W*X-XX"XMX**XMXMXM>XM>4>^*XX i K. & M. GROCERY CO. I We solicit your patronage. '!* A 2114-16 North 24th St. A 9 DR. CRAIG MORRIS DENTIST 2407 Lake St. Phone Web. 4024 C. S. JOHNSON 18th and Izard Tel. Douglas 1702 ALL KINDS OF COAL and COKB at POPULAR PRICES. Beat for the Money ... Res. Colfax 3831. Douglas 7150 AMOS P. SCRUGGS Attorney-at- Law 13th and Farnam .... Classified Advertising RATES—2 cents a word for single in sertions; 1% cent a word for two or more insertions. No advertisement taken for less than 25 cents. Cash should accom pany advertisement. DRUG STORES ADAMS HAIGHT DRUG CO., 24th and Lake; 24th and Fort, Omaha, Neh. COLORED NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES FRANK DOUGLASS Shining Parlor. Webster 1388. 2414 North 24th St. FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT. FOR RENT — Neatly furnished rooms for light housekeeping. 1107 N. 19th st. Web. 2177. Mrs. T. L. Haw thorne. First class rooming house, stearn heat, bath, electric light. On Dodge and 24th st. car line. Mrs. Ann- Ranks 924 North 20th st. Doug. 437-. First-class modern furnished room. Mrs. L. M. Bentley Webster, i7u. North Twenty-sixth street, tfion* Webster 4769. Furnished room for rent in strictly modem home, convenient to Dodge and 24th street car lines. Call Web ster 3024. FOR RENT — Neatly furnished rooms for light housekeeping at 2901 Seward st. Call between 5 and 6 in the evening. Nicely furnished rooms, strictly modem, 1923 North 27th street. Web ster 2941. LODGE DIRECTORY „ Keystone Lodge, No. 4. K. of P.. Omaha, Neb. Meetings first and third Thursdays of each month. M. H. Hazzard, C. C-: J. H. Glover, K. of R. and 8. Cuming Rug Cleaning & Mfg. Co. Vacuum Cleaning, Renovating and Alterations. 2419 Cuming. ^ Phone Red 4122 m" ROSENBERG, Groceries and Meats 2706 Cuming Harney 2560 All Kinds of Shoe Repairing Work guaranteed. Give us a call. Coleman Dangerfield. 1415 No. 24th First-class dressmaker wanted at 1922 North 25th. Mrs. Ridley. " WANTED A POSITION As clerk in a general merchandising or gents’ furnishing store. I am a Colored man, aged 36, am now em ployed in general store. Can give good references. Address Monitor. WANTED—Situation as undertak er’s attendant; four years’ experience in embalming. 1154 N. 20th st. (up stairs). Mrs. M. Byers. FLATS FOR RENT. 1547 N. 17th st., 7 rms., mod $22.50 1649 N. 17th st., 7 rms., mod 20.00 WESTERN REAL ESTATE CO., 413-14 Karbach Blk., cor. 15th and Douglas. Phone Douglas 3607. Smoke John Ruskln 6c Cigar. Big gest and Best.—Adv. II It. j The Balancer of The Universe A Drama of the Race Conflict in Four Acts by B. Harrison Peyton CHARACTERS Mauricin Crispin, a dancer from the Argentine, age 25 years. La Corusca, Senora Crispin, his Ar gentine mother, age 42. Agnes, their American guest and dancing pupil, age 22. Mrs. Vincent Widener, a woman journalist, age 35. Period: Present. Place: Provl dencia, a city on the Pacific coast. of his mind. Agnes: Oh! how I detest the ex aggerations and idle imaginings of the vulgar, scandal-mongering multi tude! Mrs. Widener, will the sensa tionalisms, the notoriety never end— oh! never so long as a Whiteside lives? Mrs. Widener: Ah well, girlie, it now is become your father's habit to remain constantly indoors, inaccessible to everyone except the servants and my husband. He goes out on the street but once a day—regularly, in order to post his letters to you. Agnes: I shan’t let him remain im prisoned like that—Mrs. Widener, in unmoving, stark despair! Has Dr. Widener never tried to induce him to ACT III. SCENE II. “The Wizard Leaves of the Press." Agnes: Yes, Mrs. Widener. Oh, there you are! Mrs. Widener: Why. Agnes! how glad I am to see you! Agnes: Now, I declare, I strove my best not to keep you waiting. Won’t you come upstairs to my room? I’ve been packing up, but you— Mrs. Widener: No, child dear; there’s hardly time, for I’m now on my way to keep an immensely impor tant engagement. But come, let the doctor’s wife kiss you—won’t you, lovie! Agnes: When did you leave Shad ow City? Has father sent you to bring me home? Mrs. Widener: Now, your father. No, sweetheart, it’s not at the rep resentative’s request I’m come, but with the purpose to—to acquaint you with certain grave developments in the situation at home, which have— Agnes: Mrs. Widener, what has happened? Is Godfrey already? Mrs. Widener: No, no! Now, child, don’t lose control of yourself; if you do, I won’t tell you anything. You certainly know Dr. Widener is very —oh! very fond of you! And you won’t forget—will you, dearest? how he habitually calls you his sovereign cure—his little “Panacea?” Agnes: But Dr. Widener no long er believes in his ability to save Baby Sunbeam’s life! M rs. W'idener: Agnes, the unac countable serious change in your brother’s condition couldn’t be fore seen. But since nature so often in dulges in mere caprices, eccentricities —is so given to the performance of miracles—girlie, there possibly still remains a chance that he’ll recover. Now, let us drop that subject. You received a letter from your father to day ? Agnes: Less than an hour past. Why is it, Mrs. Widener, you and the doctor never write to me? Mrs. Widener: Listen. Agnes. The representative refused outright to trust us with the name you assumed on coming here; and several times attempted to persuade us you had gone elsewhere for training in la Malaguena. He takes the strictest care no one shall discover your alias from the direction of his letters to you. and invariably posts them him self. Agnes: Why that’s absolutely— But Zirkle, the nurse—Mrs, Widener, at least— Mrs. Widener: I know. Zirkle later confessed you had spared no pains to impress upon her to remem ber it, but pleaded her mind was in such disquiet that the name entirely had slipped her memory. Both let ters you wrote to me and to the doc tor were signed simply “Agnes.” Were we to address you a letter bearing your true name in full—child, betrav go out 7 Mrs. Widener: Of course; even to go away on a trip for his health, but all of no avail. My girl, he’s no more inclined to leave Baby Sunbeam than he is to give up that bulky collection of newspaper clippings, which he has preserved on large leaves of cardboard bound together at one end with a gaudy ribbon after the fashion of a book. Agnes: What! is father still poring over those editorials? No, Mrs. Wid ener, not really? Mrs. Widener: I suppose you’re familiar with their contents? Agnes: Why, they all bear on the panic—Mrs. Widener, discuss the question as to the responsibility for its occurrence; and many of them, in their views and conclusons, are as widely apart as the separate communi ties in which the newspapers were published. Mrs. Widener: Destroy those clip pings, Agnes, as soon as you’re in a position to do so! It's your supreme duty to your father—one you alone may venture to perform. Agnes: My' supreme duty? Why is it supreme ? Mrs. Wylener: Your father inces santly broods over them, reads those newspaper fragments and reads them again, daily for hour after hour at a stretch. My dear, is it any wonder his mind’s became fantastically pos sessed by' a single idea? and he ad dicted to frequent, startling violent outbursts of passion ? Agnes: Frequent, startling, violent. But, Mrs. Widener, he always has been of an excitable nature. Mrs. Widener: Dear child! Subject to such paroxysms of fury and rav ing as he is at present? No! I’m afraid you don’t quite grasp my mean ing! Agnes: Paroxysmal fury and rav- s ing! What is it like—Mrs. Widener, ! his fury? Mrs. Widener: The nurses have 1 seen it often; my husband has once, ; by means of a stratagem. Your fa- I ther will ponder certain editorials for ! a long while, then of a sudden spring , from his chair—pardon the compari- ! son—with the fierceness of a wild ani- ' mal, frightful vehemence distorting his features, racking his frame. I mvself have heard his deep, ear-rend- 1 ing roars, such ejaculations as: “Hagan! Hagan! those blasted north- | erners—they keep blaming me! Oh! j the rebellious beast of a Nigger struck me—smirched me with his pitchy fist! Nurse! nurse! yet the southern public —ah! they surely appreciate the jus tice of my act, my fidelity to my duty to uphold the pride, traditions, su premacy of my race!” Agnes; They drive father to utter desperation—those newspapers—out of of his head! Oh! wrath of heaven! Yet if I were only at home to soothe him, Mrs. Widener, divert his tor tured mind! By tender reassurances your incognita ? Agnes: Still, father’s conduct is so amazingly extraordinary, irrational, almost. Mrs. Widener, what is it you’ve come to tel! me? M rs. Widener: I bring you a mes sage from Dr. Widener, my girl. Be yond a doubt, 'twould overtax the courage of a good many women to de liver such a message. They would whimper, dearie, ’twas an extremely painful, solemn and delicate mission that had been thrust upon them. But 1 shall consider nothing outside of the fact that I’m the wife of a medical practitioner, and this is one of the times when I must merit the dignity of the position. Indeed, I shall speak to you much as— Agnes: Mrs. Widener, you keep me waiting! Something has happened —dreadful, more dreadful than all else before. I can feel it! Yet you keep me waiting! Mrs. Widener: How you tremble, you shattery thing! If I could but ! feel assured you wouldn’t give way completely, break into hysterics and bite your lips, horribly, until the blood streams forth—and— Agnes: Mrs. Widener, I won’t! I take oath, I won’t! Do but let me; I’ll prove I’m strong enough to con front any calamity, endure any woe! Only don’t keep me waiting! Mrs. Widener: Do you know, Agnes, I wonder, that wild, curious, extrava gant rumors respecting your father are fluttering from mouth to mouth throughout the length and breadth of Shadow City as thick as a swarm of buzzing locusts ? Child, there are the gravest insinuations regarding his , haggard appearance, the pain-struck stare of his eyes, the distracted state l always— M rs. Widener: But understand, Agnes, the incentives of his frenzy in this case are altogether different. Then, too, your father would compel you to think continually of the af fronts and calumnies perpetrated on him by certain northern newspapers. And frankly, now, wouldn’t you your self be driven nigh crazy? Agnes: No. no, no! I’d be strong, I tell you—much stronger for father’s sake than for my own! Mrs. Widener: The power of the will, of course, is beyond computa tion. But think, my dear! you wish to persuade me you could endure in defintely their persecutions of your father—their withering blaze of piti less words that burn indelibly into the i memory and consume the heart—yes, I endure it, and never wince when you were forced—to read: “A prejudiced grand jury failed to indict Congress man Whiteside, but he is guilty beyond all question of the murder of more than two hundred white people; and we say nothing of his Colored victim. Shadow City must realize America must hang her head before the world so long as this malefactor is permitted to remain at liberty and retain, as a representative of the people a seat in the—” Agnes: That always hurts me— smites and bruises, like a stone hurled at me in public! Mrs. Widener: Eigh! you would be I strong ? Agnes: They’re unrelenting! Mrs. Widener, can they help but know? Mrs. Widener: Pish! tush, lovie! those Yankee bludgeoners are abliv ous to your very existence. Praise God! it’s one form of suffering which can’t reach your little brother! Agnes: Bahy Sunbeam in his in fant innocence! Oh! but father still watches over him as devotedly as ever —doesn’t he, Mrs. Widener? Mrs. Widener: Yes; when not read ing, Agnes, little less than the whole of his time. My husband often finds him seated at the sick boy’s bedside in morose meditation, statesque im mobility, with his eyes distended in glary flame on the child’s pallid face, and now and then brimming with teSrs. At times, your father will leap impulsively to his feet with the pite ous outcry: "Father didn’t think to hurt you, Baby Sunbeam! How proud you’ll be some day to be saved from an insolent leper of a Nigger defile ment of the family honor—your inher itance Godfrey, boy! Oh! now you— won’t die—will you, little Sunbeam?” rived today! God save my soul it’s fearful, horrible—the reference he makes to—that revolv—revolver! Mrs. Widener: You grant me a sec ond or two, my dear, to recover my breath! Why, by Hector! I fancied the representative to be extremely secretive! Now, has he actually writ ten to you how he sits alone with the revolver fast clutched in one hand, and contemplates it for long periods? and how my husband several times surprised him? and how he—? Agnes: No, not that, Mrs. Widen er! Nevertheless, it frightens me! Mrs. Widener: My child, at the doctor’s command, Nurse Hagan once obtained and hid the pistol; but later the representative’s fierce threats struck into her such bodily terror she was only too eager to blab out its whereabouts. altogether sure of this; but your poor father mutters to himself almost in cessantly, and there’s only too much ground for fear, Agnes, that he suf fers from phantasma delusions—has a settled belief the ghost of black Anthony Hall haunts his house, and is moving heaven and earth with dark bedevilments, striving to conjure your dear brother’s spirit from his body into the fires of Gehenna! Agnes: Mrs. Widener! Mrs. Widr ener! Mrs. Widener! (Agnes falls ! across the table, hiding her face be tween her folded arms.) Mrs. Widener: I had to tell you! And that’s the reason why with that pistol, your father stealthily glides about the house, as though stalking to cover—-and at the hazard of his own life—some outlawed intruder of the night! Agnes: Such horror riding upon horror! overpowering, stunning hor ror And father has vowed, vowed if! Hut, wait! You couldn't be of any service. M rs. Widener, no, I won’t tell you! I won’t tell you the dis closure he made to me regarding that exec rable—f augh—th i ng! Mrs. Widener: But consider, Agnes, “ child! consider how possible it is your father is bereft of his reason—gone . sheer insane! Agnes: Insane! Insane! Mrs. Widener: Yes, Agnes; al though Dr. Widener ami 1 are very unwilling to admit your father’s be come a monomaniac, he certainly ex periences delusions and recurrent fits of rankest frenzy! He has given up all attention to business; his big fi nancial interests are going to rapid and inevitable ruin! Consequently— (Continued Next Week ) Truth crushed to earth will rise again. Think in interest. Agnes: Uh! why does he cling to it? Mrs. Widener: It appears to fasci nate him by its ghastly association with the past. Yet the fascination isn’t so weird and strange as are his passages through the forlorn house, from forsaken room to forsaken room, in the day and in the midst of the night, though he even then, ever with out fail, carries with him on guard the—ah! now, again—the revolver! Agnes: Always tTie pistol—that in tolerable pistol' Oh! I say, destruc tion upon the nfamous thing! Mrs. Widener: You’re so unstrung! Now, do, d<-. lovie, keep your prom ise not to "ose your self-control! Agnes: But my father! Mrs. Wid ener, what does it all mean? Mrs. Widener: My good girl, why did you intimate you already knew? Still, isnx’ it better you should leant the truth from me than from Hagan, the day nurse; or Zirkle, the night nurse; or the chattering darky ser vants at home? Now, the doctor isn’t Agnes: My patience! you repeat everything he says! Mrs. Widener: Well, I won’t do so again, my dear. Perhaps 'twould be better not to say anything further? Agnes: No! Go on. make haste, please, please! Mrs. Widener: Then. Agnes, child, you insist that I mention that hideous —you insist his, you know—the weap on he carried with him on the evening of the panic, the automatic—! Agnes: Oh, thunderation! that con founded, deuced pistol! Mrs. Widener, how in the world did you learn even about—that—that, too? Mrs. Widener: But you? Dear girl, is it possible your father has told you already? Agnes: Yes, in the letter which ar t I ( f s - —I- 1 8g^P--I || — | | - tT.«BDIW**ll>W<--.» I | 25,000 MORE PORO AGENTS WANTED Equipped with the Very Latest Apparatus for Teaching the Poro System of Scalp and Hair Culture and alk Branches of Beauty Culture Terms Moderate Diplomas Given Write Today for Further Information D"”'A'22 'FORD" COLLEGE | Poro Corner St Louis, Mo. I j