Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1911)
0 THJS BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 2S. 1911 The o mai la daily dee rOUNDEDBT EDWARD ROSE WATER. VICTOR ROSE WATER, EDITOR. Entered at Omaha postofflce M second class matter. TERMS Or SUBSCRIPTION. . Funday Bee. one year K W returdav Isee. one year M" Iallv Bee (without undy. one year 4 00 Dally Be and Sunday, on year SOO DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Evening Bee (with Bunds v. per month. T-e I'ally Bee (Including Sunday), per mo..S Dallv Bee (without Sunday), per mo....H Address all complaints of Irregularities In delivery to Cltv Circulation Dept. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order payable to The Bee Publishing company. Only t-eent atamps received In payment of mall accounts. Personal cbecka. ex cept on Omaha and eastern exchange, sot aooepted. OFFICES Omaha The Bee Bunding. Couth Omaha 62 N. Twenty-fourth St. Council Bluffs 15 Scott St. Lincoln M Little Building: Chleaao 1MD Marquette Building. Kansas Cltv Reliance Building. New York tt West Thirty-third St. Washington 72S Fourteenth St., N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and editorial matter should be addressed Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. AUGUST CIRCULATION. 47,543 6tae of Nebraska. County of Douglas, sa: Dwlght Williams, circulation manager ef The pee Publishing company, being dulv sworn, says that the average dally circulation. Ieis spoiled, unused and re turned copies, for the month of August, 1311. was 47, M3. DWKJHT WILLI AM 3. Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before ma this 4th day of September. 191L (Seal.) ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Public. lafceerlbera leaylaa the city temporarily should hare The nee nailed to them. Address trill ha changed aa oftea aa reaaested. "Our Lady of the Snows" gave your Uncle Sam an Icy mitt The normal condition of the throne of Spain la to totter, so don't be too easily excited. Why do they add "of Georgia" In speaking of Hoke Smith? Was there ever another one? Confession may be good for the soul, but turning from the evil thing confessed Is better. Postponement of the gaa case sug gests that perhaps the lawyers want time to raise the wind. Time never drags to the man in the habit of improving it. His prob lem la to get enough of It. . If France means to go to war with Germany it will pay It not to destroy any more of Its battleships. : Mr. Carnegie should give the War department run on his Peace Gazette to the cub reporter, Mr. Hobson. The gates to the King's highway are open. It is to be noted, too, that Ak-Sar-Ben'a gates always swing Inward. If those cross-the-country aviators do not hurry they may be mistaken for geese flying south for the winter and get shot. . Mr. Borden's greatest task, how ever, la yet before him, namely, of coming up to the Laurier record as premier of Canada. Perhaps It was the fear of sparing the rod and spoiling the child that Impelled Portugal to chase its little king off the throne. , Apparently Judge Grosscup was ready to retire until he found out somebody wanted him to, and then he decided to stick for the big ahow. Dan V. Stephens has made a handsome start World-Herald. Most all of them make handsome starts, but it is the first under the wire that wins. Lincoln's postal savings depository will be opened next week. The date for accepting postal savings at the Omaha postofflce will be announced later. Speaking of the "tonguelesa silence of the dreamlesa grave," what do you hear out of Champ Clark and Oscar Underwood now about that farmers' free list bill? . , An Englishman has Just laughed himself to death at a funny story The man who told it doubtless bad time to get out of the country first and avoid trouble. If an Omaha highwayman' really get out of an automobile to relieve a belated pedestrian of $1. all we can say is that he displayed mighty poor Judgment. It was Edmund Burke, wasn't It who said he knew not how to draw an Indictment against the whole people? Mr. Kipling could supply him w4th the information. The trouble with the progressives is that they are not sura whether the La Toilette boom la a toadstool or a mush room. St. Paul Dispatch. And when did that prodigal return to the fold. Good for the Ak-Sar-Ben knight who carried Omaha's banner to Fre mont! But they should try neat time to reach home earlier In the evenin If they want to be greeted by those alr-pierclng sirena. The new railway mall service divi sion, whose! headquarters Is to be at Omaha, Is to be known as the Four teenth division. Still, we believe we would gladly have taken it even had It been labeled "Thirteenth." Consolidation. Consolidation of Omaha and South Omaha Into one municipal corpora tion la being again agitated, and a movement started In South Omaha to resubmit the question at the coming election. Ae the original adrocate of consolidation, The Bee baa farored the merger at ererj promising op portunity. It waa almost tempted four yeara ago to take up with forc ible annexation, so obtuse did some of our South Omaha friends seem to be at that time to their own advan tage. Previous failed attempts at con solidation, however, have no neces sary bearing on the present effort except In this that the chief incen tive for Omaha, namely, to effect the merger In time to appear ai one city In the returns of the federal census, haa lapsed, and cannot recur until the new decade is in eight. The proposition, therefore, looks now much more like a one-sided bargain, and It rests with South Omaha as the principal beneficiary to carry the laboring oar. If South Omaha is ready to come In and be one with Omaha In affaire of municipal gov ernment, as It Is In social, Industrial nd commercial life, It should make Its wishes knows, and Omaha will doubtless try to accommodate. If Free List Bill Were Signed. It turna out that the wood pulp clause of the reciprocity bill passed by congress and approved by the president la the only part of the measure that becomes operative since Canada's rejection of the propo sition. So that the , United States stands to gain and not lose by the outcome. John Norrls, chairman of the committee on paper of the Amer ican Newspaper Publishers' associa tion, says that the zone of free pulp and paper will even be widened so as to Include all of the favored nations. But as to the general results, they may not be vital one way or the other. What, though, would have been the condition had President Taft signed. n stead of vetoed, the democratic so- called farmers' free list "bill? That bill provided for the ree admission first of agricultural Implements of every kind and description and many other commodities. Under the present tariff law these agricultural imple ments are admitted free to the United States from such countries as do not discriminate against us, but under the democratic measure the proposl tion wm not for reciprocity, but to give to the other countrlea discrim inating against us our marketa free and without restriction, while asking and receiving from Canada and the rest, nothing in return. Had the pres ldent approved that bill we would not only have been compelled to give tremendous concessions to Can ada without any returns, but we might have had to make similar con cessions to other nations under the most favored nation clause or put ourselves on bad terms with those nations. All this was pointed out at the time the democrata brought forward this free list bill. It was conceived in a spirit of antagonism to Mr. Taft and not with a view of Improving the condition of the American farmer. And yet democratic organs have the hardihood even now to declare that 'Upon the high and statesmanlike ground the democrata met him (Taft) more than half way." The fact Is, the president has aaved the democrata from themselves. Their farmers' free list bill waa a piece of political trickery through and through and the astonishing thing la that they are bold enough to attempt to defend It. Continuous Politics in Massachusetts Massachusetts is in the midst of another atate election. The demo crata have renominated Governor Fobs to succeed himself and an excit ing campaign is ahead. Rhode Island is the only other atate that elects a governor every year. Twenty-four states elect them every four years and twenty-one every two years. The governors of the territories of Art sons, Alaska and New Mexico have held office for terms of four feara. It la strange that old conservative statea like Massachusetts and Rhode Island should prefer the turmoil and turbulence that go with a general election every year instead of at greater intervale. The officers can scarcely get their seata warm until they have to begin laying planV for another campaign. The ideal, of course, la that the office will seek the man and the man will devote all his time and attention to hla office from the day he enters It until the day he leaves It, but Ideals In politics are Intangible, if not unknown quan titles. Massachusetts haa been in the vor tex of a political storm all the past year, at least since Eugene N. 'Foss became ita governor. Perhapa it haa experienced more of this sort o? thing than usual, owing to the peculiarly aggressive and ambitloua character of Mr. Foss. But that argues no mitl gatlon. Every time another man like Mr. Foss comes up the same thing will be gone through with again and so matter who the man may be; he la not going to forget when he becomes governor that in another twelve morth It will be time to elect n!m or his successor. They may need such excitement to stir their otherwise sedate life in thla grand old New England common- wealth, but one is bound to believe that it doea not make for the best tate government; that It does not inure to the most stable political or business conditions. Two years seems quite frequent enough to overturn state administrations. Of course, tt is not impossible to imagine' how, under certain conditions, two years or even one year, would be too great a period, but these conditions are, after all, up to the people to control. Air line Postal Boater Postmaster General Hitchcock has suggested In his brief flight with gov ernment mail one of the wonderful possibilities of aviation when it is reduced to i practical basis. He, himself, is elated at his test. It re quires no elsstlc imagination to pic- re the utilitarian advantage of the iropJane to the government when men learn how to run It without wrecking it and their own lives. Thus far .they have not acquired that secret. But aviation for mall carrylnr rur- poees might be developed safely here It would be less feasible for the transportation of persons. Espe cially does it seem so for short mail routes. Of course. If this science Is ever .so developed, we shall probably running our mall aeroplanes on e short lines for a long time before establishing transcontinental routes. But. that has been the history of every other system of travel and transportation, so it would argue nothing, necessarily, against the ulti mate complete success of aerial navi gation if it had to come that way. And, furthermore, that la also the way in which this very department of the government, the postofflce sys tem, has been and Is being developed. It la the way with, the later aeenciea of the department free "rural deliv ery, the postal savings bank and It will e so with the parcel dobL It Is the principle on which any system mat is worth while la brought to per fect fruition "First the blade, then the ear, then the full grain of the ear." Nature, itself, in the beginning of creation adopted the principle. With what spectacular force th possibilities of mail transportation tnrougn the air strikes iis; " How nicely it will fit into and subserve tne demands of this age of anxious rapidity, when everything- must he done with the thought of saving time. wny, an aeroplane could start from New York with, its load of mail and be in Omaha that same evening. Such rapid transit now might be too much Very well, then, that gives us the time we need to perfect It" A New .York minister once said that only 39 per cent of all that newspapers printed was worth while which led the New York World to re ply that that made a good case for the press; for if 89 per cent of all the effort of life were worth while. life was far from a failure. That is probably true with the Boston Na tlonals and St. Louis Browns, which have won fewer than a third of their games this season. The gentle insinuation is put out by the city comptroller that all some of the councilmen know about their office Is what they see once a month when they call to get their pay. Still, that Is some Improvement, for in older days they used to assign their warrants in advance to warrant brok- era or city contractors, and thus avoid the necessity of even calling to get their pay. An ordinance providing- for an oc cupation tax on dealers in coal and building supplies has made ita ap pearance in the city council. The suggestion that there la any cause and effect relation with the recent organization of local dealers "to pro tect the public against short weight ing," is ruled out of order. The city council has authorized the employment of a superintendent of gas street lighting at a salary of $125 per month, "Including horse hire." What Is the matter? Hasn anyone a second-hand automobile he wants to dispose of? Ah, ha, now see what you did. By defeating reciprocity in Canada, Mr. Trusts, you have got W. R. Hearst on your back with a threat to bring about reciprocity as a universal con dition. CANADA'S COLD SHOULDER, New Tork Tribune. Carry the news to Burwash, England! New York Post: If the Canadians want to annex Champ Clark they can have him. Boston Transcript: Here's to Sir Wil frid, in defeat as In victory the greatest of all Canadians! Philadelphia Press: We shall continue to do buslnesa and indulge in pleasant social chat over the old wall even If it Is too high. Chicago Tribune: President Taft and Premier Laurier attempted a piece of constructive atatesmanshlp. It Is nothing to their discredit that it failed. History will honor them for It. Chicago Inter Ocean: Apparently It Is lucky for us Judging by the way the Canadians talk since reciprocity wss snowed under that we have something like ltM.000.000 people and they have only g.OuO.OOO. Baltimore American: Even his political enemies must sympathise with Blr Wil frid Laurier, who went down to over whelming defeat la the Canadian election- I He has now reached the age of 70 years, and though able to conduct a strenuous eompalgn as ha has Just proved, the result has told upon him and he de clares that he will now retire from active participation In dominion politics. To him Canada ewes a greater debt than to any ether man. ooIW Backward lliis Day inOmalia COMPILED FKOM BE.B F1LFS SEPT. 27. Thirty Tears Ago A fatal accident occurred on Douglas street at 8 SO this evening when Lloyd M. Brlggs, a boy IS years old, fell from the corner top window of the Academy of Music to the pavement below and fractured his skull. The Injured lad Is the son of J. L. Brlggs. a cripple. He was taken to his home on Harney street between Fourteenth and Fifteenth and his skull trephined by Drs. Chadwlck and Peck, but without saving him. The firemen had a very ugly run about 10 o'clock to a fire in C. N. Dlets's lumber yard on Thirteenth and Call fornla streets. Damage slight. The financial exhibit of Treasurer Hartman shows that the state fair faces a loss of nearly $5,000. The total re ceipts were J 12, 309. with an aggregate of about $18,000 expenses in sight. Mrs. Stlnscumb of Des Moines, who is visiting her sister. Mrs. A. Hospe, was badly hurt by being thrown out of a buggy near Wyman's book store. Mr. Chat Morgan gave a dinner party at the residence of his parents at Twenty sixth and California streets to the mem bers of the Pans Ceremonle in comment oration of his twentieth birthday, which he has just attained. The frame building adjoining The Bee office (on lower Farnam street) for merly occupied as a carpenter shop Is being moved away. The appurtenances of. the military headquarters at the barracks are being rapidly transferred to Strang's new building at the corner of Tenth and Farnam streets. P. C. Backus of the 93-cent store re ceived a telegram that his branch store In Avoca had burned to the ground with its contents. Miss Woolworth arrived home from Cheyenne. Miss Rlsdon, daughter of M. R. Rls don, returned from a visit to Grand Island. J. P. Hulett, formerly of Pueblo, Colo assumes charge of the books of the Transfer hotel in place of O. B. Fergu son, who has gone to Chicago. Hal P. Brown, the electric light sgent, Is back from Denver, but has. little to say about the failure of the light at the state fair. A lively law suit Is promised Twenty Years Ago Judge C. C. Cole of Des Moines, a member of the state supreme court, was In the city the guest of Judge J. H. Macomber. County Attorney Mahoney stated he would file Informations against all saloon men running "joints" within the two. mile limits. Mrs. W. E. Creary, son and daughter, were the guests of their friends, Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Crandell, 2123 Webster street. prior to their departure for San Antonio, where Major Creary was stationed. Miss Josephine Koenlg of New Tork City was the guest of Miss Alice Isaacs and Mrs. L. Reynolds. Overcoats were In demand and snow looked for. Captain Crowder and Mrs. Voss gave a dinner party to Mr. and Mrs. Ring-wait, Mr. and Mrs. Mcintosh, Miss Tost and Mrs. Garneau. Mrs. Josiah French Hill returned from Concord N. H., where she spent most of the summer. . Mrs. M. B. Davenport returned from Newark, 111., where she spent-' several weeks visiting her parents. Ten Years Ago The antis In the republican camp, by trades, overturn the regulars' county primary victory and gain control of the county convention, naming the ticket. the principal candidates on which were Sheriff, George McBride; county judge, D. M. Vlnsonbaler; county clerk, Charley Unltt; treasurer, W. J. Hunter; sur veyor, P. A. Edquist; county superin tendent. E. J. Bod well; coroner, E. F. Bralley. The job was completed by electing Charles A. Ooas county chair man and W. A. Messlck secretary. John Francis, general passenger agent of the Burlington, returned from . Chi cago, where the subject of homeseekers rates was under discussion. General John C. Bates, commander of the Department of the Missouri, ordered that fifty field artillery recruits be sent from Jefferson Barracks to Vancouver Barracks. Wallpaper prices were so low as to cause general complaint among the local Jobbers. , George W. Holbrook, who attended the funeral of President McKlnley In BuX falo and Canton, returned to Omaha. After fifty-five minutes of a fierce foot ball struggle time waa called between Crelghton and Woodbine (la) Normal school teams, without either side cross ing the other's goal. Harry Welch, cap tain of Crelghton, distinguished himself both at tackle and end. I People Talked About Unable to reach the Omaha market for a Juicy cut, a Brooklyn man went against a steak from a local beef and was so Incensed that he shot it full of holes to get his teeth through. The late Senator Thomas H. Carter of Montana had the courage to cling to hi whiskers to the end. A deluge of jibes and Jeers turned on whiskered senators In the halycaa days of Peffer did not fease Carter, who cultivated his en larged 'goatee with the affection of a spinster stroking a feline. The wife of Martin B. Madden, known as "Skinny" Madden, the Chicago labor leader, has applied for divorce and a division of the family spoil. The petition recites that Maddea is worth S126.0U0. His wages as business agent of the Junior Stearafltters' union is Ja a week. Where Madden got the rest of his wealth, the petition avers, is a mystery. Joachim D. Rlokard, 1 years old, ef Lynn, Mass, Is the youngest shoe-factory director in that state and probably In thaworld. The young man Is a director in a new company, of which his father is president and treasurer. Under the provisions of the wUl of Anthony Cupp, a rich fsrmer who died at Lima, O. , recently, bis grandchildren, of whom there are several, are to receive a legacy of U each, and in order to se cure this legacy they must each read the Bible dally and attend church regularly. Miss Mlnnetta Theodore Taylor, of Castle Green, Ind., won the prise of llfaO offered for the best sufrage anthem. Miss Taylor died five years after tbe anthem waa written and before It was announced te whom the prise had been awarded. r - i r 11 " w Around New York R I pale ea the Carreat e( Life aa Sees la the Great American Metropolis froaa Day to Doy. Spottla a Wtiterafr. A western visitor to New Tork or to any of the cosst cities, is spotted at once, net by his clothes, but by his silver dollars. Paper money Is the rule snd stiver dollars a rarity east of Chi cago. "We know a visitor from the far west." says a station agent on the New Tork elevated, "by the silver dollars he leavea here. Westerners are always losded with silver and seldom any paper. We've got te take the silver dollars, of course. Our main job Is to get rid of them, and that is why we try so hard to pass them on. The golfers won't take them in case they pass In a bill for change. One of them handed over a five dollar bill the other day and asked for one ticket. I thought I waa going to get rid of four, of those heavy 'plunks," but when be saw them he said, 'Give me 100 tickets instead.' " Ifevel Scheme of Preavrher. "If some one will give me 16.000, or even 2.000, I will equip for Hoboken a resort for lovers which will Insure the young people here against divorce and render their married llfes happy and content something that M per cent of the mar riages now performed are not." This is the statement made by Rev. Joseph D. Peters, pastor of the First Re formed church of Hoboken, N. J., who has been concerning himself a great deal lately with the social welfare of the young people of the New Jersey city. He has found that" a large number of divorces annually are attributed to In compatibility of temper and other rea sons which, according to Dr. Peters, might Just as well have been discovered before marriage as after. Dr. Peters Is firmly convinced of the need of a meeting place for lovers and It will not be his fault if he does not get the funds to carry It through. He tntetMs to solicit the money from citliens of Hoboken; to supervise personally the establishment and management of the first "Resort of the Lovelorn" and, If need be, to give the contemplators of matrimony some healthy practical ad vice on the art of making one salary do for two people. Dr. Peters has been mar ried almost as long as he has been a minister and he says he Is well qualified to lecture on the subject a clergyman's salary being munificent. Flashlights for Keyholes. "If some evening you happen to see a man standing on the sidewalk busily en gaged In moving about a tiny light," said a New Torker quoted by the Sun, "don't think he la some bugologist ex amining a glow worm. Not at all. He Is a busy man of affairs who has hap pened to think of an Important memor andum and Is writing It down with the novel . electric pencil which illuminates as it writes. And if you are going home lste some night and see a man with a flashlight trying to enter a front door, don't think he la a burglar. He Is prob ably a late homecomer from lodge or club, 'and Is carrying one of the new walking sticks which have small electric flashlights Inserted In their handles. These save lots of fumbling In the dark for keyholes and the subsequent scratch lng of doorplat.es." The Laay Entertainer. An old established business house has Introduced an Innovation In the lady en tertainer, .who 'In business hours Is her employer's secretary. When the country buyer comes to . town, with his vigilant wife in tow the secretary takes her In hand, escorts '.her through the stores. rides with her on the sightseeing wagon, hunts up odd places to dine or takes her to the notable hotels and is her com panion at the theater each evening. Mean' time her husband Is having a perfectly good time with the boys and she doesn't realize that the entertainment was largely to leave him free to enjoy himself In his own fashion. It makes a large Increase In the entertainment bills, but the head of the firm declares that 4t more than pays for itself In orders from the relieved husband. Famous Hotel te Be Rased. The Manhattan Beach hotel, for thirty years famous as a summer resort, will be torn down soon to make room for cot tages and bungalows. The ocean will be thrust back 125 feet by a sea wall to give more water frontage. The Manhattan Beach hotel Is knowa to race followers throughout the country, as It was adjacent to three tracks Bheepshead Bay, Gravesend Bay and Brighton Beach and many lovera of the horses used to live there from early spring until late fall. It la one of the biggest hotels In the east, being 600 feet long and having a veranda on which many thousand persons at a time have gathered for dinner. Tips from Hat Checks. If you should happen to forget to band a piece . of change to the boy who gives you back your hat aa you are leaving any of the big Broadway restaurants, don't He awake all night on the supposi tion that anybody is going to starve to death In consequence of your neglect. Ten, to one you would be In luck If the positions were reversed, for the coat room business In hotels and cafes along the great main street is mighty pros perous, according to testimony given In the supreme court last week. In some of these places as much aa $10,000 a year Is paid to tbe proprietor tor tbe coatroom privilege. It was said that Louis Martin geta 18,000, Churchill's figure Is S7.O00, the Hotel Knickerbocker's $6,500 and the Cafe Boulevard SS.OOO. The Hotel Astor gets only J3.000, although It Is the best paying in this respect In New York City. This Is because the conces sionaire was formerly employed by the proprietors of ths hotel. Victim of Hsitrou Iatloau New Tork Tribune. The thought which waa expressed In these columns the other day, that the Russian government would not deem tt expedient to let ths whols truth be re vealed about the murder of Mr. Btolypln and the relations of his murderer to the police department, seems likely to be re alized to even a greater extent than was expected. It la now declared that, as we at first surmised, the prune minister's death waa due not so much to revolu tionists as to factional rivalries and hatreds within the government circle. That is, unhappily, no new thing la Rus sian affairs. Geed Pi cifst Washington Poet. It cannot be denied that In preferring to develop wtthln her awn borders OH' has followed aa flluevrkjus ex ample. , , SAID IN rui. 'Poe's celehrsted Fsven should not huv the weight which Is generally artrlni'ted to It." "Why not?" "Beaune according to It own ehowiuix It was a bust.' "Baltimore AmH:ii. riie klnr bad lust lemarkeri that H.im- 'ct n fa. and scant o' breath. And nobody loves a fat man toe queen added in a tone that waa heavily chartx.0 with bltterns. Atiii then the slaurht.'r i-ommenred Clevtiand Plain Dealer. 'Rafferty," said Mr rjolarv "dj vou iMnk there's Snvthln' at ail in this t.ilk about locomotive enfci:iej runnin' on wan ran? "I dunno. If the exixn.o or .! r;w Is as bad aa some peouio sa mehbe they'll have to." Washington Star. "Are you a friend of the groom's fam ily?" asked the usher xt the I'liun-n w ri ding "I think not." r-nlied tne lii-lv h,1- dressed. "I'm the mothtr of the bride." Yonkers Statesman. "There are times." Vi-mniKt-.t the e;i. eral. "when we do not csi-e to huvo the army In what is usually considered the best trim." "When is that?" asked the surirlsed visitor. 'It is not desirable," .vnswr-1 the Min eral, sententlously. "from a rourafctout point of view, to hav it In Rood running order ' Baltimore American. CrhxBaggoU poimt s graded ceppef wheeL 3 Royal has no substitute for jo V making delicious home-baked foods Kb I BakingFowder I ABSOLUTELY PURE jS! O The only Baking Powder made w M from Royal Q rape Cream of Tartar" ffij J iZif Grinding down the pen points is one ol the most Important processes in the making of fountain pens It is right here that their future success and utility are assured or vioe versa. Our skilled operators finish the writing points of over a million and a half gold pens a year, every one of which is an unqualified and unequaled success. Pens that are made to suit the requirements of a whole world of fountain pen user. Some of the points are ground fine and stuT others broad and flexible. Some used by the swiftest Court Stenographers others by young Chinese students ia their native Institutions. Whatever your pen require ments may be you can get them in a Waterman's IdealJ and get them right , and lasting. . We guarantees! through every dealer, everywhere, to suit you. w w. ' i i nsuerman lompany, irj Broadway, New To NITRO nfixrs CLUB and "Zrryxk r rt IM P.YV I-1 THe steel linins in it i i n smokeless powder sneus pattern, better 5rTnr gres loac eater velocity id. It makes the shell stronger, surer and safer. It costs you no more to buy. If you prefer black powder, shoot New Clubs the famous hard hitting, sure-fire, old 1 yellow 1 shells. " perfect shooting comLinahoa. I Anss-UaiM aw 29t areadwar, New Terk Oty A L0SG FELT HABIT. John K. Fangs In the Centum 'Twoulil make me g'.ad If we I. nt ha.1 A more elastic i in ren,"v. The km1 e ve ant It stretrhe not At least It streti h.'s not fur me. Olve tis a "bit" Po marie that it Will he so full ot tensile oil That when we slip It aa a tip We 11 duly gain from the recoil. A rubber dime At luncheon time. It would stretch to a quarter slxe. Would suit mv whim b'eneath a grim Head-waiters axarclous eyes. v Give us a five Thet's so sllve, 9j springly and resl'lept. That when we lend V., It to a friend. It will return whence It has went! A ellver ounce Po full of bounce That it will make a dollar shy Mount hmh enough To pa- for stuff A silver dollar ought to buy. And so I sav, "Hip-htp-hurrav For him who'll take our treasury, And give us soon That needed boon, 4 more elastic currency!" ' Grinding!! the vray j 4 unprecedented success ot -'m- ( TTrv .11 n v Nitro Club Vi i . i insures Deuer penetration and tor the same .,! Metallic Cartridge Ce. f s A' . V - -'-, '. W Li.Ji llill 1