1 Postponement of Public Building Program Urged r> o ■ Congressman Says Homes Should Be Built Before U. S. Starts Activities—Urges Survey of Conditions. By GRAFTON WILCOX. Washington, March 10.—Until the present building boom in tlie country has i ome to a close the United States government should not enter upon a public construction program, in the opinion of Representative Martin B. Madden, republican, Illinois, chairman of the house committee on appropria tions. Representative Madden has come to this conclusion after a thorough In vestigation into the building situation and with a view to the federal gov ernment taking the lead in arranging Its public works In order to afford employment in periods of depression. , Pending the end of the present home building activity the Illinois congress man would have an Exhaustive sur vey of government building require ments made throughout the country and a program drawn up. "The wisdom of this policy," Mr. Madden said, “must be apparent to anyone who gives the matter serious consideration. Policies Set Fortli. "First, it would prevent competi tion with the home builders which such a program entered upon at this ^.time would eniail. “Second, it would give the govern ment the buildings needed at a more moderate cost. ‘ "Third, it would find employment for those engaged in the building in dustry at a time when employment Is most needed and create a stabilising influence on the labor market. "A building program entered upon tinder such conditions would not only find employment for those directly en gaged in the building trades, but would also benefit kindred industries. Jt would aid the railroads by giving them additional transportation, aid the mlnps and give the miners em ployment; would enlarge opportuni ties for employment in all industries into which the building trades ramify. The government might also enter upon a more active road building pro gram during such periods.” "Any person who thinks back to 1913 will remember that throughout that year unemployment existed to a larger extent than at any time in the country’s history," said Mr. Madden. “It then occurred to me that during such periods the government should he prepared to carry on necessary public works which would give em ployment. There are several ways In which employment can be promoted by the government during such pe riods ot general depression/ and it should be the duty of the government to have its plans laid In advance to meet the needs arising under such conditions. Nothing was done, how ever, during the period of 1913 to re lieve the conditions which then pre #iai,ed Tn 1914 the war broke out and that forced the world to buy from the United States, in consequence of which employment Jes had by oil. Had it not heen for the war it is probable that the United States would ADVFKTINKM FAT. Simple Way to Get Rid of Blackheads There is one simple. safe and sure way 1 that never fails to Ket rid of blackhead*, that is to dissolve them. To do this get two ounces of calonite powder from any druir store—sprinkle a little on a hot, wet cloth—rub over the blackhead* briskly— wash he parts and you will be surprised bow the blackheads have disappeared. Biff blackheads, little blackheads, no matter where they are. simply dissolve and disap pear. Blackheads are simply a mixture of • lust and dirt and secretion# that form in 4th< pores of the skin. The calonite powder and the water dissolve the blackheads so they wash riffht out, leavinff the pores free and clean and in their natural con dition. BUNIONS! Pain Stops Instantly— Hump Vanishes TRY IT AT MY RISK .V'vv. niarvelotjH solvent to treat bunion* Stops patn Instantly—banishes tbs ugly hump and tired, arby. swollen, burning rm corumion You e*n wear if 0 n -mailer shoe with o«m fort. Test It at rny risk. ^2%’ First trial convince*. wy No clumsy apparatus, no rubber mould or prote tor. no uncomfortable latthir shield or felt pad f no plaster, nor muss/ liquid r It H I'KDOIIYNK. The Com plete Bunion Treatment. You will soy It is wonderful— 1 oniH/ine, so quick so sure does it net. Don’t wsstq time i and money on useless meth ods Don’t suffer Try FKIMl 1»YNK at my risk. Write to day before you do another thlnr Just say " I want to try PKDODTNK." Aartments as may be affected through some competent agency. "After this survey is complete and a full knowledge had of the govern , ment necessities authority could be granted to the supervising archi tect’s office to prepare plans and have them ready to proceed when the pres ent building boom comes to a close, fiovernment Needs Ituildings. "There Is great need throughout the country for additional facilities for the transaction of government business and it seems to me that the facilities can be best supplied at normal cost In periods of depression. In fart, if wisdom Is exercised by the government its ro.nperation under a systematic plan would in a large measure dissipate such periods of de pression by eliminating them. "It would seem to be unwise for the government first to pass legisla tion authorizing building* and then be compelled to wait for years be fore the building program could be entered upon. It would seem to be the sensible thing to fir%( ascertain the needs and make preliminary prep arations before legislation is enacted so that when the time cornea for ae tlon all that will be required Is legisla tion to enable the government to proceed. As a rule buildings are con structed anywhere from five to 10 years after the legislation is enacted, but If the plan which I outline could be followed and everything is ready when fhe legislation Is enacted, con tracts could be let at reasonable prices and work proceeded with In every section of the nation simul taneously. In this or some other such way only can the nation be useful In helping to stabilize con ditions at a time when the govern ment should act as the medium to prevent unemployment. “Omnlhus building legislation should never be enacted by congress until some responsible government agency has ascertained all the facts concerning the nect salty for It and only such buildings should be au thorized as a survey shows to be es sential for the transaction of the gov ernment business ” Studio Work to Start. Studio work on "Trilby” will s*art at once. Richard Walton Tully and his new star. Miss Andrea tie Lafay ette are all settled In Hollywood and as Mr. Tully has already filmed many F'-onea In Paris the rfmalnder of the work will show great progress In a short time. Mor« than O00 persons were In one scene tn the Cirque Me drana scenes in Parts. Movie Model Falh. All your admirers of Kenneth Har lan, prepare for a shock! Your fav orite can no longer he considered a criterion of what the well-dressed man will wear For hts role In “April Showers." which Tom For man now has under wav Kenneth has donned a celluloid collar, wide trousers, has his neck shaved round and smokes a clay pipe. “Water Cross” in Makinp. William Russell Is busy making | "The Water Cross.” In which Eva Novak plays opposite the star. Salesmen Wanted! EARN $15to *50 DAILY selling Nogar patented cloth suits and trousers. The fastest, selling proposition on the market today. Sell direct to tho trade—all states open. Commission daily. Nogar Suits Sell at $ 12.50 Nogar Pants Sell at $4.40 ‘'Nogar” suits are made of our exclusive closely woven “patented” fabric that is absolutely guar anteed to nutweur any other cloth on the market and is designed especially for the man who needs a strong, substantial suit that will hold out well under the hnrdest strnin. It is water-repelling (sheds wiiter), whirh nlso increases the life of the cloth. It is dust and grease-proof and will not shrink or fade. Call Tuesday to Saturday, or write for particulars. Nogar Clothing Manufacturing Co. 207 Arthur Building Omaha, Nebraska * . . house which still stands at 818 West Ninth street. Fremont, and Is now j occupied by the family of Henry Jury ing a clothing salesman. In this house n son, Craig Hutchi- ! son whs born on June 23, 1891. When the kid was about a year and n half old Hutchison resigned from the > e monl paper and with family moved to Lincoln. Took l tide's Name. According to the father's story, Craig exhibited an early tendency 1 toward the stage and when he ae- J lively entered upon his career, he adopted the name of an actor uncle, Itichard Barthel. Later he added the "mess" to the narpe since made fa i mous at "Richard Barthelmess." Hutchison told his interviewers that i Barthelmess' )>ath to fame was not lined with roses. He had migrated to the Pacific coast, picking up such i theatrical work as he could get, when a chance opportunity gave him an opening into the world of the movies. The result is well know n to mo.f • fans. Bart helmess has not abandoned Jills real name altogether, a fact probably i little known to files followers. He 'produces and directs screen come dies under the name of Craig Hutchi son. Barthelmess himself never ap pears in any of these productions. All Denied by Richard. The father was quite amused when told of the unsuccessful attempts of the curious Fremonters to find out whether Barthelmess was really a na tive son of Nebraska. He said that Lincoln has repeatedly claimed the honor as also had a town in Minne sota where the family lived for a short time. He declared emphatically, however, that Richard Barthelmess was born in Fremont on the date . named above. He said that the reply made by the New York office of the film company was merely a stereo typed form used by the publicity bu reau which believes that a New York birth gives an actor more prestige j than a small and unknown town. But the story that Barthelmess tells Is vastly different. He declares he was born In New York city and the year of birth he himself gives is 1895, not 1891. He also says he is a product of the east, that he attended Trinity college in Hartford, Conn., be fore taking up a screen career and that his first work in the movies was done in the east and not on the Pa cific coast, and he says he has no father in Nebraska. “Look Your Best” Next. ; The n‘*xt Rupert Hughes-Goldwyn picture to come to the screen prob ably will be “Look Your Rest.” Col leen Moore and Antonio Moreno have tho leading roles. Anita Joins Cosmopolitan. Anita Stewart has joined Cosmo politan productions and will m#ke "The hove Piker” for them. BKK W ANT Alls BKIM. ItKSl I.TS DRY GRAVITY SCREENED COAL £ _ - Every ton of Furnace Coal delivered by us is run over a two inch screen—taking out all small coal and slack—giving you the best prepared coal you ever used. Try a Load and be Convinced. Boyer \zan i/uran Lumber * ▼ and Coal Co. * KE nwood 3400 “Drop by drop you distill this poison into your own blood” A famous scientist points out a danger in constipation not generally known 1AM going to tell you” said a noted scientist in a recent lecture before a New York audience, “something that very few people know anything about. “ The human body is constantly pro ducing one of the most terrific poisons known—we call it phenol in the med ical world. It is a product of the putre faction which is always going on in the intestines. “Ordinarily this poison is absorbed and partially ‘detoxicated’—that is. rendered harmless—by the liver. But if you are constipated, the amount of phenol produced increases enormously. The body cannot handle it. It is ab sorbed into the blood. The first warding you get is a headache. That headache comes because your blood is poisoned by an excess of this phenol.” We all know the other symptoms of this “phenol poisoning": indigestion, skin disturbances, foul breath and coated tongue, loss of vitality and en ergy. The whole system becomes weak ened. which is one reason why doctors say that "50' of all diseases can be traced back to constipation," That is why the first thing your phy sician wants to know is—are your intestines acting regularly to free you of these poisons? Today—an almost universal tendency Constipation is becoming more com mon every day. In place of the raw foods of the forest, for which our bpdies were built, modern civilization de mands a more delicate, concentrated diet which lets our intestinal muscles get soft and llubby from luck of exercise. Seventy-five millions of dollars are spent every year in this country alone for cathartics and purgatives! Yet such drugs not only cannot cure constipa tion—they actually weaken the intes tines still more, and so help to increase the trouble. Nothing can permanently cure constipation which does not exer cise the intestinal muscles as Na ture intended. 1 he simple food that is restoring health to thousands Everywhere physicians and hospitals arc prescribing Flcischmann’s Yeast ™ — ■■ W hat thi* doe* for the mmse It* of roar arm Vlet*chmann'$ Yeatt don for the mutelet of the mteittnet —-gt*e* them norma!, healthy nrrcue today—not as a medicine, but ns a fresh corrective food which gives the intestinal muscles regular, natural ex ercise. Every cake of Fleischmnnn's Yeast consists of millions of tiny living plants, which mix with the waste products in the intestines, softening them, and increasing the bulk cf the waste. This greater bulk gently en courages the muscles to act, and at the same time strengthens them by offer ing just the resistance they need. Every such action gives the intes tinal muscles regular, natural exercise, and so gradually trams them back to a healthy, active state. Your own physician will heartily endorse this principle of regularly ex ercising the intestinal muscles as the only way to relieve constipation and all its evils. Be sure you get Fleischmann's Yeast —yeast in its natural fresh form. Re cent experiments have shown that vcast corrects constipation only when its cells arc alive and active, and that it loses its laxative effect when these cells are '‘killed” and dried. Fleischmann's Yeast is in no sense a purgative and does not produce imme diate violent action. It is a nourishing food—not digestion-disturbing medicine — and like any other food, it must be eaten regularly to secure results. Eat at least 2 or j cakes a day— plain, or dissolved in water, milk, or tnnt luices—preferably half an hour befom a meal, or the last thing at night. Get several cakes at a time—they w ill keep in a cool, d.y place for several days. Be sure you get Fleischmann’s Yeast. All grocers have it. mad tomy run rurr aoourr > I THK > TSCHMANN COMPANY. | IV|’ MO ’01 Wi&tnntton Street. New N . a. N. Y. PImk tend w frw KvkWt. *'TVe Nr* F • > f Value of FteWhmanna Yea»t in BuOdtn* Health Name .. .... . | Street ..... Cite State Day by day Fleischmann's Yeast builds up the flabby muscles of the intestines — exactly as regular exercise builds up the muscles of your arm \