Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 29, 1910, NEWS SECTION, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TUB BEE: OMAITA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1910.
TIMTOTI?
nirnTTi a rm
MJE IF WA
MM
Aa Immense Purchase of High Class Dress Waisis, Lingerie Waists and Tailored Wash Waists
Bought from a New York Manufacturer, Together With a. Fined Clcira.ncc of a... Our Own Silk and Net Costume Waists
All Our Finest Imported Waists
Lace Waists, Silk Waists
anfl m Waish lhal havc
MJipecn selling up to $3tf
Fin?!
mm
IT!
71 v
v3x all
deaiv
ance Price
These are nil our odd imported
and domestic waists, made of finest
messa lines, chiffons, nets, laee, etc.,
colors many are elaborately
made. The most exquisite' styles
ever shown at a special sale. It in
cludes many hand made wrists.
All the Women's High Grade Vash Waists K,Bit
Hundreds of stunning, newlain tailored waists, in selected fabrics lace trimmed or embroid
ery trimmed effects all over embroidery or panel patterns tucked and pleated waists.
Every one with the newest spring 1910 sleeves. '
Smartly made, of soft, dainty lawns, cambrics and lingerie effects all sizes and all new and
charming styles.
DIVIDED INTO FIVE GREAT GROUPS SATURDAY:
CUT FLOWER DEPARTMENT Saturday.
Extra Fine Blooming Cyclements. :
Regular prices 50c, $1.00 and $1.50, at. .' . .29c, 59c and 80c
SALE OF
Pattern Hats
from J. II. Liechtenstein, the fam
ous millinery designer, 5th Ave.,
N. Y. 300 of these stunning mid
winter patterns, on sale Saturday
at great reductions.
ACTUALLY
WUKTJti ui'
TO $25.00
EACH-
at.
DELICIOUS MAPLE CONFECTIONS
Maplo Penochts, Maple Peanut Clusters, Maplo Gems, Glace Caramels,
Maplo Cocoanut Bon, Bona Saturday - Or
special price, per pound, at r
3
3 f . I
' aW 1 . . . . 11 - - - -
" .
I ;.,- - i
All the
WAISTS
Worth up to
$1.00, at
AH the'
WAISTS
Worth up to
$1.50, at
03C
'All the 1
WAISTS
Worth up to
$2.00, at
All the
WAISTS
Worth up to
$2.50, at
$139
All the
WAISTS
Worth up to
$3.50, at
All the Sample and Surplus Stock of
Stunning Dress Waists from the New
York Manufacturer in Two Great Lots
400 dainty and beautiful styles in women's waists, including
manv samples fine silk and net waists all colors ar.d all
sizes. These waists are the finest of the pur
chase and worth up to $12.00 each,
at....
. IU1UIO CI I. VI till
$398
dad
, All the Fine Dress Waists Worth to $7.50 at $2.98 .
These waists in this group includes very pretty messa
lines, taffetas, laces, nets, moires, etc. all new style features
many evening waists included.
The styles are as clever and ip-to-date as theyi
can be would be bargains at $.50 on sale,
at......
High Grade Tailored Linen Waists
In this offer we include all our King Waists and other high
grade brands these have been slightly failed in handling'
and from display plain pleated styles and hand fl l 98
embroidered fronts worth as high as $6.00 each; nr jl
special at '.
Special Sale Corsage Bouquets
These ultra fashionable boauets of artificial violets and Miles of tha
valley are all the rage In Paris and New York. They have never been
offered anywhere at such wonderful bargains as these. Dainty bouquets
many of them In large clusters perfect 1CA IA OA. 9ft
In every way and worth regularly up to 76c, at . Atllv-Irv tiW
OUR GREAT CLEARANCE
WOMEN'S CLOAKS
One great lot of women's winter cloaks that
have been selling regularly up to $20.00 each.
They are all this winter's popular styles
finely made, all the best colors and up-to-date
fabrics some lined throughout $W759
oaturaay special a
a-
sale.
Women's Winter Cloaks, that have been sell
ing up to $12;50, will go in one great lot Sat
urday. These cloaks are good quality and
include all this winter's styles $
one lot at less than half price,
at
Children's Cloaks
Chidren's Cloaks, in all styles and materials;
all sizes worth up to $5.00 each, $f 69
at 4
Your choice of any Child's Cloak in our entire
stock no matter what the former jirice
includes some worth $15.00 or $17.50 $
Saturday, at ...J
Silk Petticoats
Fin Silk Petticoat from Our Recent Great Purchase.
$2.98
for Silk Petti
coats, worth up
to f 6.
$3.98
for Silk Petti
coats, worth up
to $7.60.
$5.00
for Silk Petti
coats, worth up
to $10.
Drug ' Toilel Articles lor Saturday
25c f.anltol Tooth Powder .140
25c Sanltol Fuce Cream . .140
7fc 1'ompean Massage 69o
60c Milk Weed Cream 390
26c Lllsc Talcum Powder 60
25c Hydrogen Peroxide ,...100
50c Mine, Yales" Almond Blosfoin
' Cream, npeclnl. at 45o
00c Java llico Powder 30o
6ftc Ptizsonl'n l'nwdfr 36o
S'oc Pertect Pace Powder 10
D cakes Ivory Sonp 190
KOc White Rone. Locust Bloasom or
Crabapple Perfume, c 89o
7 cakes Cocounut OH Soap 85c
10c William's Shaving Soap 6o
15c Llquozone Soap So
1 lb. iO Mule Team Borax ...90
10c Jap Rose Soap 7o
35c Whisk Brooms ,.S4o
$1.00 Traveling Cases 49o
15c Chamois, (or loo
3 cake Colgate.?' Kngllsh Process
Glycerine tfoap 3So
BRANDEIS STOrs1
Great Clearance of Hair Goods
22-inch Wavy Braids, made in three separate strands-
worth $7.00; this sale
J5
36-inch Roman Braid, $5.00 value,
.for $2.98
3G-inch Natural Wavy, 3-oz. Switch;
$15.00 value, for ........ .$10.00
Straight Switches, up from 98
Turban Caps; 75c value, for ...-50
For this sale we have 10 dozen imported Turban Crowns
$1.50 values, at
36-inch Roman Braid, $8.00 value,
for $4.98
Natural Wavy Switch; made of fine
hair; $10 value, sale price . . . .$0.00
Hair Rolls; 24-inch, at ....... . -50
Large Auto Nets, sale price ..... 10
75c
CLEARING SALE OF
Fancy Jewelry
Fancy jewelry, plated jewelry, combs, cuff links, belt pins,
tie pin sets, hat pins, fobs, fancy chains, pocket ta
knives, etc., worth up to $1.00 final clearance IHlfft
sale Saturday; choice ; td$J?j
Our great clearing sales of 1847 silverware and Inter
national silverware are now in , progress,
reduced in this green tag sale.
Prices greatly
$2.00 Solid leather Bags; leather
lined, Inside purse and card case
each, at 75
William Rogers' 26lece Oak
Chests, with 6 knives, 6 forks, 6
tea spoons, 6 table spoons, 1 but
ter knife, 1 sugar shell 84.08
$7 Gold filled Bracelets, at $2.00
Sterling silver Picture Frames
purple velvet backs; worth up to
$2, at . . . .25 50 nd 75
50c Prussian steel Butcher Knives
. each, at 15
Elastic Belts, in black and colors;
in basement, each, at 10
BRANDEIS STORES
Laymen's Association Opens ur.ha
Headquarters at Y. iI. C. A.
HOLD CONVENTION IN MAKCH
MlutMlrm 1111U nuniiiriMi SI en Kvliiclnn
Dcrii Ititrrvnt In Cniupitltiu -tloual
(oniirni at 1'hl
vau la May.
Headquarters for the laymen's Mission
ary association, which holds Its conven
tion In Omaha, March 17 to 20, Incjublvo,
have been opened at the Young Man's
Christian association. J. C. Prall, execu
tive secretary of the association, has es
tablished an office on the second floor,
where all the business of the mlEslormry
movement will be transacted.
"The call for men In Omaha has rl'vady
been Bounded," coniiiientfd Mr. Prall and
the campaign Is now on in enrne.-.. Sjv-cnty-flve
conventions are to ! 'eld
throunhout the I'nited States wlCi: i the
next three mor.ths similar to the maha
meeting. The big campaign will culm'nate
In a National Mlssttmniy congress tf bn
held In Chicago, May 8-ti. This Is destined
to be tho Krcatest congress of Its kind ever
held In the I'nited States.
"Representative local committees are at
work In this city as well as In seventy
four other large cities of the country. The
movement Is wholly educational and spirit
ual. It does not 'send out missionaries nor
does It administer missionary funds, eiT
leavorlng on y to essln our churches. In
enlarging their missionary work; to meet
tho spiritual needs of mankind."
Mr. Prall comes to Omaha from Ames,
la., where he has been general secretary
of the Young ILh's Christian association
for ten years. He Is a graduate of the
I'niverslty of Iowa and since taking his
dtgree has done considerable work of ihU
Kind.
Tho campaign in Omaha promises to give
striking evidence of co op s-atlon on the
purt of tho churches of modern times. Tho
movement Is lnter-denomlnatlonal. Thb
p.istois of Omaha have united In dlrecliiix
their efforts toward making the campaign
a success, and business men and church
workers, generally, have manifested en
thusiasm over the movement.
Committees are active in waging cam
paigns. The commltio on deputation, headed
by Henry Keiser, Is composed of fifty
church workers and business men, who will
go out among the cities of the state Issu
ing the call to men to Join the missionary
movement. . The committee on education
with J. H. Franklin as chairman and the
committee on registration, headed by B.
C, Wade, held conferences at the Young
Men's Christian association, Friday.
Clement Chase, chairman of the co-operative
committee, will address the men's
meeting at the Young Men's Christian
association, -Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock,
on the question, "What would you. do with
a Plt-a-lMt?" He will explain the work of
tlie Laymen's Missionary association and
Its objects.
Caaubt In the Act
and arrested by Dr. King's New IJfe Pills,
bilious headache quits and liver and bowels
act right. 25e. For "sale by Beaton Drug
company.
Persistent Advertising Is the road to Big
Returns.
: t. 1b flaiA "U
aVTi
W MP '
'::r: jJ tiu
The half-pound can of
Baker's
Breakfast Cocoa
Contains eight ounces of pure cocoa,
of tho finest quality, most delicious
flavor, and possessing all the
strength that a pure, unadulterated
cocoa can have.
52 HifBtst Award, ia Eareae eae Aawrica
WALTER BAKER & Co. Ltd.
EtUUka 1780.
Dorchester, Mass.
MAYOR JIM MAKES MEDICINE
Holding Forth in Tepees of Bedmen
at Aurora Gathering, j
PLEASED WITH BEBGE'S IDEA
Dahlmanttea Are Gleefully Weleom
inw Reports of Entry of Lincoln
Man in the Coming; Gabcr.
natorlal Race.
Mayor Dahlman Is up on the bit and
going Btrong.
- The appointment of Charles Otto Lobeck
as a delegate to the municipal league
meeting at Lincoln stirred - the mayor a
trifle more than he let on. So be packed
his grip Friday morning and took the
train for Aurora, where a great gathering
of Redman la now In progress. In the after
noon he orated aa great Iconhoe for
the visiting Indians. Of course, no secret
will be made of the fact that Brother
Dahlman Is an open . candidate for gov
ernor, with his money paid In and ready to
play or fight, as the occasion demands.
The mayor and his advisers are quite
pleased over the public announcement of
Governor Shallenbergor that there will be
no extra session of the legislature, for the
present, at least. The guaranty law liti
gation Is as good an excuse as any, they
say, and they have cast off that worried
look which came when they learned that
the Shallenberger men were apparently de
termined to put one over on them through
the medium of a special session.
M(rr in the Woodpile.
It ia not conceded by his opponent that
the governor has given out the correct
reason for abandoning his plan for a spe
cial session. They Insist that Allen, Mullen
and the other managers have been given
straight tips from some signer of the pe
tition prepared by Mullen that it was
signed without proper consideration. A
sufficient number of recalcitrant made
themselves heard to make It very doubt
ful If the prised Initiative and referendum
law could be passed. This 1 the assertion
of Dahlman men professing to know what
they are talking about, and It has received
pretty general credence by the announce
ment of the governor that a special session
1 mighty doubtful.
One more cause for Dahlman glee 1
found In a report from Lincoln, said to
bave originated among certain delegate
to the municipal league meeting, that
George W. Berge ia not going to permit
Bhallenberger and the Omaha mayor to
have a clear field in the primaries. Berge
doean't easily get over a hurt, and he 1
nursing two hurt that starred him deeply.
He believe he waa whips wed by trickery
and running Innuendo In the last guber
natorial primary; also that be was the man
who ought to have been given, the call to
congress Instead of John A. Maguire, When
"Bill" Price waa forcibly sidetracked from
the congressional course and thrown In
the race for state auditor.
Look for Berate, Too.
Berge is looked for to get Into the guber
natorial contest, and the supporter of
Mayor Dahlman are praying that he will
enter very soon. "With Berge in the race,"
said a Dahlman club manager, "there
would be nothing to It but the mayor. We
think, too, that Berge would prefer Dahl
man to Shallenberger, under the circum
stances." While attending the pow-wow tt the Red
men at Aurora the mayor will not neglect
the fine opportunity to mix the very best
medicine he is capable of compounding.
He will be meeting a bunch of brothers
and sympathetic friends from all over the
state, and his local manager are willing
to wager he will more than offset an ad
vantage Lobeck who always hover on the
horiion may have gained at the Lincoln
gathering.
The city comptroller came home Friday
morning with another office, that of trus
tee of the new state league of municipal
ities. He ha not paid his filing fee, though,
either for congress or governor. When
he will do either, he says, la problematical.
Quite a methodical person, the comptroller
refuses to be stampeded in any direction,
but , I watching developments keenly.
Through hi friends, "some of the boy
on the road," as hettats it, he is keeping
pretty close tab on the shaping of events.
From his present expressions it 1 a safe
bet that Lobeck will not file for congress
unless Hitchcock gives him the ward direct
that he Is to quit; also that ho will not
file for governor, falling the other, unless
Berge let it be known that he will not
make the race again.
Carl Wilson.
Alleged Forger,
is Captured
Mail Said to Have Beaten Several
Omahans is Arrested at Col
orado Springs.
Carl Wilson, who 1 said to have de
frauded several Omaha persons January 10
by passing forged checks, has been ar
rested at Colorado Springs, according to
the Information sent Captain Savage, chief
of the Omaha detective staff. He was
carrying on the same game west when he
got caught Before that he had practiced
upon a man named, Cole of Iowa, whom he
met at Salt Lake City. ' His nom de guerre
at Colorado Springs was Conrad Roskop.
While "working" Omaha he got away
with $18 from the Union Pacific eating
house on Farnam street, $15 from Samuel
Adler, general merchandise store, 1119 Far
nam street; $25 from the Regent Shoe com
pany, $30 from the Berg Clothing company
and $25 from Sol Brodkey, Jeweler, 1801
Douglas street.
Wilson, or Roskop, Is by occupation a
carpenter and ho was able to do the trick
In Omaha by forging the name of Fred
Christiansen of the firm of Fred ChVls
tiansen & Sons, contractors, 2429 Parker
street.
COLLEGE BOARD DOES NOT
DISREGARD ACTION OF SYNOD
Erroneous Reports About Ilr, Mac
kenzie's Statement and Conse
quent Disposition Corrected.
The Hastings College Outlook for Jan
uary corrects some erroneous impressions
and statements that have been published
oy some papers regarding the visit to
Omaha and Hastings of Dr. Robert Mac
kenxle, formerly president of the Presby
terian college board, and the action of the
board on the proposed merger of Bellevue
and Hastings colleges, which proposition
has been knocked out.
Here Is what the Hasting College Out
look ald:
A statement has appeared In some news
papers to the effect that the college board
in New York might disregard synod's
action and refuse to endorse the proponed
merger. There can be no foundation for
tills view as the college board always rec
ognises the authority of a synod In desig
nating Its authorized educational agencies.
Dr. Robert Mackensle, rormerly president
of the board, recently visited Nebraska,
and stated clearly that the purpose of his
visit In behalf -of tho board waa not to
determine what college should be recog
nised, but to ancertaln the conditions upon
which the board could co-operate most ef
fectively with the Institution officially rec
ognized by the synod.
TRAINING CLASS AT MEETING
Bandar School Teachers Addressed by
Miss Margaret Brown, Superin
tendent of "State Association.
Owing to the convention of the County
Sunday School association the teachers'
training class of the Young Women'
Christian asscoclatlon meets this after
noon at 2 o'clock Instead of at 3 o'clock, the
usual hour.
At 3 p. m. today In room 81(5,
Young Men's Christian association
building, Miss Margaret E. Brown, ele
mentary superintendent of the Nebraska
State Sunday School association, addressed
the teacher of the primary grade upon
method of working with the children .n
the Sabbath school.
Guard tho health of your family by keep,
lng at hand a bottle of Chamberlain'
Cough Remedy. It has no equul for coughs,
colds and croup. ,
HELP FOR RURAL ROUTE MAN
Patrons Arc Ordered to Leave Ther
tamp Money Enclosed in Cos.
Tenient Envelopes. .
Rural rout patron will be forced by the
government to be more thoughtful of the
convenience of the carrier man. A bulletin
issued by tbe postmaster general, received
in Omaha Saturday, announce that all
money left In rural route boxes for stamps,
money' order 'and other postal' supplies
must be enclosed In envelope pr coin
card.
The rural route man rose In his dignity
a few weeks ago and made some public
remarks about the people that left pennies
In tha bottom of mall boxes for the pur
chase of stamps. Cold, benumbed and In
a hurry, It make the carrier man peevish
te stand around In the snow and fish for
copper 4roten to the bottom of an over
grown tomato can.
The government ha come to his rescue
and from , February It on all money left
In mail boxes muat be enclosed In such a
way that tha mall man can grab it in a
hurry.
nfr-'-
Si
ll
I txAmsm
rrni
it