THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY, JANUARY 15. 1920. NEW WITNESSES " GIVE TESTIMONY T IN DAVIS TRIAL Time of Assault on Mayor Alleged to Be 9:45 OXIock Hour Is 2 Important. , M. 0. Cunningham, an attorney, was one of three new witnesses for tVe state put on the 'witness stand yesterday - in the trial of George avis in District "Judge Redick's courton charges of assault to mur der and assault to do greats bodily in jury to Major Smith the night of the court house riot. Mr. Cunningham's testimony was that he met George Davis on a street car early last September and en gaged in conversation with him. Mr. Davis showed great dislike for Mayor Smithy he declared. Criticism of Mayor, j "He 'said," testified Mr. Cunning uain, "that Mayor Smith wasno Jftiod and that he ought to be run tit of town, lie said, 'The people stand just so much and then they'll go down to the city hall and hang that 'whole bunch.' '"Mr, Davis praised former Mayor Dalitman and said he gave a good city administration." "On cross-examination, Attorney O'Sullivan for Davis, inquired: "'' "You have friends who entertain such views as Mr. Davis expressed, haven't ysu,- Mr. Cunningham" ""Oh. I've heard such statements inade," was the reply. Time of Assault Fixed. ' J. Nash McCrea, a newspaper re porter, testified regarding the exact time of the attack on the mayor, which will be an important point in the present trial. Mr. McCrea was in the vault of the district clerk's office during the riot and fire with several policemen, and Deputy District Clerk Steere. He told of seeing the mob with the mayor and of looking at his watch and finding the hour to be 9:45. ' A. C. Peterson, manager of the Midwest Iron Works, also testified and fixed the time of the attack on the mayor at 9:45 o'clock. Z Yesterday morning- Mayor Smith totd of the shots which he fired with a revolver in the rotunda of the court house. j " Fired at One of Mob. "A policeman and-1 stood in the court house rotunda when a mart Entered the Farham street door and fired a double-barreled shotgun. The hots peppered the iron work of the elevator doors like hail. He fired again. The policeman said to me, 'If that fellow gets our range, he'll blow our heads off.'. I "I said, 'That's the most danger pus man in this mob, if he shoots again we ought to shoot his knees tff.' He shot again and I discharged my revolver at him and he never ihot again." , . " Ana mayor, asked Attorney jO'Sullivan for Davis, "wasn't that the sailor boy who was carried to ihe Y. ; W. . C A. and , died of his tvounds?" - . . .. - "1 don't know. I don't think so," said the mayor. v ' Says Only Aimed Shot 7 "And didn't the crowd after that shout that you had shot a sailor?" i "I didn't hear them." "But you say this man with the OYSPEPSlf AND shotgun didn't shoot again after you -fired r" "No. That was the only shot 1 aimed at a human being that night," said the mayor. Attorney p'Sullivan tried by many questions to get the mayor to ad mit that he was not normal men tally that night. The mayor strenu ously denied Jhat ie was "scared." He was perfectly normal, mentally, he said, until the blow which he says was struck by George Davis. "You are subject to fainting fspells. are you not?" -asked Mr. O Sullivan. "No, sir. I was overcome once during a long trial in midsummer iu Kansas City and once in Judge Es tellc's court here when I went to work too soon after eating a heavy lunch." His Speech to Mob., The mayor testified that he said to the mob that had him on Sev enteenth street after dragging him out of the court house, "If you are bent on pwrder, you might as well murder me," and that someone said, "All right, where's the rope," and that someone else responded, "Here it is." ' The mayor's examination was con cluded yesterday morning. A sensation was "sprung" on Rus sell Norgard, one of the state's wit--nesses, who testified in Davis' first trial, as to his rescue of Mayor Smith after the mob tried to lynch him. Norgard has been given a position as police chauffeur since the riot. Attorney O'Sullivan showed Nor gard a picture of himself taken from the police "rogue's gallery." . Norgard said this picture was taken when he and some other fel lows went out on a "party" just be fore they went to the army and one of the jtnen stole an automobile. "We refusedto give "our names at first in the police station and they 'mugged' us," said Norgard. All witnesses except the immedi ate members of George Davis' fam ily are being excluded from the court room uqtil called to testify. AT THE THEATERS D HOME LIFE What a Relief When All the .'Family Eat the Same Foods! r Avoid Dyspepsia; Sour Ris- j : ings, - Gas Indigestion i from Breakfast Sausage -: ... to Dinner Mince Pie. !' ' - '! i Arter mother has struggled two .or three hours over a hot fire to do tli cooking for a hungry family; it , Health ft Happiness To Be Free f Indication Contribute Wonderfully to Happiness ef Home Lift. is real enjoyment when .there isn't a dyspeptic jinx among them. Of course, a case of dyspepsia or daily indigestion must - be looked after. But it is far more t the "point to prevent '.as well as-to treat sour 6tomach,Tbclcbi"g, "water brash, etc., by such a valuable means as Stu- art's Dyspepsia Tablets. ' Coddling the stomach with soft food ad pre digested stuff merely invites slug gishness.' s Eat your Tittle pork sausages for breakfast without Tears; have a plate bf beans and a piece of pie with cheese for lunch, and end the day with a real dinner, instead of a bowl of bread and milk. Follow each meal with a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet and get right back to your natural self. , " The tablets digest food and as: , sist the stomach to prepare the con tent for assimilation in the intesti nal tract. , Thus you get the practi cal relief and help which induces a better appetite and a greater free--Aom in the selection of foods. You will find Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets on sale at any' drug store in the United States and Canada, as-they are considered one of the stand-bys Dy the druggist ...... Thursday Special Wilson' Certified Oleo, 45c Seller, 39c . Omaha Market O NOT, because of any . im pression mat may nave uccu vance announcements, imagine that "Jasques Duval" is a discussion- of therapeutics o r pharmacology. "Materia Medica" has -no part in the play further than the spectacle is presented of a doctor going ahead to cure a patient nn full knowledge of the fact that his wife is infatu ated with the sick man. To this vtit tVi rthir nf the nfofession enter, and these play a considerable part in tne development or me theme, which is finally the jeep searching of the soul by a process compared to which the diagnostic inquisition of the practitioner is mere play. The springs on which human lives .turn, higher than the i.;..rv0 epiani ttptfpr fniinrl in test tubes or alembic, in retort or vial, these are laid bare, are stretched to the utmost tension, and then rebound to their normal, in-Ai.u-iklj. rtfiprafuiri Tf is i the love tVllWl- .Kwv. . ry - ---- of man, for woman, and that love wholly reciporatea, tnat animates and dominates the drama, and in none easily recalled does this fact stand forth more prominently or get . greater emphasis , than in "Jacques Duval." It 'is a peculiarly pervasive fact, and to it finally all things else in the play are sub jugated. Mr. Arliss gave us a splendid bit of acting when last here, in his visualization ot benjamin uisraen. Omaha was deprived of the joy of seeing him in the role of Alexander Hamilton, because of the closing of the theaters on account of 4he epidemic in 1918. For these reasons anticipation was high, and the pleas ure felt in being -able to record sat isfaction may only be -lightly ex pressed. This man is something more than an actor; he is an artist, who creates as truly as a sculptor or a painter, who feels and ex presses lofty imaginings as a poet or a musician, arfd who sets his art before his audience simply as only those who have attained great An' Tt i imnossible that iicaa mil u ' - " 1' , - . . an actor can divest himself en- i! I., t,; rcnna1itv and aC- l ! I r I v ui i i ' . . quaintance "makes jt easy tb trace the connection from one character to another. But these veltiges of the individual serve to enhance mther than diminish the creative effort. Therefore, if an inflect or tone of the voice, a gesture or a movement of th beody, may recall one of his former endeavors, the fact should be ascribed to the pow er' jrith which George Arliss has impressed his characteristics on the memorv, rather than to paucity of his genms for doingthings. hitr moments in "Jacques Duval." among them those where he determines to sacruiLc himself, his honor and his wifes eood name, that- his discovery may live. IJut hris little -short of sub lime in the last act, where he de termines to tell the exact truth, and preserve his integrity and his work if possible from a hostile jury of iealous'copractitioners. Three scenes with his wife, one of cold djjdain, another of earnest demand, and a third of sincere devotion, finely" set off more Strenuous episodes, of the drama. ,. ... , Carl Anthony, well known, to many Omahans, finely enacts the part of a doctor who secretly, at first and finally openlv opposes and seeks to ruin Duval. Manart Kippen convincingly plays the lover, a sort ofmale Camille, and the jury of doctors in the last act is also a not able contribution. - On th-ee of the women falls an undue proportion of the rflaking of the realism necessary for the force of the drama. Elizabeth Risdon as the wife, rises to its requirements at the close, her attitude ,in the earlier moments appearing to be one of efj fort -at self-justification instead of the actual quest for .the happiness she sought Her perplexity -understood rather than expressed. Mrs. Arliss as the mother, shows a fine type of womanhood, sympathe tic, understanding, and staunch, a careful adviser an,d a guide worthy to be followed. Fernanda Eliscu, well recalled for delightful work in other plays, gives a splendid por trait of a woman who can love without-hope, whose happiness lies in helping and whose devotion knows no limit. The-warmth of greeting given the play at the Brandeis last night must have convinced the company that its efforts were appreciated. People who hold the theater in reverence will not overlook the presence of M. Arliss for the remainder of the week. Others may profitably ' at tend, that they may learn how real ly delightful and entertaining the actor's art may be At Body's tonight "Parlor, Bed room and Bath," the unlimited farce, is, to be presented again,- this time by a company which has been con siderably augmented. Eda Ann Luke stiM enacts the role of the vivacious young . fetnale reporter, but Willie Archie has the bellboy role, and other additions to the act ing strength of the company have been made. It tells the adventures of a modest young man who tries to live up to the reputation he has made for himself pf being a Don Juan and Lothario combinedi With Evelyn Nesbit, with her new and exclusive song revue, heading the bill, special interest in the Or pheum this week is evidenced in the daily display of the "standing room only" sign. Miss Nesbit declares her ambitions unrealized and that she intends to work incessantly un til she is highly equipped for a star ring tour in a three-act drama. The two featured acts, the Werner and Amoros trio and Princess Radjah are finding favor Headlining the new show which opcns at the Empress today is a pretentious musical offering, to be presented by Louis , Brecedes and company. Three men apd two women. Nixon and Sans introduce "Black and Tan.J' As soft shoe dancers they ha,ve few equals. Rob ert and Demont will present a classy dancing act, with singing and talking. Harris and Lyman, a youth ful pair of entertainers, have sing ing, dancing and chatter. As per usual when conventions are in session in Omaha there seems to be a prearranged plan ..that the evening sessions shall be held at the Gayety theater, where the fun is. This week the Lumbermen and and the Farmers' associations are in session and all agree that an evening spent -with Jack Sjnger's show and Harry Lander, 'places them in a more amiable frame of mind to cope with the, following day's problems. Ladies' matinee at 2:15 daily. Mrs. Prouty, the boarding house keeper of George M. Cohan's new comedy, "A Prince There Was," which is the attraction at the Brandeis-for three days commenc ing next Monday, .is played by Josephine Williams, who lived in a boarding house of the sort Mr. Cohan depicts and plays the part, in consequence, with gusto and w,ith feeling, for she says, she suffered much. Flashes From Filmland Neighborhood Homes APOLIX) 29th and Leavenworth ANITA STEWART In "MARI RE OA N:" News and comedy. LOTH ROP 24th . and Lothron , "DESERT GOLD." , A Zane Gray story In pictures. DIAMOND 8h and Lake ROBERT WARWICK In "MAD LOVER," a seven-reel feature; also comedy. HAMILTON 40th and Hamilton - "EYES OF THE WORLD," a Har- ' old Bell Wright story In pictures much to enjoyed. Admission 20i and IS cents. - ' EYES OF YOUTH,", the Clara Kimball Young production on the screen this week at the Rialto theater, is daily being shown to larger crowds. The exciting events of the story are based upon the opportunity given the heroine to read her own future through the assistance of a Yogi, who teaches her the mysteries of crystal gazing, and in this way she is able to avoid the mistakes that would, have been her lot had she followed one of the many opportunities offered her. Moon and Muse Douglas Fair banks has thej movie fans coming back to the Moon and the Muse theaters this week, to see "When the Clouds Rol By," a production m which. Doug has fairly , outdone all his previous efforts to Iceep his au diences in a state of excitement. Nothing seems impossible for the star to accomplish in this photo production. It is his best effort in film production. Sun Crowds continue to flock to the Sun to see Mary Miles Mintcr in "Anne of Green Gables," and fur nish the best evidence of the qual ity pi this offering. For fidelity to detail, character delineation and humas appeal, this picture of con temporaneous American small town life has seldom, if ever, been equalled on the screen. As an added attrac tion, the management is also pre senting Charlie Chaplin in what many , claim to be his best offering to date, "The Fireman." Strand It is a drarrmtic slice of real life that is to be presented at the Strand theater' today and the balance of the week under the title of "What Every Woman Learns," with Enid Bennett in the chief role". The story concerns a young wife who considers life as a huge joke until grim reality briiTgs her to her senses. The 'cast supporting Miss Bennett includes Milton Sills, Theo dore Roberts and Irving Cummings. Empiess Augustus Thomas' "The Volcano," starring Leah Baird, is announced as the feature photp-play attraction at the ittaipress for the last half -of the week, smarting today. It reveals how a horde of rabid propagandists from the darkened byways of Moscow and Petrograd weave their spells in , the humble homes of New York's poorer, folk, while sons of the men and women they seek to corrupt are pouring back from the fighting fields of France on every incoming trans port . Attempts Suicide When Girl Rejects His Suit Because his sweetheart, Miss Eva Biettler, 7W 1-2 North Eighteenth street, would not promise to marry him and even refused to admit him, tb her home when Jie called last evening, Jack Moore.'a truck driver living at 71 1 North Eighteenth street, attempted to commit suicide on her front porch. 0 Neighbors, aroused by the com motion he made, (jailed police and Moore was taken to jail before he had an .opportunity to swallow any of the strychnine in the bottle which he held in his hand. Moore told police "that he loved Miss Biettler, who is 17 years old, but that she did not return his affection. STATE BANKERS ATTACK RESERVE B A 11 RMETIIODS Organize to Resist Practice of Holding Checks and Col- N ; lectin Big Total at One Time. 7r Attempts .to force state banks not members of the federal reserve sys tem to par checks, the holding and accumulating of checks till they total large sums, and the collection pf these checks from payee banks through express companies or agents, all alleged to be the practice of the Federal Reserve bank, will be met with organized resistance, it was resovled by state bank officials who met at the Hotel Fontenelle yesterday. . . The alleged holding of checks on state banks until an important ag gregate has been accumulated was declared "in defiance of .well estab lished usage and custom and in de fiance of a deoision of the. Nebraska supreme "court" that a bank check must' be promptly presented by the state bankers, and the collection of such checks through express com panies or messengers was declared an act on the part of Federal Re serve banks to embarrass payee banks. Bankers Name Committee. To resist, these alleged practices the bankers resolved to appoint a committee of three with full author ity to act for state banks of Ne braska, to employ counsel, to make assessments aeainst state banks to defray expenses, and to take what--1 ever action is necessary to secure relief from - Federal Reserve bank practices. The co-operation of Omaha banks where state banks maintain reserve funds was asked and representatives in congress will be requested to de mand an investigation of these al leged practices of the Reserve bank. State banks which have agreed to par items for he Federal Reserve bank will be requested to recall such an agreement promptly, it was de cided. The committee appointed to resist efforts of the reserve bank to pay checks and. other alleged acts of reserve bank against state banks consists of C. A. McClqud of York, Woods Cones of Pierce and C. F. Gund of Bluc Hill. , Describe "Rough Tactics." During the meeting yesterday al leged rough methods used by agents of the reserve bank in collecting checks against state banks were graphically described. Woods Cones, president of the Cones States bank of Pierce, Neb., one of the speakers during the morning session, declared that the Federal reserve bank was employ ing "gun men" to collect cash on checks on his and other Pierce banks. In an effort to force his bank to join the federal reserve system the Federal Reserve bank has been holding checks on his bank for a"S long as three weeks, until the amount is very large, then sending rough agents to collectcash on the diecks, he said.. ' i "Gunmen" to Collect "Four men; well armed, arrived in Pierce recently, with a large bun dle of accumulated checks," he said. "Two of them entered my bank with those checks and demanded cash for them. The ther "two remained in the car and kept it running in order to be ready to make a quick getaway in case something should happen., "The two gun men who came into the bank, talked in rough, loud voices. One of them said he was from the Federal Reserve bank and wanted cash on the checks at once. While the cashier was paying'the checks to one of the gunmen the other man walked about the bank telling clerks what a bad -man his partner, was. To' Clean Up .Nebraska. "He told them he was a United States marshal and would hesitate ai nothing. He said he had cleaned up Kansas-and was going to clean up Nebraska next." , j 'There are two men from the Fed eral Reserve in Pierce now, Mr. Cones said. One is cashing checks sent him by the Federal Reserve bank, and the other is trying to, or ganize a national bank, Mr. Cones declared. Frank Pilger, president of the Pierce State bank, concurred with Mr. Cones' statements. 'The arbitrary methods being used by the Federal Reserve bank to force noamember banks to pay checks regardless of any legal rights in the matter have stirred up so much ill feeling among state banks of Nebraska," Mr. Pilger said, "that a meeting to protest was absolutely essential. We will -determine, if possible, , whether or not we are going to Ibe governed now and here after by rulings of the Federal Re serve bank. We feel that the prin ciple of the matter is an important issue. ' . Mr. Pilger also told of methods he alleges are used by. federal re serve -banks in accumulating checks, totaling large amounts then send ing agents to collect cash. They first tried to collect these checks through an express agent and the postmaster. he said, but the postmaster refused to handle them.. "Then they began to send "gunmen," he says. Piled Coin on Desk. "Two men recently . entered my bank with checks accumulating $20, 000," he said, "and demanded cash payment. They refused to take a draft on an Omaha bank where we have large reserves deposited, arfd where they would logically want to receive the money. Fortunately we had plenty of money on hand. We plied it up on the counters where all our customers could see it and ex plained tothem that the men were not robbers, but agents from the federal reserve bank. "It has. been necessary for the Pierce banks to pool their money at times to cash this accumulation of checks presented by federal ire serve agents. Other banks in the state are experiencing the samw methods." Lose Exchange Charges. Omaha banks receiving checks on small stte banks usually absorb ex- j change charges as .an appreciation! of the jeserve fund deposited with ! them by the smaller banks, Mr. Pilger said. "It is not the idea of losing the profits on exchange that has made us protest, however," he said, "but the methods used by the federal re- j serve banks, in forcing non-mem-! ber banks tb" pay checks. "The state bankers of Pierce, at least, believe that they are better off, and can better serve the community by not becoming members of the Federal Reserve system. If we be came members the system would regulate our rate of interest and amount of loans, we believe." T. L. Matthews of Fremont, pre sided at the meeting of -the state bankers. J. -G. Johnson of Tecum ser, Neb., was named secretary. A number of resolutions will be passed before the session closes this after noon. -i Admit Men Carry Guns For "Self Protection" O. T. Eastman, manager of the Omaha branch of the Federal Re serve bank of Kansas City, Mo., when tord of the charges made by state bankers, denied that agents sent out by the Federal Reserve bank employed roughtactics. , "They may carry guns to protect themselves from robbers," he said, "but for no other purposeA When state banks agree to make no ex change deduction, in remitting cash letters from the federal reserve bank,' we will send them their checks by mail and accept 'their draft for face values. '. - "In sending out agents to collect the full amount on checks we are merely helping to carry out a fed eral reserve act which provides that no exchange deduction shall be made in remitting for cash letters re ceived from the Federal Reserve banks. , ' "We are making no effort to force state banks into the federal reserve system." $25,000,000 Belgium Loan Is Attracting Investqys in Omaha . New Yortf.'jan. 14. J. P. Morgan & Co. and the Guaranty Trust Co., fiscal agents ctf the Belgian' govern ment, annpunced today the sub scription "prices of the new $2S,000, 000 Belgian 6 per cent note loan. The five-year notes are offered at 95 3-4 and the one-year notes at 9.1 The Peters Trust Co., agents for the bonds in Omaha, report the sale on the opening day one of the most brisk of any bonds they have sold. The price at which the bonds are sold makes the interest rate over 7 per cent and investors are eagerly buying them. An unusual feature of the bonds, .officials sof the Peters Trust Cq. say, is the fact that the purchaser is enabled to take advantage of the difference in exchange rate between the United States and Belgium. If the rate of exchange reaches par, they say, the $1,000 bonds'will return $1,500. The bonds mature in one snd three years. - Maj. Michael A. Kelly to Talk at Creighton Tonight Maj. Michael A. Kelly of NVw York will talk at the Creighton. uni versity auditorium, Twenty-sixth and California streets, at 8 tonight. Major Kelly comes here under the auspices of -they American Commit tee on Irish Independence. He is a chevalier of the Legion of Honor and was awarded the croix de guerre and the distinguished service medal in France. Juniper Tar Itakch p!Kft El TAR" M ft TfTmSore y 3 mm Best fot Coughs, Colds; Throat Keep Juniper Tar la tbe Sfedleln thc$t for Emergencies. 60 Doses) 30c at druggists COUGHING WEAK AND RUN-DOWN AFTER FLU Regained flesh mni strength quickly, and tell how. "I nearly died from 'flu' last October, and it left me with a terrible cough. The doctor gave me one bottle of medi cine after another, bnt it did me no good. Went to Charlotte, N. C, and took treatment of a specialist without any permanent benefit. "I saw Milks Emulsion advertised .and started using it. It helped me right from the start. I had no appetite and mr stomach was in bad shape. But 12 bottles have straightened me out en tirely. I eat anything- without distress, my cough is gone and I have gained back my strength and flesh."- Emma Withers, Box SO, Belmont, N. C. - Don't trifle with a weak, run-down condition. It leaves you op"en to serious diseases. Get your strength back. Milks Emulsion costs nothing to try. Milks Emulsion is a pleasant, nutri tive food and a corrective medicine. re stores healthy, natural bowel action, do ing away with all need of' pills and physics. It promotes appetite and quickly- puts the digestive organs in ihape to assimilate food. As a builder of flesh and strength. Milks Emulsion is strong ly recommended to those whom sickness has weakened, and is a powerful aid in resisting and repairing the effects of wasting diseases. Jhronie stomach trouble and constipation are promptly relieved usually in one day. This is the only solid emulsion made, and so palatable that it is eaten with a spoon like ice cream. No matter how severe your ease, you are urged to try Milks Emulsion under this, guarantee Take six bottles home with you. use it according to directions and if not satisfied with the reoults, your money will be' promptly refunded. Price 60e and $1.20 per bottle. The Milks Emulsion Co., Terre Haute, Ind. ' Sold by druggist everywhere. Comfort Baby's Skin With Coticura Soap And Fragrant Talcum FTiTjOmr file .a HarimMnt tnai sue. adrH mum LstentsrUs, Manufacturers Will Meet With the C. of C, Men On Thrift Week Plans The Omaha Manufacturers' asso ciation and the industrial committee of the Omaha Chamber of Com merce will . hold a jouit meeting this evening at 5 iruthe Chamber of Commerce rooms to consider ways of bringing National Thrift week home v to the employers ana the employes of the city and to for mulate plans for a permanent policy of thrift One of the plans which will be discussed at the meeting. will be that of paying all employes y a bank de posit instead of in cash, thus making every wge earner in Omaha a bank depositor -with a checking account. It is then "up to" the employee him self to draw out all his wages or to leave a portion in the bank in each week. , Committees will be appointed to present the different ideas brought out to committees of employes from big Omaha establishments as well as to theemployers themselves and an official plan will be selected. ,' With all the raw materials avail able in the vicinity, the manufacture of paper of all grades will b.e begun on an extensive scale in the Altai forest region of Siberia. Levi Cox Funeral Will Be- -Held on.South Side Today The funeral of Levi Cox, 72 yean old, who died at Wise 'Memorial hospital Tuesday night of cancer of the throat, will be held today at 2 p. m. from Brewer's undertaking parlors, 24th and M streets. South Side Mr. Cox was a commission man on the South Side fora mimber of years, having settled in Omaha in 1891, moving from Piano, 111., where he was born, He is survived bv his wife and a daughter, Mrs. Leah Bocock, and son, Russell L. Cox, both of Omaha, and three brothers, Joshua, a banker of York; James M. of. Hampton, Neb., and Joseph of Los Angeles. BRRO fll'lTS MK Men's Clothing Sale Suits and Overcoats i You Save 50 Buying Now All Clothing Will Be 25 Higher Next Season, ' Regardless of Makes or Qualities. Prepare for the Future Now Take advantage of this EXTRA SAVING we offer you of ONE-QUARTER OFF &Tve " v Yourself VU , - on Ugh grade all-wool hand-Tailored Garment. Buy Overcoats Now Styles for Young and Old $22.50 "c V $26.25 $30.00 $33.75 $37.50 v Buy Suits Now Models for Hen of all ages. $22.50 . - $26.25 $30.00 $33.75 .. $37.50 1 -Small Charge for Alterations 1415 Farnam Street .Jf. "MIAMI - FLORIDA Wmt iti Jun. ell Wirfr7r , - OCEAN BATHING Th Ufa to CossaspsUt. Snsrt sa! bto-Mtbw. ' ,Tb CUsosto Is Snpert. DrHo throuih tropical fruit groves: Ur salt two 18-hols courses: Polo .Club, tennis, flahinf, yacht Ins; Conway's Dally Band Concerts: automobllina, too ratios rock-coated oil surfaced roads: 'baseball by Cincinnati Beds: Curtlss Aviation School: On hotel, cottaa-ss. apartment. Writer J MIAMI CHAMBEX 01 COIDUBCI 50 M 1 LI Piles--Rstula--CuredWith-out the Use of the Knife No Chloroform, No Ether. Examination free to all DOCTOR F. M. HAHN 401 Paxton Block. . " ' Hours: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., Daily. xEyeninn. T to 8 P. M. Sundays, 11 A. M. to I V. M. Only y MUNV COAL YARD ' . Now Selling Fresh Mined . . . ... . . . Colorado Lump Coal $g00 PER TON $(grt00 3 .... DELIVERED 5 Call at Office of Dan B. Butler, 508 City Hall BEE WMT ADS ARE BUSINESS ET JERS QUICK REUEF FROM CONSTIPATION Get Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets That is the joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicinz physician for 17 years and calomel 8 old-time enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. 'Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative. No griping is the "keynote" bf these 1 little sugar-coated, olive-colored tab lets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth" . bad breath a dull, tired feeling dc headache torpid liver constipation, you'll find quick, sure and pleasant re sults from one or two of Dr. Edwards " Olive Tablets at bedtime. . . Thousands take them every night just to keep right Try them. 10c and 25c. WhyDruggistsRecommend Swamp-Root for many years druggist, have watched with much interest the re markable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medicine. It is a physician's prescriptiou. Swamp-Root is a strengthening mediclneC ' It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do the work nature In tended they should do. ' Swamp-Root has stood the test of years. . It is sold by all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. V sure to get Swamp-Root and start treatment at once. However, If you wish first to test this great preparation send ten centa to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blnghamton, K. 'Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention the Omaha Bee." . . . .. . . . Ai-