Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 02, 1919, SOCIETY SECTION, Image 21

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 2, 1919.
To tho ha know the mot, wards tu paint.
And thM. who know thM know all word art int.
Mora.
Four thing com not back tho spokoa
word, tho (pad arrow, tho put IK and th
neglected opportunity. Anon.
Busy Days in Music World
By HENRIETTA M. REES.
FOR many months the musical
colony of Omaha has heard
nothing but the most glowing
encomiums about Jascha Heifetz,
me i-year-old violinist, who last
season took all New York and the
east by storm. Blase critics and
public alike acclaimed him after his
first recital," and everywhere he has
awakened unbounded enthusiasm.
Now that the Tuesday Musical club
will present this brilliant young
artist before an Omaha audience on
March 10, everyone with musical
tendencies is on the qui vive to hear
him, and interest has been rife as to
what sort of a program he will play,
and as to nis extraordinary gifts as
a musician.
William J. Henderson, of the
New York Sun, in a recent two-col-inw
article devoted entirely to Jas
cha Heifetz, declares that this young
man, hardly more than a boy in
years, is at present at the top of his
profession, the first of living violin
ists, Mr. Henderson speaks of Heifetz'
gifts as manifold. First of all, a
'"violin grnis," which "means a
special facility in learning, that ex
quisite delicacy of muscular sense
which enables the left hand always
to direct its fingers to the exact po
sition demanded, and the right hand
to move and to press the bow so as
to get the perfect tone."
"Bowing," continues Mr. Hender
son, "is to the violinist what touch
is to the pianist. It is the life of his
technic. It is the means with which
he makes the tonal lights and
shadows play through the instru
mental song. It is the force behind
every dynamic gradation, the secret
of those infinite varieties of -sound
figuratively called "tone colon" But
it is more than this. It is the deter
mining factor in what is called
style. Here it is akin to the brush
work of the painter, sweeping and
Mrs. Jack Conners
Teacher of Dancing
Guarantee to teach you to dance
in two lessons.
Conner Hall, 23th and Farnam
Inflammation
Rob Omega Oil gently oyer the place
that harts. Then soak a piece of flannel
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nd coyer with dry flannel. This simple
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Unsightly Hair
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World's Most
Talented Violinist
Plays in Omaha
is '
bold, or delicate and fine. His only
limitation, according to r. Hender
son, is his age, and he predicts that
he will mature fast in the next five
years, and that "growth in wisdom
purely musical will bring with it
deeper and deeper emotion in the
study of great works."
This will be the fifth and closing
program of the season's series under
the auspices of the Tuesday Musical
club. Mr. Heifetz will be heard on
Monday evening, March 10, at the
Brandeis theater, in the following
program, which we suspect was ar
ranged by his manager to tickle the
ears of the benighted audiences of
the middle west.
(l)
Sonata No. 4 In P major Handel.
Largo maestro Allegro.
Larghetto Allegro con brio.
(U.)
Concerto In D minor Wlenlawski.
Allegro moderate
Domanza Andante non troppo.
Finale A la xingara.
IH)
a. Av Maria Shubart.
b. Menuetto Moiart.
e. Nocturne In 13 minor Chopin-Auer.
d. Choru of Dervishes (Etude)
Beethoven-Auer.
a. March Oriental (Scherzo) from th
Ruins ot Athens Bcethoven-Auer.
(IV.)
a. On Wing of Song.. .. ..Mendelssohn.
b. La Ronde ties I.utins. . . . . Bazinnl.
Andre Benolst At the Piano.
Miss Ruth Flynn will present Mr.
Barney Reilly, baritone, in song re
cital Sunday afternoon, March 2, at
the Brandeis theater. Mr. Reilly
comes well recommended from re
citals in Chicago and various other
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Take Lake Manawa or Main Street car, get off
two diocks easi ana one
of our building.
rlOFgl
cities, and Miss Flynn, who will also
play his accompaniments, is enthu
siastic about his singing. The follow
ing program will be given:
Prologue (Pagllaccl).' Laoncavallo
II.
(a) Dh vlenl alia flneatra Mozart
(b) O cessat di plargarml. . ..Scarlatti
(c) Caro mlo ben Qlordant
III.
(a) Ballynur Ballad . ...Arr. by Hughe
(b) Th Fanald Grove.. Arr. by Hughes
(c) Next Market Day.... Arr. by Hughe
(d) You'd Better Ask Me.... by Hughes
(e) Oh! I'm Not Myself at All.. Lover
IV.
Vision Fugitive Massenet
V.
(a) Drink to Me Only With Thin
Eye Old English
(b) I Gathered a Rose Lee
(c) Griefs Prelude MacFayden
(d) The Americans Foster
The Music department of the
Omaha Woman's club announces
that the concert which was post
poned on account of the epidemic
in December will be given March
6 at the Y. W. C. A. auditorium,
presentinj Mrs. Jensen of Council
Bluffs, violinist; Cecil lierryman.
pianist, and J. E. Carnal, bass. The
last concert date will be announced
later. The following program will
be presented March 6:
Boure Bach
Oevotte Cluck-Brahms.
Czardas MacDowell.
Mr. Berryman.
Ring Out Wild Hells Gounod
Meet Me by Moonlight Alone Wada
Thou Art Like Unto a Lovely Flower....
Smith.
Qod Smiled Upon the Desert Cadman.
(A California Poppy Song.)
Mr. Carnal.
Romans F Major Beethoven
Minuet Mozart.
Schorzo Tarantella Wlenlawski.
Mrs. Jensen.
staccato Caprice . .
Fantastic Nocturne
..Cecil Berryman.
. .Cecil Berryman.
nnapsoay wo. 10 y..
Mr. Berrvmati.
...Liszt.
Invlctu i Huhn.
noon ana wight Hawley.
My Love Is Like a Red Rose VrliermM
Creation' Hymn :.. Beethoven.
Mr. Carnal.
Slavonic Dane O major. . D vorok-Krelsler.
Berceuse p.i t.
Tambourin Chinols Krelsler'
Mrs. Jensen.
mis Marguerite Morehouse.- Alice Davis-
.Derryman, accompanists.
Mme. Frances Alda, the brilliant
soprano of the Metropolitan Opera
company, who is now under the
same concert management asvGalli
Curci and John McCormack and
wno will oe heard here in recital at
tne Auditorium next Fndav evening
March .7, as the third number of the
All-Star concert course, is said to be
one of the most versatile sopranos
now appearing before the public.
The program for the recital Friday
evening lonows:
t (a) Polonaise MacDowell
Mis Ballard.
2. (a) Amarllll Cacolnl
(O) jo no aula qulun Beratre...
Phllldor
(c) My Lovely Cell Munro
(0) ine Lass with th Delicate Air,
Dr. Arne
Madams Alda.
3. (a) Jag Letver (Swedish) ... .Merlkan to
(b) Kehtolaulau (Finnish) .. .Jarneveldt
(c) Somewhere In Franc (written for
and dedicated to Mme. Alda)..
Hartmann
(d) Chanson Norvegienn. . ..Foundraln
(e) Gavotte from "Manon" ... .Massenet
Mme. Alda.
INTERMISSION.
4. Cracovtenn Fantastlque. .Paderswskl
Miss Ballard.
S. Aria: "Un Bel DI." from "Madam
Butterfly" Puccini
Mme. Alda.
t Group of popular songs:
(a) Th Birth ot Morn Leonl
(b) Th Star Roger
. (c) The Llttl Gray House In the
West : Lohr
(d) A Khaki Lad. Allward
, () An Open 8crct Woodman
Mm. Aids,
Approgeiaturas. '
The following is sent by Miss
Evelyn B. Hopper, manager for
Miss Nash, tells of the recent sue
cess of this Omaha artist in her
appearance with the Chicago Sym
phony orchestra in that city. Karl-
OI oream, puiyiuiwuu, iuuijrauvu
asthma, kidney trouble and various
KADIS R
fi"ilet O)lob
White lolel)
BPlNAca
Fill Bak
TOMATO
Boob? Sam
tuatnp
, BmrwlAU
ABTBSia
CASTOR
PA.NST
POFPT
8c!ec!e"wih special regard
eiiner in caeci or money oracr
your home free of charse,'safe
Buy at home and save money.
iu page catalog uuuv uiu
i . i .t Ann ti c. v
located at iw-jrq sneer.
at Rock Island Depot,,: walk
norm ana you wui pe in ironi
ton Hackett writes in the Chicago
Evening Post: "Miss Nash was the
soloist for the MacDowell concerto
and she made an immediate impres
sion. Her tone was vibrant and of
surprising volume, her technical
equipment excellent throughout.
The bravura passages were delight
fully clear and done with a certainty
which was comforting. She had the
spirit of the music and brought it
out with a broad sweep that had the
true interpretative force in it. The
music meant something to her,
which she expressed with an inde
pendence of thought which stamped
her as a personality. She will be
heard of in the world of music."
Henri Fevrier, famous French op
eratic composer, in a recent inter
view in Musical America, said that
Wagner would perhaps not be per
formed as opera for some time in
France, probably not until after
this music has been performed for
some time in concert form. "In
concert .these wondrous themes and
progressions this glorious orches
trion stimulates our imagination,
which is only marred by the con
auistadorial business on the stage.
Eh, alors, Schumann, Schubert, Bee
thoven and others are ont to be con
sidered German composers. Today
the yare our composers is much as
they are those of Germany or any
other country."
Musical Notes.
Mrs. Louise 'jansen Wylle will
give a musical tea on Sunday after
noon March 2, at 4 o'clock at her
residence, 3821 Farnam steet. The
following pupils will take part: Mrs.
Grace Mauer, Mrs. Verne Miller, Mrs.
I B. Moran, Misses Irma Podolak,
Ethel Parsons, Lottie Freeman,
Gladys Behrens and Mildred Stovel;
Miss Flora Slmkert. violinist, pupil
of Mrs. Louise Shadduck Zabriskie,
will contribute a violin solo.
Mr. Harry Murrison will sing a
group of "negro spirituals" which
have proved so popular, at the Wed
nesday afternoon meeting of the
music section of the Woman's club.
Mrs. Murrison will act as his ac
companist. Mrs. Harry Murrison, assistant in
tho Community Singing department
of the War Camp Community service,
has been asked by the Music club,
which is Just being organized by the
girls from the Patriotic League
cfubs, to be their leader and assist
them to organize and promote music
al activities for the benefit of the
men in uniform. More definite plans
will be announced later.
The third meeting of the Song
Leaders school will be held in the
Y. M. C. A. an Wednesday night at
8 o'clock under the direction of
Harry Murrison In charge of Com
munity singing of the War Camp
Community service. A short resume
of the work done at the previous
meetings Is given each time and then
the new points taken up. The
meeting will not take more than an
hour and a quarter to an hour and a
half. The need for these leaders is
becoming more Insistent from day to
day and practical conducting will be
available at these meetings.
Wednesday afternoon at 3:30 at
the Y. W. C. A. auditorium the Music
department of, the Omaha Woman's
club will give a program of char
acter music. The department ex
tends an invitation to all lovers of
music. Mrs. Kay J. Abbott in charge
of program. Colonial dances in cos
tume will be given by Virginia Up
ham, Virginia Holiday and Alda Bea
con. Plantation music will be sung
by a ladies quartet, and Mrs. C. 1.
Brinkman and Mrs. Harry Murrison
will sing a group of songs. An In
dian dance under the direction or
Mrs. G. W. Shields will be given by
members of the department.
An Interesting program of piano,
harp and violin numbers was given
in the DeLone Harp sturtio yesterday
afternoon by pupils of Miss DeLone
and Mr. Cuscaden. Those taking part
were: Misses Irma Clow, Thelma and
Larlnda Skeen, Dolores O'Berg,
Masters Robert Kiley and Allan
Skeen. A number of the other pupils
took part in a musical game and a
taffy pull.
On Tuesday evening, March 4, at
8 o'clock at the studio's 612-513,
McCague building, the following pu
pils of J. Edward Carnal will appear
In recital: Gladys Nickel, Madeline
Stranglen, Fred Cary, Jeanette War
ren, Katharine Reynolds, Marie Jen
sen, S. O. Danlelson, Aletha Fletcher
and Louise Bratton Moor.
A musical program under the di
rection of Miss Helen Mackin will be
erlven in the T. M. C. A. at Fort
Omaha on Wednesday evening,
March B. Students of Luella Allen,
iuv 7ahrlVI Helen Mnkir.. and
Walter B. Graham, assisted by- Miss
Kate Swarzlander of the Story Tell
ers' league and Sergeant Moore of
Fort omana win turnisn ine pro
gram. A program of special music will
v crivon st thn North Side Christian
church on Sunday evening, March 2,
at 7:30 p. m. Tnose taking pan win
be Miss Jessie Cady, organ. Miss
Eleanor Alexander, soprano. Miss
rlnmr hnrniat! Jean Higcins.
baritone and the choir under the di
rection of Grace Pool Steinberg.
A program of Hawaiian music
was given Thursday evening at the
Brandeis theater by pupils of Luella
Allen. The roiiowmg toon part:
Misses Goldie Vater Ann Martin,
Eva Bobbitt, Clara Huth, Leta Huth,
Grace Relit, Hazel Weaver, Mc-
Candless, and Lillian Shellberg and
Mrs. Robert Eby.
TJiis Vapor Treatment
Surely Is Fine for Catarrh
Breaks Up Cold in Head
or Chest Over Night
If you want to get relief
from stuffed up head in five
minutes; if you want to feel
refreshed and invigorated, try
the following just before re
tiring' and wake up with .a
clear head and bright eye in
the morning.
Into a bowl, three-quarters
full of boiling water, pour a
teaspoonful of HYOMEI (pro
nounce it High-o-me) cover
head and bowl with a towel
and breathe for five minutes
the healing, soothing vapor
that arises.
This vapor will penetrate
into every nook ani crevice
where germs congregate and
where soreness and inflamma
tinn cannot be reached by any
i
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Virtuous Wives sas .re -s
CHAPTER XLI.
That wild unleashed kiss burned
her lips and cut across her soul like
the sting of a lash. Something
primevally rebellious rose up. Her
brain cleared. She flung back her
head. Her arm struck violently
against his lips.
"Let me go!"
No longer helpless, but strong
with the strength of anger, she
wrenched herself free and stood
from him, trembling in every limb.
"How could you, oh how could
vou!"
She tried to speak she tried to
voice the scorn that rose unreason
ingly against him. Words choked in
her throat. This had 'been no kiss
such as Tody Dawson had stolen.
During the one instant of giddiness
she had lam in his arms, seeing and
hearing nothing, she had been under
the absolute mastery of his will,
dominated and crushed.
"Why, Amy!" he began in wonder,
and in the darkness she felt his
hands coming" toward her.
"Don't touch me!" she cried fur
iously, striking his hands away.
"Don't you dare!"
"Amy!"
"O what a brute you've been!"
she cried hysterically. "You, whom
I trusted you! And this is the way
you protect me the way you re
spect me!"
"Good God!" he crijd in amazed
protest. "But I love you!"
"Love? No! That's not love!
You've made me despise you de
spise myself!"
"Wait!" he said, hurriedly, "You
don't know what you're saying you
can't, it's impossible!"
, "Impossible? I've never been so
humiliated so hurt and by you!
Oh, to think that this could happen
to me!" All at once she gave way
and fell back against the wall, shak
en bv sobs. He stood stern and si
lent without attempt to justify him
self, waitinsr.
Are you yourself now?" he said,
when at length she had grown quiet,
"Are vou calm enough to listen?"
"I am," she said coldly. Of course,
now he would seek to lustily him
self, to entreat her pardon.
"You said," he began slowly
you said you dispised me." He
UL'-iitpd
, "Do you mean what you have just
said?" he-asked in a tone that
should have warned her.
"I do exactly as I have said it!
she cried. At the moment her only
thought was to humble him as he
had humbled her before his sudden
strength. .
, "By heavens 1" he said with afiash
of anger. "I beg your pardon I
guess I see well, there's only one
thing to do. I'll rid you of my pres
enceand at once."
"I am glad you can at least per
ceive that!"
"My dear Mrs. Forrester,' he
said, wheeling around as if he had
received a blow. "I think you don't
quite understand my reasons."
"There's no use trying to justi
fy" she started precipitately to
""justify? Hardly," he cut in. "You
seem to quite misunderstand the
situation. I have not the slightest
intention now or at any time of ex
cusing myself for having, in a mo
ment beyond the control of any man
who loves, lost my head in a per
fectly human way."
"It is useless!" she cried loudly,
to still the felling of uneasiness
which was creeping over her. 'There
is no excuse, none!"
"I'm sorry," he said in a low
voice "I had another ideal of you. I
didn't think you were, like the other
crowd. I thought there was some
thing genuine in you something
that would mean something to some
man."
"You have no right to" .
"Oh, yes I have. I have the right
Be Oencrous
Uith Stomach
Give It Nouriihing Food and Give It
Generous Assistance With Stu
art's Dyspepsia Tablets. For
Gas, Heartburn or Distress
After Eating.
You may read library on what to eat
and whBt to avoid. You may follow th
rule laid down for dieting and still have
indigestion, sour stomach and the heavy,
drowsy feeling of over-eating. With most
people the stomach simply needs the plain,
common-kens Jielp afforded by Stuart-
Dyspepsia Tablets. Not only do they aid
digestion, but you may eat sausage for
breakfast, pie for lunch, lobster salad for
dinner. No gas, no sour risings, no lump
in your throat, no biliousness, no head
ache, no dark brown taste in the morning.
This is the result after learning that Stu
art' Dyspepsia Tablets assist digestion,
tone the atomach, bring It back to robust
appetite. Eat anything you like. These
tablets are sold in every drug store in the
United States and Canada, which shows
how they are esteemed by those who real
ize how necessary it is now and then to
give the atomach a much needed assistance.
The properties in Stuart's Dyspepsia
Tablets, combined with that already in the
stomach, act upon food and enable the
stomach to move on to the intestine the
food contents. Try these tablets and get
relief almost at once. You can obtain
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets at any drug
store at SO cents a box. Adv.
other remedy.
A botle of HYOMEI costs
only 60 cents, but to relieve
catarrh or stuborn coughs and
colds the HYOMEI inhaler
should also be used at least
four times a day.
Sherman & McConnell Drug
to. and druggists everywhere
sell for $1.15 what is called
;he HYOMEI outfit which con
sists of a hard rubber pocket
inhaler, a bottle of HYOMEI
and simple instructions for
use; but if you already possess
a HYOMEI inhaler you can
purchase a bottle of HYOMEI
only 60 cents.
For catarrh, coughs, colds,
sore throat, asthma and croup
HYOMEI is guaranteed, or
money back. It kills the germs
and soothes and heals the sore
and inflamed membrane.
Adv.
to say this, for I have protected you
in trying moments. In the moment
of your trouble I offered you every
thing myself, my name, only after
you gave me clearly to understand
that you and your husband were on
the verge of separation. That is
something for a man to offer to
put at your feet, without demanding
an answer. If I have made a mis
take, you have led me to it; you
have tried me beyond what a wo
man has the right to try a man.
But understand this: When I offered
you what I did I did it in the be
lief that your feeling was not one
simply of calculation, but that your
heart was in it and that you had a
heart."
"Monte, don't!" she cried, recoil
ing and covering her face. She had
never been able to see herself, nor
understand her own motives, and
when someone laid them before her
without mercy, she was always
shocked. .
. "I beg your pardon, I didn't
mean I should have gone without
saying such things but it's been
well, rather a shock!" He laughed,
and said with forced gentleness.
"The trouble is, Amy, you really are
like the others Irma and Gladys,
and the rest. You want to play with
something you don't understand,
something you don't need in your
life. You're willing to take every
thing from a man and give nothing.
You can't understand what you do,
because you can't feel yourself.
Well, to me that's more immoral
than the woman who sacrifices ev
erything because she does love.
Possibly I'm wrong in that opinion,
but I hold it." He drew a long
breath, and when he continued, his
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In one minute your clogged nos
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your head will clear and you can
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Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream
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It penetrates through every air pas
sage of the head, soothes the in
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and relief comes instantly.
It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed
up with a cold or nasty catarrh Re
lief comes so quickly. Adv.
People Notice It Drive Them
Off with Dr. Edwards'
Olive Tablets
A pimply face will not embarrass you
much longer if you get a package of
Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. The skin
should begin to clear after you have
taken the tablets a few nights.
Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver
with Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, the
8uccessf ul substitute for calomel; there's
no sickness or pain after taking them.
Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets do that
which calomel does, and just as effec
tively, but their action is gentle and
safe instead of severe and irritating.
No one who takes Olive Tablets is
ever cursed with "a dark brown taste,"
a bad breath, a dull, listless, "no good
feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad
disposition or pimply face.
Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets are a
purely vegetable compound mixed with
olive oil; you will know them by their
Olive color.
Dr. Edwards spent years among pa
tients afflicted with liver and bowel
complaints, and Olive Tablets are the
immensely effective result
Take one or two nightly for a week.
See how much better you feel and look.
1.0c and ?5e per box. All druggists.
A Woman's Verdict
Tells of Suffering Greatly
With Kidney and Bladder
Trouble and How Balm
wort Brought Relief.
Her Letter Well Worth
Reading
Mrs. Nellie McGinn, 609 East
138th street, New York City, writes:
"For the last year I had suffered
greatly from Kidney and Bladder
trouble, distressing pain in the back
and hips, with rheumatic twinges
and frequent severe headache, ac
companied by nervousness, chills,
and fever; also a frequent desire to
eliminate, a smarting, burning sen
sation with nain in the recion of the
bladder. I would frequently have to
arise at night, by sleep being dis
turbed by the pressure and inflam
mation in bladder. Beginning the
use of Balmwort Tablets I noticed
almost instant relief, and continuing
to use them I am now totally well
and relieved of all pain and distress
from which I suffered. I am glad
to recommend Balmwort Tablets as
a reliable beneficial medicine and
trust others may find relief and
freedom from pain and distress as
I did, etc." 1
The above letter is a true state
ment and is on file in our offices.
Balmwort Tablets bring relief when
other medicine has failed. Sold by
leaamg druggists, ?1.U0 per tube.
Adv,
BREAD
voice was even again. "You see, I'm
not a manikin. I'm not a Tody Daw
sou. No, I can't make any excuses.
If I lost my head tonight, honestly,
blindly, like a human being, I had
every right to do so. A woman who
really loves doesn't act as you do
and if you don't love me and were
only playing with my life like that,
then, Amy " He stopped, checked
the hot words on his tongue, shud
dered, and said, "I musn't say any
more, it's dangerous. Well, I think
I understand now. Goodby."
What! He was going he was
leaving her, when every word he had
said had convinced her? Her head
turned, she felt herself reeling. She
stretched out her hand.
"Monte!"
He was already up the path,
TURN HAIR DARK
WITH SAGE TEA
Grandma kept her lock dark, glossy
and youthful with simple mix
ture of Sage Tea and Sulphur.
The old-time mixture of Sage Tea
and Sulphur for darkening gray,
streaked and faded hair is, grand
mother's recipe, and folks are again
using it to keep their hair a good,
even color, which is quite sensible,
as we are living in an age when a
youthful appearance is of the great
est advantage.
Nowadays, though, we don't have
the troublesome task of gathering
the sage and the mussy mixing at
home. All drug stores sell the ready-to-use
product, improved by the ad
dition of other ingredients, called
"Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com
pound." It is very popular because
nobody can discover it has been ap
plied. Simply moisten your comb
or a soft brush with it and draw
this through your hair, taking one
small strand at a time; by morning
the gray hair disappears, but what
delights the ladies with Wyeth's
Sage and Sulphur Compound, is
that, besides beautifully darkening
the hair after a few applications, it
also produces that soft lustre and
appearance of abundance which is
so attractive. Adv.
Tells Impoverished
Men and Women
How To Become Healthy,
Strong, Energetic, Magnetic
and Vigorous.
Three-Grain Cadomene Tab.
lets Advised for Their Won
derful Tonic Properties.
Don't envy the man or woman
with abundant energy, vitality, and
the ever-present smile of cordial
magnetic personality. Resolve to
banish your languor, your tired,
worn-out feeling, your aches and
pains, your mental worry and dis
tress, by supplying your system with
plenty of iron, phosphorus, and veg
etable tonics so that every organ of
your body can perform its normal
functions from the vigorous blood
supply that courses through your ar
teries. Tone up the liver, stomach,
kidneys, and bowels, digest your
food better and supply your nerves
with the vital elements in Cadomene
Tablets and you won't need to envy
anyone. Just get your body and
nerves working right and nature will
help you do the rest. Cadomene
Tablets are sold in sealed tubes by
all good druggists, and are guaran
teed to please you or money back.
Adv.
A FEELING OF SECURITY
You naturally feel secure when
you know tha't the medicine you are
about to take is absolutely pure and
contains no harmful or habit pro
ducing drugs.
Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, kidney, liver and blad
der remedy.
The same standard of purity,
strength and excellence is main
tained in every bottle of Swamp
Root. It is scientifically compounded
from vegetable herbs.
It is not a stimulant and is taken
in teaspoonful doses.
It is not recommended for every
thing. It is nature's great helper in re
lieving and overcoming kidney, liver
and bladder troubles.
A sworn statement of purity is
with every bottle of Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root.
If you need a medicine, you
should have the best. On sale at all
drug stores in bottles of two sizes,
medium and large.
However, if you wish first to try
this great preparation send ten cents
to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton,
N. Y., for a sample bottle. When
writing be sure and mention the
Omaha Sunday Bee. Adv.
STOPS BACKACHE
Ifj FEW fiilNUTES
Rub lumbago, pain, soreness,
stiffness right out with
"St. Jacobs Liniment"
When your back is sore and lame
or lumbago, sciatica or neuritis has
you stiffened up, don't suffer! Get
a small trial bottle of old, honest
"St. Jacobs Liniment" at any drug
store, pour a little in your hand and
rub it right into the pain or ache,
and by the time you count fifty, the
soreness and lameness is gone.
Dont' stay crippled! This sooth
ing, penetrating liniment takes the
ache and pain right out and ends the
misery. It is magical, yet absolutely
Harmless and doesn t burn or dis
color the skin.
Nothing else stops lumbago, sci
atica and lame back misery so
promptly and surely. It never dis
appoints! Adv,
swinging rapidly, with great strides.
"Monte, don't go like this Monte
listen to mcl Monte!"
She ran after him a few steps
faltered, and suddenly her knees
bent beneath her. Then she was
alone, huddled against the side of
the veranda, helpless and weak. In
the distance the sound of his re
treating steps ceased on the gravel
path.
(To Be Continued Tomorrow.)
THE WEATHER FOR
COUGHS AND CtiLDS .
At ttia first snMia or cough. eMll.
fever, or a discharge of mucous from
the nose and throat, watch out. You
have caught cold. For such emergen
cies there Is one remedy which the
prudent family always keeps in toe
house
PE-RU-NA
Ilerty-to-tnke fop
Catarrh and Catarrhal Conditions
Do not nrtrtat rold. It Is a ca
tarrhal condition which may become
chranie and give rise to other and
more serious disorder. PE-KtT-NA
also wards off th Grip or Spanish In
fluenna and is excellent to build up the
aystem after an attack.
PE-RU-NA ia the standhv In thou
sands of home for aour atomach.
bclrhino. indiu-pfttinn.
constipation.
pains in th stomach,
nsusc. rheumatism, or
any disorder due to a
catarrhal inflammation
of th mucous mem
branes In any of tha
organs or in noay,
. rE-RU-NA In
house will often pre
vent serious and ling
ering sickness.
A Bottle of PE
RU-NA la Fourteen
Ounces ul Prevention.
IF KIDNEYS ACT
BAD TAKE SALTS
Says Backache is a sign you
have been eating too much
meat, which forms uric
acid.
.When you wake up with backache I
and dull misery in the kidney region
it generally means you have beert
eating too much meat, says a well
known authority. Meat forms uric
acid which overworks the kidneys in
their effort to filter it from the
blood and they become Bort of par
alyzed and loggy. When your kid- ,
nevs get slugg'sh and clog you must
relieve them, like you relieve your
bowels; removing all the body's
urinous waste, else you have back
ache, sick headache, dizzy spells;
your stomach sours, tongue is coat
ed, and when the weather is bad you
have rheumatic twinges. The urine
is cloudy, full of sediment, channels
often o-ft snre, water scalds and you
are obliged to seek relief two or
three times during the night.
Either consult a good, reliable
physician at once or get from your
pharmacist about four ounces of Jad
Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass
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 clean and
stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to
neutralize acids in the urine so it
no longer irritates, thus ending blad
der weakness.
Jad Salts is a lie saver for regu
lar meat eaters. It is inexpensive,
cannot injure and makes a delight
ful, effervescent lithia-water drink.
Adv.
Jump from Bed
in Morning and
Drink Hot Water
Tells why everyone should drink
hot water each morning
before breakfast
Why is man and woman, half the
time, feeling nervous, despondent,
worried; some days headachy, dull
and unstrung; some days really in
capacitated by illness.
If we all would practice inside
bathing, what a gratifying change
would take place. Instead of thou
sands of half-sick, anaemie-looking
souls with pasty, muddy complexions
we should see crowds of happy,
healthy, -rosy-cheeked people every
where. The reason is that the hu
man system does not rid itself each
day of all the waste which it accum
ulates under our present mode of
living. For every ounce of food and
drink taken into the system nearly
an ounce of waste material must b
carried out, else it ferments and
forms ptomaine-like poisons-which
are absorbed into the blood.
Men and women, whether sick or
well, are advised to drink each
morning before breakfast, a glass of
real hot water with a teaspoonful of
limestone phosphate in it, as a harm
less means of washing out of the
stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels
the indigestible material, waste, sour
bile and toxins.
Millions of people who had their
turn at constipation, bilious attacks,
acid stomach, nervous days and
sleepless nights have become real
cranks about the morning inside
bath. A quarter pound of limestone
phosphate will not cost much at the
drug store, but is sufficient to dem
onstrate to anyone, its cleansing,
sweetening and freshening eflc
upon the System, Adv,
and buweis. I
1
V Y Tablet3
(ffl 5 f Everywhere
- iwiiiMMirrffisi'i