F A IThe Sunday Bee J ; MORNING EVENING ill hi i imi i ii i . . i THE fttC ri BUSHING f? i mson n. t -iuk rutiutr. u. iiKawiK, a. Mnir. MCMBCil OF THE ASSOCIATED MESS 5tll Aaeialaiaa' I'mt a LW- TM N It t WnM, M avlualiatf atmi.. m iht u I laiauaa-ai'na, uf e.l aaaa 4illbe eraiMacI la II af a u.,.,ia ciIiip4 la li.ia f, a. aian iha lal aaaa j.iiatlati' Sei J I rifkii 4 iaawailuia e t mti4i ddeilwt eie iib laaartaeV ; ; Bie icierHONu ntte Bianch Kuban. Ail fur trie ll'iartinaflt t I iL. Jor I'.rao Want. 4 fur K'Shi t'aiU Atar llf, M i Al ,,M . iJiluniU liriarlmaat. Atlantis 1021 or ru ts Ma'n Off.r-7lh an4 Kirn am . It K. j't u. ho k.ia. N. to. Cor. Hib snej N N. Vnrk-ia H(i Avu f . UMfa , V. a.Sli.i'i.n . 4JJSIM Hide. Chlrato . t I'arn, Iran. 420 Mua HI. a rrl t r -i r ii ai ia aeiwi m . : WHEN THE LEAVES TUFN. j Jack Fruit ii luy in woodland dell, on hill and in tho vale, with its transformation. Autumn huts ; ,rr replacing the rub. dres of summer; blossom lnn i over, and harvest Unit, and now the last t splendid muimiil before the death that is winter ! we runic. Nvbraskans mien a great deal of the ,plendura of autumn, for we have so little hardwood , Jimber. Jlut on hillside and along the roads the ; aumuih torch glcums, a rusty rid through the ; liunjfinif grien; the joe-pya and the milkweed, the J Hitter and the golden rod aro pasted, and the ;;Jiardiet of flowers have donned the "winter gar ! went of repentance." ; It la a sulimn season, the, death of a year, but ; the passuge in now accompanied by that display of i ;iulet beiiuty that givea to orderly diaaolution a Quality of majesty entirely lucking in the riotous rnanifcatntiotu of giowth or the robust attitude of .maturity. It is not na with sorrow that nature Moves to the stillness of period of rest, buF.wil ; H dignity that is sustained by the certainty of a ! new birth yet to come. For in nature the miracle ; t)f death is followed surely by the miracle of life, ;nnd winter is hut the promise of a spring to comu. i" "My way of life ie fallen into the sere, the yil fjow leiif," complained the desponding Macbeth, who J ,3". It the lack of children and of friends, but old ; ,!; m, tried and I ! retuincr, stoutly urged: !. "Tlr rnf lire' tuliie nil 1 an a lu:y winter, J i Krofcf;', but Klii'lly." WolseyV luut hour were sprnt in regret a for ( loyally to a king whoso favor changed and left him i , 'nuked t bin enemies." It. was the sadness of an f-tulirnf embittered because of thwarted ambitions end the too late wish thut ho had served his God 'Villi something of the .. n he hud expended for his ,kinK- Few men, probtlily, escape altrtnether Huch ireflortions ra they review their lives, yet all should jjk'p.lize that with the cutumn eometh peace. A little reft, a moment of reflection, and then a quiet t ilieyond comprchcn.tioi., '! I'ut the turning leaves of autumn, while they j;:resai;e the majesty t'f winter's storms, and the )jf.ternnes of the rule of cold and death, also hold jhs firomlse of a hprinKtimcwhen alt will be born ;hnow, and in the stirring of the f:erm in 'forccarted f; he unfolding of hoot and bud and blossom, fruit find harvest opce morc. The" endless cycle of crea- Iwn, proluctirvJ Ibnd iliESolution goes ', .on, . mid J !taehee man iTifff wutest of all the lesson's he can 1; iarn from nature, that God is omnipotent, und that alieyond this life there is; another. The turning J loaves of autumn bear this message as pluinly as Jiilo the burgeonings d"f sprig time, .' v . - ' a 'I . . , . , . INTEfePRETINO THE MIDDLE VEST. i J 'J "Here ij soniething else than the New York and J .Var.hingtoli' world," writes Lord Shaw of Dunt'er Jlline after a visit to the middle west. This, he e.x j'.tittims in n article in the London Times, is the fnost reel fact on tho American iAmericn aelf-containcd, of enormous fertility and resources, and with a population second to none in I 'energy." In a very real sense the fringes of Arrsrica are Avhnt fringes usually are, largely docoratie. It is " (here in the great central viillcys that the full pat- tern of American life must be sought for. It is not J ijpmbclliahcd with much gay coloring, that is true I JThe harmonious balance of work and play hr.s no. I Jieen attained. But middle western life is filleO. J'Vith the splendid characteristics of earnestness, J Strength' .of purpore, hard work and faith in man land Cod. J '.' "Here Is a country," Lord Shaw is moved to ob tiserve, "to which Washington can not be content I Vith issuing a ukase; 4o the middle west Washing-' ton must render a reason." Nor, he remarks, can the presa of New York either interpret or control .this very different and distant community. '' Of its own independence and its own powers ;;"this inland empire is scarcely aware. Very often Jthe effort is made to think and act aa if Nebraska j ere New York. llone.H pride, in the very difTer J ences that exir.t between the middle west and the fcther sections of the union is encouraged by the 'perceptions of such observers as this Briinh Visitor. THE ACE OF HUMAN VALUES. J.! Signs are p'entiful that ours is an age of tr.in.-d- 'lion. Out of the experiences, triumphs and failures J of the last few years new standards are emerging, a ' !new spirit arising. I Wlist i evident is that America is going forward. - Europe may teem to totter on the brink of chaos, ;but the very eagerne. with which it regard th -peaciile example of America gives confidence that it will paiife In its mistaken course be for it is too late. J America seeks to extract the utmost human value I from ht it has, Othvr nation may pur.ue th t delusions of territornl expansion, military per "and the subjection of alien races, but without our 5 aid, eruKUragfment or sympathy. The? actions sow ' 'the dragon's Wh of war. an.t America wishes to re 'mailt at p"1' wof" J J In thr dajs a proposal eiuh that made by ! Yl. L. 11. Ru!. tlriS 'f 'l -Hower frvra ftiumlrr lner f "it ric in ' th event of nmrVt uV have aioue-l a storm of ' i"tffy trillum. Nw, however, uk the bUa f ' Hiual.ty f arinca upp'a. ntiseas ma i I Ihia tht an tr...t f leravf I i'- ! all. 'iIm iinrtats . vlvman I tht - from r. The irttrn of ! that m j"'1' "' Sthte aie I ft, t atJ. l 'wtt, . t. la up wea'th owl f then J rtp!t hr i u 5 Um th.a if c.h e-.l T l n.iue4Mael f e ' T U toe KM . ef H ", a.tweUif rr-". '.r ! raia xf 4 i. "" ' tf-.y 'M t e'ry I , , ,'.( a I te al t Iawattee f.'t WUfat.-a, .( aJ (tva. A't SUNDAY I . . . COMPANY ur IIU, 1000 17: fur p!il. Ilunore in , . -eaiien continent "an while we wait for month, and find 1 :ght about the through space. the p" n ka !! k ilJ r fl if' r i ,l a 1 an hr SM .!.4r behia I tHe hs i si ather a ' .rvut. If t " vt " " J '' arl tn-" e t rf'' '1 Xt t ,: v u ' ' ,"4" h ff 'I l"' r"1' '' history shows that It moves steadily and slowly for ward. The changes that now are on the way will be so gradual and orderly In their coming as scarcely to be noted. FORWARD WITH CHRIST , A new note has been sounded by Hichop Fred' B. FUher of the Methodist Episcopal church. Ad dressing a meeting In the Methodiat "I Will Main tain" campaign, this church leader said: "There is nothing I 1Ullke to hear more Hum t'uit hfickiivyril j'liraiM), 'Imrk to t'lirlnt.' It Is ut terly imiioIW to hick to Clir.nt. Tht Clirtft alMiut liorn mil "i-cokhig s thn one ilcplctfil In Hie first chapter of John,' who was prem-n before tU world' bgn, by w hom all thliiKS with mailu ami IhroiiKh whom ttm wmM him bi-en ulnli)icl vf elnre. This Divine I'hrlnt knows no lutltuilo at ih or nice. This I'hrlnt Is niovlnu' so mplilly In th world today that It Is extinm ly dlffli nit to het-p pace wllh Jllm. linnKln iiiiyona turnlnif his eyes barkwuril to Pud Dim! Thn thing that thev ami I tiiimt do Is to take wings and ulti-nit to overtake lllin. II Is so fur In udvunee ut us that it In almost liiiii)ltile for us to cairh up with Jllm. "I iT-memher nn old friend of mine taking me Into a pumpkin garden, where we beheld pumpkins that W'tio utmost as large as the boy that brheld thum, and hu sold: 'IiiiukIihi attiiniitlns to put these pumpkins bock Into the seed!' And I, as a young man, was greatly ' Impressed; ' and I now think of that homely Illustration when I think of the stlltid Ideas of many fhrlstlan rraetlonnrlcs. "It la utterly IrnimsHjIilo to eompreHS our world, either aorlal, ernnoniln, or rvl.irloua, Into the llml tatioin of our earlier conceptlona of Jrsus Christ." Here Is a hopeful doctrine a Christ that la a leader in the life of men today. It is not only con sistent with Christian concepts, but of a nature that is readily harmonized with any of the other great crceda or religions, ttlahop Fisher goes on.- "What we need In all our life Is to recognlio this Christ st work. "The editor of our dally newnoaper, when he attempts to Interpret the mutters of the' day, ought nut to be aitharmd to preach, tn the columns of his paper, th fact that he beholds this Christ at work In the new situations thut are being created. At lie dues this he will become the voice of the modern day, lie will become the moulder of the new world. "The preacher In the pulpit should not be nulla nit 1 to tell his peoplu that he beholds this . C'hMut at work In the church. "Tho buslneiis man, whether he be the manager of a gput Industrial plant or of a big department store; should be willing to tell all his executives, UHHlstuntH, and laborers, that he beholds In their new nsplrutlons the evidences 'of this Living Christ ut work and that lie propones llkewlae to adjust h! lifo to thn new lilenlw. The laboring man who In nttemplliiK by strike and the u of weapons to force tliu hand of his employer, should not une tli' tactics of Helritdinem but should come to the place where he la willing to say, 'J mil a follower of this Living Christ mi l 1 propose to settle this Uilng In His spirit und on Ills terms.' "The one problem of th;- Industrial problems, the raiial problems, the International problems of the world today Is to see the unifying power of this Living Christ among us." Such a broadening of religion has scarcely been known since Christ himself enlarged the law to in clude the Gentiles as well as the Jews. That teach ing -was a ehock to thoae who heard Him in Judea, it may be a shod: to some who hear it today, but it will be an inspiration to millions who feel thut the world moves forward unijer God, and that in His providence there should be an equally progres sive aspect in belief and worship. SOME DWARF AT THAT. -1 A sort of approuch has Tjeen attained between the French and German scientist:!, indicating thut perhaps the' war is over after all. The little sign noted comes in tho form ef an announcement from Director Deslandres of the Meudon observatory that "the reason the yellow giant stars are brighter for their size than the yellow dwarf stars is that they emit more powerful X-ruys and cathode rays." The French savant admits that in reaching this high spot on the hill side of knowledge he followed a trail broken prior to 1014 by Kois Ocrster, a Ger man, who very likely found other occupation than stur-gazing. The shock that comes to us is in the statement that the sun, only a little more than a million times lurger than the earth, is a dwarf yellow tar. This will have a tendency to deflate some cf us,twho were beginning to puff out a littlo with a sense of im portance. Yet, as we now recall tho fervor of eome August days in this latitude, we wonder just how v.e would have felt if the sun had not been a dwarf. Even in the darkest of moments a little ray of consolation may be discerned. If the sun were large enough to be ranked as a giant, and emitted cathode rays of greater intensity than those which coax the mercury up to the neighborhood of 100 Fahrenheit oh, what's the use? Let the French and German scientists have this between them, the reports on the eclipse of last out whether Einstein really is pun's rays bending as they come MERIT GAUGED BY PRICE ALONE? Jutt what conclusion is justified when one reads the price of a modern "best seller," just off the press, as being 'J net, and then in another advertisement find offered a long list of books that have survived the years until they have attained a fixed place in the world's literature, but now priced at 10 cents a volume? Also, what is to be said of tastes when along side the modern tlirilleV at 11.95 is presented a full set cf Scott's works, a special edition, forty-eight vol umes for J 10. or cents per volume? Times have change!, of course, and "Rob Hoy," "Peveril of the Teak." "The Fair Maid of Tei-th," "The Heart of Midlothian," "Ivanhoe," or any other ef the list doesn't attract the reader of today as certainty as a detective story whuh involves radio and all the modern improvements, or a romance that h entangled with airplane, submarines sad Freud ian complexes. And )et fo!k k-ep right on buying Svott IWtiit, Thackray, Irvir. Hawthorne, in fact, the works ef a ny .lea I and gone writ- ,r whti knew ntthr.g t f Ihe theme debated tn the iituvlt of todoy, and jtrt'did krvw hjw M tl a story. ni vn cevM J hw o a .. i)il-"vu'al way ii f the rltttias f ttfr , The ni'Hl.rn author ct a eel r pfne fee h h. vWS fces-j tky rv new l'p!e hve n ir t tn mut'an ialeeP"arr; tejr I con ever ii'Si. e even i-ovl 4 Kv'e -f h thn1 tel up I fe t are part. Ta opi , fh the r'. at la I atjv f' e'la, until .:h a f i, a4 ta aa ... t ki.b.a.i..a ri im te if at ' a pu;..- i an I what b al ar r.ti at4t, ft- tm Ihe t vt -vuil aiie, prwa m atKn ( atent Jw biefaturex JS (ki:e .jiI g .ivwa I t ). 14 ta ttH Bily f t 1 !' Pt. aj t' U l ? ('aa v ni ay w"vi a ' Htft waial twit) f THE SUNDAY BEE: OMAHA, OCTOBER 15. 1022. Meredith Nicholson Turns to Scandal 1 "Broken Darners," the New Novel of the Hooucr Author, Exhibit the Breakdown of Family Life. Is the American home tottering? Are Columbia's lares and penates In danger? Tne youth of today demands excite ment, action, entertainment, which they seem unable to rtiid at home. Clandestine meeting, parties at romlhousi beckon til them. This condition and the perils thut have come with the bnaking down of Ihe burriurs of convention which so rigidly governed until th luet decide uro mirrored by Meredith Nicholson In hie latest novel, "Hroken Harrier." This I not th usual sort of lloosier fiction, although Its scene In laid In Indianapolis. ' Ill-are Durland Is a student In the state university. Iter father, an Inventor, has been forced out of the business which his genius, backed by the cupltal of a friend, had helped nurture Into a thriving; manufacturing concern. Mi Is summarily called home. Hh must help with thn family support, llur older sister already Is "In an of lice," but her young brother, who her mother had determined must become a great attorney and politician as his grundslr was before him, Is to re main at law school. Grace, after the fashion of the mod ern girl, accepts the situation philoso phically, and in the face or strong op position on the part of her mother and sister who worship family, so cial position and caate, eeeks work us a salesgirl in a department store. iter chum of high schol days, Irene, had no opportunity to continue her studies, Hhe entered the business world and won a place at the head of a department in tnis snap. ' e Through her help, Grace securee a position, and as th nightly harangue of mother and sister over th unfor tunate circumstances of the family begins to prey upon her nerve, she turns to a French class In the eve ning with Irene. It is then but a step to a "party." Irene Is openly receiving the atten tions of a married man, financially and socially prominent. A close friend of his. Ward Trenton, nationally known engineer, comes to town, and Irene coaxes Grace to go with them on a " party" to Tommy Kemp s coun try house, "The Shack." Prohibition has been several years In effect, but Tommy has a "respecta ble collar." While Kemp, proceeds to become Intoxicated, Trenton leads Grace to a corner where he tells her of hi wgV, an "emancipated woman" whose tlmo la ' occupied with lecturing on the new woman and her new free dom. Trenton returns on business visits and the "parties" become more fre quent. He professes his love for Grace, and she feels for the man who belongs to another. a a a Grace's first customer Is an eccen tric maiden lady, known to the girls of the store as "Old Money Bags." Mlio takes a fancy to Grace. Invites her to dinner, and when Grace lets It be known to her mother and sister, they crime their nagging long enough to tell how Miss Reynolds is an aris tocrat of the old school, a lady of position to be cultivated. Grace chides them for their atti tude, but goea to dinner with Miss Keynolds because she likes her. Mrs. Trenton's latest book on the modern woman is mentioned by the hoi'tess. "I've rend it," eald Grace. "lt' certainly revolutionary." "All of that," Miss Reynolds re torted. "But It does make you thltin! Everybody's restless and crazy for excitement. My youpg married neighbors all belong to families I know or know about; live in very charming houses and have money to spend too much, most of them and they don't seem to be able to stand an evening at home by themselves. Hut maybe the new way's better. Maybe their chances of happiness are creuter where they mix around more. I'm curious about the whole, business. These young folks don't go to school. Why" don't they, when their fathers and grandfathers always did? Their par ents stayed at home In the evening. My father Used to grumble horribly when mother' fried to get him Into a dress suit. Put there was wicked ness, thin, too, only people Just w hispered about It and tried to keep it from the young folks. . . . But now you might think people were sending up fireworks to call atten tion to their sins! I remember the first time I went to a dinner that was 3D years ago where cocktail were passed around. It seemed awful. . . . Hut now prohibition's driven eeverybody to drink. . . ." She reached for a fresh cigarrt and lighted it trpnciuilly. a a a As Irene and Kemp, Grace and Trenton are returning from thlr "last party" nt "The Shack." Kemp, drunk as usual, tries to take the steering wheel from the chauffeur; there Is a crash: Kemp is dead. .Meanwhile Grace's father I work ing away at his inventions, striving to rise again In the world of Una nee and shame hi former partner who ruined him. Trenton, through Grace, become Intrirsted In Duiiand' inventions. Sneers seems Just around the corner. A the future of he lva affair with Trenton loom more I, link snl e ren. Tienton pl.a.ts with her thai his wife, nestle of the new freedom wilt practice wh.it she preaches; bin m f;u-i. i.il.J him to confide In hei when h may meet a arirl ho t trict him atnmgly. Mi. Trrnh.n iKtnea .. (own o l.-clyr,- ,sh to (hi giii of whom Trenton hi lol.l Hei. .(ii, rrettion l.tlmllv T 111 im .r.n i g. with li.ni l.i itu- I III Wifir Mr. Trenton Lv Km k Ik bar i h.iu- In ( ( n ,,-,., i ae mo. I Liailt liiftif, hrr t" h.k i ir. -, I uiii.' ahr ,.!. "llwtl iwi na iv 1 li.wn im ,, ,M, 1 rJt io.u,n .f n' h.,1.,1, 1. . V'4 r vr hmU.o . ,. I tan wa K..w tuur (toon w.ul t l h III, ti,l lKie i tiling, I m! ,!, I. f fl.ii.. ,,, ,.. ' a. k M'.J her h l en h I V - I Hitl -a Wall a.t ,1 I t M.lly U. vt,, h.,,k !.' if .c H ,n ti.ii', , 11, , ! I I fiar .( 4 I I. . k. h, 1, ! t'41 .. ... ,.l,.,.,il- IK , I i. ,, t,.,.,.,,,, If.Bk l.lll ,f Ht,.if ,.. ..,! k. i. In k.t ii, a,nl I I ..uil rf .K I., e t a . i,i. -a I . 1 .k. h a J( , 4, a fct,rfj..f ia a f .!.., , a ! a f , f.,,.t, Vi ic 1 '' ' I I---I ...1 I la I I 4 J. a 1 m.hi 1 . ' ii .... M, Va.(,n .. r. i..tH .1 tn I (nit.. rfit , Ik, , ' Ml 1 .- Ita a 1 . .. a H ... t I a tmi'S-m if iii 11 '..' in a. .. - -tl,,. freedom and advocate of the raey divorce, reveals hrr true If when faced with th renllMtlon that her own marriage Is a failure. Grace iMiiintid, the young girl, who has come to the conclusion she I en titled to go In search of hspplnes with no thought for th rule laid down by convention, come face to face with a stone wall the eacred nee of th home after breaking through these barrier of tradition, Mr. Nicholson aid her over or through tills wall by earning Mr. Trenton to die In a sanitarium, re leasing her husband from hi fetter. "KHllKKN llMUUtll ' by MerailUh KUiiulaun. 1'harl'a Serlbn'r's Sona. J. II. L Jr. The Bee Book Shelf NfflHTR ANR DAT! OH THB OTPST THAU.. Thruush Andtlual and olliar aladllarranaen thorn. Wllh an ar um n I of the Romany ra'-a anil en In. Irnductlun by Uanraa B. Woodbarrr, by Irvine lirown. llarpar A llroa., (tub llahars. Mr. Hrown presents In a fascinat ing manner th joy and adventure of the gypsy trail along which he traveled to collect Spanish pypsy folk songs and to study th singer. Th reader I taken to Barcelona, Cadiz, Jerez, Seville, Granada and other cen ter wher the Oltanos may be seen In their simple dwellings, pursuing a free, wandering life and caring neither for trade nor empire. The author, a atudent of the Uni versity of Wisconsin, got to th very heart of gypiy life.. He Jiellevee ther 1 a strain xf gypsy blud In hi vein. Ha learned their Unguug, acquired a rtomani brown complexion and ad mits that be had th "ltomanl fever," meaning th wanderlust He was re ceived by the gypslee In Rpaln a one of their own, an advantage manifestly valuable for his cause. Thn observa tions anil experience of Mr. Hrown are graphically related. Ho offers a series of Word pictures which teem wllh th charm and fascination of Itornnni life. "The racn that ha never grown up," he writes, "The true llomanles love tho wide, world: all nature Is their fatherland, Hlnoe the earliest times men have dreameif of a golden age, where mankind lived In utter simplicity, beneath the stars, untrou bled by ideas of good and evil." He describes the gypsy dancers, "dreamy and passionate and proud." He writes of the Joy of life that Is theirs; the song, the dance and the wine, along the gypsy trail In Hpaln. Relating tho wild and gay festivities In the Cafe Villa Rosa In Harcelona, lie refers to Call, "In her seml orlen tal costume, showing her white teeth, smiled at by her victims, who were applauding her frantically." Aristo cratic Harcelonese gazed on this whirl J wina or passion, spurreu on to wilder st( ps and fiercer mirth by the finest wine in the world. "Chaste, as a rule In their marital relations, the gypsies find expression fur all their deepest passions in their songs and dances. The dancers are full of subtle grace to the tips of their fingers." lie adds; "Nowhere, save In Rus sia, or Hungary, do the gypsies fas cinate the wilder member of the aristocracy to the same degree, mak ing them forget everything, ready to throw away their fortunes, their names, and their very lives merely to please these children of nature. The very fact that these bewitching girls never even grant n kjss, drives these wealthy fipanlards to desperation." Again: "Romunl existence Is life In Its barest essence, free from tho unessential, vivid and JntenBe, with out nerve-racking tension; It Is an eternal holiday! The gypsies are like Hie negro mommy wiio exnlalned her happiness nnd freedom from worry, saying: 'Honey, It's 'cause I weaha de worl' like a loose garment.' " Mr. Hrown unwittingly tantalizes his western reader with a delated de scription of a. visit to one. of the largest wine cellars In tho world, at Jerez. Read: "We sat In comforta ble wicker chairs while an attendant brought us glasses of characteristic wines. First, a pale Amontillado, dry and light as sunshine. . . . The next was Pedro Limenez Venerable, the embodiment of a Horutlan odr. It was followed by a Muscatel, in the making of which sufficient grnpes were used to produce a score of or dinary Muscatels. It Was a sweet wine, caressing the palate, and giving one the sensation of absorbing the very soul of the grape. Some Na poleon was brought In. For 1SU years It had lain maturing In the cask, a contemporary of Voltaire and Wash ington. Finally a bottle of sparkling sherry was opened," The book is dedicated to Vincente Wasco Ilianez. "who has given us such varied and vivid pictures of th Spanish gypsy." There are 1R5 illus trations from photogruphs of gypsy life taken by Austin A. Hreed of 'Cin cinnati. K. Tl. "FKt K VASTfnr TllROt Hit CON. Ki'tOt'S AfTuSlMUKSTIUN." by Kmll- i'.,u lAniatiiaa Library frv. Ii. N Toik ) Thi 83 page paper covered book Is an interesting exposition of the old proverb. "As a man thlnketh so Is he," "Hv believing oneself to lir llm m.ister of one's thoughts our Iwcomrs so, the author writes The follow ing ewipt la a fur keynote In ihe coiileute ef (It.. I.,,: 'We HrM w 11 Ion 11a it finer of im-iiU uliible power, which, when we handle It un I com, Inmly U I'flrll iejuilic.il in us. j If. oil llir iol,trtir. Olir.-l it i.t ' I a - "ii .111 1 wior nunnrr. tl itue 1 u lb it lii.-l.iv of omarUra ,md nl Iowa ea 11. 'I .ml i. r and In md j nlhr . . ,' fr-nu phvu.i! met i IHi'1,1 ll la. Imt nl-.l Hi lV III I.Ul.lf 1 h no. 11. a., htiir lh tondiiioit in; Whi, U Wr Ili-H fln l tuilvh " 1 m llH 1 l;j( i t' UUI I'l I IV 1 1 1 1 . , Hi ... a. I 1- . 1 I --a. I U l I. .a 4 .n ui, , "t Mlw4t,r i.lt.va, ille la ,4t,.lite, W'lH 1--II-! I. a. I v f the eou .n l.a a t tit a-1, Mr 1 h a i.ilir ii,-4,"ii , 11 . I. iI 1 f lin.4r.ira .,.v t ,l, -rr-l I 01 -I 1' 1 I 1 a a in.. Ii , 'H I t a, l, 11 lmt i.a i.-'i'l f. I ,1, I 11, ii ,1 -; H '.f . , a tiea I em 1 ' - ft ..a I' ' fV fWK I i it i : v t K It, . t -t 9 a t 1 t- i ii tk I U- t Mr S-4- ! i'l l i f K Etf t l ,1.1 .. ll V til (Mlt.'J I M t.l I K I 4 l" f---V t B.U . H nbll Kj kt k - m . M t ta t,, a I .'It i . H t - 1 i !... t ii (- . ', , v .fc !- 1 '- ! I ' i i .. ii m,-h ii i - la . b f . af. t,a4t. S . I , t- - I a)! ' tt ,1 lfv ia k. - t 4.A !' tl ir '-:t. 11 ff t. ,. living, and when h h been wllh Ihe circu IU ir and a day h la endowed by mini falrle wllh a won derful gift. Koch day after Ihat, at "half past twilight." Ian Kst all Ihe snmuila out of ihnr cuge. and for an hour they frolic and engg In ocliil Intercourse, txcliungUig torie and ret'ounlltig adventuiT. Th gissl f.ilrv with the blue blue eve and rid ing the whlte-whltr horse, takes part In the doing ut different time. Ian hu some adventure, loo, that ar worth being told. Kleplmnt. mon key, camel, tiger, giraffe and all, figure the tulr. only Ihe glrsff doe not talk; he write nil h hit to say. "TMR TlvtlitR rinATK." Ir Chrlr riirlali.phar Jrnkina. (Iron II. Imran I'uiiipaiiy, Naw VurH, "The plot thicken," my In truth he wild of this tlrrlng story of th Great Northwest. Th author skill fully build up th u sprues and then lead th render through a eerie of thrilling event to a pleasant con clusion. It I filled with mystery, ad venture and love. Mr, Jenkins, who I familiar with th country of which h write, allocate moat of th action tn th Nnnnahijou Hay country, along th wild north slier of l,ak Hu perlor. The author Introduce leverul Interesting character. A. C. (Aery) Hmlth, superintendent of a pulp camp, I ohsesaed by th desire for revenge, II gain hi nbjectlv In. that direct- tlon, realizes tho pi le he had to pay, eome out a chastened man, and lie win th girt of hi dream. Louis Hammond, it, newspaper man, whll on a Canadian continental train, meet Norman T. Glldersleev and accept a conlldentlnl podtlnn at the pulp camp at 11,000 per month. 11 also meet "th girl with high arched eyebrow," Anent Hammond: "Fat had liter ally seized him by th scruff of th neck, yanked him out ef a common place groov In llf and tosstd him into a vortex of baffling Intrigue and mystery." There are soma dramatlo situations In th story, and th action move swiftly along. lis a lively yarn. "CAPTAIM rOTTi MININTKPt," Krani-la f.. Cooper, Lotnrcp, Lee enainre ro, This Is a mystery story of a young, Impetuous, handsome minister of th gospel with an Inherited past, known only to th richest man in. town, th leader and ruler of th little congra gallon which comprises the young oastnr's flock. Of course, the divine falls hopeless y In love with this man's daughter, who Is torn between filial duty and burning love. Captain Holt, grizzled old sesdng, whose, love Is equally divided between the beautiful young girl, . hi yacht and a splnstr tn whom he ha pro posed annually. Is unwilllnglv forced to take, the young minister under hi wing, . The youth wins the respect and love of tills hardy old character and a village war which threatens to1 tear asunder the church and parishioner suddenly breaks, Characterization in the book Is good. The render aligns himself nt once with the old mptnln and the two young lovers. Hut the solution to the 'deep dank mystery shroud ing" the origin and ancestry of the young mlnlsier Is easily anticipated. There is sulllclent net Inn In the bock to hold the reader's Interest. Arnold ni-Usmlth Is so aristocratic and rich that the things of the world can hardly thrill him and he Is over whelmed with a huge weariness. Then Tilly Marshall, musical comedy star, conies Into h!s life arid the huge weariness flics away. J f eventually becomes the "angel" of the show, which is a great money maker nnd Is unloaded on hlmjiecause he Is. a "sucker.V Hut, us good luck will have It, the Invistment turns out a bkc profit to our hero and, to top It off, lie wins Tilly. All the story Is told In "Mummers In Mufti," by Philip 8. Curtlss, pub lished by the Century company. Mr. Ciirtliw has made a name as u writer of humorous short stories, Imt this Is his llrst venture into the field of the novel. "Captain of Souls," by Hdgnr Wal laenajls something ordinarily hard to achieve a distinctly new idea In a mystery story. Th're IS nn Interest ing mystery, hut more than that, thero Is the delineation of a most un usual character, a study In psychol ogy which finally enters the realm of the psychic by tho translation of one man's soul Into the hody of another. This soul embodied first in the body of one man and .then In that of an other is the soul of a man twice a murderer and yet a soul which com mands the respect and admlrntloh of the reader. - Published by Small, Maynard & Co., Hoston. "The Gland Stmlers," by Bertram Gayton. Is up-to-date at least. It is the story of a "grandpa," 9fi, who acquire new glands; who persuades a lady of 70-odd to do likewise and to become his wife; who then decides to benefit thf human race by trapping gorillas by the wholesale in frlcn and reenergize 100 octogenarian. When the supply of glands is not suf lldent for the chosen 100 and the transplanted glands fail to function too per cent in their new surround. Ings, there are coiiiplrcntions for "Grand pa." Fundamentally tho book Is a hurlesiue. Published by I.lppllicott. CKNTKK SHOTS. Ves. It's fitting that feminine fash ions should emanate from thn Paris Hue de la 1'iiu. You pronounce It "pay." and you rue It. h II right. Winona Reptihlli an Herald. over In Hiigland there Is a boy j wlui hiis nrrr laughed. Mil lie nil Im' hr ever bis hmrd are Kngfish Ji'M-s.--Gruii Knpiils lleniM. j 1 lie t ill.st in. 111 to Hi- W iild b.i I !i".-ii aries'.d (n- ilell lie whs found' In be t fr.-l, i I in he long ami II.:."" : short -Nashville P. tuner j It iiii.al hr admitted lli.il I'.oiop 1 Hole irrlrclly o.itui il mistake In h i ii'Kii.i' I, ml the Aiigm 1 g'lxern 1. 1 el ul I be a.itistl-t ill aotue old tlolhra inl 11 ( I 11 cans - Itn Ii 1 hioinl Tune (iiipitch V lib aknie ilu-U' t'oiioitg Imi k In' ruih, l.!... na if liking i, limine iiU.ut the i.iiiy f.iinii .ir I UmI , ia l 'll!v In.i-i v i.i.a In li It .f , i,r .t I , i j. i it K tii- 'liv M.ir, t NET AVERAGE CIRCULATION THE OMAHA PEE I4ilv 'iituUv 7li.-MV R RNLVelN. (.ea Mt I IMI, M RtHKt, tie Mgr. Sata ae e4 a-iaaaW4 Waaae aa l-a 4 A el IhtaaMa, - t. M l IVaH Saa rSHa lla .al ' !--at-.a t. a l lit ttaai I iiia a . '. i.l tia a e-a.a ,a,ta,- ai, al la t N.a -a- . MM., a, i - I a l - W,iaa. .1 la-1 la e -a-a t iit4 taal a a- i a ,m i ... - a a -aa- AROUND NEBRASKA f!i,t.l ltmi ,1 liiilrnriident: There ;ls a growing deiiiund all over the couniry ior me iin'"i ,iai in th court possible for th folleo tlon ef every cenl grafted tiff lb country by tmtiioteer and other during the war. Com lo think of It, however, It I asking a grral deul. Nebraska City I'res: It hu ap parently not occurred to the editor of Ihe Medical Review of New York thai a luiir cut would probably achieve the same result for long haired soda foiihliln hoy Ihe hair net which I suggested, on the other hand, why imt th hair net? II I a well known fart that the boy nre using powder and rouge; that they spill an evil smelling, sticky "dupe" Into their hirsute appemliigr to keep th Individual hair out of their eye, why not encourage them lo take up further feminine trapping and cling ti the fragile lit tl net which I said to be worn by nine-tenths of the other sex? If we're to rear a totally rffemlliat race In (hi country let go th whole how. Ileal rice Kxprrss: Horseshoe pitch ing will probably nrvrr become vry popular; It doe not requlr a club house or large acreage, 1 'o wid I.ck'uI; Wouldn't thla b an awful world to III In If w wer compelled to do all lb thing w tell other people we would do If w were In their place? Ituahvllle btandsrd: We wouldn't be bothered so much with bad roads If we were more prompt In repairing: them when they first begin to go to pieces. If you dip a saw Into a pall of wstar and wipe It off thoroughly sfterward, no harm will be dun. Hut If the dampness Is allowed to remain a few hour th saw will b a ma of rust. Haw do not coat much, but we ar careful to keep them free from TRINITY CATHEDRAL (EPISCOPAL) 18th and Capitol Ave. IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN Evening: service and sermon, 7:30. Ilishop Demby, Negro Suffrflfnn Ilishop of Arkan sas, will preach. Special music. You ara Invitad to share our Church' with u. I'Ol.rril Al, AllVKRTINKMENT OTTO Tv. SINKIE A. B.. j. D. During the last three days of our Gigantic Piano Sale we have accumulated a number of high-grade used pianos that we will sell Monday at the follqwing low prices: $450 Kimball, Frenqh Walnut Case x. $450 Erbe & Co., Walnut Case , .. $450 Hamilton, Oak Case ,$450 Schiller, Mahogany Case , $385 Hospe, Mahogany' Case .-. . .- . . . . , . . .. . .-. .,. , $800 Knabe, Mahogany v Case All are in excellent condition. Are fully guaranteed and are delivered complete with bench and scarf and on easy terms. Call early to be sure of getting one of these rare bargains. , , 1513-15 Douglas Street V aaaaaaal ajaaaaaaaaaaa eje aaMMai MBaaaaa aaaj mmmmm I rust. Roads cnt Inany innunano pi dollars, ami w allow them to b- 'whiiw ruined from neglect. Cuu you supply a r-nisfuelory reason for urh marvelous lucor.NistrncyT )larvrd Courier! Henry Ford' . . . .1.- , u.liU ,1,1a muguziu ) ui" iruiii'ia ,nnn country I Unit Ihera lt" enough money. Most or u win agree un him. At Ihe sum time the, experi ence of some of th Kuropi-an coun tries prove lhat It Is possible to have too much iiuuiry, 1'lerc County Call: They nay th ulo ar ruining many girl". W might add poi kelhooks lo lb list. llcCnok Tribune: personally we ar not familiar wllh the pereonng who Invented or discovered golf, but fiom Ihe encomium wr hear con stanlly ami volubly expressed shout Ihe game we feel certain Hint Well overlook a firi-eln guess In fall ing to name him Hi seventh great 11. an of th ages. Harvard' Courier: I can go out most any tint and find a man who I belter filled for chief executive of tei nation than President Harding. 'AnyhifV 1 run find plenty of men who willingly acknowledge lbs), they know more about running trio gov ernment than he does. Fulrbury News; Lincoln ha more telephones than In all of (Ireec and Omaha has more than all of Italy. A Pleasing Change, Out of Tampa come th startling well gratifying new that every elgur maker In that city I working. Well, thl certainly 1 101111 relief from th usual trlk news. Florida Times t'nlon. I'OI.ITICAI. Aim.. risen KMT JUDGE SEARS FOB CONGRESS Republican Candidate Election November 7 PIANOS U TUNID a SIPAISIO ' All Work aatriataa A. HOSPE CO. 1111 Decides DO S6SS POI.ITICAI, AUVRRTIHBMKirV a- OTTO A. SINKIE People's Candidal "BY PETITION" for COUNTY ATTORNEY I am the people's candidate against the Politi cal Ring. If elected, I will appoint the chief deputy and allow each of the following group to name one assistant deputy: Business Mep'a organizations; Labor and Farm organizations; Women; Bench and Bur. You can vote for ma no mat ter haw you are registered. $215.00 $175.00 ..$175.00 ..$225.00 $245.00 I, . r, ,).,.rs) ,f Ika . I