Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 06, 1904, Page 3, Image 19

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Norember ft, 1WN.
TIIE OMAIIA ILLUSTRATED BEE.
3
TRAITS OF TWO LEADERS
Trenchant Companion of the Qualification!
of oosereltnd Parker.
FRANK HONESTY AND BOGUS GRAVITY
Vzcerpts from n Article hy Alfred
Henrr Lewi la tb Metropol
itan Maaaalae for Ho.
ember.
t bft been my fortune to have teen
something and heard much of both Mr.
Roosevelt and Mr. Parker. It is my own
belief that eacfc Is an honest man. But
with this difference: Mr. Roosevelt's hon
esty Is militant, his Integrity wears a gun.
It la headstrong. Impetuous, brldleles. It
has a temper and will not be withstood. It
la restless, aogresslve, assailing wrong or
fraud or evil to the state on sight. Tou
cannot bribe, you cannot bolly, you cannot
cajole the Roosevelt honesty. It attack!
falsehood and all hypocracy. and things
unmanly or un-Amerlran, with the Ingenu
ous ferocity of a bull terrier attacking
vermin rats.
As a gal nut this, Mr. Parker la also hon
est. Cut Ms Integrities are more cautious,
more capable of self-control. Mr. Roose
velt could not have managed Mr. Hill's
canvass for governor In 1XX5 any mora
than he could have made counterfeit
money In 1885. He could not have re
mained silent while the Maynard outrage
was worked, or the snap convention In
IS92 went stealing- the delegation from Mr.
Cleveland.
In big cities one finds a sort of cltisen
whose commonest trait are a spurious Im
portance, a bogus gravity. He Is extremely
respectable and seldom right. His life is
spent on a pedestal; and when he talks
which la most of the time he is heedful to
talk to you, not with you. He never goes
to war, and ha a deal to say concerning
the horrors of war. He never speaks of
the horrors of peace, or those East Side
kennels, yclept tenement houses, where
children, four and six and eight and ten
in a room, swelter In summer, freeze In
winter, starve always. He live by Inter
est and dividends and profits on money
loaned or Invested, and would sooner see
our flag the common dlahclout of a world
than have those profits threatened. It Is
he who coins the word "jingo" and talks
of the "safe and sane."
There Is yet another sept that live by
atock rapine, and whose hunting grounds
are Wall and Broad streets. These are
the weasels to suck the yolk from other
people's honest opportunities. Also. they
Join In that shout of "Jingo!" and echo
that cry of "safe and sane."
Feeble Minded Ideals.
By talking with these narrowlsts you
will learn that to be-in their eyes "safe
and sane," you shou'.d be timid, slow, dull,
dumb, deaf, blind, weak and hold firmly
l.y the tenet that peace with dishonor la
proferable to war with honor. If every
body In every age had been "safe and
sane," there would have been no Columbus
discovering America, no Declaration of In
dependence, no Bunker Hill, no abolition
of black slavery, no heroes, no martyrs, nd
sermon on the mount. Likewise the roster
of Jingoes includes Grant, Lincoln, Jaok
aon, Monroe, Jefferson, Washington, Ad
ams, Frank'-ln, Hancock, Patrick Henry
and Paul Jones. Our history as a nation,
when the "Jingoes" have been eliminated
and all save the "safe and sane" sup
pressed, dwindles to a merest roll of money
lenders of the kind that were laahed from
the temple when time was.
As shedding a ray on the subject of our
search I mention these people in their
kind. Without exception one and all they
are advocates of Mr. Parker while shrink
ing from Mr. Roosevelt with a mighty
fear.
Difference in Men.
Something of that difference between Mr.
Roosevelt and Mr. Parker had suggestion
In a recent talk.
.VIsn't It a fact," demanded an adherent
of Mr. Parker In converse with a Hoosevelt
man. "Isn't It a fact that, during the fight
around San Juan hill. Mr. Roosevelt was on
Kettle hill? Don't you know that he was
not on San Juan hill at all?"
"I am a mighty sight surer," retorted the
other vlgorouely. "that Mr. Parke wasn't
on Ban Juan hill. Mr. Roosevelt laid down
a higher offlce than any ever held by Mr.
Parker to go to the Spanish war. And
whether he was on San Juan hill or not, at
least he did his best to be on San Juan hill.
Mr. Parker never got nearer the Spaniards
than Esopus."
This, ot course. Is rude, and as argument
no be'ter than mere rough-and-tumble: and
yet It marks a great fact of separation
when one compares the two gentlemen In
hand.
Mr. Parker, fifty-two years ago, was born
near Cortlandt. N. T. He had the advan
tage of being born poor. His whole equip
ment beyond poverty was a splendid body,
a docile honesty and a mind of moderate
size. He went to country schools; later
he taught country schools, and he learned
more as teacher than as student. In the
nd he studied law and entered upon Its
practice In a country town.
Parker a a Lawyer.
It should win your observation that Mr.
Parker never achieved distinction as a law
yer. His first fame began to grow as a
munaglng politician. He was gifted ot
craft, and an Intimate knowledge of men
In their solflshness. At an early age he
made himself master of Ulster county; not
by sublimity of principle, not by aught
proposed of public good, but solely and
wholly by adding one man's hopes to an
other man's fears, and pursuing these per
sonal mathematics until ho had gotten the
harness of his domination upon his entire
party In Ulster. Thinking, naturally, to
have some profit of his mastery, Mr. Par
ker made himself surrogate; and surrogate
he remained until, at the age of J3, he at
tracted the attention of David Bennett
Hill. More than any other Mr. Hill has
been the architect or, searching for a bet
ter word, the patron of Mr. Parker, and
fashioned him, reared him. Into what we
now behold.
Twenty years ago Mr. Hill, then serving
out Mr. Cleveland's unexpired term aa
governor, waa the party boas In New York.
Being upon his own election aa governor,
he went roving hither and yon to pick up
the one best fitted for the management of
the machine In his Interest. Then It was
that he pitched upon Mr. Parker.
e e e e e
Believing he had lighted upon the Mach
lavelll for whom he sought, Mr. Hill In
vited Mr. Parker, then In his 83d year, to
take up his, Mr. Hill's, campaign for gov
ernor. There waa to come a vacancy on
the supreme bench which the governor
would fill. Under the circumstances Mr.
Parker felt safe In resigning Ms post ot
surrogate to enter the political service of
fr. Hill. He Justtfted the latter In his se
lection. Cunning, Incessant, sleepless, Mr.
Parker so conducted the fortune of Mr.
. Hill that the latter was made governor by a
majority of live figures. Also, Mr. Hill
bowed his appreciation and consoled Mr.
Parker for that surrendered surrogateshlp
by later naming him to the supreme court
Vacancy. Mr. Parker haa continued upon
the supreme or court of appeals bench
since thst day: There you have the record
of Mr. Parker, and nothing to add unless
that as a Judge, being neither very bad
nor very good, he haa never aroused at
tention. . Mr. Parker waa a boss-made Judge, a
mschlne-made Judge; he went to the bench
not because he knew law. but politics; not
because he had helped the public, but Mr.
HilL
Roosevelt's Career aa Open Bonk.
Mr. Roosevelt's career is the precise op
posite of Mri Parker'. Without furtlvi
ties. Incapaole of secrets, warlike not
stealthy and given rather to force than
craft, Mr. Roosevelt could not have been
a partx "manager." Moreover, his frank
honesties, and a temper always hard on
the bits, made him the bane of bosses and
the despair of the machine. Also, he ha
ever met a boss only to defy and fight
with him,
Mr. Parker It should be said and thl
may modify If it do not mollify the tooth
of criticism could not have succeeded by
Mr. Roosevelt's methods. Had Mr. Par
ker proceeded with the reckless disregard
of the boss and the machine that for a
score of years has distinguished Mr. Roose
velt he would have been knocked on the
head directly. Mr. Roosevelt has been
saved only by dint of a tremendous per
sonality that placed him above bosses and
machines. The bosses sought his destruc
tion, the machine exerted Its powers to
crush; that they failed lay In this that for
brains and heart he was their indomitable
superior.
Folk delight In phrases, and fall in love
with mouth-filling terms. Tou may hear
them talk of the "judicial temperament,"
and they will tell you that Mr. Parker pos
sesses It. If one Is to play rhetorical blind
man's buff and grope for a meaning, the
"Judicial temperament," If the word9 tell
anything, stands for the abstractlonal, the
thoughtful, .the passively philosophical In
man. Emmlnently, the phrase does not de
scribe an executive who must be Instant,
pushing, alert, decisive and accomplish
things in downright saber-slashing fash
Ion. The Jndlclnl Temperament.
Holding to this definition, and having
seen, talked with and studied Mr. Parker,
I may say that I agree with those who
speak of the "Judicial temperament" aa his
primal characteristic. Mr. Parker, as pres
ident, would rescue no Pericardia, compel
no sultan to pay American their dues,
and In the face of Europe and our trans
continental railways cut no Panama canal.
His temperament Is too Judicial or shall
we say Judicious? It calls for folk of the
Roosevelt stripe, who are not judicial but
executive, to deal with the beys and sul
tans and to cut canals. True, the Roose
velt sort alarm Wall street and whitens
the cheek of gambling speculation. But It
secures safety for Americans, and respect
for the flag. In uttermost corners of the
globe.
There Is a kind of black flag predatory
wealth that bears the relation to public
Interests that henhawks bear to poultry
interests. This pirate, buccaneering Money
complains of Mr. Roosevelt. He has too
little of the Judicial temperament.
Those who represent this sailing, soaring.
swooping, predatory Money go about de
claring their fear of Mr. Roosevelt, and
putting It on the ground that they "don't
know what he'll do." By the same token,
you are to Infer that their preference for
Mr. Parker 1 based upon the fact that
they "do know what he'll do."
Tried and, Not Found Wanting.
Mr. Roosevelt, however, Is not amenable
to that charge of uncertainty. He la un
usual but not erratic, and no one Is surer
than he to do In the future what he did In
the paat Dull must be the man who in
event of his election doe not know what
he will do. No one has had a more diver
sified career, and the multiplied character
of hi experiences would have brought
down the destruction of most That very
diversity, however, glve you a fullest
chance ' to atudx Mr. Roosevelt His
strength and his weaknesses have been
laid bare to the sight of friend and foe for
twenty years. He has been tried In the
legislature, In the civil service commis
sion, In the police commission, In the Navy
department, in the army under Are, as
governor, as presiding officer of the senate.
as chief magistrate of the nation. Indeed,
he has performed In every department of
government except the judicial. He has
experienced a city government aa commis
sioner of police; he has been taught the
lesson of state government as lawmaker
and law enforcer; lastly, he has worked
among the wheels and cogs and springs
and rachets of a national government lu
the sundry roles of civil service commis
sioner, naval secretury, army officer, vlci
president and president.
W.th such a many-angled story It should
be strangest of the strange if you could
not, by studying his past, come by some
lucid understanding of what under all con
ditions and on any day Mr. Roosevelt will
do. You have but to question yourself.
As civil service commissioner did he not,
against the power of place hunters and In
the face of spoilsmen, enforce not only
tho letter but the white spirit of the law?
A police commissioner did he not refuse
every convenient compromise with vice?
and did he not maintain a police force
strung like a bow at the top-bent of high
est eftlclency? I've heard a leading voice
Of Tammany Hall declare that Mr, Roose
velt was the one police commission who,
during a third of a New York century,
had been worthy of the name. As an as
sistant secretary ot the navy was he lax
or alight or idle? As a soldier In the field
waa he brave? Did he lack in enterprise,
or courageous duBh, or coolness under Are?
A governor was he corrupt, or feeble, or
blind, or ridden of the rings? While In
the White House has he been a rich man's
president? Ask Mr. Baer, whose coal vil
lainy he broke down. Has he been the
president of the corporations? Inquire of
Mr. H1U and his Northern merger. Has
he been a president fpr Europe, or cool
and slow, toward Yankee rights abroad?
Ask the sultan, ask the bey, ask France
or Germany or, the Paclilo railways or
what other force, for years and until a
Roosevelt day, haa interposed Its lies and
bribes and Intrigues between this govern
ment and the cutting of a Panama canal.
Mr. Roosevelt can be studied and hi fu
ture guessed at by what his past has been.
Who shall study Mr. Parker, and by what
light? Once a machine manager, now a
maohlne Judge, always a protege and pupil
of Mr. Hill; that lias been bis career.
GOLD MEDAL
AWARDED
QUAKER
H AID RYE
WHISKEY
0e of the great eompll
meats ltd to Awerlcea pruuuut
... il. ik unman M CO.. of
luui Oily. Mo., wheats lDt.rotlol Jury of the
Loul.i.us urcb. Exi.o.iuon grepud GOLD
MkUali to the WPAKKK MAID RYU. This Jury I
oooiload of eonnulMvura from Try seotino of
elYllii.il world, end wlieo tli.r crowned ui'AKkU
MAID HYM .uperlor to all oiuer "i
lhay took lato euo.lu.r.tloo 'r el'm.ul ; of
.rr.ut wbl.k.T. lu r.w.rain w
YB, It from the .t.DOnlnt of rC-HiTY.
00 ALITT, FBBrtOTlOI or AO, well 111
IHONU BTANlUNd wli lotert ol g wly.
Quaker Mnl! Oold Medal Winner Is for sal at
U leading ban. or. aad drag iwtw
S. KIRSCH & CO., Kansas City, Mo.
SUCCESS IN OTHER FIELDS
Former Telegrapher Achieve Eminence in
Various Professions.
NAMES ON THE ROLL OF EX-OPERATORS
Prominent Men' Hh Gained Tbelr
First Business Experience) In
Manipulation- the Key
Notable Chances.
"The recent death of former Governor
Alonxo B. Cornell," relates a veteran
telegrapher In the Brooklyn Eagle, "and
the appointment by President Roosevelt
of Robert J. Wynne as postmaster general,
both of whom started in life as telegraph
operators, are examples of the success
some of the knights' of the key may ac
quire after they leave the telegraph busi
ness. This profession Is essentially a
young man' business as promotion in It
la slow and the salaries of the officials are
not large. For this reason many leave
the services of the telegraph companies
after serving a few years aa operators,
In which capacity they often gain execu
tive ability and a good Insight of general
business affairs.
"The press operators, especially, who
handle thousand of words of news dally,
get a good training for the newspaper
business, and somo of the best men In thl
line of work were former telegraphers.
Among the most prominent whom I can
recall at the present are E. Rosewater,
proprietor of the Omaha Bee; Walter P.
Phillips, formerly general manager of a
press association, but now connected with
a gramophone company; William J. Elver
son, the Philadelphia publisher; - George
Kennan, the woll known traveler and
writer; W. J. Johnson, T. Comerford Mar
tin, Thomas Taltavall and Frank A. Mun
sey, the magazine publisher.
"Postmaster General Wynne Is not the
first manipulator of dots and dashes to
enter the cabinet; Daniel Lamont, who
served as secretary of war under Presi
dent Cleveland, was, I believe, the first
of our calling to hold a cabinet office.
Among other who have achieved fame In
the political arena are ex-Governor R. F.
Bullock of Georgia and in a lesser degree
D. G. Hearn, the health commissioner of
Boston; C, J. Christie, who was acting
mayor of Cincinnati during the past sum
mer, and Walter C. Burton, New York
state senator.
Put Next to Broker.
"The introduction of leased wires twenty
five years ago as a necessary adjunct to
the successful handling of brokerage busi
ness 'Initiated a large number of operators
into financial circles and 'the offices in Wall
street and other centers of finance through
out the country contain many old time
operators who have accumulated fortunes.
Charles G. Gates, son of John W. Gates,
has five partners, three of whom were for
merly telegraphers, and the New York
stock exchange membership list has four
old telegraphers, H. C. Hepburn, R. F.
Rudeil, John M. Martin and Thomaa D.
Hooper. The little board, or Consolidated
stock exchange, has about half a dozen
among them being J. Frank Howell,
Stephen J. Callahan, Edward E. Martin and
John E. Hoey, who is also running for
assembly In New Jersey in the present
campaign. F. W. Dillingham represents our
craft in the Cotton exchange and J. R. Van
Wormer is connected with the Lincoln Safe
Deposit company In an official capacity.
Quite a number of the Board of Trade
member ulso worked for the telegraph
companies In formed years.
"L. C. Weir, president of the Adams Ex
press company; W. H. Wolverton, an of
ficial of the New York Transfer company;
David Homer Bates of the Singer Sewing
Machine company and J. W. Stover of the
Gamewell Fire Alarm company are men
who were operators In their day.
Versatility of Operator.
"C. J. GUdden and Loren N. Down have
reached the magnate clasa In the telephone
field, the former also making a world-wide
reputation as an automobillst. William J.
Denver la also making rapid strides in this
line, being assistant general manager of
the New England Telephone company. John
B. Sabine, J. P. Kohler, Arthur Cameron
and W. O. Miles are among the Brooklyn
lawyers who were former telegraphers. The
late Dr. W. 11. McEnroe seemed destined
to make a big name for himself as a lec
turer of medicine and practitioner when he
died a few year ago. The night force of
the Western Union main ofllce In New York
was so full of aspiring medicos a few years
ago that they tell a story of a chief opera
tor who, one evening, heard a distant office
calling New York and desiring a certain
operator who was studying medicine In the
daytime, to answer it, called out: "Here,
doc, take this message." Half a doze
men who heard the order jumped up, think
ing the chief operator was referring to
them. Lot of the men operators, too,
have become dentists. Among the racing
fraternity I think the name of Chris J.
Fitzgerald, the well known starter, needs
no Introduction, and yet It Is only a few
years ago that he was 'pounding brass.' Of
those who went upon the stage, I think
Walter Perkins, the comedian, Is our
brightest representative among the thes
plans. Frank Honnlg wna well known In
tragedy roles. They have the advantage
over their fellow actors In ease their
theatrical companies strike a snag. In that
they do not have to walk home by making
ineir way to the nearest telegraph offlce
where their experience and proficiency
readily find employment for them. George
V. Hobart, "Dlnke!p!el"; Guy Cnrleton and
Harry de Souchet have gained fame aa
dramatlo authors. ,
In the Railroad Service.
"The operation of railroad trains by
means of the telegraph has been the step
ping stone for a great number of operators
to make their mark In the railroad bus!
ness, and the list Is so long that you
wouldn't have space enough to spare. These
men rank all the way down from president
to division superintendents. The name of
Andrew Carnegie Is better known to the
general public as a steel manufacturer and
pimaninropisi man as a telegraph opera
tor. In his younger day he received
tt.
a
small salary for his service as operator
and station agent for the Pennsylvania
railroad.
"In the electric engineering field another
long list could be made up, and old teleg
raphers stand in the front ranks even If
they can't show diplomas from colleges.
Among the best known are Francis W.
Jones and Patrick B. Delaney, who enjoy
high reputations both as Inventor and
electrical engineers; Edward A. Leslie, gen
eral manager of the Kings County Electric
Light and Power company, and William
Maver, Jr., the author' on electrical sub
ject. But there Is one graduate from the
telegraph force that any profpsslon would
like to class among Its numbers, the great
Inventor, Thomas A. Edison.
"Many stories are- told of Mr. Edison by
old time operators, but perhaps these two
will show his thirst for knowledge In the
beginning of his career and also his mod
esty. When Ellison was employed on the
night shift In the Boston offlce of the
Western Union, the chief operator once
found him under the table tracing out some
wire. He was called to account for his
neglect of his duties, his superior telling
him that he was paid to work on top of the
table and not under It. A few years ago an
old friend sent him a letter Informing him
that the telegraphers intended to hold ft
fast sending tournament, adding that If he
wasn't too far removed from them, now
that he was so renowned, his ro-operatlon
would operate to th success of the under
taking. Mr. Edison, In reply, sent a check
and also Informed his correspondent that
he would rather have the smallpox than a
swelled head."
LABOR AJfD INDV9THY.
Philadelphia alone produces 75 per cent
of the glazed kid in the United States.
The wages of the common laborer In
Ireland are now nearly double those of
twelve year ago.
The Delaware, Lackawana Western
railroad now proposes to enter New York
City by a tunnel under the Hudson.
The membership of the Order of Kali
road Telegrapher increased 642 in the
month of August and 712 in September.
In 1896 Michigan had 2,572 factories, em
ploying 101,153 people at a dally rate of
11.23. In liJ3 these figures had Increased
to 6,999 factories, at a daily rate of 11.75.
Exclusive of agricultural workers, there
are over 6,000,000 laboring men In the United
uiaies. is ear I y z.oou.wo or the number are
members of labor organizations.
Feabody, Mass., Is he great sheeppk n
tanning center of the country. 11 tans
about 15.0W.UtX) skins a year, anil It Ims
about f2,(HA),0u0 Invested in the business and
uout 2,000 bands employed.
A booklet lust issued elves thn niimhor
of employes of tho United States Steel
corporation at present at approximately
150,000 men. Of this number over 100,000 are
engaged In various manufacturing proper
ties ui ine corporation. luui year the
total number of emnloves In the servinn
of the corporation was 16?,7i, compared
with 168,127 In 1902. The total amount paid
in salaries a d wages iaut year was 1120,-
Tlit 0.1,2 '
Japan has a federation of labor with al
most 3U0.0U0 members, according to Aus
tralian labor papers, which go on to say
inai mis organizauon nus ueen strugg.lng
for Improved conditions for the workinir
clasa in Japan, and its efforts are being re
warded by the enactment of a factory law
regulating hours of Inbor, age of workers,
etc., and compelling employers to be con
siderate of the health and safety of their
employes.
ADDarentlv a new field of labor has lust
been oyened for girls in the manufacture
of cut nails. After seeking vainly to secure
the services or enougn boys to operate Its
nail machines, the Chicago Steel Manufac
turing company of New Castle, lnd., hna
filled the vacancies with girls, nnd reports
much satisfaction with the character of
tho work which they are doing. The com
pany Is producing from 300 to 400 kegs of
steel and iron cut nails and about 2,500 ag
ricultural shapes daily. ,
r
T
LANDS
NO
CTiiTH'TTTf
H
"g,gg!
a
Round Trip
READ DOWN
745 A. M. 6:30 P.
8:00 A. M. 6:45 P.
7:35 P. M. 7:00 A.
7:50 P. M. 7H5 A.
Compare Thia Tlmo With Other Lines.
0
We have others. Call at Wabash City Office, 1601 Farnam', or address
HARRY E. M00RES, G. A. P. D., Omaha, Neb.
Unequaled Color Magazine
If not, you Bhoold place your
Orchard 3 Wilhelm Garpet So.
Beginning of the second week of our November Special Furniture Saie. We cannot enumer.
ate all the special values we are offering in this sale as there are over 4,000 furniture pieces in this
complete stock. Suffice to say there has been lively selling the past week and there is bound to be a
repetition this week as thrifty housewives cannot afford to miss the purchasing opportunities we are
offering them. Come and see the goods, they tell a greater story of the saving to you and the real
worth than we can explain in writing . . . . .
." Lis' Mta.tLJ!2
Dressers
Dresser (like cut) mahog
any, bird's-eye maple and
quarter-sawed, golden oik,
polished, double swell
front and swell ends,
French bevel mirror, 24x
24 Inches regular value
$22.00 Novem- 11
ber Special I ) S
Bale Price 1 ' ' J
Dresser, same as above ex
cept the two large lower
drawers are straight front.
regular semne price jis.oo,
Chi'lee cf Wnoils
November Sale
Price
12.50
Mail Orders Filled.
Iron and
Brass Beds
Big reduction In iron and
brass beds for this No
vember Sale. Hundreds of
beds In nil colors and pat
terns, nil iron, iron and
brass, and solid brass, re
duced In price from $2.00
to $12.00 each during this
Special November belling.
Fancy Rockers
and Chairs
An opportune time to make
selection of a pretty parlor
rocker or odd chair at re
duced price. This sale in
cludes almost our entire
stock of fancy and odd
rockers. The saving to you
20 to 35 per cent.
Drapery Department
In a stock as large as ours there? are always goods at special values, such as odd pairs ot
portieres and lace curtains. For Monday we have sorted out, a, special lot.
630 portieres, only 1 pair.
irv r r
IV ;U
V.JJ
velour one Bide, other
tapestry, at
$35.(Ai portieres, onfy 1 pair
figured velour and
damask, at
1950
Curtain Swiss, 36 inches wide-special
wa:
i d
YOU AT
OTHER
QSJQ2
Rates: $8.50
FAST TRAINS DAILY
Lv. Omaha
Lv, Council Bluffs
Arr. . St.
order at once with your newsdealer, or with The Bee Publishing
i
Parlor Furniture
Fancy odd parlor
fiii's greatly reduced in
693 00 J-plece French
lonlal Suit, solid
bogany November
chairs, divans and parlor
this Special Hotember Safe.
Co
rn a-
$8 no Gold Cnalr.
Nov. 8l Price.
6H."0 Mahogany
Chair Novem
ber Bale Price...
616.00 Mahogany
8po-
00
elal Sale price (fi
only 00
620 00 Oold Divan i a
Nov. Bale Price.10
625.00 Gold Divan t ft
Nov. Sale Price.10
75
75
l hair Novem- in iia
ber Rale Price... lv v'u
627.00 Mahogany Divan
November Sale o fin
Price - OKJ
Dining Room Furniture
In this November Sale are many dining room
pieces In buffets, china closets, sideboards, dining tables
and chairs In golden, weathered . and Antwerp oak and
solid mahogany.
617.00 Golden Oak Buffet
November Sale ii 17 e
Price A 0
629.00 Golden Oak Buffet
Prlce1".1!..8?!'. .23 00
633 50 Golden Oak Buffet
November Sale 2y 75
6209.00 Combination Buffet
and China Closet
Priceem!'".S.0166 00
6125.00 China Closet
Price0.8?.'.8 100 00
660.00 China Cloeet
Pr?cerab.!rSa." . 49 00
630 00 Goiden' Oak Dining
Table Novem- 01 t
ber Sale Prioe.. 0
62G00 Golden Oak Dining'
Table Novem- 01 (ill
ber Sale Price.. 1 w
62S0O Antwerp Dining
Table Novem- o'-l
ber Sale Price.. 1' OKt
$80 Mahogany Buffet
November Sale t, rirl
Price "J uu
614O.0O Mahogany Buffet
cvee,n.b.tf.f!eioo 00
Bed Room Furniture
6206.00 Maple Chiffonier
and Dressing Table
Nov. Special iti am
I Sale Price 100 uy
6275.00 Maple Dresser,
Chiffonier and Dressing
Table Nov. nac on
Solo Price ...'i0 uu
$25.00 Antique Colonial
Dressing Table Nov.
p'rTce"!..8?!8... .17 00
$37.00 Antique Colonial
Chevel Glass Novem
ber Special '55 r()
Sale Price U uw
$326.00 Trona Mahogany
Dresser. Chiffonier,
Chevel Ulusa and Drea-
Ing Table NonfQ
vember Sale... OJ
695.00 Mahogany Bed '
Nov. Special fn
Sale Price y uu
$400.00 8-plece Solid Ma
hogany Suit, Dresser.
Chiffonier and Dres&lng
Table November bpe-
ce8a 325 00
6110.00 Mahogany Chiffon-
p7i7eNo.T.."..?5 00
6168.00 Mahogany Dresser
and Chiffonier Novem-
Kef! 130 U
Library Tables
Big reduction In library tables during November Special
Saleprices reduced from 33 1-3 to SO percent.
se.ix ponierea, ail colors, r- rr
only 1 pnlV of a color, with IS MM
neavy velour border ly ,uu
heavy velour border
$17.50 portieres velour ap
plique, per pair,
1250
at
12jc
Curtain Swiss, 42 Indies wide
special
BASH
WORLD'S FAIR.
LINE CAN.
"Wi
DAILY EXCEPT
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY,
READ ui
Arr. 8:20 A. M. 9:00 P. M.
Arr. 7:05 A. M. 8:45 P. M.
Lv. 7:45 P. M. 9:15 A. M.
Lv. 7:30 P. M. 9:00 A. M.
Louis
ii f i ii , in sjiihjmhi I a miMini ajsip
With each issue
Are You
5 75
Arm
8 MJ
Side
Corner Chair
Corner Chalr(llke cut) we wera
very fortunate In securing a
large lot of these pretty cor
ner chairs, come In hand
somely polished mahogany
names, upholstered seat, reg
ular selling price
$6.50. while they
but, each
3.9?
Kitchen
Cabinets
68.50 kitchen cabinet, oak fin
ished base, whltewood top, haa
two bins, two drawers, mold
ing nnd Cutting board, size of
,n
top Mxm mcnea npo
clal November Sule
Price
.3.8?
Hall Racks
Standing and hanging hall
ra:ks and hall seats Special
November Sale Price at a
saving of almost one-third.
Parlor Tables
Parlor Tables reduced for thl
November Sale 25 to 40 per
cent Some very choice piece
In mahogany, reproduction
of old Colonial and antique.
6150 solid oak 24-Inch table
Special November Sal. ait.
Price WOO
Mercerized portieres j - K
will go at, per A.QS
nalr 7 " 7 J
$7.50 Mercerized portieres
will go at, per
pair
Off lace curtains too numerous to
Itemise, all at special price
22ic
Miii
WW BlffiBWirffll
$1380 Dally
of THE SUNDAY BEE
a Subscriber?
' ' ' li'! ' ,".') afrLrffi, ir7.i 4
company, Omaha.