THE BEE: OMAHA,' TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1920! The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING .SUNDAY TBI BEX PUBLISHING COMPANY. FKOPBIZTOI KELSON B. TJPDIK.E. PRESIDENT ; MEMBERS Or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At Aamlatad Prm. of whlca Tha Baa la a aMabar. to -tltrinlr aBUUat ( tlw DM for publleulon of all am dlipaiotMa nd)M4 to U r aot attMrtM oradiud la thti mpv, and ala ika local am pubiuhad ban In. All tlftxa at pubUcaUoa at au paelal dltvatobaa ara al mamov . BEE TELEPHONES Prlnta Bnaek tiebvif. Aik for th TwiAl 1 IhW) Sajwrtaa&l ar Particular Farm Wantad, JTlCr IWU Far Nifht and Sunday Sarvka CaUi Cdltorial Daparbaail War WML OreoUtloa baparuwnt .......... Tr 100 St. Adrartlalnc iMpaitatant ........... Tjlv 100SL OFFICES OF THE BEE , Bob Offtoa. Boa Butldlnr. irta and FamuL amai 4118 Wnrth Uti. I Ptrk Hmtrm tUt aUIlurr An. Bouth Bid Council Bluff, IS bcoU 8U I Walnut Out-of-Towa Oflkaai X, Tor 0?1 oa . JM Fifth at I Wulntoa - Star, r I unoin WIS IMTCaworth Mil H St. lit North 40th 1311 O it. 1330 H. St. ' FEBRUARY CIRCULATION: Daily 65,305 Sunday 65,057 Ararat atrralaUoa for th aioatk aabasrlbal and amis to to E B. Baaaa. ClreuUUoo Maoartr. Svbacribara laavlaf th city abatiM fcava Th Boa mallad t th.m. Addraaa chaofad aa eltaa a raqalrad. You should know that The college of agriculture at the University of Nebraska represents an investment of $1,000,000. Whose teller was Panes Savidge looking' Into? 1 ' . Brick or bltulithie will bow be answered by the court The "miracle man" now has a chance to per form a real miracle. Chairman Hays has the right idea of his functions, and he will make good. The war is over in Germany all1 right. A cousin of the ex-kaiser hat been arrested for assault. It is a pretty mean bunch of thieves that will loot the policemen's dressing room, but Omaha lias that kind.' Nebraska Non-Partisan Leaguers have 'de cided not to attempt to capture the republican organization. Their trick was too transparent. Marshal Foch does not believe the League of Nations will do away with war. Very few people do, but it might be worth while trying out. Old Point Comfort will never look the same without the Hotel Chamberlin and tired con gressmen will miss a cosy loafing place for week-end rests. , Japans it in the throes of a suffrage canv paign, only it is the men who want to vote. The camouflage is being rudely ripped in the mikado's domain. Driving in the warm spring sun it reviving the president's drooping health, but nothing will ever restore him to the place in the world's esteem he has forfeited by his dictatorial con duct. ' . Awoman has secured a divorce in a local court because her husband was to strong for autos and victrolas that he Jet his family want for necessities. Many women look on a car as much to be preferred above a cook stove. Horrible tales from the interior of Siberia continue to shock the civilized world. The whole story of savage atrocities may never be known, but enough is established to forever condemn bolshevism and the evils that came onto humanity through it. The State department has an apologetic ex planation from Mexico in regard to the killing of a former American consul. It was all an ac cident The bandits merely intended to capture him for ransom, but one of them was too good a marksman. Very annoying, to be sure. West Virginia's legislature is having a hard time to make up its mind on the suffrage ques tion, but will very likely line up in favor of the ladies. One vote is now needed to settle the question, and the senator who holds it is on his way from California to cast the deciding ballot 1 The world will long wonder why the presi dent would not confer with Senator Simmons, the only apparent reason being hjs reluctance to take counsel with anyone in regard to policies or practices. Democrats now know what is ex pected of them, without waiting for the Hitch cock letter. . ' Dropping the war wage bonus paid federal employes is likely to send a lot of men now working for the government to other jobs. Most of them were given little enough, and. the present outlook is far from encouraging. Economy is necessary, but the saving should be somewhere else. Predicting National Prosperity Tha her illdor tt ffi rnnre r( r,i,cifica events in this country are agreed that a long era of prosperity is ahead, and not far distant A public debt far larger than any of the past has been incurred, but the resources for paying it are also far greater. Every'former war debt of the United States was paid in full withou serious delay. Why should the latest, large as it is, be an exception with the richest and most enterprising of nations? In foreign relations we are more than ever before a creditor people. We lead in industry, especially in the agricul ture so vitally important We shall proceed as always after a war to encourage production, to practice a wise economy, and to pay off the bil lions whose expenditure was a necessity in be .half of civilization and free government We lead in farming, manufacturing and mining. Our territory was not touched by the war. We had to cross the ocean to get to the front Both the great political parties were a unit as to our duty. We struck the line hard and success fully. What we have done is morally sound,- and this fs the best basis for future and continued prosperity. We went into the war disinter ested seeking no territory nor other gain of any. land for . ourselves. Our motives were honorable and generous, and we are ready for peace of like nature. What it is often asked, might we not have accomplished with $20,000,000,000 spent for peaceful development instead of war?. But a supine peace is dearer than war. Prophets of an unprecedented national prosperity take into consideration the moral, as well as material, strength of our common coun try.St Louis Globe-Democrat BASIS FOR THE BON VS. When the young men of America, to the number of four millions and over, gave up their ordinary vocations, willingly or willy nilly, and entered the military service of the republic, they were not serving themselves. Consciously or unconsciously, they were doing for others all the things that were necessary to protect their home land, and free the world from a dreadful fate. Most of them never gave the matter much thought They were called, and they 'went; they served cheerfully and they returned happy in the thought that the war wat over, and they would get a chance to . ttart anew, Thinga have changed materially since April, 1917. Soldiers wbo served for soldier s pay find that they made a more substantial sacrifice than is easily calculated. Th6se who were exempt military duty for any Reason .prospered far beyond those who took up arms at the nation's call. This inequality of Reward should be over come in some way. In other wars our country was enabled to compensate the soldier out of the public domain. This is no longer possible. Uncle Sam can not give each of his nephews a farm, as he did fifty years ago. Recompense, therefore, must be made if at all from the pub lie treasury. , The amount asked is not unreasonably large. Juttice and equity support the claim. A nation that can carry tea billions of loans to foreign governments, that can subscribe hundreds of millions te relieve distress abroad, can well af ford to deal fairly by its soldiers. The request for a bonus to ex-tervice men is well founded, and should not be denied. ' v The Price of Sugar. The Kansas City Star renders a public service . by recalling the reason for the ab normally high price of sugar. We are a forget ful people. . The fact of yesterday is often lost in the new thing of today. The Star recalls that last summer the entire Cuban stocks of sugar was offered the United States at a price approximating 6yi cents a pound, which would have put it into American homes at a price not higher than 12 cents a pound. Immediately the sugar equalization board, realizing the opportunity for our con sumers, recommended immediate acceptance of the offer to the president. Their letter was ignored. Three days later the Cuban offer was withdrawn. - ( ' This occurred not after the president's stroke, but when he was in full control of his physical and mental - powers. ... Shortly after American importers were paying Cuban pro ducers nearly twice the price their entire crops could have been purchased for, and "sweeten ing" for American homes became more and more" expensive. Whence comes the fact that President Wil son is directly responsible for an enormous in crease in the cost of a daily family necessity. He had Article X on the brain. The needs of his own people did not interest him. , Another Mouse Brought Forth. Again has the Department of Justice of the United States government discovered the way to lower the cost of living. People are advijed to buy only the cheaper .cuts of meat, and thereby-force down the prices on the balance of the" carcass. Simplicity. Directly in line with other monitory and hortatory utterances of A: Mitchell Palmer and his coadjutors, as they have groped blindly about for some sort of. rexit from the labyrinth into which they so blithely entered a few months ago when they announced a determination to knock the stuffing out of the profiteers. Up fo now they have only emitted such advice as is contained in the dispatches from Washington, of Monday. Bless Mr. Palmer's innocence! Does he not know that for many, many months Americans have been eating the "cheaper" cuts of meat? Not from choice, perhaps, but from necessity, and most of the eaters are mighty glad to get thatr Has the Department of Justice envisioned the common people of the U,nited States gorg ing themselves on porterhouse steaks, sirloin roasts, and the other dainty bits of the high priced corn-fed steer? . Where do those experts think the flank and the chuck, the neck and the plate, the shin bone and the knuckle go? Not such a long-time ago the packers them selves pnt up a similar plea. If people only would buy the cheaper grades, they might be fed and hold down the prices. The public ac cepted this, studied up on ways of cooking the tougher but nutritious cuts, arid got into the habit of buying them, only to find the price whooped accordingly as soon as the market was established. ..And now the attorney gen eral of the United States saps his quest for profiteers with the stale advice that buying cheaper things will lower prices. ' She truth is apparent. Mr. Palmer and h's ous company of district attorneys, special assistants and the like, went hunting with a brass band and have come home without any game. The high cost of living is untouched by his efforts. And his latest bit of advice is fit only to go with his early promises, which have proved worthless. Good and Bad Trusts Secretary Baker's Responsibility. The terrible indictment drawn by Congress-? man Frear against the heads of the war aircraft production department may or may not be true. It may have been physically and 'intellectually impossi&e for them to get results. But we can see no escape v for Secretary Baker if the charges against his subordinates are justified. He is the man who appointed Deeds, Potter and Ryan to control aircraft production, all without previous knowledge of it to covervone of the gravest emergencies of the war. They did not, could not, do it, because compelled by inexperience to grope their way through in terminable experiments, Secretary Baker ignored loggers and lumber men, and selected' a penitentiary warden who knew nothing about lumbering, to control that end of airplane production; and two copper magnates and an expert in the manufacture of electric " light machines and cash registers to head the drive for quick1 production of wings for our airmen. How is it possible for him to escape the onus of the costliest failure of the war? Increased costs have stopped building in Chicago, in face of an admitted serious shortage of housing facilities. Material dealers and labor unions are killing the goose that lays the golden egg. . Mr. Wilson has found agreement on a set tlement for Fiume much easier than he antici pated. Perhaps he may yet find a similar outlet with regard to the treaty. (From the New York Times.) - There cannot be two sorts of laws for two torts of trusts, since bad trusts cannot survive under the law against them, if it is enforced. A trust is good or bad according to its effect on public interests, not according to its effect on private interests; and that is equally true of labor trusts and capitalist trusts. The trade unions may not yet believe that the Sherman law is a better protection for unions obeying the rule of reason than the Clayton law which the unions caused to be enacted to take them out from the Sherman law. If these sayings are too hard for acceptance it is because the Sherman law is not yet understood, after a liti gation which it is vexatious to think has been as futile as unnecessary from the beginning. The Sherman law is not like a chameleon, and does not change its color with shifts of public sentiment and interpretations of political law yers, it is a written declaration ot the common law on the subject und embodies the experience of centuries. It is no more possible or desirable to amend or to repeal it than it is possible to enact unreasonble statutes and have them obeyed. The Sherman law" means today exactly what it meant when it was enacted, and just what it was said to mean by Justice White, who declared the rule of reason in the first important case, and lived to find himself as chief justice delivering a decision to that effect as the opin ion of the majority. No apology is offered for remarks which are warranted by the frequent current declaration that the Steel trust is "not a trust," although the decision in effect declares that it Is a "trust" in the loose popular use of that convenient word and that it is entitled to live because those who sought its life did tc in error. The de cision is more important than the Steel trust by as much as the philosophy of business is more important than any application of it to. any one case. The meaning of the decision has been declared by the court itself, without the point being publicly appreciated. The Steel trust's case is the same under the law as that of any other trust pf like character; any trust of bad character is in the same position as the Oil 5r Tobacco trust. The SteeNtrust is notiaken out from the condemnation of the law, because its business accords with the rule of reason. The nature of its conduct has been such that it never was obnoxious to the law. It is not exempted from the law because it is a good trust, or like trusts allowed to live by license from the Department ot Justice, amounting merely to a freedom from prosecu tion. The Harvester trust, under the pressure of conditions which excuse its procedure, took from the public prosecutor permission to live at his pleasure. The attorney general may change his mind. There is sure to be another attorney general, and no one can say what his mind may be on the same subject The Steel trust's position, therefore, is better than that of the Harvester trust by as much as existence under the law is better than existence at the pleasure of any individual. The federal trade commission is now issuing jts 'licenses. The cattle traders and raisers were asking yesterday tnat tne packers should take out licenses. A commission is the remedy for all trade ills. We prefer the law, and a right to life under the law, without subjection to individual whim. and with the corollary that offenders against the law shall paythe penalty. That is the pub lic's true protection. The philosophy of the highest court is now the philosophy of the law merchant and of all traders under it The court's language is: We are unable to see that the public in terest will be served by yielding to the con tention that the government . . . and we do see in a contrary conclusion a risk of in-, jury to the public interest, including a ma terial disturbance of, and it may be a serious detriment to, the foreign trade. And in sub mission to the policy of the law and its forti fying prohibitions the public interest is of paramount regard. In order to appreciate over what a weary road we have traveled to reach a conclusion visible and inescapable from the beginning, it is only necessary to recall the same court s original position, as expressed by Justise Peck- ham in the railway case which is practically re versed by the law which has just passed into effect: ' 'Ti.. -f . j apply to all contracts in restraint of interstate or foreign trade or commerce without' excep tion or limitation; and are not confined to those in which the restraint is unreasonable. Senators Capper and Borah are of the oinion that it is now necessary to pass a statnte giving effect to Justice Peckham's futile decision. If that view prevails it will be necessary to trav erse again the painful road to the inescapable! conclusion from the reasoning of Justice White in the same case, not finally and fully declared by the court itselftmtil the Steel case. How can such a statute be strengthened? How foolish it is to think that it is more important under what forms business shall be done than what sort of business is done! How is it possible to express politely opinions regarding the qual ity of the minds which would prostitute the law to politics, and individual rather than party poli tics at that? ' ofays' QoTn&r For Boys to Make Handicraft Handy Boys Make' Kite Reels for March Sport. -By a. M. HYDE. Br-r-r-r-r-r-r-r. Zz-z-z-z-z-z-z-z. A growl, a metallic hiss, and a rat tic once in a while. What kind of a machine is that under Jack Black's arm? He ought not to make all that noise flying a kite. "It's a kite-reel I made," said Jack. "It isn't hard, either." In the real shown here the frame work consists of a. fiat bottom (V) about 4yi by 8 inches, two side pieces (T and H), each 2x10, and a top 5i by 2. The reel itself is a large linen thread spool (R) with two flanges of cigar box wood (S and S), each 4'i inches in diameter, fastened to its ends. For a pivot use a piece of old brass curtain rod. DOT PUZZLE. Fix the spool to the rod by filing flat spots on the rod just where it passes through the two ends of the spool and driving in wooden wedges against the flat spots. If the crank end of the pivot is filed roughly into square shape the crank (X) can be fitted to it Securely. The crank is made of a piece of wood 4 inches long with a long nail driven through for a handle. Run the kite string through a screw-eye (U) in the top crosspiece. A loop of cord tacked on at W can be slipped over the crank handle to hold the reel and keep the kite line FROM HERE AND THERE. Wolfskin makes the best parch ment tor banjos. The world's railways ar estimated at 500,000 miles. No gold has been coined In Eng land since October, 1917. Import duties on butter yield the British government an estimated an nual profit of more than $15,000,000. It is Just 50 years since the method of grinding wood as raw material for paper was introduced in the United States. . v The new republic of Czechoslov akia has an area of between 50,000 and 60,000 square miles and a popu lation of 12,500,000. Camels are fit for work at 6 years old; although they usually live 40 years, their strength begins to de cline at 25. " Chilled fish from Newfoundland Is prepared In a cold storage plant which has a cajpacity for handling over 200,000 pounds of fish a day. In many parts of England it Is a belief among the women that rose mary worn about the body Strength ens the memory and adds to the suc cess of the wearer in anything she may undertake. By means of an instrument Invent ed by Dr. J. S. Owens, secretary of the British Committee for the-Investigation of Atmospheric Pollu tion, it is possible to measure and record the dirt in the air over a town at any and every hour. 22 ? Ti 3 y 2b 2i V3 y '3 7 v lb .35 IS. 2. . la J . ...ft 4 4 8. I'Se 7 mo At. 4o 43 69" 42 Fop Girls to Make Homecraft Fluffs and Prills. Bf CAROLYN 8HERWIN BAILBT. For a while no one wore collart and cuffs on dresses, but they are in fashion now. Straight strips of net edged with tatting, blue and pink organ, !y tucked and edged will enjoy this work at much you will the result (Hunting Eye gets inte troubK again tomorrow.) ' - ADVERTISEMENT What does Willie see? Draw from on to two, and 10 on to the and v from running out. The framework and other parts must be built care fully and strongly to stand the pull of 'the kite and the strain of crank ing. ' Three sticks, one 20 inches long and two, each 24 inches long, com prise the framework of a plain, everyday kite. Each should be Ms inch thick and Ji-inch wide and should have a notch in each end. Find the. exact center of each and bind them together with cord at the crossing, Then fasten a cord tightly around from one stick to the next, following the outside lines. To cover the kite, lay it on a sheet of light, strong paper, mark and cut around about one inch cut side the string line, then lap the paper over the string and paste down. Belly bands for the kite line should be strung from each corner and brought together in front of the crossing. Hang the tail from a cord fastened to the two lower corners. (Can you measure the height of a tree as a soldier does it? Tomorrow.) ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT LIFT OFF CORNS! Apply few drops then lift sore, touchy corns off with . fingers ' Will Religion Lose Out? Some years ago Dr. Dudley A. Sareent. Harvard's physical culture expert, issued a series of measurements which when exactly equalled would prove the possessor to be a per fectly formed and accurately proportioned wo man. A prize was offered and after much pub licity in the shape of discussion of the merits of physical culture, which, of course, was what Sargent wanted, a girl, who happened incident ally to be one of Sargent's pupils, was found to answer the requirements and received the prize. What those measurements were probably no one remembers now, and as the portraits of the perfect girl were no more pleasing to the eye than those originals had admittedly in correct measurements public interest lapsed. Even physical culture and conformity to the measurements of Venus do not necessarily in sure beauty. But if Dr. Sargent were to establish anpther competition he would probably issue a set of figures somewhat different from the first For he is now quoted as saying that since the time of the World's Fair at Chicago, Ameri can girls have increased an inch in height and have gained an average of ten pounds in weight Indianapolis Star. ro n A V The Day We Celebrate. Ellis U. Graff, formerly superintendent of tchools for Omaha, born 1875. " John M. Gilchrist certified public account ant born 1862. John Erickson, captain city fire department, born 1870. Edward G. Acheson, the chemist to whom the world owes the discovery of carborundum, born at Washington, Pa., 64 years ago. Charles Warren, former assistant attorney general of the United States, born in Boston, 52 years ago. Eddie Foy, a veteran and popular comedian of the American Mage, born in New York, 66 years ago. William H. Southworth, outfielder of the Pittsburgh National league base ball team, born at Harvard, Neb., 26 years ago. Claude Williams, pitcher of the Chicago American league base ball team, born at Au rora, Mo., 27 years ago. Thirty Yeats Ago in Omaha. Maj. T. S. Clarkson was elected commander of the Nebraska G. A. R. The Reading-Dingley six-day bicycle race at the coliseum was in progress. , Helen Blythe, emotional actress, opened an engagement at the Grand opera house, playing a dual role in "Mother's Love." , The Omaha Improvement club passed a resolution petitioning the' city council to expend half of the amount of the city bonds to be voted, north of Dodge street and the other half south of Dodge., Doesn't hurt 'a- bit! Drop a little Freezone on an aching corn, instant ly that corn stops hurting, then you lift it right out. Yes, magic! A tiny bottle of Freezone costs but a iew cents at any drug store, but is sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn,, or corn be tween the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation. Freezone is the sensational dis covery of a Cincinnati genius, t is wonderful. WHY THIN BLOOD MAKES THIN BODIES Thin, pale, anaemic men and women are starving ' their blood, They are simply not supplying to the blood the oxygen, iron and cell- salts that the blood must have in order to maintain the health and vigor of the body. The red blood cells and the white blood cells are constantly warring in the blood. If you starve the red blood cells, which vitalize the blood and build up the body, the blood be comes thin, and full of white blood cells, and the body starves until it becomes thin and emaciated, weak and sick. 'Healthy blood makes the entire body healthy. Rich, red blood, .vi talized with oxygen, iron and the cell-salts that Nature must have to keep the body well, or make it well if it is sick, will renew the strength and restore vigor and vitality. REOLO. the wonderful discov ery of Dr. A. L."Reusing, rapidly increases the number oi red blood cells, and supplies the oxygen, iron and cell-salts that make rich, red blood, vitalized with oxygen and rich in the plasma and cell-salts that nourish the cells of the body, and restore strength and health. REOLO is sold under the Positive Guarantee that if it does not give you renewed strength and energy your money will be returned gladly. Each package ; of REOLO con tains 100 pleasant, tasteless tablets, sufficient for two weeks' treatment, and only costs one dollar. IXCKJLJKJ 19 bUlU 111 VJimilB, Ittev,, by Sherman & McConnell Drug Co., 49th and Dodge, 16th and Dodge, 16th and Harney, 24th and Farnam, 19th and Farnam, Omaha, Neb., Licensed Distributor for the Dr. A, L. Reusing Laboratories, Akron, Ohio. with blue or pink tatting, collars and cuffs for a blue serge dress made of pale blue and white gingham, and a sailor collar of coarse white linen embroidered in the corners in col ored cross-stitch 1 These will do wonders ior that winter school dress. And do make some ruffles for the neck and wrists of your best dress. Organdy in white or colors, net edged with narrow lace, or narrow ruffles of colored satin or taffeta will be ever so pretty. Narrow ribbon in bright Roman stripes or a plaid design will make i trimming for a plain serge dress. Fasten it with coarse stitches to the neck of the dress, leaving some rather long ends. Turn the ends under in points, and attach .a large bead to each point the color that predominate in the ribbon. Ribbon flowers are easily made. Gather two-inch lengths of rose colored tafffta ribbon, two inchs wide, into petal shape. Sew four or five of these together in flower shape and fill the center with yel low silk knots. This makes a rib bon flower to wear at the neck of your party dress. ' Sew beads in as many different colors as you like to a narrow strip of black ribbon and wear it for a necklace. Or stitch a band of beads to the neck, cuffs and belt of . your dark blue serge. You Skin troubles need immediate and proper attention Don t wait thinking they will dis appear in time. Perhaps they will, but in the meantime you are suffer ing from the burning and itching, and allowing your nerves to become badly effected, when a little Resi nol Ointment would doubtless re lieve it alL , Unless the skin affection is caused by some internal disorder, Resinol Ointment usually clears' it away because it contains harmless, ana soothing antidotes for socb Condi tions. It can be used easily for hie so nearly flesh-colored it does net attract attention. At all drufistt. esmo. If MOTHERS, DOTHIS When the- Children Cough, Rub Musterole on Throats and Chests No telling how soon the symptoms may develop into croup, or worse. And then's when you're glad you have a jar of Musterole at hand to give prompt sure relief. It does not blister. As first aid and a certain remedy, Musterole is excellent Thousands of mothers know it You should keep jar in the house, ready for instant use. It is the remedy for adults, too. Re lieves sore throat, bronchitis, tonsflltis. croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia. headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheu matism, lumbago, pains and aches of backer joints, sprains, sore muscles, chilblains, frosted feet and colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). . 30c and 60c jars: hospital size $2.50. PUT STOMACH IN FINE CONDITION Says Indigestion Results from an Excess of Hydrochloric Acid. Undigested food delayed in the stomach decays, or rather, ferments the same as food left in the open air, says a noted authority. He also tells us that Indigestion it caused by Hyper-acidity, meaning, there is an excess of hydro-chloric acid is) the stomach which prevents com plete digestion and starts food fer mentation. Thus everything eaten sours in the stomach much like garbage sours in a can, forming acrid fluids and gases which inflate the stomach like a toy balloon. Then we feel a heavy, lumpy misery in the chest we belch up gas, we eructate tour food or have heart burn, flatulence, water-brash e nausea. He teltt ut to lay aside all diges tive aids and instead, get from aaf pharmacy four ounces of Jad Salt and take a tablespoonful u a glass of water before breakfast and drink while it Is effervescing and further more, to continue this for a week. While relief follows the first dose, it is important to neutralize . the acidity, remove the gas-making mass, start the liver, stimulate the kidneys and thus promote a free flow of pure digestive juices. Jad Salts is inexpensive and is made, from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and sodium phosphate. This harm less salts is used by thousands of people for stomach trouble with ex cellent results. vnaoc 'BUSlNSSSttCOOOTHANKWW ' LV Nicholas Oil Company EBB This MMderfuJ bookwH bf sent freetoanu man voire- Full White Enamel Range While they Last, Each $4522 . 'V i 3:. ' I.-V " " I i . I f V Price inchrdes connecting VI if to gas pippin kitchen. . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' s ; : & 5 Discount for Cash Omaha Gas Co 1509 Howard Street' J PILES-FISTULA-RECTAL DISEASES (Both Acute and Chronic) v C CURED BY NEW METHOD No Knife, No Ether, No Chloroform Used. No Sever Surgical Operation. DON'T SUFFER, DOCTOR F. M. HAHN 401 Paxton Block. Omaha, NeV. f eeasjM p 1 - I St. I I t, $,v.