The Wageworker. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1904-????, November 27, 1909, Image 2

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    Eating for Strength.
Tha greatest pleasure to be de
rived from eating. Is the pleasure one
gets In the knowledge that his food Is
giving him greater strength and vi
tality. Because of this fact there Is a con
stant Increase In the consumption of
Quaker Oats; every time the strength
making qualities of Quaker Oats have
been tested by scientific investigation
or by experiments in families it has
been found to be a food without an
equal.
It builds the muscles and brain with
out taxing the digestive organs; it
costs so little anyone can afford it,
and it is so carefully prepared and
packed that it is absolutely pure and
clean. A Quaker Oats eating family
Is always a healthy family. 11
Quaker Oats Is packed in regular
size packages and also in large size
family packages. The latter very con
venient for those not near the store.
NO PLACE FOR A PAINTER.
Visitor Does the painter Maier live
here?
Landlady No; they are all respec
table people in this house.
RECIPEFOR CATARRH.
Furnished by High Medical Authority.
Gives Prompt Results.
The only logical treatment for ca
tarrh is through the blood. A pre
scription which has recently proved
wonderfully effective In hospital work
U the following. ' It is easily mixed.
"One ounce compound syrup of
Sarsaparilla; one ounce Toris com
pound; half pint first-class whiskey."
These to be mixed by shaking well In
bottle, and used In tablespoon doses
before each meal and at bedtime.
The incredients can be gotten from
any well stocked druggist, or he will
get them from his wholesale house.
Worth the Expense.
The story that Sir John Fisher of
the British admiralty tells with the
greatest enjoyment and he tells many,
and al) with zest is of an old boat
swain on his flagship who fell Into a
little money and retired. One day
the admiral visited him at his coun
try box, to find the old sailor pos
sessed of an apparently useless man
servant.
"What do you want with him?"
asked Fisher.
"H'every morning," explained the
old sailor, " 'e comes to me 'ammock
and tells me to roll h'out. 'The h'ad
mlral wants to see you,' 'e says to me.
H'and I says to 'im, 'Tell the h'admiral
to go to 'ell,' says HI."
' Misery.
The neighbor's dog sits out on the
front lawn and howls dismally. The
man in the window looks out and
yells: "Sh-h-h, you beast!" The dog
continues to howl. The man again
comes to the window and this time
hurls a shoe at the dog. Still the
animal howls. Another shoe follows.
The next day the man's wife goes
around in her stocking feet because
he can't find her shoes. The man
hasn't the price of another pair of
shoes for her, and the next night the
dog howls louder than ever.
Christmas Post Cards Free. '
Send 2c stamp for five samples of
ur very best Gold and Silk Finish
Christmas, Flower and Motto Post
Cards; beautiful colors and loveliest
designs. Art Post Card Club, 79S
Jackson St., Topeka, Kan.
Not Expecting Too Much.
"I suppose your remarks In con
gress will be listened to with great in
terest?" "My friend," said the statesman, "In
congress a man Is lucky to get a
chance to make a speech without ex
pecting people to listen to it"
The dancer from alight cuts or wounds
is always blood poisoning. The immedi
ate application of Hamlin, Wizard Oil
make blood poisoning impossible.
The best preparation for the future
Is the present well seen to, and the
last duty well done.
Good company and good discourses
are the very sinews of virtue. Izaak
Walton.
DOCTOR VOITRSEI.F
whn yon ti amlit coming on by taking a few dose,
of l'rrr Dvt' lulnkillr. It h better than Quinine
and aaf.v Tne lanro 6uo bottlm. are tue cheapest.
To believe only what our finite
minds can grasp.
v.
ELECTRICAL NOTES.
An American company is equipping
Rio de Janeiro and the surrounding
districts with a thoroughly modem
telephone system. -
Llgutning which struck his kite re
cently killed ' a Norwegian scientist
who was emulating Franklin.
The Canadian government supports
more than a score of wireless tele
graph stations along its coasts, five of
which are on the Pacific.
Canada has 20 wireless stations, and
new wireless service is being estab
lished between Prince Rupert and
Vancouver.
In the course of trials of wireless
telephone service between the French
cruiser "Conde" and land stations, the
cruiser was able to talk with a sta
tion 100 miles distant.
Conversation by a wireless tele
phone, the Invention of two lieuten
ants of the French navy, is said to
have been carried on between Toulon
and Port Vendres, a distance of 155
miles.
During the recent rioting at Barce
lona, all the gas and electric light
plants were out of commission, and
the city was illuminated only by the
searchlights of warships In the harbor.
ELECTRICITY IN WHITE HOUSE
Plant Is Now One of Most Elaborate
to Be Found In Any Residence
In the United States. ,
According to a writer in Popular
Electricity, the White House at Wash
ington now enjoys the distinction of
Entrance to White House at Night.
supporting the most elaborate electric
light piant in the United States. He
says:
A considerable portion of the elec
tric lights at the White House are in
use during every hour of dusk or dark
ness, week-days and Sundays, from
ono end of the year to the other, so
that It can be appreciated that merely
the maintenance of this lighting sys
tem, the renewing of lamps, etc.. Is a
considerable chore
Electricity is (also) employed to
operate an automatic elevator and
dumb-waiters; supplies the energy for
a vacuum cleaner for carpets, curtains,
etc.; drives upward of two hundred
house fans and a number of exhaust
fans for ventilating purposes; pro
vides a private telephone system with
stations in all parts of the mansion
and grounds; and finally, does much
of the cooking in the kitchen and the
Ironing in the laundry.
"The power plant which supplies the
electricity for the White House is not
located in the mansion, but in the sub
basement of the state, war and navy
department building, directly across
the street. The machinery was thus
placed because it was not desirable to
have the dirt and noise Incident to a
power plant at the White House and
also from considerations of the danger
from fire. The power plant has a 200
horsepower engine and two Curtis tur
bines of 75 and 150 kilowatts capacity,
respectively. The White House re
ceives a 2 20-volt direct current for
power and a 110-volt direct current
for lighting. There Is a lighting cir
cuit at the White House stables, lo
cated nearly a square from the man
sion, and facilities have lately been
Installed for the charging of Mrs.
Taft's new electric automobile.
As the White House is absolutely
dependent upon electricity as an 11
luminatit (the mansion not being sup
piled with gas), it is of supreme im
portance that dependable current be
available every minute of the 24 hours.
The equipment in the dynamo-room
presents three sources of electrical
energy, any one of which is all-suffl-clent
for White House needs and in
the unheard of event that all three in
stallations should be simultaneously
out of commission or unable to carry
the load from any cause, the White
Hous may be immediately thrown on
to an emergency street service sup
plied by the leading commercial com
pany at the national capital.
Wireless New York to Chicago.
A press message was recently sent
by the New York Times to the Chi
cago Tribune by means of wireless
telegraphy from the tower of the Waldorf-Astoria
hotel to the Auditorium
Annex in Chicago. The difficulties in
volved in sending the message, owing
to the interfering and conflicting
waves from other stations, showed
that wireless telegraphy, at least in
its present state, is not a serious com
petitor of wire telegraphy for trans
mission over land. It was only afttr
repeated attempts to get the Chicago
station that communication was final
ly established.
. sgj
ALARM ANNOUNCES HOT BOX
Device Consists of Tube Filled with
Mercury and Terminals of an
Electric Battery.
A device consisting of a tiny tube
and bulb filled with mercury, " Into
which are set the positive and nega
tive terminals of an electric battery,
has been designed to give the alarm
when the bearings of an engine be
come overheated. The mercury tube
is inserted in a case, two inches
square, to prevent breakage. On the
heating of a bearing the mercury ex
pands and reaches the terminal at the
upper end of the tube. This closes
the circuit and the bell rings. When
there are a large number of bearings,
an indicator board is provided to show
just which bearing is hot, thus saving
the necessity of a hunt for the one
Hot-Bearing Announcer.
affected. The device is in fact an engine-room
detective, and can be used
on large steamships or small motor
boats.
RESONATOR ON A TELEPHONE
4-
lllustration 8howing Device to Aug
ment Sound of Bell Where There
Is Very Much Noise.
Pictured in the accompanying en
graving is a device adapted to aug
ment the sound of telephone bells or
other signals, so that the signal may
be hfard In places where there is
more or less noise. The device la par
ticularly adapted for use in Bhops,
pumping stations, and the like, where
ordinary sounds are not discernible,
especially under heavy atmospheric
conditions or in damp or rainy weath
er. The device consists of an elon
gated dished body formed with sound
reflectors overhanging the center of
the body. This device is placed 'be
hind the bells of the telephone, ' and
acts to reflect the sound in a definite
direction. The reflectors referred to
are indicated at A, B, and C in the il
lustration. It will be observed that
they are of conical form, and the re
flectors A and B serve to catch the
sounds which ordinarily travel out in
a lateral direction from the telephone,
and direct them forward. The reflec
tor C serves similarly to collect and
reflect the sound waves that pass: up
ward. For convenience in manufac
ture the reflector C is preferably made
in a separate piece, but the 'portion
which extends to the main body is
tangent thereto and flattened, in order
that a neat joint with the body may
Resonator for Telephones.
be effected. The device is extremely
simple, and can readily be attached to
a telephone by means of a couple of
screws. The form of the reflector can
be modified to throw the sound to one
side If desired instead of directly for-'
ward.
LITTLE RIVER WORKS HARD
Tiny Stream, only Seventy-Five Miles
in Length, Furnishes Immense
Amount of Horsepower.
The hardest working river, the one
most thoroughly harnessed to the mill
wheels of labor in the United States,
probably in the world, is the Black
Btone. This river rises in Worcester
county, Massachusetts, U. S. A., flows
eastward entering' Providence river,
near the city of Providence, R. I. It
is not a large river either, its length
being about 75 miles. Its drainage
area is only about 458 square miles
and in Its power-producing section it
is only 43 miles long; a very Tom
Thumb of a river as rivers go in
America. Yet the doughty little
stream produces 23,000 horsepower,
50 for every square mile of its drain
age aiea. If you will figure out this
amount of horsepower in terms of
coal you will find that the busy little
stream represents a capitalization of
about $25,000,000. This is twice the
developed horsepower of any other
important river.
One horsepower, ten hours a day,
300 days in a year would require just
about seven and a half tons of good
steam coal for its production and the
whole 17,000 minimum horsepower
would mean 127,500 tons of coal at
probably four dollars a ton, a total of
$510,000.
.
TALKS JN BEAUTY
Employed to Stimulate Indus
tries, Says Hattie Willliams.
ctress Says Good Looks Are Asset in
Business and Scouts Idea That
Ugly Women Are Most
Useful.
Philadelphia. "This Is the age of
teauty in the business world," says
Hattie Williams, the star of "Detec
tive Sparkes," now playing at the
3arrick theater.
"Mark me, I do not mean the beau
tiful age, but the age of beauty. We
nave come to the time when a sweet,
piquant, a bewitching face is quite
Important a factor in legitimate
business as price .or quality of wares,
convenience of mart or effective ad
vertising. "Woman good-looking woman has
at last found a sphere of honest en
deavor that cannot but appeal to her
the legitimate exploitation of the
goods she is paid to show off. Paris
led the way in this new field of en
ieavor and Philadelphia has rapidly
fallen into line.
"Next to the French capital I know
of no city where the fairness of its
daughters is so effectively used for
honest business purposes.
"Let me explain. Let us walk down
Chestnut street. We drift along with
the stream of shoppers until that
stream becomes jammed in front of a
big show window. ' There in the win
dow sits a girl of surpassing fairness.
Her beautifully shaped head, crowned
with a wealth of glossy black hair, is
bent over a new model sewing ma
chine. She is intent on her work and
we are intent on the picture she
makes. It is probably a very fine, upL
to-date sewing machine, . but it could
stay in that window for many weeks
and not attract a crowd.
' "The man whose business it is to
sell that machine knows his business
and knows it well. The combination
of girl and machine is a pleasing one
and the impression is lasting.
; "Further down the street there is a
shop with big windows, through which
we see heaps of confections, and we
ean see, too, a dainty blonde miss of
exquisite feature and ' coloring who
seems to have little in the world to do
except to sit just where the passing
throngs can get glimpse of her fresh
loveliness. Why is that store crowded
with customers while another confec
tionery shop further down the street
languishes for want of trade? The
sweets in the one shop may be no bet
ter than those in the other, but the
attractiveness of the blonde saleswom
an furnishes the one thing needful in
business the initiative.
"In these days of greatest competi
tion among merchants, it was a clever
man indeed who first realized the tre
mendous attraction of a pretty wom
an's face for shoppers, women as well
as men. For, don't for a moment think
that the potency of these fair young
women is felt only by the opposite
sex.
" 'Bertha, the Beautiful Sewing Ma
chine Girl,' can go on hiding her beau
ty in the dusty factory, where it
seems,, after all, she has had a hard
time of it, but if Bertha is really so
beautiful she can be happily prosper
ous by giving legitimate publicity to
her fresh, wholesome charms. And
that's what many Berthas are doing
to-day in Philadelphia, and it's a good
thing all around. It won't spoil Ber
tha If she's the right sort of girl, and
won't hurt the shopping public to look
upon bright, pretty faces."
Phosphorescent Forests.
The phosphorescence of certain
agaries of Borneo has more than once
demoralized the superstitious natives
and astonished whites. Some years
ago a party of English engineers
found it necessary to survey a tract
of low lying country which was al
most impenetrable, and to blaze the
trail natives were employed to work
at night, others during the day. The
former came into camp one night
stating that they could not go through
a portion of the bush or forest, strange
"spirits" on the trees telling them that
evil would befall them if they con
tinued. The "spirits" proved to be a
magnificent display of phosphores
cense emanating from agaries grow
ing upon the dead limbs of the trees.
These vegetable fire bodies were
traced for a considerable distance,
producing a most remarkable exhibi
tion, the light in some places being so
brilliant that it was difficult to be
lieve that the forest was not afire. To
test the brilliancy the men held pa
pers near the most brilliant protions
and read by the light.
SAYS CANNON MUST QUIT
Victor Murdock Predicts Trouble for
Man Who 8erves Notice on
"Uncle Joe."
Kansas City, Mo.- Some one in tht
next session of congress Is going to;
have a mighty unhappy ten seconds in)
the company of Speaker Cannon.,
Men who reviewed the future here be-,
lieved that about ten seconds would,
do, and they were equally certain that
the particular visit to the sacred cham-,
ber would be made by some one; es-J
pecially certain was Victor Murdock of)
the Seventh Kansas congressional dls-,
trict. I
The most disagreeable job in the
world is waiting for some member of
the Cannon machine in the house,";
Mr. Murdock said. "It will be per-i
formed, in all probability, in the next
"Uncle 'Joe" Cannon.
eight months. The satraps of the Can
non machine will hold a meeting and
pick some man to go to Cannon and,
tell him that for the safety of the sys-t
tern he must announce immediately!
his retirement. ', '.
"The domination of Cannon over his.
lieutenants is such that any one of;
them would rather meet death than to
face the speaker on this proposition,
because Cannon has no intention of re-;
tiring, and will not take kindly to the:
suggestion; but he is impossible, and;
his lieutenants knowVit and fear that
If he continues as a factor he will
carry the system down with him.
"They know that for their own good
the system must be saved. They are
guarding three propositions. ' .'
"The first is the right in the speak
ership of inquisitorial recognition. The
second, the power which the system
will do everything to preserve, even
to eliminating the present speaker, is
the power of the appointment of com
mittees, under which, as is well
known, a part of the house control
hinges. ;
"The third factor of control which
the machine will try to preserve is the
membership of the speaker on the
committee on rules.'
"The condemnation of Cannon can
no longer be Identified as sectional. I
am in receipt of letters from nearly
every section of the country, official
and private alike, and all tell the same
tale of a widespread determination to
veto the power of this man.
"Cannon may not know that be is
gone, probably does not, but his lieu
tenants know it, and from this time
on their whole endeavor will be to
save the system and transmit, unim
paired, its machinery to another per.
sonality."
STAMPS FOR THE RED CROSS
Sixty Millions of Christmas "Stickers'
to Be Sold to Aid Tuberculo
- sis War. .
Cr ' - .
Washington. Thirty million 190
Merry Christmas stamps have been
ordered by the American Red Cross)
society to be sold to raise funds for
the war on tuberculosis. Thirty mil
lion more stamps will be ordered later
and by December 15 it is expected
that these 60,000,000 bullets will be
fired in the national battle against the
White Plague.
President Taft is the sponsor for the
Red Cross movement. He is now the
The Red Cross Stamp.
president of the society. The stamp
this year is similar in design to the,
one used last year. The 1908 stamp)
sale netted the society $140,000, all of!
which was used in the fight againstj
the tubercular baccilll. .
The stamps are sold to Christmas)
shoppers who in their turn put them
on all the packages and Christmas
greetings which they send to their
friends and relatives.
Allowed to Cry Their Wares.
The city council of - Chicago has)
killed the proposed ordinance , prohi
biting peddlers and newsboys from
crying their wares.
(AMERICAN RED CROSS)
A GOOD COUGH MIXTURE.
Simple Home-Made Remedy That la'
Free from Opiates and Harm
ful Drugs. '
An effective remedy that will usu
ally break up a cold in twenty-four
hours, is easily made by mixing to
gether in a large bottle two ounces of
Glycerine, a half-ounce of Virgin Oil
of Pine compound pure and eight
ounces of pure Whisky. This mix
ture will cure any cough that Is cur
able, and is not expensive as It makes
enough to last the "average family an
entire year. Virgin Oil of Pine com
pound pure is prepared only in the -laboratories
of the Leach Chemical
Co., Cincinnati O. '
Good Work Goes On.
During the year that has passed
since the international congress on tu
berculosis met at Washington, one in
stitution or organization for the treat
ment or prevention or tuDercuiosis nas .
oeen established every day, Sundays
and holidays included, according to a
aulletin of the National Association
for the Study and Prevention of Tu
berculosis. Fifteen new beds in hos
pitals or sanitoria have been provided
also for every day of the year.
vuiioii )dvivu vutrc?i uu nM n V liiauj WriUUI
Stseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce'
Pleasant Pellets. The favorite family laxatiTe.
Not to alleviate if we can all that
needs alleviation
Nebraska Directory
A Physician Says of
UNCLE SAM
Breakfast Food
AS A CURE FOR CONSTIPATION
"In a number of cases of Con
stipation in my practice it has given
very good results. Several patients
claim to , be entirely relieved of
severe constipation by its use."
, , Dr. J. T. M..
(Name; on request.)
If you don't know its merits
ASK YOUR GROCER ABOUT IT
HE CERTAINLY KNOWS
U. S. B. F. Co, Omaha .
Do you want Hie Best Corn Shelter made? If Mt
insist on having a
MARSEILLES CORN SHELLER
, Write for catalog or see your local dealer.
JOHN DEERE PLOW CO.. OMAHA
CORNELL ENGRAVING CO.
Halt Tones and Line Etchings. New and com- -plete
engraving plant. 249 N. 11th St., Lincoln.
FULL LINE OF PHOTO SUPPLIES
HERBERT E. GOOCH CO.
BROKERS AND DEALERS
: Grain, Provisions, 8tocks. Cotton
Main Office, 204-209 Fraternity Bids.
Lincoln, NebraskmJL
Bell Phone 512 Auto Phone 2668
Largest House in State.
Beatrice Creamery Go
Pays the highest price for :
LUSU3 BER
Let us make you figures on your bill.
Good grades, quick shipment and lovr
prices. - Direct to consumer.
F.W.Brown Lumber Co., Lincoln, Neb.
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
Established 23 vears. 900 students last year.
Wide a- xe, practical, tnorougu. equip
tor mouern Dustness me ana u nou we I
highest salaried positions, Anvamag-ea I
unapproacnea eisewnera. no buuc
I-"'"'- Write tor trm pramaetas to
UHCOLS BUSINESS COIAKSE, I
9 JUrtfc lift St., f Mefc, I
end f or car new 3S-paire cat
alogue, thb cost or
-Lium isksh." It will tell
CLEANING
you tue possibilities 01
AND DYEING
Ribbons, gloves, farm,
neckties, plumes, cor
sets, slippers, skirts
Jackets, waists, flags.
ells, overcoats', angora rags, bath robes, mattresses,
blankets, pillows, silk underwear, parasols, feather
boas, unlfo . lodge paraphernalia, billiard table
covers, lace bedspreads, muffs, fur rugs and monnt
Ings, legging, sweaters, hats, bath rugs, oriental
rugs, fancy work, stand covers, carnage robes,
party dresses, opera coats, lace curtains, fancy
Tests, shawls, lingerie, men s suits, cushions, bear
and tiger mats, sashes and hundreds of other things.
We have the largest cleaning and dyeing estab
lishment in the west. 10.000 feet of Boor space; ca
pacity, 8.000 garments per day. Members National
Association of Cleaners and Dyers. Kxpressacw
paid one way to any point in U.S. Call or write
J. C. WOOD A. CO
1322 N Street 1521 Howard Street
f ii- Nebraska Omaha. Nebraska
Xcutf ntagajin far 6utft,e
tini!in.
(Sttdieint oitrtelialitlid) sum'tgrtife Don
nut tiro 3alr.
Setter anb tft 128 bii Hi eeiten i acl,
unt ent&dlt einen etogeren iKuman, fomie
cine illn.ictil fpanneiiDer Ifitiitilunaen, etne
tucje llebctitdjl ber sUleltbeaebenbeiten, $u
moriltijitiea, lutje populate Slbljanolunaen
cn.
ecfiicf t unS 50 6tnt3
mlt (iurem Stamen unb Wbrefle auf nad)
ftetjenbem iBeftelUettel, bann fenben hut
ffiu aebieaenen Cefefloff bas aane ?a0r.
Pnu Publishing Co., Lincoln. Nab.
ttinlieeenb 60 Htnti out ein 3aljre-8bon
ncnient auf te ttUctt" iu fenben an ful
oenbt Wbtciie:
Slam,.
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