The Omaha ; Sunday Bee. WMjTADS fllT TWO EDITORIAL noil 1 to n. VOL. XXXIX NO. 30. OMAHA, , SUNDAY MOUSING, JANUAHY !, 1!)10. SINGLE COPY FIVK CENTS. PBEBE Handkerchief Carnival Values that ouiahlne even the big pre-hollilay sales it Lace Curtains A 3.1Vj discount on our entire lines Monday. This Is one Buy a year's supply of the strongest of our White Carnival attractions. Select nuns, pchti y3 on rure linen embroidered Handkerchiefs; finest 25c Linen embroidered and lare any curtain yi like hest In Scrim. Nottingham, Brussels, Cluny or Irish Point. Not a pair re served. Kvn wise to buy now fur possible future neoils edge; 50c and 75c Hand qualities, at 15c kerchiefs, at 25c Whit and Cream Bootch Madraa, 4 8 Inches wide, floral and conventional rlestsns, worth to 45c; will be sold Ht fl3o Whit a Curtain Swiss, 38 and 40-Inch. In 3 to 10-yard pieces, worth 25c; entire lot on snle at. vard,..' lOo TK1XD rLOOR Womcn'ii Linen Initial Handkerchiefs, 12Hc value, at ...So K.v ' ' We show full lines In All musllu garments at special prices. A MnsjMat. s sis ism irmrn I 1 K M E Mjm I I I I J Si- X :l J it 5 4 - 'J 1 V 11 l 'wl ft fvK.. ill w Women Linen juadena ismDroiaerea corner HinaKPrenmn, 16c rallies, at Oo 'January White EN'NETT'9 January White C'arnlral Sale of muslin garments will be In the spotlight of popu- ar favor tomorrow. Great drift of snowy garments, covering a large area on Uie second floor y$Twirorin n xP'tlo' of beautiful' lingerie, matchless and supreme. America's lellnjr makers have worked hand In hand with us, contributing their moat alluring garments. flie most exquisite undermuslins that ingenious designers have yet devised. It's a display of i V Special Garments that can be matched up In 3. 4 and 5 piece acta same patterns trimmings In varloua llnea. Oowna at $1.00, 11.85, l.BO, M.00 to $8 00 Hklrta at 1.00, $1.05, $1.60, $2.00 to $5.00 Combinations $!.. tlTS, . 3'78 Corset Covers Ten styles; lace, embroidery or hemstitched trimming, all 39c goods . . -25t Corset Covers Six styles, in cambric, or nain sook lace or embroidery trimmed, all 69c garments, at 39 tVret Covers Of allover embroidery and lace or embroidery trimmed, all $1 values . .9c CO other styles Corset Covers; excellent values, at. each .... 75 $1.00 $1.50 to $2.00 Drawers Six styles; hemstitched tucks or lace and embroidery trimmed, 39c garments 2oC Drawers Fine 50c and 59c garments; also a few muRsed, 75c values, lace and embroidery trimmed, at '. . 30c Drawers Muslin and cambric. In lace or em broidery trimmed; 75c garments, a few J 1.00 mussed styles, at 50c Circular Drawers In new patterns; lace and embroidery, at $1.00 and $1.25 Carnival Sales I'T all this is secondary to the unprecedented values. As is well known, the tendency Is up, up, 11 : on the price of all commodities, and cotton is no exception; yet. In spite of these conditions the White Carnival values are beyond nil understanding. The giimienta are carefully made, liberally full in rut, and finished to please the most exacting. Iook them over; you'll need no further persuasion to satisfy you we have outdone ourselves to merit your purchases. Gowns Cambric and nainsook; fine stylos reg ular and slin-over effects; $1 garments GOC Gowns, Skirts and Two-i'ieco Combinations Beautiful $1.25 garments, at .89? Gowns, Skirts, Covers and Combinations Some a little tumbled; $1.50 to $2 garments QS Gowns, Skirts and Combinations Very fine and high grade; $2.25 to $2.75 values $1.49 Infants sil:is Long; also short dresses In 1, 2 and 3-year sizes; values to $1.75, at 80c Long Slips and Short Dresses Russian and French styles; lace and embroidery trimmed, worth to $2.75, for $1.40 Infant's Skirts Long and short lengths; lare and embroidery trimmed; values to 7 5c, 39 Another lot Skirts for Infants, worth to $1.75, now at 89t? wwm Children's Aprons COKSET COVERS 3 styles, lace trimmed, one piece French back 25c values, at . , 15c MLSLIN DltAWEltS Ilest 2.1c garments, with rows of tucks perfect -f f goods, at XUC Mt'SLIN GOWXS 5 styles gowns and long chemise, Jaoe and embroidery QQf trimmed 05c values, at .Ol71 INFANTS' SLirS Dainty, fine slijs, lace or embroidery trimmed worth to 63c, at 39c of white lawn. In bretclle Hubbard styles, all at very 2bc aprona will be 50c and65c aprons will bo. fl.OO aprona will be $1.60 aprona will Uo $2.00 aprons will be , or Mother low prices. 190 30o 89o 98a $1.49 TIM tiA Willie umia Up on the second floor the crockery ntan contribute two strong sale attractions for Monday. Odda ana Xnds Walta Cblna Cipa ami aaucera, vas.a. hair and powder bose-a, etc. tbia antlro gaJf pf,ce lot on sale, at ah Whits raatoon Ooupa "JJTt" styles and slues; 35 OH Monday, at ,v Groceries Th.ia Bpaoial Offers o ala Monday and Tuesday. 'Bennett's '" Capitol Coffee. fresh roasted fine flavor, lb.. 880 and 40 stamps C. C. C Asparagua, uaual 20c qual- BennetS" cTpltol Flour. $1.66. and K0 itamps. t t'-arm vive" Fork and, Beans. ''Beat We Have. large can, r "TKAjfFlnest quality B. F. Japan, stamps. kamo Cataup. lar.e bottle. 98o. ana Poppy Sensed Milk, large,' JOc, and jPrackJraTur a-aortment. pkg.lOo. r and lo atamps. ' Navy Beans, sIk. lbs, .! rNllanonette feaa, usual tc cans, 1 three for Capitol BaktnK Powder, lb, ca $40, and 20 atamps. Medium Sour Pick as. quart lOo. Bweet Mlaed Pickles, quart 0o, and 10 stamps. ... , mjl llpton's Jelly, assorted. I pkga, soo and 5 stamps. . . ,, . .. Honey Cookies, fresh and dejlctous, pound. lHo. I French Asparagus, regular 60c 1 I cans, for 30Q. L i!i'?--'Hi'ii'''l''L!JI"''l'''"1U'''"t!!' Sale of Linens It swings Into its second week just as full of promise as on its first day. Frugal womenfolk have lined the counters daily and have been quick to see the superior sav ing possibilities the sale affords. ' New lots from the stock rooms have refreshed the assortments again for White Carnival week. DAMASK AITS WAT XI ITS. 60-ln. bleached damask, 35c klnd..93o 64-ln, bleached d.imask, 50c kind.. 39s 72-ln. all linen damask, 76c klndj.,690 72-ln. all itnen damaak, f 1.25 klnd.98o All linen double damask, ft. 50 kind, at 91.12H HAVKUrs. $1.25 all linen napkins, doaen 98o ft. 39 all linen napkins, dosen ...$1.19 $1.76 all linen napkins, dozen. . .$1.39 $2.25 all linen napkins, dosen. . .$1.75 $3.50 all linen napkins, dosen. . .$3.48 x.xnrar vatobbv cxatxs.' 2x2 yard clotha. $2.76 values ...$3.00 2x2 Vs yard clotha, $3.60 values. $9.60 .2x3 yard clotha, $4.25 valuea. . .$3-00 ($4.26 napkins to match, dos., $3 00) 2 yard double damask $4 cloths. $3.95 2 to yd. double daraaak $5 clotha. $4.03 8 yard doubla dainask $t cloths. $4.75 ($4.00 napkins to match, dos., $1 25) T0WXI.B,' CBASHXS, BTC. 12Ho huck towels, hemmed, at. .8H0 16o hack towela, 32x49 inches, at' lOo 19c Monile linen towels, at I60 85c Turkish bath towelrf, large.. .94 '20c bleached linen vrash. at, yd..l5o 15c bleache Barnsley crash, yd.llHo ' 11 He bleached linen crash, yd...8Vio SHc linen finished crash, yd 6H0 7o cotton twill crash, yd 60 All Tanoy Til"" Scarfs, Dolltt., iVnters, of every kind or elxe- at... Hair rmiox 1 JANUARY SALE EMBROIDERIES A masterful demonstration of the pint basing power of Dennetts is exemplified in these remark able embroidery bargains. Nothing we have seen before can compare with the values we present tomorrow. 1,000 yards 24-inch Swiss Flouncings, Corset Cover embroideries and Matched Edges In various wiatns, values to 39c, -ffx on sale, at 1VC 27-inch Flouncings in 1910 patterns and very finest equalities in 24-inch flouncings; also allover8 in open and blind patterns all new, 65c importations, at . . . 29c 4 5-Inch , Skirtings, also shirt waist fronting and allovers for waists and dresses, 98c qual ities 890 a7-Znoh Swiss Tlounolngs About 2.000 yards of hand some, new patterns; very fine sheer materials, worth 69c yard, at 39c 94-Inch Swiss riounolngs, with Insertions to mutch, some of the wider widths are samples and odd pieces from matched sets, vulues to 45c 3So Wide Swlas, Nainsook and Cam bric riounclng-s, corset cover embroidery and sheer match sets, in various widths, values to 35c 180 Swiss and Hainsook Edgings, tip to IS Inches wide, also mulched , skirtings, insertions and bands, values to 2tfc 12Vgc Hamburg Swlas Edges, to 15 Inches wide, worth 19c lOo Embroideries, to 12 Inches wide. fine qualities, up to 15c values. at 7H0 Edges, Insertions, up to 9 Inches wide, values to 12 Vic, at... Bo 1,000 White Carnival Corsets $1.29 Bpecial for the occasion A . large . purchase reserved for this week's selling $2.50 values sensation ally priced, at ......... ..... ....... ... These are extra fine, new models, made of durable batiste and non-rustable boning. vNew, long ', models ultra fashionable In design; all perfect; all sizes,, a1 rare treat; be early. White Enamelwarc Half and Less V .- - Show White Cooking Utensils of highest. quality white enamel inside and out. Preserving and Berlin Ket tles, worth $1 to $1.68, at Preserving and Berlin Ket- v ties,; worth 85c to 98c," at ........ 59c Ket- 49c Preserving and Berlin Ket- tleB, Tea and Coffee Pots, 75c and 85c kinds, for Mixing Bowls and Sauce. Pan3, worth. 40c 9Cr and 50c, at 35c Garment Prices Whittled to. the Finest Point For Quick Clearance Women's Misses' and Children's Winter Apparel, touching the highest pinnacle of style, reduced in prld out of all proportion to their regular values. W'c carry no garments from season to season AH must go. Tomorrow the clearing continues with renewed vigor, pre senting the most unitizing sacrifices we have made. Women's $30 Coals, black and colors. for $19.80 $25 long black broadcloth coats $15.00 $25 and $29.50 tailored suits. . .$19.80 $20 and $22.60 tailored nulls. . .$15.00 Tailored suits to $50, any for.. $35.00 Women's coats to $45 any for. .$35.00, Cloth dresses to $50, any for... $35.00 Misses' coats and dresses to $15. at ., $8 00 Girls $5 long coats. 6 to 14 yra., $3.95 Girls' $10 long coats, 6 to 14 years. at .. : fsoo New Lin erie Waists Advance models for 1410 Many Innovations in mode Of trimming are featured and shown exclu sively here; medallions, Roman key, embroidery and tucklngs have been artistically employed In designing many pleasing ef fects $3.75 $5.00 to $7.50 Sale White Shirts White Pleated Shtfta Full Dress Shirts. I 75c Vl.r.. anA fwforrl Verllirees. They are all white shirts and are fine $1.60 and $2.00 garments; White carnival price, 76c. Wight Shirts of very fine muslin, cut wide and full, made without collnr; 75c values, at 600 Women's 2-plece Suits, worth, up to $20.00. for $10.00 Women's Heavy Coa'.s, mixturi. thHt were $12.00. $15.00 and $17.60. cut to $5.00 Olrls' lvter Thompson Presses and Cloth Coats, v ol Hi $15.00, at ..$6.00 Ulrls' Junior and 2-plcce Suits, $15.00 values, sule price $9.00 Women's Cloth Ureases, to $20, at $10 Women's (Moth Dresses, worth to $3'.60, at $19.60 Mcssallne and Taffeta Walsls; plain and stripes, $8.00 kind, at ....$4.95 Colored Coats for Women Commencing Monday morning we offer choice of our entire stock of broadcloth, covert and diag onal coats regardless of former price, at straight 1 fC 1 eduction of .2 OH Evening Cupes A limited quan tity'of handsome, new garments; pl-' any for HALF PRICK. Pyrography A complete $4.60 set, fitted with a guaranteed point, 6 color stain, box absorbent cotton, swivel handle, extra lurxe and alcohol bottle, for ,$i3.0 PTBO WOOD New shipment boxes, stools, plate racks, placouon, bas kets, etc 15 orr EEs! PRINCE OF FALSE EXPLORERS For a Generation Lawson Was a Champion-Faker. SOME SELF-MADE GEOGRAPHY Exploration Vk as Proved Falee in Kvery Point ana He Was De nounced aa Charlatan, bnt He Tnln Cam Ilack. v m point. f observations place it in igi eea 17 minutes 8 seconds tuda 9 degrees, 8 minutes 18 Anybody who finds in ii The village . of Houtrea, my starting is attuatad on Torres Strait, and my longitude 143 do- east, and kul- aeconda south." hla library a book i 4 v.boao first chapter ends In those worda oil. V v(uld do well to keep a watchful eya on I .ny blbllomanlao whom he may admit to " i ' 4 accesa to hla shelves. It la worth money, ' 1 1 L. l.u I, VtAlnnaa . . . a ...... pleased edition. ' Blbllographlcally the wvvk Is thus de- scilbed: Wandarlngs in tfie Interior of New (iuinea, by Captain J. A. Lawson, with frontispleca and map. London: Chapman & Hall, W, Piccadilly. 1876. (All rights reserved.) Jvo.; pages vlll., S3. The trouble begins with the statement just quoted from tho flrat chapter. The position of Houtrao ia glvan with mavelous precision, reckoned down to aaconda of are. When laid down upon tha hydro- urapblo charts thoaa coordinates could not Identify the position of Itoutre or of any I habitation of men, for they tlx a apot out In Torrea Btralt. ' ' If tha base of exploration la proved wrong at the start so Is the rest of It, all of a plc. Tha explorer furnishes a map of hla r1 "77" : Humphreys Seventy-Beven Famous Remedy for Grip & Taken at the first feeling of lassi tude and weakness, the Cold disap pears at once. Taken at the second stage, shlver - Ing and chilliness, the cure may take twenty-four hours. Taken after you begin to Cough and sneese it will take several days a to break It up. Handy to carry, ftts the vest pocket. All Drug Stores :5c. Humphrey's Homo Medlclna Co.. Cor. William and Ana Strwsis, New fork. explorations. Laid down upon the real map of New Guinea it ia clear that n must have crossed' the great Island ana hav kept on into the open sea for 300 miles or so. The value of the work Is Indeed condi tioned by the fact that Captain J. A. Law. son never wandered In the interior of New Guinea, never was in New Guinea by ao much aa a foot upon the black shore. Tet tha work is of tho most lively Inter est, it is crammed with Intereat, Ha pages are replete with - such observations as a trained explorer would be expected to record. The human intereat is not absent, we follow the traveler through monatrous difficulties, wa become familiar with hla native oompanlona, tha detail of camp and company la set forth entertainingly. Captain Lawson also selected his com panions with a view to future- possibilities, and before he ia done with them they are al! disposed of in a way very satisfactory to such exploration. Toolo was a Lascar who had been tha captain s servant ror two years. The Australian black fellows were engaged as baarers Tom, Joe and Billy; but Tom ran away before they aet out from Sydney. At Houtree he selected his guides, Papuans, but seemingly well grcunded as linguists, for they used Eng lish, . French, Dutch and Portugueee and Malayan dialects. A boo was tha elder of those, about 60, only four feet three inches in stature, repulsive In ugliness by nature, heightened by art. Danang was only 20, a foot taller than Aboo, very strong and cor respondingly lazy. Up la tha interior the sun proves Um much for Toolo, he goes mad and bluwa tha top of hla head off with tha captain's rifle. Joe, the Australian, and Danang, the younger Papuan, are killed by hostile natlvea at tha explorer's farthest north. Aboo la left at Houtree on the return and Hilly Is a scamp, but the author starts him away from Singapore In the direction of Sydney. It la not to be supposed that Captain Lkwaon thus disposes of hla evidence at the beginning. On the contrary this re cord has been picked out from the narra tive "and assembled aa herein aet forth. In the -book Itself It is far more artfully dealt with. It la not until the end of the seventh chapter that Toolo la marked for aulcide. Tucked away In tha last pages of the eighth chapter la tha wiping out of Danang and Joe. Aboo vanishes without auy warning -elgn when Houtree la near on the return Journey; exactly what does becoma of him ia not made clear. Billy, ths Australian, aboriginal survivor, per sisted aa far aa Banda In the Malay Archi pelago, where hla master fell ill. better for Billy's reputation, assuming that he bad any reputation at all, if he had re moved himself earlier. For tha explorer gave him a black mark there in Banda, almoat the last words in tha book: "but Billy never one came near me, and I heard that ha was almoat constantly in a alata of beastly intoxication." A aad rec ord after they had stuck together through ao many moving adventures. The laat rec ord of poor Billy, aet aboard a ship in Singapore for Sydney, la tills: "I got rid of him at last." Now recur to tha start. Although Houtree is determined by its precision of minutes, and above all thoae incriminating seconds, to be away out at sea, thl explorer set forh from Houtree at 4 o'clock in the morning, headed north west, July 10, 1872. The equipment of , tho expedition is set forth in detail, the in struments for the determination of posi tion, twenty-four pounds of hardtack, guns and ammunition, pickles and jam, and six bottles of brandy. From this point onward the narrative is a convincing" tale In every line. Little of the day's march, the "nature of the coun try traversed, the difficulties of the way, the Incidents of the camp by night. Strange things he saw In the Jungle, but no matter how strange he set thorn down with wealth of verslslmlltude. Strange, were the plants upon tha wandering course, yet he docketed them In his narrative for tho information of botanists. Strange Insects there were, not a record Is lost, not even of the little green fly that boomed like a drum in the ob scurity of the primeval forest. The same 'attention to precise detail ia shown in the map, tlf graphlo presenta tion of. the reoonaissance. He does not pretend. to make a topographic map of the wintry. Far more honest in appearance, hJs map is the mere tracing of the spider Una of the actual march upon the blank of '.he unknown which lay east and west of his random course. It is painfully honest. When he croaes a stream, ha sets down upon his sketch only such details aa he might see at the ford. The cast and future of the watercourse are beyond his know! edge because outside hla observation. When he crosses the Papuan Ghauts, his first great discovery, his Instinct for truth prompts him to record a wider extent upon th map, tar everybody knows that a chain of hills can be identified by eyesight into the blue distance. Where all ia new, where the land traV' oraed la such virgin soil, every incident, no matter how trifling, is of moment. But setting rigorous faces against the discus slon of the details these may be presented as the 'greatest discoveries which Captain Lawson made la. hla ' traverse of New Guinea. The first great find was a magnifi cent lake, sixty to seventy miles long, on the north and south axla, fifteen to thirty mllea broad, abounding in fish, some of which were ten to twelve feet long. This fine sheet of water he named Lake Alex ananna after hla queen. Ever loyal, this explorer, a liberal, too, in hla political pro fession, that may be determined from his designation of the River Gladstone, which is tne chief confluent of the great River Royal, waterways which he is later to dis cover. Mountains are his chief discovery. First comes the Papuan Ghauts, only a few marchee from Houtree. These are but pre. paratoiy. mere foothills; he measures Mount Misty at 10,872 feet and in the dis tance triangulates the height of the high est peak of this range at 12. Mi feet After the passage of tha Ghauts he comee down to low savannah once more. It la preparatory to tha discovery of tha loftiest mountain In the world, a mile higher than Mount Everest This la Mount Hercules. Just tx-fore he reaches this mon ster of all mountains ha measures the Out post. 15.0M feet, and the brilliantly active volcano of Mount Vulcan, 10.74J feot. Then cornea Mount Hercules. Its summit altitude above the sea Is M,78J feet It ia almost all effective height, for the plains out of which it rears Its awful form are barely $,000 feet above an level. The snow of this mountain begins at 16,000 feet. The hardy explorer was not going to pass this magnificent peak as merely a landmark, he was bound to climb it He selected Aboo and they began the long climb. All went well until they reached the snow and felt the chill of arctic al titude shortly after leaving the steaming Jungle. Up they went until the snow sleep came over them, fighting to keep awake they pushed on until they could bear no more. Their eyes were swollen and blood shot, the air was too thin to breathe, they were In pitiful plight Their highest point waa exactly 25,314 feet which Is Just about 1,000 feet higher than any mountain climber has ever reached In the Himalayas. Con quered by the cold, they turned unwillingly from the summit yet a mile and a half above them and Inaccessible. After they had passed the snow line on the descent and Captain Lawson's hands had begun to thaw into usefulness, "as soon," he writes, "as I had recovered the use of my hands sufficiently to hold the flask I served out a little brandy, which put new life Into us." When he and Aboo returned to camp he records that they were "thoroughly beat," and the next morning he records that his face and hands were badly chapped. lt is a shame not to be able to follow hla adventures to the discovery of the Glal stone and the Hoyal, the voyage down that stream to the cataract 900 feet wide, with a sheer descent of 179 feet, the voyage re sumed down the River ChliiKoo-mulan, as the lower course of the Royal is named. He reached a hostile village only thirty or forty miles from the northwest coast, where he Is forced back and hats a narrow escape from the savages. But there are limits even to the record of adventure. He returna to Houtree after many hardships on February 8, 1873, eight months in ;he wild jungle, almost to the day. Precise and particular In almost every detail that could be desired, Captain Law- Son has omitted from his narrative the mathematics of his course. He had instru ments for the determination of his posi tion, but he makes no record that he ever used them except in the marvellous pre cision of his determination of moun'uin altitudes. Course and distance of his marches are absent from the record. Even on his map there is no scale. The Tatter defect may be rectified by. the recorded dimensions of Iake Alexandria as seventy miles. Using this for a scile his sketch map shows that he. must nave traveled north from Houtree soma t0 miles. The nearest position te Houtro which may be identified on the real map of the south coast of New Guinea Is lted scar Bay or Port Moresby. Measured north from this point the air line distance across the Island la about 240 miles. From this it will be aeen that Captain Lawson must iin wittingly have passed the north co.it t somewhere about hla Mount Hercules nl must have found bis great river system and the cataract and the great Chlngoo-malan Itself from 200 to 3u0 miles out upon ,U northern sea. There are discoveries in toology that mark the work as real discovery. The upes are Interesting. Tha explorer is pathetic In his narrative of the shooting of a pair of monkeys; It went SKalnst the grain, but he bad to do it In the interests of biology. More than once he dines upon buffalo; at least once the wild buffalo bull charges the expedition. Then there is the moolah, a beautiful tiger, all stripes and teeth; one measured 7 feet 3 Inches. Yet the real Now Guinea knows rot the tiger, the buffalo or the ape. NYet the work was accepted by careful readers, was put to press and published bv one of tbo most conservative ajd equally reputable houses in London with a long lecoid of honor In. the publishing business. The geographical Journals accepted the book as a truthful record and as a contri bution to the knowledge of one of the least known spots of the world. The reviews, with one exception, were altogothor lauda tory. More was asked of the author, he was taken up as the latent, lion, and at the height of his popularity he refused all social engagements In order that he miht devote, liis .whole time to the preparation of yet more detailed work setting forth his knowledge of this interesting and unknown land. For weeks he was able to bask In success and the profits were coming to bis hand. But retribution was coming to him over seas. There was one man In England who had knowledge of New Guinea, Captain Moresby of the! royal navy. He hadspent much time In the survey of Torres strait. He had never gone far Into the Interior, it was not safe then, nor is It exactly a holi day ramble at the present moment But he knew the coast and he knew that any such elevated mass as Mount Hercules must be visible for more than a hundred miles, therefore in sight of any one who should approach New Guinea from the squth, from the north or in the intricate tangle of Islands toward the east When the book waa first given to the public Captain Moresby was on aruisa. But It was not long before he found the chance to read what Captain Lawson had found In the great dark island. The more he read the more Captain Moresby recog nized It aa his duty to expose the im position. ' The first shot in the fight appeared In the Athenaeum, the reviewer evidently having received information that the book was by no means all that It purported to be. This, and It was the first unfavorable comment In any of the literary magazines and the first to suggest' impugnment of the author's good faith, was printed In No. 2477 of the Athenaeum. Thj attitude of the reviewer Is expressed unmistakably In hla concluding paragraph: "The author tells his story well. But when we inquire Into the value of this book as a contribution to geographical science we cannot speak so favorably. In deed, after persuing the ustoundln stiite im uts contain. (1 in it the reader may feel Inclined to think that the book is Intended to be a work of fiction rather tlianof actual travel." Six weeks later Captain Morseby was ready to let go with a broadside. This was piinled In No. 243 In the form of a letter slgiud by that naval officer himself. He went for John Lawson's book by chapter and by verse. The book waa fairly rid dled. A fortnight later, in No. 24So, Captain Lawson made his answer. He restated the truth of each and every discovery and lie cast Uie same veil tt veracity over Tall other material be had gathered in New Guinea and which was to be used in forth coining works. In conclusion ho declared once more his honesty and, clothing hlm sslf in dignity, he wrote: "My discoveries will sooner or later answer all cavillers and henceforth reviews and criticisms will receive nothing from me but silent von tempt." ; A fortnight later Captain Morseby pub lished a rejoinder, repeating all that he had written before, and In the repetition he selected phraseology most carefully de vised to being his utterances within the law of libel. But Lawson remained silent and contemptuous. ! His bubble had been pricked, he dropped out of sight, his publishers scurried to buy up his volumes In order to clear their own reputations of any suspicion of complicity In the swindle. But Captain Lawson did not choose to stay In hla obscurity. Branded as a geo graphical faker ho was able after no more than five yeurs to find another publisher In London. In 1880 he gave to the world "The Wandering Naturalists; a Ktory of Adventure." The book fell flat, It had little sale and It did no more than 'recall to the reviewer the history of his former brief success. There Is a suspicion that within the year of his .exposure as a cheat and traveling trickster Captain Lawson published a fur ther Installment of his adventures. In 1876 there appeared in London as the work of "John Bradley," a volume entitled "A Narrative of Travel and Sport In Burmah, Slam and tha Malay Peninsula." Again the watchful Vthenaeum comes to the de fense of geographical truth: "We do not say that Mr. Bradley's volume la a fiction, but we do say that so startling a narra tive ought not to be at once full of blun ders and also, singularly deficient In evi dences of genuineness." Use Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup and whooping cough. Walks Mile with Broken ek. . CAMBRIDGE, Mic. Jan. 7. Keeling a severe pain ir, his neck after falling oft his wagon onto his head, Henry A. Belcher, a teamster, walked a ml'e und a half today to the Cambridge Relief hospital, where. It was found his neck waa uroken. The doc tors declared he could live but ' a short time. May Enjoin Smith from Paying Fees Move Said to Be on Foot on Behalf of Warrant Shavers to Hold Business. An attempt to defeat the payment of Juror and state witness fees In cash by the clerk of the district court through an in junction suit Is declared likely to be the next chapter in the light to stop fee shaving In the court house. It Is asserted that such action Is con templated in behulf of the men engaged In warrant buying business through their at torneys, but no definite move In this di rection has been made as yet. RobVrt Smith, clerk of district court, is ready to pay Jury warrants on demand, and Jurors will bo paid dally If they asK to be. The office of the clerk of district court has been busy getting proper' blunks and forms ready for this work bocauee a new Jury punel comes Monday and the jurors who report Monday will be able to gtt their pay In cash, without deduction, that evening If they so desirs. Accordingly there will be no object in having warrants discounted and the war rant buyer's profitable Duslness will end abruptly unless something Is done. This Is why a suit for an Injunction is con templated. Whether such a suit will stand Is of course an uncertain matter, although the Board of County Commissioners and the county attorney believe the board acted legally In authorizing the clerk of district court to proceed to pay Jurors and wit nesses in cash. Guard the healtli of your family by keep ing at hand a bottle of Chamberlain's Counh llenndy. It has no equal for coughs, (.olds and croup. lllrtha and Mentha. Birlhs-Salviitoro Ue Agastu, 718 Leav enworth, boy. I ii al lis Habv l'nff 'HO Nnr. tol,i..i..nk. j ReriH Martin, 274 Ohio, :(; Sunfi nl '! Iloult. 411 South Twenty-eighth avenue, 28; Baby Taylor, 2407 Ijike; Ruby Swain, IMS Hickory, 1; John K. Ryan. St. Jut ph s liospllali K; Mrs. India L. Wallace, O'Neill. I Neb., A LINIMENT FOR EXTERNAL USE. Not only is Mother's Friend a safe and simplertmedy, but the comfort and healthful condition its use produces makes it of ines timable value to every expectant mothet?. Mother's Frlond relieves the pain and discomfort cansed by the strata, on the different liga ments, overcomes nausea by counteraction, prevents backache and numbnesa of limbs, soothes the Inflammation of the breast glands, and In every way aids in preserving- the health and comfort of prospective mothers. Mother's Friend is a lini ment for external massage, which, by lubricating and expanding the different mns cles and membranes, thoroughly prepares the system for baby's coming without danger to the mother. Mother's Friend is sold at drug stores. Write for our free book far expectant moUiere, THE DRADFIELD CO., ATLANTA, OA.