THE BEE OMAHA. MONDAY. JUNE 17. 1918. WILLIAM B. PRICE PRIMED FOR RACE FOR SENATOR Lincoln Man Quoted as Saying . Other Democratic Candidates Fail to Meet People's, Standard. (From a Stiff Correspondent.) Lincoln, June 16. (Special.) Be lieving it to be his "patriotic duty" - to be a candidate for the democratic nomination for the United States senate, William B. Price of Lincoln, announced at the state house yester- , day that he probably would get into the fight and file for that office some - time this week. He does not believe that either of the other three democratic candidates "stacks up" to the requirements. He says that Governor Morehead has tied up with the Hitchcock-Mullen interests, that Lieutenant Gover nor Howard has killed himself off by his financial platform and that At- tnrnfv fieneral Rppd "won't ?et anv votes anvhow." - :- This is very important if true, and if Colonel Price, after investigating i the situation, has discovered that 1 such a condition exists as he relates, the democratic party has yet time to seek a new Moses, and when it starts out on the hunt, Colonel' Price ex pects to be sticking around where the hunting is good. " It has been generally understood liat thfc - Hitchcock-Mullen crowd was not satisfied with Governor .Morehead. In fact it was an open secret net so very long ago that they were endeavoring to get Governor Neville to enter the race for the "democratic nomination in hopes to defeat the ex-governor for the place. Whether Mr. Howard has killed him- i r ir i. r . i. i: . :i i u in hfs platform, of course remains to be discovered, and the charge that At - torney General Reed will not get any votes, remains to be seen, To say the least, the attorney general has a good sized office force and there ought to be some votes sticking around in the crowd when the primary day comes. Expects Little From Bryan. , Mr. Price does not expect to get many votes from the Bryan faction in the democratic party. It was Mr. " Price who defeated William Jennings Bryan for delegate to the democratic national convention two years ago, and Mr. Trice went to the national convention and received much publi city and a life-size picture on the front page of a St. Louis paper as the man who defeated the great commoner, so Mr. Price does not count very much on the Bryan support, except from such men who HI himself, are for Price from a patriotic motive. Wheth er the Bryan braves will be likely to bury the political tommyhawk just for patriotic motives to vote for Mr. Price, must be left to Charlie Bryan to issue the order. And speaking of Charlie Bryan brings up the matter of the demo cratic nomination for the governor ship. Governor 'Neville has shied his castor into tne Tins' Me is now a V full fledged candidate for re-nomina tion with no - its and ands about it. Mr. Bryan was noticed around , . the Lindell hotel last night, where politicians are wont to gather and make and unmake candidates, and had . confidential conversations with lead- ing democrats wjo were sitting around. V When asked by The Bee correspon i dent if he might announce in the pa per that Mr. Bryan was ready to file lor the nomination. Mr. Bryan s eyes , twinkled and he answered "not yet." t However, it was pretty well under stood after Mr. Bryan had boarded a passing asiyum car, that it was probable that the ex-mayor would get . . in, and his boarding of the asylum car was only an incident and had no special significance. U. S. CASUALTIES TO DATE 8,085 i r Washington, June 16. Seven hun dred and seventy casualties reported amoflg the American evpeditionary forces during the week ending today brought the total since American . troops first landed in France nearly a year ago to 8,085. The army casualty list today con- tained 57 names, divided as follows: Killed in action, 27; died of wounds, 13; died of accident, 1; wounded se- " verely, 16. Lt. Whitney W. Stark, Brooklyn, N. Y., who was severely wounded, was the only officer named in the - list. rviuea in action: sergt. inaries . . Bohn, Portsmouth, O.; Sergt. William A. Williams, Lindley, N. Y.; Corp. Uecil R. Secor. VVinnewood, Okla.; v Corp. Frank Topinka, Chicago; Corp. Homer h. Weathers, Cache, Okla.; Privates George Baldwin, Chicago; John H. Barnes, St. Paul, Ind.; Leon " ard William Beck, Buffalo, N. Y. ? George H. Blyler, Ranshaw, Pa.; Gar ence J. Cowgill, Elwood, Ind.; How ard S. Ehrie, Phillipsburg, N. J. George H. Foster, Fairmount, Ind. John L. Gardner, New York; Herman .f Goetz, Johnstown, Pa.; Richmond Hall, Grand Forks, N. D.; George W. Hill, Burr Oak, Kan.; Antononi Kisi lowski. New York; Lloyd A. Long, Y Fort Wayne, Ind.; John J. Loudon, . -Springfield, Mass.; Robert R. Parks, : Kansas City; Georee M. Schlicht, Milwaukee, Wis.; Frank S. Kelly, To ledo, O.; William H. btone, Ognen, Kan.; Roger Sullivan, Perry, Me Floyd H. Symonds. Woodhull. N. Y. Joseph A. Veillette, Lowell, Mass.; ohn W. Vogel, Tell City, Ind. j Died of wounds: Sergt. Edward Harding, Cambridge, Mass.; Corp. Samuel W. Myers, Lancaster, Pa, Wagoner Dewey W. Fink, Grand ' Forks, N. D.; Privates Ernest God reau. Derry. N. H.; Harvey M. Hus - ted. San Francisco. Cal.: Frank J Kroutch, Rio Vista, Cal.; Francesco ; 1 Lucchessi, Oakland, Cal.; Frank C. ? McClenahan, Brentwood, Tenn..; " John F. Miller, Michigan City, fnd.; ' John H. Musscr, Lincoln, Pa.; Wil liam H. Noon, New Bedford, Mass.; John C. Propper, Gracemont, Okla.; Oliver R. Smith, Ipava, 111. Died of accident: Private Owen H. Johnson, Watervllle, Wash. Severely wounded: Lt. Whitney W. . Slar'.;. Brooklyn, N. Y.,; Corp. Ber uard J. Igo, West Homerville, Mass.; in CHAPTER XX. Back of the Line Peacefulness. It was 7 o'clock in the morning of a Godly and beautiful day when we set out from Trammecourt for Arras. Arras, that town so famous now in British history and in the an nals of this war. had been one of our principal objectives from the outset, but we had not known when we were to see it. Arras had been the pivot of the great northern drive in the sorine the drive that Hindenburg had fondly supposed he had spoiled by his "strategic" retreat in the region of the Somme, begun just before the British and the French were ready to attack. . What a bonnie morning that was, to be sure I The sun was out, after some rainy days, and glad we all were to see it. The land was sprayed with silver light; the air was as sweet and as soft and as warm as a baby's breath. And the cars seemed to leap forward, as if they, too, loved the day and the air. They ate up the road. They seemed to take hold ot its long, smooth surface they are grand roads, over yon, in France and reel it up in underneath their wheels as if it were a tape. This time we did little stopping, no matter how good the reason looked. We went hurtling through villages and towns we had not seen before. Our horn and our siren shrieked a warning as we shot through. And it seemed wrong. They looked so peaceful , and so quiet, did those trench towns, on that summers morning! Peaceful, aye, and languor ous, after all the bustle and haste we had been seeing, ihe houses were set in pretty encasements of bright foliage, and they looked as though they had been painted against the background of the landscape with water colors. It was hard to believe that war had passed that way. It had; there were traces everywhere of its grim visita tion. But here its heavy hand had been laid lightly upon town and vil lage. It was as if a wave of poison gas of the sort the Germans brought into war had been turned aside by a friendly breeze, arising in the very nick of time. Little harm had been done along the road we traveled. But the thunder of the guns was always, in our tears; we c,ould hear the steady, throbbing rhythm of the cannon, muttering away to the north and east. It was very warm, and so, after a time, as we passed through a village, someone Hogge, I think suggested that a bottle of ginger beer all around would not be amiss. The idea seemed to be regarded as an excellent one, so Godfrey spoke to the chauf feur beside him, and we stopped. Wc had not known, at first, that there were troops in town. But there were rHighlanders. And they came swarming out. I was recognized at once. "Well, here's old Harry Lauder!" cried one braw laddie. "Come on, Harry gie us a song!" they shouted. "Let's' have 'Roamin' in the Gloamin', Harry I Gie us the Bon nie Lassie 1 We ha' na' heard 'The Caddies Who Fought and Won,' Harry. They tell us that's a braw song!" We were not really supposed to give any roadside concerts that day, but how was I to resist them? So we pulled up into a tiny side street, just off the market square, and I sang several songs for them. We saved time by not unlimbering the wee piano, and I sang, without accompani ment, standing up in the car. But they seemed to be as well pleased as though I had had the orchestra of a big theater to support me, and all the accompaniments and trappings of Cook John A. Laudolf. Fond Du Lac, Wis.; Privates Joseph J. Curtik, Law rence, Mass.: Charles E. Demnsev. Trumansburg, N. Y.; Stanis C. Flib- bert, Worcester, Mass.; George S. Forbes, Hoboken, N. J.; Charles Half hide, Menomenie, Wis.; John B. Kearney, Worcester Mass.; James L. Mackay, Oakland, Cal.; Andry Maka rewech, New York, N. Y.; George H. Munder, New York City; Fred J. Polk, Charlotte, N. Y.; Abraham Schriber, St Louis, Mo.; Joseph Stef nek, Russian; John R. Williams, New York City. Stfeals Four Sacks Flour; Returns for Wheat Substituted "There is honor among thieves," says an old saw. There is a certain misdirected pa triotism among them, to, as was illustrated by the action of a burglar who looted a Council Bluffs grocery store. The thief entered the store during the night and stole four , sacks of flour. This was more 1jian the quota allowed by the food administration, but the fellow, remembering the rule to use substitutes, came back the next night and helped himself to a five pound allotment of corn meal. He evidently came back for the corn meal to ease his elastic conscience, and square himself with the food ad ministration. Aviators Raid Paris. Paris, June 16. A group of enemy kjrplanes last night crossed the battle front and proceeded toward Paris. A few bombs were dropped in the capi tal finding several victims and do ing some material damage. yiiniiiiiiwimmiiifHiiiR, 3 r I ADandy I Reason 1 Fop i Saving 1 The J 1 Wheat is- ISTOM ( BEST CORN FLAKES) ? Needno5ugar . Kilk$osfurth!r I mimmiiiiuiiuiiiiiuiiiiii Bll to ia m KfliTH fiTnili iimilllU Hat? mi Lauder tfte Wat' Zone experiences on tAs western COPYRIGHT 1910 the stage. They were very loath to let me go, and I don't know how much time we really saved by not giving our full and regular program. For, before I had done, they had me telling stories, too. Captain Godfrey was smiling, but he vas glancing at his watch, too, and he nudged me, at last, and made me realize that it was time for us to go on, no matter how interesting it might be to stay. "I'll be good," I promised, with a grin; as we drove on. We shall go straight on to Arras now!" But we did not. We met a bunch of engineers on the road, after a space, and they looked so wistful when we told them we maun be get ting right along, without stopping to sing for them, that I had not the heart to disappoint them. So we got out the ee piano and I sang them a few songs. It seemed to mean so much to those boys along the roads! I think they enjoyed the concerts even more than did the great gather ings that were assembled for me at the rest camps. A concert was more of a surprise for them, more of a treat. The other laddies liked them, too aye, they liked them fine. But they would have been prepared, some times; they would have been looking forward to the fun. And the laddies along the roads took them as a man takes a Rrand bit of scenery, coming before his eyes, suddenly, as he turns a bend in the road he does not ken. As for myself, I felt that I was becoming itiite a proficient open-air performer by now. My voice was standing the strain of singing under such novel and difficult conditions much better than I had thought it could. And I saw that I must be at heart and by nature a minstrelt I know I got more pleasure from those concerts I gave as a minstrel wander ing in France than did the soldiers or any of those who heard mel I have been before the public for many years. Applause has always1 been sweet to me. It is to any artist, and when one tells you it is not, you may set it down in your hearts that he or she is telling less than the truth. It is the breath of life to us to know that folks are pleased by what we do for them. Why else would we go on about our tasks? I have had much GAINS 34 POUNDS BY TAKING TANLAC Says She Had Given Up All Hope of Ever Being Well Again. "Only a few months ago my condi tion became so seriovls that I was ac tually given up to die, but Tanlae soon brought me up from my sick bed and I have gained thirty-four pounds since starting on it," was the remark able statement made the other day by Mrs. Annie Sawerbiery, who lives at 974 North Twenty-sixth street. "My troubles started," she contin ued, "with a disordered stomach that brought on a terrible case of indiges tion. I had no appetite at all and what little I forced down would not digest properly. My food did not nourish me and in a little while I lost thirty-eight pounds and was as poor as a snake. I had rheumatism, too, in my back and knees that af fected me so I could hardly get around. I suffered with awful pains through my body and sometimes the agony was so great that I could hard ly stand it, and I never knew what it was to have a restful night. I got so bad off that as a last resort I was taken to a hospital for an operation, but after an examination I was told that nothing could be done for me and that I couldn't live over three months longer. I was taken back home and really never expected to leave my bed again. "My husband had spent a big sum of money in trying to get my health restored, but nothing did me any good. Finally, on hearing Tanlac praised so highly by many who .had taken it, I decided to see if it would help me any and sent for a bottle. Well, sir, Tanlac took hold of my case as if it had been made especially for mc and the results have been little short of a miracle, for here I am able to walk about and even go to town to get me another bottle of this won derful medicine. My appetite picked up almost from the start and I can now eat and thoroughly digest any thing I warft. I feel no aches nor nains of any kind, I sleep all night like' a baby and feel just fine when I get up in the morning. I have re gained almost all my lost weight and am so much stronger that I am actu ally doing all my housework, without any trouble at all. I am satisfied that Tanlac has given me a new lease of life and I cannot praise it too high ly for the good it has done me." Tanlac is sold in Omaha by Sher man & McConnell Drug Co., corner Sixteenth and Dodge streets; Six teenth and Harney; Owl Drug com pany, Sixteenth and Farnam streets; Harvard Pharmacy, Twenty-fourth and Farnam streets; northeast cor ner Nineteenth and Farnam streets, and West End Pharmacy, corner Forty-ninth and Dodge streets, under the personal direction of a special Tanlac representative. Advertisement. For Itching Torture There is one remedy that seldom fails to stop itching torture and relieve skin irritation and that makes the skin soft clear and healthy. Any druggist can supply you with zemo. which generally overcomes all skin diseases. Acne, eczema, itch, pirn pies, rashes, blackheads, in most casei give way to zemo. Frequently, minor blemishes disappear overnight Itching usually stops instantly. Zemo is a sate, antiseptic liquid, clean, easy to. use and dependable. It costs only 35c; an extr? large bottle, $1.00. It will not stain. i: not greasy , or sticky and is positive); safe for tender, sensitive skins. The E, W. Row Co., Cleveland. O j OMAHA WOMAN ftgAtzng Afor applause. I have had many honors. I have told you about that great and overwhelming reception that greeted me when I sailed into Sydney har bor. In Britain, in America, I have had greetings that have brought tears into my eye and such a lump into my throat that until it had gone down I could not sing or say a word of thanks. But never has applause sounded so sweet to me as it did along those dusty roads in France, with the pop pies gleaming red and the corn-flowers blue through the yellow fields of grain beside the roads! They cheered me, do you ken those tired and dusty heroes of Britain along the French roads I They cheered as they squatted down in a circle about us, me in my kilt, and Johnson tinkling away as if his very life depended upon it, at his wee piano! Ah, those won derful, wonderful soldiers!. The tears come into my eyes, and my heart is sore and heavy within me when I think that mine was the last voice many of them ever heard lifted in song! They were on their way to the trenches, so many of those laddies who stopped for a song along the road. And when men are going into the trenches they know, and all who see them passing know, that some there are who will never come out. Despite all the interruptions. Premium Oleomargarine Sweet Pure Clean Will Cut Your Butter Bill in Half Sold By All Dealers SWIFT & COMPANY a PEOPLE'S ICE & COLD STORAGE COMPANY Manufacturers of Distilled Water Ice 350 Tons Daily Capacity Telephone Douglas 50 WTTER Best Butter Made Alfalfa Butter Co. 11-th and Capitol Avenue. Advertising. Specialties, Calendars, Cloth, Leather, Celluloid. Wood and Metal i Specialties. F. SHAFER ft CO. Northeast Corner '17th and Weh.ter St. f - BEE PHOTO ENGRAVINGS for Newspaper Fine Job Work Bee Engraving Dept. 103 BEE BLDG. 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I pick impotently at the coverlid of my imagination when I try to frame language to make you understand what it was I saw when I came to Arras on that bright Tune day. I think the old city of Arras should never be rebuilt. I doubt if it can be rebuilt, indeed. But I think that, whether or no, a golden fence should be built around it, and it should for ever and for all time be preserved as a monument to the wanton wicked ness of the Hun. It should serve and stand, in its stark desolation, as a tribute, dedicated to the Kultur of i Germany. No painter could depict the rightfulness of that city of the dead. No camera could make you sec as it is. Only your eyes can do that for you. And even then you cannot realize it all at once. Your eyes are more merciful than the truth and the Hun. The Germans shell Arras long after there was any military reason for do ing so. The sheer, wanton love of destruction must have moved them. They had destroyed its military use fulness, but still they poured shot and shell into the town. I went through its streets the Germans had Leen pushed back so far by then that the city was no longer under steady fire. But they had done their workl Nobody was living in A-ras. No Steel Granaries Eliminate Waste and Boost Conservation Statisticians in the employ of the federal government estimate there is a waste of food wealth in small grains, such as-wheat, corn and oats, of over $100,000,000 annually. This is a sum greater than will be realized by the farmers of Nebraska for their 50,000,000 bushel wheat crop this year, and the waste is due to the raids on granaries and bins of rats and other destructive vermin. Then there is another scourge of waste due to the heating of small grains in poorly ventilated granaries, and to the ravages of weevils and other insects in granaries which arc not air-tight and which cannot be fumigated. The Nebraska & Iowa Steel Tank company of Omaha is engaged in a conservation movement which has for its object the elimination of this gaste, and only awaits the co-operation of all the farmers p.f the middle west to make the movement success ful. The company manufactures portable steel granaries which are rat and ver STATIONERY THAT SATISFIES Loose Leaf Books, Fountain Pens, Engraved and Pristed Wedding, Business and Visiting Cards. Commercial Stationery. We make Rubber Stamp. OMAHA STATIONERY CO. 307 and 809 South 17th Street. Telephone Doug. 805 Call Tyler 3Hauling of All Kinds COUNCIL BLUFFS OFFICE CALL TYLER 883. W ara equipped to handle your hauling problemi at low cost quick itrvice, courteous treatint. Council Bluffs and Omaha. FORD TRANSFER TACT'S DENTAL ROOMS DR. H. A. WAHL DR. J. F. ANSON 318 Securities Building 16th and Farnam Sts. Have Your Records Bound Then They're Always Found Our New System Reduces the cost 60. 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There was an incessant din of horses' feet and the steady crunch crunch of heavy boots as the soldiers marched through the rubble and the brickdust. And I knew that all this had gojie on while the town was still under tire. Indeed, even now, an oc casional shell from some huge gun came crashing into the town, and there would be a new cloud of dust arising to mark its landing, a new collapse of some weakened wall. Warning signs were everywhere about, bidding all who saw them to His Stomach John R. Barker, Battle Creek, Mich., writes, "I was troubled with heartburn, indigestion and liver complaint until I began using Chamberlain's Tablets, then my trouble was over." 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They were the men of the Highland Brigade, and the ones I had hoped and wished, above all others, to meet when I ame to France. They re ceived our party with the greatest enthusiasm, and they were especially flattering when they greeted me. One . of the Highland officers took me in hand immediately, to show me the battlefield. , (Continued Tomorrow.) Trouble Over Ride a Harley-Davidson VICTOR H. ROOS "The CyeU Man" HARLEY-DAVIDSON Motorcycles and Bicycle 2701-03 Leavenworth St Omaha VACUUM PIPELESS FURNACr Less Cost 1 - More Heat Less Fuel More Ventilation Less Fire Risk More Satisfaction Burns any kind of fueL The greatest advance in the warm 'air heatine field in a generation. Can be put In an old or new house in one day. Write lot catalog. Morrill-Hifgins C., Mfr. 1112 Douflae St Omaha, Neb. Orchard-Wllhalra Co Omaha,' Leeal Areata Best 22-k Gold Crowns. . ..$4.00 Bridge Work, per tooth. . .$4.00 Best Plates, $5.00, $8.00, $10.00 McKenney Dentist! 1324 Farnam. Phone Pong. 2872. 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