Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 26, 1908, NEWS SECTION, Page 4, Image 4
THE OMAHA SUNDAY RKK: APRIL 2f, 190$. mcTTDTmr: nmrn tt q rnT tot few joters oot to register 4 f: ,v ... ;. " ' ' ' Recommends ' ' Judge John W. Bixler, formerly United States i pircuityjudge, now United States. District Judge, or Kansas, endorses Peruna. ' lh' i 'r--s: i Lrjii- i i . .- Pe-ru-na Testimonials. " when any man' of 'wdrna'n, 'out 'of pure gratitude, write us a letter, com menting upon the benefit he haa received from the us of Peruna, when he doe this without any solicitation or remuneration of any aort, and furnishes 4 tie a recent photograph; so that hi Identity and responsibility In the matter la i beyond 'question, then do we consider a in. .purpose. "Ws are-at the present time publishing many hundred of. testimonials. We ..give the pame and address in. full. of. each one of these people. W'e have no uas for, .nor would we pUllsh for any sum of money, a fraudu .4ent,tstlrno'ntaL..T0..o such, a thins; would-be "dishonorable frem a moral stand point and' commercial suicide from a business standpoint Tonic 'and Appectizer. W. H.-Parsons--la ex-Btate Senator and sro-Speclal Judge of' the Supreme Court' of feaaa, also Bregadler Oereral In Confederate-Army. Ina recent letter 'from 9ti H St., N. 'W., Washington D. C, this promi nent gentleman says: " t ' ' ;' ' i "Upon the recommendation of personal frelend and many strong testimonials of the f flcary of Peruna In the treatment of the numerous symptoms of the grip, with vhlfh' I have been affected for four months past, I.av been induced to undergo a treatment of this Justly celebrated formula. "I 'feel a decided change for the better after using It only one week. It Is espe cially good In toning up the stomach, and lias &' deemed effect on my appetite. I therefore feel much encouraged that I am on the road 'to 'complete restoration. p f ; .-. . . ' . y t Contributions on timely topics Invited. Writ legibly on one side of the paper , onlyv with nimt and. address appended. Unused contributions . will not ba re turned. Letters exceeding 300 W6fds will ,.be subject to beta cut down at the .jdlacretlon.of .the editor. . Publication, of views of correspondents does not com- sVnlt The Bee to their endorsement' -f. V . '. . , . ... .:. . - XIr. Bryaa'a' "Broad Statesmanship." , 'OMAHA, April, 26,-To the Editor of The Bee:' Roger C. Bulllvan's Illinois packed con vention at Springfield the other day indulged tfi freniled and fulliome eulogy of Mr. Bfyan'e "broad ' statesmanship." For an iS-karat Joke Vn Mr. Bryan himself, and the ' 'democratic part, this beat Mark Train at hi best.' '(Soldwln Smith, the ' great scholar, and friend - of labor,' of universal renown,' aatd riot long ago that ' he oould ' never under Yand -bow "a--pretty good' lecturer (Mr. ryan ooMld" tain control of a great na tional party In the United 'States with a metaphor.'" Reference was "had. of course, to the "cross of gold" speech In 18M, aided ky a secret plot to seour the democratic nomination tor the presidency, in that year Ut . Mr. Bryan, and defeat hi Mlsseurl rival, the real author of the 14 to l sllvsr issue- which that gentleman-, and Senator Jones- of Nevada had created and worked into life, Mr,. Goldwln Smith evidently did not .consider that, there was any kind of statesmanship -io, the. metaphor,, which Mr, Bryaa borrowed from a Massachusetts congressman Jar use at Chicago in 1894. 1 . t'nder, my .own direct observation Mr. Try.an'a "broad statesmanship" .haa con sisted for-a doaen. years in nothing but aociuUstlc .agitation, open war. on property rights and an utter repudiation of . every principle which, ever made the democratic, putty strong. end great In the nation since Mr. Jefferson, estsbllshed.it with hla own election to the presidency in ltwl. It it be objected that he never repudiated the. pro tective tariff, the answer I that Tor more than ten year he haa done worse he has studiously' and bratenly deserted It The whole burden of his platform and speeches h'as'been, and still continue to be, In open and "subtle' appeal, to the' pre judice, always alive In the hearts of men, of the poor against the rich. He has been quoted aa having said In 1896 that no man could honestly earn more than 13,000 a year, and his' diatribe upon plutocrat have been Incessant from the beginning until within the last year.' For soma Teaaon or another it would seem that my distinguished friend, whose 'extraordinary talents and power Vr the masses of our people 1 conceded, lias talked himself into a dead silence about "ALWAYS .BIGHT" DhIw loe LTlflf i u 1 L i n imi I I i m i 1 1 m i iil m m n i , Our Letter Box f A . , Ar -A "I ' Pe - ru - na as an I JUDGE JOHN W. BIXLER, 4 . 1 70O i P. STREET. WASHINGTON, D.C testimonial available for our advertls- "My numerous friends In Texas, where I have had the honor to command a bri grad of her Veteran Cavalry, In a four year war, may accept this voluntary testi monial to the merit of Peruna from a sense of obligation for It wonderful efficacy." Appetite and Digestion Poor. ; Mr. Charles Schwelhs, Lexington, Texas, writes: . ''I suffered from catarrh of the liver. What I ate disagreed with me. I . was weak and feverish. I slept very poorly, had rush of blood to the head. I was very 'des pondent, and took no p'yasure in anything. My appetite was char! Aable, digestion poor. "Tour medicine made me well again, for which I express to you my heartfelt thanks. I firmly believe that for all who suffer In like manner It would have the same good effect." plutocrats. Perhaps that reason ma not be wholly unconnected with hi recent confeeslon that. In his Income for many year as a political agitator and perennial candidate for the presidency, he takes no second rank In this part of the country as a star plutocrat himself. Mr. Bryan I evidently chewing such large boluses of cotton 1n the matter of plutocrats as to make him speechless upon a subject which was once so interesting to him in public discussion. " - " ' 1 '" ' Mr. Bryan on the money .question was al ways untrained. Ignorant and foolish.' Men who borrow economic thoughts from popu lar leaders on vital question of concern to the people. aJWayt stumble, fall and fall. The bold attempt in lf to destroy the gold standard, which made possible the conquest of the union from rebellion; meant national repudiation of all public and private debts. It. never was meant to be, and never could be, anything else. It was supported by silver-producing barons ' in the mountain state with the money which was used cor ruptly In this and other states to buy the people upon false pretenses into their own ruin, and everybody, who has a grain of sense now knows It. Was this "statesman ship" broad or otherwise? Was this democ racy? Not a whit more than was the early attempt to repudiate the national obliga tions ' during and after the civil war, which had been exchanged for gold with the creditors of the government by making payment In depredated paper money called greenbacks. But I will not try to trace Mr. Roger C. Sullivan' "broad statesmanship" upon the long list of public questions on which Mr. Bryan has "wired in and wired out" upon such astonishing lines of leadership as to fill his own following with wonder and amasement. Mr. Taft recently pilloried him on a cross of hi own erecting on the Philippine question by showing that Mr. Bryan's Utterly unaccountable conduct by personal appeal on the floor of the United State .senate fe mad a Philippine ques tion possible by securing the confirmation of the Treaty of Paris. ' He soon saw the consequence of hi own act and. as he haa since done n the question of railroad gov ernment ownership, under storms of popu lar indignation, he began to wabhle. He is still wabbling in the mud and muddle of his Own "broad statesmanship," which consists simply of a series of expedients in the in terest of a purely personal ambition to reach the White Houee. He hqp from one Issue (?) to-another, with an agility and audacity all his own, like the toad in a swamp leaping from bog to bog for fear he will get his feet wet. The' last per formance covered the last landing place In populism, every article of whose creed he ha adopted, the Initiative and referendum, a direct blow at representative republican government In this country. At this worst of all assault upon constitutional and or derly government the south groaned with such a revolt that he again climbs down and qut of it as the ostrich tries to hide by sticking his head In the aand aa he think himself In danger. "Broad statesmanship," did you say at Springfield, Roger, on Thursday last? And are you the. same old democratic pirate who, only last year, was denouncing Mr. Bryan a a dishonest man, disastrous failure as a democratic leader who was in capable, and a a man who had dishonored the democratic party? Are you the same Roger C. Sullivan, or are" you, some other fellow of the same brand who has stolen his name? - GEORGE L. MILLER. At Rlvervlaw Park. OMAHA, April .-To he Editor of Ths Bee: We would have one of the most beautiful psrks In the west If proper care were taken of It There swnii to be a great lark of thoroughness oa the part of our t park commissioners. Two year ago Klvervlew park was far more - beautiful than It la today. 1 remember one day hearing two travelers remark aa thoy stood on a hill as yon effler from the north slds that the seen was on of entrancing beauty. They we from California and were comparing the ecsne with the pic turesque hill near Los Angetoi, and they seemed to . think thst our bt-autiful view was far upertor. Be that as it may. now ttiwe U a aeclded change. The beautiful Invigorating Tonic. 't ;, Inn & unhesitatingly ji - TMommena vour Peruna i. - aa an - Invigorating tonio, alio an ' excellent remedy for cough and colds. ft Disordered Liver,"' Constipation. -Mr. W. O. Clement, Assistant Manager "Rome Georgian," Rome.-Qa.. writes: - "It affords me pleasure to voluntarily testify to the true merits 'of .your ..wonderful Fe. runa. 'I have for sevefal'years, been suffering from disordered liver and chronic cohstlph-l tlon, for which I had 'tried a' great many remedies, but none did me any good. My whole system was so thoroughly overcome! that I was easy to catch cold and andthe consequence was that a chronto case of catarrh was fast developing. "I have been taking Peruna for six weeks and am happy to say that It ha had the desired effect. My liver is In good condi tion, constipation disappeared, and I no longer feel any of the eymptoms of catarrh. "In truth I am now in better health and feel stronger than I have for several year and it Is all due to the wonderful effects of Peruna." Systemic Catarrh. Mr. Moses F. Merrell, Route 8, Columbus, Kansas, writes: "The Improvement in my case has been wonderful. My bowels are regular. as clock work. I can now eat like other people and my vltuals digest completely, I think I am cured of systemic catarrh. "It haa been a hard fight, but I came out victor. Many thank for your kind counsel and management." silvery lake that daxzled so brilliantly In the sun is almost empty, with stag nant water, full of rank weeds, bricks, ticks, stones, alive with frogs, llisards, and slimy eels. The artesian well that used to gush forth and force Its way to the lake haa about stopped. There Isn't a 'drop of drinking -water for the thlrstyv True, there Is a classic pavilion, where drinks may be liad for the money and where, the people are not welcome utiles they buy .nM.tktnff ' I something Parks should bo. for the whole people, high and low.." rich, and poor. Rivervlew park Is not. It appears to me to be but for the party who haa the concession. The seat in the park are Inadequate and are made of the poorest, material obtainable. It la always littered with peanut shells, sacks, old papers, cracker-Jack boxes and other debrl. Surely Omaha has only too few- parks and It Is not asking too much of the com missioners that they be at least kept-and supplied with drinking water and seats. CIVIS.' DODGE ON VALUE OF REALTY Estimates Cat-Off Lake Land at Ovrt . Fear Uandred anal Fifty Dol- lara Per Acre... In testifying before the board of apprais er . Saturday morning N. P. Dodge, Jr., placed a valuation of $33,600 on the seventy- two acres of land at Cut-Off lake owned by the United Real Estate and Trust com pany. Mr. Dodge stated that only nine acres of the seventy-two are dry, the other, sixty-three acres being under water. A valuation of $18,600 was placed , by hlru on the twenty acres of dry land and the twenty acres of land, under water belonging to the Thomas Davis Real Estate company and also wanted by the Park board for park purposes. Dodge said he considered all the other land contemplated for park purposes In the region is worth $-00 an acre. When the meeting of the Board of .Ap praisers was called to order John W. Par ish for the United company, the Kountae Interests, and Isaac Congdon for the Thomaa Davia company presented long communications to the board In which they held that the board Is not a legally con stituted body and not appointed by due authority, aa is also the Park board, and clalmcd'that no appraisement of the lands In the Cut-Off lake region could be made because the board has not the money with which to make the . purchase.' The com munications were placed on file. Alter receiving testimony all morning the board adjourned at noon to meet gt 10 o'clock. Monday morning and complete the taking of testimony as to the equitable valuation of the Kduntxe snd Davis estates. The annual meeting of the Park board will be held Tuesday morning at 1 Oo'clock. OMArIA BOY GOES TO BURMAH nwtgkt L. Cramer la Appointed As aayee and Cfesnltt In Brit- ' III Smelter. Dwight'L. Cramer, son of Major J. E. Cramer, superintendent cf malls in the Omaha poatoffice, has been appointed as ayer and chemist in a large smelter oper ated by the British government at Man dalay, Burmah. The appointment of Mr. Cramer to this responsible position comes through hi chance acquaintance of a year or more ago with C. D. Clark, superintend ent i.o the smelter In Burmah, who was in Omsha at that time.- Mr. Clark is an American and became Impressed with Mr. Cramer's peculiar qualificatlona aa an as ayer and chemist and promised to bear him In mind whan the Burmah smelting company should need ths services of an asaayer and chemist. Mr. Cramer la a graduate of the Omaha High school and from tha University of Nebraska 19uT, taking a special course In mlnarology and chemistry. Bine then be ha been engaged with the American Smelting and RefirrinE. company In Omaha. Ha la but II years of age. lis will leave In a few days for tan Francisco, sailing from there Msy for the orient Ever Try Tha bee Want Ad Columns? If not do ao. and act satisfactory ruuiu. Electors and Election Officers Are In v different About Showing: Up. MAITT BOOTHS LACK FULL QUOTA i Last rhaaee lallfy foe Votlasi ' 0 tho . Several Bead Pro post tloaa on tea Fifth of .May. nsnaasaaaaasi Few of the sixty-five registration booth in Omaha opened ready for business Sat urday morning with a full quota of Judge and the police had to be called upon to round up the delinquents. All morning they came straggling In. some registra tion booth running with but tare Judge as late as the noon hour. The booths were allowed to operate with two Judges, a ma jority, but where only one Judge appeared operations had to be suspended until an other victim could be secured. But little Interest was taken In the reg istration by the voters and In the morning a deputy city clerk made the. prophesy that not more than ten would be registered In any one district, while City Clerk Butler believes 600 will cover the toUl registra tion, -Electors who registered last fall were not required or allowed to register Satur day and newcomers to Omsha who had not attained a residence by election time last tall failed to ahow much Interest In the forthcoming bond election and therefore stayed away from the registration booths. Citizens of Omaha who have moved Into another precinct since last fall and who have .lived in-Omaha a number of year and become interested in matter of pub lic moment seemed to be In the majority at the . registration booths, a . these did not want to. lose their right to vote on the Issuance of the bonds, neither did they want; to forfeit their right to vote In the primaries next fall. ' The"election for which this registration was-held will be on Tuesday, May 6, and the., propositions to be voted upon will be the Issuance of $1,000,000 court house bonds, $50,000-paving intersection bonds and $S0,0C park bonds. ' l ' Returns from theVeglstratlon will not be made before Monday. HANMER AT JOINT MEETING National Play Groands Advocate Chief Gnest at Dinner at V. M. C. A. Prominent persons representing various organisation of the city were present Saturday afternoon at the annual meeting of the Omaha Play Grounds association. The meeting wa held in conjunction with a luncheon served at the Toung Men' Christian association at which Lee F. Hanmer of New Tork, leld secretary of the Play Grounds Association of America, was the guest of honor. Following the luncheon and prior to the address by Mr. Hanmer, officer for the ensuing year were elected a follow: President, Superintendent William David son; first vice president, E. A. Benson: second vice president, Mrs. E. A. Cudahy; secretary, Charles R Foster; treasurer, Luther Kountxe; board of director, Rev. F. L. Loveland, Dean Beecher, Joseph Cudahy, Dr. Glfford, T. J. Mahoney, George F. West, Fred Nash, C. B. Williamson, Charle E. Foster, Mr. Draper Smith, Mr. Aruthur Brandel. Mr. H. H. Heller. Mrs. Stella Hamilton. Mr. Hanmer of the association spoke briefly, stating that he would rather apeak at more length to the general public at the mass meeting Sunday evening, than to talk to thoae wno are already converted to the - : . ", - . ' . ' . . . " cause 01 tnepiay grouna. nsroia vam mem. bers -of the association that' he could not advise them as to the. method of conducting the play ground, whether under the Park board, the Board of Education, the city council or what. ' "You must work out your own salvation," he said; He told what other dtle are do ing In the movement and congratulated those Interested in the work in Omaha on what they have accomplished. Superin tendent Davidson and Clement Chase also gave short addresses. Rev. F. L. Loveland offered the Invocation. Organization represented were the city rnnnnll ' nnrk twiard. schnnl hnsrit. resl e8Ute chnse. Commercial club. Woman's club, Social settlement, Social Service club. Humane society. Young Men's Christian association, Young Woman's Christian as sociation and the Woman's Christian Tem perance union. The court was represented by Judges ' Kennedy, Sutton and Eetelle. George F. West presided at the meeting and. annual reports read show a balance of $6.40 in the play ground fund. 'IRATES ASSAIL . THE SHIP Irato Cwaora Threaten Destrnetion of Dos Catcher as tt Sail Fast V Them. The sturdy privateer, "Dogcatcher," which cruises over the street of Omaha dally cap turing all dogs without tax tags, was sur rounded at Thirtieth and Pratt streets Sat urday by a large force of sympathisers with the dogi which the privateer had captured. In vain the Ethiopian crew of the vessel spread all sail by beating the horse. In vain they threatened their besieger with the wrath of the government under which they sail. The crowd grew in numbers and In anger. "Hang 'em to the yard arm, or the Jib boom, or the foretopaail gallant mast, or something like that," yelled the Infuriated and outraged dog owner. A member of the crew of the "Dog. catcher leaped into the sea and , swam ashore to a grocery etore, where there wa a telephone, and called up the police sta tlon. An officer dispelled the crowd and the "Dogcatcher" continued it fell cruise. But e'er the cry of rescue could be an swered two member of the ship's crew, Skipper Robert Fox and Gunner A. L. Jackson, did a -little rescuing on their own account. They encountered a stout-hearted civilian, Mr. H. Zlotky, owner of a atora at Thirtieth and Pratt, who had resolved that come what may, ha would fain breast the storm in defense of his dog. Thus he did when. the twain from. the good ship's decks hurled broadsides upon him, bio upon blow, so he aveis, until he wot not of the things that were going on. And the rescuers when they came did take the twain from the ship and likewise the civilian unto the laws'., domalo Klevei.th and Dodge street DIVORCE DUE TO JEALOUSY Wife Tetlla Her Hsibssd Even . Objected - to Her Wearing; At tractive isssrel. The Insane jealousy of Fred Waller, formerly of- the Waller Display company, led him to object to his wife -wearing veil, good clothes or ornament of any kind, according to the evidence in her suit for divorce, which was heard by Judge Kennedy, - Judge Kennedy granted her tha divorce principally because his Jealousy led ' to ebuslve language. Witnesses testified he called her bad names frequently before their children, friends and atrsngers. Among Mrs. Waller's witnesses waa Mr. Waller'e staler. Mrs., Leonard Oulnotte, who wept aa she told her brother's cruel. ties to hie wire,' She and a number of the nmtmhhar tMtlrtd Mr. Waller had no , - A NOTABLE ARGUMENT for our clothes is -the class of - ;J J I p; XI men who wear them. ' ' .- " . j 1 They appeal to those who value not innovations and extremes, ' II but the real richness of worth. . jjl;. 1 1 I And more than that, we're able tconet, to purchasers that true' j I Hp. H i economy combined with style, which, is as rare as it is acceptable jj 1 I ' You'll find the clothier who haa Kuppenheimer clothes a better- . I 1 1 . than-ordinary merchant. ' A Style Book mailed upon request. ' I I THE vHOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER' ' '1'; m ' CHlCAG0' NEW YORK - BOSTON ground for jealousy. Judge Kennedy gave her the custody of the children, n equity in their property and ordered Mr. Waller to pay $30 a month for the support of tho children for fifteen years. MUNICIPAL SQUEEGEE AT WORK Teat of av New Street Cleaning? Machine Pronounced Bnc - cessfnl. A new 'era in street cleaning in 8t,Loul was Inaugurated recently when the "squee gee" purchased by. the street' department was given a practical demonstration. 1 The test wa witnessed by city official and a large number of real estate men, business men and cltlsens. Louis Kindling, a wealthy Milwaukee cigar manufacturer, who is the Inventor of the apparatus and hi business as sociate, Jamea TT Bannon, were on hand also.. The demonstration, " which was pro nounced a success from every' point of view by Street Commissioner Travllla, was given on Chestnut street, between Tenth and Twelfth streets, and on Cen ter street, between Market street (and Clark avenue. Each of these streets was chosen ber ceuse of Its construction. Chestnut street being of bltullthlo composition and Cen ter street of brick, of eaoji of which there kre a number downtown. The "squee gee" la designed principally for the thor ough cleansing of asphalt and bltullthlc, wood block and vitrified brick streets. ( On Chestnut street the results noted with a single sprinkling were especially good. Dr. H. Wheeler Bond, health com missioner, saw the "squeegee" passing the Sanitary office and Immediately be came interested in the operation. After an examination of the part of the atreet cleaned and an inspection of the me chanical operation of the "squeegee," he pronounced It a long-felt want in the matter of sanitation. The accumulation of slime noticeable on street with a smooth surface after being washed oft with the ordinary type of flushing machine was entirely absent along the entire stretch of street pave ment from Tenth to Twelfth streets. This 1 left the street clean, and within five minutes after the cleansing operation the street was Virtually ' free from moisture. With other methods the flushed streets usually remain wet and slippery for more thaa air hour. The danger in this is In the fact that automobiles and rubber-shod horses are endangered. Center street after the "squeegee" had passed over It waa clean as water and a good scrubbing could make It An ad vantage of the new method over the old shown here waa the manner in which the dirt was piled near the curbing with out being swept into the sewer openings In a muddy flood. . "The results accomplished with this simple device are truly wonderful," Street Commissioner Travllla remarked. "It seem odd that such a device was not thought of a long time ago, and it certainly marka a new chapter In street cleaning and provides a valuable means of sanitation. Others may be installed." As explained by Mr. Kindling. the "squeegee" operates on the principle of the rotary street sweeper, being a com. blned'sweeper and sprinkler. "It Is operated by one man," he says, "and one machine will clean 10,000 to 40,000 square yards of pavement a day. The consumption of water Is extremely small for the result obtained. There I virtually no waste, every drop being caught up by a rubber roll a It washes the pavement. v - "The rubber roll, which consist more strictly speaking of a steel roll' covered with twenty-four rubber blades, seven fnet long, are guaranteed to withstand wear and tear for 4S0 days. "The machine Itself consist of an up right cylindrical ateel tank of 400 gallons capacity. It 1 mounted on four wheels and In appearance Is much the same a tha ordinary type of street sprinkler. Four sprinkler are placed between tho front and rear wheel and are -operated with valve from he driver' ' eat. Geared to the left rear wheel la the rub ber roll." St. Loul Times. . . By using the varioaa departments of The Bee Want Ad Pages you get quick returns at a small expens ( MAD RUN AFTER WILD TRAIN Cancht by n Locomotive After a Haaardona Down-Grade Chase, , Word comes from Coppervllle, near Percy, N. II., of the narrow escape from a colli sion between a runaway string . of loaded freight cars moving at terrlf lo . speed and the Portland-Montreal express, which left here at ? p. m., with 200 passengers aboard. After missing the passenger train by leas than half a minute, the freight cars, run ning down grade for eighteen miles, jnost of the way at. an elghtyrmlle-an-hour. cllpr were xaught .by a, locomotive after one of the most hazardous' chases ever recorded. At 11 o'clock, 'Just as tha , last car of, the Night Flyer on the Grand Trunk, bound for Montreal, had passed ' Coppervllle station, a wild train of twenty cars loaded with pulpwood and without a locomotive which had broken loose on a siding two miles away shot into the main line. ' It missed only a few yards the rear end of the pas senger train bound north, and gathering speed every minute,-plunged along toward Portland. At Berlin,, five miles away, a big' mogul engine with steam up happened to be on a siding. The operator at Coppervllle, wired: "Look put, runaway freight coming." The last click of the message had hardly been received when the runaway going at a mile and a half a minute, rushed parft the Berlin station. The engineer and fire man were in the cab of the mogul. They knew the train, was a runaway before the telegraph, operator could tell them. The big enaine snorted and' trembled as 'the throttle was pulled, wide open and ll ! fairly rose from the rails as it struck the main track.' For ten miles south of Berlin, It Is all down grade. Then there is a, gentle three mile uphll stretch until Shelbourne, at the top of the rise 1 reached, where the steep down grade begins again. The only hope of the purauers was to catch the freight before )t reached the heights at Shelbourne. Fast as the runaway went, the' big loco motive, Impelled by steam as well a gravity, . went faater, but the gcln w,aa tantlllzlngly slow. Several times the run away waa sighted through the darkness on straight stretches of track, but when the wild freight cars was reached, the foot of the three mile up grade It still had half a mile lead. The tremendous ' momentum scarcely seemed to lessen at first, but tho mogul pushed doggedly up the hill. As the freight's speed began to lessen the mogul gained more rapidly. When the pilot was 100 yards from the last car of the freight the fireman crawled out in front ready to make the coupling. From 100 yards the freight's lead dwindled to fifty then to ton, and at last, when the runaway was starting down hill again the fireman hitched the engine on and atg- j naled (or the engineer to put- the air brakes on the wheels. ' One hundred yards further along the train was stopped, and a wreck and maybe a collision had been averted. Boston Tran script. OMAHA MEN ARE UBIQUITOUS Co Where Yon Will Ton Can Find Them, Says Mr. K. M. B. O'Llnn. "You cannot get away from Omaha peo ple, no matter how far you travel, and If you meet an Omaha business man he- 1 making a sale of goods." This was the experience of Mrs. F. M- V. O'Llnn, an attorney of Chadron. who was In Omaha Saturday on her way home after two months on the Pacific coast. She spent a few days at Dayton, Ore., situated close to Portland, visiting the family of O. B. Rippey, formerly of Alnsworth, Web., who is in the mercantile baslnesa.iher. As sha stepped from the train aha met Henry Glaxler, formerly of Chadron, but now representing M. E Smith V Co. in the western territory. He had Just sold Mr. Rippey a $1,000 bill of goods., ' "It looks aa if Omaha were in 'It," said Mrs. O'Llnn. "Mr. Glazier told me he was' doing a nice business in the west." Mrs. O'Llnn went west for the health of her daughter, Mrs. C. C. Smith, and was pleased' at' the Improvement ths coast ,c'J niate effected " PLEDGE TO GET OFF THE EARTH Prb-mlso Is Made by Man, Who Saya . He Will Go U in a; '. Balloon. , , ,A . . - Thoma Persell, a well known character In police court, promised literally to '."get off the earth" if the police judge would discharge hir.;,.. It la a common plea ol vagrant to, promise to. "set out of ftwn,V but, very rarely . an. .offender, seek mercy by promising to get off the very planow, Those who listened to Thomas wonde.re.d. Did the man mean .to .commit , suicide, , to float away ..from the -tcruet , worm -,. wmcu has used hfm so poidly? Or was his reason, perhaps, .UjUrring? .-. . . , Neither conjecture wrfs correct.- Thema Intends literally to "get off the earth.", "I'm getting my balloon fixed up for the summer," he explained to the court. . "And I'll, start put doing the street fairs and things soon." , .' .','. Thomas is an. aeronaut and his season 'Is Just opening. .. . Y.. ... ' - House Demands Cotton Report. WASHINGTON, April 26.-The house, to day adopted, 217 to 18,'the Burleson resolu tion requiring the secretary of Comrrifrcp and Iibor to transmit to the Jirfuse" at once the report of the 'commissioners ff corporation on the cause of the fluctuations in the price- of cotton. . . 1 . ,'. Pimple s sappear Wonderful Effect of Calcium Sulphate". Treatment on Every -Kind ojM '-; Skin Eruptions. ' - i - ' i' , r - saaanaeaaanaai ' i - ' 1 I . a . end Tot rre Trial Package to Prove U. You positively get rid of your pimples and skin - eruptions by taking'-; Stuart's Calcium Wafers. '' - These wonderful' lltt'le workers ': hal i cured bad bolls in three days, and BOiriu' of the worst cases of skin disease in a week. ' . . ' : . - " '"n-...-:1 The Pimple Can Be Made to Disappear, in a Week, meal low Jo Bo St. -.-. They contain as their main Ingredient, the moat thorough, quick and effective; blood cleanser known, calcium sulphide. . Stuart's Calcium Wafer have not a particle of polaon in them. They are free, from mercury, biting drug or venomous eplates. This 1 absolutely . guaranteed. They cannot do harm, but they always do good good that you can see In the mirror before your own eyes in a few days after.-. Stuart's Calcium Waters will make you happy becauae your face will be a Wel come sight not only to yourself when you.' look Into the glass, but to everybody else who knowa you and talk with you. ' tVe want to prove (o you that Stuart's, Calcium Wafer are beyond doubt the best and quickest blcod and svln purifier In tha world- so we will send youi a free vampta as sarin bs we r your name ana address. Send for It today, and then when you have tried the sample you will ' not rest, con tented until you have bought a tOc box at your druggibt'e. ... . Bend.'js your name and address today and we will at once send yau by mail ssmple package free: Addrens F. A. Htuart Cj., m Stuart Blag., Marshall, MiwU. 'V.-"e-?S7f S - V