TIIK BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 19. 1011. toir Announce These Special Sales Saturday Hundreds of Women's and Misses' Your Choice Silk Dresses of all Broken Lots OF and fT?; 'i . ' .... .. . ,. wlh ffrfa :K$mXs. y Kin iii jtr mi iln Tailored Suits Worth' up to $15.00, at $5.00. rThis was a special purchase and we secured one of the most wonderful bar ' cains in our history. The dresses are all finest silk foulards, high or low necks, most fashionable colors, prettily trimmed. The siiitn nrn limb on linos from mir IipsI snrincr and summer lots of tailored wool, silk shantunsr and wash fabric suits, there Wi, are hundreds to select from, nnd every suit is n sensational bar gain. They are worth positively up to $13.00, Saturday at , WOMEN'S SUMMER WAISTS Most of these waists are in the pretty lingerie effects, daintily trimmed with lace and embroideries, all tbe new style fea tures, Including low necks, short 0 sleeves, carefully sized and worth -)fTk( up to $2.00, Saturday at SKJ, - CHILDREN'S WASH DRESSES. These dresses are made of colored and figured wash fabrics, ages' 6 to 14 vears. Scores of pretty girlish styles. Made to sell at $1.50; Satur- (2Qn day, at KJJL Mem Special Sale OF WOMEN'S Light Felt Hats For late summer and early fall, actually (OQR wdrth up to P .UkJ $7.50, at .... Here are hundreds of those stunning and ultra fashionable feather weight felt hats in graceful outing shapes now so popular. Simply, but very smartly trimmed. The colors are white and the light shades for summer and early fall. The new season s biggest hit. bcores of models, worth as high as $7.50. Saturday in Millinery Department, 2d floor, at ana eariy iau. $2 FINAL. REDUCTIONS ON MEN'S LOW SHOES All our $5.00 and $6.00 Oxfords, including every single pair of Hurley Bros., T. D. Barry and other well known C6'Or makes in stock, at aPOeswO Men's $3.50 Oxfords Tans andQ ' Q C blacks only PWeJ3 Men's Oxfords Sample pairs, (11 nr odds and ends, at PX O Basement Cloak Dept. Women's Colored W a s n Waist, some with white linen collars, others with soft collars; worth up to $1.00, at 25 Women's One-Piece House Dresses, ginghams and per cales; worth up to $2, 98 Children's Colored Wash Dresses, ages one to 6 years; worth to 35c, 1J) SPECIALS IN OUR CANDY DEPARTMENT Pompeian Room Delicious Maple Ooufectioiis Maple cocoanut balls, co coanut kisses, maple peuoche, per lb 20tf Cream Peanut Nuggets Assorted flavors, very deli cious, per lb 10 Fresh Vanilla Mai-ghmallows, just the kind for toasting, Per lb 15 Ice Cream delivered to all parts of the city. Sunday included. IN BRANDEIS DRUG DEPARTMENT 25c Ir. Graves' Tooth Powder ; 14o 26o Sanltol Tooth Powder 14o 25c Pond's Vanishing Cream 17o 25c Satin Skin Cream .-- 17o 25c Kat man's Benzoin and Almond Cream lso 25c Bottle Hydrogen Peroxide so 25e Hublfoam 18o 50c Pebeco Tooth Paste 390 50c Java Rice Powder aeo ' 76c Moebert's Rice Powder 690 Plnaud's Lilac De France Toilet Water t. 690 50c Locust Blossom Toilet Water 890 1-lb. 20 Mule Team Borax 90 10c Palmollv Soap, 2 for is 10c Jap Hose Soap, 2 for 1&0 Orahnm's Ian Oil and Buttermilk Soap, S for SSo Z5o Packer's Tar Soap 160 bath Caps, while they last 14 OFF 14)0 Traveling- Casss 490 PHOTO SECTION. 18c Fkg. Acid Hypo .90 Eight Tubes M. Q. Developer S60 $7.00 Korona Post Card Camera S4.69 $7.50 Seneca, 4x5 Camera 93.98 4 Off on all Seneca Cameras. 1 I units I rmm il l W$Y S That Have Been Selling at $10.00, $12.50 and $15.00; Saturday at $5.00. We have assembled hundreds of our men's up-to-date light nnd rued lum weight suits that have been selling at $10.00, $12.50 nnd $15.00. They are made of worsteds, cheviots and tweeds, light and dark mixtures. Actually the season's most won . derful bargain. Your choice at , All Our Men's Spring and Summer Suits that $Y50 have been selling at $16.50, $18 and $20 go Saturday at.. " MEN'S PANTS Men's Worsted Pants, dark patterns, up to $2.00; at, pair worth 98c Final Price Reductions on Women's and Children's Low Shoes Misses' and Children's White Canvas Slippers, Misses' sizes at 98c; Children's sizes, 75c Boys' Oxfords, tans and blacks, worth to $3.50, at $1.50 Women's Pumps and Oxfords, every pair in stock worth $3.50 to $6 is marked $2.40 Women's Low Shoes, late summer styles, worth $3.00 to $5.00, at S1.89 Boys' Elkskin Shoes, worth $3.50, all sizes $1.50 Infants' Slippers, tans and blacks, worth $125 to $1.50, at 75c Worsted and Cheviot Odd Pants in stripes worth up todM QO $-i a pair, at.P-l-'0 Come to Brandeis Store Saturday and Buv Your Boys' Suit for School Wear in This Wonderful Sale Boys' j Children's Suits Worth $7.50 up to $15.00, at $4.98 These t.uits are all samples from the best mak ers of boys' clothing. Here are boys' knicker bocker suits, juvenile and Buster Browns; also smaller boys' blouse suits, made up of finest materials, medium weight, new styles worth up to $15.00; second floor, old store, at. Samples of Boys' and Children's Suits, in all the up-to-date styles for fall; worthflQ f up to $7.50, at 4.OU Samples and broken lots of Boys' Knee Pants Suits, worth up to $2.50 basement QQ- bargain square, at y(J $4.98 Your Unrestricted Choice Any Man's Shirt In Our Entire Stock (Manhattans Excepted) They have been sell ing regularly at $1.50 uo to $4, fjh tfl Saturday at Your choice of all our Silk, Madras and Silk and Linen, Soisette and French Flannel Golf and Negligee Shirts, with soft French cuffs or laundered cuffs; many with detached soft collars to match. The best styles, the best patterns and the best materials. Have been selling up to $4.00. Choice of our entire stock (Manhattans excepted) at ONE DOLLAR Your Choice of all our Men's $1.00 and $1.25 Negligee and Golf Shirts, at 50c and 59c Clearing 6ale of our Men's Manhattan Shirts at greatly re duced prices $1.15, $1.38 and $1.88 Men' Summer Undershirta and Drawers, also Union Suits, worth up to J1.00, at 35c Men's Pure Thread Bilk Hose. worth up to 75c a pair; on sale at 21 and Men's Undershirts and Drawers, Porosknlt and Balbriggan, worth up to 60c a garment; basement, at llrt First Special Sale of Human Hair Goods New Season The Very Newest Styles for Fall in Our Pompeian Room and on Sesond Floor. For this event we are placing on sale the following items at prices below cost: SWITCHES $1.98 CLUSTERS Made of very finest natural wavy hair, any shade with the excep tion of gray and white regular ly sold for $4.00 and $5.00 sale price "Washable Hair Rolls, 75c value, at 50c Manicuring, hairdressing and scalp treatment. These are genuine bar gains, and we invite your Inspection. Nothing made to order at these prices. One awitch onlyold to each customer. 20 inches long, made of near first qual ity hair, natural wavy; regularly sold for $2.50, specially priced at ..9S 24 Inches long, same as above, sold for $5.00. sale price S1.98 Extra large nets, three for 5J Nets with rubber in, 2 for 5 Suit Cases and Traveling Bags Special Sale Entire sample lines of two east ern high grade suit case and trav eling bag manufacturers. Genuine cowhide suit cases and walrus and cow hide traveling bags; values up to $10.00; go on sale in two lots Saturday, at $3.50 and $4.95 Clearing Sale of Straw Hats Any Man's Straw Hat In our entire stock, values up to $3.00, at ... All the 50c Straw Hats, at Men's, Boys' and Children's Caps, worth up to 60c, at Men's Sample Hats at $1.50 Men's High Grade Sample Hats, new fall styles; values up to $3, at $1.50 lo 5 JEWS TAKE UP LAMP Pi UTAH Xataren&ig Colony b Formed by Group of XtfladeipMa People. TO SETTLE (W TEE PIUTE PROJECT MBfcnfcl ! L4mt mm tk Ob. Mt tfc Ooelvtr la Track tk FeopU tfc WraJtfc that Llea -Wtthla tfc Boll. SALT LAKE, Au. li CSpclAl -Rpr-entftUvM of th Jewish Agricultural and Colonial association of Philadelphia, who have Just closed on of the bUfest land deals of the summer In Utah by purohaslnf 8,000 acres under the Piute Irrigation project, will establish homes daring the next few months for tOO to 600 PhllsdehphU families on this tract Ths purchase of this land, which was made on ths day ths tract was opened by ths Utah Board of Land commissioners, was engineered by Benjamin Brown and L. A. Flax, president and vies president, respectively, of ths Philadelphia association, and ths land. selling for 13S to 10 an acre. InvolTea ap proximately I310.CO0. Negotiations for ths sals of this tract, opened by the Commercial club publicity bureau of Salt Lake City and the Utah Development lea rue, have been continued sine last April and ths sals was mad after ths lepresenta tires of ths association had visited Colorado. New Mexico. Arlsona and other states of ths west While representatives of ths agri cultural association were in Utah three months ago they Inspected th arid Irriga tion project In company with representa tive of ths Utah Development league and tbs Btai Board of Land commissioner and their report to headquarters at Phila delphia, supplemented by complet reports n weather and rainfall oondltlona, soil analysis and en gin Bering reports on ths Irrigation system which has been con structed under tit direction of th Btai Land board. Th Jewish Agricultural and Colonial as sociation, whloh Is directed by wealthy and Influential Jews of Philadelphia, In connection with the .National Farm school, has aroused th Interest of factory and shop workers of Philadelphia In the "back-to-the-soll" movement In a systematic manner. Th children of hundreds of fam ilies have received supplementary educa tional training at ths National Farm school, where agriculture In Its various branohes Is taught, and at th same time th families havs been saving systematic ally and contributing to the funds for tbe purchase of the colonisation tract Within th next few weeks a party of carpenters, masons, laborers and artisans will be sent to Utah to lay' the foundation for the coming of the first 200 families of the colony next spring. By that time a large part of ths tract will havs been cleared of sagebrush, laterals for the Irrigation system constructed and temporary homes erected for ths families to follow. Hist Acres Irrigated. In ths Plut Irrigation project ths state of Utah has selected In all 10.000 acres of land west of th Sevier river, in Sanpete and Sevier counties. Th state reservoir constructed to supply this land will also furnish water for about 15,000 acres of land privately owned under ths system. Th reservoir will Impound approximately 60,000 acr ft of water on the Sevier river In Plut county and th supply will bs am pi to furnish at least SS.000 acres of good bench lands, having an altltud from 1,000 to (.600 feet Ths lands ara situated on ths Sanpete branch of th Denver A Rio Grand railroad and sxtend through ths valley In a north and south direction be tween th towns of Vlantl and Richfield and are also near the towns of Sallna and Gunnison. These towns rang In popula tion from 1,000 to 3,000. A tract of 3.000 acres In Sanpete county was offered Feb ruary 11, 1111, and the remaining tract of 8. 000 acres taken by th Jewish Agricul tural and Colonial association practically Includes all of the state lands under the project Included In th Utah exhibit at the sec ond annual Omaha Land Show will be an interesting collection of Irrigated farm products from the Gunnison valley from ih parts of Piute Irrigation project al ready under cultivation. J. Kdward Taylor, state horticulture In spector for Utah, has been commissioned by th Utah Development league to gather and arrange the Utah exhibit for the Omaha Land Show. His Instructions are to prepare th most apprehensive exhibit of agricultural products of this state that has ever been shown at the land show, and this will bs prepared with a view to using the permanent fixtures and non perishable portions of th exhibit for the exhibition train which Is planned by the Western Development association, organ ised at Omaha during ths first annual land show. Funds for ths exhibit havs been appropriated by the Utah Develop ment league and it Is said that no expense will be spared In gathering an unsurpassed collection of agricultural products of ths Beehive state. Seemed to Civ Htm m ltw ttosaaeh, "I suffered Intensely after sating and no medicine or treatment I tried seemed to do any good." writes H. M. Youngpeters, edi tor of Ths 6un Lake View. O. 'Ths first few doses of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets gave me surprising rilf and th second bottle seemed to give m a new stomach and perfectly good health." For sal by all dealers. Get ready for th Booklovars Contest. Nqfth Platte Men Organize to Boost Many Towns Kepreiented in Eecent meeting in City of Scottsbloff and Committees Chosen. SCOTTSBLUFF. Neb., Aug. 18.-Speclal.) Representatives from the several cities of the North Platte valley from Bridgeport west met at this place and formulated plans for the extensive advertising of this section. A most elaborate display of prod ucts will be prepared for exhibition at th state fair, the Omaha land show and th Chicago land show. K. von ForU, formerly regent of the State university, was chosen chairman of the meeting and presi dent of the association. Q. !. Shumway, secretary of the Bcottsbluff club, was made secretary. Morrill was represented by W. L. Miner, Mr. Stockwell and John Boatsman. Mitchell delegates were C. H. Blackburn, Or W. Whitman. M. E. Cotter. Mlnatare, Otto Jurgens, and Bayard by Dr. Jones and A. P. DeVault A carefull estimate was mad, which Included no feet at the land shows and the attendance four of th llvest live ones at all times and the cost apportioned to th several cities of ths valley. Th com mittee selected to solicit ths fund and to prepare exhibits consist of th following: Lingle, Lloyd Thomas; Torrlngron, T. G. Powers; Henry, Mr. Overman; Merrill, John Boatsman; Mitchell. George Whit man; Gerlng, Frank Sands; Mlnatare, B. F. Rlngsby; Bcottsbluff, 0. L. Shumway; Bayard. J. P. DeVault; Bridgeport. R. P. Bcott; McGrew, L. W. Rlngsby; Northport H. H. Harper. Tbe meeting adjourned to Monday, August 14. at which time th selection of ths representatives will b made. Greenleaf Tells of Wyoming Resources Former Resident of Omaha Returns for Visit and is Loud in Praise of State of His Adoption. W. 8. Greenleaf, a mining engineer of Cody, Wyo., Is visiting In Omaha. He la well known among the engineers of the city, having been formerly associated with the Omaha Water company and th city engineering department. In speaking of the resources of Wyoming and of the fu ture possibilities of Park county, Mr. Greenleaf rays: "It is one of the most wonderful countries I have ever visited. The commercial minerals In the Immediate vicinity of Cody consist of sulphur, coal, kaolin (china clay), gypsum and shale, and axe of th best character. They are found in almost unlimited . quantities. Agriculturally th country with its pres ent Irrigation system, has no limits." In speaking of the resource exhibitions which are held throughout the country, Mr. Greenleaf says that In his opinion Omaha will receive the hearty support and co operation of Park county In the coming land show. This year promises to be the banner year for YellowstoTTe Natlohal park. Hundreds of tourists are leaving Cody very week via th famous Cody road through Shoshone canon, and th addi tional elk allowance Is bringing many sportsmen to the great hunting grounds. NEW BOOK TELLS OF THE WEST A strong presentation of th possibilities of development by irrigation la presented In Harold Bell Wright's new book, "Tbe Winning of Barbara Worth." With a viv idness that assumes reality Mr. Wright shows how capital may be used to gain Its end and at the same ttms save th com munity and still bs "good business." A tls of 4(10,000 of Barbara Worth Is fixed by th publishers, and 17S.OO0 were printed on th first run. Its explanation of th possibilities of th great west should ap peal to everyone. Curtis Business Men Are Wide-Awake They Secure Agricultural College and Are Now Preparing Big Exhibit for the Land Show. CURTIS, Neb., Aug. lT.-That th Stat bureau of publlo lands and buildings had decided on Curtis as a geographical loca tion for the new agricultural college means that this little town in southwestern Ne braska must be of considerable Importance and havs ths natural advantages neces sary In the handling of agricultural college work. Another strong feature of ths Importance of Curtis is shown by the fact that they have secured a large block of space at the Omaha land show, and will have on ex hibition a tine display of the crops of that section as th crop conditions there this year are exceptionally fine. Corn will rang from thirty-five to seventy bushels per acre and other crops sucb as hay, small grains and garden products also pro duce large yields. Curtis has a population of one thousand, and when the proposition of locating the college at this point was put before ths commercial club, they succeeded in raising 130,000 within three days and purchased 480 acres of as fine land for a college loca tion as can be found In Western Ne braska. One important Industry is the flour mill, which runs day and night to fill orders. o assist ") nlflcent I of the ' advisory board whose duty will be to and give advice in preparing a magnificent exhibition. The board- Is composed lonowmg; Parley T. Wright, Ogdn; H. L Griffin, Ogden; G. L. Becker, Ogden; Able John can Fork; W. 11. Ray, Provo; ""'"--i Uia Roylance, Provo; J. S. Page, Jr., Pajini f 3. 8. McBeth, Pay son; Joseph B. Cain, Salt Lake City; Carl R. Williams, Salt Lake City; F. M. Driggs, Ogdsn, and D. F. Col lett. Salt Lake City. UTAH PLANS JFOR BIQ EXHIBIT Governor Spry Appoints Advisory Board to Assist la Preparing Exhibit. Utah Is Just now centering Its efforts on ths Omaha Land show which will be hld October IS to 28. Exhibits ara being as sembled from all parts of the stats showing th great advantages, resources and oppor tunities of ths slop. C. C. Roaewater, president of Omaha Land show, has Just received a letter stat ing that th governor has appointed an Settlers Crowding Montana Sheep Men from Big Pastures Land is Gradually Being Fenced and Tilled and Stook Kaisers Are Turning Farmers. CUT BANKS. Mont., Aug. 18 (Special.)-. Probably th last wool crop to be raised in this northwestern part of Montana is now on th market What western prog ress means Is now mora forcefully than ever reallxed by most of the large sheep men In Teton county. With the incoming settlers, mora and mora land is being fenced and tilled, and the stockmen, who for years have had all of Uncle Sam's big pastures to roam In. are being crowd-i out A number of sheepmen are expecting to sell out this fall, and are going In for dry farming on a large scsle. Ths wonderful crops of the dry farmer have finally aroused th- stockmen his apathy and he is going to try himself. This section of the northwest especially favored. By ths government rainfall maps It Is credited with twenty inches of rainfall per year, while dry farming can be successfully carried on with but twelve Inches. Ths average for th stat of Montana Is about fifteen Inches per year. There Is still some land open for filing In this section. Ths Blackfeet reservation, will soon be thrown open for settlement, although in taking up land on the reserva. tlon th homesteader will have to pay th appraised price to th Blackfest In i froari it foH vest Is ,