THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, - FEBRUARY y 11, 1919. i LIAflY MEM FROL1 MIDDLE WEST TO G0MEI10MESD0N Three Thousand Kansas, Colo rado, Missouri, Nebraska and South Dakota Men on Last Priority List. iBy Union Pacific Press Bureau.) Washington, D. C, I'ch. 10. (Spe cial.) Several new divisions con taining middle western men are :hown on the latest priority list of , im ts to return to this country. Among them arc the .Wth, the .4th, 'he 8oth, which i partly for rcpUce ; nent and partially for rett:rn. the ;, Jlst. and' the 40th. The 3.14th Field ! artillery of the 87th is also listed for early convoy. 0 Where They Trained. The 30th division contained about MHK) nion from Kansas, Colorado, Missouri. Nebraska and South Da kota, transferred to it from Camp f Funston, The 34th trained at Camp J Cody received about the same tiutn j iev from Fuuston and in addition J contains Nebraska. National guard J'roops. The 8oth; trained at Camp Jrant received men from some if J'hese states in later drafts. The 40th division left for overseas . villi about 0,000 men from the mid I He western states, being sent to it rom Funston. In France, however, 3 t was used as a depot division and nany of its men scattered to other I wits as replacements. The location of divisions .-ntain- ng men from Colorado, Kansas. " kVyoniing, Missouri, Nebraska and South Dakota are as follows: Thirtieth, on priority, is at Bat on. The 34 ill lias been skeletonized, i part being on priority and the rest ilready sailed. The 35th is still at Commercy and as yet no word has Ken given out of any contemplated liovc. The 30th is at Chcny. The (th has been skeletonized, partly ;or replacement purposes and partly . 'or return home. The 87th is at St. S'azaire. The 89th. trained at Camp Dodge is at Coiulrccourt. The 89th, in the army of occupation, is at Kyl- ))rg. Germany. The 90th is at --s-nt at Laferet-Bernard, Le Mans and Mayenne. The 40th division at Cas 'rcs and will be among the first to .sal j Few From Midwest. I Although ships from France are Janding every day at New York and rVewport News, the arrivals of mid dle western men have been coni aratively light during the last week !r so, no complete organizations J-aving arrived, although several ,uch as the 110th Trench Motar bat tery of the 35th, and the 314th jl'rench Motar battery of the 89th f.livision are listed to sail as is the 'fi4th -Feld artillery of the 87th di vision which was trained at Camp J'ikc and contains several thousand Jsebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Mis souri and South Dakota men. The J32d Machine Gun battalion of the f 7th will also sail. i " Russia Accepts ap j Offer to Help Settle ! ' Bolshevik Trouble Vladivostok, Feb. 10. (By Cana dian Press.) Reports from Omsk state that the Russian government (here has accepted an offer from Japan of men, money and arms to jettle the bolshevik difficulty, j This step, it is stated, is due to re ports that the allies are to withdraw their forces rom Siberia and also to a fear that the conference at the Princes' islands will result in recog nition of the bolsheviki. In return for the aid she is to "give, the reports slate, Japan will secure an iron and coal concession in the Priamur district. New York Judge to Address Socialist Meet Tuesday Judge Pinkin, who was elected to the municipal bench from the New York tenderloin . district by a big majority, will be the .speaker at a socialist meeting Tuesday at 8 p. m. at the Metropolitan hall, Twenly tiiird and Ilarncy streets. The judgv has chosen "Justice from a Socialist Standpoint" for his sub ject. During the war Judge Pinkin rep resented the National Peoples' Re lief committee in various European countries. . Dr. Jones Will,Speal on Austria in Desolation "Austria-Hungary in Desolation" 'vilj be the subject of Dr. Guernsey Jones' lecture at the Central High -cliool auditorium at 4 p. m. today. Dr. Jones will discuss the problems irising in bohcmia, Jugo-Slavia and states around the Adriatic sea. It is the third lecture that he will de liver in the course on "The Great War." Thousands of Men Apply for Merchant Seamen Jobs Washington, Feb. 10. To main ain facilities for training merchant seamen the shipping board lias de eded to turn six of the wooden :argo steamers built during the war nito training ships. More than 38, 300 men have applied to take the trailing courses and it is planned to add deep sea cruises to the curricu lum. Scott Nearing Probe. Xew York. Feb. 10. A jury icariiig the government's case tgainst Scott Nearing, the Ameri can Socialist society and the Rand School of Social Science, accused .if writing and diseininating articles tending to obstruct tne nation's, war activities, was told today that Pro fessor George D.-ilerron, appointed by the American peace commission, delegate to the forthcoming Fnn :es islands conference with the bol sheviki, was responsible for the en dowment of the Rand school. This fact was brought otit in cross examination of I. M. Sackin. secre tary of the American socialist' so ciety, a government witness. - Mr. Sackin testified that the school, which, he said, had 4,000 to 5.000 Mudents a year, was able to operate on an extensive scale because of its e;itlu uient. Presbyterian New Era Move, Which Closed -Last Night, Proved a Great Success Dr. A. W. Halsey Tells of Mission Work in Orient and Asia Minor; Says China to Dominate Asia and That Germans Will Never Get Back Colonies. With two stirring addresses, presenting two phases of jthe work to be undertaken through the New Era movement. the two-day conference of the Presbyterians of Iowa and Nebraska, which has been in session here, came to a close last night. The final meeting at the Brandeis theater came after two days of conferences aijd discussions of various aspects of the task which is being undertaken by the church, two days which the leaders of the movement pronounced really great in the clearness of the plans, outlined and the develop ment of a spirit of enthusiasm for the campaign, to be inaugu rated on March 23, to raise $13,000,000 for the various mis sionary enterprises of the church. -Their leaders are sure the movement has been given an impetus in these two states which will carry it to complete success. The strategic place of the Presby terian church in-the mission fields and the remarkable opportunities which have been created, especially in Africa, Persia and Syria, by the war were emphasized by Dr. A. W. Halsey, secretary of the board of foreign missions in the first of the night addresses. Hie great oppor tunitv conies, he said, because the Presbyterian missionaries have al ways cmpliasizen , tne individual rather than the denomination, and in an age when man is coming to his own the nations arc ready to re spond to the call of the gospel of the individual soul. China to Rule Orient. Dr. Halsey touched on the strate gic position of the great missions in China, which nation, he declared, will rule the orient. Japan, he said. will not be permitted to retain-Kiou Chan, the province seized from Ger many. China Turns to America. "China is now turning to America, because America, of all the nations, is the only one which has clean hands in its relations with the ori ent. In India the unselfish work of the Presbyterian missionaries in developing agriculture, in the Philip pines the educational work of the missionaries; in Siain, healing and the gospel, have all opened wide doors of possible service in the New bra. Speaking of the assertion of the Germans that the German colonies must be returned, Dr. Halsey de clared that this could never be, and said that the vast Kamerun colony is to be opened to missionary en terprise. , "Nothing can stop the missionary on rush," the speaker declared, "be cause we are to take to the peoplci of the earth the idea of the com passionate God, the God who is a father, and in whom the nations are to be united in a great fraternity." Tells of New Era Aims. Dr. John R. Davies secretary of the board of ministerial relief; suggested some of the spiritual aims of the New Era movement, the es tablishment of the family altar, the fellowship of prayer, study of the Bible, Christian stewardship, the evangelistic campaign and declared that if the conference had done nothing except rouse an interest in these things it would be a success. "But there are other great causes through which the Macedonian cry is coming. Foreign missions, the needs of th cities, the negro prob lem, the needs of the aged ministers. The Presbyterian church is able to give through its board now to tne heroes of the faith, who are on the honor roll, an average of only $350 annually, to other ministers only $290; to the widows of ministers, $190 and to orphans $147. Four thousand churches last year gave nothing to this work. In Wyoming, Iowa and Nebraska we received $5,-000,-and paid for ministerial relief $22,000. . . To meet all these needs, Dr. Dav ies said, money is heeded, but it must be money sanctified by whst he i termed the "evangel of the burning heart." .The spirit of Christ must accompany the giving and the spend ing of it. Dr. Davies Leads Service. In line with this thought the ses sion closed with a consecration ser vice .conducted by Dr. Davies, who called for brief pdayers by dele gates and the consecration of life to the new tasks lying before' the church in the New Era. The quiet Complete Divisions Can Parade in But Few Cities Washington, Feb. 10. Parades' of complete divisions of the American army returning from France prob ably can be held only in a few cities in the immediate vicinity of the de barkation ports. The response to the request of many other localities for divisional reviews of its own troops will likely have to be the parading of not more than a regi ment. This, it was learned today, is the conviction of officers at the War department who have been studying home coming parade pro posals. Cities in which it probably would be possible to hold divisional re views, these officers said, are Bos ton. New York and Washington. To hold such parades in an inland city was impracticable. m y tin activity k Mraofial iua af Nuxatad Iron1'. 81 vs Former Health Com. 'the City of Chicago. "Front mr own experience with Nux ated Iron I feel it is tnch a valuable blood and body build ing preparation that it ought to be used in every hospital and prescribed by every phy- fician in the country. Nuxated Iron help to make healthier women and atronf er, uur ilier men. Satisfaction guaranteed Of mope reiuniied. Al all good drugtuta. nv (E3 service was a most impressive clos ing of a conference which has been marked by many stirring scenes and by an earnest will to accomplish the fulfillment of the vision given the church. Budget of Opportuity. At tire New Era conference Mon day afternoon, with Rev. W. M. Hamilton, Council Bluffs, presiding, Rev. A. W. Halsey talked upon the "Budget of Opportunity," first going into the purpose of the movement by saying that it is simply a real, live, united plan upon the part of the 1,631,748 Presbyterian communi cants in the United States toward the accomplishment of the task con fronting the church as a result of the world war. He explained that it is the purpose of, the Presbyterians to raise and spend $13,000,000 during the next year and around $75,000. 000 within the next live years for the betterment of mankind and car rying out Christian ideals. Of the $13,000,000 the goal for this year, $500,000 will be expended On and. for the relief of returning soldiers and sailors who went to war from Presbyterian homes, and $500,000 for the relief of stricken Protestant churches in the war zone. The campaign for raising the mil lions of dollars will be inaugurated during Marrh of the present year and will be handled in accordance with the plans being worked out by the general assembly committee. Tells of Italy. Rev. Ernest Giampiccoli, moderat or of the Waldensian church of It aly, inspeakipg on "New Era Recon struction in War Areas," told of the devastation wrought in northern It aly by reason of Ihe war. He ex pressed gratitude- to the American people for what they had . done in aiding Italy. Chicagoan Speaks. Rev. Norman B. Barr, pastor of the Olivet Presbyterian institute. Chicago, expressed the opinion that the church stands for progress and that the New Era movement is go ing to be pushed to a successful con clusion and that with the Presby terians of the United States behind it, it cannot fail. . , Rev. Mr. Barr was formerly a Ne braska pastor and, in his address, he paid glowing tribute to the peo ple of the state, expressing the opin ion that when the time conies- for raising the New Era budget, they will not be found lacking in the matter of contributing their dollars. He expressed the opinion that everywhere "the church is on the job," and is going to accomplish its aim. Rev. Mr. Barr scouted the idea that there is any breaking down of Christianity; instead, he insisted, it is a break-up of "the cast iron pag- anicMl ctrial rtrrl.,- r( tliitio-e " 'Thic lit. oaiu, ,a niijr 111 uiuvt' ment is called the New Efa, and in this movement the church has great hopes for the future of so ciety, "for," he added, "the people are beginning to feel that if the church cannot save society, society is doomed." Following the regular conference, members of the local presbyteries met and took the preliminary steps for putting the New Era movement in motion in their respective dis tricts. Indigestion dyspepsia sonr stom achs bloated, gassy stomachs belch'y, raieerable-lepling stomachs these are Acid-Stomachs. What a lot of misery they cause! How Acid-Stomach, with its day-after-day sufferings, does take the joy out of life! Not only that Acid Stomacb is always undermining one's health. Think of what acid does to the teeth how the acid eats through the enamel, causing them to decay. Is it any wonder, then, that Acid Stomach eaps the strength of the strongest bodies and wrecks the health of so many people? You see ACID-STOMACH victims everywhere always ailing. They can't ' tell exactly what is the matter; all tney say is, "1 don't feel well' '"I'm all in: tired, sicklv." If t.hrv rmlv knew it, Dins times out of ten it is Acid-Stomach that is ailing them. It surely makes good digestion diffi cult, causes' food to sour andY fer ment in the bowels, weakens the blood and fills the system with pot sons. It prevents one from getting 1 1 ( FOR' YOUR " f "J n I Rnfr - mm. t r: A mm i El AT THE THEATERS E! DWARU LOCKE'S comedy, "The Climax." which the Messrs. Shubcrt produced at the Comedy Theater, was the first small cast drama ever produced in this country. Twelve years ago, when Joe Weber first produced this comedy, -which is enacted only lv four characters, the entire theat rical world watched the venture with keen interest. So phenomnaf was the success f "The Climax," that ever since .that time the tendency has been to minimize the casts as much as possible, until we recently had a case of the extreme, "Under Orders,' now playing Messrs. Shu bert circuit, being enacted by only two players. It is expected that in the near future an attempt will be made to successfully put over drama enacted by one player. The opium den scene in "The Man Who Came Back." now on at the Boyd, is one of the most complete bits of realism ever shown on the stage. It was not devised merely from conjecture, but is copied liter ally from a similar den that actually exists. ou can see the Chinese at teudant uooking the dope, mauiffi lating the yen-hok. singing his soueaky tune, indifferent to the noises made by his custoers-the whole Jiving a creepy feeling even to the spectator. And it is here that one of the most important episodes ot tne drama is enacted. A special matinee will be played Wednesday atternoon. "Somewhere in France," an cpi sode of the trenches, is one of the stellar features this week at the Or- pheum. It is the comedy and the singing of the soldier quartet which make the sketch very effective. Nothing on the bill is more laugh able than the travesty on old-fashioned melodrama, "For Pity's Sake," with Ihomas Durav in the eccen trie comedy role. Olive Brisco and Al Rauh contribute one ot the most telling song and comedy skits in vaudeville, Next week the stellar attraction is to be Annette Keller man, herself, in an "An Intimate Revue." Baron de Orgler, he of many mar riages and as many divorces, con tinues to hold the center of the stage at the Gayety, where immense crowds are gathering twice each day to listen to the. tale of his mis takes and present loneliness. Dave Marion and "America's Best" is sufficient as 411 attraction, but be cause of the notoriety achieved by the baron, he is offered as an extra feature, the management having faith in the public's desire to meet him face to face. Ladies' matineess daily. As a rule acrobatic acts are not looked upon with favor, but not so with the Helene trio, who are ap pearing at the Empress. Parapher nalia especially built for the proper presentation of their marvelous dar ing stunts is carried in profusion. Another feature act which is meet ing with popular approval is the "Fraternity Rehearsal," in which four good-looking men and a charming young woman offer a me lange of mirth, music and song. Early Settlement in Pratt Estate is Anticipated Attorneys Ben S. Baker, F. A. Brogan and David Fitch appeared before Judge I?ay in district court yesterday with evidence indicat ing that an early settlement of the Col. J. II. Pratt estate is imminent. A partition settlement is being agreed to between Louise Magcf Augustus, Helen Dorcas Magee, Mrs. Margaret Oleson, Jerome P. McGee, Wayland W. Magee and Jo seph J. Augustus. The estate is estimated at $400, 000. January Busy Month for Railway Mail Service The monthly report of C. S. Kel ley, chief clerk of the railway mail service, district No. 1, shows that for January a total of 164,875 pack ages of letters, with from SO to 60 letters to a package, were handled by theh Omaha branch on transcon tinental trains of the Union Pacific. In addition to this 38,223 sacks of paper mail were distributed and 327 storage cars, 60 feet in size, were Omaha's total share. the full strength onfc of their food. Take EATOMC and get rid of your Acid-Stomach. This wonderful mod ern remedy actually takes the excess acid out of the stomach. It quickly and positively relieves bloat, heart bum, belching, food repeating, sonr, gassy stomach, and the pains of indi gestion. Makes the stomach cool and comfortable keeps it sweet and strong. Banishes all stomach trou bles so completely that you forget you have a stomach. You can eat what you like and digest your food in comfort, without fear of distressing after-effects. EATON I C helps you get full strength out of every mouthful you eat and that is what, you must have to be well and strong full strength from your food. EATON 1C is in the form of tablets tastes like a bit of candy. Abso lutely harmless and agrees with the most delicate stomach. Try it. Get a big box of EATONIO from vour druggist today. The cost is trifling. If it fails to bring wonderful relief, take it back; he will refund your money. ACID STOMACin y WILL REPLACE STRIKERS WITH RETURNED MEN p Discharged Soldiers and Sail ors to Take Place of Engi neers in Denver Schools; Increase Refused. Denver, Colo., Feb. 10. Most of the 25 Denver .schools which were closed today by the strike of sta tionary engineers for an increase of $40 a month pay will be reopened tomorrow morning, it was announc ed today by Carlos M..Cole, super intendent of schools. The strikers will be replaced with returned sol diers and sailors who were exam ined by the school board today and given licenses by the city. Through today's strike 25 of the 65 schools in the city were closed, affecting 17,000 pupils and 425 teachers. The men were receiving from $115 to $230 a month, with apartments, heat,' light and water. They asserted that because of the necessity for hiring assistants to do the janitor work this pay was in sufficient. "None of the striking engineers will be taken back," Superintendent Cole announced tonight. The board was in session during the afternoon and evening examining returned soldiers, who said they had had ex perience with low pressure boilers, and as fast as these were examined thev were sent to the city hall. where licenses were issued to them. THOTO PlAY OFFERING FOR TODAY' " HE PURR, she claw, she scratch, but mon Dieul how she love." is the theme of the "Wildoat of Paris." which is to show at the Brandeis theater the final four days of this week. The starring role is -filled with Priscilla Dean, who portrays the part of the Queen of the Apaches at the time of the first German invasion. The realism of the scenes when the Apaches ran riot in the French cap ital and finally who, led by their queen, went with their well known fighting qualities to the defense of their city, makes a thrilling film story. Proof that movie fans do not al ways desire something new and novel is shown at the Strand this week, where Louise Alcott's well known story, "Little Women," is being shown. Many people have not read the book tor years, but welcome it in pictures. Theda Bara proves that she re tains all her old popularity with Omahans at the Muse this week in her finest production, "Salome," as there have been packed houses ev ery day. Prof. Harry Murrison, who made such a hit in introducing community singing at the Strand and Rialto theaters last spring, has returned from his war work, where he was- in charge of War Camp Community branches of the service, and is again Nineteen Nineteen Model The new Paterson is two years ahead of anything on the market in design and construction. , Everything you desire in car construction you will find in the Paterson Continental Motor, Borg & Beck Clutch, Delco Starter, 120-inch Wheel Base, Under slung Springs, full Leather Upholstering, new Patent Marshall Springs in cushions and various other units of' national reputation. It is one of the easiest riding, easilyjiandled and most powerful Light Six models built. It has an unequalled reputation in every territory where it is known. It is in a class of its own.N Don't delay come in and see it, ride in it or have our salesman call on you. Write today. DEALERS WANTED. Nebraska Paterson Auto Co. 2046 Farnam St Consolidation of Offices Means Big Saving to Taxpayers "Will wc have consolidation of of fices, doing away with many elective heads when the new constitutional convention meets?" asks County Clerk F'rank Dewey, and then he proceeds to answer his own ques tion affirmatively. "The success," he added, "of the consolidation of the old city tax of fice and the county comptroller's of fice, with the county clerk's office, has proven to be a great saving to the taxpayers. The county clerk's office is doing 50 per cent more work with only 15 per cent increase in the payroll, as compared with separate offices before their consoli dation. Mr. Dewey states that he has com pared the number of employes dur ing 1908 and ,1918. and finds there, were only tdo more employes dur ing the latter year, with an increase of 50 per cent 111 the volume of busi ness handled. , Police Raid Office of Seattle Weekly Paper Seattle! Feb. 10. The police raid ed the office of the . International Weekly and arrested Aaron Fislcr man, circulation manager. William II. Johnson, a former United States soldier, and Gus Pilz. both of whom, the police said, were taken while selling copies of the Weekly on the street. Besides the issue of the Interna national Weekly, several thousand copies of a pamphlet entitled "Rus sia Did It," were confiscated. I On the Screen Today RIALTO THEODORE ROOSEVELT in "THE FIGHTING ROOSE VKI.TS," or "OUR TEDDY." I1RANUEIS HKRBERT RA.WLIN SDN In-"COMB THROUGH." Sl'N VIRGINIA PEARSON in. "THE I.OVE AUCTION." STR.WI) LOUISE ALCOTT'S "LIT TLE WOMEN." MI NK THEDA BARA in "SALOME." EMPRESS MAT ALLISON in "HER INSPIRATION." LOTHKOP 24th nnd Lothrop MAY ALLISON in "THE RETURN OF MARY." Lynnx-Moran comedy. HAMILTON 40th and Hamilton NORMA TALMADOE in "HER ON LY WAY." SiniRBAN 24th and Ames GER ALDINB FARRAR In "THE TURN OF THE WHEEL." Bill Paraon'a comedy. GRAND 16th and Binney DOUG LAS FAIRBANKS in "HE COMES UP SMILING." I ORPHElM-ASouth Side. 24th and M LOUIS BENNISON in "OH JOHN NY!" leading audiences in singing at the Rialto. Another singing number there this week is "Whistling" "Schwartz, a returned navy man, who renders some solos. Charlotte Walker, who comes to the Sun tomorrow, is a Galveston girl, who makes her first bow to Omaha audiences here this week. She recently signed a contract with Fox, and this "Every Mother's Son" is her first picture. New Location Omaha 235 No. 10th St., Lincoln 00 PUPILS AT MASON SCHOOL " ARE VACCINATED Dr. Manning; , Thinks About Thirty Preferred Quarantine for Twenty-One Days City Health Commissioner Man niug with a statt of two other doc tors and eight nurses, vaccinated th 900 pupils and teachers of the Mason school Momlav. I Ins action was tak en bv order of Dr. Manning follow ing the discoery of one advanced case of smallpox in a pupil of the school last 1 hursday. Dr. Manning said nearly all th pupils either were vaccinated by their family physician or submitted to vaccination by the city doctors. They have the option of remaining at their homes for IV days in quarati tine if thev do not believe in vac cination. Only about M, he thought chose this alternative. The prin cipal of the school is a Christian Scientist. She was vaccinated by her own physrcian. All those vac cinated outside of the school had to show their "scars to the city doc tors. ' The vaccinating was not done without a protest from some of the patrons of the school. A special meeting of the board of education was held Saturday afternoon, at which Dr. Manning was summoned to be present. Lester B. McCotin, a Christian Science practitioner, was there also and protested the order of vaccina tion. Sees No Epidemic. T made no protest against th law and rule of the state board of health," said Mr. McLoun today "But our stand was that there is not an 'epidemic' of smallpox at tl.e Mason school. One case does not constitute an epidemic. The law commands the vaccination or isola tion treatment only when there ts an epidemic. Why, if you are going to make such an order every time one case of smallpox, scarlet fever, influenza or other so-called diseases is discovered you'll have a large part of the people under quarantine or treatment all the time. - Dr. Manning does not believe that fear of the disease enters into U'e taking of it. Six Killed and Fourteen Wounded in Berlin Riot London, Feb. 10. Repeated en counters occurred in Berlin be tween government troops and a mob which was only partly of spartacan character, a tseriin wireless mes sage received today declares. Six persons were killed and 14 others wounded, the message states. To ward evening, it is added, order was restored and the troops withdrew to their quarters. Says Head of Orphans' Home Traded Girl for $30 and Cow Marietta. Ga.. Feb. 10. Invest! cation of charges that Mrs. Naomi V. Campbell, head of an orphans' nome nere, naa iraaea a gin inmate for $30 and a cow, was begun today b" Solicitor General Dorsey. Ihe charges developed after the arrest of the woman in connection with a general inquiry relating to the treat ment of children in the institution Phone Douglas 7582 I A Cold? j Nonsense! i 1 If you take proper precautions, simple precautions at that, the dan ger of colds is vastly lessened. Keep your system free from fermenting food-waste whieh fills the blood with dangerouj poisons and you relieva your kidneys, lungs and skin pores of the over work required to rid yourself -of the poisons. Then you resistance wil overcome colds. This is easy to do. Your druggist can supply you with SALINOS, a new, really pleasant tasting salts, which will completely empty the di gestive tract, including the lower bowel where most of the poisons ara formed. It Is fully effective even if taken in cold water and is pleas ant in action as it is pleasant in taste. .' Get a bottle from your druggist for a Quarter (larger eizes Fifty cents and a Dollar.) Take it first thing in the morning. Keep your bowels open and youH not have colds, nor their dangerous after, effects, influenza and pneumonia. Adv. WORTH WEIGHT III GOLD, DECLARES MILWAUKEE MM His Mother Suffered for Eighteen Years; Tanlac Ends Trouble. "If everybody in Milwaukee knew how much good Tanlac has done my mother there isn't a one who would not think just as I do that it's worth its Weight in gold," was the interesting statement made by Frank J. Passage, brakeman on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul rail road, living at 26 35th St., Mil waukee, recently. "Mr. Passage's mother, Mrs. Minnie Passage, at the time she came to Milwaukee, four years ago, had been a resident of Shannon, Illinois, lor iiity years and is beloved by all who know her. "For eighteen or twenty years," continued Mr. Passage, "my mother has had trouble with her stomach and I can truthfully say that Tan lac is the ony medicine I have been able to find in all that time to do her any good. Nothing she would eat agreed with her and she was subject to frequent attacks of acute indigestion. In a little while alter eating, her food would sour and bloat her up with gas and cause her to suffer for hours. At times this gas would press on' her heart, almost cutting off her breath, and I actual ly thought she was going to die. Sha complained of awful pains through her stomach and left side and would belch up sour gas for hours. I hava often had to get up in the middle of the night and doctor her on account of this gas, and I don't believe she ever got a good night's rest on ac count of the pain she suffered. Dur ing the past year she lost twenty five pounds in weight, or more, and nil her strength seemed to leave her. During the past six months she has failed very much faster. All she was able to eat was a little soup or milk and soft boiled eggs, and even this would hurt her. Her condition became so serious that on December tha seventh I quit work in order to stay home and take care of her. One day I noticed a lanlac testi monial in the paper which was so straightforward and convincing that I told mother I wanted her to try the medicine. She agreed and at the time she started taking it she had been down in bed for five weeks and couldn't stand on her feet but a few minutes, if she tried. Well, she has taken two bottles now and you may believe it or not, she is up doing all her cooking and house work and is just feeling fine. She is now sixty-nine years of age, but 1 declare she gets around like one many years younger. She sleeps like a child, eats anything she wants and that gas and indigestion has stopped bothering her almost entirely. 1 have never seen such a change in anyone as Tanlac has made in Mother. I am very grateful for it and she is feeling mighty happy her self. We can't say too much in behalf of Tanlac, and have been tell ing everyone in the neighborhood about it." . Tanlac is sold in Omaha by al! Sherman & McConnell Drug Com pany's stores. Harvard Pharraacj and West End Pharmacy under ths personal direction of a special Tan lac representative. Also Forrest, and Mcany Drug Company in South Omaha and the leading druggist in each city and town throughout ths state of Nebraska. Adv. IV K O l. n m rtclKM pack. ml. Ilk. .icliu-. akava, K.tyM ali Mkatitutra. Will brin you renewed strength and vifcor. infuse new life and new energy into, your f lain&, drooping body whether exhausted from excessive nervous strain, undue physical ex ertion or sickness. The Great General Tcnic ASK YOUR DR UOGIST I 6? rm I