" t J 'it 6 MURDER TRIAL SEQUEL TO EAST ST, LOUIS RIOTS Negro Dentist Charged With Having Given Ammunition to Blacks and Incited Outbreak., St. Louis, Mari.Ii 20. Testimony that arms and ammunition were im ported to East St. Louis three-weeks prior to the race riots and stored in a saloon operated by a negro was introduced today at the trial at Waterloo, 111., of Leroy N. Bundy, negro dentist, charged with murder in connection with the killing of two policemen July 1, 1917, which, it is . said, precipitated the race riots the following day in which more, than-30 negroes were killed and scores wounded. Witnesses declared crowds ot negroes were seen gathering in var ious parts of the city in the early part of the night and assembled in the Ghetto following' the tolling of a church bell. It was testified one gathering assembled at Bundy's garage, but it was not ascertained that Bundy was in the crowd. Moty: than 2,000 shots were fired following the murder of the, police men,' according to witnesses, and the shooting did not stop until 4 o'clock in the morning. Negro women with shotguns were as conspicuous as men, Jacob Schuckhardt, a grocer, testified. Special Prosecutor James A. Farmer said in his opening state ment that he would show ammuni tion was stored in Bundy's home and that Bundy was instrumental in in citing the riots. The defense will show Bundy attempted to keep or der among the negroes, attorneys for Bundy said. Moving Pictures for Men Who Are Still Held in Army Gimps Aaron Horvitz, New York, field secretary, and J. H. Skirboll, Cleve land, sectional director for enter tainment of soldiers for' the Jewish Welfare board, -were in Omaha Thursday making arrangements with local moving picture concerns ior the distribution of films in :amps and cantonments in this dis trict. The films will be shown in Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., and K. of C. huts as well. . , . ' ' "The need to break the monotony for men still in the service is im portant. In Louisville recently, Harry Lauder gave one of the en tertainment programs.- Wherever possible, stage favorites are asked to enterain for men in the camps who have had a surfeit of amateur tntertainments,", they say. ; " from here the Welfare workers went to Denver. ' I McKelvie Speaker i Today as Shriners ! Give vt High Degree ' ' v ' 7 '"' Today, at 2 o'clock, Tangier tem ole of the Mystic Shrine confers the arder on a class of. .250, the largest number ever initiated at one time in .Vebraska. Tinley L.Combs, illus :rious potentate, ts in. charge of the :eremonies, which will be followed by a banquet at which Governor Mc Kelvie will make the principal ad dress: . I; ' "Visitfng women wilt be entertained it tin Orpheum theater party Friday nd dinner at the Fontenelle. A lance in the cathedral will end the week's festitivities. Governor- Mc Kelvie, army officers and their ladies will lead the grand march which be gins at 9:15 o clock. . Former Congressman Lobeck Leaves Washington for Omaha Washington, D. C, March 20. rr , T . y i special leiegram.; rormer von ijressman Lobeck, after a round of the departments, ironing out unfin ished business, left for Omaha this ivening. Miss Katherine O'Brien, head of the woman's division of the federal employment bureau,- Omaha, who has been in Washington attending a conference of federal employment chiefs from the western states, left for Nebraska today. IC 4? is Louis Young, the Boy Who Was Killed WHO FIRED SHOT THAT ENDED LIFE OF LOUIS YOUNG? (Continued From Page One.) ed from the other side of the build ing. We ran to the rear and saw Young fall forward while his part ner went over the fence. I fired twice in the air over his head. Po tach and Dolan went after him." Detective Potach said: "I was on the north side of the building; I heard shots and ran to the rear and saw Young' on the ground. Dolan and I took after the other fellow, who went west out of sight. I fired three times." Detective Dolan said: "The boys opened fire first from the rear door and then started to run. , I'll tell the rest of my story at the inquest." The detectives decline to state which one was concealed behind the side steps where the first shots were fired at the boys. At a late hour last night no further trace of the partner of Young was found. Several checks taken out of the Blake drug store, Sixteenth and Lo cust streets, were found on Young's body. Young and his partner had also taken seven automatic revolvers and flashlights out of John Yav erick's store, Sixteenth and Locust streets. , D. A. R. Vote $100 for Oldest Living Revolution Daughter Mrs. Elvira Tewksbury of Platts mouth, Neb., only real Daughter of the Revolution, was not forgotten by the conference, which she could not attend because of her failing eyesight and age. A gift of $100 was voted. Thurs day morning by the Daughters of the American Revolution state or ganization, and a gift amounting to $115 was pledged by the individual chapters. ,. ...... v .... These will be. taken by a repre sentative to Mrs. Tewksbury, who is 88 years old, and lives with her niece. Her father fought in the rev olutionary war and she has been a Nebraskan since the early days. English Experts Prepare -V for Transatlantic Flight ... St.' Johns, N. F., March 20. A party of airmen and meteorological experts from England has arrived here to conduct observations on air conditions in connection with plans for transatlantic flights. oi o fi r l 1 i . ' - ? f i - i A True Builder Made from whole wheat 6 malted barley this delicious food pro -vides the necessary elements for sturdy muscle and brain buildind. Economical Jeyuiresno sugar- 44 Theres a Reason SOVIET TROOPS DEFEAT FRENCH IN THE UKRAINE Great Agricultural Region Now in Hands of Bolsheviki; Letts Capture Milan, Poles, Pinsk. London, March 20. Virtually all of the Ukraine is now in the hands of the bolsheviki, according to ad vices reaching London today. In heavy fighting at Ntkolaiev, north east of Odessa, the bolsheviki lost between 5,000 and 8,000 men, but forced the French garrison, after fierce fighting, to withdraw to Odessa. Further east, the advices add, the bolsheviki have reached the isthmus of Perekop, leading to the Crimea. The bolsheviki apparently are en gaged in a strong effort to subdue Russian opposition, in the Ukraine and to drive allie'd forces from that region before spring. If the bol sheviki can control the great agri cultural region of the Ukraine they might relieve the serious food short age in Moscow and the north. Troops of the Moscow govern ment in the last' three 'weeks have occupied Kiev and Zhitomir, iintie center ot the Ukraine, and "driven the peasant government of General Petlura from Kiev to Winnitza- and thence to Proskurov, in Podolia, 40 miles east of the border of Galicia. Letts Take Mitau. Copenhagen, March 20. The im portant railroad junction town of Mitau, southwest ot Kiga, has been captured by Lettish troops, a Let tish official statement issued on Wednesday announces. The bolshe viki, the statement adds, are retiring along the whole front. The bolshevik forces have been compelled to abandon Dvinsk (Dunaburg), 110 miles southeast of Riga.. Bolsheviki Evacuate Pinsk. Copenhagen, March 20. Bolshe vik troops, under pressure of Polish forces, have been compelled to re tire and evacuate Pinsk, 100 miles east of Brest-Litovsk, according to a dispatch from Warsaw. Woman Awaiting Trial on Murder Charge Is Married Brookline, Mass., March 20. Mrs. Bessie May Skeels, under indict ment for murder, was married today at a private hospital here to Alfred J. Lundgren of Andover. Mr. Lund gren had come here with his financee from his home in Andover, where she had been fll since her release from the county jail at Lawrence, February 14. He obtained the mar riage license at Andover recently. The fact that she is to submit to morrow to an operation is under stood to have hastened the cere mony. Her condition, due to a dis ease of the stomach, is regarded as critical. Mr. Lundgren has been steadfast in declaring his belief in the inno cence of Mrs. Skeels since she was arrested, charged with the murder of Mrs. Florence Gay of- Andover, whom she was attending as a nurse. He is manager of a 'store and was a patient under Mrs. Skeels' care sev eral years ago. New Omaha Refinery Is Now Well Under Way The new refinery of the Omaha Refining company, which is being built in East Omaha, is well under way with a fair prospect of being completed by June 1. Much of the machinery is al ready on the ground "and all the building material has been assem bled. The new plant will have a capacity of 1,000 barrels a day. The officers of the new company are L. V. Fox, formerly associated with the O. K. Refining company at Niotaze, Kan., president; D. W. Lennox, vice-president; C. E. Heaney, secretary and treasurer, and E. S. Line, assistant secretary and treasurer and sales manager. All the officers of the new re fining company are well known in the oil business and especially in the Oklahoma and Kansas fields. Fire Captains Affirmed. City council confirmed Edward M. , 'alters and Patrick McElligott, junior and senior captains, respec tively, of the fire department. They have completed probationary peri ods of six months in their new posi- 9f THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1919. GALL MEETING TO DISCUSS BIG LOCAL PROBLEM (Continued From Pate One.) . sible phase of the housing problem will be discussed, by men best post ed on each subject. One of the largest employers in the city, one from South Side, lead ing builders, material men. realtors, city commissioners, architects and prospective tenants who could not find houses, will speak. ) "We must .evolve some practical plan to stimulate residence building immediately," said Mr. Gillan. "Gen eral building is desirable but we must have houses." The meeting wij! be open to the public. ,' Railroads Call Meet to Reconsider Rates on Building Material As an early adjustment in the prices of building material about Omaha which have been hindering many property owners from build ing, the freight rates of sand, stone and grave! from Platte river points to Omaha will be reconsidered at a special meeting of railroad officials in the freight manager s office m the Union Pacific building at 10 a. m Friday. Various requests have been re ceived, by the committee m charge of freight rates, involving reductions in rates on building material in order to enable contracting interests to in augurate improvements, building and highway construction. Hundreds of applicants for loans from local building and loan associa tions are hindered from building be cause of the exorbitant prices of building commodities, according to officials of various companies. Though the last large sand pits along the Platte river were bought by C. W. Hull and Sunderland Brothers, nevertheless, newly work ed pits near Ashland, Cedar Creek, Louisville, Nehawka, Weeping Wa ter and Valley, Neb., are supplying Omaha and Council Bluffs with much of the concrete material. The present freight rates for hauling the commodities are "various, lomor row's meeting at railroad headquar ters will discuss proposed rates of 2 cents per hundred-weight for sand and gravel, and 2J4 cents for crushed stone. It is likely that contractors and ftfficials of building associations will attend the meeting. Special Committee Named to Probe Cost of Building Material City Commissioner Towl obtained the adoption of a resolution in the city council meeting, authorizing the mayor to appoint a special commit tee to investigate building material conditions in Omaha. Mayor Smith announced that he would name this committee at the council meeting next Tuesday morn ing. This is the first step by the city officials to probe the high cost of building materials, as brought out by The Bee. "There is, apparently I would even say very apparently a com bination existing here to promote high prices of building materials," said Commissioner Towl. "The wheels have been stopped by this condition. My plan is to ask the council to investigate this situation thoroughly, to summon witnesses, to probe the whole matter and thus arrive at the facts. Some of the material men are quoting higher , prices to the city than they are to contractors. We want to know why this should be. I also have been told that cer tain material men are quoting lower prices-to their friends and higher rates to others." Mayor Smith will co-operate with the investigation to be made by the city council, and he also believes that the county attorney should take cognizance of the situation. Lumbermen Declare Their Present Prices Are Not Prohibitive In answer to the statement of the realtors and the proposed committee to investigate prices of building ma terial in Omaha W. W. Carmichael and M. C. Colpetzer, representing the lumbermen of the city, last night gave out the following statement: "The charge of the high cost of lumber made by the realtors of Omaha is due to their lack of in vestigation and is misleading the public, as the facts do not bear out their assertions. Those realty men who have bought lumber this spring have done so at a price satisfactory to themselves, and so far as we can learn, those who are now making the charge of high prices on lumber have not made recent inquiries . "Common lumber is selling for less than $40.00 per thousand, which leaves a gross margin of less than 25' per cent. The present cost of conducting a retail lumber business in Omaha is from 15 to 20 per cent. Now if anyone thinks this leaves too much net margin we would like to know who he is. "The price of $45 per thousand which the real estate men have men tioned as the cost of lumber is not and never has been the sale price for lumber when sold in bills for house contruction. "We earnestly request any home builder whether a member of the Real Estate exchange or not and whether he wishes to build one or 50 houses, to substantiate the above statements by applying the acid test of inquiry." Baker Goes to El Paso. Los Angeles, March 20. Newton D. Bakersecretary of war, returned to Los Angeles today after a trip of inspection to Camp Kearny and left after a reception for El Paso, Tex., where he plans further inspections of military forces and property. I FIGHT TO SAVE ,17. W, MEMBERS HELD WHAM Counsel for 21 Aliens Ordered Deportetl Apply to Fed- v eral Court for Writ of Habeas Corpus. New York, March 20. Counsel for members of the Industrial Workers of the World, whose cases were recently decided unfavorably by the Department of Lr.bor, shift ed today to the federal court the fight to save their clients from de portation. A writ of habeas corpus prepared yesterday and signed 'by the 20 men and one woman confined at Ellis Island was the course adopted to bring the prisoners into court tor a hearing, lhe petition recites that the 21 are not detained by any process or mandate issued by any court and in general follows the lines of the legal fight that was successful in gaining the freedom of 12 of the prisoners and the re fusal to allow the present petition ers their freedom. All of the 21 seeking to avoid de portations were recently brought to Ellis Island from the west. Americans to Aid in Restoring Forests in Foreign Countries New York, March 20. The Amer ican Forestry association will aid in restoring the forests of Great Britain, France and Belgium which were sacrificed to the allied cause in the war, according to Charles Lathrop Pack, retiring president of the World Court league, who spoke at a dinner in his honor here to night. In announcing formal acceptance by the three European governments of the American Forestry associa tion's offer to aid. Mr. Pack declared that about 1,500,000 acres of forest land in France had been destroyed by shell fire or cut for war needs. That virtually all of Belgium's for ests of timber value had been felled by the Germans, and that Great Britain's sacrifice in forests amount ed to fully 450,000 acres. Veteran Actor Dies. Philadephia, Pa., March 20. H. Aug Anderson, veteran actor, died todav at his home in Westvillp. M j., to which he retired 15 years ago. ne was ou years oici. air. Anderson played leading parts with many not able stars, including Edwin Booth, Marv Anderson. Clara Morris and John L. Toole. 'Ulypto' a Blessing Easos Colds Quick A Product From the Remarkable Ihcalyptus Tree. Soothes Instantly. , "Nerer Had Anything Act So SnUndidly A ThU !" "Ulypto Ointment" is a new wonder for triving immediate soothing -relief from the fearful pains of neuralgia. Your face- nerves may be drawn tight with pain, your head may be swaying with "pound ing" headache oh, very well, in a minute or two a touch of "Ulypto Ointment" will change your twinges into smiles. It's magic. Fain ceases, inflammation disap pears. u ypto Ointment is a wonder, too. for any sprains, stiff muscles and joints, sore spots, rheumatic pains. Try it for lum bago and back pains, chest painB, head ache, cold in the head and stopped-up nose. One trial proves it to be a new surprise. "Ulypto Ointment" contains the essence of the remarkable eucalyptus tree no blistering or mustard odor, .lupt blessed relief. Sold at all up-to-date drug stores in 25c and SOc jars, or sent direct by the MacMillan Chemical Co., Falls City, Neb. Stop hoarseness and cough, clear the voice with bland, soothing "Ulypto Cough j Drops," 5c everywhere. . For sale and recommended in Omaha by j Sherman & McConnell's 6 stores, Merritt j Drug Stores, Beaton Drug Co., Dundee ; Pharmacy, Green's Pharmacy. Adv. i . A A A A . A. A A. ...... M. ... A ... a v a a 'srvr'a1 ' v T T v v 'i' ' a ' A Stubborn vougn 5 Loosens Right Up This home-made remedy Is a wonder j" for quick results. Easily and cheaply made. T Here is a home-made syrup whioli j millions of people have found to he. the most dependable means of breaking ; up stubborn coughs.' It is cheap and j simple, but very prompt in action. Un der its herding, soothing influence, ! chest soreness goes, phlegm loosens j breathing becomes easier, tickling in : throat stops and vou get a good night's restful sleep. The usual throat and . chest colds are conquered by it in 24 ( hours or less. Nothing better for ! bronchitis, hoarseness, croup, whoop ing cough, bronchial asthma or winter coughs. To make this splendid cough syrup, Eour 2'j ounces of Pinex into a pint ottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup and shake thoroughly. If you prefer, use clari fied molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup. Either ways you get a full pint a family supply of much better couch syrup than you could buy ready-made for three times the money.. Keeps perfectly and chil dren love its pleasant taste. Pines is a special and highly con centrated compound of genuine Nor way pine extract, known the world over for its prompt healing effect upon the membranes. To avoid disappointment ask your druggist for "2 ounces of Pinex" with . full directions, and don't accept anything else. Guaranteed to give ab solute satisfaction or money promptly refunded. Tho Pinex Co., Ft, Wayne, Ind. Wife, Answering Suit of Husband, Says He Hit Her With Hatchet Dorothy Waterman says, in an swer to the divorce petition of her husband, Roy Waterman, that she earned the living for both of them by working in the packing houses until, she alleges, he ordered her to quit work so that he could make a claim for exemption from the "draft." While he was in the army, she says, she worked and paid up a number of bills, besides buying a rug, piano and other furniture for their home. She says he often beat her and "Rheumatism Has "From Torment and Pain to Comfort" . .... ' .. When your joints ache or you feel twinges of rheu-' matic pain in toes, ankles, legs, back, shoulders or neck. .When every movement is pain and misery. Whether you call this Rheumatism, Sciatica, Gout, Lumbago, Neuritis, Stiff Neck you may find quick relief with Bauer -Tablets n OFo a The'Bayer Cross"on Adults Take one or two "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" with, water. If necessary, repeat dose three times a day, after meals. "Proved Safe by Millions" Buy only the original "Bayer packages." Made and owned by Americans entirely! 20 cent package also larger packages. Vspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of SalicylicaciJ Doctor Tells How to Strengthen Eyesight SO per cent In One Week's Time In Many Instances A Free Prescription You Can Have Filled and Ue at Home. I Philadelphia, Fa. Do you wear glasses T Are you a victim of eye strain or other eye weaknesses T If so, yon will be glad to know that according to Dr. Lewis there is real hope for you. Many whose eyes were failing say they have had their eyes re stored through the principle of this won derful free prescription. One man says, after trying it: "I was almost blind; could not see to read at all. Now I can read everything without any glasses and my eyes do not water any more. At night they would pain dreadfully: now they feel fine all the time. It was like a miracle to me." A lady who used it Bays: "The at mosphere seemed hazy with or without glasses, but after using this prescription for fifteen davs everything seems clear. 1 can even read fine print without glasses." It is believed that thousands who wear glasses can now discard them in a reason able time and multitudes more will be able to strengthen their eyes so as to be t pared HOSIERY SALE At the Union Outiitting Co. 16th and Jackson Streets 2,500 PAIRS Women's Genuine Onyx Silk Fibre HOSE On Sale Next Saturday March 22 In Our Enlarged Cloak and Suit Department. The Season's Newest Colors This fortunate purchase of the nationally advertised Onyx La dies' Hosiery has just been re ceived and will be put on special sale for one day only,, Saturday, March 22. All of the most want ed colors are included in this big purchase. For -full particulars watch Friday night's papers. This big purchase is another demonstration of our big buying power combined with our, inex pensive location and careful or ganization which enables us to make lower prices and remem ber, the Union Outfitting Com pany considers no transaction complete until the customer is fully satisfied. Come to this hos iery sale expecting big values and as always, you make your own terms. m r." i Albert Cahn 219 S. 14th St. For Shirts New Silks Are In once struck her on the head witld a hatchet J i ! Waterman charged in his suit for divorce, filed a few weeks auo." that his wife wrote to .him while he wa in the ' army that' she did not like him and had met people with whom she could enjoy life. He said she refused to live with him since Fcb-j ruary 5, British King to Present Trophy for 1919 Regatta London, March 20. Via Montreal Announcement is made by the Henley regatta committee that King George has promised to present a trophy for an eight-car race in the 1919 regatta. This event will be open to amateur crews of service men rep resenting any allied nation or British dominion and colony. , Bee Want 'Ads produce results ; lry them and be convinced. Met Its Master" Genuine Tablets the trouble and expense of ever getting glasss. Eye troubles of many descriptions may be wonderfully benefited by follow ing the simple rulos. Here is the pre scription: Go to any active drug store and get a bottle of Bon-Opto tablets. Drop one Bon-Opto tablet in a fourth of a glass of water and allow to dissolve. With this liquid bathe the eyes two to four times daily. You should notice your eyes clear up perceptibly right from the start and in flammation will quickly disappear. If your eyes are bothering you, even a little, take, steps to save them now before it is too late. Many hopelessly blind might have been saved if they had cared for their eyes in time. Note: Another prominent Physician to whom tho above article was submitted. Bald: "Bon-Opto Is ?ery remarkable remedy. Its comtituent ingredieuti are well known to eminent eye specialists and wide ly prescribed by them. The manufacturers guaran tee It to strengthen eyesight 50 jier cent In one week's time In many Instances or refund the money. It can be obtained from any good druggist and is one of the very few preparations I feel should be keit on hand for regular use In almost every fani ily.." It is sold in Omaha by Sherman & McCon ncll. . A. Melcher and other druggists. Adv. THIN PEOPLE SHOULD TAKE PHOSPHATE Nothing Like Plain Bitro-Phosphats to Put on Firm, Healthy lesh and to In crease Strength, Vigor and Nervo Fores. Judging from the counties') prepsrsttons and treatments which are continually bc ine advertised for ths purpose of making thin people fleshy, developing arms, neck and bust, and replacing ugly hollows and angles by the soft curved lines of health and beauty, there are evidently thousands of men and women who keenly feel their excessive thinness. ? Thinness and weakness re usually due to starved nerves. Our bodies need mors phosphate than is contained in modern foods. Physicians claim there is nothinf that will supply this deficiency so well as the organic phosphate known among drug gists as bitro.phoaphate, which is inexpen sive, and is sold by Sherman & McConnell, in Omaha and most all druggists under a guarantee of satisfaction or money back. By feeding the nerves directly and by sup plying the body cells with the necessary phosphoric food elements, bitro-phosphaU quickly produces a welcome transformation in the appearance; the increase in weight frequently being astonishing. This increase in weight also carries with it a general improvement in the health. Nervousness, sleeplessness' and lack of energy, which nearly always accompany ex cessive thinness, soon disappear, dull eyes become oright, and pale cheeks glow with the bloom of perfect health- . CAUTION: Although bitro-phosphaU is unsurpassed for relieving nervousness, sleeplessness and general weakness, it should not, owing to its ratnarkable flesh growing properties, be used by anyone who does not desire to put on flesh. Adv. After each meal YOU eat on ATOMIC Cfor your STOMACH'S SARD and get full food value and real Btonv ach comfort Instantly relieves heart born, bloated, gauy feeling, STOPS acidity food repeating and stomach misery. AIDS digestion: keeps the 3tomach sweet and pure EATONlC is the bast remedy and only cost a cent or two day to use it: You will be de lighted with results Satisfaction fruaranteer or money back. Please call and try it Green' Phariraey, Cor. 16th and Howard Iti., Omaha, Neb. 1 I0AYE X&7 9u& MM WE REPAIR SHOES (Rightly) ill Dresher Bros. Cleaners-Dyers 2211-17 Farnam St. "Livest Bunch In the West" CHAS. RING EL SAYS it io ran nr-nrr. II 10 fHI DLI I mi THAN HOT SPRINGS Declares That All Treatments Failed Until He Took Tanlac Like New - Man Now. ' Remarkable, indeed, was the state ment recently made by Charles Rin gel of(319 Washington street, Peo ria, 111. Mr. Ringel declared that, al though he has taken the treatment at Hot Springs and used numbers of different medicines during the past eleven years, in his efforts to re store his health, a few bottles of Tanlac have done him more good than everything else combined. His statement follows: "Nothing ever helped me until I got Tanlac and now I'm just like a man made over. My stomach had been in a very bad fix for eleven years or more. After nearly every meal I would bloat up with gas un til I was as tight as a drum and just suffer agony. My nerves be came all shattered and my health got bo poor that I was forced to quit work. No kind of : rqedicine seemed to reach my trouble and 1 was going down hill very. fast. I was advised to go to Hot Springs, which I did, but after spending what money I had saved up, I returned home in just as bad shape as when I left, if not worse. , "While talking to a good friend one day about my deplorable con dition he told me he believed a few bottles of Tanlac would straighten me $. Well, I had little faith in it to help me, but as my friend seemed to know what he was talking about, I decided to take his advice, and to; my complete surprise the first bot tie of lanlac stopped the eras form ing in my stomach ana put me i; shape to where I could eat and en joy my meals. My food began to d gest as it should, my nervousnes left me, and I realized I was on th road to rapid recovery. As I contin ued to take Tanlac my health im proved and my strength returne until now I am able to work as well as I ever could in my life. I few more grateful than I can express f o what Tanlac has done for me an am now telling my friends who ar suffering to try it. I cant prais it too highly and expect to rely o it for my health as long as I live. Such statements as the foregd ing should appeal very forcibly t the thousands who suffer from th same troubles. Most people who sufl fer from nervousness, and dizziness! stomach and1 liver troubles, , kidne.v derangements and who are'in a sren eral run-down condition, simply need something to tone up their system and to assist the vital organs m performing their proper functions. Tanlac is a powerful reconstructive and always produces most gratifying results. - Tanlac is sold in Omaha by all Sherman & McConnell Drug Ccrn-f pany's stores, Harvard Pharmac and West End Pharmacy. Also For rest and Meaney Drug Company iij bouth Omaha and the leading drujr gist in each city and town through out the state of Nebraska. Adv. E Rub Musterole on Forehead and Temples A headache remedy without the dan gers of "heauxche medicine." Relieves headache and that miserable feelinjj from coids or congestion. And it acts at once! Musterole is a clean, white oint ment made with oil of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Used only externally, and in no way can it affect stomach and heart. as some internal medicines do. Excellent for sore throat, bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lum bago, all pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises. chilblains, frosted feet, colds of tha chest (it of ten prevents pneumonia). 20c and 60c lars hospital size S2.5d 1 I fi M Tyler in vsi 345 DRIVE AWAY HEADACH I