Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 11, 1915, Page 16

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Beo Publl;r;lr;; Company, Proprietor. BB BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omaha postoffice as second-class matter. E 8 OF SUBSCRIPTION, per year. per mnmh ¢ - " ® he and Sunday. .. HK Withowt Sunday and Sunday.... 6 Evening without Sunday. - Rend T IF::: ‘t'f‘l""h.lr'mo of addres: n‘r“:‘t;m iaints of lm(ulr::—ny in delivery to Omaha Bee, Cireulation Department. REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, expreas o- postai order. Only two- t of amall ae- 01 fved in el cent postage stAmMps receives P Raha 6ad sastern counts, Personsl checks, except on exchange, not accepted. OFFICES Omaha~The n;flnwm!n- ¢ Bouth Omaha— N stree Council Bluffa—14 North Main street. i.incoln—26 Little Building hicago Hearst Bulldin New York—Room 1106, 286 Fifth avenue £t Louls New Bank of Commerce. Washington—72% Fourteenth 8t., N. W. CORRESPONDENCH, 4 Address communications relating to news an torial matter to Omaha Bee, Editorial Depart oo b e e e Wt oo S “UNE SUNDAY CIRCULATION, 46,724 State of Nebraska, County of Douglas. Dwight Willia circulation manager, says that the average Sunday circulation for the month of June, | was 40,79, | DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager, presence and aworn to before ity TER, 1915, Subscribed in my me, this 24 day of July, ROBERT #t Notary Publie. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily ehould have The Bee mailed to them, Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. FrE—— Thought for the Day Selected by W. J. Bryan He who, from zone to Zone, Guides through the boundless sky tiy osriain Slight, In the long way that I must (read alone ' Will iead my steps aright, ! ~ Bryant’s Ode to the Waterfowl. J The latest German note looks like more diplomatic conversation. B Weather makers have won at least one credit mark. Hot weather “‘don’ts” are drowned out. | icans feel on this point. THE OMATTA The German Note Unresponsive, The text of the German note just given to the press Indicates a reluctance to approach the fssue raised in the American note of May 12. It does not meet the question raised of the prin- ciple which the president sald the United States | would "“emit mo act” to uphold. This is the neutral's right to safety for its shipping and passengers and crews on board unarmed mer- | chantment. No question has been made of the right of a belligerent to ynnroom eommerce, to | visit vessels in transit or to capture or destroy | bell rang. contraband eargoes destined for enemy ports. It has been tacitly admitted, as in the case of | | the Frye, that suspected contraband may be dis- posed of by the sinking of the vessel. But the ! lives of those on board must be saved, and, in | the case of visitation by submarines, the com- | | pany of the intercepted ship must be given at | least time to take to boats. This rule of mari- | time warfare is insisted upon by the United | | States. | In the replication now at hand, the Lusitania | affair is referred to only to reiterate that the | boat was armed, and that the submarine captain | was foroed to sink It or be himself destroyed. | This evasion will necessitate further representa- tion from the United States, for Germany evi- | dently does not understand how deeply Amer- | The proposals for safeguarding ships carry- ing the American flag, to an agreed number, in exchange for assurance that these vessels will not carry contraband, would answer Mr. Bryan's ideas of the solution sought, but they would also expose America to further embroilment. The United States is not required by international law to guarantee the nature of cargoes leaving its ports, beyond the demands of strict and im- partial neutrality. . The tension, which was beginning to slacken, will, we fear, be aroused anew by this latest | German note. The note, however ' does not in itself warrant a cessatlon of correspondence, much less a severance of relations. Lines to the Limerick. The Bee's recent limerick Wwriting contest developed two surprising things, first, that there should be so much limerical talent waiting for outlet in this neck-o'-woods, and second, that there should still be a féw people unversed af to the ingredients and mettical makeup of this essantial step-ladder to the top-notches of literary fame. Kitchener wants a still bigger army. The price of cannon fodder will soon be going up in British domains. A 200,000-population Greater Omaha In time for the 1920 census-taker is feasible and possible. Everybody boost! Political sports should understand at the outset that the scissors hold is barred from the senatorial champlonship contest. If true as reported, that Japanese officers are drilling Russian troops, the staying quali- ties of war hatreds are numbered by a few cool- ing seasons. : S———— The Union Pacific wins this bout In the St. Joseph & Grand Island litigation, but the ref- eree may yet have to give the final decision in the match. S——— The Yellowstone park diversion fulfills to an unexpected degree the promise of uncommon thrills while seeing America first. Publicity agaln justifies itseif. At the rate of one note a month the Bryan plan of & whole year of discussion before busi- ness seems altogether too short for a conversa- tion endurance test. 2 Seeee— Cable operators blunder without evil intent at times, but the sender who made the German secretary’s name Von Jagon must have been on the payroll of the enemy, * S— First among the scenic necessities of Greater Omaha is a downtown park exclusively for mu- nicipal automobiles. Taxpayers are entitled to & limousine exhibition for the money. It any unreconcilable annexationists want to remove to Barpy county nothing can stop them. But 1f they want to make sure of belng out of reach of annexation, the lowa side of the river is safer yet. The circumstantial evidence that will tell against those Yellowstone Park bandits is their lack of diserimination in including a United States senator and a bunch of school teachers in their bold-up, S——— 1f plaudits bestowed by entranced admirers all over the world were the test, Nebraska's most distinguished citizen wpuld unquestionably be none other than our cld friend, Buffalo Bill. Anyway, he has had the most limericks sound- ing his praise written for him. —— Not an Artfu] Dodger. It will be noted that Mr. Bryan did not tell the women he was opposed to female suffrage, nor did be tell them it had his favor. He simply told them that eny body of women who opposed the policies of the democratic party had not his support, Just what we are to infer from this is not at all plain, Some months ago the Bal- timore platform was interpreted at the White house, and with Mr. Bryan's silent approval, as being binding for what it did not contain on the suffrage question. Yet, only & little while be- fore that, this same platform was held to be not binding for what it did contain. As Mr. Bryan _ vention, and it was there adopted as the work b ‘of his brain, his double-ending on the suffrage _question at San Francisco can be accepted as not ‘movel. In bis earlier days Mr. Bryan was open and unreserved In his announcement of his be- ‘liefs and disbellets on all political questions, and - ke was both dogmatic and pragmatic in his ex- m Latterly he assumed the same air of i but he is no longer ingenuous and he the adroftness that might be expected from 80 experienced a politician. The only good rea- suffragettes is that “votes for women' lpwllmwlllhuum ; ‘edited that platform before it reached the con- | For the benefit of these last mentioned, and to open the door wider for possible future con- tests in linguistic gymnastics, let us call atten- tion to the fact that the limerick has a status which entitles It to dictionary definition. Ac- cording to the Standard dictionary, which s newest and latest, “a limerick is a nonsense verse of five anapestic lines of which the first, second and fifth lines are three-stress and rhyme.” The sample form by which this definition is {llustrated is: ‘There was an old man of Tobago, Who lived on rice, gruel and sago, THll, much to his bliss, His physiclan saia this, To a leg, sir, of mutton you may go. The Century dictionary, compiled with great care and learned research, submits a similar typical example of the limerick as follows: There was a young lady of Niger, Who rode with a smile on a tiger, ‘Thiy returned from the ride With- the lady inside, And the smile on the face of the tiger. Further investigation into the lineage and antecedents of the limerick traces it back to the place on the map of Ireland which bears tlat name where rhyming contests in song are sald to have been regular features of convivial gatherings. The popularizer of the limerick, however, was Edward Lear, who died In 1888, after publishing two volumes of so-called *“‘non- sense verses,” because of which they are some times called “Learics.”” The title-page of Lear's book carties this rhyme: There was an old Derry down Derry, Who loved to see Mttle folks merry; 80 he made them a book, And with laughter they shook, At the fun of that Derry down Derry. Incidentally it may be mentioned that Lear's limericks for the most part not only repeat the same ending in the first and | lines but, as printed, run the third and fourth lines together glving the ocular appearance of a four-line verse in contradistinction to the work of later limerick artists. e ——— A Man and His Home. Quite a storm of debate has been aroused by one of our correspondents, whose ideas of home life do not square up to those of others, and The Bee's Letter Box has swayed and staggered un- der the whirling winds of disputation for several days. Without going into the merits of either side of the argument, which has been very in- teresting in its detalls, attention may be called 1o the fact that each man as the head of & house- hold has In some measure the right to regulate that hom When his' wife is taken as a real | lite partner, and the two harmonize thelr views, ! peace and order in thelr home is assured, and | contentment may be assumed. At any rate, | home is & place to be governed from the inside and not from the outside. If a man invites | eriticlsm by divulging the secrets of his menage, | it 1s his own fault, though he may be entitled to that decent regard for his own opinion that | Is the common right of all. Home is yet a little kingdom, apart from all the gest of the world. —— Lovers of sartorial decorations and animated ' art may well “view with alarm” the growj: tendency to undersea craft for the navies of the future. An invisible deck spells the doom of full dress naval uniforms and robs the quarter- deck of its scenic charms. A creation of plumed art, confined & steel dungeon, loses its potential thrill, | Ohio’s workmen's compensation law far ex- ceeds expectations in efficiency and practieal value. Since golng into effect 90,000 cases of injury or death to workmen have been disposed of and $8,436 ing the prohibition convention at Atlaatic City range from 7,000 to 30,000. Unlike statictics, these furnish genuine “dry™ reading. | scriptions on it, being written i SUNDAY BRE OW strange Sixteenth and Farnam streets looks | with two of Its corners cleared for the erection of new buildings. When | was a boy the Board of Trade lot was ocoupled by No 3 Fire Engine | house, around which we congregated whenever the which was not so very often, to see tha engine and the hooks get a flying start. On the tot | ncross (he street was a frame cottage, the home of the Charles 8 (oodrich family, with a posey garden tn front, and some Inviting fruit trees in the back yard. The street cars turned north at Fifteenth and the Geodrich corner was a quiet and delightful place of residence. That Aifred C. Kennedy had a wonderfully wide | olrole of friends in Omaha was attested by the large outpouring of people at his funeral. 1 had been as. soclated with him somewhat in library board matters. 1 could not help recalling the large number of old library board members who have rassed away within a short perlod of time—Elifah Dunn, Harry P. Deuel, Wihlidtn Wallace, and now Mr. Kennedy, all in com- paratively few months. 1 was also speclally im- | pressed by the emphasie Dr. Jenks lald on the valua- ble service unselfishly rendered to the community in | unremunerative positions of publlc and semi-public eharacter, It is, alas, too true that those who put in time and labor on our library boards, school boards, Ak-Sar-Ben boards, and committees for meeting the particular efvic needs, recelve scant recognition and little visible appreciation of their work. The self- satiafaction In most instances must be the only re- ward. I often wonder whether this deplorable condie tion is pecullar to Omaha or whether there is the same Indifference or ingratitude to such public service in other cities, too N | Pioking up a copy of the North American Review, my eye was halted by what purported to be a rougn drawing that Colonel Harvey had reproduced undes the caption, “Mark Twain's War Map.” But whal held my vision was not the map, but one of the in« e out and spelling | omething backwards—not “Nebraska' converted Into “Ak-Sar-Ben'—but Omaha reversed into “Ahamo." Colonel Harvey explaing that at the time the Ger- mans were approaching Paris in 1870, Mark Twaln published this map of the fortifications of that city, drawn by himself, and elucidated as follows: “The idea of this map is not original with me, but is borrowed from the Tribune and the other great metropolitan journals, “I claim no other merit fof thia production (if [ may so call It) than that It is acourate. The maln blemish of the city-paper maps of which it is an imitation {s, that In them more attention seems paid to artistic picturesqueness than geographical re- Uability. “Inasmuch as this 1s the first time I ever tried to draft and engrave a map, or attempt anything in the line of art as well, the commendations thy work has received and the admiration It has excited among the people, have been very grateful to my feelings. And it Is touching to reflect that by far the most enthusiastic of these praises have come from people who know nothing at all about art “By an unimportant oversight I have engraved the map so that it reads wrong-end first, except to left-handed people. 1 forgot that in order to make it right in print it should be drawn and engraved upside down. However, let the student who desires to contemplate the map stand on his head or hold it before her looking-glass. That will bring it right. ‘“The reader will comprehehd at a glance that that piece of river with the ‘High Bridge' over it, got left out to one sido by reason of a slip of the en- &raving tool, which rendcred it necessary to change the entire course of the River Rhine or else spoil the map. After having spent two days In digging lndkgoul!nl at the map, I would have lost 80 much work. “I never had so much trouble with anything in my life as I ¢4d with this map. .1 had heaps of for~ tifications scattéred all around Paris, at first, but every now and then my Instruments would slip and fetch away whole miles of batterfes and leave the vicinity as clean if the Prussians had been there. “The reader will tind it well to frame this man for future reference, so that it may aid in extending popular intelligence and dispelling the widespread ignorance of the day.” The puzaler is the appearance on this map of the mirrored title, “Omaha,” along with those of Jersey City, Vincennes, Verdun, Parls, Podunk, Saint Cloud, ¥ Bridge and the Brie canal. It is not surprising t among the so-called ‘‘official commendations,™ U. 8 Grant is quoted as saying: “It is the only map of the kind I ever saw." . Twice Told Tales Hurt His Feellngs. T.ytway, the butcher, had been very busy for a few moments with a well-known dictionary, Suddenly he closed it With & snap and glowered at his wife in the cash desk. “That Mrs. Smarte growled. . “What's the matter?’ asked the good lady, sur- prised at this criticism of a good customer. is getting too clever,” ho “T've just looked up the word,” went on the in- furiated man, “and the dictionary says that ambus- cade means ‘to lie in welght! "—Chicago Herald. Seeing Through Obstructio He was very fond of playing jokes on his wife, and this time he thought he had got a winner. “My dear girl," he sald, as they sat at supper, “‘just heard such a sad story of a young girl today. Thev thought she was going blind, and so a surgeon operated on her and found-—" “Yea?' gasped his wife, breathlessiy. “That she'd got a young man in her eye!" ended the husband with a chuckle. For a moment there was silence. Then the woman remarked, rlowly: “Well, it would all depend on what sort of a man it was. Some of them she could have seen through easily enough!"—8t. Louls Post-Dispatch. The Knights of Labor picnio at Haseall's park furnished enjoyment to fully 3,000 people. The prize for the best lady waltser, a fine gold watch, was won by Miss Mary Casey, and James C. Mahoney carried away the gold-headed cams as the best gentlemaw waltser; Stevenson Lrothers carried away the three- legged race prize, and Charles Meldren took a silver water pltcher for belng swiftest in the sack race. Omaha letter carriers handled 187,408 pleces of mail matter during Jume. Ground was broken for the new St Paul depot, Just west of the present depot, corner Thirteenth and Webster. The work of grading Farnam street preparatory te paving it with Sloux PFalls granite commenced this morning. Miss Pearl Tomlinson, the well known teacher, will apend the vacation with her family at Hastings. Superintendent James has gone to Saratoga to at- tend the natiomal! educational convention. other | Samuel Burne and children returned from the Crete - | Sunday sehool meeting, where they spent ten duys, — unma.um-:mu-». tare relegate open, standup fighting to history and romenes and give glowing accounts of the future chautauqua assembly of the west. H. G. Stripe and family. and John L Redick, son m«mn"-umuu ™ n: JULY 11, 1915. MUSINGS OF A CYNIC. It's an easy matter to nall a lie, you can't always keep it down. 1t's all right to rise the world don’t go up by the skyrocket route. but in but The age of miracles may have passed, but many a man turns night into day. Many a man's idea of economy is to save the pennies and spend the dollars Bome people waste entirely too much time waiting for the unexpected to hap- Tt 1sn't 8o bad to take things as they come, If you only know what to do with them. We are always inclined to be lenfent with the faults of people who are bigger than we are. No man acquires the secret of popular- ity unless he has learned to keep his troubles to himgelf. For one man who is too good for his job there are a thousand whose jobs are too good for them, Many a man who can hear Pleasurs whisper a mile away can't hear Duty when it shouts in his ear through a mega- phone. The people who want thelr money to £0 a long way generally have some diffi- culty in letting it go at all.-New York Times, l TABLOIDS OF SCIENCE. An Ttalian university professor claims to have found radium in ordinary dew. Paper flywheels are coming into use. The tensile strength of paper is enor- mous. Blue vells preserve the complexion, he- cause they diminish the effect of the scorching rays of light. Burned but a few years ago as useless rubbish, there now is a wide demand for the waste from Spain's cork factories. Artificial sponges are made by treating paper pulp with chloride of lime, adding common salt, drying and pressing Into desired forms. Bullding Inspector C. €, Knox of Youngstown, O., claims that great pre- cautions should be taken in the construc- tion of chimneys, as he maintains that 2 per cent of all fires in the city are caused by defective chimneys. Monel metal, ‘an alloy resembling nickel, will probably replace steel and bronze for the construction of yachts. It is tougher than nickel steel, does not corrode and retains its brightness. Aluminum, the lightest of yacht plates, lasts only & short time in contact with salt water. Fuller's earth is used principally in bleaching, clarifying or filtering fats, greases and oils; it {s not now much em- ployed for fulling cloth, the use from which it obtained its name. It is also used In the manufacture of pigments for printing wall pape: for the detection of certain coloring matter in some food products and as & substitute for talcum powder. # AROUND THE CITIES. Spencer, Ia., is sprucing up with two miles of paving. ‘Topeka has 1,000 golf enthusiasts. Every one making the nineteenth hole wins a ration of ginger beer. Chicago's school budget for 1915 totals $13,816,268, leaving a deficit of $1,438,283 be- tween income and outgo. St. Louls boast of a tobacco factory employing 5000 persons and turning out $5,000,000 of chewable quids a year. ‘Tulsa’s only woman pauper at her death was found to have $300 worth of good Oklahoma land and $400 concealed in her hair, Emporia is up and doing in the Kan- Bas way. r on cigarets is about to be declared and prosecuted with the usual vigor. One family in every twenty-five in Brooklyn owns an automobile. This is one of the reasons why Brooklynites are on the jump. An Inspection of Sioux City's finances by a state officlal drew out scme sharp criticlsm of municipal waste. Being an old story the city council just laughed Cleveland has the meanest ever. Hao squealed on the Printers’ club and caused a raid on the club rooms which netted : nice assortment of beer and other fluid stimulutors Boston's new custom house tower I8 the brightest thing In the old town at night. It does not illuminate Boston's curves (o a satisfying extent, but at a distance it become a beacon of light for mariner or landiubber. Springtield, Mo., thought it was entitled to a cut in electric light rates. When the attempt was made the federal court was uppealed to and held up the plan for inquiry meanwhile requiring the object- ing company to give bond to refund the excess If the cut rates are upheld. — SIGNPOSTS OF PROGRESS. Peru was the first nation to add in- struction in aviation to its public school currioulum, The government of New Zealand is re- placing its wooden telephone poles and letter boxes with reinforced concrete ones. A dictating phonograph has been in- vented to enable a military aviator to record his observations and still have his hands free. A century ago a worRman with tools of that time could make 5,000 pins s day. Now, with modern machinery, & work- man can turn out 15,000,000 The Peruvian congress has authorized the construction of a raliroad from the present most easterly terminus In that country to the head of navigation on the Amazon piver. Dumps near Cripple Creek are heing re- worked and are yieldiag from 3§ to 310 & ton in precious metals. In the early days ore assaving was thrown away. The most northerly electric lighting plant In Asia is at Yakutek, 2000 miles from & raflroad. It remains completely shut down In summer, but during the winter the dally load factor fs extremely high. Recent sales by the United States gov- ornment totaling 126,000,000 feet of saw timber in the Olympie national forest in western Washington mark the opening of this hitherto inaccesaible storehouse of timber, estimated to contain & siand of 21,000,000.000 board feet The largest and heaviest upright drill | ever made in the United States for for- elgn trade was shipped from Worcester to England to be used in the manufacture of war implements. The drill weighs 000 pounds, and its height from the floor to the top of the upper cone is nine feet ten inches. 1t drills to the cen- ter of &% inches and #% inches. The required floor space for the drill s 34 inches by W7 inches lese than 30 & ton ! | || People and Events Canada Is in position to sympathize with Switzerland. American tourists are few and far between, and summer hotels are as lonesome as an abandoned ceme- tery. The Bankers' cluh of New York City will 6ccupy three floors in the new Equit- able building and the furnishings will cost 750 000, A plle style becomes stylieh piles. President Dan Willard of the Baltimore | & Onio, impressed by hard tuck story, took him under the offl- elal wing, fed, bathed and clothed him and was about to give him a working start when the youngster started down a sidetrack and dismppeared A New York widow, suing for damages for the death of her husband in a rail way accldent, told of the expensive par- ties he gave for her and her friends. The fact that no affinity decorated the soclal #cenery convinced the jury that he was a good one and fixed his value at $26,000 | The supreme court of Missouri 1s in the | spotlight once more. 1t rules that a county official who does his own janitor work, when tse county fails to provide the service, can charge for the extra job and collect the bill, too. Here is where efficiency gives economy the dim lamp. Springfield, Mass, reverences Liberty bell, but its enthusiasm centers on a forty-nine-pound copper rooster perched on the top of the spire of the First church. The rooster came over from England in 170 and has successfully de- of fied the elements for 166 years. A game rooster that » Zink miners of Joplin, Mo., observing the owners rolling in the wealth of doubled prices, demanded a share of the profits in wages and were denounced as knockers of prosperity. In forty-eight and prosperity resumed its march on Dbetter terms Occastonally a layman stalls a court with a bunch of logic. Henry M. Jones of Quincy, Mass,, fined $100 for operating sn aircraft without a license, protested that he could not qualify for a license until he practiced flying. That seemed 1o strike the judicial spot and the fine was suspended for three months, That thousands of women may find their way into the workshops of the Bes- wsemer Pig Iron association before the war is over, s the opinfon of J. G. But- ler, jr., its president. 1Te says there is certain to be a shortage of men, and that naces and mines, doing thelr work. During a recent cash donation party in & church a‘ Muaskogee, Okl., the nnflmu’ Rev. Robert Van Meiggs, ~ontributed to| the galety of the occasion by turning a handspring out of the pulpit for every $25 put Into the box. He repeated the performance a score of times and did each flop with such cloquent skill that not a leaf of the open Bible fluttered. a young man's| hours the owners cvoled off, coughed up | women can work in the mills, blast fur- | DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES: Father,” said the small boy, “what are delusions of grandeur? My s=on, they are what would cause almost any mar to be considered in- sane it he were 8o indis up to them In public.’ Star Roclety Dame—Oh, doctor, I'm so serely troubled with ennuf! Doctor<H'm! Why don't you interest yourself in finding out how the other half fivee? Soclety Dame—Gracious' Why, I'm not looking for a divorce!—Chicago News. Bt. Reter—What was your occupation on earth? Spirit—Robber St Peter—Ice, American. conl or gas?—Baltimore Firet 8he- My husband says that owing to the war capital is timid Becond She—~Yes, when mine has any he grows pale every time 1 kiss him.— Chicago Herald. | \ | | “That's the way with a man." . 1 sald his_life for me “Well,” he would lay down “And now he grumbles when 1 ask fhim to lay down & carpet.”—~Kansas City Star. An elderly woman who was extremely stout was endeavoring to enter a street ear when (he conductor, noticing her dif- ficulty, said to her: “Try sideways, wavs The woman looked up breathlessly and d madame; try slde sai | “Why, bless ye, T ain't got no side- ways. '~ Ladies' Home Journal. THE BRAVE AT HOME. Thomas Buchanan Read. The maid who binds her warrior's sash With smile that well her pain dissem- es, The while beneath her drooping lash One starry teardrop hangs and trembles | Though heaven alone records the tear, | ,/And Fame shall never know her story, Her heart has shed a drop as dear As e'er bedewed the fleld of glory. The wife who girds her husband's aword, "Mid little ones who weep or wonder, And bravely speaks thé cheering word, What though her heart be rent asunder, | Doomed nightly in her dreams to hear The bolt, death around him rattle, Hath shed as sacred blood as e'er Was poured upon the field of battle The mother who conceals her gr While to her breast her son she p Then athes a few brave words brief, K{ssing ‘the patriot brow she blesses. With no one her secret God To know the pain ti L welghs upon her r the sod | Sheds holy blood as e' R field of honor. | Received on Freedom! Every one who s awake to his opportun ity will invest his money in a genuine diamond NOW-—while pric in probability are lower they ever will be again. If you wish to Invest $25 in a diamond, Yyou can do so and pay only $250 a month. If you wish to invest $50, the monthly payment is only $6. A §i5 dia- mond costs but $7.50 a month, or a $109 easy plan of payment you can buy NOW while prices are down and get the bene- fit of all future advances. hesitate to open an account. men testify to the fact that they never made a dollar till they asked for credit, watch, Eigin tham or 25 -year g teed double &obd filled adjusted to Only $12.75. Open Dally Till 8 l‘:l.! or wr{h for cal JOFTI r. log No. 903. Phone Hamp- den movement, in perature isochron- ism and positions. $1 a Month M.; Saturday TII 9:30. 1144 and salesman wil call, | Natlonal' Credit Jeweles beauty is easy at $10 a month. By this , Wal- uaran- strata case, tem- Douglas A meet your req will he more and you will THE BEE We offer: 222 Cholce office Suite, for doctors or deutists; waiting room and private office; 530 square feet....845 00 822 Cholee office Suite, north iight, very desirable | for doctors or denti private offices; | 601 Nice cool office with stairs; tor \ Apply to Building THE BEE | Talk to any of our tenants satisfaction they all feel in ““The building that is always new" 630 square feet. .. -$45.00 electric light fr small choice-- but very choice offices | There are only a few from which to, choose, but if any nirements, youm than satisfied. find the great e in BUILDING north light, very desirable waitl room and two v ult, near elevator and 210 square feet— one $18.00 Sup't, Room 103. BUILDING -

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