4 the 'bel: Omaha. Tuesday, june e. 1922. The Omaha Bee UORMNG-EVEXDiG-SUKDAY. 1HS Sfl fUiMSHlNQ COM PANT uarJ S. MCWCR. 6 MMfN MCMStR OF THE ASSOCIATID KUI TM f Hi4 Fnsa. vsto Tw to II Mtv. M as t'.mu aeutiat w I. m noimm at til mn rll MM 111 ftla IS IBIS MM, 4 ! srl Hlll lull. all nU f rSfaatlSSMSe at f tlJ ' TW Htm Baa H MM A4M SwsSB f OlM lifca, im Mniy mikmim rttritii twuit. tt4 TM 1MB . MMvltltw m MJII1 tMOJlt m UMIf WM1II.III1. Tea ast elreelatUs) ef Tea OBaha Bn for May, ltM Daily Average 72.038 Sunday Average . . .78.642 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY B. BREWER. Garel Mwtiw ' eiMKA 1. ROOD, CmuUtMN. Hui Saiara te ens' suWiria1 bfr m Ikli M y ef Jtl, ISM. SI W. H. QUIVEY. NaUry r.Ml BEE TtlXrtlONU Prhste Breach Eschaage. Atk (or h rtarUBsnt er Pcrsos Waat4. ret Night Calle Afttr 1 r. M.i Editorial DMriaBi. ATlSBtle Ittl Of lt. ATUatls 1000 orrircs Mate Offlt I7th as ramam Co. BIaffi11 Bcatt St, Sosth Side I. 24ta St - Haw Yerk tit nttk Ave. wesalaitoe Wll a t Chicago llto Sugar Bids. ran, rmsee i aae a v. nonara Three Important Decisions. The upreme court of the United States has jutt handed down three very important de ci.ions. One of these has to do with the re- onsil)ilitirs ol tabor unions for damages result ing from strikes; the other two deal with ques tions of interstate rights in Avater 6f streams available for irrigation purposes. In the first instance, that of the Coronado coal mines of Arkansas against the United Mine Workers of America, the supreme court extends the principle first laid down in the Danbury hat ters case. In that it was the secondary boycott; in the present it is a direct suit for damages against the union. The court holds that labor unions can be held liable for property and other damages caused by acts of members, during strikes. This is a sound conclusion, and should have the effect, of doing away with a great deal of the disorder that has come to be an accompani ment of the modern strike." Chief Justice Taft, who delivered the opinion, '"discussed at length the question of the suability of the national and international unions if the unions were responsible for'whaf was done, point ing out that in common law unincorporated" or ganizations could be sued as individuals, but from necessity of existing conditions it was utterly impossible of doing justice otherwise than by holding labor unions suable." . In one of the irrigation suits the state oi Wyoming 'was forbidden to interfere with the use by the state of Colorado of certain waters from the Laramie river.' Justice Vandeventer holds that the doctrine of appropriation applies In both States. In another, and similar suit, the- ' Colorado' authorities are enjoined from interfer ence with a project that diverts water from the ' South Platte and uses it in Nebraska. These ' suits, are of importance because of further settling .. . ... . j. . , . tne law' wun regard to tne use oi interstate wa iters, a most important factor in the development pi the semi-arid region, where land is being re- .claimed by private enterprise and where water , rights have come to have considerable value. ; ii Slowly but surely,., the supreme court is arystalfizing the law and making more clear and, 'certain its application. Its. contribution to the ' service of civilization is the more notable be cause of the effect of its decisions, and the im provement that follows in their being adopted, as better rules for the government of a complex society, ' 1 v Lending Their Ears. . Even- Americans without an ear for music are able to recognize the national anthem, al . though it is to be suspected that many are in a position' similar to that of the man who only knew two tunes (one was Yankee Doodle ana the other wasn t). ; Little of such, .unfamiliarity with one of the createst arts will persist with the coming gener ation, it is fair to say. People hear more music, thanks to the phonograph and the radio, than they used, and most of it is very good, too. Oth erwise such a contest as was recently held under the auspices of the teachers' college at Peru .-would be. "impossible. v This was a music memory test in which an orchestra played a number of classical selections to an" audience of school children. Beethoven, Brahms, Pvorak,-Gounod, Grieg, Liszt, Meyer beer, Saint-Saens, Schumann, Strauss, Wagner and Tschaikowsky were among the composers who were heard. After each piece the children were allowed a few minutes' to write down the name of the composition and of the composer. TL. - I - 11.".. f ,La n I-' M.IMl.ll 1cA. toward the prize. ; . A surprising familiarity with 'the classics was revealed in this contest which in itself served to further the interest of the boys and girls in music. When good rr.usic has become so much a part of their lives i hut they hum or. whistle it unconsciously then we may be 'Sure thatahe hold of jazs and ragtime Is being displaced. t Interesting Rule in Divorce Law. A ruling by the supreme court! of. Nevada that the state was not an aggrieved party in the Pickford divorce case, and so could not inter vene to ask that the decree be set aside adds a le to divorce law. Perhaps ft would a be more accurate to say an old principle is ap plied to divorce practice. The moral and not the legal aspect of marriage is in question only. A peculiar .sanctity surrounds the institution, to which the church gives not only approval but to a large degree insists upon observing. The state, however, looks upon marriage as a civil contract, enforcible or dissoluble as other contracts . are. Where no public interest is at stake, the state will riot interfere other than td stipulate the man ner under .which a marriage .contract may be. Such a course is in harmony with Our theory - of libety .and the responsibility of individuals, but unfortunate developments have shown that some citizens are disposed to regard with levity the obligations resting on them, and to indulge their liberty by; treating rather lightly the im plications if not the exact terms of marriage con tracts. Examplea recently afforded have not been especially edifying. The state has assumed ' control of public and private morals in other regards to an even greater extent than was songhticf teptnHwHn the P4ckfoRt-cae,-there fore It becomes apparent that a line s being drawn that will fence off divorce proceedings from other acts that arc strictly regarded by the law as subject to regulation. In the end, the Pickford case is a matter be tween the parties, and would never have at tracted eipecial attention, had it not been for the prominence of the principals in the amusement field. If the public could forgive them, and ap parently it has, the courts would serve no good caue by setting the whole scandal going in back motion to the further confusion of an incident that is all but forgotten. Truth About the Tariff. Kven the most circumspect of free trade ad vocates occasionally blunders onto a great fun damental fact in connection with the tariff. Our esteemed democratic contemporary frankly ad mits that .' . . '. . People have, been coming to Wash inaton, Hrttlah steel manufacturers, German manufacturers, Italian manufacturers, sna they have com plain ad that if ths tiraaent tariff bill goes through they will not be ab ' to sell their products hers. If the English and the Germans make our steel products for us, our own mills will have to close. Nobody disputes that. But the World Herald goes on further: ' Mr. McOumber and Mr. Smoot and the , ' rest of them know that things are different 4 now. that Europe owes us many billions of monty. that Europe hss come to be our chlaf customer, the chief factor in keeping our own prlres up and our own wheels of trade humming, snd they know that unless Europe sells to us she cannot buy from us. The argument in this is that we will sell our wares in Europe while Europe sells its output over here. A more transparent proposition never stood on a flimsier base. Of course we expect Europe to pay its debts, but not at the expense of American industry. If the plan outlined by the democrats is followed, Americans will even tually pay the whole cost of the war, not alone the loans we; made to Europe, but Germany's bill for indemnity and reparations to boot. The prospect is pleasing only to a democratic editor. A Word for America. ' 'The United States is far behind other nations in physical training," runs a newspaper state ment. This is not true. In fact, it would be hard to say in what desirable direction America is outstripped by any other country. The proof of our physical deficiency is not to be found in the Olympic games where our athletes meet the best that Europe can provide. It is not to be found in the record of our troops abroad. It is not to be found in the amateur base ball games, the innumerable track meets, the ten nis and basket ball courts, the gridiron,' the swim ming pools or the gymnasiums. Not even the unfavorable showing in the physical tests of drafted men proves a lower standard. In many foreign lands compulsory military service has hindered the growth of athletic sports. The ideal of strength plus skill nowhere is as prevalent as among our own people. From the calisthenics classes of the schoolrooms to the golf courses we are striving to develop the body in proportion to the mind. h, ' . . . What the journalistic indictment was intended to convey, no doubt, was not a sense of our national inferiority, but that more might be done along the line of physical culture.: That much is true. Americans have not reached, perfection, Physically, mentally or spiritually.-; However,, this gives no warrant for denying our very real achievements. ' . ' ' . - , From State and Nation ( ; i All Ready for Canning. . ; A bumper crop of fruit is in prospect for Ne braska, to judge from the laden boughs of the fruit trees in Omaha back yards. On?,.looks at the green apples and the cherries' , turning red and infers that the orchards stretching- north and south, along the Missouri river are doing equally well, or perhaps better on account of the care, taken in their cultivation. - .1 . Grain and live stock form the principal part of Nebraska's harvest, although the fruit grow ers play a larger part than .is generally known. The king of fruit, as the apple is sometimes called, brings a good income to many farmers in ; the. region of Auburn, and" heavy shipments " are made in the east, while from the fruit lands of the Pacific coast come substitutes. Taken the nation over, the .fruit crop is kewise a larger item than might be thought. The value of fruit and fruit products on farms in the United States last year was $525,000,000. The' apple output alone amounted to $163,000,- 000. and grapes $68,500,000. Oranges were sold for $64,000,000 and strawberries brought $41,- 000,000. . That was in a year of killing frosts, which fortunately has been spared this thnei Truly! the canning season that is now in its beginning should be a full one. - 5 , Give a Look at Mars. fna Ike BaaMl THaamM. The planet Mars occupies the renter, of the stage this month, being nearer the earth and therefore brighter than ll has been at any time since l0T. No other planet vsries as much in brightness as viewed from the earth. This is due. of course, t Its varying dlatsnee from us. Mars describes sn slliptlesl orbit about the sun, lis average distance from that body being Hl,5u0,0o0 miles. Around this path ths planet travels In (IT days. The earth also describes an elliptical orbit about the sun, at an average dlatsncs of fl. 190,000 miles In a period of 305 1-4 days. Mars is thus what Is known as a superior planet, that Is. one whose orbit is outalds of the earth's orbu. Huperlor plsnets are uauslly nesrsat the earth at opposition, thut is when opposite the sun as sssn from the earth, and they ars farthest away at conjunction, that la. when in the same direction as the sun. Thfs would always be the case for circular orbits In the same plsne, and mod of the planetary orbits are nearly cireular and in approximately the same plane. Mars, however, has a rather eccentrlu orbit, that Is, one that deviates considerably from 4 circle, while that of the earth Is more nearly circular, so that the two curves srs not everywhere equl'dtstsnt. - Consequently some oppositions are mors favorable than others, the closest approach poasible at opposition be ing 35.050.000 miles, while st sn unfavorable opposition this distance may be Increased to SI. 000, 080 miles. Moreover, the closest ap proach may not occur on the exact dsts of opposition. - The Interval between successive oppositions Is 7S0 days, the time required for the earth to gain one lap on Mars as they travel around tne sun. This year opposition will occur on June 10 at 10 a. m., the closest approach on th eighteenth at 7 p. m., at which time Mars will be only 42,300,000 miles away, nearer than it lias been at any time since 1907. Unfortunate ly for northern observers, however, Mars is now In the constellation Sagittarius, over 25 degrees south of the equator, too far south for convenient observstion in northern latitudes. It wtll be visible practically all night, rising at 9:0 p. m. on the drat, and about sunset on the 10th, after which It will be well up in the southeast at sunset, rising earlier snd earlier night after night. It will be the bright est object in that part of the sky, and easily identified on account of Its fiery red color. How to Keep Well r OR, W. A, CVAM QueMieet (eataraiag brsleae, taaiuiU aad Bfevoatiae el diMaaa, subedited Dr. tvaa ky reesars al Tbe aW. iU ke eaavated aeteeaellr. suslett le sreaer HaMUIMa. ears S alaiaaM aadraaaad aavoUae la itot4. Dr. cveae m sat suae e susaMie Mf aetsHiiae far fcteivMuel Asdm letlMs SB tars el Ike Bea. Cesrrlikti Ittl. "Treason" and Reason. from th Xnr York Enalni Pott. '-. The common sense of twelve West Virginia jurymen, acquitting William Blizzard of treason to the state, confirms the common sense view that the American public: has taken during the Ave weeks of trial. It waa natural for the pros ecution to bring forward one of their strong st cases first. Blizzard was regarded as the leader of the miners who marched Into Logan county.- If anyone could be convicted of treason able conspiracy, the state's attorneys thought he could. Some of the 120 trials still pending are on a different footing several men are charged with murder; but the Blizzard verdict demolishes most of the cases. - Simply because in Anglo-Saxon countries the government is so firmly established, Anglo-Suxon peoples resent and-ridicule any effort to erect a bogey of "treason" out of scarecrow mater ials. The evidence in the trial just concluded placed it on an opera bouffe footing. . A few hundred union miners hear that men. women. and children are being maltreated by non-union operatora in a neighboring county: they see men emerge injured and bleeding; they remember that for years union workers there have been abused under a county government virtually con- auotea Dy tne operators and their gunmen. They begin a demonstrative march, and readily sur render when the federal government interferes. .! course tne march was deplorable. But most Americans are a good deal less disturbed bv such a demonstration than' by the fact that local government should have failed In its dutv The lesson for West Virginia is that indictments for treason against masses of men are an in dictment of government. Tbe Year's Peak. gitus the UlaBMcelli Journal. -'What is so rare as tC day in June?" asks Lowell. The month of June has more nanny associations or memories for most of us than any month in the year. feature has made June one of the chosen months. It is the month of thansition from spring to summer, when all' outdoors Is at its best. The heat of July, the aridity of Aueust have not yet paled with age the soft greens nor shriveled the flowers. And June is the month in which the whole world "eraduates." The commenc.en.enta have 'their counterpart in field and wood. what a season of happiness June brines! No wonder it is the bridal month. Its days are in deed rare. Its tempting-sunshine writes happi ness over everything and even though humdrum duties detain us from its enjoyment, at least it invokes happy memories of other June days. ino ne-man can iook June in the race with out thinking of fishing. From early youth June has been the month when school's out and we could go swimmin' and flshln'. And even though one has moved away from that notion, along me s , nignway; me memories or those other Junes endure. June Is the peak of the vear. It holds the longest day. It combines the beauty of the heights with the restful pause associated with the summit. ' It is a season of optimism. Once we have passed over its peak the year is half done. What we do with June's rare davs mav aetermine our reeling toward the last six months. it is so even In life. It is youth that determines the man. And June is a youthful month, with happiness as its keynote. Verdun and Valor. ; ' For the first time ' in history, the United States of America has presented a medal of honor to a community. Verdun, France, has been so signally honored, because Verdun stands forever a symbol of the highest quality of human, courage and determination. For' more than five months a battle on stupendous scale raged around Verdun. It was commenced in February, with the' preparatory bombardment from the greatest equipment oi. artillery ever centered on a single objective. , The plans of the "crown prince of Prussia for blasting a way through the French lines were well laid. His only miscalculation was failure to take into account the full capacity of the French for resistance. "They shall not pass!" That is Verdun's crown of glory. It was "not uttered in desperation, but in sincerity. The United States of America bows to such Valor. Four new joint stock land banks are soon to be opened in Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, Port land and San Francisco, which may be taken as proof that lending money to farmers is pretty good business after all. f . At least M. Bakhmeteff can ' not complain that the United States has been precipitate in its dealings with him. He has lasted five years longer than his government. - : . Formation of a state-wide branch of the Parent-Teachers association indicates the rise of intelligent interest in education by patrons of the schools. - '. : ' " " ' Nebraska editors differ on many things one Lin a norma mental condition. with another, but they alt agree that freight rates are yet , too high. Iowa voters will dispose of some political as pirations today. s " -The Lions' roars sound encouraging. Catapulting the Seaplane. From th Wubinftcn Pott. . A. few days ago in a workmanlike wav and without any fanfare or flourish of trumpets there was successfully performed at Yorktown, Va., an experiment which will be of first-class importance in naval warfare and which, for the present at, least, places the United States navy in a unique position. This was nothing less than the launching of a service type sea plane, carrying a pilot and a passenger, from an airplane catapult on the deck of the battle ship Maryland. As no other navy in the world is known to possess such an apparatus, the United States' has clearly established a point of superiority. The intention is to place a com plete equipment of catapult and planes on every vessel of the battle fleet. The project of catapulting planes from a ship is by no means new. The attempt was first made as far back as 1915 and was re peated in the following year, but the machinery then employed was both extremely cumber some and not powerful enough. The entrance of the United States into the war in 1917 caused a cessation of these experiments, and It was not until this spring that it was possible to restart the work. The present result has given great satisfaction to the naval bureau of aeronautics. -The Navy department is .to be congratulated on thfs further triumph of American ingenuity and Inventiveness and on its evident determination to overcome all ob stacles in bringing the fleet, to a high pitch of perfection. r. New Type of Mania. Ttm nu Knr Tack Globe A man driving an automobile near North Leroy. N. Y., Saturday, indulged in on; of America's favorite pastimes beating a train to a crossing. Unfortunately the train arrived as soon as he did, and the result is that five persons are dead and 35 or 40 badly hurt. According to an engineer, the train was clearly visible from the automobile. ' What happened must have been the result of the driver's own state of mind. Either he was too badly frightened to know what he was doing or he was actually intoxi cated, as many motorists often are, not by al cohol, but by the sense of power and Bpeed which an automobile gives. This is the subject in which students of psychology of behavior might do well to look. Men were designed by nature to walk or run, but not to drive automobiles. The excessive speed of which these machines are capable, therefore, produces conditions with which we are (.not instinctively and without long training fitted to deal. A consiaeraoie number of accidents, both to automobllists themselves and to pedestrians, can be accounted for only on the ground that the responsible person was not at the moment Now Give Vs .Jn Anti-Worry Drug, rma the FkntSdrMe laaalitr. Biologist who has just returned from a trip to the A mason basin says he has brought back with him a sample of a drug which absolutely dispels fear. Its development ought to prove of great commercial profit- Husbands may be aspects to-buy R in unlimited quantities. - ECCENTRICITY'S START. It Is frequently poaaible to uredlc what the personality and behavior or ttia an u it win be from the con duct or the infant. The pesviah Infant, the nervous, excitable baby, the young one slve to snacks of Infantile anger all of these types of bablna are ths early stagsa of emotionally ill-balanced childhood and adulthood. The poor airepers ana tne nnirxy eaters ars headed for trouble it left Just to grow. The. norms! baby Is naturally contented glutton. His natursl habit Is to wake up, fill his stomach, and go back to sleep. Like a snake, he is hsppieat when he Is full and dla. tended. His business is to gsln weight at the rate of 100 per cant a year, to acrumulste a few habits, snd to develop a few emotions and a little brains. Just as his weight and ststure never afterward Increase at sn rapid a rate, the baby learns at a high rate of speed In ths first year nf life thsn In any subsequent year Incom psrably so. But then, he has so much In learn. But If he depsrts from this pro grsm develops sleeplessness, on eilge-npss. Irritability, nervnusneas, violent emotional outbresks, holding the breath, black In the face, finicky appetite look out. mother! There are breakers shead. Pr. Barr snys that these nervous buhies develop into three types in childhood. . There sre some who nave the for tune to be born to wise parents. They are trained into normal chil dren, without being overtrained. In some the training is begun late snd never accomplishes its objective, The children of this group are ob servant and Intelligent; but. be cause they are reticent, sensitive and shy. they may seem dull, sullen and obstinate. The children of this group are prone to be solitary and introspec tlve and given to queer religious no tions, such as overconsclentiousness. Out of this group a good deal or the dementia precox eventually comes. However, though there are many peculiar children, children who do not fit in, there are rew wno are definitely insane. Insanity Is not liable to develop until the strain and stress of life begins to bear on those of ooor mental constitution. The third group are the unre strained emotlonnls. They have tantrums, and they Indulge Just as freely as they did In bahyhooa. The children of this group, as a rule, have intellectual power above the average. They are imaginative, superstitious, high-spirited, timid, Thev are worried by trifles, vain, crave sympathy, are not amenable to discipline. Thev are thirt. slim, given to night terrors and sleepwalking. Many of them have headaches or other forms of migraines. She Should Get Well. Mrs. H. M. M. writes: "Has a little girl. 10 years old, with heredi tary syphilis, a chance to got well and pass puberty without trouble? "The last blood test, about two months ago, was negative, and now some red spots, with some itching, have appeared in her arms. "Can this be produced by acidity In the blood besides impure blood? "Please give' some symptoms of acidity and advise how to cor rect it' REPLY. Yes. There is no reason for thinking the eruption is due to syphilis. Inherited syphilis gets well if it gets anywhere near reason able treatment. Raw Egg Unnecessary. Mrs. Mcl. writes: "I have a boy who was 11 months old May 1. For the last two or three days I noticed that his urine smells like ammonia. I have been feeding him the last few days on one raw egg, well beaten. and a baked potato with butter. Could this cause that strong odor?" REPLY Foods too rich. Leave off the j egg. Feed more cereal, Dread, vege tables and fruit. A Fruit and Dates Dinner. T. V. writes: "I would like to have your opinion on one meal a day, consisting of fruit and some times dates or figs. I eat a fair sized breakfast and about three or four apples, two oranges, and some times half a pound of dates with the apples for dinner. Then I eat a good-sized supper. Do you think It proper to eat fruit and dates alone for dinner?".. REPLY. . It Is. assuming that you get all the food elements in your three meals. Look What the A. E. F. DIdt Old Reader writes: "I have had an itch on my body for the last Jx months, and after my baby got it and we all got it from one another, my children, father and mother. The children scratch themselves so much that sores form on their bodies. "I have been to several doctors, and all they give me is salve, but that does no sood, and all I do very night is to give them hatha The doctors tell me the soldiers from France brought this Itch here and we have rausht It." itei'LY. This can be cured by sulphur ointment, aiicn as jou gat in ths drug stores, provided you use It properly. . Upend hnlf an hour scrubbing the affected akin with hot water and soap. Use a scrubbing brush. 3. Spend half an hour rubbing the ointment into an the cracks and scratches on the affiH-ted areas. t. I'ut on clean, freahly sterilised night clothes. 4. Kepest each night for three nights, and at the end of the week If nvceaaary. s. Sterilize all underwear with heat. 5. Cure up every Infected member of the family. p,ULBRANSEN PLAYER PIANO Nationally VricecL branded in tne bock. n 600 $495 WMNoe gasped. The Art and Music Store 1513-15 Douglaa Street BABY CHICKS 178,000 SOLD UP TO DATE Big, etroaf, healthy pura-bred chkka. Cat a law mere te fill in the early season'e leaa. ' Lata hrallars are al ways ia good demand. 100 live Sa livary guaranteed. Odda and enda only 12c each. Other braada from 13c te 18c each. Pay ua a villi. Write or phone your wanta immediately. Orders booltad in rotation. BERRY'S POULTRY FARM Clarinda, Iowa For skin blemishes "RESItlOL Soothinq and Healinq It reduces irritation and usually restores the skin to its normal healthycondition Trial free DePU2T Resinol dslliwoidli. In Confidence If doubtful aa to 'outcome of your plana or the future welfare of wife and children You Need Me My financial plan cannot fall. Addrcu Box Y 1913, Omaha Bee. ADVERTISEMENT. FOR SKIN TORTURES Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Just What You Need Don't worry about Ecsema or other skin troubles. You can have a clear neaitny sKin by using Zemo obtained at any drug store for 35c, or extra large nottie at $1.00. Zemo generally removes Pimples. Blackheads. Blotches. Eczema and Ringworm and makes the skin clear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, pene trating. antiseptic liquid. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each application. It is alwaya de- penaaDie. Cuticura Talcum is Fragrant and Very Healthful Sample free of Caticara Uborataaiaa, Dope. X. Mldi, Mm. 25c. everywhere. BiaS BBBBk 1MM Tomorrow Alright nA vac (table aperient, adda tone and vigor to . the dicestJve and elimlaattve erstem. Improve the appe tite, relieve ck Headache and Bil tonaneea, c o r r e c t s CeaaUpaUaa. k y over j M JUmoRS-Uttte Ms ie-thlrd the regular doe. StadS tl earns iagradt enta, than candy Coated. Per children and adult. Sherman & McConnell ADVERTISEMENT. Kidney and Bladder Troubles Conquered or Honey Back For 40 years, aaid Dr. Carey, I have been prescribing- my Prescription No. 777 for kidney and bladder sickness and now that I have retired from active practie I have mad arrangements with leading drussists to dispense this wonderful pre scription at a moderate price, on th money back if dissatisfied plan. Bewar of kidney disease thousands die of it every vear who ousht to be en joying th blessings of life and health. Waceh th smyptoms. If you have specks floating before the eyes, puffy eyes, clam my feet or moist palms, backache or aide ache, you ought to get bottle of Dr. Carey's Prescription No. 777 right away. It has wonderfully benefited tens of thousands of cases of kidney and bladder troubles and is the medicine you can al ways depend upon. Result ar guaranteed. ' NOTE Dr. Daniel G. Carey was a prac ticing physician for many years and his great Prescription No. 777 aided thou sands of sufferers from kidney and blad der troubles. Hereafter you can always get this effective Prescription at th S Sherman 4k McConnell Drug Stores, and all reliable pharmacists the country over. Keep in mind the name. Dr. Carey'a Pre scription No. 777 (Liquid or Tablets). No other medicine can take its place. Fistula-Pay When Cured A mild speteni of treatment that cure Pile. Fistula and other Beetal Diseairs la short time, without a severe surgical ex cretion. Ke Chloroform, Ether or other general anesthetic aaed. A cur guarante tm every cue accepted for treatment, and no asoney is to be paid ant)) m4 Writ for book ea Rectal Disease, with Bam a and teUmoaiala at more thaa l.see prominent pol wa have bcea permanently cured. Pal 1. K TAKItY 8iarhiBB, roars Treat Bldg. (Baa Bids ) Omaha. Na Now's Your Opportunity To Sacura High Grade Guaranteed WATCHES AT 25 to 50 Discount From logvlar Ratal Pricai All standard makes. Some liuei complete, others only . a few models but all absolutely new and guaranteed bj both the makers and ourselves. Every watch marked with t special tsf showing original and sals prioe. Values hitherto imheard of for high-rrads watches. Make your selections soon while assortments are vir tually complete. Offerings include Men's Pocket or Strap Watches and Ladies' Wrist Watches. There's a Good Reason Recognising the fact that we cannot do justice te all good makes of watch and desiring always te give eur patrens the vary beat la quality and service, we nave decided te greatly Increase eur stock of GRUEN tVSI WATCHES la order te make room foe this big new stock, we are mak ing these rsmsrkable offerings to effect a quick and big re duction on other lines. C. B. BROWN CO. Dianas! Merchants ltti aal Faraaai The Store That Sells Grace wfe.ha When You Drive This Evening See to it that you use BLITZEN or VULCAN gasolene. They have eren and complete explosion. They give full power and a longer life to your car. Gasolines which explode un ' evenly make , riding uncomfort able and are expensive because ; , much of the gasolene goes out the exhaust pipe in the form of unexploded vapor. Use Our Straight Run Gasolenes It Pays Nicholas Oil Corporation "Buainets h Good, Thank Ydif What Counts at AO It's not jvhat you know, nor what you oara, nor what you epoad that makes you prosperous at 40. It's what you keep and put to work for you that will establish you be fore you are middle-aged. Are you depositing money here regularly? Is your money earning interest for you? The Omaha National Bank Farnam at 17th Street Capital and Surplus $2fi00fi00 rx USE BEE WANT ADS-THEY BRING PROFITS r