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[ i THE OMAHA DAILY BEE| “FOUNDED BY EDV. . ROBEWATER. | —__ VICTOR ROSEWATE!, (DITOR. ‘DITOR. The Bee Publishing Company Propristor. BEBD BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. | Entered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matter. R ————— TERMS OF IUBS(',!.'UPHON y earrier per month. and Sunday..... 0 | fly without Sumday ® | ening and Sunday o0 ening_without Sunday. .0 nday only . e, ] d_notiee of g address or co gresularity o delivery to Omaha Bue, Circulation partment. REMITTANCE Reniit by draft, express or postal order. Only two- oent ps_Tecelved in payment of small ae- .nmnl%nll checks, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not #ccepted. OFFICES. imaha—The Bes Bullding R Omana—3is N strest. | ‘ouncil Bluffs—14 North Main street. Ancoln—3 Little Building. ic Hearst Bullding ew York—Room 1106, 286 Fifth avenus. Lovis- 508 New Bank of Commeros. ‘Washington—7% Fourteenth 8t., N. W. CORRESPONDENCE, communications relating to news and to Omaha Bee, Nditorial Depart: AUGUSY CINROULATION, 53,993 State of Ne! ka, County of Dougins, #s: | pubiEnt Willinmis, Elvlru ation manuger of The Bee | isi.0g company, ng duly swoin, says that the - o Sirculation ' for the month of August 1L i DWIGHT WILLIAMSE, Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me, this 24 day ol temuer, 1915 3 BL‘HDI H KR, Notary Pubile Subscribers leaving the city temporarily | should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. e The “bear that walks like a man” knows & trap when he sees it With the r-owrd—brukln; membership this year, Ak-S8ar-Ben should break a few carnival records, too. Hligibles for (.flll~hlt;0l‘l should know that tabernacle collections have ceased, and salva- tion is free, Hit 'em up! In the race of time September is entering on the home stretch. If the Buropean war is going to be over in October, it will have to hurry. Start now to make Omaha presentable for the coming Ak-Sar-Ben visitors. What is left to be done the last moment may be left undone, p—— Germany's new order to submarine com- Jnanders amounts to a revised motto of Davy Crockett: “Be sure you are right before you shoot." mese——— To & man up a tree it would seem that that man who was fined for breaking the speed limit with aw auto truck should be really entitled to a prige. ———— It young Mr, Rockefeller can fox-trot him- selt into favor with the Colorado miners, most of the things sald about the wickedness of danc- ing will have to be expunged. Sppe— Any other high-up office of the big national, professional or trade assoclations looking for #ood material to fill them can also be accommo- dated by drafting Omaha men, ——— Culebra slides are toe frequent and expen- sive for levity. Every time the mountain squats down the canal treasury digs up, and hangs crepe on the hope of a dividend. Nothing is still lacking to make young Rock-~ efeller's tour of Colorado & round of joy but an address of welcome from a reception com- mittee headed by Frank P, Walsh, S————— It the Allles’ financiers cannot negotiate & loan st & rate less than § per cent, the question is, Can Omaba municipal or school bonds be floated bearing only 4% per cent interest? SEpTE——— The president of the British Board of Trade boasts that he has put one over the American Beef trust. We thought it was proved {n court soveral times that “there ain't no such thing” as & beef trust, S— Mathematical wonders never cease! A friend has shown us a water bill which purports to convince him that he s saving more money by rate reductions under municipal ownership than he paid altogether before the city acquired the plant. Q. E. D.! —— Testimony given in the election fraud trials at Indianapolis show marked proficiency in the art of making tally sheets register more votes than there were ballots cast. Indiana politi- clans abhor an uncertainty, Thelr talent makes for a sure thing. The diseredited Ambassador Dumba is re- ported impatiently counting the hours which must pass before his steamer heads for home. To a diplomat of royal sensibilities turning & spotlight on a private snap sounds the depths of ‘bumilistion and provokes a longing for a wil- derness or the silence which distance gives. bridge for across the river Union Pacifio headguarters, or two, The structure Is tu resting on plers of soll1 centerof the bridge will be devoted to & driveway and street car traok for foot passengers outwide i f agreeably surprised ot on Twentieth and Douglag by & large party thelr own refreshments & gencral good time. T. Van Antwerp of Albany, was visiting his Captain John 8. Wood. ker bullding on Fifteenth and completed by the architeots, and call for a bullding fiv, roof, RE igfi " at Hoyd's o7 Farnam street level, t the corncr and Amerioa. Armenian slaughter Armenia: Terrible tales of by THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY the Turk again come to the public notice in | tiis country, accompanied by appeal that tihe United States Intervene to protect this peo an ple from threatened extermination. If only part | of the atrocities reported were founded on fact, the case would be a most desperate one, so far a# the Armenians are concerned. That their ilmrdnhlpu are an incident of the war is also true, When the Turk entered the world confliet, tbe perpetually precarfous situation of the Christians in the Near East was made extremely perilous, and it was understood that the world would be shocked by tales of murder and rapine from the regions where the Moslem was unre- strained in his control. But the other nations of Europe are directly chargeable with the pres- ence of the Turk In his position in Armenia and | elsewhere, and have been for these last five cen- turies. If the United States is to enter the world war it must be with more direct provocation and for another purpose; the rescue of the Armenians is & labor for the European powers now en- gaged in strife. Retirement oi Federal Judges. | “==Bert Mosss in Newspaperdom. | gora is patent medicines, A judge of the federal district court ia permitted to | Totire at the age of seventy, drawing thereafter the full pay of an active judge, which is $,00 a year until his death. This explains why the Department of Justice 1s not willing to mccept Mr, Bryan's recom mendation for the appolntment of W. H. Thompson of Grand Island to the vacant Nebraska judgeship The government would receive only about eight years of work and would then be responsible for a full pen slon for perhaps more years than had been devoted to active service.—Ldncoln Journal Just to scotch this plece of misinformation before it spreads further, let it be known that the revised statutes of the United States fix the retirement age of federal judges at seventy, but also require a minimum service of ten years. If a man is appointed to the federal bench when he s sixty-two years old, he is not permitted to retire until he is seventy-two years old—in other words, the statutes insist upon ten full years of service as prerequisite to a retirement pension. Btill further, the average man's probablility of life at seventy cannot be figured at much more than ten years, so the possibility of a pension for a longer perfod than the years of service is rather remote. It may be sald, however, that the appointing powers, in making their selection for judicial places, as a rule, require a prospect of more than ten years on the bench, which ac- counts for the reluctance to appoint judges who would have to serve beyond the age of seventy to meet the statutory prerequisite for retire- ment. —— Wages and Wealth, From the Department of Labor at Wash- fogton comes a report with the interesting in- formation that wages have been considerably advanced n the United States during the last year. Only one small group has undergone a reduction Jn wages, Hours of labor have been reduced in many trades, following the general movement in that direction. This information Is quite comforting, for It shows that in some measure the wage rate in the United States is keoping pace with the general advance of the living rate. Kconomists find in prevailing con- ditions encouragement for the future, The question of production and distribution is taking on new phases with each advance In man's capacity. Man's wants are steadily ex- panding, his tastes are becoming more exact- ing and his ambition more embracing, Produc- tion may have met the requirements of yestarday, perhaps of today, but certainly not of tomor- row. Man wants more, and to get it he must create it. Therefore, the question of produe- tion {s not settled, nor will it be until man no longer nourishes an unsatistied desire. Distribution is coming, in America, at least, to be on a better basis, for the good things of life are here being passed around with less ex- clusiveness, Just as man develops, his needs become harder to satisfy, and his energy must be more and more highly specialized to meet those needs, Wages and wealth go hand in hand, aud while the old ‘wage fund” theory may have been discarded, the relation between the two 18 not seriously disturbed, e———— Why Expose Children at All? An Omaha doctor, at & Des Moines gathering of dootors, delivered an address, advocating the exposing of children while young to contagious diseases, thus bullding up & race of immunes. This rather startling suggestion was met with the immediate opposition of another doctor, equally certain of the point, who contended that youngsters have no special capacity for resisting disesse, and as many of them die as do the elder. This polnt may be of Intense In- terest to the “mind that's sclentific,” but it halds a little element of wonder for the layman. Why expose children, or anyone else, for that matter, to the menace of contagious diseases? Is It really necessary that we have the mumps, the measles, the whooping cough, or any other dangerous and avoldable illg that beset childhood? Doctors really ought to be busy edu- cating people in how to escape from these trials. The bacteriologists for years have been n.ultiplying our dangers by many times, while the medicine men are equally active in supply. ing us with avenues for escape. If sclence of- fonsive and defensive persist, may we not hope for a return to that happy condition when death will be occasioned alone by loss of blood or lack of breath. — Speculation about President Wilson's feel- ings regarding W. J, Bryan's proposed peace mission wastes time and space. There is noth- ing in politics surer than that the president favors the mission. Itis a dred-to-one shot that if Bryan will merely hint at a winter's stay abroad the president will bid him a cheery god- speed at the dock, e —— From a corporation point of view things are better ordered in Mexico than on this side of the line, The street car company of Matamoras, vielding to the demands of strikers, promptly pushed the extra cost on patrons by advancing rates. American efficloncy has some leagues to £0 before reaching that destination. — It is painfully evident that the money-iend- ing baukers of this country have no respect for the opinions of Colonel Bryan and Senator J. Ham Lewis. “Don't loan money to foreigners,” the politielans cry., Therenpon the heedless bankers nudge up to the deal L Ethics of Advertising LOATING around in my ink bottle are a few F remarks about patent medicines, and also a bit of comment concerning the unkind things that folk with myosis and myasthenia of the mind have gald about them. This shall be a sincere attempt to fish the remarks and the comments out. In all re- form movements, something or somebody has to be the goat. Before you can ket a crowd to abandon reason and blindly follow the leaders, you must find « man or & thing to kick around and throw bricks at To lead A crowd, it 18 not necessary to possess an in- tellect or be a logician. All that is needed is an object and plenty of noise, One day the police are the goat; the next day, Wall street; then food nt\:;m;l:'l': Ar: u : rusts, bankers, and toda - judges, politictans, trust e g A b tion Is made by the “Mad Mullahs” hot on the trail of ephemeral fame, They condemn an entire industry simply because there are in it a few scalawags. Thero scalawags are held up as specimens of the contents of the entire package, and war dances are executed around the wretches as the fagots are lighted Let it be admitted that folk get sick, and that most of them would get well If they behaved themselves, breathed deeply of fresh alr, took a bit of ell.(Nle. forgave or forgot their enemies and kept away ron; doctors and medicines of any kind. The taking o medicine, however, has a certain paychological effect, and some Arugs possess the property of changing conditions in the human body. The practice of medi- | cine, at best, is simply @ game of guess-work, bocause the mction of drugs varies to & remarkable degres | upon different individuals, The reason there z very many doctors and so very many medicin | because the dear people demand a varlety, so they can change from one to another when results are unsatisfactory, which is frequently the case. I am told that in America there are some 90,000 patent medicines, and possibly 3 per cent are down - right fakes and frauds, The other 9§ per cent are made from formulas probably written originally by “regular’ physiclans, although I em unable to tell you what a “regular” physician is. Now, it seems to me that !f a man makes a good remedy, it Is bardly criminal ‘to let the public know about it, and the best way to let the public know is by advertising. It a man advertises a remedy that is not good, it is only & question of time until he will 1ind no sale for it. that men who advertise very often get rl(‘lh', h::l’l:“:nen who don't advertise very often g0 broke. The doctors (who don't advertise if they hl\‘/'. to pay for it) became jealous of the business estab- lished by advertisers of patent medicines, and for quite & while have been trying to get a monopoly on the medicine Industry through the enactment of laws. That s to say, if they can make it illegal for anv- body but an organization doctor to treat ;\rnplarwin are alling, they will soon be able to sell their Fords buy Packards, ‘ngifl'.ylf doctors cured the people they treat, T would be up In front shouting my head off for them, but the various graveyards scattered over the countryside are mute testimony to thelr impotency. The posses- slon of a sheepskin s not proof of skill, and a doc. tor's frequent duty is to fill out death certificates What is the loglc of the reformers wno demand that none may sell medicine except graduates of a med'. cal college? Why, it {s analogous to Insisting that no one shall write books but college Eraduates; no one shall touch upon religion but ordained preachers; no one shall go into business but graduates of a com- mercial institution; no one shall publish a paper ex. cept graduates of a school of journallsm; no one shall bake & ple except those who follow the recipes in *“The Homely Ladles’ Journal!” You might think, from all this indiscriminate bay- Ing of the pack, that promoters of patent mediciuns were co-laborers with Gyp the Blood, Dago Fran' and Lefty Louls, while the members of the pack were schoolmates of Little Rollo, Sunday School Susia “nd Sinless Sam; but the facts seem to be that there s the same percentage of decent folk who sell pre- pared remedies at reasonable prices as there are de- cent reformers who reform at big prices, There ary very many proprietary remedies that are standar as any prescr'ption that any present day physician oan write, and in millions of homes you will find these remedies in every day use with satisfactory uits, And these remedles are largely bought and used by people who cannot afford to summon a doc- tor at 82 or $8 per “sum' every time a little some. thing Is needed to banish pain or soothe a tired brow Frequently they are folk who have, at much sacri- fice, taken from their slim stores and pald doctors for services which conferred no benefit whatever. Patent medicine advertising, no matter how worthy the remedies or how immaculate the copy, s mot accepted by a few newspapers. Yet these same news- papers do not heeitate to print announcements of things that make medicine necessary. They open thel: columns to all forms of condiments, preserves, pickles, pastries and various vietuals that derange the digestive tract, clog up the Erle canal and invite the peripatetic pimple to the chaste cheek of Blanche and Mahel. They sdvertise corsets that choke the dia. phragm, and shoes that create corns, both of the hard and woft kingdoms, They give space to mince meat that puts the ache in stomach, but deny space to the man who promotes & remedy to take the ache out. If it is ethical to advertise shoes that make corns, why—I ask from the heart—is it unethical to adve:- tise a corn remedy? If your pickles and preserves and pastry send the plmple to the nose of Nelly, why not let & man making a pimple eradicator tell Nelly how to banish the vexatious thin It your various vic tuals give Jim the eczema, do you think it more ele- wvating to soclety to let him stand scratching in fromt of the court house or publlio library, or tell him in your paper the particulars about some simple oint- ment that will send the ecsema where It came from? Why should it be improper to inform a billous man, with coated tongue and bad breath, where he can get & bolus to encourage action in his eliminating appar- atus, and thus brighten up the heavens fop him aua for us? It is just as easy for a publisher to diseriminate between the mood and bad In advertised remedies .ir between the good and bad In department stores, gro- cery stores, shoe res and dell-atesren No branch of trade is immune from mountebanks an! crooks, and it is elmply & matter of judging values by the exercise of common sense to clear up the whole situation. No advertising I8 objectionable if it ccn- veys information of value to the whole people, and it is surely desirable to know what to do when you are not feeling well. The doctor has his place ,and so have patent medicines, and the world will take a big step backward If it ever glves the sheepskin power to prevall over ordinary horse sense. Why the news- papers should espouse the cause of the doctor, who hates advertising like “Billy” Sunday hates hell, ana scorn the reputable patent medicine man, who has done more for advertising than any other force known, really I am unable to say. Twice Told Tales No Question of Tenses, A young woman whose husband Is on the stock ex- change recently awakened to the fact that he was quite sportily inclined. One evening the professoi's wife, who lived quite near, ran in to make a call During the call, the young wife of the stockbroker remarked, rather plaintively “1 wish I knew where Jack was!" I presume, dear,” sald the professor's wif “you mean you wish you knew where he § “Oh, no, 1 dom't,” replied the young wife, *I know where he |s He Is upstairs in bed with terribly bloodshot eyes and a raving headache. 1 want tu know where he was!"—New York Times An Easy re. **The trouble with my wife, primly. sald the philosopher. ‘“Let's see— what fs the last word?’ He turned to the dictionary. “The last word here,” he continued, “is myxomma, meaning an Indian libellulid dragon fly, h large head, narrow face, and very large eye 1o me, Blathers, that considering how little call you have In the ordinary conversation of the ordinary day for a word like that, you might, for the sake «f peace, let her have it. 1 am sure that if I had & wife, and she wanted & word like myxomma, rather than give rise to symotic disturbances in the family, U'd give in."~New York Times L PTEMBER 25, 1915. | Bunday and his associates can gei people Latehstring for Commerecinl Club. OMAHA, Sept. %.—To the Rditor of The Bee: There Is one littie innovation that I would sincerely like to ses made by our Commereial club, It is & plan that the Lincoln organization has followed for some time and which has proved practical in its working. { Many business men, dealers in all lines of business from out in the state, come into Omaba each month on business | trips. Oftentimes they are here for only a day or possibly a few hours. Most of them know of and would Iike to visit the Commercial club, but either do not know anyone connected with it or cannot find anyone at that partic # r time who can take them to the club. Naturally, they feel some timidity about pressing themselves into the club rooms. In ad- | dition, it is not possible for these men to lunch there unless accompanied by a club member. The Lincoln Commercial club has solved this matter by sending reputable merchants in the state membership cards and asking them to use the faocllities of | the olub while in that city, This is & matter of small moment as regards ex- pense, but it has proved to be a mighty popular plan with the out-of-town mer- chants. There are many who would utilize the opportunity if offered to them, but mighty few who will beg for it. J. L. WOOD, Reasons for Admiring. OMAHA, Bept. 24.—To the Editor of The Bee: 1 admire Evangelist Sunday be- causs he preaches righteousness with- out the preposterous assumption of the divine prerogative or supernatural attri- butes. I admire Evangelist Sunday because he Incites through individual initiative to a greater exercise of tho religious virtues, without the dictum of clerical authority, 1 admire Evangelist Sunday because he 8 of men and women no religious service, which he does not do in a man- ner common to all men. I admire Evangellst Sunday because he preaches a religious democracy of in- dividual liberty in Christ, and not a theocracy of eccleslastical absolutisin. I admire Evangellst Sunday becauss he preaches a righteousness that exalteth & nation, without arrogating to himself the wearing of one or more crowns as insignia of his right and power to rule every real and imaginary sphere of in- telligence, 1 admire Evangelist Sunday because he preaches neither creed nor doctrine, which conflicts with the free agency of the Individual or sovercignty of the state. J. BRAXTON GARLAND, That Blg Loan to Britain. OMAHA, Bept. 24.—To the Editor of The Bee: I notice J. M. Thurston joins J. Ham Lewis In opposition to our loaning money to England, France and Russia. 1 think these gentlemen are wrong. For years these nations have been our cus- tomers and we have sold them hundreds of millions of dollars of our products. They now want to establish a line of credit so they can buy more. If thelr credit is bad, then we might refuse, but @8 they now hold three thousand million dollars of our securities it looks like good business on our part. It we make this loan it fn time will be pald. It may be much better to make it and let them burn it up than for us to #pend one thousand millions in battle- ships and other war supplies that we may never need. This loan is safer than It made to Germany, becauso these na- tions have not called into play ecvery nerve and muscle as yet. If the shoe were on the other foot and Germany wera In position to borrow and buy from us you would not hear a word against it from Germans who came here to got away from the very condition they now endorse, I would be just as willing to kive Germany the credit and sell to her if she could get the goods delivered. This loan can and will be made and perhaps another one like it will follow. If we lis- ten to our great president and the men who handle our financial matters and keep out of war and its cost, we will be the richest nation on this earth and can dictate peace instead of begging for it, When it 1s over they all will need our money and help and that will give us the opportunity to say on what terms they can have both. C. 8. HAMMOND.,, riton Hotel. day Campat in Other Citles. BLAIR, Neb,, Sept. 2.—To the Bditor of The Bee. I read a great many things in youy paper regarding “Billy” Sunday and his tabernacle meetings and the man- ner in which he calls the preachers for not falling Into his ways and calling | deadheads. Now, I have attended the Sunday meetings In Youngstown, O.; ow Castle, Pa.; Sharon, Pa., and Erie, Pa., and saw large numbers hit the saw- dust trail In all those cities, and should you return there today you would find the hills and hollows covered with the wrecks ©f the Sunday meetings; the great amount of money pald for expenses and siven to “Billy” Sunday to save those souls has been spent in vain, I think it is time the good people of Omaha should wake up and take this money they are giving to Sunday and #ee what they can do for the poor people of Omaha. JAMES R, WILLIAMS Clifton Hotel. Mere's & Saving Clause, EDGAR, Neb., Sept. #.~To the Editor of The Bee: I like The Bee, and my stock has gone up % points. After Mr Soovil has seen his writeup in print he will wish he had not written. It Mr. to read everything printed in The Bee that they don'y like, it will take some of thelr time they might spend at something worse. CHARLES VANSTROM, Non-Ex'stent Matter, | OMAHA, Sept. 3,~To the Editor of The Bee: That old saw about “fools rush in where angels fear to tread” s as ap- plicable today s is Barnum's utterance that the “American people lke to be humbugged. " 4 In face of the evidence of hundreds of material scientists who have put in years of thelr time trying to make something of matter, and failing, Mr, Sunday pro- ceeds L0 show his dense lgnorance on that Subject in an attempt to heap sarcasm | on & body of reifglonists who do not see | things as he does. ' In reading over some literature om the subject recently, I ceme across a lecture delivered in 167 by Bisoph Randolph . | Foster of the Methodist Episcopal ohurch, | the subject of the lecture being *Man a Spiritual Being,” and from which I quote & slgnificant paregraph which gives an idea of the entire lecture, as follows: ‘% %% There are some embarrassments which ought to be noted—things which, if we be not on our guard, will coastantly | misiead us and prevent us from reacaing | the truth. Such are these a constant habit, from childhod. of calling the form | ) | fully on" china. the man, and of thinking It so. This Mea rlxher than run him down has &0 grown with our growth and light seemed to dawn upon the strengthened with our strength, that it 18 | * e Your Honor,” he sald, “That neXt to impossible to break its power e on me-—1 or thought of that and, while we live in the mere plane of | Chicako Post. i the senses, as most of us do always, it “I offered her my hand,” said the youns soems to be trus. It requires an effort to rise above the delusion, and an effort to which minds u istomed to refleo- tion are tunequal. Properly speak- ing he (man) is a spiritual being.” LJ G MIRTHFUL REMARKS. A shoemaker ought by his calling to ethereal sort of a creature.” Why, there's nothin shoemaking, Why should oo ethereal?” “Because it is his business to develop an affinity for sole mates.”’—Baltimore an. “Did she accept it? ‘Not !n:l;(ly. Rh--’. bn.d'l: p’t‘:t”m' | and what she expects of me ' 5% lay my hand on the table and b dummy."—~Washington Star. FATHERLAND. Herman Hagedorn, in Poetry. There is no sword in my hand Where [ vatch Hvecyi Fatlor's Innd, mmh-r'l{ m.m. What will you say of me, Who am bload of your German blosd Through and through, Tet would not, if I could, be 80 prosalc as & shoemaker American. Rflaughter for you? — What will you say of one Father—Ar-r! 80 I have caught you| Who has no heart have I? Hyen to cheer you on? No heavens spart, No gulding God appears To my strained Jyes. Athwart the fog of fears And hates and lles, , 1 mark rin m"h."d 1|kylnl. Only a brawl in the darl A:d death and the groans of the dying For you, your men of dreams mbie and die with scr A And under hoofs llke weeds Are trampled; for you In city and on hill Voices you knew And needed are still And roundabout Harbor and shoal The lights of your soul Go out. To what ehdl O Fatherland? I see your legions sweep ulk; waves up the m:.;mud ear your women wi And the sound is as the groaning Swish of the ebbing wave— A_nation's pitiful moaning n_onen ravi Ah, Fatherland, not all Who love you most, Armed to triumph or fall, Mareh with your mi ({ host Some there are yet, as I, A‘:hnllfilnahl.p.,;‘ rt | And with acl oa) | “Ponder the Whither ana Whs Of the tragic story, Asking with bated breath, ‘Tlch way lles glory kissing my dai ? Buitor—1 trust there is mo doubt about It, sir. The light e 1“"0 dim, and 1 should feel vastly humiliatea if it should turn out to be somebody else I had been kissing.—~Topeka Journal. Montmorency, can your flance vook?" mother, but she can nt beauti- 8he can paint the moat natural grapes and peaches you ever naw.” "\anlfi maybe lrt‘)ollvl“ at !‘hnm ':’H ap- pesse huneer when s no dinner :udv."—buuuvfi’h Cour! rnal. Her—At the conciusion of an argument between a man and a woman the man may be_silenced but not convinoced, Him—Yes: and the woman may be con- d but not sllenced.—Indlanapolls ‘‘Yeur Honor,” sald the arrested chauf- feur in a Chlcago court. T tried to warn the man, but the horn would not work. * “Then why did you not slacken speed, nd which way, death? EAT MORE SPAGHETTI What to Eat In Hot Weather MEATS. heavy and greasy foods, should be eaten very sparingly during hot weather. They heat the system and tax the digestion. Faust Spaghetti ought to be indulged in during summer not only because it does not heat and is very easy to digest, but because it is also ex- tremely nutritious. It contains the rich gluten of Durum wheat, which is a blood enricher and muscle builder. There is practically no end to the ways that Faust Spaghetti can be pre- pared to make relishable eating, Write for free recipe book. MAULL BROS. St. Louis, U.8.A CROSS ouT ! MEAT The Henderson Piano A reliable, honestly made, medium priced piano; but having the tone and wearing qualities of a more expengive instrnment. Beautiful case designs, in mahogany, ‘valnut and ouk, $225,00. Payments if Desired. A. HOSPE CO. veusit s 1513 Douglas St. 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. ‘