Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 11, 1912, SOCIETY, Image 13

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEEr AUGUST 11, 1912.
Some Pictures of Night Life in
Copyright, 1912, by Frank G. Carpenter.)
ANAMA CITY, Panama. Come
with me (or a peep under
the crust of old Panama of
a Saturday night. We shall
leave the Tivoll hotel, where
every thing is proper and
p
a
pious and the fashionable world la a-
dancing, and go off into the byways and
' Blums. .We want to see the poor of the
city, and also take a look at some dls
' trlets where vice; carries on Its mad
i spree until the wee hours of the morn
ing.. We shall choose the Saturday that
; comes after pay day, and shall . have
abundapt reason to say why Uncle Sam
' should. "control both Panama and Colon,
the tw6 town at the ends of our ditch.
:.:'V'y lB Xm Caledonia.
We begin our walk in New Caledonia.
' At t H4 Tlyol'l.wthe charges are $5 a day.
New Caledonia Is only a stone's throw
a way;, ij you can get a bed there for
25 cents - a night, or you , may have a
i room, af 110 month; and crowd ' ten
others persons' inside it.' , New Caledonia
! la made. up, of such rooms, They are filled
with ''Jimalca "negroesv 'A single room
t will often house a whole family and take
, In bpardere' to' boot. Some of the best
i rooms' have curtains across- them that
j the ''fannies' may have- privacy while
i dressing,' but as a rule the negroes .nest
I like' rabbits in a warren and dirt reigns
! supreme. - . , ...
OiK;Saturaay;;nigWs these West Indian
quarters;, 'are t alive,." There are dances
In t)ie..galoons' aTi6r,)Ut ".In the streets.
There1 Is', the, tarriboureta, with black and
yellow. 'vm'eb'- and . women going through
' motions : similar',-to those- of. the Oewazt
tin EgVpfcj'-Other, negro dahces remind me
' of the,S"autch girls of India or the Puled
I Nails1 o'ftha atjara; and there are some
I whlfrn.oare" with the hooche-kooche
jof itfle: South- aeas.V The. negroes are
jdreasd iii their beetj' and they go through
theHrJamorous : postures with -wild aban
i don. .which. ;is ; unsurpassed, even by the
i bunny hug' or i'the turkey- trot of our
wicked; New-York They grow more and
'more upy.ai.t4ejnlght..g.qes.on, and.by
jli tfcloek, the Wholetof Caledonl Is mad.
I This is'.on' Saiurday. . It Is !irtore quiet
'on dther.nighta'of the week.'.
Mailt Life in Panama City,
leaving , Caledonia - we take carriage
for. a, drive through Panama, visiting first
i the more respectable quarters. . The
; houses here have balconies which run
' out from the second stories over the
streets. The richer -jseople live upstairs
: and these balconies form the sitting and
. gossiping' places 1 of the better classes
'during the evening. In the stories be
: low; where a whole family may have
1 but one room, the people come out on
- the. - sidewalks and Bit on the doorsteps
or curbstones taking the air. The streets
are filled with such figures. They form
two Jong lines of humanity, one on he
street and the other in the balconies
above., .'." ; '
Soeof ' the .people are charting., Some
are playing 'cards. Here and there the
, thumping of a piano falls on he ear,
' and the grapliophone . wth Its rusfy shriek
slaughters - thai- air. The most of the
groups on the balconies are family par
; ties;"- Nice girls are' nbt allowed to have
, young '.men, courting them, and the lover
: talksvwlth his 'sweetheart only In- (he
presnte'(6f the family and must do all
of ls;':'6'pboning.uflder -the; eyes of" hii
possible 'parentSrln-law.' These scenes.
i howevfrjwtre Spanish, 'fan(L they -ar,' roiKjh
j inn $anB aa yioee ui., pytiuittn ciues any
wliere iii the world.
We shall now leave the respectable
quarters 'oif Panama and visit those of
' which vice Is the queen. We shall' not
' have to go far, for the wicked sections
'; are in- the, heart of the city and their
; signs are so plain they can be read on
I the-run". , f ou tiave heard of Port Said
1 and Suez, the' two bad towns at the ends,
of the Suez canal. Rudyard Kipling. has
i defined them as the place where the
! Ten. .Commandments come to an end.
Take me somewhere east of Suez,
' Where the best Is like the worst.
Where there ain't no Ten . Command-
ments,
And a man can raise a thirst.'
I do not know just how bad Suez 1b
but you can see more wlckdeness in
I a day here than In a week at Port
'Said. In the cities of the Suez canal
i the 'vices' are hidden.' ' The streets' are
' quiet, and there are no signs and ad
i vertisementa to attract the passersby.
'At Panama the slum quarters are as
'open as in the Yoshlwara of Japan. One
'of the worst sections is not far from-
the cathedral and In the very heart of
the city.' It is known as the red light
district and the light Is electricity fil
tered through glass as crimson as blood.
There are great square red lanterns with
incandescent bulbs Inside them , painted
with the names of the special resort
they represent. Here, for Instance, Is
"Pannie's Place,"- farther on the 'Trench
House," and in the next block. is. "La
Perta d Pftclflco," or the Pearl of the
Pacific. ;. .v ', ' ..'
Now stop your .carriage before one of
these .. gilded houses and take -a . look
through the half-open door.: Tha lower
floor at the front la a saloon. ' You can
see the. bottles In-' the bar at the" back,
while at the windows and in the door
looking out upon ' the streets are little
girl with painted faces and gaudy
clothes. Most of them are mere .chil
dren, 15," 16 and 17 years of age, and they
are dressed to look younger. Their skirts
reaoh Just to their knees and they look as
though they should put on their nighties
and be tucked away in their beds.
The great majority of these girls are
French. They are white slaves, who have
been ' smuggled Into Panama through
Costa Rica or other Central American
'ports, and brought down here In boats to
i Panama bay in such a way that the
' i Jurisdiction of our zone is avoided.
I went into one or these houses with a
tlStfowF Bailey.
r Sanatorium
This institution Is the only one
in, the central vest with separate
buildings situated in their own
lample grounds, yet entirely
distinct and rendering it possible
to classify cases. The one building
being fitted (or and devoted to the
treatment of noncontagious and
nonmental diseases, no others be
ing admitted. The other Keit
Cottage, being designed, for and
devoted to the exclusive treatment
of select mental cases, requiring
lor a time watchful care aud sue
clai nursing. . .
j llf IJi life l'ff
I fir ' Tf .H.vr r lottery zedlavs awaked of their f$&um fll
H 1 -"ygrP; 7tW-,1'
policeman,' who had a summons to serve
upon the matron. She was charged with
being a white slave trader and with hav
ing brought several girl slaves through
the canal zone. , '. ,
I must say that she looked It. She was
a brazen-faced French woman of about
thirty-five, and In the room with her were
half a dozen little chits of front fifteen to
seventeen, who were probably the slaves
she had, smuggled. They could speak but
little English, and were French from
their toes to their crowns. Tney danced
.about the room while we stayed. At the
same time other girls jpf similar,, ages
were flirting with some men on the op
posite side Of the room, and at the table
one drank beer with a Spaniard.
;As 1 looked the policeman aald: "These
girls are real staves and thiiy are treated
like slaves.. They, look very gay now in
their jewels and flnot dresses, but those
Jewels and dresses .they .are allowed to
UBe only at night: During the day they
put on common clo'th,U)gy and lake fcare of
the house, scrubbing, and cleaning. The
matron keeps them, in debt,, and they are
so afraid of her that they do not dare to
It ave." " ' : ' a'
". I don' i know how many houses, of this
kind there are Inariama and': Colon,, but
the number is, '-large', and it Is steadily
increased by recruit from-'. France, and
southeastern Europe, The houses-, are
licensed by the tw6 Cities. ;It is claimed
that they are under," mgdieal supervision,
ana that the girls" are older than ttiey
look. I asked one of them whether she
had yet passed fifteen. Bhe mockingly
replied that she was slsty-tflve, and
danced away, swinging her bare arms
around her head and kicking her red,
Pilk-stocklnged toe almost to the height
of my nose. .'
The government is doing; all it can to
restrict the white slave traffic and to re
duce the vice of the Panama cities. It
has done wonders, and were It not for
our Influence In such, matters thlnga
would be worse than they are. I believe
that tho morality among the white em
ployes of the canal is far better than
could be found in such a camp any
where else. The canal has many good
American women and they and the Y. M.
C. A. clubhouse have done much to build
up a high, moral tone among the em
ployes. In th Opinm Dens.
Leaving the red-light section, I visited
some of the licensed opium dens. They
are managed by the Chinese and are ex
ceedlngly rude. The beds are mere
piatrorms made of boards, running along
the sides of narrow halls. Upon these
wooden bunks I found men and women
lying with opium outfits before them.
Some were hinting the" pipe and others
sleeping off the effects Of the drug. Some
of the smokers were Colombians, a few
were negroes and some were Chinese,' I
did not' see a. single American, although
I am told that some are to be found
among the patrons, and that even Ameri
can women have come to the Joints. I
doubt' (this. I have : seen ' the opium
saloon of Shanghai and Canton. They
are " grand in comparison with these at
Panama, but the glased eyes and dreamy
looks 'of the smokers are the same.
' Cir of Caves'.
The average visitor to the canal leaves
Panama, City knowing nothing about it.
If you would understand how these people
really live you must get inside the houses
an(! examine the caves which form the
homes of the poor. '
Panama Is. a queer city. ,Jt Is one in
wllieh a. hundred or more families have
all the money, and .where the remaining
thousands earn only enough to keep soul
and body together: The average family
of the lower classes sleeps in a cave on
the first floor; Or If on the second, .It Is
over a store and the whole family will
have but one room. There are thousands
of families here, each of which has only
one room and this Is so small that the
tooklng Is done In a common hall outside
it. The kitchen stove is a pot of char
coal put Inside a box to keep off the wind,
the box being nailed to the fence or post
of the veranda. ,
Most of these cave-homes have no win
dows, being ventilated by an opening
Which runs around the tops of the walls
under the celling. There is no plaster
nor paper. The walls are of boards,
painted or not, as the landlord may order.
,1 am having my films developed by a
photographer here whose studio is at the
top of a three-story frame building. He
tells me that there are more than a thou
sand men, women and children in his
building and that there are altogether
lomethlng like 300 or 900 rooms, each
housing a family.
I have looked into some of the rooms.
They are as dark as a pocket and the
moke from the cooking In the halls out
:de has turned their walls black. Some
if the rooms are about ten feet square.
rhey have no ventilation except at the
uoors.
That building Is a firetrap. It is all
wood excepting the root which is of
galvanized iron. I tremble at the possi
ble loss in case of a fire.
I asked my photographer as to the
rents, and was told that they are from
$7 to $10 per room per month in gold.
Similar rates prevail in the Jamaica negro
quarters in New Caledonia, which I de
scribed at the beginning of this letter.
The rents here are so high and the build
ing so cheap that many structures pay
In rents every year the cost of the land
and the building. This la likewise so
In Colon. There Is one caravansary
known as the Coal Chute, which has 100
rooms. It te said to have paid the cost
of Its erection within fourteen months.
Cave Stores of Panama.
It Is interesting to look at the cave
stores In the isthmus. , They are mere
holes In the wall about ten feet square
and perhaps eight feet in height. They
have no windows, facing the street, and
the door alone gives the light. Often one
of these little storerooms will be the
home of the family which keeps it. It Is
a store or workshop in the daytime and
a sleeping place after dark.
As to work, the idea prevails at home
that these Panamanians are lazy. I do
not find them so. Some kind of house
industry is going on everywhere. In one
little shop shoemakers will be pounding
away. In another the women and girls
are making lace, while farther on are
clgarmakers, carpenters and blacksmiths.
Much of the work is done out on the
sidewalks. I see many women sewing on
the edge of the street, and the tailors
bring their chairs out to the roadway and
stitch in the sun. The most common store
fs the petty saloon. Drinks are sold
everywhere, and there are scores of fruit
stores and groceries'.
Lottery Business.
There is one thing which employs more
people In Panama City perhaps than any
other, and that Is the lottery. Its tickets
are sold by men, women and children on
every block of Panama and Colon. It Is
against the law to sell them on our
canal zone, but the lottery peddlers
roost about the railroad stations and ac-
MAKE
I'l ! " ...-a'l
We are very enthusiastic) about .the virtues of Newbro'a
Herpioide. It is our oandid' belief that if every citizen of
Omaha were to trji Herpicidefor a little while, that the vast
majority of them would be so pleased' with the results that
they would feel under obligations to 'us for calling their
attention to it.
In order to encourage this trial we, the Special Agents for
Newbro'B Herpioide in Omaha, have each arranged to give
valuable Herpioide, products free to the first 125 persons
who bring the coupon from the advertisement to any one of
our several stores, and purchase a large bottle of Herpicide.
This makes a grand total of 750 gifts to an equal number
of customers.
Will you be one of the number?
' Th first 26 buying a Urge size bottle in any one store
will receive a large bottle FREE two bottles for the price
. of one.
To the second 26 In any one store will be given a small .
ise bottle FREE.
T,h? ??la6 wUl b Prented with a box of Gallogly's
Delightful Seaweed Cream. This cream Is made by the Herpi
oide Company and Is very superior for the skin. It sells for
fifty cents everywhere. You get a box FREE.
To the following 60 people are given a cake of Herpicide
Aseptlo Tar Soap, the usual price of which is twenty-five
ent. This Is a very fine soap for shampoo purposes, hav
' ; . lag none of the Injurious effects so frequently experienced.
V . If among the lucky 60 you get a cake FREE.
Save and Beautify the Hair
7 Tor preserving and making the hair beautiful nothing is
superior to Herpicide. It destroys and removes dandruff,
which is ft deadly enemy to nice hair. Eegularly applied this
wonderful remedy makes the hair healthy, prevents its com
ing out and causes it to become light, fluffy and beautiful.
Tbe itching stops almost instantly.
Large size bottle of NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE is positive
ly guaranteed by us. Yir money back if not satisfied., :
l
the Slums of the City
THE JVUfAMA
cost the workmen as they pass through.
They do a great business with the
negroes and not a little with the Ameri
cans. The grand prize is $75,000 in
silver, and In addition there is $17,500 of
other prizes. The grand Prize has been
drawn several times by Americans, but
in most cases it has done little good, th
money being spent In riotous living.
The Panama lottery belongs to a man
named Gabriel Duque, a naturalized
American who came here from Cuba. He
owns also the Star and Herald, one of
the chief newspapers of the Isthmus, and
he is, I am told, a man of wealth. He
pays the Panama republic for the license
to run the lottery, and his profits from
it amount to something like $50,000 a
year. The drawings are held every
Sunday, and a little girl picks out the
balls containing the blanks and the
prizes. This lottery is a great evil to
Panama and the drain of It Is mostly
on the poor, who buy tickets and parts
of tickets even when they must go hun
gry In consequence.
Panama has a bull ring out"lao the
city, and bull fights take place every
Sunday whenever there are any bull
fighters here on their way from Spain to
Lima, Peru, or Mexico City. The bullB.
however, are not dangerous, and the sport
is usually a fraud and a fiasco, I have
seen some of these fights, and at one time
watched a score of Panama boys rush
Into the ring and have a hand-to-hand
fight with the bull. This was to get a
10 gold piece which had been tied to
the horns of the bull. Each man had a
red blanket, which he tried to throw
over the bull s eyes, in order that he
might grab at the gold. Several of tho
msWsxirqnw
UNUSUAL OFFER TO USERS OF
mm
WW
CD
49
ZOTZEKZ
boys were badly Injured, but one of them
finally got the 10.
Chnnvea in Panama.
In the meantime, notwithstanding these
blots upon its escutcheon, Panama City
Is far better off than It has been In the
past. I first visited It In 189S, fourteen
years ago, when on my way around South
America. The city was then one of vile
smells.' It had no sewerage, and the wolls
and cesspools were side by side 'In the
courts. Business was dead, and the bare
footed cabmen slept In their shnbby old
coaches. Today the town Is alive. It
has modern Improvements. It ha water
works and all sanitary conveniences. Out
side the lottery peddlers there are no beg
gars, whatever. Every one of tlio better
classes rides about In carriages, and there
are victorias for hire at every street cor
nnr which will take you on the trot or t'-ie
lopo from one part of the town to Uit
other. Theee victorias have dinner- gongs
underneath at the front, so that lh,ey -can
be rung by the foot of the driver 'and
there is a continual belling going on.
It was during my second vlHlt here
that Uncle Sam took hold of Panama ai.d
made it sanitary. He dug up th street),
put in sowefs and' the water supply and
paved the. "main streets , with vitrified
brick. He, did thd same with CMon, and
you will find two towns In the tropics
which have as good streets as these.
Both places are growing. There, are
new houses on almost every block, and
the Avendla Central, which runs from
the plaza to the railroad station, at the
end of Ancon, 1h lined with houses and
stores all the way, They are Panurrla
stores, and snme of them tarry large
MiuMif lliiJJJlJj
125 Coupons May Be Redeemed at
Each of the Following Stores;
Myers-Dillon Drug Co.
16th and Farnam Sts.
Kellstrom Drug Co. 49tli
and Dodge Sts.
Beaton Drug Co.15th
and Farnam Sts.
This Is the coupon entitling you to Premium. Cnt It out now
don't wait until tomorrowmake sore of a bargain buy today.
Coupon No.
Received from Herpicide Special Agent as premium
with my purchase of lar ge size bottl of Newbro's Her
picide as follows:
(Largo Sine Bottle of Newbro's Herpicide.
Small size bottle of Newbro's Herpicide.
Box of Gallogly's Seaweed Cream.
Cake of Herpicide Aseptic Tar Soap.
Name
Street
City
Indicate premium received by
of Panama
stocks of goods. They are .-wtliir. l;ke
our business establishmentK, and snine
aie more like the general store ? hich
you find at a country cross-ro3 or in
vlllaKex.
In the center of Panama are- nany
fine ItiilldiiigH. The National ia!aeo and
theater cost something like J750,OOit, and
thf Panamanian will tell you that the
theater Is the fliifst In the world. Tliis
!s doubtful. Nevertheless, It has sitting
and standing room for I.tioo. and a flre-
i proof metal drop curtain which is won
derfully made. The new city hall, facing
the plaza, not far from the cathidral. 1
another large building, and a third In the
national Institute, devoted to i-.luc.itlon.
The Institute cost 1,000,000 pesos or more,
and It will, In time, develop into a uni
versity. At present It has about S00 stu
dents, ranging from those of the kinder
garten to those In the' college. Tlic-se
buildings are only a part of what the
country has to show for the JlO.QCU.OOO It
received from ITncle Sam at the time of
the settlement as to the Panama larial.
FRANK G. CARPENTER.
KEY TO PERPETUAL YOUTH
Discovery of tbe Ul follria Helps
to Sweeten and Prolong
Mfe.
In the large intestine of a human be
ing there exists quantities of polHonous
substances called phenols -'and Indois.
These have been proven by Metchnikpff
to be responsible fur that slow disin
tegration of the system known as old
age. The poisonous substances referred
to can be neutralized or done away with,
Mi'tchnlkoff adds, by sugar only or by
the substances classed as sugary. Unfor
tunately, sugary substances, taken into
tho human alimentary canal, are digested
prior to their arrival In any form In . the
large intestine,- This difficulty faces even
the lactic acid treatment, at least to some
extent, which, ai all know, Metchnlkoff
has advocated for quite a year.
How, then, can sugar be produced
within the colon subsequently to diges
tion. That was the problem confronting
the renowned scientist until the other day.
He asserts that he has discovered a
microbe which produces, sugar glycobac
terla. It has been established by experi
ment within the Intestine of the dog, Its
only normal habitat ' If It be objected
that the , dog does not live Very long,
Metchnlkoff replies that It Is a carnivor
ous animal, and animal food produces tbe
largest quantity of the . poisonous sub
stances which it Is sought to destroy.
Were It feasible to feed the dog a great
amount of .vegetables, the animal would
become Immune, "Metchnlkoff Insists, from
diseases arising through the existence In
Its intestines Of the deleterious indols and
phenols. ' .'. , , , ' ,
Having established . the ; presence of
glycobacterla a microbe hitherto un
knownIn the dog's intestine, experi
ments were made with It upon human
beings. In every Instance the iest of the
germ was successful. The poisonous ele
ments from which old age arises w're re
duced in quantity or expelled. " Metchnl
koff has Included himself among the ob
jects of experiment, although lie insists
that old age does not trouble him, de
spite his 68 years, owing to his care in
diet. . This comprises mainly vegetables
rich in sugar, with, a due allowance of
lactic microbes. Hence his capacity to
toll long and arduously without thinking
of a period of annual pest.
Metchnlkoff adds that some persons
secrete phenols and Indcls In such small
quantities that ordinary care In diet will
rescue them from old age as we know it.
Those who resort Jo the new glycobae
terlal treatment should use the lactic acid
preparations as well. The aged will in
no long time feel a new efficiency, com
parable only with the feeling of perpetual
youth so vainly sought by Punce de Leon.
Current Literature.
Just aa Good
Max, a primary student, was giving In
structions to write a sentence containing
the word "chicken." Not being ' quite
sure of the way to spell the-" word, he
wrote the following: .
"A Jlken Is a small hen (I can spell
hen)."-Womafi'a Home Companion. j
Merchants Drug Co. 16th
and Howard Sts.
Tobin's Pharmacy 24th
and N Sts., South Omaha.
Saratoga Drug Co. 24tL
and Ames Ave.
state
drawing pen through the others.
iiifje.
SM FACE
Rough Crust on Topr Continually
Worse, Spread Over Face and
Legs. Terrible Itching and Burn
ing, Cuticura Soap and Ointment
'Cured Completely,
Stratford, Iowa. "Throe years ago this
Winter my seven year old son bad ringworm
on the face. First It was In small rod spot.i
which had a rough crust on
the top. When they' started
they looked like little red
dots and thon they got big
ger, about the size of a
bird's' egg. They bad a
white rough ring-" around
them, and grew continually .
worse and soon spn d( over
his face and lens.- Tho child
suffered terrible itching and burhing, so
t hat he could not sleep nights. He scratched
thorn and they looked fearful. -He was cross
when he had thorn. Wo used several tottlcs
of liniment, but nothing helped. I saw
where a child hud a rash on the face and
was cured by Cuticura Soap and Olntttient
and I decided to use them. I used Cuticura
Boap and Ointment about one month, and
they cured iny child complotoly. I cannot
bo thankful enough for it is terrible if S
child's face Is all broken out as ours was."
(Signed) Mrs. Barbara Prim, Jan. 30, 1912.
Cuticura Soap is best for.! skin and bii
because of its extreme purity, delicate yat
effective, medication, and . refreshing fra
grance. " it wears to a-wafer and gives,
comfort and satisfaction, every moment' of
its use, for toilet, bath and nursery. Cuti
cura Soap and Ointment are sold everywhere.
Bnmpleof each free, with 32-p. Sklo Book. Ad
dress pout-card "Cuticura, Dept. T. Boston."
ajrTendor-raiccd men should use Cuticura
Soap Shaving Stick, 23c. Satfpid frm, . U
SO DlTt! No ZXEKi
cisiHoi wo rpisoxr DBuastj
EemoveifoaifJit.QiileMy wltw
P a t; PAP riu,'LK
r I VJU TREATMENT
Including OBESITY HERB TEA
It Don tbs Work! Sat All Tott Wat
WliBirir.' Ton Want! Don't Bs Zatl
Vqu can become slender without
privations, absurd dieting or .5i8rp
tiig. ,. No sweating injections, mas
sage rolling, . vibrators, wires or
bandages. This treatment ia deslgqed
to eliminate; superfluous fat harm
lessly and as speedily as is advisable.
OBESITY HERB TEA. a rait of 4ho
PAT .. KOfi 'TRIPLE TRKATMEfcT.
makes a mild and dellKlitful hrew rtmt
1b specially Intended for fat ,,fulks Vnd
can be nipped; at bedtimo. , 4 i
Fat folks can improve" 'their', health
wHtt the Fat Foe Treatment,' as It iot
only reduce tM.bufc-'add pw. vwor
ana, bealth "while, rraduclnifi, . Ask -jur
ch-ug-glat for tlila-remarkalrle netf' ti'at-
meni and lr ne is i out or if ne -an
quickly eecui't. same. frrt bta ..whole
saler.
Out-of-town ctiafonWs ' can'.'-' stiir
.
B'st Foe from tliS"-Omaharug(fatii1 by
mall at $1.00. . Bold .4n.Otnlra . by.-Mher-man
& McConnell Drus . Co. v,ttour
stores), Beaton Dniff ?o:r lMh" and, far
nam Hta; Myera-DIllon Dr Co-t-tBth
and larnant.Sta., .anil .Merchant In-ug
ld.i loin ana . jtigwaru. . occurs.. l"ia
KTBttl fl.uu uuauueiii nuw. .... a,
i . .... - .. - U . . lL?:i,l: .
Keep' the Complexion: Beautiful, 'i
NadinePaceiliQer
". (in Grn Bou Onl. I
Piucej'XsoffjTvetvety
appearance , to much ad-
t miredrand'wmaini'until
washed .-oftVf PurlSeii hy
' I a ne process,-'- wilt not
1 l .1.' U,,rt,fo
Prevents sunburn ana
return of disedloratkms.
i i WHITE,' rtKSUlH s
Bv toilet counter or .,mail,,50c.,rij Monet
iatk -if not tntinty tletufd .: , -
'NATIONAL TOJLtT COMPANY... Art; Tmm
I BH4 bf Sbtf m4u-MoCoBtn Bin (fc.AQWl '4rul
C. Usralx rhtnucj, tyuyarf Ptinvjr,.itntr.
WM. J. BOEKHOFF,
Stall Dealer.
Phones-
Dour, us.
tad. A-8U9.
Phone Douglas 353
Residence. Harney 4282
E. J. DAVIS
HEAVY HAULING
1818 Farnam1 Street
Omaha, Nebraska.
JOHNS' DIGESTIVE TABLETS
A REMEDY FOR DYSPEPSIA INDIGESTION
IttlRMTEED by L- D. Johns Co., under the Food
and Droia Art. June SO, 1908. Serial lo. M19.
PRICE 25o t any Drug Store, or
order direct from
L. D. Johns Co., 1123 Broadway, H.T., U.S. I
TRAVELS.
CLARK'S ORIENT CRUISE
(15th Annual) by new Cunardsr "Laconu,"
Fanruary , 16th, m. 1400 up; for 71 dayv In
eluding Short Excunion, Hotali, Guides, Ortres,
Fees. etc. W. K. Bock, 1611 Karaant St., Omaha.
Frank V. Clark, TiBMt BuUiUafc New far.
, .V-'MnuHMfV y