Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 09, 1916, Page 5, Image 5

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    i HE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1916.
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QUIT MEAT WHEN
BACK HURTS OR
KIDNEYS BOTHER
Says Uric Acid in meat clogs
Kidneys and irritates
Bladder.
A glass of Salts is 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 para
lyzes the kidneys in their efforts t
expel it from the blood. They be
come sluggish and weaken, then you
suffer with a dull misery in the kid
iey region, sharp pains in the back
or sick headache dizziness, your
stomach sours, tongue is coated and
when the weather is bad you have
rheumatic 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 "ff
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 w"
then act fine. This famous salts is
niadevfrom the acid of grapes and
lemon' juice, combined with lithia, aim
has been used for generations to
flush and stimulate the sluggish kid
neys, also to neutralize the ac'ds in
urine, so il no longer irritates, thus
ending h'adder weakness
Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in
jure and makes a delightful effer
vescent litl'in-water drink Adv.
On Cheeks, Ned and Chest. Formed
A Crust. Itched and Burned.
, Almost a Solid Scale.-
HEALED BY CUTICURA
SOAP AND OINTMENT
"A breaking out which caused my
baby much suffering came first in min
ute blisters on his cheeks, and spread
- downward coveting nis
chin, neck, and chest. It
formed a crust and his
clothing seemed to aggra
vate it. The eruptions
must have itched and
, burned. He was almost
a solid scale.
- "I picked ud a paper
with an advertisement for Cuticura Soap
and Ointment and I immediately sent
for them. I only used two cakes of Soap
and one box of Ointment and he was
healed." (Signed) Mrs. Jennie Vinson,
West Pine St., Paxton.Ill., Jan.28, 1916.
Sample Each Free by Mail
With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad
dress post-card: "Cuticura, Dept. T,'
Boston." Sold throughout the world.
NEURALGIA PAINS
YIELD QUICKLY
Hundreds Findt Sloan's Lini
ment "Soothes Their Aches.
, Th shooting tearing pains of neu
ralgia and sciatica are quickly reliev
ed by trie southing- external applica
tion of Sloan's Liniment.
Quiets the nerves, relieves the
numbness feeling, and by its tonic ef
fect on the nerve and muscular tissue,
gives immediate relief
Sloan's liniment is cleaner and
easier to use than mussy plasters and
ointments and does not clog the
pores.
Just put it on it penetrates. Kills
pain. You will find relief in it from
rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica, stiff
neck, toothache, etc.
For strains, sprains, bruises, black
and-blue spots, Sloan's Liniment
quickly reduces the pain.
It's really a friend of the whole
family. Your druggist sells it in 25c,
50c and $1.00 bottles.
"DRYS" WEEP, SIM
AMD UT PRAYERS
Prepared Jubilee Meeting Be
fore Voters Oast Their Bal
lots for Prohibition.
VICTORY FROM HEAVEN
A big jubilee to celebrate the dry
victory was held by Frances Willard
Women's Christian Temperance
union at the Young Women's Chris
tian association this afternoon. "We
cried for joy and sang the doxology
when we learned Nebraska had gone
dry." said Mrs. C. J. Roberts, presi
dent of the union. "I was not sur
prised. I felt sure we would win. The
work anil prayers of all the good men
and women in this state would be
answered, I knew. We were so sure
of a victory that at the prayer meet
ings yesterday, which were crowded
the whole day, we invited the women
to come to the jubilee meeting today."
Mrs. G. W. Covcll, pioneer suffrage
and temperance worker, rejoiced in
both suffrage and prohibition vic
tories in South Dakota, as well as
Nebraska's going dry.
Talk Suffrage.
Mrs. H. C. Sumney also rejoices
in the suffrage victory of the neigh
boring state. "It makes our own
suffrage campaign in 1918 all the more
certain. Suffrage sentiment is grow
ing by leaps and bounds since its en
dorsement by the national parties.
South Dakota's victory shows the
wisdom of Nebraska going into an
immediate campaign."
Mrs. Sumney is watching eagerly
for the West Virginia returns. She
has just returned from a four weeks'
suffrage speaking tour there.
Grain Prices Boom,
Big Foreign Demand
Grain prices were decidedly higher,
wheat scoring an advance of 4 to 7
cents over the prices of Monday.
Election results, grain men assert, has
had nothing to do with the sharp ad
vance, it having been brought about
by the enormous foreign demand de
veloping within the last few weeks
On the Omaha market the receipts
for the day were fairly heavy, there
being 139 carloads of wheat. It sold
all the way from $1.75, up to $1.84
per bushel.
Corn receipts were thirty-nine car
loads and prices were up 2 to ilA
cents per bushel, the old stock selling
at 879Jc, with new at about 2 cents
per bushel lower.
Oats advanced 'A cents and sola
at 51 J4S2 cents per bushel. The
receipts were thirty-eight carloads.
Every Niqhf
For Constipation
HeadacVJndiestion.ete.
RANDRET
S die And Sure
llllllllgl
Bell-ans
Absolutely Removes
Indigestion. One package
proves it 25c at all druggists.
Itf4tJ WM H ra EH WF want' timi
tnffi Id Ka.M BP Wed rwnerty which mil ,
a TTt MX prompt riif ud prw
&RVf kli2w COLD TABtET flmW
Hughes Sues for
Thirty Thousand
Frank M. Hughes seeks damages
to the amount of $30,000 from John
JB. Watkins and George A. Hoagland,
doing' business under the' flame of J.
B. Watkins & Co., for" injuries said
to have been suffered in an accident in
the company's lumber yard on May
5 of this year. ' Hughes claims that
his income at the time of the accident
was $3,500 a year, whereas he is now
a cripple and permanently disabled.
This Woman Wants
Real Information
Miss Elsie V. Wagner of 527 Third
avenue. New York City, has re
quested the city clerk to advise- her
whether George L. Curran, said to
i be a former Oniahan, now living m
Gotham, is Single, married, di'
vorced, widowed; also whether he has
any children and a line on his reputa
tion, sue aoes not inoicate tne na
ture of her interest in Mr. Curran
but states that the "matter is very
important.
Smith Leads Race,
Moriarty Trailing
Bob Smith is leading Moriarty for
clerk of the district court by 318
votes in the sixty-nine precincts re
ported. This also included the Third
ward complete. The vote on the
precincts stands: Smith, 10,014; Mor
iarty, 9,696.
Andrea Says Jail Has
Cured the Dope Habit
Frank Andrea was sentenced by
federal Judge Woodrough to live
months and sixteen days in jail, which
five months and sixteen days he has
already served, that being the time
. I'll-.. ?- c i
sunc lie Wrta diicsicu MLAy t,t. ou lie
was liberated as soon as sentence was
imposed.
"I think this time I've been In Jail
has cured me of the 'dope' habit,"
said Andrea. "I never sold any dope
as charged, but had to have it for
myself."
Andrea said he has an aged mother
living in Florence and that he will go
to work to support her.
Wife Won't Cook for Him
Nor Will She Eat With Him
Complaining that his wife won't
cook meals for him except on rare oc
casions, and then won't 'eat at the
same table with him, Charles ,W.
Beerup, a traveling salesman, seeks a
divorce from Nellie Beerup. Cruelty
is the specific allegation.
Beerup stlcs in his petition, filed
with the clerk of the district court,
that he is home only on Saturdays
and Sundays, but that his wife al
ways makes it a point to be some
where else when he is in Omaha.
Public Improvements
Want Binding Contract
The department of public iniorove-
ments has given the Grant Paving
company one more opportunity to
make good a promise to carryout
several city paving contracts which
have been neglected. If this work is
not started at once, as agreed, the
city will take over the contracts.
Next season's paving program will
lie placed on a basis which will hold
the contractors to "strict accountability."
Candidates Hope Against Hope
As the Returns Are Carried In
4
Over in a far corner of the election
commissioner's office on the morning
after election sat a stooped, gray
haired man, his face wearing the ut
termost lines of dejection, down-in-the-mouthness
and altogether indigo
frame of mind. He was not one of the
unsuccessful candidates, but he was
of a host that had worked for a
loser.
Someone said that twenty years
ago this man was a power in local
fiolitics; now he was a "dead one,"
ess than a flash in the pan, losing
out on even the chance of gleaning a
few crumbs from the political coun
tera minor job in one of the county
offices.
Politicians, candidates both suc
cessful, unsuccessful and still in
doubt swarmed like bees about the
election commissioner's office all day
long. What a variety of - emotions
flitted over their countenances wor
ry and dejection, peace of mind and
elation, joyousness and jubilation.
As some new ballot box was
brought in to the office and opened
there was a rush for places of van
tage, a scurrying for pencils and
paper and a hush as the returns from
EIGHT-HOUR LOT
HALED INTO COURT
Union Pacific Railroad Will
Test Constitutionality of
Wilson's Adamson Act.
TRAINMEN DEFENDANTS
Union Pacific Railroad company
filed suit in the federal court here to
test the constitutionality of the so
called "eight-hpur law," recently
passed by congress, and known as
the Adamson act.
Thomas S. Allen, United States dis
trict attorney, and fou Union Pacific
trainmen representing the different
railroad brotherhoods are made par
ties defendant. The bill of complaint
alleges that the law is unconstitutional
because it is not proper reg
ulation of interstate commerce;
because it violates the guarantees of
the fifth amendment to the federal
constitution, and because it is unwork
able as applied to" existing conditions
under, which the trainmen are operat
ing. The bill of complaint i.ya printed
document of considerable size and
contains copies of all the schedules,
under which the trainmen work.
It is said that this is the first suit
filed in the United States to. test the
Adamson act.
Arkansas Retains
Its Prohibition Policy
Little Rock, Ark., Nov. 8. Ar
kansas voters retained prohibition in
this state by a vote-of 3 to 1 against
the proposal to repeal the statewide
prohibition law, it was indicated by
incomplete returns. In national and
state contests the democrats returned
their usual majorities.
such and such a precinct were read.
Hope springs eternal in the human
breast; likewise you can't convince
a candidate he's defeated until every
vote is in and every vestige of doubt
removed.
Hoping against hope and conceding
nothing as long as the totals continued
to fluctuate with the' counting of each
new batch of ballots, the obvious los
ers took defeat in different ways
some gracefully and' with the smile
that won't conic off, others not so
gracefully and muttering strange
things to themselves.
The election commissioner's office
seemed to be the mecca for the can
didates for county offices, at least
they were all represented there at the
opening of the ballot boxes as the
day progressed. Congratulations, or
expressions of "it's too bad, Bill," or
"you've still got a chance, Bill," fell
upon welcome or unwelcome ears.
Republicans kidded democrats and
both of them kidded socialists; wets
and drys rehashed their arguments
sedate judges "bummed" chews of
tobacco from "two by four" politi
cians. Yea, verily, politics make
strange bedfellows.
Hughes Has Lead of
Three Thousand in
West Virginia State
Charleston, W. Va Nov. 8.-Re'
turns from 155 precincts out of 1,713
in the state give Robinson, repub
lican nominee for governor, a lead
of nine votes over his democratic
opponent" Cornwetl, while Suther
land, republican nominee for United
States senator, is assuming a safe
lead over Chilton, democrat. Re
turns also indicated that the repub
licans will elect at least three con
gressman. The suffrage amendment is de
feated on the tace ot tne returns tnus
far received.
Of 265 precincts out of the 1,713,
Hughes 'has a plurality of 3,042. If
this ratio is maintained throughout
the state Hughes' plurality will be
19,700.
U, P. Railroad Chief
Will Visit Omaha
Robert S. Lovett, chairman of the
Board of Directors of the Union Pa
cific system is in Omaha today,
remaining a greater portion of
the day and leaving for the east
over the Milwaukee in the-evening.
The judge has been in " Wyoming,
where he has been looking over new
work of the last year, ye spent yes
terday in Salt Lake City, where at
the dinner hour he was the guest of
the Commercial club.
Judge Lovett has been in the west
several weeks and is how on his re
turn, to headquarters in New York,
and is making an annual inspection
of the, lines of the Harriman system.
At Salt Lake Judge Lovett Was
joined by President Calvin of the
Union Pacific; B. L. Winchell, traf
fic director of the Harriman roads,
and several of the minor officials. -
pPi J
The Big Thing
In Every Home
is health. And the biggest factor in health is
right food.
Grape - Nuts
is famed the world around for its scientifically
' complete food values the entire nutriment of
whole wheat and barley, including the vital
mineral elements for perfect balance of body,
brain andnerve.
Besides Grape-Nuts has a wonderful
flavor, a delight to young and old. Every
table should have its daily ration of Grape
Nut w
"There's a Reason"
Room
Advertising
Columns
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of
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The special service
The Bee gives its
i room advertisers is
bringing results
Room Columns of .
, The Bee 1 showing
an increase of 64
for September over
the same month
last year and ad
vertisers say re
sults' are better
than ever.
Put your furnished
room' ads in The
Bee and secure de
sirable tenants.
Call up and let us
tell you about our
special service to
room advertisers.
Tyler 1000
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