TTIE NOIlTn PLATTE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. Business Woman Feared She Had Heart Trouble' "Since Tnnlac has overcome a bnd case of Indigestion end nervousness of three or four years' standing for me, my work hero In the store Is a pleasure, and I am certainly grateful for the pood health It has given me," said Mrs. J. W. Plcklns, of 010 E. 1Mb St, Los Angeles, who owns and open ntcs the book store at 210 Mercantllo Place. "1 was so run down that I felt miser nble nil the time. My sleep was broken and restless, I hod no appetite, and the gnB from undigested food caused roy heart to palpitate so I thought 1 had heart trouble. For a time I had a swelling la my legs, too, and It wad an effort for me to get about. "It Is wonderful how Tnnlac has given me mich perfect relief from these troubles. I eat heartily now, sleep like n child at night, and just feel fine all the time." Tanlnc is sold by all good druggists. Advertisement. Some people make a specialty of thinking second-hand thoughts. No man's secret Is safe after n womnn known h has It. E&1T II HI S" la1 IT) Ni fiALr iitii TIME IN BED Farmer's Wife Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Made Her a Well Woman Carter's Creek, Tenn. ' ' Threo years ago I was almost an invalid. I spent l Kali ol my time in bed, being amicted. with a trouble which women of a certain ago are apt to have. I tooK J-iVdia tu. Pinkham'sVegetablo Compound Tablets and used Lydta E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. I am a well woman how and have been for two years. I can work as well as any ono who is younger and as I am a farmer's wife I have plenty to do for 1 cultivate my own garden, raise many chickens and do. my own housework. You may publish this letter as I am ready to do anything to help other women as I have been so woll and happy since my troubles are past. " Mre. E.T. Galloway, Carter's Creek, Tenn. Most women find plenty to do. Ii they arc upset with some female ailment and troubled with such symptoms ai Mrs. Galloway had, the smallest duty seems a mountain. If you find it hard to keep up, if yoi are nervous and irritable, without ambi tion and out of sorts generally, give the Vegetable Compound a fair trial. W believe it will help you greatly, for ii has helped others. Bad Breath Is Usually Due to Constipation When you are constipated, not enough of Nature's lubricating liquid is pro duced in tho bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubricant and thus replaces it. u o i is a lubricant not a medicine or laxative so cannot gripe. Try it today, A LUBRICANT-NOT A LAXATIVE CURES COLDS LA GRIPPE Standard cold remedy world over. Demand box bearing Mr. Hill's portrait and signature. At All Druggists -30 Cents Cuticura Soap The Healthy Shaving Soap Cntlcnr8oapfhYwltlKrotnitif. ETtrywhere 25e. Strike Halts Executioner. According to n report printed In C5o- los Ilossll, an nntl-UolHhevlst uussinn paper of Uerlln, the' workers of Arch angel went on strike when the death sentences of threo .irlcsts and live lay men for luivliiK resisted tho conflsca tion of church property was nnnounccd hv Hie soviet revolutionary court. After the strlko had continued two days n telegram was received from tho Ali-ltnsfilnn central committee In Mos cow commuting tho sentences to three years' Imprisonment, and work was re slimed. Most people are willing to tell the truth If It hurts somebody else. look to Your Eyes Beautiful Eyes, like fine Teeth. tc the reiult of Cpmunt Care. The dilly uie of Mtirina makes Eyes Clcsr and iadiant. Enloyable. Hirmleii. Sold ynd Recommended by All Druwlst. liumiiiM iiiimii Ho 1 Airplane View of (Frepored by the National Geographic So ciety, Washington, D. C.) Few plnces In the world have exer clccd such a power of attraction for travelers ns Constantinople, or have had such widespread reputation for be ing picturesque. The severe, classic art of Athens Is not found here; nor the dignity of Koine; nor the exciting, sullen spirit that permcntcs Peking. It Is not gay like Paris, nor learned like Uerlln. An archeologlst would he better pleased with Egypt. But this Is the place be fore which Gnutler, Byron, Lotl, Do Amlcls and Limiartlne wept and swooned with delight before they snt down to fill books with ecstatic praises. But practical modernity has left Its mark everywhere. Already there are on all sides tho changes due to western Influence trams, electric lights, telephones and a new safe bridge. Constantinople's geographical posi tion has made her Bangutnnry history, for she controls a high road of com merce between Asln and Europe, nnd Nature herself planned the ports. The city is divided Into three separated quarters, Stamhoitl and Pern-Gnlata lie on the European side, the Golden Ilorn between them, and ScutnrI squats on the Asiatic side, across the Bosporus. Like outstretched nrms, the two straits come up from the Sen of Marmora to the south. Galatn nnd Pera nre the European quarter, opposite Stamboul, where the representatives of foreign powers have long maintained their embassies nnd homes. Once the suburbs of Sttunboul, this pnrt of the city was known as JiiHtlnlanapolls until the Genoese made It Into an Italian town nnd fortllled It with walls and many towers, one of which, the Galata Fire Tower, still stands, a lofty lookout station from which fires are reported and signals Hashed to ships after dark. Nowadays Pern's crooked streets are alive with allied soldiers, refugees, relief workers, adventurers, peddlers, beggars, and a few tourists. Pass ports, unless one has business, nre dif ficult to get, and tourists are rarely seen. The American residents number about four hundred, the largest colony between Home nnd Manila. There Is but little soclnl life, and the only piuces of amusement are the enfes and restaurants, with their adjoining caba rets nnd moving-picture screens. Galata Bridge Its Keynote. While the Galata bridge between the European quarter nnd Stamboul still lives up to Its tradition of having every nationality In the world cross It at least once an hour, It lacks some of Its old chnnn, becnuse of the Turkish people's renunciation of color. The men for the most part hnve adopted the European business suit, with which they wear a red fez, and the women's costumes are usually of black. What the IMulto bridge Is to Venice, the Pont Ncuf to Paris, the West minster to London, so is the Galata bridge to Constantinople the keynote to the city. A constant Btrcnm of polyglot peo ples flows ucross the Golden Horn: ltussln,n refugees, In pajnmaconts tucked Into trousers grown too large; Armenian and Greek incrchnnts and refugees; British, French and Italian army nnd navy ofllcers; Amerlcun sail ors; Chinese, Japanese ami Persian merchants; the lust of the outmoded eunuchs; dervishes In brown, with conc-shnped hats; Cretans In baggy trousers and embroidered vests; Greek priests with black chiffon veils streaming from their hats; hnmals (porters) with roomfuls of furniture on their hacks; Arabs In yellow bur nooses; maimed and diseased beggars; Mohnminednn prleets In pink or green robes; black troops in red caps nnd snshes; Jewish guides; American re lief workers; Hindustani gunrds In twisted turbans nnd scarlet capes; an occasional woman gypsy In baggy trousers; Levartlnc tradesmen; Al banian peasants In embroidered white leggings; Ilawulians, Filipinos, and a few drummers from "points west of Chicago" all these pass buck and forth In the course of a day. The tnxes were recently doubled on the bridge, nnd the eight TurkUh col-lei-tons were ordered to make the Turk ah women, previously exempt, pay for Constantinople. the privilege of crossing the Golden Horn. The women, however, Indig nantly refused, nnd at both ends of the bridge a constant conflict went on be tween protesting officials and the wom en, who slipped by with exclamations of anger. The collectors did not hnve tho temerity to lny hands on these toll evaders, because Turkish women were for so long a time the exclusive prop erty of their husbands that custom still forbids a raun detaining a woman by force in any sort of public argu ment. Tho traditional sncredness that sur rounds the person of a Turkish woman had a curious result during the war, for the Turks did not dnre to search one of them, even though it was known that she carried unlawful messages lu her garments. On both sides of the bridge are docks for small steamers that take com muters back atiG forth between the Oolden Horn and Scutari, the 15 sta tions of the Bosporus, nnd the Princes islands. At rush hours these efficiently operated boats are as packed as a New York ferry. Stamboul Is Really Turkish. If anything of the real Turkey Is to be seen, Pern must be abandoned for Stamboul. In this ancient city, which was Byzantium und New Itome, tho mosques, coffee houses, turbehg (domed tombs) nnd fountains remind one, even In their dilapidation, of the city's past days of greatness, Although the houses are nearly all constructed of wood, they are never painted, t6r the Turks hnve a theory that If their property looks prosperous their taxes will be Incrensed. So tha window lattices crumble and fall, tho boards sag, the shingles wnrp, and nothing is repaired. The population Is Inactive and looks discouraged. Men sit in cafes and talk about the hard times. Old graybearda sit on the sidewalks and smoke nargl lehs. The letter-writer has a stand near the centrally located mosques, nnd still makes nn excellent living from the Turks, few of whom can read or write. A group of dervishes, who, like the city, have declined In plcturesquencss, pass slowly up the streets. Ilaiunls, the native expressmen, stagger along, crying, "Mnke way!" As In the old days, kabobjees slice off strips of roast ing ment to tempt the appetites of tho passersby. As In Pera, Russian refugees havo been everywhere, selling flowers, kew pie dolls, oil paintings of Constantino ple, cakes and trinkets, books and' newspnpers printed In Itusslnn. They slept in the open streets and on the steps of the mosque. They loafed, begged, worked when they could find n Job, and sometimes sobbed with hun ger. Burned Houses Not Rebuilt. The devastating tires Hint havo over been working toward tho destruc tion of Constantinople cnused the city to bq built unew every CO years, until a lnw wus passed prohibiting the con struction of wooden houses on the site of burned ones; In fact, It was provid ed that no houses at all should be built until the city government pluuned new streets. Nothing has been done about tho planning, however, and tho result Is that one-fourth of Stnmboul more than 22,000 houses, burned during the pnst twelve years still lies In asties. Scutari, too, has vast ruined sections. So has Pera, on a much smnller scale. The publisher of The Orient, the only American newspaper In Stamboul, says that the llres have caused the housing situation to become acute and the rents to mount enormously. In fact, It costs more to live In Constantinople today than In any other city lu '.no world, not excepting New York. Tho city is especially crowded now with refugees nnd foreigners, who add ilO per cent to the population, which, ac cording to estimated figures, now to tals 2,250,000. Ths overcrowded condition will grow worse until some one starts to rebuild the ruined areas. As Stamlioul has stood since 5100 B, C It would bo a crime against science to rebuild with out scientific supervision of tho digging nnd a systematic exploration of the site by archeologlsts. 'Che. American (Copy for This Department Supplied fcjr . the American I.erlnn Nevm Service.) j; .jj i THE PORT OF MISSING MEN i -----. The United States Veterans' bu reau has requested the American Le gion to help find Robert Carter Pago who disap peared recently from St, Eliza beth's hospltnl In Washington, D. C. According to a letter from a W, Swnn, chief of tho division of Infor mation, Page is a neuro psychi atric case and may have suffered from aphasia. Ills Robert C. Page. father Is very anxious to get In touch with him. Page enlisted In the army bb a pri vate, Flying School Detachment, Air Service, January 0, 1018, at San Diego, Calif. He was honorably discharged Juno 20, 1010. Ho Is twcnty-tlve years of uge, about five feet six Inches tall; has blue eyes, dark brovn hair, nnd has a deep scar In the rim of his right car. His complexion Is Fallow. It la believed he went to California. He has been employed at the follow ing places: Sellers Manufacturing company, Chicago; Cuyuhoga Works, Cuyahoga, Cleveland, O.; 1234 Wash ington street, Chlcngo, and 103 Car penter street, Chicago. Page Is a claimant of Hie United States Veterans' Bureau. Information ns to his whereabouts should be for warded to his fathor, W. II. Page, 150, tho Portner Apartments, Washington, D. 0., or to the Information Section U. S. Veterans' Bureau. The Thirteenth Tost No. 513, Brook lyn, N. Y., of the American Loglon, has requested that any information regn r d 1 n g the whereabouts o f Frederick Pasch be sent to it, 357 Sumner avanuc, headquarters a t tho Thirteenth. Coast. Defense Command nrmory. Pasch disappeared July 20, liaYlng left Home In ap parent good health. He is a Frederick pasch. World war veteran, having served overseas with tho One Hundred nnd Fourteenth Infantry, Twenty-ninth di vision. He Is flvo feet nlno Inches tall, weighs 105 pounds, has brown eyes and hair, and Is twenty-five years old. His wife's address Is 312 Myrtle ave nue, Brooklyn. Headquarters, department of Texas, at Dallas, requests Information ns to tho whereabouts of Cecil T. Lavender, last heard from at Bakorsfleld, Calif. His brother, William Irving Lavender, Box 06, Lancaster, Tex., Is anxious nbout him. The missing man Is de scribed as six feet one inch tall, has brown hair and eyes, weighs 100 pounds, Is thirty-six years old, nnd wns, wounded while in France. A man by Uio name of Powers, killed accidentally in the Aloah log ging camp In Washington, was burled by Hoqulam Post No. 10 of the Amer ican Legion, which In seeking tho ad dress of his relatives. The following information was obtained from Ot tawa, Canada: "No. 334741; Clar ence Raymond Powers; served with tho Cnnndlan overseas forces. Broth er, John Powers, Inst address known, 533 Arch street, Philadelphia." Tho present address of John Powers could not be found in Philadelphia. GOOD USE OF HIS TRAINING Former Soldier, New Merrill (Wis.) Legion Member and Policeman, Disperses Robber Band. George Sevcrt of Morrill, Wis., Is an other of thoso fighting men whom Uncle Sam trained for fighting nnd who has in pence times proved ho was trained well. Severt 1 a a member of the Merrill police force. A gang of yeggmen, In the darkness of night, attempted to rob the post office. Revert discovered tbe outlaws, sev eral In number at George Severt work on the vault He challenged the lookout, as tho American doughboy used to challenge on tho firing line, nnd his answer was a hall of bullets. Draw ing his revolver, Severt engaged In a hnttle of bullets, driving tho robbers to cover behind a corner of tho build ing. Then the policeman, who Is a mem ber of tho Edwnrd Burns Post, Ameri can Legion, at Merrill, ran around the building to nttnek from tho rear. And his attack was so hot that the yogg men fled precipitately. Don't Be Penny Wise and Pound Foolish Don't think because you can get a big can of Baking- Powder for little money that you are saving anything. There's Only One Way to Save on Bake-Day, Use CALUMET Tho Economy BAKING POWDER It costs only a frac tion of a cent for each baking. You use less be cause it contains more than the ordi nary leavening strength. The sales of Calumet are over 150 greater than that of any other baking powder. T MA0C SYA TWIT pOTiiKiHn pom' J BEST BY TEST THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING? POWDER Geographical Situation Counts. The Institutions of a country depend In great measure on the nature of Its eoll anil situation. The manners of Its Inhabitants are In vurlous ways modified by Its position. Important tovAIl Women Readers of This Paper Thousands upon thousands of women have kidney or bladder trouble and never suspect it. i Women's complaints often provo to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or tho result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy con dition, thoy may cause the other organs to become diseased. You may suffer pain In the back, head aolio and Iobs of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous, irri table and maybo despondent; it makes any ono so. Hut hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restoring health to tho kidneys, proved to bo just tho remedy needed to overcome such condi tions. Many send for & samplo bottle to sco what Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladdor medicine, will do for them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co"., Binghamton, N. Y., you may receive sam plo size bottlo by parcol post. You can purchase medium and large size bottles at all drug stores. Advertisement. In Luck. "Friend," said Cactus Joe to tho stranger In Crimson Gulch, "you hnve held four of a kind threo times, a royal flush twice an' several ace fulls." "Lucky, I call It." "You're luckier than you think. The boys here Is wlllln' to let you go your way Intact provided you start Imme diate. There won't be nny gun play unless you linger. The big luck fur you la the fact that you happened to pick 'Safety-first' week for your per formance nt this here enrd tnble." Washington Star. Tho nvenige man nevcr misses nn opportunity to show off before a pretty woman. It would be strange If tho company a mnn keens didn't know him. MESTERN CANADA Bi Wheat Crops A Canada Is the world's crcatc&t producer of wheat second only to the United States vet onlv about 12 the tillable area has besi worked. Yields iwr acre arn net uncommon. Oats have bushfls per acre, while 40 to 50 bushels per acre are ordinary yields; barley and rye In like proportion. Cattle nnd horses thrive on tne native Brasses wmcn eic" suuuuauuy unucura and sunflower culture are highly successful. Stock Raising, Dairying and Mixed Farming secure for the industrious settler ample returns forhla energy. Clearing the cost of one's farm with a single year's crop has un appeal, and has oeen done oy. nunurcas farmers. Taxes only upon landlnot on improvements), climate, attractive social conditions, good neighbors, cnurcnes. schools, telephones, excellent markets and shipping; facilities make life happy as well as prosperous. For Illustrated literature, maps, description of farm opportuni ties in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and Uritish Columbia, reduced railway rates, etc, writo W. V. BENNETT 300 Peter's Trust Bldg. Omaha, Neb. Authorised Agnt,Dpt.ot tmmlcretlon and Colonisation, Dominion ol Canada 00 PURE Postpaid, C. O. D. 10c extra. Sheet H0T UNIVERSAL MFC;, m . AIR 1844 O Street 10c Saves Need Putnam Fadeless His Meaning. "In tho crucial hour of our country's1 history," rotundly said Senator Greed, "It behooves every patriot to rise abovo mere matters of personal pique or petty party advantage." "I understand," replied Ilostcttcr Smith. "You mean, Senator, that they should all vote for you?" Knusa City Star. rile Way. "Where's dnd?" "Listening to a sermon by nidlo." "Why, bo's sleep ing peacefully." "Well?" Louisville Courler-Juurnnl. Now Is tho Accepted Time. "If you have ears prepare to chow them now," murmurs the reader of fashion's autumn prophecies. W.L.D0UGLAS $567&8 shoes rasa W. L. Dotifrlns bIiooh arc actually do minuted year ufl"r year by more pcopto than any ol her shoe In Uio world. W.L.D0UGLAS:, terlal aiul workmanship are unequalled fortheprieo. Itl worth while for yuu to know that when you buy W. I Douglas shorn you nre get ting tlio henetl tof his 40 years ejxjrtenco InnmUlngtliebest tkooi possible for llio prico. V. L. DOUGLAS 'J', "S XTiirtlitlioprlcepalilfortliam. Wonr tliom and sare money. I'rotee tlon iiKalnst u n reaiion nble prullts is ciiuruulovd by tlio price stamped ou every pnlr. W.L.D0UGLAS:YBa III) ol nnr own stores In the, largecitles unci by shoe deal ers everywhere. Ank your sN.o riosuor to show you W.L. Douglas shoes. Only by ex amhitiiK thorn can you arc priioialo their Talue. KsfiiM ulmlltutos. Insist upon Imv Iiil' V UDouclas shoes with MOTS NIIOHR N4,MI .V. t,HO IK. U AiuriM nnmi and portrait it t4 but tnnun $ho JYaile Shrk in lite Krt(, Httnndt I or I tie itfhttt ittmttard at qualttv at thr til poiiioltcost, llu ,namt anJ price ti plainly Hamped on tlin intulliirlcnaiid thoiinmo " rw sote. slmiipod en tho solo. The II lit Ui utt It tvtdi& mull prices aro the same nl fir oUltt. very whom. ft V ? TO UKUCIIANTS! U no InAsMti&jJyiA 4raltt in voir loan handlti A tlJffPWi?4 IV l.ltvuglat than, unt'to- rMlffl & dan tor txelumrnaMt to WJ..lotinlnt nrtaC, htnJlr (Ml Quid ttltinf, JOA'jmiWi Strrrt Jkicl faro-over ilM llrocliton, Xlar. -HOW TO MAKF. MONKV" 40 pases of fact. Send COc. J. 11. MSVEVU 902 N. Winchester Avo CI II CAPO. IX, W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 48-4922. of of 40 bushels of wheat clven as hluh ns 100 oi western ianaaa :xm.;. lUIEM KIUI II 'III'- 1 1 1 1. JIIWIIW t 1 , . FORD HEATER Don't cut the DASH. Keeps car warm Hpaw Llnnnln. Np)v Illt'tQS Buying a New Skirt Dyesdyes or tints as you wish