Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 5, 1910, Page 7

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Orchard & Wilhelm 3141618 South Sixteenth Street Special Gift Carnival Notice During the present gift carnival we have tried to gift card, thus afford- v one to participate in the gift giving contest. ‘We may have missed a number of homes and frequently deliver to each and every home & ing every cards are blownr away by the wind or carried away by | children and we therefore request those who have not yet received a card to call at the store and receive one from the yvoung lady at the store entrance. There will be no more cards distributed during this carnival. The carnival will close Wednesday evening, April 6th, at 6 o'clock and we urge you to call and look for your num ber before the closing of the carnival. You may be en- titled to-one of the most expensive gift pieces. BRIEF CITY NEWS |BREWERY LICENSES VALID ‘Aave Moot Print Tt Bwobods—Certified Pudlic Accountant. Lighting ¥ inden Oo. 1850—National Life Insurance Co.—1910 Charlew L. Ady, General Agent, Omaha. Savings Accousts in the Nebraska Sav- s abG LoAR ASK'T €arn s per cent per unpum, credited semi-unnualiy. One dollar | Nusbee of Appeal Not Filed in Time tarts An account. 1808 Farmnam St. ». the Motel Men Meet—The Omaha Hotel Clrks' association will hold its regular | Jounthly meeting at lye Arcade this even- g Wtabbe Again Goes Wewt—J. C. Stubbs, diector of traffic of the Harriman lnes of the Union Pacific, passed through Umanha Monday morning, while on his way west. lie came from Chicago, recently buried a daughter, leno, Nev, two weeks ago. Seeking Ris Wandering Brother—M. B £l neerman, w buicner ut yrand Rapias, seeking information of the whereabouts iis Lrotner, Stepnen M. Schneermar who left home ten years ago. The mother of the brothers died on March 2 at the :Jurlgel Troup and Day Dismi: peals from Exoise Board. TEST CASE CARRIES OTHERS Ap- Anti-Saloon Lea Any Foree in Court, . to Have Liquor licenses granted Omaha brewerics and brewery agents by the Board of Fire and Police Commissioners val stand valid through the year by virtue of a decision In district court handed down Monday after- noon by Judge Troup., Judge Day, who sat with Judge Troup in & test hearing, curt in the finding. The ruling is on & motion filed in behalf of brewerles to dismiss the appeals taken by Rev. J. M. Leidy from the grant of the excise board. Motions to dismiss the appeals in all these were filed and argued some dhys The where who dled he in con cases BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY STELZLE ASKS SQUARE DEAL Insists Trades Unions and Church Alike Must Have It. Some Things Yo The Fur JESUS COURT OF LAST APPEAL The International Fur Workers meets Paul todiy. Many mat of will be called to the at tention of the convention, among them the problem of conserving the fur supply, and the problem of heaith for the furrier. Fur workers are liable to contraet a peculiar catarrh that never has vielded readily to Pleading for greater co-operation between |treatment, and ways and means of prevent workingmen and the church, with re-|InNE and curing the disease will fig proaches for both, Rev, Charles Stelzle, New | prominently in the discussions. Fur work York, superintendent of the Presbyterian |ers from ma. will attend the church department of church and labor, (CORvention, but they will come malnly from Auditolrum Sunday afternoon. the United States and Canada, which pro Auditorium yesterday afternoon. duce more than half of the raw furs of The speaker told his story in bold, |the world, aithough not haif of the finished sweeping terms without mincing words. He | Products #poke last night in Lincoln and will return| There are few businesses the to Omaha this morning for the purpose of | Waste s so great as in a big fur working addressing a meeting at the Young Men's | establishment. There are always innumer Christian association tonight |able cuttings and scraps trom yur, and the At the conclusion of the address made more valuable the fur the more carefully here yesterday Rev. Mr. Btetzle was taken Must be fashioned the plece made of it to Lincoln in an automobile by a delegation |hence the greater waste. Yet it is not all composed of Dr. Samuel Z. Batten, Senator | Wasted, for the scraps of a fine fur may be 1. E. Miller, Senator Mockett and E. E, |USed to trim the cheaper fur, and all that Mockett, r., of Lincoln. {hes no other avaflable use can be cut into At the meeting yesterday afternoon, of-|fiNe pleces and the hair blown from it ficers of the Young Men's Christian as-|This hair seils at several dollars a pound | soclation, Central Labor union and the|fOr the more costly furs, and a few cents Omaha Church federation occupled seats|® Pound for the cheaper ones. Of the on the piatform. The meeting was at-|NiSh priced furs the seal is the only one tended by many of the laboring men of |that is dyed. Other furs are made in imi [ the ity and people of prominence in other |tAtion of more costly ones by dveing and | activities. George F. Gilmore, president of | rimming. There used to be an imitation |the Young Men's Christian association [°f sealskinminde from muskrat hides, but | prestaed. Rev. Thomas F. Rouse delivered | After the introduction of the electric se the pravee. 4 | made from the shorn fur of the con it brayer Rev. Mr Rouse asked|TMUSkrat seal went out of style. | o warp “see i | One hears of beaver hats quite frequently, “rotten old Pittsburg” and And yet it is asserted that a genuine bea r ¢ | ot | prayed that the indignation and regret v, o s ol g ? " ) | ver hat that should follow would spell the end | t* ™ R NG L NUGR SR Nquatie of graft in the land fur, is now the prime favorite in hat mak- Stelale for ing. though for the cheaper g-ades hare Rev. Mr. Stelzle said in part: and cony furs have the call. The muskrat “The most important thing about the probably is in greater demand than any labor question Is to give the other fellow other fur in America today, it being esti- a square deal. The American working- | mated that some 5000000 of these animals |man 18 the best workingman in the world. |annually sacrifice their lives to the de | He produces more than do the working- | mands of the furrler. men in any other part of the world. He| The fur trade ot North America is very |is the most nighly paid workingman to be |jarge, New York City glone transforming | touna anywhere; but compared to what he | 500000 worth of raw furs into $26,000,000 produces, he is the poorest paid. With|worth of finished product, by the labor us it 18 not so much & question of produc-|or 6,000 furriers. tion as of distribution. Fur making is the oldest Industry of “While the labor union does not constl- |tne world. After the fig leaf had gone out tute the labor question, it is, neverthe-|.t giyvie, Eve concluded that furs would less, a very Important part of it. Indeed.|pecome her, so the first pelt was taken there is no factor in the labor movement |ang cured, and thus the world started out which is more important just mow. The|on ts career of fur trapping and manu- trades union has frtquently been accused of | gacturing. The Astor fortune was started indiscretion and lawlessness, but the trades | in the fur trade. London has been the |unton has not a monopoly of this sort of woria's principal fur market for genera- thing. 1Indced, one néed not go very far ione and welling by inch of the candle back in the history of the church to find associa- | in 8t Ethical Value of Unionism s Set Out Strongly, and Alve Claim Chureh to Alley Workers. ters Interest ce of to re y countries where the his | | anre Deal. | was a Grand Map.ds home without graufyiig her Wisi o wee the missing son again. Partners Fall Out—Willlam Bellamy haughty and dictatorfal,’ says his par.- o.r \n-the plumbing business, Henry Horn- ung, who is suicg for a court dis solving the partnership. H roung alleges that Mellamy not only keeps tne pi i in the dark about the finances of the busi- ness, but “refuses 10 speak for days at a thme and has told callers axking for plain- Uf that plaintiff is out, when the defend- aag well knew he was in the office.” Jommuaion Saves Boy From Detention aome—Hennle Brader escaped tne Deten- order ag ground in t motions of the Anti were based on the ppeal was not filed Saloon league forces Judges Troup and Day hold t absence of & specific statute the notic appeals must be given at once and appeals taken forthwith. “Forthwith" |préted 1o mean such reasonable as would be necessary to a transeript of the record made. This was not done in the cases at fssue. t e by at in the is inter- time have Teat Cawe Dee The test appeal ruled upon was the grant duplicated practically eterything that we deplore in organized labor today, even down to the boycotting and the slugging. However, else the church and labor may disagree, they at least have this mueh in common—their mutual mistakes, Val of Trade U he trades union has certaln moral and ethical values which are rarely appre- clated. It belleves, for instance, in the abolition of child labor. It stands for | equal pay to men and women for equal work. It is helping to wipe out unsani- ons In the sweat shop and the picturesque way of auctioneering them off. Pins were placed In the candle at every inch, and when one of them was reached the furs were knocked off to the highest bidder. It is & remarkable thing that more than half of the world's supply of fur is gathered by amateurs. The country with his muskrat and 'possum trap, his mink and coon hunting expeditions, gathers half of the supply. Even the grounghog is made to yleld up his hide to the furrler, for |some of the best gloves are made from the skin of the groundhog, tanned In ashes. There fs a Jeurnal published In boy tio) hame, temporarily at lcasi, bec.uss |°F 1fquor license to the Stors Brewing com- of & plea by his mother that confinement | P80Y: Similar appeals were taken against there Wil interrtpt his maxing his first 1““’,"::;‘:""}“\'“'“" to all ofhier iwweriee in communion. The Brader ch K00BL the Xty Brewialk company, 4 and two LWhose license antedaied ;the othere ‘An “ s..Jehn and, Tommie Mo risey. % e appeal in this case.was perfected at once accused of throwing bricks at Abey Cudi- ndli, 10 South Twanty-ninth street. Ths | pateiin® wno sy <o oefort Cudinair boy showed the court a fearfully e 2 P Tiowsa and Police Commissioners. His swollen back and blue ey has gone to the supreme court Roseathai's uease i Good cases cannot reach that body enthai, who rented a siore appeals to district court are Parnam street, confirmed it his lease from Dr. C. W. Downs by decision of Judge Leslte in county court. Dr. Downs brought a dispossession following an excited encounter with Rosenthal, who, after the etcounter, filed a damage sult for $25,00 in district court. Judge Leslie held that a tender of the rent money made Hosenthal. That man since_the trouble vccurred, sub-le property and is reaping h monthly clear profit of $7. Disgracetul Conduet of Iver and bowels, in quickly remedied with Life Pills. e For Co. of Fire decision The other because the now dismissed WIFE SAVES HUBBY, BUT WOULD KEEP HIM AWAY Mrs. Julin Muirhead Withdraws Com- plaint Against Johu, Still Main- talning She Has Fears. ~Albert bullding at Ros- 146 is sult was by the v "OW] Mrs. Julia Muirhead loves Ler husband, | John, but with some degree of reservation {She told Judge Crawford ‘in police that she preferred John at King's New | When he was In a bad humor. court a distance retusin i | Dr sale by » act trom of her o value Beaton Drug| Muirhead, his wife, Samuel Goldware and | Charles jvebster constituted the quartette | which stood before the bench of rapid fire Justice, involved in & charge of keeping a | disorderly house at 1916 Cuming street Mrs. Muirhead saved her husband possible conviction on a second char, assault and battery by withdrawing complaint that he had beaten her. | “But 1 want him to keep away from me () she cautioned with a sidelong” glance at | John. | The house in question s held by the Muirheads, according to testimony in police court. Goldware had been arrested on the charge of operating the place. He main- ¥ ; tained that he was but a roomer, as aid | | Webster, Their cases were set over Tuesday morning. CLASSY BURGLARS TAKE ONLY MANICURING TOOLS ining Admission to House They Select Only Thene Cleans- ing Articles Manfcuring implements to the of {815 will serve as evidence of burglary {Against any one upon whom the tools are {tourd, as the result of a complaint made | to the police by Mrs. S. G. Risher of No | 1429 North Nineteenth street, this morning. Mre. Risher told the police she had de- parted trom her howe, leaving the front door key in & hiding place near the front door last night. Upon returning in an ho he says. she found the key in the door the door opened. and the house rifled. The maniouring instruments compri: the 14ss |PLANS FOR THE ENCAMPMENT Spanish War Veterans Plan temsively Col: Meeting at This Month. Ex- 2 » CUTICURA SOAP A lifetime of disfigurement and suffering often results from the neglect, in infancy or childhood, | The second annual encampment of the Nebraska department of the United Spanish War Veterans will convene in Columb April 3%, at 3 a. m. Department headquar- ters will be established at the Meridian hotel. The council of administration will meet with Department Commander E. H. Phelps | Monday evening, April %, at 8 o'elock at | heddquarters for the transaction of such business as may come before it Comrade George Ludden of Willlam Lewis | camp, No. 2, Lincoln, has been announced ! as chief of staff, vice Barth, removed from the department. The encampment promises to be the largest yet held In the state, and the people of Columbus are making every preparation for the reception of the veterans, and to | extend them the most cordial hospitality, | gl — Mets Famous Boek B on draught and in bottles on and March 3 Absolutely the only geguune | BOCK BEER brewed in Omaha. Oifler case sent to your home. Prompt Gelivery. | ‘Puone Douglas L9, lnd., s }* of simple skin affections. In the prevention and treatment of minor eruptions and in- the promotion of t skin and hair health, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint- ment are absolutely unrivaled. 1 tary conditi | tenement. 1t 18 a force for more tem- | perate 1iving among the rank and file of | workingmen. According to Carroll D. | Wrignt, the trades union is doing more to Americanize the immlgrant than any othér institution. It cares for jts sick members and the widow and the orphan, and it is fighting for universal peace. Let us glve the trades unlon a square deal | 1t has made a good many mistakes, but it has done some other things also. Most of | us insist that we should be judged, not by our worst characteristics, but by our best. The trades union has a perfect right to demand that this principle shall be ap- plied to organized labor. There are some men who say that Jesus into the world to establish an declare that He to promote a utopian democracy. They wrong in both for Jesus came to establish an absolute monarchy, a king- {dom which shall be comprised of all those who will acknowledge His kingship. Prac- | tically every reformer claims Jesus as the champlon of his particular social theory, even though these thea be as extreme as the poles. Whatever else this may Indigate, It proves that the Christi- | anity of Jesus Christ was a much broader thing than any ‘lsm.’ the interest of the. trapper, and its dis- tinguishing feature:is its great quantity of advertisements ,of dealers wanting to I buy furs ‘or years there Naw been & belief that civilization pushed-back the boundaries of the unsettled WoMd there would be a growing shortage of” fur bearing animals. The drainage of swamps d marshes has tended to destroy homes of the musk- rat, while the saw mill in the north and the south and the west is singing a death knell the habitations of the 'coon, the bear, the 'possum, the wildcal, the fisher, the marten and the lynx. The beaver and otter have so little patience with civiliza. 1 that the appearance of man their haunts always the sign for their dis- appearance. The vast demand for furs s shown by a few examples of the spring offerings of two leading fur auction houses last year. These offerings cluded 82000 mink skins, 565,00 skunk skins, 1,238,000 muskr skins, 205,000 rac coon skins, 25,00 opossum skins, 21000 wolf kins 25,00 fox skins, 77,600 ermine skin and others in proportion. North America now furnishes a large per eent of the furs of the world. Some of the more costly kinds of fur comes from the northern parts of Europs and Asia, Aus tralia the principal produeing center in opossum hides prineipal supply of chinchilla ¢ South Ameriea. in came republic ideal came Others n in- social fes Christ Had No Pet System, o Nobody prove from scripture th Christ was the advocate of any soctal sys- and smes from can APRIL u Want to Know Industry the its world has main supply who But North America looked for tor Its fur trad en the have guided the star of empire, They have been founders of its cities. New York the queen cities of the western world we their to fur trade But with N America as the continent that produces tha furs worn by the masses and with the limits of the wiid being rap 1dly narrowed the fur supply of tomorrow to come The trapper is a great friend of conservation. He finds in the forest re: and land withy drawn from public entry a preservation of his means of existence. But realizes that even this will not always suffice to keep up to the living stand ard the trapper of today is figuring ing farmer of tomorrow Fur farming tion, but rather old as a successful experl ment. As early 1884 experiments made at raising foxes islands on the coasts of Alaska and Brit 1eh tox ng has be come an industry of nmereial impor- tance. In North Ame the principal animal that has been cultivated for its fur is the skunk. It is generally agreed that of tur farming is to be the solution of the fur problem the trapper must become the fur grower. Evidently a m is not intimately acquainted with wild animal life would make a failure at fur farming. The Department of Agriculture has taken coghizance of this opportunity to establish a industry in the United States and has publ'shed a bulletin on the subject. Among other . features of thls pamphlct is & map showing the localities | where silver fox farming might te engaged | | enturies have b westward the Chicage both ploneers and ol origin the where 1s f rve he his business Consequently becon: the on ar is new as a general voca- as were £ the on some ot Columbia. Now ra fca new in with success by properly equipped men. The reglons embrace all of New England and the Bfue Ridge, Alleghany and Rocky meuntain coast. One of the most succis:- ful fox breeders in the United States feeds his foxes a quarter of a pound of meat | and a quart of skimmed milk a day. An- other breeder says that by buying old, | worn-out but heaithy horses for the meat ration the food of his foxes d e3 not him more than a cent a day per fox. Skunk farming is sald to be a less dis. tasteful business than the name would in- dicate. It is said that the skunk uses his powerful scent only when he is in danger, | that he eariy discovers that the farmer is his friend, and stray dog will give saild that the skunk is the glutton of the fur-bearing world, farmer asserting that his 30 breeding skunks will eat two horses a week. The opossum be the momt promising of all the fur farming anima 1t grows rapidly and there is a demand both for the carcass and the hide. Having lived for generations in close contact with man, the opossum is not seriously af- fected for a life in captivity. The musk- rat is in the same catagory as the opossum, and in many cities there is a great demand for muskrat meat. In some sections the annuaj catch of muskrats has amounted to fifty per acre for many years. Raccoon raising has been tried and has proved suc cessful, and mink raising has been shown by actual experience to be a very profitable occupation. In all classes of fur farming there has been a long series of failures however. This is due to the fact that many | men have been led by the high price of furs to Attempt the work whey they had| little or no practical acquaintance with the anima’ with which they attempted to deal. One of the finest furs of the world is the seal, although primacy now belongs to the sea otter. A few ago the ment made that the Florizel had made a season catch of| 4, vaiued at §100,000. Eight of the | twenty Newfoundland waters-have reported catches amounting to than 00,000, valued at upwards of $500,000. Of all fur seals none is so valuabl as the Alaskan. Sevator R that unle kil ing Pribilof island rminated agac sealing stopped, doomed to cost | little trouble. Tt is one is said to ays announce- was eaing steamer 000 seals, vessels in seal more t has declared contract and the pe Alaskan seal The average value| of an Alaskan seal 5. The tax on it is | about $10, and all other killing and curing expenses about $. This lcaves a net pro-) fit of about §20 per or 300,000, the concessionaire makes in Pribi of island cach lowed to kil 15,000 sesls BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN, & the sea c the is extinction. seal which | his operations he being al- on vear, te He lived in an age when soclal con. were much worse than they y. He denounced these conditions man of His time dared denounce them, but instead of Introducing another social system, He began to change in- dividual men. Jesus taught that the labor question Is a religious problem. In the end there be not simply one answer to the soclal question, but many; but they 1 all of them be rely Some time ago. a& a sociological c a speaker declared that during the twenty-five years the church had ased three-fold. Therefore. con cluded, the church as a means of keeping down social unrest had been absolutely non-effective. Just as though it were the business of the church to keep down social Rather is the opposite true. It business of the church to create There are no labor troubles Africa, but If the missionaries are sending there are on to their we will soon begin to hear of strikes lockouts from the heart of the dark continent. This has been the history of the church in generation. How- ever durk the age may have been, the church has always been the avhitest light in history. And e 1 ask for square deal for workingman, 1 alsa nsist upon a square deal for the church “The power of Christ is growing today ¥ it has never grown before. Jean Pau Richter once sald, ‘The life of Ch ditlons are tod as no very cerns Him, who, belng the mightiest among the holy, the holiest among the mighty lifted with His pierced hands empires off their hinges, turned the of turies out of its channel and still governs | the ages. Jesus is the King of the ¢ Tw niuries ago a pale stood befors Pilate stream cen a wil vilized world faced Galilean Pilate asked him Thou & King then? Today no ruler the civilized world would dare prohibi the homage which men universa Him. He is a ¢ of las thinks of going back ; nfer- in ence, accord appea n on the verdict of Is it not man _as labor's ¢ lenging the workingmer He is saying to them your labor union: ask upon your plaiform co for it a win.' The workingmen ng that it Jesus lived he the battles of the toflers He thaf is what He vears ago. But is It quite fair Jesus bear all the buffeting and ting upon, and the erucifixio. ceive all the benefits of His sufferings neanwhile places far from Him ash edge Him as our frien and leader? “I Have asked workingmen, and the church, and now —————— e ) for a square deal A thing amp grea to have such Jesus is cha of America today Me to join ce.a seat a . unr is’ the social unrest in darkest that we Jobs and st = ‘Invite to your sure t are say d fight sure t aid 2,00 to have the spit- nells, you vo f this e He wo 1 am are whula every $0, whi a the taking our med 10 ac » for & squa for for the a deal for n conclusion, 1 ask for Jesus." adeal square Horse ['rade Parts Old-Time Friends Members of Same Lodge Fall Out Over a Swap of Very Bad Horses. Marvin Stoner and Guy Bfock, who liv: near Bebolt, swapped horses and Stoner got the worst of the deal. Forthwith he sought to replevin his former animal and employed Constable Hensel. That active | ofticer swapped the horse back again Hearing of the replevin suit is now cn before Judge Leslie in county court. Stoner testitied that the nag he acquired by the deal has the distemper and heaves. Brock says that Stoner knew about the distem- per before he traded Stoner and Brook belong to the same Tomorrow—The Truce in Nicaragua. lodge and Bl ! wh | | 1 never thoughit a brothier of mire w uld | gip me In a hoss GEN. SMTH HERE WEDNESDAY New Com Missouri this explains witness oner’s e on the stand trace ader of the Department of Establishes ters in mak Brigadicr o A Depar Major i the new the der of adjutant at he wiil Omaha Wednesday ‘manent headquarfers ing. t zenera v ment in all probabilit n the | | | Comes {CATRO MAKES BIG IMPRE | and the only | wonderful change has been effected ther Our Spring Overcoats and Cravenettes at $12 and $15 Deserve Your Attention Their usefulness and desirability s, of course, unquestfoned, though until you've seen them yourself, you'll not realize how unusually tylish and handsome they really are. We want you to see them at once, that you may make your selection from wn assortment, which in size, variety and quality of fabric is not equalled outside this store, You will find up-to-the-minute styles, the newest of the season’s patterns, and correct shades awalting your cholce. we're positive you'll be well pleased with these coats, be- cause, beside style and appearance, their qual- ity and talloring is a good guarantee of their wearing qualities. Whatever your taste, your size or your favorite price, it's to your best interest to see our spring overcoats and crav- enettes, at $12 @ $15 ““The House of High Merit."”’ N LOUIS METZ HOME ACAIN Back After Interesting |« Journey to Orient. | | bring me a glass of milk and & bit oi | bread.’ But the milk was aiso goat's milk the fine scenery did not leave suck sslon on my mind as that surfeit “The clally intense poverty of Italy and espe- southern Italy and Naples, could be,” sald Mr. Metz, “buth een and felt SSION | There are beggats here, there and every where.” “In Italy,” he the | remarked, “one-halt of the people seem to be in uniforms and | the other halt in rags. Then the people are so ignorant and they are Kept so by the power of the church. But there is ar upheavel coming and we saw that in & great soclalist demonstration ‘in Rome." and its capital, Monte Carlo, also visited and Mr. Metz think that half wealth of the was this part of Omahan Visits Messina, Where People Are Still Digging Up Bodies Buried in the Ruins. n “We had a splendid trip, but 1 am glad to | be back in America; it looks good to me, was the response of Louls R. Metz to the friends who greeted him yesterday on his from eleven months' travel 1 Europe and the orient. He reached Omaha | at noon, was met by a delegation of friends at the Union depot and when he turned up | at the Henshaw last night he was hailed by & sulvo of exclamations, “How well you | look." Mr. Metz admitted he had better, although the tramping he had done had reduced his avolrdupois. "We were not | demic and added that the basement of the the ordinary bunch of tourists” he ex-|hotel in which he had stopped was still plained, “with gulde book in hand and fol- | full of water. lowing their cicerone at express speed. We| Describing London as the market of wanted to see the countries we traversed | world, he spoke of tie wonderful way you can do that is by [iggulation of the great metropolis. footing it. But sometimes I think I BOl|are ten there, tor every too much of it. Would you believe it, when | Paris, but there is not the we tramped ifito Monte Carlo 1 felt just \lk-‘].md the same difficulty of a spot of. grease. 4 the streets.” In the party was Colonel Fanning, ‘h“] But, although Mr. Metz said that he felt returned Saturday, and J. H. McDonald, | good after His TTp, yet"Fe Ts mighty glad Who remained in Paris to récuperate. MI. | (o be back in Omaha and will see his Mets ‘arrived in New York with 'Colone! | prother, Arthur, and his family depart for Fanning, but stopped off at St. Louis. April Without SOkE he Mr. Metz's discussion of men and things met with in his travels showed he had both the seeing eye and the hearing ear when he was gazing upon the architectural wonders of tne Collseum by moonlight taking afterncon tea on the plazza of Shep- herd's famous hotel at Caliro. Monaco said the ated were one ha would world France. return Condition of. Paris. Speaking of Paris he said he would not advise 0 this There will be something oceurring there, his comment, and explained this never felt| by referring to the state the city had been left in by the floods. He feared an epi- anyone > there summer in o street “There one in ne crowding Betting across he said 2 Europe envy TAX RETURNS SHOW PEOPLE PCORER THAN LAST YEAR r o Insists roperty any Annes Own More n Make Re- Cal “What vour trip? Fanning, o Makes Impression. he vivid impression he was asked, and, like Colonel | his reply was “What a is most of The | County 't high schedu first tax Assessor Cairo." ret ha who is come to n a state perty and as- tne he said and he light, ments a modern city ““But the morals or since the English occupatior proceded to descant upon its electri cars and the other equip. has. rather want of morals of the people—ugh! There however, { we'l been a great change in recent years. Do amphatics you know that It was to this immorallty | .y hefore Colonel Roosevelt was veferring when he poke ot the Egyptians not being fitted for self-government? The only one,” he added the Egyptians have any respect for is the giish soldier.’ When in Cairo the party found themselves in Billy Yes, that's the name of it lost among the goats, and there hundreds of them being brought back the city from tne fields where they been browsing during the day, we enveloped by of (Arab boys de- manding backsheesh when we called for a carriage. Each one wanted to Upped huving found the jehu Speaking of suats, that was not the place We Were up against the quad Our earlier experience was at Mes- where we saw the people still d:gging | Mrs & out of the ruins caused by Wednesday Ther well, g . disgust personal 1 v by the per i sworn to reached its electric women P same indiv luals swore t year. Mr. Shriver, own as much has, sald jerk ‘em Iy. “These probably people more | | JOE SESTO IS TO BE MARRIED | Will Join Hand ana Heart with Mise Lena Marfisi of This E got lost and| Goat Alley but If we were Sesto. reet staff of foreman Wednesday at h. H b Commisstoner to be mar- St. Phll in the de a hana- bride and were, to had were N 1s at agues secured th ay given mena’s chur partment | present crowds ave som o be grox M bride-t Aaughter Mr. a Both the young laay merous friends, -be sAiss Mrs. Tony A her par who will te Varh ek for Ses is Marfiss, Marfist nts have Mr. and gton hall ruped e n de Eesto & reception at the great evening at § o'c earthquake are 3.0W yet embe ———r the we called Cut Gless. What waiter. 1 sald in ruins at a 1o eat | cut in warm soap suds, them veal' | rinse warm blue wat then cover brought. It tasted | thickly with sawdust: with a small brush What's this? ‘Goat's | brush out the corners and you have spark- take it away andiling glass to get glass have? querled ghe and something was mushy and 1 asked tlesh, signore. ‘Oh, some w Wash in

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