4 . 'THE BEE: OMAHA. MONDAY. .SEPTEMBER 12. 1921. TheOmahaBee lUiLY l MUKM.SU ) EVENING -bUNUAY TMI 1KB rl'BUBHWO COM PAN f VCUON a ITflKB, rsUltttae MIMIU Of THC AUOCMTCO PRESS U MtMinl ititad M ftfc MM In. MMllHIlM W lk ft I am wl4 ama. n WH W wlMIMa at 4 HW4i 4WM Sia WIHH Tm AmM Km M mI Ik hn f ClraS- ICC TCUPHONU uTES .TEE. i AT Untie 1000 Par NUkl Cans After ! P. M. UlUrltl DwuuwM . ATtaMM Ml W IMS OPPtCU OP THC ICE Una IHflMi Iffk Ui hnial v MA Mlh . I WftakiMsl IS 1 1 A SL LSUM4 till WMM SU4. I PWO. - N Ik The Bee's Platform 1. New Uaioa Fasseager Statloa. , 2. Continued Improvement of the Ne braika Hithwar. Including th save meat of Mala Tberouihfsres leadlag into Omaha wild Brick Surface. 3. A short, lowrata Waterway from the Cars Ball to lb Atlaatie Oceaa. 4. Hem Rule Charter for Oateba, with Cilp Maaagar form of povaramaat. Real Representative Americans. President Harding's announcement of the delegates who will represent the United States at the coming- conference on armament only confirms the expectation of the public Hughes, Root, Lodge and Underwood1 compose a group whose fitness for the service will not be chal lenged by any..' Each is pre-eminently qualified to sustain the dignity and prestige of the Amen can republic, and may be depended upon to protect the interests of their country at all points. Greater than this, they are men known to the world, and enjoy abroad the confidence and respect that is their due at home. Comparison with the action of Woodrow Wilson, when he was on the eve of proceeding to Paris, cannot be avoided. Not only did Mr. Wilson select himself to head the delegation, but he surrounded himself with such a group of advisers as astonished the world. Robert Lansing was the only one who possibly could be looked upon as possessed of international qualifications, and the circumstances under which he was made a member of the delegation em phasize the indifference, with which the presi dent regarded him. Mr. Lansing in his book tells that he had first made representations to the president of the impropriety of the execu tive's taking personal part in the negotiations, and had followed this by most strenuous ob jections to certain of the Wilsonian policies, notably the League of Nations. Yet Mr. WiU " son took Mr. Lansing to Paris, and there ig : nored him. The world will wait a lone; time for a parallel instance. President Harding is not unmindful bf the tremendous importance of the conference in all its aspects. He knows it will profoundly affect not only the future of the United States but of the world as well. Yet he also realizes that he ' will lose,., as Mr. Lansing pointed out to his . chief, the power and advantage that flows from his detached position, should he become one of the negotiators in person. In this the president is snowing himself to be a diplomat of first caliber. ' . ' ' ' Recent advices have been to the effect that the agenda for the conference is practically tvgreed upon, and that it contains the question of limitation of armaments between the negotiating p6wers, and in general the open questions wftb regard to the Far East. Japan has strongly de murred, and is making effort to close up certain phases of its problem by adjustment in advance. Thus it is not unlooked for that Yap and the Shantung questions may be, disposed of before the convocation gets under actual headway. This is but speculation, and until confirmed by the event will have little effect on preparations Americans are more concerned over the share of their country in the conference, and must feel assured by , the character of the men who , will sit as delegates from the United States. Train Service to the North. , Some years ago, when Omaha was beginning to aspire to be a market town, its citizens con ceived and set on foot what 'later came to be the Chicago, ' St Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha railroad, 4 Many men yet live in the city who can recall the enthusiasm with which the proj ect was taken hold of, to the end that Omaha be connected with northeastern Nebraska by direct route. Now it happens that the Omaha line has become a part of the great Northwest ern system, and the powers that be have just se cured from the , state railway ccmmission au thority to take off two passenger trains that served the people of Herman, Blair, Tekamah, Emerson and other communities to the north of the city' and who prefer to do their trading in Omaha. , Under existing schedules, such will be required to leave Omaha by 2 o'clock in order to get home the same day. They have an al ternative, however, that of going to Sioux City to do their shopping. Plainly a' discrimination against Omaha, this new train schedule on the line that connects the metropolis with its neigh bors to" thejnortti deserves" earnest protest from the business men of the city, as it is getting the indignant comment of citizens of Craig and other towns who are now shut out of a privilege they esteem. . v Breaking Up of a Long Summer. A .tremendous atmospheric disturbance, ac companied, by all the wonderful phenomena of wind, rain, lightning, a magnificent display of fireworks, marked the passing of summer this year. Weatherwise were not astonished at the, event, although they may have been surprised by the iwide extent of the storm, as well as by its intensity. Not undertaking io' set a date for its coming, they realized it was at hand. The closing, days of August were marked by heat almost unbearable, with such evidence of an im pending change as . was unmistakable. Hot weather spread over an entire continent means that a wide area of low barometric pressure m present, which must soon be compensated for by a corresponding "high," developing somewhere, in order that - the equilibrium might be main tained. Local showers, accompanied by electric disturbance, could not relieve the situation. , A great storm was . building up, ' and it came. Heated air rises, and the cold air rushes in to take it pUco, and that i Ju.t what happened when the summer of 1921 approached it elne. The manifestation it common accompaniment of the irason, not always so violent at the one just noted, but it certain as the patting of the days. When Old Sol, turns outh, beraute of the eartb'i oscillation on its equatorial xi, the movement denotes the coming of autumn, and the mechanical actbn of the elements, obeying physical law eternal and immutable, attures that summer will melt into fall with great splash ing of water, and frequently the running of wind and the flashing of many lightnings. It is in evitable. Prosperity Made at Home. At time when Americans are aked to worry about foreign trade It is surprising to find a financial expert of the standing of Theodore H. Price who suggests that the United State can be prosperous without the aid of Europe. A good many current beliefs will be shocked by this statement, which i bated on the fact that consumption at home is almost equal to our production. "With a little diversification of our productive activities," says Mr. Price in the American magazine, "we ourtclvei could easily consume the entire yield of our industry." With or without tariff, he predicts increas ing difficulty in meeting the prices at which European industry can supply its home demand. While he doe not depreciate the importance of foreign trade, and points out that under all cir cumstances agricultural products will continue to find a market abroad, in return for which by triangular trade'eoffee, rubber and other necet tary importations will be secured, yet he be- Jieves that prosperity in this country is largely a family affair. Our foreign trade is small indeed compared to the buying and selling among ourselves. In 1919 our domestic trade was nearly six times our trade with all the rest of the world, and IS timet the balance of trade in our favor. While we gained $4,000,000 from foreign commerce we earned almost $62,000,000 by production for the home market The money netted from selling abroad amounted to $38 per capita, while the average per capita income for every man, woman and child in the United States is $645. Not all nations would be able to support themselves in this manner, but the United States, with its immense and varied resources, is very nearly self-sufficing. Stripping away all the fine theories and looking at the problem through the eyes of common sense, it appears plain that if each man would produce enough goods, on the average, to, supply himself in comfort, there would be no limit to the prosperity the nation might enjoy. 'The only wealth is goods and the means of their production, and money, foreign or domestic, is but the measuring stick, a fact that is sometimes confused. While there is no apparent reason to believe that the foreign trade of the United States will ever slip below its average for the prewar years,' yet the threat of this loses its terror when the facts submitted by Mr. Price are considered. Is Charlie Chaplin So Funny? Watch your step, Charlie Chaplin, or the people will no longer be sq quick to laugh at your antics on the screen. Your return to Eng land was signalized by the cheers ol crowds as great as those which lately welcomed victorious generals from the fields of battle, bnt you may well have misgivings for all that For your stay in London, we read, a palatial suite in the finest hotel has been engaged, and altogether you are living on a grand scale not to be approached ,by a millionth, part bf those who have found fun in your clownish acting. Whoever heard of decent-minded, respectable people laughing' at a millionaire? The wealth you have amassed and are spending so freely was honestly earned, but for that only the more respect is aroused. Better for you would it have been to conceal your fortune, for hereafter many among yqur spectators will find it difficult to enter into the illusion of good-natured poverty and amiable stupidity through which the appeal to popular1 favor has been made. Though the shadows on the screen may show you in thread bare, barry trousers, worn-out shoes and a trick vest, yet in their mind's eye many wilj see you in broadcloth, gray spats and carrying a gold headed cane instead pf your silly wisp of a stick. While you seem to be scrubbing the floor of a bank or wondering where you will get the half dollar to pay for a meal that you have ordered in some cheap cafe, some will imagine you din ing at Buckingham palace and chatting with the oyal family, dignified as a duke. . ' The impression is also getting about that you are considerable of a highbrow in private life, reading poetry, dabbling in economics and with a great deal more culture than a comedian needs. Your success depends on imbuing the picture goers with a sense of their superiority to you. Even a child may feel that he would know how to act under a given set of circum stances with more-'wisdom and discretion than you show in your comedies, and laughter rises at the ridiculous ruses to which you resort. People attend the showing of your films in order to laugh at your expense, and when they acquire the impression that perhaps, with your culture and your wealth you are m reality laughing at the expense of them and their tickets of admission, some of the joyous illusion that has built your popularity will be in danger of wearing very thin. - Among the list of races do not forget to in clude the red,1 yellow and green race of Ak-Sar- Ben. Omaha is doing a lot to bring back this sport. . . ' V - ; - Chicago's building trade strikers ought, to look at what is going on in Boston before per manently divorcing themselves from a pay roll. One point on which republicans and demo crats agree is that Uncle Sam needs a lot of revenue to meet his bills. ' The old saying, "As useless as a fifth wheeX must have originated in the days before auto mobiles and spare tires. If freight rates should take a tumble, a lot of people would have to think up new alibis in a hurry. , ; '.'." If food continues to go up, it is only natural that less of it should go down. - ; Old King Ak is going, to have a real curtain-raiser this time. , The Making of Danzig Long Bank of Word. But Success Is Now in Sight (Wtruw Corrttpondenct of the London Timet.) The rough outline of the Tree City of Pan. rig laid down in the Treaty of Vertaillet have at latt been thaped by tuccettive negotiation! into something real, which hat the comparative approval both of its inhabiuntt and of the I'olrt, The great drawback to the idea of Damig te rving at the port of Poland it that 83 per rent of in population are Germans, and therefore natural enemies of the Poles, This fact maket the Polet all the more nervous about their claim i home tho "haymaker. Karaly to "free aecct to the tea." When firtt the treaty In a kmx-kout blow delivered without How to Keep Well P- A EVANS QtMtlMM fmttnimt ferM, aaMa Imw pftMniiM ) Ihiim. miu4 at P r at 1k Km, lU k aa4 Wfmttif MkiMl la Iwiuim, kn a 44m4 ! ta a. (tM4 D t.M vUl aal aw a mhi. (at uWiki4imI 4imw. AMtaa taltate la car at tanrrwkt. IMI. b D. W, A. Eoatt 'ATHOL6SV 6P ! SQCkLd HIM." COC kuf gfatlvN lit ti0 V. X. (utialia, vpt. . Tu tha Kditur i'f Tim il! Your' UltortMt In lo. day Ma about iha tt.00'1 nl kl ur adoption. Jt waa fun 4 into that "frratrat family of uaiin," and kept in it mtulii't Ita will far cm- lurira only a mtp nuuKiiur ana iiimi4 fur VwHIng Sun t day I ai, wnn nm jr noin. " . wan a aiilnnlld Ilally f.w will! tho rula of tho raalm, or han.t mil nil brl lo M nuu lit Ulla'. Il M. kin.t unltwa eomiwlled by tirLUiu.l Suw that Hit. lift. tiro year In una innlns;, l.t atima ! .. t k i,,mriaiit hiiri!l,iB flmw Thoaa wild nad tha sporllnP Ptt ... . know that prlta rlicMera war thlr g h mor, , , numlh, ainniiu down brfora thjr try tal UKUHOB IL l.KB. It lias Brown to full womanhood. Ihruuuh unlvrt edu- Why nt rpt in l month? eatlnn and enliahunmenl and with If hard to rain money f..r an an.h" " inJuNina of tha pa-l i ar- HI Up IHV IIUTO IH l lllfll! iihh I'fltiT developed underalnndlnif Dantigrrt their city wat to be a free city, and that if the Polet were to have unrestricted control of all ill mott important tervice they would have no freedom left For two year a fierce diplomatic battle has been waged over the words and phrases, com mas and temi-colont of the treaty, but the mott recent negotiations have resulted in more agree ment than disagreement, and the point! ttill at ittue are being rapidly settled by appcal to the hiih commissioner of the League of Xationt, Gen. Sir Richard Haklng. 1 The original conception of the Free City wat baaed on the idra that the interests of Poland and of the port of Danzig are bound up together. Thit truth became more and more apparent to the disputing partiet at time went on. In the customt agreement it hat found concrete real ization. From January 1, 1922, the Free City becomes a unit in the Polhih customt adminis tration, under the control of Polish inspectors. The customs dues will be raid to the Polish government, out Danzig will receive roughly 6 per cent of the net profits. In arriving at this percentage the requirements of its inhabitants in imported roods were rated higher than those of the average Pole, who is a peasant and finds most of what he needs in the country. Thus Dan zig has a direct interest in fostering I'olish trade and prosperity. ' A convention between Poland and Danzig settled the manner in which the Polish control over the harbor, etc., wat to be exercised. It was at last signed, after most arduous and protracted negotiations, last November. In it the letter of the treaty was set aside on an inspiration of Lord Derby, and tlie administration ol the serv ices of the port vested in a harbor board com posed of five Danzigers and five Poles, who, it was provided, might demand a neutral president if they could not agree among themselves. This eventuality promptly arose, and Colonel de Reynier of the Swiss army was appointed by the League of Nations to preside over the board for three years. He had to settle a number of important and knotty points with regard to the riehts and competencies of the board, on which the two different parties naturally held opposite opinions. The value of the harbor board is that it compels the Poles and Danzigers to col laborate on equal terms instead of putting one at the mercy of the other. The convention left plenty of points of detail to be settled by agreement After six months more of negotiation these have at last been threshed out. A code has been compiled which establishes finally the relations of every sort, po litical, economic, legal, and financial, between the Free City and Poland. It makes a volume considerably larger than the Treaty of Ver sailles. Herr Sahm, the president of the Danzig Senate, whose name, bv the way. figured origin ally on the Polish list of war criminals, will shortly come to Warsaw to sign it I his in it self marks a considerable step forward on the path of reconciliation, I he conclusion of the negotiations practic ally amounts to the signature of a treaty of peace between Poland and Danzig. Heretofore there has been a sort of petty war carried on, both parties being anxious to show what a thorn they could be in the side of the other if they tried. For instance, a Pole might buy a house on the territory of the Free City, but as likely as not the Danzig housing board would prevent him living in it On the 6ther side, the Danzig fish ing fleet was barred by the Poles from using its normal fishing grounds, which have now become Polish waters. All that sort of chicane is now to be dropped. ! Poles are to receive all the rights and privileges (except political) of Danzig citi zens, and vice versa, and there is a chance of better relations being developed. . Polish rights as granted by the Treaty of Versailles have suffered some diminution by the institution of the harbor board. Instead of Po land having the control of the Vistula mouths, i the port and its waterways and railway tracks, it rests with the harbor board, though, as the result of an aDoeal bv Poland. General Hakinsr has ruled that Poland shall have the administra tion and exploitation of the lines which run into the port and the adjacent goods yards. This is a point of the greatest importance. The trains made up in port are destined principally for Po land; hitherto they have been assembled by Dan zig railway officials,, who mixed up indiscrim inately trucks for Warsaw, Lemberg, or Posen, so that much time and coal were wasted in. sort ing them out when the train passed the Polish frontier. , ' . . - . Poland is not, allowed to maintain a naval base at Danzig.'but her torpedo craft and coast patrol vessels can lie in the .port and there is nothing to prevent her making arrangments with the harbor board to keep a stock of coal and naval stores there, as in fact she does at present As a result of the various agreements the Dan zigers are not being ousted from the government Iirlaud'a Wlalutf. wat publithed two entirely different conception! aoma minutes or even rmina or WlMt VuinU Nb gt t.Ta the of the Free City at once arote. The Pole dc 'V"?"0 u,; n VVJSSSi1" r Ths lu"1 Tha.reUU.-na manded the widen postible interpretation of the "mJf'f. -oh"?- wiitard ha' ",w"'n 0r,M,l ,,r,u,n ",d ,h,,Ktrt clause, which promited then, control of the port. EX" iit rail and water wayt and other privilege, lhe awn. Un then, to uuoie him ac. !; fi" .liV?.? .......Ji e !. I . I. . I I ... I . ... ... . .. ... .tmv viiu, tm VI iuillll i. -. , ' niamiaincit inai nrsi inn luinuu.i i curaieiy. aomati nun. i Pasteurizing Milk at Home. . t). P. writes: "1. How is milk noa.n..lA t 1 n n v nf tnpir ritv ac hv nmffcef1 In fpar at nni ! . , ' .' U . T i! lI j , leurizea miiK indigestible? I under nine is -iiuL 111 mc sukuicsl udiiKer ui Thera a French medical proverb that men seldom die from th tl naee with which thi-y suffer. This proverb Is capable of several Inter iiretatlona. Tha ona lam now mak ing una uf Is as follows: After be I ns worn dnwn by ths various experiences of life, including tha duuMaee they have li.id, alone pomes some disorder, sometimes a mild one, and administers iha roup da Brace- "socks 'em," n the Inn Busts of Profe-mor lmpay. lr. U I. liublln studied very rare fully tha subaeiiuent histories of .071 men who wars rejorted by Ufa insurance eompnnles because they had albumin In ths urlns. At the time of tho study these 2.07S men had lived an SKirrrsate of 12,07s years, or an average of six years after the exiitnlmulon. Taking the number of deaths of healthy people of tha aaea of theito men as 100. it was found thnt 114 men of this group hml died. The proportion of deaths to normal was 114 to 100. When comparison wns mads with men as picked by & mref'i llfVln surance examination, the proportion was as 141 to 100. In those cases where the record showed only a faint trace of albu min, the excess of deaths had been slight If the faint trace man was young IS to 24 years old there was no exces. If he was older the excpfts was above the avenge. Dublin also studied a groi:p of 3,24 'persons who were rejected be cause of albumin and cast in. the urine. The average time which had elapsed since the oxamlna.lon was six and one-half years. The deaths In this group, as compared with the expected rate according to tho Glo ver table, was as 138 to 100. Al bumin with casts Is more serious than albi-mln alono. The greater the number of casts, and especially granular casts, the higher the ex cess of deaths. Again, the figures showed that Brlght's disease in a youth less than 24 is not very serious. A study of the cause of death showed Brlght's disease and heart disease leading. with apoplexy and diabetes toward the lore. Strange to say, consump tion and cancer and some other dis eases which are in no wise related to Brlght's disease were consider ably in excess of normal. And now here is what this study teaches us: . 1. Persons with Brlght'o disease can live for many years If they will live properly. 2. Brlght's disease in a young person is not very serious if care is given. 3. Nevortheless, on an average, persons who have had Brlght's dis ease are not good risks. 4. They have a higher rteath rate within Six years of : their tro uble than does the average man v 6. They die from diseases which are often closely related to kidney irouDie. i 1 J Operation Surest Romedy. m. js. t. writes: "l. I am a young man of 23 and afflicted with rupture. What if the best way of curing it 7 ''2. Is an operation necessary? "3. What is good for perspiring feet?" REPLY. . ' 1. A few- hernias are cured by wearing trusses, a few by exercises, but operation is the only reasonably certain cure. 2. Operation is not necessary for comfort and efficiency; A truss ac complishes that as a rule. It Is necessary for a cure, or almost so. 3. Wash and keep clean.' Apply alum water occasionally -or a dust ing powder consisting of sixty parts alum and forty parts talcum. human nature ths moat Intricate and difficult thing In the world to iimlimiiind and lieflne that If one considers, and tries to analyse ihein only In Mil abmlract way, they xt come almost a bewildering t tha mind as the principle ot Infinity and eternity. And tho mind revolts on dwelling on theae unfiithomablti thoughts long, the same a the eyes du In facing the glare of the sun. In order to see Into that relation ship wlih a little clearness and tin durMtuniliug, let us muko a concrete, palpable comparison of the status of those two nations to a cnr"tn everyday thing of life: and call Eng land by Its old name of "Mouur country. How Is It that all the other Eng-llnh-speaklng dominions, or daugh ters, sre In perfect peace and ac- I ...1.1. . I. I . J u. I "III Willi IIIO Ul4 VVUIfc VI PI. James; and as Lloyd Ueome puts it In one of his latest speeches, nrn "proud and fearless nutions" and "tske pride In belonging to this greatest family of nation In the world, known as tho Brlllxh em pire?" Why, It Is simply because they have been treated, from their Mrth, llko reel daughters, and given all the privilege of beloved children. Is there anything so unnaturnl about a dauxhter, even after she has mar ried and shifted for herst-lf, to re tain a strong affection towurd her kind mother; and even to remain, in a measure, subservient to her? Hut how about Ireland? We shall not attempt to review, In this rrlef article, the centuries of oppressive rule enforced upon . it, with all its defrauding feudal sys tem and its harsh buffoonery und mockery toward Its just 'Uilnis to right and Justice! No, we shall only briefly say that Ireland was never a daughter of England, either by birth Seeking Live Pastors That very old finest lun as to whether or not churches liould ad. vrrtiaa fur pamnr la tip a4ln. Tula advertisement In a linatoil paper ha suited it; i'astur wanted fr prominent Ksw Knslsnd Congregattiinai church In an Inland city. Mul be una who hua been snctriul as preacher, pumor, rs ulser sn'U1 church executive. Omul suUry, wealthy sucli'ly, iitlrm live edirtce, centrally totaled and fins Held for work. The leaders of tha chunh auj they have searched in vain lur th man they want. They found one, but Kansas City bast their md ly adding un automobile and a secret-try. lie. cent experiences of Haltlmur churcliia have been In the witne line. There Is ao much demand for the live, up-to-date pastor who can build un his church and at the samo Ireland, wlih the same fei'l'nss of 1 grownup step.chlld treatvd In like manner, refuses to scaup the hand of reconciliation extended to It ty Us step. mother and to listen to its words uf peace, exhorting it to re main In that unlcn of imtlona. And is it net-canary to nak why? Indeed, not! It Is simply becnuao England has In the lut. by its oruiai. aein.u .onuu.i or erap-;ma prt...h KOml sermons. tlu h poinien guaroinn, eugemiercu in.- bu-j. turnlnsr tlow-n tirTfrw. There of.iiru manv ihiiim him eliurclica than Ireland's henrt, not any trace nilsl love, but In Its auu. a mt bitter hatred and despite now tilt the more enhanced becausi' that ex tended hand of would-be friendship ! stilt dripping with the warm red blood of hundreds of its own Celtic heroes! Would it be short of a miracle If It shnnll grasp It nt this time and say to Kimland. "I will beromo your loving daughter and forget the past?" Could nil the wladnni of the Lloyd fleorsse ministry yes, of all th wUa men or the worll out to gether make that hnnd-shaltlng sincere at heart, even If they were able to enforce It? Could any human power nr ngen-y ch;-.ng that heart seething with the most deep seated hatred and cnntetntt for that foreign rule. !n'o one full of love end respect for it? Now thut Knclaml lins thaHtisod Its step-daughter severely ind found out thut the wounds and stripes In. dieted on it body have onlv made it tha more rebellious, Instead of bringing about the deslrod submis sion, what rational course is open to it? What can the lirliish gov. ernnient do In thin dilemma, with the guze ot all nations fixed upon their every action and utterance? What aspect could the countenance of the world assume If they should renew that ch.intlRemnt, and through brutal, burbarous force bring this helpless nation to Its knees? And above all, what stare could they expect from their agon izing victim, but one of the most diabolical hatred and accurscdness toward themselves? Is there any other course open for the Lloyd (leorse ministry, boastful of liberality and good-will, other than to lay aMde national sel fishness, and to recognize the under- there are big ministers. One of the saddwst sliihts of the lung mitntner Is one of these big churches perform ing no function whatever for tho comfort ur amelioration of the com mutiny life a great barn, empty uf action ami usefulness. A live posior means a live church. Oet him by all means. If gnlni; about csnrot find him, then use the advertising columns. Alt other rinds of buslro-ss do it. nd waking up moribund churches and U ing iiood uitureli.-s going may he conxid crcd good IniKiticss proposition. An Klini'miilon ouio.t. More than l.niiu novels .ire writ, ten in a 'year In America: .written and published. Ten are nd. Two nro remembered for a few years. no survives n decade inee In a decade. IaiuIsvIIIo Courier-Journal. Making Jti-nts Uuy u New Auto. To solve the housing problem subrent your npartment and sleep in the garage. 8hoe and Leather Importer. Tim Piio I'uzlc. The man who used to ' hide be hind a woman's skirts" would bo I uzzled to do this nowadays. Lon don Opinion. a lying principle of all righteousness that Almighty Ood nus not cre ated one man to be Uie slave or servant of his neighbor, or ebie he would not have lmplnntd in his breast that unquenchable fire of lib erty and. to say to Ireland, "since we cannot get along together you may now become the -nlstreso of your own household; and let us try from henceforth, in u Christian spirit, to live in peace and friend ship?" ABNOLD S. MISEHEZ. V ' . ' Send for Booklet. Mrs. J. Y. writes: "1. Can any thing be done for intense hot flushes in a woman of 52? Have suffered with them for eight years. They are most uncomfortable and embar rassing. I am the mother of one child.. "2. Can anything be done to re lieve a body oversensitive to under wear? It seems Impossible to wear new underwear, unless silk, although it is washed first. I .cannot afford silk." . - REPLY. ' . '.' I.'"-. Send stamped addressed en. velope for booklet. ' - , r 2. - I know of nothing. Perhaps less bathing and more uso of cold cream to cleanse may help. . being Polonized. On the other hand, the Poles have obtained sufficient footing to prevent the pan-Germans, whose influence in Danzig is very strong, from squeezing them too hard. Besides running most of the railways -in the Free City, the Poles are to have their own post and tele graph office in the port, so that the Polish com munity (at present about IS per cent) will be strengthened by a considerable number bf : of ficials and their families. The Poles have been granted premises for a school and a chair on the staff of the Technical college, both Of which they would never have got had not Danzig been tinder the control of the league. Every German hates Poland and the Poles as a matter of course, and Germans in Danzig are in a majority. These are tacts Which Can not be got over, but setting these aside, the Poles have been provided with as good an instrument for turning these enemies into friends as could be devised. . . V Germany's Recuperation. There is steadily at work in Germany the greatest recuperative and conservative force that a nation can. know. The spectacle is marvellous and exceedingly gratifying to those who can rightly apprehend its significance. There is at work in Germany, steadily and progressively for Germany's salvation, the will to regain, recover, restore; not in the political or military sense, but industrially, economically, by the honest labor of brain and hands. A people animated by that purpose and endowed with the capacity that peo ple possesses for organization and toil can not conceivably be headed for national dissolution. buc ha spectacle is not one to be viewed by the rest of the world with suspicion, jealousy or distrust For although it is true that the new Germany, looking forward and not backward, is planning and working for Germany itself, it is ikewise true that when it works on these lines it is working for the rest of the world and for the peace of the world. It can not he otherwise. Xew York Herald. stand there is more or less typhoid aoout at present, and I cannot be-1 aDsoiuteiy certain of the source from which our milk comes." REPLY. 1.. Set the bottle of milk in a deep saucepan filled with water to the level of the milk in the bottle. The bottle should be set on the handle of a spoon so that the glass bottom may;, do lilted from Cljse contact wun.tne bottom of the pan. Heat the water until the milk becomes beady. Hold " at that temperature for thirty minutes. Remove and coot quickly. Keep the milk cold. .2.- xo. ; , A People Without a Vision. The body of a war hero, shipped irom France, was refused at .the town from which he had enlisted because there Were no friends nor relatives there to claim it. But If there was no family affection to meet mm, there might have been some civic pride. Baltimore American. Days of Lightning Changes. What has become of the old-fcsh-loned girl who wore knickerbockers a few days .ago? Chicago News. Knickerbockers for the feminine world make little headway. Nobody is opposing them. St Louis Globe Democrat. . Limitation of Armaments. The Conference for the Limita tion of Armaments" Is to be the of ficial designation of the meeting In Washington - Jn : November. New York Tribune. - - , Hay Fever In Full Swing. ' New York Is struggling with an epidemic which recurs each year and baffles health officials ami physicians. The hay-fever season is in full swing. New York Herald. hMll w ME BRAND' om QUALITY- fie. Size Ptickag&r All our skill, facilities, and lifelong knowledge of the finest tobaccos are concentrated on this one i;. cigarette CAMEL. Into this ONE BRAND, we put the utmost qual ity. Nothing is too good for Camels. They are as good as it's possible to make a cigarette . Camel QUALITY is always maintained at the same high, exclusive standard. -You can always : depend on the same mellow-mild refreshing smooth nessthe taste and rich flavor of choicest tobaccos and entire freedom from cigaretty aftertaste. And remember this! Camels come in one size package only 20 cigarettes just the right size to r make the greatest saving in production and packing. This saving goes straight into Camel Quality. That's tone reason why you can get Camel Quality at so moderate a price. ; Here's another. We put no useless frills on the Camel package. No "extra wrappers!" Nothing just for show! . Such things do not improve the smoke any more . than premiums or coupons. And their adderj cost must go onto the price or come out of the quality. One thing and one only is responsible for Camels great and growing popularity That is CAMEL QUALITY. V; SL J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO, WlaatotSakaa, N. & IlllllllllllilllllllllllllllW 'i jack Frost. can't scare King Corn this year. i v . , i. . :c-i . - - A ' i..