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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1901)
THE 03IAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 11101. ".T5?H"T IN VH2 WORLD" LIFE AGENTS' CATECHISM. Q. What Is a He newal Contract? A. An arrange merit by which tho ngent who write tho business can secure a permanent Income therefrom. Q. Do I fort-It this Income If I leave the service of tho company? A. You do with some companies, but not with the Krjultable. Q. Ilut suppose I should die? A. Tho Kqultable pays It to your heirs for the full number of years. Q. Do I have to write any largo amount of business each year? A. Yes, In some companies; but the Equitable pays you for what you do, be It great or small. q. Where can I get such a con tract? A. If you know your business up ply to H.D.Neely Manager for Nebraska. Merchant National Bank Dulldlnf. OMAHA. 'PROTECTION THAT PROTECT" REMARKABLE CURES Are Hslny Mndo D.illy Free of Charge By ths British Physi cians Who Are Located in the Board of Trade Build, lug, Robins 438.139. Services for Three Months Are Glv-sn Free To All Invalids Who Call Upon Them Before October 22. A staff ot eminent physicians nnd sur geons from the British Medical Institute have, at the urgent solicitation of a large number of putlunts under their core In this country established n permanent branch ot the Institute In this city at Corner of lllt'ii nnd Kurnani streets, Itaonis 4:iH-4nO Bunrd of Trade nnlldlnic. ( These nmlnont eentlemon havo decided to give their services entirely free for three months (medicines oxcopted) to all invullds who call upon them for treatment between now and Oct. 1. These services consist not only of con sultation, examination and advice, but also or all minor surgical operation. The object In pursuing this course Is to become rapidly nnd personally acquainted with tho sick and nltllcted, nnd under no , conditions will any charge whatever he mado for any services rendered for three months, to all who call before October 23. The doctors treat all forms of disease nnd deformities, and guarantee a cure In every case I hey undertake. At the first Interview, u thorough examination Is made, and, If Incurable, you are frankly nnd kindly told so; also advised against spend ing your money for useless treatment. Male and female weakness, catarrh and catarrhal deafness, also rupture, goitre, cancer, all skin diseases, and all diseases of tho rectum are positively cured by their new treatment, , The chief associate surgeon of the Insti tute Is In personal charge. omen hours from 9 n. m. till 8 p. m. No Hunday hours. St'l.CIAI, NOTIU13 II you eojiiuot mil end stamp for question blank for home treatment. Dr. Burkhart's Wonderful Offer i30Dv'Twai 'NT tJCVenia.i m VEGETABLE WMPDUND. Positive)!- Cures pain tn side, back, under shoulder blade, smothering sensa tions, tired feeling, poor appetite, coated tongue, pimples on face, bud taste, sick or "bloated stomach, dizziness, headache, rest lessness at night, night sweats, and all blood disorders. All druggists, nil. W. s. nl'HKHAUT, Cincinnati, O, iiowcii's E v o r y I) o d jr knows tliero la Anti-Kawf (1 a u g cr In a coucli. The onlv sufo wny Is to stop It nt onco. 'Antl Kmvf will stop the worst" kind of n rough. A trial will prove It V'Sc a tot tlo ut the drug storo, WEAKMEN MADE STRONG tore LIST VITALITY MITOMD alter DR. LOBB'S COMPOUND DAMIANA WAFERS cvata vr HAiniesB, ji r.Tr HiCVTJIBBM Mat Mais Maalr Ma. Piicfw. for ft Money rsfUodsd If nii4Uel a tacalDt ot trie. SamlM fr iSisssies stsr ssvsn. DOI.IDOSSSI torr. rauli aaaylea fra. Aidresa Or.H. W.Lobb WMTOfftfW! anMgTam PLAINT OF THE OLD WAITER Hafajitht BiinM ia Btoamiag Eatiral To Swill far Hia. FOLKS WANT TOO MUCH FOR THEIR MONEY Ther Eat Queer Dishes In (later Ways at Queer Honrs, bnt Tips Are Qneerlr Few and Par Between, "Waltln', " said the tired-looking man with tho white apron and florid necktie, "Is a heap different from what It was twenty years ago when I first butted Into It. Us old-timers don't scarcely recognize It as the iamo business and I reckon I'm gettln' a little out o' date for It. I got to quit and go to speckslatln' for a llvln.' " "You see It keeps gettln' swcllcr an' swellcr till flow we do raoro extras for a man that only wants one cut o' plo and four glasses o' Ice water than wo used to for a ret spender that always took steak or lob ster or fish and shed an extra two-bit piece with every order. "In the old days we had Just dining halls and lunch counters. Nowadays them names Is used only In Rubevllle. In the big towns the lunch counters have all become coffee houses, short-order houses, grill rooms, luncheons and dairy annexes. And tho din ing halls has become mostly calfaae with gilt signs on tho glass and a cashier and bumb palm In the front window. And tho fodder pitchers has all become waiters or servitors. They ain't no plain hashers any more. Wo'ro gettln' too Important for that. We got our unions now, with regular officer and badges and headquarters, and the prlvllego of going out and working up a good sweat and a sunburn every time thero is a Labor day parade. We cut some ice in politics, too, and we're oven broaktn' Into society, I understand that I, eome ot tho younger fellows Is that have got spike tailed clothes and parlor manners. Rnarllsh as She la Mpoke. "And wo've cut out the slang and phony names, too. When we pipe out an order now we got to bo nice about It. It's a com plete change from what ltuecd to be when milk toast was a 'grave yard stew,' sausage was a Mink o' cnblo,' beans was 'gambler's strawberries,' doughnuts was 'sinkers,' spare ribs was a 'stack o' bones,' scrambled eggs was a 'shipwreck,' ham and eggs was a 'grunt and a cluck,' soft boiled oggs was 'thrco In tho ocean' and eggs on toast was 'chlppees on the fence.' "Note ot that kind of talk goes now. We've had to reform even to puttln' tho soft peddle on our vocallzin' to tho cook and steam table men. We don't even han dle the coin any more. The fairy up In front tends to all that and we just pais out the oardboard. It there Is any rake-off, little Muddle, with tho glad emlle and the violet extract gets It. All we get Is the dishes back unless we're workln' In some of the few places where we're allowed to carry a tab and run our own trolley line to the, cash register. Then, by brlngln' the change split up right, wo occasionally make connection w)th a small donate, but It don't come like It used to when folks had their boom manners and was all bent on gettln' through! When They Hurrr. "And speakln' o' gettln' through reminds me of tho queerest thing about folks that cat In restaurants. Even now about one half ot 'em will holler their heads off till they're waited on, then bolt their victuals down like a train crew and then lay back ready to talk a week It anybody will listen. "I handlo'a lot ot that kind here In the tourse of a night. And a lot ot other klnda. too. You ought to see the run o' trade In this joint between dark and daylight. All sorts of propositions, you know. Beglnnln' after supper, we rua along pretty light till about 11 o'clock, when we ketch a bunch of sandwich boys from the theaters and arouu' town. At 11:15 wo got the printers and then there's real lively doln's until mid night, for there's a Rood many of them and they're trailed close by the good-nlghteru folks Just startla' home, you 'unerstand, Between 'em all they keop us buslcr'n a newsboy in war times. Then we get th hack drivers (tho transportation squad, as the boas calls 'em) and that la about all until toward 2 o'clock, when the jags begin to arrive. Other Men'a Hops Annoy- Him. "Say, pal, thon's when I want to go home. They'll come in and either try to bunk on tho counter or swell nn ami Hn h place. They want to talk to everybody on mc moeit wunoui imviit their chairs and jou aont never know what they may try to do with tho dishes. I bad one of 'am hero the other night that was dead set to feed the salt bottlea Into the electrlo fans. "They cat funnv dish that respect they ain't no worse than sober ysuy.u. m tact, ii oum surprise you to see the combination SOtTlo folk a an n trn f naf 1 give It to you straight when I tell you iimi une man nero eats mustard on his ice cream reglar and another one puts a whole lump of butter la every cup of coffee, a miiwn serveo mo otner night was raaao Up of cantaloupe, nnnln ounce r1,ik,.i, not another cussed thing. Lots or people nmtt. tueir ice tea aua inoir pie. What the Public Eats. ''In fact, they aro ant tn ir. mn. .-- thing with their pie! And nearly everybody eats pie at night. What kind? nh. .ti kinds! Every brand of pie has Its strong manors, too strongest being for lemon and cherry In the summer and minco in the winter, with apple runnln' a strong favorite right through the year. "Sandwlehesf Well, I guess hot roast beef has tho call In the daytime and it's a Itand off between ham unit rhher. . .i.i., vvu v UIKUI Cheese Is a trailer and caviar don't get much Ot a run exeunt with IK- "Hot rolls go like snowballs In hades "ucu luo oreanrast crowd commences ti tome, which Is at 6:80 (think of gettln' ui at that time o' dnv. win vn..?t ..j . ... Ion of coffee don't last no time. Eggs have i iuu uui n-nyin-,- witn plenty of bacon or ham, but not much nth r m a a t ti ain't much doln' in roaats or steaks, you u"i mug towaru noon and I'm watch before that. I was only speakln' the night business." it nas grown up witn the country for 40 years, cook s imperial Extra Dry Cham pagne has been a household word, RELiaiOUs. It that ,1 1- leading town In Vermont 32 per cent do not Tho Christian Endeavor society has been tiiiriicu iii uiiii mis uuuo mucn to forward tho work connected with tho great rngiuiii uwhhciiwk in jupan. TtlM h,l Till nt lu, .......... ...Ul.l. ... . .".I"". HJIitci Wllll'll III 111 meet. In Now York November 12-H, will havo for Its leading toplo "Tho Consollda tton of the NotlonalSocleties." The people of Tremont Temple will mnke every possible effort to retain ltcv. Dr. Larimer as pastor. It Is not probable that he will accept the call to New York, The American Hoard rounds out It flnan S!?iX,,r v.ith a debt ot l2,3U. This Is an addition of over 119.000 to the $12,000 that rested upon the board September I, 1D00. .D.VM;, Bm,.t.n altnnt book ujient of the Methodist Knlsconal Church South, has sulled for China for tho purpose of estab lishing a branch publishing house In Bhang. The Protestant federation has been mak ing active progress In Italy, where the native WaldensUns. the baptists. .Metho dists and minor Protestant bodies have Machine WASHINOTON, Oct. 6. Of the many In teresting features which go to make up the annual report of tho Smithsonian Institu tion, which has been published this week In an edition of 20,000 copies, for gonerat dis tribution through member of congress, the most striking is a reproduction ot the first picture over made of a flight of the "aero drome," or flying machine, Invented by the secretary of tho Smithsonian, Mr. S. P. Langloy. The reproduction Is a half-tone, In the form of a largo folding plate, and Is copied from a photograph, hitherto unpub lished, taken by Mr. Alexander Graham Hell, the Inventor of tho telephone. Comparatively little has been said pub licly during the last two or three years regarding Mr. Langley's epoch-making In vention, for the reason that his Investiga tions have been continued for the special benefit of the Hoard ot Ordnance and Forti fications of the War department, with a view to developing the usefulness of thu machine In warfare. Out It will be re membered that tho aerodrome Is strictly mechanical In Its operation, and thus In no wny resembles, for example, the airship with which tho young Hrnzlllan neronaut, Santos-Uumont, has recently been endeav oring to circumnavigate the Eiffel tower In I'arls. In Santos-Dumont's airship, that is, tho lifting power Is furnished by the gas of a balloon, and what tho Inventor has par ticularly claimed for It Is that It Is "dirig ible" capable, that is to soy, of being steered llko a ship. Tho aerodrome, on tho other hand liter ally "alr-runncr" furnishes Its own power, steam, from Its own fuel. Hence tho re markable Interest of the photograph now published In the Smithsonian report, tho great historical significance of which Is recognized In an accompanying statement, to tho effect that although greatly enlarged from tho original negative, which wan taken with a small pocket camera, the reproduc tion is entirely mechanical no retouching, either of the negatlvo or of tho engraving, having been permitted and may bo ac ccpted, accordingly, as absolutoly authentic In ovcry detail. Whatever may bo lacking In the pictorial valuo of the photograph, therefore, Is com pensated by its convincing quality. Tho aerodrome Is shown high up In midair, quite distinct and separate from any connection with other objects as obviously a thing ot Independent motion, Indeed, as If It were tho soaring henhawk from which It essen tially derives, Uclow Is tho secluded island of Chopawamslc, near (Juantlco, on the Virginia shore of tho Potomac, somo thirty miles below Washington. Tho flight which Is thus vividly rendcrod took place May fi, ISOt), and was a prlvato trial, Mr. Bell being Mr. Langley s only companion outside of his regular assist ants. Tho machine one of several which havo since flown considerable distances undor Mr. Langley's supervision wa launched from a specially constructed house boat, and was supplied with water sufficient only for a short course, test, In Its uncon trolled flight, It should get altogether out ot reach and lose Itself In the neighboring Virginia forests an accident which would have been sufficiently serious at a tlme Strangest of Mausoleums In civilization as-well as In savagery man has Indulged weird fancies In his ornamen tations of the sepulcher. Even In the most barbarous climes and times much thought was given to embellishments of the graves ot beloved dead. Many of the wonders of the world have been sarcophagi. The Pyramids aro but repositories for the bancs of Egyptian royalty; tho Catacombs vast aleeptng cars for the Romans' and early Christians' last dreamless slumber. Throughout tho world, by the sldo of his arches of triumph, man has erected mauso leums and tombs. Less stress Is today placed upon tho Im portance of the dead body; more upon the living soul, A few people even havo bo come sufficiently emancipated to forego the pitiful mlto of worldly Immortality crystal lized In a fragment ot marble, and have had their bodies consumed In the purifying fire, leaving no damp or frozen mound tor their successors to hover near, adding to the great sense of loss tho horror of disin tegration. Dut there still are erected countless sar cophagi, nt enormous cost and infinite pains, to memorialize a life nnd a name. Love still stands weeping at tho brink ot a grave and Invents methods of calling the world's attention to its own peculiar sor row. In tho heart of Vermont, In the shadow of the snow-clad or moss-mantled Green mountains, stands a unique sepulcher erected by devoted wealth, at the cost of many thousands ot dollars, called the Laurel Glen mausoleum. Throughout that part ot Now England known as the Marble state, tho namo of Cutttngsvlllo stands only for this mausoleum; the rudo hamlet has but one pride, ono distinction. It holds a tomb! Ia this symbolic of a dying state, . . uluvu uhicuuiviih ilk ICUBL Ull U1B UUJCVl OI their common work nnd on the method of its prosecution. Two negroes will sit In tho, house of convention In San Francisco next month. w iou"ii mm' ui iimti una uisnop Imrfftitnii nt T th.n Thll n,A(aotniit I .... I 1 I. . . 1. I wtvowiMi ,iinvu,ai LlllllUIl IS Bet-King for a new namo or a chungo of name. ... ' u"u ul U1H impurtiini topics tnai will come up for discussion lu tho general convention to bo held In San Francisco In October. All nations, says Dr. V. E. Clark, are now deavor union, and It is gaining recruits In iiooHii mm jiiiamunury mnas witn marvel ous rapidity. Tho federation 1st an accom plished fact. ihero are two cardinals In Homo of tho namn nf VnnniitnlH mi., nt it'hnm , v. piobablo successor of Pope Leo XIII. It Is Cardinal Vincent Vunnutelll whoso name Is connected with tho papal succosslon. The other cardinal Is Beraphln Vannutolll, a stu- urni ana u nermit. It seems, from on analysis of the recent SwIbr censuB, that In the past twelve years the Protestants havo decreased 12 per cent .nUiuuu imiiumuuii jinn in creased 10 per cent, though still In a consld- wuw.u ii,uiitj. Aim ;uuae in m eitner case Ml, UflmA mill rr.n Inn n . I I 1 . 1 ...w v, .,linttftt,WI UllU lIllllllBt UUUU, William Carey wbb sent out to India ns a tioor Baptist cobbler, the potty sum of about m being contributed for his expenses. And yet Dean Farrar has said that England owes more to that net and the consecration of that humble laborer than to the genlua of AVarren Hastings and the buttle spirit of Cllve, In the Island of Ban, among tho FIJI roup, there Is n wonderful stone church. Thero are stones In Its wails that once were gods, stones that onco belonged to heathen temples, stones from fortifications over which men had fought nnd died. To day within the walls Is u rough boulder of ' . "" onrn a Killing stone; now It Is used us n baptismal font. Bishop Tucker, on the occasion of his re cent visit to Toro, ordained a native of Uganda, who haa worked for five years on the edge of tho great pygmy forest. "This remarkable man," sa-B the bishop, "has been baten, Imprisoned, put In the chain gang, had his house burned down and all his property destroyed, and yet he has borne It all with a smile upon his face and a song upon his lips!" .T!K'r? ?rr"..n2,w al,eut MriY women pas B?f n.hn,,Brtnn J:.u.cn'!, In ,no United ?J?tc, ?h, lnt id'lltlon to their ranks Is Miss Eatella It. Padgham of Syracuse who has Just been ordained In thnt city, tho or dination sermon being preached by n woman, nev. Marie 11. Jenncy of Des Moines, la,, who two yearn ago was or dained In the samo church. The sermon was tho first one of ths kind preached by a that Flies- when the funds available tor Mr. Langley's experiments were limited. In connection with the Illustration Mr. Hell's account of the flight has special Interest, and is ac cordingly quoted tn tho present Smithsonian report. "The aerodrome," he .writes, "at a given signal started from a platform about twenty feot above the water and rose at first di rectly In the face of the wind, moving at nil times with remarkable steadiness, nnd subsequently swinging around In largo curves ot perhaps 100 yards In diameter, and continually ascending until its steam as exhausted, when, at a lapse of about a minute and a half and at a height which t judged to be between SO and 100 fect In tho air, tho wheels ceased turning, and the ma chine, deprived of tho old of Its propellers, to my surprise, did not fall, but settled down so softly and gently that It touched the water without the least shock, and was In fact Immediately ready for another trial, "In tho second trial, which followed di rectly, It repeated In nearly every respect the actions of the first, except that direc tion of Its course was different. It ascended again in the face ot the wind, afterward moving steadily and continually In largo curves, accompanied with a rising motion and a lateral advance. Its motion was, In fact, so steady that I think a glare of water on lt surfaco would havo remained tin spilled. When tho steam gave out again It repeated tor a second time tho experience of the first trial when the steam had ceased and settled gently and caelly down. What height It reached at this trial I cannot say, ns I was not so favorably placod as In tho flrBt, but I had ocenston to notice that this time Its course took It over a wooded promontory, and I was relieved of some ap prehension In seeing that it was already 'so high as to pass, the tree tops by twenty or thirty feet. It reached tho water one minute and thirty-one seconds from tho time, it started, at a measured distance of over 000 fect trom the point at which It rose. "This, however, was by no means tho length ot its flight. I estimated from the diameter of tho curvo described, from the number of turns of tho propellers, as gtvan by automatic counter, after duo allowance for slip, nnd from other measures, that the actual length of flight on each occasion was slightly over 3,000 fect. It Is at least safo to say that each exceeded half an English mile. It seems to mo that no one who was present on this Interesting occasion would havo failed to recognize that the practica bility of mechanical flight had been demon strated." A very interesting general description of the aerodrome Is also Included In the re port., Tho appcarauco of the models which Mr. Langley has used for his demonstra tions might not Inaptly bo compared to thai of a giant dragon fly. To a long rod nre attached, like a body, a twin engine and boiler, four wldo spreading wings, a tall-llko rudder, and twin propellers placed nearly amidships, between the two pair of wings. Tho wholo weighs about thirty pounds, one-fourth of which Is the englno and Its appurtenances, which aro thus ot unexampled lightness. The engine Itself, whose population Is deserting Its hills and dales to help colonize the whole country? An opulent New Yorker had sought soli tude In this picturesque vlllago for several summers and bad built for his use a splen did mansion. But his last loved one was ttken away by death and tho only consola tion remaining was to leave bis history In marble. And so Hon. John P. Bowman erected a magnificent memorial to his fam ily, which is now visited by tourists from alt parts ot the country, A whole year's time and tho labor of 125 men were employed upon this Oreek temple, reared nmld the green shrubbery in this lovely valley among the mountains which encompass Vermont. In this great tomb were used 7S0 tona ot granite, fifty tons ot marble and 120,000 bricks. Its dimensions are 18x25 feot and It Is 20 feet high. Each block of granite weighs from three to six tons, Tho exterior decora tions are Oreek foliage with laurel frieze. Within the portal Is closed by a door of one marble slab weighing 0,500 pounds. But the conspicuous and gruesome feature of this mausoleum Is tho ltte-slzed statuo or Mr. Bowman himself, standing hat tn hand, with ono foot upon tho step, about to enter the tombi Ho holds a wreath of marble Immortelles and a huge key with which to unlook the chamber of doath. Within, upon pedestals, aro busts of him self, his wife, his beautiful daughter and, In the center his baby, Its plump limbs slnklug Into a cushion, Its chubby arms ex tended to its mother, cold nnd rigid In un responsive marble. These were wrought In Italy, from finest Parian marble (as wsb his own figure) and aro of Immense value. Two long mirrors give tho Illusion of vast corridors filled with busts and statues of daszllng whiteness. By this optical Illusion thirty halls may be seen. Itlch sculptures, ......Kin. iiro x uuKiuiin ia u nmitn couego graduate and pursued her theological course fit Inn Ttinntruilnnl f ... In.. . . I .1 n ... .1 . HllnM II .1 1 I .... i.i ... T r i--w.wii ,i;iiiiijaif in illuullVUlU, i"o nuniiiu-r sue nmciaieu ror MlH .TnmiAv In Tlria fi,l.,..u ...Kit.. - " j ' " . .... 1 1 1 1 ,- nn ty, 1,113 t it" gaged In ministerial work there received a call to Perry, Pa. She will enter upon her duties ut onco. The Catholic Standard and Times thus ex plains the celebration of mnPKCH in connec tion with tho Illness nnd death of President ui. iwiur.) , ni; L'uuri'ii uoes not puuiiciy offer mass for tho reposo of tho souls of thoso who die outside Its fold. Since tho Why So Tired? That coiiBtunt played out feeling Always .tired, morning, noon and night, Tells a tale of kidney ills , Of kidneys overworked. So does backache and many other aches. DoaiVs Kidney Pills Kemove the cause and icure it. Kelieve the aching back, A remedy for every kidney and urinary ill. Endorsed by Omaha people. , Mrs. Kanude Thompson, 808 Douglas St., says: "It Is nearly twenty years since I first had troublo with ray back and kidneys, and In splto of all doctors and medicines could do, I gradually grew worse. There nro very fow poople In my neighborhood who do not know how I auffered. Seeing Doan's Kidney Pills advertised I sent to Kuhn & Co's drug store for a box. After using It I found tho pain In my back had passed away. I cannot use words ' strong enough to express my opinion of Doan's Kidney Pills after what they did for me when everything else had failed." At all drug stores, 50 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. Langley's Aerodrome and its Experimental Flights. with cylinders, pistons and all moving parts, weighs only twenty-six ounces. Light as It la, however, It vk 111 turn tho propellers easily at a rate ot S00 revolutions a min ute, and thence up to 1,200 revolutions, thus driving the aerodrome at a speed of from twenty to thirty miles an hour. Tho maximum speed possible has not been calculated, nor, Indeed, has the very high est speed actually attained been measured but according to "Langley's law," so called, the power required to drive the machine would in theory diminish Indefinitely as the speed Is Increased and tn practice would diminish In a very considerable de gree. It must be remembered, however, that security has been chiefly sought hitherto and'the conditions which give this Increase of speed with decrease of power must bo limited by others which demand that the flight should be made lu safety and without that danger of accident which might come by too rigorously applying exact theoretical conclusions, especially in view of the limited appropriation available for this work. It Is necessary to launch the machine against the wind. Once under way It flies steadily forward and upward until the ma chinery ceases to revolve and then It floats slowly downward, alighting on the water as gently as a gull. Tho speed Is regulated by the Inclination of the wings, or, more accurately, the motionless supporting sur faces. The machine Is built almost entirely ot steel and Is far heavier In relation to air than a ship of solid lead would ho In relation to water. Kor It must be remem bered that the support which It receives from the air is due to nnother principle than that Involved in tho buoyancy ot a ship that Is, to the rapidity with which it runs over the air like a skater over thin Ice, whenco tho special significance of its Ureek-derlved namp. What the future ot flying machines may bo ono may not predict. Tho present Smithsonian report, however, contains an article now published for tho first time In this country prepared, as an address, by M, Janssen, the president of tho Interna tlonat Aeronautic congress, In which the importance of the air as a medium of navl gatlon is very strikingly brought out and from which n reader may draw his own conclusions of what will happen to the world when the airship Is an accomplished tact. "Tho sea sovors the continents," Is one of M. Jansaon'a statements; "the air unites everything- and dominates 'every thing." On which Mr. Langley comments, as editor of tho report, as follows: "That tho sea separates, whllo the air unites, Is a proposition the sense ot which may easily escapo tho reader. The eea renders it dlffl cult to pass, for example, between an Island and tho mainland and a number ot vessols sailing round and round tho Island could cut off any attempt to mako the passage. Through the air, on tho other hand, thero will always be a path from any ono point on the earth'e surface to any other and no matter how vigilant a patrol wero instl tuted there would bo plenty ot room to pss with Impunity." Anyone who remembers the added com plications ot solid over piano geometry will not be slow to appreciate. Remarkable in Vermont Tomb bronze traceries and ornaments fill tho sepulcher. A nightly Illumination Is produced by six bronzo candelabra, bearing pyramids of wax candles, which shed a weird, ghastly light and give a solemn, cathedral atmosphere to thta palace ot death. Upon a rolling terrace, conspicuous from all dlrocttons, stands this mausoleum, with Its owner ever entering Its portal, yet never going beyond the threshold. Itaro exotics adorn tho lawn in summer and a conserva tory 1 kopt 'up solely for tho decoration of tho tomb In winter. The cost of this sarcophagus Is supposed to be enormous, but no records can be dis covered. The founder left $50,000 for the solo purpose of having the grounds and the tomb cared for perpetually. Six trustees guard this legacy, nnd one of their number enjoys tho castle onco occupied by the Bow man family. It faces tho mortuary, and In It are the elegant furnishings Just as they were used by the erratlo owner. Oriental colors, woodwork in pale blues, reds and blacks, statues and relics brought from sunny Italy to tho region of deep snows, speak of a luxury entirely foreign to austere and provincial Vermont, The tomb was completed beforo the death of the founder. What melancholy satisfac tion he experienced In viewing IiIb own mar ble Image forever ascending the steps that led to tho cold clay and colder marble pre sentments of his wlfo nnd children can only be surmised. He has made tho village nestled In tho mountains under the shadow of Kllllngton a point for curiosity seekers and tho llfo and death story of his own ob scure family well nigh Imperishable. Per haps to have done this seemed to hlra worthy of having lived. I .mrtiTf". whIch ,h0, m.nss 18 founded Is I repudiated by somo of these. It would bo i straining charity to do o. While this Is he official attitude of tho church, however! there Is no rule to prevent any priest coliii bratlng mass of hln own volition for such . 1 ji i . i . ". 1 ivanuii in iii-c- Vent Individual Catholics praying for the jouIh of those who have- not died In the faith. Inasmuch ns our holy church consid ers nil who have received Christian bap tism as belonging to It In a certain sense. They mar be of tho soul of the church though outside the body." murtn REV. T. W. Chaplain of His Majesty eran Volunteer Association, CANADA. Rev. Kearney Presided Over the Parish at Walshtown, S. D. He is a Yeteran of the Army, of 1866. Head hi strong Testimonial in which ho endorses CKAMHIt'S KIDN'KY ,AD AYVAl CUKE. CRAMER CHEMICAL CO.. Albany. N. Y.: Oontleracn During my army llfo I con caso ot kidney trouble. I suffered almost d Intense at times compelling mo to go to bo nnd did everything In his power to relievo army I tried many other doctors, as well as which claimed to cum tho dreaded disease, advised mo ono day to glvo your remedy a a bottle and began taking It, nud beforo it took that bottle and purchased another, an until I bad taken fivo bottles In all, nnd 1 good Lord, a well man, I can nay It truth no other medlclno can mado mo a well ma Melted, nnd you hnve my permission to prln know there Is yet hopo for them If they wil Very truly yours, CRAMER'S KIDNEY AND LIVER CURE Sold in two sizes, 50c nnd 1 it bottle. For sale by all druggists USE CKAMElt'S VEOETA1JLE PJLLS. SEND FOR FREE SAMPLES TO THIS Cramer Chemical Co., A,ban'Y, Health, Vigor, Strength FOR ALL WHO DESIRE IT Dr. J. M. Peebles, the Grand Old Mon of llttttlc Creek, Miuh., Cures So Culled Incurable or IIopulcss Cases Through the Wonders of Psychic Science. Dr. I'eebl, the erand old man of Hattls Creek, In whose brain orlKlnnteJ l'SYCHIC TItKATMENT, lina bo perfected hi methoil that It hav revolutionized tlio art of healing, and It can almost lie alJ thero aro no hope kii or Incurnliln dlniiii'ti. Thin uyntem of treatment haa broucht thounamla upon thous and! hack to health after they have been pronounced hopelessly 111 by the beet local Ii-ilclann. 1IU cures have been proclaimed rilllNOMKNAL, by the many thousands who have had a chance to watch the near neigh bor, friend or relative pronounced at Ienth'a door by the local doctor, brought back to perfect manhood or womanhood by this emi nent doctor and his associates. These won derful cures uro brought about through a system of treatment orlitlnatcd by Dr I'ee bles himself, the great authority on l'sythle I'henomena, which Is a combination of mild innnnetlo remedies and Psychic Tower, making- the strongest healing combination known to science. This method has been so per fected by the doctor that anyone may use It In their own home without detention from business or the knowledge of anyone Mrs. J. W. Anderson, ft. Johns, Wnsh,, suffered for years with piln In tho uvurles and uter ine weakness; she was entirely cured by this treatment, Mrs. C. Harris, of Marlonvlll", I'a,, says she cannot express too much grat' Iturte for the results reeelved frcm I)r I'ee bles' treatment for falling of the womb und general exhaustion. Oco. II. Weeks, of rieve. land, Ohio, sends heartfelt thanks for res toration to health after suffering from nerv ous prostration and Insomnia for years; he says he now enjoys excellent heulth and rest ful sleep every night. tJ, I). Young, of WImer Ore . says: "For years I bore about my body the piteous spectncle of disease and death stared me In the face, I now thank heaven I om a well man, nnd I owe this great victory over disease to Dr, I'eeblcs and his corps of assistant." Mrs Hell II llond, uf Dunkirk, ff V, who waa cured of asthma, dropsy, heart trouble and female weakness In a very few months, writes that she recommends Dr. Peebles' treatment to all h'r Ult friends and rcla-llves-ln fact, to all suffering humanity. DESPAIR NOT, THERE No matter what the disease Is or how despondent you m.iy feel because you have l,en told there Is no help for you, there Is still hope Hundreds of suffering women have been cured by Dr. Peebles' methojs, afler being told their was no help for them unless an operation was resorted to. The same may be M of men who are debilitated from excesses and early Indiscretions. Indlueitlon, stomnch and bowel troubles, catarrh, liver trouble, rheumatism, kidney tumble, heart trouble, lung and bronchial trouble, dropsy In fact, any and nil diseases yield to fnls wonderful system. If you are un familiar with this treatment, which Is annually curing thousands of those pronounced Incurable, do not fall to send nt once for literature giving full Information concern Ing this grand treatment It costs nothing whutever. and the Information gained will be worth much to you even though yo i do not take treatment If you are slek and dl?nuragcd do not fall In have the doctors diagnose your case and tell you your exact condition. Just write them a plain, truthful letter about your casu; they will confi dentially ronslder the same, fend you at onco u complete, diagnosis of your condition, and nlso literature on this grand system of treatment, together with Dr Peebles' essay, "The Psychic Kclence In the Cure of Disease," AH this Is sent absolutely free. If suffering, write today. Address DR. PEEBLES' INSTITUTE OF HEALTH, Every Woman la Intf retted and sliould know about the iwndcrful MARVEL 'Whirling Sproy u ouffinn. nest Mar. en . Most ConrenlenL If lieeannotsipplytht VJ Sili, nci-rin iiv ethrr. tun send ttnmn for II. ,iiiii-i lam -, lull panli'iilsrssnd Urei.ic,nt In u, Tsliwblslolsdlas. MIHVKI,'V lloom SJf Time Itlds,. N V. Ths Whlrllnjj flpray Syringe For Sale ny Sherman & McConnel! Drug Go, JO tli niitl Uutlife, OiiiiiIisi, Xcb. VW-W mm"W AT It LIflHttt laaUsUIr LJ KEARNEY Niagara District Vet Omaha, Neb, March 0, 1301. traded throtish exposure a very severe path a number of times tho pain belli so d. Our army surgeon prescribed for mo me, but without siici-l-us. After leaving tho every medlclno which I Raw ndvertlsed but with no result. A dear friend ot mlno trial, which 1 did reluctantly, I purchased was half gone I began feeling better. I d continued to grow better. I kopt this up nm now, thanks to your medlclno and tho fully that your medlcluc did for mo what n, and I write thoso words of pralno unso- t thorn, that sufferers of this dlseaso may I only take your wonderful medlclno. REV. T. W. KEARNEY, 403 North 15th Street, Omaha. I)H. J, M, PKEHLKS, IS. STILL HOPE FOR YOU! Dep'l, IS3, BATTLE CREEK, MICH. Superior to Aplol, Tatuy, Pennyroyal or HUcl. Suro Relief of Pain and Irregulari ties Peculiar to tho Sex. Aplollno Cspsnlcs for thrco months cost $1, Drnpgm or p. o. itotswi, ;;ew York, VARICOCELE A safo, painless, pes montntcurogunrsu. teed TwunT- jtuis experience .f. i ""'"S"""1-". iii'iiiuy uixe eq until no J,',T,li',mwc11' r"'ltat'',n BoeH fr,,, by mVU or to ; Write to DOUTOH a. M. UoK Via WstlBHt Street, KANiAfJ VVXX, b. I