I -7 A THE OMAHA STNDAY BEE: DECEMBER 14, 1013. Men's $1.25 to' $1.50 SHIRTS at 79c Closing OutJMEN'S JFUR COATS Men's fur coals, guaranteed to give service, made of carofully selected and matched coonskln, calfskin or pony skin, $32,50 to $100 values, for 519.50, $27.50, 39.50.67.50,S87.50 't Custom tnndo dress and negligee shirts, with attached laundered and turn-back soft cuffs; made of fine French panang, madras, gingham and .French cord shirting; an extensive assortment of neat, dressy pat terns, in light, medium and. dark colorings; $1.35 and $1,50 valncs, at 79c WE ARE GOING OUT OF THE CLOTHING MEN'S BUSINESS "pVERY Suit, every overcoat, every pair of pants, must be sacrificed to make room for the enlargement of the various main floor sections that they may take care of the demands caused by the marvelous increasing business that is daily coming to this store Suits (& Overcoats, at About V2 Price t r It's n clothing sale of unprecedented magnitude coming ns it does at a time when you will bo benefited most nffording an opportunity to choose from clothing that represents the pjrocluct of tho best makers of rendv-for-servico gannonts in this country, including such fanlons makes as MICHAEL STERN, ATERBURY AND MANY OTHERS. All offered to you at prices that barely represent tho cost of making. It's indeed a cloth ing buying opportunity of a lifetime, nnd no man with a need of this sort can afford to lot it Blip by without taking advantage of it. Take an hour or so off Monday and come you'll find it a splendid investment. Four groat price groups: Suits and Overcoats Values to $12.50 for Suits and Overcoats Values to $17.50 for Suits and Overcoats Values to $25.00, for Suits and Overcoats Values to $35.00, for $1085 BOYS' HIGH QUALITY SUITS AND OVERCOATS GO INTO THIS SALE AT A GREAT SACRIFICE FOUR GROUPS LOT 1-Boys' $ Suits & O'coats $3.50 values for m LOT 2-Boys' $ Suits & O'coats $4.50 values for 2 QC LOT 3 boys' S WW 1 1 r ah i suns & u'coais $6.50 Values for LOT 4 Boys' $ Suits & O'coats $8.50 values for m mm sm Iff, Remarkable Values tor Monday in Men's Furnishings and Shoes Men's 50c Underwear, 33c Men's extra heavy, fancy rib bed cotton un der BblrtB and drawers, best 50c val., garment. . 33c Men's 25c Garters, 14c Men's Boston or Paria Garters, white, black and colors, good web bing elastic; 25c values, pair 14c Men's 75c "Workshirts 38o Tile ramous rreomtm -r made of heavy chambray, percale blue, tan ana fancy stripe pat terns, all sizes, per garment ray, percaio 38c Men's 25c Sox, lie Choice ot tho famous Bakor ma co box, black, ton and gray, excellent 25c values; Bale price, pair lie Men's $6.00 Nettleton SHOES at $445 Not all oddB and ends but; a full and completo stock of this season's goods, comprising ovor 1,000 pair. In this sale you will find Every Leather, Every Staple and All the Most Favored Styles In this sale you have unrestricted choico of every $6.00 Nettleton Shoo in our store at A 45 Shawknit 35o Sox, 17c The most popular cashmoro wool box tho Shawknit, war rnnfrtrt fnnt. ntnln- m loss black: Bee- 1 7C onda of 3Co and I 1 2Kn ktnitfl. nn.lr Men's $2.50 Hats, $1.00 Big atock of men's aoft hats, in black and all staplo and fancy shades $2.60 kinds your choico, at $1 $3.00 Union Suitj, $1.80 89 Wright's $3.00 wool ribbed union suits, natural gray colon $3.00 values 1 $1.00 Underwear, 59o Wool Toxturo and Wright's soft, heavy CflC flat flooco lined un derwear, $1 values.. 59' ;Orkin Bros. 16th and Harney.. ;Orkin Bros. 16th and Harney.; TALKS ON RETAIL SELLING G. W Hopkins Gives Grocerymcn ' . Some Valuable Pointers. SPEAKER URGES SQUARE DEAL Tells Retailers that Cutomer Only Star Those Merchants i iVTto Give Tbein Kamest ' Mfunarrs. He emphasized the value of a dealer's window working In " eo-operatlon ,wltl tholr other advertising, and urged the re tailer to pay more attention to using his window to advertise profitable goods, taking pains to have a window that will provo a good advertisement, and not leave the boy to throw In Buch a display as can be placed with the least possible trouble. He pointed out that to take advantage of these windows every clerk should call the attention of the window to overy customer who comes In to make a purchase. It this Is done they will find the customer has been Impressed by the display, and when reminded, will buy. In other words, the retailer should Inter lock his advertising with his sales. The value of front storo display and the value of the first fifteen or twenty feet shelf room was emphasized, and the suggestion made that a dealer rear range his front store and front shelves according to the. profit the goods show and not particularly according to the convenience Jn getting at the goods. In other words, staple, goods will be asked for where specialties that show tho most profit have to be where people can see them coming In aild going oU,t of the htnrc. Would Train the Clerks. He also emphasized the value of train ing clerks to intelligently talk the value of the goods on sale, and the value ot making them salesmen Instead of mere clerks. Particular attention was called to the value of courtesy on the part of delivery clerks, and he kajd It was of greater value than a out price. The changing of display in a store was alto brtught out. The value of so chang ing the arrangement of goods that some thing different will attract the eye each time the customer comes into the store. ("curtesy to salesmen, who have some thing to sell, and a fow minutes undi vided attention on the part of tho mer chant was shown to be the quickest way to dispose of a salesman. A few minutes cf undivided attention enables the right kind of a salesman 13 present his story and the merchant to take advantage of tho many offers that will prove money making propositions to the customer. Particular emphasis was laid on the danger of overstocking and the value of a quick turn over of merchandise. Many times' a merchant will purchase a three months' supply of goods that can Just as well be replenished every two weeks. By purchasing overy two weeks tho profit on the amount Invested doubles and trlpplea the profit on over stock. Buying lrf sufficient quantities you keep goods fresh, Insuring a quick turn over, greater sales and a release of capital to Invest In other merchan dise. I YJrarea Square Deal.. Truth an' a square deal was also em phasized. The possibilities of selling goods over the telephone by calling customers at tthelr home at a regular hour, or cer tain days was demonstrated as being successful In some stores. This Is par ticularly true where the tendency Is to order over the telephone. Mr. Hopkins expressed the policy or the Loose-Vlles Biscuit company In their sale of Sunshine biscuits as being a desire to assist the merchant In mer chandising his goods, and called atten tion to the study that has been placed on retail sclUng for the last two years. It Is Mr. Hopkln's believe tnat Instead of W per cent of the grocers falling, Js the present record, that proper under standing of the possibilities of the re tall grocery business will not only In crease the percentage of the successful grocers, but will demonstrate tnat the re tall grocery business Is a profitable busi ness to conduct. The talk on retail selling contained a groat many points, whleh the retail groc ers present expressed themselves aa be ing able to use every day lu their busi ness. Double Murder in Millinery Store CHICAGO, Dec 1J. Louis F, Nleman, proprietor of a millinery shop, and his wife were shot b.k1 killed, and Mrs. Bmanuel Harner was probably fatally wounded here this afternoon by the tatter's divorced husband, who then shot and kllUd himself. The shooting took place In Nleman's store. Mrs. Lena Harner was approached by her former husband while In the store. She refused to talk with him and then Nelman and h's wife Interfered to protect her Harner became enraged and sect the three. THIRTEEN LUCKY FOR HIM H. E. Fredriokson Likes that Num ' ber, and Also Three. REVIEWS HIS SUCCESS IN OMAHA Came Here .Twenty Yenra Aeo with J tut Six Dollars lu Ilia Jeans nud Ilaa Climbed Ever . Since. "The numbers 13 and 3 havo been my lucky dope all tho way through," says IL K. Frederlckson, Nebraska consul for the Lincoln highway and former automo bile dealer of Onlaha. "Why? Well, I'll tell you. This Is the thirteenth day of December, 1913. Today I have been In Omaha twenty years, and I am happy, fl landed here from Fremont twenty years ago on tho thirteenth of Decem ber, 1833. 1 had 16 In my pocket, and I mado good on that." Fredrlckson la a pioneer in the auto mobile business In Omaha. It was his order that took the first tralnload of automobiles out of Detroit. It was Fredrlckson who brought the first traln load of automobiles Into Omaha. Arriving In Omaha with JU. he grabbed, a job as shoe salesman; later he went to work In a bicycle store. Here he got the fever for bicycle racing, and In a short time had grabbed both the ama tour and the professional championship of the state, both of which he holds to this day. He does not announce that he Is willing to rneU all comers at this date, aa he Is not as young as he was at twonty, but It happened that auto mobiles attracted the attention of racing enthusiasts before Fredrlckson had a. chance to lose his plumes. Told lllm He Was Polish. Then he went Into the bicycle buvlncss for himself. After a time he went Into the buggy business. Then he made the big jump and began selUng automobiles. In 1901 when he received his first ship ment of three largo automobiles, he says many of tho then leading business men ot Omaha stood and Viewed the big ma chines before a hotel, and told him ho was a very foolish man and that he would never sell them In this city. "They gave me a lot of fatherly advice that morning," says Fredricksan, "telling mo sincerely that I was making a great mis take and that I was going into the wrong kind of a business." But he went ahead and soon was shipping In train-l-ads of automobile). Two yeara ago he was chairman of the county roads committee of the Com mercial club. He Is one of tho felow that always tries to make good when placed on a committee. Later he laid out the roads between Omaha and Sioux City and between Omaha and Kansas City. It Is his hopo now that the roads he then laid out will Boon be recognized as feeder roads to the greatLlncoln high way from these two points. Soon he went west to use his Influence In devel oping and Improving the roads between Omaha and Salt Lake. Ha says he had a dream then that tho ocean-to-ocenn highway was not far In the future, and In order to get Omaha on the map ot the road when It should como he set to work In advance' to so Improve the road between Omaha and Bait Lake that It would naturally be selected as a section of the Oreat highway when that project should become a tact, as It now is. Frodrlckson retired from the automo bile business a few years ago and has since been devoting most of his time and energy to good roads movements. For the last several months he has been busy In several states working out intricate, details In connection with the pushing of the Lincoln highway movement. Some time In January he and Mrs. Frodrlck son will make a trip to Florida nnd South America, where they expect to spend the winter. Oregon Town Wefy Judge Declares the Elections Illegal SALEM, Ore., Deo, U After twice hav Ing been doclared "dry" by the majority of the voters, this city again reverted to tho "wet" side, by a decision of Judge Galloway of the circuit court. The court held both the local option measure passed November and tho charter amendment prohibiting tho issuance of saloon licenses, adopted December 1, to be invalid and primarily restrained city officials from attemptng to enforce them. Tho court holds that under the statutes local option measures may be votod on only at regular elections which fall on even years. The amendment election was declared Invalid because the voters had registered under a law declared uneon stltutlonal by the supreme court. "In passing on these case that are so unduly agitating our people," said Judge Galloway, "the court cannot too strongly condemn the prevailing mania for the ever-recurring eleetions whleh only dis tract the people and paralyze Industries and business." He added that the trouble was not due to tho Increase In the vot ing population through woman suffrage, but was simply a mania. FINDS NEW PLANT A WONDER Prank Crawford Enthusiastic About Burbank's Spineless Caotus. IT WILL GROW ON THE DEBERT Produces l'rollfle and Nourishing Crop for Man nnd l)rn, nnd Needs Very Little Moist ure to Mntnre It. Bee Want Ads Produce Results. Both the wonders and possibilities of tho Burbank spineless and fruiting cactuses are being enthusiastically narrated In Omaha by Attorney Frank Crawford. He has Just returnod from a month's busl ness trip to tho Pacltlo coast, and brought with him soma of tho fruit of the newly dovcloped edible, In order to convince his friends that It Is really as represented. Mr, Crawford first saw the cactus plants growing ut Oakland, In the grounds of tho Luther Burbank company, and he bought a few to take with him and plant near the Mohave desert district, when he went out to look over a mining matter in Han Bernardino county. Later, when he made a second trip to tho mine, Of which he is part owner, ha took out 100 more plants to net out in the sand. "As a forage crop," says Mr. Crawford, "the spineless cactus is a wonder, and It j will soon revolutionize tho live stock In-1 dustry. Regions where green feed and I drinking water have sometimes failed, with great loss of cattle as the result, will become a psrudlse when the spineless cactus Is extensively grown, for it fur nishes both food and water for the ani mals." This recent product of the wizard of horticulture's research Is said to be tho result of seventeen years ot work, In Its present state of perfection, a yield of CO to 100 tons of forage per acre each year Is claimed for It. Because ot its desira bility In dry regions, many ot the big ranchers of the country are reported to be preparing fer Its cultivation on a large scale. In order to have a plentiful supply with which to save their stook when a year of extreme drouth oomos. Not n New I'lunt, According to Burbank himself, he has not oreated a spineless cactus out of ono which was originally thorny, but he has merely caused a onee thorny variety of plant to revert to Us original thornless condition, from which it was first na turally changed by adverse cllmatlo con ditions and the development of a dosert where It grew. Whut Burbank claims cs-f pe'lal cr dlt for Is his development of the . plant to Its present perfection of feeding jvalie and unusually large jlcll, wli'le re-1 producing true to type as regards all ab. sence of thorns. Each leaf, or "slab," as It Is commonly called by horticulturists, weighs several pounds and will keep a long time in Us succulent condition, thereby maklnr a feed for stock when other green feed falls. It Is also asserted to ho a better beat nnd milk producer, than any otlier kind ot forage and on account of Its being so proline In arid regions, the prediction has teen mado Uiat it will niako now-worthless land as valuable as $100 per aero. As to the fruiting varieties of cactus, samples of which Mr. Crawford brought heme from tho Burbank experimental tarms, they are raid to be unusually wholesome and better flavored than the banana. The yield Is enormous when properly cultivated, and the fruit Is shipped great distances In aa good condi tion as other deciduous fruits. Knten raw, or made Into Jelly, Jams, syrups or con fections, they aro a delicious and unique delicacy. Adaptable to Many Climes. The Burbank cactuses are adaptable to many climates, but cannot be successfully grown where protracted cold weather oc curs. They will not thrive where tho ground freezes over an Inch In depth or whero tho temperature for any great period drops as low as IS degrrna Fahrenheit. This shuts out Nebraska from the possibility of growing tho crop for forage on Us western ranges, but tho wholo continents of Africa and Australia, most of South America, the southern part of North America, southern Europe and Asia, and most ot the Islands of the sea are Included In tho territory whero the cactus may be grown. Experiments to produce hardier specimens are now twlng made and will probably result successfully. German Soldiers Stoned and Shot At MAYKNCE, Germany, Dec 13. Senti nels on the fortifications and the artil lery testing ground here who have been stoned and shot at for several nights past, have been ordered by the military authorities to shoot down their assail ant on sight. It Is feared that tho autl milltary agitation In Alsace has spread to this city. Retailers in Favor of City Purchasing the Auditorium Now Associated Retailers of Omaha favor the purchase of tho Auditorium by th6 city. In a resolution on this subject unanU roously adopted at tho banquet of the re tallcrs, they had tho following to says Whereas, We, tho Associated Itetallers of Omaha, brllove that an Important problem now faces this city In the dis position to bo made ot our Auditorium, and Whereas. We believe that an indis pensable adjunct to the assots of every city Is a large, commodious and attractive boll or auditorium as a meeting place for great gatherings, conventions, festivals, expositions and the like, and Whereas, After a long and earnest cam. palgn on tho part of our citizens, wo suc ceeded In having erected such an edifice, and Whereas, We bellevo a crisis In tho af fairs of the Auditorium compels tho fear that this great building must either bo purchated by this city, und thereby tho purpose for whloh It was built duly con served, or that It must go Into private hands In whloh event all the purposes for whloh It was erected would be sub ordinated to private ends, therefore be It Itesulved, That wo the Associated Ite tallers of Omaha, believe that this city cannot afford to allow this splondld build ing to bo destroyed or turned from the purposes for which It was built, nor allow It to go Into private hands over which the city would no longer have con trol, Hn Is further Resolved, That we, the Associated Re record as favoring the purchase of this Auditorium by the city while It may bo seoured at a flguro Insignificant compared with what the city would have to expend In a few years from now for the purpose of erecting such a temple. No Papers in England on Christmas Day LONDON, Dec. 13. Tho morning news papers havo reached the unan'.moua agree ment to suspend publication on Christ mas day, according to announcement In the Sheffield Telegraph. A majority of the papers tried the plan last Christmas, but this year all of the papers. Including the London Times, will close up shop en tirely, giving many thousand workers engaged In tho publication and distribu tion of newspapers a real Christmas holi day. The agreement applies to both morning and afternoon papers. Death on the (iiillovftt Is sharp, khort agony. The lame back of kidney troublo Is dally misery. Take Klec trlc Bitters for quirk relief- Mte. For sale by yout druggist. Advertisement. Wanted. Live experienced salesmen to handle our line In the states of Nebraska, South Da kota, Missouri and Kansas. Give full In formation In first letter. Gunther Con fection and Chocolate Co., 736 W. Jackson Blvd.. Chicago, 1IL l i