11 I fa The Cloak .Room MOKE COATS Every week we receive shipments of the latest eastern styles. Our assortment is complete all sixes are here, Juniors 13 to 17, Misses 1-4 to IS and Ladies 34 to -47. The variety of materials and shades will make a selection easy. Yon will find Just the particular style and shade garment you want. Our low priees will not disappoint you. ranging from . $9.95 up to $22.50 SUIT SPECIALS AT $16.75 AND $12.95 Fine Whipcord ami Cheviot Suits, attraeitvely Braid Trimmed, regular $19.50 Vassar Brand values, special $16.75 STRONG SKIRT VALUES AT $4.95 AND $3.95 Splendid collection of well tailored and close fit ting Serge, Whipcord and Wide Wale Skirts. Keeular $3.93 to 6.75 values. Choice at $4.95 $3.95 anu MSSSALINE SILK WAISTS AT $2.95 AND $3.95 New arrivals of these in wide range of colors and effective styles at very low prices and $355 .$2.95 SPECIAL CUT PRICE ON 45-INCH JOHNNY COATS Choice of $14.50 and $17.50 values at $13.75 and $11.75 SEB 3E AND MIXTURE SUITS In Juniors', Misses and Ladies' sixes, regular $14.50 values, special price $12.95 FLANNELETTE KIMONOS The $L25 and $1.50 values, special at $125 and 98c $3.25 values Crepe, satin trimmed, at $1.95 SWEATER COATS Regular $2.95 values at.... $2.48 Wool Dress Goods One lot of Wool Dress Goods in plain and fancy colors, 36 to 42 inches wide, worth up to Soc, at the yard -07 Aviation Caps We are showing a beautiful new line of Child's, Misses and Ladies' Aviation Caps in all the new fall Cp ff styles. Priees ranging from 50c to OavHJ Red Seal Ginghams A nice assortment of Bed Seal Dress Gingham in 3 to 10 yard lengths at, the yard 10c Larma Fannelette 1,000 yards of Larma Flannelette in 1 to 10-yard lengths, abso lutely fast color, regular 12 He cloth, ni sale price, per yard CfoC 36-in. Bleached Outing Flannel 10c 25 pieces of 36-inch Bleached Outing Flannel, a good 15e value. Special this week, the yard Everett Shirting 750 yards of Everett Shirtings, the best fast colored Shirting, regular 10c value, special, the Ql yard CwC Women's Footwear "Firfelt Juliets are just the thing for cool evenings, All shades, flexible soles with steel shanks, pair ...$155 and $1.50 Others at S9c and up 017021 O St. OPPOSITE CITY HALL See Our Men's Hunting Boots Before you purchase. Heavy oil tanned leathers. All solid. 12, 14 and 16-inch, at pair $4.40, $4.95, $5.95 A TRAVELING MAN FOR RAILWAY COMMISSIONER. When the democrats nominated Clarence E. Harman for rail way commissioner they nominated a man who knows the facts from the peoples standpoint. lie is a traveling man wno was born id southwestern Nebraska, grew un and was educated in Nebraska, and has been traveling as a sales man in Nebraska for many years. He is not a lawyer, bnt he doe know a lot about the practical side of t Kings. He knows what the traveling public wants and deserves to have, and what the freight payers want and deserve to have. The two hold-over mem oers of the commission hail front within fifty miles of the Missouri river. Mr. Harman hails from the southwestern part of the state. His election will more equally dis titlbute the representation noon the commission. He is a man of splendid ability, a tireless worker and pledged to give the people an intelligent, common-sense administration of the office. The voters should remember that the railway commission deals with other than railroad questions. It has to do with all the public service cor porations. Clarence E. Harman is fitted by experience and ability to give the people intelligent serviee. ANDREW. M. MORRISSEY. I i RENOUNCES WORLD FOR MISSION WORK WUnaa H. ora. young uucagw iOMira. -was ordained m minister t the gospel the other night at Moody chute. He has sacrificed all other ambitions to hi desire to become a minister aad devote his fife to work tn the Chinese missionary field. Mr. Bordo ta a graduate of Tate university and Princeton theological seminary. Although still a youag man. he has devoted many years ot his Ufa and a great oral of his wealth to church work. He Is a so ot the fail Y. B. Bordea and brother of John Borden. While Mr. Bordea was attending Tale university Ira founded the Mope uusstoa n New Ham, a rescue kom for ""eowe-snd-oels." aad deaoated the building aad equipment, at a per- .. v Bora tkn OM CM departure frowi the university the ia the mission ta being carried y other ntea ta college. Mr. nmn am rans invrCTi to visiting tae eolltat of ta eoaatr? and asatuas addresses to tae stadeats ae tit saaject of Christlaaity. His tour ot th eolleg will besia la New Tort aad will extend rroir coast to coast. REMARKABLE PERS0F4AUTY OF HARDIE DECLARES WARS SOON BE ABOLISHED la aa address oa Tna Xataral Forces ta America Working Toward International Peac befora the In ternational Peaca Congress at Geneva. Switzerland. Mrs. Elmer Black, chair zoaa of the propaganda committee o! the Amerieaa Peace aad Arbitration league, declared that war as a means of settling differences between na tions will soon be abolished. She said that there were certain inrincible force working toward this end, with little noise, but with Irresistible power. Using conditions ta America aa aa example, she said ta part: There are certain great aataral forces working in America toward th ftnal eoosammatfoa of world paara These aataral forces are deTeiopln th processes ot social aad eooBoaaio eTolntioa throogh which wo are work ins oat oar part ta the world's des tiny. "First saeu these I nlaoa tho remarkable awakening of oar people to taw Ceneral aahject ot ); r Snowy -haired, deep-chested, power nil, keen-eyed. Keir Hardie. leader or millions of British working men. has just finished his third visit to Amer ica. The chairman of the Labor party ia the house ot commons is a strik ing personality picturesqoo and an forgettable. He came to attend the wedding of his son. who is in business in Brooklyn. At the age ot seven Keir Hardie was set" to work in a mine. His father had been a miner before him. hi3 mother a working woman- In the mines he slaved for seventeen years. Today, fifty-six years old. ho la ths leading figure in Parliament ia the fight for improving the condition of working people. The muscular hand grasp with which be welcomes his caller is m re minder ot the days when ho ased to swing a pick. There is warmth In it as well as strength, a warmth that bears out the steady, kindly gaze from the man's eyes. Warmth and strength are Keir nmrai comicra tsUc. . . Him countenance la natriarchaL a mass ot white hair, like snreoaea wool, sweeps back from aa astonishingly high forehead, a tremendous dome above the dark thatched brows. His face and forehead are ruddy with glowing health. His figure is not tall, bet Is erect and powerful, and the whole man radiates personality. A fall-blooded man. His face suggests a dozen other great men: Tennyson. Lord Salisbury, James J. Hill." the rail road builder; Longfellow men of great vision, great force, great tinman sympathy. His clothes are as simple aa himself: a dark gray suit whose "wrinkles show how friendly It is to its owner; a soft, white shirt, a soft collar, a soft dark blue tie. polka dotted, loosely knotted. He smokes a A native of Xew York. Andrew 3d. ilorrissey came to Nebraska " before he was a voter and pioneered in the extreme northwestern . part of the state. He . studied law while working at anything he could find to do to earn an hosent livelihood, and was admitted -to the bar. He practiced in northwestern Nebrsaka for a number of years, and his reputation for ability soon extended beyond the bounds of the state. Handling important eases involving larc in terests, he found himself, pitted against the foremost attorneys of Nebraska and adjoining states, and he always gave a satisfactory account of himself. " About two years ago he removed from Valen tine, where he had had practiced for a number of years, and located in Lincoln. Last spring his friends in the northwest insisted opoa his filing for the demorcatic nomination for attorney general, and . he yielded. His standing as an attorney and as a citizen amoa the people of the northwest, where he had lived, man and boy, for years, was attested by the handsome vote given him, and be was nominated by a handsome majority over an unusually strong op ponent. . Air. Morrissey is unusually well equipped to discharge the da ties of attorney general, lie is thoroughly informed as to the liti gation in which the state must engage, has familiarized himself with pending suits, is full of energy and ambitious only to serve the people with credit to himself and to their satisfaction. I lis standing at the bar is evidenced by the respect in which he is held by his fellow practitioners, arid he is thoroughly devoted to the re form measures that the people are demanding. , . THINGS WE ARE PROUD OF. briar pipe. -Come right in." he smiles. "That's good iv' ben, the Scotch would have It- American, lsnt It? "Com JUDGE FINDS JOY IN HEART COURT W have tadK 1 We are nncaestioBably alive to th tmportaace of ul bamaa resources, and this hi a ooaditioa opposed to -Wa are seeklnc riches aad honor la fields of toad ot through military channels, and this also la opposed to war. learned the great power or o-operaooui m Vtdwala. aad this la oppose to war umnea iwwia. -But aside frost these aaatortaBatta eoaslderetionss, I aaa fully convinced are attaining higher athtaal niMra at a Pee enasmiismats with tBcreaaing wealth and practical knowledge. . Ethics, at the last analyata. to ta greatest good of honesty a Us beat pot- ley is nevertheless to be honest: and to treat our aetghhor Justly and fairly because It pays aeTarthotaaa aeWuvea Jastlea.-, our iBkiee s wwi , ITT Is only th expedience ot nature, that which the gjsatoat number ta right Ta bo Taoneat 1 lev la nevertheless to be boaest; aad to treat ml the bread of clarity by Xaay people who live at th a praanTng It very thick with other Of others seek to aUOgaw I penyte a sauw. in xaxuwr. if Nebraska has more things to be proud of than any other state. She ought to be making every one of them known to all the world. Nebraska is remiss in her duty to herself when she fails to advertise her resources and possibilities to the remotest corners of the earth. Nebraska has some mighty big things, thank yon. She has the largest creamery plant in the world. Her largest city, Omaha, is the greatest butter market in th world. . - She has the third largest packing center in the world. She has the second largest smelter in the world. ' She is the third largest corn producer. She is the third largest dairying state, and promises to be the largest inside of ten years. . Her annual egg output is worth more than the gold output any state or territory. Her annual butter, egg and poultry output is worth mere thaw the gold and silver output of any two states or territories. Her annual output of eorn and wheat is worth more than the nation's annual output of crude petroleum, Her annual output of grains and grasses is worth more than the coal output of Pennsylvania. Her annual corn output is worth more than the nation's asnwal output of copper. Judge William N. Gemmiil. sitting la the Chicago court of domestic rela tions as the successor to Judge Charles N. Good now. re-assigned, the other day declared his work a study of hearts. Judge Goodnow left the court of domestic relations because he found n filled with heartaches. Judge Gemmiil took up the labors of the court as the most interesting labor of the law. "I enjoy the work." said the new judvut of the court of hearts. I have just oom from a civil eowrt. largely dry aa dust sort ot work. Here my work Is fall ot "heart Interest." It ta a stvdy of people sad motives. The prnhliiiaa here presented are aa intri cate and Interesting aa life Itself. " "i unending procession of Uvea aad laves are fiisenil through the court lor observation and study. T!h week at far from aa tun of heartaciea and sorrows us the work ot a cratinsA eourt. There on baa to Impose long, hard sentences, some times death. There are weeping relatives, downcast, bitter men. They get a mini at that hard side of Justice, cells and the gallows. Hero the labor ot the eeaft la to produce happiness aad peace where lafelicitles have arisen. Thar Is omwfhtug hopefully constructive about the work. Tt Is a court of -must. not "must not. " Judge Oats win, although now takma; up the labor of the eourt ot domes tie ralatioaa tor the first time as the regular Judge, has frequently sat for Judge Goodaom. , ANOTHER BOOST FOR UNCOLK. The great Beeves Co.. which makes engines and thresher and such things, has been convinced that Lincoln is the logical dw tibuting center for their line of goods. As a result they have let a contract for a warehouse and ofliee building to cost $40,000. The new building will be located on the Northwestern tracks and will be one of the best buildings of the kind in the country. And oue of the things that makes us tired is the action of the city authorities in hampering such companies as the Reeves Co. by issuing orders that they must not run their big traction engine over the paved streets. Pray how are these people to do business if they are not allowed to get their goods out of the warehouses? And who is paying for that pavement, anyhow f We wish there was enough business in Lincoln to wear out every foot of pavement every year or two. They can't wear the pavement out any too fast to soil aw, providing they do it by reason of enormous business traffic. It about time we canned a few of the men of this city. who. having: enough for themselves, are trying to make it almighty hard for the rest of us to get something. Let's think a lot more about build in u; business and considerably less about knocking the varnish off the pavements. RAILROAD MILEAGE, Nebraska did not make much of a showing in the matter of increased railroad mileage during the last twelve months. Th Union Pacific laid a few miles of double track and is building a new line up through ScottsblurT -county. The Fnion Pacific is also building between Hastings and Gibbon. But five Nebraska counties eontinTte to be without railroad mileage, while four or five have Jiess than thirty miles each.