Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 1, 1916, Page 1

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Use the telephone for BEE WANT-ADS Telephone Tyler 1000 Easiest way. XLVIL.—NO. ) YOL. 143. QUSSIANS MAKE SAINS IN THER vs Advance in Fight Yor possession of Kirlibaba Pass in Carpathian Mountains. WN IN EANGE OF GUNS Jetrograd Says Situation in Dobrudja Region Without ' " Any Change. NEMY ATTACK REPULSED Petrograd, Nov. 30.—(Via Loidon) The new Russian offensive in the Carpathians has resulted in consider- able\ gains, it is announced officially. Heayy fighting is proceeding for pos- session of the important pass through the 'Carpathians at Kirlibaba and to- Cay's announcement says the town is now within rifle range of the Rus- sians. The announcement follows: A “Having attacked the Roumanians _along the road from the Danube toward Bucharest, near Giumanzi, Tzalugareni and Tzomania, the enemy occupied the latter position towards evening. ! “The situation in Dobrudja is un- changed.” “On the western front, in the region of the village of Peraplianka (east of Vilna), small enemy forces attempted to advance on our trenches,” says to- day’s communication from the war office. “They were driven back to their own entrenchments. “Our artillery dispersed three enemy columns, each about a battalion strong, which were moving eastward from the outskirts of Gorodichi. “In the region of the village of Korytniza we captured a galient ene- my position which projected deeply into our front. In the wooded Car- pathians we gained possession of kada height, eleven -verts southeast of Wakarka, capturing 100 Germans and three machine guns. “East of Kirlibaba the battle is still proceeding. In the last two days we ave taken about 900 prisoners in this neighborhood and captured thirteen machine guns, two bomb mortars, one mine thrower and two projectors. Kirlibaba is\under our rifle fire.” McCaull Tells 0f Piece of Bone Hg_H_a,d Shown Red Qak, Ia, Nov. 30.—(Special Telegram.)—W. B. McCaull was re- called to the witness stand this morn- ing to continue his testimony in cross- examination in the $60,000 damage suit which has been in progress here since November 13. When Attorney Mitchell thun- : dered at him the question, “Where did you get that piece of bone which several witnesses have told here that you displayed in your pool room and said it was a piece of Joe Moore's ull?” the witness said it was a piece of Bane he picked up in the alley back of IHI- pool hall with which to illus- trate the pieces of skull which he saw on the floor at the Joe Moore home on the setpnd morning after the mur- er of the Moore family when he “Went there')in company with City Marshal “Hank” Morton. McCaull fidished his testimony at 3 o'clock, the guestions which Attor- ney Mitchell fifed at him having pro- duced little cfixct in the attempt to break down thelstory of the witness. MeCaull stood fitm in his declarations that he spent the gvening of the night of the murder at the Knights of Pyth- ias club room till{11:20 o'clock; that he went directly tlmm" from there and stayed at Imn‘all night; that he u knew nothing of plot to murder the Moore family, #nd that he never had in his posséssion a piece of the ; skull of Joe Moore. e * Minister Under Serious Charges Flees from Home Eureka, Cal, Nov. 30.—The Rev. Warren Hastings McLeod, Baptist minister here, disappeared yesterday after he had been confronted with the deacons of his churck, who charged him with undue familiarity | with a young girl whc belonged to e congregation. His wife is pros- trated. He has four children. The Rev. Mr. McLeod came here from Chicago and had a reputation as a \ former eastern track athlete, | The Weather ' ) For Nebraska—Fair; colder west portion Temperatures at Omaha Yesterday. Hour, 1916, 1915, 1914, Highest yesterds sie e N Lowest yosterday 24 43 48 “. Mean temperatu; 31 46 48 Precipitation 00 0z 55 Temperature and precipitation departures from the normal at Omaha since March 1 and compared with the last two years: Normal temperature oS Excess for the day.... Total excess since March Normal precipitation. . Deficiency for the day..... Total rainfall since March 1.. eflclency since March 1.,.. Deflelency for cor. period, 191 for cor. period, 1914. 1, 1016, 3.90 inches NEW OFFENSIVE| VILHJALMAR STEFANSSON— Three years in the far north at the head of the Canadian Arctic expe- dition, who now plans to search for Crocker Land, to set at rest doubts raised as to its existence. z PACKERS HAKING PARMERS WEALTHY Breed&'s of Cattle Take Eighty Cents Out of Every Dollar Handled. . CUDAHY KEEPS TWO CENTS Pity the poor farmer. He has noth= ing but money in the bank to worry about. Outeof every dollar taken in by, the Cudahy Packing company from the sale of all products derived from ani- mals, Mr. Farmer and his thrifty wife got exactly 80 cents, B And the Cudahy Packing company handled/ust $133,960,986.37 worth of busines in its fiscal year which closed October 28. Incidentally its net profit for the year was $3,011,414.94, This bank roll is what is left over after deducting from gross profit all expenses of every kind, including de- preciation, repairs, interest on bonds and other borrowed money. An Observation. “It is interesting to observe,” says he company’s business circular, “that, while the figures,in dollars rep- resenting gross sales from all prod- ucts derived from animals are prob- ably larger than ever before, the ton- nage has fiot greatly increaséd. Prac- tically all of the increase in dollars has been paid to the farmer and Jive stock producer in the price-we have paid for the animals handled. In fact, the packers are practically the collec- tion agents of the farmer.” After thus informing the breeder of cattle that they (the packers) are his errand boys, the Cudahy company tells how the remaining 20 cerits of the dollar which the farmer doesn’t get, are spent, = Spending the Rest. “Seven cents goes to the wage carners, 5 cents for freight and 4 cents ing. Out of the remaining 4 cents there have been paid interest, taxes, insurance, repairs and all such items, and of the residue not quite 2 cents per dollar applies to the fet profits of the company.” The packer pockets 2 cents out of every (100 pennies and the farmer pockets eighty. And yet the packer is not ranked as a pauper. Pity the poor farmer. He has noth- ing but money in the bank to worry about. 7 0Old Indian Guide Gets Big Welcome at Pawnee J. N. Williamson, who guided the Pawnce Indians in 1874 when they migrated from Nebraska to Okla- homa, and who located the first log house at Pawnee, recently visited his Indian friends at their Okla- homa reservation. Mrs. Williamson was with him. at the mud lodge and gave a formal reception to their old guide and friend. Mr. Williamson, who talked the Pawnee language fluently forty years ago, talked to the Indians through the medium of David Gilling- har 1 old acquaintance. William's special business at damages filed against the govern- ment by the Pawnee tribe leaders, who seek to recover money for the massacre of many of their people by the Sioux Indians. The massacre oc- curred in 1873 and Mr. Williamson was with the Pawnees on a buffalo hunt at the time, for materials needed in manufactur-| The whole Pawnee tribe met him: Pawnece was to testify in a suit for, OMAHA, FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 1, 1916—TEN PAGES. | | GERMANY FEADY FOR PEACE UPON | Chancellor Says K ing to End War % Given Guarantee of Existence of Nation. IN ROUMANIA | TRIUMPH iEnemies With Superior Num-| bers Do Not Wish for Ces- | sation of Strife. l i et ¥ LINES REMAIN UNBROKEN Berlin, Nov. 30.—(By Wireless to! Sayville.)—In an address the | | Reichstag yesterday in introducing | [ the man power bill, Chancellor von | Bethmann-Hollweg again announced | that Germany was ready to end the | war by a peace guaranteeing the ex-| | istence and future of the nation. i v In presenting the bill providing for| compulsory service of civilians for | war purposes, the chancellor spoke in | | regard to the military situation and| the purposes of the measure. It was! the chancellor’s sixtieth birthday and ‘thif desk was decorated with chr,\'san-;‘ | themums, | “The war continues with its de- structive forces,” the chancellor said. “Accordingly our enemies desire it.| They celebrated the last summer as a period of victory. But did they obtain what they wanted? “Our lines are unbroken and Rou- mania, through which a great change | of events was expected, is now aton- ing for what it did. God has helped us up to the present. He will help us further. “The almost superhuman heroism| of our troops, which cannot be ex- pressed in words of thanks, and our clear conscience, since we, the first and only ones, were ready and are ready to end the war by a peace guar- anteeing our existence and our future, they give us moral right to such con- fidence, “But, gentlemen, this right ought not to make us forget duty. Our enemies do not yet desire peace. They have superior numbers at their command and almost the wole world delivers war material to them.” The chancellor urged the necessity to do everything in Germany's power in order to manufacture the necessary war material, saying: “Hands that are idle assist the en- emy,” '!xhé bith *e"nonthflcd, had *beenr discussed with the interested trades and in the Reichstag main committee and was in harmony with the patriotic spirit shown by the whole nation since the beginning of the war. “On behalf of the confederate gov- § ernments,” the chancellor continued, | “I ask you to assist in the work which | will bring us new strength and guide us toward victory and peace.” Adress of War Minister. The war minister, Lieutenant Geun- eral 'von Stein, pointed out the para- mount role of war material during the present conflict. He said " the heroism of the troops~at the front!} imposed upon every German at home the necessity of providing the requisite | materials and added: i “The enemy has suffered appalling losses from our artillery. For a long time a very energetic French general stood opposite my sector. We found | on prisoners and on the dead docu- ments which, mostly, were incompre- hensible to us. From them we| learned how many death sdutences were passed by the general on his own soldiers. “At the time of our victorious at-| tack on the much talked of wire hedge at Thiepval, behind which machine to guns were placed, the order was igiven: ‘Whoever retreats will be shot” At the time of the attack on the heights south of Avricourt sol- diers captured there stated they had received the order: ‘Everyone who retreats will be shot. “To us such an order is, incompre- hensible. The heroism and sense of duty of our soldiers justify our con- fidence that they will never be found wanting, even when fighting against numerically superior forces.” General Dracos, Greek War Minister, Resigns London, Nov. 30.—The resignation of Géneral Pracos, Greek minister of war, is reported by Reuter's Athens | correspondent. The reason assigned is ill health. General Dracos will be | succeeded by the aged General Haz- | zopoulos, who is now in Corfu. Until | the returns to Athens the war port- | folio will be administer by Alexander | Tselos, minister of the i i Roast turkey, roast goose, roast chicken, oyster stuffing, mashed pota- toes, giblet gravy, sauce, stewed peas, apple pie, mince pie, green onions, celery, apples, oranges. This was the Thanksgiving menu down at Captain Kline’s popular hotel, the Salvation Army industrial home. Some people get scared by the high price of turkeys and geese. But Cap- cranberry of them and then asked several men to pay the bill. Dan Gaines of the Merchants hotel promptly handed the captain $10 and Tom Dennison and Morris Milder ‘“kicked " with $5 cach. (The captain 5till needs $10 which he believes some one will send him.) Much of the food was donated by various firms. And the birds were sent, Rich Man’s 7Ménu Is gérved to Poor Ot Omaha on Thanksgiving Day tain Kline didn't. He bought a supply | in charge of a trusted employe, to the Rome hotel where they were roasted. Then they came back to the Indus- trial home where Mrs, Purviance, the cook,, cut 'em up in her spare mo- | | ment when she wasn't busy baking |about forty pies and making the | oyster stuffing and the cranberry | sauce and all the other good things. | . One hundred and fifty men, includ- ing twenty-five- who are cither em ployes at the home or are regular ! roomers there and have some other employment; partook of the houn- | and-out, but are being put up-and-in | rebuilding organization. Some hob- bled in on crutches. A few had the pallor on their faces that bespoke re- cent time served in jail. It was most decidedly a success, | GENERAL MURGIA ON WAY {ing out along the Mexico Northwest- | the de facto government would not be | train at Sauz north of the break in| | vantage of a lull in the figthing to #£-vide on the bumpers. TREVINO'S ARMY ~ PLEES IN HASTE Men Leave Chihuahua City in Hurry. El Paso, Tex.,, Nov. 30.—Sergeant Lorenzo Suarez, who was in the brig- ade of General Pedro Cardona in the Chihuahua City battle, and who af- rived in Juarez on the incoming train today, said Villa’s successful \attack was made along Zarco avenue early Monday morning. Immediately after forcing their -way along the avenue, the bandits stormed and captured Santa Rosa mill, dominating the city, and on which the Carranzista army had been placed, said Suarez. The non-commissioned officer said that as soon as it was seen Villa held Santa Rosa hill, the Trevino army evacuated the city in haste. He said about 10,000, troops escaped in two di- visions, one coming north over the Mexican Central and the other strik- ern. He did not know whether Villa captured any of Trevino's artillery, Other Carranza officers in the Chi- huahya City battle who reached Juarez today. were. Lieutenant Colonel Manuel Morales; in‘charge of the ar- tillery; Colonel Martenez Perez, in charge of the hospital car, and Cap- tains Carlos F. Sandoval and Joaquin Valesquez de La Cardenas. Another arrival in Juarez today was the elderly mayor of Parral, Jose de La Luz Herrera, who had come by way of Eagle Pass some days before Villa captured that townl He said in its present plight were the em- bargo on munitions shipments from the United States not in effect. He! added he was informed General Fran- cisco Murguia, from Santa Rosalia, with 10,000 de facto troops, were ex- pected to reach Chihuahua City today. Trevino Flees Southward. General Trevino took approximate- ly 1,500 men with him-when he left Chihuahua “City going south, accord- ing to Syrian refugees who reached Juarez today. General Ozuna had about 2,000 in his command which came north, they added. General Ozuna left the train\ near Sauz to return south toward the city, as the railroad line was cut south of Sauz. However, a number of soldiers re- mained to guard the refugees, the| Syrians said, and came to Juarez with | them when they boarded another | the line. General Trevino's brother, Fran- cisco Trevino, civil governor of the state of Chihuahua, who was on the train, had his left hand bandaged where a Villa bullet had shattered one of his fingers, the refugees stated. Many Mexicans were also on the train. What happened after their train left for the north the refugees were un- able to tell. They say they took ad- board the train upon which the Car- ranza soldiers were making their es- cape and only knew that Villa was in the city when their train left the suburbs, they said. George Brittingham, one of the six American citizens in Chihuahua City, was alive when the refugee train left that city Wednesday, but was un-| able to board the train, and returned | to,a place of hiding in the city. Brit- tingham missed the last train leaving | Chihuahua City, This is the word brought to the border by a Syrian refugee, who arrived on the refugee train this morning. Brittingham was the only American he saw before leaving. General Murguia on Way. Juarez, Nov. 30.—Carranza officers | who came here with the military train | from thessouth at 7 o'clock today re- ported General Murguia to have been at Bachimba Sunday. He was mov-| ing ou Chihuahua at that time, they | said. A report here that General M guia was attacking Chihuahua C was not confirmed at military head- quarters. Another report brought by Car-| ranza officers on this troop train was | that General Treving was at Dama, | cue ship, the American oil tanker {approximately thirty miles casg of | Goldshell, which reached this port to- Chihuahua City, with a column of men. Refugees from Chihuahua City who | teous feed. Many of them were down- | arrived here last night reported loot- | was nearly sunk ing by bandits when they left Mon-| again through Captain Kline's man- | day morning. They said it had been | British schooner Arthur H. Wight of | reported to them that two large for- | eign drygoods stores had been looted | by Villa bandits. They also asserted | that bandits had fired into the train | in which they were leaving the clty.| BRITISH IN THE BALIKANS. TRANSPORTING BRITISH TROOPS IN BALKANS—These British soldiers were photo- graphed while being transported from one of the rest camps to the front. meager railway facilities the small gondolas are crowded so some of the soldiers are forced RICKENBACHER 1S CHAMPION DRIVER Former Omaha Boy Wins 150- Mile Auto Race at Los Angeles. PULLEN IS SECOND MAN _Los Angeles, Cal, Nov. 30.—Ed- die Rickenbacher won the 150-mile “championship award sweepstakes” race on the one mile paved Ascot speedway, the final event in the Am- erican Automobile association's con- test for $13,500 in prizes and the title of “champion driver of America." Rickenbacher’s time was 2:13:15.2. Pullen was second and Cooper third. Cooper ran out of gasoline while in | second place and coasted half a lap to the finish while Pullen passed him, Here is the order in which the cars started: 1—Eddie Rickenbacher, —Barl Cooper, Stutz, Duesenberg. —Eddle Pullen, Mercer. 3—G. E. Ruckstell, Mercer, \ T—George Buszane, Duesenberg. 27—Omar Toft, Omar Special. 2—Wm. Welghtman III, Duesenberg 6—Sterling Price, Gandy. 19—Ira Vail, Hudsop, 6—Willlam ' Taylor, Horsman Special, 9—C, B. Perry, Porry Speclul 10—M. J. Moosle, Duesenberg. Seventy-Four Thousand Britons | Killed and Injured London, Nov. 30.—British casual- ties in the month of November, as re- ported from all fronts, were 74,650, Of the total 2,351 of the castalties were among officers and 72,299 men. There was a marked falling off in the November losses as compared with recent menths, probably owing to the slowing down of the Somme campaign on account of bad weather. The average daily loss in October was 3,452, compared with 2,488 in No- vember." The November casualties bring up the total of British casual- ties reported in the five months since | the beginning of the Somme offensive to 488,852. Three Hundred- Are Killed by Cyclone In E‘E@ch India London, Nov. 30.—The death of| nearly 300 pers in a cyclone at| Pondicherry, India, is reported in a Reuter dispatch from Madras. The | storm caused great damage to prop- | erty. | Pondicherry is the chicf French possession in India. It has an area | of 115 square miles and a population of about 170,000. Earthquake Shock , Recorded at Capital | Washington, Nov. 30.—An earth- quake of severity and lasting more than an hour occurred during the! night and was disclosed this morning on the records of the Georgetown uni- versity seismological observatory. The first tremors began at 10:22:30 p. m., the maximum shocks came be- tween 10:33 and 10:34 and the dis- turbance died away at 11:40 p. m. The center of the disturbance was es- timated at 1,600 miles from Washing- ton. It was -thought it might have been i Indie z'rew of Sma” |GLORIOUS DAY FOR TuE OMAHA DAILY BEE Owing to the WTRRIGAI TR TR e A S O/NTL. FitM SERVICE Just the Right Kind of Weather for the Churches and the Foot Ball Games. AND ALL WILL FEED WELL Thanksgiving day in Omaha dawned with just the finest kind of weather imaginable, weather just in- tended for turkey-eating, foot ball and such things. Just a hint of frost in the air, but not cold and not windy, Great! And the people proceeded to give thanks. The Catholic churches had special masses in the morning. The other churches nearly all had union services at 10:30 a. m, several churches in the same neighborhood joining in and one of the pastors be- ing the orator who gave some of the many reasons why the inhabitants of this grand and glorious city and state should be thankful. d Of course, the banks and public of- fices and the stores were closed all day and the employes were out at church and at foot ball games and THE WEATHER FAIR ' SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. WILSON ATTENDS SERVICES AT HIS REGULAR CHURCH President Declines Invitation- to Pan-American Mass and to the Joint Methodist Celebration. WARSHIPS AT NEW YORK Crews of Four Battleships and Mine Layer Add Naval Tinge to Exercises at Gotham. TURK FOR PE]!;HING‘S MEN Washington, Nov. 30.—President ! Wilson spent Thanksgiving day with members of his family and took part in several special celebrations here to which he was invited. With Mrs Wilson he attended his regular Presbyterian church, having declined invitations to the Panamerican mass at St. Patrick's church and to a joint celebration of Methodist churches. The turkey for the White House Thanksgiving dinner was chosen from among many sent to the president from different parts of the country Tonight the president and Mrs. Wilson will attend a ball given for the benefit of the Navy Relief so- ciety at the Washington navy yard, Most cabinet members spent the day here with their families. All departments were closed. Battleships at New York. New York, Nov. J0.—Four battle- ships and a mine layer, anchored in the upper Hudson river, added a naval tinge to the observance of Thanksgiving here, The warships are the New York, Texas, Connecticut and Wyoming, and the mine layer is the San Francisco. Many of the men were given shore liberty and went to the homes of friends and relatives. Chicago Boycotts Turkeys. Chicago, Nov. 30.—Despite the sudden slump in prices, fewer turkeys were served on Chicago tables today than on any Thunksgwmg day for years, dealers asserted. ‘ A few firms, open this morning, quoted prices 4 and § cents a pound below yesterday's high point, the birds gdelling at retail from 28 to 35 cents a pound, with comparatively few buyers. ; Hotel and restaurant proprietors prepared to serve dinners to 100,000 at theaters and having a good time g:ncrnlly in celebration of the great xll the theaters were open with specially good attractions for the holiday. The new Sun theater, a de luxe moving picture house on Farnam near Fifteenth street, opened in a blaze of glory and played to big crowds. Foot Ball Games. The foot ball game at Lincoln attracted a lot of fans. A special train took down a big crowd and many went by automobile, Two gridiron combats marked the day in Omaha. Creighton .takes on South Dakota and the Central High school goes into mortal combat with St. Joseph High school at Rourke park, / A cross-country run was held by the Young Men's Christian associa- tion and there was also a big basket ball tournament at the “Y.” Theater parties are also on the day's program in great profusion and this evening there will be dinners galore at the various hotels and cafes where Bre'r Turkey will grace the banquet board. The folks who haven't got a great abundance of this world's goods were not forgotten. In many an humble home there was a dinner sent by some good person or by a charitable insti- tution and the poor were filled as well as the rich. At the Salvation Army in- dustrial home Captain Kline fed 150 poor men and they had real turkey. The spirit of the day is with our soldier boys at the border, it is pleas- ant to hear. Word comes from Llano Grande that the Nebraska regiments had turkey with oyster stuffin’ and cranberry sauce and all the fixin's, Mechanician is Killed in Motor Race at Phoenix Phoenix, Ariz,, Nov. 30.—Mecha- nician Drennan of Amarillo, Tex., driving with R. B. Armstrong in a hundred-mile automobile race on the state fair grounds this afternoon, was almost instantly killed when the big racer plunged through the fence while attempting to pass another car at-one end of the oval Drennan was pinned bencath the car and terribly mangled. Armstrong was thrown clear of the wreckage and escaped wi Ship Picked Up— : Three Days Adrift After Twenty- New York, Nov, 30.—The story of the rescue in midoccan of the captain and five men of a tiny schooner after they had suffered twenty-three days of hardship on their water-logged ves- sel was told by the officers of the res- day. Its arrival here marked the end of a five-months’ voyage during which it struck a mine in the war zone and The shipwrecked vessel was the| St. Johnms, N. F.,, Captain Diamond, | bound Arom ._’\I\c;mu'. Spain, to its home” port with salt. It was of ninety- nine tons register. 4§ According to Captain Hayes of the | fought hunger, thirst Goldshell the rescuers on November 28 found the Wight water-logged, the bulwarks, gleck houses and life boats swept atay and the sails and upper spars gone. In the shelter of the main mast the captain and crew were huddled exhausted. The schoon- er was set on fire to prevent it from becoming a menace to navigation, Captain Diamond said his vessel ran into a northwest gale on Novem- ber 5. From that time on the crew and the ele- ments. They had given themselves up for lost when the tanker arrived. The Goldshell left New Orleans for Bordeaux in June. On July 10 it struck a minc in the Bay of Biscay and reached condition. Chicagoans, who, it was said, \vould’ figure it cheaper to dine out Turkey for Pershing’s Men. El Paso, Tex, Nov. 30.—~Poultry dealers here state that 80,000 pounds of turkeys have been sold to the army for the soldiers’ Thanksgiving at the camps around El Paso, with the ex- ception of 15,000 pounds, which were sent: to the punitive expedition in Mexico. The price of dressed tur- keys here ranges from 30 to 35 cents the pound. Turkey to Cold Storage. San Francisco, Nov. 30.—Between 75,000 and 100,000 pounds of turkey, held by local commission merchants, was sent into cold storage today as the result, they said, of an individual boycott by Francisco house- {vives, who™showed by a few pur- chases that they believed the prevail- ing price of 35 cents a pound too high, Late yesterday some markets dropped to 2B cents a pound when it became apparent that buyers were maintaining a “hands off” policy to- ward the Thanksgiving bird. Train Employes Send Ultimatum to Chatttanooga Road Nashville, Tenn., Nov. 30.—Em- ployes in the engine, train and yard service of the Nashville, Chattanvoga & St. Louis railroad have voted in favor of a strike if necessary to force the management to receive the broth- erhood heads in conference &nd have given the railroad until 6 p. m. today to reply. The management maintains the em- ployes have agreed to take up their grievances separatel:. The brother- hood heads today notified President Peyton of the strike vote and an- nounced they would decide on their action after hearing the railroad's reply tonight. Ten Deer Hunters Killed in Michigan Woods This Season Calumet, Mich., Nov. 30.—Ten lives have been lost in the northern Michi- gan hunting season, which closes to- night. The loss is one-third less than that of former years, the one-deer law and industrial prosperity having kept numbers of hunters away from the wood this season. Why keep wishing from day to day that you had the money that exsra room would bring in? Bordeaux in a ainkmgl Get Busy and Rent L. You are as close to The Bee Want Ad Debt. as your phone is to you. Phone Tyler 1000 Today . P

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