Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1905)
TIIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER. 30, 1303. OnrinTin Beginning Saturday, Brandcis Announces a Display of Ladies Fashionable and Exclusive Apparel Specially Designed for Horse Show Wear The Most Lavish Display of Artistic Millinery Designs Ever Witnessed in the West Including Scores of Special Horse Show Models in this Rich As.emblage rn mi v. s ? ' 1 1 v. It A w rasa . A Sal of Imported Gowns 7 Costumes We are gratified to be able to show such a beauti' ful array of exclusive model gown at such an auspi cious time. This event has been planned with the most extreme care, and gowns from such designing experts as Beer, Worth, Paquin, etc, are shown for the first time. A number of these gowns are the elegant dresses and unfinished costumes from our purchase of Mme. Mercedes' New York dressmaking stock. An assortment of 49 elegant costumesdesigned for elaborate recep tion and evening dreBs affairs beautirulljr made of crepe de chines, chiffon taffetas, figured nets, velvets and tailor made broadcloth these gowns are handsomely trimmed I. C In lr and nhiffonn. and are worth as hlffh &B If If U fifty dollars each in our new costume department at, choice $75 1 At $35 Your choice of thirty- eren beautiful costume osclusira tries from leading designer! Is the delicate evening shade handsomely fashioned In crepe de chine, chiffon tai- fctas, spangled nets, voiles, figured Jap silks, colored Shantungs and tailored broadcloth worth up to slxty-flvs dollars each at At $45 We offer you the choice of fifteen elegant gowns. Including one stlk lace over light blue, one point net over silk, ribbon trimmed: one aeo lean Cloth with lingerie trimmed bodice, one light blue messallne with lace trimmings, one ele gant black broadcloth with silk embroidered trimmings worth from 169 to B t s4 FANCY DRESSES AT SU.ftB Tour choice of 2! elegant evening and fane dresses, In wool and silk all dainty light colors and charmingly trimmed these gowns are worth up to $30 each at , COSTUMES AT 919 Toar choice of 67 gowns and dresses, elegantly fashioned In taffeta, crepe de chine, chiffon taf feta, voiles and veilings all colors, for party, reception and demi-costume wear worth up to $45, at each. . . . Elaborate Evening Coats and Wraps Included in this sale ar soma exceptional bargains In the daintiest, dressiest and most exquisite Evening Coats, white and pastel shades some are very elaborately trimmed well adapted for Ak-8ar-Ben Ball and Horse Show wear, at 2450-$29-$39 $45 49 $150 One Yenalftsance gown, lave and chiffon over silk at One silk point net with chiffon CI floral decoration over Nile green. piD One repousse lace gown, flounced over silk at . triple One champagne drap d'ete gown, filigree and lace trimming over sUk at $59 $89 Up One reseda green S-plece broad cloth gown, eyelet embroidered trimming at One embroidered chiffon dress, all silk lace trimming $139 ..$49 Braiydeis' Exclusive Milliaery The grace and beauty of this season's most elaborate picture styles adapt themselves charmingly to the needs of horse show wear. Brandeis' position at chief fashion arbiter of the West calls for a Splendid display bsfore this important fashion event and we are prepared to cater to the discriminating tastts of Omaha s fashionable eis A Horse Show Special &t $10 As a special buying event tor Saturday we bring forward a number of our newest and most bewitching: models. In the large shapes and smaller effects, wrought by designers of acknowledged talent These hats are far superior In designs and elegance of trimmings to the hats that customarily sell at I IB selected plumes, feathers, etc. all with a smart Parisian touch, at c linings to the $10 Exclusive French Models Our exclusive Importation of French pattern hats for the Horse Show is the admiration of fashionable women of Omaha never was there sueh a delightful assem blage of elaborate models the beautiful willow plumes, snake plumes, aigrettes, expensive flowers or ornaments are lavishly employed in Ci their fashioning hundreds of ex quisite horse show models at. 15-$35 Brandeis' Millinery at $5 In our great department on the third floor and In our newsectionTln theannex we will showmany'absolutely new and charming mlllnery designs tomorrow, in the Hippodrome sailors, the new Marquise shapes, trlcornes, pleateaux. etc many of the choicest new novelties, at. S5 In this lot are many exclusive designs to. evening, theater, dressy street effects, etc. in the graceful large shapes and the new turban effects every fj f late style feature In shape and i II trimming at We wish, every lady in Omaha, who admire handsome millinery to see this elaborate display. To make this sumptrir ous style show all the more effective, have brought forward on display a greater number oj the seasons innovations in dress millinery than ever graced a showing in the West. Ladies' Silk Crepe Lace R.UCHING A great sale of thousands of yards of importer's samples of fine Ruchings, in white and col ors, all new fall effects, regu larly worth up to 50o a yard new and fresh, at yard Tf,j)JI1IBIIB?ill"'t rm and 15c Special Hosiery Sale Ladles', men's, girls' and boys' Hosiery, in plain blacks and fancy colors, all well made ladles' hose are openwork, silk clock, silk embroidered, drop stitched, etc., worth up to 86c pair rat 10c42ic45c Ladies Fall Kid Gloves All the new street and dress shades, fine fall Kid uioves, nigh quality Kid, two-clasp f . effects worth up to 1.25 pair at wt er w pair RIBBONS All Silk Taffeta. Moire, Loulscne and Warp Print Ribbons, all colors and all widths, plenty of whites and blacks at, yard 3V2C-5c-10c-15c HANDKERCHIEFS Men's and Indies' plain and linen Hand kerchiefs, also ladles' fine Swiss Handker chiefs with embroidered and revered edges, worth up to c each Saturday at, each 5c-10c-12V2C J. L. BRANEEIS & SONS. BOSTON STORE. J. L. BRANDEIS & SONS. GREATEST DOLL SALE EVER. HELD IN OMAHA A Wonderful Bargain Sale of Dolls Saturday will witness the greatest sale of dolls ever known in Omaha. We bought an entire stock from an importer some of the cases had been wet in transit the shipment was refused and Brandeis bought it at an amazing reduction. Fine kid body dolls, dressed dolls, rubber dolls, cloth dolls, etc just the same dolls you will find at Christmas time, only at less than one-half the regular price. Only a tew of these dolls have been slightly damaged by water the rest aro absolutely perfect, worth up to $2.50 each 10 GREAT SALE of BOOKS Choicest Fiction Also poetry, adventure, biogra phy and history the world's best literature, clearly printed on excellent paper, well bound- sell regularly at 25c and 50c each at, per ( volume !0c49c C-15C-25C-50C-59C CUP AND SAUCER SALE Thousands oi dozens of beautifully decorated Cups and Saucers and .Plates, imported from Austria, France and Bavaria to sell for 50c and $1 Saturday, on' bargain square, basement, at . , 5c-10c-15c-25c-35c BOSTON STORE -J. L. BRANDEIS & SONS-BOSTON STORE JAP TELLS OF CONVERSION Surgeon General of Mikado's Army Ad dresses Y. M. C. A. Conreutien. story electrifies the delegates He Bay Missionaries that Are Now la the Orient Have More Tact Than Those of Gener ation A so. DETROIT, Sept. 29. Intensely dramatic was the moment today when Surgeon Gen eral Suzuki, of the Japanese navy, fresh from the battles of the Japan and Yellow seas, declared with effective earnestness nd sincerity before the railroad Youns Man's Christian association International convention that he had been for twenty years a Christian. Proudly he added that his wife and five children shared his belief. Tears dimmed many eyes when the distin guished Japanese surgeon told brokenly of the drowning of another child, his 13-year-old daughter. Just two days before he himself had been called Into the thick of the recent fighting. lie had not urged the question of religion In his family, he said, having trusted It to the guidance of God. His eldest son had been the first to become a convert, having been interested at first through an accidental visit to a Christian meeting while walking along the streets of Toklo. Next the wife had been converted through the Influence of her son and all the family hud followed In the steps of these two. Struggling to control his emotion. General Susukl declared his faith In the Christian belief of the future life, saying of his little daughter, whom-he mourned, "I believe she has gone to our own kingdom." Further evidencing his high conception of tho hwuly and power of the Christian re ligion, General Buaukt credited the mis sionaries to Japan with becoming broi ler and broader In their views. He said: Those who came first were too deeply concerned about outward appearances. It wrtH a iiilxtiike for them to ask at the very outset: "Iht you smoke T Vo you drink? Ho you go to church?'' For we know now that when one hss really entered the church he will naturally give up the things that are evil. Ws want you to send to us good men who will convert our hearts and show us the real meaning of Christianity. Japan la supposed to be a non-Christian country but there are many men, women and children In Nippon trying to be faith ful to the right and to God, I myself, was baptized twenty years ago. I cannot say that I am a good Christian, but I am a Christian. . Convention la F'.leetrlBed. Surgeon Oeneral Suzuki's earnest words electrified the convention. The audience was wild in its outbursts of applause. It was probably the first time that cheers had re sounded In the Central Methodist Episcopal, church, one of the oldest and largest houses of worship in Detroit. The distinguished Japanese was the last speaker at the after noon session, but the audience did not turn toward the door when he finished. With one impulse delegates and spectators strug gled to get nearer to the uniformed, Swarthy foreigners, who stood behind the preacher's desk. Surgeon General Susukl looked about him perplexed. There was the making of a panto Uv the mob that was struggling all around him. It was necessary for John J. McCook of New York, who had been pre siding to conduct the besieged speaker through a rear door to the street. It was through Robert E. Galley, the Young Men's Christian association secre tary at Tien Tsln, that the Japanese sur geon was secured to address the convention. General Suzuki had related his story to Mr. Galley, who notified the promoters of the convention that the noted Japanese was to be in this country and ought to be secured to speak. Reeeptlon by Miss Gould. Other features today of the Railroad Ynunff Men'M Christian Association rnnv.n. I tlon were a reception by Miss Helen M. Gould to about 150 employes of the Gould railway system and a mass meeting In the evening at Light Guard armory. Noonday meetings were held at forty-one factories and were attended by about S.00O men. Among the speakers today were E. T. Col ton of New York, J. G. Cannon, vice presi dent of the Fourth National bank of New York; O. W. Stevens, president of the j Chesapeake 4k Ohio railroad; W. A. Garrett, ' general manager of the Queen & Crescent railroad, and H. B. F. McFarland, commis sioner of the District of Columbia. Pacific coast requesting acceptance of a publlo reception when Baron Komura ar rives there. All such requests will prob ably be declined. BOMB THROWN IN NEW YORK Gotham Tenement Is Damaged ana Some People Injured by Explosion. NEW YORK, Sept. 29.-A bomb filled with both dynamite and a quantity of inflam mable oil was sthrown at the rear of a crowded tenement house at Eight avenue and One Hundred and Forty-third street early today. More than a score of persons, who were sleeping at the time, were hurled from their beds by the explosion and two of them were carried from the house un conscious. Within a minute after the explosion flames had nearly enveloped the rear halls of the tenement house. The police believe that the "Black Hand" Italian assassins threw the bomb. The object of the attack was the rear door of an Italian barber shop on the ground floor. STUDENTS ARE UNDER BAN Wisconsin Mayor Orders Polleeraen to Shoot Those Who May Resist Officers. MADISON. Wis., Spt. SS.-As a result of an attempt of a crowd of studenta to break up a carnival company showing here at night Mayor Curtis toda ' gave orders to the police to shoot any student resisting ar rsst or assaulting officers. . .. President VanHlse of the university urged officers and courts to show no discrimina tion against students and said he would ex pel every student convtoted In court and would suspend all arrested. At a convoca tion today President VanHlse Scored stu dents for rowdy conduot. CALL MONEY MUCH HIGHER fbrtheBaby Tho quantity of the food taken la not the msasure of ita nourishment.. The quality it what counta. Many babies take Urge quantities of food and get a small amount of nourishment. MeU tin's Food babica take a small quan tity of food and (tt a Ltrgt amount of nourishment. Send for our book M Mellin's Food Babies." Mellla's Feed Is the ONLY Infants' 14. wale a received the Graaj True, the hlsksst sward ef the LenUtana Sr. chase Iseesliiaa. St. Leeis, High er than a U asedai. UEXLIN FOOD CO, BOSTON. KAM. PRESIDENT PREPARES TO LEAVE 9 Will Oo to Washington Today from Samnier Home In Oyster Bay. OYSTER BAY, Sop:. .-President Roosevelt apent the last day of his Burn ing sojourn at 8agamore Hill In prepar ing for his departure for Washington. Af ter devoting a couple of hours to his official correspondence he parsed the re mainder of the day about the house and grounds giving directions as to their care. The president, Mrs. Roosevelt and their children will leave for Washington tomor row morning at 10 o'clock. They will travel on a special train to Long Island City, going thence by boat to Jersey City, There they will board a special train on the Pennsylvania railroad and leave at 1:14 p. m. The train Is scheduled to. arrive at Washington at :!. Baron Komarn In Winnipeg. WINNIPEG. Sept. &.-Haron Komura and his party passed through here at mid night on the Canadian Pacific Imperial lim ited. His secretary reported the Journey along the northern lake shore country as uneventful. The baron Is standing the trip well. Numerous messages tiavs been rtceived from Japanese associations on the For First Time .In Many Bate Goee to Sla Per Cent. Months ' NEW YORK. Sept, .-Before noon to day call money advanced to s per cent, the highest rate In many months. The National City bank lent tlO,000.000 around this figure, while Blair Co., lent IS. 000.000 at t. and rhany other financial Institutions lent large sums at correspondingly high rates. After (hese loans the rats dropped back to 6, but again quickly advanced to ( per cent. BIG HOLE IN SUEZ CANAL jtsplodlngr Ilnamlte Makes Depres sion I'nder Wreek, bnt Another Explosion Is Keeessary. I PORT SAID, Egypt, Sept. H-The fore part of the wreck of the British steamer Chatham, which was blown up yesterday has entirely disappeared, the stern must be furthnr demolished by dynamite. There is a hole 110 feet deep at the spot where the wreck rested.. GREAT LOSS FROM STORM Arsiy Potts on tha Southern Philippine Ialaiu Are Destroyed. THOUSANDS OF NATIVES ARE HOMELESS Civil and Military Anthorltles Send ing' Aid to Suffering People Telegraph Wires Down ' and News Delayed. MANILA, Sept. 29. Keports are coming in from places along the path of the re cent typhoon on the island of Luzon and the southern Islands Indicate great loss of life and property. In the waters surround ing Bamar and other Islands, many coast ing vessels and Island transports hava been wrecked. The coast guard cutter Leyte Is a complete wreck and eleven Americans and twenty-four natives were drowned. At the town of Sorsogon fifteen natives were drowned. The loss on hemp planta tions Is estimated at $1,000,000. The army transport, Juan Rodriguez, Is ashore at Legaspi. In the Interior of the Island of Samar thousands of natives are homeless and the same report comes from many of the other email Islands. The army posts In the southern Islands, have been destroyed. The civil and military authorities are rushing aid to the suffering people in the form of supplies of food and shelter. Owing to the destruction Of the tele graph system, reports received from other points are meager. Report From Corbln. WASHINGTON. Sept. 2.-Ueneral Cor bln, commanding the division of tho Philip-' pines, today cabled the War department further details of the damage done to gov ernment property there by the recent typhoon. He says that temporary shelter porta at Hartshorne, Catubig. Tagablran Tavleran, Gangara and Bulao were de stroyed. Camp Connell was injured. Launches Hercules and Lorcha witii rations, all for Gangara were blown ashore near Taranguan; the Lorcha was distri buting coal ashore near Tarnguan. Balau reports the Carmen ashore on the east coast of Samar and the insular government coast guard vessel Leyte wrecked on the west coast near Allen. All officers and six passengers on the Leyte were lost. Artificer Joseph H. Rulon, company E, Twenty-first Infantry, was killed and several officers and men Injured at Hart shorne. The damage to property in and around the city Is mainly confined to un roofing buildings; can be repaired. Manila and McKlnley about t3,S00, the latter not more Jhan X700; land telegraph system demoralized. General Corbin does not confirm the rumor previously cabled by him to the effect that the military post at Malahl bad been destroyed. of the local union of the Structural Iron Workers union. The men have beon re ceiving $4 a dtiy for eight hours work, but demand an increase to M.50. chugging of the big touring red devils from Atlantic City. Brooklyn Eagle. ! Will right Raise la Rates. DETROIT. Mich., Sept. -At a meet ing here today of a committee of Michigan members of the Royal Arcanum, It was decided to rslse f7.fcn to fight In the courts tho sliding auala of fa lea teceutly adopted by the Sueiet. TIGHT LITTLEGERIViAN TOWN Where Everything; Smacks of the Fatherlnnd nnd American Influences Go Slow. A typical German city within a few hours' ride of New York a city where the mayor, the city clerk and all of the city officials. Including the nine members of the common council, are Germans, a city where the offi cial business of the municipality Is con ducted In the German tongue and where the records are written In German, may seem an anomaly In this day when the Eng lish language has spread In America along with American enterprise and habits. Yet here Is Egg Harbor In the very midst of all the commercial hubbub, Just as It was fifty years ago with the exception that It, too, has partaken of the thrift and the enter prise around it a tight little German town as German to many Intents and purposes as If It were settled In the very heart of the kaiser's vast domain. There are German settlements and towns In the United States lots of them. But this unique city of Egg Harbor stands out alono In Its class as the only city In the country that was started with the avowed Intention of forming a home for Germans, where they could follow the customs of the fatherland, speak the language of tho fatherland and bring around them In this new land across the sea the same Influences religious and secular that made the old land so dear to them. This they started out to do; and this they did. And It is for this reason that these good German neigh bors of ours will begin next Saturday the celebration of their golden Jubilee the founding of the city. If you go through the quaint old town during the four days of the celebration you will see that you axe not only In the midst of a community of Ger mans of the old school, as regards ths dally habits of life, but of the old Ideals as well. You will be greeted by the old-time hearty welcomes that betake of genuine good cheer. There you will find the huerger- melsfrs and der herren and die frauen and die schoenen fraulelns, all gracious, all cor dial, as In the days of Herr Grimm. youir.,.i. CROW SURVEY IS COMPLETED Plat of Reservation Soon to He Opened to Settlement Now on File. HELENA, Mont., Sept. 29.-J. Scott Har rison, government Inspector of surveys, after having been in the Crow Indian res ervation field for nearly four months, has completed his task and returned to Helena. His report Is being prepared and will be forwarded to the general land office, after which the plats will be filed In the eastern Montana land office, to be followed by the president's proclamation that the lands are open to settlement. Included In the lands Is the Custer battlefield. SHINGLE COMBINE ORGANIZED Bnrenn Will Attempt to Control Red Cedar Ontpnt of State of Washington. SEATTLE, Wash.. Sept. 19. The shingle mills bureau, an association to control the output of Washington red cedsr shingles, was organised here today. About 80 per cent of the total output of the state was represented. A resolution was adopted ad vancing a closing down of the mills during the months of December and January next. ' Reek Island Engineer Resigns. KANSAS CITY. Sept. 2S.-W. L. Dsrilng has resigned as chief engineer of the Horn Island railroad system. It Is understood that ne Intends accepting a position re cently offered as engineer of a company that intends building railroads In the Philip pines. Baltlmoro Iron Workers Strike. BALTIMORE. Sept. 29 Three hundred and twelve structural iron workers em ployed on four larg buildings In this city were ordered out today by a representative FIGHT WITH PITCHFORKS George C'onstnnee Stnbbed to Death by Slets Boekhout Near Twin Brooks, Mian. ST. PAUL, Sept. 29.-A special to the Pioneer Press from Mlibank. S. D. says: George Constance, a farmer living five miles north of Twin Brooks, was stabbed to death with a pitchfork wielded by Hletx Boekhout, who lived on the same farm. Boekhout, who claims to have acted In self-defense, surrendered to the sheriff. 'Elk," meaning the man who has taken the degrees In the benevolent and proteo tlve order of that name, cannot tell tho difference between the genuine teeth and those which have been manufactured some where in Connecticut or Rhode Island Chicago Inter-Ocean. Pointed Pnrnn-raphs. Renovating a man doesn't regenerate him. How often has the lowly banana peel given pride a hard fall. It Isn't always easy to flatter a girl who has a big brother. Incompatibility of finances Is the root of many divorce cases. When a lamps stands In its own light It Is time to tuin It down. Two can live Just as cheaply as one after they have been made one. A philosopher Is a man who thinks that possikly he was once a fool. When a woman marries a man she takes everything he has including his name. "Out of sight, out of mind" doesn't neces sarily imply that a blind man is crazy. A man's .superstition refuses to work when he is offered thirteen oysters for a dozen. Any woman who can refrain from saying mean things about her poor relations pos sesses genuine self-control. About the only difference there la bo tween an undertaker and a funeral director Is In their method of figuring. It Isn't always safe to bet that the man who howls tho loudest about thieving poll tlclans never tried to beat a street car conductor out o, a nickel. Chicago New FAVORS TRIPLE ALLIANCE will find the hillsides planted with the vines as they are along the banks of the beloved Rhine. You will see the wine cellars stocked with the product of these vines. You will note the growing vegetables In ths weediest beds. You will gaze with admiration on those noncomnarable, old-fashioned Ger man flower gardens and praise the thrlftl ness that keeps each house of this literal Spotless Town clothed In fresh paint and cleanliness, while you will be lost In won der at the luxurtousness of the maples and chestnuts and elms that arch the broad streets and avenues from one end to the other. In brief, this is the little German town that for half a century has protected the language and the customs of the father land. But In the new generation that Is coming to the front the "Americanizing" Influences are being made apparent and there la a tendency to break away from the old lines. A dozen years ago practically nothing but German was spoken In' the town. Now one must speak both German and English to be In touch with the little world Inside and the great world without. Thus far no street cars have run through the thoroughfares, but the one-time quiet of the place la today broken In upoa by the Says I'nlted States. Great Britain nnd France Can Preserve Pence of the World. PARIS, Sept. 0.-The Echo d Perls this morning prints an article signed by Andrew Carnegie, In which the writer ar gues In favor of an alliance of the United States, France and Great Britain for the safeguarding of the peace of the world. The author denominates the countries named as "the three republics, two un crowned and one crowned " Perfectly Snte. Miss Oldham awoke In the middle of the night and found a burglar ransacking her trunk. She did not scream, but looking him square In the eye, she pointed to the door and said: "Leave me at once, sir!" "Oh, that's all right, madam," said the burglar as he barked toward the door; "I had no Intention of taking you." Chi cago News. (rent t'nmo of (Jraln. CHICAGO. Rpt. !9 The largest cargo of grain ever shipped out of Chicago was cleared today on the steamrr George H. RiiHSt'll. It connlstod Of 2&.i00 bushels of corn and Sfe.OOQ bushels of barley, aggregat ing 7.972 tons. The cargo goes to Buffalo. Mannfaetnred Elk Teeth. Not long ago a paragraph was floating around the country telling about the sale of an extraordinary dress by a Cheyenne Indian woman to a dealer of curios. This dress contained something Ilka 400 to too elk teeth. It was very valuable, because teeth of the elk are getting scarce, and there Is a greater demand for them every year. It la understood, however, that as the demand grows the Ingenious Yankee has succeeded In procuring a supply without going to the Ind'an village for thst purpose. Many very fine celluloid elk teeth are now FRANKLIN MEDICAL CO. SPECIALISTQ In Chronic and Nervous Diseases of MEN AND WOMEN CATARRH 0t1 KINDS Hot a Dollar Keed Be Paid Vatll Cnred. We cure all curable diseases of the Nose, Throat, Lungs, 6t itnacli, Bowels, Liver, Kidneys, Bladder, Rl:eumstism, Paralysis, I II, gkln iJls-saaes, Dyspepsia and Blood 1'olson of all kinds. Call or write for booklet. We make no charge for examination. 'ree hours 10 to 4; Sundays, 10 to IX, on the market, or will be, and the avsrage ro Sj03 Karbaeh Blk, Omaha, Keb.