Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 31, 1903, EDITORIAL SHEET, Page 11, Image 11

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    THE OMAHA' BAILT BEE: BATTTRDAT, OCTOBEK 81. 1903.
It
i
Ho4 Tuw4 by
MM1 A CO,
Amnirft't
rrf m(va
Cl4 Mftkvn.
Our Open Account Credit Plan
Is far ahead of old fogy methods j You see, we trust
the people "out and out." No references required.
No security, no interest, no mortgage. 1
Simplj a Plain, Old Fashioned Charge Account
All business relations 'utrictly confidential. Why not
trade with the house that carries high grade, hand-tailored
clothing. Everything for man or boy. You make your
own terms.
PAY AS YOU LIKE.
Our system is to make terms to suit you. Pay weekly
or monthly.
CUT THIS OUT
Bring the coupon below with
you, imd we will accept it as ?1
in cash.
Good for $1.00
OMAHA CL0THIN8 CO.
We do this to get you started
in opening an account.
Grand Sale Saturday.
Lamb's wool underwear, regu-
ular $1 garment, only 49c
Heavy cotton underwear, 50c
quality, for 29c
Heavy fleece lined underwear,
50c quality, for garment, 35c.
Men's all worsted pants, $3.00
quality for $1 .75.
Men's all worsted pants, fl.75
quality for 98c.
Strouse & Bros' high art suits,
all' hand-tailored, $13.98.
Kirschbaum's belt overcoats, 50 inches long, hand
made throughout, . at ....... r . '. $1 8.00
These garments are equal to any $35 tailor-made.
Belt overcoats, 50 inches long,, at". . . ... . . . ..' $7.50
Men' hand-finished worsted suits .. . . .$12.50
Men's all wool serge lined suits, hair cloth fronts. . . .$9.93
Men's silk lined black unfinished worsted suits,
all hand tailored. ..." $1 6.75
Black unfinished worsted suits $7.48
.W E GIVE TRADING STAMPS.
II.M3A CI.
1314 FARNAM STREET.
yr4. ' -:ir
1 sflweTolJsIrinff a Pleasure
SHINOLH.
b f&s molts ol ths oentorv. It ii tie sbos poltsh which preserves leather
In meat wemnt! o4 eoilireo't shoes. Wont toil clothe of bands.
SHINES INSTANTLY. A (bin tats week and Is perfection.
. It otsfls all other pests shoe poliihss and it tktily applied, epeclally
so with Utt SHINOLA Dauber (5c.) and Polisher OOc) m Illustrated above.
Get Urn box SHINOLA at dealer, oe by milJ0c SHINOLA
Daubet and rdUhcr by mail 30c postpaid.
SHinola Co.. Rochester, N. Y.
J)
A well heated office
for $10;00 per month
Before the cold weather mU in. It might be well for you to sto
to think whether yott are apt to freese te death la your effloa this
winter. There's no use staylnc In a cold office all winter.
THE BEE BUILDING
If you ask one of Its tenants you will find It's always comfort
able, no matter how cold the weather. Tou would better more
before it'e cold. There are three pleasant email rooms at (10.00 per
month one or twe Urcer rooms at reasonable prices. ,
R. C. PETERS & CO.
! RENTAL AGENTS
GROUND FLOOR
BEE BUILDING
ON IDE BLACK BILLS TRAIL
on the trail, and they told of Indian mur
ders they had known of personally.
I stayed In the emigrant camp that dsy,
te jerked beef and slept When night
ilTely IiperlenCfl of Colonel Jim Bale "m " I Parted for Red Cloud agency.
TT1 M f I . t . f f I II" Ul WVrHIWII VS I" rum uiuua
wniie uarrjingtM ksiu iflre el nt away c(l on a hm.
OSTILE INDIANS GIVE HIM A RUN
Marvin and fennllese. He Took a
Job .No One Flue Weald Vulire
t pon Trnaedlea of the
Trail.
The year 1 tarried the mall Into the
Black Hills fumlnhes the most thrilling
recollections of all my career on the
frontier," said Colonel Jim Baker to a
knot of veteran plainsmen the other even
ing. "I had been In General Custer s
Seventh cavalry In the Cheyenne and
Kiowa nars In Kansas, and had tried my
hand at cowpunchlng on the Texas Pan
handle. So I had seen something of a
trenuous life and had some risky ex
periences. But thone months or mall
carrying In the Sioux country went be
yond anything 1 had met with before.
I quit the atmy service In the fall of Wo,
and catching the gold fever that then rage.l
In the Black Hills. struck out for ueadwood.
Two army chums and myself located on
Bear creek In February, 1876. and In about
month wo were clean broke and all our
capital of years of saving was gone.
Misery and dejection are no name for
the way we felt. Hungry and miserable,
we walked amid snow and Ice to Custer
City, and there we heard lots of hard
luck stories like our own. After looking
around for work I heard of a Job at carry
ing the mall across the country to the
Black Hills at $50 a. month.
"A dosen courageous fellows had declined
the Job before I heard of It. Hostile Sioux
abounded. Every day brought news of a
fresh murder of settlers and prospectors by
the Indians.
The offer of good money to carry the
mall appealed to me, almost starving and
wholly discouraged as I was. I hadn't
eaten a thing then for thirty hours, and I
didn't know whether I was ever going to
ave a meal again.
Taking; a, Desperate Job.
So I went to the man over at Keegan'a
who had the Job to give out, and said that
for 10 down and $40 more In two weeks
d carry the mall to the Hills. A ten
dollar gold piece was thrust Into ray hand.
and I was Immediately sworn Into Uncle
Sam's service. I was ordered to report for
my first ride at 7 that night.
"With the money In my pocket, t hunted
up my two mining comrades, and we had
great All-up. Both of my friends de
plored my acceptance of the risky Job,
They felt that I had sold myself to certain
death.
I reported for duty. A carbine and a
revolver were given to me and I started oft
for the Red Cloud agency.
"The first fifteen miles twisted and turned
around the rolling hills. It was bright
moonlight. As I galloped along I thought
of every bit of recent news I had heard of
Sioux attacks on lonely travelers among the
desolate hills. I fancied that I saw Indians
skulking behind every boulder and In
every clump of chaparral. A dosen times
I was cocksure I saw Indians lying In
wait for me.
'It was past midnight. The moon had
gone down, l naa begun to tnina me
Indian massacre stories were about all
Imaginary. I let my horse come to a walk.
I had crossed Cottonwood creek and was
climbing up the troll among the trees.
"Suddenly my horse stopped, and I almost
fell off. I vainly punohed my spura Into
his flanks, and by words tried to urge him
forward.
'He stood snorting and Quivering, and
Jumped off and with my shooting Iron
In my hand tried to lead him. He stood
atone still.
'In the darkness I felt around In the mud
and slush. My foot struck something
yard In front of the horse. I pulled oft my
gloves and felt a human head, cold and
sticky with blood.
'It was a horrible moment. No doubt
there were frensled savages all about,
waiting for more white lives. All my
boasted nerve vanished. I was as weak
as a dish rag.
"It was a woman's head. I knew that the
woman was a settler's wife, and that her
husband's body and possibly her child's
must be near in the darkness. With
trembling hands and knocking knees, I led
my horse around the woman's body, and,
climbing into my saddle, I dug my spurs
Into the horse and rode on desperately.
"I reached a camp of a dosen emigrants
Just at dawn. They had seen Sioux the day
before' and had been up and around all
night. I told them of my discovery back
PREACHER BILL
Bill.
Our Bill,
Ilea preached a sermon,
An' these old eyes,
Seen him do It,
Text
Waa aunthln'
'Bout old Boas
Don't know what
An' It don't matter
But the thlnge
He said was common. '
Common sense.
By thunderatlont
Says.
Bays he:
"Man's what food makes him,
Orn'ry cookin' wrecks the sperret.
Greasy vlttlls busts commandments.
An' the pit of hell's demnatlon
Is the pit of a bad stomach."
side, nothing unusual occurred that night.
"I reached the agency early In the film
ing, and, having delivered my papers, had
meal and slept. That nUht I started on
the return trip to Custer City. It was safer
for a rerson alone to travel In the Indian
country under cover of darkness.
From that time on I was a regular msll
carrier from Custer City to the Ulack Hills.
We were paid 60 cents a letter, and the gov
ernment contractor made money besides. I
made the round trip from Custer City to
the hills once a week from April to No
vember, when the advancing railroad put an
end to the profits In the Job.
"Something hnlr-ralsing occurred on al-
moet every weekly trip. If It hadn't been
for the good money there was In It, I
wouldn't have stuck a month.
"One trip I was fording a creek when I
was fired upon by a bunch of Sioux, who
lay among tho bushes over to the west.
How I ever got away is a mystery.
"Fully fifteen bullets were sent whizzing
after me as my frightened horse bore me
over the brow of a hill. The Indians were
on foot or I surely would have been fol
lowed and slain.
"Another time, Just at sunrise, I saw a
man riding a horse like a madman toward
Red Cloud agency. He wore only a shirt,
and that was red with blood from a bullet
through his shoulder.
I caught up with ' him. He and two
other men were making their way into the
Black Hills, and In camp, while asleep, had
been attacked by Indians. He got away,
while his companions were fighting for
their lives with the Sioux. A few days
later the man'a companions were found
hacked to pieces about the ashes of the
camp fire.
'Friendly Indians at the agency and
scouts told me frequently that I was sure
to be caught by the Sioux some time, for
the Idea waa abroad that the lone riders
with the leathern pouches carried valu
ables and Information about the Indians.
A Race for Life.
"One morning when I was about to
camp In a secluded spot where I could get
water and could sleep till night, I saw
bunch of six or seven Indians coming
full tilt toward me. They were three
miles distant I leaped Into my saddle
and got out my six-shooter and left the
trail like a whirlwind.
There waa a creek there, and It was
eight miles from the Cheyenne river. Usu
ally some emigrants are camping there,
and I felt that If I could reach the river I
would have help in fighting off the Indians,
"But bow to get there? I knew that my
time for a race for life had come. My
horse knew the danger, too.
"We reached the high bluffs of the Chey
enne. Not a human being waa there.
When I dashed up the rise of ground and
made a good target of myself, the Indians,
who had gained fast upon me, yelled.
can hear the yelling now, and feel the way
my heart thumped.
Bullets pinged all about me. It seemed
aa if I never would get up and over the
bluffs. I . was about to Jump off and,
facing the. Indians, sell my life as dearly
as possible.
Then over the crest of the bluffs . we
went I Jabbed the spurs harder than ever
Into the beast's flanks. The Indians came
galloping and screeching behind.
"My horse leaped Into the stream. I
urged and spurred him on. My sombrero
was gone. I saw that the odds were against
me. More volleys from . the Indians, but
the shots fell short .', ' ' ,
"My horse was In the mJddle'of the river.
The Indians dashed down the bluffs, as
If to follow me across the Cheyenne, but
they stopped at ths water's edge. They
probably believed that there were soldiers
In camp on the opposite side and that
quickly there would be a camp uproar.
"The unsteady movements of my horse
In the water saved my life, for none of the
shots sent after me hit. My horse was
wounded in the neck, and that started him
more frantically for the shore.
It seemed like ages while we struggled
there In the muddy current. The yelling
savages were firing at me. Finally, with
a bound the horse touched the shore, and
up over the opposite bank we went flying.
I glanced back and saw the Indians making
ready for another and final volley.
Twenty miles still lay between me and
Custer City. I thought the Indians would
ride' eight miles up the river to Green Rock
and there head me off, seventeen miles
from Custer City. As I rode I sesolved that
If the Indiana should bs at Green Rock
I'd shoot' my horse and, using the
carcass as a pulwars, lie oemna u ana
shoot as long as I could raise my gun.
"My horse could not last more than a
few miles at the rate he was going. Indeed,
few horses could have done what he had
already done. A turn In the road among
the hills, and I saw approaching a lone mule
train carrying supplies into the hills
Whew! What Joy the sight was. I knew
my carcass was saved that day anyhow.
'The Indians must have seen the train,
too, for I saw no more of them, l rested
with the teamsters several hours, and then
Jogged on easily toward Custer City.
'But my faithful horse was ruined. Do
what we could to nurse and doctor the
beast, be was a nervous wreck and died a
Uttle later.
'I had one or two more lively expert
enoes with the Indians, but that was the
nearest I ever came to death while a Black
Hills mall carrier." New York Sun.
Gitv Market House,
I4TH ST. AND CAPITOL AVE.
Parraclce St Redfearrt
Telephone 844KI.
Flr.t e offer aooda for aale at CIO
Market Hoase.
We give green trading stamps. Look for
the big rooster and hen. We dreas our
poultry each day. No cold storage handled
Fresh killed spring chickens, per ID..W
Fresh killed hens, per lb 9V'
Fresh killed ducks, per lb KH
Fresh killed turkeys, per lb u
Fresh country eggs, per dos 22
Fresh country butter, per lb
Choice creamery butter, per lb 23r
Tub butter, per lb 2&
Oysters, per quart 30r
Horse radish, per bottle 5c
We deliver goods. Ask for green trading
Btamps.
T. MARlNEtLI
ST A M. NO. 10.
I am carrvlns: a full line of vegetables at
lowest prices.
Cabbage, per head, each tc
Cabbage, per dozen ...-Soc
Sweet ootatoes. Der bushel Wc
Colorado potatoes, per bushel........ 75c
Green peppers, per basket 20c
Carrots, per basket 25c
Squash, per dos. Hubbard 6Do
Green tomatoes, per basket 3"c
Cooking apples, per bushel 60c
unions, per Dusnei ono
lettuce, onions and radishes, t bunches. 5o
Turnips, per basket 20c
Parsnips, per basket 20o
Look for stall next to Parmelee & Red-
fearn for vegetables and fruit and receive
Green Trading stamps.
GEO. ZARROW & BRO.
Call at Market House Stall 28
For cut flowers and plants. Moderate
prices.
When shopping; at the Market Hoase
stop at the Lanch Connter '
Where we serve the best cup of coffee In
town and all kinds of lunches at reasonable
rates.
J. If. 1IAT.K1, Stall No. 2.1.
I am now open for business, carrying a
full and complete line of fresh ami emoke1
meat specialties, also butter, esgs and
'heee. Also a full line of fresh and smokeii
Kausagps. pickles, mustards, catsups and
CANNKD meats.
Below we quote a few of our prices:
Strictly frcsli country eggs, prr dox... Sir
Kresh Rrnnkflelit creamery butter LVr
Swift's 1'rimluni ha ma 17 4i
.swift's Winchester bacon 17Wi
Swirt's Silver Lieaf lard, lb luc
iwoiiNin ciea.ii cheese, In 1-lb. pi itus.l?1
Voting America Cheese Vc
Swiss brick cheese 12'c
llrookneld farm sausage 15c
Frankfurt sausage, per lb lUc
Minced ham, per lb 9c
N. E. ham, per lb 10c
Bologna sausage, all kinds, per lb 10c
Pork and bonus, per can lite
Kxtra fine Vienna sausage, per can.... 10c
Dried beef, per can 15c
Corned beef, per can 15c
I also carry a nice and fresh stock
of cracked eggs for cooking pur
posesper dozen 15c
Mince meat, per lb 10c
Boneless rigs' feet, per lb 10c
8 bars Swift's Pride soap 25c
A complete line of fancy toilet soaps, 2
pars per dox inc
We are leaders in low trlces: others fol
low. ,
Look for HAIKS'S MARKET.'
VEGETABLES AND FRUITS.
Apples, per bushel .,
potatoes, pa Dusnei
Sweet potatoes, per bushel...
Onions, per bushel
Turnips, per bushel
Peaches, per box
Pears, per box
Plums, per box
Cabbages, per dozen
California grapes, per basket.
Concord grapes, per basket..
Hubbard squashes, dos
Green peppers per bushel ..
Pumpkins, per dozen
Celery, per dozen
Lettuce, per dozen
,...40c
,...7&o
....60c
,...60c
,...20c
,...70c
..11 U'
...,75c
....30c
,...35c
....26c
,...40c
....r.r
,...40c
,...35c
....15c
KlTNCIi A CO.,
Fresh, Salt and Smoked Meats.
Poultry and home-made sausage. Home
made lard at the lowest prices.
J. W. BROWN,
FUh Market.
All kinds of fish and poultry. Including
chickens, aucks, geese, ail kinds of wild
game.
Located la Stall No. 29.
Qulncy Meat mid Fish
Market
PRICES FOR SATURDAY:
STEER BEEF.
Round srteak. rer lb so and
Chuck ateaX, per lb 7o and To
Chuck roast, per lb.... SVfco and he
Men doii, per id -c
hid enas, per id ivv'
FRESH PORK.
Pork steak, per lb 10Hc
Pork chops, per lb 12Vs
rork loins, per lb 1-V
Spar ribs, per lb.......
leal lard, per lb ...."
i i talis, ears and snouts, per lb 4c
Fresh rig feet, per lb.
New Orleans spare libs, per lb.......
All kinds of frexh fish,
CURED MEATS.
Hams, No. 1 fancy, per lb
Paeon, fancy, per lb
Macon, no. L. per round
Boiled hams, per lb
tracked and iso. 1 country eggs.
every day. Country butter, creamery but
ter, process putter.
Everything retailed cheaper than whole
sale.
.40
.HHo
.iao
...l'-'c
...100
fresh
McCord-Brady Co. Advo. Gold Medal
Coffee.
SPECIAL
Gold Medal coffee, luc 120, 15c, Mo.... SOo
TEAS AND SPICES.
Tea Dust 12Ho
t'ncolored Japan
English Breakfast 40a
Gunpowder, SSo 400
Regular 26o box, today ISo
JOHN GOCKE
Meat Market.
Dealer In fresh meats at east end of mar
ket house.
WM. GENKRT,
Horns-Made Sanaa aad
Mavts.
Summer sausage.
Vienna sausage.
Garlic sausage.
Frankfurt, fresh and smoked.
Knack sausage.
Pork sausage.
Liver sausage.
Blood sausage.
Tongue blood.
Goose breast.
Smoked
EXTRAORDINARY
OffER
Nothing Down.
Take a Columbia Crapho
phone home with you.
Tou puy cash for the records and begin paying fur the Graphophone a week later
la easy Installments.
Call and Inv aiigate.
Terms to suit all.
Just received lo.uti of the new hard moulded cylindrical recorda Tney nt all
of cylinder machines.
Columbia Phonograph Company,
1631 FABNAH STREET.
Says,
Says he:
"Wheat Is the only
Food that civilizes nations;
Wheat built up the black
Egyptians, till they tried
A change of diet
Turned to flesh pots
An' blled onions
Then some wheat-fed
Fellers llck't 'em."
Says,
Says heu
"Wheat, predlgested,
Maltosed, cooked
An fit fer ualn'
(Like them READY BITS we read of)
Shows the highest
State of pro-gress."
Says,
Says he:
"It saves the housewife
Hours of bl 11 ii" giindln labor;
Saves the household
Time au' patience.
Costs but fifteen cents
A package,
An' makes breakfast
Always ready."
Rays,
Says be:
"Bo fine a diet
Aa them READT BITS
I mentioned.
Makes a woman's life worth llvtn',
Makes a man leas of a aavage,
Givea a lift to daily labor.
An' by makln' tempers sweeter,
la an aid
To all religion."
Boy Cared of Croup la Fifteen
Minutes.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy cured our
little 4-year-old boy of croup In fifteen
minutes. My wife and I have used this
remedy In our family for the past five
years, having tried many other kinds pre
vious to that time, and can say that we
consider it far superior to any other. We
are never without It In our home. Frank
Hellyer, Ipava, 111.
session of all ths means of transport to
gether." The surface facilities contribute extraor
dinarily high payments to the municipal
treasury. For the underground tunnels the
city reserves only sufficient rental to pay
Interest on the capital cost and to wipe out
the principal In seventy-five years.
The changes of policy represented by
these dramatic contrasts constitute one of
the most striking pages of recent municipal
history.
There are In the city nearly fifty "bus
routes, about sixty tram lines and numerous
"penetration" lines, which run also into the
suburbs. The 'buses and a considerable part
of the tram cars are still drawn by horses,
while the balance of the tram lines are
operated by nine different kinds of mechan
ical power, namely, cable, compressed air,
the overhead trolley (on one short line), the
underground trolley, the storage battery,
the surface contact system and three sys
tems of applying steam. Half a score of In
dependent companies conduct these unre
lated systems. Accommodations are Insuffi
cient, speed Is slow, routes are disjointed,
transfers are only given between lines of the
same company, and then only for first-
class fares. The situation Is prejudicial
alike to operating economy and public con
venience. .
The cost to' users Is also high. A few of
the electric "penetration" lines have 2 and S
cent fares within the city. The prevailing
fares, however, are 3 cents for second-class
and 6 cents for first-class, while only the
latter fare carries the right to a transfer.
These rates are very high In comparison
with European standards, and especially
for a city comprising 2,600,000 people within
an area of only thirty square miles. The
extraordinary number of Paris cabs, about
10,000. and their comparatively high rates
about 35 cents per ride also reflect the un-
satlsfactorlness of surface accommodations.
From the various sorts of surface facili
ties, however, cabs, 'buses and tram cars.
the city actually receives something like
$1,200,000 in special payments each year.
Even' 'bus, for example, pays a license fee
of $300 yearly, and the proverbial prohibi
tion against crowding in Paris conveyances
is probably Intended more to prevent a re
duction of such license fees than as a pro
tective measure for passengers. On the un
derground road, where there is no such
license fee, crowding goes on unhindered.
The lack In the great French metropolis
of even creditable, to say nothing of su
perior, means of surface travel. Is doubt
less attributable In part at least to a greedy
Instead of an enterprising publlo attitude
toward the whole subject. The monopoly
fifty-year franchise of the General Omnibus
company has amounted to a compact be
tween the city and the company to exploit
tne pubiio Dy taking large profits for esch
party to that compact without promoting
advanced or even up-to-date transportation
development. Chicago Record-Herald.
l"jB3RKS9S&SBCnfiS3ESa5aISSSSSSB
1 Furniture
Rugs
Curtains
snn
You Can Buy
Saturday
and
Monday
BOSTON ROCICBRS
High spindle back solid Arm Rocker 'worth 13. Bo rf
tot ................. ..vU
A.RM CI1A.IR
Solid oak, high spindle back, solid Arm Chair the ft.26 kind a
good office or library chair for
1.75
SUTTEES
Library or Reception Hall Settees 4n quarter-sawed oak or
mahogany carved backs worth 117.00 for m.....
.8.50
DRESSER
Large Solid Oak Dresser base 46 inobea long French plat mir
ror 24x20 nicely carved worth $14.00 for
RUGS AND CURTAINS
8.50
If you want Rugs, we will save you fully 18 per cent on your purchase.
The largest line of up-to-date Room Slxe Rugs in the city.
ORIENTAL RUGS
For two days we will giva you
of Oriental Rugs.
a 25 per cent discount on our full line
CURTAjNS
We will place on sale 100 pairs fine Brussels and Arabs Cur
tains worth $5.00 for per pair..... ................ .......
.2.75
Baker Furniture Co.
1315-17-19 Farnam Street.
JKIUESIIIHBEIBBiaillBIEEZIUIZBIKlIEBUKEimilSIBIKa
ha
Si
Bolls, Sores and Felons
Find prompt, sure cure In Bucklen's Arnica
Balve, also ecsema, salt rheum, burns,
bruises and piles, or no pay. 25c. For sale
by Kuhn As Co.
Inspect the Pnblle Schools.
HOSTON. Oct 80. The last day of the
visit to this city of the members of the
Mosely Educational commission from Great
Britain opened with an Inspection of the
pubiio schools of the city for the third
time. The viHitors slso spent several hours
at Harvard university.
RAPID TRANSIT IN PARIS
Snrfaea and Vnderaroand Means of
Transportation Varied and
Inferior.
The surface transportation facilities of
Paris are the most expensive in fares and
ths most belated to fee found In any great
city of the continent. The new Parts un
derground road now partially In operation
promises to be the cheapest and most
complete local rapid transit system ever
undertaken.
The aurface facilities are privately owned
and operated. The underground is leased to
an operating company, but the tunnels are
built and owned by the city.
The surface facilities are In the main cov
ered by a franchise extension granted In
1800 for fifty years, without any available
reservation for municlpallsatlon during the
period. The underground is leased for a
period of thirty-five years, with the right
reserved to the city to take over the busi
ness on equitable terms after 1910.
The unvarying practice for surface facili
ties has been to lease them solely to private
enterprise. The city's most resolute stand
In the negotiations for leasing ths under
ground was that taken for the right of mu
niclpallsatlon after 1910, and. according to
the official report, the special object of fix
ing upon this date "on which ths omnibus
and tramway monopoly expires," was to In
cur th city the right thea te take poa-
A RAINPROOF
OVERCOAT
this famous mark
elfrtd Benjamin 5$
MAKERS NEWyORK
A perfect Rain Coat a stylish
rail Overcoat Olive, tan, and
gray rainproof fabrics! contain
no rubber never neat you up
or smell musty like a mackin
tosh or rubber coat 50 Inches
long i with or without belt in
the back i hand -shaped and
hand tailored like all other
BENJAMIN Clothes. The Ideal!
all-around coat for correct,
economical dressers.
Ths pries Is rl ght Your money
back II anything goes wrong.
This store ll them hers ao
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GUARANTEE CLO. CO.
1519-21 Doujlas Street
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You'll be interested in this advance sale Ti
3 rf Fnll nttrl Winter Suits ntirl Overcnnt if vnu M
8 wish to save money.
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Here's 140.00 worth of merchandise for Q
$20.00 Suit and Overcoat Exquisite cloth- W
ing, new and up-to-date, $20, $18, $15. p
Black Cheviot Overcoat, very long, $15 to H
$20.
Oxford Frieze Overcoat, very long, $15 to jj
$20 Overcoats, same material, knee Si
lengths. , B
Men's and Youths' Fall and Winter Weigh
S Suits, $15 to $18; well made, fancy mixed
S suits, $15 to $18; blue or black cheviot suits,
g regular $15 to $18; black thibet suit, $15 to L
Jj $18; black unfinished worsted suits, all IP
m marked down for a quick sale to
$10.00
Take advantage of this
special sale
m
Clothing Dept. f
5 MAIN FLOOR. S
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TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER
.Aafrass Omaha, Ken.
TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER
Adareas Omaha, Xefc.
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