THE OMAHA SCXDAV BT.K: SErTKMBKK 27. 1!0. Two Questions Ollcn Asked Since tite Announcement o! Our (Great Ms-Ssrfeiiii Musical Ensflromeut Sale "How can Hayden Bros, sell musical merchandise at so low a price!" and "Why do they do it when their coinix'titor' prices are very much higher!" Here is the answer to the questions: Question 2 Why! It has always heen the policy of Hayden Bros, to give to their friends and customers all the Mssille henefits that they derive from any fortunate purchase. Whenever they buy at a low figure they always sell correspondingly low. Question 1 How! An eastern mus ical house -which at all times carry a very large stock of Pianos, Organs, Stringed Instruments and Sheet Music, found that they haij bought more than they could pay for. They were bound bv a contract to take the goods and offered us a large part of the order at a less price than they were to pav, if we would pay cash. We accepted their offer and now are going to give to the Music Instrument Buyers of the west the benefit derived from our fortunate purchase. Vibitors to Ak-Sar-Ben festivities can MORE THAN SAVE THEIR RAILROAD FARE AND EXPENSES by taking advantage of the many great bar gains we are offering in our Music Department. In point of amount of goods to be sold, in the qualities of the goods offered, in the beauty and tastefulness of the designs and in the most important point of all, that of the EXTREMELY LOW PRICES this Ak-Sar-Ben sale will rank as the greatest musical instrument sale in the history of 'the Trans-Mississippi country. Here you will find the following articles priced so low as to astonish you: Pianos, Interior Piano Players, Piano Players, Organs, Music Boxes, Talking Machines, Talking Machine Records, Piano Player Music, Sheet Music, (Juitars, Mandolins, Violins, Accordeons, Cases for all kinds of musical instruments and everything pertaining to musical merchandise. A Few of the Many Great Bargains to Be Found Here: Fine Quarter Sawed Oak Case, medium size 3 14S Small Colonial Case, San Domin0 Mahogany $200 French Burled Walnut, beautifully carved $285 Large Oak Case, orchestral attachment $ 12 5 Concert Piano, beautiful tone ' $285 Mission Oak Case, good as new $275 Bear in mind that besides the nbove Piano bargains we have many best assort od stock of Sheet Music in the west. Hear, our Victor Talking Plain Mahogany Case, returned from rent $ HO Quarter Sawed Oak Case, large size ' $ 140 South African Mahogany Case, colonial design $ 180 Carved Mahogany Case, good as new $ 145 more in new, just from the. factory Pianos in all the latest style cases. Also a complete stock of small musical instruments and the largest and; Machines; they will interest and entertain you. All the 1908 styles of cases in the following makes of Pianos are shown on our floors: " ; $ioo ii ,. , ;; S205.:1 " !' Old English Oak, fine piano for home Factory Sample Art Case, almost ntw Plain Mahogany Case, rented a short time Empire Design Mahogany Case, slightly damaged S 190 Hand Made Walnut Case, cost new $600, now 5 310 t.. n if Knabe, Fisher, Chickering Bros., Franklin, Ebcrsolo, Estey, Sohmer, Price (Si Teeple, Smith (EL Barnes, Milton, Schaeffer, Stark, Wegman, Smith (EL Nison, Knight-Brinkerhoff The Angclus the Only Perfect Piano Player. Knabe-Angelus, Emerson-Angelus. Angelus-Piano OUR PIANO DEPARTMENT constitutes the most thoroughly complete stock in the west. The assortments are inclusive of the very finest grades in the world and of all intermediate lines to hest low price pianos the V world oners. ','., OUR SMALL INSTRUMENT DEPARTMENT is already recognized as the largest and hest in Nehraska. The assortment is the largest and our prices are always just a little lower'-.' than can be found anywhere else. . Violins, up from ; 1.00 Finest line of Accordeons in the city, up from 50c Saxaphones, worth $125.00, now.. $65.00 Cornets, up from $6.00 Trombones, up from $7.00 French Horns, up from $20.00 Mellaphones, up from $15.00 BIG SHEET MUSIC TWO COPIES OF THE FOLLOWING, 5c Btar of Hope. Marching Through Georgia. JitAt:U, I I,,,.. ,. ' lirurio Banjo, was $50.00, now $25.00 S. S. Stewart Banjo, was $40.00, now... $20.00 Bruno Banjo, was $.'50.00, now $17.00 Burt Banjo, was $15.00, now ....$7.50 8. S. Stewart Banjo Mandolin, up from. . . .$5.00 Guitar Mandolins, Autoharps Music Kolls, Bags. Martin Mandolins and Guitars, Washburn Mando lins and Guitars and others, up from. .'. .$2.00 Teachers Should Not Overlook This Sale.. Largest line of Drums and Drummers' Traps in the city. Music Stands and Cases for all instruments. Nickel plated Music Stands $1.00 Talking Machines, all sizes from the smallest to the largest in the world. Talking Machine Records, Needles, etc. in fact, everything in music. By Mall lc Per Copy Extra. Up In A Swing. Selection Prom Faust. Dying Poet. Largo. Maiden's Dream. Traumeret. Sorella. II Trovatore. Convent Bells Cavellerla Rustlcana. Old Folks At Home. Flower Song. And 300 more to select from. OEM BIRO 1 i . . ' .... - ,., , , , . . - -4 , -.- : . . ; 1 STORIES OF NOTED PEOPLE Taft's Law Repair Shop a Feature of Philippine Government. HOW HE HELPED METHODISTS overturned no Ant'leut ttpniilanv Stat ute nnri Made fcasy the War (or n Mlaslouary While Gov ernor General. tiome years ago, when tho former secre iary of war was governor-general of the 1'hlllppines, relates Success Magailne, he v. as called upon one morning by Rev. Henry UteunU. a missionary of the Meth odist rh'jrcli, now a bishop. The mis sionary waa In trouble. He had raised lliu iimney to build a church and had puichased the site, only to find that, under mi old Spanish law still In force, no sut h I utld i riff could be erected unless the same was to he dedicated to the Catholic church. H was a law handed down from the good old days when church and slate traveled hand In hand In the Spanish possessions. The governor-general heard the mission ary's statement and said, "Walt a few mln ult i." Turning to his stenographer, Mr. Taft dictated a few lines and then handed the lyp.-wrltten sheet to the missionary, say Ins;. "That's all right; now go ahead and build your church." A lew days later the popular govornor KMitral found tacked to the front door of hi palace a huge placard bearing the Words In big letters: "Legal Repair Bhop: Old Laws Repaired Whlla You Walt." The Joke was public property In Manila for some days, none enjoying It more than the genial governor-general himself. In the Footstep of Ills Father. Ogden Mills Iteid, only son of Whitelaw Iteid. ambassador to St. James, Is hunting down the elusive political item as a re porter on his father's newspaper, the Tribune, reports the New York Times. He began Wednesday, and that night lie waa waiting in vain at the Hotel Knickerbocker to form the acquaintance of William James nm rs of Buffalo and the democratic slate committee. Later, at an hour when the seasoned reporter would have called It a day's work, he cheerfully volunteered to KO on a still hunt for Republican State Chairman Timothy L. Woodruff, who la a mighty difficult man to find after republi can state headquarters hat closed for the day. Young Mr. Reld'a appearance aa an ac tive worker on tlie Tribune stall recalls the story printed recently that Whitelaw Reld had refused several offers to purchase his newspaper on the around that he de sired to leave It as a legacy to his son. Tho latter Is a Yale graduate of the class of 1IM. Subsequently he took a course at the Yale law school. At the university he waa chiefly noted for his interest In aquatic sports. The Hooaler Poet at. Home. 1 For all his easy-going ways James Whlt oomb Riley Is the best-dressed man In In dianapolis, nssorts a writer In tho Delin eator. Ha Is tho faultlessly-attired gentle man who dally walks out of Lockerbie street with a gold-headed cane and often with a white carnation In his buttonhole, as ho aturts downtown to see his publish ers. And before he's gone far he has ac cumulated a following of children. If there la a little red-haired boy at the home with the blue pump, standing on the fence rail playing telephone with the clothes line, Mr. Riley calls, "Hello. Amber Locks." The first time they mV he lifted the boy over the fence, sat him down on the ground, looked at him gently, and said: "Son, you've got hair Just like Hum used to have. Hum was my Utile brother, and grandmother called his Amber Locks." And as he goes down the street there Isn't a child that he misses. He knows them all. Last summer there waa a lemonade stand under the trees at the house beyond the red brick church. Lemonade waa 3 centa a glass. But there weren't any Duyers. Tho fingers of the small venders were not comfortably clean and nobody knew If they washed the glasses. By and by It began to rain, and four of them scuttled off to the Bhelter of the big church doorway, leav ing only the littlest boy In charge. Along tame the fine gentleman, and, though he didn't have an umbrella, he stopped In the fast-Increasing rain to say: "I'll take a glass of lemonade." And he drank It. too. Then he left 10 cents and didn't want the change. He never does. Every newsboy In Indianapolis knowa that. Among the little folk he meets he scatters pennies as freely as the sunshine of his words. "You see," he says apologetically to any grown-up who catches him, "pennies are awful hard to get when you're a boy. Why, there Isn't anything so hard as pennies. 1 remember." Bread Cmmt I pon the Waters." Gratitude to Joaquin Miller for aavlng hia life and nursing hlra through a long spell of sickness tnajiy years ago has caused John Herren, an old prospector who has "struck It rich" at Rawhide, Nev., to make a will leaving everything he pos sesses to his old friend and benefactor. More than 35 yeara ago the "Poet of the Sierras," while carrying the mall between AMERICA leads the World preeminently in the superiority and skill of her dentists n n PERFECT has heen prepared by an American dentist since 1866. It cleanses, preserves and beautifies the teeth and imparts purity and fragrance to the breath Florence nd Mllleraburg, Idaho, brought the miner Into the latter place after he had become unconaclous while lost In the deep snow. Since then the prospector has become old seeking the claim which was going to make him wealthy, but he never forgot the kindness of Joaquin Miller, who furnished him with provisions and nursed him back to health. It has been his ambition to re pay the kindness, and since he has become wealthy at Rawhide he has made his will In favor of his old-time protector. Why lie I.Ikes Tart. Even the editor of a local newspaper Is not always entirely without a sense of humor, relates the New York Times. In a certain little suburb of New York some where between Irvlngton and Scarborough a couple of local politicians were discussing the presidential campaign In the office of one of the local dailies, when the editor looked up for a moment from his editorial on the new postofflce building and ob served : "Taft Is going to be a big favorite with the press, alright." "Well, now; I'm glad to hear you say so," responded one of the politicians. "And I guess you're In a position to know, If anyone does. Just what makes you think that, thonghT" "He takes up so much space," answered the editor", as he racked his brain to think how he waa going to get news Itetna enough to fill the space between the adver tisements on the first page. On the Fence. When Jim Watson, republican candidate for governor of Indiana, was practicing law In Winchester he had a case before local Justice Involving the ownership of a pig. Testimony waa submitted and the Justice reserved decision. The justice was a candidate for mayor of the town, and Watson and the opposing counsel thought they saw opportunity for a little fun. "See here. Judge," said Watson, meeting the juatlce on the street one day, "unleas I get judgment In my favor in that pig case Tm going to oppose your election as mayor." Opposing counsel met the justice and talked in the same strain. A couple of days later they went together to the Jus tice's office. He waa out. but his docket lay open. Opposite the pig case was the entry: "Disagreed." Crawford awid HI Critics. The popular American novelist, F. Marlon Crawford, haa a beautiful villa In Sorrento. The villa, on the edge of rich brown cliffs that fall sheer, like a wall, Into the blue waters of the Mediterranean, offers a su perb view of the shining sea, of Capri, of Naples, and Vesuvius. Mr. Crawford haa written an Iniarcdlble number of novels, relatea the Baltimore Sun. Indeed. It ia aaid of him that he can, without any difficulty, write a long and quite readable novel In ten days. Hence It la not strange that with his wealth and fame he should be the lion of Sorrento. In a Sorrento hotel sat a group of tour ists. "The native here." said a tourlat from Duluth. "talk of nothing but Marlanna Crawfoot Marianne, CrawfooL I have found out at last what they mean. They mean, by Jove, our great American novelist, K. Marlon Crawford." "Crawford la a wondorful writer," said a tourist from Boise City. "Ha thinks noth ing of turning out a novel In three days." "I doubt that." a tourist from Baltimore said. "Yet It la true that "Crawford haa written a great many books, over 100. I think the figures atand. And he la still young, remember. H may yet break all le. uuls." "X don t beliv any living man tvai read all Crawford's books." said a tourist from New York. A tall, broad-shouldered gentleman, who has been listening on t lie outskirts of the group, with something; like a sneer, lifting his sweeping moustache, spoke up Impa tiently at this Juncture. "I have read them all," he said. The tourlsta looked In surprise at the stranger. "You have, eh?" said a Chlcagoun. "And who, may I ask, are you?" "I am Crawford," was the reply. General Nlekles' Ntormy ( nreer. The reconciliation between Geneial Daniel K. Sickles and his wife, after a separation of twenty-seven years, Is one of the most notable social events of recent times, re lates the Philadelphia Inquirer. It appears to le one of the last important Incidents of a career that has been remarkably stormy In war, lu love and In politics. General Sickles will be 84 years old In a few weeks, and fur more than sixty years has been a prominent figure In public life. Concerning no man In tho country has there been more discussion, his friendships being as warm as his enemies are hitter. It is not llkelv that the controversy over the action of General Sickles on the mot n mg of the second day at Gettysburg will ever er.d, but there is no disputed p.ilnt In hlstcry on which each side holds such ab solute convictions, of a diametrically op posing character. v There are a good many people alive who remember the sensation created all over the country when General Sickles shot the al leged betrayer of his wife, Philip RurUm Key, on tho street in Wilmington. This was fifty years ago, lacking a fi vv months, and at that time General Kickles waa u leading member vt congres and known as a man of the moat positive views. The trial which followed was cehhrHleil In the nniials of criminal Jurisprudence, re sulting In a verdict of acipilttal. There waa at that time a good deal of belief In the liiffher law of the husband, but when not long afterward the couple reunited ther" were many persona who thought they had been duped. This wife died, and the necnnd has had sorrows f her own, though the exact na ture of the domcKtic troubles Is unknown. In the meantime the stormy career of the old general haa continued. He has been a fighter In politics and hla personality has never been absent from New York affairs until recently, when declining; years have snmewhst abated hla energies. But he re mains one of the few picturesque figures among the survivors of the war. the eldest In years of them all. and one who will be remembered for various reasons long after some of greater military abilities have been forgotten. The t'nptnre of Mosliy. .General John 8. Moshy, the confederate cavalryman, used to tell of a comic Inci dent which happened In the Shenandoah valley In 1SI. relates Youth's Companion. Near Millwood a regiment of cavalry halted oi. e night and went into camp. One of the men, who was hungry, slipped away and went off in the neighborhood to get some tiling to cat. lie rudo up to a cabin on a farm In the dark and called fur the person Inside to come out. A negro woman, known at that time as an intelligent contraband, opened the door and anked him what he wanted. The soldier wished to be assured of his safety before dismounting and while eating his supper, so he Inquired of the woman if any one but herself was there. She replied, "Yes. Mosby is here." "What!" said he, in a whisper. "Is Mosby here?" "Yes," she said, "he Is In the. house." The soldier put spurs to his horse and chinned off to his company to carry the r.ews. When lie sot there he informed the colonel that Mosby was in a house not far away. The regiment was soon mounted, and went at a fast trot, thinking they had Moshy In a trap. When they arrived at the negro woman's hotixe the colnncl ordered his men. to sur round It, to prevent Mosby's escape, while he went In with a few to take him dead or alive. The woman aRiiln came to the door of the cabin. The colonel Inquired, "Is Mosby lure?" She innocently replied, "Yes," so he walked In. After the colonel got Ir.slde lie looked round. Rut the woman seemed to he all alone and utterly unconscious of having so Important a person for her guest. In a loud voice the colonel demanded. "Wh.re is Mosby?" '"Kre he," answered the terrified negress, ut the same time polmtlng to a cradle on the floor. The colonel looked Into ttie cradle and saw j a little African pickaninny sucking Us paw. to locate a break, the apparatus Indicates a resistance of ohms, the break, ac cording to the cable expevts. Is about 300 miles from the shore. With this Infor mation, the captain of the repairing ship can determine by his charts the course. of the cable, the latitude and longitude In which the break has ocourred, mid can set out at once. When the ship has arrived at a point near the broken cable, a grapnel Is drop ped, and the cable is hooked. The etui are brought together on the deck, and Joined by the electricians on board . Advertise In Tho Hee, the paper that goel Into the homes of the best people. OSTRICH WAS NO CHICKEN Honed (Her Two I'll rollers ami Miule Colored Man C'haita-e Ilia lows. Just because they thought an ostrich was a timid, harmless sort of creature, two men, one while and "one black, wi re badly hurt at Mineola, f-ons; Island." Kach of the men tried to catch and hold an ostrich at the Mineola fair grounds. The negro was kicked In the face and landed about twenty feet from the bird; the white man was kicked in the cheat and knocked down and had his clothes torn off him. The ostrich that did all tlu- damnKe is named Fleetwlntf. He and another ostrich named Fleet wing, arrived from Florida In two crates the other day. They wcr brought to Mlneoln to race on the fair grounds at the lair of the Queena-Nassaii County Agricultural society. The birds have been trained to run races and pull light sulkies to which they are harnessed. They are bad tempered, however, and are kept blindfolded frequently when they are not racing. A blindfolded ostrich Is penile as n lamb. The blinding hood Flipped off the eyes of FleetwJnB at the 'fal 'grounds recently arid In an instant the big bird was out of Its crate, whloh was not covered. It started off on a run, and About 200 persons' ran after It. There was a merry chase around unJ around the racing truck, and ( finally tho ostrich waS 'Cornered. A 'big' nestfT'lorfliM at'the ostflr "T reelton there ain't no chicken evi raised that I couldn't hold, boss, I'll hold, Ms luig, an' then you grab his liald.f i' The negro wrapped his arms ahouk iio Of Fleet wing's lea;s and In a second'; w lifted Into the air and landed about twenty feet away, with on ugly wound In tin sd of his face. Then Keeper Ford approaVlfHd the ostrich from :the front, and got all p pcrcut on Ms dlahhratrm. cutting his Ithwr. and tearing his clotht-s;. Finally the 'oatrhjti waa roped and rvoratod. jj !i "That ain't no chicken," said the ieirM as he watched these proceedings from ! st dlKtance. "That there's o two-laitred nV'ljf' New York World. f J1: Hy ijhIiib; the various departments ot Tfeo Bee. Want' Ad '.Pages Vou get tho beftf H- ....... . .1... i U HUlir Ul me ll'.ai rftKi-m-. Medicine for Miser. The celebrated French physician, R was one day walking along the houle In Purls, when he met an old gent! who was very rich, but who waa a same time noted for his stinginess, old man. who was somewhat of a 1 elionilrlae. ini.isrmed that he could act medical advice from Rlcord without piylng for It. i 2 "Doctor. I'm feeling very poorly." 1 J "Where do you suffer most.'' "In my stoin.ieh, doctor." "Ah! that's bad. Pleaxe shut your Now put out your tongue, so that li cjui examine It closely." if The Individual did as he was told. . fr he had waited patiently for about ten ntn utes, he opened his eyes and found itnj self surrounded by a. crowd, who supifuKud thHt lie was crazy. Dr. Rlcord. tut tb meantime, had disappeared. Philadrhilita Record. ( u. DON'T WASTE MONEY ON "FAT" DOCTORS! Anjlxxly Can Itrdure Fat at Homo If you ar fat and wish to reduce quick ly don't go to a aelf-stvled ouikHv "Doc tor"; l your own specialist. Appropriate to your onn use tiie simple iiDitruction here and you will l,e m capable a l'at-re-duclng x Pi t as there is In I lie land. The qualifications are few and the espeme trlfllnx. Secure from your diiiKKiat one unbroken ounce packaae of M.irmolii. one halt' ounce Fluid Kxtraet fan am Aro matic, and three and one-half ounces pep permint Water, all of u l.ich are bolii cheap and plentiful In any drug store. Take them home and mix them together by ehuklng well In a large bottle. You are now ready to become a socceKsful fat reducing specialist without further train ing or preparation. Simply lake a i-.'-apoonful of this pleasant uiixiuiu after each meal and at bedtime ae.l you will make more pvortes taking off your ex eeu flesh In thirty days ihnn all toe "experts" In the land counl aicompllKh In half a year. This method of getting rid of flesh Is, moreover, not only sure and safe but appeals airunalv to the overage fat person, man or woman, for it gets re sults without Interfering with one's dlei or laay hablu It dvea the aoik ot exercise. Modern Orraa Cable.. The tin dern types of cable are con atructed in thin way: The core consists of a cential copper wire surrounded by strips of copper, weighing from 5no to i pounds per nautical mile, and insulated with thr-e or more coatings of gutta-percha, weigh ing from S' to 4c0 pounds per nautical mile. The outer sheathing varies accord ing to the depth and nature of the iMittom, and contains lr"m twelve to eighteen gal vanized Iron or steel wirs. These sea cable vary In size and cost The deep sea cabl" Is about an inch in diameter, the intermediate tpe one and three-fourth Inches, and the store, or rock cable, two and three-fourth Inches. Notwithstanding improved methods of constructing cable, all companies are obliged to maintain repair , h!ps. There are fifty-three of tin Be ships always ready for action at a moment a n' lice. Cabh a are damaged usually by chafing ovci rocky bottoms, and sometimes they are broken by khips' anchors. An Injury which bares the conductor even slightly, and allows the water to reach It, will end tho useful ness of the cable for Hie time heii-a;. The fH'ft step tlun is to local the break A conductor offers a certain amount of re sistance to the passive of an electric cur rent. Apparatus lias been devised for nil aauritig Ilia amount of tilts resistance. Tiie unit of resistance is called an ohm. Resistance ceaaea at the point where the conductor makea considerable contact with the waieij therefore, if, wbvit measuring 3 Do your form letters reach the waste bas ket or the manager's office? Don't waste postage on let ters that are not read. We produce actual typewritten ; letters. They .hhve allthe value of a personal letter Mangum & Company, LETTER FACTORY1!1. OMAHA. IIEB. FHOHEe0 i