Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 01, 1919, Page 12, Image 12

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    12
THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1919.
L VICTIM OF
LETHARGY SHOWS
RECOVERY SIGNS
Though Physicians Say Danger
Is Not Yet Passed, Present
Condition, of Patient
Is Favorable.
Frances Bell, 17-year-old Central
High school girl,' is showing signs
of recovery from an attack of sleep
URELY now, If ever, we should
GIR
lit n
noma surroundings. Peace and splendid prosperity ana lam
' ilies reunited. ; ' . ......
For yonr home; , why not that most beautiful of Instruments
A Piano or Player Piano
"Ve can help you find the very instrument you want.
Some Rare Bargains
ii
Sterling Piano, n114.l1. $ "I OQ
extra fine for-, price.
Cable Piano, walnuL$
198
case
ADDORF
; ' E. T. 1IA3DI0N, Manager
1807 Farnam St. Phone Douglas 4240
Resinol
y6rchafed,blistered
feet-;
If you are footsore, and have to
stand on one foot and then on the
"other to get relief you need Resinol
Ointment. For quicker results, first
bathe the feet with Resinol Soap and
warm water, then apply the ointment
on retiring and bandage. ,
This treatment also brings heartfelt relief to
uff erers from ecuma and other skin eruptions.
Ffr fret trial of map and ointment
- writ Resinol, Baltimore, Md.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get
at the Cause and Remove It
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub
stitute for calomel, act gently on the
bowels and positively do the work.
People afflicted with bad breath find
quick relief through Dr. Edwards' Olive
Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated
tablets are taken for bad breath by
all who know them.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gently
but firmly on the bowels and liver,
stimulating them to natural action,
clearing the blood and gently purifying
the entire system. They do that which
dangerous calomel does without any
jf the bad after effects.
All the benefits of nasty, sickening,
jriping cathartics are derived from
Or. Edwards' Olive Tablets without
jriping. pain or any disagreeable effects.
Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the
formula after seventeen years of prac
tice among patients afflicted with
bowel and liver complaint; with tha
attendant bad breath.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are pure
ly a vegetable compound mixed with
olive oil; you will know them by their
olive color. Take one or two every
night for a week and note the effect
10c and 25c per box. All druggists
ing sickness with which she wa
strickena, week ago.
She was awake for sevfral hour
on Sunday, and although present
indications are favorable, the attend
ing physician is not ready to say tha
all danger has been passed.
Many friends and acquaintance3
called 'at the home, 4107 Lafayett
avenue, on bunday, but tney were
denied admittance to the room oi
the patient, who must be kept quiet
Omaha physicians are interested
in this case,' which is one of the fe
cases of lethargic encepha'itis to ap
pear in this city.
Miss Bell was asleep all of la it
week, with the exception of a few
brief intervals.
Read The Bee Want Ads for the
Opportunities You are T-ooking For.
PP -YES-
DRESS UP
dress up; personally and in our
Hospe Piano, ostkSOQQ
case, nearly nev,'. . ,
Krakouer Piano, wal- $
177
put case
V
Music House
I DUPLEXALITE welcomes you into the home with its I
1 mellow radiance ; , - I
v I sheds the soft luster of hospitality and refinement here- I
I tof ore found only -in the table or floor lamp;
I blends with, and accentuates the beautyof the home '
decorations; , I
.. 1 placed in your home with absolutely no inconvenience ; I
I Liberal terms can be arranged. ' I
NEBRASKA POWER CO. I ,
"Your Electric Service Company" grL-. I
J Phones South Thrcc j I
I ' Tyler Three One Hundred. b I
i "Pti:-k1--.1-;4- iSHHSf'VI
Naming Baby Easy Compared
to Naming New Hiking Club
"
Mass Meeting . in Public Library Called to Decide
Whether New Organization" Is to Be Called Hikers'
or Prairie Club or Neither Officers Already
. Elected. x -
Naming the baby (for those who
have them) was a light task com
pared Jo naming the new hikers'
club, composed of leading Omaha
men and women, who went on their
first jaunt to Chijds Point Sunday
afternoon, old clothes, pedometers,
staffs and all. The momentous ques
tion .will be decided tonight- at a
meeting in the public library.
Schism threatens to rend the fac
tions, which favors the appellation
Omaha Prairie club, and those
who would have it known as "Oma-
Jia Hiking club," and those who fa
vor neither.
Nof Dignified Enough.
"Hiking club," while descriptive
of the organization, is not dignified
enough, some of the high school
teachers who make up its member
ship, maintain.
"Prairie" club finds favor with
some of the organizers of' the club
because they' are familiar with the
Chicago "Prairie club, an organiza
tion of 1,600 members, who hike in
the sand dunes of Lake Michigan
each Sunday. .
Others oppose it as deceptive of
real conditions about Omaha.
"Plenty of easterners think Oma-
Style Show
And Formal
Spring Opening
at The
Union Outfitting
Co.
16th and Jackson
Thursday and Friday
Living Models Will Dis
play the Season's Lat
est Modes in Wom
en's Apparel.
Flowers and Souvenirs
Given to All Visitors
This style exhibition - will be
given in the now enlarged
Cloak and Suit department
and will present the most au
thentic styles for the coming
season. Our buyer made e
special trip to New Yorl
which assures you of seeing r
wonderful show of Nev
York's latest styles for Easter
The living models will exhibit
from 10 a. m. to 12 and in the
afternoon from 2 until 4. A
host of styles in smart milli
nery will be shown as well as
the newest and fashionable
Capes, Dolmans, Suits and
Dresses. Bring your friends
to this opening beginning
Thursday and enjoy the view
ing of all that's new in wear
ing apparel and direct from
Fifth Avenue. Music, flowers
and souvenirs.
a prairie town
anyway, they say.
Announcement of the choice is
awaited with bated breath. Miss
Edith Tobitt has been named presi
dent; Edwin S. Jewell, vice presi
dent; Mrs. George Tt Morton, sec
retary and Miss' Allie Houston,
treasurer.
The appointment of the last
named officer aroused no slight
curiosity.
What's Treasurer's Job?
"What do we need a treasurer for
in a hiking club?" an irrepressible
one wanted to know.
So it was explained that dues of
50 cents per year will 4e asked to
pay for printing schedules of pro
posed trips. And some time there
may lie "eats" or hot coffee on a
cool day, like there was Sunday.1
Next Sunday at 3 o'clock the
hikers will meet at Fourteenth and
Farnam to bjgin their jaunt to
Mynster Springs. Anybody who
spurns limousines, touring cars, baby
carriages or plain street cars, is in
vited to join. Miss Bess Dumont
will be leader.
Bee Reader Praises
13th Engineer Regiment
"There -cannot be too much said
in favor of the Thirteenth engineer
regiment, the first volunteer regi
ment formed, which was trained in
Chicago for only ..bout six weeks
and then sailed for England, where
it was reviewed by King George,"
writes a reader of The Bee. "Short
ly after the review the regiment
sailed for France and was attached
to the Fourth French army.
"From August 18, 1917, to Sep
tember 18 the outfit served with the
Second French army in the Verdun
sector and later took part in the St.
Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne, o.ffen-
sives.
"The regiment was decorated by
the French and American. govern
ments as the. first American unit to
fight in France."
Congestion of Kidneys
is indicated by the pain over region
of kidneys and following the pas
sage to the irritated bladder. A
constant and pressing desire for
urination; the secretion scanty,
highly colored and sometimes
bloody. Then the constitutional
symptoms are often headaches, eyes
bloodshot and burning, slight nau
sea, sometimes vomiting, nervous'
ness, rheumatic pains and general
discomfort. It is wholly wrong to
neglect such conditions when
can be obtained of any druggist
for their action is to eliminate con
gestion, allay inflammation, destroy
bacteria and restore normal, nat
ural secretions.
HAVE RELIEVED THOUSANDS
Sold by all druggists.
v
ha- is nothing but
OBTAIN GLUE ON
DISAPPEARANCE
OF MISSING MAN
Coroner in Iowa Town Re
ceived Letter Which Was
Mailed After C. W. Men-,
denhall Left Home Here.
Relatives of C. W. Mendenhall
have not received any information
which would explain the mysterious
disappearance of this elderly resi
dent of 4220 Cuming street.
Mr. Mendenhall, who. is 70 years
old, ate, his dinner at home last
Wednesday noon and remarked that
he would go downtown and would
return at 6 p. nir-Sincejthat time 4iis
family has been unable to trace his
Avhereabouts.
The case is just as much of a
mystery as it was on the first day
of MendenhaU's disappearance.
Charles Smith, coroner at Mis
souri .Valley, la., telephoned to the
family to state that he received a
letter from Mr Mendenhall, post
marked at Omaha, 3 p. m., last
Wednesday.
The letter was relative to a pro
posed visit of Smith to a farm
owned by Mendenhall at Loveland,
la.
Private detectives are working on
L the theory that Mendenhall is being
held by a gang of crooks.
Mine Workers Will Not
Strike in Behalf of Mooney
Indianapolis, Ind., March 31. The
United Mine Workers of America
will not participate in any general
strike on July 4 in behalf of Thomas
Mooney, convicted of complicity in
a bomb explosion in San Francisco
in a preparedness day parade.
Announcement that the executive
board of the mine workers had de
cided against participation in such a
strike was made here today through
the United Mine Workers Journal,
the official publication of the union.
California Plans Welcome
' for Returning Soldiers
New York, March 31. Plans for
the welcoming celebration on Thurs
day when the returning California
regiments are due to reach port,
were discussed at a luncheon here
today at which Mayor Rolph of San
Francisco was the guest of honor.
Other guests at the luncheon were
members of the California Society of
New York and Col. Charles S. Hop
kins and his staff of the advance
party of the California dffision.
Wife Says Her Husband's
Words "Too Hateful" to Print
The words which her husband
used in speaking to her at times are
"too hateful to be set down in this
petition," declares Hilda J. Welsh
in a petition for divorce from Ly
man H. Welsh, filed yesterday in
district court. They were married
January 20, 1918, in Atchison, Neb.
She says he possesses an uncontrol
lable temper and lias threatened her.
s
. TT is in traffic that the flexibility born of ample power
is most apparent and most grateful. It threads the
crowded streets, - starting instantly, increasing speed
at a moment's notice, slowing down without touch'
ing a gear, springing through a narrowing passage,
speeding ahead on a clear road effortless, noiseless.
J
J. T. Stewart Motor Co. ,
Distributors
2048-52 Farnam St. Omaha, Neb.
4,000 Americans Are
Identifying Graves
of Killed in Action
In the American Battle Area,
March 31. (Correspondence of The
Associated Press.) Four thousand
mon nf tlii A. K. F. are now eneaeed
in the registration of and search
for tfte graves ot Americans wno
died in battle.
The work of seeking the resting
nf American heroes is beinir
undertaken by the section of graves
registration, which is directing its
efforts so as td be able to designate
iIip oravp of everv American should
congress authorize the return of the
bodies of the tallen.
. Tirplesa seeking for identification
rarre mark- the ilaiiv task of the men
of the graves registration section.
I hey set out on their solemn mis
sion equipped with , pick, shovel
Announcing the Opening
OF OUR NEW
Down-Town Sales Room
Tuesday, April 1st
Athletic Club Building
1710 Douglas Street
National Fur & Tanning
Company
Factory: 1921-1929
Tyler 120
PIERCE
ARRO
Dual Valve S
and gas mask. Sometimes they pry
down into the ground for the iden
tity of the dead warrior, sometimes
they ferret into the recesses of dis
tunied dugouts and sometimes they
clear away the' brush of the forest to
tnul some trace of the victims of
buttle.
Each cemetery where Americans
have been buried is fully plotted on
maps. The graves registration serv
ice is now extending every energy to
complete the burying,' marking, re
cording and classifying of the hero
ic Americans. 1
Canadian Aviator Will
Attempt Atlantic Flight
Hallux, N. S.. March 31. Co!
Ray Collishaw, a Canadian aviator,
sailed on the steamship Olympic lor
England today to bring back an air
plane with which to enter the trans
atlantic contest. He will attempt
his flight from Newfoundland eariv
F
I
OR the benefit of those shoppers who
found the trip out to our factory in
convenient and yet wanted to see our
wonderful line of line furs and take
advantage of the material economies
our position as first-hand manufac
turers make possible, we have opened
a new downtown sales room, where
the entire line will be on permanent
exhibition, and where our custoniers
can meet our head designer and our
fur experts.
S. 13th St.
Salesroom: 1710 Douglas St
Tyler 1793
in May, accompanied by Major Mc-
Keevcr and a wireless operator.
Colonel Collishaw expects to acv
..-.,v,-,liL.-1, tliA llttTnt i, (1 limit- l-fiv
machine will be equipped with fiv
motors of 400 horsepower each, cap
able of carrying 50 people and ri
maining in the air for 30 hours. :
CHIROPRACTOR
Ethel Thrall Maltby, D C.
(Palmer Graduate)
Adjustment $1.00, 12 for $10
312 Bee Bldg. Doug. 3072
WARNING
In kMBlng your boweli regular do nnt twoome
udtlh-lfd to weakening purgatives at, mineral
lmatlrtts; Just lrv KOROLAX; life, leull.
wholesome- Ktwt and giws farthest. Obtainable
at tuuiv druitffisu. everywhere. Korolax la
relief for many aUnnitit. Including conatt
imtlim. haailachei, dluy spellt. balohlne, cat.
heartburn, torpid liver. Iiad breath, uervoua
iink, d.YMHM'Hla. tiidiguatiixi, olwaity, mental
and iihyKii al dullnen.
3
,pw
id
-i--- '-"TnnaaHai
W M l.
mSami
A
'i