Tells of Witnessing Volcano in Eruption Joseph H, Sinclair, representing the American Geographic society, has returned to this country from a hard trip of exploration through Ecuador, where he had a terrific experience in an endeavor to reach a smoking vol cano which had erupted, the whole country for miles around being del uged with a flow of lava. The na tives had a wholesome superstitious fear of the great pile and could not be induced to guide the explorer as near as he wanted to go, but by his own efforts and alone he managed to get within seven miles of the cone and tills was near enough for him to witness a number of explosions which repeatedly changed the contour of the crater's rim. Little or nothing had been known about the volcano and he secured valULble data concerning its character and location. Mr. Sinclair pointed out that he was not the first white man to see the vol cano—a mountain which the natives call Ueventador. meaning “Eruptor."' .Near the place the explorers came on a lone white man who could not teil them how long he had been there nor wby he had penetrated so far from civilized association. Nor would he go with them to the mountain. He, too, had been infected by tbe supersti tion of the natives, which holds that whenever a human sets foot on the side of the tall volcano Reventador becomes “tnuy bra\ a " or very brave. Immunity to Poisons Not Yet Understood One of the most fascinating chap tens in animal poisons is the subject of natural Immunity, the fact that some animals are immune to the poi .--ons of others and remain unhurt !1 stung or bitten by the poisonous ani mals. whereas all other sorts of beasts succumb. A case In point is that ol desert ani mats, which are unharmed by a scot pion’s sting. The desert fox, the kan garou rat and other inhabitants of deserts where scorpions abound are In ibis happy position. Their cousins, living tar away from the desert, would at once be seriously injured by a scor pion's sting, whereas the desert breeds remain unhurt. It is to be supposed that in the far distant past, before the desert animals tiad this complete immunity to scorpion venom, those which were stung and could not resist died, leaving no offspring. Their luckier brothers, wiio happened to have a hardier constitution, survived and left behind them a resistant race of descendants.—The Forum. Created Cinderella It was just three centuries since Charles f’errault. creator of On derella and fled Riding Hood, was born. Rerrault, a Frenchman, never dreamed that the fairy children ol his brain would become immortal. He wrote poetry of an exceedingly dull order, and it was by his poems and not by his fairy stories that be hoped to win fame. Ferrault conceived and wrote his stories, which be called “Tules of Mother Goose," to please his little son, just as Lewis Carroll, a mathematician, told the tale of Alice in Wonderland to amuse two little girls. Cinderella and her glass slip per was one of I’errauit’s favorite heroines. Some people have tried to insist that Cinderella’s slipper of “verre,” or glass, was meant to be a slipper of “vair," or fur, but one can not imagine Cinderella in anything but a crystal slipper. What Is a Peddler? The word peddler Is derived from an old English word, “ped.” as in Spencer’s “Shepheard’s Calendar ’ “A bask is a wicker ped wherein they use to carry fish.” It has no connection with the Latin pedis, a foot, as often reported. A peddler Is. therefore, one with a ped, basket, or pack, and it has been held in law. one who has the identical article he sells in his “ped." It Is, simply speaking. Incorrect, there fore, to call an itinerant merchant who simply takes orders for goods bought from seeing samples he car ries, a peddler. Airplanes Cut Journey An airplane service for gold dig gers and others concerned with the newly discovered fields in New Gui nea is the latest aerial development. The new fields are on a 2,000-foot high plateau. 60 miles from the coast, a cross-country journey of six days, and a fleet of airplanes has reduced the trail to one of IVO minutes. All supplies for the fields are now car ried by air, the machines returning to the coast with cargoes of gold and passengers. Waterproof Glue Casein glues are exceedingly resist ant to the action of water and retain a very high percentage of their orig inal strength, even after long immer sion under water They are compara tively inexpensive, and the materials from which they are made are readily available in the market They are ap plied cold and will set without the application of heat. The Biggest Crater Two young Swedish students of ge ology named Wadell and Ygberg, after an expedition in Iceland, have dis covered what is believed to be the largest crater in the world, measur ing five miles long and a quarter mile wide, and further claim to have dis covered warm springs. I Fxcellent Work Done by the Navy Station« There Is a constant increase In the number of compass stations main tained by the Navy department along the various coasts. The latest statis tics available show that 15.374 ship captains were shown their location during heavy fogs last year, and It is fair to assume that at least 10 per cent of them might have been ground ed or wrecked had it not been for the assistance given by radio. A compass station is a wireless plant where speeial apparatus is used for telling the definite location of a vessel. A ship is lost in the fog; the wireless operator flashes out the signal, “Q. T. E." The station receiving the mes sage adjusts the radio compass to meet the direction from which the message comes. This is the ‘'mechan ical ear" of the station and the oper ator can tell exactly the direction down to a point of the compass Each station getting the message re|M>rts to a central station, where calculations are made as to the location of the ship. The distance from shore is told by tlie strength of the signals. Then within five minutes of the time the vessel sends out the inquiry the reply comes back and the ship’s master knows just where lie is and pilots his craft accordingly. Too Much Pessimism Takes Joy From Life People that are always looking for alt ttie hardships and difficulties that they may meet travel a bard road If their speech is in line with their think ing. I know farmers that start In with spring work and see their crops ruined by coining disaster, until It has been stored away. A snow and cold spell coming after the oats are in is certain to kill the seed, and all must be done over. A two days’ rain is evidence that it is going to be so wet that noth ing will mature. If the surface oi the ground is dry we are in the start of a dry spell that will ruin everything. Thus it goes daily to the finish. 1 claim that a man that really thinks that way lives a mighty poor life. We have to take about everything on faith in this old world and on the whole our faith is justified. A happy philoso phy of life is a tiling that can be eul livated and is worth while. It is an added treasure to the joy of llviDg, not for one but for many.—George Godfrey in Successful Farming. Dear Girls Amelia Gingham, the noted actress, was bright and gay to the end. She said one evening at a dinner In her Uiverside drive fiat: “The girl of today is dear—dear in tlie monetary’ sense. "A millionaire’s son was drinking lea in a girl sculptor’s studio iu Greenwich Village. He said, as be poured a little more Bacardi into his .0(H) in forming a collection, so many forgeries were I found among them that, in despair of i separating the false from the true, he parted with the lot for a fraction of wtiat they had cost him. Eased His Conscience t In 1882 David Nightingale bought i a pair of shoes in John Dickman’s i store at i'eeksklll. N. Y„ and then left for California without paying for them. Ilecently Nlri ngale returnee i to settle his forty year-old debt He found the shoe ,n had retired from business, but was still living • Nightingale counted out $4. Hie orig I Inal price of tiie shoes, and then i more, which he estimated was il Interest to dale. Wrong Beliefs About Exerc'.sc anJ Heart The old belief that the benrl in creased in size according to the in creased amount of work It is culled upon to perform is a myth. l>r. Ma thias J. Seifert, t'hleago. says In a study of the effect of exercise ti|M>n the heart, prepared for the (Jorcas Met* rial institute at Kansas City. If an athlete's heart increases In size it is not because of the exe'else tie lias performed, but because there was something fundamentally wrong with it to begin with Doctor Seifert declares. "It is now found,” he says, "that ! the predisposition of the heart to en largement Is the result of Infectious diseases, such as scarlet fever, pneu monia, rheumatism and too strenuous exercise iu youth, as well as to physic . traumas. "Exercise for pleasure causes no enlargement of the heart, hut on the contrary produces a strengthening of ilie whole body and. normally, even a smaller heart." Cubans Cling to Old Instrument of Death The one machine that the Spaniards are credited with having Imported into Cuba 134 years ago is still In use. It is the "garrote." instrument of death, which greatly resembles an old picture of an inquisition machine of torture l-'or many years the garrote served ttie Spaniards, dealing death to Cuban rebels Since the expulsion of the old world rulers it has been used Ht the Havana penitentiary as the of ficial instrument of execution. No place but in Cuba is the garrote used officially in executions. A pris oner ojM-rales tile beheading device and gets money and a time decrease in compensation for his services. The Havana garrote is said to have taken 184 lives since it has been in Cuban use. Before that it was used in executing Spaniards accused of high treason.—Kansas City Star. On Molding Character Now, it is better than nothing for a had man to have one virtuous im pulse; if is better than nothing for a man in a rocky field to find one place where there is soil and wThere a hand Tul of corn will grow and wave like the trees of l.ehanon; It is a glorious tiling for a man to know that tl ere is something In the world besides himself, and that he is not omnipo ent. omniscient, or omnipresent; it is a good tiling for a man once in his life lo feel little, and to know himself as lie is: but how much lietler it would be if he could tlx the vision and turn it into character!—Henry War-1 Beecher. Too Rough She didn't understand football "Why did they knock that man down as soon as he touched the ball?" she asked. “Because he was trying to get a goal.” her brother explained. “But isn't the object of the game to get goals?” "Yes; but he was—you see, he's on the other side. He was going the wrong way—that is. toward the wr ing goal.” ' Well. I don’t see why they should knock him down to tell him that livery body makes mistakes.”—Mou treal Star. Rejecting a Compliment A well-known member of the stock exchange, who is now giving up the close of a strenuous life to pliltun tliroplc efforts, was in his bey-day a tremendous gambler in slocks, and in cidentally. lie and Ids partner were rather exjiert in the gentle art of milk ing enemies One of these accosted him with tile pleasant remark: “Book here you are the biggest thief on the stock exchange ” “Ait." was tile an swer. “it is evident you do not know my partner " — Bondon Tit Bits. Jail Bird If was one of those tittle parties at which an out-of-town girl was a guest of honor In the course of the eve ning she was introduced to a young inan from the prep school After the introdti'-tlon. she avoided him with the most deliberate intent. When het tiostess asked for an explanation, the young visitor replied that he was from tin- prep school. The hostess looked lierplexed. “Hut isn't It a sort of a peulten Clary Y" tin* girl ventured. English Tongue in France English In eleven lessons so equipiied twenty Paris policemen that they an swered 350 questions In the new Ian guage. This encouraging result caused the prefect, Jean Chlappe, to order 250 more of the force to go to the school. Frenchmen who have adveu lured abroad suggest that a notebook and pencil will help out the officers, for they huve found it simpler In Eng land and America to write their qeus tlons rather than wrestle with the foreign accent. Snow Storm Formation Potentially enow storms form in general region of warmth, strange as It may seem. The area of low baro metric pressure, or storm sea, comes whirling eastward across the Gulf states and thPu generally takes a twist northward along the Atlantic seaboard. When sufficiently far north these warm air currents are chilled and the moisture becomes snow, very often being borne to the earth by tbe back draft of east wind. fTAI£.K9 BARNHART PRINTING Ctt rs~ ::a-.adj __MAHA S LINCOLN MARKET is still drawing crowds. Thors ia a r so son. Grocoriss and rr.oata which please. 1406 No. 24th. Web. 1411 Come Visit the Beautiful, New iC < TUXEDO BEAUTY SHOPPE 5 ■, 2225 No. 24th St. Webster OS06 ? % Mme. Zells Greene, Mgr. ■ % South and Johnson System ^ % Operator Mme. C. C. Tr«*nt «L V Marcelling Finger Wave ■JJ "■ Bob Curling Manicuring ■, % Cell Web. 0104 for Appointment ■C ( •wvvwwvwywwwA1/ x why 3: 4 4 4[ X Drive the dingy looking X X car when you can make it X look dandy by doing it X •| The Johnson Way & \ Painting with Air? | Webster 6 5 2 6 | »» /WVJWWAWMWWMMW < Office. 4913 So. 26th St. £ .5 Phone, MArket 1607 Ij J Res. 4912 So. 26th St. j[ ^ Res. Phone MArket 0722 «J 3 P. M. HARRIS ? f NOTARY PUBLIC 5 % Real Estate and Rentals ij $ All Le^al Work Confidentially jl 5j Transacted aB "■ Omaha, Nebraska "B /AVkWWdVAWbVJVWW/ I X Webster 4030 ? X I J. D. Lewis & Co. I —f x X X NEW FUNERAL HOME X v Y if —°~~ f | 2310 No. 24th St. | i x ^VkVVWMWyWWAP//W^ Ij Attention, Piles Sufferers! !■ Why suffer any longer if you had aB ■C them for 50 years or more. Buy a 4* : % jar of my DREAM REMEDY and use aB I % it for 6 days and if not satisfied, re- ■ B ! % turn jar and the druggist will refund aB '% your money. It gives quick relief aB % aril stops itching and bleeding, re- aB % duees the swelling and takes the sore- Ba J ■ ness away almost at once. For sale a* Ba > People’s Drug Store i £ 2414 No. 24th St. Web. 6323 Ij s Ross Drug Store I; f 2306 No. 24th St. J £ Web. 2770 Web. 2771 «; WWJWWrtVWrtWAf/WW - Reid-Duffy (PHARMACY FREE DELIVERY ’’ Phone Web. 0609 24th and Lake Street* and 24th and Cuming OMAHA, NEB. ;; j & Phone ATUntic 9*44 A ? Ree. Phone WEbeter 2JJ4 V | HARRY LELAND | REAL ESTATE «► i y i> X Insurance Slocks Bonds f Room 19, Patterson Block < * y Omaha, Nebraska HOTELS PATTON HOTEL, 1014, 1016, 10U South 11th St. Known from eoas* to coast. Terms reasonable N. P Patton, proprietor. DRUG STORES ROSS DRUG STORE, 2306 North 24th Street. Two phones, WEbster 2770 and 2771. Well equipped to supply your needs. Prompt service. THE PEOPLES’ DRUG STORE^th and Erskine Streets. We carry a full line. Prescriptions promptly tilled. WEbeter 6322 Classified l FOR RENT—Furnished room is strictly modern home. One block from Dodge carline. Call during business hours, WE. 71M, eves ings, WE. 2480. tf-12-10-26. FOR RENT—Neatly furnished room. Modern home. With kitchen priv ilege. Call Web. 6498. —tf. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, 22nd and Grant. Webster 0257. NICELY furnished rooms. All mod em. WE. 3960. FOR RENT—Nearly furnished room in modern home, kitchen privileges. WE. 8308. 4-T. - fr FOR RENT—Nearly furnished rooms. Strictly modern.. Kitchen privi leges. Harney car line. Web. 6618. FOR RENT—One three-room apart ment. Neatly furnished. Webstac 6018. 2614 N. 81st street. FOR RENT — Furnished apartmeat or furnished room in strictly mod ern home. Webster 4162. 2810 North Twenty-Second Street. FOR RENT—Furnished er unfurnish ed rooms. Near carline. Reason able. WEbster 1068. FOR RENT — Homelike furnished rooms. 919 North 26th street. J Tel. Harney 1904. 1 FOR RENT—Two rooms, furnished or unfurnished. Heat. Electric light. Web. 7089. SHOE REPAIRING BENJAMIN & THOMAS always give satisfaction. Best material, reason able prices. All work guaranteed. 1415 North 24th St., Webster 5666. — — ( C. H HALL, stand, 1403 No. 24th. Baggage and express hauilng to ail parts of the city. Phones, stead, WE 7100; Res.. WE. 1056. HEAUTY PARLORS MADAM Z. C SNOWDEN. Scientific scalp treatment. Hair dressing and manufacturing 1154 No. 20th St. WEbster 6194 UNDERTAKERS t JONES & COMPANY, Undertakers / 24th and Grant Sts WEbster 1100 / Satisfactory service always LAWYERS W. B BRYANT, Attorney and Conn selor-at-Law. Practices in all courts. Suite 19, Patterson Block 17th and Farnam Sts. AT 9344 or Kea. 4072. H. J. PINKETT, Attorney and Ceun »el*r-at-Law. Twenty years’ ex perience. Practices in all courts. Suite 19, Patterson Block, 17th and Famams Sts. AT. 9844 or WE. 81*0. INDUSTRIAL FINANCE CO. 810 World-Herald Bldg. Salary loans, $10 to $50, on individ ual note; steady employment the only requirement. Also larger loans made on autos, furniture, etc. No financial statement, no in dorsement; strictly confidential service. Lowest convenient terms. Under state supervision. JA. 3077. | EMERSON’S LAUNDRY f y The Laundry That Suita AH f \i 1»«1 No. 24th St. Web. 0820 X r***+*++++++++**++* * Red and White ;; ;; Chain Stores 3 3 13 Same Prompt and ' ’ 13 Courteous Service < > J Better Prices. 3 3 * 3 3 2001 Cuming Ja. 124S 3 3 * jrtMNHfrfr#1##ttttti * < > WEB8TER 0(10 3 3 3 J Pjratasr, Do You Eot at ' ' ,. Peat s Sanitary Cafe 3 3 / Sir Yoo. It lo tbs boot pUco I know < . for good rating! • . H. PEAT. Prop. I 1801 No. 24th St. | 3 Omaha, Nebraska < > 33 GOLDEN RULE 3 3 GROCERY !3 J :: 33 3 [ Operated under the « > W. C. Association Plan. 3 ' > Call Webster 4198 < > 33 3 ; Ws Deliver 3 3 < . 'i