TTTE BEE: OMAITA. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1010 iip miii -.w ii inin"am 1 JuJLrZlrg-' -1 llrnnilrls Storr Bell the Itonimii'Ml IMXii;H.S-PKKT and HIRSTl- U'lCKWIKE Hand Tailored Clothes for Men The Suits are $20 l S35 The Overcoats are $25 t0 345 nam. a i There's Real Style, Comfort and Durability in Our RENWICK SYSTEM OVERCOATS i v; sxi, KM : K '.7- and SUITS at $18 AVe have nlways specialized in our $18.00 ltonwick system clothes. Wo are satisfying Omaha men, no matter how critical they may be, by giving them the top notch of quality and style and the most faultless fit. Better than any other overcoat or suit that sells for $25.00 or more" that is what we have proven these clothes to be. Overcoats finest Skinner silk lined Kerseys, heavy serge lined chev iots, 50 and 52 inches long, with convertible collars new Scotch weave coats, etc Such Suits and Over coats as These Would Ordinarily Cost You $22.00 or $25.00 qjo; New Brown or Gray Scotch Tweeds, Cassi meres, etc. Silk, Vene tian or Serge Lined. .way u Overcoats gf 90 1 nil -L II t-ae si ana ouus at tUm FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN Choice lot of one of our recent purchases. These are certainly the most wonderful values we have ever shown in overcoats and suits. They are worth $18.00 and $20.00. Overcoats 5 and Suits... FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN Snappy overcoats and suits, in grays, browns, blue serges, etc. overcoats that have Presto and convertible collars all sizes. These clothes would regularly sell for $15.00. V. ' W . A.?. No Such Values as These Anywhere Else Boys' Clothing Roys' Knickerbocker Salts Bought from a Chicago house at a great price re duction. Nobby brown mix tures, gray Scotches, fancy cheviots, worth to $4.50, second floor. A g pa old store. a .til! at Boys' Knickerbocker Suits With extra pair of pants to match. The best made suits ever shown at such a price Strictly all wool mB'-!"' You would expect to pay $6.50 for thiB . . combination tl K.l suitat VT.UlF 51 rJ!lX Headquarters for Boys' Winter Overcoats Greater values have never been offered than these. Our stock is the largest in Omaha. Every new style Is here. You will save money on the coat you buy here for $2.50, $3.50, $5, $0.50, $7.50 and $10 BRANDETS STORES 5X53 Special Price Inducements Winter Underwear FOR MEN Manufacturers' samples men's wool under wear, in ribbed and flat weaves, all colors worth up to $2.00, at IV WW Men's Kxtra Heavy Medlratod Fleoced Shirt and Drawers, $1.00 values at 30 and 50 Men's $1.25 Henry Ilibbed Vnlon Suits a 79 Men's Full Faah ioned I'nfon Suits. Sterling make, at $3.98 nd $3.50 Roofs Medicated Wool Vndcrwear, Shirts and drawers, $1.50 to $2.00 Omaha Agents for M u n s i n g I'nion Suits, at Sl.OO to $4.50 Norfolk and New Brunswick Health Under- wear Shirts and drawers at $1.25 up to $4.50 Men's Gloves For dress and street wear; Perrin's, Northup's and Fowne's; at, per pair $1.50 to $3.00 Sweater Coats Manufacturer's samples men's and boys' sweater coats, all colors, worth up to $2.50, at. .49c, 98c, $1.39 Men's Hand Made Sweater Coats Worth up to $8.00, at $2.50 up to $4.98 Men's Shirts All new fall patterns, black and white effects made by some of the best shops in America. Shirts actually worth up to $3.00 Each Jl" Itroken lots of Men's 73c and $1.00 Shirts, negligee and golf style. In the basement at each wwC BRANDEIS STORES H ats for Men For the man who prefers the s-tiff hat we have the most shapely and popular styles of the season. Wilson's English Derbies, of Denton, England, every hat guaranteed to give absolute satisfac tion. Best English !??..$2.50 The Famous John B. Stetson Soft and Stiff Hat Latest fall styles, at ... . My 'n 2-50 Itrandeis Special Soft and stiff hats, Ai4.09 Each Maltory Craveiiette Hl and hlfth grade samples ef soft and stiff hats; Tallies p to 13.00 At 91.25 Men's Sample Caps Fine winter caps; silk lined with fur lined bands; ail samples; values up to 2.00 at T0 Men's Fine Fnr Cap Manufacturers' samples values up to $3.50; at $1.50 Boys' Caps; fur lined bands, at 25 49c 08c Children's $5.00 Fur Hats at $2.1S Children's Fur Caps at 49 nd 98c Men's Shoes of extra good quality The kind you need for win ter wear; double sole, box calf, relour calf and vlci ladir,:V:.....$3.5H4 Men's Winter Tans Ertra heavy waterproof soles, at $3.59 and $1.00 $5 The "Hurley," the French and Barry's high grade shoes for men, in all the leathers; new to the minute styles, at. . . . Men's Serviceable Shoes In box calf and a pa patent colt, at .3U Big, new assortment of men's bouse slippers In felt and leather. BRANDEIS STORES MOTHER EARTH BEST RANKER She Fayi Compound Interest and Fays on Demand. benn attained by IS NEVES ASLEEP, NEVER TIRES Ilarrlman Agent T" -t th Tierce Tnk to Colonise the Grant and . (ilurlona Writ tor the Dan a(tt of Man. Nerve Is often ueed an a ubatltutn for money, and many a rfsantlo enterprise la punned to sucresg with little capital and much nerva. "The Nerve of Some People" 1h the title of an address delivered at the Council Bluffs Horticultural show Tues day afternoon by E. M. Cobb, traveling laaaenfer agent of the Union Paclflo rail road. Mr. Cobb spoke as follows: ' I am most heartily In sympathy with the universal agitation now In prosreas for the betterment of the sciences ef SKrlcultura and horticulture. No small amount of attention hat been given to the cluHHical education of our young men and women throughout the atates, but the ni-Klei-ted sciences are those I have al ready mentioned, and now that we see what has been accomplished by the high Schools, academies, colleges and univer sities In the way of science, art and litera ture, It becomes apparent what can be accomplished !n the near future, If the proper amount of support be given to the effort th.it Is now being made to bring thu people "Hack to the 8oil." There are too many consumers and not enough pro ducers In tlin world today. "I am standing on native aoll and proud of It. I have In a little mora than two score years seen the great commonwealth of Iowa rise from an almost boundless pralna to one of the best agricultural atates between Canada and Mexico; but think what It has cost to accomplish this result. 1 don't mean In dollars and cents; 1 mean nerve, which Is the motive power that does things. The world has gone wild today over the development and achievements of electricity, but thesa things are nothing when compared with It'a the degree of goodness wherein OLIO S 1 00 OLD nL excels. We don't care what you pay for coffee Just buy a package of Old Golden Cof fee and find out how much better you like it Note its fragrance, favor and fine full-body. Af Grtxer'tSOc a pound. TONE BROtU, rM MoinM, lawn. UMt ef ta ttmtm Tom . $pnu the results that have aheer force of nerve. Requires Tlerr. "It required nerva for Columbus to dis cover America, but It required vastly more for the Pilgrims to follow and live In an unknown world and make It their perma nent home. It required nerve to make the declaration of Independence, but It required vastly mora to make the declaration good. It took the nerva of some people and all the people. It required nerva for Abraham Lincoln to make the emancipation procla mation, but It required more for those loyal citizens ef the United States south of the Mason and Dizon line to live through the crisis and the reconstruction period. It required nerva to spill gallons of blood and spend millions of dollars to free the black man, but it required vastly more to recuperate after the losses sustained. It required nerve for Ilarrlman and Hill to penetrate the trackless desert with arteries of commerce, but It required vastly mora for the colonist to leave the place of his nativity and build among the sage brush, coyotes and redskins, the many common Wealths of which our government Is proud. It requires nerve to advocate a new theory, but vastly mora to demonetrata Ita prac ticability. "Aa a native ef Iowa. I am proud of this grand exposition ef the products of that commonwealth and her sister states, but the biggest and best thing that I have seen on these exposition grounds were the smiling, happy faces of 6,000 school chil dren, the very best products of Iowa, for they are the people with which, in the next few years, we must do something, or they will do something with us. It made me glad that they could see these products, but sad to know that they had so little time to learn anything of the nature, char acter and purpose .of this exposition. It was but a passing glance. Which one of you would be satisfied with it? Fnr Comfort on the Pnraa. "The agriculture colleges, horticulture and agriculture exhibitions, farm insti tutes, farm Journals and many other agencies are lending their efforts today toward the education of the rising genera tion for the proflta and comforts of the farmers. Well do you remember, all of you, how a few yeara ago there was an exodua from the homea of our farmers. Their girls went to the department stores and the typewriter, their boys to the tele graph Instrument and the office desk;! that waa the cause of a derth of help on the farm. The energy today is but the reaetlon that followed that movement and, beliera me, that In the next five years there will be one of the greateat move ments from the city to the farm that has ever been seen in recent years. The land needa theae young men and women, the government needs them, the state needa them. In their present condition, they are eonaumers. When they have gone back to the land, they will become producers. People today are trying to cover too many acre. Farms should be divided and made trailer and cultivated better; not only the quantity of product will be greater, but quality better. "The state of Texas would make half a dosen atates the alze of the state of Iowa, and think of the millions of unoccupied acres In Texas. The state of California is 1.000 miles long and 300 miles wide, and there are mora people In the city of Chi cago today than in the state of California. It la a shame and a disgrace to the Intel ligence of the American public, that such things exist. I am not a penslmlst. neither am I discouraged; but I call your attention to the facta that are atarlng us In the face. Tba Union Pacific carries thousanda of col onists to the unoccupied lands of the west annually; other railroad systems do like wise. We have already this year carried more than ti.000 carloads of deciduous frutts from the west and the citrus fruit season has not yet come. What ahall we say of the possibilities In the states west ut the aiiscourl river? Kiguies will hardiy tell the story. Tell mo what would be the result if our annual expenditure for army and navy were judlcously expended to tell our young men and maidens about the sciences of agriculture and horticulture. Not only the young men and women of Council Bluffs and vicinity, but arrange ments should be made under some aort of an appropriation, by which tha school chil dren of Iowa could learn of the value and functions of the National Horticultural congress. An effort should be made to de mand that agricultural and horticultural text books be placed In tha public schools. There are more farmers than any other class of people, and yet less attention is given to the study of Important subjects relative to their future work. It will re quire the nerve of some leader to get a bill of thla kind before the legislature and tha nerve of thousands of others to back him up and to put It Into practice; but we are hoping that tha day Is not tar dis tant when the most Independent, happy anl comfortable ocaupatlon In tha world will receive Its share of support "Every- deposit entrusted to Mother Earth becomes an interest-bearing Invest ment. Sacredly aha guards the principal. Instantly she pays upon demand. She never aleepa or tires in tha service of her deposi tors. She never closes her doors because of a run. She never makes mistakes or is obliged to offer apologies. She compounds Interest every minute of the day or nignt. Her resources are unlimited. The older she grows, the safer she grows, and the more valuable becomes the capital entrusted to her keeping. The rich and the poor alike receive Impartial benefits at her hands, and though the foolish have often diaan out their deposits, to risk them elsewhere, the wlee have ever returned to her, satisfied that Investments in Mother Earth pay best of all. The Key to the Situation Bee Want Ads PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS R. T. Heyden ef Hastings aV Heyden, baa gone to Chicago to attend the land show. AEROPLANE VS. BATTLESHIP Aa Viewed by the Airman the Former Pilots the Latter to the Jnnkpile. Of what value Is a blgh power rifle to a man set upon by a swarm of enraged hornets T How effective are the long horns with which nature had provided cattle for their defense when they flounder in a swamp or stream to escape a cloud or mosquitoes? These questions Victor Loug heed suggests In the December Popular Mechanics while defending the aeroplane against the aspersions cast upon Its use fulness in fighting battleships, by Captain Richmond P. Hobson In his article In the August number of thla same magazine. An authority on flying machines, Mr. Loug heed minces no words in his discussion of tha effectiveness of aerial weapons. The price a nation pays for a battleship will purchase 2,000 aeroplanes and tha question of cost of defense mesns much in summing up the military effectiveness of a nation. Resources have always played an Impor tant part In war, tha nation possessing the longest purse having that much advantage over a less favored people. Mr. Lougheed classes battleships as "extravagances and follies which are sure to recede Into the llrrbo of forgotten things by the develop ment of aerial craft." He writes: "in appraising the menace of aeroplane versus battleship, It la neither logical nor reasonable to consider the problem so simple as the mere attack of one aeroplane upon one battleship. Battleships, aa Cap tain Hobson points out, 'cost as high as 113,000.000, and are still rising.' The best modern aeroplanes cost on an average not to exceed li.000 each, and their cost Is rapidly lowering. Two thouband aero planes, therefore, cost no more than one battleship besides which they require few more men to operate them than is required for the crew of a single vessel. "The prospect, then, becomes one of cost against cost, of national resources pitted against national resources, the vital dif ference being in the particular weapons of defense and offense' on which each nation may elect to make the expenditures. And for the one that chooses the flying machine there impends a prospect of suc cess that Is not so much comparable to the suggestion of a single 'eaglo attacking a lion' as it Is to that of smaller winged ani mals In swarms attacking a creature per fectly capable of making effective resist ance to a few of Its enemies, but helpless against them In numbera. "To assume that the 'offensive power of the aeroplane Is almost negligible' is to court an obsession with the present status that will defeat even a most mod erate insight Into the future. All the prob abilities are that the offensive power of the aeroplane of the future, and even of the present, is as much underrated as the defensive and offensive power of the battle ship against aerial craft Is overrated." DUMB MAN GETS HIS VOICE Speechless Sines Birth Ha Strikes Ills Friends Speechless by TaJklna". Hiram Black, a deaf and dumb man of Greenwich, Conn., about 36 yeara old, who until now has never uttered tae slightest in telligible sound, succeeded in striking dumb several other persons when he appeared In several of the leading stores in town and opened conversation with the clerks, black, who has been known as Dummy Black, worked In tha Russell, Burdsal & Ward bolt and nut works at Pemberwick for several years with Charles Mead, now a clerk In tha flower store of Alexander Mead & Son, and Mr. Mead waa buaylng himself about the shop when tha dummy entered and in a voice aa clear aa aver a man'a was aaiuted him with "Good morn ing. How are you?'- Mead dropped the watering pot he had In hia hand, and for a moment the poaitlona of the two were re versed, the clerk being the speechless one. Mead says the cold chills crept over him for at leant a minute and he thought at first that he must have been dreaming. He waa reassured, however, when tha dummy asked for his name and read it distinctly from the paper where Mead wrote it. Black refused to talk much, but explained by writing to Mead that ha was afraid his vole might not hold out. He tried it again, however, on several others who knew that be had been both deaf and dumb from Infancy, and created the same amount of consternation everywhere. Black lives with a family of deaf and dumb per sons by the nam of Martllng, In Byram, and great Interest has been attracted to blm because of hi olevarneaa with ma chinery and hi evident intelligence in spite of his Infirmity. He Is a skilled operator of on of the big bolt-making ma chines and has bean for year a frequent visitor In the Greenwich publlo library, where many wealthy New Yorker have met him. Black 1 a fin penman and apparently a splendid reader, for h haa often written out passage from the Bible and other works and called attention of the libra n J to them. The last time he visited severj of the store on hi route he wrote out hi messages. New York Press. Sawed Off Philosophy. Beauty 1 sometimes only enamel deei we are apt to extoi our own pr.de art speak slightingly of the vanity of other" A man never realizes what a sublli Idiot he can make of himself till he f.i In love. It'a one thing to get credit for our go. Intentions, and quite another thing to coil vert them Into cash. It's a wonder thut Home of those pa slonate poems couched In words that bin don t sot fire to thu wunte basket. Many a fellow doetm't realize that I loves a girl t.ll some other fellow com along and marries her. Any married man will tell you that a h that costs IIS Is more becoming to a man than one that costs if0. Luck is what comes to a man when I has the opportunity of buying somethii for a mere aong, and can't lng. iew Voi lime. 20 Pounds Best Granulated Sugar C51.GO All leadlnc; brands of Flour, P "eg. 91.30 Diamond C Soap, bars . .25 Hand Picked Navy Deans, 6 lbs 25 6 lbs. Japan Rice ........ 25c 4 pkgs. Seeded Raising ....25 1 gal. can Table Syrup ...30t? 3 packages best Minnesota Macaroni "Cj 3 cans Cream 25 rour quarts cranberries Fancy Dressed Spring Chicken, pound 12W 8 lbs. best Leaf Lard 25 Pork rtoaBt. lb 10 Prime Rib Roast, lb 10-120 Best Pot Roast, lb. .SHjrGHC Sirloin Steak, lb Round Steak, lb ll?i Best Kettle Rendered Lard, pound 15k Just received one car best Winter Potatoes, per VuV. '. '. !s5$ R. KULAKOFSKY AMES AVE. I-hMnt Web. R.IB II i i r i m Meats All Manager Reum of the Hayden Bros Meat Market through shrewd buying will give the man with little money just about twice what he can buy anywhere else. That is why HAYDEN BROS.' MEAT MARKET is always first The prices below tell the story. SHOT TO PIEC JSnaalJlQ Leaf Lard, S lbs. (or ... . S1.00 Pork Roast 10c Coneless Rib Roast 10c Pot Roast 8-7-6c Sirloin Steak 10c-12ic Porterhouse Steak .... 15c-12i Mutton Legs 6c Mutton Roast 5c Mutton Chops Rib or Loin lOc Mutton Stew, 6 lbs. for . . . 25c No. 1 Hams i4C