5 SAYS HOT WATER WASHES POISONS FROM THE LIVER Everyon should drink hot wattr with phoiphito In It, before breakfast i : s To feel as fine as the proverbial fiddle, we must keep the liver washed clean, almost every morning, to pre vent its sponire-like pores from cioe ging with indigestible material, sour bile and poisonous toxins, says a noted physician. If you get headaches, it's your liv er. If you catch cold easily, it's your liver. If you wake up with a bad taste, furred tongue, nasty breath or stomach becomes rancid, it's your liver. Sallow skin, muddy complex ion, watery eves all denote liver un- cleanliness. Your liver is the most important, also the most abused and neglected organ of the body. Few know its function or how to release the damtned-up body waste, bile and toxins. Most folks resort to violent calomel, which is a dangerous, sali vating chemical which can only be used occasionally because it accumu lates in the tissues, also attacks the bones. ' Every man and woman, sick or well, should drink each morning be fore breakfast, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful ot limestone pnos ohate in it. to wash from the liver and bowels the previous day's indigestible material, the poisons, sour Due ana toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Limestone phosphate does not re strict the diet like calomel, because it cannot salivate, for it is harmless and you can eat anything afterwards. It is inexpensive and almost tasteless, and any pharmacist will sell you a quarter pound, which is sufficient foi a demonstration of how hot water and limestone phosphate cleans, stimu lates and freshens the liver, keeping you feeling fit day in and day out. Advertisement. TOO WEAK TO FIGHT Th "Come-back" man was really never down-and-out. His weakened condition be cause of over-work, lack of exercise. Im proper eating and living, demands stimula tion to satisfy the cry for a health-giving appetite and tha1 refreehlna; Bleep essential to strength. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules, the National Remedy of Holland, will do tho work. They are wonderful t Three of these capsules each day will put a man on his feet before he knows It whether his trouble comes from urtc acid poisoning, the kidneys, gravel or stone In the bladder, stomach derangement or other ailments that befall the over-zealous Amer ican. Don't wait until you are entirely down-and-out, but take them today. Tour druggist will gladly refund your money It they do not help you. 85c, 60c and fl.00 per box. Accept no substitutes. Look for the name GOLD MEDAL on every box. Th. are the pure, original. Imported Haar lem Oil CapsuleB. Advertisement, BREATH - Or. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It . Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Or. Edwards' Olive Tablets. The pleasant, j"ir coated tablets are taken for baureath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gen tly but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. Alt the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets without grip ing, pain or any disagreeable effects. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac tice, among patients afflicted with bowel and liver complaint with the attendant bad breath. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are pure ly a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. Advertisement. SOLDIERS GOT RELIEF FROM SORENESS Bot on the Border Relieved Their Paint and Achee with Sloan's Liniment. Once upon a time Norman Jones, serving in the National Guard at El Paso, returned to camp after a strenuous 16 mile hike foot-sore and leg-weary. He had not been long in active service and his shoulders, back and limbs felt the after-effects of marching. Remembering Sloan's Liniment, Jones applied it to the sore spots and went to bed. He writes: "I arose the next morning feeling fine; in fact I had entirely forgotten about the hike and went out for a four-hour drill in the sun as spry as ever." . Private Jones passed the exper ience along, and many a boy on the border relieved the agony of sprains, strains, bruises, insect bites, cramped muscles, rheumatic twinges, etc., by the use of Sloan's Liniment, - Easily applied without rubbing. At all druggists, 25c, 50c, and (1.00. Bell-ans Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists. Advertising is the pen dulum that keeps buy ing and selling in motion Brief City News Plntinam Wedding Mng Edholm. Have Root Print it New Be con Frees l.lrhttns Flittir Burvou-Ontnrion Oe. Phone Bedford's New Coal Vrd 1017 N. 23d, for Paradise coal, beat tor furnat-es. Dnug. 115. To Clme Karller Local city ticket offices will close at 6:31) each eveninn after next Sunday. They have been closing at 6 p. in. Syrian Flower Buy Mayor Pah! man has granted permission to local Syrians to hold a flower day In Omaha on October 21, for the benefit of their unfortunate countrymen abroad. One hundrt-tl hiKh-Rrade Holstein cows and heifers to be sold at auc tion at Lincoln, Neb., October 13. Salt held at Woods Hros.' barns, across from the flute farm. Woods Broa., 719 P street, Lincoln, Neb. Holmes for Municipal Judge Berks Hit Brother Mrs. A. K. Smith of Princeton, Kan., has written the Omaha police asking thorn to try and locate her brother, T. C. Tlbbet, from whom she has not heard in the last eleven years. Mrs. Smith was un der the impression that he was an of ficer on the Omaha force. Junior Audubon to Meet The Junior Audubon society will metlt Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the public library, when Dr. 8. R. Towne will show some pictures of interest to the young bird lovers. Some of the juniors will also relate some of their bird experiences during the summer. Continue Paving City Commission er Jardine has been advised by the Murphy Paving company that work on repavlng the north side of Farnam street, Twentieth to Twenty-fourth streets, will be started on Friday. The south side was completed before the Ak-Sar-Ben soason and work was suspended until after the fall fes tivities. Will Appraise Itraiidels Kstato The valuation of the Arthur D. Bran dels estate for Inheritance tax pur poses will be made by Victor Kose water, who has been appointed ap praiser by County Judge Crawford. The estates of Emil Brandeis and Hugo Brandeis, some of the same property having passed into the Ar thur Brandeis estate, were valued by the same appraiser. Fine Fin-place Goods Sunderland. Gets Divorce When Wife Does Not Cook " Steak to Suit Him Tribulations of one-legged Fred Hunt are increasing. Filipinos shot the left leg from un der Mr. Hunt during the Spanish war. It was only a few days ago that he filed suit against the American Smelt ing and Refining company tor dam ages resulting from the theft of his drift-wood at his house boat at the foot of Douglas street on the Mis souri. The row culminated in the ar rest of the furrier, soldier, magazine solicitor, fisherman and house boat man. "I walked all they way from Pa ducah, Ky., to Denver on my one leg to avoid trouble with my wife," com plained the fisherman when ht ap peared before Judge Leslie in his ap peal for a divorce decree. After listening to art hour's recital of the clashes between husband and wife the judge granted the decree. "I bought a steak at a perfectly sanitary market and took it home to be cooked," said Mr. Hunt. "My wife had informed me that she had Jeen educated in a cooking school and that her mother had given her instruction along culinary lines. H took her word and lost. When I gave her the steak she placed it in the frying pan with out grease and without seasoning it. She fried the blooming thing until it was black and seared and then dished it out to me and expected that I would eat it." Judge Leslie considered this the last straw and granted the decree without further argument. Mr. Hunt has a son aged 18. Nonclub Autoists Will Be Outlawed The Omaha Automobile club has joined the nation-wide movement started by the auto clubs in the larger cities to do away with the nuisance of furnishing free service to cross country tourists who do not belong to any motor organization. ' Une hundred thousand motorists are touring the country today," ex plained S. L. amyth, assistant secre tary of the Omaha Automobile club. lhev buv no guide book or road mao. Thev belong to no automobile club. They make their trips a pleas ure by stopping in every town and asking the local club for road infor mation, trip slip's or road maps, which they expect free gratis. they expect, and sometimes re ceive, the same information and cour-. tesies extended to members of clubs who show their membership cards. Is it fair to local club members to make them pay for a touring bureau for the benefit of all motorists?" Court Fine Takes Much Fun from Firing Shot Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nicholson, 1118 North Twentieth street, and Harry Restman of the same address were creating a disturbance at their home Tuesday night, and to' make matters more realistic, Nicholson fired a shot through the ceiling. In police court he was lined $1U and costs, and the other belligerents were given suspended sentences. Singer Sentenced to ' Refrain from Ditties Andrew Gorman, 1706 Burt street- came home late Tuesday night and in sisted on singing "The Brewer's Big Horses," in loud, penetrating tones. He awakened the roomers and the proprietor, who called headquarters. Gorman was told by the court to "go and sing no more' Breaks In on Holdup and Takes Assailants to Jail When Gus Chivas, colored, known to the police as "Baltimore, " saw Owen Trapp ad Albert Schaeffer at tempting to rob Clarence Silverthorne at Tenth and Douglas street, he im mediately broke into the play, wal loped Trapp and Schaeffer on the jaw, and brought them both to headquar ters. f otlHtlpntlou and Kick llftadarh. Dr. King's Nbw Lire Fills will relieve you of both, clean out the bowels &nd make you feel fine. 26c. All druggist!- -Adv offlirarwiirGO TO BATTLE FRONT Carr Ringwalt Sails in Ten Days to Become Ambulance Driver for the French. GETS BIRTH CERTIFICATE Carr Ringwalt, 21 -year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Ringwalt, 3110 Chicago street, will sail in ten days from New York for France, where he will enter the army service as ambu' lance driver. This Omaha youth is now visiting a brother in New York He has been in training at the Plattsburg camp for six weeks. He was graduated from the Central High school and attended the University of Nebraska. He is experienced iin au tomobile mechanism. J. R. Ringwalt called at the health office to secure a certificate of his son's birth in this city, this informa tion being necessary in securing a passport. The mother and father are anxious about his prospective adven ture into the European field of battle Wife Beater is Released; Brother Gets $50 FJne Charles E. Boyd, 09 South Thir tv-eiehth avenue, arrested for beat ing his wife, was released on thirty days' probation. F. M. Doyd, his brother, who tried to prevent the police from arresting his kin, received, among other things, a suspended fine of $50 and costs. Circulate Petitions for Light Referendum Vote The office of General Manager Howell of the municipal water plant is the headquarters for the circula tion. of petitions asking the city coun cil to refer to a referendum vote the Quit Meat When Back Hurts or Kidneys Bother Says Uric Acid in meat clogs Kid neys and irritate! Bladder. A glass of Salts ia harmless way to flush Kidneys, says Authority. If you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted authority, who tells us that meat forms uric acid, which almost par alyzes the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from thj blood. They be come sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stom ach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheuma tic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste get four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar macy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in jure, and makes a delightful efferves cent lithia-water drink. Adv. Why Curicura Is So Good For The Skin and Scalp 1. Because the Soap is a pure neutral sapona ceous solvent for im purities which clog the pores, often causing pimples and blackheads. 2. Because the . Oint ment is a super-creamy emollient for soothing and healing conditions which cause the skin to redden, roughen, itch, burn, crust and scale. Sample Each Free by Mall lIlllllllllllllllHMItllllllllliaillllllllllllllKlltlHIIIIIIIIIIIIITIIItKl i Fireproof Europe j Hotel Loyal j 16th and Capital m I OMAHA - - . . NEBRASKA - Roams, $1.00 and $1.60 V With Bath, $1.60 and Up I I Cafe the Very Best Popular Prices - a STOP AT THE I OYAL ". b''l"l"f;l)'l!!l'l f"litlil1lt!lllllHfllIJttllllJlla Si five-year street lighting contract passed by the council October 3. Blank petitions are being issued from Mr. Howell's office to those who are in sympathy with this movement. The petitions must be filed with the city clerk before next Tuesday. Iff VV'A ?l I A) r j " C3 I; M lie EARLE WILLIAMS was chosen for the part of Christopher Race, the owner of the "adventure car. His winning personality, great popular ity and intrepid daring won this honor for him when the leading man for this important series was under considera tion. Earle Williams has been seen in many great pictures but he considers the Scarlet Runner the greatest of all. Go to your Favorite Theatre Each Week See one of these 1 hruling Adventures 'The Car and His Majesty" 'The Nuremburg Watch" "The Jacobean House" 'The Mysterious MotorCar" "The Red-Whiskered Man" "The Glove and the Ring" The story of one of these Adventures Appears each Sunday in ir1 1 ssfi r' " ' it ft, :: fc I jm, n, 1 f ...,, n i (! M.l ..f.ifii n i.i i I ... .i - ii i. , i'.ht il nVl i -n . ! nf iflurt mi i .In Motor Cop Wins the Plaudits of Crowd Motorcycle Officer Le Roy Wade pulled a moving pictnre thriller near I Will Christopher Race Win His Uncle's Fortune? Christopher never thought of working until his rich Uncle, made a new will and announced "No work, no inheri tance." That made Christopher think. He acted. He sold all his expensive bachelor trappings and bought carlet R Then things happened. Adventures came thick and fast C. N. and A. M. Williamson have written most fascinating stories of these adventures. The Vitagraph Company has produced them in Motion Pictures. v 'The Gold Cigarette Case" 'The Car and the Girl" 'The Masked Ball" 'The Hidden Prince" 'The Missing Chapter" "The Lost Girl" OMAHA BEE headquarters yesterday morning, The horse of a peddler perceived a large wagon load of hay, and never having seen this much nourishment before was seized with acute indigestion and started for the Pacific coast. Wade wat emeririniz front headquarters TWELVE HEROINES Each episode of the Scarlet Runner revolves around a different girl. The parts of the twelve heroines will be played by such well known favorites as Edith Story, Lillian Tucker, Mar guerite Blake, Adele Kelly, Betty Howe, Zena Keefe, Billie Billings,, Jean Stuart, Gypsy O'Brien, Louisetta Val entine and others. PRODUCED BY The Greater Vitagraph when the beast passed and immedi ately pursued. In less than a block tic liaH viint7 f mm hanHlp hnra tit hit and brought the equine to a complete stop amid the c era and plaudits ot the populace ' ' , ' .uimer.