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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1904)
THE OMAITA ILLUSTRATED BEE. NoTtnTwr 13. I0O4. WHAT MIRACLE OF HEALING IS THIS? The Human Heart Made to Beat Aain in Wonai's Body Res cued From the Grave THE BLIND MADE TO SEE AND THE LAME TO WALK And Hopeless Invalids Healed of Diseases PromutiMd Incur able by Pnysicians PROFESSOR'S PHENOMENAL POWER Upsets Modern Medical Practice by Curing- Without Useless Drugs and Medicines Gives Services Without Charare to ths Sick and Affl luted, Bellev-la It HI Dnfy to God sad Ma to Help Safferlna; Humanity ROCHESTER, N. T., Not. 0.-BpsolaI Correspondence.) Discarding tha usalaaa drugs and medlclnea dispensed by doctora and yet healing hopeless Invalids of dis ease pronounced Incurable by physlclana and specialists, succeeding In restoring life and health when doctor after doctor failed, Professor Thome F. Adkln. of thla city, has proven the value of a wonderful dis covery that threatena to upset modern medical practice. In the face of opposition, criticism, even rldlculu, ha haa persisted In hit belief that hope ahould not be lout until actual and unmistakable dissolution of tha body occurs. He claims, and offers vldencn beyond doubt, that he haa made the human heart beat again In the body of a woman given up to death. He citea names and Instances where, by mean of his discovery, he haa mado the blind aee anJ the lame walk; where he haa perma nently cured paralyais, consumption, ayphllia, rheumatism, Bright 'a disease, and other dlaaaaaa heretofore auppoaed to be incurable. More than that, he atatea that he cap cure the alck in their own home hundreds of miles away without stirring from his office. In one Instance, that of a Mrs. U A. Phillips of Trawlck, Tex., the witnesses say that he raised her from tha dead. Whether that la literally true or not, there la little doubt but that the woman would be In her grave today were It not for thla man's strange, power over human life and his marveloua contrel over disease and death. Mrs. Phillips had been a hope less Invalid for many years, and for the laat five had been bedfast, could He on one aid only, and was covered with bed sores. She was suffering from a severe complica tion of diseases, Including stomach, kid ney and female troublea, and had bean under treatment of twelve ' different hos pitals and various doctora, . all of whom failed to help her and pronounced her caae Incurable. Her agonlea were so gTeat that they threw her into convulsive spasms, while her body waa wasted to akin and bones. All the medlclnea given her were without effect, and aha waa rapidly nearlng her grave, when she heard of Prof. Adkln. Broken in body, pain-weary, and without faith, but hoping against hope In this last deapeiate chance, aha) wrote to him. He replied, at onus, aaylng that he would take her case, a,aurlng her that he could and would save her life and restore her to health. And notwithstanding what the doc tora had said, he did cure her completely, so that today ahe 1 up' and about, a well woman, Joyous, thankful and anihuslastlu Another case almost equally remarkable waa that of Mr. R, A. . Wailen, of Flney Mo.. Who for four vaars: waa narnJvzait and was steadily growing mora helpless u nfiin ui ii inm oociura wno atienuoa ilm, Hi cure wtt ao quick and marveloua iijmi in u leiier na lays: "it was II bringing the dead to life." Prof. Adk eurad Mrs M W K'nl Oa.. of a malignant cancer without the knife or probe; he etqpped the Great White Plague consumption In the caaa of Mis II. U Kellev, of Seal Cove, Me., and hun dreds of other suffering men .and women have likewlHe been rescued bv thla wnmlnr. ful man, who seams to control aome mys terious force not known to ordinary mor tals. When called upon for an interview, Prof. Adkln said: . "Yea, I remember the cases you mention, but do not quite understand why they hould cause any special astonlxhrnent. alnoe they are nq more wonderful than scores of other cure I have, mads sine I announced my discovery to the world, f firmly believe that there la no disease I may not cure, and whatever ether men may do or fall to do, I mean to keep on healing the sick and afflicted of any disease they mav have Just as lona as I am able, i make no exceptions, rich of ppor, east or west, wherever they live. It la all the same to me. Ail wno are sick rrom any emifw may ba cured In their own homes aimnlv by writing and telling me tha name of tneir trouoie or tneir principal svmptoms, SKe and sen. and I wtM rive them of mv aervloea absolutely without charge. I feel that It la my dutv to God and mnn to give freely, to help nil who are afflicted and not to una my discovery merely to make money." ''Do you rlly menn that anyone who Is aiOK ran write to yon -p na gureq witnout paying you any money?" "Exactly. I mem inat that. I know It mav iwm an unusual thine to 4. hut If I choose to help the earth a npya'pil un fortunates wl'hont pav. th-re's nothing to prevent m dnln an la there? I have mv wn reason for my e-viraa in thl matter and I do not want anyone to ri that bv taking advantage of mv offer thev ar arcentln ermritv. t will hnve mv reward in proving to the world rra v!" n my fiivoverv -"no inn iaeiesneia or wast, tnir monev on tofora and medlclnea when It ( not neeeassrv." "What la this discovery?" "T pas aVew von better than T Man r'a'n l?av soma one i-ho la s'cV'wrl'e to m and wt"h the reaitlta. If von do an ? would prefer that yon aUrt a. chron'o rae anm nea bi"i .fci'ilan av a'd cannot be cured. Any doctor may cure slmp'e cne with n few dna of novlle'nea hut T want thoe wh'rj vth doctora and medlclnea hsva 'allad. Tpil anvoc who wanta to he c'd to wt" to me. addreaa- mr r"wr..-.i. "horofia v. ACKin. office 87 "T'ul ho fn vnn era tho-e at a dla tf... thnae ti!m von newer aat" "Joat ,. ..rlw and J'"t mrv pa trinil'-i wn to thcrn c thv ntnm to me T"rtii inlit pn il"nii Tvvathor the 'Ive cn or a tk"iii' m'lra awav Ir VI iarr A tt' ! h . nocerv to n'lt mv aid What nhe men mav or may no oh'a to do Kn """ '" it wMt thav chacee nolrin no T?iv"t''-aton nrofea th-t T-oeo a UrTa e'etwia noa V Vto-na out hv Te THrtw fi ti. no rn.eia ttia promise or free armcf to i very letter. . . Pae tenetThoM. Sleet. Leacerraaa, Ipatautar rkM, Pilse ana All Waeealtnj Setual Dlscaargse. NO P, NO BTI N. NO STRICTURE. FrUI SVHINOC. avr A a aire rrtteatlt e4 ttta.- At Drassiau. er Mai ! T edirM lut gL. MALVOO M s. CO.. laeieeetar. 0.. U A WniiL Li o Tlo n aAl nrw SPORTING GOSSIP OF WEEK Baiket IU ii Now Ipproaching tha Center of the Btaje. CITY LEAGUE 13 BEING TALKED ABOUT High School Will Have First ad Becoad Teams and Y. M. A. la Likely to Hare Three with a Good Sehednl. Base ball, foot ball and then basket ball! Each In Its appointed time; each haa ita place W flit In the cycle of sports. As the foot ball aeason neara Its end the sounds of basket ball are heard in the land or at the Young Men'a Christian association gymnaaium, particularly the latter. The Omaha High achool and xoung men a Christian aseoclatiun basket boll playera are getting Into practice with a view of Unlng up In a few week for seiecuona in making up the teams. . Earl Cooper, captain of uie mgn acnooi team, la now woralng out about fifteen aaplrants fur the team. Captain Cooper think there will be first and second high uhool team this season, and It 1 hla intention to make the aelectlona In a few weeks. He will have a practice game with the Young Men Christian association flrt team In a week or so and thus be able to pick out the talent to aome de gree. ' J. C. Pentland, phyalcal director of the Young Men Christian association, say he will have a first team and possibly two other teams this year. The work of mak ing the selection will engage hi attention aoon. iiuvlng heard that there la every possi bility of the Yale college basket ball team playing at the Nebraska university and at Sioux City thla Reason, he is trying to Induce the Yale team to stop here and play tho Omaha Young M,en'a Christian association first team. Mr. Pentlund Is hopeful of bringing this matter to a suc cessful Issue. The Bioux City team to be pitted against the Yale team won second honors at the Olympian games In St. Lou I a In August. The contests were open to the world. The movement now on foot to form a city basket ball league la receiving warm support and the formation of the league seems to be almost assured. Several meet ings have already been held at the Young Men' Christian' association room and the matter haa been talked over and the gen eral opinion now la that as aoon as the basket ball aeason shall have been opened the league will be ready for business. The league will Include Omaha and South Omaha and a number of teams have al ready promised to Join the proposed league. Mr. Pentland and other are of the opinion that thla year' Interest in basket ball in Omaha will exceed that of former years. Now that they have had time to give tho matter sober thought, the magnates of the minor leagues begin to realize that their action at New York was about aa unwise and dangerous a Ihey could have taken. In extending the blight of TVbeauism and laying the foundation for an aristocracy among tb minor leagues, they have dona a great deal to pull down the atructure they thought was on a firm foundation, and unless more than ordinary good luck at tends the course of the. association during the coming year, the meeting to be held t Ban Francisco next winter will have little to do but declare the whole plan dead. Right at the outaet the minora blundered in putting at the bead of the association the very man who should have been kept In the background. Tebeau la menace to organised base ball, for he has shown In all hi oourso that he la sub ject to no law save hla own interest, and that be will not at any time allow consid eration for another to stand between him and what he want. He la an exponent of "syndicate" ball In it worst form and his course in the Western and American has proven that he Is ready at any time to de ceive his business associates, aa well a the public If It appear to his advantage to do so. His influence ha been baneful In the history of the National Association of Minor Leagues so far, and now that he s at the head of the organisation, It Isn't a wild guess to say that he will manipulate the affairs of the organization as far as he can for the benefit of no one but Tebeau. . Tha ether member of - the commission are also men whose Interests are not in line with those of the smaller leagues of the association, and from whom little Is to be expected, save that they will do all they can to enhance the Influence of the double A class to the disadvantage of the lesser. With the new arrangement of classes and the secondary draft proposition, the B and C class leaguea will find that DR. McGREW, SPECIALIST Diseases of MEN ONLY. 28 Year Eijerleica; 18 Years In Omaha The doctor'g remarknble gucoesg bag never been equaled, and every day bring many flattering report of the good be is doing or the relief be bas given. Hot Sprlnzs Treatroaat For All Blood . FoUona. No "BREAKING OUT" on the nklu or face and all ex ternal Bigna of tho disease disappear at once, A permanent cure for life guar anteed. VIRirnCFIf CURES GUARANTEED IN IAullUut.Lt LEBa THAN FIVK PAYg. H-ar 9f nfin e cura of Hydrocele. RBIl OtUJW stricture. Gleet. Nervous Debility, Los of Strength and Vitality. hi- HOME TREATMENT of chronic, Nervous, Rectal. Kidney, Blad der and Skin Diseases at small cost. Bavs time and money by deacrlblng your caae and writing for FQ;C RPPIf nd '" of treatment. rrtCt DulA Mejtcin, t90t In plain pack. gc- Cbargss Low. CoauHailoi Frit. Office hours, a. in. to 1:30 P- nun day, a. m. to i-m p. m. Call or write Box It Office SU South Hin Strtat, Omaha, Neb " their usefulness will consist In hustling players for the Eastern, the American Asso ciation and the Pacific leagues. That'a all. and It will keep them busy. The situa tion reminds one of the fine old piece we uaed to have In our school readers, "The Supposed Speech of Rollo to the Peru vians:" "They offer us protection. Ye, such protection as vultures give to lumb? covering them while devouring them." Among other things the meeting at New York did was to set apart a sum of money to be spent for attorney's services. In the four years of Its career the association has spent HO for lawyers and this was expended In getting a deposition In the Skel Roach case. Two members of the new commission are attorneys by trade, and George Tebeau Is shifty enough to be a whole bench and bar of shyster attor neys, bo one wonders why the association has all of a sudden found Itself In need of $300 worth of lawyer s services. When the association met at New York It found a balance of J2.CU) in the treasury. One of the returned magnates offers to wager any sum up to 60 cents that the balanoe next time the delegates meet will not be any thing like &6U0. If the little fellows want any better proof of where they are at, let them look at the adopted plan of holding the meeting at San Francisco. How "many of them can afford to put up the $3u0 It will cost to make the trip to attend the convention at the Golden Gate, not to speak of losing time from their business? The plain truth of tha matter Is that George Tebtau and hla little clique have now ab solute control of the affairs of minor league ball, and the little ones can do as they like, but they must obey orders or go broke. Joa Cantllllon has finally announced his purchase of a controlling interest In the Des Moines club, having bought fifty-four of the ninety-four shares of stock of the club. It is given out that a string has been attached to the sale to the effect that if at any time during tha next five years Tebeau undertakes to secure an Interest In the team the stock reverts to its original own era Uut this has nothing to do with the conscience of Joe Cantlll.on, and to a man at thla distance It looks as if he Is as free to act for Tebeau as though Tebeau owned the whole ninety-four shares. It Is not at all unlikely that this gives Tebeau the third vote In the Western, ho having already his own and that of Tommy Burns of Colorado Springs. If the river club owners do not want to find themselves sewn up In a sack and dropped Into the sewer they would bet ter get busy right away and take steps to head off this deal until after the meeting of the league. It Is reported that M. II. Sexton will not again serve as prts.dent of the Western league. If this la the case, The Bee deal res to renew its nomination of Sandy Griawold for the place. Everything that waa said about Sandy'a qualifications last spilng hold good now, and he Is probably the best fitted man within the territory of the league to fill the position of president. He knows the game from A to Izzard, and knows the players as well. It would be a graceful tribute to a man who has devoted many years to the upbuilding of the bame to give him this bit of recognition, and would en sure thetleague the services of a capable and painstaking executive. The magnates ought to think this over. It has been definitely settled that the first annual banquet of the Omaha Driving club will ba given at the Millard hotel Saturday evening, November 19. Indications now point to an attendance of ISO and It Is thought covers may be laid for even more than that number. Besides the post-pran-dlul features of the occasion there will be election of officers and Bhort talks, In which the lost season will be reviewed and plana for next season's racing outlined to some extent. It is the expressed intention of tha ofllcers of the club to make the organization one of the best In this part of the country. The members generally feel encouraged with the results of the summer of 1904 and are going to try and step a livelier gait In 1906. The question of a clubhouse will be at least mentioned at the banquet next Saturday evening. While the question of having a clubhouse next year sounds premature to some, yet there tire not a few who think such a venture within the possibilities of the coming rac ing season. One of the features In connection with the first annual banquet of the Driving club will be the number of Invited horse show patrons who have not heretofore been Identified with the Driving club, but who have expressed a desire to Join the club and get In the racing game. "The Driving club helped the Horsi show and vice versa." remarked a local horseman the other afternoon. During the last week T. C. Byrne sold Myrtle Boy to Charles H. Crelghton. It Is Understood Mr. Byrne Is looking around for a stepper that will leave a cloud of dust for every other horse to follow at ths Sprague Street park, next season. C. H. Brlggs and F. J. Campbell are also understood to be on the lookout for racing talent with which to lead their friends a merry chase next year. Whatever accumulation of cobweb may have gathered on the local bowling alley during the baae ball s?oson has been en tirely removed. Last week's bowling left no doubt but that the season of ten pins and nine plna and other pins Is Indeed on In all Ita glory. During the last ten days the old guard b,as gotten back Into form, while the younger talent na picked up noticeably. The report at every alley Is that Interest Is reviving with the cool weather. At the Int & WUHam alleys the first match gime of the season was played on Thursday evening between the Krug Park team and a team from Council Bluff. The Clsrk alley hnve been the cene of a match game every evening dur ing the week. Politic and the weather were the para mount issue with the local tribe of hunt er during the last week. The former out of the way, Brer" Welsh kindly did the right thing for the hunters and coal men by allowing a wintry blast to swoop down on the municipality and outlying districts. On Thursday the report of big duck fly ing over their usual haunts came to ths city as fast aa the election returns did on Tuesday night. And a the report came In -the more anxious became the men who go out and bring In the gam for those who stay at home. There were no regreta reported fro-n quail hunter during the week. Bob White It going down at the rate of twenty-five per hunter per day and were it not for a wise legislation the last of hi tribe would be a thing of the no distant future and his merry call from the cornfield would be no longer heard In tha land. Captain Ktller cf Fort Crook returned Thursday afternoon from Lexington, where he easily reuched the limit on quails during hla outing. I F. J. Campbell and party left Thursday afternoon for a quail hunt near Holdrege. Hot Mach of Prospect. Boy Is a dollar a week all I am to got? Superintendent Oh, no; besides your sal or.". jou will learn tho business. Boy And when I learn the business do I get more pay? Bucrlntendwnt Oil, dear, no. When you are worth more we sliull let you go and take another boy and let him learn the business. Boston Transcrlyt. In the Field Electricity Crownlo tea an. AHIOLS sign oi me times maxes manifest the steady Inroads of electricity on- the steam power. Che last of the steam looomotivee n the Brooklyn elevated railroad letlred and electric power haa at- tun.Lu complete supremacy on that system. Similar action is to be taken by the Penn sylvania company on lines It controls on Long Island. The company ha placed an order with the Westlnghouse company at Pittsburg for the necessary electrical equip ment. The order calls for 121 motor cars, which i equivalent to 122 loco. "Uvea. Each car will be quipped with four motor ot 12J horsepower. These will be placed under the traction car, which will haul a train of passenger car of the customary length. Many of the present baggage cara will be equipped with motor and a small ipso In front of the car will be partitioned off for the motorman. Sections of the Long Island 'railroad will have trolley polea erected Immediately and copper wire will be trunk over the entire system. The new cars will be running In the spring and will be used exclualvrly on the excursion trains next summer to Rockaway Beach and other points along the shore for the rapid handling of crowds. One of the bills aaved will be tlat of wagea paid fire- Progiestlve Strides, The rapid advancement of electricity as a motive power can be demonstrated In no betttr way thon by a comparison of the crude outfit put on the market seventeen years ago for street car service with the monster 2,200-hoise power electric locomo-, tive tested recently at Schenectady, where a dozen or more are under construction for the use of the New York Central railroad In Its tunnel and suburban traffic in New York City. "The very successful trial of this electric locomotive," saya the United States In vestor, "has again raised the question of electricity supplanting steam on the trunk line railroads, and while It Is the general opinion of experts that the substitution will be made, when and how it will be made are unknown. "As yet any conversion on the large rail road systems Is not even so far advanced as to be classed in the experimental stage, and It looks as If It would be some years before any radical change can follow, un less some marked Improvement pver exist ing systems are put on the market. "The electric locomotives now being built for the New York Central road are made necessary, simply to meet local condition in New York City, and while their suc cessful operation may have a bearing on the general supplanting of steam for trunk line traffic, thu time Is far away when long hauls will be made on these lines by other than steam locomotives. "Regarding the success of electricity for short runs, particularly for suburban pas senger traffic 'to and from large centers, where trains must run short distances, make frequont stops and still develop quick transit, there seems little doubt that a few more year of development will wit ness a pretty general suburban travel on all roads under electric power. "Basing the present situation on that of seventeen year ago, when electricity sup planted the horse on atreet railway lines, and was accomplished almost at once, there Is, of course, a possibility of a repe tition in electrifying the trunk line rail roads, but the proposition la of such mag nitude that it seems Improbable for some time to come, at least. Conditions of fin ance, of course, have changed during the period of tho progress of electricity a a motive power. Seventeen year ago to electrify their line the street railroads were compelled to eacrlfloo their horsea and many of their cara, and the cost of the new equipment practically made reorgani zation necessary, as assets were about wiped out, the main asset being the fran chise, while liabilities were enormously in creased, and many companies were put quite to the test to meet their obligations. Radical changes involving large sums of money were not frequent in those daya, the era of trusts, combinations and com munity of interests not reaching tha state of perfection ot.e finds them In today, and for this reaaon no comparison from past history can be drawn as to what will hap pen when the steam railroads are electri fied. "Another disadvantage to be overcome by experiment is winter traffic. In Connectiout where the New Haven road haa one or two small branches electrically equipped with both third rail and overhead trolley, fre quent snowstorms interfere with electric traffic and the steam engine Is called Into use and under ordinary conditions meet all requirements. "That the electrical manufacturing con cerns are alive to the subject 1 evidenced from remarks of a man closely connected with the Westingbouse company, who 1 quoted a saying: " 'The company proposes to Issue 1B,000,000 of 5 per cent debentures for the purpose of preparing for the coming demand for elec trical equipment for railroads . now using steam and for the equipment of the many electric roads being built. There la no doubt that In the near future this demand will b? greater than the combined capacity of all the electrical ' companies In the world, and the Westlnghouse Electrio and Manu facturing company proposes to be ready when that time comes.' " Electricity In Middle Africa, Electrical power house are about to be constructed at the Zambesi Falls, whloh are estimated to represent (5,000,000 horse power and should be able to do a god deal of the work of middle Africa In tha wast for any number of centuries to come. The electrical ower will be delivered to long distance transmission lines and dlitrlbutad to the copper, gold and coal flalda in tho region which are already In process of development, besides performing all the other work! which progress there 1 cutting out for it. A Railroad Novelty. Germany possesses a miniature but most useful railway to which no parallel Is found In this' country. It peculiarity Is that Its trains have no driver. It 1 uaed for car rying salt from the salt mine at Btata furt. The train consist of thirty truck, each carrying half a ton of salt. The en gines are electrio, of twenty-four hone power each. As It approaches a station, of whloh there are five along the line, the train automatically rings a bell and the station attendant turn a switch to recdve It. He is able to stop It at any moment. To etart It again he stands on the locomo tive switches the current and then de scend again before tha engine has gained pted.-New York Tribune. JflelA flnVll0e too Mlrelcss.' At a private demonstration at his labor atory In Stockbrldge recently, Stephen Dudley Field, nephew of tha projector of the Atlantio cable, proved to a number of sxperta that he had Invented a simplifica tion n wireless telegraphy and ocean cabling. The experts expressed belief that It will radically change the preaent method of transmitting electrical measages. The device consist of a small but In tricate and delicate mechantam called an "amplifier." It Is a neM of colls and mag nets, soma hung on glaas threads one thousundth of an Inch thick, all so arf juuted a to record the slightest Variation In the electrical current puS4lng through. of Elecricity By mean of the amplifier Mr. Field re ceived a wireless telrgra:n sent through an ordinary DeForf st'electrolytic reponder and recorded it la Morse charactirs on a paper tape Instead of ush-.g the regular telephonto receiver. Elertrlcal expert have been trying for five years to do this. An operator receiving a wireless tele gram through a telephonic receiver . Is greatly fatigued mentally and physically. The amplifier will enable him to do quicker and more accurate work. The new machine was also tested on a cable of greater resistance than the ones In ocean use, ond It responded perfectly. On of the most valuable features. It Is explained, is that the amplifier may be used to connect an ocan cable and a land line, or wireless telegraph Instruments and wire lines or cables, ao that a message sent by ocean cable from London may be received In Manila via Glsce Bay, New York and San Francisco without Interrup tion or repeating, although passing over three distinct systems of the tek-Kraph. It would also abolish the three repeating be. tween San Francisco and the Philippine and the operator wojld exchange mes sages direct. Mr. Field said that he biHcved tint by means of the amplifier all the attachments, such as photographic reproductions, etc., now in use on wire telograph and telephone lines might be adapted to wirelesj unJ ocean cable systems. Several rlcn New Yorkers, Including Robert Ftet-on and Mr. Trowbridge, and the Marconi and De For est companies are intertsted in it Now York World. Electricity tn Prospecting;. A new way of prospecting has been tried experimentally, and Is reaching the point where it Is practically useful. The method Is based on the differences In the electrical conductivity of the earth due to the pres ence of ore deposits. Most ores are much better conductors of electricity than the soil and rocks, although aome other are almost Insulator. In making use of these fact to locate beds of ore two electrode are grounded about 100 yards apart. In the circuit Is an Induction coil with a glass condenser and two spark gaps. The current as It passes through the ground Is tested by two tele phone receivers connected to portable elec trodes which are usually grounded about seventy feet apart The make and break of the current In passing through the ground Is heard In the telephones as tick. A the electrodes attached to the tele phones are moved about, the variations In the Intensity of the tapping In the tele phones give an Indication of the presence and position of the ore deposits. Although the method is not out of the experimental stage, yet It seems to promise much for it self In the future.CoJller's Weekly. HAVE WE LEARNED TO EAT? Some Forelgrners Think W Don't Know How, and Give Is si Ronst. It Is a common charge against our coun trymen that they have never learned to eat. Foreigners note this falling as con spicuous In the category of those defic iencies of deportment oommonly termed "Americanisms." On this side of the water we regard eating as a necessity and some times 4 annoying Incident to the rush and scramble after dollars, while In most Euro pean countries dining Is exalted to the dignity of a ceremonial rite. Americana must take this criticism of our table manners with good grace, for, generally speaking, it Is just and merited. Imbued with the ardor of commercial con quest, American people live In an atmo sphere of high nervous tension. They are always In' a hurry and begrudge every minute that delays the race for wealth. The business man eata hla breakfast with more attention to manual expertness than regard for gastronomlo satisfaction. He bolt hla food while Ma restless eyes scan the morning paper propped between the augar and the spoon tray. If his coffee is too hot he Impatiently adds cold water. Always his mind Is upon everything else In the world except his breakfast. 1 Dinner Is the one meal ot all the day that should be eaten with deliberation and mental and physical complacency. It ahould typify the highest ideal of culture and embody the vital principle of right living. Only In a few households Is the dinner more than a mere expedient to satisfy the animal craving for food. Instead of being a dally reunion of the family, full of sweet sentiment and a shrine of domesticity, it is hurriedly disposed of by the members of the household, who come and go with little regard for each other. The business man Is unable to stop the turgid tide of his affairs, and his racking brain and weary body are out of harmony with the tranquillity of the dining room. Kansas City Journal. Guilty, bat Hart. "X wa governor of my state for two terms," said a well known western poli tician, "and I made up my mind aa aoon a I was sworn In the first time to right any wrong I might find In tha two state prisons. I had somehow got the Idea that many Innocent persons were sent there." "And did you find It so?" was asked. "I did. There were over 1,000 convicts in all, and I investigated 830 caae before I stopped. According to hi -own story, every one was an innocent man and the victim of Injustice. There was just one exception. He had been sent to prison for stealing a cow, and he lied to me for a long time. At length, one day after I had gone over the case with him for the fifth time and showed him that be must be guilty, he said: "If no use to try to deceive you, gov ernor. I'll admit that I did the stealing but what hurt my feeling la the mistake they made. It wasn't a cow at all, but n blamed, old jackass, and the jury convicts, 1 me because it was sworn to that he gave twelve quart of milk a day." Chicago New. Easily Explained. "What's all thla tuff in tho newpapr about an electrio storm In your neighbor hood?" "There Isn't anything in It My wife has been missing things from our cloth Una every washday, and J rigged up a pretty strong battery and charged tha clothes Una It a wire one with a lively current; and some of the neighbors who got burnt ap pear to think it must have been an eleo- None Better Made. None Better Known, The ifuar n eu that JftMi with, ivery Mc K'bben $3 lot U (riT )0 by mak er who-a ford U as good, hi ajt-ld. Style and quali ties are I crfect At LEADINQ DEALERS f TMTOmCYOUUIfE Supplies nourishment to nerves and blood. Gives strength to the weak energy to the exhausted. Builds Firm, Healthy, Solid Flesh. 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Eye Haven't you tlwiy known ffcif flj vers tpltniM ff fo tit 1o ntp loostn int powi? 0Jn'f If tUnd H reason fhaf when the sorton of Ihtm thtt 4o$ foe work It exfNceJ from the Flg nd ttmblned with killing nm ediei that It li tht out thing to fake for cosifsaflon. Eighty ptr cent of lli causes of ap,tndlcttii are sue f constlpition. Snrader s Evaporated gaa. ,c;:,r.'a. Laxative Fig Powdef is mai up tblt war: If mores fhe bowIts wife aafural htallhy action and best ot all, cures w lhout tnj bat after effects. Trial slM, loo. BtsiplM Fi. Urgs keg. ft. 5herman & McConnell Dmr Company, Omana, Distributer. w ky all rttfa 5 I J4P 'Hull WIRfl ToP - I k-A ,1jlHi T il? (mU-.I if v a 4 V. Bill, illl Dougiu St.. OnuA. ati'oluii, Uuii tiiuSi, !. u. an. . A : . mil mm 1 I 1