THE JJKE: UMAHA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1919. SHADOWED MAII THINKS POLICE COLIE TOO OFTEN Worker on Coal Wagon Says He Was. Visited by Thir teen Detectives, Each Flourishing Gun. Climbing off a ,coal wagon. A. L. Willoughby came into The Bee of iice and said, "I want some one ta set me right in this deal. I've got some relatives in and around Oma ha that might gtt frightened when they read the articles about me be ing arrested. Jjressed in overalls and jumper covered with coal dust, Willoughby asked, "Do I look like a bank rob ber?" He looked anything but a tank robber to say the least. A lit tle indignant and somewhat amused. Willoughby told the story of his arrest. Five detectives called af his house about 7 o'clock Mondav eve ning and talked to him a little while. They left and in a little while there were 13 callers, each of them with a gun and three of them with two guns apiece, all drawn. One of them remarked, ""'I guess we gat you, kid, this time," and others used some more rough talk. Even then they left without a prisoner but an hour or so later, four of them came back and said they'd have to take him down to the station. Later Sent Home. . Arriving at the station, the offi cers put Willoughby in a room with fi.me police official and they went into another rom. Then after some questioning on the part of the "offi cial, the officers came back in and discussed the matter some more, winding up by sending for an auto and sending Mr. Willoughby home in it, when it was discovered he was arrested without a warrant. Today, Willoughby is being "shadowed" wherever he goes, caus ing him no little inconvenience. His Nfriends a:'S hailing him with "Hello Bankrobber" and other terms are used in "kidding" him' about it. If Willoughby is a bank robber, he is also a "camouflage" artist, for no one would ever suspect him of hid ing a little thing like $30,000, away. The inconvenience started, when the sheriff at Mena. Ark., wired the Omaha police that a bank ,had been robbed near there and $30,000 re moved. One of the robbers was sup posed to have come to Omaha where he has a friend at 519 South Eight eenth street and advising that the r I I J tit H t -I . . menu ue snauoweu. me uc na tives misunderstood the telegram and after two calls ar this address, finally arrested Mr. , Willoughby, who lives there and was probably heaving coal when the bank robbery took place. Wants "Guys" Called Off. Willoughby declared that if the police thought he was a bank thief or connected with them in any way, they didn't have to wait for extradi tion papers, but just furnish him with the fare and he'd go to Arkan sas and, prove .his innocence. He said "I wish they'd get the real rob bers and call tl'ese guys off of me. I'm getting ti,d of having s'omeone tagging around after me when Ijgo to deliver a load of coal." It annused the suspected bank thief to think of the officers, thir teen of them, all pulling guns on him.. Three of them having two guns each made it 16 guns held on him while they talked. Chateau-Thierry Hero Married Two Days After Receiving His Discharge War and romance seem to be in separably linked. Thus it is that Wjlliam Ralph Wade who has seen nearly a year of active fighting in France and who was wounded in the Chateau-Thierry engagement, was married to Miss Marie Berg of Oma hat at Minneapolis just two days aft er receiving his discharge at Camp Dodge. They are happily estab lished in their new home at 2f415 Qpitol avenue. Mr. .Wade before his discharge v.5s corporal in company C, Twenty thirc? infantry, second division. He enlisted on April 19 and left for France from HobokeA September 6, 1917. After a training spell of six months Mr. Wade's company was ordered to aid in. holding the Verdun sector. Here Mr. Wade went over the top tvice before he succeeded in getting his boche. In the latter part of May he was transferred to the Chateau-Thierry front' , "I was here untill June 29, under constant shell fire," he said. Mr. Wade was wounded while pa troling this sector. He lay in a shell i . f i . t i i f - L : n jie ior auoui iu uours Dcjurc uciug picked up by the stretcher bearers ar.d taken to a dressing station. . He was invalided home November 11 and 'discharged at Camp Dodge ox January 16. Two days later he was married. 11 is now seeking a position in Omaha. ' - Lieut. George R. Bierman is Back from "Over There" L't. George R. Bierman, former city ticket agent for the Union Fa cile and later chief clerk in the Chi cago offices is home from four and one-half months of oversea service as a member of the Blackhawk di vision. Last July Mr. Bierman en tered the 'army as a private and re turns as a lieutenant. While he had no part in the fighting, he was on the move to the front and when the aimist'ce was signed, was 20 miles frcm the.firing line. He was close enough so that he heard the roar of tie big guns. - A I ft X ft K!J. ImaIIma for Automcbila "Accident M3rie F. Kafleft has filed a dam age action in district court against Arthur E. Keeline, petitioning for ?23,C0O damages on account of an automobile accident which occurred at Twenty-eighth and Farrum streets during the evening of Janu ary 11, , Another damage suit in connec tion v.-i;h the same accident was for ?i0,0CO. i "PHOTO riAY. OFFERINGS FOT2. TODAY " AFTER a two tnonths' vacation, Constance 'Talmadge returns again to the screen in a new and tascinating comedy drama, "A Lady's Name," which will be the booking at the Strand theater and for the remainder of this week. The scenario is written from the play by the same name by Cyril Harcourt. Effervescent Miss Tadmadge ap pears in the role of a young woman novelist not the short-haired be spectacled type, but a buoyant, whimsical soul who, in the search for literary material, gets herself en gaged to a butler, through the me dium of advertising for a husband in the daily papers. How she finally works out of the engagement into the arms of the man who loves and wishes to marry her is a confusing and amusing series of events that holds plenty of laughs for an audi ence and much clever acting on the part of the star. Anna Case, well known prima donna, makes her bow to American motion picture audiences this month in her first screen effort "The Hidden Truth." In the play she por trays the part of a dance hall girl in a western mining town and later as a member of society in New York. It is quite a step. from the opera, but Miss Case seems to have proven that she can act as well as sing from all reports comitfg as to the picture. . 1 "The Talk of the Town," the at traction at the Brandeis theater for the. remainder of this week, is a direct wallop at parents who bring their children up to be prudes and in too strict seclusion. Harold Bell Wright's novel, "The Shepherd of The Hills," with a photo-play is shown jn ten reels and forms an evening's entertain ment, being the attraction at the Brandeis theater all next week. Kitty Gordon says of "Adele," in which she appears at the, Muse next week, "It is the finest picture I have ever done," an opinion which is borne out by Robert Brunton of the Brunton Studios, Los Angeles, who states ."the star is happy in her role, the story is strong, the supporting players the most versa- - AT THE THEATERS WILLIAM FAVERSHAM and Maxine Elliott, at the head of a specially organized com pany, will open a week-end engage ment at the Boyd this evening, pre senting "Lord and Lady Algy." Mr. F.-versham has been seen here in this, play, but never with Miss Elliott.- The cambination, formed last season, was remarkably successful in New York,' where the good old comedy was revived and proved a wonderful drawing card. Request for seats here indicate that the stars and the play are locally quite pop ular. ' Three of the subordinate acts this week at the Orpheum score individ ual hits. One is the singing and piano feature, "bright bits of mirth and melody," ottered by Florence Merritt and Gaby Bridewell. An other is the pantomime clowning of Reno, and yet another is Officer L Yokes with Don, . the inebriated canine. Headline attractions are the spectacular melodrama, "On the High Seas" and the most effective teller of humorous stories on the vaudeville stage, Wa.lter C. Kelly. An entire change of program greets. Empress patrons today, the vaudeville program being headlined by Daisy Dugas and Variety Four in a singing number. The, three Portia Sisters introduce feats never before attempted by women. Billy Grelet in banjo, songs and Stories and McCormick and Wallace in a comedy singing and talking number completes the program. Shades of Shakespeare or who ever wroe "Cleopatra 1" if b could but have known in what a ludicrous manner Fred Irwin's Big Show would burlesque his work surely he never would have written itl The travesty is but one of the many rich portions of the entertainment at the Gayety this week. It is placed way down at the close of the program so that auditors are unable to fin.sh laughing until they are well out of the theater and homeward bound. Ladies' matinee daily. j Live Stock Commission ' Man Sued for Divorce Clarence Kirkpatrick, member of the live stock commission firm of Kirkpatrick Brothers, has been sued for divorce by Minnie Kirkpatrick. The wife's petition in district court states that they were married in Pa pillion, May 22, 1915, and that she has been deserted without cause or provocation. She asks for decree of divorce, custody of a 2-year-old son and reasonable alimony. Mrs. Kirk patrick states that her husband earns $500 a month and has "mean and vicious habits." Mrs. J. W.Gannett is Dead;7 ' Funeral Services Friday Mrs. J. W. Gannett, 70 years of age, died at her home, 100 South Thirty-second avenue, Wednesday. She is survived "by her son, E. W. Gannett The funeral will be held at 2 n. m. Friday at the residence, Rev. E. H. Jenks officiating. Inter ment at Forest Lawn cemetery. J: !. -' JmnpsiiT&R k RilitMt Rnlr for COUGHS, COLDS - SORE THROAT , a An lrvtii -J- On the Screen Today STRAND CONSTANCE TALMADOB In "A LADY'S NAME." BIN WILLIAJT FARNUM In TOR FREEDOM.". EI Al.TO CECIL DC MILLS'S In THB SWAW MAN," BRANDEiS DOROTHY PHILLIPS III "THB TALK OF THE TOWN." Ml SB MAE MURRAY la "DANGER, OO BLOW." EMPRESS BERT LTTELt In "HIT-, TIN THB HIGH SPOTS." GRAND 16th and Blnoy PEOOT HYLAND In -CAUUHT IN THB ACT." St HI RBAV 2th and Ames WILL IAM RUSSELL In "ALL THB WORLD TO NOTHING." ORl'IlKUM South Side, 24th and M GABY DE8LYS In "INFATUA TION." HAMILTON 40th and Hamilton LOU1SB GLAUM In "AN ALIEN ENEMY LOTH HOP 14th and Lothrop CON 8TANCB TALMADOB In "MRS. LEFFINGWELL'S BOOTS." tile on the coast, the photography and lighting first class in every detail and a small fortune was ex pended in supplying lavish scenic effects." - Mme. Alia Nazimova, who will appear in the last of her three big productions under her comract with Metro, "An -Eye For an Eye," at the Rialto next week, has just been signed op for another series, the new list to include six pictures. The first of her next series will be "The Red Lantern." . Bert Lytell wfll be seen at the Empress theater, for the last three days of the week in "Hitting the High Spots." The story was writ ten by Mr. Lytell himself and con tains adventure, suspense and ro mance. The finish of the' story is satisfactory in every detail. Mae Marsh likes nothing better than to putter around the kitchen of her home in Los Angeles, and she enjoys making jams and jell ies besf of all. Knowing this, and being fond of the shy star, the gardener at the Goldwyn studios commandeered the crop of figs he has been guarding all season and presented them to Miss Marsh in a basket. Now she is letting her friends taste some of what Mabel Normand calls "fig jamboree." Prominent Historian to Give Ten Lectures on Peace Problems A series of eight to' ten lectures on some of the major peace prob lems confronting the world at the present time, will be delivered in the Central High school by Dr. Guernsey Jones of the history de partment, University of Nebraska, one of the best authorities on in ternational affairs in this country. These lectures, which will touch topics such as dissolution of Rus sia, the bolsheviki menace, what's up in Ireland, the peace congress, England's rule in India and others, are not only for the. pupils and teachers of the Omaha schools, but also for the public in general.- An admission fee of $2 will be charged for the entire courst of eight to 10 lectures. The first lecture dealing'with the dissolution of Russia, will be held Tuesday at 4 p. m. at the Central High school jftuditorium. All in quiries regarding ,ithese. . lectures should be directed to Mrs. Ada J. Atkinson at the Central High school. Gould Dietz Sells Lots on Farnam for Big Advance in Price The first sale of Omaha real es tate, for investment purposes, of any consequence in several months was made Tuesday, when Gould Dietz sold a frontage of 72 feet, 2205-7-9 Farnam street, running through, to Harney, to J. F. Flack. The consideration was approx imately , mm. Harry Wolf made the sale. v This property was purchased by Mr. Dietz in 1903 'for $16,000. He purchased at that time a total of 240 front fret and reports that this sale netted him more money than his original investment. He 're tains 168 front feet A one-story garage fronting Farnam street is the only building on the property purchased by Mr. Flack. The Harney street front is vacant Mr, Flack has no plans for improving the property at the pres ent time, but will build for a suita ble tenant. "TIZTOH TIHED AI!B SOKE FEET U "Tu" for puffed-up, burning, aching, calloused feet and corns. UsaTiZ" Why go limping around with ach ing, puffed-up feet feet so tired, chafed, sore and swollen you can hardly get your shoes on or off? Why don't you get a 25-cent box of "Tii" from tha drug store now and gladden your tortured feet? "Tiz" makes your feet glow with comfort; takes down swellings and draws tha soreness and misery right out of feet that chafe, smart and burn. "Tiz" instantly stops pain in corns, callouses and bunions. "Tiz" is glorious for tired, aching, sore feet No more shoe tightness no more foot troubles. Adv. ,;q- .... LACK HELD FOR HELPiiiG mm FLEE FRO". II0L1E Special Officer Charged With Taking One Hundred Dollars . for Release of Two Inmates. Jesse Black, negro, special officer stationed at the Women's Detention hrfspital, Twenty-second street and St. Mary's avenue, has been arrested on a charge of bribery in connec tion with the escapes of inmates of the institution. The specific information that has been filed against him by the county attorney charges him with soliciting $100 for the release of Gladys Thompson and Emma Brown dur ing November. The Thompson woman did escape. Details of the affair furnished to the county attorney by the police are that .Black asked for $100 and was given a note by Mrs. Thompson to her husband, George Thompson, 709 North Eighteenth street. When Black called on Thompson the. lat ter is said to 'have given the caller $50. Held in Jail. Black is held at the city jail for ap pearance in court on Friday morn ing. His bond has been fixed at $2,000. He stated that he is ready for trial. . Mr. Thompson has been in con ference with Chief of Police Eber stein. Next Friday will be movintr day for the Women's Detention hospital. It will be moved from the handsome, spacious old Woolworth mansion at Twenty-second and St. Mary's . av enue to the old county jail building, Eleventh and Dodge streets. Jail Renovated. The jail building has been under going renovation and is now spic and span from top to bottom. But it is a jail with cement floors and barred .windows instead of a hand some home like the present quarters. It is in a far less pleasant neighbor hood than the Woolworth property, which consists of a handsome home set in the midst of a large yard. The first floor of the old jail build ing will be used as a living room by the inmates. On the second and third floors are the dormitories' fur n:rhe.d with double-deck iron beds. On the fourth floor are the kitchen and dining room. Police Commissioner Ringer says. he believes the women will l'ke it. "Only a very trifling percentage of those confined in the hospital do n jt like it," he said. "One girl,. Alice, who broke her leg in trying to es cape the first day she was there likes the place so well now that her only worry is that she will have to leave when she is Curtd." Omahan is Given Important Position With Government Guy A. Collard, agency manager of the- Equitable Life Assurance society in Omaha, has been called to Washington to a accept a position with the buftau of war risk insurance. He will leave Monday o take up his new duties. Every Month of 1918 Broke the Record of Preceding Months THE DWIKERS RESERVE L COMJY Home 1 Gain in Assets, $823,886.83 Paid to Policyholders, $657,070.89 Pays Greater Dividends Than Any Company y Total Assets, 08,233,844.40 Legal Reserve, $6,379,281.00 OUSIHESS LARGEn TIIAIl EVER BEFORE III COMPANY HISTORY ('. ; ;.'.; Op Jratihg in 25 tate- v Constantly Expanding Open for a Few First Class Field Men : ' - - 'Excellent Territory ; THE BATHERS RESERVE LIFE CO. , ; . Robert L. Robison, President.! Walter G. Preston, Vice President. James R. Farney, Vice President . Ray C. Wagner, Secretary-Treasurer. "VIRTUOUS WIVES" SrS CHAPTER III. At the age of 12, two years after "the death of her mother, her father, in a moment of poignant affection, had said to Amy: "Whatever you wish in this world, my little girl, tell me. You shall have it." Of how deeply her first season had cut into his capital, she had not the slightest concep tion. Her aunt had never inter posed an objection to her whim, Whatever she wanted, she bought for shopping was such fun. "Quito is ready for his order, madam. A- trim young Japanese, in white pique, wobbled in, smiling. Ihe blue eyes of Mrs, Forrester assumed an expression of " appropriate srravitv. "We'll be two at luncheon." she said, frowning with the intensity of the mental effort involved. I here was a pause. "Bouillon some fishy?" She nodded and said firmly. "Yes then after the fish a filet mignon." "How?" "Oh, with" She came to a full stop. "Just fix it up in some nice way and get whatever's best in fresh vegetables. Then some sort of a salad and a dessert the kind you made yesterday. And, Quito, we'll be going away over Sunday." A long pause. "Get whatever's neces sary for the kitchen. Quito disappeared, smiling his toothv. Oriental smile, while Mrs. Forrester, these fatiguing housthold duties accomplished, returned'to her reveries. She felt that she had nothing to do. The third month of her mar ried life found her restless and be wildered, and if to Andrew their marriage seemed the resolution of all his perplexities, to her it appeared as the opening of all her problems The sensation of being abandoned, isolated, and alone possessed her completely in the gorgeous apart ment ot which her hands had not chosen a single bit of furniture. Only Half Nearest '. Sufferers' Fund . Obtained Thus Far Only SO per cent of the $$3,000 pledged by the Advertising and Sell ing league for Douglas county, has as yet been raised and plans for a more aggressive campaign were made by the captains of the drive at the Henshaw today. - Mr. C. L. Sykes, chairman of the local Armenian relief drive stated that although the people of Omaha eemed willing to make the contribu tions there were not enough solici tors to see the people and get their contributions. He also st?.ed that Omaha business men were not re sponding with contributions suffi ciently large. , Strike Ends. Havana, Jan. 22. The strike of the employes of the United, Western and Havan? Central, railways is at an end and- traffic is expected to be resumed at once with increases in wages of i20 per cent for men earning less than $60 a month and IS per cent for those earning more Office, Omaha, Nebraska (Copyright, 181S, by LlttU, Browa ft Co,)" Everything had been prepared for her coming, even in her bedroom, from the thick golden carpet f the crowded knick-knacks on the man tel, even to the marvel of panne velvet and chinchilla which wrapped her little body all had been chosen for her. At times, it gave her a feeling of discomfort as though there were something im moral in ber accepting all this luxury. Yet she had been wrought up to consider herself an object of lux ury and all her eaucatiorf had tended to enhance this value. Every responsibility had been carefully spared her. All her life she had been petted and spoiled and for bidden to graw up. Andrew had but followed her father and Uncle Tom Andrew, who adored to snatch her up from the ground and swing her to his shoulder. She smiled pensively as she re called the first time it happened. They were in the old English gar den, under the crooked cherry tree, the second day of their engagement That morning, she bad been full of doubts and hesitations, yes, even of terror, as she walked by his side and watched him, wondering what force had bent her to this stranger who had descended into her life with such imperious conquest. All at once he had laughed and swung her to his shoulder, and, in the sen sation of riding so lightly, so se curely, all her questionings had van ished. This must be the buoyant force to carry"her slightly indolent nature out and up into the great world of pleasant happenings. When she thought of her husband even now, she thought of herself above' his shoulder, crried lightly along, looking down at his eyes, which grew young as a boys as they turned to her in pride and adoration. She smiled again, per suading herself that there was something symbolic about it whet marriage should be. . "Madame is taking three evening towns?" said Morley, returning. She rew a peignoir over her young mis tress's shoulders, brushing out the long mole-colored hair that, in its undulations, had certain faint violet tints. "The Dellabarre s is a fine house. They do a lot of dressing there. Chilton is a very smart place, . , ' J! lot ot doio ana eenuemen riding. Thev do drink like lords. I was at Chilton three years with Mrs. unai- loner. She is quite the iashionabie beautv. thoueh her hips are bad, but she getsover that very wll with these new corsets. Mrs. Chal loner and Mrs. Dellabarre are great friends, though they do fight over a man like panthers. Mrs. Challoner is a beast to serve, though. I gave notice when she threw a water jug at the second man. and a pretty oennv it cost the master, too, hush 1UK 11 up. xic s a uc.ai, iuy uui oi, handles him!' Little Mrs. Forrester was not listening to these revelations about the beautiful-Mrs. Challoner. whom a foreien nortrait painter, before pre senung nis oiu, uau pruiiuuiiicu uic most perfect blond in America. She was still in the past. How had it happened? . She had passed through her first season without time for any other emo tion but the appetite for changing pleasures ana njuiipie sensations. She had been surfeited with too much success. Her physical self had of Equal Resource Owen Johnon't Sparkling So- which it making ia tha moviai. finally rebelled at the demands un on it; and, as her nature was neither cold nor calculating, as she had from her home a genuine love of simple things, of nature, and a true kindliness of heart, in 'reviewing the record of the winter, she had asked herself frankly what it had all been worth and where it would lead her. She had felt in her a conflict of na tures one whirling her back into this maelstrom of luxury, selfish ness, and of pleasant vanities, and tne otner recoiling betore the in evitable conclusion. Andrew had come; a force beyond her reasoning had swept her orT her feet. tier deeper nature had seen in him a sign of providence. Marriage to him had seemed the opportunity to live to the fullest, to concentrate the best that was in her, to escape from the dangerous current of adulations and flattery which awaited her on her return a danger she was young enough to recognize. What troubled her now was that it was all so dif ferent from what she had imagined. Her husband was as great a stranger to her as the day he had met her. "Really, I must do something. I must talk to him and make him un derstand." Y-it what she wanted him to un derstand was hazy in her own mind. There was something wrong. Whose fault was it? Hers or his? "Mrs. Dellabarre isn't as hand some as Mrs. Challoner, but she makes more show. Mrs. Dellabarre has very fine taste," continued Mor. ley; "she gives out for 26, but she must be a year or two closer than that." He's getting on to 50. Mrs. Dellabarre ain't maternal. Her mar riage was suite a surprise, they do say. Every one had figured her out for Mr. Bracken Mr. Monte, that is." She rambled on, detailing bits of gossip, painting the society of the younger married set from the piti less knowledge of the servant world. Amy listened, wondering. It seemed to her that another life lay ahead which was for her to choose, a life of contending vanities, of unceas ing rounds of pleasure, wherein she found again all the returned appe tite of her season of the year be fore. Yet, as she was a creature of moods and her moods changed rapidly, already, as she thought of the coming visit, she was surprised at the feeling of zest which came to her, a feeling of well-being per meating all her senses. At this moment Fifi Nordstrum burst into the room and precipi tated herself into her arms, almost upsetting the chaise longue in the ardor of her embrace. (To Be Continued Tomorrow) After each meal VOU cpt one pATORJBC and get full food value and real stom ach comfort. Inataotly relieves fceart bnra, fcloafetf, gassy feeling, STOPS acidity foci repeating and stomach misery. AIDS digestion; keeps the rtomach sweet and pure. JSATONIC U th bwl ranedraod only eottt t emit or two a d7 to w it Yon will b de lighted with naolu. Satisfaction tuuutttt r money back. Fleue call and trr It Shernua McConnell Dru Co.. 6 Buir Stores, Omaha. ARE YOU A FIQHTER? Or, Are You a Fatalist? Let Every Citizen Fight Dis ease. Never Surrender. The Big Gun of Defease la Cadomene Tablet Tonic. What class suffered most from the epidemic of influenja? Au thorities everywhere agree that those in a temporary state of "low vitality" made up the major portion of fatalities. If you are a fatalist, you will not believe in preparedness, but if you are a "fighter" you will see the wis dom of keeping your body and ner vous system stromr so that dilease will not find fertile soil in which to carry on its ravages. Medicine rightly used at the neht time is like the "Big Guns in War." If your vitality is low, you "catch cold" all too readily, you are weak, nervous and ailing with aches and pains of unknown origin, you tire easily and are irritable and often sleepless at night; digestion is faul ty, liver and bowels irregular, ap petite fickle and you never feel bright and happy as you once did arrange tremors seize you, memory seems failing and many of the joys of life are denied you, through lack of ensrgy ar.d ambition. Three grain Cadomene Tablets were formulated by a brilliant med ical man, just for the treatment and restoration to health of those. who suffer as perhaps you do. Millions of packages have been sold in the past few years, and your druggist can supply you, and help you fight disease conditions. Adv. PAINS AND ACHES YIELD QUICKLY TO -SLOAN'S LINEIEIJ Are vou tormented bv Nenraltria. Lumbago. Sciatica or anv of those aches that require a counter-irri- lanti men let tne soothing, warm ing application of Sloan's liniment stop the pain by drawing the blood away from the congested part . It is the pressure on the nerves bv the blood ru shine ta tha inflamed muscle or Joint that makes you ache. bo wnen sioan s .Liniment relieves the swollen blood vessels by setting up a counter-irritant on the surface, iKUXoiin V hi jjimisinniiHii YOUR SICK CHILD IS CONSTIPATED! LOOK AT TOIIGUE- Hurry, Mother! Remove Poi sons from Little Stomach, Liver, Bowels. Give "California Syvup ot -,t Figs" If Cross, Bilious : .-. or Feverish 1 t 1 fsiM i No matter what ails your child, a gentle, thorough laxative should al ways be the first treatment given.(J half sick, isn't resting, eating and acting naturally look, mother, see if tongue is coated. I his is a sure sien that the little stomach, liver and bowels are clogged with wasto. ' X7 fni.ot-icli ' stomach sour, breath bad or has1'. stomach ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, full of cold, give a teaspoon ful of "California Syrup of Figs,';; and in a few hours all the consti pated poison, undigested food and " sour bile gently moves out of the; little bowels without griping and1 you have a well, playful child again. Mothers can rest easy after giv- . ine this harmless "fruit laxative," , because it never fails to cleanse the little one's liver and bowels and: sweeten the stomach and they dearly" love its pleasant taste. Full direc- J tions for babies, children of all ages -and for grown-ups printed on eachr bottle. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups"' Ask your druggist for a bottle ot "California Syrup of Figs"; then see that it is made by the "California Fig Syrup company." Adv. BIG EATERS GET KIDi'EY TROUBLE Take a glass of Salts before breakfast if your back ' hurts or Bladder ; bothers you. - The American men and women1 must guard constantly against kid-; j ney trouble, because we eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with uric acid whklt " the kidneys strive to filter out, they v weaken from' overwork, becom? ,, sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and the result is kidney trouble," bladder weakness and a general de-' cline in health. m When your kidneys feel -like,,, lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine is cloudy; full of sediment" or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; if you suffer. with sick headache or , dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, ' or you have rheumatism when the ' weather is bad, get from your phar macist about four ounces of Jad., salts; take a tablespoonful in a glas? of water before breakfast for a few'" days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, , combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush, sr. I stimulate clogged kidneys; to neu tralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. " ; Jad salts is inexpensive; cannot " Injure, makes a delightful efferves- ;" cent lithia water beverage. anH J. '1 longs in every home, because; no- poay can make a mistake by hav- - ing a good kidney flushing anv rimp ... Adv. Skin Troubles with Cuticura Saap, Ointment. Teln SVs. ewh. If Bempieaof "Omum.IXet I tttn," Coughing Is annoying and harmful. Rdier throat irritation, tickliaf and get rid of toughs, cold ar.d hoarseness at once Ij tuinf i the circulation is equalized, n pathetic nerves all soothed, i - soreness or lameness disappears. Sloan's Linjment is probably tha counter-irritant most widely used to overcome painful inflammation in cases of neutalgia, sore museks, wrenched joints, strains, bruises, gout. Rubbing is not required. This : clear, clean liquid is easily applied as it does not stain the skin. Generous size bottles at your druggists. . , . IO lata! pain I-' V A - I