Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 23, 1910, Page 9

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PART TWO EDITORIAL FOR ALL THE NEWS THE OMAHA BEE BEST IN THE WEST THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. FPAGES 1 TO 8 VOL. XXXIX—NO. 32, OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. » . = - — - - - 9 4 ' : ) nnett’s Big Buyers’ and Managers’ Sale Opens Tomorrow i } : Now for a week of all-over-the-store-sales. The good, old-fashioned kind that always arouse intense interest. 1t's our big BUYERS' AND MANAGERS' SALE—A twice o, # year event, when the regular management of Bennett's relinquishes the reins of government, and, as the saying goes, “puts it up to" the department managers to get the busi- hess. Every man has authority to make his own reductions, and he grasps at the ‘chance to unload his top-heavy stocks. strikggfome, the business. | | Trimmed Hats 150 beautiful trimmed hats in Monday’s sale at a ridiculously low price. Every one. of them is beautifully designed of fine materials, on newest prevailing styles. They are becoming hats, Corset Sale He has just one week of it and he must make every stroke Absolute fairness must govern every transaction—that's the one condition-—there must be no exaggeration,no deception, nothing to undermine the reputation of Enthusiasm runs high; the men have entered into the spirit of the sale with a determination to outdo each other. The friendly rivalry has made really astonishing dargains. Twice a year these sales bring immense throngs but we Ilmk for & record crowd tomorrow. Not half the bargains are advertised—Look for them in every department. Just one gpecial bargain; $2.50 corsets for $1.85-—This is one of those very rare occasions when corsets of such unusual excellence and good style are 80 cheaply sold. We have secured specially for this week's sale, a large quantity of the new, long hip, direc- toire model corsets, fasnioned on new, straight line effects, made of strong, durable batiste and stayed with non- rustable boning. They are hand- Picture Frame Sale Your plctures that you have been thinking of framing down tomorrow. We have hundreds of beautiful frames of all sizes and kinds being of- fered at a tritling price. Frames measure up to 20x24 inches and are worth from 608 to $1.50. We Books and Stationery A sreat Monday salg of fiction. We have assembled ory large quantity of books of well known titles, T are odds and ends with but one or two of a ki “mm""‘x“ Plenty of good ;l“dlll“ b) I\OD\lllr authors—to clean up the price is. Box Stationery—A lot of fancy hoxed pnpmnu that somely trimmed, and fitted with 2 pairs supporters; regular $2.50 corsets, at $I¥ were priced up to $1.00, will be closed out for. .3%¢ in all the best colors; actusal pondence paper, 72 sheets velopes to matéh, for A Pound Package of Paper—Linen finished corres- and a package of en. 250 WINTER STYLE ll()(lln( And a 15¢ Pattern Free. BEANEIT made up—that's wh our prices are only. ) bought a makers' mou ding remnants hnd had them 10c to 60c y values to $15.00, 250 ' Byerartus China =~ |The Manager of Women's Wear Dept. Makes Phenomenal Sacrifice Cub;'ytaldr:ngs:l a4 (5] Ryl i oot by sl The entire coat and sult stocks, without exception, up to'$50 offered at $15.00 : | sale alone embraces over 150 very choice 100- Our immense lace curtain stock is arranged into with " has been brohght four lots and unmercifully price reduced. It em- ’. A : € I th one mighty sweep of the price-cutting pencil eery one of our ‘Women's Suits and Ooats has on 13 braces all styles of ourtains, suitable for every soom ‘.‘ piece sets, both in foreign and domestic ware donble_tomorrow's \price. Curtains ap to l 48 Curtains up to —the sale prices are $4.98 to $100.00, and Many were $40.00, $45.00 and $50.00. No | pnm-z or morgf'ln:g .umont. tulnon. have been n_exnibited “_",’""' 2.76, for . ... $ $4.50, for . $2 48 ; A 1 { You have oholos of blacks and ocolors, inoluding many Wooltex styles. There are sises to fit all No Ourtaling. up : to 3 48 Outabis up. to 4 48 ' ¢ 'y /2 lack of variety. No garment sale we know of ever merited your immediate response $6.00, for $10.00," for " exaotly. .. h....oe0 . price for the Buyers and Managers Sale for.any Goat or Suit. ................. ... Bonne Ferime Curtains to close, Formerly sold to $9.00— Open Stock Patterns in Austrian, German, English, — = e -~ - or " (380 aad $1.00 Americap, French and Haviland, A mmr)‘l \ce cleap up of Btock Russ, .m-u X10 ft. .up to ‘4 stock patterns, all on sale, at ....... 20 (v] OFF 10x12 ft.—in three lots, hait 4 attractions that show how earn- have just 15 pleces in Natural | and fancy effects. The soft shim- | the price down, giving you all the advantages we gain, R TS o alee CaTiag ihe oot wiah ?.“,‘; Pongee; blue, reseda, grey, wisterla, | mering silks that everybody buys | There are Two Lots and they are just as beautiful as can be and so spot- Doulton Ware—FEvery Jece on our tables, regardless of former price will be HALF OFF. Electric and Gas Lamps—aA large line, most of which Buyers’ and Managers’ Sale Dress Goods, Silks Managers’ Buyers' and ' Embroideries barely at TRy ' 36.05, $ic.es ana g1s.e Third Ploor Furniture for the Buyers and lu:mn Sale, Hrass Bedas, full size, with 2-inch posts, for. The dress goods man in his enthusiasm prevailed upon the writer to use | Sale arteraf okt hed, dieaper ‘ot '".'o'd were bought for the holiday business—The entire | .\ GA® $Po88 SDOCE Al o e o0 " th : Mahogany Buffet and Chtna Closet, iecen, Worti! ¥120.00 e put it too strong,” he says, “‘in present- P ) stock I ncluded in the buyers' and 384 g7 (JEF | g theso bargains." An, examination bears out the facts. The vaiues are | Monday we present an array of embroidery bargains that | e B L VR e managers d simply marvelous. These offerings deserve a spontaneous outpouring of | will tempt you as few sales do. It's an import shipment just Gloves, Hoslery, Underwear like these to boost them: peacock, dark rose, etc., very finest buyers, for the goods are seasonable | Popular Pongee Silks—No more sal- able goods on any silk counter. We de Cygnes and and the price a revelation. Messalines and Louisines—Also Peau also some 32-inch kimono Foulards, in' plain lessly fresh and crisp. received direct from the embroidery mills snugly pestled among the Alps of Switzerland. Direct buying in large quantities keeps There are wide 45-inch flouncings, 27-inch flounc- Buyers’ and Managers' Sale Hardware No department puts forth stronger price in- Jas & formality. Letters of this character have been re- Buerw and GLOVES $1.00 and $1.25 silks In 49 an extraordinary bar- 380 ings, allovers, waist frontings, etc., ducements than the basement housekeeping 1000 Datry gaLtRAOR ..p.'-"' S o ARy e tomorrow's sale, at ....... C |. gain; values to $1.00, at . all excellent ‘59c, 76c, u.oo and C~ c section. The manager has arranged a sale 9100 rades, s{reet gloves, IMported.—pair & . ‘50 2 5 $1.50 ‘qualitien, fors.oovveperieioie of hundreds gray enamel Preserving Kettles, Women's two-clasp id Ullmcu, ‘In bllu_klnnd( Sy 1,000 :yard< of 27-inch (‘hlna Silks, Plain Taffetalines an: {5 G.Hhit Sk ularly 36 " R i Sk bt Moire Silks will be sold Monday, at ........: G IRe New Wash Goods Underprlcea -l R S Bl ISC Sae HOSIERY Amoskeag Apron Giig- | Scotch Madras—36-inch | Silk Spot Zephyrs and Mondn.y eyl e 6 Women's Silk Liste and. Gause Lisie- Hose, double ol ovelt; Goods—80 pleces hand- | $8.00 Suitings at 890—i0 pleces of very | hams— Everybody | goods, in light colors; | Tissue€—A collection | $2.25 Ash and Gnrbaxe Cans, 25-gal. slize, at o % Lo d IO MR 'fi%‘éfi‘;&‘;":flmmé n“- -f""“"h'.'flx"‘;??«} A, iy .r'flu:".‘.’na“m'(?fz'; materiale for | ynows this to be a big | very fine 26c and 36c | of choice, new fabrics | $1.75 Awh and Garbage Cans, 15-gal. siz, at %gg A ported for Tbc and §5c selling; sale price......... e, Inch goods, ih niew shades green, taupe, are desirable; also wome sl nllk and wool value; we shall have | quality; new, spring tfhnl ;}'e"’ made to sell | waffle Irons, high stand; | Sash Cora Clothes Line, 5 v s 36c; 5 Ji iragees e UNDERWEAR B s Sre anre- 49¢ | Dy dere pereain "o’ 60 | S dieva ... Dl hanTar N0 10€ | price thin wmie. 19 | $AL MG for [ 98e | ot lonsta, vent 4o | Long Sleeve lu:l Loruel Covers, in medium_welght, very L s 8o S eV, MIOrTOW, &t, YRrd. ses ... on sale, yd. ..... ¥ ¥d. c.oeaen .. And -0 Stamps. quality, for ......20¢ | Ricely fmished and trimmed. 60¢ quality. 9 FAo06 SEUBLY, 1, SWAR ) e i B S Bt 2, . Ve / s B P gLak. tor 5¢ | ulways 850, spoal 586 SIWays" FOIAIINSARCLREL Phl0 DS o oo vc - os oo . P C t uyers’ an : 26¢c Elite Sink Strainers, 1{#D8O i zwe sna | HANDHERCHIEFS Buyers’ and All Jeweh'y 20 Per Cen ¥ ? ‘ lothln el Beé | Rice Root Sorub Brushes, Women's Puje Linen Handkdrchiefs, nice sneer quality, ’ oes - > Managers' Sale 100-ft, Wire Clothes Line, | Wworth 15¢c, Monday spe- S B O T ) Managers’ Sale Discount solid or braided, 45¢ | clal, for ...... 2 Women's_iure “Linen Handkerchiefs, real thuu dn\r.v; r The Men's Section comes in for its share of usually, at 29, Adid 10 Stam| And HebLga P IIE Raih & v The shoe man has too many party. slippers on (ALARM CLOCKS ONLY EXCORIWED) - | the bargains. The buyer has rummaged around B s o - ; D band. There are a good many odds and ends n:‘ll‘kl’e';“ vr) ::l':lkx:;‘ :'t":n“':;’zh“‘h it 1y 20‘ and selected a dozen strong items. The savings Buyers' and Li Etc that must be disposed of. Mostly pink, | (ENE CRC TR B eal pearls, amythests and | are very promounced, and just as set down here. | Buyers’ and Menagers’ Sale Groceries Managers’ Sale nens, . white, blue and lavender kid slippers; also other stone settings, $5.00 values, at . ...82.50 Men's Overcoats, worth to $16.00, in heuoya mel- | Bennett's Golden Coffee, pound...... 260—oend 80 stamps i Mo and red satins; they are‘a trifle solled, | Cuff Links—Solid gold front-and colored goid in- tons, cheviots and friezes—sale price. .97, Bennett's Breaktast Coffoe, i-1b. ¢ins.,480—and 60 stamps Only on extraordifiary occasions such as these can is h id, $2.00 kind, at $2.50 kind, Boys® Overcoats, 16 to 19 years, Were $6.60 and 37.60; 0 g UL S 4 -4 480—and 50 stamps ut can be easily cleaned. If your size is here laid, § nd, at $1.00— 1.25 ok i | Ten Biftings, pound packaxe. i1+ you expeet, such génuinely good bargains. The linen b 0 val- | $2.00 Signet Cuff Links, solid gold tront $1.00 Alprm. oyt B Bure Ground bepper, 4 Ib, cin’ . i00-and ' stamps _man has a record to establish to surpass last year's you'll get a rare bargain; $3.00 to $5.00 val- Boged': 1847 Tow BpodesecPer otk otrats. Tor' the Boyw i Bulte, 16, tor 30" yearss ‘., 50 tancy oo s10.00 s Oapl ‘}'M.“ b, e P A " sale—Hence these exceptional offers, BB, B ooroeosesssnonessqrennens @l AB DUyess’ snd. managers’) sale. only, it '$1.10 B:: :’tkzz:xfier'\;nm s Wiy r':: mmo ol‘(‘!nIs 85 otoh . 100—and, 10 stampa ¥ en Table Damask, positively Bic " * T Teem, g % A ,- ; \ w mmyn'n( Ui R LR e g ¥ 65¢ | wommws sa.50 ana 83.00 'f","“"'.,’.fi..?."fiifi.’i ¥4.00 and §5.00, at. $2.80 %:&:.f‘:{:“.‘{:&...ur el ".:L““ 2 U and 80 staing . Linen Napking, 18-Inch wize, wllh tast edfe in every 79¢ our shelves at these prices, in lace or o D Boys" Quercoats, 3 to § years; worth.$! 50 reduced Bennett's Capitol Sweet Potatoe ¢ cans. respect, $1.12% quality—dozen. . . and vicl or gunmetal calf shoes. Cfose to a thou. 100 S. & H Green stampa ...... 1.4 Whole Bable Beets, “Best We Have' brand, 18¢ can Huck Towels, large size, red borders, perfect goods, @ sand pairs in the Buyers' and Managers' sale at, o . % M.‘M son and BtLer Hate) Worth' $8.60 .,,.1 5.4/0 et ORI EARLR, O ShiEtering: Ipdk, Negals, o dc i %8 | with each Aol l" % York Violet Toilet Soap, three for 28c—and 10 stamps Bed Spreads, hemmed fringed and cut corners, 98¢ Ly 3 Ca itol Coal Men's Snrl and Stiff Hats ‘1.‘\‘.fi‘("‘.‘.:!.’}‘..'flv"".‘.}.‘.'.'.'.r‘?;‘””‘ ‘)' .. :&'t*‘"fl 10 siambs worth $1.39, for DOROTHY DODD SHOES - Lace Im.m.u, ‘lql nll::“‘:)l tonof... 6 hats @ i JFull Cream Cheese, 1. ¢ flo—::d }R :{;‘m“B: m“m“’ o o ';‘\l,l\l\".m;,‘.‘:ln ‘;‘Txlf.n ‘:\?‘ ::;e‘l;v(‘rxl‘:e.“u:‘:‘l:m: in:i: $21s | This offer is made for Monday orders only. Cap- :‘;'“," :‘ inter’ ‘":“‘“‘ "“" 38 4 ‘_”“d“""‘ to 170 },'.;‘n'tf'; S;\llu‘!:r‘;‘l:ulruzl"rxlv]: e W, 5 f'“‘";%: Bleached Biilow Cases, 'iixié-ineh, 13¢ uuamm 10c itol Coal is the best soft coal mined. Let us have en's heavy ritbed $1.50 Undershirts, reduced to 790 Double Stamps on Granulated Suga \ or + . WOMEN'S SMALL SIZE SHQES—A clean-up lot of ok ot s oA w100 Men's plain black Cotton Bocks, worth 15¢; at....9c | Crackers, Iten's fresh baked Graham | Blanke wool, § Ibs. to pair, full size, gray ”” 0dds and ends from $4.00, $3.50 and $3.00 lines. ¥y Men's 50c Lisle Suspenders, reduced to. .. and Tourist Crackers, pkg......... . .100—and 10 stamps v Lonk ,helt 5.00 bm&k-t“-o:e““\{; sk o Some Norothy Dodd styles 'm,“m_d small ® stamps with every ton— Boys' Jersey Sweaters, worth to $3.00, at Mt. Caramel Pumpkin diree cans for..... .3 comfcrtars lied i opew Wwhl¥ Some orpthy, De prompt deltverles ... Bovar Fianneletts NIt Robes, 506 Kind. Rimo tinwineriat, {or shortonks bas] baron, and he finally gave up without fin-| 4 " s celved in Omaha recently from Madrid, laws of France and Spain, and whi & | ishing nia specch, URCLE HERMAN IS rROS IY! ‘hnnm by several leading Omaba people, | to escape with hin beautiful vuung’ed‘::“.;;‘. Things You Want to Know ||y o ie s o e e L, ome ng G friendly sort has been directed against lmxal Thomas A. Fry and B. J. Drumt|secreted draft which is hidden in LonAon conservative speakers. All during the cam- | Drexel, the Shoeman, Flouts Prof- m;md“ : = amounts to about $500,00 in. American - Balsn thesnewAnabers; cotmentsd “ou this n the letter to Mr. Drexel the Spanish|meney, and Jose proposes to his Uncle # A : bk 5 | foatsire’ with SEtE Tarty 'biae, The raicdT fered Fortune in Spain. prisoner signs himself asx Jose Saigado|Herman Drexel that the latter is to take Thc En ll’h ElecthnS—Thc [_l eckhng \/ oice papers were Inclined to think it showed Drexel, and desires the answer to be sent|charge of the beautiful daughter, educate g | how unpopular. the tdries were with the| OTHER OMAHA MEN ALSO ‘COLD|™ ©'® of the “good chaplain,” Senor Don [her, live himself upon the interest of the Deonie: AHE 1okk bapvrs chabawd thatithe Juan Manar, Arganda_del Rey, Province|$0000 and then take one-fourth of it for 1% o rowdyism of the liberals was the despera- de Madrid, Espana. his troub \ Whether or not the volce of the people | remarking in & Boller-factory voice at the| #at down on the chairman’s table, ighted | WOV O 0e ) MO0 B TS B G PRI | Amtediluvian Schcme to Cat Suckers| In this instance Jose Drexel tella that| The letter is a pathetic one, particulaly (s the volce of God' & & question|ena of every ome of Sir Willlam's chaste | @ clgarette and waited for the nolse 10| oo “yindlal leaders and cardidates were| | Loose from, Their Money Tried | he accumulated hin fortune during the dig- | where it refers to the beautiful duughter, which some persons may dispute with| périods: “You are a lylng luwyer and you | cease. It dldwie cease, and as there were | oo gl (ol o® TR CHE SO D tn VM Thr & Latri ONCE ‘Kln(., of the Panama canal under Ferdinand |and her loneliness and helplessness, and the classics proverb, but no English| make your living by taking money to tell | more neighbors than there werc earls of |, o Fot Ty R N P WU b bomiig s de Lesseps, Through the faflure of the|how much she Is in need of the care of I Doliticlan Wil dfspute ~ the fact thet|lles and you know it and you know wejDenblgh, the noble carl finally gave it| "0 PLIEIINE UB COIETEULS SOt eR X . {canal scheme, fie got mixed up with the |her uncle, , @ “the volce" Jri-the audience is a volce to|know It,” repeat, ad lib., with variations\up as & bad job and hiked away from |y yied and then the radicals would cry | —— | » be respccted. The Biiilsh people have no| After about the seventh heckle)Sir Wil- | there. out that the liquor trade was plylng rowdies| “Tobos estamos sujetos a errar.’ That | 4 onsg of decorum in politics. Much as the | llam's cholor got the best of his politeness | Lord Ashborne, on the same night In | iin free drinks (o get them to interrupt|ls an old Spanish proverb meaning that | ) - 4 Englishman, may -deplore the &verasse|and of the constitution, and he inymated [ London,- was greeted- by an enthusiastic | \iuc o1 sneakers, But usually eversbody | the whole bunch of s fa lable to get taken Omaha s F“-st Skyscra.pel' \ Amorican's” lack 0f manuers in handling | that he was able, physically, to punch the | crowd’of hecklers with a genius for fun. | seemeq 49 credit all the trouble to “the|in badly should we nibble at cvery propo- T knives, forks and spoons at a dinner table, | head of a certain heckler. The heckler in- | Every time the noble lord sald anything | voice''_that fs, to the British elector in | sition that comes out of Spatn. the American can put it all over Mis|vited Sir Willlam to a joust and they went serious the crowd groaned and every tme | ..iion gs an auaitor. Once again the country is being flooded British cousin when it comes to behaving| to it. A brace of faultiess “bobbies” broke | ho said . anything allegedly funny the | geo e SO0 L | ith letters from some alleged unfor- at a public speaking. The Hriton doesn't|up the fight, but no arrests were made as | crowd groaned. Finally they got tired and | jiviont yinder thewstrain of the heckling, | Dtes; who are doing the Edmond Dantes want to behave, and his unwritten can-|the pdfice couldn't determine whether to| broke up the meeting by turning it Into | gometimes a clever speaker can turn a|@ct In some Spanish prison. He is, as of stitution protects him in certain inalien- | arrest the heckler for starting a row, or to | & saengerfest. questfon to the discomfiture of the heckler, | Yore, the possessor of an alluring bunch of able rights of misbehaviotr to which the| take Sir Willlam into custody for breach of | As & rule the hecklers are very polite to | anq that makes for peace and order. Again, | simoleons, which just prior to his arrest speakers must tamely submit. the constitution. women spépkers and seldom throw things | o gpeaker fs given an oppordnity to turn| he had converted into a draft and de- When the soverelgn American voter goes| A favorite form of heckling s the inter- | at m-m; ‘l‘.r'xey ml}fv e”xceyllunl In favor | 3 pretty point by the ald of a chance re- | Posited In a seeret drawer in his trunk, into politics as an suditor at & political | ruption of the speaker by remarks more or [ of the “sex.” The "sex" is not so consld- | mark of ‘the volce.” Sometimes, 1t is| Which Is in a boarding house in London, speaking he is permitted, by the stern code | less personal and uncomplimentary, or by | erate, and the suffragettes never miss & | whispered, speakefs have been known to| 0 that the minions of King Alfonso can- of etiquette obtaining in nearly all parts|asking questions which are pertinent or | chance to heave a brick through & window | arrange with some free and unterrified | not get hold 6f the cash. It is secure.be. of the United States, to do but three things. | impertinent as one is & radical or a tory, [ at some cabinet minister who is explalning | neckler ‘for a few Interruptions at just the | yond the reach of detectives. He may keep silent, he may cheer, or he|or by making audible comments on the|to the dear people how “the government |psychological moment. For bad.as it is to| ~There are ceveral varlations of the story ‘. may hiss. The hissing is considered ill-| past political Tecord of the speaker when | have provided for the country.” (TBe gov- |be heckled, it is Infinitély worse to be!of the modern Edmond Dantes, but one of bred, 1t is true, but it is sometimes per-| It is In contrast with his present political | ernment “have” is coprect in Englend.) | ignored. | the favorite plans Is for the writer of | mitted o pass without csusing @ riot| professions. The authors of such remarks, | But this brick-heaving is not considered | But when Lord Cheylesmore and Lord|the letter from Spain to claim to be a among the supporters of the code of politl- [ the individuality of hecklers being lost In | heckling afid therefore is not protected by | Donoughmore attempted to plead the case | distant relative of the reefplent of the cal politeness the crowd are collectively known as ““The | the constitution 4" Britlsh etiquette. | of the peers to an audience In Coventry \ letter, through an American marriage of No such pent-up Utica cnbs, cabins or | Voice." Apd in every speech made during | Hence, just before a political meeting, the | the heckler reached his climax. \He an-|his ma, and that’ he wants the reciplent confines the British elector, aithough he iy | the camplgn “The Voice had somethiug | police arrest all women in the nelghbor- | nounced in tuneful song that he, collectively | o open up o correspondence with him | ) Dot “sovercign” in theory. When he goes|to 5ay. “The Volce” 18 not always In|hood suspected of & militant desire to exer- | considered, did not intend to go home until| through the “good” chaplain of. the prison | to & political. meeting he has, under the |OPPosition. Indeeds a friendly heckler with | cise the right of suffrage and s con- | the following morning. The only local sup-| in which he is confined, in order that » constitution, a perfect right te do any or|® 00d pair of lungs is often of great| comitant privileges of heckilng and boolng. | porter of the peers was hustled off the | plans may be devised whereby the secret \ All of the seven following things, to-wit: | Y&lue in helping a halting speaker to make | Mrs. Fletcher, wife of a member of Par- | stage, but the two noble lords were forced | drawer in the London trunk in the obscure o, Cheer, hiss, groan, sing, yell, boo and|his opinions known to the voters. lament, essayed to make a speech in be- | to stay and hear the singing or several | boarding house may be gecured, the .draft heckte. Sometimes the British electors do not|half of & friend of her husband who_was | hours | obtatned and brought t6”America, and then | Now the greatest of these In represented | consider a speaker sent to address then to | running for the House. The hecklérs were | The British elector with a taste for ex-| the proceeds or big percentage of them {n the verb “to heckle,” for under that|be worthy of heckling. In such cases the | provided for her and the first part of her | citing fun has his inning at election time. | will be divided with the recipient liead the British elector at a political speak- | electors exercise another inallenable right ! address was made to the accompaniment | And if a peer is his particular avePsion, as In Vague Innugndo. | 3 ing may, camand does do anything he jolly | Of the freeborn and perfectly polite Eng-|of a grand chorus of baby rattiers. She Is | seems to be the case, the heckler Was| pose jett A7 " 4 well pleases from making a speech (o the | lghman. They boo the speaker. That i |a tariff reformer, and when she came to | happy during this campalgn, for never be- | poune vare tnneonge Lo Mith & pur | speaker 10 using & peePs monocle as the | they boo the man-who-would-be-speaker. | explain how much better the Iaboring man | fo were there so many poers on thethere) LASuC lnnuendo. un R & Eae § bull's éye In target practice with rotten | They attend the meeting and very quietly | in protected“Germany lives than his fel- | stump In England. If the House oh LOrds | oiatisme in weder (o piue (i n e i egks as ammunition. The egks business is | hear the address of the charman. The |fow workman in free-irade KEngland a |cver gets complete control of the British | of genuinerces but he ot o roance | vegarded as lil-bred and none but & very | Sbeaker in Introduced and makes his bow. | genial heckler threw a live puppy dog at | constitution it certainly will knock out the | puman. eeedulits - and. bar ot e rude heckler will deacend (0 such methods. | And then the cleotors boo him. That is o | the lady, exclaiming, “Thet's What th | clause protecting the boors and the heck- | worked/ in s FL 0N L0, e (e, It 1s about on the plane with hissing in |88y about 'steen hundred of them, With| Germans eat.’ | tegs. - | These first Ie'llu" Yy :l‘l merel, | N the United States. But it i& Rot & crime|one nccord, prohounce the word "bwo” | Lord Rothseblid, who has-more money | Y FREDERIC J. MASKIN, ik CEha sive (R EtRY the Ataviat Gin] - and the heckler is protected by the con- | loudly and eringly. And when they ere | thap Carter had oats, has aiways made it | Tomorrow—THE ENGLISE BLBOTIONS | fortune of thé prisoner, how he ‘),“ ..,,....;i \ Stitution and by Britsh etigyette. through pronouncing it, they do it all over | 4 practice neves (0 speak except in the —The British Syelibinder, 1t, his velationship to ‘thil Tociglent. toile W Sir William Bull, & tory member of Par- | 8680, Aud #0 on until the man-who-Would- | House of Lords and the city of London |’ S ————— 1F g By g oy Beo - Koogen Nament, is & shinink example of the few | De-speaker gots tired and leaves. Bometimes | ypon purely financial or municipal affairs. Anether Bzonse. [mumm R Rl m Sgpuart ar Sug politiclans who have dared to take un-|the short boo is introduced in the middle | Byt the threatened socialism of the Lioyd-| “Why do you delay meeting that fighter? [ The recipient, If he bites at the rpum..nllt constitutional steps with respect to the |Of & speech, but then it is only & part of | George regime aroused him to action and | You aren't afrald of him, are you?' | story, will ‘whortly thereafter receive an- hecklers in this campaign. A British elec- | the heckling he took ihe stump for & tour around the| “Afvald? I should say not!" replied the |oeher letter asking him or her to cough "7 %, por, & pertectly polite one without auy un-| The earl of Denbigh, & Tory lord, went | country. e went o one town to tell the | Pusilist. up & hattul of doubloons to meet the ex- em gEs about his persqn, stood near the | down to Hopewell, where he owns & large | people the seasons why he had beon con-| ..1hen What's the troubler penses of sending an agent to London or otor-van platform from"which Sir Wil- | estate, to speak to his neighbors about | verted from & free trader to & tarite re-|, ' o 10 tell the truth, I hold him |p 0" Toyny oo™ Tl the mystorious Mam was expiaining why the people should | the issues of the day. The nelghbors | former. The audience amused Meelf by |rine mosclt to tuoe oo by (Nat T CANL |\ nk. It he sends the stutf, thers is no support peers and not tax the Igad. booed him. He tried for twenty minutes | interriipting every few minutes With thres | tho ring and -n-‘an. m';":':""' Lol shird chapter. This elebtor punctuated the address by to speak, but made no headway. Then he | cheers for Lioyd-George. This annoyed the " ol VIEW OF THE CITY NATIONAL BANK BUILDING AB IT SHOWING HOW IT TOWERS OVER IT8S SURROUNDINGS, FrARDR TRAT,

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