THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1907. Now S(or 'Oil rnimm son. 1 73EC3CvSETl Second Floor Li A GREAT BARGAIN EVENT That Comes SaturdayJust in the Nick of Time 1 Women's Wash Jacket Suits I Worth up to $7.50 and $10, t $1.93 i 5 Here are 700 stunning new Wash Jacket Suits in the very H newest, Bummery style just the suit you want to buy for im- $ , mediate wear, going at less than a third of what you would expect to pay. 5 We bought them at an astonishing sacrifice a from a New York manufacturer, who was very b T r A fn .1 . . : i i i It umu yiUBocru iui ivau uiuuey, owing lAj me backward season. Smartest of Summer Suits in Jacket Styles Made of English Reps in blues, greens, tans, grays and white made of butchers' linen, In dian Ilead muslin, gray linons, etc. Etons, Boleros, Prince Chaps, Pony Coats, Norf oiks, Long and Short Box Coats, Etc. J ust the style you want now. These Stunning Summer Suits Are Actually Worth $7.50 and $10, at ......... Womcn's Dressy Shirt Waist These are fresh and dainty new lots, just received from our New York buyer in plain whites, plain summer shades and neat de signs short or long sleeves jumper styles, etc. SALE EXTRAORDINARY! Br.ndcii Buys the the Entire Stock of r, Well Known New York Importer Imported Jewelry Jewelry Novelties These are the finest and most charming novelties. They are priced at far less than their cost to import. ''av Oj OJU" 0 mm Cld Store MaJaFtoor q A SPECIAL SHOWING and SALE of 4.000 PAIRS OF THE SEASON'S FAVORITES 1 Women's Canvas sUnen Oxfords SAILOR TIES. PUMPS and OXFORD TIES French Brooch Pins Worth up to $G at , 69c - Jl 1,000 Imported Hat Pins French and German designs semi-precious stones, including real Jt O ' coral and jade, worth up to $5, at. .HfJC aiul GLC Imported LaVallieres Necklaces 50 all f 5 0 Sr new styles, worth up ot $30 each, at I 0 O Good assortment of Belt Buckles Mostly Italian and French designs, set with fancy stones, f 25 $ worth up to $10 each, at 1 Bracelets In every new style jade, tur quoise, etched and plain gold 1 $2 Ladies' solid gold 10-k. Bracelets, government atawped 10-k., at about the prices of gold filled. Li rine canvas and Sea Island linen low I shoes in white, pink, blue, brown, red and green, new styles, all of mem saturaay in our a beautiful new shoe dept., Main Floor Old Store U finrn--" ' ji AND stock of UllS I v Muslin Underwear prettiest of 1907 styles just right for June and July 8c SHIRT WAISTS Brandeis never displayed so many very pretty waists at such a moderate price. They come in short sleeves plain, pleated or lace trimmed; long ff C or short sleeves, scores of styles M Jhw f v at Sheer white and dainty figured Swisses and lawns, many lingerie effects new, practical, plain pleated waists lone with em- m broldered yokes and O panels Most charming new ef fects in lingerie waists, very dainty novelties for dressy summer AO ....4WU An extra special Saturday Women's Drawers, lace and tuck trimmed, actually worth 35c, at Corset Covers, Drawers, Gowns, Skirts and Chemises lace and embroidery trimmed all cut full and ample at Beautiful and elaborate . Muslin Under garments trimmed In the prettiest manner ail cut full at 75c and. 98c WOMEN'S TAN OXFORDS Golden brown vici and light Russia Calf Oxfords and y Pumps, the dressiest and prettiest T M & m g styles in tan for summer, at AND fyty M Children's Low Shoes The best and mnt R M 1 uuoa ' onrJ IMi 1 1 ,1 T cil. . . a r , 1 , 1 es in umafia ribbon ties, strap and button styles black, tan and 7 r . X I 75c to 1.98 y EXTRA BASEMENT SPECIALS M Extra special for Saturday Women's Men'i aatln calf, g-rtod, durable, all 8olH ft high and low shoes, pat. tip, vlcl kid "hoes, reutor $1 valu -i oq n Kkn,d- nd heavy 80168 s? "-"VSf0 ;w vv1' ''h'-'-' " 'vur4: M $2 and 2.60 values, Mt.s- biutcher cut, pt. tip Longol kid" Saturday .L J -60hoeJ Saturdar 083 Charming Midsummer .Hats at $500 For Saturday we group all the ladies' hats that have been priced at $10. These are all new, stun: ning and right up-to-date summer hats largo hats trimmed with fine ostrich plumes new lace hats with flowers and rib bons also the favorite sailors, droop effects regular $10 hats, at 39 c wear, at S A Sale of Smart, New Summer Waists In tha Basement lj Some of these waists are just the least bit mussed, but all are a newest up-to-date 6tyles and are excellent bargains, in our great Sf new basement Saturday a 4 INFANT'S WEAR Most complete section in the west devoted to Infanta' Wear and Xarsory Necessities. Sccoitd Floor, New Store. Toilet Sets and lUskcts. Clothes Hangers. Carriage Straps. Feeding Dottles. Powder Boies and Puffs. Pacifiers. Bibs, Net Veils, RatUos, Slips. Children's Ideal Wlts Ages 2, 3, 4. 5and; f f Saturday. . . I JC Infants' Outing Flannel Hacques and Kimonos Dainty colors, em- CI broldered edges, at. . 1C Padded Marseinea Bib A 16c value; Saturday, at 5c Pretty new Wash Dresses for every day or dress weai styles, etc. white chambray, checked BIG SALE OF New Japanese China We just received the largest and best shipment of beautiful Japanese China ever brought to Omaha. The stock consists of everything known to the Japanese art, from salts and peppers up to punch bowls we might say everything manufactured in this extensive line will be shown at Brandeis' Saturday. To introduce the new goods, we will allow a special discount of 25 per cent from regular prices just one-fourth off think of it on the season's first showing of exquisite Japanese China. Just i Off COME SATURbAY Untrtmmed Leghorn Hats Children's White Jocky Caps for children. These have made of duck and pique sold as high as 50o f all sixes, worth avw Bpeclal for Sat'y. . 85c, at, each ..19c Basement Old Store Buster Browns, Sailors. susDender iies, eic wniie cnamDray, cnecsea m v m v t and plain color 4 Have You Visited "Sweetland" That cool, delightful resort in Brandeis East Arcade. During our formal opening week this beautiful place Is luxu riously fitted and decorated. Come and visit It. Th finest, handsomest soda fountain weat of Chlc&g WILSON TOASTER Toasts four slices ot bread at o n e time, for gas, gaso line or oil stoves, AA TV m rta.t nnrtinntl at mv r uphoitsrra cob- a No. 1 feather Duster, VL "rJOCI well made, nicely fln- ft hammara.... Bhed With black f J enamel JQ $ Johnson's Floor Wax for woodwork, fur- nlture and floors, prepared, can, 45 0 Ice Shave, nicely finished, hard wood handle, nickel plated ferrule, tempered q steel blade S3 8 TILE-LIKE Stains, hardens and varn ishes with one applica tion, can be used on the finest furniture. Free Samples LAWN MOWERS Solid steel blades, 8-lnch drive wheels geared on both sides. 2.29 Camphorated Flake for preserving furs, wool ens, etc., per f O package ltC Moth Bolls, pound, 5t Best Quality ready mix- pared ready for ftn.f use, per gallon. . .rOC ' C arln sale of all Kitclioi CahtiU'ts t ti per cent off on marked prlcoa Ttuat nana in1a of xtru (iM7y tin, hlfJi ly Japunnel. extra strong handl) ....So Iriion t-quHor, the cele brated Eaaley, made of heavy jlaiin, flta any A tunblor w CO a a EK SPECIAL BARGAINS SATURDAY IN BRANDEIS BASEMENT children's . 10c WOMEN'S BELTS In leather and silk, worth up to 50c, at. . . DC On front bargain square leather belts in whito, black, tan, grey, brown, blue, with front and back buckles, worth up to 75c, at. , 25c Teddy Bears Genuine im ported kind that keep their shape, real bear voices 75c 2L Everything In clothing for Teddy Bears Overalls, Sweaters. Py- . etc. from nas, caps. fl ' m: 15c 98c S8ME Big lot of hem stitched open work a c arfs, squares and doi lies of various kinds, worth up to 75c each. . . .kJJC Hemstitched doi lies, some 16x16 In elie, worth op to 25 each, JJ at DC BRANDEIS CORSETS All sizes, white and gray, some summer netting cor sets, many well known makes i all lengths up to $1.00 quality, at... 19c Very fine ribbed vests, small sizes, 10c Ladies' Vests, light weight. at fir each BRANDEIS Hosiery; ladies' and men's, all sizes, at Handkerchiefs ladies', men's and children's big bargain, at 3l2C-5c Gilt Framed Pictures Gilt framed pictures at 10c interesting subjects, nice ly framed, complete with glass and mat. These large, gilt framed pictures will in terest you 6alo Saturday, Basement, each lUC LARGEST OF HUMAN HIVES Projected Office Building and Railroad Terminal in New York. WILL HOUSE 10,000 PEES0N3 - TwcatrKta Aorti mt Floor Space, ,O00 WUdowa TMrtyJUaa Elevator- Somo Idea of Material Needed. Within a year tba aisseat offlca building hi tha world will be completed In New York City. It la now known as tba Ter minal building that glgantlo structure In the underground Biases of which will run the great eyetetu of aubway lines which will connect New Jersey and uptown by means of tunnels under the Hudson. It will face oa Church street, towering twenty-two stories in the air, with a front, age- of two city blocks, from Pulton to Cortland street, and Dor street running straight through Ita oenter. Bo huge is Utl great building that it will bavs room for 10,00 tenants, or about the population of Oeneva. Adrian. Naugatuck or Hath And It Is estimated that 1.000 a minute, o more than (00,000 persons a day, will enta and leave the bulldlnr about the popula Uoo f suh great , eltiea as Baltimore lioatoa or BL Loula. It tsbard for the human mind to con ceive auch a structure as the architects have dare4 to plan. The structural stee Beaeeeery weighs U,0M toss. When com pleted the living and dead weight of tha Duuaing will be 200,000 tons or 400,000,010 pounds. It will take l,ax,000 bricks to build tha structure enough to reach tOO miles, or from New Ydrk to Denver, 1 placed end to end. Material Heqnlrvd. The 76,000,000 pounds of concrete neces sary will take up 1,100,000 cubic feet. Th smount of concrete for. the floor srcha alone would pave Broadway from the Bat tery to Forty-aocond street It will take 1.600 tons of terra cotta for the nrnumania. tlon of the facades of the building. Bon -,uw aijuare yarus or plastering will Ixj needed, enough for forty ordinary Broad way bulltllnga Of plumbing pipe there will be 88.000 feet, or sixteen mile; of steam pipe, U3.O00 feet, or about twenty-nine mllaa, and of conduits. 600.000 feet, or nearly ninety-nve miles. To light such a mastodonla hi. n k,,.i. neas will require S.0OO windows, which wlli be glased with ISO.OOO square feet of glass, or enough to cover three city blocks. It will Uke 113 miles of wiring for the elec- irio ugnung service enough to run a wire from Toukera to Ptilladelnhi. Thi. Ing will feed (0,000 lamps In U0OO flsturea And 6.000 doors will be neceasary for the rooms snd halls. To acoommodate the thronaa ot tnnt snd those having bualneas with them w!U require tnirty-nlne elevators. The lineal loot run of these will be altogether more than two mtlea, so that If they all mad a complete round trio at tha tha total diatanoe tr&vel1 ruM h. "" f hnn fnbr inllaa Th.u . . ble of going at the rate of 600 feet a mlnp l-uta, opexaWd clecUicaUy. Of tbeaa teaxitv- two will be express cars, rising without a stop to the eleventh floor, the remaining seventeen will be local ears, stopping at every atop up to the eleventh. A force of at least 160 employes will be needed to care for and operate this building. The structure will occupy TO, 000 square feet of ground area and tower 276 feet above the curb. Dow te Belle) Reek. The Church street terminal station will be built upon the largest cofferdam In the world. This glgantlo cup or box, made of concrete, is 400 feet long, and at Its broadest part Is 17S feet wide. The walls of the cofferdam are eight feet thick and they extend down to solid rock, which. In the neighborhood of the building. Is on an average of seventy-five feet below the surface. However, la one spot It was found neceaaary, because of a depression In tha rock, to go down ninety-eight feet. The previous record was ninety feet. Tha railroad tracks will be about thirty feet below the surface ot tha street Pas sengers will psas down from the street to a atatlon or concourse floor and thence downward through stairways to the sta tion platforms. The platforms, twenty feet wlda, are ar ranged with one track between each pair. The cara will have openlnga on the aides ss well as the ends, and the doors of the cara will be operated by oompreased air. Thus It will be possible to unload passen gers on one side of a train and load them oa the other. Baggage to and from the trains will be carried by elevators. There will be a paaaage from tha eon course floor ander Dey street to the sub way ander Broadway. Tbla pasaage under tba street to the abwsy tracks has been completed; it was built when the subway was In course of construction. Decorative Fee tares. The building will be a fine example of Italian renaissance architecture. Up to the fourth story It will be of polished granite and Indiana limestone. Above that It will be of brick and terra cotta. The public halls will be of marble, handsomely deco rated, and the building will be finished In hardwood throughout. There will be a complete conduit system within the building to provide for tha tele graph, telephone and stock ticker systems, compressed air and vacuum cleaning ap paratus. A special feature of the building will be the largest electric storage battery In the world, composed of thousands of cells. This is to be held as a reserve. In the event of any accident to the electric gen erating plant. As the building is almost entlreley surrounded by wide streets, such ss Cortlandt Church and Fulton, with Dey atreet between. It will be one of the light est office buildings In New York. On the western side are some low office buildings controlled by the owners of the Terminal station, but the Terminal building, for the most part, rises far above these, so that th view towards the river will remain un impeded. Nearly every ofllce In the building. If not every one, will have an - opening on th outside. Facilities for Travelers. The first floor below th aldewalk will be known aa th "concourse floor." Her will b th waiting rooms. In which will be found benches, retiring rooms, telegraph stands, telephone booths, flower booths and newspaper kiosks, restaurants, lunch coun ters, bootblack stands and every other con venience possible In a railway station. Below the concourse will be tha train platform. Passengers will pass down from this lloor by means of 'stairways and ele vators to the platform. Now Just suppose what, a tenant In this great bulldtng may do when the tunnels are opeu. He can travel on the Pennsyl vania railroad from his office to New Orleana or any point in between without going out of doors. Similarly he can go from his office by way of tho Long Island rallroud to tha tip of Montauk point He can journey to Montreal by the New York Central or to Boaton by the New York, New Haven A Hartford and never once stick his nose out of doors, or he has a choice of many routes to Chicago without ever once coming out from under cover. New York World. A MODERN NATURE STORY How a Shrewd Tomcat FUhea with His Tall aad I-oat a Serf lorn of Ilia Narrative. Some years ago the writer numbered among his household a large tortoise-shell male cat whose tall was abnormally long and tipped with dark red brown somewhat the color of red flannel. This cat was in the habit of bringing home several timea a week during the summer months large Jug-a-ruma, or bullfrogs (ran a clamatans), and well knowing a cat's aversion to water, I waa determined to find out how the frogs were caught so following the cat to a stream which ran near our home, I ssw him leap to a flat rock In the middle of the stream, squat himself near th edge of the rock, at th same time allowing his tail to hang over the edge and Into the water below. Patiently watching for tha next move, I notloed that Tom waa swish ing his tall through th water, and I did not have Jo wait long for developments, as presently I saw a large green frog anap at the red-tipped tall as only a frog can snap. Tom evidently felt the tug at his tall, and, swinging It around viciously, the frog waa soon within striking distance of his hungry Jaws, which closed like a vise on Mr. Frog, silencing bis croaking forever. Jumping again to ahore, Tom, with his quarry, pro ceeded to Die house to feast upon bis vic tim's legs, the only portion of the frog's anatomy that he seemed to relish. Tom continued to fish In this manner until one day he came home looking Very sheep ish snd with only a portion of bis famous red-tipped tall.' This took me down to ths creek again, and when I drew near I no ticed a large pickerel (pike) lying belly up near tbe surface of the water, but still showing lots of animation. Imagine my surprise when looking closed I observed slvont two Inches of Tom's red-tipped tall protruding from tho pickerel's mouth. Ths pickerel was struggling meanwhile to en compass the tall, but not for long, aa there swam silently out from under the roots of a hemlock tree which stood near the bank a large snapping turtle, evidently attracted by the I wishing of the pickerel with its cargo of red-tipped tail. Snapping at the red-tipped tall at first evidently did not suit his turtU-sMp's fancy, and b waa soon de vouring th unfortunate pickerel, tall and all. Now, what 1 would Ilk to know la thla: Did th turtle or tha pickerel bits Tom's tail off, and how did Tom know that frogs would bite at anything red or bright and not know that a snapping turtle or a pickerel would do th same thing T-Mew York 8un. Women aay there Is nothing to equal mv oe transparent soap for washing the hair. All druggists and gro cers sell It Carlyle'a "Auerleaalssa.' leTna f.M "!. ,mnnr f defining Amer- y' ""'i, in ins indon Him A lUiMr. r. Im - . . . . T . . i V. . rat h-Tig-imn : ... eiai ursa. ana Willi wH! at the open. n a: of each aentenca. Thlsl TTl Oil ft f mks-LrTr.aw - purely convention as now used, and has to American habits of th present day, whether good or bad. It la pleasant to note that th hard worked 1 aKV,ua L. buiiv mo i .I aneia They really had but to turn to ths "New and there read the following sentence: ";"' you a 'tuii Hook of Martyrs, which I calculate will go In the . rl nam gooa read no' nut of it. I m... " tt,... ... . . fcVnbners. ' " Fraaee for Motorlats. In England it Is almost impossible to attain speed with safety. The roads twist and turn and the walla and hedices pre vent the driver's seeing what there Is be yond s curve. An averts pace of twenty five miles per hour Is fairly good time In Kngland, ftpecd laws are enforced with severity In Kngland, but If you will try th mettle of your motor, cross the channel. In Franc th road Is yours. Travel Mage-sine a