Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 31, 1916, Page 2, Image 2

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

    THE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY. MAY 31. 1916.
Hair Tinting
All the Rage
Tli Absolut and Utter Hirmlnni
cf "Brosvnatona" Has Mada Hair
Tinting Safe and Easy.
You need not tolerate grer, streaked or
faded hair another dny. It takee hut few
noment to apply "Brosrnatona'' with your
romb or brush.
and tt will glva
your hair tht
beautiful
had you moat
dmire.
Will not rub
k. .. - w A
W j Or W II ,, IIIH
,, guaranteed to
4
the dangerous
1 ' ";: I 3 i l I Ingredienta ao
f i AW I nft.n found In
J J Vi7 1 .1 1 "dv" and ao
itaO'TfV 1 I M alled "restor-
ra.
Anr h a d a
from light gol
den brown to
I blnrk.
.Sample and
booklet sent on
reretpt of I Oe.
' B r o wnatona
In sold h leading drug atom. In two alr
2fe and 11.(10. Order direct, from Tht
Kenton Pharmaral Co., 62 K. Pike M Cov
mgum. Hx.. If your druggist will not mi p.
(ilr you. You will aava yourself murh en
flyanre by refining to accevt a substitute.
No eamplea at lealer.
Inetst on "Brownatune" at your hair
dreaeer'e. Mention ehada drelred.
hold and guaranteed in Omaha by Fhar
mn A MrConnitU lirug Co. tora and nthar
'rariinf dealer.
t-ts.-jpra.''.
Digestive
Troubles
cause headache, biliousness,
constipation, impure blood
and other unpleasant symp
toms. If these troubles are
neglected they weaken the
body and open the way for
serious illness. Many chronic
diseases may be traced back
to indigestion that could
have been immediately
relieved by
Beecham'a Pills. This well
known home remedy has
proven itself dependable, safe
and speedy during sixty years'
use. The fame of having a
larger sale than any other med
icine in the world proves the
dependable, remedial value of
SMS
PHILILS
Lara Sal of An MedUwe la the WarUL
aVoki t.rarywaara. la ewaax, 10a., I.
Bell-ans
Absolutely Removes
Indigestion. One package
proves it 25c at all druggists.
Hair Often Ruined
By Washing With Soap
Soap ahould ba used vary rarafully, if you
want to keep your hair looking Ita but.
Moat anapa and prepared ahampnoa contain
too much alkali, Thin dries tha scalp, waken
tha hair brittle, and rulna It.
Tha bant thing for atrady uta la Juat
ordinary mulatfied nocoanut oil (whlrh la
pura and freaeeleee), and la better than
tha moat aipanalv soap or anything alia
you can una.
Ona or. two teaspoenfula will drama tha
hair and scalp thoroughly, titmply mnlntrn
tha hair with watar and rub It In. It
mekee an abundanra of rlrh, rreamy lather,
which rinses out easily, remnvliia every par
tide of dut, dirt, dandruff and erelve
oil. Tba hair driaa qulrkly and evenly, and
H taavaa tha aralp aoft, and tha hair fin
and allky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and aaay
to managa.
You tan gat mulelfied eoenanut oil at
any pharmacy. If a vary chfap, and a faw
ounce, will aupply avary member of tha
family for montha. Advertlitemrnt.
For Sprains,
Lame Muscles
Ahaorbina, Jr., bring, quirk relief. Keep II
always at hand for inetant una. Athlrlee
u.a Abeorbtna, Jr., for th muacl that haa
baaa strained for tha cut or laceration that
rum a chanc of Infertlon; for tha ahraalon
that paint and tha limha that arc atlff and
lama from overexertion.
Walter Jnhnaon, tha famoua pitrher of
tha Weahtnglon Americana, taysi "Abaarb.
Ina, Jr, I a fut- rla liniment and rub
tnwn f 't t rJ wiu,la- I hao ueed It
myeelf to advantage and ran brarlily re-om-B.r.
it l bail t'lareia avarywhera
Akanrbnia, Ji , la neentral4 anll
aeptM liniment only a few df..' ra-iuirad
al aa ai-tli.alli.-i. It u t.fe and Uataa( l
y.e-l.a.e ao greany reatdue. bold by tt
'i,ul, II 1 and H a bottle at p.x.
raid, l iberal iii b.-tt a f He in atawat.
w . tll Ntt. f l. r
IM Ye'wBie t , tt--it.i'i!,t, Maa
C fmt nnatrui'tii4l Jr.l ien
I i f c.'iivnrla ba
DEWEY
CEMENT
ajajeaiBi rnatii e V--w-. " -a
mr!it Mmt Cff!J, Sj,fin
ficit Urtci. Wnnklit Reminl
a lWrf--4j,i ee,-eV.
f e . . " i I ...... i . s
. t . . i.a.nt v
( I . t u .. .
W H gll T, at. .
- a u
-.e - -.I. 1 " -l '
:
I' " rl UNg. & MHft
r- '. I tj TiiBaT
I V " la-
6 M-J
MAY YET RAISE
RAILROAD VALUES
State Board of Equalization in
Quandary Over Final Aueis
ment.
LIKELY TO CHANGE DECISION
i from a Staff Corraepondent )
Lincoln, My .10. (Special j In
spitr of the vote of the State Board
of Equalization Monday to increase
valuation of main line railroad 3'A
per cent, amounting to $1,000,000
after a month' deliberation, the
board may now reeonaider it s action.
It in underitood that the board it
considering the proposition of State
Treasurer Hall, which it turned down
Monday, to increate the value uni
formly 1 per cent of all the road,
6,2000 mile of them. The main line
mileage is only 2,300, The i'A per
cent raie on main line would in
crease the asse.sed value $1,000,000
according to Auditor Smith, while
the 1 per cent plan would amount to
$560,000.
It i said that farm lands and tome
other clause of property may he
boosted i() to 30 per cent by the
board.
Wilton and Morehead Badge.
Five thouand "WiUon and More
head" badge for ue at the St. Loui
convention have been ordered by the
committee in charge of the Nebras
ka' special train to the convention,
fiovernor Morehead ha hi own del
egation olidly behind hi candidacy,
and hi friend look for favorable
happening in cane a fight come tip
for the vice preidency, which they
now declare to be certain.
T, R, MAKES PLEA
FOR OLD SPIRIT
OF AMERICANISM
(Continued From I'age One.)
met are to give u, first the navy
we require, and second the regular
array we require, 1 have elsewhere
given the reasons why we require the
second navy in the world and a small
highly rihrirnt regular army of 250,
000 men, with a proper reserve, Here
let it aulnre to say that such a navy
and mii h an army would be our best
insurance against war and for peace,
Hut the navy and the regular
army are not enough, lixac.tly a
back of the navy ahould land the
regular army, so hack of the regular
army should stand the nation. 1 sneak
to, and on behalf of, a nation of free
men. Freemen fit to be freemen do
not have to hire other men to do
ihrir fighting. I speak for universal
service based on universal training.
Universal training and universal
service represent toonly service and
training a democracy should accept.
It is the plain people, it is the farm
ers, Ihe working men, the small busi
ness men, the. professional men, who
above all others, should back up this
plan.
The other day when I spoke on
universal service in Detroit a woman
in the gallery called uut: "I have two
son and thev shall both go if the
country need them." 1 answered
her, "Madam, I take off my hat to
you. That i the spirit this country
needs and if all the mothers of the
country will do as you do and raise
their boys so that they shall be able
and ready at need to fight for the
country, there will never be any need
for any of them to fight for the coun
try. No nation will ever attack a uni
fird and prepared America."
Each Mil Brother' Keeper.
I stand with all my heart for mil
itary preparedness; but no one know
belter than than I that military pre
paredness alone can neither make
nor maintain a great nation. It i
merely the essential safeguard for a
nation industrially efficient and pros
perous, and with a prosperity justly
distributed; a safeguard for a na
tional life organized in all points for
national ends and national ideals.
This national life must be dominated
by the two great truths; first, that
in a successful democracy, every man
must, in reasonable measure, be his
"brother' keeper," and second, that
every citizen in such a democracy
must accept with his whole heart the
principle that his first duty in war
or in peace is to serve the nation.
Occasionally it is said by some one
blind to industrial tendenciea that
the nation lias no right to regulate
the activities of the great successful
business men. Occasionally it is said
by some unworthy would-be labor
leader that the workingman owes
nothing to the country, because there
is not enough of such regulation in
his interest. 1'ach statement must be
emphatically repudiated by every
patriot. If any man, whether work
logman or capitalist believes that he
owe nothing to this country, then
the sooner he gets out of the country
the belter, (or he is unfit to do good
to himsrlt or to anyone eUe .Such a
man is not entitled to claim com
p4monshii with you rtetn of the
civil war who art heie today. He is
unlit to live iii dm land which is
proud of the memory ol your deed.
On the oilier hand ihe grrat business
turn must leifgnur more ami more,
tl.al ihrre must he full and (rank iv
opetaliort brtvsreu them and the gov
ernment to secure Ihe public sseluie
On Ihe pjit ( the government thu
ojirtaiii'ti mui he given with the
simrie ilrsue o imrrate Ihe rfVi
riuy ft our industrial (stgamrafion,
iifl t hamprr it, and ni( lull ft,
n-..ii..r Ot the (at t that mute) it
m, tttn mlintiv mut ht ctrrird mi
bv Otc K'cel mt.isltiel units, Ihe aim
.vnn ri.l tiouI, a i t , .!,
W i,i us but. v n!c r,t .'ii
U'g them, l- fta-iiUi I -h i in tha in
tr rem i I t .. p as who!. ,t
'! same Inn t h. business nun
i4Sl vviilt ennui liananen ttitnie
lie te.l i In bu. m.( litis, ties,
hir f.fntti. ial t.s hini,! a" I In,
'"iilo iMiit U . Mil.lv Hm
b ten ( tfiietif il . ibf pi
tu tt.-i. I r hint, M t.s ttt fM
nfc.tSt r si
Jiu Must P fr Alt
--! I I I II l'l t-Utt Si i !..
'"'. ' i i4 i.. t.itti t)
i
1 1 4 i u it I . e ,
- i i 'i i 'i t tv.i it, i (
" '! '!," .t. f
. K lie. mm
ti.at .'I
: i, ,
I l I i ll
i. ml
, i ,! 1 1 ., r,, t , , 4
iiil.( ,1 I. 4i. r
n. iliniu.iK'inai en
tub h.
I -i
' t t Sf MM. I
''' - s'i last fa, i
i:.n.f to ,-, o a s at ! ,,,
f WHAT'S Th
MATTER
'
him, unhelped and unhampered by
special privilege. Legislation lo help,
the business man is eminently proper,
but only on condition that we show
equal zeal for the working and liv
ing rights, the social and economic
rights, of farmer and wage earner;
in short, the rights of all productive
citizen must be safeguarded with
equal care. A protective tariff with
the duties adjusted outside of fac
tional politics is essential in the in
dustrial world of today. But the
protective tariff by itself means noth
ing but the rudimentary beginning of
the needed policy, or raiher, polit ies,
for the broadest national develop
ment fif our economic life, along lines
designed to secure real, substantial
justice. Our national resources must
be conserved, but the conservation
must be in the public interest, and on
this as on all other points the pros
perity and growth of industry must,
so far a possible, be made to go
hand in hand with a reasonable dis
tribution of its returns.
Child Labor Issue Must Be Met.
In addition to treating our brother
man and sister woman as we would
wish them to treat us. we must also
endeavor, so far as we are able, to
secure them just treatment by others.
This is why we must try; lo abolish
child labor. This is why we must
see that women in industry are pro
tected from inhuman treatment of
any kind. This is why we must try
to secure, not merely for women and
children, but for men also, conditions
of life and labor, such that the head
of the family will not be ground
under foot by excessive toil, nor kept
to a wage that will not permit him
to bring up his family in the way
it should be brought up, that will not
permit him to save his wife from
prostrating drudgery. It does not
mean that we shall try to give lo the
shiftless the same reward as to the
energetic and hard-working, It does
not mean that we shall permit the
vicious to commit wrong, with im
punity. It does not mean that we
shall excuse any wage worker, or any
other man, for failure to honor the
United States flag and whole heart
edly to serve the nation for the
privileges of citizenship should be
conditioned on the possession and ex
ercise of patriotism. But it does
mean that for ihe sake of our children
and children's children who are to
come after us, we shall strive to bring
about conditions in this country such
as to free every hard-working and
right-thinking man from Ihe sense of
injustice and oppression, from the
feeling that the laws do not secure
him justice, but do give an advantage
over against him to unscrupulous
cunning and unscrupulous force. In
the long run our children's children
will find that this is not a gqod coun
try for any one to live in unless we
LOSS OF APPETITE
Maat Succeaefully Treated br Taking Hood's
Sareaperllla,
I,oaa of appetite la acanmpanled hr lose
of vltalltr, whirh la eerlmia.
Il la common In tha spring herauee at
thie time the blood ia Impure and impov
eruhed and tail ( viva the dieatlve or.
gana what la absolutely reraeeaty fcr the
proper performanre ut their tunrtt,ne,
II .hmI a hartepanUe, tha I'M relleMa all-the-year-rtund
medicine, ia epeiaiiy uee.
tul In ihe erring. Let it frum ynir drug
tut tixier, Hr purlfving and ennrhing the
l,Hid and giving vitality, vtg,r and Inne,
II la arontlerttilly eiKce'irul In the treatment
of !. aieliie and he other ailmenla
prevalent al Ihla lime. II la n,.t aimplr a
I'rmg n.e.iirine - It la much m.ire then that
hut It le Ihe bt eprina medicine
llitnde haceai'eril.a mates r.e t h red
hlw tha ti'geHite eiiana need A I.
The Coming Baby!
Hooray! Hooray!
Nothing ls ft H r rcrnplclclr t ndrst
t ii if'M ai i: iviims at t,
tipvt! '! nf ,
f l la I! e ert
t i a IS. r'wf wl
a.,twr ta tt
tmpv.ile a Is.xva,
v i ti. akUraal lata
't M
st,. ,
I' I I I
.... a
il' k it.
un.lerfi.t lu
a, , l, e4-t
I- a .. . Is., a
- 'e file at,
' sr'V .1 a . t ,.
(4 n, f . , j
ae a . . i .
t, ' I ii. . I et
aeeSieatiinl ,
' st ap-
I lie I
vit w et less
s S lu :
"S M Iwklll I t I e .... .'
. j.-'he.W.,! . ( a, . ,,,
It t l.'.l ,.f ,,,,,, J,,
I m I-..., i ,j !,. . M,
' ' e I t -l g l,m
S 'IS, j
as I
sS
.f i..lee.l a-t !,. I4. t a I
"a 4,'S I .e., l . ,e I
' ' . seU l a it i..,Ih Se
it..ie.e ,4 a. lUect a. s..a, rt
S. 4
ts. taal at s".-.a e... .1
a fa
- a.
" W el we a a t"r- .14
! I f ta K.a.
l :,
Memorial Day Memories
and they make it a reasonably good
country for every one to live in.
What I' thus say does not represent
anything new in principle. On the
contrary, the principles thus set
forth have received the lip loyalty
of many men before election, who,
after election, forgot their pre-election
promises. What we need in our
public men is performance, not prom
ise; to treat a platform merely as a
means of getting office, not as a cov
enant to be kept in office, is demor
alizing both to the public and to
the servants of the public.
Chamberlain's Cough Remade.
There la no opium or other narcotlci In
CJhemberlaln's Cough Remedy. It may ba
given to a child aa confidently aa to an
adult. It la airellant for eougha and colds.
Ohtalnehla everywhere, Ad vertleemen.
A Complete Stock
'CUtn'Trvl sM I
rWtat asl lives 11.. "Sw0N"Sw C" I
aeiwe'ie m "i"s iiinn.ee en,i nees4eejM.iwi.ee i Bi'aH'ee.ja'an'w1 . i' mi - 1 1 mi1 1 i ana) rrrr rr n n iiiiriiamgineTii e)"ir.r-pniiii 111 r mi n" in iiemin a iinwitiiu ia mm ejminpiiaeji.iej
Gum
Iowa Boy Killed
By Automobile;
Driver Arrested
Atlantic, la., May .10. (Special.)
William S. Kattenberg, 14 years old
and the eldest son of C. B. Ratten
berg, south of Elkhorn, wa killed
yesterday on the hill just this ide
of F.lkhorn, when riding a bicycle.
He wa struck bv a car, driven by
Han Bonneson of Kimballton and
his neck was broken, he dying in
stantly. fionneson ha been held under
$.1,000 bonds, which he furnished, to
appear June 7. It is likely that a
charge of manslaughter will be
brought against him.
m
of United States Tires Carried by Omaha Rubber Company
Indians Sell Land
And Buy Motors
Wheeler, S. D May 30, (Special.)
Many of the Indians who recently
participated in the ceremonies at
Yankton Indian agency attendant
upon deeds to government land being
turned over to them by Secretary
Franklin K. Lane in person, now are
busy spending their wealth for auto
mobiles. The money with which they
now are provided was received from
the sale of their farms to white pur
chasers after they had received the
deeds from the government. In the
last ten days more than fifty of these
Indians have purchased automobiles
from dealer between Platte and
Dante. They believe that to be the
owner of a buzz-wagon is far ahead
of being the owner of a farm. A the
government ha no control over the
sale of the lands since deeds were
THOMPSON-BELDEN 6CO.
Th Fashion Geriier of Hie Meddle Wed
Purchases Charged Wednesday
Appear on Your July 1 Statement
The 95c Waist Section
Basement Balcony
Waists and Middies made of
dainty Summery materials.
pleasing styles and
priced very low.
The middy illustrated is
from one in stock.
Attractive
Porch Dresses
Cool materials, new styles, well made. The values
are worth while
$2.15, $3.95,- $4.95, $5.95, $7.50
Basement
Experience, the Teacher
of Tire Lessons
The experience of yotcr last vreek-ead bcxB
day trip ha told you tiraietiiiagr about tho tires
yoa use - 'xfXY
That they am, or they are not, the parti
cular tires suited to your particular car.
Eexperience taught the United States Tire
Company that all tires are not suited to
all cars.
That is why the United States Tire Company'
makes five different tires a tire to meet every
need of price and use the only complete line
offered by any tire manufacturer.
One of the five is made for your car will
L 1 a. a . t
jvu uro iuwcii cost, per mue. (;:";.
"Cannon Ban" Baker's transcontinenta
world's record car was equipped with United
States 'Balanced' Tires. Baker says: "No
other tires would have stood the test"
Ask the nearest United States Tire Dealer
for your copy of tha booklet, Judging Tire,"
which tells how to find tha rsaxtkular tire to
suit your rieods.
United Stateslire Company
Nobby 'Usco' 'Royal Cord' rUln'
I.NDIVIDUAUZED TIRES
s-sS S
transferred to the Indians, and as the
money belongs to the Indians them
selveSj government officials can do
nothing toward preventing the red
men from squandering their monejr
for the white man's "devil wagons.
FOUR PERSONS INJURED ,
IN SHELTON COLLISION7
SHELTON. Neb.. May 30. (Spe
cial Telegram.) An automobile load
of people returning from the cemetery
was run into by a Unron Pacific en
gine here today and four of the six
occupants seriously injured.
The machine was being driven by
Fred Schieck, the owner. With his
were his brother and wife, Henry
Schieck, and their daughter, Mrs. Jack
Oliver, and her two children, the Ut
ter being but slightly injured. It is
not yet known how serious the in
juries are.
Bee Want Ads, get result.
95c
sketched
i- 1 a g
v wry
'HIliJ
( n
A