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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1905)
The Omaha Sunday Bee EDITORIAL, SECTION. PAGES 1 TO 8. ESTABLISH KD .JUNK 10, 1871. OMAHA. SUNDAY MOIiNINO, AUdl'ST C, 1D05. SINOLi: COPY, 1'lVi: CENTS. MILLINERY! MILLINERY! PIANOS PIANOS Piano Department Sorting? Up. Ten Beautiful Upright Pianos MUST GO AT ONCE. Bnrne have neverhen used, but are slightly shopworn. Bom have been used a, little. ALL ARE IN FIR5T-CLA 5i CONDITION. Your Choice of These High tirade Pianos at the Price of Cheap Ones. Our Eastern Commissionaire is on the hustle and nearly every rliiy some thing quite nobhv in NKW FALL MIL LI NICKY MAKES ITS DEBIT. Moinlnv we make some special offer ings lu EARLY FALL MODES. (Curios lit the present stage-but itnudards in the coming weeks.) Small nobby fltfcln are lecllvelr In the lead, entnlill'lilns: the permen rnry of the popular Polo and Its Modification. Among other novelties of on untune oort we are showing a YKHY SMART COMBINATION FOR MISSES. A COMBINATION OF STITCHED FELT AND PATENT LEATHER -not irltiimlnv of wing ami TO ribbons, prices run from $3 s.t J PATENT LEATHER J1ILLINERY The Latest Fad Polo, wine ami pigeon trimmed, 1 QQ natty and fashionable. to..IU PATENT LEATHER CONTINEN TALS In pon-pon or wins; trimming, suitable for Missis and Ladies, a most charming hat, $.1.4ft - and 1&J PATENT LEATHER TAM 'O SIIAN TERS for Misses and Children some with white trimming, others all pat ent leather, jour choice, AQ Monday t J STORE CLOSES EVERY EVENING except V. J J Satu.dat) AT FIVE O'CLOCK. $ 1 .50 down, and 1 .50 a week THIRD FLOOR PIFRNF V II Monday Doings in Dry Goods BIS EMBROIDERY SALE We have just roroivod from a big em broidery manufacturer several thousand yards of fine embroideries, in pretty new patterns, very fine and on extra quality of bands and insertions. Tliey run from 3 to 15 inches wide, and are worth up to 75c a yd. We divide them in 11 lots Monday ..-Scj'lUOcjXlSc GREAT MUSLIN UNDERWEAR SALE AT 50c THE GARMENT 500 sample pieces of Ladies' Muslin Un derwear in chemise, drawers, corset covers, long and full length; skirts, very prettily trimmed. This is a great opportunity to buy undergarments cheap. They are worth 75c to C 1.75 each Monday only 3UC New Fall Dress Goods BO pieces of new nil wool Shirt Waist Suitings, In fancy Panamas and fancy Molialr Melanges first shipment of new fall Kt.vlos, especially adapted for smart shirt wnist suits, in all the new fall shades 4l indies wide OO on salt; Monday at, a yard J LC 25 pieces of 54 in. Mohair Sicilian, best wearing value for skirts and shirt waist suits absolutely dust-proof comes in all shades, including black our regular SI. on quality ou sule pn Monday at, a yard '. OJC Great Black Dress Goods Sale 60 pieces all wool Black Dress Goods, popular weaves, such as fancy Melrose, (iranitcs, Serges, Arniure, Mohair, Nun's Veiling, Voile. Alba tross and Henrietta all worth up to 8Tc a yard Monday at, yard 50c New Fall Silks for Suits Just received. BO pieces of new Italian Taffeta, especially made for smart silk suits for fall wear comes in all the new plain shades, including black. The wear of this silk is positively guar anteed -full 27 inches wide worth $1.39 Q Q on sale Monday at, yard J DC Clothing Section ! White China Silks 50c a Yard 10 pieces of 36-in. WHITE CHINA SILK worth 85c a yard Monday, at, a yard 50c Fancy Ribbon Sale 1,000 yarda tine Moueseline fancy and plain ribbons for belts and neck wear, 4 to 6 inches wide, worth 65c a yard Mon- C day, a yd..UC Bargain Sale of Skirts -2d Floor Ladies' nnd Misses' all wool Skirts, In plain and fancy serges new mannish mixtures and a lot of fancy Mohairs all the latest styles extra special g m for Monday J Ladies' Suits 50 odd Suits in etamines, mohairs and fancy mix tures grays, browns, blues, black and tau long and short 9.90 coats 'extra epeclal . Cravenette Coats Ladles' and Misses' Cravenette Coats, for outing and traveling, very stylish, mnke pretty colors wurth J 2.60; Mon day, 7.95 White Bed Spreads 200 White Crochet Bed Spreads, Marseilles pat terns, fringed all around extra large size; worth S2.0O; Monday, 1.25 Turkish evid Huck Towel Sale Extra havy nnd "big size" Towels, worth 23c eacbj Monday, each. 15c Bleached Sheeting Extra fine quality of bleached sheeting, 81 In. wide, worth 27c a yd.r Monday, yard, 21c Wash Waists About 5 0 left, all whites, mostly all sizes, worth up to $1.50; Mon day, each, 39c W&.sh Suits About 23 pretty Wash Stilts, mostly .light col ors, that sold up to $4.50; Monday, 1.19 Big Cleanup Sale of Wash Goods AH of our floral Lawns and pretty Kuicker Suit ings, worth up to ISc a yard; only, in a yard JC All of our Imported Silk Organdies, Eoleones and Imported dress nets, worth up to ft. 23 a yard; Monday, u yard 25c CHOICE OF NORFOLKS, DOUBLE BREASTED AND THREE-PIECE SUITS AGES 3 TO 16 YEARS OUR REGULAR $2.45 SUITS NOW CHINA DEPARTMENT The Finest China. Display West of Chicago Choicest things produced and every new thing that is good shown here first. FINEST CUT GLASS No pressed blanks Colonial Baccarat, .Rock Crystal, Glass China from Wedgewood, Coalport, Addlery, Ilavlland & Co., J. Pouyat etc. Prices moderate. CUT TTIMKLrcrtR Verv finest rrvstal. one ineli (A T " Tr'i ; X'' J ". S fluted bottoms, Monday, each llC ui i rsi au i cauiLiKUH ana jugs to matcn, uen t nu shape goods, set of six tumblers and jugs. ... J Q Japnnese China Sugars and Creams, at pair. SI. PA lit "WTfc ill if Wc, 75c and JUli l"fcV,' AlWi Twentv Green Tradlnc? Stnains with nnv nip.-e f fck'&M&jA of Japanese China un from Z.DC Wih-''a lot of 011 ha"r8 n White porcelain. We f must clear these out. Be Values Monday, each.... 1C ' " T Wi' L'hii 1 . . 1 1. 111. l I J-X 'y Ay uo uuru i luii ui tifrrjr ujDUfH wiui cneiry aero- j IUUUU9, .HUUUilV J E-i SECOND FLOOH. r 1 I I Thre Remarkable Bed Values Popular designs taken from our regular stock, fitted with spring and mattress, and marked for a rapid clearance. $8.50 Outfit at $4.95 Enameled iron bed, brass trimmed; woven wire spring, close mesh; fabric soft top mat tress, fancy stripe ticking. $14.50 Outfit at $9.95 Continuous post iron bed, heavy close fill ing, steel frame, woven wire spring, three rows springs supporting center: mattress in extra quality ticking, heavy layers, cotton top and bottom. $22.00 Outfit nt $14.95 Continuous post iron bed, beautiful design, brass spindles, hend and fixit. steel frame; double cable woven wire springs; mattress made by layer process, rattan center, heavy layers, elastic felt top, bottom and sides, in best hair ticking. NO C. O. D. OKDKHS. THIUI) FLOOK. SUMMER. READING 49c Books "The Sky Pilot," by Connor; "Monsieur Peu caire," by Tarkington; "Call of the Wild," by Loudon; "The Virginian," by Wister; "Uaflles," by Hornung; "IJewsher's Mil lions," by McCutcheon; "King of Diamonds," by Tjracy; "The Filigree Hall," Jfc by Green, and hundreds of dJr H other $1.50 copyright books. ... Beiiett's Big Grocery Diamond "C" Soap, 10 bars Table Syrup. 2'a pound can Castile Soap, cake Star Lye, can Topper Sauce, bottle Pickles, assorted, bottle Oil Sardines, can Potted Ham, 25c 10c 2ic ..4c ..7c ,...8c ..4c ...4c can Diamond Fruits . . S" Twenty Green Trading Stamps with pound fresh roasted Golden "Jig Santos Coffee Uv Twenty Green Trailing Stamps with 28c Ten Green Trading Stamps with quart bottle Diamond "S" l Catsup J Fifty Green Trading Stamps TC. with tlve pounds Tapioca.. . . tJJ Ten Green Trading Stamps with two cans fancy Hed Salmon Ten Green Trading Staujps with two cans Imported C. Sardines f Ten Green Trading Stamps with oue gallon special pickling Vinegar Optical NOTHING MYSTERIOUS ABOUT OUIt OPTICAL WORK. We give you honest work at honest prices we cut the "luxury" clean out of exclusive optician's charges. They glve-yc-H-plaln work for fancy prices, we give you fancy work for plain prices. Seel Try us and see! Gold filled Spectacles and Eye Glasses regular $5.00 value, PA Monday J. D U Rimless Eye Glasses reg- f M Q ular $2 ."0 seller, Monday l.T'O riatlna Spectacles or Eye Glasses regular at f3.00, 11 Monday sD MAIN FLOOR. Special in Hardware Monday PRESERVING KETTLES Regular B and 8 qunrt sizes, usually sell at W)c and 65c, Monday with Twenty Green Trading Stamps, at Ton Green Trading Stamps with nickel plate Iflf Soap Dish or Toptn Brush Holder 1UV ONE QUART TIN TOMATO CANS. W TER DOZEN, FORTY CENTS. Ten Green Trading Stamps with best Knife 10 Sharpener Ten Green Trading Stamps with nest Mop 1ft stick IWt Twenty Green Trading Stamps with Mrs. Vroo- f man's Sink Strainer Twenty Green Trading Stamps with best wood 'XQ, Well Buckets JJK BASEMENT KITCHENER WINS IN F1CHI Carries II is Point in Spite of Opposition of Civil Administration. REACHES UNDERSTANDING WITH CURZON VV KIrat Tim J m Slnsli Member Carries Through rians Upposeit hr All of lll Co!. Iravnrn. BIMI.A. Aug. 5. (Special Cablegram to The Bee.) ThoUKO there Is considerable satisfaction here In India over the fact that Lord Cuiion and Lord Kitchener huve agreed In certain recommendations tor the modification of the new scheme of army ad ministration, and though the homo govern ment has given genera approval to the ar rangements which they have suggested, the newspapers of India generallr condemn the orders at first passed by the secretary of state on the great question of the adminis tration of the Indian army and there ap pears to be the feeling that the present movement la only the entering wedge w hich will make the government of India more military than civil. All the loading Journals ses In the orders of the secretary of state what the viceroy foresaw, the riveting on the government of India of the yoke of a military autocracy, against which. In the absence of a more or less independent mili tary adviser, the civilian element must he powerless. Though the crisis In Indian af fairs may be said to have passed with thr getlng together of Lord Curson and Lord Kitchener It Is by no means certain that the trouble may not be renewed any day. since It arUea from fundamental differ ences of points of view. Amongst the Anglo-Indian newspapers the Times of India, the Pioneer, the Englishman, the Madras Mull and the Statesman must be counted in the ranks of the opposition, and the Indian Lilly Telegraph alone Is quoted an taking a less derided view. Of purely Indian papers the Jam-I-Jam-shed and the Hindu condemn the original arrangements in the strongest terms. The Jujar-t Punch Is almost equally decided, whilst the Indian Spectator thlnl that though Lord Kitch ener will have a freer hand than before he ineU not ho allowed to be a despot. Wil Over All Opposition. Probably for the first time In the history of India the extraordinary spectacle is wit nessed of a single member of the supreme government currying through scliuint unanimously oppesed by every one of his colloagues, Including 'he viceroy and the military member of the council. Even when Lord Lytten in the exercise of his statu ary overruled the majority of his coun.il la the matter of Imjxirt duties on Kngitoh cotton goods, he could claim the support if the most powerful, and perhaps the ablest, of his colleagues, Sir John atrachey. In the present case Lord Kitchener stooj absolutely alone. Even where there Is a tendency on the part of the Indian press to admit that he may possibly be right, it Is urged opr-nly that the decUlon has been i rived at not so much on the merits of te uosUou as ou uoiisldeiaUona of the military reputation of the. author of the proposals, and of the possible results In England from a party point of view, of bis resignation in consequence of defeat. Or, Mr. MroUrick personally the lash fulls with sp'ecial force, and the uncompromising terms in which he has seen nt to overrule the government of India In favor of the commander-in-chief ure unsparingly con demned. Mr. Brodrlck's previous unfortu nate treatment of Sir F. Younghusband is naturally recalled. In Simla itscl' where criticism is more guarded than elsewhere there seems to be a general feeling of dls satlHfactlon among all parties, except that surrounding army headquarters, where, of course, there is a sense of satisfaction at Lord Kitchener's victory in the great bat tle. Amongst others than those who think solely of the military side of the question, grave doubts are felt as to the propriety of the settlement. Lord Curxon's minute, the general moderation of which cannot but be admitted. Is held to speak not only for himself whose tenure of office has but a few more months to run, but for his succehsors in the high office which he has held with such success. However much he may bewail the position of a viceroy face to face with an imperious soldier as sole ad vl.ser regarding military schemes originated by himself. Lord Curxon might be trusted to rely upon his own Judgment, fortified by six years' experience in India. Politics Plays Urge Part. With others It may be different, especially when the viceroy Is newer to the country thun the commander-in-chief. There is hardly any question, military or civil, in lndl in which political considerations do not play a large part. The necehsity for mdian experience always exists, even In ! dealing with questions which on the face of them appear to be purely military. Writ ing on this question of the viceroy's depri vation, under the new scheme of a mili tary advl. er Independent of the commander lnhief, and on tae future position of the Indian service the Pioneer, a paper which has frequently criticised Lord Curxon with a freedom unusual in the Anglo-Indian oress, says: If a future commander-in-chief were to order the Sikh regiments to have their hair cut there is apparently no one who can say him nay. The inrtrests of the officers, so religiously respected for a century past, are now left without protection or guaran tee. Of course It will be mid that officers of Indlnn experience will be employed round the chief in subordinate capacities, but while thn military uplrit is what it Is while It is felt as an offense that a junior ottlter III a department should write a note upon a proposal that Is supMsed to come from the commander-in-chief tan experi ence which happens any day in the course of business to the governor of Bombay or the lieutenant governor of Bengali while this spirit exists It Is Idle to repoxe much faith in the iower of check residing in sulHjidinale officers. The suppositious case of the Sikhs does not seem extravagant when It la remem bered thut Lord Kitchener would but for the opposition of the viceroy and the mili tary member, have reverted to the old sys tem of making native troops build their own huts. In Sir E. Elle's minutes there is also a reference to the influence of his de partment in Inauclng the commander-in-chief to withdraw a proposal to form native field batteries. Grave Resalts May follow. It has been recognised, of course, here In India that tha great baltie fought Velaten the government and the commander-in- chief has resulted in the victory of the military party. As an example of the manner. In which the Issue of the day and Its possible consequences are summed up another passage from the Pioneer may be quoted in conclusion: It Is not for us today to attemnt to eatl- mate In detail the consequences thnt will follow from the issue of this notable en counter, but It may be said at once that all inn grounu mat lmt curzon has gained by his reconstltution 'and extension of the council Is of much kss consequence than that which he has lost In this collision. It Is Idle to minimize this situation. The gov ernment has brought up Its last reserves against the commander-in-chief's proposals. In language of the strongest conviction It has called them subversive, unconstitutional and dangerous. Nevertheless It has been overborne, and from a defeat so decisive it is obvious that grave results must follow. Probubly the army will find them very dif ferent in the long run from hat In the moment of triumph it Jubilantly expects. GIVES ORDERS IN "HUNGARIAN Noncommissioned Officer Caases Trouble for Himself and Others t Vienna. VIENNA. Aug. 8. (Special Cablegram to The Bee.) A noncommissioned o nicer when passing his lieutenant with a file of sol diers gave the order In the Hungarian tongue to render the usual salute. The Introduction of the word of command In Hungarian forms one of the chief demands of the coalition which has been In a ma jority since the last general election. This has always been refused on the ground that similar words of command throughout the entlte Austro-Hungarlan army are indis pensable. The noncommissioned officer who thus took upon himself the responsibility of set tling for the moment this vexed question la named., strange to say, Benedek the name of the general who commanded the Austrian fercca In the war with Prussia. He was immediately placed under arrest and will be brought before court-martial. In military circles the incident has made a painful impression and ehows how deeply the agitation has affected the masses of the Hungarian people. AFRICAN VlTlYEg AUB RISING German Governor Reports Trouble with Aborigines. BERLIN. Aug. E. The governor of East Africa telegraphed today to the Colonial bureau of the Foreign office that the na. tives In the Vlaturbl mountains, north of Kllwa, have arisen; also that there has been an outbreak on the coast at Smauga. during which several warehouses were burned. The causes of the discontent ap pear to be unexplained. ' While rebellious are la progress In other German African Colonies, East Africa hitherto has been quiet. The outbreak, therefore, causes some concern. The gov ernment Is thoroughly tired of these col onial wars. In which considerable sums of money have been sunk without bringing either profit or glory. ' Iowa Statesmen Hrtara. SOUTHAMPTON, Aug. l.-Among the passengers on the American line steamer St, I-ouls. which sailed for New York today, were Vnlted Slates Senator William B Alli son and Congressman Robert O. Cousins of Iowa. ' Q'JR LETTER BOX. Death of Mrs. Charlotte K. Turner. OMAHA, Aug. 6.-TO the Editor of The Bee: The death of Mrs. Turner at her residence In this city last Tuesday night at the ripo age of nearly 81 years was as sudden as it was peaceful and painless. For her It was only a short step across the dark river. She sleeps the long sleep In a beautiful spot at Forest Lawn by, the side of her beloved son, Curtis C. Turner, whose tragic death from a snowsllde at White Pass in the Klondike region In 1807 brought upon her heart and home a heavy weight of sorrow. For more than forty-eight years Mrs. Turner has been a conspicuous representa tive of all that is purest and best In the higher womanhood and motherhood of Omaha, and she is followed to her grave by the deep regrets of a very wide circle of friends In whose homes and walks her name has been as a household word for all these years She distinctively belonged to that small group of noble women, dead and living, who braved the pioneer life, and who, In their own worth and way, were the real founders of all that was strong and good and indestructible In the foundations of Omaha. Charlotte Keqnedy Turner was born at Bolton, Vt., October S, 1821. She was a daughter of Samuel Barnett Kennedy and Hannah Mosely Morse. She was married at Waterbury, Vt., January 14, 1857, to Charles Turner, and came to Omaha early In October of the same year. Miss Han nah Elizabeth Turner, who has been a member of the family for many years, la her sister, and Hon. B. E. B. Kennedy Is her brother. Miss Mary P. Turner Is the only surviving child. It was of her. In the hour of his own great bereavement that her father said to the writer of this, "I am now going to live for her." On their arrival In Omaha in 1867 Mr. and Mrs. Turner found Omaha a straggling and struggling frontier hamlet of a few hundred people. Their firet home was a frail little two-room cabin on Sixteenth street, north of Nicholas; later on they lived on Douglas street, between Four teenth and Fifteenth streets, and In 1S60 they built and occupied a small house on Sixteenth and Howard, which was still standing only a few days ago. next to the brick one erected In 18S1, both having Just gone out of the sight of men to make room for the commercial advance of Omaha. From this Howard street resi dence they removed to the present attract ive mansion on Farnam street In 191. Whst Mrs. Turner was to the earlier Ufa of Omaha car. only be Known to those who were living witnesses and beneficiaries of her remarkable qualities and character as wife, mother, neighbor and friend. As has been already said, she was one of the strongest of a small group of notable women to whom she held the relation of a constant counsellor, guide and monitor, a never-ending help In those trying days. She was not merely a supremely kind and good woman In every relation to her home and to society. Mrs. Turner was all this, as everybody knows, but she was much more than thls-sus wag a very nice aad a very strong woman. In the later days of death and sickness and sorrow In that home, her courage In supporting her own grief and that of others, and her tireless devotion to her stricken husband, would have long since shattered the strength, and terminated the life, of any ordinary woman. From which it may be said with perfect truth, that In all the severe tests and trials of her lon life, she was never found wanting. Wholly domestic In her tastes and life, her royal kingdom was her home, however humble, and she reigned over it like a very queen. In Charlotte Kennedy Turner the simple life of the. home of other days found a beautiful and Inspiring example, and loss to kindred and friends and society can not be measured In words. ! GEORGE L. MILLER. Not a Scottish Order. OMAHA. Aug. 5. To the Editor of The Bee: I very much deplore the fact that In Inst night's Bee the fraternal order Royal Highlanders was spoken of as a Scottish order.- The "Royal Highlanders" was raised upon a rotten foundation, start ed by people who knew nothing of Scot land and had no connection with It, but took for their title a noble Scottish name, made up the ritual ofvall the best parts of Scottish history, and made It seem as much Scottish as possible. They called their lodges by names of Scottish castles (sometimes badly spelled), adopted a non descript kind of dress In Imitation of the kilt, the ancient dress of the Caledonian, and In every way tried to induce people to Join by misrepresentation, if not stated, at least implied. I presume I was the first man spoken to In Omaha for the purpose of taking up this work. Mr. Sharp and his deputy made me a very flattering offer to accept a position with their order, but as It was not Scottish, and took Into membership all nationalities of whatever clime, under name of Royal Highlanders, I would have nothing to do with It, and stated that the adoption of such a name by a mixed society who tried to uppear Scots was very much like the story In the school books of the Jackdaws wljo looked from their nest In the barn and saw the peacocks spreading their beautiful tails on the lawn, begun to be envious, and during the night came out. picked up some of the peacock's cast-off feathers, stuck them In their stunted tails and Imagined themselves lovely. Moral: They spoiled themselves as Jackdaws, and certainly could not make peacocks of them selves. The Royal Highlanders have nothing to do with the Order of ScotUsh Clans are not Scottish In any manner but name. No right-thinking Scot would tie identified with such an organization, as one thing the Scot will always set his face against, that Is misrepresentation. . JAMES C. LINPSAT, Secretary Clan Gordon No. 63, Order of Scottish Clans. Hayes Cooatr ( ereal Aerraae. HAYES CENTER. Neb., Aug 6To the Editor of The Bee: I notice that In yes terday's paper, under the heading of "Acreage of Cereals for 1j6," In giving the acreage of corn In Hayes county you give It as 4.327, when as a matter of fact it should be 43. Ill Germanvllle precinct alone has 1.645 acres, nearly as much as the whole county la given credit for. WU1 you please mnke this correction so thiy an In justice will not be done the county? C. A. READY. Proposed Enlargement of. ntvrrvlew. HOT SPRINGS, S. D.. Aug. S.-To the Editor of The Bee: I have read with much Interest an article In your paper headed. "Cornish Begs for Pumont." Many state ments In It are so much at variance with the facts that I ask you to publish the following: The land referred to Is high bottom land, and Instead of being "virtually a big mud hole" has no standing water upon it nor any swamp land. The river did not overflow any part of It In July of this year, when the water was high enough to make a "heap of trouble" In tho north rart of the city and In East Omaha. Tho river has made but one serious cut along the front of this tract In the lust twenty years, and the land lien so It can be pro tected and a large acreage reclaimed from the river by the expenditure of a small amount of money. More than two-thirds of the land Is covered with trees, many of which are two to three feet in diameter, and almost the entire tract Is covered with blue grass which, when I last saw It the first part of July, was twelve to eighteen Inches high. . Since the Park board filed Us request with the city council that this land be condemned, I have sold this entire tract of land at the 'game price at which I offered It to the city, and, except as a citizen of Omaha, I have no further Interest In what the city may do n respect to this mat ter. I do not want the readers of your paper, however, to believe, as they cer tainly would if they acceded as true the J statements made by Councilman Back, that I have attempted to "unload" upon the city such a piece of land as be has de scribed In his interview. I sincerely hope that the sale of this property will not prevent the city from acquiring it for an addition to Rlvervlew purk. as I believe that Mr. Cornish Is right In his view of the matter and that the city ought to have this property. J. H. DUMONT. Is Zionism Frenzied f OMAHA. Aug. l.-To the Editor of The Bee: Your article. "Frenzied Zionism," In last Sunday's Issue attracted my attention. The reading of It aroused and Intensified old-time feelings of pity, sympathy and hope pity for those who are so stubbornly set against the idea of divine intervention In human affairs, sympathy with those Israelites who, despite the centuries of op pression and wrong, still aeep alive their faith In an ultimate destiny toward which they believe they ere steadily moving. Their exhibition of faith In the divine la to me sublime, and, together with the promise on which thy rely, adds new strength to my own hope: that It may be In my own time I shall see their faith honored, their hope realized and the na tional entity of the Israel of God and of prophecy fully established, and that, too, In the dear old land of scattered Israel s desire. One promise alone is to me sufficiently clear and explicit as to leave no room for doubt as to the divine Intention albeit the time seems long In our reckoning that leads to its fulfillment. Hut, as the day of the Lord Is as a thousands years, our con-copta-af time must be broadened and we should not throw faith to tho winds be cause of the slowness of fulfillment. The word of God In Jeremiah reads: "Therefore, behold the days come, saith the Lord, that they shall no more say the Lord liveth which brought up the children of Israel out of the Land of Egypt: but the Lord liveth which brought up and which led the seed of the house "of Israel out of the north country, and from all countries whither I had driven them, and they shall dwell in their own land." That promise Is still unkept, but to me there Is nothing more certain than that It shall be, and I am only one of many thousands who so believe. Another point upon which we need broad ening of vision Is the land of promise Itself. We must not bound It by Jordan on the east and otherwise, as ordinary maps do. The land of promise extends from the Euphrates to the river of Egypt and em braces within Its area the most central and as a 'consequence the most valuable of tho land surface of the globe. It Is not mere sentiment for so-called holy places that Is the motive back of Eu ropean nations' desire for control. Modem peoples have learned to set value upon places for other than sentimental reasons, and Jerusalem, In the hands of a commer cial and progressive people, would soon be come a rival of London as a trade center and a clearing house for the world.. Zionism is not frenzied. It Is rather the focusing of faith, the persistence of hope, that will, sooner thun we expected, V'rhape, be crowned with a glorious realization. II. R, B. DR. GORDON FEARS NOTORIETY Refuses Collection of Antiques Nnid to litre Recn Collected by Occult Method. SAN FRANHISCO, Aug. 6. -The Examiner says that Thomas Welton Stanford of Mel bourne, brother of the late Senator Stan ford, has offered to donate to Stanford university an almost priceless collection of antiques, which he says were collected for him front Egyptian tombs by the astral body of a blacksmith myBtlc, who took but twenty seconds for the round trip from Egypt to Australia. The name of the black smith medium or mahatma Is C. Bulley, and it is said that some of the leading scientists of the world bellvo In his work as. a cummuner with the Inhabitants of the astral world, and his ability to perform seeming miracles. Dr. Jordan, however, has mada It clear that this collection, the list of which In cludes many articles of great value as anll qultlea, will not be accepted, busl.., his objection ou the openly avowed method by which it was collected. A iirave Fight against stomach, liver and kidney trouble. Is always successful, If carried on by means of Electric Bitters. 5"c. For sale by Sherman A MoConnell Drug Co. Refuse to Talk or Arrests. CLEVElANI, O.. Aug. a The polloe officials here refused to tliMcu.is the arrest of Harry Parker and Harry Johnson today, but Uitlmaated that a sensational story of crime would be doveluuud as like losuil of the uricsu.