THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1919. Hair Growth depend upon hair culture, and hiir- culture begin with scalp cleanlineis. Growth ttop and bald nni begins when the scalp and hair are not cleansed regularly and' thoroughly and in the right manner. If your hair is dull, oily ' or dry and brittle, use QUINEGG Shampoo Quinegg will allow the tiny oil glands to release just the right amount of oil to keep your hair soft, silky, healthy and vigorous. Large Bottle 30c m If yokr own druggist does not have Quinegg Shampoo, you will find it on tale and recommended by Sherman A MeConnell Drug Stores. MRS. KELLY WAS DISCOURAGED SHE DECLARES Had Suffered Twenty-eight Years "Not a Medicine In the World Equals Tanlac." " "If there was no other way for me to get Tanlac, I would actually walk all the way from our farm in the country to Peoria rather than be without it," said Mrs. J. W. Kel lv, who lives on route No. 2, Peoria, Illinois, a few days ago-, "I suffered, for twenty-eight years," continued Mrs. .Kelly, "and during that time I soent thousands of dollars trying to find la medicine or treatment that would overcome my troubles, but I never got any slief until I commenced taking Tan lac. My stomach was in an awful conditio)!, and every time I ate any thing I ionld suffer for hours aft erwards. Sometimes I would have cramping spells and then I would often suffer on account of gas form ing from spur, undigested food. I would have awful -headaches, too, and would frequently get, so dizzy that I would either have to sit down or lie down to keep from falling. My appetite was so poor that I hardly nte enough to keep me'going and I, got so thin and weak that I wan hardly able to get around at all. I also suffered a great deal from ner vousness, and never got a good nieht's sleep. I finally got in such a worn-out, run-down condition that I just had to give up trying to do anv of my work. In fact, I was com pletely discouraged over my condi tion, and gave up all hope of ever getting better. "I told my husband that I didn't think it was any use for us to spend any more money for medicine, but he said, 'no, you mustn't give up, for as long as there is life there is hope.' Well, I noticed Tanlac be ing advertised then, and I thought I would see if that would do me any good, and before I had finished my first bottle I could see that I was mending right along. My appetite is as good now as it ever was, and I can eat just .anything I want with out suffering agonies afteWards. I have taken five bottles of Tanlac so av an1 mw liaoltYt i a fni. Katfor mfiur than it has ibeen 1 in 'over thirty years. My stomach troubles have disappeared, and my nerves are in such fine condition that I drop off to sleep as soon as I go to bed every night, and I rardly ever wake up 'until I am called in the morning. I haven't had, a headache or one of those dizzy spells since I finished my first bottle of Tanlac, and am so well and strong in every way that I now do all my housework, and look after my cows and chickens besides. I don't believe there is a medicine in the world that equals Tanlac, and I just can't find words to express how grateful I am for the great good it has done me and I will praise this wonderful medicine as long as I live." . r - Tanlac- is sold in Omaha by all Sherman & MeConnell 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" s.tate of Nebraska. Adv.w HOTEL COMPANY ASKS PROBE OF BANKERHEALTY Charge Conspiracy to Gain Control of Company and Excessive Charge for Building Hotels. Th North American Hotel Co. filed suit against the Bankers' Realty Investment Co-., yesterday in district court, demanding an accounting from the latter and its officers on various transactions involving the building of hotels in various Nebras ka and Iowa cities. v A temporary restraining order was granted by District Judge Day, en joining the Rankers Realty Invest ment Co. from holding certain com mon stock in the North American Hotel Co. and from disposing ofcer tain real estate and mortgages and from interfering with the officers of the North American Hotel Co. in the management of that company. A bond of $2,000. was filed by the plaintiff. The North American Hotel Co. alleges that the Bankers Realty In vestment Co. and its officers' con spired in September, 1917, to secure control of the North American Hote! 'Co., and that $10000 secured from the latter to build a hotel in Grand Island was really used to buy 1,000 shares of stock in the North American Hotel Co., thus securing control of that company. At various dates, it is charged, the North American Hotel Co. was in dncecj to sign contracts to pay for the erection of hotels and it is charg ed the figures were invariably higher than the actual cost of the hotels. A hotel built at Hampton, Ja., they charge, was paid for with $180,000 of North American Hotel Co. funds. It is alleged that this hotel cost only $125,000. . Similar charges are made regard ing hotels erected in Scottsbluff, Kearney, Grand Island, Ogallala and other cities. Returned Soldier to Speak at Comenius School Today Charles Gieselmann, who has re turned from service with the 341st machine gun battalion, will speak to the children of Comenius school Thursday afternoon in connection with a class day program. The Gieselmann family has cared for the janitor work of this school for 35 years. William. Gieselmann, one of the "boys." received his edu cation at this school and is now in charge of the physical welfare of the building. The advertiser who uses The Bee Want Ad Column increases his business thereby and the persons who read them profit by the oppor tunities 'offered. Expelling of Two American Officers By British from. Ireland Causes Sensation Yankees Said to Have Expressed Strong Pro-Sinn Fein Sentiment at Meeting of Irish Republicans, Ad dressed by President De Valera U. S. Judge Advocate Office Investigates. By ROBERT WELLES RITCHIE CnlTrml Serrlca Staff Correspondent.) (Special Cable Di.patcb). London, June 4.- An American major and a lieutenant from the quartermaster's department of the American expeditionary force who were spening their leave in Ireland, were expelled from ,that country Sunday by order of the British gov ernment as a result, it is alleged, of indiscreet partisanship with the Sinn Fein. J ", The summary expulsion of .the two officers has created a sensation at General Biddle's headquarters in London, where both reported yes terday. Though General Biddle's staff denies all khowledge of the event, even the adjutant asserting to the correspondent that he never heard of it, the fact remains that the major and the lieutenant were sum moned to the judge advocate's of fice this afternoon for a lengthy conference. From authoritative quarters where the two officers reported their troubles immediately upon their ar rival in London yesterday, Univer sal Service learns the details of their experience. The two officers had been for several days in Ireland, 'often in the company of pronounced Sinn Feiners. On Saturday night they attended a Sinn Fein function at the Dublin mansion house where President De Valera was making a speech dealing with the hopes of Ireland still pinned on the American delegates at , Paris as well as on the American congress at Washington. The officers are alleged tp have made some strong pro-Sinn Fein re marks that were overheard by Brit ish secret service agents who imme diately reported them to the Brit ish government. The latter evidently had been watching the officers after noting thair Sinn Fein associates. The se cret service is very competent and never overlooks possibilities and acted quickly. Late Saturday night official information was conveyed to the two officers that their presence in Ireland was considered undesir able. This was conveyed to them with the greatest courtesy and with no show of coercion. The officers caught the morning boat from Kingstown for Holyhead. Universal Service learns that if an investigation and possible puni tive measures are to be visited on the alleged culprits such action will be taken by the judge advocate's of fice in Paris, which has jurisdiction in the rnatter. Believes League of Nations Will Settle Problem of Ireland By WILLIAM J. BUTLER. (Universal fterelre Staff Correspondent.) (Special Cable Dlapatcb). Paris, June 4. The Irish question in all probability will be left for set tlement 6'y the league of nations, a high American diplomat informed the correspondent today in dis cussing the latest letter from Frank P. Walsh and ex-Governor Dunne, of Illinois, the two Irish-American commissioners, to President Wilson. President Wilson has not yet an swered the letter, but it is thought the clause in the Austrian treaty by which the political and religious minorities in the new states of cen tral Europe came under the protec tion of the league will be interpreted as being sufficiently elastic to stretch it to Ireland's case. Mr. Wash, chairman of the Irish Amtrican commission, declines to comment on this probability, but there is a strong report he has been g;ven to understand that such will be the most jikely solution of the Irish tangle." AMERICANS MAKING GOOD AT SIXTY-FIVE oh't worry about old ace. A aouoc man ia good at any age.. Seep you body in good condition and too can M hula and hearty and able to "do mi bit as troea yoo were a young fellows Affection ot the kidneys and bladder are amorfe the leading causae of early or helpless age. Keep them eleaa and the other organs in working condition sxd you will nave nothing to fear. , Drive the poisontms wastes from the system and avoid uric add accumuui-: tiona. Take GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules periodically and-jou will find that yon are as good as the next fellow. lour spirits will be rejuve nated, yonr muscles strong, and you nind keen enough for any tasky , ' GOLD MEDAL Haarlem 03 Capsule f rUl do the work. But be sure to get the original imported GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. They are, re liable andMhould help you, or youi money wune reiunaea. ior eme dj most drnjxUtfc Ifi ISftftd fiaclpfei tttSt Ittfcf -? ' - - 7 Again We Announce Our h Ladies Shoe Sale The story is simple we are overloaded in women's shoes and must reduce our great stock at once. We have never given greater bargains. Come tomorrow. White Kid Oxfords One of the most popular numbers of the season, Louis or mili- dJO At tary heels, pair, POtU M Every ladies' shoe reduced for this sale. 17 250 Pumps and Ox fords; values to $7.00, now $3.95 NEW COLONIAL PUMPS Colonial Pumps, just arrived, colors, sand and grey buck, Louis heels spe cial, at, pair p $9.45 200 PairsW -v Two-tones and Patent Leather ' 1 I Ladies' Shoes, J J $12.00 values, ' $6.95 Mail Orders .Promptly Filled. rr U 300 Prs. Pumps and Ox- fords, value to $10.00, now " $5,95 2J XX I mm I V 13 W CDUU V L3 VI j 105 SO. 15TH ST., OMAHA, NEB. Taxpayers Will Have ' To Pay Penalty Unless Returns Are Made A large number of Douglas coun ty taxpayers are "flirting" with a 50 per cent penalty unless they send in their assessment returns very quickly, says County Assessor Fitz gerald. ' May 26 was the day when all as sessment returns were due. The lists are being checked up now and will be completed ui a few days. Then all those that are missing will have to pay their taxes plus 50 per cent of their taxes as a penalty. "Last vear I oenalized about 80 taxpayers with a total of $50,0001 taxes, said Mr. Fitzgerald. The county assessment this year will run to about $290,000,000, actual value, Mr. Fitzgerald estimates. IS STINSON, DOPE PEDDLERS' KING, NOW A BIGAMIST? Records Show That Alleged . Husband of Beatrice Wil helm Has Not Divorced His First Wife. Here On Way to Iowa Attorney Mrs. F. M. B. O'Linn of Chadron, is at the Hotel Fontenelle, enroute to Iowa on business. She is accompanied by her granddaughter, Frances Smith, who graduated from the Chadron State Normal school last week. Is "Curley" Stinson, alleged king of dope peddlers, and who is under indictment to appear in the federal district court to answer charges of violating the Harrison act," a biga mist? On May 26 C. M. Stinson, negro, aged 32, was- united in marriage to Beatrice Wilhelm, white, aged 19, ty Justice C. E. Bird, in the base ment of the court house at Council Bluffs. According to facts brought out in an investigation, C. M. Stinson ap pears to be Marion, or Lurley Stinson, and the woman he married is "Mrs. Ruth Clarke," right name, Beatrice Wilhelm, and the woman whose sensational revelations re garding the dope ring in Omaha is srTfl fresh in the mind of the public. Guilty of Bigamy? According to the records it would appear that Stinson is guilty of the crime of bigamy. On January 27, 1919, by his at torney, H. H. Clairborne, Stinson filed suit for divorce from his wife, Josephine Stinson. He stated that the woman was living in Lincoln, and the return on the summons in the suit shows that no service was obtained as court officers could not locate the defendant. The records also show that there has been no service by publication. Miscegeation forbidden. According to the miscegenation laws of the state of Nebraska it is unlawful for a person more than one-fourth negro blood to wed a white person. Stinson and Mrs. Wilhelm went to Council Bluffs where they had the ceremony per formed, Iowa being one of the few states of the union without misce genation laws. The ceremony was an unlawful one, in the opinion of at torneys, for, the reason that no di vorce decree was granted Stitjson in the Douglas county district court, where his suit against Josephine Stinson is still pending and he is stil! bound to her. Mrs. Wilhelm is slid to have been once married and it is said that her husband is living at Cherokee, Ia. Hun Minister of Defense Prepares for Emergency Paris, June v 6. A report has reached peace conference circle, that Gustav Noske, the German minister of defense, recently made a tour of the German coast defense and di rected the personnel to be prepared for emergencies. My Heart and My Husband Adele Garrison's New Phase of Revelations oj a Wife J BA!9Ji DRUG GO Omaha, JNeb, The Word's Madge and Dicky Overheard. Every word of Milly Stockbridye's heartless gibe at her husband's lameness came distinctly to us. For tunately theorchestra was making so much noise that I don't think the other guests of the cafe understood what she said even if they heard her.' But shewas facing our table as she spoke, and we could not help being unwilling auditors of her vul gar cruelty. To all appearances her husband had not heard" her. Not a facial muscle changed, and as for his pal lor, it could not have been more pronounced than it had been when he entered the cafe. But there came a simultaneous low protest from his wife's relatives, to which she at once made a vixenish reply. "Oh, you all make me tired!" she snapped. "It's 'Milly, how can you?' and 'Milly, why do you?' to say nothing of your favorite refrain 'Milly, ydu ought to be ashamed of yourself I' I tell you I'm. sick of the whore business and all of you. Some day I'm going to beat it to the other world by the quickest route, and I don't want any of you . sniveling around me, either. "I don't care what I find on the other' side, it can't be worse than what I endure here every day. Just look at every one of you now, for instance. You know how faint I always am after a long ride, yet not one of you has asked me yet any thing about my order. I might starve to death for all any of you care." Held in Subjection. The orchestra ceased' suddenly, and the last words sounded clearly through the room. Every head was turned toward the Stockbridge ta ble, but to my surprise Milly Stock bridge was clever enough to force a laugh and say in a milder though still petulant tone! "I tell you, if you don't hurry up and order I shall starve to death. Her elder sister, a dark, slender woman, with a tired, sensitive face, took up the menu card, glanced over it hurriedly. "The lobster is said to, be very nice here, Milly,". she ventured tim idly. "No doubt her sister returned Captiously. "Things are always said to be nice about these new places. Just wait a few weeks till they get their patrons well hooked. Then you'll se how they'll sting you." "Would you rather have spme thing else, Miny?" Tier mother asked nervously. It was plainly to be seen that the whole family were held in subjection by the neurotic woman's vagaries. , f "Oh, Dicky, DorrH!" "Haven't you a tongue in your head?" Milly Stockbridge turned im pateiently upon . her , husband. "You're the one that suggested this hole, now suppose you demonstrate what it's good for." "Would you like me to order for you?" Kenneth Stockbridge's voice Iwas an infinite weariness in its tones. ' "I taw. wJui I'd order, fox her if j she belonged to me," Dicky mut tered viciously to the rest of us. "A nice stiff dose of rough on rats. I had no idea from talking with the lady the other evading that she was a proposition like this. By George, if ever a man was justified in com mitting murder that man is. If I were on a jury I'd acquit him if he boiled her in oil." "Oh, Dicky, don't!" I said ner vously. I couldn't help the exclama tion. I felt chilled to the marrow at the vision" called up by my hus band's morbid jesting words. "What's the matter?" my hus band looked over at me teasingly. "Didn't know you had such a blood thirsty wretch for a husband, did you? Well, I give you fair warning, if ever you develop symptoms of emulating that female at the next table I shall act immediately and without mercy. - Just listen to her, will you?" There was no need of the injunc tion. Indeed, we could do nothing else, save obey, so strident and com pelling were her tones. "Aha, I've just caught n!" she shrilled. "I wondered why you were so atixious to come here. I should think you'd see enough of that wo man at school every day without trailingher here." (Continued Tomorrow.) The logical table drink fonJ! health' is INSTANT POSTUM And the flavor satisfies. . WANTED 1 High Grade - . Specialty Salesman For state of Nebraska. Preferably one with grocery acquaintance. See Mr. Conroy, Fonta nels Hotel, Saturday, June 7th. I 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief BELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION Rotarians Subscribe $7,000 for $27,000 Fund for Boy, Scouts Omaha Rotarians at luncheon at the Hotel Fontenelle yesterday noon contributed $7,000 to the Boy Scout fund as the opening of a campaign being conducted by the Rotarians to raise $27,000 for the Omaha Boy Scout organization. Since the Boy Scouts were estab lished here about three years ago, the Rotarians have acted as god father ipr the Scouts. At the lunch eon General Manager Davidson of One Minute Store Talk Our customers are our best advertisers. Said one: "Urge every man to get curi "DU about thi buiineaa of get ting more for his clothes money. Don't be satisfied with their natural curiosity. When all conpar e you II serve them all." One thing about it, Greater Nebraska is big enough "to serve all" and serve them better. Compare. the Nebraska Power Co. acted as manager of the drive. Splendid speeches were made by Dan Baum, Walter Head, Ward Burgess and A. B. Currie. Mrs. Fred Hamilton, Mrs. Glen Wharton, Miss Mildred Butler of Kansas City, and Misses Mene and Elizabeth Davis acted as canvassers for subscriptions and pledges. - A number of the members of the club donated $50 Liberty bonds to the fund. The city has been divided into 29 districts Qnd a captain with four men, members of the Rotary club will canvass each district dur ing the duration of the drive. The Boy Scouts are endeavoring to raise the money to establish a permanent camp. If their plans are carried out, they will be enabled to possess the largest Boy Scout camp in the world. Many Children Pass Test Fori Special Summer School One Hundred and eighty-eight-pub-lic school boys and girls out of a group of 253 passed tests which will admit them to a special summer school for six weeks, beginning June 16, in Central school building. These pupils have been recommended as competent to skip a class during the summer vacation. Read The Bee Want Ads for the best opportunities in bargains. Red -Blooded Young Men The Clothes Yon Glory in. ' Are Here - THE clothes live-wire Americans are wearing from New York to. Sar) Francisco the clothes that stand in a class by themselves the clothes that Fashion Park, Society Brand and Jlickey -Freeman alone know how to produce are here and here alone.. THE styles are very distinctive, the fabrics are strictly; all wool, the tailoring the best known. Single and dou ble breasted welt-waist models in suits and topcoats and many other new styles that young fellows appreciate. Un common new colorings and patterns; greens, silver grays, blues, fancy stripes and checks, iridescent shades. A very choice selection at $20 to $50 Business Men's Finely Tailored Suits $00 to $65 , Involving more special sizes than a dozen other stores show. Younger Young Men's Suits $15 to $45 Specially designed styles, found only at this store. Spring Top Coats, Motor Coats, Rain Cfoats $15,' $20, $25, $30, $Si, $40 SEE OUR WINDOWS TODAY. COMPARE OUR VALUES ALWAYS. CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN. wwmmnmnnnmimnmmnniimnm i.iii.wiiii.miinnniiii))miii)i.'iih!ii!imiHh)llj! Advertising that is not properly illustrated loses the "punch" that is re quired to interest a pros pective customer. We pro duce the Engravings and Art Work, combined with Service, that you must have for successful advertising. BLACKSTNE MOTEL f t s0K 1 lU BEE ENGRAVING DEPT. 11 flQ Ha IP. 31 1 Ij! 105 Be. Bldf. Phone Tyler 1000. $Jtr ifl ifflfr IS"!: - llU' Quality and Service 1 -fi ffijS pH pWiGirf fe' 3l 1 y '