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e o o SRR | | DRINK HOT WATER | IF YOU DESIRE A | ROSY COMPLEXION Says we can't help but look better and feel better * after an Inside bath. To look one’s best and feel one's best is to enjoy an inside bath each morning to flush from the system the previous day's waste, sour fermenta- tions and poisonous toxins before it is absorbed into the blood. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind a certain amount of incombustible ma- terial in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in the alimentary organs a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not climinated, form toxins and poisons which are then sucked into_the blood through the very ducts which are in- tended to suck in only nourishment to sustain the body. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see vour skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon arising, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means of ¢ washing the waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary tract, before putting more food”into the stomach. Men and women with sallow skins, liver “spots, pimpdes or pallid com- plexion, also those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others -who are bothered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stom- ach or constipation should begin this phosphated hot water drinking and are assured of VYery pronounced re- sults in one or two weeks, A quarter pound of limestone phos- phate costs very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin'gn tlfe outside, so hot water and limestone phosphate~act on the in- side organs. We must always consider that internal sanitation is vastly more important than outside cleanliness, “because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the , while the bowel pores do.- enjoy myself again since ResmnolSoap cleared my skin ‘When my complexion was red, rough and pimply, 1 was so ashamed tha 1 never had any fun. I imagined that people avoided me—perhaps they did/ But the regular use of Resinol Soap— with a little Resinol Ointment just at first—has given me back my clear, healthy skin. 1 wisk you'd try it! Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointmentarc sold byall drug- gists, For eamples of each, free, write to Dept. &N, Res- inol, Baltimore, Md, THAT JAR OF MUSTEROLE 0N THE BATH-ROON SHELF Has Relieved Pain for Every One in the Family When little Susie had the cmu%; when Johnny got his feet wet and caught cold; when father sprained his ; when granny’s rheumatism bothered her— That jar of Musterole was right there to give refief and comfort. Musterole is a_cleart, ‘white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It will not blister like a mustard plaster. P Quick relief for sore throat, bronchitis, tonsilitis, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheuma- tism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds on the chest (it often prevents pqeumoma). Try Musterole for croupy children. l TODAY'S AID TO BEAUTY An especially fine shampoo for this weather, one that dissolves and en- tirely removes all dandruff, excess oil and dirt, can easily be made at tri- fling expense by simply dissolving a teaspoonful of canthrox in a cup of hot water. Pour slowly on scalp and massage briskly. This creates a sooth- ing, cooling 'lather. Rinsing leaves the scalp spotlessly clean, soft and pliant, while the hair takes on the glossy richness of natural color, also a fluffiness which makes it seem much heavier than it is. After a canthrox shampoo arranging the hair is a pleasurec.—Advertisement " ASTHMA SUFFERER Write today, I will tell you, free of charge, uf a simple home treatment for asthma, which d me after physicians and change of climate failed. 1 am so grateful for my present good health, after years of suffer- ing, that I want cveryone to know of this wonderful treatment. Mrs. Nellie Evans, E-6, Des Moines, lowa. i OMAHA SUPPORTS [TS INSTITUTIONS Citizenship Responds Freely to Calls for, Those Deserving of Public Help. WISE MAN CHEERFUL GIVER By A. R. GROH. Is it not a splendid sight, fellow citizens, to see the people of Omaha giving so liberally of their abundance at the call of worthy objects? The Young Woman's Chrsitian as- sociation is raising $20,000, the Holse of Hope $50,000, the Boy Scouts, $15,- 000. Soon Brownell Hall will ask for $250,000, and there are other cam- paigns coming. What does Mr. Omaha do—and Mrs. Omaha, too—when the can- vassers call with subscription blanks? Do they assume a sour, tight-waddish expression? Do they complain about hard times and slow collections and the many demands for their money? They do not. They generally as- sume a smiling and cheerful and glad expression. 1hey say, “W yes, sure, I'd be glad to heip. 1t's a good cause.”™ And they open their check books, take their pens4n hand, write certain figures and sign their names. No surgical operation is required to separate them from their cash for a good cause. From an Eye Witness. This is not merely a fanciful pic- ture. I have it directly from those who are doing the collecting. “There’s Mr. Blank,” said one. “I went in and asked him for $25, He insisted on giving nc $40.” Sometimes people who haven't been called upon “get nervous” and call up the money-raising headquarters to find out why they have been slighted. Giving to worthy objects is an op- portunity, not merely a duty. It pays the biggest dividends, dividends in satisfaction, in pride, in that comfort- able feeling of being a power toward good in the community. He who gives to a worthy object makes the only investment in the world that cannot be lost. Said the old philosopher: “What I kept, I lost; What I spent, 1 had: What I gave, I have.” Store Up for the Futurc. Think that over. What a/ man keeps he may lose in a bad invest- ment. What he spends he no longer has. But what he gives he always has in the satisfaction of having added to the world’s store of good and hap- piness. Moth and rust cannot cor- rupt that; nor cap thieves break through and steal it. “He that soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly; and he soweth bountifully shall rca; bountifully,” said Paul. And 1) “He hath dispersed ahroaJ; he hath given to the poor; his righteousness remaineth forever.” The literature of the world is full of proverbs and maxims, showing that the man who gives liberally is always the wise man. He gains not only the approval of himgelf and his fellowmen, but he actually gains in material wealth while the selfish and miserly reap only contempt. It is also a .“good sight for sore cyes” to see the hundreds of busy men and women in Omaha who are giving their valpable time to raising money for these worthy objects. They are busy people and are neglecting their|own businesses for the sake of working in charity and philanthropy, getting _nothing in return ‘except the consciousness of good deeds done. Which, after all, is the best kind of pay. / Several Paintings - And Bronzes from Exhibit May Stay Several more purchases of paintings and bronzes now being shown at the Fontenelle by the Fine Arts society will'probably be made before the ex- hibit closes Tuesday evening. A Dougherty painting and a Frieseke “On the River” are being considered by an Omaha art lover and the Gut- zon Borglum scated figure of Lincoln, dmired by all who havel seen it, will perhaps remain in Omaha. The pros- pcctive\{lurchasers will make their de- cisions ‘known today. C. N. Dietz bought two Solon Borgium bronzes last week. Miss Gertrude Young gave a studio talk at 3:30 o'clock today. Hundreds thronged the art gallery Sunday. . Man Who Steals a Clock Has Pocket Full of Hard Cash Joe Uhl, alias John Meirs, of St. Joseph, maneuvered about the Bur- gess-Nash store for more than an hour Saturday in an attempt to get away with some merchandise. He w?und:r the watchful eye of Special Officer Tagal, however, and when he stuck an alarm clock under his coat Officer Tagal snared him. When scarched at headquarters he had $200 on his person. Judge ‘Foster fined him $25 and costs. Wyoming Division of the Union Pacific Reorganized President Calvin of the Union Pa- cific is back from a western trip that had to do with the reorganization of the official and working force of the Wyoming division of the railroad sys- tem. He is not commenting on what =| was done or what is to happen in the future. It is reported that, the Wyoming division having been reorganized, at- tention will next be turned to the Nebraska and Kansas divisions of the road. What changes, if any, will be made on these divisions is not an- nounced. On_the Wyoring division Bell of the Ogden Railway Terminals com- pany was appointed superintendent at Cheyenne, vice Sam Toucey, trans- ferred to other duties. Overcomes Constipation, Indigestion. Dr. King's New Life Pllls will overcome your constipation, biliousness and Indiges- tion. Take a dose tonight. Onfy 26c. All druggists.—Advertisement. by bears. THE BEE: GRAINS TAKE BIG SLUMP IN PRICES PR i Cash Wheat Declines Seven Cents, While Options Drop Further Down. The high cost of living got bumped good and plenty Monday when cash wheat on, the Omaha market sold off 4.to 7 cents; corn, 3, and oats 114@1} cents per bushel. While the cash market hard, the blow aimed at it did not land as hard as the one received by the options. The December option on wheat went off 5. May, .4, July 103§ cents per bushel from the| high price of last Saturday, when July | sold at $1.595¢, with May, $1.80, and December, $1.75, The Omaha” market was in line with that of Chicago, where the de ines were correspondingly great The sensational drop was attributed to three reasons: Falling. off in the export demand, the investigations that are being conducted in numerous cities to ascertain the cause for the high cost of food products, and the continued talk of an embargu on grain | going to Europe. | Omaha Dealers Not -iurt.- It is asserted that Omaha grain| dealers were not hil?' ard by the de- cline that started in at the opening of | the market and continued well on to the close, when a little reaction occurred. Generally, during the last week or ten days, anticipating a break in prices, they had hedged by selling against” most of their pur- chases, thus enabling them as a rule to break even, or thereabouts. Wheat receipts were heavy, there being 224 carloads on the market, Everybody was afraid to buy and no one was anvious to sell, so most of the stuff was carricd over. Where sales were made, th price ranged from §$1.66 to §1./. per bushel, the price depending largely upon the grade, While corn slumped in sympathy with wheat the decline was not so great. However, there was not much business dowe in corn. The reteipts were HS carloads and the prices ruled at 8787 cents per bushel. Qats were a little more steady and were more sought than the other i grains, The receipts were fifty-five carloads, selling at 52)@53%, cents per bushel. Partial Rallics Follow Big Drop. Chicago, Nov. 27.—Wheat prices came down today with a crash, break- ing. in some cases as much as 934 cents a bushel. Big sales by some of the leading houses started a general movement “to unload holdings and gave an opening for aggressive selling was hit | | and Talk of the likelihood of an armis- tice in Europe had considerable to do with weakening the market and so also had warnings of the presence of a fighting submarinc in the Atlantic. Continued reference to a possible em- bargo by the United States was like- wise a factor, July wheat, in which the greatest decline took ce, fell to $1.45, as compared with $1.5415 to $1.5434 at the finish on Saturday. In later dealings, the market scored rallies. The greatest recovery was in the last hour and was due to an un- expected falling off shown in the United States visible supply. Prices, however, closed weak at net losses of 3'4 cents to 4% cents a bushel, with December at $1.73% to $1.7354, May ;1“5‘8 to $1.80%4 and July, $1.497% to Q \ Woman Sues Saloon Men for Selling Liquor to Husband \ One hundred and fifty théusand dollars is the amount Mrs. Cora Kins- ley is asking of the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance company and the Illinois Surety company, bonds- men for P. J. Martin, Ralph R. Car- ley, William Stokes, 1. S, Jones, The- odore L. Keil, James W. Lowry and P. Boyce, South Side saloonmen. She claims that the above-mentioned men sold her husband intoxicating liquors and as a result he has become a habit- ual drunkard, causing him to lose his property, health and capacity to carn money and also depriving her and her two children of her hus- band’s support. In her petition she claims that her husband, Frank Kins- ley, carned $250 per week before be- coming a liquor addict. The case is before Judge Wood- rough in the United States district court, Farmers Use Parcel Post to Help Feed The City Dwellers A number of Omahans are trying to beat the high cost of living by ordering food commodities direct from the farmer by means of the par- cel post system. Since the great in- crease in the cost of living the parcel post has been nearly congested with eggs, butter and dressed poultry. The parcel post shipments of poultry in the city are very heavy, according to Postmaster C. E. Fanning, due t6 the approach of Thanksgiving. Stylish Crooks Steal Provisions Comfortably seated in a stylish touring car, thieves drove up Monday morning at 5 o'clock to H. Wohler’s grocery store, 5144 North Sixteenth street, smashed their way through the door, and loaded into the car three cases of eggs, six sacks of sugar, fourteen sacks of flour, thirty pounds of butterine, five hams, twelve sides of bacon, fifteen pounds of coffee, thirty pounds of ~cheese, thirty dozen of men'’s socks and four boxes of cigars. Having accomplished their morn- ing's work the robbers sat back in the powerful machine and ordered the driver to-“let 'er go.” The auto gath- ered speed just as R. H. O’Donnell, 5306 North Sixteenth strect, caught a glimpse of its happy occupants. Blanket Sale—Scott’s, 15th and Howard. Follow the footsteps.—Ady. [ OMAHA, TUESDAY, N g NOVEMBER 28, 1916. & ADMIRA], LITTLE CIGARS WITH i e MILLION DOLLAR WRAPPE 1. 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