Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 22, 1906, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. lDOfi.
NEW STAFF DOWN TO WORE
WkiU, luffest, Poms, Bkt aid Tarball
1 , ea isw Maculae.
PHILLIPS PUBLISHING COMPANY BEGINNING
Editorial ; Pr.ectas ' rtinlilaf
' Cn1i of tfc 'first JlamkVr
. laaleafa Ktrang Bill far
Pabalar Rapport. .
That tvery writer has not felt the ting
ef the editorial blue pencil Is probably due
to' tha fact, that iom authors have the
wealth and poor Judgment to print thalr
work without submitting It to the Inspee
tlon of oven a friendly critic, and It la
equally as certain that no editor wai ever
able to prepare a publication In a manner
pleasing to thoae who contrlbuto to It
existence. . '
As a carollary to these facta the fate of
the American Mainline, launched at New
York- Thuraday, will be of more than pass.
Ing Interest to the makers and rentiers of
tnagsglnes, for It Is a magailne largely
owned by authors who have made names
for : themselves In these piping times c
sensational exposure In business and po
litical methods. Under the title of tha
Phillips Publishing company William A Ilea
White. Ida M. Tarbell. F. P. Dunn. Lin
coln J. Bteffens, Ray B tan nurd Baker and
ethers have associated themselves In tha
enterprise,, and If they are as able to hold
tha attention of the public ae they wore
to 'attract It their venture should prove a
phenomenal success. That they have set
their Ideals high Is shown by the conclud
ing paragraph of the publishers' announce
ment: After all, we live by visions. Though
we have hardly attempted to express It,
we have vision of a magaxlne; It may
never be realised, or it may be realised In
part. Rut we conceive that In It no great
thing of human interest would go un
recorded; than In It would be something
of the best of all; literature, that In story
end poetry refreshed the emotions and the
love of life; art. that stirred anew the
faculty of seeing beauty and truth in the
world about; counsel and Judgment and
light upon men nd public events that con
cern ua all; new knowledge of man's
achievements In the wide ranges of his
devices and-discoveries; and all set forth
with such sest. such knowledge, such art
of expression thst there would be no dulll
line and no Indifferent picture thnt aome
glow of truth or humor or sentiment would
play on every page, and that you would
rise from reading with the mind enlivened
and the hesrt refreshed and a confirmed
belief that It was worth while living In
this world, and worth while living to make
U .better. ,
WbJte and Dsns Tead.
The first article In the new magazine la
by -.William Allan White, who make a
reputation telling what Is the matter with
things In general and makes .a living by
publishing the Emporia (Kan.) Gaiette.The
title la "The Partnership of Society," and
In its course Mr. White finds occasion to
remark :
Folly's crown of follies Is on the hesd
of him who tries to pay his debt to human
ity by mere money. Service is the coin In
which humanity's greatest debts are paid.
Money does not pass current in the real
world of service. It Is false coin there.
The next of the edltoral contributors la
Mr. F. P. Dunne, whose popular "Mr.
tooley" first exploded upon the publlo.
with' the shells at El Caney. His thema la
"The Power. of the Press" and If the press
Is not convinced that it Is the most power
ful thing In America today tha fact will
have . to be communicated to It through
some other medium than "tha brogue," for
Mr. Dooley says!
No,-air, as Ho ran says, I care not who
makes th' laws or th' money It a
cnunthry so long as I run th' presses.
Pat her 'Kelly was talkin' about it th' .other
day. "There ain't annythlng like Ft an'
there ntver was." says he. "All th' priests
In this diocese together preach to about a
hundherd thousand people wanct a week
' an'," he says, . "all th' papers preach to
three millyon wanct a day, aye, twlnty
times a day," he says. "We give ye bell
on Sundahs an' they give ye hell all th'
time," he says.
-'Yes, sir," says ha. "th' hand that rocks
th' ' fountain i pens la th' hand that rules
th" wurruld. TV press Is f'r th' whole
iinlvarse what -Mulligan was f'r his beat.
He waa th' best pollshman an' th' worst
I Iver knew. He was a terror to evil doer
whin he was sober an' a terror to Ivrybody
whin he was dhrunk. Martin.' I dhrlnk to
th' la-ads all over th' wurruld who use th'
printer's Ink. May they not put too much
jv th' r-red stufT in It an' may H nlver go
to their heads." .
' ', Dyaamlte aad Medietas
Twoactlcles which wlir attract at
tention are .'Dynamite, the Power ' Un
tamable," by Samuel Hopkins Adama and
"Popular Medical Fallacies" by leonard
Keene'HIrshberg, M. D.
The description of a professional dyna
miter, the kind who operates In America,
co In Russia, Is described as follows:
The finished type of the dynamiter Is the
man who has had the ability t4 rise and
the luck to survive long enough to graduate
from the plant and become an agent. - In
Ills best embodiment the explosives agent
Is something of a chemist, something of a
quarry-man, something of an electrician, a
good deal of a mineralogist, and. above all,
a man ef resource and coolness.
Often he meets his rivals on the ground.
Then comes the tug of war. Tricks of
the trade are many, and not all of them
scrupulous. Where many, agents are
gathered together. It seems to.be a point
of honor , with every man to handle his
particular article with the utmost ap
parent carelessness, while he manifests a
shrinking timidity toward the product of
his , competitors. This Is to Impress the
outsider. So the sgent will toss about a
twenty-five-pound package of dynamite like
eo much meal; kick It. drop It over fence
or down ledges, and generally maltreat It.
If the dynamite Is fresh, this Is all right;
but occasionally something goes wrong,
and theory, together with the theorist. Is
blown to atoms In practice.
: Other contributors, mainly of a light
nature are Edith Barnard, Casper Day,
May McHenry. Edwin Balmer, Maude I
Radford and E. J. Rath. ,
tesTesta aad Tarbell.
Announcement Is mads that Uncoln
Bteffens will contribute a series of "Mickey"
stories, the first appearing In the present
Issue; that Ida M. Tarbell Is on bar farm
engaged la writing a aerie of articles, th
' first- to appear In the December number,
and that Steffens will present a character
sketch of William R. Hearst In the Novem
ber number. "Adventure In Contentment"
$195,000
CAN BE SAVED
FUEL TH
WINTER
50,000,000 tons of soft coaland lignite at $3 a ton,costing $150,000,000 and 30,000,000 tons of hard coal at $8 a ton costing $240,000,000 are
used annually for domestic heating. Where ordinary stoves and furnaces are used, this money goes up chimneys in gasand wasted heat.
COLE'S
S)
Saves
ORIGINAL
All
1
. Inmiiiiik
mm
I . - n - r - 1 in r
xtwi .u... .TrVT8'
B7 r a) III M aw- -a, rArE'sauia
Wasted With Other Stoves
For Soft Coal and Lignite
; ' As you know fully one-half the carbon available for heat in soft coal is
gas, the entire gas supply used for fuel and illumination in many cities and
towns beinr made from common soft coal. The ordinary stove in burning soft
i coal allows this gas half of the fuel to pass up the chimney unburned, thus
toasting it as a heat producer.
Cole's Original Hot Blast Stove, by means of the patented Hot Blast
draft and other patented features, distills this gas from the upper surface of the
coal, utilizing it as a heat producer along with the fixed carbon or coke in
the coal, thus burning all the coal. This is why
Cole's Original Hot Blast
Saves the Dollars and makes a ton of common $00 soft coal or
lignite do the work of $9.00 worth of hard coal.
Your old stove and imitation Hot Blasts are not air
tight, do not save the escaping gases and do not give you
a warm house at night. You cannot afford to say to
?ourself v My old stove will have to do this winter."
he old stove is eating up the price of anew stove every
year. Not only that, but on top of the cost is the unsatis
factory result it gives. It is always out the coldest morning.
Evert Heat Day and Night Fire Never Out
Cole's Hot Blast is so perfect in construction that fire
keeps all night, and when the draft is opened in the
morning will burn two or three hours with the fuel put
in the night before. No other stove does this. Fire,
therefore, never goes out, and the rooms are kept at an
even temperature all the time.
Burns Any Fuel Without Change. Hard
Coal Strikes and Soft Coal Combines need have
no terror for the users of Cole's Original Hot
Blast as this modern heater burns any fuel. Soft
coal, 6lack, hard coal, crushed coke, Lignite coal,
wood or cobs without any change in the stove.
The cost of the stove Is more than saved in
fuel each winter. Read the guarantee.
Would You Lose $50 In Fuel to Save
$1 on the Cost of Your Stove?
That is what you do when you boy a cheaply eon
s true ted, putty jointed, showy made imitation store.
HOT
Will
BLAST STOVE
Cut Your Fuel Bill
For Hard Coal and Crushed Coke
The waste of gas in burning hard coal is shown by opening the magazine
cover of an ordinary base burner, when the oxygen supplied fills the entire
stove with naming gas. Cole's Hot Blast stove burns this gas in hard
...u.w. : . . . .. ... e t-: i i
wi iui.ut in uiuuimj cluvu, vavctjm, vu nauum ui men icaay wni a
. strtirtion. oatisino crat waste and emrlnno-r-rino Vir-nltti onrl ltfs isrhn it fit
escapes into the rooms.
In the ordinary magazine hard coal stove, three-fourths of the coal
is partially consumed in the magazine, where it gives off no heat, as
it is not in contact with the radiating surface. The one-fourth
of the coal in the fire pot must be kept at a white heat combustion
to throw the heat into the rooms, thus causing great waste.
In Cole's Original Hot Blast
Half
Guarantee
I We guarantee a savins; of
one-third in fuel over any lowrr
draft stove of the same size, with
soft coal or slack. .
We gusrantee Cole's Rot
Plant to use less hsrd coal for
heating a given space thsn sny
base burner msde with same heat
lag surface,
3 We guarantee that Hie rooms
can be nested from one to two
hours each morning, with the soft
coal or hsrd coal put In the stove
the evening before.
4 We guarantee that the stove
will hold fire with soft coal 36
hours without attention.
. 5 We guarantee a uniform heat
day snd night, with soft coal, hard
coal or lignite.
6 We gnsrsntee every stove to
remain absolutely air tight as long
as used.
7 We gusrantee the feed door
to be smoke snd dust proof.
The above guarantee is msde
with the understanding thst the
stove be operated sccording to
directions, and set up with a good
Sue.
The combustion chamber and the magazine are combin!
and the Combustion Is Perfect. The stove is filled to the
top of the inside cast iron lining. This large body of hard
coal is burned tinder perfect control by means of the abso
lutely air-tight construction of the stove giving perfect con
trol over the drafts. The coal is kept at a alow, economical,
cherry red combustion and as the heat ia in direct contact
with every square inch of the sensitive steel radiating sur
face, all the heat is radiated into the room where it is wanted
and not blanketed in and sent up the chimney. Hard coal
at Cherry Red Combustion burns 48 hours, while at whit
heat It is consumed In from 2 to 5 hours.
Sold Under a Positive Quarantee
We guarantee Cole's Original Hot Blast to use less
hard coal for heating .a given space than any base burner
with the same heating surface. Requires attention only
morning ana mgnt wiin nara coat, warm rooms day and
night. No escaping gases to endanger life. The heat
wasted up the chimney with other stoves is saved.
Scientific Construction
Cole's Original Hot Blast has an absolutely air-tight
and gas tight construct"! throughout, by reason of its
numerous patented farfarUvements. The patented Hot
Blast draft saves the gas. A patented steel collar con
nects the elbow draft to the stove body and cannot be made
to leak air by action of the fiercest heat. The patented
compound hinge on the ash door cannot warp and the door
closes air-tight by its own weight. The heavy fire box
protects the Joints, where other stoves burn out first. The
guaranteed smoke-proof feed door prevents smoke, soot
or dust from escaping into the room when fuel ia pnt into
the stove. Perfect cleanliness, therefore, from soft coal.
in
' ft'- " ! itff
' i LA:--
. fi-fif Shows Stove
Burning S&fl
k!W MARI COAL
CAUTION Like all successful inventions, Cole's Original Hot Blast has many inferior imitations, avoid them. They all lack the patented features and careful construction, which make the Original Hot Blast a great success. They do not stay
tight and soon open seams and cracks which render them worthless as fire keepers. 8ee the name " Cole's Hot Blast from Chicago " on the feed door. None genuine without it.
If you enjoy the luxury of getting up in warm rooms without kindling new fires; If you would keep your plants from freezing and want
to save dollars in fuel you will buy Cole's Original Hot Blast. Investigate today.
SOLD BY
NiI(Oi Rogers Sons Co.
. L. Jones Co.
Orchard Wilhelm Carpet Co. John Hussie Hardware Co.
G. F. Beavers, So. Omaha. Ha.ydei Bros., Benson, Neb. '
Paddock - Handschey Hdw. Co., Council Bluffs, Ia.
by David Grayson
tha same number.
ia also announced for
MISSION OF THE MINISTER
at
Dr. J. J. Lasas Deltvees Address
. Opeala of Fall Term mt Pres.'
BTterlaa anlnarr.
A fair sized audience was assembled at
tha lecture room of the Presbyterian semi
nary In Kountss Place Thuraday evenln to
listen to the opening address of tha fall
semester, of that Institution' by Dr. J. J.
Lamp, professor of 'Hebrew at the semi
nary. Tha subject of Dr. Lamp's address
was "Other 'Worldllness," aa applied to the
profession of tha ministry- , He said In
part: '
The Chrlstly quality of the ministry -is
f)lctured througnout me Bioie ana pirutu
arly by Christ himself.' In those days the
ministers were manly, forceful men and
able representatives of the 'gospel, end the
lype snouia do ins suns iiuw. .-
minister should be such a one aa Christ
means. He ahould'be .educated, but mere
scholarship Is Impotent. There snust be an
Inspiration from the kingdom' of God. There
Is nothing In God's cause that needs mere
echolsrshlp. What Is needed Is God's word
that breaks the hearts of men ana Dnngs
them to Jesus Christ. . The Inspiration of
God and Christ makes true men, and God's
message reveals to men the true meaning or
the gospel and of Christ. The true minister
Is burdened with the message of God and. Is
the expounder of the ways of God to men,
Some think otherwise, and have a greater
belief In sociology and science s the mis
sion of the ministry- Such Christianity
la not durable. The true ministry Is bur
dened with truth of God, of personal holi
ness and Is sanctified bv God through His'
seminary Thursday, with twenty-five stu
dents In attendance, which It la expected
will Increase within a short time.
If you have anything to trade advertise
It in the For Exchange column of Tha
bee Want Ad page.
STOLEN PROPERTY UNEARTHED
Arrest of Three Colored People
Poltee ISxplalaa Several
Bara-larles.
1T
WOMAK IN CLUB AND CHARITY
truth and the truth of. His light, which
lighten the darkness of the world and
Induces a consecration to God's work.
The true minister carries God's renroof of
the world of sin. He Is tn teach the people
and preach the gospel. He will find many
controversies to meet where the word of
God Is dlsmited. At such times the vocation,
of a minister la a most difficult one, hut
not for a manly, masterful minister, who
has the divine enurage to atand his ground,
which surely will lead him on to final ve
tory. When Moeea heottated to lead his
neonls out of BUryptlan bonds. God csme
to him anil rave hmt holy counsel. The
rnssaa- of God waa not one of emptv words.
Christ did not use "many words. The m's
slon of the true minister ia tn rebuke vice
snd condemn It Tefor men. No men used
harder words than did Jeaus Christ In His
denunciation of sin. It Is. not the mission
of a minister to compromise God throuch
the orevalenee of fsahtonable sin. because
ef the powerful Influences that encourage
fashionable sin..
The course of study was taken up at tha
,A Natural
axatave
Inward. eleansinff is tl necessary as' outward bathingvTo keep the
bowels free and regular is of even greater importance than to keep .
the skin-pores ; from becoming clogged. The neglect of either in
wites disease. ' Everyone needs a natural 'laxative occasionally,' to
free the. bowels of accumulated imparities. Fo"r this purpose take
i
1 its m n sa
PJLtS
the greatest boon ever offered to those who suffer from the ills
that follow constipation. For-over fifty years Becciiam's Pills have
been famous as a Stomach corrective, a Liver regulator and Bowel
laxative They never gripe nor cause pain. Powerful purgatives
are dangerous. Avoid them. .- Use Beecham's Pills. They give re
lief without doing violence to any organ. Their, action is ia har
mony with physical laws. Take them regularly and the necessity
for their use becomes less frequent v They are a natural, laxative
and a positive cure for Constipation, Biliousness, Indigestion1, Sick
Headache and, Dyspepsia. . , . .
old Kverywksre la Hemes.
" 1 e aad as.
In the arrest of the trio of colored people,
Ed. Mitchell, Robert L. Johnson and Mrs.
M. Tandy, and the developments following
the 'Investigations by the police, the pros
pects for clearing up many of the house
breaking Jobs of the last few months ap
pear bright. When the house at 1610 North
Twenty-first street, where Mrs. Tandy was
arrested, was searched, from $300 to S100
worth of stolen property was found. That
the home of John T. Stewart, president of
the Stewart Brothers company at Ct53'Bt.
Mary's avenue. Is also among the houses
entered by burglars, came to light In the
effort to identify aome of the goods. Mr.
and Mrs. Stewart have been absent at
their summer home at Bennington for sJme
time, and Detectives Ferris and ' Dunn
found a window had been broken at their
house and entrance secured In the same
manner : as others of the burglaries that
have been committed.
Johnson was first arrested Tuesday night
by. Patrolman Crow. Another negro, after
ward learned to have been Mitchell, was
with him. They ran and Crow fired after
them, one bullet crashing through a win
dow of a residence. Mitchell escaped only
to be captured through the efforts of De
tective savage next day. Johnson was
caught, but was released In police court tha
following morning, and arrested again
Thurady by Patrolman Morrison.
When the goods In the Twenty-first street
house were unearthed, It was thought pos
sible some of then might be the property
of C. P. McGrew, whose home at 228 Pouth
Tblrty-flrst avenue was entered a few
nights ago, and Mrs. McGrew was asked
to look at them. She at once recognized
a skirt aa belonging to Mrs. Stewart, which
was the first Intimation the police had of
the Stewart burglary.
The detective force Is hard at work col
lecting evidence against the trio and believes
It If can place these persons In prison
It will rid Omaha' of a set ef very active
housebreakers. Johnson Is the negro who
stabbed to death another negro named
Johnson with a cane knife at Fourteenth
and Howard streets last spring. The plea
of self defense secured Johnson his freedom
at that time.
Friday morning tha police were still
busy recovering loot secreted by Mitchell,
Johnson and Mrs. Tandy. In addition to
the stuff that was recovered Thursday the
police recovered a trunk and two suit
cases full of wearing apparel. They made
a most thorough search of the home of
Mrs. Taady, even to tearing out the brldt
foundations of the house where the trunk
and suit cases were found and are now
convinced . they have everything on the
premises, although It la believed consid
erable may be recovered through the
pawnshops where It was disposed of.
The home of Mr. Stewart, Where most of
the loot was obtained, was thoroughly
ransacked from' attic to cellar. The thieves
made their entrance through a back win
dow which was broken and.evldentry took
their leisure to the Job, probably butng
aware of the absence of the owners. Mr.
eWewart was unaware ef the burglary of
his houss and could not aay how much
had been taken, as ha and his wife only
returned from Bennington Friday morn
Ing. ('
Bee Want Ads are business boosters.
That the women of Nebraska have earned
a recognised place In church aa well as In
club work Is demonstrated tn the fact that
two of the most Important general church
meetings of the year will be held In this
state this fall. For the third time in the
twenty-flve years of its existence the an
nual convention of the Women' Homo
Missionary society of the Methodist Episco
pal church will be held In the west this
year, Lincoln to have the honor of enter
taining it from October 11 to 17. The an
nual meeting of the general executive com.
mlttce of the Women's Foreign Mlwilonary
society of the Methodist church will be
held In Omaha October 26 to November 1
at the First Methodist churcji.1 These two
meetings, which are entirely distinct, will
call together, some of the most prominent
women In Methodism at home and abroad,
as well as some of the foremost workors
In the foreign mission field. Considering
how rarely these Important meetings have
been held In the west, their both coming
to Nebraska this year would Indicate that
Nebraska women are still strong workers
In the church, notwithstanding, their ac
tivity In club and other educational and
reform work that has won them general
recognition. In addition to entertaining
these two general meetings, the women
of the state are arranging for three im
portant state convsntlons of the Federa
tion of Women's Clubs, the Suffrage asso
ciation and the Woman's Christian Tem
perance union, all of which will precode
the Home Missionary meeting at Lincoln.
A call has been Issued for the twenty
sixth annual convention of the Nebraska
Woman- Suffrage association, which will be
held at Lincoln October 2 and t. The meet
ings will be held In All Souls' church.
Twelfth and H streets. All delegates will
be entertained for lodging and breakfast
In the homes of the city and upon arrival
In the city will be assigned to places of
entertainment upon application to the com
mittee at the church. -The basis of repre
sentation at the- convention is three dele
gates for each club, with one adddltlonal
delegate for every twenty-five paid P
members of such club above tbs first
twenty-five. State officers, county and local
presidents and chairmen of committees sre
ex-offlclo members of the convention. Fra
ternal delegates from other organisations
will be welcomed.
At a meeting of the literature depart
ment of the Omaha Woman's club held
recently It was decided to adjourn the
department for one year. A number of
members who have contributed promi
nently to the work of the department In
the past have decided to take up other
lines of club work this year, leaving a
scarcely sufficient number of women to
carry tha work, and adjournment waa con
sldered best. There Is some talk of calling
the department together again later In the
year.
An effort Is being made to complete' the
club directory of the general federation
before the fall is over and communica
tions have been Issued to officers of affili
ated clubs asking them to forward the
necessary data at ones. A complete club
directory la of Inestimable value In facili
tating communication between clubs and
each one should do Its share In the effort
to hst en Its sue.
The committees In charge of the various
departments of work of the Young
Women's Christian association will be en
tertained at tea Monday, evening, Septeoi-
ber 24, at. tha - association - rooms, when
plans will be discussed for the winter's
work. ' It has been definitely decided to
resume the issue of the association bulletin
formerly called the Budget. It will be
published monthly In future. Instead of
weekly. C
A committee representing the civil serv
ice committee of the Nebraska Federation
of Woman's Clubs made an Inspection of
the city and county Jails of - Omaha
Wednesday afternoon. Upon recommenda
tion of Mrs. Decker of the general federa
tion, state civil service committees have
been making an inspection of the various
public Institutions of their respective com
munities with a" view to disseminating
general Information regarding such instl
tutlons and their management. Mrs. F. H.
Cole of Omaha Is chairman of the Ne
braska committee.
Excursion to n-ar Lake, Ia.
On Friday, September 8. the Chicago
Great Western railway will run a special
excursion train to Clear, Lake. Tickets
will be sold at very low rates and will ho
good to return until October 1. Ask H. II.
Churchill, general agent, 1512 Fa mam
street, Omaha, for Information.
SEASONABLE. FASHIONS.
HAWAIIANS DRAW CROWD
After Enjoyable Concert Program of
Half Doies Numbers Is
Rendered.
The Royal Hawaiian ' band drew the
largest house of, the week to the Audi
torium last night, and presented a program
replete with delightful melody. In many
respects , the " program rendered was the
most enjoyable 'yet given by this unique
and popular musical organization. The
band did Itself proud In several selections
and the singing of the Glee club fairly run
away with the audience. Miss Lehue and
the two GUIs brothers were In splendid
voice and their solo work was exceptionally
fine and enjoyable.
' After the regular concert program was
over the chairs were removed from the
arena and about aO young and middle-aged
people remained to enjoy a half dozen
dances, the music being furnished by the
Glee club. These concert dances have be
come very popular.
This evening Captain Birgcr and his
Hawaiian band will present their great
"Civil War" selection, as the opening num
ber of part second on the program.
In the
OCTOBER
CRIBNER
HO. XN EXl.. ...T ULOL'SE FOR
8CHOOL WfciAR.
Tha young girl's wardrobe Is not com
plete without several odd blouses of simple
design which she may don for every-day
use. A design for such Is shown, which
may be developed by any amateur sewer.
A box plest at either side of the front and
In the back gives good and becoming lines,
while the narrow tucks add fullness to the
front and make up for deficiencies in un
developed figures. Such a waist may be
made of serge, challla, Snohalr or pongee
and look well at all times. The sletve
may be finished with deep or narrow t.uii.
40S1 eizt-s. 13 to 17 years. . I
For the accommodation of The Oman
Bee readers these patterns, which uouaMy
retail at from 3 to H cents, will be fur
nished at a nominal price (10 cenU), which
overs all expenses. In order to get a pa;,
tern enclose 10 cents, giving number aud
Dame of pattern wanted and bust measure.
As the patterns are mailed direct from the
publishers In New York, it will require
about a week's time to fill thj order. Ad
Srcus: Pattern Deiai Uucut, In. Uuwns
ala, unia-h. Nsa. .
Hip
T
The American Bison
Or BUFFALO
By
Ernest Thompson Seton
The story of the millions that once ranged the Western
PLun, and the causes that have led lo their extinction.
Daughters of Zion
By
IQateDouglas
"XS ? A delightfully
IAJ L5jcLn amusing story of
OO how KKBtXCA
organized a Home Missionary Society.
John Fox's
Serial
A Knight of the
Cumberland
Full of romance, humor, and interest
ing characters. ,
The Messenger&im
The remarkable adventure of a young Army officer sent on a dangerous minion
into the Indian country.
Between Towns in Spain EDWARD PENFIELD
Travel off the beaten track. Illustrated in colors by the artist.
Washington in the Hands of the British
A vivid account of the capture ol the National Capital, from the Diaries snd
Letters of Margaret Bayard Smith. 6 T R '
The Position and Influence of Pope LoljNSBURY
New light on the poet's career and personal character.
Jl Professorial Meditation
The College Professor and His Salary. '
By
GRANT SHOWERMAN
THE CLOSED SHUTTERS
By
James v
B. Connolly .
A dramatic story of the Fishing Fleet.
The Girl from the Machine
A rofM.nc .piaed. i. Um kf. ( s kuuling
young rmiimr
By JESSE LYNCH WILLIAMS
Author of MTh Molam Siry."
The Terror on the Boiling Water
By Francis Lynde
Th Msry railroad M'adoaVfti how it w ate red
NEXT YEAR-Anothmr Hi-mat Novml by
EDITH WHARTON
ul. Mirth1
I3.00 A Year . 5 Cents A Number
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, NEW YORK
5
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