THE BEE: OMAHaI' THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1919. iVor.iAriiiADr.eL AU HOUR BEFORE SHOT, SAYS JURY Coroner's Inquest Develops Tfcw Evidence Dead Girl ' May Be From Col fax, la. , (Cewiinaeel Trrai face Om.) 1 shoes that were missing from the fprl's body or through the surrender of thai murderer. Numerous queries have come to tJi chief of detectives from other cities, giving further possible clues to the identity of the murdered girf. Detectives Trohr, Bolar and Trapp ire still working on the case. Coroner Jury Finding, j . "Said miknown person came to her death from a 38-caliber bullet fired by unknown parties at a place to this jury; unknown; but body was found in a ravine in Washington county at a point about 14 miles north of Omaha on November 20, 1919." This was the verdict 7 the coro ner' jury, which conducted an in fluest yesterday afternoon over the body of the unidentified woman found last Thursday in the gully off tlie Kidge road near Calhoun. , The same verdict was returned by a coroner's jury severaljdays ago in Washington county. Miss Grace Ballard, attorney for Washington County, assisted W. W. Slabaugh. assistant attorney for Douglas county, in examining the witnesses. To Go Into Vault. . Following the inquest it was an nounced the body would be placed in vault at 4 this afternoon in Pros pect Hill cemetery. : ' Guy P. Dorsey, deputy county sur veyor, was the first witness intro duced. He was Questioned regard ing the county lines following ex pressions of doubt recently as to whether the body was found in Washington or Douglas county. Mr. f)orscy declared he had run the boundary line lately and found that the bodv was discovered in Wash ington county one mile from the southern boundary of that county. Report of Autopsy, Dr.' Samuel McCleneghan, county physician, was the next witness called. He testified the cause of death was a bullet entering just be low the left ear and emerging two Inches back of the right ear. There Were powder burns at the entrance Of the bullet, he said, indicating the weapon was held close to the wom an's head when it was fired. Witness declared that there was no alcohol in the stomach, and that the woman bad eaten a meal of chicken and vegetables less than an hour befcre she was killed. The! county physician asserted his belief I that some of the bruises ana con fusions on the head and body had been inflicted before death. Others iray have been caused by the fall when the body was turned over tne embankment into the ravine, he said. Dr. E. S. Gleason of Fort Cal houn also testified as to the nature of the wound which resulted in death,' Tell of Finding-Body. A. J. Peterson, a farmer living near Fort Calhoun, told of how he discovered the body about 9 o'clock last Thursday morning. He was driving along the Ridge road, he said, when he looked over the embank ment and his eyes fell on the pros trate form of the dead woman in the pull v. 1 f , William Sievers. Fort Calhoun undertaker; L. N. Green, Washing ton county farmer, and Sheriff Mor ris Mehrens of Washington county, the first persons to arrive on the scene following the discovery of the body by Mr. Peterson, also testified ts to the condition of the body and the ground near where it was found. All indications, they declared, (ointed to the fact that the body was urled from the top of the 20-foot embankment, as there were no toot prints i the soft earth, except those made by Mr. Peterson, who climbed down about 10 feet from the road- : aiAa in Ardor trt nMain a hotter view ' of the body, before he notified per sons living in the neighborhood and before word was sent to the county authorities. The jury was made up of Philip 1 iifui r--....t, lniirt r v;. isrd and Al Keenan. , Youth's Damage Suit , Against Parents of - v Girl Taken From furv District Judge Leslie yesterday took from a jury in his court the $15,000 damage suit brought by 21- year-oia wiinam cratn against Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Raber and decided - it in favor of-the Rabers. y xoung trath was permanently ir-2..-. j : .:. i . i - ,L. tj.l.. . i L - t t - , mirt nome inc mgiii oi January i, iyiy home and found him with their iy y ear-old daughter, Emily. Erath was found by police in the street with no clothing except his shoes acd underwear, without his trousers, hat, coat'or vest. He said 'Mr. Raber had torn these off of him when he found him with Emily. 'Erath also alleged that after Mr. Raber tore his clothes off Mrs. Raber tripped him and he fell down the stairs and broke his leg in two places. He will limp the rest of his life, his doctors testified. Liquor Has No Property Rights, So Men Are Freed Denver? Nov. 22. Declining to accept the judge's ruling that whis ky hat property rights and can be stolen, a jury in the west side crim inal 1 court - freed two prisoners charged withv stealing a quantity of boore. - The attorney for the defendants declared that, with prohibition ef fective throughout the nation, whis- ky had no property rights in the statutes of the country and, there fore, could not be "stolen." The jury apparently was of the same opinion. A Tick! is The JUginntaf 'fa throat eoM or r-Mnful cough. HATES HEALING HONEY Slope the Tickle by Bcaling the Threat, age pu UUK Grifield Wage Jate Is Refused by Miners (Continued From Pag Ox.), repudiate the act of its authorized agent or abide by it?" "There is no gentleman in the cabinet I respect more than Secre Ury Wilson," Dr. Garfield replied. "His powers are dearly defined. Among other things his dirties are to effect conciliation. But tinder the labor act the president was eni- Dowered to control orices and that duty was conferred npon the fuel ad- . . M r mraisirauon. x on cannot x prices without affecting wages and yon cannot change wages wuthout at reetiner nrices. "Both Secretary Wilson and 1 both frankly realize this difficulty, but I cannot allow it to stand in the war of dotna mv dutv. It is not ray understanding that Secretary Wilson made a dennite oner to enncr wie miners or ooerators. but . that he merely suggested a basis on which you might get together. ' Dr. Garfield said the cabinet ap oroved the basis of settlement as presented. Garfield Statement Dr. Garfield's statement to the ioint conference of miners and oper :.trtrs follow r ' On the 24th instant I announced that the public must not be asked to pay more than it is now paying for coal, unless it is necessary to do so in order to provide reasonable wages to the mine workers and a reasonable profit to the operators. Careful in vestication forces me to the conclu sion that in accordance with this and the other principles set forth on the 24tli instant, the public might not to De requirea xo pay any increase m coal prices at this time. "The prices fixed by the govern ment on coai were caicuiarea 10 in crease production for war purposes, Coal was basic and the increase in production was imperative. The ooerators are now in receipt of mar gins which were necessary to effect that increase of production, but which are larger than are required under present conditions. It was es timated that the production needed for 1918 was 600,000.000 tons. Ihe stimate for 1919 is 500.000,000. Increase by Deduction. "Applying the principles set forth in paragraph two of the statement of November 24, when the average in creases in wages since 1913 for the various classes of mine workers are deducted from the increase in - the cost of living since that time, we ar rive at the amount of additional in crease in wages justifiable at the present time. "I have ftken the figures of the bureau of libor statistics for both cost and hvin and for the weighted averatre of wage increases. Accord ing to these figures the cost of liv- - mrt o , A 1 i ing nas r:sen y.o per cent since iyio, and the amount necessary to bring the average wages of mine workers up to this point at the present time :s 14 per cent. Fears to Add Burdens. , "Readjustment heretofore made since 1913 were such as to give certain clases of mine workers an average increase in excess of the in crease in the cost of living and cer tain others nj average increase . be low the increase in the cost of liv ing. This formal adjustment was made in order to establish .or pre serve certain relative basis in the mining industry. ,. I do -not think this condition, however, ought to result in giving to mine workers as a whole, and in consequence im posing upon the public, a total aver age increase in excess of the total average increase in the cost of liv ing, because if this course be adopted the result would be that the total increased burden placed upon the mining industry will be far in ex cess of the increase in the cost of living. If this principle were ap plied in industries generally it is obvious that the resulting cost would be passed along to the gen eral public and the increased wages would increase in. a rapid spiral taking as a minimum the percentage of increase in the cost of living. In the long run, this would add many new and serious burdens to the cost of living of the entire public and would fall more injuriously upon the working classes than upon any others. Government Control. "It seems to me that the reason able way to deal with this situation is to give to the industry as a whole an average increase commensurate with the increase in the cost of liv ing and then let that amount of in creases be apportioned in accord ance with the wage bases that are acceptable to the employers and the employes. - , "Control of prices by the govern ment will be maintained for the present. 'The present negotiation stands by itself, but it is far from disposing of the fundamental controversy be tween operators and mine workers. That controversy is bound to be a continuing one as matters now stand. It involves living conditions and conditions in the mines, as well as wages and profits, and the gen eral relation between operators and mine workers. Therefore, to aid in applying the principles which have governed us and which should gov ern in reaching conclusions in the future it is urged that a permanent consulative body., with purely ad visory powers be set up, consisting of the secretary of interior as chair man and an equal number of repre sentatives of the operators and of the mine workers, chosen in such manner as they may each determine from time to time. Wants Definite Data. "In order that the data necessary for the consideration of this body may at all times be available it is urged that the congress make provi sion for collecting definite and trust worthy information concerning the coal and coke industry and for the tabulation of the same in quarterly Forbes-Robertson Traces i Lineage to David Garrick Actor Gives Discourse on Shakespeare to Audience a The Hotel Fontenelle Makes Him Mad to Be Asked the Question : "Was Hamlet Mad?" reports, showing: , "1. Fr Production, distribution and storage and stocks of coal and coke. 2. The cost of production and distribution of maintaining suitable stocks and any other data concern ing the industry deemed necessary. 3. The cost of living in the sev eral coal fields. "4. The selling prices and profits obtained by the operators, middle men and retail dealers. "5. Export requirements and the conditions limiting them. The settlement of the present controversy on the wage and price basfs above indicated must be con sidered in the light of the proposal to set ud this permanent consuita tive bodv. While it will not have powers ot decision, it win naraiy seem possible to a reasonable man that in the light of its conclusions Vmands for exorbitant profits or unreasonable wages can be success- lullv maintained or that conditions unfavorable to the American stand ard of living will be tolerated. Angeles Is Killed by Mexican firing pquad (Continued From Page One.) ficer. It entered behind the right ear of Angeles. A military surgeon arrived and performed the legal autopsy. Later the body was taken to the home of friend and buried from there. General Angeles spent the few hours between the time of being sentenced and the time of execution with friends and a priest. During most of the night they discussed philosophy, mathematics, politics and religion. The general appeared to have little concern in the fate awaiting him. . Dictates Letters Home. He slept the hour and a half be tween 3 and 4:30 o'clock. Arising, be dictated letters to Mrs. Angeles and hs sons, Albert and Manuel Calero. He wrote personal let ters and autographs for friends to delveredi after death, wheh he carried with him to his stand for execution. Angeles throughout the world was known as a military genius. He was the reputed friend of Americans and during his trial lauded this country and its citizens. He was the man who brought the French 75 milli meter gun to the perfection that gave it fame as the world's most efficient piece of artillery. This gun was one of the greatest factor against Germany in the world war. For his work tor trance, ne was made a chevalier of the trench legion of honor. Curse Carranza. San "Antonio, Tex., Nov. 26. Up on the receipt oi iniormanuon an nouncing the execution of Gen. Felipe Angeles at enmuanua A-uy this morning, Gen. Rodriguez Gon zales Garcia, a former provisonal president of Mexico, now living in San Antonio, wired resident car ranza 'as tonows: "Men like you who forget, due to passions, the valuaDie services ren dered Mexico bv the natriot. Gener al Angeles, deserve the curse of their people. ' ; A number ot similar messages . r , were sent by prominent Mexican refugees here. Wife of Executed Mexican General Not Told of Death New York. Nov. 26. Madame Felipe Angeles, wife of the Mexican revolutionary leader, is gravely ill at the home of friends here and has not been notified of his execution. Friends with whom she is stopping stated that she was in a very pre carious condition and they feared to give her the news at this time. Madame Angeles came here trom El Paso three months ago with her daughter, aged 22 years, and, three sons, the oldest oi wnom is tv. ince coming here she has nad no irect word from her husband, who had been wandering around in the wilderness of the interior of Mexico. Her illness is said to be due to . , . r nervous exhaustion resulting irom worrying over uenerai Angeies safety. r Building for the Future Here's the Oakford Way First and foremost, to so satisfy each customer that he shall always be able to say of his piano: "Lbought it of Oakford and it is giving me a dollar's worth of service for every dollar I paid for it" To never forget, even in the busiest hours and most trying ar gument, that courtesy is an absolutely essential requisite of a suc cessful store. To select pianos for our floors which we know from year of experience are the BEST IN QUALITY, and to pay for them" in cash, so that in SAVING FOR OURSELVES we will SAVE FOR THE CUSTOMER. .To mark each piano at a price which, QUALITY for QUAL ITY, we guarantee to be the lowest in the United States. , To give neither heed nor pay to the commission taker, that avaricious person who sells his influence to dealers and deceives his friend into believing he is helping them select their piano "just for friendship' sake." To require that the price marked on each piano shall be a "one price," in other words, to give discounts 10 none; iirst, oecause j UUa7 IIC9 alO BU lUOT'WB VVU1U JiVb ailViU lV, lU OCtUUUf ft WC UOv we insist that every stranger is as much entitled to the lowest prices as is every friend. To gather in our store the best pianos of the best makers, including Weber, Kurtzmann, Haddorff, Steck, Cable, Conover, Kingsbury, Clarendon, and also STEINWAY and other Duo Art Pianolas.' Call or writ The Music Hout You Can Trust OAKFORD 7""" MO&ic Co. 0maha Neb-- A discourse on Shakespeare by the incomparable Sir Johston Forbes Robertson was the treat offered by the Fine Arts Wednesday afternoon to an audience which comfortably filled the ball room of the Hotel Fontenelle.' Mrs. Louis Nash ore sented the speaker, referring to the spoken word as one of the fine arts. Before "engaging his hearers in the real movement of his theme, Forbes Robertson asked leave to present his credentials, which proved to be a father and mother who encouraged the early study of the great dram atist, presenting him in a play at the age of 14 and in legitimate acting at the age of 21 under Samuel Phelps, the famous tragedian. . Back to Garrick. He traced his histrionic pedigree back to David Garrick, saying, "I am a link between today and the classic past. I have been a long and ardent student of Shakespeare, and the fact that I was trained by the best actor of the time, make up my credentials for speaking to you on the chosen Eubject this afternoon." The speaker was seated during the preliminary remarks. "I sit down .because I want this part to be familiar," he ex plained. "There are 17 comedies in the first folio of Shakespeare. The Tempest, Measure for Measure and Winter's Tale are classed as comedies. These are in reality serious dramas, and tragis in character, though they end happily. In' our day we would call them romantic drama, of plays, which words seem to fit the char acter of the play better than the word comedy. One-Third in Prose; "Those who worshio at the shrine of Shakespeare are so carried away by the beauty of his verse that they are apt to forget what wonderful passages are in his prose. In all his plays there are 104,530 lines. Of these, 76,530 are in verse and 28,000 in prose considerably more than one-third in prose. Only four plays are without prose King John, Rich ard II, the third part of Henry VI and Lonolanus. Merry Wives of Windsor contains only 119 verse lines and Much Ado About Nothing is, to all intents and purposes, a prose play. . , In the opinion of Forbes-Robertson it is not true that prose is used by Shakespeare only when dealing with a familiar subject. "The thought is often exalting and really poetry, though written in prose. King .Lear, Lady Macbeth and Ophelia speak frequently in prose. "It is a significant fact," the au dience was told, "that Shakespeare ejected obviously to have his mad people or those affecting madness, speak in prose. . "We all have our idols in past his tory those of us who trudy or read ot the past I have two, Garibaldi and Abraham Lincoln. At this the audience gave warm applause. ,n explained Shake speare's treatment of Julius Caesar by a theory that Caesar was Shake speare s historic idol. "He mentioned Caesar 10 times as often as any other great person in the past," declared the speaker. "He reserved his glorious impassioned iambics for Mark Antony in his defense of Caesar, while other char acters in that scene were made to speak in prose. "Except for King Lear, Henry V and the french king in Henry V and six lines in Henry VIII, no king speaks in prose, nor any queen, ex cent Lady Macbeth when mad." Shakespeare was 40 years old in 1604 when Hamlet was written, and in the opinion of Forbes-Robertson Hamlet speaks more like a mati of 40 than one of 30 which the grave digger tells us he was. It was stated that there are 3,885 lines in Ham let. 2,779 of which are verse, leav ing nearly one-third of the play to prose. Characters, Seem Real. '"Was Hamlet mad?' We ask the question that way instead of saying, Did bhakespeare intend the character . of Hamlet to be mad?' The characters are so real to us that we think of them directly. Person ally, the question when it is put to me, makes me mad. Then followed a series of recitals of famous passages from the won derful tragedy, elucidated with all the delicacy and magnetism of per sonality of which forbes-Kobertson is capable and for which he is fa mous. "If Hamlet was mad," said this great exponent of Shakespeare, "then would I be mad, for I would be the most wonderful person of the 19th century." After each of Forbes-Robertson s many recitations of Shakespearean passages, hearty applause from the audience gave proof of full appre ciation of his exquisite interpreta tion of thought and surpassing mas tery of the fine art of the spoken word. Lloyd George Interested In Dry Law Reception In U. S. London, Nov. 26. Premier Lloyd George said today that he never had thought the introduction of prohibi tion in Great Britain possible,-even during the war, but that he was watching the American experiment sympathetically, with , a mind free from preconceived opinions. His reply to a temperance depu tation, to which he made this re mark, foreshadowed legislation be fore Christmas in connection with the control of liquor. STAGE NOTABLES BOOST FUND FOR ACTORS' BENEFIT r Sir Johnstone Forbes-Robertson and Richard Bennett . Speak at Dinner Of Elks. Sir Johnstone Forbes-Robertson, Richard Bennett and Julius Tannen spoke at noon yesterday at a lunch- con given at the Omaha Athletic club by the Elks' committee having in charge the actors fund benefit performances which will be held Friday afternoon, December 5, at the Boyd and Brandeis theaters. "Durinp th nprinH nf U actors did not have one benefit for themselves, and they were always willing and ready to give of their iime. jaicni ana even money to pro-1 mote the activities of the war," said Sir Johnstone. "I feel confident that this benefit, which will be held in all of the cities of th nnir,, December 5. will prove to be a reai success as it deserves to be. ' Joseph Barker, chai committee of Elks, announced that box tickets will be auctioned aMhe Live Stock exchancp Pr,rlo it a. m., and that Richard Bennett and .iuiius lannen will be present. E. , Buckingham will have charge of the general sale of tickets at tv, t Stock exchange and the packing houses. W. S. Strvker will nnnu tailers and H. M. Christie will call on the real estate men. G. F. West Will see the iohheri and ntVr. ...ill be assigned to districts. The drive win De started Friday. In his bnVf talk in tti. Mr. Bennett emphasized the thought that the actor, as a rule, does not measure his success in dollars and cents as other people do. "If evervhodv i wnuM as much of their profession as ac tors do. We WOllM all k nainr. e said. He referred to the Elks and the theatrical nrnfocxinn n( U greatest factors in the everyday life vi mc country. "One may obtain r1iVf ?n !,. theater from nearly anything at $2 20 nr " Mr P.nn.ft AA.A T f I ' UUkU. "The actor never loses his sense ! of arenerositv and he npver ficmrpc U i on a dollars-and-cents basis. He al ways takes his banjo with him, figur atively soeakinfir. Dnrino- th war th,- actors went, thev did things and tney gave, Mr. lannen said. folk, Mr. Bennett and Mr. Tannen appearing here this week and Forbes Robertson beine here to eive Shake- sperean readings. . For ffaraces or servire ititinn a PJsnlinp numn entirely nncratArl anr! controlled by electricity has been in vented. , Pershing Due to Visit Omaha After Christmas (Continued From Pa( One.) mated they would arrive at Portland, Ore., about January 17, and San Francisco around January 21. In spections in the eastern and north eastern departments have been post poned until the return from the coast , " It was emphasized today that conditions in Mexico had no influ ence on the framing of the schedule. General Pershing, tt was thought here, had purposely delayed visit ing the border posts in order that an erroneous interpretation could not be placed upon his trip there. General Pershing will reach Camp Taylor, December 14, and the ar ranged schedules beyond that point follows: v Aviation experimental plant, Day ton, O., Tuesday, December 16. Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, O., Wednesday, December 17. Dodge recuperator plant, Detroit, Mich., Thursday, December 18. Camp Custer, Battle Creek. Mich.. Oh It Friday. December 19, Headquarters central department, , Chicago, Saturday and Sunday, De-. cember 20 and 21. ! St. Louis, Monday, December 22. Laclede, Mo., Tuesday, Decem ber 23. : - - Lincoln, Neb., Wednesday, De ceniber 24. . ' ; Points to be visited after Christ mas include Camp. Grant, Rockford, 111.; Rock Island arsenal; Camp Dodge, Des Moines, la.; Omaha, Neb..; Fort Leavenworth Kansas Camp Funston, Fort Riley, Kansas; Denver, Colo.; Fort D. A. Russell, Cheyenne, Wyo.; Fort Douglas, Salt Lake City, Utah; Portland, Ore.; Camp Lewis, American Lake, Wash.; Mather Field. Sacramento, Cal. Headquarters western depart ment San Francisco; Arcadia and Marsh Fields, Los Angeles, Cal.; Camp Kearneyj, San Diego, Cal.; Douglas, Ariz.; Camp Boyd. El Paso, Tex.; Camp Travis, Camp Normoyle, Camp Stanley, Kelly Field, San Antonio, Tex. which is also headquarters southern depart ment; Ellington Field, Houston, Tex.; Fort Sill, Oklahoma; Camp Pike, Little Rock, Ark.; and return to Washington; ' ? , s 1 1 There's a smile here for you. , MmUnJjlll HMlrSaiMiiucrfi mm., THOMPSON-BELDEN & COMPANY Will Close Thursday the Twenty-Seventh in Observance of Thanksgiving Day Lloyd H. Mattson Has a host of friends sincere In all his dealings active In all that mean great er SERVICE to de- positors, and heart and soul for a BIG GER and BETTER Omaha. H la Promotion Manager of the CORN EXCHANGE. It's Worth Something to be greeted sincerely and it's a pleasure to know that, no matter what time of day, that greeting comes from every( one connected with the bank in which you do business. The CORN EXCHANGE! i3 just that, kind of a bank. You alwayB feel, while here, that little ' something which if you give It a thought means genuine welcome and co-pperatioa in your business matters. You need no card, nor do you have to feel that you are not properly t dressed to meet any of us. Come just as you are whether from the shop or stock yards and when you leave you'll say , The Corn Exchange Has an Interest in Ton 1503 Farnam Street Corn Exchange National Bank x . . iTmiiflli lit sju iMZammtmnSmmrJtrSSi iSMUIllMIHaiUiHIUIiaI m'UI rnma in fodftv see the difference. lf " Thanksgiving Dinner Main Restaurant , $2.50 the Plate -it. Hotel Fontenelle 12 m. to 9 p. m; v Music 12 to a o'clock and 6 to 8 Opening Scott Army Goods Stores NEW AND RECLAIMED ARMY GOODS AH Reclaimed Goodi with the exception of Jersey Gloree have been washid and thoroughly aterilized. Are absolutely germ free. PONCHOS Theae are rectangular aquarea of oiled elicker aooda with an opening which buttona in the middletfor a peraon'a head.. Siie 5x8 ft. Two of them make a aoldier a Pup Tent A-l condition, each. . . .I2.J0 KHAKI SERVICE JACKETS. . - KHAKI BREECHES (Knee laee). Good for huntera or motor eyclieta. r To be worn with putteea, laced boota or lefgine. All without holea or tears, each . 92c SWEATERS U. S. reg. all-wool with aleevea. Ne, 1 These have only alight minor defeete .$4.95 No. 2 These have been excellently repaired S3.0S kainiua is Aa wind and rain protection for huntera, delivery men and those who have to be out in the weather, her ia snap. No. 1 Perfect coats but wrinkled. No defeeta $3.45 No, 2 Perfect coata, alightly aoiled or apotted .$2.60 IERSEY GLOVES These gloves are slightly soiled but it does not in jure their qualities. They are very reasonably priced and will give all the wear that new onea will. 2 pairs for 2Sc Per doten , , . $140 JERSEY GLOVES Long wrist. Most of these glovea are like new and ' have a long knitted wrist. 2 pair 35c OLIVE DRAB WOOL SHIRTS No. 1 These are perfect ahirta without holaa, rips or tears. Laundered and pressed ...., .$3.10 No. 2 These are good ahirta with easily repairable teara in them. Laundered and pressed , .....$2.80 No. 3 Torn ahirta: rather than repair these and go to the expense ot patching them, we are) putting them all in at $1.9S SOCKS Cotton. Pure white, laundered, most of them perfect. Per dozen.. 85c We have only a small quantity of these. 1 OAS MASKS We have a few of these. They are valuable aa aouvenira aa all have aeen aervice on the battlefields of France 9Sc SHOES These are all wearable. Some have new aolea, others new heels. AU complete to wear with lacea. Choice $$.88 M?SRiS5J??."w' xtr ntavy, aide lacea, artillery atyle. Pair 95c LEATHER GLOVES First grade horae hide and buck driving glovea alightly palm soiled but without rips or holes. $2.75 to $4 vaiuea $1.49 MAMMOTH ARMY CUPS These are all made of heavy steel and have been heavily coated with tin. Soma alightly dented but finished like new. A snap at , 13, JA5ESP.?0NSH"'' reiinned. u. S. army grade, each Te V,R,KSr-Hi".v,3r Jtned. U. S. army grade. Each Tc n?,iMvS;orlSv-,!e,,vy tinned- u- 3. army grade. Each B BLANKETS White wool regulation V. S. navy. These blankets are made of two piecca with flat felled seam. All edgea whipped. An excep- , tional value at only , , $900 BLANKETS U. S. government grey. 4 and 5-lb. all wool '$5 JO BLANKETS Commercial wool. These are in a number of odd eolored materials, mostly solid colore . 84.10 MATTRESSES Firat grade cotton filling with extra heavy ticking. J?.!sStl,rdu",tr."om hniHng in placea. All have been cleaned S4-3S 5li:XS2fl;Sl5t.,?n, h.'!.vZ wDb,'n trouser belta. Very reasonable at....!9e OFFICERS' SMALL LOCKER TRUNKS These with the locks broken can be made serviceable for carpenter ehesta, small steamer trunks. etc.! by equipping them with hasp and padlock... $430 Same style trunk eomplete except for key .....8820 A-l PERFECT SHIRTS Theae cannot be told from BRAND NEW ahirta. - In fact many advertise them aa auch , .' 8370 52' 1 ?SRJLCTrrlHIRTS No j,ol riD " A bargain at. each.JsilO NO. I SHIRTS Theae are good vaiuea. Some alight wear, othera small defeeta , $2 80 NO. S TORN SHIRTS Here are real vaiuea. Can be easily repaired. Just ' the thing for cheap, warm work ahirta. Your ehoiee of hundreds.. $2.10 wuuli nnini unuinonmis-Muna neck like athletic shirts. No but tons. Washed and sterilised. No. 1 grade, aiaaa 84 to 44. each WOOL UNDERDRAWERS U. S. regulation! washed and ateriliaed. No. 1 trrmAnm aitma 99 n A fa a.k fJJS-."''' envaa blanket lined with belt, each $7 JO LONG TRENCH COATS U. 8. regulation long canvas belted coat, blanket lined, each . , $1130 USED ARMY COTS Gold Medal atyle folding eanvaa eot..., 82.60 NEW MUNSON LAST ARMY SHOES Small quantity, only $3.95 HERE'S WHAT YOU HAVE BEEN WAiTING FOR. OLIVE DRAB WOOL BLANKETS (U. S. REG.) No. 1 grade, perfect. .. .$6.75 No. 2 grade, alight defects $6.00 No. 8 grade, slightly torn or aoiled ...35.30 We now have, in ovjir five carloads of new and reclaimed government goods. All goods aold V. O. B. Omaha. " BRAND NEW KHAKI SLIP-OVER SWEATER3 These are fine to wear under a vest or coat; without sleeves. They are wool $2.69 HEAVY DARK WOOL SOX (new) 67c HEAVY AND LIGHT COLORED WOOL SOX. (new) S9e DARK COLORED CASHMERE SOX. mixture, pair 39c BOY SCOUT SIZE BRAND NEW KHAKI WOOL SWEATERS, only. .. .$3.20 tneguiauon Army giyic.; Send money order or draft on all mail orders. We will ship next day after receipt and guaranteeed aa advertised or money refunded. SCOTT ARMY GOODS STORE OPERATED BY SCOTT TENT AND AWNING CO. ' No. 11503 Howard St. No. 24729 S. 24th St. South Omaha, Neb. $1.20 fl .$1.20 At e 1 Omaha, Neb. J ST au Vrwr t Phone Douglas 2793, WattiaMxrOrftctcoaia OMAHA PRINTING COMPANY Muvutt aNsuai rARKAN COMMtRciAi Printers Lithographers steel Die Embossers loose UAr Devices Ji S0 It""