THE OMAIIA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, NOVEMBER fi, 1903. CHILD INS I RUCTION GREAT ' Frtt idnt Wadiwonb of BsUstus Talk on Beligioui Train in 5 f loath. CHRISTIAN EDUCATION A NECESSITY lnhop WortMnajtoa Srrnoilin on th SlftnlSoanre of Little Thins Whea Done to Adyanoe Christ's ( aose. President Guy W. Wadsworth of Hcllevue coll'jw preached Sunday morning at Caste! lar Street Presbyterian church. He spoke of the training of children and youths and praised the email Christian college. Said he: "The Instruction given a child la the most Important Instruction ever given a human being. Every evangelist knows that the most frequent way In which hearts are reached and souls saved Is by appeals to a mother's prayers or a father's teachings. "In the rush of twentieth century life parents often forget the duty of properly training their children. If we realise th'it 1 hat we must do It we will find plenty of time fof It. The men that are honest to the core, that can be depended upon to stand as firm as the everlasting rocks, no matter what the temptation, are those that have received a good training in their home, who have been taught from earliest youth that God Is all, their Creator and King, and they owe all to Him. "Family worship should be made Inter esting and helpful In every way. I believe In this day of perfection of Sabbath schools we sometimes delegate too much to the church, rather than holding In the family many Influence! which can be bettor ex erted upon the child there. "When wc come to the time when the young man or young woman Is about to take a college cnurso a critical period has arrived. 1 think tlic best way Ik for the average young person to go to a college reasonably small, where the contact be tween student and faculty amounts to something. After graduation it Is time to go to' the university. The spiritual educa tion Is vastly more Important than educa tion of mind or body. The statement of Lord Wellington that 'education without re ligion would end only In making men clever devils' la true. We are familiar with the re cent story of the school superintendent who used his education to steal a. million or so. Had he lacked the education he might have been able to ateal no more than chickens." CHRIST A MA OF AM, ATIOS Her. C. H. Maxwell Says Portrait Was . Purposely I.eft Ont of Bible. Hev. C. H. Maxwell of Minneapolis occu pied the pulpit at the Second Presbyterian church Bumlay morning, In the absence of Rev. Newman Hall Burdlck, the pastor, who Is assisting In 'the evangelical move ment at Minneapolis. Mr. Maxwell, telling of the good work being done at Minneapo lis, said that one evening last week the movement was carried Into one of the lower class theaters, which was filled by men eager to listen to the word of God, and that over 100 were converted. "Today Is the first day In Its history that all saloons are closed In Minneapolis, and although It has taken the reform mayor one year to bring about this state of af falra. It Is really accomplished." Mr. Maxwell took as his text the Urn;. "His face did shine as to the sun," and drew many lessons from a study of the Imagined face of the Savior, . "Kveryona has tried to picture the face of Christ, but the picture all depends upon the time of Christ's career which one con siders. All humanity and all things divine are pictured In His face. When we think of the Savior we do not think of Ills form or hand or feet, but of His face. No ex act picture of Christ has coma down to us, cither by description or portrait, and nil pictures which we see of the Savior are man's conceptlbn of how wa would think that He should look. ' 'The exact likeness of the Savior waa left out of the Bible on purpose, so that each nation could Imagine Him aa belong ing to that particular nation or race. Read the Bible and get your own conception of the Savior and then draw your own picture of Him, and remember that for nineteen centuries the face of Christ has been be fore the throne ef God, pleading for you and me." ARMENIAN CHRISTIANS FAITHFUL I.OB-Tlme Missionary Tells of Their Needs and Their Sacrifices. Rev. John K. Brown of Harpoot, Turkey, occupied -the pulpit of Plymouth Congrega tional church Sunday morning. Dr. Brown has for the past thirty years been engaged In missionary work in Turkey. Hla sermon bora particularly upon foreign mission work and the necessity for its extension among the' Armenian Christiana. "There Is an Inadequate conception," ha said, "regarding the real meaning of Ar menian Christianity. It la a combination of the Greek, Nestorlan and Armenian doc trlnea and la overburdened with rituals, the same aa prevailed 1.600 years ago. The priests are woefully Ignorant and are gen erally very old men, for young men will not enter the priesthood. The Armenians, while nominally Christians, are as much In need or the gospel as those. In the uttermost darkneas. What they need Is the privilege of modern enlightenment. Christ left to us the work of evangelising ttTe world and we are recreant to our duty when we fall to do s. "Those who have become converted to the living gospel of Christ are Intensely loyal and earnest. Though poor In purse they cheerfully and lovingly contribute of their means to the support of their churches and missions. "Does foreign mission work pay? The best answer is given In the fact that In 189, 4,000 of these Christians, our converts, died not In the arena, but atone in their homes and stables, because of their love for Christ. Then let It be that we can unite In prayer to Christ that we may establish the work of our hands upon them for His sake." SMALL SEEDS WORK FOR SlVAHO Head of Episcopal Diocese rlmpba alsea Doing; of Present Dntf. Bishop Worthlngton preached the sermon at Trinity cathedral Sunday morning, tak ing for his text the Incident where the rod of Moses was turned Into a serpent by the Lord. The supreme need of paying atten tion to small things and of doing with good grace apparently Insignificant duties was the lesson the bishop sought to con vey. He said, in part: "Obedience Is the universal rule laid down by God for those who would serve Him faithfully. Our own estimate of our capa bilities, our personal opinion of possible success or failure, must be laid aside. Our weakness may be the very reason why we are seelcted to do God's work. God does not care whether we are great men or not, but He does care that we should set forth to the world His message to man for salvation. : "God gave to Moses a respect for com mon things and he wielded the shepherd's staff then as the agent and teacher of God's truth. Human agencies, when God uses them, are not controlled by human measurements. He says we Khali not pre vail by might or by power, but by His Spirit. We must learn the very important lesson of self-surrender; we must give our selves wholly and without reserve into God's hands. It is thus that we may be come a power for good and not by the qualifications we may think makes us com petent for great things. We should obey and serve wherever we may be placed. "Every now and then God takes a com monplace man and, because of, his charac ter and worth, makes him the Instrument of society for achieving great ends. God comes at times and dissipates .all our dreams of elaborate machinery. We arc thus taught to do that today which Is at our hand. Each one of us has a present duty which must lie performed. The les sn Is simple and direct to all who would make their lives useful, noble, and. a blessing to the world we are to begin here and now to do God's work, to do that which Ho has put In our way. Seek Him and your strength will be made per-fect.v Going to Bed Hungry. It Is All Wrong and Man la the Only Creature That Does It, The complete enmptineia of the stomach during sleep adds greatly to the amount of emaciation. aleepliness and general weakness so often met with. There la a perpetual change of tissues in the body, sleeping or waking, and the supply of nourishment ought to be somewhat con tinuous and food taken just before retiring, adds more tissue than is destroyed, and In creased weight and vigor the result. Dr. W. T. Cathell says: "All animals except man eat before sleep and there is no reason In Nature why man should form the excep tion to the rule." If people who are thin, nervous and sleepless would take a light lunch of bread and milk or oatmeal and cream and at the aame time take a safe, harmless stomach remedy like Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets in order to aid the stomach in digesting it, the result will be a surprising Increase in weight, strength and general vigor. The only drawback has been that thin, nervous, dyspeptic people cannot digest and asslmi- ' late wholesome food at night or any other time. For such It is absolutely necessary to use Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, 'because they will digest the food, no matter how weak the stomach may be, noruibhing the body and resting' the stontach at the same time. ,i Dr. Stevenson says: "I depend almost entirely upon Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets In 'treating indigestion, because It is not a quack nostrum, and I know just what they contain. a combination of vegetable essences, pure pepsin. They cur Dyspep sia and stomach troubles, because they can't help but cure." Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are sold by druggists everywhere ' at 60 centa per package. They are In losenge form, pleasant to take, and con tain . nothing but pure pepsin, vegiUblo eaeences and bismuth. at-jnUfk'ally com pounded. Your druggist will UU yuu they give universal aatUiactloo, - HUNGARIANS JJAME A TICKET Candidates for Various OHlces Are Endorsed by I'nanlmona Vote of Good Meeting;. At a well attended meeting of the Hun garian Social club yesterday, the following candidates were unanimously endorsed: D. M. Haverly for county clerk, Robert O. Fink for county treasurer, Herman .Beal for surveyor, E. F. Bralley for coroner, Frank Bandle for register of deeds. Bryce Crawford for police judge, Emmet G. Solo mon and William O. I're for county com missioners. Charles Singer acted as sec retary. A prominent member of the republican county central committee expressed himself as being disgusted with the attempted but ting Into the work of the committee by Tom Blackburn and his particular friends. "Blackburn waa dead politically years ago," said the member, In giving expres sion to his resentment. "He doesn't seem to know how little figure he really cuts in the community, however. He. wrecked Dave Mercer and anything he touches suf fers by reason of his connection. Black burn and his friends In sending out their postals urging voters to register took pains to send none Into the lower wards of the city, with an eye to the possible effect In the spring campaign. They are playing the old game for which they have always been distinguished, and It Is surprising to me as well as to others that they should have the Impudence to even attempt to poke their noses Into our committee business." That Mr. Leslie's debut aa a letter writer haa not brought him any peace of mind la the judgment of even his friends. It is known that many of the men who have felt kindly toward him have not hesitated to tell him that he has blundered very seriously. One of the most prominent "antls," a can didate for mayor. Is understood to have said he will vote the ticket straight with the ex ception of Leslie. The chief clerk's par ticular blunder, It Is now developed,'. waa to allow Burnett or Blackburn, or both, to write his letter. They could not disguise their well known characteristics, and Leslie is to reap the resulting landslide of the votera from this cause. SUNDAY HUNT ENDS IN DEATH Seventeen-Vear-Old Jake Craig; Vic tim of the Carelessness of a, Comrade. The careless handling of a shotgun cost the life of Jake Craig, 17 years of age, yesterday afternoon along the Burlington tracks, near Gibson. William Blnkley, 17 ears of age, who did the shooting, la held at the city jail on the charge of "suspicious character," pending an investi gation. Coroner Bralley haa the body of young Craig and will hold an Inquest. Sunday afternoon Jake, Harry and Ernest Craig and William Blnkley went hunting along the river. One of the boys laid the shotgun down beside the track while they picked some .burrs from their clothes. Soon a flock of pigeons aame within rar.go and one of the boys ex claimed, "There's some pigeons; drop them." The gun, which waa already cocked, was picked up by Binkley, who in some man ner discharged the weapon, the load hit ting the Craig boy In the side. The Injured boy dropped and died almost instantly. He was standing about six feet from Blnkley. The shot was No. 12. William Blnkley resides at 414 Walnut street, while, the other boys five in the Immediate neighborhood. Officer Patullo and Detective Mitchell made an Investigation of the case and learned the shooting was accidental, al though the result of carelessness. FOUNDER'S DAY AT CREIGHTON Religions Service to Precede Formal Memorial Exercises at the I nlversltjr. Toduy will be observed as Founder's day at Crelghton university. Edward A. Cielgli ton. the founder will be the personality to hold the attention of the students and the visitors. At the memorial exercises In the university R. E. McNally of the senior class will deliver an oration appropriate to the occasion. President Dowliug will also make an address. These formal exercises will be preceded by services In St. John's Colli glate v hurch, beginning at S o'clock. BUSTER BROWN IN TOE FLESH Man who Draws Celebrated Cartoon Pays Omaha t Visit TELLS THE IRiGIN OF EEL'S FUNNY BOY Just Loves "Kids" and Delights In Watching Their Antic and Then Puts Them on Paper. Richard F. Outcault, cartounlst, father of Buster Brown, the Yellow Kid and many other notable characters, arrived In the city Sunday for his entertainment at the Boyd this afternoon. With his man ager he Is stopping at the Her Grand. "What do you think of a newspaper man that seeds a manager?" said Mr. Outcault. Readers of The Omaha Bee are' familiar with Buster Brown, for he comes to the reading public of Omaha each 8unda by means of The Bee and children all cry for It. Mr. Outcault Is making a tour of the country, giving Illustrated talks on car toons. He does not like the name lecture to be applied to his talks because that sounds too formal, when the Idea Is more of an entertainment, especially adapted for the younger people, with lota of moat for the older folks. Mr. Outcault Is noted aa a story teller and Is famous as a chestnut) detector, priding himself with being always "there" with a fresh story. Mr. Outcault is often asked how he came to be a cartoonist and in reply to that' question Sunday night said: How He Happened. "Oh, I Just worked Into ' it. You never see a man succeed in this business who sets out to be funny. Take some man with talent who wants to be an artist or an actor or something more serious and ho suddenly dlscovtiiw that he Is better fitted to go into the comic field. The Buster Brown pictures ate natural se quences of my fad for jokes and stories! I need some vehicle or clothes line on which to present them to the public and hit upon Buster to carry out my plan. When I started out to draw children's pictures it was because I saw there waa a fine opening for such a line of work. Besides I love children. Wilton Lackaye has a child with him here at the hotel which he dresses like Buster, and you should have seen him look at me Just now when Mr. Lackaye told him that I was Buster's papa. I . don't see how anyone could help but be fond of kids. To me 'kid' humor is the brightest humor of ad just good and clear, like kids themselves. Then the child proposition appeala to all. I have two children of my own at homo, and I know what I am talking about. "Children all over are crazy about Buster and his dog Tlge. I am glad. The Bee Is publishing these pictures, for I know that every boy and girl in town will want to tee Buster and Tlge. I was at a Chicago theater when a Buster Brown show was In progress and ' the word got out that Buster's pa waa on the stage.. The kids poured down from the gallery to the stge door to see Buster and. his pa.-. I had to do something to disperse the crowd so I called out, 'Buster, take Tlge and go over to the hotel at once.' The hotel waa soon as Jammed aa the theater. Jnst Feels for Laach. "Now, this affair at the Boyd Monday Is billed as a lecture, but It Is not a lecture and I don't want people to think that I am going to lecture them. What I have Is a crazy quilt of the most Idiotic things that I can think of, and I am Just trying to make people laugh for one hour and fifty minutes. When" I deliver those patches of crazy quilts I need the whole stage to do It." After the lecture at the Boyd Monday afternoon, Mr. Outcault will pass down Sixteenth street In front of the Boston store and two auits, a large one and a small one, will be given to the first boys who can recognize him.: At . the matinee today Mr. Outcault will give away picture cards of the famous Buster Brown. ' ' Mr. Outcault is a Jolly good fellow of the old newspaper school who haa kept pace with modern Ideas, so much so. that The Omaha Bee is paying him a handsome salary, four theatrical companies are pay ing him large profits each week, a St. Louis shoe manufacturer Is paying him a royalty on every pair of Buster Brown ehoes turned out, a suit firm pays for the use of the Buster Brown idea and even a baker is making Buster Brown bread.. He is well groomed and the boys who look: fqr him in front of the Boston Store this after noon will see a man about six feet tall, wears glasses and has a black mustache. , Like most artists who sketch,, Mr. Out cault has to work, but unlike many of them he does not have to worry about where, the wherewithal will come from to pay bis board bill. Some artists can draw pictures but few can draw the cash that he does, and he believes In the maxim that It la all right to be wedded to art and also to di vorce the public and newspaper publishers from some of their coin. "The worry of my life la 'some of these long-haired young fellows with the big portfolios who want me to examine their work, and then to aend them on to New York with a recommendation to some man aging editor. I tell them all that it Is not so much how they draw but what they draw that takes. I tell them to put the right ideas into their work and they can easily dispose of it." Mr. Outcault is making an extended western trip, going from Omaha to Den ver, where be will let Tlge try to catch a bear, or a wildcat, which he will send to President Roosevelt, while he la gathering In a few silver dollars with his lecture and drawing a few more cartoons for The Sun day Bet. B-K wedding rings. Edau!s. Jeweler. If You Ci Pick the Riht Man We Will Give Away Free a Fine Buster Brown. Bobby Tucker Suit To the Tirst Boy Who Will Recognize Mr. R. F. Outcault, (the artist who made Buster Brown famous). Tag Him and Say: "You Are Buster Brown's Papa." . Mr. Outcault, the famous cartoonist, is in Omaha. Be tween 5 and 5:10 p. m. today he will pass by the clothing window of J. L. Brandeis & Sons, the sole agents of Buster Brown and Buddy Tucker Clothing. AH You Have to Do is to Be There at That Time, Recognize Him, and Touch " Him On the Arm, Saying: "You Are Buster Brown's Papa." If you guess the right man he will come into our store with you and you get the nice new suit of stylish clothes. How You Will Know Mr. Outcault. " Hp Is 5 fret 8 inches hlRD, wears ft long ovpfcont ftnd defhT hot." He has n moustache. ' "? Between 5 and 5:10 o'clock he will pass the Six teenth st. window at the northeast corner of our store. We invite every boy in Omaha to be in front of. our clothing window this evening at 9 o'clock. Be the first to pick out Buster Brown's pnpa' and you get the new suit. 1 MS ::; OUR LETTER BOX. Sueeaaful Strike. against lung trouble, can be engineered by Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption Coughs and Colds. 6oc and $1. For sale by Sherman & McConnell Drug Co. Preseatatlon to J. K. Uaanmund. Twrlve friends of J. E. Hammond, Twenty-fourth and Charles streets, sur prised him Saturday evening on the oc casion of the fortieth anniversary of his birth. The little stag function was thor oughly enjoved by all. Mr. Hammond waa presented with a silver mounted umbrella, the presentation speech being made by Councilman Scliroeder. James Flannlgan rendered several musical selections and Frank Bandle recited a few lines without referring to notes. Those In the running were: H. F. Brulley, Frank Bandle, W. H. Uorranie, C. E. Lovejoy, James Flannlgan, Ci. C. Fleming. Clark and Grant Hutton, Charles Grimes, Charles Toy, Jack Salmon and Peter Schroeder. C s.;. 3 ill An Arrow Chipoco Shrunk. Quarter Staes is cum ucb: t rea a quutu cloctt. pea body , co. Siitu or Clcbtt aid Mokk Ssibts Cost of Life Insurance. OMAHA, Nov. B.-To the Editor of The Bee: In an editorial Evening Bee, October 81 vou say: I The demonstrated fact Is that most of the I larger life Insurance companies csn very materially renuce tneir expenses, inistney will bo compelled to do. . Did It ever occur 'to you that rates for life Insurance the world over are substantially alike for like jiollcles? To Illustrate, con sider premiums per annum of a few foreign companies at ago of 35 on participating life policies: , 1 , Estab- i llshed. GERMAN. lSL7-Gotha .iv .S0 FRENCH. 1819 Generate ; 30.70 BRITISH. 17-Equltabl 29.92 !?&, Liverpool & London & Globe 28 13 I806 London Life -34.25' 18t-prudenUal 2S.33 1K4S Royal 1R1 Scottish Widows S8. 1826-8tandard.. TiM Now, take tf-ose companies which are ac tive In Nebraska and whose reserve basis Is substantially alike, and their premiums on the same policy are as follows: 1850-Aetna I?7.M 18 Connecticut Mutual 2K.35 1S59 Equitable 2S.11 lkrtO Oermania 2i.V7 1X45 Mutual Benefit 2K.35 1M3 Mutual Life 27.88 1850 National of Vermont 27.41 j44New Ensland ...... 27.30 145 New York Life 28 11 1858 Northwestern '. 27.93 1847 Penn Mutual 27.39 1S61 Phoenix Mutual 27.14 1875 Prudential 1867 Union OMitral v 2C.88 In, the above rates of fourteen domestic and nine foreign companies, It happens that the premiums of the Connecticut Mutual and tha Mutual Benefit are alike; that those for the Equitable and New York Life are the aame; that the premium of the Pru dential of America, company organised In 1875. Is $27.83. and that of the Standard of England, organized In 1826, are the aame: but you don't believe for one minute that the actuaries of those -particular companies conspired together to "graft" the dear pub-' lie, do you? Take out those six companies and there are left seventeen others, and each with a different rate. Why? Let us see if the why can be made plain to you and to the public. Any company reserving (this means the putting away of enough money each year to take up death' losses. aa they come, along; incidentally, too. It means that some of this "reserve" will be on hand, and therefore necessary to Invest it) on a 3 per cent basis must have at age 35 from the Insured each year he lives for a whole life policy $3.08; possibly $9 of this will be paid out during the year for deaths. If the "vitality gain" out of this f9 should be 12, $3 or M then the Insured Is entitled to Its return; In other words, this la part of his misnamed "divi dend." Now, the home office has used up 9 and has $1108 to Invest, and aa another portion of his so-called dividend the In sured Is entitled to a return of all the com pany can earn over 3 per cent, less taxes and Investment expenses. But how did the company get this $21.08? Through an ajfent; and this brings me back to the "why" a difference In premiums. The compensation to the agent comes out of a "loading" on this $21.u8; 25 per cent on $21.08 Is $5.27, thus making the premium for two of the companies $26.33. Other com panies possibly . "load" 27, per cent or more, apprehensive, perhaps, that the ex pense of commission to the agent, loss pos sibly on foraelosed real estate, error of ' judgment In some Investment, taxes and examinations by insurance commissioners, In fact any unforeseen contingency bearing , upon the cost of insurance, must come out of the "loading." Don't think, Mr. Editor, that the agent gets It all. If he did why not more well fixed agents? I venture the assertion that of all the life agents In Ne braskasolicitors, managers or general agents after you count out a half doaen men, that not one of them could go to the bank and borrow on his own note $500, aud some of these men have given almost a life time of faithful service to their companies. You cannot say that aa a rule they are spendthrifts or men of bad habits, and If not why are they not better off Individually Jn this world's goods? If there is such a snap In a life Insurance company, why don't some of Omaha's cap italists and editor quit shouting about "graft" and start a company of their own, where neither moth ner rust ran corrupt and where thieves cannot break through and steal? The agent does not condone In any degree wrongful acta of any home oflloee, but be lieves fully that such wrongs,' If proven, will be corrected, and such laws passed as will prevent a recurrence; and we believe that the most heavily Insured man In Ne braskayou, Mr. Rosewater when he care fully thinks this problem out. can be de pended upon to say In the meantime a good word for a system that paid Into Nebraska's treasury last year $1,990,204. of which Omaha received $748,710 and Lincoln $158,088, and which will have to pay to your estate when you go to heaven about $250,000. If. the level-headed editors will quit say ing that premiums are too high, that agents get too much commission and a lot of Tommy Rot Lawson stuff, many more men will die leaving their families some protec tion gainst maybe want and po-erty. The public wait now for "lower premiums"; for "I want to see the result of these ex aminations"; for this, that and the other excuse that may to them seem reasonable. But while waiting they die. and without, too. Insurance, and such editorials as yours certainly give them a wrong impression. A paragraph In the October Issue of the Life Insurance Independent seems to me hits the question of lesser rates for lif In surance about right. It Is as follows: The fact that actuarial authorities of this country are practically a unit in regard to net premium rates ft he $21.08 mentioned above. H. R. G.) aed the fact that the rates of British companies are -uniformly higher than those of American companies is the best evidence, that a reduction would not be prudent or wise, H. R. GOULD. I,a, Grippe Thrice Cared. "I have , had the grip three different times," says Mrs. Thomas Cleland of Alli ance, Ohio, "and was left with a bad cough. Every time I was cured by tha use of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, and I can not speak too highly of this valuable medi cine." ' Harry B. Davis, undertaker. . Tel. 1231 Very Low Excursion Rates November 7th, 1905, To Points la ' Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma and Indian Territory, Arkansas, I (lew Mexico and Texas. IUte 75 per cent of the On Way Rate for the Round Trip, with three woaks return limit aud choice of routes. There are home-getting op portunities In the West and Houthwesl today that will be . goue tomorrow. 8eite them NOW fln4 frtr fr llliiatrmf4 llt-,A concerning the locality that Interests you and list of opportunities. K. P. Rl'THERFORD. D. P. A., 1823 FaruAin Street. Omaha, Neb. BSs You Sometimes Annoy Your friends with that hacking cough. Why not accept a suggestion of a remedy? LA GRIPPE COUGH SYRUP Will be a relief and the relief begins with the first dose, IT STOPS THE TICKLING. RELIEVED BORENEBS SOOTHES NERVES After severe colds the cough that re main ts sometimes dangerous. LA URll'PK COUGH 8YKUP puts you on the mud to bntter health.' 1 sizes, 26c. sue and $1.5u. Sam plea free. Manufactured and sold by Sherman & McConneil Drug Co. Corner 16th and Dodgs -Streets." J Stupendous Bargains Ml This Week Creat Manufac- Strplus Dry Goods Stock of Tootle. Wheeltr 6 M otter Now On Sale. THE RKMAHLR STOKK. . . f - I 'l Hirers Continues Ml This Week. f it i L m u Men in Ml Walks of Lite Appreciate good . clothes. They e al they want quality with it. Tl 1 i .i ft al l choicest domestic and forei-rn fab- while thev last. rics are used in the construction of our Hand Tailored , Clothing and examination will prove to you their superiority in workmanship, fit and uits 12-50 O'coals 12-50 a"" to $30 uQUd' to $35 The Great Special Sale of manufacturer's surplus stock at $7.50 and $10.00 is still going on. The immensity of the purchaso leaves , us still with an assortment from which we can fit j'ou perfectly and give you value' without equals at our sale price.' The surprising high quality of these garments makes thera irresistable bargains. Splendid values at $10 and $12.50. . pri: 1.50 and $10 YOUNG MEN'S SUITS With style that pleases, quality that wears, at a price which in lowness iaCCffl 7 0 unequaled, quality of goods considered.), ttJIU B JJ CHILDREN'S SUITS AND OVERCOATS in almost unlimited variety of style, color and fabric. Unsurpassable quality at ;rd"! 1.95, 2.50, 2.95 and 3.50 fin a wfifi oj o) n A young man wants a. warm room. He will look 'orer the Room-for-Rent Ads on the Want Ad page of The' Bee. If ' your . room Is a d e r 1 1 .e d . there, he coma to look at it. ;' '' Now Is the time to rent your vacant room. You can run a 10-word ad three times for 80 eenta. . : Telepkoae SSS. i 30,000 Beal Circulation. Going to Sea by Rail Reads like a fain- taia hut u an accomDllshed fact. One of the most Interesting and difficult I eaU of ' : railroad engineering was the building of a bridge , serosa the waters of Great Bait Lake. This Is one of the sights for passengers on their trip to. CALIFORNIA OVER TH1 UNION PACIFIC Thru meals quicker to San Francitco than via any other line. Inquire at CITY TICKET OFFICE, 1324 FARNAM STREET 'Phone 316. aW KS1II ILW.ia'.h i II 1 . ' I i-TW aaMr B( m m iaW ' ' -JI ,laV THE RIGHT ROAD TO CHICAGO AND DUBUQUE Tio Superbly fequipped Trsins Dally, with finest personal ser vke. The "GREAT. WESTFk.V LIMITED" is Ulectric Lighted throughout Equipped with Drawing Room Sleeping Cars, Club ' ' Car and Fiee declining Chair Cars. The CJub Car Is a most beautiful, roomy and comfortable car whmin lunches, liquids, . - and cigars of the best quality may be obtained. An excellent breakfast served "a la carte" from Dining Car. Union Station City Ticket Office 131 Farnam St. a . L ft if