Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 06, 1910, Page 2, Image 2

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    TIIE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JULY . 0, 1910.
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GUR usual Mid-Summer Clearance bale begins Wednesday Morning, July 6th. folks hereabouts are
pretty well acquainted with the general character of our Clearance Sales, and it is hardly necessary
to explain that, when we anndunce a sale of this' kind, we mean a Genuine Disposal Sale of all our
warm weather wearables, and not simply a sale of inferior goods bought for sale purposes. We trust you
understand' us. .
Boys' Clothing
WHITE AND COLORED
WASH SUITS
$1.25 ami ,$1.50 Suits. ... 98o.
$1.75 and $2.00 Suits . .$'1.45:
$2.25 and $2.50 Suits. . $1.85
$3.50 and $3.75 Suits. . $2.85
$4.00 and $4.50 Suits. . $3.65
$5.00 Suits for $3.85
WOOLEN SUITS, SUM
MER WEIGHT,
$5.00 Suits for ...... $3.05
$7.50 and $8.50 Suits. . $5.75
$10.00 Suits for ..... . $6.75
$12.00 Suits for $8.65
$13.50 Suits for .... $10.00
$15.00 Suits for.... $10.75
Young Men's Clothing
THE CELEBRATED "SAMPECK" SUITS AT CLEARANCE
SALE PRICES-THIS INCLUDES THE BLUE SERGE SUITS
$18.00 Young Men's Suits for $13.75
$20.00 Young Men's Suits for $14.75
$22.50 Young Men's Suits for $16.75
$25.00 Young Men's Suits for .... $18.75
$27.50 Young Men's Suits for $21.75
$30.00 Young Men's Suits for $22.50
$32.50 Young Men's Suits for $25.00
Boys' Blouses
Fine madras blouses, with col
lars attached or just collar
band, for boys 7 to 16 years
regular $1.00 . vajue, '"7Q
sale price I 7v
You"g Men's Shirts
The $1.50 Star and Benthor
madras Shirts for young men,
good patterns, sizes 13 to 16
neckband the $1.50 $
kind, sale price . .
11.15
Shoes
Women's' pumps, two hole ties and oxfords,
dull leather, -suede and patent.
..The $5.00 kind for $3.50; the $4.00 kind .....
Little girls' pumps and oxfords, with low heels
The $3,00 "kind SJl.xO; the $3.50 kind
Misses' oxfords and ankle-strap pumps
The $3.00 ones 2.40; the, $2.50 ones
Cliildren's oxfords and ankle-strap pumps
The $2-.50- oiio Sl.OOt the $2.00 ones. . .
.. The $125 .''Infant V ankle strap slippers for....
Boys '.oxfords "in tan, dull and patent leather
The $3.00 and $3.50 kind reduced to
. Little men's $2.50 oxfords for
Infants' soft sole shoes, all colors, 50c kind. . ,. .
in 'tan calf,
..... $2.60
...V. $2.90
..... $1.95
. trill'
$1.40
85c
. . : . : $2.4o
.... $1.95
.;:.. 7 39c
Girls' Wear-
COLORED DRESSES
Ages 6 to 14 years.
$1.25 Dresses 9Sc
$1.75 Dresses $1.39
$2.50 Dresses $1.95
Both White and Colored Dresses
$3.00 and $3.50 kind $2.45
$3.50 and $4.00 kind $2.95
$4.50 and $5.00 kind $3.45
$6.00 and $6.95 kind $4.75
$7.50 and $8.75 kind $5.90
$10.00 and $12.0a kind $8.50
Girls' Coats
Ages C to 14
$6.50 White Serge $3.95
$13.50 White Serge $9.75
$5.00 Colored Coats $2.95
$7.50 Colored Coats $5.00
$8.50 Colored Coats $5.90
$10.00 and $12.00 Coats $7.50
H White Muslin Skirts
Ages 2 to 14
50c quality for 39c.
75c quality for 59c
$1.00 quality for 65c
$1.25 quality for ., 89c
$1.50 to $1.95 for $1.19
Children's Hats
Pretty straw shapes for girls and boys. ,
75c Hats for ..50c
$1.25. Hats for, 95e
$2.00 Hats for $1.50,
$j.uu liats tor $2.50
$4.00 Hats for ..$3.00
$4.50 Hats for ... $3.50
$5.00 Hats for $4.00
Linen Dresses for Young Women
Sizes 32 to 38. All this season's shades and styles.
$9.75 Dresses reduced to $6.75
$12.00 and $13.50 reduced to $9.75
$18.00 and $19.75 reduced to : $14.75
$22.50 Dresses reduced to $16.75
$25,00 to $29.75 reduced to $19.75
W.iite Lingerie Dresses for Small Women
i The entire stock of fine white dresses included in this sale.
Sizes 32 to 38. -
The $13.50 Dresses are now $10.00
The $16.50 Dresses are now -.. $12.75
The $18.00 and $19.75 are now ...... $14,75.
The $22.50 Dresses are now $17.50
The $25.00 and $30.00 Dresses are now $21.75
The $35.00 Dresses are now . s. $27.50
Small Women's Office and House Dresses
Reduced
The $2.50 Dresses reduced to $1.95-
The $3.50 and $3.95 reduced to $2.85
The $4.75 Dresses' reduced to :. $3.35
The $6.50 and $7.50 reduced to . $4.75
Small Women's Pongee and Cloth of Gold
Suits
32 to 38 sizes
$17.50 and $19.75 Suits are now $13.50:
The $25.00 Suits are now $16.50 .
The $35.00 Suits are now $25.00
The $45.00 Suits are now , $32.50
$30.00 White Serge Suits are now
$25.00 White Serge Suits now
i
$22.50
$17.50
Pongee Coats
'v Small sizes, 32 to 38
$14.75 Coats reduced to' . , ... . .'. . . . .
$lV50-nnd' $19.75 Coats 'reduced to... .v.:
?Thy$22.50 Coats reduced to ,
TW $25.00 Coats reduced to
The 35.00 Coats reduced to $25.00
The $45.00 Coats reduced to . . r. .............. . $29.75
The $59.00 Coats reduced to .. $39.75
. . .1 ........ v. .' .
$10.00
$11.75
$15.00
$17.50
A bargain is not what you pay-
but what you get for what you pay
Store. Olosea at 5 O Clock Daily, Except Saturdays at 10
THE YOUNG PEOPLES OWN STORE
Infants' Wear
COLORED DRESSES
58.c Drosses now 39c
75c Dresses now 59?
$1.25 Dresses now 9Sc
$1.50 and $1.75 Dresses now $1.39
$2.00 and $2.25 Dresses now $1.59
$3.50 Dresses for $2.35
White & Colored Coats
2 to 6 years
$4.00 Coats now $2.95 '
$5.00 Coats now $3.95-
:$7.50 and $8.50 Coats $5.90 V
$10.00 to $12.00 Coats , $7.50
Child's White Guimpes
2 to 16 years ' ' -
$1.25 and $1.50 ones 69c
$2.25 and $2.50 ones $1.39 -
$3.00 and $3.25 ones $1.85
$3.75 and $4.00 ones $2.35 .
Infants' Straw Bonnets
& Lingerie Hats
$1.75 to $2.95 values 98c!
$3.00 to $5.00 values .. $1.95
Linen Suits and Coats
. Sizes 32 to 38
$4.75 and $5.75 Coats . .
$6.75 and $7.50 Coats . .
$9.50. Coats for .
"$10.DO and $12.00 Suits .
' $13.75 and' $15.00 Suits.
4
$3.95
$5.90 I
. . . . $6.75
. . . $7.50
$10.00
$16.50 Suits for .............. . $11.75 ' '
$22.50 Suits for $16.50
$35.00 Suits for $22.50
Children's Lisle Gloves
ALL COLORS n
The 25c kind for 19c; and the 50c kind for 39c
gat. clamoring for tickets became, so large
fhat it threatened to wreclc the bo1 otf.ee.
Then I Kot up on the ticket booth and
handed down ticket. a fat a I could and
Oleoiion knocked a hole In the fence and
took caah from ;auk come. i
without ticket. "He must ave collected
13 000 or In cash at this. hole. I took
In acveral thouan accepting whatever
was handed me. A!'lot of fellows handed
S and 16 bills, but I let It go at that and
they taw the fight mltfhy cheap.
"As to the fight Itself,! you all saw It and
ch .1 Judge of Jetrles', chance as well as
1 did. I saw after Jsffrles got that Jolt
that cloned his tfo that Johnson, had it on
him In every way. Hq dld Sot ave the
Steam. There ws no. snap nj his foot
work was clow.
"While Jeffries was not counted out.
Berger getting into the ring before the
count of ten, he could notr I believe, have
got up again. II he had he would have
been .such a defenseless mark I don't think
wiIld have allowed Johnson to hit him,
but would have llven a decision then and
there."
Aliened Yellr lirsk aliasing.
In all that fight talk one thing stands out
sharply there is- no more mention of
Johnson's yellow streak, the thing that has
bc"ii, written and talked about ever since
1. n.m. Inlrt Hnir nrnmlnunn. Th.
ports usree In saying that not once did he
give any Indications of fear. His nervous
ness in the first round was as apparent,
but no one who watched him in that period
of the fight could fairly attribute it to any
thing else than natural nervousness a kind
of stage fright. He was not afraid of the
big man who 'faced him from the other
corner, but rather afraid from the knowl
edge that his all was at stake. -
As his friends and the newspaper men
crowded about him while he lay back In
the hands of his seconds, he said:
"Jeffries never could hit me. He couldn't
solve my defense. I have always known
this and he has Just found it out. When
he crouched, I made him-straighten' up,
and then I picked him to pieces. I! used
everything; there Is In pugilism' on Jeffries
and could not stand the strain."
Torbett Criticises Jeffries.
Jeffries people had little to say. Jim
Corbett, who was Jeffrtns' chief advisor,
said last night:
"It was simply the old story of the
pitcher and the well once too often. It
has happened to a whole lot of us, and
that It must happen to Jeffries was Just
as sure as fate.
''Jeffries did not box often enough to give
us a line on him. We all knew him to be
In great shape Insofar as running miles
on the road was concerned, but he did not
spar enough for any of us to guess how
ha would show up on the firing Una. As
To Reduce Stock
Previous to Inventory
We will Bell blV our mixed and fancy pattern suits at
4 .J '
25 Discount
$18.00 SUITS go at $1350
$2CD0 SUITS go at $15.00 "
$22.50 SUITS go at $16.90
$25,00 SUITS go at $18.75
Tbli K a' genuine cut of 25 frori the p.lceg at which the goods
were sold dwrtng the season. Nothing has been "marked up" 1? order
to be marked down to a "barguln price.
soon as he had boxed two rounds today I
knew he had nothing. He was all right
enough In spots where he did not need to
be good, but the muscles used mostly in
actual fighting, because of lack of practice
during the training, falling to respond when
tailed on."
Out at Moana Springs an air of gloom
hung over the defeated champion's quarters;
but a morbidly curious crowd shifted
hither and thither about the hotels
and baths. Workmen were busily tearing
down the useless boxing platform and
gymnasium equipment and it promised to
be but a short time until every sign of the
brief habitation of the resort by the center
of attraction for the whole sporting world
will be obliterated.
Jeffries lweepa Oat of Slirht.
True to hlfc character, the vanquished
fighter remained hidden from the gase of
chance visitors. A few of his old friends,
faithful in the face of disheartening defeat,
remained around him.
Jeffries reiterated his purpose of depart
ing for his home in California as soon as
his arrangements could be perfected and
beyond that gave ho Idea of his plans.
The new champion withdrew to his pri
vate car last night, sparing no effort to
get started toward the applause that
awaited htm In the east, his packing being
done At great speed. Johnson's departure
was delayed until almost I o'clock this
morning by a tie-up in the railroad trains.
The party is due to arrive at Chicago
Thursday afternoon.
Only a few pcple were present when the
champion went. There was a little cliour-
ktg and the nih'i'o came out on the plat
form and bowed-
Jeffries Hear
Story of Fight
righter Not Seriously Injured
Black Foe, Says Physician
Back to Farm Life.
by
U18 Noutti Fllliila btreet
JEFFRIES' TRAINING CAMP, UENO,
July 5.-Jeffrles, the pugilist, left camp
early jtsterday. Jim Jcffriea, farmer,
returned, lie will never enter the ring
again. That was settled once and for all
today.
The big man with the bruised face and
downcast spirits was carried swiftly back
from the ringside to the cottage where the
last days of. his training were carried
through. He was still daiud and shaken
when he climbed from the machine. He
knew that he had been beaten, but in the
way whU'h the defeat was accomplished he
hud no idea.
The story of the blows which sent him
over the ropes, a beaten man, was told to
him by Jim Corbett. Jeffries knew nothing
beyond the fact that he was beaten; that
the object for which he abandoned his qulel
life, the defeat of Jack Johnson, had not
been accomplished. . .
Mrs. Jeffries arrived at the camp half an
bour before the car Xroin the ringside ap
peared. She was weeping, but endeavoring
to restrain her sobs. When Jeffries' car
stopped In front of the cottage she rushed
out to him, and together they passed from
sight through the door.
There were few to witness the return of
the vanquished fighter. " Two or three
automobiles stood In the road where fifty
had been crowded in the morning. Jef
fries' personal friends were there eager to
do something to aid him, but unable to
find words. Jeffries stepped from the
house a few moments after he entered it
and went to the rubbing room. He walked
a little unsteadily and seemed a bit dazed.
His trainers accompanied him and after a
bath he was rubbed down and partook of
a glass or two of wine.'- It was then he
made his first statement after leaving the
ring and said he was sorry for his friends.
Jeffries also was puffed from the blows,
but the flow of blood had- been stopped.
His right eye, to the blinding of which his
trainers attribute his. defeat In so few
rounds, was swollen almost shut, but not
Injured seriously.
According to Dr. Porter, Jeffries' personal
physician, his Injuries are not worthy of
cote. He suffered far more damage in
previous fights, the doctor said notably,
that with Fitsulmmons, when hia face was
cut and bruised almost beyond recognition.
Roger Cornell, Jeffries' trainer, declared
that the blinded right eye was the main
cause of hia hero's defeat. The blow, which
.welled the lids until sight was all but
gone, landed in the second round.
"It was not bad enougli to cut," said the
trainer, "but Jeffries told me when I be
gan rubbing It and working with lk that
he could see double as he looked around.
He could not see a blow coming from that
side.
"Johnson hammered him with the left
almost at will, and Jeffries could nut block
the blows. -He did .not see them. Theie
are four lumps along his right Jaw bone
where Johnson's fists landed. Those. were
tiie blows that beat him."
Jeffries waa invisible to all comers
throughout the evening. He ordered that
the friends be supplied with champagne,
but did not leave the house himself.
out from the city to see the champion, and
they, too, spent freely.
Given an impetus by the winning of $10,
000 by various members of his camp, the
games of chance did a good business. There
was also singing and dancing.
Johnson was the main attraction while
he was In evidence. As he planned to go
to Chicago on a train that left at 9:45
o'clock tonight, however, much of his time
waa taken up in packing. -
Loud cheers greeted the negro when he
returned from the fight. He went .from
the arena to his camp in an automobile
with Billy Pelaney, his chief adviser. The
camp rushed out en masse to greet him.
Ills wife was one of the first to reach him.
She saw the fight, but had reached the re
sort before her husband arrived.
"Oh, Jack, I'm so glad you won," she
said.
Friends shouted, clapped their hands and
whistled. Johnson grinned broadly, but
said nothing to the throng outside the
house. He walked Into the parlor, where
another crowd awaited him, and sitting
down, chatted with them a few moments.
Everybody wanted to hear about the
fight. Johnson refused to take It seriously.
He said he was not hurt and there was
nothing for him to tell. When they asked
him questions he answered, but, altogether,
said little regarding the contest.
"Don't think I was,, scared at any time,"
he said. "I knew how it was coming out."
The negro's engagement in vaudeville
opens in New York July 11. He will go to
Chicago from- here- and then proceed to
New York. . Already, he has accepted
theatrical engagements for five weeks in
advance and has offers of others. But he
says he is tired and wants to go home.
"I want to' be with my mammy," said
Jack.
At his order a message waa sent his
mother Immediately after the fight telling
her the result.
Summer suits to order I17.S0, reduced from
125-McCarthy-Wllson, 304 South 16th.
MOVEMENTS Of OCEAN STEAMSHIPS
Port.
OLA300W
PLYMOl'TH. . . .
NKW YORK....
NEW YORK....
NEW YORK....
NEW YORK..,.
NEW YORK....
NEW YORK....
NAPI.R8
LONDON
H(U'L)(1NB
1 GIBRALTAR....
DOVEH
Arrived.
. Columbia
. K P. WHI1.ni..,
. Mtnnpwa.k ,
. M. WuUlngton.
. Mulkt
. Baltic
. V.d.rland
.Duca D'Acxrta...
. Koma
, Mlmiatunka.
..Romantic...
. Kroonland...
Ntw AmaUrdam
Night of Revelry
at Johnson Camp
Drinking; and Garnet of Chance
Feature of Celebration Cham
pion Drinks Beer.
JOHNSON'S TRAINING CAMP, July B.
Monday was a hilarious night at the road
house where Jack Johnson trained for his
fight with Jeffries.
Buainexs at the bar started with a rush
when Johnson, returning from the arena
wi.h his newly acquired fortune and laurels,
ordered wine for. everybody in the resort.
Johnson himself drank beer. Crewda came
Clothing of refinement
for men
el
Jill i
IS IP
Semi' Annual Sale
The well droBsed men of Omaha
recognize the merit in clothes and
furnishings sold by this -concern.
We've beta giving high, quality
for 25 years now, and twice eacli
year we have held a clearance
sale of all . our two and three
piece seaHonable suits. This sale
Is an event many wait for.
os s.u: now
Two and Three-l'lem Suit big
retlurrion
$25 Knits, latest style 810.00
$27.30 Suite, latest style $18.00
H.JO.00 Suits, latethTtiyid $20
$35.00 Suits, lUsi?s?to " $24
JULY SPECIAL
WE'RE keeping our best Tailors
and Cutters actlvo thin mnnth
' - -. VIX IU .
by including -
An Extra Pair of Trousers
with every suit order ' v
for the price of Buit alone, ,
Suit ind Extra Trousers $25 to $45
fn.m'jr Sn i. in JE5S5I!!8
WILLIAM JEIi HEMS' BOA'S
200-211 So. 15th St.
FflOI) FOR Weak and nervous mil
t UUU IUA who find their power to
NFUVP work mad youthful vtaror
,,-' gone as a result of Over
work or mental exertion stiuuld (ae
GHAT'S NfcKVfa) FOOD PILLS. The
will make you eat and sleep and be a
inaa agalii.
1 Mom a boses i.60 by mall.
IIXBMAg MoCOM BTEI.I. DBTO CO,
Cox. leta and Dod streets.
OWt. DIDO COMPAJTT, . ,
Oof. 1 th and Mamey fells.. Omaha, Mesa
Come Early and Get Best Choice
PEASE BROS. CO.
- - 1417 -Far nam Street 1 .
AN EXPERIENCED SHOE
SALESMAN with 10 years'
experience just removed to
Omaha, desires jermanent
position. Address J 4f0, lite.
AM I'SESIKNTS.
BASE BALL
OMAHA vs. LINCOLN
Vinton Street Park .
JULY 5 and 6
DAMES CALLED 3:45 .
Fsctal tar leaves 6tu raruajs ti3' "
...reddy's Return:
VAUJkViLLe. t0 the U. S,
TODAT OHX.T Also Military Tour.
I to a 7 to 11 nament at Toledo!
IIW PIOTUJlEg (teat 4th of tt
TOafOJMtOW. July hill ...... tu
COUili AiNX UtiiitiiAX -HIS UM1T.
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