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1 believe they should be recreative, nml‘ sor in Oakland, Cal, and he made $,00 At the last elec- | wearing bunch; the automobile gang: the | not destructive | & month out of his classes, and he told and they believe that “Billy” can insure | noon success for the “drys.” tion the “drys What for? 1 mean the diamond- KANSAS CITY IS e by e e o | S shats S vonh B e vk Pacsttn 1. e tnat_out st"one s were v || The Quality and Distinctive Style of AHER B SUNDAY Want Loulaville to Shift, llfll\ home a dinky cream pitcher, a The church of God forbids it The!| elght girla who became outcasts as & M Loulsville has been holding out for & | whisk broom or a pair of silk stockings. | greatest and most spiritual chunrches direct result of the dance, And he quit it h Bed oom F Off d a't . campalgn to start not later than April 1. | | have more respect for the I-N"'Nllnlm\‘ forbid It and are against It Catholle, | because he saw what the dance was do- t e r urn‘t“re ere l Mr. Sunday recently motified them that | gambler than I have for the church m m-| Presbyterian, Congregational, the United| Ing right in Oakland, and out of 30 girls o . . . it Delegation Hundred Strong Comes | N Postnels could not bo.there before | Ler who plays carda. The ane x orents | Preshyterian and the Chistians are. il taken at random there ware 160 who ware | These Low Prices Will Surprise You v Genuine Mahogany Poster Suite to match the there through dancing, twenty through The Methodist church was ralsed up for!dvinking, ten from wiltul cholce and " May 1. This little difference is the point | o gambler, the other is a gambler and| against it. 3 to Tell Evangelist They Must |on which it is expected that Louisville | pretends to be decent. | Have a Clmpl'xrn There. can _h- induced to shift its date in favor | you will never know what a good time | the very purpose of discountenancing the| seven because poverty and abuse had 1 of lknnn:s ‘d\u, .x..ru:- as ()mnrh; 185t {14 until you become an out and out! dapee in the church. i arivn Yhom to it. T do not belteve that spring shifted its dates in favor of Pater- | ¢y, t ew will walk out of | God o v MAY WIN OUT THEIR POINT Christian. If every man o | God called Wesley and Whitfleld to| poverty will make a girl §o wrong it her son, N. J. If Louisville should still re-| yhe church and line up, you could close | purify the Eplscopal church, and that| heart is right main obdurate it Is expected that it will | yvery saloon in town tomorrow. movement which crystallized In the| Oh, but you say: “I go to the private Kansas City invaded “‘Billy” Sun-| pe ar pped altogether. The dance ia the dry rot, the tinder| afetho. shacds easa g o g - day headquarters 100 strong Tuesday| The Kansas City delegation is the larg- ’ [ Methodio church, was Lk Fatiuie Which| Sances. L CORY 8950 the Siume or (res. Dresser illustrated — 4 pieces. .$123 DRESSER ' Like {llustration, genuine t to get a hug or two. A dancing church member is never a soul winning mahogany, large heavy de- i box of soclety. 1 always thousht it was| Goq gave. From that day until this the | for-alle” The slums and free.for-alls 4 m v . By jgn. dull finish, wood morning and made so strong an argu- [t ~most representative and most|gs pig nuisance to gallop a mile or two qp. & i - . B Yhet sign 34 & an s B A0 ATBU- LOL,, (At" of the delegations that have | church hus hurled sermons against theso| have you beat a mile. Why? Because kobs, Jatge MIFFOP, ; ment for a Sunday campaign there, | . or come to Invite Mr. Sunday. Repre- starting May 1, 1916, that machin-|sentatives are in it from nearly every | cpurh member. Some of you girls say ery was put in motion immediately |line of business and professional Mfe. | .G 4 hve Lord, I have to go to the looking to shifting the Louisville, | With only one or two ministers. It brink® | gy nee with this dude; I'm sorry.’ & united call from all the churches and y., flate 80 as to accommodate Kan-| ¢ 1" Soouiation aggresating 400,000.] , Lhere s nothing 8o tame as to ask a things until it {s & generally accepted tru-| they wear more clothes than you do. fsm that men and women that don't| Jean Cowles, who has charge of the preach against these things are 100 much Work of fallen girls, declared before the | of cowards to pose as spiritual leaders, | Chicago counclimen that his tventory | or they are too ignorant to teach God's|Shows that % per cent of the fallen girle | people | tall because of the dante. Upon her | k BED ! To match Dresser, genulne : mahogany, dull finish, { heavy side ralls ... ... $29 | fellow to play carda for the fun of it rches | Statement, which opened the eves of the | sas City. Mrs. Sunday left Tues-| Several of the delegates are from sur-| 1 know that there are some churches ) d o . 3 rounding towns. The thres dally mews- | Wron NS 8 ubed to & sky limit. that tolerate it—they don't encourage it Authorities, dance hall licenses were re- DRESSING TABLE | day evening for Louisville to confer . y 1t does not make any difference whether ! any church that encourages it is too low | fused. down to deserve the name of church, Favors New Method. L will give you a quotation from a let-| But you say: “Can't a fellow dance ter from the bishopa and archbishope of | with his own wite?™ “His who®' ‘“‘His * papers of the city sent men with the > 3 W with the folks there on this subject. Sotegstion. Ma-Mayor Deardsley and it is & penny ante or sky limit. So we Several of the Kansas City folks ex-| j,ize Ruskell are here and some of the h;\'e hbm[n‘:l\'e‘ :)uch;-, h-v‘u] ‘Irfl: ot ( pect to go to Louisville for this pur-| men are millionaires, church members in Omaha have cards on pose alao. Those of the delegation who did not;"’]";a:bl:,,", 1’,‘.:" o f::‘f., been hav.| the Cathollc church which sa own wife? Why you would just as soon The delegation made things lively in the | 16ave last night for Loulsville romained ' Ay et ! . “In this connection we consider it our | husk corn all night by moonlight as danes | lohby of the Loval hotel. Each man|for the Tnn.m-:(l: service and, tdok -;:::_"‘""t‘":o‘u“‘*h:"‘:‘:‘m'l',“:"nL;‘;"‘(‘h‘:‘:"‘:r duty to warn our members against this with your own wife. Ita not your wite wore a badge inscribed, “Kansas City | niEht train fur‘ nsas v cards in your home, either throw the! “Musement, which may become to them|you want to dance with, It's some other Wants Billy Sunday,” and each carried a| The Kansas City dflfnllon CAmE OVCT | 4rgq iy the furnace and keep the Bibie, lan n‘wn-hvn of aln, cspecially the fash- v;llow ] w|.l: or :‘nm. ¢:|her fellow's sister. cane with a Kansas City pennant at-|the Burlington in five special EulvlnT‘n.. or throw the bible Into the garbage can | 'OAMIe dance, which Is disgusting and | You let m;' ue_ your wite for the thdied, They ndrrured nludlenrln 71:; t:‘r Ih':') :enr:’:((-c:;n:;:ne;umh;:;’:..": eler, | {ha Keep the cards.. Doa't let them both | demoralising privilege of hugging his. 1 want to see and Mrs. Sunday early and la o | gener: b To match dresser, triple mir- ror, genuine dull ma- A $28 hogany CHIFFONIER To match dresser, genuine mahogany, with one large draw- er partitioned for thirts, large mirror. .. 332 Furniture for the bedroom in Jacobean oak twist de- signs—enamel, dird's-eye and maple— American—egqually attractive and priced as low. Beckwith Round Qak ‘ ‘ Combination Ranges ! 3-Fuel Ranges ! Coal—Wood—Gas . ! e | went home and was sick in bed for two| our daughters and drive these things “Biily” Sunday preached yesterday aft- |itself in other ways. It Is on a matter of |days. She had a son named Harold, 17| from society. ernoon on “Amusements,” and last night |amusement, and that of the (rifling kind. | years of age. He had a head like an preached the sameé sermon, as follows: |The day is. long past when any number |eggplant, face life a horse, eves like| The Galatlans vi7: “Be not decelved |of serious-minded citizens look to the | poached eggs, ears like the salls on a " “The cnormities of the theater and the|the color of the buck's hair that dares situation before them. A “wet” and ““dry" | sas City. The party took breakfast at ";‘t" ‘:::’1‘;;‘°“;°;"’:’""‘”‘h"""r"‘fl~l” o out| 4ANCO Would not be tolerated another | to Put hin arma around Nell. . election is to come up in Kansas City, | Hotel Fomencll ok "'YF rhurr‘;u. [ minute it the mothers would only set| y,\"‘“y ¥OU need the exercise of danc- _——— R . In & town where I was preaching they | their faces against them." ing. Passion is the basis of the popularity @ bad parties early to’ get them off thelr| BIShop Vincennes quotes from his rec.|Of the ""“"‘~h Let women dance with | A t of Soc'et Roundl e ey et o vte | Ords that the walts would not be toler, | ¥Omen and the men dance with men. musemen S | affair and the prize was n.$20 cut glass| 8ted If Christian mothers would only set Make men dance by themselves and e & moctety woman worked and | thelr faces against it and remove thelr | ¥OMen by themselves and il kill the | ‘B' l S d Se JU|=west. and liea and cheated and took daughters from this contamination. dance in & month. 1 belleve that passion ! core y | y un ay 'n Tmo | progressions which she didn't win and| Alas! that women professing to follow “' ""M"n-': Mum' :-nn :(\pulnr.(y to- i S & then lost the dish by two points. She| Christ should not rally for the honor of [$o%" | ::‘m:l'(‘“':"d':,’:;y"h::‘_“.l:"';’; this they do without their wives. Why, then, can’t they dance without their wives, or other people's wives, it exercise is the thing they want. Church Bars Low. bars of the church are so low | (that is, don't let the devil deceive you). God Is not mocked, for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” That would be true if it were not in the Bible. It has always been true in nature. It would be unnatural to expect to plant a turnip seed and get apples. 1t would be unnatural to plant an apple | seed and expect to get oranges. You reap what you sow in nature, and in works, either material or spiritual. “‘Whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap.” If you sow saloons you witi reap drunkards. If you sow cards you will reap gamblers. If you sow dance halls you will reap shame. You ought to. It you vote for the dirty, rotten saloom your boy ought to be a arunkard. You ought to be paid In your own coin. 1 know of no more suitable text in the Bible for the topic that 1 have in hand, and by the presence of such a vast audlence and by the expectant look upon your faces, I am sure that you won't ex- pect me to utter one word in defense of the amusement proposition. And yet it there is no harm in it I should be the champion of it and not the bitter enemy of it. Not all are bad. I wouldn't say that, but most of them are. You know how few are good, and so do I. Skill of the Devil But the energetic skill of the devil has defied the truth of such masterly power that I it is to be defeated there is but ome or two alternatives vpen to the man theater for inspiration or instruction. The legitimate drama can't live, A Shakes- pearean show can't last for .mflnlh. The | people will aot attend it, but.let a God- forsaken leg show start:acrces the street ang it will be packed to the roofs. I's the spectacular that appeals today. Take the leg show and the spectacular from the stage and the theater would go to | rot You go to see a musical comeay and you will see girls that haven't enough clothes on t) flag a handcar and then they tey to hide behind art. That's why the managers say the public is to bLlane. If you want to be dirty and go to these places it's up to you. But it's because of these I'm juctifiea in preaching the wer- men that I am. garah Bernhardt went away from Amer- ica with $274,00 at the end of a nine month's tour, but when a preacher makes | a little money they call him a “grafter.”” Cyrus Townser.d Brady found only eight | out of twenty-one plays that he would endcree, The only good I can see you do with the theater is to tura it into some- thing cise. If the church would refuse to patronize the theater, the theater would be com- pelied to sweep its filth from the stage. Booth ang Garrick, two of the greatest | tragedians, would not allow tneir own children to go to the theater, Macready, one of the famous English tragedians, would not allow his wife or children to sée a play unless he had first read or seen it and passed upon it, as to whether | catboat, a regular Clydesdale fellow; and she came down one morning in her crushed geranium tea gown with ele- phant's breath ribbons, with red slippers | that turned up like sled runners, and her son came in and sald: “Here, ma, don't worry about that cut glass dish you dldn't win; here's a 320 gold plece and you can go and Luy one just like it from the jeweler.'" Won It at Cards. “Why, where L world. I have as good a right to expect “I won it at Richardson,” (that's the| 8004 of you as I have of my wife and gambling hell of the town), and she safd,| *he has of me “Why, dear, do you think I would take $20 you won at gambling?”’ | & soul winner. The dance is simply a “Why not?" he hsked. “Where's the| hUEEing match set to music. ditference between winning a prise that or three suits of clothes and a bank ac- | count can break into most any church. of it another preacher will take 'em In. minister and say, ‘Go to it cost $20 and winning the $20 and buying | everybody, not merely for the preacher | the prize?” or the old man or woman who couidn’t The woman sald to me afterwards when| dance if they wanted to, but for every- she came down and took her stand for| body Interested in morals, whether in the Christ, she would never play cards again.| church or out of the church 8he is one of the most active workers and most Christian women of the church today. I used to play cards. I could lie and| cheat like the rest of them. But I'm after the devil now; I don't care where he shows his head. One of the Gideons, While they were there the man's old washerwoman came down and pled with him to accept Christ. He told her he| olsewhere. would do it for her and went up in Dance is Immoral, ‘The dance is immoral. the same as are possessed by the bad, now that any old hog can come and rodt | and crawl in. Any old lobster with two|such close contact that virtue is well If one preacher gets a little too warm | they danced by themselvea. They danced on these subjects he gets called for it;|then for religlous exercise. But dancing and If any one leaves the church because | in the twentieth century 18 not for re- Instead he should stand by the other |the ark of God and Saul's daughter looked The trouble 18 now the church of God | ’ancing weakens you morally. There 14 you met it?" she| has become the clearing house for the (!sn't a reforming influence in it. You say The dancing church member never was The crusade against the dance fs for | J4NCINE connected with them, Every man and | bufld it; fifteen architects were required woman carries a breast full of passions, | There are 766 columns and 121 swinging and those passions become a tinder box|altar. A man traveling in Burope came to to consume morals whenever brought into | the cathedral and went in. He had only contact with the temptress. The dance|gotten a short distance when there came 1s conducive to Immorality. In the dance|the cry of “hats off, the pope s com- and on the ballroom floor you ullow lib-{ing.” and as they stand In respectful erties to men that you never allow them | silence, the Swiss guards come down the You grant men liberties on|alsle carrying a chalr bearing the pale, The dance brings vice and virtue into uigh helpless and powerless. Did they dance in Bible times? Yes, but liglous experience. David danced before on In envy. But he danced by himself, “It doesn’t hurt you,” but you know It does, If it hasn't hurt you so far, I will congratulate you ‘and warn you In time. There are plenty of graceful exercises nd cheerful amusements which have none of the objections that lie againat As everything a Christlan does should be done “Unto the Lord,” I feel that to | indulge in dancing would be more of an insult than an honor to Him. So I shall abstaln from it altogether. In Rome there stands the great 8t Peter's cathedral. It required 337 years to lights are always burning before the front and took his stand. He was one of the ballroom floor that if a man other|then, emaciated Leo XIII. TIP-TOP BREAD Bakes equally well with - $ either fuel in the same oven. - i Positively guaranteed. 30 Days Free Trial to prove our claim, Convenjent monthly terms of payment. o than your husband would attempt in your | ' He dismounts from the chair and creeps home and your husband would find you |to the foot of the status of the lowly . (1] » Who agsaults the hell-soaked institutions |or not it was fit to see. the five men who founded the little band Look for This Label Thc Pcrfect Bread with_grit and.courage, One of two aiter- natives. He can consume his energy and time talking about the minor usages of | the possible limits one might go, or he' can peel the bark away and show the thing full of worm holes and run the risk of losing his falr reputation. I want to say that Y have willingly and deliberately, and with malace afore- thought, chosen the latter course. I have never preached this sermon or lec- ture, as you call it, but that I always feel myself like a demon placed there “v society to tdke revenge for the things | at soclety itgelf had made posstble and \essary. I'm not responsible for them. § you, and you know it. If I were & these things I wouldn't have the acity to preach against them. I don't Piay cards and attend theaters. If 1 did you would condemn me, and justly, too. But I don't and you can't come to me and say, “Physician, neal yourself.” 1 have a message which burns its way into your soul and to my heart. My | words may be strong, but if they are, Those were men who nad some char- acter to them ang left honor and high stamo after them. Hweydn sald thit only the genius of Shakespeare saved the stage from the contempt of all. An actress sald tlds: “After years on the stage I am convinced that the theatrical busincss is the most corrupt in the world.” It Is corrupting educationally, commercially and morally. Mark of Decadence, It is upon ths charred souls of women |that most of the men who are a power in the theatrical world have climbed to their height. The only way to reform the theater is | to turn it into something else. Israel Zang- | {will rays that the playwrisht gets up his | production to satisfy the lust of the age, ang not for what good it will do the world. Archbishop Glennon sald that to Ko night after night to the theater Is a merk of decadence. You avoid the pest- house and leper hospital and yet night after night yow'll rush to the theater to of Gldeon—Charley Kitterege. Theré was & time in America when the stately cotillon seemed to satisfy | ury in th 1d woul, B AmNck:: but 163k od alow for the Mot Jury in the world would convict him of it. Doesn’t the swing of the dance arcund at it, he would have no trouble in secur- ing a divorce and if he shot the man no [Of the figure and returns to his chair. fisherman of ‘Galllee and kissew the foot Peter, the fisherman of God. What would I not give if I could live blood of the twentieth century. They must have something that will chase ! hurdles through their veins. nothing so insipid f waltz as to dance a 1 am asked to give a reason to the saved why they should not dance. Your love for th out of the church. I belleve that most of the girls sold as white slaves are enlisted from the ball- rooms. The dance is the rottenest, most the corners throw men and women in|® life tRat would positions that are not tolerated else- | MONUment such as There 1s| where" or the devotee of the| Fathers and brothers—you don't seem quadrille, to realize when your daughters and si ters go to these dances they meet strange men and assoclate with older women and learn to smoke and drink; and you can bet that when a girl gets 5o low that sho will smoke and drink that she is on the ose things keep you HOUSTON, Tex., for a recel for tl What would you not give? Peter gave up all and followed Christ. Great God, is it too great a sacrifice for you to stop cards, theaters and balls? Btop it! (Copyright, Willlam A. Sunday. ——————— Asks for m Recelver, toboggan slide and golng to hell fast. |western Rallway company w le: behind me a that! Oct. 12.—Application | he Greenville North- ked fn | ONCE it gets into the home it always remains the unanimous choice of the family. Its uniform quality and excellence pleases all. Made only from new wheat flour and the best ingred- ients that money can buy. It does no harm to keep your daughter away from dances. She runs a big risk in going. In God's name play the safe side, Prof. Faulkner was a dancing profes- hellish, vice-producing institution that ever wriggled from the ‘depths of perdi- tion, Certainly, I belleve in amusements, but e — oo a petition filed today in district court here by the Houston & Texas Central Rallway company, which seeks to collect | a note for $3,301.08. The defendant com- pany owng a line of rallway in Collin county, Tex be and 10c at Your Grocers. U. P. STEAM BAKING CO. { You must remember they are blood red with conviction. With the cry of lost| souly ringing in my ears I cannot remain | still. If I can save one from going to| hell, 1 consider myselt well paid for all the vituperation and malediction that you can hurl agalnst me because 1 rub it inte your pet sin, Judged in the court of human desire, \ 1 might be condemned by everybody that | wants to do It, but judged in the court of human conscience and need, I will re- ceive a universal verdict of approval. | For Moral Decency, 1 am actuated by no other motive than | moral decency and if you are ready to il gn, mors “9'“:‘ you will listen and |jjeves more in amusements than I do sive me your thanks. | But I believe that they should be recre- We niways associate in our minds cer-!gijve ang harmless and not destructive ‘ tain ' umusements—theater, cards and [;o0a)ly, intellectually and physically. No- dance. While some will champion and ;,1y pelieves more in amusements than | tndorse some other will condemn. Some |y go . who will play cards will seek to justity that and condemn the theater and those who fall by their own stinking rotten- | ‘Vhat games do I play? ness. I do not condemn the theater as an| Well, play base bail, or used to; I'm | institution, but I do condemn the way |Slowed up now. And I play lawn tenniw; it 18 run. It is hellish, And you church {don't like it so well, though, it's too members of responsible for it. If church | “§irlified,” and golf, and croquet and members would stop patronizing tne |3heckers ang chess. theaters they would either clean up or | YOu 8y, vhat's the difference between rot. If every man with his name on a |® @ame of cards and a game of chockors? church roll would vote against the | Cards never helped anybody. Cards were saloons we wouldn't have them. It is up |invented to amuse en idiotic king, and to the church. In my opinion the theater |until tris dsy they have not done any is of such dountful character that it has | better. been relegated to the class of forbidden | Just as much difference as between amusements. You know that the theater | heéaven and hell, if you ean imagine that; had its beginning with the handmaid of | 88 between vice and virtue, if you can religion. It produced so much fuss and | imagine that. trouble that they were compelled to drop | There are hundreds of games which we- ft. Unless the theater is redeemed it will | can indulge in that are not detrimental fall W its own vilenes {to us as cards are. Ever since the days We sire flooded with vile drama that | that cards were invented to satisfy the mocks and scoffs at the sacredness of | Whims of an idiot king, down to today, marriage. they have been the tool of the gambler. Theater Not Teacher, A gambler knows the cards like the jew- The theater is not a teacher. It is not | eler knows the watch, or an auto repair intepded to be educational, but it is in- | man knows an auto. tended for entertainment. Efforts have | Many a boy is inveigled into a gam- Deeh made 10 reform the stage, ling room and listens to the roulette has slways gone downward, and, wheel, the faro bank and the keno, and water, seeks its own level. There have listens to the ribaldry and the jests and been spasmodic revivals, but today the |the blasphemy, and he is reminded of majority of theaters allow any show that | home. will bring money to be played at the! What a wonderful heritage to bequeath theaters. | to & boy if he has to go into a hell hole We could shut up the theaters and you like that and have it remind him of home wouldn't miss them in forty-eight hours. | and the fact that that he was taught at You wouldn't stand up and defend a|home. Men who have been spending thing because there's lots of money In It, their funds and lives to ferret those would 'you? things out tell us that nine-tenths of the A They began to cut new exits in Chi-| gamblers are taught in their homes by cago theaters after the Iroquois theater | their mothers and 8 per cew by Christian \ fire so people could get out easier, but | people. enjoy the procession of moral lepers ex- posed on the stage for the plaudits of the people. The thaater and the church have nothing in common. The church glves the people what they need. The theater gives them what they want. We shall reap what we sow. Sow cards, reap gamblers, S8ow the dance and reap {brothels and outcasts. Sow the saloon jand reap drunkards, just as naturally as the water runs down hill. I défy unyone to contradict what I say about the mat- ter. You say: “What is the matter with this preacher, doesn't he belleve in amuse- ments?" There is not a mian in Omaha who be- Surgeon General Rupert Blue of the U. S. Public Health Service Says: What a Young Man Says of — Furnished Rooms A young business man came to us the other day, asking our assistance in finding a furnished room. If you keep a rooming house, or if you have a single, spare room, you should have heard him— ‘“‘IWANT TO WARN YOU AGAINST THE CRAZE PEOPLE IN THIS COUNTRY HAVE FOR WHITE FLOUR. THE WHITEST FLOUR IS NOT THE BEST; IT IS NOT THE PUREST; IT IS ONLY THE DEAREST, AND WHEN YOU BUY IT YOU BUY LOOKS AND NOT NOURISHMENT, IN ORDER TO MAKE IT WHITE, SOME OF THE MOST NOURISHING AND ESSENTIAL COMPONENTS OF THE NATURAL WHEAT HAVE BEEN TAKEN AWAY."” - Play Good Games, Here’s what he said: “I do wish folks who have rooms to rent would advertise them in THE BEE, 1I'm busy-—I haven’'t time to go running sround all over town looking for a room. It I could read about roowms for rent in the Want Ads, picking out those which best suited me, it would be better. But 1t seems that keepers of rooming houses care not whether they get trade or not. “f am particularly desirous of secur- ing & room in a private family, but I #ee no such rooms advertised. 1 guess those who have a single room for rent imagine it is not worth while to adver- fise it. They don't seem to understand that many people want just such rooms."” These “nourishing and essential components” are the priceless mineral phosphates of the grain, known as the “tissue salts,” indispensable for perfect health of body, brain and nerves. Everywhere food sclentists and physiclans are sounding a like note of warning, for a host of ills is following the pernicious practice of casting out these elements in the milling process, and that, simply to make the flour look white and pretty. Neurasthenla, anemia, Bright's disease, con- stipation, rickets, and a lowered resistance agalinst disease in general, are some of these ills. More and more thinking people are waking up to this evil, There's a way out. Grape-Nuts FOOD made of whole wheat and barley, retaing all the nutriment of the grains and those “essential com- ponents’’— the mineral elements. This splendid food was devised years ago to supply this very lack in ordinary food and fortify the system against the onslaughts of disease. It does it wonder- fully well. NOW, if YOU have vacant rooms, whether it be one or a dozen, why don’t youn take the hint and advertise them to people who are too busy to go searching for rooms? Use a BEE WANT AD—it costs little though it brings you much, BEE WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Grape-Nuts comes ready to eat, convenient, economical and nourishing, and has become a house- hold word in thousands of homes for its sterling food values and deliclous flavor. “There’ a Reason” for Grape-Nuts no dreadful things came to pass such as Gambling is G tos. ' had been predicted by a leading actor. A seemingly estimable woman will tear The putiic has & capacity of amusing | and snooze and pout through an aftcr- sold by Grocers everywhore.