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THE BEE: DECEMB OMAHA, MONDAY, Nebraska { Notes from Beatrice And Gage County Nebraska BRIGHT STAR OVER Glittering Emblem in Heavens |buaue. Ia. to the effect that Sam Rab- R g | nowits, Max Switzer, M. Fettleman and Hovers Right Above Lin- | Mux Hayden, who last spring moved a coln Mayor. | | | |stock of bankrupt clothing from Beat- atosmse {rice to Dubuque, Ta., were found guilty of fraud in the federal court there after Dm“ SEEK mxe a trial lasting two weeks, Hayden, Swit. . zer and Rabinowits were sent to the B B e O e o | federal’ prison at Leavenworth and Fet- IJN;‘O;N-“"":ho";::r:"."";, Tor. |tleman was fined 32600 and costs, The roun ncoln jed the exer-| . ) cloen I conmection. with the municoal g0l 3 JU0 e SRS 1R ML | Christmas tree at the state house grounds d'ly 'l“"“ed ’a'r the goverimesh : Priet last night, are wondering If history 1%y, jocating in Beatrice the firm went into repeating iteelf. Over %0 years ago OV€l [ yojuntary bankruptcy, and investigation in the Holy City of the old world R'gu01,0q that the men had shipped the star appearsd to proclaim that & neW | o594 1o Beatrice to evade their credit- | )o:::: orl thnl- :‘oopl‘-l h-a‘btrgo";""'”wm ors. They were placed under arrest and night, directly over e {convicted. ! on which stood Mavor Bryan, a vright| syojar perry Carr and Miss Anna star appeared high u“" “’l* : avens. | Pimper were married at the Lutheran | Strangly, too, it was the only stal |parsonage Friday by Rev. Reitsel, the was visible the whole evening. The star ;:_,w ¥ v eame out brightly, the first one to 8hOW | njeg Mary C, Hartwell, an old resident itself early In the evening. The k¥ o this county, died at the home of her was covered nmearly all over by hazy ! dsughter, Mrs. John Hale, In this city clouds, but that lonme siar appearing | this morning, aged sixty-five years. She above Mayor Bryan in the ‘M{ ern HO:Y leaves no family except her husband City, shone out alone clearly for nearly cvasaiiilitniins half an hour and was then obscured by or S oot mBbo g tprovby SEEKING KIDS FOR ADOPTION The question which now confronts the anti-Bryan element in the democratic Search for Extraordinary Young- sters a the Tests They Undergo, In response to the demand for children |to be adopted there has arisen a class of search for extraordinary children. A few months ago the Children's Ald society of aires for children. Two of them wanted girls and the other a boy. After long and painstaking search the cholce finally nar- rowed down to twenty candidates, none of whom would do. One of the millionaires finally began to make the rounds of o and other institutions. He finally found a little girl who filled the bill, but before he and his wife took her they looked at thousands of little girls from 3 to 4 years of age. This age ls con- sidered the safest, for in that time the child has not gained permanent impres- sions of its home, parents, or the institu- tion where it was reared, and if it has any traces of disease or bad temper they are likely to crop out at this age. Sympa- thy or pity play little part in the pre- liminary stages of modern methods of child adoption. After a cursory examination of the chiid shows that its legs are straight, ite back and chest are well formed and nor- mal, its head is well shaped and its gen- eral proportions are about right for a he | child of its age, it {a sent to clinic, where it is examined for tuberculosis and kin- t |dred ills, and especially for traces of hereditary taint in the blood. Its eyes, i |ears, nose, throat, neck and chest are © | thoroughly examined, Some of the ques- FOR REAPPRAISEMENT VIEW | (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Dec. 2.—(Spectal.)~The re- ' it of certaln school lands or- ratic members of the Stute and Funds over | of Land Commissioner Fred lrne‘l a8 he had at this convention. workers who make it their business to ! New York had orders from three million- | HIS “VIRGINIA JUDGE VAUDEVILLE CLASSIC. 18 M'CAGUE TALKS ON WATERWAYS Says Those Interested Have Decided to Work Together Instead of Fighting Each Other. WATER ADVANTAGE IS GREAT “River navigation for Omaha is not a Joke, and the Julla and Ada Belle that have been plying between Omaha and De catur during the summer and fall are the beginning of a great fleet that will one day carry cargoes to and from Omaha,” sald John L. McCague, presi- dent of the Commereial club and member | of the Omaha Real Hevate exchange, in talk to the exchange last Wednesday | en “Waterways. i Mr. McCague apd J. w. Gamble were Omaha delegates to the National Rivers| and Harbors congress some weeks ago at Washington, D, conventlon, | pointing out that the delegates had at that time gone on record pledging them- selves to make the fight for the develop- ment of waterways a nation-wide fight, looking toward development of the latent Poasibllities all over the eountry instead ¢t tighting one another to pull appro- priations one way or the other. He sald that the National Rivers and Harbors congress was made up of some of the biggest and ablest business men from all sections of the country and that he had | never heard so many talks full of real Wallr CleTly™ JAPAN DEPORTS GERMANS Presence Detrimental to the Inter- ests of the Oountry, Say the Sends Stromg Men. “Kansas City,” he said, “has always sent its strongest men to these conven- | tions, and the result is that they have | accomplished things and have already | Japanese Authorities. © & long way toward solving their | Waterways problem locally.” MANY AFFIDAVITS ARE TAKEN The speaker called attention to the fact ! that Mr. Gamble was elected one of the (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) | Vioe presidents of the congress. Mr. Mc-| TOKIO, Nov. 15.~Japan's order of de- Cague himselt was siected a member of portation against five German business the board of directors assigmed to the men of Yokohama, which has already Missourt river district, and added that becn carried out, has brought into dis- this was the first time In the history of: cussion the entire question of the treat- the Rivers and Harbers congress that|ment of German clvillans, as well as Ger- Omaha had received any real recognition. | man prisoners n Japan. “"::dm: - n:“ congress mapped it out| The authorities make no statement in sections, sach wite 1o Ty t0 elEht oF ten | connection with the deportation beyond WaYS Droject Lo et OWR definite water- | the declaration that the men were dis- ho said, s the deepenc ied out. Une, | missed from the country because of con- from Poughkespaty o n s, ¢ Hudson ' uct detrimental to the interests of Japan InteFcostal devaioncyih DAnY: another the anq jts allies. Japanese newspapers, st e g i Mo sl the Delaware however, openly allee that four of the velopment of the Onty i er the de-| Germans, namely those connected with other the Mi 0 river valley, an-| o firm of Otto, Reimers & Co., were Missour villey oD Valley, another the gy i.iieeq because they shipped copper oomaha to the Mississippl: (1 ough neutral countries destined for another the Columbia ri: and another the Intercostal Aevelommery | Gérmany. Some newspapers say they along California, Texas and New Orpnps | Understood on good authority that To W, Japanese copper mine had actually been L gl b gl gopeon | worked by the company and ta producta forwarded to Germany through the ment of these projects, sach nMd:;l.h;p-i a hrough the United 3 , in- Stead of trying to get the best of one an-| = "™ other and being accused of pulling for These Man Have to Go, the pork barrel,” said tne speaker. The deported Germans include Martin “The thing that makes Germany so|Pors ™nna~r- - & 0o Dotent at this time,” he continued, “is H. Fokkes, K. Fischer and C. Heitmann. an- heif Sood for 72 | tone which must be answered are: How lon that reap- |18 the gait of the candidate? Is he wel -flw% the follow- | balanced or shambling? Ia l-h:l.,m- . rovem! toed or are his feet everted? Is fore- flw MMI:‘- o head high or low? Are his ears well “‘1&"’“ bwsoat placed? Is he cross-cyed? Are his teeth record wiso Wil | regular or trregular? Are the fingers long b rlu!ln“. ber | OF short, Has the candidate any exag- and |gerated egoism, any excessive self-con- ly, an |golousness, and 1 mental ac- for leasti | (1vity? The child’s mind fs then sub- Jected to Simon-Binet in order to otod | determine its general intelligence. After & child comes through this ordeal, the well-to-do prospective parent .\Mn sends t it to a gpecialist in children’'s diseases, and | who makes a final report of the candi- that, the county | ate’s physical condition. nt. At this stage the process has just be- of | gun, for the child must be placed under motion, | Observation to determine whether it will b respond to the kind of training which wealthy persons give to their children. t . 1t the child is adaptable it will soon u.l: ‘boas into the ways of its foster parents. I W its parents have been Nr::n: 'o':’ m:fl: . et o ‘E‘ R s ".“:;: | habits there is & chance that the OWS [ will fall short of the position which his new life will bring to him. Children ‘who have a happy smile, a habit of prattling and climbing about, and slgns of good " the | nature and initiative are most in demand. n | These, as well as similar traits, are usu- y discovered by close contact with the 'ehild n the home which it may nenw-. the child This precaution is necessary J e e wam i shalh Bave - | come of age.—Indianapolis News, pel————————— UNIVERSITY STUDENTS AND :| PROFESSORS AMONG DEAD (Correspondenes nf The Associated Press.) " BERLIN, Dee. #0.—-At the University of Of perlin the roll of honor of l:"“ {and professors who have fallen in the of Howard present war alrendy covers three large house and black boards, which are surrounded by bers of the laure] wreaths, in the main lobby of the the order was central buflding. These tablets contain the land com- the names nf el¥ht professors and leo- that i reappraisement be tures, one official, and not less than M1 s n is very indignant students. Among the latter are thirty- he calls & hand-handed method two students of theology, fifty of law, hings after the board had al- twenty-seven of medicine and 123 of pproved the report of imself and various branches of the philosophical de- Attorney General Barrett. lm‘_ COURT PHOTOGRAPHER OF GREAT BRITAIN IS DEAD | (Corresnondence of The Aasociated Press.) LONDON, Dee 10.—~The death 15 an- | nounced at Windsor of John Russell, of- ficial photographer to the court of Great | Britain. He was only 18 when he ob- tained his appointment, after taking a serfes of pletures of King Bdward. then Prince of Wales. During his life he photographed every important monarch in Burope. MONUMENT OF FRAGMENTS i i f i i wili —(Speci -’ o.n.mdw-w-m' of Nelson were mar- County Judge James Livingston, o (Correspondence of The Associated Press) COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Dec. 10.—A monument constructed of fragments of torpedoed ships washed ashore has been at Hornum, on the lsle of Sylt, North ‘washed ashore nearby. gt OF THE TORPEDCED SHIPS not « Sea. The monument, which ' oo roughly of a submarine, | prougly. Poor gallant fellows—ten min- |be written on the fiy leaves of books. above an English unexploded mine, | yies later & battery found them and that it has its waterways so developeq The fifth German dismissed was M. F. that all its shipping above mere parsels | Peneen manager of Bergman & Co., at is done by waterways,” Yokohama He pointed out that the next thing to! The tnvestigations of the poliee covered do in Omaha s to get the water front several months and the evidence in each here into the hauds of the municipality ©ase is sald to fill more than 500 written 80 that it will be available for dockage Dpages. 'The Incident s’ regarded as show- ;hu the river transportation develops. ing that the authorities are constantly Or.l :u. ‘:- Of the finest sights at New exorcising a strict surveillance over the o m: fourteen miles of dockage German civillans resident in Japan. Mm'm““ 'y the state and city. The Japan Gazette, published at ™ ng on “th& Panama canal Yokohama, prints a copy of an affidavit M.mmw o which was sworn to by Martin Pors last Y July at the American consulate at Yoko- hama. and river transportation, “It the canal - “hawn hy Affidavit, The affidavit declares that the copper business transacted by the firm of Otto { & Co., in Japan direct or through others |in Japan since the outbreak of the war | has not been done and is not done with | Germany nor with Germany as the ulti- Entrenching Tools | mate destination. It continues by saying in .Kits of Soldiers in European War| i v vom i wa in New York throuen X ts agents, E. P. Farle, an' American Correspondence of citizen, to varlous American refining DUNRIRK. Prome: Nowclated press.) | cstablishments. The atfidavit was swomn his rifle, every soldier values most of all | 10 before George H. Scidmore, who sub- his entercnching tool which consists of #cribed himself as consul general of the & small wooden handle not quite/twe United States in charge of German in- feet long and a detachable iron cross. terests at Yokohama. with a pick at one end and a sharp spade at the other. Men cling to their entrenching tools when they have to diacard nearly every other article eqipment. A man without an entrench- tool feels that he Is of rather less value as a soldler than if he had no uniform. Without this lttle pick and spade he must lle out in the open after an advance instead of scraping for him- self a little mound for cover. ‘When there is any movement In the ' lines most of the entrenching work is done with these little tools. It is only when a position has been solidly won and is to be occupied more or less perma- but to get the benefit that is due us from this canal we must have th | Vet 3 © upper rivers | ( German prisoners of war have led the Japanese press to declare that/the au. thorities are treating the prisoners too liberally. 'The most recent trouble ooe curred at the camp at Kurume when a Japanese guard is sald to have been as- saulted by a German prisoner after he had warned the prisoner to be more care- ful about smoking and about throwing live ashes on the floor. The Jijl asserts that the authorities should deal Germany and its people in & manner dit- ferent to that accorded to other natigns. and put into use. residents angn o) Wi, ‘t The infantryman needs no urging to 'should have been expelled from d'g. It becomes the merest instinct to | try long ago, :uflu that his life depends on mvla—lnps 0“—* ng himself with proper cover. And this instinct is strong enough te conquer even WRAPPING THE GIFT the overpowering dosire for sicep which thinks the coun- Several cases of outbreaks among ths with Tt expresses the opinion that a sharp its students Nently that large picks are brought up watch should be kept over the German ER 27, 191 MUCH SUFFERING| 80 Declares Preacher at Parkvale | Church—Congregation Raises Money for New Edifice. FURTHER EFFORT THIS WEEK Practically $1,000 is now sub- scribed on the cash subscription list the members of Parkvale Presby- terian church are circulating to| raise a bullding fund for a new church. Rev. R. W. Taylor an- nounced this splendid progress at | the morning service in the present| church at Thirty-first and Gold streets. { ““This week,” he sald, ‘‘we are going | to make another strong effort with the | subscription list among the members— | {only among the members. Then next | | week, beginning with the new year, we are going to spare no one. We are then | Boing out to solicit anyone who will help l us, whether members or not.”’ Just where the new church building wil' be located 1s not yet decided. It is possi- ble, of course, that the structure will be built on the present site, but some effort fing another suitable location. At one time the handsome Creighton addition, |dust northwest of the present location, | was considered, but it was found that bullding restrictions there prohibited everything but dwelling houses. Christ Tempted Often. mon reviewed the life, temptations and sufferings of Christ with a view to show- ing that, though he was the Son of God, he came to earth as man and suffered anq felt as men suffer and feel. “He was capable of being tempted, and was se- verely tempted on many occasions, Mr. Taylor, “but he never yielded to as man suffers, and he suffered much. He was perfected in suffering as steel ralls are perfected in being heated red was a time when it was dangerous to travel by rail in the coldest days of win- | ter, because the old iron ralls might break in such severe weather. Then came the steel rail and this process of perfecting it by heating and torturing and rolling until these ralls are absolutely reliable and will stand the strain under any con- ditions. “And so the lives of men are perfected by suffering. That is one point we have to meet constantly when the skeptic at- tacks us. The skeptic says, ‘Why does your good God permit all this suffering in the world?” We answer that man is perfected in suffering. |Chinese Neutrality | Much Buffeted by i All Belligerents (Correspondence of the Assoclated Press) SHANGHAI, Dec. 2%.—Forelgn conces- slons In China have been centers of never-ending trouble since the begin- | ning of the European war. As the result of activities of varfous belligerents in these gettlements charges and counter- charges have been made concerning the violation of China’s neutrality. China is so enmeshed in Furopean treaties that it is always extremely difficult to de- termine the actual status with reference to the European powers. Practically every forelgn concession was created under different conditions, and the com- mercial treaties between China and the | various powers are so varied that few diplomatists can harmonize them. Newspaper under German control at the treaty ports are constantly charging that China is violating fits neutrality by permitting shoes and gther supplies to be shipped from Shanghfl for the use of the Russian army. They are also voicing protests against the shipments of sup- plies for the French and English armies. On the cother hand, the English and French press are loud in their denuncia- tion of German activities which are per- | mitted to continue on Chinese soll under lease to foreign powers. | The latest ground for complaint of this sort was supplied by the capture of Japanese steamer Iro which a French cruiser took Into Salgon under charge of carrying arms and ammunition for mu- tinists in India. A passenger on board this steamer without passport admitted his German nationally, and is reported to be s former member of the German consular service in China. This steamer salled from Shanghai, and is alleged to ve carried ammunition on cases and arms which were thrown overboard when the French crulser gave chase. It has even been charged that the Ger- man Soclal club in Shanghal is used as an arsenal for the storage of supplies to be used in promoting sedition amonsg the colonies of Germany’ enemies in the far east. THE “COME-BACK” The ‘Come Back™ man was reall; never down-and-out, His weakene: condition because of over-work, lack of exercise, improper eating and living, demands stimulation to satisfy the cry Precautions Necessary to Imsure | for a health-giving appetite and the comes at the close of a long day's hard s conne W s Bl I Sy eann e T8 fighting and which at nightfall often o GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Ofl Capsul makes even the consumption of food seem | ® ldha t1;.l-|.|l:rul.!‘m,;‘::(:y of Holllnd. r:lll superfluo uently the tired infantry- R A Iy i m"“’"l" . " | Every year the post offices are con. | Three of these capaules each day will fronted with the problem of distributing thousands of parcels that have lost their outer covering, and that bear nothing to dier dare to curl himself up in his Mt and |'dentity senders or recipients sender's take the coveted forty winks in prepara- (Mame and address should not only be tion for the counter-attack which is al- {Placed on packages. but should also be most certaln to come before dusk. placed juside of them. A soldier's letter tells about a British | Though it be written a thousand times regiment that boasted they did mot dig. |that parcels should be so done up that “It was a very gallant regiment,” he ondlnnry shocks will have no effect, the writes, “with & large share in the battle |MWamses will continue to tie them up in honors of Britala's past wars. They had |#lovenly fashion, \ charged at Balacl they had fought And do send your gifts in time! in every corner of the globe. But they | OB or before Christmas they should had not beem taught to dig; It was be- | e received and acknowledged with pleas- neath them. They were nominally & cav- \";;”n ma SN Sl e kot pout |a #iment, with regiment’ Y footiah, ¥ B . oty Packages weighing elght ounces or less “And here is what happened to them |teke & rate of 1 cent for each two ounces flr :ron Mons. The regiment had (°F fraction thereof. Regular zone rates n rushed Into & gap to cover the |@PPly above that welght. flank of am infantry brigade. Because| 'Po Not Open Until Christmas” may they were dismounted, an infantry officer be Written on the outside of a package. offered them some friendly advice, urg- Such inscriptions as “ln:ry Christmas,” ing them to provide themselves with |“Happy New Year" or “Best Wishes," some kind of cover. But they laughed, |In handwriting may be inserted in parcel took their position, and lay down in the |post packages, and simple dedicatory in- ‘We don't @ig' they boasted |scriptions, not of a personal nature, may fighting must strugsle from dusk to mid- night with his entrenching tools; not till | his cover is snug and sound does the sol- | |foolish ideas of caste. If 1t is desived to send a written com- sprayed them off the face of the earth |munication along with & parcel this may as the little bugs are cleaned off a rose (be done by inclosing the communication in an envelope and tying it securely to the parcel, placing letter postage on the envelope and parcel post stamps on the “For Sale” ad will turn second-hand into cask. | put a man on his feet before he knows it; { whether his trouble comes from uric acid | poisoning, the kidneys gravel or stone {in the bladder, stomach derangement or | other ts that befall the over-zeal- ous American. Don't walt unti] you are entirely down-and-out, but take licm to- day. ‘our lflfnll:n“do'“. I‘ldly "m':d ur mon ey do mot help you. e, {800 ana $1.00 per Box: "Accept’no substi: tutes. Look for the name LD MEDAL on every box. They are the pure, orig- inal, Imported Haarlam Oil Capsules. 4% ON SAVINGS 4% 1916 Xmas Savings Club Starts Today PACKERS NATIONAL BANK | hospital and has been made by the congregation to | Rev. R. W, Taylor in his morning ser- | temptation. He was capabie of suffering hot and rolled with huge rollers. There | * MAN PERFECTED BY |COUNTY PROTEGEES | HAVE MERRY XMAS More Than Three Hundred Men, Women and Children Share in | Pleasures of Holiday Season. FIFTY KIDS AT RIVERVIEW | More than 300 men. women and children in Douglas county's insti- tutions, the county hospital, River- view home for children and the coun- ty jail had a large share of holiday joy Christmas eve and yesterday. Fifty children at Riverview home | were delighted by a tree and by | gifts provided by the Omaha Wom- an's club and Superintendent Thomp- gon. The elder children received useful presents and the little tots were given toys. A turkey and chicken dinner was served yester- day. Mrs. G. W. Ahlquist visited the county jall with gifts of candy, nuts, and frult in accordance with her annual custom of many years. On Ohristmas eve there was a tree at the hospital and 2 inmates receivea |Eifts, Mra. Ahlquist, Mrs. John Shin- rock and son, Miss Katherine Carroll and the Willlam Holmes quartet were among those who participated in a pro- gram of songs and recitations. A turkey dinner was served yesterday. At the county jail the prisoners ate chicken and the usual accompaniments ot a Christmas dinner, but the real cele- |bration was postponed until later this week when an entertaining program will | be hela. |Women Agents of | Carranza Corrupt f Officers of Villa FORT WORTH, Deec, 26.-T. D. | Edwards, United States consul at Juarez, |who was reported to have left Bl Paso |this week in an endeavor to help General [ Villa leave Mexico, denied here tonight |that he had heard anything from Villa since December 21, and said his absence from Bl Paso was occasioned by a law sult at Fort Smith, Ark., in which he ‘was interested. Edwards left for El Paso tonight. | “General Villa plans to leave Mexico and go to Cuba,” said Edwards. “If he cannot go to Cuba, he will go to’some other foreign country and awalt the downfall of the Carranza government.” “Villa's failure in battle and the col- |lapse of his fighting organization is at- | tributed by Edwards to the corruption of his officers by Carranza agents, most of whom he sald were women. “Women in Carransa's pay,” sald Ed- Tex., AMUSEMENTS. | ¥ille)—A special wards, “became intimate with Villa officers that he was afraid to trust any one.” Allies Try Landing In European Turkey Dec. %.—(By Wireless to Say- despatch from Sofia says the Overseas News Agency reports an attempt to land Kaala, Buropean Turkey, of Anglo-French troops from Gallipoli. The Greek commander at Kaala, however, protested against this Burglars Ply Trade Near Poliqe Station The fact that police headquarters is situated next door to the Hamm Brew ing company's office, failed to awe burg- lars, who on Christmas eve pried open a window and obtained ¥75, BERLIN [i THE | Vivoersir HoTEL | THIRTY FOURTH STREET AT PARK AVENUE NEWYORK The most conveniently situated hotel | in New York At the Thirty-third Street Subway WALTON H. MARSHALL Manager BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25¢ at all druggists. TWICE DAILY 35, Mat. Today Mid- Nite MAIDS EXTRA YGR55" T wiie B 31 starting at 11:30, half an hour after the reg- | ular performance. i DEAR READER: As usual, you'll find the Gayety tle yest place in town New Year's Eve. ‘ou'll see 1916 born under most joyous circumstances—and you'll 11ke the show. i ¢ surprises ut Mgr. Gayety T Syt Sy oo MATS, 1650 a0 256 A7sm W Day Chow _gum if_you llke, but no_smoking. LAD 100c AT A¥NY weix TICKBTS TAY MATINER Baby Carriage Garage in the Lol now. Big ne midnight. B. L. JOHNSON, The Best of Thag ey Olier acts thia. woe Evans & Co., Walter Gardner Trio, Chiyo, FASHION | GO "hrnner, - Orpheum: Trevel Weekly, oo Mat- inee, gallery, 10c. (excopt Saturday and Sunday). e e, nl! and e. Week of Januas Hoftman. Take the “Milwaukee" Travelers experienced in the comparative com- forts and conveniences of different roads unani- mously declare, “Take the “Milwaukee’ be- tween Omaha ana Chicago.” The reason — perfect service made possible partially from the fact that equipment is com- pany owned and that attend- ants are company employees. CHICAGO Milwaukee& St.Paul RAILWAY Four fast daily trains Phone or call for reservations, | “Ticket Office: 1317 Farsam Street, Omabs Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertising: no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant- ly to be really succcessful. Each Bottle of... THE BEER YOU LIKE has a coupon affixed to its neck label. Save coupons and get premium. Send for Free Premium Catalog. Phone Douglas 1889 and have case sent home. Luxus Mercantile Co., Distributors }