All visitors to the State Fair are very cordially invited to visit SPEIER & SIMON'S CLOTHING HOUSE, and we want to assure you that it will pay you to bring enough money along to buy a complete outfit of Fall and Winter Clothing and that you will save your expenses to the Fair if you buy here. ' ' . This is the ONLY ONE PRICE Clothing House in Lincoln and is also the LOWEST priced you run no risk in buying here, because we guarantee every purchase. ' ' We aro proud of our store, proud of our stock and proud of the reputation we have made of giving our patrons better values for their money than they can get elsewhere. We sell everything that men wear and you simply must not fail to see us if you are alive to your own interests. Our Prices This Year on MEN'S FALL and WINTER SUITS are as Follows: $5.00 $6.85 $8.85 $10.00 $12.00 $15.00 $18.00 $20.00 $22.00 Speier & Sinnon 104-106 No. lOth St. WE SAVE YOU MONEY Just Around the Corner J m Auto. Phone 6334 Bell Phone F 3008 Henderson & Hald Jewelers and Opticians .Opposite New Postoffice 132 No. 10th Street Griffin Loan Company Phones Bell 313; Automatic 2438. Booms 1, 2 and 3. 1136 0 Street :-. - We loan on furniture,, pianos, organs, i wagons, buggies, warehouse receipts, live stock and other personal property. We offer you Best Terms, Prompt Service, Unequaled rates, absolute privacy, any amount on' any payments, ' any time. THE NEBRASKA CENTRAL. BUILD ING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION. No movement during the last ten years has met with such unqualified success as have the building and loan associations scattered throughout the United States. This growth is attribu ted to many causes which are easily understood when the subject is studied from a disinterested point of view. The saving man does not consider himself educated enough to understand the delicate points which are the in vestor's stock and trade and his first thought is of the savings bank, which offers him three to four per cent and absolute security. At this point the building and loan association comes in and to the investor guarantees six percent and even better which experi ence has shown to furnish the same se curity, with the natural result that he chooses the latter. It is a plan by which two persons benefit, the inves tor and the client who wishes to es cape the landlord's grip. The Nebraska Central Building & Loan Association commenced business in 1293 and their fourteen years of progress is shown by the following statement: Loaned Annually 1893 $ 16,250.00 1894 .... .66,635.00 1895...:.... 104,166.00 1896 139,806.00 1897 114,22a.OO 1898 125,178.00. 1899 186,689.00 1900.. ...... 255,140.00 1901 311,202.00 1902 295,600.00 1903 380,200.00 1904 352,209.00 1905 436,546.00 1906 .... 581,311.00 its customers a key tag to attach to one's key ring. The tag bsars the name of the company and a reward for the return of keys, and each tag is numbered. ' Such a system guarantees return of lost keys and besides provides for i identification in case of accident, sud den illness or distress, no matter in what part of the country one may be. These tags are given to every rent er of a safe deposit box, . Their safe deposit boxes a-rp in a fire and burglar proof steel lined vault, and cannot be opened by any person except the renter, and provide an-ah-' solutely safe place for money and val uable papers. A box costs only seventy-five cents for three months, $3 per year. ' - Growth In Assets 19,846.47 90,946.54 187,957.63 328,25?. 00 427,441,40 511,559.06 582,330.44 679,053.75 788.233.27 851,431.19 983,257.13 1,109,439.95 1,214,474.59 1,410,007.07 $3,365,155.00 What they are able to do for their policy holders is shown by what they have actually accomplished in 1906. During t'hls year the Nebraska Cen tral matured 797 shares If Its install ment stock and paid Its shareholders $79,700.00 in cash. This stock was carried nppn a monthly ' payment of 60 cents per share and reached ma turity in 112 months. Total amount paid in on 797 shares was..;. $53,500.00 The profits were 26,200.00 Total ..$79,700.00 SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES. The Lincoln Safe Deposit Co., 126 North Eleventh Street Is giving to MR. PARKER'S CANDIDACY. In the customary place in this issue will be found the announcement of J. D. Parker, better known as "Jim," who is a candidate before the repub lican primaries for the nomination to the office - of sheriff. Mr. Parker is too well known in Lancaster county to need an introduction at the hands of The Wageworker. While in" busi In, Lincoln he insisted on ' 'his em ployes belonging to the union of" their craft. He held the office of chief of police for several years and is quite willing tq rest upon the record there made. 'He is making an .open and manly fight for the nomination and is meeting with cordial support in all quarters, especially from those who have had dealings with him in a busi ness way. ' " HIS EXPENSE MONEY. Col. Tom Pratt, present city clerk and candidate before the republican primaries for the nomination to the office of clerk of the district court, says he is running on his record. Far be it from The Wageworker to attempt to discredit Col. Pratt's ability. There is no discounting it. But what we want to know is this: Is Col. Pratt financing his campaign, with the divi dends he draws on his stock .In the Lincoln Overall and Shirt company? He may reply that" it is none of The Wageworker's business, but this hum ble little labor paper is so darn curi ous that it really cannot refrain from propounding the query. The man who declares that trades unions are. in favor of strikes is merely exposing his ignorance. Trades unions abhor strikes " and resort to them' only when all other means of securing justice have utterly failed. Henderson Maid New Jewelry Store Opposite P, O 132 No. 10th Complete line Cut Glass, " Hand Painted China, and Silverware Watches Clocks Jewelry All Kinds of Repairing Best Watch Makers in the City Above All Special Sale on Watches FURNITURE STOVES CARPETS CASH OR CREDIT Robertson 1450 0