Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 11, 1915, Page 6

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) hd THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Proprlatnr_.__ BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered st Omaha postoffice as second-olass 1 hange o resn {rregularity in delivery to Omaha Department. REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, express or postal order. On cent stamps recelved two- in payment of small ae- counts, Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern exchange. not accepted. OF FIC Building. South hi 8 N street. Council Bluffs—14 North Main street. Lincoln—2 Little Buflding. Hearst Building. New York—Room 1106, 22 Fif h avenue. Loujs—58 New Bank of Commerce. ashington—' Fourteenth St, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE, Address communications relating to news and edi- torlal matter to Omaha Bee, itorial Department. OCTOBER CIRCULATION 54,744 State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, ss: D‘:!.fhl Willlams, circulation manager of The Bee Publishing company, being duly sworn, says that the ave oirculation for the month of Octoker, 1915, was B,74. WIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager, ribed In my presence and sworn to before me, this 24 day of November 1911 FRT HUNTER, Notary Public. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them, Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. Thought for the Day Selected by Sarah M. McCheane 1 count myself nothing else s0 happy, As in a soul, remembering my good friends. — Shakespeare. Can it be that the Ancona is destined to fur- nish us another Lusitania case? vited to come out and let us look ‘em over, Smm—— An editorial In a contemporary discusses “Bankers and Holdups.” No Insinuations, Viease. C— The call of the wild seems to convince the State Board of Health that this is an open sea- son for scalps. Seeing that the quoted price of radium has dropped from $120,000 to $36,000 a gram, no up-to-date household can now afford to be with- out it. —— Tests show that mosquitoes raised in New Vork have a crulsing radius of fifteen miies, whieh must render the harbor defenses prac- . b & EEEE—— ‘ 1t is really remarkable what unqualified p the senator’s newspaper glves every word ‘of the senmator's carefully prepared ‘‘Pre- paredness” address. . British Premier Asquith reasserts that the war will be fought to a finish, People less favor- ebly situated to obtain Inside Information might guess as much. S——— Depriving the Villa family of their jewels is a serious embarrassment. The selzure re- 10ves its chief dependence for shining in the |soclal activities of exiles. Railroad offi cheerily credit Increased ‘railroad tonnage to the closing of the Panama ‘ennal. There is no split in the business this time. Uncut velvet feels good. S—— ‘When the talk at that meeting on the rate of return due investors in public service prop- orty struck latitude and longitude everyone knew it was heading for water, 3 SRm——— We note that the weather man says we are ‘moarly two and one-half inches short of normal _precipitation since last March. Except for this ‘gentle reminder we might never realize it. SSE—— ' The “House of David,” hard by the sacred ‘precincts of St. Joe, which is in Missouri, de- (termined its matrimonial alllances by regular ~drawings, thus glving an ancient and modern to the claim that marriage is a lottery, Sapm———— college professor is convinced that has arrived for launching a new reli- Considering the number and variety al- ready avallable the salvation seeker who can- mot find goods to sult Is a hopeless proposition. S———— Great Britain won't let one of Mr. Bryan's books circulate in India. Well, that would have called for a diplomatic note if only Mr. Bryan were still holding down the secretary-of-state portfolio in the cabinet, but now it can hardly teach the magnitude of a paramount issue. flavor the time glon. { tire territory. Trade Outlet for Omaha to the Northwest. The voting of bonds for a bride across the Missouri river at Yankton and the building of a short connecting railroad north revives the old hope of Omaha for an entry into that trade ter- ritory, a large portion of which is naturally tributary to this city. The efforts to gain ac- cess to this fleld have been many, datihg back to the time when Omaha was little more than "a village and the old Omaha Northwestern was chartered, and they have been continued inter- mittently since. West of the Missouri river rallroad development has opened up the fleld to Omaha, but all traffic from east of the river has bteen forced to pass through Sioux City to reach Omaha, and the handicap of increased distance and indirect rall communication has virtually shut Omaha out. The project now under consideration gives more promige of fruition than its predecessors. In the first place, it involves no great financial cutlay, for roads leading from Omaha already tap the country across the river from Yankton, and with lines already bullt into that city and rorth, a few miles of new road will connect up with a network of lines spreading over the en- A clearer appreciation of the value of this opening probably would have solved the problem long ago, but let us hope that the present project will not be allcwed to lag. The Case of the Ancona. More of the detalls must be known of the sinking of the Ital'an liner “Ancona’” before any safe conclusion can be reached as to its Justification or wantonness, If another passen- ger ship, carrying helpless women and childre as well as men, has been torpedoed and sunk without warning and without opportunity to toke off the noncombatants, a serious situation will be presented, and more serious to us if lives of American citizens have been needlessly socrificed. If, on the other hand, the boat was destroyed ““according to rule,” while the horrot and inhumanity is no less, the possibility of in- ternational complications may be avoided. As a “Friend of the Court.” With due permission first obtained, a brief by BE. J. Hainer as a ‘‘friend of the court” has been filed in the case pending before the su- preme judges to determine whether Nebraska's constitutional provision rquiring a specific leg- islative appropriation for the expenditure of pub- e money means what it says. As the judges doubtless want light, they can have no objection to having other “friends of the court” volunteer their ideas in answer to the propositions ad- vanced by Mr. Hainer. In point of fact, what hc asks is that the constitution be temporarily ennulled, because upholding it might force the * fire commission, and the food, drug, dairy and oll commissions to wholly suspend operations in the interim between September 1 and the next session of the legislature.” The fault with this argument is that the basic assumption is catirely unwarranted, for thers {s nothing what- ever to prevent these commissions continuing to do their work and asking for a deficiency ap- propriation from the next legislature, While we do not advocate a special legislative session to meet the emergency, because we do not think it necessary, other states, where legislatures have bungled appropriations, have frequently re-convened their law-makers to do the work over again, rather than put their constitutions in the same class with a “scrap of paper.” Illi- nols, for example, is sald to be facing such a situation right this minute, but no “friend of the court” in that state seems to have suggested that the defective law be declared valid notwith- etanding, because failure to get the money out of the treasury might threaten the continuity of the salaries of the officeholders concerned. In his brief Mr. Hainer further insists that the coliections from these state inspection fees constitute a “trust fund” to pay the expenses of the particular department of the state govern- ment, and, therefore, can be drawn on without legislative authority, But they coanstitute no rore of a trust fund than do the collections ot the state university in the form of student fees, or of the secretary of state in the form of reg- istration fees, or of the clerk of the supreme court in the form of docketing fees and court costs, The constitution and laws of Nebraska contemplate turning into the state treasury all these collections and drawing the money out in the regular order. But if these provisions are to become dead letters every time a democratic legislature goes to sleep or falls down, they may a8 well be expunged altogether. Sm— Nebraska Crop Values. ‘What appears to be a conservative estimate of the value of four of Nebraska's leading crops ~—gorn, wheat, oats and hay-—places the total at $236,781,903, computed on values of 50 cents Fer bushel for merchantable corn, half that amount for soft corn, 756 cents for wheat, 30 cents for oats, §7 per ton for alfalfa hay and $6 and $7 per ton for wild and tame hay. Prices being pald out in the state for these staples show them to be, it anything, below the average, and the total crop yleld is computed on a basis which appears to be able to bear the test of an- alysis. A crop of such volume also means that the percentage consumed on the farm as feed for stock used in farm operation is less than in smaller crop years, though, of course, the actual smount is a fairly stable quantity year by year, and the remainder which will be converted into cash {n the shape of grain or meat products must be greatly in excess of the normal. In contrast with the big cotton crop of the south last year there is a ready market at fair prices for every dollar's worth of Nebraska's produet, and what this means in a business way would be difficult to compute, and its influence is more than local, for the great grain belt of which Nebraska is a prominent portion has been the luldyiu‘ln- fiuence on the commerce of the nation and the tright spot in days of depression. This great production of agricultural staples which all the world must have is the key to the business ac- tivity in Omaha and throughout Nebraska. It has been shown conclusively by a pre- arranged war game that New York harbor is 10t in & state of preparedness, Theoretically a hoestile fleet shot up Sandy Hook, smashed Coney Island, sunk Governor's Island, leveled Fort Wadsworth and made a dust heap of Man- hattan's skyscrapers. If any inland congress- man clings to the fence this theoretical atrocity ought to shake him off end burry an adequate appropriation, ' THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 191 5 |The Prohibition Program =~ Washington Correspondence Boston Transcript. — HETHER prohibition prohibits or not, there is a very good chance that the proposed national | amendment advocated by the prohibitionists will be brought to a vote in congress this year. Leading democratic politiclans are sald to favor a vote on grounds of political expediencey, the idea being to eliminate the liguor question from the national cam- palgn of 1916 and thus to avold possible embarrass- ment on this score. No other man than the new ma- Jority leader of the houss, Claude Kitchin of North Carolina, it is sald, will Introduce the old Hobson amendment. In case Mr. Kitchin finds it inadvisable at the last moment to perform this task for the ‘drys,” they will probably fall back upon Chalrman Webh of the judiciary committee. Both Webb and Kitchin are strong prohibitionists and both are ad- ministration men. It 19 asserted that the whisky interests will not op- pose the resolution as stubbornly as they did last year, but will save their powder for,the fight in the states against the ratification of the amendment. The liquor Interests believe they can postpone the final adoption of the prohibition amendment for so many years that It will become a forgotten issue. Ever since the the defeat of the Hobson amend- ment last year the officials of the Anti-Saloon League of America have been busy lining up votes to put the measure through the house at the coming seasion, Now at last they belleve they have the votes. From sources close to the league it was learned recently that it will concentrate its efforts in the Sixty-fourth congress upon two projects. One is the Hobson amendment, and the other is a measure to make the Distriet of Columbia prohibition territory, The league believes it will be able to put both measures through. Its officers feel that the real fight lies in the houss, where the margin is close. In the senate they claim to have more than two-thirds majority. It will require some maneuvering to get the Dis- trict of Columbia prohibition measure before congress. The first move will be to get it favorably reported by the district committee, but tkat committee is evenly divided on the wet and dry question and last year the wets managed to prevent the committee from reporting such a measure. It is possible, however, to tack the district measure either on the district ap- propriation bill or on to any other general supply measure which goes through congress. Furthermore, failure to get favorable action in the house will not prevent the prohibitionists from taking it up in the senate and thereby getting it back in the house in the form of a senate amendment that can be taken from the committee and disposed of by the whole house. The prohibition leaders assert that the national prohibition amndment will go through the house and senate easily. They say that many of the hold-overs who voted wet last year have heard from their districts and are now repentant and ready to vote “dry" at the first opportunity, Also, they say that a canvass of the new members, mostly republic shows an overwhelming sentiment among them in favor of sub- mitting the question to the states in order to get it out of congreas once and for all. These leaders have been paying close attention to the activities of the opposition and have concluded that the liquor inter- ests have about reached the point where they do not want any further discussion of the liquor question in congress. Anti-Saloon league officials think that if the amendment is once put through congress it will be ratified by three-fourths of the states within a few years. The liquor Interests take an opposite view. It is pointed out that once an amendment is ac- tually submitted to the states, it is always before them untii adopted. Thus, it is never formally re- jected in the sense that more than one-quarter of the states reject it at one time, because the action of the legislature can be reversed on subsequent oc- casfon! Through the process of elimination, the “drys” belleve they can soon concentrate the liquo: fight in a few states. It is already conceded that the prohibitionists will be able to get thelr measure reported by the judiclary committee, and the liquor interests also concede that most of the democratic house leaders are in favor of national prohibition. Twice Told Tales Hot Weather Price. Charley Murray, who manages sporting events at Buffalo, has a positive gift for expression in telegrams. He keeps in touch with his friends by wire—with his enemies, too, sometimes. During the midsummer hot spell he organized a boxing carnival, Being anxious to secure for one of his ring attractions Ted Lewis, the English fighter, he sent the foliowing message to Jimmy Johnston, manager of the Britisher: “Hope the heat has not affected you. Will give two-titty for Lewls next Tuesday night.” Johnston answered: ‘“Feeling fine. Want one thousand for Lewis' To which Murray promptly wired back: “I see the heat has affected you."—Saturday Eve- ning Post, In a Bit of a Hurry, A very small boy was taken to ment to have some of his first teeth pulled. For a second or so, during which time four teeth disap- peared, everything was falrly serene, and then came howls of objections. “I didn't want them teeth to come out,” cried the young patient, suddenly recollecting something. I ‘want them to stay in." “That's all right” consolingly responded the dentist. “They will grow in again.” “Will they?' quickly rejoined the boy, with a brightening face, “Do you think they will grow in time for dinner? ~Philadelphia Telesraph. Reason for It. Two Irishmen were digging & hole for drainage. One was over six feet in helght, and the other not much over five feet. The foreman came along presently to see how the work was progressing, and noticed that ome of them was doing more work than the other. So he called down to the big fellow below in the trench: “Look here, Pat, how is it that little Mickey Du. gan, who is only about half as blg as you, is doing twice as much work?™ Glancing down at the diminutive Mickey, Pat re- plied: “And why shouldn't he? Pittsburgh Chronicle-Tel Aln't he near to #t?'— raph. People and Events One day's haul of speed maniacs in New York City recently totaled elghty-seven. The courts soaked the speeders so heavily that two whole days passed without & speeding arrest. The moral is plain—soak ‘em. The Westinghouse plant at East Pittsburgh, finan- clally stranded & few yoars back, has cleaned up enough money out of munitions to equal 30 per cent of its capital, or a profit of $30,000,000. The plant ls still working to eapacity. J. Bradiey Fuller, a busted banker of Winaslow, TIL, in two short months scored & speed record in his slide from the mahogany counter to a laborer's job, Pounding sand and things in cement block moulds at $2.35 & day provides muscular exercise hitherto overs shadowed by the exercise of wits, A Virginia doctor s getting a taste of the medical gridiron, having seriously offended his brethren by paying out real money ob an advertising proposition. A local cartoonist drew & smiling ploture of the doce tor in the act of relleving & man of pain. The doctor was pleased and showed his pleasure by having the cartoon printed. Trouble started instantly, How It will end the victim will not predict. 1 The Pees ALeSer Wooster ¥ a Plan. SILVER CREEK, Neb., Nov. 10~To the Editor of The Bee: When after the civil war Andrew Johnson was at war with | congress over his plan of reconstructing the seceding states, ‘‘my policy,” he called it, old Zachariah Chandler, United States senator from Michigan, said President Johnson had no business to have a policy ~that the reconstruction of the southern states was a matter that belonged to con- gress and not to the president. In a similar way President Wilson has | no business to have a policy as to “‘pre- paredness.” If he thought the country was not in a proper state of defense he might, if he saw fit, properly call the at- tentlon of congress to the situation and recommend that the country be put in a state of defense, but he has no right to g0 before the country and before con- gress with a detailed pian, and much less has he a right to attempt to make such a plan an “administration” measure and force it through congress, as we have a right to believe he intends to try to do. Such work is revolutionary. It is the business of the president to exccute the laws, not to make them. If this matter of preparedness were to be left to the free action of congress, as it should be, how does President Wilson know that #ome congressman, or senator, if it were thought best to do anything at all, might not propose a better plan of national de- fense than his own? I think I have a better plan myselt, and to make a brief presentation of it is the purpose of this communication, What I propose is that the United States should enter into a defensive naval alllance with England. I suggest as to the main feature of such an alliance, that it should provide: 1. That the combined naval forces of the two powers lhcu!d be used to prevent an attack upon either, or any of their colo- nies or dependencies. 2. That no attack from the sea upon any country of the western hemisphere should be permitted. 3. That after the conclusion of peace in Europe, England should not add to the strength of its navy, and that the United States should not add to the strength of its navy after it had been brought up to & point something like approaching that of England, as might be agreed. 4 That no other nation should be per- mitted to materially increase its naval strength, standing notice being given that any new war vessel, or others in its place, would be destroyed on sight. 6 That France, Italy, Japan and other nations, as might be agreed, should be permitted to become parties to the alli- ance if they wished, sharing its benefits and responsibilities on equal terms. With such an alllance in existence the parties to it would be absolutely secure against attack from the sea. We should not ony be spared the enormous expense of putting ourselves in a state of defense against the whole earth, but would not need even the regular army that we now have. An army of 25,000 men for guard and escort duty and dress parade would be enough; and no national guards or organized militia would be required, ex- cept as each state might determine for itaelf with a view to preserving order within its own borders. England and all ita colonles, with the exception of India and Egypt, being safe from attack from foreign foes, could disband its armies (after thls war is over) and devote all its energles to the arts of peace, as it would be only too glad to do, and re- cuperating from the effects of this ter- rible war. It will be urged that such an alliance is against the traditional policy of this country. Admitted. But it does not fol- low that because Washington's advice against permanent alllances has been good up to this day, it is to be good al- ways. Conditions have changed beyond even the wildest flights of the imagina- tion, and we should pursue such a course as sound judgment dictates as to what 1s best under these changed conditions. It will be sald that such an alllance would be bitterly opposed by, both Irish- Americans and German-Americans. By some, yes, but I think not necessarily by the great majority of them, who, I be- lieve, are at heart really good and true Americans, President Wilson's scheme of prepared- ness would be certain to be a failure for present purposes, and would even Invite the attacks it is intended to shleld us from. For it any European power is to attack us it would be immediately after this war, and, in all reason, before we could possibly put ourselves In a state of defense; and the same would be true of Japan. Bither a European power or Japan desiring to make war on us could hardly be expected to be so polite and consideraty of our interests as to walt until we were fully armed. For more than 100 years, with a boun- dary line between them of more than 3,000 miles, the United States and England have lived at peace, neither having a fort or battleship, a soldier or gun to use agalnst the other; neither has anything to fear from the other; both love liberty and hate military power, and in such an alllance each has everything to galn and nothing to lose. Such an alllance would be invincible; it would mean the absolute and permanent peace of half the civilized world, and would take the world more than half way on the road to the longed for goal of universal peace. CHARLES WOOSTER. Joba for the Jobless. ~To the Bditor you have some unemployed men in Omaha who are look- ing for work. We need about twenty men in this vicinity who are good corn husk- ers. We are paying 6 cents per bushel, and a good husker can make from $8 to $6 per day. Our corn is somewhat soft from the early freeze. 1 myself need four men. They can find plenty of work until the holidays. GEORGE F. SILER. EDITORIAL SIFTINGS, ‘Washington Star: As trench conquests are now measured by the yard, some of those vallant onslaughts partake of all the fury of & bargain counter rush. Clevelapd Plaln Dealer: One gets a new Jdea of the horrors of war by observing the spirit with which a public service company goes at the task of dlgging a trench in & downtown street. Springtield Republican: A new long- named soclety which we shall hope suc- cees to is the soclety of promoting mutual | friendly relations betw Russia and America. It has just held its first public meeting in Petrograd and it was “in every way a success.” The more socleties of the sort in whatever nation the better. We want mutual friendly relations with all the world GRINS AND GROANS, First Barber—That was a bad cut you gave that old man while shaving him. Second Barber—Oh, there's a reason for that I'm courting his maid and the cut will let her know that I'll meet her this evening.—Boston Transcript. Penclope—Did the play have a happy engding? Percival-How should 1 know? Penelope—You saw it, didn't you? Percival—Yes, but the hero and the heroine married each other.—Judge. Binks—8hafer, do you know that wo- man across the street? Chafer—She certainly looks familiar. Let me see. It's my wife's new dress, my daughter's hat and my mother-in- law's parasol—sure! It's our cook!— Macon News. “4 didn't want Miss Smith to be in- fluenced by name or position In her estl- mate of me.' “Well, what did you do about it?" I _wrbte her an anonymous letter ask- | Ing her to marry me.'—Baltimore Ameri- can, EAR MR. K/ 2'BBLE x;Sfl"A CR¥£ TO BE AN OLD MAID? LIRS NO—FOR (Y IS NOT DONE WITH MALICE AFOI nor “How ridiculous some of our forms of speech are! Here's a notice of the Jaggs, which says they took up their residence in the suburbs. How could they take up a residence?” “Easily. They've got one of these port- able houses.”—Baltimore American. “The idga of calling that man In the cage a paying teller,’ exclaimed young Mrs. Green. "Why, asked him to tell me how much my husband had in the bank and to please give it to me, and do you know he would nefther tell' me nor pay me.”—Boston Transcript. “How about your new stenographer? Is she_quick and accurate?’ “Yes, sir. She can powder her face, arrange her bracelets and fix her hair quicker than any stenographer 1 ever had. And do It accurately, too."—Louls- ville Courfer-Journal. THE LALLYGAG. T. J. Daft in Judge. The lallygag strolls down the lane That leads to Failureville. He thinks he's coming back again, But he never, never will! He turns aside to view the scenes That tempt his artist's eye. He loafs and plucks the daffodils, And prates of bye-and-bye, Tomorrow, next year, He's going to achiev Tremendous triumphs e of some sort, If we can him belleve. But why should I the lallygag Deride by word or line? For futile as his record is It's very much like mine, I'm always golng to achieve That which will make me great, And win undying name and fame ‘When it is Just too late, So T'll not chide the lallygag Because he wastes his days. He cannot help how he was born; Those are his natural ways. THE CALL OF THE WEST, Hunt Copeland in New York Times. ‘The haze on the far horizon, The tint of an auburn sky, The infinite oceari of wneat fields With the wild geese flying high, The hum of the busy binder, , the jest, All ot earth’s wild freedom— ‘This is the call of the west. The crisp frost alr of the winter, The sun In a tropic sky, The snowshoe tramp by the river, The curler's call “Tee Hi!" The northern lights in the heavens, The healthiest land and the best, The nearest to life that's nowhere Except in the land of the west. 'Tis a land of hope and promise, ‘Where a man {8 known by his worth, To_ the Russ, Icelander, or Saxon, No matter the land of his birth. To each and to all there's a wel;ome In this land of liberty blessed. Oppression and tyranny elsewhere, But not in the land of the west. 'Tis a land that is free from traditios Where a man meets a friend as a Where people are up and are doing- They can, for they know they ca 'Tis a land that Is fast becoming The home of the wanderer's quest, ‘Where the patriot sings with devotion: My country, the land of the weat. Aad far, far away o'er the ocean, A _sweetheart, a sister, a wife, Is longing and Wwaliting and wishing ‘To obtain renewal of life In this land where for all there is plenty, That they may enjoy with the rest, The fulfillment of hope and of promise: This is the call of the west. Keeps Kidneys Active With a Glass of Salt Must flush your Kidneys ooca- sionally if you eat meat regularly. Noted authority tells what | causes Backache and Blad- der weakness. No man or woman who eats meat regu- larly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys oocaelonally, says a well-known | authority. Meat forms uric acid which clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly 1flltl’r or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, head- aches, liver trouble, nervousness, con- stipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, blad- | der disorders come from sluggish kid- neys. | The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or If the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi- ment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any re- liable pharmacy and take a tablespoon- | ful in a glase of water before breakfast [for @ few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acld of grapes and lemon julce, combined with lithia, and has been used i for generations to flush clogged kidneys |and stimulate them to activity, aleo to neutralise the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation; thus ending blad- der disorders. Jad Salts s inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia~water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep |the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney compli- cations.—Advertisement. ) — Make Your Hair Curly and Wavy Over Night! the same nothi a llt{'lg To curl the halir without at time burning the life out of 1 equals piain liquid silmerine. I be applied to the hair with a cle brulfi before retiring, wavy effect imaginabl dence in the morning. found an excellent dressing for the halr. 4 This aimple method Is not to be com- with curling by means of a hot ¢ ron because, instead of injuring the halr, \ it ig really beneficial. A few ounces of the liquid,” which may be procured at any drug store, will last for months. One can: curl the hair in any style desired and the effect will be one of perfect naturainess. The best way is to divide the hair into strands and moisten each of them from root to tip. The hair will be beautifully glossy, yet without the least greasiness or ltlck{nell.—Adverfil ment, BACKACHE KILLS! | Don't make the fatal mistake of neg- lecting what seom to be a ‘slm- ple little backache. ‘There lsn't any such thing. It may be the first warning that your k‘l’«‘!neyl are not working prop- a they Jase, g0 the cause of that backache and do it quickly, or you may find yourself in the &rl c¥ an incurable disease. LD MEDAL Haarlem Ofl Capsules will give almost immediate rellef f: kidney and bladder troubl h be the unsuspected cause general il health, - GO’ MEDAL Haarlem Ofl Capsuies are imported direct from the laboratories in Holland. They are pre- ared in correct quantity and convenient ormed!a ul;‘ and lrpvt p'o‘h.'ulgr mr“u; nteed to give prom A :none will be refunded. Get them at any drug store, but be sure to insist on the GOLD MEDAL brand, and take no other. Prices, %c, tc and $1.00.—Adver- tisement. P—————————————————————— Tl'he Joy of Motherhood. need be no apprehension of distress to mar the complete joy of for many women who the use of Mother's muscles and re the pressure re- mcting on many nerves so that the train upon the cords, tendons and gaments is not accom; ed by se- vere pains that sometimes cause nai morning sickness and other tresses. Mother's Friend has been used suc- cessfully for two generations and can be bad of any druggist, Night train leaving making appointments sure. ¢ LY o LI “Twin-Cities Through equipment is now run in both day and night trains via the Chicago Great Western to St. Paul and Minneapolis, Day train, leaving Omaha 7:29 a. m., Coun- cil Bluffs 7:50 a. m., has buffet club car (serving all meals) and coaches, arriving St. Paul 7:40 p. m., Minneapolis 8:15 p. m. cil Bluffs 8:50 p. m., has sleeping cars, buffet club car, chair cars and coaches, arriving in St. Paul 7:30 a. m., Minneapolis 8:05 a. m.—ahead of other trains—giving full business day and YOUR TELEPHONE IS HANDY. P.F. BONORDEN,C.P.&T. A, 1522 Farnam St., Omaha, Phone Doug. 260, Omaha 8:30 p. m., Coun- and connections doubly St cago S=

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