THE BEE: (WA1TA, TTfTRSnAY, JUNE 10, 1013? ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS THURSDAY Scores in every section bubbling over with truo economy in hot weather merchandise of the most wanted sort Yor Railroad Fare Refunded ROJtfND TMPTytha0nypu.rncd.hviVuaoi ONE WAY :uS aruntlnjr to 20 or. more, within 100 amounting to $10 or more, within r.alloB of Omaha. 100 miles of Omnha. $1.00 MIDDYBL0USESatJ9c CPPPf ATI Children's Middy Dlousos, 35c Gloves Pair 21c A T I Women's "llnlb OljLl,lJljLi! or chamolsotjte UJ. AjVIjTXJU; mfla0 up Rn,i Btamnod irady for embroidery, for fvRos 2 to ii years; pink, bluo, ocru and whlto; Jl values 39c kIovob, two-clasp, white, Wack or tart; regular 35c value. . . . .2f.c MIM ' I-'' HI I Mini, Women's Vests 19c Values, 11c SPECIAL! lie Womon'a Vests, low nock ana sleeveless, Swiss ribbed, full tapod, regular 19c values, Anniversary Sale price Thnrsday, each... Women's 85c Vests, 21c Women's fine cotton vests, also pants and union suits; regular price, 35c, Anniversary Ol Sale price, each AtLC "Women's 25c Vesta, 15c Women's vests, low neck and sleeveless, full taped; regular price 26c, Anniversary 1 C . Sale price, each AO, 50c Union Suits, 30c Women's union suits, low -hock, Bleevoless, knee length, flmmed with lace, 50c and '59 ejo values, garment. .... , 0C 50c Union gaits, 80c uoys porous moim union suits, short sleeve; regular price 50c, Anniversary StLQ prlce, garment 39c I r I u 1 B A Extreme Values in Our Great Annirersary Sale Thursday of HOUSE and STREETDRESSES At About Half the Regular Price IT'S one of the most fortunate "pickups" wo mndo for this great Anniversary sale. Tho Burplus stock of tho North Shore Dress Co., Chicago, 111., at a tremendous sacrifice; and the way we bought is the way we offer them to you Thursday. There Is a scoro or moro of pretty ntslearfroni which to soloct, dlvldod In threo lots thus: Women's $2 Houso Drosses, 98c A SPLENPID "Bsortment of m pretty styles, made of light colored percales, chambray, ging hams, all daintily trimmed with pip- lngs of plain materials. Ono of tho season s values. biggest rogular price, $1 Annl- v o r b a r y Sale price, choice for $2.98 Houso Dresses, $1.49 'TpKERE are sizes for ;women JL and misses, made .of fine lawns, percales, stripe d and chcckctl ginghams, trimmed with cm- broidery rovers nnd pipings of plain contrasting ma terlals" Spiondid values at $2.98. Annlvorsary Sale price, Thursday, your cholco at. . $49 Womtn's $5 Street Drosses, 92.98 npHE materials are fine lawns, chambray, linens, striped and JL checked ginghnms, with collars, cuffs and rovers of pique , lawn, finished with embroidery, others with all-over embroid ery, regular JJfi values. A n n 1 -vorsary sale price, Thursday, at SALE STARTS PROMPTLY AT 8 O'CLOCK; SET YOfrR ALARM AND BE HERE EARLY. Crepe GOWS $2.0 Values, 98c GPTGTT AT I Women's UA. JUV,I.XrJcror,oiiowii9 98c blue and white, daintily trimmod with lace or cmbroWtcxy and ribbon beading-; regularly $2 50c Drawers, 80c Womort's muslin draweiis, Rtcel lont qunUty, made with doop em broldarr flounce; rogulrc a price 69c, Thursday 07'C $2.00 IVtlJcoatA, Pc Wotmon'a cambric pettfj:oats. made with a deco flounce of embroid ery; many pretty designs; regular J200 vnluc. Child's 5Jc PatiaroaUs SOc Made of a, good 'auallty uwalln, for ogos 2 to 10 ytoars; regularly 60c, Anniversary Stale OC price Thursday ......,.. aOC Childti 91.00 Dresses, 40c Mncro of nainsook, for ages 6 months to 2 years; Uicoo are well finished, nnd sell regular ly for 1', Thursday, 98c 49c Kriwiw ui 44,11 y i iirj.riJLjjiy iili 111 ljlms House, at Two Prices, $2,95 or $4.95 A GAIN Thursday the big popular Millinery section will be tho Mecca for real bar- jHL gain seekers. Two big Anniversary Specials m Trimmed Hats like this: !!!! ii ! i ' . Any trimmed hat in the house worth to $15.00, on 1J Mm ' V sale Tliurs- jw day nt, your j& j cholco for. . sSBSr Any trimmed hat in the house worthy to $25.00, onP Nnlo Tliurs- day nt, your choice for. . . . 4 BEAUTIFUL MIDSUMMER PANAMAS Beautiful Sun Bleached Panamas, actual $3.50 val- ues; your choice during this Annlvcr b a fry Sale, Thursday for. $4 98 1 Stunning Sun Bleached Panamas, up to $10.00 values; your C & Of. cliolco during r iWB this Annlvcr- M H sary Sale. 4mBb Thursday at.. Jmm Refrigerators All automatic r o frige raters strictly high grado, a wondorful Ico saver, values from $25 to MO, Thursday at $22.50 , $35.95 $12.00 ltefrigorators, $0.08. "Century rofrlgorators, 24 inches wido, 1C Inches deep, 42 inches high, 70-lb. Ice capacity; worth fully $12.00, dQ QQ special Pl70 $20.00 Refrigerators, $10.83 "Century" refrigerators, a I inches wide, 18 inchos doop, 42 lnchos high, 75-lb. Ico ca- iij QC paclty, special .... P JL O ,OU 1'CK CREAM FKKHZK1U) Peerless Freezers, with pressed steel frames; absolutely guaran teed against breakage: lquart, $1.50 value. . .$1.25 2-qunrt, $H75 value. . .$1.B0 B-qunrt, $2.00 vnluo. . .$1.00 4-qaart, $2.25 value. . .$1.08 High Grade CORSETS at fto 4 V. Off Regular Price in Anniversary SaTe EVERY biijoktm lino or discontinued number is included as well as many stylos of. which our stock is far greater than wo should have at tho presonk'timc.1 All tho best known makes aro included. "OEKDTS SPECIAL CORSET," $1.50 VALUE, 79c. 7 Ono of the best $1.50 values offered anywhoro, made C especially for us by ono of tho foremost cprset makers, nf rrnnrl nniilifv imnfil Dinflinni iMiof lfmn olrtt lnnr trimmed, four hose supporters attached, all sizes. An extreme value at sale prico .79c nil a J: $2.50 CORSETS, $1.19 Well known makes in plain coutil, good boning,, medium In bust lino so much in demand now, long skirt, fin ished with six good hose supporters; regular pricoio f2.hu, AnnlvorsnryJSalo prlco Thuraday, at , ose supporters; $119 $3.50 CORSETS, $1.69 Beautiful models, made of brocade, in medium bust lino, finished with strong embroidery and shirr string, extra long HKirt, with eteol protectors, six good liuno supporters, vai uob up to $8.50, Anni versary salo prico Thursday, oholco !Ctors, six good $169 Orlrin Bros. Your Home Store.! sOrldn Bros. Your Home Store.si BEIEP CITY NEWS Electrlo rn Burcees-aranden Co. riOelltjr Btorr Van Co. Doug. 11 H&t. Boot rUV It Now Beacon Preis. Bmok Conanineri. That Oonsum-We Install them. J. C. Blxby & Son Co.. Seating' enBlncers, 322 South Nineteenth street. Mayor to Jndff Indian Mayor James C. Dahlman will b one tho Judges of the Indian exhibitions at the "frontier Taay" stunts In Sioux City July 2 to 4. Surflawi Steal Hpoons A. burglar gained entrance through a front window to the home of Mrs. J. E. Wagen, 2803 JPlnkney street Tuesday night and secured poons valued at 10. Wain yon XaXm your vacation lav your slfverware, etc.. In Omaha Safa De posit Co.' burglar proof vault. 1618 Far nam St 11.00 per month for a good lzed package. Cut-Off Is Completed The Union Pa cific cut-off betw6cn Gibbon and Hust ings Is completed, the ballasting of the track having been about finished. Freight trains are being run over the road, but regular passenger service will not likely b established before July 1. Passengers,, however, are now carried on the freight trains. Telsphon Asssjnnt Balssd Assess ment of the Nebraska Telephone com ...,. n luruinal nroDerty was rals-jd from U.S34.000 to $2,200,000 by the Board of 1 EquallzaUon today. B. M. Moraman. vtco president of the company, protested against the Increase, but gave no Indica tion that he would appeal from tho board's decision. rawer FupUs In Franklin District There are twenty less pupils In Franklin ochool district than there were a year rko, according to the census which has been taken. This Is due, says Secretary NV. T. Bourke of the Board of Education, to the families who, Injured by the tor nado, have moved out of the district and into others. The census shows S60 jniplls In the district. Tm Sown Old Dewsy Hotl Tha work of tearing down tho , old Dewey hotel building. Thirteenth and Farnam streets, destroyed by fire, has begun. As soon as the site Is cleared work upon the six-story building to be erected as the home of the Omaha Printing com pany will begin". It Is the Intention to have the building ready for occupancy by the first of next year, If possible. Knocked Down by Auto Beatrice Lloyd, 2632 Chicago street, darted before a moving automobile being driven by B. TV. Gamble, Uintah apartments, near Slx tecUi and Farnam streets, and was thrown to the pavement. Outside of a few bruises she was unhurt and after retting a few moments In the Myers blllon drug store, was taken to her home In Gamble's machine. The accident occurred about noon. Cnsck.r Club In Hew Booms The Cmuha Chess and Checker olub haH Moved out of the Barker block and has t-cured headquarters at 100 South Fif teenth stitet, directly ofiwlli' tho army headquarters bulldlnt-' and occupy. ng a portion of the rooms of Bwarts & Mc Kelvy. The new rooms will be opened Epturday nlrht with a smoker, to which all cbess and checker players o'f Omaha are Invited The new rooms will be 'open at all times during weekdays and (will be made comfortable, no matter how .'lot It may be, as electric fans have been UUfWled, OMAHA LAWYERS GATHER Otfer Three Hundred Turn Out at Noon Luncheon. JUDGES ADDRESS ASSEMBLY Exchange Ciiijlnntrlcn of Jurispru dence nnd Then Ilrpnir to Happy Hollow to Try Their llnnild nt Halt. Lawyers' day brought out about 300 for the noon luncheon at the Commercial club. T. W. Blackburn acted as toast- master and had considerable fun at the expense of the Justices of the state supreme court, who were tho guests of honor. Chief Justice Reese, who was tho first member called uyon, congratulated Omaha on everything he could think of, even to the pleasure it must experience at having him as a guest. Ho congratulated the state for having such an able corps of justices and declared ho did not be lieve their superior could be found any where. Ho then announced that his modesty forbade him congratulating the supreme court on having him on the bench. Justice Fawcett look exception to the statement of tho toastmaster, who an nounced that at Happy Hollow in the aft ernoon no lawyers would be allowed to speak, but that some of the Judges might. He praised Douglas county and its bar, and said It had been a pleasure In the supreme court to go over Douglas county cases. H. C. Lindsay, clerk of the supreme court, said he had simply come along to sec what really transpired In Omaha on Lawyers' day, as he had heard the jus tices tell on their return on previous occasions of the great deeds they had performed here at base ball games and other athletic games. He said If there were really any home runs made he wanted to see them with his own eyes. Justice Hamer.told of how kindly he felt toward Omaha since the day he first landed In the village forty-two years ago. His heart, he said, Is still full of gratitude to Omaha for what It has done for hlra. Arthur Wakeley, In behalf.of the bar of Omaha, spoke briefly and seriously, as suring the Justices of the supreme court that every one of them stood high In the opinion of the Douglas county bar, and he hoped .it would be' a long time before there would be occasion for them being regarded In any other light. Breaking away from the tables the lawyers "beat It" for Happy Hollow, where they rolled up their sleeves and played, or attempted to Play, golf. The possibility of sunburned arms did not atop their zeal, and they plunged Jnto the game just as though they knew how, which some few of them did. There will be a dinner there this evening. TOP BEEF PRICE FOR YEAR REACHED AT SOUTH OMAHA Top priced for heavy beef for this year were realized on the South Omaha market today by the sale of twenty head of high grade r.-d and roan Durhams at S8.S0. The sale was made for Phillip Dorr of Crelghton. Neb . to t'udahy Pack Ing company The average weight of the shipment was 1150. They were corn fed. Howell Orders His Clerks to Keep Their Coats On; His is Off "Put on your coats," said R. Beech'er Howell, water commissioner, when his tolling, sweating offlco force hung their coats on a rack and bent to their labors in that very hot west room In tho city hall. "But It's too hot," protected a rather obese bookkeeper. "Don't care. It ain't pollto to wait on customers with your coats off." And then, saying things the water com missioner could not In his official position wholly approve, his dejected office gang went back to work. ''What do you know about that?" said a clerk. "No other firm In Omaha makes such a fool ruling, as far ns I know. If we were back In The Bco building It wouldn't be so bad for it was cool there, but here why man look at me." He wai a sight. Dark and sodden rings circled his 'coat sleeves where tho perspiration had soaked through. Ills shirt clung tenaciously to him. Little streams of water ran In zigzag lines down his flushed face. "Good heavens," said a consumer, "what do we care whether you wear coats or not? All we want Is to have the rates reduced and I can't see how this order for the office force to wear coats does any thing but reduce flesh. Oh, the ways of the water commissioner are certainly past all understanding. Gimme a receipt." While his clerks raged Inwardly and sweated profusely, R. Ueecher Howell, the water commissioner, was sitting In his private office with his coat off, the win dows high, and a cool wind from an elec tric fan, watted his cigarette smoke away. H. S, Commencement Program Consists of Essay Keadings There will be no commencement ad dress at the graduation exercises of tho Central High school seniors nt the Boyd theater Friday evening, but students In stead will read essays. The prorgamf follows: PART I. Music, selected, orchestra. Invocation. Rev. J. A. Jenkins. Presentation of cadet certlflcates.iA. C.( Kennedy, chairman committee on teach-t era and Instruction. Kssap, "Education In a Democracy," Klfrcda Trnulsen. Essay, "Our Debt," Adallno Wyekoff. Vocal soJo, "Three for Jock," Leslie Burkcnroud. Essay, "The Training of the Modern Woman," 'Ruth Mills. PART II. Vocal solo, "O, Thou Kubllm. Sweet Evening-Star," John J, Hanlghen, Jr. Essay, "Fads," Mary Hnller. Oration., "Tho Day of Awakening," Ed ward Cocjkrell. Vocal solo, "Fntnle," Gertrudo Aiken. Oration, "The Problem of the City," Barney Ktulakofsky. Presentation of 'diplomas, El Ins Holo vtchlnor, 'president Board of Education. OMAHA GIRL GRADUATES FROM SMITH COLLEGE Alice Woodworth, . 2iS2 St, Mary's avo nue, graduated yesterday from Smith col lege, North Hampton, Mass. She re ceived an A. B. degree. Baby Welfare Work Conducted in Own Homes This Year The Inst monthly meeting of the Visit ing Nurses' association until fall has been hold. There was n good attendance nnd tho records show that 407 vUlts were n ado among 109 patients during May. Baby welfare work this summer will be conducted for the little tots In their own homes. For three years the association has maintained a baby camp, but on ac count of the difficulty of gottlng mothers to give up their sick infants, It has been decided that more could be accomplished by attending the little ones In their own hemea. Milk and Ice will be taken ta them and thdr mothers Instructed In their comfort tad care. In the dispensary during the last two'' months there, have been 591 cases report-, Ing there. With Ml follow-up visits Into hcmoij. The city turned over fnrtv.olvht t,,h... oular cases to the dispensary lost week. Automobile (Joe. over niaff. TRIKIDAD. Colo.. June 11 Thr wm seriously Injured today when an auto mobUe driven -by Charles E. Carter, a prominent btslneao man, plunged .over a fifty-Coot embankment on La Veta tuh. fifty miles northwest of here. Frank Lewie and. C. H. Chapman were the other members of the party. All are In a serious condition. Ohioans to Have Picnia on Saturday, With Fried Chicken The Ohio society, which has been !u exlstenco twenty-three years, will give a basket picnic in Hanscom park Saturday afternoon. The date had been set for June 2S, but on account of that being registration day it was changed to June 21. One feature of tho picnic Is that .all are expected to bring among other things, fried chicken. John L. Webster will be one of the speakers of the occasion. There will also be a male quartette. Among tho various songs will bo those written for the oc casion and also the sopg written and sung on the dedication of the first court house In the northweBt territory In tho woods near Marietta, September 2, 177S. All Ohioans, by nativity, or residence, are Invited to be present and bring their families. JUDGES KEEP ON THEIR COATS IN OPEN SESSION None but tho Judges has to wear a coat In tho district and county court rooms during the present hot weather. Judge Sutton in court room No. 1 on the fourth (floor, which Is the warmest room In the building, established the precedent for the j year of allowing Jurors, lawyers and whomever win, to sit in their shirtsleeves, and the custom became In force In every court room. The judges, however, still letaln thtlr coats while sitting on the bench. 1 s YOUR "SUMMER TREAT" You had it last Summer and found it a joy to' the palate and a delight to the stomach. This is merely a reminder to you not to miss this deliciously wholesome dish hredded Wheat Biscuit and Strawberries This is a "treat" you owe yourself after the heavy diet of the Winter months. If you know this rare combi nation you will thank us for reminding you of it. If you never tried it you will thank us for telling you how easily and quickly you can prepare it and how health ful and nourishing it is. Heat one or more Biscuits in'the oven to restore crispneu; then cover with berries or other fresh fruit; serve with milk or cream and sweeten to suit the taste. Requires no baking or cooking'. More nourishing said more healthful than ordL, nary shortcake. Make Your Meat Shredded Wheat Made only by The Shredde4 Wheat; Company, Niagara Falls. N.Y, MMMBWaVMHMMaeaW t