V - ' I I f If THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: NOVEMBER 14, 1920. 3 ft A' f If-; 5 .4 1 Engines in Repair Must Be Reduced, ..; Say Rail Chiefs Shortage Due, They Claim, toToo Many Locomotives Unfit at Same' Time. . 't "Effort to reduce the percentage of locomotives out of service for re pairs pre being made by railway ex ecutives, who declare the car ihort sge is due to the fact that too many locomotives are unfit for service at the same tune. A bulletin 'issued, under the au thority of the Association of Rail Yay Executives, to unify all forces in the effort to secure maximum service from existing transportation facilities shows that an early and substantial reduction in the number of locomotives now unfit for service must be made. This move, according to the ad-J visory committee 01 ine svssuciiuiuu of Railway Executives, is an essen tial part of the mere-transportation program, mapped out since . the roads have been returned-to private ownership. Heavier loading may be. achieved, car movement may be in creased, but adequate means to haul,, the traffic is indispensable, the bulle- tin continues. ' Big Per Cent in Shops. ,On September 15, of all locomo. fives, 17.1 per cent were out of serv ice for repairs requiring over n hours, and 6.4 per cent for repairs requiring less than 2t hours. As a basis for comparison al . though the statistics were kept on a different basis at that time in Sep tember, 1917, 13.5 per cent of freight locomotives were in shops for re pairs or awaiting repairs. 'V The number of locomotives out of. service for repairs is said to be too many even if there were'in scrvr jce all the locomotives needed. According to figures compiled by , the Railway Aje, the average num ber of locomotives provided annually bv the railroads tor eight years prior Jfilhe war. was 2,970. The same$rity estimates that the accumulated shortage of the years 1917, 1918 and 1919, was 3.190., Plan Wholesale Purchase. - 1 f According to reports to 'the Inter ; sJ.te Commerce commission unoffi cially summarized on August 30, the railroads, plan the purchase of 1,800 locomotives this year at a cost of more than $1Q5,000,000. In he program for utilization of the $300,000,000 revolving loan fund trended for m the transportation act; there are loans to some 32 com- parties amounting . to '$29,000,000 to enable them to acquire 636 freight locomotives and "27 swttcning loco motives, having a total value of ap proximately $58,000,000.; , Eeven if this is a maximum fiossi- ble otJ6ram for increase of motive nower at this timej spending the '.is unable to .find work. Business ef availability of new locomotives, the i ficiency experts have various ways bulletin, concludes tjy, saying,' there of determining 6ne's suitability for must be more service- obtained from a task, and good looks (that is, pesi- ena is pledged- the effort of every railroad management. Negro Woman Patient Throws ' Radium Into Drain Pipe ;.' Thomasville, Ga., Nov. 13. There was consternation among the doctors of the Radium institute here when it was found that $7,000 worth of , ndium- had been thrown , into a sewer. . : The radium was being used in treating a negro woman for cancer at the hospital and was left at-' tached for a certain length of time. Deciding that she did not like the odor of radium and saw no good in a little thing like that, airyway, the woman, happening to be left alone, :ut the string holding itand going to the bath room thew the costly remedy into the 3ewer.' When tpe attending physicians returned and found the radium missing and earned of its disposition excitement reigned supreme. f; -.Plumbers were hastily summoned, sewer pipe torn jup and rigorous search made. After extended search the tiny tube, hardly larger than a .needle, was found lodged against the sewer trap in the yard of the hos pital. A young plumber named Sul livan received the $100 reward of fered for the recovery of the radium. Little Girls Prove Fairies Ex-1 ist by Photographing Them London, Nov. 13. -There is noth ing new in spirit photography but a photograph of fairies is something of a novelty. , Two girls, both very young, con stantly told their fathers that at a certain spot in the country doubt dest a glade they eould always sum- mon fairies. ' ' The credulous father suggested Jhat if they could summon them and play with them, why not take photo- : graphs of them. To which end he lent the children his camera. tj.They went to their meeting place and 'summoning their elfin friends promptly proceeded to snap them. . Great was 1iis surprise, the father ratd.'when, upon developing the pho-' td graphs he found the younger of the girls surrounded by fairies with pretty faces anad gaudy wings while the eldest had a delightful chubby- " faced little girl sitting on her knee. Sir A! Conaff Doyle, who has the photographs, has no doubt of their genuineness, and it is stated that he intends- to publish, them in a book. ftpotleggers Redp'Big' . i HaEvest In Thirsty Boston "Boston, Now. 13. Bootleggers are coining money at. the expense of "iiostonians who insist - on having iheif iliquor in spite of prohibition. Profits range as high as $100 a gallon on "doctored" spirits, accord ing to Albert Lynch, chemical expert of the local prohibition enforcement office. Some bootleggers and moon shiners make as much as $15,000 in a few days. ' , . ' r On a smaller scale, men with little ' or no capital mate from $500 to P2.S0O on a trip to New York and re tarn with illicit spirits. Mr. Lynch bases his figures on the confessions of bootleggers who have been caught These men have boast ed that the whisky traffic in Boston 5s a "gold mine." PILES FREE TREATMENT w rr te:itS ftn Ktd rim PI1 trd Putntt Can RCA CO. Dot. 47. .1 maiitaMit. Midi. Homeliness Is No Bar ; - To Girl Getting .a Job - lit: AticK yK5CEw Mrs. Alice Barber believes that appearance, ana if she has effiqenc New York, hov. 6. So ugly she ca:.Vget a jobl , That is the wall of a homely. wo man who complains in a letter "To the Editor" that asNsodn as a pros pective employer! 'gets one look ar htr unlovely features he decides the "place is filled," andthat she need not wait. " . : . A mouth like a huge gash, com plexion a pasty green, eyes like oysters, and a lumpy face with every known blemish so the lady de scribes herself. She wishes some jealous woman who does not "want a pfetty girl in her husband's office would communicate, with her. While we all like comely people and attractive objects about us; yet it seems hard to believe that a caoabJe Jhouah unsightly woman do not enter into consideration except in i '- Rare Casea. In the opinion of a woman expert the homely woman is equally as satisfactory as her pretty sister often more so. Mrs. Alice Barber, who in her capacity as head of an industrial organization advises em ployers as to the fitness of men and women for jobs, says many plain women are by far most desirable in business. ' " Chance For Improvement. "This woman must be awful if she looks like her description," smiled Mrs. Barber, who incidental ly is most prepossessing herself.' . "Bad as Sicr appearance must be, if she is to be believed, she could improve it. . If her hair is stringy let her get a permanent wave. If her complexion is green she can use harmless cosmetics to cover it up. Powder puffs accomplish wonders. It is ridiculous for a woman to com plain in these days of personal im provement that she looks awful. "Plainness dpes not mean-unat-tractiveness. The neat, well-groomed business woman is always a pleasure to look at, and compares very well with the vain beauty who spends hours of her employer's time fussing about her looks. . ; x "Most important of all, in judging the fitness of people for jobs, are personal characteristics. There are 36 of -these to be read from the human face. The four most impor tant and most visible are easy to discern. The others are of less val ue, and five of the qualities apper- ADVERTTSEMENT 1 m fry Physician Explains Who Should Take Nuxated Iron practical Advice on How To Help Build Up Great Strength, Energy and Endurance. "Lack of iron In the blood not only make dan a physical and mental weakling, nervous. Irritable, easily fatifued, but it utterly robs him 5f that virile force, that stamina and strength of will which are so necessary to success and power in every walk of lite, says Or. James Francis Sullivan, formerly physician of Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor DepO. New York, and the Westchester County Hospital. "It may also transform a beautiful, sweet-tempered woman into one who ia cross, nervous and irritable. I have strongly emphasised the treat necessity of physicians, making blood examinations of their weak, aneamic, run. down patients. Thousands of persons go on rear after year suffering from Domical weak. B" "d. ffp'y .ne,X018 condition due to lack m L!ul?.c,ent Uoa ,,n, th.' wd Jlood corouc without ever realizina the real cause of their trouble. Without iron in your blood your food merely passes through the body something like corn through an old mill with toiler! to ride apart that the mill can't grind. "For want of iron you may be an old (nan t thirty, dull of intellect, poor In memory, nervous, irritable, and all 'run down,' while t 50 or 6o with plenty of iron In your blood iti'f.T-in'yiitVit For Heat anil Genuine Spadra $23 Ton (Arkansas Anthracite Coal) ' Coal Department ' B0WMAN-KRANZ LUMBER CO. Phone Colfax 0&10 ,i v 'Nii "Hi i ''J, ,' any girl can improve her. personal y arid is bright she can get work. tain to ,ideals which may not enter intc our consideration at all. 1 - - "Confidence in one's self, aggres siveness, attention, economy, love of people, ' deceit or lack of it, inde pendence, ' parental consideration these are all in the face, to be read at a glance." What the Face Reveals. Mrs. Barber paused to take in the writer and the writer, meanwhile, observed Mrs.- Barber. She has chestnut brown hair, softly waving, the freshest of color, not induced by cosmetics; rounded cheeks, gray eyes and a pleasantly direct manner. A navy blue tailored suit, with a white silk blouse is her business costume. Severe? No, very feminine, as much as the tapering finger tips that ex emplify her theory of well-keptness. "The important things ia an em ploye, man or woman," said the ex pert, "are initiative, conscientious ness that is, intention to fully earn a salary and neatness, which is only fairness to the head of a business. . "Many women say they,can,'t af ford to look nice. They really can't afford not to do so. , "A woman who has not much to spend must use her head in buying. She must study her needs and get as good quality as possible instead of cheap, catchy styles that vanish over .night. . - ". "It'is important to see just what each person is best fitted for. The facjs tells nearly all. Take, for in stance, the nose. A good-sized nose, broad in the center and high on the bridge, mean aggressiveness. The woman with a dish ifose, flattened against her face, must always depend on someone else throughout life. "The mouth tells nearly the whole Story. ' ... 1 ' ' ' ' "If a concern wants to send out on the road a representative who will create good feeling i (hat organiza tion I would never recommend a man or woman whose tipper lip shows nol I! - t I - ! . l . . ..( t" t- -1 line ui rcu auuvc me uiuuui. oulii b person is lacking (ellow feeling. , He is mean and stingy even in his thoughts of other people. 'A long upper lip with a. bit of-red showing is a ' good feature. Such a man is thoughtful of others. But since our faces are never out of proportion, where there is no room for length of Up, the good qualities lacking may be compensated for by thickness of lip, the space between the teeth and the outside of the mouth. That thickness shows that its owner gives the ether man a square deal, thinks about his neifihbors as , ADVERTISEMENT yon may atlU bt young In feeling, lull of ttfti? your whole being Damming over wiio vim and energy." But be tare the Iron yon take (i organic Irosj ' Nuxated Ironand not metallic iron which atopic usually take. Organic iron Nuxated Iron it like the iron in your blood and like the iron In spinach, lentils and apples, while metallic iron It iron iutt as it comet from the action of strong acids on small piece of (roe) filing end It therefore an entirely different thing from Nuxated Iron. Nuxated Iron rep resent organic iron In such a highly concen trated form that one dose ia estimated to be approximately equivalent (in organic Iroa content) to eating one-half quart of tpinach. on, o( vetn sublet or half a dotea baked applet. It it like taking extractt of beef instead of eating pound of bed. Over 4,000,000 people annually are urine Nuxated Iron. It quickly helps make rich red blood, revitalize wornout exhausted acrvea and give Increased strength and energy. Youf money will be refunded by the manulacturent if it doe not produce satisfactory result. Pot sale by all druggists. - 'MiHmHauMi ma Real Economy well as himself. But above all a man must have confidence to succeed. "As for homeliness why be home ly?" Mrs. Barber wants to know. Views of Dr. Quockenbos. ""Another point of view on the ques tion of homely candidates for work is that of a distinguished psycholo gist, Dr. John D. Quackenbos, who does not believe a homely woman in an office will necessarily free a busi ness man's wife from the pangs of jealousy. "For economic reasons a man might wish to hire a homely woman who wouldn't want as much salary with which to bedeck herself as a pretty and vain one. Otherwise I think men like to have not necessar ily pretty women about them, but tMose xthat do not offend the eye, other things being equal. "Hideously ugly women some times have peculiarities of at traction that will deflect a man from the path of righteousness. In my professional experience I know of many such cases where men have V7W I Mahogany Cane Suite Here is a library or living- room suite that ia Indeed a bargain. Arm cnair, rocner ana taoie ail nnisnca in beau- yfv jM. ga af tiful polished and hand rubbed mahogany. iamirifl gi C 1 1 Chairs have closely woven cane backs and 2ra Jf II fltmHll beautifully patterned tapestry teats. Table V M XI 1 KM Vr hat wood inlaid top and is a masterpiece of the wood finishers' art Come in the Wil liam and Mary perl d, or in the Queen Anns perioa. -- renucea to only 3-Piece Bed - Th gMliMw ree massive pieces in overstuffed uphol- sagt jfr. gV irlngv Has the genuine Pullman bed- riT ft I If g W venpprt that opens to a full size bed in WE? II It Wr M sterlnsr. riAvnnnnrt that oDena an instant. This is Indeed a wonderful suite in every respect and a bargain at the I . .' ...... ..Ittnn. H!n. A.ltt lOW ,1 ICO WW BID A l ivO Dining Suite Jacobean Made after the beautiful Queen Anne period de sign and is a very fine dining- suite. Finished in the popular Jacobean f iniah and a bargain for tomorrow. Chairs have genuine leather seats, and .table Is round extension style, for tomorrow reduced to only jGreat Dollar for Dol lar Value. u r rum 1 ' n a $uite-Walnut or Mahogany S This Is a very substantial two-piece suite and comes In your choice cf fH mahoirs-ny or walnut finish. Larg;e, full aizo double bed, and dresser with three sets of drawers and large French plate glass mirror. You 11 s ' be quick to appreciate the value here. 1 Dresser, $59.75 Bed, $42.50 Unusual 9x12 Seamless Axminster Bugs 0x12 Velvet Rugs v, 9xl2S'mlessWU ton Velvet Rugs 9x12 Seamless Brussels Rugs '49 s JOT 1 II III sarrmx&(7rtfr ffftm muiiiMm turned from their wives and families for some such ugly wrench. "I knew of a case where a patient of my great uncle's, also a physician, married a very ugly woman. My relative predicted that the man woukl cut his throat in despar. The unhappy husband finally did this. He simply couldn't endure the sight of his wife. ! . Beauty is Preferred. "Now, many business men do not necessarily aspire to have an office blooming with beauties, but realize that beauty does not necessarily mean badness where ugliness might. The average male, though, would like to have the woman who works for him at. least somewhat comely, i nice looking stenographer, nurseor office helper. A woman who is so homely or. unkempt that she gets in to a man's eye is a disturbing thing to have about, really annoying. "It is also quite true that when a plain girl makes less mistakes than a pretty one, the fairer girl's lapses arc more likely to be overlooked. Easy-Tetms to All. ' Davenport Suite . Liberal Terms. 50 Trico. Two-Piece Rug Bargains 9x12 Royal Wil ton Rug, Fringed 6x9 Royal Wil- T3M ffinni ai mi ii nil '-s '591 '231 ton Rugs 9x12 Seamless Brussels Rugs 9x12 Wool and Fibre Rugs Unconscious favoritism may some times cause men to have good-looking girls to wcrk for them. "But they are safer than the ugly woman vhh a strong attraction or dtsire for attention. She is not to be resisted, and her lovely sister may be entirely lacking in these dangerous qualities. There are many love-loose men who cannot be trusted wifh any woman, but in my statements I am dealing with the average decent man and the unusual woman. The tgly female." The pretty girl, it seems, might be more worried about meeting her beau after work than flirting with' men met in the course of business, whereas her ugly counterpart would be reduced to the pitiful necessity of tring her wiles on the nearest available man, s:nce she realizes her shortcomings and cannot lose any precious moments. At least Dr. Cfuaccnboss dictum about ugliness ought to be soothing to women who take seriously the cartoons and jokes about beautiful blonde stenographers. H Here is the famous Coles . T' 5 " r-j H S3 Hot Blast at an unbelleva- U 1 $2 f 1 H bly low price. Is fully guar- Wv. l ' II 11 3 anteed by the Coles factory to WJ-II A H give long and excellent service J . II Is attractively trimmed in highlj v f JiV 55 polished nickel, making it a very T ? -7 is H beautiful stove and one that you X ir fk 4 -va HI s wiH he proud to have In your living . ex , sSL, JZ!Ajrf room. Burns all of the cheaper fuels Sv 0 U&k - Jt TSrC S on tm a .. I I 1 Tt-.. TV fl&Vl 'J. -K.--7t S1 IfmJUDIW j I Jacobean Finish $7950 Here is a beautiful period buffet, fipely finished in the 'popular Jacobean finish. Willlajm and Mary design, makes it( a dis tinctive addition to your dining; room. Excellent construction throughout. Price reduced. i i s Porcelain Top $1 2J One of the finest kitchen table on the market today. Ha larg;e porcelain top that is very easily cleaned and comes in the beauti ful white enamel finish. Has large, roomy drawer and ia very substantially made. IliSixteentK aer siove ' tor tomorrow be on hand v fi-sTftl - - ngxp'' early, as we have only a few of these re- lOT' """"ia sj . tV!" s markable values in stock. To be closed IjlSy SA ' I trj U1B sitsiSBBSBj n I 1 m mm Pa KMM HMMHBHHim MaBBM m gt ''"MMagaViMgailMHMW' 'slWMMilllgJMMWsasgtMMsjigijMjglsjBM VI r Ti f 1 fm ' Chinese God Is Stolen. London, Nov. 13 Police are faced with a rare mystery in the stealin from a dealer's shop of a Chinese god nearly 1,700 years old. It vas valued at $-100. Much more valuable things were untouched. The thief is believed to have been a devotee of the ancient god. Have You Joined? Joined what? The Schmoller & Mueller Christmas Piano Clui), of course. , All interested piano buyers are joining. For full details see our large ad in this paper. Page 8A. Schmoller & Mueller Loyal Regent This is an oak heater and a stove that assures you complete warmth the coldest days that are to come this winter.' Attrac tively trimmed in nickel and has all joints very securely fitted. Has the corru gated firepot that means econom ical burning. Wonderful value and the price is cut tomorrow to only Metal T03 i &250 This is a kitchen cabinet that should be in the kitchen of every home. Has the sifting flour bin, sliding; metal table , top, and metal lined, moisture proof bread box. A place for everything that is used for cooking-. Terms if you le. t A M ) i Golden Oak $0050 A large, roomy dresser that can be easily matched with any bedroom suite. Has throe eta of roomy drawers and large French plate glass mir ror. -V bargain you are Biire to want at the low price we are e -a. - Street Between Howard and Harney! LEG TROUBLE LACED STOCKING ..-.NO RUBBER..-.. v WASHABLE OPEN OR SWOLLEN LIMBS, VARICOSE VEINS Laca lika a lagging, ifcei J peach, two at rt ijJ 4 jduced' rata. Call or tend for mea surement Blank No. 35. Corlit Limb Spec. Co., Room 323 Lragacra Bldg, B'way and 42nd St. Ntw York City. CUT THIS OUT. CHRYSANTHEMUMS EVERGREEN BLANKETS For Sal by Forest Lawn Greenhouse Colfax 0134 Simmons Bed m 1 35 3233 Mm It a genuine Simmons bed and S is frutrunt.'t-d by the factory to 3 Kive excellent service. Has SH heavy continuous posts and sub- stantial fillers. Comes in all the popular finishes and is a won- 3 derl'ul "buy", at the low price vre are asking for tomorrow. ' China Cabinet ?S9s u Here is a beautiful china cabinet that nom in the Golden oak fin ish. Haa larsre glass door and i excellently constructed. A bar Rain that you will be glad to have us put In your home at the low price we are asking: for to morrow,'. Xou save big- money !: