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Innocence Pays the Price of Guilt + | FIRST STRIKE OF SCRIBES IS BROKEN OMAHA, Neb ug. 22.—The city’'g first news gatherers iveiiihiny orchestra— 31 men under Brambilla | \ Saturday will bring a Giant Novelty— A massive spectacle in 8 parts. A year and a half in the making. : A host of principals and 8,000, supernumer- }:: aries. Coliseum’s News Service World Happenings First Friday—Final Chances to Enjoy 4% MILK TO STAY AT HIGH PRICE Jack Pickford in “Burglar STUPENDOUS SETTINGS and a love; volves a fight for a girl that over- comes almost in- conceivable. diffi- culties. A mighty pictorial present- §f *' mance ment— GODS | 5.434 were found | ment were normal. 25¢ Arrow Collars .... 20¢ Men’s Sox ........ 15e Canvas Gloves.... Men’s $2.50 Khaki Pants, sizes to 44, cut to 98c Men’s Dress Shirts, Arrow and others, to $2.00, cut to 89c Men’s Ribbed Underwear cut to 49c Men’s Flannel Shirts, worth to $2.00, all sizes, cut to 69c Hats, worth to $5.00, in colors black, brown and gray, cut to $1.89 Down go prices on every pair of Douglas U nion- made Shoes—the entire stock go- ing at a fraction of present day prices. $7.00 Ladies’ Dress Shoes, welted soles, cut to $2.98 $1.50 P Children's Suits .. s Men's Wool ‘ Underwear ... $2.00 Men's Khaki Pants $1.50 Men's Union Suits $1.50 Overalls $2.00 Men's Sweat- ALTOONA, Aug. 22.—Out of 6, a9} | children examined In Altoona schools, | | physically, the #choot report shows Only 23 per cent of the total enroll D.D.D. = | The Lotion for Skin Dinan ea ee Bartell’s Drug Stere 7 DON'T LONDON, Ang. 22.—An urgent of- } ficial communteation from the local government board, dated July 25, ar- rived at West Drayton, 12 miles away, on August 10, it was officially |reported at the council } meeting. - Prescription for Eczema inter, 38 ad IST Me Manders sate es aitp-tactene relief satis to be defective, Soa D coat tn. ROSEBUR ‘Dries war ly was unloaded and Fruit Co. ext ever known here, and hundreds! of meiona were being bought MELONS 1 CENT A POUND IN PRICE WAR) Ore., here yesterday iden | & car of California melons unexpect.| LONDON, Aug. 22—Charged with being in possession of counterfeit the 17 | ten shilling notes, Walliam Warner | have just received the highest trib Melons | *uccessfully pleaded that he carried | ute that the nation can pay to mill- sold at 3 cents a pound for a time, | them for a joke, startling people by | tary genius, appointment as instruc of Roseburg met the com petition by cutting Proxy” Condensary Official Sees No Alternative ductie the price informa alking t department to bring dowr er be reached be what the The reason they w far enough with the camp Stuart said the price of milk will not go lower because the farmer is now hoping to get $4 @ hundrett weight for duct. T wed July 1, be the raw pr ro- Price to the farmer waa r from $2.90 to $3.15, he demanded it, Madrona Line and E Union to Connect of a car tne four nd of the lines Thom F. Murs ities department hus }Upon completion, the M proceed directly de to the city, while a wervice will be ta @rona line | WOMAN LIVED AS MAN IN NEW BRITISH PLAY LONDOW, Aug. 2?.—A romance of South Africa, which was dramatized and produced for charity at the St = theatre nh around James Bafry, a served in the army as inepector-general mea und was we x was not strike seemed broken yesterday, when all but two striking reporters and copy readers of the Omaha Bee went back to work as individuals, after being out 2 pure, The first break came when a griewance committee of five men, appoitited by the strikers to confer with the management, were induced by the latter to take their | | Jobs Back. According to other atrik- ers, the committee did not even re | port back to the meeting |BOGUS BILLS ARE . CIGAR LIGHTERS Aug. 23— the Pacific prices. fuhtil after she has read the story, | \Five Instructors in U. §.- WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 A woman never reads the preface “TY '* This was announced today by Maj Satisfactery Terms lige TRE ic Tan KINCo. OTTO F. REGEL, President STORE TO'5 P. M. “How Can I Heat Comfortably?” “How Can I Heat Economically?” AVEN’T YOU ASKED YOURS again in the past few years? HOURS FROM 9 A. M SELF THESE QUESTIONS time and Last spring when you took down the heating stove didn’t you say “Never again”? Didn’t you resolve that you were through paying ex- cessive fuel bills for unsatisfactory warmth—through carrying coal and taking out ashes over the living room carpets? Of course you did. When the coal bills kept mounting and the mercury kept going down -—didn’t you resolve to get posted on a heating system that would give uniform warmth to all rooms? Of course you did. We Have the Answer to All Your Heating: Problems It’s the A-B Pipeless Furnace —the furnace that burns all fuels satisfactorily. It heats and ventilates—sends large volumes of moist, warm air circulating through all rooms. It gives clean, comfortable and uniform heat—with less fuel—no gas, dust, soot or smoke to your rooms; a furnace that is self- cleaning—that never needs cleaning out. * Call in the store at your earliest convenience and talk to our heating expert—have him ex- plain why heating the A-B Pipeless” way is the most satisfactory way. GROT E “Ri ANI KIN © 0. ~Pike at Fitth~GROT E- RANKIN CO, | fiction would dare to chron proof of the prospect that the ai holds out as a career to the tious man. For these men, witl the advantage of a West Point caion, went into the ranks fought their way up, far past a majority of the men who were uated from the military academy, WAR GAS WASHED _ War College Ex-Privates Bix of C B. Howard, war department sta Ustician In other words, said Maj. How ard, more than one-third of the men who are recognized today as ‘the American army officers who until the first peice slicing was in; U8ing them in public as cigaret| tors to the General Staff College, raven grea epi can gry fet ne| UPON BATHING BE |dulged in, but by night the retati | Mehters | Were onc and have fougnt private” instead of West Point SWANSEA, Wales, Aug. Price had dropped to 1 cent, the low: | their w p Ot the snilt These men are: Brigadier Generals Campbell King and Preston Brown and Colonels Hjalmer Erickson, be badly burned and gassed. Drums of mustard gas washel ashore here caused several bathers § —Come SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, AT 9 A.M. IN THE FACE OF aree PRICES—WE DEFY ComParenon. forced to sell these great stocks within the next ten days, will do the work: $4 and $5 Shoes, broken lines, cut to. Men’s Dress "$1.98 $6.00 and $7.00 Douglas Shoes, all $3.85 sizes, cut to. $6 Men’s Fine Dress Shoes, all sizes, cut to cut to Positively the in Seattle on Suits. rock - bottom and outfit school. $5.00 Men’s Heavy Work Shoes, all $2 .48 3.50 ys” sizes, cut to.. klipe Shoes cut to $25.00 Men’s Suits, Society Brand, cut to all Saturday at zes, £0 PAY CHECKS CASHED SALE STARTS SATURDAY 9 A. M.—COME TO THE RED FRONT CLOTHING CO. 1601-1603 FIRST AVE., Corner First Ave. and Pine St, ae x $15.00 Boys’ All-wool Blue Serge Suits, sizes 9 to 14, . $6.95 BOYS’ SUITS lowest prices Boys’ School A large assortment of patterns—and all at sale prices. Take advantage of this sale the boy for $1.85 SD ) Children’s Scuffers, $1.65 and the following low prices PAY HIGH PRICES COME TO THIS SALE We are now down to Odds and Ends. The Great Clothing, Furnishing stock, which we purchased at A FRACTION OF WHOLESALE COST, whl soon be a - thing of the past. If you want to save—come to this sale—take advantage of these prices Tbe Suspenders. ... Se Work Shirts $1.00 Men's Under. wear . . $1.00 Wool § $1.05 Sandals “and Douglas Shoe x Children's We are absolutely 98c $30.00 and $35.00 Men’s Suits, Collegian, Hirsch- Wickwire and others, to ..... 911.85 tO. srcer TEES $6.00 Men's Dress Pants, in stripes, serges and suit cut to $1.48 $3.00 Men's atterns, Heavy Work Hae to. i $2.48 Pants cut to $35.00 and $40.00 Men's Suits, Hart, Schaffner & aon * Marx and Kuppenheimer $2.25 Men's makes Union-made att... 917.65 $30.80 Men’s Suits, J. Capp & Son and Alco makes, to... $14.85 UNION STORE $1.50 Men's Union Men's Work Children's Sandals .......... $2.00 Boys’ Wash Sulte ..... $1.50 Dress Shirts $1.50 Men’s Caps. . $1. Dress Shirts Children’s Kov- eralls, in khaki, blue and striped, ages to 10, cut to $3.00 Men’s Fine Lisle Union Suits Overalls cut to $3.00 Ladies’ White Canvas Shoes, all sizes : SATISEACTIOND and Arthur L. Conger. Everyone of them served with the American 4 PRICE QUALITY Expeditionary Forces in France and each was awarded the Distinguished Ask some one who Service Medal. General King began as a private wears clothes made by | in the Fifth cavalry 21 years ago. In 1902 he passed the examination for a second Meutenant of infantry and went to Cuba and the Philip | pines with the First infantry. In less than a year he had been promoted to captain, and hia rise since then has been rapid. He was chief of staff of the First division in the ac tions near Montdidier, Soissons and St. Mihiel salient, and during the of the Mtuse-Argonne he was of staff of the Third corps. ral Brown enlisted in the old artillery and ras commis & second lieutenant of infan Cavalry Private the 49e $5.00 Heavy Army Blankets special at $1.69 his enlistment pired. He served with the § fantry in Cuba during the American war and later went with the same regiment to the Philip pines. By 1 he was a captain, and he kept going up the ladder un til, during the battles of Chateau Thierry, Solssons and St. Mihiel, he was chief of staff of the Second division. He commanded the Third | division in the Meuse-Argonne offen sive Brickaon was botn’in Nor-| ame an American citi ting in the Sth cay alrdy, In 189 was commissioned from the rar in t Sth infan try. He was not made a captain un. but he m up for lost . and the war with him commanding nt in the vicious east of the Aire river. | Militia Sergeant zen afte Suits Down come prices Colonel Williams was a sergeant “ ‘ in the New Jersey militia when the on Men's High- war with Spain broke out. He was est Grade Suits, promoted to a 2nd Heutnant of vol ‘ unteers and later was commissioned including Hart, Wir’ tne rewular army, He went up Schaffner & Marx, Kuppen- heimer, Collegian, Hirsch - Wick- wire and Society Brand Suits, grade by gra during the late chief of staff lst army corps and later of nird army | Colonel Hitt entered the army | \a sergeant of engineers in 1899. | | Within a year he w second Neu tenant. He distingu’ <i himself in the Philippines while serving with the 25th infantry, receiving the of ficial thanks of the navy department for one exploit, and being cited for bravery under fire for another, He was signal officer of the Ist Amer ican army in France. ) $8.00 and $10.00 Logger Shirts. Buy them now at $4.39 69 UNION TAILORS The materials used in| ery tailoring our clothes is ‘ acta in me New ace Kk the finest obtainable, in the nish war Pou Atta" laters he made a teu. fy and satisfaction from bes | | tenant in the re army and sent |@ ginning to end, to the Philippines, So many chances came his way—and he took advan | tage of each so well that by 1902 he | had been made a brevet captain for | gallantry in action. He was a mem. | | ber of the second section of Gen. Jeral Pershing’s staff in France. | Major Howard cited the careers of ‘these men—each one a history of accomplishment such as no writer of | Was First Corporal nel Conger went in t 304 PIKE ST.