Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 06, 1907, NEWS SECTION, Page 5, Image 5

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AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA
City Treasurer Filet Hii Report for
the Month of June.
KTJBIBEE OP FUNDS EUKUINQ LOW
roartk of Jalr ! Crlebrated Wllk tka
Vasal Adihii ( NoU. bat N
rloaa Arcldvnta A ra
Hrportad.
. . -. f ...
Tha city traurr fllad hlf rWt with
tha city clerk on tha armtnf f July S,
ahowlng tha condition of tha city funda,
tha rroaipta and tfltburaementa tot tha
month of July and tha apiount at prasont
placed ta tha credit of tha city In tha
hanka. . In aeveral way tha report la In
taraattnf. Ona la that the drat of tha
money appropriated for. ' tha construction
of severs was expended. Tha amount spent
was tor. tha first estimate of the city
engineer for the Mud creek aewer, S3, 733.24.
The largest Item of expenae for the month
was the Interest on obligations, amount
ing to IJl.irn, Several of tha bond la
suae have maturing coupons, which were
paid. Tha total amount collected for tha
tnnnth was f7,7M. The total disburse
ments wra .. 730.01. The amount of tha
June balance was M87.S84..4 Tha amount
remaining In the city treasury July 1 was
4.C9.!)t.. Prom this balance.lt will be
easily seen that tha amount appropriated
to th general lery for tha present year
la growing low. The surplus at the end
Of th; ar will not exceed 13.004, The
greater amount of tha money In the treas
ury has been appropriated to speola) pur
poses, such as the sewers, paving project
and tha city halt. The city hall fund la
being rapidly used up. '
Parh ia'wolsr.
South Omaba celebrated Its Fourth In
arluu ways yetserday. As far as notes
and huubbub of firecrackers, torpedoes and
explosives Is concerned the city vied with
any m the land. The uproar was starts)
Wednesday evening snd continued all night
with scarcely any Intermlaalon. Every boy
lu the city and tha majority of the 'girls
each added a mite to tha votllea proclaiming
tha holiday. AH the street car tracks were
lined with torpedoes. Notwithstanding ths
vast amount of explosives used there wer
no accidents reported to th polioe and
no euee required the aervloea of the hos
pital. There waa a fire about 10:30 at
Twenty-sixth and O street caused by a
skyrocket going through a window into a
honsa. Tha damag waa slight, being little
more than powder black from tha biasing
rocket. Tha department waa called out.
Ona of tha finest effects of Illumination In
tha evening waa produced by tha Japanese
penie. who Imported a lot of fireworks
from Japan especially for tha occasion.
Their rockets were tha finest In the city
and a era seen for miles around. They
simply spouted fountains of Are, leaving
(Inters or red, green and blue fire for sev
eral nilnutos after each was sent up.
Numerous carryall parties visited the
nearby lakes ouJ picnic grounds. A favorite
wus Pryino'tr lake, where fully half a dosen
k'S'la founil rnterlalnrgent.
The Houth Omaha Country club held tha
oat pretentious eelebrstlon. which lasted
all day and a very larce crowd attended.
. Laurie Ctty UM.I,.
Olvna Transfer Co. Tel. Eo. Otnehe M
Spring tha month of June there w?ra
fully ui. ilia, of wuoiu ltil)-.t w. n
Maii
Floor
Old
Store
MEN'S $4 and $5
Outing Pants
'K-SOi.-Boys-Knee Pants Suits
at .;. V
tnalea and eighteen females. Tha death
roll for June was twenty-nine; of these
eighteen were malas and eleven wera fe
males. .
Mrs. R. A. Gibson la reported seriously
to, . . . .
Jotter's Oold Top Beer delivered In all
parts of the city. Telephone No. S.
Miss Margsret McOovern has gone to
Winona, la., for a visit with her grand
parent. The Sunday evening eonoerts at the South
Omaha club will bo continued beginning
Junday, July 7.
Russell Barclay la rapidly' recovering
from his recent Injuries. - Ha will only lose
jart of one finger.
B. M. Rohrbough has announced the com-
rletlon of hi report on th condition of
the U street viaduct. i
J. J. Breen ha checked over the accounts
of fee due to th city of South Omaha
from the district court and th amount
exceeds $2,000.
Peter Hinkle, Twenty-thh-d and W. re
ported the birth of a son yesterday. Mike
brennan, 150 North Twenty-seventh, has
a son. Kd Bwatek, 621 North Fifteenth, has
a boy.
Samuel P. Howell, aged SI. dljd at his
home. Thirteenth and M streets, Wednes
day evening. The funeral will be held Sat-
Uirday afternoon. Rev. H. H. Millard will
have charge. -
HAVE YOU ANY 0f1GNERS7
"Big Money" for Letter by Slamar
f th Oeclaratloai f Isde
' .t.e..
Harper' Weekly.
There la a "literary end" to tha Fourth
of July quit a perennial aa th patriotic
firecracker. . The young of thl land of tha
free and home of the brave may see In
the great national holiday only nols and
picnic and athletic contests ; their elders,
Insofar as thy may hav been bitten by
a gentle little bug of the collecting mania,
will find in It, also, a reminder of those
patriots who put their signature to lh
Immortal Declaration .when th fourth day
of th seventh month cam first Into "of
ficial" being. The autograph hunter longa
lor them, th historian cherishes warmly
such as hs may own, while even th "mere
financier" reallxe that they are well worth
his consideration a collection Of letters
signed by those fifty-six good men and
true would be Indeed a sound Investment
to put against the proverbial rainy day.
Iu the past thirty year "signers' " au
tographs hav accrued In value from three
to five fold, and there 1 no chanc that
tha price are to fall; It la rather to be
expected that they will graually but surely
rls yet more. In 1878 ther wer Bold at
auction In Philadelphia twenty-nlna Items,
representing that number of tha signa
tures of the Declaration's sponsors, In al
most every case appended to a letter In
the same hand. The total realised for
tha lot was tbSO.SO, and tha selfsame piece
sold today would be worth from 12,000 to
H.000! A complete collection of document
bearing th signatures of all "th signers"
would bring, even under th most unfa
vorable circumstances, not less than 110,
00?, while If th letter should contain ref
erences to th famous paper which sprang
into immortality that summer forenoon
lu 1774, or to other event of greater or
lea Important. to It or to the revolution
ary period, "he price' ui th aggregate
might easily run ur to F-S.OuO.
The detain lis, ol th twenty-nlna au
tographs uold at the auction in 11171, with
the price they brought twenty-seven year
go comper.'U with the price set upon
Imlllar "plcea" by one of the largest and
best-known autograph dealers of today,
shows tellincly the steady advance In value
that has attached to them. At the sal
In Uestlun, Dutton Owinnett's signature,
one of thu rarest ef th "set," wa at
tached to a draft, or brief. f a letter, and
THE OMAHA
OH
3
ra n Anx o)
FROM DICK OROS., BAC31WTS
131 Morccr St, How York .
Bold by order. of the court, by Chaa. Shongood, U. S. auctioneer for the Southern District of
New York in bankruptcy on June 19, '07, assets of Bick Bros.', bankrupts, consisting, of men's suits,
woolens, piece goods, fixtures, etc. Wm. Henkel Jr., receiver, . r
Every suit is high grade, new, up -
wonderful chance to buy suits at less
Choice of the Entire
BANKRUPT STOCK
OF DICK BROS.
Men's Sum
mer Suits,
Worth $10.00
and
$12.50
ai. .
BOYS' KNEE PANTS SUITS FOR SUMMER WEAR
materials, $3.00 and $350 Qg
values at. ... .'. vw
not th Utter lUelf, whit tha algnatura of
Thomaa Lynch, Jr.. had been cut from
the fly leaf of a book.- In every other case,
however, th letter bearing the. algnatura
had been written by the hand of tha
signer. Th data attached are thos borne
by-th letter:
John Adam, Sept. SO. 177S t 10.00
f 80
Josiah Uartlett, Aug. 22, 1794.... 9.00
Carter Uraxton, Dec. 18, 1783.... 7.00
20
IS
ltO
80
29
88
750
100
S
278
80
28
BO
80
.80
a
60
99
75
.28
78
20
25
20
60
20
86
Abraham Clark, June 17, 177S... 10.00
Samuel Chase, Sept. 9, 1777...... 18.00
William Floyd, July , 1778 16.00
BenJ. Franklin, Jan. . 1781 lf.00
Button Gwinnett, no date 110.00
Lyman Hall, Sept. 12, 17H6 80.00
Joseph Hewes, Dec. 14, 1772 87.80
William Cooper, July IS, 17S2.... S2S0
John Hancock, July 11, 1778 ... 8.00
Thomas Lynch, Jr., no data.... 86.00
Francta Lee, Jan. 14. 17.. ..,.. 11.00
Lewis Morris, May 23, 1784 10.00
Thomaa Nelson, April 23, 1782.. 10 00
Robert Treat Paine, Jan. 8, 1787 10.00
William Paca, Feb. 19, 1779 100
John Penn, Oct. 4. 1788 27.W
Edward Rutledge, no aate '.. 18 00
Roger Sherman, Febi 14, 1793.. 21.00
Jam Smith, no date WOO
Thomas Stone, April 27, 17SS.... 18 00'
John Wltherspoon, April 11. 1772 11.00
William Whipple, Oct. 8, 1784.... 14O0-
Wllllam Williams, Mrh. 17. 176J 16.00
Oliver Woleott, Feb, 28, 1778 ... 1100
George Walton, April 22, 1773.. 16.00
George Wythe, Dec. 22, 1772 16.00
Totala , 8G80.S0 82,850
It Is. perns ps, hot without inter eet to add
that twenty-six of th fifty-six signers wer
professional msri, twenty-two being attor
neys, three physician and ona a clergy
man. Of the others, ten were merchant,
three wer farmers, ona (Benjamin Frank
lin, of course) was printer, and sixteen
may best be described aa retired man of
fortune. Nineteen of them wera graduate
of college In thl country eight from Har
vard, four from Yale, three from Prince
ton, and two each from th University of
Pennsylvania and from William and
Mary'. .
MANAWA HAS RECORD CROWD
Hat Weatae Hollaay Attract
Maay to -tha Lake
UesarU
Manawa had th largest attend an oe in It
history on tha Fourth of July; a crowd
estimated at BO.OuO, visiting the resort.
Every available car waa pressed Into aerv
tce by tha atreet railway company, ther
being a one-minute schedule during the
day. very attraction waa taxed far be
yond lu capacity.
Never before wa Manhattan beach v le
tted by o many pleasure cevker in ona
day, and th bathing resort waa fairly allv
wish tha thousand who took a plung in
the clear water. Many hundred of women
being ameng tha bathers. Tha launches
and rowboat ware In great demand.
Tha big roller coaster waa overtaxed th
entire day. Tha miniature railroad mad
many trip.
Miss Paulln Courtney scored a decided
hit in her new Illustrated songs at th
Casino, and the motion picture received
much applaus. Professor Andrew made a
balloon ascension.
Tha last, but moat Important feature ef
tha day program waa th grand pyroteeh
nlcal display In tha evening. Th firework,
manufactured expressly for Manawa by th
Pain company. Chicago, waa aent off from
a barge In tha center of the lake, and a
more beautiful apactacl wa seldom ee.
Father ssi Drowsed.
ROCHESTER. N. Y., July S.-Charles
Beck, 16-yeernld, attempted to swim the
canal with his trousers ua yestsrday. but
his strvngth deserted htm and he callnd
for help. Hts father, Lewis Beck, jumprd
In snd succeeded In reaching the boy, but
both wer drowned.
DAILY BEE: SATURDAY,
r r - i a r- m -ti lorr1-" irji ini rnim nf Mniir imiMiiiTir- -r - ii " i -'tit
THE ENTIRE
j
ii ii
OF MEN'S HIGH GRADE
l -j n n
? r
to - date. Two and three piece many are hand tailored. It is a
than half price.
Choice of the Entire
BANKRUPT STOCK
OFBlCK BROS.
$
Men's
Summer
Snlfs
Worth
$20 and
$22.50, til
'of fine
Boys' $5.00, $6.00 and ,$7.50, Jtneo Pants Suits,
in Russian, sailor, double breasted 'and Nor
folk Bloomer Suits - . " AO
at
NICE LIFT FOR Y. M. C. A. FUND
Two Five Hundred-Dollar Subscrip
tions Eeceived by Workers
OYER TWEHTY-F1TE THOUSAHD
Cemneltteee Recover froaa Faarth f
Jaly Lay-OSf and , Commemee
Work Again with Vigor
Bay Active.
Official total Wednesday v
Cltlsen' committee
Young men' commute
Boy' commute
Grand total $28,071
Tha following amounU Indicate th
report submitted by tha captains of ths
Young Men's and Boy' committees, and
th standing of th teams:
Young men's committee, I D. MltcbeU
general chairman
July 8. Total.
....$ .. $ 62S
A D. M. Newman ...
B J. H. Franklin ....
C-A. W. Miller
D-H. Kleeer
E C. B. Berry
F Grant Cleveland ..
G Martin Sugarman
H-fc. Ring
1 Harry Byrne .......
J Harry A. tilone ...
60
van
440
832
14
4tiK
.2;
1.9J
28
1
88
ii
Tot,l S404 S8.494
Boys' committee. Carl Nagl general chatr-
Brown Chester Arnold I S
Yellow Wlllard Talbot S
Black-Elbert Wade
Red-Fred McConnll , 6
Green Blgard Larmon W
Blue Herbert Arnetlen 87
Lavender James Noble 8
White Donald Campbell 4
Pink George Bugarman
I 47.
848
4o2
94
23)
488
iS
1M
Purpia Lyla Roberta is w
Totala f. $131 $$.33
The following eubscrlptions for $350 and
var have-been received:
Charles Met
6. W. Wattles
I. W. Carpenter
Charlea Harding
Lit. A. F. Jonas
E. F. M. Leflang
Crane company
Cash
J, F. Carpenter
Independent, Telephone company
Allen Bros
Frank Colpetser
Rlchsrdson Drug company
J. C. Wtfwrton
H. H. BaMrlge
Nebraska Clothing company
Nebraska National bank
Orchard at Wllhelm
Llnlnger Implement company...
Fairbanks-Morse company .... ..
Wright A Wllhelmy
I. A. Munro
.11.004 I
. 1.0U0
. l.flOO I
. 800
. 6"0
. b'W
.
. tuO
. M)
. $K
. t
. 260
. 2-)
. 260
.
. ibn
. 2
. )
. 250
. m
. W
After day spent In celebration and rest
the young men and boys, as well as the
clt liens' committee, were able to resume
their campaign Friday for the raising of
the balance of tha 190,008 required to fro
tbe new horn of th Young Men' Christian'
association from debt. The 128,000 mark had
been passed and all ar again at work
with a vim. Two large subscriptions csme
In at th right time to lend encouragement
ta the different committees. Dr. A. F.
Jenas gave $j0 and E. F. Leflang, a banker
of Islington, who la about to make hi
home in Omaha, gave tha other 8S00. The
boya ara still hard at work, and although
many apent most tf thslr money for th
Fourth, atlll ' they reported $90, and ara
going fast for th world's record for boys.
Be Want Ads always bring result.
.128. 68
. 1.944
. 404
. 131
JULY G, 1P07
Old
Store
Mairv
Floor
i-
R1
,
PECULIARITIES OF 'LIGHTNING
Discoveries Mad Thraagh TJ )C
Caaaera at gnilthaonlun
loatltate.
Remarknble studies or th nature of
lightning hav been mad by a gifted Dan-ish-American
experimenter under th aus
pice of th Smithsonian institute. Not
only ha It been learned that lightning
flashes ar made up of Innumerable shorter
flashes, and that atreaks of lightning ar
really linked, or chain lightning, but th
xistenca of black or invisible lightning
has been ascertained.'. The genius who ha
taken lightning for hi study is Alexander
Larsen, who cam to thl country from
Denmark a few year ago, and whose edu
cation in photography, chemistry and sleo
trlcity was picked up at. night school.
Several ysars ago Larsen wrote to the
Smithsonian .Institute, enclosing photo
graph of lightning, which he had taken
with a common hand camera, and suggest
ing that If a camera wer so geared a to
lie' moved during lightning flashes th dur
ation of th flash might be determined and
lu nature mads clearer. Th institution
became interested In ths Ingenious Immi
grant' work and granted him a small sum
with which to pursue hi studies with a
belter equipment.
Larsen rigged up a revolving table, upon
which h placed oamera In auch position
as to catch lightning flash at vartou
phases. It was soon discovered that what
is called a flash of lightning I In reality a
succession of flashes, following on another
with almost Inconceivable swiftness and
deceiving th eye with an appearance of
oneneca. Mr. Laraen counted up3n hi sen
sitive y lata a many aa forty fisshes In- a
single streak of lightningand Is convinced
that In tha forty ware scores of swifter
flash which eluded th camera.
Measurement wer taken ef tha time
elapsing between I ha flashes or rushes that
could be seen on the negative. It waa found
I
that soma of th flasho Were J-1,000 of a
second apurt. The measurement wss mad
by calculating th width of th film and
th movement of each camera.
Many obscure thing were noted about
these rushes of lightning, but the most
striking fact learned waa that som of th
rushes were not light, but dark. That' is,
the electric Impulse was there, just the
same as In the flashes, but the camera did
not catch any light
Repeated experiment established the fact
that there I auch a thing aa "black light
ning," or atmospheric electrical Alschare-ea
that are not visible, and that they are min
gled with discharge that are visible th
old-fashioned "lightning." ' How Is it ac
counted fort Mr. Larsen' own explanation,
Is 'as good aa any other:
"The flash," ba say, speaking ef tha
flash that glvss no light, "must hav given
out light ef a v.avo length much shorter
than ho wave lengths of vistbls light, ami
with a power sufficient to render the part
of the plat struck by It non-sensltlv t.
ordinary light, Ruch a flash would appear
black on a partially Illuminated background
or be rnvlalble."
In other ' words, "black lightning" is
lightning of such short light waves thst
th Illumination is not perceived by the
human aye or tha camera. This has sug
gested th . thought that ther may be
light waves ' such velocity as to be
equally beyond th perception of th eye
or the camera, producing tight se Intense
that tha human eye I nit only Incanahl?
of perceiving ft, but la Ignorant ef it g.
latenc. Washington tPost.
PiFD
r Pf
r
. MEN'S.
OXFORDS
TAN RUSSIAN
CALF
VKLOI R CALF
GUN METAL '
VICI KII
TATKNT KID
FATE NT COLTS
KTC, ETC.
$3, $3.50 a $4
OXFORD
LOW
SHOES
FOR MEN
AN9
WOMEN
1 rjh' i "i in m
Clearing
Sale of...
Men's Summer Shirts
All our men's up-to-date Negligee '
Shirts in pongee, mohair and
Soisette worth up AOa 4 CA
tOi$3.00, at.. .v.y0C-l.DU
Men's $1.00 Negligee Shirts - r A -
in neat effects, at .UUL
-All our men's $1.25 Mercerized
Lisle Union Underwear, CA
will go at 3VC
All our 50c Porosknit Underwear
pink, ecru and white, OCA
at VJU
All our men's 50c Summer Underwear,
at
2W leu's
All our men's, boysrand chil
dren's Straw Hats that sold
up to 50c on sale C
Saturday at
All our men's and boys' Straw
Hats that sold up to fQ
All our men's $1.50
Straw Hats, at
98c
A1V our Men's $2.00, . , 50
Rfrn-ar TTflta. ftt i
All our men's $2.50
Straw Hats, at . .
...$2
ACROSS ATLANTIC IN BALLOON
Alexander Orwham.Bell of Telephone
Fame to Accomplish
. Thl Feat. . . .
Th ordinary person hardly reallsea th
progres mad toward practically aerial
navigation. In fact, scarcely a month
passes but some new principle I discovered,
or some old one adapted to new utilisation
that point beyond doubt to th successful
air craft. ' The general public must neces
sarily, through unfamtliarlty with what Is
bs,!ng done, remain sceptical; but Mr. Bell
speaks with authority.
"I will cross th Atlantic in on day,"
says that venerable clentit and Inventor
of th teiephon. And he says he will
breakfast In New Tork, and dine that
evening in London! This h hope to see
accomplishsd by aerial navigation. The
actual problem he say ha already been
solved by tha Wright brothere.
Th balloon, or the ltghter-than-th-air
type of machine, I already dwindling Into
Insignificance, and nearly all Intelligent at'
tentlon Is being turned to ths heavier-than-alr,
or alr-plan type.
Mr. Bell' machine, th "Frost King." Is
of this type. In plain terms, the heavier-theji-alr
machine Is a great kite or great
olid arrangement of kite propelled by
motor. Mr. Bell ha already constructed
a machine that supported Itself and a man
In a ten-mil breete. : Ha say that America
will b th first country to prefect aerial
battleships,
H Wilt continue Ms experience thl
sammer at Cap Breton Island.
Mr. Bell was born on March 8, 1847, In
Edinburgh, Scotland. - He came to Canada
fa 1870, and then In the following year to
Boston. -H took out his patent for th
telephone In 1878. Broadway Magasine.
Meatal Medtclae.
A Somewhat eccentrio physician who re
cently died would order patient to take
walks, say, dally, on the left side of th
street, returning on the other side; another
he would order to arise each mornlnir at a
certain hour and eat cheese with ginger
beer; another to take supper precisely at
midnight, and eat only applrs; or he would
Instruct the patient to put just so many
grains of salt on the err he was to eat, and
t.rt his hslr In a different way each day.
His object was to get th mind of ths
patient on something else then symptoms,
and this scheme worked well In many raees,
especially when the patient was suffering
front melancholia. New York Times.
A g-ood liniment or plaster, or vme goo4 home remedy will usually
five temporary relief from the pain pf Rheumatism, but the disease is mgre
than skin deep and cannot be rubbed away, nor can it be drawn out with a
plaster. Such treatment neitner prevent aor cures ; we excess new,
which produces Rheumatism, i still in the blood and the disease can never
h rarer! while tha circulation remains saturated with this irritating, pain-l
producing uric acid poison. The trouble will shift from place to place, act-
tlins; on tha nervea and causing pam and inflammation at every exposure or
after an attack of indigestion or sather irregularity. When neglected or
improperly treated, Rheumatism become! chronic and doea not depend nrn
climatic conditions to bring- on an attack, but remains a constant, painful
trouble." S. S. S. drives out Rheumatism by neutralizing and expelling- the
excess of acid from the blood. It purines and invigorates the circulation o
that instead of a acid-laden stream, constantly depositing nric acid in the
Joints, muscles, nervea and bones, the entire systrtu is nourished and made
icalthy by rich, life-giving blood. Book on Rheumatism and any medical
advice desired will be sent free to all who write.
IU gWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, OA.
WOMEN'S
OXFORDS
TAN RUSSIAN
; CALK
GOLDEN
BllOWN VIC
PATENT VOLT
PATENT VICI
GUN METAL
VICI K1I
ETO, ETC.
in. mm n 1,1. hjwjj
. r ir
Straw Mats
CULTURE AND THE WEST
Flippant Remarks oat aa Euttra
Poet Who Failed to
Arrive.
Out In a large western city all th peo
ple do not keep In touch with th necrology
of their time. Thl I true of a good many
other place, 'but It may not b tru that
ther ar many place wher those who
write for the newspapers ar so busy with
th droppings of the leave that they can
not recall the fall of the giant of an
older Mm. : Th othr day. Dr. William
Everett was to deliver a poem on aa aca
demic occasion In that city. "The troubl
with William Everett la that he has noth.
Ing to recommend 'him except hla mind,
and for that sort of thing sem new .pa
pers have 'no earthly use.' Dr. Everett1
can lng most sweetly in numbers, whether
in Latin, or English, or Italian, and ha la
famous In his small and immediate olrcla
as the head master of Qulnoy, and, among
soma Harvard men who achieved an educa
tion wften they -were In college, as the
most . interesting teacher ef Latin they
ever encountered. He wa really gon u
to thl city of th west to reclt verses
for the P B K Society of lu university,
notwithstanding th terror of railroad
Journeys, but he found himself ill or hi
doctor did for hlrrr-tand he wa forced ta
glv up the Journey nd the poem. Up
thl th leading newspaper of the town re-,
marked that 'Edward Everett, until lately
president of Harvard college (Yale's an
nual victim at football), wa to bav de
livered a speech at the unlvertty thl af
ternoon, but he fell ill and he can't come
a th time was short no local substitute
could bs found. Mr. Everett Is said to b
one Of the huskiest speaker Id Boston.'
Thl may have been fun, but you can't tell.
At any rat, the people who had expected
to listen to Dr. William Everett said that
you couldn't expect anything better from
that newspaper." Harper'a Weekly.
" '. Prf.
' Does your husband lova youT" we asked,
"Madly, devotedly!" she answered.
' "Are you quite sureT"
"Quite. How can 1 doubt T He has shut
m up her in thl little cage of a place,
where he expecta rue to spend all my tiiuv,
with nobody's company but his own. If
ha doea not lova me, why doe he take so
much trouble to make me miserable?"
And there shone lu her fine eye. the beau
tiful strong light of unshaken confidence.
Puck,
02)
mm
3C
DRIVES OUT
IMEUMOTISM
I-