Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 22, 1915, Page 5

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e — Girls!“iots of Beautiful Hair § 25 oent bovme”of ‘‘Danderine’’ makes hair thick, glossy and wavy, Removes all dandruff, stops itching scalp and fall- ing hair, To be possessed of a head of heavy, beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, fluffy, wavy and free from dandruff is merely a matter of using a little Danderine. Tt Is easy and inexpensive to have nice, soft hair and lots of it. Just get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine now—all drug stores recommend it—apply a little as direeted and within ten minutes there will be an appearance of abundance, freshness, fluffiness and an incompar- able gloss and' lustre, and try as you will you can not find a trace of dandruff or falling hair; but your real surprise ‘will be after about two weeks' use, when you will see new hair—fine and downy at out all over your scalp—Danderine is, we believe, the only sure half grower, destroyer of dandruff and cure for itchy scalp and it never fails to stop falling hair at once. If you want to prove how pretty and soft your hair really is, moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair—faking one small strand at a time, Your hair will be wsoft, glossy and. beautiful in just & few moments—a delightful surprise awaits everyone who tries this.—Adver- tisement. for clear skin .- and good hair Try Resinol Soap for a week. You will be surprised to see how it clears and freshens your complex- ion, even in that short time. Used for the shampoo, it ‘removes dan- druff, and keeps the hair live, rich and lustrous. The soothing, healing influence that makes this possible is the Resinol which Resinol Soap contains and which physicians have prescribed for over twenty years in the care of skin and scalp troubles, Sold by all druggists. For sample free, write to Dept. 6-P, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. e SIX ARTICLES OF EXTRAORDINARY MERIT To Be Given Away Absolutely Free By the Central Furniture Store Bee these six articles of service-giving quality now on display in our show win- dows. A famous Commerce Range, a Medal Dockash Base Burner, a Comfort Hot Blast Heater, and Eldridge Family Bewing Machine, a Restwell Mattress and a Clean Well Washing Machine, Alj of the above articles to be given away ab solutely free. For full information in re- gard to their distribution, call at our store. T To Keep Your Skin Free From Hairs (Beauty Topics.) It you are willing to spend a few min- utes’ time in your room using a delatone paste, you can casily banish any ugly, hairy growth without discomfort or in- Jury. The paste is made by mixing some water with a little powdered delatone. This is then spread over the hairy surface and after about 2 minutes rubbed off and the skin washed. You will not be disap- pointed with this treatment, providing You get real delatone.—Advertisement. Rent Your VM& Homi';i Use of Bee Want Ads, | development of the rivers. first—yes—but really new hair—sprouting | OMAHA SETS 00T THE RIVER NEEDS Local Delerations Show Demands Before Federal Board of En- gineers at Kansas City. | CONDITIONS NOW DIFFERENT The Omaha delegation made a good impression in Kansas City at the hearing before the federal board of engineers for rivers and harbors, where they gave testimony tending 40 show that there is a demand for river improvement on the Missouri river that will make it readily navi- gable. The hearing was held to give Omaha, Kansas City, St. Joseph, St. Louis, and other river towns, a chance to protest against the pre- lithinary report of Lieutenant Colonel Deakyne, who recommended the abandonment of the river improve- ment program inaugurated by con- gress five years ago. The Omaha delegation, | B. J. McVann, John L. Kennedy, J. 8. | White, and Robert H. Manley, has re- |turned after an exceptionally busy two |days spent in Kansas City. B. J. McVann took much of the time { Tuesday testifying as to the effect of {the Panama canal on the rallway rates and the possible results of water trans- | portation on rallway rates In general. Kennedy Gives Reason. On Wednesday John L, Kennedy had | the floor for a long session, during which he cleared up some points as to why {river transportation has diminished on the Mississippi, which was a point about which the board was curlous since | Omaha and the other towna are seeking to | have river transportation re-established. Mr. Kennedy pointed out that the keen- iness of rallway competition had led to !methods that hindered the river trans portation, and that the Interstate Com- merce commission will now no longer permit such methods as those the rail- ways employed to defeat the purpose of river transportation. This point ‘brought out the first burst of applause heard at the hearing. | “When the government will decide to | continue its policy set forth by congress five years ago,” sald Mr. Kennedy, “then, and not till then, will capital develop river transportation.” He told the board that its recommendations might be the deciding influence in determining the con- gressional policy in regard to the future He urged that the board strike out that part of the re- port of Lieutenant Colonel Deakyne which advocates the discontinuance of the river improvement policy of congress, He declared that when the government takes up this policy and goes ahead with it- Omaha and Louis will- come ac- tively into the project and that river navigation between Omaha and New Or- leans would imevitably follow. As to Lumber, J. 8. White testified Targely as to lum- ber conditions and the need of river navi- gation for other Omaha commerce. Rob- | ert H, Manley, commissioner of the Com- mercial club of Omaha, testified as to the activity of the ¥¥maha Commercial club "1 B¥hEIng about the transportation fa- cflities now in operation locally at Omaha, and as to the volume of cargo available. Much was also brought oiit at the hear- Ing as to the possible hay tonnage that would go down the river readily if river transportation were definitely established up and down the river. The board granted the request of the Omaha delegation to be permitted to file A brief soon setting forth the case of Omaha in this whole navigation matter. Assert Judge Will Not Fine Violators of Auto Light Law Superintendent Kugel of the police de- partment explains that the reason his men have discontinued making arrests of motorists violating the “dimmer” ordi- nance is because the police judge would not fine the offenders when arraigned in |police court. [ It was reporteq to Mr. Kugel that many automoblle drivers are using bright lights contrary to la “Our motoreycle men work from 10 a. m to 10 p. m. and if they appear in police court agninst these offenders it means getting down to police court mbout 8:30 in the morning. When they found that the judge would not impose fines they naturally discontinued arrests,” sald the boss of the police department. Fire Laddies Have Nine fire alarms, from § a. m. Wednes- day at 3 a. m. yseterday was an unusual record for the fire department. Four of the fires were due to careless handling of matches, volving a child. Trying to find a gas partment & run. A woman saw the re. flection of a burning rubbish heap and promptly summoned the fire fighters. A gas stove, rags and wall paper proved another combination which incited & woman to yell “Fire! Fire! Fire." FUNERAL OF R. E. M’KELVEY TO BE THIS AFTERNOON The funeral of R. E. McKelvey, well |known officlal of the Woodmen of the died Tverday night, will be held from the residence, 3036 Casw stret, Friday after- noon, Rev. T, J. Mackay officlating. In- |terment, whieh will be private, will be at | Forest Lawn cemetery. CITY TO BRING ACTION AGAINST SCHOOL BOARD | The city council directed its legal de- partment to proceed agalnst the school | district of Omaha for the collection of 152100 satd to e been South Omaha police court costs paid into the school fund instead of the general fund of the city for a period of several years. \ | Diarrboea Quickly Cured. “About two years ago I had a severe attack of diarrhoea which lasted for over D. “I became so weak that I could not stand upright. A druggist recommended = | Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar- rhoea Remedy. The first dose relieved me and within two days I was as well s ever.” Obtainable everywhere.—Adver consiating of Gay Time Wednesday | one Instance in-| leak with a lighted match gave the de-| Worlg and old-time base ball player, who | TITE BEE: |Heaven a Place, Not a OMATIA, FRIDAY, Cb;ldition, Says Billy Sunday in Sermon ¥ Sunday spoke last night on Heaven,” He sald 1 d like, In my sermon tonight, it my streagth will permit and your pa tience endure, to ask and answer threc estiona. First, what do 1 want most of all? A man Ir CaRo sald ne one day f 1 could all 1 wanted of any one £ 1 v ke money and €0 W < If you would make a simiiar ch ice. Th e lotn ings money ¢ t do, Money can't bus Ufe; money cam't buy health, But all the wealth of tic Klondike could not open the grave ami put that ch1d back in your arms. Money can't ouy the yeae of tod that passeth understand- ing. Money can't tase the sin out of your life. iepib { to Live mnd Learn, | 1s there any particular kind of life you | It you could li.e 100 youn| {would like? you wouldn't want to die, woud you? I wouldn't. 1 think there is alwars some- thing the matter with a fell)w that wants to die. 1 want to stay as long as God wil et | me stay, but whén God's (ime comes for |me to go I'm ready, any hour of the day lor night. God can waken m: at mid- | mgnt or in the worning wnd Im reauy to respond, | But if 1 could live 1,000,000 years I'd like {to stay. 1 don't want to die. I'm hav Ingk & good time. God Maue this wond [for us to have a good time In. 1 nothing but sin that Las dam ed .he world and brought It to misery and cor | ruption. God wants you to have a g0 d t.me. There ta Only One Way. 1 want to show you the absolite and jutter futllity of piuning ),0.r hope to & lot of fool thn.s that will camn your | soul in hell. ‘Lhere is only one wuy “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even #0 must the Son of Man | be lifted up, that whosoever believeth {in Him should not perish, but have eternal life. For God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten son that who- soever belleveth in Him sho.li n t per= ish, but have e.erlasting lite.” Search the annals of time and the rages of history and where do you fini pr ises like that? Oniy up.n th. pages of the Bibie do you find them. You can't hire a substitute in religion. You can't do some decd of kindna.s or act of philanthrophy and substitute that for the necessity of repentance and faith in Jesus Christ. Lots of people will acknowledge th.r sin in the world, struggle on without Jesus Christ, and do their best 1o live honorable, upright lives. Your morality will make you a beiter mam or woman, but it will never save your s.ul in the world. 1 go to your high-toned, cultured, re- spectable man and say to him: God bath included all under sin that He might have mercy upon all. All have sinned and come short of the glory of God. *“Whosoever cometh unto Me I will in no wise cast out’ WIill you accept Jesus Christ as your Saviour? Will you give me your hand?"' He says: “No, sir; I don't want your Christ.” Both Men Lost. What's the aifference between those two men? Absolutely none. They are both lost. Both are going to hell. God hasn't one way of saving the one and another way of saving the other fellow. God will save that man if he ac- cepts Christ and He will do the same for the gther fellow. - That man is a sinner and this man is a sinner. That man is lower down in sin than this man, but they both say “No" to Jesus Christ, and they are both lost or God is a liar. You can take a meral man; he may shine and glisten and sparkle like a dia- mond. He may outshine in his beauty the Christian man. But he will never be anything else. His morality can never grow. It has no life, but the man who is u Christian has life. He has eternal life. Your morality is a fine thing until death comes, then it's lost and you are lost. Your diamond is a fine thing to carry until it's lost, and of what value is it then? Of what value is your morality when your soul is lost? So, simply ridding your life of the weeds of sin and not planting Jesus Christ is of no more value to you than a plece of ground s to a farmer without multitudes of people are doing. Bome fellow is & booze fighter; he pulis that weed up and throws it away. Yes, but he doesn't plant Jesus Christ. Tow 18 he going to win out? He is lost. Now, you know, some people think that religion 1s a sort of—well, that God will be so pleased with thelr attainments that he will grant them salvation as a sort of reward of merit. You just dismiss the idea that God owes you salvation. He gives you the oppor- tunity, and if you dont improve it you will go to hell. You get out of your head as quickly as you can the ldea that God owes you salvation. Some people seem to think that God will be so pleased with their culture, so pleased with their superior attainments |as a reward of merit. You moral men, you may be just as |well off as the Christian until death knocks you down, then you are last, because you trust in your morality. The |Christian is saved because he trusts in Jesus. Do you see where you lose out? God Prepared Place for Y 1 can stand here and tell you that God offers you salvation through repentance land faith in Jesus Christ and that you | must accept it or be lost, and you will istand up and argue the question, as though your argument can change God's plen. You never can do it. Not only has God promised you salvation on the grounds of |your acceptance of Jesus Christ as your | 8avior, but He has promised to give you |a home in which to spend eternity. Listen! “In my Father’s house are many mansions; 1f it were not 8o I would have toid you. I go to prepare a place for you." Some people say heaven Is & state or condition. 1 don't believe it. It might pos- |sibly be better to bo In a heavenly stute than In & heavenly place. It might be bet- ter to be in hell in a heavenly state | or the home, than to be In heaven in a ' hellish state. That may be true. | Heaven is as much a place as the home to which you are going when I dismiss | |the meeting 1s & place. “I go to prepare |& place for you." | Doey Not Expeet to Live Long. | People sometimes ask me, “Who do you a week," writes W. C. Jones, Buford, N, think will die first, Mr. Sunday, you or | your wife, mother?" { 1 don't know. I think I will. | expect to be an old man. or your children or your seed In it. And yet that Is exactly wl.ull 1 never 1 work 10010 cross, bilious, sick, feverish children bard. I burn up more enersy preaching|any time. They are harmiess and never ’huuumuvmnflmhn gripe or sicken.—Advertisement. Jup In ten or twelve hours. pect to be an old man, 1 don't expect te, but | know this much; it my wife or bables should go first this | old world would be a dark place for me |and I would be glad when God sum- | moned me to leave it, and If I left firat {1 kuow they would be glad when God culled them home. take Jesus by the hand and say, “Jesus, thank You, I'm glad You honored e with salvation; I'm glad You honored me with the privilege of preaching Your gos- [ pel; I wish I could have done it better, but 1 did my best, and now, Jesus, if | You don't care, 1'd like to hang around the gate and be the firet to welcome my wife and the bables when they come. Do you care, Jesus, It I sit there?" And He will say, “No, you can st right | there, ‘BIL," 1f you want to; It's all right. I'll say, “Thank you, Lord.” If they would go first, I think after | they would go up and thank Jesus that | they are home, they would say: | “Jesus, I wish you would hurry up and | bring papa home. He doesn't want to | stay down thero because we are up here." | They would go around and put their £rips away In their room, wherever it is, and then they would say: “Can we sit here, Jesus?" “Yes, that's all right.” ] Billy Plotares Homecoming. to heaven. 1 don't know whether I'll live | evard, 1 don't know where I'll live when I get to heaven. 1 don't know whether it will be in the back alley or where, but I'll just be glad to get there. I'll be thankful for the manaion wherever God provides it. | 1 never like to think of heaven as a great, big tenement house, where they put hundreds of people under one roof, Itke we do in Chicago or other big cities. “In my Father's house are many man- sions.” And so It will be up in heaven, and I'll be glad, awfully glad, and I tell you I think if my wife and children go first, | the children might be off some place playing, but wife would be right there, and 1 would meet her and say: “Why, wife, where are the children?" She would say, “Why, they are play- Ing on the banks of the river.”” (We are told about the river that flows from the throne of God.) We would walk down and I would say, “Hello, Helen! Hey, George! Hey, Will- | sky; bring the baby; come on!" | And they would come tearing like they | do now when I go home from a trip like | this. They will all be awaiting and all will fight for the first kiss, and I tell you one of the happlest days of my life | 1s when I finish an evangelistio engage- | ment in a town, get my ticket, check my trunk and the people say, “Where are you going?" Home, I'm golng home. The hardest cross I have to bear is to leave my wife and children and go up and down this country to preach. You never looked into the face of a man that loves his home more than I do. | | | dren?" “Down on the banks of the river.” to see you. Well, where do we live?" “Right around here; come on, pop, there's our mansion." 1 would say, Rody, or Peacock, or ‘Bob,’ them?" “Yes. They live right around near us." “George, you run down and tell Fred I've come, will you? Hunt up Rody, and Peacock and ‘Bob’' and Fred, and see If you can find Francis around there and tell them I've just come in. And they would come and I would say, “How are you? Glad to se you, Felling first-rate.” Will Sing 014 Hymns Up There. “How did you get here?” “Just come a-salling; I tell you it was ‘“When did you leave the earth? “Last night at 6 o'clock,” “Well, Rody, are there a lot of folks here from Omaha. “Lots of them. “See If you can round some of them up and sing some of the hymns we used to sing down there when we were holding that meeting in Omaha 40,000 years ago." Some good sister would come up and say, “Brother Sunday, I'm from Omaha." “Good; I'm glad to see you." Another would say, “I'm from Omaha.” v “Cascarets” for Headache, Colds, Liver, Bowels | Enjoy life! Don’t stay bilious, sick, headachy and constipated. ! o e, 2756 |Best for bad breath, sour stomach, coated tongue or indigestion. They're fine! Cascarets liven your liver, |clean your thirty feet of bowels and sweeten your stomach. You eat one or two, like candy, before going to bed and in the morning your head s clear, tongue is clean, stomach sweet, breath right |and cold gone, Get a box from your druggist and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel eleansing you ever ex- perienced. Cascarets stop sick headache, | blliousness, - indigestion, bad breath and congtipation. Mothers should give & whole Cuscaret A4 1 never ex- if 1 go first, 1 know after I go up and | I don't know where I'll live when I get | on a main street or an avenue or a boul- | I'would say, “Wife, where are the chil- They would come up and say, “I'm glad ““Have you seen Fred, or or any of | ing at Omaha #,00 years ago.” “You're wrong, it was 70,000 years ago we held that meeting.” | “Well, let's sing ‘Brighten the Corner' | and ‘It Your Heart Keeps Right' " | And we'll alng the old hymns, and I'm sure that some of the best songs we will sing In heaven will be some of the songs we have learned on earth “In my Father's house are many man- { slons; 1t It were not so I would have told you; I go to prepare a place for you* All i Perfect in Heaven. | And, oh, what a time we'll | heaven! Say, In heaven they never mar the hiil- | #1des with spades, for they dix no graves In heaven they never telephone for the doctor, for nobody gots sick. In heaven no one carries handkerchiefs, for nobody ! erfes In heaven they never telephone for the undertaker, for nobody dies. In heaven | You will never soe a funeral procession | going down the street, nor crepe hanging | from the door knob, In heaven none of the things that enter your home here will enter there. Sick- ness won't get in, death won't get in, nor | have In sorrow, because “Former things have | passed away,” all things have become | new. In heaven the flowers never fade, the winter winds and blasts never blow. The | rivers never congeal, never freesze, for it ! never gets cold. No, sir. Say, don't let God be compeli®d to hang & “For Rent" slgn in the window of the | mansion He has prepared for you OCTOBER 22, 1915. [ ] SR e e wne o oo Naptha is only one of the important parts of It contains other harmless cleansers, too. These go after every imaginable kind of dirt. The weekly wash is child’s play with Fels-Naptha. Best of all—it does away with hard rubbing. 30 minutes’ soaking saves you hours of labor. Not only for washing clothes—just as wonderful for all household cleaning. T would walk around with Him and 1'd | | sy, “Whose mansion is that, Jesus?" “Why, 1 had that for one of the rich | men In Omaha, but he passed it up.” “Who's that one for?" “That was for a doctor, but he did not | take 1t | | “Who's that one for?" | “That was for oné of the school teach ers, but she didn't come." 1 “Who s that one for, Jesus?" | “That was for an Omaha man, but he didn't want it." | “‘Who 1s that one for?" | “That was for a boozo fighter in Omaha, but he wouldn't pass up the business, libertine, but he | \s infamy | | Don't let God hang w “For Rent” sign | In the mansion that He haas prepared for | you, Just send up word tonight and say, | “Jesus, 1've changed my mind; just put | my name down for that, will you? I'm | coming, I'm coming." “In My Father's house are many man- slons; If it were not so I would have told you; I go to prepare a place for you." (Copyright by W. A, Sunday.) ENDORSE TOM BYRNE FOR JOB ON RESERVE BOARD | The Omaha Clearing House assoclation has endorsed Tom Byrne for re-election 88 Omaha's representative on the Na. tional Foderal Reserve board. That one was for a Millions Use it to Stop a Cold ‘‘Pape’s Cold Compound’’ ends | severe colds or grippe in few hours, Rellof comes instantly, A dose taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a severe cold either in the head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up nostrils and alr passages in the head, stops nasty discharge or nose running, relieves sick headuche, dullness, feverishness, sore throat, sneezing, sorene and stiffness. Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! Ease your throbbing head! Nothing else In the world gives such prompt relief as “Pape’'s Cold Com pound,” which costs only 2 cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, causes no Inconvenlence. Be sure you get the genuine.—Advertisement. “Every time mother gets out Calu- met | know there’s going to be good things to eat at our house, Delici tender, tempting doughnuts, biscuits, cakes and pies! I've never seen a bake~ day failure with Calumet. Mother says it's the only Baking Powder that insures uniform results.” Received Highest Awards New Cok Dok Froe—ios Wig in Pund \“"/ SOUTHERN PACIFIC OFFERS ROUTES TO THE CALIFORNIA EXPOSITION (1) Sunset Route—Through Houston or San Antonio or El Pase, Tex. Side trip over Apache Trail by automobile to Rosevelt Dam and Cliff Dwellings. (2) Ogden Route—Through Ogden and Salt Lake City, Utah, across Great Salt Lake—"“Going to Sea by Rail”—along Ameri- can River Canyon, through the old Gold Fields. Short side trip to Lake Tahoe. (3) Shasta Route—Through Portland,Ore.,,and the famous Willamette and Rogue River Valleys; past Mt. Shasta and Mt. Lassen (the active volcano). Go one of these routes return another and sce the Great We Tickets can be sold by agents any railroad. En route between the Expositions stop off to see the Big Trees at Santa Cruz and the Old Misslons at Santa Barbara. The Southern Pacific is the safest line—records show it. Let me furnish you descriptive literature and help you plan your trip. i A. G. LITTLE, General Agent, 101 Bryant Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Which of These Do You Want? Select YOUR Home All over the City and in the beautiful suburbs you will notice nice, new houses finished and freshly painted—all ready for prospective tenants, * These houses were all built for somebody, one of them may as well be for you, Of course, you want a home of your own, you have been want- ing a home for a long time, Builders and realty men have caused these new houses to be built for just such folks as you. But they can’t make you take one of them unless you want to do so, It's the old, old story, You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink, Builders can anticipate your de- sires and build according to your wishes, but they can’t make you take a home, You must do that, It is up to you to'act. Here are the houses, select one and move into it. You can pay for it as easily as you now pay rent. If, perchance, you can’t find the location or the plan of house you wish, the realty men and builders will be glad to plan and erect one that just suits you, Watch the real estate columns of THE BEE and you will see that many responsible firms offer to help you. Use THE BEE as your real estate guide and you will be kept constantly in touch with reliable business men offering building service. But the decision and the action rests with YOU. Please remember that and don’t put it off forever, THE OMAHA BEE

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