Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 04, 1903, Page 30, Image 58

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    30
THE ILLUSTRATED' DEE.
October 4, 1003.
0LOT
mm
m
BLOOD POISON
i.v . "W""J " w necessary to use sound judgment. Io not try to save
ice hat can be obtained. It will be practicing true economy iu the end.
f.f tnJfJ. MpdI i preeminent succc
. 7, U,B8 pefniiar to men and womankind, skin, blood and
nervous troubles.
Overcome in ninety days or no pay. Symptoms overcome
in seven to twentv-flvi iIavh without t.ni..ai, .
If HllliPrincr rrrim n i...nu 4. ... .
.. owlu luiuai, laiuug nair, Done paiiia, come and wo will drive
the poiHon from the blood forever by our New KvHtem Treatment.
PlIPQ "!e1 witnout tho xm' "f tho kifi' or detention from biwincis. We treat
I IIUO and cure by means of the celebrated and nm-cesHful Hrinkerhoff System. The
n1'0'' lny n thirty to sixty (lavs.
NrRUflllN nFRII ITYc,mMl ln "irty to sixty days. Improvement from the
"r!.1 W,UTU "LUILI I I art. If y(,u Buffer from loss of enemy and ambition,
iee timi when you arise in the morning lame h.M Uizximss u before tb(l t.vl,H
and feel you are not the man you once were wt, wm cure you for lifw
WFfllf MFQQ !:ither Partial or total overcome by our Viral Absorbent Pad
IlLrlllllLUU ir weak diseased men Call and we will explain why it cures
when all else fails. A friendly t hat will t.OBt you nothing.
uflRlf.flf.FI P Cuml in flVG dajs hi' absorption, no pain. The enlarged veins
VmilUUULLL are due to mumps, bicycle riding, horseback riding, disease,
etc. In time it weakens a man mentally a8 well as physically. We will cure you
for life or make no charge.
HYfinnflFI F CUIVd ,bj almorI,ti()n Jn forty-eight hours; no loss of time. Why
II I UIIUUbLU "T lunger wuen you can be cured in few huurs ,)t - moder.
STRICTURE
ate cost? Call :ind rnimulr iih sit uncix
Cured by absorption in fifteen days; no pain, no cutting, no opcruti0n
is healed and the entire system restored to its healthy state.
Test.-mon-
By our method the urethal canal
Cook Medical Co.. 11M South Fourteenth Street. Omaha, Nb.
.nti?m"1L Complying with your raqUMt to write you describing my condition
after taking the lust motth'i treatment, which I received at your offlco, I write the
iZJl? I it, u feJ" no v'deno f nr further trouble aa regard nightly dralne and
h? :. 1..hy' lrJ"nLn years. That part la cured, and I believe
IL..J1 Ii i V CU.rJd; Th? boihmr somewhat still, but I am much Im
proved, and I know that I shall aoon be entirely rid of them. I will let you know
when I need mora treatment Toura truly.
AXBL EBICSKN.
ials.
COOK MEDICAL CO
OFFICB HOURS -8. a m. to 8 p. m.
Cheyenne, Wyo.. July 20, 1903.
Cook Medloal Co.. Omaha. Neb.,
Gentlemen: Please send me another shipment of medicine.
m. considerably hotter. My mouth and throat are not sore.
My shins are still a little sore and not quite healed. My
hair has stopped falling out and I am confident 1 shall soon be
well. I owe you my lire, aa well as my health. Your treat
ment has done more In two months than others In yeara.
Yours, etc. B. BEL.1
UO-19 S. 14th St.
(OVER DAILY NEWS.)
SUNDAYS-10 a. ra. to 2:30 b. m.
ar
Reporters of the Ancients
fiTw
ir WAS eminently proper that ws
should pl:tce a tablet over the
grave of Thomas Lloyd, the ftrat
official stenographer to the
American congress." aaid a vet.
eran of the art to a Washington Star re
porter, "and I huvo been deeply
Interested In dolvlng Into ancient
history to find out when and
where shorthand reporting was f 1 rs t In
troduced. Kven before (he days of print
ing presses Cicero Introduced a system of
shorthand reporting lalled the Tyronean
method, from Tyro, a frecdman. who was
one of Cicero's most expert writers. That
even at that euriy date systems of short
hand writing stenography came Into gen
eral use for certain purpones, and that
the methods were very effective, we may
Infer from a pnKURe In Horace., who. when
aJdrettslng a nhortlmnd writer, says: 'You
write In such a manner that you will have
no oecaalon In four whole years to ask
for another sheet or parchment.'
"Julius Caesar, biddmg for popularity In
hlH first consulate, cauwd the proceedings
of the Roman senate to be published dully,
and these report were taken down by
trained writers, who were called tabular!!,
being what we today style reporters. These
reporters were probably only rapid writers
using the ordinary characters. The reports
were revised and edited before their ex
posure to the public eye. and were then
for
YOU ARE TOO THIN!
1' " j a.hT"l cr rru c.
ur CMTiuciug uial pactum, at 1 Vftl!':
N.r. m Klh Builder. b.r..u; rri. lill,!
Wrwod A-... o PWn- 'W
w niiKtri rrMrmtuia mm tor Mia la
tr eke MffMt k HtCmhII Ur Cm.
circulated even In the distant provinces
Just the same aa the Congressional Uecord
Is now sent to the constituents of members
of our congress. Prior to this time the
great annals of the lawmakers were writ
ten on tablet and placed in a room of the
pontiff, where they were accexHible to the
public. The people hud to go to the 'news
peper,' and It was not delivered at their
homes as now. This room of the pontiff
was a general reading room, reminding
one of the periodical room of the Con
gressional library.
"Why the ancients had no printing
presses It has been difficult for students to
aeciae, lor tney had the material for mak
ing mem and paper and parchment
printing, and then, ns now. there
heavy and growing demand for reading
matter. It was not until the malprl.l nr
wilting changed that there was much
progress In the matter or threading Hie
news, Tho decalogue was written upon
tablets or stone; the Athenian record, now
known as the 'Parian Chronicle,' was en
graved upon tablets of marble, and next wa
find Inscriptions on thin plates or metal and
on the broad leaves of certain plants, 1 on
sheets formed of woven texture from the
bark of trees and on the skins of animals.
Theae heavy and cumbrous volumes' were
aa difficult to handle as the Iron money im
posed upon the Spartans.
"The Assyrians cams nearer to tho print
ing press than did the Egyptians, for they
discovered and practiced a method or rap
Idly multiplying their writings, using en
graved seals, consisting of cylinders rrotn
which any number of Impressions could be
made. Naturally Intellectual advancement
was rapid with ths Introduction of 'circu
lating documents, books and papers,' ,tor
the reading class was then only 'the
wealthy, even In the best days or Roman
civilization. The assembled intellect heard
the news at the Olympian games and In ths
Atheniiui theater.
"Cicero's shorthand reporters were the
beginning or ths stenographic art, without
which we could not get along very well In
this age of newspaperlng. Cicero's plan
culled only for the taking down and copy
ing of the proceedings or the twnate by edu
cated xlaves and these copies were sent out
Cicero worked on the same plan of gaining
popularity ns do the staleamen who send
out the Congressional Record, public docu
ments and garden seeds, and he was un
uucxtlonably a pretty shrewd politician It
s gratifying, however, to stenographers of
tuo present Oajr U kaow that we aw uot
Rluven as were the writers and uhorthund
reporters or these days. True we have
rrequently long hours and laborious work,
but one or our profetmion will earn more
ln a single dav than did the ancient re
porters In a whole year. It was, unques
tionably, the system or slavery which was
the bane or ancient civilization and the
primary cause or Its ruin. Capital owned
labor; therefore labor was cheap and with
out dignity. Authors dined upon rarities
costing thousands of dollars ln the case or
a single meat, while his slaves who pro
duced his books were nearly starved. The
only cost Involved In the production or a
book was the sustenance or the Bervile
writers and embellishers. Publication was
carried on Just as a plantation was worked
la the days before the war. The largest
books, with the most beautiful and ex
pensive bindings, could be produced at a
rar lees cost In dollars and cents than they
can be made in this day. And the same
reasons which prevented modern Improve
ments In the old slave-holding states pre
vented the introduction of the printing
press as an organ of ancient civilization.
"Atticua. a Roman bihilophilfst. trained
a large number of slaves to the especial
duty of merely transcribing. There were
nve readers for each one hundred trained
writers In different apartments and 60)
copies of a short poem or small book could
be produced rapidly and at little cost, leas
by far than the boasted powers of the presi
with all our modern appliances In the
art or printing. These shorthand slaves
csuld produce in twelve hours SUo copies of
a poem equal In extent to Tennyson's
Enoch Arden' and its accompanying poems
and ror this work they received one pound
or a kind of common cors each, with a
umall allowance or wine. This kind or
reed' would- not go with stenographers or
the preeent day. We have a ralr and
healthy scale or prices ror our work and
we receive It or we don't work."-Washington
Star.
Speed in a Balloon
A sample of what tiaveiers by the air
route may expect whs furnished when two
Oerman ueronauts ascended from Berlin ln
a balloon last Thursday and after a peril
ous ride landed near Calais, Just as they
were about to be swept to sea, on Friday
nornlng.
In some eighteen hours the balloon was
driven a net distance of MO tiltea, but prob
ably actually traveled more than iwice
that distance, buffeted ba k and forth by
conflicting currents. In rhe end It struck
ths great gale raging along ths channel
and was driven at a speed as high at times
as 120 miles an hour.
There Is something uncanny in tra'-elins;
at great speed In a balloon. No matter how
violent the gale, the aeronaut himself ! In
dead calm. Traveling literally with the
speed of tho wind, the wildest tempest la
to him still nlr; only by looking down and
seeing the landscape whiz past can he esti
mate his speed, and then It seems as if
the earth were slipping from under him.
he olone remaining unmoved, ir the earth
Is veiled by mist he may le quite Ignorant
of his peril of violent motion New York
World.
Dr.CHARLES
FLESH FOOD
For the Form and Complexion
a bm iucMiulljr ustl by leading anrcssea.
lagera and women ut luklon fur mora tliiu &
renra.
WhartTar acpliad !l ban InaUntly abaortwd through
IU. poT or th n " wondarlul autrltiua
feeda til matins tlaa ea
Removlnjr Wrinkle
" m". lptU-tlon often showing
J JTlrl yintk "ood P0lhly ma only
preparation known to medusa) ac.erc. that will
ful hollowa In the neck aud prodiuw firm,
healthy He... on tbm rheeki. arm. and haada.
For Developing- the Bust
tMi brnk-n from nura.ns It haa the hlgheat
MwianH of p'.yaleiua. Two uoaea are oftea
.UIBcienl to n,.k. nrm ur belutitui
, feOLD UY DEPAHTMKNT STOHM
, AND DRl'OtilsTS.
ReraUr price tl.Uu a box. but to all who take
omo oeiiar, we will aeod tan it. h.... ... ..7T
--A Sample Box and our Book.
Art of aUM(." fully iliua
trued. 11 he eeat free to hoy
. . ,. . ' - wine so pay tor
taa of TBattinc. i hraao
UR. CHARLES CO.. 'r
warper.
FREE