TT1B ALLIANCE HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1920. FIVB (StvvJ 2MT scflla Dean Copyright by Rice Feature Sertlce, 1919. ARTICLE XVI Beauty Electrified That sub-title pleases me. It sug gests snap, sparkle, radiance and Il lumination. Beauty, to be really vorth while, should comprise every one of those attributes. Nobody a1 xnires the insipid, naniyby-pamby type of beauty that has no illumina tion or intellect, no vivacity, no vim nor enthusiasm. If you have good features and are otherwise of pleasing appearance but afflicted with a chronic tired feeling, that makes you indif ferent to outdoor sports or to any un necessary exertion, it you are listless, sleepy and indolent, you cannot be charm ing nor be considered beautiful; because you lack the most PPISCIUA .t-" important - elements CCAN of beauty life and iiealth. What you need is to be electrified. For the sake of Beauty, go some where as quickly as possible and Lave somebody turn on the life-giving current that will make your eyes sparkle, your face tingle and your blood circulate as it ought. You do not hesitate to use elec tricity in your home. You perhaps use a vacuum cleaner to keep your rooms free from dust and dirt. Did It ever occur to you that a similar device applied to your own sweet self would produce astonishing resultsT There is a vacuum massage that, used In conjunction with other treat ment. Is excellent. Perhaps you use an electric iron to smooth wrinkles out of your frocks. Did you know that the per manent frown on your face and the little wrinkles around your mouth could be Just as neatly smoothed away, not with that same lion bin Uh anotner in the hands of m skilled operator? Then you turn on the electricity, when you want motive power in the laundry, when you want the coffee to boll and when. In expectation ul guests, you want to flood your house with brilliant light and make it ap pear as attractive as possible. Why not apply the same principle, or rather, current, to yourself? You would like to play tennis, to sckate, to go on a mountain hIXe, but you lack, the energy and ambi tion to exert yourself. Turn on the electricity. Not that it will immedi ately transform you Into a Jumping jack, an acrobat or an athlete. But if you absorb a little of it now and then, under proper conditions, it is bound to result in a supply of stored up energy that will stand you In good stead when you wish to indulge in some unwonted activity. You want to read a paper at the club or at the church meeting. Your wits seem dormant. You find it hard to concentrate. You can think of nothing interesting to write. You have no "pep," no originality; you feel dull, stupid, sluggish. Turn on the electricity. Use a vibrator or some kind at the back of your neck and over your scalp. Get your nerves steadied. If you don't own a vibra tor go to someone who does. The average home variety of vibrator is not noted for the permanency of Its results nor for its especially reme dial character, but it is better than nothing. 52$ How- would YOU like a raise. like this? wt- rr nr vinui- and for 34 Years Work. THAT is the kind of increase in salary the minister has received. His living expenses have risen just as fast and as far as yours. But he is paid on tha average just 52 cents more per church member than be was paid 24 years age. The Minister Never Fmile Yea ' Every officer of the Government with a war message to deliver appealed to the ministers first of all. But 806 of the ministers receive less income than government economists figure as a minimum for the support of an average family. When hospitals need money they enlist the support of the ministers and receive it. But when sickness visits the minister or the members of his family they must be treated in a charity ward. His pay is less than a day laborer's. 8 out of every 10 ministers receive less than $20 a week about half the pay of a mechanic We Pay Him Half the Wages of a Mechanic And of these pitifully inadequate salaries, how much do you contribute? Nothing if you are outside the church; an average of less than 3c a day if you are a church ' member. , 1 All of us share in the benefits of Christian ministers to the community. They marry us ; bury us ; baptize our children ; visit us when we are sick. In their hands is the spiritual training of the youth. We Are All Profiteer at Their Expense Part of the Interchurch World program is this a living wage for every minister of Jesus Christ ; an efficient plant, and a chance to do a big man's job. 1 If you want better preachers, help to pay the preachers better. It's the best investment for your community and for your children that you can ever make. ir.'.Sr mi WD MUVJilMllim 45 WEST llth STREET, MEW YORK CITY Thm pubSot'Hoa of tiu d wrti sexnan mada jntrmibft through thm cooprtia of 30 dwtominmtioam. I am not a student of electricity and must admit that what I don't know about currents, direct and In direct, or even the red and black garden-grown variety, would fill sev eral books. But this I do know that for each 111 there Is some special elec tric current or apparatus that can be used to advantage. A war-damaged young veteran of the Fifth marine, talking with me the other day, mentioned that he still had to go regularly for his elec tric swirl bath and massage to "plump out" his arm and that his chum was Improving steadily under the electric spark shower bath! He said they stood his chum up and shot the sparks into him and it made him feel fine. Perhaps that is what you need to infuse a little sparkle Into your sys tem. If you are entertaining, or if you want to shine at some social gathering, you should prepare your Belf as you would prepare your home, by turning on the electricity. Somewhere In your town there must be someone prepared to give an electric massage. If so, try it. You will be surprised what a rosy glow will be Infused into your face, how your eyes will sparkle and gleam and how rejuvenated you will feel. There will be a pleasant, tingl ing feeling in your face, Just as after one has walked briskly for some dis tance on a cold, exhillratlng day. Stop worrying about that little growth of superfluous hair on your chin. If it was on your best rug and not on your chin you would turn on the electricity and remove it. What difference does it make? It is superfluous, whether on chin or rug. It should be removed. Visit a reliable practitioner of electrolysis and, presto, it disappears. Of course some of your money will go at the same time but you didn't want the chin decoration, did you? One must be willing to pay the price If one would be up to date in the matter of beauty culture. Tbe same operator who improves your chin can, in a moment or so, make your arms In equal readiness for a decolette gown. Most women now-a-days are supplied wlh'a Bafety ruzor and all accessories. Modern fashion make such an outfit neces sary. If one lacks it and has not the opportunity, nor the financial means, to visit these electrical prac titioners, there remains but two al ternatives either appear vulgar by an unpleasant hirsute display about the arms and the conspicuous ap pearance of "shield" or else run the risk of serious injury by using Home of the acid pastes and preparations advertised to remove superfluous hair instantaneously. They do all and often considerable more than they are advertised to do. But the woman who goes to be electrified also has a chance to have her wits sharpened and her mental ity Improved by the conversation which frequently flows around her In the beauty parlors. From the pa tient In the next booth will be wafted the Information that she has used a henna shampoo for years and never considered it did any harm. On the contrary, even her most Intimate friends always thought that her lovely auburn locks were perfectly natural. And from across the nattqw aisle dividing the rows of booths comes, the illuminating statement that liquid rouge is far easier to apply, that it is less harmful and absolute ly defies detection. If the parlors are complete a man's voce voice will sound. It will be dignified and professional. "What Is It you want done to your nose? Do you want It built up In the center or Just shortened? -Oh that will be simple. To build uj would take a longer time. To shorten, well I'll show you some photographs There are various Btyles of noset. You cap select the one you want. Do you want me to begin, now, or will you make an appointment for next week?" All of which gives the auditor In the adjoining booth plenty of food for for reflection even while lying passive in a high, reclining chair with the electricity turned on. Try it yourself. I did and I'm still a live wire with enough sputter and sizzle to write a dozen beauty talks all at one sitting but I belong to a union now. I can't work overtime. l'ATHKlt AND SON Father may not have achieved a tremendous success In life; he may not have amassed great fortune nor public honors; for the most part, he has bron a plodding citizen engaged In the dully and wearisome grind of making a living; but he has two great qualifications as adviser to his offspr;ng; first, he is the boy's father; second, he has been over the rought road of life and taken the bumps, and he knows the danger spots. And the son Is not greatly different from the father at the same age, says Seattle Tost Intelligencer. Most fathers are able to think back and remember the dazzling period of youth, when life was a fresh breath in their nostrils; when the way ap peared smooth and free from pltfals; when youth was Impatient of stralnt, and yet needed the sympa thetic counsel of an older and wImt head. A lot of fathers, when the were boys, did not get this sympa thetic counsel; what they got was a birch rod and the parental mandate, and they see now that sympathy an understanding and a manly friend shin with the parents would hava gone further In shaping the budding? man and getting him en rapport wlta the needs of an exacting world. Fer- haps. now. they will not deny their own sons what they, themselves, lacked. For Sale Two six room houses on Sweetwater. Modern except beat. Price and terms right. See Nebraska Land Company. u White Trucks What' person at all interested in motor vehicles does not class the White highest among the top-notchcrs 1 White Trucks have established this firm reputation by . Years of Performance It is the "365-day-a-year" service that you get from the White that insures your getting THE MOST FOR YOUR MONEY ALL SIZES IN STOCK Frank-W. Miller CORNER SECOND AND LARAMIE a 1 , Th e 3i gges Vote You Ever Cast I Why ? The one candi date who is a business man, but not a rich man; a diplo-. mat, but not an "internationalist"; a statesman, but not a dreamer; a fighter, but not a militarist; a leader, not a politician. JOHN J. PERSHING ' For President Because, if you cast it right, that vote will name the next President of the United States. The statement is a big one, but it is not a whit bigger than the facts justify. Of all the many candidates in the field, John J. Pershing of Nebraska is the only one who has refused the nomination from politicians who has declined to announce himself as a "contestant who has left his hopes and aspirations in the hands of his fellow citizens. In spite of this, the Pershing-for-President sentiment has spread throughout the United States with unparalleled rapidity. Today, despite the fact that no organized cam paign whatever has been made for him outside of this state, Pershing looms in the eye of every astute political observer as the nominee of the national convention in Chicago. The reasons are simple. Pershing is: The one candidate on whom all factions can unite. The one candidate who has DEMON STRATED his ability to handle a Presidential-size job. p The one candidate who is fitted to ri solve the international problems which remain as this country's heritage of tho World War. The one candidate who, throughout the confusion of war, kept his head level and did his work quietly and quickly yet so well that his enemies have found no loop hole for criticism The one candidate who is a business man, but not a rich man; a diplomat, but not an "internationalist"; a statesman, but not a dreamer; a fighter, but not a militarist; a leader, but not a politician. The Nation wants Pershing. Let Nebraska nominate Pershing, and the rest of this country will name him at the, national convention and elect him next November by tbe biggest majority ever given a Presidential candidate. You will hear many words from the other can didates; you will hear none from Pershing. lie has performed the task which you and the rest of the nation set him; he leaves it to you to say whether he performed it well. TIIAT FACT MAKES EVERY NEBRASKAN THE CUSTODIAN OF THE GREATEST TRUST WHICH WAS EVER PLACED IN THE HANDS OF A STATE CITIZENRY. IT IS A TRUST THAT NEBRASKA MUST NOT THAT NEBRASKA CAN NOT BETRAY. No other state no other body of voters can discharge that trust for you. On Nebraska AND NEBRASKA ALONE rests the responsibility. You and you only can place the name of Nebras ka's greatest citizen in the presidential lists. YOU AND YOU ONLY can give to the nation the one man, who, above all others is fitted to carry out the great tasks which wilf confront the next president John J. Pershing your fellow Ne braskan your presidential candidate. i NEBRASKA MUST NOT FAIL. Do your part. Go to the polls Tuesday, April 20, and vote for JL. Pershing ..of Nebraska for President This advertisement paid for by the subscriptions of Nebraska citizens.