TIJK BISK OMAH , SATTRDAY, Xf)TOKR 30, 1912. CONSIDER THE BUMPER CROP The Most Important Announcement in This Paper Today i An Unfailing -Self-Starter for Pros I pcrity's Limousine. Brooks Famous Clothes Sale Society Brand and Stern Mayer $22.50 and $25 Suits and Overcoats 17 S. . Corner of 16th and Harney Sts. 1 BAT CLEAN -UP All $3.66 and $3.50 Im ported Hats, OO The Most Htjllnh Hals of the H c it a o n. 2 Cor. 16th and Harney Tie New State Hotel Nowtfei .The .proprietors of the N'ev State Hotel on Doug laji street announce to the public- generally the .com pletion of tli ( hostelry, and are now ready Xy ac commodate all routers. The house in brand new. and beautifully furnished throughout. Hot and cold running water Is provided In the roonvs and there are , ample free hath. In all other respect, the house is strictly modern, and the ratea within the reach jf all. HOW IT PUTS MANY TO WORK Whnt It Mrnnit tit tUv Profiteer, llie llnllrimilo, thr Itlpinlnri, thr Mills nnil the Coif ( ii liter, 1 Sizes 34 to 44 In Either Suit ir Ovireoit I want to unload odd lots and single garments. The reduction in price does not cheapen the gar ments biie hit. They aro tho choicest plums of. the host tailors. Stylish. p;ay8,hlua mix tures .and , brown, in Eng lish orjeonscrvativo mod ols... ' You'll Oohie In Tomorrow Won't You. I 'KST AMI WEALTH TO fcOThtli AND CHILI. 'liaLWivsLoWa (tooTntxa Hrsar h.i Wa tttedforerer SIXTY YBARBby MlLUOMfot XOTHXSS (or their ClIILfJXUN WXM kUuxjiKS me tniLu, Burinnn nt ooMi, JUJU.YkslU'AUf t.CCXSS WINU COLIC. a&4 U tti bH rtmeCr tor UIABRI1UIA. It U ab solutely luusitMi. a. ute and Mk for ,Nii. WifUWs Boothia Syrup," aad Ufce bo othu r EWAS VERY CARELESS?" Vm brushed bU coat. Carried around a creat lot of dandruff with jUaa. Ono day n friend told him nt Hall's Ifalr Ifonewer. lie talked vrlth lt doctor eAouUt. Then used It Now b-4 icaln Is clean andjiealthy. No dan yryM 3Sq falling lialr. No danger of tjtwnlng- the hair, either. T TX'"": ' " a iu. . .' At tnH LiUM ana ood , fjr the next mimMrof ALh tin KIMtowJosT. muritEhieir' wihb . " flaws jurrzsw- ' Addr MikzlM Coupon Dept., T.witl4ftk JJeqtury Farmer, .PlJia.,.jieb. o ' " b .There In a "humper crop" In Hie went this year. The news of It comes In estimates of billions of bushels nnd bil lions of dollars, whole delegation of ciphers which suggest something ery huge and far off. hut which tnifst mean romethlhg pretty Important. Yet the prftt news Is true: thr, wrst Is hard ! the harvest now In sweat and shirt sleeves nnd Jubilee. t The crop Is a ec orrt.preaker, tho greatest wdiilth thai has evt-r lwen Riven ftt once Into the hands 'of nny nation In tho history of the world. . What iljieiylt mcon to the farmer, Rtid.' his men. th.ntn-wfi make t(ic wealth? What does It" nftan !toi the others who help ttlth himdlli'ic It. rnllronds mhI dealers rflid the rest, who work with the farmers on the. wrfrlu'ii blKKCSt slnsln Job? And for the consumer for whom the wealth wns made, wlmt will this year"s enormous yield do lo.ticxt year's grocery bills? For nno thing, the liuihpr crop means the movement tinmen' ami machines on a scale so big that tlifcrn Is'iiothln.g like It on earth; Only one thing npprusrhes It-thn. movements of gnat armies. The, hired. Hands alone, who are engaged for thfejin'rvest and do not work, regulnrly as' farm laborers, niltnb.r .$00,000. The strength nf both armies at Oattyshure Wan only 175.O0O men. 'Jloth nrpdes nt Waterloo numbered fX),O0O. The hired Hands In the wheat fields alone, n meve division of the harvest time army, draw moro thtui 110.000.000. In pay for their irief term ft onllstment, . Hut nil these nro only pari or tne army n tho Held. Theio are 1,130,0") Or mure farm laborers who worlt on tho farina the your around. In the great grain states of the west alone thw farm op- critors, that Is men who own or rent grain! land nnd help In gathering tho hurvest. n'tnl",-r ""ro h,,h 2.20.W. Tlml brings up) tho force of tho harvest nrmy that Is actually'. In1, tijofleld to .tho total, of t,230,000 nin. ,f , No nrmy so great as that ever trod the earth. The total for the union nrmy and navy together In tho otvfl wnr counting VvViry-man who enlisted and hundreds of, thousands who enlisted morj than once, comts to 2,W0,GOD, und not moro than half that number were tinder nrmr nt nny one time. All the men who car ried' nnns for, north or south during the strugglo would not compare with the men In tho grain fields this year. Tli? Kiinrnmun IIiikkhh Trnln. And certainly no army ever marched with such u bnggugc train. The horse that worU In the grain fields, drawing harvesters or "headers" or carts, um ber moro than O.MO.OOO. Curts, har vesters, nnd ull tho rest count up about 4,600,000 pieces of nppnfatus. In n single line ot march along a strnlghl road, drlv Ing note to t ha tailboard, theso horse? und inuohtnes would i each for ZS.SM miles, or morn than tho ontlrn dlstnncq around the earlh. Yet the work In the fluids Is only a beginning. Fv,r ,,ow ho ktbIh ttsclf cqme pouring In. If ti.ej harvesters uro an army, the grain Is n flood, a great, turbulent yellow river that must fhtd Its way from farm to city somehow, and It comes flowing In from tho melting stacks at Its sources like spring freshets front the snowlmnks. l.lko the floods. It be gins at the south, In Texus und Oklahoma, not long uftcr midsummer, and then, iia tho fields to the northward ripen, It comes streaming from Kansas, from .Nebraska, from the ltvel farms pf the middle west, and then from tho Dakota and Min nesota. The mere volume ot It Is a staggering thing, Thn yield - ot wheat,, estimated this year at 7W,OW,000 bushels, -would .make a river as wldo as jJFJftli avenuo and four Cet deep, reaching from Chi cago to New York. If every ship that sailed from Now York harbor curried nothing but wheat, It would take them two years to handle all that has been grown this year. "Wheat, ot course, Is only a .fraction of the harvest. The yield of oats Is esti mated at 1,400,000,000 bushels, And tho corn crop Is biggest ot all. It Is the jtreat American staple. Corn Is what puts pork Into pigs and beet over lean steers'' bones. Tho corn crop this year will run 3,000,000,000 bushels or more. Minor crops of buckwheat, rye and bar ley Will foot up to 1110,000,000 bushels more, or a total ot almost 0'00,O0O,00O bushels from six- American cereal crops. MovIiik the Mits. To move such a mass at one Umo would of , course bo Impossible. -,Hs weight would Uo 160,000,000 tons. It would require 7,tr00,000 freight cars of tha large twenty-ton nlxc to carry 'it, and lSi.G.0 locomotives would be required tp haul them. The railroads do not move It all', at once, und thoy have a deal of trouble In moving what they do handle. Freight cars aru,at a premium 'during' the har vest season. They aro begged, bor rowed, and nut Infrequently stolen out right by the' rnllwuy lines under the -plnrJi of necelty. Around the great .gratn.shlppipg centers the roads are fairly strangling with their overplrntl- iful freight At Dultith, where millions I of bushels a week go spouting Into 'l,he holds of the great Irihe steamers, every ridding for ten -miles around the city Is I often filled from eu'd to end with grain laden car awaiting their turn at the I waterfront, and tens of thousands ot other cam wait In the yaids at distant ,hlpplhg points behind them. xpad. BeVs a nt0nl)poly of the grain 'trade. It takes all the railroads there ! are in the grain regions nnd a good .rman'y mpre to the eastward to handle the crop. The so-called "aranger" railroads of th i WeeO of Course. Wft tho lion's share ot itta tltuslnes and of ttie trouuies mat n orings. ina crops are mlshtlly Important to these lines. Whcn a ""short"' season comes tllelr istoek goes down In the markets, and i when a bumper yield is certain, it rises like mercury in a July thermometer on i the prospect of big freights to come, be , foro a bushel of tlua new output has Vcofrie Into -their cura, J 'fhe freiihyng and selling oftho grain jls.a thlpg so stupendpusly "cohrplex that l-oopiparlipiia, cshnot'eojjly, be inude. ilut J'a few facta auggesf thp Immensity of .'th tailf. Ther ralruaa gRt t.OOO.ow for freight Itf carrying the grain to "prt rnary" market alonj that I. to the great selling foln'ts like rhlcago. Dulutli and Minneapolis, Nearly all this, of I course, later shipped again, cither You're face to face with the values of a lifetime E Si-n Our Hlunr U'lndotra XCIT-KMENT over this groat sale is at a high pitch. Tho Nebraska's "CHANGE OF OWNERSHIP SALE" is swooping Iho country. The goods are being rushed out. of tiio way to make room for merchandise' of our own selec tion. For hundreds of miles the best dressed people arc'coming here to -share in those most wonderful Xhrgsi ins. Seasonable, stylish ap parel is on stile at almost give-away pricef). Everybody "setjjina to know that TieiNcbras- ka's regular priccB vers. OJ)I-l:'illUUTHr Jeps than else where. Now thesfi rcBtilar low pj-hjetf rtre reduced from UNK-TIIIHI) ax ONK-IIAhF. It's a aalo without n par allel. Npthing like It elsewhere. DON'T .MISS IT. All $10 and $12.50 s"iRn SUITS AND GOING AT ... I Extra Special for Saturday Saturday wo will place on sale the Nebraska-s entire stock of fine blue serges and black unfinished worsted suits. Coupled with the thousands of smart fancy weaves fn every con ceivable new model and fabric, the Nebraska's Sale becomes the most powerful proposi tion evor presented to the men and young. men of this. community. NEBRASKA CLOTHING CO'S ENORMOUS ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S HIGH GRADE All $15 and SUITS AND $ GOING AT All $20 and $ SUITS AND OVER. COATS GOING AT.... $16.50 $22.50 Q50 uits aod Overcoats Chocs. Saturday -, .3 - .g ppjQg y Furnishings Great Cut Price All $25, $30, $35 50 SUITS I AND GOING AT 17 1 MENS Jiuy noy, High Glass, Standard, Goods at sensational roductions in mid-sea- son. limnonso stock to choose from. Come Saturday, will he at flood tide. A good time to lay in a year's supply SALE! BOYS 1 The sale . J High Grade WINTER CLOTHING 1 Outfit thd boj'B now nt the lowest sale prices or the year. All of the Nebraska's reliable boys' clothes aro Koine nt radical reductlone. Men's Shirt Sato 75c $1.00 and $1.25 Shirts Groat Sale Price $1.50 and $1.75 Shirts Great Salo Price $2.00 and $2.50 Shirts Great Sale J 'rice $1.50 Flannel Shirts Great Salo Price ; $2.00 Flannel Shirts Great Sale Price , . . . -1 1.45 5c Sit0 Men's Underwear Sale Prof. Muldoon's celebrated Union Suits all included. $4.00 Union Suits Groat Salo Price . $3.00 Union Suits Great Sale Price All Boys' $3.45 to $3.95 Suits, J teeters and Ov ercoats going at $2.75 All Boys' $4.45 to $4.95 Suits, Roofers and Ov ercoats going at $1.95 $2 and $2.50 Union fas JNg Suits. Groat Sale Price $ I HO $1.25 and $1.50 Union gSK Suits. Great Sale Price . .JOG MEN'S SWEATER SALE Sweat-1 $5.00 Sweat- QCn era CO At ors, at $1.25 & $1.50 Sweat- 0C .ouu ...$2.45 a?'... $3,45 25 Buhpcndorn, unlay sain price, pair 15c Men'a $1.50 NBt Hobos and Pajamas, fine outing flannels, at. . 95c SI. 50 Adler Knssnu Capo Gloves, f Clfk Bale price . . . l.UU 25r 'nrls salo price Saturday . . . . (imtcrs, ...17c . s 50 Neckwear, benu ttful rich now fall silks, on sale at, each 25c SALE MEN'S HATS and GAPS (Stetsons Kxrcptcd) All $3.50 and $4.00 S2.90 Stiff and ... 82,50 Stiff and . $1.90 Stiff and ...$1.40 Velour Hats salo price . All $3.00 Soft Ilats, sale prico . All $2.50 Soft flats, sale prico . All $2.00 Soft Hats, sale price , CAPS All $1.50 Caps nn go on sale at ..OliUU All $1.25 Caps ypp iro on sale at . . . .1 wu All 75 v Caps go on sale at ,45c ..$3.50 Women All Boys' $5.45 to $6.95 Suits, Eeefers and Ov ercoats going at $4.50 Tfl 1 3 IU 2 PRICE All Boys' $7.45 to $9.45 Suits, Reefers and Ov ercoats going at !AFURNISKi:QSRadical Reduction The Nebraska's xreat stock bf reliable Underwear and Hosiery for women coca In tills sale at remarkablo cut prices. .$5.50 Women's $1.50 SILK HOSE 75c HALF PRICE Think of it! For the most reliable silk hose made in America. Black, white and fanov colors. For Saturday's great salo $1.50 Silk Hoso'g ir S go on sale, at, per pair. Women's 50c Heavy Black Cotton Fleece Lined Hose. Jtegular and extra size, Saturday sale price, pr. . .OC Women's 25c and 35c Black and Fancy Cotton Hosiery, r Saturday salo priqe, pair . .iOC Women's $1.25 Medium Weight Ribbed Union Suits. ftp. Sale Price 30 Women's $2;00 and $2.50 fine worsted Union 4 jp Suits. Sale price ipIfS Boys' 50c Union Suits, salo price Saturday at 39c 50 Hllk llosc, good color rnnneH, Qf salo price pair . . .wUU j v j John A. Kwnnsoii, Pres. Win. li. Ilol.tnnu, Ti-ohh. ns Rialn, flotlr. oommcal, or the by products of mlllliur, and rocs to all parts ot the United Stales nid to tho wharves ot tho seaboard and means millions moro In freight. nlui llvrr 'I'lirt'f Million; What the farmer himself will set de pends upon the price at whluh lie sells, and inany farmers will hold thalc uruln till late In thn yenr, hoplnV 'fr'.ut'lUEher iimrkt. Today tho wheat crop Is worth Sffl5J0oo,O0Q on -,U6 farms. Corn, oats and bnrloy.brlnR-tho total up to S3.S00,- W.000. The entire cost at tho civil war from Its beglphlnK to Its olosa Is esti mated nt S.iXQ,0iX)jXJ0. So. for nno thine, the lumipor crop means a money transaction ot a ery respectable slie, It Is Inconvrntcntly 1U, In fact, mi) the strain It puts on the momttary system Is one of tho strongest arsuments tor a more ulastlc currency, Vor the farmer, who bus been At heavy expense tiv liarvestliiK his crop, must have his share ot tliut S10.oeo.COO that iroes Into the pockets ot the laborers and ,tlie thrashing men It may be cold comfort to tho city consumer to know that the bumper crop whluh, means peace und plenty.' for the farmer promises him nothing much ex opt the negative Messlns that -prices may not advance quite so rapidly as at some other times, but the explanation Is nut hard to find- It Is contained In the census statistics. ' which show that while tho country's population urow 47 per cent between 1S00 and 1910. the output of Us stuplo crops advanced loss than 30 per cent, und the yield per aere In creased only about 5 per cent. In other wards, the bumper crop 1. not h bumper crop at all. It Is the biggest thing ot Us kind In the world, but It Is not so ble as It ought tu be. It Is far smaller than It could be made or tliap It must be made to exercise buy appreciable effect on tho rlftjng prices of foodstuffs York Times. t'ei-sistent Advertising Is the 't .Ua tw lt Hctu ns MEMORIES OF CIVIL WAR RAID 1 ulon Vetprnn Mim- .Soldier Who ltnldrd Ills Father'. Ilnuk. Judge William 'ft. 'lloyt of Muskogee, Okl., un old union, soldier, was 'discuss liu; tho rald.of tMorKan's men on tit. Al bans, 'Vt., on October 18, ISCt. "Twenty-one Johnny Ilcbs," said lloyt, "under a commission from Jeff l)avl went Into Cunada In October, 1S04, und, orosslni; the Canadian line,- swooped down on my home .town St. Albans, seized all tho money tn my father's bank nnd burned It before the cltlxcm of the town. I-ofa see, I believe It was the Citizens Honk " "No..'lt was the Franklin County bank." spoke up W. T. Tey,Js, an old soldier tot the cohtedeiate Hrniy, w1i9.wav listening to Judge lion's story. "What do you know abollt It?" snapped lloyt. "I know- all' about It." replied Tevis. "I wss there. 1 w.as one of Morgan's raiders." "The h-U you say." said the astonished lloyt. "So you are one of the men that robbed my father's bank?" . "I was not a liank robber, suli. replied Tovls, who Is a Kentucktan, with some plrlt. "l was a soldier of the army of tho south, carrying gut the orders of my commander, and wui sent there to seize and destroy the money In that Us v" "Well, t il bo d d." said Ho "I was flBhtln? with thfunlon a,My In Virginia when tho town of -Albans Was raided, and 1 have been waiting for forty olght years to meet one ot you fellows." And the two old veterans shook hands. Then Tovls told the story of tho raid from tho viewpoint of the southern sol dier. Jeff Davis had been advised that the United States government , pad stored millions of dollars In tne Franklin County bank nt St. Albans Twenty-one picked men were sent to Canada to cross the viw and rt-treat to t'amda. wlp'h gov ernment was fnendi) to the south. If thfcy were successful ttey were to enlist Canadians and make raids all along the Canadian border to create consternation and terror and prevent, If possible, tho sending of nny more soldiers to the south. In this manner Jeff Oavls hoped to divert thn attention of Washington from the south. Tevis wns one of tho picked men who, under tho command of Lieutenant Ilen nett H. Young- marched Into the town of ' 8t, Albans. Piles of money were burned In the park across from tho Franklin State bank, and u guard gf con federate soldiers herded the citizens In tho park Uorore leaving they mnde thorn hold up their hands and swear al legiance to tho confederacy. Judge Hoyt's father wus. president of the .bank, and in the raid lost S6S.Q00 of his own money, besides that of the de positors, lloyt was later reimbursed by the United States government. Tevis, after meeting Judge Hoyt, went tp his home, ransacked hxx old trunk und found one of the bills that had been taken from the Franklin bsnk The bill contained tho signature ot Judge Hoyt's fattier. Tho famous St. Albans raid Is a matter pf history and It came near Involving tho United States Into a war with Great Ilrltaln. Tevis and his party, after their return to Canada, surrendered to the ICanadlan authorities, when they found that ono of their number had betrayed them. The United States government -demanded tho'.r prosecution, and the nmi were tried. The Canadian court held that tho men were not utility of any crime against the Canadian Kovernmst.'. and decided their offense merely un "act of war." The cuo was appealed to tne queen's bench In England, and later up held by the Kngllih court. , Lieutenant Young, who led the ra d, it now commander-in-chief 0f the I'pltrd Confederate Veterans. St. Louis Globv Dembcrat FOOLING WITHA BUZZSAW What Happened tu a C'onirmamiin Wlio (lulssed the Senator t from Murylnnd. In congress the late Senator Rayner would seldom perpetrate a Joke. He was afraid of the reputation of being a "con mesfional wit." On ono occasion, how ever, ho yielded to temptation, There was a congressman from ope of tha southern state who generally kept him self In a notoriously disheveled and un kempt condition. Rayner was on the floor arguing un amendment to the Mc Klnley tariff bill, and casually made the remark: "Kverythlng Is either a luxury or a necessity." Just then the southern representative stepped from the corridor Into the house and said: "May I Interrupt the gentle man from MarylandT" "Certainly," said Kayner. "Did I understand you to say that everything is either a luxury or a neces sity?" "Yes. sir." "Well, I have Just taken a hath; what would you call that?" "In your case," said Itayner. "it b both a necessity and a luxury; a necessity, bo cause you need it so badly, and a luxury because you take It so rarcly."-,New York Post. Irrelernnt Testimony. At a term of the circuit court In Iowa not lone ago a "horse case'' was. on trial nnd a well known horseman wasj culled as a wltnern. -, 'V.wu ST 'J1'8 h"e?" asked' tounsol for the defendant. "Yes, sir. I ' "What did you do?" "I opened his mouth to ascertain his age, and I said to him: 'Old sport, there' a lot of life In you yet.' " Whereupon counsel for the other sltlo entered a vigorous protest. "8t6p!" he cried. "Your honor, I obcat to any conversation carried on between the witness and the horse when the plaintiff wus not present." Green Jlug The Persistent and Judicious I ke ot Newspaper Advertising Is thr Road tu UyinJncsj Success, j NO MERCURY-NO POTASH BUT A CERTAIN SAFE CURE Do you know why so many Specific Blood Poison Victims are ilo .,r fercrsof etomach trottblcor Rheumatism? It is because ?hey have fiUed their systema with incrcury or potash in an effort to cure tJaeblood diS? der. These minerals cannot cure Specific Blood Poison trf S vJl' mentTvill sometimes .temporarily remove thtTtJ the poison in check but as soon su the minerals are leit t,J a- 1 breaks out ;0Sain. Any system saturated trith meSrv or wtalh is earily weakened and loses much ot its resistive cowers it 1? , 5 Cp? treatment and should be left off by any who KsTnit TTS iHtocpeci Sfc 2ft "certainiitsd S S ha . been ros f0r. rifiers and the safest of trWats blood poison Ilome TiLWtrT, P and medical advice free. Ttrv cwiet cb MU unu t u-fiWTio wv ATLANTA, GA ii- Book