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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 9, 1922)
THE PEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. MAY 9, 1922. The Omaha Bee MORNING EVJCXIXO-BUNDAY. TK MB rUMJSHlSO COMPANY NUjmM B. tl-t-lkt, r.:iMf h, tKW(JI, Gmrai Mur MEMSC Of Ttlg ASSOCIATED Hl Miu4 H II uaaia walHa. m law. - W I. a-.) . MH4H kv U fiM at ltwiul at TM taiM Bat I. a . at Ik A Oi at, ika mnfuiaW miimi aa nmtiwu 4.ta. a4 TM Im t tlnvltiw a iU4i w4iu kr laatr mwuilMi Tfc aat alrstitatia af Tka Omika Ba for April, 123 Daily Average 72,300 Sunday Average 70,505 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY B. BUEWCR. Oaaral Mumiw I LXt K s. ROOD, OtuUltaa) HuuW Inn ( ant tvktwiM kalarr at lata 4lh a Ma. ISU. SW W. H. OUIVtY. NaUty rUa BEE TELETHON Prll Sraelt Euhakga. A.k for , . Dar-artmant or FlfM WaataJ. Far ATlaaUa Ntakt Call. Art I P. H i IdH.rUI JOOO Dntmral, ATlantM 1011 ' ! orncu Mil Offl ITth nj r.rn.n Co. Bluff. II Beoll St. South Sid. 4011 B. Slta St. N.w York Jt fllU A. Wi.hlnfton 111! 0. SU Cklrat IU Btfr BUg. firla, rraaoa 410 ftwa St. Honor. Savings Effected by Budget. Representative Byrnt of Tenneisee, hose adherence to Hells of the democratic party leads him to tuspect any and all worki of the admin istration, demanded from the president a showing: of the economiei effected by the director of the budget. In response to this General Dawes has prepared and President Harding has transmitted to the house of representatives a volume contain ing the detailed transactions whereby the esti mated expenditures for 1922 have been reduced by more than $1,600,000,000 under the cost of run ning the government for 1921. The report contain (itemized transactions of thp several departments of the government, especially in the matter of transfer of surplus material and ' supplies from one to another, and shows conclu sively the great changes that have been effected by the adoptionof business methods in handling gov ernment affairs. Totals for the several divisions into which the government accounting locates ex penditures are as follows: 1131 Brtlm.U. 1951 Bnwidltura. DecrMM, Ordlnirr Miwidllnrr. not , , , ?2r?!n!!.T. .17.SM$ ll.Mt.MSt, ttt.UJ Ordinary ainmillturM far tnutlna buitnn. of gov- nmit t.TM.tTg.iri ,S7 J.43J.07S SOT.SM.40T 3toArl.nctt. la pofUl rt- anin Tt.3St.3t 1M.IJS.4M , M.SM.JM Oofrallnni In (uplul fund. 117.114.14S TW.OM.I: 471.fM.48l Eippndlturcfl Sua by coo- . trm 4SS.S1S.4M 464.T01.11S iM.tlt.IM Tntat apndltnrM. ex cllMtT. f publio dfht and Inirt tuiirfa tS.4S9.SS4.S40 4,0tl.JM.l 1.619.011.J04 Baductltm In publlo d.bt - , pv.hla tram ordinary ' . racllt .1 4H.MS.4IN) 4SMIS.0AH .754.481) Trait taTMtmwt flindt... 30. 222.00(1 M.4S7.IM . ll.r34.SM IalWMt OO Publla debt,. .1.000.000.001) S09.144.731 - 1835.388 TnUl apndltnrM.. ....S3.S:.S7J.0S0 13,558,040,489 Sl.S13.SeS.459 todlrttw IiKreu. ' ' "Tnl npmdlturM" IncludM ordlnirr nmriK., Dot ninjwt to mcuUra onntrol. Mptnic uMnt to atcutln oonlrol. kmmi Snd by conirni, InUrwt ud prlnclpml of publlo dM, ind In - . nMmmt of trim rtudi. , Note should be taken of the fact that the in creases included in the recapitulation are those ordered by congress, mainly due to increase in pay of employes, refunds for customs and revenue ;, overcharges and, good roads; increase in trust fund investment; increase in amount for reduc tion of public debt, and increase in interest pay ment on public debt. A study of the report in detail affords much that is enlightening., The item of transfer, of property from one department to another, or the , sale of surplus supplies and materials from one . to another, shows a total saving of $27,209,466.39. Total savings effected in the several departments on operating expenses are $250,134,835.03. ' : Here is a showing that ought to answer, the assertions of the democrats that the administra tion is doing nothing to remedy conditions left when Wilson turned over the government to Har ding. ' Fourteen months in. office, with a reduc tion of more than $100,000,000 a month in the or dinary expenses of the government is a record to, be proud of. It compares with the first term of Wilson, when the government was put into ' the hole at the rate of $1,000,000 a day; Tax payers are interested in these figures.. , that the prtMnt modes but trto.iwy, brmf I':ie 4 le, give way la something perhaps want, jHfhips fenter, btrt surely d,t)ernt. Finding M!k Drinleri, 1 vIus of dairy pfedurti'en farms in Vl wit J,410,OoO,0OU, b lefr of 2t) per rfnt from the previous esr, areordiug to tha Federal Dt pirtneni rf Agrlculttire. Milk mmjuitioit up better than prices, although it it to be ex pected (hat th output will (ieclint mnMeiMy unless better matket condition are secured. . Within the nest few yeart plant are to be com pleted in Nebrsaka for stimulating tht dm of milk snd its produttt. Milk it to be tdvertie4 as nature's toft drink and will enter into canipe. tiiion with the nuineroui manufactured Lever, ages. This it at it should be had there been no cot in the world, tht men inventing milk would have made several fortunes and the public, ! wayt eager to take up the latent nvclty, would demand it at every sod fountain. Due to the fact that tows aurc a steady in come whkh flows more regularly than the In come from grain farming, there hat been in the last year mote dairying than in the years of In flation. Now, if the dairy herdt arc to be main tained in employment and preserved from slaughter for their beef, a market hat to be ob tained for the milk. Th retort to advertising in oidrr to increase demand hit been made successfully in a number of agricultural instances. The fruit producers of California and Florida, the walnut grower, the prune and raisin growert and the apple men have advertised extensively. A desultory publicity cam paign hat even becu carried on by a national as sociation of dairymen. The corn farmers have lately had impressed upon them need for extend ing their foreign market by propaganda. The dairy industry it immense in the aBRrc; gate, although in Nebraska it it not at extensive as it might well be. There are many rural com muuitiet where the inhabitants are not served with fresh milk but rely on canned products brought from the Pacific coast. Instead of but ter, many families use artificial products, some of them made from imported vegetable oils. There is a market at home for ''more milk, snd the dairy interests, if the apply themselves to the problem of distribution rather than regard ing production as the only question, can find it. On the Road to Prosperity. It it good to see that continued improvement, in agricultural, industrial and trade conditions are reported by the Federal Reserve bank of this dis trict. The crop' outlook is saitkto be excellent, employment has increased, building . operations 'are approaching the boom" stage, and wholesale and retail trade has made further advances. ' Steady liquidation and .the improvement in agricultural prices are credited as the chief fac- , tors W this recovery. 1 "It is quite evident," the bank review adds, "that e adherence to rigid economy programs, buying little and borrowing , little, has also helped." . . Some conception of the prevalence of thrift is found in the report that the number of people in the Tenth district having savings accounts has risen more than 35,000 over a year ago. : Saying . deposits in 62 reporting institutions amounted to $78,411,736 on April 1, as compared with $74,- 324,696 a year before. The people of this middle west live by work and saving. These are the qualities that have brought about the easing of the financial situa- tion. The remedy for hard times is infallible l. it will achieve. results just as well in Eurctpe as in America. - When Grandpa Was a Dude. "There is so.much talk against the flapper these days, but history records that men were the flappers fifty years ago," remarks the Gil lette (Wyo.) News. This assault on the dignity snd good fame of the generation of grandfathers ; is bolstered up by , certain evidence : "They greased their hair, wore corsets and otherwise made themselves look 'fine.'. Twenty years ago they wore stiff bosomed shirts, wore silk belts six inches wide, parted their long hair in the ' middle, and wore neckties that puffed out in front like the breast of a pouter pigeon. . i Readinsr further on in sartorial history it will be found that at one period the shoulders of ' men's coats were heavily padded to make the i- veriest weakling appear an athlete. 1 It may even be suspected that the sterner sex gave up wear - ing breeches because so many did not possess the proper shaped leg. Airing of the facts brought up by this Wyoming editor has the benefit of inducing a better spirit of humility. It serves to remind also that the fashion of one age almost invaria bly appear, grotesque to the next, 155 suggest! Gloom- at Genoa. It is more than just jumpy nerves at Genoa now: senuiue doom has settled over the nro. cccdinas there, and annarenttv European nations are once more at the parting of the ways. Politics of the old stripe has had its inevitable effect, but there will be no "victory of Berlin" this time. Bargaining may be on the same basis, but Bis. marck is not there, nor Beaconsficld; Tchitcherin. Is neither RadziwiU nor Shuvaloff. Lloyd George may compose the serious differences that have arisen, but his task is a huge one. His first treat effort will be to convince Hie soviet representatives that they "arc engaged in a serious business,, and that they can not play with the fate of Europe and civilization as thev played with the great state of Russia. France realizes that its national debt is in round num bers $17,000,000,000 in cold, and Hint SO 0(1(1 (1(1(1 . 000 of this due and owing from' Germany and Kussia. Consequently, France wants assurance mat this will be paid. Russia s compact with Germany is not material; what is required of the soviet government is a guaranty that it will oav' Russia's external debts, and that property of liens seized and nationalized will be compensated, jr. Germany, too, must be held to riaid ac countability.' The French are willing to go it lone, if need be, but are not willing to forerr claims they deem to be iust. and in the enfnrrp. ment of which they will have the sympathetic support of the world. "Jim" Thomas, labor cabinet minister of Eng land, voices the thought that the world is tired of war, but even his practical mind does not go to the extreme of forgiving the debts of the rp- calcitrant nations. . It is, possible for Europe to recover, at least partially, without Russia, but Europe will never recover on a system of com promises and trades, such as has prevailed in the past. If peace is to be established on a perma nent basis in t-urope it will be first on the recog nition by all nations of mutual responsibility, and secondly, on the strict and punctual discharge of an duties and obligations. Short of this, disorder must go on. . ' ...'' . . -,. k Buying Power Is Here. A financial .writer for an eastern paper re marks on the confidence that, is displayed dn every hand in the middle west. He mentions the purchases of motor car's as indications that the people have money and are willing to spend it when they are convinced that they are getting their mOney's worth.- Nor is it pnly essentials that find a market. : 'f ."' I.1 ' ,--;.. V''41'?'" A short .time ago Mary Garden took her operatic company to Wichita. The guarantors put up. $3uj(f00 for two performances and made a profit. At about the same time 300 men were initiated into a"; lodge at a': cost- of $200 each. Numerous examples of the spending ability -of the' middle west come to mind. The market for bonds and stocks of established character has been good for several months. People out here are not investing in blue sky, nor is there any great amount of reckless ex travagance. But when they want something, they go buy it. 'And if there is a profit for the farm ers in the next harvest, the uncertainty that has cursed business for the past two years ought to be permanently dispelled. , is An improvement in the American standard of living, so that more goods will be demanded by consumers, will do more to restore business than any other method. If consumption can be in creased, production will take care of itself. ;t The British parliament is refusing to take seriously a bill for. Welsh home rule. With Lloyd George, a Welshman, at the head of the British government, that portion of the British isles would seem to be pretty well represented.' ; 1 Wild Flowers Need Help Th Ait th Days When tin Woods Way i Suffer From Ksvaieis. " Although Indiana voted for Beveridge, this could scarcely be called a wet election The Hoosiers took a firm stand against anything New. ' Chinese agriculture may still be largely primi tive, but more than $1,250,000 worth of American farm machinery was imported last year. f Jugo-Slavia has prohibited the importation of many luxuries, which is one way of getting the people back to the simple life. -; Nice thing about these flesh colored stockings is that darning is rendered unnecessary can't tell the hole from the goods, ; (From th Washington Star.) Otte it. lit glimpm jn the newt cf the ae. tiviiift ff he Wihf IJowrr I'reeivtiK)n Sawiety of Amriki. T"-' i a blanch of thit rtcirty :n a.lungiiJii, wuh a Uiite iiifitibfr.liip of men and women wlu buitif it ..ienr and of men mid wouitu who dunk a t tiirniutt tto tbaut (he prettrtatiflu of wiM floweit. 1 hc pro r le tarry on a campaign to rdurais emon. need ntj or detirmg m. trillion in itowrr. and niter fMuig tliem in the taute f Hower ptfiejvtien. The ilr.iru.ium t wild Howrit u a ten.clft thing. It i done either by persons who do not tn pretend an inirie.l in (lower r by thn.e who only pietend such lniert. Tbee clrt eem in be m nunicroti lit at the present rate i ('.inn lion, all tl itiii.to aninne flwert whkh are conspii-uou and blight and all the llowrrlng Ireet and ihrubt will be gone within perhaps a Keneration. The flowering doswood trees have been so ti'iiiiUled earli tpring that il it hard lo come upon one within ittik. of WVhitistoit I fiat It not a mere btih, uulef it is inrlo.ed in (he cardrn of a home or guarded in a public park. The same i true of the "red hud'' or Judas tree, a tree that it fopeciallv colorful and enntpicuou in early oprmc. The me fate hat come upon the vharaiteristic shrub of thi part of the country which old-time folk called "mountain laurel," and which new-time folk, when they know it at all, tall kslmia. Arbutui lu been so nearly extinguUliril that little hunches bring high pricet to street flower j eddlcrt and a boianit or member of the va rious walking rltibs of Washington who finds a pood bed of arbutut in ome tequestcred tpot keept the tecret very much at a fUhrrinati keept the secret of a place where the las bite hard and fant. One find only a poor patch here and there of the pink wild aralea, which once covered unlet of country in the Potomac valley and which gray-haired learned people, when they were chil dren, called "wild honeysuckle." Columbine, pink lady's slipper or moccasin flower, Indian pink, snakemouth, ranged robin, fire p'nk, panque flower, purple virgin' bower, moiikidiood. huntsman's Cup, blue lupine, CRlant ine, grape hyacinth, the gentians, downy, cloned and frinsed; cardinal flower or cardinal lobelia and coral honeysuckle are just a few of hundreds of wild flowers, common in our homeland thirty, forty, fifty years ago, which are now quite hard to find, and are generally found in places that are too hard for the average sort of city person to get at. Even hrpatica, the anemones, dutchman't breeches meadow beauty and pimpernel are com ing to he classed as "scarce," and every sprint? cart loads or automobile loads and armfuls of spring beauty, Virginia cowslip, adder's tongue or dog-tooth violet, wild pansies. downy yellow violets, bird-foot violets, white violets, bloodroot flowers, wild geraniums and a hundred olher varieties are torn up It would be a good thing if everybody in town would join one of the walking clubs, or form one of their own,' and learn something about the trees and flowers. Those persons who "go in" for this sort of thing declare that it is very interesting, and it seems to be quite as practical and educational as many of the fads which attract people. Made Cross-Eyed by Thirst The mcant-to-be-crushing remark heard so often nowadays, "I tell you I never saw so many drunken men on the streets before prohibition as 1 see now," doesn't overwhelm anybody who enjoys a memory of any length running back over the progress of temperance reform. This sort of observation is an old familiar friend, grown only a bit hoarier and shabbier with the iapse of the years. t An age ago, when towns in the west first began to vote out the saloons under local option, there was a certain brand of traveling salesmen forever corning by and tell ing you: "I can always spot one of these local option placed iust as soon as I land at the sta tion; there's always a lot of drunken bums hang ing around the station. But it's never that way in a saloon town." Or your neighbor with a tone of supreme disgust at "such hypocrisy" would assure you: "I have just visited that dry town in the next county and - you see more drunken men 011 the streets there in an ' hour than you would in any wet town in a week." . Well,- it was none- of it true, of course. No need of statistics to -disprove such talk. Human nature was plenty,, to explain ,the whole case. These men hated prohibition so when they came where prohibition prevailed,-they looked for Signs to discredit it. Where the saloon' held sway, they never thought of watching for drunks;" so they saw none. It was only where animosity toward the dry law sharpened their wits, that they took, note of the facts that their prejudice wished to see. It is just so now with national prohibition. No friend of the drink traffic ever. took a census of the cases of intoxica tion he saw before prohibition went into effect;, they were a matter of course then; he paid no attention. It's literally true that he emphasiz ing "he" -sees more drunks now than he, used to; he is looking for them now.1 But people whose eyesight is 'not complicated with their thirsts or their selfishness, whose memories actually can paint a real picture of ten years back, don't talk that way. Their common sense teaches them better. Continent. - Rights of the Law Abiding ' Vetoing a bill ."to permit justices of the su perior court to suspend the execution of sen tences in criminal cases, Governor Cox pertinent ly calls attention to the right of that great ma jority of the people who are law abiding to ex pect that they will be protected, as far as possi ble, against the criminal element of society. In recent years, there has been, perhaps, overmuch attention to the offender in comparison with the attention given the public that supplies the vic tims for him and his kind. There has arisen as d result a condition that clearly calls' for a change of attitude. ,As the governor says, the protection of the public "demands a more wholesome respect for stern justice, promptly administered, amd not too much deleted by wasted sympathy." , The measure which the governor has vetoed, in view of the existing latitude given the judges with reference to probation and the deferring of sentences, might not have resulted in: greater leniency, but its incorporation in the laws of the commonwealth would have been hailed in" the under world as another indication of the present day' tendency to make the course of the wrong doer a primrose path. It is better to, advertise the fact, as is done in this veto message, that the adequate protection of decent citizens is just now uppermost in the minds of the authorities. Figures for the year ended September 30, 1921, show that of each thousand persons con victed in the criminal courts of the common wealth only ninety-three were placed in restraint. Imo further argument is necessary as to tne wis dom of promptly killing attempts to make escape from jail still easier. Boston Transcript. ' It Was Providence. ; 'It was a luckv thino- for the United States thafr Lincoln had a Grant and that Grant had a Lincoln. ' Without Grant the war might have been lost; but without Lincoln Gen. Grant could not have risen to the top of the army; there to exercise that military skill which restored the shakintr fortunes of the north. Lincoln must have seen that the quiet, bearded soldier had come out of the valley with all the qualities which God had put in him; that he .was no loneer the failure of whom Ohio possiped; no longer the lonesojne man made intemperate, but a great soul who had drawn wisdom from mis fortune and strength from misery. Niw York Herald. ': - -:.' How to Keep Well y PK, W. A. VA Qu.tiM rmi,i. tiff . Malt. Ik 4 pvaiia si 4imm, tub. mm4 im lr. t r tMdar l 1 k. Km, uil k mw4 MMMtly ...bixt t ItmtUiiM. , Hmf4, 44tM4 hhIi I . li4. Dr. Cvm lll m.k. 4i..hi. m4t&t a U4ild4l Imwi A44f litr la (.r. ItM HM. MENACE OP STREET DUST. In rtfrent vr. wa ara mil ticaHxa- rnouslt about mi en wt-eiln aa a fpreadtjr of d4M. vilifti wa piiiit ilMt tltwa.a waa rtul by contaft wjili people and innt in inipuriam e or atr-burne In- r4Pfi.ll llM.4 IliUH A.' .....MH.l.A.i . . ...... ...,, ... ..,-,. iru, WW )nnt'Ci1 lo the ( oii. liislori that noth In rrliited lo air wax t'f ImporHtnae, When w 11 tied tln.t eunllaht ami air klltd tubenle hrll, wo Jh 111 mil In III t'tim-liitftctii (hut In i never raul (inniimilliin, i... . 1. ... itwi wnu h inimiif wftn mat Plulil Ull.illulit .1. -Ill I. ill .,,, nin mi U'.lutl fit lllrt tllheff!i hMfllll 4t,il tuill It kit) nil or them? Wlnnltiw iid Kleeler found that to ilAie wliera thera wna riot aup- lillUlll I,, h. IiH. KnH.lll,lnlil.H K Ma rent of ilia Imcteitu In dime wera tutienla UiKilll. In t'larea W,er (here u-epA ntiiiitmiiuAB ih. nmni,. tlon arnae to 24 per cent. 1110 propornon or aiumiua ovinf from tuhcr'UloniM In 1 ha nolshlior hnotl of i-onaumptlvea waa four tinien as lilsli as It wan In other lm-allilea. Kvtdently, while eunllpht nrf .1 ... I ., bllla .... . 1. a ,..K. burilli. it doea not kill all of them, ami lite nir.ft aweeper I reipon flhln for Nome of the ronmimpilnn. Kl rnt AMiittm In aliAtliAV ..I'm e,e qui'iilly foun1 In atrpet dimt. Mnny or inn imcirri't m tun group are uuo to rnrelee epitllnR. rifteen yonra ao Kpriiikllnr the etreeta arotiml the quarantined houiies u n fuvnrlte tiieamiro fnr the rotitrol of rplfl.Miilcn of Infantile pnriilyxlM. If Unit measure wan help ful, mreet rtunt mint ho a factor in eprendlmr infantile pnralynlM. There la no qiieetlon but what coryr.n. or common roldn, are ot times rtuo to Inlinllnc etreet ouhi, ann pneumonia Im iho child of the common cold.i Thero Is a world of evidence of I Mi. nnturn to convict utrect duet of cmiHltic cllePHBe. Then: there is evidonre or anotner kind. Varnlrililns; and ollinsr the Tlnors. lnulr.Q,l nf rnvfllllff them Wltll rUKB and carpota, leesena dunt. Moat OUKt wnirn ceta lnio nmiwn n rnrrled there on the feet, as many ntudips have shown. Foot ninla and aerapes at the , 1, a tiohi, tt Vftpnlnir the stioea rlfiin, and pin In. amooth. crack-free floors, are roonsiir of keeplnpr down dust of conBltlerable importance. AH mnke for lmnitn. u... 1nuf la mrrled around by nir currents a windy day is a dusty day, ana. as sucn, aon m iio revenues of the laundryman, the J 1... .Via Anotnr TVPTl ltl- lIlllKKini. fj.i.i M-y-.w.. . tnnplblo nnd inappreciable currents of nir win carry oust. J. tV. Redway. whoso facts T am t .nil nhnnl nnnnfnff A. box In which some delicate articles had been put away for two years. t ,1. i 1- n a tliere was sn outer, almost dustnroof. tightly clos ed box. inside tnis was a. tlehtlv closed box, inside of which was the apparatus. ' When this apparatus was lemuvcu it was covered with a fine, gray dust. The microscope showed this dust to contain ashes, horse droppings and ordinary diet. - . , . More important even than a nigh wind In spreading street dust la dry sweeping. This has been proved by anv numDer 01 inaia. . Tarring the street in front of Bed wav's laboratory lessened the dust by 95 per cent. Washing streeia aim iiavcmoui-n has about an equally good effect, aa . in tha street near the laboratory when it was tarred. , . Probably Raynaud's Disease. ' r. -o ,mitaci. "T urant to ask vour opinion about a rather .curious thing which happens to my third finger. At irregular intervals tne Diooa leaves the' first joint entirely, at .1 . ni,a 4 v. a Vino atirl coldness of LIICII wn" inw . . , death. It feels as if that Joint was frozen. -This condition iasia auuui. five or six minutes. . ' . MT r fl Bt-nar Qnil I. T H Oil C H 1 tllil ui, dliwiis .. . - .7 suffering from muscular rheumatism since my "youth. I lost seven teeth from Rigg's disease. , "Can it be lacic 01 circuumun m that case, why should it be confined to one finger and one joint?. -Per haps I should add tnai hud feeling has occurred rnuch more fre quently lately." , - REPLY. - : - ' : You have Raynaud's disease. This In evidence during cold weather than at other soasons.. . - v . . ... . 1 - i- Glands TJiat Made History. ' M F writes: "I remember so well my father's Interest in Napoleon's pituitary . glands as explaining , nla character. . , XT "1 Did you ever know that Napo leon" had a very slow pulse, never over 40 ? t' 1 . i'2 Did Napoleon's glands change the destinies of France? How curi ous!" , ,. ' REPLY. 1 Yes It is supposed that his heart beat about 80 times butvthat only 40 beats got through to the wrist pulse.- That, however, is specu lation. -' " ' . s 2. That's what Berman says. Per haps the. world, That, however, la speculation. Job No. I Become Tip Top. m c .nifaB. : "Tn the course of some tests made while going through a nasal operation 1 was louna 10 have sugar in my urine, and it was found that sometimes I was free from it' and again a few weeks later it would be there. My general health Th Vm aftar. II. aalaataa fvaaly la Hi r4f wan mm tm 4uum aar pM IWMM. II r. .1. thai lalr k .B.i.lf rtl, a4 wn to mr4. II sla laatol thai ! mm of Mia writ BoaniMB r.a MIm. ! MMaarllf (a. aabllMillMi, kl laal Millar aiar Sh with witmm km la 4alla. TM lw aw. mivimnm ADVEBTISEMKNT. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks-Sparkling Eyes . Most Women Can Have Says Tf. , Edwards, a - Well-Known Ohio Physician. . . ' Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 year treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these year he gave to his patients a pre scription made of a few well-known vegetable Ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Ed wards' Olive Tablets. You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying oft the waste and poisonous matter In one'a system. - ' . If you haye a pale face,- sallow look, dull jfeyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no good feeling, all ont of sorts, inac tive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards'! Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets r the successful substitute for calomel now and then just to' keep them at, 15c and 30c, - - Anoilwr Voloa for (.rani. Omaha, May t.To tha fiditor of Tha Hps! I liava been vary mm h In tfrr.i.d In artii'laa appearing In tha iinwapaiitta raonily about thai areat tnto.muii and aoldiar. Jenrl iiant An article appearinjr In Tha Ilea on Kunday, April 30, wrlttan by tlml ever-loyal Grand Army patriot. Captain C, K, Adams, roin.a the neat-eat doing jimilre to this trreat American cltmen of anything I have read yet. I would like lo My that If any otia knowa anything at alt about ths town of Galena, III., In tha civil war limes, they would readily aaa how and why aui'li slnnderoua atorieg would ba clri-ulsled ahout this (ill trn who mnda auch a glorious record In tha preaervatlon of the United fctatea. The most oulaiandlng fact eon carnltig thee report about Oeneral (lrnt being a drunkard, a pauper and a dUerace u that tha report la absolutely false. Another outHtandlng fart Is that any on who kpows anything at all about Galena and vicinity, more es pecially during civil wartimaa. knows that this was a very prosparoua and extensively workd Irad-mlning dis trict: Im wa tha terminus of ths llltnol Central railroad at that time, and the lead miners as' a majority were men who worked on the rail road grading, and when the road was finished this far a grant many ot these men got work In the lead mines. If you know the kind of men who used to work on the railroad grade with tha pick and shovel you would readily know something of the cliiss thiit it was neceaaary to deal with In those days. There was not a spot in the north whero "copperheads" were, bo nu merous or so vindictive, and, as they were so radically opposed to any and all such men aa General U. 8. Grant, one can readily see where and why such nefarious reports originated. It la true thut Grant worked for his father iand hla brother, Orvllle Grant, in what was called a leathor store: not a tannery, as was stated In another sheet print ed in Omaha.' It Is also seemingly true that General Grant did not have that adaptability to business matters that would tend to make him a busi ness man, generally speaking, hla special born adaptability not having been discovered at that time, but "which was so grandly and gloriously developed soon after, and a great man with ability to fill the highest office in the land, and that with credit to himself and this great United States, and tio man ever re ceived such great honors abroad as did General Grant on his trip around the world. I was born in the city, or town, of Galena. My father, a business man there at' the time, afterward was elected county sheriff and held the office throughout the civil war time. My father was also, a part of this time, United States revenue collector, and most of this time was a deputy United States marshal, being the of- Is good and I neither drink nor uri nate to excess." REPLY. . It is probable that you are not a true diabetic. If you put yourself In Al condition and live right you may never have sugar in your urine again. ADVERTISEMENT. FOR BURNING ECZEMA Apply Zemo, the Antiseptic Liquid Easy to Use From any druggist for !5c, or $1.00 for large size, get a bottle of Zemo. . When applied as directed it effectively removes Eczema, quickly stops itching, and heals skin troubles, also Sores, Burns, Wounds and Chaf ing. . It penetrates, cleanse 1 .and soothes. Zemo is a clean, depend able and inexpensive antiseptic liquid. Try It, as we believe nothing you have ever used Is as effective and satisfying. - v; lASrv- If tOStOD I land bun When ouhave trouDie 'Y)uneedReanol the itching i?n& rod heal the emplmlts cooling touch will save you hours of torture. ) The ointment that should be in every home. At Ail aruggisis RES OL , Soothinq And HeaJiru When in Omaha Stop at HotelRome r y'anowtttedaod'V f tlrsdsTStamanlgtitbf taftaahlnarrastandabright tomorrow is, tha work of Ml tablets. Natnra'a Ramsdy keepa 1 I body functions ragolar, improvaa I I apEttita, wliavati coogtlpntioo. I I ' iaTTn ,7fffif Arovw I Trl Kt Jumoiis-I lo) Uttto Ms j J Law Onthlxd tha rago- I aasi4r J V1 mm lacradieaU, I IffSai hn candy I iff iL 1 eeatad. For hll arMlnrwi I trm and adult. S Sbennaa McCaaotU Urag Htvtm flctr who look lo of tha moat Prominent MtorntM of Ualena lo itie i mitral prison at Port Uatny.ua for saditioua utteraiuaa, and Ihaaa at. torn.ya ware of tha mmi kind and ware leaders of the ropperhaad'' element who iUrt4 and 1 ircuUt.d llie.e falae rHns about this great man, grid that wera later on taken up by hla enamiea and the nmi Of the l olled rit.tta In the south. ly father and mother re not only wall aequaintad with ttenvral and Mrs. Grant, but wera liuiiiiat frlnda as nalslibora and t-ltu.n. of lha town of tial.na. I waa In tha Grant homa only four V'rs asu, and hava photo esrda of tha place and Interior ar.nts. auch as Ilia ali raaaa In which many rellia ara kept, tha property being now government own.d. 1 Tha dining room labia and chair. and Iho rug on tha floor of tha din ing room, ara still there Juat aa th.y war whan General Grant and wife lived In ths house, and also many relics, soma of which were presented to him on hla trip around tha world. GF.ORCiK II. HAWKINS. 2120 Ames Avenue. CENTER SHOTS. Tha Leviathan by anv other name will coat aa much. Boston. Tran script. Feminine roniplexlona often r semble small boy. that don't wash. Chicago News. A friend In need la all right, but tha girls prefer a friend In an auto- mobile. Syracuse Herald. The world Isn't growing better: It Just seems that way oerau.e the girls nave taken off their galoshea Hart ford Times. CUNARB ANCHOR ANCHOR-DONALDSON N V ! fia'. 4 aamk.'Npt.a MMHrt AMA .. Mat l 4M Jua IT AqlllAM! ,llarllJiiHll Jail t tttM.fc.Mi AMIS ...M a .um ilf It N T fl . rkkMi Huf I 4SOM4 .'Mar II JNl1 Jul. IS kixokit Marll4Ut I S. l tlMlaa, W V i 1 .ilk, iQummImiI A i..rMl. I IKMIMt st.t IS 1 . MlfHIl ih.I . M., II JumII Julr S ItlOMt al,,4aa S J nir kiWHM B..i. A... I hi S Y la Llilon4.ii in tI.Mv. mil MM tl JomII Julr tl I IMHllt ,.J.H lllrl, t 1 .tuun ..jumii Juir it An.a N y. I Vita, iaibtaliar, k..i. ?. PuMav.m aa4 Trim. IT t LIS Jmu la Mo.ia la La4aa4arry, Llt'rel Ul AMVHIt MIIJ. a kH I Ho.lnn I l)uMR.tll .nil tl.fot. atMikii iri.i,. Mri LAI ll.M I !. July I CANADIAN SERVICE via rifiuriu kl f.rr Reuia llaall.al Itt til. .saw tTIN , Mo II .lutJullt r.l lM 'Matil ijiwll IHMMItt 1 JuimM (tuliM All! I. Mi .... Aua. U kH. It . Alo t.ll. at lln.ul.. Ii.i.nil Memraal i Uv.rpaal AI.RIkM ... Jum III Julr IS Af. IS II HMIir.M.1 ,,Juntl JulrtS Mel. t Al M1MIA Julr a Au. It iwpl. IS A i. rail al Alaa.ow, ilonlr.al la Flrnmuik. Ch.rkaurf nt Lankan AMAI4 . .Junair Jul. tl Aua. t AMONIA .......Jul I Aug. Iki, t lul 14 a..! atai ' Hotel Castle OMAHA 0 Make This Test It is only fair to yourself and your car that when you spend good money to purchase an automobile that you put into it only the very best of oils. Prove to your own satisfaction that Nicholas Oils (Keynoil and Locomo tive) are the oils you should use. Send unnamed samples of Nicholas Oils and other oils to a chemist for , testing. 1 Then make your choice from his - report. Nicholas Oil Corporation ' "Business Is Good, Thank You" - at tbc Vvmo K off a Return Ticliot to Yollo rctoao OflOEaC ; HERE'S where you cash in big on your vacation investment ' Your ticket to Yellowstone National Park and return takes in the principal scenic high spots - and outdoor playgrounds of the Rocky Mountain . region without additional cost if you travel via Weit Yellowstone. ---'v . - , Yoo climb and ' descend the Rockies and view those lofty land-marks of the aborigines, the Three Tetons. You see the marvels of Yellowstone in pleasing sequence, visit Salt Lake City with its interesting Mormon features and bathe in the buoyant waters of Great Salt Lake. You may stop at Glenwood Springs, Colorado Springs and Denver. For $10.50 additional you can make side trip from Denver to Rocky Mountain National (Bates) Park. A vacation of variety) , V Fares Greatly Redueed Tax War Tha trip eaeca aatfy llttte 1 1 way 6-C Wflte L.t os tell you how reasonably yon can make m tha trip, and i.nd yon our beautiful booklsta, --" iTT. "Yellowstone National Park,""Rocky Mount. OOOKMU ain National Park" '"Colorado'a Mounuin Pl.TTOunds," "Utah Idaho Outinga." Vtt inform tiea 11k Union Diet, Ceaaalidited Ticket OSca, 1416 Do4( St, Pbon. Deuflu 1M4 A. K. Curt, City Pin. Atrat, U. P. Byittaa, - 1410 ioas w vmaif arsons lioufiai 4e0 .,