Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 23, 1915, Page 6

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¥ S THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor. BER BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matt TERMS OF EL'HBCRIF’H”N y carrier By mail per month. Per year. .88c.. e 88,00 notice Fin t REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, express or postal order. oent stamps Treceived In paym: ot m:n'nm checks, except on a and east: not accepted. OFFICES. The Bullding. Omaha—3i8 N street | Blufts—14 North Main street. in—2% Little Buflding. Hearst Buliding jew York—Room 1105, 286 Fifth avenue. Lovia. 48 New Bank of Commerce. ‘ashington—73% Fourteenth 8t, N. W, CORRESPONDENCE, communications rdm% to news and edl« mfl& to Omaha Bee, Nditorial Department. | JUNE CIRCULATION, 53,646 of Nebraska, County of Douglas, as: t Willlams, circulation manager of The Bee u‘ comrcnn being duly sworn, says that the circulation for the month of June, 1515, was r, WIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. P, 7 ho‘w’“meo and sworn to before RBSEAT HUNTER, Notary Public. of change addr in delivery to Omah THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JULY an 1915. The Newest Note to Germany. | Relying on the accuracy of the synopsis given to the press, the newest note to Germany sots forth explieltly what America expects in | the matter of safety at sea, in terms tWat are French Women and War Springfield Republican. of A vivid pleture and tribute to the women of applicable to all the belligerents, and comse- | w0 10 siven in a letter from Raymond Sabou- quently not meant for Germany alone. These | raud, the great specialist, to a Springfield physician. requirements do not interfere with the prosecu- | It fs written under date of Paris, June 2, as fol- " 5 7 _ | lows tion of the wac, but the United States does ob “One result of the war has heen the disappearance ject, and rightfully, to the unnecessary taking | from the streets of certain.types of men and women, of the Mves ‘of innocent bystanders, which 1s the real issue in thercontroversy with Germany. Proposals of the German government for the neutralization of an agreed number of ves- #els to carry passengers and non-contraband car- goes are rejected for reasons already forecasted. Acceptance of such terms would mean giving up our contention for the principle on which our protest is based, The willingness of the United States to act as an intermediary in the settle- ment of any dispute as to rights at sea, or any other phase of the war is made very plain. In fact, the United States has earnestly assured the warring nations from the start of our readi- ness to serve either or all in the restoration of peace. The attitude assumed by this government all along has been that of a neutral nation, striving to maintain a position of impartiality, and at the same time to preserve all our rights under the law of nations. The note now on its way to Berlin may not be the “final word,” for it is quite inconceivable that the experts in the Ger- man foreign office wiil be unable to find a means for prelonging the discussion. fans used to qualify as provinclal. Bveryone goes about his business: there are manifestations of neither Joy nor sorrow; the meneral fmpression given is that there are duties to be done, and that the people are doing them. There are no balls, no receptions aters are little patronized, vanity and worldiness have disappeared. the old ‘relations’ mo longer exist; what dinners there are are of family or intimates, and to such each one brings and each contributes his news, | his opinions, his hopes of the future. The men, un. skilled with thelr fingers, can only talk or listen; the women, in addition to these abilities, are deft in needlework, and sew or crochet, making articles for soldiers or prisoners. Those who have sons at the front work for them, those who are without sons have constituted themselves godmothers to orphan #oldiers from lists furnished for that purpose. And the great joy of such reunions is the reading of a diary which some woman has got from a husbani or son at the front T was at such a reunion the other evening and listened to the reading of the diary of a friend, Major S It contained forty pages, closely write ten, without punctuation, soiled and difficult to read. But what an evening it was! The simple story of a doctor sent from Varis to Mans, and thence to Char- tres; from Chartres'.to Rhelms, the Meuse and on to Belgium; and then the sore and painful retreat back to the Marne; up again and advance, without chance for repose, to arrive exhausted in the Argonne; sent to the rear with his ambulance for a rest, they had Just one day when the order came to again go for- ward, and for twelve days he was present at con- Beomnluti;m of the Wabash. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them, Ad- dress will be changed As often as requested. July 83 Thoaght for the Day Selected by Nancy L. Lewis If £ can case one life the aching, Or cool one pain, Or help one fainting robin Into Ma nest again 1 shall not live in vain. —Emily Dickinson. [ I —————————— The big stick knows no mollycoddle brother, Smme——— ‘Which public service corporation will score an in cutting rates? S— All quiet at Bridgeport, but Bayonne re- mains on the firing line. . SEpm— Cousidering the obstacles, King Corn is do- ficm well, thank you! S—— counts in the game, the million men In the British army must be classed the only satisfaction cotton shippers ‘the ‘war situation is that cotton is' of ing for diplomats. | coal from southern Illinols. None but would deny the Wabash needed m—a Dundee treasury tangle discloses a ness the more It is gone into, Any won- public officlals out there were so dead annexation? tinuous fighting at Albert and Lassigny. Just one thing the diary aid not say, namely, that he had been mentioned in the order of the day and was dec- orated for decision and energy. His wife was one of the party, & mother of three children: maybe she skipped a thrend during the reading, but her hands never stopped Without going into the details of the trans- action, which has the approval of the federal courts, the sale of the Wabash railroad to the reorganization committee indicates that this great system is to be rehabilitated, end made a serviceable factor in the transportation indus- try. The Wabash has had a varied history, with Just one policy consistently pursued, that of turning its earnings into interest to be pald on bonds. A few years ago an ambitious effort to reach eastern . tidewater was seriously under- taken, and a tremendous expense was then in- curred. This costly venture was the beginning of the end of the Wabash under Gould direction, but it was not altogether money wasted, for it has given the road something of a hold in the enst, which will very likely be increased under the new regime. Operating between Omaha and Buffalo, the ‘Wabash traverses a wonderfully rich and pro- ductive region, and, if managed with ordinary prudence and business judgment, it should prove helpful to its patrons and profitable to its own- ers, “I'd like to tell you a few more examptes of fem- inine fortitude, you, dear friend, Who kmow the French women--at least you know some of them— the true French women that the casual stranger never knows; for thougit we have not the gynaceum of the anclents, we have an exclusiveness, a seclusive- ness of family almost equal to theirs; to the stranger in general, to the stranger of every coun- try, the real French woman is an unknown creature, and hence has arisen the native yet grotesque belief, ever mecepted, that the French type of woman is the woman found in pleasure resorts. We suffer, as the Greeks suffered, for two other reasons, the one, be- cause, llke theirs, our women ave fair, and to the traveler the falr are supposed to be easy; the othor because, llke them, we are artistic, and to the ignor- ant of all lands the artistic is voluptuous. “Another woman of our party that evening, Mad. ame S . has two sons at the front; one, Bernard, belonging to a regiment of 8,000, of whom-but seven- teen are left. A short while ago, With the cunning of & redskin, she penetrated the lines up to the heights of Abbeville, determined to see her Bernard before he, too, might join his comrades. She told us her own Odyssey; how she got past the lines to be later sent back, another attempt and arrested, and finally how with the help of several shrewd peasanta, over ruined highways, she reached her destination— and as she told it all, the woolen stockings that she knitted grew apace. E—————— Peace Lover Infected With War Fever, The unique spectacle of a’ peace lover in- fected with war fever is presented by our old trignd, Edgar Howard, in his Columbus Tele- B If there is a more ardent and devoted follower of Mr. Bryan anywhere than Judge Howard, he has not disclosed himself. But here 15 the disciple of the dove of peace, not only de- manding armed Intervention in Mexico, but clam- oring for our foreible and permanent selsure of that country in this fashfon: Long study of the Mexican situation has Induced The Telegram to believe that there is no escape from the call which will carry our flag to a permanent place over all or a part of the Mexican soll. We do not contend that such a move will be right on our “At another such gathering of friends the among us a Mademoiselle B——, a young woman whose father and brother are fighting in th€ Vosge: she almost blew in on us from Rheims, for one can't telograph from Rhelms; what a story she had to tell! Leaving the Mediterranean on the outbreak of the war to offer her services to her friend, the superin- tendent of the Rhelms hospital, she witnessed the grief of the German Invasion, and the joy,of the French return after the Marne. She lived amo! wounded during 160 cays of coaseless bombardment; at Christmas time set up Christmas trees in the cathedral cellars for orphan children. T tell you, my friend, even American womanhood couldn’t show anything to beat this radiant young creature, so gay, #0 alert, 80 vigorous, who had spent the winter almost outdoors, for there wasn't'a pane of glass left in her windows. As contrasting experfences she told of a shell that fell on an empty bed, scattering a rain ot plllow feathers over the court, but alas! the next one killed slx poor wounded devils nearby. As showing that French galty can rise above every gicam, she sald that a favorite practical joke was to imitate, by noreech or whistle, the nolse of an arriving shell, and then laugh at the prudent colleague who threw him. solf on his stomach, And, my friend, there is no laugh more justified, or more true, than his who doe: his’ duty in dread surroundings. She gave my chily dren a bag of shrapnel balls which, she sald, the ohildren of Rhelms use as marbles. “I had at the St. Louls recentiy another type, a French Protestant, stern and puritanical, who wore enormous spectacles, and never traveled without a Bible under her arm. Her wrist had been brokén and a plece of her nose carried away, but she wouldn't awalt a complete restitution to hurry back to the front. Only yesterday there was in my office an aged lady from Versailles, one of those old aristo. crats, of Infinite distinction, bringing a daughter who had broken down under the strain of ambulance work; on interrogation I found she had six sons under the flag—a seventh being still too young, but Intending to join three months hence. Of the six one was killed at Charlerol; two disappeared during those dreadful days of retreat, which you remember lasted from August 22 to 30; one is being nursed at home for a dreadful laceration of the thigh, the other two being well and In the heat of things at Alsace. And she told her story very quietly, meither boast- tully nor in despair, without tears or without melo- drama—just simply. Alas! I could tell you of & couple more patients, victims of brutality or worse, but what's the use now of relating horrors? 1 Xnow of fashionable women who spend their nights the station at Asnleres, serving soup or coffee to the passing wounded: and of one, in particular, who among the wounded, found her own husband ticketed to a d!stant hospital, and who she must let pass while she bravely walted on the next coners. part, but conditions, will impel us, It must be so, or else we muost forever abandon our own Morroe doc- trine. ‘We cannot do that. What next? Nothing less intervention. For two years, at monstrova have had our soldiers at the Rio Grande, with loaded guns In hand, Such a situation cannot continue, Some day an overt aect will precipitate the, long delayed crossing of the river, And then— Well, there cannot be a repetition of the Vera Cruz incident. Belng an advocate of peace, the Tele- gram will be hoping that the evil day may be deferred, but come it must, eventually, - Where, oh where, will Judge Howard recon- cile his program with the Bryan talk-it-over-a- year and eonsent-of-the-governed prineciples? How can the peace bird go around clad in bul- let-proof armor without getting into trouble? E———— Another Dream of “Defense.” , War Is a great provocator of dreams of ‘de- fense as well as of conquest, and under the stimulating presence of armed conflict, genius turng to the devising of new or improvement of" old means of destruction. Within the last year #0 many novelties for offense and defense have been brought forth that little or no attempt has been made to catalogue them, The awful tales that come from modera battlefields might force the conclusion that man had done his utmost in the way of applying thought to the taking of human life and the undoing of all the works of man, but it seems something was left to be de- vised to increase the terror of war and further the possibilities of modern methods for produe- ing, sudden death and general devastation, So here comes an American again to In- crease mafi's capacity for mischief by wedding the airship to the submersible, and with the aid of the wireless, to produce an engine before which the navies of the world are to become worthless. His aeroplane will carry & torpedo, and at a safe distance launch it against its quarry, gulding its course by radio waves, mak- ing certain that the vessel for which it is in- tended will ultimately receive it. Simple, in- deed, and involving no new principle; just & combination of tested methods, and so terrible in its possibilities as to warrant its projector being halled as & genius among his kind, Other inventions of the kind, workable and unwork- able, will doubtless follow, and we may yet reach such a stage of efficacy as will make the present recorded achievements in battle look like the work of mollycoddles. ——— ¢ Dissatisfaction w. the mnew light pate schedule is evidently not {ts failure to reduce, but the fact that in making the reduction some of the preferential inequalities of the old schedule are removed, and & minimum rate es- tablished. The Bee has pever favored a mini- mum rate for either watér or light, but the jus- umnnm:mmum‘ The government is to be commended for tak- ing proper legal action against globe trotters 1o war service; you won't know our hospital, all my assistants and helpers are women and devoted women T know of & farm of 250 meres on the Marne; the young master left with the first call; the young mis- tress, recently marvied, only 20 years old, a Parisian and up to then a soclety woman, an artist and a prize winner at the conservatory: the day following her husband’s departure she took hold of the farm d@nd though there were only women, children and a few old wen to do the work, these maternal flelde are now pushing forth the grain as richly as ever. The women and children you will see in the Hoapital. remember, haven't seen husband or father in tan months, and they are patient, uncomplaining, herole ~they are today making the soul of the soldier, as they have alresdy mnade his body. After the wars with the Medes the Creeks erected an altar. “To the mothers of the soldiess of Marathon I as- sure you there is an opportunity for a noble poem «To the Women of France—but it should be written by one whom the gods inspire, and who knows the language of the gods.” ” People and Events nand Paris today has taken on the aspect that Parls- | “My dear friend, can we help being proud of w®qen | who fill such-roles? and ocalmly, uncomplainingly | and with constancy? And thelr herolsm isn't limited | | | | | The Pees LeHer Brief contributions on timely topios invited. The Bee assumen no responsibility for opimions of correspondents. All letters sub. Ject to condensation by editor. Fads and Freaks. OMAHA, July 22~To the Rditor of The Bee: I saw an item in your newspaper this week that the taxpayers of Omaha thee | Would have to pay taxes on & one hun- dred mill levy next year; that all our taxes will practically be one-third more than this year. This item should make the people in Omaha who pay these taxes sit up and think. The majority of people in business for themgelves in Omaha last year 4d not make much money and this year so far have made less. How, then, wlli these peopls bb able to pay this €enormous increase In thelr taxes and stand up under it? In analyzing this thing 1 do not blame the city cemmissioners bocause I believe they are doing the bost they can, but I believe the trouble is in the way we live and on fad and freak legislation, Omaha s not a New York, Chicago or Philadelphia, but a fairly prosperous city of the smaller middle class. How then can we compete with cities thixt are ten or twenty times our size? It seems to me that Omaha is one of the victims of pald men or women who are sent out by bureaus tn advertise their freak ideas As 1 must not make this letter too long, I can't go Into this matter as fully as I would like, but take, for in- stance, this new thing, the public park and playground jdea. We had to go o Chicago to find a man to teach our kid- dles how to enjoy themselves and pay him, 1 think, $2600 a vear. We also pay five young ladies 1o help him. When I was a boy we went bathing in Cutoff Lake or Picknicking in the park and en- joyment came naturally to us. We aid not have to be taught now to enjoy ourselves Take the present pension system (not old soldiers). everyone seems to want to have a pension, except the poor tax- payer, who walks up to Pill Ure's office twico a year or wore and pays his carn- ing to support these people. ‘1 say if %here s any yensioning going cn let's pension the men and women who have paid taxes all their lives and not people who have d soft jobs and lived oft theso taxpayers' money and have not had to struggle to meet thelr obligations, Take our Board of Education, Are the young men ¢r wumen we are turning out today better able to cope with the world than the ones we turned out twenty yedrs ago? 1 doubt it, thongh 1 will ad- mit that the young women's sphere has inorensod a great deal since then, but compare what it costs and you will find an enormous increase. I would like to have the opportunity to elaborate more,, but it would make this letter too long, but in closing 1 would say that jf the poople of Omaha don’t take a tumble to themaselves soon the cost of ‘'owning & home in Omaha will be such that only & rich man wiil be able to do so. TAXPAYER. © Arthritis a Germ Disease. To “J. C, C.:"" Arthritis is an affection of the joints, and is caused by germs, which may be introduced iuto the circu- lation in any nuiabev of ways, Any bod- ily infection, from a boil on a finger to an abscess of an internal organ, includ- ing an uicerated tooth, which discharges pus, may serve to introduce the germ that eventually will cause arthritis. Where Find the “Stutesmant” OMAHA, July 22.—-To the Editor of The Bee: 1 notice that Charles Wooster of Silver’ Creek refers to the ‘‘paralyzation of American commerce”’ by Great Britain, and it seems to me that Mr. Wooster in his rural seclusion does not know what is tramepiring. 1f he will read the export statistics, he will find that our exports are far greater than they ever wererin- cidentally the proportion .of war muni- tiona therein is small indeed in compar- ison with foodstufffs—and he will find it aittioult to back up his allegation from any standpdint. In another printed letter Mr. Wooster says, “God save thy republic,” in the be- liet that we are in danger because we ha “schoolmaster” and not a “states- man” in the pregidential chair. Where is the “statesman’” to be foundi? Cer- tainly not at Sliver Creek, if Mr. Woos- ter's epistles are a sample of his balance, JOHN RUTHERFORD, M0 Cass St. Losing Sleep for Dread. OMAHA, July 22-To the Editor of The Hee: I've been losing sleep lately from this haunting dread: what would all the hopelessly benighted and mis- gulded Nebraska contributors to your Letter Box do if anything should hap- pen to Horace P. Holmes, M. D, of Sheridan, Wyo? Only fancy if his head should get over-heated from his stren- uous efforts In our behalf during the summer solstice, and’ sofse one admin- istered the ‘“indicated remedy” in the form of coals of fire instead of giving him an allopathic douche with ice water. Why, how on carth could “our worthy United States senator” manage to pro- tect his World-Herald from the naughty, naughty ladies that insist upon shoving meantugless, but lljlm:«loull verses upon that hapless sheet.¥if that practiced med- ical thumb and forefinger were removed forever from the “Public Pulse?’ Really, Mr, Edftor, I think it imperative that B, O. M., Poly Glot, Indignant Wife, Tourist FPrinter and a few other friends and admirers from this column form a commitiee of “Safely First” amnd pro- ceed at once to Sheridan to look after the doctor’s health, and Incidentally re- view that “hatful of letters” to which he so' eloquently refers in his article on “Nom de Plumes.” What a lot of those letters there must be, if we can judge the sizg of the doctor's head by his men- tal emanations. It wouid fil me with joy It 1 could read in the Letter Box & quotation from a single one of those episties that actually has the temerity to urge Dr. Holmes to ‘“retract” any statement or communication in The Bee Not that I doubt in the jeast that there sre dozens of such unheard of roquests, since the doctor states this fact ox- plicitly, But you see I have been fed try from the cradle up, to say nothing of the fact that Nebraska and Missour! are very close nelghbors, and [ simply “Have to he shown.” Quod erat demon- strandum, you know. Come? lot's =il hike to Sheridan, where Where private fends o L s by the . Golden Rule: Where grows among the ROSBERTSON 2617 North Eighteenth street. Wallop for De Wets. on the principles of algebra and geome- | ? | Bountiful Crops st Louis Republie: With prospects of the largest wheat crop on record, a corn crop well above the ten-year average, oats and rye in proportion, and pastures as green as those of Holland, the Amer- fcan farmer is doing well up to the time | of going to press, and the mechanio, merchafit and manufacturer are prepar ing to do well in consequence. Springtield Republican: The prospect for' the largest wheat crop ever harvested is not shattered by the July estimate of the United States Department of Agri- culture, and this surely is good news. Including spring wheat, the total crop figures out in the government forecast at no less than 963,000,000 bushels, which would be 72,000,000 bushels in excess of the crop of 1914, New York Times: This is an improv. ing year respecting the crops. Seasonal deterforation is the rule, for there are many chances of injury, but now there is a better prospect of 1,000,000,000 bushels of wheat this year than ever before. There have been complaints of too much rain and of difficulties In machine har. vesting, but the government report finds 963,000.000 bushels in prospect now against 960,000,000 a month ago. New York Journal of Commerce: One of the advantages in this prospect for farmers, and in a financlal way for the nation, s the prevalence of exceptionally | high prices accompanying large produc- | tion. It will tend to keep up that colos- #sal balance of trade, which is not a wholly unalloyed benefit, and will offset some of the ‘trade evils of the war in Purope. It would be better it our trade were more balanced, made up less of | products of the sofl and more of those of manufacturing industries which min-, ister to the wants of peace. But condi- tions belng what they are, the great trade balance will lessen our indebted- ness abroad, increase the use of capital at home and enable us to do more in bullding up trade with ocountries away from the scene of war, father has opened and thoroughly cleansed the pores, leaving only a “tingle” of per- fect cleaniiness. A daily morning bath with this pure soap is a Joy and makes the day’s'work easier. —— — PASSING PLEASANTRIES. “‘Carl,” said the teacher, “can you tell me what an inebriate is?’ e ma'am,’” replied Carl. “It is a that does not have a backbone." HORSFORD’S Acid Phosphate (Neon-Aleoholic) ‘When you feel exhausted by the | heat or humidity; when the body needs to be refreshed, the brain rested and the blood cooled—a little Horsford’s Acid Phosphate in a tumbler of ‘water, is bracing, reviving, and A Vitalizing Summer Drink l Keep a bottly in your home I DIAMONDS WATCHES ON CREDIT animal —Judge, “Ho says he intends to be the architect of his own fortune.” “T predict a terrible stagnation in the huilding line.”"~Judge. Mrs. Bacon—I see it is sald, as a rule, where earthquakes are most frequent they are most severe. Mr. Bacon—I have noticed the same thing about curtain lectures, my dear.— Yonkers Statesmai Proud Fathér—The man who marrie mfind.u{m"' Wir, wits & Drige. " | We announce special SUMMER SALE of genu- glish Guegt—My word, that's a novel | 8¢ Diamonds, besutiful wide spread stones, from i 435 up—wonderful values. Choose your mountings —ladies’ §od men's Rings, Scart Pioa, Sluds. ~ — Brooches, leres, Far Screws, ete., etc., alf Paw, when a game has four qu‘u latest styles. :- also include in this in it, it's called a foursome, ism't fil?‘ line of Watches, Open Face or Hun‘l?‘n: .r':: ®olid gold and gold lined—all the standard move- ments—Illinols, Elgin, Waltham, etc. Prices range from §10 up, guaranteed. BASY CREDIT TERMS, idea! Is it & money prize or just ocup?-Boston T AnBCrIpt, o ophminiade "‘\_‘lllh two players it's a twosome?"” “Yep' .Then what's a game with one in {t?" “A lonesome,"—Judge. Ethel—Jack saw vour picture on my table and said you looked so young in it. Marie—7he flatterer! ! Ethel—8le thought it must bave been taken a great many years ago.—Boston Transcript. 659 — Diamond I AM WAR. Ring lkgold ===t e i = Men's Rin Alter Brody, in the Outlook. Bl Lot aga heavy carved, Itk T am a pestilence mounting. $50 soiidzona, finngd Aeahine the wielas: . aiamond. ..., . Bt e et e . 43 a e fruit of me Swift Is my stroke: ' D 17- Blood is the sy of me, ) 17-dewel $40.75 Stee) is the twine of me, Elgin = Thus shall ye know me; td T am' the death of Life, Mo, 16—Genuine Elgin, Waltham or 1 am the life of Death, I am War! Hampden Watch, in 25 1 am a madness vear guar- Riding the necks of men— anteed dou- Champing of nations armed ble strata Btamping of war-horse hoofs wold filled Charging unbridled; case, ad- Clashirg of bayonets, justed to Flashing of sword-blades, tempera~ Rumbling of cannon-wheels, ture, is- Crumblifg of kingdoms, ochron- se_are m& harbingers; | ism and I am the death of Law, positions, I am the law of Death, movement 1 am War! guaranteed years, I am a harlot Saducing tho natious; 01806 Wensh, i S B R Open Datly tili 8 p,m., Saturdays +11l 9:30 T T s Call or write for Illustrated Catalog No. 803 Cannor._mouths speak for me, Phone Douglas 1444 and saiesman will call Battlefields reek for m Widowed wives » Cursing T am the death of 1 am the of I am %! THE NATIONAL BOF TIS cicor ceweuens BROS&CO. fiss 00 & 1om sn. hflfi" of me, The Ideal Summer Office Building The office building furthest up the hill, gets the best air, and with the outlook on the heauntiful Court House plaza ard its own spacious court, there is no more delightful place in which 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, however, better than any in the building. We think it would be well to look them over, or, if we have not what you want, we will place you on our waiting list. We offer: Room J2—Choice office suite, north light, very desirable for doctors or dentists; walting room and private office; 630 square foet ......cvveves . $45, Room'@01—Nice cool office with vault, near elevator and stairs; electric Lght free, 310 square feet $18.00 Room G40~—9x20. Water; partitioned into private office and wall room; bas large double east windows; 180 square feet .. $18.50 APPLY TO BUILDING SUPERINTENDENT, ROOM 108. THE BEE BVUILDING

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