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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1916)
I, Mui f I Omaha Sunday . NEWS SECTION THE WEATHER FAIR PAGES ONE TO SIXTEEN OL. XL VI NO. 16. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 1, 1916 NINE SECTIONS EIGHTY-SIX PAGES. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. Bee 1HJT FULL SAIL AHEAD, ORDERS KING AK, AND MINIONS OBEY i Soya! Wand Weaves Happy Spell Over All Nebraska . and Citizens Eevel Merrily MUCH' ADO EVERYWHERE Coming of President and Mrs. Wilson Stimulates Dwell i ers of Quiver. PUBLIC PULSE BEATS HIGH 1916. ...698 ..5.113 ..3.900 ..4,629 1915. 3,201 5.970 6,949 Tuesday . . . Wednesday x aurauay . . Friday ...... A great week was last week, but this week will be much greater. W are right in the middle of the great annual celebration which good King Ak-Sar-Ben provides for his subjects. And this year the people rejoice not only because King Ak-Sar-Ben lives and is happy and healthy, but also-because Nebraska has completed half a century of statehood,' during which she has grown in wealth, pros perity, beauty and everything de sirable as few states have ever grown. The people rejoice, further, that this week the president of the United States will visit them, a ruler as puissant in his realm as King Ak Sar-Ben himself is in the kingdom of (juivera. ' Hail! First Lady. The first lady of the land, the president s wife, is to be here also. They are to view with us the won dere of our historv. as oresented in ,' the historical pageant and parade next lhursday. lhey will dine in state at the Fontenelle hotel, and the presi dent will deliver an address at the Auditorium.' Last week was sort of getting ready time. There was plenty "do ing. The crowds began surging into the city from all directions and from even hundreds of miles away. It's a good thing, indeed, that Omaha's hotel accommodations have doubled in the last few years. They have plenty of room now. ', Streets Are Filled. Streets are- full of people by day and by night The King's Highway, iy wmciuuiic enters uirouKii tne miglliy 1 arch at Mftewirfr'nd Canitol avenue. is a broad highway and a busy high way and "a highway flanked by dozens of wonders and thrills. All the streets in the city's business sec tion are festooned and arched with thousands of electric lights. The people have been disporting themselves by the thousands. Yes terday was specially" set aside for children at the carniva). Grown-ups could come, too, of course, but prices were cut in half to suit the caliber of juvenile pocketbooks. There they saw the Panama canal and the Bat tle of Verdun, the three-legged girl and the strange -girl Hattie, the Ara bian Nights, and Toyland. Jerked Around Whip. Folks are jerked around on The Whip, whirled around in horizontal circles on the merry-go-round, and lifted up and down invertical circles on the Ferris wheel. " Then it was the Week of Wonder- F ful Windows, too, you know. All f the stores have their windows in iruiy wonaenui array. Wednesday (Oonbiued on race Two, Column Six.) U. S. Will Build Big Potash Plant ' Near San Diego San Francisco, Cal., Sept. 30. The United States government will estab lish a plant either at Long Beach or San Diego for manufacturing potash from kelp, according to J. W. Tur rentine, scientist of the United States Department of Agriculture, who has arrived here. "This plan," he said today, "will be able to supply virtually all the potash needed for the manufacture of ex plosives for the American army." Turrentine states that the depart ' ment had $175,000 at its disposal to start the plant. His mission, he said, has been to ascertain whether the operation of a powder company and other plants now doing what the government proposes to do were like- ly to exhaust the supply of kelp. He had found, he said, that the kelp beds grow "with almost uncanny speed" after they have been reaped. The Weather For Nebraska Fair; cooler. Temperature at Omaha Hour. 6 a. m 6 a. m Dee. 7 a. ' Comparative Local Kecord. 1916. 1915. 1914. 1913 HlSheat yesterday . . . . 7K 66 12 Mwet yeste a ty .... 45 60 Mean temperaiurp .... 62 hi 70 l. Precipitation a.... Oft T. .06 Temperature and Di-ft-lpltatlon denarturei from the normal at Omaha altira March 1. ' and compared with the last two years: . v Dee. Normal temperature 61 UxreM for the dar 1 Total exresi alnre March 1.. Normal precipitation Pefldftnrv fnr thn ,lnv , 245 , .10 Inch . .10 Inch .1417 Inchea .10.76 Irx-heii . .69 Inch . 4.22 InchM Total rainfall elnce March I. Deficiency Mince March 1 Wftclency cor. period, 1916.. Deficiency cor. period. 1914 .. -. A. WELSH, Meteorologist. rw j 8 m 60 (dSp. 9 a. m. . . . , 66 TjOj J 10 a. m C9 v?f'&JrTvrt w ' a- m RB IWJUlOWf J 12 m $8 p a Pp m..'.!!!!!!!!!7e I p. m 78 m " 1 ' I p. m 69 Plans for Omaha's Welcome to the President Are Practically Complete To Drive Over Historical Pa . rade Route, So All May See Both Mr. and Mrs. Wilson. For a week there has been great activity in Omaha in preparation for the Omaha reception and entertain ment of President and Mrs. Wilson Land party in Omaha, Thursday of mis weeK. me arrangement is now completed locally, subject to the ap proval ot the president. l At tne station, when the special car arrives at 11:40 a. m., the president and party are to be met by an escort of some eighty persons, men and women, with twenty automobiles. The escort will consist of the execu tive committee of the semi-centennial celebration committee, the members of the board of governors of Ak-Sar-Ben, the governor, mayor, democratic national committeeman, Chancellor Avery, etc. To Meet the President. Those in the party, then, will be Mr. and Mrs. John Lee Webster, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Buckingham, Sen ator and Mrs. G. M. Hitchcock and daughter, Ruth, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Rosewater, Mr. and Mrs. Gould Dietz, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Byrne, Governor and Mrs. J. H. Morehead, Mayor and Mrs. J. C. Dahlman, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mullen, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bucholz, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Fraser, Mr. and Mrs. Casper E. Yost, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Reerl Mr an.i Mrs Rome Mifler, Senator and Mrs. Nor-; ris Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Nash, Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Haverstick, Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Beaton, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Black, Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Judson, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Hosford, Mr. and Mrs. J. DeForrest Richards, Mr. and Mrs. George Brandeis, G. W. Wattles. Charles Saunders, Randall K. Brown. Mrs. Russell B. Harrison, Mrs. J. J. ENTENTE MAKES FURTHER GAINS Britons Consolidate Ground Won and Improve Position Northwest of Thiepval. BRITISH LOSSES ABE HEAVY Paris, Sept. 30. The French have made further progress north of Ran court hy grenade attacks, according to the official statement isjucd by the war office today. ' The statement follows: "On the Somme front we made some progress north of Rancourt by means of grenades, there was inter mittent artillery fighting; in different sectors north and south of the Somme. Everywhere else the night was calm. Bad weather continues." British Defeat Counter Attacks. London. Sept. 30. Unusually heavy fighting occurred yesterday on the Somme front in consequence of German counter attacks. A division of the new British army was engaged. The official account of these opera tions follows: "During the night the enemy shelled our battle front south of the Ancre. We consolidated the ground won yesterday morning at Destre mont farm, northwest of Le Sers and improved our position in the Thiepval area. "Enemy counter attacks were beat en off in the neighborhood of Stuff Redoubt and Hessian trench. The fighting in this section yesterday was very severe and our troops engaged a division of the new army showed great endurance and resolution. "A successful raid was made by a London territorial battalion south of Neuville St. Vaast. where the ene my's trenches were entered and, pris oners were taken." British Losses Enormous. British losses in September were at the rate of more than 3,800 a day. The casualties on all fronts reported in this month were: Officers, 5,439; men, 114,110. Heavy as were the British losses in September, they were lighter than those of August, which were 127,945, a daily average of 4,127. In July, the first month of the Somme offensive, the losses were about half those of August or September, notwithstand ing the fact that in July the British stormed the first line German de fenses. The casualties in that month were 59,675. so that the total for the three months of the Somme drive is 307,169. The Overseas News Agency esti mates that the combined French and British losses in the Somme battle up to September 15 amounted to about 500,000. Since Januarv 28 the British gov ernment has issued no figures of total losses. Up to that time the daily average of losses from the beginning of the war was slightly more than 1,000. Chemist Says Alcohol Best Fuel i to Take the Place of Gasoline New York, Sept. 30. Increased in dustrial value of alochol and the possi bility of its substitution for gasoline in the near future, were discussed here today by chemists attending the National exposition of Chemical In dustries. "The only fuel in sight which prom ises to take the place, or hold down the price, of gasoline is alcohol," said Dr. Aruthur L. Little of Boston, who presided at the conference. Dr. Little declared that alcohol is the best fuel for internal combustion engines, as benzol, which had been suggested as a substitute for gaso line, is not sufficiently plentiful to keep the 3,000,000 automobiles in this country going for two days. Kero sene, he added, was out of the iuci- President Wilson's Schedule in Omaha (Completed Subject to Appray!.!' v 1 1 :40 A. M.-Arrives at Yl non. r . 12:15 CommercialpiJ? ...con, and short addresC' ' : 2P.M. Drive along the line of march of historical parade. 2:30 Reviews historical pageant from reviewing stand. 5:00 Escorted at conclusion of parade to president's quarters at Hotel Fontenelle. 6:00 Formal dinner given by semi-centennial committee to President and Mrs. Wilson at Fontenelle. 8:30 Address by President Wil son at Auditorium. 10:10 President and party leave over Northwestern for Chicago. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Sizer of Lincoln, Mr. and Mrs. John D. Has kell ot YVaketield, Mr. and Mrs. ri. B. Lowry of Lincoln, Mr. and Mrs. Ross L. Hammond of Fremont, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Miles of Sidney, .Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Bushnell of Lincoln, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Cornelius of Valentine, Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Bates of Springfield. Mr. and Mrs C. E. Adams of Superior, Mr. and Mrs. Augustus O. Thomas of Lin coin, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jessen of Nebraska City, Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Anderson of Crete, Mr. and Mrs William H. Thompson of Grand Island, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Sawyer ot Lincoln, Chancellor and Mrs. Samuel Avery of Lincoln. In Mr. Wattles' Car. -In the private automobile of G. W. Wattles, President Wilson is to be taken up town from the train. The (Continued on Pago Two, Column One.) WILSON SEES WAR IFG.O.P.ISVICT0R President Attacks Republican Party, Declaring It Has Outlived Usefulness. HE SCORES WALL STREET Long Branch, N. J., Sept. 30. Presi dent W'ilson declared in a speech here today "that the certainty of a success of the republican party" at the next election is that the United State will enter the European war and will go to war with Mexico. ' , ' Officials of foreinn governments will watch the coming election- care- . .' . i - . -j . I . . !. .. limy, me presiucnt saiu, w anuw huh they can treat the United States in the future. He said special interests with stakes in Mexico are working for the success of the republican party! '' ' ' The president said that the republi cans say his foreign policy is wrong and that the only alternative to his policy is war. The foreign affairs of the nation, he declared, are being em barassedby the partisan treatment of them by republicans. Attacks Republican Party. - The president launched a vigorous attack on the republican oarty, saying that it had outlived its usefulness. "I think the democratic party will witness the death of another party," declared the president. "It has al ready seen two great parties come and go. President Wilson asserted that the republican party was run on the the ory that a few men shall govern the nation. He indicated he thought the real issue in the present campaign is whether the people shall rule. He declared he had found nothing to interest him in the campaign of the republicans. The oresident said he had hoped for campaign based on real issues, but! that he had been disappointed. Sees Interests in Control. Attacking the attitude of the repub licans on domestic questions, the pres ident insisted again that "special in terests" were back of the republican party. "Until the present administration came into power, the Treasury de partment was controlled by Wall street," he said. He explained he meant the worst features of Wall street. "I am very much prejudiced against some men in Wall street," the presi dent said, "as they are against me." He said the democrats had driven the corrupt lobby from Washington. "The rats disappeared as soon as they were pointed to," he added. "Some of the very gentlemen who were prominent in the odius days of Mark Hanria are again in control of the republican party," said President Wilson, amid gfeat applause. The president said the program of the democratic party was to continue, the "liberalization" of American busi ness and to place" the people in con trol of their government. tion. Dr. Little quoted figures to show that from 1912 to 1915 the pro duction of completely denatured and specially denatured alcohol rose from 8.000.000 gallons to 14,000.000 gallons in a year. He asserted government restriction was one reason why there had not been a greater production. He read a letter from Aruthur H. Comey, chemist at the Du Pont Powd er company's laboratory in which the chemist wrote, "making alcohol from sawdust is a great commercial success and will grow accordingly." Dr. Little said that in the yellow pine district alone there is enough material wasted to make 600,000 gal lons of alcohol a day. "There are 10,000,000 tons of material available every year in this country from which alcohol can be made,'' ' its W N0W that the CORN is m MO THE $110 IS FULL - we cm ALL u rc AKSAR-BEI OMAHA THE MECCA FOR ADTOJODRISTS Registry of Stopover Motorists at Headquarters Reads Like a National Directory, MAIN ARTERY FOR TRAVEL By A. R. GROK. It is only a few years ago that a dust-covered automobile labeled "Keo kuk to Denver" was enough attraction to cause crowds of people to gather and. gaze in wonder upon it and its adventurous .pilots 'in the Omaha streets '-..., . , ' Today tourists, not on- such little jaunts as Keokuk to Denver, but on tours from Maine to California, don't get more than "a passing glance. Omaha his become one of the greatest transcontinental touring cen ters. The register at the Omaha Auto mobile club headquarters in the Fon tenelle hotel on a single day this sum mer contained the names of touring parties making the following trips: Los Angeles to New York. Green Bay, Wis., to San Francisco. Cheyenne to Chicago. Pasadena to New York. Los Angeles to South Bend, Ind. San Diego to Lansing, Mich. Denver to Chicago. Kansas City to Milwaukee. lust vesterdav two of the parties registering were going from Provi dence. R. 1.. to San Francisco and from Portland, Ore., to Tampa, Fla. One Hour's Proof. I stood for an hour at Sixteenth and Farnam streets and noted the follow ing license numbers: B408J9 N. Y.: 85284 Mass.; 9858 Mo and 14807 Mich., besides many trom Iowa and one from Minnesota. In one day this summer I counted cars from eighteen different states right here at the Fontenelle," said S. t.' bmyth. assistant secretary ot tne Omaha Automobile club. The registry book of the club con tains many pages of long-distance tourists who have registered. Yet these were but a part of those who came. Many come here and stay a day or two without registering or even visiting the club headquarters. The Omaha Automobile club has 1,001 members now. It has gained 800 i of these within the last year. It has established headquarters with the as sistant secretary always in charge. Information Bureau. Motorists can get all sorts of in formation there. Every morning, by long distance telephone, reports are received of the road conditions as far west as North Platte, as far east as Guthrie Center, la.: as far north as Sioux City and as far south as Falls City. The club interchanges various kinds of information with other clubs all over the country. They exchange route cards and good ideas. Omaha's location on the map in sures its position as a prime trans continental automobile tourist center. It is on the Lincoln Highway, run ning from New York to San Fran cisco and on the Washington High way, running from Savannah, Ga., to Seattle, Wash. ( . It is also on the Omaha-Lincoln-Denver road and on the Kiver-to-Riv-er road, the White Pole road and the Blue Grass road across Iowa. These highways are constantly be inb improved. They are being built of brick and concrete. The- counties are getting national and state aid. Great as the long-distance tourist travel by gasoline through Omaha is now, it is destined to grow immensely greater. And Omaha Is Waiting to Welcome Them rwe SHOCK - AM' THE W muNWASKA SCMKEHTCItMAL ! Menu jor Dinner To the President Canape a la American Ctreen Turtle Delfour Celery Raited Almonila AMortes Ollrag Medallion of He nana ' Breaat of Chlckea, lira Inlaa Punch Cardinal r firllled Freeh Huahroema Tomato PeAtenella Bleeull Olaee, National Petit Feura Demi Taeae Martini Clsareta. ' .- I eauteme. 4 It-are. - Pol Rorera "IMS." J. P. MORGAN SAILS FOR GREAT BRITAIN Rumor He Will Negotiate An other Loan for Quarter of Billion Dollars. PAGE GOES ON SAME SHIP New York, Sept. 30. J. P. Morgan, financial agent of the British govern ment in the United States, has en gaged passage on the American line steamship New York, sailing today. It is reported that Mr, Morgan is go ing to London to arrange for float ing another British loan of $250,000, 000, to be backed by American securi ties. Henry P. Davidson, one of Mr. Morgan's partners, left for England several weeks ago. Bankers , who were questioned about the opportu nity for floating another British loan said that never in the history of the country has there been such a demand for bonds. . Walter Hines Page, the American ambassador to Great Britain, and Mrs. Page also are passengers on the New York. Fast Train Wrecked,, Engineer is Killed Cincinnati, O., Sept. 30 When a piston rod on the first engine of train No. 1231 on the Pennsylvania line, New York to Cincinnati, broke today, the train left the track and partially overturned. The engineer and fireman on the first engine were killed, while the crew of the second engine were injured. Five passen gers were bruised, but none seriously hurt. The wrecked train was of steel coaches, drawn by two engines. About 1,500 feet of track was torn up. Prince Rupprecht Thinks Allies Must Put Up With Winter Campaign Berling, Sept. 30. (Via London) The latest fighting on the Somme evidently has not shaken the confi dence of German military leaders in their ability to prevent the breach of their line. The Berliner Tageblatt's special war correspondent interviewed Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria, commander of the German forces on the Somme, Tuesday. The crown prince is quoted as hav ing said that since the offensive begaf) the entente allies have gained some ground, but there could be no thought of this decisively changing the situa tion. "It is impossible to predict how things will go hereafter, said Prince Rupprecht, "but 'one thing is certain, namely, that we have everything so thoroughly prepared that we are able to contemplate the situation with equanimity whatever comes. The of tVATOS BULGE MOB HANGS TWO AT NOWATA, OKL Negro Pair Put to Death Fol lowing Killing of White . , , Deputy Sheriff. MEN TAKEN" PROM JAIL Nowata,, Ok!.', Sept. .30. Two ne groes, accused of being implicated In the killing of Deputy Sheriff James Gibson, during a jail delivery yester day, were taken from the jail by a mob tonight and lynched in front of the tourt house". , i' , j 1 A first attempt to lyncH one of the negroes, immediately after their cap ture, was frustrated by the Rev. Perry Pierce, s Methodist minister, who pleaded with the mob until the sus pended negro was cut down, uncon scious but alive. The mob dispersed but public feeling was not allayed and the mob re formed later with the an nounced intention of lynching the two men who had beep returned to jail. When the prisoners had been taken from the jail, short work was made of putting them to death. Events culminating in the double lynching moved with dramatic swift ness. Three negro prisoners escaped from the county jail late today. They were discovered in the act by Sher iff James May, who was knocked down and robbed of his pistot. Gibson went to his aid and was shot to death It was only t few minutes after the negroes had gained their freedom, that s mob bent on vengeance was in close pursuit. - Within 200 feet of where the ne groes were lynched a prayer meeting was in progress within the Methodist ihurch The leader w.s Mr. Pierce, who but a few hours before had saved one of the now dead negroes. LawrenciCoffe7 Dies as Result of Accidental Sh6t Lawrence Coffey, aged 17 years, who was shot when his shotgun ac cidently discharged white he was crawling through a fence at Carter lake, died at St. Joseph hospital. He and his brother were hunting near the lake when the accident oc curred. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Coffey, 1617 Manderson street. fensive will certainty not reach an early end. "We can reckon upon an offensive of great presistence and with heavy attacks, accompanied by an enormous expenditure of ammunition. But we have taken precautions. Our artil lery has been reinforced and likewise our aeroplane corps and our fliers have had fine successes in the last few days, although they had hard fighting against increased numbers. Our artillery derives sdvantages from the successful work of the aeroplanes, after having formerly been much ex posed to observation by hostile avia tors. . "Our troops have been striking with the utmost strength and the enemy has found the nut too hard to cra:k. It is my distinct opinion that the enemy is trying to force a decision at this spot and during this year, and he has not succeeded. He will have to put up with a winter campaign and continue fighting next year." ROOSEVELT POTS WILSON IN CLASS WITHMRS.CAESAR Former President Says it is tha Duty of the Executive to Avoid All Reasonable Suspicion. v j TALKS AT BATTLE 0REES Says False Servants of the Peo. pie Have Betrayed the ; Soul of Nation. HE CANNOT KEEP SILENT Battle Creek, Mich., Sept. 30. For. mer President Theodore Roosevelt put President Wilson and Caesar's wife in the same class when he ad dressed a large audience here in sup port of Charles Evans Hughes, the republican candidate for president, here this afternoon. "It was the president's duty as well as Mrs. Caesar's to escape reasonable! suspicion of wrongdoing; should ha or any other official tell us: 'If you knew the facts you wouldn't blama me,' we have a ready answer: 'Give us the facts and we'll see.' " Mr. Roosevelt said he found it na longer possible to keep silent when he saw where Wilson s policies were leading the nation. In telling of his restraint, the e-president said: "I never uttered one word of crit icism of President Wilson until a year and a half after he was elected presi dent If he had stood by the honor and the interest of the American peo pie, I would have thrown up my hat for him, and would have supported - him, heart and soul. 1 not merely kept silent during the first eighteen months or two years. I tried actively to support him. the only errors I have made in connection with Mr, Wilson were due to incautiously ac cepting his statements and supporting; his policies in the ettort to stand by the president.' It was with deep re luctance that I was forced to the con- elusion that the effort to stand by him was incompatible -wtth standing by the interests of mankind, and tht honor of this nation. But in my view there was no alternative for an honor able man, when once I became con vinced, as I am convinced, that the conscience of this people has been seared, and its moral sensi dulled by the leadership of the administration and of congress during the last three years. These talse Servants of tiie people have taught us to enjoy soft ease and swollen wealth in the pres ent without taking one effective step to ward oil ruinous disaster in the fu ture. These false servants of the peo ple have betrayed the soul of the na tion. ' That Peace Bogey. The supporters of Mr. Wilson say that the American people should vote for him because he has kept us out of war, It is worth while to remember that this is a claim that cannot be ad vanced either on behalf of Washing ton or of Lincoln. Neither Washing ton or of Lincoln kept us out, of war, Americans, and the people of the world at large, now reverence the memories of these two men, because. and only because, they put righteous ness before peace, lhey abhorred war. They shunned unjust or wanton or reckless war. But they possessed , that stern valor of patriotism which bade them put duty first; not safety first; which bade them accept war rather than an nnrlghteous and disas trous peace. There were peace-at-any- price men in the days of Wash, ington. They were the Tories, There were peace-at-any-price men in the days of Lincoln; They were the Cop perheads. The men who. now with timid hearts and quavering voices praise Mr. Wilson for having kept us out of war, are the spiritual heirs of the Tories of 1776, and the Copper heads of 1864. The men who followed Washington at Trenton and York town, and who suffered with him through the winter at Valley Forge; and the men who wore the Blue un der Grant and the gray under Lee; were men of valor, who sacrificed everything to serve the right as it was given them to- see the right- They spumed with contemptuous indigna tion the counsels of the feeble and cowardly folk who in their day spoke for peace-at-any-price. "President Wilson by his policy of tame submission to insult and injury from all whom he feared has invited the murder of our men, women and children by the Mexican bandits on land, and by German submarines on the sea. He has spoken much of the 'New Freedom.' In international practice this has meant freedom for the representatives of any foreign power to murder American men. and outrage American women unchecked by the president. , i . , Ignoble Examples. . '"''. "Mexico offers the most striking in stance of contrast between words and deeds on the part of our government. Mr. Wilson speaks loftily on behalf of 'oppressed men and pitiful women' in the abstract; but when the forces of Carranza and Villa murdered Ameri can men, and outraged American women, acting under the direct au thority ot their leaders, Mr. Wilson (Continued on Paga Two, Column Two.) We Feel Quite Safe in Saying .1 that any kind of Omaha Real Estate is a . mighty good buy. The city is grow ing, its people are prosper ous and the future certainly looks rosy. The best bar" gains in Real Estae are al ways found in The Bee. 1 :