Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 19, 1909, NEWS SECTION, Page 5, Image 5

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    TIIK OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEITEMBEK 10. lttW.
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The
best investment
you, can make
look your best
at all times
you will be "
; astonished to see
at what little cost
if you insist on
the Schloss Label
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Oemitleinnieini
you will never know what Clothes Pleasure is until you .
wear a Schloss 1909 Model.
The New Models for Fall and Winter
now on sale at the best Clothiers everywhere.
Evry variety for every possible shape or figure,
Ask your dealer for the Schloss Baltimore Make
Accept no other, For your protection look for the Label.
BAUMoRESchloss Bros. 6c
On Sale InV
Omaha at....
iCOIN'IMNCES IN HISTORY
Secrets of Nature Often Bevealed to
Two or More Searchen.
JirVAIS FOE GREAT DISCOVEEIES
Dl.pat.a for Priority la TtUfrapkir,
Moral.
lj , "VThat ona man can do other can do. Thla
If Id a universal law of life which la not aua-
' pindrd even In the KHh parallel of lati
tude. It la ao trite that It would not b
Worth while to bpealc of It except that the
m rival claims of Peary and Cook five It a
Irtali pertlnonce.
Colncldencea hardly leaa astounding have
. oucuimt all along the forward march of
i the world. Again and again secrete of n
' ture long withheld from men bav. suddenly
and Mlnmltaneously revealed themselves to
two or more searchers. '
Koveial eminent men In several countries
diitpuud wlih Morse a the Inventor of the
telograph. Kor many years the true prin
ciple of communicating by electricity had
been di'xrribnl by eclciittbta, and two or
throe w IrrM i actually strung and In
opia'.loi Uet. I'rof. Morse established
the firs; imi.s practical system of electric
!( graphs'.
IIn honor re challenged from all
s1Uk. I'rof. Joreph Henry of the Bmith
jT oniun Init'ltuiioii stoutly maintained that
he was entitled to them, .while a Boston
ph.VKlolan declared that Morse had stolen
th td a from hlin. Dut the man who
si uUiird the lightning from the air and
Imtnt'skrd It for everyday use received the
cro.wt and will always wear It.
Hell m4 Gray.
m- Nothing could be more dramatic than I ho
FAMOUS DOCTOR'S
PRESCRIPTION.
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(CATARRH Of STOr
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race for the discovery of the telephone.
Here anain an old dream was .realized.
On a February day In 1874 two men,
strangers to each other, walked Into the
patent office at Washington, one of them
being Prof. Bell of Boston and the other
Klisha day of Chicago, and each filed an
application for a patent on the telephone.
It has always remained a question which
was really first. When their papers were
laid in a pile, of applications, did or did
not the clerk follow the order in which
they were received? However that may be.
Bell's was found on top, and by that
chance th patent went to him, carrying
with it fame and fortune.
Two or three electric lighta glowed In
different lands almost at the same time,
and so It has been with most of the Im
portant mechanical Inventions. One of Ab
raham Lincoln's notable law cases came
from a man who developed a reaper con
current with McCormick. Half a dosen
steamboats were Invented; Fulton's merely
went farther and faster, and, therefore.
New York la about to commemorate the
centenary of the Clermont.
In faot. It would be difficult to name a
great Invention which depended for its de
velopment and Introduction upon one In
ventor. In most Instances the plan hab
been In other minds and taking shape un
der other hands.
M.rtoa aad Jackson.
The same wonderful law has manifested
Itself time and again In the scientific
world. That . Immeasurable boon to hu
manity, anesthetics, which was concealed
from the surgeons until 60 years ago, sud
denly sprang forih from three men here
in New England. Two of them, Morton
and Jackson, were so equal In their merits
that the French academy felt obliged to
divide its prise between them, while Dr.
Holmes made the happy suggestion that
the ether monument in the Publics gar
den should bear an equally Impartial in
scription "To Either."
The astronomical world was amazed
when the planet Neptnu. waa discover
by two astronomers, a Frenchman and an
Kngiwhman, each working in entire ig
norance of th other.
Irwl aad Wallace.
The classlo Instance, however, was in the
double discovery of the evolutionary prin
clple.
Darwin had been quietly developing it
for everal years, but timidly withholding
the announcement from the public, when
he was axtonUhed to receive a letter from
Alfred Husaell Wallace on the other side
of ihe eartH, stating the very principle
which he himself had come upon, which
he had written down, but had not ven
tured to print.
The better part of the atory remalna to
be told. Wallace's paper momentarily
overwhelmed Darwin. He had been antici
pated in the object of hia life work. "If
Wallace had my manuscript," be frankly
said, "he could not have made a better
short abstract. Even bis (erms now stand
as heads of my chapters. So all my
originality, whatever It may amount to.
will be smashed."
But Instead of destroying the paper of
his faraway rival In the Malay straits be
resolved to publish It and give him the
glory of priority. Only the entreaties of
mutual friends of both men Induced Dar
win to submit some notes of his own on
the subject along with Wallace's. And
when he brought out his "Origin of Spe
cies," the nam of bis co-dlscoverer ti
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CoprrffhteJ I90Q B
vSCKLOSSBKOSSCO.
fine Clothes Makers
Daltimare aai New Yrl
Go. new
writ generously large In the prcfac of
that momentous work.
Th man who makes the thing work,
and thereby serves all of us. reana th
rewards.
That is the logic of these various inci
dents. Boston Globe.
MISSOURI'S "POLECAT KING"
Makes Money Out of th Pungent
Beasts and Handles Tfceae
Like Kittens.
Jerry Jones of Claysvllle, Mo., haa
earned the title. "Polecat King of Mia
TOurl." So far no one has risen to dts
put with him that honor anl since every
one catches his breath when such an
honor is mentioned, Mr. Jones will not
have to strive hard to keep the title.
Mr. Jones does not expect to go Into the
polecat busiresa, but he has already
launched this newest of enterprises. He
has eight grown cats and twelve kittens
with which he Is trying to stock a pole
cat ranch.
Claysvllle In twenty-flv miles from Co
lumbia, a postofflc on a bluff of 'the
Mlfsourl river (Iv miles from Jefferson
City, the state capital. The place is in
habited by a primitive people who take
delight In hunting and (lshing. The orig
inal stock of polecats was taken in the
traps set by the hunters. A chicken
house was the plant In which Mr. Jones
began his cat Industry. He has figured
that at the end of three years more he
will have a stock of COO old cats after
selling furs amounting to 13.000.
Polecats are easily fed, says Mr. Jones.
They will eat slop from th kitchen, offal
of every kind, decaying vegetables and
dead animals, as well as berries and fruits.
He expects to feed them at very little ex
pense. According to the polecat king, an ani
mal docs not like to give forth his tad
smell. He will not do so unless frightened
by a dog or some other thing. He shows
that he believes In the scent theory by
handling th cats as though they were the
house cats about the fireplace In wlntr.
H w ill go to a burrow and reach his hand
among the sleeping kittens around their
mother and draw one forth with his fin
gers. Prices of furs vary according to the
color. A black animal will sell for 12 60.
while a long or a short striped on will
bring II less.. Mr. Jones Is trying to breed
his cats so that all of them will in time
be black, so that his furs will bring the
highest market price.
Young cats produce four of five at a
tlim but as they get older th number
Increases to nine or ten. This large in
crease gives Mr. Jones hopes of doubling
his stock of cats rapidly.
A cat becomes full grown at 11 months
and then the fur Is resdy (or sale. May
cata will be killed In February or March
while the (all cata will be killed In the
following fall. The work of skinning a
cat and drying the fur Is an easy matter.
Sl. Louis Oobe-Democrat.
Th Bee Want Ads for Business Boosters.
Mellfllas; Permits.
J. Baley. Thirty-fifth avenue and Daven
port street, frame dwelling. $2,5u0; Charles
Battelle. Mil Kouth Thirty-third street
frame dwelltnir t a rt.i i- .
. . . - - v e iiaernni,
I Thirty-first and t'astellar streets, frame
j Thirty-first street, frame dwelling, 2,u.
T . I WM
, , , M m
AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA
Stock Yards Company Receives Notice
of Winnen of IU Frizei.
SEWER TUKSEL ABOUT DONE
Effort Melnar Mad to Draw Water
Oat of Complete Portion Before
th Other Motion la Con
nected With It.
W. R. Mel I or. secretary of the Nebraska
Stat Fair association, haa mad a return
of th awards o( all th prizes offered by
the Union Stock Yards company for th
different classes of stock In which the
yards company Is particularly interested.
A Hereford bull won the first prise for
he( stock. A Shorthorn cow won the
prise for general breeding qualities. An
Angus steer won the prls for fat stock.
The Hereford herd of Overton Harris of
Harris, Mo., won the prise for the best
-ed herd for profit. The following is the let
ter by the secretary to Oeneral Manager
Everett Buckingham telling of the awards
In which the local market Is especially In
terested: eTh,i.ta to 'd'" vou th the silver cups
Offered aa special premiums at the Ne-
i"'r or iww ty the I'nlon
lock Yards company of South Omaha.
Tor 'S, th? f112w,n
For the best Hereford beef bull of the
show Overton Harris of Harris. M . op
n.,t 2?nmM ?Ptr'" numbered t0 In
ling BuU catloue' und" Senior Year-
Tl.Hnthr b2T fOW ,f tha ,now- ,0 D
"Mi.. f B" ?vu,l ..u". on ,h nimal
Miss Marshall H." Junior Yearling
Heifer. Shorthorn, No. la In our cata-
v., ma mm in steer or the show th
CUD was am.ant.l . or t w,.7"owt. lne
. ". a. .miter, fltw
. J Mu V" , 'p'-oia Angus steer,
named "My Choice,'' No. 7 In our ia:a-
,.0r-ih.b""..';'1 hrra ot the ". ihe
OUD Wats v sk r-As v. f r... . . . . .
Overton HarrirHris. Mo. ' M 01
me a Dove mentioned cups sre now In the
k, " and ,nere '" ret deal of
enthusiasm among the exhibitors.
Crnclal Point In Sewer Work.
Th contractors (or th Mud Creek main
ewer bav reached a point of extreme
danger In th construction work. They
have been working (or nearly a year driv
ing th tunnel (rom th lower end of the
system to meet the W0-foot section which
was made from th Fifteenth street shaft.
In th meantime the upper section has
filled with water. Now the const inotir...
has approached within twenty feet and
tn riret break will precipitate the large
body of water upon the workmea hioi
The engineers are seeking to provide a
sai means or draining this section o( the
completed tunnel. A lara dIdb has hn
driven to draw th water off, but as yet
they have failed to reach the water. Th
lower section has been completed bv mean.
of compressed air, the men working under
two atmospheres. If the point Is reached
where th air breaks through and th
pressor is released the water will mm.
in with great force.
Th probabilities are that the water win
have been reached and safely drained out
by tonight
The police arrested Minnie NaDDer on
suspicion of having robbed an Auatrlnn
list night at Twenty-sixth and N streets.
Bh is a colored woman. Th Austrian
realised his loss at once. Th woman se
cured (20. He tried to hold her and aha
drew a knife and cut his hands seriously
and made an attempt at his throat. When
he released her she ran. Later th Napper
woman was arrested on suspicion. The
Austrian Identified her as the woman who
got his money. ' ,
Dr. R. L. Wheel. r wlH nraaeh Ma third
sermon on the "Deity of Christ" Sunday
morning at Rustling's hall. In the evening
he will hsv an evangelistic topic.
Th services at St. Martin'a rhureh will
be at S a. m. and 11 a. m. The Sunday
school Is at 10 a. m. St. EMward's Sunday
school is at 10 a. m. Service will be held
at St. Clement's at 7:10 p. m.
The last sermon before conference will ha
preached by Rev. J. M. Bothwell at the
f irst Methodist church Sunday evening.
In the morning. In addition to the nrmnn
the pastor will administer the sacrament
ot tne Ljoth s supper.
The Sunday morning them of Rev. R.
W. Livers will be "The Bulldlns- of ni
The laying of the cornerstone of th new
church will be postponed until October a.
'A Look at th Field" is R.v nnr..
Van Winkle's Sunday morning topic "Get
ting a New Start" is the evening subject.
The Jewish ceremonies of the new vear
have been, observed during the week In
low imwijr ueuicaieo. synagogue at Twenty
fifth and J streets.
Male City Goaaln.
A. H. Murdock has returned from Can
ton, O., where he has been on leiral huui.
ness.
Phil Kearnev twinf a! th tiA a-.. ...
th Republic and the Women's Relief corps
mviu wis rrgumr rueeiing tonight.
The -bod v of Mra. luni.ii
warded from the Larkin Undertaking par
lors to Davenport, la., last evening for
Charles Sutton and Hi. .1.,.. pu.
eompanled by Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Vaughn,
.-. ""- vi ) iuinKiii tor a snort
visit with Mr. and Mra. Henry Wallbricht.
The South Omaha Country club mem
bers will meet in general session this eve
ning at Library hall to discuss the pur
chase of the club grounds.
Henrv 1C ri ,a r nnA Ml... i i w
. - . - . ma mt mull. JVlUnat
were married Wednesday evening at the
"'""I"'. """ parents, ihlrty-nnth
and V streets Hev. R. W. Livers offlclat-
..... vy.ii,. insure, were present. These
Douular vounr lantil. ha... .K i . . L
nV-". .Vi ?f ,llend " the' hgln wedded
... ... mcir .w noma, su X. atreet.
W. C. Lambert, who has been In Can-O-.
taking depositions In a suit of
the Champion Iron company against feouth
?.T...ln- 'ahe mlttT ot ,h fixtures
a -etui IICU,
Two Needlework Hints.
Hemstitching forms a dainty finish for
household linen and underclothing, but the
buoy woman often will not undertake It
because of th difficulty of drawing the
threads.
It a piece of whit soap be rubbed on the
under side of th cloth, where the hem
stitching Is to be' done, tha thr... n.
b drawn with ease and lo half th time
mat is usually required.
When making the round holes fn- --i
embroidery put a piece of soap under the
isoric ana auow th stiletto to pierce
through Into It. When th stiletto Is with
drawn It will, being soapy, Impart a slight
stiffness to the material, which facilitates
th making o( very even, perfect embroid
ery. Pointed Paraarnnho.
Peopl are sometimes "killed by kind
ness "-In books. "
Charity i. a cloak .m.iim..
cover an amateur concert.
mow aid poor Eve. manage to get along
without complexion lotions "
Bom women use a gallon of words to
CXwrh"" Poonful of thoua-ht.
of us have wonderful self-control ' m0,
Th Ineoroe tax Is popular with the ma
jority becaus It only hits th minority
And many a man does his growling at
home becaus he Is afraid to growl inv
where else.
Some people would b able to acquire a
lot of knowledge If they didn't think they
knew it all.
-xoltiing annoya the average woman more
than to have a clerk try to hurry her
along when she is shopping '
. Th ,iXcUMry doesn't say anything
about the mother of ten children being a
heroine, but that's just what ah la-Chicago
News.
IlalNMinut Storo Talk
JmoR Part on bag said "It Is
proof positive of a man's essential
soundness if he Improve as he
grows old." That applies to stores
as well Sound business principles
allow this store to constantly en
large Its field of usefulness.
rL'
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We can feed you if the cars will not take you
home. Popular prices with clean, quick ser
vice and courteous treatment make our dining
rooms the most desirable place in Omaha to eat
smsaaaasamsaawmsoj MSassBswmmvmaawslmMSsaaaans
THE SCHLITZ CAFES
...IS THE PLACE....
331-31 South 16th - - Omaha, Nob.
The Philbln-Murphy Hotel Co., Proprietor.
DUN'S REVIEW OF TRADE
Volume of Business Continues Heavy
Deipite High Pricei.
BIO DEMANDS FOB STEEL
Con.araers Are Anxlone to Close Cos.
tracts at Prevailing: Hate. Foot
wear Market Coo tl ones
Dall and Inactive.
NEW YORK, Sept. ls.-R. O. Dun St Co.'s
Weekly Review of Trade today says:
In spite of prevailing high prices, which
In some lines work for curtailment of op
eration) the volume of trade continues
not only largely in excess of last year,
but Is even approximating the records of
1907. Most noteworthy la the continued
expansion In steel In which the position
of producer and consumer has changed, the
lutter now displaying most of the eager
ness to close contracta at prevailing ratea.
The sales of Bteel rails are the heaviest in
two years, while there haa been a decrease
of 12 per cent in a month In the number
of Idle cars.
Copper makes a less favorable showing
than some weeka ago and during August
production exceeded the demand, with a
resulting increase in th surplus stock.
The height of the jobbing season In diy
goods Is passed, but every cons derable
business offered In small lots from retail
ers and others who bought rautlously In
their first transactions and who are mani
festly pursuing a hand-to-mouth policy In
relation to new stocks. In cotton goods
and yarns the effort to lift up selling
prices to a parity with raw cotton contin
ues aa the chief feature of Interest. Buy
ers will pay asking prices when their needs
force them and the progress of readjust
ment of stock requirements appears to bo
making steady headway. There has beena
fair export .trade In, prints, hut oriental
markets are quiet. Domestics exported
from New Tork this year to date amount
to M.2M bales, same time last year only
lltt,S3r. Domestic dress goods show a bet
ter tone.
Marked dullness continues to rule In the
footwear market, the deadlock between
buyers and sellers regarding prices still
being unbroken. The domestic hide mar
ket la firmly held, but some foreign hides
are lower, though In part this Is due to
a bad condition of many of the lots offered.
The leather market shows improved de
mand. Sole Is firmly maintained and there
Is a very active demand for fancy leather
for the holiday trade.
BRADITREET'I REVIEW OF TRADE
Distinctly Stronger Vadertoae I Dis
played In Week' Report.
NEW YORK, Sept. IS. Bradst reefs to
day says:
A distinctly stronger undertone Is dis
played In this week's telegraphed trade re
ports. Improvement In wholeaale and job
bing demand, enlargement of Industrial
output and perceptible gains In collections
are the central facta this week. Satisfac
tory progress, too, appears to be making
in agricultural matters, with the exception
of cotton. The movement of crops and
general merchandise Is enlarging and this
week finds widely noted the reports that
manufacturers of many lines are behind
on deliveries, and that the Idle car Hat Is
still decreasing largely. 1 litre are, of
course, some shadows in the general pic
ture, due mainly, however, to early antici
pations of crop out-turn or ot business
turn-over having been keyed too high.
At some dtiee dlsappolnment 's expressed
at Ihe proportions uf wholesale and job
bing demand, though at the ssme time
admission Is made of tne fact that 1
and IMS! aggregates ur being heavily ex
ceeded. Retail trade aa a whole and some
branches of jobbing trade catering to
heavyweight demands report warm weather
a bar to fullest activity. Export trade-in
leading agricultural products Is at a low
ebb, and while collections, helped by
large spring wheat and cotton crop move
ment, are better, there Is still claimed to
be much room for Improvement In this re
spect, and In soma sectli r.s of th south
extensions of time of p ment on spiing
business are asked.
reports as to current trad com
.THE
THK HOME OK QUALITY CLOTHES
Furnishings and Hats
For Littlo Follows
Until you have visited our splendid department
devoted exclusively to these particular lines you can
have no idea of the care we exercise or the pride we
take in having such things A little bit better and a lit
tle bit more savingly priced.
Boys' Shirts and Waists 50c to $1.50
Boys) Sweater Coats $1.00 to $3.00
Outing Flannel Pajamas $1.00
Outing Flannel Night Robes 50c
Outing Flannel Sleeping Uarments for little fellows,
for 50c
Boys' Hats, all new $1.00 to $3.50
Boys' Caps, in great variety 25c to $1.00
7"
limit
FffiU
Peru students plan to go to Peru In a special coach over the Burl
ington leaving Omaha at 4:40 p. m. Monday, September 20. Special
goes direct to Peru. AH students west and north of Omaha take trains
that reach Omaha before 4:40 and Join Omaha students at Burlington
station at 4:40. Coach decorated with Peru colors. Y. W. and Y. M.
committees at station. Prof. F. M. Gregg will accompany party to
Peru A similar party accompanied by Prof. J. W. 8arson leaves Lin
coln at 8:45 p. m.
from the central west and northwest, where
a free crop movement stimulates demand
and helps coll 2tlon4.
iiusiness failures In the Vnlted States for
the week ending with September 1 were
19K. against Ul last week, tt In the like
.ve,'50, vM- 179 ln ,907' 71 I" If") nd 17
In 1905. Failures ln Canada for the week
number thirty, which compares with twenty-five
last week and twenty-five In the
Wheat. ImludinK flour,' exports from the
United States and Canada for the week
ending September IS BKgregate 2 2H 81
bushels, against 161S.6R6 bushels last week
and 3.491, U bushels this week last year
For the eleven weeks ending September
Iii exports are 22.118.4Z2 bushels, against
37.190.421 bushels in th corresponding period
last year.
Corn exports for the week are M.540
bushels, against 82972 bushels last week
and 12,443 bushela In 1908. For the eleven
weeks ending September IS corn export
are 1.140.W3 bushels, against 13S,90 bushela
lat year.
BIG PROFITS IN PAPER MONEY
Unredeemed' "hln Plasters" of War
Time Fatten (ho National
Treasury.
Are you keeping somewhere In a cabinet
one or more of those old government "shin
plasteri," which In the dark days of the
civil war circulated as fractional currency?
There are millions of 'em out somewhere.
Not even the United States government
knows how many, or where, and thla fact
makes Itself prominent In every statement
issued by the Trtasury department from
Washington. According to the most ac
curate accounting luat tin rut 7.1 es ....
01 tnesc w-cent, -cen, l-cent and J-cent
issues of paper are "somewhere." Certainly
s.nce their Issue Is) 1M, 1st and 1884. notes
to this amount have not been presented for
redemption. Where are they?
Away back In 171, tiring of carrying such
enormous figures under th heading of
"debt bearing no Interest," congress sat up
and passed an act declaring that tt, 375,934
worth of this fractional paper Currency Was
"loet or destroyed."
how thla estimate was reached. Likely
Probably no one remembers today just
thla amount waa a certain arbitrary per
centage of the total outstanding In that
y ar. Otherwise It would seem to be draw
ing linra pretty fine when the official est!
rrat named the odd I9S4 Instead of making
It a round sl.OOt.
At any rate thla llo.2W721.2t worth of
shin plasters have not turned up for re
demption, but every one of therm was a na
tional gov.mment's unlimited "promts to
pay" end as such th Treasury department
Is carrying th obligation upon Its books,
less th tS.r3.K34 which officially It has de
clared "dead." This leavaa tn Ik.
I of d.bt bearing no Interest th sum of
; ... 77. 23 of this currency which yet may
I be brought to treasury windows for re-
I demptlon.
j El. her dlvls'on of th missing currency is
a pr;ty tidy little sum. even In these days
of the millionaire. But the chances are that
j far mor than th loss estimated In IO
I actually has happemd. la spit of tb fact
NKW STORE.
-1,
If" If",
nana a.
SPECIAL
that thousands of these old shin plasters
ar held aa souvenirs of one of th greatest
wars of history.
Thousands of dollars' worth of them
doubtless wor destroyed In the great fire
In Chicago In 1871. In tha use of these
small bills they were far mor uncertain
than la the tllver coin, blowing away, wear
ing out, burning. Years ago the numis
matist waa attracted to them for hla oabl
net, however, and probably a wi ll preserved
W-cent paper bill today would bring two
or three times Its face value In any down
town saloon In St. Louis.
On th whol It appears aa If Ihe United
S ales government easily may consider that
It Is Just so much ahead because of these
paper Issues. Which after all Is only a
suggestion of how much the national gov
ernment Is ahead every year through the
Issue of paper currency of all kinds. In the
at and In th middle west the public
doen't like to carry "hard" dollars, it
prefers papers, but It pays for the privilege.
At th redemption windows of th treasury
and of the f ubtteasurk of the country any
Silver coin that haa not. been mutllat d will
fully and which still is recognisable as from
the mints of the United States will be i
deemed at fac value. Thla In spit of the
fet that th silver In the worn coin may
not be worth half its fac value. As to
gold coin, the government stands only a
small portion of the loss from absorption
but ar cording to weight these worn gold
Coins always ar redeemable.-St. LouU
If you hav asylums to sell or trad
nd want Qluck action, advertise U In Tn
Bes Want A.J. Coium,,,. . " K 10
Ml ProaoaitatloM Sneoeh.
ni..b.? 8m,Uh 1d worke1 tor th Valv cor
to quit. Th company, In consideration of
a I. k." mnt fmUn'u "rvice. arranged to
give him a monetary recognition. The
superintendent of the works, a German and
ien?Hr,rd 'n1hnlc. asked to pre
rrL!J" . dv'ed o a little sen-
ah.:n,.m;hVnw'.yheh.pr(r;d',i;,,on
oveJr0for,ye.hrV.'0rke,1 fwr th
Ye."
"Youar going te qultf
thaskeS? H -at
do,l.r..'Ptl,bu uZml. nW1"d
Wsial HI Line W.
h-!,Ui,nir of drum,ars were sitting In a
Ther was a little argument an .i
drummer who h.4 not hSd much S-L5
befor. suddenly ros. and said: "I'U hVt
any man In the house that my firm ha.
th.!,ro,.P80pl" PMn Its ,..y0 ' good."
mo "V Ji.
of good?" " ruur llrm m
Baby carriage," murmured the oulet
man, a he took the money and made ill
the aide door Wudne a Library
Be Want Ad ar buslnesbootefa.
i