Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 03, 1907, HALF-TONE SECTION, Page 8, Image 28

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    8
TIIE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: FEBRUARY 3, 1007.
O
A Physic Hunt
J T IS yeur ch'lce, Bmlthers," said
ill Gentleman Georse.
JJJ I shet my eyos; I tunned about
twicet; I Mew on me hand.
"Hera t luck." I cried, a I
card from the box contalnln' tha
and discredited risks of tha
pulled a
rejlcted
Charakter Surety company.
"It orter be luck," reflected Jarge "for
all tha meaning of It;" and ba read 'as
follera:
Aualum, rierre, M: Slnale, Uvea at home
with his father, Ir. KoUert Anglum. tha
tiofd aclentlHt, and youuar sister Annette,
Nlxy for Pierre's application to be bonflea
as truatee under his uncle Peter s Will.
Htrslght goods but queer. Walks In his
sleep, writes poetry, forgets his own nsnie,
hides things. To the funny house for him.
"It la luck," I began eagerly.
" 'Tie the postscrip' thet has the sting
in It, like a scorp'un's tail," Jarge wlnt
on, unheeding. "Ivldently jotted down some concLitratun Is too Intlnse to laA more
time arter In pencil by the Inapictor hlsself than a few minutes each marnln'. The re
for his own puasonai use. Hear to It, now," leased soul la still strange and tubbled
and he read: leased soul la still Strang and tubbed
Good shot 5o,00O saved. P. A. dead and - In Its new envlronmlnta, unable to react
the diamonds gun. 4 explains. It I only coherently or progrlsslvely. If there were
bad the magnet Impulsea toward dlvuas hiding places, each
Mow, wnat in the aivvie ne Degan.
"It Is luck," I persisted. "It all cornea
back to me now; I kin see what he's
drlvln" at like the lnd of a road. '4 ex
plains' that's the slntlnce above, don't you
see, Jarge? about Anglum's wsikln' la his
sleep and hidin' flags."
"He tucked away some'ares for keeps
the dl'monds left In his care by bis uncle's
will t50,000 wuth, 'Unly a maguetr Well,
Z guess, yes. If be unly had a clue to
lead blm to that needle la a haystack.
"But we'll make a try for tbim, Jarge
'tis more an even chancL" And thin, as
he brought down bis band heavy, I told
thla votac'ua tale.
It was a year back whin Jarge and me
was apart. I was stumpln' the pave dis
consolate, with nawthln' but hands in me
pockets, and those blue ani cold.
A hearty old gent, with a long white
beard, stopped me, lifting me chin and
peerln' Into me face with his bright, blue
eyes. Thin he offered me good pay and
prog if I wud go to his house and act as a
ubjeck for a trlflin' scientific lnwestlgatun.
I wlnt to his roomy, ramblln' house, so
tired and weak from me bed and boord ct
stone thet hardly bad he told me to look
at a big, bllnkln' crystal and hardly bad
he made a pass and a stroke before I was
nlddle-noddlln' in the Land of Nod; talkln'
yls, in answer to his queatuna, but I don't
know sayin' wjiat, exclpt it was about
somethln' that was hid and must be found.
He kep' me there for free days in a
vereptable land of Canaan, served straight,
wldout milk and honey at the aide, t'ank
goodness, and when he dismissed me as
not proven, me pockets were warm enough
to keep me hands from glttun blue and
cold.
"This was Dr. Anglum T" ast Jarge, Im
pat'ently. "And you think he was
searchln' for the dl'monds?"
"Rlarht. bot' wave." I answered. "At
fuat I fought he was simply daffy, but
now I kin see he was daffy wit' a pup
pose, like every, odder man of gen'ua.
"And that ain't all, Jarge. He niced
me, he liked my glntle ways. Ills last
words wore an Ixpiiasun of confidence.
'It's In you, all right,' be said, with a
lgh, 'but I ain't got the power to revoke
It. Some'ares In the wurrold, young man,
Is you compllralnt, the strong will that Is
a key to your slnaltive soul, which kin un-
lock and unfold the mysteries of natur'.
Promise me, if the two hemispheres are
Iver screwed (ogedder by fortutus sue-
cumatances into a globe of pufflct knowl-
edge you and he will come to me as me
honored guests.' "
"I see your drift at laat," Interrupted
Jarge; "you want me to play the role of
anudder Cally Ostrum. But what do I
know about anny such rot?"
"That's half the battle." I cried, ex-
ultant. "Tour method Is sure to be an
advanced wan. Under your magical In-
flooance I'll lead you by gradooal and bar-
monua at. pa from clller to root, from cold
to warm, until be ha proclss of ellmlna-
tion we locate the dl'monds. Talk about
a needle In a haystack! I'll go t'roo that
fodder with a fine toot' comb."
JargM asalnted at lengf , but in a half
hearted way.
" 'Tls all very like with a dotty old man,"
he grumbled as we started on our qulst,
"but there's a girl what's her name An
nette?" "There Is a girl, very much of wan. too,"
I agreed with an Iplcurecn smack of the
Hps. "She was away whin I was there;
but I seen her plctur and It wud make a
did octoglneraln skip with J'y. I wisht
I cud put meself In your place, Jarge; I
wisht that unly for the onct I might pose
aa the masher unlvussal."
But It was no use. The etarnal spark
of Jarge' s vanity was blinked under a
bushel of doubts. His Arab steed was shed
with burlap and straw lnstid of Are,
"But thla sleen of yours. Bmlthers." he
fretted. "Was It genoolne, was It naterat?"
Whin I had assured htm of my ability to
sleep at will under anny and all condi
tions, but alius with wan eye open. I
began to see the drift" of his quama. The
fesr of the unknown was upon him- fear
that has rattled many a stouter nerve
than his.
Not that Jarge was a coward pride,
ambltun, eagerness, greed, united to give
him a sort of deaprlt courage. But there
was nawthln matter o' fak about It.
It was alius under excitement, tnsptratua;
with narves tightened up to the highest
pitch, and hysterics follerln' clus like a
shadder. No forlorn hope for Jarge, sech
aa propln froo a tunnell to locate a mine;
he wanted to see the wsy Ivery time; yU,
and to know It wore his.
Howlver, the perllmlnarles were so
famll'ar as to put him at ease. Dr. Anglum
recognised me at onct; be greeted me with
feverish glee.. The old man had failed In
the year, aa If the hand of Deaf had al
ready begun to smooth and soothe him
Into nort.
Is It reallv so?" he Quavered, "you have
found your Alter Eggo at last?" oom'- Ko- not OB yur 1,fe: 1 cudn't aland
"We're from the very same shell, and do for ,bat-
mistake," I replied. Btill, it was me emotuns and not me
"An adept, a true adept, rusaed In the ludmlnt which sint my over the dlvldun
mysteries of the Teast," he mummered as llne' Wan maraJn" whin Jarge and me
Jarge tossed bajek his flowing locks and WR m th m,dl,t of our "eaunta we met
caaht his eyes Into a earner of the celling. Annett n upper hall, I, leadln', with
It was rally pitiful, so It, wore, to watob..yM ,hut' a11 ntranct; he cllngln' to my
bta tremblln' eagerness, his Implicit fait' wrlst hlnd as if to a f read out of a
that, bis own crasy nofun had come true, ,abJTlnt-
as be explained how vital It was that 11 ppened In an tnstlnt la that
eertlng valooables hid In the house shud nUT'r Passage. I was cxmsc'us that she
be found, aa he offered iveryt'lng he lu'd he" hlVDd ffectlonately on Jarge's
possessed, with no Spanish string to It
Dr.iyon's",'
PERFECT
Toofii Pou&r
Cleanses and beautifies the
tee tlx and purifies tko breath.
Used by people of refinement
br over a quarter of a century.
. Convenient $or tourists.
KM
ntteAftO Y
for Diamonds
seder. If we wud unly help him.
"My Infirmities pervlnt me from furder
attempt in the occult art," he raid, "but I
sun have my apparatus, much of It rare
and coatly "
But Jorge shook his head.
"My method la simplicity Itself," he de
clared. "T'reo tha force of the will alone
I so correlate the mind of Smlthers with
the mind of the punson who hid the treas
ure that the former reflects the tmpu'ses
of th- jatter even as the brook reflecta tha
,. , ... ., i, ,
feater of tha wan binding over It-do I
maae myseir ciearr'
"Pufflckly," aald tha good old doctor; and
I liked his nerve.
"The procisd Is simple, but tejus," Jarge
oontlnnered, "If as my syklck ainse warn
me that pusaon has already passed over
and beyond. In that case the strain of
wan may be reflected before the true wan
Is revealed."
"Papa, Is there anything I can do? ast
a sweet, tinder vlce. "Tou have been so
long; It Is time, you know, for you to
rest."
A beauryus young girl entered the room
and clung to the old man's arm; her white
complexun, her black hair and eyes, re
mlndun wan of the saft spllndor of some
misty night whin the meon Is asleep and
the stars seem sleepy. She caaht an anx'us
glanct at her father, a curus wan at me;
but whin Jsnre's deep gase met hers with
a challlnge she drooped her lids and you
cud fairly hear the buds a greetin" the
roseytt twilight.
"These gentlemen are to be our honored
guests, Annette," said the old doctor; "not
for so long as I would, but for so long as
they will. They are lllumlnatl " I fought
how ofting we had been all lit up "and
are going to help me in the matter clussest
to my heart."
Ha stud for a moment, leaning on his
cane, bis hand lxtended as If In blnedlctun.
Then he hobbled from the room.
Annette drew near, with streamln' eyes.
"Tou are gentlemen, I know ysu are,"
she perflated. "Tou cul not be so crule as
to wrong that feeble and confldun old man!
You can help him; you will help htm Is It
not so? To deceive him, to dlsapplnt him
where he feels his honor Is Involved, wud
be his deaf."
And Jarge, blndln' over her hand, vowed
by Its lilies to prove a wise adviser and
true frlnd.
Curus to relate, the trail was nlver cold.
On the contrary. It stldlly progressed from
warm to hot.
Our muddus ope randy was as follera:
With a few pusses Jarge put me in a hyp
noptlo sleep.- Thin, with his hand closed
over me throbbin' wrist, he follered
wherlver I all uncon'cus led.
The very fust day I dragged him at top
speed down the kltchlng stairs to the gas
meter box. And lo. from behind that ln
glne of dlapotlsm he drew fort' a manu
script pome which no doubt had been
preo'us In the sight of the late lamlnted
and deluded Pierre Anglum.
Again, the very next marn I roller rinked
htm t'roo the parlors to the top drawer on
tha lift of the butler's pantry. The on-
likeliest place, for the damusk and fine
lining with which It wore stored had not
been disturbed, for years, and ylt In the
right back earner was. a rubber ring
carved by Pierre whin a lad and carret
by him f roo his adolesclnce with an honest
pride in his precoc'us skill,
Wanat more whin lnspiratun slnt me up
the stairs, as It alius shud, I stopped plum
against a stater of Pomony on a nltch by
the landln'. Wud you b'lleve that in the
bottom of her bounf us pharmacopla, that
barn of pllnty, Jarge found a plctur of the
gone before but not forgot Mrs. Dr. Aug-
lum which long had stud on the driaser In
her son's room?
' How did I work such maglo? Why, as it
is glnerally worked by a slight Insight into
human ways.
A tall, slim, solemn, mlloncholy, In
dlvddle, like Pierre, who bad swallered a
ramrod and thin assimilated It, wasn't apt
to do afletlo stunts In bis sleep. Ho
might walk In It and stalk In it, but all
the powers of the air cudn't make him
climb in It or creep In It So I fancied
his ghostly flgger pokln' along with arm
extlnded, and wherlver a possible hiding
place on about that llyll offered Itself I
made for it.
Such supernateral Ividlncea bad a two-
fold effeck. The hand that held my wrist
tunned cold and clammy, and I cud hear
Jarge cuss under his breaf even while he
crossin- ntssell on tne quite. Me naan t
h 1D la tn tu,t Plac- dreaded
U now so much that I fink he wud have
give It the go by for good and all had It
not been for Annette.
Yls, Annette. Seeln' was bellevln' with
her, too. She greeted as rapf ualy, as
Jr8 did skeeredly. these proofs of our
powers.
Remtraber, she had been bred and fed
upon the unseen, tlnded by splruta, and
lulled to sleep by their raps. It wasn't
spirit' us communlcatun that aha had iver
doubted, but unly whither we was of the
llict, whither we might not be wolves in
sheep's clothln' who climbed over the wall
b" nlnt- Now with . falf there kern that
,ov wnlch ' clo4V u" pardner as
81ra) twln-
1 wa" orry to constant view
. """ nor "u" ". cneenm.
devoted, unselfish, carryln' her kindly
smile and greetin' from wan room to
anudder like a movable star, plntrated to
saft spot in me natur, pritty foro'ly
. Dver lno mua years
It was wan f lng to stand by me comrld
and thief in a Job of me own sellctun; It
was quite anudder to let him step off the
t Pt' nd trample down posies In so
uuuiurr; juai as impulsively, with me
free hand. I give her a warnln' nudge.
An hour later I was alone In the llb'ry.
rlstun from the strain o me soulful endlv
vors, when Annette entered a transformed
Annette, older be years, with th' light gone
from her eyes and th' smile from her Hps.
"Tou meant to warn me against him,"
ah. said!
"I meant It kindly, Ulsa," I answered.
Then you are a wicked fraud!" she
flashed. "Wan under the apell of animal
magnetism cannot have Independent In
tenticna Prove your klndlness now by
tenia' me all."
I did, for I euln't help It. for wasn't and
the unly' time I was under a spell the
yeaxa and strain of a good woman's
agonised heatt. X pleaded guilty without
blnlflt of the clargy, I f rew meslf on the
tnuasy of tha eoort
Again I waa struck with the sudden
gravity and maturity of her natur.
"Tou must eontlnoer a you have until
the lad. aha declared, "It is possible that
mm kWMMMM
7n misr---
the outcome may bring J'y and vlcfry to
my poof father, shame and defeat to the
wretch with whom you conaart."
' What Use cud I do but obeyT I wasn't
looktn' for trouble with Jarge, therefore
I had to keep quiet about my treachery.
I reaplchted Annette for her new found
fumness, I was cur'us to see how far and
In what dlrectun It might lead her.
I was sorry, too, for the poor old doctor.
If the dlmands were not recovered he
was ruined, since he held hlsself In honor
bound to make good the llgateea to whom
they had been bequeathed. Why, thin,
ahudn't I let thim have a flghtun chanctt
It had alius been easy come and easy go
with me; there were pllnty more cards
In the box and there wud be anudder day.
Besides, I tuk a pride In my unsusplcted
powers and was anx'us to see it they wild
not prove vlctor'us. The field of research
was narrowin'; we had klvered the fust two
atorles; there only remained the third,
bavin' a vacant attlo In front an' a large
work room in the rear, where the doctor
had pusued his lnvestlgatuns, and within
which bis apparatus was stored.
"Smlthers," said Jarge, with sparkling
eyes whin he was alone arter the last
aeaunts we was dlstlned all unknowing to
bold. "Smlthers, me b'y, we have copped
the game for fair. Did you notice any
thing peoul'ar about my actuns this
marnln', whin you had Indicated that I
shud search Just back of the lldge of the
dormer window In the attic T"
"I noticed you palmed somothln', Jarge."
- "It was a note; hear to It," he cried,
and thin be read as toilers:
For safe keeping against the secret ene
mies of our house I have hid the diamonds
in the black hok standing on the shelf In
father's workshop.
"We've got thim sure," he continnered
dellr'us, "as sure as if they was already
in pawn. At the mystic hour of 12 the
night, whin old Orphuss is in asclndancy
f roout the house, we'll pluck thim from
their matrix, and thin, ho and away to
Tom Tiddler's ground !"
There was no holding of him, be was so
exalted, so excited, in such a state, do you
mind, as wud key him up to desprlt deeds
shud It unly last.
Sut It didn't laat. Either the old doctor
was persessed by the Imp of the perverse
or Use his daughter had been priming him;
I cudn't tell which.
At ail sweats, for the riat of the day and
until late at night he dealt out some blood
curdlers from the undeflled springs of hU
mln'ry and experience. I caught mesllf
seeing f lngs on the wall and looktn' over
me shoulder for more and wuss behind,
and as for Jarge, his courage waa visibly
ooslng from Ivery pour. He waa In a blue
funk, he was, whin at midnight's mystlo
hour we stole up the attlo stairs.
"If it unly wasn't so dark," be mur
mured. Dark It wore; that cold, black dark which
wud make a receivin' vault cosy In com
parison. I know I had to held on to my
own Jaw; as for Jarge, you'd tlnk It was
playln' bones In some dlwle's orchlstry.
Howlver, we persisted, creepln' Into the
workroom and pausln' In the clnter until I
oud strike a match tor our bearln's. The
light flamed for a second and thin wlnt
out, but d'rectly In front of Jarge was the
black box on tha stand. He stretched out
hie handwhin flas, bang!
I fought it waa the riasurectun. There
was a flaming, blinding flash and a blase;
there was a din, Inceaant, terrtflo, horrible!
I fink If all thla while there had not
been a subconscious fougb in me that
Annette and her .father were perhaps coun
terplotting again' us I wud have gone down
and out aa completely as Jarge did. As It
was, I staggered against th' wall, taint
and sick.
"lick up your fellow . rogue and be
gone," aald a stern v ice, as the old doctor
hlsself advanced from behind a screen.
"Whin he recovers his alnaes tell him that
froo your machlnatuns the dl'monda have
been found and delivered to their rightful
owners. If It wasn't for a sinse of oblige
tun to you, Bmlthers. pussuonally, bof for
your cllverness In devising a method of
March aad -the favor you rtndered ma
The Beer You Like Is The Lightest Beer Brewed,
It is as urilque and different in this respect as it is in. taste and quality. It is
brewed especially to meet the refined American taste of today.
Luxus is "The Beer You Like" it is what you have been looking for. It is
beyond all argrument, the best beer brewed. Luxus is brewed entirely from the
finest Bohemian hops, malt made from the world's best barley, choice, selected Im
ported Indian rice, and pure water from our Artesian Springs.
Being a light beer, wholesome and appetizing, you can drink as much as you
like of Luxus, with no after effect but a satisfied palate and a delicious sense of
refreshment in the niind and body.
Test it today at luncheon.
Luxus is really different it Is not ordinary beer Luxus is the mpst exqus
ite refinement of the brewers' art.
Brewed by the FRED KRUG BREWING CO.
OMAHA, NEB.
."EXPONENTS OF THE FINE ART OF BREWING)
daughter, I'd have you both In the lockup.
As It Is, let this be a lesson to you not to
meddle with what you don't understand,
Use, like Charcot's method of hypnotism,
a dazzling light attlnded by the clang of a
gong, It may f row you."
France's Religious Strife
(Continued from Page One.)
for two classes of ministers of religion
who prior to the passage of the law
bad been receiving salaries from the state.
One is for priests who are CO years old or
over and who have served thirty years.
To them is offered for life a pension equal
to three-quarters of their salaries.
Those priests who are over 43 and have
exercised their ecclesiastical functions
under salary from the government for
twenty years are entitled to a pension of
one-halt their salaries. In neither cose,
however, roust the pension exceed 1,600
francs a year.
All other ministers who draw salaries
from the government are allowed to re
ceive tor four years toliowing trie suppres
sion of the appropriation for pubilo worship
an allowance equui to the full sum of
their salary tor the first year, to two
thirds for the second, for one-half to the
third and to one-third for the fourth year.
In communes of leas than 1,000 ioiiaoitants,
and for ministers who shall continue to
exercise their functions, the duration of
the four periods indicated shall be doubled.
Applications tor pensions must be pre
sented wtihin a year,
Elaborate provisions are made tor the
transter of ail thu ' church property
throughout France to the new associations
that may be formed. Thus far not more
than eighty priests have made the declara
tion required under the law of ltoi, and
not more than 100 associations have been
formed.
When the enormous number of Catholic
churches in France ( is considered it will
be seen how the attitude of the Catholics
toward the law makes the tasa of enforc
ing it well nigh Impossible. Under tiie ad
vice of the pope they are offering a pas
sive resistance, which Is expected to be
much more eftectlve than violence or the
taking up of arms.
Little or no blood has been shed since
the government started to enforce th
law, but the Catholics simply refuse to
obey, its provlsloua None of the priests
who have been arrested for saying mass
In churches without giving notice to the
officials has paid his tine, and all are de
termined to serve their sentences in jail
as a mark of their seal for the old order
of affairs.
The separation law decrees that meet
ings for public worship held in places be
longing to an association or put at its dis
posal are public. They are relieved from
the formalities of the law of lull, but re
main subject to the .supervision of the'
authorities In the Interest of publio order.
They may take place only after a decla
ration has been made Indicating the place
la which they are to be held. A single
declaration, however, suffices for all the
regular, stated or special meetings that
shall be held during the year.
It Is forbidden to hold political meet
ings In places regularly used for publio
worahlp, and ceremonies, processions and
other outdoor observances of religion shall
continue to be regulated by the municipal
law. The ringing of church bells shall be
regulated by municipal decree, and in case
of disagreement between the mayor and
the president of any association the matter
la to be settled by decree of the prefect.
Under arUcle i or the law It la
forblden In future to erect or affix any
religious clgn or emblem upon public mon
umeata a la any public plao whatever,
with the exception of edifices set spart for
religious worship, burial grounds, monu
ment of the dead, museums and exposi
tions. Violations of this article are pun
. tsbed by simple police penalties. The build
ings and listed movable objecta shall be
freely open to the visits and Inspection of
the public without charge or fee.
Buildings sot apart for publio worship
which belong to the state, department, or
ocuniniine continue to be exempt Croat th
A light beer is just as essential as a moderate
luncheon for a level head during business hours.
Heavy, sticky, "bilious" beers are decidedly out
of order during the business day-; in fact they
are out of place any time. A beer that requires
digestion, instead of aiding digestion, is not the beer
for you. The modern demand is for a light beer.
realty tax and the door and window tax,
but edifices serving as residences for min
isters of religion, seminarists and the fac
tions belonging to the state, the depart
ments or the communes and property
belonging to the associations and unions
are subject to the same imposts as those
of private individuals. The law then adds:
"The associations and unions are not In
any cane subject to the special corporation
tax nor to those imposed on clubs
nor to the Income tax of 4 per cent."
Religious teaching may be given to chil
dren between the ages of 6 and 13 years
registered In the public schools, but only
outside of school hours.
A fine of from 16 to 300 franos, or Im
prisonment for six days to two months,
is Imposed upon those who "by assaults,
violence or threats against an Individual,
either in causng him the fear of the loss of
his employment or of exposing himself to
Injury In his person, his family or his for
tune, shall have determined such person
to exercise or to abstain from exercising
rights of religious worahlp to Join or cease
to be a member of any association for re
ligious worship, to contribute or refrain
to contribute for the maintenance of a
religion." The same penalties are pro
vided for any one who delays or interrupts
religious worahlp by disorderly conduct.
A minister who defames or insults a
public official from the pulpit or by pla
cards hung on the walls of the church is
liable to a fine of from GOO to 1,000 francs
or to Imprisonment of from one month to ,
one year. The fact of the defamation, but
only when It relates to public functions,
may be established before the correctional
tribunal.
Article xxxv reads: "If a speech, dis
course or a writing posted up or distrib
uted publicly In places where religious
services are held shall contain a direct
provocation to resist the execution of the
laws or the lawful acts of public authority,
or if It shall tend to raiBe up or arm a
part of the people against the others, the
minister of religion who shall be found
guilty shall be punished by an Imprison
ment of from three months to two years,
without prejudice to the-penalties incurred
for complicity In case the provocation
shall have been followed by sedition, re
volt or civil war."
During the eight years beginning with
the promulgation of the law ministers of
religion are ineligible to membership in
the municipal council of the communes
where they exercise their religious func
tions. By the terms of the present, separation
law all enactments relative to the publio
organization of religions previously recog
nized by ths state, as well as enactments
contrary to the present law, are abrogated,
a notable Instance being the concordat
Itself. This is described as "The law of
the eighteenth germinal, year 10, provid
ing that the convention ratified the twenty
sixth meaaldor, year t, between the pope
and the French government, all the or
ganlo articles of the said convention and
of the Protestant denomination should be
executed as laws of the republic."
The French government is firm In Its
resolve to enforce the law and It haa the
warm support of the Chambers In Its de
termination. After the law was passed,
but before It went into operation, an elec
tion waa held and an Increased majority of
deputies returned who are In favor of the
act.
Unquestionably a majority of the voters
In France favor the separation act as the
only practical solution of the vexed ques
tions that have arisen between church and
state, but It Is not believed that the Catho
lics, who are loyal to the pope, will ever
submit to the restriction As yet no
practical compromise tms txxta suggested
by which the Catholics could continue to
give allegiance to the Holy Father and still
obey the provisions of the law.
In his encyclical of last August the pope
declined to allow the French bishops to
comply with the terms of the act. He
said that he had examined the law with the
greatest care to see if it allowed the ex
ercise of religion without jeopardizing the
sacred principles C tha church, tie de
clared that it was not permissible to try
this kind of association as lone as it was
not established In a sure and legal manner
that the divine constitution of the church,
the Immutable rights of the Roman pontiff
and of the bishops, aa well as the au
thority over the necessary property of the
A Pair of Short Anecdotes
James Bryess Claim en America.
iRJTINO of the new British am
w
bassador to the United State,
the Hon. James Bryoe, Mr.
Charlea Johnston makes the In
teresting observation in Harper's
Weekly that there Is not a section of the
American community on whose welcome
Mr. Bryce has not some special claim.
There Is the great bulk of the nation, to
which Mr. Bryce's great reputation recom
mends him. "To the Irish-American he
comes as a stanch home-ruler, who 'never
for a moment wavered in bis convictions.
To the German-American he may probably
boast that he Is an alumnus of Heidelberg,
that he Is a lifelong student of German
literature and history, that In bis first po
litical campaign, he had the honor, shared
by few British members of Parliament, of
addressing the German electors of East
London in their own Teutonic tongue
To the French, be can point to his splendid
study of Charlemagne, In the Holy Kotnan
empire, and say that few historians have
done more ample Justice to the great re
viver of the Roman empire. The Italians
should welcome him as a great student of
Italy, from the days of Julius Caesar up to
the present day. He may fraternise with
the Swiss, if we have any among us, on
the high ground that, for years, he was
one of the most intrepid climbers of their
lovely mountains, and is a former presi
dent of the Alpine club. The Hungarians
will remember with a glow of satisfaction
that he has explored many of the remote
corners of their beautiful kingdom. The
Slavs know of him as a traveler In Poland.
The Russians may recall, with admiring
envy, that he haa the honor of having
climbed Mount Ararat, alone and ungulded,
while the dozen Cossacks and Kurds who
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AND SHIPPED
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Send us your order
save all the dealer' prof
its and get ths highest
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whiskey at distillers'
pries.
W will send jo
FOUR FULL QUART
BOTTLES HAYNER
PRIVATE STOCK
BOTTLED IN BOND
WHISKEY for $3.30
bv express prepaid in
plain package with no
marks to show contents.
Whio ysa it It .t It.
If not MUslactory, retura it
at our tipM sod w. will
rtura your Ss.se. That's
fair laa't it?
DAVQED
I-Tweruj ImuiT jy
mYNEl
'Mm
BOTTLED IN BORf
pfWWa. OSTIUIXS CO1
THE HAYKER DISTILLING COKPANY, Division 4123
OayUa, Ohio 9U Lls, Me. St. Paul, Nina. Atlanta, Oa.
llf DisTnxaar, Taor, Ona. dnxL. Ibao.ooo.00 feu. run. XsTausaan last,
wi
church, and particularly over the sacred
edifices, shall be Irrevocably placed In tha
associations In full security. To desire ths
contrary the pope said was for him, lm
possible without betraying the sanctity ov
his office and bringing about the ruin oi
the church in France,
made tbe start with him were lolling worn
out on the lower slopes of the mountain.
To Scandinavians he -may talk of hia ex
plorations In Iceland, where he trod In the
footsteps of the daring Vikings' ef old, and
his claim to have proceeded thenoe to
America la better authenticated than that
of Lelt the Lucky or Brio the Red."
. I
Waea Btabbs Cosled Bis Hsela.
J. C. Stubbs, one ef the Important wit
nesses in the Interstate Commerce com
mission's Investigation ' Into tbe Harrimaa
lines. Is traffic director of the Union Pa
ciflo and the Southern Pacific and la ac
counted one of the most prominent railroad
men in Chicago. Mr. Harriman, It la
known, relies upon his Judgment In trafTI o
matters almost implicitly. Mr. Stubbs ar
rived in New York City from Chicago one
morning not long ago, relates the New
York Bun, and bad planned, after trans
action of business with his chief, to re
Yurn on an afternoon train. But Mr. Har
riman waa busy and kept tbe traffic dl- '
rector waiting and fidgeting about th
outer office. Eventually, train time ap
proaching, he sent in to Mr. Harriman to
request an Immediate Interview. Tbe re
sponse was Immediate, Mr. Harriman,
throwing open the door and shouting at th
top of his voice:
"Sit down Stubbs, and wait tlU I get
ready to aee you. Your salary goes on,
juat the same whether you're In Chicago
or New York."
Mr. Stubbs went back and sat down and
did net appear at all disconcerted.
"He probably knows," aald the man who
told the story, "that more prominent men
than he In the financial world have ac
customed themselves to Juat such treat
ment." COYERKUEMT GUARANTEES IT.
A FSJSJL
EXPRESS
PREPAID
This is at ths rats of
only 80 cents a full quart
(express prepaid) for
HAYNER WHISKEY,
BOTTLED IN BOND
in our own registered
distillery under U. 3.
Government supervision
full strength, full mens
lire, absolute purity and
age guaranteed by Gov
ernment stamp on each
bottle.
Don't wal mb 1 roar order
to our Mmt olfic todays
sad nsauea ' DtYitloa 412
. Or4r for Aria ..Cel., Cola,.
!Uk. Un..Nr..ll M.l..Or...
t'Mb, WMk.ar Wfo. It.ua t. o.
Ih bun r e luru for abf
f,r PrveaJa, or ee ejatwt.
Wei- rtkl fr.,.14.
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