Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1918)
THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER SO, 1918. ' 15 AERIAL STUNTS PRECEDE GAME ATROURKE PARK ) Ft. Omaha Team All Ready to 5 Mix With Warriors from H St. Paul Aviation z School. , . 1 N Preparatory for a genuine fast Si ame at Rourke park today with - St. Paul Aviators, and in anticipa- tion of a sure .display of athletic Z. "Periority and prowess, Fort Oma- ha men, to the number of 1,200, last t night paraded through the principal M streets of Omaha with their "crack" band incessantly playing. A con- rert was then given on the court-house square, with interludes of new X J-eIls." A similar parade will be ; held this noon for the final "wind- - up" for the game. For further assurance of an event- f"l day, the government weather bureau at Chicago forecasts fair T veather in this locality.' Hence the cleaning of the snow from the field j esterday by the boys. T- There will be aerial stunts before 2, f d during the game. Major van Nostrand, cjqccutive officer of Fort 3 Omaha who i directing the big 2 rmy prograirt, announced I)riday J night hat permission for the stunt flying had been given. - T Ten parachutes will be prepared and placed in line for a race, with a fat man hanging on the rear end of each. and then let go a certain distance? The man holding on the longest and carriedthe farthest will be the winner. V f- . Threi Planes irt Action. There will be three planes in ac- i"ion. The flyers who will perform are Lieutenants Max Mills, Joseph t M. Shimmbn and Franklin W. GledhilJ, The Aviators will make m their first appearancei at 2:30 o'clock, when they will drop foot balls on the gridiron in mimic bombardment. ; The acrobatic flying will be put on v between the halve. In addition to r the individual stunt flying, Lieuten ants Gledhill and Shimmon will , cary on a sham duel in the air. A free balloon flight will take place at 2:20 o clock, the balloonists starting from the centerf the foot t hall field. They will rise to 10.000 feet, v Those who will make the flight are: Major Clarence Maran- ville, Captain Charles 'McCullough. , Lieutenants. D. A. Horning and George D. Kingsland and Mr. R. L. T Mdhurst, chief clerk at Fort Oma- ha. Lieutenant Kingsland will be the r pilot. . St. Paul Team at Fontenelle. 2 -The St. , Paul team will arrive in 2 Omaha this morning and will make - their headquarters at the Fonteneile hotel, v Latest reports indicate that ; the mechanic! are in the best of shape for th fray and ready to J smear "red" all over Omaha. , The strongest confidence of vic- tory exists on the part of Lieutenant j John G. McKay, Fort Omaha coach, and Lieutenant M. S. Halliday, coach of the visting team. Dr. "Joe" gReily of the Kansas City athletic dub will be referee. ,. Some of the stars that will bat- tie at Rourke park this afternoon are Warner, former varsity end on Michigan; Shepard, a star from Dar- mouth; Marshall, who figured on m the Brown eleve.i that crumbled Harvard and' Yale; and Chicken. captain, who is regarded as one f the fastest "semi-pros" in football Guttorser and Schumaker are two iboys built close to the ground and rot easily budged therefrom. Wil li liams figures in every game, either "smashing interferences or making the tackle. Game Starts Early. The game is called for -2:30 sharp. t,The lineup is: "St. Pul. ', . ...RE. ...R.T. ...R.O. ...c... ...UG. ...UT. I-K. . ...Q.B. R.H, ....f.b. Fort Omaha Welrlch Heafceth ., WTber ..... Reynold Froellch AncWson Lundberg . . Spang Faulk ..." Eurtaly .......... Klnf BRINGING UP FATHER Copyright. HIT Intern tlnnal "ws Service. Drawn for The Bee by George McManus HOVJ MANY TlME UbT I TELLXOU 0 PIPE bMOKINCi i THI HOUSE- ton,At oom- you dae LKiHT IT AVsiu- t EUPECT jvc tKf TMENTEO MEN ntrt I r 'J- oh: mow oo ."TOUDO-SlR. HOU LOOK UKE , O0O FELLOW BdT TOURE IN VRONc;' T IF tOU HfSO MET VIFE VTH THM" PPE INTOUrX HAND - HE WOULD r 1 1 i 1 - t-n i """"""""" t30 WHITE HOUSE TO FURNISH CHEF FOR OMAHA I C. Maker of Alice Roosevelt Longworth Wedding Cake to Make Pastries for Omaha Athletic Club. Though officials of the Athletic club are more than busy witji their preparations for the opening cele bration of the club, December 12-14. they are not forgetting the things that are to permanently make this club the best one in Omaha, and one of the best in the country. Manager L. L. Parker announced Friday morning that he had en gaged as head pastry cook foi the club the man who made the wed ding cake for the Alice Roosevelt- .Nicholas Longworth wedding. This talented pastry chef is now in Oma ha, an'd his engagement insures the tn .nbers of the club the choicest delicacies in this line. The word is also given out that the permanent entertainment com mittee is now making arrangentents with several of the world-renown artists to appear in Omaha before the members of the club. Caruso, Ignace Paderewski, Alma Gluck and -Schumann-Heink are some of the ijyrtists who will possibly appear, as 'well as lectures by some of the famous war correspondents on their experiences at the front. . The building is rapidly being put in shape for the big opening Decem ber 12 and 14. The carpet is prac tically all laid in the lounging rooms,, and the lobby is complete. J The membership committee also says that the limited membership will soon be exhausted, possibly be fore the opening night. During the past week a great many member ships have been taken out by south side commission men, both yearly and life. South Side Warner ... Jlatfhaw ... x (iuttornnen Shepard . . . Bchumaker Tooks . Vllli(fan Chicken . 2'XVlllam J Dennett . Aurora Overwhelms Fast Central City Acadamy Team J Aurora, Neb., Nov. 29. (Spec ial) In a brilliantly played game, the Aurora High school today de feated Central Cityxcademy on the home ground by a decisive score 2of 34to0.- J The local team played a fast game, making frequent long runs and never having their goal in dan J ger. Stafford of Aurora greatly aroused the enthusiasm, of the large I crowd of spectators by kicking goal Jfrom the 40 yard line.. In the games played this year, Aurora has teen .defeated but once and that by the I strong team of the York High ' school. v t Today's Calendar of Sports. lUclnr Winter meetlnc at Jefferson park. New Orleans. Winter meeting of Ouha-Aaieriran Jockey dob at Harana. , Wowllnf Opening of Chlcag titj ebam "ploiwhlp tournament. Athletic National A. A. IT. senior rrofts -country championship at New York City. New England A. A. V. croM-eountry J championship at Boston. : Lemon Extract Lands :t Indians in City Limbo t Six Indians were arrested about rnoon Friday at the Webster street - depot and are being held on charges siof intoxication. It is alleged that 'they were drunk from th effects of lemon extract There were also five 1 children in the party. ; Hard to Keep Lists Up. t Washington. Nov. 29-General Pershing cabled th.War depart ment today thatevery effort is be- ,ing made toeport promptly the complete record of casualties among .bis forces. Reports of deaths are forwarded by cable to Washington as rapidly as received, he said, but as the army is on the marcfi, there is increasing difficulty in checking casualty lists. German Armies Tire of Waiting for Trains and Start Home on Foot With the American Army of Oc cupation, Nov. 29. (By Associated Press.) General von Der Marwitz' Fifth army will begin to cross the Marne today. The crossing will require eight to nine days, accord ing to reports reaching here. The movement is being carried out by Jhree columns at points distant rom each other. ' Accordingto the German plan, 200,000 men will be quartered daily at Frankfort, but accommodations for but 30,000 daily have been pre pared. Congestion at- Treves is re ported. It was originally planned to move the troops toward Ger many by rail. At other points it is said that the railroads are unable to handle the extraordinary traffic and that thousands of troops are marching eastward after waiting days for trains. Apparantly theeGr- mans are endeavoring to withdraw as rapidly as possible. Copies of a proclamation by Field Marshal von Hindenburg urging German soldiers and civilians to receive allied troops with "resigna tion and courtesy" have appeared in villages opposite the American lines. Band Will Greet U. S. Men Returning from Hun Prison Camps Tours, Nov. 29. An American liner will , sail from a French port in a few days for Rotterdam, where it will take on board 96 American officers and 2,000 men who have been prisoners of war in Germany. They will be brought to France be fore beujg taken to America.. II T"- v it t Maj.-uen. james u. narnoara, head of the supply service of the American expeditionary forces, has directed that sufficient rations and ccthing be taken to Rotterdam and that the commissary department provide tobacco, canned goods. playing cards, toilet articles, soaps and towels, for issue to the prison ers. A sufficient number of, quarter master corps officers and men will go to Rotterdam to do everything possible tor tne men. A notable detail in the personnel will be a brass band, so that when the ship sails into Rotterdam the Americans waiting there will hear the "Star Spangled Banner" being played on the vessel sent to take the,ra away to freedom. Dual Monarchy Loses 800,000 Killed in War London, Nov. 29. Austria-Hun gary lost 4,000,000 killed and wound ed during the war. according to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen. Eight hundred thousand men were killed, including 17.000 officers. Ground was broken Friday at the stock yards to enlarge the accom modations for auto truck stock. The yardage capacity will be more than doubled and the unloading fa cilities will be made four times as great as they arc at present. The improvements will be completed be fore the first of the year. lhe present facilities were proven nadequate when the big run Tues day furnished conclusive evidence of the growing business of market ing stock by auto truck. There ere 175 auto truckloads brouR .t n. lhe receipts showed l,oi nogs, ifl cattle and 103 sheep. The marketing of live stock by auto truck has bten an aid to the government in saving freight. The trucks driven to the Omaha yards come from all pars ofthe state and from Iowa and Kansas. Stockmen Provide Dinners v for Needy in South Side Stockmen provided Thanksgiving dinner for 24 families Thursday when they donated the money to the South Side settlement with which the provisions were bought. The settlement provided roasts, po tatoes, sugar and coffee to the fam ilies who would have had no Thanksgiving dinner had they not received the food from the settle ment. The dinners were delivered Thursday afternoon. Clothing, which was collected at the schools and donated by the pu pils, was distributed among many families. ' . Louis Bans Bed Flag. announced today that the display of red flag at any public meeting in et Loins would not be tolerated. . Beaches Odessa. Kiev. Nov. 29, via Amsterdam. St. Louis, Nov. 29. Mayor KieM The British cruiser Agamemnon accompanied by French- and British torpedo . boats, arrived at Odessa on t XT 1 I INCREASE AUTO TRUCK YARDAGE AT STOCK YARDS Rapid Increase in Amount of Live Stock Brought to Mar ket in Motor Cars Shows ; Lack of Facilities. N Many Mouths "Water When Witness Samples Booze Sergeant Sheehan of the South Side police department qualified Fri day afternoon in Judge Sear's court as an expert witnes in identifying the contents of various bottles which were taken from the home of Peter Wzwiak. 4519 South Thirty-third street. The railing in front of tlie judge reminded court attendants of the back bars of institutions which were closed when the prohibitory law be came effective. In order to bring the evidence properly and legally before the jury, it was necessary to establish beyond doubt 'just what the bottles con tained. There was little doubt in the mind of the jury as to the con tents, but legally they contained nothing until the sergeant was placed on the witness stand to testify. "6an you tell what the contents of thfs bottle are without removing the cork?" asked City Prosecutor Murray, holding a quart bottle at arm's length. "I can not," replied the witness. "Can you tell what the contents of this bottle are if the cork should be removed?" was the next ques- tion- .... "I can," promptly replied the ser geant. . "In your best judgment what does this bottle contain?" continued the prosecutor. , "Whisky," the witness replied. Murray then removed the cork while the 12 good jurymen and true bent forward as one man. One of the jurymen adjusted his spectacles. Judge Sears looked over the top of hi glasses. Sergeant Sheehan de liberately tasted the contents of the bottle, thought a few seconds, just like a regular expert witness would do, and then' he replied that it was whisky. Another bottle went through a similar process, the contents' this time being adjudged as rock and rye, a concoction which has been said( to be efficacious in combating "What's in this bottle?" asked the prosecutor. "It looks like beer." r "Don't you know whether it is beer?" "I do not know." 1 Murray had to pull another cork, whereupon the expert witness tasted the contents and affirmed his suspicions that the bottle contained beer. The next bottle examined was said to contain whisky, according to the best knowledge and belief of the witness, but when the cork , was pulled and Sheehan took a sample, he testified thai the bottle contained wine. The sergeant ted half a dozen varieties of liquors and aroused the jealousy of some of the jurymen. - In making his opening statement to the jury Attorney Jamieson, for Wzwiak, declared that his client was in the Fontenelle hotel, paying his devoirs to "the general of the Polish army," when , the police en tered the Wzwiak home and confis cated, the' bottled goods which were on display in the courtroom. South Side Brevities Mrs. M. C. Horstraan of the Journal- Stockman la 111 with the Spanish Influ enza. W. O. West of Kansas Is the new super visor of markets at the stock yards, and will have charge of the stock yard service. Mrs. Mary Sewing, E432 South Thirty- sixth street, became violently Insane at her home Thursday evening and was taeen to the county hospital. win u uonners, an umana uee newsDoy, was held up by five colored boys Thurs day night at this corner of Twenty-sixth and Q streets and robbed of S3. In the struggle that followed O'Connors received 1 it Baby Elsie Irene died at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John F. Wels In Bellevue, Thursday morning. The fu neral will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the family residence, with interment In the Bellevue cemetery. M CROSS HEAD TELLS HOW CASH HAS BEEN SPENT Gould Dietz Submits Finan cial Report, Which Shows Organization Still Has $69,096 on Hand. Gould Dietz, chairman of the Omaha Chapter of the Red Cross, has just compiled a statement of the receipts and disbursements of the local chapter for the period from March S, 1917 to October 31, 1918 inclusive, a short summary of which follows: ASSETS. Cash on hand I , l" '' Cash In banks 22,323.49 Certificate of Deposit. Cash in hands of committee. Loans to Soldiers LIABILITIES. Subscriptions and collections Fund Drives as follows: Mooney Hanging Would Have Led to Revolt, , Julius 'Gerber Says New York, Nov. 291 A detail of police and a company of the provost guard were detailed last night to watch for a "partv of marinessail- ors and soldiers" reported to be on their way to break up a New York county socialist reception which was announced as a Thanksgiving cele bration of the Setting up of republics in Germany and Austria and was at tended by about 5,000 socialists. Whether a storm that prevailed or the threat of Police Commissioner Enright to use rigorous methods controlled the situation, the threat ened attack did r.ot materialize. Announcement of the commuta tion by Governor Stephens of .Cali fornia of Thomas J. Mooney's death sentence to life imprisonment was received with cheew by the social ists at the meeting. Hats were thrown in the air and the crowd sang the Marseillaise. A French sai lor and an American soldier, then led in the singing of "The Spr Spangled Banner." Julius Gerber, who made the an nouncement asserted that the com mutation was thej"esult of the threatened strike of protest against the execution which, he said, had "thrown fear into the hearts of the capitalists." He declared that the hanging of Mooney would have caused the "germ of revolution started in Europe to spread to the United States." Abolish Bolshevik Decree , Dividing Church and State Archangel. Oct. 20. The pro. visional government of the region of the north has abolished the de cree of the Bolshevik regime which separated, church and state and fin al disposition of the question has been left until an all Russian legis lative power has been established. Meanwhile the expenses of main taining churches and other religious institutions will b : pa:d by the var ious religoius corporations. The government has abolished the Murman soviet and re-established the zemstvoi W. W. Ermoloff has been appointed assistant gov ernor general to adminisetr theh districts of Kem and Alexandrovsk. 1st 2d Subscriptions ..$257,429.69 ,.. 442.1H.2J Collections S2S3.339.1S ' 414,601.25 40,000.00 . 7,398.82 6S.00 169,898.81 In War Bal. Un collected f 4,090.(1 27,614.97 White Star Line Loses Ten Big Vessels in v Course of World War New York, Nov. 29. Ten large steamships, aggregating 180,379 gross tons,-were lost by the -White Star line during the war, it was learned here today. Among these were the Britannic, 48,158 gross tens, torpedoed in the Aegean se in 1916, shortly after its completion, while in British government service as a hospital ship. , Other White Star liners lost were the Juticia, 32,234 tons; Oceanic, 17,274; Arabic, 15,801; Laurentic, 14, 892; Cymric, 13,370; Afric, 11,999; Georgic, 10,077; Cevic, 8,3.01; Del phic, 8,273. War losses of the Atlantic Trans port line were five ships, totaling 61,665 (tons, and of the Red Star line, one ship.the Southland, 11,899 tons. SS99.S4S.91 ' S667.940.43 (31.609.4S Net receipts and disbursements: ' Disburse Receipts rnents General Fund..... 3186,102.86 S106.106.2S Relief Fund 11,698.98 185,666.06 War Fund ... 667,940.43 503,973.12 S865.642.24 3795,745.43 Balance In Funds ... 3 69,896.81 Among the larger Items of disbursement are the following: ' Military Relief Supplies I 71,915.99 Military Relief Knitting 46,266.08 Dependents of soldiers and sailors 23,100.44 W. O. McAdoo. Treas. National Society of the American Red Cross ...600.000.01 The figures of the report have all been verified both as regards cash on hands and certificates of deposit fjront the various banks. As soon as they can be prepared the heads of the various departments" of the Omaha Chapter will submit reports of all work done during the war period. - Wilson's, Peace Trip , is Unconstitutional, Says Missouri Lawyer - Montgomery, Mo., Nov. 29. The victory meeting at the court house yesterday almost ended in a furr when Claude Bell, a. lawyer, de clared ituinconstitutional for Presi dent Wilson to make the peace trip, and that as soon as the presi nent smarted on the mission the courts should mandamus Vice Presi dent Marshall to accept the presi dency. There were 1,500 persons attending the meeting and more than half left when Bell made the state ment v Teuton Revolutionists Damage Airplanes to Be Gven to Entente Basel, Switzerland,' .Nov. 29. One hundred and fifty airplanes, which had been gathered at the Boeblingen airdrome, 11 miles southwest of Stuttgart, to be handed over to the allies in accordance with the provisions of the armistice, have been rendered useless by order ot the revolutionary committee, ac cording to a Suttgart dispatch re- ceivedjhere. Hoover Confers on Food Problems wittr Cornmittee of Frencjj Paris, Nov? 29. On his arrival in Paris vesterday from London, Her bert C. Hoover, American food ad ministrator, had conferences on the food problem with a committee of French experts and Victor Boret, French minister of provisions. Mr. Hoover was accompanied from Lon don, where he arrived several days ago from the United States, by Hugh S. Gibson, first secretary , of the American embassy there. FEAR INCREASE TUBERCULOSIS AS FLURESULT National Association Presents Five Rules1 to Observe to Ward of the Dread Disease. New York, Nov. 15. Fearing a rapid rise in the death rate from i tuberculosis, as a result of the in fluenza epidemic, the National Tuberculosis association has issued a special statement warning the pub lie of the danger. Experience in previous epidemics has clearly indi cated, the association points out, that the death rate from tuberculosis may be expected to be increased by at lea-s 10 per cent within the next two years as a result of the present epidemic, unless proper precautions ; are taken. Influenza, it is stated, greatly reduces one's physical vitat-" ity and. lowers one's resistance to disease. This opens the way for tuberculosis. The surest ways to prevent tuber culosis as a result of influenza are summarized by the association as gone. 1. Stop working and go to bed im mediately. Do not resume vwork until the attack of influenza is all follows: 2. Have nothing to do with paten! medicines or drug store "treatment" Put yourself under a doctor's care at once and continue under his care un til cured. 3. Have your doctor examine you thoroughly to see if any signs of tuberculosis are present. You can not tell without an -expert examina tion. 4. If free from any trace of tuber culosis, keep so by sufficient rest during convalescence, and careful living then and afterwards. 5. If your "cold" hangs on, or there are other indications of tuber culosis, begin medical treatment without a moment's delay. Alaskans Dine on Game Birds That Are Rare Here Nenana, Alaska, Nov. 4. Ptarmi gan stew, long absent from its cen tral place on Alaska, tables, prob ably soon will return to its import ant place on the territorial bill of fare. Reports received here said the game birds are coming back to their old haunts in the hills and tun dra after a1 lengthy unexplained ab sence. The birds were reported disappear ing last spring. , In several parts of Alaska the absence of the ptarmigan worked a harship on whites and na tives, many of whom make the birds fneir chief dish at times. Gen. Johnson Wounded -in Action in Argonne New York, Nov. 29. Brig Gen. Evan M. Johnson, whose name ap pears in the casualty list as severe ly wounded, was in command of the One Hundred and Fifty-fourth Bri gade infantry of the Seventy-seventh division. He was in the thick of the fighting in the Argohne for est. General Johnson is 56 years oM, and a veteran of the Spanish war and the Philippine campaign. !WlL Hotel fontenelle TEA DANCES I Saturday Afternoons, 4 to 6 ' SUPPER DANCES ... 2a Monday and Saturday Evenings, 11 to 12:30 lOcCHILDRENS'DAY-lOc Saturday POULTRY SHOW Bring the Boys and Girls - Open Till 10 P. M. ADULTS 25 CENTS 0 Many Kinds of Rheumatism One Sxire Mode of Treatment Authorities Say Don't Use Lin'fy kow what Rheumatism is. Ex-Emperor Charles Told by Government He Must Leave Austria Copenhagen, Nov. 29. Former Emperor Charles has been informed by the government at Vienna that he must leave Austria because of the counter revolutionary 'move ment there, according to a Liepsic dispatch to the Politiken. Enemy Alien Escapes by Leaping from Train El Paso. Tex.. Nov. 29. Wolf gang Thiele, enemy alien, being transferred from Fort Bliss to Fort Douglas, Utah, leaped from a mov ing train at Los Cerrillos, N. M., yes terday and secaped in the darkness. Thiele and another prisoner were in charge of a squad of soldiers, who continued their jorney after notifying the sheriff of Santa Fe county, in which! the escape oc curred. Headache Depression FROM KIDNEY DISORDERS Headaches and depression may be due to several causes. Perhaps yours mystifies you? Maybe kid ney and bladder disorders is the cause? If so, you surely want re lief and restoration. Indiscretions in eating and drink ing bring on such troubles very gradually, sometimes at other times quickly. will bring the desired benefit if such symptoms are present as these! If the secretion that passes is highly colored, strong of odor, insufficient or too copious, followed by pain, burning, irritation, smarting, etc. If chills or fever come and go, if the head aches, the eyes burn and rheu matic pains, general discomort and nervousness besiege you7 Babnwort Kidney Tablets ARE NEEDED BY .YOU. Not a secret, not new, just right and true. Sold by all druggists. PHOTO-PLAYS This Wis How Many Men in the Different--Units of Yankee Amty Here is some information that is helpful in reading the war news: An army corps is 185,000 men. An infantry division is 27,152 men. A brigade is 8,442 men. A regiment of infantry is 3,77f men. A battalion is 1.026 men. Accompany is 256 men. , A platoon is 60 men. , A corporal's squad is 8 men. ' A field battery is 195 men. A firing, squad is 20 men. A machine gftu battalion has 76ft men. Anv engineers regiment has 1,666 men. An , ambulance company has 91 men. A field hospital has 55 men. A medical detachment has:t 58 men. A major general heads the Meld army and also each army corps. - A brigadier general neaas eacn -infantry brigade. ' . A colonel heads each regiment. A lieutenant colonel is next io rank below a colonel. A major beads a, battalion. A camajn heads a company. (' A lieutenant heads a platoon. ".A sergeant is next below a lieu tenant. - A corporal is a squad officer. LOTHROP CORRINE GRIFFITH In "THE GIRL OF THE DAY" BIG "V COMEDY 24th tad Lothrop BOULEVARD ,33d an Lsavmworth WILLIAM S. HART In "SELFISH YATES"- UVVVVUfW - Presents Mattiiiertle ak "Out of a Clear Sky" ALL WEEK First Time in City "DOUG" FAIRBANKS "He Comesilp Smiling" And James Montgomery Flagg Comedy. "TELL THAT TO THE MARINES." iments. Treat It Through the Blood. You Can't Rub It Out! Whether your trouble is Sciatica, Lumbago or the dreaded Articular Rheumatism, the answer is the same. You must treat it through the blood. That is the only way to rid the system of uric acid, purify the blood and revitalize the nerves. If -the blood is freed from impuri ties, Rheumatism must go. This in short is the exact knowledge gained by the research laboratories of the S. S. S. Co.. in Atlanta. Their tests .have been ; made for fifty years. ml . l. tm . M .a iney Know mat s. is. s., the re markable blood tonic, which they originated, will relieve you of rheu matism. Take S. S. S. today. The complete recovery of thousands of sufferers by the use of S. S. S. is positive proof that you can be re lieved. S. S. S.is a blood tonic a purifier that restores the blood, revitalizes it, cleanses it, makes it pure as it was before it became pois oned with impurities. , S. S. S. gives it strength to drive out these impur ities the-uric acid and organic poison an" with it the Rheumatism. Get S. S. S. at your druggist's. If you need special advice, write Med ical Adviser, 446 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta. Ga. Adv. . Matte v.- 1 r if GIRLL i '. M I Ta. m M. J f PICKFORD j II EAGLE'S 1 ! AMC8EMENT9 TODAY S:30 TONITE SB llu.lral ruaMflw FousrJld sa fits. Ads's Callm Wldoa." FOUR NIGHTS, BEG. SUNDAY Matinee Wsdnssd.y WILLIAM HODGE In His Ntwtst Triumph ' "A Cure for Mies" Popular Mat. Wednesday Best Seats, $1.00. liOYD Thun., Frl, Sat, Hit. Sat. Bttt Suit, II. M Sun Monday MAIL 0RDER8 NOW . OLIVER M0R0SC0 Prwott wiiiiBii With FLORENCE ROCKWELL Prion SDe, 75c, 11.00 ir.S Phone 494 . Superior Vaudeville ' Last Two Time FLORIE MILLERSHIP end CHAS. O'COrifJOR GLADYS CLARK end , HENRY BERGMAN -AND CURRENT BILL MATINEE TODAY 2:15 .-. Esrlr Curtain Tonlfht at 8. Next Week "Whrs Things Hep pan" Mrs. Thomas Whlppen and Exeat. Unt Bill. Today Mat. 2ilS I 'Evm. 8:1S Last Two Times - ' Ths World' Greatest Entertainment 14 Symphony Orchsatre M Wonderful Effect Dally Mats, 28c, 50c, 7Se and ft Every Evening, 25c, SOc, 7Se, Sl.OO, $1. SO. December 1, 2, 3, 4 Matinee Wednesday COHAN & HARRIS Present the) FUNNIEST AMERICAN COMEDY OF RECENT YEARS J PIAUU. W JU AV aV HARRY JAMtSSHJTH Night. 25c to $2.00. Mat., 25c to 1J0 k fay 1 M Bv TWO SHOWS IN ONE EDWARD E8MONDE A CO. In "THI TROPVILLC RECRUIT "OMAHA'S FUN CENTER" tOl-mngrtlJ3 Mat., 15-25rS0e 4PCCJJif7Evga., 25c-BOo75c-$l 1 Those Two Cheerful Idiots, Al. K. Hallfr & Bobby Birry r MAIDS OF AMERICA b'. American Made Beauty Chorus of Maids. LADIES' DIME MATINEE WEEK DAYS. PLUNKETT ffeOMAINC "TWO BOSTON BEANS" WIESSER & REESER "TAN TOWN FOLLIES" 1 ( X. . OAIY'S ; TANGLED ' ARMY Mllaxloe Mill'. r tary Nowlty. ETHEL ' BARRYMORK "Our Mrs. -McOisiaty" ' 8rMs vtriloa el ' Edas Firbsr! famous (tarlee.