TITE OMAHA UAlLf BE1S. SUNDAY, MAY 1, 1904.' IT MAKING TDEX1TT BEAUTIFUL . . . ... - . - - Boms Effort in That Directioi Viiible ts tbt laksi Ers la Omaba. . PICTURE AND POSEY II HPPY UNISON Tulaee at Travel lllaaalaed with Cr geeae Werke ef Art aa Tillage Designed to Make Lit Worth the Urlat. "Nature Designs Art Develops." was the expressive sentiment lettered on the arched entrance to Manscom park some yrars ng-. The sentiment conveyed a noble truth to all who entered, expressing In few words nn ture's handiwork and man's handicraft united Jn that embowered retreat. Other parks hava been linked to Omaha's first and favorite park, each developing along the lines of tha Original and designed with con necting boulevards to form a chain of urban beauty spots through tha city. Much has been done In this way to make the city beautiful and thereby Increase the pleasures of life. Much remains to be done to complete tbe work planned. The park commissioners are pressing onward, earn estly and systematically as means and time will permit, and the Federation of Improvement Clubs promises to lend ag gressive assistance to tbe work. In the lexicon of that combination there Is no uch word asfalL It means progress and push from start to finish. These are not the only forces actively pushing Omaha' to the front as the city beautiful. Great as they are In publio con fidence, there are others, perhaps not Just as good, but certainly as energetic, de voted, artistic and forehanded. They do not limit themselves to any particular lo cality. Their activities are as expansive as the city's boundaries. With them there Is no straining of lung for preliminary ef fect, no bandwagon parade of plans, no seeking for publlo applause. "Deeds, not words." Is blaionea on, their banners, and art for art's sake" Is their Inspiration. . Patriotic Enterprise. The designs of nature In and about Omaha are too many and varied to be prop erly adorned under official sanction. Indi vidual talent and private means are neces sary to give tha "deft artistic touch" to1 neglected beauty spots and transform un sightly lots Into variegated dreams. To this patriotic duty the Association of Sign board Artists bring the unwavering devo tion and the aelf-aacrlAce that stamps the true genius of the brush and the divine muse. In a few years they have accom plished wonders. If you doubt, look around. Turn where you may, evidence of their enterprise and skill greet the eye, filling the soul with Indescribable emotions and driving strong men to hard drink. Borne localities are discriminated against slightly, but this neglect Is offset by the unique collections of art stretched along the main thoroughfares. The association believes In "doing the greatest good for the greatest number" and have bent their energies toward .converting Into lanes of pictorial art and poesy the highways tra versed by "Mr. Murphy's slectromobllea. Fasao's lassaortal Wand. In this, as In all art exhibits, repeated examinations are necessary to fully com prehend the motif of the artist, , the deli cate blending of colors, the lights and hades, and the explanatory notes. Sub jects grave and gay reflect various phases of tbe commercial spirit. Portraits of men of eminence, dead and 'living, soberly sug gest how to smoke yourself Into the ranks of the Immortals. What boots It to climb the ladder of fame In the usual way, when one may go up la smoker In these portraits the artists, unwittingly, perhaps, how greater respect for the dead than the living. The former are usually placed In the'10-eent class, while the living slse up as I centers, but this delicate distinction goes not detract from the work aa a whole. All admirable tribute to a popular aong, 1 revised to date, Is a Scotch masterpiece, representing a man In evening dress fash ioning a nightcap. A bunch of natives In highland costume and a thirst extend their palms aa eagerly aa polttlclana, humming the while "Coming to the Rye." ' Another spiritual casket In eesl brown tint halls the wayfarer with this saluta tion: Love 'makes the world go 'round. If we believe what poets sing; Tet many a wise man long since found That highballs do the selfsame thing. A homely epic combining picture and eng.'. Is a representation of a woman's foot winter clad, peeping from . beneath folds of delicate lingerie. Attached la this soleful melody: For Freedom now so seldom shrieks. The only time she blubbers Is when some heartless son of a gun Runs .off with her fur-lined rubbers.' ,,.)' The Real Tolas;. Lees .patriotic but more suggestive to the weary toller on the back platform is this piping song: . Full many a human you may koow Along life's pathway poking Bwore off chewing years ago And wisely took to smoking. ' Just sonth of tha Sixteenth street vtn duct an unsightly mound of clay that mar the vista where traffic rolls is msdo agreeable to 'the eye by a striking collec tion of portraits and panegyric. One wears a modification of "the smile that won't come oft" and hollera this eh link of mal ady: . . Oet rid of that painful expression; Be- happy while you csn. Take l.uny's III Is before etch meet And eat like a hired man. Here, aa elsewhere. Is a bust of the twen tieth century woman la all her glory. With the shoulders of an athlete and a wasp tike waist she la the embodiment of grace gnd elegance. By a deft touch of the grtlst hand her puckering lips seem to Burmuri ., Tbe lovely red oa JUacy'e cheeks Wears well In every crisis; Just the stuff for a leap year bluff, And Is sold at cut-rate prices A delicate hint to spinster cooks is Smothered In this breskfast food bouquet: The hoarders thought the story Incredible, Hew the maiden made Bostusa quite edible. It was noised shout Till the boys fuund It out. And thejt stralgtrey considered her wed abla ''There Are Othere. It la Impossible In this brief artlcls to le Justice to an art 'collection so vast and varied. Those singled out for distinguished aonsideratlon combine art and poetry, twin La TO feel the exquisite thrill of motherhood with indescribable dread and fear. Every woman should know that the danger, pain and horror of child-birth can be entirely avoided by tha use of Mother' Friend, a scientific liniment for external use only, which toughens and renders puaoie.au we pan, aau assists nature in its sablimo M work. By its aid thousands of women have passed this greet critie in oerfect safety liUil and without pain. Sold at $i.oo per fpn" bottle by druggists. Our book of price Lets . ' 1 J aluo! to all women -sopt free Address f ill mOADrtoji memtetATom m, Atimmtm, La U U Meets of genius, to an eminent degree. Many- Mhre alrooot -ornany merllniiwm re marked by admonitory suggestions which improve the perspective aa the pic ture recedes from view. Never before has Omaha had a collection of such high tech nical average. In which the dominating note is realistic strength, artistic wholeeomeneas and abundance of color. Tha poetry, ton, bears evidence of claislc Insplrallon. The artists are to be congratulated on the work accomplished, snd cheered on to greater exertions. Every visitor to Omaha cannot fall to be Impressed by the be wildering evidence of culture visible on evry side. We are advancing rapidly to ward the Ideal city beautiful. Let not the sneers of the uncouth check our pace for a moment. With every vacant lot from Florence to Fort Crook, from the Missouri to the Papplo. dedicated to art and poesy, soon will be fulfilled the prophecy of the heai-t-stirring song: ' We may be happy yet; you bet! I RATTLE OP THE YOl NGSTEH9, "Can anyone tell me what a Christian Is?" asked the Sunday school teacher. "Yes, ma'am. l ean," answered a little girl. "A Christian le a man who doesn't swear when his wife Is cleaning house." "I hope, Johnny," said the visitor, "that I haven't disturbed your pa and ma at dinner." "No," replied Johnny; "we was Just goln' to sit down, but pa seen you from the win dow an' he told ma not to have dinner till you went." ; i "Do you know the meaning of the word laiyT" asked the teacher, addressing a small pupil. ' "Bure!" answered the little fellow. "It means that you'd rather- sit down and watch the other fellow do It." "Boys." said the old woman who was on her way to church, "don't you know that j It Is wrong to play ball on Bunday?" "We ein't playln ball," replied one of the youngsters. "We're only practlcin' fer ter morrer's game." Frances had been brought up In a strict Presbyterian household and in all her nine years had never attended service In a church of another denomination. While on a visit with her mother to a part of the country far from her own heme she entered the parlor one Saturday after noon and eagerly asked: "Oh, mamma, may I go to. the "Piscopal church with Gertie tomorrow T I'll promise not to believe a single word the minister says!" There are two boys who manage to be rather' unruly in school and their teacher was so exasperated one day that she or dered them to remain after hours and write their names 1.000 times. She wstched them plunge Into the task. Borne fifteen min utes later one of them grew uneasy and begun watching his companion in disgrace. Suddenly the first one burst out with a roar of despair and between his sobs said to the teacher: "'Taln't fair, mum. His name's Bush and mine's Schjuttermeyelr!" Father Mackln of St. Paul's Catholic church of Washington. D. C, relatea an amusing Incident that came to his notice while walking recently near his parsonage. Father Mackln In his walk chanced to meet three lads, two of whom, altar boys at Bt. Paul's, were dragging the third toward the prleet. - - "Father,' said one of the altar boys, "this kid wants to be an altar boy like us." - "Indeed.- said the father hirmlnr ' hla hand over the lad's carls. ' "My son, have you been baptised 7" The child looked 'at him 'for a moment, pussled. Thenhe se'ehmed: "No, sir, not baptised, but I've been vac cinated." REUGIOIS. Among the memorials now being planned In England for honoring the late Rev. C. H. Bpurgeon, Is one for buvlng the large and beautiful estate of Westwood and con verting it i'to a home of rest for ministers and missionaries. William Booth, commander In chief of the Ralvatlon Army, began his 76th year on the loth o this month. Mr. Booth was born In Nottingham. England, and preached his first sermon In the open air when not vet 10 years old. Tbe Salvation Army was first known as the Church mission. As the outcome of the worn which Mrs. Alloe Gordon Oulllck, a missionary of the womans hoard, started twenty years agu, for the education of Illiterate girls of Spain, an International Institution Is sbout to be started at Madrid, where a suitable site has been purchased at a cost of m,O00. Rev. John P. Chtdwlrk. who has been chaplain at the House of the Good Shep herd. New Tork, haa been appointed pas tor of Ht. Ambrose church. Manhattan. Father Chldwick was chaplain on the bat tleship Maine when thst veeael wss blown up, and later was chaplain on the cruiser New Tor. There are in New Kngland, according to the rtguree of The New York Examiner. I SM Protestant churches and XXSt Roman Catholic churches and stations. Of the former l.SuO have more than 100 members each and pay their pastor at least tl.00 a year salary, and 246 churchea have more than S00 members. It Is proposed to have around the Pro testant Episcopal cathedral. In Mornlngsldo Heights, N. Y., seven cbspels, each to rep resent some element thst has gone to help build up the municipality of New York, and these are to be built without lriet of creed. The central chapel of all will be the one 'io nearly finished at the rost of ISuu.Ouu. and Is the gift of August Bel com In memory of his mother, Tbe Stout Indian Young Men's Christ's association secretary has hoe.-i speaking at the assoe'itlona In the vicinity of Re York lateiv. He la a full-blooded Bloug. His name Is Te-sun-ke-mani, or Walking Horse. He travels among Iho forty-five as sociations in the Dakotas. These associa tions, he says, have recently erected three new log buildings, making the number now occupied thirteen. The Indiana built these thenmelves snd gave the money for (he hardware, windows, etc. One of the most remsrksble places of worship in the world Is the miners' chattel In Mndd Menlgdd colliery. Swansst. Wales, where for more than fifty yeare he workers have each morning assembled for Worship. This sanctuary is 1tuateo close to the bottom of the shaft. The only light Is that obtained from a solitary t-y safety lamp hung over the pulpit from the celling and the oldest miner in the celllery is generally chosen to officiate. The Rev. Dr. James Boyd Brady, former pastor of Orace Methodist Episcopal church of Worcester, Mass.. who haa b-on commissioned by the New England confer ence of the Methodist Episcopal church to raise a fund of IAu.muO for the relief of superannuated-preachers of the conference, has a more ambitious plsn In mind, and will so to the general conference In Los Angeles to lay before It a plsn to ralwe between t.0u0.0"0 and $S,0.u for the relief of the aged preachers and the widows and orphans of Methodist preachers of tbe country. la tha Joy of tha household, fat without it no happinesg can ba complete. How sweet tha picture of mother and babe, angelg gmile at and commend the thoughts and aspiration of the mother banding over the cradle. The ordeal through which the expectant mother mutt pass, how ever, it to full of danger and guttering that lie looks forward to the hour when the shall m a mm mm se, i M (77 S j H N IT ifll wm STANDARD CHILD LABOR LAW ewaenaaashasBi Ktaturt tbs Ifomcn's Clubs sf Gonatrr Are TJuitel to Support. MORE Pf OUCTION FOR THE LITTLE ONES Provlsloae Deelgaed te letirt tease Measaro ef Development of Mia 4 aac Bo4y Before Entry ea Straggle for Br eat. Just how the women of the country are very much Interested In child labor legisla tion and have united through the General Federation of Women's Clubs to work for the adoption of what Is known as the "standard" bill. Its text follows: Bee 1. No child' under 14 years cf sge shall be employed, permitted or suffered to work In any factory, workshop, mercantile establishment, store, business office, tele graph office, restaurant, hotel, apartment house or In the distribution or transmis sion of merchandise or messages. No such child shall bt employed In any work par- formed for wages or other compensation, to whomsoever payable, during the hours when the public schools of ths town or city In which he resides are In session, nor be employed at any work before the hour of I o'clock In the morning or after ths hour of 7 o'clock In the evening. Bee. 1 No child under 14 years of age shsll be employed, permitted or suffered to work In any factory, workshop or mer cantile ectabllshmsnt unless the person or corporation employing him procures and keeps on file and accessible to the truant officers of the town or cfty, and to the In spectors of factories, an age and schooling certificate as hereinafter prescribed, and keeps two complete lists of all such chil dren employed therein, one on file and one conspicuously posted near the princi pal entrance of the building In which ruch children ara employed, and also keeps on file a complete list, and sends to the super intendent of schools, or, where there Is no superintendent, to the school commit tee, the names of all minors over the age of 14 years employed therein who cannot read at sight and write legibly simple sen tences In the English language. Ace ana Schooling Cert I fleets. Sec. 8. An age and schooling certificate shall be approved only by the superin tendent of schools or by a person author ised by hlra In writing, or, where there Is no superintendent of schools, by a person authorised by the school committee; pro vided, that no member of a school com mittee or other person authorised as afore said shall have authority to approve such certificate for any child then In or about to enter his own employment, or the em ployment of a firm or corporation of which he le a member, officer or employe. The person approving the certificate shall have authority to administer the oath provided for therein, but no fee shall be charged therefor. Sec. 4. An age and schooling certificate shall not be approved unleea satisfactory evidence Is furnished by ths last school census, the duly attested transcript of the certificate of birth or baptism of such child, or other religious record, or the register of birth of such child with a town or city clerk, that such child Is of the age stated In the certificate. Sec. 8. The age and schooling certificate of a child under 14 yeare of age shall not be approved and signed until he presents to the person authorised to approve and sign the same an employment ticket as hereinafter prescribed, duly filled out and signed. A duplicate of each age and schooling certificate shall be filled out and kept on file by the school committee. Any explanatory matter may be printed with such certificate. In the discretion of the school committee or superintendent of schools. The employment ticket and the age and schooling certificate shall be separately printed, and shall be filled out, signed, and held or surrendered, aa Indi cated In the following forms: EMPLOYMENT TICKET. When (nsme of child) height (feet and Inches) eyee (color) complexion (fair or dark), hair (color) , presents an age and schooling certificate duly signed. I Intend to employ (htm or her) at (nature of occu pation). (Signature of Intending employer or agent.) (Town or city and date.) AGE AND BCHOOUNO CERTIFICATE. This certifies that I am the (father, mother, guardian or custodian) of (name of child) and that (he or she) was born at (name of town or city) In the county of (name of county. If known) and state (or country) of on the (day and year of birth) , and Is now (number of years and months) old. Uignsture of (father, mother, guardian or custodian.) (Town or dty and date.) AGE AND BCHOOLINd TICKET. Then personally appeared before me the above named (name of person signing) and made oath thst the foregoing certificate by (htm or her) signed is true to the beet of (his or her! knowledge and' belief. I hereby an- prove the foregoing certificate of (name of child) height (feet and Inches) eves (color) complexion (fair or dark) hair (color) having no sufficient reason to doubt that (he or she) Is of the age tnerein certified. I hereby certify that (he or she) can read at sight and (can or cannot) write legibly simple sentences In the English language, and that the or she) has reached the normal development of a child of (hie or her) age. and Is In sound health and Is physic ally sble to perform the work which (he or ah el Intends to do. and that (he or she) has regularly attended ths public schools or a school equivalent inereio. lor not less than 160 days during the school ysar previous to arriving at the age of 14 years, or during the year previous to applying for such school record, and hss received during such period instruction in reading, spelling, writing. English grammar and geography and Is familiar with the funda mental operations of arithmetic to and In cluding fractions. This certificate belongs to (name of child In whose behalf it Is drawn) and Is to be surrendered to (him or her) whenever (he or she) lsavee the service of the corporation or employer holding the same: but If not claimed by said child within thirty days from such tint It shall be returned to the superin tendent of schools, or, where there Is no superintendent of schools, to the school committee. (Signature of person authorised to approve end sign, with official character or author- (Town or city and date.) reaalttes fev Vlelatlea. ' Be. a Whoever employs a child under 14 yeare of age, and whoever having under his control a child under such age per mits such child to be employed In violation of sections 1 or I of this act. shall, for euch offense, be fined not more than f54; and whoever continues to employ any ehlld In violation of either of said sections of this act after being notified by a truant officer or aa Inspector of factories thereof, shall tor every day thereafter that such employment continues, be fined not less than So nor snore than t0. A failure to produce to a truant offloer or Inspector of facto rlas any age and schooling certificate or list required by this act shall be prima facie evidence of the Illegal employment of any person whose ags and schooling certificate Is not produced or whose name le not so listed. Any corporation or em ployer retaining any age and schooling certificate In violation of section I of this act shsll be fined CO. Every person authorised to sign the certificate pre scribed by section of this act who know ingly certifies to any materially false statement therein shall be fined not more then S&a. Sec. I. Truant officers may visit the fac tories, workshops and mercantile establish ments In their several towns and cities and ascertain whether any minora are en white wood pulp. Yet your methods are cleanly. r 1 Ask for The Deer That ployed therein contrary to the provisions of this act, and they shall report any cases of such Illegal employment to the school committee and to the chief of police, or to the inspector of factories of the dis trict. Inspectors of factories and truant officers may require that the age and schooling certificates and lists provided for In this act, of minors employed In such factories, workshops or mercantile estab lishments, shall be produced for their In spection. Complaints for offenses under this act shall be brought by Inspectors of factories. Sec. 8. No minor under 14 years of age shall be employed, permitted or suffered to work In any manufacturing, mechanical or mercantile establishment more than eight hours In any one day, or after the hour of 7 p. m. ; and In no case shall the number of hours exceed forty-eight In a week. Every employer shall post in a conspic uous place In every room where such per sons are employed a printed notice stating the number of hours required of them on each day of the week, the hours of com mencing and stopping work, and the hours when the time or times sllowed for dinner or for other meals begin and end; the printed form of such notice ehall be fur nished by the Inspector of factories, and the employment of any such person for a longer time In any day than that so stated shall be deemed a violation of this sec tion. IfeweTsoy Lavw, The effort to restrict the labor of children on the streets Is so recent, and the measures hitherto adopted are so largely experimental. that It seems best to print In full the news boy lew now In force In New York, fol lowed by a brief statement of the sub Cures AOTmstfeii Uriesol not only cures the common forms of Rheumatism, but it does what no other remedy erer has succeeded in accomplishing before. It dissolves and eliminates deposits in the joints, where they have been accumulating for years. Records are in our possession, not of one but of many cases where the joints of the fingers were 80 thickened as to be practically rigid and useless; where the hip or knee joints were so filled with the deposit as to render the patient wholly unable to walk, and who have been restored to health and activity by the systematic use of Uriesol. An occasional case is found which refuses to yiefd to treatment, buth these are rare, and we can truth fully claim the remarkable record of 90 per cent of cures, where a proper opportunity is given the remedy to accomplish the result. Upjollclted Opinio! of As Expert Chemist Uriesol Chemical Co., Los Angeles, Cat. Oentl.men: ( Having h'd the opportulty of testing your preparation for the treatment ef the Uric Acid Diatheses, very appro priately called Uriesol, It Is a pleasure to be able to say that It has made Itself deserv ing of much esteem and confidence. The opportulty was one of which the manufacturer had neither knowledge nor Intimation. The Incident of acquaintance was brought about by a happy chance. Edward U. S. Holmes was in China at the earlier date of the Boxer outbreak, and the first P.kln horror drove him from the Celestial Kingdom. Suffering from terrible exposure before he sailed, and still woree exptsure whlls a pass.nger on a freight steamer, he reached this country Invalided with Rheumatism. At a place called Turner, not far from Salem, Oregon, he found frienda. The disorder, muscular and articular combined, had poaseealon of hur In .the meet aggravated form; It was then that his friends obtained L'rloaol from Woodward A Co., Portland (druggists). His report, as given August 4, on his com ing to Newark, was la four words: "It cured me promptly." Ths case was one of much Int.re.t, although full particulars war. not brought, and led to the laboratory acquaintance, the samples being bought through a fcWLem druggist, the person or dering It having the Impression that Wood ward aV Co. manufactured it. Sherman & Compare Our Methods You will realize then why Schlitz beer is pure. You wash a cooking utensil once. We wash a bottle four times, by machinery, before we fill it. You use city water. We bore down 1400 feet to rock for ours. You prepare food in the air of the room. We cool Schlitz beer in plate-glass rooms and filter all the air that touches it. Then we filter the beer by machinery filter it through to extremes. Then for fear of a touch of impurity we sterilize every bottle after it is sealed. We double the necessary cost of our brewing to give you a healthful beverage pure. Do you wonder that we sell over a million barrels annually? the brewery bottling. Made Milwaukee Famous. stance of the provisions In which It Is ex celled by the Boston lak: LAWS OF NEW TORK. AN ACT to amend the labor law relating; to children working- in streets and public places In cities of the first class. Becsme a law, April 8. 1908, with the ap proval of the governor. Passed, three fifths being present. I 174. Prohibited Employment of Children In Street Trades No male child under 10, and no girl under 14 years of age shall In any city of the first class sell or expose or offer for sale newspapers In any street or publlo place. I ITS. Permit and Badge for Newsboys, How Issued No male child actually or apparently under 14 years of age shall sell or expose or offer for sale said articles un less a permit or badge as hereinafter pro vided shall have been Issued to him by the district superintendent of the Board of Education of the city and school dis trict where said child resides, or by such other officer thereof as may be officially designated by such board for that purpose, on the application of the parent, guardian or other person having the custody of the child desiring such permit apd badge, or In case said child has no parent, guardian or custodian, then on the application of his next friend, being an adult. Such per mit and badge shall not be Issued until tbe offloer Issuing the same shall have re ceived, examined, approved and placed en file. In his office, satisfactory proof that such male child Is of the age of 10 years or upwards. No permit or badge provided for herein shall be valid for any purpose except during a period In which such proof shall remain on file, nor shall such permit or badge be authority beyond the period fixed therein for Its duration. After hav ing received, examined, approved and I have no "teetlmonlal" to write. Mr. Holmes' cass Is mentioned simply to state the circumstances of introduction. The results of laboratory snd somewhat limited clinical research present eeveral striking points of Interest. To these I desire to call particular attention. In proof of the deserving esteem and confidence to which reference has been made. It neutralises the Uric Acid without over stlmulattng the kidneys. This, of course, Is ths secret of Its success, as a neutral subject will not produce detrimental re sults. It does not disturb the digestive pro cesses!. It controls the action of ths heart with out depressing It and without causing any exhaustion. In regulating the pulse It does not cause any nausea or other dis agreeable symptoms. It acta In accordance with nature's own laws In controlling the nervee of voluntary motion. It does not Impair the quality of the blood in other words, it does not impair the constructive energies of the system. It has an action oa the liver which Is very gently alterative. It seems to produce a mild, pleasant, physiological and healthy stimulation of the Intestinal glands. These several (acts concerning physio logical action go to accentuate lie value as a Uric Add solvent, WILLAKD II. MUORK. HI), F.S 8., Etc. Consulting Chemist cGonnell, Cor. KB.ii and Dodge, Omaha ASK THEM FOR BOOKLET. Ours are cleanliness Phone 91S, Jos. Schltts Brewing Co.. , 719 S. 9th St., Omaha, Neb. placed on file such proof, the officer shall Issue to the child a permit and badge. I 179. Contents of Permit and Badge Such permit shall state the date and place of birth of the child, the name and address of Its parent, guardian, custodian or next friend, as the case may be, and describe the color of hair and eyes, th height and weight, and any distinguishing facial mark of f uch child, and shall further state that the proof requlrod by tbe po reeding section has been duly examined, approved and filed; and that the child named In such permit has appeared before the officer Issuing the permit. The badge furnished by the officer Issuing the permit shall bear on Its face a number corresponding to the number of the permit, and the name of the child. Every such permit, and every such badge, on Its reverse side, shall be signed In the presence of the officer Issuing the same by the child in whose nnmo It la Issued. I 177. Regulations Concerning Badge and Permit The badge provided for herein shall bo worn conspicuously at all times by such child while so working; and such permit and badge ehall expire at the end of one year from the date of their Issue. No child to whom such permit and badge are Issued, shall transfer the same to any other person nor be engaged In any city of the first class as a newsboy, or shsll sell or expose or offer for sale newspapers In any street or publlo place without having upon his person such badge, which he shall exhibit upon demand at any time to any police, or attendance officer. 178. Badge and Permit to Be Surren deredThe parent, guardian, custodian or next friend, as the case may be, of every child to whom such permit and badge shall be Issued, shall surrender the same to the authority by which said permit and Ail Instance of Prompt Relief. Pomona, Cel., Aug 20. 102. Uriesol Chemical Co., Loe Angeles, Cel., Gentlemen: 1 had Rheuuutt.sm (or ubout seventeen months, both articular and muscular; was so I could not walk part of ths time. I tried the doctors and But some relief, but was not cured. Tried also various patent medicines to no effect. Was In at Mr. Ludden's drug store to get some thing to relieve the Kheumati.m In my shoulder, and he spoke of L'rli eol. but did not know what it would do, aa It was new. I bought a bottle snd have not been both ered with Rheumatism since taking half of it. Took all the bottle and expect to keep it on hand. I am sure anyone suffer ing from a uric acid condition will get re lief if th.y take Uriesol as directed. Yours, nUL.1T CLAYPOOU 861 W. Fourth Street A Well Kioto rugglstfrilset Uriesol. Atlanta, Oa., Aug. W. 114. Uriesol Chemical Co., Los Angeles. Cal. Dear Blr.'. I have long suffered from Rheumatism In ray shoulders and else where, and could scarcely use my arms or hands. I had tried other remedies with out success. 1 used two bottles of Uriesol and regard myself as completely cured. It haa not only cured my rheumatism, but It has very materially benefited my general health. I regard Uriesol as a fine remedy, and will gladly recommend It to all who suffer with this disease. Very respectfully, A LEX JOHN 8, Druggist. It Lawn Street. liLi carried badge pre Issued, at the expiration ct tha period provided therefor. I 179. Limit of Hours No ohlld to whom a permit and badge are Issued aa provided for in the preceding sections, shall sell or expose or offer for sale, any newspapers after 10 o'clock In the evening. I 179a. Vlolntlon of This Article, How Punished Any child who shall work In -any city of tbe first class In any street, or public place as a newsboy or shall sell or expose or offer for sale newspapers '.mder circumstances forbidden by ths provisions of this article, must be ar rested and brought before a court or mas; Istrate having Jurisdiction to commit a child to an Incorporated charitable re . formatoiy or other Institution, and ba dealt with according to law; and If any such child Is committed to an Institution, , It shall, when practicable, be committed , to an Institution governed by persons of . the same religious faith as the parents of such child. 2. Nothing In this act contained shall be deemed or construed to repeal, amend, ' modify. Impair or In any manner affeot any provision of the penal code or the oede of criminal procedure. la the Far East. " "In some of those far eastern countries, said the lawyer, "a potentate Is apt to hang the doctor If he doesn't get welt as fast as he fancies he should." ' Not If the doctor knows his business," said the medical tnaa across the aisle. Ths lawyer nodded and grinned. "But dead men pay no bills," he said. "But dead men's relatives do so Very cheerfully," said the doctor. Then he grimly added, "In the far east. "--Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Proalaeat Jgonilisl Cirii. Los Angeles. Cal.. rah. 0. 1Mb. Uriesol Chemical Co., Loe Angelas, Cal. Oentlemen: Having suff.red for sona years from Rheumatism and dlssases al lied to It, caused by urto add. I wish to give my teetlmonlal, wholly unsolicited he you, to the merits of Uriesol. I consider myself cured, and believe your remedy is one which cannot be too highly . commended. I have met a number of othar . victims of Rheumatism, one of the most painful and dangerous diseases flesh la heir to, who say they also have been relieved and cured by Uriesol. Very truly yours, J. C. FEABODT. ' Staff Writer Los Angeles Western Orapblo. .Acute loflasrnitorj Rbeosatlea, This l.tter from Mrs. T. U HllUday ess plains her feelings toward Uriesol for what It did for her son: Loe Angeles, Cal., March a, UQL Urioaol Chemical Co., Los Angelee, Cal. Oentlemen: My son Joseph recently had an attack of Inflammatory Rheumatism. He took one bottle of Uriesol and waa quickly relieved. H. commenced this treat ment on a Friday and was well enough to b. up and about on the succeeding Sunday, and is now perfectly well. Tours respect fully, F. U HOLLLDAT. fry ... -.i 5 v. a0 :.i I s