THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 14. 1008. SATURDAY We Will Place on Sale the Entire Kosengarten Stock of WOMEN'S CLOAKS, SUITS, SKIRTS WAISTS and CHILDREN'S CLOAKS I! b The ENTIKE KOSENGARTEN STOCK of SILKS, DRESS GOODS, SATINS, LACES, LININGS, TRIMMINGS, BRAIDS, BIND INGS Will All Go On Sale Next Monday. , i i v i i it- The MOST FORTUNATE CASH. PURCHASE in RAOEIS HBSTOEY "p)nnnn np 10 J ON --" ' ' 'm"' TO P3 One of New York's Prominent Manufacturers and Wholesalers Sold by Order of the United States District Court, Southern District of N. Y., in Bankruptcy Alfred I. Dittler, Receiver This stock is made up of strictly high grade, up-to-date goods. The Rosengarten house was known all over the east as a manufacturer and wholesaler of goods of the best quality. All the Cloaks, Skirts, Waists and etc. are the latest, up-to-date fall styles. - Women's Long Cloaks From the RosengaLrten Stock JJJ Worth VP to $15, go at - - - 6 There were hundreds of fine cloaks In the Rosengarten stock that, were made to sell at. $12.60 and $15.00. These are all In late styles and col ors. We have grouped them all In one Immense lot for this sale at, each 9G.9S ALL THE LACE AND SILK WAISTS From the Rosengarten Slock Hundreds of these beauti ful new Waists. All the latest , styles and colors are represented. They . are worth up $98 to $6 at. ALL THE WOMEN'S NET WAISTS From the Rosengarten Stock Made in ecru and white net over Jap silk lace edging and inserting actually worth up to $3.50 each $150 at..... 1 Children's Cloaks r From the Rosengarten Stock werth up to 58,00, go at $2.98 The most beautiful lot of children's cloaks ever placed on special sale. These are those dressy but practical coats that give such splendid service. uearskln coats, kerseys, bouchj A- . 1.1 "Kiln stock includes: Long Black Broadcloth Coats, satin lined. Xong Black Broad cloth Coats with braid and satin trimmings. Colored Broadcloth Coats, braid and satin trim ming. Long Kersey Cloaks, satin lined and self trimmed. Fine New Empire Coats. New Modified Directoire Coats. New Wide Full Back Coats. New Tight Fitting Coats. The display In the window has been the talk of Omaha. Such fine, prac tical, stylish Cloaks as these never before sold for less than $12.50 and $15.00, Saturday, at All the $8 Voile Skirts at $3.98 Also fine Chiffon Panamas, Worsteds, Cheviots and Mix tures trimmed with taffeta bands or plain pleated. These Skirts from the Iiosegarten stock are $798 worth un to $8 at . coats, astrakhan coats, beaver coats, novelty cloth coats, melton coate, etc. The colors are red, brown, blue, black, gray, green, castor, etc. Saturday Your Choice of Hundreds of Beautiful Ostrich Trimmed FALL HATS Worth $25 and $35, at .... . J3m V Worth up to $15 Great Blanket Sale B&sen 12-4 Cotton Wank eta at 76c Pair There is no larger blanket made, no matter what the price you pay for It. Fleecy and a very good weight, at, per pair . . . y uw 75' Cotton Blankets at , $1 a pair, white, Gray and Tun Very soft and fleecy and extra heavy. Weigh six pounds to the pair. man kets not so Koorl Bell ing for at pal $1.75 pnlr, ill- ... SI Australian White or Gray Cotton Blankets r.t f l.fiO T hose soft, fleecy, wool flnluhed blankets with wide silk binding. We bought over 5,0W pair .... merit $1.25 Robe Blankets at 69c pair Fancy Btrlped Cotton Blankets, neat pink, blue and tan stripes, and are worth at.za a pair, at pair . . . .1 ipThese Cloaks are in all ages j) -jj (fY) & from 4 to 14 years many are IS W as j i These Cloaks are in all ages from 4 to 14 years many are regulation Peter Thompkins' Little Direc toires, Empires, box and semi-fitted coats. .Mothers usually pay $6.00 ,to $8.00 for .these coats. if Worth up to $8.00 Cut Price Drug Sale S H 41 A u a v 69c $2 50 Sateen Comforters-in all Colors-Plain Centers Full size mercerized Sateen and A. A.' grade of Silkollne covered Com- . forters. Best grade of sanitary white cotton and knotted or stitched, 1 sells regularly at $3.00 to $3.50, at each i '. $198 Grea.t Sale Hosiery and Underwear in Basement Children's heavy, lined underwear, 36 cents, at each fleecy worth ' 15c Boys' heav Underwear, values, at - v each fleecy lined 39. cent 19c Women's 69 cent, heavy, soft fleeced Underwear, special, at. each 35c Women's fine, fleecy lined , Union Suits, bleached and unbleached, 75c M f grade, at each . . ..TT7C Women's 19 cent at per pair . . . and Children's fast black. Hose, 10c The most extraordinary offer of hign-class Millinery ever made in Omaha. Hundreds of the newest and most heautiful Fall Hats, elaborately trimmed with large ostrich plumes, elegant wings, -fl. ' etc. All the rich new colors. Would 4 sell readily anywhere for $25 to $35. Your unrestricted choice Saturday... $5 and $7.50 Trimmed Hats New lot shown Saturday for the first time all new styles and up to date trimmings extra special L'ntrimmed Shapes, Hundreds of new shapes in all the most fashionable styles and colors, - Including the stunning large shapes, worth up Saturday at $2.50 $V0 for Children's Hats, New Sash Hats also the smart school girl hats in plain colors hundreds of hats worth up to $3.50, at each 2 $p9 to $4.00, at. Chlldren-a fast Hoso, worth 12 at per pair j I U Jersey Theatrical Cold Cream -oil L'Dc Rubl.oaiu lite. i5o HoHaline 1 '." ifio. Dr. Graves' Tooth Powder l-- lifxi Colgate's Tooth Haste :illc 115c tatln Skin Cream 19c 2,"h! Woodbury's Soap 17c 10c I.ona Oil Butter milk, . 3 cakea . . . ISc 6c Tar Soap, 3 cakes for 10c 10c Oatmeal Soap, 3 cake for 15c Cc Klderberry Soiip, 3 cukes for 10c FIBFCHES. 60c Crahapple Blnn Bom, per os....29c 60c Lllne, White Robe or Jocky Club, per ounc -9c RUBBER GOODS. $1.75 Fountain Sy ringe and Water Huttl 6 tl.J Sue Fountain Syringe for ODo 75o Fountain Syrlnjro for 49o $1 Hot Water Bottlo for b'Jc $3.50 Fountain Sy ringe, 2-yeir Ku.n anteu $2.69 $3.50 Marvel Whirl ing Spray $2.75 $3 Victor's Female Douche $2.00 CVT PRICE PATENT MEDICINES. 60c Syrup of Flga 45o 35c Custorla BJc ' ity t'urc Malt Whiskey 89c ISc Cough Syrup. Ibc South Side New Store. Cut Flower Dept. SPECIALS FOK SATI RD.W: Large, fresh cut American lleaUtle's at 10 each, or 3 for 25c, regularly sell at $3 to $4 a doetn. . A great lot of home-grown CHKYSANTHKML'.MS In all colors, on sale Saturday.; CAHXATION 8ALK 25 lozen. Rale of Ferns and Kern Dishes. ' Floral designs a specialty. i Black cents, 6ic i PliinAV TnPTHlWTPkTM llllllof J!. who for on. rea.on or .n-lih. women h Remember Mme Yale's Free Lectu.e. Next Monday. November 16, at IJoyd's Theater. Many good seats left If you come at once to our Drug Department and ask for them. NEXT MONDAY IS THAT Extraordinary Sale ' Portieres & Couch Covers Also Lace Curtains and Tapestry Goods. See the great window displays of these goods. Never such bargains before. Big gest sale of Its kind we ever held. FRIDAY, THE THIRTEENTH, lit)! Many Jokei Cracked, Including; First Snow by Colonel Welsh. LUCKLESS DAY HOLDS ITS CHARM Deaplt' Tanartble BrMrMt to Con. trarr Maar Peopl Still Firmly . Cllac to the Traditional Delmlon. Friday, the 13th, came In for Its usual amount of attention. In the first place, Weatber Forecaster Welsh had to take a hand In the tittle joke by sending the first Snow of the season In Omaha. And It was welcomed, too, for It lali the annoying dust and save a pleasant lightness to the air. "Friday the thirteenth," remarked the nan who, because of absorption In his own thoughts, slipped on an toy pavement Fri day morning. "Friday the thirteenth," said the man who had ' Incorrectly Judged the trend of the slock market. "Friday the thirteenth," said hundreds In Praise of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Thar is no medicine manufactured that has received more voluntary praite and ex pressions of gratitude than t hsuiberliin's Couah KeroeJy. It is elective and prompt 'relief follows its use. Urateful peou'it erery where do not hesitate lo testify to its merit for the Lenefit of others. It is a certain enra forcroupand will prevent the attack if given at the tirst apiwarance of the tiUeafC. it is specially adapted lo children as it is pleas ant to take and contaius nothing injurious. Mr. E. A. HiimphrrTs, a well known resi dent and. clerk in the store of Mr. E. Lotk, of Alios, Cape Oulonv, Houth Africa, save: "I have used Chamberlain's Cough Kemedy to ward off croup aod colds in my family. I found it to be very satisfactory aod U give sue pleasure at acosaawad it. other, but ' generally through their 'own fault or carelessness, had mishaps of some kind on the day of alleged Ul-omen. Ninety and nine per cent of these will continue firm, fixed and resolute in the belief that the unfortunate result of their own miscalculations, laslneas or other men tal vice, was due te the fact that the day was Friday and also the thirteenth of the calender. Thus again Is furnished a beau tiful illustration of the fact that with re gard to superstitions It is the belief which creates the evidence and not the evidence which creates the belief. This fact, wel! known to psychologists and other thinking persons, can be observed by anyone wh'J will watch how popular beliefs In ghost, mental telegraphy, theoaophy and a dosen other forma of the accult, gain strungth In this way. The believer In ghosts, for In stance, passes a cemetery at the more or leas "witching hour" of 12 o'clock, midnight, and In the atate of mind In which he Is, the flapping of a bird's wing or the shaking of a tree branch will firmly convince hint for the rest of hla days that he saw or heard a ghost, probably both. thief's Aanlversarr la Office. Friday, the 13th, waa the ninth anniver sary of the aopointment of Chief John J. DcnahtiH as head of the Omaha pjlh-e force, and that official has many remi niscences to tell of his long service, incluil-, lug many years on the force as patrolman and captain before being made chief. Chief Donahue says that friends tried to get him to refuse the appointment whin it was made because It waa on the 13ih of the month, and that for that reason he would be ousted in short ordxr. But 13 'la rls lucky number, he says, and he ac cepted the nomination. By a strange co Incidence the ninth anniversary falls on Friday as well as the 13th, of course. Wosnea I'lay oa Thirteen. The thirteenth section of the Ladies' Aid society of North Presbyterian church will give a dinner at the church tonight. They will have thirteen tablea. with thirteen plates at each table, and the price ef the meal will be M cents, which, by careful computation, will be found to be twice 11 The women have not explained why . 13 cents wouldn't do. It's all because thla 1s Friday, the 13th. LAW SUIT OVER SWEET CORN Case Arising; from Advance in Certain Brands Last Fall ta Jast Decided. A suit growing out of the remarkable rise In certain brands of seed sweet corn In the fall of 1!"7 has just been decided In Judge Troup's court after a trial lasting over a week. ' At the close of the hearing Judge Troup gave the J. C. Robinson Seed eotnpauy of Waterloo a Judgment for the possession of three-fifths of a crop of Ptowell'a Ever green Sweet corn, over which " the legal battle was waged. In the fall of 1207 the price of this par ticular kind of eecd corn went up from II to 13 per 1X pounds, its normal price, to between 13 and 12 per 100 pounds, owing to a reported shortage In the crop. Seed raisers who were lucky enough to have a crop of It hour ded It almost as they would gold dut. Sweepings of granary floors were gathered up and sold to the dealers and every kernel countid. In l!" the Robinson Seed company made a contract with John Hamilton, by the terms of which Hamilton was to raise a crop of this corn. He was t be paid at so much per M0 pounds, provided the crop showed u germinating power of 83 per cent. In alio fall, when the price beean to soar, Hamilton, claiming he had title to three fifths of the crop under an agreement which was to be vali.i provided the germi nating property did not come up to the standard, mortgaged hie shun' of the crop to the Waterloo banK and then sold his title subject to the mortgage to a rival seed concern. He dillverej two-fifths of the crop to the Robinson 8eed company under what he claimed was the contract. The Robinson company asaeried be haat no right to any part of the crop and re plevied the ehare he had sold. Judge Troup decided for the Robinson company and held It bad a right to the entire crop. JIMS WANT ALL THAT PIE EnongTB Omaha Oemocrats Apply for Jobs to Clean Them All Up. And still they come. Each day brings forth more democrsts who are hungering for state Jobs, and If all the Omaha men were successful in their quest the rest of the state would not be represented on the official roster. The latest aspirants are Walter Molse, Frank Planck and Fred Anheuser. Molse wants to be a colonel, having decided that he does not care' to sit on the excise board. Frank Planck Is after the same job that Joe Uutler wants state oil Inspector. Both Planck and Butler hold appointive city jobs and they see no reason why they could not get appointive state Jobs. Planck is a bookkeeper In the office of the city comptroller, while "King" Butler Is as sistant gas commissioner. Fred Anheuser is after the superintend ence of the state Institution at Mllford, say other democrats, though some say that this young democrat would be - saliafied with being breveted a colonel on the gov ernor's stuff. Abner B. Waggoner, city license Inspector, Is still standing "pat", on his state mine inspector Job and tells all comers he Is aure lie could find some mines In Nebraska were ho appointed to the position, which would have to be created for his especial benelit. Secured Through S. Stelnfeld & Co., New York. Big Purchase of s Men's Fur Lined Overcoats i GUIOU HANDS OVER MONEY l'us Ten Thousand Itolari us til uoajr Allowed Ills Wife with llrr Divorce. Ten thousand dollars was paid by Arthur P. Ouiou to F. A. Brogun. attorney for Mrs. Grace li. (iuiou as the alimony al lowed by Judge Kstelle at the divorce hearing Thursday. The payment of the money ends the case In district court and precludes an appeal from the decree of the court allowing the money. Quick Returns Through Eea Want Ac. U4 f If? l0MV I jp pi Pitt - y Comprising Entire New York Furrier's Stock On Sale Beginning Saturday at TNI At One-IIalf Actual Value $100 Brook Mink Lined, 52-inch Coat, with Persian (CCA lamb collar, English broadcloth outside shell, at. . .vpJU $90.00 Marmot Lined 52-inch Coat Persian lamb P collar, English broadcloth shell, at J $100 Marmot Lined Coat 52-inch, natural silver fl C A otter collar, genuine broadcloth shell, at $j3 $65.00 Raccoon Lined Coat 52-inches long, blended Z 50 muskrat collar, kersey shell, at $50.00 Black Martin Lined Coat 52-inches long, Per sian lamb collar, domestic broadcloth shell, at ;.. $25 $40 Blended Squirrel Lined Coat Coney collar, fine doeskin shell, at. Also All the Fur Coats in This Stock at Big Reductions , IJaceoon, I!usiau Pony, Wambat, Calf, Galloway, etc.