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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1918)
7 X 4 THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE; JUNE . 23, 1918. ' 11 A , CONSERVATION OF GARBAGE IS STRONGLY URGED Food Administration Points Out Great Wealth of War Material That is Now -Entirely Wasted. A campaign tor tne utilization ot garbage has. been inaugurated by the United States food administrator, which is advising all state administra tors to s. read garbage utilization propaganda through their territory and urge upon housekeepers the ne cessity for keeping- garbage (kitchen and table refuse) in a separate con tainer from other house refuse. Figures and statistics issuec' by the food administration show that in one ton of garbage there is sufficient gly cerine to make the explosive charge for . 14 7S-miilimeter shells, enough "fatty acid" to manufacture 75 pounds of soapt fertilizer elements to grow eight bushels of wheat and a sdore of other, valiable materials essential in the manufacture of munitions. ,- i- Much W-ste.. It is also pointed out that 24 cities of over 100,000 are not utilizing gar bage an- that the combined popula tion, ..hich is estimated to be over .5.000,000, is wasting 4,400,000 pounds of nitro-glycerine and 40,000,000 12 1 ounce cakes of soap, beside i 60,000 ' tons,, of tankage which contains fer tilizer elements sufficient to produce a 'three-million-bushel wheat crop The value of this losS.of materials ik estimated at $5,000,000. .- ' . In 29 cities Where there are garbage utilization plcnts the figures show that a combined population of 18,000 000 people are utilizing these prod ucts, to the value of over ?11,000,000 annually. 4nd that a large percentage of this-ISying i being directly used by the ' government in' munition-making.- ;Plans are under Way in sev eral cities for the manufacture ot al cohol on a large scale from garbage, and from experiments ' it - has been shown that, the grade of alcohol pro duced equals a high grade grain product.;' ; . : ' But in these 29 cities,' or most of them, large, amounts' of garbage are destroyed by burning or mada useless by being' mixed ivith other wastes. - This mears 'that around 9,000,000 pounds wf, grease is lost, or sufficient - to produce, 1,300,000 pounds of nitro- glycerine, which wou'd furnish the powder charge: ; of- about ' 2,000,000 shells of the famous French "seventy fives." In adidtion there is a loss of fatty acids sufficient to ..manufacture 25,000,000 12-ounce;caices of soap. Fertilizer Waste. The fertilized waste amounts to 1,250,000 pounds of nitrogen, 3,500.000 po.unds of phosphate of lime and 350, 000 pounds of potash, or enough; fjjtt the replacement of the ' elpnient re moved froitt "the soil by a ,-rftUlion -bushels of-, wheat. In other words, a waste of '22,500- tons of fertilizer. '. If in these 29 cities the garbage was "kept clean" or free frtm bot tles, tin cans, -crockery and other fdr eign matief the;,saving to the gov ernment 'would be many million, dot:, lars more. The responsibility de volves upon the shoulders of the housewife, who is urged to see that nothing but garbage goes into the garbage pail. Other house refuse has a value, but its value is lost and the value; of the garbage is lost if refuse and garbage are mixed. ' s The same is true about garbage that is to be used as hog feed. The food -administration is also urging : that ptable and kitchen refuse be fed to hogs and is driving home to the housekeeper the fact that one ton of garbage will produce 100 pounds of - good,; firm, first-quality pork. . Figures from 300 cities of over 10, 000 population, which are disposing of thejr garbage as hog feed, are daily demonstrating this fact. The com bined' population of these cities is more than 9,000,000, and the estima ted yield of pork should be 100,000, 000 pounds. But because of poor separation, inedible materials and losses the amount of garbage-fed pork; that is acutally marketed each , year is only 50,000,000 pounds, which has R value of over $8,000,000. Over 350 American cities of be tween 10.000 and ! 100,000 population are riot utilizing their garbage. Their combined population would yield .' 60,000,000 pounds. It can be plainly seen, therefore, why thevfood administration is anx ious, to encourage and help in this . great saving measure. While the . money loss is a serious one, the ma terial loss is more serious. The Jiousewife can be of very great help . in niishincr this movement Hpr re sponsibility does not end with keep 'tngher garbage "clean," but it is her ; duty to see that the kitchen and table refuse from her home is used in the most advantageous way which con ditions in her locality will permit. Chicken Dinner Served : To Autoists at Bellevue Summer resrt advantages in a col- legiate atmosphere are being offered for the summer by the management of Bellevue college. The college has opened its gates for the entertainment of guests at chicken dinner parties and tennis and swimming parties. The large swimming pool in the col lege gymnasium is being visited more and more by groups of pleasure seek ers who journey to the college cam pus in the afternoon or evening by automobile or street car. The col lege states that it is now. prepared to take care of large parties. Dinners are served in the college dining room in Fontenelle hall, the woman's, building. Reservations for special dinners can be made in ad vance by telephone. During the sul try weather of the last week many, guests had their dinners served on the college campus overlooking the Mis souri river and the valley for miles below the college. Concerts and Music Will . Alternate at Manawa Park "Camouflage" marches and patri - otic sones will alternate with "on- eratic potpourri" and "fantasias" in the Sunday band concerts at Manawa park. Finn's, band of Omaha, will present two concerts. "Metropolitan successes," "valse petites" and "char acteristic suites" are also on the pro gram. v"" '. HEROIC BELGIAN ' SOLDIER CVPTTJRBS MANY HUNS ..' 111 1 1 to - J: - w1 l i & II -i Jacques DuPre, a Belgian soldier who has been in the service of his war-stricken country since the open ing days of the war, captured re cently an entire carload of Germans smglehanded, and marched them to a detention camp behind the Belgian lines. DuPre has been decorated sev eral times for exceptional valor and his latest exploit is certain to win for him added laurels. Man-Eating SKark Is to Be Utilized For Shoe Leather A recent article in the Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry of the American Chemical society, tells of new possibilities for obtain ing the muchneeded substitutes for s.hoe leather. The present scarcity of leather is an obvious and necessary result of the war, for leather is an animal pro duct and is, therefore, affected by the same conditions that have led to the scarcity and high price of meat. In our own country we have not yet been driven to such extremi ties as in the European countries, but the price of. leather and footgear has risen enormously, and we. are dili gently seeking both leather substi tutes and new sources of supply. The skins of aquatic animals offer a prac tically undeveloped resource, and it is no,t unlikely that before long we shall be covering our extremities with ( the .skins of the man-eating shark and jnesacretr counsn. .Recent experiments at Pratt insti tute,' 'Brooklyn, have demonstrated that a marketable leather can be ob tained frpm this source. The reason we have not heretofore utilized the skins of -.aqua tic animals for leather is not because they are not perfectly well adapted for such use, but only ,becaue the skins of land animals have been so plentiful. The shoes made from shark skins cannot be distinguished from those made of other leathers and the wearing quali ties seem to be superior. Since there is no question of the excellence of- aquatic leather it is likely there will be a considerable de velopment of this source of supply. The bureau of fisheries has been ex perimenting with these skins and re ports that already several companies are in the market for the raw hides of sharks and porpoises. Finds His Brother in The Dark of the Trenches Two men who are resting in a dug out to escape the heavy shelling of the enemy for a few minutes cannot see each other in the blackness, but with that spirit of "comraderie" so common out there, although they are total strangers, begin to chat. After exchanging the numbers of their bat talions, which happen to be both Canadian and in the same brigade, one says: "But you're not a Johnny Canuck; you talk like an Englishman." "That may be; I was born in Eng land. But' I am a Canadian. I've been out there for 17 years," the other returned, a little proudly. "Indeed 1 1 was in Canada only three years. W'ere'd you come from in old England?" "Faversham, Kent." "Faversham! Well, I'm blowed! That's my 'ome. What the 'ell's yer name?" "Reggie Roberts." "W'y, blime me, I'm your brother Bill!" - ' Affectionate greeting followed, then explanations. The elder brother had gone out to Alberta 17 years before, while the younger was still at school. Correspondence had stopped, as it often does with men. Fourteen years later the other boy went out to On tario. When. the war broke out they enlisted in. different regiments, and they met after 17 years' separation in the dark entrance to a dugout. Told b Capt. R. J. Manion, in his book, "A Surgeon in Arms" (Apple ton), a stofj of a medical officer's experiences in the war. ' Shorter Library Hours. Shorter hoflrs at the South Side public library during June, July and August have caused a little confusion among patrons, according to Miss Madeline Hillis, chief librarian. The library is open every week day from 10 a. m. to 6 p. m. except Saturday, when it remains open until 8:30 p. m. It is closed all day Sunday. Compliments to VICTOR ROSEWATER AND THE OMAHA4 BEE lJHm J. HARVEY GREEN. Prop. One Good Drug Store 16th and Howard. . Douglas 848 GREA'" CROWD OUT FOR CIRCUS Kiddies Get Left at Hammond; Only Sadness and Mourning In City WATCHES WRECK SURVIVORS (By Associated Frees.) Hammond, Ind.,-June 22. Instead of the holiday crowds expected, - a weeping and bandaged throng of men and women gathered silently about a red and gilt trimmed ticket wagon on the Hammond circus grounds this afternoon. They were the begrimmed survivors of the Wallace-Hagenback show train wreck and were seeking word of the fate of their friends and fellow play? ers, who were to have given Ham mond its first circus of the year to- From behind the bars of the window, of the ticket wagon, Charles poll? mer, manager of the show, who es caped froriv the" wreck after throw ing his wife from a window, began registering the survivors and attempt ing to identify thei&d Quietly the little .lW of circus rrien and women filed past the ticket win dow givirg their names and asking news of fiieitdi and relatives. A big crowd had gathered at the grounds 60 KILLED, 129 HURT IN WRECK (Continued From Par Qna.) . see their daddy," he said. "I wish I could have died with- them.". Wild rumors that several lions had escaped from the train to the woods south of the wreck caused residents of that thinly populated district to take precautions. Circus authorities asserted rimt no' wild animals jvere on the train." They also discredited reports that one circus woman, de mented, had evaded the doctors and raced off into the woods clad only in night clothing. Engineer and Fireman Arrested. Kalamazoo, Mich." June 22. Alonzo K. Sargent, engineer of the train that crashed into the Wallace Hagenback circus train at Ivanhoe, Ind., this morning, resulting in the death of 61 persons, was arrested here, tonight on an order from Gary, Ind., charped with manslaughter. Sargent was about to board a train r I ' i . t 1 - . 1 lor nis nome in jacKson wiicn ar rested. He refused to discuss the de tails of the wreck, but signified his willingness to return to uary and face the charge against him without the formality of a requisition. Michigan City, Ind., June 22. Emil Klauss, fireman on the empty troop train, was arrested here his afternoon at jthe request of the coroner of Lake county. He will be held here until Monday, when he will be taken to Gary to testify at the inquest. KUuss is 24 years old and resides here with his wife and two children. "We were running along at a good rate of speed between Hammond and Gary and I did not see the circus tiain on the siding until we were near ly on top of it," said Klauss. "I saw that a collision could not be avoided and I grew dizzy and sick in my stomach at the thought or what was certain to happen. I did not notice the engineer .and I do not know what he did. I crawled down from my seat in tlie locomotive cab and dragged myself into the tender where I fell face downward on a pile of coal. That is the last thing I remember. I must have been unconscious when the col lision came, as I do not remember feeling it. My mind was a blank for a long time. The next thing I re member I was on a train bound for my home in Michigan City." Identfied Dead. The identified dead are: Berry, Earl Michael, Schnectady. N. Y. Conners, Mrs. Veronica. Coyle, Mrs. Joseph and two sons, Cincinnati, O. Cottrell, Miss Louise, London, Eng land. T Collins, John, New Haven, Conn Cattanack, Mr. and Mrs. D., of Chicago. Derrick, Arthur, Erickton. Md. Derrick, Joseph. Derrick, Max. ewell, Miss, .edgett, Fred. McCree, Mrs. Hattie, Toledo, O. Miller, Henry. Powell. Miss Loufse. Roseland, Rose. Rooney, John. Todd, Mrs. Jennie, Bloomington. Whipple, Fred, Michigan City, Mich. DRY NAVIGATION. Senator Penrose, dlscuMlng the Capo Ma; thoroughfares, one told of a conversation he had with a Cape May aklppsr. Amazeu at the way they were skimming through the creeks but an Inch or two deep," he said: "I suppose, captain, that you, think noth ing of salting across the meadows when there has been heavy f,ll of dew?" "Right you ra," ' gftld" the "captain, "though occasionally we have to send the men ahead with a watering can." Boston OMAHA PEOPLE SHOULD EAT PIE DAILY Pie is wholesome, combining both fruit and grain..; Those who have trouble digesting pie should take ONE SPOONFUL simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Adler-i-ka. This flushes the ENTIRE bowel tract, removes foul matter which poisoned your stomach for months and relieves ANY CASE sour stomach, gas or con stipation and prevents appendicitis. Leaves stomach in condition to digest ANYTHING. Sherman & McConnell Drug Co., 16th and Dodge; Beaton Drug Co., 16th ad Farnam; Yates Drug Co., 16th and Chicago. Adv. Mrs. M. W. Jacob Mils N. Jacobs THE IIE17 DELICATESSEN LUNCH AND TEAROOM Open From 7 a. m. to 7 p. m. CLOSED SUNDAYS Phone Doug. 5772 1806. Farnam St. to see the circus and remained.after hearing of the tragedy to watch the little group of survivors. Qne. clown, about whose head was Wrapped,, a stained bandage, leaned against a, tent pole while he watched the crowd on the edge of the grounds. "There'll be no circus in Hammond tonight," he said. . "The kids will get left this time." Then he fainted. Other survivors told of wandering panic-stricken and scantily clad over the .countryside in search of help after the wreck. After the crash, they said, there was no water to light the fire which immediately attacked the wreckage and many , were crazed by the cries of their comrades pinned beneath the cars. The ' first assistance ' came ; from Hammond, which sent twd companies ot; firemen; who were powerless to check; the flames, because of the lack of water and who at first confined their, efforts to the rescue of th in jured. Lster water was hauled to ''the scene of the -tragedy n tank wagons. Week of Picnics Planned For Employes at Krug Park Live stock commission men from South Side, employes of the Brandeis Stores, the ..employes from Byrne Hammer Dry Goods company and from a number of South Side pack ing companies will hold picnics in New Krug park this weeak. Wednesday evening the Brandeis employes, ' about 1,000 strong, willJ have picnic dinners and enjoy the many; attractions. " Thursday the Byrne-Hammer company employes will picnic and dance in the park. Friday will be South Side day. Not only the live stock men, but the gen eral office forces of Armour. Morris and Cudahy packing companies will be at the park. The commission men, headed, by Everett Buckingham, Bill Cheek, Gene Melady and others will have a program chuck full of novelties and surprises. Jewish Boys in Draft To Be Given Entertainment Jewish boys of Omaha who will go to the draft camps this week will be given a big send-off Jonight at the Hanscom park pavilion. A program will be given under the auspices of the B'nai B'rith. Mayor Ed P. Smith, Commissioner Harry Zimman and Rabbi Frederick Colin will give pa triotic addresses. Refreshments will be served during and after the danc ing. Harry Zimman will preside. Forty Fort Omaha Boys Guests at Hayden Picnic Forty Omaha boys were the guests of Hayden Brothers Red Cross Auxil iary Thursday at a picnic dinner at Elmwood park. Although the party did not forget to Hooverize, all had a good time. Baskets of goodies were sent to the fort for the balloon ists who were unable to attend. O 0KIQN A M A! M You Will Never Forget This is the first Great Millinery Sale we have ever held, and we mean to demonstrate to the clever shoppers of, Omaha what a Millinery Sale at Orkin Brothers means from an economy point, and please bear in mind, not a hat has been in stock one month. These hats are New York hats not a lot of old goods worked up in our workroom for a special sale. V We will say these hats were bought with the idea of having a big sale at the right time. NOW IS YOUR CHANCE Don't Wait Until Afternoon This sale includes our entire stock of Straw Hats, meaning every White Milan Black Lisere Italian Leghorn GIRL SUES RICH MAN FOR $50,000 ' FOR HEART BALM Cathryn Cairns of Council Bluffs Alleges Mjnatare, Neb., Banker Promised to Marry Her. t Orville R. Lamb, former president of the Srnte Bank of Minatare, Neb , and reputed "wealthy member of the real estate firm of Lamb. &" Carlton. Minatare, has been sued for $50,000 damages by Miss Cathryn Cairns, Council Bluffs, who alleges breach of promise. The petition was filed in district court here Saturday morning. Miss Cairns, who' lives with her parents in Council" Bluffs, alleges that in July, 1917, Mr. Lamb, after lengthy courtship, promised to marry her in June, 1913 -She declared that she has gone to considerable expense during the last year in preparing for the com ing marriage. ' In March, 1918, Miss Cairns alleges that Lamb informed her he had changed his mind about marrying her and that he did not intend to keep his promise to do so, and that he has since repeatedly refused to liye up to his pledge. Mr. Lamb, who makes his home in Minatare. was in Omaha Saturday morning and registered at a local hcjfel. He was preparing tft leave the city for Lincoln wheo- Miss Cairns' attorney and a deputy sheriff served summons on him. He made no effort to evade the summons, but com mented that if the sheriff had been five mintftes later the summons would not have been served at this time. Mason City Men Fined On Perjury Charges Fort Dodge. Ia Tune 22. (Special Telegram.) Floyd L. Cox snd Frank C. Burrell were lined $500, Andrew VV. Burrell and Charles H. Cox were fined $300 on perjury charges before Judge Reed today. They pleaded guilty to making false affidavits in a patent infringement case. All are from Mason City. Roy Klipping of Forest City was fined $41 and costs for hoarding sugar, art of sister's estate, and did not know where to re turn to seller. Class 1 to Be Exhausted In Some Iowa Counties (From a Staff Correspondent.) Des Moines, June 22. (Special Telegram.) Adjutant General Logan is now working on quotas to be fur nished by various counties and cities of state under call to furnish 17,829 men to report July 22. It is probable some counties will not have sufficient number of men in Class 1 to meet their quota. If the former rule is fol lowed, other counties will be drawn on to make up such deficit. Sixteenth and Harney BE IJ7 uanerv .S Rough Braid Sailor Knox Braids Panama Hats Sport Ideas $ 5U Jjgjjg' Prince of Connaught Is In Yokohoma, To Confer High Rank On Eniperor Yokohoma, June 22. Prince Ar thur of Connaught, a cousin of King George- of England and son of the duke of Connaught, formerly govt nor general of Canada, has arrived here. "" Prince Arthur's .mission to Japan is to present to the Japanese emperor the baton of a field marshal of the British army. A Violinist in the Trenches Makes the Men Forget Outside of the dugout shells whined and machine guns spattered with a staccato of rat-tat-tats. Inside a vio lin sang and sobbed. The magic of its music made men forget. They forgot the homesickness. They forgot the mud. They forgot the cold. They forgot the ever presence of danger and death. They did not notice the jar from the shells exploding near the trench outside. They did not notice the odor which was blown by gusts across stretch of earth soaked by months of rain, torn by thousands of shells, and strewn with the wreckage of material and men. , They listened, heads propped up on sand bags and feet wrapped in blan kets as they stretched on mattresses of sand bags covering the rough plankj of their underground cots. In another dugout, across No Man's Land, on the German side, others were also listening. They heard the strains of Mendelssohn's "Spring Song," as sweet and gentle and re freshing as an ealy summer shower. A strange thing happened. A Ger man picked up a .cornet. Floating to the Allies' dugout came the .notes of the horn harmonizing with he violin. For awhile the fifing ceased. Then the violinist played "Oh, Canada." He was answered, not by the notes of fusillade. The firing ceased, Heavy artillery took up the reply. Suddenly a shell thudded into the dugout. In the explosion that followed the violin and violinist were touched by . shel fragments, but escaped without great harm. The violinist was Sergt. Eddie Boyle, who went over early in the war with the Royal Montreal regi ment. He was recently granted leave of absence to serve with the British Canadian recruiting mission in Amer ca. In New York the other day, he told of his playing in the dugout, and of the duet he conducted wth "Frtz" until his "Oh, Canada," provoked the shelling. He exhibited his violin proudly. "She's no Stradivarius, she isn't, and some say her tone isn't just like the others, but she's some fiddle," .he said, "I wouldn't exchange her, with the marks of shrapnel on her, for anything in the world. For fourteen months I carried her in England, France and Flanders, on the march and in the trenches, and cheered the boyi with everything from 'rag' , to classical,, so she's the most precious possession I have." New York Times. - i i .i The reason of this great value - giv ing sale la be cause our mana ger says Hats must be sold with in a month. Styles change so often, and we only carry at nil times the latest. Jap Braid Hats Inn Dnnt Unlrln lln '.Annnfa ;- Bound for Ports of Alaski Nbme, Alaska, June 22. Despite thq :. fact fiiat the opening of navigation to this port is eight days overdue, on , a yearly'average. four steamers from v the "outside" bringing stores and pas sengers today were still far out at sea, barred' by the ice pack from , reaching the Nome roadstead. ,The.H ice so far has shown no. signs of' moving. ' Yeggs Blow Safe ; Hancock, la., June 22. (Special.) Bloodho-.nds are on the trail of yeggs who blew the safe of the harness shop here last night and escaped with several hundred dollars.' The-safe-blowers escaped after a running, fight with the town marshal and a posse of. citizens. A " we !K iV. Pretty Curls and Waves ' Acquired Over Night H'i a hair curling secret that is. dej-jryw cldcdlr "worth whllt." At badtima KPtt'tr a little liquid sllmarine with a clean tooth37' brush, drawing this down the Jiair- frorit root to tip. In the morning when jrou loolcj; in your mirror you will be tastonished and;., delighted to find your hair has dried in aa ' . beautiful eurls aa you've ever worn. The St-; wavineas will look ao natural no one wiU 7 Bursa it was artifically acquired. -ii t ' You can obtain liquid ailmerlne at any "'" drug store and a few ouneea will last Ions time. It Is neither sticky nor creasy and la pleasant to use. It b doubly useful be cause of also serving as beneficial dress- 3W inn, keeping the hair soft, silky and lustrouai jo After one trial you will never go back ,ta.ft the harharotiH purlin irnn. Arfv biv SHE USED TO BE GRAY ridub Society Ladie n Evrywhr?ut U. "La Creole" Hair ; '. V " Dressing. The well known society. leader iiauX . hair was prematurely gray,, perhaps Just like yours, but Mrs. j rjieard ' of "La Creole" Hair Dressinghow'," thousands of people sverywhere badX used tt with perfect satisfaction, i J;t Is not a dye, but a preparation dep signed especially for the purpose of;c.:M gradually restoring color to gray ot-'?i faded hair, and which is easily apfii? plied by simply combing or brushing 'wr? through the hair. .'! Creole" Hair -Y. Dressing positively' eradicates dan- ' druff, keeps the scalp In a healthy r; . condition and promotes the growth of new hair: brings back a natural, soft, "J . even, dark shade to gray or faded c' hair, and makes it lustrous, full of life and beautiful. .:,. ? '"Hi , ' 'use ; "la creole" hair dressing to prevent your hair from growing1 ivMi gray and to restore a beautiful dark ibis j a1aV fA mltr ft 4AaA Its! CaIvI mJ.o-..Lt : Wivii W ga, J Vt AtUU J Ml vuiu hiiia l : . recommended by Sherman & McGon-io ' nell Drug Stores, Omaha, Neb., andn' " good drug stores everywhere. Mail-'3 A orders promptly filled on receipt of i! regular price, $1.00.' "La Creole""1'1 J Hair Dressing is sold on a money back ..... guarantee. v ; - . . ' Iti DanFBAiiaft Sanatorium This Institution la the only one in the central west with separate buildings situated In their own ample grounds, yet entirely dis tinct, and rendering it possible to' classify cases. The one building being fitted for and devoted to the treatment of non-contagious and non-mental diseases, no others being admitted; the other Rest Cottage being designed for and devoted to the exclusive treat ment of select mental eases re quiring for a :time" watchful care and special nursing. ; i;v;. "BEST EVER? y BALMWORT KIDNEY TABLETS Mr. Chas. Atwell, 288 N. Champlon' Ave., " Columbus, Ohio, writes: "I find, that Balmwort Kidney Tablets are the best that I have ever Used for Kidney and Bladder trouble. I am sure that they "will cure me," etc. Mrs. M.' 3. Madery 109 W. Abriendo St., Pueblo, Colo., "writes: "I have used' Balmwort Kidney Tablets and ' find them highly satisfactory? If weakness, rheumatic pains, "blues," etc., affect you, try the immediate benefits of taking Balmwort Tablets, All drug gists sell them. , sbw fr rsj m .nv tswsm eaeaesaWMia .t JUST THINK OF CADOMENE. When You Find You Are Los- ing Out in the Came of Life. Worn-Out, Nervous Men and 'p."l Weak. Bloodless. Anaemic' f Women Have Pound Kiw ' Strength and Vigor in Tak ing Cadomene Tablets. v " A well-known writer on physical ,. culture says: "You. cannot rvn a high-0 powered engine with ut fuel. You can - not i,ct much speed ut j . . of'.,,: earn. Vu cannot get up.m ch steam without plenty of coal ffnd a perfectly? workig furnace (body). Similarly, in,;V your own case the. internal "works; must ' 2 sound and working proper ly."- That tiret feeling do you knoW-j,1, what it means? It means that iigesg,J tion and nutrition are lacking. , means l.at j our blood and nerves are impoverished. It means that slow bufcj sure decline in your vitality will 8ure,j ri1 IV ensue and real, sickness will over-. tJ take you, unless you bestir, yourself in;"(1 overcoming the weakness of th aiw.' . gans responsible. This is not written ,,"!T,D to frighten. In reality it expresses log--, 74 ical facts. . i Cadomene Tablets, the 'hViJ favorite prescription of a great phy- ,j sician, are made, and sold by drug- ' r;i gists for people who need help fosl neglect or dissipation of one kind or another. Every package is guaranteed to please or money back. Adv-' :' . turia aw. nl.l r'.t TO J SV 1. 1 1 1. f JO ft tA '" ftsO J' nl io '.51 3 .3" ail! t in. - ) 9 i ' "i - iv.l. H . tM -iHo iIT