THE OMAITA DAILY DEE: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1907. V. Si, W aw.. fc. m j . 'w-.W a m. t i .' V- ''-: v '-K. fA:: -Yw , v Li . li a r ' 3 1 cwcit I 35 fifllffllflCKE. ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN'S HIGH GRADE OTM1NG Couflhl From a New York Whole sale Clothing Manufacturer at IF actum me This is the greatest triumph of Brandeis' ready cash. The manufacturer needed the money badly he could not borrow it so Bran deis bought his entire stock on hand. I Choice of Entiro Purchase MEN'S PANTS Worth up to $5, )98 your choice I. . . lx All the Men s Pants $ worth up to $3 . . . U BRAND EfS (2) Select that Overcoat or Suit Saturday Choice of Any Overcoat or Suit From the New York Manufacturer's Stock Worth up to $15 Will go at.:.;...' ANY OVERCOAT OR SUIT From. thV New York Manufacturer's Stock Worth $17.50 and $18.50 Will go at ANY OVERCOAT OR SUIT, From the New York Manufacturer's Stock Worth $22.50 to $25 Will go at '"c" . y I II II I III I.. II, ! , , , , , , , , ,,, , , , , i ii , . , ay MM Your Choice of Entire Purchase on Boys' OVERCOATS and SUITS 3,030 in this ret lot and they are worth reg ularly up to $4.53 and $5. at I BRANDEIS g8 ffirnriirimini ft t t 3 I t 9 I i ft if Manufacturer iiock i Men's Wool Underwear Manufacturer'. stock of men's underwear all sizes, shirts and drawers ribbed snd flat weaves pf ill wool underwear natural prey, fancy and mispd Rlindfs -wnrtli nn to $2.00 a garment a great op-f&' portunuy to buy your winter ; underwear at ono-fourth their( vaiuc-on largo. r(Tl l Dargain squares at. a trarment . . . Manufacturer's sample Sweat-A ers men's and boys worth v-J ...750-980 ! 7. fcs Coyt' and rhlldren'i But ter Brown Sweter, worth to $1.60.. 30 .Men's 1 Negligee Shirts, at 50 Men's negligee and dress shirts from the man ufacturer's stock plain, plaited and Q Q stiff bosoms worth up to $5.00, at . J O C Men's imported silk neck wear, 6uc Tklues at 25 Men's 6 0o Suspeudets, lisle web, at. . . . . .25 Men's Work Glores, worth up to f 1.00. at 23. 50 and 75 Complete lines of Lewis, Sterling, Hoot s and Norfolk and New Brunswick Underwear, at, garment $1.25 to $20 Tws Graat D&sament Specials Men's and Boys' Negltgeo i Men's heavy ribbed and shirts, worth up to $1, ' , fleeced underwear, at 25 1 at 23 BIG SALE Men's and Boys' CAP'S FOR WINTER 150 dozen men's sample line of Winter Caps all with fur lined bands, rtor.th.,,,.p.t.0.$-:507 ;.50c-75d Sample line of men's muskrat fur caps, worth up to $3.00; Saturday atC 98c Boys' sample caps, cloth and fur lined bands, at 25c Boys' fine all wool caps, with fur lined bands, . at 49c Stetson's Hats for Men The accepted styles, derby and soft hats, complete as sortment of blocks and sizes, at $3.50 Brandels Special, soft and stiff hats, latest styles. , $2 UTES SUOW SIGN (TF PEACE Eed Cap Indicates Willingness to Gshd Children to School. OTHERS WILL FOLLOW THE CUTE? Mllnaakee Rallro Offers to Em ploy Backs, Whlrh Woald So1t Problem f Fo for Winter. Advliws received at army headquarters indicate promising proipect that the ..-trouble with the runaway Vf Indian at ;J Thunder Buttee In northern 8outh Dakota 1J11 be amicably adjusted after alL vVord cam to army headquarter! Friday morn ins from Major Sibley giving a hopeful view of the situation. Major Sibley l at Thunder Buttea with the flrat delachmcnt of four companies of the (Second cavaiiy. He wrltea that Red Cap, on of the moat aggressive of the I U chiefs, has agreed to gry until they receive their next allow ance. This la a problem to confront the Indian department, as the army cannot supply the Indiana with rations so long t tbey remain under the control of the Indian bureau. It is further claim-id there Is no available appropriation at the com mand of the Indian bureau to supply any deficiency of rations to the Ctea and there la a proepect the Indians will surfer se verely until their next drawing of rations. Railroad Offers Solatloa. The Chicago, MJwaiiHee & fiL i-aul Rail way company is building ita Pad lie exten sion westward from Evarti and has novr reached a point nearly north of Thunder good road southward from the present ter minal of the Milwaukee railway on the Standing Rock teservatlon ta Thunder Duttes and the croeslng of Grand River I easy, as the stream Is merely a succession of water holes, that are dry during the fall and, winter seasons. On the other hand, the road from the Cheyenne agency to Thunder Buttes is extremely rough. Colonels West, with the eight companies of the Second cavalry, had not. arrived al Thunder Buttes when Major Elbley wroto. t'he command was due there, however, Friday night. Lieutenant Colonel R. H. Wilson Is In command of the two companies of the Six teenth Infantry now guarding the tern- t Gettysburg. Buttea This Una runs through the Stand ing Rock Indian reservation north of Grand porary baso of iuppie, T.' (v., nln.tv ntlna nftrth tt th. Thunder Buttes subagency. This road has offered to employ any number of Utes to work on the line near there, and that mat ter Is now under contemplation by the TUtea. Should they accept this employment j It will act a a solution of the present 'Tha'irmy department la continuing , ? After a year and a tialf of divorce lltlga- m. , . ww... Mn,ni.rn n ' Alvuia Crow and William H. Crow 1AGGART SE.Dj FOR OUR JIM national Democratic Chairman Wan to Consult Bryanites. the. dinner will bring together more demo crats than have ever been assembled at one time 1n the state except at a conven tion. An old republican warhorse, A. H. Don ecken, has been given the contract for supplying the viands. Mr. Qonecken has , , w , i w..b.u mutt, t.iiiicnv, ,,, nuv.ii mm- DESHtES EIGHT ETJIICH AT nR3. ters, having fpr. several years provided ine Danqueis neia at the Masonic temple. Mayor Jim, However, la Devotln His Spare) Time Now to Plaas for Blc Aaaoaaeemeat Olaaer la pmuba. He Is to' take entire charge of the work. have his school at the Cheyenne Agency school .n .the Missouri river and that other Indians have agreed to the same proposition. a well as to other conditions laid down by Agent Downs. As Red Cap has tculdera bls inlluence with the tribe it ia thought probable the whole tribe may so-in agroa to the proposition to send their children to the Agency school on the Missouri. v eighty miles dlitsnt from Thund.r Butte. Chief Boa of Coateatloa. This u.uelion if being sepiuaied from )heir children as the chief bone of con.- (ttntlon. The rules of the Indian depart ment require that children of school agi, over T years and up to 11 or IS years of age, must attend school, and it appears that there are not many children ot those ages with the ttea. .'fhe Lte rectUed their monthly allow 1 'ance of rations November S, de.-lved from the rental and lea money of their (,'tah resnatlon holding, but with the usual improvidence of the Indians It la thought the supply will not last longer than the middle of the present month, and there Is fair prospect of the Indians going hun- Prellmlnary plan for the meeting of the democratic national committee to arrange time and place for holding the next 'na tional convention of the democratic party will be arranged at a meeting of a num ber of the committeemen at French Lick , Springs. Ind., pecomber 22. To this meet ! Ing Mayor Dahlman has been Invited and will attend It his business affaire will per mit. It I understood Chairman Thomas Taggart desire to consult those commit teemen who ar known to be the personal ' t.- - - . - vomica! irienas or flir. nrvan nnrois a i . .i a i . i i. - . . uiii. xvcnucuv in umr 11 .a a i b ri i inn nr - troops now in ine neia nsv ucm uiunru - taklns un tha auoilnm nt tln mnA ... I. - k them a dlwo-c and refused to make snv ,aK,na up ine question of time ana place up id i-tctinioer Ol. 1 HI. mil viiiuiavq about 15,000 ration of comm'ssary supplle orde'" respecting alimony or th division of their property. f Th case ha been fdught bitterly and of th command I bclnr hlpped Into deposition have been taken at variiu YEAR AND A HALF AND NO END Elsata Moata of Lltlgatlo learea Crow Dlvorre Salt Jast Where It Started. Olldden Ha Balloon Fever. BOSTON. Nov. 8. Cnarle . J. Glld den, the wealthy Boston girdling automo blllst, says that his present ambition Is to make balloon ascensions In as many coun tries throughout th world a - possible. He Is an Insatiate traveler, and already holds the world a record for mileage trav eled In an a'-tomoblle, by which he has reached almost every known accessible country. CHARITY ON SOUND BASIS Asaoelatlaa Directors Pre pose ta lar Firm Plaaaelal Voandatloa for Their Work. The board of director of th Associated Oarltle met at the off'ce of President Barton yesterday and adopted a plun of campaign for th . raising' of sufficient money - to provide for 'th running ex penses of the association. , It I th plan of th board to plac the association on a sound financial bail be foi the beg'nnlng of th season when th greatest demand I mad upon It for relief. Th money pledged In this campaign will be used far a necessary for paying tie expense of the dfflc. uch a th alary of the secretary and hi assistant, so that all fund railed by other contribu- tlona can be devoted entirely to direct charitable work.' If the plan ar success ful the assoo.atlon may. add several nea fcaturea to It present work, the most im portant being in the way of preventins. uch distress as call for the distribution of aim. One of these featrre is the school savings system, by Which children may save thair copper money through a system of deposits, the money to be avail able at time of necessity, it being tha theory of th secretary and th. members ot th board that much distress may bo prevented In future if children ar taught to b economical in small things. Batertalalas; aa Enemy Don't entertain a chronic, run'ng sort . or wound. Cure It with Bucklen's Arnlci Salve. 25 cent; guaranteed. For sal bj Beaton Drug Co. BS ..mnlle. r. h,ln hurried to the district ,ouna themselve exactly where they were children taken to the Indian I a rapidly a possible. Ration for th when ther Parted Friday morning, when with the entire com. alone. In addition to the commissary up- pllea a vast amount of forage for th an! mal the district, aa there are very few natural resource in that section of th country. Chang Base af Supplies. Owing to the dlftlcrity of transferring th supplies across th Missouri river at . .v.. , ,. ,,, , Crow was divorced from his first wife, the and in addition to th long team haul of . , ' polnta all .over th west Mr. Crow ap plied for th dlvorc and Mr. Crow filed a cross-petition making charges of a seri ous nature against her. At the hearing It d'srlosed that they wer married in Iowa less, than a month after present Mr. Crow being involved In the charge made by Mr. Crow No. 1. n r-... u. . l.. w. j i . j m It 1 now contemplated to change the base " ' " . , T " '"" certain Nebraska democrats that he would i... .... ,k husband short, y before her second marrl- A , . .,,,.,. ..... eighteen or twenty miles to the river from Gettysburg, th present base of supplies. of th convention mittee. At present the' mayor Is devoting that part of hi time set aside for political work to the Bryan d'nner, which will be held In Omaha December 7. Progress has been rap'd In th work, but so far vthe speaker from the south has not been de termined upon. Th's Is considered one of the most Important phases of the work, since the Dahlman club does not desire to make the mistake one mad by the Jack sonlans of Inviting a southern speaker who. while lauding Bryan publicly, told SATURDAY SPESIALS of supplies to th point on th Milwaukee road north of Thunder Buttea The rail road ha a bridge acroa th Missouri at Evarta, and by doing this th difficulty if ferrying across th Missouri at Forest City would be obviated. The ferry here I a small affair and th boat can only take vtiv Isen wasrns at a time. Cattlemen living in that section north of I liujMjrr uuues siai that taer 1 a fairly age. Letter fronr Crow advising witnesses to get out of th Jurisdiction of th cou-t and telling them If they wer called on to testify to answer, "I don't know," to Im portant questions were introduced. Owing to the nature of the 'evidence Judge Ken- I nedy declared neither of them was entitled to any rener rrora in court and he denied both petition. never do for a candidate in 1WM, and who four years before the event foretold prac tically the action of the BL Louis con vsntlon of that year. Invitation and ticket to th banquet ar In course of preparation and will be issued in a few day. In addition to Omaha democrats. Invitation will be ex tended to a large number of the faith ful in the state, and It 1 expected that s COIN CaICIS ov:r wattles - ; FED AND KEPT 0PEII DY IHPUniTIES HI THE BLOOD in s oils I ii ui4 ciores were due to outside InUuences, or u the cause was confined I trJct!y to tlie diseaaej fles'u around the ulcer, then external treatment and yK simple cleanliness would cure them. But the trouble is ia the blood, which has become unhealthy and diseased, and keeps the sore open by continually discharging into it the impurities and poisons with which the circulation is tiled. This poisonous condition of the blood may be the remains ot aome con- v stitutional trouble ; the effect of a long spell of sickness, or because the natural ) refuse cf the body, whuh should pass off through the proper avenues, has been left in the eystem and absorbed iuto the blood. Affain, the cause may be hereditary ; but it docs not matter how the poison becomes intrenched in the blood, the f.ict that the aore will not heal la evidence of a deep underlying cause. S dves, washes, lotions, etc., may cause the place to scab over tempo rarily, tut the blood is not .made any purer by aucn treatment, and aoon the old inflammation and discharge will return and the sore be as bad or worse than tx. fore. S. S. S. foes down to the very bottom of the trouble, cleanses and purifies the blood, and makes a permanent cure. S. S. S. enriches and freshens the circulation ao that instead cf discharging unhealthy matter into the plaue, it carries rich, tisail-Kiiil.linfr fl.h-ht1incr t.lrwvl tn thA eased parts and In every way assists In a natural cure of the aore. Boole u Sorts atid Ulcers and any medical alvice free to all who write. (r Ct PUHELY VEGETABLE Money Will ! Coming West Soon, , . H Writes front New ' York Clly. "Eastern bankers will begin shipping currency to th west In moderate amount within a very short time, says Vic Presi dent Q. W. Wattles, of th United State 1 Natloral bank, who Is In New fork to keep close watch on th financial 'aituatlon for th Orraha banker. ' In a letter to the United Btate National 1 bank Mr. Wattle say th crisis I over far aa New Tork I concerned and th financial world there ha reached a brUht sport for one ta th last pt two nr three week. Every banker with whom Mr. Wattle ha talked, since he ha been In New Tork. I confident and bel'eve that things will right themselves within a very short time. With gold srrtylng from Europ almost every day. th system of clearing house certificates will so-n be aVlbed. and with that move In New Tork. th western banks will follow. Mr. Wattle, does not venture guesa as to how aoon th atmoapher will clear up at M'ssourl river polo s, but predict that It w'll not be long before a goldea a'ream flow westward from tho financial center of tha country. Tn Pretest trans rraeklsg n O'Jlrlr fi-ne Shoe Polish. It oil, pot ttes nd rive a ratent ltr ftih and ia alriiro?f. Ask jour dealer for U. Truth and Quality appeal to the Well-Informed in every walk of life unJ are essential to permaucnt succe and creditable standing. Accor ingly, 't i not claimed that Syrup of Fig and Llixir of Senna U the only remedy of known value, but ono of many reason why it ia the best of personal anil family laxatives ia the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and relieve the internal organs on which it ad without any debilitating after effect and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acta pleasantly and naturally and trmy as a laxative, and ita component parts ar known to and approved by physicians, a it is free from all objection able substances. To get it beneficial effect always purchase the genuine manufactured by th California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sal by all leading drug- gifctfc Cutting Table Folds up compactly; made of hard maple, with strlj ed .to?; has yard measure stamped . on top; is full . 36 inches long, 18 inches wide. A very useful, in fact almost lnd!s. enslble article for the home. Sells regularly at $1.20. . Special tor Saturday only, each..., G9 m 1 Japanese Plates In E-lnch and 7-inch sizes. Beautifully decorated with artistic little Japanese figures. For salads, deserts, etc., also bread and butter plates. These are our regular 25c and 35c plates, which we will Saturday on'.y, each 19 .or for 81.J0O Pillow Tops High class velvet and moquette Pillow Tops In all colors, also India erabro.dered top and back ready for pillow. They sell at f 1.60 to 2.00 each. Special Saturday only, each 70 Ruffled Swiss Curtains Figured centers with plain hemstitched ruffles, 2M yards long, 43 inches wide. Unusially well made. Sell regularly at 11.35 pair. Siecial Eaturday. per pair 87 1 LINOLEUM Basement. All remnants and short lengths are sent to our basement and quickly closed out at very greatly reduced prices. In this lot are all grades of linoleum, in 6 to 30-yard lengtbfe. Many 6izes just right for bathroom or kitchen. GOc Linoleum for. ).. I" 29c 80o Linoleum for. . . .S9c 90c Linoleum for 5Qc 'v v ML Cheffonler (Like Cut) Except tbat it has flva larie drawers and no hat box. Well madj and finished in solid golden oak. , 30 inches wide. 66 Inches high. The regu lar price of this excel lent Chlffonjerls only 54.00 LaceCurtainSale Monday, November 11. $15,000. worth of Lace Curtains, su perior in every way to those usually thrown on sale, go at most astonishing prices. See Sunday papers Morris Chair (Like Cut) Made ot best tjuartereaw ed oak, golden, hand polished finish; neatly carved. Has spring seat fitted with hair filled, reversible cushions, best velour, choice of colors. v Tbls la a bargain at Its regular price. . .$0,75 Re'HARD & WILHELM 4i4-I()-I8 South Sixteenth Street