4 Jiti liEh: OMAHA. SATURDAY, UCTOUKR 24, lyH. Combination Velvet and Charmeuso Dresses: 1 Q C f jp C'' E f clever styles. In all colors, specially priced SmJ J OC. & Ct J J Great Sale of SKIRTS, Saturday. Don't Miss It! Julius OfMa 1510 IOXJGIJ5lS ST. Be Sure To Come To Our Great Sale of Skirts Saturday WE OFFER YOU TOMORROW SCORES OF THE NEWEST Suits. Coal 1H :s, presses, Aliens For much less than you can buy the same styles and qualities elsewhere. Come and See for yourself. WOMEN'S SUITS Actually Worth $19.50, $M! E $22.50 and $25.00, at . . vjSil J Another of our memorable high grade quit sales to morrow. New all wool materials, made , SEPARATE SKIRTS Regular $7.50, $8.75 C and $10.00 Values, at . .' CpJ Full flaro and straight line models; and the newest yone and piaiteu tunic styles are oil wclud- ft ed in this great salej materials are serge, vfl broadcloth, ilk poplin, etc. All sizes. Up to $10.00 values. Special for tomorrow , $20 Dresses. Scores of Clever Styles. $12.50 This offer Include about 100 fine Dress Id SUlk, Serge and Satin combinations, all sites and colon. NEW COATS AT $12.30. $15.50. $17.50 and $19.50 Women who demand quality with style will appreciate the high standard of materials and workmanihlp It Is possible to procure in these moderately priced coats. The showing Is replete with the latest style tendencies new materials new colorings new models. JULIUS ORK1N lCIO DOUGLAS STREET up in new styles. Good as suits you are commonly offered at $19.50 to $25.00 special for tomorrow at, only 15 800 New Blouses. 30 New Styles. $5.00 They are of Crepe de Chine, Chiffon. Silk. Shadow laoe and Satin, In black and white and In colors that are exactly In accord with refined taste. DREAMS OF JULES YERNEREALIZED Air and Submarine Battles Are Be ing Fought Near Birthplace of Famous Novelist. 'aeroplanes direct the fire At ffnmr Tim ierman Sebejiarlne I raft Try to T.rM'ln Jlaaltoes that Drop SfcrJIa I a to th Trearhre na "hare. Ill - V . : i CARMAN TELLS OP MURDER OF LOUISE BAILEY (Continued from Page One.) question about a dare: ha . aUended where be danced with "two ladles from Hempeteed," and where hie wife became ao jealous that she refused to serve them tea. eo that he (Or. Caiman) had to get the tea for them. J u Mice Kelby, who presided, arte Dr. Carman at whom the ptstot was pointed when he first saw U "Meat at Ma." . "Bight at me," the physician replied. Dr. Carman said ht believed It waa part of a left band he "saw with the re volver, but -" "Well." said the district attorney. "Isn't tt a fact that you never mentioned a left band until Sheriff Pettlt told jruo that the wltneae Uolder waa left-handed?".. . "I dent remember," aald Dr. Carman. )rfr'i Wltneae. To substantiate Iti etatm that a man and not a woman killed Mr. Bailey, the de fense Introduced as a wltneae Charles Ad ams, aegro, who testified he was pass ing the Carman bouse on the night of the murder; heard a report whloh he thought - was a firecrackers looked Into the yard and saw a man running away. Adams said that the man jumped over the fence on the weat side of the house. The witness watched the man -and saw him still running on Uie next street Faroy Smith, another negro, waa with the wltneae. the latter said. Tarawa-. Bitter Orgeat, ' ' Mrs. Florence Conklln Carman passed through the bitter ordeal of cross-ex amtnaUon today. Her story, denying all ehanged. When she had concluded, mem . bers of her household followed her to the stand and swore that what She bad I entitled to was true. Mrs. Sarah Conklln, Mrs. Ida Powell, F.iixabeth Carman mother, sister, daugh ter ana ty one affirmed her story that aha waa in bed when the' shot was fired; that she doaned a kimono nd suppers, went downstairs Into the waiting room, leaned for a minute or two against the ' mantelpiece and then returned to her bonHC Tea-yter-old Elisabeth teattfled that he, toe, weat down thas talrs be. bind her mother, stayed there but a mo snent. returned, and In a minute or two weat into her mother's room. They some Increase with ssotner TKtre, "My mother was there." she paid, Against the testimony of the Carman household, the state has the evidence of Ceii Coleman, negro maid of aU work Mrs, Carman's home, and Frank Farrell, former railroad engineer. Cella teaUfied Mra Carman went out of tha kitehon a short time before the shot was fired, re appeared a few seconds after H was fired, produced a rajvojver from the (olds of her kimono and said: "I shot him." Farrell has testified that he saw a woman, dressed as Mrs. Carman was dreeeed, flee from the window Into the houee after the shut Mrs. Carman faced ber ordeal with lips parted In a smile. Once, as the district attorney thrust home Intimate queetions as to the Jealeuay that had stirred her heart cooeernteg her huebend'e reletluae with women, she appeared to lose her eplendld aelf-ronerol and to falter. Smtl Ing salt aeon revived 'her. Khe br)k,e down afer It was all over and cried. - The rraetlon eame when her aged mother was on he stand. Mra. r.nu. 'rakes Staad. Just before the de'eaJxut took the chair She crossed to her mother, Mrs. Conklla, Sitting at the counsel table, leaned over and klsaed her. "Mra Carman." begaa the district at torney, "you said you were suspicious of ' yeur husband. When did you get eusp! clous?" , "About a year age." What caused hsr suspicion she could , not say. A woman did not cause It "lust rumors." "Were the rumors about a woman T" ' No. Just soro one asking him about ( his girls. Homebody Ui4 wiehe ws ' devil with the gtria" the could not recall who had taJl ber this. At Mr. Smith's bidding she named many wen. friends ef Dr. Carman, but ' could not name one of them as bavin said "How are all your girls r ' Derttr le game Devil. "Somebody was asking htm that ques- . Uoe all the time." she tali "They ware . )etlng. I thought at first, but after ; while I thought maybe there anight be some truth in what they said, would say to me, 'The doctor fa devil.' " "Did you have sn Inclinstlon to hear what the doctor had to ssy to his women patients T" "In a way, yea. Homo of his patients." "Did you auk him where he was when be waa out all night?" "Yes, snd he told mi." "Did you believe him?'1 "Yes, sometimes." "Did your suspicions timer' "They Increased right up to the time of the murder. They have all been dispelled new." "flow long have you been in that frame of mind?" "Ever since the terrible tragedy. What I heard, or rather what I didn't hear, over the telephone Instrument reassured me." Mrs. Carman sought to evade a direct answer to the district attorney's question aa to' whether she thought that her hus band was truthful. Finally ahe said "No." She explained eh had no real reasoe te doubt him, however. She was suspicious at first of the women who called fre quently at his office.' Finally she. was suspicious of nearly all of. his women callers. "I got tired of hearing things," she said. i And the fact that a woman would some to his office afterwards was enough to make you ausplolous? .Were you sue ploloug of yeur husband or the woman?" asked Mr. Smith. "Both," said Mra. Carmen, firmly. Naree Nat Mere Attractive. Borne women, Mrs.' Carmen said, were tare attractive to her husband, than she was, she had thought. She did net know If there were more than ene, but she wanted to find out ,"I had no particular women 4a mind," she said. . . Mr. Smith asksd If she thought Mrs, Verenca, the middle-aged nurse whose face she slapped. . waa more attractive than she. Mrs. Carman smiled and an swered "No." Under the rapid volley of the district attorney's . pitiless question Mrs. Car man's color rose and fell. She- bit ber lips; she clenched ber gloved hands, Che appeared to be about to faint, but her bottle of smelling salts revived her. She was made to describe the entire soene with Mrs. -Vgrasoa.- fih said - she saw Dr. Carman give the nurse lit and saw her kiss him afterward. It was tht passing of the money and not the kiss that distorted her, she said. "Tou didn't object to anotner woman kissing your husband In gratitude?" "How long after the passing ef the ' money waa the k'ss administered?" 'A few minutes. They were sitting down alongside each ether at the time." ' Mre. Carman said she did not rap on the window when the kiss was given, but waited until Mrs. Carman start ad ! to leave the office. . I "You went pretty, fast around the lawn' to get to the door before Mrs. V trance, didn't your I "Yes." . j Mrs. Carman Indicated that she slapped Mrs. Vara nee with the back ef her band. New, as to the night of the shooting." said Mr. Smith, "did you hear a shot?" "No, I heard some commotion.' ;Whatr' shouted the district attorney. "Well, I don't know whether I beard a shot or not. I heard a nolee." "And your curtonlty was aroused?" "Surely It was an unusual sound." Khe thought It had ccrfle from the rear of tha house, and It took her about a minute to gat down stales, she said. ' As she reached the head of the stairs she saw two women going 'into the hall, but she made no effort to find out who they were. After she went down stairs she walked Into the waiting room and leaned against a mantelpiece .for a moment She did not see anyone down stairs and went directly up stairs again after hay ing stood by tha mantel for two minutes, perhaps. Mr". Carman's crnss-examfnatloti and her redirect examination was then hegu. Tears Oat Telephone Device. Before she was excused, Mrs. Carman desrrtbed In detail how ahe tore out the telenhonlo Instrument snd Its wires be tween her riom and the doctor's office and hid the wlren, batteries, sound gath erer and the reoelver In the garret under the floor. Mra Carman." said ths district attor ney, "If your suspicions were dispelled by what you beard over the Instrument. why did you buy the thing on June 23 when your lease has two more months to run?" . .. . To this Mrs. Carman would give no direct answer. Mrs. Carman said she learned tha Iden tity of the victim late Tuesday night. She said she felt sorry 'for 4he family ef Mrs Bailey, but that ahe had not ex pressed herself because she "didn't feel at liberty te-do so." Mrs. Carman's 10-year-old daughter, Elisabeth, wna the next witness. Tn ebliairh treble she' gave' her ver sion of what had happened In, the Car man household the night ef the murder. After dinner she said she had gone out and played on the lawn, i j "Mother went upstairs,", she continued! "My aunt and my grandmother Were en the porch. Later I went Inte the parlor and started to practice oa the piano. My mother told me to stop. Then I ' went Into the dining 'room, walked ' through the hall and sat In a chair In the dining room ... -Presently' I heard glass break and a shot. 1 mot my aunt on the stair I went In my mother's -room. My mother was there. "When I ran back Into the hall I saw my mother put on her slippers and ki mono and I followed her downstairs Then I went up again. When she, cam. up la a minute, I want Into hsr ' room with her." ' Un croas-sxeminetlon, District Attorney Smith asked only one question.: "fcllsaheth! you sro very fond n v,. mother, aren't you?" , . "Tee.' she replied. 'That's all, said the rrnserutor. Aont and Mother Testify, Just as Mrs. Sarah Conklln, Mrs. Car roan's mother, years old, took the eland, the defendant burst into tears, (me burled htr face tn her handkerchief, spaklog wjh. qbs. . Mrs. Conklln's testimony corroborated that given by Mra, Carman and KUsa beth. 1 Similar eormtmratrva testimony was given by Mrs. Carman's sister, Mrs. Ida Powell., Lorimer Gives Bond . While; Officer is ' : Searching for Him ?MICAr56, Oct. fSCaplases were pre pared today for the arrest of William Lorimer, .Chafes B. Munday and twelve omer ortiwais or the LaSalle Street bank and allied Institutions against whom In. dlrtments were returned yesterday charg ing them with looting the bank. The first of the Indicted meji.to surrender was John B. DcVoney, former president of the Intcrnetlnrml Tru'et and Savings bank. Lorimer beat the roae server into court and provided hoods, of ao.OOO. flis sonM William, and several bther defend ants ahra were In court with their bonds-men, , PAIUS, (ct. !X The t'tmrcle on the length of the 'ine extending into llolftuin. now called the battle of Flanders, gave rise to sn engagement ulong the coast near to the birthplace of Jules Verne. In which aircraft and submarines par ticipated, realizing tor the first time In this seme encojnter the dreama of the i great Frenchman. The Hrltioli monltore o't shore did great execution on the German trenches, among tl'tse reported killed being Gen eral Von Tripp and his staff. While the 1 allies' si) men cleverly directed the aim of the marine gun. the Herman sub- i marines lying In wait attneked the moni tors, but without result because the latter were en far In shore. lie re again the critics remark that tba attempt of the Germans to tura the alla' left and reach the French coast lie been defeated end the Qormans again have been forced to resort to frontal at tacks. The gains made by the allies on the road to Mets, It Is thought, must draw the attention of the Germans seriously to quarter where they are menaced, not only from the direction of Verdun, but by the renewed successes of the French eu the eastern slope of the Vogoa Parliament WIU Mae- t Pa He. The news from llordeaux today In dicates that Parliament Is not to be called to meet there but In Paris. The employee of both the chamber and the senate have been notified that they may return to I Paris at the end of this month, which Is tqxen ss a sign or confidence In oficlal circles and Is making a good Impression. The French copttnue their preparations with prospective recruits to fill the gaps In the army. Baron Pierre de Coubcrtln, president of the French Olympic gomes i committee, It haa been announced, has I been charged by the government to care for the ph ye lea training of young men 1 from li te 19 years old with a view to I their entry Into the eervlce. The military authorities are more and more watchful of stragglers. Bvery man arriving at the Paris terminals, of age to bear arms, It required to show papers on arrival and If they are not In order, ar rests are made. Some of the soldiers, not In the habit ef being toted aa have been the roan returning from the front, suc cumbed to temptation and over-stayed their permlaalons. These stragglers In cluded Turcos and Zouaves. Now even soldiers in umorm are required to produce a permit, or falling In this, they are ordered to fall In. ' The College Coat FOR GIRLS and MISSES The one really smart Btyle for young wofrien, shown In our new second floor Women's Soottpn Is a fine variety f plaids and color combinations. Deetlncd to be Immensely popular. Better make SrvWcUon. wltb,Qut delay, $10 and $15 Our big, Dew Second Floor is at tracting crowds of -women every doy. TKv tell ua they find hers, style and values not sccn clsewhere. Distinctive Suits ..$17.50 to $49.50 Luxurious Coats . .$12.50 to $90.00 'DresMw, Waists and Skirts of su perb style and moderate pricing Splendid Coats, $5.00 up. Sorge and other Wool Dresses, $3.95 up. For GirU 8 to 14 yr. OMAHA'S TAUTEST GROWING STORE 1516.18-20 TARNAM STREET. Cheek Kteaer liable at . . Thsrg is guefcj reedy., actum , In . Foley Kidney Pilla you feel their healing front the very first dese. Bapkache, weak, sore kidneys, painful bladder and Irregular ac. tlon disappear with their use. O. Palmer, Green Bay, Wis., says:. "My wife is rap, Idly recovering .her health and strength, dua. solely t Fvt. Kidney. fiUa" And W. T. Hutchenl, Nicholson, aa,. anys, "Ju jt a fsw doses made me feel better, and now my pains and rheumatism are all gene and I aleep .all- nlgjlt long " All dealers everywhere. Advertisement. ' ttr-Z -v t leTgr-ev-" I I .11 , 1 rv A J . L Li mm .t.'ftii:-'4df Attention! U directed to our superb showing of apparel for little tots Children's Coats of Bou cle, low bolted style, good, warm and well made coat, in black, navy or red, ex ceptional value; ages 2 to 7 years $5.00 Mr, Brandeis Makes Rate Expert Admit Figures Are Guesses WABHINCITON, Oct. .Luts t. Brandela, counsel for the Interstate Com meroe -com mission, attacked the figures ef railroad statisticians, on-which Hie eaat ern railroads are asking increases in freight . rates because of the European war, when the hearing on the rate case waa resumed today, and demanded an op portunity to cross-examine the roan who prepared them. "These estimates," aald Mr .Brandeis, "appear absolutely out of line With what might have been expected to he the fact." He demanded that figures pn which the estimates were foundd be produced. The railroad men have been presenting tablea, io snow aenreases in earnings and Injury to credit ab:guse. of the financial exigency from the European conflict. "emuel Kea. president of the Pennsyl vania, was the first witness, but In view of the attack of Mr. Brands' h,ls testi mony was deferred briefly while Kobert C Wrlgbt of. the road's traffic depart- Infanta' Kivejlter Out- ChlWren's CoaU of Bonnet n draped ef- ftn. wool, hand ZJbellne, fancy side 'ecta, . of eorduroytt, knitted, consisting of fagtanlug with wide vivetg and veloura-- - sweater, leggl. low belt, lined and . KA A An cap and mittens, in interlined, in. Sawn 3.60 "d S5.00 , t coperjhageB, Diue or goi a en nor, net. In Xurin&ii. Llue. irrev or tan: die style, of silk, ages C mo. to C yrs. $4 brown; ages z to 7 vim ' et srrk qhlltlrWe flannel- m or velTet eiiidrea'e ats In tail, rtte Gowns, colored S1.05. . S2.25 . ?1 .".ctjL. Cr" or'UhHe 50 to Si S2.05. . . Z ;tUT OMAHA'S FA8TKSX tilUJW'JXO STOKE. lSta,18 20 FARISAM BTREET. ment described the method of reachlns the estlmatea prfsented. lie testified un der examination tUat they "were rough and not tovnded ' on' comptroller's fig ures." Ho insisted, however, that the losses described were large. "I have been told , that it would -take 60t men ninety, days .tq give them accur ately," ssjldi .ha. sir. Praodeis, put 'fright through a strenuous examination .'aa to how each estimate had been reached, and forced the w'ltnesa to.. a4inlt . that some of the conclusions were ."pure' etueasworK," Bee Want Ada Are the Best Buslneaa Boasters. ' V L..- l ri r. 1 i " t UBIES' NEW V I FALL KATJ gei r ouuoN y$ ' I un --"" y write for our .vj4 , jn - i """ I tr rdlt Vltl 4 n't KiU and - fciu' uoV , p V Shoes or Credit. credit ewy. f 111 i- i D tio 3-a V Y elessS. Ht CbafgB 1 ChHdron's Lri For Attentions r clothing . , ' ... . A J .... Ooldon - II MiLToir.RooERB II 1417 i f Eay O) ' r:JJ I DOUGLAS I -1 I S , , . MMMsWsbs .' mm ww&y' with Because of his square deal methods of doing business. There has never been a store known that treats tts customer, with more fairness than does the store of BEDDEO. Honest Jr liberal credit is trivwi to all hnriMt working people. That's v? hyBEDDEO has the town captivated. You can buy all the clothes you .hp ed pay & little down and $1.00 a week. r3 LA K PAYS THE BILL Ladies' Coats and Suits A large UKk ot tlieee beauti ful garments to chuoee frwei, and many of them ere from the moat reliable wiahere la the country. Why par rash irhra yoa ran net them on my nuij 91. OO -a week lernis? They are priced up ifrom 812.50 r.lon's Suits and Overcoats See my new men's and ftoTi deyrtseu oa the second floor. It le sure to have a suit or overeoet to suit jour every taste. We are eole agent far wie famous ferfectlosi Suite and. Overcoats for men who want the beat at fartoryto- iney are priced up from 812.50 KING OF CREDIT CLOTHIERS