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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1909)
8 TIIE BEE : OMAHA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBEIl 27, 1900. FSocieES Stores S BIG PICTURE SALE Some of these pictures have been greatly admired in our five big Douglan street windows. SI Frmv Pleura- for 25c I.... ... Many of the best modern artists being repre sented. Groups, block and white drawings, beautifully colored pictures, heads, land scapes, etc., etc. suitable for any room. We bought an immense lot and that is why we, can sell you these high grade pic tures so cheaply worth easily to ' $1.00 each, at .' 25c r A Great Chance to Select Ooe of These Stunning MILLINERY SALE Fur Polar Turbans at $5.00 WORTH UP TO $13 These are all ultra stylish new fur turbans, in the very latest shapes made of fox, lynx, marmot, mink, etc trimmed with ostrich plumes, aigrettes, flowers, gold and silver metallic ef fectsalso stunning big 'velvet hats with fur crowns they are actually worth as hi eh as $15.00 each. one big lot, at- sv IT ' 1 X t M j a m Ii ! K mm1) j mm 2 Long Black Broadcloth Coats MADE TO SELL UP TO $39. nt $25 Hundreds of these beautiful long tailored coats in full and seven-eighths lengths. They are made of an extra fine quality of black broadcloth with full guaranteed satin lining. Some are simply trimmed. They are the most fashionable and practical of all coats for dressy winter wear and they are positively worth as high as $39.00 each great special sale Saturday at, each mm WOMEN'S SMART SUITS mt $35 and $30. These are ultra fashionable, new, mid-winter models now shown for the first time. Every new style that has attained high favor is shown, 0 CIO two groups, at yuu'vOV WOMEN'S $20 SUITS at $12.B0. ThlB Is a special offer of high grade, practical, winter suits; all new styles and colors the new plain tailored effects they are worth up CI 7 rt to $20, at $1&.0J SPECIAL PRICES IN FURS Black Russian Lynx Sets Rug muff and throw at $5.00 Canadian Marten Sets Large muff and throw, at $5.00 Blended Brook Mink Sets, at $15.00 Black Wolf Sets, at $19.00 Jap Mink Sets, at $39.00 Matched Mink Sets, at ... . $49.00, $75.00, $98.00 50-inch Pony Coats, at ....$49.00 50-inch Sable Coney Coats, at $75.00 52-inch fine Caracul Coats, at $75.00 52-inch Blended Striped Brook Mink Coats, at $98.00 56-inch handsome Broadtail Pony Novelty Coats, at $150.00 52-inch Near Seal Coats, at. $69.00 Blended Sable Coney Jackets, at. ....... .. $25.00 Blended Brook Mink Jackets, at $39.00 Near Seal Jackets, at $35.00 Beautiful curly gray Krimmer Jackets, at $49.00 GREAT SALE X BASEMENT Sample Dolls Buy your Christmas dolls and you will pay just half for them. "We bought sample lines of jointed dolls, kid body dolls and dressed dolls from a great importer at a wonderfully low price. Did you see them in the window ( $4 Jointed Dolls f at 3i.yu Lacti RE s BIG SPECIAL SALE FANCY JEWELRY An Entire Lino of Drummers' Samples Belt pins, belt buckles, Scarf pin sets, collar pins, pearl cuff links, children's novelty purses, bracelets, hat pins, beads, pocket knives, initial fobs, coral beads, etc., etc., actually worth up to $2.00 each, at, each 25c and 50c, U Women's fine, 50c and 76 elastic belts, special, T C at, each tJ French Brilliant Hat Pins At Onc-hiUf Regular Trices. C Hat Pins, at . .$3.00 I 9 Hat Tins, at . .$2.00 ?5 Hat Tins, at . .$3.50 $2 Hat Pins, at . .$1.00 Leather lined Shopping Bags of goat seal leather : Inside purse and card case; your Initial In brass free; our special, at $1.00 mm Children's Cloaks Little bearskin, ullly Opossum, kersey and broadcloth coats; 2 to 14 years, at $1.08 & $2.08 Children's stylish winter coats in all ages, worth up to $16.00, at $7.50 3 BIG SPECIAL SALES IN OUR BASEMENT $15 SUITS at $6.98 From th Jacob Cohen stock 200 suits in black and colors; plain tailored or trimmed; heavy coats, pleated O AO skirts, etc., $15 coats, at, B9 each $10 SUITS at $5 from the Jacob Cohen stock all the suits in this purchase; good styles, materials and colors; silk lined jackets, worth V $10.00, at, each , ;5 $10 CLOAKS at $5 Broadcloths, coverts, cheviots and mixtures; some are lined throughout, and some are elaborately trim med, worth $10.00, at each pro 5 4 All th verv flnn. lnrim V jointed dolls that were i ported to sell at $3 and each beautiful heads and real hair, at, (T QO each 4I.0 $2 and $2.50 Jointed Dolls at $1.25 Each Up to 24 inches high sleeping eyes, fully jointed, moving head, shoes and stockings, sewed wigs in different shades, $25 "desirable sizes to dress, at, each $i ma Body foils at voc Not one is worth less than $2.00 each sewed wigs, moving eyes, jointed hips, shoes and QO stockings, each 0C $3 Dressed Dolls at 98c Each Never before have such beautiful dressed dolls been placed on special sale silk, satin and finest lawn dresses, CIS at, each ; OC $1 Dressed Dolls at 25c and 49c You will be surprised to see such beauti fully dressed dolls sold so cheaply one in a box worth up to $1.00, PLAY HOUSE DOLLS AT 15c Each Jointed and nicely dressed, worth up to 35c each, at, each !5c Human Hair Goods AteVaIe The Season' Mast Popular Hair Goods Novelties Special bargains In Roman braids, at, each S2.ftS i rauBLununiiuu iui r.ii aiuuuu mo f r f 1 1 ' iiA' JJ v ' . ...Ail .. IT,-1 'T T j l TV ' ' C.I heaa maae or nnest iB-incn nai- 4 "vj.w? - ' V kX 1 .... . o tan o t -if M ' !' r ' uiui war umi fo i.iuct, ),ug VTSkllf "-' ' i 2-lnrh natural wavv hair. 115.00 U VI vaiue, ai JJ Grey Switches " N ' h-.,- . . V JV w - for 2.3 for Auto Nets, large site . , 10 Headquarters for new turban cap frame Remember our perfect ser- vice iu unuuicoDiUH, uiBiiii;uiiu5 miu shampooing. "'v. I BRANDE1S STORES mrfWfWMBksw 3 V. and Sale Saturday Brass Craft The Most Beautiful Brass Worked Pyrography '"t Special display of finished pieces Brass Craft is practically "Py ! rography" mounted or covered with brass. You can make frames, coat bangers, tie racks, cigar jars, book racks, steins, gloves and photo boxes and hundreds of other useful articles. Opening sale price Saturday on special outfit for beginners, at. each 25c Outfit IB, containing polished hardwood mallet, steel stippling awl, steel velnlng tool, (0 brass pins, 25 brass shanks, polishing powder, polishing velvet, steel wool designed piece of brass, with complete instructions, at JC Handkerchief Boxes olid wood, brass mounted, stamped In a variety of nt. deslfna, at ....-7c Book Racks, extension, all brass mounted special, O C at OJC Outfits from 25c to $5 Main Floor la connection with Pyrofraphy Department. BR ANDEIS STORES Cut Price Drugs SV1 Toilet Articles 26c Sanltoi Tooth Powder at 14c 25c Rublfoam 19c 25c Dr. Lyon's Tooth Powder, at 14c 26c Sanitol Face Cream, at 14c 7Eo Pompelan Mmsage Cream, at B9o 25c Ulamond Nail Enamel, a 17o fl.50 Oriental Cream, 91.09 25c Lilac Talcum Powder, at 9o 50c Java Rice Powder ..860 20c Satin Skin Powder 18o 11.00 and $1.75 Hot Water Bottles, while they last, at 40c 15c Llquozone Soap . ,'flc 5 Cakes Ivory Soap ..190 10c William's Shaving Snap, at Co 25c Rogers' Toilet Soap 19o 25c Woodbury's Soap . .lTo 1-lb. 20 Mule Team Borax, at So Patent Medicines 11 Duffy's Pure Malt 89o 50c Milks' EmulHlon , .8.90 60c Syrup of Figs . ...4So tl Lydla Plnkham's Vege table Compound, at....89o 5 9c Swamp Root 4So BOo Scott's Emulsion ,.4So Candy Special Saturday Vanilla chocolate creams 12ic AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA Thanks giving Day ii One of Complete . Rest in Majfic City. RECREATION AND WORSHIP Homo Dinners and Gathering; Are II oat Popular Kind of Enter tainment and Business Is j Closed for the Day. Thanksgiving; In South Omaha was never more peaceful and pleasant. Concrete description of the day would be that tba city was at rest. Family parties were as numerous as the households. 1 nere were no outside attractions except the morning services in the churches and on or two dancing parties In the after noon and evening. The Catholic services were the early mass and the high mass, and the day was devoted to prayers for and support of the mission enterprises of the church. The largest congregations were ' at 6t. Mary's and St. Agnes' church and that of St. Frances and the Church of the As sumption. The Evangelical Protestant churches united In service at the First Methodist church at 11 a. m. Dr. Wheeler preached the sermon, dwelling particularly on the objects of the day's observance. . Rev, J. M. Bothwell, Oeorge Van Winkle and Rev. Mr. Wagner assisted In the service. Mrs. George Strang presided at the organ and Miss Georglna Davis sang a solo of thanksgiving. St. Martin's Episcopal church observed the day with a special 'service by Rev. Alfred .Q. White, the new rector. , A spe cial anthem was rendered by the choir. Numerous were the private dinner parties and home gatherings. Only a few among many prosperous and happy homes allowed the happiness of the day to overflow Into the channels of pub'.lc knowledge.' At the home of Dr. K. L. Wheeler guests from Lincoln were entertained. Mr. ' and Mrs. William Wheeler and Harry and Ruth Wheeler, their children, were the guests. In addition Perry Wheeler and his wife of South Omaha made up the party. Mr. and , Mrs. W. B. Cheek entertained STOMACH DISTRESS SIMPLY VANISHES No Indigestion, Gas, Heartburn or . Headache five minutes later. '. If you bad some Diapepsln handy and would take a little now your stomach distress or Indigestion would vanish In five minutes and you would feel fine. This harmless prspuration will digest anything you eat and overcome a sour, out-of-order atomach before you realise it If your meals don't tempt you, or what little you do eat seems to fill you, or lays like a lump of lead In your stomach, or If you have heartburn, that Is a sign of lndlgestlin. Ask your Pharmacist for a EO-cent case of Pupe's Diapepsln and take a little Just as soon as you can. There will be no sour rising, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, Nausea, Debilitating Head aches, Dlsslness or Intestinal griping. This will all go, and, besides, there will be no undigested food left over In the stomach to poison yo ir breath with nau seous odors. Papa's Diapepsln Is a certain cur for out-of-order stomachs, because It pre vents fermentation and takes hold of your food and digests It Just the same as If your stomach wasn't there. Relief In five minutes from all stomach misery la at any drug store waiting forr you. These large 50-cent cases contain more than sufftcle.it to thoroughly cure almost any case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion or any other stnmach disturbance. Adr. ? ? ????????????'?? ????????? ?????? ? ? ? ? ? ? 7 -a C7T) Qj)o 4 p ? 1 1 ? ? ? ? ?' 1 111 ? I ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? : ? ? ? 7;? '? a large party of guests, among which by far the most important was the rosebud of a grandchild which celebrated Its first Thanksgiving day, the child of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene A. Rose. Dr. and Mrs. C. M. Bchlndel entertained Mrs. E. F. Harlan and family of At'.antlc, la., and Mrs. William Waddell of Seattle and Miss Anna Wllburg of Atlantic. Mrs. H. H. Ames entertained a houseful of friends and relatives. Among the young people many little affairs are said to have developed so that the rature of the Christmas gift a month hence Is pretty well determined. OMAHA'S WIDE STREETS PROVE GENERAL BLESSING Althongh KxpenslT Beeanse of Pst In, They Are Worth While, Owing; to Heavy Traffic. '. Omaha's wide streets have often beea the causa of grief to property owners, because of the cost of paving, but they are prov ing their value In a new way since the old-time means of locomotion have changed so radically. In a great many cities, like Boston, Phil adelphia and St. Paul, the streets are so narrow that vehicles are compelled to go up one side of the street and down the other, under the direction of policemen. In other cities, like New York, fast mov ing vehicles, such as au'omoblles and car riages, are confined to the street car tracks so far as practicable, the space en either side of the tracks being reserved for slower rigs. In Omaha automobiles run freely on either side of the car tracks, without trouble. The tracks oecupy fifteen feet only of the sixty-foot width of the street. This allows plenty of space for the passing of every kind of vehicle on either side of the tracks. Auto drivers take full advantage of the generous space allowed and are never kept back for want of free room In which to travel. "Further west. In Salt Lake City for ex ample, the streets are even wider than In Omaha," said Assistant City Engineer Campen, "and In Lincoln there are several streets that are wider than ours, but there Is now no question of the value of wide streets. Owners of autos and large auto trucks may not realise It, but the streets of Omaha undoubtedly have a greatly In creased value for general purposes because of their width. Here vehicles of all kinds pass one another freely, without trouble or delay; and If the users of our streets would go to some other cities for a time they would quickly realise It was a wise 'hunch' which made the founders of the city break away from the Idea that narrow streets were desirable." Our Letter Box Contributions on Timely Subjects, Wot Exceeding- Two Hundred Words, re Invited from Oar Readers. The Hskeslt Plagne destroys fewer Uvea than stomach, liver and kidney diseases, for which F.lectric Bitters Is the guaranteed remedy. 50c For ale by Beaton Drug Co. Japan's Ship gnbsldles. BOSTON, Mass.. NovY 22. To the Editor of The Bei: That report on the ship subsidies of Japan, on which you comment editorially as proof that such national aid does not always Increase commerce. Is very misleading In its figures. The com parison comes oown only to 1906-1907. Up to that time the subsidised Japanese lines bad not yet succeeded In driving American ships off. the Pacific ocean, and all the largest and most efficient carriers were still flying the American flag. Now all but one of the American steam ers out of Puget sound have succumbed to this unequal compeltion, and a comparative statement of the usefulness of Japanese subsidies to Japanese! commerce would have a different look, Indeed. On the Orient-San Francisco line, several large, fast American steamers are still running. It should be understood that American freight shippers and American and Euro pean passengers 'prefer American ships, and the American management pi. a steam ship line Is unquestionably more exact, ef ficient and economical than foreign man agementthis San Francisco line, for ex ample, being run by .an American naval officer, a gentleman of marked fores and executive ability, comparable with one o( our great railroad men. But for these natural advantages, which Japanese sub sidies have only slowly overcome, the American flag would long since have been swept completely off the Pacific ocean. The United States has never tried subsidies. It has tried mall contracts, and the practical results wherever American steamship llnrs run are a splendid vindica tion of that policy. There are several strong mail lines under the American flag from Atlantic ports to the West Indlea and Mexico. Wherever they go American trade overtops European trade, and Is growing In far greater proportion. Tho principal American West India line, which began with three or four small ships, now has more than a doxen fine, great, Ameriran-bullt steamers so that the traveler in West Indlsn ports frequently sees his country's fag floating, as It ought, at the staffs of the beet vessels In those waters. Mall contracts have done this. The bill before Congress a mall and not a subsidy bill proposes to extend this polloy to South America and across the Pacific Ocean. If your people of Nebraska saw the shipping question face to face, as ws of the seacoast see It, President Tsft would be as heartily sustained In bis ocean mall policy by the representatives of your own and neighboring states as he Is by the representatives of Maine or Massachusetts or California or Washington. WINTHROP L. MARVIN, Former Secretary. Merchant Marine Commission. Diamonds r'RKN Zh.lt loth and Podge. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS George M. Norton of David City, Ned Manly of Oakland, H. J. Edson of Lincoln, J. W. Smith of Absrdeen and E. W. Wal ters of Hastings are at the Murray. H. N. Balch of London, England: Jack Morris of Dublin, Ireland; W. C. Oglevle of Olbbon. C. Qoodstein of Denver and S. J. Alexander of Lincoln are at the Rome. B, E. South of Watson, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Livingston of Orand Island, E. R. Carlln of Harlan, F. A. Wlsner of Lexing ton and H. Dance of Paragon are at the Merchants. W. C. Alexander of Hastings, W. W. Spanglsr of Rawlins, W. T. Craft of BHh tow, T. J. Hherlock of Cheyenne. R. Pr Drake of Humphrey and J. A. Webb of Deadwood are at the Paxton. Ferderlco Rlvas of Jerez, Spain; J. O. Oraham, O. M. Stonehraker of Lincoln, Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Albert of Columbus. Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Taylor of Scott's Bluff and A. Muldoon of North Platte are at the Henshaw. At the Theaters "The Time, the Place and the Girl" at the Krogr. Whimsically . exaggerated types from widely differing strata of society, much In nocent prattle and slang, fancifully Im possible situations, music and girls, yet lots of girls, go to make up the tuneful comedy, "The Time, the Place and the Girl," at the Krug. If It, hadn't happened to become a comedy It might have been a melodrama of tears and hisses but the audience never la allowed to forget that It Is all just a Joke. "Happy John Hicks," the gambler-hero, played by Robert G. Pitkin, has a good deal to say and do In twisting his strand of the plot. He delivers his lines with a show of real comedy. Elizabeth Qoodall, plump and charming, as Molly Kelly, a nurse, carries through a difficult part with pleasing unaffectedness. Tom Teaniey'a delineation of the grief of the unfortunate Pedro, the organ grinder, disappointed In love above his station, however good It may be In Itself, appears almost too dis connected with the scene' In which it ap pears or the whole play for that matteiiy May Ronton In the role of Mrs. TalcoliJ a widow, Is the central figure In home very pretty chorus work and sings with a pleasing voice. The music of the produc tion is representative of the work of the composer, Joe Howard. Snmeuay he man ages to get a cigarette song Into every one. He likes to "Watch the Blue Smoke Curt." GIFT FROM GUGGENHEIM Colorado Senator Donates grO,00O for Neve Bolldinar at State Normal School. GREELET. Colo., Nov. .Announce ment was mode today that Senator Gug genheim has donated W,000 for a new build ing for the Colorado State Normal school. It will be used either for a gymnasium or for domestic science purposes. Canadian Parlflo Tied t'p. WINNIPEG, Man., Nov. 25. Serious rock and snowsltdes on the Canadian Pacific railway In the Rocky mountains, have compelled the cancellation of all tralnH. Three feet of snow has fallen In Rogers pass and trains have had narrow escapes. 1 msw eimiiMn mi 11 imi wiiiininW" '! " n . -,- r - ' ' . J v ; - - - - ? ill OfW -v. I 3H!Wim CRESTS yMEwiFLcua 1 -