10 TTTTC OMATTA SUNDAY BEE: JULY 25, 1909. NEW ENGLISH PLAYWRIGHT Maugham, Who Looks Forward to Seeing Pittsburg. AUTHOR WITH AN AUTISTIC IDEA II tar THere'll B Beaatr Ito ank Chlmaer HU "Pea lap" te Be ea la New York. LONT50N. Jul I William Somerset Maugham (plea pronounce If apelled Morm), who ! spoken of In London dra matte circle a th tnu of th hour, has typical "chamber" on Mount street W, a locality wbloh has hlatorio and fashionable Interest, for tt la near tha celebrated Berke ley Square and a part of Mayfalr peopled with Prtnoa Charming by romantlo school glrla wl.o ueed to read Owen Meredlth'a "LucUe," before romance went out of data. On tha way to tha Interview, If you have the teeing eye, you will note where once upon a time an escaping horaeman evading an unpleaaant quarter of an hour for hla highhanded and highwayman methods In Piccadilly aa object of envy to all au ex ceeding Americana who have never been able to adopt Ma desirable potior dashed down soma atepa and along a passage, where now vertical bare of Iron mark hla hair-raising flight You may pass the win dow In Half Moon street where Shelter ueed to alt Tou will note the houae on Clargea street, next to Half Moon, where Lady Hamilton lived, and not far away the home of Edmund Kean and Macauley'a residence when he returned from India. Other Places of Memory. If you Insist upon repeopllng the neigh borhood, why evade stopping a moment at 11 Berkeley Square, where Horace Waipola lived for more than a decade? At 46, where Cllve committed suicide and at 21, the blrthpluce of "Auld Robin Gray," and on Charles street, which like Mount leads directly from Berkeley Square, where Beau Brummell strolled and ogled, where Lord Lytton wrote, where Fanny Burney Im mortalized the fashions of tha day In "Eve lina." You turn Dover atreet way with en vious eye, but a distant chime marks the hour and you have to leave your re searches. Mount street, through which you pass hurriedly, has few landmarks. The hand of tho destroyer has been particularly ruthltss, but you glimpse the Mount Coffee Houe, once presided over by the father of Harriet Weetbrook. the first wife of Bhelley, who furnished more than the allotted nine days' talk to the scandal-mongers. All this you say haa little to do with one of the latest claimants to fame, but who can tell, every stone In the locality has been trod by the feet of the mighty and the Invisible prints may have helped greatly In Mr. Maugham's ongoing. At any rate It does no harm to blleve so, and he him self does not deny It. Where Manahmtt Works. The special environment, up many flights of generous sized Ktalrs to working and living rooms, high enough to catch even the elusive sunlight of London, Is Interest ing to harmonize with your expectations. The salon has Its easy chairs and divans covered with shiny chintzes which recall Clyde Fltche's stage settings and home decorations. Mr. Maughan In appearance la not unlike the Clyde Fitch of eight or ten years ago, as hla playa, of which Ameri can audiences have seen "Lady Frederick" and "Jack Straw" and will see "Penelope" next siason, are not unlike Mr. Fitch's In their clcvtr construction, their more than clever diulcgue, and their lack of ulimatlu shock to the novelty seeking nerve. lie has a sort of resemblance also to the bronze Narcissus silhouetted ugalnsi the light on top of a revolving bookcase, for Mr. Maughan is a very good looking young man, with bright brown eyes, a determined chin and a ruddy, ouldoir color. He is of medium height, and wears a loose Norfolk Jacket as part of hla writ ing costume. He is in the early thirties, the era when a man refers frequently to tha time "when I waa a young fellow," which is said by those who have passed on, to be a verbal disease, brief and non- recurrent. If he does not live up to his blue china, he at least sits up against It, a number of selected pieces forming a desk frieze, and over and about him are numerous interesting pictures, some charming water colors of the Riviera and Italy, and a portrait of himself by Mr. Kelly. The most Interesting object In an extremely Interesting apartment is a new painting by one of London't greatest painters, Wilson Steer, who Is familiarly called the modern constable. The owner exhibits It with pride and .the attitude of a con noisseur. He haa, however, a little the manner of the family man, who has been carried away by the exaltation of an auc tion's psychic moment, has purchased an Ellsabethan bed and then remembers that he lives in a Harlem flat. "I certainly shall have to move,"" he aaya, taking you at once Into hla confi dence, "for I have no room here, and I hardly think chambers make a suitable 'environment for a picture like this. I sup pose It must be a house next time." The moment of confidence is apparently quite typical of Mr. Maugham, who haa little of the British detachment, to put It mildly, and he laughs easily away the idea firmly Implanted in your mind that he waa averse to being interviewed for an Ameri can newspaper. Home for Hla Picture. , "I have had to refuse a lot of requests recently, but it waa only because the in terviewers themselves got ao frightfully anlffy. I don't mind being misquoted to the least. I want to be misquoted, because I say auch frightfully indiscreet things max ir you repeated me verbatim It wouldn't be fit for publication, and you can aay anything you want to and claim I did It. but when I'd obliged two or three Journallatlo friends, aa I foolishly thought. and then read that I had pushed myself Into public notice and was seeking for self-advertisement, why I had to stop Just jor protection. And then the hlfalutin atufl they make you aay a if any one ever did talk that way; Isn't it awful Tou don t know when you read It whether you're proud to have such an unexpected and wonderful vocabulary or mad to think anybody could think you did have, you know. HIs Idea of Pales." Naturally you talk about Mr. Maugham's own profession, and with the recollection of hla latest success In mind. "Penelope." aha of tha emotional nature, finding out tha Intrigue between her husband and her dearest friend and seeking U fit herself by a routine of self-control and elaborate policy to the task of rewlnnlng him, you ask If he believes that the Munsey-Hsrras-worth ending, which marks the fall of tha curtain after the fourth act, continues through Penelope'a life. "I honestly think," said Mr. Maugham, with an expression of worldly disbelief In bis cynical eye which belles hla phrase, "that Penelope was clever enough to keep bar husband faithful to her all through tha rest of bar Ufa, although everybody Is I know who baa seen It haa an entirely opposing opinion. Certainly I ought to have a right to mine, however, don't you think r Tom shake your head sadly. "Not In tha face and eye of a personality which suggests frequent temperamental acci dents. Then you ask maliciously If he Imagines that American audiences will ac cept such a cold-blooded portrayal of marital barkulldlrg. He Is undoubtedly amazed at the sug gestion. "Why, honestly, I never thought of such a thing. Tou mean that women In America, that Is of the smart, social whirl, expect their husbands to be faithful to ttaemT" Tou nod In your best Star and Stripes manner. "Why, thkt'a awfully Interesting; of oourae we expeot the wives to bo, faithful, naturally, but we are not along as far as yeu are, or further along, which la it? However, I don't think you can look askance, for you have an easy divorce law, which really balances those questtlona." la tha Matte, of Woman. Having In mind the rumor that as a popular bachelor Mr. Maugham is much in demand at social functions, you ask re garding hla rather remarkable knowledge of feminine nature, which In "Penelope" la portrayed to the point of making you wonder If the fable concerning the impos sibility of understanding the sex Is to con tinue. He agrees that this polite and pleasant fiction la relegated to the limbo of last year's hats. Women are, ao different from men; they are of the eame clay; they have the same passions, the same emotions, the same principles or lack of principles, so 1 say give 'em the vote. I intended 'Pene lope' aa a lesson, showing young wives how to treat their husbands, for aa a bachelor I feel that I have a perfect right not only to have radical Ideaa about the marriage state, but also to express them. It'a tha only time a man can, and he ought to make the beat of hla halcyon days, eh?" Mr. Maugham hospitably presses upon you -sanitary cigarettes with cotton at the mouth, which absorbs the nicotine and ldoaa. Tou are forced to decline, although ha assures you that he don't mind ash on hla carpet, not a bit. Doctor Gta His. One of the moat amusing blta of "Pene lope" Is the peek- behind the veil in the doctor's office, where a strange array of patients are shown and the comedy of which culminates when, having treated a fussy old woman on whom he haa counted for a fat fee and whose continued visits has prompted Penelope to buy another Paris hat, he learns that she Is a doctor a widow, and according to the unwritten law of hla profession he cannot accept any payment for his services. The author ad mits that the play has not made him so popular with the profession that he Is prompted to break a leg to show how cheaply It can be reset, but life, ever com pensatory, had tipped him off to the Christian Scientists aa a promising con vert. The real reason why I selected a doc tor's office as the mlse en scene was this: One has to keep one's finger on the pulse of public demand In playwrltlng, as in other professions, and the popular bent at present among English people shows a decided reaction against the continual portrayal of the lives of the aristocracy. Over here we have decided distinctions of class, which I understand you also have In America, but don't admit. We have, for Instance, our upper middle classes, our middle classes and our lower middle classes, with about thirteen subdivisions, and everybody is relegated according to the obvious symptoms. Theatergoers say now that they want to see the lives of people who are not admitted by card to the state balls at Buckingham palace; they want the intimate revelation of domestic doings of the Bayswater people, whom one of our popular dramatists, John Galsworthy, In troduces very convincingly. Bayswater means nothing to yon aa an American, to an Kngllshman it would mean at once the class of people whom he knows about &a merchants on a.amall scale, professional men who have not risen beyond the mark of mediocrity; it la absolutely distinct In lta suggestion and certainly does offer a promising field. Advantage of Aa Aristocracy. "But I think the reason the aristocratic class has been drawn on so frequently is not because the playwright haa any special affiliations with tt or haa confined his studies there to the exclusion of other classes. It is merely because It is the only class available for his needs. People like garden parties, they like 6 o'clock tea crowds, they like the picturesque and the environment which appeals to their aes thetic sense, and In consequence when you use that environment you must people it with that class that you would naturally find there. You can't take a business man, a man who Is stock broking in the city, a barrister working out a legal complica tion in the courts, forcibly remove him, put him In regulation dress and place him In a garden party, or dancing at tendance at an afternoon bazaar, now, can you? If you want to take a man into the country or to a smart function in order to work out your story, you .have to look for that man among the only class who are always at your beck and call. You cannot find auch a man except in the leisure class, and I believe; that is un doubtedly the reason why he haa been a bit overworked. The doctor's office seemed to me a very possible compromise, and having selected it for the reason given, the comedy came as a matter of course. "You have to have ao much more snow of evidence on the stage than In real life. The motive of action must be a hundred fold more reasonable. In one'a daily ex istence, he will do the most absurd things, act absolutely on the Impulse of the mo ment, follow a mood, a caprice, no matter what may happen, but you can't do that on the stage and be convincing, for your audlenoe will not realise the emotion of the moment you portray and the hap hazard results, without logic or coiisecu tiveness, that ensue. In Mr. Bernard Shaw's play 'The evil's Disciple' there la a case In point, and the reason the play did not make a bigger success I suppose was due to the fact that while tha man in it acted as a man of that kind would do under the circumstances, acted emotionally, without thought or care of consequences, the audience looking on and seeing the Absurdity of It all could not and would not be convinced. In real life altuationa are made for us; on the stage we have to make situations and work them out to a reasonable conclusion. Slow ta Write a Play. "Play writing Is a knack, merely a knack, and you have it or you haven't It, that la all. When I waa extremely young I had to live, although the necessity may not seem apparent, and I commenced zeal ously to write plays, which nobody seemed to want then they've been sold since, by the way, and to people who wouldn't even trouble to read them at that time. I was frightfully discouraged and reasoned out to my own satisfaction that If I turned my attention to novels and got sufficient repu tation then my plays would be read, under the absolutely false impression that If a man were fairly well known as a novelist his course as play writer would be made easier. I don't think It helps In the least. Some of my books, notably 'Lisa of Lam beth,', had a fair aale and I could have kept on filling orders from the publishers and ended where I started, looking at It from the standpoint of my original am bition, but Would not have advanced an lota by that means. Merely In the matter of dialogue, you can write a very effective bit for your story; take It out of tha story and try to make It go In a play It falls absolutely flat and will not reach over the footlights even so far aa aa the first tow of stalls. Why? Nobody knows. Play writing Is founded on an entirely dissimilar Idea from novel writing, and what that Idea Is nobody has yet defined. "I have never been In America and I am extremely anxious to come to your country, although I have not yet been able to plan for It with any certainty. When you look ahead and Imagine a success you think of the things you will do when It comes. America loomed large in my Imaginings, but the success brought with It obligations and work and responsibilities; some of the thlngn It meant to me have had to be eut out. "I want to study your people. I expect to be greatly Impressed with your llve nees,' your Initiative, your difference to ourselves. I Imagine you much more hos pitable to the stranger." Hla Notions of America. Mr. Maugham inquires If It is not much easier to work and play in America. He has heard so. "Judging from the few American plays I have seen here, I believe that you actors work together better than ours do; that each helps the other and that your en semble is more satisfactory on that account. I may be wrong in this, for I have seen beside 'Arizona,' which I consider one of the best melodramas I ever saw, pnly the play of 'Strongheart on which to base my assumption. I never saw a play where It aeemed to me you got so completely the Idea that everybody was working to help everybody else and that the suocess, aa a whole, meant more to every one of the cast than an individual triumph. I espe cially noted this in Robert Edeson's part. He Is to appear In a play of mine this coming winter in America. It is called The Noble Spaniard. The scene Is laid in Calais in 1850, it Is a comedy and the costumes of the period are very amusing. 'When I speak of America I think of Pittsburg. I want to see it more than any place In the world. I have heard that there never was a more ugly city, and I don t believe it. I know that I shall find It as beautiful as Florence. Whistler, you know, had to come to London and teach the English people how to appreciate the Thames, the foggy days, the heavy smoke. Ha revelled artistically in the atmosphere conditions which had been acceptend as the great aesthetic drawback, with Italy al ways in mind. Pittsburgh's "Atmosphere." 'Beauty exists in the eye of the beholder. You must make the beauty yourself, In other words. When I was at the age when one is tuVvht, but does nothing for one self. I warf made to believe that factories anu factory chimneys, the pall of smoke, the gray days and nights were ugly things. Now I know better, and I believe that I shall enjoy In Pittsburg the climax of ar tistic delight that I havo learned to find in environments of that kind. 'There is one that I am especially fond of. I have never seen a more exquisite landscape. It is along the Medway on the road to Chatham as you go to Parts by the Dover route. Don't miss seeing It from your car window. There are times when it Is as delicately tinted as a Corot landscape, there are moments when It Is like an Impression of a huge fire opal." Having proved to hla own and the inter viewer's satisfaction that Pittsburg and the Medway share the world's beauty and charm, with a leaning toward Pittsburg, Mr. Maugham goes calmly on to announce that whenever he is not in London he lives by preference in a small place oppo site Bellaglo, on the Riviera, where he goes soon to fill the many orders for playa which will keep him busy for aome months to come. It la there that bla new piece which will bo produced by Mr. Frohman is to be completed. It Is called Smith," and is a serious play. "It la in tended to show," continues the speaker, "how it is possible to lead the simple life even amid complex surroundings. The simple life idea ia not, I know, a very novel one, but I hope I have succeeded In finding a novel viewpoint. I don't think the time of its American production haa been de cided upon." Censor, Author, Aetor and Critic. "The censor? Oh, we love the censor, ha la so much better than the police. Every play has to be sent to him to read over and it's ten chanoea to one that it escapes his blue pencil. But when you have the censor aealnst you, you often have the critics with you, bo there again s the balancing law. 'In one of my plays, 'A Man of Honor,' It was necessary to use a very ugly word, and I used It because that was the only word that would do. The censor promptly crossed it out, saying that one might em ploy the verb 'to seduce' in a melodrama, for it was expected there and no melo drama would be complete without it, but not in a serious play; it was too offensive. Not having a synonym in my vocabulary that would fill the place, a happy inspira tion occurred to ma and 1 said, I will leave the word out for the actor who plays the part to say what he' pleases. I did so, and the actor being In the same dilemma as myself, merely scowled, waved a twisted finger and thumb and looked unutterable things at tha climatic moment. The critics the next day said that a man . less versed in the art of playwrltlng than Mr. Maugham might have committed the sole cism of using a crude phrase, but he, with his accustomed art, merely suggested and In that way made his meaning doubly clear and wrote himself down a master of method." ANOTHER ILLUSION SHATTERED Home Reflections an the Wisdom of Widows la the Matrimonial Game. Another tradition Is scattered to the winds by the published record .of our latest experimenter In wholesale matri money. Of the seventeen women whom Christian C. Johnson of San Francisco can remember leading to the alter, only two were spinsters. Tha rest presumably were widows. ' Johnson, who practiced polygamy of revenue only, and who. In fact, never married a woman If he could make off with her. money in any other way, like the burglar who never slays un less he Is absolutely compelled to, lays it down aa a general proposition that the conquest of woman Is easy. "Treat bar a little harsh, and be a llttla distant, and she will come to you." Of women In general the thing has been said before. But In the present Instance, aa we have pointed out, for "women" we muat read "wldowe." What, then, become of our vast stores of gnomic wludom concerning the widow aa a menace to man? Her guile haa been pictured as Infinite; her patience aa In exhaustible; her will aa of adamant; her eye aa unflinching; her hand as sure. The ancient world thought of Artemis aa maidens; but If you believe tha cynic, the true huntress waa a widow. Tha world was her game preserve. Young and old, wise and foolish, those who did not know enough and who should havo known better, she ran down with equal ease. So much for legend. The fact, of course, U quite the opposite. Far from being man'a lm placeable foe, the widow now standa forth aoft, sentimental, gullible her own worst enemy. New York Post SAFEGUARDING INFANT LIFE Campaign for Babies' Rights to Health and Proper Care. EFFECTIVE WOEK IN EIGHT LUTE Freak Air, aa.hlae ana Pare rood Cheeks Anpalllnar Waste Coster, eace Intended to Spread tho Light. Under the auspices of the American Academy of Medicine, a conference on "Prevention of Infant Mortality" is to be held In New Haven, Conn., next Novem ber. In connection with the campaign In augurated by the academy in behalf of the babies' rights to health and to proper care, it is interesting to note that nearly all of the humanitarian undertakings that have had the prevention of Infant mor tality as their chief aim, have sprung up in this last quarter of a century. It has been only since people have waked up to the possibilities of preventive medicine that the laity as well as physicians have realised that the sovereign remedies of freah air, sunshine and pure food are the most effective weapons that could be de sired in a fight against the appalling waste of life among little children. Just as the excessive mortality due to tuberculosis was formerly loked upon as a visitation of Providence. ih t.r-ihi,. mortality among the babies was regarded as due to divine Intervention, to be ac cepted with auplne resignation. But the work of the visiting nurses, of the day nurseries, tha floating hospitals, tha fresh air homes, the establishment of milk depots, the Inspection of tho aourcea of the milk supply by enlightened boards of health, the Banltary Inspection of tene ments, all have ahown, that given a fair chance, the baby can be depended upon to do hla share toward making good phy sically. Effect of Educational Castsaln. Proof of this is ahown In statiatlca col lected by Dr. L. Emmett Holt of New York. Hla table la for New York City and covers the Derlnd from tsai loon During 1891, when the population under five years amounted to 188.70S, the mortality of children under 6 was 18,222. This meant that the number of deatha for every 1,000 children under S yeara of ace was ninetv- alx. In 18 the number of wth h.H down to eighty-five per 1,000; and In 1!H It has been reduced to sixty-seven, a total decline of nearly thirty per 1,000 in ten years. Though the population under 6 years had Increased 66,000, the actual da crease In deaths of children under 6 years was l.oOO. This decrease is attrlhnt.rf in th wider diffusion of knowledge of Infant feeding and hygiene; to the more enlight ened care given to the babies during the summer; to the bettering of the milk sup ply, and to the many agencies that are at work to secure more favorable nriitinn for the babies In the overcrowded sections of the city. Nearly everey civilised country hut hwn alarmed at the appalling mortality among me oaDies, and In many placea special ef forts have been made to lower the death rate. One of the most pnnn4i.iin,iBiu .... cessful of these was tried in Enirland. and Is now generally sroken of an the l-TiMW.. ftfcld plan. But there ia Just as much cause 10 can it the Boadbent Dlan. for It wax Mayor Broadbent of Huddersfield, who an nounced on the day of hla election in 1904 mat ne would give a prise of about $5 to the mother of every child born durin hi. year of office. It waa atipulated, though, that the child was to be alive and well and waa to fro brought to toe town hall on the appointed day. Aa a means of insuring intelligent care for th children, a com mittee of women was appointed, who vis ited tho mothers and gave them simple, practical instruction In the proper hygiene and feeding of the babies. - A Great Sarrea, When the exhibition day arrived 100 lively, healthy babies were entered In the baby show, and their mothers received the promised award. Incidentally, when the town clerk made up the vitality records for the year it was found that the death rate of 134 bablea In 1,000 had gone down to 54 In 1,000. Small wonder the municipal baby show" was, voted a great success! In many parts of Germany, while the baby show does not figure conspicuously on the program, the plan Is in force of Instructing the mothers through a regu larly appointed board of visitors. In some of the German cities, among them Cologne, If the circumstances of the family are auch that the mother ia compelled to be on of the bread winners, arrangements are made for her support for the first month of the baby's life, ao that the baby can be sure of having the mother's care during the first few critical weeks of Ws life. In our own country tha education of the moth ers is one of the most Important feature of the work of the visiting nurses. In some communities the way Is prepared for the more intelligent care of the babies hv tv, distribution of educational leaflets by the local boards of health on the birth of th baby. The carelessness with which vital statistics are usually kept, and the delay on tne part of physicians In recording births, makes this method less effective than It could otherwise be." Plan of the Conference. The conference to be held at Now Haven will be on the general subject of the pre vention of infant mortality. The possibili ties of such prevention by medical, philan thropic. Institutional and educational means will be discussed by men and women who have made a special study of these problems. The officers of the sections are: Medical, Dr. J. H. Mason, Jr., of the Johns Hopkins medical school, Baltimore, chair man; Dr. Richard A. Urquhart, Baltimore, secretary; philanthropic, Edward T. De vine, editor of the Survey, chairman; Miss Lillian Brandt, secretary; institutional. Homer Folks, secretary of the New York State Charities Aid association, chairman; Miss Mary Vlda Clark, secretary; educa tional. Prof. C. E. A. Wlnslow of the laboratory of sanitary research, Massachu setts Institute of Technology, Boston, chair man, and Dr. Henry I. Bowditch, Boston, secretary. Th executive, advisory and other com mittees of the conference include many well-known specialists in children's dis eases, social workers, educators and health officers. Among them are: Mlsa Jane Addams of Hull House, Chicago; Prof, Irv ing Fleher of Yale university, president of the One Hundred on National Health; Dr. Charles R. Henderson of th University of Chicago; Dr. Helen C. Putnam of Provi dence, R. I., chairman of the executive committee, and Dr. James Morgan Rotch, professor of pediatrics at Harvard. CHLOROFORMED THE SNAKES WIm Experiment of a Keatsrkr Dorter lur1 a Mlat Julep Seaaoa. Dr. W. K. Delaney of Ptate Run, Ky., is often called at night to go into what Is known as the Black Forest region, where Weed 4 Co. have several large lumber camps. Tha doctor owns a velocipede truck, which he rides over a little narrow gauge railroad used to haul log out of th woods. He can ride within two mile of th camp, these laat two mile being cov DREXEL'S YOUNG MEN'S OXFORDS The young man is always a criterion on the quentlon of style and quality of oxfords. He notices all the details of an oxford, such as width of toe, shape of last and height of heel. On all these points he Is well posted. Oxfords with distinctive style and shape appeal to him. We hare been shoeing these critical young men for years and know their every want when It comes to the oxford question. We have these young men's oxfords In all style and leathers, and with a price to fit any pocketbooV. , OVR riUCE $3.50 and $4.00 NOTE We are including In our $4.00 line the high arch and extreme high mili tary heel. 1 Drexel Shoe Co. 1119 faroam Street are one of the troubles of this warm weather, but we can help them just a change of shoes in the heat of the day will help. v A fine, light tan shoe is good or a black vici shoe will do nicely and they can be had in any gra'de from $2.50 up. Better come in and tell us your foot troubles. WE CAN HELP YOU FRY SHOE CO., THE SHOERS 16th and Douglas Streets. ered on foot by way of a zigxag path through the woods. He always carries a small lantern which, when he rides his velocipeds car, he hangs on the front as a headlight. One 'night he( received a telephone message to come to the forest to attend a woodsman who waa very 111. It was almost midnight when he left home. At the end of the run where he left the car he detached the lantern and carried it In his hand. In hia other hand he carried a medicine case, which contained, among other things, a pint bot tle of chloroform. At a point along the way the path runs through a small clearing, where once the stable of a lumber camp stood. This is now grown over with a crop of grass nearly a .foot high. Dr. Delaney had Juht stepped into this grass-covered clearing when he was startled by the sound of a snake's rattle at his feet. Involuntarily he leaped forward, landing almost In the center of the grass plot, when to his hor ror he heard a chorus of rattles. The sound seemed to come from all sides. He dared not move lest he step on the venom ous snakes, and to stand still seemed al most aa perilous. Lifting the lantern above his head so that the rays be cast in a radius covering th grass plot, the doctor found himself praotlcally hemmed in by snakes. He saw no less than a dozen of the serpents and every one of them had risen to a height so that their beads were from six to ten Inches above the top of tha grass. Turn In any direction he might he found himself confronted with the ugly head of one of the venomous creatures. Some of the snakes were within four or five feet of him, but none appeared to move, except as they swayed their heads in a rhythmic movement that set the doctor's head awhlrl. He dared not move, yet he found himself growing sick and faint from a nauseating odor that arose from the ugly reptiles. The snakes evidently were drawn to the clearing from the woods and it waa hla luck to walk Into this charmed circle and become a prisoner. But a bright thought struck him. Ly ing within reach of him, half-concealed In th grass, was a piece of bark, probably three feet long. Wrapping a handkerchief as best he could about one end of the bark, while he still held aloft the beacon light, he saturated the cloth with chloroform from his bottle. Then cautiously poking the bark at the heads of the rearing snakes, one after another, again and again occasionally renewing the saturation he finally had the satisfaction of seeing the snakes begin slowly and drowsily to de scend into tha grass. Their rattling, which had lessened from a shrill whlxs to a lazy buss, finally stopped altogether, and Inside of ten min utes tha doctor had conquered the whole cordon of reptiles. Then he proceeded to the camp. ' From there three men with torches were sent back to the grass patch to dispatch the snakes. They found the reptiles In a half -dormant condition. When they cleaned up th bunch they had just sixteen rattle snakes, among that number two of the yel low variety, each of which measured over flv feet In length. Bardstown Standard. If you have anything to sell or trade and want quick action advertise U In Th Be Want Ad col u rare iBUHG All Summer Suits Must Go Don't tYliso tho Grand Clear ance Bargains This Week at pji M0E Nil mi THE RELIABLE STORK Ain rn For your unrestricted M I&.UU choice of any Two-Piece Suit in our house, including all Hart, Schaffner & Marx and other highest grade makes. No matter where you buy or what you pay you cannot surpass the quality or style individuality of these splendid suits. Blue Serge Suits worsteds, cassi ineres, etc., in three-piece styles that sold up to $18.00; go fry CO in this sale at, oiioice .... M I w U Hand Tailored Suits, that sold reg ularly to $22.50, at, Pin choice V IU 400, Hand Tailored Suits, including the celebrated Hart, Schaffner & Marx clothes, that sold regularly to $25.00; while they last choice You can match the price but not the quality and style at the price. BOYS' SUIT BARGAINS $3.50 Boys' Suits. . . .$1.85 $5.00 Boys' Suits. . . .$2.85 Boys' Knickerbocker Pants $1.50 values at. .T 98c $1.00 values at 68c fSr'Jet Try HAYDEN'S First p'. SUIT CASES TO SUIT THE PURSE small profit. It is economy to deal with us for the reacon that w charge no more for good goods than is asked for cheaper grades elsewhere. Matting Suit Cues, np from $2.00 Suit Cases $1.35 8135 Our Own Make Trunks. .$3.50 to $70 Omaha. Trunk Factory 1209 Farnam Street. DR, BRADBURY, DENTIST Crowns, np from 90.60 rartial riatea, np from 93.00 Painless Extracting 60 o r tilings, np from Boo Porcelain rilllnga, np from tl.BO Desirable Offices . There are very few opportunities to secure office space In The Bee Building. At this time, there Is. but one room vacant. On August 1st there will be an opportunity to secure some particularly desirable" space In the building. Although it Is not a pleasant time to move during the warm weather, we suggest that any one desiring an office would do well to take advantage of the opportunity. South Frout Office Oh the sixth floor, large corner office with vault, having south and west light. This very desirable location now available. TIiIb room Is partitioned, providing for a general work room and a private office. Price $40.00 per month. For Rent August 1st. " Suite of two rooms on sixth floor, number 616 and 618. These offices are 13x20 and'9x22 feet In dimension; are outside rooms and have good light. Price $33.00 per month. Rooms 417 and 419 will also be available on August 1st. They are 8x14 feet each In size and are court rooms. The light in these offices is equal to that In outside rooms, and the ventilation perfect. Price $20.00 per month. Room 617 is 8x14 feet in size, and faces on the court This room will be ready for ocoupancy the first of August. Price $10.00 per month. THE BEE BUILDING R W. BAKER, Superintendent tipntMi la Mmtttxa fle-rr cattery- m m uiniaim nockiffi ALASKA-YUKON-PACIFIC EXPOSTION Stopover without xtra charge at th famoua resorts: aalf Xke toot Jleld Qlaoler. This "Lnd of Enchantment" la reached only by the Canadian Pacific Railway Through tralna to beattle from Bt. Paul dally at 10:o a. ra. X,ew Bsearaloa Tares from all places to Seattl and all Puget Sound cities and return. , Alaaka and return from Vancouver . by Can. FaoUW stcamcjxa. Tickets for sale by arents of all railwaya Eend for literature and Information. A. C.Shaw, General Agent. Chicago. THE NATIONAL HEALTH RESORT" HOT SPRINGS, SOUTH DAKOTA Approved by Natlaa and Stale. Bed Climate and sfeoictnal Mprlogs is America, flret Class Hot. la llespW tal and Beta House Writ m etary Ooaamerelal Ola. mot svriaae. , taa. s. ,ti J J jfi $15 B this week at, BOYS' PANT BARGAINS 75c Knickerbocker Pants, for 48C 50c Knickerbocker Pants, for 39c All the Straight Knee Pants to close at 25c We carry the most complete line of trunks, traveling bags and suit cases In the city. Our line embodies the best quality in all the different grades. Our prices are low because we can afford to do business on a ''4 Tel. Douglas 1058 1506 I1BH1H BTmSXT. 17 yeara same off to, 'rhonei D. 1756. Bridge Work, per tooth, up from $3.50 Serves removed with, out pain. ALVEOLAR WOSI A Br-ECIAXTT. Work guaranteed tea rar' Itee Business Office. nly. thm marnlflcne of th CLARK'N CRUISER OF THE "CLEVELAND" (Hamburg-American Line) o,ouu toas, sreua new, d new, ted. T WORLD superbly fitted. UUNU the l'lm New York October 14. l'J03; front Ban Fancisco Feb. b. 1j10. nemly four uiontha. costing only 6.i AND l;P, In eluding all expenses lfluat and auhor. raiAX TBITUBEIi Madeira, Egrpt, laita, Cyloo, Burma, Java, Borneo, VhU Ipplaes alaintu. An unusual cnaace ta visit oaasually attractive places. lath Aaaaal Orient Cruise, Feb. S, '10l by North Ujrmsa Uuu a. tt. "Grosser Kuifuer.t. 71 days, Including 2t days Egypt and Palestine, $400 up. :rAK c. OX.ABK. timis bwav. a. x W. B. Book, 1M raruaus at, Omaha,