8 C Yank Tourists Flock to Venice to Look at Queen No Ja Bantl. Shimmy Dancers or Wild ,CabareU to Mar, "City of ; Silence. Venice. June 17. Cati, though permitted, niy hsve no pleasure in looking at a king, but American tourists are Hocking to look at the queen. Venice, the Queen of the Adriatic today ia filling with folk who apeak the English language, who have all their livea heard of thia remarkable city and who are coming to ace if their dream were justi fied. The other day the new flag of the city wai raited wid loud were the viva of the native. The American joined ia no ihouting, but it was re markable now many comment were paused in the American language and how many pair of pointed hoe fill ed St. Mark square. The season of suntliine had begun, from every di rection the touriata were concentrat ing upon Venice. . Most everybody found that Venice was about the only place in Europe which comet up to the imagination. Or to one' preconceived idea. One American woman liked St Marks be cause the color were soft and not as postcardly pictured; another de clared that riot of color wa the thing that pleased an eye accustomed to gray citie and brownstone fronts. Dut all found that it was the uni queness of Venice that waa its main attraction. 1 . "You actually must take a gondola to. get to your hotel from the rail road station," exclaimed the new vis itor, uttering at once the .common est yet almost interesting observa tion tht "station hat heard in a mil lion timet. It is only after you have been in the hotel a while that you learn that you can get almost every where on land provided you want to take a chance in a labyrinth with blind alleys bringing you to blind waterways. The gondola, however, remains the most romantic of ve hicles it is romantic all the way from its graceful lints to the folk songs and the guitar and mandolin playing, the moonlight and the faint swish swish of the gondolier's oar. A room on the Grand canal which, by the way, comes ' to less than a room " in a hotel Unter den Linden in Berlin, where things are supposed to be cheap but aren't is a continual joy. From, red sunshine to. red sunset Venice goes through all the changes of color the mixing of the primary ones are capable of, and the passing of tiny lights On dimly seen gondolas under your hotel window has its own enchantment. Certainly, for the visitor from the American lands this port of the Ad riatic is the best sight of all. For the. American city dweller Venice is the,' haven of rest if he ' chooses to make it so. While it is i the city pi beauty, it is the city of silence, jThefe are, thank heaven, still no jazz bands in Venice and no shimmy dancing. There are theaters and movies but no wild cabarets. And most important, there are no auto mobiles, no street cars clanking, not a single horse to clatter on cobble stones, almost no dogs to bark at the sunrise, and durn few cats to give competition concerts at night, because a knowledge of swimming is a necessity for animalsjiere. . And it is quiet. It is the rest cure par excellence for jangled nerves. For those who are not for sightsee; ing, for mounting the steps (or ele vator prjee 3.50 lire) of the Cam panile, for inspecting the Doge's palace of the art gallery, there is still the quiet colored beauty of the city itself where one can wander for hours in perfect quiet and peace of an age long gone by. Latest Home Brew Recipe in Official U. S. Pamphlet Washington, June - 17. Sh-h-hl jWant the latest home brew recipe? .It's official, too. - . " Just anchor yourself in a chair and scribble a note to your Uncle Sam, care of Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C, and ask him to send you a pamphlet entitled "The Manufacture of Ethyl Alcohol From : Wood Waste." Ethyl alcohol for merly was used for beverage pur- poses. . . . . Old : Order Changeth; ; Cow Has Her "Day" : as Calif ornians Flee Dog No Longer Alone J Los Angeles, CaL, June 17. The old order changeth I No. longer is the dog alone in having: his "day." The cow has joined the tribe. ' N . Men scaled telephone poles, po licemen and firemen turned cow boys, and women sought shelter in automobile) here recently when a cow ran amuck in the crowds awaiting trains at the Santa Fe railroad station, " Traffic rules were suspended and motorists drove into aide streets when the cow, which had escaped from a trailer in which it was be ing transported, went charging down Santa Fe avenue, first trying a shop and then hotel entrance. Finally the animal was lassoed and turned over to its owners. AS OLD AS THE HILLS BUT AS NEW AS TODAY! ' Cod-Ever o3 has been famoua for age and hm alwiy born abundantly rich in htalth-building vitmmb A. It only needed todays adenc to confirm the trua worth of thk wxxxkr hil ccsrgiBiig nutaient UbwistVtto mm OF PURXfT VITAMINS - EXAR1NO COD-LIVER Oft. tiettalWotyi ratted DBOto item sastam rttnay tn tbs) aora smd ewooiw twrasd nowtb arad basing dtiroiifi ; GtW vear ekiUnm tht hnkh-bmlding Umfih ti SeotVa Emulnan. ThmrmM no ttsjtfcr (mm f ttmrt thorn mmwf - Gods and Kings and Temples of Old Egypt Majestic Mementos of Past Wear an4 Tear of Many Centuries Has Not ue stroyed Beauty of Monu ments of an Early ' Civilization. Mm Im eM In hm tm Mtor f arte fc HUa ea4 e a" ea ml taaaev nattae. la uus eoe esnue aa laae.e Karat, Ha relate m4 Ha raila-h She ataa Ml assarts, lag at sale-era IMa EsrPl. u h- mm ssuaa mm sai By HENRIETTA If. REBS. The most marvelous part of these antiauitiei. .which impreitei one again and again, it that every en graved or painted line meant some thing in the picture writing of the time, "Say it in stone" was the motto of the ancient Egyptians and they followed it out. Then they decorat ed it with yellows and blacks and reds and bluet and green until they mut have bewildered themselves with the wealth and variety of color. This wa the work of the king, but behind every gigantic block of (tone, every carved and ornamented col umn there it the untold tragedy of slave labor which was used in the construction. Nor did the kings forget themselves in the reckoning There are few modern records of such colossal conceit as those in these magnificent relics. I stood by figures - of kings as large as those of the srods. . as some Ram- eses allowed Horus or Isis or Osiris to oresent him with his crown or some symbol of good fortune. I saw other kings of equal size with the gods, as they did offering to them. I listened meekly. As Manmoud ex plained, the carving on the side of a temple ' described - the victories of the kings in wars, their greatness and' ability,' and he pointed out the figures of their enemies at the bot tom, usually held by the hair of the head, tied to chariot wheels, or worse still, headless. Usually these enemies are so small in comparison. to the kings it doesn't seem like much of a feat to have con- quered them. It last, we came to 2: a....: . ,,. Tk. king capturing a hippopotamus. The king was at least twenty teet nign and the hippo about the size of a rabbit. It was the last straw. Talk about advertising. The old kings tooted their own horns and echoes are still reverberating. We saw a whole valley where nothing was found -but mummified cats. We visited the tombs of Apis, the sacred bull, where several of his mummies were - tound the poor beasts in life probably never expect ed to be embalmed and buried each in a polished granite case. Among Magnificent Relics. We visited the site of Memphis, where a beautiful sphinx sits as it was found, and colossal statues of Rameses the Great are seen. We visited Dendara, where the destrucn tion of the early Christians failed to remove entirely the impressive effect of huge columns mounted with gi- . . 1 . ? t TT-.1 t- ganiic wniie laces oi nainor inc Egyptian Venus. We visited Kar nak and spent some time marveling at the efiormous scale upon which it was built, at its avenues of great columns 135 in number, and every one decorated to the very top. We went all over the great temple of Luoor. we visited a temple at Esril, where many columns, each "with a different mounting, were- seen. ; About that time it occured to me that I "hadn't lost arty more temples in Egypt. I WOuldn t have missed seeing them for anything, but just the same I didn't care if I never American Legion Notes Group 3 will meet at Legion head quarters next Tuesday evening at 8. The nurses' division will meet at the Nurses' club, 2420 Harney street, Thursday evening, July 6, at 8. Mothers of service men whose bodies have; been left in cemeteries in France-may make application now for a large American flag similar to the flag which covered each casket returned from France. Harry Hough, adjutant, will assist any gold star mother in making this application. ' The Douglas county post is par ticipating in the American Legion essay contest for school children on "How Can the American Legion Best Serve the Nation?". Informa tion may be secured from the adju tant . at headquarters. Letters await the following at legion headquarters: Charles L. Fleck, Thomas Pedro, Joseph Butler, Earl Thomas, Walter Yarlitz, Ed Be honek, J. C. Harris, James Bouch ard, Henry Austin, Gamille Levassun, John F. Seriber. . ' Cigarets, candy and magazines were distributed by the hospitaliza tion committee of the auxiliary to the following service men in Omaha hos pitals last week: Lord Mater Tom Rodlo and W. J. Wilson, Omaha. Wlaa Memorial Jack Ooldsbury, Ne braska City; William Rinehart, Okarvllle, III. Paxton Memorial William Lyflelfl, Petersburg, . Neb.; ,.. Qeorse. Bunson, Omaha. , ClarkaoB . Memorial Charles Ogle, Omaha, - ' MetBodlst Fred Murphy, -Omaha. -: Iramanuer Abel Chrlstensen, Klron. Ia, " St. Joseph B. Crosslar, Oklahoma. University John Christ, Blair, Neb.; R. Clark. Osceola, Neb.; Mr. Dodge, Du luth, .Minn.; Thomas Hensher, Omaha; Leo Flaherty, St Edward, Nab.; J. I Antrom, Arlington, Neb. KB taw any Rametciet again, nor Horns, nor any ol the rett ot them. I warn I an Egyptologist and worse still. I did not want to be. And I couldn't marvel another tnarv, at gigantic statue, especially oftcr seeing Kara ees II over sixty feet high and one solid block of done. When we reached Anuao I took vacation. Did I go to tht painted tombs on the weit bank at sunrise? I did not. Nor any other time. And my spirits rote every time I looked over at them and knew I wat not going. I fully expected some one to come along and ssy it was the moat won derful sight of the trip, but the joke of it was, I never found any one else on the boat who went to see them either. Modern Work Also Wonderful. After this we rode to the sub merged temple of Philae and saw some of the top of it The same morning we saw one of the wonders of the modern world, the great As man, dam. This in its way is just as remarkable a piece of work aa the great templea of the past. The great dam itself. U about two .miles- long and the water rests high on the one side, and on the other it gushes pic turesquely through sluice gates over rocks of the first cataract below. This dam makes it possible for many millions of acres, formerly waste, to be cultivated. In a land which has 13.000,000 inhabitants, living in 13. 000 square miles, this is a valu able item. All along the Nile, the creak of the takkiych or water wheel iq heard as the gamoose or camel treads his endless circle round it. Qn either tide of the river men ceaselessly dip with skin buckets at tached to a pole and a weight These primitive pumps lift the water to three or four levels for irruzatinsr purposes and' the countryp round glowa a vivid green At all the mud villages, and freauentlv . alonar the shore one sees women, looking like great, crows in their black robes. These come to the river to fill the jars they carry on their heads. The mud of the Nile vallev ia black, and much like the gumbo we Know, i he Hut otten reminded me of the Missouri with its sand bars, re the boat frequently stuck. """V "K u" "u certed singing of our crew to oull us off. The crew." bv the wav. did all such work at washing the deck, rowing, pushing off and the like, to singing, iq which they kept splendid time. Usually a solo voice sings a few words and the rest come in with one or more syllables afterward. The same tune is repeated many, times. The yellowish sand banks, in the dis tance by the Nile could easily have been like the bluffs of the Missouri had it not been for the tropical date nalms here and there' before them.. We saw many strange birds, vultures, buzzards, and some, long, spindly birds none of us. recognized. Nature Adds. Dramatic Touch. We revelled in: marvelous carmen flushed sunsets every night.when the waters blushed and darkened, and be came opalescent in the afterglows. We saw a few sunrises of even more dramatic beauty.- As for the moon light, it was 'of an unusual brilliancy. Its magic turned the cliffs to a sort of salmon-pmk1 loveliness, and to any one sitting cm the piazza of the Cat aract hotel at-Assuan it gives the picturesque rocks, and the water, and the cliffs a ' breathless beauty. We visited Kamak by moonlight, .when the great columns seemed twice as big and twiee at many and the rav ages of time were softened and. re moved. A group of us went to the sanctuary of the cat-headed goddess. At the right time of the month the light, shining into a small hole at the top touches this black granite figure on the head, and the effect is said to be enough to get almost any one into religion. But it wasn't quite the right day of the month, and the .beams of light were too far forward. . - - "The ancient , Egyptians originally believed in one God, almighty and self-existent. His only son was "TIZ" No More Sore, Tired, Why go limping around with ach ing, puffed-up .feet feet so ired, chafed, sore and swollen you can hardly get your shoes on or off? Why don't you get box of "Tiz" from the drug store now and glad den your tortured feet for a few cents? "Tiz" make's your feet glow with (SlaVlM THE SUNDAY BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. JUNE 18. Cuiris, who reigned wisely and well oa earth, but at length wat slain by the god Sit, personification oi the powers of darknets. But he rose from the dead, and became the god of the underworld and of the being who were therein. Decause be uf. fered, died and rote from the dead, he became the type oi the resur rection to the Egyptians who based sit their hopes of everlasting life upon the belief that Otiris wat im mortal and eternal:" It toundt rather familiar, doesn't it? . ln the museums we ssw many decorated bronie looking-glass, combs, pins of all sorts and Jewelry of such fine work and design as to take much of the credit ascribed to others back to the centuries thou sand of years before. In the tem ples we taw the first Doric and lotus columns and others of intri cate design and beauty. We taw one temple with arches which were not tuppoted to have come into existence until years later in Rome. We saw papyrus thousands of years olJ wonderfully inscribed. . . . , We saw much more and I dont know what else we might have seen, but our trip came to an untimely end. Our boat was firmly imbedded in the sand for 24 hours, and we left tmcermoniously at Luxor on the re turn trip and took the train to Cairo in order to make our connection for Jerusalem. . - I hated to leave the Nile. It was such a luxurious river. Its current flows up, according 'to our stand ards, that is, north to the sea, but the wind usually blows down, from the sea, so the many sailboats either hoist their sails and go against the current or put them down and float with it. I loved every ghiassa (or sailboat on it - - : Some Features of Egypt ' But I didn't fee! so badly about leaving some of the natives. They were so dirty and flies' rested several thick upon; their faces. The little babies, helpless to - protect them selves, often had both eyes black with feasting flies. The flies go anywhere and then come and rest on you. You have a fly whisk which waves them away for a moment. The Egyptains have given it up as a hopeless task, and it is said they con sider 'the fly sacred. But Egypt needs fly swatters instead of whisks, a.nd several tons of flypaper. They also say mothers do not want their children too attractive, because of fear of the evil eye. But the eye we cast upon the little things was much more evil than it would have been if they had been clean.v The cry of "backsheesh" is aloud in the land, and if one even looks at a na tive he expects ' it. Whatever one gives him is not enough. One day, after giving twice too much for a tip and the native fussed, I lost my patience. I-reached into his open hand and seized ha'f of it back, and as I' reached for the other half he vanished. I only wished I had dis covered the system before. But there were some wonderful Egyptain people cultured, edu cated and interesting. We met some of these, and at Assiout our boat trip was broken) a party at the home of Alexaus Bey, given by his niece. Miss Edna Wissa. We learned afterwards this was the finest home in Egypt, and it was certainly a palace and our hosts royal enter tainers. It all came about because my uncle met Wissa Bey in Cairo. We also met Mr. Macheras, the editor, of the Arabic- paper in Cairo, another wideawake, interesting man. Upon the whole we had a trip on the , Nile which will always remain in the memory. In spite of every thing, donkey and camel rides were fun and views of thff Nile fascinat-. ing, for which one had to climb a. cliff to look at the same river he saw all the time. Even the people who rode in the one or two aand carts and did the easy things only, enjoyed it, and as for the historic antiquities, none of us will ever for get them. : . Tender or Swollen Feet comfort; . takes ' down swelling and draws the soreness and misery right out of feet that chafe, smart and burn. "Tiz" instantly stops pain in corjts, callouses and bunions, liz is glorious , for tired, aching,' sore feet. ' No more shoe tightness no more foot torture.. . Ask for "Tiz." Get only "Tit:." AreUxHd; TTnltMrniiiifitiilTiini iniiswe dogging mat kfftasiesi of the porta, Ike usual csnee of ptmolee aasd baKkheade, walk the Olatmeat tooths n4 baale. Cutlcnra Talewas ia asUcasa, oaltitral diatliisM. KB IT jet a Harem Expert on Trip to Look Over Beauty Market Abdul-Al Hamld Would Like to Garner -Fair Maiden FrwB 'Every Nation for His Court I - Belgrade, June 17. Abdul-el-Haraid, 71, with young ideat and hit pocket ttuffed with Turkish pound, arrived in Belgrade from Constsntinople. That event in Itself would not create any interest if it was not for the fact that Abdul was in Belgrade to look over the Jugo-Slav beauty field, and, if necessary, purchase out right a young and pretty maid as an additionarfeminine ornament for his harem in Turkey. Abdul made no bones about the fact that he would like to garner a fair maiden from every country of j Parcel Post Mail Order Adver feing Don't Feel Old Every man or woman should be able to get vp ia the morn ing and really , feel like life waa worth living. ' : Shattered nerves, functional breakdowns, can bo easily over come by taking thia simple home treatment. Gray's Nerve Food Tonic Tablets Build up the entire system. They strengthen the brain and body, and tone yon np sexually. . They contain no harmful drugs, are very easily taken and the most astonishing result! can 'be obtained from a single $1.00 box. The complete' treatment (which we strongly advise) con sists of 6 boxes at ' a ' special price of $8.00. "These tablets will be mailed,' to you anywhere at your re quest We will send it C O. D., or you may send the money. Don't forget,' our immense drug and toilet goods stocks and our low prices make it both convenient and economical for you to trade with us. 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C LEARY CO. Ea gravers and Statieaers TtS Seutk ISth Street, Osaaha 1923. the world to light his pipe for him at night and put on his slipper, and his first ttop w Belgrade on hi way to points eat The , harem chieftain, wearing gorgeously red necktie, lopped by a lea and puffing a perfumed cigaret, take hi nightly cushioned seat at the Moscow cafe and lamps all the beauties who past, wailing for a choice morsel before popping the "come hither, child" quettion. He hain't found the. lucky one yet, be acknowledged. The harem it my hobby. Just at it it another man's hobby to ttudy attromony," he declared one night, gazing through a ring of smoke at a passing mademoiselle. I'd like to have a wife from every nation grac ing .my fireside, even though I am old and have gray hairs; but there'l a lot of life in me yet." Abdul i not any too strong for an American entry into hi harem. He explains it in this way: "Your Amer ican women want either tn run the (how or but it up. If they can't run it or but it up, thev begin to reform it. They would' probably want to oust me a head of mv own harem and put a woman in charge. Can you beat it?" Abdul said that he reaped the har The Handy ' JACK KNIFE Boy Scout Special $1.75 Sstar aa PsmS isase, sjtnei Braes L lei a Ca Liner Unftk Closed, 3. Inch This special knlla la the bast ( bun dreds wa kava a tacked ia years af sslliaf. The Wades ere tempered aad sturdy. They will held their edge loncar ties, any other knife wa anew. The stag haadle rite the hand. The whola knife ie buUt for real hard work farm or city. It la a ansa's hails with a hoy's name. Van will nsver regret being the owner of ena of these fine, up-to-date Jack Knives. SEND IN YOUR ORDER TODAY. The knife wlU go forward the same day your order ia received. , PAY THE POSTMAN. Don't send ua any money. Remember we stock every' known sporting coeds article and have what you want at the price you want to pay. Townsend Sporting Goods Company 1300 Farnam Street. Omaha Made of extra heavy Pure Cop per. Note the ex treme width of pot, which gives an ex tra large fire space. These pots are p ac k e d in plain 1 wooden boxes and 'shipped same day Wtf 1 -your order is re ceived. In ordering send only $1.00. Balance CO. D. ' FREE catalog con taining valuable in formation upon re quest. . ' & Co. Dept. S. 407 Barker Blk. . ' Omaha, Neb. 1 13th St, Omaha Tea Will Need a WeiHinj Gift In June Here is a timely suggestion. A -very specially priced Broad or Roll Tray, Adam Period Design,. Sheffield , Silver. Regular price, $8.00. On Sale for $4.95 Money back if not satisfied. Brodegaard Bros. Co. 16th aad Douglas Sts.. Osaaha It will be to your advantage to patronize-the - advertisers v in this Mail Order Section. vest of American ding whits in Nw York four years ago. Continuing: "That it why a Jugo slav maid of tender yean seems to me to be the ideal a a harem wife. Tbvy are docile, itay at home when hubby withes to gallop about the wild lands, and they are excellent cook of pig meat. The yare ideal maybe a little heavy set, but quiet and lamblike." Al Ilamid blinked twice at another member of the weaker ie hove in fight. "That's sweetness itself. I mutt buy it," he ejaculated, pulling out a pair of gold-rimmed eyeglasses. ''Pretty, that one. They do grow tome of them nice in thit country." A coffee drinker at the next table interrupted the conversation. "Par don." he laid, "thaft a French girl." Abdul put away hit eyeglaste. de claring he mut haten to Paris at the end of the month. He acknowl edged that he want! to buy wives with. Austrian kronen or Ruitian ruble, o that he will get the benefit of the exchange and collect new members for his harem at bargain price. . Bee Want Ads boost busmen. Our complete Radio ReceWIag Set . will' be seat yea at oaca for 30 Higher-Priced Oass II Desired Mail your order at eace. Wo have oaly a limited supply. 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C PETERS MILL CO. 2tk and B Stmts.'Osaaha I ' . Makers of the FINEST FEEDS ON EARTH 0 0 0 Gobs Put Missing Link 1 Show Out of Business Constantinople. June 17. "Th"" missing link, ladies and gentlemen, the musing link, captured in the wild of Africa after a long and ex haustive retcarch, half monkey, half man. Ten pi-i-astcrt, don't crowd, one at a time." The ballyhoo wat holding forth in the Champs de Mart, an imitation of Coney Island. Two American sail or paid their 10 piaster and were regaled Inside the exhibition tent with a scene of a woman, covered with matted hair. She spoke Greek. "I'm half monkey and half hu man," she told the spectator. "My father wa a baboon and my mother, was an American." It wa Greek, but the girl with the sailor understood. She told her Americsn friends. The show ended then and there. The next day the two American tailors made an of ficial report to the Constantinople pott of the American Legion, and the ihow temporarily wrecked the night before, wa permanently nut out of butine by the allied polite on the complaint of the Legion. You Can Have For a Sweet-Toned SchmoUer & Mueller Piano or Player Piano Our Factory-to-Home telling plan means a saving of $100 to ' $15ff. ' Free Stool and Scarf. Twenty-Five . Year Guarantee. Freight prepaid. Write for Free Catalog. . Name Address tv City. State.. n.... ScbmoHer & Mueller PIANO CO. 1S14-16--18 Dodge Street, Omaha. Neb. for 0) TP Ycafi to w Pay f M Poultry Feeds 5 Kr- 1 V 0 0 aeotl a I. . . : n