im: HUB: OMAHA. TUKSDAY. JANUARY 31. 1022. Omnium Shoots wife in Sid Then Slays Self '1 lirratciu Of fieer Sunmiwiietl Whrti Mate Snalt-lir 'iloI ami Hurl It Into "It'll be fUmrrs Ur you tmor low." ilmiilvij Marry MiCluuiJ, J7, ievrlling Ih rrtolvrr at Kmcrjjency Ortirrr Niulair and I'ulice Lhaiirfrtir l'rre at lliry nulnfj lowjird hit.i St'riiUy iHnriiiiitf. I'lire Itretl over lii head. McCloii'I iut the timzlc of lot own k1"' 8i"nst hi riifnt tcmpk tml fired.' lie lird instantly. JuM before the officer arrival at the iccne, lUo South Twenty. third uren, mcuu4 liaa met pi ne, Niitlirrine, trim whom be was es tranged, and had shot hrr in the tide Mi ia In Lord l.istrr hospital. He met her itnd her mother, Mr. R Jcihnon, as they rtturncd from r.iirch. "I am going to kill you." he fid to lii wiitt, She stntgnlrd fa' Use revolver, got it, and Hung it into m patch of weeds. Her mother rtuhe J into the houe and called police. Be tore thry arrived, McCloud found ihe revolver and kliot hi wife. She vill recover. McCloud lived at 1101 South Twenty-fourth street and was an cx jiresjnun. Uniforms Banned in Guarded Zone Actress Treated by Lorenz for Broken Spine Goes Horn e u t Only Strike Troops May Wear Khaki at Nebraska City. Nebraska City, Neb., Jan. 30. Military motor patrol were on duty to preserve order this morning as parkins' plant workers went to their ta.sks in Nebraska City, parts of which were declared under martial law Saturday by Governor AlcKcl vic following an outbreak of disor der lost week as the result of the strike in the packing industry. - Lieutenant Colonel Douglas of Osceola, in command of national guardsmen sent here, reported that "quite a number of men who have been afraid to go to work in the past" returned to, their tasks today. 1'eaccful picketing was resumed by strikers, but no trouble occurred. A proclamation by Colonel Doug las issued today requires that na tional guardsmen rJ former service men not called lo strike duty by the Eoveinor who have been wearing their uniforms must cease wearing tlietn because this practice was re sulting in, confusion. He also an nounced that tramps who come here will be arrested and deported from the' city. Roads Charged With Exaggerating Sayings Chicago, Jan. 30.--Statements of the railroad labor board as to esti mated savings to the railroads result in cr from changes in two rufes affect ing the Brotherhood cf Railroad and .steamship Uerks, freight Handlers, Express and Station Employes, gave a grossly exaggerated idea" of the reductions in railway labor costs, Samuel M. Felton, president of the Chicago Great Western railway, said in a statement tonight. Kefcrring to the labor board's statement when the rules were made public recently, Mr. Felton said that the board had given the impression that the railroads believed a saving in excess of $50,000,000 would result by the changes, while the board s ex- rcrts estimated 513,000,000 as a con servative estimate of the savings. Exports to Europe Fall Off $2,000,000,000 From 1920 Washington, D. C, Jan. 30. Ex ports to Europe during the last year fell off by more than $2,000,000,000 is compared with 1920, while exports to South America declined by more than $300,000,000, according to for eign trade reports issued today by the Commerce d?partment. During the year 1921 ' exports to Europe aggregated $2,304,000,000 compared with $4,466,000,000 in 1920, ukile imports for the year aggre gated .$765,000,000 as against $1,228, 000,000 in 1920. X For the month of December ex ports to Europe aggregated $155, 000,000 as against $388,000,000 in De cember, 1920, while imports for the month aggregated $73,000,000 as against $67,000,000 in December a year ago. Exports to South America for the vcar aggregated $273,000,000 as com pared with $624,000,000 in "1920. while imports from South America totaled $296,000,000 against $761,000, 000 in December, 1920. Exports to South America in De cember totaled $16,000,000 compared with $67,000,000 in December, 1920, while imports for the month aggre gated $27,000,000 against $36,000,000 in December a year ago. Officer Shoots Man Who, Drew Gun on Companion While Detectives Palmtag and Danbaum were searching the room of William Dorsey. 2305 Pacific street, Sunday night Dorsey whipped out a revolver and aimed at Dan baum. Palmtag saw Dorsey's action and, drawing his own weapon, fired, hitting Dorsey on the top of the head, but not wounding him serious ly. He was arrested, attended by a police surgeon and held for investigation. Miii Mary Moore, New York, Jan. '30. Miss Mary Moore, actress who lias been fight ing death with cheerfulness and the determination of youth since she re ceived t broken spine and three frac turrs of the skull in an automobile Accident two months ago, yesterday returned, a convalescent, to home. In a farm house at Babylon, Long She was placed in a plaster cast and removed to the 13 road street hos pital. Hrr snftlcs aid determination to live won the admiration of the rttendauts. Noted surgeons came to fee her, among them Dr. Adolf Lorenz, of Vienna. She laughed and passed pleasantries with him. He told her ! 1" she was the pluckiest girl he ever had seen. After that meeting Miss . Moore Island, where she was taken aftc. improved rapidly. She arranged yes- n accident on last November 19, ttrday with her brother to surprise Miss Moore was told by surgeons her folks and was carried into her that she could not live. She laughed and said: Why so pessimistic? II live to be an old lady!" home this morning at breakfast time, "Home at last," she remaiked as she was carried into the house. The Story of Ninette mother! She Itiew nothing about it all, of course, f knew her well , enough not to let her guest ihe truth. She a good woman, Ni nette, but khe hud b'r own narrow ideas of wht right and wlut was wrong and 1 knew she would! nrvrr admit of any lu!f tuniirc, 1 You were coming then, and she was too happy dreaming about the future ' aim an nm u ineiti( io ner id nun much of ii n and what I doing And then, one day, she found out! I forget quite how it was, but one thing led up to another, and one she taxed me ith the truth. 1 tried to he to hrr, but it wa no use, fehc had fye like yours, Ninette Urk ryes, that seemed to see behind a lie, and scorn it; and in the end I found niysrlt blurting it all out to her. She listened very quietly, and when I hud finished she asked mc wlut I was going to do if 1 was going to take back the money wlurli should really never have been mine, or if I meant to keep it. Well, you ran gurt what 1 answered. I was poor, and it meant a start in life. Other men did the same sort of things and prospered, and so would 12 She hardly spoke then; she jut looked at me, and all my life 1 shail remember the expression of her ryes. I think I thought I had con vinced her that J was justified in what I had done. It shows bow lit tle I knew her, because in the morn ing she'd gone and I never saw her again as long as she lived!" (('ontlaurd la Tha IW Tumnrron.) Coast Guards Search for Missing Hunters HcrClothcsCostSI8.000aYr.tr Edith Kelly Gould, Actress, Sues Jay Gould for $100,000-Alleges Hi Divorce, Granted in ' France, Is Void. " " Road Conditions Furnlftbed by the Omaha Auta Club. Lincoln Highway. Eait Roads muddy. Lincoln Highway. West Roads muddy. O. L. D. Highway Roads muddy. Hiphland Cutoff Muddy. 8. Y. A. Road Fair. : ornhusker Highway Muddy. Omaha-Topaka Highway Muddy... ... 0. Street Road Muddy. Grorga Washington Highway diuddy. mack. Hills Trail Muddy. ..King of Trail. North Muddy. King or Trails. South Muddy. River to Rive Muddy, "'hit. Fola Road iluddy. fair at At lantic. 1. O. A, Shortllna Muddy. Blua Grass Road Muddy. Reported snowing at every -point except hlsnd. Missouri Valley and Central City. Predictions (or unsettled today and to- Ey RUBY M. AY RES. (Copyright, 1911. by the Wheeler Nevva- Iai er fynuicate.) (Continued From Yesterday.) At the end of a week Ninette still felt as if she was living and moving in a dream. Although Cavanagh told her that she was absolute mis tress of his flat and the servants, and that she was to do exactly as she wished, she could not accustom her self to hci new surroundings and mode of living. The first excitement wore off quickly; the novelty of spending money and choosing frocks soon palled on her, and she began to feel restless and unhappy. There was nothing to do. Cava naugh was out a great deal, and she had no friends as yet of her own. , , Again ana again . ner uiuugius went back with bitter homesickness to" the days that were gone? to her life with Josh Wheeler, and the many hardships which ,they had shared together. The few small happinesses which had come their way had. been more widely enjoyable, by contrast, than anything she could experience now; and sometimes she would steal away to her room and shed tears of real grief and longing for the days that were no more. She heard nothing of or from the. Delays, and she longed desperately to know what had become of them what Arthur Delay had said to his wife, and if Margaret still believed her capable of such a dishonorable action. Ninette had grown very fond of Margaret, and the violent ending of their friendship had seemed a terri ble thing. Then there was Dick Felsted. Somehow Ninette had been sure that he, at least, would- write to her he could have found her address from Nothard had he wished to do so but the days slipped away and there was not a line from him. "There is no such thing as friend ship in the world!" Ninette told her self many times bitterly; and then she wondered what Nothard was do ing, and if he ever saw Dorothy Manvers. In her heart she was sure that he did; she did not believe that the quarrel between them had been final, or that it would be lasting. Dorothy was pretty enough and clever enough to get her own way in most things, and with most men, and Ninette was sure that she still cared for Peter. Although she had everything the heart of the most exacting girl could desire, she felt lonely and cut off from everything. If her father had many friends, so far he had brought none of them to the flat or intro duced her to any, and one evening she made up her mind to speak to him on the subject. CHAPTER XXX The Truth Is Revealed. Cavanagh had done his best to please Ninette since she came to live in his house. He took more pains with his appearance, for one thing, and seemed less silent and morose. He had loaded her with presents diamonds which she never wore, and furs which were too handsome for her slim youth. - . Onlv the nicht before he hatr brought her home a single stone ring set in olatinum. which must have cost him hundreds, and she wondered what he would say could he know that the chief thought in her mind as she thanked hiin was: - "If I had had this six months ago Josh would have been alive today Y It was strange how bitterly her mind always harked back to the tragedy of Josh Wheeler's death, and tht: realization of how little might have saved him. ( She -was watching the firelignt sparkling on the ring, which she had put on to please her father, when she spoke of her own loneliness- and of the future. "What am I to do with, myself all my life?" She looked up into Cavanagh's face with eyes of unconscious pathos rs she asked the question, and be held out his hand. " "Come here, Ninette.". She went across to him and sat down on a big stool at his feet, and he put his arm around her slim shoulders. "You are not happy, Ninette?" he said quickly. She answered, in swift remorse: "It isn't that; but I seem no use to anyone I I've got no friends and 1 seem no use in the world at all. I can't go on like this all my life can I?" "As soon as the business matters I am working on now have cleared up I shall take you abroad and show you the world. You will love to travel and the world is a. very beau tiful pjace, Ninette." "I know; but " she sighed impa tiently. "We shall have to come back some day, shan't we? And then what shall I do then?" He stroked her hair. . "What would you like to do?" he asked.. . .; "I don't know." They sat silent for a moment; then Cavanagh said: Some day you will marry and have a home of your own." Ninette laughed, her cheeks flush ing. "I shall notl I never want to marry; men are all selfish. There is only one Josh who was different." "You are npt paying me the com pliment of excepting me also?" be asked whimsically, though with a note of seriousness in his voice. "You oh, you're different!" Ni nette said," vaguely. Somehow she had not yet found a place in life for her father; he seemed some one apart and quite different to any one she had ever met a law unto himself. The silence , fell again and this time Cavanagh himself broke it. "Ninette, why have you never ask ed me about your mother?" He felt her wince, and saw that she turned her. head a little to hide her face from him as she answered. "Perhaps because I don't want to know." His hard face relaxed a little. "You mean that you think I was not kind to her?" he asked. Ninette s head sank lower. "Josh told me years aeo-that when she died she had only a few shillings in the world, and that she died alone in a little back room that looked out on a yard where a dog doctor lived. He said that the dogs used to bark aud howl night and day. Josh knew my mother, you see. He used to watch her go up and downstairs, and I know he w-as sorry for her. He said. she had the saddest eyes he had ever seen. He said that she was like me, only pret tier. I think I've often thought that perhaps he loved her, just a little, and that was why he took me and looked after me when she died." Cavanagh rose to his feet, putting Ninette gently aside. His shaggy brows were frowning as he crossed the room and, unlocking the bureau, took out a little bundle of papers. He brought them back to where the girl sat, and took his chair beside her again. "I've often wondered if when the time came, I should ever bring my self to tell you the truth, he said hardly. "But you may as well know it, Ninette as, at any rate, I should have told you at my death. Your mother left me of her own will. We married for love. I was a poor man in those days. Sometimes we hardly knew how to get 4ie money to gether to pay for the two rooms in which we lived. But I think " He broke off, seeming to forget her for a' moment. "I think those were the hanniest vears of mv life. Then then my chance came. A man T worked with in he city office he was crooked but as clever as they make them gave me my first chance to make money quickly and dishon estly! I need not tell you the de tails, Ninette, but I took the chance, and that was the first rung of the ladder of success for me. I've never gone back since, though ' I've de served to, as, according to the doc trine they teach us when we are children, the wicked never really prosper. But I've prospered, Ninette. I can write my name to a check of more figures than almost any man in London todav, and and " His voice fell back to its own hard tones, and he said again more quietly: "Where was I? Oh, yes, your Babylon, L. I., Jan. 30. Coast guards from Fire icland and Oak stand searched all today along the shores of (ireat South bay and among the islets of the bay for Ed mund A. Tearsall and Jerome B. Jerome, both of East I slip, who started duck shooting Saturday and failed to return. All night bonfires blazed along the bay, kept burning by anxious friends of the missing men in the hope they might find their way to the beacons. But in view of the snowstorm which hunar all d.iv over the bay, small hope was felt for the pair when they had not been found tonight Lenine to Attend Genoa Meeting London, Jan. 30. Nikola! Lenine, Kussian soviet premier, has tele, graphed the Italian foreign office that he will 'attend the Genoa eco nomic conference, says a Central News dispatch from Rome today. (Recent Moscow dispatches an nounced that Premier Lenine has been named head of the soviet Rus sian delegation to the conference.) .N'cw York, Jn. JO. Jut Imagine, giils, spending flti.ooo a )cr (or cUtlirt This ii the dicUuiioti nude by Edith Kelly Gould, actrei. in an affidavit filrd in a new court action ngji.iit Frank Jay (ioulj. Mm asks reimbursement lor her expenses (or about (our years at the rate vi $45.fMJ a year. The total sum ucd (or is lod.UiiO. Mrs. Gould pot only claim tlut she -pent this fabulous mm for tlothrs, but stated that her autonto bile coat her $4,UO0. and apartment $0,01)0 and entertainment $5,000, These, with $5,000 (or food, JJ.000 for a doctor. $4,000 (or dancing and nuikic lcon. and $1,000 (or a den list, complete the cot of living for her. according to her statrnnnt. Hrr suit to have annulled Iter di vorce, which Gould obtained in France, has been before the court for tome time. In hrr suit Mrs. Gould says her husband ucd to spend $50,000 a year on Iter. An answer she alio filed to liia suit says that his' French decree is void because a transcript of the pro ceeding! was not filed, as required by French law. She alo denies the jurisdiction of the French court. She says her husband has an income of $200,000 a year or more. Mrs. Gould alleges she left her husband on account of his "crurt and I J jStrrrlary Wfrk Save Join fur Tko Apt i Clurwonifit Whiiij!.ji, Srnvury vi Vr Wrtis rut U the rciue Jai i ur.Uy vi to awtd iiMimi'n wlui, ahhuuwli thry ircive f.'kl a rr " """ l.rMIr Mr Urgo Pyramid For Pilos TU Ya-ur Fri.nd. VVkat WonJ.rful Rel.e( I Civan by Pyramid fll Suppositories tKlrt try them, Ihen tell your friend" 'trinl. 'i)a Hupvi.i. lortaa bt lltit MceeJ relief In Ilia ri inhuman" treatment. She says thU was due to frequent intoxication and other bad habits. Two Oil Well Shooters Killed in Nit.ro Explosion Healdton, Ok!., Jan. 30. Charles Vandell and Hardy Oglcsby, all well shooters, were blown to pieces yes terday when the magazine of the In dependent Nitroglycerine company, two miles south of here, exploded. Flu Germ Goes Right ' Through Stone Wall, Says N. Y. Expert New York, Jan. 30. Five hun dred monkeys have been used by health officials in New York and Washington the last two years in experiments looking to the develop ment of vaccines against influenza and pneumonia. Dr. William H. Park, of the New York health department, said today the experiments had been sug gested during a meeting of medical authorities of the country in 1919. "We haven't learned anything about influenza," he said, "except that the invisible, unidentified or ganism which causes it, can pass through a stone walk "The experiments on the mon keys have shown conclusively that if one is vaccinated he cannot con tract pneumonia when innoculated with the germ, but that in the ab sence of vaccination, innoculation proves fatal in a majority of cases. Experiments on humans would bring the same results." A Silly Song By A. CUCKOO BIRD. ' The other day my wife said, "Kook, our cream check is too small. You'll have to wean that bunch of calves or sell them, that's all." I drove the cows into the barn and took the calves away and put them in a , little shed and threw them in some hay. The pesky crit ters would not eat the feed I carried in ; I gave them corn and oats and hay but they kept getting thin. My wife said, "Kook, you'll starve them calves, you lazy addlepate, Why don't you take them, down some milk each time you separate?" That night 1 filled my pail with milk and beat it for the shed. I set the pail upon the ground and grabbed a heifer's head. I was a member of church but neighbors, passing by, o'erheard the conversation between those calves and I. Next Sunday at the meeting house, the parson made it plain that I and all the elders after meeting would remain. They took away my letter and handed me my hat and now I am a heathen but the calves are getting fat. Paris Vitriol Rends Work in Opera District Paris, Jan. 30.The gang of vitrol sprayers which lias been terrorizing Farisicnnes, worked overtime this afternoon at sprinkling the garments of expensively clad women in the opera district. Hundreds of detec tives failed in their. efforts to nab the gang. Police disguised as women prom enaded the streets where the acid atomizers were used. Chemists are preparing to trap the acid throwers by smearing the coats of detectives, disguised as women, with certain chemicals which will give off instantaneously a thick smoke if touched by vitriol. Townley to Visit Wife on Release Jackson, Minn., Jan. 30. After serving a 90-day sentence for viola tion of the state espionage act, A. C. Townley, president of the national nonpartisan league, will be released from the county jail here this morn ing. . Townley, it is understood, will go to St. Paul to visit his wife, who has been ill. He has promised to appear at Fargo, N. D., on February 6 to answer a charge of complicity in the alleged embezzlement of $3,000 . by J. J. Hastings, from the Scandinavian-American bank of Fargo. Hast ings is a former officer of the bank and is being sought. Indian Woman, 125 Years Old, Dies on Reservation Salt Lake City, Jan, 30. Mrs. Mojoch Mologan, Indian, said to be 125 years old, died on the Washakie reservation near Logan, Utah, sev eral days ago, according to word re ¬ ceived here today trom Willie Utto- gary reservation correspondent for the Salt Lake Tribune. The woman, ccording to Ottogary, was middle- aged when Brigham Young led hij Mormon emigrants into the bait Lake valley in 1847. A son, said to be 80, survives, ac cording to the Washakie reservation correspondent. ' Influenza Cases Increase Following New York Storm New York, Jan. 30. Influenza and pneumonia cases continued to in crease yesterday, probably as a re sult of the storm which covered the treets with eight inches of snow Health department officials urged citizens to keep their feet dry and j'.ake added precautions during the r.exi lew days. During the 24 hours ending at peon, there were reported to the de partment 475 new cases of influcnzi and 6 deaths, and 103 new cases of pneumonia and 2V deaths. et!i. wne sUted for -dismissal r turHf i,( "economy." Due Im brm ruiUrl in th State, W.r and Navy building (or 40 yur and ilie iithrr JO , GRANDMA'S OLD FAVORITE REMEDIES f ,Men-thc-e, a Plaiant Cream I onlalnlnif (ioono Ore at and Turpentine. ,!.-na Mirasa anl lurirrititia hat I., u ual l"l urMi-rsiluiia la lh IS lirf t t-olila anil U irill. Maiitlioa rrclta III alu. ubla yiittttllra ut llivt I'M- ItllltilU". lull f (HIH'll'ra lilt III MHh Ml, 111 t.i.l. Mill. (-i ajracn, irnM limit fSjTl a ii. I mlKr liraling I I raarltrra and oils. I K Uoii-lluiTio la douti. I y clfri'liva In Ilia mr Iresimriit of la ilt'. rolja. r lliroat, ami aliinlar ailuiani. baraua II Irrala Ilia atlr.-llon li.iib nt-rtally anil ItiliMiially. ItuMteU mi etiaat or Ihrual. It draws llta Inflummalinn. I'ha lunira. inlialiil, prt tliraclly on Ilia) IhlrriiMl sK-a, Mm-llio rra uflCil In rait a a mM In Itttnli' iiilnulra. DraM laia vaey ef your own horn from lti'h In, lilfnlitiir ur ir(rudinir lli', lirmorrliiiltla unit auih rrt'lat Irou l.lfn. Oft a t'lt box today of any druxclxt. A alnirlo box has ofivn liarti suilicli nt. You ran have A frca trial packaca by vt.rilnir nam an-1 lilrrsa to Pyramid I'ruir Co., SIS i'jaainlJ JJldtf , Marshall, Mich. AtAII cooo s-oa cocoa IfUUSt K Capiat (sxrrt CratM Ui .-waists fit Its i aula tar Ilua rvuiias AnVKRTINF.MEST RHEUMATISM GONE; WALKS WELL AS EVER Mrs. Goodfellow Could Not Walk at All Without Braces for Her Legs Be fore She Got.Tanlac Well Known Omaha Woman Had Given Up Hope of Ever Being Well Again Statement Remarkable. A BABY whose organs K l luncuon regularly is l -r II laughing:, happy babr. I 3 When baby cries and tefret jA ful look for constipation. It W -dT is generally the forerunner of nervouaneaa. faTHshnfsa. headachea. colds and manv othar distressing ailmentsi. Give half a teasooonfufol Dr. Cal(fir Snin Pepsin and the baby will quickly get well. A dose costs less than a cent DR. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN THE FAMILY LAXATIVE Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is tha largest selling liquid laxative in tha world, used by mothers for SO years. It is a combination of Egyptian Senna and other simple laxative herbs with pepsin, the safest remedy you can give a baby. HALF-OUNCE BOTTLE FREE Tesv escape constipation, so n if you do nsc require a Ioxam at this jcruj yon a Half -ounce Trial Bottle ef my Syrup Pebsin FREE OF CHARGE so that you will have it handy when needed. Simph send your name and address to Dr. W. B. CatoWl. 3u Washmiton St, Morukelk, lu. write me todart. RESIfJOL 5oothinq and Healinq lb stop dandruff and loss of hair and promote a healthy scalp.begin the Resinol treatment today Trial free Dept.l3-T Resinol Baltimore.Md. Sst "VI 1 , "Few people have gone through with the nerve-racking pain I have endured from rheumatism and I cer tainly know how to appreciate the splendid health Tanlac brought me," said Mrs. G. Goodfellow, 3213 Grace St.; Omaha, Neb. "I had rheumatism all over my body and for hours and hours I would lie awake at night suffering and at times unable to turn over in bed. I got in such a bad condition I had to use braces on my legs in order to walk at all and I just gave up all hope of ever being well again. "Tanlac built me up and rid me of the rheumatism entirely and I have thrown the braces away and am actually as healthy as ever in my life. There is absolutely noth ing I can say that is half good enough for Tanlac." Note Tanlac Vegetable Pills are an essential and vitally important part of the Taiilac treatment. You cannot hope to get the most satis factory results from Tanlac with out first establishing a free and regu lar movement of the bowels. Tanlac Vegetable Pills are absolutely free from calomel and are sold on a posi tive guarantee to give satisfaction. Tanlac is sold in Omaha by the Sherman & McConnell Drug Co. and by leading druggists everywhere. All.' IIUHKMKVr. Rub on Sore Throat Minuend relieves) sore tliroiitt riuli kly. Muilo with oil of iiniKtunl. It U a, clean white iltitn-nt tluit will not burn or Mlmer like the old-fashioned mustard l!iater. Jiint spread it on with your (Inisers. Gently but aurcly It penetrate l the unre xpot und draw out the palii. Clet MiiHternlij at your drutt ntore to day. 35 & fine In jar Si tubes; hos pital Kl'.e, tZ. i BETTER THAN A MUSTARD PLASTER AIIVKKTIHKMKNT Fat That Shows . Soon Disappears Prominent fat that coin-s and sliiyj where It la not nc-edeJ Is a burden, a hin drance to activity, a rurb upon pleasure. You can take oft the fut where It shows by taking after each meal and at bed timss. one lurmolu Prescription Tablet, The little tablets ara as effwtlve and harmless as the famous prescription from which they take their nainu. Buy snd tiy a raie today. All druggists the world over sell them at one dollar for a rase or you ran order them direct from the Marmola Co., 4S13 Woodward Av.. Jletroit. Mich. You can thus say good-bye to dieting, ex ercise and fat. BIUODSrtESS-SIOC BEADACEE. call for an tB Tablet, (a vegetable aperient) to tone and strengthen tha organs of digeetlon end eliml cation. Improve Appetite, Relieves Conatipatlon, Get a Used fit-ever Your Chips off Ihe Old Block rfl JUNIORS Little ffls One-third the regular dose. Made of same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adults. 5 Sherman & MrConnell Drug 8tores IF m Psiuaoer and Freight Services V. T. TO CHEBBOURO AND SOUTHAMPTON AQU1TANIA Feb. 7 Feb. 2 Mnr.iil MAVRETAN1A Apr. 4 Apr. 2S May 10 BERENGARI A . ...Miiy SO .III lie SO ,lulv 11 IS'. Y. 10 HALIFAX, PLYMOUTH, CHERBOUBO AXU HAMBUBO SAXOXIA Mar. 7 N. Y. TO QDEE.NSTOW.N- AND LIVERPOOL ALBANIA Feb. 18 Apr. 1 SCYTHIA Feb. 25 Mar. 22 Apr. 26 CAMERON! A Mar. 11 N. Y. TO LONDONDERRY AND- GLASGOW ASSYRIA Mar. 17 ALGERIA Apr. 8 May 12 June 10 N. Y. TO HALIFAX. LONDONDERRY AND GLASGOW ALGERIA Mar. i N. Y. TO MAOERIA. CADIZ. GIBRALTAR, ALGIERS. MONACO, NAPLES. K1UMB. VENICE, riRAEUS. CONSTANTINOPLE. HAIFA, ALEXANDRIA. CARMAMA Feb. 11 BOSTON TO LONDONDERRY, LIVERPOOL AND GLASGOW ASSYRIA Feb.4Apr.IS May 23 PORT LAND.. ME., to HALIFAX k GLASGOW SATURNIA Feb. 16 Mar. 3d CASSANDRA Mar. 2 Asr. 13 Assly Company's Local Agents Everywhere CASvAlrfOIilKINE ALWAYS keep CB.Q. TUfcl 1 in Ihe medrciae abtaeC. TfceT rsre Cold in 24 timin u4 relieve Ka Grippe in 3 eiatys. At AH Dimititi30 & Wj H. KILL COMPANY. DCTKMT A1V KHTISKSKNT KEEP LOOKING YOUNG It's Easy If . You Know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Tlie secret of kc-lrisr young l feel youint to do thin 'mi iiiunt watch your liver ami lowei thfrc'aj no nead of having a. sallow eoui)le.xlon dark rintrn under your iyi-n plnipUs a hilioua look In jour fate dull oven with no pnrkle. Your doctor will toll you nine ty ir cent of all alcknrss conic from Inactive bowels iiml liver. lr. Kd wards, a well known physi cian in Ohio, perfected a vegetable compound mixed with ollvo oil to act on tho liver und bowels, which he gave to his patients fur years. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, tho culiHtlUite for calomel, arc pentta in their action, yet always effective. They brlnff nbodt that natural buoy ancy which all should enjoy by ton ing up the liver and clearing tho syteiri of impurities. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are known by their olive color. 15c and 30c. AlOKKTIM-MF.NT 666 is a prescription for Colds, Fever and LaGrippe.' It's the most speedy remedy we know. MsASYlW S TheWorld's YEAST fTand,ard' TABLETS Quickly help build firm flesh, clear the skin, correct consti pation, aid digestion, put strength in the nerves and invigorate tired bodies with renewed "pep" and energy. Contains not only Teaat Vita mines, but mil tkrtt Important Tltamlnes A, B, and C especially concentrated and combined with other valuable health giving elements which yonr system needs to keep you strong and well. MASTI.V8 VITAMOX TABLETS are fully guarantees! la every respect and thousands spon thousands of satisfied users can best attest to their health handing value. At all rood drurglsta, urh as Nherinan & McConnetl, Adams Haigbt, Alexander Jacobs, J. L. Brand els, Hayden Bros., Burgess-Nash. FOR SORE THROAT , Don't take chances start right now to reduce the inflammation. The best and quickest remedy is BEGY'S MUSTARINE Fine for chest colds, neuritis, neuralgia and rheumatism. Will not blister 30c 60c yellow box. Sleep Sound Tonight Dr. Carter's K.&.B. Tea A generous package of this great vegetable tea for 30c -a tine laxative-a splendid Ionic for stomach. liver and bowels. Take ahotcupevery night, brew it yourself. Fretful children need it For Sale by Five Sherman & McConnell Drug Stores RUPTURE EXPERT for Men, Women and - Children in Omaha Representing W. S. Rice, ; Adams, N. Y. Our expert, J. B, Weldon, will be at the Rome Hotel, Omaha, Neb., February 2, 3 and 4. Every ruptured man, woman and child should take advantage of this opportunity. The Rice Method for rup ture is known the world over. You can now see this Method demonstrated and have a Rice Appliance fitted to you. Ab solutely no charge unless you are satisfied to keep the out fit after having the Appliance adjusted and you see how perfectly and comfortably 'it holds. Iso harsh, deep-pressing springs; nothing to gouge the flesh and make you sore. Can be worn night and ' day with positive comfort. Soft, rubber-like composition pad, any degree of pressure re-quircd. Don't wear a truss all your, life when thousands have re ported cures through using ; the Rice Method. Why suffer the burden of rupture if there is a chance to be free from truss-wearing forever? Any way it will cost you nothing to come in and see Mr. Wel don at the Rome Hotel. . Office hours, 9 to 12 a. m., 2 to 5 p. m. ; evenings, 7 to 9. Don't miss this great, op portunity to see an Expert on Hernia. W. S. Rice, Adams, N. Y. IPtiIWgs Ptetula-Pay When Ciircd ' JL JlJLvCfo) A mai tem of treatment that euros Piles, Fistula and otket &a CJe-3 SS' Rectal Diseases in a short time, without a sever surgical op eration. No Chloroform, Ether or other general anesthetic asee). ure Kusranteed in every ease accepted for treatment, and no money ia to be paid until cured. Write for book on Rectal Diseases, with names and testimonials of mora thaa t,v prominent people wno nave Deen- permanently cured. DR. E. R. TARRY Sanatorium, Peters Trust BIdg. (Bee Bldg.) Oeaaha. Neb. ADVERTISEMENT. 666 will break a Cold, Fever and Grippe quicker than anything we know, preventing- pneumonia. Clear Baby 's Skin With Cuticura Soap and Talcum Ssssaft nill tin Hit TmlraeM TL rfcfrw: QsjIiMftl CSjlsMamPJlla, I