2 D BAPTIST PASTOR RAPS BAN PLACED AGAINST DANCING Progressive Columbus Minister Declares Church and Grave yard No Longer Belong f Together. Columbus, Ohio, June 19. "Churches should not place a ban on dancing. Men cannot be made good that way," said Rev. A. E. Cowley, Capti.t minister. Those who want to dance will ' dance," continued Rev. Dr. Cowley, ; "irrespective of its nature or the ban. , Those who do not dance would view , the lifting of the ban as condoning j'of the dance. I "The church and the graveyard no J- longer belong together. ( "Christianity never has been op- posed to the God-given instinet for " recreation. It does insist that peo ple must distinguish between recrea tion and dissipation. i "Americans are wearing out their nerves through running after cheap amusements. Commercialism, pro fessionalism and immorality are prostituting the play Instinct for gain. "The church 'must do something to remold amusements. Shorter hours for the worker will prove a curie, instead of a blessing, unless men can be shown how to rightly spend their leisure time." English Experimenting On Bamboo Substitute In Wood Pulp Shortage London,, June 19. Experiments are being conducted at the Britsh ' Imperial institute for the purpose of obtaining a satisfactory substitute for wood pulp. Bamboo is said to have given the most satisfactory re sults and to give better promises than any other of the substitutes tested. It has been suggested that one way out of the difficulty would be for consumers in each country to form organizations on the lines of the British Cotton Growing association for the purpose of encouraging and developing the production of pulp in various parts of the world. At the present time England is ' practically dependent on Norway for supplies of the needed pulp. In a single week recently, according to figures obtained by the American Chamber of Commerce in London, 7,866 tons of mechanical wet pulp were imported from Norway, whilst only 490 tons were obtained from Canada. Gunman Seeks Job In Movies; Has 1 5 More Years InState Pen .Jersey City! N. J., June 19. , Christian Larsen of Jersey City may be what' "a certain famous statesman would call a "forward ' ' looking" man. About to go to slate prison for 15 years, they tell him, Larsen is look ing around for a job when he comes out. i Experience, the Jersey City man I believes, has fitcd him for the mov ing pictures. , I'm a better gunman than any- i body in the movies or anybody in this jail," Christian writes to the New Jersey manager of one of the film companies. "I can beat that guy Hart on the drop of a gun. If ' you don't believe me, go to Fourth street. Union Hill, and ask the fel low that owns that store. Ask the . cop in East New York how I got ' tway from him. "Now I must go to state prison, maybe for IS years. Let me know if I can go to work for you at $500 a week when I come out, because if you don't want me I want to write to the other moving picture com panies. Maybe ybu won't have to wait 15 years. I might break out. Write quick." Keep Sabbath Holy; Make Your Business Pay, Says Babson Boston, June 19. Going to church pays in business! Religion; to put it another way, is an economic assetl ' "Remember that thou keep holy ' the Sabbath day," taught by Moses centuries ago, pays today despite ' the scoffers. t-' Cardinal O'Connell in (a. recent pastoral letter, Bishop Lawrence in many sermons, Bishop Hughes all great churchmen have been telling . people of the United States that going to church brings material as well as spiritual benefits. Now comes Rover W. Babson, a specialist in cold figures, a statisti . cian who makes figures fail to lie - and proves by those self-same figures that the churchgoer, the man , who brings religion into his daily '.life is bettff off financially than his non -churchgon ling brother. Prosperous Red Men Buy Government Certificates Bismarck, N. D., June 19. Twenty-eight Indians of the Fort . Berthold agency, Elbow Woods, have bought $25,068 of Treasury de- partment savings certificates, ac cording to an announcement made by E. C Kibble, director of the Ninth district government savings organization. -r " These certificates cost the Indians J $83 each and will pay $100 on Jan uary 1, 1925. ' Students Throw Bad " Eggs at Superintendent i Sterling, Kan., June 19. A "bad egg" barrage they laid down over ' Superintendent of Schools East wood proved a "boomerang" for seven high school lads here recently. The "barrage" grew out of East wood's efforts to suppress cigarette smoking in the school yard. r The fines of the "belligerents" ranged from $25 to $200 each. 32 Years On South Side; Has Been Downtown Once Police Captain at Cudahy's Satisfied With Home As His World Dislikes Automobiles. Thirty-two years in Omaha proper, with but one visit to the downtown district and that to the court house to look after his prop erty interests is the boast of W. J. McGuire, 4115 R street, captain of police at the Cudahy packing plant. Nor does the captain feel cha grined that he has not seen more of the world particularly the imme diate surroundings. His Home Is His World. ,From a cozy and comfortable heme, enlightened in family spirit by four boys and four girls, to his duties at the packing plant has been Captain McGuire's world since his migration here from Kansas in 1888. "Vhat's outside of a home?" he asks. "My family is my life. What more enjoyment can a person have than to be among his children?" Regarding amusements, picnic or automobile rides, Captain McGuire has this to say: "There's plenty of amusement about the home. Every married man knows that. And it's all one grand picnic, if you make it so. He's Off Autos Forever. "Automobile rides? Man, deliver me. I'll walk." , Here the venerable police captain told of his first, last and only auto mobile ride he had ever experienced. "It was last fall. My son induced me' to step in the front pew with him. No, it wasn't like the by-gone one-hoss shay. We rode somewhere out west and before I was aware of it, he said we had traveled 15 miles. I thought we were iot far out. I told him I'd get out and start walk ing home. That's the farthest away from home I had been since 1888. Happy Hollow Dazzled Him. "Then, on the way home, we passed some high-falutin. barbeque hall on a green lawn. There were lots 'of bright lights dazzling my eyes, and fairy maidens were skimp ing lightly about the floor and lawn with their male friends. My son told me that was Happy Hol low club house. I thought it was Mickey ponovan's museum in Kan sas City." Captain McGuire confesses freely that if he were detailed bv his wife to go on a shopping tour in Omaha, he would need a compass and a city directory to locatt; himself. He says he has heard of Farnam, Douglas and Sixteenth streets, but would need direction to fird them. On his next wedding anniversary, Sp ends 45 Years in Bathtub in Asylum; Found 'Not Insane Providence, R. I., June 19. Anthony Baden Duffee spent his days living in a bathtub. So they put him in Butler Asylum. They kept him there 45 years. Now they have released him, the court find ing that Anthony was not insane at all. Durfee is 75 years old. He left his bathtub to talk to a reporter. "You will have to excuse me," said he politely, "as I am just from the bath. I am tired of living in an asylum. Forty-five years is enough, don't you think? I don't know where I shall live yet, but shall let my relatives help me choose a place." Attorney Edward J. Noons, who fought the case against Durfee, says he has no objection to the patient's freedom so long as his property is properly administered. Attendants at the asylum say that besides his obsession for cleanliness, the patient has other pronounced tastes. He abhors automobiles, and will walk miles rather than ride in a. motor or electric car. German Militarism v . N Supported by Soviets Paris, June 19. German militar ism has no support whatever in soviet Russia, according to Mr. Tehitchcrin, the bolshevik foreign minister, in an interview with Charles Pettit, the special cor respondent of the Petit Parisien, who has just returned from a trip to Russia. Girls, Don't Wash Your Face Vtt Liska cold cream instead (you have never used anything like it). Juit try it once, and you will never be without it. Soap and water haa a tendency to make the akin rough, and does not cleanse the kin as thoroughly aa Liska cold cream. To prove it make this test: Wash your face with oap and water, dry thoroughly, then apply Liska cold cream, massage it well inte the akin, then wipe oft the su perfluous cream with a aoft white cloth: examine the cloth and see how much dirt has accumulated thereon. Liska cold cream cleanses, softens and beautifies the akin. For sunburn or after a dusty auto trip there is nothing lilke it. It's fine after shaving too. Let hubby or brother try it. Just compare Liska cold cream with any other you have ever used, and you will need no further argument to convince you that it'a the best. It's put up in tubes, the only tanitary way. Try it tonight. You will be delighted. At toilet counters everywhere, including Sherman ft McCon nell, Beaton and Meritt Stores. Money back without erannoo if HUNT'S Salve falls la the treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA. DINnUirtDU rBl"lwv Other Itching skin disease. Try 7i cent bos si our risk. Sherman A McConnell Drug Co. BEAR OIL For Your Hair Tm wht tow hxl4 Indian Thf dont aw pcrfamcd la For m they ed btu oil, lotions. I pv nets of AJ 1 nala is Vsf i aflMi. a) wow pounc rarmwma the fields, ooora and forests Nature. A reliable formula aoTaLKV. lad tins' elixir nair ana sesip. Aetoniihtni ess in onrromln DANDR lododnsr NKW GROWlk tMnU. EA I r tJ A TO. MBM BllM all .k. f.nuft InvMUsate. MOO, ssMMy-rsfeae trwrramtea. Far mm, woman, children. Kmd this advertise ment. Shew ethtra. Positively wonderful. Bey UTalKO at the drac store; or send M mis (silver or stupe) for proof box and foarentes, te Jeka Beit BrltUla, Stay. F. NtwVwfc Captain McGuire and wife will make a 'grand sojourn through the city department stores, he says. But He Knows Cudahy's. Though the captain is not well versed in the location of city stores and attractive places, there is not one single foot of space of the 35 acres covered by the Cudahy pack ing plant that he does not know. He has been on the police depart ment at Cudahy's for the past 31 years. Chief of Police Peter Jolly at Cudahy's has this to 'say regarding Captain McGuire: "He's my most efficient man, and is a true friend to everyone in the plant. The younger element here look up to him as a father." Is 55 Wants to Be 100. Captain McGuire is 55 years old. He believes firmly that he will reach the century mark in age. "I can easily see 45 years ahead of me," he asserted. "I cannot even imagine I'll die before then. Why, half the deaths in the country today occur because persons lose their constitution too quickly they die. because they continually think they're going to die any momenjt." Captain McGuire is a lively sport fan. He says he would rather see a good base ball game than win at poker. "Living Skeleton" Killed; "Snake Charmer" a Widow Pontiac, Mich., June 19. Artie Atherton, the "skelton" of circus fame, known and loved by children all over the world, is dead here as the result of injuries suffered when struck by an automobile several days ago. Atherton, whose real name was Moll, was for years with the Barnum & Bailey and Ringling Brothers shows. His wife was Miss Blanche Buckley, snake charmer. Mary Adelaide, 7 years old, Moll's oldest child, won first prize sev eral years ago in a national perfect bahy contest. ADVERTISEMENT Tired Eyes Lavoptik Common witch hazel, camphor, hydrastis, etc., as mixed in Lavoptik eye wash, produce quick results when used for weak and tired eyes. One customer was greatly astonished at the QUICK benefit produced by a single application. The witch hazel and camphor soothe and relieve in flammation; the hydrastis and other ingredients have tonic and antisep tic properties. We guarantee a small bottle Lavoptik to help ANY CASE weak, strained or inflamed eyes. Aluminum eye cup FREE. Sherman & McConnell Drug Stores and all leading druggists. LADIES! DARKEN YOUR GRAY HAIR Use Grandma's Sage Tea and Sulphur Recipe and Nobody will Know. The use of Sage and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray hair to its na tural color dates back to grand Mother's time. She used it to, keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Whenever her hair, took on that dull, faded or streaked ap pearance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. But brewing at home is mussy and out of date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound," you will get this famous old preparation, improved by the addi tion of other ingredients, which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. A well-known, downtown druggist says it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw them through your hair, taking one strand at, a time. By morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, it becomes beautifully dark and glossy. n mug system or Rectal Diseases ia A ti i eration. No Chloroform, Ether or other general anesthetic used. .d Wri rV" if""7 cd f0 treatment, and no money is to be paid til .Emtamt -a?1 J?1"""' with testimonial, of more ta.o . prominent people who have been permanently cured. iakkt sanatorium, Peters Dr. R. S. Jonnaton. THE OMAHA SUNDAY FAT WOMAN IS AS EFFICIENT AS THIN TYPE Business Success Aided by Sensible Clothes, Lecturer .SaysFrench Heels a Hindrance to Career. Boston, June ' Fat women take hope! . You're jtrst as efficient in business as thin women. So declares Mrs. Frank B. Tupper, lecturer on secretarial ethics and ad viser to girl students at Boston uni versity. . . Mrs Tupper also tells women how to be successful in business. Here are the rules: She should not wear extreme styles. She should not wear her hair in huge puffs over her ear?, She should not wear French heels. She should not wear dropstitch hose and short skirts. The average business man regards girls attired as described above as "poor fools," according to Mrs. Tup per. The successful business woman should be clean, continues Mrs. Tup per. She should shun all prejudices of race, creed and nation. She should have art easy manner of speech. "It is your fault if any employe costs too much," said Mrs. Tupper. "Make your employes responsible for errors in their department. Put your whole experience behind your organization. The old idea of boss ism is gone; we must have co-operation." The speaker said that a whole lot could be accomplished if both em ployers and employes would refrain from bringing their troubles and family matters into the office. "Women do not like to work for women," she said. "Women will take a chance ouicker than men when it comes to changing their jobs," Mrs. Tupper added. "One thing a woman possesses more than a man is patience. You can't tell me anything about the dif ferences between men and women when it conies to jealousy over some body else's promotion. A woman's intuition has saved many a man in business. "You can't tell us to stay home and replace our jobs with men. It is too late. We are in business and we are going to stay. "If I am worth anything to a man he should pay me for having me around. "I would not send a red-headed girl to work for a red-headed man nor a quiet girl without initiative to a man of similar type." Wrinkles That Form Around Eyes and Mouth This Good Look ins; Young Woman Advises Old Time Recipe of Buttermilk Cream in New Way, a Gentle Massage with Fingers Before Retiring All that la Necessary. here is no se cret about it nor is there any doubt about the result it's just common or dinary Buttermilk In the form of a wonderful cream gently massaged with the finger tips around the corners' of the eyes and mouth. To prove this to your complete satis faction, obtain a small quantity of Howard's Buttermilk Cream at any good drug or toilet goods counter on the money back if dissatisfied plan. The directions are simple and it costs so little that any girl or woman can afford it. Manufactured by Howard Bros. Chemical Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Sherman & McConnell Drug Co. can sup ply you. MY TIRED FEET ACHEDFOR"TIZ" Let your sore, swollen, aching feet spread out in a bath of "Tiz." Just take your shoes off and then put those weary, shoe-crinkled, ach ing, burning, corn-pestered, bunion tortured feet of yours in a "Tiz" bath. Your toes will wriggle with joy; they'll look up at you and al most talk and then they'll take an other dive in that "Tiz" bath. When your feet feel like lumps of lead all tired out just try "Tiz." It's grand it's glorious. Your feet will dance with toy; also you will find all pain gone from corns, cal louses and bunions. There's nothing like "Tiz." It's the only remedy that draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up your feet and cause foot torture. Get a box of "Tiz" at any drug or department store don't wait. Ah! how glad your feet get; how com fortable your shoes feel. You can wear shoes a size smaller if you de sire. To Remove First Signs of Old Age "The infallible first sign of age is the sagging cheek muscles," says Mine. Cava lieri, whose fame as a beauty culturi.3t is scarcely less than as a songstress. "These are more difficult and 3erious to treat than wrinkles," she continues. "The sag ging muscles indicate they have grown too weak to remain in place; they must be as sisted, strengthened." The best way to strengthen them Is by bathing the face in a simple lotion made by dissolving an ounce of pure powdered saxolite in a half pint of witch hazel. This creates a freer circulation to the parts, besides causing muscles and skin to con tract. Saxolite, procurable at every drug store, has long been known by complexion specialists to possess remarkable tonic and astringent properties, valuable in treating flabby tissue and wrinkles. treatment that cures Piles, Fistula and othei a short time, without a severs aunrfral An. Trust Bldg. (Bee Bldf.) Omaha, Nek, Medical Director BEE: JUNE 20. 1920. Boston Clergyman Says Man Who Plays Ball Is Clergyman Boston, June 19. Can a man be a Christian and. a sport? Boston clergymen answer in the affirmative. , "A man who plays base ball, golf, tennis or any other sport is a better citizen than one who stays at home and spends his time reading," says the Rev. Kelley Jenness, Methodist minister. Rev. Selden E. MacGeeghon, pas tor of the Congregational church of Northboro, says: "A Christian can not only be a sport he ought to be." Ministers who oppose Sunday base ball agree with those who favor it that sportsmanship should be an American institution. Rev. Richard Wright, pastor of Pilgrim Congregational church, Cambridge, says: "Sport leads to fairness and fair play. Therefore sport and Christianity go hand in hand." "Lifer's" Criminology Work Best Yet Published Salem, Ore., June 19. Based on his own "inside experience behind the walls of the Oregon penitentiary under 12 different wardens, and sup plemented by data and information gathered from many of the larger penal institutions throughout the United States, Jesse P. Webb, a "lifer" in state's prison here, has produced "The American Prison System," a 262-page ' book said by many to be the most able and com prehensive presentation of the sub ject yet published. ihiiiiiiihiiiiib I Pipeless Heatim System Now Sales exceed the capacity of our installation crews in the fall -place your order now for this modern heating plant and be ready for the enjoyment of the winter season. The Colton Heating System is easily installed, without cutting or marring the house--the work is done in the cellar-there is no trouble to the family. Come in -see this modern furnace -let us explain our easy payment terms. DEALERS-Write us for agency proposition. It carries advertising co-operation and is a winner. PARLOR CORNERS WITH LOW LIGHTS CAUSE TROUBLE Columbus Pastor Denounces "Lovers' Lane"; Man Blamed for Nearly All Divorce Cases. Columbus, O., June 19. "Ameri ca can go nowhere 'but to perdition, unless its social customs and prac tices are changed," declared Rev. Dr. Daniel F. Rittenhouse, local Baptist clergyman, discussing the subject, "The Mismated Pair." "Young people no longer consider it necessary to consult father and mother about the most important question of their lives, but, instead, chobse the corner of the back parlor with the lights turned low, or the end of Lovers' lane on a moonlight night. "The average girl today is choos ing ancestry, 12-cylinder cars and a beautiful home in place of true man hood. "Young men, do not be decieved by the old saying that two can live just as cheaply as one. There's noth ing in it. Tax for Bachelors. "The laws of our country should require every young man and woman applying for a marriage license to present a certificate of good health from the family physician. "It is the duty or every normal Omaha-'Des 11 the 404- S. Fl FTEENTH ST.-OMAHA person to marry. I am in favor of a dog tax on bachelors after they are 25 or 30 years old. "Married men, fulfill your con tract. Above all, stay married. Eighty, per cent or divorce cases are the fault of the man." Hold Fast With The Mighty Strength-Giving Power of NUXATED IRON Nothing slips away so easily as Unless YOU hold fait to HEALTH by your own efforts by keeping your blood pure, red and rich in iron the dy may come it to WISH you had acted sooner. Nuxated Iron help trengthen the nerves, restore wasted tissue and build red blood, strength and en durance. Over four million people use it annually. At all druggists. Phone Douglas 2793. 4.J II - 1 L OMAHA mJjET. I Y I PRINTING gpSS h Aaf COMPANY. p3pg K Xohmrciai Printers -Lithographers - SteeiOieEhbosscts loose itAr devices Coltom Moines--Sioux City mmmmm IIIBIIIIIItt : Telephone connection has been es tablished between Halifax and the long distance systems of the United States. Bee Want Loosters. Ads are Business To Health HEALTH. when all you can do MP r g m a I IBBSIIIiliEl