THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1919. NATIONAL W.C.T.U Sdffiger STARTS DRIVE FOR $2,000 y mi Mrs. Frances Parks, Evans- : ton, III., Addresses Noon Luncheon of Omaha - Temperance Workers.- , . 'Mr. Frances Parks of Evanston, -111., national secretary of the V. C. r U., opened the Nebraska cam paign for $25,000 of the million-dol- lar jubilee fund to be raised thrcugh- j-out the nation, at a luncheon given by Omaha temperance workers yes terday noon in the Hotel Conant. jrOmaha's qpota is $2,000. J "I'm heartily in accord with your Ujtate director's goal that Nebraska ihall be first to go over the top; ,aid Mrs. Parks. We have an espe cially kind regard for Nebraska be- i. cause it was the 36th state, the, one necessary to complete the ratihca tion of the national prohibition .amendment." Dr. Jennie Callfas is the state director. f To Continue Work. : , "Funds collected will be used in continued temperance work , in America that liquor interests may '.not be able to repeal or nullify the No Medicine- Without I Its Family Laxative From the baby to the grandparents a good laxative is the necessary medicine in the little ills. It wards off serious sickness and saves doctor's bills. Many a cold has been pre vented from running into grippe and pneumonia by its timely use. Many a racking headache has been quickly dispelled by it. And it is a laxative rather than a drastic cathartic or purgative that should be in every family medicine-chest, for a laxative can be used at all ages. Thousands of good American families have for more than a quarter century used a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin known to druggists as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It is a laxative-tonic that acts on the bowels end stomach. Infants take it with perfect safety, and it is equally effective for grownups. Grandparents are now seeing their children give it to their babies. It is excellent for all the family in constipation no matter how chronic, indigestion, wind colic, biliousness, headaches, dyspepsia and similar ills. The druftist will refund your money it it tmitm to do as promised. ' I' I- r. . .- PRICE AS ALWAYS In spite of greatly Increased laboratory costs due to the War, by sacrificing profits and absorbing war taxes we have main tained the price at which this family lax ative has been sold by druggists for the past 2S years. Two i 50c and $1.00. H I i,4 ' - 1 " ' 1 ' ; ' 1 ' '"' .":-? What Makes Men and Iron? Any of These People? Ignace Jan Paderewski, Pianist and Nation Maker j United States Judge G. W. Atkinson, Former Governor j- Dr. George H. Baker, Former Hospital Physician and Surgeon H Hon. Anthony Caminetti, U. S. Commissioner of Immigration ;.. . Former U.S. Sen. Wm. E. Mason, now Congressman from Illinois iRead What they Say about Nuxated Iron t AS a Tonic, Strength and Blood Builder 'Physician Explains How It Helps Put Renewed Vim and En ergy Into the Veins of the Weak, Run-down, Infirm and K Aged -Often Increases Their Strength in Two ! Weeks' Time. When widely known men of the highest calibre come out frankly and ; publicly endorse a product which they have personally found valuable for building up the health and strength, it must arouse the interest of every 'thinking person in Nuxated Iron, which is today being used by over 'three million people annually to help create red blood, power and en- dura.ice. - Dr. T. Alphonsus Wallace, a physician of many years'-experience and formerly of the British Naval Medical Service, says: "It is the men laf blood and iron on a par wirJi the war-hardened fellows returning 'from camp and fields who will forge ahead in the business and political j lite or the country today. J- "Living in the open, eating coarse ,fobdi and leading regular lives have jmad blood rich in' iron for these 'strong, healthy vigorous specimens of tmanhood. But ao such opportunity 'for building up their health is open ' 'o thousands of Ken and women in V ivjl life whor ) wearing .tasks and1 iron-impoverish! food sap their en-jl rgy and vitajitr, make them weak, anaemic and run-down and often ! t-ause their bleed to literally starve ' !or want of iron. Without iron there ,:an be no atrong. red-blooded men or I l.ealthy. rosy-cheeked women, and un , 4ess this strength-giving iron is ob ' "ained from the foods we eat. it must be supplied in some form that is eaa jly absorbed and assimilated. For this purpose I always recommend organio sron Nuxated Iron which I have sed so successfully both In eivil life and for convalescing soldiers that , i am absolutely convinced of its ef . ectivaoess for helping build red ; Wood, strength and endurance. Of great importance to the oublie should be the strong endorsement of Nuxated Iron as a preparation of great Jmerit as a tonic, and blood builder, given by former U. S. Senator William $. tlason, who has the distinction of being one pf the really big men of the nation. His fhampionship of Pure Food and Drugs leg islation, his fight for the rural free delivery system, and his strong advocacy of all bills favoring labor has made him a national fipr ure and endeared him to the hearts of the forking man and the great masses of peo ple. Senator Mason says: "I have often atd I would never recommend medicine of any kind. I believe that the doctor's place. However, after the hardest political cam paign of my life, without a chance for a V vacation, I had been starting to court v ery morning with that horrible, tired feel lag one cannot describe. I was advised to try Nuxated Iron. As a pioneer in the pure ' food and drug legislation, I was at first path to try an advertised remedy, but aft er advising with one of :ny medical friends, f-gave it a test. The results have been so beneficial in my own case, 1 made up my mind to let my friends know about it. and too are at liberty to publish this state joent if you so desire. I am now 65 years af age and I feel that a remedy which will build up the strength and increase the pow er of endurance et one at my age, should r e known to th world." , ; Equally interesting is the opinion of .Judge C. W. Atkinson of the United States Court of Claims, at Washington, who for twenty years ha been in the public serv ice as Judge, Governor,' Member of ' Con- gaa and V. S, DMariet Attarecy. Me say.: is without W;Uat!on thht I recommend huuued Iron ui persons who in the stress prohibition law; '. for Americaniza tion, child welfare, moral education and to send missionaries and work ers across seas in the work of world prohibition," said Mrs. Parks Thursday. March 20, the day set for the formal opening of the 10 week drive, is the birthday anniver sary of Neal Dow, often referred to as the father of, the prohibition movement. Through his efforts Maine passed the first prohibition law. Mrs. Mamie Claflin of Lincoln, state president, was unable to at tend the luncheon. Mrs. Paarks will visit the Lincoln unions Thursday. The Weather. i Comparative Local Board. I91. 1918. 1917. 19K. Highest yesterday ...7 74 it 49 Lowest ' yesterday ...47 43 33 30 Mean temperature. ...57 0 43 40 Precipitation ..00 00 00 '00 Temperature and precipitation depar ture! from the normal; Normal temperature. 31 Excess for the day IS Totnl excess since March 1, 1919 85 Normal precipitation 04 Inch Deficiency for the day 04 Inch Rainfall since March 1. 1919. 1 29 Inches Rxcess since March 1, 1919.. 65 inch Deficiency cor. period J 1918.. 63 Inch Kxcess cor. porlud In 1917 55 Inch Reports From Stations at 7 P. M. Station and Mate Temp. Hli;h- Rain- of Weather. 7 p. m. st. fall. Cheyenne, cloudy ....50 !i .00 Davenport, clear 56 54 .00 Denver, cloudy 62 66 .00 Dodge City, cloudy ...68 78 .00 Lander, eloudy 54 58 .00 North riatte. cloudy ..60 70 .00 Omaha, cteur, ...62 67 .00 Pueblo, cloudy 66 70 .00 Rapid City, cloudy 32 58 .00 I,. A. WELSH, Meteorologist. Chest SDr. Caldwell's YRUP DEPS1N The Perfect Laxative FREE SAMPLES If you haw never used Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin send for a free trial bottle to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 468 Washington St., MontJceOo, HI. If there are babies at home, ask for a copy of Dr. CaldweD'a book, "Tbe Care of Baby." Do You Know iii s , j k-v s js i - - n t a . . full WiM of physical or mental labors have permitted the system to become debilitated, the body exhausted or the nerves run-down. It has restored my appetite and my vitality. I feel that I have dropped off the burden of months of toil in the few weeka that I have been following the very simple di rections for the use of Nuxatd Iron." Ignace Jan Paderewski, one of the great est musical geniuses of the age, at a time when his untiring work for Poland over taxed his strength and impaired his health had recourse to Nuxated Iron to help re-, build his wasted forces and restore his old time health and strength. He says : "I am using Nuxated Iron very frequently .and ;onsidtr it as an excellent tonic." With the strain imposed by two years of almost ceaseless work in the cause of his father land it is easily understood why he sought the sustaining benefit of Nuxated Iron. Then there is United States Commission er of Immigration Hon. Anthony Caminetti who. despite his 64 years and a life which calls him to all parts of the country in all climates and all seasons, is today more ac tive and alert than many a younger man would be in meeting the strain of his offi cial duties. Commissioner Caminetti says: "In the heat of summer, and the rigor of winter and the debilitating weeks of spring time, I have used Nuxated Iron with unvarying success and satisfaction. After weektt of busiesf-eonfinement to office duties, I tfnd in Nuxated Iron the true tonic qualities which help bring one's physical being to thnt . state, of fitneee which is the desire of every healthy minded man or woman. Nuxated Iron I recommend to whoever feels HUGHES AUTO IS FOUNO WRECKED NEAR C. BLUFFS Machine Was Stolen from Minne Lusa Garage When Watchman Was Robbed and Kidnaped. With the finding yesterday of the Jordan automobile, stolen from the Minne Lusa garage five days ago, when masked bandits held up and kidnaped the night foreman, A. C. Ash, police believe they have clues which will lead to the capture of the robbers. The machine, owned by Frank Hughes, president of the Hughes Wholesale Grocery companv, was found?even miles east of Council Bluffs, wrecked, and partly burned. Sheriff Gronnewcg of Pottawat tamie county found the car. A farmer nearby, at whose house the three bandits stopped, described the men accurately to Grcnneweg and other officers. Omaha police think they know the men. Ash, the night foreman at the gar age, was first held up, and then forced to enter the Hughes car. At the Forest Lawn cemetery the rob bers hurled him from the machine. The Hughes car was valued at $2,500, and was insured against theft and fire. Omaha police notified Mr. Hughes this morning that his car had been recovered. No Bloodhounds to Trail Criminals in Douglas County The county commissioners yes terday declined to buy bloodhounds to track dovn criminals. The ques tion came up at the hoard meeting and was reteired to Chairman Neble with the request that he ask Sher iff Clark his opinion of the idea. Sheriff Clark says he doesn't want any bloodhounds. "I have Pat Welsh and Jim Lind say and they'll track oowu more criminals than a pack of blood Hounds," the sheriff said. "This bloodhound idea isn't practical, es pecially in city. Supoosa a man commits a crime and wants to es cape from being tracked by blood hounds, it would be a very simple matter. All he'd have to do would be to walk through the crowds, or jump on a street car and the trail would be lost." Fanning Co. Will Now Pave Leavenworth Street Charles Fanning has given per sonal assurance to City Commis sioner Towl that the Fanning Pav ing company will sign a contract with the city for the paving of Leavenworth street from Forty eighth to Sixtieth streets. Mr. Fanning explained that the street railway company has shown a dis position to place its tracks at an early date and thus remove the ob stacle which has stood in the way ot paving. of Blood fU.5. JUDGE G.W.ATKINSON the need of a tonic restorative for debili tation, exhaustion and overwork." In commenting upon the' probability of building up a stronger race of people by increasing the supply of iron in their blood. Dr. George H. Baker, formerly Phy sician and Surgeon, Monmouth Memorial Hospital of New Jersey, says: "Iron is ab solutely necessary to change food into liv ing tissue, muscle and brain. Refined foods tnd modern methods of cooking have rob bed us of much of the iron which Nature intended we shoul'd receive. For supplying this deficiency and increasing the red cor puscles, I know of nothing more effective than organic iron Nuxated Iron. From a careful examination of the formula and my own tests of Nuxated Iron, I feel convinced that it is a preparation which any physi cian can take himself or prescribe for bis patient with the utmost confidence of ob taining highly beneficial and satisfactory results. The fact that Nuxated Iron is to day being used by over three million peo ple annually as a tonic, strength and blood builder, is in itself an evidence of tremen dous public confidence and I am convinced that if others would take Nuxated Iron when they feel weak and run-down it would help make a nation of stronger,! healthier men and women." ' M ANI'KACTL" RER8' NOTE: Kuisted Iron which li recommended shove Is not a secret remedy but one which is well known to druggists everywhere. Un like the older inorgaulc Iron products It is easily assimilated and does uot injure the teeth, muke them black nor mwet the stomach. The manufao urers guarantee suciftssrul and entirely satisfactory results lo every purchaser or they will rfuud rour money. It Is dispensed in this cltv hy Sherman A atcCuumll drug Korea sud oliwr Uruttfisls A JAN iUI I I v ' 1 Blue Eyes Win For Artillery Lieutenant Lt. V. B. Redmond of Camp Shelby, Miss., and Scots bluff, Neb., and Miss Agnes Katherine Coffey, Well Known Omaha Girl and War Community Worker, to Be Married This Afternoon. Lieut. Redmond When Lt. V. B. Redmond, sta tioned at Camp Shelby, Miss., looked into the big blue eyes of Miss Agnes Katherine Coffey, War Community worker, one day last fall, waiting for information of a charitable na ture, he was amorously hypnotized, and at 4 o clock the couple became man and wife at the words of Father P. A. Flanagan, pastor of Holy Angels church, Twenty-fourth and Fowler avenue. Though their wedding had been planned to take place on June 17, the bride s 19th birthday, the cere mony was unexpectedly decided upon for yesterday because of mili ary orders that prevent the young lieutenant from obtaining leave of absence any other time. Special dis pensation was given the couple to have the ceremony performed in Lent. Active in War Charity. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John S. Coffey, 2111 Lari more avenue, and though she has known Lieutenant Redmond , for several years, it was not until their tryst at the War Community office last fall that Cupid flung a direct hit at the lovers. Miss Coffey was president of the Angelus club of Holy Angels parish and was active Masonic Initiation to Be Most Elaborate One Ever Held in Nebraska The stage is completely set for the initiation of 2S0 new members into the Shriners' degree of the Ma sonic lodge, The affair will be held in the Masonic temple Nineteenth and Douglas streets, Friday, and will take up the entire day. T, L. Cpmbs, illustrious potentate, is at the head of the committee in charge of the initiation. Following the re galia ceremonies, beginning at noon and extending into the evening, speeches will be made by visiting delegates. A banquet will mark the finale of the ceremonies. Friday's initiation will be the second held in the new Masonic temple, and the largest class ever initiated in Ne braska. Elaborate plans have been fulfilled to mark the occasion one of solemnity. Brandeis to Include Fourth Floor in Store Brandeis salesrooms will be en larged to take up the full fourth floor of their building, while ten ants, chiefly medical men, will be forced to find other quarters next month. Elevator service to the new fourth floor will be provided. J. L. Brandeis & Sons will take pos session of the enlarged quarters at the expiration of the Jeases of ten ants next month. The eighth floor of the building is now taken up as a stock room and it is believed that eventually the entire building will be used by the firm. Officer to Tell Kiwanis .of Reconstruction Work Capt. H. B. Lemere, recently re turned from France, will address Friday's noon meeting of the Ki wanis club at the Chamber of Com merce on reconstruction work per taining to the blind. ' J. A. Sunderland and W. B. Tagg have been elected to fill vacancies on the board of directors of the Ki wanis club. Bee Want Ads produce results Try them and be convinced. OUCH! PAIN! RUB OUT RHEUMATISM Stop suffering! Relief comes the moment you apply old , "St. Jacobs Liniment." Rheumatism is "pain only." Not one case in fifty requires in ternal treatment. Stop drugging! Rub the misery right away! Apply soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Liniment" directly upon the "tender spot" and relief comes instantly. "St. Jacobs Liniment" conquers pain. It is harmless rheumatism lin iment which never disappoints and can not burn the skin. Limber up! "Stop complaining! Get a small trial bottle of "St. Jacobs Liniment" at any drug store, and in just a moment you'll be free from rheumatic pain, soreness and stiffness. Don't suffer! Relief awaits you. "St. Jacobs Liniment" is just as good for sciatica, neuralgia, lum bago, backache, sprains and swell ings. Adv. War Worker and His Bride. in war work. She was a leading participant in the playlet given at the Brandeis theater on February 8 for the benefit of war charity. Lives in Scottsbluff. Lieutenant Redmond, whose home is in Scottsbluff, Neb., arrived here Tuesday, unexpectedly, for an early claimant to the title of hus band. He enlisted in the heavy artillery service in May, 1917, and won his commission several months later. It was while passing through Omaha on his way to Camp Shelby, Mississippi, last fall that he renewed his acquaintance with his bride with amorous vigor. He was later assigned as an in structor in the artillery school there, which detained him from go ing overseas. Following the wed ding ceremony which was at tended only by immediate relatives, the young couple Were honored guests at a dinner at the home of the bride's parents. They left on their honeymoon last night the trip taking them to Chicago, thence through the south. They will make their home near Camp Shelby. Attending the bride at the wed ding was Miss Mary Flanagan. John Coffey, jr., was best man. "IT HAS CERTAINLY PAID ME WELL, " STATESJOHN NIX Has Gained Fifteen Pounds Taking Tanlac Suffers Fourteen Years. "When a man has had stomach trouble for 14 years, so bad he couldn't eat anything without suf fering afterwards and then finds a medicine that fixes him up in a few iveeks' time so he can eat just any thing he wants, I think it is time for him to talk for the benefit of others. Well, Tanlac has done all this for me, and more, for I am now 15 pounds heavier than I was before I began taking it, and I have also gotten rid of a case of rheumatism of the worst sort." The above remarkable statement j was made by John Nix, a well ; known miner, living at Edwards, ! III., while in the Sutliff & Case drug store at Peoria, a few days ago. . "Many a time after eating," he continued, "I would bloat up as tight as a drum and feel so tight all through my chest that I would have to gasp for breathe Everything I would eat would sour and there was a burning sensation, like fire, in my stomach. My digestive organs just seemed to be dead, as I lost and felt tired out all the time. I also had rheumatism along with the stomach trouble, and suffered from it near ly all the time, but during the past Winter I began having it worse than ever. My joints ached so bad at times I thought I couldn't stand it and I could hardly sleep at all for weeks at a time for the pain. I was in such a bad shape that work was torture to me and I couldn't get any pleasure out of living. I really wasn't able to work and here re cently my friends got to remark ing about how fast I was going down hill and how bad I was loking. "I realized myself that I was getting in serious shape and told my wife that unless I could find some thing to relieve my suffering I would be unable to go very much longer. Well, I finally got me some Tanlac, as so many people were telling how it had helped them, and while my improvement wasn't as rapid as some I read about, I gradually got better. So I stuck to my Tanlac and it has certainly paid me well, for it has made me feel like a new man. After finishing my third bottle I commenced to climb rapidly and my stomach trouble and rheumatism soon left me entirely. My appetite came back in full force and I began to eat steak, potatoes, gravy and just anything else and now I never have a sign of indiges tion no matter what I eat. If my Tanlac had cost me $50 a bottle it would have been worth that much to me, for now I am feling perfectly strong and well and can do a3 much work as any man in the mines. My wife says I look better than I have in years and she must be right, for I certainly do feel a man made over." Tanlac is sold in Omaha by all Sherman & McConnell Drug Com pany's stores, Harvard Pharmacy and West End Pharmacy. Also For rest and Meaney Drug Company in South Omaha and the leading drug gist in each city and town through out the state of Nebraska. Adv. EMBEZZLEMENT CHARGE AGAINST TEAMSTER HEAD Secretary of Omaha Team sters' Union Arrested for Alleged Defrauding Or ganization of $1,000. James Keasling, secretary of a local teamsters' union, was arrested yesterday by Detectives Baugh man and Toland and charged with embezzlement. The warrant for Keasling's arrest was sworn out by Arthur M. Case, a union official, who charges Keas ling with having embezzled more than $1,000 of the union funds en trusted to him. An auditor is now checking the i-nion's books. Keasling denied the embezzlement charge and said when the books are thoroughly checked the funds will be found intact. Keasling has held office in the teamsters' union for more than a year. He lives at 4610 South Forty, seventh street and is married. "BAYER CROSS" ON ASPIRIN Always Ask for , Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" Only Aspirin Tablets with the safety "Bayer Cross" on them are genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," owned and made by Americans and proved safe by millions of people. Unknown quantities of fraudulent Aspirin Tablets were sold recently by a Brooklyn dealer which proved to be composed mostly of Talcum Powder. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" should always be asked for. Then look for the safety "Bayer Cross" on the package and on each tablet. Accept nothing else! Proper directions and dosage in each Bayer package. Aspirin ia the trade mark of Bay er Manufacture of Monoaceticaci dester of Salicylicacid. Adv. Rheumatisit Remarkable Homa Cure Given by One Wbt Had It He Wanta Every Sufferer to Benefit. Send No Money Just Your Address. Years of'iiwfu suffering' and rnisery havi (aught : this man, Mark H. Jackson, ol Syracuse, New York, how terrible an enemy to human happiness rheumatism is, anfl have given him sympathy with all unfor tunates who are within its grasp. He wants every ihenmatic victim to know how he was cured. Read what he says: "I Had Sharp Pains Like Lightning Flash! Shooting Through My Joints." I In the spring ni 1393 I was attacked by Muscular and Inflammatory Rheumatism. I suffered as only those who have it know, for over three years. I tried remedy after remedy, and doctor after doctor, but such relief as I received was only temporary. Finally, I found a remedy that cured me completely, and it has never returned. I have given it to s number who were terri bly afflicted nnd even bedridden with Rheumatism, and it effected a cure in every case. I want every sufferer from any form of rheumatic trouble to try, this marvelous healing power. Don't sent a cent; simply fill out the coupon below and I will send it free to try. After you have used it and it has proven itself to be that long-looked for means of curing your Rheumatism, ynu may send the price of it, one dollar, but understand, I do not want your money un less you are perfectly satisfied to send it. Isn't that fair? Why suffer any longer when positive relief is thus offered you free? Don't delay. Write today. Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above statement is true. FREE TRIAL COUPON Mark H. Jackson, B69E Burney BIdg., Syracuse, N. Y. : I acept your offer. Send to: QUICK RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That is the joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for 17 years and calomel's old-time enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative. No griping is the "keynote" of these little sugar-coated, olive-colored tab lets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth" a bad breath a dull, tired feeling sick headache torpid liver and are consti pated, youll find quick, sure and only pleasant results from one or two little Drjflwards' Olive Tablets at bedtime. Thousands take, one or two every night just to keep right. Try them. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. SENSATIONAL1 Us?d and New (Slightly Shopworn) IFDAK "Two a Day" Is our slogan for this week We must sell 12 Grand Pianos this week an average of 2 a day in order to make room in our Grand Piano Dept. for a new shipment that is on the way. 7 Will we do it? We will if 12 prospective Grand Piano buyers see this ad and call at our store this week we are bound to do it! Because every caller is sure to be a buyer. Never before have such splendid values been of- , fered in Omaha! Parlor Grands, Baby Grands, and I Miniature Grands. Some of them brand new and some ' of the used ones can be made to look like new. .' Read This , Then Act $l,100Steinway Mahogany, used but lit tle ; a wonderful buy. . . . $1,000 A. B. Chase U3ed, Puritan model, in ebony 'finish $800 Sohmer Used. Beautiful, dull ty-own mahogany . . . . . . $800 Smith & Nixon ( A T A Used, Colonial model, fD3l dull mahojranv V WW $750 Lindeman f Slightly shop worn, new model, mahogany EASY TERMS Buys a $1,250 Knabe . , Player Grand, Sheraton polished mahogany. Buys an $850 Steger Used, Colonial model, polished mahogany. Buys a $700 Ludwig Miniature Grand, in pol ished mahogany. Buys a $750 J. & C. Fischer New, but slightly shop worn. Mahogany. $990 $425 $495 $525 EflE Buys an $850 Mehlin lllal Sheraton model. A beauti ful Mahogany case. Your Old Piano Taken in Trade If you can't call Clip, Sign and Mail ThU Coupon to us today for complete information regarding any of the instruments advertised. , Schmoller & Mueller Piano Co., 1311-1313 Farriam St., Omaha, Neb. Gentlemen: Without obligating me in any way, please send me a picture and complete description of the (write which one in this space) Grand Piano advertised above. Name Address , City Phone No CULLER & MUELLE PIANO COMPANY Nebraska's Oldest and Largest Piano House. Everything in Music. 1311-1313 Far nam Street The Japanese Way to Remove Corns Doesn't Hurt a Bit-Easy and Simple f The Magic Touch of Ice-Mint Does It. Just a Touch Stops Soreness, Then the Corn or Callous Shrivels and Lifts Off. Try it. Your Feet Will Feel Cool and Fine. Just a touch of Ice-Mint and "Oh!" what relief. Corns and callouses vanish, soreness disappears and you can dance all night or walk all day and your corns won't hurt a bit. No matter what you have tried or how many times you have been disappointed here is a real help for you at last. From the very second that Ice-Mint touches that sore, tender corn rour poor tired, aching feet will feel to ?ool, easy and comfortable that you will iust sigh with relief. Think of it; just a little touch of that delightful, cooling Ice-Mint and real foot joy is yours. No matter how old or tough your pet corn is Use The Bee Want Ads Partial List- Quickly! $410 $290 $540 $510 1 he will shrivel right up and you ohii nick him out after a touch of Ice-Mmt. No pain, not a bit of soreness, either when applying it or afterwards, and it doenn't even irritate the skin. Ice-Mint is the real Japanese secret of fine, healthy, little feet. 1'revents foot odors and keeps them ci"!. sweet and comfjrtable. lt is now selling like wild fire here. Just ask in any drug store for a lit tip Ice-Mint and give vrur poor suffering, tired feet the treat of tlie'.r Jives. There is nothing better, nor nothing "Just 14 good." Si: to Boost Your Business