Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 21, 1912, SOCIETY, Image 12

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JULY 21, 1912.
13
The Omaha Sunday Bee.
FOUNDED BT EDWARD ROSEWATER
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR
"BEE BUILDING. FARNAAI AND 17TH.
Entered at Omaha fostofflce as second
class matter. . . . . ,.. .
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accepted. ',
; '. r-"- ' '' OFFICES. - .
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. CORRESPONDENCE.
Communications relating to newt' and
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Omaha Bee,. Editorial Department. .
JUNE CIRCULATION. : . .
48,945 .
State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, sa,
N. P. Fell,' business manager of The
Bee Publishing company, being duly
worn, says that "the average daily cir
culation for, the month of- June, Wit,
waa .M5.- ' N. P. FEIL,
' Business Manager.
Subscribed In my presence and sworn
to before me this th day of July, 1913.
(Seal.) ROBERT HUNTER,
,. . J r . ,, Notary Public
Sabscrfbera " leaving the ' cMr .
temporarily . thoald . have The
Be mailed to (hem. Address
will be change as often aa re
quested. . " "' - :" ; '
Roosevelt and Yelser! , Sounds
euphonious, all right. :
Come on, Judge Archbald. and
show down or" be shown out. ' " ,
' It looks at If the law's delays
wer not to apply ' to impeachment
trials. ;
How can democratta harmony be
disturbed when there Is .no har-
Tnonyx
5t
.1. !. T"
Stlll, justice does not require per
secution 'o Samuel Gompe'rs J and
John Mitchell, i -v ... ;;' . ., ;
It takes a real , acrobat to rde a
bull moose and aa elephant, at one
nd the same time, , , 1
Yes.tnd If we had that supplemen
tary prjmary, would "Mike" Harrlng
ton vote as a' republican. , , .
Just, what great service Uak Stef
feB8,is rendering society; In this Los
Angeles case is not very clear.-? -
How ong a bather should remain
in the, water f U easily .' determtneij
when timeVjates ' are In force, "; !
( , ... . .'.in i in ' i i i ' ' ;.(
It, may bat taken .for granted that
Colonel Yelser's convention will rjBln
flate Ws vice presidential boom. I
i
"Nebraska is a wdnderfnl stats.?
That's, one platform plank OA which
we can all stand "withont dissent. !
Just to show them that he is ne
coward, t. Bryan has refused t
cancel his Missouri Chautauqua dates.
Of course, it-will be ! perfectly
natural for the bull, mooters to take
to Ithe, wopds whenever occasion re
quires. - , " ' " ' 'V'. ' ..' , ,
No wonder that a . man named CoM
Blease should, get into ahot.-flghtl
as ' has the governor on' South
Ca)rollna.I' 1 '
Vie Murdock has introduced a pure
clothes" bill "in the' house. These1
Kansans are the, unsophisticated
oya, all right. - -v', - 1 '
If the democrats in congress really
want a few more presidential vetoes
before they go home, they can doubt
less be accommodated. 1
The best evidence of the progress
made for a safe and sane Fourth is
.the complete absence this year of
lists of aftermath casualties.
Somehow or other the downtrod
den farmers do not seem to appre
ciatet this fight the Steel and Hari
vester trusts are' making in their
behalf. v,x 11
An American cent recently brought
$220 in Philadelphia. The coin was
dated 1783, so don't wear out your
pockets looking for another one
like it
Mr. Bryan cares nothing for the Ill
natured remarks of the gentleman oe
cupylng the office of chief executive of
New York. The Commoner. '- . " ' ,
, Oa with vthe democratic dance.
Let harmony be unconfined. , ; '
Mr. ' Bryan's Commoner " reprints
from ' another newspaper, this item
with apparent approving glee:
When It comes to , operating a steam
roller, Mr. Bryan is . something of an
engineer himself. . v " : , ,
Ehake! ., - " ' .V
Out in Colorado a woman cnautau
qua : lecturer has been ' vigorously
denouncing the trend of modern
laanionaoie aress to erase the line
between, virtue and , licentiousness.
The .portrait accompanying the ac
count proves that the fair lecturer
keeps close to the fashion.
i
The Boundless West.
Ever since the American colonies
were first planted "the boundless
west" has been a phrase to conjure
with, a beckoning hand and a beacon
of hope to men and women ambitious
to better their condition. :
The geographical location of "the
boundless west" has changed from
time to time, steadily receding In the
direction of the setting sun until it
embraced the coast line of the Pa
cific ocean. The west, however, is
still definable as that part of our
country stretching back" from the
Mississippi valley, and although it
has come to contain nearly a third
of our population, it is yet full of
boundless opportunities for the for
tune builder who knows how to util
ize; Its magnificent resources.
The development of this great
country has gone on , steadily, al
though not always at a steady pace.
The apparent slowing up of the last
year or so has appeared 'to those
most observing and conversant with
it as a husbanding or gathering up
of strength for another great for
ward movement . toward which the
logic of events is plainly pointing.
The west is getting ready for the im
petus the fast approaching comple
tion of the Panama canal is sure to
give. ' "The boundlees west" will
hold a more important place in the
attention of the world in the years
to come than ever before. ; .
' Convention' Contrast.
What makes a big political conven
tion interesting and exciting is
healthy competition of aspiring can
didates and uncertainty as to the
outcome; The republican convention
at Chicago and' the democratic con-'
ventjon at Baltimore both . revealed
tnese human interest elements, and
not only were the doors of the conven
tion halls daily beset with thousands
clamoTlng for admission, but ; the
whole country looked on with bated
breath,' scanning bulletin boards and
reading newspaper accounts to keep
in touch with every stage of the pro
ceedings, ; : " . ' 11 -.-
By contrast the coming third party
convention at Chicago must be tame
and uninteresting, for it can have
only one; candidate to consider, apd
the outcome cannot be doubtful in
the slighest. If it goes through the
usual motions that characterize con
ventions, it will be as if putting on
the boards a well rehearsed play with
lines prepared in advance and as
signed to selected actors. Because
ft is Impossible to stampede a one
man convention, the demonstrations,
no batter how. Well' worked 1 up or
how well staged, will lack a climax.
By coptrast.it : must suffer in in
terest thrilling beside the two big
political "gatherings already tassed
into the history of 1912. ' f-ViV.-jJ',
: Get' After the CanwrristsfHere: :J
Now ; thaf Italian ; courts ; have
finally dealt a severe blow , to the
fjamorro in Italy, 'it would be wise
for American police officers to re
double their eforts toward a general
clean-up of this element that has
found' its way to" the' tJnited States.
For a time the black-hander and
other murderous blackmailers perpe
trated their, crimes in this country
with appalling regularity and com
parative impunity. ' It was- not be
cause of official ' indifference, so
much as the inability to apprehend
the culprits Italy persisted for years
In, its attempts to ferret out these
midnight assassins, but the' result of
the Camorrists' trial, lasting as it
did for two years, is Italy's reward
and proof that effective headway has
been made toward getting rid of a
band of Insidious outlaws Undoubt
edly the fate of the Camorrists' in
Italy will do much' to discourage
their followers everywhere and put
an end' to their terrorizing tactics.
Industrial Education for Negroes.
Booker T . Washington's idea of in
dustrial education tor his race is
cominf more to .the front every year
among both white and colored people,
who are giving serious attention to
the future of the negro. The idea
received endorsement ' during ; the
week by the Negro National Educa-
tlonal congress, '" whose Influence
should count for much.' -
It may seem strange .that . Dr.
Washington's plan did not meet with
immediate' approval even, among
negroes, but it has proved itself In
such fruitful results as no longer to
beg for' endorsement. Tuakegee
Institute today, Is an aphorism.. It
is by no means alone in the kind of
work it is doing. Many , self-help
and industrial schools among the
black race are " now ! accomplishing
excellent results and much money is
being devoted to this purpose, , (
; Not so long ago a colored woman
dying in Brooklyn left an estate of
165,000, of which $26,500 went to
benevolent and industrial education
for the negro, Hampton and Tuske
gee each receiving $10,000. Dur
ing 19li the Negro Baptists of Ala
bama raised more than $23,000 for
their university at 8elma, Ala. - Al
together the' fitro Baptists of that
state raised $30,000 for their schools.
From twenty colored conferences of
the Methodist Episcopal church, ac
cording to, the Negro '.Year Book,
$26,000 was raised for the support
of the Freedman's Aid board.
Most of these negro schools are de
voting special attention to industrial
education, the negro's natural bent
for agriculture and the trades hav
ing been recognized. It is com
mendable that this race has turned
its attention to the work of prepar
ing Itself for real, definite occupa
tions, without regard to whether they
are easy or not, no longer willing to
pursue life in a haphazard way, tak
ing whatever may befall.
The Beef Shortage.
During the first six months of
1912 the total cattle receipts at the
six principal live, stock markets
showed a decline of 410,000 head as
compared with the same period in
1911. The feeding lots in the coun
try contiguous to Omaha have fewer
cattle in them than they have had
since they were established, and it' is
said that the receipts of western
range cattle this year at Omaha will
be less than for many yvs.
These facts are full of significance.
We are eating up our young beef
faster than our rangers can inaki
them into finished 1 products. This
will lead to just one end an impov
erished supply, and that will mean
for the future, what it means for
the very present, cost of living is not
beyond the comprehension of any
thcughful person. ' Here, then, is a
liOtent factor in the genoral problem
of the living cost. Our people de
mand the best beef,: the young beef,
and are not satisfied with the older.
We cannot eat our egg and' save it
at the same time. . ,
, But why,, it Is asked, are not the
ranges keeping pace; with , the de
mand for beef? Largely because of
nature's own deliberate laws. '. Cattle
Is not produced iii litters, as is swine,
ind one head .of cattle cauno: be
made into a finished beef is even
twelve months. We are, not giving
our cattle raisers the time for their
work, which nature meant they
should have. But if that does not
answer the question, then let us re
member, as The Bee has said before,
that the steady division and sub
division of the great ranges, tho in
flux of homesteaders,, the fencing off
of water courses, the conversion of
tanges into farms all these succes
sive' steps have served to diminish
the area of land available for cattle
raising in the great west. While
this has gone on, land in older states
has appreciated in value to an extent
that' makes live stock less attractive
than other pursuits. When beef
brings $9.50 on foot, as it has Just
done in Omaha, sensible people must
think this subject over very care
fully. ' '
City Boy in the Country.
City boys ought to be allowed to
spend part of their vacation in the
country. All boys need the closer
contact with nature which this af
fords. Xs Many lads grow to manhood
utterly ignorant, except in the moat
academic sense, of things that should
form a Vital part of their first-band
information, things they can get no
where except in the country.
This appeal seems especially
strong in this diy when young men
from the city are generally remain
ing there and those in the country
are drifting to the city, It Is possi
ble the current : might be changed
somewhat easier if. boys were im
bued In their boyhood with, a fond
ness for rural life. But this Is the
economic side of it; the' moral as
pect, which le really the immediate
one, is equally as worthy of consid
eration. China in Dead Earnest.
China is determined to have a real
republic Tt proves Its good ' faith
by, coming to the greatest of repub
lics for 'its experts In Counsel and
service. It has made several calls
for American advisers. Some, of the
native leaders of he revolution now
holding high office in the new re
public, were, themselves, the prod
uct of American education and
thought, sent here by Chinese in
fluence for instruction in our higher
institutions of learning. The ex
perience proved a powerful impetus
for democracy in the orient. It
acted as a leaven working from
within to burst the bands of ancient
reactionaryism and China saw the
point. ,,. .'
China's latest appeal is for Prof.
Jeremiah Jenks of Cornell university
to take the post of financial adviser
to the new government. Other ex
pert advisers, reports state, are also
to be chosen. What a momentous
part Americans are eventually to
play in transforming the oldest of
monarchies into a near-democracy
Is rich food for contemplation. It
offers us one of the greatest out
reaches for Influence.
' Science Halts Disease.
Bubonic plague and other noxious
maladies will never have the terror
for this country they had before we
learned so much about scientific
sanitation and applied it upon our
selves and our Insular possessions.
Bubonic plague recently caused a
few deaths in Porto Rico, but was
soon arrested (and kept from spread
ing :to our contiguous territory.
Reports that this or kindred Astatic
diseases have dropped their deadly
germs at our door in New York' or
New Orleans or San Francisco oc
casion little alarm now, not much
more than would a report of yellow
fever in some southern city. , For
we know that the conditions upon
which these germs thrived, while
not absolutely destroyed, are so
largely done away with as to reduce
the peril of epidemic to a negligible
basis.
A veritable crusade of sanitation
has been going on both in our own
states and the islands for years and
this enlarged measure of safety and
fortification is the fruitage of it.
Our government readily saw, fn fac
ing its stern duties in Cuba, Porto
Rico, the Philippines and Panama,
that one of its most important tasks
was to clean up t'hese places. Our
soldiers of war enlisted in the cam
paign against filth. and today some
of these cities, notably Havana, are,
in some respects, models of ' cleanli
ness. - By one stroke the ; United
States taught its dependents the les
son of cleanly living and threw about
Its own people a measure of physical
protection defined only in terms of
human life.' v' : ri
. .. Tip to Eeal Estate Men.
Real estate men should always be
boosters. They should boost every
part of their city alike, not merely
the parts where their private inter
ests happen to be located.1 If a cus
tomer asks about property in a cer
tain section, of the city, It is quite
short-sighted to say . the least for
the agent ' to knock that section
merely because he has property else
where that he, would like to sell. He
may some day have property in the
section he discredits and then - he
would have to overcome the derog
atory impressions he had helDed to
cVeate, But though his competitor
has property theqe and he has none,
it is a part of his own city and he
should not' knock it for his city's
sake. .
It is not necessary to run down
one part of the town to boost another
part. There is distinct advantage to
somebody in residing or owning prop
erty in every section of Omaha as
of every city. The modest wage
earner and the wealthy capitalist are
not expected to pick out the same
neighborhood for their homes for
obvious economic reasons. Yet that
in which the modest wage-earner
casts ' his lot may i be Just ; as
healthful, Just as wholesome as that
in which the capitalist resides, and
each is adapted to its respective oc
cupant. It is folly to , draw imagi
nary lines between desirable sections
in a rapidly growing city like Omaha,
made up of elements that fit into
each other, one as important as the
other. On the contrary it does a city
Immense harm for those inviting
permanent investments to disparage
one part for the advantage of another.
Jury Service,
Serious-minded men generally ad
mit that Jury service is oe of their
responsibilities as citizens, yet serious-minded
men also deliberately
shirk the duty whenever they can.
And no wonder, for not only is our
Jury system, Itself, radically defec
tive, but it is surrounded with a con
fusion of obsolete customs that are
positively out of all keeping with
the honor and dignity supposed to
attach to the functions of the office.
Jurors are regularly 1 treated with
less consideration : Jay subordinate
officials than the ordinary business
intercourse accords. It is no won
der the average man will go the
length to avoid serving on a jury.
The "Spectator", In the Outlook.
after an experience of this sort, de
scribes his feelings thus: "Mingle
a sense of wasted time, wounded dig
nity, physical t'iscomfort and general
vexation and you have the explosive
mixture crowding hla usually placid
bosom." After, recounting a list of
inconveniences . and discomforts to
which men called for the Jury are
subjected, he cites the fact that in
New . York, perhaps, .more than half
the citizenship is exempt from jury
demands, which leaves' the other
half to render double service under
conditions medieval in most respects.
Why it is thought necessary to
subject Jury service to such iudignity
and to hold on to customs handed
down by an entirely obsolete day one
cannot understand. Strange that in
all our penchant for reforms we are
not giving more of our time to those
needed In this direction.
A man blind from birth, whose
weekly income never exceeded $5,
has died in England, leaving an es
tate of $5,000. Presumably he could
not see how to spend it all. ,
InforrotHSon la Incomplete.
Baltimore American,
j The health officer of New Tork re
ports that 1.000 rata coming to that port
in vessels have been examined and all
are perfectly healthy. But humane per
sona cannot rest easy unless they know
the rats are contented and happy as well
as healthy.
( Concerning; the Tariff.
Philadelphia Public-Ledger.
The prohibitionists showed good Judg
ment In . their tariff plank. They hold
"the tariff aa a commercial quesUon and
should be fixed on a basis of accurate
knowledge secured by a permanent non
partisan tariff board with ample powers."
This Is common sense.
it i ,' V '
One Beanly of Bolting.
Pittsburgh Dispatch.
One of th unique bits of aftermath of
tha republican convention is 1 the move
ment In Oregon to prevent Coe and Ack
erman, delegates, from drawing the $200
allowed by the state, for compensation
as delegates. They were elected to vote
for tha nomination of , Roosevelt and
Borah, and when the time came to fulfill
thetr instructions they bad flown the
tracks. Out In Oregon, When delegates
are paid to vote according to instruction,
there are peopls who claim that tha
goods should b delivered.
ookliicfBackwar
This Day inOmak
COMPILED FROM BE
JULY 21.
Thirty Years Ag
Articles of incorporation were filed for
the Omaha Savings bank over the follow
lng names: James E. Boyd, L. M. Ben
nett, Guy C. Barton, S. H. H. Clark. C.
H. Dewey, J. W. Gannett, G. W. Linin
ger, Charles F. Manderson, -Max Meyer
John L. McCague. W. A. Paxton. Henry
Pundt, E. I Stone, George C. Towle
and L, B. Williams. The company is
looking for a suitable room to begin bus)
ness at once. '-"
. The Missouri Pacific is now manned by
the news agents of Barkabow Bros, of
this city.
Jacob Kaufman opened hia new saloon
today on Sixteenth street between Call
fornia and Webster.
Mr. Bertram Hansen has been confined
to his room for ten days by illness.
A meeting of property owners has been
called to ask the council to pave Doug
las, street and to decide on the kind of
material desired.
Miss Millie Mathieson gave a pleasant
card party at her home on South Elev
enth street last evening, among those
present being Charles Beindorf, C. W.
Tousley, Louis Purtell, Louis Llttlefield,
Miss Jennie Patrick, Miss Emma Purtell,
Miss Mollis Monroe and Miss Nellie John
son. The school board at a special meeting
opened bids for the construction of three
new school buildings.
Twenty Years Ago
Mrs. Fannio Byrne gave a very pleasant
lawn fete at her home, Twenty-sixth and
Charles streets, In the evening.
Jailer J. J. Bebout was laid up at home
with congested kidneys.
The funeral service , of Mrs. Elizabeth
Gaiser, mother of Mrs. Chris Specht
was held at the Specht residence, 2004
Wirt street. Charles and William Gaiser
of Lincoln, sons, attended. Mrs. Gaiser
was B? years old and had resided in
Omaha a number of years.
The Omaha Athletic club mashed
Farmer Burns, who was acting as trainer
for Tommy Ryan, the pugilist, to wrestle
John Mclnery of Bradford, Pa,, catch-aa-catch-can
for $350 a side.
Miss Dora O'Hanlon left for Everett,
Wash., accompanied by her sister, Mrs.
T. D. Casey of Pittsburgh.
"A good rain in the evening cooled ; the
air and . brought the mercury down the
tube from its haughty height "of 102. '
City Superintendent of . Schools Fitz
patrlck returned from Brooklyn where
he attended the convention of the Na
tional Teachers' association.
An between Frank Ransom and Lorenzo
Crounse for republican nominee for gov,
ernor, 'Omaha republicans were quite
divided. J. H. Millard, L. M; Bennett,
Henry T. Clarke, James 'Walsh, S. A.
McWorther, John E. Wilbur, Major D.
H. Wheeler, John Rush and others ex
pressed themselves as preferring Crounse,
while Lee S. Estelle led the way for
Ransom, because of his "well known"
anti-monopoly proclivities. C. H. Marple
agreed with him.
Ten Years Ago ' u
Omaha took a thrilling slxteen-lnnlng
game from Kansas Ctty. Frarik Owen
and Gonding were Omaha's battery, Jakie
Weimer and Messitt Kansas City's. For
fourteen Innings neither side scored. In
the fifteenth Kansas City got one run
across. Waldron, already with a triple to
his credit, doubled to left; Hartzell sin
gled, "Slats" Davis fanned, Kemmer flew
out to Stone in left, scoring Waldron on
the thrown in. Omaha tied it in the lat
ter half when old Joe Dolan opened with
a twobagger and went to third on an out
by Captain Ace Stewart and scored on
Pears' single to right." The crux in the
sixteenth was tense. Kansas City had
failed to score In Its half. Gonding opened
the Inning with a safe drive to right and
pandemonium broke loose. Owen sacri
ficed John to second. Bobby Carter popped
up a foul to Messitt. Two out and Gon
ding on second when Frank Genlns comes
up. Frank didn't care to parley. He
belted the ball and It sailed off Into space
while Gonding lumbered on home with the
winning run 2 to 1. - , ; .
John Ryan, S3 years old, for forty-six
years a resident of Nebraska, died of
heart disease at his home. Twelfth and
Arbor streets, suddenly and unexpectedly.
At about 11 o'clock he started to walk
into the dining room, when he was taken
faint and was dead before Mrs. Ryan
could get .him to his bed. He and Mrs.
Ryan had lived together for fifty-nine
years, and ha was survived by his good
wife and their three sons and one daugh
terDaniel Ryan of Washington county,
William Ryan of Helana," Mont; D. J.
Ryan of Omaha and Mrs. John Connolly
of Omaha.
Tom Hughes of the Missouri Pacific re
turned from a delightful trip into Canada
and was back at his Millard hotel quar
ters, v
Mrs. Helen Zimmerman Gillespie, wife
of John A. Gillespie, died at the family
home, 1624 Malitary avenue, at the age of
54. Her husband and daughter Mabel sur
vived her. Mrs. Gillespie had been matron
from 1SS0 to 1897 of the State Institute for
the Deaf and Dumb. She wag a native
of Iowa, from whose state university she
was graduated and later, taught school
in that state and at Warensburg, Mo.
She came to Omaha in 1S7S.
EDITORIAL HINDSIGHTS. ,
Washington Post: The fellow who
makes drinking his business rarely neg
lect It.
Boston Transcript: A South American
dreibund "to resist possible enroachments
by the United States" should have little
to do.
Cleveland Leader. After all, the spec
tators at the Olympiad won't .know what
real sport is until they see the games in
a world's series.
Providence Tribune: "Whom shall our
daughters marry?" asks a woman's Jour
nal. Whom they please, probably, as
they always have.
St. Louis Times: The famous aviator
who was killed while on a hunting trip
should serve as a warning to other bird
men of the desperate chances they are
taking when they are not flying.
Christian Science ' Monitor: A new
York man says it is impossible to live
happily on less than $5,000 a year. It is
impossible to discuss this matter Intel
ligently unless you know what tha New
York man's idea of happiness is.
Minneapolis Journal: A distinguished
educator is bewailing the fact that some
gilded young person use our universi
ties as "winter resorts." If it were not
for tho trivial annoyance occasioned by
the course of study the universities would
not be so bad.
r
1 J
f J
People Talked About
, I
I , ml I
When speaking of "music and singing"
it' might be Just as correct to talk of
"rugs and floor coverings." J. W. Stew
art of the firm of Miller, Stewart &
Beaton has had a rug-ged career, more
because, he knows the business of "rugs
and floor coverings." from Alpha to
Omega,' than because of rugged work.
Charles A. Carver, the Yale "strong
man," wasn't strong enough to pull a
divorce suit. His wife won. -
Charlie Murphy's name has not yet
appeared in the visitors' book at Sea
Girt. Looks like a Falrvlew repeater.
Boss Bill Flinn is now busy trying to
arrange matters in Pennsylvania so he
will remain on top no matter what 'hap
pens. ......... w . ,
Julius Diaz, a lifesaver at New Roch
olle, was rewarded with a hug and kiss
when he saved Miss Ethel Jamison from
drowning. It was worth it.
William Marshall Bullitt of Kentucky,
the new. solicitor general of the United
States, was sworn in on Mondy. His
first official act was to send the roses
that decorated his desk to be distributed
among the women In the. department.. .
When Edwin A. Dodd, a bachelor, died
at Jamaica, N. Y., on June 5 of last year,
bequeathing his estate to his landlady,
it was not known that he left much
property. The estate appraiser has Just
estimated his estate at nearly $250,000, all
in gilt-edged real estate and securities.
Washington pioneers honored Ezra
Meeker, who drove an ox team over the
old Oregon trail sixty years ago, when a
tablet recounting the deeds of the path
finder was , Unveiled in Pioneer i park.
Meeker, who is now in St. Louis, spoke
to the -assembled pioneers from two
phonographic records of five minutes
each.
. Mrs. Russell Sage has sent $3,000 to the
pension fund of the street cleaning de
partment of; New York. Msyor Gaynor
sent her a letter of thanks for the money,
which is to , be tjsed in the pension de
partment, and said' that he hoped others
would : follow -her example. The men dh
the department wlil.be able to retire on a
fair pension when old age comes on. .
I As to Buying Semi-Anthracite Coalj
t
t
Some Sound Advice
"We wish' to prevent coal buyers from being "stung", by Ji
responding to "BARGAIN BONANZAS" in so-called J js
Rfrm-ant hrnoiip. Ooal offered at varviner urices according1 & i
to wiietner tne coal is delivered - unsoreeueu, puum t
, i .i i 11'
screened, half -screened or just uscrened." 5!
i Consider These Pacts:
There are two distinct.; qualities' of "Semi-Anthracite"
or "Smokeless'' coal; One is fit; to buy and the other is'r
not. Any dealer can buy either or both qualities df he !
wants to. ; Just a questibh of business judgment.
ONE KIND is exceedingly soft and brittle. It comes in j
SV 1 - I. . Atmlrn t5
or i ' v . . . i ... - , a i
furnace door. Requires a hammer blow to break and
such a blow crumbles the, coal into dust; During warni; :
weather will "slack" and by winter time will 'be a sorry !
sight. Such quality of coal is undesirable" at any, price!"
THE OTHER KIND is almost as hard as Eastern Hard 4 !
coal and in some respects. better. Costs the dealer mucfc ;
more than the less desirable
difference. .; . ;
This is-the only kind of Semi-Anthracite we will offer to ;
our trade. It's the only kind that is good enough for the
SUNDERLAND GUARANTEE CERTIFICATE. i
' i . - ? . r -
We used to" sell, both kinds, 'but cut out the kind that
t
urougut tracts. cuiiiiJiauuts.
We Do Certify "Ozark? f
i.:' 1. j a.:' t4t,; Ti ;A .I.j.li
our mgu grauts oeuu -.0011.111 ai;ue. x io oiwava ocietmeu
at the mines and we always RE-SCREEN it just before
loading on wagon. . The lumps are bf convenient size-to J
shovel into furnace and OZARK is a generally satisfae- '
tory substitute for hard coal. ". , ; ;.v.,''.:-'lt..''!i'
OUR ADVICE IS: "DON'T BE STUNG"
Use either Pennsylvania Hard Coal, Ozark Semi-Anthra
cite or High Grade Coke in
Vie Will Announce Our Summer Prices Soon 1
: SUfMLAHD BROS. CO. i
1 ?tb T IfHr MnrriAirLM
liiiiiv m sb m ssi ssi ssi ssi mm mm m - mm mm . . . mmmv liiuiA w t v
DOMESTIC DIFFICULTIES.
"What broke up their happy -home?" ;
"It skidded, and struck . a telegraph
pole." Life. . . . .-. '-M ;
"What a lot of old fashioned beliefs
have been shattered completely In thes,e
modern days."
"For Instance r - . -.-J?
"Well, you never hear anybody advise
a young couple now that two can ve
as cheap as one." Detroit Free Fress
Mrs. Dashaway Your husband com
plains that you never allow him to exer
cise his own Judgment.
Mrs. Henpeckle Nonsense! I let him.
sew on his own buttons! Philadelphia
Record.
Argus was boasting of his hundred
eyes: "Can you see what an engaged
couple see in one anther?" we ask New
York Sun. , .
"Father," said little Andy, "what's a
leading woman?"
"Any woman," .replied father, "who is
married." Judge.
She--That's a funny French dish on the
menu. Do you know what it means?
He-Yes; an attack of indigestion if you
take it. London Opinion.
"Father, what do "you -think of the
rccfill?" '
Well, my dear, I hardly know. Some
people think it is dangerous: But why do
you ask?"
"I sent Ferdy away last night and now
I'm sorry. "-St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
CREDO.
. Frederick Lawrence Knowles.
I know no sin except the lack of love,
I recognize the victory in defeat;
No gulf divides life here from life above,
. I spell perfection in the incomplete.
A foe to dogma,' still I hold a creed.
For I believe that all life brings Is good.
That sharing bread and wine with men
who need . '
Is .the new sacrament of brotherhood.
I know the way we tread Is rough and
long i.
And yet to pain and toil am nothing
loth,
And thus I Journey homeward with a
, . eong, '
Since in the. very struggle lies my
growth.
And when ' I reach that last green
hostelry v
Whence none have ever yet been
turned away, .
The slumber will be sound which falls
on me,
Till dawns that longer, new, divine
Today. ,
Joy! only Joy for love" is there and here
Peace, only peace! though desperate
my distress;
I find no foeman in the road but Fear
To doubt is failure, and to tdare,
. success.
ff
Nowadays a Drug Store
Is a Place ofAmaz-
:. ing Interest
First, it's a drug store and a
prescription - filling laboratory.
Then it's a novelty store carry
ing an array of useful novelties
not foreign to a drug store "line."
It's a specialty store, too, show
ing new and UHef ul inventions for
personal confort. It's a, soap
store, a perfume store, a cigar
store, a candy store. It sells
things for the toilet and path
things to ease the routine tf the
pick room soda and fountain
drinks and fountain feeds. It sells
you stationery telephone serv
ice picture post cards rubber
goods stamps.
Come oftener to an Jntarsstiag
.store. -,v,-5vj4 ,
Sherman- McConnell
Drug Stores
HsS
From Sunderland:
1 . . . . J - i. - sV I
1 0 TtrriT Vl O Tl Q TITT T. i
kind and is fully worth the:
- ,, . ' '
, ; f : r;,- , w
I
your furnace..
i
I
A. pi " i