THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 12, 1920. DRINKjJOFFEE if It Causes Indigestion, a . Couple of Stuart's Dyspepsia .Tablets Will Promptly Give Relief. Indigestion caused by coffee ii the same as indigestion caused by anything else. If eating food or drinking coffee makes you dyspep tic, all you need is Stuart's Dyspep sia Tablets, because thev act with an alkaline effect which Js just what the 'stomach does in health. "I Surely Da Enoy My Coffee! I'm Not Afraid to Drink It, Cither, for I Have a Box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets." Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets mix with the food you eat. The stomach by its peristaltic action churns and moves the food around the stomach walls and the powerful ingredients in these tablets instantly begin di gesting the food as they are forced through it and around it. The use of one of these tablets after meals will in a very short time correct the faults of digestion and you will enjoy your coffee and food without the old time distress of in digestion. Kvery drug store carries Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. Price SO cents. To Ladies Who Are Stout Fat is fatal to health and beauty. Reduce weight sensibly and easily; improve your health and figure. Avojd heart trouble, wrinkles, nerv ousness, weaknesses, etc., besides personal embarrassment, due to obe sity. . Look and feel younger. Walk sprightly. Let your eyes sparkle with new fervor. Surprise and de light your friends. Be a girl again! Go to the druggist, get a small box of oil of korein (capsules) and follow directions of the korein sys tem. Reduce 10 to 60 pound under guarantee. Eat all you need (in cluding some candy, if desired) while reducing5. Don't bother about going through tiresome exercises or following rules of starvation diet. Why not be come slender without drastic drugs, worry and self-denial? Here's your chance! THESPRINGTIMETONIC For Nervous, Weak Men and Women Is i CADOMENE TABLETS Sold by All Druggists. FOR SORE THROAT USE FORMAMINT Throat protection is of vital ' . importance to you Sore throat is caused by germs the kind you cannot help inhaling and the soft linings of the throat are just; the kind of soil they thrive on. Formamint attacks them, destroys them, reduces their number to a safe minimum. ' You simply stick this pleasant tasting tablet., It dissolves and mixes its powerful, harmless germicide with the saliva bathing the infect ed membranes continuously de stroying ' gernjs promoting the healing of the inflamed surfaces and opening the way to quick recovery. Take Formamint if you even suspect sore throat or when infection has already begun. ' All druggists, 60c. formamint B GERM-KILLING A THROAT TABLET WRITE TODAY FOR FREE SAMPLE It is of frenrous sixe and will prove to you that FORMAMINT is wonderfully ef fective as well as pleasant in mouth and throat' troubles. Send a 2-cent stamp to pay postage and we will gladly send you this free trial tube. The Bauer Chemical Co. - 169 W. isth St., New York. This wonderful book will be sent free to any man upon re quest CUMBERLAND CHtMICAt CO. 802 Perry MocKNashviHe.Tfnn. IKK RELIEF ROM CONSTIPATION Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That to the joyful cry ot thousands tince Di, Edwards' produced OUve tablets, the substitute for calomel No mpkia results from these pleasant Uttle tablet They causa th liver and bowels to ct normally They never forte them to unnatural action. Dr. Edwards'' Olive Tablets 'are a soofhing, healing, vegetable compound muted with olive oil. . , . If you have a, bad taste, bad breath, feel dull, .tired, are constipated or bilious, you'Utfind quick and sure re torts from Dr. Edwards' little Olive GAS COMPANY READY TO ACCEPT PLAN OF MAYOR ' Officials Declare Will Not Ap peal Appraisal Executive Wants Waiver Commis sioners Are Undecided. W. II. Taylor, president, and V. H. Hcrdman, attorney, representing the- Omaha Gas Co., yesterday ad vised Mayor Smith and Corporation Counsel V. C. Lambert that the company will not file an appeal in the- event that the city elects to take over the gas plant at the appraised valuation of $4,500,000. Mayor Smith announced that he is ready to offer for consideration of the city council a resolution stat ing that the city will accept the terms of the appraisal,' providing that the gas company will file a waiver- of its rights to appeal; and he resolution further will provide that in the event such waiver is filed the department of accounts and finance shall prepare an ordinance tor the issuance of bonds not to ex ceed $5,000,000. A canvass of the city commission ers indicates that a majority is not yet ready to express approval of the mayor's position, although the mayor stated his belief that his resolution will have the support of a majority in the city council. Might As Well Be Frank. "I told the gas company officials that we might as well be frank with each , other; that. if they would not signify a willingness to waive the right to appeal, I would offer a resolution that the cily council should reject the appraisal of the court of condemnation," the mayor said. , The difference between the ap praisal'of $4,500,000 and the pro posed $5,000,000 bond issue would meet the cost of materials which the company probably will sell to the city in the event of an agree ment on the purchase. The mayor said he believed that all fonrfalities could be disposed of before June 1, and he further indi cated his belief that the city could sell gas for $1 per thousand feet within the first six months of mu nicipal ownership. Water Board Joins In. Commissioner Butler is inclined toward the mayor's view of the sit uation. "I believe the company would be receiving more than the plant is worth, but even at that I am confident that the city will be able to reduce the price of gas material ly," he said. Commissioner Ure, Zimmau and Towl are not ready to commit them selves. They ask for more time to analyze the figures. The gross receipts of the company last year were $1,311,581.56 and total of operating expenses, $1,084,293, after deducting all forms of taxes and similar expenses, leaving a bal ance of $2-7,285. Inasmuch as the Metropolitan Water board will manage the! gas plant if the city takes it over, mem bers of that board are beginning to join in the deliberations between the city and the gas company. Willard Battery Men . Call Omaha Plant One Of Models of Country , Omaha's Wijlard storage battery service station, Twentieth and Har ney streets, is one of the model sta tions of the country, according to the verdict of 200 Willard station managers from Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri, who closed a two day's convention here Tues day night. "Their compliment after they had finished an inspection of the statiou certainly gave me a lot of, satisfaction, but they were so strong I guess I blushed like school-girl," says Elmer Rosengren, Omaha manager. The convention heard sales and ef ficiency talks from heads of de partments in the Willard company's home offices, Cleveland, O. Former Omaha Lawyer, Noted Poet and Author, Dies in N. Y. Word has been received in Omaha of the death of I.u B. Cake, 71 years old, poet and author, whose resi dence has been in Omaha, but who has been spending most of his time in Alton, X. Y. Mr. Cake died Tues day night at Binghampton, N. Y., as the result of a stroke of apoplexy. He was engaged in the practice of law and in the real estate business while in Omaha. He was born in Ohio,, taught school and was ad mitted to the bar in California. Many books, songs, poems and sketches have been published from his pen. Both he and his wife were prominently known as entertainers in Original plays and skits. Creicjhton to Open College Of Commerce and Finance Next fall, Creighton university will open a college ot commerce, ac counts, and finance, with entrance requirements similar to those of the college of liberal arts. Classes in accounting, auditing, office manage ment, credits, brokerage, traffic management and advertising will be taught by men who have had prac tical experience in the various sub jects. Most of these classes will be held nights in the University build ing at Twenty-fifth and California streets, according to present plans. Students who complete the four-year course will be conferred with a de gree of Bachelor of Commercial Science. OFFICERS SEND FUSILLADE AT OMAHA RAFFLES Spectacled Burglar Drops Bundle Stolen Hour Before When Sighted On Far nam Street. A middle-aged, well-dressed, slend er man wearing tortoise shell spec tacles is being sought by police as the burglar responsible for numer ous' house prowling thefts com mitted in Omaha during the past week. Policemen Ryan and Rice fired a fusillade of shots without apparent effec at the lone burglar at 11 Tues day night-as he darted behind a bill board at Ft tieth and Farnam streets. The mat) escaped. Passengers on a West Farnam street car were frightened at the re ports of the shots, the policemen having fired at their intended victim as the car was turning at Fortieth and Farnam streets. A bundle dropped by the man was identified as loot taken from the home of M. Sullivan, 4211 Har ney street, an hour before. It con tained jewelry, clothing and furs. The Sullivan home was robbed while the family was attending . a theater. Neighbors in the vicinity of the Sullivan home reported to police that an unidentified man wearing "tortoise shell spectacles'' was seen to leave the Sullivan home carry ing 'a bundle done in white sheet ing. ' V In two other instances of rob bery Tuesday night police, received similar descriptions of th burglar. Police estimated at $5,000 the to tal loot taken from Omaha homes by burglars Tuesday night. Aaron Ahnstrom, qooniing at 70S South Sixteenth street, reported thieves, entered his room Tuesday afternoon, ransacked his trunk and took $1,800 in cash and two $50 Liberty bonds. Burglars attempted twice Tuesday evening to break into the home of II. C. Trawver, 2703 Binney street, according to reports from neighbors, who called police both times. The men escaped. The Trawver family is out ot the city. A. Levy, 1309 South Thirty-fifth avenue, renorted he frightened awav burglars who attempted to break into his home, at midnight Tuesday. Too much sleep is almost as -in jurious as not getting quite enough, says the United States Public Health Service. The average adult should sleep eight hours in every twenty-four. 1 " " " ' " ' "'" , V At the first 'chill! Take Genuine Aspirin marked with the "Bayer Cross" to break up your Cold and relieve the Headache, Fever, Stuffiness. Warning! To get Genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for over 19 years, you must ask for ''Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," and look for the name "Bayer" on the package and on each tablet. Always say "Bayer." , Each "Bayer package" contains safe and proper directions for the relief of Coldsr-also for Headache, Neuralgia, Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis and for Pain generally.. Ipr-TablebAspirin Boxes of 12 Bottles of 24 Bottle of 100 Also Capsules All ' ruggists Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture ot Monoacetlcacldeat' of Sallcyllcacld No Cash Down Payment Required of Regular Patrons During This Sale Any person maintaining a satisfactory account on our books to date may buy gar merits (in this sale without any cash down payment. Omaha' 1417 Douglas Street Apparel prices have sim ply been shattered for this final clean-up. It's your greatest buying' oppor tunity. ' s Most D aring Sale of Dresses We have collected from our regular stock all Winter Dresses, together with certain new Spring Dresses, vand offer them in two remarkable sale lots for Thursday only. Just 59 Dresses That Sold Regularly to $75 Offered While They Last At Only Included Serges, Tricotines, Satins, Taffetas, in all the new colors; all sizes. Grasp this sensational buying opportu nity and be here when the doors open at 8:30 A. M. sharp. 64 Dresses That Sold Up to $59.50 While They Last Thursday, Only Serges, Velvets, Tricotines, Velours, Jerseys, Satins, Poplins; all wanted colors and sizes. Tell your friends of this phenomenal buying event, and urge them to be here early Thursday morning. 22 I Final Desperate Cl&an-Up of COATS 30 Coats That Sold Up to $85 While They Last THURSDAY ONLY Buy the entire coat at a price that hardly represents the cost of the linings in the garment. Polo Cloth Bolivia Silver tone Velour Kerseys Basket Weaves Cheviots ' 1 y So extraordinary are the values and so limited the assortments that we doubt if the lots will last throughout the opening hour. Pi MI r K n 3 arfrauns Galore B at HARTMAN'S It makes no difference what you need in the way of home furnish ings, during the Mid-Winter Clearance Sale at Hartman's you will find the articles you most desire marked to sell at an aston ishing reduction in price. Come tomorrow but by all means come early, and remember Your Credit Is Good at Hartman's. !sf3arM Our Greatest Special For Today A parlor suite that embodies the utmost in style a suite that is built to give years and years ot satisfactory service. Mahogany finish ' frames with cane panels, upholstoring comes in a variety of figured velours, as well as art tapestry. All three pieces have the "Spring Filled Loose Cushions" and come complete with bolster roll and pil lows. At the Mid-Winter Sale Price Davenport $138.67 Chair or Rocker $69.38 Furniture for the living , room, jj Furniture for the living , room, bed room, sun parlor, kitchen and library all goes on sale at prices that are" unbelievable in these days of increased cost. This sale is the greatest event of its kind ever conducted in Omaha ifc is a, money-saving opportunity you can hardly af ford to miss. Yes, Your Credit Is Always Good. Red Cedar Chest It is an extra large size Cedar Chest, measuring 38 Vi inches in length, and not only is it artistically bound with wide bands of copper, but this desirable Cedar Chest has the removable tray as well. Just as pictured at the remarkably low price of 918.95. The Right Way to Care for Baby Plenty of sleep and fresh air in a car riage. We are showing some very at tractive new models. The illustrated model offered for today in the natural or gray enamel at the very special price of ;ie imturni ur $28.75 413-15-17 South Sixteenth Street hi I