Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1902)
10 THE OMAHA DAILY 1IEK: SUNDAY, SEPTEMllEll 2S, 1002. Copper Cures Consumption New Treatment for Consumption Indorsed by Member of British Tuberculosis C.rtrcss "Antl doctum Tuberculese" (the Cop per Cure) Marvel of the Med ical World Hope for All, No Matter How Bad Off. Beaeflta Cmirritnii Dlagler'a Boa and Care Othera ef Qalch, Gallop tag and Fact Conenmptlon la Their Own Home Any One Can Rerelre FREE Special)? Written Books Which Explain Eihaaatlrely the Care and Prevention of Conanmp tloa br "Aatldotam Tobereoloae" Let Erery Reader of The Bee Write the Company at Once. O. K. BUCKHOUT. Chairman Kalamasoo Tuberculosis Remedy Co. (Ltd.); Member of British Tjber culosla Congress; Member Interna tional Aaaoclatlon for the Pre vention of Tuberculosis. Consumptives need not worry about their future any mire, as the long-looked-for cure for consumption has at last been found, and a cure la now just as aure as In the simplest disease. To satisfy yoursolf f this you have only to write the Kala tnaioo Tubercjlosia Kerned y Co., 407 Main 6t., Kalamaxoo, Mich., of which the chair man Is Mr. O. K. Bucahout, a noted mem ber of the British Tuberculosis Congress nd alas of the International Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, com posed of world-famous men who have made consumption Its cure and prevention a life stuuy. This cure Is something entirety new and is callel "Antldotum Tuberculoae, or the Copper Cure, and Is the only dis covery we know of that absolutely kills ull tuberculosis germs which cause consump tion, as, unless this Is done, the disease cannot be cured. As the name of the rem edy tells. Its chief Ingredient Is copper, whloh metal has at last been found to be the deadly enemy of the consumption germ. "Anildniiim Tuhnmulnse" Is the original copper cure. You can tell if you have consumption by the coughing and hawking, by continually pitting, especially In the morning, when you throw yellow and black matter, by bleeding from the lungs, night sweats, flat chest, ffver, weak voice, peculiar flushed oomplexlon, pain In chest, wasting away of the flesh, etc Find out how the Copper Cure kills the germs, then builds up the lungs, strengthens the heart, puts flesh on the body and muscles on the bones until the consumption la all gone and yoa are again a strong, healthy, robust man or woman. Don't doubt this, for the very same dis covery han fl tmt A II rilnvlnv nr. nf Congressman Dlngley of Dlngley Tariff BUI fame, who went West and South for relief and didn't get It, and oame baok with death staring him In the face, and was benefited by Antldotum Tuberculose after all else had failed. It oured John Devrlea of Kalamasoo of galloping con sumption: Adrian de Die, 16311 8. West treet, of quick consumption; Paul De Smith of Dalton, Mich., and many cases which wasted away to skeletons. So don't give up hope, and don't spend yur money in travel. Attend to it right away, for consumption spreads to other tnetnbers of the family. If you hav con- sumption or foar you are predisposed to it .write tonight to the Kalamaxoo Tubercu losis Kemedy Co.,407 Main street. KaU tnasoo, Mich., and they will send you Illus trated and scholarly books free of charge telling you fully how the Copper Cure will cure you in your own home In a very short time. More Cheap Excursions VIA ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD . FROM OMAHA. "A" "B" 1 Indianapolis. Ind $19.40 $17.40 1 Ft. Wayne, Ind 19.20 17.20 1 Toledo, Ohio 21.25 19.25 1 Sandusky, Ohio 23.10 21.10 1 Columbus, Ohio 23. 10 21.10 1 -Dayton, Ohio 22.00 20.00 1 Springfield, Ohio 22.50 20.60 1 Torre Haute, Ind 18.25 16 SB 1 EvansY'.lIe, Ind 18.60 16.50 1 Cincinnati, Ohio 22.60 20.60 1 Louisville, Ky 21.60 It 60 1 Logansport, Ind 18.25 16.25 1 Decalur, 111 13 40 1 Grand Rapids. Mich ,. 17.75 1 Kalamazoo. Mich 16 40 1 Detroit, Mich 19.50 1 Toronto, Canada 25.15 1-Buffalo, N. Y ' 24.75 1 Pittsburg, Pa 23.25 1 Wheeling. W. Va 23.75 1 Columbus, Ohio 21.10 1 Cleveland, Ohio 22.75 1 Frankfort, Ky 21.15 i Washington, D. C 28.05 I Boston, Mass $31.75 ABOVE RATES ARE FOR ROUND TRIP TICKETS. (1) Dates of sale for column "A," Sep tember 16th and 23rd. Return limit 30 days. For column "B," dates of sale Octo ber 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th. Return limit November 3rd. (2) Dates cf sale October 6th to 10th Inclusive. Return limit November 11th. In addition to above special excursion rates to many other points in Indiana, Ohio. Michigan, Pennsylvania, New Tork and Kentucky. Home seekers' excursions, first and third Tuesdays in each month, to northern and southern points. Correspondence solicited and information cheerfully given at City Ticket Ottice. No. 140! Farnam St., Omaha, or write W. H. BRILL. Dlst. Pass. aght.. Iltnoia Cent. R. R., Omaha. Neb. TAKE PRICKLY ASH BITTERS for kuttq actios, CeaetlpatJea, Kidney IresMae, XT TROUBLES OF TI1E MOIORMAN Es Ha Thm A-fltt 8 Many, in Tact, Thay Haunt Eii 81epiig Eaan. WOMEN AND CHILDREN ANNOY HIM MOST Former Step Off Backward sal the Latter fee Tracks for Play atroand Hoodoo Hoar for Accidents. (Copyright, 1902, by A. 8. Richardson.) "That Plttsfleld motorman who ran down Roosevelt's carriage and then asked the president whether be thought he'd done It on purpcee, was fresh, altogether too fresh but, Just the same, I know how he felt." So said a New Tork motorman with a gilt band on his sleeve, as with the light ing of a fresh pipe a reminiscent look came into his eyes. "You see, it's this way: When we get into a smaehup the first thing we feel la the awful shock physlral and nervous a feeling that heaven and earth are coming together and we're right smack In the middle. Then there comes a sickening sensation of sorrow for having hurt some one and at last an Indefinable fury with the person hurt, for nine ehanres out of ten it was bis fault, not ours. "Now, hold on a minute. Don't say we are a reckless lot until you've heard our side of the story. Ever notice the peculiar yell a motorman gives when he's almost run you down? You think It Is a warning, don't you? Well, It ain't. 'Twould be too late for warning. It is Just an expression of horror at what he has almr.et done. And then you look up and wave your um brella and threaten to report him to the company and use epithets not found in the books of Moses and wonder why the motorman looks so mad. anyhow. But, Just the same, after you get over this scare, say In about forty-eight hours, you're back at your old trick of dodging between two cars coming from opposite directions. "Whenever I read something in a paper about the unfeeling motorman that has run down some helpless child I get Just 'dotty' mad. Unfeeling! What do reporters know about the way the motorman feels? If a man in such a position is wise he says nothing. His company respects an employe who does not talk until he is put on the witness stand or is called up to report before his superiors. A motorman may be standing coolly at hi post after an acci dent while his Inspector is taking the. names of witnesses, etc., but there la no telling what sort of a Mount Pelee is doing business Inside of him. His teeth may be set hard, but there' a aick feeling swell ing up Inside of him, a wild desire to yell out or to sob aloud, or do some other fool thing. And every time he sees an ambu lance for weeks afterward it'll make him turn cold. Dri-nnilnE of Accldenta. "I remember when I first started in. It ts over on the cast side in New York, where babies are thicker than flies and where every trip meant two or three close shaves. Why, sir. I'd wake up nights with a yell of warning, thinking there was a youngster on my track. It fairly got on my wife's nerves and finally I made up my mind I'd have to take it cooler or give up the Job. A motorman whose nerves get on edge Is useless to the company. It needs a calm, easy going, philosophical chap for that sort of work. "It la generally supposed that a motor man losea his Job if be has trouble on the line, but this is a mistake. The company finds that a man who has had his little accident and was not to blame In the matter generally makes a safer motorman than the new hand whose nerve get on edge. I have known good, steady men to score a fatal accident, and, after proving that they were not to blame, report for duty two days later and go right over the same run. They are sorry, of course, but fretting won't help them nor the company and lt'a more likely to cause nervousness and another accident. Then again a man will he so un strung that he will report to the superin tendent that he prefers some other line of work. It he has been a satfsfactory em ploye he may be put at work in some other department, in the offices, or around the barns. This, of course, is with the proviso that the company does not hold him liable for the accident. Children's Dangerous Pranks. "How can a motorman be wholly blame less In an accident? Easy! "For instauce, take cases where children willfully, yes. maliciously, dodge back acd forth before the cars. You can see It every day on the Third avenue lines. With the new ratchet brake we can stop a car In forty-five yards, but what la forty-five yards when a little rascal suddenly decides to see how near he can come to bslng hit with out doing it? "I remember about six years ago my wife tock it Into her bead to go back to her home in Chicago, so I threw op my Job in New York and got a run that took me right through what is known as the Polack quarters. We had a flat rut that way, too, and if there is anything more aggravating than a Polack youngster with a streak of American devilment stirred in, I'd like you to show It. "There was one boy who seemed to think that because he lived In our neighborhood It was fun to scare the motorman, and he'd give me heart failure Just about once In ao often. I spoke to hia father about it, but the old man got gay and talked back. At last, when the kid had been particularly aggravating one day, I armed myself with a good long blacksnake whip, and as 1 Jerked up my car, presumably to spare tbe little devil's life, I leaned over and warmed his legs good and plenty. Well, his father took the matter up with the company, tell ing his side of the story only. When the superintendent heard my side he Just grinned and said that if the motormen were all equipped with blacksnake whips pcrbapa the company would have less dam ages to pay. And that was the last I beard of the case. Trolley Car Balrldea. "It seems like a nasty choice for a method of committing suicide, but sure It Is that more persons than you dream of go by this i route. "Shortly after I got back to New York I was running on the Amsterdam avenue line, and, you know, we make pretty good time going down those hills. I saw a chap stand ing in the middle of the block, near the tracks and waved to him to go on to the corner, where we stopped. He didn't budge and when we came aplnntng down he threw himself right in front of the car aod.w wrrs over him before I could as much as shut my eyes. There was no mistaking that he deliberately atod there waiting for death to come hia way. but heaven only knows why it happened to be to the form of my ear. He proved to be a bum and a dope flrod, probably tired of life. At any rate, we could fet no trace of relatives or friends and ha was buried la the Potter' field. "Another trick responsible for many ac cidents is the absent-mindedness of women out shopping. "I have atood at the intersection of Sixth avenue, Broadway and Thirty-fourth street end wondered bow so many os'.-aprd. A woman will stand glancing leisurely through her shopping Hat or plcklag things over la aer surse. beral car wUl pass, chance for crossing the street In safety will come and go and she will not notice. Then, aud denly, the notion to get onto the other side of the street will strike her, and like an arrow she dsrts away. Car may be coming from both ways and diagonally on Broadway; forty people may yell at the top of their lungs, but by some mysterious working of Providence she lands on the opposite sidewalk, stops coolly enough and looks about her as much as to ssy, 'What are you all making so much fuss about?' If she doesn't happen to make It well. It's the careless motorman again. Have you ever seen a woman reading her shopping list or studying a clipping from the bar gain 'ads' In the morning papers while she crossed a crowded thoroughfare? Can you look on that picture and then fail to feel some sympathy with us motormen? Hoodoo Hour for Accidents. "Now here is another funny thing. We have noticed that 10 o'clock 8unday night Is a regular hoodoo hour for the motor com panies. We have more small accidents then than at any other time of tbe week. More women are dragged or thrown from moving ears and it puzzled the officials for awhile. But after a time we found that most of the victims were servant girls, particularly Irish and colored girls, and the accident was generally due to leaving the car before It stopped and. Incidentally, stepping off tbe wrong way. Then by a system of reasoning that Sherlock Holmes might scorn, It Is so simple they decided that the accidents were due to the anxiety of these women to ge to their homes. It seems that In all boarding houses and in many private fami lies a rule prevails that girls must be in by 10 o'clock. A girl Is late and in her anxiety to get In before the house Is closed for the night she throws personal safety to the winds and Jumps from the moving car. "A to all this nonsense about mobs form ing to attack reckless motormen, lot me tell you that In nine cases out of ten these riots are started by thugs who pick pockets when the crowd forms. The company has found this to be true over and over again. Re cently one of our head official witnessed Just such an occurrence in the northern part of the city on the East Side. The car had run over and badly Injured a little girl. Tbe ambulance had arrived, tbe motorman had agreed to appear In court at a certain hour, the Inspector bad done his work and the crowd was dispersing when a notorious tough in that section came out of a saloon with some kindred spirits at hia heels and incited tbe crowd. It was all the Inspector and policemen could do to protect the motorman and get his car under way. But the official bad been watching the other end of the game. He saw what those in the thick of the rlotera did not see and when It was over there were some quick arrests and two members of the gang owned up to the scheme. The one district where a riot of this sort 1b apt to be genuine nnd where the motorman is really in danger is the Italian section where their pssslonate love for children will set the whole population afire. Accidents Where Danger I Least. "Another peculiarity about accidents 'a that they seldom occur at points where the danger is known to be great. For In stance, there Is Dead Man's curve at Four teenth street and Broadway. Every subur banite who comes Into town shopping, every out-of-town man who has read any thing of New York, looka out when he cornea to that corner, but let him be cross ing at some level, smooth, straight grade and ' he gets careless. Then, when you think about cities which have very steep grades, like Kansas City and Omaha, there Is a small percentage of accidents, for everyone la careful. If there la an acci dent like the one on that steep hill iu Cincinnati, where a car plunged straight down the Incline, It I sure to be ter rific and fatal to all concerned, but these occur so seldom that in the long run a company that haa a less dangerous route to cover losea Just a much through damage auits, becauae familiarity breeds contempt and, people get careless. "Personally, I don't think fenders are much as life savers. "We can't very well prove how effica cious they really are. If there Is an acci dent you can't tell how much worae It might have been If no fender waa In use. On the other hand, if you have no fender, you can't tell whether the use of a fender would have prevented the accident. From what I have sen I believe fenders are really dangerous on a crowded thorough fare like Broadway, where car run every half minute. A pedestrian crossing the street hurriedly sees only the car, meas ures the, distance to the car with hia eye and forgets the existence of the fender. I think many a leg is broken unnecessarily by fenders. Woman the Chief Trooble. "But with all their troubles motormen stick to their Jobs. Of the 5,000 men in the employ of the Metropolitan Street Railway company 2,700 have been with the road for five years or more. 8ome of us have had the same runs, too, for a long time. "Yes, there's lots in the way you handle teamsters on your line. For Instance, down on lower Broadway, or, more particularly, In the great wholesale districts like West street and West Broadway, If a fellow la good natured, hale fellow well met, he can get through tbe tangle of truckmen as a churlish chap never can. A hearty, 'Give ua a ahow, Jack, we want to get up the line,' will do more than a string of curses every time. It's a big thing, too, to have your read in good atandlng with truckmen. If the other laboring classes are down on a road for any reason tbey can make It mighty hard for us. Good will is worth more, In making time, In a city like New York than a good, up-to-date equipment. You can't make time against a sullen team ster. "A motorman must have patience and In genuity, too, when hia car Is blockaded by an overloaded team or a balky horse. "But, take It all around, the root of all evil for the average motorman la woman. And the prettier she Is the harder be makes It for us, for the sympathy Is all her way. And the man who can teach th fair sex to leave a car with their faces forward and their right feet out, and not to leave it uuttl it stops, will gain not only the un dying admiration of our .fraternity, but a mcnumentwhen ha la dead a real granite shift with a touching Inscription." Ftarhttnar 1'nder the Banner. Half a dosen veterans who bad been at tending the confederate reunion In St. Jo seph, Mo., were on their way home and were waiting in tbe depot at Kansas City for a train. They wore the confederate ) gray and one of them held a faded rebel flag. An alert looking young soldier wear ing a khaki uniform and belonging to the Twelfth United Statea Infantry came swing ing by. He stopped in front of the little group, brought bis heels together and saluted the flag. "My father was killed fighting for that banner. I have Just finished three yesrs' service In the Phil ippines," he said pithily and he strode way. Gold First MieeoTerrd. It ha been proven that gold waa first dls. covered In California In 1848. or about the same time that Hosteller's Stomach Bitters was first introduced to th public aa a fam ily medicine. During those year It haa es tablished an unequalled record of cure of such ailments aa flatulency, belching. In somnia, nerTOuancaa and Indigestion. If yoa bar taken c'.hir medicines without ob taining relief vf would urge yoa to try th aUllcra. It will sural car J a a. W, C. T, U. TEMPLE BU1LDINT, IpiriUd Isply to 8tricturei if Mr. Try a tbe Project. MRS. CARSE'S COURSE WARMLY DEFENDED Secretary Ilnnhnm Tnlnt Ont Mis takes Made by the Critic and howa How the TrnJcrt Waa Fostered. CHICAGO, Sebt. 25. To the Editor of The Bee: The letter written by Mr. Fry, cor responding secretary of the National Woman's Christian Temperance union, to a member of tbe Omaha union regarding the temple, and published in The Bee of Sep tember 9, haa Just come to my notice, and as some of the statements are so incom plete and aome so Incorrect that they give a false Idea of the situation, I ask, as a matter of Justice, space for a reply. It may be well to say that I have served on the board of Temple trustees since its organization In January. 1892, have been secretary since October, 1S93, and financial secretary for over two years, ao can be supposed to know something of the enter prise. Mrs. Fry begins by stating that the board of trustee) la a separate body from the national union, a fact which needed no repetition, for no one ever supposed they were Identical, but a spirit of fairness should have Impelled her also to have stated that all members of the board were mem bers of the Woman's Christian Temperance union, and most of them holding Important official positions In state or national unions, three of them being state presidents, ffome Imn.irtsst Facta Omitted. While etatlng that the temple had never been a department, why did she not state that other fact that until the St. Paul con vention In 1S98 it was an affiliated Interest and a such made Its reports to the na tional convention, where they were dis cussed and accepted by that body and pub lished In lta national minutes, and that many of the states made, and some etill make It, a regular department of work? The omission of these facts convey the Im pression which was doubtless Intended that there was no real connection between the two bodies, when the exact opposite was the case. Of the same animus le her next statement that there was no "written agreement" between the national union and the temple, as If this was an omission particularly unfavorable to the temple, but no such agreement was made with either of the other affiliated Interests, and so was unnecessary for this. The real connection was not by written agreement, but by the attempt of Mrs. Carse to raise money to buy the temple for the national union and tbe willingness on the part of the union to accept all the benefits which might come from her effort, and It waa the offi cers of the national union, Miss Wlllard at their head, who assisted at tho laying of the cornerstone, who marshaled the children and participated In all the exer clees and glory of tho day, and It waa other national officers who, after Miss Wll lard's death and the financial disasters of 1893 and the following yeare made the task of raising funds ao hard, who urged the withdrawal of the support of the na tional union and who have since used all the power of their official position to thwart and defeat the work carried on by the trustees. Regarding- the Site. Mrs. Fry further states that "contrary to the reaolutlon of the national convention" the building was built on leased ground, but she does not quote the resolution, nor can he, for no such was ever passed. The one passed after the question had been fully discussed, Mrs. Rounds of Illinois having objected to its being on leased ground, wss offered by Mrs. Hoffman of Missouri and reada aa follows: "Resolved, That we regard with admiration and amaze ment the colossal plans of our earnest and devoted sister, Mrs. Matilda B. Carse of Chicago, for the building of a temperance temple in that city, as a home and source of revenue to the National Woman'e Chris tian Temperance union, and that, while we assume no financial responsibility wha'. ever, we give to Mrs. Carse our sympathy, our prayers and pledge not to hinder or embarrass her In tbe prosecution of her plans, provided she shall legally obligate herself not to begin the work until $500,000 shall bo secured. Adopted." And as after thla nowhere appears in the records any ob Jectlou to the building on leased ground we cannot conalder Mrs. Fry, who was not a national officer until yeara after, very good authority, and this resolution also effec tually dlsprovea her statement that the na tional asked that the cost should not ex ceed $200,000 or $300,000. One wonders at her courage In making auch a statement when the records are ao accessible and show the real facta. Abont the Bond laaor. Quite In accord with the spirit of her en tire letter Is the following: "Mrs. Carse has issued her own personal bonds to the amount of $300,040." , After consultation with good business men and with the ap proval of Miss Wlllard and Mis. Stevens, Mrs. Carse issued these bonds "for and on behalf of the National Woman's Christian Temperance union and for lta sole benefit," but this part of the story Mrs. Fry carefully omits, and yet writes as if it was a late occurrence, when they were issued In 1891, taken to the convention held In Boston that year, explained from the platform and their purchase recommended by Miss Wlllard and othera as a good Investment and an aid In acquiring the temple for the Woman's Chris tian Temperance union. As the personal bonds of Mrs. Carse they would not have been offered for sale, and were not, but as th bond for th national union and with tt honor of that great organisation be hind them they were bought by many wbo would not otherwise have thought of In vesting in the bonds, and if this doe not constitute a "moral obligation" It will be bard to define what does. Later In the let ter Mm. Fry says: "Since the temple has been dropped it has been claimed by Mrs. Carse and others that there is a moral obli gation on tbe part of the national to redeem Mrs. Carse' personal bond." "Her bond," again, with no mention of the purpose of the bonds: this U an evasion and suppres sion worthy cf a petufogeing lawyer who seeks to win Lis case, not on its Justice, but by a technicality. Note the "since th tem pi has been dropped," as if it had never been heard of before, yet Mis Wlllard had spoken of it many ttmea, and in her address at Buffalo, in November, 1897, ah aald. "Now we are in debt. Not legally, but mxTuily. to tbe bondholders- I shall never rest what Urn I lire Ull that debt I paid.' And yet, to believe Mrs. Fry, one would suppose It bad never been mentioned until after the dropping of the temple at the St. Paul convention. Again ahe speaka of Mrs. Carse "repudiating th interest" on th bond. When the hard times, somblned with the opposition, which waa aa unjust and unfair as this present letter, made It Impossible to raise the Interest, Mrs. Carse, with the unanimous consent of the board of trustees, entered into an agreement with the bondholders to pay them th face value of th bond leas th lnteroat, buying the bonds at th earliest possible moment, which agreement the trustees have worked earnestly to carry out and art carrying out by buying bonds a they can, and would undoubtedly have that part of their work OLHtpUted before this time had the national officers "dropped the temrle" when it wa voted to do so at t. Paul In 1 .!.. But they have given It constant attention and It I safe to say that had Ihey used as much ef fort to pay off the bond as they have to prevent the trustees from paying them II would have been done long ago. Decoration of Wlllard Hall. She also spesks of the money used In "decorating" Wlllard hall, but which waa used In completing and furnishing It in stead of "decorating" It, but omits to mention that $10,000 was voted by the bnsn of trustees, those present being Lady Henry Somerset, Frances E. Wiltard, Marion II Dunham, Helen M. Barker, Clara C. Holt man, Mary A. Woodbridge, Matilda B Carse; also Mies Helen L. Hood, secretsry and Miss Esther Push, treasurer. After ward, It being found that $2,397 was needed to complete tbe hall, it was also ordered paid, but Mrs. Fry speaks as if It was done by Mrs. Carse, when, as president of the board, she did not even vote upon this ex penditure. Speaking of the debt, which, with ac customed fairness, she makes $5,000 larger than It is, she asks, Under these clrcum stances what would the national do with the templo If It owned It?" She forgets that the national cannot own the building until it is paid for, and when It Is the interest cn the debt. $.10,000 per year will no longer have to be paid, and will swell the assets. From the Records. While the rest of the letter is In the same spirit of unfairness. It seems hardly worth while to take up every item, as It would make this article too long. To show however, how misleading It is as a whole, I will quote from "A Trumpet Blast," sent out Thanksgiving day, November 28, 1895, by the national officers: It la easy to tear down. It Ik diffi cult to build, but the builder blesses and I? rvesyii. Some years ago wo set out to own a temple that should be the home of the Women's Christian Temperance union, of us puniisning nouse, school or metnons, Its dully gospel meetings, and should als'i, by means of Its rentals, furnish a fund for our notional work and help the work o? the state unions by raying to each, from the annual Income, an amount proportion ate to what had been subscribed In that state. The temple has been reared and Is the nnest omce building, architecturally, on tne continent. The set time has come for us to eon eentrate our powers upon navlng for It Five dollars from each whlto-rlbboncr. with some larKe sump from those who can afford to give more, will pay every dollar of In debtedness resting upon It. Mrs Matilda H. I arse, who has worked most unselnxhly from the beginning, has been makine; an earnest effort this year to raise HOOMO among people or wealth In order to gel control or the cnnltal stock. Owing, how ever, to the continued distressing financial situation and sickness In Mrs. Carse'a fam ily, which has confined her to her home she has been granted another year In which to raise the desired amount. The temple trustees have secured a com mittee of counsel of the ablest and most trusty business men In Chicago. They are I.yman J. Oage, ji. H. Kohlsaat, John K. Walsh, James W. Ellsworth, R. K. Jenkins, Thomas Kane, K. Harlev Bradlev, William K. Hale, Norman B. Ream. William O. Hlbbard. Rev. IT. Jihn Henry Barrows, Kev. Ir. H. A. De'ano. No better guar antee of the fenslblllty of the enterprise could be given than these honored names. While Ciod reigns In heaven and white ribbon hearts brat steadfastly on earth we will never desert this enterprise or take a backward step. What ouiiht to be done can be done. We ought to own the temple; It Is folly to excuse ourselves by tsaylng dial It has cost more than we are able to pay. However, that may be the temple Is built and its ownership Is within our grasp. This was signed by Frances E. Wlllard, president; Lilian M. N. Stevens, vice presl- dent-at-large; Katherlne L. Stevenson, cor responding secretary; Clara C. Hoffman, re cording secretary; Helen M. Barker, treas urer, and Frances E. Boauchamp, assistant recording secretary. Facta Still Trnc. Tbese facts and the othera recited in the "BlaBt" were true then and are true toady; that some women have changed their minds docs not affect them. For many yeara the treasurer of the national union waa cus todian of all the temple funds. Mrs. Carse has never received or handled them In any way, nor has she ever received one dollar for all her work through all these yeara, and It has cost her much each year beside her time, while Mrs. Fry receives a good salary for her services, and while no one criticises her for this It harly fits her for sitting in Judgment on one who has worked without thought or hope of personal gain all these years and in face of the misrepresen tations which have been so canstantly made. One other point must be touched upon. The temple was completed Just aa the hard times of the last decade set In, consequently the building has not been able until the present year to ahow Its earning qualities. Now It is entirely rented, although still at a low figure, but rente are advancing. The rent roll this year Is $170,000 in round fig ures. This should net, after all expenses are paid. Including $30,000 interest on mort gage on building, at least $30,000. This aum will go to pay off the back Interest due to Marshall Field on the building, which was Incurred during the yeara of financial panic. It amounts to $62,500, not to $67,500, aa stated by Mrs. Fry. The building earned enough the first three or four yeara to pay off the floating debt of $65,000. Had It not been cumbered with this there would have been a surplus Instead of a deficit in spite of the years cf panic. It Is simply childish for Mrs. Fry to say that the $600,000 mort gage can be foreclosed at any time. We could get it lengthened forty yeara If we wanted, for tbe building is on a safe finan cial basis and the trusteea hold $316,500 of the atock. Let me close by quoting from "A Trumpet Blast," the first sentence I took from tt: "it is easy to tear down, it la difficult to build, but the builder blesaes and is blessed." Mrs. Carse waa the builder, and we need but to read thla letter of the corre sponding secretary of the national union to see wbo It la that seeks to tear down. ' MARION H. DUNHAM, Secretary Board of Temple Trustees. flow Life to Vcak Hon, Old Man Mads Young Again-Weak Men Find Olc'-TimaStrength end Power of Youth. Trial Package Mailed Free. To th men who bar tried every known remedy to revive their waning power or lost manhood, and hav given up in de spair, the following message opine a tuoat blessed promise. Tliis new dlaeov ery restores all men who suffer with any form of sexual weakness, resulting from youthful folly, premature loas of strength and memory, weak back, varicocele or emaciation of parts. It give the warmth, atrength and development Juat where it I needed and cure at once ail the Ills and trouble that com of years of misuse ef the functions, for it has been aa abaolut success In all (awes. A simple request to the Plate Medical Institute, 17M Kiektren ftuildln-. F. Wayne. Ind., will bring you one of the free trial package In a plain wrapper, without any marks to Identify lta contents or where It cornea from. Th Institute ha had o many Inquiries from men wha are unable to leav home or thvlr business to be treated, that tt haa perfected thla splendid home treatment and sends it in free trial packages to ail part of th world to sliow Juat how aaay and almple it la to be cured at home of any sexual weak ness when this marvelous new aexual die revery I em played Th Institute make no raatrirtiotia and any ntn who writ will receive by mall a free trial of thla wonderful remedy absolutely free. Thee ho write need have no fear of any pub licity, a the Btate Medical Inatltute la an old rstabllalied Inailtutlcn, Incorporated by lb a Lata tor M yeara UWVARM n Wh1 ill vk u't WW VY. A. COOK, M. D. THE FIRST EFFECTS streaks under eyes, accompanied by pain I melancholy, evil thoughts, headache, rlnrln eyes, flabby muscles, nervousness, trembll Itching or twitching of tbe limbs, fluttering Ice,' tendency to doie or sleep, baahfulnes thepe are onlv a Dart of the avmntnms wh other nuftVrerR have only a few of the symp perfectly healthy; as the case advances the In the urine or at stool, unknown to the s spermatorrhoea. VARICOCELE in an unhealth In the srrotu strains, blows, falls and aometlmee throng It occura generally In the young and mostl cases la knotty, rordy and enlarged, bulgl the vessel when full of blood a knotty app with heavy aching pain, sometimes extendi there Is oftentimes a sense of weight on th Is very liable to perspiration. When take If filled with a bunch of worms or a rluste exists In auch a degree as to resemble rup epididymis becomes detached from tbe test the result Is a considerable weakening of t complete lmpoteney. Some men feel a delicacy about talkl really there la no cause for It. "Let him t Delays are dangerous. These conditions d run the more complicated they become. Let tt not be forgotten that we cur from business; blood poison In 27 to 90 da hood In S to 12 weeks; stricture, without k In on treatment. Our consultation at off! written contract aa good aa a bond to mak money In every case we accept for treatme 110-112 South 14th St., Enclose Stamp for Free Book. Hours E N Yiu should consider thoroughly the etc., of a Doctor or Specialist before Loaajeat Eatabllahed, Moat Sac ceaafal and Reliable Speclal lata In Diseases of Men. a Medical Diplomat, Llceaaes and Newapaper Rec ord. Show. V Call at our offices or write, and If we find that yon cannot b cured w will NOT accept your money UNDER ANT CONDITION; but if w aooapt your case for treatment we will guarantee a SAFE AND POSITIVE CURE- In the shortest possible time without Injurious after-effect. Our charge will be aa low a possible for conscientious, skillful and successful service. Con sult u before consenting to any surgical procedure upon Important blood Tea sels and organs. DISEASES OF MEN STRICTURE. VARICOCELE, NERVO-SEXUAL DEBILITY, BLOOD POISON (Syphilis) RUPTURE AND KIDNEY nlCCACCC Painful andFreqoenl uioungkui Urinations. them to stay oured when others fall. Oar special homo treatment will care yen. Refareaoea Beat Basks and Leading Baalnesa Men ot tha city. Coaanltatlen at ef- let or br letter free and strictly Omen Henre, 9 a. sn. to 8 p. STATE ELECTRO-MEDICALINSTITUTE 1308 FARNAM ST., 0UAHA, NEB. Longest established. Thoroughly reliable. AuthorUed by th law of the state, All the The Animals of the World NOW READY Complete la Twenty Feur Part. At Tho Deo Office lPrice 10c each By mail 15c in FACTS n 11 I I'l II llliJMMfll' al.iJBaw.aaau.uinw. Tho new century, with its modera meth ods and a-hlrrements baa brooght with tt a restlessness that Is dally prodtirtnc sat of "nerve maladies. th natural result of worry and work shifted from xnoscla to mind. Th present gecarwUoa Is sot fcrtlfled for the swift change from tha oil to th new order of t flings and w a great financier and politicians, great lead ers and mental giants tppljas; down to temporary and often permajMBt rtirwmnt with the work laid out before thru) rjly J half finished. Nature 1 playing- tha rol j of Shjlock in exacting the last atmca of 1 men who violate her laws and defiaattly refne sJd. With referenoe to UM doll' rate nrrre center. Charoot says; T7hs there Is tremble here there la IrooM -rT where." Provide xtsiora with tba rlgM kind, of help and the tltaJIsetl life meads th nerve, in th ' word f ghsksiat "This Is an art that doth mend xsatttra, Secret abnsa causes tha entire erganls-ni to become Incapable and weak in body aa well as mind. ar en br the saXloir complexion, ptnrplaa on face, frjre&nad. nrtk or breasts, dmrk n th back, poor memory, confused, twq In the ears, flashes or spots before th ng in the llmha. unoomf ortabls faeillaa or irreg-'lsr Deal-tea; of the heart, coward s. difficult; of crareTrtrattrig thought, etc J lch aaino sufferers are aftlirted with, wmla toma, and to outward appearanoa Mm re ar weakening drwams, vita fluid escapes ufferer; this loss is known as hiddaa y state of the spermatic chord and reins m. It Is caused through excesses, saver h excessive horseback and bicycle riding, y in the left side. The whole vela la old ng out in places to little pouches, giving earance. The disease comes on lowly, ng up the chord to the groin and the back, e affected aide, which become flabby and n In the hand tha affected aecttona feels as r of cords; It sometime. If neglected, ture; In advanced stages of the dtseas th Icle and la plainly felt by th finger; he sexual power and If not cured and in ng or writing upon auch subjects, hut hat Is without sin cast the first ston." o not cure themselves, and the longer they e varicocele In one week without detention ya without potash or mercury; lost man nlfe or sounds In 2 to S weeks, and piles ce or by letter la free and w furnish a e a perfect snd permanent curs or refund nt. Omaha (Over Dally News) 8 a, m. to 8 p. m.; 8undaya, 10 to 12:30. CONTEMPLATING TREATMENT. factors ot skill, experience, reliability. entrusting to him your health, the perfect ana lasting recovery oi wnicn mean o much to your futur life and hap piness. Every man who I afflicted owe It to himself and hi posterity to get oured safely and positively, without leaving any blight or weakness In hi ayatem. Tou do not want to be mutilated and maimed for life trying to be cured of VARICOCELE, STRICTURE and kindred troubles In a few day by sur gical procedure. We make no misleading statements or unbusinesslike propositions to th afflicted in order to secure their pat ronage. The many year of our uo cessful practice In Omaha prove that our method of treatment are BAFB and CERTAIN. Onr Comblaod Electro-Medical Treatment haa nitay friend s4 few enemies. It friend are tlM.ee wbo kav teated Its raarlt and have been eared. It nits are thoeo Doctors or Spe cialists who an eavleaa of alt other treatment. that bar proven mora anoceaefol than their own. snd nil reflex complications and as sociate., disease and weakness ef men. We will spare you th penalties as sociated with Nervous Debility, Weak ening Drains, Belf-Abua. Watting of Organs, Frematura Deollne. Lota of Memory, Bnergy and Ambition, Here ousneaa, I'lmplcs, Palpitation of th Heart, Bhortnea of Mrasth, Apprehen sion of Calamity, th Chagrin and Mortification of Weaklings, the Fright of Contemplated Matrimony. Wa will render you robust and strong mentally phyalcally and sexually. Call at our offloea or writ for mir book, FREE, which will explain th dlueast we cure, and how wa curs eeandeatlal. Bandar to a. m. te X p. m. Parts LdviriQ