D 1 8 TTTE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: PECEMRER 27. 1003. C .rirK wumr mm mmmuQi mtwmmiAii Before We Invoice Ml Merchandise Must Be Sold Down to the Lowest Possible QuantityThese Big Bargains Will Do It V J I 1 U- !, - oaoE30cioaoEaox30i30C30Oaoiaoaocaoc3oaoziocaot jj This Special Reduction SoJe Will g o Completely Dispose of All Odds and Ends o 0 in One Day, Defore Invoicing Q dtoaoDoaononoaoQOQUononoaonoDoaoaono pE30Eaoaoaoaoaoc30E30C30aocaOEaonoaocioc3oac o Come to Drundois Monday and Buy 2 jj Seasonable, Up-to-Date Goods at Unusual j Q Reductions in Price. 0 aoaononoaoaoaonoaonoQoaonoaononoDO 1 ELY J DjiOj A m u UK Mfeu '0 EMBROIDERIES Worth Up to 30c Yard at 7ic and 15c Yard Skirtings, flouncings and corset cover widths, also medium width edges and insertions all choice, new designs- worth up to OOc yard, at yard ". . .7-2C SllSc. 10c LACES at 5c Yd. Fine French and German val. laces and insertings, also Piatt vals and Torchon laces; many to match worth 11 uptolOcyard, lfj at yard . . . Sale of MUSSED HANDKERCHIEFS Fine Swiss Embroidered Handkerchiefs, Shamrock lawn, hemstitched all linen, . embroidered initials, etc. all handkerchiefs used in decorations slightly soiled and mussed, on two big bargain squares, at, each 5c ! 7Ic SPECIAL MONDAY IN MILLINERY DEPT. Your Choice f Any Woman's Hat $j, in our stock that has been selling up to $15, at. .sd: THOUSANDS OF FANCY FEATHERS, all kinds, sizes and colors, including Pocahontas.bands, great r m assortment on bargain square, main floor, Zj1i worth up to $1.50 each, at each MVJ Your Unrestricted Choice Monday Any Womaas Suit in Our Entire Stock This includes every Tailored Cloth Suit in the House. POSITIVELY NO RESTRICTIONS Suits that are worth y $50 9 Women's $25 and $30 Winter Cloaks. $12.50 One great lot of women's black broadcloth and fancy mixture winter cloaks that are positively )50 worm up to o - M Women's $10 and $15 Winter Cloaks. $6.93 One great lot of women's winter cloaks, up-to-date styles In black and colors, and actually worth up to $15 at All Our Children's Cloaks at Just Price We wish to reduce our stock of children's cloaks at once. Monday's prices will be extraordinary. Every cloak in stock will be sold at exactly Mi the marked price. ' All the children's $10 cloaks, at.. $5 All the children's $5 cloaks, for $2.50 All the children's $7.50 cloaks. .$3.75 All the children's $3 cloaks, at $1.50 All Our White Aprons Slightly 1 Mussed 2 Price Many of our dainty white aprons were slightly mussed and soiled during the Christ mas rush. Monday we offer all these white aprons in round, square, big aprons, etc., from our Christmas stock -at one-half the regular prices. All the $2.50 aprons, for $1.25 All the $2 aprons, at $1.00 All the $1.25 aprons, for 65c All the 75c aprons, for. . . , 39c iii..iiiiuiiup i i p n 1 i sT aa B mS UM U It I -W ' - -m U 5 i r tt-'zj i ::::::::;:r z2 Great Special Price Reductions DRESS GOODS For Monday at Drandeis All Wool Dress Goods at 29c Yard "Worsted dress goods in checks,' stripes, mixed weaves, barred patterns, etc. 14-inch, all wool, navy and black wire mesh voile, worth 1? to $1.00 yard, all go, at, yard nl tr Imported Broadcloth Remnants 2Vz to 7 yard lengths all the loading. shades and black. Fine Saxony Broadcloth at just one-third the regular price, at, yard $1.19 $1.50 Suitings at 49c Yard 60-inch suitings in neat checks, Fekin stripes, mixed pat terns, Herringbone stripes, etc. worth $1.50, 4Q on bargan square, at, yard fC Dress Goods in the Basement Several hundred yards of fine, medium weight suitings at a fraction of their price worth Qr up to $1.75 yard, at, yard QJC Silks s?ochu,e 39c-49c Dress taffetas, fancy silk suitings, plaid silks, stripe and check silk suiting, black Peau de Soie and a fine lot of 20 to 27-inch black and colored taffetas, Q 4 QA worth $1 yard, at, yard JJC"ZfC BOc Silk, 10c Yard About 1,000 yards of plain and fancy Bilks taffetas, Lousl enes, Jap silks, etc, yd. 19c 80-In. Italian Press Taffetas Special Blue Edge, our guaranteed $1.60 value, at, yd. 87k E it f OMAN AS POLISH P1NERU fjabrielle Zapolska Attracts Wide p . Attention in Europe. JIVES LIVES OF HER CHARACTERS Bhe Has Remarkable Genius Per . ' trayln tne Commonplace Her Methoaa ad Her Ideal Tw l'lay. WARSAW, Dec. 26. (Special.) Although htr name la unknown In the United Statea, Oabrlelle Zapolska. "the Polish Plnero-' Is Just now attracting wluu attention In Rus sia, Austria, and Germany, because of her ability as a playwright. She has the happy faculty of drawing with unerring pen the characters one Is constantly meeting In the streets one's jnds and neighbors and chance acquaintances and almost all the characters that people her many plays are familiar to is In real life. ."This remarkable woman Is 45, has dark h"fclr and eyes and a short nose, the nostrils flf which are too wide for comeliness, a somewhat tired face and a slight figure. Je her rlays she lays bare the weakness and strength of human nature wtfewon tferrul trufh and detail. All her li are urossed and all her I s dotted. 8he married A Woman's S3.' Shoe (J(j At this popular price we're showing shoe value that can not be duplicated elsewhere. We're well aware that all shoe stores sell women's Bhoea at 13.00, but what a differ ence In the shoes. The price means nothing It's not copyrighted any store can name It the shoe ' means everything. Madam, if you wear. 13.00 'i shoes and will look at our shoes at this price, we will make a sale. We've every slxe and width mhtch guarantees a perfect fit and w that every foot gets it. FRY SHOE CO. X II K 8HOER8 llh and Douglas Streets. i young and was divorced In a short time. After thct she began to write. "I rtver write about people I do not know, and r.ever draw a scene that Is not, except for the dramatic element brought out by the plot, quite commonplace," she said in telling me of her methods. "I al ways choose a commonplace, everyday aub- Joct from the middle or lower-middle class life, and strive to keep my Imagination subservient to reason, for It Is in our ordi nary life that real tragedy and comedy are to be found." Skill In Depleting Character. Her men ate neither the peerless heroes of some woman's creation, nor the unmitigated scoundrels of others. Nor does she spare her own sex. Her women exhibit vanity, hypocracy snd a hundred petty actions with sometimes a really noble character, full of the spirit of self-sacrifice and womanliness. And she can draw many kinds of men and women with unfailing skill the bourgeoise, the mald-of-all-work, the washerwoman and the fine lady; the actor, the clerk, the houseporter and the young man of pleasure. In order to get to the soul of a poor seamstress she went to a provincial town and worked as a "hand" In a dressmaking establishment for a few cents a day. She fell In ,wlth their ways and accent and soon got to the heart of their hard lives, their temptations, ambitions and point of view, in her last play, called "The Four of Them; a Tragedy of Stupid People," we have In the little dressmaker such a lifelike character that It seems as though the girl herself had set down all the contents of her soul, who longs, above all, that she might become "a lady" and an honest woman. Nobody has a name In the playbill. The characters who give the piece Its title are described as ''hus band," "wife," "child." and "wife's lover." The dressmaker, who we tearn Is called "Wladka" from the dialogue. Is the best drawn person In the piece. She works by the day In the professor's house. He attracts her by his gentle seriousness. She sees ha is miserable because his wife quarrels with his family and ' neglects her household. The wife also carries on a flirtation with a man several years younger than herself, who, as a student, betrayed the deserted Wladka. Clever Piece of Work, Her husband discovers his wife's In trigue and the latter dares not return home that night. The little dressmaker comes next morning to work, finds the professor has not been to bed all night, the 12-year-old child cold, starved and In tears, snd the whole house as comfort leas as a domestio catastrophe could make It. She makes breakfast, has the rooms warmed and forces the professor and child to take some food. Then the wife comes In and the girl is driven from the house, only to return to It as soon as the wife goes away with her lover, as the professor refuses to take her back. Of course Wladka does all she can to make things comfortable for the profeesor, who, too bowed down wltb grief to notice It at first, gradually gets used to the well being and peace that now reign In his household. One la given to understand at the end of the play that the professor, having divorced his wife, finds the dress maker Indispensable to bis child and bis home and marries her. The other characters . are all good the silly wife,' the vain. Idle boy, the serious professor, and the child, made miserable by her mother's frivolities snd the lather's reproaches. But the dressmaker Is a masterpiece. Her contempt for the young man who led her astray and de serted her when she was left unprotected and penniless whilst little more than a child; her scornful wonder that the wife should betray such a husband for some thing- so worthless; her own longing for some quiet, respectable corner where she will be able to develope her better self; her vulgarity, her good humor"and her good heart would appeal to any audience. A few words, dropped In a moment of temptation and calculated to arouse the husband's suspicions, sre followed by quick remorse and her silence till fute has taken the guilty secret from her hands are as human as her sympathy in the professor's sufferings and her scarce concealed satisfaction when the wife goes off, leaving her free to work out her own life. In spite of her Ignorance and vulgarity one cannot help feeling sure that she will make htm and his child far happier than the elegant wife. Writes from Life. Zapolska does not stop at working In dressmakers' shops. In a play called "Oh! Man! Man!" she wanted to lay stress on the miseries of fallen women. 8he hap pened to be living In Warsaw at the tlmi and, dressing as the poorest of unfortu nates, walked tho streets for several nights listening to the conversation of those she wished to portray and talking with the men who spoke to her. "I learned more of the sad and sordid side of human nature In those few terrible nights than ever before," she concluded after giving an account of her experiences Her last play, which Is a sequel to one of her most successful plays, "Mrs. Dulska't Morality," la called "Mrs. Dulska Befor tho Court." Mrs. Pulska Is a hypocritical woman, who lets her best flat to one Ma tilda Strumpf, a person of bad conduct and reputation, because sho offers more renl and then tells all her other tenants thai the newcomer Is a most respectable person living on her private fortune. The various ways In which Matilda's real character comes out would take too long to relate. A strong scene In the play Is when Mrs Dulska has sent her porter to ask the lady not to beat her old servant. The porter' i surprise and that of Mrs. Dulska, who (s listening behind the door. Is great whu Matilda rudely answers that she shall treat her servants as she pleases, because h happens to be her father. The neighbors learn this snd many other details, which pain Mrs. Dulska to such an extent that she repents of her avarice and gives Ma tilda notice to quit. Then follow reproaches and Insults. Mrs. Dulska summons her for libel and loses her case for want of wit nesses. All the Incidents snd characters' are de scribed with the life and humor that chnr-acU-rlse Zapolaka's work. Some critics de Clare that she Is not at her best In "Mrs. Dulska Before the Court." because th ire Is a tendency to make all that represents respectability and solidity reprehensible and give the triumph to Matilda Strumpf and the class she represents. . KAJBTAN DUNBAR. JOHN BURNS TURNS TRAITOR Englishman Hated by Labor Party that Elevated Him. HIS NEPHEW BEGS IN THE STREET Goes About with Card Making; Kuonn Ills Relationship I nine cessfnl In Getting; Govern ment Position. LONDON. Dec. 26. (8peclal.)-"I am the nephew of the great John Burn. M. P. president of the Real government board Because of my lameness I am ignored by him and cannot get work, although of good character. This Is the only means of pro viding for my wife and family." Such is the startling Inscription recently exhibited in the streets of London by Alexander Henry Elliott, who la going about with a barrel organ for tho purpose of calling attention to the hardness of heart of the British cabinet minister and ex-laborer. There Is no doubt about Elliott's cre dentials. He Is not a "fake" nephew. At the same time his methods of attack have given rise to a sort of political tempest In a teapot. As a rule British politics nre freo from personal attacks. This In the first time issues of this kind have been raised. Elliott's tactics are barked up by the labor party, who hato John Burna, be cause they consider him a traitor to the laboring man's cause. Tnrna on Own People, In addition to the keen personalities In dulged In, Burns came In for severe public censure at the recent meeting of the Right to Work National council, held at the Kaowlas Pet Aatsaala. A New York physician told this story re. cently In a lltle company litre pet animals were being dincussed. "We had two little pels, a Blenheim and a King diaries. Tney were both bright,- well behaved and aftec tlonats creatures with a weakness for tlx baby snd candy. They were so much mem bers of in i fimiU- that when presents were distributed Tip and Hex were often remem bered, lst Cinistmas they got new collars, Willi a high key bell on one and a bell of lower note on the other. The Blenheim, a short time ago,- got mixed up with the whoels of sn automobile and went to dog parsdise, and there was mourning in the nursery. A few days later, before taking him out, the maid put the collar on Rex, but Instead ot Jumping; for the door, as he unua'iy dor, hr howled and slunk back Into the tilllway. NolhUig could Induce htm to follow the maid,, and when she tried to carry him, he growled and showed his testM, and tiie cry went through the house. 'Rex Is mad.' It was discovered the dead don's collar hat brer, put on by mistake. snl when this was rrir.ovd he was himself aln.- I. was et.'dent that be would not wear his former ccinptllco't beU," New ltiK Tribune. J np Jsv wn.li Btrr vzm STYLES in doable sols, winter Walk-Over Shoes est known Uss for MEN BOLD AT TIB- I Walk - Ovsr Shas Store 314 tenth 15th street (Too Boors South Baatoa Iraf Os.) I So. . Thompson, waka-ovs asaa Guild hall, London. Though the council representing through its delegates upwards of a million members of labor organiza tions and distress committees for the un employedmet ostensibly for the purpose of seeking a remedy for unemployment, the convention turned ; Into a vote of censure on John Burns. All sorts of things were alleged agaliiHt him, the 'most note worthy being that he had failed to provide work for the unemployed despite the fact that he had alrvady granted funds up to S,782.0nO and loaned the enormous sum of 150,000,010 at very low Interest, for tha ex press purpose of giving the unemployed work on 4,200 separate Jobs. It Is very doubtful if the nephew of Mr Burns would have gnne on the streets in this fashion hud he not been "assisted" by the labor party, who conKldered the op portunity to attack their arch-enemy too good to be lost. Thry provided hlm with an "outfit," consisting of a barrel organ, donkey and the placard already men tioned. Tho nephew himself "did the rest," losing no time in seeking the suburb where Mr. Burns' lives snd playing before the little workman's cottage which the cabinet minister occupies. He also went to the school attended by John Burns, jr., ani played, only desisting when the students threatened to tar and feather him If he ilid not move on, for young Burns Is Im mensely popular among the boys. It hap mdlsliiK on the Work. At this point tlitj uHslstanl-e of the police whs brought in. There is a byelaw In Lor.don that no street organ virtuoso Is allowed to brinu his machine to a stand still. He must rhapsodize "on the move." And so Mr. Burns' nephew has been kept pretty well on the inarch. And now the newspapers have taken up the question, and the cabinet minister has come In for a great deal of hard words, especially from the labor section ' of ths press. On the other hand, he has his de fenders. Many anti-labor papers consider this exposure of family affairs quite un fair. The partisans of Mr. Burns praise hlm highly for nut putting one of his rela tives Into a soft job; and point out that if he had given his nephew a government position he would have been just as harshly e-.rltiolsed by the labor members. And so the merry war goes on, Mr. Burns himself standing aloof. As to tho nephew of Mr. Burns, his ca reer has been a varied one. Seen by the writer, he made a statement of his grievances: Grievance Against Vnrle. 'My name Is Alexander Henry Elliott," he said, "and I consider that I have a grievance against my uncle, John Burns, because he promised me a position unrtnr the Board of Trade, which he has not ful filled. I can speak several languages French, Italian, Turkish and modern Greek. I was secretary to Sir Stephen Lakeman.- K. C. B., In Turkey, and my step-father was - Major-General Mielton I'asha, who held a post In the Turk.sh government. My mother la Mrs.. Burns' own sister. , . "Some years ago I returned to England, but things did not go very well with me. I lost , a good deal over various business ventures, and wanted Mr. Burns to give enough money about ISO to buy a pony In order to go Into the vegetable trade. But ha refused. "I cannot sm that there is anything else for'me to do but to go on the streets and become one of the unemployed, In whom my uncle takes so keen an Interest." Elliott has announced his Intention of abandoning his organ the police tactics of hustling being perhaps too much for hlm and proposes going on the Jecture platform. Us has already had several en gagements offered him by labor organizations. MOVE FOR TORRENS LAW Kansas City Real Estate Exchange I'rges Reform In Title -Registration. The Torrens sytem of registering land titles received a big boost In Kansas C.ty when the Real Estate exchange, after lis tening to addresses on tho subject at Its monthly dinner at the Hotel Baltimore, voted to make permanent the special com mittee which has been Investigating the law and to persevere in Its efforts to pass a Torrens bill through the legislature at the coming session. The exchange listened to a report from E. V. Allen, chairman of the special com mittee, after which talks were made by Judge Henry L. McCune, Judjre J. II. Haw thorne and C. W. Clarke. Mr. Allen's re port contained extracts from numerous letters received by the committee from attorneys, trust companies, real estate dealers and abstracters in different parts of the country, where the Torrens sys tem Is In force, and all were strongly favorable to the law and Its workings. The report concluded: "The question is not, will the system work and prpve satisfac tory, because that has been demonstrated. The question is rather, will the great pe cuniary interests, which have grown up and drawn their living from the faults of the present system prove too strong for us?" ' Judge McCune, who drafted the bill for a Torrens law, which the Real Estate ex chango attempted to pass through the leg islature six years ago, gave a brief history of the origin of the system and explained Its theory and workings. "We are all aware of the defects of tho present system," he said. "Some of us have suffered from it and some have profited. Perhaps the profession to which I bekmg will suffer by a change, but 1 brieve that lawyers as a class are con vinced that a change Ib necessary and will not oppose It. I have many good friends among the abstracters and they, too, as a class may suffer by a more scientific method of doing the business upon which they now depend for a living. But these are not good reasons for oposlng a great reform. I have many friends among tho undertakers, but if I should discover an elixir of life I should not hesitate to put them all out of business. "The theory of the Torrens system is that the title Itself Is registered and not the evidence of 1 as under the present system. The certificate Issued by tho registrar is the title Itself. The procedure Is simple. To convey a title, the owner must appear in the circuit court, which is for this purpose a court of chancery, ll'o files with the court a description of the property and the names of all persons who are Interested In it, and ewears to it. The court refers It to an examiner, an officer corresponding to our recorder of deeds, who makes publication of It and serves notice on all persons interested. On a day set such persons may appear and show cause why the transfer should not be made. The court then passes Judgment and the regis trar issues a' certificate or title which Is conclusive after two years. A tax of one tenth of 1 per cent on all transfers Is col lected to maintain an Indemnity fund, out of which Judgments may be paid to any heir or other person who may establish a claim against the property after the expira tion of two years. But after that period tha title cannot be assailed, t'nder ths Illinois law, as In effect In Cook county, tha county is responsible and must pay such Judgments out of any public funds. To transfer the same property a second time, the owner surrenders his certificate to ths registrar, who issues a new one to the pur chaser." . . Judge Hawthorne made an urgent plea that the exchange continue Its efforts' to secure tho enactment of a Torrens law..-, "The guarantee feature Is the buttress of the law," he said. "Under It, the country or tho state becomes responsible to the pur chaser. This Is most proper. -.All title to land comes originally from the government and we can look to no greater source for Its guarantee. But the history of the law In other countries goes to show that there are few claims made upon the Indemnity fund. In England, since the system was adopted In 1S75, not a single one has been made. In Queensland during a period 'of thirty-eight years. In which more thn 2,000,000 transfers were made, only one was found on the record." A Horrible Death results from decaying lungs. Cure coughs and weak, sore lungs with Dr. King's New Discovery. BOc snd 1.00. For sals' by Beaton Drug Co. Che-an Meat In Vermont Venison vas selling not long ago in Ver mont tor 8 cents, cheaper than good beef, for the slaughter of deer was unprecedented this year. The usual hag for the state la about "M, but en reful estimates Indicate that upward of 2,w0 deer have iMM-n killvd. As the meat cannot Iw taken from the stHte except hy a hunter from out of the state wiio has paid a 115 license fee, most of it remained to afford cheap living while It lusted. sf How My FEET HURT Here's Relief at Last If there is a woman in Omaha or Nebraska, for that matter, who has tender feet or who la bolhered with bunions we have a message of relief. We carry a specially constructed nhoe for women which Is made one size smaller at the instep and two sizes wider at the sole which throws th foot in its natural position, encouraging elasticity In the walking and real com fort for the wearer. These shoe are piade of fine soft kid leather and they are very soft and flexible. We have them In lace only. The prices range Turned Soles Welt Boles , 3.50 4.50 Drexel Shoe Co. 1419 Farnam Street v