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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1916)
TIIK 15 EE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MAKL'll 15, l'Jlrj. J i THE -OMAHA DAILY BEE j founded nr edward roskwateh. VlCTOTb ROSE WATER, EDITOR. The Pee PuhHsbins; Company, Proprietor. WK rVlIJINq, FARNAM AN BKVF NTKgNTIU "t"i1 t Omaha poatofflos as ax-ond-claan rnat'T. TERMS Or SUBSCRIPTION. By carrlar Br mull ; . . per month. per ytr. rarty are Sunday , c torn I-aiir without Hiimlay 4 no Kvenlng and Sunday 4"e g.oo i Kvrnlne; without 8un1ay . .Z'r 4 00 . Frenlng without Sunday 2V 4 00 H in.lajr Pre only !c I do I 'ally arid funrtay Bee, three years In alvanr...siO.OO j 8-n1 notice of rnangs of adilro-a or Irresuierlty la . cUvcry Omaha W, CI mil at ton Papartmen. TIKMITTAKCm Tmlt by draft. exprvea or postal erdr. Only two. rnt stamp ra-tvd In payment of small accounts. personal checks, except 00 Omaha and eastern ex chansw. not acccptxi. OFFICES. OtnahaTne Bae Building. ,t Foitth Omaha l N street 'Mincil niuffa 14 North Mala Street Unooln fc I.llt Hulldlng. hlrae-o !. People Has PulMlng. New York Room lios, Iv Fifth avenue. St TOirla M3 Nw Rank of (mmrf. Washington 7 Fourteenth street, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. , Addrfaa rommunl.-ailona relating to news and ll ,'' tHal matter to Omaha Baa. Editorial Trarlment . FEBRUARY CIRCULATIOX, ; 54,328 Daily Sunday 50,639 t Dwlrht Williams, circulation rnenasar of Tha flee - Publlahtng company, being duly aworn, aave that tha . average rirculatlon for tha month of February, 191$, rm 14 dally and tO.m 8'inday. I1WIOIIT WILUAUA, Circulation MnMr i Btibacrtbad In my presence and aworn to before ma. thla d day of March. IMS I ROBERT liUNTER, Notary Public 6obecrlbers leaving tbe city temporarily rwuM liave Tha He mailed to them. Ad dress will be changed at often aa requested. Rushing hardtack to the front gives the ait - uatlon the old reliable 11(0 of war. j ; Maine municipal elections have tone over-J hlm!ngly republican. Straws point the way ithe wind blowi. i ; The political escalator Is a dangerous con 1 trapUon to climb, especially for' candidates 1 loaded down with odious records. Omaha wants a new Union Depot. Jump In, you others newspapers. When we land the prize, thee will be (lory enough for all. . ! So long as doctors disagree on the proper care of tbe baby, safety first warns fathers to tick to the old reliable system of leaving tha i an to mother. Forty thousand pesos Is aaid to be the Jrr(ce pi ace d on Villa's head. In view -of the lean and hungry look of tbe peso tbe premium Is much below the risk. j .! The jprimary election In Des Moines turns ; ' out to favor the "Liberals," but whatever that ! may mean In a dry capital of a dry state will ' require a diagram to demonstrate. j The patent office renews Its assurances that perpetual motion Is Imposlble In practice, but a fairly good Imitation may be teen In ' - "Bob's" naturalisation fee grabbing depart- ! mcnt. Omaha's national banks make a showing, with their nearly eighty million dotlara of de posits, la response to the comptroller's call last fall, that Is dazzling to the eye. It must have urea raining- money hereabouts' without any body realising It. What the water works andit proves con riuHively is that our meter rate atiU too high. On, aba water users could easily be supplied at 13 cents a thouifend gallons the same as Lin- -(.In waitr users without Involving the water district in a deficit. Brother Charley's name has now been filed &s condldate for governor on the populist ticket nr. ell as on the democratic ticket We should ihlnk the brother of a former secretary of state would have risen above attempting to perpe trate this moth-eaten political fake again. The federal supreme court sustains the practice of a minority of states In upholding !ihe validity of unrecorded deeds made prior '.to bankruptcy. E'ght states win and ten lose. The right of the majority to role encounters a kocckdown la courts as frequently as In pol itics, , . ... Experience with tbe sensational rumor factories operating for months prior to the Vsr'for the liberation of Cuba suggests the a;.ced of discounting reports from the Rio V'rande. Coloring alleged news to suit the 'interests served may be expected from that quarter, and. If taken at all should be snioth a red with salt. L Thirty Years Ago This Day in Omaha 4 Is It the Right Timet 1 It, or Is It not the right time for Omaha to atrtke out for a new Union Dpot? The fsct s that tbe need of modern and more adeqoate station facilities has been evident for a num ber of years, but when the project was .first urged, It made little headway because of the feeling that the condition confronting tbe rail roads was not encouraging, and the disposition of our people was, and still Is, not to be un fair In their demands. But condition have now changed on both sides: Omaha needs a new Union Depot to day more than It ever did. In fact, has made marked progress along every other line of municipal growth and development, while Its railroads have stood still or gone backward In accommodations for Incoming and outgoing travelers. The one thing we want right now, n the way of public Improvements, more than anything else, Is a new and creditable Union Depot. On the other side, all our railroadsare once more either on "Easy Street" Oy on the up grade. They cannot again excuse them selves with the "poverty plea," and they must admit that In depot facilities they are treating Omaha shameful'y shabby ss compared with other cities with no better claims. This, then, should be the right time for Omaha to start after the new depot, and keep after It until we get It. Delaying: Work on Preparedness. Senator Borah very properly urges that con gress expedite the plans for the new army and navy, Instead of frittering away its time In in consequential discussion of matters of less vital concern. If the work of preparing for natlonaf defense, which has been so earnestly requested of the congress by tbe president, Is to be done at all. It ought to be done promptly. Mr. Wil son, at Cleveland recently, said no man could tell what a day might bring forth, and it was therefore Imperative that we put ournelves In readiness for any event. . At the beginning of the present session, In December, pledges were msde by the executive and by the floor leaders that preparation for national defense should have precedence over all other business In con gress. Three months have now been spent In futile oratory, a tribute to tbe obstructive abil ity of the group of pacifists within the demo cratic party who follow the leadership of the late secretary of state In his opposition' to his former chief. Democratic factional differences are responsible for the delay that may mean rruch to the nation, If the president knows what he was talking about at Cleveland and elsewhere. Congress ought to speed up and do something, one way or the other. Alcohol at a Substitute for Gasoline. A forest ranger, carrying on research work at the University of Wisconsin, announces that experiments have shown that alcohol can eco nomically be substituted for gasoline as a source of power. This Is not a new discovery. More than ten years ago the Department of Agriculture carried on experiment to deter mine the power value of alcohol, aVwell as Its fuel value, and careful tests wre made. In dependent tests were made at different places throughout the country, with the general re sult that alcohol showed under working condl t'ons from two-tblrds to five-sixths the ef ficiency of gasoline. Following these experi ments an amendment to the revenue laws of the United .States was passed to permit the manufacture of denatured alcohol for domes tic uses. It was expected the farmers, who were then taking up the internal combustion engine for farm operations, would use tbe farm refuse, cornstalks, potatoes, and the like, to procure alcohol for their own uses. The law wee so drawn as to perfectly protect the gov ernment against any abuse by distillers, but It practically , prevented the farmer from, tak ing advantage of Its provisions. Tbe cost of Making alcohol under the present law puts It out of reach. Reasonable provisions, that will reduce the price to a figure within reach, will permit the adoption of denatured alcohol as a fuel and as a source of power. The Mystery of Speech . Oarrett T. eerrlae. WTTHEN you were a boy. the flmt time you tried VY whittle. In imitation of older hoya. yon probably uttered ' an unniualral and uncon trollahla anuaak. Tour ear told you that you wera not reproducing tha aounda that you had tieard from tha others, snd you tried again. Tou called your eye alght to your aid, and obaerved how the othera puck ered their llpa. and occaalonally wet them with tholr tons uee. Tou took advice from accompUhed whlatlera, who. If thay wera particularly Interaated In your if. forta, put their hand on thHr hlpa, stooped down cloae In front of you. and ahowad you exactly how to manasw tha llvlna- Imtrument. Tou tried over and over eaaln, and when you hit upon tho proper sounds you were careful to remember Juat what ahape you had given to your mouth and llpa, and Juat what force of breath you had exerted. Thus, by dint flrat of 1ml. tatlon and second of practice, you taught your vocal apparatus to produce tha aeries of aounda which wera In your memory. . It was self-education, and when It was finlahed yoJ could whlatle any tune that you heard, becauae your llpa and vocal chorda were trained to produce. In stinctively, vibrations In the air reapondlng to the sonorous concepts In your mind, your ears always acting as critics and guides. Havlnc attained this degree of skill. It was easy for you. If you had a talent for music, to whistle tunea of your own Invention, becauae all tunes are made up of certain fundamental notes, and you had learned how to set the air vibrating to the wave fro quencles of those) notea. Babies and birds learn It) the same way how to produce vocal sounds corre spending to certain auditory Impressions. At first theea ImpreaaJon nay not be connected with any mental conceptions. ' Thay are purely phyalcat reaponaes to external in fluences. Every apecles of bird has Its own single "song." which Is characteristic of the species, and an Individual bird seldom gets beyond the universal fam ily song of Us species. But tha human child soon acquires a wide acquaintance with many sounds, and Irarns to connect them with what we call mental states, and thus to express Its thoughts to others by setting of certain vibrations In the air. Thla Is the beginning of language. We need not enter "into the dispute as to whether or no the mind la something eaaantlally Independent, temporarily dwelling, within the body and acting through It, for. In either case, the management of the nerves and muscles to produce physical effects cor responding to mental conceptions must be acquired by practice and must bo limited by the capabilities of the bodily functions. Speech Is perhaps man's highest distinction from other animals, and it Is very Interesting to trace its gradual rise In the human species. If wa begin with the brains of the earliest types of men that have dt been discovered among the fossils contained In tbe upper layers of the earth, we find that there Is a cer tain development of those parts of the brain which have been recognized as associated with the power of speech (they He St the sides of the front half of the brain), and that there Is no similar development hi the brains of any lower animals, though the man-tike apes have the rudiments. Take, for Instance, what has bean regarded aa the most primitive human skull yet discovered, that of the "Pilldown man." found In England a few years ago. Elliot Smith, a high authority, has said that al though ths brain Indicated by that skull, which may be 1M.O0O years old, was the moat primitive human brsln that he hss ever seen, yet it already showed m Considerable development of those parts which in modern man we associate with the power of speech. To svoid misunderstanding It should be said that, of course, In these eases, the brain Itself has not bean preaerved, but anatomists can tell what the form of the brain must have been from study or the skull that contained It. A jaw which was found not far from the spot where ths ftltdown man's skull cap lay has been regarded as belonging to the same Individual,' and this jaw la ape-Jlke In character, thus showing, aa Prof. On born has. pointed out, thst speech must , have come while the Daws were still ape-like. Quite recently It has been asserted thst the par ticular Jaw la question did not belong to the Ptltdown man, but to an anthropoid ape which may have beet contemporary with him, but this does not affect ths conclusion thst the earltest men began te speak while their jaws were still the Jaws of apes. But who can Imagine what they saldT OeaspUea frees Bee rikia. " 8 The weatern executive committee of th Knights f ImXigv, headed by Thomas Neahan of Denvsr, ar-in-Omaha en4 established hoadquartera in the ' a it tie la houa. where Utey were eloeeted until a late hour with railroad employes of the I'nlon Pacific 'l hey will remain here to negotiate certain conceaalons lor the employes from tbe road. n' Tha remalna of Henator Miller of California went r()nout Omaha accompanied by members of the ('ir,.ily and a consreaslonal escort eompoard of Senator r j i i.lm P. Jones of Nevada and Kepreaentatlvea J. B. l.oailt and J. McKenna of California. Polk Lafoon a i, Kentucky, B. I klilllken of Maine, J. B. Morgan if It Mieaisalppl, Thomas 8prea"ue of New Tork and W. p, . Hepburn of Iowa. l'ava thrown or umaha la married to Muta Sarah i of New Tork before a company of friends at j't;-rnianla hall. The groom is in tha employe of i'S,V,ank sc Prince. . ). i it Detective Char lea i. Emery baa returned from a tjlnc trip to Dakota. m m . (lJ Mia adie Booth, after two months In IJncuH. iihca returned to Omaha to resume her work la the office of tbe clerk of Ike I'tited biate court. I- A disruption la threatened in ths First Baptist J'. t-.urch, growing out of a circular letter acat by W. T. r-ramaa to members of' the congregation denouncing j; ' tobacco habit and those addlctod to it. The lett-r a a due-, t atab at the pastor, W. J. Harris, who ii'.kes. Mr. heaman la church publicly denied any ih Intention, whereupon Mr. Harrle read a notice iimg a mealing of the church members to n (ion tuarda selecting a new paster. Lake Child Labor Bill in the Senate. The Keating-Owen bill, for the federal regu lation of child labor, which passed the house and la now pending in the senate, Is being vig orously 'attacked by the powerful agencies of the American Manufacturers' Association. Ap peal Is being made to the reactionary demo crats that the law is a contravention o'f that most sacred of democratic dogmas, state's rights. Tbe measure is designed to control the employment of children by excluding from In terstate commerce all articles into the manu facture of which enters the labor of children under the age of 14, and limits to eight hours per day employment between the ages or 14 and 1- The proposed law is being further at tacked on constitutional grounds, as being an undue exercise of the police power. In cases from Oregon and New York, Involv ing similar points, the supreme court has held that the police power of the state properly may be exercised to protect posterity by preventing the exhaustion .of women and children In In dustry. This principle has been so well estab lished thst it seems to be here attacked only as a pretext to permit the democrats to con tinue their pose as champions of progressive legislation and yet fall to enact the laws to carry out their promises. The southern cot ton statea are at present chiefly concerned in the defeat of the bill. Northern atates already have child labor lawa, but the great textile In dustry of the south Is based on the employment of immature boys sud girls, and under present conditions It Is Impossible to secure the passage of state laws to restrict the employment of chll dren In southern cotton mills. Great public Interest Is telt in tbe pending measure, which haa the support of all organi sations devoted to the uplift, and its course through the senate will be closely watched. Various exponents of "American righta persist In agitating the atmosphere and befog glng the Issue. Tbe effect is to make clear theti anxiety to get America In on their side of the , controversy. a 1 Tha( federal judgeship salary will no longer go to waste. But, my! How it paina those hungry democrats to see a hold-over republi- can still drawing $6,000 a yesr as postmaster of Omaha! t I Twice Told Tales Well, Hkrt Representative Bowdle of Ohio, whose vigorous sntl-suffrage a peach was the feature of a suffrage debate, sat at a reocnt dinner party la Washington beside a suffragist. Ths suffragist, desirous of showing woman's serf dom of servitude, said: "Mr. Bowdle, why does a woman, when shs marries a man, take his namsT" But Mr. Bowdle, desirous to show woman she! tared and easy econqmio position, smiled and an swered: "Why does she take everything else ha s gotT"- Phlladelphia Bulletin. After tke VtBe. "I want te buy a ear." said Felix Spatter, "and It must be a car tnat combines a reflex starter, a duplex nnuiher. radio-active cylinders. Heuffledoffer spark Plus, hot air reverse " "My dear sir, have you had your lunch V beamed me salesman. "Why. no. I-" "Well, lunch with me. and we'll talk It pver." said ' aieameji, ana mey repaired to Beanery's eatery, the most expensive place In tows. After the two had consumed a repast of Philadel phia scrapple. Denver aasa nuddln. Man kni. honeycomb cutlets, Springfield fritters and Das Molnee rnuoaro pie, iney each drank a quart of champagne. ana me auto salesman footed a dinner bill of S3 8& "Now we ll talk autoa." he said. Felix Spatter waved his hand. "I won't Inalst on all thoee nrovlalnna said, genially. They re only things Pvs heard people la in aooui, anyway, and I don't know the flrat thing about 'em. Atl I II do Is Insist on my original lnten. tlon of not paying roore'n S240 for a. ear Excusing hlinaelf. the auto salesman reached under ths table, picked up ona of the empty champagne bottles and sent It linking . musically into a million yiecea a.ainai rus rpauer a solid Ivory head Ixu villa Times. he People and Events With sll the power and dignity which envelop Jer sey courts, a magistrate at Bayonne reduced the betr allowance of a workman from M cents to 10 cents a ay. Married men are steadily gaining ground and wreatUig small chunks of freedom as time humps along. A judicial Solomon In New Tork upholds the right of a husband to pick his own clothes. Any In terference wiui thst right is denounced as usurpatlja A foot-warming device for trarflo policemen has been given a tryout at Pittsburgh and pronounced good. It oonalsts of a plate at the street IntersecUoa warmed by electric current. The copper absorbs tha current through his sola and calmly defies rheuma tlem and kindred Ills. Henry 6 legal, pinched In New York for operaUng an Insolvent bank In his department store, is out of Jail and back in Chicago, determined to win a for tune and pay off hie debta He admits making a fatal error In leaving Chicago for tha east The eaat thought bo, too, Inasmuch aa It did not tolerate Clil caso methoda as exemplified by Flefd HcfiT'e hi- As Parents waaalasj Chlldrea. ISNnOLTB EAST. March 13. To the Editor of The Bee: While passing through . . - - ' W. b.a your stste I nouirnt a copy oi ni and thus hsd the wood fortune to resd Ella Wheeler Wilcox's srtlcle on raisins; children. This Is not the first time i have had the plessure of reading this writer's articles snd poetry. But why does shs eonalder herself fit to bo a child welfare pedaaospue? Has she qualified? I mean by actual prsctlce. I would as sume that tMre.) Ella W. Wilcox Is the mother of a Urge family of a marked de gree of perfection as regards morals. Dr. Wiley Is sn authority on pure food moth ers, but the doctor hss qusllfled as an expert. I wonder If Ella W. Wilcox ever thinks thst she may be mistaken In her naive philosophy. Of course It reads well and appeals to ths kindlier sentiments of those who have no children. But does such publication accomplish good or bad resultsT Having qualified as an expert I venture to disagree with the writer at least with her method. It Is becoming a luxury amongst so-called child welfarers to berate and belittle parents. Often the only qualifications for such denunciation Is a somewhat overdrawn Imagination In the mind of the writer that she is en dowed with unusual powers of discern ment. It Is, I think, something like ten yesrs since the ' child welfarer came on the stsgs, displacing our late lamented maiden aunt. Like the aforesaid aunt. their plant always was that very wicked and Ignorant parents were willfully letting their children go to the devil. Since their arrival I should assume that children's morals would radically Improve. Has such been the case? I am Inclined to think not. Is It not possible that this In terference In the course of nature Is ac complishing more-harm than good? A mother, even If she be not a shining light amongst women, will accomplish more real good without interference than a whole army of philosophical wrltera A father who la a good provider will be a much better friend to his children then a whols platoon of Wlleoxea. FRANK STEVEN. . Greater Need off Reereatleai . Cawaed by Earopeaa War. OMAHA, March 14. -To the Editor of The Bee: The place of a playground in a community depends upon the ideas as to life's meaning held by the community. Everyone wants to get the most possible out of life, but not all have the name set of sstlafsctlons. Personal hspplnesa to soms means forgetting life's hardships in a stupor due to drugs or alcohol; to others ths sense of successful completion of a loved piece of work, while to still othsrs It takes tbe form of earning by self-sacrifice and service, the Joy of feel ing his own efforts have contributed some vital elements toward the happiness of his fellow men. The best type of human social organisation Is undoubtedly that In which thla last ideal predominates. In American communities It can safely he assumed that such an Ideal Is one of the most potent of local forces. It la the big objective? of almost all parents, In work ing for their children, it Is the vital prin ciple of church.. benevolent and charitable organisations. Our nation had Its birth in an association of ths colonists te "pro mote the general welfare" and "secure the blessings of liberty." Henry Bruere says that more Ineffi ciency has arisen In municipal work In the past from Indefinite service programs thsn from either graft or Incompetence. Men In positions of Importance to their fellow cltliens have failed through faulty objectives rather than through dishonesty or lasmess. They have not recognised certain definite ends as the goods they ought to deliver as finished product of their work. The next Important element In which community work has failed has been in poorly worked out machinery or organisation, designed to accomplish their definite work program. The last point or weakness hss been the personal effl clency of the worker. In view ef a community's Ideals, there fore, the first thing Is to work thoss Ideals Into a concrete objective toward which to work. The service program must be definite and free from general ities. Towork out such a conscious plan Is ths nrst business. It necessitates care, ful analysis of needs and local posslbtlt ties, physical and financial. Conditions of modern life have changed far more than we are conscious of, and our ten dency to cling to old ideas Is a powerful drag on effort to make. new adaptations, This precise moment In ths world's his tory is a peculiarly trying ons; America alons ef the great nations Is a conglom erate of .many peoples, having various social inheritances, snd therefore more restrtcttnr hsblts ef thought-adjustment te overcome. Moreover, Europe, spend ing its last reserve of wealth In the wsr, will face tha grimmest necessity of ap plying Itself to problems of efficiency after the war. Old habits ef Indolent ac ceptance of ways of doing business will be jolted out of ths men returning from months of the wild life at the front. They will have a contempt of old customs, and will be urged to superhuman effort by the mln they return home to, which If hlatory proves anything at aU, will awaken In them reserves of power and reeouroerulness which contented and prosperous peace would not have tapped Just as the spent sthlete gets his second wind from unsuspected reserves. Thsy win be harder competitors than ever be fore and America without the awakening they have undergone must still meet their stimulated competition. " Neceaaity always brings out previously hidden pow ers In men. Tbe necessity they will face and we muat sdopt their pace or toks their dust. Ws talk of the strain of modern Industry. Thst strain must In crease tremendously the next generation if America la to hold tts own. And ths vsriety of our population their alien hsb lts of thought and life, their reawakened prejudloes snd antaconJsins' brought to new life by aympathy with Europe's bit ter raoe hatreds in this wsr, complicate our problems far beyond what other peo pie must meet. Ws must take this con sciously Into account In devising new methods ef training our youththeir In telligence In schools, their social atti tudes and physical equipment in ether Institutions er In extended schools in the Immediate future. We shsll not have) a service program objective worth the name If it does not embrace a scientifically adapted program of meeting- this very pressing need. The old individualism ef early America must give wsy to a new snd better effort toward promoting the general welfare. C. If. ENGLISH, uperiatetident of Piblie Reereatloa. CHEESY CHAIT. Jim e'mart says he la coins to Ens- land to enlist In the army. If he gets Into a flxht I hope hell Set hia face smahed." "ViTint a cruel wish." ''Not at all. The aurseons are mak ing them new fares over there."' Balti more American. Tom That savins. "It's hard to kern a gj.od man down," is thousands of years Tom For a fact. That what IhM whale told Jonah. Koston Transcript. "Why are you staring at those lunch room chaira?'" that broad arm on which to set food ?' 'I'm aoinir to have that set duplicated In mahosany for afternoon ieas." Louis ville Courier-Journal. Mrs. Owens John, the butcher from where we used to live has found out our snare. lie caller! with aat vear'a b'll and was really Impertinent. iwns (liotlv) Imnert nent. was ha Well. .now. we'll lunt let him wait for his money. Boston Transcript. "When wa clva our hnhv hae rflnnar It la Ilka hlowlna ourselves un with hlnh explosive." "How do you make that out?" "In both caaea. lan't It a rilna a mlta affair?" Baltimore American. lm MR-KABIBBLE, WHEN JlCY FIANCE Wff A ?0X CAWDV, SIOWJ) I SrUS rr wrw him? NO -WE L1AWJE10 HAM? A OUARREL LAYF3? IN THE" EVENING AMD YOU'LL fBSQPSV MXlWato HIM SO NICE! Political Boas I can land you a Job ravin' thrra thouaand a year two to you and one to mc. Worker And do I have an assistant who does all the work? Boss eure: and we split hslf of his Salary between us. Philadelphia- Bulle tin. ' "Whet business sre you In now?" "Tha sand business." "And how Is that?" ' wen, 11 a a laniansina; son or dubi ness. Plenty of people need more sand and would doubtlens like to purchase). If I could dnly supply that demand, I'd get rich." Louisville Courier-Journal. Impecunious Buttor May I ask. air. If you are going to settle anytning on your daughter? Oirl'a Father Well. It rather looka. if she marriea you. that she la aoina to set tle something on me. Boston Transcript. the straightforward young man. nnai ao you wisn me to aoi "Speak a srood word for me." " V( T .1 ..... 1 , J iiiwm, un j uiiiiii in my power for you. But If you realised how littlA InfliunM T V m I.A .I,K mntKa n n ,1 the girls, you'd realise that you are iu.ying mignty poor pontics." wssning tun own DYSPEPSIA OF WOMEN Special Treatment Required. Many women suffer from a form of Indigestion or dyspepsia which does not yield to ordinary treatment While the symptoms are similar to those of ordi nary indigestion, yet the medicines usually prescribed do not restore the patient's norm&Leondition. There seems to be a kind of dyspepsia caused by derangement of the female organism. While this appears to be the game as ordinary Indigestion It can be relieved only by a medicine which, be sides acting aa a stomach tonic, Is good, for female ailments. Read what auch a medicine did for Mrs. Williams : Bhe says: "Before I began taking Lydia E. Finkham'e Vegetable Com pound I was trou bled with dyspepsia and bearing down paina In my back and aides, and after my meals my stom ach would bloat up till I could scarcely get my breath. At times I was ao weak I could hardly stand on my feet and I looked hollow-eyed and my akin was yellow. Now I have a good color, have gained In every way and can do my work without any pains. I think it Is the best medicine on earth for stomach troubles of wo men." Mrs. Nellie Wiluaus, 81 West Sd Street, New Albany, Ind, pi t 1 BRAHDRET W '"ci-T PILL An Effective Lazati-ra Purely Vaaretabla Constipation, Ijidlgestioo, BQjotuoessa, late-Coated i P- " jr aaa-' yiali law r IQcenis IheLartfe Package Gxooets gi A HEAP Or REAL FOOD " mur" T-ssii irimi-"r"niiii rn Pi A delicious, steaming dish of Faust Cut Macaroni and tomatoes can be prepared in 30 minutes. There's no time wasted in the kitchen, because Faust Cut Macaroni is cut into inch lengths and is ready to cook. It is strengthening, nourishing and economical. Ten cents' worth of Faust Cut Macaroni gives more nourishment than a dollar's worth of meat. And it's nearly all absorbed by the body. Faust Cut Macaroni can be served in so. many tasty and appetizing dishes that there's never a complaint of sameness of diet. It's always good and inviting. ln$it on getting Fautt Cut Macaroni. Writ for fv rcip book. MAULL BROS.. St Louis. U. S. A. I HOTELS AXD RESORTS. HOTELS AND RESORTS. White Sulphur Springs Vht Virginia OPEN ALL THK YEAH HI GREENBRIER EUROPEAN PLAX Finest Bath Eatabliahment in America, Connected Directly with the Hotel Nauhmim arte? principal hatha of European Health Retort are given in the Bath Haute by e killed attendant! MED ITEKBT J. X. BLOCTTst KaaagiasT Dlreotor Beeldeat aaaage Persistence is the cardinal vir tue in advertising; no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant ly to be really succcessfuL