Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 17, 1915, Page 6

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*THE OMAHA DAILY BEE - FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROBEWAT!:R VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Proprletor. BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. BRSNS G Omna sevtofiios ha sesond-siiss matier. —'—fim‘mm‘— %o, 0 260, . c. 3.0 notice nf change of address or complaints of | irregularity in delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation | Department REMITTANC y draft, express or postal order. Only two- tamps received In payment of small ae- Personal checks, except on Omaha and castern ccepted. OFFICPE. | Bee Bullding. ¥ 7 Sout —218 N rtree oune Bluta—11 North Main street o Bufldin Lincoln—% Liti 'hi Buil Cl ot &-' ‘ork—Room 1108, 296 ¥fth avenue Louis- 58 New Bank of Commtvnv Washington—7% Fourteenth 8t., N. W. CORRESPONDENCE, {pdieon o communications relating to news and edi- Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. OCTOBER CIRCULATION 54,744 ebraska, County of Douglas, ss fh it Willlams, circulation manager of Tho Bee ng company, Nln{‘ duly sworn, rayi the Jirculation for the montn of Octoner, 191, WIGHT WILLIAMS, Cireulation Manager. bocrlldbcg in m Dressance u\d sworn to before of November, OBERT IIUNflR Notary Public. Bubscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. November "==—==fl Thought for t_ln_c Day Selected by A. C. Hart (Geniug is eternal patience. = Michael Angelo. A long, rugged road stretches from November filings to the primaries in April. & S—e—p—— Rival divisions 6f warring Burope appear cager Lo pay any old price for a reliable diagram of the Greclan bent. e— With the recognition of the Musiclans’ union, the discords at the city hall should all be trans- formed into harmony. Omaha m;;{ln a city Ab;-uunll 80 long as it tolerates ugly and unsanitary dumps in the widst of a residence district. The steady uplift of the product reminds con- sumers of gasoline that blowing off clouds of tlue smoke is a waste of costly material. i ——— The political end of the British government blowing off considerable steam, easing the re on the bollers and laying the dust of em—— Rallroads spent $10,000,000 ln.no\uuw ‘ubligity last year. This sort of publicity is a effective business getter than rate boosting ~ President Wilson is now devoting his whole time to preparing a message on preparedness. Meanwhile half a score of hopeful hearts here- abouts throb in vain for a judicial message, The democratic candidate for governor of Feutucky pulled through on a narrow margin of M 500 votes. And they call it a victory in a state «hleh gave Wilson a plurality of 104,072, Certain advocates of to-the-hilt prepared- ness scout the idea of civilians revising or alter- Ing the plans of army and navy experts, How- ‘@éver, they offer no objections to civillans foot- Ang the bills. Remembering the adage about the way to a heart being through his stomach, some f our club women also believe that the same way will make laggard ulool children into Wt pupils. In the Brownsville affair, Roosevelt ordered i‘ whale troop of soldiers discharged for a *“‘con- 'mq of silence.” It takes the Wilson admin- 3 tion, however, to fire an assistant postmas- 1cr for not being silent. 2 S—— * Smooth workers who “put over” shady deals on the allies’ supply department reveal their ~defective wheels in following the goods to des- Unation. The case of John Wesley DeKay mabuue- the superiority of the home getaway. S— Half a million dollars in cash and $25,000 a & fow Prea Sy et | fi indifference which all but froze the inventive ' Liood of the Wright brothers. The vast field of | buman adventure opened by the heavier-than-air Mlying machines added new laurels to American dnventive skill. has returned from Wnr-m. where he last six months In the Wyoming ofl a8 interested in the wells made known K. Spauiding has returned from a three- vuu with friends in Carthage, I w from Albert Morris, the pugilist, dated at City, tells of his having quit all his bad : become an evangelist. I hope that you and the citizens of Omaha will forgive my past misdo- " he wrltes, “for I intend in future to lead a upright life. and James Martin left for a hunting Kearney. A asque ball at @ bail, Eleventh and Douglas. These ladier Canfield company, whe and the committee Burvall and Jennle ~ | one to another. Britain's War Office Troubles. Great Britain has been airing to the world its war.office troubles, which have long been suspected and with difficulty kept from public d'ecussion. Cabinet changes, however, have ap- parently precipitated things so that the ques- tion of responsibility for blunders on land and wea I8 80 acute as to threaten a back-fire from the rear trenches. In this situation Great I'ritain is having the common experience of countries that go to war, particularly when the war does not result in the speedy successes looked for and promised. The present Buropean conflict, requiring co- operation between allies on both sides, is par- ticularly inviting to division of counsel and ¢hifting of blame for disastrous ventures from Rival claime for military glory ure much more easily dealt with than competi- tive efforts to avold the odium of defeat. We in this country had during the civil war sad ex- perience of the same sort, which culminated in the nomination of a candidate for president against Lincoln on a platform declaring the war ‘o save the union a fallure. Regardless of the immediate effect of the fortunes of battle and the eventual outcome, the stirring up of the war lords by letting In a little light on their per- formances will do no harm. Omaha and the Jefferson Highway. The success of the Lincoln Highway and its assured future is due to the fact that the route is laid out on natural lines following the great central coast-to-coast roadway. If the proposed Jefterson Highway from the Gulf of Mexico to the Canadian border is to secure general ac- ceptance and support, it will also have to recog- rize natural lines rather than artificial diver- sion. From New Orleans to 8t. Louis there is no From 8t. Louis poussibility of disagreement, north, the geographic route would be either along the Mississippl or the Missouri valleys. Poth of these routes might be developed, and doubtiess will be in time, but we do not see how any half-way-between compromise over hill and dale can be seriously considered. The Mis- sour] valley route would make Omaha the main junction point with the Lincoln Highway, and the Mississippl route would cross it at Daven- port, making a triangle when both branches are completed, with St. Louis at the other apex. This is the natural, and we belleve inevitable, aevelopment of any properly devised trans- continental road system. To project the Jeffer- son Highway on other lines would certainly be decidedly hazardou: Lining Up for Congres: The president had his first meeting with his cabinet since July last week, and as the most acute stages of the diplomatic controversies have been passed without calling in his advisers for a conference, it is a reasonable supposition that the lining up of forces to push the president’s program through congress was the incentive, That this program is already mapped out i{s the goneral supposition, and while the counsel of his cabinet is not considered essential for formula- tion it is different with the political phases, since the congressional experience of several members and the numerous political strings which they ean pull make them prime factors in this phase of the administration game. With the greatly lessened democratic majority in the house and the known opposition of some of the majority members to special features of the accredited presidential program, particularly along fiscal lines, putting things through congress may not be so easy a task as it has been heretofore. Record Grain Movement. Statistios compiled by both the government and trade organizations show that at the present time there is in the United States the greatest grain movement in the history of the country. At the port of Philadelphia alone ships are under charter to transport 5,000,000 bushels of wheat and rye to Europe, the grain is in store in ele- vators there and more waliting to go into the ele- vators as soon as room can be found for it. Sim- ilar conditions exist at all the other grain export- ing ports, estimates of competent authorities p'acing the amount of wheat and rye in the United States available for export after the local ccnsumption and seed demands have been sup- plied at 400,000,000 bushels, with a foreign markot in sight for every bushel. These figures seem startling in view of the predictions of a few years ago that it would be but a few years Ull the United States would cease to be an ex- porter of grain. These figures on grain avallable for export, following a year in which practically all the avallable supply was exhausted at harvest time, {llustrate the reserve produciny power of the country. True the present year was one of rec- ord yleld nd acreage, but an analysis also shows that better farming methods have been a tactor, and that the areas which could be successfully farmed, previously not under tillage, were greatly underestimated. That a country of such great area as the United States, so fertile, and with a population no more dense, should be approach- ing the time when it could no more than support its own people with grain seemed improbable, hut statisticians had almost convinced us that it was a fact. The first test by an opportunity for profitable production and an assured market has confounded theory and demonstrated our ability to feed our own people and at the same time to portion of the deficit in foreign More Woe for Bachelors. In looking around for means to replenish the federal treasury democratic congressmen jump onto the bachelor the first thing, and it is proposed to lower, by $1,000 per year, the minimum income subject to income tax. if congress acts on the suggestion it means & few less visions of the white lights, a little less of the joys of bohemia, for Uncle Sam will reacn into the pocket of the bachelor and take away & little more of the income. If this thing is to con- t'nue the bachelor is going to have a bard time of It, for if he must live pay a government tax on meager incomes of $2,000 how is he to pay for getting his sox darned, his buttons sewed on and other similar but necessary serv- fces performed and have anything left for the Galeties and frivolities of single blessedness, S———— Why all this persistent plugging and lobby- ivg to force Omaha to invest $150,000 in a fire- alarm system, duplicating the present telephone @larm that has been answering its purpose rea- scoably well? It looks very much like a very black Senegambian in the wood pile. THE BE Business and Politics I Louis Arthur Coolidge. c.Tur,Rn are persons who constantly clamor. They complain of oppression, speculation and pernicious influence of reumulated wealth They cry out loudly against all banks and corporations and all means by which small cApitals become united in order to produce important and beneficial results They carry on mad hostility against all established institutions. In a country of unbounded liberty they clamor against oppression. In a country of perfect equality they would move heaven and earth against privilege and monopoly. Tn & country where the wages of labor are high beyond parallel, they would teach the laborer that he is but an oppressed slave These words were not penned by Blihu Reot or John W. Weeks or Elbert H. Gary or George W Perking or James J. Hill or George Sutherland, or any other of the great lawyers or legislators or business leaders of the day, Although they might well have been penned by anyone of them with reference to conditions with which we are all painfully familiar. On the contrary, they were spoken by Danlel Web- ster, away back in 153, and they bore upon a situa- tion which prevailed then ¢ven as It prevalls now, though not now to the same extent that it prevalled a little while ago. Between Danlel Webster's day and ours there have | been many fluctuations of public opinion; each perfod of agitation against business and corporations bearing its Inevitable fruit of disaster and industrial distress has been followed by a perjod of encourngement to business and enterprise continuing until prosperity once more became widespread and malice stirred into 1ife by demagogs again began to show its fangs. As it was in the beginning so is it no‘ and doubtless will be to the end of time. After the period of great prosperity which marked the Harrison administration, we had the populistic craze which brought the lean years from 182 to 1896 followed in turn by the Dingley tariff bill and a decade of unrivaled industrial advancement. Then came the era of regulation and business unrest, through the clouds of which we are now beginning to see rays of light. This business unrest was due primarily to self- advertising ‘“lawyers of the people,” labor agitators, politiclans and writers to whom it furnished a means of livelthood or political preferment, or notoriety. Brandeis and Untermyer are one type; Bryan repre. sents another, and men like Wilson and Redfield are still another, While the agitation was at its height, we never heard about any of these men making a personal sacrifice for the good of the people, by whose wrongs they scemod so deeply moved. We have heard a lot from men of this class about the sad plight of the consumer, but the men wWho do the real work of the world have not joined in the excite- ment to any appreclable extent. Workingmen are consumers, but they are producers also, and they know what it means to have work to do and a chance to earn wages. There has been altogether too much talk about the poor consumer. The American theory used to be that a man doing business In a given nelghborhood was known to his associatos and competitors, and that, if he einned persistently or even occaslonally against the criminal code, his sin would find him out, but now under the Wilson dispensation we have a new rule of conduct. Our business bullders in Industrial centers must con- form their practice to lll-begotten theories of imma- ture but stubborn doctrinaires and politiclans whose lives have been passed in communities un trade and unfamiliar with its established laws even then they run the risk of pestilent investigation and persecution by an ever-increasing army of federal employes. How can we find rellef from this unhappy state? One remedy is obvious; either we must divorce business from politics, or else put business into politics for all it is worth. If politics interfere with business we are bound to have business in politics. You can't revise the tariff without having the people whose livelihood depends upon protected industries take part by the discussion, and you can't strike a corporation or & business man through legislation or executive ac- ton without exciting vigorous Interest and provoking political activity on the part of the men who feel themselves responsible for the management of their own affalrs. The country will not be free of its present afflic- tions in the form of commissions and investigators with unlimited power but limited disorimination, of laws that cripple commerce and industry, until busi- ness wisdom and experfence are recognized in gov- ernment and are giveh due consideration in legisla- tion. The business man has a legitimate place in politics, and he should not hesitate to selze it. This great industrial nation had its origin under the au- spicious leadership of one whose aptitude for busie ness equaled his valor and disinterested love of coun- try. George Washington was the second richest man in the republic when he was elected president. A mere fighting man could not have met successfully the problems which confronted Washington throughout the revolutionary war—the problems which Involved holding together a stragsling army, leading it through poorly cultivated stretches of country, providing transportation, guns and uniforms, and food and ammunition, He was one of the few farmers in Vir- ginia who made farming pay, and he accomplished this result by watching the detalls of income and outgo with scrupulous exactness, and applying the same foresight and intelligence to agriculture that a manufacturer or merchant would apply to his own line of business. Our first president was a business man, success- ful in many lines of endeavor. He steered us safely through the troublous waters which came 80 near en- EUIfing us at the beginning, and set our rudder towards security and peace. Of late we have been drifting on the shoals, heedless of consequences and desplaing the familiar charted paths. It is high time to take our bearings, learn whither we have been drifting, throw overboard the reckless pilots who have tried to set the salls to every gust of popular demand, an dturn again Into the channels where safety Ifes. Let us select A pllot In whose judgment we can trust, a man like Washington, {f one can be found, familiar with the laws of business and industry as well as with the problems of legislation and national defense, and wedded to the commercial ethics upon which endur- in success In government depends: and let us give him a congress upon the honesty and sanity of which the country can depend. Twice Told Tales Experimenta) Polygamy, The old negro had been arrested for “having more than one wife,”" the last woman being the complainant He happened to be well known locally and an orderly character. “How many wives have you had?" Judge. “Six, yo' honor," was the reply. “Why couldn't you get along with them?" the judse ted. Well, suh, de fust two spiled the fhite folks' clothes when dey washed um; de thud worn't no cook; de fo'th was des nacherally lasy—en' de fit—I'll ted you, jege—the fif, she—" “Incompatibility 7" the court suggested. “No yo' honor,” said the old negro, slowly, “it worn't nothin' like dat. Yo' jes' couldn't get along wid her unless yo wus somewhars else.”—Case and Comment. demanded tle in He Wanted Vartety. “The professional fire-fighter,” says the chief of & fire dunnmut in New England, “is too fnqu-ntlv nnmmmwnm occasionally show an epicurean flavor. “While running to & fire in a large town In Rhode island, one man overtook another, who was going In the same direction. “ ‘L hope,' gasped the last mentioned, out of breath, the stoveling works, I've seenm that -] Ledger. : OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1915, the | | TheDees LeHer, Night High School. OMAHA, Nov. 16.—To the Editor of The Bee: Measuring education by the earn estness with which students apply them selves to the work, the resuits flowing from night high schools mark certain present and future dividends on the in vestment. The men and women whom necessity forced into the workaday world long before thelr time, or to whom school opportunities were denied, possess far gres tains in ordinary sehool life Experience In the world's workshops { brings home a realization of deficiencies Tn dozens of ways the educational nexlect of earlier years retards advancement, or makes slow and laborious tasks that are simple to minds grounded in the fundi- mentals, To them the chance of making up in part for lost opportunities spurs ambition to the utmost and brings to the work the tense earnestness of hearts and | minds fully aware of their needs. Hardly | any branch of popular education serves a purpose as urgent as these schools. How well they are appreciated is shown by the numbers of eager learners crowding ommodations in Omaha and many other cities. The more completely this need is supplied the greater will be the benefits in improved citizenship. A B C. For n Soclety of Keep-Weils, WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 15.—To the Editor of The Bee: 1 should be glad If you would publish the ideas of the Na. tional Boclety of Keep-Wells, as indicated in enclosed clipping from the Washington Star, and encourage the women of your city and neighboring towns to invite their physiclans to give informal talks as to how to keep well. It is as follows: To keep well and to aid others to do so— that is the object of the Keep-Well so- clety. It !a an effort in behalf of pre- ventlva madicine, to teach people the proper care of thelr bodies so that phy- sicians will become unnecessary. This association helps to spread the knowledge of prominent Washington phy- siclans gained from practical experience ¥| means of lectures open to the public They ald the sick to ome well, and the well to remain so. It is one step toward the reduction of Infant mortality. It carries out the idea of the visiting nurse societies, to show people how to prevent diseases. Clinics and hospital wards are often bene ited through the efforts of this band of earn- est women. MRSARTHUR MACDONALD, President National Soclety Keep-Wells. Merely Manifesting College Spirit. OMAHA, Nov, 16.—To the Bditor of The Bee: If I had not seen it with my own eyes T could not have belleved it. Can it be that there {s one man in Omaha who does not understand and appreciate true college spirit? The Creighton demonstration of Friday night was by far the most imposing spec- tacle of college spirit which has yet been #een in Omaha, College spirit, or enthusiasm, as it Is commonly called, springs from love and loyalty to the school which we attend. It prompts us to make such a demonstra- tion of our fervor by voicing the college “yells” in walking the streets. It is that #pirit which prompts “old grads” to jour- ney across the continent to visit their “‘alma mater” once a year, to see thelr old chums and to review old acquaint- ances. Yet Mr. Atwood says that such a demonstration shows ‘“‘a lack of perspec- tive.” ‘“He says, "‘there may be some excuse for such exhibitions of college enthus nsm in a small town, but such is not tne case in Omaha.” In answer to this I quote the words of an eastern college man fol- lowing a llke demonstration last year. Sald he, “It does me good t> see thoss boys show that loyal spirit. All the east- ern colleges have such celebrations and 1 have often wondered why Crelghton men held back." As to the “ordinary business man,™ who, Mr. Atwood says, “is anything but favorably impressed, etc.,” I challenge that statement and claim that the ma- jority of the merchants and theatrical men are glad to see the ovoys come to their places of business and willingly throw open thelr doors to the boys In their jollifications. ‘“We suggest,”” he says, “that the Omaha theaters protect their patrons from this sort of student enthusiasm.” When we visited the other Omaha theaters (viz., the Orpheum, the Strand, the Gayety and | Empress) the audiences applauded each yell and showeq they were with us. We damage nothing and inconvenience no one in these demonstrations, yet we give Creighton the best advertisement that anyone can put out. I repeat, the Creigh- ton boys have the right Idea. There is not one business man in Omaha, I dare say, who will back Mr. Atwood In his statement that “these dem- onstrations do not meet with general ap- proval,” for I know the rtudents from Creighton university, Central H'gh school and Boyles college bring more transient business to Omaha than any Institution or any single line of business in our eity. A CREIGHTON STUDENT. Seals. | OMAHA, Nov, 16.—To the Editor of The Bee: T see the announcement again in The Bee about the Red Cross Christmas seals going on sale, I have bought these | stamps regualarly, but I never have been able to find just what was done with the money received for them, and would like to know if you can give the information. P. B. REYNOLDS. Note—The Bee happens to have the offi- clal statement explaining the method of | dividing the Christmas seal money. These amps are sold in different localities through subagents who receive back per cent for anti-tuberculosis work in the locality, The other 50 pezsrent 14 used to pay the expenses of manufacturing and distributing the seals and printed matter that goes with them, and the salary ex- | penses of the local representalive of the Red Cross, the remainder being used by the Nebraska Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. Tips on Home Topics | Chicago Herald: BEvery congressman is in favor of economy that begins with the other fellow's district. Boston Transcript: Vie Murdock has rted for Europe to report the war. That is where a bull moose has to o now if he wants to keep on standing at Arma- geddon. Pittsburgh Dispatch: BSecretary Garri- son is quoted as saying that some of the obsolete army posts might be made use of If the army Increase gets through. Looks like & bid for the “pork” vote Baltimore American: And so they are trying to drag poor dead and gone Ezekiel into the national defense movement Well, patient Job has been on the job so long in Washington that perhape he would appreciate » bit of acriptural company. er agpreciation of education than ob- | Women's Activities rk suffragists at an enthusiastic have pledged | New ¥ | meeting at Cooper union | $100,000 to begin the new campaign for votes for women The high court of New Jersey lays down the doctrine that $1,329 is not An exces- | sive judgment in the case of a girl whose face was damaged hy the collapse of a | poreh. The figures indicate a bargain- counter start toward the fortune the face concealed The Women's Reserve ambulance of London is an offshoot of the Woman's Volunteer Reserve corps, and Is sald to have done good work during recent Zeppelin ralds. In a second every woman is sald to have been in her place when the warning guns hoomed forth A group of Philadelphia women are | alding the white population of the moun- tain Astricts of the south, under the auspices of the Philadelpiia Auxiliary of the Southern Industrial association. It is expected that Miss Margaret Wilson | will ald in helping to make money to send there. Katherine Balch of Milton, Mass., Massachusetts Anti-Suf- did successful work in Mrs president of the frage association, carrying the state against votes for | women. There are 1& branches of the soclety in the state, and 3,00 women pledged themselves to work against woman suffrage Miss Susan Everett of Hubbard, O., state champlon apple grower, demon- strated her abllity as an apple picker on the farm of Norman E. Tully. Miss Everett picked fofty bushels of Newton plppin in three hours and thirty minutes, and sald ‘she was just getting warmed up when she quit. The General Federation of Women's Clubs has decided to give up & whole week to the babies, beginning March 4, 1916. Tt will be in the interest of the health of the baby first, baby saving to be cons'dered above everything else, but the campaign may be as comprehensive as women choose to make it. Chicago, Pittsburgh and New York have held these baby campaigns, that of Chicago costing $6,000; Pittsburgh, $4,000, besides $2,00 contributed. The baby week of March will be under the direction of Mrs. Percy V. Pennybacker and a commtee from the General Federation working with the children's bureau, and will be observed in all parts of the United Statea, LINES TO A LAUGH. She—Phyllis Featherwelght is going to udy geology —Well, | am glad that she'll at last et beneath the surface of something.- e Bhe—1 see the Benedicts have returned /A No doubt they threw away & lot of money cn their wedding trip. |, He—I don’t kn.w atout that, but Bene [} dict told me that they let a lot of mighty |fine scenery go to waste.—Ju ige. “Have you figured out the exact sig- {nificance ‘of the electi>n?" 1 dla that the rext m-roing. But I haven't yet got my statistica all sorted lout and arranged so as to prove my | conclusions."—~Washington Star. | “Yes" sald the prince who married Cinderella, “‘my wife has the smallest (foct in the kingdom he ean put it down as hard as —Boston Tranecript. el row?"’ ‘More scien what the professor up to fic research. He {s con- cxper.ments to determine the w th which a man drops —~Baltimore American. ducting exact velocity a hot potato.’ Miss Tonsils—Would me sing All Throug! you_like to hear the Night? | Mr. Lobrough—I'm going to beat it about 10 o'clock.~Philadelphia Bulletin | “Where can 1 hide?" gasped the min- Ing stock promoter as he burst lnto his office. ““The police are coming. “Get into the eimpiified cnrd-in«u case,” cried the chief clerk. ‘T defy anyone to find anything in there!"—Puck. WHEN THE HUNTER HAS TO BUY. St. Lou!s Globe-Democrat. | Now comes that merry season when duck ! hunters sally forth To meet the jolly, quacking duck which comes from out the North To hasten to fair Southern climes and spend the winter mild; But sometimes does not .et that far; for oft he is beguiled To tarry in some quiet spot, om some stream to alight, And If a_hunter sly be near—to quack- ing duck, good night! Now here's the proposition in regard to hunters wise, Who take their sport in earnest and are fuil of enterprise— They've got to take some ducks back home, no matter what the luck, And oft agal ill-fortune the d hunter has to buck, The hunter who is wise, lholl‘h. ne'er comes back without his g He'd rmher shoot the duelu hlmul! 1t ot ‘s just the same hid lome une else should shoot them and to him the fowls should sell— He goes home with a full game bag: of course, he doesn't tell The folks at home about this, but his plan is safe to try— When you go out after ducks and can't shoot them, then buy. uck Of spaghetti and its allied prod- ucts, Dr. Hu dietitian, says that sorbed almost in their entirety. Their rich gluten goes to make brawn and tissue. Spaghetti is so easy to digest. Its energy value, compared with meat, is in the ratio of 100 to 60 therefore it is ideal food for hard workers and children, free recipe book. Doctors Recommend Spaghetti tchison, the famous they are ab- And Faust Write for < ,1 MAULL BROS., St. Louls, U. S. A Public Opinion Indorses this family remedy by making its sale larger than that of any other medicine in the world. The experience of generations has proved its great value in the treatment of indigestion, biliousness, headache and constipation. BEEGHAM'S PILLS relieve these troubles and prevent them from becoming serious ills by promptly clearing wastes and poisons out of the digestive system. They strengthen the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Mild and harmless. A proven family remedy, unequalled For Digestive Troubles Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World. Sold everywhere. Ia boxes, 10¢., 25¢. Free | | | | | | For Qur Little Busy Bees You Can See Alice at The Bee Office Dolls This Beautiful Doll will be given Free to the little girl, under 10 years of age, that brings or mails us the largest number of doll’s pictures cut out of the Daily and Sunday Bee be- fore 4 p. m. Saturday, No- vember 20, This @I's name is Allcs. She is twenty.five inches high, bas lght brown hair and brown eyes, and is beau- tifully dressed. Her picture will be in The Bee every day this week. Cut them all out and ask your friends to save the pictures in their paper for you, too. See how many pictures of Alice you can get, and be sure to turn them in to The Bee office, before 4 p. m. Saturday, November 20, If you don't win this Dellle perhaps you can get one nest week. Only one doll will be ghven 1o any one person.

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