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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1914)
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 15, 1D14. 5 B Frank G. Carpenter Amid the Andean Glaciers! Copyright, 1914, by HYank O. Carpenter t in , ICOIIO. PeruI am wrltlnr I I thU letter on an oil-burning I I engine on the very top of the BjpBmB Andes. My secretary sits by ICH my side in the cab and takes SsfiSW down the notes. The air is so rare that I ran hardly talk, and it ts only the- great flames of petroleum In the furnace below that take the chill from our bones. Wo arc a short distance from Tlclto, above the pass which crosses the mountains from the Pacific ocean on the way to the Atlantic, and at the very highest railroad point In the world. We are higher up In tho air than any moun tain In the United States outside vt Alaska. We are 100 feet above the top ot Mont Blanc and 2,000 feet higher than thex sacred peak ofrFujlyama, In far-ott Japan. If I could fly on this plane north to Pikes .peak I should have to drop three times the height of the Washington monument before 1 could land on Us sum mit, and if I fell 1.000 feet I should still be far aboue the height ot Mount Whit ney. Our actual altitude is 15, KS feet above the sea, and all about us are mountains that rise several thousand feet higher. Over there Is Mount Melggs, whose altl ture Is over 17.000 feet, and not, far away Is another mountain that ascends to 20,000 and more. As I write we Becfh to be In a great fortification on the very roof ot the world. We are in a basin surrounded by gigantic walls of blue, black, white, red and gray rock. We are also In a, great glacier' garden. I can count a half dozen mighty ice rivers whom where I am sit ting, and there are glaciers so near that I could almost throw a stone in the Ice as I stand up in the cab. Benntlful Scenery- A moment ago the sky was bright blue; sow Jho wind has como up and the clouds hang low over the glaciers. The black masses rest on the ice, and it seems to be flowing out of the clouds down the hills. Some of the glaciers are of enor mous extent- I can see one that sepms to bo tho whole top ot the mountain, and near It another has burst out ot the rocks and half fallen In an Icy veil down to the valley. The top ot that glacier Is covered with snow, but the face toward the train is this veil of icicles, through which you can see the Ice wall behind. We have hero the sun ot the tropics; It fights with the cold of. the highlands, and the battlo goes on all the time. You can never be sure ot the weather; It may be clear for a week and It may snow day and night. In the winter the mountain blasts are so fierce and the glare so great that the trainmen use smoked glasses to keep from becoming snow blind. Steep Climb, But before I descrlbo tho scenic won ders about me let me tell you something ot this road from the sea to the qlouds. It is the world's greatest wonder in the way of railway construction. It begins on the Pacific ocean at the port of Callao, and In 100 miles it climbs up the moun tains to an altitude of 15,565 feet; it crosses the pass at 200 feet lower and then goes down to the Indian market town of Oroya on the other side of the range. Oroya is not a great distance from the navlgablo tributaries of -tho Amazon river, and the day will probably come when this road will form a part of a steam route across South America. Xcavlrig lima for this 100 miles tho track steadily rises. From tho sea to the top Nof the pass the average grade is about 4 per cent; and there is no place where a. train or a car. If left on the main track, would not slide by gravity clear down into tho ocean. The road Is ot standard gauge, and its rolling stock is largely American. The engines burn fuel oil, which comes from northern Peru, and the Journey throughout is accomplished without dust or cinders. The system of brakes, which assures safety, is both British and American, and In the descent a pilot car always goes in advance ot the train. Owned by Government. This road is known as the Central Rail way of Peru. It belongs to the govern ment and is under tho management ot tho Peruvian Corporation, a British company that has control of tho railways ot the republic. The railway runs from Callao, on the Pacific, to Huancayo, 270 miles distant, on the Atlantlo side of the Andes. It crosses the coast range at 15,605 feet, with a branch ot nine miles to the Moro cocha mines, upon Which the altitude Is almost 16,000 feet. The road was sug gested by a Peruvian, but the man who laid It out and constructed tho greater part of It was Henry Melggs, an Ameri can. Melggs raised the money to build it, and, in fact, he is entitled to the credit of Us construction. He began to work on it away back in 1870, and In 1876, when he died, he had completed It as far as Chi cla, a point more than two and one-half ECZEMA ii mil in ii wii 1 1 1 w mi Miami iib' xwm n m r n i tit mm c SOMETHING FIERCE , Covered Face. Ashamed to Go Away from Home. Broke Out as Rash. CuticuraSoapandOintmentCured. Etna Oreen, Ind. -"When but a young girl my face broke out with eczema and kept getting worse. I was ashamed to go away from home. The trouble broke out as a rash and covered the most of my ( face, especially the chin and cheeks. The itching and burning wore something fierce causing me to rub. It which caused It to spread. When out in the wind the burning was worse than ever. "I tried and Ointment without the desired effect. I had suffered with It for several years until finally I commenced using Cuticura Soap and Ointment. After using thenT for a month or more I could feel a great change in my face. I continued using Cuticura Soap and Ointment for a year and was entirely cured." (Signed) Mrs. Ruby Sponseller, June 13. 1912. For pimples and blackhcads'the following Is a most effective and economical treat' meat: Gently smear the affected parts with Cuticura Ointment, on the end of the Ongtr, but do not rub. Wash off the Cuticura Ointment In Ova minutes with Cuticura Boap and hot water and continue bathing for some minute. This treatment is best on rising and retiring. At other times use Cutkara Soap freely for the toilet and bath, to assist In preventing inflammation. Irri tation and clogging of the pores. Sold throughout the world. Sample of each mailed free, with 33-p. Sldn Book. Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston." EVMen who shave and shampoo with Cu tfcura Soap wdliadiA best for skin and seals. miles above tho sea. By that time the J27.000.000 or $13,000,000 which he had raised tor Us construction was exhausted and the work stopped. It was resumed some years later, and In 1893 was completed to Oroya, a distance of 138 miles from the coast The extension to the rich valley of" Huancayo was finished only six years ago. Tho road was originally planned to reach the rich silver and copper mines of Ccrro de Pasca, but after going over the pass at an altitude of 15,665 feet, It came down nbout 3,000 feet and stopped at Oroya. Then the mines wore bought by an American syndicate, and this syndl cate has built a standard gauge railway from Oroya, along the high plateau of the Andes to Us mining center, which Is still at an altitude of 14,503 foot. I ex pect to go over that road within a few days and shall write of it later. Great KnaineerliiK Kent, The Central railway of Peru Is consid ered by experts the most wonderful piece of railroad engineering on earth. It reaches the highest point ever crossed by rail, and Us course from the sea to tho tops of the mountains Is almost straight up into the air. The distance as tho crow files from the Morococha pass to the ocean cannot, I should say, be fifty miles, and, with all tho windings ot tho road, with Us loops, twists and turns. Its zigzags and Us tunnels and Us other con tortions by which ft climbs up this wild est part of tho world It Is only 100 miles. All ot this Is accomplished without the rack or pinion or cog systems used on other high roads, and that with a grade of only about i per cent. There is not one inch of down grado from the sea to tho top, and theheavy cars must climb all the way up. The route for the road Is the va'ley ot tho Rlmao river, a rushing stream of snow water which bursts forth from tho glaciers of the high Andes, and rolls over rocks, through gorges, a mass ot whlto foam all the way to the sea. In places the road Is 'high above the river, . clinging to the sides ot the hills; again It Is on tho river level; and at one point where the space was not wide enough for both road and river the engineers made a tunnel through the mountains and turned the stream out of its course to use its bed tor the track. In coming up the mountains, you pass through tunnel after tunnel and over bridges of steel, which span mighty gorges. There are altogether slxty-flvo tunnels and sixty-seven bridges In this 100-mile trip; and there are sixteen switch backs located on the sides of the moun tains where the road could climb In no other way. The great wonder of the construction is that the steepness .of the mountain has been conquered by this 4 per cent grade. The Denver & Rio Grande narrow guago in Colorado reaches Us 10,800-foot level at Marshall pass, but in doing so it starts at a mile above the sea at the foothills of the Rockies, and when It has gone for hundreds-of miles through the gorges it has attained an altitude Which Is still a mile lowor than the highest rail on tho Central. The Transandean- road, which crosses from Buenos Aires to Chile, Is not more than two miles In height and tho Uganda road, which, beginning at Mom basa on tne east coast oi Africa, goes over the divide to Lake Victoria, is sev eral thousand feet lower. The other high railways require days for .their climb. The Central takes you fiom sea level to a. point higher than tho top of any mountain in Europe or the United States proper between breakfast and dinner; and if your heart can stand the strain and you can keep off the sor? oche, you may be in comfort all the wny up. Mountain Sickness. The soroche Is the great thorn in the rose of this wonderful Journey. Jt Is the mountain sickness that afflicts almost all when they take this mighty leap of three mflcs straight up Into the air. It brings on falntness, terrlbls headaches and often a bleeding at the eyes, and note. It is worse than seasickness, for the vomiting Is accompanied by diarrhea and terrible retcnings. borne nave tne aisease in a less degree and some cannot stand It at all. As I came here today I could feel the air growing rarer and my machinery moving with more and more friction. At 10,000 fret my voice was so wek I could not have whistled a dog and much of my dictation at l&.wo has been done in a whisper. After we passed the two-mile level"! found myself weighing each sen tence to see whether it was worth the breath to utter It At the stations I walked very slowly, and when the train started unexpectedly at Casapalca and I had to run to get on. I was panting for five minutes before I recovered. Just now my ears are thumping and the top of my head feels as though It was being pried up with a crowbar. in tne cars nemna roe there are men and women holding smelling bottles to their noses to revtve their faint hearii and there is one Peruvian who ha a bot tie to his nose and a gun In his bag. Be fore I came out of the train he told mo he had two cures for the soroche. Sold he: "One is this smelling bottle," and he (tilled 100 acres whero modern Peru tills one. All th way from the ocean to the tops of the Andes we passed town and vil lages. At the sea Is the port ot Callao, on one of the finest harbors of tho west i coast. Seven miles further Inland lies tho city of the kings, the Peruvian capital of Uma, and going on up the S alley, at an altitude of 3,000 feet, you stop at Thoslca. a summer resort, where n sc6re ot big Cholo women, clad In short skirts I and shawls and white Panama hats, stand on the station platform, selling crangos, tomatoes, peaches, watermelons and strawberries. I thero bought six oranges at 3 cents apiece, and an alligator near that welshed a pound for a nickel. ' Higher still we camo to tho towns ot tha Indians, Here the houses were all of one story, tho most of them being rude stone I huts thatched with straw. The people do not build In the fields, for the land In too valuable there. They huddle to gether out on the edges of the valley or on the rocky places close to tho river. They go out to work on the terraces and patches of soil, and you now and then see them driving their llamas loaded with burdens over the trails. Here they arc herding sheep, standing up and spin ning wool as they do so, and there bend ing over digging the soil. They are short and copper colored, and they look worked to death. A Native Meal. We stopped at Matucana for dinner, be ing served with plates of soup containing chunks ot meat as big as your fist, and a half doxon vegetables all stewed to gether, We had atso beefsteak and eggs. and red strawberries fresh from the vines. Here and there along the trip we passed mining towns and we stopped a while at Casapalca, where the grent smelter of Backus & Johnson sends volumes or sul phur into the air. Much, of the ore Is brought In by llamas, and we saw him dreds of these little camel like beasts trotting along with their loads ot saver and copper. Casapalca Is 13,600 feet high, ana tne climb from here to Tlcllo Is more man 2,000 feet Just below Tlcllo Is the Ga- lera tunnel that goes through Mount Melggs to the other slope of the moun tains. At that point you can see tne streams flowing both ways, and can stand on ojie place and throw chips Into waters that flow to both oceans. I knew ot this, and had prepared two small bottles with messages In them. They were tightly corked, I put one In each stream and set them adrift. One of these bottles floated away down the eastern side of the Andes. It may reach the Ueayall, one ot tho tributaries ot the Amazon, and go on Its long voyage of three or four thousand miles Into the salt water of the Atlantic. The other floated rapidly toward the Pa clflc. It will soon reach the Rlmao river, and If It can withstand the rocks it will be at Callao in something less than a 100 mlle Journey. FRANK O. CARPENTER. enixul JisLilvvfLy ue lind&s. showing ays STwfSmicTiZ&JiX thereupon asked mo to try It "But will this do the business?" said I. "I don't know," he replied, "but if not, I have a euro euro here." And ho thereupon opened his bag and showed me the revolver. This last, I am told, Is about the only safe cure for soroche. The doctors can do nothing to help you, and every one Is sure to get It It he stays long on the tops of the Andes. Ono may have It again and again and any indiscretion may bring on an attack. I doubt not I shall bo more afflicted as I go on with this Journey, but I shall keep out In tho fresh air and I hope to get through. Steep Walls. , I despair ot making you sea all the wonders of our trip up the mountains. The long chain of the Andes walls the whole side of this continent It begins at Capo Horn anil the fiords ot the Strait oi Magellan and goes north crawling close to the coast In a great winding rampart' fur a distance of 4,500 miles, when it drops down into our cut of Culebra on the Isthmus ot Pananta. throughout the whole length, except at tho top and the bottom, this chain has peaks which are three or tour miles Un height. Its average elevation Istnore than 12,000 feet, or almost the height of Fujiyama, Japan. Mount Acohcaqua, in Chile, Is -about 23,000; Mount Mist!, in southern Peru, is over 20,000, and there is a peak, within sight of my eyes, that Is 21,000 and more. North ot here, in Ecuador, aro many volcanoes, including Chlmborazo, more than four mites In height; and south ot me, In Bolivia, is a plateau which has an average altitude of 13,000 feet, with no drainage to either the Atlantic or the Pacific. The striking altitudes are the mora Impressive on account of the steepness of tho range which runs along the coast It begins right at the sea, only a narrow strip of Band separating it from the ocean, and It Jumps, as It were, into the clouds, I rodo this morning through Lima, a city of perhaps 150,000. It Is situated on the banks of the Rlmac, close to the gorge Into which wo started as we came up the mountains. Fertile Valleys. During the first part , or our Journey we passed through an Irrigated valley. There are fields of alfalfa, sugar cane snd other green crops on both sides of the railroad, but the mountains over the valley were as arid as the Sahara. I remember I thought of the dlfferenco be tween the two sides of the Ands, and that If I could bore a hole right through the desert wall I might come out into the region of the Amazon,, where the waters swarm with turtles and alliga tors, and where the vegetation Is a dense Jungle with palms, rubber trees and all sorts of tropical fruits. On this side of the mountains there is no rain and everything Is dry. On the other side it rains all the time. The Itlinaa' river here U not fed by the rains. It comes from the snows, which the winds from the east have left on the tops of the Andes. The vegetation of the arid Andes Is remarkable. I sat on the rear platform of the car and dictated my notes as we wound our way up the cliffs. Near tho ocean there was no green at sl. The mighty rocks seemed perfectly bare and there was no soil or any great thing By looking closely, however, I found gray cacti clinging to the rocks and silver-gray moss like a mantle, Thcso plants were probably fed by the deWs. It was not until wo reached Tarn boraque, at an altitude of almost two miles, that we found our first sprink ling of green. Thero tho rocks secine'l dusted with emeralds, and ths green grew fresher and more abundant from there to the tops ot the mountains. M two miles and a halt I found tho Andes covered with a thin grass, nnl where I am now, at the beginning of the great Plateau that is upheld by two of the raofies which run through Psru there Its ;!enty of feed for llamas and sheep. within the last three or four hours we have rmsed many wild flowee. At one plaCi) I encountered forty varieties and from where I am sitting I can im bulter- rups Mllhout numbers and great yellow dandelions . are looking at me, through their jtllow eyes out of the rocks Mountain Fields, The greater part ot the way up the mountains we were near to or high above tho Rlmao river. The valley nar rows and widens. In some , places" you could Jump from one side of it to tho other, and again It Is so , wldo that It would take half an hour to cross it All along through the valley there aro patches of crops. N There aro little fields of alfalfa, not as big as a bed quilt, and terraces which run step by step up the sides of tho mountains, all covered with green. Every bit of avallablo land Is used, The stones are picked off and the walls aro built round llttlo patches of soli not as large as tho hotel dining table. The valley of the Rlmao Is quite wide near the ocean, and there you soo cattlo and sheep. Thero aro some large fields with mud walls about them, and also haciendas with comfortable buildings. As we go further Into the mountains tho fields grow smaller and smaller. All the farming Is by irrigation, and that In terraces where the strips of cultivation are otton only throe or four feet In width. Nevertheless, these little farms run far up the mountains. I am. told that a workman fell out of a field recently And rolled down fifty feet. Above these ter races are the marks of other terraces which were once used by the Incas. They Conference to Make Rules for Policing Spitzbergen Isles CHRISTIANIA, March 14.-Tho Arctto islands Of Spitsbergen, unclaimed and al most uninhabited, the resort ot whalers nnd walrus hunters and the only place within the Arctio circle visited by tour ists, are this summer to engage the at tention of the powers, including the United States, in an effort officially to dtclare thorn neutral and provide for their policing during the summer months, when lawlessness on the part of the crews of visiting whalers and seal hunters has been Increasing. No power ever has made a serious" claim to Bpltzenborgen, the mountainous islands north of Norway and northetst of Greenland having necn regarded as up most valueless. But the discovery of coal, which Is beng worked principally by American capital, has completely changed the outlook, and Incidentally brought the United 'States Into the group of powers whose voices are to be heard concerning the future of the Islands, Two international conferences will bo held before July. Early in June repre sentatives ot Russia, Sweden and Norway will meet at Chrlstlanla to draw hp pro posals to be submitted' to the general con ference to be held two weeks later. Great Britain, France, Holland, Ger many, Denmark - and the United States will be represented in the general con ference, the United States having been Invited because of the coal interes'ts ot American citizens there. PROPOSED PLUMAGE BILL IS POPULAR IN LONDON LONDON, March 14.-A petition in favor of the plumage bill to be presented to the House ot Commons has been signed by 2I.5S5 persons who visited the Bird court ot the exhibition of Austrlaltan manufac turers last fall. Bo strong Is Australian opinion In favor of the bill that It Is stated In official circles that had the pe tition been circulated publicly It would undoubtedly have been signed by 95 per cent of tho population. This Intense feeling Is due, apart from humanitarian, reasons, to the conviction that systematic slaughter of birds for the plumage market is having a most detri mental effect upon agriculture. Public opinion is also incensed by the fact that prohibited skins and feathers are smug gled out of the country In spite of the vigilance of the authorities, and It Is recognized that only the closure of the homo markets can effectually put an end to the traffic, , j BURGESS-NASH CO. "EVERYBODY'S STORE" Announcing in Advance for TUESDAY A Most Unusual Sale, of Framed Pictures Involving Values of $2.50 to $5, Choice $1.00 THE salo includes carbon prints, landscapes, historical nnd marine. scenes; tho frames ar,o very olaborate, imitation Circassian walnut' nnd lacquered finish with burnished ornaments. Frames alone, worth several times tho price asked. Oblong, oval and upright styles; sizes 16x20 to 18x40 inches. For full particulars, see 16th street windows and Mon day evening papers. Health and Beauty Hints nY MUS. MAE MAItTYN A. D. C; That ltchlne and profuse dandruff plainly Indicate an unhealthy scalp, and when this condition' Is over come your hair will take on Its former richness and beauty. Hhampoolng occa sionally with a teaspoonfut or can thro dissolved In a cup ot hot water cleanses and Invigorates the scalp and results In healthy, beautiful hair. This shampoo Is very inexpensive and you will not only onjoy each shampoo, but ths results will ie very gratifying. Janet: Tou and vour husband both enn easily get rid ot the surplus fat If you (ouow tnese simple directions: uot ounces parnotls trom your druggist and dissolve In 1H Pints hot water: when it cools take a tablospoonful before each meal. This reduction method Is gradual and positive In li action k and does not depend on diet or exercise for results. The skin will be left firm and free from wrinkles. Inquisitive: Vour Dlmnlrs and sallow complexion are caused by Impurities In your system. Try this oldtlmo blood purifier and tohlo and I am sura vnu will obtain excellent results: To M pint alcoi hoi add 1 ounce kardono (from drugstore), men n cuprui sugar ana hot water ts mako a full quart. Take a tablespoont'il before each meal and yoUr skin will grow clear and the color of health will conto DacK to your cneeks. this lonio Is fine tor aches and Ills prevalent In ooM weather and tends to cleanse hpdy of poisons causing rheumatism and kidney and liver troubles, Hernia! I think all nva urn io,,iir,ii It clear and sparkling, and all eyes may be that if cared for orouerlv. i 1 litit 3 n 3 drops of my simple home-made tonla Into each eye dally. When they are tired or tho lids show any tendency to inflam mation. I use oftencr or bathe entire eyu and lids. To make the" tonlo I get an ounce of crystos at the- drug store luiU dlsaolvo It In a pint ot clear, cold water. Annabell: To be sure you ,can hav clear, velvety, plnk-and-whlte complei If Juu cr) unuubii iu hi.u u u. llttlo av 3aS tei.tlon each day. I advise discarding powder and using a .plain lotion made' by aissoivinir ounces smirmax. first rroni druggist) in i pint witch hazel or hot water, to winch should be added 2 tea-st-oontuu Kiyewnnu. Inis is illy appileU. dries quickly and Imparts a delightful tone to the complexion. Especially good for oily, sallow skins' and cannot' be de tected when on, IVart: Your wrinkles might be caused In many different ways, but without re gard, to the cause, I ant giving you a certain relief winch tuy uients ana X have proven. ThU Is Inexpensive and Is made oa follows; Into ',4 pint Water, stir an untu aiinosoin drum any uruggiso and add 2 teaspoontuls glycerine. Apply the cream plentifully on retiring and massage well Into the skin, then in the morning wasn utf anu apply a tittle more. A few such treatments wilt soon clear the skin ot wrinkles and give you a velvety complexion. Clara M.i You can help nature beautify your hair by keeping your sce.lt perfectly healthy and free from dandruff or Itch Itiess. Make your own tonic and massage into the scalp and hair root once or twice a week. 1 ut,a Yi pint oi alcoiiol, to whlcn I add 1 ounce qufnzoln and H pint water. Thin qulnzoln tonlo soon puts ths scalp In a healthy, pliant condition, overcomes oandrutt and oillncss anu gives to tho hair roots the strength necessary to pro duce, a luxuriant growth ot long, bril liant hair. Cora: Objectionable fuzzy or hairy growths ore easily banished 1C you mix enough powiloreu Uciatooo wltn watc to form a. thick paste and apply to hary surface for 2 or H minutes, then rub off, vash the skin and eve.r trace of hair Is gone, Excepting In very aggravated cascB, one application of delatoae Is enough. No harm will result, but be cer tain you get delatone. nad Mrs. Martyn's book, "Beauty, 3. Advertisements The Modern Style Cedar Chest as made by the Lager Furniture Company, is the lower drawer dreeeer or ckiflfoaier thus combining two articles of furaiture ia one, and saving tlitf extra cost of a cedar chest. Tkl feature of Luger "Cedar-Line Dressers and Chiffoniers it especially appreciated by those living in modern apartment trkSM upaco it limited. Among the other strong: features of tho Luger Cedar-Line, are the easy working drawers, tho inter-locking construction' and 3-ply, ob pleee back which make for rigidity and durability, tho dtut-prottf, mouse-proof bottom, etc. Luger Dressers and Chiffoniers cost nothiifj extra because of these valuable features. Why be satieled wHk ' any ot fieri write us u your furniture dealer tiotou't handle tatw. Luger Furniture Company Minneapolis, Minn. Quit Meat if Your Back Hurts, Flush Your Kidneys with Salts Meat forms uric acid, which clogs Kidneys, irritates Blad der or causes Bheumatism. When you wake up with backache and dull misery 'In ths kidney region It gen erally means you hav been eating too much meat, says a well-known authority. Meat forms urlo add which overworks the kidneys In their effort to titter It from the blood and they become sort ot paralysed and loggy. Whtn your kidneys get sluggish and olog you must rsUsra them, like you relieve your bowels; re moving all the body's urinous wsst. els you hav backacbt, sick headache, dlssy spslls; your stomach sours, tongue is ooated, and wbtn ths weathsr is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine Is eloudr, fun of sediment, channels ofUo gst sore, water scalds' aod you are ob liged to seeli relief two or three, times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from ?our pharmacist aooui iout ounces oi J ma tsutsi tax a tablespoonful la a glass of water before breakfast for sv few days and your kid neys will then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the add of grapes and Union Juice, combined with Uthls, and has been used for (cim rations to dsaa and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralise adds in ths urlns so It no longer Irritates, thus ending bladder weaJnss. Jsd Salts ! a Ufa saver for rsgular meat eaters. It la Inexpensive, cannot Injurs and nukes s. delightful, ffsrres. cent llLhla-water drlnk-Advcrtissmnt. "Live Wire" Business Men of Oiiialm Telephone Numbers and Addresses of the Omaha Business Houses . File this for reference, you will find it handy. For Complete Information See Classified Section ot TODAY'S BEE