Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 10, 1911, Page 11, Image 11

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    11
The ree' fme ja?a z i re f)a
(TOhe, Bee's (Junior Dirthdm- Dgdk.
WHtrl VDU GET YOUk
WORK DONE- GOME
HfRE, IHAVE A
JOB foP YOU !
The Tired Business Man
. 1JY WALTLK A. SINCLAIR.
Tells FHrnrt Wife Trou
ble" with Grand Opera In
It Can lie Understood.
THE BEE: OMAHA FlilDAY, MAKC1I 10. 1011
ge
"
IB) "
This is ihe
"That strictly American Kraml oii'-ra
fm to have aroused, conflicting opin
ions," remarked Friend Wife. "Why don't
everyone enthuse?'
"Because- they could understand every
word of It." replied the Tired Bii.-Mmss
Man. '"Half the charm of grand opera,
like thaof chop Biiey. is the mystery.
Press the same characters up as Germans,
or ancient Hrltona. or Kgyptlana, or Nome
mythology, ahd let them gum their words.
Then It would have hern a riot. Person
lly. I can't see why they didn't have t..o
Amerlran character at least In Italian
like -The tilrl wltb the Cold on Chest.
A It whh, the apectntors (cave their un
stinted pralae to the performance.
"I'nderalandlnB; opera Impose an awful
nln on the listener. If he knows tv.at
nobody elae hna any more line on It than
he haa he can talk during the entire per
formance, panning only at earn curtain ti
clap hla hand and shout 'Brava!' 'Bis!' or
nana mlt 'emV A lohjr aa Ifa all fot
elen to him he ran poaa with the neat f
them, but when It la rendered Into rcgu
lar talk he haa to come down out of the
crltlral oae'and begin to explain Just why
he la strong, for tills or doean't car.-, for
that. . , - .
, "For yeara people'have heen Juat yearn
ing for oera In Knglieh, inatead of Wop
pera. They. Knew it wa Juat what via
needed to make their hnpplnesa comtil".e.
Then, one night It was laid right on ;heir
doorsteps., and were they happy? Kciin
will oblige, hy answering. They wrr.' not.
- mIr T . inn Kiiiivnv. jiihl line I iiy no
ahout playa written 'down to their Intern
et genee. It-liit Wha We can get that we
. a., ,!' lllllin IB Jlini UUl 1)1
reach.
"In Justice to tho. late Mr. Aeaop'a much
maligned leading villain., Mr. Fox, I tvive
It from a reliable nature faker that If aald
Iteynard could have obtained a atepladder
and garnered In that hunch of grapes
which dangled above the head hla cum-
menta upon: them and their Inferiority to
t Via f'rtwinrtvAi nA fait F., .4, ,.. V... n n .. 1.1
I have been biting. Ha! Ha! Not bad, that
t "biting, eh?
' Nevertheless, we must remember tha
the present generation of Americans were
In the habit of witnessing an Indian opera,
or Yather, Indian operaa, free of charges,
Without Pavlna inO ner Beat fur the nn.nln
M. yfilght. Ha! you start In aurprlae. You are
TF Incredulous. Let me retail to you the
. ir scenario or libretto of one of the flrit I
1 Wltneaaed in the eighties, when, aa a gol
den hnlred lad all rlfiht. we'll omit the
overture. y -
I mil
"PLOT."
"The acone ahowed an Indian village
with aeveral practical tepeea. The tr:De,
attired In fireproof paint, not made by a
truat In those primitive days, rendered the
openlnR chorus, chanting their weird' cries
and hurling themselves around with all t.ie
ahandon of esthetic dancers. Ba.-e fet,
too. Nothing new nowadays. The main
enora and baaaoa would east off some
aoloe and then, without aid of a libretto,
one became aware that they were pavlnj
the way for the arrival of the white mart
"At thla paychologleal point one pale
face would materialize, attired In sombr?ro
and long hair. He might carry a banjo r
a guitar and on It render aweet strains.
Then he would reveal the plot so that all
could understand. Without all the frills
and coloratura which he added to Ms
vocallzlnR the argument was thla, that
Wickiup Indian oil would cure rheumatism,
apralns, burns, toothache, backache, head
ache, other aches, Including f-ake. After
which he would pull a horae's tootn from
another atar who emerged from the audi
ence, and then offer his great blessing to
humanity at a doll-yer a bott-ul. And -vo'd
all go homo laughing at the jokes and
humming the songs and reading the libret
tos of all the songs sung In the show, en
tirely delighted, and talk about It for a
month afterward. Oh, these were the
days!"
"What kind of medicine do yoa th'nk
they ought to sell at this latest Indian
show?" asked Friend Wife.
"Something for Ingrowing criticism." re
plied the Tired Business Man.
(Copyright, 1911. by the N. T. Herald Co.)
PI
I - . - 1 Vwl a . j aW I
MR STALL IS A FrTeNC
r MINE! YOUIL HAVE
60 BACH 10 HIM I
KH NOT LET YOU WORK.
FOR Mf IT WOULD
MUKi his FEELINGS
TOWARD Mf I AM
SORRY' HE THINKS
JJ PERSUADED YOU
AWAY FROM HIM '
VHE'S HERE NOW'
KNOW
BUT THAT
rtOU HAP
PISCMARG-
10 HIM '
s r )h
'
I I h h M Y
I WOULD
NOT LET
iM GO' I
OULN'NT
FT a i A n r.
Without hiM' too of
COURSE , DiO NOT TAKE
HIM AWAY FROM ME'
1 KrJOW THAT ' REALLY.
1 MUST GET HIM BACK'
HE'S TOO GOOD A MANl
To COSE DOC :
fSO YOU WANT ToA
M 1
COME SACK. EH '
lyEu III TELL YOU.
UAKE. WE 00 NOT
sANT YOU 6ACK
W OUR PLACE"'
JNE ONLY
KEPI YOU 70
GIVE YOU A
HOME WE
DO NOT WANT)
Grandpa ' Couldn't Resist Temptation
Orandpa Deexlona felt a great dealre to
chuck 'the waltreas under the chin. It
waa the eleventh meal with which she
had served him.
ne had' browh' hair, b'149, ,eyest! there
waa red In hef olive cheeks and a humor
oua, large mouth sweetened the respectable
sophistication of her countenance. Her
footsteps aa she brought his rice pudding
were not Jerky Iambics, nor nervous ana
pests, lagging trochees nor wearied spon
dalcs; they were blithe dactyls.
With his $1,000.60 a year from government
bonds Grandpa' Deexlona could not always
tread upper Broadway or the Fifth avenue
t'eachea. Emerging at dawn from the hall
rooYn on Brooklyn Heights, he would
fil for long strolls from navy yard to Erie
Baaln, or, firmly treading Brooklyn bridge,
descend' soon Into the Manhattan he saw
from It. "South street "and' Fulton Market
knew hlrr. well. At noon sharp he sought
out the marble haah-sllnglng portals within
which aAe walked and sang.
The J!rt time Grandpa Deexlona had aat
at her table he had known that he wanted
to do something faintly Indicative of his
Immediate . admiration. ' The matter had
worried him a -good deal. He had taken
some of his long walk upon It.
If he had Veen gifted with a ready wit
he might have rendered her a tribute of
happy words. But grandpa had never ap
proximated an epigram In his life. Younger
men might have flirted. Grandpa thought
of that and then 'realised with despair
that one wearing a beard two feet long
could not . flirt If he wanted to. Those
hairs would have obscured an earthquake
of shy emotion.
Kiss Her? Well, whatever Grandpa
I'etfXlonH lacked it waa not moderation.
The very Idea of osculation terrified him.
He would undoubtedly be arrested and
fiMly Insulted if he did that. Besides the
thing mi as trite as bold.
He had made several visits to the glit
tering and tessellated eating place before
his native Instinct asaerted Itself, and It
occurred to him that what he had really
wanted to do from the start was to chuck
her with sly pollteneaa under the chin.
But dwelling upon the conaequencee waa
I painful.
1 Grandpa Itocxloua did' not believe that
he would he draxxed to a police court aa
' u if undoubtedly would if he kissed her.
He did not fear violence at the hands of a
frenzied mob If he chucked her chin. But
lie would in.strantly draw In her breatt
and utter a sirlea of short, piercing
at ream nr a long outcry similar lo that
made by a'atcam siren and serving the
same iniriio.se. Having sounded the ilarm,
be would flap Ills fare aa likely as r.ot ill
her hast, ful tnertiy. carrying away en-
f
' mi mm i in .v.-'- .i-m"js
YOU LEFT US WITH
OUT A WORD OP WARN;
ING' NOW. YOU CAN
PADDLE YOUR. OWN
CANOE ' CAN
StCT liAur uiiTUAhT
I a....k Vill 1.1 1 fH
BACK OP 1HE GOOD.'
OLD. HAPPY DAYS
A7 COIONEV STALL?
'HE'S S0NE DOWN TO
WARDS TOWN ' III GO
4R0UN0 YHI OTHER
!WAY AND HEAD HIM
r
WSJ
NOW JAKE! YOU GETN
THIS RIG WITH ME ANW
(IF fR? STALL SAYS SO.
WE 11 LET YOU
ISTAY WITH OS
i AG A IN! COME!
iGEY IN HEPE1
ril,M0T LET
YOU GO INTO
TOWN AN'GET
los,t: COME'
m
Day We
Celebrate
PTKT.T.A MAK SMITH.
1U19 South Tenth Street.
March 10, 1911
ScIkmiI.
Vear.
I AM. ALWAYS WAS ANO
ALWAYS WILL BE. LOOKING
.
OUT FOR YOUR INTERESTS!
t ISN'T WHAT LITTLE W0R
YOU DO 00 MftST OF THE I
WORK. IT'S YOU JAKt.tOlili
rrz; . ...... . ,.
IL C- LI l Of I
L,. Y
r3C J 1
YES' the minute he
s,w ME HT: WANTED
"0 COME BACK. ' I
THINK if THE TRUTH
.WERE KNOWN., OLD
DOC ?ERKlE
C0AED HIM
AWAY' HE'S AT
HIS CHORES A
GAIN SiF HE
kNEVER LET-
SILAS J
r
Mining Coffin Lumber
J
tlrely his beard. . Ho did not think he
would pull his hair.
The manager would come rapidly ts the
table and demand explanations and there
would be several mlnutefe of horroi and
embarrassment. Then he would be to
leaVe the restaurant at once and never to
come there again.
Perhaps she was not of a nervous tem
perament and would merely say, "Sir,
bow dare you?" Very loud so that nersoris
at the table would become cognizant of
his misconduct and the Inertia of thtlr
stares would drive him outside.
Plre as any or all of these contingencies
would be, Grandpa Deexlona felt the desire !
to chuck her chin getting stronger with
each visit. It may be aaid ' that he was
foolish to continue to eat there, but Judg
ment and sentiment aside, hla pocket hook
had a say in It. His vlsita continued pri
marily, however, because he wanted them
to.
This was his eleventh sitting then.iYnd
he had fought Inclination throvgli the. buck
wheat cakes and oyster stew, but as the
rice pudding came swift on her dainty
fingers grandpa felt an odd sinking within
him, and knew that discretion was lost.
Mie drew near, she hovered over hlin.
Crooking his forefinger he reached up and
brushed her chin, effacing for a moment
the dimple In it. Then he braced himself
for her cries.
None came. Instead Grandpa Deexlona
felt a sticky trickle. It was the rice pud
ding annolntlng him Aaron fashion, and
not alone his beard. At the same Instant a
contrite voice said-
"Oh, pardon me; I'JI get you another
order right away."
Grandpa Ieexlons found voice hurriedly
to decline, and depositing his custonury
nickel by his plate he rushed ferth. Juat
what had happened? He felt he would
never know. New York, Sun.
One of the most curious Industries in the
world Is the business of mining for coffin
planks, which Is carried on In Upper Ton
quln, a portion of the French possessions
In southeastern Asia. In a certain district
in this province there exists a great under
ground deposit of logs, which probably
were the trunks of trees engulfed by an
earthquake or some other convulsion of
nature at a comparatively recent period.
The trees are a species of pine known to
the natives as "namhou." The wood Is
almost Imperishable and has the quality,
either through Its nature or as the result
of Its sojourn underground, of resisting
decay from damp. Thla quality makes It
particularly valuable for the manufacture
of coffins, and for this purpose It la lurguly
exported to Europe.
The trees often are a yard In diameter.
They are burled In sandy earth, at a
depth of from two to eight yards, and are
dug up by native labor aa doinand Is made
for them.
r
v.
One Way to Win a Suit
J
i
BUSINESS TRIP.
During the trial of a personal Injury suit
at Ottawa, III., jurors and spectators were
surprised when two wheelbarrows, a shovel
and several sacks of coal were hauled Into
the court room, and John Schneider, plain
tiff In a suit for $30,000 damages, was
called upon to give a shoveling demonstra
tion. He asked damages from the Illinois Zinc
company, having been Injured while em
ployed in a mine owned by the defendants.
He claimed to he permanently injured and
that he had little or no use of his right
arm. The defendant claimed he had been
employed In a coal mine In Ohio and also
had become a brakeman on the Erie rail
road. In the effort to convince the Jury
that he could not shovel ceal or twist
brakea If hla arm was injured, the coaJ
shovellng exhibit waa arranged.
Schneider, to the discomfiture of the de
fenae. seised the" shovel with his left hand,
braced the handle under the' elbow of his
right arm and shoveled the coal from one
barrow to the other. The Jury gave him
a verdict.
r
Man Is This You?
J
The horrible dignified man never did
have a good time. i .
A man who pasaes a magazine to a girl on
a train doea It because he Is, lonesomo.
Young man, never ask a girl to live with
your mother. Let her go flj'
Some men In for huntlngn.'dear" often
get swamped. .'
Strong men are not afraid of 'joxlnrf
gloves, but let a girl give them the mlttei
and they go to pieces. ' ;
Pome men look and act like an Interroga
tion point.
A club la a place where a man never is
when he la called On the telephone.
One man's loss la another man's game.
You can't pay bills with artistic tempera
ment. s An optimist is a man who says when a
ly la "In the soup" It is "still In the swim."
Home men get used to marriage, 3 lo
tobacco, only they want the brand changed.
Women delight In remnanta of anything
but a man. Sophie Irene Ijoeb, In Pitts
burg Dispatch.
r
Nubs of Knowledge
J
Fifty-seven unmarried persona commit
suicide to forty-three married.
Argentina leads the nations of the world
In the exportation of beef.
An average crow Is given credit for
destroying 700,000 insects a year.
Electrocution as a humane way of
slaughtering cattle Is being tried In France.
It Is estimated that there are 28,309,000
square miles of fertile land In the world.
A too hot gas stove oven can be cooled
quickly by placing a dish of cold water
within it.
Perfect skeletons of a man and a woman
of the neolithic age were found recently In
England.
Potato parings baked In an oven will
light more quickly than wood when used
to kindle a fire.
On one leg of a crow shot recently In
Germany waa a ellver band showing It had
lived more than a century.
Italy plans to build four 24,000-ton super
Dreadnoughts which shall be the greatest
fighting ships In the world.
THE WEEKLY BUMBLE BEE
VOL. I.
OMAHA. MARCH 10, 1911.
NO. 22 7.
THE Bl'MBl.K BEE.
r .
A. STINGER Editor
Communications welcomed,
and neither signature nor re
turn postage . required. Ad
dress the Editor.
NO BAD MONEY TAKEN.
NO AD8 AT ANY PRICE.
gyring-.
Although the almanac does
not admit it, other things al
most aa reliable indicate that
spring is with ua.
One of the certain signs is
that Uoa Tom Flynn haa hla
street washing brigade at
work again, and the down
town thoroughfares are being
laundered dally. And then
there are others. Among them
bock beer.
But it will be well to re
member that the Ground Hog
atlll haa a tew daya yet in
which to get hla record good.
Also that the real test ot the
coming of Lprlng in this lo
cality is not final until about
the 31st of May.
In a few months we will own
our own home."
"Your husband expeou an in
Tease of aaJary?"
No: but he has consented to
my irvj Wat g visit. father "
r
Hard on the Dog
J
A politician who was making a house-to-house
canvass came to a farm house,
when he observed an elderly woman stand
ing at the gate, and the candidate grace
fully lifted his hat and politely asked: "No
doubt, my dear madame, your husband U
at home?"
"Yea." responded the woman.
"Might I have the pleasure of seeing
him?" inquired the politician.
"He's down In the pasture a-burying the
dog." waa the reply from the Individual
at the gate.
"I am very sorry. Indeed, to learn of the
death of your dog." came In sympathising
tone from the candidate, "What killed
him?"
"lie wore hiaself out a-barklng at the
candidate," said the oiuau. Tit-blla.
Hememher.
One absolutely certain way
to keep out of Jail ia not to do
anything for which you may
t, sent to Jail. Also, If you
don't want to see your name
In a sensational story, behave
yourself.
This is not aimed at any
one In particular.
OptlOB.
Ye editor notes that the
solons decided that the present
local option law Is good
enough for Nebraska. The fact
that It doesn t suit either end
to the controversy ought lo
commend it to the citizens.
Job.
That may have been a put
up Job between the detectives
and Tom Dennlaon to get poor
.Frank Krdman into trouble,
but what about the unfin
ished sentence at Canyon
City.
arsiowla.
Boh Holmes has undertaken
the Job of regulating the
Omaha schools. This ought to
help some, for Bob Is a dandy
little regulator when he gets
to going. .
complete.
The Job of whitewashing
done by the legislative com
mittee waa very thorough as
far as it went, but Frank
huuliffe haan t got his pay
yet.
laalloa.
These warm sunny days
will make you think of it. hut
don't take em off until after
Ik sua kiosac Ui Uita,
WHERE WAS WAVES
Humble Bee's Intrepid
War Corespondent la
on the Spot.
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
FRIO FK1JOLE8. Mucho
Cullente, Mexico, March 9.
(npecial l'ouo Promo 4jUien
babe.) Well, I landed here
lioui my biplane tins morning
and have juat returned from
a., llntivii... Wtiii vieiiei hiih
simo Pulque di Aguudleiile.
t.eneral 1'ulquu's at my stood
outside and smoked a cigar
ette while I was talking to
the intrepid leader of the ln
surrecioa. "Buenos dtaa, aenor," quoth
I, "como le va, paao tlerupo?"
"Bueno," he replied; "como
le va, uated?"
When I had explained my
mission, he expressed his ut
most appreciation for the
courtesy t he Bumble Kee had
shown him. I assured him it
was but hla due, aa the great
leader of the most Important
military movement made In
this part of the world aince
the revolution of laat week.
' Muchoa gratlas, aenor," he
responded, bowing low with
the traditional politeness of
His race. General Pulque is
one of the real nobility of
Mexico. His family was here.
M' ii, without clothes, when
Cortex came over, and most
of them have been going with
out clothes ever since. I have
a notion that If It were possi
ble, one mltiht by going hack
far enough find some of his
ancestors swinging by their
tails before even the days of
the Moiilexumaa. 1 am sure
his army could do it now. Hut
thla la a digression.
1 asked him about bis plana.
"Mucho partago y Colo
rado," he replied, "yo tenso
cii-uad iHMores. y lamales
ci.lientes, y chill con carne, y
chill colorow." And here the
general a enthusiasm swelled
as the picture of his campaign
grew before my womliritig
eyes, and he went on, sweep
ing the air with magnificent
gest urea.
"Habe usted dlnero? Yo
raroa rauclio por dlnero. no
; caroa por jabon. Caramba, yo
una leal y iin'iue drills-
vos!"
I looked at the general and
then at hla army, and 1 knew
be told the truth whenVie said
he didn't care for snap. Hut
i am now waiting for what
will be the most Important de-
i velopment of thla momentous
canipuixii.
Kenor Don Juan Jose Jesus
Maria Pano y l ame, jefe po
litico und also alcalde of Frio
rrijolea. expects to have a
deference with General
pulque di Aguadiente this
evei ing.
K.Ma noche. aenor." said
Hi mil Don Pano y Carne.
when 1 SNike to him of the
approaching event, and wtth
HE'S GOT 'EM GUESSING
lion. Taft Starts Some
thing When lie Hurrtee
Army on a Hike.
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
WASHINGTON, March
(Special Delayed a Bit at
the New I'nlon Depot Post
office.) Just what rummy
game Hon. Taft Is up to in
sending the standing army off
on a hike to Texas Isn't plain
to any one. It certainly did
shake things up, Just ua the
men are coming out of a hard
winter's rest, to be stirred up
like thla. Some awfully suc
cessful social campaigns were
simply knocked out of kelter
by the order. Anyhow, what's
the good of sending the army
to Texas, when Hon. T. R. la
heading that way.
Hon. Halllnger got away un
der the cover of the war cloud,
and will not be missed. I un
derstand the new member
plays a corking good game of
meadow pool, and so will be
right in the swim. He looks
good to the eye, and ranks
considerable as a highbrow.
This oiiKht to suit Norm Hap
good, but I doubt It, for It la
hardly possible that Hon. Taft
could du anything to hold
Hon. Hapgood long. No one
elsn can,
Hoi. Guggenheim Is marked
for the committee that some
of Hon. Brown's home folka
thought he was going to get.
Hon. Brown lsn t mentioned
in the list of good things. Oh,
very well.
Some folks thought the sad
ness of the parting laat Satur
day was the real thing, but
Juat wait till they see what
Is coming off about the &th
of next month. Ist Hatur
day's farewells will he. thrown
entirely Into the discard by
the sorrow that is about to be
realized. It will have some
thing of a foil, though, in the
Joy that a lot of hungry
rii-moiraiB will show when
they connect with the pay roll.
if I hear anything ahout the
war will write at once.
BILL.
DOWN AT LINCOLN
Name and AddroNg.
Donald A. Hoyre, S523 Burt St Saunders 1900
Hazel Born, 1212 South Fourth St ractfle
Henry Berghaln. 1906 Center St CaBtoll.it 1903
William Bosworth, 2438 Manderson St Lothrop 1905
Pearl A. Brackhill, 1054 South Twenty-second St lllRh 1X96
Katherlna Baum, 3545 Harney St Columbian 189S
George Cllae, First and Spring Sts Bancroft . . . V 1903
Arthur Clark, 1323 Howard St Leavenworth 1900
Elizabeth Dlnkel, 2424 South Nineteenth St Castellftr .'...'.. .189&
Herbert Donnelly, 2429 Franklin St..l Long . '. ......... 1898
Lola V. Dorrls, 4508 Izard St Walnut Hill 1905
Irene Eckman, 2615 Ersklne St Long 1898
Martha Funk. 1714 South Eighth St Train .....1905
Alan W. Fries, 4036 Burt St Saunders 1905
Lola M. Foster, 2582 Pratt St Lothrop , 1897
Frederick E. Graham, 1714 Georgia Ave Park 1900
Gertrude M. Garrison, 2208 North Nineteenth St Lake 1904
John F. Gatchell, 1814 Corby St Lake 1896
Lillie Goodman, 1717 South Thirteenth St Lincoln -. . 1906
Jacel H. Hart, 519 North Forty-first St t . . .Saundera 1904
Ethel G. HugheB, 1021 South Twentieth St tMason 1898
Aleen Hansen, 2414 Larlmore Ave Miller Tark 1903
Annie Holzman, 1923 Paul St ..Kellora 1901
Charles H. Horsens, 2916 Seward St..' Long 1903
Carl Heinze, 2635 Seward St Long 1894
Bessie M. Hruby, 1952 South Fourteenth St Comentus 1900
Charlie Johnson, 2433 Burt St Kellom 1897
Hazel Jensen, 4251 Patrick Ave Walnut Hill 1901
Annie Kohlberg, 1220 Capitol Ave Cass ........... ..1902
Henry Leonard Kerr, 2245 North Nineteenth St' High 1895
Sarah Kesselman, 718 North Sixteenth St ...Cass.., 1902
Edua Keppenhaver, 2602 Dewey Ave .Columbian 1898
Daniel Landfeld. 4205 Dodge St.. Saunders 1902
Herman Lewis, 2107 North Twenty-seventh St Long 1901
Frank Lockwood, 4511 Franklin St Walnut Hill 1896
Percy D. Lewis, 3428 South Fourteenth St Forest 1904
Lydla Mattson, 713 North Thirty-second St .Webster 1903
James McDowell, 1631 Burdette St Lake 1897
Gladys E. Messenger, 3878 Hamilton St Walnut Hill 1900
Joseph Morrissey, 2509 Corby tit Sacred Heart ....1903
Jean Maxwell, ' 2734 South Twelfth St St. Patrick 1902
Helen Mancuao, 1026 South Twenty-first St Leavenworth . ....1903
Louis A. Metz, 528 South Twenty-sixth St Farnam 1901
Joseph M. Marks, 2804 Miami St Howard Kennedy. .1905
Marie C. Olsen, 2416 South Tenth St Vinton 1896
Conrad Olson, 320 North Thirty-third St Farnam 1902
Esther J. Oney, 4807 North Twenty-fourth St Saratoga 1901
George A. Pakieser, 3018 Fowler Ave J.Monmouth Park ..1901
Russell Perkins, 4018 North Thirty-ninth St Central Park ....1903
Myrtle Paulsen, 2217 Howard St Centrnl .'....1903
Ancy Parr, 2403 South Twentieth St Castellar 1897
Mildred Paulsen, 2217 Howard St Central 1903
Sarra RubenBtein, 21084 Chicago St ' Cass ,.,.1898
Vernon C. Russell, 2207 North Twentieth St Lake 1900
Alma Ratzloft, 2706 Lake St Howard Kennedy . .1898
Clarence Sewell, 2416 Cuming St Kellom ........ ..1897
Jack Singles, 423 North Thirty-ninth St Saunders ..1898
Thomas Staley, 3855 California St Saunders ........1902
Joseph Satrapa, 703 Marcy St Pacific ..1900
Marie R. Sherwood, 2740 South Ninth St St. Patrick .......1903
Fred H. Schanlan, 3801 North Twenty-second St. . . . Lothrop .1905
Glennard Sutton, 1521 Leavenworth St Leavenworth 1900
Stella M. Smith, 1C19 South Tenth St Lincoln 1902
Abel E. Thall, 4108 Charles St Walnut Hill 1904
Joseph Vacants, 1228 Park Wild Ave Pacific 1895
Charles B. Waugh, 2817 North Twentieth St High 1891
Florence Emma Worm, 1016 Davenport St Cass 1905
Legislature Overlooked la
Annual Match He t ween
Wets and Drys.
added 'Varoa usttd por cl
gurro?" Ami I am smoking tliat
dual' now. It Is a go d dtal
hk some of the other tilings
I find down here lunkerino.
Tell (lie home folks that I
am doing my dutv, and that
1 11 he on the Jolt, after t lie
fa-lion of Hie country, which
Ik still -'lia.-ta. Malmna "
. i-KIUlO.
tlear.
The water works situation
la aimost aa clear as the
water used lo be. ,
a tree I a.
One morning this week the
streets were really tlean.
kiaaous v of Lit Laud L lKlud ail night;
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
LINCOLN, March . itspe
clal No FTllls.) We are los
ing Interest in what Is going
on out at the state house Juat
now, for we have something
more important to look after
uptown. It seems that some of
the residents of the Holy City
have not been satisfied entirely
with the efforts made to Im
prove their condition. Maybe
that isn't just the way to put
It; they are satisfied, but they
are not contented.
So we are to have another
round of the Wet va. Dry af
fair, and it will be to a finish
thla time; no matter which
aide wlna, the debate will not
be resumed for twenty-four
hours after the vote la counted.
Hon. Hoagland la going
home full of new ideaa, some
of which he got in Omaha.
One haa to do with the prices
paid expert stenoga. Hon.
Hoaglund had the Idea the
whitewashing committee ouxht
to get Its shorthand work
done at the rate of about ttS
per month, winch would have
made the total bill for 'lie
Omaha adventure come to
about $'.).
Aa daya go by the :al
beautiea of the Initiative and
referendum are becoming ap
parent. If it takes so much
pulling and hauling to get a
hill both parties are pledged
to paas through the legisla
ture, what will happen when
one undertHkes to pasa a hill
with Z7.j.i"XI members Instead
of 10ft?
Hon. Barton has hla eye on
the main chance, all right. If
he gets hold of all the reserve
funds' of all the Insurance
companies, lie Kill he some
thing of a magnate, all rU-ht.
Hut the insurance companies
bava the foolish idea that the
state house, lsn t a very rafe
place to deposit the mill1 ns
of "llnuid assets'' Hon. Bar
ton asks to have turned over
to him. Suppose a fire should
start St the state h ?
Then what? IKE.
Forever.
One of the unfort'iiiale
thlnvs in life for some folks
Is that no statute of limita
tions runs in the court of pub
lic opinion.
Meadv.
Artie Mullen llkea a steady
Job. so he doesn t propose to
let go of the one he s got un
til he tecs another.
Happy.
Bill Murray Is happy thla
week. Fiddle f'ook U In town.
U ho a fcddw Cook? Why, the
Queer Kinks of Sailors
The conversation had been of the eea and
ships and naturally enough it Included sail
ors, says the New York Sun. No one pro
fessed to be able to comprehend that breed
of men. Some one asked Ieeplueks, who
onco shipped before the mast, what he
thought of his fellows at the time.
"Why, I didn't understand them," Deep
luckB answered. "They were childish and
villainous by turns.
"The only old-time sallorinan skilled in
intricate knots and splices was a Outch
man by birth. He was a quaint sort when
be wasn't terrifying. He had been guilty
of murder and 1 don't know how many
other crimes, but in the heat of a fo'c'sle
argument 1 once heard him say to another
man:
' -Now, you was all off. No, sir, I tell
you Portygal is wrapped around by .Spain I
like as a baby cuddles In its mother a
lap.'
llather pretty language, I thought It,
for a murderer and an Illiterate toiiow.
Vet the next day he tried to put me over
the side from up aloft.
r
Better Go Slow, Lad
J
v,-i
Koy Wall, "the man who couldn't stay
rich," waa arreated recently In Chicago,
charged with hawng forged chei ks for l-'uO.
About f.vs months back Wall was eni
ploea at the lilackstoiie hotel In Chi
cago aa an elevator boy-glad to gt t ' tips '
when he could. One morning he was told
that a relative had died and had left him
several thousand dollars. .The young man
(Wall Is Just Ti years old took his money
and Invested It in several small theaters.
I'or a few days money came in ipilckly,
and then the former elevator hoy decided
that he wanted to bo known aa a real
theatrical magnate and a "spender." Ho
he started on a round of pleaauie.
The money left him was not ao very
much and hla Ideaa of pleasure did not t or
respond to the amount of money at his
disiiosal. Ho two "bad'' checks were re
ceived by people to whom Wall Is aald to
have given them. The complaint followed
and Wall was arrested.
"The skipper was a Welshman. Th
ship waa becalmed In the tropica and this
round tub of a man strutted to and fro on
the poop deck, stundlnt,' still every other
minute to gaze at the brilliant sky and
ejaculate;
" -Blow! Blow ! Parnn ye, why don't ye
blow?"
"The man at the wheel waa a negro
criminal. He stood the cursing a while,
and then with a look of cold disapproval
aald:
'Cap'n, yo' bettah stop dat. Yo' gwlne
git all de wind yo' want.'
"Our Builmaster waa alno a Welshman, a
man past 70, who had been fifty yeara at
sett and had been dismasted off Capo Horn
In hla time, ilia kneca shook under him,
but In him burned all the firea of youth,
all the energy of Celtic blood. Poet h
was, of couiTe by virtue of his race. He
pumped the fitsh water and waa lit a
frenzy If he spilled a drop. Xna day ha
took a stroke too many with the pump
handle. He drew in Ins breath with a hiss,
uttered an In it use oath, then both his
voice and feeling underwent Instant aa
change. He murmured:
" 'We are wasteful children.'
"1'urc poetry, that, I reckon. No, I,
don't understand aallormen."
STUNC
"Do I make myself plain?"
"Yea; you are not half aa attrmOi
tiv m you used to t"