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EVERY PAIR OF SHOES IN THIS STOCK 18 STRICTLY HIGH GRADE AND ABSOLUTELY OORRECT IN FEBR ARY 12, 1910, = THIS HIGH GRADE STOCK INCLU MANY MEN'S WOMEN'S SPRING SHOES and Oxfords, bou, pressly for 1910 trade and made with the || new season’s sty || colors. | DES AND ght ex- spring les and ENTIRE STOCK G CHABOT SHOE COMPANY 203 North 16th St., Omaha—Bought From A. C. Themsen, Trustee for the Creditors ON SALE SATURDAY AT ABOUT ONE-HALF PRICE The Chabot Shoe Co., dealers in ‘‘Swell Shod Shoes,”” and known as one of the highest grade exclusive shops in Omaha, carried only fine shoes, and catered to a very high class patronage. Every shoe in this stock is a fashionable shoe of reliable quality. The entire stock will be sacrificed at the biggest bargains in Omaha’s history. Absolutely the Highest Grade Men’s and Women's Shoes Ever Placed on Special Sale in Omaha The women’s high or low shoes of tan Russia calf, chocolate shades, black and brown suedes; patent leathers and gun metal calf. All sizes, all widths, at less meoney than they can be made at any factory today. All the WOMEN'S SHOES in 4 Big Lots: LOT 1—Your choice of all the WOMEN'S SHOES and OXFORDS that the Chabot Shoe Co. priced $ LOT 3—Your unrestricte WOMEN'S SHOES AN that the Chabot 8hoe Co. priced up to $4.60—at. .. choice of all the OXFORDS that the Chabot Shoe Co. priced up to $3.50— - 39 LOT 4—Choice, of all the WOMEN'S FINEST qHOES 2nd OXFORDS— that the Chabot Shoe Co. priced up to $5.50— BIG STRIKE UP T0 PII{EMEN Vote of I.ndlvndnll Members Will Set- $998 LOT 2—Your choice of all the WOMEN’S SHOES AND OXFORDS Men’s shoes include high or low cut tans, browns, patent leathers, gun metal and water proof wax calf. Shoes of such high grade may never again be 8old any- where near as cheaply as we offer them Saturday. All the MEN'S SHOES in 4 Big Lots: All the MEN'S SHOES That were priced by the Chabot Shoe Co. up to $2.50—at All the Men's That the Shoe Co. 69 ‘12 All the MEN'S HIGH SHOES and LOW SHOES that the Chabot Shoe Co. priced up to $4.50— WAL ol e e Shoes and Oxfords Chabot priced 5298 All the Men’s Finest Shoes and Oxfords fiom the Chabot stock. Including the famous Dr. Reed’s Improved Cushion Sole $369 Shoes and the Dorsch Newark make. Worth $5.00 and $6.00—at.......... 21l the failure of the gwitchmen's strike fh the northwest a8 an ihdication t the strike talk of the firemen. will finally end in disagreement among the men. The: fire- men’s grievance 1s, nevertheless, 'consid- FINES PAID ‘PUBLIC LIBRARY More Than Twelve Hundred a Year ‘of baoks that have been with- lield long enough to create a demand from other borrowers, G0-TO-CHURCH CAMPAIGN BEGINS SUNDAY MORNING Movement Made by Local Federation Will Be Pushed for Seven Sun- Wi -fifth, frame dwelling, $2,000; C, W. R g North Twenty-eighth, frame HOG RECORDS AGAIN SMASHED fair run was in sight at the opéning. Tho South OmMha market has shown a close parailel to_the Chicago prices during the éntire season. Chicago Interests e, oh . many occasions, when - receipts el Woman Loses a Jewelry Store ered in a mote serious light. Many assert there I8 every possibility that there will be a strike. Weakness in the switchmen's organiza- Tops Rise to $8.756 Per Hundred, with Influence of Meat Boyeott Vane ished Utterly from Sight. light, boosted the price and showed & wide difference between Chicago and South Omaha, but Instantly telegraphio -reports worked and the Omah prides shot up in tle Question by March 1, for Forgetting Books, days Before Easter. campaign is to be federa- “The Go-To-Chureh” ALL WESTERN ROADS INVOLVED Committees Will Meet at Ead of Month in Omaha, Galesburg, St. Iaul and Chicago te Can- vass the Vote. \i hiether or not a general strike shall be called on the railroads operating west of "'Chicago now rests with the individual mem- bers of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen for a decision. The question has been submitted to a referendum vote to the firemen on fifty-seven roads and their votes must be in by March L During the last week in February the grievance committee of the Union Pacifie branch will meet at the Arcade hotel to determine the vote of the men on the road. Local members of the Burlington branch will report to the grievance com- mittee at Galesburg, Ill. The votes of the Northwestern men will be turned In at Chicago, the Milwaukee employes at St. Paul and the votes of the other roads oper- ating out ot Omaha In Chicago also. At the recent conference held in Chicago of western rallroad managers and a com- ‘mittee from the firemen the employes were flatly refused an Increase In wages and tion Is pointed out as the reason the men lost in their walkout. Many of the switch- men belonged to the switchmen's union, al- though a large number belonged to the Order of Railway Trainmen. ‘When the switchmen went out It was found that there were sufficient trainmen to be enlisted to fill the places of the strikers and thus carry on the major part of the railroads’ bLusiness. The firemen, however, are not divided agalnet themselves as the switchmen are, All of them belong to one order, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen., Also. in the same ranks are many engineers, who have retained their membership in the fire- men's order rather thaniaffillate with the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Many engineers retain thelr membership in the firemen's organization, owing to the lower insurance fees and Auet In the switchmen's ranks there were two opposing forces, the “Snakes” and the “‘Stingers..’ The “Snakes” were the switch- men and the “Sticgers” the trainmen. The onmity between these two cliques was the cause of the fallure of the switchmen's strike. PHILIPS AND WIFE AT OUTS ONE MAN HAD T0 PAY §l1 | Looking After Return of Books and Collection of Fines No Small Task for Miss Tobitt's | Statf. Total fines, 1505. Fines, Y, Highest month, 1906 Highest individual fi; Thie Is what is costs Omaha library pat- rons who forget. Think of it. Over $§1,000 in fines because borrowers fail to return books on time. How would it make you feel to draw out & volume and keep it so long that you were compelled to fork over §il to make yourself square with the eity? That's just what one man did last year. The story is all the more tragic from the fact that the man didn’t even read the book. “When a person is fined it's his or her own fault every time,” declared Miss Edith Tobltt, the librarlan. “We give our bor- rowers every possible chance ‘to escape; we send them a notice, then a second no tice and as a third warning notify th guarantor. If the borrower doesn't returi the book then and pay up we send a Mrs. Eleanor Miller Sues Pullman Company for. $1,000 to Pay / for Four Rings. Mrs. Eleanor Miller I8 in county. court endeavoring to get from the Puliman com- pany the sum af §,00 to compensate her for four rings she says were stolen from her in a Pullman sleeper the night of June 2, 1909, The rings are thus described: One gold ring, set with pear! One ring with two diamonds and one emerald. One: ring with one opal and one diamond. | One ring with one diamond and one ruby. | Mrs. Miller avers that she left Omaha for Portiand June 22 and reached her des- | tination June 26 and that the rings disap- | peared from her berth the night before. IOWA MAYOR A MILD CRITIC hief Executive of Sheénandosh® Won- ders at Omaba's Ab:se of Machinery, instituted by the Omaha Church tion Sunday, to be continued through the seven Sundays before Easter. This is the third of the movements con- ducted by the federatdd churches this year. The plan includes little more than an e fort on the part of each church to make the services more attractive and, as one minister has expressed it, “give an op- portunity or oceasion for many who have neglected ' their church attendance to find an exouse for going." This same plan has been trled with marked success In the federated churches of Providence, R. I. The time,the Lenten season, is considered especially favorable. The “Go-To-Church” campaign has re- celved the appraval of many Omaha mem- bers of the clergy, both of those in the federation and those outside. The church federation has completed & rgliglous census and an eyangelistic cam- paigp, In which the city was covered by tdurteen districts. The work now in hand will complete the year's activities for the organization. The second annual meeting of the federation is to be held at the First Baptist church on March 14, when officers will be chosen.© A banquet will be served on this occasion by the women of the chureh. Records were broken'In the South Omaha hog market Thursday when the tops rose to $8.75 per hundred. The average price pald was also higher than on any previous day. The market was very active and a the same proportion. The last vestige of Influence of the meat koycott seems to have vanished and prices will probably go'higher than the present quotations. — e OF INTEREST T0 P LY EOPLE SUF- FERING WITH GHRONIC AILMENTS Milen Medical Co., Inc., Succeeds Austro-American Doctors— Dr, Milen Will Have Control of the New Company. The Austro-American Dyctors, who have been 80 invarlably successful in the treatment of chronic allments of fhen and women, will be known in the future as the Milen Medical Co, " Ine. Dr. Milen, whose thirty years experience and sclen- [ | collector out to see the patron in person. | “It's all & matter of habit” continued | Miss Tobitt. *Procrastination breeds the |nabit and the penaty must be pald by the were' mlso turned down on their petition asking that the brotherhood be given juris- diction over engineers who maintained membership in the order. tific knowledge has made the, Omaha office of the Austro-American Doctors so successful, will have entire charge. ~ The location will not be - changed-y Mayor O. H. The church federation has issued this in- vitation on small cards for distribution in conneetion with the campaign: CHURCH GOING CAMPAIGN, Frink of Shenandonh, Ia., lis tn Omanha, accompanied by Charles Aldrich, a member of the city council of Shenandogh, and J. I, Brorby, a promi- Reconelliation Before Husband’'s Frial for Murder of Marsh Hom- fiton s Unlikely. [ The railrond managers offered to submit the wage question to arbitration. It is on this matter that the men are now called upon to vote—that s, whether to permit the matter to pass on through arbitration or to strike, The gencrgl manager's committee repri senting thé 'rallronds is composed of W. C. Nixon of the 'Frisco as chairman, W. L. Park of Omaha, general superintendent of the Unlon Pacific; D, L. Bush, F. Ward, J. E. Hurley, J. M. Warner, W. D, Cantillion, G. A. Goddell, A. W. Trenholm and H. G, Simons. A. L. Mob e, vice prest- dent and general manager. of the Union Pacific, l& now in Chicago. Although there sre those who point to RACKING COUGH Do fi“ cough g0 hard that, lungs cougt & Dr. Ball's w0 the youngest | Atta Banner, but was overruled by Judge pleces? Have you shortness oil’hmm and rat !n the chest? Take carel Get at onco, before too late. It will cure the and soothe the racked \‘hron and lungs. Dr. Cou Hostility between Jim Philips and Mrs. | forgetful.” Philips shows no signs of abating and it is highly unlikely that' the two will bo reconciled before the trial of Philips in distriet court for the murder of Marsh Hamilton of Florence. The trial will begin before Judge HEs- telle next Wednesday. Philips is in the | county jail and Mgs. Philips is living with | @ relative on Monroo street. Mrs, has, expreysed a willingness to Philips take the stand, but if 8o she will have to be called | by the defense. The prosecution made an attempt to get the testimony In of a hus- band against a wife in the trial of Mis, Bears. you are tearing your throac and and wheezin BE, Bull's Cous S rup It; ?lfllm&hn 1, 0. 3 my chel ri: lrur-?ul !l et The Omatia Public library has over 11,000 regular patrons. All of their cards are good for three years. With the exception of children all patrons are allowed to draw two books, so that the actual eirculation amounts elose to 2,000 In addition to this there are hundreds of books always on refererice in the public library and in the pyblic schools. They Jog 'Em Up. That the librarians do their utmost to Jog the memories of forgetful borrowers 1 | shown in the system used in Omaha, When 4 book 18 due the subscriber_is notified b postal. For the fir#t two days that the boo is overdue a fine of 2 cents per day collected, After the second day the dail assessment is § cents. On the eighth day overduc. the person who guarantees the patron’s card Is notified by mail. This usually closes the matter. If the book is not returned within & reasonable time after that a collector is dispatched to in- terview the offender. It takes nearly two hours' time every day for one librarian to.fill out the notices for the mail. These cards cost the library 1 cent each and in addition there is the printing bill. Thus the total income trom fines s cut down comsiderably by the cost of postage, and the expenditurg for labor, “Professional men are our’worst offen- ders,” sald Miss Tobitt. “T reter in this class to those who draw out books for study or reference. Professlonal men are slow, to heed the notices; they simply defer re- turning the books and the fine plles up. “The fines are not designed as punish- ment. They are imposed in order to keep books in circulation. When persons know they must pay & penalty for keeping books overtime they are imore careful to return them." People who keep books overtime are not alome the sufferers by paying fines. Others may be on the waiting list for that par- ticular book. 'This s patent from the-fact that many new books are bought to take nent citizen of that place. They came to Omana, o examlne the sweeping and flush- Ing machines in use here, as their c is about to purchase some machines. When Street Commissioner Fiynn took the lowa men back to the city hall after | showing tem the city tool house, on ihe outside of which the machines are stored, Mayor Frink remarked, “Omaha treats its | costly machinery just as the shiftiess lowa | farmer of the old day used to treat his machinery.. Nowadays every fatier who amounts to anything takes as good care | of his machines as he coes of hix stoek { Your elty ought to furnish a place te valuable machines before It buys any Scott’s E‘mulslon will last n' year-old baby nearly a month, and four bottles over threc | B months. Given in small doses four times a day | § Scott’s Emulsion will lay the foundation for a healthy, robust child. K never fails to make the ks 108y, the flesh solid and the bones ALL DBUGOISTS R B B SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St, N. Y. store Seven —Find a church home. Hundays—Attend your own chureh, Feb'y 13—-Begin Sunday morning, Feb. 13 Feb'y 20—-All the family together. Feb'y 21-1f a stranger, make known. March 6—-Everybody go to church. {Mareh 13—Co where you please, but GO. | March 20—All denominations invite you. (Feb. 13 to March 27.) | Maren z-Easter. OFFICER STARTS CLEANING SHREETS WITH LEGAL PAPERS Serves Notice on Busine | move Debris in Yyourself Men to Re- Twenty- Four Hours, / Police Officer Wooldridge, the servige of the strect commissioner's department, reported for duty and was furn‘shed with a list of a dogen prominent business men and contragtors who are al- {16ged to be violating the ordinances by cluttering the streets with unnecessary rubblsh. Wooldridge procecded to ser notice on every man on his list that twen- ty-four hLours will be allowed to remove | the obstructions and unsightly débris. If | | the stuff is not off the streets at the.expir- { ation of that time arrcsts will bs made and the street commissioner and bullding | inspector will appear to prostcute. | In a good many cases permits have been | nsued by the bullding inspector €or the oc- | eupation of c:irtain portions of the street, | but Mr. Withnell finds that some persons [ holding permits have presumed to take .much more liberty than was (ntended, Their J‘I:nllun will be called to this fact by Officer Wooldridge, with an intimation | to get back Into line. Aneffort is to be made by the street commissioner, working through the ohlef | of police, to make dirt haulers clean the hounds and reaches of their wagons before leaving an excavation with a load. Tuilding Fermite assigned to | teel )¢ per, 4611 Capitol avenue, frame ws; R D, G. Hej dawelling, K. Jensen, 582 North | DR. THEODORE MILEN. properly without seeuring any relief and finally, remembering how & number of physiel well his mother had done uder Dr. Milen, Milen' Following is his letter to Dr. Milen; will still be 428 Ramge Bldg., 15th and Harney streets—just opposite the Or- pheum theater. Dr. Milen's continuous success dn the treatment of such diseases as Rheumatism, Goltre, Gall Stones, Epl- lepsy, Catarrh, Troubles of the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach, Heart and all Chronie and Nervous Diseases of men and women, has attracted wide attention, - Patients are coming from far and near—old pa- tients who have been cured are sending their friends and relatives, . Dr, Milen treated the mother of H. L. Jordan, Marion, Towa, four years ago. Dr, Milen was located at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, at that time. Later Mr. Jordan suffered with & general debility and ' breaking down, due to the fact thal ihe could not assimilate his food. He tried s treatment, came to Omaha to see Dr he is enthusiastic over his treatment and realizes from his great mprovement that he is recelving the best the medical world can give: Dr. Milen, Dear For three months I had been losing bition for my employment. I went to di different as to what my trouble Biri— the other, and so finally I came to you and you told me | After a couple of weeks of taking your me atrength. m, amuition nad returned to prove right along. I have been taking (res erfectly satlsfied with my trcatment, nyone asking as to the truth of this i )t they will asime, as I am anxious (o curec was; one doctor would call it one i lnsing flash, and had no am- all told me g, and one ou. could cure me. oy K weight nd egun to fms e Sod™i strength, fierent physicians and’ they dicine, I began to improve I for my empioyment, and 1 atment’ now for over s!x et [t r, 1 would be pleased to answer them t sufferers to where they can be H L. JORDAN Marlon, Towa. Followink 1s another letter from an Omaha man, who suffered cxcruclatingly, | from one of the most painful afflictions known to the medical fraternity | releved his sutfering Read his letter Bldg. For years 1 have my bladder, caused by ston VGrous forms of treatment me. After the first month's tre at the end of rour months, I am is, good—and 1 can lived in Omahs led in most things Omana hes ihs services of some of the o Dr. Milen, Dear’ 81 frered past (i ling fine d n The Milen Medical Co, is located in curable will be frankly told so and no fee Consultation And Exa bladder. nt from you I commenced o Dr. Milen Omara, N with terrible pain from inflamm 1 have tried different physicians and or wix years, but f them helped rove, and now, My wu-m. raska and hav t timt Nebr rican Do ve for the first time In v before. 1 was born in 1 have always thoug that in the Austro-A orld's best specinllsts Yours very truly " Yg"0. grEiNsPRING, 36th and Webster, ‘e in- Omaba permavently. accepted, mination Free TosAll People who