t THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY,1' OCTOBER 1$, 1918. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUKDAY FOUNDED BT EDWARD BOSIWATKR VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR TBS BEE PUBLISHING COM PAKY. PROPRIETOR MEMBERS OF THk. ASSOCIATED PRESS To amwuted t'ma. 4 vlildi The Ure II a oituilw. m rclilslrl AiiiUrd to U turn tur HiWiritlon u ail orw dll't'lics crejitxl to It 01 not othtrwlM -rcditeil Id thu iwr. mJ tlw Inctl new itifettihad hernn. all ntit ol bbWIciUob of our reil d.(itcl trt a'K rcwntil. v OFFICES! i:inio-ripii lin liuiutln. o!li Tha Bc BmidUn. , w Tort-'JIti lflJ At. kiUi Oud-:'.1S N St. TuniXn Hi (UBIMtv. Vancll Hlufft-lf N. Main 8t tVaihiniUi-l.'ili a) BL Iducoln-Ullia Uulldtun- T AUGUST CIRCULATION Daily 67,135 Sunday 59,036 Awf dti-nntn i" "" "ilwrlbfd end wom lo J i-aUM William. Clrotifation Miami, " SuhacrUwnj itavinj the city abouM hava Tha Bh mailael U tin. Addrat caancett a often aa raquaatad THE BEE'S SERVICE FLAG i r -Mtl;-i;i:'l;i)i',il;!lfetlHliil!'iii;illlllllHllllinl "L Last call (or Liberty bonds! Get inl s i - . If the ruin, not the Hun, that is checking ! " out boys. The l;aiser appears to understand what is expected of him. Looks like Hindcnburg might yet lie. the l goat a well as the hero of junkerdoni. I' -'Just why is .the governor holding back the j ' report of the Americanization committee? The road to Council Bluffs has lost its last attractions, Iojia having closed the theater, too. v J Omaha is well over the top on the Liberty loan, but might as well go ahead and make it a good one. t The Gennaus are being driven toward Am sterdam and Rotterdam. Anything to get away from kaiser-dom and kaiser-dam. U ' 4".", ' '" . ' How will Emperor Karl induce his rebellious subjects-to i remain mider his. gentle control? Hi oil'tlook is as dark as Wilhelm's. S i ' ,- ' But would luck have come as fast had the president stopped his lift 'of peace terms with ' thirteenthly" instead f "fourteenthly?" . ' How dare McKclvie consult with anybody 'regarding the campaign unless he have permis sion from the. Hitchcock-Gooch-Mullen machine? Why should not the "home guard" turn out to '.greet the"war governor?" What good is there in being commander-in-chief if no one Unvtows to you? I hat ancient story about the man who caught ie bear by the tail and was afraid either to liang: on or let go, might contain a moral for t"ie kaiser right now. 1 Head the roorbacks if you will, but do not fWget that the last order issued by the traitor-iis,Gcnnau-Aniericaii alliance in Nebraska was to vote and get votes for Hitchcock. " lie Chicago doctor who ascribes the pres ence of "flu" to a shortage of sugar is some parasangs behind the Omaha man who lays the nsslHence at the door of prohibition. "Flu" is being chased with sucli zeal that we may expect some smart doctor to land on a panacea,' hut do not take any unnecessary fiances"1 while raiting for the discovery.' ; ' Little Luxemberg also calls Uncle Sam's at tention to the fact that its territory is occupied : against the will of its people. This has hot been , forgotten and will not be overlooked in the set tlemeut. v- Albert of . Belgium is realizing now the re '. ward of steadfastness. . He is re-entering his country a free man and not a vassal of the kaiser... The Belgians paid a high price for their liberty, but will find the reward worth all it cost. ' , - Don't overlook the fact while we are fighting to free the world from the shackles of autoc racy, only by adopting the home rule charter v submitted for ratification in the coming election .-. can -we free Omaha from the shackles of eternal ... bondage to a legislature at Lincoln, s- . a." ': Wonder, where those votes came from that were recorded in the primary against the con- t rftuti4nal amendment to stop voting in Ne--'braska'by subjects of the kaiser? Will those votes be repeated in the election? It behooves .. those who believe in full-citizenship franchise ' to be on their guard. Money Not Wanted X Some $500 daily is being received from those entitled to it, but who are refusing their just due from the people, who would wish them to take and keep it. No payment bv the govern ment is less grudged than the $200,000,000 an 'tiual allotment - to cependents from the pay ments due men in all the services who .-.re defending democracy over there whi'e 'ie ' :rty loan lags over here. In one day this week 31 relatives sent back to the War Risk Insur ance Bureau the checks coming to them in due course. One mother wrote that when the gov ernment is asking for billions it is no time for her to be taking money from the government. "I am' glad enough to give my boy. I am able to work, and do not think I ought to take it." There are those who ought to blush when they read a letter ke 'that. There are none who ought not to be thankful that the nation has so many such mothers and sons. Nevertheless', the fine old . mother able to work is wrong.' The money is fairly earned, and fretly paid, .with thanks for value received. She cannot know what may he ahead for hei or; her ton. Both may come to need, and the nation never can, while it numbers those of her character and his. The best use of the allotments can b put to, next to sustaining the health and strength of those to whom they are paid, is the purchase of thrift stamps, or savings certifi cates, or Liberty bonds." The certificates help the country as much as the bonds, and return a larger yield on the investment. Such patri otic relatives as this old mother can use their money in that way with clear consciences, and with the approval of those who are doing less for their country than the;'. New York Times. .O.V.. . ' n -, . ' , , -' - . ... -v . OUT OF THE DEPTHS. Word comes of the delirious joy of the peo ple of Lille when the Allies entered that city. Similar accounts have come concerning the lib eration of other communities lrom the yoke of the invader. It must be true of Ostend, Bruges and Zeebrugge, and generally of that region which is now freed from the grip of the Blonde Beast and restored to liberty. Americans can only very faintly conceive ot the situation of these people, who for the last four years have been under the most cruel military rule ever known. Nothing that we can imagine exceeds the hardship and the terror of life where every thing depends on the. whim or the mood of the military commander, whose word is final law. The full tale of outrage and brutality may never be made up; enough is known to justify the belief that nothing has been spared these vic tims. Americans may always have pride in their share of Belgium's story. To our generosity is due the, fact that the occupied territory in that land did not repeat the story of starvation that came from ruined Poland. From the first weeks of the war the Commission for Belgian Relief has depended almost exclusively n American contributions. Food and clothing have been furnished from this country, and now we know what hitherto has only been suspected, that frequently the Germans turned this ma terial to their own uses. Finally, American soldiers in the field have aided in changing the situation, and before the strengthened armies of democracy the hordes of the tyrant are fleeing. These occupied cities come up from the depths of subjugation because we have been true to our ideals, because we have made great sacrifices for our beliefs. We can rejoice with the citizens of Lille and the other towns, but we cannot rest until the world is made safe against the possible repetition of their experience. Has Germany Forgotten? s Machine Gun to Make Peace. Colonel Roosevelt is justified in his assertion that the machine gun, and not the typewriter, is the implement with which to make peace. Military experts see no evidence of German col lapse. Retirement from occupied territory has been conducted on a scale that implies main tenance of discipline by the Germans, and a, de termination to resist to the end. Nothing in this will detract from the brilliance or persist ence, of the attack made in pursuance of the great campaign. The Allies are gaining be cause of the skill of direction that has charac terized their operations, and not because the German will to resist has broken down. Mili taristic autocracy is not ready to make the full concession demanded of it, nor is it likely that the terms laid down by the president will be met as long as the Central powers can maintain in the field a force capable of such resistance as reasonably may be expected from the Ger man army on the west front. Until the mili tary situation has advanced much farther, talk of politicians, eagerly seeking to throw up a screen of words, should be discounted. Hitch Up Both Horses. A farmer who set out to do a big day's work in the field, leaving one of his horses in the barn, depending on the other to drag a load hat called for the full strength of both, would be in exactly theTfix the democrats hope to keep the country. ' Nationally we face a situation that calls for the closest of unity in thought and action, the employment of every force at the command of our people, but the democratic leaders fail to see the problem from any angle but their own. In shouting that the only way to aid the presi dent is to vote the democratic ticket they are emphasizing their ridiculous claim that the war is a party issue, that it has been and will be car ried on by democrats and that the only way to succeed is to continue that organization in con trol. Hie truth is precisely 'opposite. The war is a two-party job, and the repub licans have recognized this from the very begin ning, backing up the president and giving him support when his own party had failed him. Now, as never before, the country needs the constructive ability of the republicans, not only for the prosecution of the war to a victory for freedom and liberty, but for the solution of the tremendous problems that will come with peace. A vote for a republican congress is not a vote to interfere with the wise conduct of the war, but to insure that the president will not be hampered in his plans, and that the country will not suffer because of incompetence when the war is over. Hitch both horses to the load and it will move faster. . . Samuel Abbott in Philadelphia Ledger. . Pijil Sheridan was with the Prussian army in (1870 as military representative of the United States. As the French surrendered at Metz he watched the proceedings from his saddle at the side of Prince Charles. If any man then living was qualified to pass judgment on the fighting quality of the victorious German army it was that same fiery Phil, who but five years before had led thousands of union saoers in their vic torious sweep around Richmond. It is on rec ord that Sheridan turned to Prince Charles and said: "Give me two divisions of the Sixth corps (Sedgwick's) of the Army of the Potomac and 1 could cut my way out through your Prus sian army." ' Has Germany forgotten? Certain recent events precipitated by American boys in khaki on the French front should cause the German general staff to turn to pages of its war histories and refresh his memory as to the fighting stuff that was in our fathers of the Blue and the Gray. For the backbone of our army today is the col lective spine of the boys who are lineal descend ants of an infantry that rinked among the very best that ever njarched ai d fought on this globe. That is a pretty tall statement, and we will but tress it with facts. Here are the percentages of the casualties of the victors in six of the world's severest battles fought on European soil: Zorndorf, 1758 Prussians and Austrians, 37 per cent. Eylau,. 1807 French and Russians, 28 per cent. Berodino, 1812 French and Russians, 24 per cent. Waterloo, 1815 Allies and French, 20 per cent. Vioville, 1870 Prussians and French cent. Plevna, 1877 Russians and Turks, cent. I TODAY j Right in the Spotlight. Vice Admiral Sir Alexander Ludovic Duff, who is now in Am erica as a member of the British war mission headed by Sir Eric Geddes, has had a long and distin guished naval career, winning hon ors in active fighting and filling numerous responsible executive positions. He was born in Scot land in 1861 and entered the navy at the age of 20. From 1911 to 1914 he was director of the mobilization division of the Admiralty War Staff, and from 1914 to 1917 he was rear admiral of the fourth battle squad ron, during which time he took part in the battle of Jutland, being men tioned in dispatches and receiving a C. B. for his services. During the past year Admiral Duff has served as assistant chief of the British naval staff. i 1 Help to Ui Belgians. Omaha, Oct. 17. To the Editor of The Uee: I wish to hank you for the assistance you rendered to tW Iced Crosn in the recent drive for Uelqlun refugee garments. These services were of great as sistance to me and to the OniuU.i chanter, and will be kindly remem bered. W. S. JAUDINli Chairman Committee n UWgian Refugee Garments, Omaha Chap ter Ht?d Cross. 22 per 8 per Since Eylau no single battle in history has equaled in percentage of losses the American casualties of Chickamauga. We give the per centages of losses of the victors in three great civil war battles: Antietam, 23 per cent; Gettysburg, 20 per cent, and Chickamauga, 27 per cent. One should note as a side light, an important one, that the typical European struggle of" major importance usually ended in the complete rout of the vanquished army. The flight of Napol eon's army from Waterloo is the classic exam ple. In our civil war, after Bull Run, there was virtually no retreat of a beaten force in confu sion. Lee was ready, almost willing, to invite a union attack after Gettysburg, either on July 4 or 5, 1863. Time and time again a defeated federal confederate army stood in its tracks One Year Ago Today in the War. Germans made another air raid on London, killing 34 persons. Announcement that the Russian government would move from Pet rograd to Moscow. Food Administrator at Washing ton said that German food ration at date was about one-half of normal need. In Omaha 30 Years Ago Today. Carl Pollitz. a leading banker of Frankfort-on-the-Main, is in the city, the guest of P. L. Underwood of the waterworks company. The Omaha Democratic club held a meeting near the corner of Capi tol avenue and Fifteenth street, which was largely attended. Judge J. M. Woolworth addressed the au- Almut Debaters. Auburn, Neb.. Oct. 17. To the Editor of The Bee: Reading some of the controversies between states men, politicians and street har anguers calls to mind an incident of more tha.n 50 years ago. I was an attendant at a debating socioty and my mother asked me to take my lit tle sister fiat she migrt learn what a debiting society was li'.;?. as she was unable to answer all her ques tions. I complied with tha request, and the next mornh.g mother asked sister how she liked the debate and was answered, "Thy didn't debate; they just quarreled: just what one side said was so the other side said not so, and then they said the other fellows were liars and talk like that." And then she eaid they acted just as if they didn't have any sense. It is not thusly with the noisy politi cians of today, but they are a little , that way. C. N. dience on the tariff, dealing particu larly on the wool ouestion. Tudce ready for more punishment, sullen and awfully i Wakeley J. E. Rilev and J T.' said that the one mental attribute of the Armv of the Potomac that aroused the admiration of the Army of the Northern Virginia was its steadfast courage under defeat, its willingness to try and try again to storm impregnable in trenchments, to fight to the last bayonet thrust, although for months it did not know what to expect from its leader or who that leader would be on the morrow. The men of the Blue and the Gray were "shock troops." We see with us today a few white-haired remnants of those wonderful boys of 1861-65, and we forget that' 1,151,438 enlist ments in the union army were mere striplings 18 years old. But what terrific fighters those boys became in the red ordeal of war! An histor ian of the battle of the wilderness tells us that the average age of the thousands of soldiers that lay dead and dying Blue and Gray side by side during that mournful night in !64 was under 20 years. They were "shock troops," for they knew but one way to fight, and that was at close quarters, after the roar of musketry, with bay onets and clubbed rifles. An Englishman, Capt. Cecil Battine, Fifteenth King's Hussars, said a few years ago, "The Americans still hold the world's record for hard fighting." Changing the German Constitution. One of the interesting sidelights on recent developments in the war comes from Copenha gen, in form of an announcement of changes in the constitution of the German Confederation. First of these carries no change of real impor tance. It adds the Bundesrat or state council and the Reichstag to the emperor in the matter of declaring war, save in cases where the empire has been attacked. This is practically the pro vision under which the present war was de clared, the principal change being to add the Reichstag to the other two powerssof the em pire. More important is the alteration of the treaty-making power, which hitherto has been vested in the emperor alone. Now the peace' treaty must be acceptable to the Bundesrat and Reichstag also. This palpable attempt to popu larize the present constitution of the empire can be considered only as a belated move to gain support of whatever element exists in Ger many demanding a more responsive and respon sible government. The kaiser must give his; assent to the amendments before they become effective, but that they have the endorsement of the state council, which is the real legislative body of Germany, is assurance that imperial consent to their promulgation will be forth coming. Other amendments of a like character, which really make no material difference in the form of the empire, may be expected, that finally the kaiser and his party can approach the embattled democracies with a pretense that autocracy has been disarmed of its power to make war, and, therefore, has ceased to be a menace? Such transparent subterfuges may satisfy the German mind, but will scarcely be found to measwe up to what President Wilson had in view when he declared that autocracy must be destroyed, '" ..- . ' ' -. - ' ' , - ... -. Has Germany forgotten? We invite it to turn to the records of losses in battle suffered by federal and confederate regiments: The First Minnesota lost 82 per cent of its men on the second day at Gettysburg in 15 minutes. And, kaiser, take notice, this loss rep resents killed and wounded. There was no man "missing." The Twentieth Massachusetts, at Fredericks burg, lost 68.4 per cent in one day, and again there was no report "missing." The First Maine heavy artillery at Peters burg lost over 70 per cent of its men in seven minutes of fighting. The 141st Pennsylvania, at Gettysburg, lost 76 per cent of its roster of officers and men. N'ow for the boys in gray. All four of the percentages that follow represent actual losses in killed and wounded, with not a man "miss mg : , First Texas. Antietam, 82.3 per cent. Tenty-first Georgia, Manassas, 76 per cent. Twenty-sixth North Carolina, Gettysburg. 7J.7 per cent. Sixth Mississippi, Shiloh, 70.5 per cent To giye one an idea of the savage intensity of the fighting durinjr the closine vear of the civil war it is recorded that Lee, with 55,000 men, disposed of 61,000 of the Army of the Po tomac before he was crushed into submission. Let us go back to July, 1863, and imagine a great northern daily appearing with the casu alty lists of Mead's army alone, with no mention of Lee's sacrifice at Gettysburg. It would re quire all the columns of the Ledger to give the union ,namesx Has Germany forgotten that story of heroism? And those furious weeks in May and June. 1864. when for days the two arm ies were locked in bitter battle near Richmond, days that shape themselves in the words, "The Wilderness," "Spottssylvania," "Cold Harbor," when shadowed in the names of the boys in blue and in gray that went down never to rise again, should make the shiver of fear chill the marrow of the most Prussian of all the Prus sians. , For America repeats itself under the Stars and Stripes. Germany may have forgotten the years of 1861-65. But the sons of the men who shook hands at Appomattox, will write a chapter in the history of the world that future Prussians will read with awe. Crumbling Walls of Bigotry Palestinian war dispatches a -few days ago intimated possible military co-operation between Druses and British forces of General Allenby. The significance and importance of the hint may well have escaped general attention, since the world at large knows little of the Druses. The Druses and Maronites inhabit a district in Syria which includes the fastnesses of Mt. Lebanon. The Druses proper are probably mainly of Arab origin, about 90,000 in number, and profess a religion mingling Christianity and Islam with tribal faiths and traditions of great antiquity. They are exclusive, intolerant, fierce and fatal istic, and for ages have maintained their social entity with the utmost jealousy. Never so far as known have these peculiar people conde rcended to co-operate in any way with any other people. They have been bloody persecutors of Iheir neighbors, the Maronite Christians, and in f860 the European powers intervened, and in 1861 imposed on the district a nominally Chris tian governor, under Turkish overlordship. The Druses are as opposed to orthodox Islam as to orthodox Christianity. If they have broken down their exclusive ness sufficiently to co-operate with the British liberators of the Holy Land it may not be un reasonable to expect future results of impor tance to the scholarship of the world. For in the fastnesses' of Lebanon are believed to be concealed and guarded by initiate Druses val uable manuscripts of early Christian and Mos lem times. Once their exclusiveness crumbles .nway they may consent to yield these to the in flection of experts' tV the enrichment of h learning of the world.'-New. York World. . ; Moriarity also contributed to the oratory ot the evening. The meeting of the "Veterans of 1840" held at the headquarters of the republican league on Fourteenth and Harney streets was largely at tended and the assemblage was enthusiastic. Fred Richter and wife of Chicago are the guests of the latter's brother, Ed. Rothery of this city. The Day We Celebrate. Dr. William A. Hostetter, prac ticing physician, born 1866. William H. Johnston, United States Army, born in Ohio. 57 years ago, Major General Francis J. Kernan, U. S. A. born at Jacksonville, rla,. 39 years ago. Rev. Sir George A. Smith, vice chancellor and principal of Aber deen university, who recently visit ed America, born in Calcutta, 62 years ago. Edward Lippincott Tilton, archi tect and archaeologist, born in New i ork City. 57 years ago Dr. John H. Finley, commission er of education of the state of New York, born at Grand Ridge, 111., 55 years ago. This Day in History. 1813 Battle of Leipsic ended in the defeat of Napoleon by the allies. 1847 The cornerstone of a mon ument to General Washington was laid in New York City. 1864 General Sheridan saved the day for the union forces at Cedar Creek. 1869 Dr. Charles W. Eliot was inaugurated president of Harvard university. 1870 Steamship Cambria, from New York to Glasgow, wrecked off the coast of Derry, with a loss of 170 lives. 1901 M. Santos Dumont made a successful trip in a navigable bal loon around the Eiffel tower in Paris. 1914 The armies of the Allies ad vanced to Roulers, Belgium. 1915 Anglo-French army ad vanced into Serbia by forced marches. 1916 Cunard Line steamship Al aunia sunk by mine in English channel. Timely Jottings and Reminders. Fifteen hundred and forty-first day of the great war. Closing day of the campaign for the fourth United States Liberty loan. Patriotic societies of Maryland today will celebrate "Peggy Stew art day," commemorating the burn ing of the brig Peggy Stewart in 1774, as a protest against the tea tax. Republicans and democrats of Massachusettes are to hold their ad journed state platform conventions today, the republicans meeting in Boston, and the democrats in Worcester. Storyette of the Day. H. G. Wells tells a story which reveals the Bulgars in an unflatter ii.,. light. An angel so the story goes ap peared before a Bulgar and said: "What does your heart most de sire fame, wealth, love? Think long before you answer, for I am here to grant you any wish you mav make." The Bulgar thought hard. Some minutes passed. Then the angel spoke again. "By the way," he said, "there's on.'tMng I forgot to tell you. What ever I grant you, I srrant the double thereof to your neighbor the Rou manian, on the other side of the river." The Bulgar needed to do no more thinking. "Pluck out one of my eyes," he said. - Blouse Specials Saturday at The Store "Famous for Blouses" Fine quality Georgette Crepe, Crepe de Chine and beautiful Silk stripe blouses special at $5.95 Julius Orkia, 1508-10 Douglas. SIDELIGHTS ON THE WAR For the four yetrs of the -ir our foreign trade reached over $29,000, 000,000. as against fl 6.000,000,000 in the immediately preceding four years, our imports jumped from $6,r!87.000,000 to $9,5.r)8,000,000, and our exports from $9,000,000,000 to $19,674,000,000. United States Judge Clayton of Alabama, when prisoners were ar raigned before him. charged with publishing a bolshevikl circular, warned them that free speech does not protect disloyulty and that his court would discountenance the bol shevikt "half-baked idea of govern ment composed of socialism and nihilism.' Major General J. Franklin Hell protested against, tho conduct of a New Yor,k Judge in sentencing a con vict to enter the army. He says "the national army is composed of the best of the nation and is not a refuge for criminals." A German U-boat sailor interned in the United States received a letter from his wife saying that she was praying her husband would not be eaten up by Indians or hanged by cowboys with lasso ropes. She said: "If they should wish to scalp you. you should first make appeal to ths i-'n- of America, It he alo an'Ih- dian?" 2-"fc'','''u',',v, The public esteem in wheih we are held is a deserved testimonial of the conscientious ,manner in which we render public service. We are experienced and painstak ing and possess an equipment that makes it possible for us to furnish a funeral of marked distinction. N. P. SWANSON Funeral Parlor. (EtablUhed 1888.) 17 tii and Cuming St. Doug. 1060. -WHY-: NOT OILS I UBBK VtudsMs it Goodlbaak To" Hospe Says This It a Ladies' Shopping1 Bag Tooled Cordova Leather Photo Holders, Bill Books, Book Ends, Cigar and Cigarette Cases, Hand Bags, Memo Books, Pocketbooks, and many other high class essential Cordova Leather products are works of art in leather. They cost more, but wear longer. Right now you should select your Christmas Buy in this line. Stock is quickly broken. Everything in JTrt wctlusic 1513 Douglas St. Chicago Opera Co., Nov. 1-2. IFIf'fllP " J1U- J-P Palace Clothing Co. Omaha,s Big Clothing Store. 14th at Douglas Saturday at 8:30 We Start the Biggest Suit and Overcoat Event of the Year 2,500 Wonderful AU-Wool Suits and Overcoats for Men and Young Men, picked up by our New York buyer at ridiculous low prices, go on sale Sat urday for only . a. rn Furnishings for Men Look Big Values in Men's Derby Ribbed Shirts and Drawers Have soft nap in side, wonderful wearing qual ity, colors white, gray or cream; worth rt0 $1.25, at yoC $150 Wool Union Suits for Men Special value; don't overlook this opportunity to get a real bargain in gray mixed wool; Union qq Suits, all sizes, at. . yCnuO Men's Gray or Khaki Flannel Shirts Collar attachsd. excep tional value; sizes -t aq UI2 to IS, at 31.;70 Men's Sweaters "With shawl collar, gray, maroon or navy blue; good, heavy, durable material; specially g m Mrs priced at - eptotO Men's Soft Hats All the pop ular shapes and the newest up-to-date colors; values worth up to $4.00, for Satur- day only $&.DJ Hen's Soft or Stiff Cuff Shlrts-j-Made of finest fast colored percale or corded madras, beautiful new SKK. $1.48 Men's Shirts With soft or stiff cuff, neckband style a perfect fit Hn? shirt, made of fine washable percale, worth 11.50. Our qq bargain for saturaay 70V See These Wonderful Suits and Overcoats in Our Windows These are truly Remarkable Clothes, made by one of the most reliable clothing manufac turers in New York City. Our buyer wired that he just simply couldn't pass up this wonderful opportunity r for us to make a killing, and shipped the 'entire lot by express. They arrived yester day, and we decided to place them on sale at once. We can honestly say that these Suits and Over coats at Saturday's remarkable price of $20.00 give the men of Omaha the most incomparable opportunity for Big Savings that we have ever known. A Magnificent Display of Styles and Patterns Classy English and form-fitting effects, new mili tary waist seam and five-panel back styles, and dignified, conservative models. The fabrics are of very fine grade and guaranteed strictly pure wool. A collection unlimited values simply MARVEL OUS! Sizes 34 to, 44. Don't miss this Big Sales Event if yon need a good Suit or Overcoat. Such garments at this price may never be offered again. Remember Sale Starts at 8:30 A. M. Sharp Be Here Early Saturday i m n Boys' Suits at Bargain Prices Exceptional good wearing Suits, made in the newest styles for boys, guaranteed to give extra good wear;1 sizes 6 to 18, Saturday un derpriced at $5.00 These Suits are remarkably well made and are of the very best all-wool fabrics, in pretty shades and patterns, and have an extra pair of trousers; made for active wear; epccial Tor "aturday. ........ $7.98 p Boys' New Winte. side band. Can b worn all Wintei f .i Extra value 50c VJJUM f l ex. w-mS raa r t CaVOTtflNO COMTAAT COR,.i4a frDOUOLAi 5 Joys' Shoes Lace or button. Solid leather. Gruaranteed to vvear- $1.98