ORPHEUM Phones Bell 936 Auto 1528 Week Starting January 17th MR. HYMACK M'CONNELL & SIMPSON FOUR DANCING BUGS BARNES & CRAWFORD BALLERINI'S DOGS , KATCHEN LOISETT THE ALDEANNS Matinee at 2:30 15c and 26c Evening at 8:30 15c, 25cf35c,50c RECTOR'S White Pine (ouIi Syrup Is a quick and positive remedy for all coughs. It stops coughing spells at night, relieves the soreness, sooths the irritated membrane and stops the tickling. It is on ideal preparation for chil dren, os it contains no harmful ano dynes or narcotics. 25c per bottle. RECTOR'S 12th and O streets. Lincoln Printing Co. 124 South Eleventh Auto. Phone :h Will Save Yon Money on Any Kind of Printing Call us. DR. CHAS.YUNGBLUT DENTIST ROOM 202, BURR BLK. MR LINCOLN, NEB. Vageworkers, Attention We have Money to Loan on Chattels. Plenty of it, too. Utmost secrecy. KELLY & NORRIS lao So. Ilth St. DISEASES OF WOMEN All rectal diseases such as Piles, Fistulae, Fissure and Rec tal Ulcer treated scientifically and successfully. OR. J. R. HAGGARD, Specialist. Office, Richards Block. Herpolsfyeimei's ' - Cafe . . HEST 2.rK5 MEALS IN THE CITY V. IhnitchyProp. MONEY LOANED on household goods, pianos, hor ses, etc. ; long or short time. No charge for papers. No interest in advance. No publicity or til papers. We guarantee better terms than others make. Money pni.l immediately. COLUMBIA LOAN CO. 127 South 13th. OFFICE OF Dr. R. L. BENTLEY SPECIALIST CHILDREN Office Hours 1 to 4 p. m. rflK 2118 O St. Both Fhonot UNCOIL. NEBRASKA PREVENT TUBERCULOSIS Address delivered before the annual convention of the Nebraska State Fed eration of Labor, South Omaha, .Jan. 4, by Mrs. K. R. J. Eclholni, executive secretary Nebraska Society for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis: Charles Dickens, in His famous novel, Nicholas Nickleby, says this: "There is a dread disease which so prepares its victims, as it were, for death; which so refines it from its grosser aspect and throws around familiar looks unearthly indications of the coming change a dread disease in which the struggle between soul and body is so gradual, quiet and sol emn, and the result so sure, that day by day and grain by grain the mortal part wastes and withers away so that the soil-it grows light and sanguine with its lightening load, and, feeling Immortality at hand, deems it but a new term of mortal life a disease in which death and life are so strangely blended that death takes the glow and hue of life, and life the gaunt grisly form of death a disease' which medi cine never cured, wealth warded off, or poverty could boast exemption from which sometimes moves in giant strides and sometimes at a tardy pace, but. slow or quick, is ever sure and certain." This is the disease, Tuberculosis, and in the time when Dickens wrote thus of It, in common acceptation it was a hereditary disease, in so involv ing end depreciating the health his tory of a family, was held to be a deep disgrace. That this feeling of shame and the consequent effort to hide the disgrace from the knowledge of men was a most active factor in propagating the disease is never to be denied. Today, happily, we have graduated from this erroneous posi tion, and the Individual who has to be told that he cannot directly inherit consumption, is more or less rare. On the other hand, we. perceive a great underrating of the (danger from infect ed surroundings, ill-ventilated apart ments, poor food and overwork; all of which are contributary causes, sup posing one to have inherited from tu bercular parents, not the germ of the disease, but a lessened power of re sistance, . which of itself opens the door and invites infection. Be it understood at the outset that the purpose of this paper is neither to create nor foster a foolish fear cf this terrible slayer of life and hap piness. All the world knows that fear or other craven instinct ingrain in nature tends to lower the resisting force, though some of the world so far forgets itself today as to claim that fear mav actually give birth to a specific disease germ. It is within the experience of most of us that those who talk the loudest about their courage are the ones who most fear their personal inability to remain fear less; a case of whistling to keep one's courage up, as it Were. The danger is here and the danger is real, and we are here, not to become hysterical nd run from it, but to face it and fight it. It is a responsibility, indi vidual, fraternal, civic, national. No man nor set of men nray back down from it. It is as insistent as the con stant drop of water and sooner or later will be rec koned with. Ellen La Motte, of Johns Hopkins, says: "If tuberculosis were a little more sensa tional in its development, then educa tional preventive work would show better results." But on the contrary as already quoted, it is "a disease in Which death and life are strangely blended"; hence, if your child next year develop it. have you accurate in formation that the tuberculous school teacher of last year infected her? No, you have not. You only know, and too late, perhaps, that politics, pig headedness or prudery have blocked medical inspection in your schools. Do you also know that such inspection is maintained in all Europe, extends to South America, and even to what we are pleased sometimes to designate as semi-civilized Japan? During the recent campaign of the Red Cross Christmas stamp, sold for tuberculosis prevention, one of the lo cal papers in an editorial put the question very neatly. In this matter of the great white plague. It said, we are all more or less directly interest ed. As Blaine said of Andersonville, some of us had relatives there, many of us had friends there, all of us had countrymen there, and where Ander sonville or coal mines or Fourth of July risasters have slain their thou sands, consumption has slain its tens of thousands. With a casualty list so great, it could not fail to affect most of us. If there is one point about the white plague which may give us more uneasiness than its past ravages, it. is its future possibilities. We do not know how it will deal with our de scendants. We plant trees for them, establish homesteads and libraries, but what do we to safeguard the healtb of those who if crippled in this wise; will not rise up and call us blessed? It is up to us in the parlance of the day to deliver those to whom we are re sponsible from the clutches of the great White plague. Nebraska stands at jwesent in about the same position Illinois stood twenty years ago. In its relation to ad vancing civilization, and its allied plagues and pleasures. Nebraska has a superb climate, a high rate of health and the lowest iercentage of illiteracy of any state in the Union. Should it mean a great deal of talking to make Nebraska understand that if she does not take hold she may twenty years hence stand in the unenviable position Illinois occupies today with respect to the invasion of tuberculosis? Illinois is making most strenuous efforts to check the spread of consumption, yet hardly keeps pace with its terrible on coming! Must we say that Nebraska's comparative freedom from this disease shall lull us to inactivity along the lines of preventive work? The key note of the International Tuberculosis Congress held in Washington in 1908 was Prevention and again Preven tion. The great Pasteur said it is per fectly possible to eradicate every con tagious disease. Now it is perfectly possible to eradicate tuberculosis in Nebraska is every one helps, and the Nebraska Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis has pledged itself to accomplish this in ten years. If every one today afflicted with this disease were to die or re cover without infecting any one else, immunity from the scourge could be achieved in much less than ten years, but every one will not so contribute to the welfare of his fellow men and posterity, of course. We 1 have the ever traveling consumptive who dies in our railroad station after infecting his surroundings en route; and we have the unteachable consumptive who wilfully neglects all the laws of man and nature; he is doomed, desperate and recks not of the disaster his un cleanly habits spread wherever he goes. For him laws must be enacted, for in his way he is as great a crim inal as the thief in the night who steals our treasure: as great a menace as the leper at large and infinitely more numerous. For the traveling consumptive who passes through our gates spreading his trouble as he passes, or who dies without funds on our doorsteps, laws are now enacting, exclusion rules are already passed. The philanthropic resources of states like Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Texas and California, have been taxed to their utmost to provide for con sumptives sent west at their last gasp and on their last dollar by unscrupu lous and ignorant physicians willing to shift the heavy responsibility to other shoulders. If the disease be in the curable stage, it can be cured at home; if it cannot be cured, then home is the best place to die. Rhode Island, with its lamentable climate, has proved to us what can be done in cure, as well as preventive work. Its outdoor schools for tuberculosis chil dren are achieving results beyond ex pectations, and this in a climate of fog and mist, raw winds and little sunshine. New York, which undoubt edly has a greater problem than any other city, reports a lessening of its death rate from this cause in the last year. New York is the richer for this not only in lives, but in cold hard dollars. New York has been con vinced that the economic aspect of the problem is of prime importance; it knows that he deaths from tubercu losis of a wase earning male averages a loss, of $9,000 to his community, and that last year it lost sivty-five millions in dollars to this arch despoiler. Ne braska does not know what it lost last year, accurately, at least: its vital sta tistics are not dependable for one rea son and another. It knows in a gen eral way that the death rate from tuberculosis is increasing each year; it knows that its monetary losses therefrom run up into the hundreds of thousands, but how soon will it be lieve that all this is unnecessary, that the life you hold dear, the property you worked for may be saved or lost to you according as you take precau tion. One out of nine people dies from consumption, and by the nature of his lingering disease, unless wealth is at hand, he dissipates his savings, if he has any infects his surround ings, mayhap his dear ones and final ly goes down to his grave a failure. A failure because he did not live his life as nature intended him to. We are one the edge of scientific inquiry only, we have but the dimmest insight into what our grandchildren will under stand fully as a matter of course. iA hundred years from now the world will lauah because in this day of ours lived some who looked for relief to a religion patented in a church or a medicine patented in a bottle. We know now that one in three had smallpox in Queen Elizabeth's time, and we naturally say, something wrong in their methods. Isn't there something wrong in our methods when one city can lose sixty-five million of dollars in one year from one pre ventable disease alone? You men of labor are organized as perhaps no other forces of society are organized. In demanding, demand the essentials. Do not waste your forces, your money and your genius fighting non-essentials. Move for the great things in life which shall prove an in heritance worth while to those who come after you. They say the path of the reformer is hard and his task a thankless one; it may be, though cer tainly the satisfaction of doing what seems to better the lot of his brothers who are in his keeping, is enough to make one forget the rough road and the thankless task. As unionists you are handed together to resist imposi tion and injustice; step out as union ists, and ally yourselves with those or ganizations working toward the com mon goood. Pull with the consumers' league, demand inspection of food and boycott dirty shops. Push inspection of dairy cows lest tuberculous milk infect your child. In legislating for the enlargement of the employers lia bility law, convince the employer that a well ventilated shop has a cash value to him. It has, as the older communi ties have proved statistically. Fight the, dust peril. The greatest loss of life from tuberculosis is among the dusty trades where sedentary habits prevail. Some of the railroads are overcoming the unhealthy effect of dusty travel by allowing farmers to sow alfalfa along the right of way, even to the edge of the track; but this Is only one detail of the great reclamation plan to be worked out! Demand factory inspection, and refuse to work in unlighted. ill-ventilated and unsanitary shops. Enforce the child labor law. Promote play grounds. Surely you need not be told that we are coming to organized, supervised play in municipal playgrounds as the very best means of conserving and protecting the health of our youth, and hence raising the standard of our na tional health. Demand medical inspec tion in schools and demand that it shall be properly frequently per formed. Establish sanitary drinking fountains and sanitary methods of heating and cleaning in public places. Denvand atfd support local dispensaries for the treatment of incipient tuber culosis (the cost of maintenance is small), as well as state and municinal hospitals for indigent and incurable cases, for it is in these that the great est menace lies. Demand that politics shall in no wise affect these demands you make; politics and red tape have no place in tuberculosis prevention. Remember that the same precautions which prevent this disease also pre vent a score of others, snd help as well to make for right living. And remember also that unless you help to ; prevent preventable diseases you will soon be listed as a DacKnumner. ior all the world is now going hand in hand on this new mission. Move for civic cleanliness, embrac ing a pure water supply,, exemption from weed, mud and garbage nuisance, as well as the establishment of parks and playgrounds ; your city can be made as clean and inviting as your home, and by so doing you elevate Its health standard and boom it in the best i way. Let your supervision ex tend to your printshops, and cigar fac tories, for it is in these two trades that the greatest mortality from tu berculosis conies. See that these quiet workers have sanitary surround ings, protection from cold, and at the same time unlimited fresh air to breathe and light to work by. Tuber culosis is an occupational diseas'i and goes where it is bidden by those neg lecting naure's simple laws. Labor has its great part to play in preven tion', for labor pays a heavy toll in lives sacrificed. The fact that rest, Lyric Theatre Matinees Wed, and Sett. 2:3Q AN INNOCENT SINNER A Four Act Drama THE LYRIC STOCK COMPANY Evening 8:30; 15c, 25c and 35c. Matinee J 5c and 25c KOMO COAL The best coal in the market for the money LUMP, EGO OR NUT $6,50 For Furnace, Heating Stove or Kitchen ; Range. , Try it. Bell 234 Auto 3228 WHITEBREAST COAL CO. 1100 O STREET air and the best of food are the only cures, makes labor's tuberculosis prob lem a vast one, and it is to no pur pose that we fight the effect unless we also eradicate the cause. Dr. Lawrence Flick, of the Phipps Institute, i in Philadelphia, says: "Tu berculosis is peculiarly a disease of the wageworkers and this is so for the very good reason that one of the causes of the disease is overwork," Addressing the Internationa! Congress a year ago, Mr. Mitchell said: "Tuberculosis finds its most fertile harvest in unsanitary sweat shops, factories and mines. We men of labor who carry more than our full share of the burdens and make our full share of the sacrifices, cry aloud for assist ance and direction in 1 our struggle against this terrible plague whic.h un aided we cannot successfully combat. We are keenly alive to the importance of cure, but we are even more alert regarding measures to prevent the spread of this disease." That labor is making its effort, is proved by the fact that strikes, poli tics and boycotts are being side tracked to make way for the fight which is to save thousands of lives. Notably the printers and cigarmakers are making strides, the printers hav ing now a model sanitarium at Colo rado Springs. In Albany, New York, by the payment of five cents a month by each of 6,000 members of the Cen tral Federated Union, a tuberculosis pavilion is maintained for their sick members. Directly in line with this, a labor department was organized in the State Charities Aid Association providing for a special lecturer to visit unions over the state and pro mote tuberculosis prevention. The American Federation of Labor at Den ver endorsed this and since, Seven of the state federations have urged; ac tion. The international exhibit so stirred Brooklyn and New York that their unions took definite action. This is an easy, cheap and most effective method of disseminating information which is the first step in the first. Every union in this state could estab lish a small exhibit at its headquar ters, and thereby materially aid in preventive' work. The Nebraska Asso ciation for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis is ready to co-operate to the limit of Its powers in assem bling these exhibits as well as in all other methods and measures to re deem that pledge, "No Tuberculosis in Nebraska in 1920." Under an ef ficient organizer-in-chief the state has been divided according to congres sional districts with a representative physician or surgeon at the head, who in turn has appointed for each county in his district a leading physician. In addition the state Is divided according to" social forces into departments with a superintendent at the head; these include Woman's Clubs,. School, State Institutions and Labor, I with others in contemplation. If each of these divisions will. do its part by only keep ing posted on the world progress of the great fight, much will be assured; and not only that, but when the time cornea to bring pressure to bear on a needed measure-, these will constitute a standing army of fighters ready to push. The movement in Nebraska is young, but the workers are willing and whole-hearted. The work is sup ported by memberships' and the sale of the Christmas stamp and all serv ices are voluntarily rendered One point more: ; Apathy, indiffer ence on this subject is costly; it will get its price, possibly , so slowly, so insidiously that you may not be aware you are paying; but you will pay in precious human lives, miserably ud needlessly given up. . I pray you do net let this be. , . ., K. R. J. EDHOLM, -Executive Secretary ". Nebraska , Asso : elation for Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis.4 .! , , TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION BALL. The twenty-seventh annual ball of Lincoln Typographical' Union No. 209, will be held at Fraternity hall on Feb ruray 23. Committees from the union and Capital Auxiliary are now work ing together to make it th.e most suc cessful social event in the history of the union. The net proceeds of the ball will be invested in stock of the Labor Temple Association, and 'this fact is calculated to make the attend ance larger than usual. " , v , Nothing will be left undone ; that will contribute to the pleasure of the annual event, and the reputation' the printers have achieved for success along social lines will be more than duplicated. ; GREAT REM NAT SALE -:- BEGINNING MONDAY, JANUARY 24 -; We will place on sale all Short Lines, Odds and Ends and Remnants of seasonable merchandise. Our Great January Clearing Sale, the most successful in the history of our business, naturally left on our hands a larger lot of broken lines and Remnants. In order to clean up and make room for our extensive spring purchases, which are beginning to arrive, we purpose to close out these short lines now at discount from v f 25 to 50 Per Cent and in some cases even more. These are remnants of Dress Goods, Silks, White Goods, Shirtings, Tickings, Ginghams, Table Linens, Outing Flannel, Silkohnes, Ribbons, Laces and Embroideries, Short lines of Gloves, Corsets, Underwear Hosiery, Belts Men's Furnishing Goods, Ladies' Mis$es, Children's, Men' s and Boys' Shoes, also warmlined shoes and Slippers. Ready-To-Wear Department At One-Half Price--All Children's Coats One Lot of Ladies' Coats, (Assorted Colors) One Lot of Ladies' Silk and Lace Waists One Lot Ladies' Dressing One Lot of Ladies' Poplin and Serge Waists One Lot of Ladies' Skirts, (Assorted Colors) Sacques and jtimonas Drnlnn I inn nf Pnntn $9.95 to $17.50 Values uiimcu Liiicuiuuaio to close at $5 and $2.50 171 1DQ Will go now at ONE-THIRD to ONE r U IVO HALF OFF. Highest Price Paid for Coun try Produce . . 'HALF OFF. AND O 917- 92 1 O. ST LINCOLN. NEB. 20 per cent off on Wool en Blankets, Comforts, Wool and Fleeced Un derwear, Outing Flannel Night Gowns.