Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 2, 1915, Page 4

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| | | | ¥ Eat It! Enjoy It! | No Indigestion Or Bad Stomach| stomach, heartburn or ! Other Issues. dyspepsia. | | ““Pape’s Diapepsin’’ makes' weak stomachs strong and healthy at once. You ean eat anything your stomach raves without fear of indigestion, acid Bity or Ayspepsia, or that your food wiil fferment or sour on your stomach If you iwill take a )ittle Diapepsin occasionally. [ Your meals will taste good, and any- ing you eat will_be digested; nothing n ferment or turh into acd or polson r' stomach gas, which causes belching, Bizsiness, a feeling of fullness after eat- iug, nausea, indigestion Qike a lump of md In the stomach), blllousness, heart ¥n, water brash, pain in stomach and Indestines or other symptoms. Headaches from the stomach are abso- | flutely unknown where this effective rem- ‘edy is used. Diapepsin really does all the fwork of a healthy stomach. It digests Jour meals when your stomach can't A winglé dose will digest all tne food you it and leave nothing to ferment or sour and upset the stomach Get a large So-cent case of Pape's Dia- Ppepsin from your druggist and start ing now, and in a little while you wifl ually brag about your healthy, strong tomach, for you then can eat anything everything you want without the 'between farm and eity. HAS HOT DEBATE i “Community Never any sour, gassy or acid | Interest” Discussion Brings Out Single Tax and {ARE AGAINST THE HIDDLEKAR; The discussion of "(‘flmmunfly‘ Interest”” at the Nebraska Farmers’| {Congress became more than a discus- | sion almost a spirited debate, R.| M. Tyson of Tobias started it off in-| {nocently enough with a booster talk for close friendship and co-operation | | W. F. Baxter followed with an able puper, carefully balanced and weighed, charging that the landlord ard the tendency toward landlordism eud the increase of tenant farming is the great menace. { Then followed C. M. Gustafson of Mead, charging the city people are seifish and | do not have the community interest at | heart. He slammed the farm demon- | strator idea and declared, “If you insist on sending us farm demonstrators, we will insist oh sending demonstrators to the city. We have already demonstrated some things in the city that has opened the eyes of many.” Gustafson is president of thq Farmers Unlon, which organization nu. only mar- kets the produce of its members, but has community stores, from which the farm. ers buy implements, coal, lumber and a | lot of other necessities. lightest discomfort or misery, and every rticle of impurity and gas that is in sur stomach and Intestines is going to be carried away without the use of xatives or any other assistance. Should you at this moment be suffer- € from iIndigestion or any stomach dis- irder, you can get relief within five min- utes.—Advertisement. Delicious Muffing, uffing that melt In your mouth are always yours. If you ibors produced. We don't need that kind |of man In the community, Some people ; lastly add the egg white and { beaten, white l:dlow |declared things were not as bud as they | lare that grain SOLVENT Mi‘flufl'mflo 450 ' Cent Bottle (32 Doses) : FREE because you start the day worried SULf legs and arms a; ing b b mes Tayx Syst What W. F. Baxter had pointed out that there are today 11,000 less farms iIn the state than there were five years ago because land is slipping into the hands of the large landholder, who renta to tenants, Gustafson admitted, but as to the cause of this condition the two dif- fered. Baxter lald it largely to the sys- tem of taxation. Gustafson said: “The farms are get- ting larger because the producer is not getting a fair shake. Eliminate the waste that e between the producer and the consumer, ‘Bift out the drones, as Mr, Baxter sald, #ift them out. 8ift out the fellow that Is #0 glad to make his living gambling with the things we produce. Sift out the fel- 16w in Omaha who made $200,000 in the map of a finger gambling on the wheat that you and I and the rest of the neigh- still think we do, but we don't." Talks About Farmers. Gustafson called attention to a com- mercial club in a certain town In the state that entertained a delogation of Farmers' union fellows some time ago at luncheon. Afterward, he said, one of the members of the club criticised the 1\2 in the newspapers for entertaining this delegation of farmers, who, the critic sald, were trying to ruin the city man's business. “I sent the club a check for the price of our lunch,” sald Gustafson, “and they returned the check, saying that was only the feeling of one of the members. But I tell you, gentlemen, the next time it will be another member and another. The feel- ing is there. It was up to Ross L. Hammond, who followed Gustafson, to smooth things over. Hammond {8 president of the State’ As- soclation of Commerclal clubs. Hammond sald he had hoped this would be a har- monlous discussion and was surprised to find it had degenerated Into a debate, He haq been pictured, and that the subject should never have been brought up for discussion, as the barrier betweon the city and the country did not exist except as an artificlal barrier, ARMERS' CONGRESS DISPOSES OF THE POLITICAL FARMERS (Continued from Page One. Ila. hs F‘CE out for us IE men on [El " |Uist who are not farmers. “Well,"” sald Kirkland, ““I cannot do it offhand—I have only been Informed so.” The List as it Ta, “Then you have been wrongly in- formed,” emphaticaliy asserted President Coupland. Then Coupland read off the names of three men on the list of fif- teen, members of the committee as the back, |only three who are not actually farming &t this moment. Here is the llst of the executive com- no [mittee as It stands: Frank G. Odell, y, n {-n‘l le ( charge and without in- ons. One bottle only ress. Washing Won't Rid Head of Dandruff The only sure way to get rid of dand- ruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely To do this, get about four i ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to molsten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. Do this tonight, and by moming, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no mat- ter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, “and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel & hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and nover falls # to do the work.—Advertisement. Discolored or Spotty Skin Easi.y Peeled Off to which season. e the wax no more ef- blotches. o trans- ikt e B v i Omaha; C. H. Gustafeon, Mead: R. H Tyson, Toblas; B. H. Pollard, Nehawka Charles Wooster, Sliver Creek; Joseph Roberts, Freront: J. W, Shorthill, York; George Junkin, Smithfiel Prof. J. H. Frandsen, Lincoln: Dean E. A. Burnety Lincoln; ¥ .C. Crocker, Filley; R. Hogue, Crete; Lee Smith, DeSota; L. C. Lawson, {Grand Island; J, D, Ream, Broken Bow. Frank G. Odell, chalrman of the com- mittee, told what he had done for the Farmers' Congress and how long he had | farmed, up to the time he became iden- tified with the farm papers. He asserted | that be had served as chairman of the legislative committee of the congress for @ series of years, and had spent his own money to act for them in many cases. He sald he had worked hard and had ex- pected no compensation “We bave ralsed the congress from no standing at all,”" sald Odell, “to a posi- tion of power and iInfluence in the legis- lature and in the state, And while T was serving the congress, I supported my family by writing space articles for the Nebraska Farmer and The Twentieth | Century Farmer, I was invited this t'me | to appear on your program here. Icame 400 miles at my own expense to attend and to fill this engagement on the pro- gram. Now, If you want to exclude me from membership, say so." Shot at Odell. Kirkiand charged that the secrotary of | the American Rural Credits assoctation | has ancther interest besides the welfare of the farmer. The secretary of the Rural Credits association is Odell. Kirkland read a letter from the secre- tary of the Rural. Credits assoclation, asking Kirkiand to fnvest In some stock |in the assoctation. It asked him to u { his Influence to get friends to invest, and ! promised that & good dividend would be | pald, while low interest could be fur- | niched the farmer borrower. | 4 B, Grinnell of Pupillion asked Kirk- land If he could show that there was anything wrong with the Rural Credits assoclation, and that the letter was not girle | @ straight, honest business letter offer- | | ing him an investment. Kirkland cculd not show anything of the kind, so he was | promptiy disposed of. Dr. George E. Condra made a little har mony talk, and after a few more sparks RESS FARM CONGRESS ON MARKETING. TO ADD Chas.oJ. Brand from the hot wires, a vote was taken and the Whitmore resolution letting in only | men ehgaged In some form of agricul tural activity, was adopted by a vote of about 30 to 3 0ld Officers Are Elected. Among other things done at the con- vention, time wi taken to re-elect all tho present officers, Here they are: President—~Ceorge Coupland, Bigin, Neb, First Vice President—Irank Tannehill, Xorfolk, Neb. becond Vice President—Homer McKel- v'e, Fairfield, Neb, Third Vice President—R. D. Smith, Richland, Neb, Hecretary—J. B. Grinnell, Papillion. Neb, Trasurer—George Junkin, Smithfield, Yeb, Thursday being the final day of the convention, the resolutions committee is to report. Woman suffrage and prohibition will not be reported out of the committee. The friends of these two movements did not have the strength to get them through. Hutfrage was killed in the committee ot the ground that it ia not an lssue in the state at present. Prohibition was killed in the commit- tee by the oratorical powers of Charles Wooster of Bilver Creek. Prohibition, it is understood, is to be cffered from the floor, however, after the rewolutions report has been made, for there are friends of the measure that belleve it can be put through the congreas from the floor, even though the committee saw fit to stab it to death, Program for Today. Among the things the resolutions com- mittee is to recommend Thursday morn- ing are endorsement of the initiative pe- tition for a constitutional convention; long-time farm leases; that the vail m::u rescind their ruling prohibiting peddling from cars; approyg, the.passage Ui the last legisiatire of} the rens’ system of land registratioh; recommend co-operation of state and counties in the &00d roads movement; endorse the move- | ment for federal grain inspection: ! s in Nebraska are| kigher than in the surrounding territory; endorse rural credits; endorse the work of the department of conservation and ublic Welfare = commission; urgq’ the | University of Nebraska to. continue and | qnlarge its weltare work, especially along the lines of economie distribution Chancellor Samuel Avery and Dean Burnett of the University of Nebraska t.ddreased the congress in the early part ¢ the afternoon on the work of. the uni- versity in general and on the work of the college of agriculture in particular. FEWER EGGS ARE SHIPPED FROM STATE IN YEAR 1914 (From & Staff Correspondent.) ' LINCOLN, Dec. 1—(Speclal.)~Ne- braska hens laid down on their job of laying eggs in 1914 and produced 4,600,000 dosen less cggs than they did the year ( previous, according to figures being pre- Pared by the state labor bureau, In 103, the exodus of eggs from the state amounted to 42,628,008 dozen, In 1914 the amount dropped to 38,096,821 dosen. Whether the falling off In exports was due to the hens" getting lazy or whether Nebraska people consumed more eggs, thus cutting” off thy shipping supply s not given out by Commissioner Coffoy. BLAST SHUTS OFF GAS AND THOUSANDS SHIVER LITTLE ROCK, Ark, Dec. L-A farmer Dblasting ground today for an grchard near Malvern, Ark, placed a dynamite charge too near the natural gas main from the Caddo flelds in Louls- lana, and the resulting break left many thousands of people without gas tonight, with the temperature hovering near freesing. Little Rock's gas supply falled at 6 p. m. Hot Springs. Argenta, Ben- ton and smaller towns were also without gas for light and fuel. HOT TEA BREAKS A COLD—TRY THIS Get a amall | Breast Tea, or package of Hamburg s the German folks call it, “Hamburger Brust Thee” at any pharmacy. Take & tablespoonful of the tea, put & cup of bolling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time. It ls the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, relleving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking & cold at once. It is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore harmless.—Advertisement. THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER ANOTHER FARMERS | MEETING 70 COME: Nebraska Farmers’ Co-Operative 1‘ Grain and Live Stock Association Assembles December 15. | MANY SPEAKERS ON rmm] Another big convention, largely of farmers, {s scheduled for Omaha De- cember 15 to 17, Inclusive. This is the Nebraska Farmers’ Co-operative iain and Live Stock State associa- tion. J. 8. Canaday of Minden s president and J. W. Shorthill of York' sceretary. The headquarters will be at the Rome hotel. One of the things that is looked for- | ward to In this convention is the talk to be givan by Prof. B. . Hibbard of the University of Wisconsin on “Price; Fixing.” This talk is not to be full of | easy generalities that cannot be provea, but is 1o be a talk by a sclentific and painstaking man on the actual conditions that exist. He will give only what he knows and can prove. He will give only | the result of personal observation | ““We could get a lot of cheap politicians that would talk their heads off on gen- eralities,” said Secretary Shorthill, “but we have got to the point where we want | actual facts on a matter as important as this, and we want facts that can Le | pported by evidence It necessary. We | want to know just what the condition | 18 in regard to price fixing in various lines.” Efficlency Expert to Talk. For the first time since the birth of | this organisation also thers is to be a | talk by a business efficiency expert. Prof. H. Newman Tolles of Chicago 18| to talk on the fundamentals in business management. Better methods of accounting is an- other subject that is to be given John R Humphrey, a government man from ‘Washington. MINTUN TAKES OFFICE IN HAMILTON COUNTY AURORA, Neb, Dec. 1.—(Special Tele- gram.)—For the second time this year F. | W. Mintun today became county commis- sioner from the First district. Comm's ing over, retired without contest in favor of Mintun, thereby carrying out his | sgreement made early in the year. tA the slection in 1914, Mintun wan | |elected by a majority of four votes to take Cain's place on the county board ang his right to the place was contested, but a recount gavé him & majority of thirty-seven ovte He had been acting as commissioner but a short time when the supreme court decided the commissioner cases from Douglas, Howard and Madison countles, which seemed to deprive lim of hia seat on the county boaid. Thereupon Mintun and Cain entered into an agreement to abide by the final decision of the su- preme court. The question was definitely and finally deteymined last month by the supreme ceurt in cases arising 'n Mad. ison and Boone countles, and today Cain gave up his office. Mintun's term will end In January, 1919, A Spoonful of Salts Relieves Aching Kidneys We eat too much meat, which clogs Kidneys, - says noted authority. | If back hurts or Bladder both- | ers, stop all meat for a while. When you wake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region it gen- |erally means you have been eating too {1.uch meat, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acld which overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and theéy become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kid- neys get sluggish and clog you must re- lieve them, like you relleve your bowels; removing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backathe, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine fa cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek rel two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, rellable physi- clan at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water be. fore breakfast for a few daye and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon julee, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralise acids In the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending blad- der woakness Jad Salts 18 a life saver for regular meat eaters. It ls inexpensive, cannot injure and makes a delightful, effer- vescent lithia-water drink.—Advertise- ment. It's Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets For You! Beware of the habit of constipation. It develops from just a few oonstipated days, unless you take yourself in hand. Coax the jaded bowel muscles back to normal action with Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Don't force them to unnatural action with severe medicines or by merely flushing out the intestines with nasty, sickening cathartics. Cured His RUPTURE trunk several years ago. Doc: of e Was an operation. usses did me no gvud. Finally 1 got nold of something that quickly and coms= flnoly cured me. Yoars have ised and he rupture has never return though an dolng hard work as a carpenter. here was no operation. no loss of tinis no trouble. I have nothing to sell, but will give full iormation wboit wo may find & complete cure without o) | atlon, If you write to me Eugene Pullen, ter, 491 B. Marcellus Ave- nue, Manssquan, N. J. Better cut out this notice and show It Lo any others who are rupt ouwafluuh or at least stop the misery rupture #od the worry and denger of an apera- tors sald my 1 was badly ruptured while lifuing a ! Dr. Edwards belleves in gentleness, persistency and Nature's assistance. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets open the bowels; their action is gentle, yet posi- tive. . There 1s never any pain or grip- ing when Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are used. Just the kind of treatment old persons should have. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a vege- table compound mixed with olive oll, you will know them by thelr olive color. Take one or two occasionally and have no trouble with your liver, bowels or stomach, 10c and Sc per box. All drug- ot ‘The Olive Tablet Company, Columbus, Ohlo. sioner John B. Cain, who haa been hold- | 1915. Secreta Pool One ‘ 0f State's Busy Men, , So Reports Reveal (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Dec, 1.—(8pecial )~Filing pe- | titions placing eandidates for nomination to1 the presidency has not been the ohly tusiness done by Secretary of State Pool and his office force, the report of the| sccretary of state for the last six months ending today showing that $107,243.43 was | taken In, a gain ever the same period of last year of $12023.04 A comparisen of the different items for the two periods shows as follows | Corporation permita. . Corporation penalties Filing articles ot lucor- poration ... Notary commission Filing brands Certificates an BOTPLS ... Fule of statute All other sour Totals . ! The cash receipts for Novembed totalcd $2,2,89.92, divided as follows: Corporation | rmits, $411; corporation penalles, §72.35; orticles of incorporation. $2,014. commissions, $80; brands, $76.50; ocertifi- cates and transcripts, %4.30; sales of statutes, $169; all other sources, $5.52 ! The automobile department makes tha | largest amount of labor, it costthg $869.00 to do the work and send out the plates. | There were 1,016 licenses lssued, which | com the department as follows: Labor, | 20.%; printing, $262.50; plates, $205.60; restage, $200; supplies, $7.7, and express, | $L.04 Slatn by Unseen Assassin. LONGMONT, Colo., Dec. L—W. .} Dickens, wealthy citizen of Boulder | county, was shot and instantly killed here tonight by an unseen assasein, who fired through a window in the Dickens’ home, Ouch' Lame Back. Rub Lumbago or Backache Away 'Rub pain right out with small trial bottle of old “‘8t, Jacobs OiL’’ ' Kidneys cause Backache? No! They have no nerves, therefore can not cause pain. Listen! Your backache is caused by lumbago, sciatica or a strain, and the quickgst rellef is soothing. penetrat- ing “St. Jacobs OIL” Rub it right on your painful and instantly the soreness, stiffness and lameness disap- pears. Don't stay crippled! Get a small | trial bottle of “St. Jacobs Oll" from your druggist and limber up. A moment | after it is applied you'll wonder what | became of the backache or lumbago pain. Rub old, honest “St. Jacobs Oil" when- ever you have sciatica, neuralgla, rheu- matism or sprains, as it is absolutely harmaless and doesn't burn the skin.—Ad- vertisement. EDAR BROOK ' is everywhere that service is supreme — the ure, rich age-mellowed bon that cheers the jaded tourist like a message from home. At leading clubs, hotels, and restaurants, from leading dealers, to ask for CEDAR BROOK is a mark of good judgment— a certainty of satisfaction. years the mel- For sixty-ei lowest an ‘W. H. McBRAYER'S CedarBrook | tng Baron De Leapold Tells of War Powers Baron de Leopold of Parls spoke at the Auditorium last evening to a very small andience on the subject of “The Advance of Nations and the Maintenance of Power.” Although small in numbers, those who t0 Manager Franke of the Audi-|attended gave the baron a very cordial torium. The company received $50 in| reception and listened to his interesting accordance with its agreement with the | talk comparing England and Germany as eity. | nations and world powers. SPECIALS in DIES DRESSES For this week we offer about 150 beautiful silk and combination dresses in all the newest styles and all sizes, at— for the act has been made | A posse is forming. City Makes Profit On Bispham Concert The city made a net profit of $% on the David Bispham concert at the Audi torium, after all expenses and a guar- anty to the company were pald, accord- cause nown. 100 beautiful made dresses, with exquisite trimmings, some with fur trimmings. The very newest styles. Your cholce while they last, at— 12 "YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD BEDDEO 1417 DOUGLAS STREET ¢ re - - Is the name of the doll we will give this week To QOur Little Busy Bees She is 24 inches high, has beautiful eyes and hair, and clothes that will make any little girl delighted. Virginia will be given Free to the lttls girl under 13 years of age that Lrings or mails us the larfest number of doll's pictures cut out of the Dally and Sunday Bee before 4 p, m., it urday, December 4. Her picture will be in The Bee every day this week. Cut them all out and ask your friends to save the pictures in their paper for you, too. See how many pictures of Virginia you can get, and be sure to turn them in to The Bee office be- fore 4 p. m., Saturday, December 4. 1t you don't win this Dollle, perhaps you can get one next week. Only one Doll will be given to any one person. Most Mo Family Trade supplied by WM. JETTER, Distributor, 2502 N St. Telephone Douglas 4231. South 863 or 868. Persistence is the cardinal vir= tue in advertising: no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant- ly to be really succcessful.

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