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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1911)
5 ' 10 riTE BEE: OMATIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1011. Panama Hats Boys' and Children' Straw Hats In nil the lat est styles, at 25c, 49c 98c and $1?! v iwi n. n- i- "ii 1 1 1 w- w vr w In nil shapes nnd styles. Are priced most rea sonably at SENSATIONAL CLOTHING SALE A New York Wholesale Tailor's Entire Stock Men's Suits, Made to Sell at $25, Saturday, at... $3.8 lrTnAfYiTtT?rnfM A II II II ujuJiK I H I PI I -Kl fan bai wdi J Uatv' ' 'ir I aij PUVAi.MiJ.UrO I BIG SPECIAL SALE Entire Surplus Stock and Sample Lines of Several Eastern Shirt Factories and Underwear Hills Men's Negligee and golf shirts in pongee, soisctte and mercer ized madras cloth; soft French cuffs and detached soft collars SjllMil Mm$.s. m Jill 1 1 Supreme Clothing Event of 1911 Hundreds of suits of high character are in this purchase and new lots ready for your se- ' lection are here. JJjf Every new style every rich fabric. w Blue Serges Brown Mixtures Tans P Grays. Not a suit is worth a cent less than $25. $(g)SO BOYS WASH SUITS These Most attractive line of boys' washable sum mer suits we have ver shown ' before. Very desirable groups at Boys' All double ue, at Boys' S 98c to $3.50 SOUTH OMAHA TO ENTERTAIN Will Be Host to the Visiting Editors for a Day. BANQUET AT THE EXCHANGE Bnalnea Meeting and Election of Of ficers at a Meetln at the Ex change Bnlldln C. C. Rosewater to Talk. South Omaha is In competition with Omuha to see which city can do the most tor the members of the Nebraska Press as sociation, as most of the day Tuesday, June 6, will be known as "South Omaha day." The arrangements for the entertainment Of the press association In South Omaha have Just been announced by Senator J. M. Tanner of the Nebraska Dully Democrat. Mho Is vice president of the Btate associa tion. Chartered street cats will take the news paper men to Pouth Omaha soon after 10 O'clock Tuesday morning. Divided Into four parties the editors and their wives will be escorted through the packing houses ani Hock yards, each party visiting one pack ing house. Outdes furnished by the stock yards company, the packing houses, local Newspaper men and South Omaha bankers trill escort these parties on the trips, Dlsaer at the Eiohans. Returning to the Exchange hotel at noon Eh entire party will be served, with a dln ier, the like of which has seldom been Served anywhere. It will be a cross be tween a barbecue and a banquet and there kill be plenty of music and flowers. Following this dinner, the women of the party will be taken in automobiles for a ride which will Include a trip to Fort Crook, where It Is hoped to have the regimental band out for a short concert and perhaps a drill of some of the companies. While the women are automobile riding Ihe business session will be called to order In the Exchange auditorium. Senator Tan r.er presiding. Two addresses will be given In South Omaha, one by C. C. Roaewater, general manager of The Bee Publishing company, and by Will M. Maupin of Un Coln, publisher of "Will Maupln's Weekly." The election of officers fur the com'ng ear and the selection of the next place Of meeting will also take place at this Session. At 4: M the entire party will take char tered cars for Omaha, and will leave the Masonic Temple at 6:30 for an automobile ride about the city, given by the Omaha Commercial club. This ride will be followed by the annual dinner at the Field club, ar rangements for which are being completed by the entertainment committee of the Commercial club. Jack Johnson Gom to London Boon. NEW YORK. June i. Jack Johnson ,who Will sail for EnKland In a few days, has received a cablegram from Hugh Mcin tosh offering a big guarantee for a twenty round flKbt with Bombardier Wells, the English heavyweight champion. Johnson has not accepted, but he says than when he arrives on the other side he will asree lo terms It there Is enough money In sight. Persistent Advertising Is the Road to Big tUturna, Men's and Young Men's Up-to-Date Suits $ Actually Worth $15 and $16.50 Every 6ize scores of patterns every suit is well made in the cleverest styles for 1911 and the most refined fabrics. It is an offer without an equal. Special Sale Boys9 Combination Suits are Boys Knickerbocker suits from a special purchase. Two pairs of pants with each coat Wool Combination Suits, Boys' All breasted coat, two pair double peg top knickerbockers $4 val $2.98 40c Bloomer Wash Pants. Engineer's Rig ExtractsDoggie from Sewer Manhole Bed Light Gang: Goes Out to Pull Ex ploring; Puplet. Back to Re gion of Daylight. Judge Lee Estelle Is the proud possessor of a little canine of questionable nationality, which, like Its Illustrious owner, Is of an In vestigating mind. But unlike Judge Estelle, it Is not given to an investigation of legal questions. Instead It prefers to roam about tho neighborhood. Doggie started out on one of his tours Thursday afternoon and wound up In a manhole at Forty-first avenue and Cass streets. How dotrgle got there no one knows, but how he got out is familiar to everyone In the neighborhood. When Mrs. Eetelle missed doggie, she started out on a still hunt for the pet. Ills yelps finally directed her to his abiding place. There he was, down at the bottom of the pit. How to get him out was the problem. She tried the police. "Nothing doing," came the response over the telephone wire. Then she resorted to the humane office. She was greeted with a similar reply. Then she tried the city engineer's office. The warm hearted officials of the city listened to her pleadings. The red light brigade of the street department was dis patched to the scene. The brigade consists of 11. L'lmstead and a horse. But the com bination was equal to the emergency and doggie was safely extrlcatVd from his peri lous place. WORK ON THE NEW POWER HOUSE IS BEING RUSHED All Is Now Rendy for the Instal lation of thr Necessary Machinery. All is ready now to put In the machinery In the new power house of the street rail way company at Fifth and Jackson streets. The big brick building Is complete and some of the machinery for the making of power on the grounds and other pa its of the dynamo system on the road to Omaha. In spite of the fact that all Is ready ex cept the machinery It will be September 1". or October 1 before It Is possible to put the power plant In operation. The sattlnst up of such complex machinery and so much of it takes months. Two big steam boilers are already prac tically Installed, having been In use with the old power plsnt since last December. A chain grate system of firing, automatic stokers and coal and ashes conveying plants, the condenser, the fuel economises, the turbine, the rotary converter, the tran.M formers, and all the switchboard apparatu are to be put in and connected before the making of power for Omaha street cars can begin. "We are rushing the work as fast as Is possible." states It. A. Leuasler, assistant general ma nan it of the company, In telling of the progress of the work. "It 1U take a long time to complete, but the spending of 8U0.000 would naturally take a few months," at jjf IB S! new Wool Combination Suits, breasted coat, two pair trousers M AO 5 value, at QO.VO .22c Boys' $1.00 Washable CLASS CONFIRMED AT TEMPLE Eighteen Receive Certificates from Babbi Frederick Cohn. IN CELEBRATION OF SHEBU0TH Hebrew Holiday Observed with Pretty Ceremonial Maslcal Proa-ram and Reading- from Prayer Book Held. Temple Israel, Twenty-ninth and Jack son streets, was the setting for a pretty scene Friday morning when Phebuoth, an Hebrew holiday, was celebrated with the Introduction of a class of eighteen con flrmanta Into the faith. Rabbi Frederick H. Cohn delivered the address and awarded the certificates of membership In the church. The services were conducted In the following order: Organ prelude, muslo by the choir, the reading of the Shebouth service from the prayer book, the entrance of the con flrmants, floral offerings by the con flrmants. the profession of faith and the consecration. The members of the class were: Dorette Adler, S229 Harney street; Edythe Alperson, 2923 Webster street; Jennie Friedman, 2010 North Twentieth street; Hannah Oraets, 021 South Twenty-seventh street; Rosaline Kohn, 633 South Twenty-second street; Juliet Levy. 1815 North Seventeenth street; Goldie Melcher. 904 South Thirty-third street; Lilian Meyer, S323 Harney street; Blanche Monhelt. 1046 North Thirty-fourth street; Isabelle Radman, S321 Franklin street; Clara Rofsky, IGOi Casa street; Mar guerite Rosenberg, 708 North Thirtieth street; Lorine Rosenstock, SjOtS Harney street: Libby Snyder. 170 Glenn avenue. Council Bluffs; Sam Feiler. 2i06 Franklin street; Arthur Friedman, Victor Gam. 2822 Harney street; Isadora Mushkln, 700 North Twenty-fourth street. South Omaha. TWO SUE BECAUSE THEY FELL OFF STREET CAR Total of Seven Thousand Dollars Is Asked of Company Deranae of Tumbles. Two suits for damages against the street railway company, alleging assaults by con ductors, were filed In diKtrlct court Fri day. In one, Martin D. Vleno asks for ?2,X; In the other, James W. Cosgrove places the amount of his alleged damage at 13.000. Vleno alleges that tho conductor, after he had run for the car. beat his hands rrom the rail and pushed him from the car. and aa a result he rolled down an em bankment and was caught by two women, n.uch to his own humilatlon. The Incident happened netr Rivervlew park last Thurs day. Cosgrove's case of assault, although It happened last August, was almost identi cal In the details with the circumstances alleged by Vleno. Cosgrove averred that he was thrown from the car and Injured after his family had gotten safely aboard. Dynamite Wracks Balldlnara aa completely as coughs and colds wreck lungs. Cure them quick with Dr. King's New Discovery. 60c and $1 00. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. This Is the Greatest Clothing Offer . Presented at Omaha's Greatest Store for Men ' Each of these splendid hand-tailored suits just one-third off actual value. Buv vonr v - suit NOW while there is a wear to be had from it Every worth $25.00. cB) Men's and Young 8 Men's Suiti, $6.50 ' $ Hundreds of well f lined, perfect fit- ting summer suits ( !J special, 50-4$ at 00- The finest Boys' Combination Suits the highest class fabrics and most desirable patterns, worth A no up to $7.50. at C4.V(J Russian' Suits'. . .49c Wright Puts Dinner Guests to Work in His Alfalfa Field Loan and Building Association Direc tor Gets His Associates to Do Some Beal Work. W. S. Wright of the Wright & Wilhelmy Company, Is, In a nice, genteel way, one of the men who most enjoys life as it Is lived In this booming modern day. He Is, among other things, a director In the Omaha Loan and Building association, and so his fellow directors did not think twice about accepting an Invitation to be his guests at a dinner at his home Thursday evening. Captained by Geofrge Loomls. the other directors proceeded to the Wright home at the appointed time. In the bunch was C. E Black, "Billy Adair, secretary of the as sooiatlon; M. M. Robertson. Scott King. "Samson" Penfold and John Butler. When they had laid aside their visiting mannm and were Just prepared to sit down In a !ome M SELLS 20 Not ami sn I f"" i sUl nU At the Close of the Spring Season We Offer Special Bargains" in Rugs fix!) Brussels, seamless Jj$G.75 7-6x9 Brussels, seamless $8.00 9x12 Brussels, seamless $12.00 9x12 Brussels, seamed $9.75 Save Your Ice Bill . with one of our per feet refrigerator. Priced at N $30 to $6.75 All the men's shirts, negli gee and outing styles broken lots worth up to $1.50, at 1 4w All the Men's ers, atnietic nt mJ full season's ffe suit actually E 1 cool place and be entertained, Mr. Wright solemnly produced a bundle of nice new pitchforks, that had never been used. "Come with me," he said; and he took the husky, muscular directors of the mon eyed institution out to a rich patch of alfalfa that had been carefully prepared for cooking. The glowing blades of the gold-bearing crop' all nodded a genial wel come to the astonished harvesters and seemed to laugh with fat chuckles of an ticipatory glee. "Fall to, boys," said Mr. Wright. "I know from your personal tales of former prowess that every man of you was ralBed on a farm and won his way to success by hard toil. To him who proves the best hand with the fork shall the greatest credit fall." There they were up against It right. What could they do? Not a thing but pitch in and pitch alfalfa. Mr. Loomls, the most experienced farm boy In tho group, set the example; and "Hatty" Ulack. who Invented the easiest way to work a farm when a very young man, was close behind. Mr. Wright watched the workers closely, encouraging the laggards and saying nice things to the laborers who had the nerve to keep on smiling. Then, srtiftfoniiimii itaiharfcrniirirfina s- n TIB ill ill MM Furniture Co, PER CENT BELOW OMAHA PRICES Only One Day, But Every Day 9x12 Seamless Wilton Vel vet $15.00 9x12 Axminster Rug at :.. $1G.OO See our line of body Brus sels nnd "Wilton Rugs made in all sizes. to match, Many with the fv soft attached collars; values 1 up to $2.50, Saturday, at . . . OJ' All the pongee, imported madras and silk nnd lin but all sizes, en shirts, worth ..59c up to $3 spe cial nt Lisle Hose, worth 35c a pair, at Samples and Surplus Stock Summer weights from this great purchase in ana regular lengtns worth upto $1.50 a garment, (Qp All the Men'B Union Suits, worth up to $1.25, 1 Rroken lots of Men's Shirts ami Drawers, at 50 and 69 1 worth up to $1, at 35 and 50 We are Omaha agents for Munsing Union Suits for men, in athletic and reg ular made, at $1.00 to $3.00 Men's Shirts and Drawers, broken lots, worth up to $1, In basement, at 19 29 and 35 Men's Low Shoes at $2.25 Pair Actually Worth $3.50 to $5.00 a Pair. 350 pairs gathered from samples, short lines and single pairs Main Floor. Old Store. The Best Dressed Plea Choose These Style STRAW HATS WJillWIIillJIIHIiJii.aMiBillillMWI SSBQBEBSBBm Every Design That Is New Styles this season admit of wider choice than usual for the well dressed man. Out capable salesmen can tell, at a glance what hat will be most appropriate to jany face or figure, and the c6mplefencs-6r our stock assures absolute satisfaction. Soft- straws and stiff straws at 98c, $1.50, $2, $2.50 $5 when the perspiration had begun to flow, he signaled the house, and forth came a lair maid with a bucket of barley water, Just as it happens In the old stories of the harvest field. Each man was allowed a big drink of the soothing and strengthen ing beverage, and told to hustle along and llnlsh as soon as might be, before the threatening rain came. Mr. Wright saw to It that every stray wisp of the precious forage was carefully gathered, and then gave another high sign to the house. At once a horn blew, and recalled fond ndcmorles of the old days on the farm to every gleaner in the field. After cleaning up, having carefully put their forks away, the men wire given a farm dinner, that rejuvenated their long abused stomachs, and then were permitted to smoke and tell their prize stories of early stunts on other agricultural fields. At the proper time they thanked Mr. Wright profusely and' with a fine courtesy; then went home and doctored their blis ters and began to plan ways and means of reciprocating. But Mr. Wright is watch ing thorn very carefully. Kami Culls for Harvest Hands. TOPKKA, Kan., June I. Although the wheat will not be ready to cut for two or IF"""" All o M2 mm SOLID OAK PORCH FURNITURE SOLID OAK PORCH SWING $3.50 Four foot iu length, equipped with chains, as illustrated. SOLID OAK PORCH CHAIR $2.00 Strongly- con structed of first class materials; very artistic. Choice of either foreot gren or 8 c from $2 $1.49 21e Hen's Underwear silk and lisle shirts nnd draw- vvv Boys' Oxfords In patent leathers, gun metal calf and tan calfskin; H Diucner styles, filgii toe lasts, in all Q sizes 91Ur three weeks, Kansas farmers have called for 12.00U harvest hands. Charles Harris director of the State Free Employment bu reau, said that the bureau expected to aiik for from 15.U00 to 18,on0 men this year. I.lttle Surprises. "Yes, I've been thinking lately that I ought to take out some life insurance. I'm gliul you hunted up, young man." "Mrs. ChlKKers. here'B the cup o' coffee maw borrowed from you tho other day." "I congratulate you on your hens, old chap; they're finer than anything I've got." "I don't know how the story ends, Fan; I haven't looked at the Inct chapter." "Mother, you're tired let me do the dishes." "Thank you Just the same. sir. hut the boss doesn't Bllow us to accept tips." Chicago Tribune. The skirts alone or the mak ing alone of our suits cost moro than what the whole suit will sell for Saturday. Sale starts at 9 A. M. See ad on page 10. Orkin's Douglas Street Store 24th and L Sts - V r i Douin umana. u SOLID OAK Porch ROCKER $2.25 Substantial specially made, strong chair; a good bargain. mission finish In all Uiee articles I STORES I mm mm a 4 4