Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 26, 1922, SOCIETY EDITORIAL, Image 19

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    THE HFE? OMAHA. SUNDAY, MARCH Cfl. 1322.
A
9-n
1 '
Omaha Students
Win Essav and
Poster Contests
Oft Tru "offTrf! It .V.
brala Leagu of Womtn
Votm for Vork n
Diiarmamnit.
HousM Elliott in 'J WiJUrd ZtU
I'M of Omaha hit terti SfdcJ
fufi I'r ili SefoiiJ congrtfiion!
district in ttic y and jotrr con
ir. i an!uff( ly the Nfbrs.V.
1 rigtif of Womrn Votffi on the
ul.jr(t i f ilitarniamrnt.
The ay contest, in ulikh Mow
arl l lliott, 35JJ LaFayrtie street, a
stwlrnt in the Omaha Central lush
nhnol, a winner, i oien to any
fci;h school itu'lent in the district
anI was (in, "Wow Disarmament
Would lltlp Our Schools." The
jucter contrt was open to sixth,
seventh and tinhih grade pupils, WiU
Kird Zcllrr. winner in this district,
it a pupil at Ueiuon Central school
mid lives at 2il North Sixtieth
a'inic.
Ihe Ute (nxe e was written
by Hugh fox of Lincoln arvl the
award fir the bet poter went to
Sylvi Crocker, a sixth grade student
at Octavia.
Central City Lad Wina.
The other prize-winning essays
v.rre written by Addison Henry Lee,
Central citv, 1 hird district; Kdward
ienniiifcs Wilber, Fourth diMrtrt:
;athryn Wilson, lolhroofc, Fifth
district; Amy Chaff in, Kilgore,
!ixth district.
Other prize-winning postera were
submitted by Julius Shapiro, Mc
Kinley school, Lincoln, First dis
trict; Crissie Blumm, Scribncr,
Second district; Vie B. SchenitiRer,
Nelson, Fifth district; Luclla Zim
merman, Spauldinfr, Sixth district.
Virginia Roderick, editor of the
Woman Citizen; Miss Elizabeth J.
Hauser, Cirard, O.. national chair
man of the committee on reduction
ot armaments for the National
League of Woman Voters, and Miss
May Gund of Lincoln, secretary of
the Nebraska league, were the final
judges in the essay contest. Miss
Roderick wrote concerning the con
test. "I thought the essays were very
good, indeed, and the whole idea an
admirable one." The third judge
. ...... J a 1. a wm . Vrr( f
liUIiru UlC vJ-oja vvs - -..., J
M. Fogg of the state university for
bis rating.
Judges Are Faculty Members.
Judges in the poster contest were:
Trof. Faul H. Crummann. Prof. W.
E. Dann and Miss Olive Rush, all of
the state university faculty. Judges
in the district contests were selected
by the district directors of the
league.
The original plan was that the
president of the Nebraska League
of Women Voters, Mrs. C. G. Ryan
of Grand Island, should award the
prizes on Washington's birthday,
but because the time of closing the
contest had to be extended from De
cember 23 to January 18 on account
of Christmas vacation, arid because
the judges in the essay contest were
so far apart, announcement ' has
been delayed. The prizes will be
awarded this week.
Monastery Reopens
Under American Flag
Tiflis, Armenia, March 25. The
oldest monastery in the world, the
Etchmudzin castle near Erican, has
been reopened under the protection
of the American flag as an orphan
age of the near east relief.
The ancient monastery is histori
cally one of the most important sites
in Armenia. It is the cradle of the
Christian faith in Armenia, having
been founded by the much-venerated
St. Gregory, who introduced
Christianity into Armenia in the
third century.
The monastery covers several
acres of ground and is surrounded
by a massive wall which has sus
tained many a siege and has repelled
frequent attacks by Kurds, Tartars,
Persians and Saracens. At the out
break of the world war, when thou
sands of Armenians fled from Tur
key, the monastery gates were
thrown open to receive them and
here they remained safe for many
months. One of the buildings of
the monastery dates from the year
330.
Moving Pictures Call for
More Irish, Says Lecturer
Chicago, March 25. What the mo
tion picture industry needs, accord
ing to Col. P. E. Holp. lecturer for
the Society for Visual Education, is
more Irishmen.
"Since vulgarity has been ban
ished from the films, stupidity has
taken its place," said Col. Holp.
"What we need is more real humor
in our pictures. More Irishmen in
the industry will accomplish this re-
su,t-
"Irishmen are able to see the funny
side of things. They could bring it
out in the celluloids. There is noth
ing funny in destroying property or
hurting people. Yet that is what
passes for humor in most of our
present day comedies.
"Fun does not depend upon vul
garity. Horseplay is not the con
comitant of real humor. True humor
is clean, bright and wholesome. W it
and wisdom should be combined in
equal parts."
Five Million Man Miles
Air Record for Last Year
Washington, March 25. The air
service flew a distance equal to 0
trips around the world in 1921. ac
cording to Gen. Mason M. Patrick,
chief of the service.
The total distance flown was 5,
063,909 man miles. By man miles is
meant the number of miles flown by
each man in any one plane; a plane
carrying two men and traveling to
a station SO miles away and return
will travel 200 man miles.
The figures given cover only
flights exceeding 10 miles from au
airdome -with a definite destination
in view and exclude short trips
circling the field and nearby cities.
The Post field at Fort bill, Okl
heads the list with 826.084 miles
traveled by planes, or 1.672,120 man
miles 66 times around the world.
Mather field flew 807,119 miles, in
eluding forest patrol.
Building the Irish Free State
Bf Col Frederick Palme i
?!fit, IrtUnd, March :S,-Thfr
art two i'neri:i(ion which it it
sf to nijke, The first it thai
neither Michael Collins, nor F anion
J Valeri, nor any other member ef
thf provisional government of tht
fret state or of the republican Dail
Eir'tnn, nor the study of tht Gaelic
language, it popular in Belfast. Both
Mr. 1 ollmt and Mr, De Valera re
gret thit; but neither one denies the
(art.
'Ihe tecond generalisation it ttut
hrn you find that ont fellow pas
senger in a compartment on a rail
way tram it reading the London
Morning I'ost with grim atife
lion and another it reading the Re
public of Ireland with shining eyes,
it it folly to start a tlebaie be
tween them in the hope that it will
result in an amicable agreement.
The Morning I'ost it the organ
of the "Die Hard" Rritith toriet,
who agree with Earl Curzon that
there it no hope of talvaging civiliza
tion until every Briton who it not a
member oi tne peerage toucnri m
forelock in the preeme cf one who
it. At for the masses of southern
reland. the Morning I'ost be
lievet that they belong to a slave race
that should be eternally ruled ly
their Undlordt for their own good.
It rriert to the republican Dail
F.irunn as a "menaeerte and pre
dutt that Mr. Collins and Mr. De
Valera will end their ditferencet in
kn orgy of fractricidai ruin and dis
order. And it it doing the beit that
it can to promote this outcome.
An Aristocratic Calm.
Compared to the violence and
abusive performance of the Morn
ing Post, which smacks of the gut
ter, the Republic of Ireland pre
serves relatively an arisocratic calm
and the manners of gentlefolk. The
Repuhlic of Ireland is the organ of
the De Valera movement. I have
even been caught in a railway com
partment with both irreconcilable
sheets in my possession and the
stares at sight of this awful incon
sistency moderated as my fellow
passengers comprehended that I was
one of those mad Americans from
whom, ignorance of .local customs
and any eccentricity might be ex
pected. Readers of both papers be
lieve all that they read in their or
gans with a faith which rone of us
at home has in the editorials laid be
fore us on our breakfast and dinner
tables. On the Dublin-Belfast ex
press the Morning Post predominates.
The run from Dublin to Belfast is
two and one-hatf hours. If there
were a through fast train from Cork,
at one end of Ireland, to Belfast at
the other end, the trip would take
less time than from Boston to New
York, or Chicago to St. Faul, or Los
Angeles to San Francisco; but I
doubt if any through train could
stand the political strain.
Though, physically, it is as simple
to go from Dublin to Belfast as
from New York to Philadelphia, I
contemplated this journey awesome
ly and kept putting it off. I had a
feeling that it meant that as I came
from Dublin I could make no friends
in Belfast, and by going to Belfast
I would lose any friends I had In
Dublin. I should become an out
cast; and if I must become one I
had better postpone the evil day un
til my departure from Ireland was
proximate.
Geographic Entity.
It might have been better to have
stopped over two or three times on
the way to adjust and acclimatize
myself gradually to . the abrupt
change. Halifax, Nova Scotia and
San Diego, Cal., are much more alike
than Belfast and Dublin, which
speak the same language and speak
little else that has more in common
than the Morning Post and the
Republic of Ireland. Yet Ireland
is as much of a geographic entity as
Cuba, Torto Rico or Long Island,
and the pigs, the sheep and the cattle
in County Antrim look like those in
County Cork.
Dublin is the capital of southern
Ireland, the Orangemen tell you; it
is the capital of Ireland, declare the
southern Irishmen unitedly, includ
ing Collins and De Valera. Collins
says his policy will bring the Or
angemen into the fold and the De
Valera policy is fatal to this national
ambition.
Belfast is the capital of Ulster; but,
no southern Irishmen dispute the
definition. They say that Ulster Is
the name of an ancient province
which includes counties in racial, re
ligious and political sympathy with
southern Ireland. They refer to trie
Orange region as northeastern Ire
land. Another definition is that
southern Ireland has 26 counties
against six for the northeast. This
the southern Irish also dispute, for
they say that two of the six counties
belong to them. To this the Orange
men answer: f
Fight for Them.
"You will get those two counties
only by fighting for them." So
definition becomes invidious and dis
tinction a genuine difference. That
the London Morning Post is popular
in Belfast does not mean that the
British are, and particularly that
either Lloyd George or Winston
Churchill is. Those two statesmen
are unpopular with the Collins men,
the De Volera men, the block of
northern unionists around Belfast and
the scattered southern unionists. At
the first sign of unpopularity in any
Irish quarter which promises to
prejudice their policy they immedi
ately retrieve their mistake with a
facility of resource which character
izes their ' political careers. The
scattered southern unionists who can
not hope to elect a single member of
the free state parliament want the
northern unionist bloc to come into
the free state for their support. But
the business leaders of Belfast
"linen lords," as they are called
have no sympathy with the aris
tocratic land-holding unionists of the
south, who are of another breed, one
of inherited rather than self-made
position.
"Because two out of ten men In a
boat must drown," lay the Orange
men, "there is no reason why the
other eight should drown to keep
them company. The eight are here
in a group, shoulder to shoulder, and
are going to look after themselves."
For that is the way that the six
county men talk right to the point
as the result of their hard industrial
training as opposed to the more easy
going pastoral south. Broadly speak
ing, the six counties are industrial,
with outlying land intensively farmed
around the throbbing activity of Bel
fast; and southern Ireland is agri
cultural. This deference, piled upon
other (Sifferenret, males the unpre
cedented contratt between the two
regions. Dublin it a very old city;
tUliait it a new city of nineteenth
rrritury impulse whote rapid growth
rivalt that of our own cities,
"We settled on mud flatt," Ii the
favorite tayii.f of the flelft man,
"and this it what wt have made of
them."
Shipbuilding.
Belfatt hat the grr'atett shipbuild
ing )trd in the world, though it bat
to import both iteel and coal; it hat
the lead in rope-making, though it
hat to import all t! its hemp, and the
lead in linen-making, though it has
to import mot of ih flat it met,
The branchrt of Belfast banks arc
trattered over Ireland. Py cloe bar
gaining and long credits tielfatt out
rank Duhlin at a distributing point
for Rritih manufactured goodt in
Ireland. Southern Irishmen who
have joined the minority of their
countrymen in lielfatt are said to ab
torb the Belfast "hardness" and per-
listent conunrrcml energy.
"Work did it!" said a banker at he
indicated the hustling people on Roy
al avenue in business hours. "Every
man, woman and child out there
looks at if he were going on a def
inite errand and meant to arrive on
time. They tty we are hard. Well,
we had to be bard to build thit city
on mud flats. The southern Irish
man i a fine fellow to talk to, but
when it comet to doing business he
is not our style.
"We are invadert not indiRetiotif,
we know, but what we have made we
will hold. Ninety per cent of our
turnover is in foreign trade. We will
keep that trade at long as we can
manufacture goodt of equal merit
for the world's markets cheaper than
our rivals. Ten per cent is too big
an estimate of our turnover in sales
to southern Ireland. This, however,
supports some flesh and blood; this
contributes to our prospirity. W'e
do not want to lose it, but will if
we must, and make it up in another
direction.
Warnings Recalled
"Are we going into an all-Ireland
parliament at a permanent minority,
subject to the wCl of a majority
strange to our ways and untrained in
industrialism, which will lay taxes as
it chooses upon our wealth? Not un
til we 'know better than we know
now what is coming out of the south.
We realize that economic theory de
mands a united Ireland; that it means
unnecessary expense in theory for
us to set up an independent Rovern
ment when there are only 1,000,000 of
us in this small area. But we deal
with conditions as they are while no
one would welcome more than our
selves that future united Ireland of
the dreams, with double its present
population, for we would get our
share of the resultant prosperity. Or,
if we did not, it would be because we
have ceased to deserve it in open
competition.
"You have heard us called bigoted,
nnrrow, close-fisted and heard the
gibes at our quiet Sundays when no
railroad trains run, but here we are,
and here we are going to stay, s-.nd
our city is going to continue to grow
and our bank deposits to increase."
Writh a Belfast man as a guide I
went about the city and the environs
on a Sunday. As he gave his direc
tions to the chauffeur I was remind
ed of warnings to visitors to the
front in France to keep away from
certain sectors as they were very
lively at the time.
"There's shooting over there to
day," said the chauffeur, referring to
an area my guide had mentioned in
bit itinerary, 'We better go around
or we might get some bullets.
None In Dublin,
"Pogroms" it the word they uie In
southern Ireland about thete occur
rences There have been none to
date In Dublin. In Belfast a civil
ian, or two or three civilian, walk
into a house and shoot the inmates,
or, at one passes, be tosses a bomb
into an cperi window. Then he goes
on about hit busmen at a delivery
by does alter having left a package
t a given address.
Catholics and I'rotettantt live in
defined areas. One of two adjoining
streets will be Catholic and the other
l'rotestant; or one tection of the
same street will be Catholic and the
ether l'rotestant. There are out
burst! of tiring between the enemtet.
The heads of all the different de
nominations in Belfast have called
upon their people to stop this mur
der, but in vain, up to the time of
w riting. It has been said .that the
'rcat business leaders of Belfast
have promoted it in order to keep
labor divided into two ramps and
prevent union activities, but that it
denied not only by them, hut by
men who are friendly to the free
state. Moreover, the most powerful
captain of industry in Belfast. Lord
I'irrie, a self-made shipbuilder, who
is not a member of one of the popu
lar denominations, but a Unitarian,
has used all his influence openly In
the contrary direction.
Reprisal brings on reprisal; and1
the feud is not, at supposed, alto
gether religious. It Is race against
race, "six-county" men against "26
county" men, clan against clan, the
outsider against the home breed in
herited sectional political animosity
and unemployment. When I asked
what was the concrete cause of such
a feud in what had been notedly an
orderly city, I received explanations
which I summarize between quota
tion marks.
Find Outsiders.
"In August, 1914, Ulster was or
ganizing for defense against domina
tion of southern Ireland as it Is to
day. Carson led 2.000 of our volun
teers to the recruiting depot the day
after the great war began. Britain's
fight against Germany was Ulster's
fight. Our mills furnished most of
the airplane cloth the British army
ued, our shipyards were speeded up,
we adapted all our plants to making
war material. Labor, to take the
place of our men who had 'joined
up,' and additional labor, was re
cruited from the south where the
young men were not enlisting to
fight England's battles.
"When our men returned from the
front they found the outsiders in
their places the outsiders whom
they saw as disloyal. It was reported
that the outsiders were saying that
they were going to make Belfast a
Sinn Fein city, and some of them
were carrying revolvers. Shipyard
workers, whether they came from
the north or the south of Ireland,
are not angels. So the Belfast vet
erans, in 100 per cent Belfast mood,
went over and drove out the invaders
who were in the east yard. Mean
while Belfast men who were offi
cers and soldiers in the British army
pacifying southern Ireland, were vic
tims of the kind of warfare that was
being carried on there and reports of
their 'assassination were frequent
The Sinn Feiners, who had not
helped Britain in ber war, were re
warded with the "Iree state, and the
Ulstermen, who had faced the Ger
man shells, were let down by Eng
land. There you have the start of I
the feud and what bit kept it go
ing." Squads of British i.gular soldiers
were patralm the Uteris when I
wai lu tteliast. They had no author
ity to starch the community for
private arms. The man with a bomb
or a revolver in bit poikrt might'
pass meni ry na ue it tne minute
after they bd turned a ttreet cor.
tier. If they tired upon offender they
might kill innocent pedettriant, The
outhreakt of tiolence, infrequent,
sporadic and scattered over a larger
city arra, are hard to control at long
at there are individuals with murder
in their beartt.
Tolerant Thinking.
Ulster "specials" ortaionally
patted through the street in motor
lorrirt. There were said lo be
of these "special contteblri" armed
with rifles and machine guns who
had been called out to guard the
frontier, I had further glimpses of
them in a journey to the "frontier."
which it not farther away from I'd
fast than the distance many com
mutert travel to their businett. On
the other tide of the frontier between
the six counties and the 2r counties,
where the population it mixed,
troops of the Irish republican army
were on the lookout. I wis told that
everyone that I passed in a vi'laxe
street, every farmer on the road or
at work in bis field, belonged to one
faction or the ether in bitterness of
racial inheritance. To an American
from the melting pot of both races
and many other races, this thought
was depressing.
( If northeast Ireland doet not come
into the free state, a boundary com
mission it to define the line of au
thority betwpen the northern and
southern parliaments. There are said
to be more people of the southern
than the northern race in Tyrone and
Fermanagh counties. The northern
answer is that this is due to recent
migrations front the touth to take
the place of northern youths who
died in France. Therefore, a plebis
cite it unjust, say the northerners,
who declare that they will never ac
cept a decision that leaves them only
four counties. If they insist to the
point of armed reisum, then Ire
land will indeed tuflrr tragedy, at
southern dh faces northern stub
hnmnes in viru'ent determination. If
l ister "I ghtt j.r it" and there
danger e thwill I'ngUnd permit
her ij be corrected' Si county men
do not think so. ''I'-'tck and Tant"
and "auxiliaries and puny British
soldiers, who In I that they base a
score la pay against southern irrland
in memory of their wanaie agamtt
Sinn Fern, might IWW to the six
county banner. And the land it rich
and the rrP l kindly in thit region
where tuih lire are smouldering.
In two hourt I wat back from the
frontier in Dublin whetc the tolerant
thinking would stretch out their
hatidt to the tolerant of lielfast in
the hope cd a clasp which will unite
Ireland in a way to use the industrial
ability of the tiortli and all the varied
ahilitiet of the south to make a unit
ed and prosperous Ireland, in the
same way that many races have made
a united and rrosperout America.
l'0!MHt, s;l
20,000 School Deks
Shipped to Mexico
M'tico City, Mtrth .5 On of
Collier Proud Over
Work for President
FmnorU, Kan. March JS Tbe
th largest ordert of svhool furniturel Poudrst man in town today is F, A.
ever mad f.r an, lann-Anieririn V!!St7."l
l or pady re
tot tHTir.MKr.
The Truth About
Eczema and Piles
Thousands anit thouumlt ( pl. sM
rlr,nn pt Hufflu, r (Mining (
w-k that -nt bo I of Person'
Omtmsnt will abolUh axwma anl Uouh
pile. an4 ih grauful Ittur I rrW
veir dr r worth nor mt than
monry.
"I h4 rima for manr- rr l
h,4 and euu'd not cm anrtbinc ts tp
Ihi aanr. 1 r t ("4 t "
boa an4 I owo yon man? thsnst foe th
good It has dn m. Thrr Un I blotch
on mr brad nw n4 ! rouMn t htlp but
thsnk rtron, or Iho ur I fri."
Mm Mary HIIU 40 Third Avanu. i'llla
bure. Fa.
"I hv had Itchlnf pit for It rr
and rtr,on'a U th only ointment lhat
relit m. -tdf 1ht pllx iw to hav
son." A. B. R 'liter, 1127 W,blnloo Av.
nu, Kaetn. W n.
)',Uron' Ointment for eld ors.
,lt rheum, chafin and all skin diaouea.
Druaelsu rcommnd It. Mail order filled
br Fetenon Ointment Co.. Inc.. Buffalo,
N. Y. For ! by Sherman 4 McConnell
Drns Co.
ADVEKTIHEMKNT.
ADtT.KTIhKSJKXT.
t'JIiat Would You Give
Fak finnrl Fuociaht?
I VI UVVU HVVIIIli
City Physician Tells How to Strengthen Eyesight a Much a 50 in a
Week's Time in Many Cases by a Simpla Home Treatment.
Dr. Judkln. former Chief of Clinlm at
the Union General Hospital, Boston. Masa..
and Houie Suriteon at the New England
Ey and Ear Infirmary, says: "I have
found oculista too prone to operate and
opticians too willing to preacrib slasaes,
while neulectintr the aimple formutaa which
form th basis of the Bon-Opto home treat
ment for th eyea. I am thoroughly con
vinced from my own experience with Bon
Opto that it will etrengthen eyesiitht st
least t0 in one week's time in many in
stances." Dr. Judklns' statement will brinie
hop to thousands of victims of eye-atrain
and other eye-weaknesses, as well as to
many who wear glasses because of weak
eyes and defective vision. Many whose
eyes were failing report remarkable reaulta
from the use of Bon-Opto.
One man aays: "I was almost blind
could not see to read at all. Now I can
read everything; without my glasses and
my eyea do not hurt any more. At night
they would pain dreadfully: now they feel
fine all the time. It was like a miracle to
me."
A lady who used Bon-Opto says: "The
atmosphere seemed haiy with or without
glasses, but after using Bon-Opto for fif
teen days everything seems clear. I can
read even fine print without glassee." An
other who used It says: "! was bothered
with eyestrain caused by overworked,
tired eyes, which caused violent headaches.
I hav Worn glasses for severs! year3,
both for distance and close work and with
out them I could not read my own name
on an envelope, or the typewriting on the
machine before tne. I can do both now
and hare discarded my long distance
glasses altogether. I can count the flutter
ing leaves on the trees across the street
now, which for several years looked like
a dim blur to me. I cannot express my
joy for what Bon-Opto haa don for me."
It is believed that thousands who wear
glasses will be able to discard them in a
reasonable time and others will be able to
strengthen their eyes and be spared the
trouble and expense of getting glasses. If
you have trouble with your eyes and want
relief, go to any drug store and get a
bottle of Bon-Opto tablets. Prop one Bon
Opto tablet into a fourth of a glass of
wster: with the Itquid bathe the eyes as
directed. You will notice your eyes clear
up right from the start and inflammation
and redness will quickly disappear. If
your eyes bother yon even a little it i
your duty to care for them now before it
is too late. Many now hopelessly blind
might have saved their sight if they had
cared for their eyes in time.
Note: A proirloant pbjsirtin to wboa the aMre
was snown, salfl: res. Jion-omo is tnilr a won
derful tie remedy. Irs lDgredle&U srs well known
to eve trausts and widely prescribed by them,
I htte used It very successfully In my own prsotlos
on omenta wnose eves ware strained tnrousn over
work or misfit glsseea. It is s preparation I feel
should be kept on hand for dally use In every
family." Boo -Opto Is not a serret remedy or a
ratent msdieine. It Is an ethical preparation, ttie
formula of which Is printed on the package. Tli
manufacturers guarantee H to strengthen ey-wlght
SO par cent in a week's tints In many Inttanoes or
ynur money will be refunded. Bon-Opto is sold
oy an gooo. arugftigts.
country in the Vnne4 .stales bat Just
arrie4 in this city. It consi.tt l
.11,1)00 modern st lmul drtkt. x lane
wat Ibis ruder thai numerous Ameri
can, school lumishini: Imtttes hid tt
be ralletl upon to furnish this rush
order. This, however, is but a part
of an crJrr ot "me trat
which the department of puhbe in
struction hat t'Ui'nl it the I'tiitrd
Matet for the furnishing l teaimn
earanty fpr the new sihaolt ad
the vastly increase tchnnl attend
ance of the federal disiritt and the
territories. At many state hcw!t
are weekly comintt tinder federal
cnntioU these orders for school lur
nitute are to be largely increased in
the near future.
(.Id l4hunf J style,
eently turned 'UI a mt important
jih-repainnT a TJir of 1'resident
llaiding't shoes.
They attracted crotadt lo the rob
bier's winditw. wheie they were
placed on eMnliitioii, and Spady was
'hi" by the tit,i lamera men
while be put new beeis and soles on
th'm.
'Ihe pnnilrnt sent the tboes to
Spady oil the tecomtneudalirtn of
1 lower llmh. cfttiB'risman of thi
ttistntt, who told Harding of
Spady's skill at a slioetr.aV.rr.
The lUe leadt Other Taper! In
Sprt Sent.
We'll back ajar of Vicks
against the worst cold
in Omaha
Every family here is invited to try the DIRECT
treatment for all cold troubles
ABSORBED, like a liniment, and, at the tame time,
INHALED, as a vapor, Vicka reaches immediately
the congested, inflamed air passages.
LITERALLY millions of families who
have tried Vicks are now continual
users of our product.
So, naturally, we want you to make
the test. Here is our offer
Buy a 35c. jar from your druggist
use all or part of it if you are not de
lighted with the results, mail us the top
of the carton and the purchase price will
be cheerfully refunded.
Made for
years past
We make this offer and have made it
for years because Vicks really kelps the
majority of cold troubles.
Vicks doesn't relieve every case, of
course. No remedy can do that.
But if it fails in your case your money
will be returned without question and
remember YOU ARE THE SOLE
JUDGE.
A druggist's
discovery
A number of years ago a North Caro
lina druggist , searching for a better way
to treat colds, bit upon a wonderful
formula.
He combined in the form of a salve
the best of Nature's remedies for colds
Camphor, Menthol, Eucalyptus,
Thyme and Turpentine, with other val
uable ingredients.
When this salve is applied over the
throat and chest it not only penetrates
and stimulates like a liniment, but the
ingredients are released as vapors by
the body heat. Thus the medication is
carried with each breath thru the nose
and throat to the lungs.
Now used from
coast to coast
This remedy, Vicks VapoRub, won
instant local favor and its fame has
spread, county by county, state by
state, until now Vicks is a family stand
by from coast to coast.
Over 17 million jars are used yearly.
Just right
for children
Mothers like to use Vicks because it
is applied externally.
It avoids dosing and upsetting the
children's stomachs.
When kiddies come in wet and snif
fling it is applied to prevent colds.
It helps to keep off attacks of spas
modic croup it is a quick treatment
for all cold troubles.
In addition, its cooling, soothing
qualities make it useful every day for
cuts, burns, bruises, stings and akin
troubles.
Prevent grip
pneumonia
Crip and pneumonia are frequently
the result ot carelessness.
Keep away from the sneezers and
coughers in street cars and public
places, it possible.
If you are obliged to mingle with
them, insert some Vicks in the nostrils
pjst before going out. It stimulates the
membrane and helps Nature to repel
bacteria.
At the first sign
of a cold
During this grip-pneumonia weather
is is "better to be safe than sorry."
Here is the safest plan if people would
just follow it
At the first sign of a cold go home,
take a hot bath for 30 minutes and
A "NFIAMMATIOK .11 SB if SIZES )
J'
drink several glasses of hot lemonade.
Take a laxative andTa good sweat
under blankets. Then dry the body.
Apply Vicks liberally over throat and
chest, covering with hot flannel cloths.
Go to bed and leave the bed-clothes
loose about the neck so that the medi
cated vapors will be inhaled all night
long.
This treatment will often banish a
cold over night and so avoid the possi
bility of grip or pneumonia.
How Vicks
should be used
For Spasmodic Croup, Children's
Colds kub Vicks over the throat and
chest until the difficult breathing is
relieved, then spread on Slickly and
cover with a hot flanneJ cloth. One ap
plication at bed time usually prevents a
night attack of croup.
For Head Colds, Asthma, Ca
tarrh, Hay Fever Vicks should be
melted in a spoon and the vapors in
haled, or a little can be applied up the
nostrils and snuffed up the bead.
For Deep Chest Colds, Sore
Throat, Tonstlitis, Bronchitis,
Coughs Vicks should be applied over
the throat and chest if necessary , first
using hot, wet cloths to open the pores
of the skin then rubbed in well until
the skin is red; spread" on thickly and
covered with one or two thicknesses of
hot flannel cloths. If the cough is an
noying, swallow small pieces the size of
a pea. t
Vapor sllmportant Remember
that half the effect of Vicks is in the
inhalation of its vapors. So when ap
plied over throat and chest leave bed
coverings and night clothing loose at
the neck so that these vapors can be
freely inhaled.
'Just
rub
it on"
Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly
mm
J VAPORUB
the DIRECT treatment
ABSORBED
as a liniment
INHALED
as a vapor
Thousands of others havsj gotten rid of theirs
without dieting or exercising, often at the rata of
over a pound a day, and without payment until
reduction has taken place. r
Imi licensed practising physician and personally prearrihe the
treatment for eaA Indlridual case, thus enabling me to choose
rrmrdirs that will produce not only a loss of weight harmlessly,
but which will also relieve yon of all the troublesome symptoms
of ore nrt outness soch as shortness of breath, palpitation, imlitres
tlon, rheumatism, gout, asthma, kidney trouble and farious other
mictions which often accompany onerstoutoesa.
My treatment will reliere that depressed, tired, ilrcpy feelmfc
firing you renewed energy sod rigor, a result of the lost of you
superfluous fat
You are not required to change in the slightest from roar
regular mode of living. There is no dieting or exercising. It IS
simple, easy and pleasant to take.
If yrni are orerstout do not postpone but sit down right now
and send for ray free trial treatment and mr plan whereby I
am to be paid only after reduction has taken place If yoa aa
desire.
DR. R. NEWMAN
' Licensed Physician State of New York
286 Fifth Avenue New York City.
Desk H-330
ADVERTISEMENT
New Method Of
Reducing Fat
A r.evs item from abroad informs ns
that the American method of producing a
slim, trim figure ia meeting: with astonish
Ins suceeaa. Thia system, which haa madu
such a wonderful impression over there,
must ba the Marmola Prescription Tablet
method of reducing fat. It is safe to fay
thai we have nothing better for this pur
pose in this country- Anything that will
reduce the excesa flesh steadily and easily
without injury to the stomach, the causing
of wrinkles, the help of exercising or
dieting, or interference with one's meals
ia a mighty important and useful addition
to civilization's necessities. Just such a
catalogue of good results follow the use
of these pleasant, harmless and economical
little fat reducers. We Bay economical
because Marmola Prescription Tablet
(made In aceordance with the famoua
Marmola Prescription) can be obtained nf
any druggist the world over or from the
Marmola Company, 4612 Woodward Ave.,
Detroit, Mich., lor one dollar a case.
which ia a decidedly economical price,
considering the number of tablets each
case contains. They are harmless.
You Needn't
Look Over 30
Graying hair makes yoo asam old regardlaaa
of age. Beatorstbaonginaleolorandseemyoang.
This ia simple, safe aod easyalary T. Goldmaa'a
Hair Color Keatorer quickly stops the gray.
H I'idrsSSsM I tedayfortree
ll Ar XtSL I nd ' "
n Jfc? r1 i I directed on a
m I 5 Hti I single I tek.
a V L 7 J I Note the
T aV I' STan, per
! .IflSaWafSs! "Sfl'ii- fecUynatu-al
' I I eolor. See
f jljS5iR!3j! 1 ""ST J
Cte: iwivl! I, thia edentiSe
WS!'" Vatlil'l ill preparaaonis
X lljjh -uloen and
1111 " " '"" ' clear aa wa-
Fill oet care-
ter. Nothicfftowashorraboff.
fully, answering each question. If poesibte, en
dose a lock of hair in roar letter. Then when
you have proved reeolte. get a faQ-siied bottle,
from year druggist or direct.
TETTER ON
HANDS1YHS
la Blisters. Itched asd
Burned. Cuticara Heals.
"For four years my hands were
affected with tetter. It broke out ia
blisters which later devel
oped into sore eruptions
and were very painful.
During the cold weather
my bands would itch and
burn, and I could not do
my work. I lost my rest on
account of the irritation.
"I sent for a free samplo .of Cutl
cura Soap and Ointment which
seemed to help me so I bought more,
and after using two cakes of Soap
and one box of Ointment I was
healed." (Signed) Richard L. Drye,
R.S, Box 48, Concord, No. Car.
Use Cuticurs for all toilet purposes.
StByl,SuBrrebyIua. AV!reH:"CttreIek
ereMrtH, Dt. E, SUiaaaSSU,." Seii every
wh. SoepZac. Ointment 25 sad Me. Tekne,Ss.
HVCuucura Soap ehayee withoot nog.
mmt:
Please send me your FREE trial bottleof Mary
T. Goldman's Hair Color Bestorar. The natural a
color of my hair ia z
! Mack- jet black. dark brown i
I medium brown light brown, light auburn I
I or blond..... . I
j j
J AiMmm . . inn 5
Flense print yoor name utd addreM I
M M M m HsP
PROSTATE GLAND,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS.
These three organt r re
sponsible for more misery
among men than ell others
combined. Pains In back,
tired feeling, retting up st
night, premature age, leee
ened vitality, ere some of th
results of these troubles. Wa
believe we have the beet
treatment known to quick)?
correct these disorders.
Costs nothing unless It
doe the work. Sens' MM
tar Illustrated boetlet.
BOX 293-1,
NASHVILLE, TENN.
ADVERTISEMENT
Has Powerful Influence
Over Rheumatism
Druggists Guarantee First Pint
Bottle of Allenrhu to Show the
Way to Complete Recovery.
Mr. James H. Allen of Conirresa Ave.
nue, Rochester. N. Y., suffered for years
with rheumatism. Many times this ter
rible diaease left him helpless and un
able to work.
He finally decided, after years of
eeaselesa atudy. that no one can be free
from rheumatism until the accumulated
impurities, commonly called uric acid
depoalta, are dissolved in the joints and
muscles and expelled from the body.
With this idea in mind he consulted
physicians, made experiments and final-
compounded a prescription that ouick.
ly and completely banished ever eiirn
and symptom of rheumatism from his
system.
Hi freely gave his discovery, which
he called ALLENRHU. to others, who
took it, with what might be called mar
velous success. After years of urging
he decided to let sufferers everywhere
know about his discovery through the
newspaper and Instructed druggists to
guarantee a full pint bottle ae above
stated. Sherman A McConnell Drue Co.
Drug Store can supply you.
ADVERTISEMENT
Uric Acid
Solvent
85-Cent Bottle FREE
(32 doses)
Just because you start the day worried
and tired, stiff legs and arms and mus
cles, an aching head, burning and bearing
down pains In the back worn out before
'the day begins do not think you have
to stay In that condition.
Get well! B (ree from allff Joint,
sore muscles, rheumatic pains, aching
bs.ck. kidney or bladder trouble Start
NOW.
If you suffer from bladder weaknes
with burning, scalding palne, or If yoa
are In and out of bed half a doscn tim
at night, you will appreciate the rt,
comfort and strength this treatment gives.
We will give you for your own uae on
85-cent bottle (32 doses) FREK to con
vince you The Williams Tratment con
quere kidney and bladder trouble, rheu
matiam and all other aliment, no matter
how chronic or stubborn when caused by
cxceselve urle end.
Send tht notice with your letter to
The Dr. D. A. Williams Co., Dept. W-64S.
P. O. Block. East Hampton, Conn. Flees
end ten cents to help pay part cost of
postage, packing, etc. We will mall to
you by Parcel I'ost, delivery paid, a regu
lar S5-cent bottle of The William Treat
ment J2 rvOb'KS). without obligation or
pene. Only one bottle to the iami ad
dree or family. fialabiUbei 181.