Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 19, 1913, PART ONE, Page 4-A, Image 4
TIED OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 19, 1913. WOOL FROM OMAHA MARKETS RETORNS IN BLANKETS Thousands of Pounds1 of Wool From Northwest in Blankets -Bought by Brandeis Stores. 10,000 SHEEP CONTRIBUTE BAKERS TO MEET IN OHAHAi Commerce Students Get Practical Idea of Manufacturing Hundreds Coming to the State Con vcntion Next Week. TO BE OPENED TUESDAY President Orlmitn of Omnhn Will Deliver the Annual Atliire Considerable Entertain ment Planned. Hundred of bakers trill be In Omaha for three day next week from October 21 to 23, Inclusive, when the Nebraska Mas ter Bakers association holds Its annual convention. Thin 1 to be the fifth an nual convention. The convention la to bo opened Tuesday at 10 o'clock In the morn ing, llov. T. J. Mackay Is to give the In vocation and K. V. Parrlah ot the pub licity bureau la to give the address of welcome. Senator George Wol of Fre mont Is to respond. President C. W. Orl- man of Omaha Is to deliver the annual The wool from thousands of western sheep, grown on the ranges of Nebraska, Wyoming and Montana, and sold In the tVuii marlcitl. has coma back uraln to this city. It has come back- President's address, and the appointment . .. .i hut u a finished nrod- or committees is to be taken up nerore ... ... ., w.rm wnrtlen blankets. the noon adjournment. .1. a. nm.h hnm . tht.l A program of live papers bn subjects winter, the people will protect them- Pertinent to the work of tho baker Is to selves from chilly nights beneath the "rite out during the three day. of WankeU woven from home market wool, the "sslons. and abundant entertainment ThU Interesting fact has ben brought to Prepared for the evenings. Tuesday light after a little careful research on the fv"ln " P 'or the Orpheum part of the Omaha merchanU who .e- ,a JIan" Wednesday evening a dinner cured the blankets. When a buyer from J""3 t'"" ,h cn homo Brandeis Store, wa. In the eastern mar- automobile ride If to bo taken about U l.e t..MMn .. ft at.. the stocks at various mills, ha Inquired nVo hotV, " 8 kets a f.w weeks ago purchasing from as to Uie source from whence the wool ... . . , A i r -.1 I Mvfiiio ui mi 'lillvl,'Al ".t I " .J J came. The mill supc'intendenta Informed . ,,. ' , n. ' Jm that much of the Mkrt.w 76 WoT. of iw Daniel .n.r'St 9" C. Wt Manley ot . v . - .. V . 7T.7. ii. I umana ana rim aartner or Lincoln. ket. It furltr developed that mill ex- The officers of the association are: C. perw iuq- .,. w, Ortraati of Omaha, president; O. C aecurea in i P"" V"; Kuenno of Omaha, vice president: John wceeat of It. adaptability to blanket Bfiha of Uncoin, treasurer, and T. P. nanuieeiurn, Naughtln of Omaha. secreUry. The ex. Many rects oi interest ciusier arouna ccuUv mmit(i. rnn.l.t. of J. 3. Mr. tlits particular ecrlea ot purchases made South Omaha; Phil Tager. Hastings; mr unaantr cianaei Buyer. mil n. j, JonM( HRVelock, and W, It. Fur- spates uuf i n era are auoui s,w puunus i man c( y0rk. oi wool represented in the shipment or blankets which have been forwarded to Omaha as the remit ot this purchase. EatlsuUinf eight to ten pound, of wool to a ebetp, this figure would Indicate, that 10,060 sheep have contributed their mlAJLTA tn muUa tin ttntd tintieiiAl ThtitnU shipment From early morning until late In 'the' It took sixteen Wg loaded trucks drawn ave?ln yetorday. a constant stream of W heavy teams to pull thl. stock of customers CTaviUted to the embroidery M.t. rnw. iii. fli.M n Mn. department of. The Bee to secure tho Aeto Stores. The estimated, combined Made a Great Hit With the Ladies or more of tha celebrated outfits of Im- A department of Industrial economic was established last June In the Omaha High School of Commerce. L. E. Glfford was given the supervision over the other teachers of the department, who are: Mr Harry, Mr. Droit and Mr. Ilosenburg. A special study Is made of the various in dustries of the city and trips are made In order to confirm the facts which are studied In tho books. Far Instance, after the Industry classes have studied wheat In the steps and procesnes through which it passes, they visit the flour mills, where they see tho wheat kernel Just as It is shipped from the wheat producing states and follow tho wheat a. It passes through the various processes until It Is turr.'rt out In the shape of flour, racked ready for markot. Then the classes visit the bakeries, cracker and macaroni factorler, in order to further follow the wheat ns It is made from flour Into the products which aro an everyday necessity to nil The Tuesday following each trip a writ ten report la expected of every member of the class who went on the trip. In connection with the department of Industries a museum ot product exhibits has been established which la the finest and most complete of Its kind In tho coun try. There are thirty products of the cotton seed and all the processes of the spool cotton; there are over 1,000 Illustra tions of silk, from the tiny egg of the lik worm to the finished products of fine taffetas and silk velvets and the like, and many other Interesting displays. A new feature In this museum Is the col loctlon of articles made tn Omaha. The local Industry room has been equipped with dork curtains and the nec essary apparatus to show stereoptlcon views of commercial and Industrial In terest Tha advocates of these movltiic pictures declare that boys nnd girls can learn more from pictures and explana tions In one hoar than they can learn from books In a day. This week tha Industry classes have been making a study of dairying. There fore during next week trips will be made to a creamery and dairy In the city, where; the Industry students will sea for themselves the methods ot preparing such articles for market. weight of both the cotton and tha. wool PerUl patterns, which make embroidery blankets Is niaeed nt i.mo neundaj transfers by a new process, an art that eurely'thts much weight in bd covtring KM may follow with profit and Jtould be able to keep out a world ot P"w. In " '"test designs for the cWlly air. decoration of fabrics, lingerie, or any Naturally all the blankets In. this pur- oth6r art,0,M hat 'end themselves to Its ar aot mada from wool rnnm tn application. Not only wera young ladles U section, because a considerable lot ln vWnc aa eager buyers, but youne sK the blankets are made from fins An.- ola aa,CB aca nn r n Jsstllan wool. Imported expressly for the Hundred, ot packets on yesterday's sBsnufaeCwre ef many blanket at hlrW opening day wero handed across tho salute, t counter to satisfied purchasers who quail 'to cMvex an adequate Ilea of the ts Presenting six embroidery cou C tMs Brcttar shipment, viewed from Pon clipped from The Bee and S sothr angle. It might be mentioned cem" casn ror ee.cn imperial pattern Chat tha avwsjre Ma&ket cantatas fifty- outfit. Mir sqwaro feel and M.T60 pairs of blaa. 1 As every woman knows that ln tho W weuM Mrw a Sfaee of .099,eeo satwra regular way an embroidery pattern never iwt. 1b ether ward, thes Mankstf 1 eU leu than 14 cent,-and often more. sjkeaa wt WuM aMply' cover a seventy- I th enormous demand for tho Imperial sere tarns, wkb an acre or so to spare. I ouum, wnicn oesiaes ttio larotst as- fjsxnrt M aro aecuciemed to eetlmat- nrtment, or aeMgns, includes an all-motal t msrewaadlss tn large uttantltie think Ptent spring. hoop, and a booklet of in it ihM pareular Mankat purchase I. Krtictlons, will seem to her quite natural. but1 the Wsstint thl nr of its kl4 that and a foreffoao conclusion to be expected Ojn)i has ever exprlenl. The "pur- 'rom an offer so unique npd nnvuntage- wfmo was partly tne result of market oua io every iaay in trie land. fatt!M, but chiefly the result of care- Out-of-town patrons are requtred to add tn pkatdRff and adequate means ol ax- ? cents to pay postage for the mailing f"tlon. ot their packet, but this extra does not iAt 1hfl '.ssinm thm viip Mnv rt m annear to nffeet thi. AemanA n mull taadlnc; blanket mills turn their energlis orders are pouripg In by the hundreds, award the manufacture of special orders no doubt largely caused by the patent )& prefer to dispose of regular stocks foet, that the opportunity may never nana mat nav not been contracted occur n.alu by which over lio worth of r. This 1 tfes PsycholORlcal moment I latest style cmbroldarv nattcrna mn va jr ma uyw wno ,baa ready cash at his obtained for CS cents. fesai to visit tha mills with a qulok lurn-yqur-mercnanawe-mto-cash" pro- UlUn T( I OAW UARRIcn Bitter Cold is Predicted for the Very Wear Future Tomorrow Morning We Inaugurate an Extraordinary Cutting FU jjjjjj BBSB OF $20,000 WORTH OF BEAUTIFUL FURS- BOUGHT AT 60 DENTS ON A DOLLAR-EVERT PIECE GUARANTEED TO BE THE GENUINE ARTICLE Thih salo comes right in tho nic' tho same quality. Everything posit ime just when you need them. Later on you'll pay double tho amount for laronteed. Every desirable fur represented in this stock. COATS, SC ..JS, MUFFS AND SETS $45.50 Near- Heal Coat nt $28.50 S49.50 i'oHf 'oat at , . . . S29.50 S47.50 1'oay Coat at 807.50 Kusstan I'unr Cont, Martin Trimmed , 559.00 87.00 -BIuo "oat Coney, etc.,' nt, a sot. $45.00 885.00 Marmot Coat, nt 807.00 Brown Marmot Coats, 48 and 50 nnd 52 inches long, lit $59.00 835.00 NaU'raf Lynx, Marmot, liearer, Red For, etc., at, set $14.85 S27.50 JP Mtak, tirar Heaver, Tip Iceland Fox, at, set , . , "812.50 French Coney, Russian Wolf, Icclanu Fox, per not. $6.9 petition, and It was Just at th proper tto that fcaaaeto buyer planned his vmi. jfta-ftXsts m huge quantities were assure fnwj the mills at nrica that rid have been quite out of tha ques at any other period of the whola yr ana tW scoaomtc value, ot this StsHCa Artists Hnt Marcly Reproduce the Jog Trot. at Married Life. ("Very few actors create a matrimonial wM be vary abearskt t ,v, ilHUBlon on the stag," said tho gray wh ne4 Vlaaketa this winter. I hJoJ "Stago managers ought to A . m 1 1. S 1 A. is Knnonma the Bransata I HfwwK Mm the eotlrs basement, re- "riylng couples hammer it into tha Jan! a)t as a big stare tn itself hmuIs ot the audience that they are reg wtit be er44 to thl au whiv. ular Darbies and Joans, but they don't JPC JHaUV. U full,, UA uluBsl- f-wi hw rri m tee seiiinc event NO MORE BUNIONS The Draxel "nun- ioa" shoo for man la scientifically construct- d from and for tho foot with bunion. Thla ghoe. whllo fitting tho foot snuglr at the heol and over the' inetep, glvea ample room at tho bali for enlarged, tender and Inflamed Joints. Tfalg shoe glv absolute foot comfort. For "women wo have a snoe In look tho parta and they don't act them. In real life married couples havo Uttlo tricks of looking at each otasr, of speak' in to each other, particularly of Ignor ing each other, that advertise, to all und sundry the matrimonial noose, eXajfa folk ought to observe and Imitate lami of those slgna What good does It do to harp on tho tie that binds while omlttlnK all that byplay which denotes mora surely than any words the oxlstenca ot the tleT "Now and then, it Is true, an actor. either by accident or design, falls Into a part ln which he seems to b literally plastered with marriage oerttricate. An actor in a current play gives that Im pression. Even If there waa not a lint to Indicate hia marriage to his stogq wife no one could for an inttant doubt tho relationship. "Tho way ho talks to her, tho way he doesn't talk to her, jrtves the cose away, But that Illusion is rare. Hatred, Joai- ousy, revenge, lova aro expressed will) mora or less fidelity. Then why Is It that the Jog-trot of commonplace married Ufa seems beyond the scope of most ac tor, and actresseaf Now York Times. High School Grads Winning Much Fame For Artistic Work Irving "W. Itenolken, son of II. W. TIenolken, 122 South Twonty-ntnth street, who is a-member of the does of 1913 at the high school, la now attending the Philadelphia academy. Young Henolken was prominent In art circles at the school and did all of the designing in tho High School Register Annual, the year book ot the school. He was staff artist on the paper practically tho entire time while at i high school and waa also president ot the j Art society. At Philadelphia henolken will work hand n hand with William Heitland, an. other young Omnhan who Is making a name for himself In the east as an artist, Heitland last spring won a travel scholar ship offered by the Philadelphia Art academy for composition work ln oil, and has Just recently returned from an ex tensive summer tour through England, France, Germany, Spain and Austria. While In Omaha Henolken was a stu dent under Doone Powell, cartoonist on The Ilea, and was regarded as having a very brilliant future. Henolken first be gan art studies In Omaha at the Far nam school, whoro he led his class In clay I modeling and wood earning tn the manual training department. All through Ills four years at hgh school Benolken was prominent In high school society and waa very well liked by all who came In contact with him. His many Omaha friends are anticipating very fa vorable reports of his work at Phlladet phi a, where he will specialise In oil work. Uonolk.cn while at high school was a member of Lara i fraternity. Free I.eetnres. At nought hall, beginning Sunday, Oc tober 19, at 1 p. m. Dr. Forwoll will give a aerie, of four lectures on "The Divine Tlan ot the Ages, Showing the Harmony ot the Scriptures, the Wisdom and Love t God." Dr. Farwell does not repeat things ut tered by the clergy, but tell, you great and vital truths ot the Bible, which both Catholics and Protestants have largely overlooked. Sunday, October 1, at t p. m topto. The Desire of All Nations Is at Hand." Sunday, October St, at 3 p. tn., topic. "A Righteous Government to Bo Estab lished." Sunday, November , at 3 p. m., topic, "The Resurrection of the Dead." Sunday, November 9, at 3 p, m., topic. "The Restitution of All Things." Baright hall, comer Nineteenth and Farnam. All welcome. No collection Children's Fur Set in tills purchase go at , 82.48 and $4.98 88.50 French Hare, Black Wolf, per not. ........... cparate Mtitfs from this purchase go at about halt price, to 81.08 S8.db 815.00 Canadian Lynx, Whlto Iceland Fox, Frcach Coney, at, sot $12.50 820.00 and 822.50 White Ice land Fox, Bllver Fox, Jap Mink, Black Lynx, etc., go at, Bet Other Beautiful Fur Co&tn ln Hurts oh Seal, Seal, Natural Poay, MolcsklB, etc, etc, at 40 less than tho regular value . Very expensive seta of Furs such as Minx, Jap Minx, Genuine Mack Fox aad Lynx, Moll Skin Sets, Russian Sable, etc, all go at 65ei nthe dollar. Belgian i fWfiMH I I $8.95 Coney, SALE STARTS AT A. M. MONDAY MORNING. SEE OUR WINDOWS. NOVELTY CO 214-10-18 NORTH 10TII STREET. SMALL DEPOSIT Will hold any piece jjpu select for future de livery at tlieso prices, TO THE RESCUE OF JONAH Modern Defender of the MowCsr rrcrt Story ot Jonah and - the Wbale. The conspiracy td apply the -recairt o Jonah's., whole has, gained suoh headway ln the last year or so that ministers aro beginning to advocate) the "action boldly at men's club dinners. If notVia the pulpit, In New York, the editors Jbt a Sunday school paper, who had printed the higher criticism explanation ot the whale tor any lnnoc.nt child tu read?, aTO defending their course vigor ously. , I On every hand the most braxen insinu ation are made against thla noble old JBIble tradition. In an age of disrespect for anything with moss on it this 1. not safe. The foundation, ot our simple, childlike faith aro thereby undermined. We are filled with doubt. Losing our confidence In Jonah, we begin to mis- trust Utorge wasnington ana Air. uooee velt and Doctor Munyon, and the whole fabric ot society totters. Adam's case is different from Jonah's, The scientists had something on Adam, His claims as founder of the first fam ily were inglortously exploited when an anthropologist discovered a human foot print that had been made 00,000 years before Adam could even creep. The allegation about hi rib wouldn't hold. water, either. A Baptist professor counted the ribs of a male skeleton and those of a female skeleton, and knocked Adam Into a cocked hat by announcing that the totals were the same. 4 Adam Is nothing to me, and I am willing to let htm go into the waste basket along with the Ketly motor and Dr. Cook. I never did have much use for him. I cling to Jonah, however, vtlth all the ardor ot a lifelong affec tion. Jonah was the first Bible char acter to impress himself on my early consciousness, There was a reason. The Pointed Parasrrapbs, A soft mark Is nearly alwoyi hard up. a sname 10 spin mi in, uui not It's crvlmr shame. The bst thing about hope Is that It's absolutely free. Usually the charity that begins at home Is easily discouraged. Hven a woman seldom has cause to re pent because she said too Uttl. Ilut an ounce of flutterv beats a nound of truth If you have an ax to grind. When a girl begins to call a young man by his first name she has design on his last. Only a smart man can tell the truth so truthfully that even a Jealous woman can't tanrle him un. Persistent Advertising la the ltoail to; The man who falls ln lovo with a worrian nir rtetui-na. i at eignt Dy moonngni may iau in anouier I .1 rvnt nn H. by nuniujit- Chicago News. button and lace constructed on the fcataa principles. $4.50 1 w IN DREXEL 1419 Fanuu 5IJlW3 The Remedy for Rheumatism Acute rheumatism is an inflammation o various parts of the body, characterized by gcneralfever, by pain, heat, redness, and swelling of the joints affected, and by a tendency to leave one joint suddenly and fasten upon another. It is primarily the result of the failure of the kidneys to take uric acid out of the blood. Warner's Safe Rheumatic Remedy U one of the most effective remedies Jknown to medicine in expelling uric add from the system, ana it mexeny removes the rheumatic pains' and eliminates, all traces ot the disease. Wonderful Opportmuty To buy you winter supply of blake)tri "off in he sale att OrkHiBro titers Monday. isjr "Ihsdrheamstlita so badly that 1 was unable to walk ezctpt with great difficulty, aad I bad taken a Urge qaaatitr at doctor's aedlclqe with verr little rll(. Four botUes ol Wuitr'i Sale Rbcnmstlc Remedy eetfrelr eieartd ray sirstsm ot rbtu- fttim. -'Krs.ii.M.v.rtBeie.aMa- veBeTean. BACft FOR A PUpPOST 1- Klionr a4i Ur RaaM r 2- KbMnltc Knd 3- DUbU RuBdr 4- AttkaaRssMdy 5- N,rrU. , , v (rira'i,.p:ii..u) SOLD ST ILb PKUUOISTS y n r?ic tar irv iiupn civios Bumbsr at rmiy desired to bed gjl 'lb St siler. PUT. ptobable that he belonged to literary so cieties, culture clubs and the like. A Is well known, these clubs meet ln the homes of the members. Likely the win dows ln those days could not be opened, thtf weighted rope and roller for raising and lowering windows easily not having been Invented. Therefore we may feet free In saying that Jonah waa used to going without oxygen for long periods of time, and xould manage very well with an Inside stateroom, as It were. In fact, when we consider that he had the place all to himself and was not obliged to share the air with a crowd ot people slt Ung Around ln chairs rented trom the undertaker, we can Imagine him button ing up his overcoat and complaining of a draught Traveling ministers are able to go long distances tn Pullman berths without suf fering 111 effects. Is there any reason for supposing that Jonah, when he 'ac cepted the Nineveh call, waa more deli cate In constitution than the brethren to day? Tho probability la that Jonah's m- up on his leg under the skin. On the flrBt day ot September ho got up hun gry. By September 4 the sores were well. And so each year for eighteen years, with Inexplicable regularity, on August 1, Jila state ot enforced coma and fasUng has begun, all the scars of the preceding year have revived, accompanied unfoll, ingly by a new sore, and with equally strange regularity tho sores have never failed to be entirely healed by Septem ber i. He now has eighteen scars upon his leg. The first sore upon his Instep, like a perlodla volcano, has revived eigh teen times, the second seventeen times, and thus It becomes a simple sum In progression td find that Luther King, bitten once by a live rattlesnake, has been rebltten 171 times by an invisible and ghostly snake that all through each August lies colled there, a dread and un just nemesis, upon his leg. But still the affliction la as strange in its inconsis tencies as in its consistencies. No un usual effect, as has been noted, was felt till twenty years aftw the blta tnaVt ,m. ,M,rtnn on hi. vovajra to WT""' mo v T;h-hls" .;..d"eVxcunaon. It you like . f.' H?. Wi? "0t .v- him n or discomfort than a rj." ""' V""" B" OBO trip in tho subway would give a rabbi now.'Newark (N! J.) .News. HAS BRAND OF A SERPENT Hattlesnake Klnsr ot Oregon Awaits Death to End Ilia I'e enllar Malady. Luther King, better" known as "Rattle snake King," who la slowly dying ln Florence, Ore., does not believe that he wtU live till August, and that at last there will be an end ot his affliction whloh he himself terms "the serpent's brand that the Bible speaks about," and which has no parallel In the catalogue of local afflictions Recently the Evangelical .church of Florence prayed in a body for Uie old thlrty-flvo years after he had been bit ten. , It seems. Indeed, as he believes and asserts, that a preternatural correspond, ence is being worked out between his life and the life of the snake that bit him. "I'm Just like a snake tn August," he says. "I shed then. The skin comes .right off my leg; I can Just strip It right orr. 1 don't eat nothln' and I eleep all the time. And I'm plsen like a rattle snake then. If I'd bite you tn August. I'd kill you." He has always thought that wnen the sores reached the number of the snake's rattles they would stop la creasing and stop reviving, and, although he knows nothing of the else ot the saake except thai it was very. large, he has been watting hopefully each year, think. ing the "rattles had at last been counted." Portland Telegram. whale was the reason. As a result of man. that whale, T began at an early age to take an interest. In spiritual matters. Critic, spare that whalel Touch not a single tin! In youth It sheltered me From apathy and sin. William Jennings Bryan was my Bun- day school teacher: the whale was good trough for him, and It was good enough for me, Terhaps the whale did not swal low Jonah, but Mr. Bryan and I swal lowed the whale, and I hope Mr. Bryan will use hts Influence as secretary ot state to save the whale from the snare of the fowler. Jonah is as real to me as Robinson Crusoe or Aladdin. I have played Jonan, and I have played the whale. Ona'ot the consolations ot religion to me was the story ot Jonah. It consoled me for a great many other passages that the minister used to read. I believed In Jonah In the whale aa firmly as I be lieved in Daniel in tha lion's den and Shadrach in the furnace. 1 believe in him suit, and when the higher crtUcs assail the veracity of Jonah's ftah stqry they wound me In the most ienslUve fibres" of my being. The story that Jonah survived three NIGHT IN WYfJMING WILDS Bnbducd Roar of thei Creek; Croon Ins; of the Wind, nnd tUo Coyato (.'liornn. 1 "We-had been'cllmblnr Tilgher into, -Ufv mountains all day. and hod reached a level tableland where' the grass troa lux uriant and, there was plenty ot wood 'and water, Z unpacked j'Jeems1' anil stalte'd him out, built a roaring fire and made our bed ln an anglo of a' sheor wall; tot rock where we would "be protocted against the wind. Then I put some potatoes into tha embers, as Baby and 1 are both fba& ot roosted potatoes. I started to a little spring to get waiej for my coffeo when 1 saw a couple", ot Joekrabblts playing, so 1 went tack for my shotgun. I shot one of the 1 ability so I felt very like LoatherstocUIng , he cause I had killed but one when 1 might have gotten two. It was fat and young, and It was but the work ot a moment la dress' It and hang; It upon a tree. Then I fried some slices 0i.'bacon, made jhn elf a cup of coffee, and Jorrine and 1 sat on the ground and ate Everything smelted and tasted so good! This ar Is so tonlo that one gets delightfully hungry. Afterward we watered Nand rcsiakod "Jeema" I rolled some logn onto -the fire and then we sat and enjoyed the pros pect The moon was so new that Its' light w very dim, but the stars wero bright. Pre, ently a long, quivering wall arpso iuid was answered from a doxen hills. ;Llt seemed Just the sound one ought to-.Jtft&r In such a place. When the howls' ceased for a moment wo could hear the subdued roar ot the creek and the crooning of Uis wind ln tho pines. So we rather enjojed the coyoto chorus and wero not afraid, because thoy don't attack people. Pres ently wa crept undor our Navajos and, being tired, were soon asleep. Atlantic Monthly. In the early part ot August, 1S7S, thir ty-eight years ago. Luther Xing was picking blackberries In the mountains of Idaho, when a ratUesnaxe, disturbed in Its sleep, struck quickly and without warning and closed Its teeth so firmly upon his leg a little below the knee that he dragged It as he ran, whipping and Jerking, for 100 yards or more. He reached camp all right, the poison was extracted from the bite, the wound healed In a tew weeks, and, probably, as he believes, oil the subsequent history ot the bite, the suffering It caused and Its strange, almost Incredible, manifesta tions would not have occurred had it not been for one ctrcumstance-the time of the year. August, aa Is well known. Is dog days, and during this month snakes shed, are blind and they strike at every, thing they hear. It waa the bite of a blind and shedding snaxe that brought 1 dog days ana recurrent aeatn into me life ot Luther King. For twenty years, an unaccountable period of dormancy, of the effect, that afterward took place, he went about sound and well, the snake bite practically forgotten. Then on the last day ot July 1535, he felt a peculiar Irritation on the Mme. Yale Week We are pleased to Invite the women of Omaha to meet Mme. Yale, the foremost expert on beauty culture In America, who will be" at Brandeis Stores Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, to give her personal advice on matters pertaining to the care and treatment of the face and akin. days in the whale s rathskeller Is not NMen ,tJf but upon th, inittp end not iroprooaoie in any oeiaii. a no enwes ic us that whales have a sort of sink strainer or sewer grating In their throats that prevents them from swallowing anything bigger than a little neck clam. At a dinner party where oysters as large as a lady's hand are served, a whale would choke to death. Therefore, says th scientists, the whale could not have swallowed Jonah. Bat there are'flsh wjth open, Vluroblnx that. are big enough to swallow a man, for we all know people who have caught them. Therefore we can laugh that criticism to scorn- They; say that -aman uld not lve Just below the knee, where appeared the faint scar ot the bite. The next morn ing. August 1. he woke up feeling dlssy and to rind that the Irritating spot on his Instep was sore. All that month ha slept from eighteen to twenty hours a day, drank little and ate scarcely anything, while the functions ot the body stopped. On Septemebr 1 he got out ot bed and called for something to eat By Sep tember t the sore was. completely healed. On the last day ot July the next year he felt again an itching on his instep, two Itchlngs, and at the aame time he felt, dlssy as with malaria. The next A section of our third floor has been specially ar ranged where private consulta tion with Mme. Yale may ba had by appointment. Appoi n t m e a t cards may be ob tained in Drug Department. In terviews will be lfmlted to tlvo minutes, soan to allow as many as possible the op portunity ot ro c e i v 1 n g Mme. Yale's profession al advice. three days in such close quarters. Long- i morning the year-old scar upon his In. fellow says that Hiawatha got along step had revived with a sore and not two very comfortably m the midst ot a king inches away waa another sore. Again sturgeon for twenty-four hours, and no-. he slept the whole month through, with bo'dy calls Mr. Longfellow a Her. I little drink or food, and imagining In his Jonah was a minister, therefore it is delirium that a ratUesnake was coUed., Issssflst' MsiBsassssssssssssfl BSSSSSaBSSBsflBBHuBSnl BSSSaBBSSSi& JsBBBs9BBlsSSSSaB BSssssVeaK!St 4!bssH jsWgglsygd As this Is the first time the wo men havo Wen given the oppor- tunlty to meet Mme. Yale per sonally, no doubt tho demand on her time will be groat. We there fore advise you to secure ap pointment cards at once, "E a,c h card bears Oje exact t Ijn e Jot Into rview, per mitting no loss of time in wait- ' ing. Special Sl Mme. Yale's Proscriptions this week. Mme. Yale's special representative in charge. Mme. Yale's Book Free. Ask for one in Brandeis Drug Dept. main floor.