Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 15, 1916, Page 10

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE| FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR “THE DEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETOR. Eotered at Omaha postoffice & second-class matter. 00 $10.00. of address or irregularity in de- livery to Omaha Bee, Circulstion Department. REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only 2-cent stamps taken in u({-.m of small accounts. Persongl checks, wxcept on Omahs and eastern exchange, not;ac L . OFFICES. Omaas—The Bee Building. South Omeha—2818 818 N street. Couneil Bluffs—14 North Main street. Lincoln—526 Little Juilding. Chicago—818 People’s Gas Building. lew Room 808, 286 Fifth avenue. 8t. Louis—503 New Bank of Commerce. Washington—725 Fourteenth street, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Addres: ications relsting to news and editorial ~ matter to Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. JUNE CIRCULATION 57,957 Daily—Sunday 52,877 ' Dwight ¢ tion er of The Bee Publioin compeny” belng. duly Aworn says_ that the frerage, elreulation olor the month of- June, 1916, was { DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Girculation Manager. in my presence sworn to before me this 34 asy of Juiy. 1018 ”* ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Publie. Subscribers | the city temporaril; Should have The Bes mailed 1o them. Ade dress will be changed as often as requested. Having cleaned up the Armenians, the Turks are now jumping on the unarmed Syrians. —e As a sample of democratic preparedness, the riot of famished guardsmen at Cleveland will hold ‘their attention for awhile, \ — The most hopeful sign of the European war is the sagging of the stock market quotations on American munitions plants. e— More adequate preparedness in the Postoffice .department to handle the mail of the soldiers on the border would also be appreciated. ———— Mayor “Jim" wants it understood that he is an artist at rope throwing and language slinging, regardless of his ability to qualify as an art critic, While medical science stands baffled before in- ~ fantile paralysis, it behooves parents~to exercise - extreme care and cleanliness in safeguarding their young. S Sei——— . Castro, the Villa of/ Venezuela, is reported headed for the United States. Wonder what's his grievance against the democratic school- master? o SR In the olden days the city council used to take an adjournment for the summer without in the slightest interfering with the’ conduct of munici- pal affairs. 'Nuf sed. E— Qualified approval of the Nebraska supreme court commission by the federal court does not insure a perfect title, but it serves to moderate an embarrassment of work, 4 S Sre——— ‘The only way left for the Germ\lnl to excel their own achievement in sending their submarine actoss the Atlantic is to send over another and let it land at San Francisco. ——— “Hitchcock, Fanning & Co.” will take posses- sion of the Omaha postoffice August 1, but the event will be lacking unless all members of the firm stand in the receiving line. i Se——— . The railroads have not yet given even a plaus- ible excuse for their discrimination against Omaha in summer excursion rates. Their attitude seems :‘o be merely, “What jare you going to do about » / | That is certainly the “irony of fate” for those Towa militiamen answering ‘the summons for service in Mexico only to be incapacitated by lf[hmia( before getting out of the mobilization camp. i Sp— . The man who penned the song, “I Didn't Raise My Boy to Be a Soldier” has given his son ) n to enlist in the California militia, An- ather mollycoddle converted by the preunre\of p — - Towa's democratic keynoter doubtless carries large stock of good intentions. His claim that fm roads are possible without. increasing taxa- uggests large contributions from. his pile |+ tly celebrated paving material. — ~ The Houston Post condemns the assertion of southern politicians that the rich north will bear greater share of the preparedness cost, and he ize of bill does not concern the south. Texas, ”;Put asserts, will pay i!lllhlu of the cost ugh indirect taxation. So will every northern and the bulk of the income taxes at the e time. While the south is in the saddle, the ts }t’_cominl and going. S—— People and Events. of Polar fame is browsing about the circuit of Nebraska, dilcmmin,r on life and drawing moderate sustenance from office. Industrial Worker of the World eolk‘e forum, spans the latest leap annenbaum, erstwhile raider of New hurches, now a summer school student at Wisconsin guardsmen now fear the wotst. Or- forbids them taking their mascots to the hern border, and a hlndslcked collection of ! u(lfil, owls, parrots, and cats must ain at home. variety of personally-con- oaths supplement the oath taken when the ‘were mustered in. ¥ d e turns show that the champion girl Perinsylvania ,whose record of 971 d wihout a recess, startled the the Kenstone state, performed the “.an assumed name. Her real X p not Mary Hainsey, as ivi Y .guardsmen contend the is of no consequence. The kisses were the “Zeps,” U-Boats and “Big Business.” Captain Koenig of the Deutschland evidently appreciates the humor of his achievement, and is not above joking us a little in his jovial German way. But he is not altogether “spoofing” in his prophecy that a fleet of freight-carrying Zeppelins is to supplement the U-boat in reviving coms merce with Germany. That such a proceeding is possible is beyond doubt; that it is probable is equally admissible. Long before the war broke out Count Zeppelin had very definite plans for crossing from Germany to the United States, and the air-fleet might have been regularly established ere this had not Mars had immediate use for the equipment of Mercury. It was not impossible then, and is feasible now, and with the stimulus of-war and the pressure.of “big business” to ani- mate them, the Germans may really bring to pass that vision of Tennyson, who « Saw the heavens filled with commerce, Argosies of magic sails, Pilots of the purple twilight, Dropring down with costly bales. It is only a question of fuel for power pur- poses. This is a detail the German scientists and mechanics will attend to. They have accomp- lished other things of equal difficulty, and even'in their sternest hour of bloody conflict may become the pioneers for the day when travel will be over- head. At least, the world will welcome the adap- tation of the aircraft to the purposes of peace, Yes, But Who Wflm Bond? Anticipating the platform-makers in the forthcoming state conventions, The Lincoln Star, which usually speaks by the card for the demo- cratic machine, insists that while the "dry" amendment should not be made a party issue, “the democratic platform ought to declare, and undoubtedly will declare, that whatever the de- cree of the people in regard to this issue may be, it should be, and will be, carried out to the letter by the party entrusted with executive and legis- lative power.” And then, after more of the same kind, it says: “That is the essence of democracy which keeps faith with the people. It ought not to be necessary for any party to promise that its candidates will obey the expressed and recorded will of the people,; but in this particular instance it seems quite imperative that democrats shall do this.” Perhaps it ought not to be necessary, but the Star knows, and that is the reason for its demand, that the candidates nominated on the democratic state ticket are under suspicion, the discredit hav- ing been attached to them by the campaign made by Mr. Bryan against their nomination. For very good reasons, born of experience, democratic pledges do not pass current at par, either in state or nation, Baltimore platform, Mr. Bryan added the solemn assurance, “Our pledges are made to be képt when in office as well as relied upon during the cam- paign.” But, evén that has not prevented the flagrant repudiation of most of the platform prom- ises on which democrats rode into power. The coming democratic state platform might repeat ‘this phrase and still not allay popular distrust. Before banks fork over cash in exchange for promises to pay, they require indorsements or collateral security and when democratic promises are handed out this year, Nebraska voters will be apt to ask: “Where is the bond to guarantee re- demption?” Qil Inspection Fees. The referce in the oil inspection fee case has made a recommendation to the court that should be very satisfactory to the Standard Oil company, b(!vh not likely to meet public approval. The case appears to hinge on whether the fee collected is in excess of the cost of the service rendered. Under the Nebraska constitution public revenue is to be raised by direct taxation, but of late years the fees collected by public officers have appreciably supplemented the“income, and af- forded opportunity to reduce the direct levy by that much. These fees were fixed, for the most part, at a time when the service was not so fre- quently called for. In the case of oil inspection, the consumption of oil in Nebraska has increased to such an extent that the fees collected far more than pay the cost of the service. This is equally true of other work for which fees are collected by public officers. In Douglas county each officer of record turns into the treasury a considerable balange after paying all expenses of his office. None will contend that the fee for registering automobiles is not much larger than the cost of doing the work, purposely made so that the sur- plus may be used for road improvement. With these examples, it is plain that if the recommenda- tion of the referee in the oil case is adopted by the courts as the law, the entire fee system will have to undergo an overhauling and readjust- ment, and a much larger sum of money be col- lected by direct taxation. Som—— Democracy and the Other Kind. One sprightly young German sailor will go back with the Deutschland carrying a notion of the differenice between American democracy and Germany autocracy. Whether he will apply it as it should be is a matter for him to decide, but the probabilities are strong in favdr of its get- ting home. This young man, in a spirit of fun, asked and received permission to sit in the presi- dent's chair at the head of the cabinet table. This act in itself doesn't mean a great deal to an American citizen, anyone of whom may be called upon to fill that chair officially. To a youngster from a land where government comes from above, the experience must have some appeal. He should get from it a sense of higher valuation of his in- dividual life Than he could possibly imbibe at home, and a better conception of the privileges of free citizenship, It is not likely he will reach this conclusion all at once, but fhis memory will always carry the picture of himself sitting in the seat of the executive head of a great people, and in time he will realize that that head is not there by birth, but is chosen by the suffrages of that people. This germ of freedom ought to bring fruit that will ripen in one more naturalized citi- zen of the United States. ——— The deadlock between the city and street railway company produces this peculiar situation —that the company is able to make extensions outside of the city, but not/inside of the municipal boundaries. There should be some way of reach- ing an adjustment that will not affect the fran- chise question on one side or the other. The country no doubt will enjoy the news that the National Woman's party has tossed its ‘hat into the political ring. The operation lends ‘a touch of color to the collection and disposes of hud_mpr distinctly out of date, Congress hangs out the sign of an early finish. The general*dam bill holds the right of way. Realizing this when he wrote the’ THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY:- JULY 15, Thought Nugget For the Day. Nobler than a ship safely ending a long voy- age, and sublimer than the setting sun, 1s the f a just and kind and useful life. old age of a just ani n e MO US. St. Swithin’s Day Today. 20 St. Swithin's day is observed as a festival in honor of St. Swithin, Bishop of Winchester, in England, ffom 852 to 862. He was not ganum:ed by the church but only in popular tradition. The weather rhyme runs, in one of many variants, as follows: : St. Swithin’s day, if thou dost rain For forty days it will remain; St. Swithin’s day, if thou be fair, For forty days, 'twill rain nae mair. One Year Ago Today in the War. Italian assault in the Dolomites repelled. British and French captured large town in central ‘(amerun. q Russia_admitted Teutonic gains in northern drive on Warsaw. 4 Allies seized two lines of Turkish intrench- ments in all-day battle. Germany formally. admitted that the damage to the American merchant ship Nebraskan was caused by German submarine. This Day in Omaha Thirty Years Ago. The funeral of Miss Maggie Broderick took lace from the residence of her parents on South leventh street. The remains were borne to St. Philomena’s, where requiem high mass was chanted by Rev. F. Carroll. The juvenile choir under Miss Fannie Arnold, rendered the choral work, while the pallbearers were: J. I. Nichol, C. J. Smyth, J. T. Moriarity and T, F. Brennan. B. R. Ball, of the firm of Ball & Van Brump, has just returned from Chicago, accompanied by his niece, Miss Kittie Ball. The G. G. G., a woman's club of this city, gave a reception at the home of the Misses Dohaney in honor of the coming marriage of Miss Blanche Oliver to Mr. W. L. Welsh. The Second infantry ‘band, now stationed at Fort Omaha, favored The Bee with a serenade, which was heartily appreciated. The band num- bers twenty-three members and is under the leadership of A. Wiedemeyer. C. H. Brainard, who has been steward afthe Hubbell House in Sioux City, Ia., has arrived in Omaha to assume the management of the Canfield House, Today in History. " i 1696—French and Indians captured the fort at Pemaquid, Me. ; 1788—Governor St. Clair established civil government in the new northwest territory. 1837—Carlists defeated near Valencia by forces of the queen of Spain. = 1849—Re-establishment of the temporal aus thorities of the pope proclaimed at Rome, - 1870—France resolved upon war with Prussia. 1890—T wenty-fifth anniversary of the Salva- tion Army celebrated in London. 1893—German Reichstag passed the army bill, fixing the peace effective at 479,220 men for two years, 1914—Francisco Carbajal succeeded Porfirio Diaz as president of Mexico. This Is the Day We Celebrate. Anorneg C. W. Delamatre is celebrating his fifty-sixth birthday today. He was born in Kim- ball, O., and educated in the Ohio state univer- sity and the Cincinnati law school. He came to Omaha in 1886. Lucien Stephens was born July 15, 1861, at Rockport, Mo., and was educated in the Omaha public schools and Du Pauw university. Gwyer H. Yates, assistant cashier United States National bank, is just 31 years old. He was born in Omaha and started in the banking business with the Nebraska National bank, going to his present position in 1905. William Winter, celebrated dramatic critic and author, born at Gloucester, Mass., eighty years.ago today. Franklin K. Lane, secretary of the interior in President Wilson’s cabinet, born in Prince Ed- ward Island, fifty-two years ago today. Baron Northcliffe, nated British newspaper and magazine publisher, born near Dublin, fifty- one years ago today. me. Schumann-Heink, celebrated o erl{ic and concert singer, barn near Prague, Boicmia, fifty-four years ago today. Marie Tempest, one of the best known act- resses of the English-speaking stage, born in Lon- don fifty years ago today. Bigshop Leo Haid, abbot. of the celebrated Benedictine abbey at Belmont, N. C., born at Latrobe, Pa., sixty-seven years ago today. « Dr. Benjamin Ide Wheeler, president of the University of California, born at Randelph, Mass., sixty-two years ago today. ¥ Melbourne Inman, English champion billiard player, born at Twickenham, England, thirty-eight years ago today. Where They Al Are Now. Lyman Bryson, member of The Bee staff a few years ago, is now teaching journalism in the University of Michigan. He is writing short stories, several of which have appeared in Mc- Clure’s and Scribner’s magazines, He is about to have a book of his poems published. A. L. Gale, formerly of the Darlow Advertis- ing ag:nca' and at one time president of the Omaha Ad club, is now with the Taylor-Critch- field Advertising company of Chicago, one of the largest in the world. Arthur L. Welsh, formerly in the Union Pa- cific ticket office here, then traveling auditor for the Northwestern and for three years ticket seller at the Union station, is now city ticket agent for the Canadian Pacific at Portland, Ore. C. H. Walworth, who resided in Omaha for many years and who some five years-ago sold out his oldmfi and moved to Florida, is about to return to Nebraska. He has written to friends here that he has disposed of his Florida property and that he has heard again the call of Nebraska, adding that this section of the United States is good enough for him. Timely Jottings and Reminders. ; Milwaukee is to hold a big preparedness parade today. Today is the date fixed for the inauguration of the new plan of clearing for member banks in the Federal Reserye system. Vessels of the United States navy are sched- uled to leave Boston, Newport, New York, Hamp- ton Roads, Portland, Ore., and other points today with the{paval militia of the various states bound on the summer practice chuise, Thousands of stockholders, officials and em- ‘plorel of the Calumet & Hecla Mining company, including a distinguished g:ng from Boston, will gather today at Calumet, Mich,, for a celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the beginning of work in the Michigan copper mines. Story-ette of the Day. Jim Smith was notoriously slow pay. He owed quite a bill at the grocery for pgrk’: One day, as his credit was becoming strained, he walked calmly into the grocery and said: “Mr. Black, I want to pay you for the pork I have bad, and I want some more.” ‘Certainly,” said the delighted proprietor, as he hastened to wait on his customer. Taking the package of pork, Jim Smith started to go. “Wait a minute,” said the proprietor. “I thought you wanted to pay for the pork.” “I'do,” remarked Jim, as he resumed his home- ward way, “but I can’t."—The Christian Herald. 1916. ThePees Leffer: Hansen for Hughes. Fremont, Neb., July 14.—To the Editor of The Bee: Following up action of the progressive te committee at Lincoln yes- terday, I have issued the following announce- ment: In recognition of the great issues, state and national, involved in the election of the present year, and belleving that these can best be furthered by the rallying of pro- pressives, republicans and good citizens gen- erally around the leadership of Judge Sut- ton for governor of Nebrasks and Charles E. Hughes for president, I withdraw from the progressive candidacy for governor, heartlly indorsing Judge Sutton instead. A firm adherent, now as ever, of the principles and personality of Theodore Roose- velt, 1 have for ten or more years had scarcely less confidence in and admiration for Charles E. Hughes as s great, reliable national leader. During the number of years in the early stages of Mr. Hughes' great New York reer, I was much in that state in a bu capacity, and in the state house and ve halls at Albany, and laid the foun then of my present cpnfidence in Mr. Hughes and familiarity with his great, unswerving public services there. 1 As 2 native of Kansas, born in the flerce John Brown abolition days, I was fired by that early civil war environment with an interse Americanism myself, and would ac- cept nothing else now in a presidential can- didate. My knowledge of Mr. Hughes satis- fies me entirely that his Americanism is of e_right sort. Nebraska will go, dry this fall, and the only way to get a dry governor unquali- fledly pledged to initiate and enforce dry legislation from the start, an end second in importance only to the adoption of the anti- liquor amendment itself, will be to center the dry vote upon and elect Judge Sutton. J. F. HANSON, Progressive Nominee for Governor. Warning the Beach Warmers. Omsha, July 14.—To the Editor of The Bee: The municipal bathing beach at Carter Iake is one of the commendable features of this great inland city. It reflects the big- heartedness of the astute city fathers in setting aside a place for recreation where the weary toilers at the end of a sweltering day can refresh themselves in the cooling depth of the sparkling lake. But in spite of the good intent of our well meaning citizens this still remains a world in which privilege is often mi strued into a license for the vicious and the vulgar. starting, some jynx bobs up, turns off the sunshine and spoils the whole thing.. The jynx at Carter lake is the one-piece bathing suit donned by a few dozen daring women evidently attempting'to spread-eagle around the conventions that prevent them from pos- ing entirely nude before the public gaze. The world has not yet advanced to that stage of perfection when semi-nude posing of the fair sex at the beaches can be consid- Just as the wholesome fun is ered anything but vulgar, Vulgarity is ignor- - ance of society conventions and in this in- stance a perverse vulgarity which nauseates and disgusts anyone who will stop to rate the shallow mindedness that persuades a fe- male to pose in public as September Morn. As the majority of these would-be nyads don’t know the Australian crawl from a barbed wire fence, it is fair to assume that a short skirt would nqp interfere with their aquatic pleasures. On the other hand, if the one-plece suit is worn for the edification of the he-hangers-on at the beach, let us hasten to remind the symphs that these beach warmers are men in name only. The real, red-blooded regu- lar fellow is too busy splashing to receive any divine inspiration and the beach warmer who enjoys himself ogling the women is the laziest, weakest, most inconsequential rodent out of captivity, It is impossible to engender pure admiration in his mind. The highest inspiration he has is/ a sniveling desire to exchange insinuating remarks that fall far short of the compliment sought by the spritely mermaids and also a few ancient tub-shaped femitle monsters of the deep. We were reared near the largest bathing beach in the world, and while there were no rules that required a fair bather to cover herself with a full length linsey woolsey petticoat, there were adequate regulations that made the vulgar impossible and elimi- nated the he-hanger-on. Visitors never mis- took the beach for a reincarnation of the Garden of Eden, and husbands didn’t have to wear a bandage over their eyes when adequate restric- mayor will look e matter and also not take too long a look. LYNN GLYMAN. Absentes City Employes. To the Editor of The Bee: As a taxpayer I would not say anything against any city employe having & reasonable vacation, for it is conceded that vacations are wise and necessary, but the limit of reason seems to have been reached in the case of the city gas commissioner, who has just returned, after an absence since June 12, when he left on the special train for the democratic national convention at St. Louis. Several times I called at the, gas commissioner's office f6r information and was unable to find that official in. He was gone, I am told, nearly five weeks, for which time the city paid him more than $200. No business in- stitution would stand for such methods. ‘Why not apply efficiency to the affairs of the city? It is time to apply the efficiency test to_ séveral city hall departments, and the gas commissioner's office is just as good as any place fo: tart. Why is the gas commissioner such privileged character, anyway? Is this a sample of the wise and economical government the mayor promised e taxpayers when he sought their votes? e gas commissioner’s office, let it be re- membered, is directly under the mayor. We trust that the gas commissioner may be able to complete the year without any more va- cations. * COUNT VERITAS. Stars and Groups of Stars. Omaha, July 14.—To the Editor of The Bee: Although Orion, the most beautiful of all the constellations, left us long ago, and Venus and Saturn have become morning ) stars, rising about 4 a. m., there are still some, beautiful stars and constellations to be seen by any oné willing to."look, up, not down.” A little “looking up” will well repay any one, especially now that the subject of astronomy is “‘coming into its own": once more, on account of the wonderful strides the science has made in recent years. In the northwest sky is.the Big Dipper, or Great Bear, as it was known by the ancients, perhaps because the bear was the only animal always to be found in the cold regions of the morth. The seven stars of the dipper bear no re- semblance, of course, to a bear or afly' other quadruped, but by joinipg to it a lot of stray stars and using some imagination, a fairly ®ood hobby-horse bear can be made out. It swings around the Polar star once every twenty-four hours with its faithful *“pointers” constantly showing the traveler the loeation of the North star. 5 In June the dipper is to the left of Polaris ~—the North Star—September 22 he will be directly underneath. December 22, to the right and March 21, exactly above. Shakespeare speaks of telling the time by “Charles’ Wain,” the name the dipper is known by in England. The Little Dipper is easily located, as the North or Polar star is in the end of the handle. N= “In the northeast, opposite the dipper, is Casslopeis, a big letter W done in five bril- Hant stars. In the east is the three-cornered constel- lation, Cygnus—the swan—sometimes called the Northern Cross, formed by the three first in the Milky Way, which is composed billions of stars—suns—like our o In the south is Scorpio, with its beautiful red star Antares—Anti-Mars. Overhead is beautiful Arcturus, shone down upon Job 2,600 years per for about thirty degrees—the two point- ers are flve degrees apart—one can locate Arcturus, and thirty degrees farther, con- tinuing the curve, is Spica. Spiea is not nearly so bright as “Arcturus, fairest of the stars,” but is one of the fifteen first magnitude stars visible in the northern hemisphere. Deneb, Aquils and Vega are all in the constellation. The Swan, Antares, Arcturus and Bpica are the six first magnitude stars now visible at a seasonable hour. It may be interesting to know that the light we receive from Deneb, the star at the Aop of the Northern Cross, left that star about the time of the Spanish Armada. From Avcturus light requires 100 years to reach us, from Antares, 162, from Vegs, 29 and from Altair only 15 years. Arcturus is quite a scorcher, moving through space at the rate of two or three hundfed miles per second, and he gives one thousand ti much light as the sun. His extrem e is all that saves us from this tremendous light. If the sun were as far §way as Arcturus, he would be a telescope star. MRS. W. B. HOWARD. SUNNY GEMS. “Pa, what's the amende honorable?” “That's the kind of apology, son, that makes the man to whom you offer it want to buy a drink.”—Birmingham Age-Herald. She (tearfully)—You sald if I'd marry you, you'd be humbly grateful, and now— Ho (sourly)—Well? | She—You're grumbly hatetul!—Judge. “Is that dog dangerous?” “Sometimes. There {sn’t another do the settlement who dares come near in im. But a little bit of a {lea can walk all over him with perfect safety.”’—\Wushington Star. Daddy—Jeannette, if I allow young Stmp- son to become my son-in-law, do you sup- pose he will be willing to work and sup- port you?” Jeannette—Oh, dad, how can he, when he promised to do nothing but think of me all the time?—Puck. —— DEAR MR. KABIBBLE, 1 JUST GOV MARRIED -1 1Y _RIGHT TO GET MISELF LIFE INSURANCE FOR HER ? “Here's an attractive advertisement for summer boarders.” “What does it say?" “‘Act as If you owned the earth at our place and we'll act as If we were going to give it to you.' "—Birmingham Age-Herald. Avolrdupois—TI'll bet you five plunks that I can run around that track in less than a minute. Has anyone got a stop watch? Wit—You don't want a stop watch. Hey! Who's got a calendar?—The American Boy. “Whaf have you decided to do with your summer vacation.” “Something absolutely original. I'm go- ing to atay at home and spend the time try- ing to pay up some of the debts I mc- Star. rumullfil during the winter.”—Washington The Store of the Town Browning, King & Company OUR 5 SEMI-ANNUAL SALE OF MEN’S HIGH-CLASS FURNISHING GOODS 1 NOW ON Just Glance Over the Extraordinary Values ' Listed Below and Come Early— SILK SHIRTS— $5.00 quality....... $6.50 quality...... - $7.50 quality........85.00—3 for $10.00 quality..... .$3.45—3 f | '$6.65—3 for $19.00 ‘SOFT AND STIFF CUFF SHIRTS— PERCALES—MADRAS—CREPES $1.50 quality. . - Satin STRIPES $2.00 quality...... $2.50 quality..... SILK AND LINEN $3.00 quality. $3.50 quality ...$1.95—3 for ...95¢—3 for § o el | $ QI =3 ..$2.35—3 for ATHLETIC UNION'SUITS— - $1.00 quality..... $1.50, quality..... $2.00 quality...... $4.00 silk. . SILK NECKWEAR— 50c quality............ $1.00 quality:..... $1.50 quality..... $2.00 ‘quality...... $2.50 quality...... WASH TIES— 25¢ quality. 35¢c quality. 50c quality. . $1.00 quality. .. PAJAMAS— $1.50 quality..... $2.00 quality..... $2.50 quality..... $3.00° quality..... 228 Sebs 233 e [ ot ...81.15 --81.45 ..$1.85 .. $2.15 Browning, King & Company Geo. JT. Wilson, Mgr. Specially desirable office for a Real Estate firm with a rental business, At the head of the stairs on the first floor, oppo- site The Bee business office. This would make it especially convenient for people who want to deal with rent. g real estate firm having houses for It is almost as good as a ground floor location, and the rent is very reasonable, indeed. Price, per month. . ..$30.00 « It carries with it all the advantages of service in THE BEE BUILDING Apply to Building Superintendent, Room 103. poisons moved. S. I."‘.nwill cleanse the blood and give oew life and vitality to the vegetahl Get by B8 any draggin. an c-h’. Insist on the

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