8 THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, JULY 8, 1912. Council Bluffs Minor Mention Tie CoueQ Bluffs Offle f Tka Osta Im la at It iMlt attest. Iilifkm Davit, cruR. Victrola, $15, A. Hospe Co. ' H. Berwick for wall ppr Woodring Undertaking Co. Tel, 365. Coriigans, undertaken. PhoaeJ US. New Tork Plumbing Co. hone 2&0. High standard printing, Morehouse & Co FAUST BEER AT ROGERS' BUFFET. Lewi Cutler, funeral director. Phone 97. For Rent- Modern bouse. 723 Sixth Ave. TO SAVE OR BORROW, SKE C. B. Mutual Bldg. & Loan Aus'n, 123 Pearl. Bluff City Laundry, Dry Cleaning and Dye Works. New-phone No. 2814. BUDWEISER on draugnt-The Grand. Anheuser on draught S. Adrian. Bud it eiser in bottles at all first class bars. For one week only we offer special low . prices on our large line of lawn mowers. Itun easy, i knife, 16-inch mower, now J2.96. Liberty 8-knlfe, 16-inch mower, now X65. Electra 4-knlfe, it-inch mower, now li.75. Great America 6-knlte, 15-Inch mower, now 19.25. P. C. DeVol Hdw. Co., , 604 Broadway. The ladies of St Mary -chapter of St Paul's guild will give a garden party Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. R. H. Harris, 2308, Avenue B. Everyone is cordially invited to attend. Jewel court Tribe of Ben Hur, will hold an interesting session on Tuesday even ing, when a class of twelve will be Initiated. All members are requested to be present Refreshments will be served. George W. A. Sauer received a wire yesterday from his son, Edward, who has been undergoing the rigid examina tions required at the Annapolis military school, announcing that he had passed every test and would i formally en rolled in the academy by Monday. The last test was the physical examination. '. The funeral of William H. Van Brunt will be held this afternoon at 8:30 o'clock from the residence of W. A. Suthard, 21 Bluff, street Rev. John William Jones of Omaha will have charge of the serv ices. The pallbearers will be C. 8. Byers, M. C. Vandeveer, Louis Zurmuehlen, A. B. Brook, . R. V. Innes and F. G. Hetsel. Mrs. Sherman and Mrs. Ward will sing. Roy Steinbaugh was given a hearing In police court yesterday on the charge of having robbed Janitor Roup of the Mar cus block. The evidence was conclusive, but there was doubt as to the value of the stolen stuff. Roup fixed IU value at 30, which would have meant a peniten tiary sentence for the lad. It was final y agreed to reduce the valuation and the youngster was given a term of twenty days in the county jail. Rev. J. E. Matheny of the Fifth Avenue Methodist church received word yesterday morntng o the death of his brother, Rev. R. W. Matheny, which occurred suddenly yesterday from neuralgia of the heart at his home la Nevada, where he was pastor of the Methodist church. The year pre ceding Rev, Mr. Matheny was pastor at Malvern, and is well known In Methodist church circles of the state. Rev. Mr. Matheny of this city has left to attend the funeral. Overcome by the Intense heat yester day afternoon a big, white horse, draw ing a delivery wagon for the McSorely Grocery company on South Main street, laid down on the blistering brick pave ment at Broadway and Scott streets and died. The horse was moving along briskly tinder the burning sun and was appar ently suffering greatly, a fact unnoticed by the driver. The distressed creature wobbled a little, though trying to obey the lines to the last, then fell heavily upon the pavement , , Over forty members of the Dodge Memorial church, accepted the invitation of their pastor, Rev. C. S. Hanley, to spend the Fourth with hint and his family at Shenandoah, which Is his home. A special car was put on tae waoasn train leaving the Bluffs at 7:17, for their use and the morning trip was much ap preciated. Everybody took along a large basket or two of edibles, while toe host furnished all the lemonade and ice cream that could be consumed. The return trip was made in the evening, reaching the Bluffs at 11 p. m. A plan la under way U make this an annual event tor to everyone present it waa one of those days never to be forgotten. Mabel Madison, the 14-year-old girl re siding near Mynster springs, who was brought Into juvenile court on July 1 to check her infatuation lor a man oia enough to be her grandfather, has dle- ' appeared and Is bellevffl to be In com pany with the man. The girl eeo-ined within a few hours after being consigned . to , the Creche pending her hearing in juvenile court and has not been heard ' of since. Probation Officer Herner waa told yesterday that ahe waa aeen going northward on a Northwestern train Tuesday afternoon. The Information came from a woman who knowa the girl and who aaya the child waved her hand and laned out of the window a the Jtrain passed. ' E. L. Stevenson, giving his address ai t500 Union avenue, Chicago, Is In Mercy hospital, suffering from a painful wound In the head Inflicted by a Nortweatern fireman pulling a Bioux City train. Btev. m.am waa .to-llns a vMa wttan ha was discovered by the fireman.' The faeman, whether Intentionally or otherwise is not stated, threw a ble chunk of eoal at the man. Stevenaon waa in a position where he could not dodge tne missii without danger of falling from the train end waa struck In the head. Ha was knocked senseless, but maintained his position until the train waa stopped when lis waa cared for until the train reached Council Bluffs. W. G. Goodrich, claim Rent for the railway company, ordered the man taken to the hospital after Dr. Cote, the company's aurgeon. had dressed the wounds at the police station. JUVENILE OFFICIAL HAS PROBLEM IN BOY Just what to do with Rex Tan Horn, 15 years old, la a problem that ia worry ing Probation .Officer Herner, and It hsi worried him ever since he became ac quainted with Rex several year ago. The officer, had constant trouble keep ing Rex In school, and the very day he was 14 years old the youngster Quit school, although It was m the middle of the term.' On June 27, last year, a warren t was Issued for Rex, but he skipped out be fore he could be arrested and went to Indiana. The widowed mother has joined with the officer In every way to reform the lad. Yesterday the boy was arrested for the theft of & He went to a laundry where his mother is employed and learned accidentally that a package was to be delivered to Mrs. John Stork with $5 charges. He slipped the package from the laundry wagon, delivered it to the customer and collected the money. He then went to Omaha and bought a 'revolver. He was found by the police early yesterday morning sleeping with the loaded revolver by his aide. The weapon was picked up and the lad was awakened. Instantly his hand flew to 'where the revolver had lain, and he por trayed in pantomime the first act of "Dead wood Dick, the bad man with the gun." He la now locked up la 8t Ber nard's hospital awaiting the action of the Juvenile court , .. Being railroad time Inspector for Coun cil Bluffs, we can employ only the most skilled workman In this department Bring your watch here and receive satisfactory ork. Leffert's', Jewelers.. Sign of the clocks. . , Council Bluffs CORN GROWERS ARE COMING Officers of State Growers' Associa tion Confer Here. PLANS FOR ' FALL MEETING Exposition, Will Last One Week and , Will Be of Sufficient Slse to Fill the Andttorinn. with ,. Exhibits. The purpose of having the annual ex position of the Iowa Corn Growers as sociation at Council Bluffs this fall was given Its first Impetus yesterday after noon when Secretary John Sundberg came from his home at Whiting, la., to meet President F. H. Xiopp'ng of Potta wattamie county for the purpose of con ferring . with, the Commercial club and the officers of the Auditorium company. The association covers the entire state and has grown to be of great Importance as one of the chief . avenues thrush which Prof. Holden and other agricul tural scientists have worked successfully to raise the standard of Iowa farm life and give new . luster to the crown of King Corn. The' exposition will last one week, and will be of sufficient magnitude to fill the Auditorium building and the annex with exhibits that will come from all parts of the state. It will also attract the seekers for big prizes from other states for the competition will be open to the world. The two officials of the associa tion held a conference during the after noon with George F. Hamilton, head of the Auditorium company, and T. D, Met calf, chairman of the executive commit tee of the Commercial club. The plans were carefully discussed and the require ments fully explained. Chairman Metcalf will submit the matter to the full com mittee of the Commercial club at the meeting on Tuesday. The proposition is very liberal, requir ing but little risk outside of the heating and lighting of the Auditorium building, with the concessions and gate receipts to go to defray the expenses here. The state association Is to provide the premi ums and print the premium lists from money that will be realised from entry fees and membership cards. A guaranty of only about $1,200 la required to locate the exposition here. It will be held some time In November, after the exhibitors have had a chance to select the prise ears from Jowa'a bumper corn crop this year. A A 1 Prof. Holden, who la a member and officer in the association, will be here as one of its most active promoters and Instructors. Attractive displays of farm machinery wilt alio be features of the exposition. . . GETTY SELLARS GIVES TWO RECITALS IN CITY Getty Sellars, one of the solo organ ists at the Queen's hall and Crystal pal ace musical festivals In London, will be heard here In two free will offering re citals at the First Presbyterian church on July 17 and It He will give the famous coronation music, accompanied by a aet of cathedrlal (tubular) chimes. After making a successful tour of Canada last fall, he came to the itates about Christmas time. He has since played In moat of the large cities In the north and eaat nd la now making a tour of the south and west He has appeared la the largest auditoriums, . tabernacles, ca thedrals and churches of America since hla arrival September 84 at Halifax, Nova Scotia. Selection from the masters, of his own compositions, coronation music, inter spersed with cathedrlal chimes, which imitate the chimes of Westminster abbey during the coronation servtoe, make hla program unique In the annals of musical history In America. BODY OF MAN FOUND BY NORTHWESTERN TRACK Trainmen yesterday found the mangled body of a man lying by the aide of the Northwestern railroad tracks three miles south of Loveland. The man had been atruck by a train and apparently in stantly killed. The body waa brought to Council Bluffa at o'clock laat evening by order of Coroner Cutler. A careful examination of the clothing failed to dis close anything by which the man's Identity could be ascertained. There waa not a scrap of writing of any character In any ot hla pocketa and he waa penni less. He appeared to be a foreigner and was dressed In worklngmen's clothes. He was apparently about middle age. The body waa burled within an hour after it waa brought to the city, the haste being necessary on account of the mutilated condition ot the remains and the necessity for expensive embalming if the body had been longer kept Patronising a dry cleaner Is not merely a matter ot personal pride, but a matter of business as well. It a man or woman values the good appearance ot their clothing enough to cause them to want It kept looking neat, fresh and new you will find they are the persons that usually succeed In business; neatness Is always appreciated by the public We understand what this means, consequently you will make no mistake In sending your garments to the Bluff City Laundry, Dry Cleaning and Dye Works. Phone No. KM. '; : - HOLINESS ASSOCIATION TO HOLD CAMP MEETING - The member! of the Holiness associa tion have decided to bold a camp meeting this year, beginning July IS and continu ing for ten days. It will be held at the beautiful grove on Sixteenth street and Avenue H. The management has sc oured Rev. Will Huff ot Sioux City to take charge of the services. Mr. Huff Is one of the leading preachera ot this vt clnlty and one that the people will wish to hear. Mr. and Mrs, A. S. Dean ot Sioux City will have charge ot the song service. -. The grounds will be electric lighted and everything else will be comfortable. There will be a free hack from the car line to the camp grounds. There will be a boarding tent on the ground and also tents to rent People who expect to tent should send their orders at once to G. W. Skinner, secretary. R. F. D. No. 4. so be can secure the tent and have It ready. A Day With Marie Corelli By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. .We have pleased thousands. We ean 'pic. you. Let us do your wall papering nfl painting, jenseia wall Paper Co., Masonic Temple, tl.9S buys a regular 18 extra heavy four passenger lawn swing, eight feet high, eight-foot base, five and one-half feet wide, twenty-two-inch seat, all made of the best of wood, well bolted, painted r'. Can be set up In fifteen minutes. Mail your order with shipping Instructions. J. Zoller Merc. Co.. 100-102-104-108 Broad way, Council Bluffs, la. ' ' To find great authors, great composers. great artists, greater than their works is not always an experience which greets one who approaches celebrities. There are - those who seem on close range to be mere Inanimate instruments. used by the Creative Power as mediums of expression Instruments with no more Individuality, magnetism or personality than a grand piano, or a typewriting ma chine, or a pot of clay. When the excep tion is encountered it Is a pleasure which defies description. Marie CorelU is one of the world's most renowned and gifted women. Every In telligent individual on the wide earth knows her name. Her 'Romance of Two Worlds," published more than twenty years ago, when Miss CorelU was a very young girl, placed her immediately upon a pinnacle of literary and financial suc cess at once unique and remarkable. Since that first venture other works equally successful have followed and fame and fortune have fallen to the lot of this rarely gifted woman in such un stinted measures that It Is not. to be wondered, knowing the tendency ot hu man nature, that Miss Corelli stands ever between two ranks of human being; one tossing her flowers, praise and admlra- j tlon, one casting stones and abuse or the petty missiles of envy and jealouay. Miss Corelli lives In Stratford-on-Avon In a home which was built In the days of Queen Elisabeth by one Mr. Mason, and which was afterwards, like so many other of the houses of that period, cov ered with ugly stucco and all the beau tiful beams and wide fireplaces hidden, heaven only knowa why. It haa been Miss Corelli' privilege and pleasure to buy this old house and re store It to Its original charm, to build stately additions and to fit them all up with the furniture and decorations of their own period. ' The four fortunate people who were her guests one mem orable day In June had all traveled - In many lands and visited many mansions and palaces. And there was no dissent ing voice when one said It was the most beautiful and artistic home of alL ' Lilies are Miss CorelU' a favorite flowers. Every room in the old house breathes their fragrance. Having been In her home one must ever associate the author" with lilies.. Tet, In her type, this famous woman Is more suggestive .of the rose. Under medium height voluptuous ' In figure, ardent bloom In her round cheeks, ' the deep blue of Scottish skies In her eyes, halo of bright ash blond hair about her animated countenance, thla lily loving woman seems to be the wild roae blooming along English highways. Scotch and Italian blood . mlnaled to produce this remarkable genius. And consequently Miss CorelU Is endowed with many gifts. A skUled musician, a deep student of the occult, a profound scholar, a brilliant convener and possessed of scintillating wit and keen sense of humor, Miss Corelli has a most compelling per sonality. Besides which she Is as mag netlo as a loadstone, and, best of all, feminine from the tip of her small feet to the top of her fluffy head. She loves pretty garments, and her dresses, like her house, display the taste of an artist Miss Corelli adorea Shakespeare's old home town, and at her own expense, just to 'please her sense ot th fitness of things, she has uncovered and restored the Tudor house, whloh now makes a picturesque feature of Stratford. This was done purely for the love of doing It and seeing It Of course, envious tongue misrepresented this action and endeavoring to attribute self-seeking pur pose to the expensive experiment but the tact remains, nevertheless, precisely as stated. ' '' "' Hearing that Miss CorelU was the power behind the throne which caused the house of John Harvard's mother to be restored and presented to America, Miss Corelli waa questioned, and the foU lowing Interesting story told. It is given in the famous author's own words. Hear ing that the home of the mother of the man who founded Harvard college was tor sale to the highest bidder (whether brewer or vandal) she says: "Quietly I set to work on ways and means for purchasing It by private treaty. Fortune favored me In my design, for during a summer cruise on board Sir Thomas Upton's yact. The Erin, I met Mr. Edward Morris, son ot the mlUlonaire Nelson Morris of Chicago, and to him I confided the hop I had long cherished, which was that the 'Harvard House' should belong to America,, and to Har vard university In particular. Ton may call It a romantic notion, perhaps,' I said, but I should like to think that the house of John Harvard's mother waa a link with John Harvard's university, . and . a sign ot friendship between the two na tions. "Mr. Morris was greatly taken with the Idea, and both he and his charming wife entered Into It with spirit and generosity. After some further talk together on the subject he commissioned me to purchase the Harvard house tor htm, and - also entrusted to me the work of strengthen ing, restoring and bringing it back, as far as far as possible, to its original condi tioninteriorly as well as exteriorly. "As I have made a study of Elizabethan architecture, the task waa very congenial to me, and lost no time In setting about it I was resolved that the work should be undertaken by Stratford-on-Avon men and I secured the admirable services of Messrs. Brice at Sons, builders and deco rators, established in the town, who, under my supervision, started on the diffi cult and delicate task ot putting the old house back as accurately as might be Into its sixteenth century aspect The result has more than aurpassed our moat aan guine expectatlona. ' . "Visitors entering It today will see the rooms pretty much as John Harvard's mother aaw them as, no doubt. John Harvard himself saw them when a small boy, for It Is hardly to be supposed that he never visited his mother's home- ot his grandparents. It must not be for gotten that Robert Harvard, his father, belonged to the parish of St Saviour's Southwark, where Shakespeare had hi Glob Theater.' tX. "Much has been said and written con eernlng the lack of all personal documents (such as letters and private . family rec ords) relating to Shakespeare this so- called "want of evidence' giving rise to the most ridiculous and untenable theories respecting the great poet's Identity; but few pause to think that there is precisely the same want of evidence In regard to John Harvard. Aa the Rev. Dr. George E. EllUs aaid when speaking on the sub subject of the statu of the founder ot the University In Cambridge, Mass.: "The occasion renews the sens of re gret so often JMvllied and expressed In scholarly elrctai that a secret and a silence as yet impenetrated and unvoiced, ( cover the whole Ufe-hlstory in the mother country of him. who planted learning in the New England wilderness. And one can but keenly feel that if this secret and silence' could be once broken Into and revealed, and If the private family records of the Rogers and Har vard households could be recovered, much might be found relating, not only to them, but perchance to their great townsman whose universal fame, like sunshine, lights the whole lntellctual world. ' 'It Is partly with this intention, among others, that the 'Harvard House' In Stratford-on-Avon has been generously presented to America and the Harvard university by Mr. Edward Morria In the hope that by careful Inquiry and re search, authentic records of John Har vard and his family and neighbors may possibly come into the safekeeping of the trustees to be held for the university. The restoration of the old building has been to me a labor of love, and I am glad that the whole structure has now been made good and sound In every part and strong enough to last a thousand years. On the completion of the work Mr. Morria himself made a visit of in spection and expreeed himself as en tirely satisfied with all that had been don. "In concluding thla brief explanation of the way In which, through the Interest and generosity of Edward Morris, I was fortunately able to obtain for America the possession of historic property in Shakespeare's town, I should Uke to ex press the hope that my idea of the old house standing In Stratford as a sign ot connection between Shakespeare and Harvard, and a pledge of amity between British and American scholars aU over the world, may be realised now and in all the years to come. And on the ground i of Stratford-on-Avon, where Shakespeare trod, itwould be pleasant to think and to believe that there will always be one spot where America and England can shake hands like loving comrades in mutual admiration and reverence for their famous men, and that the 'Harvard House. " It would be a pretty act of courtesy if Harvard college should some day send Miss Corelli a gracious letter of appre ciation tor the part she played in the Interesting episode. It has never been done. . Moat Food Is Poison to the dyspeptic. Electric Bitters soon relieve dyspepsia, liver and kidney com plaints and debility. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. .. ELKS TEAM TO MEET I S-CROSS MEN TODAY The Council Bluffs Elks and the J. S. Cross team of Omaha 'will mix in a battle royal at Invincible ball park. Lake Manawa, today. The Crosses have been playing all the fast amateur teams In Omaha and have a good record. The Elks have been playing fast ball of late, defeating the fast Dundee Woolen Mills Imperials July 4 by a onesided score of 13 to 7. The Uneup wiU be as 'follows: Elks. ; J. S. Cross So. Smith catch Johnson FEAT OF AN INDIAN HERO Recollections of Aged Chief Who Swam Columbia with Child on Hie Back. pitch first .... ....second short third .left . Slevers i. Hendricks ,.. Overland .... Jarrosh McDermott McQuade ..catch Owens ...right Floryer Petersen Bender ... Williams . Wechham Downs ... Grow ...., Bayne .... Bonham .i When your child nag whooping cough be careful to keep the cough loose and expectoration easy by giving Chamber lain's Cough Remedy as rnay be re quired. This remedy will also liquify the tough mucus and make It easier to ex pectorate. It has been used successfully In many epidemics and is safe and sure. For sale by all dealers.. ' " To swim the Columbia river at Uma tilla, Ore., where it is half a mile in width, is a test of human strength even under the most favorable conditions, but to accomplish that feat burdened with the weight of a child in the dead of winter with the swollen river made more for midable by the presence of hundreds ot jagged ice floes is an achievement almost unbelievable. Tet this is just what was done about eight years ago by a Columbia river Indiana who had almost reached the age of GO. He is still living today on the Ulm atilla reservation to testify to his per formance, though no man ever heard him boast ot it The Indian's name is Sees-Tuse and he is now the head man of h scattered Co lumbias. It was in the early years ot the new century that he attempted to make the passage ot the Columbia in a frail canoe, accompanied by a boy of 9 years. When In midstream his little craft was struck with such force by an ice cake that it waa overturned. Sees-Tuse seized his boy companion, and, placing him on his back, breasted the stream and com menced his battle to gain the shore. It men who witnessed the feat are to be believed, no white man could have ac complished what this old Indian did. Foot by foot he made his way toward th. southern bank, and, though ET.'tr down stream by the swift current his progress was steady. . :.v - Several times he was struck by an ice floe and the Jagged end of one cut a deep wound In his neck. Finally, after what seemed an almost Interminable time, he reached the shore with his burden, his strength spent by his heroic efforts and loss of blood, and almost frozen by the chill water. Before the flow from his wound could be checked he had almost bled to death. Not long after the incident Sees-Tuse was awarded some heirship lands on the Umatilla reservation and since that time has lived among the Umatilla. Cayuses and Walla Wallas, but through the death of the chieftains of his own tribe he has come to be regarded by his people as their head man. The old" Indian, whose facial character istics are so different from those of the prairie" Indians, is a frequent visitor in Pendleton. Ore., and almost regularly once a week calls upon his friend, Major Lee Moorhouse, not. however, so much for the purpose of talking with the major as to gaze at a full-length painting of himself which adorns the walls of the Moorhouse office. The painting was made from a photograph of Sees-Tuse, taken by the major, and the aged red man often sits by the hour, childlike, admiring the Ukeness on the wall.-Oregon Journal. Why take chances if you are having trouble with your eyes. See our experi enced optician. Lef ferts'. ' KOTEtS AM) HESORTS STASXET HOTELS. ZSTES PARK Colorado's Greatest Scenic Mountain Resort There is not a spot comparable for both wild rugged glory and the vel vet parklike beauty here, where on finds the Rocky mountains at their best At the Stanley Hotels you will find all modern conveniences and comforts that you will find in the best city hotels. Plenty of diversion for old and young; trout fishing, tennis, golf, bowling, bil liards Surrey, horseback and autonro blle rides over many mountain trails un der the care of experienced guiJes. Write for beautiful illustrated souvenir book let A1PKED LAMB OR V. Manager, Estes Park. Colo. 8SCRST SERVICE AGENTS OF THE AXMT OF THE POTOMAC, DIRECTED BY ALLAN PINKERTON "There Are No Such Detectives Today" Copyright, MIL Patriot Pub. Co. COMPARED with Pinkerton and his men, the dangers : encountered by the modern sleuth sink into insij- nificance. For, unlike the detective of today, who : has everyone on his side except the guilty, Pinkerton and his followers were not only forced to conceal their , identity from those whom they were pursuing, but were also liable at any moment to betray themselves to the entire community in which they moved. The Secret Service operatives of the Civil War days hunted down men, entered within the enemy's lines to learn the location of earthworks, the strength of the batteries, the numbers of opposing forces when failure meant death; when success brought only the reward of labor for love of country. , For these men, whose valor was, perhaps; greater than that of the soldiers in the armies, there was no beat of drums and crash of arms and fanfare .of war to arouse their courage their names will not be found on any roll of honor their place is among the unknown heroes of history. The names of a few of these great detectives, with their pictures, have been rescued from obscurity with the discovery of the original negatives taken by the great Civil War photographer, Mathew B. Brady. In these Long-Lost, Original Brady War Photographs you not only see the portraits of th most famous Civil War detectives, th Secret Service agents.the Intrepid scouts, the darioe; spies but the narrative text which accompanies each picture . recounts the experiences of these men and the ingenious schemes unearthed by their clever ruses. Many a tale is told of mysterious' dispatches, their bearers, and the fate of those captured within th lines of the enemy. ; . ' - j One photograph pictures the locomotive that banged eight men as spies. This photograph is vitalised by a detailed account of the mad and daring feat planned by a spy la General Basil's employment. " ....... Another picture in the famous Brady War Photographs shows the fate ot a Confederate Spy before Petersburg. It is ail terribly Impressive: the double line of troops around the lonely gallows waiting for the unfortunate victim who is about to suffer an igno minious death while, the thought that this man, actuated by the most patriotic and self-denying motives, must meet death not only in shame, but also completely severed from all that is dear to him, is horrifying. , - : Section 6 Now Ready "The Civil War Through the Camera" contains a picture of " Allan Pinkerton, the famous detective and organiser of the Secret Service of the Federal Army, steading beside President Lincoln. Only a few people, la North and South together, knew his iden tity. As "Major Allen," this keen-witted detective and his oper atfves,tbrough their secret workings,forestalld and averted battles, divulged secret plots hatched by the enemy, probably saved the lives of generals and helped more than the soldiers to preserve the unity of a nation. ; These photographs of Brady's are so startling, so absorbing, so different from xsything in the world today that we have spent all our time talking about them and neglected saying anything about the other pictures and the fascinating story that has been written around them. ' - The detailed description that follows all the pictures ia like no history yon have ever read before,, It tells the intimate story of the war. Besides telling of the battle of the day before, the men who took part and the victorious generals, it tells of the drummer boys and the water boys and th many boys who got into the ; army by swearing they were of age. It tells many a pathetic story thedeathof these boys. - 10c It tells of women who were disguised as men and lived in camp; it tells of the postofflce in the fields, how the men sent their letters, how they received them, of welcome baskets of food from home. It tells of the affection of Grant, Lee, Sherman and McClellan for their men and the daring heroism of officers and privates in a uniform of blue or gray. These Long-Lost' Photograpns of Brady's now just dis covered-illustrating : ; . ( : . .. ; 'The Gvil War Through The Clamem" Sixteen Superb SectionsOne Each Week for Coupon and belong in every home. They are the only real -records of a real war. No history can tell you one-tenth as much, for no historian witnessed what Brady's camera saw, so combatant could be everywhere. Cut Out War Souvenir Coupon which appears regularly and bring or send It to this office with 10 cent to cover necessary expenses such as cost of material, handling, clerk hire, etc., and get a copy ot Brady's wonderful work. Three cents extra by mail; there are no other conditions whatever. We have secured exclusive rights for our territory to distribute these long-lost Brady War Pictures, illustrating Elson's History of the Civil War, and take this method of placing the full set of 16 sections ia reach of every home, so matter how limited the means. If you haven't secured Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, or S, clip the coupon this week, and we will supply you with either or all the first six sections for 10c each and the one coupon. Section 6 Contains a Complete Account of the Battle at Antietam-one of the bloodiest, yet most dramatic conflicts of the Gvil War. Be sure you get it. Remember the ORIGINAL" Brady" War Photographs 'and Elson's New History of the Uvii War Can be Only UbtainfM. In This-City -Through This Paper (