Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 18, 1910, EDITORIAL, Page 5, Image 13

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER IS, 1910.
WHICH IS THE WEAKER SEX?
An Answer to the Question in the
. Instances Related. . .
MERE MAN NEAR HIS FDTISH
.Rotable Demonstration ml EnlaniM
la Daarlaar, nlan aulas, Hon,
back Hiding aaa
Climbing.
Women are doing soma qulta respect
able atunta these days. One writer who
haa got a little lint f soma of these
achievement, submit. It aa proof that the
phrase -the weaker " will have to be
declared obsolete, at any rate as a syno
nym for woman.
"It Is the custom wtien a Polish couple
Is married." says this writer in the
Housekeeper, "to have a big wedding
dance. The bride Is expected to earn her
dowry herself. Bhe dances In a mad,
ceaseless whirl with every man present
until each man tires and quits. On stop
ping the man must forfeit SI. Naturally
the bride wishes to tlra out aa many men
as possible, for each man represents II.
At a recent wedding celebration In Illi
nois Jlosle Zapowa won 1 3 BO.
"Bhe began at o'clock Wednesday
morning, when she became Mrs. Zapowa,
Slid only stopped at 1 o'clock Thursdsy
evening, for the simple reason that all
tha men ' dancers were human wrecks,
the had outdanced men. And then
aha looked sorry that she had not Invited
more men to the wedding.
Mrs. Zapowa weighed 115 pounds. The
dance were In watts time; an automatic
scale showed that each time she touched
her light fantastic to the floor she lifted
eight pounds. She lifted this at the rate
of StO pounds to the minute or 3M.00Q
pounds during the evening. This Is equal
to twelve horse-power.
"Here Is a picture: It la circus day.
White topped tents roof the block. There
Is the dull smell of the sawdust ring and
the occasional wild, startling cry from
th animal tent, the gentle roar of the
crowd everywhere. A big cannon Is un
covered, a human being Is crowded do i
Its muzzle. The cannon booms, and up ..i
the air swift as a rocket, rigid, graceful,
shoots a woman.
"Another picture: It Is the finish ot
a great swimming race. The shore Is
lined with people. The sea Is running
rough and the swimmers floundering an
they struggle over the last few yards.
Boats In the rear pick up the exhausted
men and physicians with towels over
their shoulders apply their remedies. A
great shout goes up from the crowd as a
awlmmer crawls out of the water the
winner. Bhe Is a mere slip of a girl.
Hoasehold Activities.
: "The average housewife who looks
after her own home and children expends
as much physical energy as the average
husband In his routine of business. A
pedometer would show that the average
woman walks as far as the average man
In a day; If there were a machine to
measure it would record that she lifts as
much. Being more nimble, she makes
more motions than a man In a day.
There It Is; add It up yourself. She walks
as far, lifts as much and makes more
small motions. ,
"But. argues the man with the square
at Jaw, such things are accomplished
only by the workwoman, by the woman
who haa tolled all her life, who was born
behind the kitchen hoe.
"The woman who danoes all night Im
prisoned In tight clothes accomplishes
just as much of an athletic feat as the
fagot gatherer of Italy who stumblea
along' with a donkey's load of wood on her
head. The soolety woman often displays
strength that makes the washerwoman
gasp,
A case In point Is that of Mrs. George
8. Robinson of New York. When Mrs.
Robinson was a bride of only six weeks.
slender, pink cheeked, she set a record
that still stands. She had made a com
pact with her husband that they should
never be separated, and when he entered
his yacht In the Upton cup race from New
York to Bermuda she calmly announced
that she was going to accompany him. Mr.
Roblnsvn gasped, but she reminded him
of the agreement and made herself ready.
"No one thought the Gauntlet, the Rob
inson boat, had the ghost of a show, and
when It became known that she was going
to pilot It. the hope of her friends fled.
It was a stormy voyage over the roughest
course In the Atlantic for 700 miles and In
a twenty-eight-foot boat at that. Mrs.
Robinson stood at the wheel day after day,
night after night, with little food and less
sleep. The boat was a close second; the
glory of the race went to Mrs. Robinson.
Sir Thomas Upton was moved to eulogy In
a cable:
" 'Please convey my compliments to that
plucky little woman skipper, and tell her
she has my deepest admiration.'
Horseback Riding.
"Another New York woman who has es
tablished a record for strength when en
gaged In social pleasure Is Miss Edith Col
ford, who Is one ot the most daring cross
country riders In Amsrlca. When only .18
years ot age she became distinguished tor
her high jumps. Few women try to follow
.,- her, for she thinks nothing of clearing a
six-foot fence.
"For pure horsemanship and strength
please observe an Oklahoma girl. Miss Lu
cille Mulhall, daughter of Colonel Jack
. Mulhall. She Is the champion steer roper
of the world among women. In a contest
at MouUi McAlester, prise ot $10,000, she
won by far and away, roping her .steer
In the time ot eighteen seconds. When a
cowboy In roping a steer gets In ths min
ute class he is a personage of veneration.
Mis Mulhall laughs at her prowess and
deems steer roping only a tonic.
"Many hold that women who display
great strength On horseback do so only In
brilliant flashes for a few minutes at a
time, and that no woman could ever make
a cavalry ride. Miss Adele Von Ohl ot
Plalnfleid, JS. i t Is a confutation of this
belief. Her early life was spent In South
Dakota as a cowgirl, where she took part
In the great roundups. Once 1.0U0 cattle
stampeded, charging straight at her; she
spurred hee horse for a sharp cliff and
made a flying leap, .ending safely thirty
feet below. Cn the plains she often rode
eighty miles in a day.
"Nor were these days exhibitions, for now
she often rides from her home in New
Jersey to New York shops In a day alxty
miles and back In a day. She bas spent
twenty hours a day In the saddle without
evil effects; In fact, she called It a lark.
"It Is not the mature woman alone who
establishes riding records. There Is a girl
jockey In the west who Is the talk of ths
race track. Miss Dorothy Klncel has lid-
den In a score of races and Is not yet IS
years old. She is a Jockey born. Her
early Ufa was spent la South Dakota, the
same as that of Miss Von Ohl. where she
was a girl of the plains. Bhe has rlddsn
, In bait a dosen states, and won goodly
purses for her backers; she has the knack
of making an old skate win.
Taklaar Risks.
"Once she mounted an outlaw at a race
without knowing that the horse bad a
jrlolous disposition. While warming him
tip the animal suddenly tbrew himself back
ward. Tbe girl leaped out of the saddle
In tbe nick ot time, but the crowd thought
1 ier killed.
"I shall ride blm now If he kills me,"
aid the girt.
"But the crowd protsted to the secre
tary. The girl's declaration was announced
from the judges' stand and a cheer went
up. Ride him she did and win the purse
she did. When March comes around she
does not go to school in the afternoon, but
trains) her horses Instead. She Is her Own
groom and spends every possible moment
with her mounts. This schoolgirl has won
derful stiength, riot merely flashes of
strength, but great muscles. While weigh
ing only 107 pounds she can pick up a
inc-pound keg ot nails with her finger
ends.
"And speaking of riding. Theodors Roose
velt achieved some fame by setting the
army officers a pace and riding HO miles
In a Any. And the president got
no little pleasure out of referring to It.
Then one fine morning Mrs. Herbert Wads
worth started out for a pleasant little ride.
She changed horses several' times, so much
did she enjoy riding, and when she drew
rein that evening, sixteen hours later,
she bad made Just 159 rm.es. Then there
was an ominous silence on the part of the
cavalry officers who had complained at
ninety miles and the president began talk
ing about shooting big game.
( oilrili In the Water.
"Of all the contest places in .which
woman meets man the fairest Is In the
water. Every diy practice docs not fit one
better than the other. And here It Is that
woman so predominantly excels. Man for
man, woman for woman, woman Is by far
the better swimmer. There are more good
swimmers proportionately among women
than among men. The feats of two or
three women in the water stand out as al
most unbelievable. Unbelievable until one
begins to look Into the mockery of the
phrase 'the weaker sex."
"Last fcptember forty contextants set out
to swim Hell Gate. New York. Nearly all
the contestants were members of the life
saving corps and weatherheaten. A slender,
nymph-like girl of 18 kept in the back
ground as far as possible while the swim
mers were lining up. She seemed so out
ot place among the thick-shouldered, deep
chested lite savers that the crowd gaped
at her in astonishment.
" 'It's a shame to let a girl like that go
Into old Hell Gate,' said a shoreman. 'It
will Just play with her.'
"The lace began and ' the slender girl
set out with long overstrokes that sent up
a ripple of epplause. Seven miles she
fought her way, with the launches In the
rear picking up the spent swimmers. The
mill race off Ward Island caught her and
buffeted her as If she were an eggshell.
Hundreds of people were awaiting her on
shore. Thrusting aside proffered hands,
she ran ashore and shook out her hair, a
heroine. Thus Miss Adelaide Trapp, a
teacher in tho Brooklyn public schools, be
came the first woman to swim Hell Gate.
"Often girls of a very tender age de
velop surprising natatorial endurance. At
Boston, In the suburb of Dorchester, lives
Rose Pitonoff. When only IS years old
Rose Pltonotf swam one and three-quarter
miles in Just forty-four minutes. For
mere child she has wonderful endurance,
and scarcely a week passes during the
swimming season that she does not make
an endurance swim.
Walking; and Motorlngr.
"Woman has always been mincing of
step as accepted thinking tells us, but with
all that she has established records that
make the greatest male pedestrians nerv
ous. Mrs. Frank Savlle, wife ot the British
sportsman, Is typical. Her father was
celebrated alpine climber and taught her
the ait of walking. She Is the only woman
who has ever walked across Montenegro.
And she carried a parasol. Her longest
day'a walk on this trip was from Moracha
monastery to Zhub, a distance ot thirty
three miles over snow and rough (round.
one mile of which wouJd daunt 'aa average
man.
"Even in motoring woman has shown
great courage and strength. Mme. Camlile
du Oast of Paris is a great auto racer, com
peth-ig with the best drivers 1a Franoa and
winning. be carries a mecahnlo, aa all
racers do, but she uses blm only when It
Is absolutely necessary. She drives a 35-
horsepower car, and often makes seventy
five miles an hour on cross-country courses.
To hold the wheel when an automobile's
tearing along faster than an express train
demands great strength. In a race from
Paris to Berlin with 100 entries she finished
nineteenth ,and with that she stopped on
the way to assist a friend whose machine
had upset, staying with him until help ar
rived.
"A few years ago a rather slender woman
gave up teaching Latin at Purdue univer
sity In Indiana and began climbing moun
tains. She now has twenty mountains to
her credit. Miss Annie Peck, although
nearly 0 years of age, scales peaks where
human foot Is unknown.
In Worcester, Mass., lives a woman who
Is noted for her gentle manners and her
mountain climbing. She Is a daughter ot
former Governor Bullock ot that state. In
July, 1907, she set the woman's record for
mountain climbing by an ascent on tbe Nun
Kun range in the Himalayas. . This trip
took three weeks. All this time she was
under the greatest strain, both from the
height and from the cold. She had to rub
snow on her feet to keep them from being
frostbitten and to strike them sharply with
her Ice ax to find whether or not they
really were bitten by the cold. She strug
gled on until she bad reached an elevation
of M.MO feet"
NEW RULES FOR CATHOLICS
Text of Decree Goreming Reception
of First Communion.
AGE FOR CHILDREN REDUCED
Slashed with a Haiar,
wounded with a gun, or pierced by a rusty
nail, Bucklen's Arnica Salve heals the
wound. Guaranteed. 25c. For sale by
Beaton - Drug Co.
A Knock aad a Boost.
. Women who havs been abandoned by
nuahands ana are seeking an advertlsln
scheme to help ths boarding house business
might do worse than to copy the form of
the following taken irom the Tunkhannock
(Fa.) Republican and New Age:
"Warning i ake Notice! Whereas, my
husband, George Koawnurant, son or th
late John RosenKrant and Maria Rosen
grant, formerly of Korkston townBhlp, has
left the house rented iy me and for wnic
I paid the rent and has left my board and
taken his bed it end alone with him and sold
It. this Is to warn all persons not to harbor
or to trust him on my account, from thl
bate, as t will pay no bills of his contract
inn I shall continue to pay my rent and to
keep up my table in the usual form in hi
absence, and having one less to feed 1 wl
I pardoned. I think, if 1 say in better
style than formerly. There is a hard winter
creeping- along and he may Incite your
sympathies to trust him on my account
seeing that I am doing very well, thank
you, out you Just keep In mind that you
have received this warning and govern
yourself accordingly.
"THERESA ROSENORANT
"Tunkhannock, Pa.. August 10. 1910.
"HoMth Hrl1 street."
fevea Years tbe Mlslmam Fixed by
Cta rest Authorities Some Prac
tices Criticised and For
Much Interest Is felt In Roman Catholic
clroles regarding the degree recently ap
proved by Pope Plus X, reducing the sge st
hlch children may receive first commun
ion. The decree was drafted by Cardinal
Ferrate, prefect of the sacred congregation
on the discipline of the sacraments. It has
not been promulgated officially In the
western diocese as yet. but wss read In all
the Cathollo churches ot Philadelphia last
Sunday.
The decree orders radical changes In
rules governing the administration of holy
communion and the sacrament ot penance
to children. Its most Important features
are announcements that hereafter the age
of discretion at which children may re
ceive holy eommunlon, as well as penance,
shall be that at whloh a child begins to
reason, about the age of 1 years, and that
the practice of permitting children at this
age to die without first receiving the sac
rsment must be stopped at once.
In the opinion of members of the Sacred
Congregation, "It Is an utterly, detestable
buse not to administer viaticum and ex
treme unction to children having attained
the use of reason and to bury them accord
ing to the manner of Infants. The ordln-
rlps of places shall proceed severely
sgalnst those who do not abandon this cus
tom," it says.
Admit Children to Confession.
Again, the sacred college, discussing the
uestion of permitting children to spproach
the sacrament of penanoe, makes this
strong declaration:
"The custom of not admitting children to
confession, or of not absolving them, is
absolutely condemned. Wherefore, the or
dinaries of places using those means which
the. law gives them shall see that It Is done
away with."
In most of the Cathollo churches there Is
a rule that children shall not be permitted
to receive their first holy communion un
til they have reached a certain age. This
age varies In different localities from 10
to 14 and 15 years. In some Catholic dio
ceses there le also a custom of not allowing
children to go to confession until such
time as they are ready to receive their
first communion.
There has been in vogue In this country
for many years also the custom of not
giving children holy communion on their
ileathebed unless they had reached a cer
tain age, which Is usually 10 years. Chil
dren under that age are permitted to die an
"Innocent Infants."
Both these practices are strongly con
demned bv the Sacred college and priests
are ordered to make radical changes so
as to meet requirements of the new orders.
The decree declares that in the preparation
of children for their first holy communion
It shall not bo necessary for them to have
at their fingers', ends a "complete and per
fect knowledge of Christian doctrine." They
should be taught the catechism according
to their ability to gradually understand it.
the decree points out. and also be taught
to distinguish the eucharlst from common
and material bread and to approach the
the sacred table with a devotion becoming
their age.
Children and the Sacraments.
After reviewing the various enactments
of the early church which permitted chil
dren to receive holy communion at the same
time they were baptised, the pronounce
ment' tells of customs now In vogue re
garding the approach to the sacrernenU by
children of various ages.
Here are the .new regulations coveting
the reception of penance and holy com
munlon by children as set ubwn by the
Sacred college and approved by the pope:
The age of discretion required both for
confession and communion Is the time
when, the child begins to reason, that Is,
about the seventh year, more or less. From
this tlmo on the obligation' of satisfying
the precept of both confession and com
munion begins.
Both for first confession and first com
munion a complete and perfect knowledge
of Christian doctrine is not necessary. The
child will, however, be obliged to gradually
learn the whole catechism according to Its
ability.
The knowledge of Christian doctrine re
requlred In children In order to be prop
erly prepared for first holy communion Is
that they understand, according to their
capacity, those mysteries of faith which
are necessary as a means of salvation, that
they be able to distinguish the eucharlst
from common and material bread, and also
approach the sacred table with the devo
tion becoming their age.
The obligation of the precept ot confes
sion and communion which rests upon the
children falls back principally upon those
In whose care they are; that is, parents,
confessors, teachers and their pastor. It
belongs to the father, however, or to the
person taking his place, aa Is also to the
pastor, to admit the child to first holy
communion.
The pastor shall take care to announce
and distribute general communion once or
several times a year to the children, and
on these occasions they shall admit not only
the first communicants, but also others
who, with the consent ot their parents and
the pastor, have already been admitted to
he sacred table before. For both classes,
several days of Instruction and preparation
shall precede.
Those who have the care of children should
use all diligence, so that after first com
munion the children shall often approach
the holy table even dally, If possible, as
Jesus Christ and mother church deslrs,
and that they do It with a devotion becom
ing their age. They should bear In mind
their most important duty, by which they
are obliged to have the children present at
the public Instructions In catechism, other
wise they must supply this religious In
struction In some other way.
The custom of not admitting children to
confession, or of not absolving them, Is ab
solutely condemned. Wherefore the ordi
naries of places using these means which
the law gives them shall see that It Is done
away with.
It Is an utterly detectable abuse not to
administer viaticum and extreme unction
to children having attained the use of rea
son and to bury them according to Uie
manner of Infants. The ordinaries of places
shall proceed severely against those who
do not abandon this custom.
I. CARDINAL FERRATA, Prefect.
PH. OIUSTINI. Secretary.
PICTURE SHOW FOR GOULD
Probably the Largest Holler Map
Ever Made Jost Finished
for Him.
When the Missouri Pacific railway di
rectors gather for the first time in their
new board room at 10 Broadway, New
York, within a few days, they will have
ready for their deliberations a great wall
map of the railways of the United States
that Is probably the largest roller map
ever made. The map measures thirty-five
feet across and Is forty-five feet high when
unrolled. In Its mahogary frame, which
takes up nearly the whole side of the
Gould board room, only a fourth of the
depth of the map shows between the roll
ere at the top and bottom.
The map has been a year In making
and eight men have worked nearly con
tinuously upon It It wss made In sections
about ten feet square. These were as
sembled a few weeks ago on the floor of
the Twelfth regiment armory and sewed
and pasttd together so skillfully that it
requires close examination to detect the
Juncture lines. Then It wss rolled up on
Its rollers and transported down town on a
theatrical truck.
A shade roller manufacturing company
made two rollers. The top one, which Is
simply a giant spring roller made of steel
Is the largest thing of the kind ever con
structed. The manufacturers declined to
guarantee that It would work properly, and
Mr, Gould had It made at his own risk.
The roller is five Inches In diameter and
thirty-seven feet long. Sluce It Is impos
sible to construct, even cf steel a tube
supported at the ends only that would not
sag sufficiently to make the map hanging
from It show distortion, Mr. Gray used a
roller cradle, which he designed for the
Harriman map, which holds the roller up
at the middle. This consists of two smaller
rollers placed Just far enough apart under
ths big one to give a little depression, Into
which the big one, with the inup rolled
around It, sits. They roll with the big
one, and are provided with springs and
adjustments to make up for the varying
lkl.l,n.u f (ha rnll.A 111! Ill HI I. Which
Hrolls face-on to the big roller, thus making
It so that the little cradle rollers touch
only the canvas back of the map.
About a fourth of the depth of the map
shows at one time. By a crank and auto
matic chain and sprocket arrangement a
man at one end of the mahogany frame
can make the two rollers move In unison
and bring any point In the United States
down to the eye lesel. It vau Mr. Gonitis
first plan to have the map rolled by an
electrlo motor, but he was advised that the
wnole apparatus might be ruined It some
body who didn't know how should try to
work the current and make a mistake.
The apparatus now works perfectly, the
great map rolling up and down smoothly
without a hitch or wrinkle. New York
Times.
Why Johnny Cried.
Little Tom and Jack were brothers, Tom
being the elder. One evening, as their
mother was getting ready to go out, she
heard a great deal of screaming In the next
room. So she went to find out the cause
and asked Tom why Jack wtis screaming.
"Oh, mother! He was crying because 1
tried to see how big his mouth could stretch
with your glove stretcher."
Every automobile
livery
The Slim Woman is Wincing
The day of the slim woman's triumph
has arrived. "The thinner one Is the more
stylish," say the dressmakers.
This would have been sad news for th
fat woman a year ago. She would have
had to try dieting or exercise. Nowaday
howevsr. the woman who is too fat for the
styles goes to a druggist and gets a case
of Marmola Prescription Tablets, one of
which she takes after each meal and at
bedtime and so reduces ber superfluous
flesh quickly.
These tablets, being mads In accordance
with the famous prescription, are perfectly
harmless, and they are, also, the most eco
nomical preparation a person can buy, for
thsy cost only 75 oents for a large case,
one ot which Is frequently enough to start
a person to losing fat at the rate ot U or
U ounces a day. Pretty nearly every drug
gist keeps this tablet In slock, but should
yours be sold out, you can easily obtain
a case by sending to the makers, ths Mar
mola Company, (& Farmer Bldg., Detroit,
kljcu.
automobile
garage and
Everything of the least
Every
dealer
repair shop
importance about automobiles
and automobile dealers will be printed in the Auto
mobile Section of the Ak-sar-ben Number of The Bee.
It will be the most complete story of the industry, and
of the records of cars ever given here.
Prospective buyers will find it of invaluable aid in the selection of cars hand
led in Omaha and Council Bluffs.
Don't miss it.
It will be issued Sunday, Oct. 2
PASSING OF '
LIQUOR CURE
INSTITUTIONS
Doctors Using New Blackstono
Treatment and Curing Their
Own Alcoholic Cases.
Treatment is an Absoluts Spe
cific for Alcoholism Method
. is Not a Secret.
CURES ANY CASE
IN THREE DAYS
Blackstone 1 Company Gives
Privilege to a Physician in
Each Nebraska Town. '
Successful Treatment of Drink
Habit Does Away with Big
Fees of Institutes.
Thirty-four physicians of Nebraska have
made spplication to the Blackstone Com
pany for the privilege of using the new
three-day treatment for alcoholism In
their home towns.
The Hlsckstone method Is destined to
revolutionise the treatment of liquor
drinking. In the United States, eseb. year,
over $3.0iKV00 Is paid into Institutions by
the families and friends of drinking men.
nd In return a doubtful cure Is effected.
There is no rensmi ryw why the physi
cians themselves should not take tip the
metier of treating and curing alcohollo
patients, thereby greatly adding to their
practice as well as keeping the money
paid to Institutions by their patients at
home.
The Mlackstone treatment Is put tip
especially for physicians. The physlcta
using It In nls practice need not give It
out that he Is using the Itlackstone meth
od, lvach case will respond in three days
all craving and desire for liquor will
disappear and the patient will be greatly
benefited' mentally and physlclally. The
treatment contains no poisonous, delte
rious or cumulative drugs. It cures by
eliminating the accumulative alcohollo
poison from the system. It la the prea-
enoe of tn.j poison that cause, nerve
demand for alcohollo liquor. lea. than
per cent of those treated by the Black-'
tone method will relapse within the year
of treatment. It can well be called .
peclflo for alcoholism.
No physloian need hesitate to use the
Blackstone treatment In his practice.
There Is nothing secret about the method
and the results are satisfactory In every
case. The remedy Is supplied to Phy
sicians at a cost very little In advance of
the cont of the drugs It contains and the
cost of distribution. It Is sold to phy
sicians with the understanding that the
results shall be entirely satisfactory to
both phyHician and patient or there shall
be no charge for the remedy. No otber
assurance that treatment has been un
satisfactory in any case Is required by
the Blackstone company than the phy
sician's word.
The Blackstone company, with Omaha
offices In rooms 809 to til Brandels The
ater building, Invites physicians deslrtng
to use tho remedy In their1 practice to
call or write of r particulars. It la de
sired that a physlcan In each town In
the ' state of Nebraska outside the city
of Omaha take up the curing of alco
holism by the Blackstone method. The
company can and will send to the phy
sicians lit the various towns, many, patients.
Am many applications are being re
ceived dally from physicians over the
state, this announcement and offer may
not be repeated, therefore those Interest
ed should write or call without delay.
PILES CURED
WITHOUT OPERATION
OR PAIN
PAY WHEN CURED
A written guarantee given In all cases
trested. Hundreds of the most prominent
6sople In Omaha and from all parts of the
nlted Btatss have been cured by BE.
MAX WE L. I., who has reel.ea in Omaha
lor Zb years, Fatleut. must come to the
orrice ror treatment 624 Bee Building,
Omaha, Neb. phone Douglas 1424. ' ,
tout tnis out tor reference.)
cfcr?,(o
CURED
NO CME-IO PAT
la other wort.,
you pair py our
, , .mull firnfrnaloiial
"hen cored end aatliflad. writs fojut
GERMAN - AMERICAN INSTITUTE.
1QQ4 GrtnJ Ave., Kaoau city. Mo.
Are You Going to Buy Land
N larm.r should think ot burins a hosts before
Mini a Kufr ot our journal. It has lands, alty
property and stocks or fouda advartlsad In It from
vary Maw In th. union, so that joa oaa Hod )uM
what rou with In It. column.. It mcbu SO.oue
rv.ti.ra e.Lh liiut, Advertising retaa, So par wore,
(and lOo fur 3 months' trial autwerlpUoo. ft will he
tuppra at in. ana ot s niontba untaao you rat
SA11M An U ItKAb as 1 AT. JUlflNAJU
THAkiK. IOWA.
OCEAN SltAMiHlPS
CLARK'S ok'itNT CRUISE
rsb. 4. (400 up to Tl Days. All Expense..
4 High-Class Kound-the-World Tour.
October. November. Jenuarr.
T. O. CLiBK, Times Building. Mow York.
. . sutia, lost raraam St., Omaha.
IB
mm