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oo S0 Po Lo o So Lo ! Easter Apparel THE YOURG OWN STONE a = D AN 1518-1520 Farnam Street. for Girls Al the world pays hom-~ age to the young girl in her teens, but her ward- robe is often perplexing, especially at Easter time. This girls' department is solving many problems pertaining to girls’ dresses —see the dainty new gar- ments while the assort- ment is best, you'll be pleased—she'll be de- lighted. We show beautiful lines of con- firmation dresses In dainty em- broldery or lace trimmed styles, presenting entirely exclusive pat- terns of flouncings and Jatest de- signs. Some have high neck and long sleeves; others have round or square Duteh neck. Sizes 8 to 14 years; moderately priced, at— $12.00, $10.00, $8.75, $7.50, $5.00, §3.95 PEOPLES amicable adjustment of the trouble, Chair- man Knapp assured the representatives of the general managers that he and Dr. Nelll would take up the matter immediately and If necessary “would go to Chicago in an effort (o adjust the controversy. All Disputed Polnts Covered. The applieation for \mediation is compre- hensive in &cope. It Ing¢luded not merely the question of wages, which s the crux ot the dispute; but aled hours of labor and conditions of employment..In faot, it cov- wed every phase of the difficulty. It is known that representatives of the reneral: manager's Gommittee have been m ‘Washington for everal days prepared g fully. authorized to-make application, In the form-it was presented. It is expected here that the representa- tives of he employes will co-operate with the railway officlals in this effort to ad- CUMMINS HITS RAILWAY BILL, (Continued (rom First Page.) sisting ondition yiih which it deal with,! Fuey o Yoot s Placed Between Two Fires “I would) not, however, be Inclined to at- ach much Importance to the praatice fhich now seems to be very general'were ngt that its consequentes, In the 'very atyre of things, must be disastrous. Al hough a senator my be in full sympathy the broad purposes which the legls- ative proposes to acomplish, the moment \e asserts his independent view of the best /8y to accomplish the purpose he finds Umself in direct confliet with the presi- ent and he must choose between losing he presidential favor and doing a thing # his conkcience tells him 1t ought to be one. “1 do e L o i 1ot ferr ar rat fa & slight Instance atratlon, the Independ- ra of copgress can bit up.a subjects like the we s, tag praetice of having biils drepared ( the executive offices and pre- rented to congress for passage, accom- sanled with an }mplied message that pun- shment follows disobedlence, "- continued kom year to year, In the end congrees vill becomo a mere form ih organized so- ty. ¢ ‘With the utmost respect for the ex- Alted office of presiddnt of the United Btates and, for him wha' gccuples It at the present ‘times#"recqrd my protest here nd now aghinst a practice which I belleve 0 be full of danger and disagter.” Declaring 'to be .extraordinary the olr- sumstances connected with the origin of the bill, the lowa senator dotalled the meeling last August of Attorney General Wickersham in New York with othes who, he sald, had undertaken to put in thape for enactment the various recom- nendations of the president bearing upon rallroad legislation. The report, as mad t0 the chief executive, was supposedly con- fidential, he sald] but as a matter of fact long before It reached' the president it had tallen into the hands of the raliroad men. \Discussing the progress of the bill atter [t reached the président, Mr. Cummins declared thal It had been vastly changed. Indeed, he declared, “but for- the birth- nark of the commerce court no one would ‘ecognize the measure that was born in the ‘dog days' up there fn New York." These changes he attributed to the in- fluence of the reliroad men which had een brought to bear upon the president wnd the attorney general before January 1, when the blil was presented to the alrman of' the committes on intersfate rommerce, The Midwest Life 1f life insurance were @ new thing and nen were not so tamillar with it, there is wthing witich would appeal any stronger o the average man, The fact that by the )ayment of & small sum each year he wuld creato an estate sutficlent to protect family would seem almost like & falry In what other safe way can one by ® payment of & few dollars snnually nake it possible for his family to receive + thousand, two thousand or five thou- sand dollars in case of death if it should soour within & year or ten years for that matter? 2 ‘The Midwest Life of Lincoln would be pleased to qu’n' premium rates and furs Aivh & gample’ policy to any one interested in this Impoptant subjeet. In 199 only thige old ling companies made a larger gAn In insuranes 'n force in Nebrasks than The Midwest fa It has openings for two ¢ (hige I t.class general agents. Write or call at hamo ‘office for further Ll % $ 3 Shows Growth Report of Terminal Values and Earn. ings Made to State Railway ommission. (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, March 15.—(Special.)—The re- port of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolls & Omaha rallroad flled with the State Board of Assessment under the provisions of the terminal tax law shows an inerease in the valuation of local property. as well as an Increase in the net earnings. of the road. THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, Yo\ CANNON WRITES TO EDITORS lSpukn- Defends Tariff Law in Let- ter to Convention. TAFT ALSO ASKS FOR SUPPORT Lena ra- Urges Illinoix Newspaper Men ™ Support te Admi tion Measures—Good Words Congreas. SPRINGFIELD, TI., March 15.—Speaker Cannon, in a letter at & meeting of repub- llean editors here today renewed his at- tack on the “Insurgents’” and declared that all the pledges of the platform would be kept by the republican party it It has the continued support of the people, The letter Is addressed to George C. Ran- kin, president of the Illinois Republican Fditorlal association, Springfield, and in part is as follows: [ “Dear Mr. Rankin: the Sth instant, will bo a meeting of the Illinols Republican Bditorial assoclation at Springfield, March 15 and inviting me to give you a word ot encouragement and suggestion. “I thank you for the courtesy, but 1 feel there s no oceasion for me either to advise or encourage the republican editors of Iilinols who have been w potent factor In the politics of the state since before the republican party was formally organized. “The republican party has not discarded any of its principles nor has It sought new issues simply for the purpose of catching the crowd ever ready for noveities. Where it added a new plank to its platform, it has kept its pledges. * * * Repub- lican majorities in house and senate co- operating with the president placed the Payne tarlff law on the statute books August b, or within less than five months from the beginning of the session. Detends Payue Law, “Within six months after its enactment that law has demonstrated that it is the best revenue producer as well as the most sclentific adjustment of protective duties we have ever had, fully justifying the pres- ident’s declaration that It fs the best tarif law ever enact~d. The republican party did not promise a free trade tariff, not a down- ward revision, but a revision in which it should recognize the principle of pro- tection with the mjnimum and maximum rates (o preserve without excessive duties that sccurity against foreign competition to which American manufacturers and pro- ducers are entitled; and also to malntain the high standard of living of the wage earners of this country who are the most direct beneficlaries of the protective sys- tem, “In carrying out that pledge of the plat- form we enacted a tariff in which there were 654 Uecreases from the Dingley law, 220 increases and 1,160 items of the dutiable | list unchanged. The articles on which such were decreased represented $5,000,000,000 worth of copsumption, while those In- creased had a consumption value of less than §1,000,000,000. The increases were on luxuries and the decreases on necessities, and in the first six months of the law 1 have your favor of Following is a comparison of the sta- tistics. of ‘the report made last year and this year: 1909, 1910, Vaiue all local prop- erty . $ 2,983,503.98 § 3,000,991.19 5,774,83L.74 888,522.93 1,680,521.80 Total value.......$10,852,451.54 $10,426,844.73 < The following table shows the yalue of all local property of this road located In the various citles and towns of the state for the years 1900 and 1910 as shown by the reports of the company: § 1916, $ 561820 6365100 87,2078 361118 3892564 28,868.82 860. 38,745.21 Bancroft .685.. Blair ..., Bloamrield Calhoun Carroll Coler! Concor Craig Crofton . . Dakota C nsguEReTen Sx332267 25225 SRESERE BRIREBRIBE Euans EEZRESAL REZ3EE3ET EEEEE BE7 srEEEEs BagazasigEas > 25 2 i =8 =52 RES3RE5C883628888 L5 N2BERIAT 582358 H 3 guzssesis BSggzeRsdenan 33z 32828 EXBIRLVSSIBERISRIT ca South Sioux City! | Telcaman ... Randolph . Thurston . Wakefleld Wausa susuEes 3 ez B3z - 5 $14,177, 75196 2,262,113.78 121,082.08 1,962,239, 25 Net income 156,960.08 42,088,910, 137, Dividends declared each y BUSY DAY FOR ROOSEVELTS (Continued from First Page.) to Omdurman will be made In the sirdar's yacht Fifin, The tentative plana of the Roosevelts provide for their departure from here on a speclal traln Thursday night. On the way to Cairo a stop of one day will be made at Assuan, upper Egypt, on the east bank of the Nile, and two days will be glven over to a visit to Luxor. . e \ HOGS PASS ELEVEN DOLLARS Several Car Voa Sell for §11.03 eage Mar- ket. — more than 61 per cent of all importations were free of duty, the largest percentago of free imports we have ever had under any tariff, not even excepting the Walker tariff of 1846, which was called a free trade tariff. The increase of revenues has been nearly $50,000,000 in six months, mak- ing the Payne law the best rgvenue pro- curer we have ever had, ‘and that is % prime necessity In our increased expendi- tures for the greater Increass of the country. Lauds Work of Congress. “The republican party has carried out its tariff pledges in & way to justify the president’s pride in that enactment and it will carry out its pledges as it has time for discussion and agreement on the form ‘of the wise legislation to meet those pledges. “The present congress in regular session has been more energetic and more success- fui n carrying forward the work before it than has any other congress in recent years. * ¢ ¢ careful study to the number of bills to amend the interstate commerce law and other legislation promised in the republican platform and I think I can safely predict that' this legislation will be kept by the party if it has the continued support of the people. No party hes ever been able to accomplish all it promised in one ses- slon of congress amd such an accomplish- ment has never been expected. “It I the function of the republican edi- tors to keep the people infofmed as to the work accomplished, that they may not be misled by demagogues, whose funetion is to complain and create dissatisfaction; and the republican editors of Illinois can be of material assistance In presenting the truth to meet friction, that the people may fairly judge as to the fidelity of the pres- ent administration to the principles of the party that gave it power, to the end that the president may continue to have the support of the legislative department in working out the policies of the republican party.” Pre mt Asks Supp WASHINGTON, ¥ March 15.—President Taft sent to the convention of repubiican editors at Springfield, Ill., today a tele- gram in which he expressed the hope that the editorial assoclation would stand by the republican congress and the adminis. tration In its attitude toward the tariff and other legislation, The telesram addressed to George Rankin, president of the lllinols Republican Editorial assaclation, was as follow: “Bincerely hope that you will have a fuil meeting; that there will be harmony, and that the republican editors of Illinois will stand by the action of the republican con- gress and republican administration in ref- erence to the tariff bill and other pro- gressive legislitlon. The expression of a meeting like the one you have called, aris- Ing from a normal, sane and patriotic re- publican attitude, will have much influence for good in lilinols and the rest of the CHICAGO, March 15.—The ), price of live hogs passed the $11 mark here today, sev. ral carloads wselling at #11.05 & hundred Pald at the market today, $75 per husdied (e Fecord for wethers of # per hundred. KANSAS CITY, March 15.—The following Tecord prices on the local market were Dounds; lambs, B8: yearmars oot Wethers, $8.15; ewes, ESem-aan, e itiprsil country. WILLIAM H, TAFT. STANDARD NATION'S DANGER (Continued frgm First Page.) 3 urn in closin he power of the United Stajes government as it exists has reached right intd the vitals of this organization. Hero Is an organization that has a continuous life of forty years. I don't say the men in it bave never done any- thing wrong. Judge us, I ask you, by hu- man standards. 1 have no doubt i has done things that it has no right to do. But it has done this: It has fought for the marketing of an American product; for the delivery of ap American produet all over the inhabitable globe." Standard Oil and Trade. “If your honmor please,” sald Mr. Kel- logg, “this s the second time I have Ifs- tened to that ‘passionate appeal to protect American forelgn commerce. It has al- ways been the slogan in this case. As a matter of fact the Standard Oll has not increased American percentagé of exports of this product. The percentage exported 101871 was_greaer than it has been since. PEPEEEEEIREPAPAR L s He then quoted figures to support this informing me that there | ""The committees have been giving most |\ statement “For many years the Standard Oll did not ereate a market,” continued Mr. Kel 108g, “or increase it. Those markets were made by independents by struggling in competition for the commerce of the I worla.” With that as an introduction Mr. Kelloge launched forth into the history of the Standard Ofl company. “That was the genius of Mr. Rocke- feller,” shouted Mr. Kellogs, turning to Mr. Mirburn, whose words he quoted us he told of the purchasing and closing of refineries. Justice Lurton asked Mr. Kellogg if he would not reply to the claim that all the Standard Oll properties had always had common owners. The Standard Ofl attor- neys claim that the property having com- mon owners there was no restraint of trade In the reorganization of the Stand- ard Oll company of New ersey in 180! Increase in Stockholders. “I think it has not,” replied Mr. Kello ‘“The number of stockholders has increase from three to many thousands.' Justice Lurton said he wanted to Mr. Milburn just what his claim was. “It was & body of common owners from | fhe beginning. The individuals changed, A | man might sell.his Interest to another nfhn and the court o finds it,” Mr. Milburn re- plied. Mr, Kellogg told the court that to meet the purposes of the Standard Ofl two bal- ance sheets were kept in one pipe line company. On one of these an employe was credited with a receipt, of $22,000,000. He sald the employe never got it and that the Standard declined to tell who did. “Did they distribute it?" inquired Justice Lurton. “We don't know. When I asked Mr. Mil- burn he said he would not gratify my al- most feminine curiosity.” Mr. Kellogg took up the question of prot- | ita. The Colonial Ofl company, he said, in 1906 earned a profit of 5027 per cent on its capital stock. “What? What?" White. ' ‘e 502.7 per cent on its capital stock and 412 per cent on its net assets,” Mr. Kellogg answered. Ui MIKES' LSS TOTAL NILLIONS (Continued from First Page.) ask interrupted Justice we went down to the gynnasium and I bet some more on the spot.'’ Sample of Memorandum, A sample memorandum In an envelope bearing the writing of Ed Ellis was pro- | duced in court. The memorandum tells the tale of the miking of John Stelk, a Chicago attorney, under the assumed name of John Your unlimited cholce of our en- tire stock of men's and women's Baincosts_and_Overcosts,_which s0ld_ all _season Becey for $20 to 885, at Y was made in order to o e Bpeing e BDrng senscn stook. Several h of the COoats in this ‘u. are $ and medinm -weights, suitable for wear the year round. nd beat their lives, and are now telling their friends. S0 wWe are ready for another crowd of TS tomorrow, Get here as eafly as you can to get your mize —any ooat in the house, © MOODYEA 8 Raincoat Co. . E. Oor. 16th and Davenport Sts, Hotel Loyal Bldg. Bear in Mind Saturday, March 10, Is the Last Day. Kozlek. The memorandum: “Navember 8th. (No. 57 and Joe Waters, | 167) arrived from Chicago, Ill, with John | Kozlek, Interviewed by John Knox (M. M.) for fight. Sent mike home for repre- | sentation. Joe Waters, assistant secretasy | to our sccretary (M. M. Nov. 12th. Kozlek | returned with representation; got certifi- | cate of deposit on Commerefal Nat, Bk. for 5G. “November 13th. Met In room 406, Grand hotel; made match between 87 and Johnny Murphy (HK), Jay Lovejoy (JJ), J. C. Gordon (B), E. Crawford (D), Joe Waters (157.) Afternoon. Kozlek drew money to put in to help Knox; tied match; had fight in barn. Gore. Run offy 8 had second “spasm” in hotsl. Mike left at 4:5 N. W. for Chicago. “Nov. 16 wire from Kansas City to John Koszlek, 193 W. 2d- St, cornér Levant, Chicago, Iil.: ‘Gotiaway O, K. Forced to change route. Be with you soon as pos- sible. (Signed) John” “Nov. 18, Wire trom St. Louls: John. tost. ‘Caught: Took everything from him. All is (Signed) Yoo Trylng to Forget It. “I don't know when it was I bit, ahd I'm trying to forget it ever since, just as completely as I can,” declared Dr. J. B. Titterington of Dallas, Tex., the first of the mikes from the Lone Star state. “About when was it?" urged Assistant District Attorney Stewart. “I can’t remember at all." “Don't you remember with six or twelve months?"’ asked Judge McPherson. “And you are a doctor!” commented the Juage. Dr. Titterington spent §,000 backing Jack Gorman against the redoutable Casey of Mabray fame at New Orleans in 1005. The physiclan testified that he was steered by R.,E. L. Goddard of Dallas, the keeper of’a “jag cure” establishment. Goddard is on trial now. The cross-examination of Fitherington wps unsparing. “You knew this was a gambling proposi- tion before you Went into It, d'1 you not?" inquired Tinley. “Yes, sir."” Loan to Associates. “And you put up your money against that of these other men?" “I loaned it to my associates.” “Now, did you not put this money up yourself?" “Yes, but it was & loan, from my con- ception of the matter. “We don't care anything about the re- tinements of your cbnsclence.” “Thank you.” | The stork is hovering over the home of Otto Graebe, a Chicago saloon keeper, who was ellowed to testify and start home to welcome the little German soon to arrive. “I runs der saloon on der park. Clarence Class undt Joe Wiel comes dere undt I vent to Galesburg with them. “1 lose $4,000 dot I borrow mineself from the brewery. “Frank Knox, the secretary, money and run vidt it while Class he dles on der floor. 1 neffer see him yedt. & The complacent Teuton told his story in a frank and unimpassioned way. He is now traveling toward home as fust as steam will carry him, DID MIKERS U got the B HYPOTISM! ¥hat's What Sam Suter Would Like Sam Sutor, & mike from Cass Lake, Minn., says he was put inte a trance that lasted for two days when they operated on him for the removal of his pocket book. The mental anesthesla was administered, says Sutor, beyond a doubt, and he cannot figure out just which one of the steerers aia it. “I know T was hypnotized, that fs all there was to 1, declared Sutor. “There is nothing else could explain_it. T just went ahead and did what they told me to. tirmly, convinced that there was something mystic in the working of the Mabray gang that he Is lingering In Council Bluffs ‘o see the trial through to the finish. He attends every session of the court, not missing. & word of the testi- mony. The Cass Lake mike eyes Mabray warily. While on the witness stand during the trial last week he avoided the gage of the chief defendant as he testiffed. Sutor runs a hotel at Cass Lake, but he Is concerned in most of the other business enterprises of the settlement, but just now he has time to study the occultism of the mikers crew at Council Biuffs. — For stiff peck there 13 nothing better than Chumberiain's Lintment. rent. Smith and Farr WinatSioux City First Primary Held Under the New Iowa Commission Plan Law. SIOUX CITY, X . March 15—(Special eommission plan of government in Sloux City on Monday, A. A. Smith and E. P. Farr were nominated for mayor, Smith get- ting almost half the total vote, Smith is city clerk and Farr is a lawyer, The following were nominated for coun- cllmen: Jonathan Brown, retired banker; G. B. Healy, Insurance and real estate man and president of the Water Works board; D. B. Kerby, Ineurance man alderman of the Second ward; Frank S.| Wagner, president of the Live Stock ex-| change; E. O. Wesley, contractor; W. K. True, city auditor; Rudolph Beerend, pro- prietor of the Mitehell hotsl; R. §. Whitey, superintendent of schools. At the election March 28 a mayor and four counclimen will be elected, GASOLINE EXPLOSION STARTS | BAD FIRE AT GREGORY, S. D.| Quick Work of the Fire Department All that Saved Business Part of Tow GREGORY, 8. D, March 15.—(Speclal Telegram.)—The Harben drug store' here was gutted by fire last night about § o'clock. The tire started in a gasoline ex- plokion. A man using the telephone lighted his cigar and dropped the match on the floor near a gasoline can which was leaking and an explosion followed. In a minute the entire inside of the bullding was & roaring mass of flames. Mrs. Harben es- caped by the back door, while Mr, Harben and the man went out the front way. It was only a few minutea after the alarm squnded till the fire department was on the ground with two lines of hose. The fire was shooting up over the back and curling over adjacent bulldings, and & dense volume of smoke was pouring out of the front. So efficlent was the fire des partment and the water system so power- ful that within three minutes the fire was under control and in ten it was out. Mr. Harben bought the buflding last ‘year and rebullt it. The loss on the bullding s 31,800 and on the stock I $,000, with §2,600 | insurance. The Harbens lived In the rear and upstaira and lost thelr clothing and goods. Had it not been for the water works system and the prompt work of the fire department the center of the ety would now be a mass of blackened ruine. BRIDE OF FIVE MONTHS KILLS HERSELF WITH GAS Rose Montgomery of Tekamah Uses Kitchen Range to End Life. SIOUX CITY. I, March 15.—(Speclal Telegram.)—Despondent dver sickness, Mrs. Rose Mcntgomery, 18 years old, committed suiclde In her kitchen early this morning by turning on the gas stove and the gas jet. When her husband walked into the kitchen this morning he stumbled over hey body. She came to Sloux City. from Tekamah, Neb., and was a bride of only five months. \ WORK PTATE SCHEDULE Meeting of Special Committee Held at Seward. EWARD, March 16.—(8) e achedule” for the tat league will be out tomorrow, it havin worked upon tonight until ‘a late the special commiitee headed by P Slevers of Grand Isiand. at the committee me: Jacob of H of Seward. President Lipcoln attended the meeting. Telegram.) Base Bail § been v by nt YORK, Neb., March 15.—(Sp At & meeting of base ball enthusiasts of York, W. Hainer was elected president, Ed Gil- Bert, secretary, and B. Perry, treasurer. The_executive and, finance cémmittes are N. Y. Plumblang Co. Tew 0. Night, I-1700. to harvest your garden. Telegram.)=-At the first primary under the | and |2 A. B. Christian, Peter Snitzen, Dr. E Eckles. It s proposed to or ize a it Thursday is home day The Greatest Offer of Them All ONLY FOUR DAYS LEFT Will you harvest what you plant? This is the time of the year when one thinks of planting a small garden. If you own the place you are safe enough—but if you are a renter, what insurance have you that the property won’t be sold to someone who wants it, just about the time you are ready dver think about that, or about guarding against such a thing by purchasing a home of your own? Now is the pfoper time to buy a home—right at the begin- ning of the season, while the prices are low and the terms are easy. In Thursday’s Bee will be found a great many choice home bargains advertised for sale, some of them with extra large lots for garden purposes, at prices ranging from $1,000 to $5,000, on terms of a few hundred dollars down, the balance mopthly lik _“Bromo - That is Quinine "’ Laxative Bromo Quinine USED THE WORLD OVER TO GURE A OOLD IN ONE DAY. for this signature on every box. " Always temember the full name. Look 230, league fuom & squad of something like | eighty bade=ball players, and have a reg- | schedule of games.. The teams will be | evenily balanced as possible and two games each week will be played on the athletic grounds, It is proposed to select rom, the. oty .league ten of the best pl ers, who will organize as the York base ball team and then organize a tri-county league, « Letters will be written to base ball managers at Aurora, David City, Sut- ton, Fairmont, Exeter, Geneva ‘and’.Dor- chester, hoplyk' to Interest players to or- ganize a tri-cunty league and play this summer, a weries of games. York has many good base bail players and its citi- gzens patronize games. STEPHENS PULLS ROM RACEF Fremonter Withdraws From Sena- torial Fight and Declares He ‘Will Not Run. FREMONT, Neb,, March 15.—(Special,)— Dan V. Stephens has announced that he will not be a candidate for the senate. He admits that In an unguarded moment he permitted himself to drift in that direction, but after contemplation concluded he did not care to make the race. Whether Steph- ens' withdrawal is In the interest of Hiteh- cock or any other candidate {s a question, He hands the latter & bouquet, but at the same time has a good word for all the other would-be democratic senators, Spring Suits fo Order $25.00 There's nothing new in wool- ens not included in our New Spring Stock. We have shades of gra; blues Two Expert cutters and sixty sewing tailors enable us to gilve prompt and pleasing service, We guarantee every garment perfect in fit and style. Pants to Order $5 and up MeCarthy-Wilson T iloring Co. 804-. .4 SOUTH 16TH STREET Near 16th and Farnam, 11 the choicest browns and AMUSEMENTS, 55 BVoes, 15-25-50-T6e Dally Mat., 16-25-50, Twice dally all week, clos! Friday night Lz 'BIG SHOW XTRAVAGANEA AND VAUDEBVILLE ] Extra Features Bt. Patriok’ Dime Matinee at Sat., The Grew Co. in ok Fervis ‘orite Play—“WAY OUT WEST. Sun. (6 days) Robinson's VAUDEVILLE ory i Bve. Performanoce 8113 his week: Frank Fogarty, Miss Bva Taylor, Eddle Leonard and Co, Knight Bros. and Marion Saw e, T Misses Dagwell, Donovan and Arnold, Kramer and B k, The Kinodrome and The Orpheum Orchestra. Prices 10¢, 26¢ and b0c. =LK 8444 VAT “It Takes Nine T ailors to Make a Man” says the old adage, but it is not 80 nowadays. Here we use more experience and skill and fewer men for the job, ORr expert tail- ors ‘will fit"you to'your tion. ~ They have the sesson’s styles at their fingers' ends, and our cutters are excelled by non We would like to make & sing Buit for you, or a Top Coat, so to show you & sample of our high- art tailoring, SUITS $25 to $40 Jhe London i TONIGHT—-MAT. TODAY, 8¢ TO $1.00 LAST TIME TOMORROW NIGHT Henry Miller's Associate Players THE SERVANT IN THE HOUSE Friday and Seturday Nights, Mat, Sat. OLGA NETHERSOLE' . Friday . .."“The Writing on the ‘W, Saturday Matinee .., “Oamille" Saturday FEvening «“Sapho” Prices: Lower Floor .. $1.50 to $9.00 Beats now. 1st Baloonies, $1.50, §1, "o.-loo BOYD'S |00 ., TONIGHT -MATS. THURS., BAT. WOODWARD STOUK COMPANY In Omaba's Great Success Whe Knighthood Was in Flower T e o et L= Tonight at S15-—Matines Todsy at Sid ALL SEATS %o ISLE OF SP'CE, wexT sUNDAY GO ON GO MOHAWK ,