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: W R R RS THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing ccmpqny. Propriet BER BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. at Omaha postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF 8U| IPTION, £ By mail per year. t ‘address or complaints om O-I-lu Lo. &.renmln ICE. Remit by draft, MApo'lEI order. two- hecl 'u‘-‘e.p’;‘ ?.'."‘6"-.'.’1 and nm‘r.l; OFFICES. The h Bullding 1106, 386 New Bank Comi Fourteenth 8t., N. CORRESPONDENCE, t! t ARG B e B MAY CIRCULATION, 53,345 of Nebraska, County of Doug " ht Williamis, circulation manager of The Bee pany, being duly sworn, says that the - ge ol tion for the month of May, 1915, was DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager Su "z:'da in va presen sworn to before une, 1915, me. this 3 QP pERT HUNTER, Notary Public. Subscribers leaving the efty temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad: @ress will be changed as often as requosted. Fune ¢ S Thoaght for the Day Selected by Mrs. W, E. Hitcheock “‘Going through a good book is like wa'king in a garden of flowers; even if you bring away not one blossom you will carry its fragrance on your garments.’’ Uncle Sam to Carranza, Villa & Co.: Get together or get off the earth. S——— The allied Teutons evidently intend to annex the bear's hide as well as the tail. S— 1t takes nice juggling to praise the president and the kaiser in the same editorial, but it can be done. t is not what war censors tell, but what constitutes news of the first ,ue“’c-ul grows with ‘more joy thau 1) on ec- ‘Without the stimulus of & war order, makers of ized iron products boosted prices $10 14 a ton. The news combines the symp- toms of prosperity and the uplifting power of a galvanized pipe cinch. | I3 destiny a result of the reasoned processes and ethics of finite minds, or is it something ¢ reach of reason and the human wil?" our esteemed double-ended con- tem| . We'll bite. Is it? 2 Sesp—— Protessional crooks of Chicago are disre- urdi” the mayor's orders to leave the city. iuu_q is too good to admit of a hasty exit. ‘their soclal relations render them im- mune 1o the dust of politieal new brooms. of the lsdies musical recitals for the sea excéptionally enjoyable. Those contributing uded: Mra C, E. Squires, Mrs / Estabirook, Mr. Sauer and the Misses Offi- Boulter, Rothschiid, Merkel and Stull H Electric Light company has ‘on.a bric. bullding between Capltol Dodge, wherg they will place their ma A Y of old houses being moved about to mew bulldings indicates a growing boom. __ii-% 1o Nye, cer, while Bee left for Big Rapids, Mich.. ‘ud days, bringing with hin ‘Was put on at Crelgh: cul- Performance by |hmx'l‘h:a Leach, Sallie Mc- May Riley Carlin of the Urion Pacific general freignt | Constitutional Government for Mexico | President Wilson's new policy is one that " ought very soon to end in the establishment of a stable and responsible government along con- stitutional lines in Mexico. The president pro- poses to recognize no faction, but to require all to unice, if possible, and among themselves form a government. This will require an adjustment of differences among them, the abandonment of certain personal ambitions, perhaps, and a gen- ulne spirit of unity. Failing in this, the United States will take steps to set up a government for Mexico, regardiess of the wishes of the factions now disputing for control and doing only dam- #ge o the country. ‘of the serious business of government has been thoroughly demonstrated. Their pretensions to patriotism have proven as empty as their claims to real ability, and they are no longer entitled to confidence or respect. In the last two years they h demonstrated most conclu- sively that no ome of them has such qualifica- tions as fit him for responsible duties in connec- tion with government. the comfidence of a sufficient number of Mex- his “army,” in event he should be elevated to the presidency. In the natural order of things all activity, save that of the guerilla or bandit warfare, in Mexico has been suspended. The people are starving, ‘and we are treated to the spatacle of one of the self-styled liberators of the country seizing the corn sent there for the relief of the helpless. It is the purpose of the United States to end this condition. In doing so it may be necessary to send armed forces into Mexico, but only when all other means have failed, and then on a mis- slon of mercy and to establish constitutional government, that the people of Mexico may have peace and prosper. S ——— Opposing the Merger. City officlals of SBouth Omaha are reported to be in favor of entering suit to test the legal- ity of the merger of the municipalities as de- cided by the voters on Tuesday. If they are really serious in this intention they should not delay the action any longer than Is absolutely necessary. It should be determined at the earliest poseible if the law under which annexa- | tlon is to be accomplished is flawless. As it stands, the course of the bill through the legls- lature is known to be regular, and the verdict of the people is affirmative. The only serious objectors are the city officials, who will be dis- placed when the governments are consolidated, and some others, whose incomes depended on the separate governments being maintained. All visible evidence fs in favor of consolidation, but if the law is to be further tested, action ought to be taken at once. | o—— A Notable Feat of Arms. . The retaking of Przemysl by the Austro- German armies will rank as one of the most notable military episodes of the present war. w great Austrian fortress fell into Rus- liftle over two months ago, atter : months,. its garrison being ' the ‘Russians, it opened for southeastern Germany, to !,dldu a triumph for Russia. Germany still had a word to say about this, and the event proves. that it was no part of the raiser’s strategy to permit the czar's wrmies to run unhampered over, that part of the world. The Russian dash over Gallcla, and the ¢8mpaign in the Carpathians, was soon met by what experts say has been the most tremendous offensive movement of the whole war, German and Austrian allied armies have relentlessly at- tacked and driven back the Russians, step by /step, mile by mile, day after day, until Preemys Las succumbed to a twenty-day bombardment, and is again held by the Germanic allies. The importance of this victory i only ug- derstood when the relation of Przemys! to the wheat flelds of Hungary and the great farming reglons of eastern Prussia fs understood. Hold- ing the Russians back from this part of the country means the Germans will be able to raise and harvest another crop before their farms cau again be seriously menaced by the army of the czar. This is the prime advantage of keeping back the invaders. It postpones indefinitely the day of short rations in Austria and Germany. —— @' sure, Wo More Duplication of Plants. The Nebraska Rallway commission is about to issue an order that may have the effect of determining to whai extent it controls the erec- tion of publie utility plants. It is forecasted that the order will be against the establishment ©of a second telephone plant in an interior town, the commission being opposed to the duplication of plants. This conclusion ‘s sound in principle and practice, and, had it been observed, it would have resulted in Nebraska in the saving of a very considerable sum of money to inves- tors. It is the function of the commission to so control and regulate the service of the public utilities of the stale that the patrons will have | Yittle, if any, cause to complain. | tection, the public is assured of all advantages that might come from the existence of com- peting plants, and is relieved of the annoyances that duplication certainly provides. In the tel- ephone industry particularly, the monopoly of service Is to be desired, but it must be always under public control. It is s0 in Nebraska, with results far more satisfactory to the patrons than were possible a few years ago, when ¢ompetition | between rival companies resulted in duplication, | annoyance, and additional expense. —_—— The prosecution of a London newspaper for . printing uncomfortable facts is not a proceed- ing peculiar to war, though related to war news. I peace times in England and on the continent | broof of the truth of a publication is mot ac- { cepted as a defense against damages. “‘The “mur the truth the greater the damage" is the rule of the courts, especially in the cases of individuals pilloried by newspapers. A steel boat on its way from Chicago to New Orleans with a full cargo, stopped at St. Louis long enough to start g little more talk of nav kating the Missouri in its upper reaches. The Missouri is Just as susceptible of navigation to- duy as ever it , the only thing lacking being | the treignt. s puts the matler squarely up | to the shippers. i il it e e o e e T — The incapacity of the several leaders for any ! Neither has any of them | fcans to give him enduring support aside from | With this pro- | 1'HE 1 B OMAHA, FRIDAY, | Why Italy Went to War | By Caesar Regeassi, MAMA, June 2~To the Kditor of The Bee: lLet 0 me present some facts regarding the entrance of Italy in the war. Austria now holds Trent and Trieste, two districts geographically Italian, and whose population is mainly Itallan. They are both on the south side of the Alps, and would easily give command of Venetia. and of the incomparably fertils Po valley, to an army, Austrian or otherwise, Invad- ng Italy from the north. Northern Italy used to be the battlefield of every contending Wuropean nation a8 Poland Is today, and the best way to prevent repe- tition of this, and to hold off any possible enemy, i for Italy to have its natural frontier, the Alps. No one must lose sight of the fact that the Itallans want the Alps as a frontler much more than they want to unite to Italy the Italians subject to Aus- some Slavs in Trieste. The Italian government, of course, through the press, the sehools and other agen- | cles, represents to the people that the aim of Ttaly is | 10 unite to Italy the Italians subject to Austria be- | cause in this way it is more likely to arouse en- | thustasm in the common people, who would hardly | appreciate the strategical importance of the Alps for | the defense of Italy. Austria was willing to give up & very small slip of territory between the Isenzo | river and the present frontier, but the Isonso most of the year s either dry or can be crossed without any bridges, therefore its value to Italy for defensive purposes would have been small According to the Itallan note ‘o meutral countries, in the Trentino, Austria would have ceded territorv up to a line running from west to east, and passing about seven miles to the morth of Trento, “thereby excluding some parts Inhabited by Itailans.” The statement of the German chancellor, “‘part of Trento inhabited by Itallans,” tallies with the foregoing. Such a proposition would have given to italy a boun- dary of no strategical value, says the Italian note. Also, according to the report in the newspapers In the days In which Italy decided for war, General Ca- dorna, chief of the Itallan general staff, represented to Premier Salandra that, accepting the Austrian con- cessions, Ttaly would still have had on its northern frontier a constant menace. Another report said the minimum demands of Jtaly were: Trieste, Capo @'Istria and Plramo to be free cities, the frontier In the Guif of Trieste to be brought as far as Na- bresina, some ten miles from Trieste; Italy to have some islands fn the lower Dalmatia, and in Trento to set as frontler the border of the kingdom of Italy in J811. This border would run close to the 46th parailel, and would give Botzen to Italy, leaving to Austria Meran and Buxen, together with the upper reaches of the Adige valley. Clear-minded people In Italy see that Austria cannot, and must not, be made a land- locked country, and with this arrangement Austria would have kept nearly all its present seacoast. Tieste would still have been its commercial port, and many more Italians would have heen left to Austria thar the Teutons in and around Botzen, who woull have come to-Italy. As for agriculture, there is wot mueh to be had around the crags of the Dolemites. But the central empires evidently didn’t want to give up the stategioal part of the Adige (Etsch) valley, this huge Austrian wedge set Into Italian territory, which would have enabled them to have the best of Italy in any question arising by baving it at an over- .whelming disadvantage. Ttaly Is also at great naval disadvantage in rela- tion to Austria because, while the Austrian coast 's full of splendid natural harbors, the Itallan coast in the Adriatic is devoid of any except Venice, which is not much adapted for a naval base, T am told. This is the reason for which Italy asked some islands in lowér Dalmatis, islands, which' as well as Daimatia, belonged to an Italian state, the Republic of Venice, from the sixth to the elghth centuries, and have only belonged to Austria for the last hundred years, and whose population is mostly Itallan. The Adige valley is of great importance to Italy for its defense, to Austria only for offense. Austria acceded to the Ttalian demands in this quar- ter, I have mo doubt that other differemces would "have been settled in some way. i e The fact that the treaty of the Triple Alllance pro- vided for compensating Italy in certain circumstances shows that Italy never gave up its’ aspirations to Trénto and Trieste. Besides those under Austrian rule, Italy has some other ynredeemed lands, but either they belong to & now militaristic state, and the Italian nationality there is scrupulously respected, or such lands are not as vital as Trento for the defense of Italy. Some Wwill say ‘that there is no precedent for a nation that turns on its own allies. T think there is some such precedent, excluding, of course, the case of the Balkan states, and there is record.even of a whole army going bodily over to the enemy’s side during & battle. But even if there Is no such precedent, should Ttaly be much In need of being, able to poing to a precedent, while Germany, itself, these very days is making its own precedents, as we #ee in cases of the Falaba and Lausitanie? Could not Italy have had Trento, Trieste and more somewhere else had it gone to war against France? Yes, T say. But after the Austrian ultimatum to Berbla, and Germany's rejection of the British media- tion plan, the Itallans became convinced that Ger- many and Austria, unprovoked, wanted war. Some- body raised the ory, *“Remember 69! Any other consideration apart, a war with France became fm- possible because against the national will, As Italy was bound by a defensive alllance, T do not think many will question its clear right to stay neutral. It is eaay to say that Russia started the war, bit not easy to prove it. The csar sent a tele- gram to the kaiser proposing arbitration, and as an excuse for not printing it in the German White Book, Germany stated that only documents of importance could be printed there. The principal scheme of Pan-Germanism is the “Drank nach Osten.” a German empire comprising Germany, Austria, the Balkans, Persia, Afghanistan and Indle, and Servia had to be subjected hecause it held the key in the realization of this plan on ac- count of its geographical position. The murder «f Francis Ferdinand just made it possible to give some color of right to the way ‘in which the war was started Herr Delbruk should be thaniked for saying that Austria demanded conditions which would have placed Servia under its permanent control. Ex-Fremier Giol- litt! in the Italian Parllament said that in August, 1913, Austria informed Italy of its intention to invade BSerbia, (no archduke had been killed then), and that Austria was informed that in such a case Ttaly would stay neutral. So in 1914 the central empfres knew they could not count upon Italy United States, Italy would not care if Trento and Trieste belonged to Austria—just as Nebraska doesn't care much If some strip of land on this side of the Missouri belonged to lowa. If (his country was divided like an armed camp Europe is, even in times of peace, and some state wanted to force its domination or its culture, or both, on the others at the point of the bayonet, in many quarters there would soon arise the determiration to change even by war some of the meridans in order to make them correspond with some natural obstacle to the passing of an army. Nebraska, too, would claim all the Towa territory on the right side of the Missourl. Burope could, and ought to be, united. But seelng what is &oing on, who can blame the Italiaas, because they don't hope that this union will soon come? At this last moment | see & map in the Literarv Digest in which the whole south Tyrol as far as the Brenner is represented as having been offered (o Ttaly. No! BEven Italy's mintmum demands, accord- ing to the repory 1 have spoken of, were just two- thirds of the shaded territory, and Italy, according to officfal Information, was offered one-third of it. Emergency Prayer. Ome day, while Willle and Harry were playing in & fleld they disturbed a bumble bee's nest and began running, with the bees after them. When they had run Yor & few yards, Harry breath- lessly panted, “Willle, we ought to pray while we are running '’ To which Willie replied: “[ know it, but I can't think of but one prayer.” And Willle, :‘. admonished, called out between gasps: “Oh. LordBfer what we are about to receive, make us truly thaekful!"—Natlonal Menthly. ) ‘ JUNE 4, tria, mot to speak of some Teutons in Trento, and | If Burope was a federation, tn some way like the | 1910, LeSer | Blessing Gives His Blessing. | SOUTH OMAHA, June 2—Te the Edi- | tor of The Bee: I note by this morning’s | Bee that a majority of the citizens of | South Omaha by their vote yestarday fa- vored consolidation with Omaha and Dundee, 0 1 say “amen,’ and, while I | still insist the bi!l was unconstitutional, 1 acquiesce, as I am now satisfied a ma- jority of South Omaha citizens wanted to | be mnnexed to Omaha: 1 congratulate Omaha upon its wisdom of annexation to its already ‘Great city,” one of the | mreatest industrial cities in the west, and | | for its age the “Magic City” was the best in the United States, and while 1 voted against the merger yesterday and | #hould have done so as long as T was a | eitizen of South Omeha, I will now bury the hatchet and “‘cure all sore spots” and be a “booster” for Omaha, one of the very best cities in the United States, and hope it in turn will do all in its power to help the south part of Omaha, so we will all feel Mke working for the union of two of the best cities In the world, Sincerely yours, J. G. BLESSING. South Stders Rejolee. BOUTH SIDE, OMAHA, June 2.—To the Editor of The Bee: With an overwhelm- ing vote in every precinct of South Omaha in favor of consolidation with Omaha, we who have stood for the con- solidation for @ number of years past, feel that we are fully vindicated in our claim that the people wanted to annex to Omaha and when a fair vote could be taken, it is shown that the people of Bouth Omaha are ready and willing to become & part of the great eity of Omaha. With practically no organization among the friends of consolidation, the Victory for consolidation is the more pleasing and decisive, It does not seem to us that any of the anti-annexationists will have the nerve to take the matter inte court any more. It does mot look as if they ‘would have much standing in court in face of the tremendous victory for an~ nexation. I have been accused by some of the antls of being the cause of the sentiment down here in favor of the consolidation. Of course I would be proud to claim that distinction, but it seems to me that the people o? South Omaha wanted a change ang they were bound to have it, for they feel that things are bound to improve now. We rejoice In the fact that such an overwhelming majority of the resi- dents of this part of Omaha voted for the consolidation and refoice that instead of being called South Omaha, we can from this time on forever call ourselves residents of the city of Omaha. I pre- dicted a two to one vote down here for consolidation last Sunday. F. A, AGNBW. Settling Some “‘Statistios.” SAN FRANCISCO, May %.-To the Editor of The Bes: Much pleased to find The Bee of the Mth and news from home at the newsstand here. T note therein a communication from your Des Moines staff correspondent of the 19th annnunc- ing that a certain circular is to be freely distributed through Iows, the contents of which should not go unchallenged. It is to the effect that 8 per cent of the penitentiary expense, 85 per cent of the 60 cost of maintaining the and feeble minded institut! per cent of the expense of Insane hospitals and “all other institutions” (whatever they may be) i due to intoxication. Sush ex- travagantly fictitious claims (I will pay 31,000 to anyone who can prove that even one-tenth theveof is true) are comstantly being circulated by the Anti-Saloon league and are merely & part of thelr well-de- fined plan to pofsdn tho sources of pub- lic information with false statistics, a fact well known to every publisher. The statement referred to is In line with ex- Congressman Hobson's assertion in con- gress last December that alcohol kills 700,000 American citizens every year. Al- though that mendacious fabrication, noe doubt credited by milllons of readers, Was denounced by the unprejudiced press of the country, it bobs up persistently from time to time and was reproduced only this month in the Modern Woodman of Rock lslend through an article by Walter Allen Rice (whoever he may be), and favorably commented on as ‘“‘the truth about King Alcohol.”” One would think that a reputable journal published in the interests of the many members of that organization would be extremely careful and consclentious In selecting articles for its columna. ‘To show the total absurdity of Hobson's claim I will quote from the United ¥tates census, which gives the annual total deaths in the United States as 1,300,000, of which 700,000 are males, o that Hob- ron’s claim that 700,000 citizens are killed cvery year by alcohol means that each | and every death of males of all ages, | babies included, is due to alcohol. The fact that mearly ® per cent dle under M years of age would eliminate ‘some 430,000 deaths from the possibility of be- ing due to alcohol, leaving only about 40 per cent, or 230,000 deaths, amongst males | ©f 15 years and over. Now the vital sta- | tistics of thie government census classify | the causes of deaths by reentages, showing that about 80 per cent are due to a great variety of diseases, many of them contagious, such as typhold, ma- laria, smallpox, diphtheria, cancer, etc., which nossibly be due to alcohol. In fact, carvefully compiled statistics show that out of 835,000 deaths in 1912, | within® the so-called registration aga, there were less than 12000 JBaths with even a remote history of the probable excessive use of liquors. This means that instead of 0,000 deaths as Hobson claims there could not pos- sibly be more than 15000 cases 'n the total United States where alcohol may possibly have shortened life, or one- fortieth of what our “kissing hero” would make us believe. \ The prohibition propagands depends largely upon such and similar misrepre- sentations. These professional reformers realize that with taking away such fic- tion they will have no ground to stand on. With them it is & remunerative busi- ness which thrives on ignorance and » | perstition, but what excuse has any re- putable journal for imposing upon its veaders Ly serving out to them such glaringly false information. Real tem- | perance has nothing to gain by such | tactics. | ‘The United States census bureau sta- | tistics show for the twelve years from W00 to 1912 that although the consump- tion of liguors imoreased 8 per cent the | death rate during that same period de- creaged 14 per cent. Scientific investiga- tions of the most thorough and reliable sort by eminent medicad authorities have shown that the strietly moderate drinker will outlive the total abstainer. In an at- ; tempt to prove the opposite certain irsur- ‘ ance siatisticians and physicians try to | force their figures into the straitjacket | of their precenceived notions and inva- riably eharge up the results of excessive use to the moderate use which neces- sarily leads (o deceptive conclusions. Monotony, grief, worry, anxiety, lask of Inmocent pleasure and wholesome di- version cause ever so many more prema- ture deaths than even the excessive use of liquors, A L MEYER MIRTHFUL REMARKS. At the close of the forencon a ministerial conference in In announcing the opening subject for the afternoon, the presiding officer sald “'Elder Jones will Nt & paper on The Devil.' " Then added earnestly, +Please be prompt in attendance, for seasion of tladelphia, Brother Jones has a carefully prepared paper._and Is full of his subject.”—New York Timee inly works hard on r m?hbor cet wi. Yesterday he was cleaning away | the dead leaves.' *1l, you know he Is a professsional has that got to dg with his wotk- hard on his lawn y, haturally, he sees a rakeoff in ~Baitimore Amerfcan. “'Yes, he's one of our leading citizens. He certainly has climbed hl{: in a few }':Ir . Why, he holds our st federal ndeed' How did he get 1t?" His brother-in-law is our leading poli- Uclan."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. “I have money to burn,” said the great heiress with due aplomb, or whatever it wan. “1 shall not make light of your for- une,” he ejaculated. ‘"You bet you won't,”” retorted she, and with that the butler ushered him' into the delightfully cool summer's night.— Philadeiphia Ledger. Bileen—Viola is to be married in July. She always sald she meant to be & Juns \rldo.‘“l ‘wonder how it happened she think it was the fault of the man, who nnul«ru? to ask her in time.— Brooklyn Citizen. er thet if he was a “1 told you Ta fm to the circus this 8004 boy T'd take summer. “Did it work?" “No. He sald he tried that last vear and the cireus wasn't worth it."—Wash- ington Btar. v The Cup \4] Editorial Siftings One Nebraskan jmmune from torpedo or mine, on or off Pittsburgh Dispatch the sea, is Willlam J, Many’s the time he's been hit, fore and aft, but to no ef- fect. Seremely he sails on his way, now and then dropping in to some chautauqus port to discharge cargo. Boston Transeript: “The submarine i1, i still in an experimental stage.’<Ecere tary Daniels. Yes, we have noticed that the Germans are experimenting with it on American ships, while the Turks are 1 eonducting some very interesting experi- ments in the Dardanelles Baltimore American: ' Aroused to in- dignation by Roosevelt's fighting talk, some Louisiana villagers wired him théy would supply him with & gun and free | transportation to the camps of the allies. |This may explain the recent commend- able silence at Oyster Pay. | New York World: On her arrival In Berlin on an errand of peace, Miss Jans | Addams remarked: "It seems as though the whole world had gone crazy; there | must be some little spot left where | reason will rule.” There is such a spot in | Switzeriand, a little state entirely sur- {rounded by warring nations and with | | practically every one of its own fighting i men under arms. There is a larger spot on the western hemisphere, but we hési- tate to name it THE TIMID GIRL. | Los Angeles Times. | When Cella was a little matd | Of darkness she was sore | Sne us always for a li [To” give her courage through the night. | This dread clung to her as she grew: |it was not make-believe, we knew, |8he suffered much, and so we tried By shaming her, to rouse her pride. Our various efforts were In vain, Outlandish fancles ruled her brain; She trembled if the evening found Her with no nice young man around. Bhe'lnlll right now, 'Who'dmbunm w! (3 mumod to tro'n: He' or Cel and no fear Assails hef when ihat follows near. 1 can’t explain why this should be— He'd net give confidénce to me. In fact, I've more than once suspected Young Brown by Cella is protected. Well, 1 don't care. Perhaps she feels With that great ninny at her heels, Each terr-r she must overawe Lest Brown it should devour raw. Last month youns ‘A every home 50c.. 60c., 70c. and $1.00 per pound \ . JC N ), e X idgways lea Five More Pairs Free This Week for the five boys that bring us the most pictures of the stilts before 4 P. M., Sat- urday, June 5. J ‘fhis picture of the stilts will be in The Bee every day this week. Cut them zll out and ask your friends to save the pictures in their paper for you too. See how many pictures you can get and bring them to The Bee Office, Satur- day, June 6., The stilts will be given Free to the boys ., or girls that send us the moet pictures be- fore 4 P. M., Saturday, June 5. A small choice- but very choice offices There are only a few from which to choose, but if any meet your requirements, you will he more than satisfied. Talk to any of our tenants and you will find the great ; satisfaction they all feel in having an office in THE BEE BUILDING *“The building that is always new" We offer: 222 Choice office Suite, north light, very desirable for doctors or dentists; waiting room and private office; 530 square feet....$45.00 8322 Choice office Suite, north 1ight, very desirable for doctors or dentists; walting room and two private offices; 530 square feet....845.00 601 Nice caol office with vault, near elevator and ' stairs; electric light free, 210 for Apply to Building Sup't. Roem 103. THE BEE square feet— <+ $18.00 BUILDING