what ce you think of cremation as'a means of dispogs fiue cuiture, & poet, & lay of a number of the best k PRYTLYD T une e ; ¢ r raud a member N l‘l'(: .H’ YReD & and the New Orleans Times aevoted a num own sclentific P{.‘f][(]“r"l‘: n\(fifi.j'.n ! ?\'P IN ber of co 10 the Norse disc gers have geuerously oflered to | ing the stairs, we visit the diniog rooms, ss with which he whers wouderfully decorated tavles delizht openhugen savant | suoulder. veries, Its d it stated letter wes written oy a Dane a societies of the world. It was whilo ho was v . 80 with which ho broaches g S ud inspiro @ most wn 2 | fugof the dead { y: v D that be bad just received o letter from tue bich /! b A Mi-Careme Fet b mogl Skl ] ; 1 tho white Bouse that ho conoaived and ex- | PR Ta: 2 A ¥ir4e thaubioand JIak IEclyod @ IuhRe rom has ges involved 1o th great il R T flogh posa 361 Elopyple o arson L=Well, sab, ivs fus'_dis wa. ecuted this remarkable hoax, which setthe 1.4’}.,!1 10 Prof. itaftinnson had ever been connected g ILhI3-paty - AbIUY the s were discussed, and 1 ¥you may tarry todinc upop the | Lo 3 PUsSO s ‘mado’ up his mu’ whar i o cy 3 vith that university and that the so-called the discov was made o Mr, N A ) 8D ; ; be's gwine hil’s jus’ de same as gettin’ out scientists of this country and Europe to in- with that university a _the Burnes, a member of 1he Marylang «onstitu. | the briliaut financial schemes advocated and ies you have just seon prepared in tho | a5 p. AL u Icclandic inscription was provanly a fraud. ; oned b be fertile of one of 3 above, There is tho glitter of silver nors; ik glbahim'a sortor vestigatiog the Icolandic discovery of Amer- ; ) PHOA ! AR ual convention, whic ca, which caused the Washinzcon newsps- The Selentists and the Newspapers. bis man “‘-‘g ‘;'"E:T‘lu Josepn ”i‘"‘_';‘,'] “‘L"" napolis n 1567, arzued in fa pers to run out extras discussing it, acd | , This publication created so greata sen b R0, FUUIp L AR0AFIPLY i i a i ¥ ent of & historiographer for tne state, | ceived tn ! u Was on unmitigated hoax, & lia wite | pointmen : tho st peivea inoabapluiely orliinal ) RR:0, Hio brsllank glow of bokeN | dg 1 I which was of o scientific a nature tnat it §{,",:‘l:}‘u“,t,;":’,.fi",',fi."‘r';"‘nf‘;’fim;‘;" Jub xtras | oyt the accompauiment, of wit, con- | 89d Sid that suoh wogderful discoveries as | RECK §50.010 0001 80 Y atope 108 | er folks bit's awryvoo, @s de French says, A u . vse U ire f the Potor from market to table of a ginn their soft radiance, DL foN foken amuar L s ¢ _nph cocted by & young lawyer of Washington those ut the Great, Falls o 1omao | LHOm WArKel i A o' fokes dat's had all de pusperation an has even cmplflm: "‘:{"0;’{“‘"{"‘:’“}' has 8 | phalograpna of tho inst Fipon atould be | 22 that it was dono for the purpose of as- | Sbould be perpetusted fak the glory of Mary- | Sberry—privee and pateiarch of caicrer A Scene of Dazzling Splendor, warmi in dis world dat dey kin stan’ ais ker- part fn some of tho stories of the discovery B of Washington. sisting the sale of a newspaper published wn | land. f p tering tho white and gold room, one {s | Watiou bus'ness ain a loetle too mernotemus, leld st An- o or of the ap- | the brightest womca of the “smart sev’ con- | aud the zicam of cut glass,the delicate boauty bsplutely original idea of o mi- | of exquisite china, the brilliant glow of roses citizenship, don’ you seef In , hit goes fur to ackimate 'im ter de tropickum tempychoo, Fo' dat kin' gnt ful though it was, emed impracticable, 4 v long articlo was publishod about tho (fieti: | SSUIDE i o : ! ’ of tois continent. Just aow wwhon the WOHd's | (fous) noted explorer which stated that o | '¥4sbiugton. Fho IAMALIRRE Hatinnion That Sherry, the ‘autocrat of the dinner DCNR inamenk i SuR e ARONG SHHR (o) oo e e faat oh atelana arin) far is attractiog 80 much attention toColum- | \AE%) FOLET AEROTE WINER Btated that Lo How the Hoax Was [nvented, “Tut did not. the people want to sco Prof. | tabie, coula Do “induced to permit a public | delicato streamors of whito sils, festooned | | Q€ of the brichicat physictans of Port- bus, the story of this attempt to wrest from | e had graduated at the Univarsity of Coben- | T asked Mr. (owan how he bappencd to | Rafionson( I askeds invasiou of bis epicurian temple on Fifth | With ferus and '“’”;‘(.’,‘.‘,”l:.l,“fi"fiif‘\‘l HOMAO | of Bath, sars iis Lamiston dehraal nariaas bim bis laurels will be especially intoresting. | hagen, aud they described the wouderful | think of the scheme, aud be replicd thut it | , "Of course they dig® xoplied Dr. Cowan, | avenue, seemcd au idea impossibie of realiza- 0 Boicest bon bons. white | the physiological room at Bowdoin Medical ", iscov V] o o ' i i o1 S0C! v et Y tea or niobling the ¢l It was, on Mr. Cowau's part, u pisce of ; discoverios which he hag madein the past. | was throuzh tue study of Danish books, and [ "Dut I stated that he was ill in the letter | tion. Society hud feasted und feted in his RLae 4 school not long ago, R T R T Ty ..:1 ‘from the | Ttstated that the czar of Russia had gIven | ho told mé how b wert tonn hnum 4na | which I wrote for bym, and that bo had re- | famous rooms, but the inner mysteries of | the Hut garisn bagd' plays 1o "the paim- | RO ROV JORK REn, akeleing, i company newspaper roports and the scientific docu. | D 8 medal, and it described Lis personal | studied for days in ordsr 1o acquire familiar- | Ured Lo the wountaia’of Virsiala for Lis | puntey aud kiichen were quite uupeneurated, | s7recnsd balcony, " 5G| SR S ierascopte, sildes showing eefs ments of the day that I take the story. :'&',‘;:I:'!,‘."J‘."d lr:;‘:::!l.; :?mfium:‘[na l\::r‘; 1wl “1'2:"5‘“1 and feelandic histcry ana :f-‘ilf.‘;:’i'ns“ug‘fi'fs bfl“wmw‘:"m‘im‘_‘:“);: e Mr. Shersy Bountiful, thy hoapltal's pationtslittle. ¢r1ppled. bose phyu‘vl an ut once launched out intoa brils . e with the old Icelapdic language and ¢ - o q 5 Mr fucas | liant discussion o X0a Kedatintion at Great Falls ket up In the newspapers, and the press | ters of the twelfth conturv. Hla ctuged np | 1t Was @ long time some of them fo Curiosity Is quite as much a passion of the | With the stmp of sufforing on their fucas— | (OEL q/scussion of he glaads and thelr rels AR 5 5 throughout the country took up the matter, | the old Sugas, utd the resull was such & mix- | E87€ me. Amonk othgrs who thougnt I was | gentler sex on Muriay Hill as among tne | s¢ll programs dud sorve 1o keep before toe | [Pl 9, RATORS GISRERSS. The theologian The Great Fals of the Potomac are about | and the New York Evening Post published a | ture of truth &ud falsehood (hat 1t was hard | Very wicked was DF. Touer, the famous | scribuling sisterhood 1n Newspapcr Row, | 8uests the noblo object of the cotertaiment. [ FE2W lired al how 0 ot AR ARS | ffteen miles above Wasbington, The region | long critical account of the discoveries of e e o ontad’ scientist and bock collgetor of Wasnington, | and there was a thrill of interested antisi- Who Gave Color to the S S i S00LAN nuen. 80U ¥he Une 8! B g C C to tell where ory ended and the hoax 5t certainties of tuis world thut | uid think sbout thew is wildly romantic and there are | America in which in sober earnest 1t gave 8 | began. Said be: and it wes a long lime before Prof. Josepll | pation along Fifth uyevue wheu it was an- All New York is here—that graceful | you would not want to live G Wany great rocks which rise out of the river | BUMbEr of voyages of the Irish and the Ice “I'had to be yery careful aboutit, for | Henry kuew that I had anyvihiug todo with | nouuced that Mr. Sherry bad kindly con- | womau just entering the soothsayer's booth, | logians, came (o Qbiok reply, Al ua' s e T g i ey sy el land‘:,rs o (\mj-ru'r;und ~limwed %"m Iceland | vou see I was employed atihe white house | 1% 1“"0“"[““;‘”»“‘_ me, \m\u er, for the | sented to open his entire estabiishinont to | where u daughter of the Vauderbilts is tell' [ much about the cortainties of the next thas e 9 was discovered and occupied by Irish monks | and I did rot like to get President Jonnson | dcception, for be called me one day t . bis in- | the public for @ mid-Lont beueBt for tho | s fareus Eila Wheeler Wi You- | we don’ sges. 1twas on one of theso rocks that in | as far back as A, D. 1t showed that & | mixed up in this. 1t was for this roasen that | stitution and asked: me to mako out the | Ortbopedic hospital (108 28 M lax (3 ra0LITeAD Tram moalilttiumane ] T8 Sen'imant Lo'dip it 1507, it was claimed, & Prof. Raflunson, | number of Danes and Norwegians had been | | stopped & southern imember of congress | PAPErs conveying s laud to bis Ler. With great pleasure Linvite readers of Tk | ypyoad, where even royalty is said to hayo Grace Cu i A explorer of Copenhagen, had discovered & | in America beforo A. D. 1000, and stated | when bo wantcd to offer & resolution to ihe | ‘This land,’ said he, %ig in the state of New | Bee to sccompany we upon a pilgrimage. | w. rshiped at ber sbrine, selling to Mr. St. | ere r,‘,-‘nm’- [ nlu\)‘)l:ill'u.r :.l)Zrn;..“,‘:“: Ll wonderful runic inscription which conclu- | that in the year 1002 Thorvaid had gone from | house tendering to Prof. Itafinnson the | YOrk aod'my titls from the Dutch down is | “From Market to T Gaudens, Amoricu's greatost sculptor, o | ° Naloatan—flore is & presty oue. 5" sively proved that the Icelanders had been | Greeuland fo America, aud had discovered | thanks of the congress of the United States | ehtangled in 1hé mass of musty papers Of course, no right-minded Omuha girl | fiower for bi nere more than 4 yeavs before Columbus | it. It descrived the discoveries about | for bis gloricus discovery. This congrese. | Which lics here betore you, and the title is | cousiders a visit to New York complete until Wilies, discovered America and bad oa this rock re- | Martba's Viseyard by this man in 1 aod | man bad bis resolution written out, and it is | ib such a condition that I believe it can be | sbe has diued or dunced ut Sherry’s. Many | ) ongshoreman’ gladly drops into the cof. corded the deatb of one of the faaous women | 8poke of the time the old mill was supposed | tre rcgret of my life that I aid noc let bim | Gisentaugled ouly by the man who made the | of my readers, therefore, will readily ) | fors of charity a shining gold eagle as tho of theirtrive. This woman's nawe was | to bave been built at Newpert. It guve | proposeit. it was all I could do to keep hun | Funic inscription, {want you to take the | tue Louis XV.'room where neut aud natty | price of his pos Suasu, and the inscription stated that she | suthoritics for all these discoveries, }mm offering it, and 1 bad to produce wit- | Pabers aud makeme an abstract and prepare | damsels sell bon-bons at @ price thut causes o sweel voiced lady who sells you a | o came from the east part of Iceland and that | the chronological rocord of which 0ok | nesses before I could convince him that there | 8 dced, and when yofi send in the same with | the purse in your pocket to throb with cou- | glacs of lemouade is the granaqsughier of | ©d1med to vo s friend of yours. she was'buried there io 1051 The fivst pub- | up several columuos and closed by sayiog that | was no such place as Arrowhead Kock and | Your bill for services readercd, it will be | vulsive aespair. Also, the “white-and-gold” thropist Peter Cooper and the stately Gabriel -1 noyer saw bim until ten min- 3 lication conceruing the discovery was made | the writer, who was thoroughly bosted on | {hat the whiolo thing was & frand." pud." I took the papers and in about & fort- | room where dinuer s served by a veivel | womun who touches eloows with you as you | U1e3 before you dia. He made a strauge re- by the Washington Constftutional Union, | old runic letters, beiieves that the Potomac pight I bad tbe abstract and deed and put in | footed butler aud his perfectly traied as | geand sippiog side by side is Mrs quest, . cout. It1s o a spray of val Grace Church—Ob, yes, but it does not b et tho artist of “Diua” and “The | guy meaus match tue shides of my dress ; New York Herald: St. Peter—I turned away a mau by the name of Soak who ® cony of which of Monday, July 8, 1567 | iuscription 1s geuuine and states that if 1t is Decelved His Owa ¥uther. my bill for §15, Which the learned scientist | sistants, who wail upou you with a waoner Faras | st Peter—What did he wantl llos before we. This contains 'a long article | & forgery ¥it shows cousuwwate ingenuity on “In this connection,”Dr. Cowau continued, | paid and which was the first fee I ever re- | that inspires you with tue belief that you are Some one touches your shoulder and a soft Gubriel—A clove. with the following beadlines above it: the part of its unknown author,” “[ may say that on several occasions I was | ceived as an attoghey-at-law. I consider the | a princess in exiie, aud very Engiish voice says: “May | bog ® EXTRAORDINARY DISCOVERY! The scientists at Wasbington were of | sorely trouvled over the serlous consequences | temporary deception which 1 practiced upon | — But today the stoward and bis army of 300 | you for one wore lmp of sugar, piease | Gabriel—Why did that sanctimontous lock- ; Priow rae Gukar FaLie oy zus Porouac. | SoUrss greatly interested io itaad Prof. Jo- | of mv facetiousuess. Amoug my victims | Joseph Heury fora few days in making him | assistaats ere bauisbed, aud their You murmur, *Certaiuly,” and amiably tury | 18§ ludividual tura away from the gate so eelandic Woman Buried In 1051, with Trink- | seph Henry, then secretary of the Smithson- | was my fatber, who & few mwontbs before | believe that therd might besomething in the | filled by recrvits from the radiant to hand tne silver sugar basin to the dark. | 58d 51 ets. Bowan Coins, Ete.. Exbumed. lan Iustitution and cousidered as the bead | hiad retired from the United States senate. | story as the greatest evidence of my skill in | that mysterious element called *'society. eved stranger behind you and receive her St Poter—He found out that we kept open A, Temarkablo Kuale Inseription. and front of tbe scleutific men of the times | He was so deluded aud 30 euthusiastic in his | gettiog it up, for ho was one of the greatest 5 : thauks with & condescending smile that | Susdays meriea Discovered by the trish. was strangely fascioated with the story. | delusion that while I was mortified 1o hear | Scientists the United States has ever had, Same of the Notshies Freseats freezes upon your lips when you learn & e The article cousists of & letter from Prof. | The day after it appeared he girected the ed- | of his speeches in public, 1o expianation of | and I don’t suppose he was ever taken in be- Entering by tue Fifth avenue door which | moment later ‘that your neighbor is ner Philudeiphia Record: A “rattling good fel- Ramooson 1n :rhlch be states that be first | itcr of the Evening Expres: Washiogton | the wmysteries involved in tbe wonderful | fore.” Pi CARPENTER, opens bospitably unext 1o the egualiy hospit- | grace the auchess of Marlborough. Witk a | 'O 18 often oue who shakes dice L the idea that this inscription existed | to call on Doctor brig, the distinguisned | story, I was afraid to reveal myself to bim / able eatrance to the residence of Colonel | gasp and symptoms of & spinal chill you seek > e— o the Skaiaolt Saga which wasexhumed o | lingulst who was for many years professor of | &3 tho suthor of the hoax and be ever after- | _Talk about foreign champagnes, try Cook's | “150y " Tgorsoll, wo are at onco met by a | L wuter sir Thore's er o dellar (ofi ok & “I feel ivmy duty to testify to the e 7 . T ) Lriy i i bjch told the story of & | languages at Coruell uuiversity, and get o | wards a cause of humilistion to bim whea- | Extra Dry: i is superior L0 swo-thirds of 16 | brient-ovcd lady, whose Kown bo: fa tho ui: | yous purse aod you Ao to6 Lred for wozar Of Bradycroline us & hoadacte cure, ”says | wona P which Icolacders bad takes | report from Limon the subject. This the | ever the matier should recur to bis mind. l iwported “wines. ‘ wistakable signs of Parisian origio, whose | but you have aticoded the great Mi-Careme ‘1érbern Wasbiogton, D. G

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