The Commoner 12 a ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE FOR THE FEET JSprlnklo one or two Allon'B Foot Easo powders in tho Foot Bath and 8Uk and rub tho feet. It takes tho sting out of Corns and Bunions and smarting, aching feet. Then for last ing comfort, shake Allen's Foot-Easo Into your shoes. It takes Che friction from tho shoe, rests the feet and makes walking a delight. Always use it for dancing parties and to break in new sljo'cfl. Over One Million FiveHundrcd Thousand pounds ,pf Powder for the Feet were used by QWr Army and Navy during the war. - i in a rincli, ime AM.EN'S FOOT-KASI2 Ideal health and beauty cannot be ob tained by hlt-or-mlss methods. Good health brings real beauty. And good health is determined largely by your weight. A daily check on your weight marks your progress to ideal health and bejiuty Gofqd health, vgooil looks and a good flguitf are your birthright. Know exactly tin; prdxress you nro tanking ; guess nut la (lRtptcruiu wcigii yitirnrir dully without clothesIt is the only snfo way. Tho HEALTH-G-lETER ' "ThePilot of'Realth" will RiinRo your health correctly and conveniently, .lust, step on tho Hculth-0-Moter nnd reacl your cor- , rect weluht on tho dial. Thouaaiids lire in uho. l'uunu ocaica nro notor iously Inaccurate. Sec, try, and ex- nmlnu thu Health U-Mofer at uur uxnonso. Write for our Sncclnl 10 Day Free Trial Offer. It means much to your health and hcauty. Adtlrm I CONTINENTAL SCALE WORKS Dept. X, 2120 Wttlst Dice, Chicago SheDoesrit ?r: 2EL3 gux -She Knows ' Cot V WEIOHS UP 70 2BO LDS. Mr. Bryan at Kansas City GIVEN OVATION . (From the Kansas City Journal, Juno 28). William Jennings Bryan didn't dis appoint the thousands who crowded convention hall last night. They came expecting a defense of tho rigid, literal interpretation of tho Bible. Mr. Bryan gave it to them. They came anticipating something of tho old-time power of speech in scorn ful, sarcastic argument. They heard it. And evidently they liked it. They cheered Mr. Bryan as once they cheered him, back in 1900, when he spo,ke as the "Peerless Leader" of a great political party. They cheered him this time as a preacher of the Word: as a defender of the faith of tho old fathers. And if there were those who did not like it, they remained silent. Back there in 1900 Mr. Bryan preached eloquently of the double standard of money and won follow ers. Last night he preached a single standard of morals and alluded face tiously to it. There was no hint of rebuke in his manner of speech for those who had so recently brought about the with drawal of the first invitation issued to him to appear on tho program of tho convention. He seemed only glad o.f the opportunity to bring to a close the convention of the International Sunday School association a conven tion declared by leaders of the or ganization to be tho greatest yet. But he made no apologies for his defense of the Bible intact. A Bryan whose voice has lost something of the old resonant ring, who is per haps more feeble of frame, less em phatic of gesture, on whom has be gun to tell the ravages of passing, strenuous years, it was yet the force ful fighting Bryan, who could offer no excuses for defending the thing he professed to believe. troduced Mr. Bryan as "his friend." When Mr. Bryan stepped to the speakers' rostrum, the crowd again stood and cheered for several sec- oiids. Mr. Bryan motioned with his palm leaf fan and the crowd was seated. His first few words, acknowl edging the Introduction, were spoken in a clear voice which could be heard in the farthermost parts of the hall. Throughout his address, the com moner emphasized his remarks by gesticulating with the fan. Oc casionally he fanned himself vigor ously, when he became particularly vindictive against the doctrine of evolution. His preachments of the old fashioned religion and an unerring Bible were interrupted frequently by applause. Mr. Bryan told of his forty years as a Sunday school teacher and ro lated experiences he had in that time. He indorsed the principles of the in ternational association and praised its work. Mr. Bryan started ' speaking at 9:15 o'clock and closed his address at 10:45 o'clock. When in Omaha stop with us Hotel Conant Hotel Sanford T Hotel Henshaw Our reputation of 20 years fair dealing ia back of these hotels. Guests may stop at any one of them with the as surance of receiving honest value and courteous treatment. CONANT HOTEL COMPANY Cures ASTHMA and HAY FEVER Any reader who suitors from Asthma And Hay Fever can be quickly cured without risking a penny through tho remarkable discovery of C. Leavengood. 1589 S. W. Blvd., Itosedale, Kan. Don't send a penny just write Mr. Leaven good and he will send you a big Dottle of his prescription on 10 days' trial. If it cures pay $1.25. Otherwise you owe nothing. Thay Maks Others Hear-Why Not You? f'ow ondtntaad yor nbamment. THE DEAV MAN :NOWH. WK lOjOW. IlKAB-AIOa aopplr wh.ro natora all. Tb.7 atop bead noiaaa, mra cotnfortabL, cannot b. aoa sad make yon b.ar In natora'a way. Appror.d by promln.nt phyatciana. Writ today for fret information THE HEAR-AID COMPANY Beat. 9SB I lumbar Bid.. 13833 Woodward Ava. T DETROIT, MICHIGAN w,ow"ro Av PLEADS FOR BIBLE (From tho Kansas City Times, June 28.) The largest attendance of the Sun day schopl convention was reached last night at the closing session. There was not an unoccupied seating space in the building. Only a few persons left the hall before the ' end of the" night's pro gram. The audience was strictly at tentive throughout. It was a Chris tian assemblage, eager to hear a prominent brother speak. It was a demonstrative crowd, un like the assemblages at the regular sessions of the convention. Long be fore the choir opened a, musical pro gram, tne nan was ailed. Awaiting the president's call to order, the delegates sang. They clapped their hand in unison. A group in one section of the hall sang "America" while another section sang "God Be With You 'Till We Meet Again." There were cheers and more songs It was spontaneous singing, without leaders and without musical accom paniment. If the crowd was demonstrative be fore the program began, it might be called uproarous when W. J Bryan appeared in the archway at the back of tho stage and descended the stens to the, speakers' platform. Plo Was GSC,,rt,e(L by tllree Patrolmen, who guided the orator through the chorus Mr. Bryan wore a long black al paca coat. His face was wreathed in the Bryanesque smile. He carried a palm leaf fan which he waved inter mittently to the crowd and used it to fan himself. Dr. W. O. Thompson, president, In- TALKED BY RADIO "(From Kansas City Star, June 28.) It was the same dynamic Bryan of ten years agoi twenty years ago who talked into the microphone in The Star's radio, studio last night. Times change. Political parties change, but Bryan he might just as well have been addressing a Chautau qua under a canvas top, instead of an invisible audience of countless thou sands. It was his first visit to a radio broad-casting station. It was his first experience of talking entirely to an unseen audienco, but he plunged in with the same verbal aggressiveness that is typically Bryan. He stood before the tinv micro phone, a palm leaf fan grasped in. his right hand which was clasped by the left hand behind his back. He em phasized each word with forcefulness, pausing only to wave the-frayed fan in front of his face, causing his long white lawn tie to sway slightly in the breeze. Then back went the fan to its resting place behind his back, where it rested against the long loose alpaca coat. Mr. Bryan' talked into the micro phone forcefully, emphasizing his re marks by shaking-his head or bring ing his lips into a straight line to carry home a point. He is older in years but has the same rigorous de livery of the "Prince of Peace" and "Cross of Gold" days. Mr. Bryan was introduced, by Dr. William T. Ellis, who said: "How absurd to think of introduc ing William Jennings Bryan to any company of Americans the biggest single human in our country; the man who embodies in himself more of moral force and idealism than any other single figure now in the world The man who has stood as like Gib- r?lta,for the things that are right, the things that are beautiful, the things that are American. I am proud to be permitted to introduce my fr end, my fellow newspaper man, my fellow interpreter of the old Book. Honorable William Jennings Bryan!'1 Mr. Bryan's address was a digest of his talk before the Sunday school convention last night, which is printed in another part of The Star. His preliminary remarks, however were in praise of the radio. He said- Th q???E? ? the PPrtnity that The Star has given me of speaking to lninl?d8for a f0w mnts before going to tho convention, and I am deeply grateful to Dr. Ellis for 35 more than generous words. If anv .fyu yd. as I do,, that he has been guilty of gross exaggeration in his SubE? m? renember tht a man in m V i 7 must bQ -wer-Praised by his friends to make un for the abuse which' he gets from his encmi u he doesn't deserve, and havin! l,hat my share, of the abuse I Jm .JS to my share of the flattery led "One thing that I am niw Pleased about when I am eulo,?? as tonight, is that the spaaker??; guilty is never called upon tn n what he says, and thereC0 embarrassment I have spoken ove the radio once before just 01 c i, fore. It was at Pittsburgh on the 1 th of last March, and I am not yet oft from under the spell of the radio spoke in the Presbyterian church a Point Breeze, and when I reachea( the church I found they had made ar rangements to broadcast the address "On the pulpit was a little nX ment I would not have noticed had t not known it was there. It w scarcely larger than a water claw but that little instrument took rnv" voice and scattered it through the air, filling each cubic foot of space in an area of 25 millions of square milos. I don't know how much fur ther it threw my voice, for we haven't had. a chance to hear from the out lying districts. That pastor received two 'thousand letters within two week's from persons who had heard it. ,They came from as far west as California, as far north as Winnipeg as far south as the Honduras, and as far as east as Porto Rico; and when, a few days afterwards, I visited tho Westinghouse plant, an official told me tliat eight minutes after I had ut tered a word, it had reached the sun, that my voice was still going on. and he didn't know where it was then. and I haven't been able to get track of it since. "I think the radio is the most wonderful thing that man lias yet drawn from out God's mysteries, and I do not know yet how much the world owes to the one who discovered this method of communication, hut we have no doubt that it opens a field almost infinite in its extent, and we know that because of this means of communication, the world is being brought nearer together, and it is possible for one who has a messago for the 'world to speak now to a larger audience- than any human be ing ever spoke to in the days that are gone." Preceding Mr. Bryan's talk, Dr. Ellis, war correspondent and author, addressed the invisible audience on the subject "The Big Thing that Has Happened in the World." MR. BRYAN'S FINE MESSAGE That was a noble and moving ap peal that Mr. Bryan made at the Sun day school convention last night for the great ideals of religion. At a time when on every hand there is such a struggle for material rewards, when selfishness is made a god, when men seek ruthlessly to thrust out of their way every public interest that blocks their path, there is need to emphasize the saving truths of the teachings of Christ. This is what Mr. Bryan did with forceful eloquence. His address was a sermon addressed to the America of ruthless greed and lawlessness; to the America of youthful criminals, and of men and women who keep within the letter of the law, but ignore its spirit. There- will be differences of opinion on Mr. Bryan's views on evolution. But these were an incident in nis speech. On its fundamentals, on tne principles of conduct he laid down, men and women of every shade oi thought will heartily agree. That righteousness exalteth a na tion was his essential message. itj a message the country needs today Kansas City Star. (An abstract of Mr. Bryan's ad dress before tho International Sim ay School Convention will be PU,jlis"ena. in the August issue of The Common er. Ed.) fC a -ArQtfl iiJt.feM-iS. Si .U-l