r 8 THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE : OCTOREK 2.". 100?. 1 1 CHOLERA SCOURGE IS RUSSIA Morgues Filed to Ceiling1 with Un identified Corpses. DISINTECTION NOT PRACTICED gafferers Often Left for Honrs Wrlth. 'n In IMreet I'neared For .One lllla-e la Wholly Hlprd Out. I. sr. prrricRsm rj. ct. ':4.-P:cifli To the happier Inhabitant of iHiids wr.rre cholera Is either ur known or kept well In hand, the orgies of death whlrh that terri ble epidemic Is holding In some of the amaller Russian towns would be Incredible. There, thanks to the lack of organisation ana grossly unhealthy conditions, victims have been lying 111 In the streets, neglected In the hospitals and umburted In the rem -terlcs. I have had reports of mortuaries so overcrowded that the corpses are stacked tip from floor to celling. Thoso coming to claim relatives who died rf other disease have been obliged, In son' rases, to spend hours in the pestilential air. till they could find the bodies they search and could pull them from amongst the cholera stricken. When the cholera was first declared 1n other provinces a commission was ap pointed In 6t. Petersburg by M. Hirn, the president of tha town. Hut the chair man, M. Oppenhelmar, left for Carlsbad before any arrangements were made to combat the epidemic and practically noth ing was done. There Is no drainage In St Petersburg worthy the name. AH the ewaga Is thrown Into the canals, which are nevr cleaned more than cr.ee a yar. and send up a most terrible stench ns soon as the Ice thaws In the spring The first victims of the epidemic were workingmen, cab drivers and porters, who dr'nk the water out of these canals, whlrh is poison at the best of times, let nlrne when cholera Is about. Now, the police hive put up placards at the street corners to forbid them, under a threat of pnylng IT, penalty, to drink this water, and the magistracy has made arrangements for hot ten to be distributed gratis In all the principal streets. Tha sole of fruit has been strictly prohibited, and It, therefore, goes to ether towns from the cholera Infected districts. Half Cases Frovc Fatal. Considering these thirds. It is, therefore, not surprising to find that 30O and 400 ea-es occur dally, of which at least RO per cent prove mortal. Everybody who can afford to do so has fled from the city. The dreaded disease has now found Its way Into the well-to-do houses and Into the Cadets' college. The hospital and town ambu lances are quite unable to cope with the work, for people fall down 111 who felt per fectly -well a few minutes before. It Is Siard to believe that most of them are ser.t In cabs and public conveyances to the hospitals; but such Is the case, and. what Is more, these vehicles are net even cleaned afterwards, to any nothing of being disin fected. As the poor cabbies are oftn not paid for taking a sick man to the hospi tal, because nobody has any time to bother about them, they whip up their horses and get away as soon as they see a man or woman lying on the pavement In contor tions, and the victim Is left alone till one of the sanitary Inspectors or a policeman sees htm. When taken to the hospital tha patient cannot receive proper care because they are not half enough doctors; and med ical students, though offered good pay by the town, refuse to help. One. doctor has 400 patient to look after in a day. Nurses are almost unknown; there Is nobody to give the patients medicine or try their tern perature. ao that the result is a huge per centage of . deaths. As one harassed, worked-to-death doctor said: "rf they get well they do and If they don't. It's not my fault, for I've only ono pair of hands and legs." Patients suffering from other eompluints have as bad a time of It as anybody not only do they get no attention now, but many of them have been sent away be cause they must make room for cholera, cases. Several large barracks are alno full of thorn but what Is that when hundreds fall 111 dally? Hed Tape Follows Death. There Is In Petersburg a hospital regula tion to the effect that every patient who dies within twenty hours of . admittance I must bo dissected. It la characteristic of' For a" lldU1' or two t"t .evening they Russian red tape that this regulation was ' ,alked tl'l'y about the dead and then adhered to for several days alter t'ie i Vl'"t l beJ' Mr' Joueg' uf'er tossing upon cholera broke out. so that the rm,,;,,!,'.,!1'1" t'"low fl,r a lon tlme- '- '"to theaters were plied hl?h with dead hc.il -a : which nobody had anv Urn. to rtl,,.s., i, lust It struck one of the Inspectors that ! It Is Impossible to dissect 1,0 oorpjes dally I and tha regulutlon was abolished. The vlctlme are hurled o that the coffins must gu by train. ! that the coffins must gu bv train'! Thirty or forty trucks r .in.,, ,,,. .... i ao bfcrre and two or three passenger saloon, ar. put on f,r the dead peo". fri.rn.ia .n,4 .... .... -. iu ici.uci. ouca a train started yesterday by the Mlkolnjcwska railway. carrying 150 coffins. On arriving at th cemetery It was found that thirty-four coffins, bought the day before, were stll: awaltln hni-inl Thnn.i. k- gers had worked hard mi r,.-.,.n Z. impossible to bury all, and the rest i' nd a" ,hut ""l'Pened In tao pre piled up for the tiliht in th. . ... ! cedl" rur ,a'l, 1,e marched the room for mourners waiting there till .lnvhvi.t '."r,.'i t mat, ir iney went away, others would ar rive In the morn in and get their dead burled first. These fccenes nre repealed dally and many wilt f.r a couple of days feefora they see tiieir (lead relatives nnd friends burled. s all the coffins are Bilk., being painted wlih tar, and no In scriptions are put on them, very few people know which box really contains the remains of their dearest ones. The result Is that the most terrible scenes of des pair and protestation occur whilst the wailing of women and children fill the air. In the provinces things are no better, and disinfection Is almost unheard of In small towns. In one village . ailed Karnkl. In tha government of Kvar, 470 out of tne 6U0 died. It was decided to burn every- tning, corpses, houses ajid barns together Tha police came and. giving the thirty survivors time to get away, threw fire- brands Into the place. This rtramtic measure seemed to be the only way of pre- WB, lryln fetbly to turn over In her nar ventlng the epidemic spreaJing all over I roW bed' K'le '"""d at lllm wl,l the province. saw not; site was unconscious of her sltua- tlon. LORD MAYOR WELL QUALIFIED Uo pa"";d h" urm" "bout her B(1 imed tU htr out. Tiie two men ri.move, hr(. frum w Head of t it, II.. .t-roved Ills e Klavt'- I'l'ed her in the buggy und Ability to I mlrrtu Vear drove home. Physicians were called in. of Kruatiag. I'nder close medical care she slowly recov- .cied. Every precaution was taken to guard LONDON, Oct. 31.-(8tecial.i-Luiidun ha. i ll,'r f,om thu "ltJe of what had 1iap another lord mayor. VI. is time it Is S.r ; pt'ned' and a" w,' wer, ,n t,le aecrtl Georg Wjatt Truscott. who hue been in- l'!tfJK J themselves to sileiue lest the nho.k ugurated with all tite ceremony, paruphti- : uf ,httt vtlalioii ot her burial anJ resur nalia and flim-flam which attends n.is I rtvUu,l ilht prove fatal to her. but the perennial function that lias i. n.a ned prac tically unaltered for about iai. One of the chief re oium . mkui ins of Lie honored and honorable g iitlcinan is his ex treme youth fulness for l.oud n just 51 J ears. Another recomineudutioii fur which highest praises have beet, sounded through, out tha British press consists In the fact that during the year that be was sheriff he "attended 184 public dinners without ln th least endangering his digestion, and." Mj s U gwWlaf fcocwuut of his (astronomic achievements. "Sir George Is quite prepared to undergo the ordeal cheerfully again." When It Is remembered that the city com panies of London sre compelled whether they want to or not, of course to spend SHO.ono a year In fesstlng. the task before l lie new lord mayor will not be regarded as an easy one. It goes without saying thst Sir George Is neither a vegetarian nor a. nut rater, neither teetotaller nor tea fiend. He likes the "cup that cheeis" and the dinner that satisfies. Therefore, he is considered by everyone to be one of the most promising Incumbents who has ever hud the honor of sitting In the chair once occupied by Dirk Whltttngton and his cat. All the London papers recently gave col umns of space to details of how the lord mayor was elected by a show of hands of the aldermen, and how the latter went to the voting place after It had been sprinkled with "sweet smelling herbs" In memory of the plague which occurred In London hack somewhere In the dark ages. Though the farce of electing a man whom everybody knew a year before was sure to he "it" was duly gone through with, Sir George responded by a rousing speech ex pressing his "surprise and gratitude." etc., "for the honor which had been forced upon him," etc. Despite the fact that Kir George Wyatt Truscott has been compelled to go through the perennial puppet allow and In spite of his mastery of the prandial art, he is a good man with the best of records. His grandfather was a "corporator" which has nothing to do with hoaconstrlctors but In dicates his connection with the ancient city companies In an honorable way; while his late father. Sir Francis Wyatt Truscott, was alderman In 1871, and became lord mayor In 1K7S. So, Sir George, In occupying his present post. Is literally "following In the footsteps of father." The new lord mayor has not only been "something In the city" for many years, but has really been nearly everything It Is possible to be In the city throughout his life, from member of. the court of common council to sheriff, magistrate and other dignified things. He Is a member of vari ous city companies, including the Haber dashers', Stationers'. Musicians' and Vint ners'. He is also a distinguished Mason. As a business man, he has long been known as a hustler, with a capital "II." He has Interests In no end of successful firms, snd Is the principal of James Truscott & Sons, printers and manufacturing station ers. He is a director of the City of London Brewery company we said he wasn't a teetotaller Chuhb's Safe and Lock com pany, big life Insurance company and other commercial enterprises. Naturally enough he Is a millionaire, and the $51,000 he will be expected to spend while In office will not give him neuialgta of the pocket nerve. Personally he Is a handsome man lord mayors always are and speaks French flu ently, for which, by the way, he was dec orated by Loubet In 1903. He also possesses an order conferred upon hltn by King Leo pold. The lord mayor has two sons and two daughters. SAVED FROM THE GRAVE How Dream Rescued a Woman from n Terrible Death After linrlal. Mr. Jones was a popular young business ii". in in the city of B. His wife was a woman of strong emotion and most deli cate perceptions, tetwoen them there ex isted a rare sympathy which extended to all tho faculties. Mrs. Jones fell III and after a few weeks' agony, during which her husband waited en her with a constancy not often seen, f ho died. That Is, she appeared to bo dead. There was no question about It In the doc tor's mind. A certificate was Issued and an undertaker called In. But for the fir tunate circumstance that Mr. Jones ws opposed to embalming there would be no story to tell, unless It were of another per son apparently deaU who was rovlved for a moment under the lunge of tho cm balmer's knife. Saved from that fate, Mis. Jones wn lu:d out. in her burial robe, placed In a col fin and on the third day was burled in u cemetery some distance away. Her husband was greatly aflected, so much that his relatives reared an attack of nieluiicholia. His uncle, wishing to urojfao his spirits ur.d divert his attention, remained In the house the night after the funeial and was a valuable witness, us it I proved, of un event so astounding as to l' a"'"Ht beyo:sd belief. troubled leen- 111 u" middle of the night he hear1 vuUe !Wng M name, "George! , ' tu,lM nut '"" lu wll". ViL' h'S UlV,i . , ... ... ..win rii nil, jtiiuseu vieum or a ' ,lie,U8an we"1 " lwK- U was day- i,r.lU m. urlu,e 1,10 vult0 wus ' anu nun ume it cuuij not be U'Mured. He r,fCOB"l'J 11 l - "e tulcc of his 'j. "8lri'"' Ca"""f UP" h"n "h8 ' crieu. "George! Save me! Save me! George!" she cried. He sprang out of bed, trembling all over. That despairing cry still Tang in his ears. oo real was it that, though he was awuko a,lJ "mem bored perfectly the death, the her who ,,aJ thrlce calu'J """. j-Hiding that he was alone, he rushed Into his uncle's room, crying: "Get up! ge; up! You mul(l go to t!le cemetery! She la alive; she Is calling me!" The uncle, skeptical us he was by nature, was carried away by Jones' Impetuosity. Hoth men threw on some clothing, and. while one harnessed a horse to a light buKy. the other procured spades. Thus i equipped, they drove to the cemetery at a gallop. The sun rose as they leaped oul ai the grave and began to dig. Mrs. Jonea had been burled the previous afternoon. Her husband shoveled away the earth in a frenxy of energy. It was firmly fixed in his mind that she had been buried i "V tlmt h nilht et be ln l',n 1 ""' ln8P,r,!a "y nl nephew s excite. ' ""nt ,he Unct. du wUh a vlgor almost great aa Jones's. Begrimed and disheveled, they at last reached the coffin and wrenched off the lid. i JO,le" "lll'lukeU- "is wife was moving. She story U-akeJ out later, when Mrs. Junes got ahout again. Ilaltliiioie Sou. Dai hrlor'a llellretlous. Man begins by expecting tilings to get better and ends by praying they will gel no worse. The reason a woman knows the baby's hair is going to be curly when It grows up la I is .1 now . A hero la a man who can 7ull out a handerrhlef tvlth a hole In It In a street car and not thrust It back In his pocket as if It ei a smallpox flg. JVew lurk fraa. WONDERS OF HINDU MAGIC Skill and Trickery Used to Perform Their Marvelous Feats. METHOD OF MAKING TREES GROW Interesting and Instructive Explana tion of Fakir Feata Whlrh Aston! h the I unary Traveler, Doubtless we have all heard of the tricks or feats of the Indian Hindu fakir; we have been accustomed to regard his powers as marvelous beyond compare as performing marvels that no mere Occidental can equal. He can, we are told, make trees grow from the ground or the deck of a boat; he can throw a rope Into the air and, causing It to be susriended without vlsi'ile support, have Ills assistants climb up that rope, and his head and arms and legs falling to the ground, Join themselves together, and finally form the original body and come up whole as at first! He can cause a stone to sink or swim at will, a boy to vanish from a basket, and a hundred other tilings, too marvelous to conceive. Let us examine some of these powers of the Indian fakir and see how far they are genuine and how far they are the result of trickery. We will first consider the famous mango tree trick. This has been the marvel of all Or iental travelers from time immemorial, and the correct explanation of this trick has never been made public, to my knowledge. The Mango Tree. The performer comes forward and pro ceeds to make a little mound of earth out of the soil and some water. Tills can be done anywhere, on tile earth, on the deck of a ship, etc. The fakir usually wears next to no clothes, apparently making this trick If It is a trick all the more difficult. When the mound of earth Is complete, the fakir Inserts his seed of the mango tree, and waters It to make It grow. He then covers It with a cloth, and. placing his hands beneath the cloth, proceeds to manip ulate the seed for soma time. In a few moments he withdraws his hands, and makes passes over the cloth, outside It. A wait; then the conjurer removes the cloth, and the seed Is seen to have sprouted. Two tiny shoots appear above the surface of the ground. More passes are made, and when the clotn Is removed for tne second time a tall mango tree la seen sprouting above the earth. This trick has probably mystified more people than any one that The Hindu fakir performs. It Is accomplished In the following manner: The seed that Is placed In the earth Is hollow, and within it Is placed a branch of tho mango tree, previously prepared and folded up. The leaves of the plant are specially adapted for the trick, and they are easily compressed into a small compass. The seed containing the mango shoot Is placed beneath tho earth, and when the conjurer places his hands uti neath the cloth he works out a part of this folded-up branch, and leaves It stick ing out above tho surface of the mold. This Is repeated several times until all the branch Is showing above the mold, when quite a respectable sized tree Is seen to be sprouting. If the seed Is examined before the trick Is exhibited the conjurer ha previously exchanged the one exam ined for tho trick seed at some conven ient moment before placing It in the ground. Sometimes the seed Is seen to grow Into gigantic proportions Into a regular tree, bearing fruit. In fact! It Is probable that much of thiH Is exaggeration pure and simple, but there Is a manner of working tho trick, or rather extending It, so that a very large tree can be produced at the conclusion. It Is this: The conjurer has the large tree concoaled beneath a thick cloth a duplicate of the cloth he uses to over the seed at first. After uncovering l no seed several times and showing It grown more and more, he uncovers it for the last time and, while the audience Is gazing at the plant wonderlncly, the con jurer takes occasion to exchange tho cloth for the one containing the big tree underneath It. Now, he quickly covers over the plant with this cloth, and when It Is removed there Is the tree, full grown. It may be several feet In height. It was compressed benenth the covering cloth. People do net think of asking to look un der the cloth tho last time, because they have often seen beneath it and know It contains nothing. They therefore as sume that It contained nothing tho last time the mold was covered over. Famous Ilaaket Trick, Now we come to the famous basket trick, which has also mystified thousands, and yet Is simplicity itself. A large oval be.sket 1 shown, something the same shape as an egg, laid on Its side, and ' of any of the spectators, Immediately blow an opening cut In the upper Burface or out of his mouth any one of the colored top. It la first shown empty. Then a small I sugars desired or called for. This is re boy Is shown, wearing a Jacket and turban. ' piated until all the colors are blown out He Is placed In the basket and the opening j jn turn. Is covered over with a blanket. The basket Is so small that the boy apparently fills the whole of the basket. What Is the sur prise of the spectators, then, to see the fakir suddenly leap Into the opening of tho basket and proceed to stamp about as vig- orousiy as ne can treadtnr on th. ,r..i and apparently showing that the boy has disappeared and Is no longer in the basket. To make assurance doubly sure, however, he snatches up a sword and proceeds to run the basket through and through in all directions. No sound Issues from the bas ket. There Is an ominous silence. Evi dently the boy has disappeared. But the conjurer turns around and shouts, and the boy, wearing the same Jacket and turban, is seen In a neighboring tree. He descends. A tom-tom Is beaten and after a few in cantations the basket is seen to stir ami soon the blanket heaves up and Is thrown aside and the boy is seen standing before us as sound as ever. This trick, like the last, can be performed ln any Inqgllty, on the deck of a ship, etc., thus showing that trap doors have nothing to do with the result. How Is it done? First, as to the basket. It will be seen, when we think It over, thut the p.culiar shape of the basket renders it capable of being employed in the following manner: The small boy, as ( soon as he Is placed In the basket, curls up and wriggles his body eelwlse around the edges of the basket That is. he coils around the inner surface, just as a snake might coll up within It Now It will be seen that It Is possible for the conjurer to leap intj tha opening, stamp on the ground, etc., since the open space I in which he treads is unoccupied by the boy's body. He steps In the middle cj the circle of flesh. And when he luns t.Y sword through the basket, he only runs it through thoso places w here the boy's b dy Is not concealed. go much of the trick is plain; how about the disappearance and reappearance in tho tree? There are two boys, dressed exactly alike. Tne first one never leaves the bas ket, tie simply remains quiet until he it eel ye the signal to show signs of 1 i f again. The second boy climbs up a neigh boring tree at some convenient moment and shouts when be sees It is the proper time to make his presence known. So much for tha famous basket trick! Dry ad and Colored sand. A very clever trick often seen Is the fol lowing; It Is known as the "dry sand trie." Th fakir brings forward pail o Wfta.li it BY it ' viv J CONCERNING OUR We depend on no one or two makers for our goods we select our tailors according to their ability to make the )artic ular kind of garments we want from fabrics, linings , etc., of our own choosing. By takiug a hand in our manufacturing problems we are able to undersell stores that buy in the usual way by 20'-. We put an absolute money back guarantee on everything we sell and allow no misrepresentation by sales-people. IS IT ANY WONDER OMAHA PEOPLE SHOW A PREFERENCE FOR THIS STORE? Men's Suits $7.00 to $40.00 Young Men's Suits. . . .$5.00 to $35.00 Child's Suits $1.50 to $12.00 Men's 0 'Coats $10.00 to $50.00 Young Men's 0 'Coats. .$5.00 to $35.00 Child's 0 'Coats $2.50 to $15.00 which he proceeds to fill with water. He then shows some ordinary sand, quite dry. To prove its dryness he takes up a handful, and, blowing sharply upon It, Bcatters It In all directions. He then takes up another handful and drops It into the water. We can all see It lying In the bottom of the pall, under the water. Next, showing his hands empty, he places one In tho pail, and brings out a handful of the sand. Blowing upon it, It still scatters In all directions-showing It to be as dry us ever. This is ic;euU'd several times, until all the nan.l is again extracted. Tills is a very clever trick, and would never be discovered unless its secret were told. It Is performed la the following man ner: Klne, clean sand is selected, washed carefully in hot water several limes and dried in the sun. Some of this Hand is then placed in a frying pun with a lump of fresh lard and is cooked until all the lain la burned away. The result is that eveij purticle of sund Is covered with a thin coat ing of greaae, so that when this sand lb dropped into the water the sand Is Imper vious to the water (owing to Its coulj ana so remains as dry as ever. Another trick that Indian fakirs perform is known as the "colored sands trick." The conjurer eats several colored sands ol sugar blue, red, yellow, etc. and swallows them. Nevertheless he can, at the rei.uest The conjurer really swallows the sugars In the first case to his detriment, be it said. But he has concealed In his mouth, several little capsules, each containing one Lf .h .,,r. ,.r it.- ..i,.r tht ealPn. rheK e conC(.aled within the mouth, between the teeth and the cheek, In various positions around the mouth In a certain order, which the conjurer knows. No., when any color is called for, the conjurer simply works the capsule contain ing this color to tho front of the mouth, breaks It with his teeth, and Immediately blows out the sand. This is repeated until all the capsules are broken In turn. A little trick sometimes shown Is known as the "diving duck.". A howl Is shown empty, and then filled with water. In tho water is now placed a small artificial duck. I'pon command of the faker It dives quite naturally of Its own accord i then It rises to the surface, and this Is j repeated several times. At the conclusion of the performances the duck It taken out : and handed to the spectators, who can ex- amine it. No amount of examination will reveal the Her ret, however. It is this: A fine xiik thread pusm s up through a small hole in the bottom of the bowl, and when the conjurer places the duck ln the water he manages to slip this thread around the dork. Now, he hub only to pull tills thread, when the bowl Is filled, and the duck dives. At the end of the per formance the thread Is broken and the duck may be examined as much as d -sire I. j Scientific Ameritan AVorklu. Ton llarl. ... , , . The owner of Lie farm l.ad l. , n chymg hiiiis. if ai the county fair worn- his hard- working wile hiuytii at :.onn- lo se- l.iat l ie faun suli'-ied no toss in Ills absence "Weil. aiau. ' said the owner upon iiis retuin, "1 in about all tired out. la tho cow in the barn'.'"' "Yes. Iui.lt tln.t," i.-pli.d his wift-, barely I locking up from the lu.-K then in hand. the iiosHf unliai lu-ed an led ; "Ye." "i iiicki-ns I nked up'.'" -Yes." ' w ,od chopped for mornlu'T" Yes. " "V agon-wheel mended an' ready t' al.it in th morning." "Yes." "Well, then," concluded the exhaustt-d owner with a sigh of relief, "let me have my supper. 1 in goin' t' turn In. Fannin's beginning t' tell on me." St. Louis Ite public. By using tha various departments of Th Be Want Ad pages you get tha best re sults at in least xpens. THE STORE THAT EVfltYBODY TALKS ADOUT OPPOSITE THOMPSON, DELDEN & CO. WORTH GOING A COUPLE HUNDRED MILES TO SEE WHEN for Omalia." Why shouldn't a magnificent city like Omaha have a clothinir store equal to any in the country. It should and it has. Th at it is appreciated by the people of Omalia and vicinity is proven by the excellent trade since we opened. That it is appreciated by other cities is evidenced by the number of business men from far off cities who make special tri s to see and profit by this store. CONCERNING THE DEPARTMENTS It doesn't make a particle of difference to us what you want whether it be a pair of overalls or the finest garment that can be made we have them and we make no distinc tion between any departments we value the trade of all. , FIRST FROOR Great clothing room large, roomy aisles, where It la a pleasure, not a task for ladles to assist their men folks to se lect nuits and trousers. A most conenlent ttaber dashtry department It Is removed from the clothing a delightful department. A hat department without a peer in the country every hat or cap kept in'glass cases and in full view, you can buy quickly and satisfactorily here. A shoe dept. Immense in size and beautifully equipped. It la every bit as inviting to ladies wanting boys' shoes as it Is to men both enjoy privacy in our shoe dept. GLORY OF THE CORN BEL1 Melodious Tribute to the King of American Cereals. MOST VALUABLE OF GROWN CROPS Second Only to Wheat as "the Staple of Lite," and the Itnala of Hun dred Other I'aeaFlKurea that Tell. If America has no other claim to great ness, still its record ln the production of maize or Indian corn would cause It to rank among the foremost nations of the world. Maize, or Indian corn furnishes food to a larger portion of the human race than any other grain except rice. America gave Indian corn to the world, taught the people of other nations how to make It Into brcadstuffs and other products and yet America produces 75 per cent of the world's total supply. In America the grain Is known simply as corn. By botanltts It is calley lea muys. Corn is the moat valuable crop grown on American soil. It amounts to ubout i.aOO.COO.ta) bushels a year, worth more than tl,2i0,0u0,000. In quantity and value it Is greater than all the other cereal crops com bined. Here are some comparative figures relating to IhsI year's production of the different cereals ln the I'nlted States: Bushels. Value. Oats '". 0i,0 10 I 2;3,r.nno Wheat 6i3.ni..r 0 BoJ.tX'O.Oo' Barley ir.i,iiiO,(AO !7,fii0.0 0 Rye 3:',87&,0 0 H,&x,2jii Total all other ce reals except corn.. 1. 434. R75. WO S-S.f.r0 Corn 2.&57,JJO,( $l.i7S,5i,Oi)o America's corn exports average about 2f,0M,fln0 bushels a year, but aro much smaller ln years, following a domestic crop shortage when prices nre high. The seven great corn states of America are Illinois Iowa, Kalians, Nebraska, Mis souri, Indiana and Ohio. These comprise the territory familiarly known as thp corn belt. Not only do they grow enough corn for their home use, but export enormous qnsntltles each ye-.ir. The soil of the Ohio valley and the Mississippi basin, seems es pecially adapted to corn growing, and from here the great preponderance of the world's supply of corn Is oh'.alned. Texas has come Into prominence as a corn state of late years, but its supply is all needed at home to feed Its great number of cattle, hogs and horses. nistrlhutlns; ( enters. Chicago is the world's greatest corn dis tributing center. The cities next in order of importance are Kansas City, St. I.ouls and Omaha. These are known to the coin growers as primary points, and the ship ment of the corn to these points is the first step in Its marketing. At these points the corn is graded, temporarily stored ln warehouses and thence reshipped by land and water to all pails of the country and . Ihe world. 1 ne titeai i.aaes iurnin a vi-iy i cheap and convenient means of distributing , , , . .. t'or" lu Important markets, and to them I hicugo is largely iniieincu ior me pie- eminence it enjoys in the jr'ain Industry lu general. The annual production of corn in Illinois is nearly tO'.Oeo.cui bushels from ne.ily lo, olhj.iKjO aires devoted to corn lalsluu. Iowa is tecum! In import. i m e, with an annual production of about o ,') bushels and an acreage of il.;'7i,.oii. NeXl lu older are Nebraska. with 7 -III.ojo aciej, ielding about Jo". 'W'.'ioo bushels a .war; Missouri, 6,i,vi acres, yielding about i'e, i'oi.OjO bush els; Kansas, 7.7iu,ouO acres, yielding 2'to.uoO, (.) bushels; Indiana, 4j0.ioJ acres. 1TS.(.. uv bushels; Ohio. iMD.WU acres, 15d.ODO.uio bushels; Kentucky. 3,5jO,JU acies, 8K.Uiu.ijuJ bushels; Texas, 6.000, Uw acres, SO.Uki.uou bush els: Tennessee, 3,!iO.0UJ acres, 78.OuO.Ou) bush els; Arkansas, 2.5uu.ujO acres, U.UjO.Ouu bun li tis, Oklahoma, Z.ouO.OOO acis, 52,OtO,0A) bush. this store was oponoil somo competitors said good for Omalia. We are still of the opinion SECOND FLOOR Acknowledged by all as the greatest upper floor In the country. A Juvenile Dept. un usual in size, convenience and luxuriousness you couldn't be ny more comfortable, If we took the garments to your own home to show them to you or your boys. A Wardrobe section double the size of all other Omaha wardrobe sections combined. They contain the finest business and evening wear that can.be made. You must go to the very largest cities to find an Over coat Dept. equal to ours. You'll not find It In the stores of the Middle West. MODERATE els; Wisconsin, 1,700,000 acres, 50.0no.ono bush els; Michigan, 1,570.000 acres, t'.Onn.Ooo bush els; Minnesota, 1.700.000 acres, 46.50v,o bush els; Pennsylvania, 1,477,000 acres, ij.'dvuo bushels; South Dakota, 1.50O.0OO acres, ), OOO.oni) bushels; West Virginia, 770.W0 acres, 19.000,000 bushels; New York, 670.000 acres, 16,(00,000 bushels; California. 66.000 acres. 1,500.000 bushels; Oregon, 2O.CO0 acres, 4W.fm0 bushels, and Washington, 10.GW acres, pro ducing 250.000 bushela. Illinois leads all other states ln the yield per acre, as well us In the amount of acre age and production. Second Only to heat. As a contributor to the "staff of life" corn occupies a position second only to wheat and more and more is it gaining ln popularity as a breadstuff. Corn flour mixed with wheat flour has proved u bless ing to the poor ln producing a bread which Is much cheaper than flour bread und which many, even among the wealthy, de clare to bo superior in flavor and more healthful than all-flour bread. But this is only one of the more than a hundred uses to which corn is put. So extensively does It ent- r Into our daily life, our commerce and Into the affairs of our nation generally that no person can let a day go by without encountering many things to remind him of the Importance of this regal American Krain. When you wash your face and hands in the morning with soap the chances are that the soap you use. If it 'Is very excellent, was made . from corn oil. When you put on your clothes ln the morning what are you re minded of In the gloss of the shirt and collar? "Corn," for from it the starch was made. hen we pick up the morning paper and read of the cruise of our battleship fieet around the world and of the superiority of our navy you may ask what is the one point that makes our ships superior to all others. And what will the answer be? "Corn." for of the pith ln the cvrnstalk is compressed the com cellulose which forms the filling between the inner and outer skins of all the Ainei-iian battleships con structed within the past ten years. This cellulose made fireproof and submitted to powerful hydraulic pressure has almost made the American battleship invulnerable to the ordinal y shell, for It has the magic like property of closing the hole within two minutes after t lie shell bus entered. This is caused by the rapid expansion of the cellulose whenever water cornea ln con tact with it. As a War Material. In future when deadly explosives an hurled from our forts and battleship into the forces of the enemy, we may be re minded that It Is the great chief product of our soil that is fighting for us. for from corn the smokeless powder and other ex plosives now are being made. Of course you are reminded of corn when you eat your corncakes for breakfast, and when you pour the syrup on them the re minder is strengthened, for corn symp com prises four-fifths of the syrup served on the lubles of America. And wnat Is called lo mind when you reach the office and write a letter? "Corn." for mayhap the paper on which you write was made from mill starch, a corn product, and very likely the gum on the envelope and the stamp was made from dextrine, another corn product. When ou buy candy for your girl or for your children, you may know lhal the great preponderance of all candy cuntuina corn syrup as its basis. The coloring in the clothes worn by the housewife In her household duties is piolaibly ellecled through the use of dextrine mad.- from colli, which is used for stamping figures on gingham, calicoes and numerous oilier textiles. We can scarcely eat meat without being reminded of corn, for It Is principally through feed of corn products that cattle and hogs are fattened for the market. Ho conspicuously does corn enter into the diet of live stuck that cattle and bogs ar re Half Minute Store Talk Whrn we st'll you any kind of wearing apparel, we assume all the risk. If our judgment was bad In selling and your Judgment was bad in buying you don't have to puy for both our errors. Hiing it back we are more than ready to stand the loss. We would feel you had done us an Injustice if you didn't give us chance to make good our guarantee of absolute patisfaction. it, was "great," but too "there is nothing too good BASEMENT STORE Light as day perfectly vent ilated easy to get to by eleva tor or Btalr hih ceilings conveniently and splendidly equipped. lx)ts of clothing stores don't pay as much atten tion to their main floor as we do to our basement. It is devoted principally to work cloths, Overalls. Cordrroy Suits and Pants. Duck Clot! Ing. Fui Coats. Work Shirts. Work Gloves Etc. Here also is found our great dept. for the sale of Trunks, Grips anu Suit Cases. These dcpis. are a revelation to all who see them. PRICES ferred to' by n noted writer on the subject as "corn on the hoof." Corn is the principal grain distilled In tho t'liited States. An enormous proportion of the total production Is used In the man. ufacture of many kinds of alcoholic bever ages, principally bourbon whisky. Formerly the potato crop of New Y'ork state furnished n larc part of the raw ma terial for Ihe starch industry, but now tha corn crop furnishes n.ost of th-' wo. Id's su.i 1. October What lo EjI. FATAL LURE OF SHOPPING St. I.ouls Woman ( uuM Vnt Hesist Mealing When She Didn't Have the Mono). That she Just couldn't Ke( p lier fingers off things Is the moaning explanation, often repeated, of Mrs. Maggie Mathlas of i".'!3 Odell avenue, mother of five children, locked up ln the detention room of police headquarteis on the charge of shoplifting. "If they will let me go." she udds. "I will promise nev.r to come down town again." It was coming down town thut worked the undoing of .Mis. Mathlas. Her hard workin, honest husiiand was a good pro vider, she says, und gave her the money that he earned, und she did not need to steal, but when she rame down town and saw things that struck her fancy she could not keep from stealing them. Nervously wringing her hands, constantly on the verge of tears Mrs. Mathins, who says she Is 38 but looks much older, her marred hands and bent fonn telling a tale of toll, related how she first fell under temptation's sp 11 and a year later fell ngaln. "1 can't understand why I did It." she faltered. "I had n '""'n' lo My husband gave me his earnings. My tastes were simple. 1 had never cared much for fine clothing. I h'l a" Hint, I needed and, indeed, all that 1 cared for. I was down town shopping. In one of the stores I saw a black brilliant. ne skirt lying on a coun ter. I wanted to take It. I could not un derstand the Impulse. I had never tnken anything that did not belong to m and had never had an inclination to do so. But the temptation to take the skirt was stronger than I could resist. 1 could not keep my fingers off It. I took it. "1 took ot.ier tilings thut I did not really wont. I was caught st it and arrested. 1 paid for what I had taken and they let m.i go. To this day my husband does not know of it. I never took anything else until two weeks ago. I was down town again and ln one of the stores 1 saw a black waist. I could not keep my fingers off of It. I took other tilings ami was not detected. I took them home. My husband supposed 1 had bought them and asked no questions. I wore them, but I did not feel right with them on and was glad to get back home and take them off. "I went down town on other days snd took more things that I did not need. I did not start on any of these trips with the Intention of stealing. I hoped that the temptation to steal would not com over me. Uut as soon as I got down town I Just bad to go lo the stores and when I was there and saw the profusion of articles about me I could not keep my fingers off of them. "H was coming down town that caused all the trouble. If they will let In go I will borrow the money and pay for every thing that I ever stole and will never come down town araln us long a I live." Mrs. Mathias' greatest anxiety was to keep her husband from knowing of her arrest. She begged that she might be re leased so that she could go horn before he cam from his dally work. "Ha will never forglv me," she moaned. As the door of the cell room closed behind her the shadow that fell on Ihe glazed glass was that of a woman walking back and, forth, back and forU.-at. luul Tlme, f vf T X f