Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 21, 1916, Page 4

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE " FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR, The Bee Pubiishing Company, Pror-rie(or. BEE BUILDING, FARNAM A I"VFNTFFNT" Entered at Omaha postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ass m By carrier By mail per month. per year. Dally and Sunday....... ssvronies iee 1] Dally without Sunday R o Evening -r;;:h Sunday e in 4"" Hl w Mll lunday. o .. 0. e "and ree years in advance... $10.00 Send notice of change of address or complaints of irregularity in delivery to Omaha Bee, Cireulation Department. REMITTANCE Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only two- cent stamps recelved in payment of small me- counts, Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. OFFICES, Omaha—The Bee Bullding. South Omaha—218 N street. Council Bluffs—14 North Main street. Lincoln—26 Little nunm Chie n “'ll'l( R\ll' IH New York—! fth avenue. 8t wie— 508 Vnw B.nk of Commerce. ‘Washington—7% Fourteenth Bt., N. W. CORRESPONDENCE, ress communications relating to news and edi- matter to Omaha Bee, itorial Department. DECEMBER CIRCULATION. 53,534 State of Nebraske, County of Douglas, bt Willlame, eireulagion manager of The Bos Publishing company, being duly sworn, says that o circulation for the montn of Decamber, lzu. 'I‘ 534, DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Mani Bubscribed in my presence and swom to me, this 4th day of Jlnu-rk BERT HU. TER Notary Publie. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requestod. Harmony continues to be spelled with a big H in the lexicon of Nebraska republicans. No signs of any .move for a preference prim- ary to decide to which deserving democrat the Omaha postoffice plum shonld go. 3 Nothing dllumhhu lhl- u a free country any more than that any one who wants to run for & any elective office in the land has a perfect right to do so. Apparently the Allies dread applying the Bel- glan treatment to Greece, preferring the slower, but equally effective method of progressive strangulation. It the weather department looks over and beyond the instruments and charts it will quickly find that a prediction of “high winds” is as safe now as in March, _ The only thing left for our great and good friend Villa to do in retaliation on his former chief is to issue & counter-proclamation, declar- ing Carranza's life a forfeit, and inviting any patriot to take it. S—— ~ The limit on postal savings accounts is to be radsed from $500 to $1,000, But why should 1 be any limit? Why stop people from loan- their money to the government at 2 per cent M vm to? —— ,fimmmmnmnmnocuuxuw mean, however, that there is no immorality among women who earn more than $8 a week, that the temptations are greater for 13 et 2o E——— ~ The proclamation dooming Villa, Castro and Lopez to a premature shaffle lacks the speed ing-up qualities of tinanclal reward. If the proc- lamation carried a bunch of real money, results would make a new speed record. SEpR———— As a retreat for royalty involuntarily exiled, taly affords decided advantages. The country is studded with remnants of anclent elegance and vanished glory, which exhale an atmosphere of goneness pecullarly suited to the welcomed fuests. Em— It is worth while noting in connéction with ‘he Illinois vice report that some members of the Investigating committee gave practical effect to thelr preachment agalnst an insufficlent wage. rfiunm of the state are now seeking light v the whereabouts of an excess mroprlnlon of 0 a brother of the chairm E———— Some Cerman critics echoing the sentiments of Maxmillian Harden, accuse American of greed and a surpassing reach for the dollar. E Higher and nobler ideals obtain in Germany. . The imposition of a monthly tax ot 40,000,000 francs on conguered Belgium rizes to a lofties plane. Scorn for the dollar is overshadowed by love for the frane. The T. A. M. club, which translated means, as you may prefer, either “Twide a Month," or “Til After Midnight,” gave its first masquerade party at Metro- i politan hall. The committees include: Frank H. Depuy, J. P. Dugdale, J. C. Shechey, T. F. Dugdale and 8. H. Stevenson. i Louls Hargison and John Gourlay and their com- " pany of comedians, presented “Skipped By the Light ¢ of the Moon,” at Boyd's opera house. The company had been blocked on the Kansas Pacific near Bille, Kan, for nearly two days, and to entertain their snowbound fellow-passengers, had given a perform- anice in the village school house. Prof. Bumann at the high school has more than elghty pupils in bis manual training class, /Mra. B. B. Whitmore returned from Chicago, where she had been visiting friends for two weeks, G. P. Clark, the popular agent of Bradstreets, was to Miss Lucile Maturian, at the residence of the s mbther, 1184 North Eighteenth street, the ceremony being performed by Rev. Mr. Harris of the Prasbyterian church. « Pemple lsreal bas the services of & voluntess cholr, consisting of Mrs, 8. Kats and Mre. J. Eick- the Misses Lena Moses and Nathalia Selig- Minnle Rotschild as organist. It 1 hat the change is made “out of the spirit has added another to the future Omaha to the register, as Carl Wilson. Hulse, of the Hulse Upholstery company, president of the Purniture Manufac. & mieeting of that body held in Sweden Showing Its Spirit, Relations between Great Britain and the | Scandinavian countries are coming to a focus, and the action of Sweden signifies that the peutrals in northwest Europe are not entirely | pleased with the way the Allies have been con- ducting the war. The embargo on mails is but one of the many points on which disputes turn, but the incident brings to tha front the whole question of the relations between neutrals and belligerents. The restrictions 'mposed by Eng- land are naturally resented by Sweden, and by other neutrals, for that matter, Intercourse be- tween countries at war and countries at peace is admittedly subject to interference by one or the other of the belligerents, But how far this interference must be tolerated has never been settled. It is equally true that neither belliger- ent has any right to intercept or molest traffic between noncombatant nations, and this Is what the British are doing. Sweden is just now very essential to the Allles, as affording the most accessible route for communication with Russia, The Swedes are mnot especially friendly to Russia, for many political and economic reasons, but have so far maintained a strict neutrality on the polnt. Due to the desirabllity of keeping open this route to Petrograd, the present lssue may not terminate in Sweden being forced into the war, Some modification of the present practice of the British goverument will likely follow, but it is not probable that a full recognition of the rights contended for by the neutrals will immediately be granted. The United States is concerned in the matter very deeply, for although no steps at reprisal have yet been taken on this side, the provoca- tion has been quite as great and fully as annoy- ing as that which has stirred the Swedes to the show of spirit now manifest. No One-Term Plank for Wilson. No little comment has been evoked by the recent publication of a letter written by Presi- dent Wilson, repudiating the one-term plank, the salient parts of which we reprint in another column. This epistle, which purports to have been addressed to Congressman A. Mitchell Palmer, in February, 1913, after his election as president but a few weeks before his induction into office, discusses the question dispassionately enough, wit". the usual arguments to support the existing condition by which the people are free to say at four-year intervals how long they wish to continue a president in the White House. But that is really not so important as the self-fur- nished proof the letter gives that Mr, Wilson never took his solemn platform covenant as binding upon himself, yet, kept his diesent to it secret until after his election. Adverting to this, the Outlook says: We wish that Mr. Wilson had declared himseif on this point while seeking the votes of his fellow citi- wmens; but that is now a bygone. He has now made his position clear before seeking re-election or even re- nomination. Plainly, therefore, Mr. Wilson did not make his position clear while secking his original nomination and election, but, on the contrary, let people vote for him under the bellef that the platform declaration for| a single term and fis unusual obfigation of | the candidate to this principle was accepted by him and would be observed by him. It now develops that the abandonment by the demoorats of all effort to submit the promised one-term constitutiona! smendment is charge- able to the influence of this letter of the presi- dent’s. The ready-to-hand answer to the sugges- tion of bad faith, however, is that the one-term plank has been maltreated no worse than many other parts of the Baltimora platform, which, desplte its asseverations, was bullt “to get in on,” but not “to stand on." No Single Vlo. Panacea. The Illinols vice commission has concluded its protracted investigation with a report that sweepingly charges a long list of shortcomings to the people of the Sucker state. The docu- ment apparently has the fatal weakness, inher- ent in {ts kind. It proves too much. The report hits in every direction and at many things as causes for the condition complained of. The investigators lay much stress on low wages for women &s the principal contributing cause for moral lapsation. This is a favorite allegation of vice hunters, who never fail to assert that lack of sufficlent pay leads lovely woman to stoop to folly, and sometimes they fix a minimum below which morals melt and vice is embraced. In this case the danger point is set at $8 per week. Aside from this ever recurring charge, the report, so far as furnished the public, di closes nothing of especial novelty, nor that could not have been readily ascertained by apply- ing to the chief of police or the district attorney, Poverty is not the principal cause of immor- ality, and it is a gratuitous insult to the hun- dreds of thousands of honest girls and women who toll for low wages to insinuate that they are morally weaker than their alsters who are better housed and fed. Nor is a minimum wage law the remedy., Wages are too low, when they fall below the point where decent living is posaible, but this is an economic and not a moral question. One thing is certain: The situation in Illinois can be no worse than is described. It will be interesting to watch the process by which the legislators apply the remedy. Lawgivers from the time of Moses down have grappled with this question, and it is yet undisposed of, A visit to The Hague is well worth the cost of the side trip to members of the Ford peace mission, An inspection of the Spanish prison, the Binnerhof and the House in the Woods are inspiring in different ways, with the Carnegie Peace palace topping all in thoughtful thrills. The florid gorgeousness of this flouted temple should impress even a peace missionary with the hollowness of men's professions of peace. Inside and out the palace is tagged with the contribu- tions of warring rulers who belied their peaceful expressions ere the donations were placed. re—— It being the intent and purpose of this article not oply te remove the water board, but lkewise its employes, from the influence of partisan politics— Metropolitan Water Board law, And at last accounts, this wording of the statute remains unchanged, though forgotten, accidentally or on purpose, by the honorable members of the water board. LTTR BE OMAHA, FRIDAY, JA Wilson and Second Term ‘ of letter written by——— M‘dm in Pebruary, 1913, repudiat. ng one-term of platform om which | e had just been elected. T WAS characteristically considerate of you to ask my views with regard to the joint resoiu tion which has just come over from the house senate with regard to the presidential term. € to th I have not hitherto sald anything about this ques- tion, because 1 had not observed that there was any evidence that the public was very much interested in it. I must have been mistaken in this, else the senate would hardly have acted so promptly upon it “The question is simply this: Shall our presidents be free,, so far as the law is concerned, to seck a second term of four years, or shall they be limited by | constitutional amendment to a single term of four years, or to a single term extended to six years? “I can approach the subject from a strictly im- personal point of view, because 1 shall most cheer- fully abide by the judgraent of my party and the public as to whether I shall be a candidate for the presidency again in 1916. I absolutely pledge myself to resort to nothing but public opinion to decide that Question | “The president ought to be absolutely deprived of every other means of deciding it. He can be. I | shall use to the utmost every proper Influence within | my reach to mee that he is, befors the term to whicih T have been elected is out. That side of the matter need disturb no one. “And. yet, if he is deprived of every other means of deciding the question, what becomes of the argu- ment for a constitutional limitation to a single term? The argument is not that it Is clearly known now Just how long each president should remain in office. [Four years is too long a term for a president who 13 riot the true spokesman of the people, who is fm. posed upon and does not lead. It is too short a term for a president who is doing or attempting a great work of reform and who has not had time to finish it. “To change the term to six years would be to in- crease the likellhood of its being topo long, without [ any assurance that it would, in happy cases, be long | enough. A fixed conmstitutional limitation to a single terra of office is hilghly arbitrary and unsatisfactory from every point of view. ““The argumeni for it rests upon temporary con- ditions which can easily be removed by law. Presi. dents, it is sald, are effective for one-half of their term only because they devots their attention during the last two years of the term to bullding up the influences, and above all the organization, by which they hope and purpose to secure & second nomination and election. “Tt is their illlcit power, not their legitimate in- fluence with the country, that the advocates of a constitutional change profess to be afraid of, and T | heartily sympathize with them. It is intolerable that any president should be permitted to determine who should succeed him--himself or another—by patronaye or coercion, or by any sort’of control of the ma- chinery by which delegates to the nominating con- vention are chosen. ““There ought never to be arother presidential nominating conveation; and there need never be an- other. Several of the states have successfully solved that difficulty with regard to the cholce of their governors, and federal law can solve it in the same way with regard to the cholce of presidents. The nominations chould be made directly by the people at the polls. “Conventions should determine nothing but party platforms and should be made up of the men who would be expected, if elected, to ‘carry those plat- forms into effect. It is not mecessary to attend to the people's business by constitutional amendment if you will only actually put the business into the peo- ple's own hands. “I think it may safely be assumed that that will be done within the next four years; for it can be done by statute; it need not wait for constitutional change. That being done, the questions of the presidential term can be discussed on its merits. ““The present fact is that the president is held responsible for what happens in Washington in every large matter, and so long as he is commanded to lead he is surely entitled to a certain amount of power-- all the power he can get from the support end con- victions and opinions of his fellow countrymen; and ho ought to be suffered to use tHat power aguinst his opponents until his work ‘s done. It will be very difticult for him to abuee it. He holds it upon suffer- ance, at the pleasure of public opinion. Every one | else, his opponents included, has access to opinion, as he has. He must keep the confidence of the country by earning it, for he can keep it in no other way. “Put the present customary limitation of twe terms into the constitution, if you do mnot trust the people to take care of themselves, Liut make it two terms (not one, because four years is often two long), and give the president a chance to win the full service by proving himself fit for it."” Twice Told Tales A Wrong Impresston. A Quaker fell asleep in meeting and soon began to snore. Tor awhile the nasal uotes were soit and smooth and did not disturb the worshipers, but finally the sleeper let out a few extra kinks, and the effect was & trifle disconcerting. “Friend Hesekiah,” whispered an acquaintance, digging the other in the ribs. “I think thee had bet- ter arouse thyself.” “What did thee say? What did thee say” cried Hesekiah, somewhat confused. “What is the mat- ter?” “Nothing, Friend Hesekiah,' was the quiet re- Joinder of the other, “‘only thee was snoring a little, and I was afrald that outsiders might think the spirit had moved thee to a trombone solo, instead of an expression of thy convictions.—Philadelphia Telegraph. Seld. Frantically she dashed Into the reom and lhrew‘\ herself upon him. Her hand closed tightly upon his wrist—the glittering blade he held wavered and fell. There was a look of terrible rage in his eyes, as he turned upon her, “Don't!" she gasped. | “Why not?™ he asked thickly. | “Jim cut his corns with that this morning." she breathed. ““You'll have to shave with the safety™ ~Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. Peaple and Events. Uncle Jimmie Pettit of St. Louls claims to be the luckiest member of the Showme tribe. He is 8 and beardles:, has never had to shave, and figures a saving of $1.3%0 in having no use for barber shops. An old white hen roosted on a telephone wire In Columbus, Ind., and shut off all conversation in that eircuit for two hours. It took ten line inspectors to locate the hen, but she flew out of reach without the loss of a feather. Adolpk O. Eberhart, former governor of Minne sota, has tossed his hat in the senatorial ring and announces that he will move in force on the trenches of Senator Moses Clapp just as soon as the frost is out of the ground, If not soomer, The bherolsm attributed to Rome's cackiing geese has been duplicated in & measure at Jollet, Il An escaped prisoner sought refuge at night in a hennery, but when daylight came the birds spotted ‘he in- truder and set up a clatter, which led to his detec- tion and capture. JARY Theodore Hetsler, # years of age, has climbed from the bottom to the top of the ladder, finishing the other day with the presidency of the Fifth Avenue bank, New York City, He began as messenger boy, ih answer to an advertisement. Ii pays to read the ads 21 1916. The Peek effer Appeal for the Gospel Mission. OMAHA, Jam 19—~To the Editor of The Bee: Did you ever step into the Union Gospel Mission, 198 Douglas street, and ree the class of men that go in and out of there, going in to get warm and to inauire for work or something warm to and going out to continue their search for employment? If the business men of Omaha would give men of this type any work they might have, from commen labor to office positions, you would be dolnz them a Ereat benefit, yourself a good that would be returned tenfold and the city of Omaha to help to fulfill 1ts motto, ““The City of Opportumity.” If the good housewives would look up the castoff clothing and either send them or eall Douglas 355, they can make many a sad heart glad and a cold body warm. CHARLES 8. MACK. wear, The Facts in the Cawe. HOLDREGE, Neb, Jan. 19—To the Editor of The Bee: 1 want to make a statement In answer to the letter of Governor Morehead which you published He says he got a letter from L. N. Miller of the Hampton hotel, claiming there was something wrong about the death of the woman that went to meet a man at an- other hotel. Why did he not say the Evans hotel? The facts in the case are these: The man was here before the woman came. She came In on the second section of No. 8, Christmas night. They registered as man and wife. My night clerk showed them to their room after 11 o'clock. About 1 o'clock they called for a doctor, and within ten minutes the clerk had two doctors in the hotel to ses her. When I got up Drs. Anderson and Newman said there was no hope for her, and a short time afterwards they pronounced her dead. I immediately called the coroner and he made u thorough examination and pronounced her death to be caused from heart disease. The undertaker re- moved the body, which was shipped out on No. 6 at 12:2 o'clock, I saw the coroner the next morning and we called the county attorney In and stated the case to him. They decided there was no use holding an inquest, as there were two doctors with her when she died, and that there was no foul play whatever. The case is open for any in- Vvestigation that any one wants to make. This man Miller knew all the facts be- fore he wrote these letters, or if not, he could have gotten them from the coroner or the county attorney. H. H. REED, Proprietor Evans Hotel. Recognition of G. A, R. Button. SILVER CREEK, Neb., Jan. 18.—To the Editor of The Bee: As an old soldler of the civil war, speaking only for myself, but believing that I volce, at least in some measure, the zoneral sentiment of my comrades, I desire to express my heart- felt appreclation of the action of the State Board of Asgriculture at its meet- ing in ordering Lhat hereafter all veterans of the civil war wearing the Grand Army button shall be admitted free to the State fair on all days of the week. It is not that we are to be saved the half dollar at the gate. When first in- formed of the action of the board no such though® entered my mind, not do I for an instant suppose that Charles Gratf and his committee that recommended it were actuated by any such motive, Nevertheless, I suppose that it is true that many old soldiers will hereafter at- tend the State fair who otherwise would not have done so by reason of the ex- pense which they could ill afford. Rather, it is thls, that the thought of that very grateful action of the board filled me iike a flood with memories of that four years of war, and I was glad to be again reminded that for our services of more than fifty years ago we still held aa old soldiers a warm place in the hearts of the American people, If, possibly, any one laments that the gate receipts at the Btate fair will be lessened, which T doubt, he need only to remember that the days of the Grand Army of the Republic are numbered; that there is no fleld from which they can draw recruits, and that thelr rapidly de- creasing numbers point unerringly to the tme when all shall have answered the final roll call and gone down the sllent way. Not long hence only one old vet- eran will pass the gate, and In silent reverence all will do him honor. CHARLES WOOSTER. Editorial Snapshots Washington Star: The present play of the limelight on Philander C. Knox serves as a reminder that it won't be the first time a good man “came back’’ from Valley Forge. 8t. Louls Globe-Democrat: Great Brit- ain should rid itself of the notion that it 1s fighting the battles of the United States for it. The implication that we are a silent, cowardly ally is insulting. Philadelphia Ledger: What a patriotic service, at no expense to himself, Mr. Bryan could do by accepting the offer of a place on the permanent peace board, with & residence abroad until the end of the war. Springfield Republican: Every Austra- lian or New Zealander lost in battle for the empire means a loss in a special sense to the dominiens in the antipodes, for the natural increase of the white population in those countries has been very . slow. New York World: Passing the Ferris bill to lease the enormous water power rights of eleven states, the ‘house at Washington took steps on a road which must be traveled with care. It will take wariness to avold falling into another such trap as that revealed in the Hetch Hetchy Instance, where a water power grab now takes the place of San Fran- cisco's alleged need of a water supply. St. Louis Globe-Democrat: No matter whether General Sherman ever used the particular description of war accredited to him or not, his name will be forever linked with it. It unquestionably ex- pressed his views of war, views based on tirst-hand acquaintance. It also expresses the views of a great majority of Ameri- cans. The tendency to ascribe popular sentiments to the mighty has been marked throughout history. Sherman died without disavowing the quotation. But other statements attributed to other noted men still live, in spite of their denial Not one person io a thousand knows, for example, that it was Mr. Soule of Terre Haute who put into Horace Greeley's mouth the “Go west” advice, although Greeley disavowed its origin, through the columns of the Tribune. Tack a popular sentiment or a pleasing story to the fame of an illustrious man and it will become immortal. LWhittled to a Point A manicure artist man's brains would fill a long-felt want Too great a command of sometimes lessons a woman's matrimonial chances And some people Who are always pre | pared for the worst remind us of mourn ers at a funeral The prose version of the nursery rhyme may be that when Jack fell down Jill sued for allmony The principal business of a man in of- fice is worrying about how long the voters will stand for him. As a rule the more a man has to say about women the more he doesn’t really know about them. The more indignant some of our nelgh- bors can grow over scandal the more they seem to enjoy it A woman's smile may wreck a man's heart, but it is usually another kind of smile that wrecks his constitution SUNNY GEMS. “Father,” sald the small boy, ‘‘what's a state of righteous indignation?" ‘A state of righteous indignation, my son, is_the frame of mind into which you drift because of some other person's shortcomings.”—Washington Star. *“The fascination of widows has its root in the genera| contrariness of human na- ture.” “How so?" “Oh, men are always more interested in other people's widows than in their own, ZBaitlmore Amerioan “I told_father 1 Joved you more than any girl I've ever met And what did father say?" “He sald to try and meet some more girls.”—Puget Sound Trall “Now, my lad, I hope vou have some clear and well-defined id.a as to what you want to be in life. That means everytling to a young man." “I know it, uncle, or a lawyer, or something like that."— Loulsville Courfer-Journal. DEAR MR. KABIBBLE, SHOULD 1 FORGE A CHECK FoR MY SMETNBRTS SAKE? NO - WLL S!’ARTIN ING CHECKS FOR YOURSELF A YOU'LL GET N ‘TROUBLE ! BT “Would you regard Amtrlclnl in “No, I_wouldn't regard it as no such thing. I'd regard it as a low-down greaser outrage.’—Baltimore American, Hotel Clerk—Is thig '1 000 bl“ the small- est thing you have about you? Departing guost—I'm afrald it is. Clerk (to beliboy)—Here, take this bill to one of the walters and ask him to change it.—Judge, 1 want to be a doctor the shooting of Mexico as a casus bel- "I suppose when these political reform- ers get in control they will shut up all the theaters.” ""Why should they do thM" f “For maintaini lobbles on ground floor.”"—Baltimore American. “Well, Bobby,” sald the minister to the #mal] son of one of his deacons, “what is the new: “Papa’s got a new set of false teeth.” ‘Indeed,” said the minister, restraining a desire fo laugh, “and what will he do with the old set?” “Oh, I suppose,” replied Bobby, “ithey'll make me wear ‘em, ’— their cut ‘em down and New York Times. “A LETTER FROM THE EAST.” (First Spasm.) In our little dug-out in the east, Where of shrapnel we get such a feast; There is Iyddite galore and shells by th scol —] can a man sleep in peace? There is bull beef and crackers and jam, For the Turks, well, we don't care a d— With the shella in the air, Y\ r can compare Wit] out ittle dug-out in the east, (Second Spasm.) ‘There are spiders which weicome us in, Thel':fl:re beetles which fly round and 83 There are ants in a line and glow worms that shine, And there's things that the people will It's a corner of Turkey itself, And to us it's a_haven of rest; When the guns blaze on top It's a safe, decent spot, In our little dug-out in the east. Omaha. SAM L. MORRIS, A TIMELY Save Coupons and who covld polish a | Ianguage | Let your home beer during 1916 be A home product, brewed of the choicest materias. Phone Douglas 1889 and have a case sent home, LUXUS MERCANTILE CO. An Old, Family Cough Remedy, Home-Made Easily Prepare Little, but is Prompt, Sure and Effective Costs Very By making this pint of old-time cough syrup at home you not only save about $2, as compared with the ready-made kind, but you will al=o have a much more prompt and positive remedy in every way, t overcomes the usual coughs, throat and chest colds in 24 hours—relieves even whooping cough quickly—and is excellent, too, for bronchitis, bronchial asthma, hoarseness and spasmodic eroup. Get from any d lrnz store 214 ounces of Pinex (50 cents worth), pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. Full directions wm; Pinex. Keeps perfectly and tastes R0 You ean feel this take hold of a cough or cold in a way that means business. 1 (iul(‘klv loosens the dry, hoarse or pain- ul cough md heals the inflamed mem- branes. It also has a remarkable eflect .h.. o orenmmfi th; persistent '!mm- mmi v stopping the formation of legm in the throat and bronchial tubes, 4 The effect of Pine on the membranes is known by almost every one. Pinex is a | most valuable concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine extract combined with guaiacol and other natural healing pine elements. There are many worthless imitations of this famous mixture. To avoid dis- appointment, ask your druggist for “21% ounces of Pinex,” and do not accept any- thing else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money promptly refunded, goes with this preparation. The Pinex Co, Ft. \V.ynp I d. There is no after-glow When you blow out a Safe Home match, it is DUT. Anditstaysout. EverySafe Homematch is chemically treated to prevent after-glow, Safe Home matches are extra long and extra strong. Theextralength means . extra service. SafeHome matchesare non-poisonous. They are safe to have in the home. All grocers. Sc a box. The Diamond Match Company ‘Help Digestion To" keep your digestive organs in good wo! or- der—tostimulate yourliver, tone your stomach and regulate your bowels, take— B pfi*:"‘é“s Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World, "Soid everywhere. In bexes. 106 25¢. THE PURE FOOD WHISKEY ":'Y\\c\\\sp(*(\or \s Back Of > tvery Bottle SUGGESTION THE BEER YOU LIKE Get Free Premium ——rw —

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