Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 14, 1916, Page 7, Image 7
THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1916. ( EEPS KIDNEYS ACTIVE WITH A ) GLASS OF SALTS Must flush your Kidneys occasion ally if you eat meat regularly. " Noted authority tells what causes Backache and Bladder -weakness. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which clogs up the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, head ache, liver trouble, nervousness, con- stipation, dizziness,- sleeplessness, L-bladder disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended bv a sensation of scalding. ?;et aDout tour ounces or jaa sans rom anv reliable oharmacv and take ablespoonful in a glass of water be- 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 gen erations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and can not injure; makes a delightful effer vescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications. Adv. CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, Wall-Known Ohio Physician - Or. F. M. Edwards for 17 yean treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredi ents mixed with olive oil naming them BST- t?j 1 A,:..- : know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a nor mal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one's system. If yon have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women as well as men take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets the successful substitute for calomel now and then Just to keep in the pink of con dition. 10c and 25c per box, All druggists. Dorit be discour aaed! Heal your sick skirvwitk In the past twenty years Resinol Oint ment has made thousands of sick skins well. In the great majority of the cases, it stopped the itching, burning and smarting at once, and quickly drove the unsightly eruption away. ' To appreciate how much good Resinol Ointment really does, you should try it on your own skin trouble at our expense, it you wish I Although ill erusslsta toll Rulaol Olntneat we will rLdly ttnd s frae sample. Writ! io Dept. 44-R, RinoI, Baltimore, Mi ASTHMA SUFFERER ' Writ today, I will toll you, frw ot chuff asthma for my tali Svau, of s impl bona treatment for which cured me after phyakiant and of climate failed. I am to grateful present food health, after years of ins, that I want everyone to know wonderful treatment. Hri. Nellie B-6, Dm Uoine. Iowa, Adv. FINE FOR RHEUMATISM! lmrmvMA 1 nnanw I In ThnoA Ntltr Joints Drive Out Fain YouTl know why thousands use Mus terole once you experience the glad re lief it gives. . Get a jar at once from the nearest drug store. It is a clean, white ointment, made with the oil of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Brings ease and, comfort while it is being rubbed on I r Musterole is recommended by many doctors and nurses. Millions of jars are used annually for bronchitis, croup, stiS neck, asthma, neuralgia, pleurisy, rheu matism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back 'or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest It often prevents pneumonia), 25c and 50c jars; hospital size $2.54 'A GRIPPE on nttania, ehllliiu Va neat. mw aaiaa . ur a . COi.0 tWITl" ai. tt all ana, Resinol jiimJ?ti,WM.j K 1 ' Briej City News " l"letlaess WeeMla Rlese Edkolm. Have Boot Print It Now Beacon Frees. Ucbtlaa Vtxtuno Bur,M.ami4a Co. Carey'a Corner, 24th and Lake. Web. 892. Movleo of Nebraska The develop ment of Nebraska' resources In mov ing pictures will be shown In the Com mercial club rooms during January. Firemen's Ball Tuesday Evening in eignm annual nremen s nan win be held In the Auditorium Tuesday evening. The proceeds will be credited to the firemen's relief fund. George Oreen'a band will play and C, H. Wlth nelt will lead the grand march. Fine fireplace Goods Sunderland. Small Fire An engineer with a lighted torch crawled under the water tank In the rear ot the Chi cago laundry's plant at Fifteenth street and Capitol avenue at noon to And out what was the matter with tt The tank caught afire and the result ant alarm tied up traffic tor fifteen minutes, but did only small damage, To Test Homo Rule The . opening chapter of what might develop Into another test of "Irish home rule" was enacted in Omaha shortly after the day's activities "started at the court house when Fred Baldwin, 80 years old, and Marie Gorman. 18 years oia obtained a marriage license In the of. flee of "Cupid" Stubbendorf. Young Baldwin waa born in England, while his bride they were married shortly after 10 o'clock by a Justice ot the peace "allure, first saw the light of day In the land of the shamrock. Germans Seize Dutch Steamer Bound tolbndon Berlin, Nov. 13. (Bv Wireless to Sayville.) The following announce ment was made today by the ad miralty: "A German submarine stopped near Schouwen bank (off the Dutch coast) the Dutch mail steamer Koningen Regentes, bound from Flushing , to London. The steamer was brought into Zeebrugge. - -' "Immediately after ft was stopped several bags, apparently containing mails, were thrown overboard. One of them, which waa recovered by the submarine, contained mainly newspa pers for the foreign office at London. "Thirty hostile citizens of military age who were on board the steamer were arrested. On of them was an English soldier on leave of absence from a Dutch detention camp." A dispatch from London on Friday night told of the seizure of the Kon ingen Regentes. It was said Thomas Smith, Howard Kimblay and William Goodbody, Americans, were on board. The steamer carried ninety-three pas sengers, most of them Belgians, Conference of State Institution Heads The third semi-annual conference of the officers of Nebraska state in stitutions with, the board of commis sioners of state institutions will be held at the Orthopedic hospital at Lincoln Wednesday, November 15. This is the program: , Forenoon, 10:30 Paper, Dr. F.' S. Uarnell, Hospital for Insane, Lincoln. Leader of discussion, Dr. Claude Wat son, School for Blind, Nebraska City. Paper, Warden W. T. Fenton, state penitentiary, Lincoln, Leader of dis cussion, Judge Silas A. Holcomb, board of commissioners, Lincoln. Afternoon, 2:00 Paper, Superin tendent Lyda J. Mr.Mah.on, Girls' In dustrial school, Geneva, Leader of discussion, Miss Sude B. Ward, Girls' Industrial Home, Milford. Paper, Superintendent L. S. B. Robinson, Hospital for Tuberculous, Kearney. Leader of discussion, Dr. R. H. Foster, Hospital for Insane, Norfolk. Thursday, November 16, Forenoon, 10:00 Paper, Superintendent D. G. Griffiths, Institute for Feeble Minded, Beatrice. Leader of discussion, Su peritnendent H. W. Orr, Orthopedic hospital, Lincoln. Paper, Steward M. O'Meara, Hospital for Insane, Ingle side. Leader of discussion, Steward A. J. Gutamer, Norfolk. Business session, appointment of committees, etc. i Afternoon, 2:00 Paper, W. ' L. Weekley, Hospital for Insane, Lin coln. General discussion. Paper, Superintendent G. E. Charlton, Hos pital for Insane, Norfolk. Leader of discussion, Superintendent W. S. Fast, Hospital for Insane, Ingleside, Jorgerison Tells of v"Y" Work in China Arthur Jorgenson, student secretary of the Young Men's Christian associa tion work in Tokio, Japan, spoke at the local association Sunday afternoon on the work being carried on there. He told of the seventeen associations in the city of Tokio and the good they were doing. He also told of the meth ods used and of the results reached. "The Young Men's Christian asso ciation has had unusually good luck in carrying on its great work," he said. "It is almost an impossibility to change the ideas of the Japanese be cause of their old religion and cus toms." Arthur Jorgenson is a former Oma ha man, at one time being assistant secretary of the local "Y. He is a graduate of the University of Ne braska. J. J. McDonnell, foreign secretary to India, who was with the Indian troops in France, spoke of the work the associations were carrying on among the troops. ' Following his talk an organised ef fort was started to raise money for the aid of the Young Men's Christian association in Shanghai, China, which is in charge of a former Omaha mag, W. W. Lockwood. The Shanghai association is the largest in Asia and the salary of the secretary is cared for by the Omaha association. Mrs. Boissevain Slightly Improved at Los Angeles Los Angeles, Cal.. Nov. 13. Mrs. Inez Milholland Boissevain of New York, who is critically ill at a hos pital here, was somewhat improved today, according to her physician. Her chances for recovery were favor able, thev said. i Mrs. Boissevain collapsed while on a tour delivering suffrage aHrirrieei I Her physicians said she was -suffer-. in sj from extreme anemia, compli cated by throat trouble.. Three blood transfusions have been made in an j effort to strengthen her.' HAPPENINGS IH THEJAGIC Cin New Heating Plant Idea An: nounced by Brewery People Discussed With' Interest. POSSIBILITIES ARB MANY The possibility of heating a large part of the" South Side through a new public heating plant that is being planned by Krug interests was the subject of considerable interest yes terday. . . Steam expanded under pressure can be forced to almost any limit, accord ing to engineers. The plan of the brewery interests is to run pipe mains along the principal residence streets of the- South Side, provided enough subscribers sign for a certain length of time to make the proposition pay able. The cost of heating to the con sumer would be far less than if one maintained a separate plant, and there is no question but the system would prove far more convenient. In targe cities of the country, Pitts burgh and St. Louis as an example, similar heating plants have been built and maintained on a profitable basis by large corporations. ' The high steam pressure that has been neces sary to keep the huge vats of the brewery properly going; - is figured enough to heat any considerable por tion of the South Side. The plant is on the very edge of the residential district. . Preaches Against Discouragement. The uselessness of permitting dis couragement to affect one's daily life was in substance the sermon of Rev. C. C Wilson, pastor of Grace Metho dist church yesterday morning. Dr. Wilson described several personal ex periences with both young and old men who had become disappointed to the point of possible desperation over very small matters. He congratulated the people of Nebraska on voting out the saloon and predicted an era of prosperity and good fellowship. Teachers Must Report. 4 Schoolma'ams must have excuses for absence in the South High night school. Such is the substance of the latest edict of Principal Edward Hu waldt, who is in charge of the school. The best part of the order is that he is getting away with it. Many of the night students are long-tried school teachers of the city who graduated from high schools and normal schools years ago. Night school will commence again this evening at 7 o'clock after a lapse of a week due to the teachers' con vention which was held in Omaha last week. The attendance is under the 300 mark. Carries Army Gun. It required four stalwart officers and Captain of Police John Brigga himself to bring in a helpless colored belligerent. Ed Youne bv name, who was reported to be carrying a revolver at i o clock Sunday morning,- When the call came in the captain and police crew, Baughman and Grace, rushed to the scene, while Desk Sergeant Smith called the two night detectives, Flem ing and Sullivan, over the telephone and dispatched them to Twenty-fifth and O streets, a block from the sta tion. All arrived at the same time and Young, who was carrying a huge army revolver of old style, was placed under arrest. He said he carried this same revolver while a soldier alongside Officer Joe Ballew, who was formerly in the United States army. The gun was a full foot long. Hade Cltr Getalp. - A concert of much local Interest will be slven at the Centurtan club rooma at Twea-ty-aUth and T streets Thursday evening at t o'olock. , . Mamie Dworak.was elected president ot the Reglna club at an election of officer, held laat week. Helen Klnchnovsky wea elected secretary and Veronica Farrell treasurer. Work -has begun on the remodeling ef the new gymnasium at the Workmen temple at Twenty. tilth and M streets which Is being conetructed by officials, ot the Toung Men's Chrietlan association. President Beal and members ef the es ecutlve committee of the local Toung Men'e Political club are arranging a banquet at the Hotel Rome banquet room to take place dur ing the next two weeks. Re-organisstlon ef the club win take piece In the nest few weeks. .) Tour intentions may be good, but haphaz ard saving will not bring the full measure of suoeees. Have a system. The Houeehold Expenee Book Issued by the Savinge Depart ment ef the Live Stock National bank, South Omaha, e an esoellent plan to follow. It if free to all. Thla Is Oeld Booster night at the Basso. See A. H. Woods' big stage pley. "The Test." Tomorrow surs Mary Ftekford in "Friendo," end Carlyele Blackwell with Bthel Claytoe In the "Madnesa of Helen," a eurpaeslngly beautiful story amasingly mysterloue and eo full of thrllle that to tell you any part ef It would be robbing you of some big moment which nfuat come ae a surprise. No advance in prtcee for either picture. The Beaee. , Newspaper Editors Are , Divided on Wheat Embargo Columbus, O., Nov.. 13. Of 175 newspapers throughout the United States which participated in a poll conducted by the National Association of Master Bakers to determine public sentiment on Jhe subject of an em bargo on wheat, forty-five have ex pressed themselves in favor of such sn embsrgo or are inclined to such views where no editorial stand has been taken on the subject, according to a report made public here tonight. Fifty-four expressed themselves as definitely opposed to an embargo. The remaining papers did not an swer in full the questions asked and the information sought was not given, The sentiment in favor of the embargo seems to be developed most largely in northern states, while the southern states appear to be against it. Several southern editors expressed themselves as regarding an embargo or export tax as a war measure. . Union Paoifio Will Hold More Empties Here (Prom a Staff Correspondent.) Lincoln, Nov. 13. (Special.) After questioning the right of the State Railway commission to inquire into the action of the road in snipping .empty freight cars to Oregon because it waa interstate commerce, the Un ion Pacific Railroad company has now notified the commission that it will cease doing so and as a consequence, Engineers Boyer and Gregory, who were sent out in the role of Sherlock Holmes', have been notified to return to the home station. The complaint was that empties were hurried to Oregon, where they could be used to load hay and grain for points along the road. Tomor. row notices will be sent to snippers to report if the promises made are carried out WE SHOULD BE OUR BROTHER KEEPER Too Often Men Shrug Their Shoulders and Pass by on Other Side of Fallen. CHANGE IN LAST TEN YEARS Rev. C Franklin Koch, associate pastor of Kountze Memorial Lutheran church, preached Sunday on the mending of broken lives and human souls. . "Too often," he said, "men are in clined to shrug their shoulders, draw their garments close about them and pass by on the other side when a brother has fallen by the wayside. That is a grievous wrong. "For we should help the fallen and never despair of them. The Master commanded it. We should extend the helping hand as often as they fall. And we should do it gladly. Nor should we do it in a spirit of patronage or a holier-than-thou attitude. We should do it because we really feel that they are our brothers and that we are all subject to the same frailties and need one another's help. "There has been a great change even in the worldly attitude toward the fallen in the last ten years. For merly a man who had been a convict was an outcast from society. He was shunned as though he had the leprosy. "Today it is different. The Ford Motor company, the Standard Oil company, four great railroad systems and other big employers take men who come out of prison and give them a chance. There are societies organ ized especially to extend the helping hand to the 25,000 men who are re leased from our penitentiaries and prisons annually. A decade ago 70 per cent of men released soon com mitted crimes which brought them again to prison. In 1910, 40 per cent of ex-convicts were convicted; again and last year this percentage had tall en to 26. So it actually pays. to be the keepers of our brothers. ' "The welfare of the soul is more important even than that of the body, And we should always be on the look out to help up the brother whose soul has fallen into the prison of sin. The problem of today is not so much to get men into the church as to keep them in the church and to keep them at work for the upbuilding of Christ' kingdom." Sherman Prefers . Satan as Editor To Modern Ones Springfield,1 III., Nov. 13. "I'd rather have Satan edit my manuscript than the modern newspaper editor In a hurry," United States Senator Law rence Y." Sherman told 'a large audi ence'Of Epworth Leaguers here to night. ' Senator Sherman was speaking on the subject "Our Daily Reading Mat ter." He criticised sensationalism of some of the daily newspapers aljd de clared that the larger the citVhe greater became the evil of the pub lication- ot wnat ne termed garbled news matter" and details unfit for the younger generation to read. "Why, believe me, people," he said, "if the modern newspapers existed in the time of Solomon they would use type eight inches high to print the fact that Solomon had 700 wives," Balkan Express ' Kills Nineteen -, Women Workers Berlin, Nov. 11. (By Wireless to the Associated Press," via Sayville, N. Y., Nov. 13. )The Balkan Express which runs between Constantinople and Berlin dashed at full speed today into a party of women section-hands in a suburb of Berlin, Nineteen were killed. There was a heavy fog at the time. The women had stepped out of the way of a westbound train and did not observe the approach of the Balkan Express. Belgians Not Being Forced To Work in War Plants Datf-liM Mnu AsaArli m eUa UVI aMI WTi IUl ItVVUIUIIIBJ . J a,lV Overseas News Agency, authoritative oeniai is mauc oi statements irom PalniaM uinrMi that Rlffian uim.I.,. are begin compelled to labor in Ger man lactones in wnicn war materials are made. n Former Publisher Better, Say Physicians at Denver Denver, Nov. 13. Crawford Hill, capitalist and former widely knewn publisher, who became critically ill yesterday was better tonight, pnys' cians said. ' Instant Hair Stain Better Than Slow "Restorer." torn folki wou'4 havt yot btUv t h t thy o m m ft r veloui o omblnatlon that will 'tr', th o 1 o r to rty. Itrtftk 4 or fa.4d hull, wit boat t.lDinv it. Neiuch prep aration Ti a n tvtr bn dls eovarad. W auvu preparation hai avor baan dli co Tared. Thar U only ona preparation ao tar an wa know that la entirely free from sul phur, lead, allvar. mercury, sine aniline, ooat tar product or their dertvatlvaa, That preparation e called "Brownatone.' It Is ao eaey and eafe to apply that the wonder la that anyone aver usee anything elee, "Brawnatone" tnatantly tlnta the hair to any ahade of brow a (or black) that may b desired. If the fray show on your temples or ts atraaktns; your half rf the ends of your balr an llchtar than the balance, or If for any reason you with to stela ail r part of your heiruse "Browne tone." A aamplo and a booklet will be sent you (from manufacturers only) upon reoslpt of 19o. Mention ahade desired. AU of the leading drug eiors soil "Brown atone." Two slide, Bo and 11.00. Insist on "Brownatone" at your hair dresser's." Prepared by The Kenton Ftiarraaca) Co., HJt B). Pike St., Covington. Ky. Sold and guaranteed In Omaha by Sher man ft MoConneU drug sterea and other loading drugglita. INVENTIONS, TALK . OFDOILIMR Inventor Tells What He Consid ers the Most Worthy of Consideration. WIRELESS THE GREATEST Inventions of the past, the present and possibly of the future served as the basis of an interesting talk made before the members of the Omaha Philosophical society by Dr. Frederic H. Millener, custodian of the Union Pacific building and widely known along experimental lines, yesterday. Yesterday, Today and tomorrow, was the subiect of his talk. He re. viewed the achievements of inventive genius in the past and told of how many of the great inventors accom plished the seemingly impossible in the face of criticism and under the most unfavorable conditions. Of modern inventions. Dr. Millener gave as his opinion, the aeroplane undoubtedly is the most sensational, helping, as it has, to revolutionize the mode of warfare and bidding fair to do the same in the commercial world. He mentioned the fact that the Zep pelins have proven their practibllity and given the English much of their worry. Striking Feat. Dr. Millener said that one of the most startled moments of his life was when he read in the newspapers of a German subsea boat slipping into a harbor in the United States, drop ping a note, and departing again. He said that it made him realise how the English felt at the outbreak of the war. The Union Pacific custodian de Monday, Nov. IS, IH6. Maa"HaaaaMe7Jss ! Burgess-Wash tarn: I Greater, Each Day, Grows the Interest in Our Unique "Sugar Plum" Hospitality Week I i Extra f That Were HERE'S indeed a wonder fully biff, ripe -and iuic. "Sugar Plum" A suit bargain of the jery first magnitude. ; The surplus ot a big man ufacturer who has turned all his attention to making coats, and willingly accepted the sacrifice,;; The Styles. Are the season's very latest, some plain, others trimmed with braids and still others haye fur or plush collars., The Materials. Are broadcloths, serges, gabardines, and poplins, all satin lined. The Colors. Navy, brown, green, and burgundy, also black and white check. Bwseia-Nask C' Devi Slain Slere. Remarkable clearaway of Trimmed Hats At $1.00 That Were $3.50 to $5.00 TTATS for street and y Children's and Misses' Hats, 19c. A selection of hats that wore 98c to $1.29, all in one group for Tuesday for quick clearaway, at 19c. Burgesa.Nesh Co. Down Stairs Storo. clared that the greatest inventions are the wireless telephone and telegraph. He went into detail as to the workings of the wireless telegraph, its vastly important place in the world's activi ties, telling of the great improvements made in the invention in the last few years. It is a popular fallacy, Dr. Millener pointed out, that the wireless telegraph the real modern types sputters and spits, like we see it on the stage and in the movies. One A Distinctive Reason What is the chief reason for the superi ority of Royal Baking Powder? There are several good reasons, but there is one which distinguishes Royal from other baking powders. This reason, which every woman should know, is that Royal Baking Powder is made from cream of tartar, which comes from grapes. This means a healthful fruit origin. It means natural food as distinguished from mineral, substitutes used in other baking powders. There is no alum nor phosphate in Royal Baking Powder. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. New York . 'everybody!? store' Stow Naws for Tuaiday. Here's your "Sugar Plum" for Tuesday with a pur chase amounting to $5.00 or more : , This Full Size ' ' Sewing Rocker fj Like Illustration Regular Retail Price Substantially made of solid wood with saddle seat, golden-oak finish, full size, five-spindle back; regular price, $2.00; Tuesday, with a purchase of $5.00 or more,.25c. Limit of one (1) to a customer. J - Barfaas-Naah Ce. Third. Fleer.- Special Women s IN ew buits at $12.50 Intended to Sell XI dress wear.'-niade of beBt silk velvet in black and colors. Sailors, and all the late fall styles. An offering that has not been duplicated this sea son for style and real value. Hats that were $3.50 to $5.00. for $1.00. EXTRA! cannot hear the modern wireless when it is in operation, he stated. The im portant part the wireless has in the European war was touched upon by Dr. Millener. . Discussipns by members of the so-, ciety followed Dr. Millener1 talk. . Ritchie and McCarthy Draw. I ' Kl Paso, Tel.. Nav. 18. Willie Rllrhle. termer lightweight ehamiklem, aa1 Jahliny McCarthy of Ren Fraaolse fought ten rounds In the Jueres hull rlnc today. The referee declared the flsht a draw. Phon. D. 1J7. 25 c for $2.00 ? to $25.00 Flannels. 8Jc ' V SOFT, fleecy, warm, fluffy outing flannel, firmly wov en, stripes and checks, for making gowns, etc., oh sale at H yard. Fancy Valour, 81. ' Fancy swansdown and va lour flannel, for making kimo nas, children's dresses, etc.; bolts of the 15e kind to choose from, at 8Mc yard. Rob Btank.U, $2.98 Fu size Beacon bath-robe blankets, with neck and waist cords to. match the designs ; art new, pretty and washable; choice, $2.98 set. Comforters, $2.98 . Size 70x90 Beacon comfort ers, attractive designs, all fast colorings that can be launder ed; at $2.98 each. Bath Robing, 38c Beacon bath robing, largest assortment of the new designs, in light, medium and dark-colored grounds, at 38 yard. urfees-Nesh Ce. O a Stair. Ssera