Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1919)
T see toe vacant chair, sad think. Haw food! bow klndt and he U tonal" ' Tannyaoav. Crabbed ( and youth cannot llva toi-ethsrj Youth la lull ef pleas ra, ere la lull al cara. , Shakespeare. ETY Wedding. The marriage of Miss Maude Carter, daughter of Mrs. J. E Wells, and Richard Humphrey, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Humphrey, took place Thanksgiving day at the Clif ton Hill Presbyterian church. Gertrude Humphrey and Donald White were the only attendants. Miss Lucy Hill sang. I To Wed. f Miss Edna Dalle of Chicago and Mr. Lawrence A. Peckham of Oma ha have been licensed to wed in Chicago. Informal .Affair. Gertrude Cooper entertained 24 Cuests Thanksgiving evening, when Leah Kauttman, Hannah Kauffman, Sadie Lipshitz and Ida Sacks, all of Sioux City, were honored guests. Entertain at Dinner. Mr. and Mrs. George McKeeby entertained at a dinner of 19 covers at their home Thursday evening. Chrysanthemums and Thanksgiving novelties formed the decorations. To Entertain at Diriner. . Mr. and Mrs. George Brandeis will entertain at dinner at their home, followed by a theater party, Monday evening. Thanksgiving Dinner. Miss Katherine Worley enter tained at a Thanksgiving dinner at m n IX TV 4 1' V. I . hl L' MA i a.' The Joy Of A Prfvr Skin Know the joy andQ to one thru possessing a skin of punty and beauty. The soft, diQ enders brines out your natural beauty to Its full' est. In use over 70 years. her cottage, "Edgewood," Thursday. Chrysanthemums formed the cen terpiece and coven were placed for seven. , Dancing Party. The' pre-legal class of Creighton university entertained at a dancing party at the Fontenelle, Thanks giving evening. The Creighton foot ball team and the South Dako ta team were the honor guests. Robert Coyle, president of the class, was in charge of the affair. t To Attend Convention. Misses Helen McDonald and Alice Mae Weller, and Messrs. Har old Ramsburg and Dwight Higby, from the University of Omaha, will attend the Students' Volunteer con vention in Des Moines December 31 to January 4. . Box Party. Mr. and Mrs.; Ward Burgess and Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Nash occu pied a box at the Boyd theater Thanksgiving evening Dancing Club. The Week End Formal Dancing club will give a dancing party Sat urday evening at the Fontenelle. C. Y. M. A. The C. Y. M. A. will entertain at a dancing party at Kel-Pine's acad emy Wednesday evening, Decem ber 3. Sigma Chi Omicrom. I The Sigma Chi Omicrom 'soror ity will entertain at a Thanksgiving dancing party Friday evening at Dundee hall. Among the honorees will be the Misses Izma Tucker.i Margaret Powell and Mabel Ras mussen. Dinner. Mrs. Charles "Sherman entertain ed informally at dinner at her home Thanksgiving day. , Chi Omega. ' The Chi Omega sorority will meet Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Roy B. Hossic. Personals Miss Isabel Pearsall, a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority at the University of Nebraska, is spend ing the week-end at the home of her sister, Mrs. J. E. Goodrich, jr. Miss Margaret Thompson, from the University of Nebraska, is spending the week-end with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thomp son. Mrs. H. G. Iseminger of Waco, Tex., is the guest of her sister, Mrs. F. A. Freeman. ' Miss Katherine Reynolds is spending the week-end with her parents, Mr. , and Mrs. E. M. Rey nolds. Miss Selma Anderson, who is at tending school in New York, will return home for the holidays. Miss Jeanniet Dow, a member of Alpha Omicrom Pi at the Univer sity of Nebraska, is spending the week-end with her parents, M?. and Mrs. J. M. Dow. Mrs. Andrew Edstrom is ill at her home , . . ' . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Houston end Mr. and Mrs. Fred Houston of Tekamah spent Thanksgiving at the home of Mrs Victor Jeeps. Mrs. Fannie Patterson and daugh ter, Edith Wisely, have returned ftom Lincoln, where they spent Thanksgiving. 1 Mrs. J. R. Cain, jr, is ill at her' home. - Mrs. C. L. Hempel returned Tues day from Ashland, Neb. Mrs. George Abel and baby of Lincoln, are spending a week with Mrs. Abel's, mother, Mrs. C. L. Hempel. Mr.-Abel was with them for Thanksgiving dinner. ' Dr, William Berry is convales cing at his home. , An eccentric old lady in Paris has the roof plate of her false teeth made of two thin sheets of gold be: tween which is inserted a miniature copv of her will for safekeeping. "FOLLOW THE BEATON PATH" Tff) EATON'S irtEi i i x. iv Bargains "FOLLOW THE BEATON ,PATH" Every home should have a well and completely stocked medicine cabinet. The lower prices offered at this store Saturday will afford an opportunity to many peo ple to purchase drugs and sundries for this purpose with considerable saving:, aturday pecials 30c Laxative Bromo Quinine, at 22 $1.00 Kodol Dyspepsia Liquid, , at 72 60c Sal Hepatica 48 Castoria 24 35c Vick's Vapo Rub. .27 25c Salinos (a saline lax ative) 16 $3.75 Horlick's , Hospital Malted Milk .....$2.98 50c Swiss Villa Lawn Station ery, per box 24 25c Mustard Cerate, special. f at ...... 16 40c Corega .....40 60c Lavoris 46 60c Eatonic 29 Waterman and f C o n k 1 i n Fountain Pens, $2.50 and up. 11.25 Denatured Alcohol, ner gallon 85 25c DeMar's Cascara TonicLand Liver Pills l7 $1.00 1 pint Dioxogen. . . .59 60c Swamp Root . . . t . . .44 30c Zymole Troches. . .21 15c Sayman's Vegetable Soan 12 15c Physicians' and Sur geons' Soap, for. . . .10 20c Wool Powder Puffs, 10 $5.00 Auto-Strop Safety Razor, at $4.5 $1.00 Pcnn Safety Razors, 69 $1.00 Gem Safety Razor. .89 1 pint Stanolax 43 25c Lysol 19 4 oUnces Glycerine and Rose- : water, at 25 B0c Pond's Extract -39 30c Bromo Seltzer 21 $1.20 Imperial Granum. at $1.05 85c Mellin's Food 59 25c Shac Headache Remedy, at 19 25c Honest John Corn Plasters, at .v. 16 $1.50 Fellow's Syrup Hypophos phites $1.19 25c Phenalax Wafers . . . .21 When you next buy aspirin ask us for the Nw Im proved kind, ' ( Salicon It won't hurt your haart nor ' upt your ttomaxh. More efficient than crude aspirin for headaches, colds, rheumatism, neuralgia, etc. Put up in bottles, 25c, 50c and $1.25. Try it and you will always use it Graham Beauty Secret Lifts out lines v Draws out blackheads Reduces enlarged pores -r Bleaches the skin Corrects sallow skin Sold Only at ThU Storo $1.00 Listerine 73 50c-Salicon 42 $1.00 Nuxated Iron 89 50c Orazin Tooth Paste. .34 50c Hay's Hair Health. . .29 PARISIAN IVORY These values must be seen to be appreciated. ' $2.50 Ivory Hair Receivers, at $1.69 $2.50 Ivory Powder Boxes, at $1.69 $4.50 Ivory Hair Brushes, at......;. $3.15 85c Ivory Combs 39 Ivory Nail Files, Button Hooks, Cuticle Knives, special, 48 We also have a complete line of Dupont's Mirrors' Combs, Hair Brushes, Trays, Infant Sets, ' Jewel Boxes, Perfume Cases, etc. All specially priced. I SALINOS aturday pecials PERFUMES $1.25 Piver's Azurea, La Trefle, Muquet, and others special, per ounce, 79 $2.00 Hudnut's Dubarry Ex tract, per ounce. .$1.10 $1.00 Spiehler's Sweet. Pea Extract ...... 59 $2.00 Djerkiss, per ounce, at 81.25 $4.00 Coty Jacqueminot Rose per ounce . . . , .$2.25 $6.00 Coty L'Origan, per ounce $4.59 CANDY DEPT. Agents for Huyler's, Orig inal Allegretti, and Lowney's Chocolates, in one-half to five pound boxes. We also sell Johnston's, Gordon's and Wood i ward's. t . , $1.00 Milk Chocolates, in stars, per lb 80 80c chocolate-covered Caramels, at 65 RUBBER GOODS Big special sale of all Rub-, ber Goods, guaranteed two years, Saturday and Monday. $1.10 2-quart Tavidson Fountain Syringe. . .78 $1.25 2-quart Velvet Water Bottle 89 $3.50 Ladies' Spray Syringe. at ... ; $1.98 40c 12-inch Syringe Tubing, at .,.25 the perfect saline laxative. Easy to take. Per fectly soluble in cold water. Recommended as a p 1 e n d i d and healthful tlimlnant by over 15,000 physicians. -tig- 16tf, 39S 78 J 1 at v iijc "THE APPRECIATED jj p3 CANDIES" 7r. I CIGARS Little Chancellors . . . .'. . .6 McCord-Brady Hand Made, each 5 Box of 50 ... .... 82.50 8c Little Mozarts 5 15c Mozart, Perf ecto . . . . 10 Box of 50. .i $4.75 EDISON MAZDA LAMPS 10 to 50-Watt Mazda Lamps, at 35 60-Watt Mazda Lamps, 40 15c Fuse Plugs, 6 to 30 am peres, at .....8 At Our Store Today We sell so many of these famously good choc olates that we can always supply any of the Johns ton popular assortments. And Always Fresh These are the kind you see advertised in The Sat urday Evening Post and are , ( What She Wants! We have special Christ mas packages in 1, 2, 3 and 5-lb. boxes' now in stock. Beaton Drug company 15th and Far nam Streets ' i Mail Orders Receive Our Most Careful Attention, For the Kiddie Comes - an agate porringer dish. She holds it by the handle and scarcely ever lets it fall. Dressing Dolls at Vassal". People who have been brought up to believe that college girls are in evitably of masquline type might be interested to know that the students at Vassar college are at present in the midst of doll-dressing contest Nor is -this contest a new event at Vassar. Every year shortly before Thanksgiving 600 dolls are bought by the Christain association and dis tributed among the students, to be dressed in time for Christmas for the- children of the surrounding neighborhood. At an appointed times the dolls are assembled by their respective owners and placed row on row for inspection. The best dressed doll is selected and her owner awarded with a prize. This custom has been observed at Vassar for many years. For the last two years, however, it has been omitted, owing t o the exigencies of war work. But now that those serv ices are not needed the work has been taken up again with an added fnterest and enthusiasm. Boston G-lobe. ' ' . ! Embroidered Pillow Slips. Embroidered pillow slips, after the center begins to break, make dainty petticoats for the small daughter. One pair with embroidered scallops will make two pretty skirts to wear with best dresses. - It will be 50 years next September since Empress Eugenie lost her throne and fled from France. For half a century she has lived a vol untary exile in England. Why you need Resinol Ointment ' The same soothing, healing, antisep tic properties that make Resinol Oint ment ao effective for skin eruptions, also make it the ideal household remedy for Bums 'Ulcers Scalds Felons Cuts Pimples Scratch . Cold-sores Wounds Chafing Bruises Stings Sores Piles Boils Irritations And a score of other troubles which constantly arise in every home, espe cially where there are children. That is why Resinol Ointment should be on your medicine shelf, ready for imme diate use. C,mnU frV v Your dranist sells aampie tree. it( but for gentroas sample and a nrinlatura ctks oi Resinol Soap, write to Dept. UN, Resinol Chemical Co, Baltimore, Hd. When the King Comes ' Home When the king comes home, With his book and slate,. His freckle face And his romnin trait: When the king comes home, it is home, indeed. And we bow to his will with our thought and creed. When the king comes home, It is different then; And he conquers us alii Both women and men; ! But his rule is sweet and his sway is strong With music and laughter and lilt and song. When the king comes home, It's a hosier place, And our eyes light "up, And upon each face There stealeth that gentle and gra cious smile That brooks no sorrow and knows no guile. When the king comes home ; Ah, we need no drums, Nor trumpets to signal us. When he comes ' For he bursts right in from the ' sunny street With a laughter that ringeth so true and sweet 1 ,. When the king comes home, It is this and that, From his lunch to his tie And his coat and hat For the king, ah, the king, is the little boy blue Who comes unto us and he comes to you! Bentztown Bard in Baltimore Sun. l.!llll!lllllllllllllll!l(flllMlllllll!ll!l!IIHIIllltlllllllllIIIIHHIIlllll!IIHM WHIG BROTHERS 'Mlllllllllllllllllllll!ili:flililllllllliililllili:ll!lllllllUIIIIIIIMIIIIIIUIIIIIllllllMI TOYS! TOYS! A Real Toyland With Santa Claus Saturday, Nov. 29, Santa Claus will be here at our store; his hours will be 2 o'clock to 4, 7 to 9. Mothers, bring the children, let them see dear old Santa. Every minute spent here in toyland will be pleasant for old as well as young. A Wonderful Showing Of Toys, Dolls,. Games, Sleds, Wagons, and Toys of every description and kind. We feel safe in say ing the greatest toyland this vicinity has ever seen, and still more7, the first time Santa Claus has made his headquraters in South Omaha. Our Entire Basement Devoted To TOYLAND Practical and Useful Gifts For Brother,' Sister, Mother and Dad, the entire first floor of this store shows a big variety of use ful gifts. Everything well displayed. This makes Christmas shopping easier. For Grownups and Kids, shop at WIIG'S- The Xmas Store Love's Crossroads Loom Large At Every Turn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. A few weeks ago all of us were startled to read of the man who, flinging protective arms about ' his wife who stood caught in the rail road ties, stood facing death in the form of an oncoming locomotive. , "I won't leave you, Mary," he said. And the ring of it had something of heroism and love bigger than self. It takes a lot of courage to ace a fire-snorting, powerful, onrushing car of the juggernaut. Courage like that has something of grandeur. There's no getting away for a breathless moment of reverence for the sheer magnificence , of the thing. "Wbuld I be brave enough for that?" we say "brave enough to face annihilation with some one I love?" But there is one braver thing. To face the agony of farewell, to en dure the awful knowledge that part ing has come, to bear the hideous crushing out of life in the being dearest in all the world to bear it and not share it for the sake of the "stern-faced daughter , of the voice of God DUTY." That is the su preme thing. That is the thing that requires the greatest courage of which the human heart is cap abler For every human decision has its "other side." The man who loved his wife enough to die with her had three children. And the duty was to love them enough to live for them. ' i There were three helpless kiddies at home. Those three kiddies were flesh of the man's flesh. They had come into this world without any volition on their own part. They hadn't been given any choice about the mere matter, of being born and living. And the man who had thrust, upon them, all unasked, the gift of life was responsible for the life he had summoned from the in finite. . There's no way of getting out of duties and responsibilities. And the sternest duty in all the world is the duty of parent to child. What. a child owes its parents doesn't start to be a finite thing until the parent has created the deft as it created the child. To make a supreme decision all in a moment is a terrific mental test. Everywhere a Cross-road. Everyday life is full of moments of strain. We keep coming to cross-, roads and having to decide down which we will go. When there's plenty of time to think things over, to weight the pros and cons, there isn't much excuse for deciding stupidly. Some unconsidered ele ment of chance and change may render a well-thought out decision null and void. But, other things being equal, when there's time to decide the well-balanced brain makes the best choice.. The big moments, however, come unheralded. Instant action, quick decision, an unerring choice, a right weighing of values are required. How then shall we make the right choice? -k . 1 The best preparation for a crisis is to live every moment of every day as well as we know how. When the little decisions have to be made, we must make them sanely and wisely. Mentally and not emotion ally. Honestly and not - dramatic ally. Then when a crisis comes au tomatically the brain trained to weighing and measuring and basing decision on actual values is pretty likely to formulate its decisions like that in the infinitesimal moment it has for adjustment. Emotion, the love lor tne dra matic, the telling gesture, are tempt ing to all of us all the time. And the wrong mental habit will lead us to make first one and then another decision with our mind's eye on the wrong thing. Unconsciously we olav 4o the gallery of our own self-esteem, of To Cure m Cold In One Dav. Taks LAXATIVE BRpMO QUININE (Tab lets.) It stops the Cough and Headache and works off ths Cold. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. SOc. ' Women Advisers to the Industrial .Conference Among the women advisers to the first industrial conference of the league of nations just held at Wash ington, D. C, is Senator Marie Hjeumer of the Danish Parliament. Senator Hjelmer, who has recently been in New York for a hurried sight-seeing trip, reported to the National American Woman Suf frace association in th nam t u. - - --. v,. nit uanisn woman feurlrage association, one of the 26 national associations affiliated with the International Woman Suffrage allianccof which Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt is pres ident. Although Danish women have had parliamentary suffrage since 1915, owing to war conditions there were no general elections in which they took part until last year; when several women were elected to Par liament. . . Senator Hjelmer, ' for several years a member of the municipal council of her small city, not Co penhagen, was elected last year to the Landsting, the upper house of the Rigsdag. , Fru Elna Munch, president of the Danish Women's Suffrage association was at the same election, seated in the lower house, the Folketing. Both women have recently been instrumental in leading to victory a, woman's equal pay bill. - ' Although she is one of the law makers of her own land, Fru Hjel mer's position in the industrial con ference in Washington was that of adviser only. "By the terms of the league of nations treaty, women are to have equal opportunity with men to hold all offices even in the secre tariat, but as a matter of practice they are still far from any such equality. The only mandatory ar rangement, which ensures women's presence on the league's labor pro gram is the one providing for wo men "advisers." . "Many of the foreign delegations," Fru Hjelmer reports, "have brought such women advisers with them to Washington. Spain has one, Bel gium has one, and Scandinavia is especially strong in its representa tion. Fru Betzy Kjelsberg, factory inspector from Norway, is the only woman thus far reported, who is ac tually appointed to the position of delegate-to the assembly of. the league of nations, ,but she also is here at the labor conference merely as adviser to the Norwegian group. Miss Gerstin Hasselgren is adviser to the Swedish delegation." . Fru Hjelmer has the gift of being silent in several languages. She has that poise which marks older civili zations, calmness of speech and de liberateness of judgment. One thinks of her with her restful, gen tle manners, her habit of listening and her remarkable power of con centration on the business in hand, as 'a woman representing a very conservative constituency. -She be-- longs, however, to the Danish radic-. al party, which would probably be : translated into Anglo-Saxon as a liberal party. ; 'v Her principal preoccupation has been with bills asking for better protective laws -for women and children. In addition to the' equal pay bill, the women's admission to offices bill, Fru Hjelmar has in her year of parliamentary service also worked for a great school commis sion, for educational reform, and for an improvement in the law for illegitimate children. other peoples' opinrons, part of the time. And they don't count, they haven't any real value. "The best preparation for a life to come, is to live well every mo ment here and now," said a wise man. - By the same token, the best pre paration for tomorrow is to con duct today sanely and wisely. The Best Way. , The best insurance against mak ing wrong decisions when decisions nave to be made instanter is to make able decisions when there's plenty of time to "dope them out." Don't ask yourself agonizing and unanswerable catch questions like this one: . , . "If my wife and mother were both drowning and I could save only one, which would jt be? Instead of that, prepare yourself to take care of both of them. And help your wife in her youth to train to take care of herself in case life demands that of her. ... I'm using this well worn idea- for its symbolic value. This is what that is: ARMY GOODS FOR SALE BY THE NEBRASKA ARMY & NAVY SUPPLY CO. 1619 Howard Street 1619 Howard Street. r jrC.lVl.mPC.I i619 Howard Street. Protect Yourself from the cold weather Z. with the least money. . . U. 3. Araijr Regulation Tents, 16xlfl, with a S-ft. wall, pyramid shape, extra hnvy duck canvas. These tents cost the government up to 1. Havs bwn used in service. Our special offer ... J S27.SO and 935.00 U. S. Army Comforters or Quilts, renovated ,..$1.23 v. o. Army woci Bianr:, renovated, sale price U. S. Army All-Leather Kaiters, brand new, at l-98 U. S. Khaki Sweaters, without sleeves, brand new, at ' .S4-6S U. S. Army Sanitary Cot Beds, all iron, brand new, Simmons' Saf less Sprints, gray tubular ends. Speria! while they last 75.69 Only 2SO O. D. Blarkets . , -50 Corduroy Vests, leather lined and leather sleeves, sises 44, 46 and 4S only. Exceptional values at $12.49 Sheep Vests, without sleeves, large sizes only V0 and $8.49 Army Munson Field Shoes, brand new, at price of $fl.98 Khaki Oversea Mackinawi, ' brand new i ... .$12.49 Khaki Sweaters with sleeves, brand new $5.88 Sweaters with shawl collars, brand new .: $4.63 Cotton Double Blanketa, plaid, gray or brawn, brand new, at ..,.$5.98 Wool Union Suits, brand new, per suit $3.79 Khaki Flannel Shirts, brand new,' at $4.98 Wool Undershirts -68 Wool Drawers 8 Shoes, brand new, Munson last, marching, genuine oak soles, at $6.98 Pork and Beans, per can , t ''.,9c Work Shoes, exceptional values .' $5.98 Khaki Flannel Shirta $2.99 Leather Vests ....$9 49 Brooms .,.............. 49c Ulster Sheep Lined Coats , .$22.50 Three-fourths Sheep Lined Coata ... $14.69 3. D. Wool Mackinawa i $15.95 SOCKS Cray Wool Socks, light .......... .59e Whit Wool Socks, light ......... .59c Light Cashmere Socks, pair 39c Khaki Wool Socka 79c All Wool Socks, black, uaed but thor oughly renovated; in dozen lots only; while they last $3.68 Whits Wool Socks, heavy ....69c White Jumbo Wool Socks, extra heavy, at 98c Cotton Socks, brand new, per doz. .$1.63 TO OUT-OF-TOWN BUYERS Ws ship goods sxsctly as advertised. Make ordera ut plainly. Include money order or draft. No. C. O. D.'a shipped. II ordered by parcel post include postage. You are assured of prompt and satisfactory shipment. REFERENCE State Bank of Omaha. . I'aka Money Orders or Drafts payable to . THE NEBRA3KA ARMY & NAVY SUPPLY CO. 1619 Howard St. Howard St. Hasn't a Nose, but Can Smell A fish hasn't a true nose, but it can smell. Experiments have proved this, says a scientific writer. What is more, these experiments, have, proved that odor travels througn water just as it does through air. Anglers' have laid so much stress on the need of exciting a fish's in terest by the look of food that the effect or scent has been overlooked. A shark will bite at a hook con taining a piece of fat pork that does not look like any kind of fish that . ; swims the sea. Why, then should me iroui oe expeciea to oe interest- ( , ed only in an artificial "gray hackle " It may be heresy in angling to suggest that a "fly" should smejl ' like a fly. These scientific experi ments show how large a part smell, plays in the food pursuit of fish. diii, such as sman craDS, was xouna , and eaten by the fishes three times as rapidly when the shells were broken. Bait, placed inside'a gauze bag, was smelt within three minutes of being lowered in the water, and almost at the same time all the fishes ' began nibbling at the bag. When cotton was stuffed into its so-called "nostrils" the dogfish would seldom observe the food that came near them, says the "Fishing Gazette." If they saw other dog fish eating, those whose nostrils were stuffed up would join them and take a share in the feast,' but when kept by themselves they starved in the midst of plenty, Several score of species were ex perimented with, and in practically all cases it was determined that fish es are possessed of a sense of smell, though their olfactory system is as yet but little understood. ' POINTS O? INTEREST. Bread must be allowed to get per fectly cold after baking before it is put away; or it is liable to . become mouldy and sour. 1 In some parts of Serbia the young unmarried women carry a special mark in their headgear-'-generally red feather to indicate that they are open to proposals. ' , . The republican women's executive committee of New York is arrang ing to give a dinner. in honor of Wilt H. Hays, chairman of the repub lican national committee. . In Morocco if a. bridegroom is not pleased with his bride he has a. ' right to return her to her father within thr mnntVie u;ith th nriffc originally paid for her. The Drexel Kid says: "Any kid's dad that don't buy Steel ' Shod Shoes or his kid is only cheatin' himself, my dad says $o, too." ; ." DREXEL' S BOYS' SHOES Now is the time of the year when, more than ever, your boy needs the best shoes you can buy for him. Bring him in Saturday and have him fitted with a pair of TEEL HOD HOES You'll find that one pair of these shoes will outwear two pairs of or dinary boys' shoes. Boys' sizes, 1 to 5 Vs. $4.00 Little Men's, 10 to 13V2, $3.50 ' DREXEL SHOE CO. 1419 FamamSt. HEARTBURN or heaviness after meals are most an- noying manifestations of acid-dyspepsia. KiHOIDS pleasant to take, neutralize acidity and help restore normal digestion. MADE BT SCOTT ft B0WNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION 1M