s OMAHA, SUNDAY MORXTXO, JULY 31, 1910. 3 'Tilt CUURCII IN OUR TOWS" PUMP CUN.iOVE AND LAW SLIT RIVAL OF THE DREYFLS CASE ? . - - i ' v t V Reflection! and Obierrttioni of an ' Omaha Critic. REASONS TOR ALLEGED FAILURE , Dora ?ft Satisfy lnellteae of the People, Their Reaaoa or Tkelr Aaplratloaa" Tratb of Selcaeo lancred. Tna enurcn in Omaha la a failure, Ita teachings mora fabla than truth. It Ig nores the truths of science, psychology Smooth Worker Is on the Wing Soldier of Fortune and Pretended American About to Lose Citizenship. Ludicrous Entanglement in Court at Osfden, Utah. CHAMPION SHOT OF THE WEST If Captain Jorge Iken Y. Waldberg, erstwhile of Argentina, pretended Ameri can, typical soldier of fortune and one of the few men who ever succeeded In selling the lata Senator Mark A. Hanna a gold brick, does not return to w aan Ington within th next sixty days, he Is likely to lose hla allegod American oltl- and ethlca, and does not satisfy the peo- senahtp and be denied the protection of pie's Intelligence, their reason or their as- the American flag. An order has been Is- piratlona, are a few of the assertions made sued In the district court of the Dlstrlot by Dr. I A. Merrtam of Omaha, In a paper of Columbia giving him that time In which contributed to Collier's Weekly series on to appear arid show cause why his natur "The Church In Our Town." Ministers and church people generally will be Interested In the reaeone Dr. Mer rlam glvea for hla aweeplng Indictment, hence the paper, unabridged, follows: The church In our town Is not a success. because It does not teach the truth. The people are In earneat, and anxloua to know the facts, and tha truth, aa to their origin, existence, purpose and future. The church doea not aatlsfy their Intelligence, their reason or their aspirations. The people would go to church If they were taught tha truths of modern aclence, psychology and ethics. Instead of tha fables of antiquity, tha folklore of an early and Ignorant peo ple, used by king,' prince, priest and po tentate, to enslave their minds, and make tham submissive to the ruling class?, who always robbed them, Just the same as they are doing everywhere today. The churoh ahould teach modern science, and the prin ciples of psychology, and ethics as they are taught in the new philosophy of thla twen tieth century. The church should lead the people to eternal and varied nature, and by the aid of the aciencea, to tha fact, that universal and eternal law everywhere pre vails. No one can, or will deny this uni versal power, or energy In nature. Witt Bcleaee Haa Ikewa. allsatlou papers should not be canceled. Captain Waldberg flourished In Wash ington twelve years ago, during the Span ish-American war, and a few years later, at the Pan-American exposition at Buffalo, encountered the late Senator Hanna, whose exterlence with him is said to have cost tha senator several thousand dollars and to have given blm an Insight Into Latin American clevernesa which he had not be fore known. The captain cam to Washington with a long military record. Having been born In Argentina, he haa lived In half a doxen South American countries and been en gaged In many revolutions In thu cause of liberty. Exiled, when unsuccessful, he dropped Into New York one day and or ganised a company'of Greek fruit venders, whom he took to Athens, joined the Oreek army and fought In the Graeco-Turkish war. All that he got out of that contest was little military glory and a wife. He married a very beautiful daughter of a professor in the University of Athens and leturned to America in time to take up newspaper work at the outbreak of the Spanish-American war. Being able to apeak several languages whether this universal fluently, and especially Spanish, he courted Is called "Tha Oreat "The Oversoul," "Tha Infinite," or It matters not, power or energy O Spirit. f God." It exists, and all recognise It Scl ence haa shown that matter has been ana lysed, not only into moiecuiee, ana atoms, but also Into ions, or elastic units of en ergy. Matter Is latent energy, evolved out of cosmic ether, in which consciousness In heres. and Its ultimata analysis is the unl versal mind of the Infinite. Whatever ex the friendship of Senor Palma, late president of Cuba, and Senor Quesada, for merly Cuban minister to the United States who were then tn charge of the Cuban Junta In Waahlngton. He espoused their cause most ardently. There was a great demand for newa from Cuba, ana the genius of Nelken led him to make translations from Spanish and Cuban newspapers, for whloh he found II n aba ad Leaves l.ea-ary la the Shape of Royalty oa Firearm Iaven- d Widow Goes to Hon I Law for Reealts. lets Is but the exponent of this universal I ready market with tha Washington corre- jnd, the expression of the Divine thought ' 'Man, himself, is but an Individual spark of the Infinite subject to nature's eternal laws, and ever tn a state of constant flux, or onflow, from lower to higher forms of development. Evolution Is nature's method of work, or the plan ,of the Oreat Infinite spondents. His success prompted him to "fake" when his news sources became ex hausted. One of these "fakes" was a dis patch which he put forth all over the country, telling in most dramatic manner of the attempted assassination of Oeneral Blanco, who waa then governor general Mind, as all mortem acience and philosophy 0f Cuba, and which cauaed a great deal of reveals the truth to us. Nature's Foreea. Mind Is a subtle form of static energy, one of nature's forces, Just as much as is light, heat, electricity, chemical action or the force of gravity, and thought Is a dy namic phase of mind. Thoughts are mental thlnga and tend to become material things. Our desires are seed thoughts, which we sow and reap action. We each constitute a thought magnet, and we attract those that are like us, and If we live right, and think right, we can make our bodies finer and our mentality greater. There Is no such thing as dead matter. All matter Is living matter and all so called forces are living forces of eternal energy, the expres sion of the lr finite mind. Intelligence Is not a product of matter, 'aut all material sub stance is the product of mind and is regu lated by Infinite anO eternal law, for the Infinite la eternal and unvarying law. Scl- ' ence demonstrates that all the forces of nature are correlative and convertible. There la but one force In nature and that la infinite energy. Infinite mind. Man Is a part of that Infinite mind. No force or en ergy 1s ever lost. Man's mind Is correlated iMiVi the Infinite mind, hence man's mind nevVt dies. There Is no death In the uni verse. There Is only change, transition, de velopment, evolution. Eternal law rules In the domain of mind and aoul, as everywhere excitement at the trme. After the war waa over. Captain Wald berg took up with the Pan-American ex position. In thla connection he aucceeded in interesting Senator Hanna in the publi cation of a sort of personal history of the three Americas, with elaborates write-ups of distinguished statesmen. Senator Hanna fell for his game and paid titm a large aum of money for wrlte-upa of President McKinley and himself and lent.his name to the undertaking. The publication failed and Senator Hanna was out a large aum of money and much experience. Not long ago the captain turned up In Constantinople and becajme Involved In some trouble there which prompted him to demand the protection of the American flag. He presented his case at the Em bassy, and In endeavoring to establish the fact that he was a naturalised American Nellie Bennett Stuart, well known in Omaha Oun club circles because of tne j fact that she is the champion woman rifle shot of the west, haa Just won a peculiarly Interesting lawsuit In the courts of Weber county, Utah a suit In which there was a ludicrous intermingling of ardent love, cold, clammy business and a pUmp-gun. The pump-gun, In fsct. or rather the royalty supposed to come through pump gun sales, was the basis of the suit. In the process of litigation, all of the love was shot away, but Mrs. Bennett-Stuart came out victorious and henceforth, John Doug las Pederson, defendant, must pay to the fair winner one-fourth of 3S centa for each pump-gun sold. As the gun Is popular and the rights of manufacture are vested in an arms company or national repute, saies run well Into the thousand every month. It therefore follows that the 8 cents royalty on each sale guaranteed to Mrs. Bennett Stuart by order of court, while "appearing email at first glance, really meana much in the aggregate. Here la how it all came about: A. L. Bennett, first husband of the heroine of thla story, was a champion shot. Ha. made a life atudy of fire arms, and as a result, he Invented a pump-gun. Like all other Inventors, he needed money with which to complete his Invention. Enter: John Doug las Pederson, with money. Exit: A large share of Bennett's Interest In the pump gun. Then, with money to back him, Ben nett soon perfected hla gun and brought it Into the limelight to lu.-h extent that the Remington Arms company purchased the right to manufacture, paying outright tn cash a lump sum of $6,000. with an under standing to the effect that for each gun manufactured and aold, a royalty of 35 centa should be paid. Pederson was to have three-fourths of the cash payment of $6.0X10, also three-fourths of the coming royalties. Just Like an Inventor. Bennett, with the proverbial poor luck of the Inventor, died Just before the close of the deal with the Remington Arms com pany, but Pederson paid the $1,800, or one fourth, to Mrs. Bennett. About that time there arose a most ard ent love affair. It la related, between Peder son and the Widow 3ennett. But, although the pump-guns were selling rapidly, there came to the widow, so It is alleged, no royalties, neither was there any fraction thereof. The love affair waned. Mrs. Ben nett married another man. Pederson also married. Then came the suit, Mrs. Bennett-Stuart being plaintiff, in which she sought to en force the payment of one-fourth of all the royalties paid to Pederson. The result was a complete victory for the woman in Judge J. A. Howell's court at Ogden. In rendering his decision Judge Howell laid: "It is ordered, therefore, that in accord anoe with the prayer of the plaintiff's complajnt, the defendant be required to ac count to her for all royalties received from the Remington Arms company on account of the sale of what, is known as the 'Remington pump gun.' There Is a little romance connected with the case, it appearing In court that the plaintiff and defendant were desperately tn love with each other at one time, and that because of this love there had been considerable business laxity exhibited on . i vx v---"-' w 4 - i II Arreit of Russian Baron Trouble. Starts ' CORRESPONDENT FOR NEWSPAPER tharaed with Itevealtag Forbidden Information to the Anttrtiin BRICK MAKER!! i sHiiriliiTir" iiMmiiii ininif ailaWf WHlliBBia I'M Ti" Our town ts building .have THREE ao fast that we UUMHER TAR OA, all ft , BY OKOROE KRASER. PT rETER.ni'Rt;, July 30. -Cpeil M paicn to ine wn.i-iw airw f I, h.m An,- mnt. ,hn thev pan handle. von l'ngrn-Sternheig promises to develor What we want ' n nRtCK PLANT. Oot Into an affair rivaling In dramatic inures I iv.VU'J',"i.Vw .Y.'-?iTJ'Tui, 2J the famous lrcfus affair. That a mim- vkVr,CK. Will mSks first ells, ber tf memhers of the Duma will be in- otopnaltlon to the right man. volved seems certain und it may be of- . . Buhl, Idaho. Is the market point for flclal. of the War department may 00 land that" le rut of doors. There Is drawn Into the net Von Unfiern-Sternherg is a Russian sub ject and Is correspondent of an Aumnau newspape.-. The formal accusation against him ' Is that of rommunk-atlna to Austria a Te- prrt of o rocret sitting of the Duma dpuJlim I mlth the new distribution of the Rutpitu.l cheap electi.i; power gained from the rail or tne enaKe river. Thre are oceans of farm produce of every description. Everything Is favorable. Please WRITU ME AT OXCE. You can satisfy yourself about this if you will wrlie to me at once, t can send you a booklet showing Jl'ST WHAT THIS SECTION HAS TO DK FEND ON: Just WHAT IT WILL D' l FOU YOU. Write fer the book. It costs a lonune 10 yois. army, n prmir.i ; nothing snd n sy mesn found among the papers seixea at oihi Addrtss Aa he Is a Russian subject and an I cltixen some disclosures came to light re- the part of the two. and that It was not garaing Ms papers which led the American charge to refer the matter to the State department. The department In turn made Inquiry at the district court, with the result that au order was Issued requiring him to show cause within sixty days why his papers should not be canceled.-Cinclnnatl Enquirer. i else. . Psychology is built on physiology. CONSERVING MOVING PICTURES Ethics Is built on psychology. Right and ( . -Vv rPood J jiure, wrong, good and evil, are relative terms, and governed by natural law. All the forces of nature can be used Just In proportion as they are understood and obeyed. Eternal Laws. The universal cosmlo ether contains within itself the potentialities of all sub stance, all energy and out of It, or from It, has been evolved all that haa ever been, Is now or ever will be. Thoughts are things, and build character. Thoughts build the body and keep it, develop It or destroy It. thoughts make the body, soul and life strong, serene and glad. Only our own deeds can hinder us; only our own will can fetter us. Forgiveness of sin is a myth. Nature Is inexorable. Consequences are sure. Nature, or Qod, Is absolute Jus- tlce. Wrongs must be righted. Recompense must be made. The life mUst be dived. The life lived is a true exponent of a man's prlnolples. We are living In eternity today s much as we ever will be. Life Is a 'develcment of soul, an eternal evolution. The aoul never dies. It is Immortal. All science Is In harmony with thla Idea. All men are brothers. Development of soul and service to hu manity -la the chief requisite. Purification of th o body by correct living, eating and dilnklnb Is absolutely essential to a wall developed mind and aoul. To eat a baked, friid or boiled corpse, very common every where, doea not favor pure blood, pure bodies or pure thoughts. Law reigns su preme. Obedience to law Is the condition of well being both in this world and the next. When the rudiments, principles and teach ings of modern aclence, modern ethics and modern philosophy are taught to the people by the preachers then "The Church In Our Town" and elsewhere will be filled to hear the truth, while fossilised and clammy creeds a 111 be brushed away forever and the brotherhood of man be a living reality. Objectionable Flluui Cat Oat the 'Show Caa Go On. Before The power of the moving picture show for good or evil seems now to be a vital Issue all over the country, and hundreds of city officers are searching through codes for ordinances under which they may legally atop the exhibition of certain films, or hurriedly paasing new laws to meet the sit uation. Chicago has had for some time an effective way of dealing with objectionable shows In ita special board, whose business It Is to censor them In advance, and also to Inspect the actual performances as a double safeguard. The five men on the board, headed by a police sergeant. Charles E. O'Dcnnell, cover the city. A decision of the supreme court two years ago confirmed the right of the police department to supervise the exhi bition In moving picture theatera, and the board was then organized, with orders to be strict In Its oversight. From the, censors' office In the city hall the men ko out to tne manuiacturers' places, to the 600 theaters, or. more regularly, to the score or more of film exchanges. There the rolls are run off for approval, In preparation for release day," when about 1,000 films get their release. In one case the policeman sat alone, looking Intently at the "silent drama, while half a dosen employes of ine exchange stod anxiously about him. ne neia up nis hand, and h. mii. waa stopped. "You'll have to cut out that murder." he said, decisively. , "But It will spoil that story-that'e the whole point!" pleaded the manager, while the other men crowded around, adding their arguments. "Can t l elp It," answered the policeman. You'll have to clip that murder and give ( FED MISTRESS INTO MACHINE Estraornlaar t rime Contra It led hy n Jealona Pertsiaeat Mechanic. LISBON. July 30. i Special Dispatch to The Bee. An extraordinary crime oc cured In a factory at Lisbon, where a man who was responsible for the smooth running of a large machine called hla sweetheart, of whom he waa Jealous, to tne machine room and killed .ier with a resor. He then upproached a large wheel, whkh was revolving with great rapidity, and daahed nlmself between the spokes. Hla body waa immediately rendered shapeless. The machine did not atop, and It was aome time before the bodlea were til sco ered. GREAT DISORDER IN PERSIA y tm and Mohherlea Are Belnsi Committed Cloae to Teheran. TEHERAN, July 30-iSpecisJ Dispatch to . he Bee.) An unusual number of outrages liave been committed la Perala recently robberies) having taken place cloae to Teheran. Tha government troops have been defeated by Kurds outside Kermanahah, NELLIE BENNETT STUART. afterwards, but whether he was madly In love or only pretending to be, he made a legal contract with the lady concerning the Bun In question herein, and he must fulfil It even If he escapes a great many other promises he made her and never kept. It la ordered, therefore, that In accord ance with the prayer of plaintiff's com plaint, the defendant be required to account to her for all royalties received from the Remington Arms company on account of the sale of what is known as the Remlng ton pump gun. "' A. L. Bennett was an expert shot, as well as an inventor, and at the time of his death was the champion of Colorado, Kansas and Oklahoma, and had the record of never having met defeat. He taught his wife to shoot with him, and she, herself, was for four years a professional shootlst. How ever, she was not willing to devote her energies to shooting at targets, and she has a record for the killing of big game In her home state of Colorado. Elk, deer, mountain lion and bob cat have fallen as her prey, and at present she Is on a shoot Ing expedition . Into the Jackson's . Hole country. n easy matter to determine Just what was the contract between plaintiff's former husband and the defendant and between the two parties to the action. Findings of the Co art. The court In making a summary of this phase of the question, says in part: "It Is finally Ingeniously argued by coun sel that defendant should not be held to his agreement because it was simply the ex travagant promise of a lover to his sweet heart, and not in any sense a business ar rangement. It appears from the numerous and lengthy epistles introduced In evidence as having passed between the parties to this suit that after Bennett's death and prior to plaintiffs remarriage to her pres ent husband, a violent love, apparently mutually reciprocated, took possession of both plaintiff and defendant. No matter with what seriousness the philosopher might ponder over the sinuous, uneven and unhappy course of this love story, or no matter with what delight the psychologist might seek to unravel the tangled strains of It, nor how It could be woven by the novelist Into a romance, I am, of course, only concerned with its legal phases. Fortunately the courts are. not often called upon to enforce the promises which are said to be made between lovers. The fond swain's hyperbolical desire to lay the wealth of the world at his loved one's feet is meant for the poet and the novelist, not the prosaic Judge. Occasionally, however, unwillingly the courts are nevertheless compelled to draw the lino between, what Is simply love's fantasy and cold, hard business between people in love, and fortu nately the task Is not difficult, because In the crucible of common, sense, It Is easy to separate them. If, for Instance, the lovesick youth, during a spasm or delirium, promises the equally lovesick maiden that he will give her the silvery moon for a brooch to embellish her lily white throat or the lady fair. In a monment of ecstasy, swears she will pluck from the sky a shining diamond to bedaxzle her lover's manly ahand or shirt bosom, a court of equity would not seek to 'enforce either promise, nor would a court of law give damages for the failure to perform either. (But If a lover or a beloved hsppen to own some property, or other valuable right. nd the other promises to give a sum of A Wedding Fenst In Little Italy. The Little Itajy of Kansas City threw rice, candy und some money recently, also there were motor ear and cab rides for some 260 residents of that district, not to mention refreshments, solid and liquid, and dancing for aome 500, All this was brought about because each of the principals In a marriage had a well-to-do uncle. These uncles hired thirty seven motor cars and twenty cabs to haul the guests about town. The uncles are D. Donnicl, owner of a grocery store at 522 Hafrlson street, uncle of the bride, and John Stasl, owner of a saloon at 1026 East Fifth street, uncle of the groom. The groom was Anthony Stasl, 633 Troost ave nue, 19 years old, and the bride Miss Tere slna Donnicl, 509 Harrison street. The wedding ceremony was read by Father Dolbecchl at the Holy Rosary Catholic church at 2:30 o'clock In the aft ernoon. Immediately the bridal party and as many of the guests as there was room to accommodate got Into the motor cars and cabs. They rode down Admiral boule vard to Grand avenue, then to Eleventh, where a stop was made to give the bridal party time to get their pictures taken. An Odd Fellows' memorial procession passed between the two lines of waiting carriages. At first the Italians believed that the procession was a funeral. When they saw that It was not they were greatly relieved, for such a happening would have brought .them bad luck. After an hour of riding the thirty-seven motors and twenty carriages, with their occupants, returned to the starting point. This time they gathered In the parish school house adjoining the church and went to the second floor of the building, from which the desks had been removed In preparation for dancing and feasting. An orchestra was stationed at one end of the room and a march waa played, whereupon the bridal party started on the second wedding march. As soon as the march was over all the guests, children Included, Joined in the dancing. At short Intervals there were Intermissions for eat ing and drinking. Peanuts and soda pop were given to the children.' The grownups ate sandwiches and drank beer. The uncles supplied it all. The celebration lasted until 11 p. ra. house ex-offlcer. this charge Is undoubtedly j serious. A notebook was also found x-on- j talnlng entries of small sums received. 'from j various memoern or me Auiro.nunain embassy, where he was employed as a translator. inms of .Money. , One of the sums was 160 rubleap (115) re ceived from Count Spannocchl. Jt Is In ferred that an attempt will be made to trace the disclosure of the secret report to M. MUlukoff. His wife said that her husband was personally well ncqualnted with Count Spannocchl and had occasion ally borrowed money from him and other members of the embassy staff. He con sidered the facts of having a searet report In his possession and his pecuniary tran sactions so Utile compromising that he left the one on his table and Inscribed de tails of the others in his notebook. Some Journals declare that ho acted as a secret service agent for Austria and that Count Spannocchl would have to leave his post. Baron von Vngern-Sternberg'a friends wonder how a secret service ' agent could lack money. Csarlna'a Health Improves. I understand that the ciaxina's health shows great Improvement. While her majesty Is still extremely nervous the attacks which it was feared for a time would result In complete loss cf reason have ceased and the royal physicians now hold out the hope that with complete rest the health of her majesty may be re stored. The csar Is In better health and spirits than he has been for years. New Siberian Railroad. A new Southern Siberian railway via Orsk, Akmollnsk, -Semlpalatlnsk and Barn aul is to be butlt at a cost of $$6,000,000. Financial circles In St. Petersburg- are exercised by a rumor that the minister of war refuses permission to foreign com panies to work the Maikop oil fields. The ciar Is said to be desirous of keeping In Russian hands the sources of liquid fuel for the fleet. The Judicial committee of the Duma has reported against a proposal to abolish totallsators on Russian race courses.- It was pointed out that the government ob tained over 32,260,000 annually from its per centage on the totallsators, this amount being devoted to the breeding of thoroughbreds. McQTTOWW, Secretary 1UXI COM KBXCXAXi CLUB. BnhL Idaho. MOVING PICTURES FOR CHINA Jananeae Firms Are Uakiag Enor mous Snms Oat of the Now Crnae. TIENTSIN. July 30.-(Speclal Dispatch to The Bee.) The cinematograph has caught the Chinese tastn to such an extent that German and Japanese firms are- making enormous sums In China with moving picture shows. The Chinese like war scenes best, but not the western Idea of humor. 500 Bushels of Po tatoes to the Acre YOU know that potatoes are always staple. Potatoes are like gold. The markets fluctuate very UUle on potatoes. An4- U you have GOOD potatoes you CAN ALWAYS FIND A MAR KET FOR THEM. This Is the most remarkable potato country In ALL THE WORLD. The 8nake River Valley has been known to produce EIGHT HUN DRED AND FIFTY J3USHEL3 OF POTATOES TO THE ACRE. You can RAISE POTATOES IN THIS VALLEY. RAISE THEM AND GET MONEY FOR THEM. Write to us about this. We have the most handsomely Illustrated booklet written about this, THE TWIN FALLS TRACT in South ern Idaho, that has been printed for a long while. It Is mighty In forming, too. IT IS FREE AND WE WILL SEND ONE COPY TO YOU IF YOU WILL JUST WRITE A POSTAL CARD RE QUEST. WRITE TODAY. J. E. WHITE TWIN FALLS. IDAHO "emnion's- off-' Grades Possopatedl Daw 99 Skepticism of a Former Prominent Dakota Public Official Overcome and He Made a New Man ' In Three Days By The Neal Three Day Drink Habit Cure A Remarkable Letter Read It ACREAGE TRACTS FOR THE INVESTOR OK FOR THE SMALL FARMER THIS is our specialty. From One to One Thousand acres. This business is made to serve your Interests. No sum of mooey, however small, is two small to get our best attention And no sum, however large, Is tdo large to tax our capacity to TO PLACE AND PLACE WITH PROFIT TO THE INVESTOR. We would like to have you write to us for our booklets, literature and other informa tion. We are sure that you want to know about IDAHO. It is the last West and the rap idly growing section of the United States. Here you can make big profits on small In vestments. Land can be' bought on credit. Write Ri(M Nov, Write Iodif GRAY a GRAY INVESTMENTS. POCATELLO, . . IDAHO lse can be enfored In a court of Justice, In the absence of fraud or dureas (which love, in and of Itself cannot be legally con sidered), and It matters not that In making It to me. or you'll get no permit for that (money In exchange for It. then that prd-.i mm in i n:rago. And there as no help for It. That meant losing many feet of the roll, and the best pait of the climax, but the censor's word . - inemur-.tne Bargain tne lover or belovrd ngree3 to der scene cut from.lt. and a "reading no- give a great deal more becausa the trans- .....-,.., .-,.,., wnai nal happened action was looked in ine niatus. ine policeman wrapped the clipping up carefully, labeled It. and took It to hla office to be stored away. When the film Is sent elsewhere, theae censored parts are restored to the oners. The Hat of objectionable featurea Is not a long one, but rather broad, and leaves much to the dlrcrrtlon of the censor. Crime must not be presented In a heroic aspect; there must be no murders; no burglaxs or other criminals are allowed to escape the police. If the film puts the erring boy In Jail, or restores him, repentant, to the arms of hla mother, with a. promise never to do so again, the poilce recognise the whole some moral that has been brought home, and apprcve. Faithless wives, wayward husbands, kidnappings, hold-ups. slugging matches, and any form of suggestlveneas also come under the ban In Chicago. Chi cago Post. If yu have anything to sea or trade advertise it In The Be Want Ad col umaa and set quick result was looked at through the eves of love, or that it was not looked at at all, the parties being, as tradition ha It. blinded by love. Admits the Lor Phase, So here. It may be, that If the defendant had not been In love with the plaintiff, he mould hav agreed to treat her exactly a he would have treated her husband had he lived (queer promise that) and give her the same amount of monev and royalties, had he not been in love with her, but she had an Interest In her deceased husband's contract, and to benefit himself by making the contract with the Remirgton Arms Co , he had to obtain her release of that inter est, and when In order to obtain that re- ' leas ha promised to give her .H and' one-fourth of thirty-five cents on every gun manufactured, he must live up to his con tract "It may be, too, that he was not alto gether disinterested in his love for plain tiff, for he was ever so much more ardent before b secured the releae than he was ; Sioux Falls. 8. D July 11, 1910. Captain G. .A. Ludlow, Manager Neal Institute, Sioux' Falls, S.iD. My Dear Sir: A few weks ago I entered your institute, a miserable, discouraged, dissipated slave to a long standing liquor habit. When I first read of your "Three day cure" I bad little faith In it, for it did not seem pos sible for you to do in three days what I had striven to do for nearly twenty years by tbe exertion of my will power as tar as I was able to exert it. For years it seemed that tbe very demons of Hades held me in their grasp and toyed j with my misery. I exerted all the will power I possessed to break away, from the curse; would walk back streets to i avoid paseing saloons, shutting myself up at home when I felt the craving. But all this was Ineffectual, for the least excitement would unnerve me snd render me unable to resist drinking. I shall not enumerate tbe number of good I business positions I have been forced to resign on account of an uncontrollable appetite fcr liquor. 1 can never estl- j mate the tears and heartaches it has wrung from my family and friends. Tears were In vain, pleadings unavailable, j Sitting one evening in a hotel at Pierre, my nerves racked and unstrung from the constant use of liquor fo" . weeks, discouraged beyond all hope, I felt that the end must tome. I will spare you from a recital of the dark, desperate contemplations that seized upon me during that awful hour of despair. On a table near at hand 1 saw a Sioux City dally and the first thing that attracted my attention was your advertisement of the "N'eal Cure." I read and reread it. I pondered over it during the night I could not sleep wondering, yet doubting if it possessed the merits claimed for it. I resolved to test it as a last resort and came ta Sioux Falls ou the first train and entered your institute and j submitted unreservedly to your treatment. After the third day I found myself a free man. The old craving for all j kinds of stimulants was entirely gone. And now, after several days have passed a feeling of disgust arises when-1 ever a thought of liquor comes to me. The past seems some horrible dream. I no longer fear to trust myself, but i animated by a spirit of hope and courage I can face the world and feel that I am a man mong men. During periods; when I was not drinking I thought my mental faculties were normal, but now I realize that they were haiy and: whimsical. I can now think clearer, quicker, and nobler than I have been able to do for nearly twenty years. I can not understand how such a change can be effected, but I positively know that It has been sccomplisbed in my case. The poverty of language prevents my expressing the gratitude I feel for this happy deliverance. Life is trans-: formed from a terrible phantasm to a beautiful reality. Once more the sun shines for me through the rifts In the; clouds, the finger of hope points to a beautiful beyond for which I have not even dared to pray. Wishing you all God's speed In the noble work In which you are engaged, with elncerest gratitude, I remain. Yours truly, Are You Going to Buy Land Ne lumtr tbonld think of bujlng a bona before Mine a copy of our Journal. It ha Imnde, cltr oroptrty tn', stak or good sdrtlu4 In It from vary state in the union, lu that you can (Ind Juat what you !ah In Ita columna. It raachaa 0,ie readors oach laau. Advertising rataa, l oar word. Sand too lor 1 months' trial subscription. It will be stopped nt tha end of n months snlaaa you rsnav. FARM AND HEAL ESTATE JOURNAL, 'ibAfclt, IOWA. Ncw'i the day and Noto's the hour" i rm x- -J Jillll" 1 .pi eC THE BEER YOU LIKE HAVE A CASE SENT HOME I, H. F. Harris, notary public in and for Minnehaha county, do certify that the above printed testimonial Is the exact copy of the original letter held by George A. Ludlow and shown to me this 12th day of July, 1910. (SeslJ H. F. HARRIS. Notary Public, Minnehaha County. , ' MY DEAR MAN IF YOU ARE AFFLICTED do as this prominent man did. go to the nearest INSTITUTE or send to them for the home treatment at once and rest assure? that, as he s-iys, "Life Is transformed from a terrible phantasm to a beautiful reality" by the Neal Treatment In Just three days' time and the best proof of this is that any Neal Institute will leave it absolutely to you to say whether the cure should be paid for or not at the end of tbt third day's treatment. IN THIS TERRITORY go to nearett Institute or address the PRESIDENT. HON. JAS. E. BRUCE, the well known banker at Atlantic. Iowa, or any NEAL INSTITUTE at either OMAHA, NEBRASKA, DE3 MOINES, DAVEN PORT OR SIOUX CITY, 10WX. JOHN NITTLER I 3224 SO. 24TH 8TRCCT It IND. A-1420 A HAY FEVER OS ASTHMA If you suffer, call or writ me at one and learn of something you will be grate ful for the balance of your life J. 0. McBRIDE, Stella, Neb,