-M ar® w. power of a newspaper to carry •HMrfortB and conveniences of modern •ft* into the homes of the people is •cqrond calculation. Being the only ••dium through which a merchant or manufacturer can do intensive, con "nitrated advertising, it is naturally the greatest educator of the people regard rag the things that inventive genius implies from time to time to save iufeor and to lighten the burdens of housekeeping. Advertising saw woman bowed down with the work of the ages, carrying lier shoulders the double burden «*f bearing children and doing the work •f fhe_ household. Advertising saw her •sweeping the carpet with a bunch of ltcoomcorn tied to the end of a stick, a «:rude and clumsy contrivance call ing for much wearisome and tiresome xi»enditure of muscular effort—and so *b« born the carpet sweeper—and after it eaine the vacuum cleaner. Invent ive genius supplied these utensils and advertising had to create a desire to ltowsess them. Advertising had to edu cate women away from brooms and cwpet sweepers. Perhaps the greatest monument to etiwcational advertising is the growth the breakfast cereal habit in this »u.ntry. The parent of the breakfast c-eweal habit was the oatmeal porridge habit which was brought over by the Sootch Presbyterians, and on this as a foundation advertising has built the aknost universal Anglo-Saxon habit of eating some kind of a cereal every Morning for breakfast. Klectricity threatens to completely revolutionize not only modern manu facturing methods, but all the activi ties of household management. Teach ing .the people the coming uses of elec tricity in all departments of domestic service presents one of the greatest Hnlds of educational work for newspa per advertising. The reason that the use of electrical devices has not be I'wnc more universal in the homes of ttw people is because the manufactur ers have not made the proper use of newspaper advertising to spread the MIDIH.E CUSS GIRL IN AS MUCH DANGER AS POORER SISTERS Editorial Article Emphasizes Import ance of Education in the Home, Not Schools, Societies it or Churches. Editorial in Pictorial Review. Professional philanthropists have 1»ecn inveighing against the idle rich aad fretting over the underpaid work ing girls, but they have forgotten the middle class, her opportunities and her temptations. Sociologists have been calling conferences to discuss such questions as: "Is sex morality a ques tion of wages?" "What part does the low wage play in the vice traffic?" But nobody has watched the steady change coining over young people who are neither rich nor very poor, but who, for lack of parental discipline, are sailing closer and closer to the reefs. Who can stem this tide of immorality except parents? It is not work to be left to the public schools, philantropists, sociologists, statesmen, employers and ttoe church. It is father's work and mother's work. And the main reason why the middle class, well-to-do Amer ican parent does not do this work is that industrial conditions have changed the relations between parents and chil dren. In how many homes where you visit, do you know children who answer re apecfully when asked where they are going or where they have been? In h«w "ny of these homes has the fear •C father, mother and the rod been •roily implanted in the minds and awls of children? Pardon the allusion to the rod. What! Spank a child! Shades of Montessori! Cruel! Brutal!! Cowardly! Reason with him. Thy moral suasion and then let him have his own way—and wonder why he grows up disobedient, selfish, disrespectful. Sometimes some of us dare to think that some of the old fashioned ways were best after all. What influences are molding your child's tastes today? Does your daugh ter dance the tango, the one-step, the grizzly bear? "Of course," you answer. "Everybody does. They are the modern parlor dances." Does any father who knows the boo.: oelife dare make that last statement? Does he really believe that these dances either of the parlor or the hour? These slow, sensuous dances originated not in parlors, but in the lowest dives of such districts as the old Bowery of New York, and the Bar bery coast of San Francisco. They were devised by social outcasts to in flame the vicious passions of other out casts. Not long ago, an experienced, cul tured man returned from a trip round the world. On the night of his ar rival his home town, he dropped in on a dance given for his debutante niece. Suddenly he drew his sister, a stately matron, into the quiet library demand^ harshly and with twitching lips how she dared allow •'those children" to indulge in such dances. "Do you know where I've seen such dancing before," he demanded. "In the danger zones of every foreign city where I've stopped on my travels." "How silly, Jim," the matron replied complacently. "Wherever they came from, they've been modernized and brought up to drawing room usage "Do you think so?" retorted the traveler hotly. "Well then all I've got to say is that America and American society has changed its ideals." Unquestionably American ideals' oi American standards of .morality' have. changed. You tee-young petople .'their parents and even thetr grandparents •de-stepping and tangoing in the same dance halL And from the pulpit clergy men thunder denunciations of modern dancing, while no less a- personage than NEWSPAPERS SHOULD "LIGHT" THE HOME (Copyright, 1914, by Truman A. DeWeese.) 1 gospel of ease and comfort and con venience. When the average woman sees or hears the word "electricity" she thinks of forked lightning. She thinks of tha story of Ben Franklin, how he brought down lightning with his kite, and tt sends the shivers down her spinal col umn. I arts not so sure but that the average man thinks of electricity in terms of "lightning rods." Does not this fact present a great educational opportunity? Surely thi3 is the electrical age—and yet the great manufacturers and distributors of elec tricity have not availed themselves of this great merchandising force that has revolutionized other departments of in dustrial activity. Industrial enterprise has harnessed the waterfalls of the east and the west, but it has not hitched the greatest of natural forces to the greatest of merchandising agen cies. Edison has lighted the dark places of the earth, but millions of homes are not yet lighted. In no city has there been a comprehensive campaign of edu cational advertising to extend the use of incandescent lights. If the same ad vertising methods that have been used to acquaint the public with the con venience and cheapness of the tele phone had been employed to extend the use of the incandescent lights their use would now be almost uni versal. The time is coming when every homo will be heated and lighted by electric ity, when the cooking will be done by electricity, when the washing and ironing and sewing will be done by electricity, when the carpet will bo swept and the rugs cleaned by elec tricity. In the home of the future when the uses of electricity are iiroperly ad vertised, electricity will rock the cradlo and churn the butter while the house wife prepares the evening meal. Ihe modern home is ready for all these things right now. but they can not. come except through an extensive and comprehensive scheme of newspa* per advertising.-—Truman A. DeWeese. P°J?e has iss,u'(l instructions that absolution shall not be granted those who dance the tango. When such arguments are advanced against modern dancing, its advocates remind its assailers of the day when the waltz was denounced in the same vigorous terms. They sav that stand ards of morality change w'ith the times, with custom, with the broader view point. It is for each dancer to decide what the dance means to her or—to him—and if it represents sensuality not healthful recreation, it becomes a moral menace. The modern parents rarely super vises the reading or the play going of his children. And what is the result? A heavy demand for red light novels by readers still in their teens, a rush of unchaporoned young people to plays depicting the social evil. It is high time that American par ent:-. pull themselves up with a jerk, and decide how far we, as a nation, are to drift toward the shoals of lax living just how much liberty is to be given children. The editors of Pictorial Review be lieve that American parents shift too much responsibility to the shoulders of educators, on public school teachers in particular. Father is busy making money mother is busy conserving it or scattering it. according to her na ture. The question of supply and de mand is about all the parental mind can swing. The teachers are well paid, pro gressive, highly moral. The entire edu cation of the children may safely be left in their hands. I remember how shocked one mother was when I told her that certain teach ers in New York had to train little im migrant children in habits of personal cleanliness, the washing of their hands, the brushing and cleaning of their hair, the brushing of their teeth. Yet this same mother thinks that a teacher is only earning her salary when she in structs her daughter in sex hygiene, in cleanliness of soul. AFRICA. WHERE ROCK IS A SUICIDE OF MATURE By George Edward Woodberry, in the Scrlbner. Almost from the first it is unimagin able. that landscape. It is all rock in ruins, denuded and shivered, shelving down, disintegrating fallen avalanches of rotten strata every kind of fracture whole hills in a state of breaking up into small pieces, pebbly masses, bit ten, slivered. We traverse broken, burnt fields of it, all shingle expanses of it so, beneath walls cracked and scarified we curve by scattered bould ers of all sizes and positions, down val leys of stones new hills open, sharp- edged, jagged—continuous rock. All outlooks are on the waste wilderness crumbling in its own abandonment all contours are knife-edges the perspec tives are all of angles. In the near open tracts lie relics and remains, mounds, mountains, and hills that have melted away steep lifts on all curves and on the sky-horizon, following and crossing one another, saw-toothed ranges, obliquely indented with sharp re-entries, or else acute cones and rounded mamelons: the whole changing landscape a ruin of mountains being crumbled and split and blown away. It is an elemental battlefield, where the rock is the victim—a suicide of nature. In this region of extreme temperatures with sudden changes—burning noons and frozen nights, torrid summers and winter snows, downpours of rainfall— the fire and frost, wind and cloud-burst have done their secular- work: they have #stripped and pulverized the softer, outer rock shell, washed it down, blown it away, till the supporting gran ite and schist are bare to the bone. It is a skeletonized, worn land, all apex and debris near objects have the form and aspect of ruins, the horizons are serried, the surfaces calcined. It is an upper world' of .the floored and pin nacled, rpek, an under-world shivered and strewn with its own fragments, a "gray annihilation"—of the colpr of cinders. I imagine that the iafcHscfetpea of the moon look thus. A mineral world, bedded, scintiUant, naked. It is dyed with color. All life has gone from it, and with the de parture of life has come an Intensifica tion, an originality, an efflorescence of mineral being. ffHw -fp 2- r* Mil AND HEARTY AT 99 THIS HIS PUN Aged Chicago Professor Uses No Narcotics and Eats Sparingly. Chicago—Prof. S. S. Sherman, of this City, who is hale and hearty at 99, ascribes his good health and "long years largely to his careful diet. He says: "My breakfast, which is always given to me while in bed. usually consists of the juice of an orange sweetened, and ccd. i! UK. warn!, .» u: of mush, a & PROF. S. S. SHERMAN. soft-boiled egg and a cup of coffee. Once in a while, especially in early spring, when a fresh can of genuine maple syrup arrives from Vermont, there is an addition of a fluffy pancake floating in a rich bath of fresh butter and aromatic: maple syrup but this luxury, though palatable, is indulged in rarely and then only once a week. "My midday meal admits of much variety and is given to me between 1 and 2 o'clock. It usually contains a soup, having the same stock as that of the family, and is often of chicken or mutton broth, appropriately sea soned and made more appetizing by the infusion of tomato, -okra or other aro matic vegetables. "Many vegetables are found digest ible and from them selections are made for my dinner. Baked potato, both sweet and white, also macaroni in its various forms, are standard dishes green corn, squash and legumes in their season are common: beets, carrots, as paragus, cauliilower and spinach some times are indigestible and are used in small quantities. Meats are used spar ingly. "Many sorts of flesh, fish and fowl are digested easily and are agreeable to most palates, but in my dietary these are much Iimitod. Corned beef and other meats hashed with potatoes form a standard dish. Beef juice on toast is acceptable to weak stomachs fresh raw beet" or boiled ham fine ly scraped and sandwiched between two thin slices of bread is readily mashed between the tongue and palate and is digested easily for dessert, puddings of rice or tapioca, cornstarch and custards, baked apple, pear or ba nana. Ice cream, wine jelly, tins juice of a cantaloupe, a pear or a peach often conclude the meal. "A cup of mild coffee or weak tea is my usual beverage at dinner. A glass of milk, an hour or two before going to bed is my usual supper and I often sleep better by omitting that." All his life Profesaor Sherman lias been free from bad nabits. lie. does not smoke or drink except for an oc casional sip of wine with his friends. World's Most Famous Dancing School Havelock Ellis, in the Atlantic. There can scarcely be a doubt that Egypt has been for many thousands of years, as indeed it still remains, a great dancing centre, the most in fluential dancing school the world has ever seen, radiating its influenco to south and east and north. We may perhaps even agree with the historian of the dance, who terms it "the mother country of all civilized dancing." We are not entirely dependent on the ancient wall-pictures of Egypt for our knowledge of Egyptian skill in the art. Sacred mysteries, it is known were danced in the temples, and queen and princess took part in the orchestra that accompanied them. It is signifi cant that the musical instruments still peculiarly associated with the dance were originated or developed in Egypt the guitar is an Egyptian in strument, and its name was .a hierog lyphic already used when the pyra mids were being built the cymbal, the tambourine, triangles, and castanets, in one form or another, were all familiar to the ancient Egyptians, .and with the Egyptian art of dancing they must have spread all round the shores of the Mediterranean, the great focus of our civilization, at a very early date. Even beyond the Mediterranean, at Cadiz, dancing that was essentially Egyptian in character was established, and Cadiz became the dancing school of Spain. The Nile and Cadiz were thus the two great centers of ancient dancing, and Martial mentions them both together, for each supplied its dancers to Rome. A New Thrill at Palm Beach. ord comes from Palm Beach—a pleas ant place for tho.-e of us who have to remain in these latitudes to think about— that a distinguished and stout New York Ju rist has created a sensation by appear ing iii a bathing suit and heavy eolf Stockings. The throng along the smiling stretch of sand instantly broke into a babel of conjecture. Newspaper corres pondents hastily mobilized. Was this the latest fashion in men's wear for surf plunging or the promenade? Or. was a golf course' about, to be laid out on the beach? Some laid bets. L.ife down there 5s so languid that the impulse to wager is as sharp and undiscriminatlng as on an ocean liner. The judge, having laid himself out on the-palpitating sand, sub mitted to an examination from eager in quirers. No, he had not intended to cre ate a new fashion, much less excitement. He had put on the stockings because he was afraid of sand crabs. The. crowd melted liway, resuming Its accustomed recreations., .and .from thou sands of little holes the mischievous fid dler crabs peeped out to have a look at those golf stockings. Fame, the tricky jAde. wiU not fail to bestow her tribute if only we will do something merely differ ent. MUSKRATS STILL FOUND THROUGHOUT AMERICA From the Indianapolis Nws. Of all the wild animals that once made their home In th« middle west only one •pecles remains in any considerable num bers, though sedulously sought by trap pers from thr «iwys of the earliest settlr ments, who took up the hunt where the Indians had left it. That animal is the muskrat, a native American rodent, also called the musk beaver, and by the Indian name, musquash. This rat is yet -aught in the very edge of the city nf Indianapo lis. The other day a hoy i:- s' climb ing a bank of Pleas-ant ran. in Irvington. holding some furry in his haiul. Tt was a muskrat, full grown, thut he had trapped, and a proud boy was he. The body of the muskrat is from 12 to ir inches long, and the taii. which is some what llattened from side to side, is fiom to 10 inches long. It is as frracelY.l in the I water as an otter, though wkwaivl on land. The color is ruddy brown above, darker on the back and grayish below. Its fur is tine, close and silky, with coarse hairs intermingled. These are pulled out by fur makers. The entrance to the muslcrat's home is under water and the burrows extend 20 or even 30 feet, at the end of which may be found the family nests lined with dry leaves and grasses, above the reach of the water. This burrow connects with other burrows leading to the air. Muskrats biing fourth young as often as three times a year, with four to six at. a birth. The muskrat Is considered edible and is some times found on sale in the Baltimore and Detroit markets. TO TELL COUNTERFEIT MONEY A Simple Comparison Between the Se ISjfl rial Number and Check Letter. Prom Popular Mechanics. The hand is quicker than the eye in detecting fraudulent banknotes. The "feel" of the distinctive paper used by the government is the first warning signal that the money tendered is bad. This paper Is distinctive not alone be cause of the introduction of silk fiber in the bill Itself, but because of the treatment the stock receives in print ing. The silk threads are sometimes imitated by pen and ink lines, but these do not bear close examination. The engraving has been the greatest protection, for even photo-engraving fails to bring out the propel" color values, and retouching by the graving tool makes the lines heavy and irregu lar. Photography also fails in repro^ ducing the color of the seal, which must be washed in with water colors, the black lines of the engraving show ing through in counterfeits. The most dangerous counterfeit is that in which a genuine bill of lower denomination is bleached out and a false plate showing a high denomination placed upon it. Here is a genuine bankblll. It has the "feel." The silk threads are present. If the engraving is fairly well done and the color of approximate correctness, it becomes a dangerous counterfeilt, and bankers are at once warned to be on the watch for it. In this connection the "check letter" often comes into play. All government notes are printed of one denomination, lour on a sheet and are lettered respec tively, A, B, and D. Each note bears a treasury number. If, when that number is divided by four there re mains one, the check letter should be A if two remains, the letter should be B: if three, then C, and if there is no remainder, D. If the result shows otherwise then the numbering is wrong and the note is a. counterfeit. This rule does not apply to national bank notes. All denomination from $1 to 51, 000 have been counterfeited, as well as all our coins. The most usual method of defrauding when gold coins are handled is to saw the coins in half, extract the interior and fill with base metal., Farmer Found Advertising Pays. From the llopklnsville New Era. That farmers can use advertising to just as good advantage as the store keeper has been proved, by at least one wide awake farmer. This farmer re cently had some corn to sell. It was pood corn and the price right, but the farmer didn't have the time to go from place to place trying to sell it, so he called the newspaper office over the telephone and gave a short reading notice for three insertions. The night that the first issue of the paper came out with the advertisement ho received several calls and before the third ad vertisement had appeared he had sold his entire supply, about 14u barrels. From time to time during tho year he has advertised various things he had to sell, a cow, some hogs, etc., and every time people have besieged him to buy. He says that during 1913 he had sold at least $1,000 worth of products of his farm solely through advertising, and the entire expense of the advertise ments had not been more than J3 or $4. But he declared that the saving in time and energy and worry by hav ing the buyer hunt him up instead of him having to hunt the buyer, meant many more dollars in his pocket. Adjusting Business to Seasons. From the Chicago Tribune, me federal industrial relations commis sion, now investigating the subject of un employment, will inquire into the seasons of industry with a view of eliminating, wherever possible, slack seasons on tho one hand and overtime work on the other according to Mrs. J. Borden Hnrriman. one of the commission's members. Mrs. Harriman points out that certain lasses of employers are even now adher ing to a policy of all the year around em ployment. Coal dealers, for instance, are able to keep their help at work in the summer by establishing an ice business in connection with the coal trade. Not every business adapts itself to such ex ceedingly happy seasonal regulation as the coal and ice business. But, it is pointed out, many an industry could with some planning distribute its work throughout the year more evenly than it Is now distributed. As for such industries as agriculture, where seasons are not only man made but natural, eflicient employ ment bureaus will do much to reduce un employment to a minimum. In making the regulation and, .wherever Poiislble, the abolition of seasons for bor the first unemployment, The Ave Maria. From the National Monthly. One of our sweet soprano singers was un in the mountains last summer and often gave much pleasure- by her songs, among which was a favorite Ave Maria. One evening as she was getting «ut her music one of the boarders cams impressively and said to her: "Dear Mrs. J.. won't you sing us that Half a Maria again tonight? W| all Jove it so much." la­ step in its campaign against the federal industrial com­ mission is certainly showing an authori tative grasp of the situation. Much good is to be expected from its work. y, Located. "I see you hare recovered from the measles, Johnny," said the primary teacher. "Yes'm," replied Johnny, "tat ma says that they are still in my cis tern." Constipation causes many serious dis eases. It is thoroughly cured by Doetor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative, three for cathartic. Adv. No Wonder. "We had a perfectly killing tima." "Where did you go?" "On a sleighing party." Your family Doctor can't do more for ,t:A your cough than Dean's Mentholated Cough Drops "they cure"—5c at Druggists. The deeper a man Is in debt tho less he cares for expenses. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief—Permanent Cur« CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely vegeta ble act surely but gently on the liver. Stop after dinner dis tress—cure indigestion,1 improve the complexion, brighten the eyes^ SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine ft —solved ones lor all by Calumet* For daily use in millions of kitchens has proved that Calumet is highest not only in vitality but in lea-venbig poiuer as well—' fciling in results—puretotheextreme— wonderfully economical in use. Ask you grocer. And try Calumet next bake day. Received Highest Awards WnlPihn MEipmMM, CUcan, IH hrouiMi tSM,Fruc* •urea, 1I1X. A**. for 'TRUST MA*! *&2§5|g Ciliirt i» for (ipuior to (oar bIHc »rj tods. CARTERS ITTLE PILLS. must bear ta W ir Signature OooL V' Utc 'J