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THE BEE MAY OMAHA, SATURDAY, Brandeis May Sale of Waists - Thousands of the Highest Grade 1909 Waists Will be Sold Saturday at the Most astonishing Bargains This great annual sale is the result of many months of careful preparation. We have taken advantage of several opportunities to purchase sample lines and surplus stocks at remarkable reductions. The bargains are extraordinary. Special—In the Basement Scores of pretty practical new waists {n the styles that s ) EI by are strictly new this season. These N Waists are positively worth up to "BOST 5 ON C| $1.00 each—an extra special n the Basement, each. Dainty Lingerie Waists--Tailered Linen Waists--Dress Waists—Four-in.One Waists —Dutch Neck Styles—Lace, 1 and Silk Waists Thousands of the cleverest and most up-to-date 1909 waists are shown in this extraordinary Women's $1.25 and $1.50~Womew's $2.00 and $2.50~ Waists at| WAISTS at 69¢c | 98¢ ¢ ¢ There never was such a fine lot of These waists are all in new styles waists sold in Omaha for 98¢c. The styles are all new and smart, and the materials high class. sale. Stunning waists were never before priced so low, Women's $3.00 and $3.50~Women's $4.00 and $4.50~ : ( WAISTS at | Waists at| | Ig___g |98 Exquisite designs are shown in Tailored linen, lingerie and the new this group—the new four-in-one Duteh neck styles of sheer or heavier waists, stunning sheer lingerie and materials—many are elaborately trim- smart tailored waists, Dutch necks, med. ete. ete. Hundreds of Women's Fine Silk, Lace and Net Waists at $1.98 and $3.50 Stunning Dress Waists in white and ecru—silk waists in delicate evening shades— many are elaborate and the trimmings are exquisite— $ ; *1.98 they are easily worth up to $5.00, at . .. Saturday in Our Millinery Department ANY HAT IN OUR STOCK That Has Been Selling for $5.00 or More At Half Price On account of the backward spring season, we will sell all the finest hats in our stock Sat- urday at just one-half price, —very daintily made, long sleeves— pleated, tailored or lingerie effects. This assemblage is the most beautiful waists ever placed on special sale—many { are exclusive samples and are only one of a kind-—such charming 53 50 J Waists regularly worth up to $10, at B e A Special Sale in Jewelry Department Wm. Roger’s Chests of Silver 26 Pieces Wedding Rose-oak-Chests, silk lined, name plate engraved free, worth $12.00 Women’s Low Shees Saturday LA O Brandeis sells shoes that give genuine satisfaction. the styles that are strictly new. Cross shoes for women, We are showing We meation our bench mm'lr and the Red for which we are Omaha agents. Sterling silver bon-bon pieces, cholce German Silver Mesh Bags. trame, all stamped German silver 8-inch ...$1.00 Three way reformed crook thick-soled shoes them shoes could 1,000 pairs men's and women's cuff ) links, worth 26c.and ls ! Gold Filled Bracelets—warranted Hoe, your choice. oo C to wear and not change color for ten years, chased and sz 50 e 1,000 pair beauty pins and collar | plain, worth to $8.00, at ping, enameled and plain rose gold | and green gold, worth 2ic and 50¢ Ball a pair; two on card, | cholce ... Y | In Comb Section—Jet Pins, fet barrettes, worth $1.00, at Specials in Women’s Ready Made Apparel On Our Second Floor Women's White Serge Skirts—In the newest Wmss 00 . styles, specials at $8.98 $6,98 and Smart New Wash Rep and Linen Skirts—Very $l 9 8 L] $17.50 popular this season, at $§5 $3.98 $2.98 and. . $17.50 A new lot of White Serge Suits— $6.98 Halr New lot of Black Striped White Serge Suits— Special Saturday Lingerie Dresses—In this season’s latest styles— worth $12.50, at New Colored Wash Dresses and Jumper Dressoa— all colors, at. Fashionseal Sul'.s—\m\' arrivals— very stunning styles, at Al Our $5 Hats at $2.50 Straw Braid Hats, smartly trimmed with ribbons and flowers, All Qur $10 Hats at $ Beautifully trimmed in the very latest black and all colors. 5.00 styles for late spring and early summer. New and becoming shapes. All Our $25 Hats $ Brandeis exquisite late spring and early summer hats, 12:50 many imported Paris pattern hats, also New York patterns and many of our finest millinery creations. In all the history of Omaha, there never were such wonderful millinery bargains. NOTION SECTION—MAIN FLOOR 50c net covered hair rolls— all Hair Rolls, shades, Saturday, special Light welght wire rolls with combs attached— Saturdsy . Hair Nets Hair Goods Depts. ask at 50¢, all shades 10c large allover hair nets in all shades 25c for the same, Saturday Colffura Hair Nets—Fine Coiffura Human Halr Nets—the highest grade nets made, sold by hair dressers .. 25¢ 25¢ 10c 1. B. Kleinert Every woman i of Dr. I g kind 25¢ Kleinert's Shields d showing a complet pecial prices by the dozen. Special prices to Dressmak Great Sale and Demonstration Kleinert's Dress Shilds s Dress Shields at Notion Counter maha should call and have the merits nonstrated to them ssortment of shapes and Women'’s $3.50 Low Shoes at $2.50—No equal in Omaha at the price, blacks, browns and tans, vici kid and patent leather, lace, button or ankle strap pumps, at $2.50 Cut Price Drugs 10c Shinola, special. . * straight Tom Moore, 256¢ Shinola Outfit . ooe Sanitol Tooth Wash 1-1b. 20-Mule Team Borax. Dr. Graves Tooth Powder 25c Lavender Camphor Colgate’s Tooth Powde > Pompelan Massage Cream Sanitol Face Cream . Rubifoam . Colgate's Tooth Paste. Ingram’s Milk Weed Cream $9c $1.50 Oriental Cream Pinaud's Lilac de Water Hudnut's at s 50c Crab Apple Perfume, oz. .88c 50c Dobrook’s Lokust Blossom, per ounce . o4 saay .. 20c $1.00 (Pivers) La Trefle, oz..50c $2.00 Houbigante Ideal, oz.,$1.47 50c Java Riee Powder . 26¢ 650c Mme. Yales Face Powder. .40¢ c Roger & Gallet's Powder. , Mme. Ise Bells Powder, Face Chamois 3 for RUBBER GOODS. Rubber Gloves . ... Fountain Syringe. 50 Fountain Syringe ater Bottle c Hot Water Bottle. $3.50 Marvel Spray SOAPS Liquozone, special Palm Olive, 3 cakes. Jap Rose, special. Woodbury's Facial, Cuticura .30¢ 19¢ Hot $1.50 | L49¢ 82,75 be be and France Toilet 59¢ Water, . Violet Sec Toilet 15¢ 10¢ 10¢ 25¢ 25¢ Be .24¢ 7e 18¢ . 20¢ !pw 'ul 5¢ Owl, 3 Capadura, 3 for 5c Little Chancellor, 5e Hoffmanettes, 10¢ ¢ Manicure Scissors . 10c Solo, 2 for 15¢ Orange Wood Sticks - WHY SUPFER WITH CORNS, BUNIONS OR CALLOUSES? The man who gives the world a Genuine Corn Cure in indeed o human benafactor Dr. White, the celebrated chiropodist and foot #pecialist of Washington, D. C.. haa done this with his Painless Plasterettes at. . 190; @ packages for 350 10¢ AN 4 for....18¢ |,15¢c 3 for BIG BARGAINS IN BRANDEIS BASEMENT SATURDAY Women's Spring Tailored Suits—In late styles, special at $6-98 | $2.98 Women's .Covert Jackets, worth reg- ularly $6, Samp -umnn and Lisle Underwear — worth $1.00, at 25¢ 75c Shirts, Men's and Boys' styles and patterns t 25¢ $1.35 Al Linen 8-4 l'-bh Cloths, at, 15¢ ‘Women' Children's Seamless black Hose, pr.. all each Full size ns, worth $3.25' pair at, pair spd PR 10¢ Lace .81 Women's' 16¢ and 25¢ Under- veen 15¢-10¢ at ‘Women's Cors 780 e — all 49¢ at eac Cur- Best Ol Opaque Win- ¢t ag J dow Shade .9s| 39¢ ors, 6x13, ., at, each each Women's Handkerchiefs, Lace Ourtain Stretch- ThHe $1.25 Full Size Orochet Bedspreads —Slightly imper- fect, cuch 59c h 98¢ Women's Tan and Black Low Shoes— Worth up to $3, at $'.59 and Misses and Chil- dren's §1.50 High Shoes—at 69¢ and 98¢ Mon's High Shoes for Dress or Work Worth up to 33 pair, at 98¢ flnn Low Shoes— Worth up to $2.00 vair, at 98¢, $1.25 $l.58 and 51.39 questioner's shoulder and rested it there lightly for a second. Thp latter felt a pe- cullar vibration flowing from the crook's fingers “Feel it?" he asked. “That is an inven- tlog of Timne's 1t a¢ pretty much all over the world now by decectives who want to communicate without anyone hearing “You can run a wnole line of instructions that way, using a code, without a third person knowing anything about it. Some of the men who are palred in the front of- fice nowadays have brought the thrill up to such perfection that in & playful rough house, amusing to the witnesses, they can exchange notes and make dates or prepare each other for a closing in “When & crook sees two men near him slapping each other on the back he gets a chill these days, for he misses all the other high signs of the bull, and anything like & thrill gets his nerves. “But there is just one mark of a cop in plain clothes that the department cant get away from; that's the hunch. Every cop has it during his first three years on the force and some of them carry it to their MARKS OF THE DETECTIVE Have Ong Disnppeared nina to Warn the Crooks. Ouly “You ean’t piex ¢ ised to in a hull nowadays my day,” observed a “they don't wear the shoes they used to, There used to be three ways of piping off'a detective from the front of fice or a eop \n plain clothes. First, there was the big moustache, then the big walst line and third and always the square-toed, the you “There must haye beenra special graft in No but cops ever wore ‘em, an’ cops never wore anything else, You her them clopping along a block , ®nd as for the squeak—why, it was Mke a burglar slarm “When they didn't went you in a crowd they didn't have to give yuu the thrill, You knew then and If they frowned at you, You knew WaSs up to you to move."” “What Is the thrill ™ The crook pat his right ne hand on the graves, except those that have been out of uniform a long while. “The hunch 18 a sort of nervous uplifting of the shoulders when getting on a car when sitting dowr or rising or when they make a sudden move of any kind. “You know that on one trouser leg the cop carries a billy and on the other a re- volver. Then In a back pocket he has his handcuffs. Now, these things welgh con. siderable and they drag the suspenders sudden movement is MHable spenders from their fasten- Consequently the cop gets Into the habit dyring the early days on the force of hunching his shoulders to feel the weight and assure himself that his internal econ- omy is in good shape. *“Once he gets the habit it hangs to him for the rest of his life in uniform. Of course, If he goes Into plain ciothes he loses the hunch, unless he has been too long in unitorta.'~New York Sun ——— Sturdy oaks from lttle acorns grow— advertising In The Bee will do wonders for your business NOTABLE FEATS OF IIIEMORY‘~ | Remarkable Retentive Power Exhib-| tted by Men of Yesterday | and Today. | The average person does not use more | than 3000 words in wriung and speaking, | and the professional writer's supply seldom exceeds 5,000, yet Victor Hugo commanded 8000 at will. Cuvier, the French natural- Ist, and Louls Agassiz, the Swiss zoologist, could promptly give the names, according to careful estimates, of over 5000 animals, in' addition to the ordinary words they knew. Dr. Asa Grey, the great botanist of | Harvard, knew 500 plants by name and at sigpt; and the late Dr. Joseph Leldy, for mdny years president of the Academy of Natural Seciences of Philadelphia, was able to use at will 25,000 words—this vocab ulary embraciag what he knep of four languages, including English, medicine, &eography, geol and a general science, together with a large number of tochnical words. it we investigate and compare certain feats of memory, we are tempted to belleve what has often been averred, that while memory may be, as Dr. Johnson puts it ‘the primary and fundamental power with- out which there could be no ether Intellec tual organs,” yet it does not belong to the higher mental processes, 18 a faculty rather than a function of the mind, and may be abnormally developed in a brain which glves no other indication of strength. The famous Antonlo Magliabechi, of Flor- ence, knew at sight every book in his great collection; and It is further related that a gentleman, to test his memory, manuscript, and, after its return, pretended it was loat, whereupon Magliabech repeated its entire contents. A modern instance in kind is that of Mr. Spofford, for so many years the Mbrarfan of congress, whose fa miliarity with the contents of the great Ii brary Is starting. Yet we should also keep in mind th negro boy, Willlam Ash, who was employed in a New York bookstore Tt was claimed for him that, having grown up among the books there, he could indi- cate the place of every volume in stock. though the classification 1s complicated and the books numbered by the thousand lent him a | | the subject ot Liebnitz knew the Aeneld by heart Duke of Sermontea could recie the of Dante's Divine Comedy; Dr. Leyden could repeat a long public document after reading it onece; Daguesan onc Bolleau by reciting a satire for the first time. the whole Ished to hear a young m other group of natives, word word somet which Moffatt could not hay done bimself.—Lippincott's Magazine repeat startied read to him But such gifts are not alone the property of the learned. If Rev Willlam Cullen Hicks, a revivalist, wel known. In Kentucky, does nothing else to perpetuate his name, he may be rescued from oblivion by his extraordinary memory, which he has exercised with Holy Writ Those who have heard him claim that, ex- cepting the Psalms, he can recite the Bible verbatim, beginning at any passage In any chapter. Dr. Adam Clark had from boy hood a memory 5o retentive that after lst ening to & sermon for an hour he could not only repeat It word for word, pany the delivery with the by the preacher, Imitating his volce and | manner. One is inclined to assoclate such a performance with decided mental devel- opment; yet we have It on authority of a Wiasionary named Moffatt that after|as thatrs - S s, preaching & sermon to savages in Africa on """." nit v h.:"':ohw:n lo. at, “Eeternity,” he was aston- | pridel' ' —Cleveland Plain Deales, Bigger. vertising business, Better, Buster in - The, ‘Bee does for Givie Fride. The strangen wes faking notes “You say this ruffian was a native ur village?” You bet tler. “‘Born throw of here. “Pretty he was!" replied the old se. an' bred withip a stonc bad man, they ‘Bad man! Why Bill was abow as breathed. He crime, Bik had at all about to place him world's very say? stravger, 1 bad a had a perfec it you siranger, the front worst men,” The stranger stared at the native, “Do you want me to put it as stror as that? as ey but accom- anythir gestures used n rank of t to an That's what ad your ot reckon Mus fo don't you fail elvic