TITE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER Jfi, 1000. Don't llayt NOW Is Yonr nest Opportunity To Bay That w Overcoat or-Salt ra n rTi r neck moff lin for man, 9 A GREAT SALE of MEN'S UNDERWEAR 10 0 4 1 2SI 7 7:7- - Y . AOs. "t : t . ? ; V 5 If i' r ' t V i j j i -Vkl'l4 jtU:''4t' 4 L; r stJ'v, Lit' i 4 1 1 - M ;i t v f GREAT OASGI PURCH The Entire New York Wholesale Clothing Stock at a Wonderful Sacrifice on LMJLS and Brandeis stores have held many wonderful clothing sales in the past, but never one so great as this. Every Overcoat and Suit in this entire purchase is hand tailored and made in the classiest style for fall and winter. We have diided the entire stock into three lots: LOT 1 Your Choice of All the MEN'S Overcoats and Suits from the Big Purchase WORTH $15 AND $16, AT LOT 2 Your Choice of All the ' MEN'S Suits and Overcoats from the Big Purchase WORTH UP TO $20.00, AT $ Am LOT 3 Your Choice of All the MEN'S Overcoats and Suits from the Big Purchase . r WORTH $22, $25, $27.50 AT (One of the New Style Protector Overcoats from . . ' This Stock.) On Sale Saturday at BRANDEIS STORES All the Samples and Surplus Stock From a New Yorl Underwear Mill at About One IIlf It) Value The greatest chance In years to buy fine winter underwear am below its value. LOT 1. Men's all wool double and single breasted under shirts also drawers pray, red, tan and cam- ers hair worth up to $2.00 a gar ment at 75c LOT 2: Men's worsted under shirts and drawers fancy and plain wool-J-extra heavy wool fleece; worth up to $1.25 at. ., 3SC Men's wool and leather mittens, at. .25c, 50c 75c LOT 3 In the Basement Broken lots of men's underwear- extra heavy ribbed cotton and flecee lined worth up to 75c, at 25c Men's Sweater Coats A special sale of high grade samples worsted and wool sweater coats plain and fancy AC 7 tZn ClQt trimmed; worth up to $2.50, at. . . HtJV- i UV'JOV Men's hand made wool sweater coats and vests, highest quality, at S3.98 to ........ $G.50 Boys' 76c leather gauntlet gloves made with fancy cuffs, pair . .20J Men's Murmlng union suits $1.50 to 4.SO Lewis and Sterling union suits, also Bhtrla and drawers, at $3.60 to 99.B0 Root's medicated wool nhlrta and drawers $lJti to $2 Norfolk and New Brunswick under wear 91.85 to 94.BO It !, 1 ai ii, 1 " 1 " Boys9 Clothing Great Specials Saturday Boys' $7.50 Knickerbocker Suits and Overcoats Top notch point of good clothes making $ C r at. Our great $3.60 com bination suit, one ex tra pair of pants free with every cCn suit, suit at Boys ? 5 overcoats- ages 3 to 1 TQ9 16 years at Boys' extra fine single or double breasted suits or overcoats, at $7.50 Up BRANDEIS Men's Fall Ha& Your choice of J,500 soft and stiff hats, the entire sample lines of two eastern hat manufacturers. New fall styles- P(k QO worth to $3.00,, at. .0Jte70C The famous Stetson soit ana a e r d v r hats, at. ..$3.50 Imported English Vki made. at..S3.00 Na Brandeis Snecisl i i sotted stiff we; Hats, at . . . 2.00 " Boys' and children's winter caps at 25d 49 and 08 Men's corduroy hunting caps fur lined bands, at 50d Men.' sample caps $1.60 and $2.09 values, at . . . . 08 STORES ( SUNDAY SCHOOL INSTITUTE Opening Session Held in the First Methodist Church. IMPORTANCE OF W0EK SET OUT Greater Portion of Church . Member ship and Practically All of Clergr Recruited from the Bandar Schools. The opening aecfilon of the Methodist Sun day school Institute, under the direction of the board of Sunday schools of the Metho dist Episcopal church, was held Thursday evening at the First ' Methodist church, ith Dr. F. L. Loveland, pastor of the church, presiding. Addresses of welcome were given by T. F. Sturxesa. editor of The Twentieth Century Farmer, and Dr. William Oorst, superintendent of the con ference. Bishop Nuelsen was kept away from the session by a delayed train. Mr. Sturgess, after his formal welcome, xplulned the need of the Institute to build up the Sunday schools, saying that SS per cent of the church membership was re cruited from the Sunday schools. . Dr. , Uorst said that four conferences would be represented at the Institute, two from eastern Nebraska and two from west ern Iowa. "The two eastern Nebraska conferences have a church membership of 44.000 and a Sunday school membership of 42.000," said Dr. Oorst. "The western Iowa conferences have a church membership of 78.000 and a Sunday school membership of 69,000. Tn Greater Omaha there are eighteen Metho diet Episcopal churches, with a member ship of 3,398 and a Sunday school member ship of S.:S6. N In Council Bluffs the church membership is 1.1M and the Sunday school membership la 984. ,"Ve have a great work to do and the leaders In this Institute will speak to all these people through their delegates. We (eel that we. caa do mora and ought to do more than we are doing. One of the great est difficulties In the church today is to find a sufficient number of qualified teach ers who are willing to make the sacrifice. I have seen a statement that we get but 3 per cent of our male membership Into the churches from other sources than the Sun day school." t Problems of Sander Schools. Dr. David O. Downey, secretary of the Board of Sunday Schools of the Methodist Episcopal church, was the only one of the leaders of the Institute present last night, but he assured the congregation that he had word from the 'others that they would be present at the opening this morning. "If we enter this Institute In the right spirit we will go away better prepared to cope with the obstacles which may come in our way," said Dr. Downey. "No two Sunday schools have the same problems. It Is a mistake to think that every class of boys can be handled In the same way. Every Individual boy Is a problem by him self. We have not only organisations to deal with, but we have Individuals. "The symbol of the highest and best civ ilization Is a little child. The child is the greatest of all natural resources in this country and he la of far more Importance than the water-power and the forests. The call of the ministry and of humanity Is for the prevention of our boys and girls from falling Into the mire. "Religion was Intended to fit men to live and not to die, and a boy Is not concerned on when he Is to die or to where he will go when he dies, but he Is more concerned In living. These children must be taught that the greatest thing of Christianity Is to live as we ought to live. When the Sun day school membership drops below the churoh membership there Is danger, and according to the figures of Dr. Oorst this will be a splendid field tor some good work. There is no other such evangelical oppor tunity as la presented in the Sunday school. 1 "Ninety-five per cent, of the ministry gets Its start In the Sunday school and 85 per cent of the membership of the church Is recruited from the Sunday school. The greatest Institution In the world today Is the church of the living God. "The church that rightly conceives the opportunity of the child will bring about the thing moat needed to be done." JEWS FORGE TO THF FRONT Their Dominant Position In the Busi ness Life of New York City. How much the Jewish population means In the life of New York City few people realize. Within the last few years, quietly, almost without notice, the Jew has be come the chief single element In the pop ulation of our principal American city and In a very real sense one of the dom inating factors of our life. , Out of the total population of Greater New York nearly 1,000,000 are Jews, or more than one In every five. Nowhere at any time in the world's his tory were so many Jews gathered to gether In one locality. Jerusalem the Golden In all the 5,000 years of Its history never had a quarter as many Jews as now live In New York City, and all Palestine today, In spite of all the efforts of enthusiastic Zionists to fire their people with a desire to return to their home land, has not as many Jewish residents aa may be found In half a, dozen blocks In the East side. Not only are they the domtnent factor on the crowded East side, but they occupy whole neighborhoods In other parts of the city In Harlem and the Bronx, In Wil liamsburg and Brownsville almost to the exclusion of other population. And they are not mere renters of home and tenements; for a considerable proportion of the valu able land on Manhattan Island Is now held by Jewish owners. The largest single Industry In the city alothlng manufacture is almost wholly In the hands of Jews They control many of our greatest banks, and other financial Institutions, and their domain In finance la rapidly extending; they dominate and direct almost exclusively the amusements, both theaters and opera of the greatest American city. About half of the principal newspapers of the metropolis are owned by Jews and some of the other papers have Jewish editors In important positions. They con- arts Don't be misled by imitations ASK FOR AKER'S' COCOA bearing this trade-mark A PERFECT FOOD PRESERVES HEALTH PROLONGS LIFE ii I til g C Registered 83 V. 8. Fat. Office x trol the greater part of the wholesale and retail trade. Many of our ablest lawyers, doctors and scientists are Jews. More and more the Jew Is becoming a great factor in pqlltlcs; if Tammany Hall Is beaten at the polls this fall, the Jew will do It. Many Jew. judges now administer our laws, and not a few Jews In our legisla tures and tn congress are helping to make them. The education of the children of New York City Is, to a surprising extent, in the hand of the Jews and becoming more and more so. I examined the lists recently published of newly appointed teachers for the public schools. It reads for long spaces like a directory of the East Side. Hundreds of teachers In New York who were born In despotic Russia and who came here only a few years ago, know ing not a word of English, are today teaching American children the principles of democracy. Some of the strongest benevolent and civic activities of the city are controlled by Jews, and, finally, the Jews, resisllnC Christianity, have built up at least one religious or ethical movement which has attracted many Christians. Not a few Christian churches, slowly surrounded by Jews, have given up the struggle and their buildings have finally been purchased and converted into syna gogues. It may come as a surprise to mtny people, but It is a fact, that there are now far more synagogues (organiza tions, not buildings) on ' Manhattan Island than there are Christian churches. The number of Jewish synagogues In Greater New York is 803, of which 708 are In Manhattan Island and the Bronx. Assuredly New York City has become the New Jerusalem of the Jew. Hay Stannard Baker in American Magazine. TOUCHED THE WRONG MAN Practical Application of a xeatirc Incident Ends Dismally. So. found the Reverend Henry lingering about the' portals of the massive office building In which Colonel Bullion attended to busi ness, and sure enough along about 11 o'clock the Impressive figure of the colonel was to be seen making Its way through the crowded highway. . "Why, Bill, how are your' said the Rev erend Henry, extending his hand, as Bul lion entered the corridor. "Morning," said the colonel, glowering at him darkly and trying to get by. "You don't seem to remember me. Bill," said the Reverend Henry. "Don't you re momber that I married you to Josephine" "Remember you!" roared the colonel. "Remember you?. I'd give 10,000 tf I could forget you. You' are my most persistent nightmare. When I think of what I got for that J2 bill I gave you thirty-five years ago for tangling me up for the rest of my natural life you ought to thank your stars I don't Jump on your ding-basted neck. Get out of here!" And the Reverend Henry went back to his flock. Harper's Weekly. WUN LUNG, HIM BUG HERO Chink Catches Thief and Leads 111m to Conviction and Twenty Days' Sentence. "Him glow In aiicd me cetchy wlf locke." With this declaration Wun Lung, captor of Jim Smith, a negro charged with an attempt to rob the Chinaman's coalshed, stepped back and left the rest to Judge Crawford. The defendant could say little to explain the situation. He had burst out of the shed Into the arms of Policeman Joe Hell. Smith stood silent 'and embarrassed. The painful situation was broken by the voice of the Judge: "Twenty days, James." The longer a cold hangs on, the more It weakens the system. Cure It promptly by using Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. MEDICAL MARVELS IN CHINA Where Barber, Doctor and Dentist Take Torna with the Native. . It Is the custom . for a Chinaman to visit his barber every week to have a general overhauling. First, ths head and face are shaved; second, the ears are scraped and cleansed with a small brush made of duck's hair; third, the upper and lower eyelids are scraped with a dull edged knife, all granulations being smoothed away, and then an application Is made with a duck's hair brush of salt solution. This Is the 'reason why you will find so much blindness In China. They take no antl-septlc measures whatever. All Instruments are held In the operator's mouth during the process of operation. Finally the patient's back Is massaged, and after paying a fee of 8 cents and no tip lie leaves the shop feeling clean outside, but now must consult his regu lar physician. After going through the usual examina tion, which is a form of military Inspec tion, the doctor diagnoses the case and treats It, unless a devil happens to Jump down the patient's throat. If this has happened the doctor can do the patient no good until he promises to set off 100 firecrackers and to make a dally visit to the Joss house. This doi.e tie receives the usual pills for tljose vacated by the devil. These pills may consist of spotted rhinoceros horn, said to be a wonderful cure for Intestinal troubles. The spotted rhinoceros horns come from southern China, and In the market at Singapore a single specimen will bring $26. Tiger bones when ground to a powder end mixed with Chinese wine make a great blood tonic which Is used by all classes of Chinamen in northern China. The recipe is held by a firm In Shanghai that has beoome ' very wealthy by the sale of this tonlo. Old deer horns are boiled down to make the medicinal glue which binds the fifty Ingredients composing the average Chinese pills. As in these you may get anything from a pinch' of gunpowder to powdered cobra tall dust It Is not the fault of Wong-Ylk-Chee If Just the right kind of spmilflo escapes the patient. Equal In medicinal efficacy to the aiove are three high -grade tiger remedies, the eyeball, liver and blood. As may be im agined, tiger eyeball, the genuine article, can be prescribed for only the axoned ingly wealthy Chinese. Similarly the liver, when dried and reduced to a powder, la worth Its weight In gold all over China. Tiger- blood, when evaporated to a solid at a temperature of 110 degrees and taken as a powder. Is believed by Asiatics to transform a craven into a hero. After the patient has made the rounds of the barber and traveling physician he now looks up his dentist, whom he jt'lll find on anv street- corner In all -faffs Chinese cities. You are greatly Impressed by the seriousness of this gentleman, who Is always reading and thinking of his collection of some 2.000 teeth on a table and a few bottles of some secret drug which upon Inquiries a Chinese inter preter told a visit contained tbe moisture of the Inner side of an old coffin which was collected after being burled some ten years. A dentist In China Is called a boxer" by all Chinamen, for he Is sup posed to have great strength In his arms and hands, and also some great maglo power. Medical Record. Transport Baford Arrives. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 16. The United States army transport Buford arrived from the Philippines, bringing a large number of enlisted men of the Fifty-seventh coast artillery. Among the returning , officers were Major J. H. Gardner of the First cavalry and Captain George D. Arrowsinltli of the paymasters department. iutrfujfVunuOijtiunutiufa The little country clergyman had Just read that very charming aiecdote now go ing the rounds of the press telling how Mr. John W. Gates, the other day, on meeting the minister who had married him forty years ago, after greeting him warmly said to him: "When you married me I only gave you I a S5 fee, but I'll make up for It now," and ! drawing out his checkbook he drew and presented to the astonished clergyman a draft for $1,000. The little country clergyman rubbed his eyes iM-ei he read this, and then he read It aiuud to his wife. "That Ik perfectly splendid," he said. "It certainly is." replied the good woman. "By the way, Henry, didn't you tell me that It was you who married Josephine lllckenlooper to Colonel Bullion of the Shingle trust?" "Yes; It was thirty-five years ago. He paid me 82 for tying the knot," returned the clergyman. "Well, I should say," said the good woman, "that If these millionaires are go ing to make a habit or this thing it wouldn't be a bad Idea for you to meet the colonel casually some day and remind him of it." "Curious coincidence," said the little min ister, "but do you know, Marie, I was thinking that very same thing myself." "Well, Henry dear, don't let any grass grow under your feet," said Marie. "If I were you I'd go to New York today, while this anecdote is fresh In the public mind, and sort of get In touch with Colonel Bul lion. Who knows but that he has Just read It himself and Is thinking of you at this very moment!" j Hence it was that the next inornlnv 1.,M null.. I , IHW.-L-I.UJ-W. .. I I .Jt.lV'i'f'" WWWW .W'Jfc. - . ! " -" wASHBURN-CR0SBYC0- GoldMedal Flour I Copyright 1000 Vabturo-Cryb Co., Miuueajyvlis, Minn,