Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1919)
THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY; SEPTEMBER 22, 1919. Y 3 FORTY BOYS AND GIRLS OF OMAHA PLEDGED AT UNI v Hustling Fraternities Get Pick of Omaha Contingent as Students and Athletes. . Lincoln.' Neb., Sept. 21. (Spe cial.) Forty Omaha boys and girls were pledged into 19 sororities and fraternities of the University of Ne braska here Saturday. Fraternities scored the majority, 26 lads from the metropolis having sworn to abide by their fraternal brothers. Most of these were athletes. Following is the -complete list: Sororities. Acboth Kathrine Reynolds, Car oline Cain, Helen Cain. Alpha Chi Omega Marion Jones. Alpha Omieron Pi Margaret O'Brien, Mercedes Abbott, Jean Dow. ' Alpha Phi Zoe Schalek, Gladys Michel Kappa Alpha Theta Betty Ken nedy. - Kxnftl TTsnn riavnma TlAftliir i t ""rr- " wui . ' j Cavanaugh, Olive Harington, Jose phine Pattner. Phi Betta Phi Isbel Pearsal. Fraternities. Alpha Sigma Phi Bryan Nixon, Lyman Corr, James Etter, Arthur Herring, James Austin. Alpha Tau Omega Robert Dodds, Eugene Maxwell, Robert Osborne. Alpha Theta Chi Robert Hunes, Howard Wilson. Beta Theti Pi DenmanKount. Delta Tau Delta Clyde Smith. ' Delta Upsiloa Jack Yates, Nich olas Mayne. Phi Delta Theta Ray Stryker, Virgil Northwall, Philip Carlson, Hartley Anderson, Walter White, .Willard AUemdn. Phi Gamma Delta Maturas Voltz. Phi Kappa Phi Herbert Negle, Russell Funkhouser, Robert Mc Candless. Sigma Chi Wallace Crsig. Sigma Phi Epislon William Hussy. Dr. J. L. Hillman Inducted - Head of Simpson College Indianola, Sept. 21. (Special.) Dr. John Linnaeus Hillman received t college from the hands of Senator A. IV. Proudfoot, president of the board of trustees, and is now the duly inducted oresident of. the col lege. Five hundred members of the Des Moines district ministerial and lay electoral conferences came down from Des Moines, where they were in session, in a special -train provide.d by the college and the In dianola Commercial club. Dr. Hillman is a graduate of Ohio Wesleyan university and of Boston School of Theology. He has held some of the most impor tant pastorates in Methodism in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Iowa. He is very popular throughout south western Iowa, where he has a large acquaintance.' , r....ni d.j r ...... 1 1.. j rieiiium neu wuss neau Resigns to Enter Politics Fremont, Neb., Sept. 21, (Special) J. Rex Henry, who served for sev eral months as director of Red Cross work at Fort Des Moines was elected president of the Dodge countyXRed Cross to succeed S. S. Sidner, resigned.' Mr.. Sidner is a candidate as a delegate to the con stitutional convention and can not , serve in an official capacity for the Red Cross. - Fremont Man Uninjured i yvnen i rain wrecks auiq Fremont, Neb., Sept. 21. (Spe , cial.) Frank Paul's automobile was -wrecked when a North Western freight train bumped into it at Cedar Bluffs. Mr. Paul had stopped to let a passenger train pass when the string of freight cars struck him. . He escaped unhurt. Elki to Conduct Campaign. Fremont, Neb., Sept. 21, (Special) The Fremont lodge of Elks, will have charge of the Salvation Army drive in Dodge county next week when $8,250 will be raised. Burnell VISUII Will vwuii iam George C Gage, district chairman, has Dodge and surrounding counties all lined up for the drive. State University to .- Open Monday With 51 New Instructors Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 21. (Special) Fifty-one new professors and in structors, recruited from great uni versities of the nation, specialists schools and military camps, com prizing the biggest single addition to the University of Nebraska, will assume their separate duties Mon day as members of the state uni versity faculty. The large registration, bringing with it increasing details in curri culum, has caused a broader policy to be instituted in the militaryand physical educational departments. Colonel Morrison comes to com mand the university cadet battalion. Several Lincoln doctors have been enlisted,in the medical section. It is required, under the new sys tem, that every student be examined by the physical department. A fee of one dollar per student is charged each v year and medical attention given free during that time by phy sicians employed by the school. A dispensary is maintained on the campus Pioneer of Dodge County Kills Self in Hospital Fremont, Neb., Sept. 21. Mrs. Anna Sinamark who died of injuries sustained when she jumped from a fourth-story window at the Birch mont hospital in Omaha was a pio neer settler of Dodge county. She was a native of Denmark and for years prior to the death of her hus band resided on a farm north of Fremont.. She had been in failing health for several months. A son, Dr. Andrew, is in charge of the naval hospital on the Island of Guam. Two daughters, Carrie, teacher of piano at Dana college. Blair, and Dora of Fremont, ana another son, George, of Fremont survive her. Hamilton County Farmers' Union Holds Annual Picnic Aurora, 'Neb., Sept. 21. (Special) The fourth annual picnic of the Hamilton County Farmers Union was held at the county fair grounds. The attendance was not as large as usual, owing to farmers being busy in their fields. a f . - j: i t i rtiicr a picnic dinner j. kj. Shroyer of Humboldt, member of the state board of directors, de livered the principal address. He reviewed" the accomplishments of the union during the past six years, particularly with reference to co operative marketing. Municipal Store Will Open at Auditorium Tuesday Mayor Smith announced that his municipal store, will be open Tues day evening in the Auditorium, be ginning at 70 clock. He expects to have canned peas, corn, tomatoes, baked beans and laundry soap.. These goods are from the surplus stocks of the warj department. Hastings College Notes. Tho building fund la creeping rlfjht nlonK. Almost 111,000 came In during the last week, though only a few work era were engaged In the campaign. It Is planned now to push the campaign steadi ly until Synod meets In October. Rev. E. M. .Steen spoke to the college Mtudents Friday. Rev. Steen has three children In the college and academy this semester. . An open! house was observed In the new dormitory when the matron, Miss Edith Mattoon, invited all the friends of the college In to see the transformation that had taken place since the girls took possession. The new dormitory was chris tened "Lakevlew Home." The young ladies served frappe and a large number of the student body and friend of the college took this occasion to go through the new building. Mr. Newell, of the First Presbyterian Church of Hastings, addressed the students of the Y. M. C. A. on "Tha Man's Hours." He spoke to a full room, nearly 100 boys being present. Miss Dorothy Pettis of Lincoln, has been engaged to assist Miss Carter lu the French and Spanish department. This department, which had only surtlclent work for one faculty member the1 past yoar. has a large enough enrollment to occupy the full time of two teachers the coming year. Miss Pettis Is a graduate of the University of Nebraska, having spe cialized In French and Spanish. She spent one year in Europe. " The classes in social sciences are much Targer than usual this year. Since none of these classes are open to freshmen, this is not due to ths extra large enroll ment of first-year students, but te un doubtedly due to the Interest aroused In social science as a result of the war and conditions arising out of the war. Rev. James Clark of Beaver City, spent Wednesday at the college and spoke at chapel. The college will be represented among the applicant! for the Rhodes' scholar ships this year by James Rlgg and Edwin Bertram Crone. Mr. Rlgg is a member of the Junior class and Mr. Crone is a senior. The Christian Endeavor Society of the Presbyterian church held a reception to the college students Friday in the church parlors, which a large body of the students attended. Coach Andrews Is getting his teams In good form for the foot ball season. TATA You've noticed we lave a Apod deal to say about robust. . bodies, keen brains and happy faces., That's because foocThelps wonderful ly to produce those happy conditions. All the goodness of wheat and barley, deliaous.econom gj ical, nourishing ! qtj I S J MAN SOLD INTO HAREM, RESCUES HIS SWEETHEART Greek Soldier Puts One Over on Mussulmans at Smyrna and Escapes With Bul let Wound. Belgian War. Orphan, Adopted by Nebraska Red Cross Nurse, Likes His New Home Athens, Sept. 21. Elentero Kar antaubulos, formerly a soldier in the Third regiment of Greek in fantry, is the latest hero of Corinth. Elentero was betrothed to a fas cinating Greek girl living at Smyr na, from whom he had received no tidings for three years. On the entry of Greece info the war, . Elentero's regiment was dis patched to Smyrna. Once there he sought in vain to learn the whereabouts of his sweet-, heart. One evening, errterjnga lo cal cafe, he met another Greek, a sponge merchant whom he had not seen since his boyhood days. , - The soldier told him of the loss of his sweetheart whereupon his fellow countryman intimated his suspicion that the girl had been abducted by Turks and lodged iij the harem of a wealthy pasha fa the outskidts of the city. Elentero was granted eight days' leave and, being of somewhat ef feminate appearance, attired himself in women's clothes. His friend, the Smyrna merchant, then conducted him to a small bazaar at the rear of a mosque, where a private exhibition was in progress of prospective harem in mates. In due course Elentero was pur chased as a girl by an agent for $600, and subsequently sold for $1,750 to a pasha, who placed him in his seraglio. Two days after his admission there Elentero met his sweetheart, also a prisoner in the same house. That night, having chloroformed the gigantic negro guard, he climbed, accompanied by the girl over the flat roof of the building to a. pro jecting gable to which he tied a rope. Along this he descended to the courtyard below, fastening the end of the rope to a tree. His sweetheart then blgan climb ing down, but she had not gone far before a shot rang out. One of the pasha's servants, who was on night duty in the garden, had fired his revolver at the escaping youth. At the report the girl, seized with terror, clung with frenzied hold to the rope, swinging to and fro fear ing to descend further. Elentero though wounded in the shoulder, rushed at his assailant i and, wrenching his revolver from him, shot him dead. Then he res cued the girj who fainted in his arms as her feet touched the ground, and carried her to the street. There the sponge dealer, accompanied by two other Greeks, was awaiting the fugitives. Elentero, of course, married the girl., Married in Omaha. Fremont, Neb., Sept. 21, (Special) Roy M. Cusack, president of the 1st National bank of North Bend, and Miss Adys Huuerle of Nebiaska City, were married at Trinity ca thedral, Omaha. , Creighton University Notes. The faculty of the Collegro of Law has been uonr iderably strengthened for the. coming year by the return of Prof. Neal D. Reardou, jrho spent , the last year in post-graduate study at Harvard univer sity. Donald J. Burke, who prior to his enlist ment In the army two years ngo was a teacher on the Irw school facnltv. has re cently return!! from France and has been discharged. Hp has been added to the faculty aa a full time teacher and has al ready commenced his work. The law fac ulty will this year have four full time and a fifth man who gives about one-half time to the work of the school. The law school is introducing this year for the first time the nuarter system In place of the semester system which h&s. prevailed heretofore. The advantages ex pected from the new system ore more in tensive work due to the easy maintenance of the continuity of the course and a better working out of the correlation of the vari ous subjects. Advantage has been taken of the va.r-. time disarrangement to further tmprove the library which is now in first class con dition and under the direction of Pro fessor Gillespie and be of very great serv ice to the students. John H. Hopkins. LL. B . 1913. has re cently been appointed by the government as supervisor ot tne iazo census in Omaha, Second district. Mr. Hopkins was captain of the vatslty foot ball team in 1912-13. Following his graduation he served one term in tho Nebraska legislature. During the war he served as a first lieutenant In charge of aircraft production at Camp Lewis The university summer session which closed on August 14 was notable not only for the enrollment of 626 students, but also for the number of degrees granted 28 bachelor s degrees and 10 master's de grees and for the number of teachers' certificates Issued S80. Messrs. Wllllara.P. Wclcfc and J. V. Mc Dermott, both of the law class of 1916, have formed a partnership for the prac tice of law at Logan, la. Franc Yoons Tells New j Friends Great Stories of ; the War-All Hisjlel ! atives Killed Franc Yoons lives near Gretna, Nebraska, U. S. A. If it hadn't been for the great war he would be living at HuwerBel gium. v He was brought to Gretna recent ly by his adopted mother, Miss Verna Snell. who was a Red Cross worker in France, Italy and Ger many for a year and returned home recently. She lives with her broth er, John Snell, on his farm five miles from Gretna. There Franc lives, too, now. He goes to the country school and is already a great iavorite, and tellingv his friends great stories about the big war and about life in Belgium. Franc's parents and relatives were all killed or died during the war. He was adopted as the mascot of the 89th division of American troops. And when the war was over and the 89th came home. Miss Snell adopted him and brought him to the great, rich plains ofNebraska. where the possibilities and oppor tunities are limitless He speaks English perfectly anil is also fluent in French and Ger man. ' , Miss Snell was born and grew up in the vicinity of Gretna. She was a school teacher when she received her appoinment as a .Red Cross worker. The only other Sarpy county girl to go abroad for Red Cross work was Miss Elizabeth Davidson ,of Springfield. She spent her time in England. B sa3iSL P5 lli ' ' as qZ-sl ) - j University Notes Miss Verna Snell and her adopted son. Franc Yoons. Uranus 01 y Planet Which Appears on Sky in October OCTOBER SKY MAP o'clock . .a. o O CIOCK HOLD MAP ABOVE HEAL) JWTTH IT5 COMPASS LETTERS TO .ORHE5PON0ING - - 'Doane College. Prof. A. O. Heyhoe' has Just been ap pointed dean of men by the trustees. This appointment brings great satisfaction to students and faculty alike, as Prof. Hey hoe has always had the interests of the students at heart, has been untiring In his efforts to be of service and is very popular with the men In class room and on the campus. Dean Heyhoe received hia A. B. and A. M. from Dartmouth, his B. D. from Bangor Theological seminarv and has completed his work for Ph. D. at Tale. He Is head of the department of philosophy and has been connected witn uoane since asos. Ha nas a very wide acquaintance throughout the atate, both with the churches and the school men. through hia very acceptable service In the churches and his connection with the Schoolmasters' club and with the State Teachers' association, In which he was president of the college aectlon In 1917 1918. The college opened Tuesday with a large enrollment and more students expected be- fnr th WAelr ! nut. 1 A hmlHA near lh. collece was rented for the overflow of 1 women students and many people opened their homes to accommodate the men. It has always been the policy of the col lege to limit the attendance of women to the capacity of the women's dormltorv. But this year the applications were so numerous and persistent that It was de cided to take out a group of the older women under proper chaperonage to room near the hall. They take their meals at the dining ball with the rest of the stu dents. The traditional first week entertain ments were successfully carried out Oaylord hall corridor stunt party Wednesday evening;, on Thursday after noon the T. W. C. A. reception. In the even tne the stsjt party In the tcymna siom. Friday night' the a-eneral reception under the auspices of the T. M. A. and T. W. C. A. the Men's CSle club furnish tnt ln'uslo for the affair: Saturday even ing pledge night for the women's societies. rvi ? MOONS PHASES 'ST.Qr. 2nd. Full M. 9th. Last Or. i5rh. NewMT .3rd. lit On Slst f , s r STA D M&RNITi mee fk 1ST. 9iw. 4-S'O- e -J.TM. URANUS Like AH Other Planets, ,Uranus Shines Only By Re 'flected Sunlight, Says Dr. C. S. Brainnin of the Columbia University Observatory Staf. Nebraska School of Business. President J. F. Zoeholl of the St. Paul Normal an4 Business college was a fra ternal caller Saturday. A large number of students nsve enrolled lor the night school classes which open Monday evening. September 22. Miss IJsther Miller, who completed her normal training course with the class of 1911, has been engaged to teach com mercial subjects In the academy of Wes leyan university. Harry C. Goggins. who has been Instruc tor In the commercial department of the Ijincoln Hisrh school for the past year, has been eiectfd to a similar position in the Idaho Technical Institute at I'ucatallo, By DR. C. S. BRAININ. Or the Columbia, University Observatory Staff. , Uranus is the only one of the planets which makes its appearance on our map this month; all the other planets, with the exceptidn of Mer cury, is too near the sun to be seen at all. The early morning star field is as rich in planets these last months of the yar as the evening sky was when the year was younger. Unforfunatelt. too, Uranus is not much of an attraction, either to the naked eye or even in the telescope. Though really a very large body, it is so far away from us that it ap pears only as bright as a star of the sixth or seventh magnitude. It is thus only on the border line of naked-eye observations Like all the other planets, Uranus shines only by reflected sunlight. It was not known to the ancient Greek astronomers-for, without the aid of powerful optical instruments, it can not be distinguished from the neigh boring fixed stars, even under the best of observing conditions. If it were possible to observe its mo tions through the fixed-star field, this would immediately have inform ed the Greeks that it was not a fixed star, but one of the company of "wanderers," or planets. But they could not attempt this" with their measuring insUuments, which were in themselves excellent, but lacking the telescope. The first one to recognize the- true nature of this planet was William Herschel. who announced ifs disco'ery in 1781. He named . it Georgium Sidus, the Throne of George, in honor of George II of England, but this name died an early and well-deserved death. Occultations" o! Algol. -Last month we discussed the re markable variations in brightness of the "demon" star. Algol, the sec ond brightest in the constellation of Persecus. Xhis star, we recall, is really a double star, one of the components periodically eclipsing the other and thus diminishing the total brightness of the pair as seen by us. At the minimum of bright ness the loss in light is about two- thirds, bringing the star down from second to third magnitude. Algol can be observed passing through, its minimum six times in October as follows. October 1 at 12:20 a. m., October 3 at 9:10 p. m., October 6 at 6 p. m., October 23 at 10:50 p. m., October 26'at 7:40 p. m., October 29 at 4:30 p. m. These figures are taken by permission from The Monthly Evening Sky Map' and are in United States east ern standard time. For other stand ard time belts the proper correcms must be made. Subtract one, two and three hours, respectively, for central, mountain and Pacific time. The occulation begins five hours, approximately, before the time men tioned and ends five hours later. The ather occultations will not be suitable for observation because they occur when Algol is not visible to us. The "Pleiades. Below Perseus, toward the north east, rises the famous constellation of Taurus, the bull, which contains one of the best known subgroups and configurations in' the entire heavens, the Pleiades. Perhaps no star or group of stars in the entire firmament has been mentioned oft ene in song and story than these. They figure prominently in the mythologies and religions of all pri mitive peoples, from Persia, Babylon and .Greece to the Aztecs and the Australian savages. To" the average eye the group seems to consist of seven stars, forming what might be termed a small dipper; six of the stars are easily seen, but the seventh may be somewhat illusive. However, it can- be sen on good nights, and even as many as 12 or 13 have been counted by people with sharp eye sight. Of course, the telescope re veals many more. The brighter stars of this sub- fgrtup must be of tremendous lumt inosity, tor the group can not De nearer the earth than 10.000,000 as tronomic units 10,000.000 times 93, 000,000 miles. They must, therefore, be equal to a hundred suns merged into one. Our sun at that distance would be less than insignificant. It is a very interesting fact that longer-exposure photographs .show the large stars of the Pleiades sur- rounded by a bright nebulous haze, which sis rather unusual for stars. 'The Fixed Star Capella. The word Capella means she goat; we would hardly be inclined to name one of the most beautiful stars in the heavens after so humble a domestic animal as the goat. The he-goat is present in the heavens as Capricornus, the Ram, and will be found in the southern heavens where Uranus is. ' Of course, to the ancients, as still to many half-civilized people today, the she-goat is an important source of food and therefore no doubt worthy of having a place among the stars. At any rate, Capella is the fifth brightest star in the sky, the third brightest visible from these northern latitudes and, next to Vega, in Lyra, the brightest star north of the celestial equator. Intrinsically. it is calculated to be nearly 70 times J as great a sun as our own. It is a double star which is speeding away from us through space at a rate of about 20 miles per second. It is pure white in color, and its spectrum is practically the same as that of the sun. The Stars and the Weather. The unusual weather of the past summer and winter accounts, no doubt, for the very large number of inquiries received by us as to the possibility of a connection between celestial phenomena ana terrestrial weather. Thus far, in spite of many attempts to do so, no connection has been established between these two. It is not possible to prophesy the weather from the positions or move ments of the celestial bodies. While philosophically it must be true that all these phenomena have some ef fect, however slight, upon the earth s physical condition, it is so small as to be entirely absorbed by condi tions which may be called local. Even the moon, upon which so much is blamed, is innocent of any note worthy effect upon our weather. It is really very untortunate, tor noth ine would be grander than to be able to prophesy weather with the same exactness - with which the astron omer can prophesy lunar phases and eclipses. 1 . , 1 1 1 1 The Dyckman on Sixth street, be tween Hennepin and Nicollet, Min neapolis, is an ideal place to stop. The' rates are reasonable and the Coffee Shop is one of the most complete in the country, where the best the market affords may be had at sensible prices. Adv. Joseph R. Fulk, '03 state univer?. sity, is professor of education in the University of Florida. He received they doctorate degree from Nebraska in 1917. A. E. Nordgren of the class of 1914 at the state university and the degree of A. M. in 1917 is vice presi dent of the Farmers' jstate bank at Clarks. J. A. Christmau, a graduate of the University of Nebraska, is county attorney of Lincoln county Wyo ming. He is the only republican lected to office in his county. Helen Reiher,, a graduate of the state university, is teaching mathe matics in the Red Cloud High school. " ' ' " 1 A eonsiderablesjiumber of alumni report to the alumni secretary that they are engaged in banking busi ness. Such are Dwight P. Griswold of Gordon. Neb.; John D. Dasen brock of Prairie Home, H. O Cu sack of North Bend, John R. Knit tel, Sioux City. 1 ' John P. Everett, an alumnus of the state university, is a county judge in South Dakota. He resides at Sturgis. Dave Rogers, '12 at the University of Nebiaska, is moving from Sioux City to Mitchell, S. D., where he will continue the practice of law. Claire F. Borrowman, son of 0 Borrowman of Bassett, Neb., enters the University of Nebraska this fall as a freshman in electrical engineer ing after two years' service as ap prentice seaman. Dr. Grove S. Rathbun, an alumnus of the University of Nebraska, died September 5. He was a surgeon. Hovard -W. Loomis, 'IS, has just returned from military service in France. Mis W. Kuser, an alumnus of the State university, is superintendent of the State Training School for Bays at Eldora. Ia. She has just beenre appointed for a term of four years. Dr. Tracy A. Pierce, the newly ap pointed instructor in mathematics, was given the degree of Ph. D. from the University of California about 1914 and was appointed Pierce fel low in mathematics at Harvard the next year He received a reappoint ment to this position but gave it up to enlist at Plattsburg. He was made a first lieutenant and put in charge of important work a't Camp Lewis. He was recently discharged. He comes to the University of Nebras ka very highly recommended by the University of California. A. Russell Moore, '04, is a pro fessor of physiology at the Univers ity of New Jersey. Miss Charlotte Lowe, who was given the degree of A. M. from the department of philosophy of-the state university in August, has ac-' Skinner's the Best Macaroni and Spaghetti Recipe Book Free- Omaha It Certainly Is vThe Oshkosh Wardrobe trunk has been called the finest wardrobe trunk in the world. Comparing it, feature for fea ture, appearance for appear ance, utility for utility, we say it most certainly is. And yet it is no higher priced than others. We ask you to inspect it we are willing, to let the matter rest with your judgment. OMAHA TRUNK FACTORY 1209 Farnam my . The Sparkling Home Drink for All of the Family. Pleasant Refreshing Goes Well With Cakes or Cookies. Used by The Best Cooks Gooch's Best Flour - Sold in the Best Stores . - cepted a position in Oakland, Cal. She will have work with subnorm; children. Arthur L. Palmer. A. B. 1910 at the University of Nebraska, has been appointed lecturer of the Omaha chapter of the American Institute of Banking on banking law for 1919 1920. Nellie Hyde of the class of 1918 is home economics teacher, in the schools of Norfolk, Neb. in R. B. Hyde of the-tlasi of 1911 is in the state tax department, Al bany, N. Y., as expert appraiser. Frederick Free, jr., came from Sioux City, la., this week with his father to enter the university. His mother, who was Cora Lyons, was a member of the class of 1892. Mildred Borrowmnn. a graduate of the university, writes from NewV York City to the alumni office that she saw Oeneral Pershing in the front ranks when he H returned to America. THE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC Lincoln, Nebraska i TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR BEGINS SEPTEMBER 8TH. MUSIC DRAMATIC ART Playground Supervision and Story Telling. Complete Courses In All Depart ments. v DEGREE DIPLOMA TEACHERS' CERTIFICATE. .Anyone may enter. New Catalog on Request. Address: ADRIAN NEWENS, Director 1103 R Street. Caught in draft ' stiff neck or back 9' won't last long if , BAUME ANALGSIQUE BENGUE is applied as directed. Simple instructions ; , with each tube Thos. Lmio A C0..N.Y. GOES DOWN TOWN FIRST TIME IN EIGHT MONTHS Wife uf Former Steamship Captain Feels She Should Tell Others of Tanlac. , "Yesterday, for the first time in eight months, I was able to go down town," said Mrs. Margaret Sprowell of 2021 Lackawanna Avenue, Su perior. Wis., in telling of the bene fits she has derived from the use of Tanlac, recently. Mrs. Sprowell is the wife of Cap tain J. Y. Sprowell; who sailed the Great Lakeajfor 25 years and is well known and .popular at every port. Among the vessels under his com mand was the Steamer Fritz, plying Lake .Superior. Captain and Mrs. Sprowell have resided in Superior for nearly 30 years, and their many friends will be glad to learn of Mrs. Sprowell's wonderful improvement. "For the past ten years, that is until after using Tanlac for awhile," continued Mrs. Sprowell, "I have had trouble with my stomach.- I could not eat anything: without bloating up with gas and suffering intense pain through my stomach and right side. I was constantly belching up this sour gas and Tin digested food and always felt badly for hours after meals. Then about ten months ago I got so I could hardly eat at all and would go for more than a week at a time without eating a mouthful of anything. Then about this time the worst kind of pain struck me In my right knee and ankle and hurt me so badly I could hardly bear my weight on that limb. I was unable to leave my room and was so helpless I just had to hobble from one object to the other. I could not walk without, the most awful suffering. My right leg became all swollen, and then the pains extended to the small of my back ami hurt me so at times I could not get out of bed. My nerves finally became so upset and unstrung that I would shake like a leaf. "Neither treatment, medicines or liniments helped me and I had lost nearly all hope of getting: relief un til I began taking Tanlac about sev en weeks ago. But, thanks to Tan lac, I began to feel better in just two or three days after I started taking it The gas stopped forming on my stomach and my pains gradu ally left roe. I am still taking Tan--' lac and improving right along, but, as I said, I am already so much bet ter that yesterday I walked" to the. car and went down town for the first time in eight months. -The fjuni to nti juiic vuiy vi iiijf icg emit back and I have not felt so much like myself in many years. Since Tanlac has done so much for me I can't help thinking of others who need it like I did and I feel that I ought to tell them about it." Tanlac is sold in Omaha at all Sherman & McConnell Drug Com pany's stores, Harvard Pharmacy and West End Pharmacy. Also For-"1 Vest and Meany Drug Company in South Omaha and the leading drug-' gist in each city and town through out the state of Nebraska Adv. 79 Soothe Your -L W. f!irlirifri " AA vuuvutu All iKrtlffSftta; Roan 91 0nfmnt Tftlran S. lBsaplt oca tecs ot "Oiacmta, Vn h tMHa." FISTULA CURED Rectal Diseases Cured without aaver tumraJ operation. No Chloroform of Ether used.. Cur guaranteed. PAY WHEN CURED. Write for Illus trated book on Rectal (Jtseases, with name and testimonials of trfore than 1.009 prominent people- who have been permanently eureo. DR. E. R. TARRY, 240 Bee Bldg., Omaha, Neb.