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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1911)
'mi, oMAiLk suxdav uciuukk -22, mi. t 1 I 1 ! I i 1 j ; i I I Blew Dress and Coat For Your Inspection Monday Kwry jnrment wo have sold po far hn brought tlio friends of its owner to this store, eager to fwuro u counterpart. Tho dl8V'R8 are so infinitely varied (hat a great many of tho models bare but a. single retreacnta tlve an advantage that every woman appreciates. A liost of new dresses and coats have Just rrachrd is and will have their Ini tial showliir Monday. A number of then express the very latest Idea of eastern designers Just tho stylo you have l.een took lux Is doubtless Included, and Its beauty and modest cost will urge an Immediate declilon. Til lWG-lTSiQ the Lnd ahow and. In addition, com mencing this afternoon, twice dally, at 2:30 and 9 'o'clock at night, Ferullo'a Koyal Italian band wNI be heard In con cert, and without extra' charge. '' The one price. 25 centa, admitting to every thing inside the Coliseum and the amuse ment halls. liesldee the musical features, the com ing week haa many things In store for visitors at the Land ahow. There will bo numerous state and special daya, there will be new and attractive travelogues, with moving and colored pictures, lec tures and dlacuanlona upon aubjecta that will Interest town and country people alike. UPRISING NEAE PEKING AND TIEN TSIPLANNED (Continued from KIrat rage.) view of the possibility that the entire force would be dlHnuichcd tor emergency duty In the foreign concessions at Han kv. .... That the naval authorities regard the preacnt dtttlurbance In China aa ilkly to he of long duration, la Indicated by the fact that the collier Abarenda, which sails this week for Shanghai, took ammunition fur a lung campaign. All au let at Chanc Kka, WASHINGTON. Oct. 21. Apparently conditions at Chang Btia have materially changed in the governmt tu'a fuvor, for the state department waa advised today by American Consul Wilder, at Shanghai, that there , waa no occasion for appre hension aa to the safety of Chang Pha. Thla la an Important city In the province of Iiu Teh, loo mllea aoulh of the Yang Th river, and aondltlona might be re garded aa Indicative of the strength of the revolutionary aentlment in ail of south China. , The Abarenda is carrying a large Quantity of ammunition along with the marine detachment from Manila to Hhar.ghal for transshipment to I'eklng, In accordance with the cjBtotn of carrying supplies to the legation guard on the ap proach of winter season when the Chinese capital ia cut oft by K-e from the sea. ' Pet rat of. Fleet ConflraaeU. SAN KKANCIHCO, Oct. 21. A cable die patch from Shanghai to the Chung Sal Yat Po confirms the report aa to tho de feat of Admiral Hah, who waa in com mand of the Imperial warahlpa In ..the attacK on Hankow, bah ia aald to have mUtd to Klu Klang with hie disabled vessels, exoepttng for one that waa sunk, the sailors surrendering to the revolu tionists. OeneraJ Chang Piao, the military gov ernor, waa executed and Suit Chlng, vice roy, waa degraded by the Imperial gov ernment for allowing the provlncea of Hupeh and Hunan to paxe Into the power of the rebels. Martial law exists In all places occupied by the rebels. The dlpatch puts the Imperial loss in the Hankow battle at 8.000 killed, besides many wounded. A cable to a rival paper. however, aald the goverumeiit lost J.OUO Lllled. DEATH RECORD. William VanWIakle. CALLAWAY. Oct. 20.-Wllllam Van WinK'.e. a resident of Callaway the utat twenty-five years, passed away at his Lome utter an lllneaa of but a tew daya' duration. Mr. VanWUikle was a veteran i f the civil ar, having enlisted In Cali fornia, and bad tor a number of years iK-m a member of the locul Grand Army post, in which order he had held ail of the high office. He was a sign painter l y trade, and hla lettering eiunua oui ou i.i met every business building of the ton a as a mouumeut to his memory. J--uiiri.il servUea were conducted from liia late home at t e'ulotk yesterday aft criiocia and interment u uila In tbe Rose H'll cemetery. MUm Uvrraa. V. Hail. NKHIIABKA CITY. Neb.. Oct. II.-.-';,cc'.a!.) Alvetda Virginia Hall died ; f.ter-lay el the homo of her brother-ia-Uw, Jurnes S. M.ilcr, and was burled i. a,-., hjho waa born In Gray son county, Yi.fc-lii'.ii. t..ptcmber 17, lt6, and came t this city with her paronta. air, and ilia. William Hail, on November , 1M. Knee bar coming to thla city there have been trenty-alx deatha In the family. In--iau.rj-.ff tTiandchlidren ant the Inst mem Ur of the family-Wt la C. C. Hail of ' : city, who 1 now fc yrats of age. M.e a great church .rkcr and held l :;'s etesu by tuvry one. f 1 sTVT"5,ii WW Ihz New Dresses are cf Ea French mrgns, sanamas am! . tbepberd'a ehecfcg, made with high er ronnrl Beck, or with a Jaunty sailor collar. Tho i slcwt -! Empire aafst. distlngnlsh ibfm seueon's styles. Faney bottona, Egyptian braMs and hand-em broiifcrail ?sf?a. crwreTfy applfatf. effect an fninitaWa richness. Th coTors are niivy ami Copenhagen blue, wine, brown, coronation and prali black. Junior and mn li women's sizes. The price-$14.75 317.50 810.75 $22.50 $25 00 l 20.75. The Twin Coat aptly describe! the reversible Polo model a new arrival com bines a plain color and a beautiful soft plaid. The Polo atylo also comes in plain tan or white. The very latest addition Is a handsome, two-touo coat with bag to match, a very striking combination., Man-tailored coats and those of chiffon broadcloth and every favorad material Indeed, your coat la here, bo your taste what it may. Junior and small women's alios. Prices range 312.50 313.50 $14.75 $17.50 $19.75 $22.50 $25.00 p to $05.00. frCTUTS crwm arrow 3 C".Tf IT I r ARM All Mrs. Warren Fairbanks Bobbed of Many Gems CHICAGO. Oct. Hl.-Mra. Warren Fair- banka of Chicago, aoclal leader and wife of the on of former Vice President Falr- banka, reported to the police today that a hag containing Jewels worth $10,000 had been tiiken from her from a Pullman car enrouts from Uoaton to Chicago a week ago. Mrs. Falrhanka aald she did not learn of the losa of the Jewels until yesterday. The gema. which were carried In a chamois purse In a traveling bag, were described to the police as follows: One diamond necklace, set In platinum, val ued at 15.0UO; one diamond dinner ring, set in platinum, valued at ai.000; three aolltatrea valued at $2,(100, an emerald aolttalro and several email pieces, with a total value of $2,000. Mra. Fairbanka, who before her mar riage waa Mine Kthel Caaaldy of Penn sylvania, waa returning from a visit with relatives In Ponton when the Jewels were stolen. A week elapsed before she no ticed the loaa. Rock Island Official Denies Report that Wages Were to Be Cut CHICAGO, Oct. 2I.-F. p. Melcher. vlce preaident of the Bock Island lines, today declared that the new Wage schedule of fered the ahopmen, who are taking a strike vote, would not affect the earning power of the men. "It wgs charged that in thla achedule which we preaented to the ahopmen com mittee the overtime waa abolished," he auld. "Thla Is untrue. The committee demanded the acceptance of Its schedule, which called for an approximate increase of 10 per cent, but we did not give It seri ous consideration." - CALL ELECTION ON ANNEXATION (Continued from First Page.) Samuel L. Winters, attorneys i for the antl-aonexatloijuta, but no real progress waa made. The board adjourned until I o'clock. risht Cloae One. . Defeat by a margin of eight' ft a red the exponents of the proposed Omaha-South Omaha merger In the face at noon Sat urday, when the Board of County Com mlsalonera, before whom the annexation war now Is being fought, voted a re cess until 2 o'clock in the afternoon. The annexationists confeaaed they must lose the fight unless they could find some plan by which eight additional names could bo established on the petitions calling fur a apeclul election. According to John I. Ureen, attorney for tho annexationist", there were but l.Vil valid names on the Omaha petition asking for a eietiul election, thla number being elalit short of the required 10 per rent of regtatered voteia at the last general election, that of 1910. At that election there were 21,000 reglalered vot ers, according to the certificate and sworn statement of City Clerk Dan Butler of Omaha. Henry C. Muiphy, attorney tor the anti-aiinexatlonUts, declared the recent revision reglatralion aliould be the baala In determining the number of signatures regulred for the apeclal election. The revision waa 25.0UO; 10 per cent would be r;Vin or Son nun limn were claimed valid by the annexationists. The board took no final action. The warring parties left lo return and finlvh tho battle at 3 o'clock. Deputy County Attorney Magney In the afternoon advised the county cnmmla sioncra that the 1!10 general election reg istration of approximately 22.000 ahould be used as a basis In determining how many names were required to call the special election. - tioldrai WrStflasT at alelaUlsberc. M'CALIBL'Ka, la., Oct. Jl.-tSpeclal)-Mr. and Mra. Aaa 11. Griffith, a highly tespected old couple of thla place, today celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of their wedding. Mr. and Mra. Griffith hf.ve been resldenta of the county ever since they were married. Among the rtlatlvea present at the celebration were J. A. Doe ton of Pavkl City, Neb., and Mrs. S. hi. Dunn of Auburn, Neb. Arrivals jr" T';m "i V'-. ti'i's wf toy -n i i li&V. ii 11 1 '1 pi J' .ww Buys House and Lot Soon After Voting For Lorimer CHICAGO, Oct. 21.Members of the committee of I'nlted mates senators In veatlgatlng the Irim-r case, today aaked for the peraonal bank account of State Representative Henry U Wheelan with the People's National bank at Rock Island. 111., for the year im. The order waa Issued for a atatement of Wheelan'a bank account, arter Wheelan had teatifled on the wltnesa atand that he paid $1,900 for a house ana lot a few months following the Lorlmor election. In which transaction he admitted using twelve $100 bill as one payment. Wheelan, however, 1 declared 'that he borrowed that moneyX, from J. K. Scott and Thomas Cox at Rock Island, and de nied S charge by eounael for the commit tee that he had received money to vote for Lorimer, Wheelan admitted that hs had repre sented the liquor Interests In an antl prohlbltlon campaign In Hock Island while member of the legislature. Wheelan aald he waa a democrat, but had voted for Lorimer with Patrick Walah, a contractor of Davenport, Ia. ' Attorney Mealy asked him to name some of those he hud urged to vote for Lorimer. "Former Repreaentatlve Walter A. Lanta of Chicago, Repreaentatlve Qeorge W. Alaculer of Aurora and former Rep resentative Thomas H. Itlley of Jollet were among thoae with whom I diacuased the matter," aald Wheelan. Former State Senator Syrll R. Jandua of Chicago resumed the atand today, but hla rroaa examination waa dovotd of ape clal Interest. Populist Committee Called by Democrats a (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN. Oct. 21. (Special Telegram.) -Hccretary of State Walt today heard tee tlmony In the protest made by U. A. Eberly of Stanton against allowing Dan V. Stephens' mime to go on the populist congressional ticket, in the Third district at the coming election. The contentlona of the republican chalr 'anan are that no regular populist con vention waa held and that therefore the certificate of nomination given him from that party ia null and. void. The caae will be taken under advisement and a decision will be forthcoming the early part of next week. Candidate Stephena waa represented by J. It. Groavenor of Aurora, S. 8. Bldner of Fremont and W. H. Wooley, whp waa chairman of the populist dUtiict con vention. Colonel Kbeily questioned the legality of Stephena' populist nomination on further grounds that the populist con vention waa called by order of the demo cratic state central committee, a moat Irregular proceeding ha declares. J. H. Groavenor, chairman of the populist state committee, contended that the call for populist convention did not originate with the democrata, saying that was a mis take. He admitted on cross-examination that the populist state committee had not been called together to sanction a Third district convention, but that a talk with some of the committeemen caused the call to be Issued. Osceola Liveryman Charged with Af son OSCHOLA. Neb., Oct. 21. (Special Tel egram.) On complaint of Fire Warden Randall, Harm bhank waa today ar rested on a charge of aettlng fire to the livery barn of hla competitor, William Everettd, u week ago. The fire destroyed the large barn and seven horses, includ ing the ' Nebraska stallion, Cresceus. Bond waa fixed at $H,tX and Shank was unable to furnlrh It during the day. SOAKS HER CLOTHING IN GASOLINE AND SETS IT AFIRE CLAR1CSVILLE. Ia,, Oct. $1. (Special.) Soaking her clothes with gasoline, Mra. Robert McGregor, aged 35.- while tempo. rary Insane last night, aet fire to her garments and committed aulclde. Her body was fearfully burned and she died a short time afterwards. Mrs. McGregor waa formerly M.a Kate Mather. Her father. C. T. Mather, and two alateia survive her., i Taft's Caretakers Will Not Allow Him ! - to Eat Apple Pie KDOEMONT, S. p.. Oft. 21-rrfsldpnt j Taft wae up before 7 o'clock this mornlna I to make tlift flrat speech of Ms three days' lour of South Dakota, the flrat In . aurgsnt state In which he haa traveled j slnr leaving- California. The president j .'firnt lait night In New Castle, Wyo., nnt left there at 8:30 a. m. for this city Hi day's program calls for atops at Custer, Dead wood, Iad, Bturgla and I P.apld City. The president"! train last nlRht was aurrounded by Wyoming mllltla mi'n. Mr. Taft did not retire until nearly midnight. The president lo In the best of health and Is standlntr the trip remarkably well. Ills voice la holding- up aplendldly, and Its wonderful carrying power conatantly la being commented :ipon. Speaking In the clear air of thta hilly country. Presi dent Taft can be heard a block away. t'ndoubtedly the president's health i largely la due to diet which haa been ' prccrlled for Mm by Mnjor Thomas L. Khoadea of the army, hla official phyai clan. Mr. Taft probably doca not know the extent to which hla food auppllea are limited, but ao far he lias not com plained. His fellow travelr;ra In the pri vate car Ideal Secretary Hllles, Major JJtitt and Major Rhoadcs are taking something of art advantage of their chief In tilts respect. For Instance, the presi dent la denied all pawtry. Yefitvrduy for luncheon the cook baked a anvury hot apple pic. Kvcrybody In tho car knew about It except the preBl- Oent. When ho asked for deaaert they supplied him with fruit. Then, when the midday meal waa ended, the consplratora retired to one of the staterooms, where a table, had 'been set for them. They feasted royally on tho masterpiece la pastry, while the president sut alone, and neglected In the observation end of hla car wondering what had become of hla staff. Kvery day that pie Is on the menu In the Ideal there la a lot Of tiptoeing and the word la paaaod along tti line to "aland by" and prepare for some thin "like mother used to make.' Home day the president la going to discover the low deceit that Is being practiced upon him und there la going te be an awful row. SEEKING THE OLD . STUFF KIk Pointers Dream ef , Burled Treasure in the Mlasoart Illver. A dispatch from Elk Point, S. D., aaya that much Interest Ih being manifested In the recovery 'of the cargo of the old steamer Leadora, which in V6i Bank In the Missouri, near that place, with 100 barrels of good whisky on board. It adda that several gentlemen have as sociated themaclvea and ralaed funds for the purpose of exploring the wreck and rescuing the Imprisoned whisky. If they are aucceaaful, they count on making a small fortune out of the enterprise, aa the whlalty has been valued by some as high as Ho.000. v We ahould think there would be a good deal of Interest In the plan! And wo should also think that the Interest would nut be confined to the little town of Elk Point. There la a human appeal In It which can be relied, on to cross state lines and wake an answcrng thrill from Canada to the Gulf ef Meglco. Stories of lost galleons weighted down with cargoes of doubloons and piecea of eight, and waiting at the bottom of the aca, covered with coral and with shells, move the souls of only a comparatively limited number. Tales of the treasure burled by Captain Kldd on Island and seashore awaken the personal thrill in comparatively few. Hut 100 barrels of good whisky, lying tangled In the wreck of an old river steamer since 1888, aging in good, tarred barrels against the day of their deliver ance thut is something like It! It comes straight home to men's business and boaoins with a peraonal appeal that there Is no mistaking. Down in Kentucky the news that 100 barrels of old whisky are. awaiting the fairy prince that is to awake them from their long slumber will no doubt atlr a tenderness that Is akin, to teara. In Maine, the news 'will be heard with con flicting emotiona. Rut nowhere, it is safe to say, will it be heard with indif ferencenot even by Hie W. C. T. U.! There are, however, some extremely painful thoughta that always Intrude in connection with theBe tales of long-lost whlaky. Will It not be spoiled as a re sult of untoward aurroundlng conditional Will not the long yeara have been wasted, after all? May not the enthusiastic, reacurers find, after all their labor and expenae and anticipatory rellah, that they have ralaed nothing more than a thick syrupy, unpalatable atuft from .the mud? Or KO barrels of muddy Missouri River water? The possibility of a disappointment like that 18 certainly enough to make a man hesitate before undertaking such an, en terprise. It Is, no doubt, this possibility that accounta for the fact that the 100 barrels have ao long lain neglected at the bottom of an old channel of the Missouri River that successive generations have passed the great opportunity by and de voted their attention to other and more prosaic enterprises. However, It seems that Elk Point, 8. Df, now boasts men of the true explorer's, the true adventurer's, breed men who aro willing to run the risks of receiving a great, poaa.bly a fatal, ahock In pur suit of the enterprise that appeals to them men who understand that he who would greatly gain must also dure the hazard of greatly losing. Chicago Inter Ocean. Two Weddings at Nebraska City. NEBRASKA CITY. Neb.. Oct. 11. (Special.) At St. Uenedtct's Catholic church yesterday morning Joseph Cress, one of the prominent young farmers of thla section, was united In marriage to Jilsa Anna Schnltger, daughter of Mr. nd Mrs. Alfred Schnltger, a retired fanner. The young people will make their home on a farm belonging to the groom. Henry Gosser of (his city mas united In marriage yesterday at Tabla Rock to MUa Cleon Saner of that city but for merly a resident of this city. . ' Married Slaty Years. ROLAND. Ia.. Oct. 21. (Special )-lr. and Mrs. Paul Thompson, thought to be the oldest coupes of Story county, yea terday celebrated the sixtieth anniver- aary of their marriage. Both are nattvea of Norway. They were married In Use Don, 111., aad have been resldxnta of thla county for almost half a century. Roth are patlvee of Norway. Mre. Thcmpaon la $i and her husband is four years her Junior. If Jou hare earthing to exchange, ad Mae it in the Omaha Pally Bee. Harriman Officers and Union Leaders Pleased with Outlook KANSAS C5TY, Mo.. Oct. 2L-Bofh company officials and union leaders to day asserted complete satisfaction with the situation in the strike of shopmen on the Harriman railway syatem a s touching conditions in the local shops of the Union Pacific. "We are a little short of car men," aald J. O. Brlnlterhoff. superintendent of the Kansas division of the Union Pa flc, "Otherwise we are running about aa usual." M. F. Ryan, president of the Interna tional Car Men's union, aald the strik ing shopmen not only in this city but throughout the Harriman system were gaining every day. "The company Is running short handed In practically ever shop," said he. "We are bound to win. They cannot get the mechanics. Green men won't do." CHICAGO, Oct. 11. Charges that the Illinois Central road had brought men here to set ss trlke breakers and then left them to depend on the community, were made by W. F. Kramer, secretary of the International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths and Helpers, In a letter to city council today. FUNERAL OF ELY WILL BE AT WILLIAMSBURG TODAY DAVENPORT, Ia,, Oct. 21.-The body of Eugene Ely, the aviator, who was killed at Macon, Ga., Thursday, arrived In Davenport, his old home, thlr after noon, accompanied by his widow, father and stepmother. The body was at once taken to Williamsburg, Ia., his birth place, where the funeral will be held to morrow afternoon.' HEAD-ON COLLISION ON THE MISSOURI PACIFIC SWEET SPRINGS, Mo., Oct. 21.-Two Missouri Pacific freight trains collided head-on near here thla morning, demol ishing both engines and several cars. Three of the crew, all from Sedalla, Mo., were Injured seriously. They are: W. H. Snelder, engineer. Charles Rosenbaum, brakeman. Freeman Roberta. GOOD DEEDSSHJNE BRIGHTLY Timely Helping; Hand Tapa Foanta of Thankfulness and Remin iscence On one occasion the faculty of Bow doln college was obliged to discipline young Frye by sending him to spend a week with the Rev. Elijah Kellogg, a loveable man. Young Frye became hlB de voted friend. Years afterward when Mr. Frye waa a member of the United States senate and Kellogg was an old man, the senator, who had not heard from Kellogg for at least ten years, got to thinking of him and thought he must be, poor, as his only source of Income waa hla little farm and occasional fees for preaching on a Sunday. Kellogg, was so much on the aenator's mind for a few days that he saw Chief Justice Fuller and several other Bowdoln men who were admirers of Kellogg and they made up a purse of $2M, sent it to President Hyde at. Bow ddln college with Instructions to see that Kertogg got it. Upon receiving the money Kellogg wrote to Senator Frye, telling him that ho gift ever came at a more opportune moment; that he had a mortgage on his farm; that it waa due, and that he was behind on his Interest; and had it not been for that money he would have loat his farm; and when in such straits to re ceive more money than he had ever Been at any one time was indeed, he felt sure, th dirct act of God. Senator Frye replied to Kellogg, telling him that his comment about the gift be ing an act of God reminded hlin of old Martha Stevens, a very poor but devout colored woman, who lived In a hut near the campus when he was In college. One night the boys were near her cottage and heard her praying, climbed up cloae to the chimney, and ' Martha prayed vigorously: "O Lord, send me some flour; O Lord, send me some sugar; O Lord, send me some bacon," and It occurred to the boys that It would be fun to go to the atore, buy the things that Martha prayed for, put them In a bag and let them down the chimney. So they carried out their plan and of course, were on hand In the morning to hear what old Martha said. Of course she was delighted end she devoutly and vociferously thanked thanked the Lord for aendlng the artlclea that she had aaked for, "Finally," wrote the senator. "I went around to the door, walked in and said: Martha, the Lord had nothing to do with sending thoae thlnga; we boys heard you pray for them end went down to the store and bought them and let them down the chimney; ao you aee the Lord had nothing to do with it' 'I don't care,' Said Martha. 'If you did. I know the Lord sent 'em, even If the devil brought 'em. " Lewiaton (Mo.) Journal. The Key to the Situation Bee Ads. GIRL OFIIYDREAIIS LAUNDRY "YVs handled exclusively by us with the following result: Brandela Theater. 10-18-11. Nonpariel Laundry Co., Omaha. Gentlemen: It Is a pleasure for me to say that the work received from you la the most satisfactory thla company baa ever received. Respectfully youra, MIS3 ANNA FAYHIN. Wardrobe Mistress Cirl of My Dreams Co. Tis what they all say. You should have the best, you're entitled to it. Both Phones. Wagons Everywhere. WILL RETAIN PERKJNS, -. . IN HIS PRESENT PLACE f From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Neb.VOct. tl. -i Special Tele gram.) A atatement Issued late today by the railway emmmiton and signed by all three members Indicates that Clark Perkins, who onl.ejrrecently profered his resignation to that body, would be re tained for an Indefinite period. Perkins, It Is understood, will conduct the Aurora Republican, which he recently acquired, from thla end of the line. Men's $17.50 Overcoats, For Monday only, one lot of men's all wool heavy gray diagonal overcoats, made with the reversible col lars, positively worth $17.50, at S9.75. Men's Hand Tailored Suits and Overcoats $12.50, $15.00, $18.00 Regular $17.50 to $30.00 values elsewhere. Bcfore-you buy any clothes anywhere, come in and look over our splendid new stock. You'll see all the latest and best styles and fabrics. You'll see garments that are sold in all other stores at $17.50 to $30.00, sold here for $12.50 to $18.00. Let us save you that $5.00 or $10.00. Underwear. Prices 7av Down Men's W inter Weight San itary Shirts and Drawers at, each. 39c. Men's $5.00 and $4.00 Shoes at. . . .$3.00 and $2.50 ' s sSBSBBssBSBWBBMssaaaSaVwssBaaBSSSMaBaaaasaas Important Savings in Uomen's and isses' Fall Coats Monday The careful, economical woman can get wonderful bargains here-Monday. Now is a most opportune time to get your faJJ coat at a wonderful saving. $17.50 Plush Coats at $11.95 Made of rich silk plush, full lined, with large roll ing shawl collar. The Polo, CI Sale of Beautiful Trimmed Hats Monday, $3.98 and $5 . . "Regular $7.50 to $10.00 values. Charming new models. Hardly any two alike. Mentor Comfort Underwear for Women and Children You derive more durability and comfort out of Mentor Un derwear than from any underwear you have ever worn. Ladies' Union Suits CDs to i no Misses and Hoys' Union Ladles' Sweater . Cnata. in all leading styles and colors, up from $1.48 Knit Misses' Aviation Caps, 75c and 98s Holeproof Guaranteed Hosiery for Men and Women. 214-18 North 16th St. Clothiers to Men and Women. Formerly the Novelty Skirt Co. BUCKING About June 1. 1911, a trust agreement was entered Into by the Abstracters of Omaha. Since that time the prices of abstracts have materially advanced. . We have withdrawn from this agreement and have adopted the following reduced scale of prices: OUK RATES Plats, each .......... i .S .50 1st Entry ,..-,l.UO All other entries., each . , , . .23 Court proceedings, per page, at , . .&o 1st name in judgment, ctf. 1.00 All other names, each . .23 Trx certificates, each .75 Our aim will be to Improve the high standard service of the past. BETTER BE SAFE THAN SORRY. REEK ABSTRACT CO. 303 South 17th Street. MONETARY COMMISSION ; ARRIVES AT ST. PAUL ST. PAUL, Oct. 21. Congressman E. B. Vreeland. head of the sub-committee of the National Monetary commission, Congressman Prince, former Congress man Bonynge, and Secretary Wlckham, arrived here today to beet business men and bankers to talk over currency re forms. No meeting for the purpose of taking testimony was held today. At a dinner thla evening, business men and bankers discussed the money question. aUArWkSA dsHdismH sfc 1- Men's Winter Weirrht Union Suits, $1.25 val ues, at ....... '.69c Kewest Models in Fall Coat3 in Blanket and Hovelty Mixture Coats CA C1C All -.J ma rft . AlvV SRPftifil Sail. nAnri'iv''AF1r Hew Fall Skirts We place on sale Monday 300 splen did new fall skirts, Corduroys, Worsteds, Serges, splendid voiles, etc., all man tailored garments in the newest and prettiest of fall styles. Positively worth up to $7.50; Monday, at. ..... . .. -.$12.50 Beautiful Fall ; : Dresses at $4.98 r Made of all wool serges and wor steds. -Made with the wide silk lanels and sailor collars, with net lace yokes. Suits ......... J0 to lSa Beautiful New Silk Waists peclal at ..$1.08 to 94.08 Handsome New Handbags, 48c to $3.08 RUST TRUST RATES. Plats, each if 1. 00 1st entry . 1.00 All ether entries, each . . .50 Coftrt proceedings, per ppge, at i.oo 1st name in Judgment ctf. 1.30 All other names, each .... l.oo Tax certificates, each ., . l.oo rhone, Doaglaa 8187. THET II 1 56 w n lit. - V IIS