! I 10 THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1?, 1911. JJPl! UlaWflBSejl! . .. J.1 :4US BOYS" Capital T, R, O, U, B, L, E, Period. ! CwrrtsBt, 111. letl By Tom McNamara Af ArTWf. 1 60 AND the t wo r oiye Mff A TiCKCT.Itfl CMIUY MOT 60 ANO gi M MY CUKTAIAs" P0L To 111 TELL MO UHPU& OH TO 41T A FftU! TiCKgT RAND STANO MAO TMi J FOf TXE FBmAHT ON AnOTHIM Twf Af iM TOO YAOG T5 HAvfi A PRE! TICKET, WAif-Tm. I SES AP'oMPOk . (X - A rRAM&E KlC NAH6B LOlUt IMNf iMAM8 6U6hV to C1 iaj f ftf C Jijr CAU.B HV TEM rwE UMPiEs 6or BfiAr TH T MQHrO'Vi Ak A TlCngT jj? 66oe m 5" I OU6HT To 6T lAj FREE IM EA&US &EAK ViSlTR 'M 60"N(JTeR Tu M J UMPO ABOUr WHAT THEY WEN" AND VIVIAN &PRUDFR. WAN! S St TOUSE UCTo HIS MOUSE fcHr away: r x5 THERE fjEEMi T BIT A UTTLM M6C SOMEPLACE I IT J ... rrtn nwE30r7-fv.f.M: tr arrival n ; i-ni-iiKiFFH tme TRoa3Le is That everybody KIIN IP CU" "NUN I HIT WUItUS ?t(tiE BUSINESS PD6&Y AMD ME i MAMA&IN4 rr and everybody s TRYING TO BUMK U OIT OF PREP TICKET -VMS AiNr 60T ajOC -evERY &COY HAS Td PAY CCF ME AND YOU AMD PU6(sY. CAUSE vuE MAvE TO HjT UP VMlTM TVtE PUYEHiTM SAME v ft tmsy ro "M ALL SIREMff - DIRECTLY AFTER THifc 0AL06uE TOOK PLACE M D1PERS BO06MT UP FIFTY TICKETS To THE 0M-DS SERIES FOR JAe OOLUAd CASH FOR FREE OlSTRlQUTiOM KlD4 MHO CAN NOTPKiUPTWI PCE OP ONE &STWEEM MOVM AAlD FRIDAY Just a hp skip ano a jop from not moulow now wm t ve Got Md OA'SY TS ROlM) ILL fiRtau A PAR OF FAt6 TEETH AMD S HIM nTf) riPYOtTi a -v Cam Back. u)hJ DRAB ME A P0STAU AP0V ITCAMT BE OONE Ai iTUrtiir A j7 j I GoTCrtEO) 1 STEVE SALEM PANORAMA IS Y1YID Willamette Valley on Canvai it ! hibited at Land Show. MANY VISITORS ARE LN1EBESTED Hvmarkaktr Palatlair l tHI Vr" ft-alial kr ' ' orua lnl Rlfrtrlral ICtfra. Gtorgt L. hrlrber I'tmi to Omaha and brought Uty Willi him- city of palut and Iron, plprlrlc I i eta tat. automobllri, mraiRnhlpa and all of It aiirroundrd bjr grea( moiinlalim nnd tmn valleya, and nhvpibrr a Ixo broocht lha aim and the moon and the utar. The city transported by txpraM to th Omaha Land ihow Ik the rlty of Ralem, Or., and the reproduction, vividly Ac curate to the mlnuteiit detail, la the -work of Brhrelber. 'ho le an artlet of ability and a vurreniful artlet. having Mold many of hit paintlivra of weetrm arenes, Ob the opnln nlxht of the expealtlon large crowd guttiered In front of he reprodurtlon of the city of Halem. The pertator BMma te aland an on a mountain and view below, far away and yet very clear, the rlty, lt uplrea and ehyecrapere and Ita outlining array of houeee. off to the left, anow.orowned and gilt. lerlng In the flerre light, etanda Ml Hood, aa1 away te the front, a mere f(k of while, Mt. Jeffereon. Through the elty a blue river flowe, with boat upoa It. end about the city Itaelf there are many tree and green field, la front of the epertetor of all thl automobllet r;-e baok and forth, ftrta burn brightly ia hea eryere and ralaln.ahda and while tent of the workmen about the drying er.edn give forth a hum of conversation, mo real le the Illusion. While one stands nnd views this puna. ranva a slew change ia wrought, The aklc darken, the llgll (uds and behind - - i a veil of blue-black clouds the day dna out and the engelflng night comes on. Mghu flh eJon lha street and from the windows of the houses. A red steel bridge suddenly baronies distinct of out line In the new light. "My, how beauti ful," yori say and thinks no more about It unlees Mr. Behrelber takes you behind the arenas and shows you a msse of eleelrlo wiring and a multitude array of lights and nothing olse exoept sheet Iron labs standing on edge. Hut the Illusion does not leave you and you go away to tell your friends you have Just returned from Kalem, and it le a nlre plaoa and If your friends have been there you launch into siKia a detail description of what you have Been that they wonder how they missed ao much when they were there. Switchman Killed on the M. P. Tracks in the Omaha Yards James Wherry, a switchman In the am. ploy of the Missouri Pacific railroad, was Instantly killed Monday afternoon at fourteenth and Ohio streets at 4:30 'clock, when he waa knocked beneath the wheels of one of the cars ha wag working on while making a coupling. Whirry waa working between two car when the engine which waa to pull the string suddenly "kicked" lata the part of tne train the twitchman waa working on and he waa knocked down and cut al most In two. The entire train passed ever hla body and waea he waa taken from the tracks he wss lifeless. The eoroner waa notified and the body was turned over to him. Wherry waa years of age and roomed at not Cuming street. He was unmarried and bad relatives here, and cards found in hla pockets showed that ha was bprn In Oallas. Tex., and had a brother there, who will be notified today. CLUB LISTENS TO REFORMERS Miss Kate Barnard Telli Women of Ker Work in Oklahoma. SEVERAL DELEGATES TALK Mrs. alllngton Bewth Spot-Its I'rom the gtaadpolat at the Prisoner Who ft a re goflere Ilarrara. KaU Barnard, tha "Oklahoma whirl wind." swept tha Woman s olub and IU guests at Monday's meeting off their feet by her spirited and dead-ln-earnest re cital of the fight wnk-h and other charity worker of her 4-year-old state are putting up to heat the politicians and bring about needed reforms. Miss Barnard is a small young person with fiery black eyeg and quantities Of black hair, which ahe wears In a braid. Officially, she Is state commlx-iloner of charities and corrections of Oklahoma and as such Is a delegate to the Ameri can Prison Association congress. Hhe won her position with SOW mpre votes than were polled for Governor Haskell. "You've got to use stratagem to get the bills you want iased." was her tip to the women and ahe told of the lobby. Ing, the waylaying of legislators, the wire-pulling which she and her confed erates went through to secure the pas sage of bills which have given Oklahoma compulsory education, child labor and juvenile court laws. She described how she stood beside the governor and fairly bulldosed him Into signing the child labor bill. Other Delegates apeak, Other Prison congress delegates npoke. W. A. Gates of San Francisco, secretary of the 8tat Board of Charities and Cor rections, told the story of "the redemp tion of California" from the political dominance of the Southern Pacific rail road which' It has been nhder tr fifty yar. to Its present subserviency to the will of the people through last week's elections for Initiative, referendum, recall unci woman suffrage amendments to tha stuto constitution. Mrs. Maud Balllngton Hooth of New York, for fifteen years a prlon worker, wife of the commander of the Volunteers of America, spoke from the standpoint of the prisoner, who, she said, hud suffered horrors which would make one's blood run cold, under the old system of aebra stripes, shaved heads, lock step and si lence system which I being replaced by humane treatment. She said that the prison should not be a place of punishment, but a stepping stone to stronger manhood, and that tba wall against which prison reformers bump Is the state which will not provide adequate buildings for the prisoners. Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, superintendent of Chicago public schools, spoke on "Medical Inspection In the Public Schools." "The achool la not only answerable for the mental and moral character of Ita pupils; their physical care is uldo part of Its duty." Che told of Chicago's system. It schools for the sub-normal children, tin outdoor rooms. Its open-air camps. Its child study department, , medical Inspec tion and dispensary. ' WEST SIDE WANTS THE STREETCAR EXTENDED Councilman Schroeder will present to the council tonight a petition signed by more than MO residents and property owners living In the southwest part of the city requesting that tha elty oounetl compel the street railway company to build a street railway Una through their section of the city, either from Hanaeom park west on Lincoln avenue, or from Leavenworth street south. to Lincoln ave nue en any street from Forty-eighth to Sixtieth street, and thence west on Lin coln avenue to the ( Missouri Pacific tracks.- 1 v ! The Key to the Situation Bee Ads. Thoroughfare Lore Will Be Narrated at Land Exposition The management of the Omaha Land how has set aside Friday, October XT, aa "Good BoaUs" day and I. A. learlea, J. E. George and E. A. Sprague hare been named as tha committee to take charge and make the arrangement. Upon this occasion It Is expected that Dan Stephens of Fremont, Colonel Allen, state road commissioner for Colorado; George H. Cooley, Bt. Paul, Minn., and Colonel Lafayette Young of Pee Moines, la., will be prexent and deliver ad dresses upon the subject of good roads. In addition, there will be a display of road-making machinery In action. The vacant tract of ground south of the Coli seum will be used as a place where the demonstrations will be carried on. Besides the addresses and demonstra tions on "Good Roads" day, there will be a special program that will be of gen eral Interest to the public. A large majority of the exhibitors at the Land show are directly Interested In the subject of good roads and It Is ex pected upon the occasion referred to good roads all over the wet will be given a boost that will result In much good to the country at large, 8, A. Searles, who for some years has been active In the work of securing good roads in Douglas oounty, haa just re turned from a long automobile trip through Iowa and speaks In the highest terra of the work done there during the last year. Last fall he went over sub stantially the same route as traversed on his last trip. At that time he found the roads in very bad condition. Now he says they are In splendid condition, due largely to the work that has been dene under the direction of the road su pervisors during the last season. Sohool Board Works Fast So the Members May VisitLand Show Owing to the desire o many of the members of the Hoard of Education to attend the . Land Show the business of tha meeting last night was hurried through and after the reading of the minutes of the last meeting and the re ports of tba committees the meeting ad journed. The secretary' report of the amounts apportioned for the fiscal year ending December 3L Ml, and the amounts ax. pended during the first nine months of the year showed an apportionment of tm,ni and an expenditure of $551,196.46, which leaves a remainder 'of $249,556.41. The amount expended In exoems or the estimate ia $36,690.86, leaving a nut 'remainder of 21J.C3.5lt. A comparative statement of expenditures for the first nine months Of mi as compared with the same period of 1910 shows a decrease In expenditures of $8.0tl.M. The deficit In tha general fund. Jan. uary 1, 111, w $17,419.47. Receipt from January to September Incluslvt amount to $756,7S9.S3; expenditures ana transfer amount to $5ol,19;.45. leaving a balance of $38,173.41. Nobody te Too Old to learn that the sure way to car a cough or cold is with rr. King' New Discovery. Hc and $1.00. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Sploo Is tho llfo off cooking Usoa it depend tba saaf and appetising' quality of pwwr baking. Setae pour epie with aere if vow are jeslaw ot jreur isn a Mag. TONE SPICES te an fIlmtk tlvsra, Ody Im (sMrteteck i Md. a ft tlx auliiB UbytW amt scifxt et uitor Mtke TbwesM ewe awe .rWTONfc as "otktn Jaat te eomaa swimlf" for s full ue ulue r Vimi. W will md yea 1m, tne. see e mm mi keek " Tea.. tW TaU'" Tese'i islet i are swr lot rsr frecer. . . TONS BROS. . Dee Maine, la. 3l,n f " " oMeM Cefhe Dessert Book FREE Cht, IUntoftM .. Book, (iris tedaes fat ever 100 desieru, nladt tnd eandln, tent on receipt of yuu qrocr'i aaate. If ht doeta t tell Knox Gela tin will send yoa a full slat wniftU for t taotpt 4 kit asvt. Ckarte B. Knox C. 4QO Knea Ave. Johaaiewa, N. Y. An Appeal to Wives You know th terrible affliction that comes to many home from the result of a drinking husband or son. You know of the money wasted on "Drink" that I needed in tho home to purchase food and clothing. Orrlne hae saved thousands of drinking Tien. It is a home treatment and can be given secretly or taken vol untarily. Put up in two forms, powder or pill. Your money will be returned if after a trial it ha failed to benefit. Costs but 1. 00 a box a mere trifle when compartd with tne amount a drinking man will spend In a day for liquor. Come In and get a free booklet and let ue tell you or the good ORRINE9 is doing. Rherman ft MeConnell Drug Co., 16th and Dodge, and i4th and Farnam, tOT-j No. lth St., Owl Drug Co.. 16th and Harney fits., Omaha. tirrf(gi . mi if JUL Id qi Mireg n J y An intensely interesting and instructive feature of the daily program at the D) ii is OCTOBER 16 to 28, COLISEUM, OTwlAHA is to be found in the lecture halls each afternoon and evening. Today's program includes two illustrated lectures by William Bruce Leffingwell, author, traveler and lecturer. IPtoir&eeiP Oays'Siru- tHtucs Westf Lecture Hall "B" at 2:30 P. M. A vivid description of the pioneer trail from the days of the Pony Express up to the Twentieth Century. IfoflEowstlornio Faitfiloinisil IPsnrlk Lecture Hll "A" ft 0;00 P, M. While words fail to convey to th' mind the beauty of this National Playground, an idea of ita ecenio beauties and natural wonders will be derived by attendance at thia illustrated lecture. literature and information relative to the weit may be obtained at the booth of the ' , e I a J Mm Ss A, Mt.i'.itiP' OrmfldDini STANDARD ROAD OF THE WEST