The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, May 01, 1922, Page 13, Image 13

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    MAY, 1922-
Hvnes. Treaties were desired,
explained, to handle the Cana
dian border situation and to better
eontrol exports of liquor from Cuba,
Jo Bahamas, Bermuda and to this
'prohibition officials also, have un
der discussion a proposal for decli
ne rum-running vessels to be pi
rates through negotiation with for
eign nations looking to the cancella
tion of the registry of such ships.
Many of the larger liquor ships carry
ing illicit cargoes of alcohol, it was
eaid, anchor just outside the limit of
customs jurisdiction ahd send the
cargo ashore in small boats. The war
upon these craft is being successfully
waged, officials asserted, but the car
go vessels are beyond the reach of the
law. If they sailed without proper
registry papers they would be
HEAVEN AND HELL
Swedonbore'a jrreat work, 400 panes, 25 cents poitpatd.
PftitorLandenbersor, Windsor TIace, St. tyalo, Mo.
Distributors wanted for the CAMCO
Turbine Water pump for Fords. For
full information write The C-A-M- Cor
poration, 300 Southwest- Blvd., Kansas
City. Mo. t
PATIENTS. Write for free Guide Book &
Evldenco of Conception Blank. Send
model or sketch of Invention for free
opinion of its patentable nature. High
est references. Reasonable Terms. Vic
tor J. Evans & Co., 722 9th, Washing
ton. D. C.
FOOTOLIHE ? W JSS
vents odor of feet and armpits. De
creases perspiration. 1 trial convinces
anybody. Guaranteed. Send 25c coin.
Agents wanted. Breithaupt, 3155 Mel
drum, Detroit, Mich.
They Make Others Hear-Why Net Yn?
Ttn ooderttsod rar ecobunuiaeet. TBI DKAF HAN
KNOWS. WR KNOW. I1KAR-AID3 oPbr wbara natur
full. They ttop hed oelsea, are cotofortablo, cannot bo
ca ud mak joa bear In nature' war. ApproTed br
prominent pbjvlehuis.
Write today for frtt information
.THE HEAR-AID COMPANY
DPt. go Humber B., I3B3S Weedward Ave.
DETROIT. MICHIGAN
You Can Cure
Your Rupture
Capt. Pollings Will Send You Free
His pnn by Which Ho Cured
Himself.
Thousands of ruptured men and
)vomen will rejoice to know that Capt.
1 01 ings who was helpless and bed
ridden for years with double rupture
i 'J isc.nd freo to a11 the ful1 Plan y
it le cured himself at home.
Merely send your name and address
to Capt. W. A. Collines, Inc., Box 578 P,
Wajertown, N. Y. It won't cost you a
St i un.d may be worth a fortune. Hun
dreds have already cured themselves
y JU8t this freo information.
Rheumatism
A Remarkable Homo Treatment
Given by OucWlio Unci It
hvInxT.Vo0 y,ear of 893 x was attacked
nwitKmCUlar n Sub-Acute Rheu
wftn a1?' .f 8uffered as only those
tffiLa? ths afflicted know for over
remo,JeaKSV 1 trI,ed remedy after
tffi?' but ?uoh relief as 1 b
nm,iVMlonIy temporary. Finally,
coSM a trcitmont that cured me
t?onP ' ely and sucn a pitiful condl
effin itsf never returned. I have
rlhiv ima,number who wero ter"
of tL?mictediovon bedridden,- some
am in L &eve,nty to eighty years old,
Snv nl5results were the same as In
ly own case. ,
formVaJ ovory sufferer from any
KiHnl oInH?culaF Ana sub-acuto
to tri ? at thQ olnU) rheumatism,
Prolyl tt Brca valuo of my Jm
KrnnrlQIon?0'l'eatment' for its
EXf ?XJS . te"P.? P9.wer. Don't
and n,i,io ' ow"iy man your name
to trv drA5? and I,win send II freo
ithT?'m.fter.?ou havo used and
oo&Pfreii "80" Jo be that Ions-
such fnrmB .J i,B oc petting Tid or
send th?8 . rheuma?ism, you may
but un w J?rIc? tS " no Dollar,
monfVvdenriSQtand d0 not wantrour
isn2dy tnlfsav9P RrQ Perfectly sat
ffy ,. on,d ? Is"'t that fair?
is thiw nftr aniy loneer, when relief
iSy wh?oV.ou freo Don,t de"
S" ""on I11,1C., Syracuse, N.-Y.
The Commoner
branded as pirates, outside the law
uu mo lawiui prize or every navy in
the world.
At the State dpnnvimnnf f .,.
said no proposal for negotiations of
luid ouu aro unuer consideration as
yet. International discussion of
American prohibition would involve
many difficult diplomatic questions, it
was declared.
13
J
RESPONSIBILITY FOR CRIMK
On April 4 Fritz Meinhauson kilted
Mrs. Anna Peters and wounded his
wife. Friday a coroner's jury rec
ommended his discharge from police
custody. The jury "do not hold him'
criminally responsible for the death"
because Meinhauson was intoxicated
when he did the killing.
The killer was drunk. The jury,
presumably, was sober. We can un
derstand how a vicious man will kill
v,hen inflamed with drink. We do not
understand how a jury of sober men
of normal intelligence can absolve
him from blame and let him ,go free.
No wonder Chicago enjoys a record
of a killing a day. This verdict is
an invitation to every brute to go
as far he likes. No one need hang
for killing. Patronize a bootlegger
and get a license to shoot any one
who may displease you.
Of course, this jury was excep
tional. Chicago would indeed be
hopeless if it were not. But the call
ousness to the taking of life, the per
version of moral standards, the
sloppy and misdirected sentiment, the
lack of common sense, and of any
clear conception of moral or social
responsibility exhibited in this verdict
appear persistently in our dealing
with offenders. We complain, and
justly, of many evils in the adminis
tration of criminal justice. But they
would soon be corrected if our social
attitude toward crime were what it
ought to be.
The moral fuddlement shown in
the discharge of Meinhausen is likely
to defeat justice in any case. It may
appear again to cheat the gallows in
the sordid tragedy of the unknown
unfortunate, murdered by the con
ductor, Rtfach. By his own confes
sion this man is without decency.
His wife had gone to a hospital. He
said, therefore, lie was "free," free
to take another woman into their
home and kill her there. If he was
drunk while he did this and has the
good luck to fall into the hands of
such men as freed the slayer of
Anna Peters, he will soon be free
again, free to drink and kill.
A jury that frees a criminal be
cause he has committed crime while
drunk is as dangerous to the com
munity as the criminal himself. Be
ing sober in its offense, we rather
think it is more dangerous. If sober
men will hold a man not responsible
because he has by his own will parted
with his responsibility, there is no re
sponsibility for any one, drunk or
sober.
There is something radically wrong
with a good many of us in our at
titude toward crime and punishment,
a social disease that calls for drastic
treatment. Chicago Tribune.
GOAT GLAND TREATMENT
San Francisco, dispatch, dated
March 12 says: Warden J. A. John
son of San Quentin penitentiary
doesn't know what makes the wom
en wild but he knows what makes
his convicts wild.
Goat glands! ,,
Ever since Mr. Johnson allowed
Dr. L. L. Stanley, prison physician
to rejuvenate Uzy Prisoners by the
goat gland process he has been losing
thAfter being given the glands of
the crag-leaping goat the most pep
loofl.i prisoners just naturally scaic
he wans and all the warden's men
:a .; i. o1,1b to find them.
"rr-saassrs;
were siageu uj ...-,
ported
lizard"
to be
before
a "rogular loungo
trio nnninnn .i
Willis Knowles. one of thn wnwinn'a
most experienced robbors.
dfo'!?nUttG" ,thc Eoat Stands, Dr.
Stanley has been advised.
CORONA OAR Cm.
rtio apmrt car OK LifXK
ThoOarfrYoungMmrt0m
Klghty Mllmm t0UtmUan
A Omy'a tld fro mollar
Hair iff 9 mrlem arm ntvvar
1913 aOUTNWrASAH AVfc.CHICM
M'NIDER LAYS FIGHT ON BONUS
JLU mu BUSINESS
a , Washl"Ston dispatch, dated
uiors honus comes from a small mi
nority constituting what may be
termed "big business" and financial
Interests, Han ford MacNider, national
i i , er 0L l,le American Legion,
told the Senate llnnnpo nnmmittnn
ay.
Mr. MacNider says these interests
have used every form of argument
available to prevent passage of a
bonus bill. He called attention to
the "referendum" of the Chambor
of Commerce of the United States,
a leader of the onnosltlnn nn,i n.
serted the referendum was not fair
ly taken and does not represent the
country's sentiment. He submitted a
long list of chambers of commerce,
civic organizations and state legisla
tures which have indorsed the bonus.
ECZEMA
Also caHed Tetter, Salt Rhswn, Pruritus, MM
Crust, Wat Pel sen, WeapKig skm, eic;
I believe eczema can be cured to
stay. I mean just what I say
C-U-R-E-D and NOT rterely
patched up to rettlrn again. Re
member, I make this statement
after handling over half a mil
lion cases of eczema and deyot
ing over 20 years of my life to its
treatment. I don't care what
you have used nor how many
doctors have told you that you
could not bo cured, all I ack to
just a chance to prove my claims.
Don't be discouraged but write
me TODAY and I will send you
a rK&is ikial. or mua aoou t.j.B.cAHHAfi
inc. guaranteed treatment that
will surely convince you as it has me. If you art
disgusted and discouraged juat chrome one chance
to nrave mv claims. Ilv writinir me today I believe'
f you will enjoy more real comfort than you reaXy
tnoucnt tuts world neia tor you. just try u, ana s
feel sure you will agree with me.
DR. I. E. CANHADAY, !7l8Crt Mfc, StaKft, Mi.
References: Third National Bank, Sedalia, Mo.
Sond This Natiea to Soma Ecxma Smffarag.
The Ball is
-the Secret
of its
Success
$3.50 Vacuum-Washer $1.50
THIS AD. WORTH 52.00 IF SENT IMMEDIATELY
No More Boiling. No Moro Rubbing. Throw Awny Your Washboard.
Get a .Duplex Vacuum Washer. This Is What You Have Been Waiting For.
FOR $1.50 YOU WILL GET A WASHER THAT:
Will wash a tubful of anything washable in 3 minutes.
lias been awarded prizes over $r0 ma
chines in competition.
Will wash the heaviest blankets in three
minutes.
Will save you many dollars a year by
not wearing out your clothes.
Is the best and strongest made.
Is the easiest machine to work.
Is capable of washing anything from laoe
to carpets.
Can bo operated by a child of ten.
Will save you many hours of needless
toil and will last you a lifetime.
Can be used equally well In boiler or
wa.shtub.
Can bo dried with a cloth In ten seconds.
(Nothing to take apart, nothing to lose..
WJ11 do all wo claim for it or we will
return every cent of your money.
.Send tli If, ad, and only $l.f0 cash today
before the price goes up and wo will
send you the $3.50 Duplex Vacuum Wash
er bv narcel nost to any address. Agents
PATENT PENDING wanted.
DUPLEX MFG. CO., I)EPT. W-82, DETROIT, MICH.
This 23 CQ
the5folveJA
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-.i JiArr7&
TOC- Ii GsS2P
nStaaWamX&KBm3rW
ynSS; amKoSamSlaam .Zw
In His Image
By William Jennings Bryan
This volume, which will be issued in March by Fleming
H. Revell Company, publishers, will contain the nine lec
tures delivered by Mr. Bryan at the Union Theological
Seminary, Richmond, Virginia, last October under the fol
lowing titles:
First : , In the Beginning, God.
Second : The Bible.
Third : What Think Ye of Christ? .
Fourth: The Origin of Man.
Fifth: The Larger Life.
Sixth : The Value of a Soul.
Seventh: Three Priceless Gifts.
' Eighth: "His Government and Peace."
Ninth: The Spoken Word.
These lectures cover the fundamentals of the Chris
tian faith and present from the standpoint of a layman"
Christianity's appeal to the ayerage man, special atten
tion being given to students.
The price of the book is $1.75, postage prepaid, to any
part of the country. Those desiring this book can order
through The Commoner if they do not find it in local
book stores. Address
The Commoner, 207 Press Bldg., Lincoln, Neb.
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