Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 25, 1903, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25 1903 [ Men's $1.50 Gloves $1.00 “Our Nebraska Special” the best dollar and a half glove made, we sell for a dollar porfect Atng—-well sewed in the latest shades of browns and tans, every pair guaranteed to give the most $l perfect catisfaction, ne sou Sessebees Men'’s Suits and Overcoats The Lowest Prices Ever Quoted for Strictly High Grade CIothlnE We don't hesitate to say that these are the best values we have ever offered, for men's strictly high grade clothing. Rather than wait till the end of the season when the demnnd would naturally be less and it would be more difficult to move such an enormous stock we em- ploy the most effectlve means ever prompted by good business methods, and offer the people of Omaha the most unusual valnes ever given them. Rend every line of this ad carefully—then if_you are at all interested come and see liow well the garments back up these qescriptions. _Qen's $10.00 Overcoats $7.50 | Men’s $10.00 Suits for $7.50 Full, long coats of neat, all wool fabrics, Newest styles are represented—all wool with silk velvet collars—several styles to Samimeres, cheviots_piain and fancy col- select from—every onme the best $10.00 will ors, an almost endless variety of patterns 5 - y —would easily sell fo Sup in & reRulss Way~you save $L.50 siberfectly tailored—would casily sell for xymlh):lu were our price—however, you Men’s Overcoats worth $13.50 4 ) for 10.00 Kersey and fancy mixtures—all wool, latest fall styles—satin sleeve lining, broad padded shoulders and full backs—equal to most $12.50 to $15.00 coats, Men's Fine Neckwear, 45¢ We have on special display In our neckwear department the finest and snapplest line of men's neckwear ever seen in Omaha— they are strictly up to the minute—regu- lar seventy-five cent value tomorrow, 45¢ POF ioviniiee . Men’s High Grade Shoes, $2.50 Don't pay shoe stores $2.00 and $2.50 for shoes when you can buy shoes iike we offer for §.i—made of patent colt, box calf, viel kid, and velour cy 0 and #50 values, ariety of Topios Treated Under Titles More or Less Imposing. GLIMPSES OF THE DAYS OF GARIBALDI Dessertation on Ch Ed Studies and the Usual Ase wortment of Fiction. “The Sword of Garibaldl” by Felicla Buttz Clark, opens with a scene at the Vatican in April, 180, just prior to the time when Garibaldl, with his 1,00 volun- teers, descended upon Sicily, and when his hopes and ambitions were to enter Rome and for a “United Italy.” Uneasy was the head of a revolutionist in those days. The long-drawn campaign, with its traftors, its hardships, its perils and dangers, and self- sacrifice, and finally the entrance of the Roman treops into the Eternal City, and the proclalming of Victor Emmanuel II. king, makes a very interesting and excit- ing tale. However, the whole interest is not in the historic, for there is a beautiful and touching romance connected with the atory. Olivia, our heroine, was the daugh- ter of a prince, who on account of sym- pathy for the rebels was compelled to fles from Rome, and identified himself with Garlbaldl. One of her lovers was Antonlo, secretary to Cardinal Rosmini; the other the Marquis Perrott, also a rebel with Garibaldl. Italy was free, but the great floods came In the terrible devastation pay | Men’s $13.50 Suits for $0.75 From two to four dozen suits of a kKind— the manufacturer wanted to get ready for epring business and was willing to sell them at any price. You will be as anxious to buy as we were. The fabrics are best Imported and domestic worsteds and Scotch cheviots and the like—best tailored, broad JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER A% NE I8 TO-DAY. SKETCHED FROM LIFR Ida M. Tarbell’s Men’s $18.50 Overcoats for $13.50 Full or warmnth, style and wear. glad to be able to offer these, because we know it would take from $.00 to $7. to get as fine elsewhere in the city. must be hard to please who can’t find his overcoat in this lot at $13.50. We are padded shoulders, shape-retalning coats, Men’s $18.00 Suits for $13.50 The and wool noth! 50 more He from an investment In such cf expect to pay $ more for such suits, best hand tailored styles—correct cut clegant workmanship—the finest ot ali worsteds and Bcotch mixtures, There's but eatisfaction oming to you thing. You ing THE CITY OF LIGHT. Philadelphin Claims to He the “Best Lighted City In the United State | Chicago Record-Herald. | Philadelphia now claims to be “the best | lighted city In the United States. 18 | led to make this claim after having erected 560 new electric street lights this year, and a8 & result of comparison with the number of atreet lights maintained by other cities. The Quaker City now maintains nearly 10,000 lights, or, to be exact, 9,977. Chicago, covering a much larger area, now operates 4881 arc lamps from Its municipal plants and rents 605 more arc lamps which are operated by private companies, making o. | total of 6,48 electric street lights. In adal- | tlon to these lights, however, Chicago h 5,000 gas lamps and 6,200 gasoline lamps. | In the absence of figures regarding Phila- | delphia’s gas lamps it 1s not possible to make comparisons as to total lights of all kinds. In the matter of are lamps, ho ever, it ' evident that Philadelphia is way ead of Chicago. A / The history of street lighting In Phila- delphia Is Interesting, because it is a his- tory of the development of the arc light. | When Brush of Cleveland Invented the arc light, as everyone knows, he had a hard time convincing city authorities of its prac- ticability. 1t was ridiculed by Inventors and | electricians and its failure predicted. After | many unsuceessful efforts to secure its adoption In Philadelphia a local company offered to lght Chestnut street with the arc lights for a year for nothing. The offer was accepted in a city ordinance passed by | the Philadelphia council June 2, 1881, and | the dark and gloomy thoroughfare was converted fnto a brilllantly lighted prome- | nade, ‘This marked the beginning of a very wide and rapid extension of the arc lighting sy tem, not only in Philadelphia, but al over the union. In Philadeiphia, it 18 claimed, the increase In lights has caused a great decrease In crime, burglary and thievery | belng very rare. It has also effected a | &reat change in house architecture, the | old-fashioned outside “shutters” being done away with and ornamented glass panels belng placed in front doors. — THE AMERICAN DRUMMER, In a Business ut He Beats the Britisher in His Owa Batliwick, New York Times. The roport of the British commissioner | to South Africa, Mr. Birchenough, is the | most reassuring document which has been given to the public about the industrial | condition and prospects of the vast region | now reduced to alleglance to the British crown. Partieularly striking fs the atate- ment that South Africa, of the British de- pendencles, already ranks second among the customers of the mother country. And the experlence of the past two years seems to warrant the commissioner's expectation that within the next year South Africa will pass India and take first place. Amer- fean rivalry with Great Britain in this fleld is confined to certain specialties, especially agricultural, electrical and mining machin- ery, and manufactures of wood. In fact, the Transvaal was a market for American wagons long before the war, and will now become a better market than ever. One cause of the Amerfoan success the British commissioner finds in “the ac- cessibility and bonhomie of the American agents, compared with the reserve of the Rritish agents.” This is & welcome and merited tribute to the American “‘drum- mer,"” with whom the “bagman” following the British drumbeat cannot cope. How any commercial traveler can get on with “reserve” Is a puszle to whoever has ob- sorved the ways of our native practitioner In that kind. He at least fs as free from reserve as was, according to a British au- thority, the late Countess of Beaconsfield. It can readily be understood how a drum- mer who not only knows his business, but is also familiar with the latest anecdotage of Chicago and New York, can endear himself as well his goods to a remote, unfriended, melancholy and slow set of potential customers. Unfortunately, it Is only in countries in which English is spoken that the drummer can oxerate. Outside of those, he comes into a compe- tition with the German drummer, by what- ever name he may be known at home, a competition which he cannot sustain by reason of the German's superior knowledge of forelgn tongues. The addition, say, of Spanish alone to the equipment of the American drummer, including his total want of any but a calculated and prudent reserve, would be worth millions te his native land. “Give him but room, and do not bind him when he sleeps.” In other words, give him a fair chance by a ilberal- ization of the tariff, and he will do the rest. BRIGHT AND BREEZY. Weary Wraggles—I don’t like to think that the world was made In six days. Dusty Rhoades—Why not? Welr{ ‘Wraggles—It makes me tired.— Somerville Journ: “I think he has “Yes, perhaps so; Yale Record. heavenly voice.” at least unearthly.’ “Whenever 1 see & meteor it makes me think of that steel stock of mine.” Wy vt You never saw a meteor that wasn't go- "}fi down, did you?'—Chicago Record-ifer- ald. She—1 hear the aftempt to run a base ball team In the coal region was not a success. What was the trouble? He—All the men went out on strikes. Cornell Widow. ‘Two men fallen out of the sixty-fifth story. As they proceeded downward one of them yelled. “Why do you yell?" asked his compan- fon, “In order that people may catch us with lhelll:‘l gnmerll." replied the other.—Detroit ‘ee Press. Tuffold Knutt (with a_hollow cough)— Mister, when a pore man gits tired o' livin' ike, Wot's the easiest way fur 'im to kill elf. Takin' pizen or inhalin' gas? Man of the House—Well, I can recom- mend both ways. I own a drug store and T have some stock in & gas company.—Chi- cago Tribune, Artist—What a beautiful place thi suppose you came here for the view? gf‘d Lady-No, I i ulted. born here.—Somervill is. I I w \h’omn"lnd Tlms, alwa) bad friends, final to words. ““n{'.on u.yunwom-nl " eried Time. “And, ‘you" Tetorted Woman, “are un- e wutusl friemds intarvensd.—Puck. THE TURKEY'S CONSOLATION. New York Commerclal Advertiser. When I think of all the dressing, And the light and shady meat, That the gormand and the glutton, And dyspeptic have to eat On fhis the glad Thanksgiving— Why then I'd rather be The roasted turkey gobbler Than the man that gobbles me. When I think of all the raisins nd the flavoring of sage, And the tiny sea of gravy To hide my !oug:ened age, Then I'd rather the dinner Than the guest—1'd rather be The roasted turkey gobbler Than the man that gobbles me. When I think of all the visions That shall ripen in the night, From the shadows of my dark-meat To my shredded ghosts of white, Then I'd rather 13y my wattle On_the block than chance to be ‘The head upon the pillow hat is dreaming over me. Let the cleaver clip and sever All my ardent hopes of life, h aith and fancy nd carving knife— wits futher withal, I'd rather The roasted turkey gobbler Than the man that gobbles me. Yet my That SPAULDING & Co. OHICAGO Goldsmiths Silversmiths and Jewelers Importers of Diamonds Precious Stones Watches and Art Goods Producers of Rich Jewelry and Silverware Our “Suggestion Book” Special and artistic designs furnished. alled on application. Correct and latest forms in Fine Stationery. Spaulding & Co Jackson Bivd Cor State 8t Chicago . them until quite soft. —————————— TABLE AND KITCHEN Menu, BREAKFAST. Fruit Cereal. Cream Fried Calf's Liver Brown Sauce, Grilled Spanish Onione. Corn Muffins. LUNCH. Fried Smelts. Sauce Tartare. Chestnut and Orange Salad Rolls, Cocoa. DINNER Chopped Vegetabie Soup. Panned Rabbit. Glazed Turnips. Egg Slaw. Quince Souffle. Recipe: Roast Turkey, New Chestnut Stuffin Singe, draw and truss the bird, filling with the following dressing: Peel fifty large chestnuts, blanch in boiling water to .re- move the inner brown skins, then boil Drain and chop fine and mix with the marrow from two soup bones, first cutting the marrow into small pleces. Season to taste with salt. Cover the breast of the turkey with thin strips of fat pork or buttered paper and roast,in a hot oven, basting every ten minutes with hot butter. When nearly done take oft the paper, dredge with flour and salt, and con- tinue to baste with butter until a fine brown. Place on a hot dish, garnish with celery and glazed chestnuts, and serve with a rich giblet sauce. Turkey Roasted Turkish Style.—Prepare the turkey for the stufing. Wash a cup of rice through several waters, parboil and drain it, add & dozen large chestnuts, peeled and chopped, half a cup of washed and dried currants, two ounces of blanched pistachio nuts, chopped fine. Season to taste with salt and pepper and add a pinch of cinnamon. Put four ounces of butter In & raucepan and melt slowly, then pour over the stuffing and toss until the butter is well mixed through. Put this mixture into the turkey and finish in usual way. Serve a clear brown gravy with it when done. Turkey Stuffed with Oysters.—Prepare as for roasting and make stuffing as follows: Take a quart of bread crumbs and same quantity of crushed oyster crackers. Add the lMquor from five dozen small oysters, two well-beaten eggs and half a cup of warmed butter and a few tablespoonfuls of cream. Mix in the oysters, and salt and pepper 'to taste. Fill the turkey loosely, as the crumbs and crackers will swell when they absorb the juices of the bird. Roast same as turkey with new chestnut gressing, Roast Turkey a la Allemande.—Singe and draw a young turkey, wipe inside with damp cloth and dust with little salt and pepper. Make stuffing as follows: Boak a small stale loaf of bread in cold water untll it is soft, then wrap in a towel and squeeze out the water. Put an ounce of butter in a saucepan, and, when hot, add | four tablespoonfuls of finely minced onion, | and cook five minutes without browning; | then add the crumbs and stir and cook five | minutes. Turn the bread out to cool; then | mix with a pound of finely chopped fresh pork tenderloin. Season with a level table- spoonful of salt, a level teaspoonful of pepper, a grating of nutmeg, and a tea- spoonful of thyme. Add the yolks of two beaten eggs, and when well mixed together fll the turkey as directed. STOCK BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN Subscriptions to Omaha Gralnm y Capital May Be Made Wednesday. Coftee. Rice. Coftee, Ter- | | The books of the Omaha Grain Terminal | company will be open Wednesday for subs scriptions to the capital stock. This is the second step legally in the forming of the corporation. The articles of incorpora- tion have been signed and executed by President A. B. Stickney, in company with Nathan Merriam, John L. McCague, A. G. Charlton and W. D. McHugh. These in- corporators have now given notice py ad- vertissment that the books will be open to public subscription Wednesday, Novem- ber 2, in room 411 of the First National bank bulldin, This action, it was said by a business man who 18 In & position to know, Is for the pur- pose, aside from its legal significance, of al- lowing the other rallways coming Into Omaha to join with the Great Western fn owning and operating the terminue. It this ts done it will, 50 the rumor goes, be gratifying to Mr. Stickney and will insurs & general faterest In the grain tracks. It | none of the stock is taken, the enterprise will be catried on without any change of plan. The opening of the stock books is fn the nature of a feeler to ascertain the exact position of the other roads & Perm. Bullding permits have been lssucd as fol lows: To tings & Heyden for a §2,00 dwelling at 220 Norih Tweniy-fourth frame dwel'lng at 224 North o for u §1,00 Sovth Tenth street dwellings at frai THIEVES TEAR THE LETTI'ERS Oclwein Mail Pouch Recovered, bat Contents Never Can Be Delivered, ST. LOUIS, Nov. 20.—~A mall pouch that was rifled near Oelwein, Ta., has been re- celved at the office of Chlef Postoffice In- spector Dice. The pouch had contained several hundred letters « from djfferent points in the west and had been cut open and the contents rified by soffie unidenti- fled thief. Every letter had 'been opened and the money in it taken. Money orders and checks amounting to $10,00 were left. Nearly all the leiters were torn or mutilated in such a manner that it was im. possible to forward them to their destina- tion. The only clew the government had regarding the robbery is that the sack was taken from the car somewhere between St. Joseph, Mo,, and Oelwcin, Ia., it being last seen intact at the former city. 4862 Faucy Blouse, 8210 40 bust. Blouse Waist with Yoke Collar 4582—Deep yoke collars with softly bloused waists are exceedingly charming and are to be noted among the best designs of the season. This smart model is graceful and attractive and is well suited to all the fashionable soft and pliable materials, but is shown in champagne colored velling with the yoke of cream Venise lace, and the ruchings and crush belt of soft (affeta in the same shade as ghe gown. The ruches are the new ones that are pinked at their edges, and, with the broad-shouldered yoke, give just the quaint old-time effect so much in vogue. When desired the sleeves can be made long by the addition of deep cuffs. The lining for the walst is smoothly fitted and makes the foundation for the full front and backs that are made to blouse slightiy. The oddly shaped yoke 18 separate and is arranged over the waist, drooping well over the shoulders. At the neck fs @ stock collar. The sleeves are soft and full and can be made with the puffs only or finished with cuffs that are shaped to extend over the hands. The draped belt, or girdle, is shaped to fit the figure and is closed at the back, as is the walst. The quantity of material required for the medium size Is 4 yards 21 inches wide, 8% yards 27 fuches wide or 2 yards 4 {nches wide, with 1% yards of all over lace for yoke collar and cuffs. The pattern 4582 is cut in sizes or a 32, 34, 3, 8 and #-inch walst measure, For the accommodation of The Bes | readers these patterns, which usually retail at from 25 to 60 cents, will be furnished at & nominal price, 10 cents, which covers all expense. In order to get a pattern enclose 10 cents, give number and name of pattern. e ———————————————————— ‘WHAT THE OLD DOCTOR SAID, “Doctor,"” sald I, “you say appendioftis !s much more common than 1t was thirty years ago."” “Indeed it 1s,” replied the old doctor. “That we encountered this disease then, is true, but not with such app: quency. Appendieiti “To what, doctor, do you attribute this increase of appendicitis?” ““To basty eating and to the use of foods which bave a tendency to clog and fret the intestines and deaden peristaltic ac- tion. The way to avold appendicitis avd the surgeon's knife is to shun unnatural foods that beget intestinal torpor and con- stipation.” s People who eat Shredded Whole Wheat Biscult do not have coustipation and hence need not fear appendicitis. This perfectly natural food preserves the tone of the digestive tract and induces every excretory gland to subser: the body's interests. Have you tried this most de- licious of all cereal foods? the marquls and his friends, who were at- tempting to assist others, discovered a house and its inmates In great danger. Two werb rescued, but one man remained, and he deliberately cut the rope, thus creat- ing a death-trap for himself and his res- cuer. It proved to be Antonio, and his act a deliberate one; he, {n his anxlety for the death of the marquis, his rival, being will- ing to die himself, if necessary. But the marquis was a very strong and able-bodfed man, and he saved both himself and An- tonio. The long years of treachery and hatred practiced toward his rival stood befors him. Broken-hearted, he went to the cardinal, confessed his guilt, and on the day after the marriage of Olivia and the marquis he tolled up a steep hill, a spur of the Apennines, and knocked for admit- tance at the door of a monastery. Pub- lished by Eaton & Mains, “Character Reading little book brought out by the Saalfield Publishing company. As the title ind!s cates, It is a gulde to reading a person's ability, faults, talents, or characterlstics In general from the lines of the face, the eyes, lips, nose, eyebrows, chin, shape of the head, etc. There has always been a pecullar fascination for both the cultured and uiieducated in attempting to read the character from the faces of our friends, to eay nothing of our enemies. Books on physiognomy and phrenology are technical, and contain much which is tiresome and unsatiafactors to the lay reader, but this little: book orth the principal facts in a pleasing * *» and in a language and terms easi!: sned by all. Any one who cares ut all (v male a study of character will find this little volume excellent read- ing. Asifie from taking up each feature of the face separately, it contains an alpha- betical guide, which makes many points plain. (The Saalfield Publishing comxlll)'. Akron, 0.) is quite a unlque “Eleanor Lee,” by Margaret B, Sangs- ter, Is the story of a beautiful girl's life struggle to redeem from vice a worse than good-for-nothing husband, whom she loves, Eleanor is a true woman whom any amount of macrifice did not embitter and whose wifely fidelity was never shaken, ‘We may not all agree that a woman should sacrifice and suffer so much for the sake of a man who happened to be her husband, but none can deny that this book is written with excellent Intention and with a true Christian spirit. Published by Fleming H. Revell company. “The Spinner Family,” by Alice Jean Patterson. This beautiful little nature book tells in a simple way of the habits and characteristics of many of our common spiders. The book is in itself very at- | dent of the Michjgan State Normal tractive. The type is large and clear ana the pages very prettily decorated, A, C, McClurg & Co., publishers, “The Limerick Up to Date Book” com- posed and collected by Ethel Watts Mum- ford and fllustrated and decorated by Kthel Watts Mumford and Addison Mizner, Pub- lished by Paul Elder & Co. “The Heart of Hyaelnth” by Onoto Wat- anna, author of “A Japanese Nightin- gale.” The romance of an American girl born in Japan, reared and mothered by a Jupanese woman, and companioned by Ko. mawaza, her son. The boy and girl grown | up together and he finally goes to Europe to be educated. In four years he returns but Hyacinth scarcely knows him. Of course they love each other and the story deepens In Interest as thelr new relation develops. The book is beautifully bound and each page decorated In color by a Japanese artist. Published by Harpers, Ginn & Co., are the publishers of quite & number of new school books among which are included: ““Lessons in Astronomy,” including Uran. ography, by C. A. Young, professor in astronomy in Princeton university. It ig a briet Introductory course without math- ematics and includes all the latest discover. fes and theories. It is believed that to the extent of its scope it fairly represents the present state of astronomy. “The Jones Fifth Reader” Is intended for puplls of the sixth, seventh and eighth years in school. The selections are taken from the best literature of the English language. The selections have been made and arranged by L. H. Jones, A. M., ollege. A “Latin Grammar,” by Wililam Gardner | Hale, professor of Latin in the University | of Chicago, and Carl Darling Buck, proies- sor of comparative philology In the Uni- versity of Chicago, is adapted to the needs of high school studeats. No attempt u' made to treat early Latin fully, but some | of its most striking pecullaritios are men- | tioned. | “Insect Folk" is an interesting and in- structive book on insect life and habits for the children from the pen of Margaret Warner Morley, who s the author of “Seed | Bables,” Flowers and Their Friends,” etc The preface of this little book is devoted to “A Word with the Children,” which gives them some very good advice about the treatment of captive insects. “American Rallway Transportation” i the work of Emory R. Johnson, Ph. D., assistant professor of transportation and commerce in the University of Pennsyl. vania and & member of the Isthmian Canal commission. The writer has endeavored to cover all branches of this subject in an interesting and simple manner from the definition and scope of transportation and the origin down to the present and look- ing toward the future in the discussion of the “Problem of Government Regulation." The book is worth reading by anyone in- terested in the subject, D. Appleton & Co., publishers. The wbove books are for sale by the Me- vt Newspapers From All' Over Our Specialty, s Story of R ocKefeller is “one of the most remarkable and stir- ring that has ever appeared in a magazine,” says the Chicago Record-Herald, It is run- ning as a serial in MCCLURE’S RAVEEYY iy O short stories, and beautiful illustrations in tints make the CHRISTMAS NUMBER the best magazine of the month regardless of price. 10 cents a copy. All news stands. In 1904 Every number of McClure’'s will have articles of the greatest interest, on subjects of burning national importance. In addition to Miss Tarbell’s Standard Oil History, there will be articles by Lincoln Steffens ‘on the men of influence cor- rupting our government— Ray Stannard BaKer on the great labor conflicts which the country is facing ‘““Enemies of the Republic,” at this time. Fair, clear, and he calls them. vigorou: Carl Schurz and Thomas Nelson Page will answer: *‘ What are we going to do with the Negro?" Personal observations qualify them to know. “McClare’s is justly famous for its short stories.” Every number in 1904 will have at least six. You may not always know the writer, but if his story is in McClure’s it is a good one. SP ECIAL November and December 1903 num- bers given free with a year’s subscrip- tion for 1004—14 months for $1.00. ® Tus 8. 8. McCrure Company, 618 LexinaTon Buoc., New York, N.Y, THE ABOVE ON SALE AT 1308 FARNAM STREET, #AOMAHA ONERY @ Moore’s Stoves Always Please 18 SHE GUESSING? Not Much! Her grandmother watched & shadow o the kitchen floor and guessed the time. Her mother feit of the and guessed the heat. This modern, up.to-date womn sy ither, for SHE KNOWS. ' She has a New Mocra's e . with & ble Oven Mmomeler and every Incllity for cooking with ease and certainty. Be sare xad civy us opportunity to show you these befors you buy, For sale by N ebraska Fu South Omaha, s nd by =il la & Carpet Co., The CHRISTMAS ETROPOLITA 160 of Text— 332 in Color 106 Missera tons =13 Shors Storics ALL NEWS-STANDS. PRICE 15 Cents “Tell It To Me” EZRA KENDALL'S NEW BOOK-- Just out. All new. Better than “Good Gravy.” Beats “Spots.” Price e, . By mail, 30c, BARKALOW BROS.

Other pages from this issue: