tv fv b VJ 1 i i - THE EYE THE WINDOW OF THE SOUL Walter Irwin M O The eye which can look and laugh and dance and love and hate and sneer that can woo and wound suc cumb or subjugate retreat or triumph Is indeed the window of the soul and must be free from defects which pervert the images pictured on the brain or all our relations to the ex ternal world are changed The spright ly step becomes slow and halting fa miliar faces pass without recognition the appearance of vigor is quickly changed to that suggesting decrepi tude when vision fails Happily In the march of science the needs of the eye have not been overlooked This intelligent speaking organ as It be gins to fail can be misfitted abused and ruined or it may be fitted with correct lenses and preserved to ex treme old age Eyes of Children Do you sometimes feel discouraged that your little one does not seem to do better in school Does the child seem awkward in its play stumbling ovor objects which other children avoid Do you sometimes f eel that tjere is Eoxnethiiig wrong wfUi the child and that it must be stupid If so I want to say to you as a careful observer of children that many times the sjmptoms described ore due en tirely to defective eyesight In many of the eastern cities prac tical tests have recently been made of the eyesight o children in the pub lic schools and it was shown that a much larger percentage or dullness could be attributed to defective vision than was thought possible heretofore The Wearing of Glasses A few years ago It was considered almost a disgrace to wejSr glasses it was almost as much as a gtrlTs majzl nionial chances were worth to appear with them on Spectacles were con sidered a mark of deformity or of old age and you seldom found a young person willing to wear them no matter how badly the glasses were needed But fortunately for those who are compelled to wear them Dame Fashion came to the rescue and set the seal of her august approval upon them and lo all was cnangea Glasses became the fad and many a dainty patrician nose submitted to the tiny golden yoke and many a pair of lovely eyes quite free from any de fect in sight looked out upon the world through the little glass panes and their fair owner went on her way rejoicing in the knowledge that she was in the fashion up to her eyes This fad however had its day and glasses were laid aside by those who really had no need of them but the fashion had done good as it had paved the way for those less fortunate who i V OS found them quite essential to their comfort and well being Possibly the day will never come again when glasses will be considered disfiguring In fact popular opinion has changed and glasses are now regarded as lend ing quite a distinguished appearance to the countenance Possibly this is due to the fact that they are worn by so many professional and business men who follow clerical work and who have invested glasses with a dig nity in the eyes of the public and have helped to do away with the prejudice that once existed Defective eyes cannot in all cases be cuved but they can be generally assisted by the proper treatment or the use of glasses although to say that everyone who notices anything wrong with their eyes as smarting watering redness quivering of the lids etc is in need of glasses Is like saying that everyone who limps needs crutches whether he may have a broken leg or a corn on his toe The accusation is sometimes made nowadays that people are given glasses when it is not necessary that children never used to wear glasses and they got along just as well The wise parapi jp jjt Inwjnced by any HfcfefeBgf fggfegq 3SSfc WW materfaji e3oifc Shj future USe of his offspring tjf h SaKe that more children ffl ses gteess today than formerly vrh a coceeqttent result that there ss tesfe eerious trouble with the eyee of gowo tip children where parents have glvea Cola faculty sensi ble considcTOttaa Seventy five years ago nothing was done for crossea eyes later eqjesattoa for tho trouble became oommen but this helped the situation ooj tgbfy Ktow nlne tenths of ttx8p5s csB3 of cross eyes are cured h 331 ta use of proper gftrfr TJe 3aia Bp ma feo im ilar to permit of a denial of the fact that any- deformity in the physical make up is not a source of infinite sorrow but some of the most tender hearted of parents do not realize the burden their little ones bear in being cross eyed Kryptok Lenses Mean Quality Opticians have labored hard upoa the problems of their profession since the time Franklin first evolved the idea of a two part lens until with modern scientific achievement the Kryptok lens alone stands as repre senting the combined result of the in dustry and skill required in bringing the merit of Kryptok quality to its present standard of perfection The Columbian Bifocal Co Temple Court Denver Colo are exclusive manufacturers and guarantee the per fection and quality of every pair of Kryptok lenses fitted by them Send for booklet It will interest you Wyqyrt V FRANKLIN President A C EBERT Cashier JAS S DOYLE Vice President THR CITIZENS BANK OF MeCOOK NEB Fall Term Opens Sept 3 in All Departments 3 a Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 7000 a - DIRECTORS V FRANKLIN JAS S DOYLE StftSSSStSW f fidsCsTni sa jw2U alL A 0 EBERT Omaha Commercial CoHee rprP Our Beautiful Souvenir Cat- alogue Besides information concerning the school it contains many half tone engravings of the kind yon would like to keep among them is the best eye view of Omaha ever published ROHRBOUGH BROS Proprs 10th and Farnam Sts OMAHA E J niTCHELL Auctioneer Catalogue and Sale Bills Compiled Stock and Farm write ups Satisfaction Guaranteed With the Republican ittcCook Nebraska Gate wood Valine Office over McAdams Store Phone 190 DENTISTS Wima I II i an i li inlid lit Colonel Churchill of Cornish T TTR Rohnlnr In nnllHoc ia n familiar phrase but the au thor in politics is a phrase which still possesses some novelty in this country at least An idea has prevailed that nil the authors in politics are from Indiana The fact that Bootli Tarkington and some other Hoosiers noted In the literary world have dabbled In politics forms a basis for the Impression but it now proves that Indiana lias no monopoly of the article New Hampshire has an au thor politician too and he is no less a literary personage than Winston Churchill Mr Churchills latest work Coniston deals with the problem of the political boss In Jethro Bass lie has typified the well known character who obtains control of party machin ery and uses it for his own advantage From writing about things he thought ought to be reformed to taking an ac tive hand in brhiging about the changes advocated was easy and he is a candidate for the Itepublican nomina tion for governor on an anti boss anti corporation platform E claims that the government of New Hampshire does not at present belong to the peo ple of the state as it should but is in effect the property of a single power ful corporation the Boston and Maine railroad and he says that if nominated and elected he will see that the gov ernment is returned to its rightful owners The New York Sun has termed Mr Churchill a carpetbag politician That is in allusion to the fact that he Is an emigrant from another stafe and sot log sfaee resided in dbg teScfik fiio hnM of Folk- and Sh ifty how could he be otherwise than a reformer Admirers of Mr Church ill have claimed that he placed St Louis under a heavy debt of gratitude when he helped to make it famous by writing The Crisis and that after the publication of this romance It only needed the worlds fair to lift that life- wwBk 1 A xWflKk - JsMsflm mSs - J - vv Wms WINSTON CHUKCHIIiIi municipality to a pinnacle of glory Though the book made him popular in his home town Mr Churchill removed from it to Cornish N H where a summer colony of artists and literary people has sprung up At first Mr Churchill too expected to make New Hampshire only his summer home but he liked it so well he decided to stay the year round He is a young man still He will not be thirty flve until November It is not yet ten years since his first novel The Celebrity appeared As a boj he had an ambi tion to become an admiral of the navy and so went to the Annapolis acad emy but he found that writing rather than fighting was his forte and so turned aside to journalistic paths He had hardly turned thirty when he went to CoFnish His neighbors liked him and he and his Avife entertained them 500 at a time at their beautiful home Harlakenden House As one of the old inhabitants of Cornish ex pressed it Cornish is lookin up Twenty odd new houses hev been built within th last half dozen years Weve got the best sculptor in th world and Mr Churchill ken stay in harness with th best on em when it comes to writin novels They tell me his stories are ez real and lifelike ez newly hatched chickens So he was sent to represent the Cor nish district in the lower house of the legislature and served two terms It was supposed that the colonel he has been a colonel on the governors staff would be a candidate for the state senate and perhaps after that for con gress But his admirers decided that such promotion was too slow The Lincoln Itepublican club proposed him for the nomination of Its party for governor and he accepted its support He promises that if nominated and elected he will work for these things Abolition of the railroad lobby in the legislature a direct primary law and more equitable state taxation The capital of New Hampshire Is Concord In this connection the young novelists wellwlshers say that throughout his career his winning let ter has been C As a young man he edited the Cosmopolitan His first book was The Celebrity and on Richard Carvel he won his place in literature Then came The Crisis and later The Crossing and at Croydon he found the hero for Coniston If the luck of the Cs follows him he will In place of Churchill of Cornish become Churchill of Concord ga 4Nw r THREE CENT TOM ClevelandH Unique Mayor and ni Antlcerporntivn Idena Mayor Tom L Johnson of Cleveland who recently put himself in danger of being sent to jail for contempt of court Is always doing out of the or dinary things He is a fighter and be lieves that in combating greedy corpo rations quiet and parlorlike methods will not always answer He has been working for years to get three cent fares on street cars for Cleveland and is sometimes known as Three Cent Tom It was In pursuance of thin TOM I JOHNSON contest that he recently disobeyed an order of the court The city council of Cleveland had ordered the Cleveland Electric Kailway company to remove Its tracks from one side of a certain stree to the other in order to permit HiQ Forest ki ty Railway company iWle4i wag ovgA nized to eperate lines on a thr c eent basis to lay its tracks in the street A month elapsed and the company did not comply and bright and early one morning the may or went out with a gang of several hundred men and began tearing up the tracks which had been ordered re moved An Injunction was obtained by the companys attorneys command ing tho mayor to desist from the per formance but ho calmly put it in his pocket -until the 5ot was completed The mayor is reputed to be worth abwjt and has retired from jfeGvp fensiiss ljCo Ap tee dees not haw to worry aboltt making a living any longer he devotes his time energy and often his money to efforts in the direction of carrying out his political and social Ideas He is an advocate of the Henry George land theory and his methods of fighting corporations have made him famous far beyond the bounds of his own city and state Mayor Johnson began his remarkably successful business career as an er rand boy He was not very rich when he married which was when he was only about twenty years of age What have you with which to sup port a wife his prospective father-in-law asked These two hands was the charac teristic reply and it won him his wife MISS LIBERTYS NEW DRESS Vanilsli mid Other Improvement For the Ilartlioldi Statue Miss Liberty is to have a new dress A coat of verdigris has been formed on the graceful folds of her gown and on her features by the salt air From an artistic standpoint there is no ob jection to these soft green tints but If the chemical action is allowed to con tinue the bronze plates of the Immense statue will be seriously weakened Therefore workmen will remove the verdigris and apply a coat of varnish Other improvements will be made When the French people raised 250- W THE BAItTHOIiDI STATUE OP LIBERT1 000 for Bartholdi to build the statue of Liberty to be presented to this coun try little did they dream that the United States would neglect the mag nificent gift But while congress ap propriated large sums for the erection of fine federal buildings In small towns it would not vote the compara tively small amount necessary to keep the statue properly lighted and its sur roundings on Bedloes island in even a decent state of repair Now G2S00 will be expended in Improvements In cluding an electric elevator for vis itors and the torch will be Increased from flv lights to ten Sleuths of the Secret Service kings and emperors go WnEN plumed knights on dashing steeds surround them When the president of tho United States goes out unless It be an occasion of greatest state we see no men on horseback In demo cratic simplicity Theodore Roosevelt travels from the White House to the summer palace at Oyster Bay Ap parently he Is unguarded jet from un der the hat brims of the plain clothes men by his side peep the piercing eyes of secret service agents In pockets of innocent looking trousers lurk big pis tols In sleeves of civilian cloth are biceps ready to launch blows at sus picious persona who approach too near the president The chief of the re public Is really as carefully protected as many monarchs though the protec tion Is unostentatious Occasionally the vigilance of the presidents bodyguard gets it into trou ble On the presidents latest arrival at Oyster Bay a secret service man struck a photographer who was tak ing an unauthorized snapshot of Mr Roosevelt The photographer swore out a warrant for the guards arrest and when the defendant came up for a hearing half Long Island ilocked to the trial It was to be a famous case Great lawyers were expected to make memorable addresses but the secret service man spoiled the show by plead ing guilty to a charge of assault and cheerfully paying a ten dollar fine Guarding the president Is not of course the only or even the chief duty of the secret service Trailing and capturing counterfeiters and smug glers running down moonshine stilts roiling fbreign spies all are in its days work Counterfeiters arc its particular enemies Slickest of criminals are the counterfeiters and slickest of detec tives are the men who catch them WfMMJJJili j r f s o izt ri i r n 1 1 - WALOON rAwoefVl CHIEF WIIjKIE AJD HIS ROGUES GALXiERY Pretty nearly every counterfeiter in the world has his mug in the secret service rogues gallery In Washington At the head of this great detective system is John E Wilkle Mr Wilkie used to be a reporter in Chicago He did his first Sherlock Holmsing In that capacity A heavily insured grocery store had been mysteriously burned Suspicion pointed to its owner one Arbuckle Arbuckle proved an alibi and the police were bafiled Wilkie wasnt He poked around the ruins un til he found a tintype of Arbuckle with a Philadelphia address on its back He sent the picture to Philadelphia where it was recognized as the photograph of James Moan who had abandoned his wife and eloped with a seamstress Armed with this exclusive informa tion Wilkie went to Arbuckle who thought that all was discovered and confessed Wilkie in 1SS1 became city editor of the Chicago Tribune and continued in newspaper work in Chicago until he was selected by Secretary Gage in 1S9S to command the governments de tectives Mr Wilkie has a great fund of stories showing the ingenuity of shovers of the queer One is this Dressed like a prosperous carpen ter with a beam on his shoulder the counterfeiter plods along the street In front of a promising show window the beam gets the better of him he lurches he loses his balance crashl Through the plate glass shoots the beam Out comes the proprietor Say you pay for that window Boss I cant afford it The deuce you cant You look pros perous enough Boss you can search me I aint got a cent And the fellow turns his pockets in side out and inadvertently drops a bank note which he picks up quickly and attempts to conceal Holy smoke A 100 bill exclaims the owner of the window But It aint mine boss All right Ill have you arrested anyway Come In here now and Boss Ill tell you what Ill do Ill give you 25 and call It square Then the dealer joyous and well pleased takes the counterfeit 100 note and gives the crook 75 In good money But even with such original schemes as this the counterfeiter is tripped up In the long run m i I in wiiii i in Sti33iup v oo 1 pus ooS sjijuwip 3KAOH JJODS 3UU1C 33ij JOJ pU3 nupipoui v 30 si uotpu si s3ajou aip 01 AjtiDocIso sonssii oqi 01 ijSudjis aou 3uia3 30 Dip Hide 3ut jo jairuiu oip u loA puy uojiujnu pajjod joj Auoiiin d os spinas 51 osnuooq pooj c N0ISinW3 SJJ03S HUD oj rjsoq oji o A Guaranteed Cure For Piles Itching Blind Bleeding or Protrud ing Piles Druggists refund money if Pazo Ointment fails to euro any caso no matter of how long standing in G toll days First application gives ease and rest 50c If your druggist hasnt it send 50c in stamps and it will bo for warded postpaid by Paris Modicino Co St Louis Mo A H SMITH CO Cfrrtioiutiiti CHRSI GRAIN STOCK CO gjf Direct private wire to Kansas Citv Grain and Provisions for Chicago and Kansas City delivery We solicit your hedging business and orders for future delivery IS HASTINGS NEB JOE HIGHT contrTgtom m and BUILDER Farm Buildings a Specialty SATISFACTION JLARANTEED McGook Neb CHiGKESTERS ENGUSit EHIYiSYAL PILiS Safe Always reliable Lntliea aslc Drueelst for CHICIIKSTKIfS ENGLISH in Ked antf Ooltl metallic boxes sealed with blue ribbon Take no other IteftiMe dmiircroun Mubntl tutloriNutid Imitation Jtuyof your DniueLit or send 4c in rtanips for JPartiouIara Teati uionialH and Keller Tor Indle in inter by return nail 10000 Testimonials Bold bj all Druffcista CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO 8100 Sadlnon Square 111114 JPA Mention tats oaear FEELING IIVER ISH This Morning TAKE PFttWiVTW ttf 9 IJJ ik7 m VHBkHnBHHPKk A Ge ne Laxative And petizer PMsMt1 i m i 1 1 i The best of every thing in his line at the most reasonable prices is Harshs motto He wants your trade and hopes by merit to keep it D MARS The Butcher Phone 12