Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE OMAHA DAILY BFfi!’ = SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1895 VARM WEATHER WISPOM the Fecs nable Euggestions Concerning Cares of Housekeeping. and will greatly lessen your laundry bills For your own house dresses you should mals plain, unlined prints, which are so easily laundered and kept elean, and have no weight to tire you in getting about. A woman who elects to wear out her cast-off finery at home s always an object of pity, 1 think, and always gives the impression of | A TRU | Thera is | incia thinking less of her own than she does of strangers, since she rescrves for the home HCW TO MAKE THE HOUSE LCOX COOL | circle things that she is ashamed to have | anybody outside of it see. o Don't fret! The woman who wants to keep And Take the Edge Off Mercury's Lofty cool must smile when the e muldy Climbs—Rout Annoyances with Smiles 1d take Katie's torn (rock as a great joke. ot She must not “stew” because bangs Snd’ Don's Gk 0% < won't stay in curl, or storm at the hot Use of the Bath. weather. About the very bost body heater, ikl aside from a fit cf temper, is to walk around with a fan in one hand and a handkerchief “Kesp cosl! How can one keep cool? asked | In the cthier and esk it anyboiy over sav gneroury is hunting the 90's, the baby fa | 81ly. It is here, and LR You only Increase your own and ey broken out with the heat, as cross as two | g CTgt TR B g of the sticks, and 1 am ready to drop to sleep this | woather, for while or cannot “wallow minute with weariness, and it i3 not 11| naked in December snow by thinking on o'clock yet? I don’t know how I am ever | faniastic summer's heat,” one certainly ea to get through the da without a rvant icrease one's temperature ‘l-"\l b to do a hand’s turn, too. We have to|dwelling intemperately cn the tor "”“!""‘H‘ SNt hifite) Jokn wih 146 out of oMes,: | . DY N THERIN Gvold e whter aic T8 a | up on iced drinks and frozen fruits and And there that poor young mother ustards. A light appetite is a good thing to | little more than a year-old wife was | poxsces In hot weather, for both eating and mizing right where she should have made | drinking increase the aperatur The her most lavish expenditure, in rest. The | temptation to take a cool drink or a dish of baby was cross and fretful, and badly broke: | cam I8 strong when one heated to the | out with heat, as ad aid | boiling point, and yet that is one of the stopped to think that her own quickest steps to sunstroke, indigestion and dition and worried mind and t neral discomiort Balf the cause of it. and ta: with | WARM WATER FOR WARM WEATHER a larger quintity of her own nervousness, to | The Idle person finds the: weatner hottor wvex her with all night, perhaps. Being k ‘\-‘ e AR etloh: L you= 0o “tired gnough to drop,” the proper thing to Ll Rl ime & o ol do was to drop, and take a good, long nap, | "0t find the weather nearly 8o unc " 4 from which she would have arisen with m SRR AR CLLL SO cheerful views of life, and would have found | % o CeA Tl HAES Weath ey e also that the wheels of the household ma Sllh S0 It o6 Bt the rERPAtARI Virbie chinery would have moved much .more | fleaniness s one ot T CRraiiel LA ;'p"!,"",::"d “K"‘”’]‘“ :n_,’ !lhv'” gt ‘,’J’I that a bath in cold water will cool you off lttle baby would have had one good meal [ TFY Water a littte more than blood ‘warsm of its mother's milk, that was purified from | 4nd after some cxperlohciii the GERCions worry and microbes of nervou o g L AL ST LE L hait prickly h would have had A warm day, you will always remember thal upon 14 water for c-1d weather and warm water “Koeping_cool” this _biistering _weathor, | {0 Warm weather Iy the rule to follow. says the Washington Star, does not mean | . NEVES wake S0 SUSEIE,BE NEE e physically only, but mentally as well, and | {68 When BeSIme, (b P ¢ It you zo you can materfally add to your comfort by [ You 81t wneombetanie FEER S0 S S e Observing a few common sense rules. The | out in the T e taoe Sently ot DeeNpirac woman who s managing and who looks well | the skin, - Dry your face gently of Bresfi after her family will get most of her work | tlon with a soft inen towel, And thed (Aor dono very early In the morn'ng, before any- | 211y dredge it with starch or taleufs powce body is astir, and before forvidly familiar. Of course be dressed for summer, If pos: carpets should be taken up, dusted cleaned, if you intend to have that done b fore putting down In the fall, and then they should be tightly sewn up 1n clossly woven bags, to keep them from the invasion of moths. All the heavy curtains should be taken down and treated in like manner, and all the hangings should be removed and stowed away or during th ummer open windows, sunshine and dust would ruin them, and your peace of mind at the same time. THE ROOMS LOOK COOI It you can afford it, light stra the ideal summer floor coverin. not, stain your floors and content yourself with rugs. It may be that bamboo furniture will not be available, either, but light linen covers for your pretty upholstered parlor set will b for you can get patterns and make them yourself. Strip your rooms of all the fancy Dric-a-brac that catchies dust so easily, and that tpight get overturned and broken in the hurried daily dusting. gAfter ring the house of the “litter” that makes it o cozy and bright in the winter, but only enhanc: its “stufliness’ In warm weather, yon will be surprised to find that your labors in keep. ing your house clean are appreciably light ened, and with heavy hangings gone the rooms actually seem cooler, By arising at daybreak, leaving the little ones sleeping, the whole house excapt the wleeping rooms cen be put in r before Dbreakfast. Den't go about this cleaning without fortifylng yourself, though. Drink a glass of cool lemonade anl eat a biscuit or ish of berries or other fruit, which wili ot Teave you with that “empty” feeling, nor yet destroy your appetite for broakfast. It Jou have not done your marketing the night BR. matting is I before, of eourse it should be done as soon a3 possible after you get up, so that you ca arrange for the day's meals. If you are a real sensible woman you will have learned what is the best kind of warm weather fool for these {s a vast differerce in the heat producing propertics as well as the health- giving ones of the various articles of diet It the man of the family has to perfor manuel labor, he will need meat twic For yourself once a day s quite enough, 1ess you want to increase your discomfort, for meat I» heating. 1f it Is a roast or a be plece tha nd to have for dinner, cook it rarely done in the morning and set |t away in the ice box, or at least where it will kesp cool. Save the broth that has formed about it, and if you want soup you can make it from that broth in five minutes' time when you are getting dinner. If you profer the meat hot for dinner cut neat slices of the rarely done roast, place them in a pie tin and pour over them zome of the juices you have saved, and set them on the gas stove or in the oven to heat through, then slip on the hot platter and serve. COOKING MADE EASY Make your potato salad, or the chicken or veal salad while you are about it, and th ple or bread pudding, or custard, or gelatine deasert. 1f it is sliced cucumbers save all chance of indigestion by slicing them into £alted fce water and set them In the ice box rinse before putting on the table. With these things prepared, a vegetable or two for dinher can easily be cooked over a one burner gas stove in a double boiler, and the matter of getting the diuner confined to halt an hour, and another halt to getting the dishos done If you have any regard for your digestion is eschew hot bread, oatmeal, cracked wheat and griddle cakes in hot weather. They are all_heat producers, and fat producers as well. Fruit, fresh fruit, and plenty of it, should be found on the table at cvery meal, hoth summer and winter if_possible, but in the summer especlally. Day old bread, thinly sliced, and toasted a golden brown and eaten dry, is the very best kind of bread for one who suffers greatly fre B e Y :'” ,‘(',;ff.: Alt“ym_n:?iu s publications, is very neat and | magazine, the initial l!:\ln'llvrlln':lrmg date to give 1 up, but drink less of it, and more | M'OLURE'S COMPLETE LIFE OF Na.| o5 U Mastors of Franchilitaraturg and Tomonade, that Is, It the lemonade docs. mot | eaiumas (CONPLETE LIFE OF NA-| the principal artists of Franca will alone bo O E L Tsing. haby ths: con POLEON—By lda M. Tarbell. Paper, 50| admitted as contributors. ~ The varlous If you will carefully note when your baby R ‘|';‘ '(_;l;-w» “‘\. Yorlk. schools and systems of art and literature 18 the crossest you will generally find that | ameimey wers rag &, Crown, Cacsar and | will be represented, and side by side will 1ts crying spells follow closely on a fit of | amuence, but Napoleon Bonay i ,“‘:" and | appear the names of Tolsto! Clemenceau, anger, Hl-temper, ovorhcaling or overeating | struggle of life under great Rimeultisg g s Maliproe, Rouries, ) Dasien” Gersiing, Hars on your part. he summer appetite 1s | jyije fsland that had just been h | vien, Mendes, Alph. Allais, Grosclaude, Cour- usually quite dainty in the morning, %o |yo gependence upon forsign en humiliated | tejine, ete. Among the artists will be Puvis never have anything heavy for breakfast. | yoqq "m, i e fl:“ lr“’“" Toldo Chevannes, Whistler, Helleu, Forain, The first course should b fruit, always. | Gorsican is (o witness one of the wonnire | Caran d'Ache, while Princess de Chimay After that the tastes of the family must be | o¢" {ha world, for what “““d. e wonders | i oontribute articles on fashion, and considered, but whatever you have cook it |y o (G, at wonder may even | piincogs de Polignac on artistic decorations . bo compared’ to the prodigious marvel of nicely, serve daintlly and do not have 50 | gyef plipy > A Of | The Revue will not be composed of extended, ! . uch a career as his. Pyramid and temples Inuch of il on the table as to disgust the | ure dwarfed at the mentlon of his vast in. | heavy studies, but will contain short, vivid, light -n‘h‘r-"lly a little managing you can | guanes upon history. Simply .l; xf‘n w?.l vigorous articles on subjects of universal in- ;::e.{:\:x{i;[. a gr.“ .d,‘l.l uxd work over & siory of this man is the recital of a romancs | terest. The Revue Franco-Americaine will | el e right in the heated part of the | wnose equal has not yet been penned. What l be printed in Paris, its literary editor being do, rush through In the morning o 8 arens d _engaged con- | AIME hi B v TR, e g o the morning mliim)‘:-;!,,.,‘,vm,.w“g the unfolding of his life, ‘\1‘“!\\\” bo sufficient guaranty of the worth, ex- of your sowing While It whs cool, say in | TAFbell has succeeded not only in’ telling | cellence s d suce s of his n‘ulflrprl:; La March and April. Lot the children play | e StOF ,""“,, it in brinsing to it th |\<..\u»' |»xk.nuu..\nu-rlmlnu, 83 Duane Street thelr hardest all morning, aud about noon [ latest and most authentic vorsions of the | New YVor bring them in and strip them. Qlve sueh | facts that in its plot. One of the| A large and complete map of the United one & rubbiug duwn With o towel dipped In | MOSt Iportant features, Lowever, for whicl | States in soctional strips Is one of the foa Balt water, put thelr night dresses on then | the book will b prized is its princely collee- | tures of the June edition of The Rand & and send them o thelr rooms to go to | ton of portraits and illustrations, that lend | McNally Oficial Railvay Guide and Hand sloep. They will probably object, but et [ Additional ‘uster to the work. These com- | Book. American Railway Guide Company, them know that it has to be dors. and it | Prise not alore the great collection of en-|162 to 174 Adams Street, Chicago. il not be long before they w ikl ;:Ir-l‘\'lugf‘-lu&,;\h:" Gardiner_ Hubbard, but a MAGAZINES RECEIVED. 0 o or nat s vory arge W ers copied from rare | PHYS) JAZIN odical, and a sleep at @ certaln hour one | Plctures ‘n private collections in France. | THE, METAPHYSICAL ~MAGAZINE—The day 15 suro to Induce oue at the same hous | CHIMMIE FADDEN EXPLAINS. MaJjor | Metaphysical Publishing Company, 503 the next day MAX EXPOUNDS—By Edward W, Town. | . Fifth Avenue, New York. — A GRATEFUL REST send. Cloth, $1: paper, 80 cents. ' Lovell, | THE NINETEENTH CENTURY--Loonsrd Then darken your houso from top to bot. | SOrYell & Ce., New York e BANKER'S MAGAZINE—Joh take & nap yoursel An hour is long | Most o ch have already attracted atten- | Flovd, 84 John &t B i T > enough, and will ampiy repay you for whet | tion In the columns of the New York Sun, | THE HARVARD GRADUATES' MAGAZINE You Stolo from your morning alecp and re. | The characteristic feature of the sketches js | —Harvard Graduates' Magazine Associa- uperate you for the loss sustancd through | the Ditroduction of Bowery vernacular in a | tion, § Deacon Street, Boston. heat and nervousness the might before | Style trite with a delighttul idiom, thor-|THE CLOTHIER AND FURNISHER—The \'nurh A'hlh’lr»u \Hl‘l probably slesp for t ul.:,n.ni- re l‘”’(‘l'll mnl nf wit and humor. N vru\g Nkl.mey(nmxmn)', 13 Astor Place, or three hours, they can scarccly get 'he character of Chimunde Is unique and the | New York. A much, and when they get up, can huve | remarks on society that drop from his | THE FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW—Leonard on thelr clean clothes aud will be good- | 1ips lend special charm to the book Soott Publication Company, New York lumored for the remainder cf the day, | OUTRE-MER—Dy Paul Bourget. Cloth, | BATON—The Baton Publishing Company, 315 which will, of course, add to your own| $1.75. Charles Berthner's Sons, New York,| Y. M. C. A., Kansas City, Mo. * com fort, IProm Megeath Stationery company, Omaha, | THE WESTMINSTER REVIEW-—Leonard One of the greatsst blessings in bot| “Outre-Mer” is not a philoscphical treatise | Scott Publication Company, New York waather is an ample supply of clean clothes, | on American political institutions and ad- | BANKS AND BANKERS—Banks and Bank- toky, sciled, ill-smelling clothing would | ministration, Ilke De Tecquevilie's and| ers Publishing Company, 77 Dexter Bulld- sour the temper of & meraph, %0 in your | Bryce's, but It is, In its way, equally serlous. | Ing, Chicago mpring sewing Include a change from the | It has ita Ught, and even its gay side, bui | OUR DUMB ANIMALS—George T. Angell akin out for each day. It Is easier to wash | none the less does it comtain food for 19 Milk Street, Boston two ploces of linen that aro slightly solled | thought, and depict with precision the social | RIODES' JOURNAL OF BANKING—Brad- than one that has to be washed into holes | pliysiogiomy of a considerable portion of | ford Rhodes & Co., 78 William Street, New o got the dirt out. Make all the “eves day” clothing simply and without frills of The latter is best, as it is wenderfully cooi ng and absords prespiration. Cold cloths on the wrists will cool one greatly, and a cold cloth at the bick of the nack is good for a headache caused by the glare of the sun, covering the eyes with another. If the head gets heated, let hair down and Iift the long strands =0 as to let the air gel to the scalp. Frequent g of nce a week at least, is nac 1s the hair <o soon gets to be musty. To sum it all up, the best recipe for keep- ing cool is to eat temperately and drink the same way, control your temper, got plenty of sleep, do not stint yourself in clean clothes or clean water, and refrain from “retting. —— BOOKS OF 1HE NONTH PRINC STORIES--By Jesse Lynch Wil ms. Cloth, $1. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. From Megeath Station ery Company, Omaha College life at Princeton, in pets and charact tic features depicted in these lively stories. The diffe :nt types of character are drawn with fide ty and penetration, and the author has a natural gift for short story writing which endues his book With an interest quite in- lependent of its special subject FORWARD HOUSE—By Wiiliam Scoville Case. Cloth, $1. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. From Megeath Stationery Company, Omaha. The romantic quality of the story is en- hanced by e mystery which is not solved by the teller of the tale himself until the very end. The rapid succession of incidents which piques without satisfying the curi osity in regard to the shadowy figure of the girl in the story as well as touching some Other matters, is carried out by a group of en who have gree of individuality Colonel Forward himself, his two s‘rang sons, Mister Hawke, the leader of a piratical crew, Mister Hunt, who was a witness of and a participant in all that occurred, and who tells the story in inimitable fashlon, with Molly Forward in the background, fill the stage with strongly contrasting and highly nteresting characters ALASKA—By Miner W. Bruce. Cloth, il lustrated, § Lowman & Hanford, Seat tle, W An experience of six years in various por tions of Alaska enables the author of thi work to give authentic and accurate informa its varied is vividly tion concerning the development of the re- glon during the past few years. In order to able the formaticn of a more accurate and complete conception of the country and its outlook Mr. Bruce glves an outline of fts history, a description of its topography, its climate, its agriculture and its flora. He also gives an account of its mineral re- sources, its timber and the great Yukon gold fields that are attracting so much atten tion at present. In connection with the lat ter the route to the Yukon is carefully out lined, the land and sea animals, the Alarka Indians and Eskimos, in fact all the dis- tinetive and prominent features of this vast country that covers one-fourth as much sur face as the entire United States are detalled The tourlst route and the Alaska boundary question are also among the topies touched upsn. The fllustrations, of which there are a large number, are taken from photographs and are a great help in conveying a better conception of the land and its people. MADAME DE STAEL—By Helen Hinsdale Rich. Paper. American News Com- pany, N The w York. A lecture delivered before many prominent socleties in the United States by Mrs. Rich, ““The Poet of the Adirondacks,” presenting a scholarly analysie of the celebrated French- woman's character, works and influence upon her times. The print, in the style of Stcna Ameries and Americans. After a few days in New York, of which his first impressions any description. 1t whl save time aund strength, which you need for nobler dutles, T e are vivaclously presented, he repaired to Newport, of whose soclety he gives an ex- e ———— tremely sympathetic. and diseriminating count. An analysis of the differont types of the young girl naturally follows. Them the reador 1s taken slumming in New York and cn visits to Archbishop ireland and Cardinal Gibbons, with whom the labor problem and its political aspects are discussed. Chicago naturally claimed a good deal of M. Bour Kot's attention, as well as St. Paul, Baiti more anl Washington, though naturally New York and Boston are most exhaustively treated. The different subjects discussed, It should be said, & eoncantrated and presented topically throughout the book, which method satisfactorily breaks the nar ra of Its author's journeys and wit- nNesses the fact that his impressions have ematized and digested AND OTHER STORIES—By Mary Tappan Wright. Cloth,"$1. Charles Ecrib ner's Sons, New York. From Megeath Stationery Company, Omaha Each story in this book man and woman. Bach theme is the oldest and the that the world holds—love. plot to spaak of, very little it The Interest lies in the working out of the type of character. The studies of vomen are very close and sympathetic. The vorkmanship {s delicate, and*if the general eftect is somber, it is because life see gray to the sensitive vision of the author, MYTHS OF NORTHERN LANDS—By H. A uerber. Cloth, il he American Book Company, N Properly cribed he tale of a speaking, the myths herein de- s of the north and which the earlier toms of the D s French are the c the stock fro beliefs and e s, German, Engl 1. The style of quality of “its illu contribute to make it an exc but render it invaluabl ader SUPPRESSF BOOKISHN $1.25. C F'rom M PUT YOURS & Lee, Chicago. JEWEL ~DON TS—F Paper, 50 cen lishing Compan Now York THE FRIENDSHIP OF NATURE Osgood Wright Muc & Co CONV NAL LIES—By Paper, ts. Laird & MAUREE FAIRING—By Cloth, 75 cents. Macmillan 'ERR MANY ard Henry Tennyaor Stationery C: THE HER Bjornstje 50 cents. York Omana. a and the not only lent text book, to the general rations ) CHAPTRE By arles Seribnir's S 18 AND OTHER tebart Bridges. Cloth s New York ry Company, Omaha IN HIS PLACE—By Paper, 25 cents. Laird Edmund Bramer nwich Ru! ell Pub Streat, The 135 Gr By Mabel Paper, miniature, 25 cents Now York. Max_Nordau Lee, Chicago, Jane Barlow & Co., YEARS—Poems. By Rich 5 pages. I rom Megeath g0, Omaha THE KURTS—I Cloth, $1.00; pap ell & Co, New tationery Company mpany ITAGE OF ne Bjornson Lovall, From Megeath LITERARY ‘s Weekly for 1 H. V. Boynton number of extracts fre “Life of General in the July Century. s reported that Tolstol has become an stastic bicyciist and joined the Moscow Cycling club. He rides for an hour oy 1ay, accompanied by members of his family. Going on a “painting the town 1" Has the Elizabethan parallel ever been poin 1 out? Priv al with Poins in the Boar's Head Tavern say “They call Irinking deep, dying scarlat.” An adm of Edgar Allen Poe sug t as a means of increasing the contributions to the fund for the poet's monument in Balti- nore that rozes be grown on his grave and old at fancy pric The titie of Winnie Davis’s novel, soon fo be lssued, is “The Veiled Doctd It {3 described as telling the story of an over- sansitive man whose married life with a not very sensitive young woman was a tragedy to both. Mr. Herbert Spencer, who was one of th thr men, outside of Germany, who were ntly appointed by Emperor Willlam ights of the Ordre pour le Merite, has de- clined the honor on the ground that his opinions, repeatedly expres: in his writ- nz> epting it Mms. Re spondence has been put up at auction Paris. It embraces a mber of love le rs written to her by Lucien Bonapart Bernadott issena and Benjamin Constant. he lett of Princ Aug us of Prussia, who wished to marry the famous beaut. if she would obtain a divorce from her bankrupt husband, are not among the collecti: NOTES. Jun Chickamauga Harp istr Gener contains an park by a ant” amusing will be debar him from ac co in amier's McClure's Magazine for July will contaln anillustrated article by Sir Robert Ball sfessor of astroncmy in the University of wbridge, England, showing how recen ntific discoveries tend to bear out-early speculation in favor of the existence of life »n other planets than the earth. The same wber will contain also some very inter- sting Stevenson matter Ths Westminster Gazette sa: “It ap- pears that the Russian censors stand in much greater fear of Tolstol than he does of them. They begin to tremble as soon as they learn that he is meditating a new book In making up their minds whether the work of the greatest Russian writer is to b placed under their ban, they have now to consider, not only what people will say iIn Russia, but also what people will think In Europe. When the ‘Kreutzer Sonata' was prohibited, Tolstoi's wife, it 1s sald, went in person to the czar and lodg:d a complaint Alexander 1L received the countess viry graciously, removed the ban, and declared that in the future he would himself act as censor of Tolstol’s books." A serics of prize essays on the labor ques- tion are published in pamphlet form under the rather lengthy title, “A Bad Way of Settling Difficulties Between Capital and Labor.” Varlous plans for the peaceable settlement of labor difficulties are argued but nothing of distinctive importance brought to light. The American Humane Society, 19 Milk street, Boston. “A Bureaau of Municipal Information,” is one of numerous timely topics considered in the June number of The Municipality and County. Niagara Publishing Company, Buf- talo, N. Y. La Revue Franco-Americaine, a journal printed entirely in French, but designed for American readers, is an illustrated monthly York THE PYTHIAN TRIBUNE—William D. Keonedy, 240 West Sixty-first Street, Chi- cago. -t Loo mutive Bagineor. GRADUAL AND-. CAREFUL PROMOTION Terms of Ay nt on In- tell reritloenhip Depo co and Appliention—Tae Kaps ture of the Buy, the Roaliza tion of the Man, FROM ENGINE PIT TO CAB Progressive Stews in the Training of a|li | the glad sunlight again, the verdant valley stretching away below, the high hille lifting thelr hoary erests above, 1s apt to impress one with the awful grandeur of God's world | 80 that he will carry that impression through A very small percentage of locomotive en- gineers become railway offcials. It promo- | tion comes to the engineer he s usually pro- {moted to the office of traveling engineer. The duty of this officer Is to go about over the road to see that the engines are made to work o thelr full capacity, and to sco that | the enginemen do not abuse the engines or | waste the supplies. The traveling engineer usually recommends firemen for promotion While rallway rules permit the promotion of firemen in accordance with the length of time they have sorved in that capacity, the SoAP RIGHT rule i= not always applied; and it should not Bvery boy. arrived at a certain age, | be One man will learn as much in a year wishes to take part in the work of lll\";“" '! will in ten . nd all H.;." ) not make good enginee Then, agatn, it a man HERwICHE I going on about hm. | Toi el g diseipation ho is not, and should Many desire to become locomotive en-f ot b promoted In his turn gineers, but few of these understand how | There is a vast improvement from year to | hard and how lcng is the way to gratifica rallway employes as a class, morally | tion of that ambition. They may be stk GO L TR o pleased to read my experience, which | to ba a good train or engineman is like the experlence of man man who | the men who now enter the railway | | has worked his way from the cornfield to | scrvice are more intelligent than th who the cab of a locomotive, says a writer In | Sousht i employment fitteen oF twenty I Phutnm cavapan | years ago. = The traveling engincer is often | \'s Companton | promoted to the position of master mechanic; | | My first railrca In the humble | from that place to superintendent of motiv | capacity of a water for the gralers | power, and sometimes he becomes superin- | | on the Vandalia rca in Illinols, where | tendent of the road or general ma | my father had a contract. Finally Ty s ! THE SILVAR SYNDICATE. | grade was completed and the constru | g tion train came along behind the first | Cornering the White Mital Proves an kx. | loc otive 1 had ever seen. pensive Job, | Ot course I was deeply pressed with A Washington dispatch to the Chicagy Pos its grandour. Every boy gazes at a loco- | says w th ition has been directed motive with rapture partly compounded of [to the busincss motive behind the silver fear. It boys playing foot ball hear the |38 .\ WLl LeL] Al f cts are g lmwl.:nl‘ tik el el oo ol SO Pl ght every day, and people are wonder whistle of an engine they will stop and || ¢ how they could have heen %o dumb and look. A boy swimming, who is supposed | biind as not to have covered what was to forget everything, will turn and swim on | really behind the movement ince the pur- his back and watch the train go by, chase of silver by the Lt |;'”\ :'lewli # 4 L[ two years ago the production of that meta Our farm lay near the railroad, Just at| "% 3900 S8 Gt P Sroximated §115,- | the end of a hard pull. From the fild [000,000. The dircctor of the min. is au hority where 1 werked during my youthful years | for the statement that there been no im I could see the fireman at his furnac portant fncrease in the ame of silver hil fant 1 put into manufactured articles, hard times | while the great black steed tolled slowly | having cut down the trade. The net expor's up the hill with half in of cars behin the fiscal year 1804 were $24,000,000, and her. I never locked with envy at the en- |the net exports of the fiscal year 1804-5 will gineer. If [ could be a fireman, I tnougat, | Approximate §35,000.000. Possibly $10,000.000 my cup of happiness would be full has gone into manufactures and arts, whic It is not an casy matter without influ- [ Would leave a surplus in bullion at the end entlal friends to get employment on a rafl- [ Of the precent mcnth on the record of the | road, especially if the applicant happens to | '8t (W0 yetro L Neten el vot besh have hayseed In his hair or milk on his |Stantial character ot titset i sttty | §lias 3 tisputed but it is just as well to fortify | shoes. When the brakeman, who is the | (EBREE VO 0 i ormation as can be paid elocutionist of the train crew, wishes [ [WEH! (E SUCH > it to humiliate a fellow werkman, he in- [ "Rt (o 4y arefore no doubt that the variably calls him a farm o greater | oY belng carried by the combination is insult can be oftered to a brakeman | substantially as given, and the amount is I had lived a quarter of a century and | yoiy nerensed at the rate of between falled n lalt a dozen business ventures|gogio oo and §3,000000 per month. The | whenpd cedileds toligo Srallioading, "“"‘41 price of silver is cheap, or at least it woull prepared to aczept th humblest position, 3 wanted, The wiper's work is not very arduous, ex cept for the long inthe evening to i9 disagreeable work. in the pit under the and dreary hours, from 6 fn the morning. But it You have to get down comotive reeking with oil, and wipe the machinery clean and dry with bunches of w All this time you are obliged to inhale the awful fumes of the toreh you carry! If you are faithful and patient you be promoted to the day shift in six r may nths. Here you perform the same work, but without the torch, and you sleep of nights. By and by you are promoted again to the posit of engine watchman There are from twenty to fifty locomotive in the roundhouse, and it i duty to keep water in steam up to move th e in case one Is wanted in a hurry. Befere long the foreman f he thinks you deserve to ba encouraged watchman's and enougl > hours of darkness. use It when he becomes an engineer. he was making over $100 a Road en- a month, but month at $2.40 a day as fireman gineers are pald by the mile mountain miles or eighty-five valley being a day’s work. Thus, when Is good, the engine crew month, The man on‘the night yard engine goes through the same stages of promotion that the fireman went through, until at last he finds himself at the throttle of a road en gine with another increase in pay and a corresponding Increase in responsibility, but with less real hard work to perform. On some roads a man must, I believe, serve a time in the shops as helper and machinist before he can hope to be promoted to the position of engineer, This is not absolutely necessary, for the reason that the en- gineer Is not requiréd to keep the engine in where the engineer whose engine needs re pair writes its number, what he wants done and his name. If he is not quite sure about the disease he may make a rt like this: “Examine right steam chest The foreman will set a machinist to work who, nine times out of ten, will locate the trouble in a very short time, Even when promotion comes rapidly it takes from four to six years to work from the whipping gang to the cab, but these years are not wasted. Every day and every hour you become more and more acquainted with the various parts of the great iron horse till at last the knowledge picked up in these years of toil serves to make up the sum of your education as a locometive engineer. The years seem sur- prisingly short, for there is always the hope that springs eternal to lure you on. The life of an engineer 15 fascinating especially where the road lies along the banks of a beautiful stream, or over grand mountains. Here at every curve a new pic ture (s spread before him. To reach the summit of some high mountain at sunrise, to look down the winding trail which he must travel and see the blue-gray cloud lying across the track; to dash through the cloud out lato long as it was in the path that led to the | geances, but the situation with the silver throttle. I presented some strong lotters f ket at the present time milar in to the master mechanic of the Denver & 1y respects to the wheat market during Rio Grande, at Salida, Colo., a clerk wrote | last four or five years. There was a my name and address in a large book, say on of overproduction, the resuit of ing that he would call me when I was was that the trade had to carry a wanted. I began to think I would not b | surplus through a back-breaking for I had to wait a month or more | vhen the caller came one evening and told | y,ctjon, The lowest prices of a hundred me to report to the night foreman ars followed; all the way dow m §1 in- First I joined the wipers, a gang of ha stors stepped nd helped carry the sur- a dozen men whose business it to clean | ylus because the price locked very low the engines up when they come in from the | prohably $100,000,000 o road. This gang is made up of three clazses | 1, hulls in wheat during the last four years -old men who are mot strong enough to | tnat amount having been sunk rying perform heavier work; young and delicate | jronarty for which there was no mark youths; strong .young men who expect to| ' go with sily he price looks very low become firemen when their names are |,y the capitalists and producers who are reached. putting their money into it fully belleve that will put you on a yard engine as fireman, [ “7'3 alane AL MR This ‘Will ‘take you bick to night work, but | 4mplion, whereas In sliver the dlement of step forward and the work is light. | /P°C on B 5 . SpHOrNATQranthe wone. be considerel. In t ase it will be neces day engine, and again you feel th AL AR LR R L u see the sunlight; it gives you cou them out. Thls is a most uncertaln quan- you are glad to be free of night work. I ™ SRE 0RO LG TidTiaance. the crowa do not know (of anything that will embllter & ) will. have ‘lett: uponi its liands twenty-four man’s life and sour his disposition so sw LR e on BYo i€ 1001000.000 8o th Lot and surely as working weeic after week | oR BOM TR SCE S e o avtive de track, aide ks B inem coaled. . the | Silver milliovaires {a in Feality o better than f;m cleaned and then runs them into the|® crowd of gold millionaires. stalls in the roundhouse. In this work | s—————— . he becomes familiar with each and every engine on the division, and if he is ob- serving he will retain this knowledge and The next promotion takes the hostler back to the night yard engine; this time as engineer. His pay' is now $3 a day or $00 orty-four miles business makes forty and fitty, and once in a while sixty days in a repair. Most master mechanics will tell 5 6olo American Aguzia, Claeianail, Chie, you that the machinist is not always the I o ¥ VR s bl best ‘“‘runner.” There is a book called the work book ) | be considered cheap under ordinary circum- period until consumption could overtake pro- ould not pay the losses it will go no lower, and that when the metal receives the ‘“recognition’ which by some process of mind they figure it is entitled to s of the gov nt they expect to realize enormousiy on their investments. When the combination went into the deal it is doubtful it many of the members thought it would grow to the size it has already From present appearances it woull look as though they were hardly fairly embarked in the enterprise. Two years have elapsed and the combination finds itself under $55,000,000 vorth or nilver bullim. The earliest they can expect relief is two years, and by that time they will Le carrying ot the metal; that Is, they w f they can last that long. ““Cornering" eilver Is a good deal | rering” wheat, except that in the case of heat it is always fairly safe to calcula ertain ascertained facts with regard to con figured down to a fine point, a crowd of We Offer YOU A REMEDY Which Insures Safety to Life of Mother and Child “ Mothers’ Frignd” Robs Confinement of its Pain, Horror and Risk. MOT FIRIEND " be- her tirst cinlld —ha Amps—was quickly ro- od—suffering but little—no pains afterward— recovery rupld E. E. JOUNSTON, Eufals, Ala. £ Sent by M Express,on receipt of prl #1.00 per botile, Book “ToMot, atldd ¥ BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, GA. Sold by all Drugglsts. ~ 0 1a 11 French E N Romedy CALTHOS frse, and 4 M 1ozl guarantoo cha Tios will = TOP Diacharges & Einfsstor (~BE CURE snmrmatorrhoa, s oricoc RE Lost Vizon ud pay if satisfied. Ofl MOHL CO., Use it Address, “CUPIDENE"” Cures the effects of | self-abuse, excesscs, | emissious, impotency. | varicocelé and constl | l. tion. One doll " hox, six for §5. For gale by THE GOOD- MAN DRUG CO., and KUHN & CO, OUSEWIVES USsEeE Sold evepywhere wade by THE NKFAIRBANK COMPANYevicag- L0ST VIGOR When in doubt what ous Deb f Sexual Power (in eith . Loss of Sexual Power (in cither el Tmpency y nd othee weaknesses, from any cause, use Sexine Plls. | Dra and full vigor quickly restored. 1f neylected, Such every 6 T we give & legal Luarantes 16 cire maney, Address SHERMAN & McCONNFLL DRUG CO .. 1513 Dodge Hll‘(“(‘l, Omaha, Neb. (i e e [ ) | e o e The Average Man who suffers from headaches and ] biliousness nceds a medicine to keep his stomach and liver in good work- ing - order. For such people Ripans Tabules fill the bill. One | tabule gives relief, Ripan's T i tho_pric pans Chemical Company, e s o bules: 8old by druggl (50 cents a box) I8 e No. 10 Spru or by mail to The Ri- st, N. Y. ] A B 6 O R ) B o O B THR Palace Office Building OF OMAHA. INCANDES CEN T ELECTRIC LIGHTS NOTA D ARK | OFFICE ROOM . PEAFECT IN ANY PART YNTILATION through t \d in this country. In their sober 1) he road, and now you a real fireman. | ground of this deal, who are p Sotinels NIGHT AND DAY You are assigned a regular locomotive, and | illions” of dollars, must realize that they | L youNaTe u;(p-l‘l'\';|‘[“) keep syervhing cl a0 | have engaged in an extra hazarlous under | and in order—that s, everything above the | :aking, and one that will require sustained | o Slie Dox-i. Eiak board Whith o WHL|opnE A e N N e esiis aod vere BUILDING. ; 5 ELEVATOR see on all locomotives, extending from the [ 001 fortune to bring to a successful out- Ve 3 3 cab along the side of the boiler to the front | came. The Bee Bulldiug. SERViCE end. On mountain roads, ten years The discovery of the full facts relating to wipers, watchmen and all roundhouse helpers | this silver conspiracy will not tend to adl to Were pald $1.75 @ day, firemen on yard en- | tho popularity of the frce coinage crusade DIRECTORY OF OCCPUANTS. gines $2 and engineers $3. Firemen on road [ The masses may decline to stay enthused BASEMENT FIOOR. engines recelved $2.40 a day and engine ver a question which involyes primarily the | GEE BUILDING BARBER SHOP, "Fred.| H. W. COWDUROY, Buffet, $1; but eastern roads do not pay nearly fortunes of a handful of rich mine owners | Buelow, Proprietor. R 1. CAMPDELL, Court Kotunda, Clgara well. 1 know of half a dozen ra - [ ana “speculators merely. ' The glamour which | FIDELITY TRUST' COMPANY, Mortgago | and Tobacco ™ © /05 P oo dents who began at less than ow surrounds the hurrah discussion may | Leans. = ERE _OMAHA LOAN AND BUILDIN 3 A ZAM JENEDICT, [ ASSOCIA i . M. Another great advantage the men of the west f ev \‘ylurnln when it ’1)”'» mey fim'-vr(lyll_v ”I“J| - ‘\l:;l‘l‘rl‘x;‘h}‘d lf‘)‘ n‘rw‘x-"fi?ui nfi' _‘lmlp{le‘lL’l m'_b OCIATION, G. M. Nattinger, Secre- had at tht timo was tnat they iitag | ntaoiktnat it matlyes highiare Liussiclo rOREST LAWN CEMETERY ASSOCIA- | MUTUAL LOAN AND BUILDING ASS0- rule, less than three years iremen, though | tho er agitation are quite as sordid as | TION. CIATION. now on eastern roads men commonly fire from | those controlling Wall strect, which, eccording Y (l\"n to ten years. But the west was then [to popular belief, is the head center of the wlick Lo FIRST lvhoou: Auveleptug rapidly, and new roads were being | machinations of a terrifyihg gold conspiracy | DR BUSINESS OFFICE d Y. W. CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION. built every year. of some sort, the horrifying details of which | AMERIC Q\'f'u\\'\fi“ H},fi{{glxfilfifi)i\}m \’.l M|‘(h A. 8. CONVERSE, Beauty Culture ' v o ’ he fire- | are vague hintel at by such orators as TENDIS BEE JILDING. gom. A 2 AL the end, ey of e stion Tns | Bryan and_ Peffer and Tillman. Theso dis. N UNION TELEGRAPH OF-| & %' PARDEE, Agent Fort Wayno Bleo: mux't‘lnlf‘inkm\ the engines from the coal | closures will go far to show that, when It is 3 SECOND FLOOR. . RE DR. KINSLER, Nos ABSACHL UAL LIFE IN-| DIt CHNHERY ROgiWar it JRANCE, CO 4 HAREMAN & ROBBIN c S D) - S HARTMAN, Tnspector Fire CtiisTIAN READING | EQUITABLL LA NS CHANCE b ROOX IETY, J. W. SQUIRE, Loans. D & BECKET, s ErORGH B TURKINGTON, Attorney-at- . ERENBERC Mr'.iry-‘f,"’flunnm Law. . 'A. K. DETWILLER. THIRD FLOOR. W. A. WEBSTER, Real Estate. HUGH MURPHY, Contractor, IQUTY COURT, Room No, 6. J A WAKEFIELD. Lumber, R. W. PATRICK, Law Office. PROVIDENT SAVINGS LIFE ABSURe UNITED STATES LIIE INSURANCE CO. ANCE SOCIETY OF 2W ", M. R. TRA ) N, Attorne; THE GRANT ASPHALI ?A N :QUITY COURT, Rooms No. g’nml 1. SLAGOLITHIC CO. LE PAYVING hed B, l“Vv BIMERAL, WM .SIMERAL, Law V".l\l.\\lll;‘\‘ "B ASBSBOCIATIC Offices. "ROVID! LIFE AND TRUST COM. VIAVI COMPANY. PANY, Dhiladeiphia, W. 1. Aloxanden General Agent. o OURTH FLOOR. NASON & NASON, Dentlsts. BTANDARD ACCIDEN N/ lli \I‘“l(/ 11 1]\[ 3 'K\;gl‘ll" : |; ok . ‘A.U . Percy B, Ford, Ag:rut IYSURANCE TAC C LAD , Poruand, Oregon, IMOHA COAL EXCHAN C. K. ALLEN, Alpha Council No. 1 Wood- | DR. HANCHET, il man of the 'World. DEXTER L. THOMAS, Real E: PACIIIC MUTUAL LIFE AND ACCI- IMA” J. DAVIE o DENT INSURANCE CO. Jat D TS co, t, HOWARD & CO, Fire In- ITLE AND INDEMNITY GO, . Court Stenog TOMAS, Re r LANCE Cco, , Clvil Engin 18 & CO., Solici ors of Patents, LIFE INS PIFTH FLOOR. ARMY HEADQUARTERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE PLATTE. SIXTH FLOOR. BATES & SMITH, Mortgages and Loans. STATE MTORIAL, ROOMS, w IMPOSIN ROOM. INDOR Architeet RN M PPINTIN ROGGEN, Life Insur MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCECS,, pecater, Masi. Frank E. Hartigan, Geat UFACTURERS AND CONSUMERS JCIATION. MA A OFVICE | BEVE V’l‘il FLOOR. ROYAL ARCA NLM LODG: 3 ROOMS. AT THE el LADIES’ BATH AND TOILET PARLORS 109-110 Bee Building, A FULL LINE OF MME. YALE’S COSMETICS. L 3 \ ik f \ 4 4 A b [\ 1 -~ 4 i 5 - B N~ o ¥ d 4 \ ’