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PART TWO l!'3;])ITORIAL PAGES 1 TO 8 A PAPER FOR THE HOME OMAHA BEE —— THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. VOL. XXXIX—NO. 21. UMKHA. SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 1909, ) SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. 5c¢--Sheet Music Sale--9¢ MONDAY AND ALL WEEK. Bennett's Popular Priced Millinery No necessity to pay “‘outlandish” prices for your fall hats. €Come over to the Bennett idea and see how very, very much the savings to you really are here This millinery keeps forging ahead, rolling up bigger sales records day by day through the giving of values not approached In any other place In town—It's an admitted fact, we have a corps of the most efficient design- ers, whose artistic tastes are shown In the thousand or more pretty hats shownv— $5.57%-10-*15 These are our popular lines. They were not planned with a view to securing from you all we could possibly get. 1'hey represent savings of $5 to $10 each. We are alming at an enduring business, and, have taken paifis to have the prettiest and most fashionable hats that the city can boast and yet keep the prices within reason. Big Monday Sale Berlin Kettles First Grade Enameled Kettles and Sauce Pans at Less Than Factory Cost—One Day Only. 74 74 gleces 35(: 84 pleces will be . will be Peninsular teel Ranges—8§6.00 Saving—A full size 6-hole range, with 18-inch oven and high ,335. warming closet, regular price $39.50, for. . Advance Steel Range—One of the | Savory Roasters, up from ..98¢ | best Peninsular models, $28.50 and 40 stamps with each. stove, for Peninsular Oak Heaters, §5.95 Ash Sifters, good ones for ..15¢ ROLLER SKAT! \Barney & Berry's ball bearing rol- lers, $3.50 kind, 1or ....82.85 $1.50 Stdewalk Skates .....98¢ “Quickest Ever” Washing Machine This 1s a new lever washer, and, as the name implies, does a large washing in shortest possible time, and does it well. Large, firmly rodded tub, No parts to break. Frequently sells at $6 50 $10. Our special price . ... tep Ladders—8ix-foot, handy to | Turkey Dusters—Large, fine one, 8 800d | with 120 tail feathers, with cutf have about the house, < St 4 and ferrule, $1.25 kind, for @5¢ 'on- Structed, usual $1.25 kind, Mon- | Bennett's Toflet Paper—Special, Long Kimonos First showing of mew holiday line Monday— Exquisite new ideas in silk and silk erepe, plain figured and flor- al designs. Al fresh and new. Silk Waists Just unboxed, new models taffeta and messaline silk walsts; black and all late shades $4.95-85.95 e < \ ~ Many vhn(._\ou have always wanted, but These are the things that 500 New and different titles. were difffcult to get, now at Bennett's. keep us growing greater in the estimation of music lovers, We are wide awake to your needs all the time. Music originally published at high prices, at ¢ —Second Waltz b) Goddard, La Paloma, Falling Waters, Alone, Eidelweiss Glide, The Rosary, Anchored, Lutespiel Overture, and 500 others—All favor- FREB—Any 16c Ladies’ Home with the Fall style book; at Journal pattern 200 1,000 POPULAR SONGS Every one a good 26c number—— Look them over—Big 5¢ counter full B s New Shipments De Luxe Books Don't overlook the fact that the finest de Luxe editions of the world's standard authors are still on sale at Bennett's at lowest prices in history of the store. The stock is replenished again. These are genuine de Luxe gditions, and compare with the highest priced books ever offered by agents or publishers. Make selections for Christmas | One-Fourth Publishers’ Prices Alnsworth—8 vols., % lea.—sub. , Plutarch—5 vols., % price, $35, our price ....$9,75 | Price, $25, our price . g f | Plato—3 vols., % lea Burns—6 vols.,, % lea --sub. price | “$16, our price,.........$3.90 W uRtprioe . 8925 | 5ot 24 vols, % lea.—sub. Balzac—18 vols, % lea.—sub price, $100, our price, $27.50 price, , our price .. $20.50 And many others in same pro- DeMaupassant—1v vols., % lea.— | portion sub. price, $49, our price, U AT e ST 5 N Dickens—20 vols., % lea.—sub. price, $90, our price Gibbon—6 vols, % price, $33, our price MR, CARL MORITE. Omaha's favorite tenor, now with Bennett's, gladly ~demon- strates all songs called for. Big Sale of Wooltex Models and a Grand Climax to the Cohn Purchase Never before a week so full of promise to suit buyers. Most impres- sive low prices ever made on fine suits. A sale involving only the most elite of the year’s styles. Every ‘‘Wooltex’' Suit in stock in a sharp markdown. iverybody knows the high character of Wooltex garments. America produces no finer examples in women’s tailoring. The lowest price ““Wooltex’’ sunits are carried in stock was $35.00. Monday to add still greater interest to our big sale of the Cohn purchase we offer choice of any Wooltex suit in our house, 1,000 Handsome New York Models "-s2500 1 stso0 Will Be $15, $19.50, $25, $29.50, $32.50 The second week of this sale finds the stock refreshed and replenished to completeness. The immensity of the purchase permits of greater variety for satisfactory choosing than you have ever enjoyed before. The materials in these garments are highest quality Lymansville hard twisted worsteds in solid colors, made with long 45 to 52 inch coats and exquis- itely pleated skirts. The large majority of them lined with genuine Skinner guaranteed satin. To Out-of-Town People this is a great opportunity. Spend a dayls shop- &' ping here, it will be a most profitable day for you. $22.50 $2500 | $35.00 $40.00 $45.00 SUITS SUITS | SUITS SUITS SUITS ST | T L ke $15.00 | $19.50 | $25.00 | $29.50 $32.50 : Bennett's Special Nonday Offer Popular Moire Silks----Surprising Offer jere Never in Higher Favor—You see them | Look Here For Black Silks—Sixteen pieces of 36-inch A everywhere in dregses, coats, coat dresses, waists, capes and for millinery uses. We just received 32 black taffeta, shipped us by our New York office, in- cluding a few odd pieces of messalines and peau de pleces of fine, $1 quality; blacks, and in a sgc QQzen newest shades, Monday, all, t, yard. .. ... - cygne—Constitute one of the biggest bargain 79: A Big Dress Goods Scoop propésitions we have had in a long time— _~All $1.25 valugs, at - A New York talloring cstablishment, | PLAIDSE—We call special 3 (AT anxfous to close out its stock on again to our representative showing hand of fine woolens, offered us of handsome new plaids. We are over 100 pleces of varfous kinds at told it's the best ortment in 37%ec on the dollar. The year's most Omaha today. Plaids for children's tashionable sultings and wear; plaids fqr walsts: plalds for dres stuffe in all shades |uto coats and capes; plaids for all worth up- 10 $3 are.in- c uses— cluded Monday ....... T6c, $1.00, $1.35 and $2.00 lea.—sub. -$7.50 sub. price, - Bird Onges—New line just In, many new styles, up from 75¢ and 40 stamps with each. ...10¢ .. 10¢ 15¢ quality stove pipe and 10 stamps. Black Jack Stove Polish and10 stamps. Linens for Thanksgiving It's just around the corner, remember, and time to be stooking up on your linen service. A few helpful suggestions for tomorrow: All Linen Damask, full bleached, 70- EDDING inch, heavy $1.25 quality, at $1.00 | mleached Sheeting, S1-inch, All Linen Damask, cream, 70-inch | 52¢ value, at . < with, extra heavy $1 grade.....880 | milow Cases, 45x36-inch, MIPEiaN: e T e ONE "_’l';.' 19c cases for . p 3$1.66 quality, apecia o S p s Mapiins, dice block patiern, 18 inch U varaey e, size, usual $1.85 quality .. 5 . 1 Blankets, full 11-4 size, Crash Towsling, all iinen, bieached or | Blankets, full 114 size, brown, 12%c value ... 5 Bedspreads, full size, Comforters, filled with snow white cotton, knotted, $1.2 $1.25, Monday starched, vs serviceable .. 140 patent center ¥ v....B00 light and hemmed, worth 3 .00 Bennett's Big Grocery Pride of Bennett's Flour, per sack ..... Bennett's Golden Coffee, per pound. ... Bennett's Challenge Coffee, pound . Bennett's Teas, assorted, pound . Bennett's Tea Siftings, pound .. N and 16 Green Stam Franco-American Beef Soup, quart can . and 40" Green sumg: Bennett's c;rnol Country Gentieman Corn, speclal, CAN .......ceeees 8ilver Cow Milk, three cans .... Gonssvseuenaass Bennett’s Capitol Early June Pea Diamond C Soap, ten bars Fregh made Cottage Cheese, .pound ..............100 and Bennett's Capitol Oats or Pancake, package .. ...1lc and Double Stamps on Granulated Sugar. Chocolatina, two cans .... . Bennett's Capitol Pure Maple 8yrup, quart cen....400 and Snider's Pork and Beans, per can ..180 and ,llm nd ..280 and 100 Green Stamps and &0 Green Ntamps and 10 Green Stamps T and 50 Green Stam Stamps With Each Ton, $6.00 or Over . e ine 10 Green Btamps 10 Green Stamps 16 Green Ntamps 20 Green S 15 Green Stamps 10 Green Stamps 10 Green Stamps 10 Green, Stamps 10 Green Stamps 10 Green Ntam) 10 Green Ntam) 20 Green Stam: Let us have your order for your winter's supply of coal tomorrow. As a special Inducement we are offering 100 8. & H. Green Trading Stamps with each ton ordered, at $5.00 or over. We ‘make prompt deliveries, and give you best kind of service. Cagitol $ g7 .50 Coal TON 18 the best soft coal sold at any price. It's a clean coal, gives more heat and is more lasting than any other kind we know of. We deliver to all parts of Omaha, South Omaha and suburbs. vy oo e Embroideries ‘Worth 88c and 79¢c. Exquisite Swiss Embroideries ‘rom 24 to 45 inches wide—the patterns are superb, all BEddy's Dome Mustard, ‘) new and dainty; the goods are 39° an Small Olives, t Jar Swansdown Codfish, '3 pi 5 and Bennett's Capltol Mince Meat, 3 p: and Crackers, assorted, package ..... and Rex Lye, three cans ¥ 6o and Yankee Tollet Soap, 3 c S o RAISIN ‘New light California Seedless Raisini clal Monday only, pound .. ...... sk 174 Lawn Grass Fertllizer, pound, Sc—26-pound # fresh and crisp and a typical Trimmi; very pop- ular, 35c values ‘s, . ,lgha Hennett bargain; Momday, vard. Jet ngs, neat band effects, Biderdowns for dressing sacques and 10Ng robes, 29¢ VAIUES . ...............18%0 SOME PECULIAR EPITAPHS ning ball is then sald to rotate, or turn about an axis, every point in it and on It, except those on the axis itself, moving in {a true circle of its own. The center of | It is by Inference from these results that we know what the force of gravity is at the poles. It would, however, be a most | revolution, and moreover are not at extremities of the same diameter. The magnetic elements of the earth are the ith day of May, 1 Kick of a colt in his bowels eaceable and quiet. A SCIENCE AND THE POLES Lebt Sunden Frey, so kommst Ich hier erst Frey worden. ‘ Du auch in meinen Order, L ( Movement of the Earth and Effect at the Axis. HOW ASTRONOMERS GET RESULTS Actual Occupation of the Poles by Observatories Would Vastly Ine crease (he Sum of Hu Kuowledge, “The actual oceupation of the poles would #d4 enormously to the advancement of sclence,” is the contention of Rev. Willlam . Rigge, 8. J., director of the Creighton university observatory. In the initial num- | | to lle on the equator; they form the clir- | cumference of a circie obtained by cutting ber of the Crelghton Chronicle, the dls- tinguished astronomer condepses a vast amount of Information concerning the arth's movements.. the difference at the | poles and the squator, and the needed lght sclence would galn from prolonged observa- tions at the earth's axis, lows: . 1 The poles of the earth are, in the math- ematical as well as in the ordinary sense of the word, singular points, that is to say, they posses: many essential features | which do not apply In any way polnts on the earth’s surface By definition the poles are the extremi- ties of the earth’'s axis. The earth, as we know, is & big ball, and is turning. That It is a ball, or approximately a sphere, s proved by Illy appearance of vessels at sea, by the equal dip of the horizon In all directions, by the different aspect of the starry heavens as seen points on its surface, by the shadew it casts upon the moon in a lunar eclipse, and lastly by extended measurements of its surface. That it i in rotation is proved by | the classical experiment of Foucault's pen- dulum, by the gyroscope, and the devia- tion of projectiles, and especially by the sclence of celestial mechanics, which estab- | lishes its rotation as an essentlal postu- | late | We know also that the earth is carried | forward bodily as & whole, and that its| center moves In & well-defined orbit about the sun. This feature does not interest us at present, and we shall dismiss it with | the statement that the earth runs a little | over a millon and & half miles a day, and In 50 doing turns round once on its axis in moving forward about two hundred times | its own length. This, as we see, Is & very moderate ratio to other The Earth a Spianing Ball. The poles, as was sald, are the extremi- tles of the axis about which the earth | turns. This axis s often sald to be imag- nary, as opposed to real, and whem we | say real, we take the case of & mounted | globe or a wheel turning on an axis, or axle, In fixed journals. The earth, of course, has no real axis in this sense; as it is freely suspended In space. When, there- fore, we say that the earth's axis is imaginary, we mean that it s exactly like | that of & ball, which we may throw up into the it} and to which we may give a more from different | | rotate at al, The paper fol- [pp .0 | | tween the radil of Afferent parts of the | or rapid spiuning motion. - This spin- desirable consummation of these researches to set up such a pendulum at the pole itself. each of the circles is on the axis of revo- lution at the foot of the perpendicular dropped to it from the given point. The | points farthest away from the axis are said | Complicated Mevements, The axis of revolution about which the earth revolves is not fixed in the earth as one would naturally suppose, and as | even sclentific men supposed, until the | contrary was proved, It moves about in a very complicated manner. The polss shift on the ground In a space about sixty feet in diameter. There are two compo- nents to the motion. The first has a pe- the sphere by a plane through its center at right angles to its axis. It is evident that all the points in and | on the earthly sphere must move together in such a way that their relative positions are not changed nor the sphere distorted Hence, while they all have the me angu- lar epeed mbout the axis, that is, they all | riod of one | the magnetic needle makes with the true | three, declination, inclination and intens. ity. Declination is another name for the | ariation of the compass, and is the angle | Lot of Funny Ones Found on Tomb- stones in Pennsylvania. | meridian. Inclination is the angle the dip- P | ping needle makes with the horizon. Tt 1s| TOBIAS BROWN'S IS A REAL GEM mensured by supporting a magnetie needie | ou its centre of gravity, placing it in the magnetic meridian, and leaving it free to turn in a vertical plane. At the mag- netic poles the dipping needle dips nin: degrees, that is, stunds perfectly upright. At the magnetic equator, which for ob- vious reasons canrot coincide with the nd Four Wives Are Buried Un der One Headplece—Tennes- ) see Puts One Over inm | a Name. riend to his Father and } Mother and respected by All who knew him and went to the world where horses can't kick and where sorrow and weeping is no mor Taylor & Shuck. In the burial ground at the old Hilltown church, Bucks county, are ‘five tomb- stones in a row, and the successive in- scriptions begin thus: Anna, wife of Toblas Brown. Mary, wife of Toblas Brown. Jane, wife of Toblas Brown Sarah, wife of Toblas Brown. Toblas Brown—At Translgted the stanza would read: s was called Free, but here for the first time |1 am really free. If you will live Free from sin you shall be as Free as I am." | To mateh these pecullar Pennsylvania | epltaphs a tombstone over the grave of an | old darkey in an eastern Tennessee grave- i)‘!rd bears a name that might be worth mentioning: 5 “Emmaratta Demaretta Cream o' Tartar | Bweet Potato Caroline Bostwick." This woman bore that name through life ‘nnd had to rest under a slab of stone with it graven upon it in death. run the circult of thelr own circles in the same time, their linear speed, their miles per hour, must depend upon their distance from the axis. Thus at the equator every point moves about 24,000 miles in twenty- | four hours, that is, about a thousand miles an hour. Omaha Is about 5,000 miles from the earth’s axis.and rotates therefore at the rate of about 76 miles an hour. As the | poles are on the axis itself. they do mot Mnear speed 1s zero. | first reason why | their therefore is the they are called singular points Effect of Rotation. is about tw about elght of symmetr: | second component moves the pole of revo- lution in a of symmetr | |a diameter The ellipge revolution In an ellipse, whose major axis is & certain fixed point termed the pole period is 428 days. the same direction, opposite direction at year, and moves the pole of O & | astronomical equator, the dip s zero, and the needle is horizontal. And lastly, the third element is the intensity, which means simply the strength of the earth's magnet- ism at any place. Three Magnetic Elements. These three magnetic elements, especially the declination, which is of such vital im- portance in navigation and travel gener- ally, have been pretty well determined all over the earth. This is true to the ex-| tent that they may be approximately pre- enty-elght feet and minor axis feet. The centre of this ellipse th y or the pole of figure. The there are ma: circle about this same pole y as a centre. This circle has of about thirty feet, and the Both “motions are in from west to east swings round slowly in the the rate of about As But besides | Few regions afford so interesting a | fleld for the epitaph collector’ as the coun- | of southeastern Pennsylvania | about Philadelphia, which were originally | 0 Interesting addition to the list of queer | peopled to a large extent by Germans. the ancient burial grounds of this district repetitions of that one time | popular tombstqne stanza which is found |gipa] chief of the Cherokee nation in nearly every old cemetery Reader, Ak you are now so once was 1 am now so you must be, Prepare for death and follow me, behold as you pass b, the repetition of varlous f round In| B e Teares camevsrr| “MARY" s NOT-2A = LITTLEwAIRL of the Moravians in. Bethlehem supplies —~— ed, but 1 Child Appearea on Scene. | The two voung men were wandering down Farnam street when a tall young ‘ i’ Eherdicde on * %/ v|woman stopped at the corner of Seven- died in St Louls November I8 teenth street and called back sharply to- T DTl A T pot | Ward & group of children, as It seemed to November 2. 1964 aged 50 years = days. |the young men, “Mary, Mary.” There was At historle Trinity church, In the northern [no movement among the children’ and the {suburb of Philadelphia, & tombstone in-|Woman repeated her call. | epitaphs In the followihg, which 1s in- scribed on & stone at an Indian grave: In memory to my dearest son, Tames Mc- Donald Ross, eldest son of John Ross, prin. five degrees a year, and there seoms 1o be another varfation with a period of about 43 days. These results have been obtained by as tronomers without leaving their observa The consequence of this immobility s a | total ioss of the so-called centrifugal force. | This force is the apparent tendency of a | point to recede from the center of revolu- tion; It Is in reslity a case of inertla, ac- | nave | subject orite epitaphs there are many original | outbursts in these Pennsylvania cemeterles. | For instance, in the pretty churchyard at Whitemarsh, where members of many wealthy suburban families of modern to accidental and periodic varia. | times repose, the grave of John Barge, dicted for places in which they have ndt yet been actually measured. I say approx- imately because actual magnetic surveys disclosed many important errors. And, moreover, all the three elements are | cording to which It tends to retain its di- rection and remain on|the tangent line. At the equator this tendency is a maxi- tories, by observing the variations of their latituds Places on opposite meridians behaved oppositely; when one approached | mum, and amounts to 1-286th of the gravi- | the pole by Increasing its latitude the, tational attraction. So that the welght of | other departed from it by decreasing its | bodles is lessened there by one pound out | gwn the identical amount. In this way Of every 28. As a consequence the mov- it was proved that the continents did not able constituents of the earth's surface, the | 4oy to and fro, but that the axis of revo. air and water, have receded from the axis| . ion 1self shifted In the earth and approached the &quator, and have > there accumulated in a ring of matter thir- | A Oheyvaiton Needed, | teen miles thick. The equatorial radius of | This splendid achievement the earth 15 therefore thirteen miles longer | science would than the polar radius. This ditférence be- nd would and with better results, by an extended | | series of observations made near (tiic poles themselves. This would, of course, | require the refined instrumental outfit of | a large and fixed observatory. of moderr recelve much confirmation be prosecuted with less labor | surface Is a gradual one are the shortest, and the rest In- crease in length gradually until we reach the equator, so that a meridian section of | the earth is nearly a true ellipse, with its | minor axis running through the.poles and | Th® occupation of the pole by a fixad its major axis in the plane of the equator, | *PServatory would have no other astronom- The poles of the earth are therefore |'¢a] advaniage. The apparent diurnal mo unique In two respects; they do not rotate, | ONS of the heavenly bodies as seen from and they are nearer the earth's center | the poles are known to every elementasy | than the other parts of the surface. KFor |Student. The mounting of the inatruments | both reasons the welght of bodies Is a | Would give rise to no special theoretical | maximum at the poles. It is one pound |OF Mechanical problems. The advantage | out of every 190 greater than at the[of the long night of six months, which cquator. the twilight would cut down to about These results have been obtained princi- | three, would be offset by the at least| pally by ‘means of the pendulum. We|equally long day. Observations by day or | know that gravity is the only force that|by night would most probably be much moves a pendulum, and that the time it |interfered with by the weather. So that | takes to complete a vibration Is absolut:y | &5 far as the observation of the heavenly constant as long as the force of gravity |bodies is concerned, the poles are rather at | and the length of the pendulum are the |a disadvantege, and this the more because same. By transporting the same pendulum | Only half the heavens is visible at each therefore to various parts of the earth's of them. surface, we can determine the variation of | The magnetism at and near the poles is Sravity, and thus find the shape of the | another subject upon which information | earth. This has been done aiready in 50 | is desirable. We know that the earth has | many places that we have & pretty acour- | two magnetic poles, and that these are at | ate knowledgy of the shape of the earth. The polar considerable distances from the poles of | | add a welcome amount to our store of in- | somewhat definite knowledge of its mas- |add enormously to the wdvancement of | tions. The accidental variations are calleq | Who died in 175, Is marked by a stone | magnetic storms, and the pericdic ones are | Which bears this stanza divided into’ dlurnal, annual and sccular Life is a cheat . : And always shows it; changes. Explorers cannot, therefore. 1 thought sd ouce, trust the compass implicity. On the other And now 1 know it hand, the magnetic elements they observe| A few miles further west, in the ceme. tery of Bt. John's Lutheran church, Center | S8quare, is this epitaph, the third line of of the magnetic poles of‘the| Which doubtless was gratifying to those | he dealt with | earth has been well located and been act- | " Hed® WL L ually occupled by explorers, we have a| porWell ¥ WCe BAC ShECTEn i My debts are pald. my grave you see Walt, but your time and foliow me South of the Schuylkill river the Vincent | Baptist burying ground contains a stone | on which In raised letters appears this legend, probably dictated by a family of loving children “OUR PAPP.” Bucks county's graveyards supply sev- cral unusual epitaphs. A stone in the cem- etery at Morrisville is Inscribed thus In memory of Samuel McCracken, Who ‘died April 19, 1 It leading politicians and priests All_go to Heaven, then I am bound To stop at some other station. McCracken made an agreement with the cemetery association for the erection of | this monument and then committed sulcide by cutting his throat. Beside McCrackes rests his wife, and the inscription on the stone at her grave, In contrast with that on the esdjoining marker, reads thus formation As one netie elements. But the whole selentific world is much Interested to know what the magnetic clements of the poles of revo lution are, and to what varlations they are subject. Fixed maguetic observatorics at all the four poles, the two magnetic and the two revolution is one of the day dreams of science The meteorological poles claim their share of sclentific in- terest. Only one day and one night in the year must cause most abn al con ditions of the weather. The cvelonic, thit is rotary, whirl of the atmosphere would seem 10 be most pronounced near the act- | ual center of revolution. The extremity | of the cold followed by the long insolation, | is another exceptionsl feature. A meteor- ologist would have no rest until he also could erect mn observatory at the poles. We can find space here only to hint at the other sclences that would benefit | -1;. :'f;:fi”.:: :u‘bi'.r:"ll\“n“h:o.m;;- greatly by polar exploration, such as geol- |died a firm believer in Christ, her Savior. oKy, geography, z00logy, botany and many others. The polar sea would probably be | boy is the principal feature of & tombatone | s interesting as the land, in its currents, | In & cemetery near Doylestown, and be- | life, temperature, and other features. neath the carving are these words: But eacugh has been saild to show that 5!("{!‘,{‘0 the memory the actual occupstion of the poles would By IR Heory Harrls and Jane bis wife. Died on the conditions at the sclence. concludes with scription recalls the early strife there be- tween the Quakers and the Eplsgopalians over the control of that place of wdrship. |the situation It was founded as a Quaker meeting house, but early In the elghteenth century It passed into the possession of the Episco- pallans, The epitaph, dated 1708, reads thus Here by these lines is testified No Quaker was she when she dy'd So far was she from Quakerism That she desired to have baptism For her own babes and children dear To these lines true witness bea The efforis of an elghteenth century pun- ster are apparent In a German epitaph In | Hood's cemetery, Germantown conversant with German of course need an; explanation that the German word “frey” Is equivalent to “free.” The epi- taph s at the grave of Johannes Frey and this stanza Ich war der Frey, doch bin Those not “Guess the kid don't obey her very well,* said one of the young men, as he sized up ““There'll be a spanking com- | ing to some one.” | The woman, still standing at the corner, | ealled out again: “Come here, Mary,” th | time rather more persuasively. There wa | no responsive movement by any of the chil- |dren and the young men pauseq in their ! walking to see what the outcome would be. | The young woman pursed up her lips and whistled shrilly. The children kept on !playing and several nursemaids near by | kept on_inditferently with their gossip. Suddenly there was a patter of feet and & rush, and a small dog with eilky hair came running out of an alley way and dashed up 1o the fest of the young woman, | She attached a leash to the dog's collar and | then she turned the corner. | The young men said “Huh" and kept on walking. And the children kept on playing. |A FEW DOSES END BACKACHE AND ° REGULATE OUT-OF.ORDER KIDNEYS Your Kidneys will act fine and the most severe Bladder misery simply vanish 1 take several doses of you out-of-order kidneys or bladder will vanish, and you will feel fine. Lame back, painful stitches, tism, nervous headache, tability, sleeplessne: len eyelids, worn-out, other symptoms of idneys disappear. Uncontrollable, smarti ation ( trouble rheuma- dizziness, irri- sick feeling and sluggish, inactive frequent urin- clall; A crude pioture of a horse Kicking & | misery pecisily b night) and sik bisfdes nds. This unusual preparation goes at once to the disordered kidneys, bladder and urinary system and distributes its heal- |ing, cleansing and vitallsing influence | 8%d no backache directly upon the organs and glands af- fected, and completes the cure before you realize it Pape's | Diuretic, all backache and distress from | , inflamed or swol- | The moment urinary | pains icine, you suspect any kidney disorder or feel rheumatism begin taking this hurmless med- with the knowledge that there is no ether remedy at any price, made any- where else in the world, ‘vhich will effect 80 thorough and prompt a cure as a fifty-cent treatment of Pape's Diuretic, which any druggist can supply. physicl pharn Ist, banker or any mercantle agency will tell you that Pape, Thompsoi. & Pape, of Cincinnati, is & large and esponsible medicine con- cern, thoroughly worthy of your cone | tidence | ~Only curative results can come from taking Pape's Diuretic, and & few days' treatment means clean, active, healthy kidneys, bladder and urinary organs— or Your Accept only Pape's Diuretic—fifty-cent treatment—any drug sltore—anywhere i the world, Adw