V 10 TITE OMATJA DAILY BL:E: SUNDAY, JULY 17, 1904. (That Ever Tooh Placo n. 0 UU VC The Extraordinary Bargains We Are RJow ffering From SIQ6.740.00 STOCK Bought for 845,200.00 T- CT LT0 C ARE GROWING GREATER EVERY DAY FAIL TO ATTEND THIS SALE TOMORROW ST n f r i ii Snrnnfru Iff DON'T KELLEY-STIGER'S 39c Corset Covers 10c All of Kelley-Stiger's 39c Corset Covera made of good muslin, In all slies trimmed with embroidery on Bale In Aiusnn unaerwear Department Second 10c 50c Kltnona Dressing Sacques at 15c These come In all sizes, made of percale, trimmed with braid around collar ana sleeves on sale Second Floor, each braid around 15c JFTinmRfrfll?1! Kclley-Stiger Silks At One-Half Price More and more splendid silks are brought for ward as the sale progresses. Monday we offer some wonderful bargains in fashionable silks. 27-ln. wide Washable Chins Silk white and colors worth 69o yard at Black Summer Allies Washes and wears well worth 65o yard at, yard Pongus Silk 27 inches wide ' worth 75o yard at, yard..,. .. 24-ln. Crepe de Chine Black, white and all shades worth 85o at, yard 39c 35c 39c 48c Kelley-Stlger Black Silks KelJey-Stiger carried the finest blaok Lyons and Swiss dress and lining silks, oil boiled pure dye taffetas, mousseline all the latest fanoy weaves blaok shirt waist silks,and guaranteed to wear taffetas, peau de solos, pongees. Wo sell them at just one-half K.-S.'s prios. $1.50, 11.25 and II Kelley-Stifer silks on Bargain Square shirt waist silks, areas silks, 27-ln. rustling taf fetas, eta. at, yd Natural Dyed Pongees all 27-ln. wide, many of the new coarse weaveB, newest shades 11.60 value at, yard auger suks on Bargain square '39c49c-69c 79c Dress Goods 19c 69c Silk Mousseline de Sole Beautiful flower patterns always sold 50o yd at t On Bargain Square Newest, up-to-date dress good, regardless of former prices, go at, yard The Biggest Bargains Yet in SummerWashGoods From Kelley-Stiger Stock TOSS Monday We Make Special Offer in Embroideries and Laces KELLEY-STIQER'S $1 Wrappers at 25c All of the llpht and dark Wrappers that Kelley-Stlger sold up to $1.00 In all sizes on Second Floor at IU ll UJ 1.VJ 25c 25c Handkerchiefs at 10c and 12ic Kelloy-Btlger'a pure Irish Handkerchiefs that sold up to 25c each, at....... Linen 10c-12y2c French Ginghams Checked grounds, woven dots or small figures, specially adapted for shirt waist suits or man's shirts, at, yd Beautiful Dress Swiss White grounds, woven dots, new floral designs prettiest tub fabrics of the season Monday at, yd 36-inch Victoria Lawns the excellent kind W that sells regularly at 10c yard, Monday, T) special, at, yard . 82-luch Scotch ginghams, dress styles, at, yard Light and dark French Shirting Percale, loc grade, at, yard Art Drapery sateens, for sofa pillow tops, etc., , to 1 yard long, at, per piece !5c 10c ic 5c .7k 2lc 40c figured French sateens, very desirable for drapery of all kinds, at, yard Mercerized dress sateens, like foulard silk, 35c grade, at, yard 3C-inch bleach muslin, good grade, at, yard Sic 15c 5lc KELLEY-STIGER'S MUSLINS At One-Half Kelley-Stiger's Price Unbleached Defiance Sheets 72x90 to 81x90, worth 70c each, at, each Hemmed Defender Sheets 63x90, worth 90c, AlZ0 at, each JC Iron Clad Bleached Sheets 81x90, CCI 35c Kelley-Stiger's $1.26 Cream Sicilian, at yard .-..75c elley-Stiger's 11.60 Black French Voiles, at Q8C Kelley-Stiger's Black and Colored Silk Chiffon (f Cram. at. vnril UJJ ... i.oo .1.25 Crepe, at, yard. Kelley-Stiger's Shirt Waist Etamlne-Mohalr mixed, ut, yard. Kelley-Stiger's. Best Black French- Voiles, U a yard durable and looks like linen, at, each Bleached Sheeting 9-4 equal to Lockwood, special, at, yard 35c Hemstitched Cases 42, 45, 50 and 64-lnch widths, . at, eacn. WHAT TO DO WHEN IN DANGER Examples of the Average Person's Help lessness in a Panic WHAT TO DO AND HOW TO DO IT Great Vain of Keeping; Yonr Head and Yonr teat and Becomlnf , Acquainted with the Mean of Escape. (Copyright, U04, by Guy T. Vliknlskkl.) Punic Is man's greatest enemy and de stroyer. It bloats ordinary accidents into great disasters. It Is the annlhilator of common sense and the last vestige of rea son. In the twinkling of an eye it turns men into brutes, making them mad with unreasoning terror. It even transforms brave men Into the most arrant 'of cow ards. Panic, according to dictionary definition, la "a sudden fright; especially a sudden frigfft without real cause, or terror In spired by a trifling cause or misappre hension of danger." Fear causes its victim to reason out ways of eacupe from the Impending danger. "If I don't find a way out of this," says the man caught In a burning building, "I fear I'll be burned to death." Reason still guides the man who fears and usually guldea him to safety, , How Panic Operates. But panic is Infinitely worse. All bar riers go down before It. A little puff of smoke, and a whole audience is rnadly scrambling for the exits of the theater, the weakest, being knocked down and trampled under foot and killed, lie dead and Injured piled In heaps at the choked-up exits, that, had the crowd been orderly, would have permitted of the passage of all to safety before real danger" threatened those In the rear. What killed the majority of the victims In the Iroquois theater horror lout DecomberT Borne of the occupants of the upper gallery were suf focated by the heat, but as for the rent, the heap of bodies before the exits and the bruises on the corpses showed that not fire or smoke or heat, but 'panto claimed their Uvea. A girl In a tobacco factory In Phil adelphia runs a needle Into her finger. She screams from the pain. Instantly the 200 workers on her floor spring up as one girl, rush blindly down the stairs and jump from the third-story windows, and a half doaen lives are sacrificed and two score or more girls lujured. A steamship meets with an accident, perhaps slight, perhaps serious, but not so serious that the passengers cannot be got off In safety In plenty of time, pro vided order la maintained. But a woman swoons, a man grows excited over some unusual hapiwnlng on the dork, he rushes wildly at the lowering lifeboats, and the Useless sacrifice of life has begun. Throw buck your mind to past disasters of recent years Inolude the Paris Basar - fir borror, where -strung men, la their 20c Pillow 12k Kelley-Stiger's silk embroidery baby flannels at half price. - ' j , All the $5 Oxfords at $2.50 Your choice of all the ladies' street oxfords that nave sola up to f5 s0.50 a pair, Monday on Second Floor, at, pair , From Kelley-Stiger's All of Kelley-Stiger's Medium and Wide Widths of Embroideries and insertings in Swis3 Nainsook and Cambric, up to 18 inches wide some of the very finest embroideries, in this splendid 1 dTb f stock worth up to 50c yard U Q H m J f at, yard A" All the Fine Laces that Kelloy-Stiger sold up to 25c Yard In plat vals, Normandy vals 1 d clunys and torchons hundreds of f II Q J styles, at, yard W Allrxs Al! the Fancy Trimming Laces from the Rslloy-Stiger stoold-inclu ding Venice bands, ranoy galloons, wide not top orientals, many ICI styles on bargain square, worth up to 40o yard, at yard IrC Ladles', Misses' & Children's Hosiery All full seamless, fast C iOl.tCr, black, worth up to 30c, lvl"a5 J-IOC French Imported Hosiery Plain lisle allover lace lisle, fancy -IE Itl-AClr lace, worth up to $1. at sSO-OU"VC Pure Silk Hosiery Allover lace, silk embroidered, etc., worth u75c-l Q8 Men's 60c and 76c Hose, 25C 10c plain and fancy border Hand- Ol-Bi kerchiefs, at - aSJ-OW ude.. $20 Waists at 85c Ladies' Munsing Union Suits Low neck, sleeveless, also umbrella yfCI n styles worth II, at nfJ fllsses' and Children's flunslng Union Suits Long and short sleeves wnrth fiOn. at JZJl Children's 20c Lace Trimmed Pants, at Boys' ond OJrl's 25c Knit f T I Underwalsts, at IsW2C 10c 85c t Jv "l- j ii vy -, KELLEY-STIGER'S LINENS Now Is the time to far In a supply of fine linens, 110 and $12.60 extra fine Irish Double Da mask Pattern Table Cloths. V-k yards wide and 3 and yards long, A QQ for, caoh ..' " U All IJnen 10-4 Hemstitched Pat tern Table Cloths, at, each 1.98 70c All Pure Linen Silver Bleached German Table DanuiBk, yurd -uw 48c 68c $1.00 All Linen Bleached and Silver Bleached Table Damusk, yard .... The $1.25 All Linen Extra Fine Bleached and Cream Damaak, yd. $2 very fine and heavy soft finished two yard wide full bleached Double . Qc Satin Damank, yard jjs $2 Napkins, both bleached and half t OC bleached, dozen "" $4 Napkins, bleached and silver 4 QQ bleached, dozen S.u $5 Double Damask Napkins, for, dozen '.. 2.98 10c Fringed Linen Napkfns, O In each The lowest prices ever known in Otnnha. 39c 5c 10c 31c $1.00 Fringed Table Cloths, all white or with red or blue border, each... lie and 25c Sewed Fringe Linen Doy. lies with open work center, 10c and... Knotted Fringed Linen Towels that sold up to 25c, each, for . 10c Turkish Wash Cloths, each Genuine Turkey Red Table Cloths, 8-4 and 10-4 size, that sold for $1.00 fiQp.CQri and $1.25, for each UVWOVl Larze size cotton Huck Towels worth 10c, but slightly Imperfect, lli each, for Oaw Mill Ends Turkish Towels, worth up to 10c, each, for Pillow Shams, Scarfs, Tray Cloths and Squares, worth up to 75c, for. All the Kelley-Stlger 60c Table Pad-OtE ding, 64 Inches wide, for, yard 10c Cotton Diaper, 18 to 27 Inches wide. In Mill Knds for, yard .2ic 25c 5c From KELLEY-STIOER Stock Sheer white embroidered Shirt Waists, so fashion able this season, wide lacb berthas, lace medal- ions, insertion, etc., Kel ley-Stige r'a price $2,60, Art - sj Very finest Silk Shirt Waists from the Kelley Stiger stock of the fash ionable Jap silk, elabor ately trimmed 550 worth $7 and $8 J IJJew Silk Shirt Waist Suits $8.9? New lot of Silk Shirt Waist Suits of the new figured changeable taffeta. These were priced by Kelley-Stiger at $17.50 a Q fk Q suit Extraordinary ( arkMfnl frvnr1ntr Pretty Wash Shirt Waist Suits Kel-iey-Stiger's price, $10, at ........ . Wash Shirt Watst Suits Cham bray, percales, etc., Kelley-Stiger's U.'J Unllned Mohair Walking Sfcrfs-also cheviots, K.-S.'s price $5.00, at Denim and Duck Skirts Black and whita and blue and white polka dots, launder 498 250 JEWELRY BOUGHT FROri THE U. & CUSTOMS HOUSE AT LESS THAN THE DUTY. On sale Monday ell the beautiful filigree, inlaid and mosaic Jewelry from the big stock consisting of brooch pins, stick pins, ornaments, etc. actually worth as high as $3 each to close them all out, at. 25c panic, beat women back Into the flames and I daresay you will recall vividly the fact that the word panic occurred again and again In the accounts -that panic, ac cording to eye-wttnesses and the authori ties, caused the greater part of the loss of life; that without panic, the majority of the victims would surely have escaped with their lives. And you can hardly read of small accidents' without running across "panic." "Fierce Drug Fire Blase In Store Starts a Panto on the Floors Above." "Killed In Blow-Up Panlo In Dye Works." Panlo Is the god of moat dis asters, great and small. Panto m Possibility Everywhere. Panic is a possibility everywhere at any time where two or three are gathered to gether for any purpose whatsoever. And because it feeds on nothing or a triviality, because It robs fear of reason where fear is well founded. It Is the most difficult thing with which firemen, policemen and other clvlo regulators of order have to cope. There Is apparatus aplenty wtth which to fight fire. But there is only one thing to pit against panic. That la "a cool head, and Its efficaciousness Is limited. It csn at best save only Its owner and those in the Immediate vicinity. It can reduce the death list, but It cannot prevept It. There fore, no general rule can be laid down against it. Only guidance for the In dividual is possible of outline. The Great Precautionary Rale. The great precautionary rule Is this: If any member of your family Is going to the theater, a muslcale, or any sort of public gatherings, take particular pains to Impress upon him the supreme importance of keeping his seat In case anything causes the audience to rush pell mell for the exits. Drive it homeward that the seat must be kept by all means during the first mad rush and until the crush has swept paBt. By that time your wife, or son, or daughter will have had to think out cooly a means of escape, and will undoubtedly effect it, If you have also Insisted upon the pleasuregoer becoming familiar with the location of the different exits as soon as possible after entering the building. In case of a theater, or other public meeting place, this can be very well done by studying the diagrams of the place, which ar required to be exhibited upon the programs and in the lobby. These dia grams murk the fire esr&pes and the ex Its. Men, in this matter, can equip them selves more fully than women. For ex ample, if they are attending a theater be fore the play begins they can walk around bnc-k of the seats, locating by eye the va rious ways of esraiw. Of course, such a method is hard for women to pursue. But a close study of the diagrams will be' ex tremely effective, depend on that. Wh a Panic Strikes. This, then, is the first thing to do to combat panlo to be prepared for it. Then when It comes, keep cool. If you can do that, more than likely yon can keep those around you cool. Speak to them In a quiet, even, commanding tone. "Keep cool," tell them. "Keep your seats. Stay out of the crush. You'll get hurt. Keep your so la, I say. iJoa'i you see that we'll get out all right If you'll Just keep your seat and keep cool." Tour words will undoubtedly have the desired effect on the majority of those who bear them. But If any one shows a ten dency towards panic, which may be com municated to his neighbor, don't hesitate to pull his sleeve or coat-tall vigorously, and gruffly command him to "sit down." fleeting reason; at least. It will give him and those about you a moment's respite from brute force that may mean the ultl The unexpected order may bring back his mate salvation of all of you. Don't follow the mob and rush to and block up the exits. Let the wave of panlo aweep by you. Then, using your reason, pick out the place that It tells you permits of probable escape. Let reason guide you there; and If you find more difficulty than you looked for, still keep cool. Perhaps you have reached a window on the upper part of a tire escape, the lower part of which Is licked by flames. Don't Jump. Common sense has carried you In sight of the firemen. It will keep you safe until the firemen can reach you, which will be In a minute or less. As you kept your neighbors quiet until the time came for you to effect escapo, so you can load them to a place of safety, for once you have established respect In them for you by making them obey your first command r "they are too human not to follow like sheep where the stronger mind leads. This Is the only efficacious method I know of to help others' out of a panlo. Panlo oa the Water, A panic among a crowd on water al ways a possible thing In summer with so many excursion boats plying around the majority of our larger cities should be bandied in much the same fashion. The tendency Is for all the passengers to rush to one side of the' boat. If such a thing occurs tbje rail will speedily be under water. But you of the cool head should not permit this listing of human cargo. Urge nay command as many of your fel low passengers as you corns in contact with to make for the opposite rail. Point out that there they will be dry at least, and farther away from the water which they fear. If no one will follow you, go there alone. Stay there until the brutal fight fer possession of the lifeboats Is over. Stay there even when the over-loaded lifeboats leave the ship's side, to sink, per haps, with too great weight before they are out of your sight. You will be safer by the rail. Stick to the vessel as long as common sense tells you Is proper. Then, If you have no life-preserver, remember that any frail object a fragment of board, a piece of the ship's rail, an oar, a chair, will support you for hours In the iwater. All you have to do Is to grasp It lightly with your hands, and you will float In ordinary cases until help comes. You can do more. If any ono is de pendent on you In the emergency, you can provide him with the means of keep ing afloat. Or, If you deem it better to keep your companion erhups your wife or your daughter with you, then have her lightly place a hand in your shoulder while you grasp the float. Thus both 'of you wtU stand Infinitely better chance of rescue than if, flcbUng, jreu had plunged headlong into the over-crowded lifeboats. Panic not only seizes hold of gatherings. It works in individuals. It Is panic that causes this woman or that man to Jump from the upper windows of a burning house or to run shrieking through smoke an heat-filled halls. Inviting suffocation, when the only reasonable thing to do. If other escape is cut off, is to stand at a window where fresh air can be had and wait for the firemen to reach you, which they gen erally manage to do, since that Is a part of their life work. Panic, operating in Individuals, is largely responsible for hotel holocausts. Of courso, carelessness on the part of guests Is also somewhat to blame; for bow many guests of a hotel are ever aware of the means provided for their escapeT But ignorance does not preclude all hope of escape by any means, while panic practically seals Its victim's doom. Panic unreasoning terror; "terror In spired by a trifling cause or misapprehen sion of danger." You say a fire like the one in the Iroquois theater was not a mis apprehension of danger It certainly was, in that the audience forgot completely that Ore has to burn up before It can spread out. That takes time, and In that time, if only the audience had not been possessed of a sudden fright that the Are would come out on them Immediately, I believe, and others who know the circumstances fully believe, that probably every ocou pant of the parquet would have escaped and many In the gallery also. Panlo Prevents Escape, Unless the whole place biases up In stantly, which is a very remote possibility, a theater or other publlo place with the escapes provided according to law, can surely be emptied when a fire Is discovered without loss of life be fore the flames become really menacing. If only the audience can be made to keep Its head. Any theater In New York can be emptied in three to four minutes ample time, for a Are cannot reach out over the audience In less time than that If the Iroquois theater audience had only recog nised this and not blocked the exits there would have, been a far less gruesome tale to tell to the. world Just entering on Its Christmas festival. Your only weapon when panto surges around you Is a cool head. Keep It and the odds are largely in your favor that you will reach a place of safety. Lose It and you throw your life away. EDWARD -CROKER, Chief of New York Fire Department. WASHINGTON ON ZION'S HILL She Wasted an Experienced Artist. A woman who had become suddenly rich was traveling In Europe, and while there It occurred to ber that It was the proper thing to have her portrait painted by a prominent artist. Accordingly she called at the studio In Paris of a painter of high reputation. "Will you kindly sit down and wait a few moments?" asked the attendant, when Mrs. Newrich bad stated ber errand. "Well, I'm In a hurry. Is your master busyr" she-asked. "Tea, madams. Ho Is engaged on a study." "On a study!" exclulmed Mrs. Newrich. "Well, no matter, I guess I won't wait. I sha'n't want him to paint my picture. I want an artist who has got all turougb with bis studies!" Success. Principal at Tuskegee Institute Exhorting a Baptist lially. SYMPATHETIC PICTURE OF THE ASSEMBLY Effective Work in Advsvnclnc the Col ored People Along; Lines of Greater Usefulness Encouraging; Re sults Achieved. Writing to the Boston Transcript con cerning the Influences for good exerted by the Tuskegee Institute, Koscoe Conkllng Bruce draws the following picture of Prin cipal Booker T. Washington addressing a Baptist rally: That Sunday I shall not soon forget. From the library that Tuskegee owes to the munificence of Mr. Carnegie I had got a pile of magazines and a few books and was Just making ready to be secretly com fortable when a sharp rap on the door halted my preparations. Principal Wash ington extends to me an invitation to drive with him to the "Rally" of the Baptist church on the other side of the town; be is to deliver an address. Promptly accepting the Invitation, I slipped on hastily the whitest, thinnest, coolest clothes my grip could muster. The sky was lurid with the blaze of the sun, the wind even on these sandhills was be yond resurrection, and the mercury had evaporated. The team a pair of Tuskegee bred horses, young, clean-limbed and eager was waiting at Mr. Washington's gate Impatiently. In a moment mine host came briskly down the gravel path from his bouse, greeted me In his hearty way, and lo! we were whisked down the 'road In a rush of breeze. This powerful man by my 'side, grave and silent, but alert and keenly observant, I have grown greatly to admire. He has made an oasis of thrift and Intelligence In a desert of shlftleesness and Ignorance; in a wilderness he has been true to a great IdeaL One quality which, as much as any, accounts for the continuous, the Inevitable, the glacial advance of Mr. Washington, Is unswerving common sense. Crotchets and prejudices, praise and blame, momentary ills and Joys, none of these disturb this man's balance and fixity of purpose; he steidlly gazes through sham and aentiment and detail, upon the essential, and for tbs essential be unceasingly strives. Addresafosi His Own People, What would he have to say at the rally? I wondered. In New York and Boston and Washington and Chicago I had again and again heard Mr. Washington address white audiences. Who that was in the great audience at Madison Square garden laat February to hear Mr. Carnegie, President Eliot, Dr. Frlssell and Dr. Washington speak In behalf of Hampton could forget the overwhelming effect of Mr. Washing ton's words? "Reduced to the last analysis there are but two questions that constitute this country's raoe problem. The answer to the one rests with my people, the other with the white race. For my race on of Its dangers is that it may grow Impatient and feel that It can get upon Its feet by artificial and superficial efforts ra ther than by the slower but surer process which means one step at a time through all the constructive grades of industrial, mental, moral and social development which aU races have had to follow which have become strong and independent. I would counsel: We must be sure that we shall make our greatest progress by keep ing our feet on the earth, and by remem bering that an Inch of progress Is worth a yard of complaint. For the white race the danger is that in its prosperity and power it may forget the claim of a weaker peo ple; may forget that a strong race, like an individual, should put Its hand upon Its heart and ask. If It were placed in similar clroumstances how It would like the world to treat It; that the stronger race may forget that in proportion as it lifts up the poorest and weakest even by a hair s breadth, it strengthens and ennobles Itself. This is the lofty doctrine of statesman ship. On such an occasion the plane of thought and feeling and method of ex pression is of course Immeasurably beyond the range of what I figured his audience at the Baptls' cha'ch to have. How would this man, with his easy mastery of an au dience in the north, master the rallyT Gathering; Worshipers. I began to notice groups of rather quietly dressed colored people, men and women and children, hastening across the fields and along the road toward tbe church, which I could now discern In its shimmering white ness set like a beacon 'at the utmost top of Zion hill. As we neared tbe neat little building Mr. Washington ran a very gaunt let of greetings, grotesque but genuine, greetings which he scrupulously acknowl edged with a certain shyness which could not quite conceal a glow of appreciation. At the door of the church the parson, robust and dark as night, and good hu mored, met us. As Principal Washington entered, the choir started up "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot," but every eye In the con-1 gregatlon, dcbplte the seductions of the song, was fixed upon the Moses of the ne gro people. The congregation, sociologically considered, was transitional; the gray haired, gentle mannered freed man rubbed shoulders with the smartly attired New Issue; the black mammy of the old regime, with beaming face and snowy apron, sat without her kerchief, fur even she has be come adjusted to the new order of things beside the ribbon bedecked, bright eyed school girl. And the tactful pastor, himself a product of tbe schools of freedom, has kept this place a solace for the older gen eration and a church for the new. After another hymn by the choir and prayer by a visiting preacher the pastor arose In quiet dignity to Introduoe the speaker of the occasion. Rev. UadHen in clear, mellow tones expressed the gratitude Of his congregation for Mr. Washington's long continued an aubatantlally expreaaed Interest In them, their church and their school for tills congregation helps support the Booker T. Washington public school. "Our people,' said the pastor, "in their preparation for the next world have not forgotten this world." And to the evident delight of the guest he read a long list of members of the church, who since Mr. Washington's last visit had bought land, built comfortable homes, painted their houses, developed vegetable gardens, begun poultry raising on a larger scale, etc. "And there Is a brother here today," said the preacher, looking with a broad smlls, while the congregation tittered, into tha face of a serious young man who ntwig a shrill tenor In the clioir, "there iy a brother here today who painted his house red all over this week, so that Mr., Wash ington when he came today wouldn't think that John lived In an unpainted house." A Fatherly Talk. After anothar plantation me:ody not a coon song, but a genuine plantation melody, unordered and to alien ears grotesque, but strangely touching Principal Washington rose to speak. In his hand wus thut in evitable pencil, and on his face the gen tlest smile of a stern father who wants his children to be joyful occasionally, but al ways to be sensible and prudent and ma ture. "I rejoice with you," ho said, "in your successes, but (n your Jubilation do not forget the victories yet to be won." And thon for an hour, to the most attin tlve listeners I have ever seon, he talked simply and directly of some of tho ways In which they could raise the level of their lives. He emphasized In mlnuto and toll ing detail the subtle Influence for whole some family life of a comfortable houso with Its garden of vegetablns, Its orchard. Its pigs and its poultry. The deeper sourcs of social enjoyment are in the home, not in the enmasse activities of the enmp meeting and the street. Then, too, the evils of the negro habit of pouring from tho plantation on court day into the gallery of the courtroom, there to satiate a morbid curiosity in the older folks, and develop It In the young, were outlined with Illustra tions, humorously pathetic, drawn from life outlined arid effectively denounced. That v frailty of taking the quarrels of the chll dren to ths court for settlement did not elude the speaker's fearful Irony; lie ex preaaed hia delight In the admirable cuntnm of the Judge to fine, with Invariable gen erosity, both defendant mid plaintiff! Nor had the searching eye of Mr. Washington failed to note the effect of the Saturday excursion to town upon the salts tit tho dispensary; ten years -ko the deacons felt, and now some more youthful members of the church feel. In conscience liomid to aupport that dispensary, when tho wive and children could put the nl'kels and dimes and quarters to infinitely better una than doea the barkeeper! And nf rnursn Mr. Washington paid his respects to the "hollerlu' preacher" the fellow who has an lca that the Almlahty is n bit d.af,x and who therefore fiercely pawn the IilMo , and lifts his voice to the very skim. Tha "hollerln preacher" has gone out nf busi ness, at leaat In this community; ond this congregation must decently support t h -1 r more modern minister. Finally, th? rpeaksr emphsslzed the Importance of uhIhk tho church as an Instrument f r ennobling tho actual life of the community, and cited m, a case In point the practice of this church to help support the public school. I have spoken of Mr. Washington's noM mastery of the Madison Square Garden audience, and of his eloquence there, but I am tempted to feel that at the rally'of tha Baptist church on Zlon Hill that memo rable Sunday, he displayed In his homely sympathy and commonsense an equal though different eloquence. For the heart of Tuskegee's principal, unaffected by what men regard as the greater affair, of the spacious world. I. with tha poor and lowly of his people. And thev sjrlve to realise hla Ideas, to be sensible and p-u-dent and mature, because In many ways be Is to them a father. 1 i