THE BEE: OMAHA. MONDAY. OCTOBER 31. Mil. First Half of Smith Revival Is Big Success Influence is Extensive and Sponsor! Are Loud in Praise Few Mistake Were Made. Gipsy Smith Calendar All meetings at Auditorium un lets otherwise specified, Monday. High school g'rls at Y. W. C A.. 3:30 p. m. Family piht. 7:30. Wednesday. ' Grammar school boys and girls at Y. W. C. A., 4 p.m. Thursday. Mother's day, 2:30 p. m. . Retail Grocers' association It Auditorium, 7:30 p. m. Friday. Grammar school boys and girls at Y. W. C. A., 4 p. m. Boy Scouts, Camp Firs Girls, V. W. C A. and Y. M. C. A. members at Auditorium, 7:30 p. m. Meetings for business men and women at the Brandeis theater each noon. Numerous delegations have made reservations for Mats dur ing next week of whichfjmounce ments will be made late. . The first half of the Gipsy Smith revival campaign came to a close Friday night at the Auditorium with a splendid meeting for the young folk of the city. In the first two weeks of the campaign, young and old alike have become intensely in terested in the revival and "back to the church" movement which has been led by Gipsy Smith, the mes senger of Christ on five continents and a religious worker for 35 years. All church and campaign officials express satisfaction at the progress the revival has made! Few Mistakes Made. "There is always a certain amount of ground work and preliminary . struggle that must be gone through in a movement of this kind before it begins to shape its course and run smoothly," the Rev. Titus Lowe said in commenting on the revival. "The plans we had settled on nec essarily had to be changed at times to meet unexpected circumstances and as we were all inexperienced in a work of this magnitude, we had to make a few mistakes before we could learn many important things. Preliminaries Are Over. "We have got over all the pre liminary work and the next two weeks will go off with a bang," the minister said. Gipsy Smith and his corps' of re ligious workers are of the same opin ion, namely that the next two weeks of the campaign will see rcarlfpit riniicps .arli nicrrir anil ffinii. sands rededicated to Christ's work. A The raising of the campaign bud get from $15,000 to $18,000 was one of the important things done last wri.:"v2 As was first announced the expenseVof bringing the Smith party and of liie revivaLnvas placed'at $15,000. The wpf kers announced that when this money was collected there would be no more collections. . Last week the amount was raised to $18,000 and the additional $3,000 will be used when the main revival has been finished, to carry on an in tensive "follow-up" campaign in the churches and among those ' who signed pledge cards of rededication. The whole plan of the follow-up campaign will bring as many people ' back to the church as possible. .Al ready more than $10,000 of the money has been pledged. Influence Not Local. Another interesting feature has de veloped and that is, the influence of the revival is not local. Many persons who have their homes in adjacent states have come to the meetings and have signed pledge cards. These cards are to be for ' warde.d to pastors in the signers' home town. Then too many; Oma hails who have an intense interest in the revival have " been sending daily papers to friends in all parts of the country. Gipsy Smith said not long ago, "The Omaha papers are .splendid. They are doing a great work in their aid of the campaign. I have had many letters from personal friends who have received papers. I have also sent out many and they have brought replies. My friends see me, in the reports of the meetings." The noonday meetings, which started off with just a fair atten dance, in the past week have gained more fav6r and all last Week, irt spite of bad weather for two days, the Brandeis theater was a worship ping place for the business men and women who came to hear of God, if for only five minutes. The collec tions taken at these meetings, in comparison to the big meeting, have been much larger. - Choir's Work Splendid. The big choir of almost 1.000 voices under the leadership of "Wee Willie" McEwan has been doing Splendid work the past two weeks and is really one of the features of the revival. The splendid thing of it all is that the singers are all Oma ha men and women. The revival will uncover a host of musical talent that heretofore was unknown. It has demonstrated that Omaha has the talent to sing any of the oratorios or cantatas which require a large chorus. J. Edward Carnal is re sponsible mostly for the organiza tion of the choir. Something worth while in ensemble singing may re sult from the excellent chorus which has been organizqd. , Young people's night, Friday ot each week, will also result in the organization of a young people's union, according to the Rev, Titus Lowe, for the purpose of perpetu ating the friendships made among the young people during the revivals. It has. been many years since the young people hive turned out in such large numbers to any religious services. Inch and Quarter of Rain At Beatrice Helps Wheat Beatrice, Neb., Oct. 30. (Special.) Acording to the government weather bureau here 1.23 inches ol rain fell here Friday night The moisture came just in time to sate thousands of acres o winter wheat Thousands Greet Foch By tsra - -j Marshal Foch,' generalissimo of the allied armies, upon his arrivel In New York received a welcoms such as has not been experienced since the armistice day of 1918. The thunderous din in the harbor, along the water front and along the Una of march of the famed old fighter has never been equalled. Cannon on Govern or's Island boomed out a deafening salute, transAtlantlo steamships vied with tugs and ferryboats with car splitting' blasts of their sirens, and hundreds of river and harbor craft of every description sent out a shrill ovation that added to the gigantic roar. The city, state and nation formally greeted the celebrated marshal when he stepped foot on American shores. The photograph shows Mayor Hylan shaking hands with Marshal Foch. On the right is Governor Miller and on the left Rodman Wanamaker. ' . Net Tightening Around Suspect In Priest Murder Sheila Found Near Scene" of Crime Said to Fit "Gun. Taken From Room of ; Suspect Lead,.S. D, Oct. 30. While an automobile load Of."' officers from Deadwood was speeding in the . di rection of Sheridan, Wyo., today, in the hope of apprehending Andrew Rolando, wanted in connection with the death of Father A. B. Belknap, Catholic priest of Lead, local authori ties were summing up the evidence availed in the case According to information obtained through the sheriff's office' and of ficial sources in Lead, the following are said to be important develop ments: . ' . The finding of three empty shells near the spot where the body 'of the priest was found early Wednesday morning oft Poor Man s Gulch high way, where he had been shot down by an unknown assailant The shells are of a brand that can be purchased at but one store in Lead and authorities declare they have teamed that Rolando purchased some shells of this brand These shells fit a gun found in Rolando's room the day after he disappeared from Lead, officers assert A hammer alleged to have been taken from Father Belknap's auto mobile was found in Rolando's room. Sinn Fein Demand Revision on Ulster Hopes for Final Settlement of Peace in Ireland! Improving Next Meeting Tuesday. By JOHN STEELE. Chlca.ro Thlbun Cable, Copyright ig?l London, Oct. 30. I have learnod that the government is ndw in pos session of the Irish demands which Prime Minister Lloyd George , in sisted on having after Eamonn de Valera's telegram to Pope Benedict brought matters to a crisis. It is stated that sovereignty is not men tioned, thus by impication surren dering that demand, but the main demand is for the revision of Ulster's position. , I he Sinn baa asks that either Ulster consent to Come into united Ireland or to agree to a plebiscite for the revision of its boundaries. Under such an arrangement Ulster would be sure to lose Tyrone and Fermanagh. The government's chief difficulty ih agreeing to a plebiscite is the fact that there is a solid block of Protestants in thi center of Tyr-i one. while in the( east and west the county is Catholic, There will be no further meeting Of the conference until Tuesday and in the meantime hopes for the final success are improving. LoydS is in suring the risk of a general election before the end of the year at 40 per cent which means 6 to 4 against a general election. As a general election only is possible if the con ference breaks down, these opinions reflect the best opinion ' on the chances of success. There is a revival of the fear that Mr. Lloyd George may not be able to get away ntxt Saturday for Wash ington, hut he is still determined to go if possible and in any case he will go later. During . the prime minis ter's absence Arthur J. Balfour will act as chief of the British delegation. Rail Strike Situation In Texas Unchanged Houston, Tex, Oct 30. From all apparent angles, the strike situation on the I. & G. N. railroad remained unchanged tonight The 600 train men are still on strike and so far an adjustment leading to their re turning to work has not been made. Tomorrow there will b ft confer ence here of union officials. Execu tives of the road met Saturday- eve ning with James A. Baker, receiver for the road. 4 Striking trainmen await the action of their leaders with confidence. Ac cording to Mr. Kellis, the strike has remained unbroken since the hour the men left their jobs notwith standing the reports to the contrary. Monkey fur is still a favorite trimming for elaborate models as well as for day wear dresses. "Sideslips" From Air Meet , Guy Kiddoo, in charge of arrange ments for the international congress, is out gunning for an attorney who will tend to legal phases that may arise through possible accidents or property rights. t The attorney is ex pected to serve gratuitously on the committee. ' Harley Conant has been elected treasurer of . the newly organized finance committee of the congress. The committee requests all persons to whom the congress is indebted te send a new statement to Mr. Conant , Clarke Powell, in charge of the committee of judges at the congress, is short five stop watches. "If I don't have 'em, those planes'll skid 'round those corners," said Clark. "The steady rainfall of the last two days has benefited the new field in North Omaha," declared Charles L. Trimble. "It - hasr settled the loose, ground and tended to make the field more smooth. It'll be in fine shape for the meet" . .. Red Cross ambulances and nurses will be on the aerial meet field in case of accident, Gould Dietz re ported at a joint meeting of com mittee chairmen. Governor S. R. McKelvie and Mayor Dahlman, together ' with prominent Omaha business men, will go to Kansas City to extend a spe cial invitation to Marshal Foch to attend the congress. Col. Amos Thomas, head of the Rail Labor Board Forbids Union IMen to Strike U. S. "Wage Commission An nounces That Any Workers Who Walk Out Will Be Considered as Outlaws. By Tba Associated tress. ' Chicago, Oct 30. The United States railroad labor board, in ef fect, forbade railroad union labor from striking without the board's permission and " declared that all strikers who violated the order would be Classed as outlaws who had voU unarily removed themselves from the protection ot the transportation act The labor board, after detailing the decision of both sides to abide by the Jaw, says, tnese tacts render it unnecessary for the board to make any further Orders on or about this mattef and move it tb congratulate the parties directly interested and the public, most vitally and pro foundly interested, on this return to industrial peace, triumph of the reign of law and the escape from this national disaster - " Makes Position Clear. "But at this time the board deems it expedient and proper to makets rulings and position on some of the points involved so clear that no, ground for any misunderstanding can hereaf tef exist. . First, when anv chanares of wages, contracts or rules previously in effect are contemplated or pro posed by either party, conference must be had as directed by the trans portation act and by rules or deci sions of procedure promulgated by the board, and where agreements are not reached the dispute must be brought before this board, and no action taken or change made until authorized by the board. , Decision Violated. "Second, the ordering or authorix ing of a strike against decision num ber 147 (the July 1 wage cut) of tis board is a violation of that decision. The board desires to ooint out such overt acts by either party tending to and threatening an interruption of the transportation lines, the peaceful and - uninterrupted operations of which are so absolutely necessary to the' peace, prosperity and safety ol the entire people, are in themselves, even when they do not culminate in a stoppage of traffic, a cause and source of great injury and damage. West Point Breeder Selli Duroc Hog for $465 West Point Neb.. Oct 30. (Spe cial) The annual Duroc Jersey hog sale of Herman Toelle was held here. The highest priced animal was Sold to Herman Bloom Of Creighton for $465. Buyers were present from four different states. The amount re j v:- .... . - -iAt in (uvea uam uiii ii was fift.jv. JL Land and Sea Nebraska National Guard in Omaha, has promised the services of 50 auardsmen on the field. Mayor Dahl man said he would add 50 traffic policemen to care for the crowds. Randall K. Brown, chairman of the finance committee, reported that he anticipates no special difficulty in raising the necessary funds to per fect the congress. "Though the meet has been quite unpopular, he said, business men of Omaha see they can't let it be dropped." Mrs. Mabel Walker of the Cham ber of Commerce will be in charge of the registration of delegates from state flying associations to organise a national air body. Who will be distinguished enough at the International Aero congress to be dined at the banquet of avia tors gratis? That is troubling Gould Dietz. in charge of arrangements for the banquet. A charge of $3 will be made to all who attend the banquet except ' distinguished visi tors. "Wherell 1 draw the line," Mr. Diet asked. - '.'The board further points out for the consideration of employes inter ested, that when such action does result in a strike the organization so acting has forfeited its rights and the rights of its members in and to the provisions and benefits of all con tracts theretofore existing, and the employes so striking have voluntar ily removed themselves from the classes" entitled to, appeal to ' this board for relief and protection." ' Chicago Grain By CHARLES D. MICHAELS. Cfelcasto TrtbaMHOmatia Bt JUaMd Wire. Chicago, Oct 30. The wheat sit uation is a two-sided . affair with statistics as bullish as it is possible to make them. ' New export buying is light, receipts are falling off and elevators are well stocked with grain. Those who are basing their opera tions on statistics are figuring on a reduction in stocks in the near fu ture. The theory is that when stocks commence to decrease specu lation will come into the market in sufficient volume to advance prices and that the turning point is almost at hand. A point made by close students of speculative conditions does not present as bullish a situation as the statistics indicate. It is true that our surplus has been largely ex ported and on the theory that wheat is ft domestic proposition and will be scarce later. the question is: Will speculative buying be strong enough to carry prices higher and hold the advance? We have had six years of bullish conditions. Light . sup plies and cash premiums have made it easy to advance prices. Usually after such an extended period of high prices, bearish conditions pre dominate. . How long the latter will last is problematical. The entire question seems to concentrate on the extent of the volume of speculative buying that can be developed. Canada TjBd8lllnc V. 8. for the tprht Sulilnf what In ths T7Hlt4 States Markets l lafgelr aiding Canada to sell itt surplus to better ad vantage. Admitting1 that tre might he a tlttls wheat tor export, it la giving Canada a thanes to Undersell lis, which they are doing and Will continue to do ao as long as they havo good supplies. Looking ahead, there Is the Argentine Wheat aros With 4 good sromise, harvest ing or which IS only 30 days off. A llttld later -Australia comes Ih and win be followed by India. Argentine has some old wheat left, while Australia is regarded as nearly sold out India is Importing wheat, and a cargo- left Balti more for Bombay on Saturday. Flour millers hare been accumulating stocks of wheat tot a tew weeks, fearing a railroad tleup, and hava secured fair supplies. Flour business, which was stimulated by Stocking up Of consumers preparatory for a strike, haa decreased the last few daya. It Is understood that the Russian relief haa bought large quantity ot flour m1 that moat of the food for. starring Rus sians will bo sent ready for use, but proportion! of Wheat and fyo flour Is not reported, A tot of 41,388 sack., ot flour left New TOfk Saturday for Fetrograd, and more la to follow. Many Cross Currents. In all, the wheat aitttatton presents so many crest currents, all ot which must be considered that, slmmorcd down, the future of prices is largely a question of supplies and the Tolume of speculation It la possible to create. A. few strong op eratera ballere the turn haa come, and with the market Well llquidam, tey look tor an Irregular advance, while others who are active in the trade, think It la too early by a month or more to take a firm stand on Che buying side. Much will depend upon tho outcome ot the southern hemisphere crops. A great deal has been aatd itt Various r porta about the business of the United States Oraln Growers. Inc., the farmers' grain company, which propoM to handle the grain business of the country. Recent statements issued by tb official bulletins say the company is handling eight cars of wheat daily in tho northwest, which la going through the equity oachange at St. PauL and so far they have had about 4t,0l bushels this season. It has been given out that they had IMM.OOO bushels of grain. Instead of this being actual grain, it I understood to be the signing tip of farmers of grain they aspect to raiao neit aeaaon. Th total merhberehin of tho rnlleif State. Oral o rowers. Inc.. on October SI . mwww si m ut was ll.lto. an lncrtaso of l.CU I . . . . i Japs Announce Stand at World Arms Conference Will Not Plead Ovfr-Popul tion as Necessity for Ex pansion on Asiatic Mainland. By ARTHUR SEARS HENNINO. ChsMfl Tribes 0 to Dm Iaw Wlro, Washington, Oct. 30. The first disclosure of the policy to be pur sued by the Japanese delegation at the conference on the limitation of armaments is that Japan will not plead over-population as a necesity tor expansion on the Asiatic main land. The neceiiltv of obtaining the en larged supply of raw material and other resources that will enable Japan to become an industrial na tion will be put forward in explana tion of the extension of Japanese power and interests in China and of the measures adopted as the means to the end. In taking this stand, the Japanese have cut the ground from under their American friends who have been contending for years that Japan is crowded to the point of suffoca tion, that Japan, therefore, must be allowed to spread to the mainland and that the more of an outlet Japan finds for its population in China and Siberia the less pressure there will be ol Japanese emigration to America. Must Find Solution. The trouble with this theory Is that it failed to stand up under scrutiny of, the facts. The density of population, it appears, is no greater than in England and Bel gium and with southern Manchuria and Korea under Japanese control for nearly 20 years, fewer than 500,000 Japanese have emigrated thereto. True it is that the arable land of Japan is densely peopled. Surplus population, however, is not attract ed to the mainland because the Ja panese are unable to compete suc cessfully with the Chinese and Kor eans. Hence, Japan must find some other solution of the surplus popu lation problem. To transform Japan from a chief ly agricultural to a chiefly indus trial nation is the solution to which the Tokio government is now ad dressing itself. But Japan is poor in the coal, iron and other raw mate rials needed to build up an indus trial nation. China is rich in such resources and to China Japan turns for these necessities. Problem Complicated. Of course, it appears from the views of the Japanese, it is not fea sible to obtain such materials in the ordinary course of trade. Conces sions to develop mines must be ob tained and also political control of such districts granted by one Chi nese government would be abrogat ed by another or local disturbances would interfere with operations. In obtaining political control of portions of China for the purpose of protecting the development of re sources, Japan falls foul of the nu merous pledges to preserve the territorial- integrity, of China, which it, like other powers, has given That will be the stumbling block to the Japanese aims in the confer ence. In the 21 demands, Japan was found to have designed Jo make a political dependency of China. To what extent also Japanese aims trench upon the open-door principle is another question that will engage the attention of the contcrence. Ja panese operations in Manchuria al ready have aroused much complaint on this score. Shakeup Occurs On South Side Police Detail Two Patrolmen Transferred To Duty at Central Station; V Detective Pairs Are - Reorganized. r Several radical changes in the as signment of officers at the South Side police station have ben made for the November detail, which shows a transfer oone or two offi cers to Central station. Patrolman George P. Belitz, who has ben promoted to serve as a de tective will do duty on the South Side in place of John Rybin, who will patrol a beat downtown. Belitz has been appointed as detective on six months' probation and will be paired with Joe Potach doing moral quad duty. Detectives Keane and Wright will work together and Detectives Sle zewiski and Briflkman Will work as team mates. Joe Beister, for several years patrolman on the South Side, will work out of Central station. Cv. Brown, appointed desk ser- areant on the South Side and who has been absent on sick leave, will return as desk sergeant on the after noon shift, while Ralph Hughes, who was acting desk sergeant, relieving Brown, will return to a Beat out ot Central station. Tudire Charles E. Foster will serve on the police court bench, replacing Judge W. F. Wappch, who will go to central station. Papillion Notes Jnhfl f) Steels and Miss Mary O. Btrat- man Were married by Judge Wheat. Mrs. Lena Sweetman of Omaha spent Sunday at the j. K Strawn home. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Frye moved to Omaha. FrIBay, whoro they will mako tbalr home. Frank Empey of Slou Falls, S. D., spent Saturday With his mother, Mrs. A. F. Xmpey. Thieves entered tho barn of Charles Hysham, Sunday and stole thres sets of heavy harness Valued at 1200. Miss Otadys King, who la teaching In tho Lexington school, spent th week end at th homo ot her parents her.. A farewell surprise party was given ! honor of Mrs. T. E. Murray. Tuesday. Sev eral hour Were spent very pleasantly and a nice lunch was served. They will Uovo to Millard In tho near future. Tho Royal Neighbors camp of Omaha came to Papillion, Friday evening and Joined the lodge her la Initiating candi dates. An address was given by Mlea Robinson, state deputy, and by Mrs. Owens of Omaha. Lunch waa served. A verdict for ITS was Brought In Wed nesday In the of Albert Rnthermond against the Missouri Paclfte Railway company- for Injurres -svetaineff last fer em ber when be was struck while in bla car by Um Missouri f acUls train, . Club Woman Prefers Jail to Probation Mrs. Loretta Linncll, Springfield, Man., club woman, who prefers jail to probation. "Probation," she said, "is what is meted out to women of the gut ter, wicked women who have trans greised the laws of God and man all their lives. I am not that kind of a woman. She has entered a counter suit for divorce sgainst her husband. Her bert S. Linncll, world traveler, en gineer and clubman. Mrs. Linnell spent a month in jail because she refused to stay away from her hus band's home and for refusing to be placed under probation for a year. Harley Moorhead .Will Not Ask for Reappointment Harley Moorhead, election com missioner of Douglas county since the creation of the office in 1913, an nounced Saturday that he will not be a candidate for reappointment when his term expires next January. Mr. Moorhead is to be one of a new law firm with Alvin F. Johnson and John A. Rine. the latter former city attorney. J. he tirm is to be known as Johnson, Moorhead & Rine, with . offices in the Keeline building, effective November 1. Mr. Moorhead will not resign his position as jury commission, he said. This office is filled by appointment of the district judges and its term is at tfieir pleasure. Appointment of Mr. Moorhead's successor is dependent upon Gover nor McKelvie, who has not selected the new election commissioner yet. Mr. Moorhead was named election commissioner by Governor Morehead. He undertook the difficult task of putting the new election system in effect on short notice. He was re appointed by Governor Neville and, although a democrat, was retained by 'Governor McKelvie, a republi can; In the eight years of his ad ministration, the office has been sin gularly free from criticism. Qrief City News Charles S. . Elputter hag . opened new law offices, 707 W. O. W. Bldg. Tel. Jackson 3811. "" tuiti The New Laws on teeth cleaning five of them Dental science has adopted new laws on teeth cleaning. They mean whiter, cleaner, safer teeth to those who follow them. Millions employ these new methods, largely by dental ad vice. Now this ten-day test is offered to show every home the results. H 1Fight the film .'The first law is to fight film that viscous coat you feeL It dims the teeth and causes most tooth troubles. Film clings to teeth, enter crevices and Stays. Old ways of brushing do not end it So few have escaped some form of film attack. ' j Film absorbs stains,' making the teeth look dingy. It is the basis of tartar. It holds food substance which ferment and CP2l MBsaBaaaMMMn PAT OFV JI 'RE ft. U.S. bs-SSSrMHssssMaHss-flHHBHHH The New-Day Dentifrice A scientific film combatant, whose every application brings five desired effects. Approved by highest authorities, and now advised by leading dentists everywhere. All druggists supply the large tubes. Farmers Near Kearney Ask Abolition of I.C. C. Kearney, Neb., Oct. 30,-(Specia1.) The executive committee of the Buffalo county farm bureau wrot on record in meeting here as ap proving abolition of the Interstate Commerce commission and alio op poking a guarantee to the railroads, to they may be free to make reduc tions In rates as thry see fit." Reso lutions embodying these suggestions were adopted unanimously. A general opinion prevailed among farmers present that the Interstate Commerce commission wss inclined to be too friendly toward "big busi ness and governed its rulings ac cordingly. In the same series of resolutions congress was asked to speedily bring about such changes as will help straighten out the financial tangle in which agriculture now finds itself Indicted German Wishes to Return Man Charged With Violation Of Neutrality Wants to Be come American Citizen. Washington, Oct. 30. The State department has asked the depart ment of justice to rule on permitting the return to this country, of Cap. Hans Taucher, late oi the imperial German army, who left for Ger many in February, 1917, with for mer Ambassador Von Bernsdorff, while under indictment in San Fran cisco for violation of American neutrality. According to official advices from Berlin, Taucher wishes to become an American citizen as an example to his countrymen of the proper solution of Germany's future culti vation of good relations with this country. He is reported to have suggested that thte government drop the indictment still pending at tan francisco, in order that he may transfer his allegiance. Despite Taucher s record of al leged connection with the activities of Von Bernstoff, Von Papen and other German agents, the War and Navy departments are understood to see no objection to his return. It is intimated that Taucher pos sesses certain secret inlormation which would be of value, both to the government and certain American industries. Taucher, according to intelligence agents, was concerned with wide spread German intrigue in this coun try and was indicted in San Fran cisco with Von Papen for violation of neutrality laws m connection with the so-called Hindu plot to Ship arms and ammunition to inaia. After reaching Germany, however, he is declared to have evidenced a friendly attitude toward this coun trv and used his influence in behalf of American prisoners of war. Wilson Improving Washington! ' Oct. 30. Former President Wilson had practically re covered today, it was said at his home, from the slight attack of ii-' digestion which yesterday prevented him from receiving Marshal Foch. However, on advice of his physician, Read Admiral Carey T. Grayson, Mr. Witeon remained in bed. forms acid. It holds the acid in contact with the teeth to cause decay. Millions of germs breed in it They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. Two methods now Two ways are now known to fight film. Able authorities have . proved their efficiency. Leading dentists everywhere now advise their daily use. . Both are embodied in Pepso dent a scientific tooth paste. They keep the teeth uniquely clean and also highly polished. Three other laws Modern starchy diet also calls for other helps to Nature. So every use of Pepsodent brings these three desired results. 1 A multiplied salivary flow. 10 Overlook Farm To Be Visited hy. Various Clubs Organization! That Will Aid In Father Flanagan'i Boyi . Home Drive to Inspect Institution. Omaha's civic organifatinns are going to make special trips to Over, look firm within the next two weeks to see personally, the work being done by Father Flanagan's Roys' home, before the drive for $300,000, which starts November 14, Official invitations to these clubs will be delivered at various times this week by one of the "boy orators of l ather rlanaeans home. The Rotary club has arranged to have luncheon there Wednesday, November 9. The Lions' club will have luncheon attlhe home Tuesday, November 8. Will Start Monday. The "boy orator" will begin at 1 p. m. Monday, making the omcial invitations. At this time he will speak before the Omaha Women's club in the Burgess-Nash tea rooms. The boy will be accompanied by J, E. Davidson, chairman of the cam- paign executive committee. Mem bers of the Women's club will ote Monday on a time for visiting the home. The "bov orator." with Mr. David son, will appear Monday night be fore the Ad-Sell league at the Fon tenclle hotel, before the Lions' club Tuesday, the Rotary club Wednes day, the Concord club Thursday and the Kiwams club rriday. W. B. Check, president of the 1 Omaha Auto club, will send a spe cial communication this week to all members of the auto club, urging . them to drive to Overlook farm ! some time during the. next two weeks ' so they wul be familiar with the home befrwe the drive starts. . Officials of the Ad-Scll league say , they may arrange for a downtown entertainment by the boys in place . of the meeting at the farm, because of the fact that the Ad-Sell league '. meets at night instead of noon. Dr. Gifford to Aid. Dr. Harold Gifford has been added to the executive committee of the ;i drive. This committee now consists of 18 members, representing all , . forms of religion and all classes of business. Henry Monsky, chairman of the speakers' bureau, is arranging with . some of the best orators in the city to talk this week and next before -various public gatherings. The drive for the $300,000 is for the purpose of erecting a new build ing which will house SOO boys. The -home is now turning away an aver age of 10 boys a day because of lack of facilities. :.J Burch Will Stand Trial For Murder of Kennedy y; Los Angeles, Cal., Oct. 30. Ar thur C. Burch, charged with the'.-?, murder of J. Belton Kennedy, a broker, stated in the county jail here .'L today that despite rumors he.sbadr., been offered a sentence of life im prisonment if he would confess, he -t would go to trial Tuesday as sched- ,' uled. ' ; ." . His statemetit followed a confer-' ence'of more than an hour -with Mrs. Madalynne Obenchain, indicted with him, and her chief counsel, Charles E. Erbstein of Chicago. 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Wabash Ave-Chicago, I1L Mail 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent to Only mm tubs to fan!!?. I (V