HOTEL AND RAILWAY NEWS The white union orchestra at the Henshaw threatened to strike unless the hotel discharged Adams orchestra from the cabaret. The manager told them to go ahead and he would hire the Colored musicians entirely. There has been no strike to date. Daniel Manley, well known in Oma ha about seven years ago, returned from Chicago last Saturday and will remain in Omaha. Lester Burrell left for Chicago Monday, where he will enter the serv ice as chef on the Burlington. Smoke John Ruskin 5c Cigar. Big gest and Best.—Adv. All of Omaha’s hotels have been crowded this week and extra waiters have been called for everywhere. Get the money, boys! About forty waiters were used at the Omaha Club banquet, October 6. The Canadian Pacific has now all Colored waiters on their short runs and expect to fill the long ones by Spring. The Santa Fe is putting on a great many men out of Chicago. Frisco is still crying for Colored waiters. The hotel managers assure the boys that their employment will be permanent. As the club season ends, many boys are busy looking for winter berths. We hope they all are successful. Sergeant Bailey has recently se cured a position at the Fontelle hotel. The Omaha Country Club closed Saturday night. H. A. Alexander, Clint Miller and Albert Green, how ever, will remain until November. John W 'tods has been taking a two weeks’ vacation. After his success ful debut as a Thespian he feels that he needs to recuperate. Smoke John Ruskin 5c Cigar. Big gest and Best.—Adv. W. M. Jackson of the U. P., has been on the sick list, but expects to report for duty soon. Waiters report that the hotels of Salt Lake are crying for men. George Watson, who has spent sev eral months putting the Carleton on a paying basis, left recently and as sumed the headwaitership of the Pax ton. C. C. Galloway has succeeded him at the Carleton. Don’t forget our advertisers. They want your trade and welcome it cour teously. DR. LYMAN ABBOTT ON TEMPERANCE New York, N. Y.—Dr. Lyman Ab bott, who succeeded Henry Ward Beecher as Pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, and present editor of The Outlook Magazine, New York City, in an article which was printed in the Ladies’ Home Journal, writes: “Are not the temperance folks, un consciously perhaps, to blame for a very general interpretation of the word temperance as applied only to alcoholic indulgence? It is such a beautiful word, temperance.” Can you not tell folks that it applies to all things in life and that the reverse, intemperance, is just as true of re ligion as of drink? “We have robbed the word ‘tem perance’ of its noble significance by applying it only to alcoholic drinks as we have robbed the word ‘charity’ of much of its significance by apply ing it only to gifts of money. I should not, however, say that it was a good use of language to speak of one as being intemperate in religion. Tem perance means self-control, and gen erally is applied to the control of the body and its appetites and passions by the intelligence and the will. A physician in one of our great hos pitals in New York, who is himself a practical if not an absolute total ab stainer, once told me that tea inebri acy is a common vice among the working women of New York, and that it was a fair question if as much njury were not done by intemperate use of tea as by intemperate use of beer. No man has a right to call him self temperate who has not attained the power of self-control.” EIGHTH ILLINOIS ORDERED HOME FROM BORDER Chicago, 111.—Orders have gone forth from the War Department at Washington, D. C., ordering the Eighth Regiment, Illinois National Guard home from doing service on the Mexican border. The regiment entrained at Fort | Sam Houston, Texas last week. It I will possibly reach Camp Lincoln, Springfield, 111., to be mustered out of the Federal service about the middle of October. For anything you want to buy, ome advertiser in The Monitor sells it. HORNED LARK \ (Otocori® alpestris) Length, about seven and three fourths inches. The black mark across the breast and the small, pointed tufts of dark feathers above and behind the eyes distinguish the bird. Range: Breeds throughout the United States (except the South At lantic and Gulf states) and Canada; winters in all the United States ex cept Florida. Habits and economic status: Horned larks frequent the open coun try, especially the plains and deserts. They associate in large flocks, are hardy, apparently delighting in ex posed situations in winter, and often nest before snow disappears. The flight is irregular and hesitating, but in the breeding season the males ascend high in air, singing as they go, and pitch to the ground in one thril ling dive. The preference of horned larks is for vegetable food, and about one-sixth of this is grain, chiefly waste. Some sprouting grain is pulled, but drilled grain is safe from injury. Cali fornia horned larks take much more grain than the eastern birds, specializ ing on oats, but this is accounted for by the fact that oats grow wild over much of the state. Weed seeds are the largest single element of food. The insect food, about 20 per cent of the whole, includes such pests as May beetles and their larvae (white grubs), leaf beetles, clover-leaf and clover root weevils, the potato-stalk borer, nut weevils, billbugs. and the chinch bug. Grasshoppers are a favorite food, and cutworms are freely eaten. The horned larks, on the whole, may be considered useful birds. [trunks! THE BETTER KIND Made from good clear lumber, § H; covered with fibre; well bound rf on edges. Durable corners and » § braces where necessary. Sturdy g S; locks and hinges, 2 trays nicely j§ ;8j cloth lined. f| Priced at $10.00, $12.00, $13.50 § | and $15.00. i Freling & Steinle 1 “Omaha’s Best Baggage Build- 1 ers” 1803 Farnam Street | ' ats New Fall Styles Now Ready $2 WOLFS 1421 Douglas St. wmemmmmmamKmmmmammmmKmm C. H. MARQUARDT CASH MARKET Retail Dealer in Fresh and Salt Meats, Poultry, Oysters, etc. 2003 Cuming St. Doug. 3834 Home Rendered Lard. We Smoke and Cure our own Hams and Bacon. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT ii ii Your Sunday Dinner Dinner served from 12 m. to 6 p. m. At 25c and 35c. HOME COOKING S. R. Jackson’s Lunch Room 2122 No. 24th St. Webster 7971 - SHIPP’S Optical j >L Watch and Shop Highest Quality Lowest Prices 518 S. 16th St., Opp. Rome Hotel 1 i !Gibson Tea & Coffee Co.! j It pays to come to our store. ♦ We pay you a bigger interest on f the money you spend than the bank ! pays you on the money you save. ♦ Doug. 5320 2411 Cuming St. ..... Tel. Red 1424 Will L. Hetherington Violinist t Instructor at Bellevue College t Asst, of Henry Cox | Studio Patterson Blk j. ............. 4 [LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED Called for and Delivered ARTHUR DORN Locksmith and Gun Repairer i Electric Bells, Bicycle and General | Repairing We Will Open the Most Compli cated Locks Phone Webster 4509 2420 Lake St. ♦ .. ... RUG cleaning! I 2221 North 20th St. | Telephone Webster 1659 I N. A. Christianson & Son Auto Delivery. t t If You Understand the Value of I Good Shoe Repairing—Try H. LAZARUS I 9 Years in the Same Block. _ 12019 Cuming St. R<“d 239:* | Work called for and delivered. X. - ■ m- » | il I PORO i ,, For Good and Quick Results TRY PORO SYSTEM For Scalp Treatment and Hair Culture Mrs. Anna E. Jones, Har. 5100 Miss Susie Smith, Douglas 7689 CORECT MANICURING MRS. LILLIAN TAYLOR JENKINS’ SHOP 1313 Dodge St. Phone Red 3357 Will answer out of the shop calls for women customers. Hill-Williams Drug Co. | PURE DRUGS AND TOILET J ARTICLES t Free Delivery Tvler 1«0 2102 Cumins St. { ...... . . t EMERSON LAUNDRY F. S. MOKEY, Proprietor 1303-05 North 24th Streot Phone Webster 820 BUY A HOME WITHOUT ANY CASH Do You Know How? Ask About it at 724 BRANDEIS BUILDING l i , i i SAVE COUPONS AND GET PREMIUMS Send for Free Catalog