THE BEE: OMAHA". THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1920. A r,1 "k. r X:lt:"A III WW 1 This wonderful book will hp sent free to any man upon re- HWJF ClMBtRLAND CHEMKAl COL oa oerrg dwch, Nisnvme.ierm ersistentCoughs e dangerous. Oct prompt relief from laoi Slops imUbon! soottttaf . EfTectiva id safe for young and old. Mo opiates la PBSS Our ntire itoek . of Paint will be placed on tale beginning; Thursday. If you are planning; to paint your house, it will pay you to attend this Paint sale. The sale will continue until our present stock of paint is all told. H. H. HARPER CO., 17th and Howard Sts., Flatiron Bids. Says Thick Sluggish Blood Should Be Purified A Greasy, Pimply Skin, a Foul Odor to Perspiration, Boils and Aches and Pains All Banished by Sulpherb Tablets. Like Grandma's Remedy for Spring. Take these tablets made of sul phur, cream of tartar, calcium sul phide and extracts of rare herbs and take regularly for a month or so, and you can drive the poisons out of your system. Sulpherb Tab lets are wonderful to overcome con . stipation, sluggish liver and kidneys and they quickly start all the elimi native organs working. They "flush the sewers," as it were, and you will feel their fine effects all through spring and summer. Head aches, catarrh, neuralgia, rheu matic pain, constipation and kin dred ailments due to poisons in the blood, all go, the skin clears, pim ples and boils are absorbed and pass out through the proper waste channels. Every package is guar anteed, so you can prove it easily. Good for children and. adults. All druggists, 60c per sealed tube. Get Sulpherb Tablets (not sulphur tablets). QUICK RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION Get Dr. Edwards' OliveTablets f That la the joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for 17 years and calomel s old-time enemy, discovered the formula for .Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative. No griping is the "keynote" of these little sugar-coated, olive-colored tab lets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth" bad breath a dull, tired feeling sick headache torpid liver constipation, you'll find quick, sure and pleasant re sults from one or two of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets at bedtime. Thousands take them every night just to keep right .Try them. 10c and 25c SURE WAY TO GET RID OF BLACKHEADS There is one simple, safe and sure way that never fails to get rid of blackheads and that is to dissolve them. To do this get two ounces of calonite powder from any drug store sprinkle a little on a hot, wet sponge rub over the blackheads briskly wash the parts and you will be surprised how the blackheads, have disappeared. Big blackheads, little blackheads, no matter where they are, simply dissolve and disappear, leav ing the parts without any mark whatever. Blackheads are simply a mixture .of dust and. dirt and secretions from the body that form in the pores of the skin pinch ing and squeezing only cause irritation, make large pores, and do not get them out after they become hard. The calonite powder and water simply dissolve the blackheads so they wash right out, leav ing the pores free and elean and in their natural condition. Anybody troubled with these unsightly blemishes should cer tainly try this simple method. ADVERTISEM ENT Sure, Harmless Way To Remove Hair Roots (New, Wonderful, Quick Method) You who are annoyed with embarras sing growths of superfluous hair have waited long for something that would do more than merely take off the surface hair" temporarily something that would really remove the hair roots. And now at last your wish ia realiiedl The new phelactine process is far dif ferent from, far better than electrical, depilatory or other methods, because it actually removes the bair entire, roots and ail before your very eyes easily, quickly, harmlessly I Get a stick of phelactine from your druggist, follow the simple directions; and you will be sur prised and pleased beyond words. It has no odor, no irritating element, and is so non-injurious a child could safely eat it. It leaves the skin so soft, smooth, hairless, that not the least sign of your former trouble remains. m V3t -TABLETS-1 1 IS fJ)t tli Sherman 4 McConnell Drug Co. LACK OF MONEY MAY BE RELIEVED BY CONTRACTORS May Take Over portion of City Bonds Issued to Cover Cost of Street and Sewer Work. The present stalemate in regard to work on $400,000 worth of sewer and street improvements may be re lieved through contractors taking over a portion of the city bonds issued to cover cost of the work. City Commissioner Roy N. Towl said yesterday. He and Finance Commissioner Ure have been conferring with con tractors on this plan, he said, and have received assurances from some of the contractors who express a willingness to take the bonds in or der to prevent further delay in starting work. Finance Commissioner Ure has been unable to find a market for this year s $100,000 street intersection bond issue, the $200,000 sewer bond issue, and $100,000 worth of city jail bonds. The financial market at pres ent, he finds, offers opportunities which most investors consider more attractive than the S per cent mu nicipal bonds. Meanwhile, ' the contracts for $200,000 worth of street paving and $200,000 worth of sewer construction are pigeonholed in Commissioner Ure's office. Under a ruling of the city legal department, he is not au thorized to approve the contracts as in effect until funds are actually available to cover cost of all work performed under them. If contractors prove unwilling to tske over a sufficient portion of the bonds to relieve the present delay, an appeal may be made to interest small investors, it was stated today. Commissioner Towl is preparing to advertise next Friday for bids of approximately $40,000 worth of ad ditional street improvement work. Work is being nushed on the new city jail with $100,000 already avail able in the city treasury. When that amount is exhausted construc tion will have to stop, unless mean while a market can be found for the $100,000 worth of jail bonds. Bon'ar Law Says England To Treat Prisoners Well London, April 14. Andrew Bonar Law, the government spokesman, said in the House of Commons today that the Irish government had de cided to treat those prisoners in Mountjoy prison who were arrested on suspicion by competent military authority, differently from other classes of prisoners and they would receive anieliroative treatment. WILL REPRESENT U. S. AT SUFFRAGE CONVENTION AT GENEVA For the first time in ita history the International Woman Suffrage alliance, which is to hold its eighth congress in Geneva, Switzerland, June 6 to 12, will be attended by an official representa tive of the United States government. President Wilson has appointed Mrs. Josephus Daniels, wife of the secretary of the navy, to represent the United States in an official capacity. At former meetings of the alliance only countries wherein women have full suffrage have had official representatives. The fact that the United States is to have its official representatives indicates the depth of conviction among suffragists that this country will be in the full suffrage list next June. . .7.. r t 1 SZ iN est,- 31 , rrv Sim m". -6. If f J I llr ; 1 1 i EIGHT HURT IN PANIC AS BOYS RING FIRE BELL Mischievous Prank Results With Disaster at Commun ity Center Meeting In Mason School. Mir.cTosepKas Dayvtcls-. Be Particular about the Bread You Eat- a Buy ( bCIIULZE'S BUTTER-NUT BREAD Yes, there will be a lot of things of fered for sale that can be used on the farm: Scoop shovels, pitchforks, po tato forks, harness snaps, hundreds of things that we cannot mention here. The sale will start Thursday and will continue all week. Prepare to attend this wonderful GROCERY, HARD WARE, and PAINT Sale. H. H. HAR PER CO., 17th and Howard Sts. $1.00 Is All You Need To Join the Hoosier Cabinet Club at the Union Outfitting Co. Loos e-W ilea Sunshine Cakes, Hot Advo Coffee and Alamito Cream FREE. A Beautiful Hoosier Kitch en Cabinet Given Away Friday Evening, Apr. 16. On one point all women agree that kitchen work causes more mind and body fatigue than any other part of housekeeping. With the idea of bringing "happiness to the kitchen" the Union Out fitting Company is forming a Hoosier Cabinet Club. All this week special induce ments are being made. The pay ment of ONE DOLLAR delivers a labor-saving "Hoosier," to your home. Then a few easy payments of a DOLLAR a week and the Cabinet is yours. If you have an old cupboard or Kitchen Cabinet, $5.00 will be allowed for it on the purchase of a new Hoosier. Dainty Luncheons are being served free &f charge and all vis itors have en opportunity to get a "Hoosier" Cabinet FREE. The Union Outfitting Company is known as the "Home of Home Outfits" and this season is mak ing special inducemtnts to young couples just starting housekeep ing. No transaction is ever con sidered complete until the cus tomer is satisfied. Leaders Expect Congress To Close Session on June 5 ' Washington, April 14. After a conference with Senator Lodge, Massachusetts, Representative Mon dell, Wyoming, the republican leader in the house, said he be lieved congress would adjourn June 5. All appropriation measures will be ready for approval by May IS, he said, and other important pending ! legislation will be disposed of by jjune 1. Mr. Mondell did not forecast when the soldiers adjusted compen sation bill would be reported to the house. He said, however, that the senate leaders had promised to ex pedite all legislation with a view to adjournment in time for the conven tions, adding he was "still of the opinion that the adjournment would be June 5." Latin-American Republics To Send Officers to U. S. Washington, April 14. Nine Latin-American republics have noti fied the War department that they have accepted its invitation to send officers of their armies to attend American army service schools next September. Mexico will send four officers; Nicaragua, 15; Guatemala, 3; Colombia, 7; Venezuela, 5; Ecua dor, 4; Chile, 7; Peru, 5, and Bolivia, 3. They will be assigned to the signal corps schools at Camp Al fred Vail, N. J.; coast artillery school at Fortress Monroe, field. ar tiller yschool at Fort Sill, Okla.; army medical school at Washington; and the air service schools. Grading of Howard Street Cause of Sacrifice Sale Grading of Howard street, order ed by the city planning board, will place a seven-foot fill in front of the H. H. Harper & Co. grocery in the Flatiron building, making ac cess to the store impossible. As a result of this, the firm has opened a sacrifice sale of their stock of hardware and groceries. The sale begins tomorrow. Buyer for Burgess-Nash Dies Suddenly In Chicago James Dickison, 2024 Sherman avenue, hosiery buyer for Burgess- Nash company, died suddenly m Chicago, according to a telegram re: ceived by T. P. Redmond. Mr. Dick ison's wife died a year ago. A rep resentative of the Burgess-Nash company has gone to Chicago to bring the body back td Omaha. tsem Pianos and Players Tuned, Regu lated, Polished and Repaired. Schmoller & Mueller Piano Co. 114-16 S. 15th niisiSsT'rj JOE MAR (10 IV (THE BAILIFF) for Police Judge Thespians of England Seek to Keep Teuton Artists on Own Soil London, April 14. The supreme Council may extend the right hand of fellowship and the loan of a "fiver" to the late enemy, but not so the Variety Artists' federation. Efforts have been made to book German music hall artists for "turns" in this country. The Inter nationale Articten-Logo of Berlin is so anxious "to get German artists onto British stages that it has pro posed that if fifteen German per formers are admitted to England eighty-five English artists may book in Germany. The variety artists point to a 1916 resolution forbidding booking Ger mans for three years after peace is declared, and to another passed in 1919 directed against employment of Germans in any capacity at any time. i The Germans aje attempting to "undersell" the British, Danish and Scandinavian markets by offering engagements at prices far under those prevailing in the various countries. Hen, Without Bill or Claws, Resembles Monkey New York, April 14. A black hen that looks and acts like a monkey is the unique window dis play of a hardware dealer on Grand street, Brooklyn., The hen has no bill, and as a re sult its face strongly resembles that of a monkey. - It has no claws, so that its feet also resemble those of a monkey. It spends most of the time climbing around its crate, which is three feet high and three feet wide. .The hardware dealer said he bought the freak from a poultryman in the neighborhood. He said he would not sell it because it has proved a great business gettes. Night School for Service Men Here Will Cost $40,000 P. J. McCarthy, regional director for the Knights of Columbus voca tional night school for service men, yesterday completed this year's budget for the school. He said it will cost slightly more than $40,000, all to be paid by the Knights of Co lumbus. Mr. McCarthy is in charge of similar schools in several western states. Enrollment in the Omaha school is slightly over 1,000. Newlyweds, Unable to Find Flat, Occupy Old Barn Rockford, 111., April 14, Newly weds at Beliot, Wis., unable to se cure a house because of the scarcity, took up quarters in a tumbledown barn. They came from Texas and feel quite Greenwich Villagy in the Bohemianness of their abode. Mine Sweepers Placed In Reserve at Portsmouth Portsmouth. N. H., April 14. Eight of the mine sweepers used in the North Sea during the war have arrived at 'the Portsmouth navy yard and have been placed in re serve. A majority of the crews were enlisted for duration of the ' and have been discharged. Confusion reigned at Mason school, Twenty-fourth and Mason streets Tuesday night at a communi ty center entertainment when mis chievous boys broke into the base ment and rang a false fire alarm. Eight persons were slightly in jured and two women fainted in the excited rush of 800 spectators of aJ play, being given by pupils of .the school, as they attempted to escape through the Twenty-fourth street entrance to the school. Mrs. E. Radspinner was trampled i over by the crowd, she suriered ! cuts about the body and arms. The fire alarm in the basement was sounded in the midst of a play being given by the eighth grade pu pils of the school. I Efforts of men in the audience to suppress the mad rush to the doors i were to no avail. Miss Betty Hutchinson, G. S. Curtis, E. W. Palmer and George Carlson, janitor, sitting in various parts of the com munity hall, stood on chairs and atr tempted to quiet the panic-stricken crowd. L Following 'the discovery of the mischief, 200 of the crowd that es caped from the building sought to re-enter and have the play continued. Recreation directors ordered the en tertainment discontinued for the night. Sells Pension Measure Is Reported Favorably Washington, April 14. The Sells bill providing pensions of from $12 to $20 a month for disabled veterans of the Spanish-American war, Boxer uprising and the Philippine insur rection was ordered favorably re ported by the senate pension com mittee. This is the first pension leg islation affecting these veterans to come before congress. Bank of England Raises Discount Rates One Per Cent London, April 14. Announcement by the Bank of England today that the rate of interest on treasury bills had been raised 1 per cent to 6 per cent, foreshadows the announce ment tomorrow of a 7 per cent bank rate. One of Omaha' Down Town Stores Is Selling Their Entire Stock of Merchandise The sale will start Thursday of this week and will eontlnue until all the stock is sold. Watch the papers each day for details concerning; this sale. Thousands of people will take advantage of this opportunity to Ret goods at prices much helow the regular price. CHURCH OF CHRIST PRACTITIONER DIES OF LONG ILLNESS Dr. James Richard, Former Physician, Was Vnable to Cure Himself. Dr. James Richard, 1200 North Twenty-sixth street, former physi cian and later a Christian Science practitioner, died at his home fol lowing a lingering illness. He was known throughout Iowa as a skilled surgeon before his con version to Christian Science 18 years ago when his daughter, Mrs. Ida J. Harr, is said to have been cured of chronic illness. Since then Dr. Richards has been an active prac titioner of Christian Science. Mrs. Harr, who made her home with Dr. Richards, said her father concentrated his thoughts through Christian Science upon his own chronic affliction in recent years in hopes of becoming well. ''He cured others, but he tould not cure himself," Mrs. Harr said. Nearly 75 Years Old Dr. Richards was within five days of his 75th birthday when death came. - He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Ida J. Harr, of this city, and a son, W. E. Richards, of Wooster, O. Christian Science services will be held at the funeral, which takes place at 2:30 this afternoon in Crosby's chapel. Burial will be in Forest Lawn cemetery. Calvary Baptist Church Sold to Another Church The Calvary Baptist church at Twenty-fifth and Hamilton streets has been sold to the Pilgrim's Rest Baptist Church, colored, for a price said to' be $35,000. . Before possession can be taken of the building $15,000 most be raised. A campaign is now in pro gress to raise $11,000, the amount needed by the congregation to make up the $15,000. The Rev. W. M. Franklin is pastor of the church. Boy Breaks Both Legs While Turning in Bed Sullivan, Ind., April 14. Leo Pinkstop, 15, broke both legs whije attempting to turn over in bed. The !ad, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pinkstcn, has been confined to his bed for mere than three months with a malady affecting the bones of his legs. Physicians said his bones were brittle as chalk because of a lack of phosphorous. So, when Leo tired of one position and at tempted to change, the legs snapped. The broken bones were set and the doctor, are awaiting with interest to see if they will knit. Armenian Refugee Bearing the Turkish Tattoo Reaches U. S. Doomed to everlastingly bear the markings of a Turkish war prisoner, Miss Marges Avakfan, an Armenian girl, arrived in New York recently after a miraculous escape from Turkish bondage and a series of thrilling adventures. With her father and mother she was taken prisoner by the Turkish forces, who ruthlessly slew her parents after putting them to many tortures. Miss Avakian was taken to a city far away from her home and mercilessly tattooed with distinctive markings. One signifies that she is a prisoner, another that she is a Christian and not to be married into a Turkish family. Miss Avakian is shown as she arrived in New York aboard the steamship Pannonia. Bee Want Ads Produce Results. Noted Counterfeiter . Freed From Leavenworth Leavenworth, Kan., April 14. Tom Johnson, one of the most noted counterfeiters in tJie United States, was at liberty here the other day for the first time in 23 years. He was released after having served a term for counterfeiting $20 gold pieces. t Johnson, a native of California, i; said to have caused federal authori ties more trouble than any other living counterfeiter. File Suit for $25,000 Against Laundry Companv Suit for $25,000 damages wa filed in district court yesterday by Maurice Bachman against the Troy Laundry companv. The suit was filed through Maurice's father Henry Bachman. It is alleged thai a truck owned by the laundry com pany ran into Maurice, October 2 1919, at Twenty-third and Cuming streets. Gov. Calvin Coolidge Says: ??1XTE need forever to remember that representative government does represent. A careless, indifferent rep resentative is the result of a careless, ' indifferent electorate. The people who start to elect a man to get what he can for his district will probably find they have elected a man who will get what ' he can for himself." Forty-three'publio addresses by Governor Coolldf neve been gathered into book under the title "Have Faith In Massachusetts" It it a book of sonnd guidance ror timet like these e book thst will make you littb prouder of being en American. There is something almost Lineolnesque in the' independence of Coolidfe'e thinking and the vigoront simplicity of kit style. Buy Umi yttur tmok tmmtwamnd $1.50 aUrad ( she pmUUlun Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston T5" MAnra year Irom now Drj)2.n a new president win De in oriice. borne of his acts are going to affect youyour business the welfare of the state. Will you trust your interests the interests of the Middle West to a New Englander? To a Californian? Or to a Nebraskan? . There is one way for you to make sure the next president comes from ,the right place. That is by going to the polls on April 20th and voting for John J. Pershing of Nebraska for President. This advertisement paid for by the sub scriptions of Nebraska Citizens