THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: .JULY 0, 1011. OMAHA WINSJJIG VICTORY Locating1 Kail Division Here to Bring Manj New Families. MANY BOOMS WILL BE NEEDED: 1-iereae-d Pal Nr-eetpts TVIII Re It frM Tat Mve mm Hat ter Mall Service Mar Be 1 Kspeete. The locating of the new railway post office division In Omaha will mean a great deal for this city. Fully fifty famine Will com here when the word I ent out to move. ' At present no time haa been aet for the opening of the office here, but that la expected within the next few day. In all, It la expected that about 260 men, women and children will be brought to the city, by the locating of the headquarter here. An Increase In the poatofflce re ceipt will alio result from the declalon. It la atfto probable that Omaha will be made dlvlalon headquarter for other branch e of the service in the future. It may alao bring In the future Inspector" of rural free delivery. Lota ef 5p-e. Ample working apace, which wa one of the feature which brought, the dlvlalon here, la being prepared at once. At preaent, however. It la not known where the headquarter will be located. The poatofflce building will be uaed, but what floor la to be vacated la yet a problem. The second or third floor will be vacated and aet aside to await the coming of the officiate. About aeventeen room will be occupied, and If enough apace cannot b procured on one floor, rooms on another will be uaed. Six rooma are In une by the chief clerk of the railway , poatofflce dlvlalon, and hi office at the present time la on the second floor. Theae alx rooma, however, are Included In the aeven teeen rooma, ahould they all be required. Better poatal facilities will be realized when the headquarter are eatabllahed here, as all postal trains and car will be ! scheduled by the local dlvlalon and In such a manner as to make Omaha the headquarter for as many mall car a possible. Galld Telia of Victory. -"This I a great victory, for Omaha, for Nebraaka and for the Commercial club and has been reached only after three and a half yeara . constant effort, during which time every business reason and sound ar gument that could be marshaled together have been collected and put to use," aald J. M. Guild, commissioner of the Commer cial club. "Our activity commenced long before there waa any poaltlve provision made for a new division, which the sixty first congress authorised, when th general poatofflce appropriation bill specified four teen divisions instead of thirteen aa here tofore. ' "The new division Is made up of terri tory taken from the present sixth and seventh division. Omaha being In the sixth. Nebraska and Wyoming are taken from It and Colorado from the aeventh. The sixth, with Ita headquarter at Chi cago, haa been cumbersome on account of being the largeat in point of mileage and railway poatofflce lines, and aeoond larg est la number of rllway poatal clerka. In our competition with Denver we outclassed It In every particular that counted for any thing, poatofflce revenue, railway mileage In Nebraska as against Colorado, railway mileage operated from Omaha and Denver, saving in distance and time In handling mail to and from Washington, number of routea In the several states, the number of railway mall clerka, volume of mall han dled per day, headquarters accommodation and In every other respect. Dlvlalon Meana Mack. "Not only will he location of the head quarter In Omaha bring a large number of additional clerk and their families here, but a, new office will be established, that of division auperlntendent, with hie staff, o that In a material way Omaha la the beneficiary of a substantial Increase. But the added prestige that comes to Omaha Is la far from Insignificant, as the trend of Uncle Sam In all matters of this kind seems to be toward concentration and for Omaha to be designated as the' headquartera now means possibly more In the future than It doea today. In another very Important re apect It Is a good thing for Omaha and the state at Urge, aa the railway mall service of Nebraska haa not been what It should be and with an Omaha administration it can be bettered very materially and with leas effort and losa of time. , "While the club haa been working away on this ever alnce Captain Palmer's poat- mastership, when an unuaual effort be came necessary, a delegation waa aent to , Washington,' headed by Victor Rosewater and consisting of Messrs. J. L. Kennedy and H. H. Baldrtge,' to whom great credit la due for their successful work. The repre sentation of Omaha'a reasons waa made to the postmaster general and the second as sistant, under whose supervision comes the railway mall service, by Mr.' Rosewater and aupported by thla committee last April, and the matter has been hanging fir ever Ince, pending decision by th postmaster general of the merits of the two contend ing cities." Deserting the Farm and Going to Town Census Bureau . Gives Out . Figures, Showing: the Trend of the More ment of the People.. WASHINGTON. July i.-The people of the United States are steadily deserting the country and the farm for the turmoil and delights of the city and town, ac cording to statistics made publio today by the census bureau. In the last ten year the percenters of person living In cities or other Incor porated places of mors than 2. M0 Inhab itants, Increased from '40.1 to 46.1 of the total. Twenty years aeo only X.l per cent of th total population lived In such In corporated places. In classifying the 1910 census returns, the ' bureau calls that portion of th popula 1 tlon in incorporated cities or towns of S.W0 or more Inhabitant ui-oan and th re mainder rural. On this basts. In 1910. 42.623, tn or 44 3 per cent of th total, lived in urban territory, and ,J,&J or U.T per cent la rural territory. LAND REGISTRATION IN FALL SIBI41 City Offfctala Kotlfle to Pr mmr tor Rash Karl? la October. RAPID CITT. 8. D.. iJuly t-Speclal.- orriclals her have been notified to prepare for the rush expected during October, when registration will be made her for land In th Fort Berthold Indian reservation In thla state, which Is about to be opened to entry tor settler. The registration will begin October and end October tl. and the drawing will begin October 24. As this 1 the first town In th Black Hills to be n a registration point for a land open- lag, thousands of Black HUler are g pectAd to com and register. Superin tendent James W. Wltten writes Mayor Jackson urging that particular restriction be saad against any form of gambling. 9-4 Bleached Fruit of the Loom SHEETING Regular price 32Vc a yard, per yard, t)rn at. UUK, Basement 8-4 Bleached Fruit of the Loom SHEETING .' Regular price SOc vrard, per yard, Basement Women's Mercerised Lisle Finish and Cotton HOSIERY Plain and x allover lace, . double heels and toes; white, black and fancy; 26e values, per pair, at. ... . 15c DRESS PERCALES Plain colors, 36 Inches wide; also standard fancy Dress prints; worth up VaC to 12 Ho a yard, 1 per yard, at. ' Basement Perfect Mill Lengths. BLEACHED MUSLIN Good grade in our . basement, per yard, at 3C Women's and Children's Sun Bonnets and Hats; all colors; French cham brays, ginghams, m etc., worth to 35c, 1 ra basement, at 45-Inch High Qrade St. Gall Embroidered Stirling 12 choice, new de signs, $8 val ues, per yard . . , $1.50 each HOW CONGRESS KEEPS COOL Contrivances Designed to Moderate the Temperature. TEMPERS AT A . HIGH NOTCH Cold Air Charned br Fans, lee Water anal Lemonade, Marble Baths,' and the Subway Breeso ' Prodacer. . "How to keep cool" Is not the. title of a bill before either the house or the' senate, these stalling days, hut It mlirht well be, Judrtng from the attention paid the subject by 'homesick representatives of the people assembled under the big white ' dome. Figuratively, congress Is whacking out cer tain and sundry piece of legislation with one hand and wiping Its perspiring, brow with the other and -swearing softly and sweetln under its breath at the unkind fate that keeps It lashed to th mast when It might be at play . where the cool winds blow and the waters sound their summer symphony. Bo congress has gone assiduously about the business of keeping cool. And not by the old-fasbioned gin rlckey and festive mint Julep ' route, either. If a member wishes to laugh at the thermometer In that fashion be m6st keep the laugh producer In his own committee rooms, for he cannot get it tn the eapltol nor within many' squares of It. Other congresses' may have done so, but not this one. It ha more scientific, and, it believes, more effl- caclou methods. Cold Air aad Col Driaka. ' By the desk of, each representative and senator, for Instance, and In other parts of the chambers, are small vents through which cold air la forced by hug electric fan In the basement. At th same ttms th hot air I drawn up and expelled through the relllnga In all nearly eight acres of building are cooled In this fashion. Always th temperature within la from five to eight degree cooler than on the outside. Ic water and lemonade are the popular beverages, the .' senate alone . using some 4,500 pounds of ice per day, while th total dally consumption In the entire cap! to 1 and both office buildings I said to be over four tons. The senate expends th modest sum of $30,000 for Its favorite brands of mineral waters, but the house frowns down on such extravagance and wets its parched throat with water from the broad bosom of the Potomac Down In the basrments of the office buildings of both house of congress are costly baths, where Swedish, Turkish or Just plain American soap-and-wster baths can be had at any hour. They are built entirely of marble and not bath room marble, either,' but the exquisitely Veined sort that millionaires use In constructing their interior stairways and mantels. Fre quently on a particularly humid day one representative and senator after' another will slip away from the atmosphere which remain close despite the air vent and Indulge In a quick plunge. . Th lack of a pool Is deplored by many, but curtailment had to be mad somewhere, and the bath rooma cost so much that th last feature of a Turkish "treatment" had to be omitted. Running from both house and senate to their respective office buildings are sub ways lighted by electricity and paved with asphalt. In the senate one is a specially constructed automobile on which it is quits the fashion to take a "Joy ride" and get cool!. i Veatllatla System. Southwest of the eapltol building and Just outside the grounds there is a pic turesque granite tower about thirty feet tall. At that height the air Is quit pur, being too high to contain the floating germs of th street and too low to be affected by th amok blowing from chim neys. Within this tower connects with a long underground tub or tunnel that runs Regular 15c ORGANDIES and all 12V,c and 15c BATISTES Choice Styles, from the bolt,' per ' yard," at. ...... DC . iimnn - 27-inch Swiss and Batiste EMBROIDERED FLOUNCmGS i Elegant -English eyelet, floral , and combination, effects; worth to $1.25 yd.; on CQ sale on main floor, yd. . 1 Women's Dainty WAISTS -Lingerie and tailor ed waists, high and low necks, long and short sleeves, worth to rr , 12.60. sec- If H ft ond floor . STORE CLOSES DAILY AT 5 P. M. 'Except Satur ' day's, Until" September 1 All Our Summer 0 r1 A mm A. Hundreds of asked a few thousands of dollars worth' of the finest summer merchandise must be sold at once. You pay just a fraction of the prices weeks ago.' There are amazing bargains in every department. Never before a sale like this in Omaha. ; : Clearing Sale WHITE GOODS Fine embroidered St. Gall dress . Swisses, In dainty designs and fine pin dots, at, yard . .49 46-inch French Lawn, 25 cent value, at, yard -..'. 10 Plain white cotton crepe for cool underwear and house dresses, 25 cent quality, a Pr yard ..-1SH Domestic dotted dress Swisses, 15o value, at, yard . . . . 10 Nearsllk Foulard, whloh laun ders perfectly; 32 inches wide 15c value, at, yard . .10; Jacquard silk and printed silk dimities, foulards, dotted Jap onlka, etc., yard 10 27-inch printed voiles, worth 16c a yard, at, yard ..QH? at. no er up O hllr a' Rleev less Tests and Um brella Fant l.ace trimmed; Upper noles) Pearl or sold fUled. worth II Tell aad STev lty Wns Sold up .to 76c; at, choice . 12Kc . a pair. 6c 10c to th eubbasement under th house side of the eapltol. The indirect radiation ducts are seventy-five feet in area and the air blows through them at th rate of 750 feet a minute. The huge fan receiving this air is twelve feet In diameter and re volve 108 times a minute, holding S6.0M cublo feet of air In- each . such Interval. Thla air Is forced into the floor of the houne through grating in th legs of the members' desks ,' and, where the floor elevated, through bronr registers'. Seven hundred and eighty-five square feet of such openings are found on thla floor. , , There are similar air vents In the gal leries,' and one can easily detect the rush of cold air by placing his arms down be tween the seats. The warm air is expelled through the celling at th same rate as It en U-rs, thus avoiding draughts at' the doors. The thermometer proves that at all times the temperature Is from five to eight degrees less than outdoors in the shade. - Hanging In the fan room is an electrical tester which can be read in the chief en gineer's room. by. pressing a. button. . A hygrometer registers the humidity of the air and is also closely watched by those who have this feature of keeping congress cool as their dally duty. Another fan draws from this same duct and supplies air to the corridors and com mittee rooms"bf the eapltol, the air passing through flues burled .In the walls Ilk chimneys, so that one room may be kept cooler than another' If desired. In this manner eight acres of floor . surface are cooled. Basy Day for Paas. . Precisely the same method of reducing the temperature Is used In the senate, with the'differenc that the air la drawn from a grotto nearby In the eapltol grounds. The suction fans are r.lmllar and the air la likewise distributed through the subway and various rooms. But. for some unac countable reason, both th senate cnam ber and adjoining cloakrooms always aeem cooler than the corresponding sections of th house. The members all Insist upon thla and th senator -do not deny It. There are S26 occupied commute rooma in th hous' 6fflc building, and numerous other special rooma f or . the holding of meetings. In each of these at least on and sometime three electric fans buss all day long In an effort to simulate ocean Hreeses. In the cloakroom there are as many aa can be conveniently placed for action. The speaker's lobby ha It quota. and every committee room of the eapltol building, the restaurants and some of the hallways are similarly equipped. In the senate office building each aenator has two rooms so the total of fans uaed there la enormous. But what It costs to ruii all of them is not given out for publication. In every committee- room. In every pri vate office, in the hallways of th eapltol. In the office of each employe and In cthe cloakrooms of both house and senate there ar water coolers alwaya filled with Clear cold water. For the ice used in these re ceptacles and. In the house restaurant the dally purchase, according to on of the employes, averages four ' tons In hot weather. But aa thla warm weather neces sity la purchased at a wholesale rate of IS 20 per ton the entire amount only totals slightly more than $ a day. . . No special minerals or rarbo rated water are purchased out of a house fund. Some while back, when the summer season loomed ominously on the hortson, certain members asked for an appropriation for such waters, referring to the senate aa a precedent. But their request waa voted down, and on the south side of the eapltol or In th house building only plain, every day Potomac river water Is served. . Aa effort waa made to secure special coolers, but It suffered the ssme fate aa the bottled water motion. There la nothing else left to drink but lemonade. In th cloakroom of th hous for more than twenty years a colored man known by his last name to every member ha dispensed this picnic concoction to thirsty representative. lie stirs up his lemon Juice, sugar, cracked Ic and water after a recipe all . FINE BATISTE CORSETS Long and . medium lengths, hone suppor ter g, non-rustable, worth no to 11.25, per pair, at. . . . t 4T Js. I I Hi-MJillMcM Women's and Misses' White and Colored Summer Dresses, Pretty Marquisettes; lingerie, ging ham and fine colored materials. worth up to $12.60, $5 second floor. Women's Lingerie and Marquisette Dresses Lace and embroidery edges in sertion trimmed; marquisettes, nave colored embroid ery trimmings, etc., worth up to 12 5, at . i $102 Women's Tailored Suits Your unrestricted choice of any woman s suit in our entire stock, a 3 OLliwIYa $15 matter what the form price. Many worth to $40.00, at . . . . rsaor Veok Tin and La Tallleres Worth up to 60c, kt Brooches and Belt Fins 1 to 8 on a card worth Sfic, at 15c 15c his own. Epicures on lemonade declare It Just right, never too sweet nor too acid, nor even suggestive of having been di luted. ' ; ': Th old man. dispenses his cooling drinks gratia. Nothing la allowed t,o be sold In the cloakroom. But about every now and then a member'a hand has an Instinctive habit of atraylng flrat to the loose-change pocket and then toward this dispenser of lemonade, apples, bananaa and whatever fruit la easily eaten and In season. ' Not long ago. during an especially ardu ous debate anent the admission of Arizona to the union a day when the chamber fairly alssled with heat waves-4nore than one dignified member was seen ' to saunter away cloakroom-ward and emerge later holding aloft a fat banana or wiping his mouth with all th mysterious delight of an urchin who had Just stolen th "com pany" lemonade. . . Hot Weather Togs. Th speaker' lobby, back of the iiall, is often utilized as a. fitting place In which to finish such an al fresco reuast. And tell It not In Oath but no one . has been bold enough to' deny' that on very hot days many congressmen have ventured to re move their coats and loll about In th easy1 Chairs of- this room after the fashion of th magazine ahlrtwalst man. Ruraoi haa It that only those fitted with attached cuffa and the newest Ideas in soft collar and smart belts venture on such radical ism.' But there are a great number of modern young men In thla "session extra ordinary" who dare tread softly over past traditions. ' When a member has exhausted the pleas ures of cloakroom lemonade, writhed at his desk and grown weary of the view from the lobby a very cool one,, wltb many trees and a distant gleam of the river he hies himself down Into the sub way and runs baok and forth a few times between the eapltol and his office. Thla 1 a- veritable dungeon of coolness, buH an Slectrlc-llghted asphalted on Into which not th slightest suggestion of th heat at ground level ever penetrates. - When vn this palls upon him he gath ers together all the other members he can locate and goes over to take advantage of his "privilege of th floor" of th senate and drink senate lemonade. It la rather a sore point on the north side of th eapl tol, this swarming of th Goths. Although rth hoirse preened Itself on refusing to ap propriate money for mineral waters and haa Indulged In sarcastic references to th pampered ones "over the way." It is said aa a body to look with much favor upon th fruit of this extravagance. Thirty thousand dollars a year Is the estimated sum spent by the senkte for mineral waters and apolllnarls. During the preceding session such a flurry waa made over thla Item that the water supply has been cut down considerably. For aummer Use the statistics given out showed 100 splits of apolllnarls In the cloak room a day. about 200 big bottle of mineral water In th restaurant and committee rooms and about 182 bottles In the senate office build ing. Besides, when a senator expresses a special wlah for a certain water bottled la his state It Is furnished him. Or. perhaps, he believe that soma special brand has a peculiarly cooling effect upon his temperature.- Thla la also procured. The day of the lemonade Jamboree is on the wan. Formerly in the aummer time lemons were ordered by the crate, augar by the barrel and apolllnarls by the case. Down in th basement of th senate a staff of men waa kept busy all the time the aenate waa In session making this lemon ade and aendlng It up to the cloak room. It cost the trifling sum of 11.000 a month. Apropos of liquid refreshment as a means of keeping cool, Henry D. Flood of Vir ginia, considered one of the best dressed summer men of congress, said that it Isl surprising how very little liquor Is par taken of oy 'the national legislators. "Th old days of th mint Julep and gin rlckey In th cloak room ar gone," be an nounced -proudly. "One never sees a mem ber drinking anything la the eapltol these days." 24-inch Swisses and Nainsook ALLOVER EMBROIDERIES , The daintiest designs for .waists nnd dresses; worth" to $1 yd.; on big bargain JQ square Monday, yard..'! 69c I'ffmitilamillHIMiniig During July' and August This Store Closes at 5 P. M. Except Saturdays Goods Sacrificed o. II 11 k. XI 4 UBaill All the Women's Fine SUMMER COATS Cloth Coats, silk and coats, auto and rain pongees, silks, etc., up to $25.00 at. $10 Long Summer Coats Long tan coats with silk and th silk and $3'i-$5 collars, plain mohair, silks, etc., at Women's Wool Suits Black and colors; all up to styles for women and ?- .$6'-8 and misses , worth to $20, second floor Brsoelsts For Utile and misse-s, worth 75c; special M a t W a s. Mourning and Boveltr, worth up to 75c, u.t ' 39c 15c "It Isn't there for him to drink T" the caller inquired skeptically. , Mr. Flood was pained. "A "man could keep It In his lockers or over here In his offlce; But during, my flv terms In congress I have been amaied at the small quantity of liquor uaed.' Even on the hottest and most trying day It is unusual to find a congressman whose breath suggests that he has been Imbibing. Taking the bar out of the eapltol did much toward this, for a man Isn't going to walk all the way over here to get a drink, though he might if he had only to step down to the restaurant. But th real reason la that we of thla generation have discovered the fallacy of trying to get cool by drinking what will send the temperature up. When we get thirsty we drink lemon ade." Washington Star. Record in Use of White Paper; Broken . Figures Given Out at Washington Showing the Amount of the Consumption. WASHINGTON, July 8. Records for the print paper business in this country were broken In May, when 110,166 tons of print paper were produced and 107,142 tons shipped, according to statistics filed with the commissioner of corporations by the American Paper and Pulp association., An Increase was shown over April of 11.800 tone in production and 10,350 tons In ship ments, while stocks on hand Increased 1,183 tons.. On new concern, a small one, was included In the May returns. The month's production was 98 per cent of normal, computed on twenty-seven days. The actual output per day was 4.080 tons, compared with 3.S43 tons In April, 3,345 tons In March, 8.707 tons In February and 3.821 tons in January. The stock on hand, 34,917 ton, were th largest since Novem ber. 1910. May. a 'year ago, finished with 19,533 ton on hand. This, however, was from a smaller number of mills. Business In other grades of paper was Ir regular, though on the whole there were aubatantlal Increaaea, particularly in wrap ping, book and writing paper. For all grades, th May production was 87 per cent of 'th computed normal, and 98 per cent of the output waa shipped. CONDITION OF THE TREASURY n i i Flgnrea Show a Deficit, as Against a Snrplaa This Tim Last Year. WASHINGTON, July 8 -At the Beginning of business today the condition of th United Slates treasury was: j Working balance In treasury offices, S5.3as.41S. - la banks and Philippine treasury. 334,- 9M.147. The total balance In general fund waa J14S.431.U1. Ordinary receipts yesterday were 32.616,485, with ordinary disbursements of tLS4S,t4. The deficit to date thla fiscal year Is 3327,374, aa against a surplus of 31.626, 4&3 at this time last year. These figures exclude Panama canal and public debt transactions. 7 lV.tIBV-fr ' WW All Printed and Plain COLORED LAWNS They have been selling at lOo a yard; from the olt Monday, In base ment, per a I . aa ti J 3c 7 Ota U at Women's Pure Thread SILK HOSIERY Wide lisle garter tops, lisle soles, heels and toes; also silk with dou ble Sbles; fv 75c values cLKif at, palr. ' v Our blearing Sale LINENS IN BASEMENT Irish embroidered doilies with scalloped and lace edges, worth up to 25c, at, each 5 Beautiful hand made Renais sance lace lunch cloths, 4 5-in. round or square, $3.50 values, t. each $1.49 30-lnch round or square Renais sance lace center pieces, $1.00 values, at, each 40 Odd lots of satin Marseilles bed spreads, worth up to $6.00, at, eactt $2.50 'Slightly soiled satin Marseilles pattern ana finest crochet Wed Spreads, worth up to $4.00 ech, at , 91.98 Full size crochet Bed Spremls beautiful Marseilles patterns worth up to 12.00. each ... 91.88. 11.00 fcrd $1.60 Turkish Hmh . Towels, with names of large hotels woven In greatest biir galn ever offered, at. etch..4e 6Uc Turkish Bath Towels, with names woven through centers extra large and heavy, encli. 85o satin coats, worth satin satin date Sheer India OUnoa Rplen did quality from the Dolt, at, yard 10c Baaement Xeal Japanese Tnm Made of silk gaur.e worth 10c, at 3V4c SAMSON PLANSRIOT OF FUN King and His Jesters Will Do Thing! to Aldrich and Staff. BED LETTER NIGHT ON MONDAY Besides. State Officials, Railroaders, Veterinarian and Publicists Will Be Introduced la Conrt. On of the biggest red letter nights thst the followers of King Ak-8ax-Ben have witnessed for many a moon In th initi atory line Is promised by Samaon for all who take advantage of the Den next Mon day night. In the first place It Is Gov ernor's nljglit, then Lincoln night, thirdly railroad 1 night, also veterinarians' night, and laHtly State Publicity league might. In reality It is two special nights In one. Originally the night was Intended for only the last three of the five, but some one suggested, that th chief .executive would like to taste the brand of hospitality that the real king of Nebraska la handing out this year, and the suggestion turned Into an invitation and acceptance aa fast as th wires would work. The governor's ac ceptance led to th Idea of making It a Lincoln night all the way through. So the editors of the Lincoln papers and the Com mercial club of that city were invited and aocepted at onoe. A telegram from W, S. Whittln, secretary of the latter organiza tion, speaks well for the attendance of the Commercial club. Dinner to Governor. Th program Includes a dinner to b given Governor Aldrich, Dr. Aldrich of Tennessee, a brother of th governor; Will Oweiy Jonts, editor of th State Journal; Hajy'y T. Dobblne, editor of the News, a.nd L. C. Tobln, editor of the Lincoln Star. Th dinner Ja given at the Loyal hotel by the boam) of governors. The governor and his brother will be accompanied by their wives, who will be entertained at th Field club. Ballroad night is in Itself always a big night at the Den. This fact la vouched for by the character of the list of representa tive railroad men that have been asked to speak. The list Includes Gerrlt A.Trt of the Union Pacific, C. E. Bpens of the Burlington, F. A. Nash of the Milwaukee & St. Paul. John Utt of the Rock Island and George West of the Northwestern. The veterinarians will be there In 'full force, as they are guests of Samson, as delegates to the Missouri Valley Veterinary association, which convenes In Omaha on Monday. The State Publicity league Includes the officers of the commercial clubs of the state. TWO . WIVES ONE TOO MANY Mr. A ana Sharp Lcsvts Home f Hasbaad Who Hd Married Sap. poainar Her Dead. PITTSBURG. Kan., July 8. Th effort of Peter M. Sharp to keep peace and two wivea In the family at th earn time haa ended In failure. Convinced that ah and Mra. Sharp No. I'"' LEANING and Pressing prices on - mings you sou. Whit Dresses. 11.50. ?-p'ece Suits. 11.25. Whit Waists, 50c. Linen Suits at 11.60. Uwn Drowses, 3160 jNwKties at loc. Silk U I uvea at lOo. White t-'lioea at 26c. White Gloves at 10a Silk Underwear Suit. 76c Corsets at boa - Telephone Tyler 1100. or Auto. 22.5. and a on shipments of 12.00 or over. Up-town receiving station In l'ooiPeTan R , 7Vt Brandela Stores. """" DRESHER BROS., 2211-13 Farnam St E V WOMEN'S SILK WAISTS Tarfetas. Messallnes, Pon gees, China Silks; high and low necks; soms colored embroidered; worth ta $6; second . rA .rr. 52.50 EDM WASH FABRICS KflMire and It. 'ail T, Im ported Voiles, always sell at 60c; Bargain ja Square, ier ill9 yard. at.. ...UOX v Main Floor. DRESS GOODS .Vr ON K-1MLF TRICK Serges, Panamas, Popllna and tan Suitings, black and white stripes, checks, etc. sold regularly at $1.00 ysrd, your choice, at. ..... . I 50c DRESS FOULARDS AHOl'T ONK-THUUJ. All this season's styles, many of them spot proof; nul l at. ?6c and 85c yard, A on Bargain If Square, at we SILK PONGEE A eplendld wearing qualify for coats and JrcFscs; sold at 6 9c a yard, t f Monday, per "I'll yard, at UitX' IMPORTED SAPHOSlLivS The best $1 sl'k on tl'ti mar ket; light, medium A and dark shades, (1 Up per yard 18 an'l 23-'ncli AVItle EMBROIDERED FLOUNCINGS Choice, new designs in Cor set. Cove-rings, Galloons and Insertions, worth SOc, per yard. at. ..... . 25c EST 2 could not live together amicably, Mrs. Anna Sharp, today left the residence of her husband for the home of her hod, William, In New Orleans. Sharp became separated from his first wife and his son during the Chicago fire. Nine yeara ago, thinking them dead he re married. Last spring through the pension office. Mrs. Sharp No. I found hlin here. He Invited both women to live in his houno. Peace reigned less than a week. Secretary Heilman; I IS IJL.SJBBI ' mmUL JIBIIMIIIML. WM - ia i i i ii in i - i i r". i i . r Officers of Colorado-Wyoming Retail ...Lumber Dealers' Association Charged with Conspiracy. - y DENVER, Colo.. July t Louis J. Hell man, secretary of the Colorado-Wyoming Retail Lumber Dealers' association, was arrested today on an Indictment returned by the federal grand Jury of northern Illi nois. , Conspiracy to interfere with inter state trade Is the specific charge. Heilman waa held In $5,000 bonds. Bigger, Better, Busier Tnat Is what advertising in The Bee will do for your Duslness. f ..'', -lifotnvcr ' Mbtliers No young woman, In the joy of coming motherhood, should neglect to prepare her system tor the phys ical ordeal she is to undergo. The health of both she and her coming child depends largely upon the care she bestows upon herself during the waiting months. ' Mother's Friend ' " prepares the expectant mother's sys tem for the coming event, and its use makes her comfortable during all the term. It works with and for nature, and by gradually expanding all tis sues, mascles and tendons, involved, and keeping the breasts in good con dition, brings the woman to the crisis in splendid physical condition. The baby too is more apt to be perfect and strong where the mother has thus prepared herself for nature's supreme function. No better advice could be given a young expectant mother than that she use Mother's Friend ; it is a medicine tnat has proven its value in .thousands of cases. Mother's Mothers Friend is sold at drug stores. rriervd Write for free book for expect ant mothers which contains much valuable information, and many sug gestions of a helpful" natnre. BRADF1ELD REGULATOR CO.. AiUmU. Cm. the oltenest. Parasol at ROo. ran at Z&c Vella at tf.c. Lac 'Kerchiefs (0o Plume, per Inch, sc. - ) aw. JWIB. waron calls. Kmrua n.in ... uuua xur iisia. J