Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 20, 1920, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE BEE; OMAHA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1820.
6,
PROTEST MADE vinton school ,
nw pd nmn nc I depopulated by
ON GRADING OF i mildjnfluenza
ST. MARY'S AVE;!Hta' cTiTsf'T ,n'
I speclion, Days the Situation
City Council Committee On the Not Dangerous.
Whole
Hears Complaints
Made by Property
Owners.
Proposed grading of St, Marys
avenue, Seventeenth to Twenty
fifth street, and Howard street west
of Twentieth street, brought 'pro
testing property owners before the
city council committee of the whole
yesterday morning. 's
Among the principal objectors
were F. H. Davis and Mrs. F. II.
Cole, representing Clarkson hos
pital. Plans for this gr-ading pro
jejet show a cut of 11 feet in front
of the hospital. A cut of five feet
would be made at Howard and
Twenty-second streets.
The protests were all against the
grading of Howard street, which is
necessary in tonnectiun with the St.
Marys avenue grading.
This is one of the projects worked
out last year by the city planning
commission and the city engineer
ing department. Engineers con
tend that this improvement will
btnefit the adjacent property as well
as the entire city, and they further
insist that it is necessary for the
proper development of Omaha.
The city council will hear argu
ments on both sides before taking
final action.
Similar protests were heard before 1
the Dodge street grading project
was finally approved by the city
council, i
T V Kimball, architect, said: "It
is a question of natural law, rather
than of opinion, that this district
should be graded. It will have to
be done some time, and the longer
it is postponed, the more it will cost.
The grading of St. Marys avenue
will give an outlet to Twenty-fourth
street which is becoming the great
north and south highway.
"Six yean ago I urged that street
car lines be not allowed on Twenty-
fourth street until it had been widen
ed .and straightened. It would have
cost about $100,000 at that tipe to
have widened and straightened this
street. The work is, going to be
done soon at a cost of about $1,000,
000." .
Etifity-five children of the lower
grades of Vinton school, Twenty
first street and Boulevard avenue,
were absent yesterday on account of
the prevalence of a disease which
Dr. J. F. Edwafds, health commis
sioner, believes may be a mild orm
of influenza.
Most of these children were ex
cluded by school nurses. No spe
cific case of influenza has been re
ported by any physician from this
school district.
Coughing and sore throat were
symptcms affecting one-sixth of the
enrollment of the school,' but only
in the lower grades.
The health commissioner directed
Dr. Allyn Moser, assistant, to make
a thorough examination and to have
bacteriological tests made of cul
tures. A school nurse will remain
in this school district until the situa
tion has been checked.
Dr. Edwards madeNa personal ex
amination of Vinton school and re
ported that the sanitation of the
building was satisfactory in every
detail. v The doctor also visited nine
homes of stricken rhi!drin
KT A ... ..,11.. :
4. nifi oi.v. itaujr aci i-
ous as yet in the situation at Vinton
school," the health commissioner
said. "It appears to be an epidemic
of colds resembling in some respects
mild influenza. We are keeping a
close check on the school. There
is an unusual prevalence of colds in
Omaha just now." 1
Cojjple at Whose Home
Young Girl Was Found
Face Serious Charges
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Force. 1617
LChicago street, at whose home 13-
year old Grace Knepper, 2223
North Twentieth street, was found
last Friday following her disappear
ance from home four days before,
were bound over to district court in
Central police court yesterday
Bonds for Force, charged with crim
inal assault, were &et at $1,500 Mrs.
Force was charged with aiding and
abetting a delinquent. Her bonds
were set at $500.
The Knepper girl appeared against
her alleged captors. She testified
that after she left the Creighton dis
pensary on the morning of January
1.5, she visited at the Force home.
Public's Stand for Rights
In Fight Between Capital
And Labor Is A Good Sign
' v
New Awakening Is Observed in All Organizations A
Demand for Justice and a Square Deal Dominates
All Proposed Remedies for the Unrest In Indust
rial Conditions.
Record as War Prisoner
Pr-PVPntc? Fine nf tlfMI When she attempted to leave for
When Dick 'Kennedy, 1513 Burt
street, told Police Judge Fitzgerald
m Central police court yesterday
that he carried a three-ounce bjttle
of alcoholr found on 'him, yesterday,
when he was arrested, to "starhis
automobile easily," court attendants
laughed.
1 The judge was just about to fin
ish: "$10O and costs," when Ken
nedy continued: "And judge, I never
was in jail before, but was a prison
er in a German camp for five
months." Kennedy was discharged.
: i. . , . .
49 Drown In Wreck
Stockholm Jan. " 19. Forty-nine
members of the crew of the Ameri
can steamer Macona, which struck a
rock off Nidingen light and founder
ed, were lost, the only survivor be
ing the secoudmate oftheship.
home that night, she was locked in
a room, she testified.
Detective's found the girl on in
vestigation of a "tip" furnished po
lice by a woman who lives in the
neighborhood of the Force home.
Neighbors Complained When
They Drove Car Over Lawns
Ten dollars and costs each were
the fine! imposed upon Louis B Vil
liger and William Bird, both living
at 1938 South Thirteenth street, in
Central police court, yesterday on
charges of drunkenness. They were
arrested Sunday afternoon afte.' an
automobile in which they were rid
ing crashed into a house near Fltv
enth and Arbor street, police sav
Neighbors in that vicinity com
plained that the car left a ragged
trail over lawns, through hedges and
hack vards.
NAME "BAYER" ON
GENUINE ASPIRIN
Safe and proper directions are in every "Bayer package'
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin", to be
genuine mast be marked with the
safety "Bayer Cross." Then you are
getting the true, world-famous As
pirin, prescribed by physicians for
over 18 years. Always biy an un
broken package of "Bayer Tablets
of Aspirin," which contains proper
directions to safely relieve Colds,
Headache, Toothache, Earache,
Neuralgia, Lumbago, Rheumatism,
Neuritis, Joint Pains and Pain gen
erally. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets
cost but a few cents. Druggists also
sell larger "Bayer" packages. As
pirin is "the trade mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester
of Salicylicacid.
I'JHAT OXYGEN DOES
FOR THE G BODY
Without it there could be no living body since without
v oxygen there cannot be any life.
Oxygen acts on the blood, and by
constantly cleansing and revitaliz
ing it, converts the blood into a
vigilant guardian against the in
sidious attacks of disease. It assists
every natural force in the body.
It makes it possible for the blood
to build up what the stress of
daily activity, over-work, over-exertion,
and over-taxing of the body
.:ars down. Waste products are cast
out new cells grow the hollow
cheeks ifill out and take on the
ruddy glow of health. The spring
conies back to the step, the whole
body tingles with health and ritali-
ty, while the brain is cleared to
meet the battle with the problems
of life.
If the supply of oxygen is not
sufficient the engine runs down
vital force wanes the fire goes out
. and the whole machinery of the
body stops.
But when the blood is vitalized
with oxygen the complicated
structure of the cells of the body
is broken fown, and the energy
liberated that drives the human
engine.
REOLO, the wonderful discov
ery of Dr. A. L. Reusing, makes
rich red blood vitalized with oxy
gen, iron and the cell-salts that the
blood requires to maintain health
and vigor. It stimulates the ap
petite, aids digestion, tones up the
heart and nervous system, rapidly
increases the red blood cells and
Isends through the entire body a
stream of vitalized health-restoring
blood, that nourishes every cell of
the tissues, blood, nerves, brain and
bones. '
- Healthy blood makes the whole
body healthy. - The cheeks glow,
the eyes soarkle, the step becomes
light and elastic and the whole body
thrills with the vigor and vitality
of Derfect health.
If you are not feeling welltry
REOLO. It is not expensive. Each
package contains 100 pleasant,
taseless tablets, enough for two
weeks' treatment, and it only costs
one dollar.
REOLO is sold tinder the Posi
tive Guarantee that if it does not
give absolute satisfaction, your
money will be returned.
REOLO is sold in Omaha by Sher
man & MxConnell Drug Co., 49th
and Dodge, 16th and Dodge, 16th
and Harney, 24th and Farnam, 19th
nd Farnam, Omaha. Neb., Licensed
Distributor for the Dr. A. L. Reus
ing Laboratories, Akron, O.
By RAY STANNARD BAKER:
. Article VIII.
When I was in Chicago some days
ago a man with whom I was dis
cussing the industrial problem sud
denly asked:
"What are you going to do about
me?"
"What do you mean?"
"Well I'm the Innocent By
stander. I'm the man who gets the
brickbat intended for "one of the
belligerents. I'm the Public. What
ever happens 1 get hurt.
I have dealt in former articles
with the attitude of various groups
of employers and employes toward
the present industrial unrest. It is
now important to consider the point
of view of the "great third party."
The awakening of the public to the
seriousness of the present -mrest,
its threat to American institutions,
is in some ways, the greatest news
in the whole situation.
We are in the midst of a sudden,
powerful, and, at present, crude re
assertion of public rights. It is as
though the American giant had sud
denly awakened or just returned
from war overseas! and finding dis
order all about, had acted with ter
rific force and direction. It is the
American way we may not at all
approve it, but there it is! to act
first and inquire about it afterwards.
I recall a saying of the early days
in the north woods, when the lum
bermen first went in: "Cut the trees,
ask about the lines afterwards."
There is much of this spirit still left'
in America.
Pounce on Disturbers.
So we have pounced right and left
upon disturbers with little inquiry
and less understanding tossed one
handful of them back to Russia and
evidently propose to toss still oth
ers. No one knows the number of
thousands or the fleet of ships re
quired to take them! A stupendous
business! We have raided the offi
ces and homes of both wild and
tame radicals, sometimes with legal
authority and sometimes without;
we .have choked off radical orators;
turned out radical members of the
legislature and now propose the
most sweeping and drastic legisla
tion in the world for dealing with
disturbers. One bold stroke at
what seemed a- threat ,to public
rights and public order the police
strike at Boston has made a pres
idential candidate!
Deep Instinct Underlying.
' It is not the way they do it in
England, nor yefNn France; it is
our way, and must be so accepted
and dealt with.
It is our way, and behind it, ruth:
less as it is, and little as many of us
can approve the methods employed,
there is a deep instinct that the sel
fish forces of cliques, groups, inter
ests, whether of labor or capital, in
American life have grown too
strong, and that "there must," as
one leader expressed it, "be some
kind of a new-deal."
The causes of the present disor
der and unrest reach far back and
deep down; the war merely acceler
ated developments already under
way. At the bottom lies the popu
lar discontent, which has been grow
ing for years, with the economic ar
rangements of society; a feeling that
they are unjust and undemocratic;
a feeling that while there have been
enormous developments in machin
ery and business organization, the
social and political structure has not
kept pace with them. This feeling
is not peculiar to America; it is
world-wide.
Someone has said that the 'ereat-
est invention of the "wonderful cen
tury" was not the steam engine, or
the dynamo, or wireless telegraphy,
but that extraordinary and potent
device, unrestricted social organiza
tion. , '
Groups everywhere that felt oo-
pressed, or wanted protection, or
privilege, organized to get it Capi
talists organized, combined, trusti
fiedand succeeded beyond the
dreams of avarice. Labor organized
and became powerful. Prohibition
ists organized and dried up the
country. Women organized and got
the vote. Voluntary social organiza
tion has for the last 25 years been
humanity s magic wand. It , would
do anything! It has built up a won
derful technique of its own. It
knows how to get monev. use Droo-
aganda, influence"" elections, force
legislators.. It is a wonderful tool-
used sometimes for good ourooses.
sometimes for wholly selfish purposes.
Old and New Contrasted.'
Consider more specifically labor
organization. I remember well the
little, dismal, smoky rooms over sa
loons that used to represent the
typical labor union headquarters of
25 years ago. I thought of the con
trast the other , day when I . visited
the fine hall it "tost several hundred
thousand dollars built by the Street'
Car Men's union of Chicago.
Once the movement demonstrated
its success in improving the condi
tions of liie for working men and
it was the only way they had it
spread' like wildfire. I was amazed
the other day to look at the lists of
unions affiliated with one . of the
principal city central bodies; school
teachers, actors, newspaper, writers,
architects, nurses. They are dll com
ing in. Public employes are com
ing in: policemen, postmen. The
movement is even, penetrating the
rarified atmosphere where authors
and college professors are supposed
to dwell.
I received a communication the
other day from the Authors' league,
of which 1 am a member, that read
strangely like many a trade union
document only the pantsmakers
and hodcarriers have had longer ex
perience and know better how to do
it We authors have gone at the
business 'n our "labor union" of
standardizing contracts making bet
ter terms with our employers the.
predatory and shamefully plutocratic
publishers and working for more
pay and better living conditions.
"As a result of six years of un
remitting effort," remarks this docu
ment, "the author enjoys a new
standing and a greater security thrfh
at any other time, in the history of
the profession." ;
You see what our union does!
We're better off than erer Shake
speare was, or Dickens or Thacker
ay, or Cervantes, or Goethe. We're
securer; we have a new standing,
and organization did it!
College Man'-s Point.
I live in a college town, and all
about are college professors. They
complain bitterly of cold and hunger
and long hours of work and low
pay; I hear that their living condi
tions are being investigated not only
by the government but by at least
one foundation.' The union is the
only remedy!
As I say, this tendency toward
group organizations has gone to
great lengths in our society. It has
been a" powerful centrifugal influ
ence, disintegrating our life into
thousands of small, warring groups,
societies, factions each seeking its
own advancement, its own security,
regardless of anything else. This
has applied to both employers and
employes.
One reason why political life has.
reached such a low ebb in America
why politics attracts so poor a
quality of leadership is because
vital men who really want some
thing done feel surr of getting it
through outside Organizations than
through the indirect and cumbrous
machinerjf politics.
In its essence this strong, crude
impulse toward a new public order
represents a powerful reaction from
these disintegrating tendencies.
For years we were hammering
selfish capitalistic organizations
we are still at it and now we are
hammering labor organizations. We
don't want either Gary or Gompers
to boss us; to control our lives or
force their will upon us. v
We have had one or two recent
object lessons of stunning force.
The entire 110,000,000 of us have
seen our business paralyzed, our
production cut off in the steel in
dustry because Gary and Gompers
could not agree. The 110,000,000
of us have suffered still more acutely
because 400,000 of us who are coal
miners stopped producing a basic
necessity of life. There was never
demonstration of group interest
Deiore in America such an acute
against public interest. No wonder
the American giant is angry
blindly angry and beats about in
a kind of berserkian rage not at
all particular as to what heads he
hits, or how.
A New Sense Abroad.
If this rage, however, were the
only expression of the public inter
est, the outlook would be dark in
deed. But it is not. While there
are powerful forces using the fine
burst of passion for a "new ideal,"
for "public rights," for "law . and
order" in America to serve their
own selfish interests using it as
a smoke-screen to conceal their
own purposes there is, it seems to
me. a new sense abroad that law
and order must be based upon a
real understanding of the new con
ditions and upon a solid foundation
of justice.
Never before has there, been such
a number of inquiries from all sides
and by all kinds of organizations; or
such a desire to get at the truth. We
have had government inquiries one
commission now sitting which have
aroused unusual public interest. It is
nothing that, the presidents' first
commission failed; at least, it failed
dramatically, with the protagonists
of the opposing issues clearly re
vealed. On what may be called the side of
the capitalists the awakening is
marked. The other day in the office
of oneof the notable figures of Wall
Street where one would least ex
pect to find such a sentimental saw
framed and hanging on the wall
this quotation from a speech by Mr.
Asquith, delivered in January of last
year:
"The old system has broken down.
War was it? final declaration of in
solvency. New factors are at work.
Science not only has said its last
words, but is airly to be described
as still only lisping the alphabet of
anihilation."
New Methods Devised.
Organizations such as chambers of
commerce and merchants' associa
tions have been working on the
problem. They all begin with the as
sumption that the old system is at
least cracking, if not, as Asquith
says, broken down, and that new
methods must be devised to meet the
situation. I have before me. for ex
ample, the report of the Merchants'
association ot New York, which at
tributes the difficulty to the greed
and blindness of both groups labor
and capitaland suggests the follow;
ing remedies which are very differ
ent in tenor from those which wonld
have been recommended by a similar
organization a few years ago:
"The recognition by both employ
ers and employes that the determina
tion to achieve national prosperity
rather than to enforce maximum
selfish returns should be the control
ling motive in industry. '
"The establishment of a recog
nized and permanent method of con
ference between the employer and
his employes.
"The limitation of the economic
law of supply and demand as a ba
sis of labor policy by the utilization
of a more human doctrine."
The Chamber of Commerce df the
United States has also made public
the careful report of a committee
which lays down 13 "principles of
industrial relations, a Among these
principles are the following:
"The public interest requires ad
justment of industrial relations by
peaceful methods.
Right to Organize.
"The right of workers to organizer-is
as clearly recognized as that
of any other element or part of the
community.
"Industrial harmony and prosper
ity .will be most "effectually pro
moted by adequate representation of
the parties in interest."
The church, which represents a
great conservative opinion in Amer
ica, is moving as never before, try
ing, to understand and meet the new
conditions and problems. In one
churchI know on a recent Sunday
morning prt large men's class dis
cussed "The Relation Between
Wag'es and Production;" another
was studying Prof. Rauschenbusch's
book on social problems in the light
of Christian teaching, and a wom
en's class was considering "The
Health of the Community."
One great church movement has
been spending tens of thousands of
dollars making an investigation ot
the steel strike, and one need only
refer to the social reconstruction
i program of the Federal Council of
Uiurches in America and the pro
nouncement of he Catholic war
council of the United States to be
convinced of the deep and serious
interest of the churches in this prob
lem. Stand of Church.
In a recent statement the Unita
rian Church of America says:
"The claim to a more equitable
distribution of the profits of in
dustry is not only clamorous but
just." ' "
A sense that the old system is
unjjust and needs revision per
meates all groups of our society.
A prominent business man took
from his pocket the other day and
read to me this paragraph:
"The rapid growth of great cities,
tle enormous masses of immigrants
(many of them ignorant of our lan
guage) and the gteatly increased
complications of -life have created
conditions under, which the- provi
sions for obtaining justice which
were formerly sufficient are suffii
cient no longer. I think the true
criticism which we should make
upon our own conduct is that we
have been so busy about our in
dividual affairs that we have been
slow to appreciate the changes of
conditions which to so great an ex
tent have put justice beyond the
reach of the poor."
"What bolshevik said that?" he
inquired, and answered his own
question, "It was Elihu Root."
He was quoting from a new and
exhaustice study of the "present
denial of justice to the poor," made
by so respectable a body as the
Carnegie foundation.
Not only public and business and
religious bodies are awakening, but
labor groups as well. Labor is learn-
i ing that it has public as well as spe
i cial interests, that to a large extent
it is the public. I heard a speech
at the convention of the Labor
party at Chicago in November by
Glenn E. Plumb, whose name is
connected with a new plan, the
Plumb plan, for railroad control. He
set forth the new situation in a way
which seemed to startle some of the
labor leaders there assembled. He
said that in the early days of or
ganized labor craft groups could
; get together, and by organization
lorce up wages, the cost of which
the employers promptly passed
along to the public. But what is
the public? asked Mr. Plumb, and
went on to show that a large ma
jority of the public was madj up
of wage earners or wage earners'
families, so that when a strong
unio got a raise in wages most of it
was paid by other wage earners. As
more and more labor organizations
got into the field, the more wages
were forced up, the faster grew the
process by which increasing wages
for one group chased up the living
costs of all the other groups.
Idea of Plumb.
He might also have said, but did
not, that not only increasing wages,
but lessening production whether
caused by the limitation of output
by labor unions, the inefficiency of
employers or by strikes or lockouts,
had to be met by the public, a ma
jority of which was also wage
earners. In short, we are . all the
public toward each separate greedy
group, whether of workers or em
ployers. Mr. Plumb's idea is that there has
get to be a "new deal, a new ar
rangement of society"; he has a
"plan" for working it out, so has
the new labor, party, so have the
socialists. I am not here entering
iiito the merits or weaknesses of
any of these plans or proposals,
whether coming from labor or capi
talistic organizations, or churches
or other public bodies, but tailing
attention to them as evidences of
the wide awakening to the serious
ness of the problem and the effort to
grapple with rtt.
A new note was also prominent
in the so-called 'bill of rights" is
sued by a group of 119 uwron lead
ers at Washington on December
12. There is a clear attempt to meet
the new public criticism of labor or
ganization, especially regarding pro
ductivity and efficiency, by the pro
posal of new remedies for the or
ganization of industry. No group
any longer dares , leave the public
out of account.
All this grouping for a better un
derstanding of conditions, this as
sumption oil all sides that there
ought to be more justice, more de
mocracy in our industrial ' relation
ships however uncertain yet of spe
cific applications of new remedies
is surely the most hopeful elements
in the present unrest.
New Swiss Envoy Here
New York, Jan. 19. Among the
passengers arriving on the French
liner La Lorraine today was Marc
Peter, the new Swiss minister to
Washington, who will succeed Hans
Sulzer, who recently .resigned.
W. H. Taylor New President
Of the Omaha Gas Company
Succeeds Late Frank T. Hamilton Also fleeted
Member of Board Fred P. Hamilton Becomes
Chairman of the Board, Newly Created Office.
At the annual meeting of the
Omaha Gas company held yestcday
morning, the office of chairman of
the board was created and Fred P.
Hamilton, who has been a member
of the board fora number of years,
was elected to the new office. Mr.
Hamilton succeeds his brother, the
late Frank T. Hamilton, as the rep
resentative of the Hamilton inter
ests in the Gas company.
William H. Taylor was elected a
member of the board and also presi
dent, these two positions having
been made vacant by the death of
Frank-T. Hamilton.
George W. Clabaugh continues as
vice president and secretary; in
which capacity he has served for
maffy years.
Mr. Taylor brings to his new posi
tion an extended experience in the
gas business. Graduated in 1902
from Stephens Institute of Tech
nology, HobokenvN. J., with de
gree of mechanical engineer, prac
tically his entire time since then has
been spent in the gas business. He ,
has had to do with the construction
or operation of gas plants, at Ro
chester, Schenectady, N. Y.; in New
York City, at Baltimore, St. Paul,
Duluth, 1 Cincinnati, Indianapolis,
Des Moines and Burlington.
Des Moines "and Burlington, and at
Karrisburgh and Ardmore, Pa., and
Gloversville,N. Y.
Mr. Taylor first came to Omaha
in 1907 and was here for about a
year and a half in charge of the
manufacture of gas for the Omaha
Gas company. After an absence of
three or four years, spent in con-1
struction work in other places, he
William XTaylo?
Policeman Worried
As He Watches Crowd
Of Women Gathering
The traffic policeman at Sixteenth
j,and Harney streets paced uneasily
: to and fro as he watched a crowd oi
women gathering at the two en
trances of the Burgess-Nash stor
yesterday; morning. He had been in
structed that large congregations of
people should be dispersed, especial
ly if they blocked the sidewalks but
this seemed to be a very orderly
sort of gathering.
Still, it would pay to investigate,
he thousht. He did, and found that
instead of being a militant suffragist
meeting, as he half suspected the -women
were waiting for the store to
open.
"They are selling women's ready-to-wear
suits at $10," one woman, ex
plained, producing a copy of The
Sunday Bee, in which the sale had
been advertised.
An hour a(tcr the store had opened
every siiit had been sold, according
to Miss Mary Marsdcn, advertising
manager.
"It is simply an example of the
power of advertising," Miss Mars
dcn dc-.lared. "I'm glad we featured
I the sal- in The Bee. It certainly
brought results. Perhaps Thrift
week had something to do with the
eagerness with which women bought
the suits, but it was advertising that
informed them the sale .was to be
held."
returned to Omatta in the fall of
1912 as manager of the Omaha Gas
company, which position he has
filled continuously to the present
time.
MR. BUTTINSKI
We have never tried to play the
role of Mr. Buttinski. We are clothes
cleaners exclusively and - exclusive
clothes cleaners. No side lines here.
CAREY CLEANING CO.
"37 Years in Omaha"
RUPTURED?
TRY THIS FREE
New Invention Sent on 30 Days'
. Tj-ial Without Expense to You.
Simply send me your name and I will
send you ray new copyrighted rupture
book and measurement blank. When you
return the blank I will send ysu my iew
invention for rupture. When it arrives
put it on and -wear ' it. Put it to every
test you can. think of. The harder the
test the better you will like it. You will
wonder how you ever ot alone with the
old style cruel spring trusses or belts with
leg straps of torture. Your own grood,
common sense and your own doctor will
tell .you it the only way in which you
can "ever expect a cure. After wearing
it SO days, if it is not entirely satisfac
tory in every way if it ia not easy and
comfortableit you cannot actually see
your rupture getting better, an4 if not
convinoed that a cure is merely a ques
tion of time, just return it and you are
out nothing. Any rupture appliance sent
on 30 days' trial without rxpense to you
is worth a trial. Tell your ruptured
friends of this. EASYHOLD CO., 01
Kach Bldj, Kansas City, Hot - - -
0, S. GIVES TRIP
TO WASHINGTON
FOR BESTESSAYS
School Children May Compete
On Subject "The Benefit
of Enlisting In the -Army."
To the three boysor girls, re
gardless of race or color, having
the best essay on the subject, "What
Are the Benefits of Enlistments' in
the United States Army?" a free
trip to Washington will be given,
with all expenses paid by the gov
ernment.
The contest is under the auspices
of the War department and is open
to all the school children in the
United States.
The principal of each school will
appoint a board of three judges to
select one essay as the entry from
this school and will forward it to
the nearest recruiting station no
later than February 27.
Silver Cup Awarded.
The officer in charge of the re
cruiting station will select the best
essay submitted to him and will
STCMACH GOOD AS
NEW; FOUR DOC
TORS GAVE HER UP
Mr. Hendricks, Bedfast Five
Months, Was Able to Work
in Two Weeks.
T lost a.ii.t.a fr ffV TTIrtnthS
I ,(M iaov ' .. - - - - - - '
-.1.1. . U V.nnra1 Irnnhlo CmiM
Willi BWUIttl-W nuu "
not turn myself in bed without help. I
was under the care of four doctors, and
they gave me up. men Mr. sinis, me
druggist, persuaded my husband to try a
I A Mnirct TTiviiilamn. 1 had onlv
UUbblV VIA .'"I.. . -
taken it two days until I was sitting up
in bed, and in two weens i was aoing my
own work. When I began taking it, I
weighed only 70 pounds: now 1 weigh
inn ..H1. " Ma MHrv Honririeks. flOO
1 , V UUIIUD.
Litchfield Road. Owensboro, Ky.
Thousands or people wno nave suuereu
m fvnn, eTna..li anil hnwel troubles.
have found relief, almost from the first
dose of Milks Emulsion. T. And it is real,
lasting benefit. .
Milks Emulsion is a pieasani, nutri
tive food and a corrective medicine. It re
stores healthy, natural bowel action, do
ing away witn ail neea oj yiu u
physics. It promotes appetite and quick-
(U. Altrnaivm lKani 1T1 fthaOe to
assimilate food. As a builder of flesh
and strength, Milks Emulsion is strong
ly recommended to those whom sickness
IIVB .ranciim, i.... ... v ...
resisting and repairing the effects of wast
ing diseases. t;nronic stomacn irouoie anu
constipation are promptly relieved usually
in one day.
and so palatable that it is eaten with a
spoon like ice cream. v
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 results, your
money will ' be promptly refunded. Price
60c and $1.20 per bottle. The Milks
Emulsion Co., Terre Haute, Ind. Sold by
druggists everywhere.
award, a silver cup to the school
sending in the best essay.
The" recruiting officer will then
send the essays to Washington and
a board of judges consisting of Sec
retary of War Baker, Gen. Peyton
C. March and Gen. John J. Pershing,
will announce the name of the three
boys and girls who, on February 20,
wrote the best essays. The winner
will be entitled to a trip to Wash
ington accompanied by parents or
guardians. y
Conditions Arrive Soon.
The winner of the first prize will
receive a gold medal, second prize
a silver medal and third prize a
bronze medal. In addition to the
medals three silver cups will be sent
by the War department to the
schools represented by the three
winners.
A copy of the conditions of the
contest will be sent to all the
schools in Omaha sometime during
the week.
Condition of Mrs. Updike
Reported as Satisfactory
The condition of Mrs. N. B. Up
dike was reported yesterday as sat
is factjry. She underwent an opera
tion last Friday at Clarkson hospital.
TODAY'S AID TO BEAUTY
Hair is by far the most conspic
uous thing about us and is proba
bly the most easily damaged by
bad or careless treatment. If we
are very careful in hair washing,
we will have virtually no hair trou
bles. An especially fine shampoo for
this weather, one that brings out all
the natural beauty of the hair;
that dissolves and entirely removes
all dandruff,' excess oil and dirt;
can easily be used at trifling ex
pense, by simply dissolving a tea
spoonfu of canthrox (which you
can get at any druggist's) in a cup
of hot water. This makes a full
cup of shampoo liquid enough so
it is easy to apply it to' all the hair
instead of just the top of the head.
This chemically dissolves all im
purities and creates a soothing,
cooling lather. Rinsing leaves the
scalp spotlessly clean, soft and
pliant, while! the hair takes on the
glossy richness of natural color,
also a fluffiness which makes it
seem much heavier than it is. After
a canthrox shampoo, arranging the
hair is a pleasure.
STOP
ITCHING
1
Zemo the Clean, Antiseptic
Liquid, Gives Prompt Relief
There ia one safe, dependable treat
ment that relieves itching torture and
that cleanses and soothes the skin.
Ask any druggist for a 35c or$l bottle
ci Zemo and apply it as directed. Soon
you will find that irritations, pimples;
blackheaeis, eczema, blotches,ringwona
and similar skin troubles will disappear.
Zemo. the penetrating, satisfying
jquid, is all that is needed, for it
Danishes most skin eruptions, makes
ha skin soft, smooth and healthy.
Tbe E. W. Rose Con Cleveland, Q.
Piles-Fistula--Gured With
out the Use-of the Knife
No Chloroform, No Ether. Examination free to all
DOCTOR F. M. HAHN 7
401 Paxton Block.
Hour: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., Daily. Evenings, 7 to 8 P. M.
Sundays, 11 A. M. to 1 P. M. Only
iff
Phone Douglas 2793
j WeWi Hioip for Wxturfttl
OMAHA
PRINTING
COMPANY
swuras umist nil mi
funs ttnets I !1
I omu imim I'l
u if l?rxz
Commercial Printers -Lithographers - Steeioie Embossers
fcOOSCUAr.ocviccs
DYSPEPSIA
ANDBUSINESS
They Don't HitchTo Be Fit
and Yet Eat What You Like,
Follow Your Meals With
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab
lets. No Gas, Sourness,
Nnr Hoavinpcc nf .
I1VI 'MvUTilivug VI (
Indiqestion.
Business men and women are apt
to fall for the peculiar theories ad-
. e i rjj:. r... It
vanceo oy ioou iuuuims. oui u
isn't what you eat but what you di
gest and assimilate that, should
command thought and attention.
You may eat fried eggs, sausage,
hani or bacon for breakfast, and
feel tip-top at lunch time if you
follow the meal with a Stuart's
Dyspepsia Tnblet. Or if yourstpm- '
ach is full of gas, sour, or has a
gnawing sensation- or neaviness in- k
stead of the keen sense of appetite.
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets relieve
these distresses and introduce you ,
to the next meal or a day's work j .
with a quiet, restful stomach.
Many physicians prescribe these,
tablets for kidgestion, dyspepsia,
and other digestive disorders, as
they contain harmless properties
that york with an alkaline effect s
just as the stomach does when in
perfect health. 'They- are particular
ly adapted for business men and
women, who are bften called upon
to discuss important business 'mat
ters at a luncheon or dinner.
Get a Sfl-cent box of Stuart's Dys
pepsia Tablets at any drug store, -eat
all you want of what you like
with no gassy Stomach, no sour
belching, bilious distress, no coated
tongue nor heavy, drowsy feeling
after eating. , '
Important to all Women
Readers of this Paper.
Thousands upon thousands of
women have kidney or bladder
trouble and never suspect Jt. v
Women's complaints often prove
to be nothing else . but kidney
trouble, or the result of kidney or
bladder disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy
condition, they may cause the other
orgrans to become diseased.
You may suffer pain in the back,
headache and loss of ambition.
Poor health makes you nervous;
Irritable and may be despondent; it
makes anv one so.
But hundreds of women claim
that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by
restoring health to the kidneys,
proved to be just the remedy needed
to overcome such conditions. '
Many send for a sample bottle to
see what Swamp-Root, the great
kfclney, liver and bladder medicine,
will do for them. By enclosing ten
cents to Dr.- Kilmer & 'Co., Bing
hnmtnn. Ttf Y. von itihv receive
sample size bottle by Parcel Post.
You can purchase medium and large
size bottles at all drug stores.
KEEP URIC ACID
eunpiNTS
Tells Rheumatism Sufferers to
; Eat Less Meat and Take
Salts.
Rheumatism is easier to avoid
than to cure, states a well known au
thority. We are advised to dress
warmly; keep the feet dry; avoid
exposure; eat less meat, but drink
plenty of good water.
Rheumatism is a direct result of
eating too much meat and other
rich foods that produce uric acid
which is absorbed into the blood. It .
is the function of the kidnevs . to
filter this acid from the blood and . '
cast it out in the urine; the pores .
of the skin are also asmeanstof
freeing the blood of this impurity.
In damp and chilly cotrj weather the
skin pores are closed '" forcing
the kidneys to do double worR, n.
become weak and slueeish and fail
. . .,:. . . . i J , .,.
to eliminate ine uric acm wnicn
keeps accumulating and circulating
through the system, eventually set-'
tling in the joints and muscles caus
ing stiffness, soreness and pain
called rheumatism.
At the first twinge of rheumatism
get irom any pharmacy about tour
ounces of Jad Salts; put a table
spoonful in a glass of water and
drink before breakfast each morning
for a week. This is said to elim
inate uric acid by stimulating the
kidneys to norma! action, thus rid
ding the blood of these impurities.
Jad Saltsjs inexpensive, harmless
and is made from the acid of grapes
and lemon juice, combined with
lithia and is used with excellent '
results by thousands of folks wha
are subject to rheumatism. Her
you have a pleasant effervescent
lithia-water drink which helps over
come uric acid andJs beneficial tl. .
your kidneys as'welL . ..