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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1925)
Horizontal J. V highwayman. 6. Frightens. 11. Part of "be." ,, 12. One core. »■ 14. That 1* (abrr.) • 15. To vex. £ 15. To put a sole on a shoe. 13. A whisp of turf (Scot). " i 20. An accepted standard by which i}o compare things. « 22. To remove (he bone from. 24. Before. 25. One who digs for ore. 27. Ever. ». 28. A Chinese nettle, used in place ff cotton .10. Made of oats. .. 12. Exceeding all bounds. ' 1". Bestowed. 33. Tlie capital of India < 38. A roe (Scot). ‘ 30. The trunk of the human body. 42. A rowboat necessity. 43. Lady of King Arthur s court (Tennyson). • 45. Portuguese coin. 46. Arrived. 47. Money unit of iAlvta (19.3 Dents). 40. An undeveloped blossom. 6o. Extremely. 52. A remedy for neuralgia. 55. Dutch (abbr.) 56. A rubber. 57. To go the rounds, as does a policeman. • Vertical •J 1. Acrid. • 2. Like. - 8. Defy. “ 4. Writing fluid, s 5. Preposition. £• I. An Exclamation of satisfaction. 7. To permit. “ 8. A homeless street urchin. » 3. Musical note. 2. 10. A river in England and Wales. ” 13. Easy to see through. • 15. A newspaper paragraph. £ 17. A versifier. ■* 2 19. The finest horse. “ 20. To .iftfnble. 21. Second note of the musical icale. 2. 23. A Massachusetts city, e 25. Intended. .. 26. A musical composition M 2®. Anger. • 31. What you did to jour dinner. Z 33. Animal fat. ’ 34. To bide. 36. A burden. ‘ 37. Wrathful. 40. Bold in heraldry 4). Musical note. 44. Barriers to cheek the flow of fivers. 46. A system of religious observ ances. , 43. Starting point In a game of gtdf. • 40. A large serpent. 51. Either. *53. North River (abbr.) *• 54. Horse power (abbr.) *35. Accomplish. a— Today For the king's Health. Bobbed Hair Headaches. Branding a Body's Bach. The Vilest Crime. By ARTHUR BRISBANE. V_/ Today the king of England leaves to cruise in (he Mediter ranean for his health. They take good care of him. lie will avoid Ihe rough Atlantic and hoard the royal yacht at Genoa, where it waits, escorted by two destroyers. From Calais, the British royal train, kept always in readiness for emergencies on French soil, will take him to Italy and his yacht. Absit omen or unberufen, as our German friends would say. But if the czar had kept such a train ready, he and his children might he alive now. The British kings obey Vapors Check a Cold Overnight There are many \\; > to treat a cold but only one DiHEt'T way— with vapors that can he inhaled. Vapors penetrate immediately into every corner of the air pas sages and lungs, soothing and heal ing with every breath. Vicks Is so rernarkahly success ful In treating cold troubles because it acts like "a vapor lamp in salve form.” When rubbed over throat and chest the body heat releases vapors of Menthol, Camphor. Kucalyptus, Thyme and Turpentine. At the same time Vicks is Absorbed through and stimulates the skin like a poultice or plaster. This double,^direct action often checks the worst cold overnight. VICKS ▼ V a f»o Rub Over 17Million Jars Used Yearly AIIVKKTISfc.1l fc\T. STOMACH "DUEER” Chew a few Pleasant Tablets. Instant Stomach Relief! Tf you fed full m< >. •■! un* "mforta bln after eating, here N harmless stomach rMief. ‘ pnpf's Ilia pepsin ” settles the stomach and corrects dig** t ion the moment It reaches the stomach. This guaranteed stomach correc tive copI* but a few cents at any drug store. Keep It handy! AllVF.KTISKMKM. MAGNESIA BEST FOR YOUR INDIGESTION Warns Against Doping Stomach With Artificial Digrstents M*'it people who suffer, either occa sionally or chronically from gas, sourness and indigestion, ha' e now discontinued disagrees Ida diets, patent foods and th« use of hamful drugs, stomach tonics, medicines and artificial digest «»nt j, and instead, following th** advica so often given in these ro iinuu, take a tee-poon*] ml or * •• •» tablet - of Iti-iirnled Mngio u« tn a little water after meals with the re lit that t In-ir tomrtrh no Inn »>r trouble them, tiny are able to eat as they pba ■« ! and they enjoy much hotter health j I ho •• who «i»• dt«ura< « *l Mugnesia never 1 <lr**«d Die approin-h *f ineil time because they know this wonderful anti and and j food corrective, which can hr oh'uined 1 from any good drug store, will in*taut I\ , neutralise the »tommh aciditj. -weeten Mi# stomach, prevent food fermentation., snd without the slightest pain or di-eorn* fOfti I rv this | bfit k# ftf tain to get pure disunited Magnesia v*»ye ciall* prepared fur stums- h uis. their people, serve them r- well as they know how, and Britishers, at least a* democratic as we are, like their kings. They prefer a good quiet one to an election every four years. The king's majesty, in ancient English, written for him in the pre scribed style, appoints a commis sion to take care of the state while he is gone. “For divers causes and considera tions, the king has instructed his right trusty and well beloved coun sellors, Prince Henry, the arch bishop of Canterbury, Viscount Cave and Premier Baldwin to look after the safety and good govern ment of the realm, etc.’’ They have full power, except that they may not dissolve parlia ment, or confer ranks and titles. He includes in his commission his son, the church, the peerage and one commoner, Baldwin. The lat ter, of course, is the real king and writes out what the king signs, but he does not say so. Everything is done respectfully in that well-man aged empire. <ieorge Curzon is dying at 66, v ery young for a British statesman. He represents a class of English men whose lives are devoted to the nation's service. In our humble. .American, gro cery store way, we contribute a little to the commissariat depart ment of British government. A Chicago fortune, that of I.eiter, the dry goods man, enabled Curzon to forget everything but public serv ice. And so with the half Ameri can, Churchill. His mother had the fortune of Jerome, New York stock broker. /‘They also serve, who only stand and wait." "The shingle headache." or “bobbed hair neuralgia," has ar rived. and was inevitable. Silly women, not content to cut their hair short, actually allow the bar ber to shave the back of the neck, uncovering that part of the body most sensitive to cold, the little hol low, at the base of the skull. Cut your hair that way. then motor with your back to tbe driver, and you have found the short cut to acute neuralgia and pneumonia. ^ on shudder at the complaint of Mrs. Dolores Winfree, wife of a sailor. Her jealous hushanil burn ed his initials into her hark with a red-hot iron, to warn other men away. Such conduct, once common, per sists, here and there. In far Pata gonia. the bridegroom, oil his wed ding day, stands his wife against a tree, and with a stone, knocks out two of her front teeth, to show that she is really his. And she thinks that means affection. Read "Eli Reel us.” Other savages comp‘1 their wives to paint their teeth black, which also means, "Keep away, 1 belong to somebody.” 'The patience that women have shown is really amazing. But things are better, the highly developed while man puts a pearl or diamond collar around his wife’s neck. That also means “She is mine,” hut some times the pearl collar is mistaken. As you read of Chicago’s dread ful murder, you know something of a lynching mob’s emotions. A Dr. Caiman, indicted with Shepherd, who is accused as chief criminal, testifies that. Shepherd's young ward,, McClintoek, was murdered to get the fortune that he had willed to Shepherd, his guardian. Trust com-1 panics will find a text for adver tisements in that. They may make mistakes, hut they do not murder the heirs of their clients. Murder is murder, but there are degrees of horror. The doctor con fessing complicity in the Mc-j Clintock murder, confesses that he laught Shepherd how to administer typhoid germs to the unfortunate boy, who had willed a million dol lars to his murderers, and that pois ons. including prussic acid and morphine, were added to the ty phoid bacilli, to make death sure. The learned Henry (J. Lawrence, professor of history, drops this bombshell into a ladies’ club, ‘‘The first bootleggers were the good Puritans, and some of the Puritan girl -'.‘Wul women were frivolous and fast personalities.” There was quite a demand fori scarlet letters, it appears. Voltaire was ahead of Prof. Law lence. He told of earnest round heads calling on the doeeply re ligious Cromwell and told to come another day, as Cromwell was then "busy seeking the Lord." The fact was, according to Voltaire, that Cromwell, at that moment was in gay company, seeking, not the l.ord, but the corkscrew which had fallen under the table. If you heed iconoclastic histor ians, illusion disappears. If your friend has a bad cold, be polite, smile, bow. say, "I never saw you looking better," but don't shake hands. That is the advice of Dr. Sund wall of Michigan university. In fluenza is spread by hand-shaking. You get the germs from your friend's hand*, transfer them to your handkerchief, and then to your nose. Hand-shaking is foolish and archaic anyhow, as foolish as In dians rubbing noses. Primitive man stretched out his right hand to show there was no knife in it, and to reassure the stranger. That's hardly necessary now. M‘i»py rluht, 192T.) Farm I .ami Market Mmost Normal in I'lallr homily Columbus, March IT* Seventy-ona real estate transfers totaling $639,165 were filed fur record in the office of register,of deeds incident to the first of March settlement pfrlfni. That tho farm land market Is rapidly return ing to normal Is indicated by the fact that among the rural transfers are :t mmtber of sales at the 1200 mark, and some run up to S225 an acie. Headaches From slight Colds Laxative BKOMO QUININE Table* C relieve the Headache by curing tho Cold. A Safe and Proven Remedy. The box bears the signature of E. W. Grove. 30c.—Advertisement. the solution will appear tomorrow. n - Solution of yesterday’s puzzle. •j < (.imri'li Roof [.iftrd. * Xiasrarn Falls. X. V., March 19.—A bi&h wind struck Niagara Kail*. The Coof wa® blown from St. Stanislaus church *nd rrushed onto the r*»of of the convent of the Fellelan Slaters. Mo on* was Injured. Milal ipyjmggsr Ordinary case* of itching, blind, bleeding, or protruding piles ere cured in six dava worst case* two week*—with PAZO OINT MENT, the dependable and proven remedy (or pilea. Instantly relieves itching pile* and natures reat/ul sleep after the first night. Get the Handy Tube PAZO OINTMENT is now packed in handy, collapsible tubes with detachable pile pipa. which make* the application of the runt ment a clean, and eaay task of a moment. Full directiona and scientific advica lor pile sufferers go with each tube. jjj Guaranteed to Cure ' _ur money will be , . omptly refunded if it fills. lubes, with pile pipe, 7S. ; old atyle tin*, M)<. Get PAZO OINT. ** MF.NT from your drug gist; or, il you prefer, Send stamps or money order direct. Paris Medicine Co. Z«,10 Pm. Si.. St. Lout.. Mo. iu- "l-J Mail Orders Filled Mail Orders^ FiUed Opening Saturday With An Avalanche of Incomparable Offerings (13TH and BRADLEY, MERRIAM & SMITH COMPANY’S 4 NOtethe I CAPITOL i I A C> A IlOWRENT Rctsiil • Outlet "Store i—mmr --> A Statement by I. Shomcr, Pres. The Bradley, Merriam & Smith Co., have served pa trons of this vicinity for many years, through a gigan tic Mail Order business. In our plan of expansion, we launch this Retail Outlet store, which will mean a greater service to our pa trons. It will be a cash and carry plan of selling, with the ad vantage of wonderful money savings all on your side. V_J Women’s Fancy Knit Rayon a HOSE 1 an. | nnd | ^ won i*. A new venture in Omaha’s Retailing—a proven success in many cities—The test is in the values and in the quality of the merchandise—No fancy fixtures—therefore no fancy prices. Come Saturday—Join the crowds. The vast stocks of the Bradley, Merriam & Smith You’ll marvel at the prices, here your dollars will go Mail Order House now offered to the people of this farther than you ever dreamed. Don’t come expect vicinity at Retail, bringing with it the most sensational ing elaborate settings, rich fixtures, polished floors and money-savng privileges ever inaugurated in Omaha. other price inflating facilities; but, come expecting I Such values are only possible through our low rent vast stocks of qualty merchandise at prices that will location, through the fact that our selling expense is amaze you. We are a little off the beaten retail path, absorbed mainly through our Mail Order organization. but a few blocks walk means many dollars saved. Thousands of Articles at Sensationally Low Prices--Read These j A Bungalow Aprons 77c Many styles. Ameskes, Ging hams, Scout Per cales, Cha m brays, solid colors and fancies, all sizes. Palm Olive Soap 5 Bff25c Sateen Petticoats White, colo ri and flowered Sateen Petticoat!. Handkerchiefs Standard qua!- Q ity, white Q lawn, in tale. 2 Porch | • Dresses $J45 Ginghams and Linens Porch Dresses, plain and fancys. all sires; clever styles, well made, cut full, in sale. 300 Silk and Wool Dresses Stylet of the minute, all eolert, all aizet, Cantona. Satina, Char mene, Poiret Twilit, Sergea. A itartling value indeed. Stout Sizes. $6.95 Mercerized W HOSE ^ Medium weight, W • top ravel feature, ^ highly mercerised. Slip-Over Sweater* -/ 1/i New Spring / 4> Style*, all color*, plain and noveltie*. Whirlwind Values In Girls' Dresses $1.59 Rajah, Voiles, Crepes, Organ* dies Basket Weaves; sizes 7 to 14 years; • mart new spring styles; daring ▼ alues at $1.59. ^ Women's Spring ^ SHOES A $1.98 Satin, Pat- 3 m rnt and / Calfskin, ^0^^ Pumps and Slippers. Boy#’ Shoes Sizes 9 to 13 Vs 1 SI.89 Sizes 1 to 6 _ 812.39 ^___r .. , D Women’s Knit Ik Hand Bags it* c • Corselettes \ ty Cases Union ouits 59c Genuine Finely knit leather Herd from white Fancy Brocade Reg* and dld^flMhiV* material*, elastic Vanity Caaea. Open er"* *ore *• bottom; All atylea. rloaed aaat. fleah color, sizes Choice Satur- sizes »4 to 32 to 44 44: Saturday mm ®*v price enly _y Marvelous Offerings in Piece Goods Fine yarn zephyr All wool canton ginghams, 32 crepe, 36 inches inches wide, wide, yd., 83C vard , 190 Woven dress Standard per- chambray, 26 cales, 36 inches inches wide, wide, yd., 15c yard . . . JOC4 Ramie linene, r . . . . . . Curtain scrim. 33 inches wide, , SEES* Tussah silks, 35 inches wide, inches wide. Fancy dress yard yart* .42c crepe ging- ... Economy silk, hams, 32 . come ,n a 36 inches wide, inches wide. ' variety of colors yard X»C yard • •22,:><4 and patterns. Knockout Values in i.) SHIRTS A Mens’ Shoes 79c Brown Calfskin. Stnpaa and tkatks. »laia rubber heel*. I whtta and tan. Neck Goodyear welt kand and collar attack leather soles Sat *'vl”- »" *'"* ^ urday ^_W | Women s Arch Support I Th. IH..I CU,> *'"• I r„r!«• M-k I tltlv. IhI. kirf. Wonder Values in Our Children’^ Dept. White embroidered or- Girls’ nainsook princess gandie dresses, 2 to 6 slip*. 4 to 14 yrs., 29(' ye»r».88r , . , , . Girls’ fine ri bbed, Linene and chambray rompers .49r combed cotton hose, sizes 5-9’ j . . 19' - C Girls’ nainsook bloom ers, 4 to 12 years, |9<* Infants’ pure wool Girls’ knit union suits, stockings, size 4 to 2 to 16 years . ,29C 6'2 . 99<‘ , r Thrilling Values in New Spring Millinery Stunning New _ AA Sprint Hat*. He f and wa offer (D ■ kJ them Satur- ■ day at le»a 9] than Half S Price, Street. Sport ard ! Dirtii Hat*. | Boys’ Stockings RnnforreH I lierli and tnca, aivea H la 10. Work Shirts I hlur Cham pd | hray. faced aire. 6 9 M 9 9 ^ MV. !• 17. (,’nmhfd Cotton Half Hoar, black or brown, mrdium weight; reinforced for Q C \ rntra weer; 2 pair. for. ■" .• ■ m 'll" j^TT i Y:y- ""a \ v w ■ ■ mm ^ Wl Boys' Suits | * J f 1 1I]I'\| I kJ {1 {1 f 1 I r/11 ^ I I I I I One-Pant Tvvo-Pant IjI $445 $598 f 7jt jb i f J '/Tv^BPTjMBWiM Vrni^mSiJSSaS^iSimm^Lmm^^£^^^^==L-^^^.—— —-—- ' ~" ~ :fgT^r7^__J »er|f* S'Jrn 6 !'•* 16. l.xtri Heavy Half lloir, for work torlu, Woman Y Purr Gum Rubber Kit* ban blark or brown, OP Apront A variety of *2 7 2 pair* for . .. OOC rolort u I C