Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 7, 1910, Page 2

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THE BEE: OMAH |tather. He was & creditable soverelgn, and CHANCES IN ENGLISH RULE [ster some roubis imais ria nimeed o e bad advisers and reigned without a rival Throne of Great Britain Subject of | from 1327 to 1377, one of the longest reigns in English history Upon his death the Many Strugg the present three sovereigns have reigned eorge 1V, Willlam 1V and Vie toria, but the succession has Inter rupted, Willlam being the brother and not the son of Geotge 1V, and Victoria being The prince first became attracted to Prin the daughter of Edward, Duke of Kent,|cess Alexandra by her photograph. In No the fourth son of Georme I1I. Moreover, | vember, while on a visit to Germany Vietoria succeeded her uncle to the _“.m- the princess for the first time thus making & serious break in the suc-| The formial betrothal took place in 132 cession. Nevertheless, the successions of | but it was not until the evening before the thesa thres have been peaceful, and without | Prince became of legal age that his en- notable excitement or apprehension. | gagement was formally nnnmmv:«d The Tevogular Suovessions. | marriage took place In St. George's chapel | on March 10, 1862. The young couple began With regard to the successions noted. | .. oieeping with an income of over §00,- they have been remarkably frreguiar trom | g CERRE, TSR0 oo mmons baing the time of Willlam, the Conquerer, AOWN | jiharal In its grant. to the present. In one only has the great- | time was his mesting with Princess Alexandra of | | Denmark and his courtship, which was, | | however, Interrupted by the death of his father, the prince consort Eaaon ool *HE predominat- ing features em- phasizing the excel- lence of Bourke twen=- ty-five Suits and Rain- coats are a union or combination of graceful lines been Look at Other Boys Ball Ticket Free With Suit |0 oyBLES FROM THE BEGINNING —how many wear coats in which collars surl up, the fronts are wrinkled, the sleeves are short and a general air of slouchiness pervades the garment? kingdom descended to his son, Richard 11 a weak man, unable to cope With the turbulent element present among his sub- jects. A more able sovereign might have deferred the evil day, but the ill-advised measures of Riehard precipitated hls own ruin. By a suecessful rebellion he was overpowered, then dlsappeared from his- | tory, the place and manner of his death belng uncertaln. MHe was no doubt mur- dered, but by whom er in what manner s unknown. Thus, in place of the three kings, re ~The fact is, as mothers know, who have shopped about, that in very few places can boys’ clothing be found that has the right style and fit or good workmanship. In most stores the boys' end of the busines is & side issue—with us it's a specialty. wil the Congueror's Followed by a Long Fleree am Invasion Line of Contests and Dispute: Boys like our nobby suits; the saving they experience in buying Great Values Satur- day in fins suits with two pairs of knicker- bockers, at . EW ONES—High parents like here. 39 Shocs and Oxtords; patent lea- ther, dull leather tans; extra quality soles of oak leather; all made on \ Sizes 11 to, 18%— $2.00 and $2.50 and , welt new Sizes 1 to 6— $2.50 and §3.5 ‘THE YOURO PEOPLES OWN STORE 5= - .‘,u-. - 1518-1520 Farnam B'.root three children, two of them boys. eldest, heir presumptive (o the throme, wi born on June 2, ufter the patron saints of the islands and his grandfather, Edward Albert Christiar George Andrew Patrick David. son, Prince Albert, was born in 1895, # daughter, Princess Vidtoria, in 187, In 1801 Prince George rhade a tour of th British colonies, accompanied by his wife, The royal couple salled from Portsmouth on March 18 on the warship Ophir, which had been especially fitted for the cruise. The price holds the grand cross of th sultan of Turkey and the grand cross of the orders of the Black and Red Hagle of Germany. vex Hussars, Yeomanry Cavalry and col onel of the Third Middlesex Artillery vol unteers. In 189 he was elected an eldel brother and master of the ocorporation o Trinity house. He Is also a bencher af Lincoln's Inn, LL. D. of Cambridge, a fel low of the Royal soclety and, 1898, succeeded the duke of Argvie dent of the Royal Humane soolety. Militia Guards s pres| Ilinois ‘Mines Fears of Further Trouble at the Camps in the Vieinity of Danville. DANVILLE, Il fact that there are two companies of sl militia and a number of deputles unde Sheritf Helmialk on the scene, grave fea e entertained day in Westville, ‘whe been troublesome for the last three daye. ‘Che chlef ground for these fears is the tact that the saloons, closed for two year: Westville went “w at the recent elec. tion and this is the date set for the re sumption of the sale of liquer. The two companles of the militia, Danville company, which have been about seventy-flve men, from the local armory at 1 o'clock thi morning by the sheriff and were taken in stville. two special trolley cars to Wi Most of the men were stationed at No. shaft, one mile from town demonstration on the arrival of the troop: and at an carly hour in The A second and He is colonel of the Royal Sus- in Mareh, Mey 6.—In spite of the te s to the outcome of the five miles from here, eral hundred foreign miners have will reopen today. the under Captaln Swaim, and the Champaign company, under Cap- tain Smith, the two commands numbering were summoned There was no the forenoon already started are to be continued. “We plan to put all the bucketshops out of business and (hat, teo, without addi- tional legislation by congress,” sald an offi- clal of the department today. “The cleaning up work in the east al- readv has begun and & number of indiet- ments have been returmed. More are prom- ised. Then operations will begin at Chi- cago and working from that center the de- partment expects to break up any business radlating from Chicago. 184, and was christened n o f 4 People’s Party Ready to Fuse r i t Chairman of National Committee Announces it Will Unite with Any New Organization. BT. LOUIS, May 4.—After eightesn years of fighting the people's party announced today It was ready to unite with a new polltical’ party regardiess of name to the end that rights and equal justice shall by law be the inheritance of all citizens. The announcement was made by Jay W. Forrest of Albany, N. Y., chalrman of the people’'s party national committee. A call was issued by the committee to all_cltizens regardiess of party alleglance to join in a national conference here, Feb- ruary 22, 1911. The eall scores the republican and demo- oratle parties for exploiting the people for the benefit of Wall street. Insurgency in congress Is pralsed and Senators La Follette @nd Gore are held up as the leaders of the present thoughts of the peopl Tom L. Johnson Back trom Europe Former Mayor of Cleveland-Says He Will Be in Politics Until He Dies. NEW YORK, May 6—Tom L. Johnson, former mayor of Cleveland, is resting here today after his return last night from Europe. Mr. Johnson had & brief but ex- citing tussle with a newspaper photog- rapher at the pler. The photographer tried to take a photograph of the former mayor and the flashhght exploded almost in Mr. Johnson's ear. Angered, he smashed the photographer's hat over his head and r n ||treasure. For a time he played the tyrant, From the time of Norman conquest to the present day England's government, 80 generally accepted as an institution of solidity and permanence, has been subject to many changes. It has never previously happened that there has been four rulers in direct succession without a crisls which, at the time, threatened to affect the en- tire nation If not to result in a change of government. The time of the Norman conquest is taken as a starting point, because until then it cannot be sald that England had a settled government. There were kings, but in the modern sense of the word Eng- land had no government worthy of the name. Might made right. The government of Saxon England was, as has been said of Russia in more modern times, “a des- potism tempered by assassination.” The names of fifty-six Saxon’ kings have been preserved to us, and of this number all but four died a violent degth, and of the four, the end of two s uncertain. Poison, the sword, midnight assassination, armed rebellion, the fortune of battle, the result of a drunken brawl—some went one Way, some another, but, only two out of the fifty-six, so far as recorded, dled peace- fully in thelr beds. The early Norman times were not much better, and the deaths of many of the kings were far from creditable either to the nation or to the royal family. Several were assassinated, some in the most brutal manner; some dled under exceedingly suspiclous eclrcum- stances, but there was less drunkenness and assassination among them than among their Saxon predecessors, so & review of the history of the English sovereigns since the Norman conquest would not be unfalr as & basis of comparison. The Norman Kin Willlem the Conqueror closed his bloody relgn by dying like a dog, and before his naked body had been trampled into a di puted grave his sons were fighting for the kingdom. Willlam was succeeded by his fon, Willlem Rufus, who left the bedside of his dying father to take horse, ride away and secure that father's castles and of Th In the language of the historian, “fearing not God, regaiding not the wrath of man, esteeming not the honor of woman;" then was killed by Sir Walter Tyrrell in the New Forest. Poetic justice was meted out in his case also. He had deserted his dying father's bedside, so, at his last moments, his servants deserted him, leaving his body Iying in the forest and riding posthaste to plunder the royal palace. Some travelers saw the royal corpse, but passed on, and a day or 80 later a charcoal burner, recog- nizing the body as that of the king, threw it into his cart and brought it to Winches- ter. A general scuffle for the throne en- sued among the king's relatives, and Henry I nicknamed ‘“Beauclerk,” succeeded in | winning the prize. He too much of a glutton and a drunkard to give more than the necessary attention to the atfairs of the kingdom, died of overeating and was buried with the honors due to his presumed scholarship. This made the first trlo, whose combined relgns lasted from 1066 to 11%. Then there was a change in the sucoession. The throne was seized by Stephen, styled “the usurper,” because someone of the opposits party wrote his pistory. He was, in fact, no more of a usurper than most other kings of his time. The truth was that upon the death of Henry there was the same soramble for the throne that had followed the death of William and of his son, Rufys, and Ste- phen in the souffle was victorious, prob- ably because his principal competitor was a woman. However, he succeeded, seixed the government and held the-throne until his death, or from A. D. 113 to A. D. 1154 Another Revelution. Upon the death of Stephen the crown re- verted to the family of 4enry I. whose daughter Maud had contested it with Stephen, and by treaty secured it to her son, who ascended the throne under the title of Henry IL. This king was the son relj The erl thrown turned over the crown to a new race of kings, those of the House of Lan- caster, Henry 1V 1L, being, however, his cousin. The throne changed occupants in 13, and in due time Henry IV. was succeeded by his son Henry V., and he by his, Henry IV, bined reigns lasting until 461. ‘This was & period of great turbulence, of riots and dis- turbances at home, powers. Almost continual strife was car- rled on with France, various fortunes at- tending the English arm: fought and won, and as an opposing vie- tory, all the English conquests in France were lost by the wonderful suce French army, under the leadership of Joan I, & trio, was buffeted and set up and pulled down like & wooden man, was deposed for good, and being of no further service to himself or anyone else, dered. At his death the throne was taken by the Duke of York under the title of Edward IV, and a new dynasty of king came in. much study, Scoteh tutor, triends of Lady Jane Grey proclaimed her queen; she reigned with royal honors dur- ing ten da; was arrested, headed when only 17 years old, and few p tures In history are more pathetlo than the fate of this unfortunate child, who was after all but & tool in the hands of intrig- uers. only twa orossed the stage before the poli- tical earthquake came which upset the ex- isting order of thing and substituted a new regime. The House of Lancaster. s by which Arc. At home ti o consequence wi having the fil-lu Richard 11. was over- icceeded Richard their eom- of wars with foreign Agincourt was 0t the he people were more than ususlly turbulent; Jack Cade's rebel- lon broke out and was suppressed only after immense bloodshed, and the two lead- ing families of English nobllity, the housecs of York and Lancaster, were engaged in almost continual strife for the precedence. that poor old Henry ck to be the third of quietly mur- Rosweorth he _bei) in suc The Vi, list gn. Then then r tried, Mary and Two queens now character and religion—Bloody Mary | Queen Ellzabeth—thelr relgns covering the years from perfod of ‘English glory. arts and sclences flourished; forelgn econ- 1563 to Edwarda VI, the crists, As in the preceding case, s0 now three reigns pass ere another change; reigns full of battle and blood, of private murder and of public vengeance. English history has no darker page than that narrating the events from 1461 to 1488, comprising the reigns of Edward 1V, child of the Tower, and Richard I1I, brother of Edward IV. With the reign of Richard 171, Broup, came which ended the relgn and life of Richard together on Bosworth tleld. prised the forcible extinction of one dy- nasty and the establishment of another. was one of the most marked epochs in the history of the English peaple, and with his usual fidelity to fa upon it and made. It the turning point of one of his greatest dramas. relgns must be counted, covering a period from 1485 to 1563, before another crisis ap- pears in governmental affairs. are Henry the miserable the ng the third in the the revolution, cess, and terminated crisis this time com- It Shakspeare seized Three more The kings Henry VIII and Edward VI, father son and grandson. changes occurred during the reign of the second of this troubles, the divorce question, the quarrel with the pope, the separation of the Church of England from the Church of Rome, were all matters of history during this Henry's However, they all passed and the three kings died; Menry VII, old age and stinginess; VIII of “carbuncles, fat and fury,” and Bd- ward VI of general debility, caused by too enforeed by Momentous the king's domestic of decline, his son, Henry his old-time came the crisis. The etired to private life; condemned and be- relgned, opposite in | and | 1608, This was the Literature, “the celved a reception &t Queenstown which grandson in direct descent ascended the | throne, That instance was John, and the exception in his case was far from cred- itable, for during his relgn the kingdom was twice given away; his son, Henry IIL, | was Imprisaned, his greatgrandson, Edward | IT, was murdered. Grandchildren have sue- | ceeded In direct descent anly two or thr times, Stephen was the grandson of Wil Mam I, Richard 11 of Bdward IiI, George 111 of George 11, but their fathers did not succeed to the throne. In the case of Henry VI and Edward V, both were the children and grandchildrén of relgning soverelgns, and each was notably unfortunate. A glance backward shows that there has been a ruling number in the history of English kings. They relgn in groups of three or two each, Alternating with crises of more or less importance, The three longest reigns | not ineluding the present, were those of Henry 11, fifty-six years and of Georgoe 111, sixty years. The reign of Victoria was begun In 1837, and so exceeded the reign of Henry I1I; but it should be remembered that the regency extended from 1811 to 18%, ,a period which should be taken from the relgn of this king. The English have been without a crisls, therefore, since 15%0; four soverelgns have ruled. King Edward became the fourth ruler since 1830, KING'S PERSONALITY UNIQUE (Continued from First Page.) of Germany, was born at Windsor. Albert Edward was born duke of Cornwall and duke of Rothesay, but not prince of Wales, that dignity being conferred on him a month after bis birth The future king of England received his fivst training under the dlrection of Lady Lyttleton, a sister of Mrs. Gladstone, who tilled the post of governess to the royal children until he was 6 years old. His ed- ucation began at the age of 7, under the tutelage of Rev, Henry Mildred Birch, who retired from his position in 1851 It was in this year that the future ruler of Great Britain made his first public ap- pearance, asslsting at the opening of the great exhibition fn London. His second tutor was Frederick W. Gibbs, who re- mained with the prince seven years. He then went to Bdinburg to pursue his studies under the instruction of & number of prafessors. In August, 18, Edward saw Ireland for the first time. With his parents he re- was 80 enthusiastic that he never forgot it, In the summer of 1865 Edward extended his travels beyond the borders of the king- dom, visiting France with his sister and parents. The visit was a historic one, it being the first since the days of Henry VI on which an English soverelgn had entered Paris. In 1857 the prince went to Germany and apent four months in study at Konigs- winter, on the Rhine. In the fall of 1858 he continugd his travels on the continent, visiting Germany and Tialy. At Rome he was recelved by Pope Plo Nono. Spain and Portugal were next visited, and in July he returned to England. Before attempting further globe trotting the prence concluded his fifth térm at Oxford. He finished his education at Trinity college, Cambridge. Swinging Around the Cirele. It was not until 1860 that Edward began his first tour of the British dominions be- yord the seas. With a brilllant entourage he salled In the battleship Hero for Can- ada, accompanied by a squadron of war vessels. The prince arrived at St Johns, New- foundland, on July 2. and his landing was accompani#d by every evidence of popular | rejolcing. He was then a stripling 19 years of age. After a tour of the Dominion, in which he visited Quebe¢, Toronto and other principal citles of the subrealm to &he north, and was everywhere received with the most | publie In July, 1864 the prince, by laying the foundation stone of the new west wing of the London hospital, evinced the first signs of that love of charitable acts which never | torsook him. After a visit to 'Denmark Belglum, he paid his first state visit to Jreland in 186, opening on May © of that year the interpational ex- hibition of Dublin. On the 3d of the fol- | lowing month Prince George of Wales was born at Marlborough house. In this year the prince of Wales attended his first dinner as president of the Royal literary fund and Inspected the telegraph cable—then a great novelty—in the Great Eastern off Sheerness. In this year also the prince sufferad the loss of Lord Palmerston, whose friendship was greatly esteemed by him. Visit te Indin. On March 2, 187, the profected visit of the prince of Wales to tndia was an- nounced, and, strange to relate, a great deal of criticism was caused by the state- ment. It seems odd now to read that a mass meeting was held in Hyde park to protest against the tour on the score of expense: Tt was estimated that the prince would have to travel with presents, to be given to his various hosts in Indla, to the value of $200.000; hig personal expenses were set down at 3300000, and the ad- miralty estimats® the expenses of the voyage out and home at $260,00. His sulte was extensive, for, although he went to India officlally as the helr apparent of the crown, the native princes and the people of India regarded him as the direct representative of the crown. Leaving London on October 11 for Brin- disi, whence he sailed on the Indlan troop- ship Serapis, he landed In Bombay on No- vember 7, 187. In seventeen weeka the prince traveled 8,000 miles by land and 2,500 miles by sea, thus seeing more of the coun- try than any other Englishman of the time, and making the acquaintance of more ra- jahs “than had all the viceroys who had ever relgned over India." Poutcally as well as from an economic point of view the visit of his royal highness to Indla was a success. On January 2, 1901, the day following the death of Queen Victorla, the prince of Wales took the oath as king in St. James palace. His accession to the throne was marked by a noteworthy revival of cere- monial forms and pageantry, which neces- sarily lapsed during the long relgn of Vic- torfa. After the queen’s funeral, at which the new king and his nephew, the emperor of Germany, were the central figures in the processlon, King Edward remained in seclusion at Windsor until February 4. On that day he Issued the three messages, one to the British people, one to the people of the colonies and the third to the people of India, in which he pledged himself to strive to the utmost of his power to maintain and Germany and { promote the highest interests of his people. King Edward's first appearance in pub- lic after his accession to the throne wi on February 14, when he opened the first Parllament of his relgn In The spectacle had a novelty and a splendor unprecedented within the memory of the oldest Londoner then living, It was @ spectacle that carried London back to the days of the chivalry of medievalism. Not a feature of ceremony was omitted. King Edward moved Ii procession with his court from St. James to Westminster and received the homage of the Houses of Lords and Commons just as King Henry VIIL aid 400 vears before. There were beefeaters In red and hlack medleval garb, life guards in brilllant red cloaks and white-plumed helmets, postil- fons and walking men In scarliet and gold- laced liverfes, ushers, silversticks and a soare of officlals in royal Insignia Arriving at Parllament house, the king and queen marched between a living wall of peers and peeresses, all clad In the robes representing their rank. Before the king walked the marquis of Londonderry, carry- ing the gorgeously-jeweled sword of state, and the marquis of Winchester, bearing the cap of maintenance. When seated upon in the models and high quality in the fabrics. They look well and wear well, The coats are properly balanced, and the careful “make™ within and throughout gives backbone to the well cut lines. We would like to sell clothes this season. talk it over. Spring Suits, $18 to $40. Raincoats and Overcoats, $30. For your next hat try a BOURKE PREFERRED-——that's our $3 hat It is an attractive value. All the new blocks and models. you Drop your in and ] 318 318 S. 15th St CERTEEIAS BEATON'S Specials for Saturday 856¢c—=6-inch Ribbon Nail Files Sntur- day, at .19¢! 76¢ Manicure Scluorv—suurdny 49¢ 16¢ box Emery Boards; 12 in a box- - Saturday, per box ......, ...De 26c Woodbury’s Faclal Cream—8at- urday, at 26¢ Graves' Tooth Powder—Saturda $1.00 Pompeian Mnn'e Cream—Sat- urday, at . $1.00 Pinaud's Llluc \'agetul»—salu"- day, at 49¢ 60c Dagget & Romdelln Cold Cream and 20c cake of D. & R. Cold Cream ——Saturday, all for .. 35¢ 60c De Mars' Benzoin and Almond Lotion—Saturday, at .. 21¢ $1.60 Oriental Cream-—Saturday, §1 26c Lustrite Nall Enamel—8aturday, at -16¢ 25¢ Rose Blunh—snurd:y . AT7e BeatonDrug Go. Farnam and 15th Sts, Leave Your Money at Home—This Means What It Says Dr. Branaman Co. Will give thelr res- ular treatment (value 3§6) for one month to all sufferers from Catarrh, Asthma. and all chronia Branaman Co. have been treating chronic diseases for 24 years in Omab and Nebraska, We know what we can 40, but you may not. You want to get well and we belleve we can cure you. What you are Interested in is & dootor who has faith in his own works. You hav the one to take all the risk fn health, mow, We want you te investl of Geoffrey Plantagenet, and after the crsls brought on by Stephen this Henry was the first to reintroduce the regular line | of succession. Henry II. left the throne to {his son, Richard I, in 118, who, after relgning ten years, spending less than six months in England and the balance of the |time on the continent or In his crusades, dled from a wound received while besieg- ing the castle of a rebellious vassel and | turned the scepter over to his brother John, Deg. | Whose nickname was a Latin term which *%i| might be freely translated “The Mashe - 481John was the third of the second group, {7/ and as If attended by ill-fortune at every 48| step, almost immediately got into trouble | 48| with his barons. They overpawered him, {4 |forcea him to sign the Magna Charta, a| . 48| step which he §o bitterly regretted that as | 48 s00n as he was free to act he collected trib- {7 utes for the purpose of putting down his re- | oo 47| belllous Vassals. The barons secured the | Y 47| assistance of the pope, who laid England - {11 under an interdict and kindly presented his friend, the Dauphin, with the English crown as a gitt. John went on‘with his prepara- tions for war, but having lost his baggage and treasure by & tidal wave while cross- [ ing an arm of the sea, he died of mortifica. | retired to private life, when the throne was | tion and was buried at Worcester between | Offered to Charles II, who accepted it and | {the shrines of two famous saints in whom | relgned as quietly as possible, giving uf- he felt unbornded confidence, and, there- |fénse to nobody, because, as he sald, m fore, hesitated not to trust his body and | '‘did not want to go on his travels again.' soul to their keeping. Thus was the second | After his death, in a fit of intoxication, | grcup of reigns, lasting from 1164 to 1216, | James 11 ascended the throne, a man of en- terminated by s most serious crisls, the tirely different character, intolerant and | kingdom belng given away by the pope|intolerable, and thus at the close of the| and a strong effort made on the part of |second reign another crisis came, the revo- | the French to seize it. To the English |lution of 108, by which James w prople, however, this erisis was the more | important, from the fact that the founda- ton of English liberties dates from latter part of the reign of John! The Bdwar Henry 111, immediately after | regal power, made peace with who changed his tactics, {turch, reinstated vociferous loyalty, the then prince of Wales | arrived at Windsor, Ontario, whence he crossed the river that divides British soil | from American and landed at Detroit, thus beginning his memortal visit to the United | Stat The next event tn the life of the prince his throne the king took the oath and read his first speech to Parliament. everything was fairiy quiet, The miners, however, declared that some tme during the day they would march in 8 budy to Cattlin, about five miles from Westville, Should this demonstration be peaceable no attempt will be made to in- terfers with them, but rioting will be checked. Information of trouble in In- diana came by telephone this morning from Clinton, Ind., where at an early hour 200 miners marched on the Crown Hill and Buckeye mines and threatened forty pump and repalr men. Assistance was asked of the chief of police of Clinton, who sent men to the mi; WILL PUT BUCKET SHOPS OuT OF BUSINESS\ Department of Justice Kxpeets to Ac- | complish Result Without Fur- ther dashed his camera from his hands. “I shall stay in New York a few days and then go on to Cleveland,” sald Mr. Johneon. The Weather. For Nebraska—Rain. 1 Rain. atures _at Omaha yesterday: quests were made; the English began to travel and colonize. Explorers laid the foundation of states in America and India; the voveges of Drake made possible the | settiements of the next century, and, above all, by the defeat and dispersion of the “Invincible ‘Armada,” England became the first naval power in Europe. The orisis | which closed this period was none the less marked because peaceful. It was a change | of dynasty, the erowns passing from mei house of Tudor to the house of Stuart. James I ascended the throne lately va- cated by Elizabeth in 1603, and held it | |until he drank himself to death In 1635, | { when it passed to his son, Charles I, who | fell out with his people, and, after a long | eivil war, was captured and beheaded. Mis | death constituted a crisis more serious than | any previously known in English history, | it the entire form of government | was changed, and, during the reign of | | Cromwell, England was practically ruled | With the sword. The commonwealth lasted | from 1649 to 1638, After the death of onwr Cromwell, his son proved Inadequate to lhb burden of empire, resigned his position and our treatment, and te prove ils merits we are going to gl full month's Mea. toine and Treatm Free to all who call or write before May 16th. Remember this, If we wero offering you a cheap cr worthless -treatment free, we could never hope to benefit by it. ¥ou will gey the best we Beve and that is backed by | 24 yoar of experience in treating catarrh, | deatness and head noises, asthma aud all | enronie diseases. Mrs. W R. Belley of Denver, L. man of Great Falls, Mr. and Mrs, Ed Latia of Tekamah, W. McCormick of Lincoln and J. M. Swanson of Sidney are at the Henshaw. W. Chay SDrotect Yowrelf! At Soda Fountains or Elsewhere | ‘ Look for “HORLICK’S” on the bottle. | Original and Genuine HORLICK® MALTED MILK Olfess e The Food-Drink for All Ages. Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. More healthful than tea or coffee. | Forinfants,invalids and growing children. Agrees with the weakest digestion. fam and Mary. | Pure nutrition, thewholebody. Keep it on your sideboard at home. Another dynasty now eame in with Wil-| |nvigorates nursing and the aged. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. |llam of Orange and Mary, the daughter of | o 2 . suming | James 1L Although Willlam and v | sent free. Address HORLICK'S, Racine, Wis. sy n oyt . substitute. Ask for HORLICK'S. reigned jointly, their relgns may be counted | left France fn the | m “ j % Z& Sensational Sale {of Mary in 198, when William reigned | | 8races, and confirmed the power of Henry. alone until 1703, and was then succeeded |In spite, however, of papal suppArt, this by Anne, the daughter of James II Her |weak man was in continual trouble with yeign continued,until 1714, and of her thir- | his vassals and with foreign potentates, - SAMPLE DRESSES—In Rajahs, Pongees, Foulards, $ilks and Cloth of Gold; formerly sold from $17 to $25—Saturday special $7.50 $12 SKIRTS—Panamas, White Serges, Volles and Fancy Mixtures; formerly sold up to $12.50—Your cholce Saturday $2.98 $3.98 and $4.98 teen chlldren not one survived, so that was imprisoned by Leicester, and fioally | when ghe died & change in dynasty oeceur- ;mm under suspiclous elrcumstances, leav Y 500 WASH DRESSKES—Congisting of linens and lingeries; values from 00 to $9.50—Saturday special L red, Vi ™ Ing the kingdom to his son, Edward, sur- 1o gutpior SaENIng qvir 6 the Hogy $2.08 and $3.98 . Wi e Shred 8 SRR 10 HigiaNE RewaW, of Hanover in the pereon of George 1, the named “Long Shanks. o really a 0 f Sophia, th ol A | Kreat soverelsn aud ruled with signal abil. | %2 O Bophia, the daughter of Elizabeth Corne idland 16th and 3 Ts333333: o ' SRR P T L ‘-onh- treatment anda medioine free Bring this ad with you DR, BRANAMAN €O, Suite 26, Continental Blogk, Omaba. 8a Floor, Over Mepg Clothing Co. Damnanw—EESenan AIUEUIINTI BRANDEIS MR. THOMAS J. KELLY Director—Presents the MENDELSSHON CHOIR Assisted By -MR. JOHN FARSELL BARITONE TUESDAY EVE,, MAY 10TH Tickets $1.50, $1.00, 7S¢ and 80e (ALl reserved) Sale Opens May T7th at the Theater. BHA" nEl Matines | 8218, Today, HENEY W. SAVAGE OFFRRS 2:18 THE MERRY WIDOW with Grest Cast, Including R and GEORGE D -w;l;.,lb 16— WILLIAM 00&‘&&“ WASHINGTON, pression of the ‘“bucketshop business throughout the United States is sought by the Department of Justice. Prosecutions = Comet rises Sundsy at 2:64 a. m. Comet rises Mounday st %153 a. m. & Immediate Delivery The element of time between the wearer and maker of men's suits has been elimi- nated by the perfection of our ready-to- wear service, driven | from his throne and country, and became | {a wanderer throughout Europe. the | | st Time | Tonight, What yeu want today is here today. ADVANCED VAUDSVILLE Matinee Hvery Day, This K-—Annab Whitford, & dom's Venus, Gus kdwapdy Kountry ki¢ Butler and Bassett, Fay, Fay, De L-on Wateon and Cohan | Kinodrome and the Orpheum Conce: | hestra—¥rices 106, 88c and 80c, ‘BQYD s CALL US DOUGLAS 101" ormano u':'fl‘-"‘ e Howe's TRAVELS PICTURES | t. be, May 81, Bva Lau j'::" ltuk’oe iz PETE Bvags, 18-35-50-704 m-&lfi‘l“ closing vrday nix g8 of the Beason 'oLLl" v" o, ¥. AND PARI | Live Luby souvenir; eserygpatron g wuniberea coupon iree; ey bl nighy ! Dliue Mautes at 918 !‘* Mat and Nigne—Llage vl 401V, Dici man Scnool of Acting And as fine in fabrics and workmanship and as perfect in fit as if it had cost you two week’s delay, The price, $15 to $35, is not much more than half the tailor’s customary charges. Browning, King & Co CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS AND HATS, FIFTEENTM anp DOUGLAS STREGTS OMAHA. & 8. WILCOX, Manager, A Qre | - gty gk e o who was the daughter of James I. Aft J A% UL TRAER SR B9 :’":l;‘r’r:f‘_’,‘} | the group composed of William, Mary and | \ he being srrested atd fmpri Anne, and the crisis which resulted in the | his rebellious subjeets, and i ucccssion of the new dynasty, three sov- | ’d'n!‘\ under cireumstances of mast ingen- | CTMNS relgned—George I, George 11 and | {ious barbarity. These throe soverelgns | G60r8e 11—but during the reign of the last | formed the third t='o, a0d their combined |th*re was a regency. and so a break in th | relgns ex‘ended from A. I 1218 to A. D, succession. The crisls was rather politieal | 1827, the longest perfod of uninterrupted | than social or military, but 1t was none the | | succesalon which had hitherto been knowr |less a crials. The establishment of the re in English history. Civil wars of intense | Bene something unpreced:nted: there | bitterness preceded and followed the death | had "‘:l;frln : rleltncr hefor;‘ In the his- | of Edward 1. The kingdom was rent by |tory of England; it was something unparal- | {fl\munfllnl factions, and the result was|leled; hence the political cxeitem:nt, for that Edward 1ii, son of Edward II, was|(he regency was practically a change in the placed on the Lhrone by the enemies of hll‘form of government. From George 111 mi ame. oned by put and PAY Chicago - e

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