Henry Ford Buys 125,000 Acres Coal Land for $20,000,000 Aoteil Auto Manufacturer Predicts Kra of “Big Busi ness" Coining to America. Lexington. Ky., March 22.—It be came known today that Henry Ford has bought 125,000 acres of coal land on the Kentucky river in Clay and Leslie counties at a price to run from *12,000,000 to *20,000.000. (Cutij right, UK! B) International Nfwn Service. 1 Detroit, Mieh., March 22.—Within 20 years industry will have grown to such vast proportions that “big bus! ness" of today will be small in com parison, according to opinion ex pressed by Henry Ford in a review of conditions and prophecy for the future. . Mr. Ford is an optimist. But he be lieves that investment in a concern merely for the sake of profits is "had business." Outside capital, Fred de clared. Interferes with Industrial | progress. Money paid out In div idends, he believes, should go back into the business to improve and ex pand it. A manufacturer should run his business just as he runs ltis home, the famous motor car maker said. To Construct Highway. Ford thinks that within five years or so most of the railways will be electrified. He revealed that he in tends to construct e model highway paralleling the Toledo and Ironton railroad which he bought several year* ago. "Within 20 years industry will be no magnified that the big business of today will be small in comparison," iyaa Ford's answer to the question— What is Industry coming to?" Must Gain Confidence continuing, Mr. Ford said: "Industry la coming to big busi ness. Not big business as we now know it—big business is what I mean. We have, within four miles of where you are sitting, a plant which is a big plant when compared to other manufacturing plants of today. It employes more than 30.000 men. This big plant is our blast furnaces, where we use just three things in the raw -coal, ore and wood. From these three fundamentals wc produce a mul titude of products. "People look at the plant and say what a big place!’ it Is—today. It won't be 20 years from today. Indus try 20 years from now will be a lug business that takes ma'erials in the i aw and turns them Into a finished product at a price the average ens | tomer can pay. There will be an elim ination of the various profits of the v arioua middle men. Those profits can not remain because they are unnat ural profits. They are the profits of people who do not create. To be en titled to a profit a man must create or must serve some indispensable need in the process of production and dis t ribution "But. to succeed, big business must first gain the confidence of the pub lic," he said. Young Men's S. S. Classes Work for More Members Pre-Easter campaign for new mem ber* 1* being conducted by more than i L’O Omaha young men s Bunrtay school classes under the auspices of the young Men s council. A young men's pre-Easter rally will he held in the V. M. C. A. auditorium Sunday nftcr i noon at !?. Rev. Arthur Atack. pastor » of Hanseom Park M. E. church, will -peak. Robert Anderson of Council Bluffs will lead the singing, assisted by ] >. C. Robe at the piano. Friedman Has to Pay for Stolen Watches lie Bought Judge Robert W. Patrick in muni - ,pal court decided yesterday that l«adore Friedman, defendant, should pay the value of three watches which iefstiinony showed were stolen from i ho store of the T. L. Combs A Mater company, plaintiffs. Hert York, when employed by the > ombs Matter company, had stolen three watches, which he disposed of to Friedman, who later sold them. Their value was placed at $4*15. Births and Deaths. Birth* Harry and Rtella Solomon. Sixtieth and M streata. girl. ljoreaso and Elisabeth Litton, hoapital. kenitath and Laura Flnlayson. hospital, «i f i. fames and Mary Farho, hospital. boy. John and M«*rv Bonne wit r.. hospital, *Josaph and Catherine Noeivky, R317 *outh Thirty-third street girl. Christ »n.l Minnie Held, 2922 Spring KJJa and Francis Hubbard. 3ftOI South Thirty-fifth street, boy. John and Goldie McWllllgma, 819 South Nineteenth street, girl , Ted and Catherine Balderaon. hospital. ' James and Mary Morria. hospital, boy. flanidro and Ftlomena D’Agosta, 341ft Mouth Fifteenth street, twins, girls Walter and Margaret Brown, hospital, hoy. '»m». *rd M»r*»r«t O Connor. hoapital, ' latDM .pi ld>.. Wart,, ho«i>.tnl, t'oj. Chari*. ,04 Mathilda Prchal. hoapital, k < hart.y and Bthal Bakin, hoapital, hoy, Joseph and Louise Hoc ha. 11007 South thirtieth afreet, girl Samuel *nd Mary Roberta, 4111 Chica go atraat, boy. William and Margaret Ward, 3020 Em imet street. boy. Harry and Doha Dolgaff. 1*47 North Twenty-fourth street, boy. I’aul and Theresa I,ansa. 4 24 Mouth Thirty-fourth street, boy. Charles and May Owen, hoapital. boy. I.mrnet and Leafy Lggleaton. 1*16 M street, boy. Joseph and Anna Margulaa. hospital, boy. . - , . livron end Claire OherD hospital, boy. Abraham and Mollis Klaiier. hospital. ' ioren and Eleanor# Johnson, hospital, * Joseph and Mildred Qoorif. hospital. t Karl and Daisy Brown, hospital, girl. Daaths. Mary D. Henger, Infant, 4131 Emmet \ melan Radford Fuller, 24 years, hoa * Klfraida Aufdenherga. I years, 199ft Spring Street Oscar W Parley. 70 years. 2330 South Thirty-fourth street. „ |>nn»|d Kr«ua«, infant, 1912 North V or i first street. Marriage* LicfMiM**. Iulif.fi pevoa. .9 Omaha and linrgla Muaaely, 83. Omaha. II. Lee GasklH, 14, Valley. Nab., and Ruth Z. Koehler. 81. Pilfer. Net W a I tar W. Paan. 34. Omaha and Kstello Smith, 3 4, Omaha <'hni lea O ciahaugh. over 81, Omaha, oil fora F Nlckla ov#r 31. Knoxville. Tens Successor to Uncle Joe in Next Congress pViUia*tvP Congressman-elect from Illinois, who took the place of "Uncle Joe Cannon when the veteran ex-speak er retired from the house March 4. New Vegetables in Omaha Market Plenty oi Green Stuff of All Kinds and Fresh Fish Now in Demand. New asparagus from California ar rived on the Omaha market this week and is selling wholesale at Tf> cents for two bunches. California green pease of fine quality and Florida wax and green beans are being received daily. In fact, there are now plenty of green vegetables of most every kind to he had. Florida celery ip just starting to come in. Rhubarb is off the market lor a spell, but fruit commission houses are expecting an Raster sup ply to take care of that trade. Move ment of grape fruit, oranges and ap ples remains about normal. The 28-ilegree weather in Louis iana in the early weeks may have an effect on strawberries for Easter. Those corning through for that trade will naturally be high in price, and in limited quantities. Flori da's strawberries season is about at an end, and berries from that locali ty are now beginning to show soft ness and an ovrripe condition. Fresh pike and fresh trout from Wisconsin are highly favored varieties of fish at the present tltnc. The shad season will open next week. Soft shell cratis are expected to ar rive for Easter week. Lobsters are extremely high in prl. e, but in good supply. The Raster market Is again easing up after recent coast storms, I and the supply is meeting the de | mand. Pastor Suffering From Kidney Stone Affection Rev. O. 1). Haltzlv. who was seized with a violent illness while In his study Wednesday morning, is found to he suffering from a kidney stone. X ray pictures were taken yester day. Ills physician states that un- ( less there another attack he will not. at this time, operate on Rev. Mr. ■ Baltzly, who Is reported ns showing j some improvement. Three SI00 Fine? for Men Having Liquor Illegally Three men wu* given fine* of $m0 [ each In municipal court Thursday j on a charge of Illegal possession I of liquor. They are .loa Vonda and ! Haul Genoa, 2227 Pacific street, and ' Pete Krause, Victoria hotel. This Gtows Hair absolutely guaranteed Here {a th« remarkable Van T>s f WILL* GATHER. Famous Nebraska Aullior. <('ontinuefl from Yeftterdar.) SY NOPM*. ( iuudc Wheeler, UvIiik c:i :» Nebraska rum-li with his parents and :» .xiuiikci hrother, K.il|ih, returns for the ►ummer vueaiion from Temple eolleife, snmll de nominational school at Lincoln, which he Into been attending miwilliiiicl v because he prefers to k<> to the state universit>. Two tilings have happened during liis third Jf*r, however, to cheer him. One of the*.# was tits enrollment in a special I iiropeatt historv class tinder a professor in the stall* university. The other is his chance ac quaintance with Julius Krliclt. iiniycrHit> clever iiuartcrhack, and his brother, who mail s the sliy hoy feci at home on his mi ne rims visits to the Krlidi residence. Maude's father, Nat Wheeler. Imi>-* a ranch in (oh. ratio. ( are of flic ranch net . sshatc^ th • uhsence t»f >lr. Wheeler and Kulph from their Nebraska home, and ( laude lias to quit school to take care of the home place. An older hrother, Itavlis*, runs un implement store at Frankfort. (Continued From Yesterday! CHAPTER XVI. Ralph an lie true. Later he found arithmetic and geography more inter*-Ming than “Robinson Crusoe.’’ if he s it down with a book, he wanted to feel that he was learning something. His mother and Claude were always talk ing over his head about tire people in hooks and stories Though Bayliss had a sentimental feel ng about coming home he consid ered that, he had had a lonel;, boy hood. At the country school he had not been happy; he was the boy who always got the answers to the test problems when the others didn't, and he kept his arithmetic papers but toned up in the inside pocket <»f hi* little jacket until he modestly hand ed them to the tea* her, never giving a neighbor ihe benefit of his H* \er ness. Leonard Dawson and other lusty lads of his own age made life as ter rifying for him as they could. In win ter they used to throw him into a snow drift, and then run away ami leave him. In summer they made him eat live grasshoppers behind the schoolhou.se, and put big bull-snakes in hi** dinner pail to surprise him. To this day. Bayliss liked to see one of those fellows get into difficulte s that his big fists couldn't get him out of. It wa b( figure and undersized for a funnel that his father sept him t* town to learn the implement business. From the flay he went tc work, he managed to live on his small salary. He kept in his vest pocket a little day book wherein ho noted down all his expen ditures—like # the millionaire about whom the Baptist preacher* won n* v or tired of talking—and his off* ring to the contribution box stood out conspicuous in his weekly a< * <>unt. In Bayliss* voice, even when he used his insinuating drawl and said dis agreeable things, there was something a little pla.ntlve; tho expression of deep-seated sense of injury He felt that he had always be. i mbun derstood and underestimated. Later after he went Into business for him self. the young men of Frankfort had never urged him to take part in their pleasures, lie hud not been asked to join the tennis club or the whist club. II" envied Claude his fine physique and his unreckoning, impulsive vital ity, as if they had been given to his brother by unfair means and should rightly have been his. Ra.vlis* and his father were talking together before dinner when Claude eame in and was so inconsiderate as to put uii a window, though he knew his brother hated a draft. In a mo ment Bayliss addressed him without looking at him: "I see your friends, the Krlichs, have bought out the Jenkinsnn com pany, in Lincoln; at least, they've giv en their notes." Claude had promised his mother to keep his temper today. "Yes, I saw it in th" paper. 1 hope they'll succeed." "I doubt it." .Bayliss shook his head with his wisest look. "I under stand they've put a mortgage on the.r home. That old woman will find her • If without a roof one of these days." "I don't think so. The boys have wanted to go into business together for a long while. They are all intelli gent and industrious; why shouldn’t they get on?" Claude flattered him self that he spoke in an easy, confi dential way. Bayliss screwed up his eyes. "I e*. pect they're too fond of good living. They'll pay t hr ir interest and spend whatever’* I'-ft entertaining their friends. I didn’t see the young fel low - name in the notice of incorpor ation—.Tillius, do they call him?" ' Julius is going abroad to study this fall. }!c intends to he a profes sor." "What .- the matter with him" Does he have poor health?" At tills raotmnt the dinner hell sounded. Ralph ran down from his room where he had been dressing and they all descended to the kitchen to greet the turkey. The dinner prog ressed pleasantly. Bayliss and hi* fa ther talk'd politics, and Ralph told ories about his neighbors in Yuc ' i county. Bayliss was pleased that his mother had remembered he liked oyster stuffing, and he complimented her upon her mince pies. When lie iw ) ■ r pour a second cup of coffee "i herself and for Claudn at the end "f dinner, he said, In a gentle, grieved tone, "I'm sorry to se« you taking two, mother " Mrs Wheeler looked at him over the I off.. pot with u droll, guilty stn.le. I don't believ> coffee hurts me a par tide, Bayliss." "Of course it does; It's a stimulant." What worse could it he, his tone ltn plled! When you said anything was a "stimulant." you had sufficiently i ondenined it; there was no more nox ious word. Claude was In the upper hall put ting on his coat to go down to the barn and smoke a cigar, when Bay ,.-« came out from the sitting room and detained him by an indefinite re mark. "I believe there's to be a musical show in Hastings Saturday night.” Claude said he had heard something of the sort. "I was thinking,” Bayliss affected a. careless tone, as if In* thought «>f such things every day. "that we might make a party and take Gladys and Enid. The roads are pretty good.” “It’s a hard drive home, so lab* at night. Claude objected. Bayliss meant, of course, that Claude should drive the party up and back in Mr. j Wheeler’s big ear. Bayliss never used ! bis glistening Cadillac for long, rough drives. ”1 guess mother would put ns up over night, and we needn’t take the girls honn* till Sunday morning. 'Til get. the tickets.” "You d better arrange it with the girls, then. I ll drive you, «*f couth*. if you want to g<>." Claude es* aped and went out, wish ing that Bayliss would do his own courting and not drag him into it. Bayliss. who didn't know one tune -in another, certainly didn't want » go to this concert, and it was doubt ful wheti, i i.,.. a ...ci* would care much about going. Gladys Farmer was the best musician in Frankfort, and she would probably l.ke to hear it. Claude and Gladys were old friends from their high school days, though I they hadn’t seen much of each other while he was going to college. Sev eral Times this fall Bayliss had asked Claude to go somewhere with him J on a Sunday, and then stopped to “pick up Gladys,” as he said Claude didn’t like it. He was disgusted, any <»w. when bo saw that Bayliss had ’ made up his mind to marry Gladys ; She and her mother were so poor that j tie would probably succeed in the end, though to far Gladys didn't seem to give him much encouragement. Mar rying Bayliss, he thought, would 1* i no joke for any woman, hut Gladys was the one girl in town whom he Raisin Bread De Luxe Rai.in bread de luxe—gener ously filled with luscious seeded raisins—is now available at gro cers and neighborhood bake ■hops. Real raisin bread with at least eight tempting raisins to the slice —the kind you like. Order now and serve tonight for dinner. Made with Sun-Maid Seeded Raisins the best raisins for bread, and all home cooking uses. Had Your Iron Today ? 3 LoweBrothers & Paints - Varnishes ■SOLD IN OMAHA BY C. 0 Hurd. Benton North Cidr Htrdwtre Co.. w‘"to3SoVfcu"h 2^7T Co <’12 51 Meyer Hardware Co., ' ‘moB» 2915 Leavenworth St. 5302 South 30th St aSchooning Hoidware Co , EGC *06 Weat Bro^uLway, Council Bluffe, la. Use Mello-Gloss for That Kitchen of Yours Use it. because once it's on, it will stay on. sjg. Use it. because it produces a hard, smooth. ^B cheery surface, to which kitchen grease and 1 smoke will not stick and which may be wiped clean with a damp cloth. Drop in and see samples of this lustrous, satiny finish that is made in twelve different tone-tints. SEND FOR THIS BOOKLET failed "Thu Diary of the House in the Woods," by Katherine and Kdward Mc Dowell, who, themselves, designed and built the house, then Mellotoned ami Mello (dossed the walls, Neptunited the floors and woodwork and did various other things, odd and interesting, to make their home cozy and attractive. Send 10 rents for it direct to our Dayton, Ohio, Office. The Lowe Brothers Company particularly ought not to marry. She was as extravagant as she was poor. Though she taught in the Frankfort High school for twelve hundred a year, she had prettier clothes than any of the other girls, except Knld Itoyce, whose father was a rich man. Her new hats and suede shoes were discussed and criticized year in and year out. People said if she marred Hayliss Wheeler^ he would soon bring her down to hard facts. Some hoped she would, and some hoped she would not. Ah for < Maude, he had kept away from Mrs. Farmer's cheerful parlor ever since Kay lias had begun to drop (r, there. He was disappointed in Gladys. When he wan offended, he seldom stopped to reason about his state of feeling. He avoided the per son and the thought of the person, as if it were a sore spot in his mind. (To lie Continued.) Women's Homes Raided. Federal prohibition officers raided the home of Mrs. Lucille Lombardi. 1102 South Twenty-second street, Wed nesday night and confiscated one gal lon jug and two bottles of whisky. AH VKHT.SE MENT. ADVKBT.SKMKST. Every Minnie Counts in the fight against constipation! Once lot constipation got a grip on you, and your system is wide open to of human ailments. Statistics show that to be tho proportion of illness that has constipation for a starting point. Pills and cathartics are as dangerous to tho system as | constipation I Your physician will recommend Kellogg's Bran, because it is nature’s own relief from constipation. It is scientifically prepared to redove suffer ing humanity from constipation and it will do what no other food can do! It will give every sufferer permanent >relief if it is eaten regularly—at least two tablespoOnfuls daily; as much with each meal in chronic cases! Kellogg's Bran is wonderful in its I natural, positive action. It sweeps and cleanses and purifies the bora' tract; it scours out the dangerous toxic poisons; it puts you back on schedule time without irritation c discomfort! Don’t delay eating Kellogg’s Bran each day in some form! Try it as a cereal sprinkled over your favorite hot or cold cereal or cook it with hot cereals. In the latter case, add two tablespoonfuls for each person and mix with tho regular cereal and cook as usual. Kellogg's Bran is simply delicious made into muffins, popover*, raisin bread, macaroons, pancakes, etc. Recipes are on every package! For health ’» sake get eomo Kellogg 'a Bran immediately. All grocers. First-class hotels and clubs s* rva Kellogg’s Bran in individual jack ages. Ask for it at your restaurant. L> Always use Kitchen Klenzer to clean the bathroom fixtures. Its soft, powdery substance forms a thin, latherlike film that dissolves the dirt and leaves the surface antiseptically clean and gleaming. I'se Kitchen Klenzer freely. As It contains S no acid nor hard grit, it cannot w . iVrud any ^ ^ Use in Your Wash Boiler or __ Washing Machine r The Link That Connects the Job and the Jobless'— The Omaha Bee “Want” Ad Every day more men and women are finding good paving positions through the “Help Warned" columns of The Omaha Bee. They are the links that connect you to the kind of a position you have long wanted. Read these "Want" Ads thoroughly. Pon't miss an ad. Your whole future may denend on any one of these opportunities offered YOU. If you don't find the kind of a position you want t' lay, try tomorrow and every day until you do. Make a start. Turn hack and look NOW. If you want efficient help insert your advertise ment in the “Want" Ad columns of The Onviha Morning Bee—The Evening Bee (two papers for (he price of one). Omaha Bee “Want” Ads Bring Better Results at Lesser Cost Ask for Jfie Omaha tBeelPantytcl department CA& Omaha Morning