TUB OMAHA DAILY REE: SATURDAY, MARCH 10, IPOn. Our Corset Department Is prepared to supply your every desire with the latent a ad besL Never waa there a corset shape mora tiniver allr popnlar than Warner's Rust Proof No. 221, here Illustrated, a ahape adapted specially to the average form, tha coraet skirt covering the hips shape them Into eurree of beauty. It has security robber PA button hoee aupjOTtert attached. Price 1, JU 'Si flee our new La Marguerite Corsets In white or colors, at, up from Tap Olrdlea In plak. blue or white, SOe values Saturday, at m Batiste Cornets with rallies. Special Sale of Hats Our Ito Imperial Hats, soft er stiff, latent style, at .. OUR MOO BTBTRON HATH. Special Saturday, at Our O.60 Champion Hats, special Saturday, at . .2.50 350 2.00 Millinery! Millinery! n LL our idealistic modes of creation make our de- partment quite attractive. NATTY, CHIC, EXCLUSIVE STYLES for the well dressed LADY are in prominence here, and a visit to our depart ment will convince you that THIS is the place to buy your spring hat. Have you seen our special line of Street A Q O and Semi-dress Hats for nfUO Drug Violet Talcum Powder Sc r.ath Sweet at 15c patmeal and Clycerine Toilet Boap jl irt box 10c fVlojtjtlne Tooth Paste 15c EASY MONEY CARRIES CURSE Those Who Receive Rarely Derive Bcnefi', Irom It. REAL ARTICLE GAINED BY HARD WORK Vaperieaera of One Who Had a HI ah Old Time BarnlnB His rile Itrflertlona on the Mornlag After. 'Easy money" Is one of the curses of modern Industrial life. Whoever gets "easy money" Is contumluated sometimes ruined. Tha "only money that does any good In the World is the money earned by hard work, and "easy money" ruins more young men, destroys more happiness and wrecks more careers than whisky and to bacco together. I am a victim of "easy money." It was the easiest of easy money. It was the one thing that had made me a failure or partly a fallu-e In life, where I should have been a success. . I came from a small town where I had worked hard and diligently for wAges that ranged from $160 a wvek to r.i-lhe highest I ever earned there. 1 cuiued 11 mui the spending of It and tht ti-.u;ln f ii were sweet. It went fur. I m.t.lo 11 last. I cul tivated habits of thrift mid i. miliary unJ saving. Since then I huvc c.uv.i d-not earned, but received u.i liij;h ns $Tu In a Ingle week, and frequently l0u u wek. and today I am almoxv pcnniU'., 1 at tribute it all to 'Vany money," To be fair. 1 nrjl suy that my own weak ness was the contrilmiui y cause, but easy money develop weakiieHM-s, and all men are weak. I emigrated to Chicago lu the spring of world's fair year. I had a little money that I had saved, and a small sum that bad been left me by my grandmother. I waa determined to get a foothold in a big city 1 and fight my way upward. I had a friend who had a pull, and through hiin 1 got a Job st the fair. It waa In the manu factures building, and, before the fair opened, I was placed In a certain part of tha foreign section to supervise the plac ing of exhibits. Ia tha first week that I worked there I had my first touch of "easy money." A French manufacturer's exhibit arrived. It came frome New York on the Wabash rail road. The agent hunted me up. He wanted to get his exhibit Into shape before the fair That the point m COAT SHIRTS Timm im id km im atkacaWe inaaaa sf ll.$ ssaatars CLUCTT, PCABOOV 4 CO. 1 -' ..... . lfllttTfli ON AND OFF V I III III 11 UKE A COAT 1 V lill I III 3.00 25c long or short hips and hose sup porters, also mercerised tape girdles, 7 6c PA - JUC Ei-B AND BO IB) CAPS), worth np to roc, spacuu tmiureay, at we and Children's Caps, worth up to 46c. Saturday, lOo jd BIT IT CASH SPECIALS. 25c 5c $4.0 and $4.60 Leather Suit Cum, linen or reamer nnea, q 48 $.00 and Htt Rorsrhlda' Cities', 'linen lined with ahlrt fold, special, at e io K M and Genuine Alllretor (kips, worth up to $11.00, 5.00 trunk spKciAiA Regular 1110 Trunk. linen lined. ( ff has xtre skirt trajr. at JJKJ 8a ma as above only smaller slsa, Q Kn $1L0 value, special, at O.OU 8-INCH METAL COVERED TRUNK. regular $8.0 value. 4.00 at, .. The Oriole Go -Basket We have now secured the exclusive agency for this useful and extremely comfortable article. It not only gives pleasure to the child but Is a boon beyond dlscriptlon for the mother. It is a Go-Cart, Chair and High Chair in one. Is made of rattan and metal and has rubber tire wheels. Come and see It. . W axe now showing our new line of Go-Carts and Sleepers, and offer rubbertira wbeel Oo-Carta that fold for ei.es. Visit our money-saving Furniture department. Specials Packer's Tar Soap ...15c Caahmere Boquet Soap .......... 15c Fountain Syringes 80c and 4c Massage Cream at 25c Tar Soap, cakes for Oc opened. I chalked off his space, hunted up bis two cars of stuff, had the railroad switch It to the ground, employed men to handle and put up the stuff, and, when everything wns In position, the agent slipped a bundlo of money Into my hand. I protested. I told him I had only dons my duty. He explained that it was cus tomary, and that It was worth that amount to him. There was $300 in that bundle. Just then I felt elated. If a little conscience stricken. If I had to do It over again I would throw that $0 into the lagoon. I worked hard In thive days, hard and conscientiously many hours a day, some, times twenty hours at a stretch, during the weeks that preceded and Immediately followed the opening of the fair. Ex hibits arrrlved In all sorts of shapes and there was a constant fight to get them into the building and fixed up before the opening. Every exhibitor was ready to hand out. money to gain a day or a half day. Money poured into my pockets. In the month before the fair opened and the fortnight after it opened I must have received $2,600 in gratuities. I fl! in with a lot of other fellows who were getting the easy money. We drank wine, we played the races, we "sported." Nothing was too good for us. The gifts decreased as the fair went along, but still the foreigners would hand out the money at every fuvor. 1 drew my wages wuti disdain. I was gutting ten times as much lu graft as in pk.y. And I was spcnilir.K It as faat as It uuuie In When the fair cloved I was out of work und almost out of money. I suddenly woke up to the realization thai easy money did not coma ft all times. I went to the races. I got a job with a bookmaker. Already I waa spoiled for hoitust, earnest work. 1 wrote sheets for the bookmaker and, made $10 a day. I knew 1 could not get $15 a week by working. I was after "easy money." 1 remember that I said to my friends: "A man who works is a sucker." Sometimes I was worth tl.uOu and some times I borrowed $S until next pay day. I played the races. Afterwards I ran a handbook downtown, not for myself, but for a syndicate that backed me. I drew J'.SO a week and 10 per cent of the winning.-;. Sometimes I had as high as fc!.00U, but most of the time I was running along in debt to the concern. Heaeat Wain Werkers Rtdleeled. I laughed at the fellows I knew who were drawing $'- a week fur honest work. 1 told them I could make that in a day. I did not realise that most of them were laying $G a week or maybe $10 In bank, while I was gambling away my money. I wasn't ex travagant. I didn't spend any great amounts on clothes or on food. I spent a lot for drink, although not a heavy drinkar myself. At tha end of four years I had nothing. Then on oS my friends who had been working for $20 a week came to me with a business proposition. He had $l.i and wanted in to put in $l,Suo and go into busi ness. I didn't have the money. Today he is worth $60,000 at least, and I am working for $11 a week, and working hard. It took ma almost twelve years to realise that easy money wasn't worth getting. I pent it as fast as It came, and I got no material good from It. I got a political )ob and held that for a few years. It was tuote "eaay money." Bui there alau I pent It as fast as tha money cam in. Then the thing happened to nie that ought to happen to every man. I met the right girl. I wanted to get married. Then I suddenly realised that I had wrecked my chances In life. I couldn't ask her to marry m. a simple pirate and para tie. I hadn't saved anythini. n Then I looked around for work. The friends" I had mad by spending mouty "vd ni up." I waa "so ood.Tna nj Out-of-Town Customers Should Write tor Our Speca Catalogue. It's Free U HE THERE SATURDAY SPECIALS TAILOR SUITE, In worth 115 00, biousa styles, well worth lli.oa. Q QJ special V-VU TAILOR SUITS. In great variety of plain and fancy mixed fabrics, Pony. Etm fancy mixed fabrics, worth $30.0. special. 13,75 BBAUnnTL TAILOR SUITS, In all tha most popular fabrics and colors, areat variety of styles to selert from, IX. 00 Q Qf values, special X.W ELEGANT NEW SKIRTS. In Vollea, Panamas and Chiffon Cloths, at $16.00, $1150. 7 Cf $10.00. M-76 and iJJ Women's S 00 fiklrts. at Big Grocery Sale Saturday The Best Pure Food Products tl pounds best pure Cane Oraulated Sugar $1.00 10-lb. sacka beat Granulated Cornmeal..l6o 8-lb. sackes beat Rolled Oatmeal 3ftc T lbs. beat hand picked Navy Beans Kc 7 lbs. best Whest Fsrlna, Barley or Hominy Xc 10 bars best brsjtds Laundry Soap 25c 6-)b. pall purs Fruit Jelly lie Bromang-elon or Jello, per pica TVfco 1-lb. cana fancy Alacka Salmon tc OH Sardines, per can $c 1-lb. cans Assorted Soups So t-lb. cans fancy sweet sugar Corn Cc 2-1 b. cans fancy Wax or String Beans... So t-lb. cans Early June Sifted Peas 1V,c t-lb. oana Boston Bsked Beans -lb. cans Golden Pumpkin Tie $-lb. cans fancy Sweet Potatoes ic a-iD. pacKSge fTuen a wneat waters. .70 Fancy California Prunes, per lb oc ?incy Cleaned Currants, per lb 7c fancy S-Cron Muscatel Raisins 7Hc Fancy Beeded Ralalns, per pkg Tr Fancy Full Cream Brick Cheese, per lb..l6o Fancy Full Cream Wlaoonaln Cream Cnease, per lb 16c BXTKA SPECIAL CANDT SALE SATURDAY. Fancy chocolate Creams, per lb 10c Fancy Vanilla Marshmallows. per lb....l0o Fancy Yankee Peanut Candy, per lb 10c Fancy Exposition Mixed Candy, par lb.. 10c Fanny Peanut Brittle Candy, par lb....l0e Fancy Jelly Beans, per lb 10a Fancy Mint Loxenges, per lb l"e Fancy Purs Sugar Taffy, assorted flavors, per lb 10c Fancy Pure Sugar Stick Candy, per lb..lec BIO ORANGE SALE AT OMAHA'S Git EA TEST FRESH FRUIT DEPT. Fancy large Juicy and sweet Highland Navel Oranges, 30 for 26o Per dosen 15o The Highland Oranges are the richest flavored Orange that grows. There are none just as good. a "grouch," and I wouldn't "stand for a touch." I went to work at $15 a week. I have had a raise since then. Also I have mar sled the girl. We are doing pretty well on $18 per, and I am glad I threw away all the easy money. My punishment lies in the fact that I wasted nearly twelve years of my life. I don't regret the money I wasted, but those twelve years mean a lot. I threw away that much of my life groping after "easy money" and, frankly, if it hadn't been for the girl I would have thrown away my whole life. If I had there would have been a big funeral and a lot of fellows would say: "He waa a good fellow. He let me have 120 once when I needed It." Now they will say: "He used to be a good fellow, but he turned grouch. "--Grant Phillips in Chicago Tribune. TRAVELING MEN IN ENGLAND Advantaaes They Have get Ferth by One Who Has Enjoyed Them. "Traveling men In Englund have special dining rooms, special rates and special tots of things," said E. K. Bimmor.s of Man chester, England, who is in Louisville. Mr. Simmons has been traveling In America for the last four years and has become somewhat accustomed to the methods of American hotels in caring for traveling men and at the same time has picked up many vf the Utile ,meiiun tricks of speech. However, he. lias not lost the broad English accent and Moll drawling methods of speech. "When you go Into the lobby of an English hotel," h said, "you may be sur prised to find a great open fire burning In one end of the room. Great comfortable chairs will be found about th lobby and you need not exclaim if you see several salesmen smoking long pipes and reposing their stockinged feet upon large footstools. Empty shoes can be found in many por tions of th room. "Th English lobby is a parlor or sitting room, a place of comfort and in no in stance bears the stiff, varnished, emblai oned appearance of your American hostel rles. When you go to the diulng room you may be surprised to hear th clerk ask if you are a traveling salesman. If you are you are ushered Into a simply, but homely furnished room containing one long table. The apartment Is more Ilk a prlvat dining room and everybody la everybody else's friend. "The meal Is especially served, lb wait ers show especial deference and everything bears a tone of home Ufa. As each man leaves th table he ia seen to drop a two pence piece, a cent in American money, In a little box. This is an unwritten law of the land, and the money thus collected goes to pay for schools and orphanages for the children of traveling aalesmen who die wilhout leaving auffkient means for their aupport. Several of theae schools and orphanages are maintained throughout Lngiand.. "English traveling salesmen taks life easier than do the men following a similar occupation in America. They never think of entering a man's store with a lighted cigar, and they would as soon forget to wear a collar or coat as to expect to do business with a man without having their auotsa careiuliy polished. All hotels look to this and a 'boots' gets your shoes each night, marks them with chalk, polishes theui and returns them before you are avuke the next day." Louisvtll Courier- &1 fll Fatalities rritaatta, u0 an accident, use Bucklen's Arnica in It prevents fatal results. Heals T burns, cores. 26c For sal by gher sol JdcConasU Lru Co, lute L3 THE RELIABLE STORE. Newest Style lde" Ladies' Garments As ever this store excel U In showings of new spring ready-to-wear garments. The greateet Tarlety of handsome designs are here and at price which make thorn almoet irrreUt ibly attractive. A MANUFACTURER'S STOCK OF COVERT COATS, stcurcd at a areat haricaln, will be placed on sale Brturday In three Rrent lota. Theer coats are all nob bleat new etylea and of very beat materials. Se them Saturday. liOT 1 COVERT COATS, unllned. mads to sell at 16 00. special LOT J-COVHRT COATfl. In Ave different styles. satin lined throughout, made to sell a' flii.Ofi, apeclal barg-atna, Q 'J LOT -roVERT COATS. -id.lc of beet Mohegan Coverts and worth up to $16.o. Saturday jj is, your choice -9Jt-, LADIES' SKIRT SPECIALS Women's 15.00 Walklna O t" Sklrta, at ai.1i- 4.95 Copyright Books, 43c Saturday morning we wiU place on sale 2,000 of the Grofcsctt & Dun lap Hat of Copyright Hooks, at, each 43c The Crisis, The Master Christian, St. Kimo, The Hon. Peter Sterling. The Cardinals. Snuff Box. Soldiers of Fortune,, The Iaw of tha Ind, The Virginian. MHelsnlppl Bubble. Alice of Old Vlucennes. If I Were King, and many other tltlea. AXr, all go st one price Saturday iJW SATURDAY SPECIALS 60o Gold Belts, at 26c Embroidered Belts, at 26o Runnings, each 60c Neckwear, at 25c 10c 15c 15c 25c 10c 60c Hoss Supporters, at 36c Hose Supporters, at , Headquarters Qe$f Q0yQS The readiness of the Harden store to supply your every need in the glove line has never boon more clearly dem onstrated than by our complete stork of the beet una season. Let us show yon. The finest stock of Silk and Kid Gloves, In 1$ to 16-button lengths, ever shown In Omaha, black, white and all new spring shades, ranging In price from 7 $3.00 down to d Ot LADIES' KID GLOVES. In all the new colors snd stltchlngs, with 1 or $ t pearl clasps; price.- $2. $1.50 and... "- LADIES' KID GLOVES, absolutely guar anteed the best on the market, J QQ SPECIAL LOT OF KID' GLOVES about 60 dozen of them good colors, new stltchlngs, with 1 or I pearl Cr clasps, $1.00 values, special..... OUw THIS HURTS NATIVE PRIDE American Trains Rank Third in Point of Railroad Speed. ENGLISH TRAINS FIRST, FRENCH SECOND Remarkable liesg Runs at Hlah Speed With on t Mopping; Few Heally Fast Trains ta This Country. Instinctively people think of speed as the first and most Interesting feature of the railroad, and In view of the develop ment of railroads in the United States most Americana will be surprised to learn that this country Is not first In the matter of fast trains. England holds the lead und Franc la a close second. In this statement reference is made not to the short bursts of speed which this or that engine has shown and may never how again, but to the regular scheduled runs of trains. In looking nrat at England on is apt to be surprised to find how many faat rains and long runs without stops are made there dally. The fastest regular long distance run without stop in the world U on the Great Western from London to Bristol, 11SI miles in 120 minutes, or practically sixty miles an hour. In order to drop passengers at Bath a car is dropped from the train with out stop, a time saving device lu operation on a number of European roads, though still unknown here. Tht longest run without stop' made in any country Is London to Liverpool vn tha London ft Northwestern, 3'1 miles, mad at th rat of fUty-four miles an hour. The next longest is on the Midland, from London to Leeds, IM miles, at the rat of fifty-two miles an hour. The train in this country coming nearest to these long runs without stop ia the Em pire State Express on the New York Cen tral, from New York to Albany. It3 miles, at the rate of 63 64-luo miles an hour; aid the time of the same train to Buffalo, MU miles in 600 minutes, Is Just a trifle faster than that of the Midland express from London to Glasgow, 447 miles in 510 mln nutes. Each makes four teguiar stops. Th Northwestern runs a train from Lon don to Glasgow, 401V miles. In eight hours, making only two stops. The Great Northern runs a train from London to Doncaster, lu6 miles, without stop. In 16V minutes, at th! rate of KVi miles an hour. While there is not uulte so fast as over England's new road, from London to Sheffield, ltX miles, in 170 minutes, better than fifty-eight miles an hour, slipping a car at Leicester without stop. Faat Tralas ta the lulled States. These fast and long runs are common to all trunk lines In England, while in the United Stales the fast runs are all con fined to two ronils. the New York Central and the Pennsylvania, Compared to many English fast runs the time between New York and Washington and Boaton is slow. The distance to the two cities from New York is about the same, and in both case th fastest trains make it in live hours tor a littl over, now, to Boston!, or at th rate of forty-six miles an hour, three stops being made in each case. For runs of nearly l.OuO miles no country rsn show trains to compare with the New York and Chicago trains on the New York Central, the lft trains making the !o miles in l.Oao mini'.ies, or at tidy-four miles an hour. While this not quite so fast as th time made by the fast trains from Paris to Lyons and Marseilles the distance ia twice a great as across France. Cuiuiiig ta abort runa aod special summer We Will Fill Mail Orders on all Special Sales Except Hour Sales or Where Otter wise Stated Women's Cravsnettea, regular 16.00 quality, 9.95 NEW LINGERIE WAISTS. Japs. Crepea and mulls. In every latest styles, at tlX.M down 25 MOIRE UNDERSKIRTS, rerular $150 value, specisl 79C lined or 3.95 FROM I TILL I A its. at...0"' Women's $1.60 Wslst FROM ) TILL t:V Women's $1.60 Dreealns Sacques, at A M 75c FROM 9 TILL 10 A. M Women's $1.26 Wrappers, 69c ?ROM :M TILL 10:S0 A. M. '"hildren's $1 60 Dreems, 69C IC'.: Meal Saving Pork Loins, lb 9c Pork Roast, lb 834c Veal Roast, lb 7y.c Mutton Roast, lb 5V2C Mutton Stew, lb ZV2c Choice Beef Roast, lb 634c Boiling Beef, lb 234c Rex Bacon, lb IIV4C Grand Ribbon Sale BOc RIBBONS. PER YARD 12Vs Odd bolts of the finest plnln and satin Taf fetas, extra heavy satin Taffetas and Liberty ea teens, plain Mescalines snd fancy print warp ribbons, worth 26c to 60c a yard, go Saturday at one price, f 21r per yard 60c VEILINGS, PER YARD 13Vo We have Just received a great lot of fancy and plain mesh, fancy figured and chenille dot, all silk Veilings, regular 60c qualities, which we will plsce on eale 12Xc Saturday, at, per yard '"I" China Dept. Special Art Pottery Jardinieres, full 1(lr 7-inch, worth 60c, at J Decorated Japanese Eegshell China Cups and Saucers, limit of six to a 121r customer, at '"I" Decorated Japanese Tama Plates, limit of six to a customer, 12 lC Stamp Plates, all sises, green felt, f Ar per square Decorated English Porcelain Pieces, worth from 26c to $1.00 each, at en 10c and Ofc trains, undoubtedly the fastest are from Camden to Atlantic City. Here some very fast time has been made over an ideal country for fast time, by both the Reading and the Pennsylvania. The Reading has set the pace und the Pennsylvania followed. The best Reading time Is 56H miles in fifty minutes, or over sixty-six miles an hour, while the nest Pennsylvania time Is fifty-nin miles at the rate of sixty-four miles en hour. Moderate race In the West. These constitute all the fast regular trains in the United States. The fastest run In New England outside the Boston New York run Is from Boston to Portland at the rate of forty-four miles an hour, and the showing is still poorer In the west and south. Chicago, In many respects the greatest railroad center in the world, has no fast trains outside the New York 'Cen tral and the Pennsylvania trains referred to. Throughout the west, while the beet trains are very luxurious, perhaps the most up-to-date in the world, tha runs are all short, averaging about thirty miles be tween stations, and the speed nowhere averages forty miles an hour. Throughout the south there are no really first-class ex press trains other than those from New York City or Chicago carrying the tourist travel at certain seasons of the year. Next to speed may be considered the fre uuency of trains, their appointments, etc. In this renpect a still more pronounced dif ference appears In different countries with almost equal population. Why should the people of ' one region crowd hundreds of trains dally and those of another region be Ratified with only two or three trains? Thus more trains leave the great south terminus In Boston in one day than are moved In one direction on all the roads of Spain and Portugal In two weeks. From one terminal in London mor trains leave dally than move in ten days to supply 125.000.00u people of all Russia, In Europe and Asia. It would probably surprise New Yorkers to know that the south terminal In Boston not only Is the largest station In the world, hut sends out dally more than 400 trains, nearly twice the number despatched from the Orand Central station by the three roads starting from there. The next larg est number sent from any station In this country Is about X0 from the Boston A Maine terminal in Boston, and th next about 3J6 from the Broad Street atatlon. i Philadelphia. Then come the Grand Central station. New York, and the Reading termi nal, Philadelphia. London Tramp. But tliHse llgures do not equal those of the great Loudon terminal. There one sta tion sends out Too trains dally, the great est numlMr from any one station in the world, and all of the twelve great terminals send out large numbers of trains as th suburban travel Is great and the trains are often auialler than in America. Including all suburban trains, such as IhosQ of the Stalen Island road, which is Hill opeiuled with steam, und figuring on a mean average of winter and summer, the tegular scheduled trains leave the four great centers In the following number dally, the figures being for all roads and approximately correct: New York City, 1,j0, Boston, l.ouu; Philadelphia. KX; Chi cago, SaO. No other American city has 400. As might be expected the roadbed and the operatlrg equipment are better in Eng land and some parts of France and Ger many than lu America, and owing to the ever-prevailing precautions taken both by the roads and the mate, accidents sre only about one-fifth as frequent as in America. All the principal roads in England have two tracks snd many main lines have four. In this respect Americans are making great Improvements now, as th Pennsyl vania la i four-trai-ked from New York to Pittsburg aud the Nw Haven from New Big Shoe Sale Saturday UOO pairs Women's fine vlcl kid, hand tarn soles, nice new fresh goods, also 4 or 5 line of the celebrated $8.50 I lira shoes The Crossett 1,0 KG l.IFK UNION MIK shoes for men, the bant for the O ti price made ttmxJVM SCO pair Hulsksmps UNION MADE shoe for women, Iisnd turn Goodyear welts. and McKay aewed. $-50 O and ..Ku Wmnen's Osfords In all the 1st style snil leathers at prices within the reach of all. women's ehoes worth up to H SO QU odd aisct Mimed and Chllds" at 11.60 laca. 98c Sheet C. ROBES, now with II tydens" Sheet Music Department. Ringing and playing all day. Come and have your fnvorltea played. Everybody welcome. All mail orders promptly filled add 1c extra per copy for postage. Orcat Special Bale on all Sheet Music, Including the very latest and most popular hits of the season. Everybody should take advantage of this sale. Borne of the Music on sale as follows: VOCAL Nothing From Nothing Leaves) ion, miriii kasius Johnaim Brown. Tou Can t tineas Who Flirted With Me Desrle, Mrs. O'Harahan. Will the Angels Let m plav. Cheyenne, I Ixive V eH All the Time, Yankee Do..ul Bov. Good Bye Sweet Marie, In Mv Merry Oldsmohlla, As You Go Your Way and t Go Mine, Spoon Time, Picnic for Two. In Vacation Time. Can't You It9c Per Three Bee I Am lonely. Let Me See You Smile, My Irleh Molly O. Mv Hindoo Man. Quit! Quit: Quit. Bright Eyes. Good Bye, Hiram Green. Good Bye, snd others too numerous to mention. We are making special rates to all teachers and professionals. Do not fsll to ret our prices, which are the very lowest, and remember we are always tip-to-date. We also carry all the classics, studio, folios, etc. All operstlc selections and scores will be placrd on sslo this Saturdsv and Monday. This music will be on sale In the Base ment and In the sheet music department on Snd loor. Manufacturer's Sale of Muslin Underwear Interest has centered on this our greatest sale of dainty I'ndermueUus. Women cannot help but realise the true bargain merit of these offerings. The materials are better, the lengths and widths more liberal and the deelgna more varied and beautiful than you can buy elsewhere at the price. Bee them Saturday. LADIES' GOWNS, made extra long and full, handaumely trimmed with lace em broideries and tucks, worth up nun to $$00. at $1.60 and VOW LADIES' GOWNS, daintily trimmed and splendidly made, values up to 'lOr $1.60. in three lots, st 76c. 6tc and... LADIES' SKIRT?, made extra long and full, with deep knee flounclnga of em broidery, lace and tnsertlngs. hsve under lay with deep ruffle, rerular values up to $3.00, In this sale st $1.M g(j LADIES' LISLE GAUZE VESTS in CEC white colors great snap, at GREAT SALE OF LADIES' HOSE A special lot of about 200 dosen pairs of ladles' Hose, blacks, whites, pinks and bluea. In all over lace, lsce effects and great variety of fanclea, they are worth front 19c to 3c a pair, and will be on aale Saturday, while they last, Ifin at pair uc LADIES' CORSET COVERS-The greatest sssortment of beautiful designs ever shown at the price, those worth OCp double, at $c and ..,JL' CHILDREN'S DRAWERS, trimmed with lace and c.lunter of tucks, worth IQc! double, at 26c and Specials in Men's Furnishings Only a few specials for Saturday but every one of them a winner. To those fiunlllar with ttte saving possibilities in these ealea we would say we've never offered better values. To those who do not know a glance wiU convince you of their great bargain worth. MEN'S SHIRTS All well known brands In newest spring patterns and best mater ials, Negligee. Stiff and Pleated Bosoms, cuffs attached or detached, special Bftr values at 8c, 69c and tWW MEN'S HORSE HIDE GLOVES Unllned, regular 60c valuea, great snap 2Sc Saturday, at, pair awow York to New Haven and the New York Central is three-tracked part of the way to Albany and four-tracked from there to Buffalo. Fast Trains on the Continent. Touring Europe outside of England It Is found that France alone indulges In really fast trains, and possibly it is the first In the 'number of trains running reg ularly above fifty miles an hour of all the great nations. The greatest travel route in Europe out of England Is from Paris south to Lyons, Marseilles and the Mediterranean, and here are found fine and fast trains. Tha run from Paris to Marseilles, 685 miles, is made in 70 minutes, with only six stops. Many cf the shorter runs, uch s from Paris to Calais, to the Belgian frontier, etc., are at the rate of from fifty eight to sixty-two miles an hour for the regular schedule. According to a German authority the average speed of the fastest trains in Eu rope is as follows: -French, fifty-eight miles an hour; English, fifty-five miles an hour, and German, tlfty-one, but fast trains are hard to find In Germany, and the service in this respect does not com. par with Franc. It takes the fastest train 227 minutes to go from Berlin to ' Hamburg, 178 miles, which la 47H miles an hour, and the "luxe" train, the one fast goer, between Munich and Vienna, runs at only 45. tin miles an hour, but there are as a rule frequent trains throughout Germany and the service Is good. For all the rest of Europe the speed drop to about thirty miles an hour for express trains. Italy is surprisingly slow. It takes the express 963 minutes to go from Turin to Rome, 413 miles, or only twenty-six miles an hour, though th Milan-Rom express makes nearly forty miles an hour. Between Rome and Naples, 166 miles, there are only four or five trains dally, th fastest t. thirty-four miles an hour, while It takes 920 minutes to go 439 miles on th best train from Rom to Brlndlui. a rate of less than thirty miles an hour. The express from Stockholm to Gothen borg, the two large cities of Sweden, barely makes thirty miles an hour, and other' European countries are still worse. On the English trains third class dining cars are now run In which the same meals are served as in the first-class coaches, but at considerably lower rates, and the high back sesis give a privacy greatly appreci ated by small parties or two persons dining together. Such runs aa that between London and Birmingham, on the Great Western, a dis tance of 119' miles, made without stop In 140 minutes, or at the rate of more than fifty-five miles an hour, are remarkable, as this seems to be about the regular gait of many trains in England New York Bun. The Ideal In Everyday Life. Let us now go for a walk, during which we will observe the people who are pur suing their callings. Let us note their mood. We shall come upon peraocis whom we cannot see iwfip, hammer or dig th earth wilhout experiencing- a desire to take from them their broom or hammer or sad in order to show them how they ought to use it. This sort of worker Is to be met with quite aa often In the schools, In th church. In the fields, the mines and the shops. Without Ideals people are the same every where. When they tea h. they make us weary of learning: when they make music, they cause us to hate inuxic. Tbey have no faith lu their work. All the time they have the air of saying: "What a stupid trade 1 have chosen! Be sure my children shall not follow It." Those who put th ideal Into their work produce an aJtt-gilUar dlSurant sffec upon 1.96 Beva' and Youths' 11.50 satin rait ORr? laoe, at yow ChlldV tl .o hand turn lace or button shoes Child' ?5c turn, lace or button .1,.,.. 480 Agents In Omaha for the STETSON and CROSRKTT ph..e for men and 1-Ol'NS. HI'RT. MATTKWSON ft CO ULTRA and OROVER shoes for women Twenty-elaht etylea of the OROVER loft Botes lor lb.,, Lfiun r a lit i stock. Music 1NSTRUMKNTAL- Moonlight. Wedding or winds, Vanar Oirl Walties. Dorothy Vernon VValtses. Rose Leaves. Melody of love, Dixie IooJle 12 step). Blue Grass Echoes, love is King (waits, Hnarteaee a reverie). Eye of the Soul treverle), Bamboo Slide, Satura Waltses. Captain Cupid (march,, Bouncing Betty, (novelt jr 3 step), Hearts Are Trumps, MspU Ieaf Rag. A W h 1 p r e Flchtlns the Flsmee, St. Louis Copy for 25c Thought rAK. neei, ami i i..wt-i?.. , nr - ' , Meditation, Chicken Chowder. Syncopated; Rags. Happy Heine. Patcoka Waltsee, Bit O'Blarnej, and hundreds of others. CHILDREN'S SKIRTS, prettily Or trimmed, anecial at "W MEN'S HOSE In fine Hals and Maoo cotton great assortment of plain and fancy col ors, worth up to 60c. in three lots Saturday, at pair. 12Hc 10c and.... MEN S ROCKFORD HOSE Best quality, worth Uc at, pair 5c 5c Men's Ribbed Underwear In Spring AQr weights. 76c quality, Saturday us, whether thej be manual or intellectual laborers. You see them at work, perform ing at times unpleasant duties, which you. perhaps, would not choose, but, with so much good will, of punctuality and fidelity, and such an appreciation of "the useful flight of days" that they appear great to us and an envy seises us to imitate them. Harper's Knzar. Pointed Paragraphs. Some authors' originality Is due to their persistency In misquoting others. Even a bachelor would rnther be a widow's second husband than her first. Nearly all great orators and authors use words that are Rinaller than their ideas. Let the poet hitch his wagon to a star; the really wise man anchors his airship to toe earth. If you think that honesty keeps the ma jority of politicians poor you are entitled to another think. It sometimes happens that a good man's conscience doesn't prevent him from ac cumulating money. Honesty seems to be an ingredient that many a self-made nran neglected to mix in with the rest of his material. In its way the gold cure may be all light, but a man seldom feels the need of the cure until his gold Is all gone. When a man falls In business hi wife tells the neighbors that he was too honest to succeed, but what she tells him In pri vate Is another story Chicago News. Meu Make Vestment Embroideries. Of white brocaded satin, embroidered with gold, the vestment measured about three feet by five. I "it is $VX." the dealer said. "It Is .years old." I YJa tmii'h,H the heavv and brlffht em broidery. "This gold work," he said, 'is aa fresh as though new and it will always stay fresh, for It Is worked with Holland gold thread a thread of silver, gold plaited, such as only the Dutch can make. "With these stiff threads of sliver plaited with gold only strong men can embroider. The task is beyond the strength of women. All good eoieatlcai embroidery is man's work." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. , The Orlaln. The wiley sulian called his vizier to his presence. "We are not sufficiently numerous to meet the Infidel Franks In open conflict," he said. "It Is so written, O heaven born," the vllier replied. "Therefore must they he undone by crft," the commander of the faithful con. tinned. "I myself have devised the means. See to it. dog. that these are Immediately put upon the market!" and he banded to the viilrr a package of TurklsU cigarettes. -Puck. R HEUT.1ATIS MUST GO E LIM-IN A TUM STOPS PAIN and relieves soreness, between pain Uk E-LIM-I-NO to clean th blood of rheumat ic poisons, to restore the circulation and tc prevent recurrence. If constipated us E LIM-I-NCTS a needed. The Kllmln Trll la buad spoa the sew prtuoll: of h!!intoftil"ii ltute4 of lha commou priM-tlraof .tlmul.tlun and alupefuclloa. I ! noa aicobollc aud fir from opium. morptilDr aof oor.lua. To ptov its superiority over all other remedies will send a FREE TRIAL BOTTLE upon receipt ol this ad and 10 cts. pusug. jHIsTO k Tha Raidl( That Rsmsv tha Causa tt lekaeM. ;j-L!MtNETS 1 lOMKtleMeiMs4a