Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
for Fine Sifk | Ncck»car — worth 15¢ and 25¢. Men's fine Silk @l! the choice colors and pat- Shield Bows, terns, neckwear that posi- tively wells regular for 15c 21 C‘ and 2 on sale irday tor /2 | yetountil veal cold weather sets all sizes and all styles, 50¢ Neckwear, 10c A choice lot of handsome I'm perials and koglish Squares, rare patterns and designs, money can buy for Men's Shirts 25¢ for 50c & T3¢ Shirts| An elegant line of Shirts on sale cluding every st men’s fine | Saturday, in le of summer Y | with laundered col shirts, Negligee Shirt lars and cuffs, attached nd d hed 1|Iun| a fine lot of Workin Hu materials various colors and patter I on sale for Come today Men’s Men’s Finest All Wool Worsted Suits Men’s Finest Men’s Finest Fancy Scotch Cheviot Suits— This is the best ¢lothing offer we have ever made, n. kver, if oy Men's $18, $20, $22.50, $25 Suits for $12.50 The finest Finest Every suit up-to-date, trimmed and perfect fitting—worth from £18 to %2 on sale Saturday, choice, $12.50 v suit is well made, looks stylish, and fits perfect, HA DAILY nto 2 The suits we offer at these remarkably low prices ar eowant to buy a geod suit at less than the cost of the materic 1250 All Wool Cassimere Suits— Men’s Fine All fin Clay Worsted Suits— Men’s Fine Ha correctly tailored, handsomely Every suit made for this and perfect fitting garme Men’s $12.50, $10 and $8 Suits, Men’s Fine Tweed and Homespun Su Men’s Fine Fancy Worsted Suits— on sale Saturday, choice, $5.00 | - The Greatest Clothing Offer of the Year | —our entire stock of men’s fine medium weight clothing divided i All our $18, $20, $22.50 and $25 Men's Suits All our $12.50, $10.00 and $8.00 Men’ lots for Saturday’s sale — on sale for $1 Suits on sale for $5.00 . the very kind that will be worn for montl There is no end of patterns and matevials to choose from, and we have . $5.00 suits worth two and three times the price. It's a rare chance. for Wool Cheviot Suits irline Cassimere Suits— season'’s trade—correctly tailored nte—worth from %5.00 to £12.50; — 08¢ " | For men's $2.50 [ Hats. ! All styles. All size 2.50 i nd black, worth Men's S! llat fnr I.38 1% 1o come bough At a sa ause ¥ were | samples; every b hoys' Straw Hat in the e 250 Underwear. 50¢ & 75¢ L‘ndcrwcar 25¢ | We are offering 1 1o f men's flue full Summ Under one-half and one third th value 1 col of fancy bal briggan mixed lisle ang mixtures \\en l(k Sli\pt'ld»l‘ 1c A hig bargain, gentlemen; good BUsnandsre, made Gtofihoy. AUt ‘ wvy corded and elastic ends, nickel r leather stay, full leng lues, on sale SC | for ATURDAY A BISTAN STIR 167A% DOUCLAS 5T) OMAHA More and bigger and better ~ shoe bargains. The sensational excitement caused by this shoe sale y day of the sale. The remarkable that people can't help buying. grows with eve g Bl such a sale. our store only too happy to g BOBTON 6TORE, OMANAL BOBTON BSTORE, OMAHA. The most particular people in town ar t fitted for so little money. values we are giving are There never was crowding $60,000 Fine Shoes on Bargain Squares and in the Original Cases On Our Main Floor and in the Basement B "ccon stonc. omer: I $6.00, $5.00, $4.00, $3.00 Men’s Shoes voson o $1.8O In blacks and tans- new swell styles, MEN'S CONGRES retail for two fifty go at Ladies' fi o dollar hand welt ther OXFORD TIES Patent 8o at Ladies’ §1 Oxford Ties. Ladies” $2.50 Oxford Mies. .. Youths' $2.00 Oxford Ties. . Ladies’ Kid Lace Shoes. .. Ladies® Velvet Nlippvl's BOBTON STORE, OMAHA, lace, congress and button—all BOBTON STDHE e’ll give you your money back quickif you can dup- our bargains at even twice Butthere's no one that can come ar selling as good shoes as we do licate our price. anywhere 1 for the mone Forderer’s | Tan Shoe Polish | 'll|\~ ‘_’.n‘ km(l we sell at... ON SALE o IN THE . BASEMENT Thousands of boys’, youths’ and little gents’ shoes at oMAH_n. | | style y, | thav oth | 75¢c 89c¢ 98¢ ROBTON sronz. thnA. $5.00, $4.00 and $3.00 | Ladies’ Shoes e $1.69 llmu\nnl\ f them to And there are choose from—cvery size—overy every now style you can think of —shoes rs sell for as high as ars—our price is $1. 69 do! | | ‘ ‘ | ‘ | | | \H \h)]nnl\ Bros.' Child's $1.50 and | 8o at sen’ and half finest I\Il 20 at exactly All Moloney Bros.’ Child's Shoes: all sizes price. BOSTON ETORE, " OMARA] Y T Tve | tory at about 10 o'clock last evening. The | fine rain fell here yesterday evening and [had been threatening in the north and me,‘,x,mm\ and feels confident he will succeed Usion | I dl t'\ d '. " L 3 north of west and was not in the shape of | generally, but is fine for fall plowing and |sulted in about three-rourihs of an inch | South Omaha News. ’{;, a of the city aud it the street is | twister, but at times assumed o velocity | pastures. The most of this month has|of rainfall, many broken limbs to shade | e At i LTar diie of ‘tie (tnokti| of eighty-five miles per hour. The Newer | been very hot, windy and dry, and the|trees, with the loss of several trees .mu‘h"‘lw. B T e :’:‘{.nml (‘:H.“‘]\ll\”_“]_” it .ml TRETY Great Damage Done by Heavy Windstorm | yjcic is badly damaged, roof and cornice | change is most acceptable considerable damage to grain stacks and [ The democratic caldron continues to seethe | (hought by some that as soon as the pay- at Lawrence. stripped off and most of the windows in [ CRETE, Neb., Aug. 24.—(Special)—A |blowing down corn and sorghum field and Loil and bubbie in South Omaha, With | g is completed thal the street railway both stories broken. Frank Hacker, who | very severe windstorm visited Crete and| LINWOOD, Neb, Aug. 24.—(Special)— |no immediate prospect of abatement. Tho ! company will extend its line through this Vi P occupies one of the store rooms, had | vicinity last night. At 10:30 p. m. the wind | About two inches of water fell here last | Bryan-Stevenson club is still firm in Dart of town, As it ds the dar )ine does g his stock badly damaged. One side of his | began to blow strongly from the south-|night, insuring the planting of a large | determination not to allow the Bryan club |y, anv Blade Wi % L xobntion o MARIANL WANE HOME OF NELSE DICK IS COMPLETE WRECK store was filled with valuable lamps and [ west. The Ium was accompanied by vivid [acreage of fall wheat lLlKqu'lm( struc ul the glory, or even a share of it, of feasting | Alyrieht. & ..,‘,I...(.y“':'lx:..\‘.i\ A Ly‘\’.,..:r‘ | F . . S they were swept from the shel and | flashes of lightuing, but no thunder. At|the barn of Willlam Woods, in the east end | Mr. Br tonight the Bi club he B, & M. \an At ok 3 \V l 1< ” 'l Churches Ar broken. The Hotel Coronad is some {10 p. m. the wind was blowing at a rate|of town, killing a valuable horse | a spirit of retaliation, declares that it will ‘h:‘”‘ ll o & \\’j“r'f": ‘UI“”’“" Py oric amous onic k) AAmANed And & portlon-ol the % | of about sixty m per hour. Many| PREMONT, Neb. Aug. 4.—(Special)—A | deteat the success of the entertaimment. 1t [10d'i is tho that as s0n as the pav- | P, s W i of Warren's block is blown down trees were blown down and much damage | heavy rain fell here lust evening. For fully | seemed the general Impression vesterday el i the oot of the streer | PTEVENES Waste ings Blow ANk th st wall of the bullding occu- | was done to grain and hay stacks. About [ half an hour it fell in torrents, flling gut- | that whichever of the two clubs wa o t all metropolitan that steps will Has Be pied by T. A. Moore as a pump repair [ quarter of an inch of rain fell | ters and low Iying lots and flooding severa: | cessful in this fight that club would obtain s AL ey «ve | Aids Digestion, s house was blown down. The roof of Ritch-| ST. PAUL, Neb., Aug. 24.—(Speclal)~ fcellars in the eastern part of the city. Dur- | the supremacy over the other during the| qje Tk BolthGOmanE nate AR s caouiiat | LAWRENCE, Neb., Aug (Spectal)— | ara’s livery barn was blown off, the stecple [ Another thunderstorm came up last even- |ng the storm lightning struck a tree on | coming campaign dition Braces Body, Brain The worst storm for years visited this | yag blown from the Baptist church and W lh&:uw;ul[n’mlvdl by I..l fine l.n'n, amounting | the premises of S. F. Waldner, corner of | The stat t publis vesterday that Jlace about ® o'clock last night. The wind | H, Brown's barn was leveled to the|to .89 of an inch, his, as far as it ex- | Twelfth and Pebble streets, tearing it up by the nquet to Mr. Bryan is to be a non- | skl ey T aniondie ita Ll.:m.m hed the velocity of hurricane | ground. The residence of V. Stark, a farmer | tended, will leave the ground in fine con- | the roots, throwing a part of it against the | partisan affair is a myth. Not a business| City Treasurer Frank K’”.,\L fics aom and Nerves. and @ vast amount of damage was done. northwest of town, i¢ so badly wrecked |dition for fall plowing and winter wheat | house and breaking several windows. man could be found yesterday who would | pleted his report for the f year end-| No other preparation has ever recelved The Baptist church was blown about [as to be untenable. Hardly a windmill is Jand rye and will also greatly improve il precipitation was over one inch. Since | say that he regarded the meeting in this | ing August 1900. 1t shows that during | 50 Many voluntury testtmonials from four feet from its foundation and is badly |left standing and reports as they come In | pastures the storm the weather has been cool and |light. The republican members of (he coun- | the twelve months ending on the date | Witelt P/ &8 the world-famous Marlan: wrecked. The dwelling house belonging |from the surrounding country indicate o s Badly Damaged. comfortable. | cil sald that they would not attend the |mentioncd $50,699.84 taxes had been col- | Bold by all druggists. Refuse Substitutes to Nelse Dick is & complete wreck, hardly | that hardly a farmer escaped some damage, [ oA 8O0 RS TETTRCEE L HEATRICE, Neb., Aug. 24.—(Special Tel- | banquet, and Mayor Kelly said that the re- |lected, This sum inciudes the amounts | pAeianl & €063 W, i6ih st New York two bourds being left together. The fum- [But few aceldents to residents are re- | QSEWE - Tef | AUE - SLEERCER H egram.)—A terrific windstorm, accompanied | port that he intended presiding at the meet- | paid in for back faxes since 1850, as well | S5 Haperoral diome, ook of endoraemen fly that lived in the house was at one of [ported. During the storm the family of | L0 -0 5, (5000 g0 cinictive wind- | DY rain and considerable lightning, visited | ing is absolutely false. True, he said, he is the amount derived from (he 1549 levy, [ Archbishops and other distingulshed per. thelr neighbors visiting and no onc was | H. P. Schmidt took to the cellar and he rm in the history of this region. The | N8 section last night. A number of small | going to attend, but he will be a guest o | The back taxes levied have - mostly :‘l‘l""v:',:‘: ""u:“"vnl"‘grllh and postpald w hurt. J. K. Dooley's barn is blown to|not knowing that the door was open, fell [FOT B LI PO @ and was | Puildings were demolished by the wind and [onlooker, and not w participaut in the ex-|paid in cases where realty transaction, o pieces and house badly wrecked. The | down the stairs, br ing a bone .‘I\ his accompanied by a heavy rainfall M ?4\I‘|4l| pla were struck by lightning. | ercises. He said he would not even do this | were involved d have consisted mostly | 7 e front on C. T. Austin's new brick hotel is [ right wrist, besides receiving other inju- | \TERERAICE W, O KR TR e DT | The lighining rajsed havoc with the elecs | were it not for the urgent solicitation of |of small amounts. Payment of reguias tlown off and the buildiog damaged. The | ries. B. Murray, a farmer residing tions, among them the United Brethren ‘“-A‘ ]Ig]” wires certaln members of the Bryun-Stevenson | taxes is considerably In exce of the {mplement house of Sheriey & Cole was |four miles south, weat out during the b ot 8URRE SRR G, e dimaged, | CREIGHTON b, Aug. 24.—(Special) fclub, who asked him to o us a personal |average and show a first-class condition budly wrecked storm to close a shutter and was it 000 yiiohens, shedding and outhouses | ~~ThIS section was visited by a heavy rain [ favor. And for this reason only, says the |of aifairs ? The large corneribs belonging to the Duft | the back of the head by a fiying missle and were generally demolished and scores of | 484 Windstorm yesterday forencon. The | mayor, he will participate in the chofce P Grain company and T. B. Cole are literally ' from which he received a severe cut. Itis | Lo P Ba iowq ™ There is little to - | Fain Will greatly help out late corn. Con- | viands that will possibly be obtainable for Magic City Gossip. torn to pieces. The Methodist Episcopal impossible at this time to give ml)l‘lnu'l‘]“ that the storm was other than a |Siderable hail fell also, although doing no |50 cents at the Exchange dining hall to- | The council will not meet again until Sep church 1 badly dumaged. Awnings from (like a lst of the damages or the eXont OF |y rqgn wind rly every structure |dams night LA T. 8 Jackson's, Charles Necland's and L.[the storm, as reports are continually | v, oy was blown to the southeast. Grain | ROSELAND, Neb, Aug. 24.—(Special| Certain complimentary tickets were ves- | 10, g atkine leaves taday for Buf Wike's buildings were blown off and fronts | coming in. stacks suffered materially and corn fields legram.)—A heavy gale visited this se terday sent out In letters neatly worded A son has been borm to Mr. and Mr - badly damaged Wrecks Around Fre . pretty generally leveled to the |tiOn last evening about 8 Dozens of | written on Bryan-Stevenson club station- | J. Will Gree ! A N Scarcely a small bullding, cornerib or FAIRMON Neb. Aug. 24.—(Special.) ground The storm was tough on chim- windmills are down, besides corncribs and | ery signed by the president of the club, J.oA 3 d wife have returned from windmt s lett standing in this place ana | A strong windstorm visited this vicinity [neys, most of thom blowing down. Ob. |Outhouses. The high wind was preceded by [ which related that “the Bryan-Stevenson |® P lorado §t is feared that the storm was worse a |last night about 9:30 o'clock. The day had [jects were lifted and carried great dis- |® heavy dust storm, which smothered every- | club” extended the itation and desired | X1 Sy, AT e from ew miles south. About one-half inch of |heen very warm and dark, ominous clouds |tances. A citizen, not at all musically in- | thiDg Half an foch of rain fell. the individual's presence. Some of these | Oren & Merrill has returned from an rain fell, which was badly needed. began to gather about € o'clock in the | clined, found a snare drum in his front Scared by the Wind. +| were sent to members of the Bryan club, | extended trip in South Dakota ! Windmills and Grain Destroye west, but the wind changed from the south (door. There was no loss of human life | LINCOL Aug. 24 (Special) but the letterhead seemed to burt their | Mrs. low Mt and son Iirl are vis ALach i Aue oo to the north and ny‘«‘“..x...\u 9 nl e and not one injured ) | Lincoln w visited by another wind- | feelings and they said they would not go. [ 111 4 1o home of SN RTLCION . oAl BT ulace | RABISA BX:8 MONS tarelifo wind, whien R, Neb, Aug. 24 pecial)—~A |storm last night and for awhile people | The woman's committee originally ap- |4 v two weeks' outing 1 Colorado gram.)—0One of the soverest wind & eled shade trees, corncribs and windmills. | yorrifie storm, bordering on the verge of |feared a repetition of the storm of a few | pointed consisted wholly of wives of the TR &R af Cintoa (21 trical storma in receni years pa o Thirty per cent of the windmills in this|, cvclcne, struck this place last night bes |days ago. Rain fell in torrents, measur- | Bryan-Stevenson club members. Mrs. W. § with frie and relatives i the this section of Nuckolls county iast,evoRiNE [ yioinjty were wrecked. tween 9:30 and 10 o'clock. Although it dia |ing over an inch in this city and consid- | White, who is a warm personal friend of sbout 0 ololock, The reaidence of Georgs {BLTON, Neb. Aug. 24.—(Special ) |5 oxceed fifteen minutes' duration, it | erably more in other sections of Lancaster | Mrs. Bryan, the two having been girl Inspector Frank Jones wa Norwood, a farmer living four miles north fyy o hor dry weather which has prevailed | ooy ror (e worst windstorm that ever |county. At Aurora and Grand Island the | chums, was mot originally placed upon thi eatorday making a Aeries of milk FFET LIBR :“ the :'h\‘r:{‘ llvmw: ’ “‘::'h ‘l"J"ll;“ €N | o1 last evening at }r"“;*k’ “y"‘ B K R | damage. The Burlington railroad was the | ipitation at various points is re- | fully smooth out the mass of wrinkled ar- | terday plumbing without a it ents. ° helonging to Jol Seas | chower came up and cooled the air and we ferer in town. The northwest cor by the United States eat rangements for the Bryan banquet, Mrs, | HI% fine was remitted 1 field, which was almost completed, was com: | \3iqp {n the evening rain came down in | .. o ml.‘ depot \\,u‘m n off and the new | § Aiaer White's name was added to this AI‘IH‘ mv‘j, Mrs, H. Ashe, deputy clerk, writ n.n mlllfll ca' sa"u pletely wrecked, His outbulldings and | o nanis Fully one inch and one-halt of | ™ (ol e N T Cater tank was o Sl 1.18| AS so0n as notified of this Mrs. White no. | Licnds that” she 14‘.H‘ ately artived dn | Y windmill were blown down and scatiered 10 | yqier foll and a heavy wind, accompa-|poun ‘down and demolished. Numerous | Ashiand Lonp City 8 [ litely, but positively, declined to serve ARl k. - {00 windh A IATRE RVERAT' Q. WIRAR led by much thunder and Hghining, Pre-) oo oping, sheds and other small outbuild- | §ITor, 2| Neupaska ity 1| The disaffection that has arisen seemed | Schultz and " faday hy were lald waste and many grain "I"““ vailed for two bours. This morning the |y, .y were torn to pieces und also numer- | chard 30 Ok ii [ t0 be the sole topic of conversation yester- [ {hntys i honor of thelr safe return from scattered broadcast. - Fortunately, 1o 1V8 | ground is soaked in splendid shape for | gus shade trees were destroyed. In the | Burwell Omiha 1.6 | day in democratic circles. Committees were | Aries pue Carlin b turned from a vist county has recolved a three-inch rain "'"‘?:\‘.’»'l”’\n:ll “:‘\".\"y”\.dm O e mieht hbout 18 this morning and grain stacks arc | (Ut 13 | formulated than it was torn to P et b ITIVY |‘» 1'\‘; W e 10 b A turae the IATRRALS GO Bron. a4 DOMIR| G SeioLs Um,» LOISATANKS ISLIVIRE AROUS Dadly . tafn to:/plo likewlse all small | jyfison 2| factional disturbances, I Smith ot | wirrick 1ig i HveiE KNEW you cou 1 b and all grains are full crops. Corn is esti | The precipitation amounted to nearly I all pisht, baviog sufteved but very Iit 5 | MAMIS.T 58 AR tno. leadors of Ahe B | red Ploneer cure mated at from 40 to 45 bushels to the acre. | tnree-quarters of an inch, Heavy wind and | ' . The m|, ™ was Ao ...y...mi« by a Gredloy it ; i 184 | Bteveason ‘)\’m.y,.yylu formed them that they | RERTRAND, Neb., Aug (8poctal)-~ | brilliant 1ightning proceded the rain. Tho | 8000 Faln and a lutle ball. About FAHnELOD T8 Tok o g i BLA Aame i sy |z tor Rheumatism does the work A heavy and destructi orm_ struck his | rain was very welcome, as the drouth was [ 'o 200 T R LG et Quantity | Hickma " Vulentine 108 | 2Rt S R R R R B ol §: every time. A dollar draft in [} o and vicinity last night, raging fu becoming severe i B kot ax Oax ot reg 52t W r T Tt " il . 5l P T FARIRCANNN, B oy, e : ; » do any further damage than ) e 6 Wy more {1 | would have nothing to do w I N Throe windmills in town were blown over | Luroofs s Frolght Car. |off the corn and the foliage off tr oo | The Bryan-Stevenson club o | T | cure. Ask your drugsist or and the gable end of F. D. Child’s livery | PUATTSMOUTH, Neb., Aug. 24.—(Spe-| 'h‘ MOMIARF, RIaYIOUA 1 thN iwe beoh ok |y st will refund your money it th to understand that thoy are Lo by al ¥iike The atning Medicine Bars ha Eariiaar R KR A ien e 1) —A terr electrical storm, accom- | trdmely hot Pazo Ointment fals to oure you. 50 senty, | the whole thing or nothing, and his partina | Pack , Towa fre bell tower, ffty four feet high, started | PADISd by heavy rain and hall, struck | FAIRFIELD. Neb., Aug. 24 )— | shot was that they would und Ay b 10 Ko over, but was reacucd and guyed with | PIAULSMOUtE &t 10:30 last night, and the |This part of the county was a 1e Distress in Indis, without the'r “distinguished” g RaRIans | e {n the midst of the storm. Two Inches | "410 continued to fall until morning. The | nearly all night rain last night. As a pre NEW YORK, Aug. 24.~The comr of But the Bryan-Sie on men la The we the fabie pu. on sheep' | o entite roof was blown from a car, which |liminary to the rain heavy win nd | 100 on India famine relief re that they will have a supper wit 100D'8 | TOBARLLL MU LA B0 SHA MATH S MOSRSIR] hotixe in m a w minary al d and | . hat th 1 have a supy h Bt | alaititna hacsiikh LE BES teavilad -ax nInTAR M| ‘ BEAUTEH’I WOMAN 9 v loaded with merchandise and in fast {dust storm scared some people into their t rom Willlam T 1| Bryan, whether they have a corpora ports from (he country have come in, but it m Lo, Wibham. | putation he coulda't ascompiish Bis Dure 4 b ot (B b s believed extensive damage was done by | TCIER train No. 76, a few miles west of |cyclone caves, but no serious damage was India rellef commit | to indulge in their luxuri-s or a Counterfeiters of DeWitt's Witch [ | h: R f e g this city. The car was set out of the train |done. Plowing, which had come | T Salve couldn’t sell their worthless fl‘palla " egenera m' At this pla The hail cut the leaves from |still on account of the extreme dryness of [ ([ Fiamine distress wpnalling To Pave M Street e ey g o (e o | 5 he s rein Friend Sufiers from Wind. the stalks of corn in the fields, but it is|the ground. will now, be resume I SR A ARNAD B o I * FLATE LR e S - T RS SEHE AT A TN \“"‘- them in i T’I RIEND, Neb. Aug. 2h.—(Special)— | generally helieved that very little, it any,| HARVARD, Neb. Aug 24.—(Special.) e suftering from lack of clothing s tor- [ petition for pa M g t far i haa ImAL SRSl S : his place and vieinity was visited by one | damage was done to the corn 15t night at about 9 o'cloc e &L \e condition of destitute Workmen | rwent y-fc s Lot g 1y Iti's W nple o of the wost destructive storms in its his- | GIBBON, Neb., Aug. 2h.—(Special.)—A L( ux‘xlnj;‘an; xa’u;“nm for gfl»;: we Bours | A0d childs ecislly pitis Many boys [ Twenty-f RO8G 1 ¥ lo | Hazel Balve, It cures plies and all sk WHRIA| CHEMICAL MF, 0., 22 V. 214 5 ' s s lund giils are in heart-rending nee ays he b ured almost enough wames | di K Pt jatic o Y