Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 11, 1918, SOCIETY SECTION, Image 19

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY 'BEE:' AUGUST 11. 1918.
Conducted by Ella Fleishman
I CLUBBOM
i MflNTliV
Patriotic league club rooms T
.open, i. w. c o p. m.
TUESDAY
Custer Woman's Relief corps,
' Memorial, hall, 2:30 p. m.
1 . Suffragist observe Lucy
Stone Blackwell's birthday.
X Wednesday-
J. WC T. U Franfces Willard
f V union, Mrs. A. J. Hawkins,
a ' nostess, & p. m.
D. T. A. club, party for sol-' f
T diers, Y. W. C. A., 8 p. m. 1
f FRIDAY . , J
X "Sammy club" to be organ- I
Ized at Y. W. C. A 8 p. m. f
Changed World for Women.
Women all over the country will
celebrate on August 13th the 100th
birthday of Lucy Stone.
A Massachusetts farmer's daughter,
the has been called "the morning star
of the woman's rights movement."
She began her public work for equal
buffrage five years before Susan B.
Anthony. She met ridicule and oppo
sition, but largely disarmed it by . her
tweet voice and her almost magical
eloquence.
When she was bom there were no
free public high schools for girls;
they were not admitted lo college, or
to the professions. Public opinion
forbade women to speak, ridiculed
them if they wrote for : publication,
and limited them to a very few ill
paid occupations.
The world for women has been
revolutionized, largely through the ef
forts ofrLucy Stem and her co-work-trs.
She was the first Massachusetts
woman , to take a college degree (at
Oberlin. O., in 1847). Her husband's
i-ister, Elizabeth Blackwell. was the
4irst woman to take a medical degree
(in' 1849); and when she started prac
tice in New York City ne had tobuy
a house, because nta respectable board
ing house would take in k woman doc
tor. Another sister-in-law, Rev. An
. toinette Brown, Blackwell D. D.. was
the first, woman to be ordained a
minister (in 1853). Now the United
States census shows more than 5,000
women doctors and more than 3,000
women ministers and preachers. Then
no woman could vote. Now women
have fU suffrage throughout more
than half the territory of the United
.States. '
Instruction in Games.
,' At a meeting of representatives of
all the girls' clubs in the Patriotic
league held Friday evening in the
Young Women's Christian associa
tion, Miss Clara Julia Anderson of
Grinnell college gave instruction in
games and dancing for the leaders to
teach the rest of the girls in their
dubs.
Visiting Nurse Tag Day.
Wednesday, September 4 is the date
Aft for thin vear's Visitine Nurse
association tag day. Forty-seven sta- j
tions, 1 more than last year, win oe
established that day for the collec
tion of funds. Mrs. W. E. Rhoades
will have charge of the stations; Mrs,
Luther Kountz, supplies, and Miss
Clara'-Thomas, publicity. Mrs. W. J.
Hyiles,' president of the board, who
is summering at the lakes, will be
home in time for tag day.
Woman's Relief Corps.
George A. Custer corps will hold its
regular meeting 'Tuesday at 2:30
o'clock in Memorial hall.
War Work Speakers.
Mrs. E. M. Syfert, former president
of the Omaha Woman's cluB, will
speak on Young Women's Christian
association war work Monday" at the
Broken Bow, Neb., teachers' institute.
Mrs. Grace ,F. Cholson left Satur
day for Fuellerton, Neb., where she
addresses the chautauqua on Young
Women's Christian association war
.vork this morning. .
Frank W. Judson was called to
Chicago for a conference with How
ard Fentou, new general manager of
the Red Cross Central division, suc
ceeding Bruce D. Smith. .
Miss' Louise Dinning, who has been
in Paris on a two weeks' leave of ab
sence during which she had her pass
port renewed, has returned ' to the
Belgian Red Cross hospital near
Nieuport', where she has charge of a
ward.
Among the prominent Red Cross
workers at the station Friday to meet
General Paul Pau, president of the'
French Red Cross, were F. W. Tud
son. ZT. Lindsey, Gould Dietz, Ran
dall Brown, Tyler Belt, W. A Pixley,
John Gamble, Mrs. C. T. Kountze,
Mrs. A. L. Reed, Mrs. George Prinz
and Mrs. Luther Kountze. with two
v- companies of canteen workers, Mrs.
L. J. Healy.and Mrs. Howard Bald
rige's corps.'
The wool shipment for LOOO pairs
of wristlets is expected daily.
The salvage truckworking in the
Windsor school district collected a
great quantity of newspapers and oth
er good salvage.
A "woman and two children, solicit
' ing funds for the Red Cross without
authorization, barely escaped arrest
in the Grain Exchange building Fri
'day. Mrs. H. B. Robinson, with a corps
of workers, opened the public work-
shop Friday to begin work on mend
ing 500 soldiers' uniforms.
Organization rf Tnninr T)A Cme
work for District No. 4 is going for-
wara rapidly under the direction of
leaders County Superintendent .'.lice
A. Swanson, Holdrege, and Superin
tendent C. L. Littel, Cambridge. The
first county institute to be held under
the organization fwas Furnas county,
where each teacher under the lead of
Miss Hennegan of Lincoln, knit a 10
inch square, and these were made un
. in afghans. The yam was furnished
by County Superintendent Fletcher.
All teachers were very enthusiastic
over the work and decided to start by
enrolling, all the pupils in their
schoolsas members of the Junior Red
', Cross, and then have each child knit
Mrs. Kalk, .Mothe? of Navy
Mer6, Writes t
V '
r
AMUSEMENT ROOM
water n n
f WRITING
TABLES
a
HOSTESS
TABLE
1 I
TTT HAT "patriotic-spirited Ameri
W ca" women are doing in i
France may be gleaned from
an interesting insight into the work
of a former . Omaha woman, Mrs.
Flora Stanton Kalk, who is serving
as Y. M. C. A. hostess in one of its
huts located in Brest, France, for
the comfort ofU. S. naval forces
operating in European .waters. Spe
cial interest attaches to Mrs. Kalk,
who is the sister of Mrs. T. F. Ken
nedy of Omaha, because of her son,
Lieut. Stanton Kalk, naval hero, who
lost hjs life in the sinking of the
Jacob Jones. A steamship to be
launched in December will be christ
ened in his honor, Mrs. Kalk having
been asked by the secretary of the
navy to do the honors.'
The information comes to Mrs.
Kennedy in a letter from her sister,
enclosing a sketch of the" hut in which
she is serving.
'This drawing will give you some
idea of our hut. Off, behind the
canteen are some more rooms for the
Y. M. C A. men workers. As you can
see, it is quite a large building and
they are adding to .it now, putting up
a building for showers and things
like that at one end and a gym at
the other. There are five women
and six or eight men workers. The
men are supposed to run the canteen
part except that they have to have
help so . a woman, goes . on from one
and remains until four; then another
woman goes on until seven. The
mornings are usually very quiet for
the men are all busy then and don't
get much liberty.
Duties of Hostess.
"Each day one woman is hostess
for the day which means she gets
down about, nine o'clock, sees that
the place has been cleaned, that the
flowers are all fresh, if not goes
out and buys new ones; that the
books are straightened and back in
the cases and that the writing tables
are all provided with pens and ink
and the checkers are all with the
boards. After that she sits at the
hostess table and gives paper and
envelopes to all who want it and is a
bureau of information, taking only
enough time off for lunch and di li
ne" .'
"The rest of us are busy planning
other things and helping them get up
plays, movies, concerts, lectures and
anything that can be gotten up-. This
is hard, for after planning everything,
a . 10-inch square which will then be
made into afghans and delivered to
the Senior Red Cross. Later other
work will be done.
To get the work more fully organ
ized an institute will be held at the
Oxford auditorium Tuesday. All
committees, auxiliaries, all teachers
and all others interested in the Red
Cross work are invited to attend this
meeting, at which L. W. Trester, state
director, will speak. '
7 War Insurance Facts
So many questions have come to
Miss Sarka Hrbkova, chairman of the
Woman's Committee of the State
Council of Defense relative to pay
ments of war insurance that she has
issued the following statement which
is authorized by the War department:
Under the provisions of the act the
beneficiary named does not secure the
amount of the policy in a lump sum on
the death of the insured, but receives
a monthly payment from the govern
ment as proceeds from the insurance
The payments cover a period of 20.
years or 240 months. .
For an insuranceyof $1,000 the bene
ficiary would receive a monthly pay
ment of $5.75 for 20 years. For the
maximum insurance of $10,000 the
beneficiary would receive a payment-
of $57.50 per month fof
20 years. Insurance may be had
in any amount from $1,000 to
$10,000 in multiples of $500 and the
policy is payable on the basis of $5.75
per month for each $1,000 of insur
ance for 240 monthly installments. .
Proceeds from insurance of soldiers
under the-war-risk insurance act can
not be attached, assigned, or other
wise taken by creditors.
WASH GRAY HAIR
IH ALDI.1 VATER
Restores Gray Hair to Its Nat
ural Color. ,
K'i the new. wonder.' It acta like marie.
Restores white, ' gray or faded hair to ita
original youthful color. The hair ; will atay
tht aame rich,' natural colon atay fluffy,
glotiy, brilliant, clean and odorless, with a
clean acalp. It'a a joy forever. Diaaslve
ona bottle of ovelo powder In two ouneei
of water, moisten the hair with aome of the
eolation, and while yet damp, rinse the
hair in tepid alum water (two heaping
teaspoons of powdered alum to one quart),
then j-inse well in plain, tepid water. That
ia aX. Ovelo powder is inert, and so abio
Intely harmless, that a child could drink
the solution. Any druiririst can easily a;,
ovelo powder for you, if he happens to not
have it in stock. Adv
i
x
Y. MC. A. Hut
Y
T
TAB IE
58 31
lPIA.NO
ft
8
I
ee or
2 X
5ia
6OOK6
II 1
i
Otcs.T&eSL Stanton folk
possibly halt a dozen of the 'artists'
may turn up missing, owing to i
avoidable circumstances." As all the
men over here say 'it is a great life if
you don't weaken.' Picnics are also
gotten up for the different ships, and
that takes two or three people away
from the, hut all day. . If you have any
ideas in the way of amusing things,
for goodness sake, let me have them,
for when the weather is bad they will
not want to be out in town so much."
Mrs. Kalk is billeted with a French
family. "I have a room on the fourth
floor. Breakfast is at 8, and consists
of a cup of coffee and some war bread,
also butter and sugar for coffee. The
coffee is served in huge cups holding
fully a pint, and the spoons are large
tablespoons, which seems very funny
to me. t
Food in Brest.
"Wc have, lunch at 12. This is a hot
meal, but starts with either fish or
cold meat, then some kind of a stew
with vegetables cooked in it, then
cheese, fruit. Dinner is at 6:30 or 7,
and we have soup so thick you can al
most cut it, next comes a roast, veal
or mutton, then vegetables, next a
salad, then cheese, then fruit. The
family dring a sour-looking beer with
both dinner and lunch. Most of the
house has bare floors and all old furni
ture. My bedroom 'looks like the
proverbial attic room, but, being i.tj
so high, I have good air (for Brest),
and get a very remarkable view of the
roofs, chimney pots."
"The sanitary conditions here are
awful. I can say that it is a good
thing I was inoculated for typhoid,
paratyphoid, for from the odors, you
expect to get anything, or rather
everything under- the sun. Some of
the streets are so awful you hate to
even walk on them."
. At a recent banquet given at the
Hotel Moderne in Brest honoring a
Young Men's Christian association
secretary, . Mrs. Kalk met General
Harries, also of Omaha. That food
was plentiful is evidenced bv the
printed menu card, replete with v...r
terms. Mrs. Kalk sent to her sister. It
includes royal clear and green peas
clam soup; filet of soles, garnished
with mussels and mushrooms; dressed
Langouste Parisian; saute of chfcken
of the allies, glace ham, brown sauce;
baroft of lamb, roast oversea turkey
and watercress; hearts of lettuce
salad, ' asparagus with Musselin
sauce; vanilla ice cream, pinapple
crust, puff pastries, jelly and grape
fruit.
MP ima&t
-LAlE ROAD TO HEAlTh
This road is open to all sufferers from, catarrh, either
acute or chronic, coughs, colds, bronchitis", effects of grip,
indigestion, constipation, or other complaints due to in
flammation or congestion of the mucous linings.
PERUNA
FOR YOUNG, MIDDLE-AGED AND INFIRM
Mist Helen Thomas, R. DeJo. 4, Box 106, Paris, Kentucky, teat i Re
In behalf of her brother, her sister and herself. Her letter ie an
inspiration to the aiok. Read it. ,
"It ls a great pleasure to write you of the beneficial effects my
brother, alater and myself have derived from the nae of Pernna and
Bfaaalta. We, indeed, owe them a great debt of gratitude for the
good .health we are enjoying.
"Several years ago, I Buffered a severe attaek of LaGrippe followed
by Typhoid Fever. Careful nursing with Peruna and Manalin piloted
sac safely through. For Systemic Catarrh, Catarrh of the Stomach.
Asthma, Chronic Constipation, and all ailments arising therefrom,
Dr. Hartmaa'a Reaneaies stand unexcelled- I speak from my own
experience and observation. If people would only use these remedies
that have successfully stood the test of time. It would lessen the
amber of vacaat chairs by the hearth-atones."
Miss Thomas' family Is only one of many thousands that owe a
debt of gratitude to Peruna, It is a good remedy to take any time
and the proper one tor emergencies.
8old Everywhere Liquid or Tablet Form Ask Your Dealer
sTHOUMT Fm THE DAY
ine sworn oi power nas
blood on it, the crown of author- 1
rr., J I . i JL
ity has thorns in it and the pil- 4-
low of majesty is hard as stone.
But the heart of simplicity is X
full of happiness and the voice
of the gleaner glorious with X
song. What czar of the Russias S
has glorified his tasks with sing
ing? What Napoleon has 5.
walked arm in arm with happi-
ness? V
X
l
t
X
T
WashiEgteini
.Society---
t
3
C
4
By E. C. SNYDER.
Washington Bureau, Omaha Bee.
The 15fh White Honse wedding
Wednesday evening scarcely made a
ripple on the surface of the social at
mosphere. The president's niece.
Miss Alice Wilson, became the bride
of Kev. I. S. McElroy, formerly of
Columbus, Ga., now pastor of the
Presbyterian church at White Sul
1 bur Springs. In all the history of
weddings in the historic mansion, this
one was witnessed by probably th6
very smallest company. There were
hut 16 to sit down at dinner in the
state dining room,. after the ceremony
in the blue roo-n. There were two
guests, oustide the immediate family
circles of the bride and bridegroom,
Miss Elizabeth Perkins of Mmncie,
Ind ami Rev. R. M. Turnbull. who
was best man. The bride's onlv at
tendant was the bridegroom's sister,
Mrs. Crook, of Spartan sburg, S. C,
wife of Capt. Martin Crook of the
Y. M. C. A. service in France. The
blue room, which never admits of
much elaborate decoration because of
itf. own stately and significant beauty,
had a great many maiden hair ferns
banked on the mantel and forming a
sort of hedge around the oddly
shaped oval room. These were
studded with white hydrangeas and
white flox, blossoms quite out of the
ordinary for wedding bowers and al
tars. A string sextet played the wedding
marches and soft music during the
ceremony following the playing "The
Star Spangled Banner," when the
President and Mrs. Wilson led the
way into the blue room just before
the entrance of the bridal party. The
bride and her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph B. Wilson of Baltimore, and
the bridegroom with his parents. Rev.
and Mrs. I. S. McElroy of Columbia,
Ga., arrived at the White House on
Tuesday evening in time for dinner
with the president and his family.
They were joined there on Wednes
day morning by the bridegroom's
sister., Mrs. Crook, their cousins,
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bryant of Ten
nessee, Miss Perkins who came from
the Wilson apartment in Baltimore,
where she has been visiting, and Rev.
Charles L. King of Georgia. There
were no other guests save Miss Marg
?ret Wilson and Mr. John Randolph
Boiling, brother of Mrs. Woodrow
Wilson.
The flowers which decorated" the
White House were all gathered from
the old-fashioned garden designed by
Mrs. Roosevelt, at the south of the
mansion, and from Lafayette park,
from the large garden facing the
White House doors, on the avenue
side of the park.
Mr. and Mrs. 'Walter Penlield nee
Lucile Bacon of Omaha, returned to
Washington on Wednesday morning
from Swamscot. The thermomter
went to 107 in the shade, and Mrs.
Penfield began making their plans for
getting down to the Hot Springs of
Virginia, at once. It is a much cool
er place than it sounds and they have
gone down for the week-end, at least.
Mrs. Reavis, wife of Representative
Reavis of Nebraska, who is now in
France, will entertain the Nebraska
Girls' Knitting class in her Cleveland
park home, next Monday evening.
Professor Buck, of the University of
Nebraska, who is here for war work,
and Mrs. Buck, are established in a
home in Fairmont street, and have
Mrs. Buck's mother, Mrs. Hall, with
them.
THE BEST
MACARONI
A YEAR-ROUND
MEDICINE
SOUTH SW)E J
Mrs. William Yager and son, Wil
liam, are spending several weeks at
Estes Park.
Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Cressey are at
Estes Park.
Miss Alice Krajci of Schuyler, has
been the guest of Miss Agues Barta.
P. J, -Nestor has returned from a
short trip to Chicago.
Dr. and Mrs. F. O. Beck have gone
on an auto trip to Yellowstone park.
Mrs. J. L. Barta has returned from
Schuyler, ! where : she visitcd friends
for a few days. V
Dr. Rolland Enson is spending
some time with South Side relatives
and friends.
Private John Krejac is home from
Camo Funston for a short visit with
his parents.
Miss Alta Gillette will spend the
week-end with friends at Irvington.
Ralph King has enlisted as a motor
mechanic and will train at Kansas
City.
The Misses Bessie Duncan and
Barbara Scoville spent the summer at
the Kearney normal.
Miss Dorothy Van Sant is visiting
at Tilden.
Miss Blanch Crowe has been visit
ing at Missouri Valley, Ia.
Mrs. Leslie Smith and children are
visiting Mrs. Smith's mother at Lew
is, Ia. , .
Miss Elsie Stevens is spending fcr
vacation in Minneapolis and St. Paul.
Miss Alice Casteel is in Des Moines,
Ia., for visit with relatives,.
Mrs. J. W. Hasburg and daughter,
FURS HAVE NEVER
BEEN SO POPULAR
Three classes are featured the all-enveloping garments such as
long coats and large capes, the short coat and ( coatee effects,' and
stoles, collars and animal scarfs. Short coats and vestees generally
have small collars. Large coats and capes generally show deep
yoke and large collar effects. The favored furs are Hudson Seal,
Mole, Squirrel, Nutria, -Muskrat and Mink, with Fox -leading for
scarfs. Furs 'will be necessary to every fashionable woman dur
ing the fall and winter months. s ( 'f.,Vr-y V ' -'V:-.' ;
OUR AUGUST SALE
offers the early buyers an opportunity to purchase furs for consid
erably less than our usual low prices. " ' v
Our line includes many novelties and staples. Or you may select
the pelts you wish and have them made according to your individ
ual taste. '
Our Factory-to-Wearer
Plan Will
Save You
Money.
1921-29
. Appendicitis ia primarily due to the pois
ons formed by decaying food in the bowels.
It is a disease caused by improper and in
sufficient bowel elimination. Many people
have only s small -passage in the center of
the bowels while the sidea are clogged with
old, atale, fermenting matter. They may have
a bowel movement every day, but it ia not a
complete movement and the old, stale mat
ter ataya in the lyatem to ferment and
cause trouble. Besides appendicitis, such un
clean bowela cause headaches, stomach trou
ble and 90 per cent of all other sickness.
The old, foul matter sticking to the aides
of the bowels often stays In' for months,
poisoning the body and causing that list
less, tired feeling known as "auto intoxica
tion." HOW TO AVOID TROUBLE
The way' to avoid sickness and to keep
feeling full of ambition is to watch your
bowela. Just as you keep the outaide of
your body clean, you ahould also KEEP THE
INSIDE CLEAN. It n even more important
to keep the bowels clean. than it ia to keep
your body washed, because the millions of
pores in the thirty feet of bowela quickly
absorb poisons generated by decaying food
left eareleaaly in the bowels. Don't allow the
old, fermenting, filthy stuff to stay in your
bowela for weeka, but GET IT OUT and
keep it out. Remember, filthy bowela art the
cause of most sickness no stomach, liver or
any other organ can do Ita work with a foul
sesspool aending out gases and poisons. Even
"assoaWsBB"e J
Jean, are in Dupre, S. D., visiting with
Mrs. W. A. Aldrich, formerly Miss
Dora Hasburg.
Mrs. George Krause, who has been
in the St. Joseph's hospital, will be
brought home Sunday very much im
proved. Mrs. M. Goldenburg is at Excelsior
Springs.
Arthur Reynolds has enlisted in
the navy.'
Gilbert Bott, Clarence Johnson and
Charles Reuban have enlisted in the
navy and left for San Francisco to
train.
Miss Nellie La Vclle spent a couple
of days this week in the St. Joseph
hospital, where she had her tonsils
removed. She is now getting along
nicely.
Mrs. George Rahn'has returned
froni a short visit to Shenandoah, la,
On Thursday evening Mrs. 'J- W.
Allen entertained for her daughter,
Miss Isahelle Dowrie. The evening
umm-
I JLLr(.iJ fill
El
Combine
exclusive
704
NationalFur 6TXnning
Company
Omaha , Nebraska,
Albright Cars Stop at
South 13th St.
TO PRETOFT
APPEPIIS
it your bowels move alightly each day, that
is not enough. There must be an occasional
THOROUGH, complete cleansing to rid your
system of all accumulatedjjecaying matter.
HOW TO CLEAN BOWELS QUICK n,
The ' MOST COMPLETE bowel eleanser
known ia a mixture of buckthorn bark, gly
cerine and ten other ingredients, put op in
ready prepared form under the . trade name
of Adler-i-ka. This mixture is ao powerful
a bowel cleanaer that it ALWAYS doea ita
work ' properly and thoroughly. It removes
foul and poisonous matter which other ca
thartic or laxative mixtures are unable to
dislodge. It does a COMPLETE Job and ,it
works QUICKLY and without the least dis
comfort ox. trouble. It ia so gentle that one
forgets hthas taken it until the THOROUGH
evacuation atarta. It is astonishing the great
amount of foul, poiaonoua, matter a SINGLE
SPOONFUL of Adler-i-ka draws from the
alimentary canal matter you would never
have thought was in your system. Try it
right after a natural bowel movement and
notice how much MORE foul matter will be
brought out which waa poisoning your sys
tem. In alight diaorders. auch aa occasional
constipation, sour' stomach, "gaa on the
atomach" or - sick headache, one spoonful
brings relief almost INSTANTLY. Adler-i-ka
ia the MOST THOROUGH bowel cleanser
and antlsepticlser ever offered in ready pre.
pared form. It ia a conatant surprise to peo
ple who have uaed only ordinary bowel and
atomach medieisea and the various oila and
waters.
was spent with music and dancing,
followed by dainty refreshments.
Those present were:
Mlssea
Misses
Florence Bronder
Ethelyn Berger ,
Lillian Hodgcn
Messrs.
Ray Clinchard
I-jiwrence Loechner
Lc Jordcn
Luclle Egan
Helen St-hroeder -Isabelle
Uowrle
Messrs.
Hennlng Karlqulst
John Rossi
Wallace Cowrie.
ENGAGEMENT.
An announcement oi. interest to
younger social circles is made by Mrs.
Lula Frankel in Denver, Colo., of the ,
engagement of her daughter, Susye, '
to Irving T. : Oberfelder. of Sidney, I
Neb. No date has been set for the
wedding. Miss Frankel is a charming
young woman. She is a graduate of .
East Denver High school and. attend
ed the Colorado Woman's college.
Mr. Oberfelder is the son of Judge -
J. Oberfelder of Sidney, Neb., and -is 2
a graduate of the University of Ne- .
braska. He is now at Camp Funston,
where he- has been manager of the i
Liberty theater af the camp. "
MONUMENTS
quality, good wortmanahip
design and . you have the
ART MEMORIAL
Add to these guarantee of satisfaction
and you have the kind of work w are
producing. Phone Tyler 8.
Jrr DJeroorieu t-
.South l6th. Street
Our Door.
Phone Tyler 120
REPORTS FROM PHYSICIANS
Dr.'Jamea Weaver, Loa, Utah: "I have
found Nothing in my 60 years' praeties to .
excel Adler-i-ka."
Dr. W. A. Line,Weat Baden, Ind.: "I nae
Adler-i-ka . in my practice and have found
nothing to excel it" '
Dr. F. M. Prettyman, Mallard, Minn.: "I
use Adler-i-ka ia all bowel cases and have
been very auccessful with it Some case re
quire only one doae "
Druggist D. Hawks, Goshen. Ind.; "One
of our leading doctors has uaed Adler-i-ka
in eaaea of atomach trouble with wonderful
aucceaa He haa not loat a patient and saved
many operations."
J. E Puckett. Gillham. Ark.: "I had bad
atomach trouble. After taking Adler-i-ka ,
fee better than for twenty years. Haven't
language to vxnreaa the- awful impurities
which were eliminated from my system." "
Cora E. Noblett, Sageeyah, Okla.: "Thank a
to Adler-i-ka I can aleep all night now.
Something I could not do for- years."
Mrs. L. A. Austin, Auiland, Minn.: I
could not eat a thing, my stomach waa ao
weak,' Adler-i-ka made me feel better and
am now able to work and gaining."
i
' Adler-i-ka is sold only by the leading
druggist in each city. ;-
Sold in Omaha only by Sherman It Me- "
Connell Drug Co 16th and Dodge: Beaton
Drag Co:, 16th and Farnaaa: Yates Drug Co., '
16th and Chicago. Throughout Nebraska by
the leading druggieta ia each city, Adv, .
- 4 ;