THE -.BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1918, 14 :.;erica(i spirit upholds morale OF GAUL TROOPS Behavior of U. S. Men Under Artillery Fire Excites Ad if miration of French Gen eral in Marne Battle. London, June 6. The behavior of the "American troops at Chateau Thierry has demonstrated more than anything that has yet happened on the American front the splendid initiative and enterprise with which the American army is endowed and nothing has aroused the keener en thusiasm of the commander, says the Dailv Mail correspondent with the American army in France. He auotes an unnamed French gen eral as saying that the American spirit and enterprise at a critical moment served to maintain the morale or the French troops around Chateau Thierry. ' Among the incidents of the en gagement ' the . correspondent men- lion is the steadiness and persistence of the American machine gun fire in the streets of Chateau Thierry. Company after company of the enemy, marching four abreast, repeat edly tried to advance, but recoiled aorely shattered before the fire of the American gunners. -The streets were strewn with Ger man dead and; wounded and the American officers estimate they in-flu-ted at least 1.000 casualties. When a bridge, across ' the Marne wit blown up, the correspondent adds, the Americans were left on the north ern bank with the enemy in front of thenv and the river at their banks.! Carrying their guns, the Americans ilescended to the lower banks of the river and, under enemy machine gun and artillery fire, succeeded in reach ing thciext bridge. The " correspondent predicts that much will be heard of the deeds of U-.e Americans in .trie next lew days and adds:' . ." - "American troops fresh from the Vnited States continue to arrive with regularity -.and in numbers more than sufficient to justify renewed confi dence in the ultimate triumph of the entente. The Americans at this mo ment are : distributed over a very wide front, indeed, y - - "Iti some sectors entire American divisions form one unit, holding a cer tain extent of line while elsewhere they '.are brigaded with French and Lritish regiments. Jn the Luneville and Toul sectors the Americans hold very difficult salients dominated in the Toul sector completely dominated by the German arfillery on Montsec by tffc enemy. The Germans recent ly have been drenching these posi- iih. .,! naa Hut lh Amarirane. stood firm and won the ready appre ciation of all observers. , COLi GRANT WILL HAKE HIS HOME IN OUAHAAITEEWAH -wnen me war is over am .comvi ing back to Omaha to make this my borne the rest ot my wc," aeciarea Colonel F. A. Fran t, at a public af fairs luncheon given in his honor Thursday at the Chamber of Com merce. Celonel Grant leaves Thurs day evening for his new post of duty at Montreal, Canada. "I have never been in place where the people showed a greater spirit of hospitality , or greater evidence of loyalty," said the colonel "It fi't pleasure, to live here and I (hall al ways be proud to have many friends in Omaha." Randall K. 1 Brown presided and ypeechet were made by Charles H. Pickens and John W. Gamble. Of i.cers from the two Omaha forts were among those at the speakers' table. -; The Fort Riley band, which is here to play at the "jitney"' dance at the Auditorium tonight, was also enter . tained by' the Chamber of Commerce and played several pieces during the noon hour.--" '. v. d YANKEE BOYS SHOW SEAL GRIT ; IN 2 TO 1 FIGHT Washington, June 4 The atory of Low an American patrol of forty men, outnumbered two to one, held its f round in Lorraine the night of June for 45 minutes and only retired wnen its ammunition became ex hausted, is told in General Fershing's communique received today. The pa trot inflicted heavy losses on the eremy. - v- . ---v ; Lieutenants Campbell and Meisner 'swned an enemy biplane, June 5. etween April 4 and May 31, Lieu t;..a!t Douglas Campbell shot down Cx planes. r'- ----i y-..--' C ID Wcundsd U. S. Troops r Return to Home Hospitals Washington, June 6. During the :;k ending May 31, 184 sick and cunded soldiers of the American ex f iiuionary forces were landed in this cuntry. For the week ending May I:. 16 arrived. The soldiers have been sent to various army hospitals. .... Fcm-.cr Lincoln Man. Doomed To Die, Attempts Suicide Syracuse, N. Y June 6. (Special Telegram.) Alva ; Brjggs, former Lincoln, Neb., man, convicted of mur izr and doomed to die in the electric thair next week attempted, suicide ta-e today. The attempt was unsuc ctisful. X '" ;iM00,00Ofor Air award Washington. June 6. A $16,000,- - - 'i 1 appropriation for establishing "Ton and seaplane station to guard s United States against submarines 1 air attacks, was asked of con- tt today by the War department Czs Dead, Kany Ecrt TsrisJune 6. A violent explosion rrtd in i factory in St Denis. : Paris, during the night One i was killed and several wound - 1 tsateriaV damage was done. A :sr-l air tank file up several kftrr ' th mnrbrt- f.iil tfrtt ' r ' """"" W I k CHAPTER XVI. Striooed for the Fry. It hid turned very hot, now, ah the full of the day. Indeed, it was grill ing weather, and there in the battery, in a hollow, close dow.n beside a little run, or stream, it was even hotter than'on the shell-swept bare top, of the ridge. So the Canadian gunners had stripped down for comfort. Not a man had more than his undershirt on above his trousers, and many of them were naked to the waist, with their, hide tanned to the color of old saddles. .These laddies reminded me of those in the first battery I had seen They were just as calm and just as dispassionate as they worked in their mill it might; well,have been a mm in which I saw them working. Only they were no grinding corn, but death death for the Huns, who had brought death to so many of their mates. But there was no excitement: there were no cries of hatred and anger. They were hard at work. . Their work, it seemed, never came to an end or. even to a pause. The orders rang eut, in a sort of sing-song voice. Alter eacn snoi a man wno sat with a telephone strapped about his head called out corrections of the range, in figures that were just a meaningless jumble to me, although they made sense to the men who lis tened and changed tne pointing ot the guns at each order. - Their faces, that, like their bare backs and chests, looked like tanned leather, were all grimy from : their work among the . smoke ' and tne t .a ' t . it ' gases. Ana tnrougn tne gnme ,ne sweat had run dbwii like little rivers making courses for themselves in the soft dirt of a hillside. 1 They looked grotesque enough, but there was nothing about them to make me feel like laughing, I can tell yon! And they all grinned amiably when the amazed and disconcerted Reverend Harry Lauder, M. -P., Tour came tumbling in among them. We all felt right at name at once and I the more so when a, chap I had met and come to know well in Toronto dur ing one of my American tours camel over and gripped my nana. "Aye. but it's good to see your face, Harry!" he said, as he made me welcome. -:- This battery had done great work ever since it had come out. No bat tery in the whole army had a finer record, I .was told. And no one needed to tell me the tale of its losses. Not far away there was a little . cemetery, filled with doleful little crosses, set up over mounds that told their grim story all too plainly and too eloquently. The battery had gone through the battle 'of Vimy ridge and made a great name for itself. And now. it i was set down upon a spot that had seen some ot ,tne very oiooqicsi 01 the fighting on that day. I saw here, for the first time, some of the most horrible things that the war holds. There was a little stream, as I said, that tan through the hollow in which the lattery was Diaccd. and that llim VimA K4n it!rt with Mrtnrl nnt water on the day of the battle Everywhere, here, were whitened bones of, men. In the wild swirling of the battle, and the confusion of digging in and meeting German coun ter attacks that had followed it. it had not been possible to bury all the dead. And so the whitened bones re mained, though the elements had lonsr since stripped them bare. The elements and the hungry rats. These art not pretty things to tell, but they are" true, 4nd the world should know what war is today. I almost trod upon one skeleton that remained complete. It was that of a huge German soldier a veritable giant of a man. he must have T)een. The bones of his feet were' still en cased in his great boots, their soles heavily studded with nails. Even a few shreds of his uniform remained. But the flesh was all gone. The sun and the rats and the birds had ac counted for the last morsel of it. Hundreds of years from now, I suppose, the bones that wire strewn along that ground will still be being turned -up by plows. The genera tions to come who live there will never lack relics of the battle, and of the fighting that preceded and fol lowed it They will find bones, and shell cases, and bits of metat of all sorts. Rusty bayonets will be turned up by their plowshares; strange coins, as puzzling as some oi those of Roman times that we in Britain have found, will puzzle them. Who can tell how long it will be before the soil 'about Vimy ridge will cease to give up its relics? : ; That ground had been searched carefully for everything that might conceivably be put to use again, or be made fit for further service. The British army searches every battle field so in these days. And yet. when I was there.' many weeks after the storm of fighting had passed on, and when the scavengers had done their work, the ground was still rather thickly strewn with odds and ends that interested me vastly. I might have picked ut much more than 1 did. But I could not carry o very much. and. too. so many of the things brought grisly thoughts to my mind! God knows I needed no . reminders of the warl I had a reminder m my heart, that never left me. Still.' I took some few things, more for the sake of I the hame folks, who might not see, and would, surely, be inter ested. I gathered some bayonets for my collection somehow they seemed the things I was most willing to take along. One was British, one German two were rrench. - . : But the best souvenir of all I 'got at Vimy ridge I did not pick up. It was given to me by my friend, the grave major him of whom would like some famous sculptor to make a statue as he sat at his work of ob servation. That was a club wicked COVINC MC-2 FwULASt Evzby Day POSTTCASTIES W..IAT p. 2 Laudet erf Zfftnstret tt firancem Te7?sfzs ZPersoxa? - dxpertences on tAe Western tFegJtfyxg import r k COPYRIGHT I9ft -looking instrument. This club had a great thick head, huge in proportion to its length and size, and this head was studded with great, sharp nails. A single blow from it would finish the strongest man that ever lived. It was a fit weapon for a murderer and a murderer had wielded it. The major had taken it from a Hun, who had meant to use it had, doubtless, used it! to beat out the brains of wounded men. lying on the ground. Many of those clubs were taken from the Germans, all along the front, both by fhe British and the. French, and the Germans -had never made any secret of the purpose for which they were . intended. Well, they picked poor meti to try such tactics on when they went against the Canadians! The. Canadians : started no such work, but they were quick to' adopt a policy of give and take. It was the Canadians w ho began the trench raids for which the Germans have such a fierce distaste, and after they had learned sontrthing. of how Fritz fought the Canadians took to paying him back in some of his own coin. Not that the.v matched the deeds of the Huns only a Hun could do that But the Canadians were not eager to take prisoners. They would bomb a dugout rather than take its occu pants back. And a dugout-that has been bombed yields few living men! Who shall blame them? Isot I nor anv other man who knows what lessons in brutality and treachery the Canadians have . had , from the Hun. It was the Canadians. near Ypres, who went through the first gas at tack that fearful day . when the Ger mans were closer to . breaking through than they ever were before or since. " I shall not set down here all the tales I heard of the atrocities of the Huns. Others have done that Men have written of that who have first-hand knowledge, as mjne cannot be. I know only what has been told me; and there is little need of hear say evidence. There is evidence enough that any court would accept as hang ing proof. But 'this much, it is right to say that no troops along the western front have more to revenge than ifcive the Canadians. It is not (lie loss of comrades, dearly loved though they be, that breeds hatred among the soldiers. That i a part, of war, and always was. The loss of friends and com rades may fire the blood. It may lead men to risk their own lives in a desperate charge to get even. But it is a pain that does not rankle. and that does not tester like a sore that will not heal. It is the tales the Canadians have to tell of sheer, de praved torture and brutality that has ! n . t m . .1.. - i I innamea wicm 10 inc pncii oi nairea that they cherishV It has seemed as if the Germans had a particular grudge against the Canadians. And that, indeed, is known to be the case. The Germans harbored many a fond illusion before the war. They thought that Britain -would not fight, first of all. . And then, when Britain did declare war, they thought they could speedily destroy her "contemptible little army. Ah, weel they" did come near to destroying it I But not until it had helped to balk them of their desire not until it had played its great - and decisive part in ruining the plansMhe Hun. had been making and perfecting for forty-four long vears. And not until it had served as a dyke behind which foods of men II. S. ARMY GENERAL ; FINDS QUICK STOMACH RELIEF Brigadier Graeral Gordon, U. 5. A ' BmIowi Unlimited PnUM On EATONIC for Stomach Ilk. EATOJflC Ii (leaflet to ine tana ana citm rir relict from dy- 'pcpia ana lodlnettloa. i ' I T respectfully. I onriaier uenerti. nncaaier uenerti. B.G. Gordon. U.S.A. f "Speedy rellet.,' Thrt j It what General Gordon x- ms will experience it you will bat V (V iTetAivjuuainai.Hear. ' ll an lormi oi etomaca mla--Aki ery lndirortion.lDMl. heart-bum, belchlngs, flatulence, aoar itomach ad that painlul bloated lading which ao fre quently follow a hearty steal-all these art almost always caused cy the lormaUon of too orach acid in stomach and bowels. EATON 10 amtralisea this excess ot acidity. It la "Are aid" to the digestta organs whenever then ia the slightest disturbance tones np the satin tract so that yoa can eat what yoa Uki and digest ybut lood without discomfort- Here's the secret: EATONIC eVivw the s sot ot tne Boayana tne woa uoes With 1U Costs only a cent or two a flay to use It. It is guaranteed to bring relief or dT Iren yoa i. drug gist ; yoa get your money oscM uei box to- j fllsle?t,w..;swtwi ) masssw Mtw MfWMs sTWHstsMW If W MhRM ntti' staw.ta mmt .11 -m Uumii. M IN m sal II mwimuii imm jta. f f 11 EW.HltM ItlOwlMCWM II I I al SiiMimh aa ssaara. X? frmr asmr ar Stss'w M This Frees Your Skin From Hair or Fuzz (Tollst Tips.) ' ' .The method here suggested for the removal of superfluous hair is 'quick and certain and unless the growth is extremely stubborn, a single applica tion does the work. - Make a stiff paste with some powdered delatone and water; apply tMs to the hairy surface and after about 2 tainutea rub it off, wash the akin and fhe hairs are gone. Trf avoid disappointment, be lure your druggist? sells yoa dela tone. Advertisement Ait i- ftoka rr;Atw mm ss. Timc rrp.- ea f aw m" "CaBxara. Bars. I, asstaa." Atl ;inirBmltlllltni TSf tt KMtarS RHmS IMI MwnSMM Mtw ) I rT f U. S. tnniNMlMit.ClM UVsV Anal M Mm tnnw t t - ii smih snst sugisai ass II H.s.smikMntaliwia in the khaki of King George had had time td arm and drill to rush out to oppose the gray-green floods that had swept through helpless Belgium.' They had other illusions, beside that major one that helped to wreck them. They thought there would be a rebellion and civil war in Ireland. They took too seriously the troubles of the early summer of 1914, when Ulster and the south of Ireland were snapping and snarling at each other's throats. They looked for a new mutiny in India, ,which should keep Britain's hands full. But, above all, they were sure that the great, self- For Friday's Selling, ? Omaha'l Pionr 8-Hour - Stors )Opm 9 a. m., Closs 6 p. in. u 1 r ill! I Wohderfuly Attractive Silk Dress Values Friday in the Annex Sales Room .Lawn, Voile! and Gingham Dresses For ladies, misses and juniors ; plain colors, plaids and checks; over 200 here for your selection Friday; special price . JO Dozen White Wash Skirts, good styles, all sizes, on sale. huAnnex, Friday, QC choice ..." aOC wil!iliiliiliiiitiiii:ii!!i!ii:ii):i!iiiiiiii:iiui:iiiiiKi:ii:iiiii June Sale of j ! Standard Notions I It is a welUsUblilbMl fset that Rardco's Notion- Dspartment stands first as regards completa stocks, lowest prices and service. Be J. A P. Coatee' Best -Cord Machine Thread, all numbers -black or whits (no mail orders or phone orders filled) ; on lot to a customer with purchase of other notions; S spools ..........25c 35c Draasmakera' Pina, full rtol- ished and sharp points; U-lb. box. cash price, box... ...19c Be Warren's Fast Black Dammf Cattea, 46-yard spools, cash price. S f or So 9 10c Warloe and Tip Top Garment Snap Fasteners, all sises. cash pricetdoseii ...So So Ksswkk Spool Silk. 50-rard . spools, all wanted shales, cash price, spool ....4c Se-Easjron SUk Hakr Nets, all shad, cash price, 6 for. .....12c IOC Red SaJ or RefsJ human Hair Net, all colors, eaeh price, 4 f or 25e Se Wartoo Safety Pins, highly nickeled, cash price. S doa. for 10s ZSeVest Electric Hair Carters. 't on card, cash pries... ........ 18c 10c West Electric Child's Barretts, cold plated, cash price. ....... .7c Be 5. B. or EUbt Maid Crscket Cotton, all , wanted colors, cash price, ball Sc ISe Beat Ooalitv Inside Skirt Belt. inc. blacV.or white, al) wldtns. B ensh price, yard 9 lie Indian Cottoa Taps, all wanted ? widths, -yard bolts, cash price. ! f bolt .. ,..c ? I 10c daaical Collar Bands, best . 9 'quality cambric, nil wanted aixes. s 9 cash price, I for STe 15c : Beat Nevelty Edfinfs, all f wanted colors; cash price, I for 25e i 10s Vktrla Hooka and Eyes, black 9 or whiu, all nurabers, ch price, per card ......Sc i I lOe M. A K. KnltUni Cottoa, all e 1 wanted numbers, whits onlr. cash - 1 pries, bolt .....TV',e B lOe rViscnU Hair Pin Cabinet. I f ood assortment, cask prict....sc 1 . 12c Beet Quality Brass Pins, full B I count, foil nickeled, cash pries. Sc ' f , tiim:ilrwiinrlfii!t9?:tTitntittui::i:ittft!:wai Vr ......... Your , Favorite Fresh Fish Friday: Fresh Halibut Steaks, lb., 25c Fresh Salmon Steaks, lb. at 30c Fresh Cod Fish, Jb. . . .20c Fresh Pollock, lb. .....20c Fresh Haddock, lb. ...,18c Fresh White Perch, lb., 15c Fresh Dressed Herring, lb. at r. . 15c Larpe White Fish, lb., 25c Small White JFish, lb., 16c Fresh Smelts, lb. . .... 20c Fresh Spanish Mackerel, lb. at 30c Fresh Catfish, lb...'....30c Fresh Bull ' Heads, 1 lb., 25c Fresh Pike, lb. ......25c Fresh, Trout, lb.. .....25c Fresh Flounders, lb. . . 18c Fresh Pickerel, lb. .... ,20c Fresh Carp, lb. ......10c anaed as4 risk ef aa Uada, WWMl yCsOtsts) :9 I jjjfr'lyW' Waasaaaa It Pays T- - ' 13 HI f governing dependencies of Britain that made up the mighty British em pire would take-no part in the fight Canadia,' Australasia. South Africa --they never reckoned upon having to copewjth them. These were sep arate nations, they thought, inde pendent in fact if not in name which would seize the, occasion to separate themselvef entirely from the mother country. In South Africa they were sure that there would be smoldering discontent enough left from the days of the Boer war to break out into a new flame of war and rebellion at this reat chance. - , And so it drove them mad with fury when they learned that Canada and all the rest had gone in,, heart and soul. And when even their poison gas could not make the,Canadians yield; when, later still, they learned that the Canadians were their match,, and more than their match, in every phase of the great game of war, their rage led them to excess against the men from overseas even more damnable than those that were their general practice. - . (Continued Tomorrow.) Superior Values in Dependable, Seasonable the Direct Result of Cash Buying Methods AY1DEN THE CASH STORE Hundreds of Classy Dresses Worth to $15 A bevof clever designs in Taf fetas, Crepe de Chines, Soft Messalines or Poplins, with Georgette sleeves; your choice of a wide assortment of colors, in plaids, stripes or plain colors, all sizes; our special cash price, Make Your Selection Early Hundreds of Silk Blouses " Made to sell at $2.50 and $3.00 ; dainty de signs, all sizesin plain white,-flesh, maize, peach and pretty stripes; Friday's A P special cash price. . . . . .'. tltJ 10 Dozen Middy Blouses, for ladies and misses; regular price $1.00, special Cft-- cash $3.95 cash price . ........ . . . ....... . . OnJit $3.00 and $3.50 Banded Panamas . ... 95 - One Style Pictured We have just received six dozen, genuine Toyo Panamas neatly fin ished with silk gros grain ribbon. We put these on sale Friday morning at the unusu ally low price of .......... $1.95 ; A dozen styles to se lect from. , . 11 -J Cutting Prices to Cut 14.1b. Sack Pars Kyo Flour. . ..1 .78 IS Bars Diamond C or Swift's .Pride Laundry Soap . ............. ..36c lf-ounes Cana Condensed Milk. . . .10c 6-onnce Cana Condensed Milk ...Sc 8 lbs. Best Whits or Yellow Corn- aieal, at 3Sc C lbs. Barley or Corn Flour.... 43e 6 lbs. Pearl Hominy 43c Assorted Cookies and Crackers, per lb. ISe I lb. Best Boiled White Breakfast Oatmeal .; ..fSc .lbs. Froin's Wheat Flakes. . . .3e . Fancy Queen OliVeaf per bottle. .15c Larfe Bottles Pickles, assorted kinds, at S3e No. 1 Cans Pork and Beans . ...Tl,e 22 ounce Jar Whits Bear Preserres, at 2Se 1 2 -on nee Jar Pure Apple Butter, 25c The Best Domestic Macaroni, Vermi celli or spaghetti, pkg-. T'jC 1-lb. Cana' Assorted Soups . ...12Ve Lux Washing Compound 11c 4 Cans Old Dutch, Cleanser f . . . .2Sc Yesst Foam. pk :..4c Breakfast Cocoa, per lb. Z5c OMAHA'S GREAT TEA AND COF FEE MARKET. . . Fancy Golden Santos Coffee, lb., 20c 5 lbs. for 95c Maricaibo Blend Coffee, lb ,25c Porto Rico Blend Coffee, lb. 27c The Beat Tea Sif tines, lb. 20c Chins Basket-Fired ot Sun-Dried Jap an Tea, per lb. ....... 40e Try Our Famous Diamond H Blend - Tea for 4c tea; it has no equal; per IK 0e at$1 TRY HAYDEN'S FIRST 3 AVIATORS ARE HELD ON MURDER CHARGE IN TEXAS Beltfln, Tex., June 6. Indictments have been returned by a grand jury here charging Gerald Brice of Cleve land, O.; Clinton Hughes of Denver and George Bath of Oklahoma City, OklTwith the -murder of Edward Paul, near Temple last month. Thel Unen inaictea were enlisted in tne aviation corps at Richfield, Waco. Paul was a service car driver of that city. , -- The soldiers are alleged to have lured Paul from Waco and killed him in order to obtain his automobile to effect their escape across the Mexican border. They were arrested at Bee ville. Tex. All are said to have made confessions and their trial has been set for next Tuesday. . Bee Want Ads Prjduc Results. Merchandise IMj-s4Ss M.il Orders If. ; rilled rrom : vauy as : I While Stocks X j Last Order .! Promptly. t. l':'it'il!i-:iiilPl!!!H;i::::i;il:il::i:ii:il;ll:ii:HiH,n;;l!l ' oe I s Women's patent $-bar strap ' slippers and vici kid pumps, with high and low heels ; $4V00 values. ;. Hayden's Cash Price $2.95 Woman's dull arid pat- ent one and two-strap, . 1 . $3.00 slippers. 1 Hayden's t1 AO I Cash Price . .. tpl.JO Women's kid, one and i two-strap house slippers 1 also suitable fori ; 1 growing girls. Sizes I I 2V2 to 4; $2.50 val- ; ues. - '; ,1 Hayden's A j ; Cash Pripe ... 9lOV i Women's white canvas, i elk sole, Mary; Jane I spring heel,' stitch down I pumps; $1.50 values. I Hayden's 1 AA Cash Price 1UU j jfiuiiiriiliiiiiti!lt:liili'iiiiii:!ii!iui:itiiiiiini:t!liiliis nssansaaasnsannaannBnsnssaanBnsta the Cost of Living Dried Fruits, Etc., for Puddings, Piss , , and Cakes. Fancy Evaporated Apples, lb. . . 1 5c Fancy Muscatel Baisins, lb. 12V,c Fancy Santa Clara Pranee, lb. ..10c Fancy California Seedless Raisins, lb at ' ISe Fancy Muir Peachea, lb. . Golden Sultana Raisins, lb.' Fancy Bartlett Pears, lb. . Fancy Silver Prunes, lb ... 15c 15c 20c ...20c Fancy Moor Park- Apricots, lb., 25s Seeded Raisins, pkg. ........ l-5c THE VEGETABLE MARKET OF ' ' OMAHA, y IS lbs. Ktw Potatoes to the peek for 40c per lb. . . . . .................. 3c IS lbs. Old . Potatoes to the perk for - 25c 4 Bunches Fresh Rsdishes ........Se 5 Bunches Fresh Onions ........5c 4 Bunches Fresh. Turnips Sc Fresh Spinach, per peck ........15c Fresh Was or Green Beans, per lb. at 10c Fresh Peas, per quart ...10c New Cabbage, per lb. .....Sc Texas Bermuda Onions, lb ...... Sc STRICTLY FRESH EGGS (No de livery, per dozen............ 28c No. 1 Bulk Creamery Butter. . 42c Nut 'Martaren. lb. ...30c Fresh Peanut Butter, lb,.... .2Sc Wisconsin Cream Cheese, lb..... 24c Fancy Cream Brick Cheese, lb. ,25c All Kinds of Fancy Ckesae. Bulk and Bottled Pickles st lowest cash prices. ... - aw Jf I 1.1: a...-, fl rt "'-Jt? I Friday Sh Saving It Pays ; - AtaaSsraajaaaeyae'; ARTHUR WALSH NOW TELLS ABOUT WIFE'SJROUBLES I At Arkn!4A find Cnll ftt C!' teen Pounds Her lm-, provement on Tanlac Wonderful. "When I saw what wonderful ran. suits my son-in-law Obtained through the use of Tanlac I got my wife to try it, too, and she actually gained -five pounds on her first bottle," said Arthur Walsh, of 3603 South Nineteenth street, the other day. Jfl"r. W alsh is . an electrician who hai been in continuous service with the Omaha- & Council Bluff Street RaiK way for the past twenty-seven years. "About one year ago," he contin ued, "my wife began to complain' of her stomach, which she said wa troubling her all the time. She lost her appetite and soon "got so she qidn't seem to want to eat a thing. What little she did force down did ner naraiy any good ana sne oegan going down till she had lost all of fifteen pounds. She said her head would ache till it made her sick and ; she would often net so dizzy that ' I was afraid she'd fall and hurt her self. She sure had a miserable time of it night and day, and I was so uneasy about her condition that I was all the time buying some sort ' of medicine for , her to take, but nothing seemed to do her any good till she started on Tanlac. "Soon after taking the first few doses of Tanlac she began to pick, up and said she felt better than.' she had in some time.. I knew it was doing her good, for I noticed that . instead of picking at her food like she didn't want it she was' getting real hungry and eating , everything like she loved it. When I asked her about those mean Headaches,, she said that she is free of them for the first time in over a year and she rarely ever has a touch of dizziness now. She sure is gaining in weight and strength, and I feel so proud of the way she is getting on that I have just bought her another bottle of Tanlac, for I believe that if she keeps on at this rate it .won't be long before she will be a strong and healthy woman once more." . Tanlac is sold in Omaha by Sher man & McConnell Drug Co., corner Sixteenth and Dodge streets; Six teenth and Harney, Owl Drug com pany, Sixteenth and Farnam sreets; Harvard Pharmacy, Twenty-fourth and Farnam streets; northeast cor ner Nineteenth and Farnam streets, and West End Pharmacy, corner For-ty-ninh, and Dodge streets, under ths personal direction or a special ianiac representative. Advertisement. For 'Active Women" Stinknot Rubber Heals a anartrv SSVSra. SUd Imt vaailianew makes easr.' buoyant walking. To meet stylo demands in women s shoes, tnero are French, Cuban, and Special Cuban Slipknot heels. Insist OB Slipknots. Manufactured by PLYMOUTH MISSES COMPANY caatsa. mass. . Put on at all Shoe Repair Shops TWILIGHT JUNE 11-lS All : tha famous trotters, pacars and runners from tho Mississippi river to California will open their racing season at Omaha. Rawing starts promptly at 6 p. m.. Sand wiches and Coffea served ia tha grandstand. . -r Benson Race Tree!. Opposite Krug Park. Admission, 50c; Grandstand Fra. Heal Skin Disease It is unnecessary for yni to suffer wkb eoeema, blotches, ringworm, rashes sod similar skin troubles. A little xemo, obtained at any drug store far 35c, $1.00 for ertia large bottle, aodjmmpdy applied wil usually give instant telid from itcning torture. It ' cleanses sod arwrhes the skin and beats quickly gad ittertiveiy tnost skin diseases. , . Zemr t a wonderful, penetrating; appearing liquid and is soothing to tho most delicate skin. It is not greasy, k easels applied and costs tittle. Cot It tods? nd save all further distress. TheE. W Ross CoGsveiand.Q. Whtn Wrilinj to Our AdTsrtisors Mention Seemf it in Tbt Bet