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| Begin on Salts at First Sign of Kidney Pain !Wo eat wo_m;c;x—mut, which clogs Kidneys, then the back hurts. i Says glass of Salts flushes Kid- : neys and ends Bladder irritation. Urie acld in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get siuggish, ! ache, and feel like lumps of lead. The urine becomes cloudy: the bladder is frri- tated, and you may be obliged to seek relfet two or three times during the night. ‘When the kidneys clog you must help them fiush off the body's urinous waste or you'll be a real sick person shortly. At first you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, you suffer from backache, sick { headache, dizziness, stomach gets sour, tongue coated and you feel rheumatic twinges when the weather is bad. Eat leas meat, drink lots of water; also | get from any pharmacist four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon julce, combined with Nthia, and has been used for generations to clean clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity, also to neutral- ize the aclds in urine, so it no longer s a source of Irritation, thus ending blad- @er weaknens. Jad Balts is Inexpensive, eannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia- water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active. Druggists hefe say they sell lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe In overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble.—Advertisement. DRESHER BLOGS, NOW LOOM UP ' Two Separate Additional Structures Add 25,000 Square Feet of Space to Dresher Bros, Oleaning & Dye- ing Plant. To Be the Equal of Any Estab- lishment of Its Kind in America and the Peer of Most of Them. Dresher Brothers, the Cleaners A\ e e e e et | V57,00, for, when the two new addi- tionsi Dredher Bulldings are completed, 67,000 wil] not begin to cover the In- | Vestment. Now then, you folk who have been by om Farnam cars dally and what “bulldings next | 1o Dreshers” are, ‘s & bit of in- t you. The bullding directly Dresher establish- be devoted entirely to the li i i 7 j i 4 FL 4 «F H ] 2 g i J #6-That puts you “Knowledge Booth" - |&s far as it goes. Weoe powder simply covers up an WUnattractive complexion and leaves no lasting benefits. Those who have tried THOMAS J. KELLY Katherine K. Baxter Says He Was a Prophet in His Own Town-—Now He Goes to Chicago. CALL HIM BACK SOME TIME The following words of appreciation | for Thomas J. Kelly, who has announced his intention of moving to Chicago, was sent to The Bee by Katherine K. Baxter. “And thus we let him go. Coming here In his early years, struggling, learn- Ing, creating—creating a beautiful thing for us, which we know not enough to appreciate. All those years of aspiration in the face of discouragments have gone to make up our Mendelssohn choir, for they have prepared him for the leader- ship he has shown. ““The last few years we have had many eminent men from abroad speak to us. The inference is that their word would be profitable. Profitable how? In pass- Ing a pleasant hour? Or are we to ponder their words? “Dr. Zueblin told us only a few days ago that beautiful ag Greek art was for the Greeks in expressing their civiliza- tion, it was not & true expression of our democratic civilization today. He would have our art a symbol of present condi tions and times. “Gutson Torglum constantly refterates the same thought; be yourself—be sincere —~do not imitate—be American—let us have an art truly our own. “Dr. Zueblin told the Commercial club two weeks ago the way to advertise our city was to bave something to advertise To advertise it in a way that woyld fit any city was not advertising. ‘Pick out the distinctive features of your city.’ He named our mew hotel for one thing, our park systzm for another. Did you go on in your own mind to find any other distinctive asset that we had over other cities? “Do you know of any city in the middle west that has a Mendelssohn cholr? A choir of ita size, its beauty, its earnest oharncter, its educational and art value? All due to the persistent, unencouraged work of one man, who worked because the beauty within him sought expression. Our own Omaha has grown side by side with Mr. Kelly from a crude little town to a city of great promise. One would think that the mutual struggles would make for a better understanding. “Jast year our Retallers’ association vealizing that art has a big value for a city engaged five eminent musiclans to came to Omaha. “The organization has mset a fine standard for itself, which ls very good “But whero was the man of vision— the Borglum or Zueblin to see the chol In our midst, which others from a dis- tance can vision or appreciate? It was not only a musical, a business, but also a civic error which these gentlemen made. It was the paychological moment for the business men of the city to BTASD one art feature the city offers that in distinctive. Tt is the great llving thing that is ours and has never been heard by, such members as fillsd the Audi- torfum for the first charity concert; “Blg and promising as our city has Erown it has not kept step with Mr. Kelly—it has had its eyes turned to the ground, he, his to the clonds, “But let us make amends, if that s possible. Let our Ak-Sar-Ben governors call forth all the talent of whatever nature in our eity to co-operate in one great fall festival. “Let us have a pageant—Miss Joy Hig- #ins 1s already working at an Omaha pageant. Let our artist guild, our dan- cing teachers, our dramatic workers begin plans now so that the fall of 1918 may see what the soul of Omaha has become. “Tot us call ‘Mr. Kolly of Chicago’ to #1ve the people—the people—a festival of music, such as they have never heard, to recognize even though late the which is his." — Ku Klux Klan Was a Terror During the Reconstruction The period of the ‘‘reconstruction” so i |vividly brought back to the memory of those who may have gone through it and represented afresh for those newer Kenerations who now view it for the first time in Griffith's “Birth of a Nation," #hows the time of Johnson's administra- tion and he, as the nation's chief execu- tive, in the hands of a ring of politicians and power-seckers, who are manipulat- ing the affairs of the south to suit their Own ends. It turns to the ruins of the flower-decked Bouth Carolina village of Ante bellum days, the place where the blacks were light hearted and care free, even under the bonds of slavery—turns back to the town that by war has been left half in ruins, the streets grass , |§rown, the stately mansions of the old days tottering and crumbling, to & town where those once wealthy now are in direst poverty—where. the “black is as #00d as & white man." as was the slo- =|&an of the northern men of the Lynch and Stoneman type. Women are menaced by the black minions of the northern whites or are attacked, whites are driven from the streets or insulted. Homes are Invaded. Justice s & forgotten thing. The land knows no law but that concelved by the race:then in control. Then—the chivalry of the whites is given new life. The Ku Klux Clan is formed. These riders of the night, in ghostly white, rally by dosens, by scores and hundreds and thou- sands. They ride llke the wind. They strike without even the warning the Tattiesnake gives and are far more wonderful, eoul-stirring, breath-taking as it is, but another of the unnumerable ‘“dramas within & drama” or which “The Birth of a Na- This glorious, spectacle s being given at the B theater in its entiret with its accompanying symphony orcl trained mechanictans for the purpose and is put on here i the same fashion down to the smallest detall that has amaszed New York for over a year. —_— M FACTURERS ASKED TO ND RUSSIA PRICE LISTS Russia wants to buy more American The Amaha Commareial elvh has @ ciroular letter from the Russian Cham- et ot Moscow, tra, ita effective paraphernalia and its THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: NOVEMBER 1915. Many an old soldier has stood in awe and with bared head in the pres- ence of this old-fashioned land sur- veyor's compass. It was once the property of John Brown of Ossawato- mie, the famous anti-slavery zealot of the days preceding the civil war, whose name has come down in his- tory because he sacrificed his life for his principles. APPRECIATION FOR |John Brown’s Original Surveyor’s * Grew, retired banker of Omaha, who | of the men whose acts precipitated | has just loaned it to the Kansas Btate | the civil war. Historlcal suvclety, because John | | Mr. McGrew prizes the relic so highly [Brown used the old compass in that |that he 1s merely loaning it to the Kan- | istnto while fighting the pro-slavery |party there. Old John Brown is generally cred- bringing Kansas into the union as a sas society, and has stipulated that it | shall forever remain the property and under the control of himselt and his heirs. He consented to part with it ited with having been a leader In |temporarily because it will be safer under | the care of [Secretary Willlam E. Con- nelly of the Kansas soclety, in its fire | It 1s now the property of C. F. Mc- |free state, and with having been one | ang burglar proof museum, than in the MoGrew home, 218 South 'rhmy--umh!mon his compass and while pretending avenue, to be surveying, would really locate and Then too, the 6ld compass was #0ld by | map the whereabouts of the pro-slavery John Brown to his friend and neighbor, Simon B. McGrew, father of the Omaha | the compass to Mr. man and grandfather of Governor Arthur Capper of Kansas. The latter wrote to Later, Brown sold MoGrew's father, bushwhackers' camps. who lived in Kansas. John Brown reached the pinnacle of Mr. McGrew, his uncle, and asked for | his fame in 1859, when he organized an the loan of the compass for the Kansas| j,vasion museum. The Smithsonian Institute at Washing- ton wanted to secure ths rellc of the| #reat anti-slavery character, but Mr. McGrew did not want to let it go that far away from him. The value the lat- ter placed upon the compass may best be judged from the way he paraphrases the famous ballad: “John Brown's body lies a-moulder- ing in the grave, But his soul goes marching on— And his compass shall never be sold. The compass was used by Brown in surveying in Kansas about the years 185- 58, During the border warfare between|of the scarcity and high price of Virginia, to liberate the slaves. After surprising and capturing the arsenal and armory at Harper's Ferry, he was. wounded and captured, and | was hanged for treason, December 2, 1859, GASOLINE GOES UP ONE CENT MORF IN OMAHA Gasoline prices mave gone up another cent per gallon, making the poor autolsts | pay 15 to 16 cents now for his “‘gas.” Kansas and Missouri, Brown frequently | Ol dealers assert that still further ad- vances will soon be nesessary, because ofl, from which gasoline is refine 107-9.11 So. 16th St. Phone Harney 188. v~ S LOE 87 Phone Doug. 1258 | 1814 Douglas St. Fontenelle Hotel. Embroidery, Beading, Braiding, Cording, Scalloping, Eyelet and Cut Work, Button Holes, Pleating, Buttons, Ideal Batton and Pleating Company Phone Doug. 1936. SOMMER BROTHERS IMPORTED AND DOMESTIIC GROCERIES. clusive Omaha, Nebraska. 28th and Farnan. WHEN AWAY FROM HOME The Bee is The Paper Fou ask for; if you plan to be sbsent more than a few days, bave The Bee mailed t0 you. X Don’t try it. cake. you nothing. We pay the dealer for the gee Clip the cou- n now and present ittoyour grocer. Co pons are good wherever this TOILET SOAP fail to It costs 7/ 11 0 THEAR | S SWEE below certifies Retailer's Endorsement .—My signature This Coupon \RT COUPO N OUR opportunity to test at our expense the best toilet soap made. Don’t let it pass—this is an unusual offer on an unusual soap. Below you’ll find your coupon. It's good for a full size cake of SWEETHEART the perfect toilet soap. Absolute purity—dainty perfume—generous size—handy shape. is a quality soap at an ordinary price. J Money cannot buy better. Clip ; . SWEFIHE . Sweetheart Soap Now! J this coupon person whose signature appears on lfi:fm;lhfld-chdawmf < address of the perty “MANHATTAN SOAP COMPANY vy Name Address Te the Dealers mm-"s"hm - attached) is n‘n-a.hlh.z full retail all oo v o fully complied with. Any violation of the above con- ditions remder Omana fee, Nov, x1, 1015, mfpeaeg————— Present this Coupon to before Dec. 10th and receive one full-sizecake ofiWEMTToflet Soap absolutely free. This offer is limited to one coupon to a family and the correct name and receivin this soap must be sijned in full to the following: that I have received one cake of SOAP Free of all cost. Tear off the top end of the carton (the )w pant NEW YORK CITY. NODNOD LHVAHLAIMS A Tk A