4 " TIIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY. DECEMBER 12, 1009. Brandeis Most Fortunate Ca.sk Purchase . I sP stnwsannaw snsjBsnnnaa ss, pW"1! m You Can Buy a $22.50 U Hand Tailored Overcoat or Suit at Brandeis SATURDAY for $10 ! ! &ri RE, '-V ":pt&i V 'v Kl The 7;lklHv -a i if?. I wWMdz: $18 Suits W. 4: i M S $20 Suits r v V V I.U-'vJ "e,,'s -cmi" ? ; in? i in ENTIRE TOLEDO, OHIO, TTV A T7T7 ii iii TO.CK s Smoking Jackets and Lounging Robes Are Gifts a Man Appreciates Men's Smoking Jackets in Oxford, blue, brown, gray and fancy mixtures trimmed with cording 50 $5.00 values, at Men's Smoking Jackets, in all the new colors, perfectly tail- 50 t 50 ored throughout, at. . O li MEN'S LOUNGING ROBES AND BATH ROBES in an tne nug, warm materials biggest selection in :is. ii v w rt sr .iiii ! rr tv ."n ttttTT T" V II 7 t B iiiuui. robes and rith robes Unrestricted Choice of All Men's Fancy Overcoats or Suits f ' or Makes, at 20 ' Reduction. Positively One-Fifth;, Off Regular Prices Bought Through L. Ullman & Sons, 26 to 32 L Houston St. Finest Hand Tailored Overcoats or Suits for Men in One Lot for $10 Made in the very newest extreme and conservative styles by the best tailors in New York. Suits in the finest all wool fabrics also the swellest new "protector" over coats, raincoats and top coats. Buy one of these splen did Suits or Overcoats just before Xmas for $10. All s From the Toledo Stock at ?,$180'coats L$20O'coats .225-0'coats From the Toledo Stock Sweater Coats For Men and Boys Men's and Boys' $1.50 wool Mn Sweaters and Sweater Coats. . TtW V Men's and Boys' Fine Sweater Coats, worth up to $2.50, Jackets, at. :r.98c Men's all wool Sweater $Q w OhHatmM Vokwff I Xan'a Chrlatmaa Mum- I Kn'a Kid and Moeh worth up to $1.60 pn(lr on a t a OIotm for chrlatmnn, at &o and 7So pair 60o to M-88 I at ...98o to 12.83 r .Jtl f.m.lii lona " w t. BOTH ALL THE MEN'S PANTS ftaftS" The newest cuts and the finest patterns full peg and semi-peg tops finest of worsteds, cassi meres velours and Scotches. Thousands of pairs of these well tailored trousers. POSITIVELY WORTH UP TO $5.00 A PAIR, at pair mi BBEC1D All the Men's 50c end 75c Winter Caps i 35 All the Men's $1.50 fine Winter Caps 984 All Men's $2.50 Fur Caps. $1.50 An Extra Special Sale Girls' Children's Caps Pretty knit and bearskin Caps, in all shapes and colors actually worth np to $1.00 each P in one lot for. All the Girls' $1.60 Bearskin Caps Saturday at 08 All the Women's $1.50 Fur Caps Saturday, 08 Men's $6 Muskrat Caps... $3.08 Men's Sealskin Caps, $3.98 and $4.08 Men's $10 Beaver Fur Caps at .-$6.50 jtnaiiA 'brandeis BRIAN'S IDEA OF TAXATION (Continued from First Page.) greater than the amount of Interest re turned for the preceding blennlum. This is attributed . to the Interest being in creased from 2 to 3 per cent for the aver age bally balance of state funds deposited In the various depository banks. State School Funds. By the pasnga of senate file No. IMS of the last legislature, providing for the pay ment of warrants by the state treasurer and the Investment of same la the school fund when sufficient money is on hand in such fund, thereby taking these warrants from the hands of speculators who lesire to carry them as an Investment, the rec ords of this office are placed In such shape that our book shows the total amount of state Indebtedness by the daily balance of such registered warrants, and no general fund warrants have been registered for the holder of same since April 5, 19u7, so that the school fund has the benefit of the In terest accrued on all warrants owed by tho general fund of the state. The money -received from Investments In warrants, from bnds coming due and from payment of principal on school land has to be reinvested by the noard of Educational Iands and Funds and the records of this department for the last four years indicate an average yearly Investment of over Ii, oio.ooo. I relieve the various county and school district bonds which will be offired for sale will be Inadequate to consume this mm of money available for Investment, and tills will require the buvlna; of other tate securities, aa has been done In the past. The records of this department show a larger Income received by reason, of buy ing these bonds direct from the states which Issue them, and they also show art Increase of from V4 to 1 per cent for bonds purchssed this biennlum over the income received on bonds purchased for the pre ceding biennlum. makina- an additional an nual Income .of I10.831 on the amount of bonds purchased dur'ng tho last two years. In order to pixlntsln this precedent which lias been established, of aolng out mid buy ing bonds direct. I would recommend that an appropriation be made available to this board for the continuation of buying bonds Uect from the various states. Greargr Wants l.ona Terra. 0efora Governor Sheldon selects a, auo ressor to James K. Delsell, member of the Stat Board of Education, whose term ex . plred some months ago., he will have to pass upon a proposition which" has, It Is reported, been put. up to him, which In volve! considerable detail. It la reported that Charles Gregg ot Kear ney, already a member of the board. Is anxious to be reappointed, but his tlmo does not expire until next year. By then Governor-elect Shallenberger will be at the head of the state and Gregg does not de sire to trust himself to the consideration of the democratic executive. 80 he has proposed to Governor Sheldon that he will resign. Then, Instead of ap pointing Delsell for a five-year term, the governor can appoint him to the full term and appoint Delzell to fill out the Gregg term of one year. This would put It u to Delsell to take his chances with the Incom ing executive. It Is reported on the most reliable au thority that Gregg has made his proposition to Governor Sheldon, but that the governor has as yet not decided what to do In the matter. , Delzell, It la reported, wlfl make no ob jections to the preposition if the governor decides to permit Gregg to resign and ap point him for the five-year term. Falling to make this proposition work It Is said Gregg is in favor of the selection of R. J. Barr, principal of the schools at Grand Island, to succeed Delzell, and flie latter also favors this If he cannot get the Job himself. In the meantime the name of Hon. Peter Mortensen has been prominently mentioned for the place. Mr. Mortensen has' served as a member of the board when state treasurer and. Is familiar with the needs of the two normal schools. Fight for Speakership. The speakership fight has reached the slow dog-trot stage and already some ot the aspirants are almost winded. At this stage of the game Henry of Holt county has the lead and there ia no doubt about that. Dividing the old members with Henry, is Graff of Cuming, between whom there Is no illfeellng. The western coun ties, so the card reads, are about equally divided between Taylor of Custer and Bowman of Nuckolls. Then comes Pool of Johnson and Clark of Richardson with the southeast portion of the state for either of them, with Henry Gerdes In the background ready to pick up after any mlsttake either makes. Pool and Clark are going to divide the Douglas dele- UMBRELLAS For Christmas Gifts PRICES WERE NEVER LOWER QUALITY NEVER HIGHER Pickering Umbrellas Are Born and Raised in the Shop of ED. PICKERING, M0H: South Sixteenth St. 17 Tears In This Location. gatlon after it gets through with Stoecker. R. E. Lee Herdman was down here one night this week and had a conference with Clark of Richardson, and this is taken to mean, considered along with other straws, that Clark will find a friend In some of the Omaha delegation. Pool, however, is not objectionable to the Omaha bunch, and, it is a case of whlcji of these two has the best hand when the showdown comes. It is reported than Henry is for county option or prohibition, but, strange as It may seem, that has not alienated from him tne support of several members who are op posed to county option In any form. These men give It out that the liquor question is not to enter into the organization of the house, and whichever candidate attempts to secure votes by reason of his stand on the liquor question Is going to be swatted. In the meantime E. O. Garrett, late can didate for lieutenant governor on the dem ocratic ticket, has gone back to work for the American Book company. He takes the Job he was supposed to have resigned when he Jumped into the political game. Cone and Richmond Meet. The gladiators met in the lobby of the I.1ndell hotel this noon and neither shed blood. They were Trenmore Cone, the leather lunged stateman from Saunders, and Henry C. Richmond, the democratic oracle from Fremont and the national committee. These two are fighters. For days they have been arrayed against each other in a political battle and the chief clerkship of the house is the purse. At the conclusion of the conference. which mipht have been a horrible bloody fight, but wasn't, each said: "There will be no compromise." Then each satisfied his friends that he had the job nailed down. Cone had fifty four members of the house promised, his friends said. "Richmond haa a cinch," aald Richmond's friends. And then each hustled for the depot to catch a train for distant parts of the state to butoon-hole other representatives who have promised no one. Howell Draws ray. Lieutenant Governor Hopewell today drew a warrant from the state auditor for $30.28 for serving the state aa gov ernor for twenty-eight daya. During thla period Governor Sheldon waa out of the Ktute on business In the interest of the state, but he drew no pay for the time he was gone. The twenty-eight days cov. ers a period from September So, 1907 to July ' 19, 1908. Cannot Escape Tax. According to an opinion written by Deputy Attorney General Grant Martin, one cannot escape the payment of personal taxes by removing from one county to another, un less he flies an affidavit of poverty. It Is not only the duty of the treasurer in the county where the delinquent originally lived, the opinion says, to make diligent ef fort to collect by distress warrant any de linquent taxes, but it Is also the duty cf the treasurer In the county to which the delinquent has removed to collect the taxes due the same as upon execution, together with his costs, and after so collecting to forward the same to the treasurer of the proper county. , County Attorney E. E. Ross of Merrick county, who asked for the opinion, had a case in mind where the treasurer of Mer rick county sent a distress warrant to the treasurer of another county for the purpose of collecting delinquent taxes egalnwt a party who had removed. The county treas urer to whom the distress warrant was sent said the tax debtor refused payment and said he would fight th matter out in court, and the treasurer returned the distress warrant. Mr. Martin says it is the duty of the county treasurer, under section 11057, Cob bey's Annotated Statutea, 1907, to collect the taxes due and return the money to the proper county, and if he wilfully falls and neglects to perform his duties in matters of this kind, he forfeits his right to office and may be removed therefrom. He is further of the opinion that a county treas urer who wilfully falls to execute such war rant would be liable to th county ag grieved upon his official bond for any dam ages that such county might sustain. There are at least two remedies for his failure to act. First, this being a duty enforced upon him by law, it may be enforced by a man damus in a proper case. Second, the only endorsement upon the distress warrant that justifies a county treasurer in returning it without collection Is the one that shows no property could be found belonging to the delinquent whereon to levy and collect the same. If thla return Is made when the de linquent really has property It would be equivalent to making a false return, which, under section 110&4 makes the officer liable for double the amount of taxes, with Inter est and costs, to be recovered in the name of the county. DETAILS 0FMURDER GIVEN Coroner's Jury Finds Nicholas Far. rena Acted Without Felonious Intent In Fight. TEKAMAH, Neb., Dec. 11. (Special Tele gramsAt the Inquest held at Decatur over the body of Lester Ball, who was killed in a row there Wednesday night, the Jury returned tho verdict that Ball came to his death by blows Inflicted with out felonious intent, by Nicholas N. Far re ns. Farrens was arrested and brought to this place, but as County Attorney Slng haus is away the time for the preliminary hearing was not set. Farrens and several others had been to Onawa with grain and were returning on the ferry boat about sundown when the boat commenced to leak. It was run on a sandbar to keep It from sinking. Lester Ball heard of the trouble and took a row boat over to help get tho horses off and awlm them ashore. The horses were all gotten across about 11 o'clock and when Farrens got Into the boat to go over he missed his jug of whisky. Some one told him Ball had taken is across some time before. When Farrens landed he immediately hunted up Ball, who had taken the Jug to his home. Both men had been drinking, and after wrangling for some time. Ball agreed to go home and gret the Jug, Far rens and two or three others going along. When half way there Ball turned on Far rens and nearly knocked him down by a blow on the Jaw. Both men took off their coats and went at In. Farrens pounded Ball unmercifully, breaking his jaw and nose and bruising him up terribly, from the ef fects of which he died In thirty minutes. Ball was 34 years old, married, and had four children. Farrens is a well-to-do farmer living east of Decatur. Lester Ball is a son of Ellsha Ball, whom it was first reported was killed. knows no creed, race or color; it's used the world over by young and old alike as a frame and body builder. It's wonderful how rapidly bab ies and children gain flesh and strength on it. Be sure to get Scott's Emiti-Sion; It has been the standard for over 30 years, and has many worth Ids imitations and substitutes. ALL DBUOOiaTO Send this ad., four cents far poets-, men tioning this paper, and wm will tend you a "Complete tUody Alls of ths Wofkt" SCOTT BOWNE, 409 Pearl St. R Y. SHARP SAFE BEHIND BARS Prophet Says Lord Waa Not with JHm or Waa Taking: m Va- cation. KANSAS CITT. MO., Dec. ll.-"The Lord was either not with us or was on a vaca tion. Now, I know my faith was wrong, that I was mistaken." ' That Is the statement of James Sharp, better known as "Adam God," who was captured In Kansas late yesterday. It was Sharp who last Tuesday led his followers Into a battle with the police that has al ready resulted In five deaths. A. J. Selsor, aged 72, an Innocent bystander, wounded by a stray bullet, la the last of the vic tims to die. Selsor died at the hospital at midnight last night. It is a penitent and humble prophet that sits In his cell In the police station here with the responsibility of five deaths upon him, but he insists he was misguided and acted in good faith. "Honestly, captain." he said to Officer Whltsett, "I believed that we were doing right and that it was God's will. When the bullets commenced to hit me then I had a revelation. I am glad to be back and want to stand for anything that God wills. Oh, it is terrible. "I had a nice farm In Oklahoma and was doing well when I believed I was called," he continued. "Now I have no money, my children have left me and we have mur dered Innnocent men. "I'm up a stump, brother. But It was all the fault of the faith. I saw It all as soon as the bullet hit me, "I expect to be killed," added Sharp In answer to a question. "I don't care how quickly It comes. I only want time to write a letter to my followers, and tell them that the faith was wrong." valued at r 2. OOftOOa To South America, which cornea third on the list, wo exported 172,000,000 worth of manufactures, of which 122.000,000 waa In Iron and steel manufac tures and $9,000,000 In. refined mineral oil. The value of manufactures exported to Asia In 1908 waa 172,000,000, Of thla 125,000,- 000 waa In Iron and steel and $23,000,000 In refined mineral oils. To Oceania $40,000,000 worth ot manufactures were sent, $14,000, 000 worth of which was In Iron and steel Africa received during the year $10,000,000 worth of our manufactures, Iron and steel showing a total of nearly $3,000,000 and re fined mineral oils $2,600,000. v SENATOR BROWN SEES TAFT Nebraska Member On of Several Who Par Respects to Presl-deat-Elect. WASHINGTON. Deo. It President.!... Taft today had conferences with Senators Kiureage ana Gamble of South Dakota, Brown of Nebraska and Henropntoti. McGulre of Oklahoma, McKlnley of Cali fornia, Blms and Sweeney of Tennessee, IOWA TOWN SUFFERS IN Fll Nearly tho Entire Baslneaa Sectl of Town of Patton Wiped . Ont by Blase. FORT DODGE, la,, Dec 1L (Spe Telegram.) Fire last night swept out entire business portion of the little tq of Paton, twenty-five miles south of hi andfor a time threatened to destroy entire town. The loss Is estimated at t 000. The amount of Insurance has not been complied. The fire started from defective flue in Agnes Welch's mlllfm store and spread to Elmore's general stoi and from, there to the Paton hotel. T meat markets, a barber shop, a blacksrr shop, the telephone exchanges and sev other buildings were destroyed. The gj eral store of Fowler & French was sa as was French's $10,000 home. Fourtj merchants and professional men ere w out places of business. m LIST OF EXPORTS IS LARGER More Manufactures Shipped Out This Year Than Any Preced ing; One. WASHINGTON. Dec. 11. More menu factures were exported from the United States In the tlttcal year 1908 than In aiy preceding year, aggregating In value three-quarters of a billion dollars, accord ing tj the annual report of the chief of the bureau of statistics of the Depart ment of Commerce and Labor. His report shows that the value of exports to Europe is Increasing yearly, being $368,000,000 in 19U8, as against $36S,000,OUO In 1907; $318,000. 000 In 19i and $2l3,000,OUO in 1906. In 1908 19 per cent of our manufactured exports went to Europe. Copper led In value of exports to Europe of this material, $97, 000,000 being sent. Refined minerals came next, totalling $56,000,000, while of Iron and steel manufactures the value was $47,000,000. The value of manufactures exported from this country to all North America during the year was $189,000,000, of which the principal Item was iron asd steel. Our Diamond sales have been greater than ever before tor the first ten days of December, and we want to make this the record-breaking Diamond month of our 18 years in business. We cannot offer you a $100 Diamond for $90, but we can offer them at such prices that we are willing and guarantee ,to buy them back at any time within one year and pay you nine-tenths of what you paid us. We have them from $5 f o $1,200 m BRANDEIS Washburn of Massachusetts and Taylor Ohio. Mr. Taft has accepted an Invitation J lunch with the president tomorrow. LEATHER GOODS SALE . We have on sale a large cq elgnment of Leather Goods, co slsting of Ladles' Handbags, L dies' Pocketbooks, Gentlemen Pocketbooks, Card Cases, etc., i The line consists of about l,4t dlfferentiteruB. No two alike, ai will go on sale at manufacture prices. This will be a wonderful opp tunity to save money and also! get the best selection. Ilememb there are no two Items alike. Come early before they a picked over, Myers-Dillon Drug Co CUT-RATE DRUGGISTS, j Sixteenth and Farnaut Htreel