Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 27, 1915, Page 1

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f { ( The sure way to satisfy your wants is through -1se of the want ad pages of The Bee. Try a Bee want ad. VOL. X'1V-=NO. OMAIHA, IPRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27, THE OMAHA DAILY BEE THE WEATHER Showers On Trains, loul Noews & eto., SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. GARRISON SCORES WOOD FOR LETTING T.R.TALKTO MEN; Secretary of War Criticises Com“; GERMAN PIONEER CORPS REPLACING STEFbS £ near Lemberg, blown up by the retreating Russians. Note the stronglusy winporary bridge in foreground. manding General Because Colonel Allowed to Speak in Camp. IT MUST NOT HAPPEN AGAIN Cabinet Member Says His Telegram Sent Without Consulting | President. l | Rus ian Stronghold East of Warsaw BREST-LITOVSK IS CAPTURED BY TEUTON FORCES Taken by Storm by German and Austro-Hungarian i Armies. | FIGHT WILL TAKE NEW FORM When Russians l\cform Back of the | Present Line They Will Resort to Trench Warfare. | FRENCH BOMBARD GERMAN FACTORY| Sixty-Two Avm.on Drop 150 flulh on Arms Plant North of City of Saarlous. ARTILLERY DUEL NEAR ROYE PARIS, A\l;: French aviators on August 25 flew over a German arms factory to the | north of Sarlouls, throwing a total | | STATEMENT BY CHANCELLOR of more than 150 shells. Thirty of these were of large caliber, Announcement of the aerial rald | is made in the statement given out | by the war office this afternoon. The statement reads 26, — Sixty-two | GERMANY WILL MEET VIEWS OF UNITED STATES Kaiser Regards Arabic Incident as a Source of Discord Between the Nations as Practi- cally Eliminated. Complet Satisfaction Will Be Given if Submarine Commander Ex- ceeded Instructions: VON BERNSTORFF SEES LANSING | | EAST IN m:c:movs BALANCE i | ROOSEVELT HITS RIGHT BACK “During part of last might there was fartillery exchanges and fighting with —_— v " e A | hand grenades and other explosives in BULLETIN, ! WASHINGTON, Aug. 26.—Secre- AUSTRIAN HEADQUARTERS, ¥ia [ (o' Artols district, in the vicinity of | WASHINGTON, Aug. 26.—Late tary Garrison today telegraphed London, Aug. 26.—Austrian ‘u\q|lry"iuu|- hea ang Neuville today Secretary Lansing received & Around Roye there has been continued on the part of the enemy's artillery, as well as our own Major General Leonard Wood ex- ¥ \ ‘)mn pushed eastward from oveKl and | | pressing his deprecation that oppor- | dispatch from Ambassador Gerard, | divided the Russian forces into two | | but he declined to say whether it | marked activity tunity was given at the citizens’ sol- diery camp at Plattsburg, N. Y., for | Colonel Roosevelt's sensational | speech of yesterday and directing | nothing similar should be pvrmmml at any of the other camps. Secretary Garrison referred to Colonel | Roosevelt's remarks on the mlilitary un- | preparedness of the country and the at- | titude of the adminlstration. His tele- | gram to General Wood- follows “I have just seen the report in the news. | papers of the speech made by ex-F dent Roosevelt at the Plattsburg camp. | It is difficult to conceive of anything which could have a more detrimental e fect upon the real value of this experi- ment than such an incident, 'his camp, held under gn\-vnmont: auspices, was successfully demonstrating | many things of great moment. Its vir- | tue consisted in the fact that it con-| veyed its own Impressive lessofis in its practical and successful operation and results sl WOMAN HEARS PLOT |AIR BOMBS SINK FIVE HUNDRED DIE T T o GERMAN SUBSEA I TEXAS STORM nished to anyone o present to the |n0\|; TO KILL PASTOR Aviator Destroys German Submarine Latest O!ficilr;;t Compiled in any matter exceptin, that which was| by Dropping Shells from Houston Shows 276 XKnown essential to the necessary training they | Vigitor to Ccmetery Listens as Three were to receive, Anything else could only have the effect of distracting attention | Men and Woman Arrange to from the real nature of the experiment, | Slay Rev. Mr. Kayser. Plane. Dead and 102 Mssing. diverting consideration to issues which | i, > excite controversy, antagonism and il R fim feeling and thereby impairing, it not 1o-| ONE MAN IS UNDER ARREST | BATTLE STAGED OFF OSTEND MANY UNID stroying, what otherwise would have been ! B - 80 effective GARY, Ind., Aug. 26.—With the| LONDON, Aug, 26.—A German| HOUSTON, Tex, Aug. 26.—Ae- ‘“There must not be any opportunity given at Plattsburg or any other sigilar | cording to a careful checking up to- day of all published figures based on arrest today of George Schneider, a member of the Gary Saxon Verein, submarine has been destroyed near Ostend, Belgium, by a bomb dropped | camp for any such unfortunate o currences.” 4 ¥ iy ! charged with the murder of Edwond| py an geroplane. Officlal announce- official statements from the cities Secretary Garrison said he had no|M. Kayser, whose body was found| ment to this effect was made here|20d larger towns and localities in- volved, and accounting for all per- woir, listed as missing who have sub- sequently been fourd safe, the tropi- cal storm that visited the Texas coast ten days ago took 275 llves, 206 on and and sixty-nine on water. In the same list show 102 other per- with President WWitnon and had no knewi. | Suburb, Tuesday night, the police an-| e text of the statément mllowr edge of the | resicent's views. The secre- Nounced they had abandoned the| «The gecretary of the adiiralty tary said he had not considered whether theory the German pastor may have) gnnounces that Squadron Com- his felegram to General Wood would have | hoen glain because of his pro-German' mander Arthur W. Bigsworth, R. N any effect upon the general's record FeHBAAET N tate wad CUEL dhatrtyed: tBbe; Sanddd; & -Gachaks What T. R . NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—Colonel Theodore He is'said to have told| submarine this morning by bombs | utterances. vt and bruised. Sa | B Rt 1R rephrd o Reatebury Gam n‘u-latiu\ he was in a fight Tuesday dropped from an aeroplane, The ) Sons still unaccounted for. The 101-}‘1“ rapidly within range of Brest.| gon's telegram to Major General Leonard night. Chief of Police Heintz de-|gubmarine was observed to be com- lowing list shows where the stormlx,uouk, notwithstanding the obstacles of- ::"*fl". late l'l';‘\"yr'"";““""\‘"“l": was en- clared his story unsatisfactory. pletely wrecked and sank off Ostend.| exacted the heaviest toll of life: fered by the swampy nature of that 1y responsible for his o mar : 4 ‘i . g ey oo £ o Tomaideray | Schneider has been a member of Bt.| “It is not the practice of the admiraity |dalveston Ialand. 48 Anabuo ........17| FeEIon. NG hint has been wiven how e et ary had mo. right to ecriticise ' John's Evangelical church, Tolleston, ' to Publish statéments regarding the losses | [redgo Houston son i J » e bigeidr ¢ Lo the secretary has & +18{that their armies will be t ed all oo el A f which the Rev. Mr. Kayser was °f G¢rman submarines, miportant though | Texns City virrnia ot m he trapped along Jenera . {of which the - Mr. Kayser Wa8 ..y have been in cases where the enemy | Predze San Ber- | Surfside . ' nis tn® eI — { pastor, but he is declared to have has no other source of information as| " .:.oo.c......19] Houston . 3| The near east continues to present an Clemons Traded been the pastor’s enemy. The pastor, to the time and place at which these| 1M additon to these it is known that |aPPearance of precarious balance between ! losses urred. seventy-nine persons lost thelr lives in | the warring wroups. The central powers it is said, had incurred the displeas- ure of members of the Saxon Verein because of his opposition to plans of other small towns along the coast and in tae country district swept oy the storm. | he complete list of dead probably never | “In the case referred to above, however, the brilliaut feat of Squadron Commander Bigsworth was performed in the im-| to St. Louis Browns LOUISVILLE, Ky. Aug. 2.—Vernon |4nn¢ oreanization medtate nelghborhood of the coust in oc- | Wil e known, as scores of unidentified Clemons, for the last three yearg catcher | 00 SFEIIIEREOL e cupation of the enemy, and the position | Yictma were buried, but it s likely the for the Loulsville American assoctation, | ECPOPTI B A 0 B e women, |©f the sunken submarine has been lo- storm took a toll of nearly &0 lives. | has been traded to the St. Louls Ameri- | MyStery toduy broukBt (e WOWKR | cated by & German destroyer.” rlu a muititude of unusual stories is that cans for five players, it was announced | » i s rpatblng H of li-year-old Roy Riggs, who los L Tart & ihe it of Police Heintz, into the case. | o emands lite near Seabrook. Mg Ay ls:: Louis club at the close of the assoclation he..firet . of ‘these womes M 088 Who ur. y D d | tember 8, 1900, coming into life wi ,.,.umn_( The players to be secured from nus |.-x:nu the r:u:lu- :" u ;;_hlhl l_n: fm.m stormi In the Khm(.;,v of lhl.h :x‘:t' the St. Louid club will be announced at | the cemetery near the Rev. Kayser's that th G m country und going out with the ne the opening of the season next year. ( home. The second woman was seen by & € brermans | worst. o |3he Riret with thrte oarteen Killed in Cuba. ! night of the TAMPA, Fla, Aug. %.—Fourteen per- or four men on the i JESSIE JUG, SIOUX INDIAN < aromd « nanty| Make War On Italy grave. They were, the first woman re-| sons met death near Cape San Antonlo BELLE, DROWNS IN LAKE ported to Chief Heintz, plotting the| PARIS, Aug. 26—A rumor is current in |Cuba, and the powerful wireless station | murder of Rev. Mr. Kayser. | Athens that Turkey has threatened a |there was badly damaged and made unfit SISSETON 1,[,\\~ AGENCY, 8. D, | At one stage they flipped a coin, ap-|separate peace with the allies tnless for immediate use by the recent tropical Aug. %.--While boating yesterday on ' parently to decide who was to perform |Germany declares war on Italy, accord- | hurricane. Captain H, O. Borden of the Buffalo lake, near this agency, Jessie certain tasks in connection with the at-|ing to a epecial dispatch to the morning |schooner Caroline Vought, brought that Jug, aged 2, a belle of the Sisseton tribe tack on the preacher, whose pro-German | papers. ‘newn today on his arrival here, It was of Sioux Indians, was seized with an = activities in speeches and writing in a |necessary to beach the small fruit | eplleptic fit and fell Into the water. Una- community which included many Slavs, The crew was saved. | ble to help herself, she drowned before | friendly to the allies, made him a number Tribes of NOBThOrD . | i e st . assistance could reach her. | of enemies | Explorer from St Andn-w., Fla., after | “I know a woman who took part in Indla, Are Restless lhn nmm badly damaged and being | | the plot,” safd Chief Heintz. She has| i d by a vessel to Cape San Antonle. | The Wedther { disappeared from her home. L canmot| mowre Aug 5 R e | Tht- only wlhilte inhdbitants at Cape 1 give out the name of the woman Who|ceived by Americans who formerly lived San Antonio are employes of the United i was an unwilling and frightened eaves- | "'y, ¥ CUCTTO L T nrest of the | FTUlt company. Forecast till 7 p.m. Friday—For Omaha, | dropper in the cemetery, for I think ft| —_ £ d k i northern tribesmen s causing disquietude, «Council Bluffs and Cieinity: Falr and | would mean death to her. Following |aithoush it fs believed that the terri.| VIOLENT STORM SWEEPS continued coc! up her story, however, we found the |y : | 2 ' ' | torfals, aided by loyal Indian troops, will ARIZON. Temperature at Omaha Y + | footprints of three or four men -nd}m able ta handle any insurrection that| SOUTHWEST IZONA Hour. ne woman around the grave. I have|mj | oy F one ght break out. | g8 reason to believe that there are dozens| It is reported that the tribesmen have | u‘m'l:\\(u-arflrsl [;"] c,"" fi”‘ v:: Ta m of persons of Tolleston who could tell | been incited by literature emanating from | e, "o o470 m‘nv swept the south- L., 62 ' most of the story it they cared to, or|agitators in San Franeisco and in Manila | Yo% €Omer of Arizons, just east of| B Ml dured to. 1t is @ significant fact that|and by Turkish propagandists | Yuma. according (o;d\hel received here, | 11 a m 6 | the grave where the plotters gathered| There ure no indications of any inten-| AP ic6 house at Yuma was unroofed | 2 : 1s 80 located that a view of the window |tion to dispatch Japanese troops cither to| 204 communication with paints east of W.wie U of the room where Mr. Kayser sat could | Indla or Russia | that town was cut off. m 9 | be had.” | - | = Plan to Reorganize BeEihion Uauined. g W Laugh? Russia is Probable anta Lau Comparative Loenl Reeord. Rumely Company| Highest yeiterday 1915, 1914 1913, 1912 PEROGRAD, Avs, %~(Via Loaden)—| IMAl)Mtsl )n:u.d.x) » T [ NEW YORK, Aug. —A plan to re-| Pally conferences are being held by mem- P’-‘C:?p"l:(u‘? Derature " " 7 | organize the M. Rumely company, mani- | bers of the variqus parties in the Duma and council of the empire with a view to |wetz, { tion, {Decatur and | roups, which are now unable to co- [ operate with each other, aceording | to mdvices received from the com- | manders at the front WULLETIN, BERLIN, Aug. 26.—(By Wireless | to Sayville.)—The Russian fortress, of Brest-Litovsk has been captured by Teutonic forces, Announcement to this effect was made today by the| German army headquarters staff. \ German and Austro-Hungarian | troops stormed the llm works on | western and northwestern front and succeeded last night in entering the | fortress. The Russians, the state- ment adds, then gave up the fortress. | | LONDON, Aug. 26.—The invaders | {of Russia, with Ossowetz safely in| their hands, are now rapidly gaining the whole triangular rallroad sys-| tem which with its apex at Bialy-| stok, also serves Grodno and Osso- | The mass of heavy artillery | freed by the fall of Ossowetz and| Kovno is now being brought against Brest-Litovsk and Grodno, but not without great difficulties. Hereafter fleld maneuvering will count more for the German armies than the use of heavy artillery against fortresses, but open Hala‘ movements may be cheeked by the| reported determination of the Rus-| slans to dig themselves in when their | line has been reformed back of Brest- Litovsk. Perll for Russlans. No further advance has been reported along the Riga-Kovno line, which pre- sents a perilous problem to the Russians, but the Austrians and Germans are get-| claim a diplomatic victory in the form | of a Turco-Bulgarian agreement, while | the entente allies apparently are bring-| ! ing Serbia around to their view that con- | | cesstons are necessary to procure Bul- garia's adhesion to the reformed Balkan league. Plan Paved Road 3 from Laredo, Tex., | to Detroit, Mich.' CHTICAGO, the Aug. %.--Organization of International Paved Way assocla- | wag formed to promote an automobile highway from the Mexican | to the Canadian border, was perfected here today. The proposed route takes in Laredo, | | franc {in “In the Argonne district, In the sector lof ‘La Fllle Morte' yesterday saw fairly severe fighting with bombs and hand | Brenades, sthing of importance has been re- ported from the remainder of the front. “During the day of August 24 a French down bombs on the rail- road station of Offenburg, in Baden, sev- enteen miles from Kalrsruhe. At this point there is an important railroad junc- tion In the grand duchy On August 2 an aerial squadron com- posed of four groups and including a total of sixty-two aviators, flew over the | heights of Dellingen. Here there s a factory where shells and armor plate are !made. The location of this plant s to the north of Saarlouls, in Rhenish Prus- sla, thirty miles southeast of Treves. The aviators threw down with precision over 160 bombs, thirty of which were of large caliber." aviator throw So far as official reports have dis closed, there nover had been previously any alr raids of such magnitude, so far as concerns the number of machines em~ as yosterday's attack by sixty- In a few earlier ven- thirty or moré aero- 10} two aeroplanes. tures of the kind planes were used, Yesterday's rald was the third In this part of Germany during the last three weeks. On August § Saarbruecken was bombarded, and three days later the neighboring towns of Saint Ingbert and Zwelbruecken were attacked. Eight per- {mons were killed in the latter rald. Big Stream of Gold | Continues to Flow Into Bank of France PARIS, Aug. 26,—Gold continues to flow into the Bank of France at the rate of 90,000,000 francs & week. Two and a half million francs have been recelved thus far from the reconquered part of Alsace. The new twenty-five franc and five bonds put on Monday have |given a fresh impetus to the movement among the working classes for investment war loans and starteq a flood of touching letters from children who wished to empty their savings into the public treasury. Deposits, exchanges and bond purses have enabled the banks of France to send 1200,000,000 francs In gold to England this week without a fraction of the market reaction that ordinarily would have re- sult This remittance of gold is sald to be “for the anticipated needs of two governments.” The principal purpose appears to be maintenance of an cquilibrium of the rates of exchange of Parls on London, which again show an upward tendency. News that a loan of 100,000,000 francs has been taken by New York bankers to cover French purchases In America has aroused sympathetlc comment here. It is sald that the loan s likely to ease the exchange situation between and New York. Pittsburgh Makes Green Barb Wire for Allies’ Armies San Antonio, Austin, Waco, Fort Worth land Dallas, Tex.; Texarkana and Little | Rock, Ark.; St. Louls, Mo.; Springfield, | Danville, 11l; La Fayette, Loganspurt and South Bend, Ind.; Dowa- glac, Kalamazoo, Battle Creek, Jackson and Detroit, Mich. It was stated at the meeting that automoblile clubs have pro- vided the organization with $100,000 for promotion work, and that states and counties south of St. Louls have alrea provided for about half the money needed | for the Laredo-St. Louls section of l\w road. The road, as planned, will be {miles long, will be paved with' zamrbl or brick, will cost $220,000,000, and will have a width of twelve feet south of St. Louls and of sixteen feet from Et. Louls to Detroit Man Indicted Along | With Tom Taggart Admits His Guilt INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Aug. 26.—James “Bud" Gibson, who was indicted with | Thomas Taggart, democratic national committeeman for Indiana; Mayor Joseph ; E. Bell of Indianapolis and others charged Temperature and precivitation facturers of agricultural implements, ures from the normal: now under recelvership, was announced | the formation of a coalition ministry, the jNormal telaperature ... v T3 today by committees representing the | POSsibility of which has been under lively Deficlency since March i, isi 404 | various creditors and security holders, | 9iscussion of late in the corridors of lhvi | on . 12inch | The committes, which has undertaken|!’Vma. The names of Michael Viadimir- | i!r:("l‘::,:‘;‘:wflmrn_ for 4 inct the reorganization, includes leading New | oViteh Roszlanko, the president of the | A g ol arch 1 -4:“‘-;;\\ | York bankers, as well as Chicago and | Puma, and of Nikolai A. Khomvakoff, | oficlency cor. period, 1914, 2 inches | Indianapolis financlers. | former president of that body, are being | Deficlency cor. perfod 1913.... 5.71 inc nee | mentioned in connection with the pre- Reports from Statlons at 7 P. M. | miership. Bt orat 1, 2, | FIVE ALLEGED LYNCHERS . Cheyeune, vart copdy .o o %5 ARE ARRESTED IN TEXAS | Western Passenge }:v-n;orn lrn;l cloudy .69 o 4,,‘ — g r nver, part cloudy s w| HALLETTSVILLE, Tex., Aug. 2.— : Dey . : g b 3 . | et oy il -8 | SALLETIOVILLE, T e e | Rate Hearing Set Omaha, cloudy % | In connection with the investigation into | o { 8 | the lynching of John Slovak at Shiner| WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—Arguments - -I“;’Lxl‘:fd;y fi’rh;y“xm; J _lr\un' l)’::."J'-w:r; on readjustment of passenger fares on | 72 A esh, Frank Michna, Tom Balley and | western raflroads will be held before the J of | Frank Chromcak. Slovak, who had been | Interstate Commerce commission October Have One on 1g¢gs % | arrested charged with beating his wife |¢ and 7. Arguments on adjustments in alen O PR hergee k See Page 3 “T* Indicatss trace of precipitation, and children, was taken from jall and|eastern Mve stock rates will be heard ¢ | & A. WBLSH, Local Forecaster. beaten and shot to death. here October & |in the | was remanded to | sheriff, with eleetion irregularities here in 1914, pleaded guilty to the conspiracy charge indictment today. His trial hus been set to begin next Monday. Gibson's bond was fixed at $,00 and he the custody ANOTHER ZEPPELIN AMSTERDAM, Aug. %.—(Via London.) to the Hetvolk, a Zeppelin worning over the Dutch flylng from the east Acoording passed this | island of Vlieland, | English coast. This is the second time in two days that & Zeppelin has been scen over the island traveling toward Eng- land. of the | " ™| ana its wide range @f prices within the | y¢ gor snythtog FLIES TOWARD BHITAIN 15 PITTSBURGH, Pa, Aug —~Barbed wire, painted a follage green, ls now being manufactured here for the armies in Furope. Barbed wire is ordinarily galvanized, but hecause of the scarcity (and high price of spelter, a local manu- | facturer discovered a scheme to paint it. Steel men say that representatives from abroad say that from a short distance It |18 impossible to see the green wire. | Foreign Exchange is Paris | Again Demoralized NEW YORK, Aug. ange markets were moralization again today by a wave of forelgn bills that broke early in the business day and threatened to carry 26.—Forelgn | rates to depths hitherto untouched. The English pound sterling, usually the standard of world finance, at $4.57, was selling within the first hour at $4.644, and one sale, confirmation, lowest figure sterling had yet reached in this market. Francs broke to $5.98, cents under yesterday's cle on the first transaction recorded. Lires dropped 2 cents, to $6.4. German money, reason not seen on the surface market, was worth more reichmarks selling at 81% cents. The chaotic condition of the of the market, last thirteen months, were emphasized by & comparison of rates now and shortly after the war began, little more than a year ago. Sterling then sold up to nearly §7, and other continental | soured to similar helghts, PARIS, Aug. 2.—Financlal writers of | the press propese that the government | invite French holders of readily ne- | them for national defense bonds. Thus the treasury might avold the necessity of transferring gold in payment of sup- plies purchased in the United States. B ex- | plunged into de-| it was reported without | had been made at $4.64, the | for a | | yesterday, | ol | | | | to the northwest in the direction of the | gotiable American securities to exchange | contained advices from the German government, BERLIN, Aug. 26 (Via London.) —The Associated Press is in a posi- tion to state on the best.authority that the Arablc incident may be con- sidered eliminated as a source of dis- cord between Germany and America, or, at least, is regarded by the Ger man government in that light. Moreover, Germany, in its desire to continue its friendly relations with the United States, had adopted before the sinking of the Arabic a policy designed to settle completely the whole submarine problem as af- fecting America on the basis of good will and mutual understanding. Another communication supplementing that which the ambassador transmitted to the State department Tuesday, s ex- pected from Berlln and pending its re- celpt, Count Von Bernstorff will re- main at the embassy in Washington Wil Not Sink Passenger Whips. It is confidently belleved the next word from Germany will be an announcement that pending further negotiation, sub- marine warfare on passenger ships will be discontinued, and that submarine com- manders already have been instructed to sink no merchant vessel without warning. It I8 understood that Germany. same time, will revive its proposal for & modus vivendl for considering of Brit- ish restrictions on neutral commerce In German quarters, it is sald that thi which had been u“m‘h." In Germany for some could now be announced, because German of it was explained, conside 3 (Continued on Page Two, Column The Day’s War News BREST-LITOVSK, the great Rus- slan stronghold, which has bee the apparent chief goal of the Austro-Germans in thelr advance after the taking of Warsaw, h been captured by the Teutonle forces. N AIR RAID of unprecedented pro. portions, wo far as reported, ha been made by the Fremch, wh sent sixty-two meroplanes over n German arms factory to the north of Saarlouis, Rhenish Prossia. More than 1560 bombws, thirty of them of Iarge caliber, were dropped “with precision,” French statement says. PAN IS TO OPEN new for the manufacture of part of its plan to assistance to ita allles in the war, advices from Tokio state. INDICATIONS ARE that a new coalition eabinet of na.- tonnl defense may be formed 4, Ruw UNREST OF THE TRIBOSMEN in dvices recelved 1 but the belef is expresed any utbreak could he handled by the avallable forees. THE WANT-AD-WAY l LOOKIT PURTY All Rights Reserve jou will but use the metiiod t a\lmol this boy's siate, " L . got real good And you'll sa¥, ¢ Wnd-flymm to’nn w buy, % o BER W Anm‘hw » flu WANT AD goes M K uld be reached no n& it exchange | wou will find out, 'hn you uv ~c t they certaluly do pay. You business can be very profit- ably advertised by a liberal use of BEE WANT ADS. Try a classified camnsign for the fall season and wateh the resul you will be more than pleased wit your venture. Telephone Tyler 1000 ul PUT IT IN THE OMAHA BER,

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