Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 17, 1909, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Buy That Spring Suit SATURDAY 125 7 By W.C. BOTH Clcasn. ) e for your unrestricted for your unrestricted | Suits, Cravenettes This Purchase. for your unrestricted THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY APRITL Men's Separate Entrance, Nor(h- west Corner Six- teenth and Doug- Overstocked on Account of Countermanded Orders choice of all the Hen'g s—ui—;'rop Coats and ' Oravenettes from the Big Purchase; worth choice of all the Mm’s Spring Suits, Top Coats and Cravenettes, from the Big Purchase; worth up to $20.00. This is not an ordinary event. Suits can get them here for just $17.50. Boys’ Spring Suits The best of styles are found in this attractive depart- ment on second floor, old store. BLUE SERGE COMBINATION SUITS AT $4.75 All wool blue serge Knickerbocker Suit, with extra pair of Luickerbocker pants to match—a $7.50 at. value- - special ROYS' $5.00 COMBINA’ IN SUIT FOR $3.50 One complete knickerbocker suit, with one extra pair of knickerbocker pants free. Just as serviceable as two suits——well worth $5.00, at BASE BALL AND BAT FREE WITH EVERY SUIT. choice of all the Men'’s 8pring Suits, Top Coats and Oraven- ;ttes, from the Big Purchase; worth up to $25.00. These clothes are made in the newest styles by the best tailors in New York. Men who prefer $25 Streets Brandeis Takes Advantage of the Backward Spring Season A Tremendous Cash Purchase of Men’s SPRING SUITS From New York's Leading Wholesale Tailors Who Are Badly EVERY SUIT IS NEW, WELL TAILORED AND UP-TO-DATE IN EVERY WAY Just 2650 Finest | Samp Special Sale of Men’s le Hats « IN NEW SPRING STYLES, Derbles hats from two eas These are all sampl positively lots, at— 98c We give to Omaha they want. of all hats for me men ask for it. Tb sell it at Sample Caps at, each ... Low For Men The most practical, most comfortable shoes in Omabha. sort anywhere else than a splendid less make this antee as to quality. Yale knive! Co.; Sheffield knives, knives; and 4 blades and positivel $2.00, at We Bought Feur Drummer's Sample Lines Pocket Knives «": 50¢ Thousands of high quality knives from one of the largest cutlery houses in New York, bought at less than one-half their actual value. W. L. Wadsworth steel knives; Parker Bros.” knives; American Cutlery Hunting genuine walrus hendle, stag, bone and one-plece pearl handles; 2, 3 A positive guar- knives, Deerfoot men's change purse hat pins, at, each worth up to Stetson Hats The Stetson hat {8 the favorite The price Brandeis Special Derby and Soft Hats. for Men, Boys and Children— Worth up to 76c—all in one lot, can not get shoes of this $4.50—We speclality of group, Jet ear rings, brooches, belt pins, | Women's genuine or Soft Hats Entire sample lines of men’s soft and stiff tern hat manufacturers, es of new spring hats $3.00—two great wa $]45 About 7,000 Shirts in this purchase. All are samples and broken lots of fine negligee shirts in new spring styles. Sizes 12 to 181%. New paiterns, $2.00 SHIRTS FOR 98¢ LOT 1—Comprises all the men's plaited and men the kind of hats n. Particular hat's why we $3% $2 Shoes the low You plain bosom negligee shirts in finest materials—worth up to 98c 2, at LOT 2—Includes all the men’s fine negligee and golf shirts, in nmew epring worth $1.256— 50c ing acd negligee shirts—blue, chambray, madras and percales—some ment, new store, at.... el balbriggan and derby ribbed-—worth up to for 35¢ and 50¢ priced, at. ... 98¢ to 8$3.50 Men's Manhattan and E. & W. shirts in new & orivso e ... 81.50 to $3.50 the choicest spring patterns and $1.25 SHIRTS FOR 50c designs—excellent quality— LOT 8—Includes all the men's and boys' out- slightly soiled—worth Men's Spring Weight Underwear—French Munsing and Sterling Union Suits, specially pdterns (silk initial free with each shirt). Books, ' ases, Purses Thousands of drummer's sample Bill Books, Card Cases and Change Purses—warranted to be all genuine seal, goat and buckskin leather, including the universal e 25¢-50¢ seal| Women's Elastic Belts, to match your costnme, at 45¢ , worth to $2—at........-* real 20c up to $5| hand purses, in black, at 50¢ September. . ENW BUILDINGS COME FAST Permits for Over Two Hundred Thou- sand Dollars Worth in One Day. CREIGHTON MEDIC ANNEX ONE elty Skirt Company Will Ereet Nig Ome, Store and Rooming House and Dwellings Com- plete Lint. The college has acquired the northeast quarter of the block on which the present building stands, the new tract being 68x132 feet. The new building will be on the south end of this property, leaving enough ground for the erection in the near future of a maternity and emergency hospital. The new building wiil be 68x70, four stories and basement, and will be of brick con- struction. Gymnasium in Basement, The basement of the new bullding will be fiited up for & gymmasium and will also contain shower baths and lockers. On the tirst floor will be a large reception room, a free dispensary, clinic operating rooms and a clinlcal laboratory. The second and third floors will contain class rooms and private laboratories, while the entire fourth floor will be fitted up for the historical department. The new bullding will cost ,000, exclusive of equipment, and will be connected with the present bullding across the alley with enclosed steel viaducts. Possession of the ground will be had by the college authorities April 2 and excava- tion work will start immeciately Is will be cofpleted by the first of the coming month and then work on the bullding wlil be begun as soon as possible thereafter, Architect Davey is also drawing plans for a new three-story brick bullding to erected on North Sixteenth street, adjsining the Masonic temple and directly across the street from the new Hotel Loyal. This building will cost about $30,000 and will be Addition to the Creighton Medical college to cost $45,000; brick building North Sixteenth street for the Novelty Skirt com- pany to cost $30,000; three-story brick build- ing on West Farnam street for stoves and bachelor apartments to cost $30,000; residences in varlous parts of the eity to cost $10,00; improvements at the Smith brick yard to cost $10,000; additions to Florence school bullding to cost $16,000. These are the new bullding operations for one day, the total cost being in excess of $300,000. Plans are under way for a large four- story addition to the Creighton Medical college at Fourteenth and Chicago streets. J. Jetfery Davey, architect, s drawing the plans and that the excavation for the new buflding will be completed before May .1 and that the bullding will be ready for — LIES do not know the difference between PEARL RUSTLESS Wire Screen and any other, but YOU will and save money by using PEARL-- lasts longer, always looks bright. The gen- uine has BRONZE Selvage. We have the Pearl in LIGHT and HEAVY grades, all widths; then we have the regular Black and Gal- venized Fly Screen. How About Your Porch Screens? JAS. MORTON & SON cO. 1511-1613 DODGE STREET. Lawn Mewers, Goodrich Garden Hose and Hardware the opening of the fall term the middle of IDN‘np(td by |on the site will be moved off immediately. | | | | | | once. | | | ¢ | { | third floors, with an entrance on Nine- |in charge of the barn, | teentn | bulléing with a frontage of 2 feet and with the Novelty Skirt company. The lots are owned by the St. A. D. Bal- combe estate and the small bulldings now Long Lease on Ground. The skirt company has secured a long lease on sixty-four feet frontage of the property and will erect a bullding with a frontage of 42 feet and %9 feet deep. Mrs. Mora Marple, one the Balcombe estate, will \ of the helrs of erect another the same depth as the skirt company's building. The two bulldings will have the appearance of one, with the same kind of a front and the Novelty people will occupy the whole structure. The front of the bullding will be of gray pressed brick with tone trimmings and extension show win- dows. Tennants of the present buildings on the | site have been notifid to vacate May 1 when the old structure will be removed Work on the new blocks will be begun at | Another large bullding to be erected In the summer will be located at Nineteenth and Farnam streets, on the southwest cor- to Mrs. Mary Angress' home at 4738 North Thirty-eighth street to cost $16,500. The permits for the one day Issued from City Building Inspector Withnell's depart- ment total over $70,000. Condemed by His Own Pride |James Smith is Faced by Witness Who Says He Talked of Sun- derland Fire, James Smith was a little too well satis- fled with the vengeance he secured on the Sunderland Bros. company, according to evidence Introduced against him Friday in the criminal branch of district court. “The morning after the fire Smith bor- |rowed a nickel of me to buy a paper," | testified ¥rank Merrill, “and cutting out ner. Fisher & Lawrle, architects, are draw- ing the plans for this bullding for W, aham, Dr. Lord and Dr. Bridges, This third structure will be three stories and a basement and will be fitted up for store rooms on floor and for bachelor the second and the lower apartments on street for these apartments. A cafe will be installed in the basement. The bullding will be of pressed brick and will cost Florence School. i Plans drawn by Architect Davey for adal- | tions to the Florence school buliding were | aceepted Thursday night by the Board of | Education of that suburb and the general contract was let to H. Armstrong of South Omaha for $16,000. the north and south sides of the present building, each to be 35x% feet, two storles | high and a basement. Work on the ex- | cavation will be begun May 1 and within | the next ten days bids for wiring, plumbing and heating apparatus in the additions will be received City Building Inspector Withnell on Fri- day issued permits to Hastings & Heyden for seventeen new dwellings ranging in price from $1,000 to $2500 each. The permits 10 this one firm total $34,00. Eight of the Hustings & Heyden homes will be bullt on Lothrop street between Fourteenth and Twenty-third streets, two will be built on Ames avenue, two on Madison avenue and the others on Wirt street, Camden avenue, William street and Webster street. Two permits were. Issued the same day by Mr. Withnell to Charles W Martin for dwellings to cost 36,20, and other permits tssued during the day total $2,300. One of these permits in for & kiln and smoke stack for the Smith Brick company at Thirty-first and Lake streets 1o cost $10,000, an another is for an addition and repairs Wings will be bullt on | = |and said, ‘T guess 1 showed 'emy where to {head. in,' or something like that." Merrill notitied the Sunderlands, who fn- | | formed the police. The officers promptly | gatherea Smith In and found the clipping in his vest pocket | Other witnesses Friday were Hugh Boone and Willlam Robb, | yardmaster for the company, both testity. ing that Smith threatened (o get even | The defense, in addition to denying the about $30,000. | confession, will try to prove an alibi, | —~—— Frightful Spasms of the stomach, liver torpor and weak kidneys are overcome by tric Bitters. Guaranteed. b Beaton Drug Co. back Elec- For sale by lame Take Life Easy A Memitter S¢ Olgar helps wonder- ful n making the world look bright & 'S you that satisfied feeling. Remitter 5¢ Cigar Wm. Binderup, Manufacturer Also manufacturer of the Pride of Hastings and Money Order 5¢ cigars. 1833-34 St. Mary's Ave. Both Phones. the account of the fire he showed It to me | Enoch Arden Today Not as Generous as the Original Returns After Twenty Years and | Wants His Wife Back—Hubby | No. 2 is Willing. {‘ Frank Newbanks was Enoch Arden | enough to be_absent from his wife twenty years and Mrs. Newbanks believing | dead took a new husband in the interval. Here, however, the likeness Lo the Tenny- son poem ends. | “Wnen Enoch aia appear on the scene | He ing filed his complete report with record of evidence, and schedules. Referee Ken TELL MERCHANT TO WHACK UP Cohen of South Om Tarn Over $1,044.45 to tee in Bankrupty. Cohen, & merchant of South Omaha, who filed a voluntary petition In bankruptcy fn the United States district court some time ago, is given ten days In Henry | which to turn over to the trustee in bank- ruptcy, Sidney W. Smith, property to the value of $1,04.45, which, it is alleged, he has sought to conceal, or take the conse- quences. nedy’s report states that there remains the amount of $1,044.46 which, it is alleged, that the bankrupt seeks fradulently to conceal and that the trustee In bankruptcy is en- titled to the possession of such property Cohen flled his voluntary petition in September, 1908, scheduling his llabilities at 104 and his assets at $5,08. Cohen applled to make a further showing of his llabllities and assets, but this was re fused after hearing the evidence, by both the referee and trustee in bankruptey, on the ground that the record would thereby be unnecessarlly encumbered. The final him | This order is made by Referee in Bank-|hearing on the case and report s dated ruptey J. A. C. Kennedy, who Friday morn- | April 10, 1009, | after nis 1sland exile he looked in througi {the window, it will be remembered, and not saying a word fell down beside the house and wept. Nor did he reveal the fact that he was alive Newbanks was not so self-sacrificing a soul. When he came to Omaha he got | himself in police custody for intoxicatior aud prevailed on the officer to lead him up to the house where his wife, now Mrs | Bamuel Morris, lived He knocked on the | door and Mrs. Morris opened it | “1 have come back,” sald Newbanks. | To this self-evident statement Mrs. Morris { replied by inviting him to go away and }l‘\d.\ twenty | Her husband, who is | Omaha police force, Jtor annuiment of marriage and this cas came before Judge Redick In district court Friday morning. He testified that Mrs. Morris In addition to having one husband too many, addicted to drink. Morrls declared that his | wite told him while he was courting her that she had been married before, but that she had been.informed that Newbanks was 1, and that she did think him dead is ed. another vears. an officer on (i is also o The contest in court is chiefly over two little girls, both Mr, and Mrs. Morris wish ing to gain custody of them. Mrs. Morrls' first husband, Newbanks, 1s declared to have from a well-to-do Cincinnat! family and to have been a col- lege graduate | WIDOW SUES SALOON MEN FOR SELLING SON DRINK Asks Ten Thousand Dollars | of Young Ma Supi She Loses. Mrs. Dorcas Morris filed suit Friday for $10,000 against Edward Cackley, Gust Lar- son and W. L. Harrig, the Lion Bond and Burety company and the Massachusetts Bonding company. Mrs. Morris claims that the first three saloon men robbed her of the support of her son, Robert Morris, by selling hir liguor. The plaintiff states that e is & widow and had ne other support than tne boy. come s Price rt | has since brought sult | 20% DISCOUNT REMOVAL SALE | We must move and will close out our entire stock of Men’s Clothingand Fur- nishing Goods before we move. We will {take NONE of our present stock into our [new location. A visit to our shop will |convince you that this is a bona-fide sale. ' For Saturday we will specially feature 40 Sprin% Overcoats and Raincoats. You \cannot afford to miss these bargains. ‘ BOURKE’S CLOTHES SHOP, 319 S. 16th St. ‘ a

Other pages from this issue: