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Efi SUNG WiTH QUAINT MELODY Bnllad Said to Oont.ain i Many Pretty Strains L Adnew sonk now popular In New “Vircinla Lee has just r A this ety and is already being & gome of the falr sex. While the ifda tell the same old lovestale as In pular songs, the etty and has a very music 1y rather | haunting swing h- SONE was writton b Joff Brane, uthor of “In the Vailey of the Moof Here is 8 p ++ of the nther works. orus: - fifi“_j‘l_'—; ] | Vi - gin - ia Lee, my = Come to me, 1.“‘&"1 nesome st \ coprgs 15 a1 Probably the chist cause of the song's ipovularity is that there is no suggestiva {3dea in fta text, but a mort of refined theme that appeads to women and be- 3 o it in & ranke easy to written in GOLD WATCH FREE FOR A NAME How to Get One: Just send us the name of & end or feighbor who does own & Plano or Player Piono, but who i¢ talking of getting one. If we sell them, you get the Gold Watch for your mhh Ooilollcr& Hnllur u}x-u Bt.., O]IAhN P oM Mes. LW Edwards ‘p«é‘é‘b, AHA SUNDAY BEE: JU \}‘ Miss Sylvia Orloff, 6, 19 [ UL S, lnvesugates ' Alleged Recruiting 'Man Who Swore Lusitania Carried Guns Under Sorutiny NEW Department of Justice, from Washington, began an investigation ‘of Americans for the British Armies| l BONTON, June 5.—Alleged recrulting of | derson and his staff on order from Wash- [ American young men for the military Ington to learn what inducements, if any, | forces of Great Britaln s the subject of | '8Ve been offered youths to ship on British vessels as caretakers for horses and cattle. YORK, June l;—Alenln of ths on {instructions | an investigation begun by federal officers e T o ey e T ot 'M'l here today into the actions of Gustave According to w cablegram from the port on the Leyland liner Cambrian, on a ‘t1da |t Stahl, the German who made an a nited Btates consul general at London, | May 8, the consul general found that all| [T (U8 COTEn B0 GHOC6 8 L Pt | which was included in a message sent had signed preliminary enlistment papers | S0 Gorashy Sbesty, Bt the sieem {by Seoretary Bryan to Congressman | before his agent could board the steamer | Y v 4 enfp Lusitania carried guns. The repre { rentatives of the department went to & | boarding house at 20 Leroy street, the aldress he gave In his affidavit, and spent half an hour there. Stahl was not there nor has he been seen there since Poter I, Tague of thiy city, at least fif- on its arrival in London, |teen youths have been eniisted in viola-| Sinee the outbreak of the war seve! tlon of agreement with the British Board | hundred young men have shipped out | of Trade regarding the United States of this port on steamers used as horse | shipping laws. These and other cases | transports by the remount division of the | are being inquired Into, it is understood. British army. Few have returned ao- Secret service wgents are co-operating | cording to the information guthered by | yesterday. His trunk and hand lugsage with United States District Attorney An-|the federal officers. it was sald, had apparently been packed i in preparation for departure. The agents o T T | refused to say what they had discovered. [able man and womap could be employed | F¢[Ted to sa¥ Wi Loy BEC €AVl | Rules in War works ment of Justice it was asserted tha Lloyd George Urges \o.u told the workmen, “was brougnht blok‘tsrum the front, and i they worked | xothing of importance had been devel- |to the utmost limits of human endurance, | 6ped. It was explained thers that the .‘u,." would not be enough labor to pro- | public investigation was merely to gather duce what the government is esking to | oil information available concerning LIVERPOOL, June 8.—Continuing "|'|nvp produced during the pext few | Stahl's actlvities for transmission to the campalgn for the orgenization of the | Fitate department. munition trades of the country and the "YU o il hat as gov | Btahl fs said to have dons work for the speeding up of the output of shells and |, 00 req tape had been cut, fhe trade | German imperial consulate in this city other materials required by the AFMY. |, . i nists also must relax thétr rules. |and for Captain Boye-Ed, the naval at- David Lioyd George, the now munitions | ;o oountry, he said, was demanding as | tache, He came here before the war, it SIS, ddresmd mestinge bt Wiy i« satd, from the German protectorate in of employes and employers, He urged upon the workmen that for the duration of the war union regulations | [ #hould be wuspende: o that & matter of right, and not as a matter of appeal, that every one of its citizens | K10 Chow, where he was attached to the should do his best, and he dld not be- | cyfice of the German commander at Tien |lleve that there was any objection to it being made a legal right and dut Monday, 8 A. M. Curtain Rises on the June Clearance Sale Of Our Entire Stock of Women'’s and Misses’ Spring Coats and Suits Oldham Paisley ‘We Wil STORE LOOK 'l'0 AMERICA Your Winter || FOR ALL SHPPLIES k] Thlng SAFELY Industries of Europe Crippled and Stave off the moths NOW! Must Come to Uncle Sam for ‘WE will take furs, clothes, Supplies. m&: l&l:nl hoot‘ of oth‘u OLEAN them and STOR FRENCH VIEW OF SITUATION ,(Con‘upondpnco of the Associated Press.) them and STOR! . /them fof .you. Our storage PARIS, May M.—~Thres hundred million |dollars lost by the textile industries of :urn 18 3% of the value values over §30. Our I, {northern France In raw materlals and . manufactured products taken by the Ger- /mans as booty of war-that is the estl {mate given The Associatod Press by an | muthorizea member of the most influen- MOTHS, § sl textilz corporation France and an :“‘_ o e lax, | |authority on industrial subjocts. tin | What the total Joss, inclnding damages s time to store last I /{s jiants and to bulldings, may amount winter’s things. [to, there are no indications, for many |rumore of the transterring of valuable machines to Germany have not been |confirmed, The feregoing estimate 1s based on confirmed fact<« only. It more |then bears out the estimate of the Ger- man publicist, Ludwig Gaoghofer, who after & visit to the German front, told the Muenchner Neueste Nachrichten that the war booty sent from-morthe to Germany In the form of cereal | metals, wool, leather, etc., amounted to $500,000,000 during the first six months of [the war. It s supposed that hin fig- |ures were based on the requisition price |sald to be very Inferlor to the market |value. On the latter basis the actual total would be far in ¢xcess of the Ger- man figures; the estimate for the tex- tile industries alone would so indicate. | Germans Took Raw Mater | It 1 koown that the Germans took [nearly all the raw material ana finishéd §00ds In the great woolen manufacturing |centers of Le Cotean, Roubaix and| | Tourcolng, where America buys heavily Phone Tyler 345 IDresher . Brothers > Dry Cleaners © 2211-2213 Farnam St. IKILL THAT .1 POTATO BUG ARIS GREEN {of the flner woolen fabrics., They also never fails. It goes twice as | |¢MPbtied the linen factories, with the nlolm of the adulterated brands. | | exoeption of those at Avmentieres, where and be- 3% -1b. pkg. : %-1b. pks. 1-1b. pkg 2 1bs. for B-Ib. pkg. per 1b. 4-1b. buckets, 21¢ per lb 6-1b. buckets, 20¢ 1b $ % Orders Bhipped Promptly “per Express. S he 1&0539113!1! Drug Co. @ [ |they were driven vack too moor, 1 at Lille, where they have recently gun to requisition these products. *%24 | The territory occupled by the Uermans contains more than % per cent of the voolen and linen industries of France; | the conseq 18 a shortage of all these products. “The -y is seeking hundreds of thousands of yards of vas ‘for tents that these industries & unable to supply. ('otton, tried as a sub stitute oved unsatisfactory. The finaucial provlem resulting from . o |this stgte of things," according to this study alter the war A commercial an If you are receiving a regular ® |iidustria! activity such as we have Ssiary you are in the best pos'- fl lngver yeen will be witnessed in France, tion poesible to solve the probl of how to provide for the futu when age or sickness will Lut the setting in motion agalu the in- |dustrial machine will be attended with e your interefere with | sreat difficulties. uu:élt." oeait Soms 1 | Losses Ave Great. | "One manufacturer in the occupled ter- ritery hLas lost raw material ana fin- {tshed goods to the value of 50000 to 000000 francs. . The banks had ad- vanced him 60000 france. The security for | e Is gone. That man will say {after the war: ‘L am not played out. '1 Want Lo put my Industry on its feet again, but where will he find the means since {he has already hanging over him a debt jof wwow francs end weoured it are lu Germany?. It s & ser- fous problem, but it wili be ‘weived. | “Anpother great difficuity 1s In the re- storation of our plant, the rnlndl. d Ta Rl e AY iNGs paid on deposits our machines; Under existing condi- tions it seems llkely that it will take {two years for machine constructors to furnish what we shall require. Perhaps we shall have to call upon the Amerl- can ingenuity to help us in working out the difficult probloms, but they will be solved for mever was the spirit of our manufacturers and workers so strong as today."” Workers on Canal Want to Work for Uncle Sam in Alaska the goods that| (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) PANAMA, May 3l.~Many of the work- | ers on the Panama canal, after several years of tropleal lifs, are mow anxious to 80 to Alaska, where the United States government is undertaking to hulld a Taliroad, A short time ago, when H. F. Warren, representing the Alaskan Ralil- way commission, arrived on the isthmus to purchase machinery no longer useful on the canal work, he was swamped with applications for positions In Alaska. Many of the canal workers are tired of the tropics, or what is the same, be- leve thew are and are willing to risk the rigors of an Alaskan winter for the sake of change. Immediately after his arrival, however, Mr. Warren made It plain that here would not be many posi tions open In Alaska. He told canal work- ers that living conditions are fur from and that the construction gungs would not find the sawe treatment fin Alnska that he had veceived at l'anama for the last eleven years, although work Ing for the same government. Fositions jare going to be scawce for awhile, he | sald, because not nearly so large & force will be needed as was employed at Panama. The government has sent out a warn- ing agalnst any rush into the territory {this season as the work by no means | .o [Justities one. Moreover, the majority of | the workers will have to beprepared to jreturn to the United States each fall, a ithe winters are so severe that Mttle out {side work can be done Many of the locomotives that were | {used in the copstruction of the Fanama |canal eventually will do duty on the {Alaskan project. They will have 6 he | altered from a five-fool gauge to the |standard of four feet and elght inches, and this work s new Lemng done in the Ficanal mackine .ships. Many other | " |machines. also have bea purchased by | |Mr. Warren and shippe!l north to begin | 'Typhus E Epidemic in - Serbia i is Wlped Out (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) | LONDON, May A ‘seml-official tel- egram from Nish, Serbla. says i “The epidemic of typhus has ceased and there Wre no new cases. The army has not begn. affected by the epllemic. “The Serblan army has entirely recov ered from the effects of its former ef- { forts, and 1s now in excellent condition, | ready for anything that may be demanded ial it. "It s now well and completely | eauipped, and Ws spirit s higher than | ever.' WAR BRINGS THE BRITISH (Correspondence of the Assoclated Press.) | LONDON, May 3.—War has led to & | noticesble increase in socia! comradeship ' | salaries. | tri | Tires that has given them their deser WOMEN CLOSER TOGETHER| USE among English women and has broken down the former prejudice against what | are popularly and contemptuously known as “hen parties.” Numerous clubs have sprung up, such as the Lady Workers' club for lonely women earning moderats This club keeps open from 4 to 9 o'clock on work days and from 2 to 9 o'clock on Saturdays and Sundays. Its Cls arc purely the cultivation of dship, ‘without' bride or any kind of propaganda. Whitman Hears Baby Cry Across America ALBANY, N, Y., June 5.—Charles Sey- mour Whitman, r, the governors baby, oried mo loudly in the executive mansion here tonight that his father, who is in San Franclsco heard him. The governor listened to his baby ocer the telephone. It required several minutes to induce the baby to utter a cry. “I's easy enough to be pleasant ‘When a man has all he requires; If his health is all right His heart will be light ‘While he's riding on Diamond Tires.” : ~Mr. Squeegee | A man is a good deal like a tire. His greatness depends on the crowd ¢ he is in. The really great man—the leader—literally has to moet all comers in the contest for public approval. Any tire is the best tire in a crowd of lnfenom. | But nowadays a tire has to be ext an:; is to make and hold a record for superior service mileage economy. It is the extragrdinary quality of Send for our book of letters from dealers who sold Diamond Tires in 1914, | It tells how more than 99 out of every 100 of the more than half @ million Diamond Tires sold last year gave maximum service at minimum mileage cost. It is yours for the asking. Diamond Squeegee Tires are sold at these PAY NO MORE For Automobiles, Bicycle Diamon Diamond Viggo Jenmsen, 2807 Burdette Street.... L1176 ok pesminenie. Everett Lake, 3302 Larimore Avenue.. % T 7 £ | George Beal, 1815 North 28th Street, Souub Omahx ssaan e e sBBB T | Raymond Prohaska, 2210 South 14th ....,.. .122 Put on For Results Bee Want Ad-.‘[ signers in - much wanted, high _. High Grade Suits 75 Ki In the season’s most desirable styles = and fabrics which were form«ly as high as $30,at . . . . . . Exclusive Models grade ‘materials, including silks. 19"‘—‘-‘ Heretofore as high as $45 . . Motor, Street and Dress Coats Tailored and novelty styles, in the sea- son’s most approved colors and fabrics, By both European and domestic de- including a few bengalines and silk chud- 10 da cloths. Seasen’s prices were up to $25 AN : A TRUNK OR A BAG --WHIOH’ The trunks we are offering im this sale have been sold in the best stores everywhere up to $10. They contain one tray with two compart- ments. The outside is steel covered, and the trunks are well trimmed with heavy hardware and bave two large leather straps. $6 75 While they last, sizes 32, 84 and 36............ From our best stock of si 1 lugaage we have taken an assortment of 15, 16 and 18-inch, all leathel’ hand bags, leather lined, with pocket on one side and corners hand sewed. Urlgiunlly $ sold for up to $10.00. While they hast, each..... 5 00 FRELING & STEIN\.E, The Stilts for Last Week Were Won By | Dick Bland, 2010 Miami Paul Lindberg, 3342 Meredith Avenue V. W. Banper, Barnard Apts. No. 6.. Kenneth Hampton, 621 No. 41st Avenue Busy Bee Boys-- Do You Like to Coast? Here is your chance to geta fine Coaster FREE. We Will Give Five Coasters to the five boys bringing us the most pic- tures of the coaster before 4 P. M., Sat- urday, June 13. This pleture of the coaster will be i The Bee every day this week. Cut them all out and ask your friends to save the plctures in thelr paper for you too. See how many pictures you can get and bring them to The Bee Of- fice Saturday, June 12, The coasters will be given Free to the boys or girls that send us the most pic- tures before 4 P. M., Satur- day. June bqucu ee Jread { ol