Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 20, 1912, SOCIETY, Image 16

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 20, 1912,
The Omaha Sunday Bee.
XDED BT EDWARD ROSEWATEK.
UOTOR ROSEWATER. EDITOR.
BEE BUILDING, FARM Ail AND 1TTH
Entered t Omaha Postofflce as secona-
cuu matter.
rri-THij rv L'r'UspCl PT ION
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Saturday Bee, one year $ljJJ
Daily Bee (without Sunday), one year -J
Daily Bee, and Sunday, one year. . . . . .fO-W
DELIVERED BY CARRIER.
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Evening without Sunday, per montn..aso
Dally Bee (including Sunday), per mo..oc
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Address all complaints or Irregularities
in delivery to City Circulation Dept.
Remit by draft, express or postal oroer.
payable to The Bee Publishing eompaiiy.
Onv 2-eent stamps received in payment
ot small accounts. Personal checks, ex
;ept on Omaha and eastern exchange, not
accepted.
ns pipes.
Omaha The Bee building. ' ,
South Omaha-2318 N St.
Council Bluffs 14 No. Main St.
Llncoln-rfi Little building.
Chicago 1041 Marquette building.
Kansas City-Reliance building.
. New York-34 Went Twenty-third.
St. Louis 402 Frisco building.
1 wnintnn 7goJurte.enth St, w. "
" CORRESPONDENCE.
Communications relating to news and
editorial matter should be addressed
Omaha Bee, Editorial Department.
SEPTEMBER CIRCULATION.
50,154
8iate of Nebraska, County of Douglas. .
Dwight Williams, circulation manager
of The Bee Publishing company, being
duly sworn, says that the average dally
circulation for the month of jPp.mber
mi, was W.lfct DWIOHT WILLIAMS.
Circulation Manager.
Subscribed In my presence and sworn
to before me this ctoU.
Seal.) ' Notary Public.
Subscribers leading- the eHf
temporarily shonld nav The
Bee mailed to them. Address
will be chanced m of tea requested.
Farmers who ride In automobiles
bare no time to listen to calamity
talk. '
As. the transfer agent of disease
the house fly never fails to check
Its baggage. , . ' .
"Sparrow Smoke Cigarette."-
Headline. But it may be excusable
in a sparrow.
It hardly seems possible to think
of Lieutenant Becker as other than
a detective story creation.
The preacher who has something
to say need not buy an alarm clock
to wake up bis congregation.
By Novepber 5, it is presumed
the American voter will have been
duly Instructed enough to vote.
The world' aeries. base ball games
are not 'oyer and . will not be until
the moving pictures all glide by.
Sane-Jheaded men will agree that
toierance in religion has progressed
further - than tolerance In politics.
' ' Philosophy teaches every man to
forget himself. But how can 1 he
when he has lost a world's series? .
The Balkan war affords an ex
cuse for brushing up on the location
of a few otherwise inconsequential
places. 1 "'
It is evident that no one can beat
young Mr. McCormlck In working
himself -up to a high pitch of anger
when he tries. "' -
The divorce lawyers get the small
ekt part' of their - business : but" of
households 'where children- play
around the doorstep.
A chain is no stronger than its
weakest link. The driver of a de
livery wagon can make or break a
big mercantile establishment.
j no pracuca 01 maniiiir vwm pouuvu
opponents statements which cannot , be
tubetantlated has been- the bane ' of
American politics. The Outlook.
We think so, too.
Center Fielder Bevertdge, sure hitter,
may bat toq the colonel In the ninth ln-
iUng.-CMco Tribuh
Yes, but, unfortunately, he fanned
out the last time he was up,
No worse heresy was ever
preached than that love and reason
are never chums. What Incongruity
exists between real love and sound
reason?
No trouble has been experienced
. with the mints since President Mc
Klnley opened the mills. All we
have to do Is to keep the wheels re
volving. -
The educational value of these
base ball series must not be over
looked. A lot of New Yorkers now
for the.' first time know- that there Is
s place called Boston on'the map. -
V U turns out .that Colonel Dan La-
.mont tipped It off (to Judge Parker
! that the trusts .were putting, up that
; 1904 fund. ' Colonel Dan must have
known "what he was talking about
1
.Just' fifty years ago the demand
i nag voiced In certain quarters 'for
! he "recall of President Lincoln, and
J a declaration "that the war for the
i preservation of the-union was a fail
iore.
' One of the designs of the new nr.
ee1s post .stamps "will '.represent an
i aeroplane mail carrier as a forecast
, of what is to come. . The first post-
'age stamp issued Dyvour postofflce
!. which 'portrayed the ponyi express
.dated le t'ban ' seventy-five years
hack. l,The jump, or rather flight, is
rrptoryin a nutshell.
A Titanic Achievement.
Although the construction of the
Panama canal, which is to connect
the two great oceans, is fast ap
proaching completion, few people
have as yet adequate conception of
its magnitude.
The discovery of America could
not have taken place much earlier
than it did for lack of the magnetic
compass, nor could it have been
long delayed after possession of that
instrument keyed up the ..daring
mariners of that day to sail beyond
the Bight of -land. That the-long-
cherished idea ofjhe Panama canal
could not have been sooner put Into
practical execution nor by any na
tion less resouceful .than the United
States, is what impressed Ambassa
dor. James Bryce most when he vis
ited the spot, and his thought is
most suggestive as embodied In his
new book of South American obser
vations, in which he'says:
i In no previous age could an enterprise
so vast as this nave been . carried
through; that is to say. It would have re
quired a time so long and -an expenditure
so prodigious that no rational government
would have attempted It. Pharaoh Necho
may have, a Herodotus relutes,' dug it
canal across the Isthmus of Sues by the
labor of hundreds of thousands of his
subjects accustomed to Implicit obedience.
but his ditch was probably a small and
shallow one. and it was through a dead ;
level of sand and clay that it was dug. j
Here there was a mountain to paerce ana
a torrent to bridle, and the, locks had to
provide for vesseta thousand feet long.
Nothing but the new fmres which scien
tific discovery has placed in the bands ot
the modern . engineer steam, electricity,
explosives of high power, machinery ca
pable of raising and setting In their place
one above another huge masses of ce-.
ment would have made the work pokbI-
ble. Yet even that was not enough. The
French company possesrd such ap
pllances, and though their eftl mates of
cost turned out to be based op totally
Inadequate data, the competence and en
ergy of their engineers have never been
questioned. And the French company
failed hopelessly. Yet even if, all the
French capital had been properly, spent
and better sanitary measures had reduced
the pestilential conditions, It may be
doubted whether the French company
could have mads a success of the under
taking.' Whoever looks at this prodigious
work feels that It could be carried through
only by a nation commanding resources
so overflowing that It does not need to
care how much it spends, a nation which
can borrow as much money as" H pi Bases
without sensibly affecting the quotations
of Ha existing national debt. '
The Panama canal was plainly
destined to be an achievement of
modern Titans. , It marks the great
est transfiguration of the surface
of the globe wrought by human
hands. But, as Mr. Bryce says,
human hands would have been pow
erless had not the age of steam,
electricity, compressed' air, high ex
plosives, andv mammoth machinery
made a few thousand twentieth cen
tury workmen, properly , equipped
and Intelligently directed, 1n,ore po
tent than combined' armies of toll
Ihg slaves' that' built air the temples
and tombs and monuments of the
ancients. " ( ...
The Champion Chautalker.
The Chautauqua as "The Great
American Forum," Is the subject pf
an article In the current World's
WorkVlri which the writer confers
upon Mr. Bryan the distinction of
being the only one of the top-liners
"who can' draw his fee (its value in
attendance)" ' on "a ' chafitaUqua or
lyceum course." And his fee Is
said to be $50,000' a year.
Thus 'Nebraska may;; boast' ot , hav
ing the champion chautalker of the
country. Such leaser lights, this
writer tells ub, as former Senator
Frank J. Cannon, former Governors
Folk, Hoch and Hanly, Dr. Harvey
W. Wiley, and even the irrepressi
ble Francis Hehey, - make only
$10,000 a year, one-fifth of what
Mr. Bryan gathers in. .
But Mr. Bryan's friends have al
ways Insisted that be was "not out
for the money, which opens up a
still more Interesting aspect of the
case. Admitting that $50,000 a
year Is a comfortable Income for a
man who cares little for the money,
the fact that Mr. Bryan has
preached bis political hobbles from
these platforms makes his emolu
ments all the greater. Ordinarily
the propagandist has to pay for get
ting his nostrums advertised, but
Mr. Bryan has turned the tables and
amassed a fortune by advertising
his, free of cost to himself.. But, of
course, others beside Mr. Bryan have
done much the same thing.
fashion that tendB to belittle the
serious purpose of matrimony is a
menace to our social life. Perhaps
we are drifting too much toward the
Epicurean, perhaps we are the vic
tims of an easy indulgence that
sweetens our lips only to leave a
bitter taste. The high cost of living
argument loses its force so long as
wild extravagances are so freely in
dulged. If religion is the remedy,
strength to its teachers.
t
The Heat of the Campaign.
In theory there is no reason what
ever why a political conteBt shouM
not be waged on, as. high a plane as
other competitions of life. We see
a base ball championship won, or a
foot ball trophy awarded, by keenly
pitting one club or team against an
other, with points scored according
to accepted rules designed to prevent
resort to dishonorable tactics. Even!
the bare-knuckle fight to a finish
between burly bruisers is kept within
limits by eagle-eyed umpires and
referees ready to disqualify the man
who strikes foul.
In a political combat, however,
the heat of the campaign is too often
taken to excuse and Justify reckless
disregard of all the rules ot con
duct observed in every other rela
tion. In the heat of a campaign it
is assumed to be perfectly fair to
call every antagonist a liar, a thief
or a crook, and to accuse every one
who supports an opponent with
abetting political burglary, and de
serving to wear prison stripes. Ir
respective of who lights the match,
the heat of the blaze invites repris
als and retaliation In kind, with the
result that political campaigns In
this country'engender personal bit
terness and animosities rarely
equaled anywhere else in the world.
What we need evidently Is a re
form that will reduce the tempera
ture of our political contests. In
base ball, and in foot ball, a
mediating board, representing the
various associations, gets together
In advance of the season and fixes
the rules. A similar rules commit
tee with full power to act for all the
different political parties might be
a feasible way out.
these figures would be enough to il
lustrate the importance of tha point
made. Here is a factor in our high
cost of living problem unrelated to
politics and -ell within our power
to readjust.
Boyal Doctor on Our Race Suicide.
The physician to the royal family
of Spain, now visiting In the United
States, Is struck by the prevalence
of our race suicide, which he at
tributes to an apparent ' lack of
religious feeling. He believes many
American women regard motherhood
as a responsibility to be shunned,
preferring freedom, to go about and
mingle In society or club life instead
of being "held down" by home cares.
He Bays that this ,1s true also of
Parisian women, but not so of those
in Spain, where the average family
numbers seven or eight children and
where women "regard children as a
joy and motherhood as a happy God
.given duty."- "' ,
The majority of American women
need no defense of their sense of
these solemn responsibilities. " But
every thoughtful ' person knows that
this criticism is not wholly false or
unfair. ; ; Many homes 'themselves
furnish the melancholy, but Irrefuta
ble proof, and divorce courts too
often reflect It. Every foible or
Greek Patriotism.
Patriotism has been a passion in
Greece since It was burned Into the
bosoms of the boys of Athens and
Sparta by those .fires of competitive
zeal. How well these boys learned
their lessons may now be reflected
til the fervor that drives armies from
the profitable pursuits of peace in
America to war in their native land.
Some ot these : young . men have
been In the United States for several
years, become well settled in their
work and 1n cases have accumulated
property,1 but hot yet have we heard
of any hesitating to respond to his
country's call it it was decided his
services were needed.' He pledged
himself on . leaving Greece to return
It called, a ' pledge that' might be
forgotien in the engrossing affairs
Of business. But Greeks do not for
get such pledges, nor falter in their
fulfillment. The spontaneity of
their response Is strikingly impres
sive.
The lesson must not .be lost on
Americans, not that we especially
need It to Inspire the passion of
patriotism within us, but rather be
cause of its revelation of so admir
able a characteristic In this foreign
born people. It shows the Greek to
be true', not alone to his country,
but to his word. A fidelity that
fears not even potential death, It
self, roust have the force of charac
ter back of It. So In . the gleam of
such crises we catch the glint of true
manliness in our ' friends from
abroad, who have come from many
countries to cast their lot among us
and be Americans. It should help
us to see the possibilities of
strength In them and the opportunl
ties they bring us. '
Street Car manners.
It would be difficult to fit drawing
room amenities upon street car
crowds, though one might wish some
code of ethics possible of enforce
ment upon 'the latter. It is one ot
the anomalies of city life that men,
and sometimes even women, will per
form manners in a street car they
would, never countenance elsewhere.
All ot .which conspires to the annoy
ance and discomfort of riding in a
car "which otherwise might be made
very enjoyable. The pay-as-ypu-enter
trolley is admirably adapted to the
absorption of much that is undesira
ble and needless, yet fails often be
cause people persist in making a
nuisance of what was intended as a
comfort and convenience. i
If f he average "person did not lose
his thought for the other fellow the
moment he put his .foot on .the car
Btep it would not be so. All the lit
tle placard sermons tacked up In the
car, supplemented by the conduct6r's
plaintive, "Move up. Jiy front, please,"
fall flat on 4he person stationed in
the rear end or' perhaps halfway up
the aisle, possibly reading a paper,
while a score of others scramble for
a spot big enough to stand on in the
consequent congestion at the rear of
the car. There Is positively no excuse
for this, though one might suppose
from its conventionality that there
were. (
soiling Backward
TlifaDay la Omaha
GOIinUD r'ROM BEE rib
"1
r
It " j
OCTpBEB 20.
Transportation and .Living Cost.
Experts have agreed that it costs
about 25 cents a ton to transport
food products over a mile of earthen
roads by animal powerwhlle the per
ton mile cost of steam railway trans
portation is but T.8 mills. Allowing
for possible discrepancy in these rel
ative figures, it, will not be denied
that the cost of many articles ot ne
cessity .could be materially reduced by
cheaper facilities for delivery which
often costs much more than 25 cents
per ton mile. Here, of course, Is oue
vital demand for good roads and ef
ficient motor vehicles. u a recent ad
dress the president of the Philadel
phia Chamber of Commerce said on
this subject:
I am acquainted with retail firms
whose cost of delivering goods at re
tall is not less than 60 cents per ton mile,
and, In vlew 'of the several loadings and
unloading! in comparatively short dis
tances. It may be safe to assume that
the cost of this service when applied
to the exacting demands of modern com
merce will vary from 2S cents to SO
cents or even more per ton mile. The
more Important bearing which the high
cost of this form of transportation has
upon our subject lies In the fact that
if the respective hauling I have named
should aggregate ten or fifteen railed
the aggregate cost of these distances at
25 cents per ton mile would be equivalent
to the cost of railroad transportation,
based upon ' average railroad earnings,
of from SOO to 600 miles; and if Us cost
averaged 60 cents per ton mile It would
be equivalent to the average eost ot 600
to l.nOO miles of railroad transportation or
to double or treble that distance by
water transportation. " ' ,
Merely approximate accuracy of
The New Military Hardship.
In the language of the immortal
Mikado, "Here's a how-de-do" with
brass buttons on It.
According to the report made to
the secretary of war by Judge Advo
cate General Crowder, the new army
bill, which contains a provision re
quiring the return to their commands
by December 15 next of 11 officers'
below the rank of major on detached
service and making such officers In
eligible, for detached service unless
they have been continuously With the
commands frr the preceding . two
years, "is airtight ' and bombproof
and will have to be literally ''obeyed.
It goes without saying that this
ultimatum is creating all kinds ot
comment and palpitation under the
dress uniforms of officers enjoying
soft berths as staff aides, military
attaches abroad r militia and school
instructors and other comparatively
comfortable posts. The real task, it
turns out, is not -to find detached
service men who have to go back to
the line, but to. find enough active
service men possessing the required
qualifications to be detached to fill
their places; But, 'of course, over
coming that difficulty is only a mat
ter of time. '
The real hardship of the new or
der of things will be Inflicted upon
the officers with Independent in
comes, which they cannot well spend
fast enough In Isolated frontier forts,
upon the officers with socially ambi
tious wives and daughters who feel
cramped when circumscribed by
purely military circles, and upon the
officers who suddenly find them
selves physically unfit when notified
that their place is close - to bar
racks. Of course, there are. not bo
many of these,' but there are quite
sufficient.
Watch for a bunch of army resig
nations on or about December 15.
A Definition of Education. .
Dr.' Lyman 'Abbott adopts .Huxley's
pungent; definition .of;, education as
the best remedy to apply to. our cur
rent moral and civic ills. Ib is this:
Education la the Instruction of the in
tellect In the laws of nature, under
which name I include not merely things
and their forces, ' but - men and their
ways; and the. fashioning of the affec
tions- nd the win into an earnest and
loving desire to, live In harmony with
those laws. ;. '
Admitting that .in our system of
public education we are teaching
very well the laws of matter and
force natural science -Dr. : Abbott
declares that we are not training the
Btudents into a loving and earnest
desire to live In obedience to law.
And what, he asks, is the conse
quence? Four of the Ten Command
ments, those against theft, lasclyious
nesB, murder and bearing false wit
ness, are constantly violated to ap
palling degrees. ,
This Is a grave indictment of our
public educaf onal Institutions. It is
not pleasant to be told that while
we are an instructed nation, we are
neither a disciplined nor an educated
nation. But our task Is not a simple
one. Our population Is heterogene
ous and we shall probably remain In
our laboratory a long time before
completing either the ideal citizen or
the ideal system of his training. We
cannot afford, though, to screen his
education through too free a sieve.
for the elements of moral precept
and civic honor and responsibility are
essential to his refinement.
Thirty Years Ago
Rose Eytlnge and her dramatic com.
pany held forth at the Boyd" in .' Led
Astray.-" Y ' . -
McHugh ft McG&vock, the contractors,
are finishing up the pipe sewer on Daven
port street, and will at once begin on
the extension of the South Omaha sewer.
The new planing mill of Phil Moyer,
located at Ninth and Dodge street, re
cently enlarged, is described as one of
Omaha's boasted Institutions.
The. Inauguration of the new Toung
Men's Christian association rooms con
tinued over today, with eierclses led by
E. D. Ingersoll, secretary of the railroad
work, and a paper by George C. Coxhead
of Kansas City. .
Pursuant to an army order First Lieu
tenant E. D.-Thomas, Fifth cavslry, will
sell to Brevet Major O. O. Howard, one
Horrel horse belonging to the government, '
at actual cost If known.
The Japanese minister and his attend
ants, 'accredited to this country and Aus
triapassed through the city.
Judge James W. Bavsge Is being talked
of for. the position of chancellor of the
state university, but the Judge is hesi
tating even to consider It. ' ;
:X- birthday , surprise party was giveii
by Miss-Minnie Burch and Miss Minnie
Woodward to Miss Minnie Horsman, with
the following ladles and gentlemen pres
ents Misses. Amelia K and IJszie Can
field, Grace Warner, Myrtle Ester, Anna
Stolden, Minnie Woodwsrd, Mary KUnett,
Nellie Pratt, Josie Peters, Julia Scott.
AnnaDillon, Maggie Hughes, Emma
Auchs, Eve Striker, Mary Ostrom, Clara
Huff, Mamie Hlggins and Pearl Pratt.
and Messrs. Georga A. Goodwin, W. D.
Allen, Eddie Dillon, Charlie Cone, Georgo
Umpherson, Fred Anderson, Ephraim
Pratt, John Scott, George Weeks, Wood-
worth Allen, Luther Adklns and Herman
McKlnney.
Twenty Years Airo
Judge M. R. Hopewell of the district
court left for his home at Tekamah to
remain until Monday, when he would re
turn to his Judicial duties in Omaha.
Coroner and Ma. M. O. Maul returned
from Green Biver, Wyo., where Mr. Maul
did some hunting. He said : his party
killed twenty-seven antelope and fourteen
bears.
City Clerk John Graves and Frank
Brownlee, clerk to the Board of Fire and
Police Commissioners, went to Chicago to
attend the opening exercises of the
world's fair.
Guy Douglas Ripley of Weeping Water
and Mias Josie G. Betts were married at
the home of the officiating minister. Rev.
Charles W. Savidge.
The Congregational church convention
favored the union of Gates and Doane
colleges In this state, concluding that it
would make one stronger and more ef
fective institution. ,
Charles Ogden became Judge Ogden
when be ascended the bench in district
cpurt and succeeded.. Judge Doane, who
accepted the ' democratic congressional
nomination. Judge Ogden was the re
cipient of many pleasant favors from
friends.
Ten Years Aso -
Mr. arid Mrs. W. J. Burgess " went to
Kansas Cltv' tor a short visit r-
John B, Mott, leader of the Students'
Volunteer movement, spoke on missions
to an assemblage that packed the Coli
seum, for the national convention of the
Christian church. ' '
The Board of Fire and Police Commis
sioners was considering the cutting down
of the fire fighting force of Omaha from
119 to fifty-nine, on the theory that avail
able funds Were not sufficient to main
tain the normal force. -A resolution was
adopted calling on the fire chief to re
port at the next meeting what fire houses
could best be closed.
. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bingham cele
brated their golden wedding at the
Kountze Memorial Lutheran church. The
bridal party was led by Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy White,
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hill, .Mr. and Mrs. W.
W. Bingham. The choir sang the "Bridal
Chorus" from Lohengrin for a proces
sional, and "Happy Bridal Days" for a
recessional.
Members of the alumni of Eureka col
lege. Eureka, 111., drawn together by the
Christian church convention, held a ban
quet at the Commercial club, at which
former Governor Poynter acted as toast
master. Hon. James Wilson, secretary of agri
culture, was in the city. He called at
The Bee office to meet Mr. Edward Rose
water, who escorted him to the city hall,
where they chatted for fifteen minutes
with Mayor Moore.
SECUIAE SHOTS AT THE PULPIT
DOING RIGHT.
Some of the. witnesses before the
senate committee investigating cam
paign contributions appear to ' have
gotten credit, for putting In a great
deal more money than they really
did. It transpires, however, that
some others put in a great deal more
than they were" presumed to have
parted with. The popular rating of
political contributors falls far short
of accuracy. - ; ; 1 -
People and Events
. When the Americanized Greeks meet
the standpat Turks, then comes the real
tug of war.
There is. hope for the hairless and joy
In prospect. A French savant has devised
a method of sewing hair on baldheads.
Despite the thunders pf proclamations
and the clatter of advancing warriors,
the Balkan was will not be fully on until
Phlllopopalls strikes the firing line.
Denver gets $1,100,000 for its city hall
and the site, the main consideration be
ing the ground. Douglas county's record
In giving away its court house with a
bunch of money thrown In, still holds the
bargain championship.-
A meager 110,000 a year Is the sum
total of the Income of an expert profes
sional grafter In the Ohio legislature.
The income didn't leave sufficient mar
gin for a trip to Honolulu or any other
restful resort for the weary.
Cleveland achieved such distinction with
Us boycott of the Meat . trust that It
feels brave enough to tackle the egg com
bine. While this boycott lasts the cackle
of industrious hens will carry" no ap
petising melody to mortifying souls.
' Base ball strategists continue discussing
the whys and wherefore of, the Red Sox
victory and the Giants' ui'tRt, and won
der why eight games were needed to
settle the diamond primacy. If they will
consult the box office receipts they might
make a hit . ? - ;
Thomas J. Ryan, former councilman of
Philadelphia, who snuffed 6ut his. own
Hfe a few weeks ago, left In trust for his
wife an estate valued at' $300,000. On
Mrs, Ryan's deatb the' Income, of' the
estate i 'to. be ' given' to the poor of the
Sixth' ward, .where the deceased got his
start in politics and in fortune making.
Rarely does bread cast upon . political
waters return, t6 benefit the' ward. -'
Boston Transcript: According to Dr.
Moss, the church is finding it harder and
harder, to get and hold "the man of
power." Perhaps this explains why more
women than men worship regularly on
Sunday.
Boston Herald: With Dean Briggs de
claring that compulsory prayers at col
lege may tend to diminish religion, and
the students of Perkins Hall voting to
have real beer beer nights, poor Harvard
is In for another round of criticism for
its degeneracy. Y
New ToVk Mall: There is said to be a
dearth' of university graduates entering
the Protestant ministry, but It does not
yet appear 1 whether a university educa
tion unsettles the faith of students or
merely prepares them for more lucrative
employment than the church has to offer.
Louisville Courier-Journal: A colored
evangelist in Georgia is reported to have
died of injuries sustained ' while conduct
ing a protracted meeting. This evangelist
appears to have been possessed of extra
ordinary powers as an "exhorter." He
preached a sermon of such moving char
acter as to work his congregation into a
religious frenzy. At the close of the ad
dress he was surrounded by a struggling
crowd of men and women who sought to
express their appreciation by wringing
his hands, slapping him on the back and
hugging him. Amid the Intensity of the
enthusiasm a husky male convert threw
his arms around the preacher and
squeezed him with 8,t'ch force as to frac
ture several ribs. fThe) preacher fell
helpless to the platform and was taken
home and put to bed. dying some hours
later as a result of the onslaught of his
well-meaning but over-enthusiastic congregation.
Leslie s Weekly.
Get up right in the morning. Go to bed
right at night. Start with joy in youi
heart, hope in the future, kindness i
your purpose.
If it is a dark day, never mind: you wit
lighten it up. Give a word of cheer, a
kindly greeting and a warm handshake
to your friends.
If you have enemies, look up, pass then
by, forgot and try to forgive.
If all of us would only think how muck
of human happiness is made by ourselves
there would be less of human misery.
If all of us would bear in mind that
happiness 13 irom wiuun ana nui irum
without, there would be a wellspring oi
Joy in every heart and the sun would
shine forever.
Try it! -
SUNDAY SMILES.
POLITICAL SAINTS AND SI.NEI19
What . Is Good in the Boll Moose Is
Wickedness In the Klephant.
New York Post.
What is legal and moral in California
becomes infamy, trickery and chicanery
when it appears ' in Idaho. To deprive
Taft supporters of a column on the Cali
fornia ballot is to do political justice; to
refuse Roosevelt supporters a column on
the Idaho ballot is to write one's sell
down as a reactionary. The feeble reason
ing of the Idaho supreme court Is that,
according to the laws of Idaho, the new
party has no legsl standing in the state,
and that voters wishing to cast ballots for
Its nominees must therefore go to the
trouble of. writing the names of its elec
tors In the column provided for that pur
pose. Now,, it may be quite proper to re
quire a Taft man to go through a good
deal of formality in order to get his in
famous desires duly registered, but to put
an equal burden upon the saints who are
for the third party Is simply perversion
of power and malfeasance in office. Dis
franchisement of Taft pickpockets in
California is a piece of political righteous
ness, a glorious safeguarding of our
threatened Institutions; disfranchisement
of Roosevelt patriots in Idaho what is
this but political robbery? The colonel
has once more put the country under obli
gation to Mm for a distinction between an
eternal verity and an infernal attempt to
thwart the people's will.
i "Truth," remarked the Philosopher,
i thoughtfully, "is by common consent at
. the bottom of the well. Yet, in these days,
1 why do they try to raise it from the" well
;by hot air?" Baltimore American. '
"Good gracious, you don't dare to send
1 out all that abuse of the candidate, do
you?"
"Sure, I do. It's all understood between
us. I give the abuse and he gets the
advertising. "-Cleveland Plain Dealer.
: "Just listen to the baby!" said young
Mrs. Torklns.
"Yes," replied her husband. "He 8 try
ing to yell his head off!"
"And Isn't it pleasant! The precocious
' "pet sounds as If tie were at a ball game
i and our side had made a home run.
Washington Star.
Blobbs-A deliberate lie is often pretty
hard to swallow.
Slobbs-Well, the truth Isn't always
pleasant to the taste, clther.-Philadelphia
Record.
"It's difficult for a man to be a candi
date and a political boss at the same
time." . ....
"No," replied Senator Sorghum: 'the
method are different. The candidate Is
supposed to get votes by shaking hands
with people, and the boss Is supposed to
get them by shaking his fist at them.
Washington star.
'What's this space marked off for
demanded the architect
"A laboratory," said the druggist, som
V JUU wo.ui. ...... ' " '
A modern druggist sells everything but
drugs." , '
"Well. I've got to have some place to
mix mv fountain syrups, haven't I?"
Louisville Courier-Journal.
A LIFE LESSON.
James Whltcomb Eiley. -There!
little girl, don't cry!
They have broken you doll, I know;
And your tea-set blue,
And your playhouse, too,
Are things of the long ago;
But childish troubles will soon pass by
There! little girl, don't cry!
There! little girl, don't cry!
They have broken your slate, I know;
And the glad, wild ways
Of your' schooldays
Are things of the long ago;
But life and love will soon come py
There! little girl, don't cry!
There! little girl, don't cry!
They have broken your heart, I know;
And the rainbow gleams
Of your yoljthful dreams .
Are things of the Ions aco; :
But heaven holds all for which you sigh
There! little girl, don't cry!
Health and Beauty Helps
BY MRS. MAE MARTYN.
" Mrs. J. S.: Wrinkles and other marks
of approaching old age which now worry
you are very common. However, you will
not have to worry if you will follow this
simple treatment: Apply to your face
every night a greaseless cream-jelly
made by mixing two teaspoonfuls glyc
erine and one ounce almoaoln into one
half pint cold water. Stir and let stand
several hours before using. Massage
frequently with this cream. It will re
move all dirt and excess oil from the
skin pores and in time you will not
have a rough, wrinkled face, but a fresh,
smooth, clean-looking skin of velvety
texture. I also find this preparation ex
cellent for removing tan, sunburn, black
heads, freckles and large pores in the
skin.
Juliet: Yes, any one afflicted with
superfluous flesh is always at a big dis
advantage, whether married or single.
To get rid of that annoying fat, stop at
your druggist's the next time you are
down town and get four ounces of par
notis. Dissolve this 'In I hi pints hot
water and take a tablespoonful three
times a dav (five minutes before each
meal), and your burdensome flesh, will
soon become cut down. The effect of
this harmless remedy is generally no
ticeable within a week, and you will
feel much better.
R. P. N.: To whiten and beautify your
face, neck and arms, dissolve four
ounces of spurmax in a half-pint witch
hazel or hot water, adding two tea
spoonfuls glycerine. Apply this lotion
freely and it will tone up your skin won
derfully and quickly. It makes the skin
soft and smooth, and will remove that
shiny, "muddy" look which is so annoy
ing to you. You will find this lotion
much better to use than face powder, as
it does not rub off. easily like powder
nor does it give one's face that "pow
dered look." I find this spurmax lotion
excellent for removing and preventing
freckles, chapping and roughness of the
skin.
Mrs. R. P.: If your hair Is getting so
thin that you have to wear false hair,
you should begin at once a treatment to
rid your scalp of dandruff which is the
direct cause of all scalp and hair-troubles.
If you will mix together an ounce
of quinzoin, one-half pint of alcohol (not
whiskey) and one-half pint cold water,
you will have a dependable remedy for
your hair-troubles. Rub this gently into
the roots of the hair twice a week, and
it will destroy the dandruff, stop your
falling hair. This 'quinine-tonic applied
regularly will make your hair soft, lus
trous and keep It from splitting at the
ends.
Maid: The quickest and surest way
to remove hair or fuzz from' the skin is
with a delatone paste. With water mix
enotich dela.tnnA in rovnr tho hnfra on-
.i.. .. j i . . i J .. A '
yix aim iu inu uj unco muiuies remove!
and wash the skin. This removes every i
particle of hair and leaves the skin1
smooth and clear.
Ester: Apply pyroxin to lash-rootsl
with thumb and forefinger and your eye
lashes will grow long and curly. Eye
brows can be made to grow thick and
glossy by rubbing on pyroxin with fin-1
ger-end. Be careful and don't get pyroxinj
where hair is not wanted.
Minnie H. : As you do not like the
idea of wearing glasses since they make,
you look so much older, why don't you
try treating them first with a good eye-;
tonic? If you will get an ounce of crys-i
os, dissolve it in a pint of water, you!
will have an eye-remedy that will prove j
very refreshing and. strengthening. Drop!
a few drops In each eye two or three I
t . . m u u j . a, u x a, ,1 duib il n ill uu
your eyes a worea or gooa. it WU1 not
smart the eyes. I find it excellent for
dull, tired, watery eyes, and a great aid!
even to those who have to wear glasses.
Victoria: As long as your blood is,
loaded with Impurities, those impurities;
the application of external remedies will,
do no lasting good, for they do not reach
the cause. Dissolve one ounce of kar-
dene and one-half cupful of sugar in
one-half pint of alcohol (not whiskey),1
then add hot water to make a full quart,)
and you will have enough inexpensive.
old-fashioned remedy to rid your blood'
of impurities, stimulate your liver andl
correct your digestion. Take a table-:
spoonful before each meal and your sal-l
low skin will again take on that beau-i
tiful color nature Intended you to have..
Your circulation and general health will!
improve, and the sores, blotches, rednessi
and other eruptions will cease to trouble!
you. No better general system-tonic can'
be tr.ade than by following this kardenei
recipe. Try it and get rid of that "run-
down" feeling.
Josephine: In treating your scalp forj
dandruff, it is necessary to keep it as.
clean as possible. Shampoo freely andl
as often as you need It. but never use1
soap or a soap-Jelly, as the "free" alkalL
will make your hair dull, lifeless and
your scalp harsh. Shampoo with a tea-l
spoonful of canthrox dissolved in a cupt
of hot water; then rinse in clear water.'
You will find this a wonderful shampoo;!
it will put new life into your hair and
cleanse your scalp as no other shampoo'
will. It lathers freely, dries quicklyi
without streaking, and leaves the hain
lustrous, fluffy and easy to do up. After
the hair is dry apply the same toniol
recommended to Mrs. R. P.
Read Mrs. Martyn's book, "Beauty.'
$6. Advertisement.
Again we ask that
pertinent question -Why,
O! Why
should you pay $200 to $250 per carat for diamonds when
our well organized buying power can secure the gems of
the world for you at from $150 to $175 per carat?
' Memorize these and use them as a standard and a
safeguard. ,
Arm sign of
m CROWN
UP THE GOUXN STAIRS