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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1914)
Q THE NATIONAL SUNDAY MAGAZINE Give This Perfect Adder A 10-Day Test The American Adder $35 Watch It Work See for yourself if $35 does buy a quick, compe tent Adder. Give it this chance to prove itself, with out cost or obligation. What 10 Cents a Day Will Do You will want this machine when you ii v it . You u ill see it compute a hundred figures a minute, and with net rr an error. You will not again want tu add in the old way. 19,482 Users Tim Up new Adder, hut more than lit. 1)00 offices have adopted it already. It is used by the U. S. Government and ly a cry large number of the largest concerns in America. Hut it is not for big offices only. It is for little offices, for stores and shops for men who have heretofore gone American Can Co. (A"b7,&"M) 1259 Monroe Bldg., Chicago Eastern Sales Dept., -189 West lltli Street, New York (49) This Coupon Brings the Machine and Booklet FREE American Can Co., 1259 Monroe Bldg., Chicago Please semi mc one American Adder on ten days' free trial, without cost or obliga turn to mc. without Adilcrs, because competent machines cost $ ISO and up It is for any man who cmnputis l'm 10 cents a day it does all this work fur him. It checks his invoices, insures his footings, and makes addition easy and accurate. We hae two propositions. You may pay the cash price which is $35. Or you may pay III cents a day $3 a month until you pay $37.50. The Prince of Graustark (Continued from 'aye 3 Xttme . AttlllTM . Do Away With Bands of Steel and Rubber l t!'"'' TDIII MUAKI'S n.AFAU-l'AUS oJiALiiro different from the truss. CDFF 1 li? xtfSklwinit medicine luiWk-tilors vjtarr w flfttfjBUiuudo ol t-iiillii HI u lu iro- I vent aiiiiinc. unu tnu result runt rhnlltitf. ami shifting uf fthe pail out of Mn to and 'against tho bono, they have, .therefore vrovento bo nn lin )portunt adjunct In retaining 'ruiiturii Unit ciinnot be held tXSi'Sy tt truss. No Hlrn lis, buckles m- or hiiriiiirs attached. Soft iim elwt eiisr to ii ii ltl 1" InrxiH'imlw-. Awarded Uold Medal Koine (irnnd I'nx. I'arK uidandvoung have uitcDtcd under oalli Mini Hie riinuio-l'iuU eureil their rupture -some of them most aggravated eases No delay from work Prix-ess of recovery Is natural bo more apt to be permanent. Wo "aIiow" you by bending Trial of J'liipao ubsulutuly Fill,! Write for It KHIAV. Ailillcss PLAPAO LABORATORIES, Block 1369, Si. Leaii.Mo. I LHrAt'lLKAIL MORE VITALITY FOR YOU Our MaciN'tlc AIhIoiuIikiI and Hhl Uf)- ltnll7('i-does what all the medicine oil earth cannot do. It eiret I ife Tone and Vigor to the blood and nervea. oTorcotnlnir cnnirpiitinti. mir. uostt and pain, by rapid circulation. Be Well and Strong through tbli civulcr fill Intention wlneli tlooilt the item w ith mug net Iprn and given Mii'iiKlli to the Hack. KliI n '. I.lti'r. Stomach and llimt-U, luntithng buoyant) tone and rejuvenating vitality Into the whole organuui. maLiiig you feel like a new lietng M ADE FOR MEN AND WOMEN Send for f ro Ixtoli and full Information. Describe your cao fully We adrlie you how to apply Magnetism for treating any form or weakness ordlneate. THAI HI It M AIiMliK Slli:i.l CO, Snlo383. 1 10 No, WabiiHh Ai i IIICAtiO, ILL 100 MvXmsrfn& Seconds $QO FRcrrFACTORYDiREcrToYoirBvEx Or Parcel Post Jl r Mode of IuipurtiHl Havana l'lcadura, from our own plantations In Cuba leaves that are too short to roll into our lac cigars, t ney ro not pretty no nanus or aecoruuons, uutjou uud i smoKo liHiks. Customers call them IMaiuundslntholtoUKh All M Inches lonir some even longer Only 10Q nt thta 'tint AcntinlntiHl' itrlcn. lonev cheerfullv refunded If vuu don t receive, at least uoubio value, Mention strcngtn nhonontering uur reicrences, nun or iiraastreet s or any oann. w - m. m. , mm " - Lcnrn nt Homeantl In Class Million of j)p!o prefer Uruules heal In to medicine- then is a bur demand for Doctors of Chiropractic - tho new dm i;U' fcienco, Capitalizo your rioro time, learn tin lucrative profession -varn Sa.OOOtoSS.OOOYearlve' profusely illustrated; o 14 bttf free charts nd a fpinal column tnake itudy fascinating rasif Km turncil nnirVlv hav fnr rnurie. PfnA 1 Aimni Write for KItEK sample lesaont, Ului ft ICC LtCSSUUS trated catalog, namei and addrese of BucccflsiuiffnuiustesanubitfDookuy tuiitui iiuiihauu. National School ol CMroprtctic. Vpt 12, 15S3 W Mifoon. 0ko About Mushrooms .li.iv ti mull miln lilv iiiisiin In Imu'rvuR's U fully ipitniT in th won Jj-rful tK,k rb Truth Abwut Mu.h Prouma," a rt rvvulutiwisry I in pro, mviit, thing many rori nvr knw b I ,-m t itt thing- iplalnvd fnm A tc?7 at flrftthanj. from Ibm tirrtet practical atl thurltk In Atnrrira A.1J $K' to ITO a wrk , 1 1 f ii ii 'ma imnj aaeaaua aurr'T f....u,lt. 1 ... .K.i. -f Ammii carltal to tUrt IWIta I'lasvr ami qulrWr Anrona ran iw it .mn art J c....rn to Now ia bl vm Ko.f fur fraabwok Bsrcu l MuluMm IndosUr Pfpt 16S. 1342 N. Cuts St. Cluaf 3 Wrinkles Tliousawlt have successfully used iius lormuia 10 retnovu truces of aij. Illuewi or norr) 1 oz. ot puro Powdered SAXOLITE dlaimlvfd In nt witrh harel uau an a fat o uuah '1 ho t'tloct I almost man leal l)ttipit vrrnnklftt. cmw' fet't, as well as tfnrt linoc, completely and ?u ckly tan h Fare Iwomoa tlrm, araootii, rrih, anj yuulook yaara vounnvr No harm to tanjarvat liln. la( aattuicaSuulila UMMrJaratl) at any dlMf aiura HARTSHORN SHADE ROLLERS Ilcar the rlpt name uf Stewart 1 IsirUhurn on label. Oet " Improved.1 no tacks reaulred. Wood Rollers Tin Rollers mas S "I can say it with a perfectly clear conscience, Miss Guile," said he, and was filled with delight when she bit her lip as a sign of acknowledgment. "Oh, here conies the tea," she cried, with a strange eagerness in her voice. "I am so glad." She scrambled grace fully out of her rug and arose to her feet. "Aren't you going to have some?" ho cried. "Yes," she said, Quite pointedly. "In my room, Mr. Schmidt," and before he could get to his feet she was mov ing away without so much as a nod or smile for him. Indeed, she ap peared to have dismissed him from her thoughts quite as completely as from her vision. He experienced a queer sensation of shriveling. At dinner that night, she failed to look In his direction, a circumstance that may not appear extraordinary when It is stated that she purposely or inadvertently exchanged seats with Mrs. Gaston and sat with her back to tho table occupied by It. Schmidt and his friends. He had to be content with a view of the most exquisite back and shoulders that good fortune had ever allowed him to gaze upon. And then there was the way that her soft brown hair grew above the slender neck, to say noth ing of but Mrs. Gaston was watch ing him with most unfriendly eyes, so the feast was spoiled. The following day was as unlike Its predecessor as black is like white. During tho night the smooth gray pond had been transformed into a turbulent, storm-threshed ocean; tho once gentle wind was now a howling gale that swept the decks with a mer ciless lash In Its grip and whipped into submission all who valnglorl ously sought to defy its chill domin ion. Not rain, but spray from huge, swashing billows, clouded the decks, biting and cutting like countless needles, each drop with the sting of a hornet behind it. Now tho end of the world seemed far away, and .tho Jumping off place was a rickety wall of white and black, leaning against a cold, blue sky. fN'LY the hardiest of the passengers ventured on deck; the exhilaration they professed was but another name for bravado. They shivered and gasped for breath as they forged their bitter way Into tho gale, and few wero they who took more than a single turn of the deck, Like beaten cowards they soon slunk into tho sheltered spots, or sought even less heroic means of surrender by tum bling Into bod with tho considerate help of unsmiling stewards. Tho great ship went up and tho groat ship came down: went up so high that the sky seemed to be startllngly near, and down so horribly low that tho bottom of the ocean was even nearer. And It creaked and groaned and sighed even above the wild monody of the wind, like a thing In misery, yet all the while holding its sides to keep from bursting with laughter over the plight of the llttlo creatures whom God made after His own Image but not until after all of tho big things of the uni verse had been designed. R. Schmidt, being a good sailor and a hardy young chap, albeit a prince of royal blood, was abroad early, after a breakfast that staggered the few who remained unstaggered up to that particular crisis. A genial sailor-man and an equally ungonlal deck swabber advised him, in totally different style of address, to stay bolow if ho knew what was good for him, only to bo thanked with all tho blltheness of a man who Jolly well knows what is good for him, or who doesn't care whether It is good for him or not so long as he Is doing the thing that he wants to do. Ho took two turns about the deck, and each time as he passed tho spot he sent a covert glance Into tho cor ner where Miss Guile's chair was standing. Of course he did not expect to find her there in weather like this, but well, he looked and that is tho end to tho argument. The going was extremely treacherous and unpleas ant he was free to confess to the genial sailor-man after tho second breathless turn, and gave that worthy a bright silver dollar upon receiving u further bit of advice: to sit down somewhere out of tho wind, sir. Ql'INNOX and Uankwore hopelessly bedridden, so to speak. They were very disagreeable, cross and unpleas ant, and somehow ho felt that they hated their cheerful, happy-faced Prince. Never before had Count Quln nox scowled at him, no matter how mad his pranks as a child or how silly ills actions as a youth. Never before had any one told him to go to the devil. He rather liked it. And he rather admired poor Dank for order ing him out of his cabin, with a per fectly astounding oath as a climax to the command. Moreover, ho thought considerably better of tho faithful Hobbs for an amazing exposition of human equality in the matter of a pair of boots that he desired to wear that morning but which happened to be stowed away in a cabin trunk. He told Hobbs to go to the devil and Hobbs repeated the injunction, with especial heat, to the boots, when he bumped his head in hauling them out of the trunk. Whereupon It. Schmidt said to Hobbs: "Good for you, Hobbs. Go on, please. Don't mind me. It was quite a thump, wasn't it?" And Hobbs managed, between other words, to say that It was a whacking thump, and one ho would not forget to his dying day (if he lived through this one!). "And you'd do well to sit In the smoke-room, sir," further advised .the sailor-man, clinging to tho rail with one hand and pocketing the coin with tho other. "No," said R. Schmidt resolutely. "I don't like the air in the smokeh room." "There's qulto a bit of air out 'orb, "I need qulto a bit." "I should think you might, sir, be ing a 'ealthy, strappln' sort of a chap, sir. 'Elp yourself. All tho chairs Is yours if you'll unpllo 'em." " Tho young man battled his way down the deck and soon found hlni self In tho well-protected corner. A half-dozen unoccupied chairs wero cluttered about, having been aban doned by persons who over-estimated their hardiness. Ono of tho stewards was engaged In stacking them up and making them fast. Miss Guile's chair and that of Mrs. Gaston wero staunchly fastened down and their rugs wero in place. R, Schmidt experienced an exquisite sensation of pleasure. Hero was 'a perfect exemplification of that much abused thing known as circumstan tial evidence. She contemplated com ing on deck. So ho had his chair put in place, called for his rug, shrugged his chin down Into tho collar of his thick ulster, and sat down to wait. (Continued in Our Kcxt Issue.) aB'u ww tuiitiMirimiiiwiiiiu THREE WISE MEN (A Contemporary Allegory) By ROBERT LOVEMAN The Mystic, Psychic, Scepiic, Were calling over names. One meekly murmured Maeterlinck, Another whispered James : They gurgitaied Chesterion, And decimated Shaw ; They roasted Zoroaster, And swallowed Nietzsche raw. The Psychic, Mystic. Sceptic, Evolved a mass of things. From Vedas old in parchment fold Through Judges, Job and Kings : Confucius had them in the air. Calm Buddha bore all blame : The Sceptic Psychic. Mystic. Sought succor from a name