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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1920)
THE BEE: OMAHA, WEUKKSPAY, JANUARY 28, 1920. Lincoln Bureau of The PLAN TO MAKE A REFERENDUM MORE DIFFICULT r - -Provision Safeguards Spirit Of Act by. r Requfring Signs to Go Before An Official. Lincoln,' Neb., Jan. 27. (Spe cial.) Action by the constitutional convention to make it increasingly difficult to invoke the referendum seems likely in view of sentiment developing in the assembly Tuesday morning. . The convention went into com mittee of the whole and considered the initiative and referendum as a special order. The report of the con vention committee, reducing tne percentages of signers required for the- initiative and referendum, was nresented and then a series of amendments, proposed. The dele gates adjourned until Wednesday morning without final action. To Lessen Signers. , . After the report of the committee o'u initiative and referendum had treen sumitted, Delegate Walter L. Anderson submitted an amendment, embracing the same subject itiatter contained in his proposal 'oh the subject, which had been killed by the committee. The Andeorr pro posal still further reduced the .pert centaees reauired to invoke the mi itiative and referendum; as follows; To Initiate a Law Committee report, 7 per cent; Anderson amend ment, 3 plr cent. .. . For Constitutional Amendment-- Cnmmittee renort - 10 . oer. cent:. Andef son amendment. 4:fttf. cent - rmrt.-5 -oer centr-Anderson -amend ment 3 per cent. To Prevent Abuse. Delegate. Anderson . called . atten- ijuii IU .me laki tuai - twu0 . v carried two vital prov'isidnVto'safe Kuard the spirit and intent of the initiative and" referendum act and to prevent its abuse through reduced percentages of the required signers. Under, the provisions of. the- An derson proposal, every signer of the petitions would be required to sign before some public official. It also incorporated more rigid pro visions as to attestations of peti tions. The report of the committee was defended by Delegate Sidner of Dodge county, chairman, who ex plained it in iletail. ... . Claims Husband Has Kignt to. make wire Live. Among Snakes TT 1 :-L. t C--il xmcoin, ico-, Jan. bi . yjyc.ia.i. Matthew Stuart Thompson .con tends that the" husband has the f ight to choose the family domicile,in a brief appealing to the Nebraska su preme court from a divorce decree granted his wife, Edith, in Omaha, on the ground that she had been forced to live among rattlesnakes md mice in a tent in the Nevada deserts. , Thompson argues that she knew hat he was a miner and that his in ierests were in Nevada mines. They were married in 190S and have one son. j Thompson charges her with taking the money he sent her to return to Nevada, after h(t badiittedOUt a suitable city home f or-.her,; and us ing it to get 'a divorce:;'- Wants Convention to Meet Every Alternate Saturday Lincoln, Neb., Jan 27.--(Special.) Delegate Junkin . Tuesday intro duced a resolution in the consti tutional convention calling for seS' sions of the assembly on alternating Saturdays for the remainder of the term. The ' resolution went over a day under the rules. . ." .'. don't Crank Your Htad Off iicr i uiHirmn urine wtib n in nil 1 1 ubv iihrubn, Mr. Tcrd Ownr Thonitndi ot orator triu Ford owner are now iwing this sim pl dafrico, which attaches to the mani fold. ;Hakea tha crankip of your ear at finpla a matter on cold winter morn, inaa ak an hot summer mornlnaa. This little starter starta tha ear on tha first turn over, limply dampen the wick with gasolene and touch m match to it. It burns just lens snonsh to heat your mani fold and put yeur gasolene in shape for ignition. If your dealer doesn't handle this product tend us SI. 00 and we will mat It to yen. Money refunded if mot sat isfied. : A3 Dealers $1 AO All Dealers Gard-Hawklns Company Franklin. Neb. kxNUXATED HCuP9 MsKO Strong, sainfy lor and Healthy, BeauUfni Women kits' . (M Dm Co Shaman lteCoana P. A. Barrows, Correspondent" Eastern Paper Predicts Pershing Will Have Four States In the Convention Washington, New York and Chicago Dailies Record - Significance of Rising Pershing Boom and Decline of Wood's Pershing Would be Stronger In Con gress Than Any Other Man Mentioned. Lincoln.Neb., Tan. 27. (Special.') Personal friends of General Persh ing and those interested in his can didacy for president believe there is just cause for the optimism mani fested on their part regarding his ultimate election, ( especially since the Pershing boom formally invaded the east. Canvassing the situation among the political candidates to date there are many signs m the political bushes showing a direction of the winds' favorable to the Nebraska general. Chief among the indica tions, perhaps, have' been the . per sistent reports in the Washington, New York and Chicago newspapers in which the significance of the Pershing boom has - been empha sized, .','. ' "; Will Have Four States. The Brooklyn (N. Y.) Eagle, re cording the political pulsebeat in the Washington vicinity, also claims discovery in announcing the ' rise and rapid progress of the Pershing movement .at an hour in which the Wood boom took on an obvious de cline. C. G. Brainerd.,;, writing from Washington to the' Eagle, sees signs of-trouble- among .the- forces pro mating .the.- interests of- General Leonard Wood. At the same 'time, he'-says,: senators and ' representa tives in the capital look kindly to- ;-wanh the..candid?cy .of .the -gresteH geefaJ, .Mui- suggests, : too, - that P5rsRing;'"vefy " probably "will be given the' "delegations' of" Nebraska, Wyoming. Montana and Missouri, at the June convention, for a starter. This corroborates, in part, the state ment of Mark Woods, chairman of the Pershing organization,, that Gen eral Pershing would have ."more pledged delegatesat the Chicago convention than any other candi date. ,i - Political writers and "observers in .Washington meanwhile are. of the opinion that in the final showdown the race for the republican nomina tion will lie between General Wood and Pershing, according to a state ment in the Baltimore Sun. Between Army Men. If the choice is to lie between the two army men, there is a greater hope for the Pershirtgf forces, says the Sun,, in reviewing the rival careers of the two soldier gentle men. "The pitting of these two dis tinguished ..officers against each, other," reads the statement, "there fore, naturally producess a pictur esque situation. They have-been pro fessional rivals for more than , 20 years, and to find them in the great vuuirsi lln uic picsiucijty is a ire- mendously interesting development' in th political history of . the coun try: - ; -.. There are reasons," however, be yond the military record of the two men which, no doubt, favor General Pershing in republican circles: They are reasons influenced bv the po litical situation in this country and by our new interesting national re lations. Politically, the president of the United States for the next term of office, will need a united support from congress, if he is to effect any decided results toward recon Vaccines From Old Strains Worthless In Present Epidemic Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 27 (Special.) The same1 quarantine' rules that prevailed for the "flu", epidemic last year have again been put' into ef fect for all the cases of the present outbreak, by Dr. W. H. Wilson, state epidemiologist. A different "bacterial flora"from that of the 1918 epidemic has been discovered so that vaccines from the old strains are virtually worthless, according to the bulletin. There were 154 cases of ; "flu" in Nebraska up to last Saturday morn ings at which time' the following cases were reported:' Omaha, 71; deaths, two: Lincoln, 9; Lawrence, 10; Big Springs, 4; Neligh, 5; Henry, 13; Crete, 4; Holdrege, . 8: Papil lion, 4; Gresham, 14; Bloomtield, 12. McKelvie to Open the Economy Campaign Here . Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 27. (Special.) The state economy drive will be officially ' opened by Governor Mc Kelvie in Omaha with an address in the Y. W. C. A. auditorium the after noon -of Feb. 5, according to Mrs. Lnarles u. Kyan, state director. The campaign in the state at large "will begin Feb. 1. with a week of mass meetings and public speaking in the interest of thrift. Howard Rescues Bill To Penalize Non-Voter Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 27. (Special.) Delegate Jerry Howard of Doug las was successful Tuesday, morn ing in rescuing one of his pet meas ures, which had been consigned to the graveyard by the committee on rights and suffrage. By a laree ma jority the assembly voted to place tne proposal, wo. liu, out on general file. The measure is as follows: T"The legislature may prescribe penalties for failing, .neglecting or refusing to vote at any general elec tion." : Eleven proposals in all were head e4 for the graveyard. McKelvie Honors Requisition. Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 27. (Special.) A requisition from Governor Cox of Ohio for the return to Logan county, of that state, of Homer C. Savage, alias Fred U. Bissell, held on a forgery charge in Omaha, and wanted in Ohio for child abandon ment, has been granted by Governor MCA.elvi? Omaha Bee struction, and it will require a man with a following among both demo crats and republicans to secure "such unity. - Gencral Pcrshinc could secure a more united support from congress possioiy man any otner man so tar mentioned for the republican ticket He is followed by persons of all political faiths and has none of the thorough political enemies in con gress which his opponents for the presidency could expect to encoun ter in carrying on the work of re construction. For Country, Not Parties. Under both democratic and re publican administrations Peshing nas Deen entrusted witn some ot tne highest responsibilities ever given to any military man, and he has always worked faithfully ana successfully, without regard to the party under whose directions he was carrying on his duties. This record has won for Pershing the recommendation that he works for his country, not for ' parties, and it is this recom mendation that could be expected to enable him to unite both 'of the great political forces in an adminis tration of reconstruction surpassing; that accomplished by any president yet entrusted with the destinies .of the nation. ... la. the, line .. of, :.hit..experience8' Pershing has-haa an opportunity, to qualify Wmselffor president!! re sponsibilities. He- has Handled Afnerican military and civil affairs in the Philippines with a high degree of success. He has represented our government in handling the Mexican difficulties,;- and" probably: under stands the underlying causes of our troubles there as much as any other one man today. , Has Studied Japan. ' , ' Pershing was stationed in Japan under Roosevelt's administration for a- period of time that allowed him to study the institutions and the government of that country, and he knows Japan's military possibilities thoroughly as a result of his oppor tunity to follow the Japanese army at the front in the Russo-Japanese i war,, acting as a military observer for the United States. His report on the organization and training of the Japanese army, together with a review of their system of fighting and tactics, has been characterized as the most com plete and exhaustive report of its nature ever filed with-lhe. war- office of the United States, i i When called by President 'Wilson to handle our participation in the wa"r on the' side oflhe Tillies, Persh- ng was given opportunity to fur ther his understanding of the com-, plexities of Europe and the Orient, through dealings with the repre sentatives of the allied powers in a capacity that enabled him to-ob- i3in a Keen insignj into political ana economic situations all over . the world. In the light of broad, fundamental experiences with the nations of the world, Pershing has equipped .him self witn a Knowledge ot conditions surpassing that of any other man suggested for the republican nom ination. Governor Replies in . Sharp Letter to the Criticism of Mayor Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 27. (Special.) Mayor Ed P. Smith's attack on the code bill in a recent speech in Omaha is- answered by Governor S. R. McKelvie in a communication in part as follows: "You seem to have overlooked something in your reference to the unbounded power-that is given to the governor by the code. The code gives no power at alL It only gives authority and fixes responsibility. The governor points out that the cabinet form of government has been in force in Illinois nearly two years, and has been recommended by the "governors of 14 slates. He says fhat not a single constitutional officer has been eliminated' by the bill, and that it has saved the state an average of $10,000 a month. In closing he suggests that whn the mayor starts making comments, he keep "somewhere within the facts." Candidate for Representative. Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 27.. (Special.) Charles F. Reed, lieutenant in the army during-.the late war, has filed with Secretary of State D. M. Ams berry as a candidate for state' rep resentative from his district at th? April primaries. He lives in Logan county and is a republican. Nasty Colds Ease First dose of 'Tape's Cold Compound" relieves dis tress Three doses break up colds No quinine! Don't stay stuff ed-up! Quit blow ing and snuffljngl A dose of 'Tape's Cold Compound" taken every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks up a cold and' ends all grippe misery. , The first dose ooens cloesred-tm nostrils and ai passages of bead; South Side Father Alleges Family . Would "Freeze Him Out" The wife of Tacob Tarpolsky and his two sons, Frank and Charles, had the father before the bouth Mile police court on a charge of dis turbance, alleging he used bad lan guage and violence.- The boys said they supported a family of nine, including the father, who they say, spent what little money he made occasionally buying intoxicating liquor. ' "Jake" said he was the victim of an attempted' "freeze out" game on the part of his wife and two older boys. The court put decision of the case over until March 1. Sister Charges Brother With Stealing Jewelry Mrs. Kate Matchka. 1910 Y street, reported to the South Side police Tuesday, that a.lavalierre set with a diamond and surrounded by six pearls, and a ruby ring, all valued at $70, were stolen from her home Saturday. Her brother, Emil Grapek, .19 years old, rooming at the home of his: sister, was arrested Monday, night by Detectives Herdzina and Baughman, who say Grapek admitted taking the jewelry and selling it to Luther Vincent, colored porter, 4718 South Twenty seventh street. Thecase will be tried; Wednesday morning. South Side Man Dies. ' Frank Gazdic, 38 years old, died yesterday morning at the resident of Frank Mindjek. 3363 T street The. funeral, will ' take place at 2 Thursday afternoon, from the Mindjek -residence- to St.; Peter and yesterday." Tnorniiig at. the residence cemetery.- - ; South Side Brevities For txiess and hauling of. any kind cali George LUri South 12!1. St Mary Court No. ' 577, 'Woman' Catho lic Order of Foresters, will. Meet Wednes day at 8 p.-m-t.-.fit:Marjr. school hall; Superior Lodge. '.Ko. 193, Degree of Honor, will givo a card party with games and prlies Wednesday at Odd Fellows hall, A complete foreign fiehange depart ment. Money sent to ail parts of Europe. Live Stock Natlonr.l Eank, Junction 2lth and N Sts. , A complete foreign . exchange depart ment. Money sent to all parts of Europe. Live Stock National Bank, Junction Twenty-fourth and N streets. Adv. The Kensington of Upchurch Lodge No. ?, Degree of Honor, will meet with Mrs. Fred Lightfoot, 2S23 South Twenty. third street, Thursday afternoon. The women of the South Side Christian church will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. L. Shainholtz, 4730 South Nineteenth street. A number of books on live stock, added to the South Side branch library, include a hand book on breeds of live' stock and western live stock management. George Burke, 611 Bancroft street, was arrested Monday night at Sixth and Pierce streets by Sergeant Allen on a charge of illegal possession of Intoxicating liquor. His "bond f tSS was declared -for-' felted when he failed to appear in South Side police court. Youth Found Guilty Of Attack On Girls Gets 8-Year Sentence Stanley Fox, 19 years old," in county jail-garb', stood before Dis trict Judge. Redick yesterday and was sentenced to the state oeniten- Itiary. for , eight years. His mother saim rne court Toom-ana wept si lently after the sentence was'pro nounced. He was found guilty by a -jury in district court January 7 of a statutory crime, The complain ants against him wers Eva Turn quist and Belle Anderson, 16-year-old girls. Fox, James O'Hara, Thomas Sul livan and Amos Gorman were charged with taking the two young girls in an automobile late the night of. September 13, 1919, to a lonely road west of the city and there at tacking them. Details which pointed to a plan to assault the young girls were related ' by the girls on the witness stand at the trials of Fox and O'Hara. O'Hara was found guilty also and was sentenced last week to the peni tentiary for one to eight years. Chief Deputy County Attorney Cof fey prosecuted both cases. -Thomas Sullivan, another mem ber of the quartet, fled from the city right after O'Hara was found guilty. .Sullivan, in fleeing, "jumped" -a $S00 bond and aban doned his young wife and three chil dren. , Fox will appeal his , case to the supreme court. He is' under $2,500 bond. Beatrice Pioneer Is Found Dead With Gas Heater Jets Open Beatrice, Neb., Jan. 27. (Special Telegram.) Mrs. Sophia Dole, Be atrice pioneer and one. of the foun ders of the Dole Floral company of this city, was asphyxiated at her home Tuesday. She had been living with Mrs.. Arthur Fletcher, who re turned from a shopping trip down town to find the body of Mrs. Dole lying on the floor. Gas was escap ing irom a small neater in the Toom. From the appearance of the table the woman evidently had been over CQme whjle eating breakfast. She was' born in New York in 1836. and is survived by five children. at stops nose running; relieves head ache, dullness, , feverishness1, sneer ing, soreness, stiffness. 'Tape's Cold Compound" is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance. Tastes nice. Contains no quinine, Insist paPape'sJ Once MAYOR OPPOSES ANY INCREASE OF POWER CO. RATES Says Present Patrons Should Not Bear Burden of Im 1 promevents Detailed Statement Demanded. . Mayor Smith takes issue with the Nebraska Power company in its ar guments Offered yesterday before the citv Council for an inrreasp of 20 nrr cent in electric light and power rates. J..A. C. Kennedy, repreesenting the company, stressed his client's de sire to expend $2,000,000 on improve ments during the next two years. Protect Present Patrons. "The nrespnt natrnne etinnM tint be required to pay for improve ments, me mayor said, a general rule 'of business is that improve ments necessary for extension of business are paid for by increased business. It eenerallv fnllnwi; tliat increased husinpss means Inivoi overhead, expense and lower rates. i uyr argument wouia lead ns to be lieve that rates must increase as your business grows." . Mr. Kennedy stated that the com pany is unable.to care for increased business with present equipment. ' . ine company s application for in creased rates was placed on file. City Commissioner lire's ordinance, pro viding for lower rates, will be called up for discussion before, the city, council committee of the whole next Monday morning.. Want Detailed Statement. The: council will, demand that the company . present a detailed state ment of its operations since 1915 be fore further ; consideration will De given, .to. the application for an in crease of rates. . "The. Chamber of Commerce com mittee -in-1915 reported a valuation of $4,500,000 forvtJie. Jight plant, and I wouldlike to know-just' how much the company has spent-on improve ments since that valuation was made," said Commissioner Ure. "The company is now requiring its patrons to support a valuation of M r f cf ffr i . - ' pio.ow.uuv, wnicn is made up ot the outstanding- bonds, preferred and common stock and short time se curities." - Pleads Guiltv to nnnsnirar.v To Murder Negro; Fined $200 James Shields was fined $200 and costs by District Judge Redick yes- tcrdav (11 hlQ rjtpa nf mltlf... in a charge of conspiracy to murder Will crown, tne negro, lynched by a mob at the court house the night of Sep tember 28, 1919. A charge of first degree' murder,' originally found against him by the grand jury, was dismissed on recommendation of thiat body. Paulist Father Addresses The Knights of Columbus Father B. L. Conway, who is de livering a scries of lectures at the St. Cecilia's Catholic church, 701 North Fortieth street, addressed the Knights' of Columbus last night upon "The Lay Apostate." Th( u "WW My Heart and My Husband . ADELB GARRISON'S New thase of ' Revelations of a VVife-' What Harry Underwood Did for Madge. When I have grown so senile and doddering that my memory fails me altogether I shall be able to forget the motor drive through the woo'd road to Southampton in which Harry Underwood "set the pace." Until then it will be one of the most vivid of my recollections. To him, of course, it was an or dinary speed. But to me it was a Valkyrie-like ride, in which with set teeth and flying locks, my . one. thought was to keep Mr. Under wood's car in view. The nature of the w.inding road made this impossible at "times, hut it would be only a few minutes be fore I caught sight of him again. From the way he kept looking back I judged that though he was "set ting the pace" he was yet keeping strict watch unori mv driving, ac commodating his. ideas of speed to my inexperience, -and this thought was the only solace I had in the dif ficult task I had before me. . For, queer enough, considering the aversion which I had felt , for Harrv Underwood. I now watched him as a child would gaze at a fath er in time of peril. The thought of the man somewhere behind me on the road, the man whom Mr. Un derwood's graphic tongue had pic tured as letting no opportunity sup to sov uoon me, terrified me so com pletely that -1 was glad to forget everytning disagreeaoie aooui iianj L'nderwood and to remember only with deep thankfulness his great physical strength, his quickness and resourcefulness, and . his expressed determination to protett me at all hazards. ' "All hell can't get at you, if I only get the chance to be in the way," he had said, and the" ytry . profanity gave me -a sense of ' security that nothine else could; it was "so char actcristic of the old dare-devil, par ry Underwood I had known, who stopped at nothing if he was enlisted rn the cause of a friend. -There were few cars on. the road, and we were going at such a pace that no cars had passed us. Instead, Mr. Underwood had gone past three and I had. obediently but . fearfully followed an . experience , which. made me feel as if my' heart was de tached from its usual- position . and pushed up into my throat. A Favor Asked. As the miles reeled off behind us, however, with no accident and no sign of the man pursuing us, I be came less terror-stricken, more ac customed to the tricks of driving which Mr. Underwood was uncon- sciously showing me, I began to be able to take my eyes occasionally frem the speeding machine in front of me, almost to enjoy . the whip of the exhilaratirg early autumn air against my cheeks. As if he had guessed my feeling, Mr. Underwood suddenly drew up his car by the side of the road, alighted, and came back to where I had stopped my own car when he had given me the sienal. "We're about out of the woods. new,' he said. The rest of the road is. fairly straight, and. there are "more, houys along it. And, let me (Kg w&m s ma hti&(ii3Ii5 3dl &WJHRt)z mM& &bi& 40l iistf imntiiDiiiiiiiin ei ti3 Farnam at the Boulevard House of Exceptional Service tell you, you're all to the mustard as a driver, little Kir . . "I always knew you were pretty nifty at anything you undertook, but I never, expected you to do- as well as . you have today. We ye covered the eroiuid ill short order I can tell you, and I don't believe our lriend can catch tin to you now unless he's commandeered some body's racing car. So if you'd rather toddle on home by yourself, go ahead. I'll linger along the road here and sort of rattle him a little if he does happen to show up. What do you say? ' I had not thought an hour before that my lips would be uttering th words I found myself pouring out to Harry Underwood, But the fear of the man who had threatened Alice Holcombe and me had become such an obsession that the very thought of finishing my journey alone without the protection on which I had' been unconsciously leaning since the appearance of Harry Underwood upon the scene, robbed me of bravery, almost of self-control. "Oh, please don't!" I began, changed my phraseology frantically in humiliation at my own coward ice. ,"If you don't mind, if it isn't a bother to you, I'd much prefer to go on as we-were. I wish you couldf-stay somewhere near until until " . , My PhooheUc Soul. "You poor little kid!" His deep voice was . suddenly filled with a beautiful tenderness. "1 didn't dream you were scared as stiff as .all that, Don't worry anymore.- I'll- stick till the, brimstone lake freezes over, and deposit you in front of your own door. 1 only thought I. could perhaps serve you. better this other wav. "But. we'd better, tje' hitting up a pace again. My prophetic, soul tells me that son-pf:a-se'aCOck back there might have a . streak-of luck and catch up to us, and I'd like to be a little nearer civilization before he does it." ' ' - " The hum of a racing, car came faintly to our ears. Harry Under wood threw up his head and looked in the . direction in which we had come. . "I'll be d d if he hasn't, turned the trick, he said. , (Continued Tomorrow.) Lisco Light Plant Burns;: Town Now in Darkness Lisco, Meb., Jan. 27. (Special Telegram.) Members of the John Mitchell family, who occupy living rooms in the front part of the gar age of the Mitchell Motor company here, escaped in scanty garments this morning when fire destroyed the garage and light plant of -the company. The town is in darkness as a re sult of the blaze, since electric cur rent was furnished by this plant. The fire was discovered about -2 a. m. and is thought to have been reused by a short circuit in the wir ing system. . . . . i wenty automobiles were burned. with a large stock of accessories and. the household effects of the Mitchell family. ; . The loss is estimated at- $40,000. partially, covered ..by in surance. . .. ..... IMti &lfe ui:o 1 ano; n miismmxismsnxsmmxiini nun' m Pneumonia Causes; Death of Civil War Veteran and Pioneei Gilbert Bolen, 76 years-old, died suddenly Monday night of pneu monia at the Swedish Mission hQspi tal. Mr. Bolen came to Nebraska in 1889, and lived on the South Sid until the death of his wife, six ytsrt ago, He was born in Sciota county, Illinois. May 27, 1844. He was t civil war veteran, serving with tin Fourth Ohio cavalry, Sherman' division. He was a m-jnher of tin Phi! Kearni'y post, G. A. R. of the South Side. - For the last six years Mr. Bolen had lived with two sons in Missis sippi until this winter, which h spent with his daughter of this city, Miss Inez Bolen, Carter Lake club. He is survived by seven sons, Will iam of Omaha; O. H of Lexington, Neb.; D. C of Brady, Neb.; G. R. of Dentohia, Miss.; C. E. of Canton Miss.; C. W.- of Wisner, S. D., act E, Bolen of Morrell, Neb., and two daughters, Miss Edna Bolen - ol Portland, Ore., and Miss Inez- Bolen New Hooper Superintendent Fremont, Neb., Jan. 27. (Special, Earl Schroer has been elected su perintendent of the Hooper schooh to take the place of J. E. Jslash .chosen .county superintendent to succeed J. M. Matzen, who becanu state' superintendent. This Laxative Is Now in Haifa Million Homes They regulate tkeir faith With Dr. aid well's Synp Pepsin WHERE there are women -and young children and elderly people it ia always well to have a mild, gentia-acting laxative like Pr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin bandy. This is a combi nation of simple laxative herbs with pepsin which doe all that is required in constipation and does it with safety and comfort. It is free from narcotics end may be given to babies. Hal? a million mothers' have it in as many good American homes, and these fami lies are healthier for it. Every drug More sells Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, . . In spite of the fact that IV. Gold well's Syrup Pepsinis the Urgestidling liquid laxative in the world, there being over 6 million bottlts sold each, year, many uiha need its benefits have not yet used it. If you have not, send your name and address for a, free trial bottle to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 31 1 Washington St, Monrictllo, Illinois. DR. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN THE PERFECT LAXATIVE J 111. .11. I. 1 IJ (i&i (Item iim? ivlW