BURGLARS AND ROBBERS STILL VERY BUSY HERE Eleven Holdups and Robberies Reported in Last Two Days, V With No Offenders . Caught. The activities of burglars and highwaymen in Omaha continued throughout Saturday and Sunday. According to reports received at the falice station, 11 persons wers victimized between midnight Satur day and early Monday morning. None of the offenders has been ap prehended. Yeggmen forced an entrance to the grocery store conducted by J. Uadiztner. 2-11)4 Fort street, wrecked the safe, stole $50 in Liberty bond.1, and war saving stamps and $250 in cash. Groceries, the estimated value of which was placed at $250, were hauled away in a truck, which was backed up to the rear entrance. Entrance was gained by breaking a plate glass window in front of the store. Dynamite is believed to have been used to blow open the sate, the door of which was carried across the room by the force of the . ex plosion. The detectives who in vestigate the case are of the opin ion that the thieves worked more than an hour in the store. The burglars made their escape without leaving a clue as to their identity. Clothing valued at $160 was stolen from Mrs. Brooks, Sterling apart ments, Sixteenth and Kates streets, by burglars who gained entrance by climbing down a fire escape and through a rear window. Several other apartments in the building were ransacked, but nothing was re ported missing. Mrs. H. Adler, who lives in the Troy apartments, reported that $6.25 in cash was stolen from her rooms by two men, who represented themselves to be from Orchard & Wilhelm. They declared they had been gent to examine the curtains in the apartment. Mrs. Adler missed the money when the men departed. Visits were paid to other apartments in the building by the same men, but they left without stealing anything else. Woman Assaulted. Mrs. C. F. Neilson, 3320 Corby street, Was assaulted by two negro men in front of an unoccupied gro cery store in the vicinity . of her home. One of the men is said to have seized the woman by the wrists while the other held her by the shoulders. A third negro, who acted as a lookout, gave the signal that some one was approaching. The men disappeared down an alley. Using a pass key sneak thieves intered through the front dor of the residence of B, A. Chappell, 1921 l'inkney street, and stole cut glass iti(l silver valued at $50. The glass in a front window of the residence of A. Rosen, 416 South Tenth street, was broken out by burglars, who took a number of household articles, a list of which the police were told would be fur nished later. Ransack Residence. Clothing valued at $100 was stolen from the residence of Mrs. Klizabeth Engel, 1824 Capitol ave nue. Thieves ransacked the house during the absence of the occu pants. Otis Williams, 2615 Parker street, reported the loss of an overcoat from his home. The garment, which was taken by sneak thieves, was valued at $15. The Troy laundry reported the loss of a bundle of laundry from one of their wagons. The package, said to have been valued at $15, was taken from a delivery wagon while standing in front of the laundry at 2117 Cuming itret. Thieves forced an entrance o the residence of Ed Bryant, 2817 North Twenty-seventh street, rvfld stole Nothing valued at $115. A rear win low was broken, through which the rhieves entered and escaped with 'heir booty. Bessie Abbott, Opera Star, Dies After Long Illness New York, Feb. 10. Mrs. T. A'aklo Story, widely known in the L'nited States and in Europe as Bessie Abbott, an opera singer, died at her home last night after an ill ness of several months. Then there are those who started the day with a backache, Btiff legs, arms and muscles, , and an aching head (worn-out before the day began 1 xl 2 J A 1 1 t , 1 Because uiey were id ana oui oi oea nail a dozen imcs at night), who are now appreciating the perfect rest, comfort :nd new strength they obtained from Dr. Pierce's Anuric Tablets. Tc firove that this is a certain uric acid solvent and conquers headache, ;idney and bladder diseases and rheumatism, if you've never used the 'Anuric," send ten cents to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for a large ample package. This will prove to you that "Anuric " is many times nore active than lithia, dissolves uric acid as hot coffee does sugar, and t the most perfect kidney and bladder corrector. If you are a sufferer, :o to your best druggist and ask for a sixty-cent box of "Anuric." You via no risk for Dr. Pierce's good name stands behind this wonderful :cw discovery as.it has for the past half century for his "Golden Medi al Discovery" which makes the blood pure, his "Favorite Prescription" or weak women and his "Pleasant Pellets" for liver ill3. Dr. Pierce'B Pleasant Pellets do good that lasti. They rrgvlate the system, at rc!l as cleanse and renovate it; mildly and gently, but thoroughly and effec ively, no; griping, no violence. They're the smallest and the easiest to take, lureiy vegetable, perfectly harmless, and the best liver pill ver known. Only na little Pellet for a laxative three for a cathartic. - Sick or Bilious Headache, 'obstipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and many derangement! of the iver, sumach and bowels are prevented, relieved and cured. "VIRTUOUS WIVES" CHAPTER XXII. For a moment, before the unex pected vision of the master of the house, Dawson had an impulse to retreat blindly, in the desperate need to steady his nerves. Then he came down slowly, extending his hand, a hasty explanation on his lips. "How do, Mr. Forrester?' "Oh, how are you?" said Forres ter, who gave him a short look, an abrupt hand-shake, and began to struggle out of his coat. "We've just been practicing the steps for the minuet. Amy's going to be stunning." "The what?" "The minuet the Versailles fete, you know." "Ah, yes." "We're counting on your being there." "Kind of you." Dawson felt that Forrester no ticed his embarrassment and that being an intimate of the household demanded that he should say some thing more. "How are things in Mexico?" "What?" "Conditions all right in Mexico?" he continued, shifting to the other foot. . "About the same." "Staying long?" , "Don't know." , "Amy'll be surprised." Forrester gave no answer. To Dawson the door seemed miles away. He swallowed hard, mum bled something and departed, curs ing the impulse which had made him tell an unnecessary lie. Amy was content with herself. It seemed to her that even Andrew, had he been present, would have been proud of her. She knew that she was unwilling to punish her self bv losine the boys de votion, but she had handled the situation so firmly, if with kindness, that he could have no doubt of her loyalty. Moreover, she had gained in his eyes, and the memory of the new adoration she had seen on his face gave her a spiritual satisfaction which she thoroughly believed she deserved. As for the effect on Tody at this moment in her life she was skeptical of the great passion of love which novelists harped upon and newspapers dressed up in sen sational colors. To her, it was a question of propinquity, a comforta ble sensation such as the emotion that made her seek strength from her husband; a logical thing, born of respect and admiration rather than of any uncontrollable passiofi. She had never known its fever, its anguish of desire, its obsessing specter, and she doubted its exist ence. "It was the only sensible way to handle him the dignified way," she repeated, glancing about the room. His card had fallen by the sofa. She picked it up smiling and was about to tear it up, when Mor ley rushed in. "Beg pardon, madam, but Mr. For rester is down stairs," "Mr. Forrester 1" she said, vaguely alarmed by the sense of precipitation in the maid's entrance. "Yes, madam, I was passing in the hall and I heard his voice talking to Mr. Dawson. I'm certain of it!" Below, the outer door slammed. She remembered suddenly that Mor ley was watching her, and angrily aroused herself. ' "There must be some mistake go and see," she said abruptly. The maid departed. She was alone, Tody's card in her fingers. She noticed it, and started to hide it in the front of her negligee. "No, no I have dope nothing wrong why should I feel like this?" she said impatiently, her ear strained to catch the slightest sound. The next moment she heard the power ful fall of her husband's step on the stairs. "Why Andrew, it isn't possible!" she cried, going to him with out stretched hands. "I was called up rather suddenly," he began, then his glance fell on her negligee, and he stopped short. The face, already set in nervous ir ritation, become all at once hard, concentrated, and bitter. Before this look she recoiled as though he had stepped out from behind a mask. In a prophetic flash, she saw what he might beepme if he should cease to love her, and, seized with horror she cried, warding him from her. "Oh, Andrew, don't look at me like that!" He continued to look at her. His eyes blazed and the color went out of his face. He turned, closed the door and said. "I met that young Dawson in the hall." She was too overcome with the shock to her heart to comprehend AFTER WORK- All Tired Out "All In "-Because of the Uric Acid Poison Which so often causes Rheumatism. "(Copyright, 1918, by Little. Brown Co.)" what he was saying. She nodded, her eyes blurred with tears, wounded as a child is wounded. "And I have a second , disagreeable experi ence to find you in such a costume," he said, his eyes running over the soft negligee which wrapped her little body about as the wreath of some heavy incense. "If you choose to receive men at such hours in. your private salon, I object to your danc ing in a dressing gown." "Dancing?" she said, startled back into attention. "Exactly." i "You are out of your senses, An drew!" she cried, and her modesty was so offended that her cheeks blushed in indignant reproach. "You don't think that of me! No. no; that is impossible." "One moment 1" He stood staring at her, his fingers playing like lean tentacles. "Do I understand you to say that you have not been dancing with Mr. Dawson?" She drew herself up and faced him with a flash of anger. "Certainly not." "That is rather mofe serious, then," he seemed to her himself say ing. Something roared in his tem ples; a rush of water closing over him. "Mr. Dawson himself, five minutes ago, told me that he had been rehearsing the minuet you are to dance with him!" "He told you that!" she cried aghast. "Exactly that." He waited, torn by all the blinding forces of jeal ousy, his eyes never leaving her face. After a moment he said im periously, "Well?" She could not assemble her wits. She felt trapped, beating out her wings against a cage, convicted by appearances. "But this is awful!" she thought, shrinking before the ugliness of the situation. "He'll believe anything of me, and I am innocent! "Well?" she heard his voice re peat. She glanced down at the card which was crumpled by the action of her fingers her fingers that were moist with perspiration and she said slowly. "If Mr. Dawson staid such a thing, he told a lie, and a very stupid lie." The silence seemed endless before she heard him draw a deep breath. That I believe," he said carefully. "At least you have not forgotten your dignity and mine to that ex tent. , Now, may I ask why Mr. Dawson should have felt it neces sary to explain his presence here with a lie?" "'A lie'?" she repeated weakly, feeling the forces of circumstance clos-'ng again about her. "Exactly a lie." , Before she could' meet this new danger, the telephone bell rang. Glad of the opportunity to delay, she made him a sign and took up the receiver. It was Harry Fortes cue, of the "Young Guard," as Irma termed them. Nothing could have been more opportune. "Impossible, Harry," she said ir ritably, "I'm lunching with Irma and Gladys. Some other time. I'm in a rush now." She put down the receiver, but hardjy Had she taken a step before the bell rang again. This time, it was young Pardee, who was to dance in the minuet Pardee whose manner toward her of late had aroused Mrs. Challoner's combative instincts. , "Lunching with Gladys at Laza re's" she said hurridly. "Run in and and see us there, and we'll make an appointment. In an awful rush now, Charlie can't talk to you." These interruptions from young men whom he did not know and whom Amy already addressed by their first name were not calculated to calm Forrester's irritation, "If your social duties will allow you," he started to say, with cold, calculated phrase, but his anger boiling up, he burst out, "Well, come now; what have you to say?" She had regained her poise. After all, it was quite simple. She would Ull him the truth everything as it had happened. "I should have told you," she said, frowning at the effort this simple operation suddenly required. "I have had an unpleasant experience with Tody Dawson, but I have handled it in the proper way as you would have wished me." She hesitated, and then continued reso lutely: "Last night, in the car, when he was taking me home, the boy forgot himself. I don't know why he may have had too much to drink " She hesitated, and re coiling before the whole truth, said, "He tried to take my hand." "In love with you, of course." "I don't know he imagined he was, perhaps," she said reluctantly, angry at herself that she had pali ated the offense. "What did you do?" "I stopped the car at once." With the instinct of a woman to appease a man who is jealous by the spec tacle of his rival's humiliation, she added: "It was raining. I made him get out awl I left him there, in the rain. This morning he came around and begged me to see him. I thought it was better to treat him as a boy to end the incident. I saw him and made him understand my loyalty to you. He is heartily ashamed, quite miserable, and I am sure that he has now only the pro foundest respect for me, your wife." She extended her hand abruptly, and offered the card. "This is his card." He took a long moment to read it, and then tore it slowly to pieces with unsteady fingers. "Good God!" he said, leaning sud denly against the table. In the last terrible moments he had feared everything;. She tiiiprehended the torments of jealously in his cry and forgave him on the instant. "He loves me like that I" She was ready to fling herself in his arms, to cling to him and be done with words. She hesitated. He had been totally wrong, she was ready to forgive, but it was only right that he should make the first advance. And her heart swollen, longing to be in his arms, she wait ed for the word she was certain would come. "Well, we don't have to face that yet," he said heavily; then he stop ped, looked at her quickly and said, frowning, "You say you taught him to respect you?" "Absolutely." "And yet he goes out and tells me a lie?',' "Yes; but" "Come, now; I'm not going to be THE EEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY, 11. 1910, Own Johnson's Sparkling So ciety Novel, which it making such a h i t in tha movie. lieve that. There is more than you have told nie." Her face betrayed her. Why had she withheld the whole truth, if only not to lose in his eyes? He saw her confusion, and all the happy horde of doubts shrieked once more about him. He put his hand to his throat and then looked away from her. "Amy, I truest know. On your word of honor, is what you nave told me the truth?" He hesitated, and added in almost a whisper, as though he too shrank before the test, "All the truth?" She felt cold to her finger-tips, and in the palms of her hands the perspiration rose. "It is dreadful I am going to lie; I must lie, there is no other way out," she said to herself, even while calmly and deliberately she an swered: "Why,' of course, Andrew abso lutely all." "This young cub means nothing to you?" v "Oh, that I swear it to your "There is one way to find out," he said quietly. He stepped to the door and rang the bell. Morley ap peared. "Send Gregory here." "What are you going to do?" she cried. "That is my affair." "Andrew, you are in my house, before my servants you won't do anything to humiliate me before them?" "And 1? Haven't I been humili ated before them?" he said sternly. " 'Humiliate' that's good! What do you suppose Gregory thought when he heard that young cub lie to mel" "Andrew, be careful!" "Exactly. I intend to be a little more careful about many things." Before she could protest, Gregory came in, fumbling at the buttons of the duster he had forgotten to change. The butler's agitation fanned Andrew's fury. "They know everything. They've already been talking it over I This is what it's come to!" he, thought. Aloud he said, "Gregory, in the future, when Mr. Dawson calls here, whenever it may be, neither Mrs. Forrester nor I are at home.. Do you understand?" "Yes, sir perfectly, sir," said Gregory, with a frightened look. lhats all. And as the butler stood glancing from husband to wife, he cried, "Well, why do you stand there? Didn't you hear me? That's all, I said!" Gregory backed out, bumping against the wall, seized the knob and closed the door with a crash. "That clears the atmosphere," said Forrester deliberately. Amy. was in a conflict of two emo tions. The further Andrew receded from her control, the more she felt a thrill of admiration at his master fulness. But this sentiment was im mediately brushed aside by the shock of her pride. A servant had been witness of this sudden su periority, which in itself fascinated her. She had received the greatest affront she had ever experienced. In this home, where her whim had been law, suddenly the man had stepped in and shown who was master. "This I shall never forgive 1" she said in a haed voice. In her every thing grew cold and rigid, and, all at once, from the "weak, passionate longing for his caress of a moment before, she felt a blind, uneasy re volt, a hatred, the same hardening of all her nature that she had been amazed to see in him. "I am not through," he "said, checking her with a gesture. "I shall assume that after what has happened Dawson will not appear at your dance." "I shall dance with Mr. Dawson," she said slowly. "I forbid you. Understand me, I forbid you!" "And I tell you now," she cried, facing him defiantly, "now' after what you've done, I shall dance with Tody Dawson!" "I think, when you consider calmly," he said sternly, "when you realize what such a defiance will mean you will do nothing of the kind. What you do outside my house, whom yousee, I cannot con trol; but here in my home " "It is my house as much as yours!" she cried indignantly. "Quite true; but there is one ob ligation incumbent on you," he said sternly, "to see that my dignity is respected. When any- man tells me a lie as to the motives of his tete-a-tete with you he doesn't come in here again." "Andrew I warn you, Andrew, I won't accept this," she said, in a choking voice. "You must take the responsibility of your own decision then," he said coldly. He looked at her a moment and drew a clipping from his pocket. "I don't know whether you have read this pleasant reference to us. I have." And he flung on the table the unlucky number of the Tattle tale. "You don't accuse me " she be gan indignantly, when as though the imps of ill chance were determined to overwhelm her with false testi mony, for the third ,time, the tele phone broke in. Their nerves were at the snapping tension. The metal lic, shrill note was the last irritation to him. "What another!" he cried, with an ugly laugh. "So this is what it's come to!" His hand went out in blind anger, struck the telephone and swept it from the table. With a crash it went rolling to the floor between them. She shrank back with a scream, throwing up her arm. He stood breathing hard, his lips work ing spasmodically. Then, with an effort, he turned .and rushed from the room. i (Continued Tomorrow.) Co repair daily waste effective - ly. use GrapeNuts a delicious and highly nourish ing food. MAYOR'S MARKET PUT UNDER FIRE BY TIIEJDOUNCIL Commissioners Bring Up Side Issues Which Tend to Delay the Proposed Project. Mayor Smith stood yesterday like Horatius at the bridge, defend ing his pet municipal market ordi nance against "death" and "chloro forming." Finally he secured pas sage of section 7 of the ordinance. which, in effect, makes a monopoly of the municipal market by prohibit ing gardeners from selling their pro duce anywhere else than on the mu nicipal market to be established at Fifteenth and Davenport streets. The vote was only 4 to 3, on this section. Then rose Commissioner Zimman and declared: "I am in favor of a municipal mar ket, but I would be willing to wager my salary for 1919, that the market, if established at Fifteenth and Davenport streets, will be an abso lute failure as far as relief for the consumer is concerned. What right have we to spend $15,000 of the peo ple's money in putting it there when we are sure all the circumstances are against it. Why not try out the idea at the Auditorium first until we see whether the people will pa tronize the market in sufficient num bers?" Where is the Money. "Where do you propose to get this $15,000, Mr. Mayor?" asked Com missioner Ure. "We appropriated it in the mis cellaneous fund when we formed the budget," declared the mayor. "No, we didn't; we merely appro priated $7,500," said Mr. Ure. - "Oh, well, we'll find the money," Said the mayor. "Well, I'm opposed to getting up plans for all kinds of things on that principle," said Mr. Ure. Commissioner Falconer, who was named in the mayor's ordinance to manage the market, declined the honor. "I am willing to take the hot end of this if there is one, declared Mayor Smith as he offered a reso lution putting the market under management of his department. "I certainly don't want it," said Mr. Falconer. And all the commis sioners voted joyously and enthusi astically "aye" on the amendment to put it under the mayor's man agement. Then came Commissioner Ringer and attacked the location at Fif teenth and Davenport streets. "Why should we put it there, where no green groceries have ever been sold?" he asked. "Because the city owns the land," replied the mayor. "The worst possible reason in the world," declared Commissioner Ure. "I know a man who built a $200,000 building on. a location because he owned the land and he would have made three times as much money if he had sold that land and bought a better location for his building"' Want Better Location. Commissioner Ringer moved the appointment of a committee of the mayor and two others to report on a better location for the market. The mayor opposed this, but finally the mayor and Commissioners Ure and Towl were appointed. . Council several days ago ordered the removal of the building from the Fifteenth and Davenport site, as"? I nr.. . ' j rrr,-sf mineral water ana 0LI inMPUAX Batb Retort NOT 8inltrluni COLTAI. KWA. U.I,, l nv vnique no ii vr America. 360 acret of beautiful grounds. Run on tha pi am of a Great Country Mansion. Steam, Vapor, Elec tric and Pack Baths. Massage Treatment for Bheumattem and Stomach Trouble;. European Plan, rates $150 per day Dp. Sensible priced Cafe aerrlca, Under Personal Mfirngemtnt of Builder and Owner. Send for Booklet. Hotel Colfax and Mineral Springs, Colfax Iowa. Figki to Win! The Nation demands strong men strong women and robust children. Wisdom suggests thai every proper means of safeguard ing the vital forces and building up of resistance, be utilized. EMULSflOM affords definite help to those who are "fighting to win" against the inroads of weakness, -ft Scott's, abundant in tonic nutrient properties, builds up the body by Nature's methods. Scott&Bownc.Bloomfield.N.J. 18-14 It's Easy If You Know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young is to feel young to do this you must watch your liver and bowels there'snoneedof hav ing a sallow complexion dark rings under your eyes pimples a bilious look in your face dull eyes with no sparkle. Yourdoctorwill tell you ninety percent of all sickness comes from in active bowels and liver. Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician in Ohio, perfected a vegetable com pound mixed with olive oil to act on the liver and bowels, which he gave to his patients for years. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel, are gentle in their action yet always effective. They bring about that exuberance of spirit, that natural buoyancy which should be en joyed by everyone, by toning up the liver and clearing the system of impurities. You will know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tabletsby their olive color. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. scom KEP LOOKING YOUNG ifc)Ifa;ilia'TI .'"-"""- -j preparatory to building the market house. Establishment of the market now is considered farther from realiza tion than before because of the many divergent ideas of commis sioners on where to put it and what kind of market to make it. Commissioner even suggested the building of a large permanent mar ket building, centrally located, and to cost from $100,000 to $150,000. Says He Owes Bee $3 for Number of Years; Wipes Out His Debt "The enclosed $3 has been due you for a number of years. The cir cumstances of the debt is immater ial, so I have taken this means of paying it."- The above letter, together with $3 was received in yesterday's mail by The Bee. The communica tion was unsigned and the history of the "debt" will doubtless remain a mystery. This means is taken to acknowledge the receipt of the re mittance. The amount has been duly credited in the hope that the sender will experience a weight lifted from his conscience, which no doubt has proven 'a scource of uneasiness to him for many years. Two Men Accidentally k Killed Near Seward ' Sunday Afternoon Seward, Neb., Feb. 10. (Special to The Bee.) Two men were acci dentally killed in this vicinity Sun day afternoon. D. T. May, propriet ct of a hotel in Utica fell 40 feet from the tower of a windmill short ly after noon and died last night from his injuries. He was 35 years old and is survived by a widow. John Levaty, 16, living on a farm eight miles north of Seward, was instantly killed when his gun was accidentally exploded while hunt ing. The charge entered the abdo men. He was stooping to pick up a rabbit which he had shot when the accident happened. No inquest will be held. ' iniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii Business. Men Buy Office Equipment Here for the same reason that their wives come to us for Furniture, Rugs, Draperies and Kitchen Wares wider variety, and the as surance that 25 years of careful, thoughtful retailing has asso ciated with the name of Orchard & Wilhelm Co. Steel or Wood Furniture and Equipment Linoleum We have a number of used Desks and Equipment priced very reasonably. iii'iii!iiiii!iiiii!ini!ii!iiiiiiiiiiinii 414-416-418 U3GJMY COAL YAHE) Your Coal Yard -Wishes to Announce A New Price and a New Coal COLORADO LUiV.P "The Olcf Favorite" v New $(S50 Per Price fO) Ton ILLINOIS LUMP "MONTGOMERY COUNTY" New $7SO Per' Coal (J Ton Call at Office of Dan B. Butler, City Hall liT c fell J 'IllO- "'Ml She is as popular as ever now that her skin is clear Don't be denied the society of your friends cooped up in a hot, stuffy house all because you are ashamed of a skin that is blotchy and disfig ured by ugly red spots. This discol oration and pimply appearance ,may be speedily relieved by Resinol Oint ment. Its gentle soothing medica ROSE AND SLACK ESCAPE T17ICE FRO&HFFICERS Elude Omaha Police and Es cape from Train While a Deputy Sheriff Sleeps. Confusion in the city detective department was responsible for the first getaway of Henry Slack and Carl Rose, wanted for bttrglarly in Omaha. A sleeping deputy sheriff was responsible for their second getaway Sunday morning when they jumped, while handcufted, from a train near Corning, Mo., and are now roaming somewhere in the fields between that place and St. Joseph, Mo. When detectives arrested Pearl Wilson, 1903 Capitol avenue, on the night of January 27 and found two suitcases tull of stolen revolvers and jewelry in her home, Slack and Rose were concealed in a closet adjoin ing the hallway. It was learned that the detectives were ordered to be on the lookout for the bovs at the time. The detectives were tin- aware that Slack and Rose were in the Wilson home. The detectives failed to investi gate further evidence of the boys' presence in the house when they discovered their caps and overcoats covering the suitcases in the hall way. When "the detectives left the house, Slack and Rose, breathing signs ot relict, left the house and took an early train to St. Joseph, Mo. The. revolvers and jewelry found in the possession of Pearl Wilson comprised part of the loot from the Brodky Jewelry store, Thirteenth NO STRING PULLING There is no string pulling in the model cleaning plant of the Carey Cleaning Co. We rigidly adhere to a one-price policy. We clean neckties, corsets, etc. Hard work is easy for us. t.siiliiliiliiliilii Rugs South 16th Street i, i':mhi::i:xim::ihi mni tion usually arrests the complaint after a few applications. Its steady and proper use seldom fails to restore normal skin health in the most ag gravated cases. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap may be obtained at all druggists. . and Douglas streets, robbed several nights before. While several detec tives were looking for the boys, three other sleuths, who later re marked they were unaware that Slack and Rose were wanted, were seen talking and joking" with the boys at Thirteenth and Douglas streets. GET SLOAN'S FOR , YOUR PAIil RELIEF You don't have to rub it in to get quick, comforting relief. Once you've tried it on that stiff joint, sore muscle, sciatic pain, rheumatic twinge, lame back, you'll find a warm, soothing relief you never thought a liniment could pro duce. Won't stain the skin, leaves no muss, wastes no time in applying, sure to give quick results. A large bottle meant economy. Your own or any other druggist has it Get it today. 30c, 60c, $1.20. , CATARRH VANISHES Her I On Treatment That All Sufferer Can Rely Upon If von want to drive catarrh and all Hx disgusting symptom from your system in the hortest possible time, go to your drug gist and ask for Hyomei outfit today. Breath Hyomei and let it rid you of ca tarrh; it give such quick relief that all who us It for the first time are astonished. Hyomei is pur pleasant antiseptic, which is breathed into the lungs over th inflsmed membrane; it soothes th sore spots, and heal all inflammation, Don't suffer another day with catarrh; th disease i dangerous and often ends in consumption. Start th Hyomei treatment today. No stomach dosing, no sprays or douche; Just breath it that' all. Ask Sherman A McConnell Drug Co. Adv. Be Careful in Using Soap on Your Hair Most soaps and prepared sham poos contain too much alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is just plain mulsified cocoanut oil, for it is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and beats the most expensive soaps or anything else all to pieces. You can get this at any drug store," and a few ounces will last the whole family for months. Simply moisten the hair with wa ter and rub it in, about a teaspoon ful is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy, and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. Adv. CYSTITIS-KIDNEYS Cystitis oftentimes begins with a chilly sensation, a slight fever, loss of appetite, sleeplessness, nervous ness, irritability, or a feeling of de pression. Frequent urination, but voided slowly with burning, scald ing, spasm-pains in region affected ; the pain 'of a dull character, at times becoming sharp and agonizing. Don't rest until treatment of ' Mm hi "imim ii -.. nTinwV-i j is in your posession. Take as di rected, and you should find imme diate benefits in 24 hours. Tried and Reliable. YOU NEED THEM Sold by all druggists. For Skin Tortures Dont worry about eczema or other skin troubles. You can have a clear, healthy skin by using Zemo, obtained at any drug store for 35c, or extra large bottle at $1.00. Zemo generally removes pimples, blackheads, blotches, eczema and ring worm and makes the skin clear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating, antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor greasy and stains nothing. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each application. It is always dependable. The E. W.Rose Co., Cleveland, O. TIIL'I PEOPLE SHOULD. TAKE PHOSPHATE Nothinf Lilt Plain Bltro-Phospbat to Put on Firm, Healthy Flesh and to Increase Strength, Vigor and Nerv Fore. Judging from the countless preparation's and treatments which are continually being advertised for the purpose of making thin people fleshy, developing arms, neck and bust, and replacing ugly hollows and an gles by the soft curved lines of health anj beauty, there are evidently thousands of men and women who keenly feel their ex cessive thinness. Thinness and weakness are usually due to starved nerves. Our bodies need more phosphate than is contained in modem foods. Physicians rlaim there is nothing that will supply thi deficiency to well as the organic phosrhate known among drug gists as bitro-phosphate. which is inex pensive and is sold hy Sherman & McCon nell in Omaha Rnd most all drugKists un der a guarantee of Hatii,faction or money hack. By feeding the nerves directly and by supplying the body cells with the neces sary phowphoric food elements, bitro-phosphate' quickly produccx a welcome trans formation in the appearance; the fnereaKC in weight frequently being astonishing. This increase in weittht also carries with it a general improvement in the health. NervounnenH, sleepleaKneaa and lack of ergy, which nearly always acsompany ex cessive thinness, soon disappear, dull eye become bright, and pale cheeks glow with me Dioom 01 perfect Health. CAUTION : Althoueh bitro-phosphat is unsurpassed for relieving nervousness sleeplessness and general weakness, it should not, owing to iU remarkabl flenh growing properties, be used by anyone wii. does not desire to put on flesh. Adr. , W I ""-" .Miuuli.Ju.,iu-iyi..i...i.i..