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EIOIOEOEIOIO IO OEIOEIOEI 0 EIOEIOEIO IO IO IO IO Y 75¢ Embroideries 25c¢ Yd Skirtings, Flonncings and Corsel Cover Widths Swiss, Nainsook and Cambric 18 and 27 inches wide, also galloons, and wide insertions, ele- gant designs in English c_vc-2 5 let, crochet, Grecian and Japanese effects—worth up to 75¢ ydrd, at yard ¢« .o 2 BIG BARGAIN SQUARES Embroideries at 5¢ & 10c Yd. Corset cover widths, medium and wide edges, also insertions and beadings— all new designs many to match, worth to 20c, yd. Sc'loc 123¢ French and German Val 5 Laces and Insertings at yard C Platt Vals.,, Torchon and Cluny LLaces—many to match. $1. Short gloves, double tipped, pure Milanese, all col- ors, also black and white— 69(: pair elbow length silk | Short silk gloves, two clasp, double tipped all colors, black and white- best makes on sale, 500 per pair kid gloves, two clasp; black, white and colors, fitted 1o the hand, main glove dept., sl.slso pair. naanox:l ononononol:lo:lo::o:::ot:lo:lo=o=o=o=o=ououomo=ano° MAY SALE OF MUSLIN UNDERWEAR The greatest under- muslin bargains ever known in Omaha. Great lots of fine under- muslins; special- 45c 1y priced, at.. ('nvors, Gowns, Skirts and 75¢ beautifully elaborately Corset Chemises, Drawers, Undermuslins made and trimmed, Genulne Hand Made French Lingerie The most exquisite Real French Underwear-—corset cov- ers, chemises, drawers, gowns and skirts—all hand made; at rare bargains. OONORIORIORIOIOEIONIC ORIOEIO I OEIO IO IO IO I O X THT. OMAHA SUNDAY (5] =1 D o 0 o 0 o 0 a 0 [ 0 o 0 o a o 0 o 0 o 0 o I o a0 o ] o I o 0 3 OEIOEIOEIO IO IO IO IO EIOEIOEIOEIO LI 0! The Best Place in Omaha to Buy RUGS This daylight department offers every help to those looking for beautiful and practical rugs. The varieties are greater and the bargains more attrac- tive than anywhere else. The Famous English Wilton Rugs-—9x12 and seam- less. They are shown only at Brandeis—the new patterns are very attractive— $39 $55 values, at .. Arundel Body Brussels Riigs These rugs are in all sizes and a nice line of pat- terns in both Persian' and medallion. 6-9 size, regular price $21.50, this sale. §3-10 size, regular price $30, this sale. ... 9-10-6 size, regular price $32.50, this sale. 10 6-12 size, regular price $4250. this sale. Famous Snnford Axminster Rugs No better Axminster rugs made, our ‘line s ex- tensive both in sizes and different patterns. At- tractive prices on all new and regular goods. 9-12 sige, regular price $30, this sale. 6-9 size, regular price $20, this sale... $-2%10-6 size, regular price $27.50, this sale, Other Sizes in Proportion. New Rrussels Rugs—9x12 good value at $24.00—while they last, at $16.50 .8as 835 size full 10 wire and a f $18.50 !LOHOI:OHOEOHOHOflOflOflOHOHOHO MONDAY DRUG SALE 26 bottle oxide . Sanitol Per- 1 1 b for pint v Hydrogen 20 Mule Team Borax « 9 Tooth Powder Bottle 120 $3.00 Cream 40 1 Thermos for Sanitol for » Peroxident der for Arnica Face rt Thermos Bottle $5.00 10¢ 3l 50 Sea Sult 100 Tooth Pow- 200 Soap 18¢ Cream 39¢ per 1 15 i0e Cham 413 Ib for 1 guarg bottie of Ammonia Tooth NewFort Milk Weed 8o 1%c 130 WE CUT PRICES ON PATENT MEDICINES b lygothymoline. ... .. 48¢ $1.00 1. Pinkham's VeE Compound $1.00 * Duffy's Whiskey Tollet Orris Red Cedar Flakes. |, ackage 0c Rogers & Gallet Trvnu Soap 3 cakes Lona Oil and But: termilk . 5o0e Root, 180 Per- T 2% Perfume. veadl Locust per Blossom z Tub Pute Malt 89¢c BRANDEIS knot in the e e S S B RS S B ARST ea 10 well made, The “Billy Burke"— Swellest of All made with 15 full puffs. This is one of the very latest crea- tions, worth $5, Mon- day, at......83.50 THE ROSETTE Made with 2 very large puffs surrounded by 6 other good size puffs, made in 1-plece and can easily be adjusted to the head, worth $2.50, at. $1.59 HE SALOME PUFFS full size puffs with large psyche center. This is a very effective creation worth $5.00, --83.50 18-inch straight switch for . 20-inch straight switch- 22-inch straight $3.50, for 20-inch wavy switch 22-inch wavy switch. for ..., 24-Inch wavy for ... 28-inch wavy switch—$§ switch- Gray Switches - wonderful values, | DIt up from $2.50 Treat for Sensational Values in Switches Ewitch— Maidioring Dressing. BEE: MAY “Styles That Are Correct” The Charming New Wash Suits and Dresses Our showing of summer apparel is as varied and as thoroughly York up-to-date as any or Chicago. of the great stores in New The new arrivals charming. are Smart New Linen Dresses—Delightfully novel in style and extremely hnmmmz,l slzso te 525 as well, at Dresses—Essentlally summery and Chic Lingerie 510 to %35 dainty as they can be— Styles that are not found prices, are smart and practical 35 to 51750 summer frocks, at NEW WASH SKIRTS White and colors, reps and New Colored Wash Dresses- elsewhere WASH JACKET SUITS 36-inch Coats— Brald trimmed— heavy rep or Ger-||well flored, all man linen, special, || colors and white, lingerie, service- el Bt able and smart $8.98 SIS to S25 $1%, $1* to $10 WASH LINEN JACKET sSUITS NEW LINGERIE WAISTS Trish and Val in-| sertions, high or || Dutch collars, ex- clusive styles— LINGERIE WAIST SPECIALS Summery effects — SPRING TAILORED SUITS up-to-date light weight wool il sults, worth up to vam groups— | $30, at— $2.98 to $15 || 98¢ to $1.50 1? $10 to $15 300 sheer OO0 OIOIOIOIOEIO IO IO EIOEIOE New White Goods BASEMENT A great variety of imported swisses in dots, figures and stripes, all new patterns, worth up to 85c yard, at yard 2bc. White linen finished suiting such as Indian Head, Auto Cloth, Economy Linen, French Lina suiting and mercerized linen, prices yard 10c, 12%c¢c, 15c 19¢ and 26c. White linen, 36-inch extra quallty, at yard 35c. White sheer linen, 36-inch, at yard 29c. Colored linen {including 46-inch French linen, em- broidered linen and plain linen, all the new shades, worth up to 65c¢ yard, at yard 35c. One special number of Persian lawn 46-inches wide, yard 26c. Wash Goods BASEMENT Brandels Stores show the greatest varfety of all kinds of wash goods of any store in the west. We show more extreme novelties, more dainty, new de- slgns and more exclusive weaves and patterns than any other store. New shipment of colored poplins, Monday at yard 19¢ and 25c. New polka dot foulard silks, colored dot, yard Flaxon—The new wnfih fabric, yard 15c¢. Indlan Head Suiting in all plain colors, also in checks, at, white grounds, with U:lonononononononononononoflonououono:fl EIOIOEIOTIC OO IO MO IO IO IO IO IO IO IO EIOEIC OO OmOIOHOMOOMOMEIC OO IO OIOEIOIOEIOEIC fi):onouononouononononououou A Remarkable Sale of Human Halr Goods "ORMATION—22 inches long, 16-inch values for... wavy hair—$9 NECK CURLS vorth $1, Three heautifully -69¢ -worth §2, attached on a stem— vorth 2.49 3.25 value ..$1.69 4.50 value $3.69 $7 value -85.00 l" value -$9.00 Halr |8 h A m Scalp value, at MARCEL WAVE HAIR ROLL Made very fluffy, net cov- for Monday, a heffler's yress Restorers, day only and Hair Mon 890 Set of 8 puffs—worth Set of 8 puffs $1.60 worth $3, for & and ments. made curls very de- sirable for the finishing effect in dressing the hair—8$1.50 ered, the kind that is sold ¥® 5 EXTRA SPECIAL Monday We Offer Your Choice All Our Imported Hats and all Our Mid- Summer Hats This offer includes all our priced hats in latest summer styles, worth $20.00, $25.00, £35.00 and $40.00. ; At Just Half Price Show Room Sample Hats from Alland Bros., 65 Bleeker St., N. Y. Every hat is a sample and is the latest midsummer style that will be the favorite at leading and $12-—at $1.00 Untrimmed Milan Hats 39¢ Several hundred new, fresh, up-to-date Milan shapes, in the newest styles; blacks, burnts and whites actually worth $1.00, each—in Basement nononnononononoflononOflOnonOnonm:f'u' ncnonononononono:ononouonoflouonnn(\l{ 50c and 85c FRENCH VOILES at 25c a Yard. Several hundred yards of 44-inch French Voiles, fancs mohairs, checks and fancy stripes, nun’s veilings, Henri ettas, ete.—the color assortment is good and the fabries are the 50c to 85¢ grades choice, yard . :lo:lononononononcnonononono=0fl°=0n0:: Basement Bargains i Sheer Lawns and fLinen Finished Dimity — Plaids, checks and stripes Batistes, in all the | Suiting, biue, tan newest and high very aft, 0 (HEONOENOENOEIOIOIIOIOIOIIOIIOIOIOIOIOIOI0I0 JEISEOOMO OO IO IO IO IO IOIO IO IO TIOEIO CIOEIO your o HOIOIOIOR, SIOSIIEICIID) S ry sheer for waists, dresses and children’s wear; 18¢ quality, per yard, colorings brown ground s for ry 15 ' the vard. with sum val ;e Very fine madras for waists and dresses, light grounds, with the neatest assortment of small de- signs ever shown, actually worth 18¢ yard, in 8, 10 and i 12 yard lengths, at, 8 per yard ...... R 40-inch wide silkoline remnants, would be cheap at 10¢ yard, all day, at, per yard and designs Monday on i stripes mer w. ue, o bolt, sale at, Fine quality soft finished 40- inch wide nainsook for wo- men’s and children’s loc fine underwear, yd. .. cambrie, will be Well known 1215 including Lonsdale, sold from the bolt Monday, yard. WALL PAPER at a Saving of One-Half. Our entire stock of fine parlor papers that sell at 20c roll—on sale Monday, at, roll Theé A fine assortment of pretty bedroom papers in stripes, florals, etc., that you pay 12%c and 15c for any- where—Monday's price, roll. 6¢ 10,000 rolls fine glimmer papers suitable for all rooms—never sold for less than 10c—Monday, at a roll 4% ¢ 5,000 rolls of odd ceiling papers with borders to match—worth 6c¢ roll—Monday, roll Aee Beautiful tapestry papers, two tones, orientals, silks, ete., regular price 25¢ to 35c—Monday, roll. 12% ¢ All our duplex papers regularly sold at 40c to 50c roll—Monday for the last time, at, roll 22¢ BRANDEIS - $5.98 rival, George Bernard Shaw ten but every every month in the year. In fact, Shake peare, If all the English speaking countrd 4 considered, is about the hest seller ng except the English Bible tions Shakespeare are hotels In New Yorl it seems impossible to get too many them not only evel year, and probab LD BOOKS STILL SELL BEST Bible First on the List, with Shakes- peare Second. POPULARITY OF THE OLD-TIMERS | Steady Demand for Irving's Case An Example, Long nfter Washington Irving's cop | rights ran_out his works were still t | most profitable books on the list publishers. In fact, Irving's earlier worl went h and resurrection whi mself yvet lived en in 1846 Irving will, | residence in Europe hix Philadelphia pu lishers toid him tha print and that i a uew editions be \ New York on writing, and between his new books ar his old his royalties in the doz years until his death amounted to abo $230.00. The sale of his books for the fif yaars since his death at Irvington November, 1859, never greatly flags for long, and the sale of the most popul umong rormous. Van V ) the last of the There are Irving, While the of Dickens, Hawthorne, Best Seller & Year is Forgotten, de he ten years; W NEW YORK 100 standard outsell any 100 new boc the genuine best be considered, are old. After the daring young lady has written a book that her mother shoul read sale the the bo ing young lady ng. It over again, the novel of ti that kriows no waking Shakespeare May books, In any fos it In other words ' long period favorites, but you y did not care to u Th sellers, if an e plates Irving we not new gt by n't let her next nd has drawn her rovalties from a £ 50,000 coples | looks for & new s that were 150,000 a year but fore the dar was born go right on sell the all sleep t vertakes a sleep ubl s on classic be ts the hare and tortoise best selle and it promises to only at . best a few century that would enrich In ten years a gre publisher who could have a monopoly vear is apt to be outselis his at modern \ { | | work and “Dav has been selling steadily f There are those who prophe “Pickwick” will be popular mest other prose fiction of the last cel tury has gathered dust upon the libras sheives. Hardly any other book by youth of % has had such a success for long & period, Dow more than asven! Stomach Trouble, | :ic.. e o o Anybody can publish Hawthorne now, b Your tongue is coated. | i .@.’.,m publia Your breath is foul. s D SR AR SN N S Headaches come and go. The Pickwick Papers any recent humorous Theso symptoms show that | 527" your stomach is the trouble. To | (1. remove the cause is thefirst thing, and Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets will do that. Easy t~ take and most effestive. of his | abr returned from a long | have t his booke were ou wel ‘Rip | veat novels of the last rs go right on selling | sells better than when | dropped from the revision place. A, 1y now making Dickens’ Publishers are even ready for a spurt in the sale of works at his centenniul in 1912 8- os | Thacke or| Thackeray X, | vear earller ¥, Cooper and Others. whose centennial comes wrote nothing that has had of | the steady sale of “Pickwick,” though | “Vinity Fair" fs still a best seller when | decades instead of single years are consid- | ered. Cooper's Leatherstocking Tales have | never ceased to sell both at home and ad, and many thousands of them are culled for every year. You may buy them gaudlly covered French | oy o"pogt sellers | paper bound in editions. just as you mAy | inat would natura of Hawthorne's New England|in competition wi an Itallan popular edition bear-| There are {ing the titte del Farwest.”” The | not fiction that i | French “Pickwick,” by the way, In two |of years outsell small paper bound volumes, is a thing to | these Thoreay ke adinirers of Dickens sit up and | last forty years it Lrub thalr eyes | new nature books, ':‘“ No current new bgoks for children long Creasing year by ty | Cutsell a few old favorites of the last and in Not to go beyond ed | the middle of the last century, “Alice in few of Loulsa Alcott's of Uncle Remus never | , (% T of a new A | tavorites and for taste voluntarily tory course in En indicated reading good literature a find time to read, of professors and mine this matter the whole countr we he ks | lle | today In cheap, some b- | stories in ‘Raccon n re nt nd [ m eral of Thoreau's of earller generations. Dana's Wonderland,” a best to the ar | One of the books and the letters vield long vopularity 1 o juvenile. “Hans Brinker outaells | oo gact narrative | the new books. ““Treasure Island” won & | gore the Mast.” I place on the permanent juvenile list 1ong | o ‘trifie within the | betore Stevenson's death Uncle Tom's | a new edition has | Cabin used to be a prime favorite with it is selling right young folks north of Mason and Dixon's | earlier editions. W line, re | be alsa ny of or. v but within & very few years its popu- | larity has much faller off, sc that it no | twenty-five years lenger ranks as a best seller. of 100,000 inhabitan | body had read hi | Years Before the in California. No other simple common sallor's v ir College Course Causes It The somewhat capricious college entrance 1d | requirements have kept alive for years an | or | artificial demand books that | | young people do not really love. No girl lor boy of 16 ever voluntarily read either | POPUldrity. Whe “Absalom and Achitophel’ or | in 1840 eyerybody | Burke's “Speech Conelliation with | told of California America,” yet thousands of both have been | has directed atte s0ld yearly because boys and girls had to | stimulated the sa read them in order to get Into coilege. |the Mast™ It ‘s “Absalom and Achitophel” bhas for sor sy | Dryden's n- ry a 0 ty on but Burke's speech still nolds its The college entrance requirements alone have created a demand for a few genuine things that only girls and boys of unusual a few old suffices to keep alive most astonishings things in years of a simple | Francisco in the 'ss, been | ruln iu low sallors’ boarding houses and honored with¥gilding and fine leather in rich private libraries They say in Boston that Bob Dana after his two years of hard toll and rough com panionship developed into something of an | exquisite In dress and deportment. It is | even told of this man, who as a youth cepted all the hard conditions of the fore- castlo and afterward took Immense to trace out the fate of his old messmates that he made the odd mistake of saying an of something less th Brahmin caste: “If 1 shouldn't recognize you on the street you'll understand that it my short requirements by a recent & good many excellent 1s read. As the prepara glish is now laid out the provides about as much s most boys and girls so that the little group | schoolmasters that deter- fix the reading of youth y over and incidentally of a good many th ally cut no great figure th current fiction ¢ American favorites | n any considerable span | the new novels. Ome of s “Walden In the has outsold most of the and its popularity is in “Walden™ the Interest of sev- lesa popular books. pains | acquaintance n| is for sight.” no reason except ness of | Poets Outsell Novelists. i the ! popula in the| native utsell in outsells Even a few of the long run any but the novellsts. Longtellow United States all his fellow er, except Shakespeare. Whittler | s next to Longfellow in the American 1 and the other American poets trall | & way behind. i rangely sugh, there is a large and | dy sale for Bryant's “lliad,” but moderate demand for his original | Whitman's verse, which never for | | any length of time afforded him royalties | enough for his modest wants, now sells in | Iy editions. Holmes' verse has always pretty steady sale, but small In | \parison with th Autocrat of the His approaching cen- | interest ml Breakfast Table.' tennial is expected to stimulate his books, though anniversary occasions are of uncertain value to the publishers There was no greatly increased ot | Milton's poetry last year, although the tercentenary of the poet attracted much interest poets, com indeed | dema al year reat Story. st a very | verse. sale for matter “Two Years Be- % ts popularity has waned | | last few years, though | °° just been announced, and along in three four When Dana revisited San to tind the hamlet of city er is the steady Dana’'s or before grown into a ts, he learned that e s book, and today Mast" is a prime favc sale rite Ter outsells In this country native poets, and Browning to societles formed for the wanted the one book that comes close after ' and ever since whatever | single volumes of ver mtion to the Pacific has | lected works of most poets le of “Two Years Before | Garden of Verses and still thumbed to greasy | Bab Ballads” is another. B Nonsense” has had more than sixty e yson has had -any such was on undecorated story oyage n the gold fever of his A few study nyson outsell the col The “Child's | verse, is one such, . ok of years | cutture | marvels of the publishing business. |FIRE BURNING FIFTY YEARS| ! have of popularity and it sells better today t { Ashland district to ald In erecting con most serfous verse, walls to check the spread of the tla About the most popular of all translated | Great quantities of sulphur abound in the verse in English is Fitzgerald's “Rubalyat | sunken shafts and the work is dangerons of Omar Khayyam.” It Is bought in all ! It may be necessary to fill the shafts witl sorts of editions by and for folk who think | vattle possession of the volume a mark of The sale of the Fitzgerald's mas- pyright expired about as been the to o the ad of the fire water In order contin against the sp! NEGRO STILL LOOSE IN PRISON Fugitive Seen Twice the terplece since the twenty years ago one of The hunt for negr guard It COLUMBLUS, Harvey Johnson who escaped Wednesday night and s at large Ohlo penitentiary, continues and ti have been armed with rifles. Johnsou wa twice @t midnight running igh Warden Jones said emergen in Flames in Lehigh Coal Mine at Sum- mit Hill Spreading Despite Fight, esperate trom his TAMAQUA, Pa., May the fact that hundreds of thousands of dollars | In an endeavor to ex- burning for fifty ye and Navigation com. it Hill, the fire is now Despite seen thro | the yards and shot at today he would purchase be kept in the prison for such Search for the man continues nook and corner, guards being & ta the top of a swndpipe 160 feet high been spent tinguish the fire in the Lehigh Coal pany's mine at Sum spreading toward the Spring tunnel we ings and thirty of the Reading company's carpenters and masons were sent from the | nt even And many other painful and distressing ailments from which most mothers suffer, can be avoided by using Mother’s Friend. This rem- edy is a God-send to expect- ant mothers, carrying them through the critical ordeal with safety. No woman who uses Mother’s Friend need fear the suffering incident to birth; for it robs the ordeal of its dread and insures safety to life of mother and child, leaving her in a condition more favorable to speedy Mom L] covery. The child is llso healthy, slron*wflg‘ zood natured. D afmesion willive seat free by writing o BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. Atasta. Ga.