THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1916. 11 Avoid Ail Meat. If Kidneys and Bladder Bother Uric Acid in meat excite Kidneys and irritate the i Bladder. Take Salts at first sign of Bladder . weakness or Kidney- . Backache. ' Kidney and Bladder weakness result from uric acid, says a note autnorny. The kidneys filter thu acid from the blood and pass it on to the bladder, where it often remains to irritate and inflame, causing a burning, scalding sensation, or setting up an irritation at the neck of the bladder, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. The sufferer is in constant dread, the water passes sometimes with a scalding sensation and is verv orofuse: again there is diffiniltv in avoiding it. - V 1 Bladder weakness, most folks call it, because they can t comrpi -unnuon. While it is extremely arinoying and sometimes very painful, this is really one of the most simple ailments to overcome. Get about four ounces of Jad Salts from your pharmacist and take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast, continue this for two or three days. This will hcutralize the acids in the urine so it 10 longer is a source ot irritation to iUm hlflrfriot..- and unnarv orsrans which then act normally again. ' jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is. used bf thousands of folks who are subject to urinary disorders caused by uric, acid irritation. . Jad Salts is splendid for kidneys and causes no bad effects whatever. Here you have a pleasant, efferves cent lithia-water, drink which quickly relieves bladder troubles. Adv. .... Mr, Hotaling Was Troubled 19 Years and Was Healed by Cuticura. 'I was troubled with dandruff for the 1 last nineteen years. My scalp was so bad that it used to bleed and itch and . burn moat all ..toe time. Mv hair fell out to I had to have it clipped all over.and the top of my head was alt 1 scales. It annoyed me nights so i lost sleep, and; my coat collar used to. be covered so with dandruff that I used to be ashamed. . "I tried everything that'' I heard of but nothing seemed to do me any. good until I tried a sample of Cuti cura Soap and Ointment, and from the ' first I found relief.: I used three large sited cakes of Cuticura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment before I was healed." (Signed) Earl J. Hotaling, . Elba, Micfi;,-Jan. 22, 1916. A Cuticura Soap, to cleanse, purify and beautify, Cuticura Ointment to soften, soothe and heal, have been most suc cessfulimtlre rerest formtof skin and scalp troubles, but greater stiH in pre: serving clear skins,, a,,d preventing litJe sktt troubles becoming serious. , y I " For Trial Free by Return Mall ad dress post-card: "Cuticura, Dept. H, Bostoa." v Sold throughout the world. SOLDIERS GOT RELIEF FROM SORENESS Boys on th Border Relieved Their Paint and Aches -With Sloan's Liniment. Ones upon a time Norman -Jone,- serving tht National Guard at 1 Paao, nturntd to elmv .e'tev. A itrenooui U-niilf , hike, foot-Bore and leg-weary. He had hot been long In aetivc aervice and his shoulders, keek and limbs felt the after-effect of marching. Remembering Sloan's Liniment, Jones ap plied It to the sore jpots and went to bed. Re writes:"! arose the next morning feeling Ana; in fact, t had entirely forgotten about the hike' and went out for. a four-hour drill in the tun aa spry at ever." .. , J Privatjt Jones patted the experience along, and many a boy on the border relieved the agony of aprains, strains, bruises, insect bites, cramped muscles, rheumatic twinges, etc., bythe use of Sloan's jkiniment ' Easily applied without drubbing. At all druf gists, McrftOe and IKOO. V,...- Be Sure- Get "Duffy's" No chance.flf failure to obtain the whii. key msdv for medicinal purpose, only, the kind physician, recommend in ill. nea, when yon call lotf ; Bee that It 1, wrapped with Mr. ."Annual" and that the label" on the bottle bean the familiar "Old Chemist" trade-mark. The greatly re. duced fae' similes repro duced herewith will help to guide you, to you'll not tail "G.t Duffy's and. Kp Wall" At moat druniata.i troeers and dealer,. If they can't1 supply you, write ns. Useful household booklet free. ' . The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. Y. Advertising is tht pen dulum that keeps buy' ing and selling in motion IS DANDRUFF - KILLING YOUR HI? J If ., mil tfi'fta fW ADVISES AMERICA - TO COURT ITALY Business Sleuth for Big Cor poration Talks of Relative Money Values. OrVI ITALY HOKE CREDIT (Correspondence of The Associated Prase.) Rome, Italy, Nov. 1. James Francis Case, a civil engineer representing the 'American International corpora tion in Italy and Spain, has just com. pitted his first inspection of business possibilities in Italy. One general conclusion lie has drawn is that American firms should do all possible to lower the present high rates of exenange witn tne conclusion 01 tne war.--. '..v1'-.";.-i ..-c'i'...v,i Said Mr. Case, to a correspondent of the Associated ' Press; : "It has been widely - stated'? that. American business in, Europe . will suffer, after the war from the high value .of the dollar, as compared to other money, forcing these nations to buy from each other or go without what they need. For instance, let us consider a pair of, American shoes worth $4 of our money. Before te war $4 were worth just over 20 lire, whereas now these $4 are wpr'th 26 lire. For all that the lire has still the same buying power in Italy, or in Russia, and even more in Austria or Ger many, where the mark, has depre ciated. Naturally, if an Italian can buy a pair of shoes in another 'coun try, where his lire has a better value than in the United States, he is going to do so. I ' ;.,. Wa Lack Faith, , "The"' solution of i this - exchange problem is inducing these countries to send us . their goods to increase their trading., with us. The . reason the exchange' is now high is not so much that Europe's credit is bad with us, that we have no faith in her future prosperity it is because we are not receiving as much goods from her as before the war. -' I. have no fear, however, that American business will be Seriously handicapped . in , Europe by . our higher exchange. . Take Russia,' Her ruble has lost a third' of its value merely because she cannot get her wheat and other products to market. So soon as. the war is over, these goods will go to market and her ruble will go. to its old place," . . i Regarding Italy s. business future, Mr. Case said: "Italy does not en joy the credit she should. She is a wealthy country and my. principal reason for making this- statement is that any Country is bound to be weal thy which has an honest, thrifty, hard working population such as she is blessed, with;. We Americans do not appreciate the. fact, that she is in reality a young country! that she has not been united for more than thirty years, though the date; of her union runs back to 1870.-- -- sf '.. s . "At present I do notHrid much in clination, to consider hew business in Italy, because every mind is still pre occupied by the-war. But so soon as it is out of, the way Italy will be come a fine' field for Americans, not only for detail business but for-big ?ublic improvements; :Kkt "the lectn ication of ailreada to eliminate ex pensive coal bills, and the establish ment bf more electric power plants for factories. -- ' "The American should find a ready market here and be well received, bh; cause, as a rule, the Italians 'know more more about our country and its products than we do about Italy," - German-Bulgarian Club Will Print Newspaper (Correspondence of The Aaaoclated Frees,) Berlin. Nov. 1. For the improve. ment of relations of all kinds between Germany and Bulgaria, theuerman. Bulgarian society of- Berlin has de. cided to create and support for the ,timebeiri"'a daily newspaper in Sofia. This was decided upon at, a recent meetins. of tne -society in laree hotel here, at which Duke Ernst Guenther. of . Schleswig-Hol stein, the- nresident. oresided. ' The prospective , newspaper - will make a specialty 4 of extended and reliable, trade and business sections and reports, for the special benefit of German commercial circles. The paper will also. issue a year book for the society, gotten up by prominent statesmen,-, authors and educational ists in the - German . and Bulgarian languages. - "''"' - . There will also be a legal section in which there will, appear a transla tion of the Bulgarian legal code in January of next year the society plans to bring to uermany a numner of Bulgarian artists and musicians. who will hold expositions and exhibi tions here. h', . The membership of the society has been: steadily oh the increase ever since Bulgaria entered the war and the organization has been supported and nnancca oy very consiaeraoie aona tions "from both German and Bui garian sources. The money . sub scribed is sufficient to carry out all of the ambitious plans of the society tor next year,- - ...... - .- tiermans Will Recoin All Gold and Issue New Type Cologne, Germany, Oct. 30. A pre diction tnat tne government soon will re-coin all of its gold and issue for after-the-war use new type of 10. 20 and 50-mark gold pieces, is contained in an appeal from the mayor of Cam-P-. burg-on-the-aaaic to tne aniens of that city to f urn in whatever gold pieces they may stilt be keeping back. v-. '. "- w - The mayor declares that the old style gold pieces will soon be placed out of circulation. He even describes the prospective new coins as alle gorical and commemorative of the iron time, extremely artistic and abso lutely different from the former style." The re-coining is to be com plete ne says, by the start ot 1917, Baron Kuerthy Is Food . , Dictator in Hungary Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 1. The appointment is announced of Baron Kuerthy to the newly created posi tion of food dictator for Hungary. The new official, whose post is re garded as' of almost equal importance to that of a cabinet minister, its prac tically unknown in the. capital. He has held for some time past the po sition of governor of a northern prov ince, where his work won the admira tion of Count Tisza.: - -: Board Votes to Give Visiting Nurses Little Boost in Salary Five-Dollar, Increase in Pay is ling and Refining company, among Granted, Except for the Three Months' Proba- , v, tionary Period. MANY OASES CASED POB A salary increase - for Visiting Nurses was voted at the board meet ing held in the city hall rooms yester day. While wages for the first three months' probationary period remain the same S60 the-.balance' for the remainder of the year was raised from $65 to $70. The second .year's, pay was raised from $70 to $75. ( 'Thanksgiving baskets will be fur- msnca , . sixty-nve Visiting Nurse cases. . . An industrial nurse, 'whose salary. win re niq oy me American smelt- MARINE BUSINESS OF FRANCE FALLING OFF Loan to Help Build Up the Ship ping Industry of Country . ' Is Proposed. -. SOME FIGURES SUBMITTED (Oorreaponilenca of The Associate Frees.) Paris. Nftv. 2 "l artr ot o,.,l freight was what ailed . th merchant marine before the. war," says-.Maurice Ajam, deputy for the department of the Sarthe and former under-seeretary for the merchant ma rine. "Outgoing ; freight,, heavy freight, is the only permanent cure for that ailment; the remedy will be furnished by, the issue of the war "Five million fnna nf atl nX'lroM from the valley of the Moselle," Ajam said to the Associated Press, "will be added to our exportations, since the least that France will get out of the war will be her old provinces of Alsace and Lorraine, with the iron deposits that Germany took from us in 1871." . , :, , , ., "The Frenchman is a stav-at-home!" 6ays: M. Ajam, "and we can't give to our lines the revenue German ships derive from the emigrant trade. We can and will give them products and manufactures in place of live freight At least, we can give them a larger proportion of our own current carry ing trade that went to foreign ships before the war."' ... The significance bf M.vAjam'a ref erence appears front' figures showing that France paid 1,085,000.000 francs to foreign ships and 345,000,000 to French lines in 1915. The balancii of 740,000,000 francs has had more weight iri tht argument for a greater mer chant marine than years of propa ganda. . . Both the ' government and parliament, propose immediate action, but they are not ; yet agreed as to what action. - .... '. ' . .. Marine Business Falls. . , Statistics collected by the Moniteur de la Flotte, the - French ..maritime journal, show that the""part of the French marine in the exterior com merce bf France had fallen to 30 per cent in 1895 and to -24 -per cent 'in 1913. ln the meantime the general freight traffic of the country had gone from 15,000,000 tons in 1880 to 45,000,000 in 1913. - . . , French lines-carried, more and more freight, but considered in comparison to the development of French foreign trade, its proportionate share became less and less. . The unusual circum stances developing from the war changed the situation and increased the part of French bottoms to 31 per cent in. 1915, but the Moniteur De La Flotte estimates that, as a result of remarkable increases in imports dur ing this year, the share f French ships will have dropped 1 again to about 25 per cent; in other words, for eign ships "are. bringing to France three-quarters of all the products and manufactures that.it imports.- France will have expended for the year 1916, at the present rate, 3,000,000,000 francs for ocean transportatidn, of which 2, 500,000,000 will go to foreign bottoms, reducing the share of French lines to 20 per cent. : f - . . 'M. Ajam proposes,' in a bill just introduced in the Chamber of Depu ties, the construction of merchant ships to the aggregate of 500,000 tons burden. He demands that in view of the magnitude of the task of restor ing and developing the merchant fleet, the first initiative be confided to the government and that the ships be put on the stocks at once, to be sole sub sequently to steamships lines on the most favorable .terras, possible. The merchant marine committee of For Piles Pyramid Pila Treatment Is Usad At Horn Mel Has Savad a Vast Number from the Horror ; of Operation. . Don't permit a dana-erous operation for flea vntil roa have aaen wbet Pyramid Pile Treatment een So fee rou in the privaer of your awn boms. , Km failed. Lttr by fth acar tram mm. iia l r Mini nr. mm . dim mm m ale who believed their eaaea hopeless are itn ear flies. Ther f alrlr breathe the jor let tee writers. Tet Pyramid Pile Treatment yoarself. Bither a-et a boa nriaa ROe fpnm mhh .druggist or mail the coupon below right ewer tfs a. vwinnr iiw trial. . ... r i FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUO COMPAKT. SIS Pyramid Bldg.. Marshall, Mich. Kindly send me a Free aample of Pyra mid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper. Kkata Street i . ... CMr Bute..,.:. ... ' Ho h can Im' whose emolovea she shall work, was added to the nurses' staff, raising the number to ten. Mrs. Wheeler was placed in charge of this work. Mrs. Neleen replaces Mrs. Wheeler on the 'staff. '-. '-., V Octobers reports, compiled by the superintendent. Miss Bess Randall, show 1,335 calls made on 346 patients during the month. Twenty-seven ma-' ternitv cases were cared for. Miss Arthur, one of the nurses, was accosted on her day s round by a lit. tie girl who asked her to bring a baby sister to her house. "I'll have to speak to your mother about it. the nurse told her, . "All right, come on," insisted the little maiden and drew the nurse into the home. Miss Arthur found the home a very poor one with the stork really ex pected. This case was cared for by tne visiting. Murse association. the chamber proposes loans aggre. gating 160,000,000 francs, at 6 per cent interest, to shipping companies ac ceptable to the minister of marine for the purpose of buying or construct- ing steamships; of this sum 50,000,000 franca would be reserved to colonial service and 50,000,000 to French ship builders. T - ' ' ' The best information obtainable in dicates that between 50,000 and 60,- 000 tons of merchant ships have been built since the war began, although most of the shipyards are employed manufacturing war material. Mer chant vessels bought abroad to fly the French flag at the end of hostili ties aggregate 150,000 tons, . while from the German fleet . seized in Portuguese ports vessels aggregating 60,000 tons have been attributed to France, making a total of 260,000 tons' to be added to the fleet as it existed before the war. From this should be I Seior ' Ti wr' .r0m ihli 'houl2 tteuc,ed lo5"uthrouSh th f rmrme? t0-the ""reBte U7f 000 tons, leaving - net gain, accord ing to semi-official figures of 113,000 tons... ' . -. . M. Ajam contests the accuracy of these figures, and is of the opinion that, if there will have been any net increase in the tonnage of French merchant ships at the end of the war, it will not reach 50,000 tons, . Wild Duck Mistakes the ' Aeroplane for Bad Bird Kiel, Germany, Nov. L Ornitholo gists have discovered that the wild duck does not like the aeroplane, ap-. parently taking it fof some huge bird bf prey. From the North Sea- coast of Schleswig-Holstein it is reported that the great flocks of docks, which in previous years stopped for rest and food on the" coastal sands and isl ands on their flight from the far north to the south, have avoided that region this year., The explanation offered is that they were frightened away by the many aeroplanes that are constantly scouting along the coast. '. (.- ,',...'. An e venaLties of oversmoking are discounted by settling down to a cigar as consistently light-hearted as Tom Moore. TOM., M0RE ( Wavana filled ) m CIGAR - TEN - CENTS f light hearted S&vana" i Rvtbmberf A Schlost, Distributor), Kmiu City, Mbiouii V Omaha Branch. 1718 OouKlas Straat . PRINCESS WIELDS AXE FOREXERCISE Progressive Member of Grecian Royalty Spends Summer J Chopping Down Trees. IT TEACHES INDEPENDENCE .(Correspondence of The Associated Press.) . Villa Mon Repos, Corfu, Greece, Nov. 4. The Princess Andrew of Greece, who was the English Princess Alice of Battenberg, has spent the last summer chopping down trees to keep herself fit. The Princess Alice Is 30, a cousin of the queeni of Spain. Shortly she will take her children back to Athens for the winter sea son and give up felling trees to begin again her wortc of encouraging the Greek women to earn their own. liv ing by home sewing the Princess Alice's own particular hobby. The two eldest little girls, Princess Marguerite and Princess Theodora, 11 and 10, respectively, are' as brown as their mother and as strong, though they have not been chopping down trees. They have been swimming very day for an hour and a half in the warm, translucent water of the Corfu channel. Prince Andrew's wife herself is a fine, strong swim mer now, but it has not been a long time since Shelton Whitehouse, who was then secretary of the American Igeation, pulled her out of the water and saved her life when she had gone down three times. Family's Plight. The villa of Mon Repos, the. sum mer palace of Prince Andrew and the Princess Alice, was the favorite country residence: of the late King George, who left it to his third son, but unfortunately he failed to leave the means to keep it up. Prince An drew is a colonel of a cavalry regi ment not a lucrative employment. Princess Alice, also, is not rich, and the pair, who for royalties are poor as church mice, have four children, all girls, a sad prospect these days when turope is tull ot royal girls and short of royal boys to marry them, Mon Repos is a big and very beau tiful palace. Seldom occupied, the property had been let run to seed. The villa itself is in bad repair and has no modern comforts. The casino, built by the British lord high commis sioner, Sir Thomas Waitland, in 1816, is almost gone to rack and ruin. But at that it is far more beautifully situated, the house and garden far lovelier than the Achilleon. the villa of the German emperor, now used as a french hospital, the Achilleon ts on a height, overlooking the whole Corfu channel and the distant shores of the Epirus; but Mon Repos is at the water s edge, and the back ot the place gives on the still and beauti ful lagoon of the Kaliopoulos lake. , Princess is Happy. The Princess Alice is very pleased and proud Over the improvements she has made on Mon Repos this summer, while her ' husband has been in England on a diplomatic mission for her royal brother, King Constan- 7i. tine. She is looking forward to sur prising him on his return with the results of her labors. ; German Warriors Being Sent Home (Correepojidenoe of The Aaeoelatoi Press.) Berlin, Nov. 1 This autumn is to be another furlough period for a good majority of the soldiers now in the field, for the ministry of war has Is sued an announcement whereby each troop commander has been instructed to send men home as fast as he pos sibly can spare them. - The first men to go, many of whom are now on leave, are those who in normal peace times are farm ers, or are employed on farms. They are needed of course for the second harvest When they get back to the front men in all sorts of other walks of life will be sent back home, those who are married being given the preference. The minister of war especially asks commanders to give furloughs where ever possible to men who have .been in the field continuously for a year, regardless of their married or single stste. The plan, it is believed, will make it possible for almost every soldier to face the coming winter campaign more or less fresh from a : at ii Persistence Is the Cardinal Virtue in Advertising, CITY VIA MISSOURI PACIFIC Leave Omaha .8:10 A. M. Arrive Kansas City ..4:05 P. M- ' Modern Equipment. , Pullman Sleeper. Chair Cars and our own unsurpassed Dining Cars (Meals a la Carte). : Leave Omaha. .... . . ...2:00 P. M. . v Arrive Kansas City . . . . . .8:35 P. M. Observation Cafe-Parlor Car. Chair Car, etc. ,' ; Leave Omaha ... . .11:15 P. M. Arrive Kansas City. .... .7:10 A. M. ( ' Electric Lighted. Observation Sleeper. Chair Cars, etc. EXTRA POWER IF YOU WANT IT Most everybody does in an automobile. Sometimes on a hill. Sometimes ih passing the car ahead. Sometimes in mud. Sometimes in sand. Sometimes when you are in a hurry. The 5 pas senger 6-30 Chalmers has it plus. extra power. Though rated as 30 it de velops well over 45 h. p. The cost for the extra power is nothing. ;: The quality car at a quan tity price $1090. f HID ''' !. a 1 tu r rices i. a. u. unroii, R. W. CRAIG, Inc. Phone Doug. 7888. mi . QuUtttint H.kve Dark Hair and Look Young dy ; when you darken gray, faded hair with Sage Tea and Sulphur. Grandmother kept her hair beauti fully darkened, glossy and attractive with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur, Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked , appearance, this simple mixture was applied with won- derful effect. By asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bot tie of this old-time recipe, improved by the addition of other ingredients, all ready to use, for. about 50 cents. This simple mixture can be depended upon to restore natural . color and beauty to the halr. v .. -, , . A well-known downtown druggist says everybody uses Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound now because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has. been ap pliedit's so easy to use, too; You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw it through your hair, taking one Strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; . after another application or two, it is restored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and beautiful, This preparation is a delightful toilet requisite. It is not in tended for the cure, mitigation or pre vention of disease, Adv. THREE . , TRAINS , DAILY Direct connections in Kansas City Union Station for all points South and West. , i Omaha Office 1423 Farnam St . - T. r, Godfrey. G. A. P. D. . Phone, Douglas 104. ' Tickets Also at UnIo Station. ': '" ' , ' 2512-14 Farnam St