r THE COURIER. trl s. n 4 1 m i t K WOMAN'S STORE fi MIT SALE f We're one year old. We celebrate our first anni versary by a great special sale, lasting- from yester day, Friday, morning until Monday at 6 P.M." Dur ing these days we shall offer unprecedented bargains in Cloaks, Suits, Furs, Gloves, etc. Lad ies' Tai lor- M ade Su its SPECIAL BARGAINS. About twenty suits which Bold formerly as high as 1200, have been placed id one lot. lnese are made from jood quality Cheviots and Serges, in colors brown and gray your choice..$7 50 1 Special discount on all higher-priced Suits during this sale. Taffeta Silk Skirts. K i t We have, Our assortment of Silk Skirts is large and up-to date, them as plain or as elaborate as can be desired. Prices 10 00, 812.50, 813.50, 81G 50, 820.00, up to $35.00 Wool Dress Skirts. During the pist few days we have r ceived a laree assortment of Wool Dress Skirts, male from Sergee. Venetian and Broadcloth. These Skirts are flounced, trimmed with bands of Satin or Taffeta, and to be fully appreciated must be seen. PriceB 85.00. 85.50, 8G 00. 87.00, 8 50, $10 00 and $11, It is a well-known fact that our Fur Dapartraent is surpassed by none in the city. Here are a few special values: ELECIRICSEAL COLLARET1ES and STORM COLLARS with tabs, and trimmed with tails prices, $.'1 50, 81.00, 85.C0. 8600 and S7.50 MARTEN STORM COLL A US-Prices 8G75, 811 50, 814.75. .$18. OO ELECTRIC SEAL SCARFS, extra long, with six tails Prices 83 00. 81.00 and $5.00 &URTEN SCARFS, all length Prices. 81.00, 85.00. 8(500. 87.50, up to $26. 50 OrHEiSlYLE3 AM) QUALITIES AT SPECIAL PRICES DURING THIS SALE. Furs! Furs! Furs! 1 Children's Jackets and J a Golf Capes. "T This sale offers an unsurpassed opportunity for the purchasing of T kA school wraps for children. Vm n LOT 1 Jackets for children, ages G to 12 years-come in co!- V 0k ors castor, blue and gray goods woith up to 2 00- W SdlePrice $1.25 J j LOT 2-Jacketa for children, ages 6 to 12 years. These are v v 4 made from boucle and beavnr colors red, blue and M a f castor sold formerly up to 8300 Sile Price $1 98 WW V4 ALL BETTER GRADES OF CHILDREN'S JACKETS AT jfi .J SPECIAL PRICES. y f( Children's Golf Capes, f . Our entire Btock, ranging in piice from $3.90 to 0.00. has A. V been divided into two lots: WW - LOT 1-Sale Price $2.00 ffif rjLOr 2 -Sale Price $3.00 71 These are but few of the Special Bargains offered. Further inves- VT ML tigation will convince you that our announcement or an Unprecedented MM rW Sale is true in every particular. We invite jou to m-estigate. Re- W J member this sale lasts till Monday evening only. t LINCOLN 5 6I .OAK & SUIT? S POMPANY. 1 j m w i v Iy published catalogue numbers twenty nine hundred. Nebraska Beta was established Jan uary 25th. 1895. with eight charter members, and in the fix years of its life in the University hns added thirty-nine names to its roll. Besides the initiated members Nebraska Beta has three pat ronesses: Mrs. A. S. Raymond. Mrs. C. II. Morrill and Mrs. Willard Kimball, also one patron. Mr. A. J. Sawyer, who have always shown the liveliest interest in the chapter. The Lincoln Alumnae club dates its organization from 1S99, and has taken for its work the assistance of the active chapter. The active chapter this year begins its collegiate life with eight members and four pledges, the alumnae eleven. Mrs. Ida Smith-Griffith, of Lawrence, Kansas, ex-grand treasurer of Pi Beta Phi, but now president of Delta pro vince is in the city, a guest of Nebraska Beta and several social functions have been planned in her honor. K SOUTHEAST CORNER 13 ana 0. F Program of the Organ Recital By Mr J. E. Butler, organist of Trin ity Cathedral, Omaha, Friday evening, September twenty-eoventh, at Univer sity chapel. Prelude and Fugue in D Minor J. S. Bach Vorepiel to Lohengrin Wagner To Sevilla J. Dessauer Miss Bessie Turner Overture Semiramidi Intermezzo Forget Me Not March Funebro Stars Franco Leoni Miss Bessie Turner Pilgrims' Chorus Wagner March Militaire Gjunod-Archer Lea Preludes LUzt Miss Anne Stuart, accompanist. Ropbini Majbeth Chopin BEDTIME THOUGHTS. Our little Blue Eyes is going to bed , But never alone goes she; For Dorris and Dorothy over the way In nightgowns white I see , So here is a thought for your dear little head: Across the street they are going to bed . And through the town, where we cannot look, They are going to bed by the score , Till I seem to heir, "Good night! good night i" Passed on from door to door. So here is a thought for your small, curly head: AH over the city they are going to bed . And the thousands of children throughout the land , As westward the sun goes fast, Will say their prayers and climb into bed , Till all will be sleeping at last . Now here is a thought for your wise, little head: Thousands of children will soon be in bed. And all over the world, as the sun journeys on, An army of girls and boys Will don their nightgowns and say good night, Leaving their games and toys . Oh, here's a big thought for your small, curly head : Millions of little ones tudked into bed ! Farmer Greene One o' Jo&u M adder's summer boarders skipped out without tettlin' and Josh is tickled to death. Farmer Brown How's tbat!" Farmer Greene Why, Josh had been tellin' everybody that th' feller wuz a foreign nobleman, an' that proves it. i'uek. REUNITED. Chance never figured in a prettier ro mance than that which has reunited Frank Parrish and his young wifo.und brought to them the delights of u tec ond honeymoon. The man and his wife were living in Galveston. Texas, at the time t the terrible tidal wave of last year. They were caught in the Hood and snparated. The man was nearly drowned, carried across the bay, and lay an invalid in the house of a stranger for weeks. The wife sought him hopelessly for dayB, then donned widow's weed and wont to the home of distant relatives at Mui freesboro, Tennessee. The man. as soon as he had partially regained bis strength, sought anion;; the ruins of his home for his wife's body. It was not there. He widened the cir cle of his search, but never did ho tind 11 trace of her. Disconsolate, sick, weary of life, he went to the ranch of a brother near Roswell, New Mexico. Chance drawing the wife to this state a few days ago reunited this tragically parted couple, and, happy in their re union, they are spending their second honeymoon on the brother's ranch. When the Galveston tlood swept over the city both Parrish and his wife were at their little home. As the water rose they clasped each other in their arms. Then their house was lifted from its foundations and the merciless waves swept the husband and wife out into the darkness, the- tlood and the storm. The husband swam bravely, shouting for help to the winds which whistled their derision. His arms grew weak; be could feel hie wife slipping, inch by inch, from his embrace. He could feel that his swimmirg stroke was impotent against the waves. Then be sank. The water closed over him. The chorus of the winds was drowned by the strange, harsh music of water rushing into the ears. He choked. He felt the breaking of his last faint hold upon the woman beside him. Then all was still. When consciousness returned to Par rish he found himself in a farmer's house on the main land. The farmer told him, bit by bit, of the terrible havee the storm had wrought, and of his mir aculous escape from death being buf feted across the bay and thrown upon G01 HE FIRST COOL DAY Youth's Companion. Mrs. Oldfam That set of china be longed to my great great-grandmother. Caller Did it, really? Why, I have not a single piece that belonged to my great-great-grandmother. Mr&. Oldfam (distantly) Indeed! Caller-No. We always kept ser vants, you know. Er. I Bring your Fur Garments and have them repaired or remod eled, because it will be cold again this year. By the way, you can order a Fur Garment made in the latest stvle at 0. STEELE. ViRRW . iui .ii iiin.ii i im. inn mrnn 4'ov' o I T 1 I Y- i , i r. i n nl i j i II ; 1 1