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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1923)
State Organizing * in Child Home Society Drive < bounty Chairmen Preparing to Complete Campaign for New Receiving Home Here. Organization of the state in con ti. riion with the campaign of the Ne braska Children's Home society for a new receiving home, is being rapidly completed. It. B. Kails, superintend ent of the society, said yesterday. Sixteen counties of the state were organized at the time the campaign was carried on in Omaha. The organ ization work is now being carried on in the rest of the counties. The society is seeking ?40,000 to build the receiving home, which w’ill lie located on Fontenells boulevard near Fontenelle park. Following are the county chairmen: Antelope—Jlr». Emma M. How. 11 of Nnllgh, Mrs. Ida D. Swanson of Oakland, asrlrtant. Adams—Mri. W. M. Dutton of Hastings. Brown—Mrs. J. J. Baldwin of Ains worth, Mrs. E. Olsen of Johnstown, Mrs. Merle Milton of Long Tine, Mrs. B. F. i*hrimpton of Ainsworth, assistants. Custer—Miss Elizabeth Brenlzcr of Broken Bow. Cherry—Mrs. Will S. Jackson of Valen tine. Cuming—Miss Emma Miller of West Point. Mrs. Guy Mailer of Beerncr, as sistant. Dawes—Mn. J. E. Humphreys of Chad lon. Dodge—Mrs. Henry W* liner of Fremont. Franklin—Mrs. It. 13. Campbell of Franklin. Furnas—Mr*. Wade Stevens of Beaver <’ity. - Gage—Miss Hatti** M. Summers of Ben trie. . Mrs. John Lam,' of Wymorc. Mrs. William Thompson of Beatrice. Mrs. Robert If Steinmeyer of HolmcsvlUc, Mrs. John Todd W.iggener of Adams. Mrs. A. I.. Beeson of Beatrice. Mrs. E. P. Bachle of Liberty. Mrs. Erastua Starlin of Filley, Mrs. George B«-l 1 of Rockford, Mrs. B. M. Deardorf of da ton la. Mrs. C. P. Horn of Plekrell. Mrs. Charles A. Gardner of Cort land, assistants. Grant—Mrs. J W Mann of Hyannls. Harlan—M^r*. T. L. Porter and Mrs. P. M. Everson of Alma. Hooker—Mrs. K. c. Pickett of Mullen. Holt—Mrs. F. J. Dishn°r of O'Neill. Johnson—Mrs. K .T. Fiala of Tecumseh. Kearney—Mrs. J. S Canady of .Mlnden. , K* yapaha—Mrs. Dcltrick of Spring view. Madison—Mrs. M. D. Baker of Norfolk. Vnnr—Mrs. Wolfgang Schmidt of Full erton. Mrs. 13. J Ainley of Belgrade, Mri. tv I». Do vis of Genoa, assistant. N* rnnha—Mrs. A. L. Allen of Auburn. Pii me—Miss Clare Atkinson of Pawnee City, Mrs. c. K. Brittain of Burchard, Mb-. Je'tn Bechtel of Pawnee City, Mrs. Andrew £?cott of Pawnee City. Miss Lelt \fhtshall of Pawnee City, Mrs. Will Barr and Mrs. J\ E. Crosier of Pawnee City, assistants. Pholps—Mrs. Del I. Davis of Holdrege.* Rock—Mrs. Evelyn X. Towle of Bassett. Richardson—Mias Miranda Myers of Falls City. S;i line——Mrs. Jessie Bond of Friend. •Sarpy—Mrs. J A. Frye of PapilUon and .Mr* John A. Elwell of Springfield. Stanton—Miss Ethel Chaco of Stanton. Sheridan—Mrs. W. C. Bates of Ru»h vlile. Thomas—Mrs. IT. P. Wolf-" of Seneca, Mrs. L. Bealey of Halsey. Mrs. O. C. Cardin of Thedford, assistants. y Webster—Mr*. L. H. Nash of Cowles, Mrs. E. L. Grime* pf Red Cloud, as sistant*. York—Mrs. W. A. Learning of Brad shaw. ^ Finest Thing ! Failure ef the kldneye te promptly and thoroughly act. brings on a train of His, and continue'1 neglect, results frequently In Brights Disease, Ure mic Poisoning, and Chronic Rheuma tism; also a very serious nerve dis order often follows. Backache, headache, restlessness, flrv skin, hot flashes, end chills, should cause you to suspect the kid ney action. Look for these symp toms- amount of urine. Insufficient or too copious; Irregular flow, with frequent desire, especially at night, followed sometimes by pain, burning, o- smarting; pressure and pain in j Madder region- pain in groins and back; swelling of feet and ankles; alto a scanty flow of urine, accom panied by slight fever, chills, head ache and rheumatism twinges. Begin right away to use Balmwort tablets and the quick relief will n.-naze you. for they are true kidney medicine Mrs. Frank Moneban. 1513 Penrosa Sh, St Louis. Mo., writes: "I an taking Balmwort Kidney Tablet* and must say they are the finest thing on the market—and I feel I could not live if I had to be without them." Go now to your druggist, and get this good medicine, Balmwort Tab lets. Two sizes, «0c and 11.25. Free Medical Book and Sample Medicine* to anyone sending 10 cents ;n stamps to the Blackburn Products Jo, Dept. B. Dayton, Ohio. k CHILDREN-those I bangs and bumps and little aches and SA pains (and the headaches and sore throats! that make the children feelsocross - -- and rest* ir^iLy lew -all dis appear with \ Ben-Gay. J \ \ Ask mother to 7 ( rubitontheplace ! \that hurts—she knows how it soothes ; 'v andcomtortsanddrivea y "3^ away the pain. If »he Ben-Gay at any •tore »he will get ft i hoa.Lccmlagfti.Ca. ONE OF OURS By WILL.* i miER. (Continued from YeM(prdfl)) SYNOPSIS. Claude W heeler, living on a Nebraska ranch with his parents and a younger brother. Ralph, return* for the holiday* from Temple college, small denominational school at Lincoln which he ha* been at tending unwillingly. Two thing* have happened during the fall term of his third year, however, to cheer him. One of the«e 1* hi* enrollment In a special Eu ropean history class uniter a professor in the State university. The other Is his chance aeiiuniiitanei* with Julius Krlit-li. unlverelty eleren quuMerhnck, and hi* mother, who makes the shy boy feel at home on his numerous visits to the Erlich residence. While on Ids Christmas vaca tion, Claude goes wnlkinrr with Ernest Haver, friend of high school days. When they left the spot ami climbed back to the level, Claude again felt an Itching to prod Ernest out of his mild and reasonable mood. "What are you going to do after a while, Ernest? Do you mean to farm all your life?" ■'Naturally. If T were going to learn a trade, I'd be at it before now. What makes you ask that?" "Oh, I don't know! I suppose people must think about the future some time. And you're so practical." "The future, ell?" Ernest shut one eye and smiled. "That's a big word. After 1 get a place of my iwn and have a good start, I'm going home to see my old folks some winter. Maybe I'll marry a nice girl and bring her back." “Is that all?” "That’s enough, if it turns out right, isn’t it?” "Perhaps. It wouldn’t he for me. I don’t believe I can ever settle down to anything. Don't you feel that at this rate there isn't much in it?” “In what?” \ “In living at all. going on as we do. What do we get out of it’.’ Take a day like this: you waken up in the morning and you're glad to be alive; it’s a good enough day for anything, and you feel sure something will hap pen. Well, whether it’s a workday or a holiday, it's all the same in the end. At night you go to bed—nothing has happened.” “But what do you expect? What can happen to you, except in your own mind? If I get through my work, and get an afternoon off to see my friends like^this, it’s enough for me.” “Is it? Well, if we've only got once to live, it seems like there ought to he something—well, something splendid about life, sometimes.” Ernest was sympathetic now. He drew nearer to Claude as they walked along and looked at him sidewise with concern. "You Americans are al ways looking for something outside yourselves to warm you up, and it is no way to do. In old countries, where not very much can happen to us, we know that—and we learn to make the most of little things.” "The martyrs must have found something outside themselves. Other wise they could have made them selves comfortable with little things. ' “Why, I should say they were the ones who had nothing hut their idea! It would he ridiculous to get burned nt the stake for the sensation. Some times I think the martyrs had a good deal of vanity to help them along, I too." Claude thought Ernest had never ! been so tiresome. He squinted at a bright object across the fields and said cuttingly, "The fuct is, Ernest, you think a man ought to be satisfied with his board and clothes and Sun days off, don't you?" Ernest laughed rather mournful! "It doesn't matter much what I think about it; things arc as they are. Noth ing is going to reach down from the sky and pick a man up, I guess.” Claude muttered something to him self, twisting his chin about over his I collar as if he had a bridle-bit in Ids mou^fi. Tlie sun had dropped low, and the two hoys, as Mrs. Wheeler watched them from the kitchen window, seem ed to bo walking beside a prairie lire. Min smiled as she saw their black fig ures moving along on the crest of the hill against the golden sk\; even at that distance the one looked so adapt able, and the other so unyielding They were arguing, probably and probably Claude was on the wrong side. . CHAPTER IX. After the vacation Claude again set tled down to his reading in the uni versity library. He worked at a ta ble next the, alcove where the books on paintnig and sculpture were kept. The art students, all of whom were aiils, read and whispered together in this enclosure, and he could enjoy their company without having to tali; io them. They were lively and friend ly; l hey often asked him to lift heavy nooks and portfolios from the shelves, and greeted him gaily when lie met them in the street or on the campus, and talked to him with the easy I cordiality- usual between boys and girls in a coeducational school. One of these girls, Miss Peachy Millmore, was different from the others—dif ferent from any girl Claude had ever knfnvn. She came from Georgia, and was spending the winter with her; aunt on B street. Although she was short and plump. Miss Millmore moved with what | might be called a "carriage," and she i had altogether more manner and morel reserve than the western girls. Her! hair was yellow and curly—the short1 ringlets about her ears were just the; color of a new chicken. Her vivid blue eyes were a tritle too prominent, and; a generous blush of color mantled her cheeks. It seemed to pulsate there—1 one had a desire to touch her cheeks to see if they were hot. The Erlich : brothers and their friends called her "the Georgia peach." She was con sidered very pretty', nnd the univer sity boys had rushed her when she first came to town. Since then her vogue had somewhat declined. Miss Miihnore often lingered about the campus to walk down town with Claude. However he tried to adapt his long stride to her tripping gait, she was sure to get out of breath. She was always dropping her gloves or her sketchbook or her purse, and he liked to pick them up for her, and to pull on her rubbers, which kept slipping off at the heel. She was very ! kind to single him out and be so gracious W him, he thought. She even coaxed him to pose in his track clothes for the life class on Satur day morning, telling him that he had "a magnificent physique," a compli ment which eove>—m him with eon fusion- But he posed, of course. Claude looked forward to seeing i Peachy Millmore. missed her if she ! were not in the alcove, found it quite j natural that she should explain Iter ab sences to him—tell hint how often she i washed her hair and how long it was when she uncoiled it. One Friday in February Julius Er lich overtook Claude on the campus and proposed that they should try the skating tomorrow. "Yes. I’m going out,” Claude re plied. “I’ve promised to teach Miss Millmore to skate. Won’t you come along and help me?” Julius laughed indulgently, ”(3h. no! j Some other time. I don't want to J break in on that.” “Nonsense! You could teach her better than I.” "Oh, I haven't the courage!” "What do you mean?” “You know what I mean.” “No, I don't. Why do you always laugh about that girl, anyhow?” Julius made a little grimace, “fine wrote some awfully slushy letters to ADVERTISEMENT. Chronic coughs and persistent co:ds lead to serious lung trouble. You tan stop them now with Creomulslon. an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulslon is a new medi cal discovery with twofold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed mem branes and kills the germ. Of all known drugs, creosota la recognized by the medical fraternity as the greatest healing agency for the treatment of chronic coughs and colSB and other forms of throat and lung troubles. Creomulslon contains, I in addition to creosote, other healing i elements which soothe and heal the inflamed • membranre and stop the [ irritatipn and inflammation, while the i creosote goes on to tho stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and destroys the germs that lead to consumption. Creomulslon is guaranteed satis factory In the treatment of chronic coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, catarrhal bronchitis and other forms of throat'and lung diseases, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or the flu. Money re funded if any cough or cold, no mat ter of how long standing, is not re lieved after taking according to dlree- : tions. Ask your druggist. Crso- | mulsion Co., Atlanta, Ga. Phil Bowen, and he lead them aloud at the frat house one night.1' “Didn't you slap him?" Claude de manded. turning red. “Well, I would have thought I would,” said Julius smiling, "but I didn't. 'They were too silly to make a fuss about. I've been wary of the Georgia peach ever since. If you touched that sort of peach ever so lightly, it might remain in your hand.” “I don’t think so," replied Claude hnughtly. "She's only kind-hearted." "Perhaps you’re right. But I’m ter ribly afraid of girls who are too kind hearted,’1 Julius confessed. He had wanted to drop Claude a word of warning for some time. Claude kept his engagement with Miss Millmore. He took her out to the skatlnll pond several times, In deed. though in the beginning he told her he feared her ankles were too weak. Their last excursion was made by moonlight, and after that evenisg Claude avoided Miss Millmore when he could do so without being rude. She was attractive to him no more. It was her way to subue by clinging contact. One could scarcely call it design: it was a degree less subtle than that. She had already thus sub dued a pale cousin in Atlanta, and it was on this account that she had been sent north. She had, Claude Sound Kidneys Save Suffering The hustle and bustle of modern life often cause weak kidneys. Overwork and worry invariably create poison fast er than the weakened kidneys can filter it from the blood. Pains in the back, nervous ness, and lack of ambition are some of the warnings that the kidneys may not be function ing properly. Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy should be used for beneficial action. For 60 years this de pendable remedy has proved its value in helping nature to restore these organs to a nor mal condition. Warner’s Safe Renediei Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy ] Warner's Safa Diabetes Remedy Warner’s Safe Rheumatic Remedy Warner's Safe Asthma Remedy Warner's Safe Nervine Warner’s Safe Pills (Constipation , and Biliousness) j The Reliable Family Medicines Sold by Sherman A McConnell and all leading druggists. Sample sent on receipt of ten cents. WARNER’S SAFE REMEDIES CO. Dept 491 Rochester, N. Y. WHEN IN NEED OF HELP, TRY OMAHA BEE WANT ADS. NAIRN Straight Line Inlaid linoleum What it is A solid, yet flexible flooring. Made of linoleum tiles pressc4 together and on to.a tough burlap backing under tremendous pressure. The Straight Line patterns arc as clean cut and regular as the finest tile floor. And this linoleum floor is sanitary, easy to clean, resilient, and durable. The patterns cannot wear oft—the colors go through to the burlap batk. Your dealer knows Naim. Ask hifn to show you this economical floor ing today. I NAIRN LINOLEUM COMPANY .... Kearny, New Jersey Largest Manufacturers of Inlaid Linoleum in America W. SC J. SLOANE, Wholesale: Sole Selling argents 575 Fifth Avc., New York 2)6*228 Sutter St., San Francisco The edge shows you the tile designs are Built-in, not printed. The colors m< through to the Burlap Back. angrily admitted, no reserve—thougn when one tlrst met her she seemed to have bo much. Her eager stisropti bility presented not the slightest temptation to him. He van a buy with strong impulses, and lie detested the idea of trifling with them. The talk of the disreputable men his f ther kept about- the place at home, instead of corrupting him, hail given him a sharp disgust for sensuality. He had an almost lllppolytean pri !-■ in candor. (To Be Continu'-ri Tomorrow.) Shoe Company Bankrupt. The Tornskar Shoe company, 01 ated by Albar Tornskar and K.itii ryn OramHch, 3117 Calhoun street, filed a petition In bankruptcy In federal court yi'-icic i. rating Labi! Kies as $3,041 and assets us $50. An all porcelain /handle has lx :eu produced fur safely removing fuses from high-ten ion • -1 <, ■ t»i ■ d circuits. \Ir~. Paiilollc Saludes Miiit Spend _M) ^ ears in Pei. New York, March 14—Mrs). Paul ette Saludes, convicted of second d reo murder for the killing of Osi 1 Martclllere, tvas today sentenced .0 from 20 years to life imprisonmei. . ^ Lowe Brothers 8 Paints ~ Varnishes SOLD IN OMAHA BY C O. Hurd, Brn.cn North S.de Hardware Co., Williams-*! ouni? Hardware Co„ ...» . 0a.. 220 South 24th St. 4,12 r,orth ,24th St Meyer Hardware Co., ^‘rnon* S2P15 Leavenworth St. 8302 South 30th St. Sthocning Hardware to.. Kl 706 West Brc.idw.iy, Council Bluffs, la. |^| j Every Gallon of This Paint Is Equal To Five Quarts 1,0 you believe you can get five ! quarts out o& a four-quart can? Is it not true that some tvt nine miles out of a gallon of while others get fifteen? I. - no. th<• number of gallons of g.t put into the t;u n that i .tints, it'-' the number of miles that >■ .me out of it. It’s exactly the same with paint. ]f Lowe Brothers paint will go 25% far her than most paint, isn’t it ex actly the same as if you had five r:~ in every one of your gallons? There is not room here to tell yon why thi- paint goes so far, but we have a little booklet called “Figure your painting costs with a brush, not a pencil,’’ which goes mto the matter further. Write for it. SEND FOR THIS BOOKLET / ' ailed ‘'The Diary of the House in the Woods,” by Katherine and Edward McDowell, who, themselves, designed and built the house, then Melio-Toned and MelK-Glossed the wall' Xejitunited the floors and woodwork, and did variou« other things, odd and interesting, to make their home cozy and attractive. Send 10 rents for it direct to our Davton. Ohio, Office. 1 he Lowe Brothers Company 109-J1 South Tenth St. OMAHA For a Generation American house wives are using Calumet Baking Powder today with the same success that their mothers experi enced over a third of a century ago. This perpetual growth ot favor best by test has made Uo Economy BAKING POWDER —sales over 150r, greater than that of any other b*-and. There isn’t a baking powder of great er merit—there isn’t a leavener ob tainable that will produce more satis factory or positive results. That^ why the largest lxiking powder factories in theworldarcalwaysbusytumingoutenough Calumet to supply the great demand. A pound can of Calumet contains full 16 ounces. Some baking powders come in 12 ounce insteaJ of 1C ounce carts, oc sore you get a pound when you uu:n£ it, THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER