Dr. Mathews Gets l-Year Sentence for Death of Girl Physician Convicted of Per forming Illegal Operation, Released on $3,000 Appeal Rond. Dr. John T. Mathews. TO, convicted by n district court jury of murder by performing an illegal operation, wag sentenced by District Judge Goss yes terday to serve five years In the state penitentiary. Dr. Mathews was found guilty of the murder of Loretta McDermott, Bassett (Neb.) school teacher, who died January 4. Motion for a new trial was over rued last week by Judge Goss. Dr. Mathews, confined to county jail for eight hours while his attorney went to Lincoln to procure a supreme court appeal bond, was not dressed In the regulation prison garb of overalls. Shortly after 4 yesterday afternoon attorneys rushed into criminal court during the progress of a murder^trial and obtained Dr. Mathews’ liberty on a. 15,000 bond, pending appeal. Woman Drops Dead in Dentist’s Chair Mrs. Agnes Landru. colored, drop ped dead In a dentist’s chair in the Brandeis theater building yesterday afternoon just os she was about to have a tooth pulled. She was in the office of Dr. F. S. Mellinger. Dr. K. It. Porter, who ex amined the woman, said she died of luart failure and exonerated Dr. Mel Jinger of all blame. The body was taken to the Silas Johnson undertaking establishment. Shrine Injunction Suit Hearing Delayed Two Days Hearing on the injunction obtained by half n dozen members of Tangier temple, to prevent their ousting from the organization! by the Imperial council, was set over in District Judge Fitzgerald's court yesterday un til next Wednesday, due to the illness of It. V. Cole, ono of the plaintiffs. \l>\ r.RTlSI M PINT. For Relief from Piles Send to Vnreit DrnggUt for ■ Box • f I’yrnoilil Pile Suppositories■ Their' Soothing Influence la Hemarkalile. t' In the privacy of your own homo P>ramld Pile Suppositories give blessed relief from itching, bleeding ©r protruding piles, hemorrhoids and Buch rectal troubles. And It is a comfort to know you ran call or send to-the nearest drug store and get a 60 cent box anywhere in the U. S. and Canada. Take no substi tute. A single box Is often sufficient. You can have a free trial packago (by sending name and address to Pyramid Drug Co.. 625 Pyramid PUto- Marshall. Mich. IResinol I keeps skins clear ■ in spite of everything The moke and dust of city life, the *un and wind of the country, the steam and dirt of housework —all spell ruin for good complex ions. But the regular use of Resino! Soap, with an occasional application of Resinol Ointment, keeps the skin soclean, clear and fresh that it simply cannot kelp being beautiful. All druggists fell Resinol Snspaod Oint ment. Wbf don’t you begin using them/ AI)\ ERTINEME.NT, <**»**•«(• i* Home-made, but Ha* No | Equal for Coughe 5 ■ famllr xipiifr nt rnlty <•) '• riforndsMe * oiigl* medMnr. Eti- & ♦- ily prepared, sad naves al*o«t f*J. (g If you have a severe cough or chest cold accompanied with soreness, throat tickle, hoarseness. or ditlioiilt breathing, or if your child wakes up during the night with croup and you want, quick help, try this reliable old home-made cough remedy. Any drug gist can supply you with 2 V* ounces of Pioex. Pour tnis into a pint bottle and till the bottle with plain granu lated sugar syrup. Or you can use clarified moiasee/. honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup, if desired. This recipe makes a pint of really remarkable cough remedy It tauten good, and in spite of its low cost, it < an be depended upon to givo quick and lasting relief. You can feel this take hold of a cougli in a wav thst means business. It. loosens and raise* the phlegm, stops throat tickle and soothes and heals the irritated membranes that line tha throat and bronchial tubes with such promptness, ease and cer tainty that it is really astonishing. Pinex is a special and highly con centrated compound of genuine Nor way pine extract, and is probably tha best, known means of overcoming severe coughs, throat and chest colds. There are many worthless imita tions of this mixture. To avoid dis appointment. i-k for M2Va ounces of Pinex” with full directions and don't accept anything else. Guaranteed to give absolute sat inf act ion or money promptly refunded, Thu Pinex Co* Ft. Wayne, Ind Writer of Well-Known Hymn 90 Years Old Rev. Sabine Barhig-Gould, author of "Onward, Christian Soldipra,” re cently celebrated his 90th birthday in England. Veto of Grain Rate Increase Forecast Attorney for Omaha Exchange Returns From Commerce Cimmission Hearing. J. A. Kuhn, attorney for the Omaha Crain exchange, has returned from Washington where on Wednesday and Thursday oral arguments were heard by the Interstate Commerce commission in the complaint of the Kansas City Board of Trade that there is discrimination between wheat rates between Kansas City and Duluth and the like rates between Omaha and Duluth. “Early in 1920 rates on grain from Omaha and all points In Nebraska to Duluth were made the same ns were rates to Chicago.” explained Mr. Kuhn. “In the latter part of 1921 Kansas City demanded the same rates to Duluth as applied from Omaha and ' Nebraska points to Duluth. "The examiner for the Interstate Conjmerce commission held that Kansas City shpuld take the usual arbitrary rate of 1 cent .over the Omaha rate, but to arrive at a basis he declared that rates from Omaha and Nebraska points to Duluth should be advanced 5 1-2 cents per 100 pounds. This would automati cally have had the effect of closing the Duluth gateway to all Nebraska grain. “The Omaha Grain exchange pro tested vigorously to such an advance, and we can feel reasonably sure. I believe, that, the commission will hot order such an Increase.” _/ Car Driver Taken After Chase Given Jail Sentence B. L. Warner of Herman, la., driv er of the motor car in which 11 per sons were arrested Saturday night on Twenty-first street, near Creighton boulevard, by Detectives Trapp and Munch, was sentenced to six days in jail yesterday. After a chase of three blocks, dur ing which five men and six girls threw out bottles, the party was cap tured. Fred Frey, Clarence llalloway. Omar I.Ipp and L. J. Irvin were each fined It for vagrancy. Ina Uumbaugh. star witness for the state in the case of “Singing Mike” LaPorte; Fay Shoyer, Avis Diamond, June Lapkin, Frances Kelley and Florence Thompson were discharged. Drug Company Salesman Succumbs to Pneumonia Edwurd Mattson, 37, 2715 Sixty fourth street, salesman for the Fuller Drug company, died Sunday morning of pneumonia. He is survived by his wife. 5frs. Edla Mattson, and two sons. Cecil and Quintan; four brothers. Herman Matt son, Louisvillt, Neb ; Henry Mattson. Miller. S. D.; Albert Mattson. Fre mont, Neb., ami Walter Mattson, Hong Reach, Cal., and three sister, Mrs. Mae Grunt, Nemaha. Neb.; Mrs. Ella Oster rarap, Seattle, Wash , and Mrs. Aman da Herman, re.sidtng In Missouri. Funeral arrangements have not been made, pending the arrival of relatives. Burial will be In Fremont, Neb., the former home of Mr. Matt son. Paris Specialist Says It's Duty of Women to Be Pretty "Every woman at 43 should appear 25," emphatically stated Dr. Felix Chrlstion, ex president of the College of Beauty Culture. Paris, In hi* suite at Hotel Pome yesterday. Chrlstion is 71 and looks 40. "American women lack the knowl I edge of how to retain their beauty j and it is their duly to remain beaut! j ful.” he said. Dr. Chrlstion will deliver his second lecture on beauty culture at thollran idels theater this afternoon. Running Store Just Like Running Auto, Says Dailey Running a department store is Just like running an automobile, J. F. Dailey, general manager of the Bur gess Nash store told the goodfellow ship committee of the Omaha Cham ber of Commerce at luncheon yester day noon. "You learn to press a button, shift gears and apply the brakes—and there you are," Mp. Dailey said. Northland Trio to Live Concert at Auditorium Program of Scandinavian aongs and American concert numbers will be sung Thursday night at the Audi torlum by the Northland trio, com posed of Rose Pearson Burgeson, so prano; Mary I’eterson, mezzo soprano, Jand Htgno Mortenson, contralto. They will be assisted by Miss Margarita Rlljenstnlpe, Omaha pianist, snd Rob eint Cuscaden. violinist. Death Penalty to Be Asked for Fatal Holdup Suspects The state of Nebraska through Deputy County Attorneys Yeager and Sheehan are asking the death penalty In th" criminal case of Set Wesley and vReRoy Maudon, who went on trial Jointly In Judge finss' court. Woman Asks New Trial. Mary Shnnnon. convicted last week | in district court on a charge of may i hem, today filed motion for new trial. J She alleges the Jury was guilty of ' Improper conduct, was governed by | prejudice, snd that the stale failed I to shuw she was *nn<^ Truck Insurance I _ Rates Reduced 10 to 15 Per Cent Post-War Deflation ami Safe ty Campaigns Are Held Responsible for Decrease. Post-war deflation and numerous ; campaigns carried on successfully by traffic safety committees throughout the country for the prevention of au tomobile accidents arc great factors in the lowering of Insurance casualty rates on commercial trucks, cars, ac cording to J. R. Dumont, vice chair man of the insurance cpmmlttee of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce. De creases in this insurance ranges from 10 to 15 per cent lower than the rates charged last year. According to information given out to local insurance companies, rate re ductions were also influenced by the decrease in loss per car for last year ns compared to the proceeding year. The reduction will mean a saving of more than $2,000,000 to commercial car users. While the rates for commercial cars were almost universally reduced, rates governing the Insurance on private cars remains about the same, as re gards public liability and property damage rates. Since the stock casual ty companies have made it a practice to reduce the rates for automobile ac cidents and their attendant losses are reduced, the failure to reduce the in surance rates Indicate that unlike the motor truck owners, the owners of pleasure cars have made practically no improvement on their accident expe rience. The private car owner, however, will share with the truck owner in a reduction of approximately 25 per cent in the rate for collision insurance which applies in praAically every territory. Steamfitter, 23, 111, Plunges to His Death John Disney, 13. steamfitter at the Union Pacific shops, committed sui cide yesterday morning by plunging from a third-story window at St. Jo seph hospital. Disney had beyn suffering from pneumonia since March 8. His home was in David City, Neb. He had been rooming at 712 South Seventeenth street. Paul Stelnwender, coroner, said there would be no inquest. Proprietor of Lunch Room Shoots Self in Abdomen Sam Barakat, 38; 214 South Four teenth street, proprietor of the Red Star lunch room, shot himself through the abodmen at 1:30 yes terday afternoon at hi« home In a crib In the same room was his 2-month old baby, and in an adjoin- ! ing room were his wife and 11 month old child. He had worked in his lunch room during the noon hour and appeared to be in good spirit*. No cause for the shooting is known. He was taken to St Catherines hospital, where hts condition is said to be serious. Mr*. Du ncan Hears Speech, via Radio, of Major General Mrs. George R. Duncan, wife of Ma jor General Duncan, commander of ; the Seventh Corps area, United States army, heard her husband's speech, March 4, when he presented a medal of honor to Col. E. E. Itlakesley in the Forum at Wichita. Kan. Mrs. Duncan sat in the home of Mr. anil Mrs. C. W. Calkins, 3346 Har ney street before a radio receiving set. A week hi fore that she had h*.nd her husband's talk at tin* dedication of an armory at Kittle 11« ii, Ark.. 700 miles from Omaha City Fireman on Trial on Charge of Manslaughter Chris Hald. city fireman. 332'i North Thirty sixth street, wa nt on trial yesterday in District Judge Ttedick's court on a charge of man slaughter in connection with the kill ing last April of Roy Ward. 3103 North Thirty-fifth street. Ward's slaying Is alleged to havo been the outgrowth of a neighbor hood feud. He was’stabbed through the left eye with the barrel of a re volver. Shaji Osato and Family on First Lap of Japan Trip Mr. and Mrs. Shaji Osato and their j two children leave for Denver this afternoon on the first lap of their Journey to Japan, where they ex I pect to remuin Indefinitely, They ox j fiect to land In Yokohama, Japan, on April ♦ or 5. Mr. Osato staled that he j and Mrs Osato may return to Oma ha. Births and Deaths. Birth*. Chart*** ami Mur M*»n*k, 5X14 South Tw enty-aeennd •tr#*f't, boy. Chrla and Minnie Jenaeti, 44,‘>2 Canter street. girl. Vrrn<' Mud f-nutprt Moor# hoaplfal, girl Tom and Marta Ma trarello, 311 llaa I kail Mtr.'at. boy. Anion and Martha Jindra. Jr, 1414 .South Twpn'mth «tr.*et, boy. , John and I.up* <•< m*x, 5214 Mouth T*ren ty flrat afreet, boy J< hn and Mary Start. 5954 South Thlr ty-aixth *tie*t, boy hrafh*. Mr* Ftntua Tllh'del, f. y*ara. hnapital Horten JUtnlln. 57 year*, hoaplta! Thorn a* Kyle. 51 yaara. hnapital bfixey .tana Hanford, infant. Forty-alath and V' *tr»at* livorg* MrvanPon. 74 yrara. 2505 5faeo»» at rpri John Ttlaa^hl, 1* >e*ra, 5714 South Twanly-mnth atrrel i h \>rbru|«, Infant, 4304 South For ty flrwt avonu*. 1 rank Novnk, 40 jrara. >15 Homer afreet Oinrr C Trout. 31 yanra, hoaplta! Kuban A Alorrlman. 72 yaara. hoaplfal Mr* Bed a Carolina Doten, I. yrara. hnapital Churlrg rook. 55 year*. h«>#plfal Albert S Pierre. l,i year* IMS South Twenty-eighth atreet Fdward Smith 4 vein, hnaptfat Thomm W. Mill*, 42 year*. :5ni Worth 1 Nineteenth afreet. Frank Smith, 45 genre. Fifteenth aad Hodge ad real*. Marriage bireiine*. Tha following -oupjra havn been itaueil lleenae* f»i wnI Carl Itrov ?| Omaha and Alb. no denhough, 24, Otimha. I,oula It Crenel over ’I. Omaha, and filad.ia I, Mihimi. nvar 2J. omntiM WUIIani I! Soft. ?», Unetdn. Neb. and Mulda 1 Wall-n. |n. l.lnroln. Neb Fn.nl Wilson, 3’ <>maha. and Star garat Wllaon 7 1. ontnh* Ftank W Wolf 1* Omaha, and Maltha J rhllllpa, 19, Omaha. ' ___ ONE OF OURS By WILIJl CATHKR. (ContinutMl from VenterdH)) My nnpMf. f la title W heeler, living on t« \«bm*Un rnnrii with hit parent* anil younger broth er, Ralph, return* unwillingly to Temple college, the *mull denominational *<-hool he hu* been attending, lie requested to be allowed to uttend the state unhrruity, hut his mother objected bee*tin* she be lieves the boy will be In better environ ment in the smaller institution. The fa ther, Nut Wheeler, is a Jolly, en*>-going man whose Joke* rattier jar on I lautfce'* sensibilities. An older brother, Ituy Hss, run* an Implement store at Irunkfort, near whirlt the Wheeler ranch is located. On til* way home for the Christ mu holi day*, Claude reflects on two fortunate thing* which have happened to him iti the last three month*. One of these Is Ills enrollment In a *pcc|al European history class under a state university pro fessor. Then, after a practice football game between the Temple and stoto uni versify elevens, in which (Inode ilis tinguished himself, Julius f\rllch, quarter back for the I nlversity team, invite* t Intnie to Iti> home for Mippfr, where the friendly mother ami brother make the lad forget lit* shyness. ■While the freight train was puff ing slowly across the winter coun try, leaving a black trail suspend* d iii the still air, Claude wont ovep that experience minutely in his mind, ns if he feared to lose something of it on approaching home. He, could remember exactly how Mrs. Krlich and the boys had looked to him on that first night, could, repeat a.1 most word for won! the conversation which had been so novel to him. Then he had supposed the Krlichs were rich people, but he found out after wards that they were poor. The fa ther was dead, and all the boys had to work, even those who were still in school. They merely knew how to live, he discovered, and spent their money on themselves, instead of on machines to do the work and ma chines to entertain people. Machines, Claude decided, could not make pleasure, whatever else they could do. They could not make agreeable peo ple, either. In so far as he could see, the latter were made by judicious indulgence in almost everything he had been taught to shun. rsince mat rirst visit, nr nau gone to the Krlichs’, not as often as he wished, certainly, but as often a« he dared. Some of the university boy* seemed to drop In there whenever they felt like it weVe almost mem bers of the family; hut they were better looking than he, and better company. To l e sure, long Baum gartner was an intimate of the house, and he was a gawky boy with big red hands and patched shoes; but he could at least speak Get man to the mother, and he played the piano, and seemed to know a great deal about music, Claude didn’t w ish to he > a bore. Sometimes in the evening, when he left the library to smoke a cigar, he walked slowly past the Krlichs house' looking at the lighted win dows of the sitting room and won dering what was going on Inside. Before he went there to call, h« ricked his brain for things to talk about. If there had been a football game, or a good play at the theater, that helped, of course. Almost without realizing what he was doing. h» tried to think things out to justify his opinions to him self, so that he would have something to say when tie Krlich boy* cjui-h tioncd him. lie hail grown up w-ith ■ the conviction that it was beneath his dignity to explain himself, just «s it was to dress carefully, or to l-e caught taking pains about any thing. Krnest was the only person i he knew who tried to state clearly I just why’ he believed this or that; I and people at home thought him very conceited and foreign. It wasn't American to explain yourself; you , didn't have to! On the farm vou seid you would or you wouldn’t; that Roosevelt was all right, or that he was crazy. You weren't supposed to , say more unless you were a stump speaker,—If you tried to say more, It was because you liked to hear yourself talk. Since you never said any’hing. you didn't form the habit of thinking. If you got too much bored, you went to town and bought some thing new. But all the people he met at the Ktllchs' talked If they asked him about a play or a book and he said it was "no good." they at once demanded why The Krlichs thought him a clam, but Claude sometimes thought himself amazing. Could It really bo he. who was airing his opinions in this indelicate manner’’ He taught himself using word* that had never crossed his lips before, that in his mind were associated only with the printed page. When tie suddenly realized that he was using word for the first time, and prob ably mispronouncing It. he would lie come a* much confut'd as if he wire trying to pass a lead dollar, would blush end stammer snd let some one finish Ills sentence f->r him Claude couldn't resist occasionally dropping In at tlie Ki ilichs' in tlx* afternoon; then the boys were away, and he could have Mrs. Krlich to himself for half an hour. When she talked to him she taught him *o much about life.. He loved to hear her sing sentimental German songs ns she worked; "Splnn, spin, du Toch ter mein." H didn't know why. hut i lie (Imply adored IK Kvcrv time he j went away from her he felt happy and full of kindness, and thought anout beechwpods and walled towns, or about Carl Schurz am! the ro mantic revolution. lie had been to see Mrs. Krlich Just before starting home for the holidays, and found her making German Christmas rnkc- She took him Into the kitchen and explained the almost holy traditions that g’*v < rni-d this complicated rookery. Her excitement and seriousness ns she heat apd stirred were very pretty, Claude thought. She told off on her fingers the manv ingredients, hut he believed there were things she did not name the fragrance of old filen ships, the glow of early memories, belief In wonder working rhyme* and songs. Surely these were fine things to put Into little cakes' After Claud* left lur, lie did something a Whc lei dtdnt do; he went down to O street end sent her a box of the reddest roses he could find. In his pocket was the little note she had written to thank him. CIlAPTlill VII. It was beginning to grow dark when Claude reached the farm. While 1 ialph stopped to put away the car, he walked on alone to the house. He never came back without emotion,— try as he would to pass lightly over these departures and returns which were all In the day's work. When he came up the hill like this, toward the tall house with its lighted win dows.y something always clutched fat Ids heart, lie both loved and hated to came home lie was always dis appointed, ami yet he always felt the tightness of returning to Ills own place, liven w hen It broke his spirit and humbled his pride, he felt it was right that he should be thus i hutnhled. lie didn't question that the lowest state of mind was the truest, land that the less it man thought of himself, the more likely he was to be correct in his estimate Approaching the door, Claude stopped a moment and peered in at the kitchen window- The table was set for supper, anti Mahalley was at the stove, stirring something In a big iron pot: cornmeal mush, prob ably—site often made it for herself now that her teeth had begun to fall. Khe stood leaning over, embrac ing the pot with one arm. and with the other she beat the stiff contents, nodding her head In time to this rotary movement. Confused emo tions surged up In Claude. He went | in quickly and gave her a bearish ii lie Her face wrinkled up In the foolish grin he knew so well. "Lord, how you scared me. Mr. Claude' A little more'n I'd 'a' had my mush all over the floor. You lookin' fine, you nice boy. you!" He knew Mahailey was gladder to see him come home than any one except his mother. Hearing Mrs. Wheeler's wandering, uncertain steps in the enclosed stairway, he opened the door and ran halfway up to meet her, putting his arm about her with the almost painful tenderness be ab way felt, but seldom was at liberty to show. Hlie reached up both hands and stroked his hair for a moment, laughing as one does to a little boy. and telling him she believed it was redder every time he cams back. “Have we got all the corn in mother?" "No. c'laude, we haven't You know we're always behindhand It's been fine, open weather for husking, too. But at least we've got rid of that miserably .Jerry; so there * some thing to he thankful for. He had cne of hi* fils of temper In town one day. vc hen he was hitching up to come home, and Leonard Dawson saw him iaat one of our horses with the net k yoke. Leonard told your father, and spoke his mind, and your father discharged Jerry. If you or Ralph had told him, he most likely wouldn't have ri me anything about it But I guess all fathers are the same." She chuckled confidingly, leaning on Claude s arm as they descended the stairs. "I guess so Did he hurt the horse much? Which one was it?" The little black. Pompey. 1 lie lleve he is rather a mean horse The men said one of the hones over the eye was broken, but he would prob ably come round all right." ' Pompey isn't mean: he's nervous All the horses hated Jerry, and they had good reason to " Claude jerked his shoulders to shake off disgusting recollections of this mongrel man which flashed hack into hie mind He had seen tiling* happen In the barn that he positively cottldn t tell his father. (In It* rolltlnueri Wedllesdst 1 \it\ i.hti-i 'it vr ! "California Fig Syrup” is Child's Best Laxative Tongue Shows if Bilious, Constipated « > Hurry mother! F.ven a cross, sick child love* the "fruity" taste of "Call- , forma Klg Syrup" and It never fails to open the bowels. V toasnoonful today may prevent a sick child to morrow. If constipated, hthous, fev erish, fistful, hH.s cold, colic, or If stomach Is sour, tongue coated, breath had, remember n good cleansing of the little bowels Is often all that It necessary. Ask your druggist for genuine "California Fig Syrup" which has di rectmns for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say "California' or you may get an Imitation tig syrup. ADVERTIIEMENT. AHA KRTIRKMF.NT. T'nbs* you *•■** the name ''Bayer” on package or on tabl't* joy at* not getting the genuine flayer product ; prescribed by physician* over twenty*, two years find proved soft* by millions for colds, headache, toothache, c.tt | ache, neuralgia, lumbago, rheum* j Ham. neurtll*. amt fur pain In ism etui. Accept only "llayct" packittrc which ounlatna proper direction*. Handy boxea of twelve tablet coat few cent*. l>ruK£i*t« alao HI bottle* of 24 and tno, Aaptrtn I* the trade mark of ttayn Manufarlure of Mono acellcacldestei of Sall'ylicacUt Community Chest for Omaha Assured C. of C. Committer Notified Junior League Will Enter Organization. The Junior league has notified the ■ public welfare committee of the Cham her of Commerce that at ils last meet ing action was unanimously taken in . favor of the Welfare federation and | j Community Chest and it would be an 1 ] active part of the organization. This insures the establishment of! the federation and chest plan. Or ^ ganizationn will send members to a I meeting to be held early in April j when nominations to the board of di- ' lectors will be made. Several other .agencies will have had time to call 'their boards of directors together for favorable action. By early fall the plan should be .n full operation with a definite time for the financial campaign. AlIVKKTMKMK.Vr. STOP ITCHING ECZEMA Penetrating, Antiseptic Zemo Will Help You. Never inind how often you have ti led and failed, you can stop burn- ! : ir.g, itching Eczema quickly by apply i lng Zemo furnished by any druggist for 35c. Extra large bottle. H.00. i Healing begins the moment Zemo is , applied. In a short time usually every j trace of Eczema, Tetter, Pimples, ! Hash. Blackheads and similar skin diseases will he removed. For clearing the skin and making it vigorously healthy, always use Zemo, the penetrating, antiseptic liquid. When others fail It is the one dependable treatment for skin troubles of all kinds. Says Excess of Hydrochloric Acid Is Cause of Indigestion. A well-known authority states that stomach trouble and indigestion are nearly always due to acidity —acid stomach—and not. as most folks be lieve. from a lack of digestive juices. He states that an excess of hydro chloric acid In th» stomach retards d.gestion and start* food fermenta tion; then our meals sour like garbage in a can. forming acrid fluids and gases, which inflate the stomach like a toy balloon. We then get that heavy, lumpy feeling in the cheat, we eructate aour food, belch gas or have heartburn, flatulence, water hra«h or nausea. He tells u$ to lay aside all digestive ads and instead get from any phar macy four ounces of Jad salts and take a tahlespoonful in a glass of water before breakfst, while it is effervescing, and furthermore, to con tinue this for one week. While relief often follows the First dose, it Is im portant to neutralize the acidity, re move the gas making mass, start the liver, stimulate the kidneys and thua promote a free flow of pure digestive Juices. Jad salts is inexpens.ve and is made from the add of grapes and lemon /Ulce. combined with lithia and sodi um phosphate. This harmless salts is used by thousands of stomach suffer ora with excellent results. ■P Boom Batts rn H«>to4yjp t-ana with a shm* r-1 ; i i' 11 ; I 1 ' i i -- ———■> Energetic! -enjoy new life wiih Dr. KINGS PILLS u. ^ ~jof finwiponoH AD% F.KTIltrMkM. When You Catch Cold Rub on Musterole Muttarola it assy to arply and it gets . in ita good work right away. Often il prevents a cold from turning into ’‘flu’* or pneumonia. Just apply Muttarola with tha fingers. It does all tha food work of grandmother's mustard platter without the Mister. Muaterple it a clean white ointment made of oil of mustard and other home simples. It it recommended hy many doctor* and nurse* Try Mu*tern)e for sore throat, aold on tha chest, rheuma tism, lumbago, pleurisy, stiff neck, bron chitis. asthma. neuralgia, eengettion, pains and aches of the hack and Joints, sprains, aorw muscles, bruises, chilblain*, frosted feet colds of all sorts. Seldom fails to deliver results. ate and ttc, < jars and tub*.; hospital site,*$• <>• llrttrr than a nm«tard pUatfr. Charles York Fates Dope Charges in Federal Couty Charles Yorke, 714 North Eighteen"* street, arrested twice last week,; charged with violation of ttie Harri- j son narcotic act. was ttimed over to ___ ___„_. ) No wonder “RUNNIN’WILD” hat the dance hounds runnin* wild. But you ain’t heard nothin’ till you hear it played by Tad Lewis ar.d his Band on Columbia Record A-3790 The reverse s'"»sis ! NOW PLAYING """ 'l 1 ( .IN* LLASCY rU*DTI [Cecil B.[ DeMilles f 9LO D U C T I O N Adams Rib' ev MILTON SILLS ILUOTT DEXTER THEODORE KOSLOfr ANNA Q NILSSON im PAtAJNE QAJL5N N <2 Qaranwmt Qictore / v-/ — NOW AND ALL WEEK GEO. LOVETT & CO. “Concentration” The absolute climax of all sensational offering* AIoo Three Other Big Acts and I Bebe Daniels Lewis Stone ia “The World's Applause'' A Paramount Picture i -. JOHN B. HYMER A CO in **Tnm Walker in PitU** "THE SPEEDERS” with 1 JACK MUNDY Frank Murat and kddt# Vogt Alfrirda Wanna A Georg# Simondrt .n ’ A FIRESIDE REVERIE" trie Fordo Th# Narhatta Topic* of th# l'»r \r*op a Fab)#* Fatbr _ ED— Bl *NCHF PRESSLF.R A KLAISS A Uvaly Duo } Matin##*. 1 Ac to 90c. Night*. 1S< to $t TH|S THIS WEEK WEEK “Burning Timber” with ANNA Q. N1LLS0N FRANK KEENAN 4 fed'ial authorities by police yester day. .... . - S-p-r-i-n-g-t-i-m-e : • Suits Frocks Wraps I • You will like the new . 2 etyle* at ca*h and carry • price*. I No One \ ‘ Under ^ 18 Admitted Fir»t motion picture f&4| description made for a 9 public showing. iJ® Rejuvenation 3 Through Gland j Transplanting 1 An accurate scientific de scription how, why and when animal glands are Bl transplanted in men and women, their effect and cures. And on the same program— j| « How Human 1 Life Begins | Little known mysteries iMj life's origin revealed. Also pfi: first films of jr#! “BILLY" 1 World's first gland baby. and father, a living modern , 1 miracle. . ? Continuous 12 Nocn 11 P. M. I When in Omaha Stop at Hotel Rome i tOsm A Mat. 4 Nit* Tod »y Pr*-W*r Pnc*a Back Mom* After Thro* YrorV Ab*«u* THF WORLD FAMOUS DA.NCLNG TEAM STONE & PILLARD Columbia n ■ CUAU/ Witk Burlesk DIU jHUn J«>« Hurt c GREAT CAST: BIG BEAUTY1 CHORUS LstflM T!rL*t, i p, r** at Pan? MiMH 2 S R»t Mot A *** J-ort R** r.. % f»nwu* xTiuclK' * 12 REELS IN ALL £?' IwfTTI £& D. W. Griffith’s “Hearts of the World" 10 reel* of the master pro* ducer’s supreme picture. | a ar.t LSI "TK* Lmthfr Pu»t»»iV’ ‘“WHEN KANE MET ABEL” NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS VICTORIA TitK a*4 F**l ALL STAR CAST 1 HE BROKEN DOl l PEAR! WHITE m "PI I NFER %• !h GRAND • «t.N lltR.wt NORMA 1 Ai-MAOGE ii *'IRw ' #*<* f r*« tU« Mioint ‘ KAMI! TON 4i>tN M»m tor SPECIA! PRODl'l JON "QVlN’t \ AO AMN SANVH r