The Pioneer Press
Saturday, March 10, 1917
Martinsburg, West Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
The Pioneer Press.
THE PRESS, THE PEOPLE'S RIGGES MAINTAIN, ENAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN"
A WHITE HOUSE DINNER.
Dishes President Jefferson Served to His Guests In 1802.
Manasseh Cutter, the founder of the Ohio colony and father of the ordinance of 1787, kept a diary all through his public life, and it is now in the possession of Charles G. Dawes. It contains an account of a dinner at the White House given by President Jefferson Feb. 6, 1802, to which Mr. Cutter and six members of the house were invited.
Mr. Cutter wrote that there was "rice soup, round of beef, turkey, mutton, ham, loin of veal, cutlets of mutton or veal, fried eggs, fried beef, a pie called macaroni, which appears to be a rich crust filled with strillions of onions or shallots, which I took it to be; tasted very strong and not agreeable.
"Mr. Lewis told me there were no onions in it; it was an Italian dish, and what appeared like onions was made of flour and butter with a particularly strong liquor mixed with them. Ice cream, very good; crust wholly dried, crumbled into thin flakes, a dish some what like pudding, inside white as milk or curd, very porous and light, covered with cream sauce; very fine.
"Many other jimberacks, a great variety of fruit, plenty of wines and good, President social. We drank tea."—Columbus Distribute.
Americans' Physical Development
Americans Physical Development. While this country may excel in a competition of trained athletes or in certain kinds of mental ingenuity or shrewdness, it is certain that the average man is far from a model of perfect physical development. A casual inspection of the crowds on the streets of any one of our large cities will reveal pale, undernourished and poorly developed youths and pasty, flabby men in large numbers and will convince the open minded observer of the desirability for the individual of some form of regular physical training. That the country breed, moreover, are not greatly superior to those brought up in the city has been the experience of most military men who have had occasion to handle large numbers of troops.—New York Medical Record.
Lieutenant General.
Many of us are puzzled to know why a lieutenant general ranks higher than a major general. Perhaps the explanation is that the titles date back to the commonwealth, when the country was divided into military districts, the less important under the control of a sergeant major general, the rank beyond that of colonel, and the more important being governed by a lieutenant general, the captain general being Cromwell himself. The lapse of time has deleted the sergeant from the sergeant major general.—London Chronicle.
Ocean Currents.
There are twenty-seven permanent currents in the oceans of the world, and there are nearly as many more of the semi-permanent variety existing at one time. Several causes tend to originate and maintain these drifts. Uniformly directed winds have the greatest influence, and differences of temperatures, storms, polar ice and eddies have each some effect, creating usually the currents of semi-permanent variety.
What Life Is
Life is not made out of money, and friendship, and talents, and patronage, and family influences, and good chances, and good positions, and good health, and good nature. It is made out of faith, virtue, knowledge, temperance, patience, godliness, and brotherly kindness and love.—Iminger.
The Real Reason
Congressmen and legislators have not been lowered in grade during the last twenty years, but public understanding has moved up so much that it just seems that way. - Sioux City Tribune
Wise and Unwise
That is ever the difference between the wise and unwise-the latter wonders at what is unusual: the wise man wonders at the usual. -Emerson.
Clotheslines.
When the clothstime needs cleaning wrap it around the washboard and scrub it with a brush in soapbads.
THE WORRY HABIT.
It Not Only Kills Peace of Mind, but Is a Menace to Health.
The protective instinct is present in the human mind and when properly directed is a great source of prosperity both to the individual and the nation. In order for man to store up and lay by, to gain advancement either in honor or material things, it is necessary that he take some forethought of the morrow, but just so soon as he carries this beyond the normal point the mental process becomes an exaggerated and abnormal one.
The normal protective instinct is stimulated by a normal fear of those events which are reasonably sure to happen in the future unless means are adopted against them. The moment that this fear becomes abnormal or exaggerated it overstimulates this protective instinct, and to no good purpose because it results in worry. This worry continues long after the necessity for the normal stimulus of fear has passed, with the result that there is an impairment in mental power and a dissipation of the nervous forces. In fact, worry is an abnormal state.
Not all worry is preventable, but for the most part it can be avoided. Most of our fears are never realized, and, as a rule, if we meet our troubles day by day as they come without worrying about them before they arrive or fretting over them after they have passed we will find that we have the strength to rise above them. Worry undermines the health to a certain extent, and every victim of the worry habit owes it to himself to crush it out of his life. - Bulletin of Public Health Service.
DINED WITH THE DUKE.
No Common Kitchen Would Do For This Soldier of the Guard.
During the peonieslar war a strip of vineyards running between the two lines was a sort of neutral ground, where the men from both armies were in the habit of repairing for drinks and relaxation, in the course of which opposing forces often came across one another, but each passed their own way after courteous salutes. One day a British party had drunk somewhat freely and, happening upon a French sergeant of the guard, insisted upon making him a prisoner. The man was brought before the Duke of Wellington and lost no time in acquainting him with his plight.
"All right," said the duke good maturely. "Of course you shall go, but you must have something to eat first." And, turning to an orderly, he said, "Have this man taken to the kitchen and given a good meal." The Frenchman saluted, but made no attempt to express his thanks. Noticing his looks, the duke said: "Well, what more do you want?" "General," replied the Frenchman, drawing himself up proudly, "a soldier of the guard is never asked to eat in the kitchen."
"The duke bent his brow a moment as if resenting the man's aplomb, then, laughing, said: "Maybe you're right. Come and diar with me." - Pall Mall Gazette
Lincoln as a Gallant.
Although wanting in the language of gallantry, Lincoln was not incapable of turning a neat compliment. The artist Carpenter has told me of one that would have pressed Chesterfield third. An enthusiasm the lady gave the president an entirely superstitious bouquet. The situation was momentarily embarrassing, but "with no appearance of discomposure he stooped down, took the flowers and, looking from them into the sparkling eyes and radiant face of the lady, said, with a gallantry I was unprepared for, "thely, madam, if you give them to me and they are mine I think I cannot possibly make so good a use of them as to present them to you in return" - Helen Nicoday's "Personal Traits of the Magnum Lincoln."
Unkind
She—What do you suppose Harel meant by sending me these flowers? Also She—He probably meant to imply that you were a dead one—Jack o'Lantern.
Paradoxical.
"The truth lies somewhere."
"Strange conjecture, that, for the truth."—Baltimore American.
STRUCTURE OF THE EYE.
Why We See Better In a Moderate Than In a Glaring Light.
An observant chauffeur, passing an automobile with glaring headlights, noted that objects at the side of the road which had been distinctly visible dropped out of sight when the bright lights were thrown upon them. Since one can see better in a little light than in no light, he wondered, why can one not see better in bright light than in moderate light?
The answer is, paradoxically, that the less light there is the better one sees, for the brighter the object the less efficient is the eyesight. If, after we have been in darkness, we suddenly turn on a bright light and look at our eyes in a mirror we can see the pupil of the eye rapidly growing smaller. If we reduce the light the pupil dilates again. What happens is the same as in the camera when we adjust the shutter to the intensity of the light.
The colored iris of the eye corresponds to the shutter. It consists chiefly of a muscle which, as the light increases, is stimulated to contract, thus drawing the curtain and shutting out some of the superlimnos light. It usually takes a few seconds for this adjustment to take place. Thus when we emerge from darkness into light we are blinded until the iris can shut out some of the light from the eyes.
BANKS "LOAN" MONEY.
They Don't "Lend" It Because It Is a Business Transaction.
Why is it loan-ling houses always "loan" their huge sums of money, never by any chance "lend" them? "loan" is the true verb, while "loan" was exclusively the noun. How came it about that "to loan" has uniformly supplanted "to lend"?
The purists make a great fuss about this. They insist that the stupid and untaught financial world has foisted upon the language a substantive verb when he no verb was needed, when the ancient and established usage was fixed in the signification of "to lend." But prior to the modern development of business enterprise when money was lent it was bestowed upon the borrower either for temporary use without compensation, as a mark of favor or patronage, or by the professional money lender who, taking advantage of persons in extremities of need, demanded usurious interest. This Anglo-Saxen verb today retains its ancient connotation. When it was coined the productive powers of money were unknown and the wealth of rich men was locked up for safety and kept out of the channels of commerce.
Newark, by devices of credit and rapid intercommunication, it is kept constantly working in productive enterprises. These loans are made, no longer to relieve the necessities and the impoverment, but to stimulate industry and to enable the borrower as well as the lender to reason profit in his transactions. Money is loosely in this sense, it is not banked. New York Times
The People of India
The population of India spends about 150 different languages and are divided into forty-two distinct nationalities. There are 2381 main castes besides a large number of subcastes. There are 238400001 Indian, 630000000 Malayan, while among the Indian there are 70000000 of designated people of no caste, whose touch or even shadow is supposed to cause pollution.
Limited in number, but mighty in influence, are the Purposes, who hold the wealth of Burgey in the hollow of their homes and dwell in the lowest manhouses around the coast. They conform to European customs and live as much like Europeans as is possible for a colored race. 164 these people still worship the sun.
The Seychelles Islands.
The Sepulchre islands form an archipelago of 141 islands and are situated about 1,900 miles east of Aden and 1,000 miles from Zanzibar. They rise steeply out of the sea, culminating in the isle of Nitha, which is about 3,000 feet above the jewel of the ocean and is nearly the center of the group. All the islands are of coral growth. The houses are built of a species of mass sieve coral hewn into square blocks which glisten like white marble.
FRUIT AS A FOOD.
Only Figs, Dates and Maybe Bananas Are Really Nutritious.
"Fruit of all kinds, whey mixture and frost, is beneficial for healthful digestion, good quality of blood and as a preventive of clogging of the liver, kidneys and skin and, last but not least, the brain.
"It is a rustable, however," writes W. Howard James, M. D., in Good Health, "to look on fruit as a source of nourishment. It should not be taken with that idea. It should be looked on more as the lubriator which makes the nutritory work harmoniously and without destructive function.
"Some fruits may certainly be ranked as food such as this, dates and perlaps bananas. Those in the tropics, who live largely on the banana, we are told, develop considerable abdominal distention on account of the quantity taking. With the exception of the dates and the banana, fruit should never be considered as a food.
"The taking of fruit often does good by being among the amount of food taken. We are a population of dehydrites on a count of a excess of food, immediate of thirst and lack of proper supply of fruit and juice water."
Codish Will Eat Anything.
The cod has the reputation of being as connoisseurs as most, whose appetite for pelicans and owl tin cans is the rubble of neptunian jests. The varied nature of when the cod swallows is not more than kilte than the enormous quantity. A writer in the hot summer mail volumes as silver heath has, a cup kelves, books and rubber bulbs have been found in its stoma; but the tomentum of Aberdeen has a stone that weighs more than a pound taken from a cod that had swallowed it for the sea anemones with which it was covered. The same fish crumen has also found specimens of almost all the stalk eyed crustaceans that freewheel the northern coast of Scotland and of every kind of fish that a cod can mastest, including its own young. Cod have been known to swallow particles of swillenoids and hares.
Dangerous Sport
First Lady reading a newspaper--
This golf scene to be a very dangerous game. Did you see what happened to a man named Taylor? He went into a banker and was in two when he came out.
Second Lady. How dreadful!
"Yes, here are the words, 'Taylor getting out in two! Braid secured a half'"
"Well, Tommy?"
"Does it say what happened to the other half?"
"No, but there was worse to follow. According to the report, Taylor then fell completely to pieces." Exchange
Altering the Life Without War
In a world where nations grew and decay, where forces change and populations become erupted, it is not possible or desirable to contain the vast supruque forever. If peace is to be preserved, nations must turn to accept unfavorable alteration of the map without feeling that they must first be defeated in war or that in yielding they incur a humiliation. Derrmann Russell in Atlantic Monthly.
No Discrimination.
"I'm afraid father-in-law doesn't care much about me," said the young man. "He finds fault with me on everything I do." "Noseense!" replied his wife. "You don't know his ways. He is treating you just like one of the family." Exchange.
Ear of the Whale
The offence of the whale's curse is severely perceptible, yet it is said that the whale's hearing is so acute that a ship crossing its tracks fails a mile distant will cause it to dive in difficulty.
True
Profession—Now, what was the cause of the decline of the Roman empire? Bright Student—I know. It was due to too much militarism on the part of outsiders.
Believe me, it is prudence that first forsakes the wretched.—Ovid.
Morality is a priceless heritage.
VOL. 35. NO. 1.
INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENTS.
The Large and Puzzling Part "Man Failure" Plays In Them.
Close observers are not astounded by the statement made at a "safety" meeting that 10 per cent only of industrial accidents are due to machine failures, the remaining 30 per cent being wholly chargeable to "man failure."
Students, however, will not be satisfied with the simple statement, but will want to know something more, especially as to conditions that contribute to this appallingly large percentage charged directly to man's share in the fault.
It will not do to say that in each instance wanton carelessness is blameable. Psychologists are no longer content with that explanation, but are going deeper into the causation of accidents, seeking to determine just why the normal mental processes at times break and the interrupted coordination between brain and body ends in disaster.
In the matter of interpreting railway signals, for example, it has been set up that registered impressions vary as to individuals, and that likewise individuals react in different ways to the impressions given.
Emergencies invariably arise in the operations of modern industry similar to those in the transportation service, and, while the safety device may work with mechanical accuracy, the human factor cannot be depended upon. Omaha Bee
SIX SIDED SNOW CRYSTALS
That Is Nature's Law, but Why It Is So Science Cannot Explain.
Snow, crystals obey an immutable law of six. They are six sided jewels or six pointed stars. They never answer to the law of four or five. Snow is crystallized water, and water always crystallizes in six sided forms. Why? No one ever will know. There is no more apparent reason for the sixness of crystallized water than there is for the monoclinic prisms of sugar crystals. Water and sugar and the complex minerals which make the granite rock all follow laws which are utterly unchangeable, but which are, as far as we can see, without any special reason. It is as profitable to speculate why the chlorophyll of vegetation is green and why the blood of animals is red.
The whiteness of the snow is understandable. It is due to the fusion of prismic colors scintillating from the countless surfaces of minute crystals. Human science comprehends this. It also comprehends the fact that snow is a poor conductor of heat and thus prevents terrestrial radiation and keeps the earth and the things in the earth snug and warm under the white blanket which is sorter and finer than lamb's wool or ciderdown. Science knows why snow is white and why it is beneficent, but it cannot explain the law of six.
It is well that snow cannot be altogether explained. It is one of the earth's most beautiful mysteries. It would lose something in beauty were it to lose all its mystery.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Trying to Oblige
"What's your name, my poor man?" asked the kind hearted woman. "Lady," replied Flodding. Pete unblushingly, "the name is Lord Reginald Courtney Thorpe." "Are you sure that's your real name?" "No. I jest" thought it "it'd be a nice name fur you to use if you wanted to put de fact dat you had given me a sandwich an a cup of tea in de society news."—Washington Star.
There Are Others.
"It is very strange that no one has ever been able to find Captain Kidd's treasure."
"Oh, well, Captain Kidd isn't the only man who has put his money into real estate and couldn't get it out."—St. Louis Post Distribute
The Whole Period.
"There is a period in a woman's life when she thinks of nothing but dress."
"What period is that?"
"From the cradle to the grave."—Puck.
Beauty is the first present nature gives to women and the first it takes away.—Mere.
Hutered at Postoffice, Martinsburg,
West Virginia as second-class matter.
ne
Subseription Rates:
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ONG Year 60555s 0 wen ene corny STOO
@ix Months ...................8 76
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Issued every Saturday by J. R. Clit.
ford, Editor and Owuer.
ee oe eed ee
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SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1917, |
An insignificant hill will some-
times hide completely a towering
mountain behind it. A silver dol-
lar held before the eye will blot out
frdm view the noonday sun. And
in the same way the pleasures of
life will conceal the divine purpose
rising behind them.
Bah! that ‘‘Senators Stone, . La
Follette and others who have the
sense, manhood and too much in-
terest in the welfare and peaceful
perpetuity of this country to put
it in the hands of a_vacillating ex-
ecutive whose Mexican folly made
him a world-object of ridicule."’
Tf you are satisfied with medioc-
rity, you will always be mediocre.
‘You will remain a menial so long
as you have only a menial’s vision.
If you have no higher ambition than
to be a porter, a waiter, or a ser-
vant, you will never rise any higher
than a porter, a waiter or a servant.
We never hit higher than we aim.
The development of character
does not depend upon what we have
but what we are. This is one vi.
tal truth that needs to be empha-
sized for the help and guidance of
the race. The final effect of our
life, upon ourselves and upon our
race is what we are, not what we
have. Our real worth, in time as
well as in cternity, is measured
wholly by our character, not by our
possessions.
The editor appreciates very much
a complimentary reference to him
in the February issue of the Berry-
ville, (Va.,) Peoples Journal, and
readily reciprocates the same to
Editor G. L. D. Harris, who has
labored long, faithfully and hard
that the lot of the colored brother
in Berryville aud Clarke County
might be made easier, and he a real
asset to that section of the country.
The buckwheat or double-faced
person is of all persons the most
despicable. Especially the double-
faced christian, who wears two
faces, who can look with one face
upon the christian life with great
delight, and give his subscription to
the church; but who looks with the
other face upon the blind pig, or
the indecent dance, or the immod-
est dress, or the illicit love, and
give his time and money to them.
Such a person is despicable; run-
ning up a bill with the devil all
his life, and then sneaking behind
the church when pay day comes.
Thousands are failures in life be-
cause they do not go far enough.
They stop just this side of success,
Tue patent office in Washington is
full of contrivances that are almost
successes. If the inventors had on-
ly gone a little farther and not
stopped, they would have won suc-
cess and a name and died rich in-
stead of poor. Many of us start
out to do our duty. But we lie
down each night with duties on!
half done. We close the day with
plans partly carried out and obliga
tions partially met. We get tire!
and we stop. Our resolutions got
as far as nvuonday and then they
withered up.
Wonderful! ‘The $25,000 store
proposition in this city to be sup-
ported by the laboring element has
already begun to knock the bot-
tom out of starvation prices. Exes
can be gotten for 28 cents and but-
ter for 30. On with the store—it
will force rascally merchants and
farmers back to the days when eggs
and butter were considered high at
12 cents. Fifty cents for corn, po-
tatoes and onions, and a dollar for
wheat is a plenty forthe producer
to get and the consumer to pay
Hoxs and cattle on foot at 6 cents
is a plenty and never should be
more. The high-price game has
taught all a lesson—that it will yo
on just as long as the consumers
allow it, and stop just as soon as
they unite against it.
Church bells—are they needed?
ff one wanted money badly and by
going to a certain place ata certain
time he could get it, would it) be
necessary that a bell should ring to
start him; or ifa young man were
in love with a fine, beautiful girl,
and they had a mecting place,
would they want a bell to call them
together? No! and no again? If
our souls were on fire and we were
to work for the master’s pay, in-
stead of being on time, we would
always be ahead of time. It’s a
sign of religious negligence, and
ought to be relegated. ‘The late
Judge John J. Jackson wouldn't
have the court bell rung—''the
public knows I am here."’ So
christians should know and feel
God isin the church waiting for
them.
So much now is being said in
condemnation of —unpreparedness
for war. ‘Taking sobercr thought
over the matter, would not an hon-
est preparedness for brotherhood
be by far better? Suppose our
great leaders were men like Rodger
Willioms, William Penn, Charles
Sumner and others, would it re-
quire a standing army of trained
men to defend and protect Ameri-
ca? Rest assured when and where
there is a cause to fight for, lovers
of a country are ready. Who did
the best work on the bloody: battle-
fields of the war that John Brown
hurried on? ‘T'wo hundred thous-
and ignorant blacks, taken from
the huts and cabins of slavery—
people whose laws made them crim-
inals if found trying to learn to
read and write. ‘They had a right
to fight and God gave them wisdom
and power—the world's best pre-
paredness.
The dying words of two of
America’s greatest men, should
cling to and tug at the hearts of all
reasonable Americans now and for-
evermore. Thomas Jefferson's last
words were: ‘‘Tell the committee
to be on the alert. ‘Tell the com-
mittee to be on the alert.”” It meant
and means justice, and equality for
all. The other was Charles Sum-
ner, who whispered: ‘‘The Bill!
Take cate of the Bill. ‘Take care
of the Bill,’’ then closed his eyes
indeath. It was the Civil Rights
Bill that clung to his heart with
the last breath he breathed. Both
men advocated the saine thing, and
it is coming to stay. Such things
such men die for must live, rule
and reign. For Thomas Jefferson
to look into the future of this coun
try—before and now, made him
“Tremble,’’ and the late Charlies
James Faulkner whose speech in
1933, came with’ one vote ef
ing the slaves; decla: ine
it was done ere the third of a ‘cen-
tury, slavery would drenel: this
country in human blood, and it
did.
Livery man of us ts the architect
ofhis own fortune, every woman
the master of her own destiny. We
cannot hide our failures —whether
moral or spiritual or material; whe-
ther individual or of race—behind
the lame excuse of prejudice or
discrimination, Then why choose
to root and did inthe fith-heaps of
earth? Why not Hft high he head
and looking out upon tue great uni-
verse say, ‘allthis ismine. Know!
edge isa broad oceaii: the ship «f
my mind shall sail to its farthese
shore. Power isthe gift of 1
spirit; TP will subdue my body ana
obtain it. Above all other ambi-
ticns, I will stand for a man, real
man; I will stand fora woman, a
noble woman, and will make the
best of my life.’ Once take that
position, and you will soon Jearn
that there is ne limit to the possi-
bility of what you can accomplish
as an individual; there are no
bounds to what we can achieve as a
ence.
The intellectual, civilized church
members of today think themselves
far above idol worship; ‘‘for’’ they
say, “we no longer ake gods of
wood and stone.’’ No; but: they
make them out of their own desires
an! worstip them. Deep down in
their hearts, the professed chris-
tian don’t want a God who is holy
and ready to sanctify the sinful
heartof man. They prefer an idol
god who never rebukes or punishes,
whois noaxacting judge. So the
godsof the church arc merely th
passions deifi.d
Money, that’s one of the gods
worshipped. Po les rich is the
thing, The harlot with mores is
more respected than the vir
out moucy. Money! Tits +
in the market, on thre 1
thealter, ‘Me mereiis t1
his success by it, Dome tre vate
estsaresupvert dito ¢ Bvon the
ministry has come tiuder the spell of
it; fora parish is no longer valued
by its spiritual opportunities, but
by the salary paid and the chance
for graft.
Society is another of the gods
worshipped. Its followers are not
going to the devil—they have gone.
A body of hypocrites who bow in
mocking worship to the ‘Trinity
above, but serve far more the trini-
ty below—the world, the flesh and
the devil. A flirtable, danceabl»,
small-talkable crowd whose god is
their belly and whose glory is their
shame. Their temple, adance hall;
their congregation, so many women
ready to be sold to the high@st bid-
der, and so many men ready to do
the bidding; their order of service,
when they have no more to say, cat
or drink: when there is no more to
cat or drink, dance; and when they
are through with the dance, go out
and peddle the gossip and scandal
they have heard. Truly idol wor
ship has tuken the place of divine
worship,
His Color. ,
Little Ben go gentleman caller
You arent tink. ave yoy Mr Moo
hey— Wack, cuild) Why. not Tshoutd
hope neil What made you think 1
wast Little Ben Oh nothin! Only
Da said sou were awinly nievardly.=
London Telesray
Hard Lines
“In financial troubles What is 119
“OMT promised to pay Brown £10
today. ond [ve cet it and he janes
[ve got ite and he diey Tokio be
knows ve get it Vuck,
Friends inay ho affronted in fan and
Jost iu suber carnest.
Tread the Read Leatiing io the Goal
gai Aiea AAS blew aon
Tere as ot st omituct: of
fe for you, and Usat is the one that
for you 0 ste wander
dinilessjy in eotoet the stusle right
Tormiula for exi ave ois a mage
through which ihey mu ¢ thread: thely
Way endlessly in search of the center
which does not exist
There Ie no one recipe which will
serve for all mankind. Each must
Jearn not his neighbor's but his own
Lost way of living. ‘To one ft may be
the routine task, the daily round, to
curb the wandering will and bring con-
tent. ‘To another it may be the forti-
tude to eseape the sheltering care of
Dabit or the lassitude of stoth. To one
ft showid be the abandonment of phi
usopliy or iutrospection ty rub eibews
With his fellaw men; to another, tho
Willingness to let the son! awaken and
breathe amid the sky rimmed. prarie
and under the deathiess stars? to one,
Hearthstone and slippers; to another.
the seven seas, the aurora borealis and
the Southern Cross: to one, society:
to another, solitude; to one, the quiet
Which stills the passions: to another,
the ctermil restlessness which brings
achievement.
The best rounded life contains some:
thing of cach and all, ‘There are but
two attitudes to avoid—the level line
of least resistance and the rigidity of
relf distrust which denies every im-
pulse simply because it is impulse.
Somewhere between the two lies your
course. Many are the thickets to be
hewed down, many the crags to be
sealed. But beyond stands the Tun in
the Clearing, where faithful travelers
tay find the refreshment, the rest and
the kindly words of welcome which
form the goal and reward of life well
lived.—Collier’s Weekly.
UNIQUE AMONG ANIMALS.
Raccoons Have a Curious Habit of
Washing Their Food.
vew Atnericun wild animals are more
widely Known or excite more popular
interest than the raccoon, which oceu-
bies most of the wooded parts of North
America from the southern border of
Canada to Panna, with the exception
of the higher mountain ranges.
Is diet is extraordinarily varied and
inclndes fresh water chums, crawtish,
frogs, turtles, birds and their Ones.
poultry, nuts, fruits and green corn,
When near water raccoons have a curi
ens and unique habit of washing their
food Letore cating it. ‘Their fondness
for green corn loods then izto frequent
danger, for when bottom land corn
he. Aa ie fictive in our frontier
tevaiure ut am carly date. Coon.
shin cps, with the ringed tails hang-
ing Vike plumes, made the favorite
headcear of many pioneer hunters, and
coonskins Were recoznized articles of
barter nt country stores, Now that
(he increasing e-cupatiey of the coun-
try is crowding out more and more of
our wild life it is a pleasure to uote
the persistence with which these char-
acteristic and Interesting animals con-
tinue to hold their own in so much of
their original range.—National Geo-
graphic Magazine.
Learn to Be Thrifty,
Thriftlessness seldom if ever is able
to seize and detain opportunity or te
drive advantageous bargains.
What men call luck generally is a
combination of foresight, indu:try,
pluck and thrift in the lucky man.
To save is to have, to own Is to pos.
sess_power, Property speaks. loud)s
and Lirgely sways the commonwealth,
‘The thrifty contribute most to the wel.
fare of the state,
The purchaser on credit pays not
only for the property, but for the tin
it takes to compicte the purchase. It
seldom is the thrifty way to. finance
deals. ‘The extra expenditure ix equity.
alent to the loss of so much interest on
oue’s principal.
‘K Bid. fetan
A Most surprising Atstratian %,
the Kookooburra, or Jauzhing ja i ass
MI at once in the quiet bush come iovd
penis of uproarious, mocking laughter.
One is net inclined to join in the mer-
riment—it_ all seems as foolish and
weird as if an idiot boy were disturb-
ing a concregation in chureb, When
ihe source of the laughter is located it
{urns out to be a silly looking bird,
with clumsy, square body and oven
mouth, sitting unconcernedly oo.
stump. — National Geographic Maga:
vine.
Getting Bald.
“Mr, Soirell proposed to me, mother.”
“And sea aecepted him, E hopes"
Nt I conld never jove a
i bh. Sen shomid cone
( © its very ittue
oF it eraid
THEATRE AUDIENCES.
A Sermon For Those Who Arrive Late
and Banest Geol
Mtis one of our most hallowed oa-
onal customs not to go into a theater
unui the curtain has risen. Lf by some
stupid binder we bare arrived pune.
tually We smoke a cigaretie fn the
lobby
So the ctuning play write takes care
‘hot to stiurt his storyeuutil wt i ast tive
tninutes jater. He occupies these tive
iniuutes with a Colurless scene of some
Kind just to keep the groundliugs
amused. In some ca: s he will begin
each act i, the same way. tt depends
on how fashionable bis audience is and
how thirsty, Mor a converse reason he
Tnust finish his play five minutes be-
fore the faai curtain falls.
Another of our national customs: is,
to leave the theaer che moment Ed-
win has einbraced A: ee ina, although
the author may have seserved a quaint
comedy touch or a dramatic surprise
for the actual end.
itis no use altering the hour of per-
fer cre Regin at midnight if you
like: we shall not come until tive min-
utes after. Leave off at 10; we shall
£0 out five minutes before. It is in the
ocd. ‘The idea that an audience owes.
aay Consideration to authors or actors
is entirely foreign to us. ‘The very
svgvestion of it is almost an imperti-
nence.—Lovis N. Parker in New York
Phisod.
IN AN ANDEAM CAPITAL.
They Have Queer Ideas About Bath.
lig: Places In (Caldentile,
Ibague, capital of the Colomblan
province of Tolima, claims 2.300 souls,
but the count takes much for granted,
Itis a square cornered town of almost
wholly thatched one story buildings,
its wide streets atrociously cobbled and
its few sidewalks worn perilously slip-
pery and barcly wide cuough for two
feet at once.
A stream of crystal clear water gur-
gles down every street through cobbled
gutters, lulling the travel weary. to
slecp and furnishing a convenient
means of washing photoxraphic films,
We drank less often, however, after
We had strolled up to the end ‘of the
mountain and found three none too
handsome ladies bathing in the reser.
voir.
It is a peaceful, roomy place where
every one has unlimited space on the!
grassy, gentle slope to put up hiy lttle
chalky, straw roofed cottage, yet all
toc the strect line as if fearful of
missing anything that might unexpect-
edly pass. Poreiners seem to be aj
great novelty, and 1 could tind no sat
isfactory reason why so many. Iba
gucnos “were blind unless they had,
overinduized then.selves in the nation
al gate of siaine—Harvy A. Franek
in Century: Shacazine.
Red Foxes Mate For Life.
Since the days of Aesop's fables tales
of foxes and their doings have had
their place in literature as well ag in
the folk lore of the countryside, Many
of their amazing Wiles to outwit pur-
suers or to capture their prey give evt-
dence of extraordinary mental powers,
Their bill of fare includes many items,
such as mice, birds, reptiles, Insects,
many kinds of fruits and on rave occa.
sions a chicken.
Red foxes apparently pair for Hfe
and occupy dens dug by themselves in
a secluded knoll or among rocks. ‘These
dens, which sometimes are occupied
for years in succession, always have
two or more entrances opening in op-
posite directions, so that an enemy en-
tering on one side may be eluded read.
ily. The young, numbering up to eight
or nine, are tenderly cared for by both
parents.—National Geographic Maga-
zine.
Courses and Dishac
“Aree courses seem to have been the
customary menu in medieval times for
a state banquet. less ceremonial feasts
comprising only (wo and no private
dinner more than one. But each course
might comprise from eight to a dozen
different dishes. ‘Thus at the wedding
banquet of Henry V. there were only
three corn et over thirty different
ast 1 in ‘he records,
five ant ines.—Lon-
dou Chrouicvie
Reverse Methods.
“An heiress has to take measures op-
posed to anybody clse’s when she|
wants to save her money.”
“In whet way?”
“The last thing she showld do is to
husband her resources.” ~ Baltimore
American.
Real Nice.
Bobbie—That Mrs. Smith said some-
thing nice about you, Mrs, Brown
(purring)—What was it. Bobbie? Bob-
Me-She said sou didn't: show your
age.—Londan T lesrapb,
tia Gata ix Canc.
Do yeu sit up for your husband 2
“Ser Daman eariy riser and ans
Ways wp jin time to grees hin +
troit Free Press
ipie Sy IY Se a ge a
we =p Last Chance!
— = HH Offer Expires Mavoh 31, 1917
Ruan) wei A HE A Neo Combination $58 10
WAU ON RUE RH 0! Reading Like le? oF
Ce ete\\ ae BA AND ALL FoR bed
a Dur : f LS ee
Chg? ag Nae 7 any oe
ee The Youth's Companien
17 Issues of \ 82 ISSUES
THE YOUTHS COMPANION The favorite family weel-ly of Ainerica
Ny, mageat Pas oF Groce ta, anak
e es WO 3 and Swegestions. 4 thoussnd Funny:
ea ae
fl ee $230 [Pa °
Len Bote gd McCall’s Magazine
G MCALLS MAGAZINE ARE 12 ISSUES ARB A DRESS PATTERN
NG 281 Dros Bator PR, OLAS Seri ttt i atvaze
ee |) mr aa
OT Oe B ey 4 6 il get the 12m athly romes. of
ip CAN ALTEAGL ES Mec ails. making marels a de-
oe i Ee A ree alg (nein mean
ae bs ‘pF r and ise. 4
Me Neel 64 kee 2.10
- © * ee ee RG WENT Se8 EPS EMEC
: Pe fa BA Beet 3810 (Repressor PO Moacy Order) to
i ea Mah aaneeteain ges
4 THE YOUTH'S COMPANION fer 52 weetes, and the 917 Homme Calendar,
(This Offer Is (0 nave Youth's C om pa subrecribers on ; i:
2 NCAR MASAMMR Te lene ioke, tee af ne oo
Local Noies.
Visit the West E t
Goofton Roman. tpr or
George. M. Mill vc
MRS; # k
" Mr. and Charles Moten have
moved from the Corsey house on
West Martin Street to the Warrick
property on Samuel Street.
The many friends of Mrs. Belle
Dawson will be glad t. know tat
she is rapidly recovering from her
recent illness.
Rev. R. R. ‘Thompson, former
pastor of Dudley Church, is im
proving nicely.
Mrs. Harriet Green is visiting
her sons in Pittsburg, Pa. We
hope she may enjoy her visit
Mr. ‘Bub’ Green, who was
struck by astonein th W ashings-
‘ton Building and Lime Stone
Quarries, Woodville, Olio, u
the ‘Toledo Hospital, and is mend
ing rapidly. :
The -harter members of Ber ke-
ley Fountain 2218 United Order of
True Reformers do hereby yive no
tice to all persons holding said
Property of this order that same
will be called fer,
By Comm. tte.
-Rev. S. HW. Brown, Cunberiand
| District: Superintendent of
| Methodist Episcopai Chareh, § cle
his fourth and last Guarterly Con
ference at Mount Zion Crurei oi,
Wednesday night last.
A Mock Conterence was hoa
Mount Zion M. E. Chureh on Iasi
Thursday night. 9 Mrs. Canary
Cheairs was the “presiding ishoy'
and itissaid of her that + .e ful
filled her various dutics in man-
ner that would do credit to the
average preiate.
Rev. S. H. Norwoou, pastor of
Mount Zion M. Ji, Church, will
preach his farewell sermon on next
Sunday night, and it goes without
saying thata large crowd will b= in
attendance to hear him. He leaves
for Baltimore, where the W ishing
ton Conference, of which ne inas
been the Secretary for fifteen con-
secutive years, mee!s on March 14
Having had a very successial vent
itis qmte probable that
return
PROHIBITS!
ma) FOR U.S
AAPS Wh. J. BRYAN
Most Famous Democratic Editor
Criticizes Commcner’s Stand
For “Dry” Cause’—"lt's An
Appeal From God to Fanat-
icism” Declares Kentucky
Leader
The greatest editor in the Demo-
cratic party—Henry Watterson, of the
Louisville Courier Journal—stands um
alterably opposed to William J. Bryan,
the always-wrong, erstwhile champion
of free-silver and other benighted doc-
(eines, in his attempts to lead the clan
of Jefferson, Watterson is fighting
shoulder to shoulder with President
Wilson. In an interview given to the
New York World, at Miami (Fla.)
where he is wintering, Colonel Watter-
son declares: +
“It's a good thing for the politicians
and a bad thing for the country when
a great moral question can be made a
leading party issue,” said Henry Wat-
terson, in commenting on Bryan's
statement that Prohibition will be the
issue in the next Presidental campaign.
An Appeal To Fanaticism.
“It's an appexl trom God to fanatic:
ism. ‘The fanatic knows no relouting,
neither does he make any dise:imina-
tions, He is a monomaniac. He
would, by act of Assembly or const
tutional amendment, suddenly change
the human species from mortals inte
angels,
“Thus he becomes an asset to the
politicians. For half or three-fourths
of the 2,000 years since Christ, the
priests and prelates, in the name ot
religion, steeped the world in. woe.
Are they to be succeeded by a race,
A class of professional notiticiins, who,
in the name of Hberty and the peo.
ble, would steep it in despotism? Ts
Uhristisnity a failure? Is democracy
@ failure? Must men and women he
forever the victims of their incapacity
for self-xovernmont?
“Intelligent self-control is doing
much to draw men away from strong
drink. Science is doing much to
abridge the area of diseases. Tut the
regeneration of men must proceed
from within, and is of slow growth.
We cannot hope to eliminate death,
nor is Prohibition likely to end drunk.
enness,”
AJL. Miller, the drayman. was
a pleasant call rat the Pooss effec
tits ori
this morning.
nel ND Pease somes ere
om v1) Ecce
4, 7, _———S————
a N% NN gym ‘Ths
% mS Soro
: " ‘ Hee aT rd .
* a . : SLOTNCHINT Tac ud i
By ats RB PCUNGRHALI gai B.A. puts mew joy
ut, Te - :
fk de site. * us REPARED into ine sport of
he Ne. a WMERTRE “ot
ae | ie, oad 4 Soren | smoking!
ye | Pe : epatcnsto
OG OO as. ~ EE OST De @ you may live to
ae e DTFUL AND WHOLE?
} eS - ft pees pa 4 be Li0and never
| \ \Saa © S: Sih KERS { feel old enough to
ae Yen, fatep || 2 vote, but it’s cer-
RYZE ARES 7 § ta :
ee ARS 4 tain-sure youll not
GEN, cole cchowram know the joy and
paca ee Sa : “magie ¢ contentment of a
Leber Malta Coit @ friendly old jimmy
DRS: io —s S587 nine ora hand rolled
a a is nfess you get on talling-terms
aie tig SS, Ss ibert tobaceo!
ie i le Ba 7 a with a real reason for all the
j Se \ Mee , i ves satisfaction it offers, It is made by
ay 4 NERS i R i process that removes bfco and parch!
ae “th Piles : sce it long and hard without a come-
PH: oan © Albert has always been sold without
a HM cass cuems. We prefer to give quality!
ig ee
if Fes inlets, : hm Gae keenest pipe and cigarette
‘ WoWng 2 : Sic that flavor and fragrance and
re (Tee tas that sounds. P.A. just
} i Meet tceaaeree eS il . i . Geniand for tobacco
a Bie, parc Gree bee:
“if
a : feat Sibert isn’t any harder
Ho fn tena fer be celes 2 TRG. tt sarest place that. sells
Se Hee das arene 1usi for “a supply of P.A.” You pay
: hitenidor “uaithe ap ts fe hut ics the cheer-
rH cplenuuy conetace. : stvienl you ever inadc!
- @ he p
q bs 2 Pp si alae sab 7
i Re Bo EB GT ee AO PR Beary,
Ln Sh awe eel Ee Ae
a Madey a? ag gly sag he LPR RES Rose
: Ree GA et Pe 8 aes e Aes) eae,
YO a . 2 ASST) ia Eee BE
f RJ. Reynolds ‘Tokacee ¢ ight 916 by HU teeweianmaumeeeres. |
bony Kar See
pay OF WO) Go ba ey
bona Bp Geo Ges ©) an
bond Mea) fea og? i a
ind Te ie Satchel os 3 tty By
Bod says ats J ye em asl ot, SOR
bot ee - So % dy Pom ay i ara
| {oie She ay of Cit i
Rist area che says it Bid Cant ae ea bd
Pye thot ate any back Ue Ie Te wor tes oe
pe ight ihe pain weuld ne is cna pS
t a to doa ehh wot would 1 tee bot
Feed Of Cari {my hence i 7 : a os
Hee Of Cari beg ousewerk, Af on vial Eye
gy ained 35 pi gan to fect Hko a. k iy ante Ferm
; Seay a Pounds a fool Hke an by ate feceg
Net ; I 2 ria A y sid now. 1 ae vow oes Loe
wish every suff vier ane soon ES
Bed Sy DE \ SFLED tna WOUle) BING ye
bead Eo 1 i: ye a vam 4 F feo
ag ge NF beck eee 3 | aes IE re my ~
bee ee EN Cea Ad bee
ras ha | ey 1) Ey ee ; pet
wy The “Won ely a La Ce
Bee a trial, Ts Womans te a, ud pes
pag aa sie Caeaei this LOM eo
oe it always docs ing di vition Tfecl a Fil a
fe tired, feadacho, bac! e woe." fewla hive ved, | a
ei enue ene, he, side ache ve bed,
eR tonic. Vo eee nares cha, nervavsnas ares
REZ for your ha Eeuaet Gea @ Site bigns Of 8, By
t = anes eon oF ctae face ard, ihe aman: Pee
rey - ns has been hel; dn tryine:« was Tag
Pl Ge ea hilly pars," weak, wing’ | a4
we EE Mattia | on
ee Men } BRE he hovey 8 :
it ls Dak bad & /
A jie wi bbb ahaa dime
eet IS oy 4 < v6
Le Hele tees. hes ofa Good Figure
Le hacel ee aga ee
tig, Re ep 8 ° Se wiete ta hawt Jl
esis a,b eae er Ss eka a ay an Ak
Palins aad oo Breer a feare lis youthtal
Bag fg eee HOR
Sa il ~~ Balan) # rey A m: :
we" ke CEL,
nas ca orAcoikRes '
ey UE, raltha datetonl wan eSinle burnin
he ee Ae ltemabie. Gris the bast af raters are |
| Dn Ae gata. UAtelann x fan ble bone
Mi art OES hin eh meer |
be Fyre BBE SME ‘They come in 2M eteloe.and yore local DEY
FB Oe a i ee Raa oan
YAK 4 A RR Fea wr renten yoeklet showing sayin Maat fl
1" \ 3 Sara nN:
pea aia. @ BENJAMIN & JONES | f
+ ‘ ij Y pig 09 Warren Street Rowan, KJ.
A, hi —Z Ea ia aa a pa a
Sere 309 f
Si, PREPARED
fh *F ms ele
/ Ma WA
f A Age Se | ae
‘ol eae nrg CRSP
| Ae Ce eammaden ae, |
| 9 Se BPS 7
Ae ee t ee en Bt
\ CP ES este ie?
4 er eee
(nl 5. > Ke
ToRTERTT AT BA a
POPULAR MECHANIC
ILLAGCAZINE *
Isc ARTICLES cette
[gu inf 1 of the Workl's Progrea in
fe ‘id sod Voe Mec ain Oopee
fo nettle mertal Boe Beet
sae ah Terenas the tte
rio Se You Com Understond i
Minalor stag Neene wad gang ase ter eal
ewer de Ree 2
bas ae SN sets aan
1 ee a
un cetera
eS
y pean te 1 a meme se ey f
is apie can!
PR wy FOR UMP fab St
ge cA ee 2 PIRST Charen |
hele see Big on. |)
Re Sy efor the binjes'
‘age 7 game of Mar fi
Aas America. i!
1 Be. Ker 3
ie STEVER. i
Ie ‘High Power” Repeatic.;, |:
|| Rifle Mo. 428. i
| Ubt Price = Gam.c0 i
1} -25.20-20..22 and 38 calibers
|! Le Rem, Auto Lowting Carteianes By}
| with on pwer prinors a |
FA SURE rnc No BAUS _ wep SIG oy
1} Onr “ities Power" i
1} Rifles wise fure x FAY
} nished in fancy ass
* Sisk your Deatar. SS
11 sone por handed ar .
{icine Catatog wy
| STEVENS ARMS Wea, He
_ 720), company, BB LE
2) O. Box $064 ee Be
jorte Eos, ph RNG)
ACHISETH Pugh
— : of H..2Ffn.- St
r son err cscs
L. Dodd s Sale, Little Georg
oon. Wartncsatlay. thaval 74
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HAS the whole world gone start and end over a very foolish and trivial question? Are sword rattling, cannon rumbling, mailed armor glistening just because Russia wanted to show her love for the little brother Servia? Tear aside the curtain of Europe's politics and see the grim end shister game of chess that is being played. See upon what a slimy, yet desperate, excuse the sacred lives of millions are being sacrificed. Read the history of the past one hundred years, as written by some of the greatest authorities the world has ever known, and learn the naked, shameful truth. Just to get you started as a Review of Reviews subscriber, we make you this extraordinary offer. We will give to you
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CHICAGO BUSINESS MAN ADVOCATES COMPENSATING DEALERS
No Private Property Is Safe From Puritanism, Says Edward A. Gore - Foreign Countries All Reimburse Victims of Prohibition, Only America Confiscates
Declaring that prohibition, in establishing the principle that the property of the liquor man can be confiscated without compensation, is establishing the same rule with respect to any other industry that Puritanism may select for destruction, Edward A. Core, influential member of the Chicago Association of Cotmanite, took occasion to give his views on compensating the liquor man. "The treatment accorded the liquor man is unjust and un-American," he declared.
"Once let the principle become established that property in one line of business may be destroyed, that the owner may be despoiled of his property, and the same rule will be held good with respect to other property that those who are overcharged with Paritanism may select for destruction," said Gore.
A Challenge To Liberty.
"We have long held ourselves up to be citizens of a country which invites the oppressed of every land to come to its shores and here find freedom of opportunity, here find the protection of laws guaranteeing equality of all. In the light of the treatment the liquor men have met with, I am afraid that proud boast of America must be challenged. Freedom has been ours, but there seems to be an element of Puritanism in our country which would treat freedom dawn and erect in its stead something masquerading in its habitiments which even the old Puritan would have repudiated as representing what must be the principles of this country. We need to stop and take note of the fact that if this thing is to continue, the liberties of which we have boasted will all melt away; and the man who claims to be a free man in America is making a claim that he can not sustain.
"You are familiar, no doubt, with the legislation that transported in Switzerland when it was proposed to destroy the abusive industry; you are doubt recall that when that matter was pending in the legislature."
that compensation was used to cause in the United States compensation was not provided when bitton provailed; and from every side of the law, the sentence three years was applied effect that no matter who State had or had done the five body of Switzerland would no law that had about it not picture of dishonesty? the measure finally allowed for compensation to the person raised the absurd act the players, to the distiller who distracted his employees, to the dealer, worked it and his employees.
Getting the Air.
I have known city men, hundreds of them, who had a firm conviction that one of the greatest obstacles in their way to becoming healthly live in the fact that one ally has lost a child or than the air quality or at the time of birth. True, the air down that ally would not assay as ally to ozone as that in the weakly penetrating, but the difference ozoneility is so硕 that it isn't worth putting unhonor - L. R. Welzmuller in Woodford, West.
Homo sapiens
Certain lipids are good adapting to adapt the horse chestnut to the horse dietary. The nuts are triangular starch and sweet with pear and fat, and are nutritious food value of the elements on the carbonation of the bitter elements and the first tating sapod n-live glucosides.
DEATH RATE DECREASES AS
Saturday Evening Post Contradicts Claim of Hobson, and Other Prohibition Orators. That "Alcohol" Destroys 2.000 Lives Each DayAmerica's Mortality Rate Lowest In History
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The Saturday Evening Post of Philadelphia, editorial page, issue of October 21, 1816, gives some very interesting information which ought to be read by Mr. Hobson and other prohibition regulators who would have us believe "alcohol" destroys two thousand lives each day!
We quote from the item mentioned: "The death rate in the United States out of year was the lowest ever reported in children and a half for each thousand infants. In ten years, also it was seventeen and a half; so we may say that about four hundred thousand more people would have died in this country last year but for the better care we take of our health—mainly by public sanitation. This ratio, of course, is for the "registration area," which embraced only two-thirds of the population. Probably the remaining third faced in about the same way, though the fact that it is not enough interested in the matter to make a proper report or vital statistics raises a presumption against it."
Accepting the names of the Saturday Evening Post, the year now approaching its end shows the host record of any as to the nation's death rate.
Use of Liquor Increases.
The figures of the Internal Revenue Department in Washington for the same period show a steady increase in internal Revenue receipts.
The books of every distiller, brewer, wine dealer and wholesale liquor dealer in the country show increased withdrawals from bond and increased sales to dealers and consumers for the same period of time.
Were our prohibition friends capable of learning anything, these facts and figures should be highly discouraging to their unsupported claims as to the accomplishments of prohibition. On the one hand we have in enormously diminished death rate and on the other a largely increased safe and consumption of wine, beer and whisky. The prohibition agitators will meet these facts and figures with their usual evasion and misrepresentation, but facts, and especially evasion, of the figures, are stubborn things to deal with. Sane people who go to work with themselves will draw the conclusion that the nation is going along under
AT ALL
GOOD
DEALERS
504 UP
STYLE
19323
QUCR INCREASES
contradicts Claim of Hobson, and Other
that "Alcohol" Destroys 2,000 Lives
Mortality Rate Lowest In History
Phila constantly improving conditions of
sanitation and sobriety, and while
using liquors more freely, it is using
but not abusing.
In almost every city the colored death rate is substantially higher than the white. In a number of cities, including Northern as well as Southern towns, it is double that of the whites, and in a few places much more than double. For all registration cities in which the colored population formed the one or more of the total, the colored death rate in 1914—was twenty-six per thousand, against fifteen for whites.
is to the higher death rate among the colored population, to which the Saturday Evening Post draws attention, it is due now as it always has been, to the wretched habitations in which they live. This is especially true of the cities where they are unfortunately crowded into the districts not deemed desirable by whites. That contains about the whole story of a falling death rate, for undoubtedly the colored population of cities lives under less sanitary conditions than the white.
Liquor Didn't Kill Those.
Of the million and a third persons—roughly—who died in the United States last year, about one-quarter were under five years of age, and over one-third were under one year. It is there, probably, that attacks upon the death rate can be most successfully made; for there is no doubt that an important part of the infant deaths is preventable.
Importance, not alcohol, is accountable for the large percentage of infantile and juvenile mortality.
The falling death rate is a result of social action, a strictly co-operative product. This has been most vigorously applied in cities; so the city death rate is lower than the rural.
And yet, it is in the cities that litters, especially among the unsanitary, are the more freely used.
Every statement and all the figures of the Post's item tend to refute the prohibition asseveration that the increased use of liquor is the cause of its instability.
The Post's record shows just the contrary—greatly increased use of liquor and enormously diminished morality.—National Bulletin.
Beautiful Bust and Shoulders are possible if you will wear a scientifically constructed Elen Jolie Brassiere.
The dragging weight of an unconfined bust so stretches the supporting muscles that the contour of the figure is spoiled.
Bien Jolie
(BE-AN JO-LEE)
ERASSIERES
of the hard work where it belongs, prevent the
fault just past, bring the appearance of flaw-
bness, eliminate the danger of dragging muscles
and contine the flesh of the shoulder giving a
graceful line to the entire upper body.
They are the daintiest and most serviceable zer-
ments imaginable—come in all materials and
styles. Cross Back Hook Front Surprise. Band-
can, etc., jointed with Walabo. The rustless
boating—permitting washing without removal.
Have your doer show you Bien Jolie Brassieres.
Bond stock, we will gladly send him, prepaid,
samples to show you.
BENJAMIN & JOHNES
51 Warren Street Newark, N. 3
OWN SHOPPING