Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 09, 1912, Page 4, Image 4
V' - - BENEFACTOR MANKIND Gmt Medic! Eefora Wrought by 'tie lite Lord lifter. IATHIS OF ASTBEPnC SDEGEBT Smlnnit of grstrss af Treat eat Che aged Pablla Dlstrast ' , late Cratitada aad Very High rTr. J - It seldom falls to tb lot of a man to set eo foet-a great reform and to live to see It universe.'! y adopted.! to be helled in liia own lifetime aa one of the great benefactors of humanity, Tet that tu the fortunate fate of lard Liater, the father of antiaeptie surgery, who died a, week sgo at the age of fw. So well accepted hate his theories come that feat booka on surgery apeak of the da-s of pre-LUteri-m" a s his torian cilrht speak of the Ir Ages. But Ms first successful demonstration of antisepsis dates back only to IMS. He met ridicule, but less than falls to toe lot of most originators, and lone before his death be had received every honor that bis ovd and other countries could show to him. To appreciate fully, what Lord Litter's worn has meant to humanity, it Is aarr ts nqderataiid something of the con ditions of hospitals as hs found them. Death rates, whleli to the modern sur- ceon would seem astoinidint then were t matter of course, ny open wound might lead to death, "Hospitalism," as eTlr James Teens 8tsrson called It tor lack of a better word, had become almost a recognised disease. PuMlo hatred of hos pitals had rrowa interne. It a patient's ' sufferings h,d bora lessened r ths ad- minMratlon of chloroform what did It really amount o If he were to die of Wood poisoning after the painless oirr- alien? - Take the first farm of surgery upon which Lister tried out his theory of anti sepal, the compound fracture, a break Ins of ths bone tn which there Is an open wound leading to the seat of the Injury, dases of simple fracture came to the hos pital, were set -and Tscovnen' much aa they do now. Of the compound fractures la same hospitals It per cent proved mortal. Bo serious waa such a wound regarded that James fyne, the Hootch surgeon who waa Lord Lister's preceptor and father-in-law, openly adrocatsd Im msdleta amputation la all eases of roes pound fracture, en ths (round that the chances of recovery were far better by . this method, j Great Change Wrossht. How great change waa wrought by ' Uster and hla methods a shows also by the statistics of the death rata, in the . Boyal Infirmary at Glaegaw., whore much of his ark was done.:, In ISM the rate la major opsrslloha waa tl jier cent. . Two years later "Utrlia" had reduce It to tt per cent, and from in to' ttTT further betterments and greater as re and cut It to II per omt. " f tie grnat was the public distrust of hos pitals that Lord Llsur -might well be called not the founder but the pre server of ths modern, hospital. .,. One Instance wklch the historians of surgery not Is that of the expert from Munich who came t study Lord Lister's methods. The " Munich hospital waa as badly Infected that i per cent of Hs patients war dying of hospital gsjisTen. A declsioa had ttsea reached to .destroy It, but as a last resort a surgeon was seat to study Lord lister's methods. - Ha ' ret tinted full of ths pew Idea and the hospital wag saved and Its death rata made normal, , 'lis came naturally by Ms Inquiring turn of auntt, this patient Quaker surgeon, who was to die a baron of the United Kingdom, Hla father, Joseph Jackson Uner, was aa eminent scientist, his chief claim te fame being that he had raised ths compound sslerosoope "from a efteer tirio tor- te a powsrfal angina ot re search." . .. .He studied la University college, Lon don, taking both bis 'aria and hla mea.ee degree there, and aa hones surgeon at the L'nlvsrtlty eeilege hospital first found himself face to face with the problem he sms destined to solve. Hospital gangrene broke out, and hs studied Its causes with the microscope 'Pyaemia, thst other hospital scourge, was found en every elds of alas. At he went as assistant surgeon to the Bdtn burgh Royal Infirmary and four years lstsr became professor af surgery 04 th Vnlverstty of Glasgow. There the same situation faceel him. It eu no question of external cleanliness. That had been fdught out , Fresh sir and trash lines were plentiful, but sOH Infections followed opsa wounds. ' , -giadrlas; ranees.' ll this Urns Uster had been following Ms studies of causes. Meanwhile Fasten, la rraaes bed ween Tarrying n hla re searches, which proved that putrcfaeUe. aad fermentation came from germs tn th air, that the exposed wound does not Itself develop Inflammation any mor than fruit perfectly protected WIU decet or ferment. Moreover Pasteur had shows ( thst It was possible to destroy the germi -the source of the Infect km. ( tms point uster seised upon, and It was ins oasis of bis system af surgery. It wsa a.le be was professor of sur gery at Glssgow that be first successfully put lata practice the theories thst hs had been developing alnca hla eeilege days. Ta Infirmary of thst elty waa "a hot bed of septle disease.'' All that seed teal science then knew had been tried. But the problem still remained. la one bed a simple fracture f the leg would So wen ani the patient leave tha hospital cored, wlille la the next bee) a patleat with a compound fracture, aa more aerieaa ssva that the wound was open wauM die. a-issious renin contemporary of leister has divided all surgery Into the nay, oeiora uster sad the davs .ei.. The dividing Hoe between the two psetsds ap commonly accepted waa March Is. when ths Lancet printed Litter's article -V" a asw method of treating compound fracture, abscesses, etc. Observationa oa the condition of aupparatlon." T real tse. however, had been made two years befers an a case of comoaana fracture and tJie antiseptic employed was carnous acta. Toe appllcaUoa of urmiiuies ads as aa epea wound seem somewhat appalling to the lay mind, but wuuag to forget Its lausus quaiiuea is the hope of a " may ne assumed that fa the aad tha patient was coetent. At any rate he recovered la tha face of the tact that a per ceo of each cases ordinarily iii nwavw j m I 1 if. That waa th bectnatag of antiseptic surgsry.. It was the hsgiimkig also of years of sspertmemmg upon the best methods of employing antiseptics ana us sssx sen segues to employ. stlfl It Was t lead to a long but harmless warfare between the tasvrle af Tele ami asepsia, . On th aw were ranged Its mere immediate foaowsrs rlistcsv.'wha wstteved fet the street of a rerraV idfd agent; on the other those whs thought 'that ' perfect dead mesa. that I, surgical cleinlinsss. of and Instruments Is sufficient to prevent Infection. The Old aad the New. How great th change has been It Is sot easy to realise. To one who sees th modern surgeon, rubber gloved, white gowned, with everything about him sterilised to th last degree, tt Is hot easy to believe that within the memory of living surgeons sn operating coat, too worn and dirty for other use, wsa takes to the hospital and left there for years. A lecturer oa surgery In a famous mrd leal school, dead not many years, used to say, half la earnest and half In Jest. that he sometimes regretted -the dais when a surgeon stropped hi knife on his boot before he started to operate. Lister himself stuck firmly to the faith which be had founded In the warfare between antisepsis and asepsis and he kept firmly to carbolls acid as the best agent, though he himself soon abandoned Its uss In undiluted form. As recently a 1M he wrote: 1 cannot but think It a happy ctrcunv stance that th substance which I em ployed flret In endeavoring to employ the antiseptlo principle ahould have been so admirably adapted for detergent pur poses. And tt has grieved mo to learn that so many surgeons have been led to substitute needlessly protracted and com plicated measurea for means so simple and efficient." It has been said that the Olasgow In firmary, where Lister's most famous ex periments were conducted, had an 1U re put as a har borer of post-opsrative dls- Rtckman J. Oodles, ons Of the sur geons In ordinary to ths klnaV in a re sent address oa Lord Lister. Said of It: The mortality from hospital diseases was so frightful that some of th wards hsd to be shut uo entirely. what wonder that he (Ulster should have wel comed tha less Interesting cases of lm- pis fracture and those without open wounds and that the mortality from am putations should have reached the ap palling number of nearly W per cent al- most entirely from septio disease." . A Ketable Trlbwtc - To the medical mind there Is no 'bet ter tributs to the wonderful change that Llsur . wrought than, the fact that the same Infirmary still stsnds, practically unchanged, with Its surgical wards "as free from septle accidents aa tha most modern hospital In ths land." There Is no better xsmpl of -Lord Listers painstaking methods than ths long series of experiments he conducted to determla th boat ligature for tying arteries. It had long been ths custom to use silk or flax threads, and on of hi contemporaries recalls that It waa ths habit of th house surgeon attending upon his chief to carry In his buttonhole ekelns of th thread ready for Ose, a iding that would horrify tha mod- era surgeon. Lister hosed thst his method would do away with this and that a properly sterilised ligature of the right materiel would be absorbed aa th wound healed. Hla first experiment wss on a hoc as. using a silk Ilgsturs, and tha results were sue- eessful. It waa tried on a human being with every outward appearance ot so- Later there cam proof that ths (Ilk thread had lot been completer ahsorbsd. Then the surgeon began again, this time trying 1 a specially prepared catgut and experlnteiilng on a salt .Tbla time re sult werh better, .hut still not, satUfae tory. For th greater part of his long life aa aa actlvs practklonsf this (ubjsat so gaged Lsrd. Llstsr a susctioa, As did. ths constant thought which he gave to th proper gsrmlclds and th beet Kethed of It ass at tit Urn of operation. Wall Lard Uster (rest gift to medi cine was th doctrine of antisepsis, be In addition a great operator. Con fident' of preventing subsequent compli cations, be dared to do many things thst surgeons before him had thought Impo. si bis. dn operating for canorr of ths krsaaf1 and In orrectlng dederrnjtle by attacking Ins bona Itself ha went far be yond hi predecessors New Tern Sun. WHEN THE KAISER TOGS UP Ithsten af Ml tlatfenae Leaves Hlval Balers aa th ae tse-teh. Among the many peosllar distinctions which might be claimed by the Osrman emperor, svea among kings. Is the pos session of tha largest number t uniforms any one being has svgr worn. In variety and apumdor the kalssrs wardrobe of cjeremony far eclipses that ot even King Ooorge, whs holds th tight to wear Just mere than M military and naval uniforms. In th emperor's suits of rooms, lined srtth cupboards and stacked with tia cases, are nearly Nu complete uniforms. A large proportion f these oonalat of reghneniala of th German army, but th rest are mad up f BrMish, Italian, Ppenlsh. Oreek, lMttch, Swedish, Russian and Turkish trapping!. Indeed, the only Europern army tn which th smpsror Is not a colonel la that of Prance: hut the reasoa for this omission at not that his imperial majesty Is nabl to appear In republican gold lace, for he frequently wears tha nest uniform of the Swiss gssrds and still retains his I 'on a. sues regimentals under the republic. The kalaar 1 most exacting aa regsrdt ths preservation at this hugs collsrttoa of costly uniforms, which, baa te be kept absolutely up to date In. raspers ot the constant change which are mad to cut aad arrsjigemeat of details, if some for skga war office decides that a battoa must be added, or twe mast go, these much-debated altsratlsns will he found en a cost should the smpsror have eo. Cae ca t wear It. A may be Imagined, th task of keep ing this tmmeass outfit la spstkan rendW tioa and ever ready trim ts a source of osjunant worry and cease tees labor. Th mvastoa sf a single moth into the Im perial wardroa recess Is as much dreaded by th custodian of th kaiser's uniforms aa th discovery of a bomb In th Im perial paiacs) by hat majesty' body guard. A small army et official tailors and servants as continually at week, iron ing, svuialnsr and pohshmsT. ' ' When the German emperor travels on a state visit hs Is often accompanied by mere than twenty tia trunks containing selection ot urufonna which may required; and with this section of 1 ths Imperial luggage goes a specially chosen staff of valeta. each t whom Is responsi ble for soma particular Item of art HsuDste. cocked bat and "undress" caps are on man s care; snotner aeretes nuw e!t to the good order of swards, belts and trappings, whlls a third Is aa ex pert la the art at preserving and polish ing tha kaiser' boota-Loodoa Mail, Maniac star The altorrey for tg dates arose te address the fury. -OenUemen." he said, "In all this tes timony to which you aav 1 im,I tire la aot eae" Then hs paused, aad th surer arstned themselves. tney anew wnsw was) som aag. Or the thought they knew. . . Ths atlorssrv for the defease resumed: -There as no a parthd ot evidence ssralnst my client!" Thefl the urors breathed more freely ' ooked at one another with giad -seo tills.- Chicago ji not said Tribune. PAWNS G00DSJ0 AID SICK South Omaha Laborer Playi Samar ' its to Kaa Who Dies. SOW WAITS 1AY FEOX COTJSTT Ctt Odell Careel far Cnarlee BalUtor laTil Latter Died nad Clalsa for Medical genii Kow Placed at. 110. The man who plays th good Samar itan to the extent of pawning his clothes for th saka of a stranger In distress, whom he never before hss seen, , Is worthy of remuneration from the pnblic coffers. In th opinion of Ed Odell. a South Omaha laborer, who has played such a part. A SJ claim against tha county waa filed In th county clerk's offlta by Odell yesterday. It la for care of Charles Balllter, whs died at Odell's home In February. Odell's communication I accompanied by a written statement of the case and : affidavits In corroboration. According to, the story. Odell found Balllter lying in th street oa January t Tha old man. who had been a charactsr In South Omaha for years, was sick and helpless. Odell, while he hsd little enough ot this world's good himself, took In the fallen wayfarer and cared for him as best hs could. II hsd no money with which to procure a physician's services and, not, being familiar with methods of procedure to have ths man cared for by tha county, i he gave blm such home medical aid and comfort as he could. Early In February Balllter was attacked by more serious: dlssasa, Odell summoned a physician, hut when fa arrived tha man wss dead.- The! body was turned over to the coroner. In order to pay for medicine and food for another mouth Odell found tt necessary to pawn soma ot hi best clothes. - I iw 1 1 . Inches ;: j V-A !ffri TF Ifcfiillililill , 1 sat.,-01 m ir1"" "" f I ML- Positively None NO' 13f Sold to Dealers WHITHER WE ARE DRIFTING When the .Earth Stops la A beat JXO Years, There Will Be . Semethlsg Dolag. A discovery ot tremendous Import to th human rai has Just been disclosed by Prof. Louis A. Msuer ot th Carnegie Institution, Washington. . . ... Th world IS Blowing down to Its dally rotation and the days are getting longer Magnetic storms are putting a magnetic brake on tha earth, and if they continue to restrict this braka at tha rata meas ured for the last ten years In just t,t year this good ld earth will no longer be turning like one of Msthewson's curved balls, but will settle does with one aids In perpetual sunshine and ths other aids In end less darkness and cold, orrsssoadlng to th extreme frigidity et Interstellar space. Observe, It Is not claimed that tha earth positively will com to standstill In IhlS year US! A. D "hut simply that It la being subjected ts a brake that may step It at by. than Urns. Probably moat srlentltfa ' would argn that m agnatic torms will be less violent In future; that other forces wit Intervene, and that tha stopping of the earth will be postponed great many year beyond tha date named, But all scientists will acqulescs In the statement that th earth Is stowing down and sooner or later win corns to atop. When tha earth stops turning tha aids .oward the sun WIN become over-heated 1 water will dry up and blltterlng .eesrts will cover the surface. Near the edge ot th suallt side there wUl be a temperate sons, where th sun will al- says ba one hour high or thsrsabuta. remaining at tha am height above the lorlsoa year In and year out. Every hour will be like t o'clock in ths morning of a summer day. Ta this delightful region Jia world' population will flock. A little removed from lb hot sera will u th twilight, eae, ale gull habitable, with th sun unending at ths hortson. Though Bfs In ths torrid or hot sons will b Insupportable, as a rule, yet on he suter sdgss. where ths sua I but twe or three hours high, people may live la temperature of tut to la) degrees by mesne of various cooling conlrtvsnces. On tha dark, cold slds of ths sarth an he watsr will be f rosea solid -even mer cury will freess In that awful chill. It will b Impossible for human bring to penetrate mors thsa tltres.or four bun dred mile Into th dark and frigid son. which will be far mors inaccessible than Are now th polar wastes. ' During th period when th earth's days are lengthening, perceptibly great social hangss mast come about, du to th difference tn hours. When the days get to be forty hours long It will suerly bs necessary to arrange for a period of rest ind sleep In the middle of th dsy. Think ot a long day In which ft lets light only st M o'clock and we arise and go to work at' II: al M o'clock we era, allowed s recess and lunch. At If o'clock w stop ind din and lake a nap. At 3 w go to work again; recess at M o'clock, with mar hutch. At ws quit tad thla I he rush how for street car. At M i clnch ws are homo Par our night dinner: et ws ge te the theater. At M o'clock he people begin to gd to bed, and by I f o'clock ths last night prowlst should ba tucked In hi littles souch.-- Louls post-Dispatch. Palaled Parasnphs. Fair, but false A blond peruke. klsnr a tailor's aooes lava soides am for Its owner. It s esev to find fault rwhen van are looking for trouble. ana toe little eeir-conrldence Is sa die sstrnus as too much. The woman of the hoar la th see mhr ssys she'll bs ready In a minute. ns s a poor minister whoee voice ttllr the church end empties th Dew. Some writers hava a wealth of tKrtt,tt at d they all hai-w- tncurht of w-alth. Many a man thinks himself smart urn-1 hla smartness lands him behind the ban- now it aiuat joii me wite or a sonehet when she Is celebraltna her sau. 1 Many a pe'ntsr who claims to t-s warfde. to art probably wishes he had married a rich girl Instead. And lots of people would never think a treepesetnc If thev dlrfn 1 mmm un the effect that it wasn't allowed. Chj csg News Maedaaw a Cysie. Many a aula ducsat set aMng becauat of hat own shortcomings. Tom can drive a pea to Ink, but yo can t make It think. ' We doa t oflea gst a shsw unless w. have the price of ambition. There Is suits a difference, bet wee hoping for to best, and rea.ly expect in It. If yea are going te save up fee- a rain dsy. don t wait till yea see the daudr it setaora tas fellow who has m ta bunt that keepa the nut bmilu vYornaa may betoag te the weaker sex but abe le generally strong oa argument When two girl friends ksvs a faiiins oat it a pretty safe ta ask Hla asm. The only aim some people have tn lif :s to prove that they aught, bar heea worse than they really arc-New lark geeey dlwewta aad aaSawtetievraa. These sections are the granary of the rid. Jteeched via the Soa Lin from St Paul and Mlaaeapolla . Pre Infarma tlea. st true uusvdSj- starhy.-dx. f. A. Fifth St. De Moines, la. Saturdays ftBTJnnTBT-t- . f gains At- Hartmon's Underselling Store COLONIAL LIBRARY TABLE t . . ... . . . it 1t 1 i!m hi . mis table U jvst as presenxea in we niusuauun. It is a handsome design and beautiful in its Bim- pVckj. The" are M crlos'ntI tha entire surfaco 1 brllllantlT ' polished, extra .massive thronghoot. Laree drawers with wood pnlta. Broad ghelf. Hera la table that srill last for years; a piece; of laruiturn mat arm oeaoutr aar home. Made tm Americas quartered oak; the most re' markable value erer offered for the wa .ef. For 1 Saturday only,' one' for each customer. TAKE A YEAR OR TWO TO PAY FOR WHAT YOU BUY All Brass Bed ' 2-in. Posts, -5 Fillers Guaranteed 10 Years A mm " OAK DRESSER r '' ' PK-'---; ' J -V. c. & ..--rSsamwwns-- $ Co) 85 (P) i ' An sxcluslva Hartmao Urge oval plat mirror, two large and twe small drawsre. Had of selected Amerl o a n quartered oak and has wood pull' w o n d r ful vain at .... ..... PARLOR ROCKER American quartered oak frame wlttt wide back and apacloug seat. Uphol stered In Imperial leather over' nil stoat springs. , nanosomo new and attractive ds Ira. For Baturday only $4.25 ''eapLtJ' This Bed Combination fied jhiui 'ucjpipiDis, Xtryo Tillersnan3'w guftrantocd 10 (yeartjlrlattms made of higb grade felt, built-layef npon layer .. j' J ilu V.-Ul lli i.:il!l.'J ' ' I ' "a .' auu cuvt-itsu nuu iniKj my uuauuk, weiirii.t ..45.2mifaQ''tyfygteipiqA9 'wjth all tBteel frame and three rows of copper sup--.- " ports. . Entire oombiiuitioi;. $10.95 CHINA CABINET Bent end design 'with ' double strsiftth glass : Has . adjustahla Shelves grooved . for - standing State, i ia is mir ror tn too. atade throughout of gsa-' 1 ulns quartareo oaa, A rrat her rain at SI 7.75 1414-1416-1418 Doiiglus St T'x BOOK CASE ' This earn bt nation hook ease and writing .1 desk comhlned s mad of aeild oak, haa , Sas deor to hook " oompartmaat and well arranged writing . desk, artistically carved, 'top fitted with French 'Slat mirror, l7.it salu $10,801 SEED TALKSCONYERr MANY la Aihton SaJooru Com te let .' troni Her Lecture. , C&XPAIG5 IS A Bid SUCCESS atssegrr Psrrlsh far that hr hat- ardar Jilght lllrr fhssissd : Khraslut Varmera "Will ; ' Have Visited ffeelasa. . .. To to Thursdsv night, st,7lt .parson attended the lecture on the seed corn speclsls." said Manager Parrilh of ths publicity bureau of th .Commercial club, lust returned from a four days' trip oa the Rurilngtou'e central -Nebraska P- clat "With tjro day left for th p eial, I heawva th total will bs brought np to mors than M.ouo. Ths fsrraers hava shown a rcmantanis Interest In thla campaign. We Wer due Mamuette for a meeting I the early evening, hot the train waa lata and IN farmers waited until If m for the train ta come and then Helen te lectures aatU after 1L At Ashtor. where slopped about ths middle of the afternoon, th tare saloonkeepers thrust their patrons out doors and locked up shop, saglng they would open again sfter tha aeed corn special had gone." When the Burlington train unieiieu est nhrht. towns had been visited ey h ala sssd specials, which hav been run. ' ' The Dos Moines Commercial dub I new starting a seed testing campaign sow offering to ship a tester t any farmsr she wants one. th fanner ta pay for tha tester and his money ia o ; when he returns the tester to tha aluh. Th mst National bank of Kansas city a starting a campaign In Kansas and ilia sou ft, workiag through th men turn or country form th sacred da noes whtlat waving their Sana Every now and then tha ww vibrations of aa enormia brotu gong, or th dull, heavy blows oa n monstrous prayer drum, are heard rn -h deep and echoing forest. At ther time there art certain sounds watch really seem to be fa part' of th ileae and solitude, the chirp of tb gtrasshoppsrs, the cry of the falcon in the air. th chatter of th monkeys In th branches and, th monot eaeue fail of the cascades. AH this aaaxnng gold In the mystery' of tha forest makes these sepulohsrs unique. TM la tha Mecca, of Japan; this i th heart, aa yet mvteiate, of this country, which la now gradually staking In the great occidental current, hut which haa had a magnificent past .'Those wer strange mystics aad very rare artists who, M or M years ago, realised all this magnificence "In the depths of ths woods and for their dead. A solemn hour an the Holy mountain la at nightfall,' when they close the tem ples. R ig even mora lugubrious at tfala autumnal . season, whan th twilight brings sad thoughts. WHh heavy, rumb ling sound -which ringer long In the sonorous forest. - ths- great panels at lacquer and hronas are rolled aa their grooves ta shot m -tha snagnlflosnt build ings which hava been open all day, al though visited by nobody. A eoaf and damp shirsr passes ithrsugh- th -Mack forest., Far fear of fire, , which might onnsiuns these marvels, not a slagte light I allowed la thla village af spams, where certainly darkness fails aoonar and re. msins longer than anywhere alas; no lamp haa avsr shewn open tness treas ures, which bars thus slept la darkaens ta the very heart of Japan tow many centuries, anddhe sssoadrs Increase their nuisjo .while tha ,slleno of night sa shroodsi the ferost :sa rich! In enchant-meat- Pierre Lot! In "Japoamt a srAa v .i ; ..,. Second Floor . aw . da mmi 10 gters. ' '' 'r '' .:.. ' 16th and Farnam. Take the Elevator. THERE UESAPAN'S HEART Temple at Ktkk Rear Tetr Celies Beefs la dhadew of Oeaaa rarest. la the heart of the lares Island 'at "tppoa and In a mountainous and wooded eerto fifty leagues from Tokohama Is Ydden that marvel of marvels the ne cropolis ot ths Japanese emperors. There, oa th declivity af tha holy mountain sf Klkko, nadsr cover at a l-nae forest and ta the ssMst at cascades wboss roar amoag tha shadows of tha cedars never ceases. Is -a series at eav c haa ting temples, made of axons aad l lacquer, with roofs of gold., which took as If a sasgic rug mast have called thsm j at existence amoag tha terns ssssaes sad tha green saunpnios. overarched a dark branches and surreuaded by. ths j wiidness snd grandeur of aatare. I Witkla the templea there Is aa in-1 ccaeetvabla siagnificenes. a fatry-Vks splendor. Nobody Is abeot. exespt a tew 1 raardiaa brsnsea whs cheat hyssaa, aad several a bite-robed Driest eases, who per. (1 ISA Brightest and most cheerful real. Day light Store - in 1 the West !-V " 1 5Lw m mm VS5 'idsfavg B - Erperiasaed and eour-l teoaa, salea force; expert. fitter i the bihcst Mand- - ro of qaaltty; priced sowar Una, the lowest. Oar garments are made , ey. tonsjat labor. .. No nag or womia itarved srhile employed to the production ot REDFERII GARMEUTS That !' why' they are beat. The only reason we do nad can sell for lean la our saving In, rot ty hvin oar store on. accond floor. LoglcsJ. lg tt UOt? - ',.-.. , 4 , Wt want jam to be the Jadfe to whom, we gak- aut tia sd .; , --. : - " " SATURDAY and MONDAY- 300 New Spring Trimmed Hats . Beautlee-e-Ne two Bats alike or can-any duplicates be had. Insuring;. yea exclanisenesa to dealjrn lu X great lota, $2.93 a4 95 . Come and see oar bau we re featnriac at , So.00 . Real Jlfl.vb nd fli.OO.yalBes, . . - . . - NEW SPRING SUITS and COATS: 1 Marked invidtlaHtr, iBflndth?-th Redfera - make Satardsy we will feature S0 galtt nhe-ut 0tl hew (Iftul ! fs gprtnr coats at . : i. , t- P V - W Sea) ratode p' tci f3a.ee- .. ,- .'.- i. cms. Tccsdij Etc., Kir. 12ti, it First JLE Church 90th and Davenport St. " ' ' Itcgened Seata 50c, $1.00, fl.rXJ. ETefett' Piino Uicd a u m . .. . m m PiOTXCTION FOB Toua Jsseese. (amlly rati aad swtente pepsie eaa ba es ji ed than te rwat a awx ha es De sett TsalU tse kasplasj. "'TTl asaeacuoa yn are Uab4 t a nsa al aay tltrve --way. .ri aa es ta safe aids by sHeruts a was today, tha east of .sab le seat W yeas Omaha Safi Deposit Co. L" i f Ova-.