I TOE OMAITA DAILY DEE: SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 1004. r THE GREATEST AND MOST IMPORTANT Z3 U A Sale of Mens Shoes that mams much Kii ON BARGAIN SQUARE THAT EVER TOOK PLAGE IN AMERICA i i.Vje v '' imp s Mm 4f$$MPm mm mnmMim iff , 1 vRws J Am M J2) IliU "SO tori rZS e Exccllcjit Leathers, Fine Shocmaking I Second Floor frlen's S3-50-S4 Shoes bargain squares m 4 on Second Floor at... 45 wet' ALL THE SURPLUS STOCK BOUGHT FROM Jg 14 Vaverly Place, How York i AT THE BIGGEST BARGAINS IN OUR HISTORY For the past few years Brandeis has bought the surplus fall and winter stock of the great S. H. Marks & Co., New York house Thousands of well dressed Omaha men every year have benefitted by this chance to buy a fash ionable "S. H. M. & Co's. overcoat or suit at a greatly reduced price. This year the stock is bigger and finer than ever before by far the greatest oppor tunity ever offered to Omaha men. fer.l'- W : ' ? J fefl; ill? bargain square by it self. Real Welt Soles, Oak Bottoms. Uppers made of best Imported Enamels, Patent Coltskins, Box Calfskin, Vicl Kidskin, ALL NEW UP-TO-DATE STYLES Thts lot of over a thousand pairs is the balance of the Lin coln Street Boston purchase, whteh was delayed in shipment, and the shoes in this sale tomorrow are the best of them all. Choice of all the SIO and 12.50 Overcoats j and Suits Frtm p II II 0 n Stock o.n.m.ttuu. t Choice of all the SI6 and SI8 vercoats and Suits S.H.M.&G0.T From the (p) -X. I ON BARGAIN SQUARE All sizes Finest Ouercoets & Suits ,1 . Chicg Choice of All the FROM THE S. H. M. & CO. STOCK -These are the swellest, haodsoraest suits and overcoats that ever went on special Bale every new style all the newest wiuter shades and mixtures. They are worth $22.50 and $25. Your choice U 4 egins Tomorrow. sya to 8 D, L EE On immense bargain squares. 'The tfhole length of the second floor shoe department Each size by itself splendid hidsktn up' pers I ight, medium and heavy soles. Every pair special good value. LADIES Nice Shoes at V'w.:,, '''Vat, rv1EK3'S SS.25 SHIRTS at 29c A Big Special Purchase of Manufacturer's High Grade Sample Shirts. -every 29c We bought an eastern manufacturer's samples- one ho bad negligee shirts that are sold all over the coun try at 91 and $1.25 -high grade shirts with collars attached or detached and many men's extra heavy we also include 200 doz. government flannel shirts regularly worth $1-1.25' New Fall Negligee Shirts at 49c and 75c. All of them are new late fall patterns well made and suitable for durable business wear 4 Qn "7 C worth as high as $1.50 at TC- i DC Men's Fine Custom Made Shirts. These are the very latest styles in stiff bosom shirta culis made on shirt or separate stylish ngures, worth up to $8 :...98c to $2 Men's Hats in Latest Fall Style Right new and up to date in every feature the very latest New York fashion all the (P most popular colors and P shapes in soft and stiff hats the "Brandeis Special" is the best hat you can buy for. J. B. Stetson Hats Every Man knows them the best and most dur Ajft able hats in the country, at... J.'TtJ . . BOY'S CAPS Uouble and single bands, plain and iancy colors worth as high as 50c each your choice Big Purchase of men's Underwear 19c Manufacturer Sells Us All Ills Surplus Stock of Hlgrh Class Medium and Heavy Weight Winter Underwear. A bargain snap in every man's reach good warm winter undershirts and drawers silk fleece, plush back and Derby ribbed worth up to $1, at. Men's $1.50 Underwear at 75c Finest underwear in the entire purchase natural grey and salmon color wool derby ribbed wool in brown, cream and tan worth up to $l.BO, at Coopers, Winsted fe Hoots Tivola Un- derifour very high grade, at 35c-45c 75 c derour-very QQ . 1A 1 CA it Ut IU tm.Jt Broken lots of men's worth 75u, at Munsin? Union Suits finest underwear LlVS.'.l.SOtoSO 25c iiae fleece lined and derby ribbed underwear, M MYSTIC "HOLE-IN-THE-WALL" Haunt of Western Desperadoes in the Tetone of Wjominr. once the site of an ancient lake Idal Hldlnar Places to Elud Pnranlt BeatnalBas o the "Wild Banch" ma Other Raatlcra Hot Fight . la Years Put. la tha chapter of "The Virginian" Im mediate! r following the opa called "Super stltlon Trait," Owen Wlster has sketched the rendesvous of the Wyoming; "wlld bunch" which ia known locally as "The Hole ia the Wall." and also as "Jackson's Hole." It Is hleh up lit the Teton range of mountains. After the dramatlo scena among the cottonwoods, when Steve and Ed were hanged to expiate their high crime of cattle "rustling," It will be remembered that the Virginian and his companion struck off through the hills and up to the higher peaks. Xter a long climb up a rocky trail the two gained the basin, where Bhorty'a final tragedy was played. Out of that green retreat only Tram pas merged hla horee'a hoofprinta were fol lowed by the two. "Somewhere at the eastern basa of the Tetons did those hoofprinta dlaappear Into, a mountain sanctuary where many crooka ths have led. He that took another Joan's poaaesalons, or he that took another ilaA's Ufa. could always run her If the or popuUr "justice were to hot at his neeta. Steep rangea and forests walled him In from the world on all four aide, almost without a break; and every entrance lay through Intricate solitudes. Snake river came Into the place through canyons and mounrrul pine and msrihea, to the north, and went out at the south between formid able chasms. Every tributary to this stream rose among the high peaks and ridges, and descended into the valley by well-nigh Impenetrable couraes; pacific creek from Two-Ooaan paaa; Buffalo fork, from no pass at all; Black Hot It, from the To-wo-gee-tee paaa all these, and many mora, were the waters ct loneliness. among whose thousand hiding placea it was easy to be loat. Down In the bottom was a spread of level land, broad and beauti ful, wllh the blue and silver Tetons rising from Its chain of lakes In the west, and other heights presiding over its sides. And up and down and In and out of the hollow square of mountains, where waters plenti fully flowed and game and natural pas ture abounded, there skulked a nomadic and distrustful population." Refuge for Thieve and Hardarors. It was to "The Hole in the Wall" that Trampaa and Shorty, with but one horse between them, had fled. Trampaa got there, and waa a wallowed up; and Shorty, a victim to "necessity," waa left behind. In the real life of Wyoming scores of "rustlers" and murderers and truln rob bers have found refuge from eager pur suit in the "Hole." After the raid on the bank at Cody two weeks ago, whose only result was the killing of a brave cashier, it was to the "Hole" in the Tetons that the raiders fled, nearly 100 miles southeast. Tom Horn, hanged last year after a pic turesque career aa a cattle thief and bad man, knew the "Hole"; "Black Jack" Tom Ketchum, hanged at Clayton, N. M., was known a the original leader of the "wild bunch" that uaed the mountain refuge of Wyoming; Harvey Logan, who killed him self a few months ago at Parachute, Colo., when surrounded by officers, and half a score of others, knew these gloomy, enclos ing mountain walls. To the northwest the Teton range has been what the Algerian mountains are to the people of Tangier, a safe hiding place for whatever Raisul! gained their shadowa. If It were possible to go straight north west from Cheyenne toward the Yellow stone reservation. "The Hole In the Wall" mould be found to 11 almost directly In the way, and less thsn 100 miles from the southeast corner of the great national park. Once upon a time, a geologist would describe It, this hug cup In the mountains wss evidently a lake. In the course of centuries (a geologist always seems to speak loosely) the waters of ths laks gnawsd their way out In a narrow stream where It was easiest to break through. loiter the outlet became a deep gorge, and the waters of the lake fell lower and lower until the one wide and deep body of water became but aa Interrupted chain of small pool and a rapid little stream that Is a veritable torrent when the snow melts In the spring. It was the reced ing lake that left the "bleak, crumbled rim" that ran "like a rampart between the towering tops," and under that rim sub terranean passages and staring caves were left, too, where a cautious man, familiar with ' the basin, might hide and be safe from capture for any length of tlmo. The entrance to the "Hole." and Its exit, are narrow, steep, rock-bottomed gorges through which the prehistoric lake found Its way to lower levels. Ead of the Wild Bonc-h. The end of the "wild bunch" has been announced to a relieved northwest more than once. When Logan was found self killed an enthuslastlo sheriff wired to a Chicago detective agency whose work had been onerous in Wyoming and Colorado: "Dead robber abaolutely Identified as Logan. This means the end of the Hole In the Wall gang." In the minds of the thief takers and men tamers of the west, Harvey Logan, who was better known as "Kid Curry," was the leader of that band. "The Hole In the Wall" without Logan would surely become but a memory of wickedness. To that versatile outlaw had been credited the leadership of the "bunch" that robbed the Butte County bank at Belle Fourche, B. D., In 1897; that held up a Union Paclflo train at Wilcox, Wyo.. in 1899; that robbed another express car at Tipton; that looted the First National bank at Wlnnemucca, Nev.. of over $30,000 In 1900. and that got $36,000 from a Great' Northern train at Wag ner. Mont.. In 1901. By the time he was run to eerth It was thought that the "wild bunch" had dwindled to "Kid Curry" and two others. It waa known that "Butch" Caseldy (a sinister, fitting name) and Harry Longbaugh. the "Sundance Kid," were at large, but It was thought that they had de serted "The Hole In ths Well" forever. Now. with Colonel Cody and his Indian scout on ths trail of ths men who killed Cashier Mlddaugh. and with ths trail pointing again to the Teton range retreat. It la not, so certain that th regnancy In outlawry lapsed when Harvey Logan killed hlmaelf at parent. It la even hinted that the great "Bill" Cnisans. who wss re ported to have been killed in a fight with officers. Is still alive. ,nj a leader of sor ties from the "Hola," Haaat af tha Oatlaw. For fifteen year, at least. "Th Hoi In th Wail" has been known and used by th outlawed among the cowboy and gamblers of the northwest. It waa In 1S92 that its secrets were revealed to the world. In that year a Northern Pacific train was held up near Big Timber. Mont., h press car plundered. The "Job" vas well done, and the posse formed to run down inn louoers naa a long, stern chase. One man, Camilla Hanks, was captured. He was the "Deaf Charlie" of rne gang, and from him the officers got the first trust worthy Information concerning the "wild bunch." He was from Texas, as was Ben Kilpatrlck, the "Tall Texan," who was neatly trapped by detectives while on a drunken spree In St. Louis. .After serving a ten years' sentence at Deer Lodge, Mont., he returned to the old life, to be killed twoyears ago by a posse at San Antonio. It Is the general belief In the country where such things are most tulked about that at least one woman wa an active member of the "wild bunch," and knew the secrets of the "Hole." She was Laura Bul lion, an Intimate of the "Tall Texan," who fled to St. Louis with Kilpatrlck after the robbery of the Great Northern express car at Wagner, Mont. When arrested her satch el contained some thousands of unsigned bank note of the National Bank of Mon tana and the American National Bank of Helena. She, with Kilpatrlck. Is serving a terra in the penitentiary at Jefferson City, Mo. The outlawed went to th "Hole" by e cret way, one by one; they gathered there to plan tha next raid. Bending out courier to collect the news that would be likely U ut oi vaius to them. Their arrangements made, they slipped out of th "Hoi" one by one. to meet perhaps two weeks later and aw miles away and carry out a raid. When a robbery had been committed and th plunder wa distributed every man had to defend himself. He might go southwest Into Arlson or Into southern California, th whim might tak him down into th Rio Grands country, or Chicago or Bt. Louis might draw him. But when ths ohas grew stern and the money grew scarce the "Hole In the Wall" was ths final refuge. Even those men who, for one rea son or another, gave up the Robin Hood existence and became, as Mr. Wlster de scribed them, "the honest citizens of the Hole," were always resdy to furnish food and new to th hunted. It wa when th refugees left th "Hole" and put sslde the tremendous advantage of Its (talus sea that they were "plucked." Thus "Flat Nosed George" was killed In a fight with Utah officers; Sam Ketchum was wounded and captured near Cimarron, N. M.; "Black Jack" Tom Ketchum, another brother, was also taken In New Mexico; Bob Lee, Tom O'Day, and Elza Ray fell victims to the law far out of sight of the Tetons. There was nothing In the "Hole" worth having except safety, and that was worth risking when a man had money and a six-months-old desire to spend It on a glorious carouse. New York Post, If you hav anything to trade advertise It In the For Exchange column of Th Bee want ad page. INDIAN RELICS AND MINERALS Notable Collection Hade In Thirty Year by an Arkansas Man, Among ths largest privste collections within Its range anywhere In the country Is aald to be that of Frank Howlund of Little Rock, Ark. It Is mainly In the line of In dian relics, mineral and geological speci mens. Bom of the rarest minerals are to b found in this collection, on which Mr. Howland ha been engaged for thirty years. His home Is especially built for this large collection, which occupies a room to Itself, th wall of which are lined with cases built to show to best advantage ttvt eplen dld specimens. In soms of ths case th shelve sre plate glass swung on brass chains; In others there are graduated atep shelves on which th specimens are carefully exhibited. To enumerate the varieties would fee to make a list column long, but among the most noticeable are the large specimens of amethyst In various shades of purple, agate In stripes and bands In rose color, green, yellow and brown, crystals In various slsss and a clear as diamonds. Chief among the crystals Is a perfect oross of Hot Hprlngs diamonds, which Is mounted on black velvet In a gold frame and Is one of Mr. Howlund's moat cherished possessions. There are opals from Mexico, pearls from Arkansas, brilliantly colored stones from Island of ths sea, while the collection of minerals snd ore Is msde up of specimens from all part of th world (bat rang n J size from diamonds no larger than a needle eye to massive pieces weighing 120 pounds. There are In the collection specimens of clay with the diamonds Imbedded, quartz with yellow gold showing In pockets, curious formations of a combination of metals and stones nnd a few crystals, Iw slda which an imprisoned drop of water can be seen following the motion of the atone. There are thousands of specimens of the rare and Interesting kind, each with Its own peculiar boauty and Interest. The Indian relics comprise wearing ap parel, beaded work and leather goods, and a large collection of pottery, every piece of which Is valuable because genuine, most of It being obtained by Mr. Howland him self or under his supervision. The latest addition to this collection Is a bowl which h recently unearthed from a mound and which was found In tha skele ton hand of an Indian who ages ago had been burled under the sand mound. The skeleton was In a sitting posturs when dis covered. A string nf wampum beads was also found In this grave. Among the most valuable pieces In the pottery collection .Is a head bowl, which design Is quite rare. There are also several piece In the animal design ami ons large bowl. Arrowheads by th hundred may be seen In this Interesting place, with different styles of stone weapons. Mr. Howland haa also In his possession some valuable pieces of carved Ivory from Japan and China, a large tortoise shell, the sword of a swordflsh, th saw of a saw fish, coals, sea urchins, starfish, sea fans and beautifully tinted shells. The collection of prehistoric specimens Is large and Interesting and tells In broken chapters ths story of vegetation In the car boniferous age. ImpresMons of ferns In the leter sand stone and clay depoelts sre Interesting snd his colloctlon of petrified wood Is one of the finest anywhere, as It should be, Mr. Howlsnd being the discoverer of this novel curiosity. Mr. Howland Is n authority on such specimen, as mk his large collection and haa furnished some valuable papers for leading publications In this line. in srtdltlon to this unusually handsome snd valuable collection he has collections of stamps, coins, ei'j.. ahlle Mr. Howland has a unl-jus collsctlon of dogs, single sod la tamlllw, wlUob Pwy plo oo ft cas of shelves In the parlor. St. Louis Republic. Pointed Paragraph. Society 1 a machine operated by cranka, Women are never Insincere when angry. , Many a candidate for office gets nothing, but experience. Tha moth always look on th bright :1e of the flame. Never bet on a sure thing unless you can afford to lone. Tim softens all things except boarding house biscuit. Nothing destroy th memory of a man like doing him a favor. If a man Is In love ha doesn't think tha woman in the casn talks too much. It Isn't necessary to acquire an auto mobile In order to run Into debt. It sometime happens that a girl hides the family Bible In order to keep her age hid. ' The pessimist make mountains out of molehill and th optimist makes molehill out of mountain. If satsn's janitor were anything Ilk th apartment house brand his tenants would soon be kicking for more heat Chicago News. Be Want Ads produce result. Former Governor 1 Wona NEW YORK. Nov. 18. Jiufh Smith Thompson, former Kovernor of S iuth Caro lina, who has been critically 111 at his home here, was still alive today. He passed a reetbsn night and was much weaker this morning. . - ... - 1 n 7-7-z special MMvenir bale THE UNION PACIFIC TEA CO. JH4 n. ftllTKKNTH T. For Satarday, Nov, lIMta and Hon day. Nov. Hist FRfcrVl FR "EI! FREE!!! IMPORTED Gold Band Gup and Saucer To all purchasi-rs of To. Coffee, Baking Powder, hpices. etc., In addi tion to the usual checks. HOARS OI.U AT COST, . THE UNION PACIFIC TEA CO. M. Istecata St., Omaha, Re. .... u1.' " mj