Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 31, 1916, Page 2

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THE_BEE: OMAHA, (WEDNESDAY, Hair Tinting All the Rage The Absolute and Utter Harmlessness of “Brownatone” Has Made Hair Tinting Safe and Easy. You need not tolerate gray, streaked or faded hair another day. It takes but a few woments to apply “Brownatone” wit ur and it wil your hair the fbeautiful shade you most B! desire Will not rub or wash off and | guarante [ ntain none of e dangerous ingredienta 0 often found in “dyes” and wo ealled “restor Any shade from Jight gol den brown to hlnek Sample and hooklat sent on recetpt of 10c stores, in zes v direct from The Pike 8., Co d by leading dru and $1.00. Or Pharmaeal Co,, 629 F. Ky., if your druggist will not sup- ngton, ply you. noyance by efusing to accept n o Insist on your hair nteed in Omaha hy Sher stores and other " S0ld and_gua MeConnell Drug Co ending dealers Digestive Troubles cause headache, biliousness, constipation, impure blood and other unpleasant symp- toms. If these troubles are neglected they weaken the body and open the way for seriousillness. Many chronic diseases may be traced back to indigestion that could have been immediately relieved by Beecham’s Pills, This well- known home remedy has proven itself dependable, safe and speedy during sixty years’ use. The fame of having a larger sale than any other med- icine in the world proves the dependable, remedial value of EECHAMS PILLS Logd o il e BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 26¢ at all druggists, Hair Often Ruined By Washing With Soap Boap should be used very earefully, if you want to keep your hair looking its best Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkall, This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins it The best thing for steady use ia just ordinary mulsified coconnut oll (which is and s better than p or anything else pure and greascless) the most expensive » you oan use. One or_two teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair and scalp thoroughly. Simply molsten the hair with water and wub it in. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy Iather, which rinses out easily, removing every par ticle of dust, dirt, oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and i leaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage, dandruff and excessive You can get mulsified cocoanut oil at any pharmacy, it's very cheap, and a few ounces will supply every member of the family for months.—-Advertisement. For Sprains, Lame Muscles brings quick relief. Keep it Athletes Absorbine, Jr., always at hand for instant use. use Absorbine, Jr, for the muscle that has been strained, for the cut or laceration that runs & chance of Infection: for the abrasion that pains and the lmbs that are stiff and |t} lame from Wa aver-exertion v Johnson, the famous piteher of the Washington Americans Absord "y Ine, Jr, 16 & first s lniment and rub fown for tired mus 1 have used it myself to advantage and T Absorbine, Jr., s & conee an heartily vecom rated anti septia liniment—only & few drops required st an applisation. 1t s and plossant to ue 1 » bottle D ¥ i Tems . Mars Consult the Dewey Dealer on your construetion prob Fur concrete use DEWEY CEMENT " Comarate fr Forvaanence. Sold by Dewey Dealors Everywhere lirlhfl Noses Corrected, Sagging sees Lifted, Wrinklos Remeved S LT Aot Woesdewil rsatment, ' Hea e . - .l LAl WoOR BAILEY, W B & 4 Al - Firine - .n - You will save yoursell much an. | substitute, | MAY YET RAISE | RAILROAD VALUES| State Board of Equalization in Quandary Over Final Assess- ment. CHANGE DECISION |LIKELY TO | | | From & Staff Corrsspondent.) Lincoln, May 30.—~(Special.)—In of the vote of the State Board |of Equalization Monday to increase | valuations of main line railroads 314 per cent, amounting to $1,000,000 after a month's deliberation, the board may now reconsider its action It is understood that the board is considering the proposition of State I'reasurer Hall, which it turned down onday, to increase the values uni formly 1 per cent of all the roads, 6,20000 miles of them. The main line mileage is only 2,300, The 3)i per cent raise on main lines would in | crease the assessed value $1,000,000 | according to Auditor Smith, while the 1 per cent plan would amount to 60,000, It is said that farm lands and some other classes of property may be boosted 20 to 30 per cent by the | board Wilson and Morehead Badges. | Five thousand “Wilson and More- | head” badges for use at the St. Louis | convention have been ordered by the | committee in charge of the Nebras- a's special train to the convention Governor Morehead has his own del | egation solidly behind his candidacy, |and his friends look for ‘flvt:l’ihf’a‘ | happenings in case a fight comes up | for the vice presidency, which they | now declare to be certain T, R, MAKES PLEA FOR OLD SPIRIT OF AMERICANISM R Il | ;r (Continued From Page One.) | | met are to give us, first the navy we require, and second the regular |army we require, 1 have elsewhere | given the reasons why we require the | second navy in the world and a small | highly efficient regular army of 250, 1000 men, with a proper reserve. Here | let it suffice to say that such a navy and such an army would be our hest insurance against war and for peace But the navy and the regular army are not enough. Exactly as back of the navy should stand the regular army, so back of the regular army should stand the nation, | speak to, and on behalf of, a nation of free freemen do men. Freemen fit to be not have to hire other men to do | their fighting. 1 speak for universal service based on universal training Universal training and universal | service represent to.only service and | training a democracy :-imuld accept It is the plain people, it is the farm ers, the working men, the small busi ness men, the professional men, who above all others, should back up this plan T'he other day when 1 spoke on universal service in Detroit a woman in the gallery called vut: "I have two sons and they shall both go if the country needs them.” 1 answered her, “"Madam, I take off my hat to you, That is the spirit this country needs and if all the mothers of the country will do as you do and raise their boys so that they shall be able and ready at need to fight for the country, there will never be any need for any of them to fight for the coun- try. No nation will ever attack a uni- fied and prepared America.” KEach His Brother's Keeper. I stand with all my heart for mil- itary preparedness; but no one knows better than than I that military pre paredness alone can neither make nor maintain a great nation, It is merely the essential safeguard for a nation industrially efficient and pros perous, and with a prosperity justly distributed; a safeguard for a na tional life organized in all points for national ends and national ideals I'his national life must be dominated by the two great truths; first, that in a successful democracy, every man must, in reasonable measure, be his “brother's keeper,” and second, that every citizen in such a democracy must accept with his whole heart the principle that his first duty in war or in peace is to serve the nation. Occasionally it is said by some one blind to industrial tendencies that the nation has no right to regulate the activities of the great successful business men. Occasionally it is said by some unworthy would-be labor leader that the workingman owes nothing to the country, because there 18 not enough of such regulation in his interest. Fach statement must be emphatically repudiated by every patriot. If any man, whether work ngman or capitalist believes that he | owes \ing to this country, then e sooner he gets out of the country the better, { he is unfit | to himselt anyone ma entitled ¢ | | pa ith you vetera 0 | | unfit ad ¢ | | | . ase 1t | | a ganina Niea | \ gov \ { be i § fheta Justice Must Be for Al sl & . . " : A A et a N N . e MAY 31 1916. Memorial Day Memories WHATS TH' MATTER GRAN'PA ? B ee—— | and they make it a reasonably good country for every one to live in e o e e ke him, unhelped and unhampered by \rr- ial prwilep Legislation to hrl;n‘ the business man is eminently proper, | What I'thus say does not represent | | | but only on condition that we show |anything new in principle )n the | equal zeal for the working and liv- | contrary, the principles thus set | ing rights, the social and economic | forth have received the lip loyalty | rights, of farmer and wage earner;|of many men before election, who, in short, the rights of all productive | after election, forgot their pre-elec citizens must be safeguarded with |tion promises. What we need in our equal care. A protective tariff with | public men is performance, not prom the duties adjusted outside of fac-|ise; to treat a platform merely as a tional politics is essential in the in- | means of getting office, not as a cov dustrial world of today But the | enant to be kept in office, is demor protective tariff by itself means noth- | alizing both to the public ing but the rudimentary beginning of | the servants of the public the needed policy, or rather, policies, | for the broadest national develop ment of our economic life, along lines designed to real, substantial justice, Our national resources must be conserved but the conservation must be in the public interest, and on this as on all other points the pros- | perity and growth of industry must, | so far as possible, be made to go hand in hand with a reasonable di tribution of its returns | Child Labor Issue Must Be Met In addition to treating our brother man and sister woman as we would wish them to treat us, we must also endeavor, so far as we are able, to secure them just treatment by others. | This is why we must try to abolish | child labor. This is why we must | see that women in industry are pro tected from inhuman treatment of any kind. This is why we must try to secure, not merely for women and children, but for men also, conditions of life and labor, such that the head | of the family will not be ground under foot by excessive toil, nor kept to a wage that will not permit him to bring up his family in the way it should be brought up, that will not permit him to save his wife from prostrating drudgery. It does not mean that we shall try to give to the shiftless the same reward as to the energetic and hard-working. It does not mean that we shall permit the vicious to commit wrong, with im- punity. It does not mean that we shall excuse any wage worker, or any other man, for failure to honor the United States flag and whole heart edly to serve the nation—for the privileges of citizenship should be conditioned on the possession and ex Chamberlain’s Congh Remedy Thers Is no Chamberiain's Cough Remedy, 1t may given to w child ws confidently as to an Tt tn axcollant for coughs wnd ecolds Advertissment. splum or other nareotie in secure be wdul Oblalnable everywhers. ercise of patriotism. But it does mean that for the sake of our children | and children’s children who are to| come after us, we shall strive to bring about conditions in this country such as to free every hard-working and right-thinking man from the sense of injustice and oppression, from the feeling that the laws do not secure him justice, but do give an advantage over against him to unscrupulous cunning and unscrupulous force. In the long run our children's children will find that this is not a gqod coun try for any one to live in unless we | "~ L0SS OF APPETITE Most Successfully Treated by Taking Hooed's Sars 1 f appetite in anied by loss of vitality, which is 1t s common ing hecause at e and dige thin time the | impov erished and falls WA what (s abso The Coming Baby! Hooray! Hooray! Nothing else can so complotely en W 1o the present and the tuiure fear M the fa ‘Chain’ Tread o o One of the Five rn\cnsn-n' l. ™ [ and to | yesterday on the hill lowa Boy Killed By Automobile; Driver Arrested Atlantic, Ta, May 30. William S, Rattenberg, 14 years old and the eldest son of C Ratten- berg, south of Elkhorn, was killed just this side of Elkhorn, when riding a bicycle He was struck by a car, driven by Hans Bonneson of Kimballton and his neck was broken, he dying in- stantly Bonneson has been held under $3,000 bonds, which he furnished, to ,‘{ vear June 7. It is likely that a charge of manslaughter will be brought against him (Special.)— | Indians Sell Land And Buy Motors Wheeler, S. D., May 30.—(Special.) —Many of the Indians who recently rticipated in the ceremonies at Yankton Indian agency attendant upon deeds to government land being | turned over to them by Secretary | Franklin K. Lane in person, now are | busy spending their wealth for auto- | mobiles. The money with which they now are provided was received from the sale of their farms to white pur- ‘fhasfrs after they had received the | ‘v‘kcds from the government. In the last ten days more than fifty of these Indians have purchased automobiles | from dealers between Platte and | Dante. They believe that to be the | owner of a guzz-wa on is far ahead | of being the owner of a farm. As the | government has no control over the | | sale of the lands since deeds were | transferred to the Indians, and as the money belongs to the Indians them- selves, government officials can do nothing toward preventing the red- men from squandering their money for the white man’s “devil wagons. FOUR PERSONS INJURED IN SHELTON COLLISION SHELTON, Neb, May 30.—(Spe- cial Telegram.)—An automobile load of people returning from the cemetery was run into by a Unmon Pacific en- gine here today and four of the six occupants seriously injured. The machine was being driven by Fred Schieck, the owner. With his were his brother and wife, Henry Schieck, and their daughter, Mrs. Jack Oliver, and her two r§n|dr#n. the lat- ter being but slightly injured. It is not yet known how serious the in- juries are Bee Want Ads, get results. THOMPSON-BELDEN &6 CO. we The Fashion Certer Established 1866 of the MiddleWest — ' Purchases Charé;di Wécir:esdayi ' Appear on Your July 1 Statement! The 95¢ Waist Section Basement Balcony || Waists and Middies made of || dainty Summery mati || pleasing styles and || priced very low. erials, The middy illustrated is sketched from one in stock. | are worth while— $2.15, $3.95, $4 Attractive Porch Dresses | Cool materials, new styles, well made. The values | 95, $5.95, $7.50 Basement Experience, the Teacher of Tire Lessons The experience of your last week-end hob- you use— ~—That they are, or they are not, the parti- cular tires suited to your car. Experience taught the United States Tire Company that all tires are not suited to all cars. That is why the United States Tire Company makes five different tires—a tire to meet every need of price and use—the only complete line offered by any tire manufacturer. One of the five is made for your car—will give you the lowest cost per mile. e Ly (NN “Cannon Ball” Baker's transcontinental world’s record car was equipped with United States ‘Balanced’ Tires. Baker says: “No other tires would have stood the test.” Ask the nearest United States Tire Dealer for your copy of the booklet, “Judging Tires,” which tells how to find the pArtkuh: limo suit your needs. United States Tire Company ‘Usco' ‘Royal Cord' *Plain’ “INDIVIDUALIZED TIRES* 1

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