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e { 4 ’ R - 2 - THE OMAHA DAILY BEE “"FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Comp: BER BUILDING, FARNAM ANL K 1. | OFFICES. Bulldine. h Omaha—318 N street. Counell Bluffs—14 North Main street. ‘Lincoln—% Little Buflding. earst Bullding. m—l‘«;om lll,ull l‘nh avenue. 508 New Bank of Commerce. 7% Fourteenth Bt., N. W. COI'RESPONDENCE, o a1 t m- oa-“tllauou mnl‘l ‘: “‘vlnvi ‘ JULY CIRCULATION. 53,977 jabraska, County of Douglas, sa.: pubmight Williaza, g“fl{lldtlrlm manager of TheHes ioh] ‘oom| ) n, uly sworn, says e RS Reouiatieny ‘tor Uy nduthy oF suly, 101 “wes of Ne DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Ofrculation Manager, hnulbqs.ln my presence and sworn to before me, this 34 ‘o HERTHUNTER, Notary Publfe. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Beo malled to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. Anrun 94 Thought for the Day | There' s beggary in the love that can be reck- oned. — Shakespeare. _— Ak-Bar-Ben's dates have been definitely an- nounced. Mark them down on your calendar! — Omaha continues a steady upward climb in bank clearings. Results measure the efficlency of the push. —_—— Attorney General Reed’s ruling is worth the toll. The heavenly chorus at the plebelt de- werves encouragement. It's dollars to doughnuts that the occupants of those rallway commission ‘‘vacancies” will office in the state house longer than the attor- rey general. Galveston sends official greetings to the world with the triumphant assurance that its great sea wall has conquered the raging hur- ricane seas. Hats off to Galveston! Spm—————— No one with heart attuned to pity will decry the joy Russians draw from the Gulf of Riga. It is the first rift of sunshine that has pierced the gloom of Petrograd for five months, The report that a good Indian has been made a fleld marshal of a Mexican revolution- ary band should be accopted with caution, The field marshal was aliv( ‘ast acoounts, — - 1t is evident from the number, variety and vastness af the reports of the Industrial Rela- tions commission that the literary junk depart- ment of congress will require a few more five- foot shelves. emm———— George W, Perking in the east and Vietor Murdock in the west are beating up the political woods for bull moose game. The open season is some distance off, but pothunters usually get busy first. Sm—— + The last of Brigham Young's nineteen wives has “‘crossed the divide.” It family parades are permissible on the other side the Salt Lake lime-up should exclude Solomon from the re- viewing stand. Sm——— The labor and material already expended in building and destroying fortifications in Enrope during the present war would have built a con- tinuous sea wall around the whole Gulf of Mex- ico, and then som: —_— Spain fs about to join other neutral nations in demanding damages for vessels sunk by sub- marines. The amount of business pfled up by the underwaten craft lusures overtime work for ~the German claim department. p—— Not a word from the Water board's high financiers In answer to The Bee's exposure of its water bond sinking fund being computed on o 4 per cent basis instead of a 4% per cent basis, just to take more money out of the pock- «ts of the people than is required. E—— ‘Women constitute the vast majority of the members of the National Educational associa- tion. Whenever the women really want to elect one of themselves president of their organiza- tion, they can do it without waiting for the aid or consent of any masculine member on earth. ly on the new school street and on Twentieth and are expected to be ready for Effect of Compensation Laws, | The report on the first year's operation of the lowa workmen's compensation law contains figures that must be satisfactory in a large de- | gree to the advocates of that method of dealing with industrial mishaps. In its main features | the Towa law s eimilar to that of Nebraska, and | therefore the figures shown in the report are of interest in this e«tate. Thirteen thousand, three | hundred accidents are reported, of which 2,781 were sufficiently serfous to come under the re- lief provisions of the law, under which $136,000 Of this total $96,000 went to the vietims and $40,000 to the doctors who at- | | was paid out 1 ded them. This report doesn't show where | { | | | | | | the lawyers came in, but, as the lowa law is automatic as regards relief, the contingent-fee ambulance chaser probably didn’t get much. The average amount of compensation paid to the in- jured is less than $40, and the average doctor's | 111 is a little less than $15, showing the indi- vidual items to have been rather low, but the relief afforded at the time it was most needed s the best recommendation for the law. It is estimated that $400,000 was pald in premiums to {1dustrial companies by the Iowa employers dur- ing the year. Again Mr. Bryan’s Desk. So much ado has been made over the carry- ing off by Mr. Bryan of the desk from the office of secretary of state when he relinquished his cabinet portfolio, that it is only fair for him to have the benefit of his own version, which has just now come out In his own Commoner as follows: Those who are Interested enough to make inquiry will find that it is customary for officlals to pur chase from the government pleces of furniture fo which they have formed an attachment. Bach cabinet | member, for instance, takes the chalr which he has used at the president’s councll {able, paylng therefore theycost of & new one. Mr. Bryan takes his, depositing for It $5. He also buys his desk chair for $0 and n desk for $%0—the cost of new furniture of the same character. The dek s the one used by him In sign ing the peace treaties. Is it strange that he is fond of 1t? Mr. Bryan's explanation then is that they all do 1t, and that he has been merely following snclent and honorable custom. The only weak spot is that Mr. Bryan does not refer to the fact as reported, if it be a fact—nor does he dispute it—that this was an historic desk that had served all hig predecessors, and had been used by every succeeding secretary of state since Willlam H. Seward, if not farther back. If each succeeding secretary of state had ‘taken his desk, buying a new one for the next incumbent, | then, of course, there would be nothing ‘“his- toric” about It except the history made by the secretary of state personally appropriating it. Yet even here it might accord better with the proprieties for each secretary of state to buy and install his own desk in the first instance instead of buying it from the government after using it. In that way no cabinet officer’s desk would at any time be worth anything more than the market value of a new desk because it would not have had time to accumulate any historic reverence. Those interested will walt to see Whether Secretary Lansing becomes “attached’ to the desk which Mr. Bryan has so consider- ately furnished for him spick and span, suf- ficlently to take It off Uncle Sam's hands in the same way when he retires from the position. Lining 'Em Up for Billy. Omaha 1s just now getting a fine illustration of modern methods of organization for work in the extensive and somewhat elaborate prepara- | tions being made for*the coming of “Billy" Sun- day next month. So very thorough is the pre- liminary survey that onme might almost think that not much will be left for the great revival- ist to do when he gets here. Business methods are being adapted to religious effort in such a ‘Way a8 to leave nothing to chance. The clity has been districted and subdivided for the various phases of the work, and is being thoroughly canvassed that the greatest possible amount of information relating to the religious predilec- tions of the residents may be available. Great effort is belng made in advance to awaken in- terest and arouse sympathy, so that when the head of the movement comes, he will find all ready and and prepared for his ministration. The thoroughness of the preliminary work is the most interesting feature of the campalgn from the standpoint of the student. Omaha is getting the benefit of the experience gained in other cities in this regard. So far there has been no lack of responsive effort, and If the “trail” is not kept crowded after “Billy" un- limbers his vocal artillery, it will not be the fault of the advance guard, — Died Like a Man. From all accounts, though In the nature of | things undisclosed sources of information, Leo M. Frank died llke a man. Surrounded by im- Dlacables, bent on his destruction, he went to his death supported by such courage as is not the portion of a gullty craven. The “inside | story” of the lynching, just made public, is a recital of facts that more than any other so far known, give color to the bellef he was not only wot convicted by a fair trial, but was wholly innocent of what he was accused of. Seven hours he rode in silence with his self-appointed | executioners, answering with monosyllables the two direct questions put to him. No appeal for mercy, where he knew he would get non: debate with the men who had determined his death, he said nothing they can treasure in their memories as a pretext on which to excuse thelr cowardly course. His weakened physical condition was more than compensated by the strength of his spirit, and through the long ride he sat erect, and at the end he walked firmly among his captors to his end, The Milk in the Cocoanut. For the truth of history, the Water board manager’s organ wants it known that the water fand levy has not been raised quite 50 per cent over last year, That's a minor matter, inas- much as it 1s about 50 per cent over what it was when the city obtained the plant. The milk of the cocoanut lies in conceding that *‘the board could readily have gotten along without fny water fund levy at all.” The Bee's point is, therefore, well taken that the hoost in the levy for which the Wat board is respousible is unnecessary, and that it ocould, and should, | lighten the loads on both taxpayers and the water users instead of needlessly piling up an excessive surplus to be kept in the banks or used for speculative purchase of bonds and se- curities THE BEE: OMAH TUESDAY AUGUST “Lest We Forget” Congresgman J, Hampton Moore Opening of Mass. Republican State Campaign. BST WE FORGET, is about the best text that can be recommended to republicans at the presen! time. The European war and the temporary prosperity it has brought about in #pots is being used for all it | 1s worth to make republicans forget what was “dono to them' in 1912 Above all things this is the time not to forget, but to remember. We should remember that the whole country was prosperous, and that all men were employed prior to 1912, We should remem- ber that the entire republican system of prosperity was attacked and that we wers charged with responsi- bility for the high cost of llving and for a great varlety of economic evils. President Wilson came to congress with a direct message to back up these charges. He ¢ld not mince words, but declared emphatically that the progress we had made under the protective tariff system must be destroyed. In Address from the Throne,” April 8, 1913, immediately after he had called congress in extraordinary session he said i @ We must abolish everything that bears even the semblance of privilege or of any kind of artificial ad- vantage ¢ ¢ aside from the duties laid upon articles which we do not, and probably cannot, produce, there- fore, an¢ the duties Iaid upon luxuries and merely for the sake of the revenues they yleld, the object of the tariff duties henceforth lald must be effect! competition, the whetting: of American wits by contest with the wits of the rest of the world This was the beginning of the president's efforis to put into effeot the promises ot the democratic party In any discussion of the relative merita of a repub- llcan or democratic system of government, this mes- sage of President Wilson should not be forgotten Neither should we forget the failure oi the adminla- tration to reduce the cost of llving, to destroy the trusts, or to remedy any of the other evils charged against the republican party. We should not forget the consequences of the policy which the president advocated with such vigor. Our democratic friends prefer now to discuss the war in Europe, but we must not hold them to the industrial war they have wrought at home. What was the effect of the president’s tariff dec- laration? First—A staggering blow to all business United States because of the fear of what come Second—The passage of the Underwoood low tarift law which produced the most unsatisfactory industrial conditions, Third—The loss of trade and employment at home, and the development of industries abroad. Fourth—An Income tax and a war tax imposod upon people who were at peace with the world; and a grist of legislation adverse to American enterprise Tifth—A depleted treasury with more taxes in sight, since the present war tax bill expires by limitation at the end of the current year and will have to be re- newed in some form the to in was In seven months, from January 1, to July 81, 1614, the loss of revenue, under the Wilson-Underwood tariff law, as compared with the repealed republican | tarift law of the previous year, was upwards of $23, 000,000, The damage to the country in that period was enormous gnd forelgn manufacturers displaced $243, 000,00 worth of American labor. That, however, wns only the beginning, The whole argument in favor of Presitent Wilson's low tariff system was based upon #he alleged control of trusts and monopolies and the high cost of living Let us remember how his remedial scheme worked out. By admitting the goods of forelgn cheap labor free of duty, and at such rates of duty as made American competition impossible, the Wilson anti- “artificlal” tariff law cost the American treasury u full $100,000,00 of revenue the first year. The retail price of foreign commodities was not reduced to the American consumer because the forelgner added the duty to his price. The democrats, therefore, @id not relleve the American consumer, but added $100,000,000 to the profits of the foreign manufacturer, who was thus enabled to take the work from the American workingman. 2 If anyone thinks the cost of living has been re- duced by Mr. Wilson's plan of reducing the tarift and lowering the ‘“artificial” barriers which check competitive imports, all he has to do is to compare the prices of 1916 in the heyday of the Wilson admini- stration with the prices of household commodities in the closing days of the administration of Mr. Taft The advantage in prices was all in Europe, not the United States, And “Lest We Forget,” let us sum up the present aituation, all the vexatious laws it could, Is now trying to assure All business, both big and little, that it did not mean any harm. Any suggestions that business has suf- fered reverses or that capital has gone into hiding or that workingmen have lost employment have been treated ah “a state of mind." That sort of loss in busineas or employment was purely “psychological.” The man who lost employment or who suffered in business wants to remember this. He does not want to forget it because we are having spasmodic proa- perity in certain parts of the United States, due to the demand for war supplies in Europe. The Buropean war does not excuse the democratic party for using up tho 850,000,000 balance that was left in the treasury when Mr. Wilson took hold. It does not excuse that party for losing $100,00,000 of revenue and a full $1.- 060,000,000 of bustness and wa, It does mot excuse the Income tax nor the war tax. It does not excuse the deficlency that now exists In the treasury—that 18 to say, the excess of expenditures over receipts that must eventually lead to an {ssue of bonds or additional taxes. It does not excuse the tendency of all legis. lation of the last two vears toward government owner. | ship and the destruction of individual enterprise, It does not excuse the violation of de: retrenchment and economy, nor does it excuse the most extravagant congress in all history. It does not excuse fake antl-trust legtslation, infurious ship. PIng laws and the delfberate destruction of Ameriean shipyards by the proposed use of American taxes to purchase forelgn vessels. It does not excuse the raids upon the treasury for sectional purposes. Al th things should be remembered, and “Lest We Forget let us take up the United States treAsury statements from day to day and discern for ourselves whither we are drifting. T have before me the treasury statement of Aukust 10, which Includes in collectiuns all income and war taxes and all revenue recs el ecelpty on the - cratic basi; e mocratic pledges of 500,000 less than they were for the same periq and that our expenditures were 32,300,000 greater. Hery is a net lo: for six weeks of the new year only, of approximately $19,000,000, ; Remember another thing, that it we do o poorly with & Buropean war operating as a protective tariff we shall still have the Underwood low tariff law on the books when the war closes. Remember that the moment the war in Europe stops the men who are in the trenches will go back to the mills. It will be neces- sary for them to work hard and at the lowest wago As the Wilson administration stands today it stands to welcome the products of this cheap forelgn labor as soon as hoatilities cease. Republicans who belleve in the protective tariff system should not be lulled into the bellef that “Watchful Waiting” in Mexico or “ultimatum' letters to Purope are a sufficlent atone- ment for the wrong that has been ‘done to industries of the United States. Our duty would seem to be to unite forces and to proceed immediately to the repeal or revision of those laws which, when the competi- tion of Europe is again free, can only humiliate us financially and economically. B et BN L Spotted. Mayor Riddle of Atlantle City said at a clambake on the beaeh *“You ean tell, 1f you'rc clever, a vacationist's home position. All vacationists, of course, are not bankers or helresses or manufacturers of war munitions, though most of them look it. “Yea, you can spot them out if you keep your eyes open. Thus, on a fishing excursion to the bank, it ‘was easy to spot a blonde In a Paguin gown for a telephone ®irl because, as she w: drawing in a flounder, somebody called to her, ‘Hello" and she frowned and answered impatiently “‘Line's busy! "—Newark News. od in 1914, The Wilson administration, having passed | For less than six weeks of the f\ : scal | year of 1918 it showa that our recelpts have been §16,- | his | | ThePees | work for him he would at least pay him | | This 1s not a ract efler Fairness of the Letter Rox. SHENANDOAH, la, Aug. 38.-To the | Editor of The Hee: I wish to congratu- late you upon your fairness in publishing lotters for your Latter Box columns. You | have shown your fearlessness in allow- ing Lucien Stebbins' article to ,close the debate which started. I consider his the best yet and hope that it attains a wide | circulation C. B. LB BARRON, | Golng Back Too Far. CRAB ORCHARD, Neb.,, Aug. 23.—To the Editor of The Bee: A contributor to your Letter Box today charges it up to ermany that during the American revo- lution “a petty German king” assisted England by furnishing soldiers to fight against the colonles, If the writer of that letter will look up the historical data touching this fact he will find that the petty German king he refers to was the absolute ruler of a sovereign principality, whose connection with the German empire is slightly less intimate than that existing between the United States and the defunct kingdom of Korea The German empire had its beginning in 1871 Acts, treaties and agreements | made and entered into by Prussia or any of the minor German state prior to that time are not binding upon the empire unless they were specifically recognized and assumed by the imperial government, any more than a treaty made by the soversign and Independent republic of Texas would be binding upon the United States today unless specifically recognized by the federal government. * 0. J. WERNER. | Protection to Bulld Up the Went, | TOPBKA, Kan., Aug. 23.—To the Editor of The Bee: Some years ago a bill was being voted upon in congress one day which provided for an appropriation for a relative of the late William N. Holman, then serving in the house from Indiana. | (You remember him—the old “Watch-dog of the Treasury.”) For once he failed to object, but voted “aye.” Instantly a witty colleague, appreciating the situa. tion, arose and recited the famous lines: Tis sweet to hear the watch-dog’s honest hark deep-mouthed welcome as we draw near home. Thut story came to my mind as T read of that great free trade newspaper, the Springfield Republican, demanding tariff protection. The famine in dyestuffs, you | know, has paralyzed the manufacturing Industries of the Republican's home city and other Massachusetts manufacturing | centers, and the Republican i3 now clamoring for protection, in order to bulld | up a dye manufacturing industry in order | that Massachusetts' industries may not | be agaln crippled by a European war. The same argument can be made for the beet sugar industry of the middle west, and let us hope that the light that is breaking in the east will fall upon our democratic mewspapers of this section. PHIL BASTMAN, Bay Does Beam Obscure Mote? SOUTH OMAHA, Aug. 2.—To the Editor of The Bee: Let me explain to A. D. that the Georglans have learned the “civillzed ways of the north.” They learned them fifty years ago when they were carried to them by a noted northern general who spread ‘northern civiliza- tion" and future “twenty century barbar- ism'’ as he marched his army to the sea. In later years they have taken lessons in the same ‘‘northern civilization” from Kansas, Colorado, Indiana and other states located north of Mason and Dixon iine. Doubtless the sheep and cattle men contributed some information to the night riders, and our own Greek riot may have helped some. Possibly A. D.'s splendid knowledge of the south came by the Carpet Bag route ~hence the lack of shock, Such & pity Mr. Waite that the Oglethorpe strain should exist longer than Salem witch-craft strain—blame it all to the climate. Really, now, are you northerners consclous of the beam in your own eye? A SOUTHERNER. Just a Little Knoek. OMAHA, Aug. To the Editor of The Yee. Jesus of Nazerath was so poor thgt he did not even own & stone where- upon he could rest his head. Now he must be looking back to that time of | depressed poverty, and promises himself that whencver he employs anyone to | well. Illly Sunday is working for Jesus | (s0 he suys). He must be well pald or | else his advance agent would not be want- ing to rent for his iord and master a furnished {wenty-room mansion. Yes, they are even talking of hiring Fontenelle hotel rooms at $5 to $15 per day, per room, but what is the diference as long as the pinheada are willing to foot the bills, The local preachers must be hard up for Jamb chops when they resort to a tle-up with the foul-mouthed Billy Sunday. P. WHG. Safety om Raflroads. CHICAGO, Aug. 2.-~To the Bditor of The Bee: Your editorial on “Safety of Raflroad Travel” is of interest not only as a good record for the rallways, but it indicates a well marked tendency. The fact that there is a tendency, toward increasing safety on rail- ways is shown by statistics covering periods of years. But I am chlefly in- terested in your reference to the propor- tion of fatalities to persons trespassing on the right-of-way and to the too pre- valent custom of “taking chances.” Trespassing on rallway property is a pecullarly American habit. It is not due to ignorance of the risk, but to the great American habit of “taking a chance.” There is & general impression that the trespassers killed are largely hoboes. Nor are they for- elgners. A committee of the Association of Rallway Claim Agents recently made | an exhaustive Inquiry in relation to the | trespassing habit and the victims of it. The report covered nearly 1L000 specific cases, or about 9 per cent of the total number of casualties reported to the Interstate Commerce commission in 1914, It showed that 8 per cent of the tres- | passers were Americans. Only 13 per cent were reported as in the hobo class and & per cent were reported definitely as not in this class. Only 19 per cent were | forelgners. Casualties to trespassers are 4 per cent | fatal. Official records of casualties to | all persons except trespassers, and in- | cluding passengers snd employes, in all classes of acecldents show a relation of | injurfes to fatalities of about thirty or | forty to ome. Almost half of all tres- passers reported in all rallway casualty lists are reported killed. Of course, the explanation is that they are walking on the tracks, or climbing or riding om cars. | They are struck by locomotives or knocked off and run over by cars. Safety appliances, in the provision of which the | rallways have spent much momey in the | last twenty years, do not afford them pro- tection as they do to passengers and | Boy Scout, Campfire Girls, etc., all im- | press the warning sgainst narcotic | poisoning, and this fond mother keeps | an eye on ull these Institutions to see | that the demands are met, and then joins the Mothers' club jollifications, that nn‘l much has been accomplished—when lo, | e s r N the dreaded enemy has crept into the | Large and Inflamed. Nearly home, and mnested itself into the very | & . bodies of her cntire family, as well as | Crazy. Disfigured Terribly. herself; in fact she herself has been Face a Mass. feeding it to her loved ones, “Al la White House Cook Book,” and thus she her-| self has become the direct vendor of the HEALED BY cUTIcURA venom, she has declared unceasing war ' SOAP AND OINTMENT My eyes have just been opened, and | el 12 £ P« e the revelation has taken effect, for| employes. The “sefety first” propaganda TOLD IN JEST. does: not include them within the scope i of its activities. In the same year only | nio Crabshaw—When you were fn the eighty-five passengers were killed in|hammock with that young man, didn't I train accidents. Applying & 80 per cent|®ee his arm around you? i y | fatality ratio to the 8000, which fa|, Mariorle=\Why, mamme. we con obviously within bounds, it appears that it Is just fifty times safer to be & pus- | senger on & railway train than to steal a ride or to walk on the track as & short cut. Trespassing on railway rallway trains is taking a long ing a little.—Judge tracks or on hance. F. W, L No Smoked-Up Grocerles BLAIR, Neb., Aug. 28—To the Editor of The Bee: My womanly indignation rises to such a degreq that I would throttle some of the villainous conditions that. secretly undemine all the sacred | efforts of home, school, church and state; “Here's a sclentist who says th tor when the average village grocery be- olvj]e(\:: commonly regarded as inanimate der, to lay the snares |Teally have feelings.' R SR o ey e T belleve it. 1 heard a clarinet last of death and distruction in the Very ar-|night that spunded as if it was suffer- ticles of food, it is time to act. Soclety |ing horribly."—Washington Star. in general has carefully placarded the| ..y 1usnapq won't dare criticlss my avenues of life of the dangers of the | party gown next winter. “Why not? “He's wearing a self this summer tobacco habit, and the institutions of the lond have been lending their aid in de- veloping moral in this line, so that the fond mother can in a measure | feel safe when she kisses her child on the low-neck shirt hir -Detroit Free Press suasion T was troubled with an itching on my the village grocer, from which she gets | o = S3L VAT T K pien, The her provisions, has ita tobacco depart- | it S (O L large and fn- ment at the front door, so that at its Samed. 1 scratched and opening the fumes are carrled back frritated them till they nearly set me crasy. The breaking out disfigured me terribly, and ftched nearly all the time. My face was simply a mass of sore pimples. 1 was troubled for about a through every line of shelves, then the habitues that inhabit these places, smoke | and spit and saturate the floor. Women, let us fight for clean groceries, | and that they shall be free from all to- | baocos, mo smoking nor vile spittoons permitted—real sanitary places. And let g oo g 5 a 1 tobaccos be sold in places for that| o0 - tried —e— S Bt special purpose, “Smoke Houses,” if 1t | mppen” " told me to try Cuticurs must; for I don't want to feed it t0 MY | goup and Ofntment. 1 sent for & free sam- family. To fact, grocers will be glad ple and bought some more. I received quick rolief and now | am completely healed.” (Slgned) Miss Effle M. Rine, Bremen, Ohio, Jan. 19, 1915, Sample Each Free by Mall | With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad- dress post-card **Cutioura, Dept. T, Bos- ten.” Sold throughout the world. for this condition, and if we demand it, the old tobacco worm will be chased out of the grocery store. JENNIE WREN. | A TOAST. Marion €. 8mith in Youth's Companion Here's to the old earth, and here's to all = = = = that's in her, To the soll of her, and the toil of her, and the vallant sou { that win her; and the gift she s and her prizes, To the face of her, and the grace of her, | and all her awift surprises, | ¢ HOT WEATHER DEBILITY with a feeling of languor, exhaus- tion and extreme depression, is a condition which clearly indicates a poverty of phosphates in the body. eplenish the supply of these strengthening elements, and Here's to her mighty dawns, and golden splendor; | To the heights of her, and the nights of | her, springs and their surrender; Her storms and h with rose | er frozen scas, and the L mystic stars above her, The'fear of her, and the cheer of her, and all the brave that love her. Here'a to her valleys warm, with their little homes to cherish; The gleam of her, and the dream of h and the loves that flower and peris! To her citles rich and gay, with their stern life-chorus ringing, The noise of her, and the joys of her, and the sighs beneath the singing. | ‘restore the health and energy by | using HORSFORD’S Acid Phosg)hate (Non-Alcoh: l Keep a bottle in your home l Here's to her endless youth, her deaths her reviving; The souls of her, and the goal of her, that Keep her ever striving; | Her little smiling flowers, and her com- | forting grass and clover, | And the rest of her on the breast of her when striving days are over. | 3 2, Here's to the old earth, countless chances, The heart of her, and the art of her, her trowns and (ender glances; ‘With all her dear familiar ways that held us from the starting: Long might to her! And good night to her, when the hour Is struck for | parting. | with all her SERVICEG00D WORK THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK The Food-Drink for All Ages Bee Engraving Dept Shampoo Hints It's not the soap that you put on your head that hurts the hair,—its the soap that stays in the hair, the remains of the soaky suds that penetrates hair fibre and scalp pores. Lee’s Liquid Shampoo cleans itself out too. RICH MILK, MALT GRAIN EXTRACT, IN POWDER #** The purer the soap the more likely to curdle in hard water. Use raln water or distilied water for the “lather-up.” A few ounces suffice. Any clean water will do for the quick rinse-off. *** Don’t use hot water, —its 100 soaky. *** Oily or greasy hair takes more shampoo than dry hair and more need of soft water. #** For excessive dandruff, falling hair, scalp eruptions, ete., use Lee's Liquid Tar-Sulphur Shampoo twice a week for @ while, then use regularly Lee’s Liquid (green) Sham, once a week and you will have no more trou . *** | ee's Liquid Shampoos clean quicker, dry and leave hair and scalp in better condition than any other. i wcker b, Sold by druggists. *** Accept no substitutes. ¢ GEO. H. LEE CO., Laboratories Omaha, Nebr. Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertising;: no matter bow good advcrtising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant- ly to be really succcessful.