Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 3, 1916, Page 4

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{ { ) War Days in Vienna. One contemplates with a chill of dread ap- THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR, The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor. BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omaha postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF BUBSCRIPTION 0 gay FKuropean capitals during these days of strife and privation. All the little soclal nice- ! tles, the many little creature comforts that used | to pad man's urban existence, have been stripped away from him, and life {s become stark and By carrier By mani | Stern, where once it was easy and luxurious, if o ahd ‘Sundds rwmu,v‘\:h per year. | pot actually sybaritic. lLondon, Paris, Rome, ally and Sunday iy without Sunday. Evening and Sunday Evening_without Stnday. Sunday Bee only Berlin, Petrograd, all centers of soclal activi- ties, where days were spent in feverish pursuit of pleasure, and nights given over to the enjoy- change of address or complaints of Bend notice of frregularity fu delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation | ment of the softest and most refined of modern B bl | amusements, now find their occupation in ways | REMITTANCE " Remit by draft, express or postal order, Only two- | [AT removed from enjoyment. cent stam recelved in payment of small ae- But it is from Vienna we get the most har- counts, Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted OF FICES. Omaha~The Hes Building South Omaha—218 N street. Souncll Bluffs—14 North Main street. Lincoln—3% Little Hufldln’r. Chicago—901_H-arst Bullding rowing tales of hardship imposed on the un- happy people, who are left at home to wait the news from the front., Through the under- ground channels that bring information from the war capitals we learn that one day a week N rk—Room 1105, 28 Fifth avenue 4 8t Louls- 8 New Bank of Commerce. the Viennese can not buy fresh meat, as only Washington—1% Fourteenth 8t, N. W. pickled or preserved flesh is permitted to be CORRESPONDENCE, dress communications relating to news and edi- ;Aodrlu l:uncr to Omaha Bee, Editoria! Department. NOVEMBER CIRCULATION, 53,716 State of Nebraska, County of Douxlas. es; Dwight Willlams, circn’ ation manager of The Boe Publishing company, Leing duly sworn, says that the Sysrane circulation for the month of November, 1913, was 58.716. | scld on “Fleischlose” days. Suffering, due to this cause i{s mitigated in some measure by the fact that fresh meat can be purchased the day | before, a process of escape somewhat familiar to those of our local residents who are forehanded in anticipation of the approach of the hour of | 8 p. m. Worse than this is borne by the Vien- nese, according to the correspondent, who pur- sues his tale thus: “'But what really hit the Viennese hard is the lack | of whipped cream, without which they formerly eould | not drink their coffee. Now only plain or condensed milk may be had.” This knowledge will bring home to many in a most convineing way the horror of war. Think | of having to drink your coffee without whipped cream! me, this 2d day of December, 19 ROBERT HUNTER, Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. J;IIAI'! L] Thought for the Day Selected by Homer P. Lewis All that is, at all, Last ever, past recall; Earth changes, but thy soul and God stands sure; What entered into thd, That wes, is, and shall be; Time's wheel runs back or stops. Pot- ter and clay endure. Things Ahead of Omaha to Do. ‘While Omaha has started the new year with r good record behind and promising prospects in front, it will be well for the municipal au- thorities to keep definitely in mind some things yet to be done, of which the following are just a few, although not necessary in the order of their importance: 1. Finish the job of putting our streets and thoroughfares in condition, and extend our system of good roads along the main arteries of interurban travel. 2, Modernize our sewer system by building the new lines needed to relieve the outgrown and overtaxed present outlets. 3. Improve still farther our parks and boulevards and develop grounds and recreation spots. 4. Build the new school houses which are required to relieve existing congestion, and for which the money has already been voted, 6. Furnish a tangible solution for the vargrant criminal problem, by building a work- house, = Browning. Two pairs of holidays In two weeks seriously mpairs esteem for the daily grind. ——— At least one event vindicated prophecy, Good retolutions come out of the trenches on New Vear's for the annual airing. system of the play- B —— It should not escape notice that the talk of peace in Burope comes chiefly from people who will not be consulted about the negotiations. m—— Claims of Americans for losses sustained in 6. Have the City Planning commission get the Mexican revolution promise to roll up & | gown to business without waste of time. longevity record rivaling the Freneh spoliation 7. Help the new Welfare board put the “luims at Washington. clamps on vice-breeding resorts and entertain- mient places, 8. Straighten out the kinks with the pub- lic utilities corporations, with the objective of better service and more reasonable rates. 9. Keep far énough within the bounds of Measured by the volume of sound from that | €€0ROMY to pull down the tax rate. uarter, It is evident that the absence of Henry Observe that these are all strictly municipal ¥ord from his peace party does not affect the | Problems, to be worked out by our city officlals, voeiferations of his money. and remember, too, that they by no means ex- AL sk, AEIROIR haust the Ifst, to which additions will readily Nothwithstanding all kinds of inducements | suggest themselves. But we will advance a offered to speak out, Col. House declines to join | §reat deal farther if our public servants know /\“Great opportunities in Mexico,” now await Amiericans with money. The principal oppor- unity is swapping American dollars for bales of shinplasters. | proaching the conditions of life in any of the | 11 Drur.s: Monday Mechanics From Popular Science Monthly. Tn the good old days when the only way to wash | clothing was to carry it to the riverside and sop it up and down and rub it upon stones, there was good reason for calling the first work day of the week blue or drab or even black. Today, however, for- tunate home laundreases have at thelr disposal exoce lent mechanical helpers. The pity of it s, that these | helpers fall far short of the mark because of lack of knowledge upon the part of women of how to operate them efficlently and because of really blame-worthy stupldity on the part of the men who design and install the equipment. For instance, take the “convenient” laundry of an ordinary home. It is not an isolated instance. There are hundreds like it in other houses and apartment bufldings. The bottoms of the set tubs are but four- teen Inches above the floor. The average helght for women is tive feet four inches. Can she see the wash- board? No; it has sunk out of sight because the tubs are too deep. A third fault is that the tubs are poorly lighted Number four is that the tubs are against the wall and also In a corner, accessible from too few points. The only artificlal light is a single electrie bulb, a sixteen candle-power carbon, hung near the celling in the center of a very large basement room. Then the water inlets are flush from the back of the tub, so it is not feasible to attach a hose for filling either the wash boller or a washing machine. This | means the arduous carrying of water in buckets The remedy is a complete change. The tubs should be out in the room instead of in a corner. There should be more window lighting and a stronger lamp located above the tubs. The laundry trays them- selves should be shallower in form and their bases ®ix or eight Inches higher. There should be faucets suitable for hose attachment and set high above the rim of the tubs to be out of the way of washing. The laundry stove should adjoin the tubs at their left, so that the bofled clothes can be lifted directly Into the rinse tub, for the washing processes are usually rounted from left to right. If a washing machine is used, however, it may be desirable to give this location to it, the best location for a washer depends upon the type of the machine and upon the style of the wringer if it be stationary or sliding cr swinging. If one uses portable tubs the bench shoufd be | slightly higher than is usual, the exact height being determined by individual experiment. Twenty-four inches is right if the tubs are for rinsing only. If one uses a wash-board, twenty to twenty-two inches is preferable. Galvanized iron is better than wood because it is much lighter to handle and because wooden tubs shrink anl leak it not used for a period. If one can possibly afford it a washer is to be substituted for the back-breaking washboard. A hand power washer entalls as much wearisome work as hand rubbing. Test it by attaching a spring-balance to the lever of a hand power washer filled with wate: and clothes. Pull on the balance instead of direct on the lever. The handle moves through an arc of twenty-elght Inches and the pull is twenty pounds as the balance will show. Multiplying two and one- third feet (the arc of movement) by twenty (the pounds of pull) you get forty-six and two-thirds foot-pounds of work for every stroke of the handle. The average is thirty strokes per minute. This means fourteen hundred foot-pounds every miinute. An ordinary washing is seldom less than three fillings of the machine at ten minutes per filling. The woman of the farm or village can attach her hand power washer, adding the proper wheel to carry a belt, to the farm gasoline or ofl engine. This, too, means wringing with & wringer turned by hand. For twenty dollars to thirty-five dollars a splendid power washer is available with an attached, motor- driven wringer. The higher priced ones have also a wash bench. The power wringera are stationary, swinging or sliding. ‘The city woman can have the best of all servants, electricity. A one-sixth horse power motor can be attached by a belt to a hand-power washer. Machine, motor and accessories, without wringer, cost twenty- elght dollars. For forty-five dollars to one hundred dollars onc can get excellent electric washers with power wringers included and the saving of woman-power for higher uses will justify the Investment. The cost of current is very small, usually two to four cents an hour, A fifty dollar washer should last at least ten years, which is five dollars a year for depreciation. Coun ing interest on the investment of fifty dollars this ls u the conversation about his mission. The | what we want them to do, and by reason of this colonels talent for silence ridicules the clatm | knowledge avold getting at cross purposes, ‘hat he is a Texas product, = Renewal of Austrian Crisis. The sinking of the passenger liner, Persia, by a submarine is certain to strain again the relations between the United States and Aus- ol tria. The reply from Vienna to the second An- Census bureau reports show that the death | °°0® Note had been received as satisfactorily rate in the United States, 13.6 to 1,000 of estl. | *tinE the main point, Austria having gen- mated population, is the lowest on record. The erously subscribed to the principle lald down sliowing is commended to Europe as a brilllant by the United States in its correspondence with oxhibit of the arts of peace. Berlin on the same topic. This would leave only — the lesser details to be adjusted, and the State There is much force in the saying that. the | department at Washington frankly expressed h4od things of & material world are Inequitably | the relief it felt at the issue of the affair. Cistributed. Take the banks, for example., They Now the experience with Germany is being obgerve to the full every holiday on the calendar, | repeated. Just as the Arabic was torpedoed and yet have more money at the end of the | While the Lusitania case was under consider- year. ation, the Persia Is sunk in the vicinity of where ——‘fi an Austrian subsea boat has been active recently. - For soma unaccountable rehson preparedness | This latest attack is made under circumstances tdvocates fail to take into account the defensive | that indicate the rules lald down for the safety rossibilities of the colonels on the staffs of the | Of passengers were not strictly observed. While governors oi forty-eight states. Proper appreci- | the accounts so far at hand do not give all the ation of their courage and commanding ability | detalls, the loss of lite is such as proves undue Would ensble the government to cut its cavalry | haste against the submarine commander, caleulations in two, Consideration of this case will be complicated by the presence of congress, certain members of which have declared intention to supervise it not censure the correspondence of the State department, 5o far as it relates to dealings with belligerents, These statesmen insist the presi- dent has been running amuck in his course, and must be curbed. If they persist, sharp division may result, as Mr. Wilson is too firmly com- mitted in his position to recede, even at the be- hest of congress. In any event, our relations with the Austrian government are once more at a critical stage, and the procedure to be taken should be deter- mined by consideraiions that are far removed from partisan politics. —— Rival aspirants for control of the Frisco rail- road promise to go into court and still further oiF that savory promotion mess. It needs ven- tilation, also a sprinkling of disinfectants. The city woke up to find & heavy mantel of the beautiful on the ground, the snow, which had been falling steadily for more than twenty-four hours, haying reached a depth of a foot and a half. On St, Mary's avenue it was 3 o'clock in the afternoon before the first car was sent out. Traffic wa behind and everybody who could do so stayed at home. €. J. Daubrauch, manager of the 1. T. Clarke Diyug company was the reciplent of a gold watci @4 & New Year's testimonial from his business asso- aites. W. H. Remington of Des Molne: No Dearth of “Good Towns.” Wher Rev. “Billy” Sunday was about to make his debut in Omaha, it was carefully ex- plained to us that bis coming was not because formerly con- cause it was “a good town"—for a religious re- vival, Since his sojourn n our midst, Rev. “Billy” Justices of m‘:.:‘.“:::“.:f,:‘ Las found a fertile fleld for his activities in Judge | Syracuse, and is now again beginning a new furrow in Trenton, with Baltimore already slaked out for the next plowing, and many clamorous competitors for dates for other cities. 1* is certainly gratifying to kmow that there pre so many “good towns" om Billy's visiting Uist and that Omaba is not exceptional in either wickedness or goodness. Let us all keep on the Job and “lrl:lu- the corner” where we are. g - three dollars yearly. Current cost varies but ien cents a week, a generous allowance. Twice Told Tales Startiing Amnouncement. One afterncon, just as a Providence clergyman was about to enter the pulpit to conduct the service, a couple from a nearby town presented themselyes. making known their anxiety to be married as quickly possible. The clergyman, an extremely methodical man, replied that he could not oblige at that moment, but that immediately upon the conclusion of the serv- fce he would take pleasure in making them man and wite. 8o, after some demurring, the couple seated them- selves in the rear of the church, When the minister had finished his remarks he cleared his throat and made the following announcement: “The parties who are to be joined in matrimony will present themselves at the chancel immediately after the singing of hymn 43, ‘Mistaken Souls That Dream of Heaven.''—New York Times. In Memoriam, Frank D. Gildersieeve, assistant general passenger agent of the Baltimore & Ohlo, is trying to “get by" with this one: Pat, & new created section boss, was taking his old friend Mike over the route. They passed a mile-post. It read: “Baltimore forty-two miles." “Phwat does that mean?’ Mike inquired. “Now,' says Gildersleeve, “Pat did not know, out he would not betray his ignorance. With true Irsh aplomb he rose to the situation. Yea ignorance is horrible,” he told Moike. “‘Take off your hat to the dead. Sure, his name was Miles, he was 42 years old, and he lived in Baltimore, and they buried him where he was kilt."—8t. Louls Globe-Democrat. People and Events The first of three homes or portable winter shel. ters for Swiss soldiers, given by Americans at a cost of 36,000, was dedicated In Switserland last week. Each home I8 fully equipped for the purpose in tended, and bear the names of George Washingtos, Abraham Lincoln and Woodrow Wilson. A Jersey City man supposed to have been drowned at Coney Island, where some of his clothes were found, walked in on a group of mourning friends as they were holding a memorial meeting. A commit- tee of three appointed to draft resolutions of con- dolence secured its discharge by standing good for & hot dinner. Only ong lone butcher in Washingion market, Ne: York, applied for a permit to sell horse meat, wn innovation approved by the Board of Health. No opposition has developed among the butchers, each evidently preparing to let the other fellow try out the experiment of overcoming the settied customs of meat eaters. Omahe's claim to the meanest man is conlested by Atlantic City, N. J., but there is mo ground for rivalry. There is an infinite variety of meanness, and Bo two in men are exactly alike. Atlantic City's mean- nest stole the savings of his brother's children from their Christmas banks, and established a record tast 15 in & class by ltcelf . .\ AHA, MONDAY, JANUARY , 1916, efHer Ohjections to Forelgn | Laws. OMAHA, Dee. 31.—To the Editor of The Bee: In the year 1013 a bill wis intro- duced in the state legislature by Rep- resentative Mockett of Lancaster county, which was fostered and lobbled throuzh by an organization of foreign influcnce and thus became a law. This law 1s to provide for and to regu ate the teach- Ing of European languages above the Fourth grade in the public achools of Nebraska. Another law that we have in Nebraska is one compelling county commissioners and county treasurers to publish at puolie expense the proceedinzs of the board and the tax sale advertis:- ment of the treasurer in papers of foreign language in their repective countles if such paper or papers have 1,500 subscr.b ers or more. Such laws as these would not be tol- erated in a foreign country. No forelgn country would have laws giving our American national language such an equal right with their own. No one has been able yet to offer any sound argu- ment why we should have the foreign language laws In America. The position of those favoring the foreign language laws 18 so untenable that they can only resort to abusive tacties which prove nothing more than their insolent, de- graded disposition. 1 have been advised by good, loyal American citizens of for- elgn blood that there is an organized at tempt to ultimately gain forelgn control of this country by putting their foreign language and teachers in our schools and also by using other means. In another country the same thing is being accom- plished by putting teachers In the schools and officers in the army and navy. These language laws are un-American; they lead to clannishness of the for- eigner instead of to Americanization and American sympathies; it leads the for- eigner in America to the news and sym- pathies of forelgn concoction. Many per- sons of foreign birth become good, loyal American citizsens. The children of for- elgn blood, when permitted to get away from forelgn clannishness and foreign language by attending American schools where the English language alone has been taught, have always developed into loyal American citizens. Why throw the language impediment In the way now for them to stumble over? We are glad to give them every opportnuity possible, at public expense, to become worthy, loyal citizens, but it cannot be done by teaching their foreign language in our public schools. . We should limit them to our language at public expense until they have passed through ten grades or more. No person of forelgn blood should be permitted to take part In our govern- ment until after learning to read the newspapers printed in our language. And then his loyalty to the government should be a subject for challenge as much as his vote is. I wish to suggest to our many loyal citizens of foreign blood that the leadership of their organizations has largely fallen into the hands of persons of foreign Influence and sympa- thies, and those leaderships should be renovated. Do you know what they are doing with unsympathetic citizens in all the countries now &t war? Who can say we shall not have war with the same conditions prevalling inside of a year from now? E. L. IRELAND. 2126 Pinkney street. Beet gar History, TOPEKA, Jan. 2—To the Editor of The Bee: Some democratic free-trade stand- patters who are opposed to repealing the free-sugar clause of the Underwood tar- ift give as one of their “reasons” that the American beet sugar industry has been cnjoying protection for forty years but is still “practically undeveloped.” This Is an unfair statement and the as- sertion s not borne out by the facts. Considering that two-thirds of this in- dustry. is located in western states that thirty years ago were sparsely settled, that it has had to face many disadvan- tages, unfriendly agitation that kept it in | continual doubt as to the government's policy toward it, this industry has de- veloped rapidly and encouragingly. The first beet sugar factory was es- tablished in America in 1830, at Philadel- phia, but it did not receive proper encour- agement and it was a fallure. After the re, publican party came Into power and Inaug- urated the wise protective tariff system which has been the foundation of our wonderful Industrial progress, a beet sugar factory was bulilt at Alvarado, Cal. It was successful and from that time the Industry has grown and expanded until today it stretches across the country from Ohlo to the Golden Gate, with sixty- seven factories in operation this year in fourteen states, and which pald Ameri- can farmers $40,000,000 for beets in 1915, The industry is now worth nearly $100,.- 000,000 a year to the nation and practically cupplies its 90,000,000 people with sugar three months in every twelve. But for it at this time, with the European war going on, consumers would be without sugar because the price would be pro- hibitive. We would be sweetening our coffee with molasses, as the south did during the civil war after the nerthern blockade shut off forelgn importations, With assurances of a permanent pro- tective policy the beet sugar industry would unquestionably develop much faster. Already with the promise of a repeal of free-sugar, five new factories are to be bullt. One, at Gering, Neb,, is now nearing completion; another is to be built at Belle Fourche, 8. D. A million- dollar factory at Sheridan, Mont., has just completed its first campaign. Two others are to be bullt this year, one at Wheatland and one at Lovell, and com- pleted for the 1916 sugar campalgn PHIL EASTMAN. Hyphenation va. Ameriea PLATTSMOUTH, Neb, Jan. 2.-To the Editor of The Bee: *“We do not ask for a pro-German president,” says the Fatherland, the German weckly of New York, “but we do not want a presi- dent, who s pro-British. We shall apply to every candidate the acid test of real Americanism. In the democratic camp, Hoke Smith, Champ Clark, Willlam Ran- dolph Hearst, Willam Jenni gs Bryan need pot fedr this test. Borah, Cum- mins, Knox, Nagel. Norris, MeCall, Hughes, Kenyon among the republicans likewise men who have proved the r met. tle. We can vote for these men without loosing our selfrespect. We cannot vote for either Rooseveit or Wilson, unl unforeseen circumstances completely verse the situation.” Here we have the German press in the United States even at this time Injecting ‘nto the next presidential contest the lssue of “natism” versus “hyphenation.’ We have all desired to avoid this fssue for the sake of the country's solidarity. But it it must come, It might as well come at this time and out in the open. There can be but one way in which it will be settied A W. ATWOOD, food some revelations as to war fights under all fiags. Editorial Snapshots Pittsburg Dispatch France has a war scandal and England is promised harity. Graft New York World: The swiftness with | Loutsville Courier-Journal: The fellow | who 1s firmly of the opinion that he | wouldn't have felt as he does it there { had not been a bad egg In the egEmoz | may be described as a sincere friend | of John Barleycorn which compensation laws have covered the workers of the land is remarkable Not all satlefactory, some of them littls more than experiments, they already exist in thirty-one states, besides Alaska and Hawalil, and part of the federal em- ployes are also working under compensa- tion. 1t will soon be universal Indianapolis News The enormous amount of meat officially reported to be | in storage in New York and New Jer meat consumption, sey again reminds one that not so much has been heard about of meat the impossibility sping up with since large contracts production k to supply the. European belligerents are being regularly and promptly SMILING REMARKS. filled. Employer—What, you here still? I thought ‘T d'scharged vou Cassldy—Ye did, sorr Employer—Well, why didn’t you get out when you were told? Cassidy—Shure sorr, Of know when Of got a good boss, aven If ve don't know when ye have a good man.—Boston Tran- script. Mrs, A.—Let's zo and see that new medium. She cinims that she ean call up any spirit you desire, Mrs. B.—Thanks!' I have no desire to communicate with sofr alled up.—Boston T s that have to be seript Oh Enthuslastic Lad sir, may we tarry here awhile and drink deep of thess deep here, lady. Th's y —Baltimore American medium Magazine. rural delights? Practical Native—Can't drink nothin’ 8 a dry town “If & man has the price he can get r(nzlh!n‘ he wants and the way he wants “Don’'t know about that. There' soft-bolled wiingis egg."—Browning's She—Now tell the truth, Weren't you gambling at your club last night? He—Indecd, we had only been talkine of spiritualisiic experiments, ve wers ust sitting around (able Tt ands.—Baltimore Ameriea. the table holding «Why was one paving contractor pre- ferred over the other: “Because while one took up an abstract the other eame | proposition in the matter, down with _a concrete statement.”—In- | dianapolis New 1 told my boy that Santa Claus 18 only a myth How did he take it? He didr " h impressed, He merely remarked every great and good man has te ibjected to some kind of unfavorable comment.”—Wash« ington Star Did_that alieniat prove that you wers crazy 7 “No,” replied the defendant: ‘but he admitted that he was nearly so before the lawyer got through with him "— Dallas News. “Indeed, Cousin Jack, we owe you & great deal for helping to decorate the room for our Christmas party “Then as you acknowledse the debt, come over here under the mistletoe and let me llect some of the overhead charges. ouisville Courfer-Journal v e~Pa, when has a man horse sense? Pi—When he can say “Nay,” my son.— Philadelphia Ledger. [ OLD YEAR SMILES. ‘Great Scott sald D'ngley Dell. Tt says here in this paper that bromides have gone up from 35 cents to $.50 a pound’ Oh, well, what of it?" mid Bfldad. “The Congressional Record is free. Let sufferers from sleeplessness read that in- stead."—New York Times. Old man Smith kicked young Flivvins | out when he asked permission to marry his daughter.” y inen | giess the'old man's objections carried welght."—Baltimore American. see a greal composer just Chureh=I dled in E Gotham—Too bad. They certainly need to be comnosed over there just now.— Yonkers Statesman Penley—I can't afford it, my dear. Re- | member, I'm merely a_ hack writer. His Wife— and why are you merely a hack writer’—because you're such a | slow coach.—Boston Transecript “Yes, sir; 1 can assure you that when your daughter is graduated from my echool you won't know her." But ‘I don't know her now."”—Life. “1 am afraid your _daughter, Mrs, Comeup, has not enough savolr faire.” “Dear me! Do you think we'll have to walit “until the | move from Paris? war |8 over to get her ~Chicago Post say people with opposite char- stics make the happlest marriages.” es; that's why I'm looking for a girl money."'—Brooklyn Eagle. I take a cold bath every morn- Yah!" “You seem to doubt my statement.” “My dear sir, if every man took a cold bath every morning who talks about tak- ing a cold bath every morning, my busi- ness would be doubled.” “What is rour busin The soap business.—Louisville Cour- fer-Journal. " PRICES LOWERED The prices for the underment the price of issue in their respective countries, but owing to the practical cessation of exports to Empires rates of exchange have fore able to offer the issues named at the prices stated below: We offer—subject IMPERIAL GERMAN 60 (THIRD W TAX EXEMFT IN GERMANY, 1000 Mark - (Exclusive April 1916 Coupon) - $198.00 INTEREST PAYABL IMPERIAL GERMAN COVE Not callable before 1000 Mark ............. 4 INTEREST PAYABLE JANUARY A ™ Definitive bonds ready for immediate delivery ~gs@ THIRD AUSTRIAN WA TAX EXEMPT IN AUSTRIA, REDEEMABLE IN 1930 1000 Kronen.......... INTEREST PAYABLE THIRD HUNGARIAN WAR LOAN 6% BONDS | TAX EXEMPT IN HUNGARY, 1000 Kronen.......... INTEREST PAYABLE JMMERMANN & Members of the New 9 and 11 WALL STREET ioned secruities remain at or above | the United States by the Central | declined further and we are there- ! to change in price— VERNMENT 59 BONDS AR LOAN) NOT CALLABLE BEFORE 1924 VERNMENT 4%, BONDS 1918 ‘ eene....$180.00 | s | ND JULY, OR APRIL AND OCTOBER | | R LOAN 539 BONDS ----$130.00 RY AND JULY JANU. NOT CALLABLE BEFORE 1921 MAY AND NOVEMBER | FORSHAY York Stock Exchange NEW YORK LASTTRAIN ror FLORIDA LEAVING CHICAGO EVERY NIGHT Lv.CHICAGO 2355 12.01AM Ar.JACKSONVILLE 8.45AM PENNSYLVANIA L1 Only Throu via Cincinnati NES ough Train Through Knoxvilleand Atlanta Over Ne\xficenic Route Particulars, also Tourist Tickets to from local ric Doug! inter ket ay . Neb. Florida and. be obtained ents or byaddress- MWAH.xO!VhAND Trav. Pass. Agt., 329335 y 'm“.' s 5. 4‘11 224 JJS.CM!NGM ——— i § e Y —— —— e s

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