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v THE OMAHA DAILY BEE — = —— FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishin ~Cvompn\y. Proprietor, BEE BUILDING, FARM ND 81 Wntered at Omahs postoffice as mecond-class matter. | TERMS OF BUBSCRIPTION Ry carrier month por > Preninz_ without Sunday. Sunday Bee only.... . gotapss BIOs stag ) Bead notice of change of address or complaints irrepularity in delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation Department. By mail PEr year. .00 4.00 em | 4.0 8 REMITTANCE, Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only twoe oent stamps recelved in payment of all ae- ocounts, Personal checks, except on Omaha &nd eastern ange, not accepted. OFFICES. ha~The Bep Hullding uth Omaha~38 N street Counell Bluffs—14 North Main street. Lincoln—2% Little Buflding. 0—0071 Ch Hearst Buliding Ne ork—Room 1108, 36 fl h avenus . Lovia-—-58 New Fank of Commerce. shington—1% Fourtesnth 8t, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE, P ———————— e e e e Jeatl alati AL B S Bee. Haitoridl Bepartment. JUNE CIROULATION, 53,646 Sta/ Nel County of Douglas, es: Bwieht Willtasha. ircalation triaker of The Bes Publishing company. felng duly sworn. waye rat the ge circulation for the month of June, 1515, was DWIGHT WILLIAMSE, Cireulation Manager, '?': r;c nce and sworn to before of Jul 915, BERT HUNTER, Notary Publie Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee malled to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. oty 0 e Thought for the Day Selected by Mrs. Blanche L. MeKelvy Here's @ #igh to those who love me, And a smile to those who hate; And, whatever sky's above me, Here's a heart for every fate.—~Byron, Welcome, and again welcome, to the Saen- gerbund! eemmm—— The party who inguired, “Is it hot enough for you?” has no pressing need of & nerve tonic, Se————— The hole in the bottom of the Adriatic Sea, hitherto neglected, is fiow being decorated with battleship junk.q S— Colonel Roosevelt and Colonel Bryan are both on the Pacific const. No wonder Mount Lassen ceased spouting. v S————— All mollycoddles still st large had better ke to the bomb-proof cellars and keep out of slght till the war is over. ~ Mexico City has once more changed hands. scorg between the Carranzaists and the p seems to be tied. “The most important duty devolving upon playground instructors is to teach “safety * first, last and all the time. SEm—————— so much '‘keep-it-dark” business about in the Dundee treasury? As a matter of fact, is it not now a hole in ‘the Omaha | ‘. — ~ Among the “Made-in-Amarica goods” shipped - abre in the last eleven months are $41,000,- 3 worth of motor cars. There Is not a joy ride > Emme——— “The mills of the gods grind exceedingly " according to tradition, The lncrease in tax gatherers already insure a ings and sites, why should the board pile on an additional $25,000 of under pretense that it is needed for the purpose? : EEp——— It bas been discovered that under a new law registered nurses must be at least | years old. If this were a man-made law, fortunately it is not, some ulterior motive be suspected. > Se——— According to Washington advices, our latest | ote to Germany is intended to put an end to debate. Unlike hig predecessor, our present of state evidently belleves in the con- ot conversation. 3 g —— Some day in the more or less dim and dis- future Omaha will have municipal civil whereby city employes who have only or clerical work to perform will secure hold their jobs solely on a merit basis. : * S —— THE No Improvement in Mexico, The American Red Cross makes report that it cannot afford relief to the starving people of Mexico because of the operations of the “armies” in that country. Neither Carranza nor .Villa shows the slightest concern for his suffering fellow countrymen. They have given but slight | attention to the appeal from President W.lson | that they get together, which was accompanied by a warning that something might be dome from the ontside to tranquilize Mexico If the warring factions failed to agree on plane to establish a responsible government, It is quite easy to understand why Villa, who Is just now on the loser's end, might seek to provoke intervention, but why should Carranza risk this danger to his designs? It has been rumored that Carranza is represented by an Omaha man as his hired préss agent, and that | the latter is trylng to make the path to White House favor easy for the “first chief.” What- | ever foundation this report may have need not be seriously consillered at this time. The fact { is that conditions in Mexico are not improved, | but seem to be worse, if anything, sand the time for a definite policy in Mexican matters cannot be long deferred. The Price of Progress. Omaha is confronted with the biggest aggre- gate tax levy for the coming year ever put upon | ite records, We are to have the biggest school | levy, the biggest city levy and the biggest water district levy ever made. The ostensible reason for this spurt in the tax rate is the achieve- ment of Greater Omaha, because in anticipation of merger Dundee and South Omaha both hastened to spend the larger part of a year's | revenues in six months, leaving the running ex- | penses for the rest of the year to be made up by & draft on the future, We take it that this is the price of progress, | and that if we are to have a city of approxi- mately 170,000 people we must pay the bills for the expense of & municipal household upon that scale. At the same time we belleve we voice the sentiment of the taxpayers In serving notice on the officials of the various taxing bodies that they must not take this exceptional condition a a precedent for future operations. The fact that we must raise this tremendous amount of money by taxes for the coming year must not be permitted to lead us into needlessly expensive habits or to stop efforts to hold the public out« lays down to the lowest limit of economy com- patible with efficlent service. While the price of progress must be paid, it is not necessary to poay two prices, Great Britain and the Cotton, The British Board of Trade's ruling that cotton now held by the British navy will be con- fiscated brings a more serious aspect to the | guestion of neutral rights, pending between the | United States and Great Britain. No dispute exists as to the right of a belligerent to seize contraband, or to confiseate material destined to an enemy nation. That is an established point, but what right has the British Board of Trade to predetermine the destination of goods shipped from one neutpal country to another? In the case of the intercepted cargoes of cotton, a8 of the meats, the consignees are at neutral ports, and in order to make even a showing of right to interfere, the British authorities are required to assume that the ultimate destination of the goods held is to an enemy. Perhaps it is true that Germany is obtaining war supplies from the outside; so are the Allles. With this fact admitted, shipments from one neutral to another still bear on their face ex- emption from selzure and confiscation. Deten- tion of neutral cargoes by Great Britain is ille- gal, regardless of the order in council, and this is admitted by Premier Asquith, in effect, though not:in exact terms, Strict pursuance of the rule laid down by the Board of Trade for dealing with detained cotton cargoes will not ald the cause of the Allles. \ | — \ “Children Have Lots to Learn.” Our new supervisor of stematized play” says Omaha kiddies have lots to learn; so also have the teachers. Hig assistants report they are having much trouble in teaching the elllr dren to play the games that are prescribed in the new code, which sets up games with rules for the guldance of the youngsters. In days gone by the ehild was allowed to get as close to uature as possible in the summer time. ° door play then togk on the expressive forms of primal instinets, the natural impulse was the guide and the untrammeled imagination the in- spiration. It was good, healthy fun, even If it were not “sclentific” or “efficient.” Now, the oifspring of civilized parents are to be “‘super- ‘ | vised" in their play, and thelr bent to savagery is to be trained into channels of order and ai- rected effort. This may be good for the kids, but many a strong man will bless the fate that delivered him from having his swimming hole managed by a lady supervisor. Reports reaching the office of the superin- tendent of public instruction are to the effect | (hat Nebraska cqunties are rapldly reorganizing | their school districts under the new laws, passed | last winter. In Buffalo county four new rural | high school buildings are almost ready for the | beginning of the fall terms, and mpny districts have been consolidated, so as to make more | | compact and solid divisions for school work. | One county is reported to be proceeding so fast | on the work of consolidation as to necessitate a Lkalt being called. That this reformi was needed has been™ (r parent for many years, but it took some time to | convince the lawmakers that Nebraska, while | Under the New School Law. | ! and admioistration. The new laws are ot the final word on the topic, but they are a start in better understood it will be possible to make needed amendments to secure the best of results, Nebraska has u splendid endowment for its niggardly In the matter of expenditure for guu- cational purposes, therefore it is desirable that Nebrasks have the best of schools, fallure which can ‘only be charged to the people them- THURSDAY, JULY 09 1915. Hlair Trbune: ordinated history and in s doing has The achool has sub- found time to put In a course lnundry work. We belleva in vocational training, all right, but just where to #top with this line is a question that will have to be settled some time in the not far distant future. That the step taken by the Omaha school board in adopting this Jast fad s going too far, s hard to say, yet we would venture to wager that the average mother would be mighty glad to give her daughter Omaha High | @ few lessons along this line right at home No doubt, too, #he could give her some valuable hints that weuld, with a little practice, not only be of benefit to her in after lifs, but also take away part of that backache that is felt by the mother after a hard day's wash Try It, giris Get up early and practice for about two hours before school one day each week. The amount of knowledge gained In that two hours' work will be surprising. Tekamah Journal: Some people who attended the auto races In Omaha July 6 complain that it was a rather tame affalr. We presumg that thoy would come home satisfled ¥ they had seen two or three smashups and a pumber of peopla killed Friend Telegraph: There may be glory sufficlent for the Omaha Bee, the Omaha Commercial club, and In fact nearly all Omaha, in booming the Lineoln highway over all the others, but we fall to undere stand Just how they are going to get any glory out of it. The tourists who journey over the boomed Lincoln highway will never travel over It again after they have been over the O-L-D route. Such Insignifi- cant booming hurts in the long run, a fact which Omaha ought to fully understand. Loup City Times-Independent. Steps are being taken to land the next democratic national convention at Omaha next year. This would be some big stunt for Omaha to pull off, but that town has got the right make-up to pull it off in the best of shape, and we should surely be delighted to have it come to the great stats of Nebraska Blair Tribune: Joe Etecher is the man of the hour and every paper is loud in his pralse., That he is a | wonder and has the strength of a muls and the sup- plencas of a wild cat there can be no doubt, but of all the fool comparisons that we have yet noted is one recently made In the Omaha World-ferald, where it compared his athletic skill to the brain power of W. J. Bryan. We have long known of the an- tipathy of the owner of the World-Herald to Mr Bryan, but for him to allow dn intellect trained be years of preparation and study to be brought down to an accident of brawn and muscle endowed by nature | without the necesaity of effort: well, to say the least, It 1& a joke, an insult to intelligent people. Columbus Telegram: In Omaha, Kearney and Hast- ings efforts are belng made to compel school boards and city coune'ls to quit the “executive session habit. 1 am not familiar with the crooked work alleged to have been transacted (n “executive sessions™ in Omaha, Kearney and Hastings, but I offer to the victima the suggestion that no eity éouncil nor board of education has any license under the law to hold any such thing an ‘‘executive eession,” from which any citizen o be exeluded, and if the people of these citles really desire to kill the “executive sion' erime they can do it quickly with the club of the law. Ask the court to compel your councila and | your sehool boards to transact business in publio, and the court will instantly tell your public servants that thelr masters (the people) have a right to know what the servants are doing every hour and every minute while transacting publie business, Tf the pub- llg servants shall desirg to go inte “executive session’ for the purpose of trdnsacting private business that will be thelr prerogative, but to har the doors against any ollisen while public business is being considersd ~well, that sounds very much like the talk of the hired girl whose mistress found the maid In ‘‘ex- ecutive session” with her husbapd. Twice Told Tales Chance for Spe The teacher of a night school In Chicago was en- deavoring to istill in the minds of wome of the dis. couraged pupils rome notlons of ambition. \ “Do you know, he asked a seedy looking boy of X “do you know that every lad fn this country has a chance to be president?* “Is that se?’ asked the geedy one, reflectively. Then he added: “Say, I'l| sell my chance for 10 cents."—New York Times. The Cook Crook. Edith Wharton, the novellat, was talking In New York about French housekeeping. “The one, Arawback,” she said, “is that your cook does your marketing. She markets for cash, too. The result ia a very frank kind of cheating. I sald onoe to & cook in Paris: Now, if you are strictly honest, 1'll give you 3 france extra at each month's end. What do you say ' “The cook hesftated, then she answered: “ 'l think It over carefully, madam, and let you know my decislon this evening. you Was It & Dark Horse? An exbookmaker tells this one: One day in the palmy days of horse racing, he was operating a book at one of the western racetracks, There had been considerable betting on the thid race of the day and just before post time an excited rural-looking individual rushed up to the stand with a roll of bills in his hand. The man shouldered sevoral fol- lows out of line and posted himeelf in front of the stand, but then seemed to lose himself in his re. “Well, come om' exclaimed the bookmaker. “Don’t stand there. Who do you want to bet on™ sikhed the man, *T can't tell you. It's —Loulsville Times Averse Slang. Just to show how mich averse to slang he was, & small boy In & Chicago school explained to the teacher one day that he had been walking with a friend, but neglected to take off his hat when they met a lady they both knew. kis friend nudged him, and whispered: “Take off your id, you simp!" “What he should have sald,” “was ‘Remove your hat, you nu A secret.” The general pentiment s summed up fn the words of & small boy, “Anywa who ventured this: it's only roughnecks who use slang People and Eveats A manifestation of Belglan gratitude comes to To- ledo through Minister Brand Whitlock. It is & Van Dyke palnting representing “St. Martin Cuttng His Mantle and Sharing It, With a Peor Man." Some Texans are emulating the Bedfo.d, Ta., dix- @ors of treasure trove. The fabled “ioty of Santa Anna, supposed to lave been buried in the Lone Star state some el hty years ago, har provoked another search for the Mexican leader’s loot. Hear ye, victims of the autumn sneese! The an- | nual convention of the Netlonal Hay Fever assocla- | tion will be held at Beliulehem, N. H., September 2. at the front in the actual matter of literacy, was | Advance assurances a‘e given that the program con- tar behind in the way of school organization | lemplates serfous wscussion No funny business will be tolerated. In & “sight unseen” chance in the matrimonial lottery Aaron Friedman of Chicago drew & bride the right direction, and when their operation is | with a vooden leg and wants a divorce to get rid of barraln, As the bride s dad s well-to-do, Aaron insists that he le entitled to punitive damages for the shack of the dlscovery. A probatecourt administemtor of Chicago, having school system, and its people have never beew.’| decamped with the funds of widows and orphans, caused & belated overhaullng of the business and the discovery of four more administrators short. The latter have heen allowed to make up thelr deficite 10 | 4nd thelr nares are withheld, Two co-eds In o West Virginia college caught two burglars ransacking their ropm, beat them to a beg- dashed powder in thelr eyes and fin- out but | | Ihe Pee’s er Those Ben BENBON, Neb,, July 2L—To the Editor of The Bee: I have read at various times statements made by street car officials saying they are losing money on their longer lines, always including the Ben- son line This 18 to be doubted, but assuming it to be true, the loss could be turned into & gain if the company would make a bid for nickels of patrons who are not abso- lutely obliged to use the uncomfortabls, unsanitary and wholly out-of-date cars which they furnish us. The Benson housewife could profitably Go more of her shopping in Omaha, but the thoughts of & disagreeable nour on ne Cars. | the car is of larger consideration than the 10-cent fare. It we were supplied with roomy eross- seats, there would he many & family which would delight in a trolley ride or a trip to various Omaha points. A per- son would indeed have a distorted sense of pleasure to enjoy these long meats | with incoming and out-going passengers |form clear, and plenty of room insk tramping over their feet. Ts it any wonder the conductor finds it an impossible task to keep the rear plat- during the rush hours? % There is none so blind as they who | won't see, and the street car company is blind to the comfort of its patrons, consequently they are paying dividends with the nickels paid only by passen- gers who are obliged te ride, Of course the above suggestion will hold no interest to such characters as A, B, Mickel C. W. M'KAIN, How He Would Teach (he Child, NORTH LOUP, Neb., July 2.—To the Editor of The Bee: How would I teach the child? This is 4 subject of much dis- cussion past and present. The trouble with modern education is that, we are trying to place anclent and modern methods together. The universities are stale. They teach & lot of material in such manner that one muat stay in school always to keep up. Those methods close the higher schools to 90 per cent of the people. The ideal method is to give the pupil & proper training In the primary elements of education with a chance to branch out Into the more advanced, with the advance of years. This cannot be accomplf except by a 11 planned and permanent course of study. But what should the obild be first taught? Many may say letters and the art of spelling and reading, but I think not. I would not burden the child with letters until the age of 7 or 8 Eduecation should begin at a very early age. I would begin with the classieal and instil the classical before reaching the prac- tical Reproduce the words and music on the graphophone by the best talent, and set apart certain hours for the child te listen to the music. Within a few months the child will be able to sing the fifty songw, which will be the atart of its education. 1 would also reproduce the three principal orations of history, on the graphophone, in sections, for the child. Those orations are Cloero on immortality, Oloere on friendship and the address of Socrates to his disciples after he had been con- demned to drink the fatal hemlock. The child will more readily grasp musis and eloquence than any other subjects. Every man, woman, boy and girl should be able to repeat the three most pro. found pleces of eloquence of profane history. When we learn it, the grapho- phone will be first in school. WALTER JOHNSON. That i« the Law Now. OMAHA, July 2.—~To the Editor of The Bee: I favor tax exemption for chureh bulldings (and the lot on which they stand) of all creeds and denominations only when such edifices are used for worvicesa and wership of God. All other property, no matter of what desoription, held in the name of a chureh, ils trustees or olergy, should be put on the tax list. Untaxed church property held for inyestment or as a source of revenue is landlordism. Unless used directly for church services it becomes a commercial proposition, the same as wholesale and factory, or any other kind of bullding or land. If I build a house either in which to live or for revenue, I am taxed for it The same should apply to all church property of every description held for yevenue or money gain. Take tax exemption from such real es tate holdings and the burden of the tax would be less heavy for the poor man who 18 trying by every means within buman effort to pay for his lfttle home w. The Test of Christian Solence, OMAHA, July 31.—To the Editor of The Bee: It is & pleasure to undertake to snswer “‘Bible Student,” inasmuch as & scholar is always Interested in logical sequende and is no: averse to breaking away from interpretations which have only age to commend them. His premise occurs last, therefore we will begin at the bottom of the article and read up. Premise: Adam's trans- greasion brought sin and death into the world, thereby making necessary a re- deemer, and Mrs. Eddy attempts to show “that the Bible story of the fall of Adam was & le." Now, if we shatter the premise, it is going to make trouble for the conclusion, 18 it not, Two and two make five is & lle, but the child who makes the mistake is not & Jiar. That the Bible records the Ife #bout man reflects only upon us if we %0 to grasp the significance of the apiritual and material accounts of crea- tion—the true and the false—the good and the evil. The first chapter of Genesis and three verses of the second give the spiritual eccount of creation. ‘“‘And (Elohim) saw everything that “He Aad made and behold it was very good.” Gen. 1:81, Then follows the material account of creation, in which the Lord God (Jehovah) makes man from the dust of the ground. But previpusly Elohim had created man in His own image. Both accounts cannot be trug. A dust man Is not the image and likeness of God. Mre. Eddy did not discover the two ac- counts of creation. Biblé students have always recognized them, but the theolo- Stans unlawfully yoked them together and hitched them to the gospels, and the Bidle studonts looked on helplessly be- cause they @id not know what to do about it. Mra. Bddy did, and it makes her book, “Sclence and Health” u key to the Sceiptures. Let us vead up on this aud on the article of “Bible Student’ to where he Quotes from 1 Johm 4:l, “Try the apivits Wwhether they are of God,” and. instead of going back to the fall of Adam, which has nothing to do with the case, we will accept the test Jesus made for himselt when Jobu sent his messengers to find out whether he was sent back word, ‘“Pell John what things ye have seen and heard; how that the biind see, the lame walk, the lepers ar cleansed, the deaf . the dead aic raised, to the poor the gospel s preached.” Christian Scientists accept this test in glans of the middle ares. CARL E. HERRING, Let Feminine Fans Reolproosts, OMAHA, July 2L—To the Editor of The Bee: The feminine fans of Omaha and vicinity will have an opportunity on | Boosters' day, August 6, to show Mr Rourke how they appreciate his courtesy to them. He has made It possible for them to enjoy mapy pleasant afternoons every summer and surely they will do no than help make Booster day a &rand success, MRS ADAMS, 1517 Ontarie St. A Poetio OMAHA, July 2. Ber Oh, Mickle, O Mickle, You sure are a joke, With your one bound of beefsteak And tobacco te smoke, When you lay down to dle, And are through with this strife, What [ Jolly good time for kiddles and wife. To the movies they'll go, And the beefsteak they'll eat, When you throw up the sponge And take your last sleep. Think it over with And turn soon that That will give to your The joys and belief That “Dad is all right, And we're glad that He's better alive Than piled on a bier" iration, e Editor of The 1, family SUNNY GEMS. | Mr. Gottrox—~My danghters, youn: 3 | are both worth their 'l'?‘nht 1ny(n|ds ATy t I am asking Crawford—What's that ual - tion crank working on me;M = Patricia—Quite irl sy a girl you had at the ml’eumd—?eh a peach. Knew the game, 0. Patricla~Well, she o0t to. She hasn't missed one in Tiinsed twenty years,.—Cornell "“The clothes don't make the “Mehbe not,' replied Farmer Corntos- sol. “But a lot of our summer bearders wouldn't think 1 was a regular farmer it T didn't grow chin whiskers every {Ering and wear my panta ticked in my boots. —~Washington Btar. “What's the matter with that bathing #uit?" asked the impolite man “‘Oh,"” replied the serene woman, “‘evi- den it f& a success. 1 was tryving to make it 80 ugly that no one would raise the slightest objection te it."—Washing- ton Star. The moving pletures of a train wreck were startlingly realistic. “Who do you suppose that man is who s running with all his might toward the disaster?” asked ome auditor of a ecom- nion 1 am not sure,” lied the other, “but I'll bet cookle i u"! fi-m sult law- yer."'—Judge, OUT OF CONDITION. J. M. Lewis, in Houston Post. 1 ne:-r will admit I'm old, but holy Last e kids wore playing tas lay ‘with them, ar ¢'s what 1 did; gy Whm‘:ver l'l,ll amongst the kids I try t a kid; And Dubby stood at my right hand, an rgare! ore, 'yes-o'-Blue and Touslehead a 1o And away, or more, And Georgia stood polsed for flight, « fairy would who knew That she could dart as swallows dart and skim the drops of dew. ! Iput on speed and followed t her Margaret ran in between W And s0 I ran for ow green, And then T thikk ‘twas Georgia who came Eé tween, 1 Georgla, or thought 1 Young Dubby came 'on..d' ran between with ch & That "l!‘ : not a bl'lpn.? use in running And my legs were wobbly and eyes "! growing dim. oo b And so 1 L, #0 1 flopped down on | not ke their galt, m. nll =:t ::nn! il My The ulwx‘é{n lyl poured, and down And still t eNlSun ran as frosh as when the game began' I'm just as you soul's ‘The moon, \ fields of June, Just a8 sweet I'm %(m ruv{. m.? E.idl. to run And Eyes-o'-. 4 Touslehe: a e l.y:n ue an: ehead. an ing yet. o, Atargaret across the IE l_dé_l_ Summer €rabshaw—A machine that will enable | A woman to Jace her own shoes.—Judge, | as 'y are young, my | ot ng. its unadulterated stmplicity and prefer it | to the labored movements of the theolo- | | | | The expectant mother revolves in her mind all we un- derstand by destiny. And It is of the utmost importance that her physical _comfort be our first thought. There is & most splendid rem- ody for this purpose, imown as “Mother's Friend.” It is applied ©''er the muscles of the stomach nn:r rubbed and at once peneirates to leve all e on meves, Sovds Dpamests eng ol parts involved. 1t makes the muscles 0 of the expectant mother is a ful influence since a calm and must have a wonderfully beneficial impress upon the coming child. Get & of “Mother's Friend” of any druggist and you will realize why #0 many women declare it to be the most helpful remedy they know of. Write today to Bradfield Regulator Co., 702 Lamar Bidg, Atlanta, Ga., for a splendid book of great interest and value to every ex- pectant mother. Among the letters of interest in this book one says, in part, “Seven years ago I sulfered from Wednesday to Saturday and had to bave instruments. This time I was sick only three hours. 1 want to tell all that I can not praise ‘Mother's Friend' high enough for the ood it did me, as I had an ecasy time and the baby was perfect. I will always speak & good word for It o N ppre ®omm sonHoteld i Chicago il EveryRoomwitha Bath .50 fo 5% Dauble Home of the BostonOysterHouse i e £t o . vt eer. Dine in the Dutch Grill DR oo iy i ks, The Hotel of Perfact Service tect Yowrse Ask for HORLICK'’S . The Original MALTED MILK Or You May Get a Substitute Ihe Nourishing Food-Drink ror All Ages All Fountains Take a — Druggists, Package Home LEHIGH VALLEY ANTHRACITE THE COAL THAT SATISFIES More Heat — Less Ash—No Smoke — Ask Your Dealer. Office Building The office building furthest np the hill, gets the best air, and with the outlook an the beautiful Court House plaza and its own spacious court; there is no more ho We offer: Room §40—9x20. delightful place in whith to work in summer than THE BEE BUILDING Its popularity is shown by the fact that offices offered are very few indeed. Some of these may meet your need, er, better than any in the building. would be well t5 look them over, or, if we have not what you want, we will place you on our walting lst, We think it Room 223 —Cholee office suits, north light, very desirabl doctors or dentists; waiting room aad wi.v::: office; 530 square feet ..............845.00 Room @Q1—Nice cool office with vault, near elevator and statrs; electric light free, 210 square feet $18.00 Water; partitioned into private office and bas large doubles east windows; 180 square feet .. .. APPLY TO BUILDING SUPERINTENDENT, ROOM 108, THE BEE BUILDING