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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1912)
THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1112. TEE OMAHA DAILY BEE VICTUR KOSEW ATKR, EMToR BKK Bl lI-MXa. KAKNAM AXU 1TTH, Eaund at uiuhi posturx,.. aecoad eles matter. TEKMS OK til BSOKIITloS. Stiifiay liee. on year.... Jjie Saturday Be, on year "':! Da!! MX tirHho.it BunJayi. ore jtarM'W JJaiiy He and SiitkUv. one year Svw t.KUVEHKD HT CAKKIfcR. rranlrt he iwlih Stmdavi. per Iwuip He unrluding run1ay!, per nio..w Jail" rU (Without lijndai l. Ir mo . tol Aldreoe all roDiplaint or Irrcguiar'ue la deUvery to t'nv ' irrulstn lept. RKMITTANCK9. Remit bv draft, eiprees or postal nnm. payable to To Bee Puhli.hlng company. Only 1-cent stamiw revived in pamenl of raajl arrountu peraona! che.-a. -rapt on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. OWE. Orr.ar.a-Th H HuiMlng. mouth Omaha-Sit N St. t.'ounrll Wuff-T5 Sco't St. Lincoln X Utile Hulldlng CtHcaeo ): Vaniuette B'llMlng. Xanana Clty-Rdlanre Building. .w York-,14 Wet Thirty-third. "Washington uS Vnurteenth St.. N. w. ri.RRrp.NrKM-E. movement making hU rommunlratlf.nl relating to news and editorial matter ehould he addressed ' Omaha Bee. Kditorial Department. JANUART CttWULATlON. 49,728 Ftsie of Nebraska. County of Poun'aa, at Dwlght Williams, etrmlatlon manage) of Tke Bea Publishing company, being duly (worn, ears that U average daily rlmilatlori. leas spoiled, unuaed and re turned copies, for the awDtb of January, MX st.ra. DWTOHT THLUAafS, Circulation Manager, ubaertbed ta my preaenre and swam to before me this eth day of February. Wit, (Seal.) ROBERT HUNTER. Notary Public. rarleg tae etty arllr aheald have Th Mailed t thaea. Addeeee will h eaaased aa at tea aa re-.aeatea. Tha Folk-Clark ansa an milk. ' feud endM In Lincoln's anniversary baa com to be the orator'a opportunity. Tbnt far Dr. Bun's election president baa not bean ratified. Good Horning, Post maatar Whar ton. Quite a nice valentine, Isn't ItT No oe talking, those Indianapolis bon be do. bar an astounding effect. - Measured by what be gave up. Mr. Folk's sacrifice does not seem so groat Th stage mar hardly be called a fake, sine H only pretonds to be an Imitation. . Tb Insurgent has ball league . should send Senator La Folletto aa aoa ual pass. J It Is reassuring to know that th . grand Jury wilt not hav to b dan , tloaed against overwork.' ' Thai old-fashioned winter that had gone emtlrely out of style seems to have put on' over on us. j The Success Msgssln sad th play ' "Making Good," both hav faded. No, there la nothing In nam. -7 r It la hard for a lot of folks to ap preciate the need for aa big buildings as facie Bam haa for th atorag of money. Nov It remain to be seen whether Governor Harmon will return the compliment and decline to stump New Jersey. , Still, If all th army post scandals were to be aired In public, w might have to revlv the code duello for affairs of honor. Every occupant of th city hall la cocksnr that - tb graft Is la th ofBc on the next floor or at th other end of th corridor. Th convict who wantonly mur - dered a deputy warden in th peni tentiary 1 aald to expert to hang. Let him not be disappointed. Abraham Lincoln would b th most amaied of men It he could open his ears to som tblnga said la his same oa one of his birthday an.nl versarles. Those admirers of Governor Folk In Nebraska shoo Id hsv filed his aame for th presidential preference ballot sooner If they wanted to keep him la the field. Memphis, which la aboat the same sit as Omaha, boasts the lowest tax rat this year la its recent history. Omaha would like to t able to make a boast Ilk that. Th empress dowager applied that hoary old platitude, "seething cauldron," to China In her edict 8he must hav read som American news paper story of a big fire. Third Party Talk. Talk of forming a third party to be made np of the so-called progres sives, both republicans and demo crats, is being revived In parts of the country. The talk Is said to emanate from those camps bitterly hostile to President Tsft who see thst his renomination la practi cally assured, and are figuring on the next move after that The suggestion Is that a third party to put a aeparste ticket in the Held, headed by La Fol letto. is to be kept in view as a last resort. Frankly, we do not believe there ia anything substantial la these re ports. The talk of a third party was much more pronounced two years ago when, ss we hempen to know, overtures were tade to Colonel Roosevelt to jo'.. In with such a new nation alism" Its foundation, only to meet a firm refusal from him, and no suf ficient encouragement from the pro gressive or Bryan wing of the demo crats. If tbe men whose leadership wss regarded as essential to a third party movement saw no good reason for taking It up two years ago, but preferred to work out their salvation within their own respective party lines, there Is certainly less reason for It now. We do not believe the in surgents In either party wsnt to get Into th position where their party loyslty Is under suspicion, or wber they msy hsv to affirm publicly that they will not bolt the nomination If their preferred choice is unsuccessful. This applies especially where th rank and file of the party la to make tb decision themselves by direct pri mary and would be entitled to know In advance If tb Insurgents were by mental reservation holding a third party program In reserve. If th la surgenta should win out, they would expect th regulara to line up for the ticket and It, will be well for them to tnak It plain that they, too, recognix th binding fore of major ities that decide th other way. China with Its Fact to the Weit Event hav moved so rapidly and ksleldosroplcally during the Chines revolution that It has not been en tlrely safe to venture npoa any de cisive discussion of th situation, but now that th Imperial government's diet abdicating and totally accepting th terms of th republicans has been published, th situation bight be accepted at Its face value. Yet of course, there Is ample opportunity fof discord In the perfecting of de tails In the transition. But th Man con uynaaty naa, py to empress dowsger's proclamation, terminated Its reign of three eenturle and yielded to the Inevitable. 4 The majority of tbe people are In favor I a republic From the preference of th people heart, ln. WU ,, u discernible. How could we oppose the desires of millions for tbe glory of one ramnyT 8uch an utterance from the lips of a Chines , ruler ought to satisfy doubt; It surely meant that ooclden tal ctvllliatlon has wrought Its Influ ence upon oriental Imperialism. In this Is there all th Inspiration Amer- cans need at thla time. ' Republican. ism rears its majestic head amid most auipices conditions In China. It 111 be a long time before these 400,000,000 embryonic republicans rise to a real understanding of con stltutlonal government with Its blessing of liberty to them, but some day they will, and when they do what mighty things will bo don In the asm of tb new civilisation I It Is triumph enough for us that this In terminable tide of humanity la faced westward at last It has taken 100 years to turn Its back upoa the east- era horiion. And .only yesterday men were say- log It would never be In our day. An old German orator one mounted to a climax of eloquence upon this rhetorical flight: "Dreamer among th possibilities of life, do yon ever grow weary watting for fortune to lift you upon th pedestal of pre-eml nonce? For untold age th old world. Impatient,' lay hidden behind the veil creation dropped, till time proudly lifted th eurtaln and th old world gased la silent aw upon her beau teous sister world." Today, at last, that curtain haa been lifted from China and China npon Its pedestsl of pre-eminence which America so valiantly helped to build, gases in new vision npon her beauteous sister world, of which she aow Is a part aad Is yet to be a vastly greater part. to let the individual voter instruct his delegates on every possible point and names may be filed for vice presi dent by petition of twenty-live elect- Tarioui.or Just the same as for president It candidates for president should go before tbe people, why not candidates for vice president? Why should not aspirants for the trice presidency trust the people the same aa to the presi dency? Come oa in! The water is fine, snd the more the merrier. With all those forms and samples tbe ready-made letter writer should hav no difficulty ln composing the serial proclamations and pronunela- mentoes without losing the flavor. Booking BarJarard COMPEL! TliisDav inOmalia C9MPHXO FROM BEE FILM FE& It. Ths Theater Censor. London's august play censor. Earl Spencer, also lord chamberlain, haa resigned his position in sheer despair of ever being able to fill it with any degree of satisfaction to all the Inter ests concerned. Evidently stage cen sorship Is about aa difficult a role to play in England aa America, wbere It hss never yet been successfully plsyed. Every now and then some zeslous and well meaning persons suddenly awake to the enormity of the stage's baleful Influence "a thing not altogether Imaginary" and to tbe necessity of appointing a censor of plays as the surest remedy fop tbe evil. But somehow or other these good Impulses Invariably come to naught, though that ia not to say the task ia impossible, only very, very difficult It Involves many exacting demanda. Through the entire fabric of stage craft runs the subtle thread of com mercialism. That la going to be safe guarded. Then there are divers and often conflicting Interests to be sub served. The ethical pnbllc sentiment demands chastity and Intellectuality Insists upon lofty appeal. Over against tbem are their opposltes. The theatrical manager Is not In the busi ness tor his health. Box office re ceipts respond to the acceptability of the play. The players are the most capricious of folk. The press agent hss his whims. If the censor,' by some dint of miraculous achievement, finds It ever possible to reconcile this tumult of conflicting Interests, he still Is In no position to receive the approbation for duty well done. Ah, 'there is that Implacable autocrat, the critic, no two of whom often see the same thing alike. They would cease to be critics If they did. Let the censor essay to aatlsfy tbem and see If be blames Earl Spencer for quitting hta Job. Her Is on Chicago critic who ha actually said that th theater to day la a place where a man should not take a woman unless hs knows her very, rery well. Plumb that with another critic's panegyric that the stage Is most ennobling In Its Influ snc and you may be qualified for th job of censor, yourself. Tet the aters certainly heed censoring and som need It extremely much. Poetic Valentines ear aad Great Rhyme atere Pay Tribate to the Salat ef the Heart Throb. WHITTLED TO A POUT. -They can never do any effectrre tem perance work ln Berlin." i -Why not!" "Because It l a city which Is always on th Spree." Baltimore American. "I wonder how Acam and Eve cam te Sorghum. 1 find It Is Impossible to ad rocat any kind of a tariff that won't cause aiarm to some of my most in fluential constituents." Washington Star. "Oa what around do yon seek a di vorce from your wife?" asked th law yer. -araoly because of a pun." replied th loog-sutferlns husband. "Tou see, she's Mr. Bryan aays the Wall street In terests have offended "us ever since 1896." The editor of the Houston Post Is a red-hot democrat but he denies that he la on of th "us' who have been offended by anything that Wall street ever did. From the way they vote, a good many demo crats have evidently been able to steel their feelings to tbe offenses of Wall street Our old friend, the Piatt river canal, haa been built once more on paper. We hope to live long enough to see the water turned Into the canal, and the wheela made to re volve by electric power generated In Its turbines. If democratic harmony has gotten that far ia Nebraska that Edgar Howard Is ready to ahut his eyi and awallow any dose that la mixed for him, the political millennium must be almost In sight Chairman Underwood is being re ferred to aa the "man who triumphed over Bryan la the Money trust con test" Mr. Brvan never admitted defeat oa the first round. Perlleas Eaerels at Kaarkias. Houston Post. Th democratic party needs at th pres ent time some little reputation as prosperity maker, and statesmen who are notorlus as hard times coaxers ought to be a little cautious. : Mercy! The Louisville Courier Journal now goes Colonel Wstterson on better and calls Governor Wilson "aa intellectual crook," whatever that Is. This democratic harmony, as Happy Hooligan would say, ia sumpin' fierce." 1 Polk turns bis votes over to Champ Clark and Champ Clark probably will Urn bis and Folk's over to Hereon- and where will that leave Mr. $ryao, whv brought abest tke eora- tromlse between Folk aad Clark? Otjyoa eocled hatf . . Why the Difference? Interrogated with respect to a re port that his nam was being con sidered by the Insurgent organisation as a possible candidate for Tic presi dent Governor Aldrich is quoted aa saying: It premature to think of such a thins. This position seeks th snan, and It I Impractical for th mas to seek th offto of vice prenKieat- The notion voiced by the governor may hav been true heretofore, and may yet be true where old-time con ditions prevail, but how can It be true In presidential preference states like Nebraska where the law provides a direct choice by the rank and file of each party at the primary for both president and vice president? Our .Nebraska ' presidential preference) primary law, and the laws la all the other states that hav enacted such ledslatlon,- pat th vice presidency on precisely the same basis as the presidency. The sroweU intention is A Pant leal Art t rttle. Boston Transcript. Champ Clark's preference for a Lincoln road between Washington and Gettysburg over a memorial In th capital Is based oa eminently practical considerations. lie says. "There are the votes of 2.0UO old soldiers la every consreMlonal district la the north." Champ Clark is not an art critic, but be Is tolerably familiar with politics. last sen Meat Itf Chlcace Inter Ocean. Here's a sweet, aweet dream to add to th fajety of politics: Roosevelt realises th strength of th insurgents and fears that his protege Tatt dose not 80 he crooks his finger to the Insurgents, drive La roUett from the field and stirs Tatt to action. At th psychological moment he will reveal hta deep, dark plot, com out for Taft, deliver over th Insurgents, and lo! Taft la triumphantly renominated and the democrats are beaten to a frax- sie! Can you beat It? Why This Jaley Melon. Chicago Record-Herald. With appropriate apologies tn Standard (Ml Company of New Jersey announces Its intention to follow the eaasspl of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana m the matter of melon-cutting. It Is explained by th official that they are sorry th atvtdends are to be so great this year. but owing to th steady advance in th price of oU they are unable to dispose of tbe Immense profits except by dis tributing them aarong tb stockholders. Th public wiu doubt leas accept th explanation with tb polite satiafactloa R Is Intended bs liupert Thirty Yean Ago Th residence of Alderman McXamars on Oak Hill waa visited with about twenty couples, with musio accompani ment, to give lira. McN'amara a warm welcome home from Stertlng, Colo., where she had spent several weeks visit ing her larenls. Th surprla was com plete, and enjoyed by all participant. Th grand jury adjourned after find ing seven more Indictments, making fourteen tn all. The recent buatneaa consolidation by 8. P. Mors A Co.. has brought about th disposal, of tb stock In their Tenth street store to a new firm composed of Mr. Peter Wlgg and John N. West berg, formerly a clerk for 8. P. Mors a Co., under th firm nam of Wigg A West berg. Th council meeting received th re port of th appraisers on th proposed Farnam street grading, allowing damages for l,8ai several property owners hav ing waived their right. A car load of eocoanuu In barrels was received by an Omaha commission firm. Th window frame and eastings ef the fifth floor of th Grand Central are up. The contract for the carpenter work oa W. A. Paxton s new store building hss been let to W. A. Dollone. Mr. C. H. Dewey and Mr. P. P. Shelhy returned from an extended trip to Arlsona and Santa Fe. They spent a week at Birr Madra villa. Ban Gabriel, California, where R It H. Clark, his wife and son and Mrs. Horace Everett and daughter of Council Bluffs are pending a delightful vacation. Gold fillings put In by electricity at Dr. Wens dental rooms, 1M Farnam. Twenty Years Ago , Th ewedlsh Lutheran church at Twenty-second and Vinton streets was formally dedicated. Rev. C E. Elvlnr. founded th church In UN and was made pastor. Rev. B. A. Foglestrom had charge of th dedicatory service and was assisted by about thirty ether ministers from over th state. John O. Matter of Chadron was at the Paxton hotel. Frank P. Ireland, mayor ef Nebraska aty, occupied room "U" at the Paxton. K. O. Mayfteld went to Greenwood to attend th funeral of his grandmother. airs. Martha Majfield. John Kelly, at years of as. KS Dodge street, died at hla home at 1 p. m. Hugh Patterson, B years old, died at the residence of his nephew, J. A. Dal sell. Ma North Nineteenth street, of winter cholera. Tea Years Ago A hospital to cost t3t,00t waa among the lew Improvements announced In th plan for Fort Crook. Chief of Police Donahue Issued orders closing all public dance halls at midnight Saturday to remain closed until Monday. News was received that th brigands had been paid th ransom for Miss Ellen M. Stone and Mm. Tal Ik a. City Comptroller West berg wrote a letter to th chairman of the advisory board, calling his attention to th "dan gerous condition of stmt cars oa what Is known as th Dodg street line, and particularly te the condition of car No. B." Winners of three of the most valu able gifts distributed at th Klks' fair were announced. Th KM check pre sented by Count Chelghton went to No. held by Fred Blake. Th Brewers' sliver cheat was drawn by 0k C. Towle snd No, Ul got the Elks' eolt, but there was no record to show who held th lucky number. Miss Alice Ensor, Twenty-fourth and D streets. South Omaha, left her purs containing money and other valuable to the value of M lying In the reading room of the Omaha publlo library and when she went back to get it It waa gone. Karate Valeatyar, HI Day. ! Goe, little Ryfame. greet Her. I ioe, tel Her j t I thlnka Things Infinitely sweeter Vn 1 mae putt In Inke; Tet Muuck of ye meter Shalt linger on ye Aire Te biles she turns e Leaves a: learns Ye sec.t hidden there. Flye. Utile of Paper. Flye, tnerrle-hearted Bird, a lett your Kanele. shape Her Horn dear and simple Word. So sweete It snan't escape Her A If s blushe you see Steal upp a chs across Her face Ketum and counall m. Hut, little God! I send Her, ny Xou. y MS, Wch hopeful Love haa penned Her Withe tiuill In Honle dipt; Haste; bid Her Heart be tender l.'nto ye lightsome Line Where I In mask hav com to ask To be Her Valentyne! Frank IXropster Sherman. My aleatlae. Let Chtoe and Clorinda ease With eye aglow with loveiight's beam. I'll turn my music to other ways Than this, which makes th young to dream Of thoughts as sweet aa throatful bird. Of lacened picture, honeyed word. No lilt of love shall lightly trip FrtKn out my flute; no song divine Of charming Cupid. Tet I d dip Into the realm of Valentine; For truth, may maker of ruae rhymes. A well be dead as out of times. If I'd my way th mailman's call Would haul my walk uito a run Out to the mailbox In the nail For billet-doux no man would ehun; St. Valentine would bring me thrills A couple Of tun-dollar bills. New ork Tribune. name "theTr e.de,,"on Cain- said W.,M a alptre and It "They probably knew what they were 1 w 'hear her remark ,w'n'r - Si; raising' aald Dingbat. Harper'e kmI when I mould . Weekly. Mrs. Brown-Mrs. Janes has the worst habit' Mr. Brown Wliat is It. dear? Mrs. Brown She turn around and look every time we pasa oa the street. Mr. Brown How do you know she doesT-Judfie. Tou haven't mentioned the tariff In anv of your speeches." "And I'm not going to mention tt un ices forced to do so." replied Senator People Talked About Official red tape In Washington the ether day demonstrated Its old-time vigor by yanking out the tooth of a real gen eral. The antl-tlpping crusade started by th traveling men'a associations Is chasing th watar wagon late the deep, dark woods. That reconciliation between th twe branches of the Braganxa family, aspir ants te th throne of Portugal, at another evidence that misery loves company. That rare touch of sympathy which adorns the sartorial profession promises to bloom In the spring. Tailors are going to make fat men look lean without a surgical operation. Cyrus II. Walker ef Albany. Ore., haa the distinction of being the oldest whit man born west of the Rocky mountains. H celebrated his seventy-third birthday anniversary last month. Out ln Spokane. Mate of Washington, a reform wave threatens te put out of a Job every policeman whose waist line exceeds that of hla chest. While the agitation Is on managers of hand organs omit from their repertoire the curbstone favorite. "Nobody Loves a Fat Man." Mrs. M. W. Thomas of North Adams haa received from her mother, Mr. T. C. Phelps of Vergennes. Vl. a postal card containing U words, written by th latter In a very fin but perfectly legible hand. Mrs. Phelps is 78 years old and wrote the words without the aid of eye glasses. Asserting that he had mad a fortune ef tt.000.uo sine he left home, twenty years ago, Morris Smith has returned to th cottag occupied by hla old mother, Mrs. Henry Smith, In New Haven, Conn. Investment In ere and mineral lands near Harlem, Ga.. Smith says, hav mad him Immensely wealthy. New York Sun. 'No. I cant get cp enough ecu rare to ask old Patterson for hla daughter." "And why not?" " Because I'm a builder of absolute y fireproof building and he is a fire In surance agent." Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Ten. sir, 1 am proud to say that I'm a selfraad man. "Then It's a great pity you didn't notice that your leg were net mate." Cleve land Plain Dealer. ' I. set by a alea(la. John Henry Clin Loved msiden fin; And (or this day He long did pin. With pennies nine A valentine He bought that girl 'Taas superfine. Two doves did twin ln a combine Around a heart And 'round a vtn. "Wilt thou be mine. O, Kmeline? Thou angel on" (So mad tn line). But Fate Malign, che did design; He sent that girl No valentine. But did consign (He'll e'er repine) Ills laundry bill For sixty-nine! No maid for Clin-. No dove combine; She'll ne'er be his. He doth incline. Joe Kerr. D Yea Hraaesabert Old chap, do you still remember, tbe days of your callow youth, When you chewed th end of a pewcil, and swor that you wroto ui trutn Ia the doggerel labeled. "To Pnyllls" . which you left at tn aoor 01 sieg. Then posted the same to ta.lie, apd. a dupuoat copy 114 regi And say. do you still remember that mar velous work ot art Thenaked god with th empty bow and the arrow that pierced a heart? 'Twa framed In much lace-Ilk paper, and th envelope' cramped address Looked much Ilk th hand ot Mlunle but you hoped thai 11 cam irom Bess. I know that you still remember those violets you sent to Nell, And the roses which went to Mary, and the candy expressed to Bell; And do you remember tn mitten you got by the morning post? It waa red, and cut out of flannel by a maid on tii other coast. ril bet you remember, you rascal. Tou used to be handsom then. And you captured the genuine Phyllis In a race with a dosan msn. And now 'round your eve ar wrinkles and your hair Is ss gray as mine. But so that you won t be lonesome heres "How, and a valentine. Yalratlalaa. I'd love to buy some perforated lacelike, little paper things With a pink Cupid In the middle fl ut ter n' on snowwhlte wings. An' carry a whole armful of them back, 'wav back to long ago. And gently push them 'neath th door of little a-lrla I used to know: And then tiptoe adown the steps and tlppytoe out through the gate. And then hide out behind a tree and hold my breath, and stand and wait. And maybe git a glimpse of HEH with her but eye an' fluffy hair! An' then, when she had abut th door go off e'walkn on the air! Td be glad to send Mary one, an' run off Ilk I used te oo Th while aba read th wondrous news: "No knife can cut our love In twa!" Td km to sneak to Lassies door and leave ne with a sounding thump. And wonder how eh looked when she learned that ah waa my "sugar lump." Oh. there ar dosen I could name I sent tbem to la day son by! Td lev to b a boy again with Valen tine day drawing nigh! Te wad through carloads of th thing high on som country counter piled. And choose the sentiment by which I thought ah most might be beguiled. They were so lovable and sweet, back In tb country school back there! In fresh starched aprons, with bright yea, and ribbon bw tied ia their hair; And they seemed farther from m then almost than they seemed from me now; Me, just a harum-scarum boy, bare footed, full of rowdy-dow. Thy brighter than mv d reams today. with red lips and with eye ashlne. Sweeter by far than Cupid's are on any painted valentine Ah. well, we can t be always young, th longest race is sometime run. And 1 am weU along th road but I did hav a heap of fun. Mortimer Lewis. Great Span at Start. Baltimore American, Th year Is only a month old. but it has contrived already to crowd so much history-making Into Its short life, as Well as to show without dlsguls Its pro pensity tor making mtsdhtef. that It is hard to predict what kind of a record It will hav established when Its full span is completed and what existing order of things will be surviving at that time. Was Gat the Maaeyt New York Tribune. Wouldn't It be practicable for the Wil son campaign managers to brine a friendly suit against Colonel Wstterson to compel an accounting of the "consider able" contribution which be says he col lected for the governor's benefit but which they maintain la still In transit? There as ae need of a special "court ef fbeaoa" Don't Let Skin and Hair Show Your Age (Mollis Manton In Woman's Journal.) "Don't look old until you hav to. A clear, soft complexion makes any woman look younger titan she is. To preserve your complexion, us powders and cream sparingly. If at all. Ia the morning, rub the face, neck and arms gently with a lotion mad by dissolving a small origi nal peckag of may ton in a half pint of witch haxeL It won't barm the moot delicate akin, and It give a dainty, natu ral color that Is most attractive. "If any treatment will make hair grow, dry shampooing with there will. Just put a cupful of cornmeal In a fruH Jar. mix In well an original paekag of tberos. sprinkle a little of the mixture ea th head once a week, and brush out thor oughly. It make th hair clean, soft, silky and lustrous aad easy te de np. "Acne and pain make a woman look old. T stop ache la back or Joints, to reduce swellings, to allay Inflammation, to relieve pain from eprala, uiuls er any cause, apply Mother' Sarre, rubbing In welL It ta easy te us snd autck to A It. No anxiety on Baking-day if you use 0 CREAM Insures light sweei wholesome -food A purejCream of Tartar rowaer T7 T7V 1 1 1 11111 rvAt rTn r f r 1 1 lim I U vjl If I MlVN El l&li Good Opportunity tor Investment in Substantial Horns Industry ' TUfj condensed milk and Canning Factory that I am erecting at Papil lion, Nebraska, ia rapidly ne axing com pletion, and I am now offering a lim ited amount of Waterloo Creamery, Co, preferred stock at $100 per share, drawing interest at the rate of 7 Per Cent Per Annum We will guarantee to cotrort all outstanding stock into cash at the ead of three years. This inyeetment ii bound to be prof itable for the investor and will reaulJ in great benefit to the milk inAwtry in Douglas, Sarpy and Washington eotmties. This is the first "Evapo rated Milk" factory in the state of Nebraska, Our brand will be tbV'Eak horn Evaporated Milk.1' If yon are interested send for list of men who have already subscribed and such other information aa yon may, desire. Reference, First National Bank, Omaha. ...... Waterloo Creamery Co., LEROY CORLISS, Prost. Omaha, Neb. ' Ton are cordially invited to inspect this plant at any time. Paptflioa Internrban line terminal. sS GUARANTEE HIND LIFE ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED JAM; ART 2, 1002. rVRE PROTECTION IASl'KA.N'CE. Assets, January 1. 113 $d32,4SJl Reserve Fnad Jaaaary 1, 1012 fil3,01S.O becarltles with State Department Jaaaary 1, 1S12 SdsjssO.OO Ts aeeare Oar innraae Contracts.) Rats per tiioasaad, age 83 (other ages la proportion), S8.75. Mortality Cost per S1.000 Insurance Mean Amount, Year 1B11, $3.10. Depoeltery Baaks Annotated. 980. Mosassi la OaUforala. Xaalaaa, Im, Kaasaa. aSoattaaa, ebraska. Mart Saketa, Orearoa. Soata Dakota, Xaaaa, Waaalagtea, Texas Tead Wyasilag. aa srepartag te eater xniajl aad -, tea eapakl ex preaedxg the be ciaae eg Vn1aa waste a Stat aaa Soiled tor. " x-ooz trr ocb aacoaa. Home Office: Brandeis Bidding, Omaha Nek Tetrpbcase Doaglaa 7021.