THE HKE: OWlllA, WKHNKSPAV. .Tl.XY 7, 1015. 1 m o ft I H ft fir. 44 H. J'l 1 b hm ri to J if uu ini nil wu ma f wo iri trl 1M lie ,T tl.e am cc ti B ok l H17 'M M.rt J-t. M.y Stan S'ra T( r r h Km J 'l I 1 1 JU. THE OMAHA DAILY DEE FOUNDED BT EDWARi ROSE WATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER. EDITOR. Tno Be Publishing Company, Proprietor. PFC BCILDiyU. PARK AM AKD gEVKHTIKNTH. rntered at Omaha postofflre aa second -fie matter. TEKMS or SUBSCRIPTION. Py carrier Fy mall per month. ft year, vnr a Snnflty . teliv without 8unday....' IN-entrf mi unrfv J" F.ventng without Sunday o J W Runday only , ri V. , fund nctlc of charge of a11ree or complaint of Irregularity la delivery to OlK Bee, Circulation Department RtMITTANCE. Dinlt b draft, esnreaa or postal Order. mivi t MrmMt of m count Personal ehecV. xcpt on Omaha and eastern exebeng. not accepted. Only t an OFTICESt Building. it N afreet. Council Pluffa 14 North Mala treet. Omaha Tb Fee l Jouth Omaha M is S.lnooln L!U Building. Chlrafiv Hrt HuiWlng New Torh-Room INK. 1 fifth avenu. s t rt K.ar Rank of rnmmarc. Whlneton 7 Fourteenth ft.. N. W. , COP.RESrONPEN'CB. Hsdr communication relating to lwd anil U tortaT saatter to Omaha Baa. Editorial Department. JUNE CIRCULATION. ' 53,646 Wat of Nebraska, County of Douglas, : r-wlht William, rliculstlon msnseer of Tho B Publishing company. being duly morn, says that tha average circulation for tha month of J una, lilt, wm 14.! DWIOHT WTI.TJAMH. Circulation Menajrar. ftubsnrlbed In my prancnna and sworn to before tna. thla 24 day of July. 1 S1 5 IVOBCRT HOTTER, Notary Public Kubscrlbcra leaving the cily temporarily should bay The Bee mailed to thorn. Ad dree will be changed m often a requested. r jrnly T 'Thought for the Day A forgivtru$i ought to bt lik a canctUd noli termin tieo and frurnsi, so that (t ntr can be hoen agnintt tht man. ' H. W. Bttcktr. Nebraska farm products are world beaten, all right! The German reply to the laat Americas note la coming. Mr. Bryan's resignation came faster than that. KebraskVi Fla.ee on the Map. ' Nebraska baa long boon firmly filed in Ha proud noalHon as load or of enllghtmant, with the lowest i.rcntate of Illiteracy Iff the union. Recent government report place this state ae fourth In per capita wealth. It la first la num ber of automobiles owned and used tn propor tion to Its population, world famed for Its poli tics, and somewhat known for the statesmen It has produced. Nebraeka scholars hare shed a luster on the name of the state, and by their erudition and Industry hsre added to the world's tore of knowledge. Its fields and orchards hare glren It first rank among the food producers of the world, and poets and painters hare glorified In song and on canvas Its sunshine, its scenery and its people. It would seem that Nebraska's cup had been filled to overflowing. But now cornea Fame, and with a new blast of her trumpet, she heralds to the four winds of heaven and all quarters of the globe that Ne braska has brought forth a champion athlete, and Is otherwise bedecked with added Impor tance. . Maybe this category has not been set down with exact regard to the relative depend able values of the attributes and accomplish ments noted, nor is It entirely complete, but It Is enough to show the world that Nebraska Is on the map, and that its particular spot is getting brighter all the time. 13 It a War to a Finish? Henry M. rtaSeU la fcUo. Huerta's Plaint from Prison. Victorlano Huerta weeps in prison, as he tells how deeply be is hurt because the United States will not accept hlj word as a pledge. We will be given tear-compelling word pictures of this caged eagle, beating his wings against re straining bars, while his soul strains to free It self and soar again. All of which is very nice, but Huerta's record Is much against htm. Me pledged his word to Madero and the Mexican people, and broke hla pledge. He allowed his ambition to outweigh his loyalty and honor, and he roust now pay for broken faith by being, com pelled to give other security than hla word. The United States was very tolerant of him aa a guest, peacefully sojourning within our boun daries, but as a suspected conspirator against the people of another nation he takes on en en tirely different aspeot The government it fully warranted In dealing sternly with Huerta, and with all other Mexicans who foment disorder from this side of the border. Here's a suggestion for a "Joe Stecher nlgbf at the Ak-Sar-Ben den. But where get men to aerve on the initiating crew? Note the temperature deficiency of 18? de trees oa the thermometer below normal alace March 1, which ia the self-talking explanation., War geography runs the gamut of the alpha bet keyboard, from Arras to Zamosc, and tumul tuous pressure holds both ends and the middle. The Increased activities and victims of Ger man submarines carry a succession of sinking spells to J. Bull's marine department. Ills sea power is short of Jep., Every financial institution hereabouts re ports normal or better gains for the half year, and bears eloquent testimony to the productive resources of the corn belt. Omaha as a Model Host. Omaha la entitled to furthecplume itself on fts ability to take care of and entertain large crowds of visitors. It easily provided for one of the largest assemblages of holiday visitors ever gathered in a western city, and without ap parent strain on its resources. The Fourth of July merrymakers, most of whom spent two days and some three in the city, found everything ready for them, and had no occasion to complain of their welcome or of their treatment. They took part In' a safe and sane observance, and en joyed a program of out-door sports and games of such diversity and attractiveness as is rarely afforded, and all without serious hitch or mls- fcap. This is an achievement to be proud of, and shows how well Omaha's facilities for handling crowds are organized. All the local public ser vices are accustomed to unusual tasks, and dis charge extraordinary duties without friction or fuss. It is bard work, but It was well done. I O THJO American from the middle wet the war sons offer a erki of rapid-fir senaatlona. ln . tha ar baa not at ret exacted any nao'io trthuta. tha Interest has not bean loeallaad, there" has boan ne erytallltIoa of pubtie sentiment, therefore tha opening and prorr of the baa ball aaaon. th Invasion of the JHnay tu. and the like, frequently drive th wr new from the front pas. In In east, where h conflict haa touched more dirtetly upon th butnt of living, tt the Its natural place a th paramount oueatlon of th day. "o th ould-b Invadar of th wr aon ntra It outr circi befor b leave hU patlv neath. New Yor wm warmly dlecuaaing th poMlbtlltl of an attack en th Entllah liners daya befor th lAialtanta mat her rat, and th Atlantic rolng promiaed Increasing excite ment. Th flrat gllmpM of England was eurloualy diaarw pointing. War was w1l In avldanc. th Liverpool harbor wa crowded with war venal a; Atlantl racer war making ready for duty a transport, cattl boat unloading hundred of horaea. huare freighter bringing In siippllei; munitions wer piled high on all ld, and soldier wer very here; but It a tre ime,old Ena- and we all knew, normal, poleed, elf-ront.lred, a bit bored If anything by all thla pother of war. It was only at tha .club, th laat place one would hav looked for tt. that a vital tntereat tn the aubject waa found. Th man In the atreet appeared to view th proceed ing with Mngularly detaonad ye; and th con stantly me vine- aoldier. the ever vtalble machinery of th war. gav th Impraaelon of an elaborate effort t advarti patriotism rather than express It. No adequate explanation was offered for the ap parent apathy of the people. Th lack ef any popular leader waa uteatd and the ugaeUon wa plaual- ble. but war o terrible, eo cloao at haad. war that haa already lvled heavy a toll on llf and eoonomia condition, might be expected to develop popular lead era. That the apathy realty exlatad in th face of all th panoply of preparation, and waa not merely a pose, wa freely admitted publicly and privately. And a the vtaltor wondored that thla should be, he Luaitanla waa aunk, and with a tullen roar tha British lion awoke. Th visitor had a chance to aee the chance of mental attitude aa auddan and surpris ing as If all the clubs on Pall Mall had by a bolt or lightning been turned Into gardens. The people bail aocepted everything else aa part Of the fortunes of war, but this hld-oue thing wa so purposeless, so Inexcusable, that in the fiorceneaa of their resent ment the whole country solidified tn sn Instant, a soldier ambling along, each at hla own gait, fall Into military formation at th tap of a drum or a bugle not. Th recruiting offices, formerly doing a steady but modest justness despite enormous advertising. were Jammed. The crowd in th street cheered tn marching 3ld(er ss If they wer entirely a new fea- turer and th crowd became a mob and th restaur ants and shop Controlled by Germans, whion had In no way been Inconvenienced up to thl time, felt th foroe of th mob anger. Th authorltlea had their hand, full to protect tha lives of resident Germane. The coalition government cam In with a ruah, Par liamentary leader no .longer had to plead the oaua of the nation's defendera, millions more wer voted to th war budget without a dissenting voice. Th victim of th ljusltania did not die In vaia. They gave new life to England. Subsequent experience proves tba the auto cratic power exercised by the late President Diss is the only successful system of refrigera tion for Mexico's hot tamales. With his years of experience and bis knowl edge of the IUo Grande as a trouble breeder. General Huerta's plea of Innocence mocks his discretion and banishes his smile. , Try to Imagine some one aeriously propoalng to the Continental congress that the Liberty bell be put on wheels and sent out on -a cross country trip to the Pacific coast and back. Ciriliiatioa After tht War. Edward Davies fichoonmaker, writing of "The Moral Failure of Efficiency," sounds a new note in criticism of our civilisation. Me depicts our social scheme as a train of two cars, pushed by au engine, and rushing to destruction. The first car is militarism, the second induetriallam, and the engine is our educational system. It is his argument that militarism is the outgrowth of industrialism, and that industrialism flows from our system of education, and that the wreck of one will surely entail the destruction of the others. Following this line, he finds that 'efficiency" has failed because it Is, paradox! caliy, inefficient, lacking in the moral element Internal revenue receipts from distilleries and breweries show a decided slump for the flxcai year. As a Joytnaker the white map does I that makes for the fuller development of man'a not send its thrills to Uncle Barn's pocket. I faculties and provides for his spiritual along with his material growth. The parents of Omaha's Fourth of July trip- It Is interesting, too. that Mr. Sohoonmaker lets are entitled to active life membership In does not confine bis accusation to any one race the Two Hundred Thousand Population club. Tbelr example is worthy of praise and emulation. Assurances or permanency accompany the proffer of the chair of political economy tn the Lntveraity of Indiana to Mr. Bryan. Improving tbe politics of Hooaierdora guarantees a life Job. By holding hack public warrant for salariea sot specifically appropriated, Btat Auditor Smith is likely to make himaelf unpopular with the payroll brigade. What's the conatltution be tween frlenda, anyway? Steel mills working at 80 to IS per cent of capacity Is another reliable barometer of the country's industrial uplift The gala la due to ' home demand, aa the mllla covered by the report are not in the war order class. c rrr 'VT-- Of si 1 - -y-vgiaraaaaxaaMaaaaaj Tha fracas between th mayor and council waa r Ivrd by the nomination of J. & livus te take the place of Jamea C reishioa aa chairman of the Board of PubMs Works, which, like all tha othera. waa referred to a com mi Ufa. The mayor also withdrew the nam of W. R. Shoemaker for city attorney, substituting tht of Geoige U. l ake. A movement la on foot to have all th clothing tores i loss at I o'clock excepting Saturday. Aarun Cahn baa revived a postal from Max Meyer mailed at I'loldmsludi. Mr. Cahn'a native village, where his els'er snd other relatives still reside, and bleb Mr. Mvyrr promised to tlslt when ha ot t Germany, M. 6. MariinoYk'b la back from a fishing excursloa te norrnce lake. Mo tells a fabulous story of how tha fish in the beat were eo heavy that th boat sank, when he and bis comralce etradJled a bis catfish anl landed oa terra firoia. All the fish escaped but the big catfuh that had saved two valuable lives, and, of court, toe kt.ighis of the rod and Una could not be ao u.iKTttff'il as rot to allow It lie freedom, which eipiaiiie their bom coming without any fish. Mni Edna Co in. daughter of General Cowin, I e turni to Omaha from i'leveUnd, wher she ha been it'4 iter (isndparanis. Hut JUl't-jif, the pouular bookkeeper for Morse A fo. fit to I-S'iin, Mass, where. It is rujrawr4, a j : l.ii l,aa sjong for Liuv. or nation. It has been quite fashionable of. late to lay all the blame flowing front "efficiency" on Germany, because the Germans have proved themselves such capable exponents of the dogma of organisation and preparation. Americans are Included with the other enlightened nations of the world in the Indictment, and must take their full shsre of responsibility, and pay In propor tion as they have neglected the ethical to expand the practical in the possibilities of the race. Our educational practice leada to industrialism. nd thia to militarism, whether we admit It or not according to the syllogism presented. But Mr. Schoonmaker sees a worthier clvl lUatlon arising; not a aoctallstle atate. nor an Utopia, hut, a condition in which the individual will have every opportunity for developing to the fulleat, encouraged and acslsted in bringing to fullest fruition his better and more desirable qualifies, and in which "efficiency" will not be gauged by mere capacity for production of ma terial thinga. Industrialism will no longer lead to militarism, for It will be a means and not aa end la the better social life that is to com. Will the One-Term Plank Hold? Interest in the p'eiform adopted at Balti more by the democrat ! revived to some degree by the defection of Mr. Bryan from the coun rtla of the party' Isadora. Will th ax-secretary of atate undertake to nail the president to th one-term plsnk of tbst platform, and set him adrift oa the sea of retirement? At the time that platform maa adopted, the public was assured that it contained the articles of faith of the demo- ! b cratlc party of today, and later tbe candidate for president solemnly announced that it waa not set "aa molassea to catch files." In light of later events, however, reason for doubt as to tbe sincerity of these prophets haa been raised. The canal tolls plank waa flagrantly set aside and other violence has been done to the document. Therefore, it remains to be seen how much de pendence can be placed on the one-term plank. At thla writing the odda are much in favor of the proposition that the democratic convention will ask Mr. Wllaon to take another cup of ooffee. - If the detachment of th English was a surprise, the exaltation of th french waa on no less. That Part, the debonair, the rapldeet and most reckless of pleasure's pace-makers, should reveal an almost nun-Ilk quiet and spirituality waa a distinct ahock. The French have often protested that foreigners could not Judae the nation as a whole by what they saw In Paris and the Parislsns, but today the Parisian I lost In th Frenchman, the hero of the boulevard I on with hi brother from Bretagn or Normandy. There la no need her for ropular leader to arouse enthusi asm, th causa of France 1 motive enough, and It children are as one 'In devotion and service. There I not a family, rich or poor, aristocrat or peasant, that I not contributing to th army or It Immediate need. Every able-bodied man la under arma or employed In making them.. Every tiny village ha It factory to produce the ammunition needed for its defense. ' I hav lost five son in this war," the aad-eyed woman In black said, "and If I had five more I would gladly live them to Franc. On can not glv enough." And It was th who! nation speaking. rsrls I full of these women In black. Th soldier furnish all the brilliance In the atreet. that wer formerly riot of color and light. That with thl aplrlt th Frenchman should be an ldeul soldier is a matter of course. Ho I quick, dar ing. yt patient, and alway cheerful alike In victory," defeat or delay. "H love to take a trench, but dis likes holding It." he want to go rlgbt ahead and take another one, yet he aervea weeka In the trenchea with- out a murmur a long a Frsno bid him stay. It 1 the long lines of underground fortifications, the trenches, with their complete equipment for aupplylng the need of men who must eat and sleep there ss well as fight, their bomb-proof chambers and their endless barri cading hedges of barbed wire, that add another rea sonable doubt tn resard to the possibilities pf its being all over by October or November. Only a little beyond are tha German lines. Just a well equipped, Just aa anSlous to advanc. Just aa determined to conquer. These ar not fortification Intended for a few month service. Uks 'everythlnt else that Is being don In connection with th war. they portend a long, long truggl. On little experience stands out in my memory of those amasing day spent at the front In th vicinity of Nancy and Lunevtlle, atanda out with lnsulr 'vtvtdneee. and I give It here beciuiie It perhaps beet Illustrate the Impression war at cloae rang mad uoon on onlooker. Walking along behind the second line of trenches, the hills pock marked by ahella, the crumbling houses of th destroyed village a our background, we could see quite plainly, beyond th wired hedge of the flrat trenches, th German battle front. Suddenly from out tha forest tops a French dirigible soared up In the blue. In an Inatant th Oertnen guna were trained upon It Great puff of whit mok told of the burst ing bomb close about It Serenely It poised to fulfil its mission of observation, than swiftly aa It had com It nailed up, up, and waa lost In the clouda. Soma twenty feet from our pathway a bunch of popple nodded bravely In the wind; they wer red like blood and flaming Ilk th spirit et France. I took chances with the German markmen and went over and picked them. I wanted them becauae they were real. That thla la a war to a finish Is a conviction that deepened with very hour spent In the war sone;'a war to a finish whether that finish be brought about by annihilation, ex..auatlon, or absolute surrender, whether It duration be sis month or six years. It la the same story on vry lde. For fifty year Franc has suffered the menace of the German ad vance. Alaace and Lorraine hav never crated to be a bleeding wound In It heart. It la determined at all coata to hav It own again and to fettle for U time the republic' boundaries Ther can be no compromise, no tslk of peace: auch measure would ' be merely bottling 'a volcano; th fir would burat out more furloua'y later. That U the unanimous verdict of th country. Do the allies look to America for help? Surely, but not as a participant in tli struggl. "This 1 our fight and th United States can help most by keeping out of, it." That waa the Idea repeatedly expressed by every men whose opinion had weight to whom th writer talked either In France or England, and thanks to th endless courtesies of the American ambassador In Parla and London, the opportunities for reoelvlag such opinions at first hand were exceptionally favor- Isrtef eonerlVatloaa tlsaaly t epics tart tea. Th Bee aswasae a reapeastVUlty tot opinion f oroaBta. AU letter sm Jot So eoademaattoa by aitot. Savla Money hy Set Wsstlss Omaha, July 1T tha yjdltnf of The Bee: 'Indignant Wife" wrltea to yrair paper and call me a "Poor old fool" be mun I hav managed to a.v money and rale a family. X am a ."poor foot" be cause I do th marketing myself and don't let the tradesmen overcharge me as thy might my wtf. I am a "poor fool" becaua my children don't go S ad ding to th movie and don't poll their health with candy and ! cream. ffh say. "Lt m tell yon It's a good thing I am not your wtf." It surly t. for if ah wm ah wou)d hav to to th mark. X would do th marketing If X wanted to and h would hav to let It go at that'. My wife objected, too, at flrat, but now she sees Ui advsntag and doesn't aay a word. Why shouldn't I buy th groceries and meat, eta.? I earn th money T Haven't 1 got th right to ae that It ain't W td ? Thsy'r my children, too. and I'v got the right to say they shan't west money nd ruin their health with candle and Ice cream ' eon and movie. I would Ilk to ask "Indignant Wtf" how much of her husband's money She -haa laid up In th bank for a rainy day? Poor man, I bet It goe as fast or faster than h can earn It And I suppoa hi wlf and children go gadding to tha movies every other ntaht- In my house we spend the evening at home. Smoking my. pipe Is good enough parttlme for me and my wlf doe sew ing and the older children dsm stock ing. That's more sensible than gadding to tha movie and filling themselves ur with candy and ice cream snd setting Ick and running up doctor' Mils. A. B. MICKLB. Splrliaal and Paveal ftmedlea. OMAHA, July .To tha Editor of The Be: In a hecent Issue of tho Church and Home appears an interesting and impartial discumton of th relation of the church to healing. Without admitting that the physician can operate In the dual capacity of using both spiritual and material lemedle for th sick, w certainly can agree that th Christian phyatdan. believing In th ternality of llf rather than death would to a tremendous agency for the eradica tion of fear and ignorance which con stitute th prim cause of much of sick ness and death. Concerning this question Mrs. Eddy expresses the thought suggested by th article In question in the following apt language: Phrolclana whom tha elck employ In thalr helplessness, should be models of virtu. They should ti wis spiritual uldes tn heeUth and hob. To th tremblers on the brink of death, who un ci eret and. not the divine trutn wnicn i life and perpetuates being, physicians should be able to teach it. Then when tha soul is willing and the flesh weak. the patient's feet may be planted on the men J u a innn, ine true inea plritual power. Th writer Is not eufflclently learned In th ubjecta Involving th relative authority to be Riven the canonical and apocrypal writings and therefor I not In a position to deprecate tbe us of th book of Eocltntlcu aa authority for eom of th positions taken, but from a layman's standpoint th prophet Isaiah more fully sound th Inspired not when he says: "And I will bring the blind by a war that they know not; I will lead them in path that they hav not known; I will make darkness light befor them, and crooked thing tralfht." Th author tieferrlng to Christian Sotenc suggest that he would b loath to erect a church upon the one gift of "healing the sick" a Christian Scientist V CHEERY CHAFF. Tonne Psrnes had married contrary to Ha father's wlhes. Meeting his i.arnt onn afterward, the father said, artgrtly- "Well, young man, 1 have mad my Will and cut you off with a dollar." "I am very sorry, fsther," said th youth, contritely, nd then added, "But you don't happen to hve th dollar with you 7 Ldieo Home journal. 'The submarine Is to be the fighting vesel of the future." Iooks tbst way. Ones our future naval students will graduat in overalls nd each be presented with a monkey wrenoh Instead of a word." Loulsvlll Courier-Journal. KAB1BBLE , LsraBllgJ A KABARET HE pocSAli-T-rUKi, fie i&txs who Ht?fai "Do you promts to love, honor and cherish this woman?" "Tee." said the Politician! "what ever th platform I. I subcrlb to it" LoulsvUI Courier-Journal. 'Teopl ar always mor Interested In their own affairs than they ar in their neighbors." "It Is easy to see you don't know our neighborhood." Baltimore American. Castldy (Visiting Warehlp) Ivry time that. ble gun is fired, Dlnny, slvln hun dred dollar goe up la amok. Conley Glory be I Why don't they use smoksless powder ? Puok. "That suburban town where jyou live is rather arid socially, isn't HT' asked tVigglethorp. ."Arldr Welt, I should say It was arid," said Banks. "Why, th soil there is so arid socially that you can't even raise eyebrow there." Chicago Herald. "The more a man has, th mor h Wants." ouoth tha parlor Dhlloeonhee. "IDo, you think that applies to the father or seven children?" asked the mere man. who happened to have that n any -Judge. He dropped her hand With defeat writ ten upon every feature. Silently she eased into hi ye. own expressing a mat ppeal for help for tha decision she knew wa cimlng. Again he gased down upon her hand. "Utve them the trick." h growled: "you haven't got a trump." Philadelphia Ledger. Tankey Is an awful braggart wheei he gets a load on." "Well, I suppose It's natural for a man to blow his own horn when he's on a toot" Boston Transcript " Tay a you go.' I my motto," said th stern, practical man '"Well," replied Farmer CorntOMl: "maybe if an all rlsht tnotto. But ,1 have noticed that roads with tll gntea to 'em la mostly In poor repair." Washington 8tar. strccoiuNa the clan. John O'Keef In New York World. I waa foollehly proud of the fact I had relative hither and vnn: I'd an uncle In Austria a tract And another In Germany a sun. But no longer I'm proud Of that polyglot crowd. For I now am supporting eich one! I've a couMn In Pontypridd. Wales; I've a neahew residing in Cork; And I'm cettlng by various mails Little daily rerjueets that I fork; And I hourly behold Mor demand for th gold That a supposed to grow wild In New York! From my grandfather cousin's pet nleoe. Who is living In Pstrograd now, I've a letter imploring some fleece Of- the aureate juvenile cow! For th Petrograd bunch Haven't had any lun n. And they've got to get dinner somehow! And I'v heard from a Turk Of th city of minarets high Who perceives a relationship lurk. Thoua-h it's certainly vague to my eye, And the prophet s son says He 1- holding his fex ; For a lot of backsheesh from N. V.! j Ther are calls from the hills or Savov, There aro pleas from the banks of the Nile. TIM I pray that the name I employ Mav be Suddenly altered In stvle. Yes. I'd elve fifty bones To be rare as a Jones Or a Smith or a Brown for a while! hav don. It might be pertinent upon the direct point to seriously consider whether the health of the community, more and physical, 1 not the entanglement In our Immediate path and that th church might well center all of Its' sncrgle upon thl problem aa th prerequisite to the next progressive step, but to linger upon thla argument would ' not be fair to Christian Scleno Inasmuch a healing th sick -Is but Incidental to th building of the perfect structure which I th end and aim of Christian Science . While th cur of disease) attracts the attention of the outside world both be cause of th world' great need to he healed of its disease, a well aa the radical departure In the method em ployed by Christian clemce, yet th thoumnda who hav been tiealed tn Science testify that their physical healing 1 relatively unimportant compared to th mental awakening which ha coma from some understanding; of what Paul meant when he aald, "For the law of th spirit of Ufa In Christ Jeeus hath made me free from th law of in and death." and tha writing of Mrs. Eddy fully Jus. tify her statement, that "The mission of Christian Scieno now. a In th time' of Ha earlier demonstration, la not pri marily one of physical healing. Now, as than, signs and wondtr ar wrought In th metaphysical healing of physical disease; but these rlgns ar only to demonstrate It divine origin to attest th reality of th higher mtaMon of tha Christ -power to tak away th . stn of th world." CARLE. HERRING. Editorial Viewpoint Twice Told Tale3 Slew I'm for a roll. A pollmn. with mor than usual avoirdupois and expanse of shoe leather, had lust passed a little terrace house In Jeraey. with a bit of gardea tn front, whea a IllUe boy ran after him. "Hello, kiddle, said the copper, genially, "what caa I do for you?" "Mother aeat me out." answered the youngster, "to ask you tf you would mind walking up and down our path for a minute or two. It s lust been graveled and w ala't rt a rol j," .New terk Tune. New. York World: In plant word, th Frit Urn memorandum In relation to th lawleea Interference with our ships and cargo I an Impudent perslatanc In wrong-doing. Nobody I mor conscious of this offense than tbe member of the British ministry, for In answering us now with sophistry and falsehood they nnru th record of their own government in like cases for many years. . Indianapolis News: Th Mexican ar wrong. Thar I no Incoaslstsacy be tween th president's former declaration that he had no disposition to Interfere in Mexican affair and hi recent warning that If condition down ther didn't Im prove something would be done. No civ ilised person would hav any disposition t mix up la such a nasty muss, but It may hav to be don anyhow. . ftprtngfleld Republican: "Ma a who through toll and ability hav got to gether money enough te endow universi ties ar professor' chair," think th New York Times, "do not generally hav It la their mind that tbelr money should b spent for th dtasemtaaUoa of the dog mas of socialism." Thla I th angle from which It view th dismissal of Dr. Svott Nearlng from the faculty of the Vntveraity of Pennsylvania. To this the obvious snswer is that If rich men endow universities with the i tea of hampering academic freedom, a free couutry cannot afford te accent th brLba. rPIAZA HOTEL- , TITTH AVENUB and FIFTY NINTH ST. The coolest hotel In New York. Overlooking Central Park. Within easy distance of all theatres and shops. Your address known the world over while you stop at The Plaza .OUTDOOR TERRACE AND SUMMER GARDEN ' Special Dancing Featuree . Siagle Rooms with Both, $3.10 up Double Rooms with Bath, $5.00 up ' j Te raecrre rjs er ta sarere further iaforaaadea , I aadrsaa PRBO STERRY, Maaaaing DireeMr ' you Should Worry If it were difficult to find a safe and reliable rerhedy for the ailments due to irregular or defective action of the stomach, liver or bowels. These ailments are likely to attack anyone; likely, too, to lead to worse sickness if not relieved. BeeeMnM Pills are famous the world over, for their power to correct these) trouble) certainly and safely. They cleanse the system, purify the blood and act as a general tonio pon body, brain and nerves. Indigestion, biliousness, constipation might, indeed, cause you pro longed suffering and expose you to danger if' Beecham's Pills Were Not On Hand The Lane gab of Aay MaJlclM is Us WerUL la eeaae, 10-, 2 Sc. When you order Krug you will not only get a beer of quality but also an oppor tunity to obtain a free premium by saving coupons. 'Pbone Dougla 1MB. LUXUS Mercantile Company, Distributors k2Bglta rr .eo$j 1 1 ... Iltif fif.-:::::-.;,. . r..':i..., fca-- ft l Go to NorthernWisconsin Have a General Out-o'-Doors Good Time Get away from the heat and dirt of Va iihff a1tt o r4rt f r tha rrsj4c covered, ozone-laden North Country a week or two there wu greatly relresn you. This entire region is a network of forest crirt lakes, rivers and streams, abounding in gamy fish of all kinds Is served to its remotest parts by the lines of the , cmcACO Milwaukee & St. Paul RAILWAY TKer Road to m Thousand Lahs Mas) of th North Country mm4 k'tVirmarioo about tun f brain, fates, safe. 1 add ria beiew. - x TV tree Offl0(. HIT firmaj ftreet. Oaaak aUGaNDUVAUowra.Aa J Y