) THK BHK: OMAHA, SATURDAY, (KTOBKR ' -N5 1 "" Wli ill IWI1H. BP lgmilint. JJ ' I4I'I ipaaM I1IHHJI1 llllJjMp IIKt MIW I! I II II I 111 II 1 1 im WtWl llJWiW linn .HI HIWII Jaw imiiiri -irmns linr' wi MMa'&'k tr Vft ' iff -- r - ----i-t Viiui m mi ff"l Our piano warerooms are over-crowded and we must dispose of several carloads of pianos before November 1. Our purchases for the Christmas trade are beginning to come in and we Have not the room to properly display them. As we announced last week, we have on our floors several car loads of HIGH GRADE STANDARD INSTRUME NTS That were to be hero for our great Ak-Sar-Ben trade, but on aooount of the New York Piano Makers Strike, they were delayed until last week. In all our twenty-five years of business, we have never had so many or such a splendid variety of Standard Pianos on our floors at one time. We invite a comparison of qualities and CHALLENGE OTHERS TO MEET OUR PRIDES They can not do it. Their loss would be too great, even if they met our prices on their much inferior goods. Our spot cash buying brings us a much lower cost price than other dealers receive, therefore we can well afford to sell HIGHER PIANO QUALITY for less mony. "We advise all prospective piano buyers to visit our department before making their piano purchase. In this sale will be offered Brand New, Direct From the Factory, High Grade Standard Pianos at prices that are quoted in the majority of cases on 2d-hand or used instruments. We are quoting below just ten prices on brand new, just from the factory pianos, every one ordinarily would bring twice1 the amount we are asking. If the styles in this list are not what you want, w,e have several hundred other equally great bar gains. Look them over. Every instrument absolutely guaranteed to be just as it is represented. i Colonial Oak ....$169 Art Style Walnut 179 Golden Oak 179 Art Style, Massive Mahogany. . . 249 Art Style, Massive Walnut ...... 279 Figured Dark Oak $169 Oolenial Circ. Walnut 138 Artistic Model, plain Mahogany. 159 Boudoir Style, plain Oak . . ltfO Plain Golden Oak, full brass rim. 179 Remember We give a guarantee that protects the buyer. Kemember We are offering the most liberal terms. Our prices are 50 per cent lower than you can get elsewhere. rui Guaranteed fi raaeiess mue Serge Suits, $10 to $35 I Sweater Coats, all Styles, $1.00 to $7.50 n A HAN AGAINST A SYSTEM ... . Pen Picture of Judge Who Presided in. New York Police Graft. BIO TASK BEFORE THE COVET Gambler Traced? and Its Ramifica tion Subjected to Judicial Review Before Veteran Prober. The great importance of tyie , Booker case, the powers and motives . back of It, the possibilities of baring a public scandal rivaling the Infamies of Tweed and his associates so Impressed the mem bers of New York City's supreme court that they assigned to the criminal branch Justice Ooft, a veteran of the bench, to preside at this trial and over all re lated cases. Nation-wide Interest has been aroused by the tragedy and the su sequent revelations, , consequently the characteristics of the presiding Judge will five the reader an insight into the man ner in whioh the case will be handled from the benoh. A New York correspondent of the Bos ton Transcript draws a pen picture of the man and bis manner of dispensing justice as follow Justice Ooff Is a slender, ereot man of middle height, His long hair is white, and bis white beard, not long, shows of the rather narrow faoe only the forehead, nose and a little of the oheeks, whleh latter ire of a curious, soft ruddiness. But yo soon see onty the piercing blue eyes, in which seems oonaentrated all the compelling tore and dignity of the man. Bis vote, a he speaks to the olwk of the court, ft notJoeafcly mild. His men ner, while te a tray (entle, is at the same time austere. He look like fine steel covered with vJt. You mar the truth that he ft Irish. Justice Ootri. personality MU him snore the common run of New Ytk EI "THE PRICE of a suit is not always indicative of its true worth. If we make your c 1 o t h e 8 the goods are high grade, all wool, the work manship first class and the style perfect. ' The price will be $20 to $45. You de-1 .1 t H termine t n a t wnen you select the goods. A8K IkcCartiy-Yfilson Hw, When and What to Wis 304-SK58 South 10th St. 1 preme court judges as a lighthouse towers above a low-lying fog. ' There are now, and have been in the past, some able men on the New York bench, possibly men of greater ablHty, merely as lawyers,' than Justice Goff. But it is douuuul If there is or has been another judge so well fit, for every reason, to undertake the pres ent work of investigation and punish ment By many Justice Goff is alled a harsh trial judge, and there are some incidents of his career on the bench which seem to lend force to the criticism. He has, beyond Question, a brusque and oauetio way of disposing of many matters that come up tn his oourt; and he rather often treats counsel to a stinging reply or bit of comment that is quite unnecessary. In common parlance, he "gets his Irish up" on what seems like very slight provocation, and then outs loose with a tongue that needs but few words to do great execution. When he takes a hand in the question ing of a witness, the spectator Is quick to understand why he Is feared and dreaded as a croBS-examlner. His mind does pot have to climb the stairs of a carefully ar ranged series of questions before it ar rives at the floor above. Instead, it jumps, taking witness, prisoner and coun sel a long leap that leaves them rathei breathless, and with an inner impulso to axoleim, "Oood Lord! How did we gel here so soon!" His questions are like flashes of lightning not that they are o swift in time interval, but because the) bare for an instant the heart of things, and then leave behind a bewildering dark ness, If you have ever tried to walk ovei rough ground by the light of Intermittent lightning flashes, you oaa imagine tht sensations of an unwilling witness. You don't know "what minute gwine tor be de nex," and you'd a lot rather have blank darkness than this merciless, inter mittent illumination. Many of the wit nesses examined by Ooff in the Lexow investigation are said to have felt this range of sensations rather acutely; and some of them were quite prostrated after the storm had passed. Justice Ooff has no patience with pottering slowness and verbosity, and he often reaches a point where it seems as though he could not resist the impulse to oleaf away the rub bish with a few swift strokes of his own. The Maklngl of a Mas, Justice Ooff it a self-mad man, and the manner and metnod of the making throw a good deal of Ught on the man a he now is. t To get - quickly over the statistical beginning, Justice Ooff was born in County Wexford, Ireland, in 1880, of a family that had for generations been active in sacrificing even their lives in the struggle for the independence of Ireland. His father and mother died when he wa about 9 years old, and be then lived with an undo until he was 14. Then he learned telegraphy, and was in the government servloe in both England and Bootland, leaving that etrvlos shortly, to go to Brasll. Sidetracked by yellow fever, he was landed In Argentina, and from there he made his way north, landing in New York in the summer of 198. He got a job, t&uOly, with X. .T. Stewart and studied o nights, taking aourses at the Cooper institute- pretty determined pro gram for an orphan boy of 15 in a strange country. He was goon advanced by Mr. Stewart to a responsible position which h held uatil IfiTS, when he left to study Istw In a Isw offine. As he got no salary there, ha had to support himself by night work a telegraphy and by Writing for the newspapers. He married In 1874, was 'admitted to the bar two years later, and at one entered private pmotiee. To one who has not received the Im pression ef personal lnteroourse with Jus tice Goff it may seem noteworthy that tin, young Goff did not ally himself with the new Tammany which rose under John Kelly on the ruins of Boss Tweed. Goff has always been a democrat, but up to the t-me of his election as recorder of the court of general sessions, following the Lexow inquiry, the only office he had held was that of an assistant dlstrlct.attorney under John R. Fellows. The mental and moral fastidiousness of the man, hardly less than his inflexible honesty, must have made any active alliance with Tamman impossible to him. He ran for the offlct, of distriot attorney in 1890 against De lancy NIooll, but was beaten. Prom thai time until h's appearance In the Lexow In vestigation Goff was little known to tht general public. Since the beginning ot that investigation Tammany, which he has always opposed, has feared him. H's public life since his election as recordet has been passed In his court room. His private life has been tranquil, Incon spicuous and without blemish. BOSS SPOTTER OF CROOKS New Yorker Conld Nab Thief From Dncrlptlort and Seldom Made a Mistake. Seymour Beutler, for years the iden tlfier for the Pinkerton Detective agency, is dead at his home in, New York City. It was said of Beutler that he had a knowledge of 16,000 crooks of various sorts and that those whom he knew would have to put on very effeotive dis guises to keep him from recognising them again. For years he went to state and national conventions to look over the rowd that entered the halls for familiar faces; in the race track days his post was outside the track to see that no pickpockets got past the gatekeeper. Most of the crooks whom he knew well enough to pick out of a crowd he had never seen, but his memory for descrip tions was so good that he seldom made a mistake. Besides descriptions he made it a part of his work to memorise the rec ords of those he needed to know. For the last thirty years he had been in demand for the entrances to Important meetings of , all sort. He had traveled from one end of the country to the other Identifying criminals who had never seen him. The ears, Beiitler said, were his principal means of Identification; they never change and cannot be disguised. Mr. Beutler was a slender, gray haired, gray mustached man, but he had great powers of endurance. He was at work on a forgery oaae one time, where a firm rf pork packers had lost $40,000. He traced an employe of the firm' to Canada and then decided to put him under sur veillance, Beutler hired an adjoining room and went two days without food or sleep, keeping a eqnstant watoh on his man. He wanted to see if his man had certain His identlfloation of Billy Coleman, papers necessary for the ease and Beutlsr didn't leave the door until he made cer tain that the man had these, An arrest followed and the forger settled with the firm by giving back VA.VO, One of Bou tier's famous oases! was the arrest of Sophie Lyons, the most no tortoxis and clever woman thief tn rbe United States. He had caught her enoe la Springfield, Mass., picking t pooket and tried to arrest her. The eatery she raised brought a crowd down en Beutler and hs was badly beaten, who stole 160,000 from the Coo pore town, S. Y office of Ambrose Clark, son-in-law of Blfcip Potter, was considered re markable. Coleman was taken in New York with some of the jewels, but the keadquarWs deteetlvee oonTd net say whe H VtUA AW v rar tJ nil v TJ I 1 S y VX 'S1I? 1 T Wit. n ' & f cut nee ddac m ' . Fin. Clothe. M.W.r. Kif ii Baltimore nd N.w York s 7ss ft" i r r ou ii r ma n r":""i 1 Boy's Suits and Overcoats We have never shown such winter clothes for boys, nor such great varieties as are ready at this stole now. The good things you've come to know about this store are only magnified by the Immense show ing of fall and winter garments. The standard of quality and value giving are higher than ever before. Assortments greater and varieties better than at any previous time. If you have not already done so, "Give us your boy to clothe." We will save you from 11.00 to $2.50 on every garment. Suits and Overcoats, $2.00 to $12.00 ere Thousands of fine Overcoats. A showing now that is abso lutely in a class by itself; no other store to compare with it in smartness of models, absolute cor rectness of styles, variety of patterns and fabrics, perfection of tailoring, fit and values; no taste we cannot please, no form we cannot fit, no purse we cannot accommodate. Overcoats for every purpose and occasion. The prices start at $10 and range upward to $40. As representative Berg values ii5 ask you to inspect the three great lines at $15, $20 and $25 Several thousand suits on Berg's great suit floor a half dozen stores in one. , The advantage of se lecting a fall suit nt Berg's will be apparent to every clothing buyer. Tn this great department prepara tions have been inde to care for both the artisan and the millionaire. Here you will find suits of the most inexpensive character at $10 and up and the highest quality at $40. We call your attention to four wonderful lines in every weave, pattern and style, from Kup penheimer, Schloss Bros., Stein Bloch and Society Brand at $15. $20, $25' and $30. tttMS Vassar and Superior Union Suits, $1.00 to $5 .-A -.. , n wmu , I.. l IMirl1lll IJ1JLM M Trunks, "Travel ing Bags and Suit Cases, $1.00 to $35 1 he was. Buetler, who had never seen him, but had spen a photograph of the crook once, accosted Coleman as If he had . known him well and the prisoner admitted Ids Identity. To Pat fiheedv has generally been given credit for recovering the Gainsborough portrait of the duchess of Devonshire. but the story hae been, told that it was BeuUer who first learned where the pic ture was. A convict sentenced to Danne mora. to whom Adam Worth had confided the hiding place of the picture, told Beut ler, and after Sheedy had conducted tne npB-ntlB.tlon for the return of the picture Robert Pinkerton delivered It to the,Ag- news in London, the original owners. Beutler had the first copy of the picture ever made. He had -a wide acquaintance with rac ing men through his own connection with the track and was very popular. Barney Schreiber once named a horse after Beut ler. Beutler had charge of the Pinkerton work at the Polo grounds. Three years am h left the Plnkertons and started the Greater Now York Detective agency. New York Bun. WASHINGTON MYSTERY HOUSE Octagon, Where Dolly Madison Set Up Conrt was Scene of Ro mantic Tragedy. Don't let anybody tell you the story of the old Octagon Hones In Washington after dark you'll have to sleep with the light on all night if you dol Why, It's the kind of a story that will send all manner of dellolous, indefinable little shivers and thrills over you at 10 a. m. on a sunshiny day. Octagon House Is where Dolly Madi son, the fascinating, set up her Demo oratlo Court of the Republic when the British burned the White House in 181. And as if that were not romance enough for any house to oiaim, there are ghost stories galore, two more or less well-authenticated underground passageways, a secret stairway and secret doors open ing out of blank wsjls. Here Is a really old time mystery house. From It runs a secret passageway, now walled up, to the White House itself, and for this, the story goes, Dolly was responsible. As runs the story, the clever and de lightful Dolly, really the first mistress the White House error had, with that queer psychological twist not uncommon In j the feminine mind, knew In her pro- phetio soul that in time the defeated Brit ish would want another tost of prowess with the valiant little republic of, the Now World. When such time should oome, she figured cleverly again, the White House would be a point of attaok and she Vlhed be prepared for a seoret flight, Bh knew the Tyloes, who owned Octagon house, very intimately, Kenoe, the senrei passageway, Put whan the time far ar anticipated flight earns something ''interfered with the prearranged plan, The British aama, torch in hand, almost to the door of the White House! . . Dolly lingered lane enough to gather her priceless silver and t cot the Gilbert fttuart portrait of Washing ten from Its heavy gold frame before she fled by the south porUoe and sought shelter with friends in Virginia, whanee her husband had preceded her. Some months later she returned to Wash ington and then It was that the Octagon " ' " 1 SgSBIMI i.usn Don't Minn the (JreiiteNt, Huit Sale Omaha HM j,;ver Known. Ii This Great Sale v of Oyer 1,000 Suits j Will Be the Talk of T Omaha,' i 5mt hm t Y First wea Starts at 8 OXlock Salurday Horning MILLER BROS. (N. Y.) ENTIRE STOCK OF 4 igh Class Tailored Suits i uvcr For Women and Misses that were made to sell for $30.00, $35.00, $40.00 and $45.00 your choice Saturday at . All the suits are perfectly tailored of the finest all wool ma terials in the very newest styles. t t house became the home of the presiden tial family, Ths strange troublous tlmea In which the bouse was built it was a building while Washington was prealdcnt must have had some share In determining its mysterious construction. The architect was a man of renown, Dr. William Thornton, who designed the capitol.'and aided Jefferson years later In the plans for the University of Virginia. The hmiss Is full of secret doors and even now,, wide opon and to bo Inspected by anyone who elects, there la a tunnel leading out under Eighteenth street. Where the destination may have been none of this generation can say, for most of the land In that part of ths city has been changed by filing In. Oemmunloa-t-Ing with this underground passage Is a back ntfttrway running from ths basement to the third floor, and either the second or third landings are rsaohed from It through secret doors. The bssoboards and ohairhoards on the blind side run far past the dcors before being out through, and eftar all thosa years ths Joining re mains so nearly porfset that none but a quiest ays detects the slightest s4peamnos of aa opening, for there are no keyhole, hinges or knobs, The tm'.aue arrangement of the house, which is V-tlt In octagon shape on the outside and with rooms surrounding the circular hall, with a spiral utalrway run nlng from basement to roof, and all the rooms connecting some of them by se cret doors, to be sure Is such that had an arresting party entered anyone famil iar with the house or even passably clever might have escaped quickly and quietly. Quick egress also was provided for from what was once the dining-room through a secret door Into a closet and out to the street through a casement window. Such are the actual facts. The ghostly personages who gather there constitute another story. Philadelphia Telegraph. MOTHERS ORGANIZE TO HELP IN SCHOOL WORK Thlrty-nlne mothers In Miller Park school distriot have organised a club to meet and confer with teaoliers, discuss school problems and plans for making a better school and more beautiful build ings. Mrs, Charles Thiem was elected presi dent, Mrs, J. N. Jenkins, vice president; Mrs, D, T. Gregg, secretary; Mrs. Ous ( X Hallo, treasurer, and Mrs. W. I Liftok, treasurer, Last ssitog the members ef ths olub, prior to the present organization, gave a social and raised 170 to purchase pic tures. This year a moving picture ma chine has been borrowed from Fort Omaha and another entertainment will be given to secure funds to decorate the Interior of tho Sillier Park school. When the Miller Park building is com plete this club will meet in the assembly' room. They are now meeUng in the old Miller Park building. . . Key to the Situation Bee Advertilng. f A Bachelor's Reflections. .. , A girl catches a man by making him think he Is catching her. The best way for a girl to daub color on her cheeks Is with a mustache. If, Instead of walking, a woman wad dles she knows she does it gracefully. It's a pity it isn't against the law to save money, for then everybody would do it. , There's a kind of man who ean pooh-. pooh Cromwell and Napoleon because they didn't have steam heat. V The baby Is never going to feel so ba4: about looking like its father as its mother, feels. Telling a woman she has pearls in her mouth isn't going to cure her of wanting some for her neck. - Whenever ths coal bills for a man's, family go up anywhere near the oigax bills for himself, he begins to denounoa extortion. New York Press