2 THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1913. October, the Month for Suits New styles, just received from our buyer who is in New York. We present a constantly changing showing for your selection excellent suits at prices you generally associate yith poorer merchandise $19.50, $25, $29.50, $35 up No charge for alteration SPENCER'S STORY IS FICTION Confession, of Many Murders Product of Disordered Brain. OLD SIMILAR TALES IN JOLIET fir-cord. Shorr Hint Slayer of Mr. llrxront Wn In I'rUon When Several Crime lie Admit Were Committed. White Pique Gloves, $1.25 a Pair Ask for a "Cavalier," you will find it a good wearing, good fitting glove. Featured Monday at $1.25 a pair. AND SIXTEENTH STREETS SDLZER GASBJS REOPENED Court Permit Prosecution to Pro sent More Evidence. EYAN GIVES TEN THOUSAND Agent of Son of afasmate Hands tbe Oomnor Ten Thon.and-Dotlar Hills Asked Hoot for Aid, ALDAN-, N. T., Oct. 6.-Desptt8 tho protest of Governor Sutler's counsel, a, motion by attorneyn for the assembly board of managers to permit 'thent to re open their case and introduce further testimony was allowed by Presiding Judge Cullen this afternoon. The neig; testimony was- expected to be brief. A new unreported campaign contribu tion of $10,006 developed In the Impeach ment trial of Governor Suiter- tills after noon. J. V. MeCllone testified that he banded the Governor ten 11,000 bills for his employer, Allan A. nyan, a son of Thomas V. Hyan, last October. Allan A, Ryan testified at tha impeach ment trial of Governor Bulcer this after noon that Bulser requested him to go to Washington and ask Benator Boot to use his lnfluenco to get William Domes to attempt to lnduco republican senator of ''the Impeachment, court to hold i that the Impeachment proceedings .were Invalid. tlio Arizona climate Is good for Mr, Murphy ho may decide to locate thero permanently, for he has no plans for tho future, (TECUMSEH MAN JrYIL-L MAKE LONG AUTO. TRIP TECUMSHH. Neb.. Oct. 6.-(SDeclal.- Srank 6, Murphy, who lives In tho west ern nart at this county and who has been Jin. failing' 1h'e4ui for1 four years, haa In- camping ouuiu including a, tent, wnicri will cover the car end as much more space. Jivorythtng haa been arranged to bo In good portable condition and can be Attached to tho. car. Mr. Murphy nnd bis wlfj and son will leave within a short time for an overland trip to ArUona, hop ing tha chango of climate, including the trip, -will bo beneficial to him. They will travel slowly across the country and camp when and whero they see fit. It Negro Homesteader , Held for Killing of Woman and Girl DISON, , S. D .Oct. 6,-8peclat.)-Joe Ilelger, a negro homesteader near Blzby, is In the Perkins county, jail horo charged with the murder of Mrs. Ellon Fox, widow, and her 14-year-old daughter, who were holding down a claim near Itclger's homestead, Tho crlmo was discovered when nelghbors'found that the shack on Mrs. FoxVhomesteod had been destroyed by fire during tho night. Investigation revealed tho dead bodies of tho woman and girl In the burning embers of, the house. At first it was thought Mrs. Fox had attempted to light the gasoline stove, when It exploded, kill ing her and setting flro to tho house. Later it was found that the skulls of both victims had been crushed and there were great gaahes on their bodies. Hub plcton then 'attached to Ilelger, because be was known to have quarrelled with the woman. , The negro was arrested and Is said to have made damaging admissions. A coroner's jury Svas lmpannolled and the evidence against Ilelger was considered sufficient to justify holding him for trial for murder and h&..wa brought to tho county-jail here. Big Eaters Gfet v Kidney Trouble Take Salts at First Sign of Bladder Irritation or Backache. The American men and women must guard constantly against Kidney trouble because we eat too much, and' all our f04 is rich. Ourtblood is filled with urlo acid and the kidneys strive to (liter out, they weaken from overwork, become sluegtsh', tho ellmlnatlve tissues clog and tije result is kidney trouble, bladder (weakness and a general dolln In health. When your kidneys feel like lumps of bead; your back hurts or tho urine Is cloudy, full ot sediment or you are obliged to ok relief two or three times (during the night; it you suffer with sick headache or dliiy, nervous spells, acid (stomach, or Vou have rheumatism when the weather is bod, get from from your IpU&nnaclst about four ounces of Jad Salts take a teospoonful in a glass of .water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with llth la, and has betn used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; ito neutrallxe the acids In the urine so It no longer is a source of irritation, thus lending bladder disorders. Jad Salts Is inexpensive; cannot in ure, makes a delightful rfffervcacent Uthla-water beverage, and belongs In Very .home, because nobody can make .mistake by having a good kidney flush ng at any time, Body of Late Judge Travis Laid to Rest i . PLATTBMOUTH. Neb.. .Oct uM-ino junerai ot ine late juogo it. D. Triavls was held from his lato res! dence in this city Bunday afternoon, there being a largo number in attend ance from both the city and out ot town. The funeral was under tho charge of tho members of the bar of the three counties Cass, Qtoo and Baroy of which comprlsod tho district of which deceased was tho presiding -Judge, and the order of .Klks, of which he was a member. The cefVnonles consisted ot prayer by Ilov. II. W. Lorlmer, pastor of tho Pres. bytorisn. church; orations by C. A. Itawts end Mathew acring ot the Cass county bar. and .the funeral servlco read by Itev, Larimer. A choir rendered "JJcad Kindly Light," while Mrs, Albert Clay. baugh sang "Abide with Me." The active pallbearers, who were se lected from tho members ot the bar from the three counties, wore: William Dellea Bonier of Elmwood, Allen J. Ileeson, pro bate judge ot this county, Plattsmouth Paul Jessen and W. F. Moron of Ne braska City, James T, Begley of Pa- pillion and William 1U Patrick of Belle vue. The honorary pallbearers woro T. II. Pollock, James M, ltoberU. Frank K Bchlater, Qeorge B. Dovey, C. C. Par mele. Wllber Ieyda. William Holly. Dan lei B. Smith, Charles XI Martin and Dr. E. W. Cook. The body -was laid at rest in Oak Hill oemetery, Just west of the city, near tho place where he has lived and served hi Country so long. Pkpne your want ad To;"The Bee" Tyler 10O0 (Continued from Page One.) the swan pond. This was about .six months ago. Bobbed body of tXO. Woman In house at Fulton and Hal- stead streets ' about eight months ago. Killed her with hammer. Burned her clothing and robbed the house. Woman In house about two blocks from county hoopltat. Again used ham mer and burned tho- clothing. Qot !) and soma rings. Woman in Belle Isle park. Detroit, Mich. Met woman in New York. Came with her to .Chicago and then both went to Detroit. He beat her to death and took her money, burning clothes and body. Did not know name. "They all lie lo you," he sold. His . first wlfo at Fort Montgomery, N. V. Beat hr to death arid took 3W In money and diamonds worth $S0. English Immigrant woman. Killed her near western avenue ana inrew. ner body Into drainage canal; Body was re coveted, but Identity was nover estab lished. Unidentified man and wife, killed at Fox Lake, 111., In September, 1911. and bodies thrown in lake. Unidentified man who brushed against him ot Forty-second street and Indiana avenue last spring. Shot, body dragged Into alley and. robbed. Saloon fcwper In park Bow. killed about two months ago and robbed. Mrs. ConnoTf, killed fct St, Joseph, Mich., and robbed- of Jowelry. BaloonkcoDer on Van Buron street near Aberdeen street. Shot mtfn and wounded his wife while rubbing saloon. Mrs. Mildred Allison Itextoat. murdered at Wayne. I1L, September x. Cannofldentlfr Victims. The police cannot account for all of the victims Spencer claims to have slain. Tho only victim Spencer "was able to name was Fdnnle C. Thompson, who probably Is the woman he said ho killed before he left the ponltentlary. Luman C. Mann, tho son of a wealthy family here, was tried six years ago for tho murdor pf the Thompson woman and acquitted after a long and sensational trial. Boencer gave a clear account of the way he claimed to have tied up the ThomDson woman at the time of the killing and his recital, conformed to the evidence that was brought out at Mann's trial. Bncncer told his gruesome story calmly to Captain Halpln and a room full of de tectives and newspaper men Thief Alt Ills Ul. "I've been a thief all my, lite," he de clared, . "I killed all these women to get then money. I found it w tne easiest, way to live. It cost me $400 or awo a Week to enjoy myself the way I wanted to In theso cabarets and dives and the easiest and quickest way to get the money was to got aome girl off by herself and km her. , Mr, lloxtoat was easy. She thought she -w as working ma. the same way aha jworksd the, farpierwShe thpugnt X was" i farmor like her husband ona.sne coma work me the same way. I let her think so. 'At first I was going to take her to Michigan and kill her there, but finally I decided it would be less trouble to take her a little way out on the car line and set It over In a bustness-llke way. Bhe thought we were going to be married. She came along Jusu aa I told her. Tells ot the Murder. "When we got out at the station It was nearly S o'clock. We turned around and walked down the track until we got where it was dark. I took her by tho right arm. pulled out my gun. and shot her through the head. Then I laid her on the railroad track so she would bo 'tore up.' I took what few dollars she had and her diamond ring, i opened ner ruttcase and dumped her stuff out of It and .brought It back to Chtpago with me, I took the next train back, about ten minutes after I shot her. "I dldn t want the ring. I never go near pawnshops. That's the way people gat caught. I gave the ting to a girl. Just common girl I met on the street St. Clair Back to South Dakota. AMES, la., Oct .-Bpeclal Telegram.) Tho sheriff of Minnehaha county, South Dakota, today returned lo 8toux Falls with Fred St. Clair, alias C. P. Yoakum. wanted on charges ot larceny and other statutory offenses. EL Clair, employed In extensive construction work on the state college campus, was arrested by Marshal Blcketts. He did not object to extradition. Hooray! Blood Free of fcupwritits Eczema Gone! Acne, Tetter, Rash, Pimples, Carbuncles, Boils Banished! LlT Itntr. 3$ to. Seattle, Tacoma, Portland. Van couver, Spokane; to Butte, .Missoula", Three Forks, Harlowton, Lewlstown and many other points in Montana. One way, second-class colonist tickets on ssle dally via ' CHICAGO. MILWAUKEE & ST. TAUL. BA1LWAT. For further Information call at or ad. dress City Ticket Office, 1J17 Farnam St, Omaha, Neb, liable Thrratened by croup, coughs or ooldo aro scon re lieved by the use of Dr. King's New Dis covery. Wo and l.oa-For sale by your druggist Advertisement Bhe went to New York Tuesday Wednesday." Spencer said that he had married four women, killed the first one, near West Point, N. Y. HA did not know exactly how many years ago. One wife is living In 'Detroit, he said, and another In Chi cago. Details HI Crime. Spencer gave details of his alleged murders at the Wisconsin and Michigan resorts whero he said he had spent most of tho summer as a hotel thief, com milling an occasional murder. "I Jellied the two girls at Paw Paw Lake for their money and rings," he said. "One ot them let me see she had some money with her and so I shot her and sunk her body in the lake. The other girl I killed tho same way, but she didn't have . much money. "The girl at Delavan lake I shot with the same gun with which I killed Mrs. Bexront. "When I got back to Chicago I met a man ono night who looked as it he had money. He didn't have much, but enough for me to go to a hotel for a few days and 'there I met another man, an old fellow fho said he was a broker. Wo got friendly and ho let on to have a ftno business and a lot of money. Ho looked like money. Fnllert to Cet Slack Money, "I was disappointed In that fellow. I got him to take a walk with me lato one afternoon In Jackson park and I shot him there and went through htm. Ho didn't have near ns much money as he said ha had. He told mo he had a lot more than I found. 1 rolled htm into a swampy place, 'where they were dumping. The papers had a lot about It and called It a case of suicide. ' "Another case the police called su)clde was a woman Killed on tne northwest side. I killed her with a hammer, tore up her clothes and sat flro to them,' The last woman t killed was a few' days ago, two blocks west ot the County hos pital. I beat her to death with a ham mer. She had .rings and J200. This mur der'' was done with a hammer the police found wrapped up In a towel by the rail road track. They thought the hammer had something to do wltlj the Bcxroat murder." "It costs a lot ot money to hold up your end In these cabarets. I spent J700 in two nights last week. I average two Jobs a week all tho time I am out ot Jail," said Spencer. Never Visits Pawnshop, Bpencer aala none of the Jewelry ho had taken from his victims ever would be recovered. "I never go Into a pawnshop." he said. "When I sell any of It, it Is to some private person, maybe on the street. I do not know their names A lot of It I gave to girls." The police doubt that Spencer had com. mltted the large number of murders and holdups to which he lays claim, but are convinced that he is guilty, ot many of them. The man's Jail record extends from, his boyhood. He accounted, for lm munlty from trial for murder by saying that ho would get apprehended for some minor crime and would take a short sen tence and while he was in Jail the murder .mystery would be shelved and forgotten, Several of the murders ho declared he had committed are known tonight prob ably to have been accomplished by Spen- - . cor in accordance witn ms conrcssion. The Fannie Thompson mdrder, the kill ing ot tho two policemen, the murder of an old 'man lri 'Jackson' perk, the killing of a. woman near the county hospital and tho attempted killing ot a family ot four on the West Side, all had bean catkiague'd 'dlr-mysterfeft " " The entire Hit" of fc'rImi-oorifessed bjr Sperlcer will bo Investigated wY't'ne Vollce who will check up how far tne man's accbunt Is Correct". On Parole) from Prison, His coldly planned murder of the. dan cing teacher and the other killings ,of which he boasts, jero committed while the man wan on "parole from the state penitentiary for highway robbery. IIo was paroled to Major M. A. Messleln ot the Volunteers of America and a short time after he was set at liberty he visited Captain Halpln and asked him to get him a job. Halpln obtained employ ment for Bpencer, but the man held the Job but two weeks. , The murderer's name If it Is ever learned, for he soys he doesn't know It will be ranked by the police with thoso ot H. H. Holrats, who confessed to twelve murders and Svas suspected of a total of twenty-seven, and Jonanu Hoch, who admitted tour murders and generally wan considered guilty of many more, "Is your jj&me really Spencer7" a re porter asked 'Oh, no; I never knew my parents and I never knew my name, except as 'Harry,' " ho replied. "The first I remember was In the re form school at FeehahVlire." he wont on.' "This Is triy first recotlectlon. They may have a -record-of my real name. I ran away from tho school and never was found out From that time on I lived with thieves and bad women. I never knew a good man or a good woman In my life. Ten Years ror Snlt. "I got my first prison term shortly after running away from the school. A man sold me a suit ot clothes for a nickel that's how it started. I knew the suit had been stolen, but It didn't' Impress me as anything serious; that sort ot thing was part ot my life. The very next day I walked right Into the shop from which it had been stolen and I was, surprised when they arrested me, Tho prosecution and the judge wanted, me to plead guilty and take a sentence' of thirty days, but my lawyer said no. He eatd tight It out and so 1 pleaded not guilty. "What do you suppose p got? I got ten years, and If there ever was any Or I aaBJSBBJBBJBJBJBJSJBBBJBnSJBJBBBJM Going Out of Business! GEORGE BROOK'S ENTIRE STOCK OF Men's Fine Clothing Including such Famous Makes ast "Society Brand," "Sturn-Maycr," "Strausc & Bros Etc., tmst be closed out at once Regardless of Cost! Nothing Reserved. It's a case of where EVERYTHING must GO! $ 9.75 buys $15 to $18 Suits and Overcoats $12.45 buys $20 to $22.50 Suits and Overcoats $14.45 buys $25 to $30 Suits and Overcoats $17.50 buys $30 to $35 Suits and Overcoats $19.75 buys $35 to $40 Suits and Overcoats , IMBssssas88 Store Fixtures for Sale An Unusually Handsome Equipment See Manager Corner 16tk and Harney Streets City National Bank Building In a bonk; or selling silk over a counter, would not have thought him unfitted for tho part. He doesn't look a tough." His- whole manner of telling his story, With Its incompleteness, its lapses and vagueness of detail, was regarded as ymptomatlo of his admitted addiction to the oplum-smoklng habit. For the most part those who heard his story of criminal abnormality had difficulty in reconciling the , self-possessed young man he Is 52 years of age -with the moral monstrosity he pictured himself to be. Two missing women, whom tho police believe may have been tho ones lured to Delavan Lake, wis., and killed nro Laura K. Voss of Lake Geneva and Mrs. Margaret Whltncck of Three Rivers, Mich. Both wW reported as missing. Partially n "Pltfe." DBTUOIT, Mich., Oct. 8. Sheriff Franz of Berrien county, In which Paw raw lake Is situated, said tomgnt tnai ne icnew nothing of he supposed murder of two girls at tnat place. , Spencer didn't kill anyone tnere since I havo been sheriff." he sold. Vnwunaner files In this city and In araVdi)a04f4ajfto'ytqvd qf. such At lol'-iolfee"headtuiarters?ton1ght It was declared ho woman was murdered on Bell? Islo, last summer. No Murder .at Goshen. DELEVAN LAKE.. Wis., Oct 6.-her was only one mysterious death lost sum mer here, that bolng Albert Jones, who was found dead In a lonely spot near tno lake on July 24. according to the police. A verdict that Jones' death vjas caused by heart failure following a blpw from tho crank of an automobile was returned at the Inquest. The police- chief says It Is barely possi ble tho man was murdered. He was known to have considerable money and was a free spender. Ttfo School Tcncher Killed. OSKALOOSA, Ja., Oct. 6, Investigation here today disclosed the fact that no school teacher or any other person from here had been killed at Lake Delavan, Wis., last October or at any other tliuj. as stated by Henry spencer, neia in Chicago for the Itexroat murder. Does Not Ilelleve Statement. WALKER. VILLE, Ont., Oct 6. A. 13. Griffith, the local chief of police, does not believe Harry Spencer's statement that one of Spencer's murders occurred in this city. "There has not been a woman killed here In twenty years." said the chief. No Itecord of Harder. GOSHEN, N. Y., Oct 6. The Orange county authorities have no record of a murder In recent years at Fort Montgomery. W. H. Moore, county detective, said to-' day that he could learn nothing to sup port Spencer's story that he killed a RAIL BOARD ASKED TO ORDER SIX CAR TICKETS FOR QUARTER former maid of Miss Helen Oould named "Nellie" In the woods near Fort Mont gomery about six years ago. No body has been found anywhere near Fort Montgomery. However, the country thereabout Is so wild that a murder vic tim might easily escape discovery. (From a Staff Correspondent) LINCOLN, Oct.' 6. (Special.) A com- plaint was wiled with the State Railway commission this afternoon asking that tho Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Rail way company be compelled to sell six tickets for a quarter. The complaint was filed by James A. Davis, representative in the last legis lature from Douglas county, and asks that the rule be put In effect on all of the company's lines In Omaha, Florence, Benson, Dundee, South Omaha and Al bright, good from any point n one, city to any point In any. Of the other cities mentioned. It Is certainly remarkable how quickly BtKtrt , ,ne tnat k,ij8(1 . Ten yra for the action of 8. 8. 8., the famous blood purl Per, shows Itself In tho skin. There is one ingredient in 8. 8. S. which peculiarly stimulates cellular or glandular activity to select from the blood, or from the fine network of blood vessels In the skin, those elmenta which It requires for regeneration. a suit .of slothes! Lose. Goad Time, "I served, .the full term, .1 had about two years' good Urn. coming to me, but I attacked a guard and lost It. They strung me up by the arms and the) Thun DlmDles. acne, ocxemo. lupus, or starved me l they put mv In solitary, too. any other blood condition that attacks i "I think It was the solitary that really the skin or seeks an outlet through the 1 got mo.. When 1 came out I wanted skin Is met with the antidotal effect ot k,,, Wood toVm n5,'i. i. -K- .vin .i vaniih. ma Pople aritfiseo it run. They gave W readily and why they do not return. Un- I U when they turned me loose, and M Two Carpenter. Injured. AMES, la., Oct &-(Speoia Telegram.) Lou Christiansen and Jack Hasae, Don- ish carpenters employed on the new chemistry hall of the state college, are In tho college hospital, the former uncon scious with fraetured skull and the lat ter with a broken arm and scalp wounds, following the collapse ot a forty-foot hoisting tower, on top of which they wre working. A high wind blew over the tower. Christiansen may not lire. der the Influence tot S. B. 8. this fine net work of Wood vessels in the skin is con stantly selection from the blood the nutri tion required tor 'healthy tissue, and tha cause ot disease Is Just as constantly be ing remoTod, scattered and rendered harmless. It Is a great mistake to rely upon ca thartics to cure pimples or other faclfj eruptions. Not only do cathartics cause, chronlo constipation, but they1 thin tho blood ot its valuable and essential pre servative!. You will be surprised and .delighted at the quick change It you will use 8. 8. 8. the famous blood purifier. Its action la the skin Is quite sensational. These facts are most fully explained in a book on skin troubles sent by the Swift BpecWo Co., SI Swift Bldg Atlanta. Oa. You will find S. 8. B. on sale at all drug stores. To Cur n Cold in One Dnr Take Laxutlre Bromo Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it falls to t oet a bottle today and banish all .Via cure r w. uroves signature m on . afflictions. each box. IBc, ) When you ask for 8. 8. 8. look out for the common trick of trying lo sell you Key to the Situation Be. Advertising. something els. Don't be aiuled. 1 of that I spent for a gun. I have been kllllng people more or' ' less ever since." I liked It in a wayr when I robbed any body It was a sort of satisfaction to clean up the Job by shutting up tpo victim's mouth forever." At Jollst the murderer was known as Smith, as Burke and. by one other name. he said. "I took the name of 'Spencer' when I got out last time It was an other "ten-year sentenoo, but I got three years oft for good behavior," explained the prisoner. "Spencer" was garbed in a plain, well kept business suit; his linen was clean and hts wavy chestnut hair carefully parted and brushed. A detective, trying to vliuallxo the monstrosity of t&e story to which he had Just listened, described the man nega tively. "It I saw him behind a cashier's cage Bo You Want a 'Good Complexion? YOU can h&T. one lx 70a take oars .of yourself. Ots re attar and sluggish, cir culation, clog tlx. bowsls and af- ' t.ct the skin, nature has pro vided an. lasal laxative which pu rlflss year blood, cloanssa your intestines and relieves constipa tion the rtsi cause or pimples, , etc Get a bottl. ot HUNYADI JANOS WATER today at any Brag Store, faka'ti glass on arlsln; or as any uut oa iu j tomaoh, and you'll the difference in your complex ion. John Says: "Oar Country Cous ins have gone'. 'The Carnival is over and the SUdget X,ady has left town. Let's fill oar pockets with THTJ8T SUBTira Co CXQAOH and ' smok. ahd rest awhile."- John 's Cigar Store 16th & Harney Stt. .L You have a choice of three excellently conducted )iotels : Hotel Touraine Universally esteemed for Its luxuvy, beauty and distinctive homelike atmosphere. Rooms from $2.50 ; with bath from $3 ; everjf room outside. Parker House A family hotel of traditions and exceptional comfort Per fectly appointed. Rooms from $1.50 upward. Young's Hotel In the financial district World wide reputation for New Eng land cooking. Rooms from $1.50. VHBBISI RWhippleGb. sbbbbbbWH jIbbbkiI sbbbbbx . A Carefully Measured Suit made right, fits better, looks bettor nnd wears longer than the best rendy mades. We make good suits as low ns .$25.00. A trial will convince you of the merit of our clothes. Suits and Overcoats to or der ..$25.00 to $45.00 MacQarthy Wilson Tailoring Go, 304-306 South 16th St. Office For Rent The large room on ground floor of Bee Building, oc cupied by the Havens White Goal Co. Nice Farnam street front age. About 1,500 square, feet of floor space with large vault. Extra en trance from court of the building. Fine office fixtures are of fered for sale. Apply to N. P. Feil, Bee office. AMUSEMENTS. Chambers' Academy of Danc ing will open season 191344 for lessons and. classwork;, October 7th, 1913.' Applications for enrollment In classes can be made now by calling D-1871. New entrance on. 25th Street. Roller Skating will begin October 14th. Entrance on Farnam Street- Tonight, All Wk, Mats W.d. & sat. W. A. Brady's Production "WAY DOWN EAST" The h.st of all rural plays. V.xt8tmday t Bays. THE Tnc-TOK MA IT OF OZ" AMERICAN THEATER JLJOIi WSEXC MATS. WED, and SAT. E V A Xn THE WITCJUSB SOVB Kit Wwk Wtwn Knighthood Wo la -Flawtr LANG . i tf-k sA t-v& Julius Orfcin 1.S1Q DOUGLAS ST. PHOWE nova. o-t. JittlDH Erry Oar. S IS. Ertrjr Hlfht. I .5. ADVANCED VAVEBVZX.Z.E TU Wk Mora Btnntd AxaftM UltB Ciual, Ijotxrtl. Ttw fit. Melodr iilU ttad a Man, PbUa A Oa.. Doeart A Nalaoc. B.aln pilniiu Trio. Bollinger A llamoUa, Tlrotlr Motion PI Urea. trica' Uatlnaa Oalltrr, 10c. BaiV'ftaaM (ucapt SMurdar and Bundar), lie. Mitt--10c, tto Mc. "lc. Women's Exclusive Wearing Apparel At Moderate Prices New Goods Arriving Daily. aafciJsiWaataW Bally Mat-1 8135-80 o XTBgs- 1S-3S-90-7SO .-with Jo. sortiga 'onrasB qihx" ! HnaDDlest of all Fun tihows. Just -S Presented Eight Weeks at Columbia Theater Chicago. Alpine Quartet, Great Cost, Gingery Beauty lltqrua ZvAOXES BXME MATINEE JTOPAT.