Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 19, 1919, Image 4

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THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBFR 19, 1919.
Lincoln Bureau of The Omaha Bee
INDIAN DAY TO
BE CELEBRATED
SEPTEMBER 26
Governor McKelvie Issues
Proclamation to Do Honor
to First Settlers for
Part in War.
Lincoln, Sept. 18, (Specials
Governor McKelvie issued a proc
" lamation today, calling on the peo
ple of Nebraska, and particularly
the schools, to celebrate Friday,
September 26, as Indian day, in
honor of the 3,500 original settlers
still in Nebraska and of the 10,000
in the United States, who joined
the colors in the world war. Sixty
Indian boys enlisted in the Fifth
Nebraska regiment at the outset
of the war.
The proclamation follqws:
"Just how long the American
Indian has been on this continent
,is difficult lb determine. That he
was here when Columbus discovered
America is established by history,
and antedates the landing of the
Pilgrims by many moons. He cer
tainly has been here long enough
to warrant his citizenship without
the form of taking out first or
second papers. His Americanism,
therefore, from the standpoint of
residence, cannot be questioned and
is not shaded by his ancestors hav
ing been born under 'the dominion
of any prince, king or potentate.
"We found him without books or
any line of literature. Here in his
simplicity he saw and recognized
God in the stars and traced His
goings forth in' the milk-maid's
' path, heard Him speak in the winds
and acknowledged the. presence of
the Great Spirit in all about him.
"The late world's war found the
descendanti of these primitive chil
dren of the forest ready to defend
the principals of freedom , which
th eir fathers and themselves ab
sorbed in the liberty of their out
door life. Unrestrained by the con
ventionalities of the white man's
civilization and code of honor led
them to recognize the law of mine
and thine. This was their constitu
tion and Magna Charta, including
those natural rights with which God
has endowed His creatures. Over
3,500 of these children are in our
state. There were more than 60 In
dian boys who volunteered to serve
their country in the Fifth Nebraska
regiment, and others were found in
the various branches of the service.
Ten thousand of these boys
throughout the United States joined
the colors and served overseas.
"Therefore, in consideration of
these acts, and in compliance with
the request of the Ladies' Legisla
tive league, and in keeping with the
resolution passed by the house of
representatives at the last session
of the legislature, I, Samuel R. Mc
Kelvie, governor of Nebraska,
hereby set apart Friday, September
26, 1919, as American Indian day,
and would request our people to
meet together on that day. and that
p. A. Banows. Correspondent
He Delivers Telegraph
Messages One Day Late
Lincoln, Sept. 18. Complaint has
been made in a letter to the State
Railway commission by Frank P.
Johnson of Minatare, Neb. that the
local Burlington agent not only re
fuses to sell tickets and check bag
gage on Sunday, but on September
12, he received a .telegram t 9:35
a. m. which he delivered to the ad
dressee three blocks from the depot
the same time the following day.
The .corflmission will look up the
prescribed hours of service for this
agent, tinder the arrangements of
the railroad to conform to the
Adamson nine-hour law, and investi
gate other phases of the complaint.
SEED WHEAT OF
STATE WILL NOT
STANDTHE TEST
State Department of Agricul
ture Warns Against "Dar
nel" in Seed - From
the East.
Lincoln, Sept. 18. (Special.) Seed
imported from the east and the no'rth
tends to contain "darnel," a noxious
weed seed from which this state has
so far been free, according to a re
port by the State Department of
Agriculture. Nebraska wheat seed
this year shows a germination as
low as 50 per cent.
Warning against the planting of
Nebraska seed, especially where the
yield was low and he-weight light,
is made by Secretary Leo Stuhr, who
also recommends the testing of im
ported seed as well.
Mr. Stuhr says that with the aver
age germination of wheat in 1918 at
98.85 per cent, which-is normal, tests
of this year's crop show a menancing
lack of vitality in sections where the
yield was poor.
In the southern half of Hall coun
ty and in Adams county tests this
year have run from 50 to 83 per cent.
Specimens from Nebraska City show
80 per cent. Lancaster and Hamil
ton counties show up aomparatively
well with 90 to 91 per cent.
The darnel seed is practically im
possible to separate from the wheat,
being a .gray berry the shape and
sjze of a very diminutive oat that
yields neither to threshing or fan
ling segregation.
Fremont Auto Thief Warned
Not to Speed on Streets
Fremont, Neb., Sept. 18. (Spe
cial.) A thief who stole an automo
bile belonging to R. W. McGinnis,
general gaent of the Northwestern,
from the Union station was halted
by the traffic officer as he drove up
Main street and warned! about fast
driving. At the time the officer
did not know the car was stolen.
the public schools take up the sub
ject of the American Indian and in
a fitting manner observe the occa
sion." .
NONPARTISANS
REPRESENTED AT
FALL ELECTION
Twenty-Five or Thirty Ne
braska Districts Name Can
didates Affiliated With
League.
Lincoln, Sept. 18. "(Specials
Nine of the constitutional conven
tion candidates endorsed by the
Nonpartisan league were nominat
ed at the Tuesday primary, and a
number of other candidates receiv
ing the league's support without for
mal endorsement were also success
ful. Added to these, the recognized
Townley candidates in districts
where no primaries were held, the
North Dakota party will be repre
sented in 25 or 30 districts at the
November election.
Of the candidates listed in the
state organ of the Nonpartisan
league last week as having the or
ganization's endorsement two failed
to pull through. One was B. F.
Parmenter of Lancaster county and
the other was Ed. Shughru in Red
Willow.
Lose In Lincoln.
William Ebright, supported by
the league in Lincoln county, was
also -eliminated. W. V. Hoagland
and J. G. Beeler, both of North
Platte, were nominated.
The Townley candidates who
pulled through at the primaries
were:
Lancaster C. C. Flansburg, F. M.
Coffey, N. Z. Snell, A. E. Sheldon
and W. F. Dale.
Johnson F. A. Panko.
Boone James Auten.,
Madison J. T. Green.,
Gosper and Frontier George C.
Junkin.
Valley D. E. Strong. '
Flirting with League.
Among those reported to haye
been flirting with the Nonpartisan
league, although not affiliated vsth
it, were A. L. Tidd in Cass, H,t V.
Price in York and Henry Behreis in
Cuming, who were among the win
ners in the primary.
Of. those running in dstricts
which held no primary the 'follow
ing are understood to have he sup
port of the league: f. Ht Gerdes,
E. D. Howe. H. C. Elwrftd. J. H.
Knudson, Edgar Howarr', Andrew
Dahlsten, F. E. Liston., John O.
Schmidt, J. A. Parmerer, George
Luftdgren, Charles W coster, Emil
Stolley, G. W. Grady, I. C. Rankin,
Hijo Aden, W. J. Taylor. J. D.
Ream, D. E. Strong,, S. C. Bassett,
E. Arnold and Hany Johnson.
Rental Agents Order Tenants With Children
To Vacate at Termination of Their Leases
One Couple in Dewey Apartments Who Received Such a Notice From Hastings
and Heyden Retain Attorney and Will Resist Proposed Eviction Were
Willing to Pay Increased Rent, but Now, They Are Ordered t6 "Get Out"
. Because They Have a Thr,e-Year-01d Child. . ' '
H. D. Bergen, tenant in the Dewey
apartments, 3301 Dewey avenue, has
been ordered to vacate, by Hasting!
and Heyden, agents, because he and
Mrs. Bergen have a 3-year-old chain.
A letter from the agents, signet?
by "E. A. Thompson," rental maa
ager, specifically states that tTufey
are ordering all tenants, who lykve
children, to vacate at the termination
of the current lease, practically all
of which expire September 30
Mr. Bergen h:s retained H. S.
Lower, attorney, and he intends to
resist the proposed evictin. Mr.
and Mrs. Bergen and chi'd are the
only members of their family, who
occupy apartment No. 3 of the
Dewey. The rent was raised from
$45 to $52.50, which latter amount
Mr. Bergen was wiling to pay.
Gets 30 Days" Notice.
The first intimat:)bn he received,
ordering him to vacate, was a letter
dated August 13,,. which reads in
part: "We are V.ereby giving you
the required 30 &gys' notice and wish
to say that if yu find anything be
fore September 30, we will gladly
release you frjom your lease if you
give us sufficient notice to rent the
same before vacating."
Mr. and Mrs. Bergen were sur
prised to i;ceive the formal notice
to vacate They could not under
stand it, tbasmuch as they had not
exyTessed any disposition to not re
nw their lease.
''I shalL be obliged if, you will
advise me the reason for your no
tice to vacate, particularly in view
of the last line in your letter, in-,
dicating it is your intention to lm
mediately rent the apartment again,"
wrote Mr. Bergen to Hastings and
Heyden, August 18. .
Can't Have Children.
Eleven days later Mr. Bergen re
ceived the following reply from the
agents: "In reply to your letter of
the 18th, in regard to giving pos
session of the apartment, will say
that we are ordering all tenants in
our, buildings, who have children, to
vacate at the termination of their
leases.
"Yours truly,
"HASTINGS & HEYDEN.
"By E. A. THOMPSON,
"Rental Manager."
Mr. Bergen consulted an attorney
in whose hands the case rests.
"We will fight the case, but it
would not be policy at this time
to divulge our plans. We will be
guided by the circumstances as they
are presented after September 30,
when the Bergen lease will expire,"
said Attorney Lower for Mr. Beri
gen.
Tenants of the Milton apartments.
Nineteenth avenuej and Jones street,
another Hastings & Heyden apart
ment house, are, protesting against
in increase of their winter rate from
$45 to $47.50. There are 20 apart
ments in this building.
Is Refused Everywhere.
H. S. Kamer, head of the Omaha
Hat Factory, operating several lo
cations here, asserts that - he has
been endeavoring to find an apart
ment since July 1, but because he
and Mrs. Kamer happen to have a
17-month-old baby, he has been un
successful Mr. Kamer expressed
his case as follows:
"I am a newcomer to Omaha, hav
ing been attracted here" by the op
portunities presented in pictures
and words by the Chamber of Com
merce. I saw the pictures of the
beautiful homes and decided that
Omaha would be the place to live.
At least a dozen times since July 1
I have been refused admittance to
apartments when the. owners or
agents learned that 1 had a child.
"In one case I had the arrange
ments all made and then they learn
ed I had a child and the deal was
off. I had splendid recommenda
tions in another instance, but it was
the same old story. It looks as if
I will either have to sleep .in the
streets or pay hotel rates.
"There are laws in the east on
this subject and it is about time
that Omaha had such a law. I be
lieve the Chamber of Commerce
should take this matter up se
riously.'' '
Herald and Y.M.C.A. Conduct
Campaign for Bootleggers
R&ise Fund for Mr. and Mrs. Jim Musko, Who Sell
"Dago Red" to the Thirsty, When No Policemen
. Are in Sight.
Double Capital &tock
of Frertfont Land Bank
Fremont, Ne'., Sept 18. (Spe
cial.) At a mebting of stockholders
of the Fremont Joint Stock t Land
bank it was Voted to inoease the
capital stock 'from $250,000 to $500,-000.
m i a m.
. iThis 'is not just a claim it is a fact.
We tested Omar in ourbakinglaboratorv,1
with forty other brands. The result with
Omar was about five more loaves (per
48 pound sack) of creamy white, whole
some bread, with an even texture, and
a satisfying taste. Then too, Omar bread
' 'stays fresh longer than all the others.1
There is a scientific reason for this, but it would
take a book to explain all the processes, so just
try a sack of Omar next time. We know what
the result will be.- That is why, with every
(sack of Omar, there goes this guarantee:
, "If Omar doesn't baka tht best bread yon
rer baked, simply take the empty sack
to your ftrocer, tad et your money."
OMAHA FLOUR MILLS COMPANY
Onafca, Ntbruka
" 2f f tern M6 CapmHr
A
a-asaa-a-afP- I
1 - "n rtUUK niu r
The generous public is being
duped through a campaign con
ducted by the World-Herald and
the Y. M. C A., to raise a fund of
$1,200 for a donation to Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Musko, 421 Pierce street,
widely known bootleggers, whose
savings for a home were stolen last
Saturday.
Through an investigation by a re
porter for Thea.Bee, authentic infor
mation was gained of illegal manu
facture and sale of "Dago Red," a
cheap wine, in the Musko home.
Scale of Prices.
Evidence of the sale of the highly
intoxicating liquor at 15 cents a
drink, 45 cents a pint and 75 cents
a quart was obtained in the presence
of two witnesses. It is the boast of
Jim Musko that the greater part of
the $1,200 lost to a pickpocket last
Saturday was an accumulation of
sales of "Dago Red" during the last
year.
Police have arrested and convicted
no less than 20 persons for the man
ufacture and sale of wine in "Little
Italy," near Sixth and Pierce streets,
since prohibition went' into effect.
In' the presence of two witnesses
in the Musko home, the woman of
the house, commenting upon her
loss, said: "But never mind, we just
made 150 gallons of the stuff again.
It sells good." ,
Receive Numerous Complaints.
Though police have had numerous
complaints of illegal sale of liquor
at the Musko home, a successful in
vestigation has never been conduct
ed. No countersign is needed by
the drinWng public to obtain the
liquor. A muddy pathway leading
through fences, alleys, between
sheds and finally to the back door
of the Musko home leads the liquor
fiend to hjs haven of joy.
"Just a litle drink," is mentioned.
The housekeeper takes a circum
spection for a probable policeman,
then locks the door. From the
basement is drawn a pitcher of the
inspiring liquor. After the libation
is paid for, the guilty purchaser has
the oportunity of buying ready
filled pints or quarts of "Dago
Red." Plenty of bottles are in evi
dence in the lower part of a cup
board in the Muske home.
Boy Builds Pathway.
Upon leaving the Musko home the
investigators encountered Sam
Musko, 12 years old, constructing a
cinder pathway through the alley to
the pavement at Fifth and Pierce
streets.
"The fellers ought to tip me for
buildin' this for you," the boy re
marked. "Else they'll all have to
step in the mud."
So far the following subscriptions
have been made for the support of
the Musko family, according to the
World-Herald:
S. L. R $1.00
J. D. Youngman.... 2.00
M..W 100
E. M 1.00
Miss R. D.:....w 1.50
J. K. Calkins 1.00
E. L. Schober..... 100
F. V. Kniest 10.00
Total $18.50
Tells of "Nebraska Beef,
Bread and Butter State"
Lincoln, Sept. 18. (Special.) The
United States Railway administra
tion has just issued a thirty-six page
pamphlet, printed in colors and hand
somely illustrated, describing the ag
ricultural resources of Nebraska. L.
M. Allen, traffic manager of the
Rock Island, is sending out the lit
erature. The cover shows a Nebraska farm
yard scene in colors with "Nebraska"
in oig rea letters as me caption.
On the top of each page is a border
in red, containing the slogan: "Ne
braskaBeef, Bread and Butter
State."
The data on the state's resources,
prepared by the Nebraska College of
Agriculture and the agricultural
agents of all the railroads in the
state is calculated to invite colonists
and homeseekers. The introduction
contains messages from Governor
McKelvie and W. W. Burr, former
acting dean of the College of Agriculture.
Returned Soldier High in
Hamilton County Primary
Aurora, Neb., Sept. 18. (Special.)
Unofficial returns from the consti
tutional convention primary, one
precinct missing, give A. M. Hare
325, W. I. Farley-133, F. E. Edgerton
120. Less than 20 per cent of the
voting strength of the county is rep
resented in the above figures. Hare
is a young lawyer, recently returned
from France, where he was a ser
geant in the expeditionary forces.
He is a graduate of the state univer
sity, a former school teacher, and at
present associated with R. R. Smith
in the practice of law. Mr. Farlev.
who will be his opponent in the Nov
ember election, has been a resident
of Hamilton county for more than
40 years and is extensively engaged
in banking, real estate ad farming.
He was a member of the lower house
m the 1907 legislature.
Lost Battalion Hero Is
Visiting Superior Friends
Superior. Neb., Sept. 18. CSoecial
Telegram.) Frederick Mendell of
the Lost Battalion is here on a visit
after being discharged from Fort
Sheridan hospital. He was born
here 28 years ago.
Heavy Rain at Beatrice.
Beatrice, Neb.. Sept. 18. CSnecial
Telegram.) The rainfall here since
yesterday is over four inches. Farm
ers are rejoicing over the soaking
the ground has re.ceived.
Beatrice Firemen Burn
Mortgage on $20,000 Home
Beatrice, Neb.. Sept. 18. (Sdc
cial.) The volunteer firemen of this
city held a celebration and banauet
in their hall to fittingly observe the
burning of the mortgage on the
building which they erected years
ago at a cost of $20,000. H. C.
.Leech, president of the fire depart
ment, acted as toastmastef, and ad'
dresses were given by ex-Congress
man Sloan of Geneva, Father D. J.
Cronin of Wymore and Rev. E. C.
Lucas of Beatrice.
Fiftieth Anniversary! of
Table Rock Church Observed
Table Rock. Neb.. Seot. 18. rSne
cial.) The 50th anniversary of the
organization of the Baptist church
at Pawnee City was observed by ap
propriate exercises at the church
Sunday. But one member of the
church at that time is known to be
living, Mrs. Nathan D. Pierce, who
lives in Missouri and was unable to
be present.
Sell 4 00-Acre Farm.
Beatrice, Neb., Sept. 18. (Spe
cial.) Jake Heiliger has sold his
400-acre farm near Plymouth to
George Phlman of the Dewitt vi
cinity for $76,000.
ASTHMA SUFFERERS
FREE 2 5 -cent bottle of our wonderful
Aa-No-Mor, for Asthma, pent absolutely
free. Gives instant relief. Has cured thou
sands. Will cure you. Guaranteed. Four
months treatment As-No-Mor handled
by all leading .druggists. Send today.
AS-NO-MOR CO..
Dept. 33. Dea Moines, la.
Blood-Iron Phosphate
For Weak, Thin Folks
Weak, thin, nervous people almost in
variably owe their condition to lack of
phosphate In the nerves and lack of iron
in the blood. One of the surest, quickest
and safest ways in which to make up the
deficiency is to take with each meal a five
grain tablet of digestible phosphate and
iron known among druggists here as Blood
Iron Phosphate; because it supplies iron
to the blood as well as phosphate to the
nervous system. People who have tried it
say that one five-grain tablet taken with
e&ch meal nnirklv restores depleted nerv.
ous energy, enriches the blood, increases
strength, vitality and endurance, and those
who are too thin usually put on pounds of
olid stay-there flesh in a short time. Inas
much as Sherman & McConnell Drug Co.,
end all other druggists are aumonzea 10
ell Blood-Iron Phosphate under a guar
intee of satisfaction or money back, every
thin, weak, nervous or anemic man or wo
man should give it a trial without delay.
Important Blood-Iron Phosphate is sold
snly in original packages, containing
aiough for three weeks" treaimeni, ax l jo
tar package only 60 !
Two Nebraska Newspapers
Will Have New Publishers
Aurora, Neb., Sept. 18. (Special.)
Announcement has just been made
of a change in the management of
the Hamilton County Register, for
many years controlled by George L.
Burr, by which A. L. Burr, a son
at present connected with a printing
company in Lincoln, will assume full
responsibility for the publication.
The elder Burr will continue to edit
the paper on salary, however. G. L.
Burr, jr., and his brother, Captain E.
N. Burr, who have been associated
with their father since their release
from military service, have pur
chased the Herald at Alliance from
Lloyd Thomas and will take posses
sion immediately. c
The Burr family is well known in
Nebraska newspaper circles, the
father having been actively engaged
in the publishing business for a life
time and his four sons have at
various times assisted him in his
work.
Bridge Down at Deshler .
Holds Up All Traffic
Deshler, Neb., Sept. 18. (Special
Telegram.) A railroad bridge on
the Fairbury-Nelson branch of the
Rock Island road three miles east
of Deshler was burned Tuesday af
ternoon. A. bridge building crew
was put to work immediately, but
a four-inch rain caused such a flood
that building has been suspended.
No freight and very little express
has been accepted over the line, as
all had to be transferred at the
bridge, and this was later entirely
suspended on account of high water.
No mail went out or came into
Deshler Thursday.
Sob Barneston Store.
Beatrice, Neb., Sept. 18. (Special
Telegram.) The Lon Turner gen
eral merchandise store at Barnes
ton, 20 miles south of here, was bur
glarized and a large quantity of silk
goods taken. The thieves are be
lieved to be the same gang which
operated at Plymouth and Blue
Springs a few weeks ago.
Alfalfa Seed from
Italy Said to Have
Some Obnoxious Weed
Lincoln, Sept. 18. (Specials
Secretary Leo Stuhr of the state de
partment of agriculture, in a warn
ing to Nebraska farmers, says alfalfa
seed, the production of which in Ne
braska and the west central states is
only one-fourth of normal, is being
imported from Italy in quantities
containing noxious weed reeds.
Specimens examined show small
flowered morning glory and dodder,
which is under the ban of state law,
and. ox tongue, which thrives partic
ularly in Nebraska soil and climate.
Secretary Stuhr says any of these
seeds are objectionable in new al
falfa fields and interfere with the
quality of the hay.
.Production of alfalfa seed in the
west central states has fallen from
4,562,241 pounds in 1918 to 1,609,736
this year, Mr. Stuhr announces.
Speciments of seed are examined
free for farmers by the state depart
ment of agriculture laboratories.
Two State Aid Bridges to
Be Built Across Platte
.Aurora, Neb., Sept. 18. (Special.)
Contracts for state aid bridges
across the Platte river near Cen
tral City and Grand Island were
awarded to the Western Bridge and
Construction company of Omaha at
a joint meeting of the county com
missioners of Hall, Merrick and
Hamilton counties held here. The
successful bid on the Central City
bridge was $83,990 and on the Grand
Island bridge $84,975. Each bridge
is to consist of 16 50-foot concrete
arches on wood piles, with 24-foot
driveway. Work will commence
this fall and it is expected that both
structures will be completed next
year.
Beatrice German Paper
S6lls its Plant for Junk
Beatrice, Neb:, Sept. 18. (Spe
cial) The Nebraska Post, a Ger
man publication edited at this place
by Emil Schultz for 25 years, and
which was ordered discontinued
more than a year ago by the Gage
county defense council, was sold to
Barnhart Bros. & Spindler of Chi
cago, who will ship it to Omaha.
The press will be overhauled and
sold, but the type will go to the
foundry and he made into new ma
terial. Mr. Schultz, the editor of
the paper, has eone to Lincoln to
work for a German publication
mere.
Lightest Vote in History at
Cuming County Election
West Point. Neb.. Sent. 18. (Soe
cial.) Election for delegates to the
constitutional convention was ex
tremely quiet. Very little interest
was taken and the lightest vote ever
polled in the county was the result.
The two highest candidates on the
ticket were Henry Behrens of Bee-
mer and Andrew R. Olson of Wis
ner. Behrens is a former represent
ative trom the float district and
Olson formerly represented this sen
atorial district and for a time was a
judge of the district ctfurt.
"BAYER CROSS" ON
GENUINE ASPIRIN
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" to be
genuine must be marked with the
safety "Bayer Cross." Always buy
an unbroken Bayer package which
contains proper directions to safely
relieve Headache, Toothache, Ear
ache, Neuralgia, Colds and pain.
Handy fin boxes of 12 tablets cost
uut a lew truis b ufrug oivicb
larger packages also. . Aspirin is the
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture
of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylic-acid.
inn it ini t?
NERVOUS
Superior Youth Killed in
40-Foot Fall From Stairs
Sunt-rtor. Netv. Spnr. 18 ffsnria!
1 " " " - " ' yvv.-.
Telegram.) Pleasal Austin of
Lhulicothe, 19 years old, was killed
at the Nebraska cement plant when
he fell from the ton nf a winrlino-
stairs about 40 feet high and landed
on his head on a conveyor. He was
taken to Lewis Memorial hospital,
but lived only an hour. He came
here about a month ago.
Swedish scientists have found a
way to remove 'water from residual
lye obtained' in sulphite manufac
ture and prevent a waste of some
800,000 tons 6t valuable matter annually.
You are almost cer
tain to need Chamber
lain's Colic and Diar-;
rhoea Remedy before
the sum mer is over. Buy
it now. It only costs a
trifle.
Be Young In Body, Mind and
Looks Despite Your Years
How often you have
wished that you could
indulge in the strenu
ous exercise of out
door sports with the
vigor and enthusiasm
of youth! But the
end of the week finds
you all in you are
tired, listless and lack
the energy to go out for
a vigorous walk or a
round of the links or
any other exercise that re
quires much physical exer
tion. Many a man, even in
his middle 'forties, has a
vague feeling that he is
"getting old" and right
at a time when he should be
at his very best physically.
And he is growing old , not
in the sense that the years
are pressing heavily upon
him but in the sense that
his vital forces are wasting
away faster than Nature re
places the worn out tissues.
Thousands yes minions of people find
themselves in this condition early in life. Ana
there is no excuse for it You can check that
tendency to grow old. You can carry your
?outh with its joys and enthusiasm into vbur
0's and 80's. But you must give Nature aU the
help too un. Tin best utUtanee yon can find-waist.
nc of found, eonatroctiT character ia in th um of
Was Condition of Indiana Ladj
Before Beginning to Take
Card-H-i, the Woman's
IODIC J
Kokomo, Ind. Mrs. H. Hankemeler,
of this town, says: "I look so well, and
am so well, that it does not seem as if 1
ever needed Cardul. But I was not al
ways this way ... I think I have taken i
dozen bottles . , . before my little girl
came.
I was feeling dreadfully bad, had bead,
ache, backache, sick at my stomach, no
energy . . . ! was very irritable, too, and
nervous.
I began taking Cardul about 6 months
before my baby came. ' As a result all
those bad feelings left me, and I just fell
jrand, just as if nothing at all was the
matter, and when the end came Iwai
hardly sick at all. '
Since that I have never taken Cardul
at all ... It has done me good, and I
know It will help others, if they will only
try it."
Many women have written grateful let
ters like the above, telling of the good
that Cardul has done them. Why should
it not help you, too? If you suffer from
any of the ailments so common to women,
and feel the need of a safe, reliable,
strengthening tonic, we urge you to be
gin today and give Cardul a fair trial.
Your dealer sells Card-u-l - EB-1Q
-
mm
LYKO I. told In original pack,
at onlr, lk pictura abort.
RrfuM all tubilitutaa.
The Great General Tonic
It enriches the blood-gently atinialateaiieart lirerand
Hdneya to normal activity bringa bark Vur pep. punch
and mental vigor chaaee away that tire , .m-oat feel
ing and replaces It with a ipirit of buoy v.oy
LYKO is a distinctive preparation, scientifically cor
rect in its combination of medicinal ingredients, and there's
nothing more invigorating, more strengthening or more re
building. Specially beneficial for Invalids, convalescents
and run-down people of all condition. Get a bottle from
your druggist today tomorrow you will feel better for it.
M-Jr. Uko Medicine.Co. JsV
OLD TROUBLE
HAD GOTTEN THE
BEST OFCOLBURN
Was So Run-Down He Was
Flat On His Back Gains
Thirty Pounds.
"I have gained thirty pound!
since I commenced taking Tanlac,
and the troubles that have been
causing me to suffer for eighteet
long years have been completelj
overcome," said William Colburn
who lives at 2118 East Lawrencl
Ave, Springfield, Illinois, while talk,
ing to a Tanlac representative th
other dav.
"Yes, sir, I was flat on my bacl
in bed when I commenced taking
Tanlac," continued Mr. Colburn,
"and was so weak that I couldn'i
raise my head. I had suffered with
stomach trouble so long and s
much until it had the best of mi
altogether, and I was simply living
on milks and liquid diets. I often
had bad attacks of acute indiges-,
tion, and would suffer so muck
that I would become delirious. Onc
or twice before I got so bad 1
couldn't leave my bed, these apelli
came on me while I was away from
the house and I just had to lie there
in an unconscious condition until
somebody happened along and found
me. I was awful nervous, too, and
never got a good night's rest. I tell
you I was in a bad fix, and instead
of getting any relief from the dif
ferent medicines and treatments I
took. I just got worse all the time.
"My wife got to reading about
Tanlac, and as it was doing so manj
people so much good, she just went
to the drug store and bought a
bottle of it for me. Well, I took
it for several days before we said
anything to anybody about leavinjr
off the other medicine that had
been prescribed for me, but when
I commenced to mend so fast, we
just told about it, and I kept on
taking Tanlac. Every day I got
stronger, and it seemed that the
more Tanlac I took the more I
could eat and the better I felt.
Then 'I noticed that what I ate
didn't seem to hurt me at all, and
in a short time I was able to get
out of bed and knock around in the
yard and soon I ventured down-
town, and I felt fine when I got
back home, and when I had taken
four or five bottles I felt so good
and strong that I went back t
work, and I haven't lost a day since.
I just want to tell you right her
that you won't find a sounder man
anywhere in this country than I am
now. Why, I am sixty years olo
and I can actually do as much hard
work in a day now as I could when
I was thirty. Yes, sir, you can pui
me down as a friend to Tanlac, and
as long as I live I will boost it everj
chance I have."
Tanlac is sold in Omaha at al
Sherman & McConnell Drug Com '
pany's stores, Harvard Pharmacj
and West End Pharmacy. Also For
rest and Meany Drug Company ii
South Omaha and the leading drug
gist in each city and town through
out the state of ruebraska. '
II iPfVn h iliiWI
r-T.vjy