Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e, o THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VIOTOR ROSEWASER, EDITOR. Pee Publishing Company, Proprietor. BUILDING, FARNAM AND BEVENTEENTH. at Omahs postoffice as sscond-class matter. OF BUBSCRIPTION. ] By carrier By mall per month. per oar, £ address or com plaints of delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation REMITTANCE. draft, express or postal order. Only two- recel in payment ot ao- checks, except on Omaha and eastern FET "h B;fldm Bluffe—-14 North Maln street. Little Buflal Hearst Bull A lork—Room 1106, 386 Fifth avenua 608 New Bank of Commerce. 7% Fourteenth St., N. W, CORRESPONDENCE, communications relat! to news and edl. mfl- to Omaha Bee, itorial Department. G —————————r e e AUGUST CIRCULATION, 53,993 braska, County of Dou o Witiama, cirediagion 1l pany, bein " Girculation % , #8: ager of The Bee Publish says 'h.‘l;i‘: E ‘duly sworn, for the month of August, 'WIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. Subscribed In ce_and sworn to before me, thia 3a a"LyE:mm 1918 ERT HUNTER, Notary Publie. Bubscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. “Our busy ex-presidents,’”” eh? What about our busy ex-secretaries of state? For his helpful u;ommod;Uon, the weather man ought to have a regular job with the street cleaning department. Sem———— Love of excitement which leads youth to wrongdoing emphasizes the need of more fre- quent dusting with the parental slipper. —— Wish those map-makers who used to label Nebraska “Great American Desert” could come ‘back and take a look at our State Falr exhibits, S — A state-built paved highway from Omaha to Tdncoln, with free bridge crossing over the Platte, would be a paylng investment for Ne- ‘braska taxpayers. Czar Nicholas leans hontuily on his divine pulmotor as a means of pulling his armies to- gether, but is not overlooking a chance to speed up the ammunition factories.. Sr— In the meantime, the split of that $5,000 premium paid out of the public funds for the #tate treasurer’s bond among ‘‘deserving demo- awalits further explanation. e——— Take note that the letter carriers’ mational convention includes delegates from overy state in the union. Too many of our national con- ventions are national only in name. ——— ' “Billy” Sunday will also reach out for new A carry his evangelism to London, so can Sunday. Peace-loving people at a distance may faintly the fierceness of the war in Europe from monarch applauds air, ralds endanger the memorial statuary of his | ' “Desr old London,” the very heart of it, actually bombed by the enemy, brings home to the Britishers a development never dreamt of. All the arts of defensive warfare appear usel dealing with a tlylng enemy shrouded in the li ~ Governor Whitman of New York promptly and secured a modification of the pro- “constitutional provision bling the sal- during part of his term of office. of being classed as a salary grabber is restraints that per- Wanted: More Light on That Bond Deal. Explaining the increase of the state treas- urer's bond from $500,000 to $1,000,000, and the premium for it correspondingly from $2,600 to $5,000, after he had agreed to the former figure, Governor Morehead makes this charge against Treasurer Hall 1 belleved then, as 1 do now, that he had some uiterior motive for so doing. On recent Investigation, 1 find, as T believe, the reason for his changing so sud- denly. The local agent of th bonding company, Judge England, who Is a high class, honest, uprigit man and In no way dishonestly connected with this transaction, was entitied to a commiasion of $1,000 on the $5,000 paid by the state as premium on this bond Mr. Hall demanded of the agent that this commission be divided into five parts, $200 to go to his brother, John, at Verdon; $200 to H. J. Murray, vice ‘president of the Franklin bank, of which George Hall is presi- dent; $200 to W. C. Dorsey and $200 to James Conklin Just why this $%0 should not have been returned to the state treasury 1 should like to have Mr. Hall ex- pain. If Mr. Hall vas paying for this bend with funds belonging to himeelf, he would have a right to this money, but when It comes from the taxpayers of the #tate, out of the treasury, which he is so anxious to protect, I cannot understand how he can justify him- self in a transaction of this kind We would like to see this bond deal fully gone into, because there is more back of it than even the governor has disclosed, and pre- sumably other considerations as well for placing it with the particular agent who wrote it, and the peculiar division of the commission on the premium. Why was the million-dollar bond handed to Judge England, a lawyer, rather than an insur- ance agent, in the face of the clamorous com- petition of all the bond jnsurance underwriters in the state? It is of record that Judge Eng- land is a republican, and not a democrat, and further, that his signature appears as one of the original petitioners bringing out the candi- dacy of the republican nominee for governor who ran against Governor Morehead. It is of record, too, that Judge England, from being an active champion of the republican candidate for kovernor, suddenly switched shortly before the election to become a still more active champion of Governor Morehead, the democratic candi- date for governor. Did the writing of the treas- urer's bond have anything to do with this polit- ical transformation? And was Governor More- head, as the chief beneficlary, in on the deal? This bond proposition has ramifications not yet in full view, We believe the people of Nebraska who foot the bills want to know more about it. German Memorandum on the Arabic. The brief officlal communication from Ber- lin on the case of the Arabic outlines the posi- tion of the German government in that specific instance only. It does not close the matter, but leaves the way open for the further presentation of the views of the kaiser on the matter. As it stands, the incident turns on the action of the commander of the submersible, who had been in- structed not to fire on a merchantman without warning, but who reports that he acted in what he deemed to be an emergency requiring him to defend his own craft. That such instructions had been given to the comanders of Germany's undersea fleet is a partial recognition of the claims for neutral and noncombatant rights set the note of the president in the Lusitania case, and on which our grievance turns, is the demand for a disavowal by the German government of the action of the captain of the submarine in torpedoing that liner without warning. This yet remains to be answered, but should be an- swered categorically. The question of Indem- nity can easily awalt future determination. In the tone of the present communication may be found support for the belief that the German government is steadily approaching the point of y:elding its whole position as to the Lusitanla, Europe’s Credit. That the splendid position of the United States in the world of af’airs today Is fully ap- preciated In Burope is established by the arrival in New York of a notable commission from England and France, sent to negotiate with American financiers for the preservation of the financial credit of the Allles, In some respects this is one of the mest important delegations that ever crossed the Atlantic, and its presence at this time gives to the war added Interest for Americans. Recent ralds on the credit of Eng- land and France by stock exchange speculators forced to the attention of the statesmen of those countries the necessity of making such arrange- ments in this country as will protect them in future transactions, They are frankly looking forward to the negotiation of a loan, probably balf a billlon of dollars, to serve as a basis for any purchases they may make in this country. This naturally presumes that buying war munitions and food supplies will be extended rather than diminished. It also indicates that the financiers of the United States do not expect to pay any great attention to the suggestion of the president, made during the early days of the war, that one good way for manifesting our neu- trality would be to decline European loans. The bankers will get their share of the war business, along with the manufacturers. Farmers and the Experts. The action of the Nebraska Farmers' union in connection with the agricultural “expert’ is not to be interpreted as meaning that the tiller of the soil is above taking advice and help from the sclentific man who is trying to ald in farm progress. It merely means that the farmers will insist that the adviser shall know what hwe is talking about, The farmers of the country for the last few years have been bedeviled by a host of “specialists,” who have been long on theory and short on practice, and the resolution adopted shows the natural resentment of this interference with tho business of farming The great state universities of the west all mwintain thoroughly sclentific and earnest staff mgn, who Fnow the conditions and study the needs of their localities, and who do give Immense assistance to agriculture. Many farm problems are solved ai the state schools, and the general comdition of the industry is improved as a result, Much is yet to be found out, and intelligent and sym- pathetic co-operation between the Sirmers and the professors will uncover many of the now hidden things in farming, but tie half-baked “sharp” Is & pest, and the farmesr will be well rid of him. —— Some gayety might be added o the launching of political booms in Nebrasias if the authors would announce which of thres popular streams will be navigated-—the Repmblican river, the River of Doubt, Salt creek, or the Big Muddy. B T Lilly Dk | | | “Oh, Johm Wil shouldn’t say ‘I ain't golng:' you must say ‘I am not #olng.' "' And, thinking to teach the little fellow some Keeping Codes Secret LITERARY DIOBST e HEN von Jagow and Lansing exchange corre- W spondence concerning neutral shipping and sui- marines, the notes, as we know, are laboriousiy eoded and sent to the senders’ representative in the other's county, there to be as laborlously decoded anl translated before they can be presented to the ad- dreasee. What would happen should sucn mcssages be sent in piain English or German nobody seems to know. ‘“Abracadabra” s the accepted language of diplomacy, and continues to be used without question. Manifestly, however, there are many messages sent by this government to its various departments ana ropresentatives concerning the purport of which se- crecy is the prime essential. To this end, each de- partment of the government has its own code, and these are guarded with the utmost vigilance. Copies of these are entrusted only to the chosen few, but in #pite of this and other precautions several coples have at different times escaped. In the San Fran- cisco Times Illustrated Weekly, Harry B. Kirtland formerly military code expert of the War department, ates that the War department has been the one to suffer most, as when, for example, several coples of ita code disappeared in the San Francisco earthquake. He gives us one story to fllustrate the pains taken at times to frustrate code thefts: “When Becretary of Embassy O’Shaughnessy and his party left Mexico City for Vera Cruz in 1914, Cap- tain Willlam A. Burnside, U. 8. A., our military at- tache, fearing theft of his baggage, carried’his copy of the War department ¢ode in his hands. His trunks were broken Into and searchedq surreptitiously, and while on the train the attache, in the presence cf American witnesses, burned his code, leaf by leaf, Ieniting it from cigarettes. The witnesses swore to this, and on filing their affidavits at the War de- partment the officer was relleved from ail responsi- bility.” Tn contrast to this atory, however, is one of a rare opportunity lost by forelgn sples: “Not long ago, a thousand coples of the War de- partment code, lying In a covered, but unfastened box in the War department attic, in an open room, visited dajly by hundreds of curlous tourists for a view across the eity, were accldengally discovered by a olerk. Bound in gold and morocco, they would have been rare souvenirs of Washington. Investigation proved that they had lain there, forgotten, for elght years. Not one was missing."” We are told that the Navy department code Is weighted with lead, and every commander is sup- posed to throw it overboard in the event of capture, But in spite of this rule at least two coples have dis- appeared. Only one code appears to have Been kept wholly {nviolable~that of the bureau of insular af- fairs, and this one has never been printed: We read: “Its compller, an expert codist in the office of ths chief of that bureau, personally typed it on thin sheets, making four coples, which were then bound. One was sent by speclal messenger to the governor Reneral of the Philippine fslands, another to the governor of Porto Rico, a third was retained in the bureau, and the fourth is In the hands of a trusted government offi- cer, who, for confidential reasons, cannot be named. No other coples exist, and the four made are guarded with the utmost vigilance. It is the vehicle of secret communication between the government affd our co- lonial possessions, and is the only government' code In whose certain secrecy absolute confidence s placed. Only the most vitally important messages coded in It are further protected by enciphering, and its use ob- viates the delay inevitable in enciphering and deciph- ering important messages coded in the more widely distributed departmental codes. It is the one really #ecret code of the United States.’ But a code discovered does not necessarily mean that all efforts at secrecy by the particular depart- ment affected are completely frustrated; for a message already coded can later be enciphered, wnereupon the Possession of & specimen code-book s of no avall to the spy who waylays the message. He must have the cipher key-word well, and, as we learn, these are kept_secret most effectually: X ““These key words are never put into writing. High officers leaving Washington for foreign stations re- ©celve them orally, and commit them to memory. One famous commanding general in the Philippines, at o critical stage of our forelgn relations several years ago, forgot the key-word, and a young oficer made the long trip from Washington to Manila to repeat it to him. This s common practice In the navy, and it 18 not unusual for officers whose only mission is to deliver orally a cipher-key word to be sent on such missions halfround the world. The secrecy of our government ciphers, as used In connection with the codes, Is, for all practical purposes, absolute, It rests in the honor and fidelity of trusted and patriotic offi- Cors and not one fota on any written book or paper.” " Twice Told Tales Didn't Need Them. Tn the lobby of a hotel the assembled delegates were discussing the servant problem, when Congress man Charles H. Dillon of South Dakota recalled an appropriate story. Recently a prominent matron in a big eastern town had occasion to employ a new domestic, and as soon as the girl reached the house a large questioning seance started. "I suppore, Gwendolyn,” remarked the matron, ‘“that they served the dinner in courses where you worked last?" “‘Yes, ma'am.” answered Gwendolyn, reflectively, ":::t.u. they did sometimes and sometimes they “Um, I see;” thoughtfully responded the ‘matron, and then continued: “Did they use finger bowls?" “No, ma'am,” was the startling rejoinder of the domestic, “they always washed before they came to the table."—¥hiladelpbia Telegraph. The Essential. The y school teacher was talking to her puplls on patience. She explained her toplc carefully, and, as an ald to understanding, she gave each pupil & card bearing a picture of a boy fishing. “Bven pleasure,” she sald, “requires the exercise of Patienoe. See the boy fishing: he must sit and wait and wait. He must be patient. Huving treated the subject very fully, she began with the simplest, most practical question. ‘‘And now, can any little boy tell me what we need most when we go fishing? The answer was quickly shouted with one volice, “Enit!"—American Boy. Poor Gutlook Plente. John Willle was a bright littie lad, but he never would learn grammar. This was a cause of much dis- tress to his Uncle Frank, who was keen on correct speaking. One day Uncle Frank met John Willie in the street and asked him if he was golng to the school treat the following week. “No. T ain’t going."” replied the lad glibly. " protested his uncle, * You grammar slyly, he went on: “You are not going. Mother is not going. We are not going. He is not Kolng. They are not going. Now can you say all that, John Willle?" “Course 1 nobody golng !" sooffed John Willle. “There ain't —Youth's Companion. People and Events St. Louls soclety folk are anxious to have motion pictures made of their diversions and put on the movie eireuits. Thus are the germs of a riot idea nurtured. The Soclety of Lower Rents and Reduced Taxes on Homes reports that eleven families own one-fifteenth of the assessed land in the Borough of Manhattan, which helps to explain why New York contributes a big bunch of the feaeral income tax. Peter Peterson of St. Paul, Minn., is watching the steamuship plers of New York, hoping to head off his wife, who eloped with the hired man, bound for Bweden. Peterson says Mrs. Peterson trat was, welghs 30 pounds, and while not exactly speedy, she managed to stir yp some dust with an auto, & brass bed, & cuckeo clock, a phonograph, §500 of the fawmily cash and the hired man. The chaken husband adnits that is going some. SR LSO 1L, 190 The Pees effer Give the Sinners & Chance. | OMAHA, Sept. 10.—To the Editor of The Bee: What are the “Billy” Sunday meetings for? Are they to be monopo- lized by the old saintly church members who are well on the wuy to heaven? Or are they Intended for the sinner who iy not In the habit of going to church and who lacks the salvation that this evangelist is so earnestly proclaim- Ing as the need of lost humanity, the careless non-church goer, the saloon keeper, the fallen In all walks of life? It would seem the way this tabernacle 1s being filled up at each of these serv- ices with the ministers, the church offi- clals, the church-going people who claim they are among the saved already, who are going just through curlosity to hear the amusing things that "Billy" says, etc., but which in results answer to help crowd out the very class of people that these meetings are intended to get at. The hundreds and possibly thousands who do not hang around the tabernacle two or three hours before the hour of service, but come at the appointed time to find the seats all taken, the aisles all jammed full of the curfous ehurch people and are obliged to turn back home, will not try again. They are not particularly interested more than a little through curlosity and these are largely lost to the opportunity of “Billy's” in- fluence, Sinners are the people Sunday wants as his audience, and he s systemati- cally being cheated out by an over-supply of saints who ought to be at the nelgh- borhood prayer meetings trying to in- fluence sinners to go to the tabernacle Instead of occupying the front seats merely to hear what there Is new in the way of entertainment at the tabernacle. Sunday is not getting the people he is after, because the sinners are not curi- ous enough to display the gall that the old hide-bound saint or the idle church~ goer has in securing a seat, even if they have to sit half a day on a hard plank for this privilege. Build the taber- nacle larger or sort out the sheep rrom the goats and take them to some church or to the auditorium and entertain them in prayer meeting exercises. Let Bunday get at the peopie he came here to talk to and convert. But If he is obliged to preach only to preachers and the already saved, his mission here will all little, AN OBSERVER. Chloroform for Hay Feveritea. OMAHA, Bept. 10.--To the Editor of The Bee: The kindest method by which to deal with hay fever sufferers is to put them out of their misery with chloroform. I really mean this statement to be taken Iiterally notwithstanding that it may seem to class me as well as some of Omaha’s most respected citizens with stray canines, supernumeracy cats and other excess baggage. Although probably originated by some poor sufferer rendered desperate by the pangs of his disease, whose Intent was to secure peace @t any price, the method has the approval of physicians. The medi- cal man, however, advise that much judiciousness be mingled with the treat- ment. It was discovered that to relieve hay fever it is not necessary to continue the treatment until the patient 1s gone beyond recall. Soothing sleep and soveral hours surcease of torture may be secured by few moments' inhalation of a weak solution of the kindly drug. Hay fever sutferers who used to run the risk of making drug fiends of themselves with solutions of cocaine or other de- rivatives of the soporific poppy, are now barred from that relief by federal statute, funless a physician lends his ald, which is unlikely. Chloroform is best. A few cents’ worth of chloroform liniment bought at any drug store will do the business. Inhale the fumes and forget your troubles for awhile, is the advice of those who have tried it. ONE OF 'EM. Ten Eape HEBRON, Sept. 10.—To the Editor of The Bee: Some will not stop to con- sider a long article, who might read a few digested statements, and to save space 1 give a score of such items, embracing the gist of the international language Esperanto: 1. An inspiring accomplishment that places you on “speaking terms” with the whole world. 2. It is fifty times easier to learn than & national language—mere play—verily spontaneous. 8. One hundred and thirty-two journals and magasines are published in that lan- guage throughout the world. 4 Is it not the actual fulfillment of Zeph. 3:9-glving the world ‘“pure lan- & By using the international roots, there @re only a few new words to be learned. & After a few hour's study you may write an intelligent letter—test it your- welf. 7. Esperanto gives a translation to the world—another tongue only reaches a few millions. 8. Missionaries find it a bridge across the medly of jargons, the neutral lan- Buage. 9. Only sixteen brief rules of grammar, and twenty-eight letters, and each letter has but one sound. 10. Esperantists enjoy exchanging pie- ture post cards throughout the entire world. And the arch fact that It is a most valuable approach to Latin, as well as the open door to the modern tongues. A. G. WILSQN. Here and There Colonel Francols Desclaux, former pay- master general of the French array, who on March 27 was sentenced by a military court-martial to seven years solitary confinement, after being con- victed on the charge of stealing military stores, was degraded Monday morning at the military school In Paris. There are no cuss words in the Kick« wpoo Indian language., according to George Davis, former register of deeds in Brown county, Xansas, who was ralsed on a farm adjoining the Indian reservation. Even the sign lenguage of the Indians, which is the universal means of communication among all the tribes, has no profanity. Reno's method of granting while you wait” is prowmised an alring in New York courts. Mlillinalre Maro- soni's daughter, who married a police- man somo years ago and later shook him, in resisting the latter's claim for $10,000 & year, alleges that ne divorced his first wife at Reno In three days ‘without wait- ing for the lewal six vionthe’ residence. Some 30,00 wus unocessary (o speed up the Reno machine and it responded to the lubricant with amaziug celerity. by spraying their tortured membranes | PR ) l Editorial Siftings Detroit Free Press: Three days of fasting have been ordered In Russia. They'll be lucky if they get off with that. Washington Post. Possibly Mr. Bryan will attribute the settlement of the dis- pute with Germany to the ultimate | triumph of his good eontentions. Washington Post: With every return of his birthday, Francis Joseph can con- sole himself that it has been a long life with something doing all the time Brooklyn Fagle: The struggles of the Ttalian army in the mountains of Aus- tria make clear the value of mountains to Switzerland and ought to give uw pause if we ever lightly think of invading Mexico. Cleveland Plain Dealer: If all able- bodied citizens who make jokes about hay fever could be mobllized and sent to the trenches in Gallipoli one feels con- fident thelr departure could be made the | occasion of one of the greatest patroitic demonstrations this country ever saw. Pittsburgh Dispatch: Each side in the great struggle rcross the sea is counting on making its opponents foot the bill of | expense., But counting chickens before hatching s proverbially uncertain. In the end each fighter may be glad to emerge from the scrap with the proud privilege of salving Its own wounds, Brooklyn Eagle: The firing on Dun- kirk from a distance of twenty-three miles, each shot gauged by close engl- neering calculation, recalls the toast of Gauss, the German mathematiclan: “I drink to pure mathematics, the only sclence which has never been defiled by practical application.” Taken tmpure, it 18 no less exciting to the tmagination. Minneapolis Journal: Germany and the United States have unloaded their Jonahs. The first report that Grand Admiral von Tirpits had resigned from the direction of the German admiralty is corrected by a semi-official statement that he is worn out by his strenuous service and has been obliged to take a vacation. No matter how he goes. No matter how Bryan went. Each has relleved his gov- ernment of burdens within harder to bear than enemies without. Philadelphia Record: From the tone of the gratuitous advice now being offered to the United States by the British press it might be supposed that we were con- cerned in upholding the rights of Great Britain against Germany. The fact is that we have been buey taking care of ourselves, and we know just how to go about it without any assistance from England. It may be a great disapoint- ment to John Bull that we are in a fair way of reaching a satisfactory setle- ment with Germany without resort to arms; but the outcome is correspondingly gratitying to us. Johnwwould do well to attend his own business. FROM A ONE NIGHT STAND. Detroit Free Mrees, It isn't just the colors of the maples in the lane That makes me think that gone and Fall has come again, It's not the nodding goldenrod that blossoms by the wall, Nor yet because, on quiet days, the rlened apples fall. 'l tell you what has cheered my heart —we're going to see a play. I saw a brand new poster on the bill- board yesterday. Oh, happy, lucky city folk, with all thal wealth commands— It's very dull of evenings in the lone- some one-night stands. It's true the moving pictures our eve and grieve our heart But_they, like Macheth's v ome Itke shadows, so depart.” You've vaudeville the whole year round; you ne'er feel oh, 5o gay, Because you saw a poster on the blll- board yesterday. It may be ‘‘second company; even third; There may be volces in the cast that Broadway never heard. The play may be a relic of the palmy days of vore— Who ‘cares’ We'll dust the Opra House, and see a play once more. The world's & Dleasant place to be, though skies are getting gray— 1 saw a brand new poster on the bill. board yesterday! Save The Baby Use the reliable HO l}le CK'S Malted Milk Upbuilds every part of the body efficiently, Endorsed by thousands of Physicians, Mothers and Nurses the world over for tmore than a quarter of a century. o Convenient, no cooking nor additional milkrequired. Simply dissolveinwater, Agrees when other foods often fail. Bample free, HORLICK'S, Racine, Wis. o Substitute is‘Justas Good" as HORLICK’S, the Original 1t may be Summer's | GRINS AND GROANS. “Our _friend always puts his best foot forward, although he is a trifie uncouth “Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum: “‘a man who puts his best foot forward ought to be careful at least to keep his shoes polished.” —Washington Star. Mrs. Bacon—How many biscults would it take to make ten pounds, John? Mr. Bacon—Well, it all dependa whoso biscults they were, dear.—Yonkers Statesman “Your wife is a Kreat star. Gets a thousand a week in that sketeh, 1 under stand." Yes, and 1 assist her at fifty per. “That's & small salary to pay a hu. band. Why don't you kick?" “I_don't dare risk It. She could get a husband at twenty-five. —boston Transcript She (viewing the flagship)-~What does he blow that bugle for? He—Tattoo She—1've often seen it on their arms but I never knew they had a special tims for doing it.~Life. “Hints on_ courtship abound. Every magazine will tell you how to win a wife. Anybody will gladly post you on the etiquet of love-making “What's on_your mind? “But after a man marries he has to ;Iflfl completely for himself." —Pittsburgh 'ost. WHICH 18 PROPER, FOR ME O TAKE HIS ARM OR HE TAKE MINE,WHILE QU WALKING —— IF You STARTED IY, HES DEPENDING on You Ted—8o he figures that he didn't learn as much in college as he expected? Ned—-No wonder. He failed to make even one of the minor leagues.—~Judge. ““Jinx says he can marry any woman he | pleasea.” “I don’t doubt it. Any one ought to be able to marry a_woman whom Jinx pleases.” —Houston Post BREAKING OUT [TCHED ON FACE Staried Like Water Blisters. Scraiched Even In Sleep. ‘Would Bleed and Get Larger. | HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT “My Mitle by, two years old, had a “1 saw an advertisement for Outicura Soap and Ofat- ment and seat for some. In & couple of weeks his face was healed up and pow there is no scar or mark oo f." (Signed) Mrs. A. M. Gollmick, 327 Caledonia 8¢., La Oross, Wis., March 26, ‘15, Sample Each Free by Mall With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad- drees post-card “‘Cutieura, Dept. T, Bos~ tom.” Sold shroughout the world. ‘;;:;'.‘J:;.:".,:T::‘::‘LS.':‘:“E’.‘ o Ractoriae o e g g i | | | | Everybody For offices apply to the knows where The Bee Building is Can you have a better address for your office? BSuperintendent, Room 103, The Bee Building Co, 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. —~—