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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1909)
W , - V CSKf vt.-? V?" - " P " '" c'f I - '"-W-pryt. .ajiTJ!. fcl.Sr3.itTs5ftl ; " 3?- rf " - . r . . A - tk,i -. - ?--- jCA - e- , v I J. -" '"1 l--' x . N .-. i I? Aolntiitnts Jttttrtt&I HiX MWBPwtwtm ea mt itM Tv AY. JaMUABY . nOOEB BTOCIWKLL, Prejrieton. i to what Ji sto Jss.1. MKkt.WaiMjrk i rem JUDGE WRIGHT'S DECISION. No derision in recant yean, either - horn a lrign or low-oourt, km created amek warn dwrossion as the one hand ad down hjjudgp Writ, Uw Wash ington jariit, U the contempt case ajrainsr Samael Gompen, president of the AaMrican Federation of Labor, and his co-workers. It is to4 be lsmsntrrl that trial of the case was naibrtanately before this particular jadge. Had the words of his decision , been More fitly chosen, one-half the fnror created would hare been avoided. It is not at all necessary for a jadge 'the liench to stoop to personal abase of a dependent before the bar of a conrt, in order to render a forceable judicial decision. The American peo ple hare a moral right to criticise judicial abase; that in rendering a jadgsMut against any person accused of violation of law even a criminal statute it'illy becomes the man who wears the judicial ermine to so far overstep the dignity of his high posi tion that he practically deals in per- Had the language of his been more temperate, the feelings of oar citizenship would have been less offended and comments as to the martyrdom of the defendants heard in labor circles only. Yet there is another side that every American citizen must stand up and take notice of. His individual.rights as oachssfofl by the constitution. It was the Englishman, Montague, in his work an "Individual Liberty," who stated, "the individual constitutes society, socfety the state, and all law is bntasnostitatefOTelfhelp." Again, we are informed by the law chancellor of Columbia university, that our indi vidual liberty was created by the AaMrican Constitution. These units of society, which constitute the state, ware the makers of the constitution, which, according to legislative judg ment, brought into existence the fed anal .statute under which. the three laW, defendants were tried and con omitted. This is a representative gov- t, ami the people themselves responsible for the contempt statute which the three, defendants denied as constitutional, and in pursu ance of that denial, after they had been enjoined by a court of competent juris , diction created and existing under and by virtue of the constitution itself, assumed the individual liberty of deny ing the correctness rendered in the injunction proceedings, and, as the testimony seams to show, this injunc tion was by them violated with impu nity, and in turn the court passed sen tence of punishment Tnese. defendants each determined on an individual interpretation for id their interpretation a violation of a court order judicially determined. To quote a recent writer, "The American consti tution was born and brought up in the of an environment and heridity taught that the validity of a lust be determined by the courts of justice." Is this doctrine cstieetf If so, what right has an indi vidual to determine a constitutional question for himself, more especially when a court has recognized its validity? Hn writer on constitutional ques tions has advanced the doctrine that the constitution, either by words or impfication, authorizes the individual citizen to assume any such liberty; yet, according to the acts of Gompers mnd the other defendants, not only do they assume the liberty, but they turn that liberty into license, and then behind the 'free of-this time honored document and rrsrr to a mart drtfiwnn as a "judge made-law." Again, quot iagiratt a constitutional work:. "We said of our that was not said of memory the American iow sacredly adore. License of saaaoh is the neatest defect of liberty, and has, ever assisted its with tireless patience and It was irreverent with lliaAiHssnikon and Hsaxyas k bii - wtMhsrsimiim HiimiiiroAXTa iirtii ess ft. una i ii iihr !- iii i Hiii. OPIH PI AD 111 Ml Wasn ii In fag GnurtMd -I --- -f' - heroes of our ewntaay (am? Mr. persis nfw lauded to ttt'SsTJea'as ' present ey heroi). History will re peat itself. When unborn generations shall turn back through the avenues of time for the period of most unselfish devotion to the republic, no age in all the centuries of freedom in thVnew world will furnish to them higher standards of judgeship, heroism and statesmanship than the now defamed and unprecedented time in which we live. Chronic, and sposmadic despair aad distrust are as old as the history of free government With all their many faults the American people grow better as they progress." To permit the individual in lieu of a court to. become the interpreter of constitu tional law, would luunperyas, stop the march of American progress. .To stand upon ones.' rights is a laudable' ambition, but when it becomes neossv sary to secure such rights when claim ed constitutionally, it is beggaring the question to say that individual inter pretation stands paramouatto judicial determination. Bach n doctrine, if ever established, would change the character of this government, and shake the foundation stones of 'the very republic itself. 8hould the President of the United States at this time if at any time interfere, with 'his power of pardon, and thus prevent any appeal from" the decision of Judge Wright, it would leave the entirequestion undetermined, only to be brought up again in possi bly the near future, and the country thus disturbed and kept in constant turmoil. That labor is a power in the United. States is a conceded fact; that the members of the American Federation of Labor have a telling' influence Ton the prosperity of the nation is also a .fact apparent to any intelligent man. It is also a recognized fact that the Federation is also' a power in politics, and the politicians notice the gather ing clouds in the political sky, with the thought "how will it affect my party." It would be no surprise to learn that the president's own party, or the prominent politicians in it not the statesmen are strongly urging him to interfere in behalf of these so called martyrs, who are at present receiving such an abundance of sym pathy from the people. Should the power of pardon be exercised, it would be a greater trial than has yet fallen to the lot of this government to keep within due bounds the societies of organized labor. " License born of liberty would so increase that it might possibly beget revolution. FATHER OF HOMESTEAD LAW. Daniel Freeman, aged 82 years, died at his home near Beatrice, Wed nesday evening, December 30. Mr. Freeman was the first man to file on a quarter section of land under what is known as the homestead law. It was one minute after midnight on the morning of January 1, 1863, that his filing papers were handed to the register of the U. S. land office. His entry is No. 1, his proof of residence was No. 1, his patent is No. 1, record ed on page No. 1, of book No. 1 of the government land office. In reporting the death of Freeman, the correspondent of the State Jour nal says: "Freeman's name is linked with that of Gslnsha A. Grow of Pennsylvania, onee speaker of the lower house of oon grass, and whose maiden speech in the house was on the subject of 'Man's Bight to the Soil.' That speech was made in 1852, but it was not until ten years later that be was able to see his measure, the homestead law, recorded in the statute books." The Journal does not desire to detract from the efforts made by GalushaA. Grow in behalf of the homestead law, but he is not the father of the idea. The homestead policy was advocated by George W. Julian as early as 1846, and before that time, by many years, a society in New York state, under the leadership of a man named Evans, organized and called themselves "land reformers." It had always been the policy of the south to. oppose any law that would cheapen the unoccupied lands of the govern ment to -actual settlers, and every ineasure providing for free homes for free men was fought in. congress by the slaveholding aristocracy. About twenty-six years ago the writer was assigned the task of gath ering facts relating to the homestead law, and, among others, corresponded with George W. Julian, of Irvington, Indiana, who has since gone to his reward. He accomplished his purpose in life, and millions now enjoy die fruits of the successful effort he made in saving a portion of the public domain from the greedy grasp of grafters. In his correspondence with the writer, Mr. Julian wrote: Irvinrtce, Indiana, March 38. 1888. O..J. StoekweU: Dear 8ir I have your letter of the SM, and wfll answer it somewhat eiwrnmstsafaattj. im order to nut yen ja? nssissf on of the facts as :aa witk rally I In the of 18a J discussed it on the Strap. T was keted to coagress ia 184, aad there met Andrew JoJmsob, of Sfoaa asses, who had a bill prepared pro viding homesteads for actual settlers, which he utrodnced in the house 'of representatives. This was' the first legislative 'proposition ever offered on Ik? aabjeot. Ioo-operated with him zealously in support of the measure, aad it was through his friendly tactics that succeeded in obtaining1 the floor to make my homestead speech, which had a'wide circulation, aad was made ia oppoMtmn to the determined purpose of 8peaker Oobb and the slaveholding members of the aoaasL Oa bscomiag acquainted' with Johnson I found he had 'espoused 'the homestead pblley eeoattstJirIdid,aad the truth is that we are jast about equally the fathers of the measure. , As yon 'are aware, he died a few years ago. I was ameaberof the house com mittee oa pnblio leads in 1869, and-as sisted in framing the present homestead law, which was passed the SOtaNof May. It embodied the essential features of the first bill offered, and of various subset quent bills, a number of which, were sent to the land committee in 1863. Perhaps my letter will seem somewhat personal, but I thought it proper to give you the literal facts as I know them. I may add, that many years .ago there was a society in New York of what was called Land Reformers, of which a tal ented man, named Evans, was the lead er, which proclaimed the homestead policy in advance of any of our. known public men. That society still exists, and was doubtless the germ of the poli tical movement which at last culminated in the passage of the homestead. act. As I find you are interested in the land question, I send you a copy of my . volume of speeches, containing a num ber on that question. I am, Very truly yours, Geo. W. Julian. Forty-six years have passed away since the first homestead entry was made.. And wonderful years they have been in the development of "The Land Beyond the Mississippi." 'The homestead law assistedr in developing the country to a degree the Fathers of Homestead Law never dreamed of. It has turned the Great American Desert into A Land of Plenty. And here, in the center of this Modern Eden, in the city near which is located the first land filed en under the home stead law, should be perpetuated in granite the names of the Fathers of a measure which has been of so much benefit to the landless and a factor in opening the granary of the world to settlement and cultivation. Let the people of Beatrice take the matter up and inaugurate a movement for the erection of a monument as a mark of gratitude and respect to Andrew Johnson and George W. Julian. Every man living who has enjoyed the advantages of the home stead law should be allowed to con tribute to the monument fund. No More Gold Lace for Afghans. ''The ameer has published an edict, which applies to all parts of Afghan istan, prohibiting the import Into the country of all kinds of gold lace, in cluding, embroidered kullas lungis and embroidered shoes. The ameer is ev idently actuated by a desire to prevent hu subjects' from spending their hard earned money on showy dress. It is the, poorer classes who are notori ously addicted to this extravagance' which his majesty -has decided to check. The gold laced coat of the Afghan Is decidedly handsome, and al though the ameer has acted wisely in bringing into general use clothing less costly, his majesty's orders will doubt less be received by his subjects with rather mixed feelings. - Deaths ef Presidents. Washington's death was due to acute laryngitis; Adams, Madison and Monroe, practically to old age; Jeffer son, chronic diarrhoea; John Quincy Adams, paralysis; Jackson, dropsy; Van Bursa, catarrhal affections of the throat and lungs; William Henry Har rison, pleurisy; Tyler, cause of death not given by biographers; Polk, cholera; Taylor, cholera. morbus, com eined with a severe cold; Fillmore, paralysis;. Pierce, dropsy 'r Buchanan, rheumatic gent; Ltai.coln,.OarlIsld and MeKssWy, assssslasted; Johnson, paralysis; Grant eancer at the root ef the teniae; Hayes neuralgia 'of the. heart; Arthur, heart trouble, aid Ben jamin Harrison, pneumonia. One from London. "TeU us a Joke, Mr. Fogg," said the pretty American girt. "Wth pleasure." drawled the tall DagHshman, as he straightened up his mustache. "One cold, dawmp day, as I was strolling through the London soo, yon know, one of the 'hares es caped aad after chasing It two miles J caught the little animal and returned it to Its cage. For jtbis service bis ma jesty awarded me a medal of honor. "Do tell! Aad what was 'on the mod- air " 'Awarded to James Fogg for Serv ices as a Hare Restorer.' " A physician, upon opening the door of bis consultation room, asked: "Who haa been waiting longest?" 1 have," spoke up the tailor. "I delivered your clothes three weeks sga" Kansas City Journal Freaably Tee Modern. k An unsuccessful attempt has been made to give the Indian city of Delhi electric lighting and street car service. Far Below Capacity. The capacity of the Atlantic cables la M,St,H words annually. Only IMM.aaa are sMiuosissTlne liessajHoeu neliey kslMMWa -!.. m. , -t NOT LKE ROMANCE -"- u THE "SOLDIER OF FORTUNE" ' REAL LIFE. IN DHfsra m Mjeny Material Respects from the Heroes Whs Figure Se Prominently in the Pages ef Novelists. Richard Harding Davis and other writers of .leaser note have cast a 'glamour over the title. "Soldier of For tune," -which possibly applies .to cer ;tain victims of wanderlust, and love of unususladyeatetebut which is a hor rible. mM to the only individual the tares bjr feld and tood, aad beneath a-tatf-doseu nags, properly placed him hi .the clses of Cagt Macklin, Red Saunters 'and otaersjknown torea'ders of action, says a writer in the Atchl sfn Globe.. 8am Chalmers" was the name our -soldler.ofsrtaae. gave to those who asked. Incidentally, he was the homeflsat man wa.aver met a? large, steu&fsjtf looee-joiifcecT crea ture,' who' looked half' man v and half gorilla... His feet and' hands were too large for his big body and he handled both as if they were, something of burden. He w'as 'dish-faced,' had bleary eyes andthe oomplexton of a tan shoe after you have worn, it through dewy grass. Chalmers was always dirty and usually drunk a man without a vis ible' redeeming peTSoaal, feature an& little mental attraction. Bat he had ampllshments; he knew enough of thetsea to make It carry him where he would, and, perhaps, something more. He couid-speak several laagoafces and a'.half-dosen native, dialects, Including that of New York's East side (the hardest .to understand), where he; claimed to have originated at some In definite date in the past. He seemed to have a knowledge of all the ports of all the seven sea and could, when he would, tell interesting tales, of fighting Zulus In South Africa,' bush men in Australia, pirates off the China joast and' several other strange and unpleasant creatures in other outland ish, places. Americans found him In an isolated Filipino stronghold on the island of Leyte, and he said he had been taken prisoner when, he came ashore from, a hemp ship. The natives said he had been a captain of the insurgent army, and perhaps he had, although he de nied it for obvious reasons. At any I rate, he wasn't an officer with them for patriotism or love, for he turned American scout and fought them with a lust for blood amounting to savagery. He was brave, as the bulldog "is be cause it knows no better1 which seemed to be his only trait in common with the other soldiers of fortune of whom we' have read. Xater we met him as second mate on a wind Jammer at Nagasaki. The sea was home to Chalmers and he only quit It occasionally to find a fight and a more convenient place to get drunk. Had Chalmers turned to the land In stead of the sea In his earlier years he would have ended as only a com mon tramp. As It was, he is a tramp, but of a more uncommon kind. It fs the tramp instincts whieh makes soldiers of . fortune, although, perhaps, some, of them,, more fortu nate, do wear Immaculate white duck suits and pith helmets. But the only one we ever met was not very "classy. and he kind of shook our faith In Capt. Macklin. Oxygen Tippling. Oxygen tippling is the latest form of the drug habit," said a doctor. "Two physicians have died of it this year, and it ia. stated that there are quite 100 oxygen tipplers among the laity of our big cities. "Oxygen, you know, is a wonderful stimulant. Its inhalation keeps death off the dying for days aad days. But taken regularly it soon wrecks the health. Its effect is said to be de lightful. Like champagne, it creates gayety. Along with this gayety goes a feeling of tremendous power and lightness. Drunk on oxygen, the most sluggish and melancholy persons have a Joyous tend heartening idea that they can do anything in the world wrest the oil trade from Rockefeller, say, or with a little practice outrun Johnny Hayes." Eternal Fitness. "Women are" wonders," said a man at the quick lunch counter.-. A" friend of mine sentjne an Invitation to the funeral- serrlcea. over her pet Angora cat that. dieduIa a fit Now, I had never been invited to a cat funeral before, aad I had no more idea than a rabbit what was expected' of me. I was In. a rush, aad stopped la at an Italian florist's and told him to fix up' d suitable design for me. He sent up a cat, life slse, made of white im mortelles, with a huge purple bow eaagling-from the end of Its tail. The maid' says my friend regarded it as a deadly insult to her feelings, and I wasn't even handed a rata check when I called." Feud Simply Settled. In western China European travelers recently found a simple method of settling disputes. One of them writes: "While we called the midday halt at Ta-cha-de, we asked the villagers con cerning some new graves which we noticed in a field close by. They an swered: 'Our head man and two oth ers were killed three months ago ia a feud with a village higher up' the hills.' la it settled nowr Tea.' DId you report the. matter to Lao-wo r No. What would have been the use? We Just settled the matter ourselves.' 'Howr 'OH, we killed eight of the otlu. er party." Second nest. Young Isaacs Fadder, ees marriage a failure? . The Elder Isaacs Veil, my boy, eef you marry a real, real rich girl, mar riage eea almost as good as a fail ure. Success Magazine. Out ef the Fullness ef the Heart (What shall I play r asked the or ganist of an absent-nUnded clergyman. "What sort of a hand have ' yoa gotr JTrnm was the. unexpected reply. .STATUS OF A TRAITOR. Well Deflnee ay the Father Walter ScetL ef Sir Among the treasures which adorned the ''den" of Sir Walter Scott was a china saucer the memorial according to the author of "Edinburgh Under 81r Walter Scott," of a striking in cident in the domestic life of Scott's father and mother. 'One autumn Mr. Scott, Sr., had a client who came reg ularly every evening at a certain hour to the house, and remained in his private room usually long after the. family had" gone to bed. The little mystery, o the unknown visitor ex cited Mrs. Scott's curiosity, aad her husband's vague statements increased 'it One night, therefore, although she knew It' was against her husband's desire, she- entered the room with a salver' in her hand, and offered the gentleman "a dish of ten," as It used to be called In' eighteenth century par lance. Mr. .Scott very coldly refused It. but the stranger bowed aad ac cepted a cup. Presently he took bis leave. Then Mr.' Scott seized the empty can aad threw it out on the pavement. His wife was astonished at first, but not when she' heard the explanation. "I may admit into my house, on business, persons' wholly un worthy to be treated as guests of my wife. Neither Up .of me nor mine comes after Mr. Murray, or Brough toa's." The client who had called was none; other, than the .traitor. Sec retary Murray, who bought off his life and fortune by giving evidence against his gallant Jacobite associates. Dundee-Advertiser. I SOME SMALL ENGLISH PARISHES. Dozen Inhabitants in One; In Another Only Two Houses. Probably few people know that this country contains a number of par ishes so small that their population can be housed under one or two roofs. For instance, Upper Eldon, near Stockbridge, consists of two houses, which with an eleventh century church and a tiny "God's Acre" In' the middle, of a farmyard adjoining one of the dwellings, comprise, the whole parish. Not much larger is the population of Lullington, five miles from Eastbourne. Small, as Its church Is the interior dimensions are only 16 feet square it is quite large enough for the inhab itants: In Grove near Lighten Buzzard, there are only about a' dozen inhabi tants, the parish containing a modern farmhouse, two cottages and a tiny church. At Rhyd, in Flintshire while there are only three adult inhabitants, the village contains five cottages and one ship. Until, recently there were two licensed houses, one of which still remains. Tit-Bits". Store Carries Old Hotel Name. Away up In Harlem is a sign which reads: "The Old Astor House Store." In reply to an inquiry the proprietor said: 'The business was established In the vicinity of the old Astor house when the latter was the big hotel of New York. Later on it moved up to Fourteenth street and carried the name of the old hotel with it. Some years after it moved up to Forty-second street and the name went with it Then it Jumped ail the way to Har lem, and, as the name had become We of the fixtures of the business, It was maintained. ' The business now' is In the hands of the third generation of the family that established it. Just a bit of sentiment." New York Press. Pleaaant Situation. Clintonville, this county, had sev eral , thrills of nervous apprehension on Tuesday of last week. A driver In the employ of a torpedo firm started off with a load of 40 quarts of nitro glycerine, and when a short distance from the barn stopped, got off bis wagon and started an argument with a bystander. The team became fright ened and started to run, but had not gone far until the front wheel of the wagon struck an Iron support of a porch at a' street corner and the horses stripped themselves from the harness, leaving the wagon, with Its load of condensed destruction, stand ing. Oil City Derrick. Will Found In a Hat Probate has been granted of the will of a peddler who left an estate valued at 11,937. He was Mr. Har ris Norman,' a Polish Jew, of Mill road, Cambridge. The document was found in his silk hat after his death. It was dated January 15, 1903, and by it he left the whole of his property equally between Addenbrooke's hos pital, Cambridge, aad the London Jew ish synagogue for the relief of poor and needy Jews. London' Evening Standard; NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT. To Merrott filler, BoareideBt: Yoa an harabr notifei that oa the 15th day of December, 1908, Jessie Fuller filed a petition aesiaet yoa ia the Dwtrfet Coart off Platte conntj. Mebnaka, the object aad prayer of whieh is to obtain a divorce frost yoa oa the aroande of josrbeiacof eaficieat ability to provide suitable maintnninoe for her have srostly. wastosly aad eroelly refseed asd ae bcted so to do, aad that yoa hare become an habitsal drasfcsrd. Yoa are isqaircd to answer said petition on or before Monday, the 2Mb day of Jasaary. 1909. Jkhhik Fcixxn. Plaintiff, MM PACIFIC THE TIILE TRUE aJQKssvlTh warn noovD. nAsr notnn. No. 11 337 SB No. 4 6:06 am No.lS lldSaB No.lt Iii No.1 1132 sat No.l4al2:35d 100 pm No. S ll:Msm No.S- 2:18pm No. ? MS p m No. IS......... 258 p m No. 15 8:90 pm No.W... S:12pm No. 8 640 pm No. 8 6:14pm No. 5 7:15 pm No. 2 705pm NotSS 7:80 s m No. 89 '3:28sm No. 63 3389pm No. 84 SsQSsm snajicana. HoaroxK. sriunae) a aiaion. No.77mxd. dSSam Nb.79mxd..d6jam No.29sas ..d 7:36pm No.tlpsa ..dlJOpm No. 89 pas ..sl245pm No. 82 pas ..sUJOpm No.78mzd..a6jMpm No. mad., s 7988pm Dally except 8aaday. arnti i TAos. 1,1 7 asd 8 an extra fare trains. nee. ,, saa u iniwunM Sea. 9S sad Stare local bsiastaT Nea.tsadMaTsaaUfjBiasonl No. M easts Omaha 448 p. m. No. ens ia Omaha f p. a. 77eABCaruXYZof ADVERTISING A SERIES OF TEN TALKS 1 by Stymesr Estea The man who succeeds mast fill his job so fall that he bulges out a little at the top; where people can set him. The successful store must do the same thing, only in a different way. The goods must be on hand; the prices must be right; the service must be commendable ; the trading must be square; the land of square that has four equal sides and four right angles. ' Every successful store has its trademark whether the merchant knows it or not. Its advertising and its service have created a public sentiment in its favor which neither reverses nor fire nor time can obliter ate. Nine times out of ten this trademark is the store's biggest asset. Much of the ordinary store advertising is a hand-to-mouth sort of business ; an effort to make tomor row's sales equal to today's or yesterday's ; and this is just as true of thcTdepartment store as of the small er shop. The advertisement appears in the morning and the merchant figures out the net results in the evening. It is true that the bargain advertisement of today is of little, if any, use next week. It is for gotten in twenty-four hours; but if the store makes a feature of genuine bargains, then each bargain sale helps to advertise the bargain department. The advertising ought to be done in such a way as to permanently advertise the -department as well as to emphasize the bargains of the day. Don't go at it as if you were advertising an auction sale. ' As I said at the outset, your store is the seed in the soil; the advertising is the rain and the sunshine. Inexperienced advertisers dig up the seed every evening to see if it is growing ; or puH up the young plant by the roots because it didn't bear fruit or flowers the first week. It is safe to say that not more than one-third of the people are looking for bargains ; the other two thirds are looking for quality and style. The very fact that the goods are offered at bargain prices leaves the impression that there is something wrong with the quality or that the style is a season behind. Good advertising should enable a merchant to sell $20 coats at $25 instead of $25 coats at $12.50; in other words, it should create confidence rather than doubt. As in stocks and bonds, the securities quoted above par are always more desirable in the thought of the investing public than are those quoted at a discount. Advertising is a tremendous force which in action contradicts all mechanical' laws. The circumference and speed and working power increase, while the motor remains the same: Make your advertising continuous. This is the first great secret of success. Copy and medium and circulation are all subordinate to keeping everlastingly at it. "OfiLjpuruv (Copyright. 1908.. by A Dreadful Thought. One day Mary, the charwoman, re ported for service with a black eye. "Why, Mary," said her sympathetic mistress, "what a bad eye you have!" Tesm." "Well, there's one consolation. It might have been worse. "Tes'm. "Ton might hare had both of them hurt." "Yes'm. Or wors"n that; I might not ha' been married at all." Every body's M agasine. BSmW ,nBmW smw ' BHBnmBsfl gfcMssnSmBmmsSj BBs I ' ! nil iiimi BM IHnmmmTln iBmUmnSfllQammKIai Bsmv lA . mJm3Lsmmsnimmmmmi BmmS L r"smn mmF VQlofee IV&nnehg I Globe Wernicke Elastic9; Bookcase I sTsstfrnrenwan 7888 I afaBBmf SffsVSm BmBl SmfwmmmBmn Smt Bl VmmmW Smf SmflBmBnmS mBajsmmrA- n&BBmrV BmmmJmBsLT SmBmst I' 4m mnmmmLsnsnsmnsf snnSmmWa-mmm4mmm mmmnvJftnanmSms mfemsm) flmmsne enmmmmwmmTsfsa a"mTem7emTaTaV I HPNRY fil HIRIITVRE&UI0ERMIII6 Mi II Ball II I UnU U Both pboaee $5-210-fl-2J West 11th St. "SSmmSBmSBammBaBJseBmsssmmBsmsnsmammmm wSmsW- BBmmrs BSSBSJ ' BSSBSr mmv ' N vmmT w' w No. 9 ef Tribune Company. Chicago.) Beans and Bacon. An old Scotchman surprised as all by remarking: "Tour famoas New Eng land dish of pork nnd beans came di rectly from England, where for cen turies it was the reigning favorite with' all classes. The English called It 'beans nnd bacon.' In New York yoa have corned beef and beans the same old beans. I never could understand why beans and bacon were never naturalized in the Land o' Cakes. I cannot charge myself with ever hav ing seen such a dish in Scotland." ON ADVERTISING A fegi, .s - J?, -.A- ,f-..iwijri- - ''- "ft 1 ,.j&oW'jv ,..' Zsri. - xj-:&,. . -i .. i '---