THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1911. Just Abore the Hih Rent District Te Vant Every Man in Omaha to Read this Clothing Ad.,.. -CULP-HORTON, "When re broke into the clothing frame on the second floor we did it with both eyes wide open. "We know the clothing business backwards, forwards and in the middle. For 20 venrs we have beon up ngninst the people of Omaha, sell ing clothes, clothes, clothes. We have sold more clothing in the last 20 years than any two clothing men in Nebraska. We are making a specialty of one brand of clothes The David Adler Collegian Brand and that brand is the best brand that the brains of the world ever put together. We don't make Adler clothes a leader because we are obliged to do so. There is no trade deal no inside funny business we sell David Adler's clothes and will continue to do so as long as they make the best clothes on earth for tho money. We can give a stronger guarantee on David Adler & Sons' clothes thau any clothing house in Omaha would dare give. Wo will guarantee every Adler Suit or Overcoat bought hero to be absolutely perfect in style, in fit, in high grade workmanship and to prove satisfactory in every wayor you can roll the garment into a neat bundle and bring it up to our store on tho second floor and get your coin back. i We don't want any man's money unless he's satisfied that we deliver tho goods he thought ho bought. We want you to come up Saturday and look at some "real clothes" at prices that would be suspiciously low if you didn't know that we pay $5,000 a year LESS than the same floor space would stand us on the ground floor. All new suits, all new overcoats, all new models from the house of David Adler & Sons .oo to .oo We are. spex-talltlng lilue Serge Butt that would rout you $ floor, for 1.50 on the ground Take the Elevators and Save $10.00 $15.00 81X mammoth elevator easy marbla stairways direct to our .tor. CULP-HORTON 2d Floor Cily National Dank Building CITY C0UNCILJR0CEED1NGS Flan of Aaieument to Pay for Open in; of Boulevard ii Approved. MAH0XEY GITS A VACATION Will I'm It la Booetle His dUuf ; for Felloe Jadgt Reatla Baalnea at alal session. Caa At the adjourned meeting of the city council Friday morning the ordinance for assessment to pay the coat of the pro poeed boulevard from Thirty-eighth and Hamilton etreete to Thlrty-flret and Spregu streets, together with the re port of the appraisers, eatne up and waa accepted, immediately following the neo- aseary ordinance for the condemnation ot uwub ana iot ana ine aaeeeament 01 benefit waa given It tint and aecond reading. Tb coat of the propoead Satan. ion to the beulevard system le fixed by the appraisers at M7.ML This extension ia dealgned to connect Oemla and Miller park ultimately. The aaeeeament levie a benefit taa en every Jot between the terminal and be tween Thirtieth and Fortieth atreet ranging from 12. M to I too per lot The proposition of cloalng Nloholaa treat during the time required by the Interested railroad to construct the pro- posed rladuot waa referred to the com mittee of the whole. The Improvement of Liocust atreet from Twentieth to Twtnty-fourth etreet waa ordered by grading and paving, the prop erty owner to select the paving material. The propoeed change of grade of Lake atreet from Thlrty-ascond to Forty-eeoond etreet we referred. By the term of the ordinance the atreet would be out to a depth of from fifteen to forty fast. Ap praiser on the opening of Chicago atreet from Eleventh to Twelfth reported dam age of tii.toa, On hi request John J. Mahonay, clerk of the police court, waa granted a leave of absence of three weeke to put In the time campaigning for the office of police Judge. The bond of the Thomas Realty com pany for 15.000 to Indemnify the city against damagee during the construction of the aeven-atory Keellne building at Seventeenth and Harney etreete, was approved. Sledgianowskiis Held for Robbery Charges of brsaklng and entering and grand larceny were filed against Fred Slcdglanowskl In the juvenile division of the district court ' Friday and If found guilty the lad must b sent to the peni tentiary or ths atate Industrial school. - - Sledgtanowskt Is well known to Omaha studente of crime a the boy bandit who want to be honest, but whoee home eur rounding ar such a to make him hardly reeponsibl for his wrongdoing. Wore than a year ago Bledglanowakl wee Implicated In the operations of the notorious "boy bandit," auppoeed to be headed by Monk Trummer. After month of work the pelloe department uoeeeded In breaking up the gang. Joseph Trimble and several other more dangerous members of the gand landed In the penitentiary eoine months after the finding of hundreds of.doliare' worth of loot In thd gang's hiding plaoe; hut young Bledglanowakl waa paroled. Ever since Bledglanowakl's first arrest the Juvenile authorities have been trying to better hie environment, but with In different succeee. Walter Bledglanowskl, 13) North Twelfth street, father of the lad, has been In juvenile court several times on account of alleged 111 treatment of his family, but conditions In the home have not greatly Improved. The new charge against Bledglanowakl was filed by W. C. Heaton, a Burlington railroad watchman, who says . the lad broke Into a Burlington ear and atole four sacks of wheat. Ths case will be up for hearing at Saturday's session of the Juvenile court POSTMASTER'S SON WILL NOT CONTEST ELECT0N Roland Thomas, ths university student who was deposed from the presidency of the junior law cla-s at Lincoln on the grounds that the choice waa ths result of llleiial voting, la a aon of Postmaster D. F. Thomas of Omaha. It Is announoed that the seoond election will not be con teeted. The Merchant Who Ha ths Ooods la ths On Who Lets ths Publls Know It Throug Advertising In Ths Bee. The rush and roar of deadly . modern life is everywhere. Your nerves are weak e . t and worn tney are overtaxed, strained to the breaking point, Strengthen them, build them, vitalize them with a Food' Tonic, HsmanUGUdDDd is one of the oldest, purest and best-known of FOOD -TONICS. Iff PRESIDENT 07 THE CLASS 1911-1912 AT 0. H. 8. - - i . ' ' : v f M ff - LTNN BACKBTT. Stotts is Convert to Land Exposition Irwin A. Btotts, of Cody, Neb., who came to Omaha to participate. In the Ak-Bar-Ben festivities, and 'Incidentally to do hi fall buying, ha become so in terested in the Land show that open Monday alght he will stay over ta see It. "Uncle Irwin," ss Mr. Btotts Is known in Cherry county, Is an old settler In that region, with farming and business Interests that keep him busy, "I never have much time to spars," said Mr. Btotts, at ths Merchants, "but Ak-Sar-Bsn always draws me to Omaha. Now, sine I have learned something about ths Land showv I am going to see It through. That I the kind of thing that will help the west more than any thing X know of and It It Is mads an annual affair every county In Nebraska will shortly be vising with the better advertleed sections of ths Paolflo coast "While I have been In Omaha I have made It a point to attend eeveral of the churches, and have heard some sure purs preaching. It carried me back to my boyhood flays In Missouri, when we used to travel all day by wagon to at tend the old-fashioned revivals." TtADtMAKX ALL OHUQQI9T ivl I K. W. Bartos Dies. Being 111 a Year K. W. Bartos, for many years con- nected with the National Printing com pany as one of Its officers, died Thurs day night at his home, 2214 South Four teenth street. He had been III for mure than a year. The funeral will be held at O'clock Sunday afternoon from the Tel Jed 8okol ball. Thirteenth and Martha si rest a Deceased had resided In Omaha almost thirty years. He leaves a wife and aeveral grown children. Mr. Bartoa a as one of the organisers of ths Omaha Tel Jed Sokol and for many years was active In the affaire of the society, taking part In the athletics. WILCOX SUIT DISMISSED AND A NEW SUIT FILED Charles M. Claret's attachment suit against Henry E. Wllcos to recover t,Kl, which he says Wlloox collected as his agent, was UUnilsved and the attachment dissolved by Judge Bears Friday on the ground that the attachment bond' waa Irregular. Caret Immediately started a new action, correcting the error, and sc ouring a new. attachment Stanley M. Rosea ever, attorney for Wilcox, says he will defeat, thla eult with evidence that Wilcox doea not owe ths money. orGEMS, FRUITS AND FLOWERS Products of California Are Being; Set Up at tho Land Show. DISPLAY COVERS BID SPACE Experts Are Here with California Deleaatloa to Give Lectare and Enlighten Vlalter oa the Wonders of ths West. There will be Interesting exhibit from many place at the Omaha Land show but biggest of them all will be th pro duets of th sun-kissed countlee of Cal- norma. Mors than I.BOO aauara faet of spaas will be occupied by ths sxhlblts from three counUes ,of that stats and tnia space will be one of the moat at tractive spots In the huge coliseum. -nanee u. wnson, in chsrge of the Los -Angeles exhibit; Jamee A. Jasper, cringing tne nohee of Ban Diego county ana a. js. Miot, in charge of tons of ncoee rrom the famed Tulare countv. are gt the Den industriously superintend ing in installation of their exhibits. "Vou can name anything you please, aaio air. jasper, "and well show It to you here. We have everything from red peppers to the finest native gems pro duced by sny atate In the union; every thing from a bale of cotton to a dried grape; biik, cotton, citrus fruits, pump ams, grape irult, apples, peaohee. oranges we nave them all-an axhihit that can't be squalled." Aa Eaormoua Pnanpkla. In proof of hla alatement that he would ahow the patrona of the Land ahow a pumpkin weighing kX pounds, Mr. Jas per pointed to a large crate which son talned a pumpkin the slaa of whiH marvelous. Btanqlng by the crate containlna the huge pumpkin was a bale of cotton, white, fine and compact. Whlls ths scrs- age upon which cotton can be grown in taiuornla Is not a great a In om of the southern eta tea th cotton 1 of as fin a texture as any crown and ta bale of it cea be produced to the acre. And In the same field where the cotton and the pumpkin grow, corn measuring eighteen feet In hetghtt can b raised and also at the same time oetrtuh plumes can be harvested from birds rambling around the earns acreage Ia the green and gold bound booth, where Loo Angelea and Ban IXego will exhibit, there will be a diversity of ob jects that only California could show, aa ths products of ons ststs. From Tata re Coaaty. Responding to the chance to show off to an advantage not often secured, Tulare county, California, through lis board of trade, gathered exhibits not aurpaeard by either Ban LMego or Los Angelre and has sent them, to the Land show lu charge of A. E. Miot. a man of many years' experience In preeervlng frulta and In exhibiting them. Mr. Miot 1 enthuslastlo over his collection, all of which comes from the farms la this county of the Ban Joaquin valley. The Tulare exhibits are contained In o pagoda booth, built In the California mltb.on style. The top le coverud wun varicolored leaves and the columns and side beauia are amothei-ed In California poppies. Like Ban Diego and Loa An geles, the exhibits will be contained in mission show cases. The entire pagoda is to be of an Ivory finish. In addition to such Interesting and novel exhibits ss banana blossoms snd perfectly preeerved flowers of alt species, Mr. Miot will cap the climax by showing a sweet potato weighing seventeen and one-half pounds, the largest known te have been grown. H!!jHll7MliimilWf!ilN!l!il!!NIM ll 1 U M 1 Ii ! I ! Ill ll W V, , I . I I I i , II I ' I T 1 1 1 1 I ( 1 1 1 I I ; l 1 i I t ' I M 1 1 1 t i V '. : I 1 I l I I I ( I I I lit I It I I I I 1 I i I t I . i ' ' - 1 1 I I l I i I Mill I I 1 I I 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 M I I I II I i I I F I I I I . I i i I 1 1 t I I HI L .V S.X XT SI iifll ll ; " ' ... j 11 I i4l I I ! These superior garments give a new meaning to "clothes value." There are no other clothes that possess such a high degree of excellence and seU at so reasonable a price. You can pay as little as $15 or up to $30 for an Adler's Collegian Suit or Overcoat and whatever you pay you get the very utmost for your money. In the matter of fabrics, we select the finest qualities and most artistic patterns that money can buy. Then we employ the most skilled designers to give to these garments the smart, snappy lines so much desired. The workmanship is the very finest possible. If you understand clothes value and clothes style, you will appreciate Adler's Collegian Clothes. On receipt of your name and address we will send you our latest Fashion Book and we will tell what store in your locality sells these pre-eminent clothes. DAVID MILWAUKEE ADLER & SONS CLOTHING CO. ' CHICAGO III . . I poison. Bhe then feigned orampe .so ef fectively that Bob left and sent the doo, tor ' to th scene. The permanganate had been fixed purposely for the occa sion. . Bhe was given a healthy lecture by the, doctors, and has promised not to scar any mors lovers In such stagelike way. General Hospital : Held Responsible for Wetzel's Death Verdict against the Omaha General hos pital for SS.SO0 damages for the death of the late Alva P. Wetsel was awarded his widow, Mrs. Fsnnle W. Wetsel, by a ury In Judge Sutton's court Friday. Judgment for this amount was sntered. Th hospital will appeal. Wetsel, while delirious with typhoid fever. Jumped out of a third-story window of ths hospital to his death a year ago. Mrs. Wetsel sued for I20.00P. charging negligence. The de fense was that under the contract .with tho hospital Wetsel was to receive only general cars and but 119 a week was to bs paid for It; that when ths rsre merely Is general a rettent cannot be watched constantly and It he Injures and kills himself ths hospital cannot bs held responsible. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS r. II. Hurt of Chlcaso. president of th Young Men s Christian aeeovlailon train ing school, speot s'ridey la Uuiaba as a guest wf the local association. T. J. Crawford, manager of the fur niture department at Hayden Bros., and Frank Harrison of the hardware depart ment, have returned from Dallas, a. D.. where they expected te win claim V, U or tl when the drawing begins. South Omaha Maid Frightens Wooer Margaret uanonay, aged n years, a beautiful fouth Omaha maiden, threw a scar Into a would-be lover Thursday night whaa aha swallowed a email qusnt Ity of very much diluted permanganate of potash. In her quest ts sear ths wooer Margaret succeeded, but Shs could not palm It off oa th three doctor who were niahed to th soens by th fleeing sweetheart. It la said Bob Teung. a driver for th United Kx press compear, called oa th girt A quarrel followed, during wbicn Margaret swallowed the auppoe4-t-b UNIVERSITY CLUB PASSES MANDERS0N RESOLUTIONS Ths University club oi Omaha, of which General Charlee V. Manderson was a member, has passed the following resolution of regret at the death of ths general; " Whereas, Ths University club of the city of Omaha hae Irarned with deep regret of the death of tlvneral Charles r. Manaerson. one or us most ais- tlntrulshed members, and Whereas, The L nlver.it y club remem bers the valuable per v lets rendered by him to the city of Omaha and the state of Nebraska and this nation and Is mind ful of hie many Xrlends ana nign stand ing In this community : therefore, be It Keaolved, J hal tne university emu oi the city of Omaha et a meeting held on the 10th day or iirtoDer. iu. unanimously voted to extend to the family and frtenus of the deoeased its sincere and heartfelt condolences; and be It further Resolved. That mesa resoiuiiona De spread upon the minutes of the Univer sity club, a copy transmitted to hla be reaved family and the presa of Omaha. Nebraska. t HAKl.r:u u. MCI HJ.TAUL,, CI'ttMfcNT CHASE. STANLEY M. ROUEWATKn. Committee. BISHOP TIHENJS TO SPEAK Will Addreai Prison Congress Meet ing tt Auditorium Sunday. MAUD BAIXIN0T0N BOOTH ALSO Other Famous Speakers to Take I'art 1b th Exercises In Cob. aeotloa with th Natloaal Prison Congress. - Glnce th last edition of th program tor th National Prison congress was Issued Bishop John H. Tlhen of ' Lincoln has consented to address the mans meeting Sunday afternoon at ths Auditorium and a new program for that day la being printed. This will be the first opportunity of fered to most of ths people of Omaha to hear Bishop Tlhen. Announcement of his address will be made In ths Catholic churches Sunday morning, and It is ex pected that Catholics and Prosteatant will fill the Auditorium at the afternoon meeting. Father Patrick McGovern will pro nounce the Invocation. Besides Bishop Tlhen' s address there will be addresses by Maud Ballingtou Booth, Dr. Charles H. Henderson . of Chicago, Judge C. A. De Courcsy of Boston and J. T. Uilmour of Toronto, at the head of the prison re form movement In Canada. The Fourth. Infantry band from Fort Crook will play. Many delegates to the congress have already arrived, including those who also are delegates to the national convention of the society for the Frlendleea, which 1 In aeraion at th Young Men' Chris tian association. Sloas Cltr Grocery Hobhed. BIOUX CITY, Ia.. Oct lS.-Robbers blew open the sate In the Court Street grocery- early this morning securing neailv fl.uW in cash and several hundred dollars' worth of Jewelry. Gst tho Original and Genuine U OH Li G '8 MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Agts. For Infantt,Invalid,and Growing children. rure Nutnuon.up building Uie wnoie Doay. r Invigorates the nursing mother and the aged, f Rich rnilkt malted gram, in powdei formJ A quick luncV prepared in a minute j Taka no substitute. A&k for HORLICK'SJ Not In Any RIM Trusf A SAFE PLAN Nona safer. Rent a box In eur great Safe Deposit Vaults and nines your jewels. bonds and private paper there when not needed. feuch articles kept In your home become known and are a constant menace to your family. Call and see our Safety Boxes todsy. OMAHA SAFE DEPOSIT & TRUST CO. Street I etel tat ranee to TaalU. 1114 Faxaam Street Spirits (or Rhaumatlam Ths Increased us of spirits for rheu matism Is causing constaeraoie oiacua- slon among tb medical fraternity. It I wonderful cur when mixed witn cer tain other Ingredient and taken properly. The following la the formula: ; ro ona- half Pint of good wnianey tor anerr wtna If It la preferred) add one ounce of Tonis oompound and ons ouncs or avrun Barsaparllla compound. Take In published here laat winter and thousands before retiring" Any drugglet has these Ingredients or will quickly get them. Any one can mix them. This formula was nubllahed her last winter and thousand were promptly benefited. It give im mediate relief. la addition to driving out rheumetlsm tl.ls treatment le a eplendld eystern builder, soon restoring vitality and ap- w.,ii in am ht has rheumatium should never be without a botlla of skis mixture en hand. It will save raan-e doctor bill and much offer Lug Aav, y- f fy f j Do not know what to take? I ilCl I a nlu $ Then why not find out? Your doctor knows. Leave It all to him If he savs. "AVer's Cherrv Pectoral." then take It If he says something else, take that. Do as he says. I. O. AyerOe.. r-w-ll. Ha. IS YOUR HAIR STREAKED WITH GRAY? GRAY HAIR MEANS AGE A Few Applications of a Sim ple Ecmedy Bring' Back the Natural Color. How often ons hears ths sxpreeslon, '8h I gray and beginning to look old." It Is true that gray hair usually denote age and I always associated with age. Tou never hear one referred to as having grsy balr and looking young. Th hair Is generally th Index of age. It your hair I grsy. you can't blsms your friends for referring to you ss look ing old. Tou can't retain a youthful ap pearance If you allow your hair to grow grsy. Many persons of middle age jeop ardise their futur (Imply by allowing taa gray balr ta become manifest. ' U your hair has become faded or gray, try Wyeth's Sage snd Sulphur Hair Remedy, a preparation- which a chemist by th nam of .Wyeth devised a few year ago. It I eiinple. inexpensive and practical, and will banish th gray hair In a few day a It 1 also guaranteed to remove dandruff and promote th growth of th hair. It Is a pleaaaat dressing for th hair, and after using It a few day Itching and drynee of th scalp entirely disappear. Don't neglect your balr. Start , using Wyeth' Sag and Sulphur today, and you will be surprised at th quick result. This preparation Is offered to the pub lic at fifty cents a bottle, and Is recom mended and sold by all druggist. Spsclal agent: Sherman MoConnell Drug Co., ittn and Dodgs St a., Omaha, Nebraska.