THE BEE: OMAHA. RATI'TiPAY, NOVEMBER 2C. Win. i I Nebraska U S0RRI3 TALKS TO TEACHERS Congreisman, in Ie:ture, Tells the Story of Insurgency. OFFICERS SELECTED ARE ELECTED flonk Mm Mho lluve onlrnllrd tr Many Maya 5lw Relieved of Tlirlr Preirer An bur f onnty Appears. From it Staff 'ori nHnondent 1 MNTOT.N'. Nov. 2i-(S.eolnl Wnnrrr mnn Ceorati- V. .' rr's of Mc-i.'ook wnjt the takrr at the mr-ftltiK of the NphranK.i Teachers' ds-ric atlon tnnlcht. giving hn lecture "Thr MiHtory of Iniira-nry." Th-? auditorium of t)o clutrrh wan completely filled and th l. ' tiii" n,i npplp.udod fro qncntly. .lii'lt'n Ncjrrm nave the. story of the flht of th Insurgent in runnrrsa and the h Btory of events leading n j to that fight. Congressman Norrls was entertained at luncheon at noon, at which the Invited Bursts numbered fifty and Included several educators and many prominent men of Lincoln. The officers reported by the nominating ommlttee last night ware formally In ducted Into office and the ssslon ad journed with the meeting tonleht. In many waya thla convention of the as aoclatlon was the most remarkable ono In years. It marked for the time being the complete overthrow of ring manage ment, bossed and dominated by perni ciously active representatives of book con cerns. It put an end to the practice of members of the reading circle accepting expense money from the publishers of books selected and recommended by the circle. This has been a custom condemned for years, but for some reason the book agents had their hooks In so deep It has been Impossible until this meeting for the teachers to shake them off. The expenses of this reading circle will be paid by the association and consequently no member of the circle will be placed under obligation! to any book concern. Combination Itnlca No More. The association frees Itself from the management and control of the publishing houses by permitting only those who are actively engaged In school work to be per mitted ' to vote on any proposition. It has been an, easy matter heretofore for the combination that desired control of the association for selfish purposes to register any number of persons for tl each and thua get that many votes. In this wav the location of the meetings could bo swung to the city which put up the most money. Many of the educators who desired the association to be for the benefit of the teachers have for years fought the ma chine, but until this year they have fought tn valn. The victory bos put new life into the association and the teacher are leav ing the city feeling that one more they have come Into tbeir own. The next meet ing will be located In a city selected by ballot, each teacher who registered being permitted to Vote. At the general sessions held today, a Resolution waa adopted expressing sympa thy and best wishes to former Chancellor 00. Benjamin Andrews, who la 111 In a local (anttarlum. Dr. Andrews waa president of the association two years ago and has always kept In close touch with lta affairs. Maspls Mar Prosecute. With five weeks of his two-year term still Cmalnlng unserved. Will Maupln, deputy bor commissioner. Is going to make a ppeolal effort to force a compliance of the aw regulating the employment of femalea. &Isupln baa Just wakened to the fact that the law can be enforces and that violators may ba punUhed, so he announced In a tement given out thla afternoon that he Intended to get busy along the lines Indi cated. In other words, he la going to keep ' up with Arthur Mullen, th new attorney general. ' If aw Oeinntr of Art a nr. Governor Bhallenberger has received a petition from a number of taxpayers anklng (or the Issuance of a proclamation formally organising the county of Arthur and nam ing th following commissioners to serve temporarily: W. B. Yarnall, George Brower and Iceland B. Rice. Charles M. Lightfoot m to be special county clerk. Arthur Bounty waa formerly on vn map, but It gradually disorganised. Th temporary aounty seat will be located In aectlon 6, township IS, range 37, P. M. Th petition sets out that the territory to be Included In the new county is In hahltated by 1.000 persons. The county Is Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound rhicafro 111. "I was troubled with falling- and Inflammation, and the doc tors aaia i could not (ret well unless I had an operation. I knew I could not stand the strain of one, so I wrote to you sometime a(?o about mr h a a 1 1 K and you told me wuai to ao. ATtr taking- Lydla E. tMlaya well woman." Mrs. William Ah kens, 9H8 YV.aut St., Chicago, 11L Lydla E. rinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and terbs, contains no narcotics or harm ful dnira, and to-day holda the record for the areest number of actual cures r female diseases of any similar medi cine in the country, and thousands of voluntary testimonials are on lile in the lliikham laboratory at Ljnn, Mass., from women who have been cured from almost every form of leaiale complaints, inflammation, ul 4 '. fll.!,Plicements,nbroid tumors. ..rKuianues,reritxilcpalus.backache: indigestion na nervous nrost rati.iri- T . iufferlnK woman owes it to K ?Te Ldi 1 inukham's egeUblc Compound a trial. If you would Ilk upcclal adt Ico bout your cane m rlt a confiden tLil letter to Mrs. IMnVham. at -Tnn. Mais. u.l.l.,. I . t OWES HER LIFE TO 1 Nebraska to d'TiiPjf the wit portion of MiThtriion county. Nrhrnaka eiT ntes, lirCATUH!;- Samuel Hur'on Jones and Mir, Allre Hiekey, both of Irving. Kan.. re mn;riod in the city ester. lay bv Judire Waldr-n. ilHHON -Klre riettroved the train e'e VHti.r of !nk Vohland at : o'Hm-k this i.iornltiK The In;. Ik about $'l partly cov ered l,y In? urn nre. HKATHIfK ir ,T. R. Hohertson. a veter inarian of this ltv. was barllv hurt In a tunaway. The ve' l. le In wl rh he was rld Inr was rotuplrl -ly simi l I -I'ATIt I "F - A i.nounrrment has l.een re ceived here of the timrrlai?" of Mis I'orinne Newell, itaiiichter of V A. Newel! of th; ' .ty. an. ii i.rup Hurkwell. which occur red a few 'lays a" at Tuconia, Vh!i. I.Vf INS-We nedav was wedding day for two Lyons ( jile. Mr Clyde Sears a married to V.-r Llllie Anderson nTid Mr. Harry Whitr wss married to Miss S otlo "a!n all well known and highly rejected here i rinlll . M'CATltM'R-Louie Graff, a lumber and iosl merchant of this city, was ni:irrl d ni Lino,. In .,n Thanksgiving dav to Miss Mary Hoc kley of mialia. a former Itrn trko resident. After an extended wedding: trip through California and Mexico they w ill return to Heatrlce to make theli home HKATItrCR-Karl Owens, a youni; man chaired with forgery. was arrnlgned Wednesday In county court and pleaded not guilty. Mr waived preliminary hear lnr and was hound over to the district court In the S)m of l. too. In default of which he was remanded to the county Jail. RECEPTION FOR THE BOYS AWAY FROM HOME FOLKS Entertainment at the Toons; Men's Christian Association to t.ladden Their Hearts. If there were any roomers or members of the Young Men's Christian association, who went to bed last night suffering from that "malady" nostalgia, to which persons away from home are very atisccptlble upon Thanksgiving day. It was probably because they did not attend the pobtal card social held In the Young Men's Christian associa tion building. It was an informal affair and the enter tainment consisted in postal card pictures thrown upon a screen from a reflectoscope. Each member of the association brought several postal cards which were shown In this manner and as a result those who at tended enjoyed views of most everything from the Young Men's Christian associa tion building at San Francisco to the "Oh, you kid" comics. Washington Affairs (Krom a Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 2S. (Special Telo grain.) .r-ottUiiasiers appointed: .Nebraska i.nna, Cm Id county, Allle M. Clark, vice C. Mccarty, reaigned; Odessa, iiuttalo county, Samuel J. Johnston, vice C A. Ir'aehby, resigned. Iowa .dna, Won county, Anna M. Mont gomery, vice 8. A. Nelson, resigned. bouth Dakota Dusiiamet, Pennington county, Joiieph Trask, vice J. U. Crulck fchank, resigned. Hubert P. McCfc.be of Dubuque, la., for several years clerk in the ottlue of the secretary of the Interior at H.20W, was touay promoted to l,uu and assigned to new duties In t!:c l.i: .ccllai.jc-j : ,-islon otflce of the cnlet Clark of the department. J. iloyd Wright. New Hampton, la., who had charge of the bureau of the republican stale oommiuee at Des Moines during the last campaign. Is la Washington for the winter. Mr. Wright has been engaged by thb Washington Post for the com nig winter and. will be assigned to work at the capltol W. 8. bummers and W. J. Byrne of Omaha spent Thanksgiving day In Wash ington. Mr. Summers came from New York upon some personal business and returned to Uotnam last nlgnu Mr. Byrne has been here several days upon business relating to theatrical matters. lieutenant Colonel Henry S. T. Harris medical corps. Is relieved from duty at headquarters, department of California ana will assume charge of the medical supply depot, ban Francisco, relieving Col onel Daniel M. Appel, medical corps, who will proceed to Atlanta, Ua., for duty as Guff "ur,"-on of tne department of the Dental Surgeon Charles J. Long Is re lieved from duty at 'ort Adam. K. 1 and will proceed to Fort Andrews, Mass.. for duty. Captain Dan. T. Moore, Sixth field artil lery. Is relieved from duty with bis regi ment and will proceed to Fort 8111, Okl for duty. '' First lieutenant Eben Swift, Jr., Eleventh cavairy; Second Dieuunanta John V spring, Jr.. Seventh cavalry; Adna H. Chaf fee, jr., Fifteenth cavalry, and Frank M Andrews, Eighth cavalry, upon completion of duties at Chicago, will return to Fort Myer, Vs., for duty. Captain George Vldmer, Eleventh cavalry now In Chicago, will proceed to Fort Osla thorpe, Qa., lor duty. First Lieutenant Gordon Johnston, Sev enth cavalry, and Isaac SmarUn, Four teenth cavalry, now In Chicago, will Join their station at Fort Klley, Kan. The ioliowlng cnanges in tils corps of engmeerk are ordered: Lieutenant Colonel Riddle, upon arrival at his position, will report to the command ing general. Department of California, for duty as chief engineer, relieving Captain J nomas H. Jackson; Major Clement A F Flagler, upon being relieved by Major Halts, will proceed to Mobile, Ala., reliev ing Major Henry Jervey. who will proceed to Cincinnati and relieve Major John C Oakes; Captain Robert F. Kalston, upon being relieved by Major llurges, will repair to this city for duty as assistant to the chief of engineers. Leaves of absence: Major Henry Burgess corps of engineers, fifteen davs; Second Lieutenant Stephen W. Wlufree. Ninth cavalry, four months. Animals Imported for breedng purposes after January 1, mi, must be accompanied i - - 'imiwi ui me bureau or animal In dustry that tne animals are pure-bred of a I Tf. ulf lil.u.l ...... , .. ..I.. . .' ... -B. .tu mim uuij regisierea in tne foreign book of record for that established breed. The secretary of agriculture has revised regulations on the subject In order to en force more thoroughly the provisions of the tarirf law Instructing him to determine and certify to the secretary of the treas ury what are recognised breeds and pure bred animals as a basis on which customs orfioers may determine what aiUinuis may be passed through the customs freo of duty for breeding purposes. Marrlaae Lleeasea. Permits to wed have been granted following couples: the Name and liesldence. Mill M. ivauftnian, itrownvllle, Neb MaiKaret M. Flynn. Omaha KraiiK Sullivan, Omaha Melvlna Ames, Ginaha l'eter M. Christiansen. Omaha Anna Jacobson, Omaha Morton P. Gray, Omaha Martha I. Mickel. oinaha Henry Ch'rlstensen. Walnut. Ia Mis. Laurtna Cssperon. Atlantic, la! Age. ... r ... isj ... 24 ... j ... St! ... zc ... 21 ... 20 ... se ... 42 ... 2i ... 20 ... 23 i Lester Kli-fchbraun. Chicago i Minnie lllller, Omaha " Herman Kulwh, Oinaha Uoca Cohen, South Omaha !.!!!! I John Hends. Omaha Nellie Edmonds. Omaha Jcide Hoilir. on. Winslde. Neb U.ttie A. Orr. Dakota City, Neb Fred llhlner. Mi ml in. Ia Km ma lJeterson, I'ersia, Ia .. 13 .. 17 .. 2j .. .. SS .. r .. 6 .. 22 .. 20 .. Ik .. 21 .. 17 .. 21 .. 21 .. 3g .. t ..24 .. 26 .. 27 .. U .. 34 .. Si .. 25 M George A. Btevens, Omaha Lois Urook field. Omaha William A. llartwvll. South Omaha fcleanor Anderson, Oinaha Clyde A. I.owman. Fremont, Neb Anna l'rice, Omaha Fred V. Ulake. Omaha Fmnii M. Huirbail, Omaha H.njaioln W. Hennett. Omaha Sarah B. Trumbo. Omaha Carl K fxrgergren. Hed Oak. la Anna t)katrom, Newman tirove. Neb.. Francis A. Harnett, Wahoo. Neb Ltot Walker, Wahoo. Neb Hubert (1. Norhelm. Aleiander, N. D.. liia Elisabeth Moore, Omaha tlnmlhlL lln.lt, , 1 .1 . THANKSGIVING IN LONDON Ambassador ReiJ Tells of Duties of Foreign Ambassador. RECEPTION EOF.. REAR ADMIRAL Officers of tmrrli-nn Fleet In Knells Waters tre Honored Seymour Smym America la I'.ateralna from "hell. IiVPnX. Vnv. OK The Amertrsn Po clet'c' Thankelvln dinner, which was heM la-t n ght In ConnauKht rooms, was made the occasion of a demonstration In honor of nnr Admiral M'lidock and other t.ffi'-ers of tho American fleet at present In rrn-ll' h waters. Ambassador Held and Mrs. TteM and the mi mliiTs of the American colony with the r wives had fathered In force under th" pres!dncy of A. O. (ilnssow to welcome the American officers and prominent I'.rlt Ish naval men who had been Invited to meet them. Amour the latter present were Admiral Sir Edward Hobart Seymour, near Admiral J. It. Jelllcoc and Sir William Henry White, the famous naval construc tor. Admiral Seymour. In proposing the health of President Taft. said the visit of the American fleet was an Indication that America at last was coming out of the diplomatic shell to take the Interest which It should take In nations on this side of the Atlantic. If It did this, he added, it certainly would be In the Interest of peace. Mr. He'd was called upon to respond to a toast to "The American Ambassador." Iteld's Speech. He bepan by acknowledging the cordiality with which they received It as well as the kindness of the terms in which It had been prepared, but what he specially wished, he said, to thank them for. was yielding to his repeated requests and for the first time In six years leaving him to bear only his own burdens, and not loading him also with the duty of a set Thanksgiving speech. He really did not know how many he had made ovore here on such occasions. He was only sure that the last was the fifth In regular, annual succession In the same place, before the same audience, on the same subject, lie had been surprised at this continued requirement as well as amaied at the patience with which they bad endured what they invited and he was now grateful for their mercy to him as well as to themselves In giving him a rest from double duty. He then con tinued: "I suppose I ought really to hesitate now about any further response. 1 saw last year in a popular and extremely clever book on England and the English, which a great many of you were reading about the same time, a discouraging view as to any after dinner speaking whatever by ambassadors. The author often shows much Judicious ap preciation and clever insight; but of our luckless appearance on occasions like this he declares that 'A clawless kitten Is not more harmless or uninformlng than a for eign ambassador at a banquet.' "It Is not for me to dispute this dictum, or Ignore It. And yet one wonders what precise role this American citizen thinks his foreign ambassador ought to play on such an occasion. Does he want him to appear as a clawing and scratching old catr Forela-n Relations Keceaury. "Many a people may have thought Itself Isolated and may wish to remain so. But when It has passed the first raw stages of national existence and attained something of higher civilisation that comes with age, education, and above all, with wider ex perience and interests, It realises mors and more the Inevitable necessity of foreign relations of some sort and of business with all the world. It finds accordingly Its in terest, no less than its duty, In making the relations peaceful and pleasant If possible. Its diplomatic) corps thus becomes and must become more and more the right arm of Its foreign service, while the navy and army mt-st be relegated to the place of a left arm. They, In fact, are to be called Into vigorous use only on extraordinary occa sions, If at all, and only as a last resort. But the duty of the right arm Is constant and vital. "I suppose what an ambassador la sent abroad for under nlodern and civilised con ditions Is a very simple and straightforward work. It is to look out for the Interests of hi 4 own country, and to protect and pro mote them so far as he can by honorable and peaceful means. For this purpose It may be that telling the truth with good will may often be quits as useful to the country that sends him as clawing and scratching at the country to which he Is sent. "The pursuit of honorable American di plomacy, sir, finds Its type neither In the clawiesa kitten nor In the scratching cat First protect and promote the Interests of ycur own country. Next keep the peace. These are the two great Commandments. If there Is a higher service to be rendered one's country, or humanity, no man has yet pointed it out. If there is a nobler per formance connected with the merely human affairs no man has yet found it out" Rear Admiral Murdoch expressed his thanks for the reception that he and his men had received In London and Blr Wil liam Henry White and Hear Admiral Jelll cos paid high tributes to the efficiency of the American navy. Celebration In BerUa. BERLIN. Nov. 24.-L.avld Jayna Hill, American ambassador, presided at a Thanksgiving dinner at which 226 Ameri cans were present tonight. Mr. Hill pro posed the health of President Taft, to whom a cable dispatoh of greeting waa sent, and also toasted Emperor William. . Prof. Hugo Muensterberg, professor of psysohology at Harvard university, spoke or Idealism In America and C. Alphoass Smith, professor of English literature in the University of Virginia, mads a speech on the appreciation of the United States by Germany. A vote of thanks was accorded Consul General Thackeray and his wife, who or ganised the dinner. Dancing followed the feast TRICKS OF CAPE COD KIDS MaMtlost klll Displayed la Rmm-rla- ripe Llae to Cider Barrl. "As a boy rear Cap Cod I lived near an oM cldtr mill," says a writer In the Mtroj.o!'.tc. -The hard old Yankee who owmd thin tin told the boys that If we would pii'k ?6ree barrels of seedling apples he wor.'.i slve us all the cider we could sue, '.'ii-ugh. a straw. 'I -.ve had ambitions In my day, but I do not recall any mora hopeful than that forty-year-old one of putting a rye straw as middleman between my mouth and a cider tank, though I would not today per mit cider on my farm. "We picked the apples and delivered them, but the old Yankee drove ua out of th mill and told us we mast suck from the outside. We found a knothole in a board near the tajik, and down In Uncle Daniel's grain field was a rye straw of great length. "We ran this through the knot hols, took a long breath and out came the old Yankee and caught us at It He took three old rails and some boards and built a fence around that knot hols. "I do not know so much about the modern boy, but down Cape Cod way forty years ago we had to do things The smallest boy crawled l;ke a woodchuck in sids that ftac H raa suj loaf straw Half- .inute Store Talk It Is wonderful how wide Is tMs stf re's rpputH'lun Kver now sr.. I then we lme it hrougnt home to us. Only the other duy a sudor from the Cruiser St. Paul, stationed at Mare Island Navy Yur-ls, was In and hoilcht clothes. 1H sslil In auo stance, "Your stole Is pretty well known nut on the const. When the fellows In the service found out I wns conilru to omnha thev told me to he ruif and go In and sec the great Klng-Swanson Store.'' F V;M If-T It Wsuld Pay Every Han to look to us for the llttlo things he wears. The line Just now Is particularly bright new things for the Holidays arriving every day. aiOIWSAB- New holiday patterns of Cheney silk at 60c. Others at 50c, 11, 11.50 and 12.00. HOBB Pure silk special values from 60c to $1.00. SWEATERS Turtle neck and coat style 93.00, S3.0O, $3.60 and up. KID GLOVES Dressed and undressed etlk lined and unilned, 91. IS, 91.50 and (3.00. HOX.XDAY SHISTS Just arrived, 91. 91.60 and 93.00. OUTING rLAWHEI, RIGHT SHIRTS Regular and extra sizes, SOo, 76o and 91.00. You Can Save SOc to $1.00 on Shoes by buying every pair you wear at this store. Klng-Swanson shoes embody foot-comfort with all th"! lataot kinks of fashion. You can get all the .modish lasts, all the shapes of toe, all the colors of leather 93.60, 93.60, 9-60. Guaranteed patents many styles, at 94.60. These were taken in exchange on Knabc - Angelus, Emerton Angelus, Angelus, Fischer, Invis ible Milton, Schaefer and Strat ford Player Pianos. One Cecilian Cabinet Player ft PA aa with 50 rolls of music jj 0 Lf U U Ten other good cabinet play- J ft f f f ers at from $125.00 down j J f (Jy One Oecilian Player-Piano rtrtnr fl ft with 50 rolls of music Jk Jj "J II II One Melville-Clark Player AAAP rtf Piano, with 150 rolls musio, S f 1 1 1 lt 9J One Price & Teeple Player- tt ft f f f Piano, with 25 rolls music, j) JJjJJ "We also have 1,000 rolls which we will close out "Will fit any 65-note through the knot bole until the end dipped In the cider tank and he put th other end tn one aide of his mouth. "Then he put another straw In the other side of his mouth and ran that out be tween the fence boards. It waa a cass of pull on the straw connected with the older and push through the other with the rest of us on the outside struggling for a place at the straw. "There was my first experience with a middleman, and I have lived to know that they are all alike. That boy's first ambition was to obtain his own supply of cider. Hs then lost Interest In the Job and forgot to send any along." Dallest Hoar oa Btoek Eirktift, N'rJSV YORK, Nov. 2S A record for dull nesa on the stock exchange was msde this afternoon, when transactions from 11 to 1 A.yer y THE STORK OF f I sfT't!MeK wu mmm fi t feft fcajajil j ---Jt-1 ,f " n -V tfll T I fTl V Vl ill " T iM I ttLC t-iome Lucky for Omaha Men and Young Men that this store had the foresight to strike a new chord in the selling of good clothes by selling them for what they are, rather than for what some so-called "greatest" maker might say about them. This foresight means an actual guaranteed cash saving of $3.00 to $10.00 for every fellow who has foresight enough to invesigate our claims New things are coming in every week, too. Suits $10 to 340 Overcoats $10 to $50 Wonderful Values, $15, $20, $25 Well A ( J V i - 1 1 V 1. V7 : t I II iiiuiiBttiiuB II"! They're y. . 9 a. 1 f f - 1 f t f absent In . i Boys' " ! i if you I ' J i bring him " styles for ' r 1 ON Used Players and Player Pianos of 65-note music at, per roll player. o'clock totalled only 11,749 shares, the smallest for any hour thla year. Commis sion houses were practically deterted ami nowhere on the floor of the exchange was there anything that could be called a crow a. Seaaolasasters Meet at Mobile. WINONA. Minn.. Nov. . The next an nual convention of the superintendents of the National Educational association will meet In Mobile on UecemDer 23, li and tS, 1911. In making this announcement. Keere- tary fehepard cays It will be possible for members to take advantage of the favor able rates which have been granted Sur the Marai uras seaaon. Baltdlast Peraalta. Omaha Electric Light ft Power company Fourth and Jones street, addition to power nouee, concrete ooai pit, m.uiu; -' A. Jorn. Wit Camden avenue, frame dwell ing. II, 750; A. H. Glmstead. ia21 North ur. tern l h avenue, frame dwelling, fl,0uO. rr - t r. s riair vi igor Renews SPLENDID VALUES ol Quality Jlothe Made Clothes for Boys' and Children ,ll-J - 1 ! It ui BttLieiicu pai rule iu vn 11 y styled by real designers and made jv rem laiiuio in muhki; uuu.m. i ntj lundlwork of lhA Awe&tahom In entirely l.ll. rr'U our Boys Dept, Quality Suits, $2 to $15 Overcoats Worth Seeing want your boy nlftlly overooated here. Great line of Military and little fellows 52.50 and up ... ft it j ' j ,.. 4 The Pleasire of Dining at Home is Enhanced when that home is brightened like sunlight by the brilliant rays of the General Electric Mazda Lamp. It's restful rays impart the effect of a flood of sunlight the only light for which the eye has a natural affinity. Not only does the G-E Mazda Lamp give this superior quality of light, but it gives nearly three times as much light as the common carbon incandescent and costs no more to operate. If you are not now ulng electric light the chances are that you will if you come in and let us show you this wonderful G-E Mszda Lamp, THE OMAHA ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER COMPANY ft ST Are You Going to ttie INTERNATIONAL LIVE STOCK EXPOSITION Chicago. Nov. 26llt to Dec. 3d? THE (lORTIHVESTEnn LICE The Ouly Double Track, Automatic Safety Signal Line, Has Eight Through Trains Daily The OMAIIA SPECIAL Leaves at 6 P. M., Arrives at Chicago 7:45 A. M. Tlie Best ol Evcrythlnn For lieservatious and Tickets apply TICKET OFFICES, 1401-1403 Farnam St., Omaha . r ';. 7 nl Don't say you're hard to fit until after you've been here and chancps are you won't have to say it. "We've a stock for fat men, . big men, tall men to astonish you. Better try us before you give up. $15. to $40 Hat styles and Hat .1. t , Quality Here So many hats are larking In these 1 essentials to hat satisfaction that thousands of men V?. urn to ua with a lgh of relief. STKTSON8, $3.50 l P- Bout $:l.OO Hat in Town :. vr n SLfl . T 41 1 Jm. ttl"l I ' M'ti' jew. MM m