Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 26, 1915, Page 9

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1 ave Moot Print I't—Now Beacon Pres: Wiectrio fans, §7.50. Burgess-Grandes Public Insurance Adjuster—Georgs Schroeder, 48 Ware block. Hed 646 “Today's Complete Movie Program” elaseified section loomy, and appears in The Bes EXCLUSIVELY. Find out what | the verious maving plctugy theaters offer. | Keep your money and valnables in the| American ‘Bate Deposit Vault, 218 8. 17th St., Bee building. Boxes rent §1 for three | |PRAGTICAL TALKS | FOR MEN'S OUTING Specialized Lectures During Fore- | noons and Speeches Afternoons at Men's Chautauqua. MEETINGS TO START AUGUST 2 monthe. Files as a Bankrupt-—George J. Haller, aruggist, 2619 Capitol avenue, filed a| Instead of the Dixie singers, and the petition in bankruptcy, giving labilitics | #lelght of hand jugglers, how would a line of practical business talks suit one Nayden Buyers Go Bast—Four buyers | {0 & week of outing at a lake-side chau- | from Hayden Brothers, headed by |tauaua? I Joseph Hayden, have gone to New York | Well. the business men of Nebraska. | & dideied buying Wi Towa, Dakota, and a lot of other places 2 For Safety First n Life Insurance :“’h"“‘l‘l‘" RICHENR ANFusE Shd:AuEa | see W. H. Indoe, generat agent BState D for those are the dates set for the Mutual Life Assurance Co. of Worcester, Nebraska Business Men's Outing assocl- as 32220 and assets as $180, THE BEE: | AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA| | Police Make Arrests in Places Where Liquor is Being Sold After Hours. SOLVES A $100 MYSTERY Captain Briggs and Sergeant Sheahan raided several alleged “bootlegging” and open house joints last night. Conflsea- tion of five cases of bottle beer and the arrest of three inmates and the proprietor of an alleged bootlegging joint at 83 North Twenty-fifth street, run by Joe Jasper, resulted. | Emergency Officer John Zaloudek and Detective Andrew Lepinski were also mnking the rounds and secured evidence | |in the case of at least one saloon. No arrests were made, however. Missing Hundred Found. Mase., one of the oldest, 71 years, and A *tion chautauqua. at Carter lake in best :'nmpnmeu on earth. | Omaha. The Business Men's Outing lll—| B Siverss Ookst--Sira. Grabs Rm..v‘norln((fln is an organization or federation has brought suit for divorce against Of business organizations of Nebraska. Jamiea” D RAmsky, WIIAEIGH Aonaupor. "l‘hry have federated for the purpose of | Mrs. Mary Ann Wood has secured a de- staging this big business Fhl\"l\ll]\lfl.‘ . The associated retallers, the assoclated J . Wood h | cree in her suit against Harry A. Wood |}, quuve men, the assoclated jewelers, on grounds of cruelty. . | the associated clothiers, and other busi- Heold on Worthless Check Charge—]. I |\oo o1 trades assoclations of the state Downs has been arrested in Kansas City Omaha to an | have federated themselves into this outing and will be returned to Omaha o &N-|,geocintion for the purpose of staging swer to the charge of having given W.|4 " chavtauqua C. Beebe, to whom he owed $35, a worth- Blg Chautauqua Tent. less check for $35 as payment on account. | 4, w8 T AR O The Bee Makes Away with Twenty Dolars—A | y,iging, 14 general manager of the chau- man who has been hanging around the | United Cigar Store at Sixteenth and | Howard streets for the last two months, was given a $20 bill to get changed for the clerk. He disappeared and the police | are looking for him. poss Section of Trolley Wire Stolen—Six-| gectional meetings are to be held in the teen cars on the Benson Deaf Institute |, noone’ when men interested in the line were held up Friday night “I”'“‘Imrdv«nn business for example may hear some person stole 20 feet of copper feed | gpapiq)ized talks on the concucting of a wire that had become disconnected from | gycoegstul hardware business, at the same the source of supply at Fortieth and|moment that in another tent, the jewelers | Lake streets. A falling branch had will be hearing a specialized talk on the broken the connection. | economical handling of diamond sales for Installing Lockers—Ior several dave example, The implement men will be the boys' department of the Young Men's hearing discussions on the best and most tauqua and outing. He has drawn to- gether a nice list of talent for the various business talks during the afternoon of | each day at the lake, where a big chau- | tauqua tent is to be pitched for the pur- Captain John Briggs yesterday unfolded | the mystery of the missing $100, which | | nte wite wired haa been stolen on a Burlington train, while en route to Steam- | boat Springs, Colo, a week ago. Cap-| tain Briggs found the missing money in | @ dresser drawer at his residence, 16238 North Twenty-sixth street, where it had been mislaid by Mrs. Briggs before her | departure. Last week when Mrs. Brigge left for | Steamboat Spring, she thought she hud‘ secreted the money safely among her effects. On the train she missed $100. | She wired her husband in Omahe that| the money had been stolen. The captain being wrathy took the matter up with the rallroad oficials and an investigation | was under way in a trice. Then came a letter from Mrs. Briggs in which she | explained that the thief had carefully sewed the money back inside her coat after baving abstracted $100. “I knew right away that the money was not lost,” #ald the captain. A careful search about the house brought the cash to light ye terday. Jerry Fitsgerald Congratulated. Jerry Fitzgerald, new police court clerk and deputy prosecutor, was receiving Christian association has sounded more |efficient manner of handling self-binders like a boiler factory than a department or a technical discussion on the latest devoted to the younger members of their implement freight rate controversy. organization. They have been installing | cach association that goes to make up) a new locker system and the pounding |the delegation will have the privilege of | of rivets has been going on for some |hearing highly specialized talks each e, morning on its own line of business; while in the afternoon, United States sen- ators, congressmen, and big business men from the east will be on hand at the general sessions to talk on business legis- lation In congress, and a dozen subjects of interet to the business men of the country. Run Over by Wagon—TFrank Vereil, aged G years, 1215 Chicago street, sus- tained a badly smashed right foot when a wagon driven by A. Sesseman, a gar- dener of Bast Omaha, ran over the mem- ber at Thirteenth and Dodge streets. Sesseman was arrested by Sergeant Fer- s after a chase of several blocks. He e, e riee_cranes| 0B0OE Ta¥l0r Says He Will Take Year G 2601 Brown street, met a crowd of convivial gentlemen last evening and, after buying numerous rounds of re- Off f V . i freshment for the crew, accompanied or Vacation| three of the bunch to Fifteenth and Cali- | fornia streets. Hero to show thelr grati- tude they held him up and robbed him of | a gold watch and $4. Books on OChristian Solence — The ! Omaha public library has recently re- celved from the trustees under the will of Mary Baker Eddy the following books on Christian Science by Mary Baker | Eddy “Sclence and Health With Key to|account of political conditions not neces- the Scriptures.” 'This literature has sary to mention. 1 have’ been treated been presented without cost to the|most courteously by both Senator Hitch- library and is to be placed at the dis-|cock and Congressman Lobeck, gentle- posal of the reading public as soon as it | men with whom I do not agree politically, has been catalogued. {but for whom I have the highest per- Rald bling Game—When | sonal regard. It pleases me to know Officers Willlams, Holden, Cunningham | that I am to be succeeded by a newspa- and Barta galned entrance to the base-|per man, and Mr. MoCune will receive ment at 510 South Sixteenth street they | the ‘glad-hand’ with my best wishes. arrested sixteen men whom they assert| My officlal record is made up, and were gambling. Poker and craps were|the books will soon be closed, and I the particular implements in use. J,|think my friends will find a clean balance Baryenbruch was booked at the station | Sheet: as the keeper of the place and will be arraigned as such Monday morning. All of the men were released on bond. Cadet Taylor, outgoing collector of oustoms, has already made his plans for the future, and it includes a vacation of a year or two and a trip to California and the Philippine islands. Mr. Taylor issued a statement, as follow: “I have served four years and four months, the latter an extra allowance on | bullding with regret, for our official and “::':"y O o covr e “e\,pn"l::‘ tically since a boy 12 years of age, and sought to gain entrance to the Updike | MTs. Tavior and I propose to take & va- | cation for a year or two. We will go to Lumber company's yards at Fifteenth| ., 05 1o visit our son's family soon, and Webster streets and in o doing fell | and DOIllbly later to the Philippines to from the fence surrounding 88 yard ana| o0\ "other son and wife. After that, dislocated his right shoulder. He Was!pasy to Omana o again don the harness found by the watchman and taken to|got o ® P B L e o ity police headquarters, where Drs. Foltz, wii'a better future than Omaha, and I and Shook set the unjointed member, A\-\hl‘e too many friends tried and true in Thus | other | “I leave the good people in the federal | personal relations have been ntost kindly. | “I have been hoeing my own row prac- | Downey had been drinking he was locked | up for the remainder of the night. Omaha Purniture Company Bankrupt ~The Omaha Furniture Manufacturing company of Ralston has filed a petition in voluntary bankruptcy with assets of $99.4% and liabilitles of $61,%2. This action was decided upon at a recent meeting of the stockholders, at which it was decided upon at a recent meeting of the stockholders, at which it was decided that the concern was insolvent. Though the liabilities are given as only about two-thirds of the assets, they are largely made up of items on which little can be realized. Stock in trade is put in at $21,259; machinery at $17,702; pat- ents at $20,338, New Yorker Winner 0f Three-Mile Swim! SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, July 24.—Burt Goodwin, New York Athletic elub, won the three-mile open tidal water swimming race today In the Amateur Athletic Union championships at the Panama-Pacific exposition. The cold, choppy sea caused three competitors to collapse. Time, 1:39:8, Michael McDermott, club, was second, Hoffman, third, with no time known, Nyrman Rcss, Multhnomah club of Port- land, Ore, collapsed on the return Journev from the halfway turning stake and two other Illinois Athletic in 1:42.33%, and Charles in San Francisco bay, competitors were picked out of the water exhausted tefore they finished. No one knows what he can do until he tries. You say you cannot accumulate money— you camnot open an A CCOUNT at this Try it. time, There is not one thing in the world that can be done with- out trying. Which is it going (o be with you— “I can’t do it," o “I will try?” PACHKERS NATIONAL BANK OF. S MAHA NEBR Dolphin elub of San ¥raneiseo, | this city to say farewell. 1 hope and ex- pect it will only be au revoir, Good Housekeeping Expert Will Speak Omaha housewives will have an oppor- tunity to listen to that good housekeep- ing oracle, Sarah Tyson Rorer of Rorer cook book fame, every afternoon this week at the Orchard-Wilhelm company store. Mrs. Rorer, whose word has been law In all culinary affairs for many years, has consented to make a western trip, giving lectures and demonstrations each day, although she admits being 6 years old. A model kitchen with gas stove, re- frigerator, kitchen cabinet and all cook- ing utensils has been fitted out on the fifth floor of the Orchard-Wilhelm com- pany building and at 2:30 each afternoon during the week the lecture demonstra- | tion will begin. Mrs. Rorer will answer all queries propounded by troubled housewlves or inexperienced brides. Mrs. Rorer, who 1s a Quaker woman | from Mt. Gretna, Pa., is a ploneer in | domestic sclence research or the scien- tific study of cookery. She is assisted |in her demonstrations by Miss Loulse Neldhart, A feature of Mrs. Rorer's lectures will be the demonstration of a new kind of glassware, which is tempered so that it will resist heat. Foodstuffs can be put | from the refrigerator into the hot oven iand what will commend the innovation | still more, food may be served at the | table in the same utensil in which it is cooked, s0 ornamental are the patterns. | And housewives won't have nearly so many dishes to wash, H is the outline of Mrs. Rorer's lec- "Qulck Breads." lads. Vegetables and Egg Cook- erv.” Friday, “Meat Substitutes. Saturday, “Simple Desserts and Pas- |t {BURLINGTON MEN OF K. C. TO PLAY OMAHA TEAM HERE The Kansas City Burlington employes have organized a base bell team and are | due in Omaha Sunday morning to play the Omaha Burlington team. The game | 1s schedulea for 10 a. m., at Elmwood park. The Omaha team is delng man | aged by Charley Loving and the Kansas City team by August Blerman. | Apartments, flats, houses and B "or Rent.” cottuges | can be rented auickly and ehearly by af congratuations and sympathy from his many friends. He has long been in public office and is known for having one of | the gentiest dispositions. He is a bache- Jor, who would rather face a squad of rifles than a couple of weeping females. A tale of woe will bring his hand to his pocket as quick as lightning. Bo when |the news got out that he was to be prosecutor and clerk of the South Side | station, his friends, while pleased, sighed for Jerry's new troubles. | Drother Not Among Missing. | “Emil Peschek, not among the missing. Undoubtedly saved.” This little message | to Joe Peschek of the Scarr Drug com- pany yesterday evening brought a bright smile to the face of the popular South Side pharmacist. Emil Peschek ia one of the foremen of the Western Electric company, many of whose employes were drowned yesterday when the steamer Eastland turned over. Joe knew that his brother, a long-time employe of the Western Eiectric, would probably be on the trip. He wired for information, but was kept in suspense until late in the afternoon when the good ! word came that his brother was not OMAHA, MONDAY, JULY yards, apparently in the act of attempt Ing to board a Missourl Pacific train for Kansas City. The police were askea L. to look up the boy Secdiiee. Anieited, Figures on Exports and Imports of Three peddiers, J. Brokstein, Myer| Holland Prior to War Appear to Groft and Joe Nivolch, were arrested Have Been Bldly xep‘ yesterday morning by Inspector ot Welsh and Measures John Grant Pegs | on the charge of breaking the law in| MANY STATEHENTS DISCOUNTED peddiing their products. The case will come up In police court Monday morning, | (Correspondence of the »\Mmh'fli Prosa.) Magie Clty Gossip. THE HAGUE, July 16.<In the absence H. W, Putlitz and family have returned | of a detailed statistical system in Hol- from a month's vacation spent In Wy-|land it is impossible to say how rly ming. g . accurate are the figures given in English UP wall paper sale. Koutsky- | inq jrench publications respecting the geant Carey arrested P. Barrett on |effect of the war on imports and ex of assault and battery last uth of the matter, acco o Wil move August 2 to 819321 North S 193 IR St S Tweniy-sixth street, across the street ment of forelgn commerce in from old location. K\ Lorig The MHague, is that nobody ever knew William Klenk, veteran stock shipper | nrocisely ho ch of how Httie Holland 10 the loval yards from Coftman, Neb, Preciesly how inuch of how Htus Holland | visited with friends here in the city yes- | Imported or exported. lolland is a free | terday trading country. A few items like tea Office apace for rent in Bee office, 3318 | pay ¢ or & per cent duty. Otherwise R, Torme reaugnuble. Well known | practically everything can be brought Mise Viola Willlams left vesterday|Into the country free of duty. Of the afternoon for a week's visit with Miss | total amount of imports Holland never Patience Keiley, now residing at Car-|consumed more than a tenth part. Most ki (T“f‘- : © halaahie 1Ak . | of the trade was of a transitory nature. adies’ day at the Spring Lake park | p. 3 ’ " swimming pool last Fr.day brought out,!rom all parts of the world gnods were a record-breaking crowd of feminine | brought to Dutch ports and were sent l\n':hvrn. as well as spoctators. |on by rall to Germany, Russia, Austria fisses Mamle and Marle Ackerman |ana Switzerland | have returned to thelr home at Chicago tatist) N % after visiing with tueir uncle, John | atiatics of exports were kept, but Malntire, of this cily, for three weeks. |since nobody dreamed of a war which Want Ads for The Bee ma would upset the entire fabric of modern hl‘ left at The Bee's branch office, 2818 N Rates. 2¢ a word for one time, Itsc a word each dny for three days and lc a word each day for & week. Prompt and courteous service. Miss Mary McLausghlln, deughter of J. 8. McLaughiin, 312 T street, won the doll contest held at the Columblan club festival last Wednesday evening. | The other successful contestants were | Misses Margaret Gillin and Minnie Win- dell. The cattle men of thie local yards beat the hog men at their annual base ball game, played at Rourke park Friday | afternoon, by a acote of 10 to 4. This makes the second consecutive victory for the cattle men over the hog men in the last two years. District Deputy Grand Patriarch A. B, Hess installed ihe following_ officers of Crusader Encampment No. 37, Independ ent Order of Odd Fellows, last Friday! evening: T. C. Talbot, chief patriarch; B. W. Loomis, high priest; Frank Hiner, senjor warden; O. Olson, junior L. F. Etter, secretary; Henry Bur treasurer; L. C. Mook, first watch: Ju Sterns, second wat third | watch: George Hausmand L. Auguay, inside watch; C #ide sentinel; Chadwick, guido: r son, first guard; Bliss, second guard. Pegg Finds Some Short Measures on The South Side John Grant Pegg and his crew of welght and measure inspectors made a raid on the South Bide, the result being that Meyer Grostelt and Z. Brookstiens, | Omaha peddlers, and Joe Munsky, grocer | at 2221 Q street, were fined 5 and costs| each in the South Side police court yes- terday morning. Grosfelt, according to the evidence, | was caught with a set of short measures. Brookstiene also had short measures, while Munsky sold a bushel of potatoes to a woman, the purchase weighing fifty pounds, whereas the law requires sixty | among the missing. Emil Peschek lives at 23% South Avers avenue. No More Pool Hall Saloons. Effective August 1, the joint pool halls | and saloons will be discontinued on the South Side. It is contended by the po- lice authorities that joint pool halls and saloons are the cause not only of teach- ing young boys to drink, but also breed- ing places for crime. In several places on the South Side the new law will be felt. Accused of Using Knife. BEva Jones, colored, 318 North Railroad avenue, was arrested last evening at 11:20 o'clock on complaint of having slashed at Retta Johnson, also colored, 357 South Twenty-eighth street with fn- tent to do bodily harm. The woman ad- mitted the charge after she had been ar- rested by Sergeant James Sheahan, but told the police that the Jones woman had attempted to cut her the week be- fore. She will be held for investigation. Youth Runs Away. | Cloya Adare, 13-year-old son of Clay Adare, 2626 C street, was reported to have run away from home yesterday morning. ‘The boy had secured a quantity of goods on the credit of his father at a local grocery store and was seeking to evade the eriticism of his parent when the mat- ter was found out. At noon yesterday he was seen in com- pany with three men near the L street viaduct in the Missourl Pacific railroad pounds. The Bouth Side police judge told Mr. Pegg the court will back him up in his campaign to secure honest weights ‘and measures on the South Side. More inspections will be made during the coming week. Restored to Good Health. “I was wsick for four years with stomach trouble,” writes Mrs. Otto Gans, Zanesville, O. “I lost welght and felt so weak that I almost gave up hope of being cured. A friend told me about Chamberlain's Tablets, and since using two bottles of them I have been a well woman.” Obtainable everywhere.—Ad- vertisement. CHARLEY JOHNSTON PUTS NINE-HOLE COURSE AT ORD Charley Johnaton, professional at the Happy Hollow club, went out to Ord, Neb,, last week and lald out a nine-hole golt course for the Country club at that oity. Ord is taking to golf and it waa decided to bulld a course so the Omaha pro was called upon to fix up the plans. Sanw Stamesh Your stomach and bowels need clean- Vo Atmastion Cured Are the Smiles homes this morning, happy smiles over Post | [ The Smiles of the Satisfied In thousands and thousands of for years and years—there have been ing out. Dr. King’s New Life Pills giv quick rellef. Only %c. All druggists.— Advertisement. | that Count and yesterday— Toasties —and cream. These crispy; sweet bits of choicest In- dian Corn, wonderfully seasoned, cook=d and toasted, were never better than they are now. Post Toasties —the Superior Corn Flakes jof the peuple. | actually happens. 1915, STATISTICS NOT DEPENDABLE ! V26, life, they were not kept in detall and the total amount of goods which crossed the Dutch frontier into Germany was never specifically mentioned This caused a curlous situation at the outbreak of the war. The government knew in a general way how much it im ported. It also knew In the same vague fashion the total amount of exports. By | subtracting one from the other it ex pected to arrive at the amount of grain and wheat and beer and butter which remained In Holland for the consumption Statistics, however, do not seem to obey the laws of mathe- | matics, for it was found that the Dutch peonle consumed much more than the difference which was the result of this | offictal subtraction. Statisticlans are serlously working upon | the problem, but the war has upset | every established way of living to such an extent that the problem is not an easy one. For example, instead of feod- Ing an urban population doing chores in offices and living the lives of clerks, the government now has to feed 500,000 soldiers doing hard labor at digging and marching and the ontire diet has been upset. Then the Belglan refugces have come into the country by the hundreds of thousands (nobody knows exactly how many) and they eat different things from what the Hollander does. But In other ways the Dutch statistics | as printed in the British and French vapers do not give a clear idea of what It is often claimed | that the imports from America have in- creased by leaps and bounds. This is quite true. But in the first place the old import route by way of Hamburg, Bremen and the other German ports has ' been entirely stopped. These ports are blockaded and no ships can enter, Although the British and French ports | are open, the war regulations of these | countries do not allow any exports to | foreign countries and all the many ma- terials which formerly came from France, England and Germany, now have to come exolusively from America. The storfes of large amounts of food- stutfs being smugkled into Germany | across the Dutch frontler are entirely discounted by the department of com- merce. To Wreak Potato Corner. It 18 true that potatoes have gone into Germany, but they were not on the con- traband list and they went in small quantities, just sufficlent to break the potato corner which some German specu-~ lators had brought about. According to French newspapers, every sack of pota- toes so0ld to Germany meant the lives of | tifty French soldiers. According to the Germans, it merely meant the breaking up of the corner and a fall In the price of potatoes from § marks a bushel to 2 marks twenty, The accusations of the allled press against Holland's refusal to assist in the starvation of Germany and Austria are made possible the faulty system of sta- tistics mentioned before, and the first measure of the Dutch government after the war will be the establishment of a most minute statistical bureau, so that every potato, every mustard meed and every pot of jam can be closely traced from the moment it enters the kingdom until it disappears into a Dutch house- hold or finds its way abroad. Five extra Half-Holidays a month! Every washday afternoon —that’s what the right gives you. When used the Fels-Naptha way, in cool or lukewarm water, it does away with hard rubbing and boil- ing; saves time, saves strength, saves the clothes. Ml\llTrIp rmmomhn. * 388 Fels & Co., Philadeiphia. Mountain and Goast Tours nic Colorado Tours To Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo. . To Estes Park—Rocky Mountain National Pa: Leave Omaha 4:30 p. m,, arriving Park for lunch.. Bur- ll m tickets Include the two auto routes via Lyons Loveland. No other service like this. This rate in- ::::: side trip from Denver to Colorado Springs and Night service from Omaha at 12:15 a. m. (sleeper ready at 10 p. m.), arrive Denver 2:80 Esf Park or Colorado Springs for supper. e e Yellowstone Park To Gardiner, Cody or Yellowstone Entranee.......... Park tour via Cody or Gardiner or both, includl; I“ Park accommodations ....,.. from 885, Side tour, all Park accommodations, cost from uvlnuwn Wylie (‘lllp tour, all Park uwommodlflum. cost from Gardiner or Cody «.s.from .00 to Park tickets are honored either via the direct !urtl- west main line or without extra cost via Jenver. Glacier National Park o Ginditwe POk BIMON ..... .00 000 cvivessstinnanis Scenic tours and side trips, including autos, launches, accommodations in hotels, chalets, ete., 1 to § “‘i’ to 34.50 92, 83:8 Park; cost from park station from........... To Hot Springs, 8. D. To Deadwood and Lead . To Custer (for Sylvan Lake) . The Big Horn Region To Sheridan and Ranchester Thermopolls Hot Springs, Owl Creek ny Cody, Wyo, east and soenic entrance to Yellowltom. The Pacfic Coast To San Franelsco, San Diego, Los Angeles, Portland or Seattle, direct routes, three-months’ tickets ..., Same destinations with longer limits, December 31, 1916, Coast circult tour, including California and the North- west, with Shasta Route or Ocean Coast Voyage (mea and berths included), additional ... ado-Utah Handbook.” Trips I ellowaton. l'-rl." ¥ wtome Tours,’ “Ranch Hooklets,” “The annk Hi mer Tours Wentbound,” “Northwest CITY TICKET OFFICE, Farnam and 16th Sts, Phones: D, 1288, D, 83580, There are probably a half dozen Classified ads a week in The Bee that you ought toanswer. Sometimes there may be that many in one issue of The Bee. If you've never formed the habit of an- swering and investigating Bee Want Ads, then you have still to form what will prove the most profitable habit of your life Wouldn’t you conclude, even if this were half true instead of being quite true, that this is a good time to start in, ATRIUMPH |N PUR|TY “rg Two Or AMEeRIcAs FINEST BEERS Storz Brewing Co. OMAHA

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