Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1915)
8 TITtf BEE: OMAHA, MOXDAT. .TTTttS 7, 1915. i THE "OMAHA DAILY DEE FOUNPtCD BT EDWARD RQ3EWAT1CR. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. 1 The Fee Publishing Comrany, Proprietor, PER BUIUMNU. FAR AM AND gEVTNTggNTH. (Entered st Omaha postoffirs es second-Ose matter. TERMS OF BL'BSfPIPTION. 1 By carrier Py mall . per month. per year. X.fT Sunday... .s.,...i..', M il;-y without Sunday. L-venlmT and .incv '! ! Knmln wttbmit Sunday.. ..Bto.. f.OO Sunday only I W pend nrrtk of change of address or cdmrlnt r frTrntarity in delivery to Omthi Bm, Circulation , tprtuxwit. I RfcMrTTAKCE. P.mtt by am ft, express or postsl order, fry two cent stamps received In payment of smell ee- ' eourrta. iVMotval checks, except on Omaha and eastern j TOhJ ccrpd. offices. Omaha Th. Pea Building. Couth Omaha 3ii N street. Council Biuffs 14 North Main street. . t tnroln-M Little Building. Clcago-WU Hearst Building. Saw York Room IT. M Firth Tiua ft Iru KM New Psnk of Commtrr. WearilTiirton T Fourteenth t, N. W. . - . . . CORRESPONDENCE!. MjiMi erwrimunlrettona relatlnr to lw aH (orUi matter to Omaha Beat Editorial Department, AFIUL CIRCULATION ! 53,406 i State of Nebraska. Couhty of bouglts, a I i Insight Wllllnms. circulation manager of Th Be I Pn'MUihlns; company, being duly sworn, Htl that tha t"rt circulation for tha month of April. 1914, we !"-WT WtTTjtAM!, Clreuiaiton Manager. Subscribed In my prein-nce and aworn to bfor I ma. thla 1st day of May. 118. jlOUEKT HUNTER, Notary Public. fivbiMnrlbora leaving Um ejtj temporarily ahoald have The Bee mailed to tbera. Ad Amm will be dge4 as often as rtnostel Thought for the Day 5Wm4 e Mr . B4lct "0-eall not ttta eo! 0 (ear, J. apotM- ptootn antf orro-u, On fea (A (rHcf tal o'er ui com Frotii sslf to eln borrow. th torM ft hfuttful and goo&i Okl wh f tKvuld man mfetofca ft, Tht folly it within ourttbu, Th uorld it what v miU It won't b long before Horenca and Benloa will wlkh the bad been included. Th-Job of Jarring loose the Nebrarta plum tree hae teen derolred upon McAdoo to do. But what McAdoo eaa do la dublot:t. Building tradee kctlrlly U greater la Om&ha than (a any other American city of onr lite or larger. Btop knocking and keep a-bodstlfigt It 11 to be feared the warrior in Bufepe are a trifle out tf range of . 6uf commencement orator, otherwise peace would be established forthwith. The. tip has gone out to 1,000 Trefuurr clerkt to pay up their debie or teeli other Jebe. Viewed from any angle the tipping tyetem la a banefut otIL ; Btg business is doing the tango of delight to the music furnished by the federal court of NeW Jersey. Eren the tanners' combine blows oft the lid of Joy. T TT" . .. L.S ... The success of the peony exhibit suggests that the city might with advantage put on a flower show once or twice a yeaf after It takes orer the Auditorium. Warring On neutral shipping proceeds with unabated vigor. What German submarines tall to blow up. Great Britain interns in port. Either way the shipper gets the book. The dlacoTery that the railroads have paid taxvi on property destroyed or moved away Is an Impressive sign of restored generosity for which the corporations are famous. The Water board's action In pressing Dun dee for the coin is rude and unseemly. Surely a classy neighborhood does not need a summer suit to look pleasant at an Involuntary wcddlug. , It Is not so much that the secretary of state is "obdurate," as the Senator explains the cause of the plum crop shortage, but that the presi dent Is "obdurate" In standing with the secre tary of state. i ; . 1 . ' : Bat if It is the anlvereal verdict that dentists should advertise, why not also the other profes slons that have legitimate services to offer about which posalble patrons must otherwise rem sin la the dark? Germany is going to pay the bills for those "accidental" blow-ups of neutral ships. At the time England dallies in prise courts, con fUtates the goods and keeps mum on reparation. A Stiff dun for John Bull is also overdue. The millers have finally found out that the price of wheat is coming down, and have low ered the price of flour accordingly. - Now, it eoir.eoDe will only get word to the baker, the householder may get some advantage of the del line. Aa ascuislon of Iowa edltora to California la to go ovr tha I'nton Pa trie In chare of T. W, litarabura r.f ttta iV. ner department, "a gentleman peculiarly qualified to entertain and look altar th comforta of aui'H a itrty Jtr. and Vlra. A. Cilne, 161T Burt atreet. ar rejoicing vr the apieranca of a bouncing boy. Culmiel C!ory of Chicago la planning' to erect a hafcrlamne four-etory brick building to coat JWO.000 oa what la known aa th r-oUbrook property on Blstaentn tre-t John A. McHhane baa gone to Cheyenne, Governor Jernea W. tai ant tha day In Omaha. '! ainttla Wl.lta. In char of th glove counter at Kiilth'i, u convalrat-lng after a severe lllueaa, The aiituiunrement la mad .by J. 8. Richardson chairiiuiB of the committee appointed by th Baptist etAte convention, that U.ey will s.Kn make a tour of the ;t to look at aura offered for a Haptut college. A reporter f"ing over the asaeeanr a book counted tip 2.613 tnrf c :( In Omaiia and I luted for taxation Jua iuufiy ltft for Toptka, Kaa., where b will ' I-oid a Klon of ewrt. . Bryan Proposes a Credit Merger. Hag Secretary Bryan hit upon the solvent that may reconcile and unite the Interests of ail the Pan-American republicans through a gigantic credit tnergert A proposal in that direction made by him in connection with the financial conference held In Washington Is balled by the National City Bank circular ag "not only a dar ing but a brilliant conception" and though a tnove in the realm of finance as of more far reaching statesmanship than anything emanat ing from him in the field of diplomacy. The gist of the Bryan proposal may be found In this quotation: Secretary of Plate Bryan presented a propoaal look ing to an nter-chanir of credit by the government of tha I'nlted Rtatea with (tovemmcnta within the Pan American union that mltht denlre to take advantage of the arrangement. The secretary of state waa care ful to aay that he threw out the iiaetlon he waa about to make quite In a personal and unofficial way, ohvloUKly guarding against Its bring regarded at thl-t tlmo aa an administration mraaur or aa repreentln even the Vlewa of any of hla colleague. Mia premlae was that tha development of several of the frVmth American republk-a was greatly tilniVred by tha lack of credit which would enable those countries to bor ow on any reasonable baals. lie cited Instances of government paying 8 per cent, and ha could, of course, have cited many such Instance, and soma where the rate Would have been even higher. Ha very properly regarded tl.la lack of credit and consequent lack of national Initiative aa a great losa, not alone to the countries and the people of the natlona being considered, but quit as well to the people of the United Btatea. This Interchange of Credit waa to be accomplished by taking from a South American nation It obligation bearing 4 per cent Interest and giving such a country a Ilka amount of United Btatea bond bearing I per cent Interest. Our government, how ever. Instead of making the 1 per cent difference In Interest rates, would devote thla to the amortization of the South American bonds, whloh by Investing the sinking fund at I per cent would be accomplished In forty-seven years. Paradoxically Secretary Bryan, despite the revolution be once sought to lead against a gold bandage, would cha'n the republics of the two American continents together with links Of the same yellow metal or rather with a credit union secured by our gold. The Idea, of course, should It appeal to our neighbors to the south of us, would take time for. fruition and require first the development of many complicated details, but It would be remarkable if it proved to be the one lasting contribution of national policy to be credited to Mr. Bryan. ; An Adjustable "Gateway." How the advantage of a natural trade route forces recognition and dominates actnal traffic la now being shown In a striking way. A few months ago the purchase of the Central Pacific by the Union Pacific was prevented by Attorney General McReynolda, the reason given being that It waa to avoid Setting up control at Ogden of traffio to the west. Whatever Of dispute might have arisen over this point has been set tled by the natural route for travel. Roads run ning out from Chicago have arranged to turn over their business to the Union Paoifle at Omaha, and the Oeden "gateway" has at last lost Its significance. Pour other transcontinental lines In the United States and two in Canada own their continuous rails to the Paelflo coast. but this was denied the Union Pacific. But neither "regulation" nor rivalry cati overcome the advantage ot geography and location, and Omaha is sow the gateway in fact as (well as In name for the great current of transcontinental traffic. 1 Education by Legislative Enactment One of the most widespread ot efroneoag beliefs is that which attaches to "be it enacted" potency that stops Just short of omnipotence. Popular faith in the ability ot the legislature to bring to pass almost anything that is desired or desirable has never been more confidently ex hibited than when the lawmakers are dealing with educational institutions and methods. Here the trust ot the voter seems to be as implicit aa the faith of the martyrs. Nebraska bad a most Illuminative exhibit of this peculiar equality of mind during the late session of the legislature, when a member very nearly had his way In deal ing with the University of Nebraska, over the protest ot the chancellor, the faculty, the regents and everybody else who Is la a position to reatly know of its needs, ltg capabilities, Its purposes and Its aspirations. . . Missouri Is Just now getting an illustration cf the beauty of the legislature's conception ot its Own ability to deal with any and all ques tions. The last session down there enacted a law that requires the University of Missouri to grant certain degrees at a achool of technology for which it Is not equipped to prepare students It seems to have been (he notion of the law makers that if the legislature orders these de grees conferred, all the Curators of the univer sity have to do is to fill out the sheepskin, and the recipient , Is thereby duly qualified. The mere matter of mental preparation and qualifi cation fof the dignity and distinction Of the title conferred cu.ts no figure under th Missouri law. The curators propose to test the question in the courts. Possession of a diploma from a college or university is usually a credit to the holder, but It Is Dot ad infallible proof of Intellectual emi nence or usefulness. Many very able and Influ ential men have achieved greatness against the handicap of lack ot university training, while many formally permitted to write sections of the alphabet after their names have failed to kneet expectations. .Experience hag pretty well demonstrated that the domain of intellectuality is not to be attained by fixed rules. Thla being true, legislative enactment may well be kept tor ether Uses, while the direction of the great state schools is left to the wisdom of those with estab lished qualifications for the work. Movements for human betterment find their greatest obstacles in the dollars Involved. In one New York Institution for the care of un fortunates, efforts to cure them of the drug habit are well-nigh useless, made so by the ac tivities of presumably respectable bootleggers The resident physician, a nurse, two keepers and an orderly, caught with the goods, have been ar rested for smuggling dope to the Inmates. This comes close to the limit of human greed. War alarmists are wotully behind the time. They imagine much and know so little. While these high privates urge instant preparedness. General Cleveland Moffett has already pulled off a hot air invasion and laid the heavy hand of tribute on coast cities. All of which goes to show that a speedy typewriter can outdistance sabre rattler. Gas as a Weapon Literary Dureat. WHAT la the nature of th deadly g-a launched against th allies by their German foeeT A contributor to the PdenUfle American wiinK that the evidence points t ehlorln. and he furnished some Interesting facta regarding th probable method of producing the gaa on the battlefield and of Insuring that It ahall reach th enemy In a sufficient degree of concentration to do damage. A formidable attack of thla sort on May M I describee! In Sir John FrenorTS report: "Bom positions In our line eaat ot Tprea lost yester day during an enemy gas attack hare not yet been recovered. The amount bf gas Used waa greater than on any previous occasion, extending over a front of five mile. The gas was emitted from cylinders dur ing a period of four and a halt hours. At the same time ouf line was bombarded by ashyxlatlng gas shells until the gas eloud roe at places to a height of fifty fet from the ground. "Portion of the line remained Intact throughout tho ordeal, and our men demonstrated that with due pre cautions this form of attack can be successfully met and defeated." We are reminded by the writer that In th evolution of warfare there has been an Increasing use of forces further and further from th direct use of muscular power. This tendency, of course, IS also shown In In dustrial development. WS see everywhere Increased use of machine, the application of physical forces as they become known through scientific study, and In general the gradual aubatltuttoa of hatilral forces controlled by mind for the muscular exertion of earlier times. He goes on to say: "The methods of destruction also call Upon knowl edge from most of the arts and science, and each tep In their evolution la a further application bf Sci entific knowledge. "In the present European war the Implication of such knowledge seems to be reaching the utmost limit of Ingenuity. It may almost be called a chemist and physicist war, with Its application of physics In aerial navigation and Its us of submarines, of telephone, wireless telegraphy, searchlights and range finders, and tha application of chemistry In the manufacture of Its many explosives, the manufacture of hydrogen for airships, Its illuminating bombs and flares, and, latest of all. In the manufacture of poisonous gases to be Used for tactical rurposes. "Th reports which hsve been received seem to show that ths gas so far used Is ohlorln. The greenish-yellow color, th strong smell, th great density of the gas causing It to flow along ths ground ar Indications of cholrln. The symptoms shown by the victims ar those exhibited by persons who have been poisoned by ehlorln In Industrial accidental that Is, great irritation of th mucous membranes, bronchitis snd sudden death by a narcotlo action In th most sever cases. "If ehlorln Is ths gas which was used. It must have reached th trenches In a concentrated form to cause death, unless ths death was due In pari to payohology Icei effects, for to produce death rapidly It is neces sary that the sir breathed shall contain at least one Pari: of ehlorln In 1,000 or air. Long- exposure to air Containing on part of ehlorln per 100,000 la dangerous, and even smaller amounts ar troublesome, "ft Is of some Interest to knsw bow much ehlorln Is needed to bs effective. On the supposition that thers Is a breeze of four miles per hour and that it takes two tninutes to empty ths containers holding the ehlorln, the drift of air during that time would be about 700 feet; to charge the lower three feet of this sir Current with ehlorln to a concentration of one to 1,009 would require about six eubio feet, or one pound for each yard, or aomethlng like one ton per mil of battle front. Chlorin can be obtained com mercially compressed Into liquid form In cylinders for I to S cents a pound, and ks a by-product In the eleo trolytio manufacture of hydrogen for balloons it tnajr well be of less value." Under proper conditions, ths writer concludes, It is quite feasible to Use this Inexpensive and powerful offensive Weapoh. But th conditions must be right Too strong a breese would diffuse the gaS; a Variable Wind or Calm would Injure the user.. The gas could hardly be used unless the battle Un war straight ef conve toward the enemy, since otherwise the fumes would bs apt to drift lh part Over the USerS Own lines, as, In fact it has don sometimes, the dis patches Say. We read further) "And then undoubtedly effective preventive M antidotal measures can be used. A sponge or towel Wet With warer or better. With torn basio SUbstano like cooking soa or bora kept ready to put over the face might hold off the danger, and more Special respirators charged With basle substances or With re ducing agents tlks oxalates or sodium hypoaulflte might enable the attacked force to tide over the worst or the attack. "Probably sulphur dioxide and bromine might be weed in a similar way to ehlorln, as they are ex tremely Irritating, act at one, and Are heavy. But they could both b absorbed by respirators similar to those effective for Chlorin. . "While the use of poisonous gases has been spoken of as in the line or evolution ef warfare, slnoe.lt Is an Application of advanced knowledge, the thought oemea that in view ef the apparent cruelty Involved It can be tired only when It Is shown to be of great military value. It has been apparently ot soma military value temporarily, and la used against military forces and hot against non-combatants, and In that sense IS perhaps more allowable than the dropping of bombs In cities or the bombardment of undefended towns, but the weapons which seem moat In line with this us of eases In war are the Saw-toothed knife, the Jagged spear and the dumdum bullet With the perfection ef preventive measures tha tactical advantages may be removed and this barbarous application of Sclentlflo knowledge may not tempt the leaders ot armies of so-called enlightened nations." Twice Told Tales Hat Plarlac U Laek. . They were speaking about playing In luck and Congressman Eugene E. Peed ot New Hampshire told of an Incident that happened In the west A traveling salesman landad in one of the burgs along his routs snd was surprised to find the Whole population marching to the musio of brass bands. "Hay, old man." h wonderlngly asked an esteemed cltlaen standing alnng the sidewalk, "what Is the eaus of all thla excitement V "We ar celebrating th birthday of our oldest In habitant." answered the ether. "She Is 101 years old today. That was her In the rirst automobile." "You don't mean It!" returned the salesman, glancing Up th street "Who was ths sad looking glnk sitting by her elder' "Distant relative," was ths grinful rejoinder ot the native. "He has been keeping up the payments on her life Insurance policy for ths last thirty yaars." Phila delphia Taiegraph. Seemed Probable. A young business man. who has been married but a short time, was greeted by his wlfs one evening Just before dinner with the Joyful announcement that She had that very afternoon received her diploma front the cooking school at which she had been an assiduous student fnr soma time. "And I've prepared the whole dinner tonight!" shs sdded, gayly. When they wer seated at the table, and th young man waa endeavoring to masticate a parU ularly tough piece of on of th new dishes, his wlfs suddenly said: "I took special pains with ths dish you ar atlng. Quess what it la." "Well. I really don't know," be relied, uncertainly, "la It the dlplomaf-Phlladelphla Ledger. Hi laslty ISatabllaaed. At a political convention in on of the WesUrn siatea twe rival delegates got Into a serious personal dispute. th. you're crasy!" shouted en. "I'm not rraiy!" denied th other. "But you ar crasy!" vociferated tha first "I can prove I'm not rraxy, and that s more than you ran do." cam back th rejoinder. "Let See yu prov-j it, then." Whereupon th man who was accuaed ef being oraiy pulled from an Inside pocket hla discharge pa pers from a neerbyann asylum. New fork Times. a. Patent Offlee Practice. NORTH tiOfP, Neb.. May at-To ths Editor of The Bee: Th truth Is some time a difficult thing to find. Readera of The Bee know of the objections raised to the Interior snd AgMcultureJ departments by this writer. On of those objections was with respect to ths man agement of the patent office which la In charge of the Interior department and with respect to the tuttmaa claims en a gasoline process. The' present methods of selecting the patent office examiners leaves the patent practice entirely open td the Spies of big business, especially the oil and gas trusts. A few WeekS ago I rSlsed the objection to the practice, but had heard nothing1 ot the matter un til irery recently, and that came In an accidental way. Big business selects a few men and places them in line for patent office ex aminers, and they take the oath th same as any applicant for those posi tions. When an application for tetters patent enmes In, If it Is a matter that big business does hot waht patented, the letters patent la denied sn some sort of previous Claims. Blnce raising ths ob jections to the manipulations of the In terior department In making gasoline and taking out patents In the name of th government, I have received the fol lowing! "May . 1516. Mr. W. J.Dear Bin Mr. H. examiner In the United Mates patent office for the last eight years, has resigned his position and Joined the P. P. Mr. M. had charge of patent classes, including carburetors, air and gas mixers, gas producers, and treatment of mineral oils and Is therefore in posi tion especially fitted for preparing and prosecuting applications tor patents of this character. This, with Mr. M.'s famil iarity with patent office procedure and patent law practice, makes him a valuable addition to ths firm and Increases our facilities for rendering expert services od behalf of our clients." Mr. M. did not know that this writer was working In those matters except he Obtained the same from the patent of fice records, which hs has no right to dlsdoso under the patent laws. It would seem that ths department saw fit to re trieve Mr. M. for cause, and gave htm a Chance to resign and enter the patent right practice. But how does that im prove the patent office practice and how does it remedy the matter of the In terior department in going Into the pat ent right business and at the same time felt In Judgment on the Issue ot patent right. What we are insisting on is that ths patent office and ths interior depart ment be cleared Up In A proper way. Mr. M. was the man who covered the p pllcatlon of thla writer for a gasoline process, and to an average man a pat ent granted lh 1890 Would hardly antici pate a superheating process which Was not demanded until the last five years. There are other matters connected with the interior department that do not look Corpulent give m good. One of those Is the matter ot tha Osage ell fields of Oklahoma, where the ell trust wants In. Mr. President you Should get busy. They seem to have let some matters out that was not Intended. Patent attorneys should insist on clear ing tap the department. WALTER JOHMBOlf. bensoeratle Economy. OMAHA, June S.-To the Editor of The Bee: Borne time a year ago last winter a committee sat lrt a room In the capitol at Wsahlmrton and Considered cutting down appropriations. Senator Sorghum's annual rake-off for his constituency of half a million dollars to deepen th Bquecweo river Couldn't be cut toxens Of ether clamorous patrons of th pie counter and diggers In the portt bar I clung to their pie and pork. But the apTtvrrtatlort bad to be cat down somehow. Ah, here Is the money ror paying the Janitors and charwomen of the public buildings. They get SK and 25 a month, respectively. Cut that They won't kick. They can't complain. They ar poor and humble and have no influential friends.. They'll have to bear It in slienc Oft Went SfiS.OOO from the appropriation to pky the meagre salaries of these poor mplowtea. Each lost eight days' pay and It any W sick during May and June this year he br sh lot at his or her pay for that time. Two ar lrk Id Omaha at prevent On I a widow with children and she ha Just gon te th hospital with amallpox. On Janitor1 has been compelled to bor row SSS from a loan Shark, paying 127 for ten months' Interest. It will take him Just halt a month to earn the Interest alone. Th eut affects iSJS ot tha government's hardest working and poorest paid em ploye throughout th country and tha misery and hardship that it ha caused is Incalculable. , Meanwhile supernumeraries put In time at their sinecures, useless "rivers" are dredged and In a hundred ways the gov ernment's moneys ar wasted. A. R. G. Prest Leather Medal. BOTJTH OMAHA. June l-fo the Editor of Th Be: It th South Oamha offi cial persist In their refusal to give up their ofrices, whsn they have been com manded to do s4 by their own constitu ents, they should be presented with leather medal a. They did not wait for a court to decide whether they should taks their offices when they were elected. Not by a long ehot They do not own the offices they hold. The voters who put them in own their offices and have a right to command them te give up their positions, ths sam as they had a right t tU them to tak them Th mandate of the public should be sufficient for ths effldala to take notice to vacat their positions. Ths voters ot South Omaha who elected th city otfloera told them In very plain and ainphatlo term on June 1 that they do not want them In office any longer and they should obey the command. Their cry all last winter was, "Let th peopl rule." They had better be con sistent now and carry est their slogan. Ths result In South Omaha was too plain for any offlcs-holder to misunderstand. Before th Park board gets after poor Mr. Elliott toe hard In regard to a tie horn snd a M rig. they ought to ac count for the $15,000 they handled less than twe years ago. LEATHER MEDAI Feraaldaate Mevesaeat." New York Tlmea. Senator William Aldea Smith doe not apeak too strongly when hs characterUea hla candidacy for the republican presidential nomination aa a "formidable movement." Formi dable la too meek a word: terrifying would be a better one, hoi rifle better atlU. Once launched, nothing ran stop ttt movement . E a w n TO A L&U0H. beat to keep ydung, hW do yon Sitppnee she Kkes anybody butting In, anxious in riv h mrma new wrinkle T" Wash Lovef fpassinnsteiT) nif, t love the Very ground your daughter walks on! Father f grimly No doubt you do. It's worth la) a front foot Town Toplea. ington fctar. "wv f a. M fnf4nM Mil tha eVMl- scIoim beauty. "Weil, It Isnt neceasary for you to be constantly raethln your roll," remarked the male cynio, Judge. "Our suburban neighbor, who Is a law yer, told me yesterday with pride that he la quite an expert at whitewashing." "What'a his specialty-fence ot char acter ?" Baltimore American. "Where were you last night T" asked one gtrl of another. "Itwas eut riding with father In his C'B1ut I didrt't know your father had an hutomohils." "He hasn't: he Is A motofmah." In dianapolis News. "I see th town council has put a new doorknob on the town hall and or dered bogs out of the pubtlo square." "Yes," said Selectman Hoptoad, "we owed it to riUnkvllle to slick up a bit With European travel stopped thl sum mer, A lot of peopl will be seeing America fust" LoirtSvlH Courier Journal. KAEIELE THff ViAl3nfVlkrtr Fct Crf Aa5ttferxS Individual But you Can't any reason why I should not eniier- Hruwe Well, should rrrlsS yrtti, deari but ths Germans couldn't London Mail. "Women do not seem reeiljr to want to learn anything." "Well, when a woman Is trying her Heavy Eatieg Needs Brown Bottles , , "-tj i1 'll;"""-i Heavy meals mean more tpr less in digestible food Schlitz is a great .yd to digestion. Start drinking it with your meals. You'll notice from your first glass an added enjoyment of your food, and you'll feel imme diately The Beneficial Effects of . Good Beer on your digestion. Schlitz in Brown Bottles is all healthfulness, it is pure and whole some. The Brown Bottle protects Schlitz purity from the .damaging ef fects of light from the brewery to your glass. eSV that crown is branded uSMtx Phone Doug. UJf SeMlts Bottled Beer Depot 721 g. eta St, Omaha, Neb. Phone 421 3& lly. Oereer AJ 7. y 7 "1 8, Mala Bt, Council Bluff f I'- OnieBeer That Mods nilvauttee Famou 5