Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 30, 1910, NEWS SECTION, Page 8, Image 8

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    Tin. OMAHA srNDAV r.K.K: ncroBEK r,o. imo.
BRANDEIS STORES GREAT SALE
EimMir Stock f si Mw Yoirk Pre
BOUGHT FOR LESS THAN THE ACTUAL COST TO IMPORT
On Sale Monday at the Most Amazing Bargains Known U. West
This was one of the most fashionable dressmaking establishments in New York, supplying exclusive
patrons with apparel made from fabrics and trimmings imported expressly for this house. The stock is larger, the goods areViner and the
bargains more extraordinary than in any other sale of the kind ever held in the west. We secured the entire stock at n figure actually less
than the duty on these goods. It is a wonderful opportunity.
8
ssMfflkeiP'
pant
PRACTICALLY THE ENTIRE
Ail Hie Exquisite Laces
MAIN FLOOR OF OUR NEW STORE WILL BE
AND
File Dress Trimmings
From the N. Y. Dressmaker's Stock
Highest class foreign novelties at less than cost to import.
Venetian point, ( 'arrickmacross, Irish Point effect and Irish
Crocket laces. Kich Orientals, silk embroidered bands, real
crochet and Princess laces. Heal Cluny and Keal Crochet and
metal effects combined. Kich Persian, Egyptian and Cashmere
effects, real Yak laces, bands in silk and metal combinations,
Indian beaded effects, etc.
Fine French and Swiss embroideries. Unusual effects on
batiste and linen fabrics, flouncings, bands, galloons, medallions
and inserting. Irish Point, English eyelet and heavy Japanese
effects.
Some of the finer grades are worth up to $3.50 and a few even
$5.00 a yard.
On Six Big Bargain Squares
15c, 25c, 3c, 4c,
6c, 1 98 c Yard
All the High Class Imported Dress Goods
From the New York Dressmaker's Stock
Finest of broadcloth , novelty suitings, rough weaves
and tailored suitings. 1 hese goods are worth from
$2.50 to $5 yard and go
in two lots on bargain
squares, Monday, at
per yard
and
)ilYd
DEVOTED TO THIS SALE
AH the Partly Made Gowns
Waists and Fine Dress Skirts from
the Dressmaking Stock
Partly made garments made of cloths, silks ,uid laces, including
evening coats, theater and house kimonos, elabonitelv embroid
ered (which is only a fractiou
of the actual worth), go
at
$2.50, $5, $10
All the Beautiful Silks
From the New York Dressmaker's Stock
Stunning imported Marquisettes and grenadines in exclusive pat
terns, also gauze materials, including the scarce Persian effects,
imitation fur materials for coats and jackets. Full line of the lat
est colors in mcssalincs, exclusive pattcins in the newest silks, in
cluding white and black, stunning effects. Materials for party
dresses and coats. Lace robes, spangled neti, newest silk waistings,
embroidered patterns, at, per yard
39c,
59c
and
Yd.
-A Special Group ol Beaulilul-
Dress Trimmings
From the. Dressmaking Stock.
The most elaborate imported lace, chiffon, nets, Persian, real
Irish nces. snec.ia iv adamcd lor evenine and atternoon ress
...... - 7 I - 1 ri
trimmings, on sale on
bargain squares, each,
at
$1.50, $2.50, $5
These Elegant Materials Grouped on Bargain Squares ani in Regular Departments
Special Sale of Portieres, Couch Covers, Etc.
Full size
bottom;
Portieres fringe top and
at, pair. . .fl.AO and $1.98
Tapontry Portieres with wide borders,
also plain with now style edge
worth up to $7.50, at, pair. . .f5.98
Tapestry Portieres, In plain or allover
patterns or with wide tapestry bor
ders, at, pair $7JH)
Couch Covers - 60 inches wide, extra
heavy, worth up to $3.00, ea. $1.98
Rope Portieres We show the largest
assortment in lethr. velour and
tapestry bands, at. .$1.8 to jpil.00
Couch Covers in the latest floral,
oriental, plain and allover patterns,
60 inches wide and reversible, worth
up to $7.50, at, each $1.H
Window Shades Linen shades, 3-C,
complete 2c
Best Oil Opaque Shades, 3-7, at. ,45c
Hand made Kmplre Opaque, with
Hartshorn rollers, 3-6, at OOc
Best grade of Silkoltne for convfort
ers. at, yard Vic
Extra heavy Sateen for comforters,
at, yard !
Hallowe'en Novelties
CAXDV DEPARTMENT 1DMPEIAN ROOM
The largest and most attractive assortment in
Omaha. Pretty novelties for decorations, for table
favors, for parties, etc.
We never carry over any Hallowe'en goods. We
will sell everything In our entire stock Monday at
these big reductions:
All our 5c Noveltiea at two for 5
All our 10c and 16c Novelties at, each 5;
All our Novelties worth up to 25c and 35c, each, 15c
Everything will be sacrificed. Prices greatly reduced.
The first of the season. Delicious sweet little Buttercups the
.1... 1.1 1 . . .... I 1 a k t(..1. IK
19c
BKANDEIG
STORES
In Brandeis Great Flannel Dept. Batt
Assortments are larger, qualities the best, juices always lower' than elsewhere.
29c
The popular Beacon Ilobe Flan
nels, in all the wanted designs
and colors for making
robes, at, yard
Silk embroidered Wool Flannels
for Infants' wear an assort
ment without an equal, at, yd . , j wine, rod, drab, green;
49 59 65 "P o 81.10' at, yard
Very best quality all wool face
eiderdown, in white, cream and
colors, yd 25 35 49
Wool Flannels for w o m e n's
sklrtx, children's wear, men's
shirts, In blue, brown, gray,
25c
Splendid values In white all wool
Flannels, also silk and linen
warp wool flannels, at, yard
25 35 49 P o 98
Ask for the new 34-inch Aus
trian Suiting, light and medium
colored grounds with new
checked and striped 4 O.
. .. lOU
designs; at, yard
Select Fancy Flannels for Dresses, Kimonos, Robes, Gowns, Etc. Hero where the as
sortments are the largest, qualities the best in the country, prices the lowest; on sale
at, per yard 8H, lOcv 12Vc and 15c
Special Sale of Linens in the Basement
$28!
50 Fine Irish Linen Pattern Cloths, full bleached and
extra heavy, size 2x3 yards, $3.50 values, each, at
100 Pure I.inen Bleached Pattern
Cloths, 2x2 yards, all new frf Q
pattern, worth $2.25, each. 9107
Finest Double Satin Damahk, full
bleached in all the new stripe pat
terns, $1.50 qnaltty,
per yard, at
NAPKINS TO MATCH
70-lnch Pure Irish Linen Table
Damask, extra heavy
weight, 89c values, yard
Dinner Size, Pure Irish Linen Nap
kins, worth to $4, (a no
per dozen, at
Table
69c
300 doren Imported Mercerized Nap
kins; hemmed, ready for CQ
use, worth $1.39, dozcu, at. . . .OaJC
100 dozen Renaissance Lace Scarfs
and Lunch Cloths, worth
$1.25, each, at
Beautiful Hand Drawn and Embroid
ered Lunch Cloths, size 4fx45,
and 54x64, worth up to
$7.50, each, at
100 Extra Large Size Bath Rugs, all
colors, worth up to $ 1.50, Q
each, at 0v
75c
$3.98
Brandeis Beauty Shop
Pompeian Room
, iiairdressing, shampooing, coloring, beauty mas
sage, manicuring, facial massage, scalp treatment,
transformations, cluster puffs, Turban caps, etc.
Manicuring 35c Hairdressing 35c
Kxtra Large NeU two for 5
Extra large size real hair Nets two for. . . -25
Madam Hoyd Cluster Puffs $8.00 values. $5.00
Cluster Puffs, 20 in sets $5.00 values ..$2.48
Washable Rolls $1.00 values 50
Appointments made by phoue. Call up Iiairdress
ing Parlors, Pompeian Room.
Interesting Monday Bargains
Heavy
IN OtT BASXTKBITT
Flannels, In pink, . Dress percales full
Mottled
gray, blue and brown, also fancy
checked and striped outing flannels
8, 10 and 15 yard
lengths at, per
yard . .
Persian cotton ehallies for com
forters. Buy them here Mon
day from the bolt, at,
per yard
Fancy Dress and Apron Gingham
7c
3c
standard dreiu
percales, light and dark, neit de
signs. These wide percales are
worth 12V4c a yard
sale price, per
yard
Meroerized Black Sateens flnlahed
and looks just like the $1.00 heavy
black silks from the bolt Monday
worth regularly 35c j p
a yard; on sale at, I
7c
per yard .
fall
The new
styles for dresses
all different checks for aprons, mese iota just il.7i.Ul
lved Monday at. yard v s w
received Monday at, yard
Ask for the 36-lnc.h No. 80 Cambric.
Double the sale price would not be
placing the value too high; IAa
por yard luv
Monday we will sell 4 5-Inch wide
Pillow Tubing, regular price ZZo a
yard; at the muslin depart
ment, at, yard
15c
.RANuEiS STORES
SONS OF ADAM NOT IMMUNE
Celebrities Lured from Stxaieht Path
bv Women's Charai.
INSTANCES OF BLIND INFATUATION !
Wealth anil HrpiUlloa Th r
the Winds rfcaaler Affair
Mot the First Nor
the Last.
Robert VA imhrop Chanter it not the
flrnt man tit sacrifice nJI hta possessions,
tila reputation, hta position in Ufa and
lita future to hta Infatuation for a woman
nor will he be the last. The phenomenon
la an ordinary that It la commonplace.
Perhaps ;ever: man whose nnture U or
ganised on an ctnotiunal basis either has
ken at mme ni'. merit in hta life or mill
ae on the veree of nuch a situation.
Hlwtory, Indred. In full of caaes In
which treat men a fa ten have been held
la a woman's little hand, aometimea to he
axhexi to wrevk and ruin. yt oftene.', ks
Ilia record hoa. to be bul!t uo t Hver
anl fame. JutUe compela the acknovl
dgment that even an Irregular and law
lea l"ve hai a'liuetlinea resulted In tne
tnakln rather than in the bnMiklutf f a
really etrcnic man'a life.
In such a situation the little man, t.ie
weak man: ao8 under, while the great
man may go on rNlng. The lnfa.1u.1tlm
of Lord Nelson, the areateat and most
famous t-ea fiKhter in the .world's hll ry.
for Ijinma, Ijidy Hamilton a woman
who had IlKTa'ly coma from the cutlet
and who had no more nigral sense than
a jTulnsa Dla was a case htrh Illus
trates the power of a treat man to t"t
geod out of vll.
NeU. 'n's moral fall, aa the world meas
ure huch thlnjcs. was complete asd t-ir-rib'e.
Me liuri.hed hia lawful wife fro.it
atda and took tlx fair tmnn with
him wherever he went. Hut his acts re
Hulted in no a reck of position and power.
Not only did Nelson retain his lank, his
command and his popularity, but lie
marc Led straight forward 011 the road to
power. Ha even challenged the moral
sentiment of tie community with this
extraordinary saying, which thousanda
have r seated with seat: "It there were
mora ErumaH. there would he more Nel
sons!" His case was an Instance of the ability
of a man who ktps In hia hand either
authority and public power, or the might
of personal and temperamental strength,
to carry off a situation which would ruin
an ordinary man.
Petrarch's Stlnialaa.
If these uncompromising and utterly ab
sorbing lovea which a man puts above all
things on earth, above Ids very hopes of
salvation are the purer sort, Oiey may
raise the man intellectually and morally
higher by an Immeasurable dlxtajiee than
he would otherwise hava risen. A case of
the kind waa that of the great Italian poet
Petrach the most essentially charming of
poets next to Phakarpeare and Goethe. Pe
trarch waa known as a poet before ha met
and loved Iura. But whan that supreme
event of his life took place he suppressed
at once everything that he had already
written, and nut one line of It has come
down to us. His past was wiped out. Kv
ry word of his that we know waa written
under the stimulus of his love for laura,
and he leaped Into eminence under Its In
spiration. "It is to her," ha said, and saJd truly,
except for the undue modesty of the
statement, "that I owe what little merit
you see In me. and I atiould never have
gained such name and fame as 1 have
save for the nobility of f-ellng with which
she cultivated the spare seeds of virtue
planted tn my hvtrt."
Iaura could not be Petrarch's. It ts
supposed, though not positively known,
that she was the wife of another. At
any rate, there waa between them an in
superable bar. But ha aaug nf her to all
the world, without concealment or re
serve, and the love of her, for which he
sacrificed every other hope and every
worldly Ideal, made him great.
But this Is far from being the case
with the ordinary man when he falU into
the grasp of a love which exacts a sac
rifice of hiinaelf. In moat canes he mskes
the sacrifice and goea under. Even
great and powerful men have been ur
terly ruined tn life and fortune bv their
love for a woman. Thla fate la so usual
and ronunon that the Peralana. w 10 he9
a great gift at aummary characterisation,
tall women "Af tl-Jehan." or "the calam
ity of the world." The ordinary maacj
II ne opinion on this subject Is represented
by Thomas Otway'a quatrain:
Who lost Marc Antony the wor.d'
woma
Who was the rause of a long ten years"
war
And laid at last old Troy In ashes?
Woman
Destructive, damnable, deceitful woman!
Antony and Cleopatra.
Marc Antony was the original Robert
Wlnthrop Chanler of history: and the ueua.1
notion of t.'leiipMra, his mistress, makes
he;- singularly like Una Cavalleri, at least
In personal appearance.
Antony, an aristocratic young man of
Rome, became, by sheer force of hla abil
ities and audacities, the second figure In
the Roman empire after Julius Caesar, and
after Caesar'a death he received the em
pire of the east, and might eaaily have be
come the master of all the world. He fell
madly In love, however, with that "serpent
of the Nile," Cleopatra, queen of Egypt.
His passion for her made him completely
her slave; he neglected his own and the
I miblic's business, paralysed hla powers of
action, and at last fell a victim to the
might of Octavlanus Caesar (Augustus),
his Inferior in every point of native ability.
Defated at the battle of AcUtim, An
tony fled to Cleopatra's arms, but was
followed up by Octavlanus. I ..Iks many
I another charmer In a like situation, Cleo
' patra was willing to letray her lover
now that ahe had ruined him. At Octa
vlanus's suggestion ahe enticed Antony
Into a mausoleum, where he and she
were to "die together." Antony carded
out hla part of the arrangement and died
by his own hand In his fifty-third year.
But Cleopatra barely took her departure.
I Afterward, however, when she found that
i her blandishmenta did not prevail with
j Octavlanus as they had prevailed with
Julius Cae.ar and with Antony, and that
j he intended to take her to Rome a captive.
1 she laid the poisonous asp on her bre.iat
j and died.
j It Is undoubtedly the case that Antony
1 sacrificed the empire of the world U hla
I Infatuation for thla woman. He was not
. strong enough, as his master. Julius
I Caesar, had been to bend her to his own
'purposes while enjoying her beauty. Caesar
I had yielded to her fasclnatlona before
I Antony; but he had taken her to Rome
! and had successfully def.ed scandal while
administering the affairs of the republic,
j Antony was of a more uncompromising na
ture. His surrender of himself was more
'absolute. And he fell at lat, the utter
and hopeless victim of his love.
t'blaea Isitasrt.
The Roman world was . not the only
vast realm that has been laid on the altar
of a wild, a meaaurcleaa fascination fur
.,,,, A Bu.mi, ,ue mory or a
sacrifice still more amazing than that of
Antony. The western world knows little
of this tale, but it lias been well told by
Rounsevtlle Wildman in hla book on
"China's Open Door." and It ts true and
matchless.
Kvery Chinaman today wears a pigtail
because the celebrated Chinese imperial
general, Wu Bankwel, who flourished In
the aeventeenth century, loved a slave
girl, and for the love of her gave tils
country over to the Manchus, who im
posed the queue, which they themselves
wore, on all the Chinese as a badge of
servitude.
It was In the year 1M4 that all this oc
curred. There had been a rebellion In
China, and IJ, one of the rival clatmanta
of the throne, had seized upon the reins
of power at Peking, after forcing the sul
olde of his opponent, Chang Wu Hank
wel, who commanded the Imperial troops,
was absent from the capital with his
veteran army. The fate of 1J lay In his
hands.
The general's father, Wu, had written
him from Peking, advising him to give his
allegiance to l.i. and he waa on his way
to the capital to do so when he learned
that a beautiful slave girl, whom he de
votedly loved, and whom he had laft at
Peking, had been seized and presented to
one of Li's officers. Jn his frenzy of rage
at this deprivation, Snnkwel forgot his
filial obedience, his loyalty, his own fu
ture, his country and everything. Noth
ing remained In his mind but hla horror
and grlet. He wrote on the moment two
letters one to his father, upbraiding him
for not protecting the girl, and the other
to Liorgan, the regent of Manchuria, in
viting I "org an and tbe Manchus to join
him in the subjugation of China
The Manchua did not hesitate a mo
ment, and sent an army to Join the forces
of Sankwel. Together they mai-ched upon
I Peking. IJ, unable to make any other
ckfenbe. put Baukwel's father in the front
rank, and the aged man pleaded with
hla aon to forbear hla hand, but Sank w el.
obxessed by the vision of the outraged
girl, allowed hla father to be murdered
i before his eye.
1
j A Wild Bailie.
Then ensued a wild battle, in which
IPankwel and the Marichus triumphed. IA.
; in flight, butchered all the family and
relatives of Wu, including the sieve girl,
set fire to the go ernmer.t buildings and
fled. XankweL novr an Incarnated fury.
I
left the Chinese capital and empire to the
Manchus and started out In pursuit of
IJ. All over the empire he followed the
flying prince like a mad dog. LI was at
last killed by some peasants whom he
was plundering of food, and Bankwel ar
rived only In time to claim the corpse of
the fallen emperor, who had deprived him
of his loe, and to subject It to many In
tilgnitiea. Meantime the Manchus. who. but for
Hankwet's aid. would have remained to
this day a league of scattered barbarian
tribes on the borders of China, made
good their hold on Peking and the empire
and established a dynasty which rulea
over China 'today. Sank wet dropped out
of night in gloom and grief: but, as VIr.
WllCman says, he burned on the grave
of his love a dvnasty and a city and
gave a vast empire to a small body of
forelgnera. The queue that every China
man wears Is known In China aa the
badge of mourning for the beautiful slave
girl of Sankwel, who Is historically even
without a name New York Mall..
HOPE FOR THE STIFF-KNEED
Rheumatic Crips Treated to a
Islon of Hellef by a
Doctor.
By the simple device of making new
Joints that will v.ork aa effectively as those
supplied to human beings by Iamc Nature
herself, one of the most dreaded of here
before Incurable ailments-stiff Joints, or
"anchylosis'' suddenly has beeni transferred
to the lit-t of curnblc diseases.
The discovery was made by Dr, John U.
Murphy of Chicago, and la the rweult of
eight years of secret and almost Incessant
icearrh and experiment. lr. Murphy,
who Is prexldent of the American Medical
association, described the discovery for the
first time In an address1 before the aurgeons
of the Erie railroad '.n Chicago.
Thu Intricate operation, which involve
the siibftilulion of new bone in stiffened,
joints, dressing them with live muscles and
wiring them In place, la expected to make
thousands of until now hopeless cripple
whole again. Numerous operations of thu
aort already hava been performed and Ir.
Murphy la of the opinion that they will be
come common.
For more than two hours Lr. .Murphy
In il the railroad surgeons spellbound while
he gave them the rletslls of his discovery.
His talk was Illustrated with photograph
Illustrative of the new method of treating;
Inflamed Joints and of remarkable cure
Dr. Murphy has effected In JolnU that had
been stiffened and useless for as long- aa
eighteen year.
In one caae a man who had been suffer
ing from a stiff Joint for that length of
time permitted Dr. Murphy to hew out a
new Joint for him and recently he has been
upending from ten to twelve hours In the,
saddle on a western cattle ranch.
Two of the mont common cause of
anchylosis are said to be rheumatism and
lagrlpp. In many uch cases Dr. Murphy
prevented the dtead results and haa been
successful In relieving the sufferers and
giving them new Joints after the old-style
treatment had failed to effect a oure.
Another dtecoverey of perhaps a second
ary nature, but still Important from the
point of suffering humanity, was given to
the Erie urteons when Pr. Murphy an
nounced that "Cqllea fracture" of the
wrist, which most frequently result In
at.chylosi or crookedness, never should
produce bsd results. By the aid of an
other physldsn, who posed a the subject,
lr. Murphy illustrated the proper method of
setting the "Colles fiacture." which Is
totally different from the method now in
vogue. He made the remarkable announce
ment that after having such a fracture sot,
his patients were told to go home and use
tleir knife and fork aa though nothing had
happened.
"When the fracture Is set In the manner
I have described." Dr. Murphy said, "there
Is absolutely no subsequent pain and the
patient may use the fingers of his hand
immediately and constantly. No bad re
bults can happen. It is physically Impos
sible for the fracture to become out of
place. It Is also Impossible to allay the
inflammation by the old method of getting
th 'Colle fracture." "
In connection with the explanation of
the new method of treating Inflamed Joints,
Dr. Murphy aatd:
"Accordingly it can be Been that doctor
are to blrm for every bent Julnt and every
ciooked elbow that Is seen on the streets
of our city. If we doctors treated fractures
In tho manner In which we have been
treating inflamed Joint. I believe we would
be strung up to the lamp posts. This Is
pretty strong language, but this Is a heart
to heart talk and we must tell the truth. '
lr. Murphy said that eight years ago he
bo amo convinced that the suigeon could
make a ne Joint much afier the manner
H ut niitui" aometimea makes It mu. h to
the di-gusi of the surgeon, when some sub
stance like a piece of bone get bntween
the surfaces. He conducted a series of
experiments, which proved that the making
of new Joints waa an easy matter for the
surgeon.
"Having found out that I could make ner
Joint." Dr. Murphy Bald, "I proceeded tv
try to make the discovery useless In the
first Instance by preventing the necessity
for new Julius. In this r en poet the research
bus been wholly successful, as anchylosis
from any causa except tuberculosis never
need occur."
Theold method of treatment require
the draining of the Joint, which, Dr. Mur
phy deoJares, transgresses all laws of tha
human anatomyand makes anchylosis all
the more certain to occur. The new method
does away with draining and "put out th
fire as soon as poasibls after It kindling."
Chicago Record-Herald.
A Bachelor's Reflections.
expensive to get dlv
more so to stay married.
What makes It so eK' to marry a gill
Is hhe pretends It's ho hard
It seems as If people try harder to he
fools than they will try to le anything
else
Kithei' a man pays rent and wishes he
owned his house or he owns ll and wihrs
he paid rent.
Self-cotitrul Is easiest when you are
under Homebody else s strong I ule
When a man does a good deed he thinks
it's much more thun it Is: when a bad
one, much less.
It'a a luxury to spend money on a girl
you're engaged to. and a necessity on one
you're married to.
I A woman expects all manner or bless
ings, but she never gives up necause tun
doesn't get any of them. New York Prese.
ot tlalte Bare,
The elder of the two salesgirls, who haa
some pretensions to good lookx. ,( in
specting her festures In the mirror.
"Admiring ourself, are ytiui" queried
the cither girl.
"No. I'm studying myself."
"What ftr?"
"Tou won't tell?" .
"Nevel !"
"Well, I was standing bef.tr this look
ing glass the other murium;, wiping
siuiiilee of soot or something off my cheek,
sud the floorwalker saw me. 'There no
use In your trying to Improve on that fsc
Mis Ackley,' he ssld; It can't be dons!'
1 ni wondering Juat what be meant by It
j whether it waa a compliment or a knock."
Chicago Tribune.
tlatwa ol Irish haplala labelled.
t;ETTVMBCK(i. l a., t. 2.-ln tne
1 presence of seveial thousand survivors anl
j friends of the Irish brigade which particl
aied In the battle of let t i-ton g. Ilia
memorial etatije vf their chaplain. Itev.
! Father Will. am Corby, was today unvallad
and dedicated.