fl) TUB T.KE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. KRRRUAKY 21. 1922. Society i. ) .4 Community Sing at Belltvue. Mr. V, L. J'ierpont conducted tointnuniiy "tint" at the Idllrvuf Vocational school Puuday afternoon for the Women's Overra iervin league, litty tons took were d' tnhutfd ( tle ex.crvie men by Mi Helen Cornell, tlie )ietueiii. who alo bruuht it Urge aupply ol new tiugarinrt, Mii Cornell bat arranged (or tlx Concord Club axophoue band to five a roinert thrie, probably Marh I.', Mine l.dith Mandeven and I. mile Seoit le charge of the pro gram ncM Sunday, lebruary Jo. The Wot Mer' quartet will give an '.later piograin, Yale Professor Here. I'tof. Robert Corwiit of Yale uni vrrsity, former head of the athletic board, and at present chairman of the committee cm adiiiiioiit, apent Monday in Omaha. He was the guest of John Madden at a luncheon at the Omaha club Monday noon, when Mr. Madden, pit-ideut of the local Yale club, invited 12 Yale (.Itmini tit nu et Mr. Corn in. He left for Denver yesterday afternoon mi a tour to the IV ilk cuat. Dinner and Orpheum. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keogh enter tained at dinner Monday evening at their home complimentary to Mrs. France NaNli Watson. Covert were laid for 12 and the dinner was followed by a party at the Orpheum. lite guest were Mr. Watson, the Mcs.r. and Mesdames , Hubert Ittinx. Law mice Hrinkir. Walter Koberta ami Louis Nash. Musical Tea for Mr. Watson. Mrs. K. W. Nash wilt be holies Ml a musical tea Wednesday after i.oon at 3:45 at the Burgcss-Nash auditorium, honoring her daughter, Mr. France Nash Watson. About 150 guest are expected and Mrs. Watson will play informally durum the afternoon. Mr. Watson leave later in the week to fill a concert en gagement. Two Parish Card Parties. The women of tin- Sacred Heart parish will give a card party at their hall, Twenty-second and Locust streets, on Thursday evening. Wed nesday afternoon the women of the parish will give a card party at their hall when Mrs. George Koewler and Mr. Joseph Sherry Will be host For, Southern Visitor. In honor of her house guest. Mis Gcraldinc Sprague of Memphis, Tenn., who arrived Monday morn ing, Mrs. Arthur Loomis will give a tea at her home Wednesday after noon. Miss Sprague will spend a week in Omaha. Card Party. The Extension society will enter tain at a benefit card party Tuesday evening at 8:30 o'clock at the home of Mr. John McGowan, 1015 South Twenty-ninth street. Scottish Rite Club. The Scottish Rite Women's club will sew all clay Tuesday and Thurs day at the Scottish Rite cathedral for the boys of the Masonic home. St. Adalberts Club. St. Adalberts Social club will en tertain at a card party Tuesday evening in the parish auditorium. Patriotic Party. The Jolly Seniors will cntertaiYi at a patriotic party Tuesday evening at Crounsc hall. r Clubdom D. A. R. Musical. Omaha chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will entertain at a musical Tuesday afternoon at the hemic of Mrs. Charles Kountzc, 3925 Dewey avenue, in celebration of Washington's birthday. Mrs. Will H. Thomas is chairman of the com mittee in charge of the affair, which will include a musical reading by Mrs. V. A. Smith; violin solo, Mrs. Grace Leidy Bcrgcr; colonial cos tume dance," Doris Ycager and Fran ces Alvord; vocal solos,' Mrs. J. H. Hanlcy and Miss Nan Garrett, and piano selections, Mrs. DeEmmett Bradshaw. Members may invite guests. Fortnightly Musical Club. Mrs. V.Dale Clark and Mrs. Roy Page will entertain the Fortnightly Musical club Tuesday afternoon, 2:15 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Clarke, 3540 Harney street. The program will be given by Mesdames E. A. Reese, Irma Podo lak Klopp. E. R. Davis, Ted Rich ards, W. Dale Clarke, Fred Ellis, Louise -Jansen Wylie and Eloise Wood Millikeru Ennis Club Dance. The Ennis club will entertain at a pre-Lcnten dancing party Tuesday evening at the Kelpine academy. Dan Desdune's orchestra will furnish the music. Proceeds from the affair will be added to St. Mary Magda lenes church fund. Viking Sewing Society. Ladies of Viking Sewing society will be entertained at the home of Mrs. John Larson, 1465 Evans street, Thursday afternoon. Grant Relief Corps. U ,S. Grant Woman's Relief corps v ill meet Tuesday, 1 :30 p. m., in Memorial hall, court house. . Personals A. M. Eaton returned Saturday from a business trip to Cleveland. A. C. Murphy of Omaha is spend ing a few days at Excelsior Springs. Mrs. Louis Clarke returned Mon day afternoon from a week-end in Lincoln. ' A son, Frederick, jr., was born February 19' at the Methodist hos pital to Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Stott. Mrs. Charles Frankish is expect ing Mrs. George Judd of Battle Creek, Mich., for a visit, early in March. ' Mrs. William Fitzgerald of Troy, X. Y., who is the guest of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. C Byrne, is iil with grippe and affairs planned in her honor for this week have been postponed. Illinois Poet Has Won Battle for Independence Vachel l.iuday, writer at proe and portry, it in Onulu to Hive In. terprrtative reading to the Omaha fcocirty of Fine Art '.Vsd.iv after noon at the Fonttnclle htll. 'Ihe whole ihmf sound polite, proper and pleading. The hardship, the courage and even the victory have gone before. Mr. I.inday, Me many another, i early told that he mint riot write poetry, that man nerd (cod and tluthin, that poetry may be all wry well but people won't pay for it. 'Had the praker of Tuesday been IfM miic of himself, 14 indifferent to public opinion, he might have til tenrd and become a traveling sales, man or something of that kind. In which rase today'i Fine An' program would be different. Hut in W he iued an ultimatum, not to a preident or a king, but to Life itself. He "took t the road." From 1906 to 1912, with no money in hi pocket, lie tramped over the country, exchanging verses ir bread. Hi "Adventure While Preaching the Oopcl of Beauty" in prose, ami "Handy Guide for Hrg gar" are part of the rcult. They are only part o" the visible result, however. The invisible it infinitely greater. For these year taught Mr. Lindsay that he had nothing to fear e en if the world did not buy and pay. lie had freedom for hn ex pression and fa: hi individuality. He was forever released from the intimidation of a practical world. "The country is full of intimidated people," he said Monday morning. Recognition wa wrested from the public in 1913 when his "General Booth Enters Heaven" was pub lished in Poetry magazine. A year later he recited "Congo" and since then he has been better known a an interpreter of hi poems than as a writer. "The Chinese Nightingale and Other Poems" is his own fa vorite volume. Mr. Lindsay has given many mu seum lectures. He studied art for eight years at the Chicago Art Insti tute and in New York. This love and knowledge is revealed in "The Art of the Moving Picture," in which he ha applied sculpture, painting and architecture to motion. The average movie director, in Mr. I.indsav'g opinion, know very little of art. He has a sort of "department store" idea of it, to express it in Mr. Lindsay's language. "There is no classic stand ard in the movies," he said. What manner of man is this, so sensitive to beauty, so full of earnest ness and keen of humor, who could yet become a troubadour and fling his defiance to the gods of greed and to America, "raw and inhospitable to art." as he described it. Mabel Warner Rugge, character analyst, without knowing the identity of Mr. Lindsay, made these notes of him: Imagination, individuality, quick perception, good memory, sense of humor, critical, thoughtful, persistent, determined and quite in different to public opinion. Added up, these qualities give a writer of first rank, a man of mental courage, a man of" industry and philosophy, and, to bring the story down to date, a most promising speaker for the Tuesday program. Mothers' Culture Club Celebrates Tenth Birthday West Omaha Mothers' Culture club will entertain at a luncheon Thursday, 12:30 o'clock, at the Ath letic club followed by an Orpheum party in honor of the 10th birthday anniversary of the club. Mrs. Peter Barber and Mrs. P. J. White are in charge of the affair, Members of the club include Airs. W. W. Carmichael, president; Mrs. P. F. Bonorden, vice president; Mrs. Clifton Wood, secretary-treasurer, and Mesdames P. T. Barber, P. J. White, C. D. Hutchinson, R. A. Mc Farlane, James Corr, J. F. McDer mott.'H. R. Baldwin. P. H. Dillon, W. N. Baker, Clinton Hamilton. El mer Johnson, Alice Weigand, J. T. Cooper, J. E. Dugan. J. A. Hamilton, Blaine Trucsdell. Of this number Mesdames Hutchinson, MtFarlane, Carmichael. Barber, Baker, Corr and J. A. Hamilton are charter members. The club is studying Tennyson this year. , America as a Center of Russian Art. Since the revolution Russian men of letters and art have been scattered all over the world. Paris became the actual centers of Russian art, but' the United States is also getting a good ly share. The following Russian artists have settled in the United States: Prof. Nicholas Roerich and Boris Anisfcld. painters; Serge Rachmaninoff, Prof Leopold Auer, Osip .Gabrilovitch. Jasha Cheifetz, Efrem Zimbalist, Misha Elman, Arnold Volpe, M. Levitaky, Modest Altshuler, P.- Fidel man, Mr. Piastro-Borisoff, Messrs. Press and rSaminsky Cherniaffsky, musicians; Nina Koshetz, Lidia Lypkovska, G. Baklanoff, Messrs. Shwartz, Vinogradoff, Akimoff and Dobkin, singers: Vera and Michael Fokin, Adolph Bohlm, Boris Rosloff, Miss Lopookoff, dancers; Alia Nazi mova, Olga Petrova,' Vera Gordon, Rose Rosanoff. Leonid Sncgoff, N. Or.ievska, M. Bessaraboff, dramatic and moving picture stars. Women Wear Black at Weddings in Paris. Speaking of the wearing of the at a wedding in Paris, the congregation almost to a wom an was garbed in black and the bride herself was married in black. Cutting Down the Bills. All drippings from meats should be carefully saved. When the family does not like the flavor of beef and mutton fat miladv may use them in combination witfi lard substitutes and get good results. - Take two parts beef fat and one part vegetable shortening. Put beef fav through grinder to mix well. Add one-half its weight of milk and ren der it in double boiler. The milk seems to remove some of the peculiar flavor of the suet and the resulting mixture is ;ofter My Marriage Problems AM ftarrlMU't New of "REVELATIONS OF A WIFE" uiriki. IM Why Lillian Telegraphed Kttherin Bickett. Lillian utenoVd her liaitd fr Kaiheriin Itirkett' letter, rectmid ered, and let hrr band drop to her tide itiiu. "Phase resd it to inr, he laid, "I have a beaMly headache," She gestured to a low chair, and sank back into her own a he spoke. I looked keenly at her, notiung the linn etched deeply at the ide of her mouth sure in of nervous ttrain with Lillian and then I real ized that the mietioij of providing proper cpion.iKi for the wounded man in the hopital wa worrying her more than she had betrayed to inc. "Of coiiie," anwercd, aettlrd comfoitably into the low chair and be. i u to read; "Deareit Madste," the letter be gan. "I can imagine you turning to the signature of this, and inui murine: "(Catherine Sonnot Cickett where have 1 heard that name?" And I cannot blame you, for I have been the worst correspondent ever iu these last few month. Even now, I have not the time to write you the long letter which i your clue, and winch 1 long to pen. Hut 1 nniKt tell you our new. "You know, of course, how long it ha taken Jack to recover his health, shattered in the war. 1 do not think he is fully recovered yet. but per haps I am too femininely fearful, as he put it. At any rate, he has a wonderful chance iu South Amer ica, but it i on a job w here lie can not possibly take me. Of course, his idea is for me to stay safely here in our home until he conies back, months, perhaps a year from now. lJut you know that is something 1 could not possibly do. I should go stark mad with inaction. Lillian Has an Idea. "So, when Jack lias gone, I am going to take up my old profession k7:iiu in a in-iirliborim: city, near enough for me to see to our little home. But I am saying nothing to him about it, for perhaps you re member his attitude toward wives working for an income. So please iln not mention inv decision when you write, although unless you reply to this the day you receive it, your letter will not reach me until after Jack has gone, for he leaves within the week. "I suppose 1 am a very bad wife trt deceive lack thus, but I have carefully submitted to bis strictures upon, earning money while he was with me. though sometimes it has been hard to refrain from rebelling under the circumstances. But I timnlv eannnt ohev this last demand. And there is such need for nurses, I am sure I shall do splendidly. I have managed not to get rusty by helping the local aid societies when ever there has been illness ambng the poor people of the town. ' I will send you my new auums when ! know it. How I wUh I were lirarer you I 1 Bel pa.inveiy nome :. c 4nr nj .iiiii'iliiiet. Love to all the dear one. Alfectwnately yoma, "Natnertne ronuoi nnnt". Lillian wf kitting bolt upright !...,, k.t.ir I Iu,! liniihrd. A the .t,t word came from my bp he diew a iiuiiaui ireain. an ntereiitiuii of Providence? ic .,ke.. " J he next tnm li to sn Katherine br quickly i r,,V'l ble. When i Hut letter dated r I mined quickly to the heading: "Three dayf ago." Lilian imted an Instant. "Will That Do?" -She said JUck wa goinst 'within the week.' That Icavei tour dayi at the longest. Too long! Kath erine must know that we want her, and be preparing to come on. o she can start a toon a he doei. There' no other way, Madge. You've got to 'go into a decline. Isn't that what our grandmother called it? Then Jack, dear, will have hi scruple appeased." There wa the faintest tinge in her tone of fomcthing which 1 had remarked in the day before Jack and Katherine were married an al- mn.l rnnlffnintuoiis disapproval Ot my brothcr-couin, which she gen erally succeeded in conceaunn irom me. Rut whenever her secret aver sion did betray itself, I alway ig nored it carefully. . "I'll agree tt contract anything from T. I!, to heart failure," I laid hghtlv. "But you'll have to give me the details." "Easy," she declared succinctly, the light of creation in her eye, "liia lund me that portfolio beside you, will you please?" I ave ncr mc worn itdiuw ItssMtt T illian'fi tllfkst illlPOr- V. IIH.II MWta - ------ - tant papers, and she drew from it a package of telegraph blanks, im provised a tics irom a nm. nin zine, and set to work upon the mes sage she wished to send. As I watched her 1 whimsically reflected upon the elaborate writing case which an admiring friend had once presented to her, and which she had conscientiously tried to tise for a week. Then she had read the riot art, and had gone back to her magazines. "There!" she said at last, handing me the result of her concentration. "Will that do?" "Madge in serious nervous condi tion." I read. "Needs loving yet professional care. In view of your husband's absence, could you come to her for awhile? Imperative we know your decision immediately. If you decide affirmative, please plan 'tart day of husband's departure if possible. Madge most anxious to see you. (Signed) "Lillian Underwood. I smiled at her with rueful amuse ment. "I think that ought to turn the trick," I said. Dog Hill Paragrafs 'By George Bingham Atlas Peck has been appointed 'a delegate to some sort of a convention to be , held next week at Tlnmdcra- tion. The trip won't cost him any thing as he already has his badge, umbrella and valise. Columbus AIlsop reads where the new silver dollar may be called in, and says if the government discovers two or three of them missing, they may be found in the hands of the Old Miser on Musket Ridge. stands for accuracy, and to prove it he calls attention to the fact that when he docs print something wrong he keeps on reprinting it until he gets it right. Nebraska Chiropractors to Hold Convention Here The Nebraska Branch Union Chi ropractic association will meet in Omaha February 26-28. Dr. B. J. Palmer, praetor of the national, association, will address the convention at a special meeting in the ballroom of the Hotel Rome the evening of February 27. Arrangements are being made through the office of Dr. Lee Ed wards. About 600 are expected to attend. ADVERTISEMENT A HOME-MADE GRAY HAIR REMEDY You Can Make a Better Gray Hair Remedy Than You Can Buy. Gray, streaked or faded hair is not only unbecoming, but unneces sary. " Anyone can prepare a simple mix ture at home that will darken gray hair, and make it soft and glossy. To a half-pint of water add 1 ounce of bay rum, a small box of Barbo Compound and ounce of glycerine.,- These ingredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost, or the druggist will put it up for you. Apply to the hair twice a week until the desired shade is obtained. This will make a gray-haired person look twenty years younger. It is easy to use. does not color the scalp, is not sticky or greasy and does not rub cfr. Commsision Orders Coal Rates Readjusted Freight rates on coal from Illinois. Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma fields to Omaha are to be similar in proportion to rates to Kansas Citv, according to a decision handed down by the Interstate Commerce com mission in Kansas City two days ago. C. E. Childe, manager of the traffic bureau of the Omaha Cham ber of Commerce received word of the decision yesterday. A reduction of 28 1-2 cents a ton on coal from the fields to Kansas City was suspended by the commis sion when Omaha protested on the grounds that the freight rates to this city should be similar in propor tion, according to Mr. Childe. Retiring Naval Inspector to Be Honor Guest at Banquet Capt. J. H. Comfort, U. S. N.. re tiring naval inspector for 10 middle west states, will be honor guest at a dinner to be held by the iunioi division of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce Thursday night. Capt Comfort will ' leave Omaha Feb ruary 28 to take command of the U. S. S. Ohio on the east coast. SLEEPY-TIME TALES R -3, THE TALE OF : MEADOW f ARTHUR SCOTT EAILET i ciiArrr.R m. The Kitten, Ma.tcr Meadow Mou.e had tain bled about the meadow without pay ing much heed to safety. Although be still seemed ti listen politely whenever hi mother gate hint a he i me on dangerous bird or beast half the time he didn't know what ft.- 3 1 Then the kitten jumped. she wa saying. He had decided that her fear were foolish. He was sure that nothing could harm him. lie was tbinkiiii; that very thought one day when he came face to face suddenly with a huge, furry crea ture. At least the stranger seemed terribly big in the eyes of Master Meadow Mouse, though it w as only a kitten belonging to Miss Kitty Cat, who lived at Farmer Greens house. Like Master Meadow Mouse, the kitten was exploring the meadow. To her, as to hint, it was a new world. It would he Imrd In sav wlmh of the two was the more surprised. Obi Master Meadow Mouse squeaked right out loud. "I I I wish I'd stayed home." llol the kitten mewed. Tin fclad I came a-hiinting." Ihe kitten sprang at Master Mouse. But when he didn't run she stopped in her tracks and stared at him. She had expected him to flee. as the mice at the farmhouse always did whenever a body met him. hat s the matter with votl? the kitten asked him. "Don't you know that you ought to run when X jump at you.' Master Meadow Mouse made no reply. How could he know that the mice at the farmhouse were ever so much sprier than he was and that they always trusted, to their legs to get them out of harm's way? His lamily had always done differ ently. Unless there was a hole near by, big enough for them but too small for a pursuer, they had ever stood their ground when attacked and fought while they could. Master Meadow Mouse knew no other wav. It was something that had been handed down to him along with his short tail and his reddish-brown back. Somehow, as she stood and crazed at Master Meadow Mouse, the kit ten thought he was growing bigger every moment. She began to feel uneasy bout pouncing on him. It was one thing to clap a paw down on the back of somebody that was running away from her. And it was an entirely different matter to seize a person that didn't try to escape, but faced her almost boldly. "Hunting isn't so much fun as I expected," she muttered. For a moment or two she was tempted to scamper back to the farmhouse. And then she thought how pleased her mother would be if she brought that fat fellow home in her mouth and laid him at her mother's feet how pleased and how proud! To help, her courage the kitten began to lash her tail, jerking it from side to side as she had seen her mother move her own. And she crouched her chubby body lower in the grass. Then the kitten jumped. And the moment she was within his reach Master Meadow Mou gave her a smart nip on the no.e with his sharp little teeth. The kitten iqujtted, And she backed ln.iily away, "You'd belter run!'' she aJied Mauer Meadow Moue, "I ihall not giv yoii another rhance" But he itood fal. And the kit. ten didn't give him another chance, either t run from her, or t bite her note again. Hie fell into a Hid den panic and bounded awkwardly away toward the farnihoue. And then Master Meadow Motue ran. He ran home a (a-t a he could go. ,(! rtiiM, i&j; Will Make ilea Here for Merchant Marine Common Sense ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Bran Will Free Your Entire Family From Constipation ! EIGHT MILLION PEOPLE were admitted to the hospitals of Ameri ca last year. Nine-tenths of the sickness can be traced to constipa tion! If every man, woman and child would eat Kellogg's Bran, eookecl and krumbled, each day, nine-tenths of all sickness would be eliminated! Kellogg's Bran, cooked and krum bled, is not a "remedy." It is na ture's health food. ; Bran acta as a sweeper, at the same time cleansing and purifying without irritation or discomfort! Results are astounding! Physicians indorse the use of Kellogs's Bran for constipation be cause it corrects constipation as a food not as a "remedy"! Your physician will tell you that the de sirable way to relieve constipation is through food. We Kuaranteo Kel loffg's Bran will relieve constipation permanently if at least two table-, spoonfuls are eaten regularly. Chronic cases should use aa much more as necessary. AVhen Kellog's Bran is eaten regu larly it will also t-lear up a pimply complexion and sweeten the breath. And, Kellogg's Bran, cooked and krumbled, is dellciously good! KeUogg's has an appetizing nut-like flavor, is crisp and adds zest to any food with which it is eaten. Or, it's just fine to eat as a cereal! Or sprinkle it over your favorite cereal-! Kellogg's Bran is used in muffins, raisin bread, macaroons, pancakes and in a hundred other palate tickling ways and all the time building health! Start the I'hildren eating Kellogg's Bran. It will actually increase their growth. Get it at your grocer's. COUPON FREE Offer Purchase one package of Britt's Powdered Ammonia and receive one Free. Name Address ON SALE ONLY AT J. G. McCRORY CO. 5c and 10c Store 214-16 So. 16th St. By J. J. MUNDY. Are You a Grouchy Patient? Why be o grouchy when ill? Ilecaiue you are uffcriiig, because you are worried about your work netting behind, i no alid rcaoon (or being disagreeable to those who are doing all they can to make you com fortable. When you are ill. the familv It ilo worried lest your illuc prove lata), you have not a monopoly on worry. The member oi your family arc ready and willing to do everything to alleviate your pain and make you iu condition to return to health. Still you receive cverv favor with a growl or complaint if it is not done exactly to your liking, You cannot e.ect children to go alt day without making a noic. I ertaul ilutiei in the home tnut be performed and there i bournl to be a certain clatter incident to the orderly person who i making your home more Military and livable. Cooking is bound to make odors which may be diasreeablc to you and possibly cannot be flint olT from your sensitive nose wiihout closing the doors and making it harder to hear your calls for attention. He considerate though ill. (Copyright, i::.) VIVA V ti.uminmsr Pilos! Pyramid Brings Roliof Y... tk Rlif AfWrJ.4 fcr Pyrmi4 PiU SuppatiUri. It Truly Blaaaiaf Uvh vnu ar tifrrln with It. h '". blotting er r""u,l", l'll r h.morihoid., and If osi hava ntr A Silly Song ! By A. CUCKOO BIRD. f When supper's done my wife says, "Kook, let's take the kids and go up town and buy an ice cream cone and see a picture show." 1 count my change, and then my kids, and look at Mrs. Bird. She grasps the situation though I do not say a word. She reaches up behind the clock and gets a little gold, that she has slowly hoarded, Irom the garden truck She's sold. Then Mrs. Itird and I put on our coats and get our lids, and put the pup and the cat out doors, and mobilize the kids. We buy the kids a cone apiece, which nearly exhausts my. tin, then go down to the picture show and lead our litter in. The lights go out, the place grows dark and then, upon the screen, Tom Mix appears and right away some ghastly things are seen. In less than 20 minutes time, in ways undignified, the hero of the play commits all crimes but suicide. He is a bad gazabo, who gamble, drinks and robs. And all the kids applaud him when he does these du ty jobs. Not long ago we beat our kids for reading. Diamond Dicks, and now we take them along to see this bird Tom Mix. We take them to this sort of junk as often as we can and wonder why our son as pires to be a highwayman. Shafer Building Sold. The M. F. Shafer. company build ing, Seventeenth and rcbster streets, wa sold in bankruptcy to Max Rapp, 1924 Lothrop street, accord ing to B. H. Dunham, referee in bankruptcy. The building will bo utilized as a factory, Mr. Rapp stated. The consideration was $82.-500. Edward C. Plummer. lmitiiik!oner Kdw:ird C. I'lum ir.cr of the l uiied State shipping hoard will advocate the development of America' merchant marine in a perch lit noon today before the t lumber of Commerce, His talk Is fur the foreign trade and commerce committee. Mr. i'luiuuicr i an interrMing personality. Of the filth generation of shipbuilders in his familv. a sailor and naval officer iu the Spanish w ar. he became -attorney later for ship, ping interests and a Maine news paper proprietor. Mr. I'liiiiiiuer believes the govern ment should pay subsidies to Amer ican shipon iier iu order to main tain a merchant marine. A "stabili zation" fund should be established for this purpoM.'. he declares. He blames foreign propagandists for blocking attempts to give pro tection to American shipping in the past. Will Hold Hearings on New Building Code I'nblic hearings on the proposed revised building code for Omaha will begin March (, according to announcement by the Chamber of Commerce. Under the proposed code, a ban is put on wooden shingles within the fire limit of the city. Fireproof materials must be used iu all walls, floors and roofs of buildings within the fire limits, ac cording to the code. Frame struc tures within those limits will be for bidden, under the proposed code. The advisory board that drew ut ihe code consisted of Harry B. Ziininan, Frank Myers, George S. I'rinz, Rodman l'rown and City Ivnginecr Bcal. Parents' Problems Should children be allowed to "dip into" books; or should they be trained to read one book through before taking another? They should not dip or skinl. Children cannot choose wisely what books to read, and the books .chosen for them by parents or teachers ought to be sufficiently interesting, suitable and valuable to be, read carefully. Skipping may be w-ise; skimming always wrong. Dipping or skimming in reading or in work i? a subtle enemy to concentration. We want our children to read in tently with eager listening minds. Dipping into one book after another weakens this native intentness and power of absorhition. The death rale in London for 1920 was 12.6 per 1.000, which is the lowest ever registered. In New York it was 12.9.5. also a record. IHH ryrmtil Til Huiiiirln, t It in'im lu at one. Ut a rnt bnt at anv lru( more. Avcn4 ihr pain anil licli.. u' l'ilek r tiff and a, nror li of n.mfnit. take no ubutm. If ym wouti Ilk In try ihm II ret pl.n- Mnl ram and aitdrti t fyramM !rnc (n.. ll I'yrtmld Dll(., Mar.htlU Mich. .WlUkTlNHIKVr as. p :t.. c pi mum u uri i ijr j utiyi j of Couth Remedy Ballr hMtrr ihmn rlr.ilt raurh o mr, ana iui ti. fca.ll tuia nwrklf pr.parvu. If you rnmbinej the en rat We prop rti of ery known "ready maiie'' cough remedy, you prnb.iblv could not get a murli real eur.itite puwrr m t fieri Is in this imil liuine-mml cougb syrup, whicb i r.u-ily prepared in a few minutes. Get from ny druggist 2','j ounce of Pinex. pour it Into a pint bottle and fill tho bottle with syrup, uiing either plain granulated tiigar syrup, clarified buhiihm'is honey, or euro yrup. as drsiril. The result i a full pint of really better emiffli syrup than you could buy rm'1y.md for three tluiea the moury. Taste pleas ant and never spoilx. Thin I'-inex and Syriiy preparation get right it the ratine t" a rough and gives almost immediate relief. It loosens the phlegm, stop the nttT throat tickle ana heal the sore, irri tated membranes so gently and easily that it i really itKtonishing. A day's use will imunlly overeome th ordinary cough and (or bronchitis, croup, hoarseness and bronchial asth ma, there i nothing better. Tines i a most valuable concen trated compound of gemiino Norway pine extract, and has been used for generations to break severe eoush. To avoid disappointment, ask your druggist for "2 ounees of Fihex" with full directions, and don't accept anything elee. Guaranteed to give absolute aatisfaetion or money promptly refunded. The Fines Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. ADVERTISEMENT Nature Loves Bright Colors We see the truth of this statement in the varicolored flowers, the vivid sunsets, the birds of brilliant plum age. But we never sec it exempli fied more attractively than in the person of a splendidly healthy woman. How docs nature paint this health? Why. in the rosy cheeks, the transparent skin, the smooth red lips of such a woman. And she molds it in firm flesh and rounded con tours. The ailing woman is deficient in natural coloring, and she docs not even appear to advantage in clothes that would set off her more attrac tive sister. Many women who tong for glowing health will find that they, too, can have these charms if they will give a trial to that remedy which brings strength to frail wo men Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound. 25 Use Mazola for shorten ing your next cake or pie crust. Follow the usual recipe but use one-quarter to one-third less Mazola than butter. You will find that your recipe comes out better, richer, and tastier than it ever did be fore and perfect digesti bility follows. 81 FREEStsfSSills II t Com Porduct. Cook Rook of 64 pages. Writs Com m X r Products Refining Co. M Department A, Argo, IIL M CAKE 2Ena VcoeSuaBf ' teaapooa Salt 'it npWawr V cup Mxole (6 tableapoona) 1 cupa Sifted Paarry Flour 2 teaspooni Baking Powder 1 teaspoon Vanilla Flavoring Break eggs, add ragar and beatwith Dover beater until light and thick. Add Mazola and water and beat until thoroughly mixed. Fold in aifted dry Ingredients. Bake in pan oiled with Macola. Used and recommended by Domestic Science Experts J