Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 4, 1909, Page 9

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PART TWO. EDITORIAL PAGES 1 TO 10, THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. MORNIN HA, SUNDAY SINGLE COPY FIVE CE Unlimited Variety Easter Millinery Almost a thousand exquisite Easter Hats at $10.00 and under. Just think of the oppor- tunity for choosing from such a line. It's a stock noted for its beautiful styles; the choicest ever displayed in the west at our prices. There’s another lot of charming Easter Hate on sale this week that cannot be bought in any other store for less than double 310 Powerful Introductory Sale| 1,000 Superb Styles ‘We announce today the moat important sale of high grade tailored suits this store has made, and without quest\on, the. best sale of the kind this city has ever known. The mak- ers of the famous ‘‘ Wooltex’*suits having confined the sale of their goods to the Bennett e o = = e e S s S SR store have taken a lively interest in this event and through their co-operation we expect to BOYS’ Confirmation and Easter Suits have the most successful sale the great west has known. As every garment buyer knows T e e e o e e R T and as millions of America’s well-informed women know ‘‘Wooltex’’ is the embodiment of all that is desirable in women’s wear, Tailoring art, as applied to women’s suits has never attained a higher degree of perfection than you’ll find in ‘‘Wooltex’’ garments. . Altera- tions are reduced to a minimum. They are made from finest imported fabrics that are absolutely pure wool with a guarantee to give two season’s satisfactory wear, $35 It is purely an introductory sale to get Omaha’s fashionable colony and every woman who prides herself in being well-dressed fully and more thoroughly acquainted with “Wooltex’’ style and ‘“Wooltex’’ quality. Every one of these suits is in accord with elegance and good taste. Freaks of fashion and fanciful fads—here today and gone to- morrow, have been avoided. Back of every ‘‘Wooltex” garment is an organization il world-wide in its scope, reaching out, acquiring and originating styles that make for indi- viduality, that lift ‘*Wooltex’’ out of the rut, and the rank and file of common-place styles with which the market is overrun. All the Fashionable Shades Easter Gloves i ive as- The Monday sales will start the annual Easter rush at the gloce counters. Evtenal sortments of all the season's most desirable gloves at very inviting prices are attractions that will throng the aisle with shoppers. - Kay: Real Kid Two-Ols ilty, In Two-Olasp Silk Gloves —Famous Kayser or Fownes . gomniets rt\nl‘l'..nf RLor. -"‘ éli“z? Best Imported prndur!:_ black and leadin 82.00 Fownes' 12-button 8ilk Glove: Fownes' 16-button Silk Gloves, $1,00 Kayser's and Fownes' 2-clasp Gluvea 1\|lh dl)\lh!n Ilr\ned fingers B0c and 78¢ @loves—Ver: ‘mh oves —N. colors, pair fine qu Hundreds of clever striking hats trimmed in i flowers, fruits and foliage, in the newest drooping shades Values clearly $8.00 to $10.00, makes, in roseda, olive, rose, raspberry, wistaria, taupe, gray, champagne or other shades....81.00 Fino Two-Clasp Lambskin Gloves—All the lnnflhos colors, for Lambskin Gloves, with Paris point -mhmme colors 8. & E. Green Trading Stamps cvery day in all departments yith every purchase all Another of Bennett S Famous Black Silk Sale " trike'’ in this 0,000 yards of the finest black silks purchased at lower prices than we have had before. Our New York office makes a ‘‘ten st | deal (:‘:nr‘ln- ltflk’n th:l are :um in universal demand enabling us to make a sale that dwarfs in comparison our previous successes. The bargains are ;Imply phenomenal. Every yard is backed by a Bennett guarantee which protects you against any possible loss. FREE e We again make the offer of making to your measure a beautiful, PETTICOAT from any of the taffetas in this sale, ab- solutely free of charge. --$1.39 -$1.08 Women'’s Messaline and Directoire Satin—The handsomest silk in the black silk family. It's full 386 inches wide, soft and clingy and best dress silk made— $2.00 goods, at .$1.29 . Black Silk for Coats—An absolutely non-crushable silk suitable for auto and traveling coats, 36-in. wide, regular $2 quality, for e 81,19 Black Silk Radium—Peau de Cygne and Messalines, 24-inches wide, very choice, $1.00 silks in Mon- day's sale ... PPt - ] 86-inch Black Peau de Cygne—A high ‘grade silk and really a remarkably big $1.50 value, rich and beautiful and most durable silk we have, yd. 98¢ 274nch Black Louisine—A silk that is very soft and lustrous, absolutely none at $1.25 to equal this quality, our special price, yard.. 79¢ Black Taffetas—Three marvelous bargain lots $2.00 Black Taffetas.. ..$1.39 $1.50 Black Taffetas .. = $1.39 Black Taffetas . o and a petticoat made free. FASHION FAULTLESS $2.00 Taffetas .. $1.50 Taffetas ... $1.39 Taffetas ... HWatches, Diamonds, Gold Jewelry Colossal Purchase and Sale Tomorrow another sale of fine jewelry with prices down to less than half wholesale values. Several complete stocks watches, diamonds, solid gold and gold filled jewelry. Every piece fully guaranteed. = UNMATCHABLE WATOH BARGAINS Men's Gold Filled Watches, open face, hand- engraved, warranted for 20 years, either El- gin or Waltham movement, Easter week sales in boys’ clothing, 5,000 new stylish suits and reefers on sale; bought at very low figures and priced to create biggest Easter business ever done at Bennett’s, A fine base ball and bat FREE with any purchase of a suit or reefer as an extra inducement. Boys' Confirmation Suits of strictly all pure wool, or black serge, made double-breasted, pants. ... $3.50 $ Long pants suits of same materials, at $7.50, $10, $ 500 Two Pants Suits with $1.25 saving on every one. These suits are pure wool in tan, gray and green mix- tures. Two pairs knickerbocker pants with each sty- lish taloring cuffs on sleeves, flaps on pockets, etc. Best $5.00 values in America $3.75 Sailor Collar Russian and Blouse Suits—Handsome. ef. fects in all the best shades and patterns. Every mother will find in these lots something to please her— prices ... ....$4.00 $3.00 $2.00 Boys' Reefers—A world of dressy little top coats for spring—double-breasted styles in covert, green, gray. olive, also nice line of reds. Every one represents. a N snug saving—$5.00 and Boys' Caps and Hats—Dozens fects, all colors. Etons, yacht, telt hats blue coat and knicker .00 $6.00 and 87 00 In this sale we have assembled over 1,000 suits with actual retail values of $50.00, and choice for. 25 Same watches with hunting case for $11.50. Men's Thin Model hand-engraved, warranted for 1igin or Waltham movement, at Watches—Hunting case, 20 years. $12.50 Women's Gold Filled Watches—O size, hunt- ing case, hand-engraved, warranted 20 yrs. Complete with Elgin or Waltham sll so movement .. Thousands of Bargains Fine Jewelry Back Combs—Finest quality, nettings, * values to 36. Of pretty new spring ef- golt caps and cloth and -25¢ to $1.25 A good Ameriean Bat and Cracker- brilliant Jack Base Ball with purchase of any " ehole suit or reefer. Pretty Wash Dress Materials Cotton Poplins in the popular shades are quite the dressiest fabrics for tail- ored street or travéling dresses, colors launder perfectly, yd.25¢ and 35¢ French Ginghams—Scores of effective new patterns suitable for all pur- poses for women and children—quality extremely fine, yard 25¢ /A Real Bargain—Madras—White grounds with black or colored stripes and neat designs. 26c goods on sale at, yard. . .10¢ at. 8 Back ' Combs—-With genuine cameo and brilliant settings, $25.00 value, 8olia’ Gold ‘Btiok Fins styles, values to $6.5 Stick Btiok Pins_—Gold filled, signs, $2.00 goods, at.... Genuine Coral Cameos—in beautiful inest carved goods, than ever shown. nuine Turquoise Matrix Jewelry — Solid gold and gold fllled rings, brooches, cuff links, stick pins, La Vallleres, etc. Most extensive sliow- ing ever made in Omaha. All at less than other jewelers’ wholesale cost. newest de- 500 The sale tomorrow includes every new fashionable shade and fabric. “Fashion Faultless” to a degree, all regular $50.00 valaes on sale for . ; et yx goods, sale Gold Filled years, values to $6.60, ‘Values to $3.60, for. Braceleta—1,000 'J. Filled “Bracelets, cholee, .. Sturdy | Gold vaiues to $9.00; in Watch Fobs, &s, Jewel Boxes, Sterling Pi rames, Belt Buckies and Pins, ete. . .. 8. Ta *and Finest xnld filled; values to Sur rising Embroidiofiry Bargaln Monday’s sales are the best ever. It’s the chance of the year to buy right. Flouncings 24x27 inches wide, thousand yards just arrived, most beautiful and elaborate patterns ever on any counter at 59¢, Mon- terials, values double, day, yard 25¢ down to 25¢ Embroideries at Half—One large lot edeges, insertions, bands, ete.— 25¢ values, for SPECIAL OFFERING Easter Corsets On sale Monday, bargain, in high grade sets, way under price. Absolutely never such embroidery selling in this eity. Allovers Handsome allover embroideries ' in open and blind effects, actual $1.00 goods for dressy waists, yokes and children’s wear, yard Embroideries 250 pieces edges and insertions in match sets, tasteful and heavy pat- terns on nainsook and Swiss ma- Off on- Entire 20% Monday Other big bargains all through the Cut Glass line. We mention but a few: Cutglass Bowls, 9-inci size, Seward pattern, sells reg- ularly at $9.50, for $5.00 QCelery Trays, Manchester cut, a regular $6.60 qual- ity for a special $2.50 Cor- These are the most desirable, up-to-date Cor- sets made—high bust, and extra long hip—just the right styles over which to fit your new Easter Suit. Groceries for Less at Bennett's Bennett's Golden Coffee, 1b. Lipton's Tea, pound .o 600—and 40 stamps Bennett’s Capitol pure pepper, can.10c—and § stamps Tess, assorted kinds, Ib ...150—arnd 10 stamps Tea Siftings, per 1b 15c—and 10 stamps Granulated sugar, 20 Ibs. .. Navy Beans, 6 1bs. for Corn Meal, white or yellow, &:lh. sack ..12%¢ Sweet Pickhd Penrhel. qt jar.25¢ Bennett's Capitol Extracts, bottle..18c—and 20 stamps Special Offers in T. A. Saider Co. Goods. Snider's Catsup, pint bottla......230—and Snider's Chili Sauce, pint bottle. . . .250—dand Snider's Oocktall Sauce, pint bottle.@50—and Snider’s Salad Dressing, pint bottle.250—and Saider’s Pork and Beans, 3-1b. cans. . 200—and Snider’s Pork and Beans, 3-1b. cans..150—and Pure Honey, Mason pint jar. .. . 250—and Armour’s Sliced Dried Beef, jar .15c—and Egg-0-See Corn Flakes, 8 pkgs 25c—and Iten's Grabam Biscuit, pkg. Iten's Tourist Crackers, pkg. . Springtime Hardware Things you'll need in gardening, for the lawn, in your housecleaning. Very special prices for Monday. Railroad Wheelbarrows—Good and substantially con- structed, they are almost indespensable about the home, our $2.25 line for. .81.75 POULTRY WIRE—Our second uirllmd in’ this sea- son on sale to morrow, full rolls, sq. foot... Smaller quantities, sq. foot. . . Lawn Rakes—24-tooth, roguh\l’ 40( Ilnn r(lr Garden Hoes—Riveted, special Monday. Water Filters—Also answer for good wi $4.25 regularly, for . Carpet Beaters—4 sizes, each 20¢ And Ten Stamps 'lvi?hc 15e Zbc for cleaning walls and Lefllnnu 20c—and 30 stamps *“Dorothy Dodd™ low shoes for Spring come in Gun Metal, Patent finished leathers, Black and Tan Kid, Tan Russia ; Suede finished Ooze leathersand Cravenetted cloth. In all shapes and all pattems. Sugar Creams, size, $4.50 & pair- speclal, $3.98 Nappies, han- dled, G-in., are worth $1.75 — on sale at 98c Bread and But- tor Plates — lLiandsome cut- ting, wpectul, at, each §1.98 Libbey Sugars and Oreams— Iola pattern, at 8a.98 Libby Out- glass Bowls, 8-inch, Iola pattern, $6.00 value, at §3.48 They are made for service, being substantially boned; nicely trimmed and fit- ted with support- ers. Our Special Price 1.35 Expert fittings by corsetieres, trained in the business. 8 or Veg per pac o 3% Flower table, nge . stamps stamps stamps stamps stamps stamps stamps stamps stampa stamps stamps including and 200 400—and 30 stamps - 400—and 20 stamps .lbo —and 10 stamps -§L.75 and §1.98 Broom Oovers 10 stamps, for Belt $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 L and $5.00 Also fine asortments of new bronze kid oxfords and pumps. | = B it Bt Monday . loor Wax, oan. o, can.. o @Gasoline Oveans, extra good quality 40 stamps with each. Baseball Goods Bennett's Sporting Goods Department is fully equip- ped with every necesary adjunct required in our national gume. Balls, bats, gloves, uniforms, masks, etc £00ds up to the best Spalding goods of all sorts. b Johnson's Preparcd Wall . ! Juvenile | Laterary-Artistic theater here, called usu- !h at the literary evenings, then, as now, | burgskl Viedomostl. After elghteen months |under the rubric “Little Letters” and kept ally the Suvorin theater, and he is an|a favorite soclal pastime | ot freclance newspaper work M. Suvorin, |the true epistolary, animated style eager student of modern painting | He was Invited at the end of that year | with & partner, M. Likhatcheff, acquired | 1n recent years Buvorin has Old Serger Suvorin, his father, was a|to Moscow by the Countess Sallas to write [in 157 the Novole V a Bt. Peters- | nimsolt specially to the theater, sert of the crown. He was a military | popular booklets for the soclety for the 9 plays, dancing by the favorite artists of the imperial ballet, and orchestral music. He had his health proposed by Mr. Khominrkoff, president of the Imperial Duma; the terpischorean goddesses Tohes- | RUSSIAN EDITOR'S JUBILEE| Honor Done to Alexis Suvorin of the Naples to Welcome devoted wya which he sinskaya and Paviova danced to him and | in the name of forelgn culture Lina Cavali- erl sang him Neapolitan songs to a guitar accompaniment. Incidentally there were tableaux vivants, arranged by the painter, Constantin Mahovsky, showing the divers nationalitics of Russia and the printing conseript for life, battle of Borodino, where the Russlans made thelr first great stand against Napo- leon's advance on Moscow. He rose to the rank of captain and by so doing ran- somed himself from serfdom. He dled in the province of Voronesh, nominally of and production of & newspaper. | noble rank, but without any private posses- Notices of M. Suverin's career teem with | sions to speak of. buman interest. He has been entirely alive | His son Alexis was born In everything he has done, his zest for controversy is genuine, he ls a patriotic nationallst and he has assafled all parties. Bound “There are 10v nationalities in Russia, he says, “and to be a nationalist you have to offend 100 of them Withal he is a man of g0od works. In his book-publishing ness he teaches professionally the g00od Russian printing in a way that private enterprise has attempted. He frayed the publication of a bandsome tion of the works of Russia's best lo poet, Pushkin, for 5 cents, so that the peo- ple at large should have access to the best things in thelr language. He fouuded the Novoe Vremya. HUNDRED ~SOCIETIES JOIN IN Fiftieth Auniversary of the Grest St. urg Publication Was Made Event by Admirers there in 1834 of Its Editor. and was sent to the local military school In due course he was graduated, and chose the engineering service in the army. But want of means made an officer's life so- clally impossible for him. He resigned his | commission and tried his hand at teaching <R PETERSBURG, April 3.—In the Hall of Nobility in this city In the presence ot 5000 people, addresses from over 100 socl- eties were presented on Friday, last, to Alexis Suvorin, proprietor-editor of the Novoe Vremya, to celebrate the fittieth anniversary of the publication of his first article. With that comprehensiveness which marks Russian festal occasions M Buvorin, who s 7, had begun the day with & church service of thanksgiving at 10 & m., and continued the celebration to the end of a complimentary supper after 2 . m. the next day, bearing up through & sequence of oratory, ode singing, stage to Offend Many. Literary Hack in Early Life, To eke out a decent subsistence he sent some literary sketches and verses to the local paper, Which had the good luck to the mnotice of the popular poet gi- | Nikitin, His first notable success was a story of poor people, which he called “Garibaldl.” It was published in 1861. Its fame was helped Ly the celebrated actor, Sadovsky, who used to recite passages from many practic busi- | art of no de- | attract and was wounded in the | the sons of his moré prosperous nelghbors, | propagation of useful knowledge. The sec |ond of these books was prohibited by the censure. In 158 he moved to St burg, where he took charge of the | review pages of the Russky Invalide. | chiet military newspaper | While holding this post he published a | volume of miscellaneous essays, he was prosecuted by the government and sentenced to two months' impriso The sentence was reduced by the appeal court to three weeks, but the book was destroyed. His vogue was now widespread He contributed & Sunday feulleton to the | Petergski Viedomost! which showed his | individual talent at its best—his spontane ous humor, sincerity of feeling, and a gift | of l0oking at incidents from the point of view of thelr soclal value | His polities at that ti | the moderate Liberals, who favored west- |ern ideas. He assalled the reactionaries and nationallsts of the narraw school in the Vestulk Europy to & degree that made his name odlous to the ruling wirepuliers in the official world. He secured his dis | missal in 1574 from the staff of the Peters book the ment e were those of Peters- | for which | | burg aan Editing ship prevented Mr ing himself in | property as himself as he hopes " | jotcea in the amo public tent | went, were decetved | He haa tak when the | empire and the Balkans were bestirring themselves for a na embraced their | made the | throughout all the struggles arising from war the Russo-Tu treaty rkish This_policy and the management of the paper brought it enor- Suvorin literary mous success. ablde by his early personal contributions of small consequence Under His previous conflicts with the censor- Suvorin from announc- the columns responsible The new venture roused great the reformers who had re success of Suvorin's work on the Viedomosti their hopes, 8o far as domestic affairs er the Christian Slavs In the »nal existence s from the outset and had always loved and frequented as & sym- pathetic and well-equipped eritlc, By common consent he was voted to the chlef place in the lterary and artistic club which owns the Little Theater His reputation as dramatist rests chlefly on two plays. “Tatlana Repina” (1888) and and “Medea" (1883), which are still played with great success He has written be- sides these stage sketches and comedies. Dificulties. of his 80 does to this day new he a editor many To a great ex Noted for Pithy Aphorisms. Suvorin is noted for the pithy aphorisms with which he has hit off the ruling foibles of his compatriots. “In Russia the man's dressing gown and slippers were before the man,” is his comment on the laziness of the Blav. “A Jewish half talent defeats & Russian great talent by its readi- ness and insistence on reaching Its end." This of the brooding, melancholic type of Russian philosopher—'"Peopie live In noise, dispute and haggling, not in quiet. In quiet they only die.” “To live one must belleve, and the realities of life help be- lef. Persistent pessimism polsons every energy.” paper at a time Turkish created Suvorin a thelr champlon and the Berlin vigorous and alert nimself likes te form and his to his paper were Roosevelt Party Great Disappointment is Expressed that Stay of Ex-President Will Be Limited to Few Hours, NAPLES, April 3.—As the time of the arrival here of Theodpre Roosevelt ap- proaches—the steamer Hamburg\ls expected Monday morning—the interest and the ex- cltement of the people of Naples increases. In the belief that Mr. Roosevelt would be here for nearly two days ail kinds of arrangements were made for his entertain- ment, and the disappointment is corres- pondingly great as it is reallzed that through delay to the Hamburg he will have only & few hours here A magnificent apartment in one of the best hotels been prepared Roosevelt's use. The ro titul view of the bay of Naples, Vesuvius and Capri, and it Is hoped the distinguished traveler will be able to make use of his apartment for st least & few hours. has

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