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e e THE OMAHA DAILY BEE | FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. o ——— e The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor. | BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEE Entered at Omaha postoffice as second-class TER OF SUBSCRIPTION. MS OF By care and Sunday. Bty witnout Sunday and 8 e Bee, Circul RHMT"AN(;EH der. Only two- by draft, express or postal or , two- T pe recaived in 'payment of amall ' se- reonal checks, except on Omaha and eastern ted. OFFICES. ha—The Bes Bullding R th Omaha—2i8 N street. ficfl Bluffi orth Main street. 4 Lincoln—26 Litthe mlldln:. 0801 Hearst Bufidin Fow Fork—Hoom Tien, 55 :‘((m avenua Louts--58 New Bank of Com! 3 shington—72% Fourteenth Bt., N. W. CORRESPONDENCH, ) communications relating to new: MARCH CIRCULATION, 52,092 ot 3 raiiy Sz Sl LR ne e n u-m.n irculation ‘for the month Of h, 1915, 0 o IGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager, bed i Presence and sworn Subacrived in to before me. this Yol Publie. co IWrER, Notary Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. i — Thought for the Day Selected by Mary H. Cleary Let me both diligently work And duly pray; Let me be kind in deed and werd Just for today. — Canon Wilburforce. It is possible to shoot off a lot of political fireworks in ten day To the Nebraska editors: The way to show your appreciation is to come again. eEmye——— Delayed tree planting is almost as good, just #o0 the planting is not too long delayed. ——— . The balance of power in the Real Estate ex- change seems to have a pendulum-like motion. ~ Dollar gas will be inaugurated at Lincola ‘May 1. Some day the Omaha Gas company will come out of its trancs The coming of a flock of American Eagles to the Omaha roost sounds a timely and appro- priate note for the patriotic pull of the Liberty Bell. Y Senator Hitchcock says Secretary Bryan urged Mayor Dahlman for a federal appolnt- ‘ment. Wonder what Secretary Bryan has to say to this. Smm—————— It is announced that a saving of $500 per month is to be effected by a newly discovered and cheaper way of clarifying our city water, Good! Now for another rate reduction. Stpe———— The constitution of Nebraska calls for pub- lication of the sesslon laws within sixty days after legislative adjournment. It can be done, although it never has been done. SEm—— Optimistic government officlals say that the outlook for the cattle market Is very encouraj- ing. It ¢ {he producer and the packer. For the a' consumer the order is, “Hands upt™ 2 Delinquent defeated candidates plead ignor- ance of the law for their failure to tile campaign expense statements within the required time, The plea must be sustained, as none of them is more than the legal e ——— water are in an awkward plight when attack a minimum charge for electric light asd power. : —_— Bhowering honors on the citizens of Vera Cruge, who fought in “‘defense” of the city during the recent American invasion, is interesting s & diversion from native troubles. It lends em- phasis to the policies of plcayune dictators who resent outside interference in their butchering The county commissioners at last decided to build | the. retaining wall around the new court house of Berea sandstone. The plans call for twenty-five stons steps leading up from Farnam street. Policeman Brady is rejoicing over the advent of @ strange young woman into his household Marshal Cummings has issued a general order that the owWners of all teams left standing unhitched on the thoroughfare shall be arrested. Too many run- aways is the explanation The closing party of Prof. Almon's dancing class came off at Falconer's hall with about 30 persons in attendance Willlam Felming and wife left for New York, whence they sall for Europe to be gone until De. cember. Messrs. Geib and Maas, two enterprising young men from Freeport, Iil.. have opened an agency here for the German-American Insurance company of that | eity. An order is out, effective May 1, making G. W, manager, instead of assistant manager of lines. Mre. Thomas Riley, 18 Cass street, cele- their o) wedding with & party of friends, them Mr. and Mrs. John ¥. Coad, Mr. and Riley, Ta D. J. Donohos Dillon, Mr. and Mre. J. P, and family, Messrs. N. B . Fred Dellone, James Mijlet, Riley, Dr. Benn and the Jennie Dellone, McDonald, Furlong and Mrs. | resentative Negley's good intention, Redistricting and Reapportionment OMAHA, April 2.-To the Editor of The Bee: 1| notice that in a recent editorial you deplore the fact that no act was passed by the legisiature to provide for the election of senators and representatives from this county by districts so that the ballot could be shortened to that extent. 1 had this matter under | consideration and found that the comstitution pre- vents an apportionment before the next session, 80 that redistricting at the recent session was out of the question J. 1. NEGLEY The Bee is perfectly willing to concede Rep- lieve, nonetheless, that he and those who agrec with him are mistaken law. The constitution of Nebraska, it s true, provides that the legislature shall apportion the senators and representatives according to number of inhabitants after each census enu- meration, “but at no other time,”” yet there is a distinct and easily discernible difference between reapportionment and redistricting. Redistrict ing as proposed contemplates no change in the | allotment of representation, but only in the method of election. While the re-apportion- ment enacted at the legislative session after the | 1ast census increased the Douglas county rep- resentation to five state senators and twelvo representatives, it is no essential part of this apportionment that all our senators and rep- resentatives be elected on a blanket ballot by voters of the entire county. In a word, provid- ing for election by separate districts within the county would not in the least change the appor- tionment, but, on the contrary, would leave the total strength of the Douglas delegation pre- clsely as it is. No, the excuse for dropping this much needed reform on the plea that it would be unconstitu- tional is not sufficient. That excuse rests either upon & misunderstanding of what is involved or | upon a fictitious pretense. Restating an 0ld Principle. Mr. Brya note to Ambassador Bernstorff, replying to the latter's curt accusation that the United States h been showing Great Britamn consideration not accorded to Germany, again very plainly restates the neutral position of the United States. The tone of the note is not only friendly, but even gracious, in that it overlooks the expressions of the German ambassador that might have been construed as uncalled for. This shows how far the United States is willing to go to preserve cordial relations with all the Eu- ropean nations. The Bryan note closely covers the whole ground on which the case of the United States rests, so far as neutrality is concerned, in the following words: This government holds, as I believe your excel- leney s aware, and as it is constrained to hold in view of the present indisputable doctrines of pted International law, that any change in its own laws of neutrality during the progress of a war which would affect unequally the relations of the United States with the nations at war would be an unjustifiable departure from the principles of strict meutrality by ‘which it has consistently sought to direct its actions, and I respectfully submit that none of the cireum- #tances urged In your excellency's memorandum alters the principle involved. The position taken by the United States is that to place an embargo on arms 1s to change the law of neutrality, and thus to invite attack because of departure from the strict application of the principle. Mr. Bryan also plainly points out that the United States cannot discuss its re- lations with either of the belligerents with a third party. . The note should serve to reassure Germany as to the future action of the United States, be- cause the purpose will be to hold even between the combatants. If we do that, any disadvan- tage one or the other may suffer will not be rightly blamable on our government. S —— Y About the Price of Meat. The' Omaha housekeeper fs 108t in wonder- ‘ment, while the price of meat goes aviating far beyond the cow of the nursery rhyme, which only jumped over the moon. Retall dealers re- port that the prices they are asked to pay the Dpackers have almost doubled in the last week, and consequently the price to the consumer has advanced correspondingly. Reference to the live stock quotations show that at South Omaha the supply of animals has been in excess of that of last year and the prices are lower. On Wednesday, for example, the prices for both cattle and hogs were at a decline of from § o 10 cents a hundredwelght below the preceding day's figures, and a dollar or more below the prices paid for similar grades in 1914. The only price that shows any advance In quotations is that for fancy fed lambs, which has gone above all previous record: Just what is the reason, then, for the ad- vance at retail. The dealers say the packer: have doubled their prices on fresh cut meats, and justity doubling theirs correspondingly. Why this advance in price should be suddenly thrust upon the consumer is beyond understand- Ing. The one thing certain is that the m eaters are being squeesed, and that the situation offers an Inviting field to the authorities for an investigation that investigates. ——— Inquiry Into Employment Agencies. Labor Commissioner Coffey promises an in- quiry into the affairs of the employment agen- cles of the state. This is his answer to a threat- ened attack on the sufficiency of the law passea by the legisiature for the better regulation of these agenci: /The labor commissioner is in receipt of letters making complaints against practices from which laboring men suffer, and it is to determine the cause and apply the rem- edy, It possible, that he will move. The matter is of much local importance, because of the fact that Omaha is one of the great primary markets of the country for unskilled or “casual” labor, These workers are entitled to the fullest protec- tion. They have been made victims in the pas®, and if the new law will save them from the prac- tices that are complained of it will be & boon to & class of citixens who have little other means for preserving their rights. The Interstate Commerce commission has given the Sunset route permission to put inte effect a rate of 40 cents per 100 pounds on as- phaltum, beans, barley and canned goods from the Pacific coast ports to Atlantie ports, The concession is granted on account of water com- petition through the Panama canal. All the a vantage accrues to coast ports. Interior shippers must pay the through rate plus the local rate from point of shipment to destination. The dis- tinetive feature of the canal enterprise as i* shows up Is that it carries the fruit from coast to coast and the husks to the interior cities. but we be- | in their conclusion of | the | THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, APR 1L 23, 1915. A "Billy” Sunday Monday I From a Newspaper Account RE is & graphic pen picture of the way Rev | H Bllly” Sunday lined ‘em out around a pulpit diamond in New York City last Monday as | snapped by the special correspondent of the Globe- Democrat Billy Sunday preached the gospel, “not of hades but of h—e—l—l, plain old hell.” to a wildly en thusiastic bunch of “gospel fans” in old Calvary Bap- st church, West Fifty-seventh street, this morning He tore at the fastenings of high-priced New York pews and upbraided the theory of evolution and all “modern philosophies breathed out by a bunch of He told tha ministers that for preaching such philos phies they are all going to alide into hell together and he gave them a taste of the burning by racing across the platform and ripping out a siszling spit ball that landed squarely in the testh of the ministry. Then | he neatly tucked this thought on the end of his dem onstration . “You're going to hell for it; that's what's going to happen to you. The church is rank with the rottenest i1sms and cisms that ever crawled out of the pit of hell. I'm preaching the truth and 1'm radically ortho. dox. The average preachér prays five minutes a day and preaches a sermon that's a reprint or the latest novel.” And all this Bifly did while the preache rooted “hufrahs, ‘‘amens,” incoherent cheers vl glass windows. Billy tried to stop preaching after he had been at it for nearly for forty-five minutes, and he turned to Dr. Charles A, Faton, asking ‘“how much tg#ie have | #ot™ and got the response from all over \ie house. “Go on, go on.” 8o Billy went on, and when he had preached some more, his collar wilting and his face streaming wtih perspiration, he tried another get- away Gotta quit this preaching,” he said. ““Want to get some lunch, and If T ain’t too tired 1'll go to the ball game—see the Phillles and Giants." “'Go on, g0 on,” was the cry again, and Billy went back at it after exclaiming, with a smile, “Well, 1 guess I'll be too tired.” Billy took the preachers at their word, and, to thelr increasing delight, hit even a hotter pace. He mimicked the way New York churches received a well dressed sinner in fine clothes and a huge roll of bille. He seized one of the red plush pulpit chairs and. conversing affably with it, escort it to the front of the platform by the side of the pulpit and asked his Imaginary rich man to sit down and be comfortable while the preachers roared. “But If a poor Fuy, a weary Wile came along and wanted to sit in o.c of your pews, you'd say this way,” whereupon Billy scized the chalr and rushed it along the side of the aisle to the stde door exit as though he was making tor home from second base on an infield single. panhandler, To start with Billy announced that he was not in town to overcome any prejudices the preachers might have nst him. He said: *'I would not cross the street for a call to New York. That call's in the hands of the Lord, and I have not been trying to get ahead of the Lord for the last Lwenty years.' At the close of his talk Billy and his- wife had luncheon, and after that they decided they werc not too tired to see a ball game. Béfore going to the Polo grounds Sunday motored with Mrs. Sunday and “‘Bishop” Callahan of the Bowery Mission to Mis, Findley J. Shepard's home at Irvindton to meet the woman he said he always thought of as Miss Helen Gould. He was back at the Polo grounds in time to see six Innings of the game, hold a brief fanning party with John.J. MeGraw, heft a bat and look longingly at the dlamond. Then he called it a day and mo- tored back to Paterson to rest. Twice Told Tales Two Expatriates. In exchanging with some friends the ether night experiences regarding the speaking of allen tongues in alien lands, Dr. Willlam K. Henderson of the State university faculty tcld an ineldent that once hap- pened in & restaurant at Liege, Belglum, “I was new to Europe and mew to most of its lan- Kuages. Therefore, whenever I had to go to a restau- rant my soanty command of French and German was always @ source of embarrassment. I never was sure Just what was going to be brought tw me and my ordering was very laborioyps. , One day I recall T was in & restaurant at Liege when the inevitable waiter came up and began to listen for my broken French. After a few words to him I muttered to myself, ‘I wish I could be sure of getting a good square meal once.’ At this the man looked out of the window and with & far-away look in his eyes commented, ‘Gee, but | wish T was back in Denver.! “I mever think of the tragedies of recent months at Liege,” added Dr. Henderson, “that I do not con- nect with them this little memory of the two ex- patriates.”” —~Columbus Dispatch. On Gelng to Coneerts. Joseph Hofmann has a story which illustrates the attitude of many people toward recitals of plano music. An eminent planist was to give a coneert (but Hof- mann does not relate that it was his own) and as the audience was filing In the ticket-taker stopped a man who presented two tickets. “You can't go in," asserted the official. ‘You're mot In fit condition."” “Didn't I pay for my tickets?’ questioned the would-be auditor, “Aren't they In order?’ ““They're perfectly in order,” was the reply, “but the truth is, you're drunk." “Drunk? Drunk?’ mused the other, solemnly, and placing the passports in his pocket. “Or course I am drunk. If I weren't drunk, would I come to a plano recital " —Philadelphia Ledger. People and Events Love laughs at war hatreds as well as at locksmiths Alton, TIl, features the marriage of an Snglishman and & German girl. Officlal statistics show that up te July of last year 700,506 Missourians had ridden the goat and were in #ood standing in the various fraternal orders. The leaders in membership are the Oda Fellows, Modern ‘Woodmen, Masons and Woodmen of the World, A mew government publication dealing with farm wages in New England shows a wage increase of 3 per cent in the last twenty years. The average monthly wage, with board included, is $%.15, while the average for the rest of the country is $2.38. In only eight states is the New England rate exceeded Without board the New England farm wage is 5871 In harvest time the average is % per cent higher The approved plan for sending the patriotic relic | to San Francisco is denounced by the Philadelphia Ledxer as “dishonoring the Liberty Bell.” The Ledger gives three reasons for the grant of removal: “Ome was & milk and water patriotism which insisted that carrying this old relic around the country would en- Ccourage a spirit of national loyalty. The second w & desire on the part of world's fairs and expositions to obtain a popular attraction that would add interest o the show. The third was an unblushing effort to make an official junket at public expense.” Mayor House of Topeka, who won in a field of four in spite of the opposition of the press. the churches and women's clubs, breesily sermonizes on the lessons | of the campaign, “For years,” says the maver, “we have watched the trimming and sidestepping, (ne salve-spreading and the boot-licking of various as- pirants for office with a feeling akin to disgust. We Bave long wondered it It were absolutely necessary for & man to abase himself in order to be elected to office. We have wondered if the flap-doodle, the fol-de-rol, the “bunk™ and piffie which are the dis- tnguishing characteristics of every political cam- a man might be elected to office without smearing himselt with his own slobber and we put the idea to test. Future aspirants for office may take our word | for 1t that it works first-rate.” professors over beer mugs in Leipsic and Heidelberg.” | concerted applause that rattled and banged the colored | Palgn were essential to success. We had an idea that | | Editorial Siftings Washington octopus hunter Post: Sam 18 said to have cleaned Untermyer. up $2,000000 in Bethlehem stock: but it | | that tan't coming back with the golden | fleece, what is? Pittsburgh ‘Dispatch: Each war loan | proposes & freah burden on the shoulders of future gencrations. In addition to kill | Ing an unprecedented number of the men of today. the war is mortgaging the lives of the children and their children | Pittabtirgh Dispateh: The total revenue of the Panama canal up to April 1 was 2,804,900, may operating expenses or $1%.000 short of expenses safely this year. When it interest on its cost Baltimore American been erected on the spot where the Ger- man drive on Paris was checked. event has great historical and sentimenta! | interest, but it is a lttle early in the | day ®to be putting up monuments any where. Even boundaries are uncertain. Louisville Courfer-Journal: It pean monarchs believed the Euro- American are forever telling how easily our coast cities or Denmark by annexing the territory 1¥ing between Canada and Mexico. New York Post: The colonel has had suffer many wanton attacks in his time, but none has been so cruel as the retort' of the women whose “silly and base” views about peace he had sought to correct In his gentle way. They tell him quietly that he is “fifty years behind the times.” This of the great progres- stve! Boston Transcript forward and 1: ‘How do vou do, Theodore' " ~from the World's account of the momentous meeting, but reports the Herald: * ‘How do you do, Mr. Taft? sald Mr. Roosevelt: 'How do you do, IMr. Roosevelt” " was the perfumctory reply. Well, it's at least clear that they didn’t make it “Ted” and “Bill* Springfield Republican: ‘‘A speedy end- Ing of the war by peace which shall explate the wrong done to Belglum, im- pose no humiliating conditions on any na- tion and recognize the right of all na- tionalities, large and small, to indepen- dence and self-government,” is the pro- secret International conference of social- ist women in Berne. Thc construction of Utoplas is a fascinating occupation and not without its suggestive value. e e More than 9,000,000 young trees and 10,000 pounds of seed were planted on the na- tional forests in 1914, Stationary steam, oll and engine plants of the Un!ted States are produc- ing about 20,000,000-horsepower. The government built more than 2,000 miles of trail and 3,000 miles of telephone line on the national forests in 1914, A new Tennessee law makes provision for fire escapes on workshops and fac- tories two stories and more in height. As a result of an automobile show held in Oporto, Portugal, in which several American cars were exhibited, it 1s thought that there will be a great de- mand for American made cars. According to a report of the director of the United States bureau of census, 20,248,326 miles of telephone line were in use In the United States during 1912. This represented an increase of 313.2 per cent during the decade. The estimated num- ber of messages for the year was 13- 785,668,245, The Massachusetts savings bank life in- surance system, now seven years old, has in force 9,038 policies amounting to $3,518,- 182. Four savings banks have opened de- partments, other banks and trust com- panies have become public agencies, and more than 200 manufacturers have estab- lished agencles for thelr employes. Of the many inventions for life saving at sea, that of a New York inventor is among the most interesting ones. It is an odd-shaped sult that is worn by per- sons to enable them to float in the water. A life ring is placed around the neck por- tion to prevent the suit trom capsizing. ‘The head of the wearer is held above water and ls protected by a hood. In response to the advertisement of the United States Navy department for 1,- 500,000 teak decking logs, a Manila lum- ber firm has submitted an offer of 500,000 feet of yacal, a Philippine wood resem- bling teak, which is regarded as the equal of teak for construction purposes. This s the first time that sugh offers of Philippine woods have been made to the navy. A “safety first” book lssued to the ter- minal employes of a rallroad in New York Is printed in four languages. This is due to the fact that dock employes in Jersey City are almost all Poles, in Brooklynm, principally Russian and on Manhattan island Italians, with & mixture of Eng- lish-speaking races. The booklet is ad dressed to “The man who takes a chance,” and who causes most of the injuriem Signs of Progress Women's Activities The New York School of Mothercraft wishes to establish similar achools throughout the country. In regard to this plan, Prof. Zeublin of Chicago sald recently: I believe that we need schools of fathercraft.” He sald that women are not the only obes that need iustruc- tion in parenthood | Mra. Julia Kingman, aged %, of Ever ett, Mass., celebrated her birthday by winning the firet prize at a whist this being the seventh she has won in the last year. During the same perfod she has given Whidden Memorial hospital three quilts of her own manufacture, each of which is composed of 3,73 pleces of silk Arnold Bennett says that the loss of males in the war wiil very greally af- fect the women of the countries that are fighting. The mean value of woman labor will rise, he says, and much com- petition implies the survival of the fit- test. The political programe of women will meet with less opposition after the war, he says, and the effect will be to bring men and women closer together. Serena Helen Blue of Washington, D. | €. has the distinction of owning the | Moreover, it cost only 10 cents triangular bit of land, 19 feet long and thirty-eight feet wide ut ita broadest point, jutting into Turtle lake, Minne sota. The 10 cents commutes her enmtry to cash in land office pariance, and she does not have to live on the land three years, as otherwise required by law. by her pareants It | be calculated that it wili pay | receives about $10.000,000 more it will pay | A monument has | | to marry one of the Johnson family military officers and jingo politiclans who | could be taken an effort might | some time be made to enlarge Montehegro | "“Prof. Taft stepped | posal of a resolution adopted by a recent | | smaligst homestead in the United States | Itisa) Quaint Bits of Life cur husd ng, jsn't Le Yer Following the examples set by her mae!w ternal ancestors, all of whom have heen | .o marricd secretly since her great-great-|je poking me In the eye grandmother, Miss Florence E. Snyder, of New York, was married to Charles A. | Krauss, December 22. The bride revealed | the romance recently and was forgiven | ate you A new town was established in mn\ Charlton valley, northwest of Macon, Mo., | Aimee @lmost in & dJay. The houses were n ready bullt and were hauled overland by & traction engine to the new settlement As fast as the houses reached the settlement they were located on regular squates of ground, placed so as to form Wwide avenues and streets. Fhe families most closely tied by rela tionship in St. Louis are those of the Heuers and the Johnsons Harry Heuer, who is soon to be married to Berths Johnson, will be the fourth Heuer brother In addition, Minnie Heuer, a sister of the | four brothers, is married to John E. John- | 80n, & brother (o the four Johnson girls. | ASS A LAW. Louis Giobe-Democrat neighbors very bad? Pass a law’ they smoke? Do Pass a law! Are thev bothering vou? Don't they do as you would Pass a law! Sir | ment)—He St Are your Do they chew? yer face?" “Auto man. do? Are your wages awful ? Pass a law! Are the prices much too high?® Do the wife and babies cry Cause the turkeys roost high® Tass a law! When M. D. finds new diseases, Pass a law! Got the mumps or enfermesis, Measles, croup or ‘experiisis?’ Lest we all fly to pleces, Pass & law' low “Going Journal dining? Are tha lights a-burning red? Pase & law! em _green, or paint 'em up el them places tight! Our_town js such a sight! Pass a law! or Paint Close My! whitet No matter what the trouble is, ass 2 law! Goodness sakes, but ain't it awful My! What are we going to do? before."” Almost anything ain't lawful, ‘That's nothin is human, too! “1 have a And the iud::- ass a law! CHEERY CHAFT. yusband i« very fond of luxuriou sald one woman, such thing as reincarnation, 1 fancy he 1 turn into a moth.”~Washington Star. growled the man, “that umbrella responded the other, it ain't my umbreila; I just borrowed it Priladelphia IRec That's all right Aimee—1 hear you are going to marry { young Simpkins. Allow me to congratu to marry him Then allow me to co indlapolls Star iiazel—But I'm not goin gratulate you some more.- Teacher—Who can tell me what induced read his cloak Walter K zabeth to pass® ver a puddie tor Quen Kl | P Piwhose pa holds & city appoint- workin’ for the job of }.'4')!-1-[ commiseioner.—Boston Transcript Where fa get all them scratches on asked the thin man. turned “Yeplied the fut msked the thin man. replied the fat man “Lyose tire?" “Tight chauffeur,” Cincinnati ‘e prospects of dining ourselves an automobile out turtle." —Louisville Courier- yonder that turned Who is that man you are wining and doesn't look as if he were accustomed to soclety.” ‘I don’t suppose he is. something of that ‘And you entertain such a man?®’ X my husband is a young lawyer and this'is his first case.” Louisville Courfer-Journal. JHe is a birras “Certainly. 1 think Prof. Hibrowe {* a wonderful lecturer,” said the Old Fogy. things home to you that you never saw replied the Grouch. ndry wagon driver who can do that”'—Cincinnatl O ALUM N ROYAL BAKING POWDER RINSES EASILY Like a powerful drawing! The pull ful serial is beyond all conception. Like a mighty curvent that carries you on, against your will, is the interest-impelling power of . rHw NBW EXPLOITY ELAINE — If you haven't started to follow the fortunes of the master (played by Amold Dely) and Elaine (played by Pear! White) and the Criminal Chinaman (played by Edwin Arden) come on in— , Craig Kennedy e =% The water's fine ! IETT !!:gigil" sohinl the—urpol!hi-m Read the stories—the best detective fiction ever erested— a8 told by Arthur B. Reeve in the Sunday THE OMAHA DAILY BEE COUPONS Ask for the beer and save the coupon. FRED KRUG BREWING COMPANY THE BEER YOU LIKE Get Your PIANO A. HOSPE CO Hospe's 1513 DOUGLAS STREFT