Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 23, 1916, Page 6

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE| L A A e L T b e FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor. BEB BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH, Entered at Omaha postoffice as second-class matter, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By carrier By mall : per month. per year. and Sunday. o BBC. i 96,00 ‘without Sunday.. e and Sunday. L Evening without Sunday. Evening without Sunday.. ceve . Dally and Sunday Bee, three years in advance. X Send notice of change of address or irregularity in 9 11} to Omaha Bee, Circulation Department REMITTANCE, + Remit by draft, express or al On! postal order. ty § gt stampe received in payment of small accounts. ¥ Pernonal checks, except on Omaha and eastern ex~ change, not accepted. OFFICES, m'h.-'l'be Bee Buildin| ith Omaha—2318 N _street. Counell Bluffsa—14 North Main street. TLincoln—5626 Little Building. Chi, 1 log Butiding. New York—] 106, 256 Fifth aven! i 8t. Lo New Bank Commerc: Washington—725 Fourteenth street, N. W. ! CORRBSPONDENCE. | Address communications relating to news and edi- | torial matter to Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. FEBRUARY CIRCULATION, | 54,328 Daily—Sunday 50,639 & Williams, circulation manager of The Bee %uny. gvhl:g duly sworn, says that the 1 " lation for month of February, 1916, was 54,328 daily and §9,639 Bind DWIGHT WILLIAME, on Manager, bed In presence and sworn to befors i ! me. this 34 hiool arch, 1916, BERT HUNTER, Notary Publie. Clr ki Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Boo mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. “Birds of a feather flock together.” Watch the grafters and fake reformers hitch up with “‘Bob,” the prince of fake reformers. { Kansas delegates to the Chicago convention are uninstructed, but most of them are out- spoken in their preference for Hughes, “Straws poiat the wind.'" Residents of El Paso can well forget the i annoyance of the campaign. Few towns on the 3, Texas map enjoy the favor of toots from Ga~ ) briel's horn every mornin, : The naturalization fee graft Is just as odious as the jail feeding graft. Both are the same kind of a steal sought to be perpetrated ¥ by greedy public officials under color of law, “Bob” is busy trying to explain how pocket~ ing that $6,000 of fee graft, in addition to his $4,000 salary as district clerk, is the essence of ‘honesty, but it is hard to make it go down with ‘honest people. 4 CE————— . The remarkable ease with which the capital of Monteriegro was switched to Bordeaux sug- _gests to Congressman Curry that his Milwau- ‘move, with the ““suds” blown off, may not be s 1ift the ritiroad die- a8 a stop-over poin to chart the safe middle course be- $ingo and the pacifist, T % 3 SEp—— ) the Commercial club passed the mark, it was some achieve- ‘When the 2,000-line, which seemed an then, is a reality, as it will be this wm will be due.’ ] G 4. GEEt— ~a good start toward equaling the death record of King Menelik. His latest “assassination’ in in London, but he persists in livng devising trouble for the enemies of Islam. + Se——— il 1s plain that the taxpayers of Omaha are to be losers from the readvertising for bids _furnishing auto fire equipment. Inci- w, remember that The Bee put in some 3 strokes to prevent the questionable being put across when it was attempted. It turns out that Willlam Grant Webster _who filed for president in the Minnesota repud- ~ lican primaries, is entered here for vice presi- " dent against our home aspirant. Now, we test that this Is a flagrant breach of the ethics of the political game, as she is supposed to be " played, — Unseemly haste marks the deliverance of _ the New York World on the issue of W. J. Bryan's democracy. The World rules that Bryan “was and is a populist,” but does not give proper weight to his zeal In hitching the family to the public payroll, which is a pretty strong brand of straight democracy in these days. Secretary Pool's periscope got the right range. SEmee—— Thirty Years Ago This Day in Omaha X Complied from Bee Tiles. . Mary Anderson concluded her Omaha engagement with & performance of “As You Like 11" in which appeared as Rosalind, and went on to Denver as stop in her itinerary, Gas company has secured a temuo- on the city council, accompanying the an annguncement of a new price schedule 1,000 cuble feet, with « discount of 13% per bills pald within ten days, making it $1.75 per to the consumer. vestrymen of Trinity cathedral have decided A. L, Little of to fill the vacant by the departure of Dean Millspaugh. James L. Mead of Lansing, Mich., is vis- brother, Frank D. Mead, at 102 Douglas -;g £ zi? i fi'%; s ¥ £ Pl g H, Pickens of Paxton & Co. Ppleasure left on an trip through Colorado, Utah and ? Byler, city passenger agent of the Burling- ) ccompanied by his wife, has gone to Xenia, O., attend the funeral of & brother. After & pleasant vislt wilh Omaha friends, Mable " bas gone on to San Francisco basket reports quote the best cuts of 15 cents a pound and best creamery butter cents, with eggs al 12 cents & dozen. THE An Impressive Object Lesson. A very interesting {llustration of One phase of popular government is afforded by the list of filings of aspirants for public office as pub- lished in The Bee. These include only those the law requires to be nfade at the office of the secretary of state, but in themselves make & most imposing array. If the full list of all who have filed with the county clerks throughout the state were published at the same time, ¢ most impressive object lesson would be pre- sented. One of the principal results of the primary election law has been to bring the active candidates out Into the open. It is pot at all likely that the law has inspired a longing for office where it many who previously aspired to serve the peo- ple did not get very far when it came to facing a convention. When the showing is multipliea by all the states in the union, some idea of the extent of the business of governing the country may be acquired. Whether the world is gov- erned too much doesn’t matter in this connec- tion. The point is that plenty of willing volun- teers will always be on hand, ready to under- teke the service of doing the governing. One He Will Have to Take Back. Throwing a bouquet at one of the candi- dutes running for the nomination of governor on the republican ticket in Nebraska, that dyed in-the-wool democrat, Edgar Howard, lets thi? slip out W Tan't it a shame that such a fine character should be engaged In the task of trylng to make poor peopls pay more tariff on the sugar they use in coffee? Well, here’s one for Friend Edgar to take back. The duty on sugar which poor people use in their coffee is to stay by edict of the democratic administration commanding repeal of the act which would put it on the free list. Kvery democrat oy the ways and means com- mittee voted for a protective sugar tariff ana it went through the house almost unanimously. No one knows better than Edgar, however, that that does not necessarily mean that poor peo- ple will pay more for their sugar, for the tax 1o levied only on that part of the home con- sumption which Is imported, and our own stead- ily expanding heet sugar industry is now pro- ducing a large part of our supply. To paraphrase the phrase, “Isn’t it a shame that such a noble democrat, as Edgar Howard is, should have to ‘fess up to having fotten on the wrong track on the free sugar question.” The North and South Railway. The long mooted project of a railway tc cross the North American continent from north to south s again revived by an army officer, His discussion turns on a point in connection with the defense problem. Such a line will be very useful, and almost indispensable in con- nrection with the guarding of the Panama can and for strategical reasons will get much consta- But it can be made of much greater m”flhn ways, Such a line will be a closer link between the United States and the republics of the south, It wiil not only facilitate communt- cation and develop commerce between thé coun- tries it traverses, but it may ald in settling muny questions that are now vexatious, Our relations with our Central American neighbors would be much more satisfactory if our contact with them were a little closer, and the great rallroad proposed ought to be a factor in es- tablighing the desired conditions. It has been well sald that one advantage a corporation enjoys is that it has neither soul to save nor body to kick. When several of these cen conceal themselves bekind another incor- poreal and still more diaphanous body, register- ing their will through a joint agency they have thus created, this advantaze is immensely in- creased. Buch a body is the Western Passenger association, through whose operations the rail- roads entering Omaha have practiced discrim- ipation against this city in the matter of rates and stop-over privileges for many years. All the lines entering Omaha are members of this assoclation, and as they constitute the leading and most. influential part of its membership, the thought is natural that what they object tc will not be permitted. It is reasonable, there- fcre, to conclude that they willingly acquiesce in the practices from which Omaha continually suffers. It is not alone in passenger concessions that Kansas City is favored to the disadvantage of Omaha. The Bee recently published a list of freight rates, showing how less is charged for « longer haul on grain that is diverted from the local market to the favored one further down the river. The discrimination, so open and so flagrant, has been vigorously but unavailingly protested against, until the rallroads are forti- fied In 1t by the inaction of Omaha people. Every railroad agent in Omaha will joln in local complaints against an obvious injustice, but not one will take steps to remedy it. It gets back then merely to the question how long Omaha will submit to the unfair treatment ac corded it by the great railroad lines that con- verge here, ————— British troops are reported to have routed the followers of the Senussi prophet, scattering them among the sand dunes of the Sahara. The result is disappointing, inasmuch as the fallure to ecapture the prophet deprives England's prophecy department of the services of an ex- pert. It 1s gratifying to receive assurances from the Mexican commander at Juarez, General Gabriel Gavira, that “the crisis is past” and that “fear of trouble” growing out of the chase of Villa is over The fact that Gavira is able to sit up and issue a manifesto shows he is recover- ing from the fright. A military expert is convinced that Turkey is bound to lose, no matter how the war ends. The same raay be sald of every nation engaged {1 the struggle. With mountainous debts pil- ing up, “breaking even' is a practical impossi- bility. It is gathered from Hiram Maxim's syndi- cated remarks on the subject that government manufacture of munitions would be “colossal folly,” nothing less. This makes the munitions vote unan‘mously against the government. [ did not exist before, but | | BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY Many Mysteries of Life Can Be Solved by Man Garrett P. Serviss. I\ REGARD to the life history of the tions are asked in letters which show that many m attracted by this subject wishes to know whether man earth ques- ds are One having arrived at his present state through many changes, has now reached the top of his pe opment, or whether he is not, in some unconscious way, being ochanged continuously Another inquires: “How did life come into Where there any new species developed in the Quaternary age, and are there, or cauld there be, new species developed in this or a future age™’ animal existence? First, the capital feature of man is his brain, and this has manifestly been growing to relative size and complexity of organization for tens of thousands, and probably hundreds of thousands, of years. Whether we assume that the mind ia simply a manifestation of the activity of the brain, or that the brain is only an Instrument of the mind, the final result is the same as far as the development of man's physical form i« concerned With a better brain more mental power can be exerc On the other land, the mind, if it be some thing acting upon and through the brain, may pro- duce superfor organization and stimulate growth and development In the brain cells by long-continued ac tion. For ages it has been shaping and improving its tool, and, while the brain is the seat of mental ac- tion, it Is not the only part of man's body that s affected and modified by the activity of the mind His features, his limbs, his muscies, his nerves, hiy vital functions, all are subject to mental influence. A high intelligence shows In the face. We do not know how Shakespears looked, for there is no au- thentic likeness of him in existence, but we are mor- ally certain that he dia not look like a brute or a thief or & murderer. That certainty is based upon uni- versal experience. It requires some skill to read the “mind's construction in the face,” but it can, in n large sense, be done. There can be no question that the general appearance of the human race, as civili- zation and Intelligence have advanced, has changed for the better. Exceptions do not alter the rule. Back slidings do not arrest the general advance; or unconsciously, changing in looks and form as well as In character, and the change is upward. Man In the future will be a nobler being physically and men- tally than he 18 today. We have no means of fixing & limit to his possibilities of progress, Becond, we cannot tell how animal life, or, for that matter, vegetable life came into existence. But it is A& subject that has Jed to many fascinating specula- tions. It has been assumed, for instance, that the first germs of life are ultra miscroscopic, 1. e., too minute to be seen and studied by any Instrument of science, and thus the beginnings of life seems to us miraculous, though in reality it may be the result of chemical and physical operations no more mysterious than any other operation of nature. v Home have assumed that life was started from an original germ by a special effort of ecreative pawer, and after that was left to natural developmient In accordance with the needs of its environment. We do find from the study of the rocks that the earliest lito forms were comparatively very simple, and that the higher and more complex forms have appeared grad- ually, and apparently always by evolution or develop- ment, from preceding forms. At the present time we know of no life which does not spring from previ- ousty existing lfe. In other words, we find no creation of absolutely new life in any form. Yet some. like Dr. Bastian, think that life is actually developing anew now, Just as it has done in the past, but that, bove sald, its eleents are below the range of mi- croscopic vision and of chemical experiment. New specles have been coming into existence every geologle age, but always, as far as we can see, as & result of changes and modifications in older ones. Many species have gone out of existence entirely, Changes of climate, etc., have been powerful factors in altering the forms of life, We can watch that process going on under the Influence of changes pro- duced by ourselves. It we cannot produce absolutely new species by our interference, we can produce many new varieties, and by Intermixture many extraordinary forms. Look at what Luther Burbank has effected in this way. He has found that there is, so to speak, an underworld of undeveloped or forgotten forms and tendencies In the Iife forces of_this globe, which can be brought out in what seems like new creations of beauty and useful- ness. Fle does mot pretend to create new forms of plants, but he finds that he can manipulate old forms and bring about new combinations and encourage hid- den or suppressed tendencies, so that with sufficient time and effort, it might be possible to reclothe the earth with a garment of vegetation far more splen- did than any it has yet worn. . Twice Told Tales How It Happened. “Do you think any girl ever proposed in leap yeer, a8 they say, Jessle?' he asked “Not unless she was obliged to,” answered the maiden. “Mm! I never thought of that,"” he said, after a pause. “But, George,” she sald, laying her hand affection. ately on his arm and looking up into h T am sure, will never force me to that humiliation.” '‘No—er—that {a to say—of course not. I—-" The ice was broken and three minutes later the was a job In prospect for the parson.—Beston Tran. seript. His Information, ‘When fllicit distilling was common in Ireland there was an old man who went about the country repairi; whisky pots. The gauger met him one day and askoed him what he would take to inform him (the gauger) where he repaired the last whisky pot. “Och,” sald the old man, “TI'll just take half a ecrown."” “Done!"” retorted the gauger. “Here's your money, but be careful to tell me the truth.” “Och, I'll tell you 1o He, sir. I just mended the whisky pot where the hole was."—New York Times. People and Events A shipload of Scotch whisky direct from Glasgow reached New York safely and banished the danger of & shortage in highball ammunition. Hoot, mon! Pennsylvania courts have knocked out the state law empowering judges to send lazy husbands to the rock plle and their earning to the wives. The action of the courts gives the afflicted wives the right temper for exclaiming, "It was too good to last."” Divorce law as Interpreted in New York courts does not give a detached wife the privilege of chasing her detached husband into clubs so long as he forks over the alimony. Accordingly, payment of the pen- alty of domestic liberty safeguards the pursuit of ex- clusive happiness. A bill taxing bachelors from §2 to #5 a year made its appearance in the Maryland legislature. Penalty for non-payment is work on public roads at §! a day. The jocular lawmakers gave the lonesomes a vocal dressing and then referred the bill to the Baltimore delegation comprising a majority of bachelors. The tmmigrant housing committee, which is a part of the National Americanisation commities, at a meet- ing In New York last week decided to offer prises for the best designs for a house for a family to imclude twe bedrooms; for a house for a family and four lodg- ers: for a boarding house for thirty lodgers, two to & room, and for & substitute for the freight cars used to house construction gangs on raliroads The committee { moves quickly In the right direction but the | latter is, by it very nature, slow. We are, consclously | MARCH By Huaghes—Who Is Het? OMAMHA, March 2.—To the Editor of The Bee: The local democratic paper has an editorial under the caption, “The | Hughes Boom,” that naively inquires Hughes—who 1s he?' and suggests that while Mr. Rosewater and “other stand- pat politicians, whose ways are devious. are busy endeavoring to inflate the Hughes boom, won't some of them please tell us what the boom represents Disclaiming entirely that I am a stand pat politiclan, whose ways are devious, | or. indeed, that I am a standpatter at all, In the invidious sense which this edi- torlal implies, as the first candidate for delegate to the republican national con- vention from this state to announce my- el for Hughes for president, I am pleased to have an opportunity to answer this solicitous ihquiry as to who |Is Hughes and what does his boom repre- | ment. It is but a little more than ten years ago that Charles E. Hughes sprang into national prominence by his masterful con- duct as special counsel of the investiga- tion carried on by the Armatrong insur- ance committee in the state of New York. His pitiless exposure of the ruth- less manipulation of the people’s milllons; his fearless pursuit of the high priests of graft in the innér temple of the insur- ance sanctuary, made strong appeal to both the imagination and the conscience | of the American people. He drove the money changers from the temple, and since that hour every American home— where the thrift and prudence of the bread winner has made provision against his last hour—is more secure. From that day the manhood and the integrity of Charles E. Hughes became a matter of nation-wide knowledge Immediately following his service with the Armstrong committee, the govern- ment of the United States sought and obtained his assistance as a special aid to the attorney general of the United States to iInvestigate the coal situation, & matter of great moment to the Amer- ican people, in which he rendered signal service, A8 governor of the great state of New York he established a record for ability, integrity and independence not equaled since the days of Grover Cleveland. In the campaign of 108 he took the stump for the republican ticket, and his triumphal tour across the country and through the great west is not yet for- gotten. The people of this country thronged by thousands to hear the man with whose splended achlevements they vere familiar. It 1s today a matter of | common consent, wherever two or more republicans are gathered together, that in his presentation of the great national jssues in that campaign Charles E. Hughes towered high above all our party leaders, It was then that the virile personality of the man, his splendid Americanism, impressed themselves upon the repub- licans of this country. We are told “New occasions have made new duties in the political world, and as to not one of those dutles does the public know how Hughes interprets them,” and then, Mr. Bditor, referred to, indulges in a little fling. I have no doubt he blushed while writing it. “We know that Mr. Hughes. as goverpor of New York vetoed the 2-cent fare law." Governor Hunu-; veto of fHe Mt fare law was one of the -ploldafl'?mnz that he would rather do right than be popular. The great and overshadowing lssue of the coming campaign is Americanism. The next president of the United States must be an American in the broadest and best sense of the word. A man who knows enough to know that the traditions and the ideals of this republic cannot be separated; that one is the root, the other the biossom. The republicans of this country will demand as their leader in this campaign & man who is neither a mollycoddle nor a militarist. A man who 1s made of melther sob stuff nor squib stuff. A man who has given evi- dence of his sincerity of purpose, of his high sense of justice, of his supreme in- tegrity, of his lofty and fearless char- acter. + A man whose words and deeds have both rung true. A man whose Americaniam i unquestionable. Such & man Is Charles E. Hughes. And be- cause of this his boom represents the pest thought of the rank and file of the republican party. It is because of this sentiment that I have M\u‘:. “lor it elected a delegate. I belleve i gpdn Ly write his that many republicans - will ) the 'ballot. ol WILLIAM F. GURLEY. Fair Play for Omaha. OMAHA, March 2.—To the Editor of The Bee: Referring to enclosed élippings taken from The Bee relative to rallway r discrimination against Omaha, it the people of Omaha will stand to- gether and be loyal to each other, and to Omaha at large, cutting out all polit- jcal questions and special favors, the combination could be broken inside of twenty-four hours. A. TRAYNOR, 315 California Street. Editorial Snapshots Washington Fost: Congreas becomes more strongly inclined every day toward that Jowa law which doesn’t permit a presidential tip. Springfield Republican: Local option wins over state prohibition in Vermont by the substantial majority of 14,366, which shows a growing feeling that home rule is the thing Roston Transcript: Deslers predict that owing to the scarcity of leather ladies’ shoes are going up higher and higher this spring, but at that we don't expect | them to reach the hem of the skirt. Brooklyn Eagle: Posterity in order that it may pay for the extravagance of this generation must be both sober and in- dustrious. War and officlal waste are doing & lot to endow posterity with the saving grace of poverty. Pittsburgh Dispatch: Canadian justice has & good deal to recommend it. At Windsor a dynamiter who, last summer, tried to blow up some bulidings, one | an armory with several hundred men in It. was sentenced for life, and the Judge sald he saw no reason for clemency because the convicted man had failed to wipe out many Uves. Indianapoiis News: Consider the poor packers and their burdens! Now comes the Chicago firm of Sulzberger & Sona company with the report of the best busi- ness in its history, and net earnings last year of more than three and a hait times the 7 per cent. dividend on preferred stock. Oonditiong like this encouragingly indicate that it 'a sufficlent increase in prices_can be estabiished a fair return on the investment will be possible. BREEZY TRIFLES getting real money in the box 4 great trick ¥ you can do it.” —Washington Prp— Star Khe—Did o ou at ;mkh:r. o T T from you & Wife—Dear me, you can never *ind a He—Yes, and he said that a dub who | thing without nsking me where it is | played such & poor game shouli pover | How did you get along before you were marry his daughter—never.—Boston Tran. | married? seript Hub—Things stayed where they were ¥ — put then.—Indianapolis News. o (bri )~ Wor hav se uf vy | i TR = Tt e e I see where they have besn fighti: Ehe '(pointedly)—Oh, yes, they have | near the site of the Garden of lden. Th uson they don't laugh at the funnv Well, why not n't that where the trouble started?'—Baltimory Ameri- things they see is because they don't want to hurt the peor things' feelings can Richmond Times-Dispatch Why didn't vou interfere when the cook chased the waiter with a cleaver and the waitress yelled murder?" 1 thought it was an ordinary cabaret featur ouldn't understand what the waltr singing. ———— ON THE BEAT. St. Louls Republic Hopper" O'Leary, six feet in his howe, Sollloquized thusly—(a package of woes) was yelling. I thought she was ~Louisville Courler-Journal DEAR MR. KABIBBLE, 1 AM A MAN 92 YEARS O AND AM IN LOVE WITH A WOMAN OF O1'— SHOULD 1 LEAD “Now take us poor coppers—right here on th' beat For elght hours per dully—yeh, it's hard on th' feet; I_watch all th' traffic, 1 handle th' erowd (He's got the poor devils sufficiently cowed) 1 know all th reg'lars, th' dip an' th op. Th' fussy old ladies, th' Chink an' th’ ° Wop, HER To THE ALTAR But b'lleve me, O, Stephen, just lend me SRR your ear, An' pipe th’ dame comin'—now ain’t she a dear?”’ YES —BUT WAYTH YOUR r Bighed “"Hopper" the copper. S0 1 piped the fair damsel—(me and the cop) While the crosstown traffic for a block; was stalled Kirte “.,.b‘,,,.,.'; whort “An (l‘;[?“!g-dllfi fairy,” quoth ‘“Hopper" lecrn to be getting shorter, too. J " » > A gaze down the avenue.'" Lamp the flash Kelly—O, Mother Ma. . chree! [ musical " comedy “when' the merey %t | Lord help th poor devil who footed th' lagers come on."—Louiaville Courler- | xo wonder some fellas are lootin® th till . She's makin’ th high sign—ah, this is th’ W vo' ‘ life, sei¥hat do yo' think o de new evangelist, | o, ! Sufterin' Moses! The wren %o “Uh-well, sah,”’ replied square-headed muh wife! A | old Brother Raiaree, “he's plumb eller Yelped Hopper the copper | quint, and all dat, but 'stidder preachin - AR R 4 b i e Gompel he's tryin' to sell lots in de | “Lay off'n th' kid stuff,” said “Hopper New Jorusalem and collect de money in next day, advance.” —Judge. “I'm wise as a llama to what you will FRE say, Maude—What makes you thiak his in- | Don't pull th' old wheezes, I'm off'n th' tentions are serious’ stuff, Mabel—When he first began to ea'l he | An' can th' bum vodvil—your action is used to talk about the booxs I like (> rough; K read B'lleve me, old topper, no more for th Maude—And now? lights Mabel—Now he talks about tha things | I m wettin’' old-fashioned—I'm.. goin he likes to eat.—Life home nights. What's th' story book dore? A kiss at th’ Do you believe in realism in th door? theater?" Say, tell me th' truth—is that done any ‘Yes,” replied the manager. I don more ™ care for it so much on the stage, it Queried “‘Honper the copper CL LT T LR T EEEHFE A LR R R B AR o] 621 Residents of Nebraska registered at Hotel Astor during the past year. = 1000 Rooms. 700 with Bath. A cuisine which has made the Astor New York’s leading Banqueting place. Single Rooms, without bath, $2.00 to §3.00 Double &P 300 t0 400 Single Rooms, with bath, 3.00 to 6.00 Double SRR E AT 4000 7.00 Parlor, Bedroom and bath, §10.00 to $14.00 At Broadway, 44th to ¢5th Steeets—the center ofNewY;l:'undnl <) R T ITE TTMR R ) " PAIN AND ITS RELIEF By DR: E. L. ABOGADO Ours 1s not & nation of Stolcs. We are [ be termed a “pain specialist.” Dot indifferent to pain. We abhor 1&. Be| Ready to minister to the need of evem 18 ever so slight, we fume and fret until| one who suffers pain, regardiess of its pi we get rid of it, because it annoys us—it | mary cause, anti-ksmnia tablets await your interferes with our work and pleasure. call at every drug store. And 1f pain is severe—the pain of rheu-| The development of most diseases i matism, sciatica, neuralgia, gout or some | Heralded by pain and fever and while in mcute merve derangement, we are apt to|no sense s cure-all, anti-kamnia tablets regard it as suficient excuse for a hurried | are exceedingly useful in & large number call st the dootor’'s office. of diseases. In the aggregate, the American That Js becaunse these tablets are quite probably suffer more annoying, oss | 88 effective reducers of fever as they pain than any other people on the face of | are as relievers of patn. the earth. Therefore, they bave thelr use in any That is beocause of the intensiy of our a:»u ‘where paia or fever exist, either complex otvilization—the strenuosity of ether or separately. our effort to secure dollars—the rapidity | It is geatifying to note that pruminent of our pace W pursuit of pleasure—the | practitioners everywhere have prescribed indulgence of our appetites. anti-kamnia tablets with most satistying Rich, poor, saint, sinner, stray from the | resulty in the tfeatment of all kinds of straight, narrow path of nature’s immut- | headache, migraine, neuraigis, la grippe, able law, until Pain 1s so universally pres- | and its after-effects; as a sedative in indi- ent, so much of can | gestion, gastraigia, dyspepsia, hysteria, and scarcely find & insomnia; as an antipyretio in intermit a all this broad lan tent and malarial foevers and bronchitis with pain. Pain is so common that to see |and for the severe pains of toothache, H frown 1s to bring forth the guestion, | sciatice, rheumstism and gout. ‘Are you in paint” You know full well when you are in Despite the almost nniversal prevalence | pain or when you feel feverish and it of pain in its various manifestatdons, 1t is | doesn’s require a physicians’s advice to tell & carious fact that some people dread to|you so—nor s a presoription needed to nssume the respensibility of attempting to | take anti-kamnia tablets. They may be relieve themselves of it, almost as much | obtained in any quantity desired a8 they dread the pain itaelf. You'll ind 1t no longer necessary to How fostunate therefore 1t is, that there | take your every ache and pain to a dostor, is & simple and veliable remedy, which, | when you have once learned of the quick because of its power to bring sure and | relief afforded by anti-kamnia tablets, the speedy seMef fsom padn o any form, may | pain specialists, at the corner drug store. TIMES SQUARE is an aid to digestion and is especially appreciated in ingtime. The hops employed in its manufacture are springtime A i of the finest quality and act as a-tonie. Save Coupons and Get Premium Phone Douglas 1889 and have a case sent home. Luxus Mermfl!e Company, 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. ) b

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