Nebraska OMAHA'S ONLY MODERN CLOTHING MTOUE H if-rllnutj iior Talk f We're often askotl why our STANISICS MDS THE FORT Accused Maa May Not Be Forced Back to Lincoln. LITTLE CHANGE IN FIGURES Official Count in Numerous Counties Progresses, clothing nnwi I hrlnk or puckr at the seams. our gmt.1s are "Lon.l.m shrunk" by a cold water prtH'ca that inHkes them entirely dependable theienfter Steam shrinking is not urarly no thorough A holt of worsted suiting afier goini; throiiKh told water Immer sion and (Irving in the air loses all It rotKll'ly an, about 2 yanU to a 5 )-yard bolt us nRainst S yard ly steam shrtnkiige. The actual cost of hHiiilling is about 60, rreater. Most of the fibrle uned In clothes making ure steam shrunk. The proien.4 isn't tienrly so costly and the results nut nearly va good LAWYERS DISCUSS PEOCEEDURE HALL'S LEAD KEEPS GROWING THK HOME OF QUALITY CLO IHLM rl F.. Clark of Llarola Formally Kile for Comma la the First District HrqaliMloa Caao U tp, HIP' Nebraska 4 ) (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Neb., Nov. 10.-(Speclal.)- Theodore Btanislcs, held In Ctica, N. T., and wanted In thla atate on the charge of arson, may and may not be compelled to return to Nebraska. The local man J under sentence of seven years In the tate penitentiary for procuring Roy Wllacam to f.re a house In this city. Later Stanlslcs appealed his case to the upreme court after being released on a tE.OJO bond. He Is said to have disposed of much uerv uDiurv nia departure. An effort was made today In the district court, where his bond still Is, to have the man brought Into court or declare the bond forfeited. An attorney for the defense, however, stopped the proceed ings by contndlng that the district court had no Jurisdiction In the matter now that the case was on appeal to the state upreme court. ' It will come up at the next sitting, November 20. The matter 'k'as not ruled upon by the Judge who heard the matter today, but it h prob able that this method will fall. Attorney General Martin asserts that If the man does not show up before the date of the hearing, set for November 20, then he will file a motion asking that tho appeal be dismissed. In this event the matter will then stand as It came from the district court and Btanislcs can fce recalled from New York If the Chief of police of Utlca still has him held there. Clark Formally Enter. Paul F. Clark of this city today started the. 1912 political baU rolling by filing for republican candidate for the congres sional nomination from the First district. XI r. Clark Is understood to have no busi ness connections at this time and has given out that he will devote all of his time to his candidacy. Mr. Clark returned sole time ago from the west and had not been here long tvhen a hundred or more of the most In fluential republicans In th:s county asked him In a signed petition to make the race next year. Ho Is one of the best known politicians In the district and has a wide KQualntance in all of the counties. HearloK om Reqnlaltloa. The hearing on a requisition from South akota for the return of Mrs. Irene Fore- graves from this state to the neighboring atate to the north will be held before Governor Aldrlch on Saturday. The woman Is wanted at Fairfax, Gregory county, on the charge of having main tained a disorderly house. The offense Is punishable In South' Dakota by Impris onment In the state penitentiary. The accused woman has retained T. J.' Doyle of this city to Teslst extradition while the state through the; county attorney .of Gregory couny has employed H. II. Wil son to attend to Its side of the case. TWO JEFFERSON COUNTY PIONEERS PASS AWAY FAIRBURY, Neb., Nov. 10 (Speclal.) Daniel Mortlmore. a pioneer of this county, passed away following an opera tion performed in. a hospital In this city. Mr. Mortlmore had been a sufferer for the last five years. Mr. Mortlmore was born June 20, 1S40, at KIkhait, Ind. He enlisted In the war of the rebellion, serving In the Ninth Jowa cavalry. He was honorably dls- hargad February 3, 18G0. Shortly after wards he came to Nebraska, locating near Falrbury. In 1W5 he was married to Miss Mary Shelburne of this city. To this union three children were born. Mr. Mortlmore was a member of Russell post No. 77, Grand Army of the Republic, of this city, and his comrades will have charge of the services. John Pattereon, a prominent farmer living near Reynolds, In this county, died after a brief Illness. Mr. Patterson came to Nebraska In 1SG9 and has lived in this -county ever since. He was married In 1876 to Miss Mary Mervey, and to this union two children were born. Deceased was born March 14, 1849, In Indiana. FORMER ALLANCE MAN IS ACCIDENTALLY KILLED ALLIANCE. Neb., Nov. 10. (Special.) The funeVal of Anton Young, an erst while resident of this city, but who has been away from here for twenty-three years, took place from the home of E. V. Ray yesterday. Deceased met with his death In an acci dent In Kent, Wash., last week, and It was by finding a photograph In his pos session bearing the name of a local firm of photographers that he was Identified as the son of a pioneer family of this city. Steps were Immediately taken by his relatives to have the body forwarded here, and he was laid to rest In Green wood cemetery In this city, being mourned by his mother and three slaters. Mrs. E. W. Ray, Mrs. J. W. Richardson and Mrs. Bertha Wykoff, all of this city, and one brother, Mr. E. C. Young, all of Alliance. f rrua II. ;llmore. FULLERTON, Neb., Nov. 10 (Spe cial.) Cyrus H. Gllmore, one of the pio neer residents of this city, died at his home here Thursday. He suffered a par alytic stroke about ten days ago and on account of his age he was tyo feeble to recover. Mr. Gllmore had resided In Kul lerton for about th'rty years and was very prominent In Mssonic and Grand Army of the Republic affairs, as well as municipal and county, tfeiiig a life long republican. Mr. Gllmoie was about 77 years of age and was, engaged In busi ness as a druggist. He Is survived by a widow, three sons and two daughters, who are all grown. Alllssct rastor lleslajna. ALLIANCE. Neb., Nev. lJ.-iSpeclal.)-A buelness meeting was held In the par lors of the First Baptltit church of thla city last night, the huvlness before the board being the resignation of the pastor, Rev. Franklin McNeill. . The resignation of the pastor came somewhat as a sur prise, but after due consideration It was accepted and steps taken to supply thi pulpit from the state board until another 1 as tor la obtained. Repablieaa Candidate for Railway Commissioner Far Ahead of Herman Latest Figures Many canvassing boards over Ne braska are busy with the ballots and more complete returns on the state ticket are available. Totals from these show no change save to accentuate the republican success. On supremo Judges 1,369 preolncts, or eemy-tow counties complete, give tiamer a lead of 1.975 over Dean, while In the same countlea Fawcett had a lead over Sullivan of t0S. Hall for railway commissioner Is swiftly running away from Herman, having now a lead of 1,770, and demon strating how an alumnus of Nebraska university moves when he organises his friends among the students to assist him. In the Third district sixteen out of the eighteen countlea give Stephens a ma jority of J.023 over Elliott. For State Hcaraat. Hair Antelope , l,uo . Lyfe d. Kn'p. Mll'er 1.042 49i So6 1,141 146 744 1,6,3 Boyd 770 lit brown 400 4u0 Boone 1,367 l,Jus box Uutte itt 440 nurt 1, l.tuo Butler 1,212 l.&ts t edar 1,13 Chase 4itf 4'J Clay l.tJ 1.4W) Coiiax 141 feu cneyenne 647 6vl Cuming- tail VII Custer 2,210 2,:io Dakota oi bll Dawes H3 titi i. 'aw son 1,4 1,37 it Douglas 13,241 lt.lM Oooge l.otitl l.bis Deuel So6 Hl Franklin )at ad Furnas l.oai l.uoti Frontier M4 M6 UHKe 2,67b 2,44'J Garden 347 A.V Garfield 303 1!M Gosper 2 id 2M Giant 1M 1, Greeiey b fiui Harlan Vtitf ti2 Hayes 29 lilt Hitchcock 441 4:'H Hooker 133 lJi Holt l,4iU 1,4M Howard 749 7;j Hall 1.641 1.6'H) Jefferson 1,623 1,633 Kearney 733 7wt Kleth 876 SW Kimball 244 230 Knox L663 1,49 Lancaster 4.773 6,273 Lincoln 1,403 1,810 Merrick 993 943 Madison 1,674 1,61V Morrill 449 413 Nance 870 839 Nemaha 1,117 1.165 Otoe 1.642 1.K94 m 1.1-3 we 810 1,611 1,232 MM 1,233 910 29 1.0i7 2,223 Witt 644 ' 1.S31 lU.fcW ' i,Ui 81 93 1,029 646 1,621 111 . 3U4 319 63 7S9 Hi 19 199 36H 69 l,57fc 1,042 1,378 1,063 000 2n 101 l.2) 2,333 913 7r6 tSS9 293 663 1.08a 1.412 767 884 1.866 841 9-i6 1,742 1.267 8.1 1,238 876 2o 926 tUfo 6ul 1.2M k,9i Ltioi 72 966 too 4Wt 1,621 1V6 196 819 60 76i 793 U2 8SU b8 1.49V 1,06 l.u3 1.063 S3 274 10u 1.687 4,439 875 734 1,866 29.1 646 :,02i 1,452 ' 736 869 1,810 836 923 1.761 234 1.279 1.460 1,972 683 891 1,297 98 635 754 670 9tS 967 160 1,631 Pawnee 1,124 1,101 Pierce 767 728 Plalte 1.077 1.933 Phelpa 832 84 Polk IMT 94) Richardson 1,710 1,862 Rock 410 391 286 Saline 1.464 1.891 1.258 Reward 1.60S 1.614 1.404 Saunders 2,011 1,937 1.9tifi Slitrman 617 64 o91 Scottsbluff .... 799 im 384 Thayer 1.687 .. 1,633 1,276 Thomas 147 14S . . 110 Thurston GNO 646 641 Valley 917 , 913 737 Wayne 757 S20 883 Washington ....1.199 l.llt 906 Webxter 1,2-M 1,196 1,011 Wheeler 201 196 161 York 1.963 1.938 1,617 70 counties.... 84,146 Railway 0ua 83,110 72,267 72,396 imisaloner. Hall Human (Rep.) 0em.) .. 1.457 L132 ,. 779 &8t .. 1,329 L202 .. 426 2h9 .. 1.I2 801 .. 1,223 1,664 .. 297 266 .. 2.040 1,751 896 861 .. 1.643 1,868 ,. 910 1.066 ,. 1.163 1,292 . . 766 944 .. 2,134 1,948 . 631 822 , . 607 64 . . 690 669 ,. 1,428 1,460 . 216 79 ..11.429 S,33& . 1.699 1,8X5 .. 9)3 1,167 .. 671 639 .. 940 1,201 .. Z.468 1,746 .. 857 2ut .. SOS 212 .. 270 611 .. 142 6s .. 636 801 ,. 810 L010 ,. 276 245 .. 426 439 .. 130 6 .. 1.649 1.694 .. 1,663 1,543 . 786 1,064 .. 1.674 1,072 .. TJ2 994 . 38S 296 . . 261 106 .. 1.630 1,6411 ..6.225 S.36S .. 1.380 1.066 .. 1.611 1,888 . 1.042 77S ,. 469 24 .. 1.340 1,909 .. 1.195 1,096 ,. 899 677 ,. 1.627 1,483 . 1.048 783 .. 769 10 . 1,121 1,9.".S .. 750 1,256 . 986 10 ,. I,6tf9 1,U .. 421 257 .. 1.9f4 1.967 .. 1.477 1.S27 .. 1,489 1.331 .637 627 .. 828 416 .. U8t 1.S79 ,. 162 106 .. 716 711 . 910 786 ,. 1,122 939 .. 9w4 73" .. 1.103 1,324 ,. 207 164 .. 1.979 1,491 ..88,767 70,98. Antelope Boyd Boone Brown Burt Butler Box Butte Buffalo Chase riav Cuming Cedar Colfax Custer .' Cheyenne Dakota Lawes Dawson Deuel , Douglas Dodge Franklin Frontier Furnas Gage Garden Garfield Gosper Grant Greeley Harlan Hayes , Hitchcock Hooper Hall Holt Howard , Jefferson Kearney K1h Kimball Knox Lancaster Lincoln Madison Merrick Morrill Nuckolls N'ehama Nance Otoe Pawnee Pierce Platte Phelps Polk Richardson Hock Saunders Saline Seward Sherman fc-cott's Bluff Thayer '1 nomas Thurston Valley Washington Wayne Webtr VN heeler York Seventy-two counties. RETl'HM FROM THIRD DISTRICT Stephens Leads by Twenty-Eight Ilandred Votes. Following are the totals for the con gressional race In the Third district, with the exception of Dixon and Stanton counties: the exceptions of Burt, Dakota, Dixon and Stanton counties: Elliott. Stephens. Boone 1.12 1 436 Knox 1 Ssi 1,71,8 Dodge 1.6.',3 2,319 Madison 1,620 1.6,13 Vayn HuO 864 Merrick 967 9u0 Cuming 1.611 ,1.353 f'oltax . 707 Cedar 1.132 l.t5 Thuiston 693 kwi Nance 771) 6IM1 Platte 1,14 l.Mi Antelope 1.897 1,28 Pieice 776 M Dakota 485 7ns Burt 1,181 1.067 Totals 17,464 20.483 "Values You've Noticed this Emblem Appearing In our ads of late. We've nilopted It na a means i of drawing attention to a fa -t that every cuMomer knows and one that we guar antee. Wear Crawford Shoes and Forget your Foot Troubles They nre so carefully made of such excellent leathers and our sales men fit them to the feet so accurately that foot discomfort is unknown among Crawford Shoe wearers. $3.50 and $4.50 Great line of $2.50 sioes, too PERU ELEVEN DEFEATS OMAHA UNIVERSITY The foot ball game between Peru and Omaha university resulted. ' i3 to 8, in favor of Peru Normal, ROOSJ OF COUNTERFEITERS Output of Printing Plant on Pa trifle Isle Cashed on the Mainland. An old world romsnce has been shat tered by the arrest In Chicago of Fred J. Marneek as one of a trio of alleged counterfeiters whom secret service opera tives fay they have followed from a tiny Island In the Pacific through the chief cities in the United States. Marneek, who lives at 1309 Sedgwick Rudolph Swanson, who was apprehended at 833 La Salle avenue, and Albert I -eon, caught in New York Sunday while board ing a steamer for South America. All came from a small Russian village on tha Baltic, according to secret service authorities. Marneek, who lives at 1309 Sedgwick street, was about to start to his child hood home to bring back his sweetheart State Vote A 'Jf ?fcV Hamer. Letton. Rose. Dean. Oldham. Stark. Fawcett. Sullivan. .... Us5 1,41)4 1MJ 1,075 l.Uuu l.W 1,UW 1.01'J .... DM 40ti 411 31U ill W UZ7 41 J 710 6b2 760 12i Vil USH lS:i S,U .... 1,113 l.KiO l.lKl l.TM 1,1. l.Mli Win 1.77 .... 417 4W 4d7 417 t0 3.J 4(3 457 .... l.VJU 1.1:44 l.tii l.Mi l.usw J. US 1.107 l.Ui .... l,7ti 1.H43 l.M 2,M 1,'J4 1,H 1.78 1,820 ... l,lt 1.1M (Hi ;"4 i.ii l.Wl Ml .... l.Wi l.iiH l.Ul l,2;o Vifi l.z:a 11,U3 i.'tM .... l.aoi l.tn'i l.il 1.4v l.M) 1.6JJ l,4l 1 412 415 410 3V9 23 21)7 Bon 'M .... U.l ii.i (.-4 tr& 24 i4 jw i I .... 722 736 714 2J fctss m o48 91S .... VU4 H'Ji 14 l.bil l.-t 1.314 3, a4 l,itt,S ... 1,849 S.OiKi l.4 2,740 1,,S57 1,M 2,1 2,721 .... t5 (UO bl C41 4U8 Mt S Ml .... l.m 1.4-ii 1.481 1.314 1,31(1 1.374 1.3U) .... ;oj It 9 W4 lul M 98 4 .0 274 .... l.' 1.717 1.M1 l,b;J l.n.l l.bu 1'ii7 I. Ml ....12,214 12.XM 12,0 t.Ztt i.M (H.S40 8.220 7.82J LW 679 bli Uii) U2 iSH tU IM .... 943 1.0..3 1.U1J 1,213 J,(H1 1,0-JD 1.147 1.1-J .... 910 .940 U.'O 1.U64 1,019 9S9 o.- IMi .... tas 0f,4 6:0 47 4774 i'A 8L'3 041 .... 2,4d 2,6.11 VtVi l,t!78 l.tibt l.l.Sl 2,719 1,975 .... 299 2H3 2:8 HI jU ht 208 245 .... 319 33.1 4J1 i.i'J 4.'4 M 41 121 IJ-l 111 K5 173 1U3 117 77 .... (13 huu 4vi 810 7.717 7i6 35 718 317 3J3 3-'o 2U0 M 1 ,M .... .... l.I'M 1,ii !.. 1,M 1.4.1 1.372 1M l.&T.l .... b27 k'.iti 871 9u5 7.(0 7x9 b36 8(74 .... 2.6 2.xi iJii lta 12 27ii 'Hi .... 441 45 459 8:3 847 3iM 74S 47,2 1.4J 1,4)4 1.474 l,0o3 1,114 1,&J0 J.3"2 1,493 ....113 133 113 82 tj l 75 oi .... iiO iJJ '3i l.Oii .0u7 l.Oiti 7.ul l.t7 .... 1.476 1.710 1.5il 1.12 1.079 1.15& 1.4JO 1,07 .... l,i 1.H5 l.H4 MJ V.Ki c.l l.w(., h7 023 8J9 813 Vi7 ( 8(7 791 930 .... 31 3.rt &i 23 374 3K8 848 2V2 212 243 215 129 12 95 214 Ul ... 1.616 1.W1 1.519 1,6:1 1,574 1,574 1.22 1,471 . ... Vf.j. . I. J.K liWt 4,113 7,,l.'.4 a .... 1,365 1,329 1.3irT 1,WJ 913 HSl 1,133 m .... 1.567 1,540 1,519 1,373 l.Svi 1,347 1,403 1,273 .... u i :'! i:i7 ,f,u 7'. I 4i HI 43 4 449 431 294 2S0 317 232 .... 847 844 8.4 575 544 529 878 725 .... I.lv3 11 1,1.1 l,i. 9.0 l.l)4 1,14. .... 1.V9.1 1.34") l.r.l 1.1 a l.lnl l.OMl 1,1,0 1,07.' .... 1.513 1.C37 l.C.i2 1,538 1.404 1.S3S 1,723 1,70 .... i.u.4 i.i'J i.u. ,4 ;a i,i.a ?: .... tf74 939 9J7 951 849 840 1,092 M3 .... 738 744 7 33 843 HID .v i;m Ml .... 3,i'20 l.OSJ) J,0f, 1.907 1.7!(5 l.iyil 718 1,954 .... idiC 9h4 9i 964 xs8 i 924 1.18 ... 1.M7 1.7S8 1.743 1.890 1.7i4 1,77 1.7W 1.911 392 401 8'Ji iM 224 2:14 819 JM 1750 (26 Hi bM 3ii9 423 77 428 1JI; 1.612 l,iX l.M 1,473 1 4O0 1.2h9 1.5AI .... 151 1,418 l,w l.l'.i 1,1W 1,210 1,410 1.J3J .... . o. (,VJ 47 bi.l 14)3 i-,l r. .14 .... 1.924 2044 1.9m 1.5S4 l.t',4 1.3) 1,378 1.25J .... 1.474 1.51 1.5H5 2,''J l.HDO .l.Vi 1,723 2,Uw7 .... 130 ui i:a 147 in? m 4 9; .... C18 Vi 6.3 72 829 W7 -77 657 .... -.'l K4 K K.fi Milt -,4-i Ml , , .... 1,135 1,153 1,187 1.137 913 9u0 1,173 i.027 .... 1,024 1,234 1.22s 1,141 l.oul 971 1,130 1,124 M 9t9 1.1'5 745 6(7 .7.i 7W4 6s 14 ... 1.822 1,974 l.i'37 l.Ctwi 1.486 1,011 1,972 1,716 ....83.031 8.C1 17.858 80,059 71225 74,621 0,34 TsT'isO Antelope ... Brown Boyd Butler Dox Butte Boone Buffalo .... Burt Cedar Ciay Chase v ii enne ... Colfax Cuming .... Custer Dawes Dawson .... Deuel UfOge Douglas .... Dakota Furnas Franklin ... Frontier ... Qage Garfield ... Ciosper Oram Ureeiey Garden liall Harlan iiayes Hitchcock . Holt liooker nowarJ .... Jefferson .. i in..un .... Kearney ... Keith Kimball .... Knox ..ui. caster . Lincoln Madison .... .-airlck .... Morrill Nance iwitiaha .... Nuckolls ... Otoe rtwnet .... Phelps Pierce Platte Polk Richardson Rock Scottahluff Seward .... Saline Merman ... Sanders .... Thayer Thomas .... Thurktun .... a It . Washington Webster ... Wsvnr .... York 71 Counties... We wouldn't Handle a poor gar ment except to throw It out. We have built up a wonderful reputation for good clothes. We cannot afford to sacrifice that reputation by selling a poor garment any more than you can afford to buy one. There are hundreds of garments of only passing goodness, sold in Omaha every year ou the strength cf some high sounding nnme. In ortlor to eliminate, any possibility of ever riving, otic of our patron it Mxr Rnnnrnt va practically iiinnufMctitro our own. To still further prutwt our runtoinrrV Intorctta, wo rtib-Jet-t every Raiment coining into title store to a very loso scrutiny. Any that arc found defer tlve, or varying in the least fiom our specifications In making ,are rejected. No store n tJm country has so Held a code of customer-protection ai tills store. Knowing thl cau you af. ford to buy clothes in ordinary stores? Superb Fancy and Ginulrie True Blu Strje Suits $10.00 to 540.00 We honestly believe There Is nioro trickery practiced In the selling of overcoats than in any other thing a man wears. The average man waits until he needs a coat badly then he buys hurriedly, and consequently, not carefully. Our stork is selected to bene fit the hurried buyer. It Is lmpositlble to select a poor coat here. We advise you to take your time, but If you must hurry, you're safe. Overcoats. $10 to $60 1 Let Our Furnishing Goods Salesmen Serve You They'll take delight in pleasing you they have that confidence, that knowledge of quality and Tightness of price begets in the men who sell our merchandise: Swell Shirts $1.00 and up Rich Neckwear, 50c op Dressy Gloves, $1.15 and op when arrested last week in Chicago. , , Through the dense forests of Vancouver Island to the shore of the Pacific, secret service operatives fought their way to Friendly Cove, a tiny bay on Nootka Is land, a stone's throw from the greater island and 600 miles north of Seattle. There, In a. picturesque log cabin, they say, they found one of the most complete counterfeiting plants ever known. Upon this ovldcnce and the testimony of nearly fifty merchants and bankers of some of the chief cities of tha United States, Captain Thomas I. Porter, head of the United States secret service In Chicago, expects to send the three men arrested to a federal penitentiary. They are charged with having passed nearly $C0,000 In counterfeit 10 bank notes in Seattle, San Francisco, Denver, Salt Lake City, New York, Milwaukee and Chicago since the opening of the log cabin plant on Nootka laland in May, 1910. Leon, a RiiHsian political refugee art ist and expert photographer, was the al leged head of the gang. With 8wanson and Marneek, he Is said to have gone to the distant island and there Introduced himself to the residents of the little vil lage of Nootka as a hunter of big game. Threo miles from the village tho two story lug cabin was built. It was named on Judges Popular priced garments When it comes to medium-priced clothing this Bloro takes a decided lead. Perhaps 75 of our clothing business u In these garments, and it Is little wonder that we make such determined effort to have In comparable values, and an Incomparable assortment of styles and patterns. You'll save $5.00 and got the very kind of suit or overcoat you want if you pay us $15, $20 or $25 Soil, Warm Underwear, 50c garment up Perfect Fitting Union Suits, $1.00 up . Splendid Sweaters, $1.50 to $6.50 after tha tiny bay near by, Friendly Cova. Nearly $1,000 la believed to hare been obtained by the passage of the spurious bank notes In Chicago, according to tha secret service authorities. They declare also that seven merchants of Vtlet street, Milwaukee, were victimised. Among the bank notes Captain Porter deolares tha trio counterfeited were those of Pasa dena National of Pasadena, Cal.; First National of San Francisco, First National of Wllliamsport, Pa.; Illinois National of Springfield and Blair County National of Tyronne, Pa. Chicago Record-Herald. ROMANCE OF BUSTED VASE One of Gotham's "Sweet Llllle Pastimes" Gossips Abont It In Court. Unruffled by the titters and giggles that rustled through the crowded court room during his frank exposition of the love secrets between him and Miss Helen Woodruff Smith, the wealthy daughter of the late James I). Smith, one time president of the New York stock ex change, Russell A. Qiiswold, known to the publlo as "Russjelamb," took the stand In a New York court In his suit for $50,000 damages against the Stamford, Conn., heiress for breach of promise to marry. "Ruzztelamb" showed no trepidation in facing an ordeal that few men would care to undergo, and even when It cam. to explaining tha mysterious Initials "K I." at the 'bottom of many of Mis: Smith's letters and postals he bravely offered the solution, describing the lady's particular penchant for kissing htm on the eyes while exclaiming, "Russell and his pretty little eyes!" and how she cams to adopt the Initials "K. I," as smyboll cal of this eccentrlo desire. Miss Smith, who resumed tier maiden name after divorcing Homer Cummlngs, former mayor of Stamford, In 1907, through her attorney, Kdmund I Mooney of 41 Wall street, declared today before the trial that she will deny every one of "Rustzlelamb's" allegations. "Ruzzlelamb" was the first witness. He said he first met Miss Smith, then Mrs. Cummlngs, on Easter Sunday, 1901. He was a close friend until 1907, when she divorced Cummlngs. "Ruzzle" came back from a western trip and Miss Smith asked him, he said on the stand: "Ruzde, do you love me enough to marry me?" "I said, 'You know I do: how I've been waiting for you all this time.' Then she said we would be married Just aa anon as her father died. 'You see, I'm afraid to marry you now as my father might disinherit me,' she said, 'but we'll b married some day. I've always know we were meant for each other. W mus have met In another worldP " Attorney Jacob Oordon for tha plain t'ff Introduced a postal from Miss Smltl Suits and Overcoats to Order $20 Up Have your suit and overcoat made to your measure. We offer all wool goods, perfectly fast in color, well tailored and perfect in fit and style for $20.00 and up. Look over our goods before you place your order. MacCarthy-Wilson Tailoring Co. 304-306 South 16th St. Five Steps South of Famam to Russia that contained a mystic "K. 1." after the signature. Ortawold was aked to explain tha significance of "K. I." "Miss 8mlth always loved to klos my eys," he said. "She would kiss them over and over again and say, 'Russell and hla pretty little eyes.' The 'K. I.' on this postal Is her code for the eye kiss." The fair defendant laughed heartily at this testimony. In describing their final meeting Rux clelamb said. "When I. told her I did not want her to have William Harper, who Is a civil en gineeer, around ahe told me It was none of tny business as I was to be her hus band. She laughed. In my face and said: " 'Why, Ruzsle, what the dlcknna do you mean? I never loved you and never meant to marry you. You were just a sweet pastime.' I was just too angry for anything and I let her see it. I broke a vase on the table, I was so upset, and walked out. She cnlled me back and asked why we could not patch it up like the broken vase, but I Just looked at her and went away." New York Telegram. Nobel Prise Given Maeterlinck. . STOCKHOLM, Nov. 9. The Swedish academy haa awarded tha Nobel prise for literature for 1911 to tha Belgian author, Maurice Maeterlinck. to::e's old golden coffee There are more cups to the pound in this coffee. The growths that enter into it are picked to give strength as well as splendid, enjoyable cup-quality. Roasted 'to the instant of coffee perfection. There are two kinds of pices. Tone's and "tthtri" l8 SBTB tot ttia teal ts unbroken I OLD tOLBf CO rut You'll be convinced by a single pound that it is not only the most delicious coffee, but that it is most economical. Al your grocer's 93 a pound. TONK BROS., Dee Moines, la. Hats good hats nro tho kind our patrons get wo throw in the stylo features. Stetsons, $3.80 up Famous Berwicks, 93.00 Klnfsoni, $2.60 Those Popular Rouf h Hats, $3 up Caps, tool Good, warm ones, made to con form to Fashion's mode. For motoring, riding and other forms of out-door use 60c and up ann 1 One of these 1 0,000 MISSION CLOCKS U jrourg If you will ace me) two . ubacriptlon to a weekly magazine. KIT1" vi .! i - - .iff, : j ;'! t ii aflJL gSjgsfianB u&tfflsTT qMll.4 K-UAV MISSION CLUCK ... u.nin iieiiiiaueu kiln Uried ouk Willi raised inei; nuinurU. Urge brass pendulum ulitk and ornamental side weights cup bell strikes the half hour and cumedral Kong on tin, hour bIZK IS'nl, is yuuii at no cuii LkL ly you. A Superb Xnias Gift A l'erfect Timekeeper A iianJoii.e object of American urt, suitable for the finest Home if we lier from you before Nov 15. this clock will be shipped Deo." 15. tienJ us your name and ad ureaa and we will tell you what to do, to get it. it 1 worth tlie asking for. WaiTBTOltiaHX TO MISSION CLOCK DEPT. .Ai liast 4ta at. Mew York City I rTi4S4wiMUirHJ THE OMAHA BEE is the home paper of Nebraska. You reach peoplo who buy j when you advertise in Tho lieo