THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY NOVEMBER 16, 1916. 9 BEAUTY DOCTOR TELLS SECRET Detroit Beauty Doctor Gives Simple Recipe to Darken Gray Hair and i Promote Its Growth. Miss Alice Whitney, a well-known beauty doctor of Detroit, Mich;, re cently gave out' the following state ment. "Anyone cam prepare a simple mixture at home, at very little cost, that will darken gray hair, promote its growth and make it soft and glossy. To a half pint of water add 1 oz. of bay rum, a small box of Barbo Com pound and 01. of glycerine. These ingredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twice a week until the desired shade is obtained. This will make a gray-hafVed person look twenty years younger. It is also 6ne to promote the growth of the, hair, and relieve itching and dandruff," Adv. ' TryThis FREE FOR CATARRH OVERNIGHT I It is new way. It Is something aba lutely different. No lotions, sprays or sickly smelling salves or creams. No euoroizar, or any ap ; paratus of any kind. Nothing to smoke or inhale. No steaming. or rubbing or Injec- ft tions. No electricity r vibration or mas-- , igo. No powder; no plasters; no keep- ing in the nouse. Nothingofthatkfad at all; Something newanddifferent something delight ful and healthful something instant ly successful Yon da not have to wait, and linger, and pay ' out a lot of money. Yoe an atop it arer aitM and I will (ladle na yen this one eight treat meat FREE. I am not a doctor and thia is .not a so-called doctor's prescription but I am carta, and my friends are cared, and you can be oared. Your suffering will stop at once like magio. I AM FREE YOU CAN BE FREE My catarrh was filthy and loathsome. It mad m 01. It dnlUd mr mind. It under- ITALY EAST'S GATE Wartime Conditions Far Less Filled With Hardship Than Supposed. mined mr health and wu weakening my will. rricmc. coucmnr, noxious to ail, and my foal breath and di.cu.tlnf jittini mad me ob habit made even mr loved ones avoid me lecretlr. My delight in life wat dulted and my faculties Impaired. I knew that in time it would bring me to an untimely grave, because every moment 01 tneaay ana mgnt it was siowiy yet surelytapplng my vitality. But I fwmd a car, and lam ready to send yoa aa ever night treat merit FREE, Write me promptly. RISK JUST ONE CENT Send no money. Just your Dame and Address on a postal card. 6ay:'DeeSas ICatet Send mm voor one aiiht treataaent far aatarrk.N That all you need to say. Iwftf understand, and I will send this one night's treatment to you FREE, atone. Do not delay. Send the postal card or write mealettertoday. ' Don't think of turning- this pag until you have asked for this wonderful treatment that may be th meant of fining for yon what it has dona for me. SAM KATZ, Suite S. E 18, 2909 Indian. Ave. 1 . Chicago, HI, Skin trouble costs many a man his job No matter how efficient a man may ., be, if he has an ugly skin-eruption, : there are positions in which he cannot be tolerated. He may know that it is not in the least contagious; but ether people are afraid, they avoid him, and bt - must make way for a man with a clear, healthy skin. Why run this, risk, when Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap stop itching and dear away eciema.snd similar humors, so quickly and easily ? , Fhjridana have prescribed th. Rieimol treatment for over 20 yeare. Every drusritt will ReeiQol Ointment and Retlnol 8oap. For uraple of each, bee. mite le Bert. 7-R, Rcnaoi, Belnowre, Md. " Pimples Disappear There is one remedy that seldom fails to clear away all pimples, blotches and other skin eruptions and that makes the skin soft clear and healthy, i I Any druggist ' can supply 'you with xemo, . which generally overcomes all skin diseases. Acne, ecrema, itch, pim ples, rashes,.black heads in most cases give way to zemo. Frequently, minor blemishes disappear overnight Itching usually stops instantly. Zemo is a safe, antiseptic liquid, clean, easy to use and dependable. It costs only 25c; an extra large bottle, $1.00. It will not stain, is not greasy or sticky and is positively safe for tender, sensitive skins. , Th. B. W. Bom Co., Cleveland. O. : lit j if! 0RLA GRIPPE TfcaM'a Mtfu&r batter than "WIEKf MIAK-UP ' COLO TABLETS' TW avrt jpronjMiy. Try theta Persistence is the. cardinal virtue in a d v e r Using; no matter how good advertising may be ' in other re spects, is must be run frequently and constantly to be really success ful. , WELCOME TO AMERICANS j - (Corraaponttence of Th. AMOclateoT Preem.) Milan, luly,. Nov. 20. The explana tion of the incresjing number of American firms settling in Italy, is the realization that Italy is the future gateway to the Orient and to the near east, according to Charles F. Hauss, president of the American Chamber of Commerce for Italy. "Because of its geographical posi tion, joining the north of Europe to the Orient, said Mr. Hauss to a correspondent of . The Associated Press, "Italy today offers better busi ness opportunities for Americans, in my estimation, than South America or the far east. It has a fine commercial stragetic position and its government and people are actively aware of the fact, and intend to push this advan tage of location. . . Dividends Art Paid. "Wartime Italy is far more prosper ous than is generally known. There cent declaration of dividends showed earnings higher even than in peace times, it is also not generally known that Italy boucht more nroducts in the United States during the past year than in any four other great coun tries. It bought over $200,000,000 worm irom us, as compared to $80, 000,000 in England, $50,000,000 in the Argentine, $50,000,000 in France, and $1S,UOO,000 in Switzerland. It is sell ing to us something over $50,000,000 wortn year, which is about its nor mal yearly sales before the war. "There is going to be much more ousiness netween Italy and the United States, ts this bisr fact of its geo graphical situation is better appre ciated, and when both Italy and the United States ' 'increase their nnmh.r of merchant ships, at present sadly inadequate to handle the cargoes either way. Italy has provided and will continue to provide abundant re turn cargoes, such as its renowned silks,. laces,; furniture, alimentary foods', 'wines, cheese,, its beautiful marbles, hematite iron, lead and line ores, .as well at certain other manu factures in which it excels. Before the war. Italy was Iavinar the irmmH for a fine national merchant marine and right now during thewar, it is continuing that policy. - "I have livfrf in Ifetv n.arl,. .:!., oi me seventeen years l nave been in Europe, and I can. say that Italy has the most liberal government "I have i ever lived under. Its; laws, though' severe, are just! and when you get to know Italians and their customs, you will realist; what great strides they have made :-in science, industry and commerce during the last forty years of a United Italy. Milan, with it. more than 600.000 in. Habitants, the heart of industrial Italy, has a record growth iiniaue in mod ern European historv. Its nonula. tion has increased fifty per cent in the icu ts, uuc to me weaitn and hustle of its business men. ' . "All of the American firms now in Italy to my knowledge and belief are prospering, some even more than pre- viuus to tne war. lt:.Js: no more difficult to arnnize a separate company here than else where, though it would be well before" settling for an American company to first carefully try out the field by ac tual trial of its eooda nn th Italian market. Obviously, for some kinds of goods, a separate company is not advisable, as in the case of srooda light in weight, of ' small . volume. and of a certain value, such goods may be sea-shipped and easily en tered, if the tariff is not high. "Italian 'tariffs are not oppressive, and they are always specific, never ad valorem. This, of course, means that the higher the value of the mer chandise the easier it is to export to "Italy welcomes American initia tive, capita) and merchandise of all kinds,- especially semi-finished pro ducts and raw materials. ' "The war has opened its eyes to the latent capabilities it possessed finan cially as well as industrially, and it i going to keep on going ahead.". Jap Actress Is Not Coming to United States This Year (berreapoDdono. of Th. Associated Preea.) Tokio, Nov. 2. According to the Japanese press the foreign office his declined to give permission for Sada yakko Kawakami, Japanese actress, to visit the United States with a troupe of twenty actresses and pre sent the "Oiran Detenu," or proces sion of the Yoshiwara girls, which has been an ancient custom iu Tokio. It "is understood that the decision is the result of the objections raised by the Purity society, of which the president is Saburo Shimada, the chairman of the house of representa tives. The Tokio branch of the Sal vation Army also opposed the plans of the actors and it was finally de cided, according to the Japanese newspapers, that the reproduction of the procession in question would be detrimental to the honor and dignity of the Japanese, people. The pass ports, therefore, were refused. Sadayakko has been to the United States twice. On' her first visit she was accompanied by her husband. Otojiro Kawakami, the man. who es tablished the first modern school of acting in Japan. She is also well known to the playgoers of Eurooe having toured that continent several years ago. The procession in ques tion was not new in lokio last year, naving peen suppressed by the au Monties. . . Germany's Vintage Fine ' In Quality and Quantity (Cerreipond.no. of Th. Aeioclated Preee.) Treves, Germany, Nov. 1. The wine auctions of the 1915 vintage in the famous Moselle district are soon to , begin, -with big profits expected. Last year's wine was not only of re markably high quality, but also the yield was almost phenomenal Wine experts have exhausted their vocabu lary in trying to find terms to de scribe it. Following the example of previous years they have adopted a nickname for last year's vintage, and the term selected not only expresses their judgment of wine but also a prediction that' Germany will come out of the war victorious; they call the 1915 vintage the "Victorious." ' The wine yield of 1915 was so large that the auctions will have to be arranged in series through No vember and December, whit a nirt will be carried oyer to the spring auctions. The grape harvest last year was so abundant that-many growers urn not nave casks and other vessels sufficient to accommodate the vintage and many graces had to he nll Ann as for quality, the experts assert that no sucn wine nas been made on the Moselle since the year 1893. "Mum" Show at Capital - Breaks Previous Records , Washington, Nov .JO. All records were broken at the sixteenth annual chrysanthemum show of the Deoart- ment of Agriculture, which recently closed with a weeks exhibition, and as a result' -this annual event here after will be conducted on a much larger scale. Durine the exhibition this year nearly 25,000 people visited the government's greenhouses on the Mall and enjoyed the beauties of the rare collection of prize blooms. At the close of the show the government officials distributed many of the blooms to persons ill at their homes and in the various hospitals of the city. On Sunday, the last day of the show, more than 7,230 inspected the flowers and at times during the day there was a waiting line where some persons remained an hour before gaining admission Own Dr. Klna. New Life Pllla will overcome your conatlpatleq. ellloURnea. and taduaee Mon. Take a doe. tonight, oals lie. All drufs'i-e. Advertiioaieat, j Some of the French Airmen Who Receive Mention in Dispatches (CorrMMn4ie of Th Aaaoelitad Prw.) Parii. Nov. 2. French airmen are not mentioned by name in the official dispatches until after they have brought down their fifth enemy ma chine. Up till then they remain anonv- mout. The neweit comer ia Sergeant Major Ftachaire, who is a newcomer in another sense also, as he began his air fighting only in March at the beginning of the Verdun battle. Other French flying men with the number of machines brouarht down. mentioned in dispatches, follow: Second Uauttnant Ourn.nitr. ..II Second Lieu tt n.vnt Nunener IT Serreant Major Dorm , IB Second Lieutenant Navarro -li Serreant Major Lenol .11 Lieutenant Heurtaux 10 Sergeant Chalnat ., t Lieutenant Deullen I Second Lieutenant Chaput Second Lieutenant Delatour Seoond Lieutenant Pefoud (killed) 6 Second Lieutenant Da Rochefert (killed). I Sergetnt Taraaeon t Berceant Major Block7 sergeant viaiiet ,,,, Sergeant Sauvagt I Sergeant Major Lufberv (American).... I i i Three Pounds of Sugar Per Month (Cerraopondene. of Th. AMOelatad Pron.) Petrocrad. Nov. 2. The oooulation of Petrograd will henceforth obtain sugar by card or ticket. The allow ance per person is fixed at three pounds a month. Sugar has been very scarce for nearly a year past, owing to disloca tion of industrial activity and the vast quantities issued to the army. The newspapers assert that much of the difficulty has been due to profiteering maneuvers by speculators. ' but this allegation is discounted somewhat by the fact that the price of sugar, has not risen much. Denmark Has Designs on Eastern Part of Greenland (Cm.ponil.ne. of Th. Auocl.ted Proa.) Copenhagen. Nov. 2.- The Danish Greenland society, : which includes prominent Danish Arctic explorers, intends to launch a olan for the coin. nization of uninhabited East Green land. West Greenland will soon be over-populated, Danish North Green land already is well-peopled, while in East Greenland the conditions' are considered good for supporting a larger population of Eskimos. Denmark previously has ontv' had nominal possession of the country ana otner nations will hardly recognize her supremacy until a Danish station has been established, the Danish flag raised, and Danish inhabitants settled. - Holland Merchants Figure' On Colony in Dutch Guiana (Cerrraponaone. of Th. Aeolat Prw..) The Hague. Netherlands. Nov. 2. It is announced that a number of Holland's colonial merchant princes have formed a syndicate to inquire into the question of what fresh planta tion enterprises can be founded in Dutch Guiana, with a view to help ing raise it from its present weak condition, and applying to this strug gling South American colony the ex pert knowledge, energy and capital wnicn nave attained such good re sults in the Dutch East Indies. J War Brings Out Substitute For Milk of the Cow ' (Corf.ioond.nc 6f Th. Aitoclatad Pren.') London, Nov. 2. To avoid hard ships arising out of the higher price of the milk, the Housewives' War league has put on the market a so- called milk improver. It is a white powder, with the correct combination of bone and flesh-forming consti- .......... a - .u . : i lUVllia. f J,1II fVV, ill. AlilACU Willi a pint of water, is added to a pint of cow's milk, and the housewife has a quart of just-as-good. A DAGGER IN THE BACK That'i the woman'! dread when eho gets up In the morning to itart the day'a work. "Oh I how my back achea," OOLD HBiUAu naanem uh uapiuiee laxan today eaaea the backache of tomorrow taken every day ends the haekachator all time. Don't delay. What' the usa of auffertngf Begin taking OOLD MDDAL Haarlem Oil Capeulee today and ha relieved tomorrow. Take three or four every day and be per manently free from wrenching, dletreiplng back pain. But be aura to get GOLD MB DAL. Since MM OOLD UKDAL lem Oil haa been the National Remedy of nuiiiiio, ." wvwrniuaiiv vi me nemerianas nasTMi- -rniKi ociai cnarter auinonuni 111 nreiiaration ana eate. The hoiunwtfs. n He I land would almoet aa toon be without bread a he would be without her "Real Dutch propo." aa ahe quaintly calla OOLD MBUA.L Haarlem Oil Capeulea. Thia 1r the ane reaaon why you will find the women ana oniiaren or, uouana eo aiuray and rebuilt. OOLD MKDAL are the pure, e rial rial Haarlem Oil Capsule Imported direct from tbe laboratorlee In Haarlem. Holland. But be aura to get OOLD USUAL. Look for the name en every bos. Aold by reliable drug aleta la aoaled paokagea at 34c. lea tad ti.wv. joner reiunaea n tney ao net kelp you. Accept only (he OOLD MEDAL. All Cholera in Japan Continues to Spread Over the Country (Cerr.Rpond.nc. of Th. AMoclatod Free..) Tokio, Nov. 2. Although cool weather has brought a decrease of cholera at Tokio, the malady con tinues to spread at Osaka. Up to Oc tober 10 the cases at 'Tokio had reached 548; at Osaka, 2,001, with an increase of twenty daily. At Tokio there have been 151 deaths. The authorities believe that by the end of the month the epidemic will be entirely wiped out here. No foreigner has been attacked by the disease, so far as is known. The spread of cholera to Korea has had a serious economic effect there, as the authorities have prohibited fish ing in a aone extending along 200 miles of coast. Cholera is believed by many physicians to be easily circu lated from fish tissue and the fisher men of Korea are said to have failed to comply with sanitary , measures ordered by the health department.. Some 270,000 fishermen, commanding 40,000 boats, are thus thrown out of work at the- most fruitful fishing period of the year. Fear of fish as a microbe carrier has reduced the con sumption of fish throughout the Japa nese empire and as fish, next to rice, is the chief food of the people, the ban placed upon it has caused misery among both fisherman and distri butor. More Than One Hundred . . And Three Millions of Us Washington, Nov. 1. The popula tion of continental United States has passed the 103,000,000 mark.- Offi cials of the treasury department, in their monthly money circulation statement, estimate that on Novem ber 1 the population of the country was 103.00i.000. . United States Is Richer By Half Billion in Gold Washington, Nov. 14. Gold in the treasury of the United States amount ed to $2700,136,976 on November 1, an increase of $502,023,214, since that date last year, New Map of the United State's Is Now in Making Washington, Nov. 10. Rapid prog ress is . being made Dy the United States in preparing its portion of the huge world map which was agreed upon in 1909 by nearly all the prin cipal countries. By international agreement the authorities began pre paring maps of the entire surface of the earth, to be published on a scale one-millionth of actual size, or about one inch to every sixteen miles. All the maps are to be uniform in shape and general appearance and are to have the same conventional signs. To meet the popular demand ia this country for state maps the United States geological survey, which has charge of the making of the American section of the world map; is preparing and publishing maps of each state on a larger scale than the world map sections. These state maps are twice the size, or about one inch to every eight miles. A' map of the entire United States on that scale would cover a sheet meas. ' uring twenty feet by thirty-one feet. The survey already has issued such maps for thirty-three states, the latest being that of Florida, which is one of the largest of the series, tn compiling the, maps every available source of information has been ran. , sacked for material, and many data ' never before available to the public in any form have been procured, so that the maps exceed in accuracy any heretofore published. The new Florida map measures 44 and one half inches by sixty-one inches. Cops ies oi tne state maps are soio to tne public by the government at nominal price. ! ,, , ' - And rather ran BUla. "How le Robert totting on at eell.e.?1 . aiked th. mintiur. woe wee beine nur. mined at dinner. "apl.ndldly," aald tfc. proud father, who) ' then want on to t.!l of his eon's varloud ' social, athloUa and echelaetlo euceee.ee and th. mlnlaur .aid It wa. a fin. thins le be college bred. That evonlnv llttl. Jemee who had been an lnteresttd U.t.n.r, Mid:' "Papa, what did Mr. Brown bimo by ool. l.S. bred?" "Oh. that," Mid papa, who had been looklnf ovor hi. eon'o bill., "la ay' four-year.' loaf." Waahlnglon Star. A Million Dollars Salvage for Smokers! t 1 Us I isV- IV (ifrfe on the I r LITTLE . CIGARS . , . According to the .tatittic. of th U. S. Internal Revenue Department, there ere smoked yearly in the United States. One Billion Little Cigars. It is figured that Two Hundred Million of these are broken before smoking. Therefore, the Million Dollar Wrapper on Admiral Little Cigars-will save the present smokers a Million Dollars a year in breakage. The Million Dollar Wrapper does not break, crumble, or fraxzle. IT IS COMPOSED OF PURE TO BACCO, AND NOTHING BUT TOBACCO, selected to blend with the filler of Admiral Utile Cigars. . ' t ! -3' : 1 'M 1 1 THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY - a 3 L This nitans all kinds of monty savsJ far 90a.' In f oil-tins J packagts. BstanieM on it. You'll win, . i 635 Pwnsgw Tewring Caw Bojtdter $620 l.k. TeMo ' Model TSB S . . ,' 1 : Horsepower . Speedy and Easy Riding There's little comfort in most low priced cars. You can't use their speeds. They jostle you they ride roughly they don't hold the road. ' The $635 Overland is different. It is not only the speediest of low priced cars But you can use the full speed of its power ful motor when you need it. It has loner 42-inrh. onav rirltnov ahnMr ah.. sorbing cantileverrear springs. In addition , the 75 B Overland is a longer car 104 inch wheelbase. And it has 4-inch tires. Its smoothness and ease of riding at any : speed would do justice to a much larger and heavier car. Come in and let us demonstrate. That's the best kind of proof. Willys-Overland, Inc., Omaha Branch SALK ROOMS SERVICE STATION 2047-49 Farnam Street Th Wffljra-Ovavland Company, Tolado, Ohio 20th and Harney Street Doug-las 3292 "M.d.u u..a. .. Douglas 3290 ' 4 .?. v t X' ' 'M JO ''.ik K 7 are inmaiiaaso- Aaveruaemeat,