Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 3, 1916, Page 4

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W ————— TO REMOVE DANDRUFF | — - WANT MONITION PACTORIES HERE Under the Preparedness Program. | WOLF ARGUES SURE TO COME| Get a Mcent bottle of Danderine at any drug store, pour a little into your hand and rub well into the scalp with the finger tips. By meorning most, 1t not all, of this awful scurt will have dis- Avpeared. Two or three applications | Will destroy every bit of dandruff. stop soalp ‘tching and falling hair.—~Advertise- ment A Child Doesn’t Laugh and Play if Constipated Look, Mother! Is tongue coat- ed, breath feverish and stomach sour? & | Munition factories for Omaha! | Just that in so many words is what | {the Omaha Real Estate exchange| wants—that is if the preparedness program of the government carries Harry A. Wolf sprung the sensation al the meeting of the exchange yesterday. | Some objected. They didn't want muni- | |tlon factories anywhere—they didn’t want | to them that preparedness ’ Mr. Wolt pointed out asking that the factories be located In | Omaha, is not an announcement in favor ‘n' the preparedness program, but it is simply a matter of falling in line with & program that s sure to come, and set- |ting forth the advantages of Omaha as A base of wupplies. Might Attraci Alrships. Then came an objection it would have been hard to overcome, had it been made long enough to be heard. W, T. Graham feared that munition factories centered in Omaha would be & bait to draw alr- ships and aeroplanes to this section with { their baskets full of bombs | But Mr. Graham merely suggested this {to some of his companions at the table |ana was promptly sdvised agatnst mak- |ing much an objection. It was pointed out to him that the meroplanes and dirigl- bles would all be shot from the sky in their journey acroas the country long | before they could reach Umaha. 8o this deadly suggestion of bombs never got “nre the house as & real live objection Then the Exchange settled down fo a | | werious consideration of the question and structed Jts committee on new industries | 10 Ko into conference with similar com- mittees from the Comerclal club and other bodles with regsvd to gettng Omaha's claims for such distinction prop- | erly before congress. “Whether it be President Wilson's plan, or the plan of the army officers, or any other advocates of better military equipment,” sald Mr, Wolf, “we must recognize that some form of a prepared- ness program is going through. Now, that being the case, the factories and supply depots will have to be located somewhere. The Union Pacific road iy already making & campaign to get these | jocated somewhere in the central part | of the United States, and naturally | Omaha s the logical place.” Texans Are Able to Settle the Mexican Trouble All Alone| “If the Texans were turned loose they would seitle the Mexican question in ord asserted R. A. Wills of the Unlon Pacific colonisation department, who hag returned from a trip that took him to Californis, along the Mexican for 1,000 miles, or ‘so and then through the south, 3 A large number of the Texas cattlemen at Bl Paso, Mr. Wills reaches ‘conclusion: ' the cattlomen were jeft alome they 4 right in ‘‘California Syrup of Figs” can’t harm tender stom- ach, liver, bowels. [ | A Mxative today saves a sick child tomerrow, Children simply will not take the'time from play ta emply their bow- els, which become clogged up with waste, Liver gets sluggish: stomach sour. Look ut the tongue, mother! If coated, or your thild is listless, cross, feverish, breath bad, restiess, doesn't eat heartily, full of cold or has sore throat or any other children’'s allment, give a tea- spoonful of “Galifornia Syrup of ¥ then don't worry, because it is perfectly harmiess, and i u few hours all this + Gonstipation polsoh, sour bile and fer- menting waste will gently move out of _ the bawels, and you have a well, playful “ohlld again. A thorough “inside cleans- s ofttimes all that is necessary. It . ould be the flrst treatment given in (‘!W sickneas. " Beware of counterfelt fig syrups. Ask | your druggist for a B0-cent bottle of “California Syrup of ¥igs,’ which has * full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed __on the bottle. Look carefully and see that is made by the “California Fig —Advertisement. bring about peace. Pecple down ly are far from being In the policy pursued by the in handiing the Mexican . “Texas people belleve that the ted States should have intervened Ag0, They beliove that it was a the Stars and Stripes were after they were hoisted over ‘soon | accord on the Paso to border s the Rio Grande, wide, from &I Mexico, the RAILROADS MUST CLEAR SNOW FROM THE VIADUCTS The raliroad companies will be required to clear snow from the viaducts or they may have to go to jall. Mayor Dahlman notified the superintendent of police to advise these companies of the law on this subject. The matter was brought to the atten- tion of the city council by T, J. Flynn who had occasion to use the Sixteenth street viaduct. Mr, Fiynan formerly was city clerk and at present is United States His appearance in the city hall, however, was as & private cit- iten, with & heart still beating for the plain people, as he explained. A year ago the city legal department #ve an opinion that the rallroad com- panies must keep the viaducts free of mow, AUTO SHOW TAKES RAP AT “DEADHEAD” FIENDS “Dead-head™ fiends are going to en- counter difficulties in gAIning entrance to the automobile show at the Auditor- fum February 2l to %. this year. The directors of the show assoclation have announced that the custom of distribut. ing complimentary tickets for the open- ing night will be abolished this year and not & single ticket will be lssued except those for which the admittance fee of 2 cents s recelved. In the past several thousand complimentary tickets have been distributed by the dealers for the first nignt, but protests against the sys- tem was made and the directors de- cided to eliminate it this year. —_— After Lagrippe—What? Coughs that “hang on" after lagrippe RE bave a successful treatment for Itupture without resorting to & pain- uncertain surgical operation. the only reputable physicians .will take such cases upon a guar- ve satisfactory results. We more than twenty years to the exclusive treatment of Rup- and we bave perfected the best treatment in existence today. We do ot inject paraffine or wax, as it is xum ‘The advantages of our treatment : No loss of time. No ut-m business. No danger from shock and blood unll.-. nd 2o laying up in & hospl- Wilied By Siide. 3 RBARA. » - B sha Sls adelotant, were sto! Mary Pi mi | Joined my brother. | to be leagued against them fin this fight [ for life and liberty, and though he tried teatimony |that would be, and his teeth clenched in an agony of longing and & rage ainat the futility of that desire to exhaust the strength and lower the vital | ON THE BEE: The Strange Case of By Frederick Lewis, Auth **What Happened to Mary" (Copyright, 1915, by McClure Publications ) SYNOPSIS, actress, is accused of the | rder of David Pollock and is defended »y _her lover, Philip Langdon. Pollock was intoxicated. Shale, a crook and tool of Poliock, was on the fire escape watching for Langdon. At Mary's trial she admits she had the revolver. Her maid testifies that Mary threatened Pol- lock with it previously, and Mary's lead- ing man implicates Langdon. (Continued from Yesterday.) CHAPTER 111 “7Did Mr. Langdon reply?” “No. He just turned round with a shrug and walked away, and I came out and Did he ask if you had overheard? “Yes." ‘DI you tell him of the conversation between Miss Page and Mr. Langdon?’ “Yes. 1 felt that he ought to know. You—you see, he was my brother, even though Mary was my friend.’ ‘Did your brother make any com- ment ™ No, he just flushed up a little; then he Jaughed and sald they'd have to get over it, and he was going to marry Mary anyway." “Did Mr, Langdon ever make any other plea to your brother, or see Miss Page amain?” “Not then, but Mr, Brandon told me—" “Your Homor!" broke in Langdon, leaping to his feet, "I object! The wit- ness is now repeating mere hearmay and is not stating facts of her own knowledge.’ “The court will sustain that objection,” sald the judge, promptly. *Miss Pollock, you must not repeat what you have simply heard from oth only what | you saw and heard yourself.” “May It please the court,” cried the prosecutor, quickly, I shall be glad to have all of the answer of the witness with the exception of the words ‘not then' stricken out, for what Mr. Bran- don said, he will tell the court himself." Brandon! Langdon winced at the nam and Mary, lifth her head, turned a pair of despairing eyes upon him that seemed to ask If all their friends were to smile reassuringly, he could mot en- tirely hide the shock it was to learn that his boyhood chum and life-long friend was a witness for the state! He could object—could fight to have the witness kept out of the stand—but in the end he knew that he would lose and perhaps lend added welght to the He fancied fe knew what spare Mary the raking up of these old memories—memoris that brought a throbbing ache to his own heart that was only balanced by the bitter exulta- tion of the thought that at least Pol- lock was dead now. And he vowed to himselt that Mary should soon be free of the law as well as of David; but he A not face the fleeting thought of the price that might have to be paid for that freedom of Mary Page. She would not look at Brandon when took the stand, though his eyes as he glanced from her to Langdon were full of mute appeal as if he wanted somehow to explain that it was not by cholge that he stood there; and there was an aggressive, almost a hostile note in his volce as he answered the pros- ecutor's first incisive question: Efficiency which is right food. grains—are imperative, are lacking in many foods, the famous pure food— Made of whole wheat Nuts with cream or good but repairs daily the wear Mary Page | prised In Childhoed comes with proper training—a most vital faotor in If a child is to gain physically and expand mentally certain vital mineral elements—grown in the field These elements, such as phosphate of potash, ete., Grape-Nuts nourishment—not only builds up the growing ehild, Grape-Nuts has a delicious nut-like flavour—is specially processed for easy digestion—and is always ready to eat direct from the package. Economical— convenient—and makes for efficiency. “There’s a Reason’ for Grape-Nuts Sold by Groocers everywhere. [ATTA, THURSDAY ! Pictures by Essanay orof :: w 134 Yo 1 Mr. Brandon, you weve present, were vou not, on the night of the dance given to announce the engagement of Miss Page to David Pollock ™" 1 was. “You were well acquainted with both of them?' ‘We all grow up tomether. I was not particularly intimate with Mer. Pollock,” sald Brandon drily Did anything oceur to lead you to be- lleve that Miss Page was not happy in her engagement? ‘Yes." “Will you tell us what that oceurrence was?" “I had a dance with Miss Polloek, but #he hid from me and it was not until ‘ater that 1 found her in the conserva- tory. She was erying and told me that Mary didn’t want to marry David, that her brother and Mr. Langdon Just quarreled about it." “What did you do™" “I went in search of Langdon.” *“Where 4id you find him?* Brandon flushed, and again his eyes turned appealingly towards Langdon as It begging forgiveness as he sald in a low volce “He was in the bar, drinkng with a group of workmen.' “Did you join him?" “Yes. Or, rather, I urged him to join me at one of the tables. I was sur- to mee him take anything to drink, but when I sald so he answered that he was drinking to forget that he had lost a girl who still loved him, though she wae going to marry another man. 1 asked him If he meant Mary Page, and he sald yes.' “Did you remain with him long?" “No. I tried to persuade him to come home with me, and when he wouln't, I left him. In the hall, however, 1 met Miss Page. 1 wanted her to ses Mr. Langdon at that bar. 1 led her to the door. 1 remember how horrifled she seemed, and how she struggled to con- trol herself, I tried to steady her; but suddenly she rushed from me Into the cafe.' The witness paused dramatically, as f he realized the interest this picture of the past was arousing. “What happened then?' tor asked. “I recall that Miss Page went right over to Langdon's table, and several loafers gathered around them. She scemed not to see them at all. Her mind was apparently on Langdon alone. Langdon was just sober enough to realize that Miss Page ought not to be, in such a place. He tried to push her away; but she cried out, ‘Don’t drink any more, Phil!' " “Did Mr. Langdon make any reply?” “Yes, He sald, ‘Why should I stop drinking? What have 1 do live for? | ‘Then she put her arms around his neck, and it was while they sat thus that Dave Pollock came in. There were a lot of Jolly friends with him. It wasn't a mo- ment before he saw Langdon and Miss Page at the table. He looked madder than I've ever seen any man look. Really, I didn't know what would happen. His presence seemed to sober Langdon com- pletely. I rushed forward fearing thero would be a horrible scene, and urged Pollock to go away. He pushed all of us back: ‘I want to get at him!" he kept calling. ‘Just let me get my hands on him!" Langdon was trying to get Miss Page out of the place. He did succeed, ‘while several of us held Pollock back by the prosecu- but abundantly supplied in and malted barley, Grape- milk supplies well-balanced and tear of body and hrain. FEBRUARY ante-room, a-mort of parior next to the prosecutor, o in foree, in getting Mary into a little | room with him, and I slammed the door. l But . Dave, for some reason, was calmer now. ‘What does this mean, Mary? he sald ‘It means,' Miss Page answered, SEE THE MARY PAGE SERIES AT THE EMPRESS itneas. I can’t marry anyone but Mr. Langdon w them, and we couldn't prevent hlin |are you going to do about it?" Second Episode found mysel! drageed into the lttle (Continued Tomorrow.) fo." “Yes, go on, Mr. Brandon,” urged the who seemed pleased with his | that | o § o § i i § o (i i § s § i § e § it § s § et cdihe s (S AR Advance News Next Saturday We Will Place on Sale All the Men’s Fine Shoes ~ Men’s and Boy’s Hats and Caps All the Boy’s Furnishings At Sacrifices That Compel Attention See Friday Evening Papers King-Peck $137,000 Stoc ON SALE NOW! Men’s Suits and Overcoats Men’s High Grade Furnishings . All the Boys’ Clothing n It simply means just so much money saved to take advan- n tage of the bargains offered *hrough our purchase of the King-Peck store. Itis certainly wisdom to stock up now. Buy Everything You Need For Your Home Now RUGS AND R U B E L’ FURNITURE DRAPERIES AND STOVES Going Out of Business Sale Presents an Opportunity that May Never Occur Again High grade furniture, beautiful rugs and draperies, thoroughly dependable steel and cast iron stoves and ranges, baseburners and heaters, all going at less than wholesale prices, Buy your complete outfit or anything you may need now — we will arrange easy terms on any purchase which you wish to make. Rubel Furniture Company, 1513-15 Howard St. Bid goodbye to Old Boreas and fly down to Florida, where Old Sol bosses things. Work’s well enough for folks who can't get away; but its dead wrong to pass up the good fortune that permits yox to go. Low fa_res A day and a half; that’s all the time it takes to toFlorida reach Florida from Kansas City via Frisco Lines | and Cuba trip, Karoas and Southern Railway— the direcz route. The i ansas(1 orida Special feaves Kansas City at 5:55 p. m. and gets to Jacksonville 8:25 a. m. second day. All-stee! sleeping cars and Fred Harvey dining cars ] train of coac ‘Write the undersigned for new Florida literature and full information about fares and reservations. J. C. Lovrien, Division Passenger Agent, Waldheim Building, Kansas City, Mo.

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