rm: bee: omaha, RATntnAv, wnu. 2. mi.v Extra Special Furniture Values On IVlost Liberal Credit Terms r , m mmsmm. 'soifc .(MmwRmom mini i n mib Sy Ifij F EST VALUE U3.VER OFFERED BED, SPRING MATTRESS COMPLETE $1.50 Cash 1 $1.60 a Month For This Vernis Martin 2-Inch Post BED, STEEL SPRINGS and 40-lb. Sanitary Mattress Handsomely Designed All Steel Bed Outfit Bed Is very massive with 2-Inch continuous posts, enameled In the popu lar Vernis Martin. Strongly constructed, woven wire springs with steel frame and a 40-lb. well made, sanitary felt top mattress. This Is posi tively a ueciaeci value at tne unusually low price tor bed, spring and mattress, complete. For tomorrow only at. $10.98 Ladies' Slip-ons and Automo mm m mm mm Jfc Q II mm bilo Coats $5 to $15 MUCICvOhML!UI SERGE SUITS Ladies' gen uine Panamas Genuine Solid Oak Dresser Colonlnl design, with tli".i larf.u drawers fitted with wood pulls Large French leveled plate mir ror, square frame, suppirtcd nv scroti standards, neatly carved. V big aluo at thin price suppjrieu 'iv $7.65 Our Special Price Missin Set Bargain $1.50 Cash, $1.00 a Month Made of solid oak In Early English or fumed finish. Seats have full set of steel springs, upholstered in Imperial Spanish leathor. Table has two magazine compartments and large book shelf. Very specially priced for this week's selling and a great value while a limited number of these sets last Mocker and chair have wide arms nnd broad backs. $12.95 Special Sale ef Bamboo Furniture Only through the tremendous buying power of llartman's stores were we able to purchase these exceptional bargains in bnm hoo furniture. We are placing an entire car on sale at prices that are astonishing, lower than heretofore have ever been offered. Be low we offer for Saturday's sale a few of these exceptional bargains. $1.10 $1.20 $1.29 Large,, site Bamboo Center Table. Matches the clialr onnosl f.MoiiH- ly braced with hook shelf and top or tame covered in iiign grade matting. For to morrow's celling at this unheard of price 89c Large size magazine racks with three shelves. Strongly constructed Artistic Umbrella Stands, of good size, very neat and pretty . . , Well made corner, chair.. Strong seat cov. ercd with high grade Japanese matting Extra large, .folding bamboo music or mazine rack Heavy bamboo matting seat, largo size sewing rockers. . . . Unmboo sowing tables, with 10 AC matting top, sectional interior ip.T'O $1.35 $1 95 ft. A B IH t m t m mm mm uno Panamas T R Omaha's Greatest Clothing House $10-$15-$20-$25 THESE suits are guaranteed to bo absolutely last color and all wool mado up in two or three button coats, long or short lapols. The now English model or the Norfolk. A very new novelty in blue is an English model with snug fitting shoulders and waist with bound edgos. A bluo sorgo suit is always dressy, suitable for many occasions, in fact, the most economical suit you could buy. We win fit any build man- slim or stout made by Knppenheimer - Schloss Bros. Stein Bloch - Sophomore and Society brand. SPRING SHIRTS and UNDERWEAR E. & W., Manhattan, Savoy and Excollo Shirts, all sizes from 14 to 18 thousands of patterns to soloct from $1.00 to $3.50 VasBar, Superior, Van Dyke and Kitesize Union Suits $1.00 to $5.00 Athletic Union Suits . $1.00 Crepe Superior Union Suits . ... $1.50 French UbIo Athletic Union Suits $2.00 I'nion Suits, short sleeves, one-fourth leg.... $1.25 The Now Bulgarian Silk Cravats 50c Stetson Hats $3.50 to $12 Mallory's Crave netted soft and stiff Hats $:.? Berg's Special Soft and stiff hats, $2 English Caps-rat.. 50e to $2.50 Beautiful design and ntroni.iv con structed Bamboo Chair. Exactly lllA lltllu ..... Inn 1 . . round seat covered In hlrfh grade muiiing. A aiue hnt tutia Iia a..n to be appreciated at mis very low price In hlrfh gradu $1.38 Men's Slip-ons, Gabardines and Watershed Coats. ... $5 to $30 ( ltn.Amant an sltnu'lt In ll 1 11 H I m t iOfl. Rp movable drain pipes, enameled shelves, bull-bearing castors. Guaranteed ice saver I'rlced for this sale up from Largest Line of Ever Shown New 1913 Style White ' Enameled Refrigerator Made of the best hnrd wood nnd thoroughly lined with char coal and miner al wool. Con structed with evory k n o-w n $6.95 Wonderful K tchen Cabi net Bargain 98 $1.75 Cash $1.50 a Month llartman's Spe cial YVaictd oi l Kitchen Cabinet Just like il lustration, Mad) with eery known conven ience for tho kitchen. Sliding metal top. In dividual flour and cake bin, handv uten n 1 1 drawers, separate compartment for pots and pans and room) china com partment. The greatest value ever offered at this low price, $17.95 1414, 1416, 1418 Douglas St. 1414, 1416, 1418 Douglas St. New Books Fiction. TUB JUDGMENT HOUSE. Hy Gl' bert I'arker. 4 Pp. Harper & llrothers. The author's knowledge of men and motives, and his understanding of .the deeper impulses and emotions, are strongly manifested. Kach person of the story has his charm, or interest, ot man ner, of point of view, ot individual ex ptesslon.. The book opens the night of the Jameson raid, but the opening scene is In London, at Covent Gardun. Rud ynrd Byng, South African millionaire, sits in a box at the opera with Jasmine Grenfel; with them Is lan Stafford, high up In England's diplomatic service, in love with Jasmine, and sure of winning his suit. On the stage a newly found star of song is thrilling the house when her filmy robe ea tubes (Ire, and Byng leaps' from the box. and with Jasmine's cloak smothers the flameo, Ian Staf ford goes away on a diplomatic mission arid in the meantime Jasmine throws htm over and marries Hyng. When he re turns three years later his apparent In difference piques Jatmine, and in guise tf helping him with his work she brings him to the point of dlsresurdlng his friendship with Hyng If she will go with him to soma far-otf corner of the world. All this time she is playing with Adrian Fellows, her husband's secretary, a handsome beast and the lover of Al'mah, the singer in the opening scene, and be trays to him Uoer secrets, which he hastens to sell to Oom Paul, through Qyng'a Hottentot servant, and it diplo mat from the continent Is also another admirer But when the war opens her hcu.se of cards falls; the servant reveals her dallylngs with the secretary to her hUHband. and he shows the Incriminating letter to Stafford, who Is disillusioned nnd grimly resolved to save Byng further knowledge, befriends Jasmine to her hus bend and to her husband's friends. Fel lows Is found dead without trace of vio lence and Byng. Stafford and Jasmine, each wonder If the other two killed him. Tho scene moves to the Transvaal, and the grim and simple realities of life and death show the development of character that leads to a new sort of happiness for Jasmine and her husband. It Is a thrill ing and Intensely human story. WAR. By John Luther Long. Tit Pp. $1.30. BobbM-Merrtll company. A kindly old German unfolds the tale of the strlte-rldden sixties, full of the file of patriotism and love. A girl Imaginative, darln?, courageous and two' brothers, both ttalwart, honest men, are the central figures. The 'tale sympa thetically mingles the Joys, disappoint ment, daring and turmoil ot the days of anxiety of the war between the states, By Albert Ed The Macmlllan COMRADE i'BTTA. wards. IIS Pp. $1.35. company. In this novel the author paints tho tragic side of life In the East Side. The book opens with a brief account of Yetta's childhood, before her father dies i and forces her, at the age of IS, to go to wgrk In a sweat shop. After several tears there Is a strike, and she is saved Irom a moit deplorable fate by Mabel Train, an offWr of the Woman's Trade Union league. Then begins a new period for Tetta, u period In which she comes to be recog nized as the leader of the working girls, a period in which education and th molding of her very great natural ability Play Important parts. What the doc with her new and larger possibilities and how she meets the various crises which come Into her life make up tho balance of the story which Is fsaught with no little significance. THE BISHOP'S PUIISE By Oliver Hrrford and Cleveland Motfett- 354 Pp. $1.30. D. Appleton & Co. A clever girl thief filches a purse con taining J5,00) from a bishop. When the theft Is discovered she drops the purse into a girl's golf bag. Intending to ex tract it at the first opportunity. A de tective, recognizing her. watches her so closely that she dares not attempt to re cover It Her pursuit of the girl with the golf hag and her many bold at tempts to regain the money are Intensely Interesting. PIPPIN. By Evelyn Vun Puren. 216 Pp. $1.30. The Century company. Pippin christened hy an aspiring mother Victoria . Alexandria Is a child of the London streets. Pippin has been the tool of clever pickpockets, and proved cleverer than her teachers; but she Is, sound at core, and when a lover comes aspires to give up all crookedness for th sake- of Dandy and of the frail little brother she mothers. Pippin herself is so matter-of-fact and go-ahead and hope ful about her reform that there Is not a touch of pathos In the situation; but there Is a rare lot of fun all through, from the first chapter, where Dad Ray mond expounds his views of family obligations, to the very end, when Pippin finds her cup overflowing, having played a very large part In making tho fortunes nnd happiness of u charming American actress VANISHING POINTS By Alice Brown. - 62 Pp. $1.25. Miicn)lllan company ' The keynote of each one of the stories . which make up tho volume Is some hiimnn I characteristic that Is universal. Love for mankind, ambition, greed, pride, i honor, love for the beautiful, parent loc nil form the basis of one or more tnlcs. Of course, there are Included several bits of old New England, for tho plctur , Ing of which Miss Brown is Justly famous. THE IMPOSSIBLE BOY. By Nina Wilcox Putnam. 335 Pp. $1.35. Bobhs Merrill Company. j The boy's name Is Pedro, and wander ing with his tamo bear In company with some other Interesting gypsies, meets a ; wonderful golden-huircd girl, whom he , saves from a tramp, lie Is on his nny 1 to New York' to become n painter, itpd . the other gypsies and their bears arc j loyally accompanying him. He promptly ; meets the artist, who has Jdst been rc 1 Jcrted by the golden-haired girl, and i said artist promptly swaps his studio for Pedro's bear. In n few weeks the gypsy i boy Is Senor Pedro. At this point tlm i trouble of this Joyous roundelay Is dls j turhed by the bnss rumblings of nothing , less thnn another Vcnezulenn revolution. "Thickens" Is no word for what the plot j does. Being a wise and wcll-regulatei I novel. It nil comes out right, of course, In the end, but In a very surprising and diverting way. THE WOMAN IN BLACIf. By Ed mund r. Be ntley. S00 Pp. $1.25, The Cen tury company. Hlgsboo Manderson of scnsatlonnl for tune and career and a dominating power In the financial world, dies suddenly at nls English country home, starting the financial world Into a panic. Then comes the report that he has been murdered, nnd robbery Is not the motive. Every theory Is blocked by proof that the trail Is wrong, yet every trail leads Into home curious tangle. There Is some very elevi r character drawing to add to the Interest of an exceptionally well-plotted tnle. which comes after many sensational pages. Jnvrnllr, BEAVER WORLD. Bv Enos A. Mills. 221 Pp. $1.73. Houghton Mifflin company. This book is the result of beaver studies of many years, and the Investigations were made during every season of the year. The author not only has studied the beaver, but has taken notice of trees, birds, flowers, glaciers nnd bears. and It Is quite the most Instructive and accurate account of the boaver that has been published. It Is equally Interesting to the grown-up and tho child, and one of the most pleasing features are the Il lustrations, which are from photographs by the author. THE JUNIOR TROPHY. By Ralph Henry Barbour. 310 Pp. $1.25. D. Apple ton & Co. A small private school In New York state Is the scene of "The Junior Trophy.'" "Kid" Fulrchlld, In an en deavor to earn money, becomes an agent for Tinkham's Throat Ease, and gets himself into hot water by "high finance" methods. Hockey and base ball contests enliven the story, and the way "Kid" Kalrohlld wins the deciding ball game for his team will win the admiration and envy of every boy. DAVE PORTER AND THE RUNA WAYS. By Edward Ktratemeyer. 01 Ip. $1.X. Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co. While Dave is hard at work, bent on graduating with honors, some of the stu dents are accused of a grave crime, and while Dave and one of, his ohums resolve to stay and face the music, the others flee In tenor, fearing arrest. Dave re solves to bring the runaways hack, and goes after' them, only to be caught In a flood, caused by the breaking of a dam. A STORY GARDEN FpR LITTLE CHILDREN. By Maud Lindsay. 91 Pp. $1. Lothrop, Iee 4 Shepard company. There are twenty stories, in large, clear type, and eaoh with a full-page picture and smaller decorative illustrations. Every detail has been planned to delight the eye and mind of our little people. SIN&PH. THE INDIAN BOY By James Wlllard Schultz. 155 Pp. $ 10. Houghton Mifflin company The author tells In an JST""? wjiy tho incidents of the onrly life of n Blnck- foot Indian boy Children, whose Interest In Indians Is, of course, perennial, will i find the hook of remarkable fnclnattou. lllusttntcd. WHEN I WAS ABOY IN GREECE. By George Demntrloun. 1K8 Pp. 00 cents. Iothrop, Leo A Shepard company The young teller of this story enmo hut recently from Macedonia. A grnphlo ac count Is given of tho country nnd Its customs, with the homo nnd school life. tusks and pleasures of a real boy In a land strange to us. THE SILVER ISLAND OK THE CHIP PEWA. By I). Lange. 24 Pp. $1. Lothrop; Lee & Shepard company. The author tells of the famous Silver Island In Lake Superior, nnd represents a youth of in and his active small brother, ns locating after eight months of wild life, during which they wlnteied on Islo Royal. The success and caenpo from a murderous lialf-brocd . are duo to the friendship of a noble Chlppown In dian, nnd much Is told of Indian nature ami ways. THE CHILDREN AT RED HOUSE. By Amandii M. Douglas. 352 Pp. $1. Li tin op, Leo & Shepurd company. Eight blight children, with n kind and loving mother, make up the Red House family, and the change to better circum stances through a new father, and a good one, does not In tho least "spoil" them. Kun and frolic in plenty are a part of tholr wholesome development, and the story does not drag for a moment NO PAIN Wo poHltlvoly gunrnntco to extract tooth or pro pnro tho mont sensitive decayed tooth nnd fill without ono particle of pain. iilnta for the Kitchen. Boiled rlco must always bo tightly handled. It should not be stirred with a fork or spoon. To remove scorch marks from fireproof dishes soak them In strong bornx water until tho ugly marks upon them enn bo rubbed of with a cloth. To make oatmeal Jelly T.oll four table- spoonfuls of oatmeal In ono pint of water fin a double holler) for three hours, add ing water from time to time, nnd then strain. When mnklng baked or boiled custnrd tho milk to be used should bo scalded and set oslde to cool. Then innko a custard In tho oidlnnry way, and It will be perfectly smooth. Lamp chimneys and othpr glassware boiled In salt water are considerably toughened. Wicks which have been used a long time and smoke when burning should be vouked several hours In vine gar and allowed to dry thoioughly, when the flame will burn with a renewed brightness. BAILEY the DENTIST 70(1 City Xntlonnl llnnk Hltli nnd Ilnnicy Ht. Oinnlin Special Round Trip Fares To Points West Liberal Return Limits and Stopover Privileges S55 to CALIFORNIA AND NORTH PACIFIC COAST POINTS. Tickets on sale to Califor nia Juno .'K) to July 7; August 22 to 29; to North Pacific Coast, June 1 to 4; Juno 22 to 29; July 8 to 11. $721 to CALIFORNIA ONE WAY VIA NORTH PACIFIC COAST. Tickets on salo Juno 1. to 4; Juno 22 to 29; June 30 to July 7; July 8 to 11; August 22 to 29. Ellick Gets Watch in Recognition of Work "To Mr. Frank I. Elllck. a willing tor nado relief worker, with expressions of esteem and n'dmlratlon. The Board of Directors, Omaha Manufacturers' associa tion, 1913." This Is engraved on the inside of the case of a beautiful gold watch sent to V. I. Elllck by tho Manufacturers' us soclatlon, of which he Is vice prerldent. The following telegram, a copy of a rec. on! put Into the minutes of the organiza tion, was also snt to him: "The board of directors of the Omaha Manufacturers' association desire to ex press to ItH vice president, Mr. Frank I. Elllck. Its most grateful appreciation and slncero admiration of the masterful manner In which ho performed the duties which he assumed In usslstlng in tho di rection of the relief work given to the sufferers of the tornado which visited Omaha March 3, 1913." !i60 $771 $173 CITY ACCEPTS GIFT FROM MRS. G. A. J0SLYN At a special meeting of the city com mission the offer of Mrs. George A. Jos lyn to donate her collection of rare orchids to the city along with $Z,ooo to care for them was accepted by unanimous vote and Mrs. Joslyn will be tendered a formal note of appreciation and thanks. Death on the (iullniTH. Is sharp, short agony. The lame back of Kidney trouble Is daily misery Taka Electrio Bitters for quick relief 50c, For sale by Beaton Drug Co, -Advertisement, $303 to CALIFORNIA AND NORTH PACIFIC COAST. Tickets on sale Juno 1 to Septem ber 30. to CALIFORNIA ONE WAY VIA NORTH PACIFIC COAST. Tickets on sale June 1 to September 30. to DENVER, COLORADO SPRINGS or PUEBLO. Tiokets on sale Juno 1 to Sep tember 30. to SALT LAKE OR OGDEN. Tickets on sale June 1 to September 30. DOUBLE TRACK STANDARD ROAD OF THE WEST Protected by Automatic Electric Block Safety Signals DUSTLESS ROADBED. DOUBLE TRACK. Key to the Situation Be Advertising. For literature and furthor Information relative to fares, routes, etc., call on or address L. BEDTDORFF, 0. P. & T. A., 1324 Farnam St., Omaha, Nebr Phone Doug. 331"