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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1908)
THE OMAHA, SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 11, 1903. LIGHT ON THE NEW WEST Hell, Doug. AIR MOTH I'HONES HK.U'II ALL PEITS. Ind. A-1241 ctobetr Furniture Sale Why it U Self -Conscious, Self-Reliant and Self-Sufficient. STANDS ON ITS OWN RESOURCES Clear Statement of Known Troth Which Kirltes Admiration ana Surprised Comment la the Entt. Very Tempting Monday Specials Our October Furniture Sale is proving n Great Success. And why shouldn't it when you consider that this store positively saves you from 30 to 50' on every purchase made here. There is a reason for this. It X is due to our small expense and eeonomical management. For honest Q COME MONDAY Our $1.35 Black Swiss Taffeta, 36 Inches Wide, 98c Yd The ilk for service. The Mark taffeta t hat will please you, just like the Taffeta our grandmothers used to wear. A heautiful liig h grade dress taffeta, at less than today's wholesale value. No woman within five hund red miles of Omaha can afford to miss this splendid value; for dresses, coats, waists and s kirts. Better come early. Saving Sale of Odd Table Cloth and Napkins. Monday, we will place on special sale all our fine odd table cloths and napklDS, at al most half price, for Monday selling only. Special Sale of Tenerif fe Doilies. Economy Basement Monday only; 100 dozen 10c Tenerlffe Dollies, each 3c. Limit 1 dozen to customer. Knit Skirts. The bst place to buy thpm Is her where the assortments and qualities are best. Knit Skirts with red and whit stripe black and white, also plain gray. Prices 60c and 1.00 each. Bargain Square in Basement. Remnants of Amoskeag Apron Ginghams In blue and white checks. Monday at per yard 6o. Announcement. We beg to announce that Mrs. Armstrong, who is authority on all kinds of perfumes and toilet goods Is now at our store. The toilet goods are now in a special department by them selves, in center of main floor. All goods displayed in our new circular caae. We carry none but the best makes of perfumes, toilet goods, soaps, etc.. and our prices are Just as low If not lower than the specialty stores. ' Mra. Armstrong will be pleased to meet her many friends at her new location. Free Lessons In Art Enx broidery ever day from 2 to 5 P. M. CHEAPER IRON AND STEEL Colt. of Reducing Iron Ore ii .Reduced to. $1.0' a, Ton.' - NEW .PROCESS --IS .A J SUCCESS It Wilt rermlt Work! t Million t Atr of, Lbrr Urate Ore . ..No it Caaalslered Valne ' ' !.' JtAKIETTE. Wis.. Oct. R-The coat of dining Iron ore to Iron Is lowered from tS to Sl.50 per ton according- to a dispatch re ceived here today by J. T. Jonei from his son, Elmer Jones, the message stating; that ait experiment with a new process at the Jones new Iron furnace having proved an entire aucce. It Is sal dthe success of the new process means a revolution In the iron making Industry. Aside from the big reduction In the cost of converting or into iron, it Is said the new process will per mit the utilisation of low grades of ore which . at present cannot be worked and are valueless. The furnace which waa tested this week coat Mr. Jones and his associates abou: 1250,010. The success of the , new process will make valuable millions of acres ot ore holdings now considered almost worth less. IN SAFE SIDE (Continued from First . Page.) cldent, an Irredrtcent dream." "And Mr. Bryan hearing uttered no word of protest; he opened not his mouth. And not one of his - many listening disciples drew a sword, and smote a servant of this speaking high prelst of the gold standard, o rsllred off his ear. "la April last Mr. Bryan said at Denver as reported In 'the press: The silver ques tion is no longer an' Issue.' Oalr Dream. "In Jane last he acquiesced In a state ment that It never was an Issue. Myths, Incidents and dreams, especially dreams ot tho irrldtscent kind, are not Issues. The 'Ctowu of Tttorna.' the "Cross of Gold' and the 'Crime of TJ' were but Incidental to the Incident. Tlioy gave to the dream Its many colors which msde It trrtdescent. When Mr. Bryan declared that at a realm over whose door was written 'Abandon hope1, all ye who entr here," he stopped 'appalled,' ho was dreaming. "Did Mr. Watterson at Fairvk-w, Hl.ortly before this incident at the Lincoln hotel, require Mr. Bryan to recant his expressions Mrurdlng Hie gold sUndurd as the price Of the ' support In this campaign of the gold democrats? Was it agreed that the re cantation should take place In the pres ents of a not largo congregation and should be in the form of silent acquiescence tin the part of Mr. Bryan while Mr. Watter son tolJ what the opposition to the gold standard so long preached and proclaimed by Mr. Bryan really waa? Did Colonel Watterson want to know by actual trial, before the Kentucky convention elected Its delegates to the Denver convention, before the bargain waa completed, whether Colonel Try leaving off coffee a few days and drink well boll ed POSTUM The benefits are pleasing. "There's a Reason" Special Sale of Hosiery, Monday. Women's black cotton hose, rib top or hem top; high spliced heels and double soles, medium weight. 39c quality, at, per pair 25c. Saving $2.25 band embroidered Lunch Cloths, Monday sale price, each $1.00. Just Received. A new assortment of French Gowns. Either high or low neck style. Made from the fin est of materials. Ready for showing, Monday. See the Drapery Display in Howard street windows. Our prices will interest you. li-lil-U- Bryan would 'stand hitched' while the gun was fired T Was this performance at the hotel the figurative bringing of the demo cratic candidate unto the door post and boring- his ear through with an awl as evidence of servitude T On the 11th day of Jucn last,' the day succeeding this 'Inci dent', at the Lincoln hotel, the democratic convention of the slate ot Kentucky, as reported by the press, elected Its delt-csles to the Denver convention and by resolution instructed them 'to cast the vote of Ken tucky as a unit at Denver and for W. J. Bryan as nominee for president and to con tinue until he Is nominated.' " STATUS OF lMIGRANT (Continued from First Page.) hood of Londonderry about a herd ot cows which it Is stated was attacked by bats. Borne of the animals were so badly Injured that they had to be slaughtered. The country people are so terrorised that they are afraid to go out at night and the legend of the vampire has been revived throughout the district. If the story Is true It shows that naturalist who thought that the harmful species of bats had long ago dis appeared from Ireland are wrong- The known varieties are all moth eaters and instead of things to be dreaded are friends ot the farmers and gardeners. F. X. CULL.EN. NOTES OF THE OPERA ABROAD The Rivalry Between Emmy Deatlnn and Miss Farrar. Andreas Dlrpel has not heard from MUe. Emmy Destinn as to the results of a tall which preventeJ her reappearance at the R.yal opera house In Berlin, but he does not believe her accident was aerlous enough to prevent her sailing for this country In time to open the Metropolitan opera house on November IT in "Aids," which is to be the first opera she will kln.i here. There Is Indeed a Wtll founded b.llef that MUe. Des. Inn's indisposition Is caused by the fact that she w.ll not be allowed tdr sing . Nedda when Signor Caruso goes to the Royal ope: a house In B.rlln. That role, which la one of the most famous in the repertoire of the Bo hemian pilma donna has been given to Miss Orululne Farrar, and the feud be tween the American soprano which began when the title role In "Mme. UufUrf.y" was allotted to Miss Fariar Is not likely soon to end. Mile. Destinn has retired from the Ger man iper house, as her' contract has come to an end, but like Miss vKarrer she is still under contract to sing there for three monti.s every year. After she I st the right to create Bu.lerily in the opera house she waa so Incms.-d with tlie direc torate thut she continued to say alio was loo 111 to slug until it was necessary to give her two month leave of absence to recover her htahu. Emmy Destinn created the part at jL'o veiit Uarden and made a. sensational suc cess In It. But Miss Farrar gave the rule In Berlin and Ml.e. Destinn naturally re- I tused ever to sing It there as sue felt that tb nonor oi the first performance be long to l.er. In order to show her fie.ing on the subject of all things Qennan kho rt.ceni.ly save a song recital in ner nailvu Prague in wiik'h the entire program was rei.deied lu bohemlan. tier return to Ber lin Has lu order to appear as Neiida with SI Bur Caruso. V hen she anlved th.r-t i to txisln i.er engagement she discover, d ' ihul the part had beau asagned to Miss . Farrar. Mine. ginibrn.ii Is l make a short tour I of the principal German opera bouses be j fore sailing fur this country. eXie Is to , appear In "La Travlata'' and "11 Barbieie I di oVvtalia" In Dresden, where both per formances will be given In Italian. Graf Setback has ordered that evtn the chorutea be Sung In that language. More Interesting than these preparations to give Italian opera In a German ojura house Is the fact that Mme. Semhrich has for twenty ytara been barred out of the Roal 0era house In Dresden, although her caieer be pan Saving Sale of Fancy Linens, Economy Basement Monday we will place on special sale 100 hemstitched and drawn work Lunch Cloths. Regular 76c and 85c quality. Monday special price, each, only 25c. Sale, Monday Only. Main Floor. Women's Outing Flannel Gowns Now Ready. Those wo do not wear an outing flannel (own In cold weather don't know what a Rreat comfort they are mlsslnjs;. Ouri are cut food and full, are well made and the assortment Is all that could be de sired. Prices start at 85c. Flannel Department. New line of flannelettes at 10c per yard. New line of Serpentine Crepes at 18c per yard. New line of Walstlng- flannels at 28c, 30c, 36c, 40c, 45c per yard. New, line of "Vlyclla' flannels, the only flannel that will wash and not shrink or fade. Price 75c per yard. Free Lessons In Art Em-' broidery every day from 2 to S P. M. there. She found after a few months that the principal coloratura roles which she had been engaged to sing were being given to another soprano, and it was plain that her advance In that theater would be slow. In addition to thla Disappointment she had sung at the Teatro dal Verme in Milan in Italian, appearing six times while .on' a leave of absence as Lucia, and she realised that her' prospects were lest In Italian opera. On her return she was cast for a dramatic role utterly unsulted to her, and that determined her course. -Julia Subra, who has just died in Paris at the age of 42, for some years divided tho honors of the ballet at the Paris opera with Roelta Mauri, who was much her senior. MUe. Subra waa a child of the house, for her father, a tailor In Mont martre. decided when his two daughters were children that both should be dancers. She and her sister Constance, who became an actress and died very young, entered the school when children. Constance soon doclded that she preferred the dramatic stage, and acted at the Vaudeville and Theater du Pare In Brussels during her short career. At the age ot 18 Julia ap peared as a dancer In "La Muette de Por Uci" and met with success. Lilll Lehmann, who Blngs now and then, and gives all her earnings to charity, has for soma years contributed most that she earns to the Berlin Society for the Pre vention of Cruelty to Animals, which sho was Instrumental In founding. But the other day she gave 1500 to the use of the Mosart museum at SalSburg. Edith de Lys, a New York girl who was able to complete her preparations for the stage through the generoelty of a rich New Yorker, who has helped many aspirants before. Is to be the original Tess In the Milan production of the opera composed by Franchettl on "Tess of the d'Urbervllles." She is also to sing Mlml and Eva. After the production of "Gotterdam merung" at the Opera in Paris the new directors are to give a series of novel ties by French composers. Among them are "Monna Vanna." to which Xavler Leroux has written the muslo and the annual Massenet work, which is this time called "The Youth of Bacchus," a con genial theme to the pen of Catulle Mendes, who has prepared the text At the Opera Comlque there are to be among other new works the long-promised set ting by Gabriel plerne of De Mussel's "On ne Badine pss Avec 1' Amour," Isador du Lara's "Sange," "Pierre le Verldlque," by Xavler Leroux, and a revival of "The Magic Flute." The Theater de la Mon nale at Brussels Is to give "Katherlne," by Edgar Tlnel, the Belgian composer; "Eros Valnqueur," by Brevllle and Xuvler's "Monna Vanna," which has been accepted for several German opera houses as well. The most Important work to be introduced in France next winter, however, wilt be "The Life of a Poet," which Uustave Charpentler has declared willte ready for production by that time. It Is the second part of the trilogy of Bo hemian life In "Louise." Equally Interest ing Is the announcement that Debussy has found the Inspiration for his next work In Poe s stury "The Fall of the House of T'pher." These two operas bebng to ths Metropolitan Opera house, which will after next year have control of tlis entire French school. "Pelleae et Melisinde" and "h'h-k- tra," by Richard Etrauss, are to be the principal novelties of the Munich Court opera house. One of the successful novelties during nient years In Germany as "The Curt us Women," composed by Wolf Ferrari, whj li at the conservatory In Vsnice. The i text was adapted from a play by Goldonl. The composer Is much better known as an I ope: a composer in Germany than in Hi ; own country, although he intends that Ms j new opera. "Tl.e Virgin's Jewel." st all be bi.nf first iu Italy. Zangarlnl has wiitteii ! tha poem, which Kha ths story ot a young j man who steals ths jewels from a statue of the Virln to give them to his sweet heart. Leoncavallo's "Maja, ' which Is to be surg at Monte Carlo this spring, deals with a I'rowncaj subject and U.e composer Is now In that UUUfc ' In th cast few of us really understand why the west is so aelf-consclous, self reriant and selfsiifflclent. In an artlclo In the October North American Review Mr. J. B. Case, president of the Transmls sisslppl Commercial congress, turns on the light. Ills theme la the future of western trade, and he tells the east some thlnm It ought to know, for the eat Is very well satisfied With Itself, too, and not as well Informed -about the oxpunslim and aspira tions of the wchI as It should be for Its own lut rests. To speak of tho west as independent of tho east would be going too far, but Mr. Csse shows that It has developed so many resources In tho good times of the. lust decade that If a dividing wall were to bo built along the Ohio river tho west could exist and tlirivo without the aid anA coun tenance of the east. For the west now ras capitalists and financial centers, as Well as factories and department stores, and If it still borrows money from the east It also lends money to western peo ple, underwrites western enterprises and recently In one Instance weathered a panlo with, less damage to business and less suf fering to Consumers. In a sense, Indeed, It Is the east that Is dependent upon the west, since the east may be said to sub sist on the products of the great agricul tural west. There Is one 'passage In Mr. Case's article that In times when the au tomobile Is the hallmark of prosperity will give the eastern man a comprehensive Idea of the growth of the west: "It la stated by the dealers in automo biles that more cars were sold last spring to v the fsrmlng sections ot the prairie states than In any other part of the United States. In one town, 9jU miles west of ths Missouri river and half as far from ths mountains a town of little more than 3.60U inhabitants are seventy-two automo biles. Counties that one year ago hud less than half a dosen machines now have seventy-five to 100." Potential Reasons. In what way has the west waxed so rich thst It can afford to treat itself to such luxuries? Well, nowadays the west does not live by farming alone. The smokestack Is a common and conspicuous object and Industrially the west Is making great gains. It has learned to produce many of the things It uses snd wears anu with which It furnishes and embellishes lu houses. Local capital has started thou sands ot industries In the prairie states, as well as in the middle west, and western men buy their products not only becausu ths manufactured article is eflen cheaper, cost of transportation being a cheapening factor, but because they feel a pride in western enterprises. To quote Mr. Case again: "California's manufactories turn out a product worth more than that ot Ohio, Maine or Michigan; Oregon has as great a production from its factories and shops as Michigan; Missouri has more than Ver mont, Kansas more than Virginia, Colo rado more than Indiana." Ia the Paclfio and Rocky mountain states alone the annual production of manufact ured goods Is estimated at a billion dollars. Even the prairie slates are now dotted with factories. Mr. Case saya that ''today the aim of every town between the Mississippi river and the Pacific ia to secure ,some son of enterprise that will give employment to its loborlng classes." In almost every county seat you may find a department store carrying a miscellaneous stock of goods. The west has even gone Into the the manufacturing of automobiles and sells them at home In competition with eastern makes. It should not be forgotten that seventy percent of the area of the Uulted States lies In the tranamlsslaslppt country and that It contains JO,0OO,00O people very proud of their homeland. Industrious and resourceful and no longer envious of the east. Palllnar Toaretner. Co-operation In a large sense In char acteristic of the new west. All its people are pulling together for the common good. Three bodies Interested in mining, irrigation and commerce meet every year to com pare notes. "The direct object of theso organisations." we sre told, "Is to build up the struggling enterprises of the west. The purpose Is to unite In one effort the politicians, the capitalists and the busi ness workers who live between the Miss issippi and the Pacific." Hence the vast reclamation projects and other enterprises dry nursed by congress, ultimately to pay for themselves If the west continues to prosper. The farmers also resort to co- When Ths Blood Goes Wrong Man Suffers In Many Places Like A City Whose Sewers Spread Disease. When the blood of man becomes impure and filled with poison and decay, it throws off the impurities and leaves them to force and fester themselves through the skin, just like a city in whose sewers foul gases srlsn and escape up through cellars into houses, bringing contagion and death. What a city needs la a generous flow of pure water to carry along and away tho sewage which breeds death and disease. What the system needs for the blood that Is impure is a purifier that will stimulate the flow of the precious fluid, that will cheek the Impurities and remove them by the flow of the blood from the system na turally without Irritation, Infection end pain. Callclum Bulphlde is the strongest blood purifier known to science and medicine. What pure, running water does to the im purities In a city's sewor Calcium Sulphide does f -r the blood of man. Stuart's Calcium Wafers give the human body all the strength snd vigor of Cal cium Sulphide, in better form than any other mode of presenting It to the system. A recent article has ttsd that most Cal cium Sulphide preparations Tontaln but 30 per cent of the strength of this wonderful cl?anser. the r.ther "0 per cent being lost by evaporation,' chemical change or decay. Stuart's Calcium Wafers contain other blood purifiers like Quassia, OoldVn Seal and Eucalyptus, each having a distinct fusetlon to perform; also an alterative and laxative to throw fff through the human seweraKe system fine bowels) the wssto and poslonoMs matter evtrleated by the bliKifl puffers. Theso little wafers are a tremendous power and set with untaxing raptdlty In twlr work of eleanulng the Mood. and clearing the skin. Every druggist carries them In stock; price Me. per box. or send us your nsme ard address snd we will send you a trial package by mall .free. Address F. A. Stuart Co., 17$ Stuart Bldg., Marshall. JaTteh, wm Don't buy your heater until you see what we have tn offer. Positively the bent values In the city. A l:n value offered here g WE GIVE TOT7 KOXTEST T1LVII AND B.I1.I AJBX.B MERCHANDISE. Brussels worth Velvet Reversible site, fail ?T"tt tff tr worth t a. Steel Ranges. Made of e A lected steel of a special gauge, full asbestos lined, high warming closet. A $35 value, special 3 50 operation, building elevators and planning to control the prices of their craln. They, like the miners and lumbermen and the manufacturers, are Interested In cheapness of transportation, and the movement to contruct north and south railways and develop available water routes Is general all through the west and Is backed by a powerful public opinion. Mr. Case pre dicts the "the increase in shipping from Galveston, Port Arthur and New Orleans during the next ten years will be greater than from any other ports of the United States." What the opening of the Panama canal will mean to the west its people never tire of anticipation. One thought must be pervade the mind of an eastern. man who hears the tidings of the great material progress and breesy assur ance of the west, which he has only dimly comprehended, snd that la that those well to do and buoyant Americans can hardly contemplate turning out of office the party under whose administration they have flourished and grown supremely con fident of themselves to try an experiment In economics and government urged upon them by a ready talker who could not have succeeded In previous designs on the pres dency without causing the disasters which he falsely predicted would follow his rejection. New York 8un. CROP OF PROMOTERS' VICTIMS The Clergy and Maiden Ladles" Said to Be Favored Class Eaaleat to Reach. Ths World's Work constantly receives letters telling how tome poor man or woman has been Induced to buy doubtful stocks, snd faces the loss of the entire Investment. Many of these letters come from country doctors and cle.g. men, and tell of cases that have come under their personal observation. Very often the stories sre pitiful enough. They all md with the queatl.n: "What ian be dons about It?" In nnety-nlne cases out of a hundred nothing can be done. In the hundredth case there has been fraud on the part of some responsible agent, and a silk at law may recover the loss. But this chance Is slight, for practically this form of piracy Is safe, and nothing can be done to stop It. The two "favored ilnss.-s of reople in the lls.s of posikle Invest rs are the cle gy and maiden lad1.s. There is hardly a "fake'' Industiial c.ncern promoted tn this country that does not send out to a list of the clergy a set letter, bought by the thuus-nds from concerns that by long prac tice are expeits In preparing such liter ature,, setting forth the claims of that par ticular company to the cons deration of Investors "of the most conservative and necessarily careful class, which you repre sent." I had never been able to figure out Just what profit there could be in the appeal by circular to the clergy, a class ihat usually has education, some knowledge of human nature, and very llitle money. But, since the R aders' Service of this magaxlne was il ab.-stud, I have come to under stand, in sjmo part, the reaaon why they are se.ected. Not only are the clergy themselves extremely likely to buy in kmall quantities, but the pitiful fait ap pears that, through the honest but mis gu d. d enthusiasm of preachers, the pro nuclei s rtach hundreds of Investors whom they could not otherwise reach. In small country towns and rural communities the clergyman Is frequently temporal as well lis a spiritual gu de, particularly to widows, oiphans, and the" hepless of both sixes. And It Is to such as these that the pro moier looks for profits. It a man comes liao the office of a lawxer, a banker, a merchant, or even an editor, and tries to f e 1 sioik thai Is "almost lailalu" to pay l' per cent, per annum, he may find: a listener but hardly a buyer. The pro moter of a new invention, or ot a mine, cr of some wonderful process for mak.ng something out of nothing, knows perfectly well that i.s must rujcu the "I t le isuple," the nun or the women with little In the world to lose, tut with' the hunger for money In Hi-.-Ir hearts. Hs must spread his net abroad, not set it In the sight of the wary and the wlae. Ths ways of the spreading may be of interest to some llio-isajida of persons who appear to have been caught at limes; and to many other thousands who have been coaxed, by skill ful letters from men they never heard of, to buy this or that stock World's Work Uagaslne. A Heaaoaaal Kaeaae. An Ohio lawyer tells of a client of his Oerman farmer, a hard worklr.g, plain, blunt man who lost his wife not long ago. Xu lawyer had sought him out to express Out of Town Folks ATTENTION! No nutter where you live vou ran get all the creilit ton want here. Cnr "espondenee koI lett ed We pay freight 250 miles. WE OUAKANTEE THAT OUR PRICES ARB TTTXiZiT 00 1,198 THAW OTHER SJTORES. AID THAT OUR GOODS ARB OT A HIOH QUALITT AMD WILL GIVE THH BEST Or BATISTA OTTOK AHS SERVICE. SHIS Dressers. Made of solid onk and finished In a beautiful golden, best of construction, three large drawers. 112.60 value, at mil price, 7 AC only '0'' Special Carpet and Rug Sale . . , ... ... I npraln Carpets, made of guaranteed stock, worth 76 r. sale price 490 Carpets, best quality and values In the city, $1.00, sale price, per yard 8J0 Camets. many very beautiful patterns to s- lect from, worth $1.50; sale price, per yard, 870 Ru ib-s, can can be used on either side, room (3.98 $t.60; sale price. Brussels rugs, good heavy quality, worth II T. room slse; sale price .T. 810.60 UNION OUTFITTING CO 1315-17-19 FAR NAM ST. his sympathy, but to his consternation the Teuton laconically observed: "But I amagaln married." "You don't tell me!" exclaimed the legal light. "Why, It hasn't been but a week or two since you burled your wife." "Dot's so, my frent; but she 1s as dead as effer she will be." Baltimore American. Oil Magnate on Money Maklag, John D. Rockefeller, enjoying In excel lent health and spirits his sixty-ninth birth day, advised a reporter to be very slow and careful and cautious in all business matters. "Look about you," he said. "See that you get your money's worth. Be a hard customer rather than an easy one, If you don't "John Sullivan of Cleveland waa proud of his reputation for generosity. Every Your New Stove... Should be purchased only after careful investigation. Most Omaha people know our reputation for reli ability and anyone can see the ad vantages of our stoves and ranges looking over our first and second floors which are filled with the best Stove values obtainable. Radiant Home Base Burners, Ranges and Oak Stoves Quick Meal Ranges Nowhere else can you find reliable stove at RUIIV OAKS Nickel trimmed, soft coal heaters KAU1ANT HOME OAK Heavy, handsome, high grade, like cut . . . . PURITAN STEEL RANGES With high closet, guaranteed QUICK MEAL RANGES Have no equal, all sizes RADIANT HOME RASE BURNERS Standards of the world MILTON ROGERS & SONS CO. Hth and Farnam Sis. THE OLDEST AND LARGEST HARDWARE AND STOVE STORE IN OMAHA. .: tt Stars and Stripes THE BEER THAT MAKE STURDY CONSTITUTIONS There is a rich, satisfying Kolitlity to Stars and Stripes Beer that makes it unequaletl for the lover of good beer, and particularly enjoyable to the seeker for health. ORDER A CASE TODAV Brsirtd from only ths eholo rt sslsct malt snd bops; oaly ifttkllir Willow prints wstsr ussdl abso lute parity 1" ssry drop this ars wbst snaks Stars aad Itrlpss Uis most vopu 1st t) $I.B0 In Green Trading Stamps (15 stamps with each two doaea case of small bottles. Price 491. 345 Out ot town cus tomers add (1.26 for case and bottle. WILLOW SPRINGS BREWING CO. Offlos, 1407 Haras? St., raos Doaf. IMS). Btswtry, ard aad miokory, Vkoas, Soaf. IMS. iliii 4; Extension Tables. The larprst and lest line In the i-lty to select from I 'tit Inn thlH BHle we offer u Nolhl on I. b-foot extension t:ihl; C t)C worth $10.00, at Farlor Bnlts. Pome very exceptional values in tills srh Ilest of uphol Sterlns-. massive n-nines. nigniy poi- - 1r1,w1 25.00 values, tL Cft at IO. U T stering, massive n-nines, highly poi- VOOa SluvtB, ite Hiiro nnu iri your cook stove here and save money. Ourlng this sain w offer a $15.00 cook O 1C stove at & body sought his pstronape tailors, gro cers, tobacconists, and so forth and this delighted John. "But one day at his tailor's he overt heard something that gave him food for thought. He had been trying on some golf trousers, and was still In the dressing room, but the tailor thought him gone. " 'What shall I charge Mr. Sullivan for these golf trousersT' John heard the clerk ask. "Eight dollars a pair, the same as our other patrorjeV " 'Sullivan,' paid the tnllor. In a tone tt once thoughtful and enthusiastic, 'Is a good customer. He always pays up promptly. He never haggles. Charge him $12.' " Heyman ft Berry, sellers of "Quality" meats; 24th and E, telephone 390; 2h and A, telephone 117. , V "c p'- w; ?1 I rtf home these prices: $5.95 it $17.75 I P $20.00 up $30.00 up $29.00 tTP $3.00 in Green Trading Stamps (30 stamps) with each o dozen case of large butt Us. rrlco $2.25 Out of town cus tomers add 11.25 for case aad bottles. ffPfPl) . - s 1