THE SCBANTOX TRIBUNE SATURDAY HORNING, AUGUST 17, 1805. Career of Omar Pasha, , Oriental Adventurer. Born a Christian, He Became a Follower Of the Prophet If we want to find the true type of (he adventurer, we must go to Oriental countries. The name of Omar Pasha, which wa no often pronounced during the Crimean war. Is not yvt forgot teik, though very few people know much about th commander of the TurkUh troops during this memorable period. Me nvade his appearance in history sur rounded by such names as Chose of Lord Kaplan, of iMarshal Saint-Arnaud, of Marshal Canrubert. His Ufe before the great days of the Crimean war reads like a novel; It has Just been written by M. Georges CUulls, from notes furnished by the private doctor of the Turkish commander, a Swiss who entered the sanitary nerviee of the Ottoman army, and who ended his life in Serayevo, before the entrance of the Austrians Into Bosnia. Omar's real name was Michael Lat tas. He was born In the Christian orthodox faith. In 1S06, In the village of Tanya-tiara, In Croatia. Ills father belonged to the Austriau administra tion. Michael Lilt Us entered a school of cadets and wis attached at the age of eighteen to the cihancellerle of the staff at Ooaplch. Soon afterwards he deserted, .for reasons which remain ob scure or unknown. He somvtfim-s al lege! that a Herman oltlcer. who hated the Slavs, ordered him, for u slight fault, to be beaten for three hours with a cord. It has. been said that his father incurred a condemnation .which brought dishonor on his name. The deserter entered Uosnia during the night, determined to enlist in the Turk lsh army and to go to Constantinople, lie had not. a penny, and knew nobody. The Bosnians, fortunately ifor him, had remained faithful to the patriarchal laws of ihoapltHlity: he was received by a bey named Michael, and worked on Ms farm. He wvnt from .place to place, working In a hundred different ways for his bread, but he soon perceived that there was no chance for him to rise from the obscurest station if he did not assume the turban: he became a neophyte, had himself converted by a hodja, and took the name of Omar LuftL Once a Mohammedan, he 'became the preceptor of the children of his master, und remained with them for two years at Banyaluka; he then leift Bosnia, and at Widin he became the drawing mas ter of the sons of Ibrahim Pasha, the commander of the fortress. It was the beginning of his fortune, as Ibrahim was an advanced Turk, who adopted Occidental ideas. Omar became ac quainted with old Chrosreff. the Grand Vizier, a Turk of the old school who attached him to the topographic bureau of the army. There he remained from ISM to 1S34. engaged in technical works, and studying the French. Italian, Per sian and Arabic languages. He mar ried In 1S34 the daughter of a colonel, who got him appointed professor of technical drawing at the military school, with the rank of captain. One day the Sultan Mahmoud visited the military school, saw the new professor and learned of his adventures, and the next day Omar, summoned to the Im perial palaces, was informed that he had become a major, and was ti be the writing master of the heir pre sumptive. Prince Abdul-Medjid. He was now on the road to honors; In 1SJ6 he was lieutenant colonel; two years after, colonel; In 1839, when his pupil a.wnded the throne, he was made brigadier general and pasha. He had never appeared before an army when he was thus made general at the age of thirty-three; neverthe less, we And him in 1S42 taking part in a campaign in Syria; in 1843 com manding a brigade in Albania; in 1S45, a division general in the Lebanon, put ting down an insurrection. He is em ployed in Kurdistan and with 12.000 men makes a rapid campaign and ob tains a victory; on his return he is made field marshal, and becomes the hero of the day, the hope of Turkey; he is looked upon as a paciflcador, to use a Spanish expression. He is a favorite of the Sultan, who gives him a fine estate at Scutari. The foreign ambassadors forget his origin; the rene gade and deserter is sunk in the com mander of the Turkish forces. All the Polish and Hungarian refugees solicit and flatter him. He lives like a real Turk, and has preserved only the pas sion for wine. In 1849 the spirit of revolution blew all over Europe. Prince Bibeaco was turned out of Bucharest; Russia and Turkey entered both the principalities. Rus sia occupied Moldavia and Omar Pasha was tent to Wallaehla. He entered Bucharest without fighting, and re mained there for two years, leading the life of a sovereign, courted 'by the old boyars as well as by the 'Liberals, one of whom even wrote a pamphlet in which It was proved that Omar had as much right to the throne of .Rumania as a Ghika or a BLbesoo, as the Lattus were descended from Latus, a Roman centurion. It was in Bucharest that Omar became acquainted with a Ger man governess, who was converted by Mm and changed her name to the Oriental name of Zubeldah. He took tier with him to Constantinople, and their mutual affection was such that she accompanied him In 1850 In a two years' campaign In Bosnia. Omar had to fight there an old feudal aristocracy very warlike and Independent. The tieserter of 1828 entered Sersyevo at the head of 10,000 men and lived there, sur rounded with Asiatic pomp. During his expeditions tie once entered the house where he had been a domstic; he loaded with presents the son of his former master. He triumphed over su perior forces with his irregular basht hazuks and Albanians; he gradually disarmed the population, Mussulman as well as Christian; he commenced en expedition against 'Montenegro, but was checked by Austrian mediation. A larger field of action was preparing for him. In 1853 the Russian armies crossed the Pruth, and Omar had now on enemy worthy of him. He received the command of the whole Turkish ormy. From Shumla he sent word to 1'rlnee Oortchakoff to evacuate Turk ish soil. On his refusal, he placed 100,, 000 men on the right bank of the 'Dan ube, in front of 70,000 Russians. The Orst Important engagement took place at Oltenltza, between Rustchuk and Uucharest. Impetuous In attack, Omar did not know how to follow up a victory; ten days after his success at Oltenltza, he retired to "his former positions. He gained another undecisive success at Kalafat, on Jan. , 1804. At that time the allied forces, French and Kngllsh, arrived at'Galllpoll. Omar entered Into communication with the French gener als. The first interview of the three chiefs of the (armies took place at Varna; Omaryeft his camp at Shumla, while Saint-Arnaud and Lord Raglan came by sea. Omar insisted on the necessity of a common action In the Dobrudja; Saint-Arnaud wrote to Mar shal Valllant: "Omar does not deserve all the good or ttie bad that Is raid of hCm. Among us he wouM not be a dMInguVshed man.; but he Is all the more remarkable and useful wmong he Turks In that, I say K sorrow fi'tjy, thoy would And nobody to replace h:m. -Omar has In the highest degree mil itary (nXelllgence; he Is a true soldier; as a general fte has a few sound Ideas with Im possible and incredible. porhlce.1 views. I have," be add, "fathomed the man. His great merH is tihat he t indispensable, mrA he knows it, I have been able to When 43alnt Arnaud brought his army pf 40,000 men to Varna, he held a great review In honor of Omar, who went through the French ranks gravely a fid hardly SJWe to conceal his deep mo at tut atnra ol the eslalfellah- and Achieved Distinction. ment of the camp at Varna, the Rus sians abandoned the siege of Siltstria, which had made a heroic defence. Soma time afterwards the scene changed; the ravages made by the cholera forced the Allies to transfer the seat of war to the Crimea. Omar was left behind on the Danube, and ceased to be in the center of action. He became quite a secondary actor in the great drama which kept the world so long in suspense. After much hesi tation he transported his army to the Crimea; he had about 20.000 men and gained a victory at Kupatorla. When the siege of Sebastopol be,'un, he had nothing to do but to obey the orders of Canrobert. The French, commaaider, Pellssler, who took command after Can robert, showed little consideration for Omar, and treated him almost with contempt so much so that Omar with drew his forces from the Crimea and had himself sent by hi government to the relief of Kurs. Once In Asia, he was alone. Independent; Instead of going from Batum to Kara, he made a diversion in Georgia and marched on Kulais; he had hardly approached this place when he received news of the sur render of Kars. His campaign had been a thorough failure, and his re treat was disastrous and executed In the greatest disorder. On his return to Constantlnople.Omar fell into apparent disgrace. He con soled himself with living In luxury, sometimes at his villa near Scutari, sometimes In his kiosk at Stambul. His domestic affairs, which were too com plicated to be told in detail, occupied him much. On the death of a governor of Bagdad In 1S57, he asked for the post, and it was given to him. He took a little army with him, and conducted it from Aleppo to the Kuphrlates. At Bagdad he administered his govern ment in such a way that he was re called. He returned by way of Mosul and Dlarbekir, and learned on arriving at the latter place that the Sultan al lowed him to live on his estates at Oltenltza. He lived there a while as In a prison, obliged to sell his horses and his wife's jewels. The Sultan was forced to give him a command again when Insurrections broke out In Herze govina, in Montenergo, and In Crete; but he was 111, and could not keep long In the field. He went to Vichy in 1S68 by the ad vice of his doctors. During his journey he saw Napoleon III., the pope, and his old companions of the Crimea. In Vi enna he was presented to the empress and dined at the table of the emporor. He died In 1871, on his return to the Golden Horn, and It Is said that the sultan had the body of the giaour who had fought so often for him sent In a lead cotlin to the coast of Dalmatia, RIf IIES OF THE WORLD. Per Capita the Called States Tskc Fourth Place, tho I'nited Kingdom Leading All Other Nations with ail Average Valua tion or 51.390 Per Head. II Is a common Impression In this country that the United States stand .Suit the head of the nations of the world In the aggregate wealth and the equal ity of Its distribution. This is probably true In the narrow sense that the aggre gate valuation of property in the United States Is larger than In any other coun try, but, according to the Louis Globe-Democrat, it is not true In the sense In which it is generally under stood, that the average wealth per In dividual is greater. If the statistics of European economists regarding their own countries can be accepted as trust worthy. The aggregate for the United States Is larger than for any other country, because the population Is larger than that of other great com mercial nations, but the proportion of wealth to the population Is less than in Australia, Great Britain and France. The figures for Australia, however, are not really Indicative of the wealth held In that country, as the property of the Island Is very largely mortgaged to British capitalists. England stands pre-eminent In the actual holdings of the wealth by her own people. The estimate of the wealth of the United Kingdom of Great Brit ain and Ireland made by Dr. Robert Glffln in 185 was 10.037,000,000. or about $50,000,000,000. The classification of this valuation was about $3,400,000,000 for land, $9,600,000,000 for constructions, $23,000,000,000 for foreign Industrial and national securities and public funds, $5,000,000,000 for English national and public funds and $4,000,000,000 for mov ables and tools of trade. This estimate Is somewhat higher than that made by (Michael D. Mulhall In his "Dictionary or statistics" Tor 1W2. His figures for 1888 are 9.400,000,000, or about $47,000, 000,000, an increase of $1,400,000,000 over 1892, Dr. Giffin's estimates were based primarily on the income tax of Eng lishmen as shown by the Income tax returns, which he proceeded to capital ize at various rates of Interest. Dr. Glffln has given much study to the sub ject and took account of many other elements and much data besides that of the income tax. Highest Per Capita In I'nited Kingdom. The population of the United King dom in 1885 was 36,013.9.17, which would afford an average valuation- of about $1,390 per head, or $$,950 for a family of five. The figures would show a con siderably higher average for England Scotland and Wales if Ireland were ex cluded. The average, even for the United Kingdom, is higher than fot any other country except Australia, where land values are a large element In the reported wealth. This inclusion of land values in thinly settled coun tries, where much of the land Is unim proved, Is subject to more or less criti cism In an effort to ascertain the degree of affluence of the people, and adds greatly to the apparent per capita valu ation of-our own western states, like Nevada, Wyoming and Arizona. The wealth of France Is placed by several of her leading economists at 200,000,000.000 francs, or about $40,000, 000, which affords a valuation or $1,081 per capita, or fl.405 per family of five, France ranks second In wealth among the great commercial nations and shows a much more even diffusion of wealth among the masses than Great Britain. There Is a slight difference between the estimates of M. de Fovllle and those given by Professsor Charles Glde In the last edition of his "Prln cipes d'Economle Politique" as to the classification of French property, but the difference appears to be due to the different manner of setting off negotia ble securities against the property which they represent. Professo- Glde gives $18,000,000,000 In lands, $10.000,000,. 000 In houses, $16,000,000,000 In negotia ble, securities and $4,000,000,000 In mov ables and money, inaklng a total of $48,000,000,000; but he deducts $8,000,000, 000 (40 mlllards of francs) for national securities and mortgages held In France against French property. In order to avoid the duplication of figures. M. de Fovllle, as quoted by Professor Claudlo Janet In "Le Capital, la Speculation et la Finance," gives the figures at $14, 000.000.000 for securities. $16,000,000,000 for land, $8,000,000,000 for buildings and $2,000,000,000 for movables and tools not represented by securities.. Rapid Inereese in Fifty Years. The Increase In the wealth of the great European states has been phe nomenal auring tne last hair century, Land values have contributed consid- f erably to the Increase, but the erection of more and better houses and the cre ation of negotiable securities, repre- sentlng railways and manufacturing industries, have tteen tremendous fac tors. The estimates of Great Britain show an Increase In the value of houses from 366,000.000 in 1SU to 2.e24.O00.000 in 18S7. an increase of about 600 per cent, in a slngie lifetime Some Idea of the increase In France within a gen eration may be Judged from the fact that the annual rental value of build ings was officially computed In 1856 at 512.494.000 franca and In 188 at about five times this amount, dr-!.&7,68,t4 francs. The latter figure represents an annual rental value of about $500,000,000 and an actual vale of nearly $10,000,000,- 000. This estimate Is considered slight ly excessive by professor Paul Leroy 'Heaulieu In his great work, "La Science des Finances," and he is more disposed to accept the total of $8,000,000,000, given by M. de Fovllle. A striking proof of the Improvement In the character of the houses Is afforded by the returns of the window tax in France, which Is levied according; to the number of win dows a house contains. These figures show an actual decrease In the number of houses with one aperture between 1837 and 18S5, and no material Increase In the number of houses with two aper tures, while tiwre is an increase of about 76 per cent., or from 1,845,280 to 3.259,331 in the number ot'bulldlngs with six or more windows. The total in crease In the number of buildings is only from 6.798.151 to 8.975.166, showing a much greater Increase In quality and comfort than in numbers. Russia the Lowest in Karope. The estimates of wealth for other Eu ropean countries are hardly as trust worthy as for Great Britain and France, and show some variations which hardly seem to be Justified by common knowledge regarding the con ditions of these countries. Belgium, which is one of the most active indus trial countries on the continent, and escapes the expense of large arma ments. Is given an average valuation per capita In 18S8 by 'Mr. l.Mulhall of only $835. while Denmark ranks as high as $1,150, and even (Spain Is put at $740. The German empire Is credited with a total valuation of about $32,000,000,000. or $700 per capita, although the aver age earnings of Germans are about 25 per cent, below those of Frenchmen. Italy at present ranks among the low est of highly civilized states, and has suffered of late years under the bur den of bitter party contests, an im mense military establishment, a con stant deficit in the treasury and a de preciated paper currency. The aggre gate wealth of Italy is estimated by ill. Pantaleoni at C4.OOO.0O0.000 francs, or a little less than $11,000,000,000, of which about $6,400,000,000 represents lands. $1,-, 200,000.000 represents buildings and $3, 100,000.000 negotiable securities. This affords a wealth per capita of only $352, or $1,7430 per family of five. cDebts, which do not represent property or which would reduplicate the figures, are eliminated from this valuation. 'Russia ranks low in the scale of wealth, and even her land values are returned at less than those of Germany Her total wealth, according to Mr. Mul hall, was 5.089.000,000, or about half that of Great Britain, in spite of her Immense area and population. Her av erage wealth per head is about $275. Austria-Hungary shows a total wealth of 3.855.000,000, or about $495 per head. Switzerland is supposed to have a val uation of $2,500,000,000. or about $825 per head, ranking below Great Britain and France, but above the other European countries, except Denmark and Hol land. Denmark, however. Is estimated considerably lower by Professor Falbe than Mr. Mulhall, and his figures would give an average valuation per capita of about $1,050, Instead of $1,150. The American Flgnres. The latest figures for the Unite Sttte are contained In the census oi 1. v-0, :ir.d give a total valuation of pnp rrty located in the couhtry of $6o.0.:7. tlf'.i:7. No account is takei r.f negoti able EfUities or of the t$i: that prop, erty may not be owned where located, but all tangible property Is valued In the locality where It Is found. High SUN SPOTS ARE PASSING PLANETS. Recent Wonderful Discoveries Made by Prof . Coles, the Kingston Astronomer. Undoubtedly one of the greatest dis coveries In modern science has Just been made by Professor Charles Coles, of Kingston, who Is well known to readers of The Tribune for his accurate weather forecasts that have appeared in our columns each month, and as the Inventor of the "Electrls Eye," a mar velous combination of the telescope, mi croscope and electric photographic ap paratus. There seems no question that by the aid of the electric eye Professor Coles has succeeded in solving one of the greatest problems that have puz zled modern men of science. . The views of Galileo and others of that day were that the "spots" were on the surface of the sun, and that they were carried around by the rotation of the sun, and such are the views held by Figure 1, showing the sun. and the plan ets (sun-spots) passing over It as they are seen in the photographs. astronomers of the present day. But we have never been told just what the spots are. All the explanations of fered today are as vague and conjec tural as were those of the ancients, and involving as much uncertainty and contradiction. Professor Young says we can look Into the dark center of these sun spots, as Into a funnel, to the depth of prob ably 6.000 miles. All of the great astronomers are unan imous In agreeing that In many In stances where the sun spot Is forming there Is a gradual unveiling of the dark underlying body until the perfect spot Is disclosed. In other cases fiery whlsps seem to leap from behind the dark centers, like flames breaking around and over an opposing obstacle. 'Professor C. Coles, whose wonderful discoveries are surprising!! Christen dom, has discovered, by the aid of his long distance photoscope or electric eye that what Is now known as sun spots are In reality unknown planets passing between the earth and sun. Professor Coles says that these plan ets get in such close contiguity to each other that the Increased voltage of the sun's rays envelopes them In an all em bracing electrical sheen of flame until they appear like a sun within a sun, as shown In large cut marked No. 6." He says: "If you take a large bait and suspend It Into the air a few feet from the ground, then get some one to turn a water hose on it, from the oppo site side, you will get a correct Idea how the sun's rays strike these planets and glance off In all directions, as does the water on the ball, and makes a fiery ap pearance like a great flery monster con tinually changing Its positions." The way in which Professor coles dls- AnvrAit fthM nlanata 4a mm fnllnara About the 15th of-June, while 'the professor was taking pictures of the sun, he saw two spots, as shown In fig ure 1 marked 4 and i, resembling s IF -$r w valuations are placed upon the lands of the western states, so that the per capita valuation of Nevada, Montana, Wyoming and Arizona la several times that of great manufacturing states of the east. If some allowance were made for excessive valuation in these cases and for foreign capital Invested In the United States, a deduction of ft per cent, should probably be made from the reported total. This would afford a valuation of about $1,000 per capita, or $5,000 for a family of five. This valua tion Is very unevenly divided through out the country, but not so unevenly as If the property was reported where owned Instead of where located. Throw ing out -the new states, where high land values afford such excessive val uations per capita, the District of Col umbia stood at the head of the list In 1890 with a per capita valuation of $1, 491. Then came 'Rhode Island, $1.4u; New York. $1,430: Illinois. $1,324; Min nesota. $1,300, and .Massachusetts, $1. 2C2 These lgues contrast sharply w-h thiso nt the southern states, among which the lower were: South Carolina, $34$; 'Mississippi, $35: North Carolina, $361; Arkansas, $403; Ala bama. $412; Louisiana, $443, and Geor gia. $464. BICYCLE ETIQUETTE. Some Things That Need to bo Defined by the Law of Custom. From the Chicago Times-Herald. There has been a good deal written about the professional etiquette of the bicycle, but the feeble few who behave In accordance with the laws of com mon civility are nowhere, pitted against a .great racing clan of barbarians. Nothing pleases an expert rider so much as to whiz in between a gentle man and a lady, riding together, or to crowd in between a lady and the curb, which, if she Is at all nervous, nearly sends her on As for manners, the average bicyclist never had and never will have any. He la, when clad In the ordinary garments of the street, the same "gent" who walks over you in the crowded car, or sits on you. He Is to be avoided everywhere, but when you can't avoid him and he is mounted break him on the wheel. One man of my acquaintance was much annoyed by wheelmen "scorch ers" who passed him on the wrong side of the road. If the left was better, they stuck to It, no matter who might legiti mately claim It at the time as the right, going the other way. The result was, he said, that as he religiously obeyed custom and law, he found himself per petually forced to the bad side of the street. He accordingly one day, seeing a desperate human animal, with a fiend ish expression, shooting his ohln out beyond his handle bars, and with no intention of turning from the wrong stand he had taken, dismounted rapid ly, and planted himself, with the wheel broadside on, directly in front of the oncoming wheeler. A large crash en sued, and the man, cursing and shout ing, came to a good deal of grief. He was so clearly in the wrong, that when the thing was explained to him, he picked up the fragments of himself and wheel and limped away. In dealing with rhe unreasonable, use military per suasion. When they don't do of them selves what they are compelled by law to do, make them by force of others. There will never be any place for res pectable blvyellng until a few examples are made of the lawless. Nothing, aparently, but an Injury to his wheel, can teach the vainglorious, pompous, reckless scorcher any lesson. He cannot see that without whistle, bell, or voice, he has not a perfect right to run amuck through a mixed crowd of men, women, children and carriages, trusting to his speed and nerve to push everything aside. People are learning, however, that he is not as dangerous as he seems, and several of these auto crats have been, by a little firmness and decision on the part of their vic tims, given some glorious falls and a few points In common decency, which lives and lets live. double star, but one was dark and the other light. This he thought was something very unusual, and, focusing the power of the electric eye upon Figure 2 is an enlarged photo of Is'os. 4 and 5, as seen in figure 4. them, he took a snap shot. No sooner had his eye caught sight of the picture than he exclaimed. I have It! I see! These spots are planets unknown plan ets passing between the sun and earth. No. 6 is nearer to the sun than No. 4. and at a right angle to receive the re flections of the sun's rays from planet No. 4, which Illuminates It sufficiently to see Its land and water. As No. 4 passed slowly away from No. 6 he found that No. G became more illuminated. The next morning he took a snap shot at No. C with all the powers of the electric eye. and got photo as seen in figure a. This photo plainly shows land and water, rivers and mountain ranges, and proves beyond a doubt that what Is known as "sun-spots" are really un known planets passing around the sun planetary system that we do not know anything about as yet. This un doubtedly is one of the greatest dis coveries ever made and will immortal ize the name of Coles. WW Figure t shows No. S enlarged so as to show the rivers and mountain ranges. The professor says that "when these planets reach the sun-llne of our earth we onlysee a small portion of them, but they gradually unveil as they near the center of the sun, much like the un veiling of the moon. Numerous plan ets are constantly passing around the sun, and as often as they pass between the earth and sun we feel their dis turbing Influences." Professor C Coles made a bold state ment over a year ago In his remarkable astrological forecast of the sun's eclipse and Challenged the whole scientific world to disprove the theory, that the corona was produced by an Increased voltage of the sun's rays, striking the moon and glancing off In all directions. his challenge has never been dls- proved. In" the Wonderland Of North America. Minneapolis, Minn., July 16. There Ik no more delightful trip than the ten mile electrkj ride between St. Paul and Minneapolis. The traveler pass ing between the two cities finds him self in the one 'before he realizes that he is out of the other, so closely have they grown together in spite of them selves that their suburbs seemed to touch elbows. While Minneapolis lacks the com manding situation of her sister city, St. Paul, she Is rich in picturesiueness and in beauty of environment. Min neapolis is a city modern in tone and progressive in spirit, with a keen ap preciation of the beautiful. This en terprising city Ilea at the Falls of St. Anthony, a site with unexcelled water power. Clustered around these- great falls stand those colossal flouring mills that have been the pride and glory of Minneapolis. Within this city are the largest flouring mills In the world, huge lumber mills and other manufactories, which contribute to its wealth. Minne apolis manufactures more flour than any other city In the world. The dally capacity of Its twenty-five mills is near ly 49,000 barrels, which turned out In 1S93 over nine 'million barrels of flour. The value, of this product was near $43,000,000. An enumeration of the Immense busi ness of one of these many flour mills may be of Interest. We visited Pills-bury-Washburn, No. 1. It Is called "the eighth wonder of the- world." Its ca pacity Is 9,500 barrels dally. That of the five mills is over 22.000 barrels. They require dally 400 freight cars, or twenty trains of twenty cars each, to supply the wheat and remove the flour. It Is said these mills alone could feed two cities as large as Nw York. They run night and day, employing 'I'M hands. As Lumber Si c. As a site for the manufacture of lumber It has no superior. Its fifteen saw mills manufactured In 1893 over 400.000,000 feet of lumber and over 175. 000,000 shingles. These figures furnished by the board of trade seem too enormous for belief. The growth of its manu facturing Interests otherwise since Its settlement In 1849 has been steady and rapid. Minneapolis Is a handsome city, though less than thirty years old. On Its site, though beautiful by nature, much has been done to add to its natural attractiveness. It is much better laid out with broader streets and avenues than St. Paul. The Mississippi river outs It In twain, but being utilized for its great mills loses none of Its scenic attraction. Within Its city limits are a dozen little lakes which add to the beauty of as many handsome parks which cover a total area of 1,500 acres. Lakes Harriet and Calhoun In close proximity are the most popular and beautiful, but 'the residents of both St. Paul and Minneapolis are fortunate In having within easy access two other of the most beautiful of Minnesota's ten thousand lakes White Hear and Minnetonka. They are celebrated for the beauty of their scenery and sump tuous hotel accommodations. The lat ter is appropriately called the "Sara toga of the northwest." Minneapolis vies with St. Paul in public parks and pleasure grounds. The attractive Como park and lake Is a dally resort for the citizens of both cities. The fine turn outs on this pleasant summer evening Is quite remindful of and compares fav orably with Saratoga, Lenox, Newport and other summer resorts that we huve visited,. St. Paul's Formidable Rival. Minneapolis covers an area of fifty three square 'miles. The business blocks are elegant and stately, and the private resldenoes are notable for their beauty. A fact that a large percentage of Its residents own their own homes is wor thy of note. There are rhirty-two compartment houses of most imposing design and architectural beauty. One of. its palatial edilloes Is the great West hotel, which cost with Its elegant furniture $2,000,000. Six dally and two weekly papers are published here. There are nine public libraries and twenty-one social clubs, seven national and twelve state banks, and forty-seven .public schools; eleven railroads center here. It is a pleasure In turning to the religious statistics to be able to state that the city has 172 churches and 175 Sunday schools. Nineteen per cent, of the population attend Sunday school, and in this respect vies with Provi dence, R. J., and Alleghany for the third placeamongall cities of the Union. In the matter of church edifices Minne apolis has one for every 1,200 of her people, while New York has one for every 2,465, Boston one for every 1.C00, Chicago one for every 2,081, St. Louis one for every 2.800 of her citizens, and Brooklyn, N. Y., the City of Churches east, has one for every 1,383. Minneap olis beats the record. Another redeeming feature of this city are the "patrol limits," by which the drinking saloons are confined to the business districts. These limits were established several years ago by rneclal act of the legislature, and to day commands the approval and sup port of the best of the community Irre spective of partisan connections. In politics Minneapolis is strongly Repub lican. The population of the city by the-late census Is 200.000. Sixty per cent, of the voters are foreign born The Scandi navian element Is numerically and In fluentlally strongest. They are a frugal people, owning their own homes. T THREW AWAY THE BEL Mr. William Thornton, of 1 27 W. Market Street, Explains How and Why lie Did It. From the Elmlra Gaxette. Old age has many Infirmities, none' of which are more prevalent than kiilney dis orders. Have you ever noticed how the old people complain of barkuche, lame back, and general UstlessnessT And there are many other symptoms of which they do not speak, such as bloating of the limbs, painful and Infrequent urination or excess tveness of the urinary discharge. Most people think they are too old to find relief and cure, but this Is not so. No better ev idence than the following, which comes from an Elmlra citizen, who has been cured of a very severe case at 77 years of age. Mr. William Thornton, of 127 West Market street, speaks of his case In this way: "I am 77 years old. I have been afflicted with that dreadful complaint (kidney disease) for over ten years, mak ing my old age a burden. I was so bad as to be forced' to carry a belt at all times, and, when my suffering became beyond endurance, I would put on the belt, draw ing it tightly around me and buckle It, thus bringing an extreme pressure over the kidneys; this, undoubtedly, forced the urine out, a function which the kidneys themselves had become too diseased to perform. My condition I put down to a strain 1 received. I began taking Doan's Kidney Pills. I was much surprised, as the aliment was so severe and so long standing, while I had tried many remedies without any relief whatever. The pain I have experienced at times from straining In my efforts to discharge the urine was simply awful. I have done away with the uss of my leather belt, and the pain has all gone, and I recommend Doan's Kidney Pills to all afflicted with -kidney and urinary disorders." ' For sale by all dealers, or sent by mall an receipt of price by Foster-Mllburn Co., Bulale, N, Y solo agents for the V. S. .. - ;.. ' . . i Pen Pictures by an Old Traveler of Picturesque Minneapolis. As a residence city It has no equal a home for every five Inhabitants. Un like St. Paul the city obtains its water supply from the Mississippi river. While Minneapolis owes its primary exist ence to rhe fine water power afforded by the Falls of St. Anthony the high moral tone of the city Is due to the early settlers from New York and Puri tan New England, a feature as notice able as in Scranton and Honesdale. J. E. RICHMOND. THE LATEST EL DORADO. llamMn Garland Describes Ills Impres sions of Cripple Creek, Col., and Tells How One Has to Travel to Get There. One morning at 5 o'clock the mist and the clouds began to break In the west, and up Into the clear air the crown of Pike's Peak rose, gleaming with snow, clear cut as carved marble against the blue sky. The streams, bank full, came singing down Vhe gulches, and the teamsters of the roads were merry as bobolinks or the toads singing in the pools. Great scarfy rolls of cloud lay along the middle heights, and spots of lesser clouds crept slowly round the higher peaks, like weary birds seeking resting place after the-storm. To the east all was dark, gray, forbidding. On such a morning I went from Colorado Springs to Cripple Creek over the Mid land railway, which runs through the Ute Pass, keeping Pike's Peak on rhe loft. It was a magnificent ride. The train climbs constantly, attaining at Divide a height of 10,000 feet above the sea. From Divide we turned sharply to the left, circling the great peak, stop ping nt GllleBt and Orassy. At Glllett are a couple of "chlorlnatlon mills," for the reduction of ore, and a race track. One of the hlxhest race tracks In the wurld, I suppose, 10,(W0 feet above the sea. Glllett was for a time the terminal of the Cripple Creek branch of the Mid land and is locaited In a beautiful moun tain meadow, with smooth green slopes o the west and the rugged foot-hills of Pike's Peak to the east. In a Genuine Old Stage. At Grassy we took stage for Cripple Creek. It was the real thing. An over land stagfe which held nine Inside and six on top, and which was "too low for a tall man and 'too narrow for a fat man, end a h of a place to put a woman anyhow." And yet it once car ried thousands of passengers from east to west. It was drawn by six lean, hunched, incredibly strong mountain horses. Not exactly bronchos, but near it. The road was muddy and steep and the stage rolled till the woman shrieked and the fat men clung to the hickory framework. We could hear the cruel swish and vicious pop of the whip, but could see little. A row of boots hung over the roof, a movable ballast which probably saved us from overturning. When 'the vehicle lurched to the left the boots shifted to the right, to the wild cries of those within: "Shift yer ballast!" There came a time when -the hill grew steeper, and most of the passen gers alighted to walk up the long slope. Then began painful puffing and whistling and explosive cries. The rare air demanded the utmost expansion of the lungs, and the tenderfoot walked with wide-open mouth and Toaring breath. A sharp pain came Into the chest. I, for one, felt as if I had been running a long distance In zero-cold air. My lungs seemed seared and my pulse throbbed painfully. First View of Cripple Creek. We topped the swell at last looked away over Cripple Creek. At first sight It seemed a handful of yellow blocks sprinkled in the warm hollow between smooth, grassy, gray-green hills. Be yond it ranges of brown foothills and blue ranges of secondary mountains lead to the Sangre de Crlsto range of mou;iUln peaks, white with snow, soft as the clouds Just above them and more than 14,000 feet high. The wholle pros pect was of the" most gigantic magni tude, yet it possessed the delicacy in coloring of a flower. The wind, pure as the snowy peaks, came amiably over the smooth, sunny slopes, making the blood rush like a gal loping horse. Clouds, wind and sun shine strove together to make the hour memorable. The setting of this town of mingled glory and Infamy must, therefore, be said to be most magnifi cent. All about on the rounded slopes wrere prospectors' pits and dumps of reddish or terra cotta rock. Every hillside was pitted with these broken out in a sort of terra cotta rash, with here and there a windlass with a blue denlmed miner winding wearily. Fur ther down stream holsters were at work. Occasionally blasts boomed forth like the sound o( cannon. Most of the pits and trenches are the wotk of prospectors. Others are tiade to show In making a claim. Some of them ore mines. We passed by several of these shafts where men were work ing with pick and shovel In the good old way, pushing out or winding out by hard their buckets of rock. Others had horses and a very handy "power" for lifting the carrier. Gold seeking Is Paromonnt. Entering the stage again, we whirled with some flourish into the town. At near view It was a singular collection of buildings. 'Here was an old log ranch house, there a shock, half tent and half cellar, and beyond an ambitious brick block. Everything looked like a camp, and so It Is called. "When did you come to camp?" they ask, instead of using the word town or city. The camp, we'll say, Is less than four years old and looks to be newer than that. It swarms with people; all sorts of people. Englishmen in helmet hats: Scotchmen In visor caps; miners In tall laced boots and clay-covered hats; cowboys with sombreros; capitalists and professional men In smart clothing, and prospectors In sagging gray shirts and shaggy beards, just down from the higher altitudes. At the hotel, before the big fireplace, snapping with fierce energy, they gather to talk of mines nothing but mines. In the first half hour I heard again and again these phrases: "It's running well." "He took out $100,000 last month." "They struck It again on Globe Hill tpday." "Started from the grass roots and struck It at an angle." "Some of it runs and some of It don't." , On the counter hty a big hunk of gray rock which sparkled - with precious metal not In color of gold, but of sil ver. In everything I was minded that ordinary affaire were far oil and gold asking vary present thing. xmo That Insists upon keeptnititockol E23WS 03 EjI In the house? Whv tttm wit mrMimr Rmiiu ifc taken internally it cures la a few minutes, r-M. o - u Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, Dbrrhf-) nuuntarw CiauM CimkU Colic, Flatulency and all internal nates. uums naif a teaspoontui in nan a tumbler of water. Used MturfMltB W arill rmm thaiautlui Neuralfta, Mosquito Bites, Sunn oi Insects, CianLwu D ; h r. .11. , uiuuiu, Druixs, ourns, acaius, uougns, Colds and all threat troubles. way's rills, will cure Fever and Ague; Ma- kuiuus, raiious ana other fevers. fifty Ceits a Battle. SsUftyBmi BAD WAY 4k CO., Mew Tests. RAD WAY'S Purely vetetsbto, mild ud reliable. Oraw perf.ut disMtioo. eompUte aMlmlUtloa sad healthful regularity. Cure couilpatioa atxl Its long IIM of nnpleasut symptom sad reia veaste Us system. . at eeato box All drag- EVA M. HETZEL'S Superior Face Bleach, PotltUilj Rtmoies ill Facial Blualih No more Freckles, Tan, Sunburn, Black (loads. Liver Spots, Pimples and Bellow Complexions if ladles will use my Su perior Face Bleach. Not a cosmetic, but a medicine which acts directly on the skin, removing all dlscoloratlons, an one of the greatest purifying agents for the complex ton in existence. A perfectly clear and spotless complexion can be obtained In every instance by its use. Price, SLSO per bottle. For sale at E. M. Hetsel's Hair dressing and Manicure Parlors, SM Lack awanna ave. Usil orders nuea ressptiy. The twit VMtfnff niMf svll.k A.,! the greatest value of any fiooHen'a Shoes on the continent Best calfskin, dongola tops, solid leather soles, with all the popular toes, lasts and fastenings, and Lewis' Cork Filled Soles. Each pair contains a paid-up Acci dent Insurance Policy for 1 100, good for DO days. Wear Le wis'Aecldent Insuranoe Shoes once and you will never change. The insurance goes for "full measure,' Talk with your dealer who sails Lewie Bhoes. FOR SALE AT Globe Shoo Store 227 LICK. ME, SCRMTM, ft EVANS I POWELL, Prop'n Gq?!!:i PrssrnJ DR. HIBRA'S i VI0LA CREW SesMves Fteildeo. Plgistes. ijLgi- m pijioQ BlealdieMe. ieakera "auJ Tea, and re tons the skin to Its orlgl aml faeshMSL producing a tesr in aeaiuy slaxlan. Rmwrtor tAllllioa fmeastloM and .perfectly hsmlest, At all foalina, or nailed lor locta. lead lor Cirealae; VIOLA tXIN SOAP to m i Ml O.C. ITTNC tealehy Matthews I and Jo DID. 9f n6 Mntmv Mi siwnoLifiHflfa CATARRH KEADACKE'SfH inuun will n worn. A yoneerral sooa UntMM fraaCeMe, store Thr, immnHmU mui. AaaBairaS "7 " nr. WfiTntMl to awry faint MUoajunateaS or sweey nfnM Ini vy&miim heiithoTu tLts BALI! IHurbTiiaUrDaK. Adern i rpr sale by Matthswa Broavnng JeM H. PhniDe. lEUNYnOYAL PILLG r. unlaw) YesiafjsWtfths)ft XMsf) sBsyesl wi cum eivt 'TiareTtoi Come mnd tee ut mieui At Won you try netm -t ALWAYS W'teCjpp' sta i ii i" a R4 COMTouoo.OL esTWsitrsw mmmr ' VWW RMMFM1IMMWMBHIV W K wll Mat WW fmkmSj i f TiiwiKllMWin lw fs -au3r a rn - mn rMMcMrOMiM sM tr mhhi Dcmim m m 7