THk'bEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1917. The Health Habit (By Dr. L. C. Bowers.) The late Elbert Hubbard once said: "Most people go through life on a short allowance of good air and oxy ' gen and too much food. Life is com bustion. The digestive tract is the boiler. The value of exercise in the open air lies in the fact of getting a goodly draft of oxygen through your system, and this forced draft is both eliminating refuse and" burning up slag." Breathe deeply when in the open air. Sleep in a room with windows open wide. Drink six or eight glasses of pure water daily, and keep well. But if one has been shut up within doors during the cold winter months, has eaten and drunk things which he should, not; if he or she has over worked in stale air, that person needs a general tonic and housecleaning. Especially is this so at this time of tle year. For a tonic that will freshen up the blood, clean the digestive tra-t and put new force and vim into you," I know of nothing better than an al terative extract with glycerine, made from Golden Seal root, Oregon Grape root, Blood root, Stone root and Queen's root and it contains no al cohol or narcotic, so is perfectly safe to take. This tonic has been sold for nearly fifty years in the form of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It can be had now in tablet as well as liquid form at most drug stores. When your kidneys feel like lumps ot lead, when your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night, when you suffer with sick headache, or diz zy, nervous spells, acid stomach. you have rheumatism when the weather is bad, ask your druggist for Anuric, double strength. 1 have found in practice that Anuric is more potent than lithia, and in most cases it will dissolve the uric acid as hot water does sugar. Advertisement. Nebraska UNIVERSITY HEADS STAGE WAR MEETING Spirit of Patriotism Is pected to Run High Next Tuesday Afternoon. GOVERNOR IS TO TALK Quit Meat When Kidneys Bother Take a glass of Salts before breakfast if your Back hurts or Bladder is troubling yotl. No man or woman who eats meat reguiuly can. make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheupia tism, headaches, liver trouble, ner vousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish Kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache'in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or at tended By a sensation ot scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces ot lad Salts from any nhar macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act finei This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used tor gen erations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irrita tion, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot Injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications. Adv. Alkali Makes Soap Bad For Washing Hair Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is just plain mulsificd cocoanut oil, for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and beats the most expensive soaps or anything else ill to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces-will last the whole family for months. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy latfier, cleanses thoroughly and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to han dle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. Advertisement. DEAD ON HIS FEET GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Caps&lM will bring new life and quickly relieve that stopped-up congested feeling. . They will thoroughly cleanse and gently carry off the 111 effects of excesses of all kinds. The heal ing, soothing oil soaks right Into the walls and lining of the kidneys and expels the poisons In your system. Keep your kidneys in good shape by dally use of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem OH Capsules and you will have good health. Go to your druggist at once and secure, a package of this time-honored, world-wide remedy. It la not a "patent medicine." It la pawed upon by U. S. Gov ernment chemists and declared pure before coming Into this country. GOLD MEDAL is the pure, original Haarlem Oil, Imported direct from the ancient laboratories In Hol--land, where It la the National Household Remedy of the sturdy Dutch. Look for the name GOLD MEDAL on every box. Accept no substitute. Tour druggist will gladly re fund, your money If not as represented. Adv. Disfiguring Growths of , Hair Entirely Removed Nv Method Removes Roots and All) If you' are afflicted with a growth of superfluous hair, go to your druggist at once, get a stick of phelactine, follow the simple Instructions and have the pleas ant eat surprise of your life! With your own eyes you will see 'he hair come out, roots and all instantly, easily, leaving your skin smooth and hairless as a babe's. Phr-lar-tlne la not to be compared with the usual depila tory or electrical methods. It In new and different It 1 odorless, non-Irritating, and so harmless a ehij,d could safely eat It Bo efflca61ous It Is always sold under a money-back guaran tee. A d vert lae men t Do You Know that the PARISIAN CLOAK CO. will soon close its doors and say good-by to Omaha? We are making every ef fort to explain just why we are hold ing this immense sale. Our building will soon be torn down and we must get out. Every one of the spring coats, suits and dresses is being thrown out at a sacrifice. The .Wreckers are Coming. Eighth Lincoln, Xeb., April 18. (Special ) The university authorities are plan ning for a big war tienionstration here next Tuesday afternoon at the city auditorium, when recruiting spirit expected to run high. There will be a parade through the business sec tion. headed by the university cadets' band, Chancellor Avery, the board of regents, members of the faculty and prominent alumni and the cadets in uniform Ihen will follow the sec ond cadet regiment band, the women students, arranged by class, and the men students. Governor Seville will be one of the speakers. The chancellor will pro!) ably speak and also a member of the ooard of regents and a representa tive of the student body. The meet ing is intended as a rebuke for those members of the faculty who have shown an inclination to criticize. Lincoln Street Car Men Threaten Strike at Midnight Lincoln, Neb., April 18. Street car men will strike at midnight tonight, unless the Lincoln Traction company agrees to recognize the union. The action was decided at a meeting of the newly organized union last Tuesday evening. There are over 100 motormen and conductors in the union. The traction company, prior to the present ultimatum, has declared it will stand pat against the demanded rec ognition. For three weeks the company has been breaking in new men in antici pation of the strike, which has been threatening ever since a move was started to form the union. The company says that every effort will be made to run the full quota of cars on the main lines. Traction company officials look for fifty or more of the men not in the union to walk out in sympathy. The union demand calls for reinstatement of union leaders, said to have been discharged by the company; an in crease in wages, which the company has agreed to make in case it wins its 5-cent fare fight; and an agreement to arbitrate disputes. of Million Strike in Berlin; All Back at Work Copenhagen, April 17. (Via Lon don, April 18.) The number of strikers in Berlin is placed in even the semi-official report at 125,000 and is distributed, according to the Taee- blatt, through machine works, some electrical establishments and Dart of the munition plants. The latter state ment is interesting m view of a dis patch from the official news bureau, denying that the munition factories were affected. The Tageblatt savs. however, that the great munition in dustry at Spandau has not been in volved. London, April 18. A Reuter dis patch from Amsterdam says it is re ported there from Berlin that the last ot the strikers have resumed work. A Berlin dispatch to the Politiken of Copenhagen, as forwarded to the Exchange Telegraph company, savs that work has been resumed in most of the Berlin factories. ' The Vossische Zeitung of Berlin says that as conditions of returing to work the strikers demanded a suffi cient supply of bread and potatoes, proper distribution of food and a guarantee of the promised Prussian electoral reform. Directors to Decide Fate of House of Hope George H. Pavne. chairman of the board of directors of the House of Hope, has called a meeting to take action on the old House of Hope at 956 North Twer.v-seventh avenue, against which comprint was made by the Board ot Public Weliare. I feel confident that our board will order the old house closed and will make arrangements for the care of occupants," said Mr. Payne. lhe property of the old institution controlled by the board, which operates the new house at Florence, but the management is under Rev. Charles W. Savidge. Coleridge Makes Good Its Patriotic Reputation Coleridge, Neb., is showing lots of patriotism in the war. Six hundred people attended a rally there Mon day night, and twenty-seven lads volunteered for war service, President Guy Briggs of the Coleridge Com munity club wired The Bee. Omaha recruiting officers say they have not yet heard of any Coleridge recruits coming here, and believe the volunteers there are either going to enter a National Guard company or else are waiting a few days before coming here to formally enlist in the army or navy. Alliance Club Re-elects Officers. Alliance. Neb.. April 18. (Special.) The officers of the Alliance Com mercial club, F.arl I. Mallery, presi dent: hen. I. Sallows, vice president; F. W. Harris, treasurer, were unani mously re-elected to those places for the coming year. The board of di rectors voted to retain the services of the present secretary, H. M. Bush- nell, jr. - -. Uni Fraternities Asked to Curtail , Social Activities Lincoln, April 18. (Special.) Greek letter fraternities in the uni versity have been- asked to dispense with social affairs, especially formal parties, for the rest of the year and to discourage private subscription di'.nces run for profit by the interfra ternity council, the governing body of the fraternities. The council met at the call of I'ro Icssor K. M. Buck, its chairman, yes terday and adopted resolutions look ing toward strict economy during the war. The council also decided that the Pan-Hetlenic dance, the biggest of '.he university year, at which all of r'ic fraternities combine, shall he given iir the benefit of some pairiotic fund this year. All profits will probably go to the Red Cross. The council discussed the question of raising a regiment to be composed ot fraternity men only. The senti ment was favorable if the call for men becomes urgent. Wife of Mayor of Beatrice Hurt in Auto Wreck Beatrice. Xeb., April 18. (Special.) Mrs. J. r. Saunders, wife of Mayor Saunders, was seriously injured last evening about 8 o'clock when the car driven by her husband collided with Dr. U. D. Urimths car. Mie was tnrown to the pavement, striking on her head, the fall producing concus sion of the brain. None of the other occupants were hurt and the machines were only slightly damaged. William Young of the Cortland vi c nity yesterday sold his' half section of land to Henry Bochheim for ?34, 200, or $1.35 per acre. Mrs. F. M Scoggin, a pioneer of Beatrice, died last night at her home Here, aged fifty-eight years. She is survived by her husband and four children. William Koenig. a farmer living near Odell, was fined $5 and costs yesterday by Judge Ellis for using obscene language over the phone in the hearing rf Marie Borden, the ooer- ator at the Odeirbfnce. He paid his ine and was released. Falls Thirty Feet and Lands on Head; May Live Kearney, Neb., April 18. (Special.) G. E. Prather, an employe of the Kearney Phone comnanv. had a close call from fatal injury and possible oeatn wnen, on iuesday, he fell from the top of a thirty-two foot telegraph pole. The safety hitching belt used by Prather worked loose and he plunged head foremost to the ground. Striking in a big puddle of mud with head and shoulders, he suffered no broken bones,- but it is feared that he mav be internally injured. Clean Blotchy Shin Don't worry about blotches or other skin troubles. You can have a dear, clean complexion by using a little zemo, obtained at any drug store for 25c, or extra large bottle at $1.00. Zemo easily removes all traces of pimples, black heads, blotches, eczema, and ringworm and makes the skin clear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrat ing, antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor greasy and stains nothing. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each application. It is always dependable. Th. E. W. Rose Co,, Cleveland, O. We Clean Rugi DRESHER BROTHERS Dyers, Cleaners, Furriers, Hatters and Tailors. 2211-17 Farnam St. Tel. Tyler 345. Neuralgia Neuritis Sciatica, Etc. CURED Free Trial of a New Method That Curve by Reraorinf th Causa. Send No Money. We've a new method that eurei Neuralgia, Neuritis Rheumatism. Asthma. Sciatica, yNeurasthenis, Tie Douloureux, etc., and we want you to try it at our expense. No mat ter how great your vain or how terrible the torture you endure from diseased nerves, our method will bring prompt and blessed relief. No matter whether your case is oc casional or ehronlc, nor what your age or occupation, this method should care you right in your home. The Mulhall Method does not contain a dron of morphine, opium, chloral, cocaine. acetanilid or any narcotic whatsoever. It provides a nerve food that cures by remov ing the cause. We especially want to send It to those so-called "incurable" cases that have tried all the various doctors, dopes, sanitariums, "opathys," etc., without relief. We want to show everyone at our own expense that this new method will send at once and for all time, all those tortures and twinges of al most unbearable pain that are present in Neuralgia. Neuritis, Sciatica, Migraine, Tic Douloureux, Neurasthenia and other nerve diseases. This free offer is too important to neglect a single day. Write now and begin the cure at once. Address Mulhall Co., Room 674 Bris bane Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y. DontFussSo About Your Complexion The more you massage, steam, manipulate and fuss about your complexion with so - called skin foods, creams, lo tions and what not, the chances are the worse it will become. Away With rBeautyFads Make Cuticura tSoap and Oint fment your everv- iv toilet preparations. Bathe with the Soap and hot water on rising and retiring, using plenty of Soap, best applied with the hands which it softens wonderfully. Smear any signs of pimples, redness or rough ness with the Ointment and let it remain five minutes before bathing. Nothing better, purer, sweeter or more effective. Then don't over diet, overexercise, lose sleep or fret. g.mpl. Each PfM M.ll with S-p. Twnlr nn th. .kin. AdrirM. po-e.nl: "Cuticura Dept.tt, Bctoa." Sold Trj where. Nebraska Will Do Its "Bit;" What Is Expected of Farms Nebraska farmers are mobilized to do a double duly. First of all, they will do their "bit" in preparing to feed a hungry world. Second, they will retrieve the disaster that fell on the winter wheat crop. In 1916 the principal crops of the state were: Acreage. ' Yield. Corn 6,740,803 190,070,449 Winter wheat 3,063,756 65,365,691 Spring wheat 246,557 3,407,890 Oat. 2,174,236 83,791,558 Alfalfa 1,127,642 3,412,465 Wild hay 2,093.192 2,454,930 Tame hay 159,410 332,612 Potatoes 74,796 5,922,279 Alfalfa and hays in tons; others in bushels. Sixty per cent of the winter wheat crop of this year is beyond hope. A larger acreage than usual had been planted, and the yield now expected will be in the neighborhood of 25,000,000 bushels. This loss will be made up by increased planting of corn and oats and to some extent by added acreage of spring wheat. Barley and rye wilt yield as usual, hut they are listed among the minor crops of the state. However, this is a year when everything counts. More potatoes than 'ever will he raised, and an increase of at least 50 per cent is expected. This will bring the potato crop up to the neighbor hood of 9,000,000 bushels. Farmers are being urged to give especial attention to corn. If they increase the yield but 25 per cent over that of last year, which was not a bumper crop, it means 250,000,000 bushels of corn. Half of Nebraska's arable land was idle last year. Not an acre should be allowed to remain unproductive this year. Bankers of Group No. 2 Will Meet at Columbus Columbus. Neb., April 18. (Spe cial.) Group No. 1 of the Nebraska Bankers' association will hold its an nual meeting here May 21. This was ("ccitled by a recent meeting of the officers of the Group and local bank ers of Columbus. Judge 1. I.. Alberts, slate senator, , 't ill he asked to talk on new legisla i.iin of interest to the banking fra ternity. Dan Morris of Kearney, president of the State Bankers' asso ciation, will also address the meet ing. Attorney Gurley of Omaha, will be expected to take part in the evening program. d. V. Thillips of Columbus was chosen toastinastrr at the banquet : in the evening, which is always one j ci the big features of the annual : gathering. The morning and after jroon sessions will be held at the New , hwan theatre. The present officers of the Oroup I are Y. W. Kileen, Schuyler, president: .1 vv. Luentkc, Creston, secretary itid treasurer, and Emil Folda, I'larkson, vice president. Child Drawn Into Sheller At Ashland and Killed Ashland. Neb., April IS. (Special.) The two-year-old daughter of Will iam Trader, at his home near here, was drawn into a power corn sheller yesterday and killed. You Can Do Your Bit in the trenches, in the home, in the office, in the factory, in the store, when the body is nourished with foods that build healthy muscle without overtaxing the digestive organs. Shred ded Wheat Biscuit contains the greatest amount of body-building nutriment at lowest cost. It strengthens the muscles of the stomach and intestines by, making them do their normal work in a natural way. A better balanced ration than meat or eggs, more easily digested and costs much less. Ready cooked and ready-to-eaL For breakfast with milk or cream, or for any meal with fruits. Made at Niagara Kails, N. Y. If You Read It in The Bee ' Depend Upon It Basement Sale of Shoes A Sensible, But Very Stylish Shoe No. 1 Patent vamps, mat kid, cloth tops, low heels, walk ing boot ..,.....$3.05 A Very Smart Bit of Footwear No. 2- -9-inch Lace Boot, vici kid, welted soles, 2-inch Cuban heels S3.95 A Shoe for Long and Satisfactory Service No, 3 Patent colt, mat kid and cloth topB, also dull leather mat kid and cloth tons, at $2.95 . L A Very Classy .v if , ; i Shoe at ! jf ' This Price h No. 4 Vici and dull leather vamps, mat kid and cloth tops, button and blucher styles $2.95 Little Short of a Sensation 6,000 Pairs for Women In Every Wanted Style V $4.50 to $5.50 Values . AND WHEN WE SAY values in this instance, we are quoting the prices we should have to ask if we purchased these Shoes at present wholesale figures; We bought this stock last August, from Dunn & McCarthy of Auburn, New York their surplus stock at that time-and in addition to obtain ing the prevailing wholesale market figures then in force, we obtained ex tra concession because they were sur plus stock-bringing the price to us down to such a point that, even to day, with Shoes higher in price than they have ever been-we are able' to offer you $4.50 to $5.50 Footwear at $2.95 and $3.95 a pair. Patent Vamps, Mat Kid and Cloth Tops. Dull Kid, Cloth of Mat Kid Tops. All Vici Kid and All Dull Leather. The Above in Button, Blucher or Lace Styles. Also Vici Kid Vamps and White Kid Tops. Gray Vamps with the New Repp Cloth Tops. These in Lace Style Only. I Full Louis, Leather Cuban and the New Baby French Heels. All Hand ' Turned and Welted Soles. Every Size From 2 to 9 Widths, A to EE Mail Orders Accepted Sale Begins Thursday 8:30 A. M. brandds Stores Not to Be Equaled -for Style at Anything Near This Price No. 5 All pearl-gray vamps, repp cloth top; same in vici kid vamps with white kid tops, at $3.95 Shown in ' Variety ' Each One a Sure Winner U ! - I" I 1 V I No. 6 Dull calfskin, mat kid and cloth tops, also patent colt, mat kid and cloth tops, at $2.95 A Smart Shoe That You Will Surely Like No. 7 9-inch vici kid vamps, mat kidor cloth tops, also in patent colt vamps, mat kid or cloth tops, plain toes, at $2.95 Surety of Long Wear Here No. 8 Velour calf vamps, mat kid tops; also patent vamps, mat kid top; wonderful walking shoes, at. .$3.95 Rose Bushes, Ornamental Shrubs, K A ra.L And Hardy Perennials, all at.. . . Not on Sale Until Saturday We have purchased the entipe stok of a prominent grower, at such a concession, that we are able to quote this price. The recent rains here put the soil in first class c&ndition for planting,, and you never had a better opportunity to buy than this. Full Details in Friday Night's Papers