Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 221, 16 September 1922 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM ; AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets, filtered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, aa Second-Class Mail Matter.

MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Associated Prwj is exclusively entitled to the use Tor republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local nws Published herein. All rUrhts of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

Gov. McCray on Education

There was an unmistakable ring of sincerity in the exposition of Indiana's educational needs which Gov. McCray presented to the Kiwanis club

a few days ago. Ranked as seventeenth among

the commonwealths from an educational stand point, Indiana must improve its system to pre

pare its youth adequately for the the governor said.

One factor that impressed his listeners was the governor's statement that too many teachers

are taking courses in the normal do not prepare them to teach the

branches thoroughly. He found that young girls of,6 and 17 years were taking courses in Spanish, Greek and the higher mathematics as a preparation to teach arithmetic, geography, reading and writing in one-room schools in rural districts. Gov. McCray argued, and rightly so, that teachers, whose activity will be confined mainly to teaching the elementary grades, should take normal courses that will make them highly efficient to instruct the youth of the lower grades. It is a waste of time and money for a teacher, who is to preside over a district school, to specialize in the ancient languages and neglect the study

Answers to Questions (Any reader can tret th answer to anv question by writing The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J- Haskin. direr-tor. Washington, D. C. This offer applies strictly to information. The bureau does not fjive advice on les?al, medical arid financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on any subject. Write your question plainly and briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents in stamps fnr return postage. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer. Q. Just what is butter? What I want to know is, is there any official definition of or standard for butter? C. E. V. A. On August 2, 1886, congress defined butter as follows: "That for the purpose of this act the word 'butter' shall be understood to mean the food product usually known as butter and which is made exclusively from milk or cream, or both, with or without common salt, and with or without additional coloring matter." On February 17, 1898 congress passed a law effeotive in the" District of Columbia, establishing a standard of butter of 83 per cent milk fat and 12 per cent water. On June 6, 1906. under an act of congress approved March 3. 1903, the secretary of agriculture defined butter fat as follows: "Butter is the clean, nor-rancid product made by gathering in any manner the fat of fresh or ripened milk or cream into a mass, which also contains a small portion of the other milk constituents, with or without salt, and also contains not less than 82.5 of milk fat." On May 14, 1919, the secretary of agriculture re-affirmed .and re-announced the butter standard of 1906. On June 16, 1922, a bill was -introduced in congress defining butter as follows: "That butter shall be understood to mean the food product usually known as butter, and which shall be made exclusively from milk or cream, or both, with or without common salt, and with or without additional coloring matter, and containing not les3 than 80 per cent of milk fat and not more than 16 per cent of water." This bill has not yet become a law. Q. Is former Senator Sutherland, of Utah, the new associate justice of the United States supreme court, a Mormon? G. It. A. He is not a Mormon and is not affiliated with any church. He was born in Buckinghamshire, England, in 1862, and came to America in his youth. Q. How much milk is used in New York City? T. J. M. A. About 55,000 quarts of raw milk and 2.245.000 quarts of pasteurized milk are consumed in New York City daily. Of this amount, approximately 44 ner cent is retailed in bottles. Q. When do leaves drop off maple and oak trees? E. W. M. A. Trees leave defoliate at different periods in different sections of the country. Generally speaking, mapie and oak trees defoliate in October and Novemner. A 1 1 e r Limner atones A colored couple stood once again before the probation officer. "Now this." the officer said to both "seems to me to be a case where there is nothing very much the matter Yrert that your tastes are different You, Sam. are much older than your wife. It is a case of May married to December." A slight pause, and then Eva, the wife, was heard to remark in a tired voice: I i really doan know what you means by yer saying May i3 married to December. If yer goin' to talk that way, it seems to me to be a case of Xbor day married to de Day of Rest" Everybody's. "Confound It Louvindy! Looky yur!" demanded Gap Johnson of Rummage Ridge, after a prolonged family jar. "Are you going to give in and own pip vou're mistook about it?" "No, I'm not!" snapped Mrs. Johnson. "Then, by p'tu! thunder, I reckon mi have to." Kansas City Star.

Lessons in Correct English DON'T SAY: Either James or his sisters HAS tha book. either James nor his sisters HAS the book. This can be easily PROVEN. Ehey have PROVEN him guilty. SAY: Efther James or his sisters HAVH the Jbook. Neither James nor his sisters HAVE the book. This can be easily PROVED. f hejr have PROVED him euilty.

of methods which will enable her to teach boys and girls the fundamentals of learning. I This becomes increasingly apparent if one keeps in mind that only eight per cent of the boys who quit the eighth grade later on graduate from college. Or, in other words, if 92 per cent of the pupils do not go farther than the eighth grade, it is essential that their schooling up to that point be the best that can be provided. One of the most important factors to bring this about is the thorough training of the educators who are to instruct them. If the teachers are ignorant of pedagogical, methods, or if they take only a passing interest in the school system,

the boys and girls who are entrusted to their

care pay for it in sanitary school

to enable the teachers to put into practice the methods which they have been taught in the normal schools. In this respect there also is room for much improvement, Gov. McCray said.

needs of life, The report of has completed a schools which

system will soon be published. The governor intimated that it would contain a number of reve

rudimentary lations, and also

to revamp the whole educational system so that it can be put on a modern basis. The survey was

maSe by representatives of the Rockefeller and Carnegie Foundations, men who are experts in

the educational

One gathered the impression that Indiana had paid too much attention and spent too much money on its universities to the neglect of the

common schools, ties. The survey

true, and will indicate how ,the money is to be

apportioned to obtain maximum results.

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can." "Take IV "Up" ON BEING INSPIRED . I came upon a quotation the other day by one named Herder in which this writer says: "Without inspiration th best powers of the mind lie dormant. There is tinder in us that needs to be quickened with sparks." This arth is filled with beauty and mystery and possibilities so that inspiration may be born through U3 all. Life, at its best, is filled with a strain of monotony and we must have sources from which we may draw our inspirations that we may rise and not fall, that we may grow and not shrink. No matter how far short these brief little Talks may fall of their purpose to uplift and inspire, still the fact remains that for inspiration and that alone does a Talk appear here each. day. And I who write, get my inspiration out of my desire and attempt to inspire you who readA friend is for the purpose of inspirationCharacter, high purpose, clean thinking, a deep desire to make this world a better place in which to live, these are the results of inspiration. And there is none of us who does not need to be inspired quite often. .,"' Most inspiration, however, comes about through giving inspiration to others. Or else, from where could we draw all that we have? It isn't so much what we actually accomplish as what we honestly earnestly and hopefully attempt that establishes our standing and the worth of our character. Not merely "Did you win but did you try?" That, I am sure, will be the question of the Judge of all Judges when the last day's work is done. "There is a tinder in us that needs to be quickened with sparks. Are you furnishing any of these sparks to the world?

Who's Who in the Day's News MISS HELLNER-NIELSEN Born wealthy and educated for the social and titled society circles of Europe, Miss Ingeborg Charlotte HellnerNielsen, has forsaken a life of leisure I o r i n e serious work of a criminology expert At 26 she is in New York to explain to police officials of the United States the new system of utilizing the finger print system of i d e n t i f ying and tracking criminals which she, with Dr. Hakon Jorgensen, sub-director of police in Copenhagen, have perfect ed. bne nas devised a code method of sending finger-print descriptions by wire, cable or wireless to speed up and simplify the hunt for important criminals. Miss Hellner-Nielsen is an attractive girl, blond and athletically inclined She is a star at tennis and skating She was born in a small town in Den-1 mark, famous as the birthplace of Hans Christian Anderson, famous fairy tale writer. She first heard of the finger print science through a friend and went to see Dr. Hakon Jorgensen. In spite of the fact that she was not obliged to earn a living, he was so impressed with her qualifications that he urged her to take the position under his direction. Against the protests of her family she went to work. Mis3 Hellner-Nielsen is interested in the introduction of a universal sys tem for every country this system of course being Dr. Jorgensen's and the establishment of a central bureau. The accomplishment of this will be of inestimable importance to women, said Miss Hellner-Nielsen. "In the first place, it would be a great protection against the kidnapping of chil dren. It would also be a protection to women against a bigamist marriage, and would have an enormous effect in preventing fraud in the collection of insurance and numerous other crimes." Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason RETIRED A ead old man sat by the sea, and wept in trumpet tones, and every time he looked at me he heaved some bitter groans; "I wa3 a merchant prince," quoth he; "my name is Jimpson Jones. I had the finest dry goods store that ever eyes beheld, and strangers, when they glanced it o'er, I Victor Adding Machines I $100 BARTEL & R0HE 921 Main St iiiiniimittinnifiimtntiiMMitimiimiiinfHiiinitHmHiniinimiitmimifniiimiiii

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

an inefficient education.

Of equal importance is the establishment of

buildings, sufficiently equipped the special commission which survey of the Indiana school present a constructive program world.' especially those in poor coun probably will show if this is threw up their hands and yelled;,! was a happy man, of yore, but all my joys are knelled. I will retire from active life,' I said, though trade was fine; "I'm weary of the toil and strife, at ease I would recline:' I was en couraged by my wife, and by my daughters nine. In some nice grad beside the sea, I said, 'I shall abide; a chair beneath a banyan tree, and I'll be satisfied; there with my pipe and fiddlers three, I'll let life's autumn slide.' And oft I heard my wife declare that such a course was best: my daughters went up in the air and said I needed rest; and so I sold out every share, and all that I possessed. All day I sit beside the wave and sigh and beat my slats, and people, when they hear me roar, imagine I have bats; oh, I would thank some surly knave to shoot me with his gats. For when a man i3 used to trade, with all its rush and roar, he feels like something dead, decayed, when he's outside a store; he'd see things measured out and weighed, and rest's an awful bore. I see you with your wooden lyre, you swat it once or twice, and while I sit here and perspire, I hand you this advice: Oh, never from your graft retire, while you can put up ice." Facts About Indiana The county governments of Indiana paid more than $20,000,000 in bounties and relief to soldiers and their families during the Civil war. Gunboats built by Captain J. B. Eads of Indiana, were the first armored ves sels ever built in the United States. Indiana responded to the call at the outbreak of the Spanish-American war with more than seven thousand men With completion of the first real rail road in Indiana, the value of farm pro ducts in central Indiana increased materially. Flatboats could be used for transpor tation purposes to New Orleans only a few weeks of the year because of the condition of the streams. The National Soldiers Home at MarHELPED HIS BACK Bactiache. rheumatic pains, dizziness and blurred vision are symptoms of kidney trouble. "My husband had a bad bacK, writes Mrs. M. McCulloufrh Easton. Pa. "When he sat down he could hardly get up and then he would be drawn over to one side. He tried Foley Kidiney Pills and they cured him." Foley Kidney Pills auickly re lieve kidney and bladder trouble. A. G. Luken Drug Co., 626-628 Main St. Ad vertisement. luHinimmmtmMiiifmtimuiHmmmuujltnaimniitiutiuii 1 3 Interest on Your Savings 1 .Accounts I American Trust Company 5 E i Main ana sun ts. The Bank for ALL the People Second National Bank

SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND.

Hopi Indian Snake Dance Two Fraternities Participate in Ritualistic Ceremony of Southwestern Indian Tribes.

By FREDERICK J. HASKIX WASHINGTON, D. C, Sept 16. Many years ago a great drouth visit ed the land of the Hopi Indians, in northern Arizona, according to an Indian legend. The corn and the melons died and there was no game. By and by the people themselves began to die of hunger and thirst The old men planted many prayer sticks. The gods were invoked in every way the people could devise. But no rain came. There was great suffering. Then the children said, "We must help. How can we make the gods listen? By doing something that we hate. So they went out on the plains below and gathered snakes, and played with them, putting them in their mouths, and singing and dancing with them. Then came great rains and the people's lives were saved. And the old men said, "The children have pleased the gods by playing with that which the gods love. We have learned our lesson." So they themselves in the great snake fraternity, made songs and prayers, and once every year since then they have appealed to the gods for rain with their "snake brothers," who are the messengers to the underworld. Thus was evolved the, according to legend, the snake dance which falls between Aug. 20 and 26. The exact date depends upon the moon. It was held this year on the latter date and, as is always the case, attracted a large crowd from all over the southwest. The dance is carried out now in much the same manner as it was years ago, it is believed. Two fraternities always participate, the Ante lope and the Snake, the former as as sistants in certain rites. For 9 day6 before the dance the men of the latter organization go out on the plains with notched sticks, buckskin bags and wallets of sacred meal to hunt for their 6nake brothers. As they capture each reptile , they sprinkle it with the holy meal and thrust it in the bag. To ward evening they bring their captives to the snake kiva, (church) where the reptiles are washed, sprinkled again with meal, submitted to chants and prayers and kept in cap tivity until the great event. Their number is added to day by day. And so, for many days, minor ceremonies are held in the kiva. Late in the afternoon of the day before the dance, the Antelope priests appear in full regalia of painted bodies, dance sasnes and kilts of brilliant colors, and with symbolic equipment, such as bowls of sacred meal, prayer plumes, sacrificial plants, and feathered wands. For half an hour they chant and enact a prayer for rain and for Safety First Maxims Johnny Glade overstayed His sojourn at a friends; Folks said "He oversped," And there my story ends. Nothing is so bad but it could be worse; the fellow that's in the pen for life does not need to concern himself about how to cross car tracks without getting scrambled! It'll be too bad if the rallorads take back the careless shopmen along with the rest! Kids crossing streets ought never to rush out where bigger angels might be afraid to tread. Uo to this time it hasn't been (founa necessary to offer any kind of trophy to stimulate interest in the 6pori oi trying to beat cars and trams over crossings. "Wonder what a speeder tninss about" ought to make a good subject for one of these cartoon men! If some of these trucks of the roads keep getting wider and the drivers deafer, new roads must oe Duiit lor us common folks! Musings For The Evening The public is being urged not to waste coal. Inasmuch as tne puoiic has no coal whatever, it loons as though this bit of advice will be followed. Muriel McCormick has declined a million-dollar movie contract and moved into an attic. Evidently there is never going to be any way to keep that family off the first page. DO YOU KNOW THAT La Viscomtesse de Lestrange is at Ouchy-Lausanne? La Marquise ae aiane is at &vianslea Bains? Le comte de vasselot de Kegne is at Cauterets? Le Baron de Noirmont 13 at Sam-Jean-de-luz? If you do not, save enough money to take a trip abroad. You will be glad to get back home! Marcel Steinbrugge. A lot of people are advocating "beer and light wines who never tasted a light wine and wouldn't know one if they did. ion was established by the government in 1890. None of the Indiana troops engaged in battle in the Spanish American war. Indianapolis and Union City were connected by railroad in 18o2. For BURNS Spread layer of Jack Frost Cream on cloth. Apply direct to affected parts. Its cooling;, soothingand healing: effect will be quickly apt parent. All drugigsts. HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS 827 Main St. On per week or

IND., SATURDAY, SEPT. 16, 1922.

their brothers, the snake priests. The next morning before dawn runners have gone far out on the plain that they may race to the mesa top, hoping to reach it as the sun rises, They go loping in long various paths, all of which converge in the trail to the top. Up they run, seemingly unwinded and unwearied. Young girls are standing at certain points with ofienng oi melon vines and corn stalks, which the runners seize as they pass. Old women have drawn lines of sacred meal from the trail top towards the Kiva court. No stranger must cross these lines under penalty of much chattering and scolding. The runners dash through the lane of. meal and then, in open court, battle with a bevy or girls for their green offerings Indian girls, like their white sisters, are voluble in their play they shriek and squeal with laughter. It is evi dent that the girl favored of each run ner always wins. The court in which the dance occurs looks as usual except for the kisl built at one end. The kisi is the shrine of cottonwood boughs covered with canvas wherein the snakes are put for the ceremony. A shallow hole is dug in front of it over which a board is laid. This is Shi-pa-pu, the entrance to the underworld or the abiding place of the gods. At 5 p. m. or a little later, the Antelope priests enter the court with the same paraphernalia the.y employed the day before. After circling over the Shi-pa-pu a few times they take their places on either side of the kisi and sing lustily, rhythmically, and with a wild, vigorous melody. Two or three times during the the song they hum a deep reverberating refrain that has the effect of many cellos. They employ no drum, though a shrill rattle and a "bull-roarer" are occasional used. All the time they keep up a certain rhythmic weaving of their feathered wands. Then the snake priests dash in literally dash in their rattles jingling madly, their feet padding the hardpacked earth faster than ear can conveniently count. They are wild looking creatures, painted reddish brown from head to toe. Their hair is ragged and tufty with parrot plumes stained a soft rosy brown. Their jaws and chins are painted black, the mouths broadly outlined with white. The Dance Grows Furicus. They take their places in front of the Antelope priests and with them chant and wave their wands for many minutes. The music seems to grow wilder. Suddenly it breaks. The Snake priests separate. One of them kneels in front of the kisl, reaches in and pulls out a snake. He grips its neck with his lips so that its head projects a little beyond his left jaw, and if it is a large snake, 6 or 7 feet long, he grasps its body with his hands. Meantime another priest, with a feather wand, has taken his place at the dancer's right, places his left hand on the dancer's left shoulder and with the wand strokes the body of the snake. Together, with high rythmic step, they start around the court. A third priest, also with a featherwand, falls in behind. Thus the whole fraternity forms into groups of three faster than words can describe, making the vcircle of the dance. Every time they cross Shi-pa-pu, they stamp upon the board. These beats fall as reg ularly as those of a drum and keep periect time to the song of the Antelopes Both movement and song are swift and wild. Several times each group of three makes the circle, and then the dancer drops the snake. The third of the group, the "gatherer", now brushes the snake with his wand, and seizing it by the neck swings it high In the air. Then he drapes it over his left arm as unconcernedly as a woman ad justs a bouquet. Meantime his two companions, the "dancer" and the "hugger", have gone around to the kisi and secured another serpent. And so on and on and around and around until the "gatherers" have armfuls of reptiles. Now and then they hand them to the Antelope priests who nonchantly fold them over their arms without losing a beat in their songs. Altogether they use 70 or 80 of the creatures, big and little, harmless and poisonous, whip snakes, bull snakes. rattlesnakes, any kind of snake. finally, almost unnoticed, women come from an inner room with plaques or sacred meal and draw a huge white circle in one corner of the court. Then the lines break. The snakes are thrown in a beap inside the circle, the women hastily and timidly sprinkle them with meal, and as hastily depart. Certain of the younger Snake priests dart in, and, seizing as many reptiles as they can hold, dash in four direct FREE TRIAL If you have eczema, eruptions, roughness or any itchy skin trouble, write us today and we will Bend you a FREE SAMPLE of SANA-CUTIS to prove that it bids fair to be the World'3 Greatest SKIN Remedy. SANA-CUTIS CHEM. CO. Box 725 S ED AH A, MISSOURI. BUTTER MAID CAKES Are Sure to Please Sold at All Groceries ZWISSLER'S 28 S. 5th St. Savings You can start nv. Ings account wtth Davmenta at 9t more and tame can be withdrawn n

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After Dinner Tricks

EL EL -

FlAAl. Dice. 307 No. S07 Adding the Dice The performer hands a pair of dice to a spectator and tells him to roll them while his back is turned. Suppose a three and a five are rolled (fif. 1). The epeetator is told to add the numbers to himself (three and five are eight). He Is then told to pick up either one of the the dice. (Suppose he picks up the five or "B" in figure 1) and to add the number on the opposite side of that die. (See figure 2.) He does this, and as he already has eight, the total becomes ten. Ho is then instructed to roll die "B" again. This time we will suppose It stops at two (see figure 3). This number is also added, making a total of twelve. The performer turns around, looks at the dice, and Instantly guesses the total. The trick is very easily done. The performer elmply looks at the dice as they lie In figure 3, and adds seven to their total. The dice lie five in figure 3 : hence he knows the total is twelve. If the dice showed nine In figure 3, the total would be sixteen, etc. Copyright. lttj t Pukito l.tiar Cnumw Let Science Help When Washday Comes There are a hundred ways in which time and labor may be saved in the arrangement and equipment of the home laundry room. Any housewife may apply tests to soaps which will tell whether they are too strong or too mild, and warn her of the effects they may be. expected to have on cottons, Bilks or woolens. In ironing clothes there are certain facts an understanding of which may save ginghams from scorches, taffetas from fading, woclen3 from shrinking. There is starch lore- and bluing lore. All of theso are to be found in a free Government publication which our Washington Information Bureau will secure for any reader who fills out and mails the coupon below. Write your name and address clearly. Do not send the eouoon to The Pa.11 ad him. Mali It direct to Washington, D. C) Washington, D. C. Frederic J. Haskin, Director, The Richmond Palladium Information Bureau, I enclose herewith two cents in stamps for return postage on a free copy of the Laundry Booklet. Namo Street City . State ions. Far out on the plain they release their loads and their serpent brothers seek their holes and bear the recently enacted rain-prayer to the gods below The snakes fangs are not pulled Sometimes the men are bitten, but it is claimed they do not even gel sickIt is rumored that for many days be fore the dance the men use an herb tea which the women prepare, which acts as a counter poison. Moving pictures and photographs may be transmitted through the air by a newly discovered method. Dr. Simpson's Vegetable Compound is recommended by hundreds of peo ple who have been helped by its use. An "alterative" medicine capable of keeping the blood stream pure and uncontaminated certainly covers a wide range of ailments. Try this great remedy in your case. Supplied by druggists. Advertisement Fresh and Smoked Meats BUEHLER BROS. 715 Main Street New Fall Silk and Wool Dresses GEORGE E. KLUTE CO. 925 Main Street I You can buy a f 1 FORD TOURING CAR $122 Down, Balance in 12 Monthly 1 Payments I wPRB.r.ni fmam rn 1 i opp Postoffice Phone 1616-1694 niKiurimmiiiiMMnuHiuiuiuwnmHmmunniiuiiijKTuunw LUMBER POSTS ROOFING BUILDING MATERIALS of All Kindt Right Prices Prompt- Delivery MATHER BROS. Company Try Out Wet Wash PHONE 2-7-6-6 Home wSer Laundry 1516 E. Main

A a

RIGID ENFORCEMENT OF VOLSTEAD ACT IS FAVORED IN NEBRASKA

(By Associated Press) OMAHA, Neb., Sept 16. Rigid enforcement of the Volstead laws almost the unanimous announced attitude of candidates for representative to congress from Nebraska in .he comiijg election. In the First district Walter L. Anderson, republican, has received the endorsement of the Anti-Saloon League and Abraham Lincoln Tidd, progressive, favors no weakening of the law. John H. Morehead, democrat, encountered Anti-Saloon league opposition in his primary race, but did not state hie. views. The two candidates, R. H. Thorpe, republican, and W. Parriott. democrat, to fill the vacancy in the first district created by the resignation of Rep. C. F. Reavis, have announced opposition to modification of the Volstead act. Judge Willis G. Sears, Republican' candidate in the second district, received the approval of the Anti-Saloon league. James H. Hanley, Democrat, declined to state his attitude. Roy M. Harrop of Omaha, progressive candidate in the second district, is in favor of rigid enforcing the Eighteenth amendment as long as it remains a part of the constitution. Edgar How ard, Democrat, said he favored loyalty to American laws on land and sea and would amend liquor laws to accom plish this. Opposed to him in the third district fight are Robert E. Evans, Republican, approved by the Anti-Saloon league, and John Havekost, progressive, who was reported to have informed members of the Nebraska League of Wom en voters that he believed the Volstead act "may need amendment for medicinal purposes." In the fourth district the Rev. M. O. McLaughlin York, Republican, and H. B. Cummins, Democrat, favored enforcement" A. C. Shallenberger, Demo crat, who did not state hi3 views and S. J. Franklin, Progressive, who favors a referendumCOMPLETE LONG HIKE LAFAYETTE. Ind. Sept. 18. How ard Hagaman, a local high school stu dent, and Ross Clark, of West Lafayette, are home again after a 2,300 mile jaunt through the northern part of the United States and Canada. The trip started Aug. 14. The boys said that they bad to walk only about 400 miles of the trip, having been given rides by automobile tourists. Twilight occurs only in those coun tries that are situated at some distance from the equator. In countries ne'ar the equator darkness falls quite suddenly as soon as the sun dips below the horizon. We are a Part of all we have met On the wall of the National Cash Register factory at Dayton, Ohio, the above is painted in large letters, meaning that the cash register is not one man's idea but the product of many minds combined into one machine. When asked why Tepee Herb Tonic would do what other medicines failed to do, Redwood, the Indian medicine man, said that it was like the cash register, the product of generations of medicine men and not one man's idea. Tepee Tonic is intended to purify the blood, regulate the kidneys, liver and bowels, aid digestion and build up and purify the system. Tepee Herb Tonic is sold at the Quigley drug stores, $1 a bottle. Redwood gives his free health talks and free vaudeville show every night at 7:30, Sheridan and State streets. Come and bring the family. Advertisement. Hackman, Klehfoth & Co. 10th aid No. P Exclusive Agts. THE NATIONAL CEMENT We Give 3 per Cent Interest and Personal Interest First National Bank Southwest Corner Ninth and Main Msr i-" v f- iriMry"Mwifra Weekly Payment Terms At Cash Store Prices This friendly Family Clothing Store solves your clothes problem for it offers you ace-high styles, ace-high quality, new low level prices and a generous CREDIT arrangement that'is absolutely without equal. HIRSCHS 718 Main St. Quality and Service Lumber, Shingles and Roofing; Poplar and Oak Plank and Timbers. COAL that burns well and gives satisfaction. BELXr in BeaUview S. 8th and M Sts., City