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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1913)
PHE OMAHA SUNDAY BEBJ: MAY 4, 1913. Musicians Who Will Give Benefit for University of Omaha LARGEST IN THE WEST TO BE INSTALLED AT THE CLEANING PLANT OP ' DRESHEB BROTHERS sr wwt&Ki Kabul 1 WATETTOMOSKS-WiflT Should Mandamus Commissioners to Assess Special Taxes. WANT PAY FOR WATER MAIN IVnter .Doard Would Force Council 1 I'roperlr Owner .riftr Cent a Foot for Exten sion or Mains. The Omaha Water beard made It first move In Its attempt to set trio coutta to lorco, the city counc.l to assess property owners to cents a foot for extension ot wfcter mains In tliir city this morning. Counsel for the Water board filed a peti tion for a writ of mandamus compelling tlw city commlts.oners to sit as a board c' equQiizauon and to assess taxes to pay ocpenaes'of extending a water main In disttlct No. 2. r Seven property owners would be af fected by such a writ. District No. X Is In the vicinity of Thirty-ninth street and Dewey avenue and was create! by the Water Board by a resolution parsed July 31, 1912. ' Tho petition relates that the city coun cil rtfuaed to assess taxes for this w.tter district on advice of Corporation Counsel Baker, who believes the city is without authority to make such a levy. The Water board asserts that the naln consists of 20 feet of eight-inch cast- Iron plpo and 321 feet of six-Inch p;pe. The contract was let William S. Doll janA the ptlco fixed at 1334, but the Water ucara claims u cost an aaa.tioniu ,h. It Is allcsod In tho petition that th-t taxes If levied would bring 415. DOCTORS IN TIMES OF PERIL Prompt and Kffecttvo Service of the Profession in Recent Disasters. During the recent' period of disaster and havoc ordinary 'dvents were rele gated to t,tie back pages of the news- . papers. Every Irsue of the dallies was full of heart-rending and pathetic stories of disasters' storms and floods. The people responded to the call for helt w.th the magnanimity and promptness which characterizes tho nation. From the scenes of disaster came the call for food, clothing and shelter, But before tlili thero came a call for physicians to minister to the wounded, the sick and the dying- From almost overy afflicted lo cality soon came the same statement, ;J'A special train carrying volunteer phy 'slctans, nurses, dressings and medical supplies Is on the way to the sceno of disaster," So It Is after every great calamity. The first men on the scene are phy sicians, performing their sacred work fit saving life and relieving the suffer ng. Thti happens so constantly as to bo .n accepted occurrence, No one ex presses any surprise. t On the contrary, surprise woilld be aroused only If the 'nearest available physicians ever tailed to respond In numbers tuual to the need. Leaving their own work, volunteering wlthout hesitation for the hardest serv ice, they toll often for days and nights 'without Intermission, without asking for cr' expecting compensation. Instances re not hard to find. 'Following the re cent cyclone In Omaha, one -survivor Jwrltes: ''I have personal knowledge- of physicians whose homes were destroyed, ;-yet the moment they knew their fam ilies were not Injured they left, them, and worked all'nlght, ministering to the rnalmed., and dying." There never has been a' public calamity In which the services of physicians, were not Instantly pffered, without money and without price. At such times what becomes of the In numerable sects and cults which, under ordinary conditions, are constantly try ing tot usurp the place of .the scientific Tme.dlcal profession and undermine the confidence ot the public? -Apparently they sink into obscurity and silence. Wlwn the emergency arises, what havo they to offer? Suppose the dispatch from Ohio last week had read: "A special train containing one hundred osteopaths is pn the way to Dayton. All of the sufferers will be given spinal adjustments ns soon as the train i ar rives.'' Or "It is reported that tOO people are dead and thousands rendered home less and in danger of their lives through exposure due to tho floods in Columbus. A special train containing 100 chlropatlcs Is being sent to the scene at once. Those suffering from Injury and ex posure will be given Immediate treat ment for nerve Impingement." Or let us suppose that those who disdain all material methods should emerge from their state of self-absorption long enough to do something practical: "Senator Works telegraphs that he has arranged for a special train, containing 100 Christian Science healers, to be sent to Omaha. This train has been given the right ot way over all railroads. All persons Injured In the cyclone and the blizzard will be given mental treatment as noon ns the train arrives.'' No such items hae appeared lt any of the news. papers. They would bo greeted with laughter from all over thee country. The peculiarity common to all of the un scientific and Irrational cults and fads, Is that, In times of real peril and need, they have nothing to offer. When lives are In danger and when death rides on the wind and waters, the people want the men of scientific training and ex perience, of cool Judgment and steady nerves, who can carry to them all the aid the human intellect In Its centuries of struggle has been able to discover. Fads and Ism may be followed by some ot our people In times of peace and safety, but they fall when real danger threatens. Journal pf the American Medical Association. ' . Persistent Advertising is the Road to Big Returns. The Best Tonic 'or Spring Use (The Home Doctor.) "To best cleanse the system and rid the blood of those Impurities which cause drowsiness, spring fever, slug gish action of the liver and general iprlng sickness, there is nothing quite 10 good as a home-made kardene-tonlc. prepared as follows; Get from any drug) store H pint alcohol and one ounce kar .dene; mix these with H cupful sugar then add hot water to make a quart. "No matter how lacking in strength and energy or how rundown one may be, a tablespoonful of this splendid Ionia utvcn before meals will soon purify the blood, fill one with energy and the feel Ing of perfect health, and remove all plmplesfjor sajlowness. This simple, in expensive syetem-tonlo Is a perfect liver regulator and will dowonders as a tan lly medicine In preventing sickness."' Advertisement. WUI S'viWf,iS, Mill WHMMIHP Isf KJSSKVi.V f J. TXi' HEALTH VALUE OF BATHING Dolly Tubs nt Homo Mny Be Sfndo Greatly Invtsxoratlns for Worann. We have today a wonderful knowledge of the therapeutio value ot baths, both ot luxury and of hygiene. The absolute purity ot the skin being essential for health, it follows that the dally bath, either medicinal or-emollent. Is the surest means to obtain it! and there is almost nothing which keeps tho skin softer and firmer or the limbs more pliant and the body more strong1 and vigorous than the dally bath, Physical culture exercises, breathing exercises and baths will keep the normal woman In perfect condition, preserve tho contour ot youth and beauty and protect the body from Invasion by the germ of old age. It Is useless to say that good looks are not .assets, both In domcstlo lite and In the business world, for they are. Extreme hcauty may be Its own un doing. Still, the woman who Is healthy and attractive in form and feature an i who makes an effort to remain so be yond middle ' ago not only adds to tho sum total ofi beauty In the world, but sheds a particular charm In the home. No woman can radlato this charm Who neglects her appearances, and without It much of the happiness and Joy In life is lost. The use of water plays a most Impor tant role In the hygiene ot the body. It Imparts vgor and beauty to the skin, aids Its power of absorption, carries off the waste products and assists nutrition. Friction and massage should always fol low a bath. In the. first place, they aid the general reaction! secondly, they ex cite the proper functions ot tho skin and stimulate the normal nutrition of the tissues, . Ther.e is no Infallible rule for the time and kind ot bath necessary for the pres ervation of the health and the body beautiful. It Is only by experimenting that one can determine the frequency and the temperature of baths best agree ing' with the individual. Some ot the herb baths are excellent for nervous troubles,' being both tonlo and soothing. Tho following Is a delight ful mixture for the tired, worn woman: Thyme (dried) 200 grammes Jtosemary tanea; , .w yrummes Mallows (dried) ' ..200 grammes I.lndon (dried) 09 grammes Bicarbonate or soua grammes Steep the herbs In eight quarts ot boil ing water for one hour! decant and dis solve the soda in the Infusion. Add to the bath. The penetrating sweetness and Invigorating yet soothing effect of this aromatic bath must bo enjoyed to be thoroughly appreciated. One At the most refreshing and tonlo baths is prepared by dropping slowly Into warm water sufficient ot the following lotion to" make, the water milky and fra grant: Tincture of camphor 1 ounce Tincture ot benzoin M ounce Cologne . ounces The following is wnai is cauea a "Deau- ty bath" and gives a wonderful luster and whiteness to the skin: Marshmallow flowers pound Hyssop herbs uound Bran Hour jiaunua The materials must bo Incorporated with one another and put into cheese cloth bags. New York Tribune. HARDY MAN JENDURES MUCH Stands Up to Kxtrcmet of Heat and Cold Better Than Plants or Anlmnls. Man may with more or less discomfort endure the climate of any part ot the elobe whereon ho lives. On the other hand, plants nnd animals cannot exist in temperatures far higher or lower than those to which they have become accustomed. But man moves from one extreme to the other with, gen erally speaking, but small physical dis comfort. Explorers visit the sands of Africa and the ice fields ot the north, re turning to their normal environments within some cases a distinct Improvement in physical condition. Man Inhabits pretty nearly every part of the earth, with the exception ot the Immediate vi cinity ot the poles. Men of science contend that the low. est temperature at the earth's surface are not found directly at tne poles, but at some distance south of the North Polo and at some distance to the north of th eSouth Tole. Then, too, it is claimed tho greatest degree ot heat is not, as might naturally be supposed, to bo en countered at the equator, but at some distance to the north and to the south of that line. The records and statistics show that the coldest place on earth Is In Siberia. The lowest temperature ever recorded In the open ar was SO degrees below Fan- renhelt) at Wcrchajansk, Central Siberia, , up to 150 marks (W5.70), or confinement.'' on January 15, JSS5. The highest tempera- j The law, as Interpreted by the courts, ture 1 set down at 124 degrees above jdoei not applv when an individual or a zerrr (Fahrenheit), registered In Algeria, smsll group of persons Is disturbed by Northern Africa, on July 17, 1887. noises, but only when the publlo In gn- These records ot extreme heat and eral Is disturbed, cold afford a range of temperature cov. The term "public in general" is, how ering the whole. Innsbitable world of tit , ever, contrued to apply to a number of degrees, or two degrees more than from 1 families living In the same house, or zero to the boiling point People who In - habit these places of extreme beat and cold are found to be exceptionally healthy and live to a ripe old age. In our own country the extreme range of heat and cold Is not so great but one may live In comparative comfort n any section: yet the same conditions apply to anlmtl and plant life here as prevail throughout the world. Animals and plant, that survive the winters of the south could not endure the winters of the north. The greateit ot the extremes ot heatilexr. and cold in the United States are found t' . . t . k. -. tas and Montana southward to Texas and " JQHfSTON. Arizona. Tho temperature in the north Vest In the winter months frequently drops to 30 or 40 degrees below zero and occasionally runs below CO degrees, while the heat of summer In tho central west and southwest touches 100 degrees or mora. Regardless ot such extremes, tho climatic conditions throughout tho entire Rocky mountain rango are delight ful for ten montha of tha year. Tho most equitable temperature throughout the year In our country Is found along tho sea const. Nearly two thirds of the entire population dwell In sea coast cities. Harper's Weekly. LONGEST BRIDGE IN WORLD Steel Arch Bridge Over Itell Gate Will lie Marvel of Con struction. The Bteel arch bridge over the Hell Gate, In tho northern part of Now York city, will be, with Its viaducts, 'the largest bridge in the world. Its construction has only recently begun, but preparations for" It havo been In progress for seven, yearj,. It Is expected that trains will tun over It In less than four years,. The bridge and viaducts will measure 16,840 feet In length. The Tay bridge In Scotland la W.TR0 feet, and the famous Forth bridge 9,000 feet. The Hell Gate bridge will form a part of the so-called connecting railroad, which, though only ten miles in length, will cost about 6.000.000, out of which the cost of the Hoi) Gate bridge will probably be 1.200,000., The connecting railway, which Joins the New Haven systom with the .Pennsyl- vanla, begins nt the New Haven yards,' In the Bronx. It Is carried on a viaduct to the Bronx Kill, which It will cross by a lift bridge 300 feet long. A viaduct T.000 feet long will bring the line to Little Hell Gate, which will be crossed by a bridge, and a third viaduct, which crosses Ward's Island, will continue to the edgo of Hell Gate, which will bo spanned by the great bridge. The catastrophes of the Tay brldgo and tho Quebec bridge are borne In mind by all competent engineers, and In the care fully wrought plans for the Hel Gate bridge every possible precaution has been taken to Insuro Kb safety. It will bo built strong enough to support on Its four tracks at one time four lines of the heav iest modern locomotives. But it Is hardly within tho bounds of possibility that under the worst conditions ot congestion It wll ever be called upon to bear such a burden. About 400,000 cubic yards ot concrete will be required for this bridge and 4.0M tons of steel. Some pieces ot steel will weigh 1C0 tons apiece. The bridge, of course, will be of steel; the abutments of the arch will be stone and concrete towers, which will divide the arch bridge proper from the steel viaduct approaches. The base of the towers will be ot granite, the upper por tions ot molded concrete. The design of the simple and massive towers harmon izes with the design of the arch, Gustav Llndenthal, formerly bridge com mlssloner of New York, is the consult ing engineer and architect London Sphere. GERMANY TO BE NOISELESS ot Um Prohibit Everything Ex cept Snorlnnr In Sleeping Cars, The laws governing noises in Ger many are severe. For Instance, according to the German criminal code, "Whoever In defiance of law and order shall cause a disturbance of the peace or perpetrate a public nuisance Is punlshabln by a fine (to pupils assembled In a public sopool, If they are disturbed by a barking dog or cackling fowl, tha owner of the dog or fowl Is liable under the law. The Berlin street ordinances prohibit the playing ot tnuslo or the crying ot wares by hucksters or newspaper venl ers In the streets, unless permission I first obtained from the police officials, and prohibit the transportation of all articles, such as sheet iron, chains and other metal object, liable to mane a nose, unless packed so as to be noise- But the new ord'nances now coming r.A. w- ...... ..hi ....-.4 1 tn tEus not only must police permission yecnai be obtained for playing musto in the streets, but also In all cases when played In buildings, It can bo hoard In tho atrecets. Otherwise, when music Is played or sung In rooms which connect with the streets, tho windows and doors of the rooms mun he kept tightly closed! No loud singing, whistling or hurrah Ing and no bellringlng (except the Jingle ot Melghbells) Is now allowed In the (streets. Morcovor. the new ordinances forbid th cheating of beds, carpets or clothing In open windows or on balco nies connected with the streets. Finally, the new rules require that vehicles with out springs shall be driven slowly, so as to reduce the noise from the vehicle or its contents to n minimum . Thete details suggest what might, even In much greater moderation, be accomplished in American streets. Tne puuook. CHURCH BUILT IN TEN HOURS Australian Town Challenges tho World vrllh Nolnhla Speed nccord. .One ot tha most remarkable building (feats' on record has Just been accom plished In Australia, At tho town ot Bankstown, New South Wales, a good slze.il church waB erected 'from foundation to roof In ten hours, While this was probably tho shortest time that It has ever taken to erect a large building, there have been many othor remarkable In stances ot quick building In the history ot architecture. A few years a chapel known as the Split Log Baptist Mission church, In Kan sas City, was erected In the course of a single day. The chapel was twenty-four1 feet wide and forty feet long, and had' eats for over 200 people. At sunrise: thero was nothing to be seen but bare land, but at 8 o'clock the tame ovenlng, a service was held In tho fully completed. place of worship. A remarkable feat about this chapel was that It' was built entirely by amateur laborers,. Tho people of a small Baptist congregation wanted a new chapel, so they set to work with a win to build one, and men, women and children Joined In the labor with equal enthusiasm. At tho Ideal Homes exhibition at Olym. pla In London last year, an even more wonderful piece of work was accom plished. This was nothing less than the erecting of an elegant eleven-room villa n less than six days. When it Is said that 75,000 bricks and over 30,000 tiles were used In Its construction, some Idea of the remarkable nature ot tho task can be gathered. Altogether 23) tons of material were employed. In California a few years since two to tally blind men erected a pretty little Dungaiow, witnout any v iuide aid what, ever, In the space of a few months, Brown and Martlnes were the names of inese ciever ouiiaers, and although, of course, they could not see a single prick which they employed, their house, when completed, was pronounced by experi enctd builders to be almost perfect in its workmanship. The two blind architects worked hard both by day and night, and they were watched in their labors by crowds or astounded and interested spec tators. Philadelphia Ledger. ALLIGATOR SCARES TEACHER reason In JVntarul lllstorr Passed Up 'With n Scream and a Itescne. When Mls Lillian A. "Welsh, a ectnoj teacher at South Norwalk, Conn., pulled down the covers of her bed she found a frisky young alligator there. One look was enough, Springing to tho top of her bureau, she shrieked, "Put It out!" The door of the room was locked and Miss Welsh had no desire to unlock It. Nor did she 'want any member of tjie Storey family, with which she Uvea, to come In. Even In her excitement ihe did not forget that her raiment consisted of a slnglo light garment which for the greater part of the time Was far above her ankles, Under the circumstances her cries were misunderstood and the fire department was summoned. By the time the firemen arrived the truth had ben ascertained and Miss Dorothy Smith, another teacher, whq owned the alligator, had selzeJ it and returned It to Its cage. The alligator was only eight Inches long. It had lust been sent to Miss Smith from Florida New Yprk World. Bam Public School IlalldlnR. ABERDEEN, Scotland, May t.-One of tha public ichool ot this city was partly burned this morning by militant suffra gettes, Th,e damage amounted to 11600 A large quantity ot suffragette literature was found scattered about th? building, t Key to the Situationflaw Advertising, 2,000 Gallon Benzine Still Built for Dresher $57,000 Plant at 2211-13 "What on earth IS that contrivance?" "It Isn't a boiler; It lan't a furnaco; what CAN It bo?" thoueandB of expressions ot thin sort wcra hoard on oil sldoo a tow days ago when tho above pictured, tank UUo affair, was bolng hauled from tho frolght depot to Dreshor Brothers over nrow lng Dry Cleaning, and Dyeing establishment at 2211-2213 Farnam St. Well, reader, here's information for your benefit. Tho contrivance pictured above is a specially designed Bonzlno Distilling Equipment, built to Dreshor Brother's special order, by a well known firm of Dry Cleaning equipment spe cialists at Brooklyn, Now York. You see it's this way; to clean fino fabrics, dainty clothes and the like, it, is absolutely nec essary that tho Dry Cleaner has an abundant supply ot pure Benzine; In fact, tho raoro rotlned the benzlno, the better the grade or cleaning work turned out. Now thon, when Dresher Brothers startod their present plant at 2211-2213 Farnam St., they Installed' what was then tho biggest still In this section of tho country; a still pf 150 gallons capacity. Imagine thon, what a phenomenal growth Dresners must havo enjoyed when It has become necessary to Install this newer still with a capacity ot 2,000 gallons. This nowcr still was plannod by Dresners and built to their special order by tho world's' largest still oxports and you have tho buildor' word for it that this Is the largest benzlno still ever sent west of the Mississippi river, , Dresher Brothers aro dolly discarding equip ment that would ho hailed with delight by the ordinary cleaner, bu that's tho Droshor way; If something newer and better comes In Drosh ers want It no mattor what Its cost Take, for Instance, in tho matter of this 2,000 gallon ben zine still, "Al" Droshor made a special trip to Brooklyn, Now York, to plan that. Ho spont sav cral days with the designers at tho factory and tho result Is a ploco of equipment built accord KNOCKS WASTEFUL HXPHEN Spotlight Turned on Ono of the Wars Unman Energy Is Wasted. There is enough energy waited in placing the little hyphen In the words "to-day," "to-night" and "to-morrow-every week day to haul a passenger train around the world, according to statistics that have been compiled by those Inter ested in tho strictly modern movement toward higher efficiency. It Is claimed there are 200,600,000 English writing peo ple and that they average to hyphenate these words "to-day," "to.nlght" and "to-morrow" three times a day. That Is, while some may not average to do this more than three times a week, and a few, perhaps, not three times a month, others write those words and place the hyphens In them scores of tithes each day, especially newspaper men, type writers, authors, business men, school children and the like. The acquiring of sufficient power from making these hyphens each day to propel a passenger train around the world is figured on the basis that It take halt an ounce of energy to make the stroke either with pen or pencil, and more for a tvDewrlter that represents th hyphen, and this would total 2.1M.00O pounds it energy, or sufficient for the train. It takes an ounce ot energy to make the hyphen on a typewriting machine and three ounce of energy to make it on a typesetting machine, and the same statis tician has figured that typewriting ana typesetting machines alone take up suf. flcltnt enrgy each day to propel a bat tleship from New York to the Panama canal. All these figures were not complied for amutemtnt, hut as an argument against using the hyphen In these words. Many people do not use the hyphen, but It ap pears that the majority do. Those who are working toward greater efficiency in everything claim that the hyphen In these words Is not at all necessary and rhould be discontinued by everyone, sav ing a great deal of valuable time and energy.-Phlladelphla Ledger. TREE'S VEINS AND ARTERIES nnnnln flap Still the Marvel of Nature's Koglneerlna Skill, How the raw sap travels from the ab sorbing roots beneath the ground to th topmost wlg on an oak or elm tree, more than 100 feet above, and to nearly four or five times that height in the case ot some of the mammoth gum trees (euca lyptus) of the Tamanlan fortsts, and In the glgantlo Wellington!, ot California, ing to Dresners own needs; a benzine still largo enough to moot tho Droshor tlomand for a few soaiono, at least But "Al" Dresher says If a 5,000 gallon still becomes nccossary ho will order it on tho Instant. Now then, reader, you havo an Idea of tho sort ot ontorprlso shown by Dreihor Brothers, Cloanors. You hcodn't wonder a bit how this concern has grown to bo tho largost ,ln the.enttro west In tho short spaco of a few years; you noedn't wonder why so largo, a procession of de livery wagons and outos lino up In front ot tho. Dresher establishment dally.- Bend your work to DreshorB and have It handled rlghtfy; It rfiattcri not Whethor you hare a $2,000 Turkish Bug or a filmy precious ball gown ot lace and silk, either will bo handled with extreme care. Then remember, too, that your smallest 'Job recolvca tho samo careful con sideration. In this day and ago anything and everything, can be cleaned and cleaning, It must be admitted, Is vastly more economical than buying, Dntihers bwvo built up an Inconceivably largo out-of-town business benauso they wero tho first to offer the "express paid one. way!' induce ment. DreshorB pay express one; way on any shlp ment of work amounting to $3 dr ofert ' And tho 'DrcBher"uranch agencies are Jlvely affairs also. Droshers maintain a receiving sta tion at tho Porapolan Boom of Tho Brando'ic Stores and at tho Dreshor Tho Tailor establish ment at 1515 Farnam St. When these branches wero established kind hearted competitors claim ed they wouldn't pay and couldn't last, btit tho branches aro yet there and thriving nt that. , Cajl Tyler 345 fpr a Dresher wagon; .the Dresher phono exchange is a private one and you may always get in touch with tho head of any ono ot the twenty or more Dreshor departments by calling tho ono number TYLER 348. Just remeinbor this! Dresher 'Bros., w,bo havo just Installed the 2,000 gallon ''still" aro "still" growing. has long puzzled the physicist to explain, The old Idea that capllarlty Is the factor at work, the fluid being conveyed up the trunk and branches after the manner of oil through the wick of a lamp, becomes an altogether Inadequate explanation, Especially Is this ro whtn we realize that, In some ot the Internal tissues ot the stem, the pressure exerted reaches from eight to twenty atmospheres, or In other words, from U0 to 300 pounds to the square Inch a force greater than that In the boiler of a railway engine. This mighty pressure, scattered more or le Irregularly through the tissues of the tree, drives the sap to the buds and forces them open? expands their leaves, and Is oonntantly at work wherever the process of building new structures Is go. ing on. It it obvious, therefore, that the engineering arrangements for th 'con ducting and controlling ot this powerful stream ot life-giving sap must be very perfectly organized, Indeed, they are more than that; they present marvels of mechanical construction which are not only mechanical on Account 6f their per fection, but are so minute that man can only penetrae the mysteries and beauty of their structure by means of hlEh-poiviy microscopes and careful chemical Investi gations. Even' then hr Is left baffled and wondering. strand Magazine. TOES ARE BECOMING HEELS Modlshlr Dressed Women Walking Uackivard a Coming; Possibility. A modlshly dressed wonun walking backward need causa no surprise a few years hence, She may simply have lived so closely In style that she has devel oped the "new heel," situated where her toes ought to be. The discovery of the new heel Is that ot Dr. Max Strunsky of New York. It blames It entirely on high heeled shoes and finds women would rather continue 66 Figure How can you expect to possess good health If you are careless with your Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Theeo organs are tho "controlling power" and must bo guarded against weakness. To this end you really should try a bottle of HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters 1 YrrS eaner Far nam St to sufer with It than to use common sense shoe', which make the toot look large. "Th anterior arches become promi nent and bulge and are covered with Callosities." he reports after htn ,xam Inatlons of the latest freak. -"Not only do tha arches perform? undsr pressure, of the additional burden, the function of heel, but they actjujra all Up character Utlcs and every semblance of heel." urf Btrunky says women with foofc complaint .are found' almost Invariable to have trouble with tho anterior arch, Ho finds the afyy: throw the weight of the body exactly whr -weight was never intended to go. "The heel I the atrohgct part of th, foot and Is constituted to carry the main bodily weight." he writes. 'The -hlh heeled shoes which women wear. how. ever, practically compel them to walk fin me neaas oi tneir metatarsals. Thujf every time they take a step they Jam th mttatanal heads on the ground. "High . heeled shoes compel the ante rlor arches to assume the function of weight carrying structures or heels. Metatarsal walking Increases the size and strength of the anterior arches and changes their flexibility and elasticity, essential to a normal gait, to rlaldlty." -New York Mall. Tho Persistent nd Judicious Use ot Newspaper Advertising Is the Road to Dulne Success. Saved hy Ills Memory. During tho campaign around Manassas, null Run and Fnlrfax. General Phil Kearney, Inspecting his command one morning, found a man who had polished the front of his shoes, but not the heels. The genernl looked him sharply In the eye for a moment "What do you mean," he laid, "by coming to inspection with the toes of your shoes polished and the heels muddy?" "Genera!," the soldier said persuasively, 'you told us a good soldier never looks behind him." dentil;' Ktaruty passed on down the Ilfie.New ur' nun. If Out mllll illl miiiiMII MMtH ft