Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 30, 1915, Page 6

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- Tt Y sy OMAHA DAILY BEE " FOUNDED BY EDWAi, ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATEIL “,DIT(H} The Bee Publishing Comvlny_P_ro_ rietor. | BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. el - e i § Entered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF BUBSCRIPTION. By carrier By mall per me&h‘ DeT year. $6.00 | 4.00 { 800 % 4.00 : ) 200 2t r complaints of ; Bee, Circulation REMITTANCE. draft, express or postal order. Omly two- .4 pe m&od in payment of no- ma nal checks, except on Omaha and eastern not sccepted. | Es The Tigg Buiing i ng. ha s X ntreet. I Bluffs—14 North Main street. Little Fourteenth Bt., N. W. CORRESPONDENCH, W aofln?:-lcnuou r'd.:u% Wn and * | e ———— e e e t AUGUST CIRCULATION, . 53,993 -w f Douglas, se: it Wi Ilmc:;.é&da?n ml"nrlnle:.;: m:‘m s WOl B D Trton for "the ‘montn of August. b, - » %am‘ WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. Bubacrived in pressnce and sworn o before 1t T, N b M Ny BT RUNTEN, Notary Public Subseribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as oftén as requested. Bivtember 80 Sy Thought for the Day The making of friends, who are real friends, {a the best token we have of a man’s success in lige.— Edward Everett Hale. fifi——._-_— This {s where Ak-Ser-Ben attains his ma- jority. Twenty-one is old enough to vote, Each and every one of you are now on the rueeption committee for Ak-Sar-Ben visitors. | S——— Before “Billy” finishes, of course, he will tell us what he thinks about municipal dances. e But it Uncle S8am will not protect his own American citizens in forelgn lands, who will? : War shares are aviating higher and higher into the clouds. The return to earth promises ' & new speed record. e—— The report that the Russian bear lost all its claws In the Mazurian lake reglon turns out to be' slightly exaggerated. ¢ " gubstituting a recall for a leave of absence safeguards the etiquette of diplomacy and © blocks a return visit. Dr, Dumba goes to stay. | Farmers are advised to organize their work ‘ P they can do a steady all-the-year-round busi- | W b That is sound advice for people in other lines besides farming. & 3 CEmme——— i Nebraska’s 804 state banks report deposits { $111,000,000. As one of several meas- \res of the state’s resources the figures give the " knockout to pessimists. Sm———— Should the big fellows persist in pushing 3 brothers to the front as & “horrible ex- m"umzmmwnnm- to blame for the boomerang effect of " A most unfortunate moment has been chosen o legal aspersions on the purity of ‘Omaha’s piped water, A public charge of im- urity, even though unproven, indicts the water ‘wagon as unclean just as the multitude are busy SEE——— General Kuropatkin, the Russian com- ported coming out of eclipse and heeding for Ten years of retired meditation ought loped a substitute for his famous One of Lincoln’s watchdogs of reform is mak- a loud noise over the expenditure ot $800 the purchase of an automobile. He ought 1o be Invited up to Omaha and permitted to re- . wiew a parade of our city, county, school district and water district-owned autos. — The government has invited the American copsul at Munich to forward his reeignation. An American woman, just landed in New York, ‘brought a ticket-of-leave from Italy. Both are actused of war partisanship. In both instances safety first pointed to home as the proper place for Americans minus a mental stabilizer. | was the Grand Army of the Republic, just fin- DeAATS 1o Fifty Years After, Twenty thousand veterans of the army of Grant marched in review before the president at Washington yesterday, trudging along with tot- tering steps over the route their young feet had covered with springy stride in the morning of their sturdy youth. When President Johnson reviewed the veterans, 160,000 men, sunburned, fanned, lusty and vigorous, filled Pennsylvania avenue with such a stream of virile life as it rever had seen and may never again see. It jshed with its fighting on the field of battle, and ready to take up the conquest of life, Some of tnem looked back on campalgns from Bull Run to Appomatox, from '61 to '65, full of the action that brought a nation out of the depths of war, und looking forward with clear eyes to a future great beyond the dreams of any. They dropped the muskets after that march down Pennsylvania avenue, and took up the tools of peace, States have been erected, cities bullt, civilization In all its wondrous progress has been established since then, and these men have had their full share in the magnificent work. Only 20,000 of them marched up Pennsylvania avenue in this review, while all that are left of the men who fought under Old Glory in those dark years scarcely number more than marched before President Johneon, but these few are the grand Army of the Republic, and will so remain while this gov- ernment and its institutions endure. Just What it Was All About, ow we know what all thig fuss and flurry over the floating of the Anglo-French $500,000,- 000 loan was about. The terms upon which the honds are to be offered to the syndicate and underwriters and to the public make it so plain that any school boy can figure it. The bankers who are In on the deal are o have the bonds at 96, and to offer them at 98-In other words, they are to have two per cent commission for | flotation., The particular banks to share in the underwriting group are to have their invita- tions from the head of the house of Morgan, although it is not disclosed whether or not a epeclal additional commission is to be paid for that service. On the $500,000,006 the two per cent amounts to $10,000,000, which is some- thing worth fighting for, and for which the fight would bave been just as keen whether thesmoney was to be loaned to the allles or to the Teutons. What Will Rockefeller Do? The full significance of the visit of John D, Kockefeller, jr,, to Colorado can not be deter- mined until his final judgment is pronounced and his action taken. Mr. Rockefeller s now en- goged in summing up his experience and obser- te done for the improvement of industrial con- Citions out there. His visit has been variously interpreted, some of his critics flippantly ecom- paring it to the tour of a feudal lord to receive and enjoy the homage of his vassals and bond serfs. Why not give him the benefit of any doubt that may exist and concede that he is sin- cere in hig professions of desire to be of service? He has it in his own hands to do much good, and, with first hand knowledge of the situation, he may find means to bring about changes that ‘Wil be of great'value to those directly affected. He hasn’t gone deeply into things in hig short visit, and has been and still is in the hands of ,men who represent the Rockefeller interests ‘there, but he has in othor ways shown a ten- dency to practical methods in his philanthropic look for some inquiry. muine good to come from this Mr. Rockefeller has now a great op- if he intends to work any considerable change in existing conditions. S——— Mudge and the Rock Island, The resignation of Henry U. Mudge as joint receiver with Judge Dickerson for the Rock Inland system clears the way for the suits that are to be brought by the receivers against the directors of the defaulting company. While Mr. Mudge is not responsible for the conditions that necessitate the suits, being a director in the one company that is not involved In the stock manipulations complained of, he felt a natural delicacy as to his position when called upon to appear as plaintiff against his former assoclates. His resignation therefore removes any embarrassment the government might have met in this respect. Mr., Mudge may be retained As operating executive of the system, although rumor connects his name with the place of presi- dent of another great and successful raflroad. He has high rank among rallroad men and his ac- tion in this affair indicates the high quality of his honesty, which has been proven in other ‘ways, along with his executive ability. The straightening out of the tangled affairs of the Kock Island is proceeding apace, and the own- €rs of the road may yet have back thelr property In serviceable condition. e — The first and most difficult lesson taught in five days to the 452 men comprising the volun- teer army in training at Camp Sheridan was ‘“‘Obedience to military rules and orders.”” The difficulty of learning it proved more imaginary than real. Obedience in the military sense ineans system, unity, co-operation in workaday life and the addition of one to the other makes for greater efficiency in life's battle. — Why not be frank about it? Sending food to the belligerent countries, loaning them money, selling them war munitions, furnisking them hospitals and hospital supplies, or helping to re- longer. —_—— matter of common knowled, ship of Mexican property. SE——— Dreserves a lively sense of humor, 2 b XL . vations, and has promised he will see what can | Blt.: OM AhA, LHURBSLAY, Skt Lk l A Boarding House Keeper S, . @leason in Marper's Weekly HE 1s an elderly gentlewoman with soft gray hair and a face where much suffering has not availed to leave one line of bittern: Only from an in ner kindliness can the tone of the voice and the serv- fee of the hands come which bring a comfort to a houseful of strancers. Out of a dull, brown dwelling on & city street and a group of lonely men and women finitely repellant particles,”” she has made a home 8he achieves It by a long patience, a habit of thinking N the best of faulty human nature, and a quiet but per siatent oversight upon every detail of the establish- ment, from the coal fire in the guests’ rooms to th deeserts made by her own hand. One key to her success, that enables her to bind lodgers to her with hoops of steel, i that she buys tha | best foods which the market offers. She pays the highest prices, and obtains fresh meats and worthy vegetables. She makes less money, because she gives | unusual value in her table. One of her lodgers, a | eritical, even ‘cranky,” battered, dlsappointed man, has been with her for twenty years. The “help” en | Joya the same quality of food as the star boarde:s. Tt s just at the point where the element of calcula- tion 1s passed by, that she gaths her distinction. She | eares for her guests as If they were her family. No | missionary to South Sea islands, nor worker in slum | @istricts gives more service to his community than this silent, active woman of 60 years, who prefers her calling to the bleak, unrelated life of retirement. It 1 a trying life—that of pleasing tired, fault- | finding homeless people—because it deals in innumer- able little things: The cleaning of rooms, the prepara- tion of food, the jangle of the telephone bell, the care- lesaness of hired workers. The hostess of transient lodgers must consult a jumble of personal tastes, whims, prejudices. The lefsured worlding who slee, late and breakfusts in bed, the student who rises early the invalla of delicate appetite. She has to calm a Babel of volces, each one of which is insistent to de clare his own dislike of other medes of thought, and alien brands of religlon and politics. She performa a ministry of reconciliation hetween exasperated persons in the drawing room and fretted workers in the kitchen. Her own personality must be as persuasive s an equable climate, unrecognized but effectual Buch as the boarding house keeper. Aimed at Omaha Shelton Clipper: It Billy Sunday does not succeed in converting the sinners of Omaha it will not be the fault of the newspapers in the Nebraska metropolis They are glving the acrobatic evangelist every assist ance possible to his sermons and ‘hot shots." Culbertson Banner: There are slight hopes for the Omaha papers. If anything they give Sunday Billy a little more space than they used to devote to Canada Bill, Frank and Jgsse James. Kearney Hub: The Omaha Bee declares that the “short ballot" is ripening very fast. It sure fs. As & matter of fact it is just a little overripe. Of course, we will not offend delicate sensibilities by declaring that it is really rotten, Bloomington Advocate: The Omaha papers are to be commended for the excellent manner in which they are handling this feature. Sllver Creek Sand: It is to be hoped that within the next couple of weeks the Omaha papers will be worth reading. “Billy” Sunday's rot is disgusting an) people who pay their money In advance for the papers are entitled to a financlal rebate, Columbus Telegram: Nebraska's two best preach- ers are Ak-Sar-Ben and the State Fair. . Ak-Sar-Ben, being a purely commercial institution, cannot, of course, be favored with an appropriation of money from the state treasury, but Ak-Sar-Ben should re- celve & very large appropriation from the people’s treasury of good will and personal patronage, becauso of the fact that It always so splendidly advertises this agricultural commonwealth to the nation and to tho world. The Telegram hopes and belleves that In due time Ak-Sar-Ben's annual fall festival will be to Omaha and Nebraska what the mardi-gras festivities are to New Orleans. It can be done. ‘The spirit of Omaha, as breathed through the men of Ak-Sar-Ben, can accomplish anything. ) efforts, consequently it is not unreasonable to | portunity, and will shortly let the world know | lieve homeless war victims—each is only one way by which we share the burden of the fight to the extent we take it off of the countries at war, and thus enable them to keep up the fight That American schemers are responsible for some of the trouble on the Mexican border is a . Several persons at Los Angeles and San Diogo are under indict- ment for conspiring against the peace of Mexico. back of these movements, usually well covered, is the definite purpose of provoking war by which the schemers might profit through owner- “War obtruded upon us by criminal sur- prise,” says the kaiser in a congratulatory d's- patch to his finance minister. Despite the vast amount of serious business on hand, the kaiser Twice Told Tales A Salesman's Slip. There was a young fountain pen salesman ‘who, to his great joy, was succeeding on his first trip In persuading a stationer to order 100 pens, But all of a sudden the stationer's manner changed to the young man. “T countermand that order,” he barked ,and hur. :‘ed into his private office, slamming the door behin.d m. Later in the day tloner: “May I ask, air, Why you so suddenly counter- manded vour order for those fountain pens?" “The young salesman,” explained the stationes, “booked my order In lead pencil.”’ 3 ,hl. bookkeéper said to the sta- Advance. There is a voung author in Baltimore who Is de- termined to achieve fame in the writing line if it takes his whole life. Accordingly, he s even willlng to defray the cost of putting on the market the numer- Ous noveld,he writes from year to year, On the oceasion of his last visit to his publisher, however, he was somewhat vexed, a rather unusual thing for him. “Why," asked he, “do you charge me time than before? * ' sald the publisher, with the utmost frank. ness, “‘the compositors were constantly falling asleep over your last novel."—Harper's Magazine Prayer Before Battle. When the British ships under Lord bearing down to attack the combined fI falger, the first leutenant of the Reve round to see that all hands were at served one of them devoutly kneeling his gun. So very unusual an attitude in an English saillor exciting hs surprise and curlosit; asked the man If he was afraid, o e e “Afrald!" answered the hone: nance expreasive of the utmost only praying that the enemy’s shot may be distributed in the same proportion as the prize mone: grea y—the - est part among the officers.”—Joe Miller. : Nelson were leet off Tra- nge, on going Quarters, ob- at the side of St tar, with a counte- disdain. “No! I was People and Events The man who set the bl of New York required th; und tell how it happened. The prettiest young membe, in upper New York pcsed in a procession Woman," dressed in white and held ln..(-l‘:nl\el\; swarthy, dismal figures representing prejuttice, jgnor ance and vice. An imposing guard of sisters armed with brooms surrounded the chained maiden, and no man dared make an attempt at rescue, Jitneys legislated out of business in Philad are back on the job, not as jitneys, but as l\‘-‘b :I.T:. ‘The owners have pooled thelr business in club form sell memberships at & cents each, and each member- ship entities the holder to a ride on speified routes in any of the jitneys in the pool. So far the authorities have not interfered with the club scheme. A herolo monumert to the American cowboy is pro- Jected by ploneer settiers and cattiemen of Oklahoma. The general idea is & granite and bronze memorial to be reared on some commanding eminence similar to the one dedicated to the Américan Indlan at Oregon, IIL At present the cowboy is without & monument though he was a ploneer of ploneers and matched his valor with that of soldiers in Indian wartare, A Georgla court deftly sidesteps a direct answer to question, “What 18 & drunk™ According to the record of the court of appeals the fact that a man drove & recklessly on & street on Sunday, people ust that blew up the streets ree days to compose himsels r of the suffrage hosts the horse shouted botsterously, brandished a whip and scared off the highway, is not sufficlent evidence of drunkenness, but baving driven his horse through o fence and into a gardem, justified the lower court n soaking him for $2. MISkAR SU, VWl Worse AVOCA, la., Sept. 2.—To the Editor of The Bee: Just now the gospel trumpet of Omaha with & vim and vigor that Is apparently shaking the civilized world. Just what Is accomplished from this source on the spiritual side of life goes unmeasured be cause the field is too large. There are too many “ifs,’ “ands” and “lsms” to get the real meat of the nut here. The kospel assists in building spiritually, while human laws are made to help out in the material world | It was In police court the other day when the writer saw the | law vindicated The first case called was parking an auto against ordinance, time limit being violated. This amounted to little more than a fractured ordinance. The next case consisted of drunken- ness and fightig; civilization lacking here. The light-fingered wretch known as the shoplifter appeared next, pleading gulity, and was given twenty-five days in which to repent. Another case was that of a young girl, whose blue eyes and fair features were perhaps a mother's joy, sullty of va- grancy. Two young men were with her on the same charge, all thelr ages were given as 19, traveling the road of irre- sponsibility together, and who was to | blame? Fingers yellowed by cigarette smoking were strongly in eShlence in this case. | | | | in being sounded in the city | | | | | | | ¢ | in the big eity | | 85 & fortune teller in an effort to extract money other than by means of the sweat of brow. If there was a human soul within the specimen of humanity before the bar of justice the countenance failed to reveal it. Two young men lined up next classed as “bums,” as their violation. The kindly Judge told them to “hit the pike” go west and grow up with the country as a penalty for their wrong-doing. Another specimen of humanity ap- peared next whose head was white with the frosts of many winters, charged with being drunk, and whose declaration was that he had only had two glasses of beer. He was tenderly given thirty days. The wife beater appeared in the arena and recelved sixty days. Two descendants of Ham, sisters, were lined up next charged with fighting. The green-cyed monster, jealousy over hus- bands, was the cause. The man sitting in judgment told them shame. Go build an unsurmountable wall, each brighten- ing their own little corner and sinning no more Now comes two kleptomaniacs, who had been accused of stealing wire, and were convicted. Reformation was hoped for by twenty-five days in jail, | Thus the big world moves, formation on the one hand that it ls growing better, while on the other ob- servation leads us to belleve it is growing worse, with the gospel and human law as the main rule and gulde to assist & improving conditions in human life, but who of us has the ability to deal out the proper doses? TEE J. AITCH. with in< Eeho of the Water Wagon. OMAHA, Sept. 20.—To the Editor of The Bee: The Letter Box of The Bee seems to be popular, a la “Billy” Sun- day, pro and con. I went to hear Mr. Sunday the other night and stood on the fringe of the crowd at the outer edge. 1 failed to notice any slang or stone age nonsense that has shocked so many of his Letter Box critics. Yeos, I stood out there on the outside, & traveling salesman, 46 years old. Years ago I fortifled myself with the “Mistakes of Mosees,” and journeyed into a wise career, daring my chickens to come home and roost. In the heyday of my follow- ing after false gods I returned unexpected to find a broken home. I was “infal- lible,” and burned all the bridges, It ‘was hard to give up my home and babies, #0 I turned to John Barleycorn to fill the gap, and. find now it's too late to give it up. In my Nebraska territory I do want to thank the good people for such dry towns as Wayne, Wakefield, Blair and the numerous others, and when I Bloomfield or Grand Island I am yet thankful that the law of our state closes the thirst parlors at § p. m. I-and thousands ltke me are praying for the day that all the country will be dry, and then, and then only, will our bables be better clothed and hetter fed, G. W. H., An Outsider. Ushers in Cadet Uniform. OMAHA, Sept. 20.—To the Editor of The Bee: I am glad to hear that the officers of the High School cadets did not wel- come the offer which the Omaha Audi- torlum extended to them, It secms that they were wanted as ushers at the Au- ditorium. If they accepted this offer they would be obliged to wear their cadet uniforms. These uniforms are not cool. They are made of heavy cloth and they are hot. The boys are always glad when they can take their uniforms off just because they fit so snug and are so hot. I was an usher at the Auditorium over two years and it is not easy werk. People usually think ushers are inhu- man and very often treat them as such. Ushering is not easy when you have be- tween forty-five and fifty rows to watch Last year there was a a very fine group of boys that ushered at the Auditorium. They were mostly Omaha high school boys of good standing. We got along Just fine last year without wearing uni- forms, and I kiow we could this year, | toe. AN AUDITORIUM USHER. A Garland for Sunday. AURORA, Neb., Sept. 20.—To the Editor of The Bee: In your issue of September M, Mr. J. Braxton Garland gave forth expressions of admiration for Evangel- ist Sunday. The preponderance of the personal pronoun “I'" categorized the statements as expressions of egolsm. Mr. Sunday deserves sympathy in his her- oulean task of cleansing the pulpit of Darwinism, Ciceronian ethics, higher criticlsm and social cant. These are of the themes that locked hell and flung the key away. If in unravelling the Saviowr from mythology and bringing Him alive among His own, placing Him on his proper pedestal, Mr. Sunday has used forceful language the chromle illc of his patients induced chiefly by religious quackery justify him, Mr. Garland bestows more admiration because neither creed nor doctrine, as expounded by Mr. Sunday ‘“conflicts with the soverelgnty of the state.” If he means the state in its own sphere Is soverelgn, then he expresses a truism, If he means révelation is subject and secondary to the state, then he con- flicts with Christ, who commands that imu- that are Caesar's be given him. but to God the things that are God's If the state be absolutely supreme the martyrs who planted the banner of civili- T LN P R The dope fiend appears next, who passed | strike | diftoyn! and unpatriotio. They were r“-l rehensible for wresting from the etate rights for prisoners, hope for slaves, | “You're doin’ what you can to improve liberty for debtors, fostering care for !this institution” sald the inmate of the penitentiary, “‘but there's one thing you ought to do at the start.” “What's that?' asked the warden sickness and infirmity, for proclaiming the universal brotherhood of man and o 00 30 E H “When you bring a man here you ought g e wbo to_rig up the handcuffs as wrist waiches ~Washington Star. l Nebraska Editors Colonel Willlam O. Todd, former editor of the Thedford Herald, is the new pro- prietor of the Dunbar Review. ‘ W. W. Moore, a printer, who has been in the employ of the Schuyler Messenger, has leased the Schuyler S8un. H. R. Fair- child, who has been in charge of the Sun, will go to Wyoming, where he will lnka“ up a homestead. The Record l¢ the name of a new paper at Bdison. H. M prietor, Hditor Stone of the Hartington Herald, | has been appointed probation officer for | Cedar couny. | The Neligh Bemi-Weekly | i B ) BE MORE SPECIFIC. —THEATRE LOBBY OR MARRWGE 7 Bill-Do you belleve brevity s the sor: of wit? Call is editor and pro- | Jill—Sure thing. “And I suppose that is the reason the English spell it humour.” —~Yonkers States man LIFE'S SONG. Baltimore Bun hink of thee— en kindly night is falling, en star to star is calling. When moon and sky in quiet hours de- News made its appearance this week. The name of B. 8 Bchofield appears at the masthead | a8 publisher. Mr. Schofield was proprietor of the Neligh Register up to a few months 1t W scend. g b When o'er my head the azure heavem The Neligh Leader, Best Bros., pro-| bend. " In dusk omdawn, in travail or in strife, prietors, appears this week ss & semi- | i the Folden' interludes of life— weekly. { T think of thee. The Sidney Telegraph will celebrate its |} ¢pir o thee— » forty-second anniversary October 2 by [ When day's long tasks are o'er, changing its publication day from Satur-|In summer silence by the vine-ciad door; day to Friday. In busy throngs and haunts of teeming care, L. W. Enyeart, who has been manager|In Sgntle moments where no shadows of the Hayes City Times-Republican for | nineteen years, retired last week to as- | sume his duties as postmaster. A. C. | Ready, who has been one of the owners | of the paper, has taken over the active management. The Seward County Tribune, which was started as a semi-weekly a few months are; In light and dark, in dusk and dawn for eye, When morning breaks, when twiight haunts the sky— 1 think of thee. I think of thee— When round me thunders rattle, When I stand forth to face and fight the battle; In hours of rest. in journey or in playing, ogo, last week changed over to a weekly |In moments filled with fancies gently e I Hope i Crdt, tn courage, dread and n hope, In trust, b The Bertrand Herald, L. E. Brown ed- A ftor, last week completed the installa-{In deep, tion of a linotype machine. in dreams when star by star goes out— I think of thee. * is good for 10 trad ks toward thl This Coupon §&05 Coter. Cur it ont. Thonpe ckage of Quaker Oats, see our of and note how much this ':unl. lntgflly one of these coupons a'u beapplied on a cooker, Every Woman Cares Every woman wants luscious oat food, and wants it rightly cooked. Those who don’t get it do not know the way. The way is this: Ask forQuakerQats. These flakes are made of %ueen grains only. wo-thirds of each bushel is discarded as unfit. Yet, at most stores, this extra qual- ity costs no extra price. ‘Then get this Quaker Cooker to bring out the flavor in full. Most grocers have itnow on show. Go see it, then see our offers in each package. ‘These things mean a royal dish, a finer oat dish than you dream of till you try it. From now on, for your own sake, serve it in your home. Quaker Oats 10c and 25¢ In Round Packages with Top Pure Aluminum 2%4 Qts. Quaker Cooker See It at Your Grocer's Offer in Each Package To Chicago Fast trains daily from Omaha arrive La Salle Station and Englewood Union Station, most convenient locations in Chicago. “Chicago-Nebraska Limited” at 6:08 p. m. “Chicago Day Express” at 6:30 a. m, “Chicago-Colorado Express” at 4:10 p. m. “Rocky Mountain Limited” at 1:09 a. m. Aatomatic Block Signals Finest Modern All- Steel Equipment Saperb Dining Car Service ‘l\irmnd information at Rock Island T 1 'o'& oy | ravel Bureau. Phone, J.Lluln.l.v.u-u..r-tm 1323 r ‘arsam St, Omsha, <

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