THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1907. 3 Je eje ee eje ej eja J D 4 m nnnMnns SALE EXTRAORDINARY !l 'Women's Shirtwaist Suits and Jumper Suits, worth up to $5 -I 4 Grandest wash 6uit bargain we ever offered white and col ored wash fabrics lace and embroidery trimmed, wide full 6kirts in this lot are many pretty embroidered white ducks--such suits Bold earlier in season up to $5 each Sat urday, choice NEW WASH 611 HIT WAISTS, AT 05c Freeh new lots Just received many with aiiibroldered fronts and tucked and pleated backs a big bargain Bquare of these new waists, worth JC. up to $2.60, at, each i Women's Fine White and Figured Shirt Waists about forty styles on sale in basement at Clearance of Women's Skirts Women' $13.50 Walking Skirts, In popular summer tailor QQ cloth, extra special bargain at "O Women's fine silk voile and chiffon panama skirts Clf) 1J Cfl that were priced up to $22.60, In two lots, at. . . 4 1 1" J -( Women's $10 White Wool Coats at $3.98 Women's white GT QO 0 t sjsau a va awa-su 1U5W Dim vw - -aa-- -r a- -aw J Clearing sale of all spring and summer coats at a fraction of their V real, .value... ... 4 T Casement Cloak Dept. . Wwniru i s-bh ousts., iiii ff -worth up to. I.00. at " J. No Free Altera tions In This Bale a No Free Altera tions In This Sale OUR 49c 0 potest II fSc- mm MI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE Vhb i Men's Clot r15 Wonderful Offer Comes Just Twice a Year and . FOR ONE DAY 0SLY The Finest Ready-to-wear Clothing on Earth. ROGERS-PEET HAND-TAILOR'D CLOTHING STEIN, BLOCK & CO. SUITS, HIRSH-WICKWIRE & CO. SUITS, worth 32.80, $30, 27. BO and $26, your unrestricted choice. Saturday A GRAND SALE-WOMEN'S Solid Leather land Dags We offer aa a Saturday extra special Genuine Horn Back Alligator Bags, 8, 9 and 10 inches solid leather JTTQO lined, with alligator purso inside, easily worth O up to $12.50 each, at one price Saturday Guaranteed Solid Leather Bags made to retail for $1.00 and $1.50 browns, blacks, tans leather and moire silk lined- many with fit tings of purse and mirror Saturday, special Your choice of all our hand-tailored 22.BO, $20 and $19 MEN'S SUITS. Hand tailored and rlht up to date It's an unusual every suit la chance Your choice of any two-piece $ OUTING SUIT in the house worth $19, 17.80 and $18, at 127M Choice of hundreds of MEN'S SUITS $T50 that sold up to $18, at Men's $10 Suits, two and three-piece, good enough for any man, at J COO Children's imported matinee hags and street purses, with chain, worth 50c to $1 each; bargain square, at. jC Leather belts that have been selling up to $1 go at, r each Ribbed elastic all silk belts, steel buckles, worth $1, Shirt waist jewelry and fancy beads, worth up If to 60c, at JlC All the odd combs, in mount ed and plain, that sold A C -up to 60o each, at J 7C LAMES' AVATC11KS. Ladles' O-site watch, gold filled J. Boss cases, Betsey Hons movement, warranted QA for time 5 years, case U warranted 20 years. . . . Ladies' Oslze watch, J. Boss gold filled oases, small dia mond set, Betaey f 49 Ross move- II ment, at v Written guarantea with all w aches. H1LVKKWAKK 8ALK. 1847 Rogers Bros.' cold meat forks, $1 values, 75 C 1847 Rogers Bros.' beef forks, 75c and $1 value, at t I- 59c Youths' and Boys' $7.50 j Boys' $5 Blue Serge Knee' i All the Boys' and Child ana fiu.wu duiu -zn x-bihb ouu, juh ren'B Wash BuiU at Just at f I I about One-Half Price. Men's $2 Pants, at, per pair . . . .08 Men's 3 Pants, at, per pair.. .$1.08 Men's $4 Pants, at, I Men's $5 Pants, at, per pair... $2.50 per pair. r 3E $3.50 Men'B $6-$7 Pants. at, pair ..$4,501 nrtA Dunk Dulslido A . S Me"JJ25r" SHIRTS 98c Tour choice of any man's Negligee Shirt in the house, except Manhat hattans, Includes a doz en well known QQ brands, at Ot Men's Negligee ShirU, .-worth up.' to . Cf V J1.25. at ';JvL derwear, tcth up tp aU. 25i35c 5- JHSSt LAST DAY OF THE GREAT SALE 1 Just one more day to sell thousands of pairs of O'Donahoe-Redmond-Normile's finest Women's Oxfords we sacrifice My every pair In order to clear them all away. Be on hand early to share in these positively unheard of bargains. Such a chance may never come again. Arc J S4.00 LACE CURTAINS $1.98 PAIR Ktr?4,4!MiMt,44t 800 pairs of fine Batterburg and Renaissance Curtains- full size, in white and Arab ian, many would be big bargains at $4 pair g fQ all go Saturday, f at, pair A 9 r J Your choice of anv oair --T- - - - of Women's Canvas Ox- fnrrls irt fli pntirft W O'Donahoe - Redmond -J$ Normile1 stock: blue. whltft i onrl crrnv nf a .. o j pair SHATS 5c CLEARING SALE OF Odds and ends of men's soft and stiff hats, that sold' up to $2.50 Sat- JQ.JJ Men's Straw Hats Sailor style, Sat urday, worth up to 50c, at, each All our men's $3 Straw Hats will QQ go Saturday for t . . . .-'OC Trunks and Suit Cases 500 fine Suit Cases, splendid valites, special at 08. $1.50. $2.50 and up to $4.08- Seventy-five Trunks, fibre bound with fibre center band slses 30 to 32 Inches, at S4,f)8 sixes 34 and 36 inches, at $5.50 UP t0 $8.00. 1 i I u Your , Unrestricted Choice oi Any O'Donahoe-Redmond-Normile WOMEN'S OXFORDS in the house, worth up to $4.00 $4. ?0. and,. $5,:1 at. ... .... . v4 L Your choice of all the Wo men's Oxfords . f Q worth up to $3. i I Misses' and Children's Oxfords Misses $2.75 Oxfords, 13Mj to 2 $1.39 Children's $2 Oxfords, Children's Oxfords f7Kg to, , at.. Children's Oxfords A(n i to t, at., "ifvy n 4 -I 4- mDs NOVELTY NET at 15c & 75c Yd. l.BOO yards of good grade of Bobbinet with Renaissance Battenburg & Cluny edges, white and Arabian, worth up to 40c yard, at, per yard ;: t5c-25c pecial ccasibtn epf. las Ranges Four celebrated makes to choose .from a discount of 20 per cent for this sale 10.95 to $46.00 Get ready for preserving season 'family scale1, weighs up to 24 pounds, slanting dial 9$4 Whp bqlldlng, put In one of our house safes In closet or sideboard. EHIousefyrn's Comply with the ,, , Clothes Basket Full ordinance heavy ' willow, family size.79c galvanized covered f$M3 i parlor brooms. Garbage Cans with P'Sj wd8 of beBt J wcmuoq wcuia vim V'i!; I broomcorn, hardwood iron drop handles tf&a handles, at 15 12 gallon size Lemon Squeezers 5c to 25c for $1.19. 16- Waxed Sandwich Paper, 50 sheets gallon size, $1.33 in roll, at . '. 10c Summer Goods Must Plates Wood Or paper, full Old Store n Pascment M S WONAROLA THE HERO Dr. Oumaului Speaks to Larje Crowd at Belle rue Aisembly. ITALIAN EEFORMEE LAUDED kvr gars He Wn br Calllac t Walk la the rath . Caoee . f God. ; More people turned out to hear the lec ture of President Frank W. Ouneaulue of the Armour Institute. Chlcato, on the toplo of Savonarola at the BeUevue assembly Thursday afternoon than had been out any day- during the wek. Including the crowd which had lletened to Senator La . Toilette Thursday, In iplte of the heat the lecturer was lletened to attentively and was roundly applauded as he told of the life and Itfework of one of the treat re . formers of ' history. "Savonarola was more to Italy than 1 Ctoero to Rome, for Cicero did not show '. Rome how to climb the helahts. to see - the future of humanity," seld Dr. Qun aaulus. "He Hved fn an ace of despotism and saw pne path' fur nstiona and souls the bath Moes trod. ' He created a new law for Italy, . founded on the only cor rect ttuestlon Is It rlghtT He dispelled Illusion aftur Illusion and pretense after pretense until he had shown his people the oue hlsh plane where rifht rules. Here waa a man who could so solve the soul of the weakest that be waa able to put valuation on every man. the foundation f the rifbt kind of government which aska Where la the man? He created In the fifteenth century the. most remarkable Chapter of republicanism and democracy the world has ever seen and today when we look backward for some beacon light to guic ua we see the reformer Jeruint Savonarola. v Hrml Refreer. ' ""Here was a real reformer. Today we eannut tell whether a reformer is real or a sham mere glow In the evening" sky. '. The ttana will come wbea reforms will have to be reformed, but you cannot do It until you get them into the minority. To reform things you must transform men and there must be unity of heart. To re form Is to conform to higher Ideals. He preached Justification by faith fifty years before Martin Luther. I would like to have you think of him as a statesman, tor he separated from politics before he was out of his 'teens.' He saw that states manship la the art of finding the way Al mighty Ood is going and following this course. The enterprise of statesmanship Is a divine enterprise The song sung In all the great movements la the history of the world Is 'let the Lord arise and His enemies be scattered.' Here Is an Idea of cittxenaliip to which you and I must oome before the flag Is safe. The year H61 is noted In history tor two events, one impersonal and the other purely personal. The Impersonal was the fall of Constantinople under the advance of the Turk, and the personal happening was the birth of Savonarola. It repre sented a new era In military tactics, and Instead of the cross there burned . the crescent, and Instead of the Christian making Constantinople the capital of the orient, It fell Into the hands of the Turk. Ureeha ta the West. "You tell me what a man I willing to worship and I will tell you the kind cf a man he Is. The new crusaders were thrown Into western "Europe, the penni less U reeks. They carried not weapon, but the stylus, the progenor of the pen; and carried, wrapt in the folds of th.ilr togas, vellum with gems of poetry. Those were the men to give to Europe the in tellectuality born In Athens. TUey smt fetterless free into a world enslavod. They found In Italy a glowing hour of a departing day, the retiring splendor of the renaissance. The Oreek scholars found humanity lifted out of chains. They found the ancient Rome of Jurisprudence and poetry. Man had shaken from him self the horrible chalna which had sur rounded him. Plato waa making poetry Of philosophy. Once more the drama came back. Here stood man bating his chains; her was the. Idea of the reforma tion bora out of the renaissance. "I want you to see my hero giving hie life for liberty.' He waa of the aristocracy I would not live U a republic where go Lawn Swings, Baby Carriages, Set teefc, Water Coolers, Lawn Mowers, Ice Picks, etc aU at a discount of 25 per cent ' m e -v -fevT v W . Ik Cld DYTatS etM SOMETHING NEW IN OUR HAKDWARK DEPARTMENT A complete and strictly high grade assortment 01 inu.i flu iw0 ran save money by buying here prices are S2.2B and up. size, at 4c dozen. Mincing Knives,.. 5C Galv. Wash Tubs Extra heavy galvan ized iron 69c WEST ARCADE English CHINA DEPT. Fancy Decorated Rock Tea Pots assorted sizes and shapes, worth up to 75c, Saturday. Big Lot of Fancy raes--Traveling men 'b samples, worth up to $1.50, at Water Tumblers, with iargr fancy cut stars, bell shape, each China 75c IDC WOMAN'S WORK IN WORLD California Women Offer Prize Suffrage Essay. for S0UTHEEN WOMEN'S PROBLEM out of Conditions Amass Women iu Sonth That Have Aroused Clubs to Seek Reform Lals ' latloa. lion with a cloth of gold and gems In his raiment, followed by bishops and priests and officers of the city, and behind all. Kerrara. The proreealon entered the city Southern Association of College Women: but the aristocracy of the city was not tn the procession, neither was our hero. Tills before legislature amendment passed. Wimn of the 8oth. Now that southern women have outgrown their conservative attitude regarding woman's sphere, they are making progress and accomplishing realty remarkablo things for , their less fortunate slBters, for the children and other dependents. They are not only accepting but seeking of fices where they may give, mostly gratis, their services to reforms of all kinds and they no longer look upon such work as shooklng. The mayor bf New Orleans has recently appointed three women on his new tenement house commission of seven. One of these women Is a settlement worker who has taken an. active Interest In tene ment house reform. Another woman Is a practicing physician and the third Is the president of the famous Era club of New Orleans.-The appointment. It Is said, baa there was no aikitocracy we have aU kinds in this country. Some aristocracies go on all fours, but he belonged to the upper class. We are bound to have an aristocracy whether we will or rot. It Is a strange thing, but sometimes we seem to be reverting back to the time when might meant the aristocracy It means the rule of the best ut who is the best man? "lie inherited from his mother the beet thing a boy can Inherit, and that waa the sky full of saints and angels. If Jerome Savonarola's rolce had been heard and heeded there would have been no break In the church we would be one church today. He Inherited from his father his Intel lectual methods. The boy was a rebel. He , stood with his parents and watched the festival of the birth of the duke of Ferrara Something 6f the condition that confronts a thief and robber, and now the crowned the Ueorgta clubwomen and that have stlm- head of the city mounted on a white stJ- ulatod them In their agitation for refprm legislation are shown in the following re-, met with general approval. port from one of the officers of the Georgia The women of Louisiana worked long for In th AnruilntmAnt rt Xf I an .luan In Georgia there Is an army of ltCi.OUO ,K ., . .,,K , . working women. About the same, propor- I Gordon. h known club woman and - . ' as me general average lor me umtea lltlcal party gets to be a procession and Ktates. but we are confronted by the curious society gets to be a procession, and what fact that Georgia's proportion of working America needs today Is youths like our wmjn h4lf hlh again aa the aver- . . . , age for the whole country. Twenty-seven hero, who will say no. pr cent of the women of Georgia are em Lav Last lavossrsls. ployed for wages. Again, while only on "He fell desperately In love with a beau- married woman out of twenty works in the H.n.ht.r nf oni of the ito.nnar-t- I nlted States Us whole, one married tiful daughter of one of the degenerate wurnan out of every j, ,t Wolk , families, but when he 'popped the question' Georgia. . she said 'no.' That 'no' was a blessing Naturally, a. large proportion of these to every one her today, for there was working women are negro domeitlo serv- " , ' , ants. Many of them are deserted mothers greater work laid out' for Bavonaro.a of "children, others are not supported by than to b bustling tor macaroni for the their husbands, and still others are while Btrotal airl working women forced by the low family .," " . ' . .. , - wage to take up their part of paid labor. "He entered the monastery for seven 0v. m(M ch,fjren of (ham ,ttU years and came forth to preach and failed, girls, are working for waees In Georgia. He want to Florence and failed, and then While one-fifth of the boye of the United ,- The ministry and the States are at work. Georgia hid U per " v - cent at worn, wniie one minstrels have the same resources. He nv 0f tt,e ages between jouna mi secret ui me i.iiui.. n iwuim bi wi i ' vu. ..iai.. -uuh . 11 jtA . . . , . .. v .i .... ..... toundlt. DroDortlon of the ehllren of Oeor- . a,rM necessary by the complex Interda- m tnurvii -ta at work for money. It la of the utmost ' pendenc of modern llfs. Dr. Luther H. so he took up the sword of God against fcnpo-tanc. to throw ali possible safeguards i Qunck n Auaust Charttie. and th. rn!Z the wrongs within the church and we aoon around the occupations which they uu"c m Auaust Charities and the Corn see 1.000 human beings raised to their feet work, no matter whether the child be whit mon"- . ' . - k.. jr. .-w. or colored, and to eliminate entirely those For S a ST rase. by the power of his oratory. He spoke occuoiiion, that tend directly to intern- , w 'Ti words of liberty, not dry -neology. perance or loose morals. While we are I - . , ' ' ox tsrraeiey. ai., is arranging tor a prise or 1600 to be given by the class of 1IT to the students of the University of California next year for the best essay on woman suffrage. Ex-Governor Pardee of Cali fornia has contributed 1100 to the fund and $300 mors has already been raised. NEBRASKA FROM DAY TO DAY Qaalnt aa4 Cwrloaa Feataree f Llf ta a Havldly Grow turn Stat. A pair of buffaloes used to do work In Beaver City. Later, Pave Miller used a yoke of oxen to propel aa anolent "hack." Now you are not In It unless you ride In an automobile. Walt for the airship. Beaver City Tribune. whose boyhood days down on the ban)., of the old creek are the happiest of a lifetime. Wealth and Influence may com In later years, but no robe of purple and scepter of power gives half the satisfac tion to a man as the art of being the best diver gives to the boy. No place equals In comfort the shade of the old trees, and no nectar of the gods served on banquet tables tastes aa sweet as the water from the spring. under the creek bank. Bare foot boy with cheek of tan, you are tho kind of happiness among a peasantry of trouble. Callaway Courier-Tribune. Henry Rills In Trouble Again Bad luck seems to follow Henry wherever he goes. A Justifiable Holler-A farmer cam to J Word ctme 'rom ,f" "ah ""r our office recently and wanted to advertise w" ent.b.'' h" ,", Mr"' Ollbart Osier. '.'an estrsved ronir. We. being a lawrer. lu l" -'"" P' or miles asked him If he had filed the required ! d 'nt , ,n an w,'"n Henr nntlo. .Oh a lu.lira of the M. an the 1 'lve1 ' Uie "" ' Kt..., kd at the door county clerk. As h said he had not. w '"J1 wa' m't. by ,h" Uuiy of ,l,a nou,e told htm thos would har to com before J w ' "r '- 'y " which the advertisement In our paper. Bo he Is making a test of the ten-hour law for women which 1 attracting widespread at tention. She Interprets the law to mean ten hours a day altogether, Including the noon hour which would mean but nine actual hours of work. Baaa-PIl Morality. The sandpit for the small child, the play, ground for the mlddle-alsed child, the ath letlo field for the boy, folk dancing and social ceremonial life for the boy and the girl In the teens, wholesome means of so cial relationships during adult life these are fundamental conditions without which democracy cannot continue, because upon them rests the develoDment of that -air- cent st work, while one girl out of every control which la related to an appreciation 10 and 14 years Is i of the eornorata ivmUnA. wkih i. ...... perance or loose morals, w nue we are taking the children out of the factories In If you have anything te trad advertise Georgia, we mut have factory Inspectors ,, ta the For ICxchaa cob-mas f Th thjjt our "U V Be Want Ad pages. ky doing all In our power to have the went away to attend to these preliminaries and did not leave us the notice to publish. Result: Three days afterward the owner of th pony called on us, and though w kept the pony Item a strict secret he went out and straightway found the farmer who had taken htm up and proved property and rode th pony home In triumph. It pays to advertise In th New . Era Standard I Kearney New Era-Btandard- When W Were a Boy Th other day we saw two boys with short fishing poles over their shoulders trudging down through th alley toward th liver. W wonder If the kids have th same kinds of times w used to. Do they leave their clothes be hind some tree and go In swimming and then com back and and their shirt sleeves tied Into knots! Vo they still keep secret the place in th bend of the creek where they get th moat bltoat Do thy bold up two fingers whea they want to ask another kid to go In swimming? Is there still on fellow who can dlv further than th rest? Do they go down fishing early In th morning and go without eating all day and get back Just In time for supper with two or three little dried up sunflshf Is there one kid that always has a stone bruise on his heel and another who can't keep from stubbing bis toe and always walks on bis heels as a result! Kids, he said he was a brother of Mrs. Gilbert Osier and the champion horseshoe pitcher In Pllger, and so on, she decided he was a hobo tramping through the country and waa In the act of turning a vicious bull dog loose when the head of the house ap peared on the sceue and rescued him. It is said Henry covered the two miles going home at a ten-second gate. Tho people of Pllger extend their sympathy to Mrs. Osier. Whatever you do Henry, don't bring back any more of those Chicago mumps. Pllger Herald. FT. CALHOUN SUMMER RESORT Little Town Haa Colony of Wealthy Oataha Fasntllea Thar with Ileases. Fort Calhoun boast a colony of summer residents from Omaha, not th stsr boardor sort, but families of affluence, who own their houses and farms. Dr. Olffnrd, Dr. Allison. E. P. Peck and I. Blbbernsen are all living at Fort Calhoun this summer, and Charle Barton Is at DeHots. two miles further north. Soma of thee men have large farms and others hav garden and orchards of ten or twenty acres, which are said to be paying th expenses of tho establishments. Th houses of thc sum mer resident are situated on bluffs ver. looking the Missouri liver, affording a, trees and a beautiful vtw.