6 THE BKE: OMAHA, TUKSOAi. MAHCll .;. 1:1. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD RQ3EWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATEK, EDITOR. Tse Bee Publishing rompany. Proprietor. "tB BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Sintered at Omaha poetofflce eecond-clssa mstter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By carrier By mall per month. per year. Kelly and Sunday (Ao to ally without Sunday....' Ve N enlng and Sunday v .( Kvenlng without Sunday Ko 4.00 unday Be only c 1. 00 Send not Irs of cheese of artdrese Or complaints of Irregularity la delivery to Omaha Bee. Circulation Ipertmnt. - REMITTANCE. Bewtlt Vy draft, express or portal order. Only two cnt stamps received In payment of email ee emunt. Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. OrriCES. Omana Th Be Building. South Omaha 2g N afreet. Council Bluffs 14 North Main street . Lincoln M Ltttl Building. Chicago-01 He am Halloing Vnw Tork-fUom HO. Fifth avanua. . St. Loule-MS New Bank of Commerce. Washington 7 fourteenth St.. N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. 'A'dr roramonlraUrma relating to mwi and edi torial matter to Omaha Be. Editorial Department, FEBRUARY CIRCULATION, 51,700 Stat of Nebraska. County of Dougtaa. aa. Dwlstit Wllrtawis, circulation manager of The Bea PnhliKblng company, being duly tnoro, aaya that the average circulation for the month of February, 191a. was H.Twi DWIOHT "WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager. tutcr(led In my presence and aworn to before ne. this td day of .March, imis. BO BERT HUNTER. Notary Puhllo. . eabacribetv tearina th . city temporarily ' should have The Do mailed to them. Ad- dress will b chan fed aa often aa requested. at acazoa so Thought far the Day Stfecf? by Mmry Amotlm Ltt tocK make the best wm of our natural abiUlie$, and, icitK tht bfessinf of Ood, m thall arrim at irmt pood end. At for famo, it mai Urt but UtiU whether u aeair U or rtN. Hawthorn. It it the wise lawmaker who takes his twi light sleep wits at lea.it one eye peeled. It's a long-, long way to s salary of f 4,500 a year, and political submarines infest the route. Some poop! do not seem to know a good thing when the bare It for example, our graft greedy sheriff. ; As the weather man has failed miserably, to the spring poets falls th task of tying the can on th departing March Hon. When the legislature adjourns, perhaps our Watsr board manager may find time to figure out that overdue water rate reduction. Let history' be revised. General Hugh L. Ec&tt proves by his dealings with the Flutes that a good Indian is not necessarily a dead one. Turkey's promises of protection for mission aries would be more reassuring if Turkey had th means and the disposition to strangle its fanatics,-' ; i One Nebraska tows is confronted with a re minder of the past by the resurrection of a pop ulist ticket in its municipal campaign. Anyoni seen a bull moose, ticket anywhere? .- It is absurd to suppose that an examination fee of fS generates the steam behind the eugen ics bill ia the legislature. The sole object cf tba bill ia the conservation of the human race. From th goRslp flowing from his visit abroad, it is gathered that Colonel Housebound th concert of th power a discordant musical performance. As much was suspected on this aide. It teems a mlatak to us to limit the Audi torium bond proposition to $150,000, with no margin above the purchase price for needed bet terments. It is too much like taking two bites at a cherry. Omaha's latest bank consolidation conveiu a state bank into a national bank. Evidently a national bank charter is still considered desira ble regardless of th deposit guaranty feature of our state bank system. If those county officers would work for tho public bait at hard as they are working pn the legislature to double their terms without going before th voters for a new commission, the tax payers' would have something to show for it. Speaker Champ Clark gives out the cheering assurance that ther won't be a man out of wor la this country by the Fourth of July. He might bar added that Champ Clark, will hit th chautuqua hard to make up a year's lost time. e eaii4J The democratic city . convention' nominated traigtttout party ticket as follows: J-'or mayor. James EL Boyd; for auditor. Freeborn t Lewis; for ireaaurer, Truman Buck;' for police judge. August Weiss; for eouncllmen, Thomas Lowiy. Louis Schroder, Julius Meyer, C. 8. Goodrich. Thomas Ifeily Ptr 0MaHey: for achool board. H.- G. Clark, J. V. tnglleh and J. P. Lund. The water worka company ti pumping through the city Kaina a.O00 gallons dally, which would make th aacual coneuioKlua ao me thing like W'.ouu.On) sailoca. ' The Omaha Qlee dub fcaa arranged with Prof. Max Guahort of the Ueadolaeoaa Quintette club of Boston te join thein in a coucert th May. At the homo literary circle party at the reaidenr of Jwph Redman, a farce, entitled 'A Quirt yamUy," was put on with parte taken by Lout Little field. iJeloa Beard. J. U. Conrad, J W. Curron. Mrs r lilott. Mrs. Piunk Ualley, Mlaa Bella lUrubrlght aud -Mlhe Jennie rk lteru. t. it. i iinrijinin. aa cm a refluent or unuilia, aa of Ci-sWago, la itete OA bualneaa. H. D. Ettabrouk. who ettt to t'ennaylvanla aome xka aso, le now tn Chicago laid up whn rheumatla'n al the bouae of Colonel Clowry. timer Frank, clerk of th Vailed KUbeg court, aa S ne ia . ajomm. Statecraft Subject to Change. If Italy, as cemi imminent, should enter the present war, the action will simply emphasls the fallibility of statecraft, by bringing to an end the drelbund, which for o long a time domi nated the affairs of Europe, and in a Urge mean tire thoae of the world. Otto von Bismarck built weir when he laid the foundations of the Ger man empire, and on the agreement between Ger many, Austria and Italy he laid much emphasis. When von Caprivl came to office, after the sep aration between Wllhelm II and Bismarck, he devoted much of his ability to completing tho Triple Alliance, and in It had the active co-operation of Crlepl, Italy's great statesman of the clos ing quarter of the Nineteenth century., Aus tria's share in these negotiations was more or less passive, because of the relations between that empire and Italy, but the final agreements were so entirely acceptable at Vienna that no serious protest was raised there. For twenty-five years England and France, each with Its own purpose to serve, have sought for a combination that would offset the strength of the drelbund. Russia was unapproachable, having been considered favorable In certain phases of the alliance, until after the war with Japan. Then, by a strange turn of the affairs of diplomacy, the Triple Entente was made pos sible, although it was not brought to a stage of actual coalition until after the Agadlr Incident, which the kaiser cleverly used to make sure of the force of the understanding between the trio of powers now allied against Germany in war. This alignment of Interests Is what made the present conflict in Europe almost a certainty; at least the warriors of the several countries lost little time in making ready. In reviewing the steps by which the nations of Europe have approached the struggle that is now being so disastrously waged, the observer can not fall being Impressed by the selfishness of the nationa aa exhibited in their policies. U Italy joins the battle, it will be but another scrap of paper torn up, because of Jealousies and enmities that have root in the dim past. Strength of Omaha Banks. Another merger between local banking firm calls attention to the fact that a number of such have taken place in the past, and with the in variable result that the consolidated institution has developed; into one of the leaders. Omaha banks rank high in the financial world, because of their solidity, resting on the essential quality of sound, conservative methods. The business transacted by these banks ia unusually Urge for a city of Omaha's size, but has solid support. The' commercial and industrial importance of the city, far beyond its numerical position in the census of population, Is reflected in the clearing house reports, a prestige that can not be gain said. With ample facilities for taking care of their customers, and with the confidence of the business world, based on the solid foundation of confidence and experience, the banks of Omaha are a strong bulwark for the city's prosperity. The Police Court Grist The current issue of "Municipal Statistics" gives in detail the report of the Omaha police department for the year 1914, which furnishes a lot of food for thought. The figures show that 12,721 persons were ground through the police court machine in twelve months, of whom 10.- 714 wer men and 2,007 were wpmen. Doubt less there are repeaters included in this enumer ation, but allowing for duplication, the arrest during the course of the year of at least 8 per cent of th population would indicate that th police are kept busier than they ought to be kept. " Further inspection of the figures show that of those brought Into the police court 4,699 wer convicted, 7,39 dismissed, with 18J casea con tinued. It would be easy to jump at conclusion and declare either that the polic magistrate is too lenient or that th police are overzealous, when in all probability we hav merely a normal condition reflecting an effort to stop lawless ness snd vlclousness rather than to punish for accidental slips. What we are citing these figures for, how ever, It to call attention to the wide field for preventive measures, which are always th most effective curative reforms, and also to glv sora conception of the magnitude of the' job that de volves upon the police fore of a big city filled with a mixed population and serving as an artery of transit for all sorts of floaters. The Work of One Fastor. Palm Sunday was observed in Omaha much as usual, by the confirmation of large numbers of persons in their religious professions, and their formal union with the church of their doptlon. In this connection It was developed that one pastor, whose confirmation class num bered 239, haa brought into his church 1,183 men, women and children during the four years of his pastorate. This amounts to one a day for the working days of his term. Ia accom plishing this result, moreover, he has not re sorted to braas band methods of campaigning, nor to vaudeville stunts tn the pulpit; it has been done by plain preaching of the simple mes sage of th gospel, and by unobtrusive work on part of the pastor. Omaha Is in little danger of going to th devil while such a man can achlevo such results arnons its people, and the cause of real religion is greatly advanced by such ex ample. The reported peace offering to Bulgaria con templates the restoration of the territory the Bulgara won in the Balkan war,' and lost by th attack on Greece and Serbia. The Enos-Media line -now suggested as Bulgaria' southern boundary, will reduce the Ottoman empire In Europe to a thirty-mile stretch of land surround ing Constantinople and the adjacent Galllpoll peninsula flanking th Dardanelles. One thing is fairly certain at this stage of the war game Turkey is booked to lose some feathers. Local socialists demand a publicly owned and operated Jitney bus lin to compel with the street railway. Now you're talking! For this municipal ownership enterprise experiment no 18,000,000 bond issue and no $5,000 general manager would be necessary. Japan is not to b likened to the bull in a chins shop. The movement, of the "Yankees of the east'' are gumshoed and prompted by a desire not to distract th attention of allies from their present social engagements War and the Fish Supply "" m "rational Oeograpble BCageslae. WITH Its war sonea snd counter war sonea. Its mlnd areas. Ha hostile fleets and its heavily defended shores, the North pea. In a few month, haa bem tranafortned from one of the rlcheet food-producing- areas In Christendom Into a region upon whoee mastery may depend the starvation of one or the other of two of the mlghtleat nations of the earth. In tlrnea of peace no other like area In sll the seas ever has given to humanity such rich sup plies of food as this narrow strait separating- Albion from the continent of Europe. More than any other known region of the oceans, the food flehea of the marine world aern to love to congregate there, and to fe that tt la home to them tn aplte of an age-long attack upon them by the greatest of etl creatures of prey man. t tep by atep every new Idea of art and science haa been brought to the aid of the fisher folk of the North sea, and by the same atep-by-atep process, the annual drain on Ita resources haa climbed higher and higher, until finally, during the year previous to the present war, it amounted to a million and a quarter tone of flah. Counting two tona to the truck load, and allowing thirty feet to the truck, this would make a procession of fish trucks reaching across the United Ratea from New York to Baa Francisco, via New Orleans. Yet almoet as rapidly as tho demands of Oo world have risen, the supply has Increased, and. ex cept for a too heavy concentration of fishing forces on aome Individual bank now and then, there Is no evidence of any serioua depletion of tho stock. The lesion of the present war to the Inhabitants of Neptune's world is that It la an Ul wind that blows nobody good. But yeaterday thousands of steam trawlers pursued their way up and down the fishing grounds of the North see, gathering In with their vast nets untold mlUlons of flah. Other thousand of drifters dropped dowa over the fishing banks and view with the trawlers in th magnitude of their catch. Other thousands, and even tena of thousands, of boats, equipped with a myriad of baited hooks, aided in collecting the tremendous tax levied by the human appetite upon the sea. Today a hundred thousand Englishmen who manned the steam trawl, the drifter, and th sailing boat; tens of thousands of Germane who vied with them In their work: Belgians, the French, the "Dutch, the Danes, snd the Scandinavians, who also helped exploit the North sea fisheriesall of these are largely out of jobs. Fishing boats now sweep the sea for mines Instead of seining It for fish. Wa In America, where fish forms such a minor part of our daily diet, and where so many fish that we eat are grown in our rivers and bays, under a great Amerlcan-Orisinated system of flah culture, find it hard to realise how serious in their proportions and how far-reaching In their consequences are the results of the practical closing down of the fisheries of the North sea. Europe has depended very much on these fisheries for fish supplies. More than half of all the fish produced on all the fishing grounds operated by Europeans are caught within the limited territory that constitutes the North sea fishing grounds. How much they are depended upon Is shown by the fact that Oreat Britain annually absorbs WO, 000 tons of North sea fish; that means twenty-two pounds per capita. And while thta is small In proportion to its per capita meat consumption of 119 pounds, yet it is thst margin which represents the difference between a bounteous plenty and positive hunger unless other foods can be secured to take Its place. The same condition applies to Germany, . The vast proportion of, the fish consumed In Europe is salt fish.. The fresh flah go to the tables Of the rich, while the herring and other salted varie ties are consumed, principally by te masses. Tho re sult is that when the pinch In the fish supply began to come It visited the homes of tho well-to-do first. AU of the countries at war probably have enough salt fish In their warehouses to tide over a considerable period, but if the war keeps up this reserve must dis appear. Not only do the nationa at war feel the pinch of the fish shortage caused by the war, but neutral nationa as well. Holland feels It sorely from a pro duction standpoint, aa do alao Bweden, Norway and Denmark. On the other hand, it hits SwUserland more from a consumption atandpolnt That country normally buys nearly a million dollars' worth of fish from the countries that border th North sea. Many regions around the North sea live almoat.en- tlrely by their fishing Industry. The Orkneys and the fhetlund Inlands have almost no other activities. Lerwick, the principal town of the islands. In winter has a population of 4,000. tn summer this grows to 19,000 and everybody Is busy with the fisheries. Where the llttl Scotch town of Buckie possessed three steam fishing boats In 1910, It possessed ISO In 1914. The port of Fraserburg annually handlca 100,000 tona of fish, and Aberdeen has Increased its fishing business sixty fold In - fourteen yesrs. In Great Britain the fiahlng industry ia centralised in a few large ports; In France It ia Mattered among a great many small ports. Grimsby is the fishing capital of the' world, with an annual output of per haps K),000 tons of fish. The territory which conatl tutes the North sea fishing grounds Is strikingly 11m Ited tn area compared to Its Importance. Its total arcs Is leas than 130.000 square miles, only a little larger than the state of New Mexico. The Dogger bank is the center of It all the Charing Crtaia of the sea, so to apeak. It has baea estimated that there are some 19,000 speclea of fish in the world, and some of th food flehes found in the North sea are among the moat prolific of them all. Twice Told Tales Great Staff. English men-of-war have no ice-making machine on board, aa do our Ships, and everybody know bow th English fall to , understand ua on the subject of th uae of Ice, especially In our drinks. An English officer was aboard one of our ships of the Asiatic fleet and on being served with an Iced drink, commented on the delights of having cool water aboard. The American officer responded with an offer of a small cake of Ice, which was aont th following morning. Meeting- the Englishman ashore a week later, the American asked htm If he had en- joyed the Ice. , "Kajoy it, old top. Why, do you kaow that wa the first cold bawth I've had since I left England!'' Everybody's Magaalna, A -New Eteasr, Mr. Rounder lay in the hospital with a broke leg and a bruised head. But theae weren't worrying him moat. There In the morning paper was the whole atory of one too many joy rides, chorus girls and all. staring from page one. Ills wife ha knew her too well. Even while he pictured th scene la the divorce court, she cjui hi, stiff and cold and threateninc. th telltale paper clutched in a trembling hand. "Wcllr" aha demanded accualngly. The cam hto Inspiration. "Ltioretls." he whiapered, reaching toward her. In aplte of th I vain hla movements gave him. "I thought the automobile waa a jitney bua, and beforo I discovered the difference, it whlsied away with me and" She Interrupted him with a wild cry. "Oh, Jonathan! I knew you couldn't have dun anything ao absurd!" Manlike, he forgav her. Judge. War llaactt. An Engliah girl aa reproved for engaging heraelf to no leas than four of th boys who went to th froot "It sent them all away happy," answered the guilty one. "I think any girl who wouldn't do what he could to make th defenders of her country happy ia no patriot and besides" Well, rolasr "Well. I wanted to hav enough fuut so as to make aur that on of them would com back aad marry ine. Boston Transcript, Km new apartment f on we left, know that repainted. Carle the Pope Habit. SHERIDAN, Wyo., March 29.-TO the Editor of The Bee: As a homeopathlo physician who haa practiced medicine ist. "I don't difference to sine St. Patrick'a day, lSSO. I cannot re frain from replying to the communication ent'tled "Hope tor Drug Victims," by Cured In Five Days." I agree wholly with all he says in the Now, small pupil, panther Is?" first half of his communication. In over "Yetn. ma panther 1th a thirty-three years' practice of medicine 1 have not used over a dram of mcar- Chicago News. jihlne, of any other form of opium, snd "t like only then in cases where th patients had become oaed to it at the hands of old school physicians and I gave way to their pleadings. But 1 have not given a single dose tn over twenty-five years. There are two reasons why I hare given up the use of morphine: First, it be numbs the patient and blinds the physi cian ln Charge. , It Is impossible for th physician to know how the disease Is progressing when the patient Cannot feel "You are said, thinking its effects. Many a patient haa gone down to hla death because he continually told his physician he felt better,' because the morphine made him feel so.. Second, every true homeopathic physician knows that the "Indicated remedy" will relieve th most of a pain and do It curatlvely aa promptly as morphine. When a horaeo pathlcally treated patient says he feels better be is better ahd he does not have his pain return when th medicine la a topped. Therefore, I can believe "Cured in Five Days' " story of his own experi ence and can sympathise with him. ' But and here Is the reason for sending in my opinion of his communication It very broadly takes the attitude of an ad vertisement for the parties handling the Cured In Five Days" treatment To me. a physician, who has had a great deal of experience in treating "morphine fiends," a five-day cur is impossible. However beneficial any cure may be It is Incredible and Impossible that all the long deleteri ous effects of opium can be completely, perfectly and permanently removed In five days. I will leave It to The Bee to prove in the future the truth or falsity cf my statement. Being a physician who haa the welfare of suffering humanity in his heart, if I knew of, or could Pro cure a five-day cure of the opium habit. would freely give It to the world and let every physician freely use It. And If anyone will procure a sample of this remedy and send It to me I will have It analyzed by a competent chemist and publish the analysis in The Beo. HORACE G. HOLMES, M. D. Th Appalling; Waist of Time. TILDE.V, Neb., March 29. To the Editor of Th Bee: When the door is opened and the way to the school Is pointed out to the child, the heart of tho fond parent sinks into a state of dls- palr to think of the labarynth of orthographical complexities that this mind must traverse in order to arrive at a few facts. With so many unneces sary rounds, must the pupil attempt to ascend the ladder of fame. With the twenty-six letters which are marked with tho eight unwritten diacritical marks, of which the macron has eight uses; the breve, two; dleresis, five, seml-dleresls, six; cedilla, two; tilde, three; caret, four; suspendid bar., two; totalling twenty- two; plus fifty-three Instances where one letter is substituted for another, and beyond all this the letter "a" has a score of ways by which from two to five letters represent Ua sound, thus: th(ey) gr(ea)t str(alght)t v(eln) en!) rtei.sii d(ahllla to(a)s w(eigh) pal)n K(uatgfe) - (aye (a)t(ei cnampiagmicjoDieyeia p(ay) camptaigln . w(eighe)d, etc. And the same endless mase of irregu lar! ttea may be) found In other letters. Hot only 1 the time lost in attempting to learn this arbitrary system, but the mind is dulled for other lines of pro gress. In fact. Ideas must be associated with ivrelated combinations of lctttera that form wards, ratber than writing the word as pronounced; and for that reason the philologist Is still learning hla alphabet, which should have been spontaneous. 'None but the brave dare step aside from custom's Iron rule, the common mind must follow It or be esteemed a fool." The English language should be freed, from shackles which are atlll hang ing as chains to the ghost of departed days. One hundred and fifty millons speak ur Janguaire, and a greater day of ef ficiency will dawn when we are set free from these bonds. .. It would, however, be egotistical to ex pect English to become the universal 'tongue, for If number would count, the 400,000,000 Chines would have a vote, and French, German, etc., would have a vole, and others would combine to pre vent any national -language from being adopted. The International language must be neutral; the property of no nation, and thus be aa auxiliary language to the world, without discounting any idiom th cosmopolitan need demand this eaeenc of th romanCe-Teutonlo roots so systemattsed. which is proving Its effi ciency by some twenty years applica tion. But nevertheless, the orthography of th 9ug11sh langnag must be simpli fied, thus saving valuable time and brain power. - CHARLES P. LANG. Paatoh Methodist Episcopal churdh. Suite Editorial Sittings Pittsburgh Dispatch: It is one of tha Suite heretofore unpublished secrets of the capital that President Wilson's delermi nation to stick to Washington this spring la due to his dautlr not to interfere wtth Secretary Bryan's lecture engagement. Brooklyn Eagle: Austria remembers Room Garibaldi, and hatea bitterly to give up Trentlno, even at Germany's request, to Italy. Btill the kaiser Is asking nothing unreasonable. But for Prussia. Garibaldi would nut have evacuated th Italian Tyrol in 1. and Austria would have lost It almost half a century sooner. Philadelphia Ledger: With ao many ahipa being loat to th carrying trad and with navies being reduced by battle and torpedo and mine, it seems the vary Ground climax of folly for this country to disre gard Us opportunity. Every shipyard should be crowded with new orders. It Is our chance to get the flag back on th seven seas. New York World: Tho suggestion that Austria might purchase peace by the sac i Ulc of part of her possession baa doubt' less been mad, though, perhaps, not in th maaaer reported. It ia not atrange that th aged emperur cannot see the iiecrasity of parting with the Trenlloo and part of Gallcla while Germany seeks to keep Belgium, part of France and a tltre of Poland. Like tlte fowls in tha fable, Austria, when asked w-.th what sauce it prefers to b eateu, ' evades th question." Floor Room MIRTHFUL REMARKS. "I am not." he growled bs-k at them. "I am In this fight to win." Philadelphia Ledger. "I should like to make a suggestion a to the portrftlt." "Madam," said the testy artist, 'Mo yon think you can tell me anything about painting your face?" "Well, I've had considerable experlene with this face," resp'mded she, for eh had a sense of humor. Louisville Com I ler-Journal. 1 Mrs. Crawford How do you like your Mrs. Crahshaw It Isn t as nlc as the but the neighbors will never our car Is merely the old one Judge. "I suppose Turkey will be annihilated." "Well. ' replied the industrious humor know that It makes much me. The Thanksgiving Joke waa about played out, anyhow.' Wash ington Star. Dorothy," said the teacher to a "can you tell me what a ' T PlW RMSE MWfi UMWSUA TO . PROHCTA fl MAN, TMfRtS ONCf ROOM FDR ONE-THE "Or- IS Mtr I tlk TO Bf rXJU1E,lUrV0O MltST ONDHcSWM' AM Us3REUA AWT A AWMffKr. tocr am. itsneo norotny. a. man that makth panth." acting wtth spirit to it." said the great star, "but that girl has too much spirit to suit me." How 807 ,'In the third act she Is supposed to resist my kissing her and the vim she puts Into It I far from flattering to my personal pride." Louisville Courier-Journal. 'He's suing the company that con structed the artificial limbs." "On what grounds?" "Nonsupport." Buffalo Express. the lories! candidate." the- to please him. Of Special Interest to Housekeepers This is the first of a series of practical talks that will appear in this space every week. It will pay you to read them care fully. They will contain nothing, that Is not absolutely true, and will prove helpful to the house keeper in the selection or use of a (common, everyday food necessity. No article used in such small (Quantities occupies a more impor tant place in household oconomy than baking powder. On it depends not only the successful prepara tion but the healthfulness of the food. Therefore the character and quality of the baking powder she Should use is one of the most Important questions which oon ' fronts the housewife, and to help her solve it in a satisfactory Banner is the purpose of these little articles., ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. New York xmms Om$L Only three offices but very choice ones There are still but three offices on the rental list of the brnlding. We had some sixth floor space, which we offered a few days ago, and this is now taken. The space offered is very desirable, if it meets your requirements. ' It. will also pay you to call. Even if we have nothing that meets your requirements, we will place your name on our list and notify you as goon aa a change occurs which will vacate the kind of an office yon want. THE BEE BUILDING "Tht building that i always new" The fact that there are but three vacant offlcea , ... In tho Bee Building Is the best testimonial we can offer you of service, comfort, safety and location. 222: This la a very choice office on the second floor, facing the corridor sround the court. It la par titioned for a very comfortable waiting room and two private offices. It has north light. Price, per month S45.00 This is a duplicate of the room described above, except that It la divided Into a waiting room and a single large private office. Price per month $45.00 This la one of th corner offices which Is con sidered so very desirable. It is 20x20 feet, and has two window facing north and two west. Th large vault Is particularly deairable for some classes of business. Th door of this office la directly at the end of the hall, so that the sign may be seen by everyone walking down the corridor. rrloe, per month 810.00 Especially adapted for printing office. This ha been occupied by a printer for many years snd on account of Us location In an office building and in the heart of tbe oftlc building district, the location itself la an asset in this bualness or any similar business. It ha an entrance from the court on the ground floor and also from the alley. There Is very satisfactory light and ven tilation It likewise has the advantage, from, the atandpolnt of insurance and safety, of being in a fireproof building. The floor apace Is 1.2 3 S feet. Price, per month 8100.00 S22: 420: Apply to Building Superintendent. Ro6ml03 THE BEE BUILDING COMPANY KABIBBLE.. a KABARET j