Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 29, 1909, Page 5

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BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, MAY 29, 1909 - The Matter Stands This Way When you go to a tailor to order a suit of clothes you are governed by his idea of Straw Hats are in full bloom-—and it's time to choose one now. There never was a wider choice in Men's Straw Hats than is shown this season-—variety of straw, of color, in width of brim and height of crown. the sort-of suit you should have. Few men know just what they want, but after the suit is made you can tell whether you like it or not—and"If you don't like it you feel as though you ought to take it anyway. We've all the good styles soft and stiff—and if you pass & us on straw hats you pass the best stock in the whole town. Qualities from $1.00 to $3.00 you can’t mateh. Extra Pant Suits Don’t know of a boy who does not wear out at least two or three pairs of pants to one coat. An extra pair of pants to match the coat is a splendid investment, as they make the suit equal to two suits. Try the extra pants proposition. You'll be highly pleased. We've a splendid offer for Saturd: Suits that sold to $4.50, for $2.50 Suits that sold to $6.50, for $4.50 That's not satisfactory. And it has a lot to . Tailored Cloth Suits In our great Suit Clearance Sale Half Price This sale includes our entire stock of fine tail- ored suits, made of the spring’s choicest mate- rials. We do not and will not carry over suits from one season to another, hence you can ex- pect genuine suit bargains at the “Elite.” Suits worth to $25 on sale at $10.00 Suits worth to $35 on sale at $15.00 Suits worth to $45 on sale at $19.75 Suits worth to $§60 on sale at $25.80 do with the namber of men wearing our hand-tailored, ready-made garment It's a matter of wonderment to the custom tailor man when they slip into one of our garments and feel that luxurious touch of style, elegance and fit they have never known before—and a quality at $25 that has cost them from $40 to $55. Other splendid grades at $22.50, $20, $18 and $15. ’ Drop in and try on the best readymade clothes in the world—we've got 'em. Furnishing SHIRTS that are artistic blendings bf new shades and novelty effects $1.00 $1.50 $2.00 NECKWEAR in new weaves, shapes and art shades 25¢and 50¢ Dresses Radically Reduced Scores of pretty new dresses late in arriving go on sale at greatly reduced prices. They include pongees, foulards, messalines, taffetas and rajahs. $19.50 dresses on sale at $12.50 $25.00 dresses on sale at $15.00 $35.00 dresses on sale at $22.50 Broken lines of Boys’ Shirts and Waists, that sold up to $1.00, at HOSIERY—Some so delicate they are called dreams. Others 80 loud they are called nightmares 25¢ 35¢ 50¢ DERWEAR-~—Balbriggan, lisle, linen, nainsook and mercerized cotton, two piece, union and athletic styles §1 $1.50 and §2 Boys’ Straight Knee Pants, that sold to $1.50, for 25¢ and 50¢ The home of Xuppenheimer Clothes, John B. Stetson ate, Manhattan Shirts, Oarhart Work Clothes, ' Everwear Guaranteed Hosiery for men and women, $25 Pongee Coats, $15 The most popular coat this summer in a long semi-fitting pongee. We have dozens of them to show you, worth at least $25, on sale Sat’y $15 Waist Sale Saturday wing the gro of the A MAIL TRAINS tacco Commuay e ey wia ot ot | R ush and Gregg BREAK TIEUP |Soiinet s i soween s 2| - Praised for Work| its chief competitor, to a compromise and om First Page.) | obtained an agreement by which the Im- . 9 5 e O |perial vielded up all competition in the | Attornej General Wickersham Wires | | country,” he sald, “and we propose to| United States. Congratulation for Second Has- | keep it a white man's country if we nmel “France, Austria, Italy, Portugal and kell Indictment. I \m do without any trains.” ‘otlier countries each msanwhile decreed . ‘” ! | Cabinet Will Send Knapp. ;nm the government would buy and im- | WASHINGTON, May 25.—President Taft | port tobacco as a business, the profit going | WASHINGTON, May 28.—Attorney Gen- D L t | and his cabinet considered the Georgla |into the coffers of the government under | eral Wickersham today sent a telegram of Values b to sa'w CItagle 'Hs §1 & | raflroad strike today and decided that|what is known as the regie system,” said | cOngratulation to United States Attorney {Chairman Knapp of the Interstate Com- | Mr. Bradley. “The American Tobaceo | Gregg and Special Assistant Attorney | merce commission should go at once to|company, seeing the danger in this direc- |eral Rush at Tulsa, Okl, upon their sui | Atlanta to use his efforts to effect adjust- | tion, entered into a conspiracy with the: cess under adverse conditions in securing { ment of the trouble or at least force com- | regle agents by which the territory should | Inictments against Governor Haskell and | pliance with the Interstate commerce law. | ritory into well detined districts so that | Others charged with fraud in the Muskogee | |1t was also decided that Second Assistant | there could be no conflict of interests.” town lot cases. The attorney general sald | Postmaster General Stewart should go to| Thus the producers found themselyes |that the government counsel were deserv- Atlanta to look after the movement of the | powerless and hemmed in on every side, |IN8 of great cradit for the ability with Saturday we place on sale dozens of fine waists of dainty lingerie materials and our entire stock of fine madras waists worth $2.50, $3.50 and up to $4.50, on sale Saturday at $1.45. | matls. | continued Mr. Bradley, and appealing to | Which they had handled a trying situation. | The Postoffice department is not inclined | congress without effect, as a result or-| TULSA, Okl, May 2.—Governor Charles to act favorably upon the suggestion of Vice | ganized the pool which resulted in a |N. Haskell, who was reindicted here yester- [ | nite general characterization of the situa- | bankers in general. Ab. > B ther! ¢ Lo- | sat lia of eri in K ¢l day, logetlier with five other Oklahomans " VIEw ol.‘ TRADh X . y gener: out fifty bankers | President Ball of the Brotherhood of Lo- | saturnalia of crime in Kentucky and Ten- 4 fon as a whole. House trode with jobbers | y. | ; A g DUNS RE SR8 Wholesatars 1o Hel tromlly Seirerat | Were neetent. | comotive Firemen to designate some one | nessee. in the Muskogee town lot fraud cases, left Lnln season, and efforts to attract business to confer with him upon the question of | While denouncing the night rider out- ;m» m*)él"nd» for M:sko:eo to ;wm-«d his y clearance sales and liberal advertising H £33 7 1 R iteio | Kembes A SR | il o | bond. \Bond in each case was placed at 2 ; the movement of the mails, as the Georgia vy declared the tobacco | b 3 Progress, Slow But Constant, is|P4ve not been altogether wuccesstul, arvard C]ubS railroad s looked to for (he performance |leaf BTowers were 8o sorely pressed that | #9000 No date for the trinls has been set. Record of the Week. demand for woolen and worsted goods; . 2 of that service. Officials were greatly | they were forced to combine to proteet| MUSKOGEE, Okl, May 2.—Governor yarn mills catering o’ this demand are at ClnClnnati pleased to recelve advices that mail cars | themselves and that the crimes which re- | Huka: and' the other |dnmcled :m; m;l(\m] said t ing full, & ra ol 1s | ue to st’s o) thi ternoon an ve be an; very 3(-‘:‘\:’“"\'\":!:4:' mcl'n:‘adlnygfl;lmnff ex- had been sent from Atlanta and Augusta | Sulted were due to the trust's oppression. }""‘ s after nd gav on, y GROWTH OF CONFIDENCE NOTED | ports from the United States and Canada for the week ending May 27 aggregate | p— 3182509 bushels, against 233,00 busheis| Former and Present Presidents Are in | Volume of Busines Increases and | (the corrected total for last week) and 267828 bushels this week last ve For Attendance at Annual Confer- |torney Tate at Atlanta Revival of Imon and Steél De the forty-eight weeks ending May 27, this that while the orgla railr year, the corrected exports are 180,803,177 | ence of Graduates, foo £ mand is of Remarkable bushels, against 188,884,316 bushels in the st acute there was falr | Without finishing the agricultural sched. | Prominent local eitizens offered to sign kersham today re.|Ule the senate adjourned the bonds and telegrams were received by ived 1 f United 8t A | | the governor from persons throughout the celved a telegram from United States At- ins inettct | THREE HUNDRED ARE KILLED | %tnor-s” sunioers. shasuseneinep . | = spect ot an| IN FIGHT OVER STOLEN BRIDE | | this morning. Attorney General W tion of asking that the indictments bef = ; i quashed because of allsged improper infiu- |!0W/ands are covered, but no ser »us dam- | corresponding perios R adjustment of the difficult vernment attorneys and secret | 8k¢ 18 expected. The dam across the north Rimsasions R SRpethe tor iAot e L bristi- | CINCINRATL. 0. May 3=The. atimson| Trouble Among Clans in Heuwah Dis- | ¢ DY govern e an. witnesece T [channel at the west end of Fremant fsiand ela. against 114,88 bushels (corrected) last | will predominate in Cincinnati today and RI) Olavks: Ase : Negranhi trict Has Lasted More Than i Wb o ot it S " [is holding and turning all the water inlo NEW YORK, May %.—R. G. Dun Co's | jors AN 7151 ‘bushel in 188 For the | tomorrow in honor of the meeting here on| AUGUSTA. Ga. May 2--With a regular Three Years. Rivers on the Rine. | the north channel. The Elkhorn is also | | erew, including a negro fireman, the first | Weekly Review of Trade tomorrow will| ports are 280,198 bushels, against 4, |those two duys of the Associated Harvard train over m»‘ Georgla railroad since last | po bushels last vear. [clubs, bringing together, as it will, Har- k | 4 | 3 Business fallures in the United States for | v, duat Saturday left Augusta at 7:46 o'clock this Progrese, slow but constant, is AKAIN the | the week ending May 5 were o ag | vard graduates from all parts of the coun- ainst | 1oy . The train consisted of mai i record of the week. The growth of busl- | 318 last week. 23 In the like week of 1us, | (1Y (The meeting was formally opened tn | PO"7E The (rain consieted of mall cars ness confidence is indeed more Motable in | 142 in 1807, 127 in 1906 and 154 in 1505 | the Sinton hotel at 10 o'clock this morning | °™" e e an | trouble began three years ago because of | the tncrease in the volume of tra Business fallures week In Canada |by Robert J. Cary, president of the Asso- |UBU4UA! demonstration marked the depart| .\ " (o ction of o bride. More then 30 the revival in iron and steel is of Such |number 2. which compares with 3 INSt | ciated clube h . X . . " ¢ e ure of the train | I“ , H d d I) 1 P ] remarkable dimensions as to justify the | week and 3! in the same week of 1905, A ol |I'I‘“ ur‘ the thirty-slx constit-| Tp bt from Harlem, Boonville and |Men have been killed in the encounters. 1veé undare upliis €c most hopeful outlook for the entire In- ey B 1 AL 05 DA, AEINRAL I8 | o e the Tathar Zhsts five liae oot of dustrtal and mercantile situation oon | Kemper, Hemphill & Buckingham, gathering here, which is the thirteenth 4 < from School to Seek Booty FREMONT, Neb., May %.—(Special)—|high. No trouble from the Platte is ex- AMOY, China, May 28.—Fighting among | The Platte river Is three feet above low [pected and it Is reported as going down, the cans has been resumed in the Heuwah | water mark and still rising. Some of the (hough still high district, 6 miles north of Amoy. The — as the tariff agitation ls out of the All Kinds of Plating. annual session of the assoclation Augusta say the train passed through [ MAY ACCEPT TABOR POSITION The period of crop uncertainty is, however, An important feature of the session today | 0%® places without incident before us, but it is significant that not- 2 : 3 ! .| Unldss there are immediate steps taken | Election of Dr. Frederick as Presi- ported favorable. will recommend that in all cities excepting | F6510T® train service it is reported that the Rim, Brown Park school In South Omaha had | vet heard of the daring achievements of In the dry goods market a better tone f S New York all boards of education should |Sate of Georgla may interfere to settle the p—— . | their teliows on the day before now began is manifested. Weatern jobbers report a or Blg NI BOE] donster 0f Bva, soven o Bine Fiembabe strike. The giste (s & stockholder In the | ‘HUMON, 8. ‘D' Moy M-iBpesialse | 8 h0MI087 Priday A | to hear of them; t tellows saw to thet. better business {or fall merchandise’ trom e Th Iagnrt Wil el Sy (e L [Gforgils 7allraed w08 ¥pder: the State IaW | weiiin s b el M Apeal | B e Inot. by sders of the sboot ] Aund that story, related with all the | glamor and drama of the typical hero who on the other hand, was insistent | ryng to earth the desperado, scted on thit e ™ '~ has power to operate trains. s House business is peasonably quiet. ¥ tance of the merit system and praise the 3 w There is an entire absence of export de- | Hundreds of Track Men Are in Cam- | action of the schogl board of Cinclnnati fn| RePOTtS received heve from the line of mand at existing quotations, Prints urll Long of this city of his election, by | authorities. Miss Margaret Hayes, prin- Rongg b o B il lex of tuf the Board of Trustees of the Congre- | cipa bridge for Contests Today | @doptiug such a system. the Georsia Mirosd atate supplies of fuel yyiiony) allegs; a¢ Tebor, 5. 86 presl- y. It was taken entirely | body of school child muech as a lighted v y peen hope e : nd other indications of preparations to against the holiday oy Ao e e g B e e and Tomorrow. The ¢ riere d"" r‘“"“ ““l'[“"" L PPt ol il s :‘”:\.-L\r ta. €Nt of that institution. 'The position | upon the Initiative of the children match would act on a huge pile of ex- : 3 sion of Harvard's future policy In the aft- . . S18° | tendes v y . ee, half a dozen | celsio irated with coal oil moderate freedom, while g ins are ernoon by former President Eilot and P tions. There are twenty-one idle engines |(-"0¢T®d him was entirely nnsought on| It was this way: You see, half a dozen | celsior sawirated with coal oil firm. with prices unchanged. In wooien ¥ e ident Ellot and Pres- | - A A vt A nd Au.| I8 part and comes as a complete surprise. | of the children attending this school ac-| In a twinkling the flanie of wild, youthe goods duplicate orders are coming in sl CAMBRIDGE, Mass., May 2.—Hundreds | /dent Lowell and a smoker in the evening | 810nE the main line between here and Au-i () o0 =00 0 B0 accept the posi | cidentally run onto the rendezvous of the | ful enthusi ared up and 500 kids and « \'v‘x"n",:“:-':m":.m-l :ej-:‘\:‘n P of college athletes gathered in the Har “H r}h \'n”n hotel, where the athletic sit- | VS’ { tion 15 undecided, but it is quite probably | men suspected of the train robbery Thurs- | kidlets afints tire situation is firm, with the tendency | Y4rd stadium today under somewhat threat- | Uation of Harvard will be thoroughly dis- ! - - - | that he will accept day, dug up thelr accoutrements of war | ve hundred frenzied sch children, toward an advance. Oak sole continues | ®NINg conditions for the preliminary events | Cussed. A. G. Cable, secretary of the senior | D[ T\ (’\ sl (; _‘R — and led to the arrest of three men | 6 like demons, tore ¢ and away heavy: in the thirty-fourth annual meeting of the | /348 and an athlete, will present the un- 4 4 ) Wanted for Old Murder. Could these children lapse back from the that school as if it had heen o pest BRADSTREET'S REVIEW OF TRADE | [lercoliegiate Athletic association. The [dursraduate point of view D TUB_\(‘(‘O‘ CHEYENNE, Wyo., May 2i.-(Special.)— | thrill of such a life into the dull monotony | house and broke for the hilix and dales— 4 k| Survivors of teday's conteste' will compete | y 2L, (e t ) | Ex-Sheriff Virgil Kelly of Deseret, Utah, | of lessons? the home of the desperado, the rendezvous oyl o v . < : esterday e V. uh! { e ban Fhey swa ed out poi Improvement is More (n Evidence le\'::d "'d’“"“:"“:’:r ‘;‘“':':“ ‘t"‘;”l' ! All Kinda of Plating. | il rday arrested W. R Harper as he| Huh of the bandit. They swarmed out upon This Week. e were present dele- | was boarding a uUain for the west. The| Foolish to hink of such a thing | that stretch of country like bees routed NEW YORK, May 2—Bradstreet's to.|581¢® from Pennsylvanta, Cornell, Mich- Bry at Platismenth 1 (Continued from First Page.) |arrest was the successful ending of a| Well, Miss Hayes didn't see in this any | from a new hive and pounced down upon B o b lgan, Princeton and Dartmouth. Other in-| PLATTSMOUTH, Neb, May 2 ~(8Pe- | through very rapidly, the committee rec- | “C8rch covering over ten years and reach- | cause for dismissing school. On the con- |the ground around them searching for it | stitutions pi " el lowdoin 1 I | . BN . p i ~ | in ito eV e estel , - r « ers | mo lements of w Iraane bl et s Aot Lt el represented were Bowdoin, Will- | clal.)~The graduating exercises of the emimendations belng asreed 1o ng into sev western states and terri- ) trary she and her corps of teach were | more implements of wai ' week but \rregularities in weather and | !ems. Brown, Amherst, Massachuseits In- | Plattsmouth High school were held in the | tories. Harper is charged with the mur- | on hand as usual at the hour of ci | But the police laughed and the teachers crop mnamodn. nd ebb and flow move stitute of Technology, Syracuse, Swarth-|Parmele theater. The salutatory, By I ""l""e"' " 4‘.7”.-.“.; ARt L of E. P. Penny and son in Millard | So were the children. But a little later | didn’t feel that Young America ought (o be ments in trade and Industry prevént defl- | more, Columblia,| Stevens institute, Haver- | Their Works Ye Shall Know Y et h\fl’ n:)r’(qu‘uutuA sc .'w" ’"”* il “;’wnulh Utah, in 1898 the children were not. Those who had not | spanked unduly hara == | ford, Johns Hopkins, New York university | by Miss Jo Hall. Helen M. Jess gave the |PY MT: McCumber spoke on th 4 and Fordham the bill relating to cereals. Mr. McCum. valedictory. The address was given . The night's rain had left the fleld ,,,l““n William J. Bryan, his subject being | D¢ deciared that in a short time a duty | [ER—— 0gEY condition, but the cinder track was|“The Price of & Soul” J. M. Roberts |Of 2 cents a bushel on wheat would be | SRS SRR < i i, Get Rid of not materlally affected. No points were|cashier of the Plattsmouth State bani | "8dequate to keep out forelgn wheat. I contested for toda . but each team “.,r.,,,|\h.,\(‘ diplomas to Misses Ethel g | C8n8da, he said, east of a line extended | @nxious to qualify as many athletes as|Bently, Marie B. Bookmeyer, Grace O, | NOFth from the boundary of Dakota, there HE NEw the G!'Ollch Ppossible for the finals tomorrow. Dalton, Marie K. Pitagerald, Jo E. Hail | ¥% More wheat land than in the 1 nlted | It was arranged. as usual, to start the | Mable B. Kiser, Helen L Kiine Anna 1 | 5Utes. With the increasing ton of competition with the trials In the 100-yard | Kopie, Ethel M. Leyda, Muriel M. Mulliy | N® United States and the resulting in dash, followed by the quarter-mile run, | Marie M. Hiber crease in the price of wheat, he said, im- | the hurdle event, the haif mile run and the Jirguask, ‘Etlen C. Pellock, Alics . Root, | POTiations would be sure.to follow if the furlong dash, leaving the two long-dis- | Wilhelmina M. Thieroff, Clara H. Wohl. | 0UtY Should be lefi a nis .9 Hushal tance runs, the mile ond the two-mile for | farth, and Messrs Elarence. L mon: | BY 1820 he was sure no more wheat could { tomorrow. There aleo was scheduled the|cCari E. Smith, John 1. Helnrich, Will .4 | D¢ €Xported and the country would be face ; Just say to the Waiter: Helen M. Jess, Netty M | A 4 Weeding out of the less agile jumpers, and | Shopp and Clarence Staats. The class | 'O f8¢ With conditions that would cause the w.aker weight hurdlers in the field | motto was “Not at Top, But Ascending.” | 'PPOFtations. Wehat at from §1 to §1.50 a L] events, so that there would be only half bushel, he looked upon as @ regular con- . dozen In each of the finals tomorrow. dition in the next few years and these — same conditions, sald, applied to all | Bankers at Slows Falls. Your complexion as well |of the cercals except com | s Py SIOUX FALLS, 8. D, May 25.—(Special.) - i Tobacco T Back of Citme. It is the delicious corn flake §|_mi. (ol meeting of the bankers ot e | ms your temper is rendered | ... e ouirages of the nignt ride food which puts you in good J! &loux Fais grou rd 1406 Douglas Street will open for busines® Saturday noon. This is the finest dairy lunch room in the west and is fine as any in the country. Absolutely sanitary—perfect ventilation, beautifully designed. The equipment for sanitary cooking and baking is of the very latest construe tion. Ladies and gentlemen are invited to wake it their regular lunching place. Our specialty of the finest coffee served in the city will continue in both places—1612 Farnam street and 1406 Douglas street. 0 | ! ht riders in lted from the outrages of the r consisting of the bankers of Moody. Lake. Mccook, Min-| miserable by a disordered Ko"tc¥r and the oppression of _the American To. humor. nehaha and Lincoln counties, was heid ! here ‘today. liver. B’ hkuu Chamber. bicco company and that unless the internal revenue tax on leaf 1 3 “The Taste Lingers” The meeting was called to order by Stomach i obacco was repealed these outrages would W. L. Baker of Sioux Falls, president of | UMIR'S and Liver | obacco was rep e N otcur, was the declaration made by o()' the atstrict ation, who made the ad- | H Senatol Bradley of Kentucky today in Popular pkg. 10c; dress of welcome. Addresses sl wero| T4DlEts you can improve 4 g - Large Family sige 15c. || made by C. B Holmes of Sioux Faiis. | both, They cleanse and in- 'the senste il This amendment proposes Harvey Vernon of the Commercial Nationa! (0 restore in ar bank of Chicago and others. The greater vigorate the stomach and for the free part of the session was devoted (o the the farmer, which was stricken out by discussion of matters of lieres + w| improve the digsstion. | finance committee of tne senate. Atte Try It Today bill the house pi Sold by Grooers. v of ieaf Lobaveo

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