Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 10, 1914, PART ONE, Page 5-A, Image 5

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    TITO OMAIJA STNDAY BKK MAY 10, 15)14.
5 A
IRELAND'S ANSWER TO MANY
John A. McChristal Gives Other Side
of Country's Question.
ORANGEMAN IN ADVANTAGE
"Writer llerlnrrn that Krln'n Oppos
inir Klemcnt In In Possession of
Lnml, While Other Are
Kent l'oor.
a more pernicious energy. But those
whom the people truit have promised
that they shall have Justice; and In full
rellanco on that promise, in undouotlntf
faith lifthe Integrity of nn administra
tion, which holds Its authority by so
iioblea pledge, they give themselves up
to a thousand 4arrasslng and vexatious
To the Editor of The Bee For several
months . past articles regarding Irish
politics have been appearing "at varylwj
Intervals Irt several newspapers. The all
thors of these compositions are evidently
ns Ignorant of this theme as they are
Illogical In their conclusions. For ns far
"back on English history concerns Itself
about tlio affairs of Ireland, It gives our
country and our people a bad name.
Ireland is described as it soil in which
the seeds of good government could never
be made to strike root, for the fruit's Of
peace to grow up to maturity. Fertile
to prodigality In the gifts 6f nature, her
moral field's are represented ns Incapable
of good, and yielding 'no other return
than a Cadmlan crop to the most as
siduous cultivator. On other topics con
nected with our lnnd, the British hlst6r
ians wrangle and tear each other's cred
its to tatters with tho fierceness of con
tending mastiffs. Hut there Is u pro
voking unanimity when they, come to
speak of the national character, of tho
Irish people. Like the annalists of old
Rome they immolate tho good name ot
nil other natlo'ns to the, glory ot their
own, and Ireland, as' if it were really
alien lp blood and In interest, comes In
for an equal share of obloquy with France
and Spain, the natural enemies of Great
Britain.
Press W Xot Kree.
Had our native historians been allowed
a perfect freedom of reply through tho
medium of Ihe same press and' the same
language, "which was used' with so large
' a license for the purpose of traducing
their country, doubtless they would have
told the English, reader and tho world a
different story. They saw their country
men held up to scorn and abhorrence as
an Inhuman, .revengeful and perfidious
race, whom no ties could bind,, no kind
ness soften. But for one instance Of
fierce vengeance on the part of the bonds
man they could have, cited ten of Inso
lent and rapacious cruelty on the ' sldo
of the taskmaster. They could have borne
down the charge of violence .with au
thenticated cases of oppression on the.
other scale. They might have balanced
impatience with extortion; tho disregard
of treaties with a profligate contempt
of Justice and disobedience to law,
with proofs without 'end', that the laws,,
both In spirit and operation, were con
trary to the will as they were adverse
to tho happiness of the Irish people, "It
Hons were carvers,'' said the king "of
beasts as he eyed a group ot statuary
which represented an animal of his own
species prostrate and bestridden by. a
man, "these two figures should change
place."
Orangemen Contemptuous.
Every Orangeman launches out against
the character of this people In a strain
of contempt, tromthelr very beginning
down to the moment In which wo write.
They are distinguished by the same spirit
of malice and exaggeration, thensame ex
alted pretence, of pletyand.the same ex
clusive assertion ot loyalty .which rac'-sep.
most strikingly exemplified Jn tho. wait
ings and declamations of their most zeal
ous leaders of today.
AVe own that In the pasD the plan of
the Cralghs, tho Carsons, the London
derrya has been too successful lnpcr
ivertlns thd most noble and generous-of
peoples. During several successive reigns,
not to speak of the present, In which
they aro trying to be most rarnflant.-the
Irish Is slandered and blackmailed by the
Orange clement, not alone in Ireland "but
v all over the world. By them the Irish
have been pillaged without relaxation or
remorse from the sixteenth century down
to the beginning of the twentieth, and
slnco then, with only occasional gleams
of forbearance, up to the present moment.
fear and severity, persecution and the
'sword were the means employed during
that .dark and afflicting period of Ire
land's history, to master Its affections
and win It to loyalty and obedience,
What wonder if they failed? Men do not
gather grapes of thorns or figs of this
ties, vyny then should they look, for a
return of gratitude and attachment to a
long series ot galling oppressions? Tha
rea matter of surprise is that tho Irish
have .not been rendered more wild, reck
less and vindictive than even tho hyper
bolical malice and Invention ot their ca-
lumnlators can paint them. For they are
naturally high-minded and impatient, nor
does their spirit tamely bend to a wanton
wrong or an insult. Yet are they still
found frank and open-hearted, unsuspic
ious against the warnings of all expert
ence; generous upon the faintest show of
kindness, and redfly to grasp the hand
which may be half extended to them in
amity, with ail the confiding ardor .jind
hope of men who had nover .been de
ceived. ' t
Give Them Justice.
Give them Justice. Give them but i
prbmise, such a promise as their san
gulne and credulous hearts, can rest
upon, that they shall have Justice.and
at once their fierceness Is turned to
praise; the voice of complaint is no
more heard In their streets, and a child
can lead lhem. This Is no idle declama
tion; the state of Ireland during the
last year and at this moment "gives it
the proof. Ireland now fondly contem
platinghome rule sustains its peace to
such an extent that even Its enemies
have to marvel. Never did the Orange
men of private life ply their task with
practices which are employed to goad
them to violence. They hold the warm
est and holiest' feelings ot our common
nature In restraint and Implicit subservU
e.nce to the better hope which shines
through their heaviest trials.
Xot All Are fntlrnt.
There are Indctd exceptions to this gen
eral rule of patient endurance. Some w
d'gnant spirits break out occasionally
against persecution, and those wild com
ligations which' rame yenrs ago ltepttho
whole government and the community In
terror, can again summon their scattered
adher"! to take vensennce for oppros-
slons.to which nil feel that they riro sub'-
Jcat. 'There nre nlsd hovering nbout their
former homes, or rathel about the spots
v-here ome they stood, many hapless out
casts, 'with nvnils as desperate as .their
foi tunes, eager to inspire others with
ttmKn hllrn!nir thmtBlitn whlph fnrm tho !
wietched sfclncc of thtlr pwn dark and
rcstles. hour, and who arc not unwilling
to assist In the purpose which their coun
sels suggest. Whatever remains of agra
rian outrage st'II Survives In the south
forging new fetters, or riveting the old
one Upon limbs that thoutd. and with tho
blessing of God shall be free. But Irish
patriotism has them overcome, they fully
leAllte this, ami Carson & Co., arc now
nothing more than tto borrow from
Tennyson):
'Infants prying In Ihe night.
"Infants crying for the light.
And with no tHiisuage but. n i ry .
. JOHN A. M CUU1STAU
OLDEST RIVER IN THE WORLD
St.
knwrcnoe lli Kehinlned
chanited Sliiee Knrth V
Formed,
tin.
What' Is the oldest river in the world?
Tho St." lawrenco. It Is also one of tho
tow- rivers that did not make Its own
bed. ami has remained unchanged slnco
the very beginning of the American conti
nent. Try to-think of n time when the tarth
was covered by a - mass of wntcr, hot,
steaming- and often tremendously dis
turbed by the throes of a globe beneath
It that was shrinking because It was be
coming cooler. As 'the ftlobe slirunK.
every iMirtlclc of the outside was nat
urally pulled In toward tho center, and
tho hnrdcnlng crust, which could not be
packed any more solidly thnn It was,
had to wrinkle, sinking down hero and
Ihulirlne un somewhere else Attn" n time
and West of Ireland, proceeds from tho oortairs of these rising wrinkles, or folds,
agency.or the dictation of uch perturbed lno thicker, or firmer, parts ot the earth's
spirits. But. In comparison to the mnsscruet u,e strain and became per-
of suffering which is unsparingly Inflicted i nlHncnt .ridges. The oldest of them that
tho state of populnr feeling and action geologists know, and apparently tho first
radium in the form of -rudo barium
sulphate salts. The only known process
then and now was the process of frac
tional crystallUatlon. No specific reagent
had been found to separnto In ono opera
tion barium and radium,
"In April. 1909, I made and reported
to Mr. Walsh a discovery ot a process
which, In my Judgment, will reduce the
tlmo and cost element of refining radium
inn les passengers. On July 21 Inst, the
Merced was several miles off Point I'on
cepclon nl S:N In the evening en route for
San Pedro. Miss 1'erklns was on deck
amusing the children. Glancing curiously
at the sky. she saw what she at first be
lieved to bo a gull making for tho
steamer. Idly watching the gyrntlons of
the bird high In the nir. sho did not curing a rifle, mado for the deck. Here,
children, when Miss Perkins, awake to
the danger, seUcd a boathook, forturjtely
near nt hand, uxul struck at the bird, (ihe
missed It, but frightened It away. Strfk-.
Ing It a second tlmo she called for aid,
The captain of the vessel, seeing the pre
dicament of the young woman and child,
rushed to the engine room and there se
rialize What It was until the eaglo seem-
of feel above the teamer and dropped
like a plummet for the deck of the vessel.
It was making direct for one of tho
JOHN A. SW ANSON, Pros.
salts by W per ceh;. 1 mado this report ngly stopped In midair mnny hundreds
to Mr. Walsh alone, and submitted me
evidence of tho effectiveness of the
process In the fornj of a radiographic
test platOv which was then placed nnd
now reposes In the Vincent Walsh memo
rial collection.
"Today 1 submitted to the officials of
the bureau of mines in confidence tho
original report sont to Mr. Walsh. These
officials have examined this report and
the plate nnd aro convinced of Its ef
fectiveness. Should tho bill to withdraw
the radium ore lands become a law this.
Information will form tho basis of claims
for pntcnts. and these patents will bo
assigned by me to the- government for
tho benefit of tho American people with
out cost.
"In doing this I think I nm following
tho wishes of the lato Thomas F. Valsh,
If ho could express them, for I feel ''that
had ho lived to prosecute his efforts for
the discovery of an economical method
of extracting radium from the ores ho
would have done this," Washington Post.
handing the rlflo to ono ot the crew, he
told him to shoot the engle, which by this
time had perched Itself on ono of the yards
of tho vcssol. The man shot at the bird
nnd missed. Another ot tho crew at
tempted the shot, but missed four tn fs
Miss Perkins, watching with intercs tV
tutilo attemps of the men to hit the I 'd
asked for' (he gun nnd fired once, mtss
Ing. Nothing daunted, she took carcfu
aim, and at the second shot the eag o
dropped to the deck, dead. When the eag o
was taped It was found to mcasuro eleven
feet eleven inches from tip to tip of Its
wings. Miss Perkins Is a stenographer
employed by a lumber company with of
fices In St. Hclcn's.-Wlde World Macn-xlno.
Key to the Situation Beo Advertising
War. L. IIOLZMAN, Trons.
Are Wrinkles
More Common?
Because life is more complex-
In Ireland !s qu'escenco Itself. The num
ber of thoso w;ho are at open war Is J
utterly insignificant, not alono now, but j
In , the past,' when title sales, bills In
exchequer, the wholesale ejectments
and depopulation ot entire villages ad
tracts of country, which w:ore crpetratcd
without cessation and with every circum
stance of aggravation and cruolty that
unrelenting pranKclsm could' devise, Com
pared with the provocation which the
Irish race has received wo say that the
blood of Irishmen Is tame and humble,
nor Is there any other people n Europe,
nor In tho rest of tho civilized world,
who would so long have brooked tho
uronsq they have endured and not risen
up tn a simultaneous effort to shake off
the annoyance of such puny and con-
Advnntnce In Possession. t
temptlblo oppressors. That which has
given tho orangemen of Ireland so great
an advantage of the Irish Is the posses
sion ot their land, ' The poor farming
Irishman has nothing to look to beyond
his ''blj of land.'' He Is rooted to the
solljho grows upon; he knows no other
means of living, has no resource what
ever, no tasto, no "aspiration, unconnected
with the cultivation ot his field. His
children generally ,are not Inured to any
other species of Industry. Drlvo them
from the fields which thefr sturdy labor
has been accustomed to subdue and you
render them totally helpless and desti
tute, without hope, without the oppor
tunity and without the ambition to ac
quire subsistence by any other art or
occupation, So when landlordism (which
Is merely a synonym for orangclsm) vis
its a, .happy home with1 eviction what is
the .wrctchet) peasant to do? phased
from the spot where he had first drawn
his breath, where hehad first beheld tho
light of heaven, incapable ot procuring
any other means ot exlstenco and too
houorable'to steal, can we be surprised I
that the peasant of unenlightened mind,
f uneducated habits, should rush upon
tho perpetration of primes followed by
tho' punishment -of the rope and gibbet?
Take the Cane Home.
Let. any parent make It his own case,
for this. 1b the' best way to test it. When
we, are assembled at the domestic hearth,
With our families, around us, let us bring
home to our bourns the bare apprehen
sion that for exercising an undoubted
privilege, not onljj recognized, but ' ac
tually -enjoined by the constitution,. It
werq In the power of sotne brutal tyrant.
come abortive, stunted upstart ot yester
day, of whoni goldT amassed by pecula
tion and. public plunder",' Is the sole no
bility,' to put out our fire and drive us
away far from that pleasant home. Let
us suppose him by tho word 'of Jils power
destroying our only means of providing
for that bright and Joyous circle and
turning our children arid ourselves adrift,
to lead & vagrant, hopeless, scrambling
life, disowned, rejected,, persecuted and
maligned. could we "bear It? .Where Is
me ramer heart that could endure It?'
"What reverence for the law, what sa
credness of private property, what ab
stract right of men to do as they please,
with their own, would be of force to re
strain our thoughts from dark Imaginings
or our hands frpm giving them effect?
We frankly avow we would not submit
to such treatment, but would take the
law Into our own hands, and It possible
redress ourselves. Our children have a
right divine to cjalm from us the pro
tection whlbh may be denied . to them
elsewhere. And we cannot recognize any
human obligation Wjhlch' should or could
constrain us to. reject such an appeal,
say that no man owes a moral obedience
to an exterminating decree, nnd, the man
who should, Is un anachronism to this
twentieth century civilization. - No man,
pretending or deserving to bo free ,wquM
pay It an outward homage, ruie moment
longer thap superior force compelled him
to bow hi neck- under its intolerable
yoke. ,
I nnrresslhle n Pity,
Tho persecutors and ulamlcrcrs of the
people talk of thejr untamubje force nnd
Vlndlctlyo nature,. But If they believed
that wnv. -would ,mey iare "to oppress
and harass them'a's they do? Would they
expel fathers, mothers a'nd infants at tho
breast and tottering a?e, If they xenlly
thought, that blood alono could slake the
burning Heart of h ruined Irish peasant
No. Too well tpey know that thoso
domestic tyranto are inaccessible to p.'ty.
.-so sentiment or numnn Kindness, no
horror of ,th calamities meditated
against fellow creatures, fellow country
men, fellow Christiana cart 'male them
lelax their stern'code of proscrlnt'on. But
i they are not reckless of their own stfc'ty.
DogBcll and perverse though they be, an
that bulged" tip abovo the universal ocean
nnd remained high mid dry. was tho
brond mass on which Canada now rests.
It Is a part of the original emit of tho
eurth, and we can see It today, wherever
It Is not covered by newer .rocks or soil,
Just as It crystallized and cooled ,out of
the primeval molten material.
This mans formed a broad ,V from Lab
rador down to Lake Huron, and thenco
northw'estwnrd to' Alaska; on account ot
Its shape, geologists call It the Canadian
shield. It Is the oldest land known, and
apparently the strongest, for there aro
no signs of any extcnslvo changes In It
(except the wearing away of tho surface)
since It first rolled the ocean off Its
shoulders.
Off the eastern coast of this primitive
continent lay a .chain of lofty islands,
a'bout on the lino of the Blue Uldgc, tho
White' mountains, thd Malno const nnd
Nova Stotla. Between these Islands and
the mainland wns a trough-llko spaco
that ran from eastern Quebec 'southwest-
ward to' Ohio. It was 200 or 300 miles
wide nnd filled with a shallow sen: and
just outside the Island chain was tho
great hollow that held the Atlantic ocean.
Time went on. For ages tho straining
and cracking of the shrinking globe,
earthquakes, sun and frost, pqundlhg
surf, running water, blowing gales, Ice
all labored to tear down tho mountains
and carry the wreckage of ' rocks and
dust away into tho valleys and seas. In
this way vast masses of rocks, in layers
ot shales, Sandstones and what not were
laid down in tha, narrow, trough-like
sea between the chain ot Islands and the
continent. All these "sedimentary" rocks
were soft and woak as compared with
the solid od granltcS deeply footed on
cither side of them; and the, trough Itself,
u sagging fold, was a line ot. weakness
In the .crust. As the load of deposits
became heavier and heavier, the floor "pf
SOLDIER MOTHERS AT HOME
Theirs n Heroism nn rnmmendnbte.
ns Glory Won lit the
Front.
his' trough slowly yielded, and as It sank
townrd the heated region below the un-
aer siae mcupa ana grew m)nncr ana
thinner.
That could not go on forever ami soon
the continual shrinking of tho globo and
tho .enormous pressure of the weight ot
the ocean became "Irresistible. The
Canadian shield was Immovable, so the
rock In the trough began to bulge or
crumple alLalong Its length. Gradually,
not all at once, but by. slow and varying
movements, thoo folds were squeezed
up, which In their broken and worn-down
form we know aa the Appalachian moun
tains. '
Toward the south there-iwas room for
this action 'Jta be rather gentle and regu
lar, but In the far northeast the trough
was narrgwi and the soft rocks Svere et
on edge, overturned and splintered
agalpst -the solid continent. Very early
In the struggle a great fracture of - the
earth's crust occurred hero along at curv
ing northeast and southwest line. It loft
deep --and broad trench between, tho
crushed and displaced rocks of tho trough
and the granlto shore of tho Canadian
shield. Into this trench rushed all the
Interiorwatera of the continent, draining
away to the sea, and the -St. Lawrence
river was born! There, no doubt, it will
remain .as long as the earth keeps Its
present form.
At thtit time there was no Gulf of St.
Lawrence. The land extended out to a
coast lino that stretched unbroken from
isova bcotla to Labrador. The present
gulf lsthe result of a sinking of the
coast region. Most of It is very shallow,
duc a cnarl ot soundings shows the an
cient rlVer bed as a channel winding out
between -Newfoundland and Cape Breton
to. the deep ocean. Youth's Companion.
COLORADO'S RADIUM, PIONEER
Expert Tells of.TJiomns P. WiiIhIi's
Kf forts to Save Yield to the
Public.
"The Vnlted States government. In my
Judgment, should fake Immediate steps
to protect Its rights In radium producing
lands," .said Stophen T. Ixjpkwood, a
Buffalo lawyer, who Is in Washington
on business" with the bureau of mines.
"It Vas..a Washlngtpn man, the lato
Thomas-, F. (Walsh, who first .gave per
sonal an'd financial encouragement to tho
efforts U locate suoh ores ami tn k.
traci from them jhelr contents fiT radium ,
sans, as long ago as IW) n prospector
In Ctah gave me a fine specimen ot
carnotile ore while I was visiting there.
He requested that I .endeavor to learn
the value of his find, and tn do so 1
experimented In a i-rude way, and finally
ascertained that carnotltc. as' well as
pitchblende, contains radium
Volunteers nte needed in the army for
a dnngerous service. lnstnntly( there
spring forward ten' times the number of
men required. Thoso selected become
heroes by their chotco on' the spur of the
moment. Tho United Stutes needed men
to sink tho Alcrrlmac In tho neck of tho
channel of Santiago harbor. Hobson and
his bravo comrudes sank tho vessel and
bottled up tho Spanish fleet. And the
world proclaimed them heroes all, which
they were.
But the world hears Uttle of tjie every
day acts of heroism stretching over years
Instead of hours. What of tho widow left
with a family of smalt children, nnd no
money? There can bo. no trumpet sound
ing tho "Charge!" to lend courage; no
knowlcdgo that the eyes ot the world ,ar
focusscd on her, she does not march to
tho battle with banners flying, and stir
ring muslo urging her on. Sho la face to
faco not" wlh an net of bravery that may
bo consummated In a few minutes or a
few hours, and that will be blazoned
through all tho land she Is confronted
with a struggle that must go on fop
years, with nothing to lend strength but
her lovo for thoso for whom she must
labor.
The charge of the Light brigade at
.Bnlakalava! "Cannon to tho right of
them, cannon to the left of them, volleyed
and thundered'.' The "noble COO" were In
the heat of battle. They were filled with
unholy battle fire. .Inspiration-could point
to nothing else than "to do or die," John
Taul Jones' "I havo not yet begun to
tight" deserves no greater placo In tho
nnnals or heroism tnan tne suom re-
solvo of the wldw: "I'll, keep them all
together, Ood giving me strength." It Is
premeditated heroism .that enables a
mother lo say that premeditation that
sees tho long, weary struggle, perhaps
days over the' washtub, bajk-breoklnff
task; mending tho' children's clothes long
after tho Wearers have been tucked Into
bed; twelve and sixteen hours ot Vrork
a day; scheming and planning, Instead ot
sleeping, In order to keep the little flock
together. There can bo no" thought of self
for the mother who elects to keep her
chlldron together. Sho Is and must be
"thankful to .work for all the seven,
trusting tho rest to One In Heaven."
There are durk days In the self-imposed
task days when It seems that life Is not
worth ttje struggle, days when It seems
that flesh cannot,, stem the tide, days
when there Is no vista beyond tho dull.
dreary monotony of doing for a brood
that Is too young to appreslate the her
culean struggle,
There is no grateful nation to prcssnt
the mother with a medal. Her heroism
will go unsung. But somewhere, the One
who notes the sparrow's fall has weighed
Ihe wrtlmo her and the -llttlo mother
nrfd In Writing In tho Book of Gold the
world may be sure that the 'little moth
er's name is not going to be the last on
the page. For how could the heroism of
battle bo possible without the foundation
of tho heroism of the little mother? In
dianapolis News.'
Choice of Any Trimmed Hat
IN THE HOUSE
mMKm Worth up
to $7.50, Monday $2
00
AU Hats
worth up
to $15, Monday, $3
PATTERN HATS , Ilft T
ALL -rfr-
PATTI
PLUME HATS
No matter what the former prico was, Mon
"day, choice of tho house, $2.C0, $3.00, $5.00.
00
All Hats
up to $25
Monday, $5
Nothing
Held in
Reserve
JOHN A SWANSON.MH.
WM L HOIZMAN.thi
m ' i t t i mmm nwi ruin ir
Sco Motion Plctu.ro Exhibition ot Holeproof Hosiery Manufacture at Ellto Theater No. ,2, opposite
W. O. W. Building. Wo offer largest showing of theBO celebrated hoso.
OUR NEW CREDIT TERMS
IF $5
SHIP'S FREEDOM FOR WOMAN
Unique llrivnrrt Given for FlirhtlnB
lliilil Knule llrnt on
KlilnnpliiK,
Miss Kcona Perkins, a young Woman of
26, of St. Helen", Ort., has been given
tho ""freedom" of tho steamship -Merced,
and can voyugo on it whenever sho likes
free of charge, ns the result of a success,
tul battlo wlth'an American bald ertfile
which attempted to, snatch a child from
the deck of the vssej. The Incident of tho
ldlllnc'la regarded by the oldest seamen
entering San Pedro us ono of the Strang
est In tho annals of tho port, The steamer
Merced, one of a largo fleet owned by a
big lumber company on the Pacific coast
Is tho newest ot the fleet. It plies between
the Columbia river, San Francisco, and
Ban. Pedro, the port of the city of Los
Angeles, "In addition to carrying many
thousand feet of lumber tho vessel also
:5Excellent Tonic"
MRS. S. A. WEIR,
C27 W. lSthvSU Pueblo, Col.
-Ilerause L. . , ,
women are interested in bo ina:.y miore """isneo apprenension 01 consequences
.things than they used to be Because! to themselves, consequences such as
dividing a day unionij household duties, WOuid Beetn to .be Inevitable, were the
politics, clubs, charities, society, bUil- , . ... -,h,,L ,,, . .
ness. and personal care Is a strenuous I Irl"h Peasant the tiger which their In
thlng and strenftouH life mukea muiko i ventlon "Would nalnt 4blm would restrain
upon the face, the worrtan of tbday who the arm which pity clasps in vain. Fear
wants to look right has long since start- . . ,, . 1
ed to aid Nature in Its uneven fight and land Prudence would operate where natur;
many of the wisest and busiest l ave do- 1 Is rudely thrust aside, and the Inter-
crTa Chr"tltt" ?hri "k ll
mover and skin stimulator It prptects ' sacred author, are mocked, reviled nnd
the surface of the skin and brings the spat upon. But the persecution fioes on,
blood to the surltice Where It performs Kir hrnrn was !andr mnr nn.
Its upbuilding wor... J-a. t tio.n ..-our " "'anf'r niore
druggist an ounce df almozoln. put It mltlgably active. And yet Its authors
into a fruit Jar and add half sv-plnt of wolk abroad unhurt by any lash, unless
r'lJr'VhKKTK S'CSI! conscience, unseen and in Its secret hour
lne. Let this mixture stand for several , , . . ,
hours,, stirring occasionally during this may,npply, scorpions to their souls. HIs
tlme. Before retiring apply rather . tory ropeata Itself, let orangelsm gloat all
............... : If will her clavs or tvrannv In Krln aro
Peruna Is tin excellent tonic for
the weakness that follows grip. If
everybody could have a bottle or two
nf Peruna after they havo had. trip
In UK51 1 built tho first exj erlmmtal i they would get well a great deal
plant .for the reduotlon of arnot te ores , cooncr uw
... .,... u... ..... .:i .-v. ...... "There Is no better medicine
I came in contact with Mr.! Walsh. He 1
and allow It to dry. It will harden ran-
Jdly and, when applied, you will note a
slight tightening of the skin. In the
morning remove' with hot " Water and
note the ImmeUte iffect, which is .last
ing. Advertisement.
consummated. They may appeal to what
they designate as "the wholesome' rigor
of the law." and to the natural results
ot their own brutality as arguments for
In
tha world for colds and grip than
was deepiy Interested Id the pr.luct.on J g
of radium, not from a commercial stand- any remedies that I have
point, but because of his dese to de- I JjyJJj, taken"
velop the mineral resources of Colorado) othtp tLng, ,ena 0qus!t the
and to give radium, to the world tor Lady . to - take medlolno Is the
scientific use. it was largely the result I ch,ap,r; On this phsso of tho sub
of fits efforts that a bureau of mines . jeotMrs. Weir ssysi
was created. r am a widow with a very small
".a the technical adviser of Mr, Walsh, I inc0me, and have to look tp every
who was one or the ablest mining men penny very closely. Under these
In the world, 1 dlrooted tho activities of i circumstances your medlolne Is a
his private exploration, and made many, i, godsend to me. One bottle of Peruna
experiments on a large scale to dovls;' has accomplished for me more than
methods for the recovery 6f .uranium, an expensive course of treatment of
vanadium and radium eContents from any other sort. Of this I feel sure,
ores. At that time tde plant we operated, As a matter of economy every one
which is still In existence, had a capac- ought to. have a bottle of Peruna In
Ity for the reduction of thirty tons of the house."
carnotlte ores a month. We saved the J Speak from Experience"
Down on
Hundred
The wage earners of Omaha and vicinity surely ap
preciate our efforts to help them fight "the high cost
of living." When we reduced our credit terms to "$5
down on a hundred" we benefited hundreds of families
who needed that-help, We have absolute confidence
in the wage earners of Omaha. They have proven
themselves worthy of the best things that we can
possibly f &vor them with. ,
$50 Bill, $3 Cash, $3
$100 Bill $5 Cask $5
Monthly
Monthly
Larger bills will be sold on proportionately low terms.
This is the store for the' wage earner the store that does most
for people of moderate income. No other store in Omaha renders
the service or grants the favors' that we do. We guarantee you
lower prices, easier terms of payment and the greatest accommo
dations at all times.
$1,00 Cash 3So Wsskly
Very unusual value, splendid Table,
genuine solid oak. Price exceedingly
low
LIBRARY TABLE
Made of solid oak, well-built
Table, should sell at trr
$15.00. Salo price... pO f O
Credit Terms to Suit.
SOLID OAK-DRESSER
Substantially mado of genuine
solid oak, golden finish. Ono of
Bovcrul big values In low-priced
dressers, Now
at
$7.50
Bi.so Cash BOo Weekly.
Refrigerator Special
Three door design, frmt Ice,
dry and odorless, most eco
nomical In use of Ice patent
lever locks and t1.r nf
adjustable metal tblDaD
. '
shelves; sale price
GO-CARTS
One motion Collapsible Go
carte, H-Inch rubber tires,
complete with hood and ad
justable dash;
price only
$2.98
HI