THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1010. Brandeis Stores Sell the Famous PwOgers-Peet and Ilirsh- Wickwire Clothes for Men. k B0CHE5TEB WBOUSSALE TAILOR'S OMAHA An Entire Now York Wholesale Stock MEN'S SUMMER UNDERWEAR Mercerized lisle condo mesh, Otis lislo and Balbriggan men's union suits and nain sook shirts and drawers. ,We bought a big lot and offer At About One-half Its Valuo Lot 1 All the Men's Mercerized Lisle and Mesh Underwear, and Men's Union Suits, worth up to $1.25, a garment 59c of . Cfeiliss ON SALE SATURDAY AT i Stock iv.. i V TOM! At About One-Half the Regular Prices . This immense cash purchase comprised the entire stock of VIEWPORT PRIDEFUL" CLOTHES FOR HEN ?f Rothschild & Co., Who Retired From Business f ...'.. . ..... These Rochester made clothes were famed all pver America for their sterling excellence. The suits were made by Rothschild & Co. for this spring's most fashionable trade. . Newest grays new est tans newest wood browns in extreme or conservative models every one is perfectly tailored by and . . "r': . ; YOU WILL SAVE FROM $10 TO $20 ON YOUR SPRING SUIT IF YOU 'WILL BUY IT AT BRANDEIS STORES SATURDAY Your unrestricted' choice of All the Hen's and Young Hen's $25.00 Suits, at All the Hen's and Young Hen's $30.00 Suits, at . . All the Hen's and Young Hen's $35.00 Suits, at . . From the Rochester Stock , '. ''! mini mi wmliw www ii w'wwlwwwww,"wwww'ww"l'w"l'll""'n jmmm - -. - -- - - - wm w isu It mmm " " ..... i - .1; - . v,:- i. . . , . -..: -t. .. . t CHILDREN'S SPRING SUITS AND REEFERS Boys' Russian Blouse Suits in red, black, brown and fancy .mixtures boys' double breasted knickerbocker suits of fancy cheviots boy's sailor suits of -wear resisting - 0Q materials. ' V -:" " : l VO Rnvs' Snrinrr Reefers, of red flannel, also shepherd fclaids and black, tan' - fiJ II v x o ' - . ' ' . . . . . . ' . f- . : $jP coverts, grays and fancy cheviots made to sell up to $3.00, at. 'JJm Boys' Combination Suit3 at $3.45 Complete suit with extra pair of knickerbocker pants to match; all for' $3.45, also strictly Ml wool red, blue and brown serges in Russian and sailors, also red and tan reefers. at, ; Boys' Double Breasted Knickerbocker Suits With extra pair of knickerbockers free with every suit. also boys' blue serge and . fancy mixed rf)45 cnevioi suns in .Busier Brown ana sauor ' styles, one pair pants worth up to . ; 14.00, at j... , J: Lot 2-A11 the Men's 75 cent I Lot 3 All the Men's Balbrig- and $1.00 Otis r ft K!J d ropo Kn" Shlrto On. Underwear, at 5UC ?0nd76Ic?T:.T?:t.h..U.P...39C N4 In New Store Basement A.11 the men's Balbriggan, mercerized lisle and broken lots of fancy Peruvian cotton shirts and drawers, worth 50c, at 2m Ml the men's $1.00 Poros Knit Union Suits, at. . . . .. . . .GOc Men's Sample Shirts Manufacturers' samples of men's high grade shirts Star, Griffon and custom made shirts outing and negligee styles worth up to $2.00; your choice at Lilf LX ,1. (AUG Dll.ll. K7tCVX y 75cand98c Men's 75c and $1.00 Negligee and Golf Bhlrts; all new patterns r! and values up to $1.00, at J Ul The most complete line of Manhattan and E. ft W. Shirts in Omaha Silk, silk and linen, French flannel: with and without Ql Cfl flf! collars corded madras and Russian cords; prices Is JU'yJiUU M u n s i n g Union Suits $1.00 to $2.50 Special Men's fancy and plain lisle and mercerized hose worth 35o and 60c at, pair 10 Earl & Wilson Red man Collars; two for .........25c See Page 4 Great Sale of AMERICAN BEAUTY fl ROSE BUSHES, worth up to fl Hff 75c, your choice at HHJr BRANDEIS STORES :PHANDE1S STORES SPECIAL SALE MEN'S H AT All our broken lots and samples of men's soft hats and stiff hats, in newest spring styles and colors wortn up All. f 4 to $3.00 eachall in one lot, . at. .......... ; v s The famous John B. Stetson soft Q50 ana aeruy hats, at Imported English Derbies Brandeis Special Soft and Stiff Hats at $2.00 Boys' and Child ren's Hats at 496, 98c, $1.25 and $1.50 Boys' and Child ren's School Caps, at.. 25c and 49c Some Things You Want to Know Votes for Women. II. Where Women Have Votes. , Women have the right to vote on a basis . Cf abHOIute equality with men In- four atntts of the American union, In the com .' lnonwcXUlh of Australia, In New Zealand, Finland, Iceland and the 'Isle of Man. They have a limited rUtht of suffrage in a .reat mmi other states and common- Vealtlis. It la Impossible to form an In ri'lliKeiit opinion of the merits or de merits of the woman's suffrage cause from geographical - deductions. Israel Zangwlll, the great Enirllsh-Jewish writer, (1 an en thusiastic suffragist, who has admitted frankly that he belongs to the class of male supporters of this peculiar propa gandu who have been described as "men cf putty, seduced by women of brass." In HOI any Hllll TfllSl Tht Origins! nd 6ona!nt tHORLIG r8 ALT ED raiLK Tha Food-drink far All Agis. At restaurants, hotels and fountain. Delicious, invigorating and tustaining. Keep it on your sideboard at home. , Doa'i travel without it. A quick lunch prepared in a uinnte. Take no tabstitute. Aak for HORLICK'S. - Others are imitations. , Your h - J 'I v j Grocer j p .? " " gQfm 6. A. UKDQUEST GO. 235-236 Putoo B!ock Milkers of itood t-lothes. A nice lWw of MrlnK patterns on hand Mini our pi lie are rig-lit. A llhuHl tlHoount on two or more suits. PILES F1STDLA FAT WRV CTTBXO All sVaekitl SliHin cured without a Suiatlrnl uparailun and 0r.aaatee4 to last 'a Llfatlise. No chloroform, siner or other , .-iji1 ansnaiheilo ud sAiniaatoiJS I int. Tot Free Book. DR. C. R. TARRY a speech In defense of the -militant suf fragettes and their methods he. said : "It Is told of a little girl who had been brought up In a newly-built town in a re mote western state of America that when she Was taken to New York and aaw for the first time the ctowded horse cars out side the mighty station of the Pennsyl vania railway she cried out: 'How cruell They arc using horses to drag the street ear.. How barbarous.' Tbls little girl never nad setn snythlng but an eleotiie car. Her town, being brand new, had Jumped over this antiquated absurdity of horse traction." Mr. Zangwlll used this Incident to Illus trate his contention that "In strange, raw regions of America and the Antipodes" the march of civilisation had Jumped over tha traditions of the barbarlo system which imposes political disabilities upon women merely because they are women. While It Is true that the newest and moat recently organised states have been roost liberal In granting the elective franchise to the weaker sex, Finland and Iceland and even the lisle of Man cannot be Included among these "raw regions." Outsiders differ In their opinion of whether or not woman suffrage is. a suc cess In those communities wnere it naa been tried, their differences being In the exact ratio of their prejudices, but the In siders apparently are pretty well agreed that woman suffrsge is a good thing. In New Zealand the constitutional pro vision extending the privilege of the bal lot to women was carried, at the beginning, by the narrow margin of two votes In an election In which the whole male popula tion participated. After a trial of several years the prime minister of New Zealand ventured the assertion that there were not, two persons In all the dominion of New Zealand who now would testify that they thought woman suffrage a failure. New Zealand Is the most radical of all civilised atatea in Ita system of social laws, but in the country itself the word "progressive" always Is substituted for the word "radical" and the superlative Is most strenuously Insisted upon. Tha rest of the world may or may not agree with the New Zeaiandera that they have tha most advanced and most nearly perfect democratlo government on earth, but the New Zeaiandera firmly believe It, and they give the women voters a large share of the credit for their political status. An Australian woman of gentle birth', young, beautiful and somewhat shy was present at a gathering In a London draw ing room where the opinion was expressed, generally and vociferously, that the pos session of the right to vote would unset the gentler sex and would destroy the bloom of true womanhood. Everybody but the Australian woman' agreed with the sentiment and boldly expreesed their faith. Finally someone turned to her ahd said: What is your opinion T You are far too modest. ' "Well,' you see," she blushlngly replied, "I always have had a vote." A few months ago a speaker In New York declared that woman suffrage in Colorado had been a complete failure and that the flections in that state were In the hands of some ' thousands of fallen women who hold the bafance of power. This statement Immediately brought forth an Indignant protest from Colorado, In' which the gov ernor of the state, former Senator Patter son and Judge Ben Lindsay of Juvenile oourt fame, together with many others of the most prominent men In Colorado,' vlgor: oualy . denied the . truth of the statement made ' by the New York speaker. Prac tically every prominent man In Colorado has signed the petition for woman suffrage which will be presented, to congress next week. ' In Utah, Wyoming and Idaho, while there Is some opposition and some adverse criticism, the vast . majority of the people express entire satisfaction with the exist lng election laws. .Within the last two years woman suf frage has been rejected by the states, of Iowa,' Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska, Rhode-Island, South Dakota, New York and Wisconsin. Twenty-nine states now give women the right to vote In school elec tions, but the last legislature rejected a bill giving them the full suffrage. Michi gan, Louisiana, New York, Iowa and Mon tana give tax-paying women the ballot In elections relating to bond Issues or tax levies. This modified rght of suffrage Is given also in many foreign countries, in cluding most of the provinces of Canada, the kingdoms' of Denmark and Sweden and the commonwealth of South Africa. In France women engaged In manufacture or trade have the right te vote for Judges of the courts of commerce. ' 1 In Great Britain, where the woman suf frage movement is now more aotlve thaa In any other part of the world, women have the light to vote, subject to the sams restrictions as men, for the election of all officers except members of Parliament, This right Is very generally exercised In municipal elections, and there are several women members of the London county council, which la the greatest municipal legislature In the world. Women participate more generally In pol itics In Finland than In any other country In the world. The Finnish women always have been prominent In commercial and economic enterprises, and when they de manded political rights they soon got what they wanted. The Finnish Diet has had a great many very able women parliamen tarians, and their Influence has been posi tively oa the slds of those who have re sisted the Russian attempts to throttle the liberty of the Finns. It has been said, ul truly, that la the United States the crusade for votes for women has made very Vrttle headway. This s quite true, but It may be attributed principally te the lack of Interest upon the part of the women themselves. In Masssv ehusetts and New Jersey, where woman suffrage once exieted, the women offered no resistance to the olUlon of their right J to vote a century see, axi4 they tve man- Hasted no general desire for a restoration of their old right. In Massachusetts, par ticularly, they failed to respond when the legislature left the decision of the question to a vote of the women-themselves. Women had the right to vote In the territory of Washington," but lost It when that common wealth was admitted to the union of states. But Washington is a western state and the women always have been aotive in pushing their demands for the franchise. In other states the movement ki carried on by a very small percentage of the female population. In the east' and the south a vast majority, of the women not only remain Indifferent to the appeal of their emancipated sisters, but actually. .are . opposed to the sntire movement.- ' , In the .United States, as well as) in Eng land, - there are aotlve organisations com posed of women who are opposing the de mand of the suffragists. In England Mrs. Humphrey Ward, the novelist. Is the head and front of the antl-suffragLst .movement. In the United States there are now work ing anti-suffrage ; organizations In Massa chusetts, New York,. Maine, Illinois, Ore gon, Iowa, Rhode Island and the state of Washington, With such officers In the New York association as Mrs. Franclsf M. Scott, Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge, Mrs. El'lhu Root, Mrs. Richard Watson Gilder, Mrs. George Phillips and Miss Ida H. TArbeli; The ahtl suffragists have collected data to show that the standard of morality 'is no higher, the condition of the working women no bet ter, the progress of philanthropy no swifter In the states granting equal suffrage than It is In the states Where women follow their more feminine bent and correct the evils of society through their home Influence, their Clubs and their church work. As early as 196 a protest was made by antl-suffraglsta before the- select commit tee ofthe senate on woman suffrage. "We believe that God has wisely and well adapted each sex to the proper per formance of the duties of each. We be lieve that woman suffrage would relatively lessen the Influence of the Intelligent and the true, and Increase the Influence of the Ignorant and vicious," the women wrote. These are the sentiments of hundreds of thousands ofwomen who still are content to abide at home and leave the steering of the ship of state to the men of their families, confident that the Influence of home life Is most potent and having faith In the ports being reached more sareiy If they don't meddle with the steering gear. By FSVESXKIO J. KABKHC, Fearful Slaughter of deadly microbes occurs when throat and lung diseases are treated with Dr. King s New Discovery. 60o and $1.00. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. I A persistent cough mould not be neg lected. 'Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will cure It. Big Year for King Ak-Sar-Bcn's Host Membership Committee is Now Host ling to Make Membership .'. . ; Strong, . , A canvass Is being made for rnembers of the ancient and glorious order of Ak-Sor-Ben. A circular letter sent out by Samson calls attention to the fact that now Is the time - to enlist support under - the banner of the king and a strenuous attempt will be made to substantially Increase the list of knights. Old members of the court are requested to enroll themselves and bring at least one worthy companion to enlist In the service of the sovereign. ( In. South Omaha You Can Buy Furni ture .at 20 'Per Cent Below Omaha Prices - Wondrous store Ttloes in South Omaha ! j El3 ' j A m . A Tremendous Bargain for Tomorrow Only inroasss aookw a as bah a Eg Everyone knows that the Acorn brand of stoves Is never surpassed for superior construction and perfect satlsfuctlon. Tliey are the must re markable etoves for ssvlng gas that has ever heen markoteil. We charge from 121.011 down to $10.00. according to sue. Don t buy a gas range before seeing the Acorn at thene price. You 11 save several dollars $10 1 n fY ' I'm'1 , -. : Every family needs one of those adjustable curtain dryers Traasfer to any ftouth Omaha ear M don't have So y ts extra fare Just get traasfer and ride a little longer. The oars saas out dee. f 7 ia the price we bare marked on this most useful household ne cessity. A full aire, adjustable curtain dryer; can be made to (It any curtain. Our regular price U f 1.25. but we sell them tomorrow only and just one to 7Ea a customer, at. I uw STEEL COUCH Strongly coustruct ed, folding couch, with double sup ported spring full size; a bod at night and an ornament at a C day our price, only ffl I1KAKB BE118 Our complete line of all sorts of brass beds la one of the finest to bo seen. They are artistic and sanitary,' and each Is marked 20 lUlow tho Omaha Price. ' HOME IFUIRIWinLJlRE CO.. 24th Zk sLi Streets, SOUTH OMAHA J ,1 1 1 1 '