Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 2, 1910, Page 16

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JANUARY A Woman’s \\'Of]’,i‘ SALE BEGINS ' : SPECIAL NOTICE \ See Last Page First ey by ‘.: . | | Section. s ; on ay el (g BRANDEIS AD. v wealth, reared 10 xury and - i Grand Clearing Sale oo s s, s o o 40 P ‘ January 3d . White Goods Sals. Go right on pursulng pleasures, plunging more ¢ pursuit of pleasure iry, seeking new soclal wor for she fs & real Amerl pringing from good, old-fashioned American shares with her dead father's closest men friends and advisers the secret My e e e e jv OUR ENTIRE STOCK SACRIFICED—EVERYTHING MUST GO AT ONCE Bdward 11 flarciman left iy mighty fortune, real and personal, unbrdken by s All the Men’s and Boys’ ALL THE MEN'S s el e, e SWEATER This is our great clearing sale thateverybody has been waiting for. It is the grandest chance | NEGLIGEE i T e st p TS ever offered to buy things you need at.prices lower than they will be offered later in season SHIRTS peram inctly feminine; above a OA Flannel and Madras, col- things @ dovoted wife and mother i : . All the Men'’s 25¢ and Extra Special ik B ] | e nd e ~ herra ol | R UNDERWEAR || /o acut o sepassie her first hours of gri €, for & happ.er couple LINEN COLARS— Worth up than Mr. and Mrs, Harriman was seldom to $1.00, All siges. . ... Men’s wool and fleeced : to $1.50, The Russell Sage fortune is managed by NS undershirts worth up T T M| =2\ Hosiery i wish of the one-time w al st All the 'men’s $1.50 and $2 P |Plain and fancy colors, Men’s and Boys’ : [ M R thaiviag A i “,\.‘,:hl.h.ln -“xlwi-xl‘ Sry e per pair— LEATHER o5 . Men’s fine wool under- £ | W NS shirts, madras and Jersey The cldest son, Walter Averill Harriman, | e A o) 98c BELTS, d shirts and drawers =it worth to Just out of colluge, s studying practical \ \ worth up to 9 i The, at, each allroading in order to safeguard the ¢ o i By x.mrmu’i i ,,,‘,’,,,,,,‘_,\ Worth 25¢ 00 b, vl 80 i T Cornelin, the eldest daughter, Is married All the men’s hand made and 50c to Robert L. and Is a gentle, womanly type, willing to leave all busi wool Sweater Coats ¢ each, at All the men’s wool and silk and wool ‘\‘I_fl'.‘ R R and boy ness responsibiltil ting upon ! Vests, wortl s union suits—worth $: shirts, worth to c o e Ry {0 $6.00, at Men’s Silk Reefers 506 it, GRAR, b, the fourth chlld, is just out of her her debut in society deferred by her MUFFLERS Men's and Boys' i father's unfortunate death, while Roland, | : - And Squares PN ’ French Lisle All the men’s high grade the fifth child, is preparing for college. Unrestricted Choice Worth up to §1; 8 shirts, worth to 98c Mrs, Sage's directions to carry out ¢ only This leaves the second daughter, Mary, special for clear- \ % k) 5 a0 o woai roric o1 svensin-wvon wior | | Ay Winter C ‘ - uspenders i Seatist e the mother will lean in carrying out her ny inter ap 7 ¥ % . husbends's wishes. And Mary Harriman | will turn her back on soclal conquests, | in Our Entire Stock. 25c ‘ f 54 Worth up . on the pleasures which wealth can buy, Men’s, boys’ i I ¥ to50c per c Men’s $1.50 and $2.00 o, e ke e ez i [ | 80 kil ! Way's Sweater | : % pair, at, pr , Wool Lined carry burden and administer the sxpenditure of Mufflers u';:x'»;ux:;;‘-‘r upward of $60,000,000. up to $2.00, ' Phewe ‘are* regulnr 4 Y All new styles and new Gloves who will touch in & dozen 50c quality muf- ways the fortunes of the family, is of at, each— flers, which we \ H H 14 2 5 R R D IR ' : (I Pyjamas Night Shirts : patterns; Mocha and kid determination written in every line of Men's Outing Flannel | Men's Outing Flannel 5 —at, pair— face and figure. She has a clear ollve Y Pyjamas, worth up Night Shirts, worth : <§ Worth up to » P complexion, regular but not striking fea- | : to $4, at— up to $2.50, at— b tures, dark brown hair and eyes a trifle | iy $1.00 each, lighter, In speech she is incisive, often $1-50 to $2.50 75(' to $1\50 3 ab.. .. abrupt. She reaches conclusions ullll)l(l\“ and often makes mistakes which she is ON "' dn"k' ll SALE M 0 N D AY AT B RA N D E l S STO R E M::l:l: gkggi:a gll:l!:l") iTEf)Vl\!/ESTORE responsibility, will eliminate. On the other hand she Is intensely practical and business-like, always just and fair Mrs, Harriman was regarded by all who ::;n‘-imnj:.ulf:::;::,..1..m-=x<nn and soctal traits | H DAWN 0 /& \x\\\\ IM /// \\ — practical help. It was Mary who audited e = uccounts and cut down bills and O, K.'a I' l N ——— statements for the dead financier's final inspection and payment. In the last hard fight for the life of husband and father > it was Mary's resourcetulness and practical ability which never failed the brave wife. L o And ndw it is Mary whose will and execu- / 4 tive ability have taken the helm in the ) = mountain retreat of the Harriman family, 4 Mary Harriman has been trained well for f her task., Hers has been essentially an outdoor life, which accounts for her per- fect health, her clear eye, her fine com- — ploxion, as well as her steady hand. \\ 4 ° Women as Winter Campers, : Every winter more and more women are - / going north to camp In the pine woods and { i to hunt moose and deer during the snowy . p season, reports the Duluth News. This is not so much of & handicap as it ——— sounds. In the first place the cold, al- though in some cases 30 degrees below zero, 18 a dry cold, and therefore exhilara- . i Z S A ting and not depressing; secondly, moose ” L 3 and deer are far easier to track and over- 5 take when the snow is on the ground, as > 4 they cannot move so fast. Then, too, camping in @ log cabin is & much snugger arrangement than in @ tent, and there are far worse things than eating hearty camp o 3 z I 1 cooking done over a roaring fire when the . - 5 a e an e . snow 15 50 cold it sings under your feet and B . A appotites are of the keenest. Women will not mind the cold any more s 2 ° than men if they dress properly for it, and - e . z SRt - Die Embossers tirely out of place. They are no protection S S .<'¢- ° against cold wind or dampness. The « - < S 8 proper costume is one of blanketing or <X Py chamios, or even waterproof wool tweed, e but made with loose knickerbockers, and knee or hip oots. These should be lined with fur or feit, and s woollen union suit > —— v ( y and stockings should be wom. A great- o - o g coat lined with squirrel or opossum, or a = - = muskrat fur coat is also good for very & cold days, but the best thing is to wear w . S % chamols or fur lining to the half-fitted - [ ] [ ] . Jacket or the suit, as a long fur coat is a clumsy thing when hunting. of cold cream, but no other adjuncts to s ’ beauty execpt & pair of old gloves o wear » S 3 : at night over her vaseline-rubbed hands. | < . She will find & man's fur cap with car 1 flaps the most comfortablc for wear, and | bt ) ) ® she should remember that she Is FOINg 1Nto | S—————— the north woods for health and solid man's | sport and should dress accordingly and take things as they come cheerfully and | like a good fellow | of today, and it will be seen that the in-|estate of her father, the late Fred Croker. | Is practically h as is his sister The educational opportunities of New [this to a small degree she Invited a num- | 1,000 acres of land, much of' it under crease of late years is considerable, The | op AR 45 | Zealand are not excelled anywhere, but | ber of them to meet her every Sunday at a | cultivation, and several fine bulldings, in feather hats of last season were sold for . Ideal Home Life in New Zealand. | co-education, even In the high schools, is | little cabin she owned, and there under-| which fifteen t hes are Jept busy in enormous prices, some being as much as The women all vote In New Zealand, | not popular. The professions are open to took to teach them a few of the things structing the 150 pupils, not only in the | 8200, and none being undpr $60; the most [3$300.000, and now, from the estate of her|ung have done so for years, but they are | women and there are a lot of doctors and | they most needed to know studles of the ordinary school, but in the simple of morning hats run between $20|Uncle, George Croker, who died in New | beautifully feminine, nevertheless, declares | lawyers amo, them, But Lady Ward Is At the time Miss Berry had no thought | useful trades as well. Miss Berry is now and $30, and an evening colffure can quite | YOrk last month, she will inherit about|a writer in Putnam's Magazine. They | correct in saying that the women of New [of establishing a permanent school. In-|engaged In ralsing an endowment fund suf osally maount up. to M8 $3.00000. This makes $10,000,000 easily have a home life that fs ideal and they | Zealand are exceptionally feminine and the | stead of belng & temporary affair, how-|ficlent to support it and b dy e Yet it cannot be that material is so very | BUt added to that Is the matter of the| belong to it. It is seldom that & Woman | homes A aaatic efer, the school soon made Igself an in-|cured $26,000 each, from Andre arnegle much dearer, for the same old record tells |INcrease, what the British parliamentar- | speaks at & political meeting and wher titution practically without any effort on |and Mrs, Russell Sugc us that broad satin ribbon cost from g|!ans are now, in the language of Henry | goes It usually transpires that, she is a Work for Young Wo! her part. So far as the chidren of the & cents to 10 cents a yard, white crepe §, | G¢0r8t, calling “the unearned increment.” | visiting American or English/ advocate Py rb st ) xoeptional ational | "'poor whites” were concerned they not only | Thai Abént Wammdl and feathers varied between $ and 420 | The unearned and the hard earned incre- | They say they are too busy with domestic | stitution in America than the Berrs | erowded her cabin to more than its full| <G .0 qe 2, Curtiw of Bradford, Pa.. is It must be, therefore, that the work girls | Ment of Miss Crocker's fortune s several | asfairs to care to hold public offices, but | schoo! for mountain' whites, near Rome, | C#Pacity every Sunday but they finally | tne first colored woman dentist Bhe are better paid than they were, and in this | Mlons, for tho Crocker estate company | o wuiuc the world are better Informed | Ga., and vet the whole work grew out of | €Ame to her with the request that a day [ passed the final examination in the Col v d. lege of Dental Surgery, in Philadelphia, case We can have nothing to say; unfor- | Shrewdly invests its money where it will | on political affalrs. They do no end of |4 little Sunday school that.Miss Martha ol b B with Digh honors, 8nd intends t0 Begit tunately, however, higher wages always|®arn dividends, and the properties it holds | political work among themselyes, at elec- | Berry established in the mountains near | For a time it looked as If the move- | active practice without delay. She be- create new wants, and there is the same |In San Francisco and elsswhers are busy | tion time, In the way of party teas to Win | Possum Trot, Ga., less thun ten years ago. | ment had come to @ point beyond which | lleves denlisiry is one of the best profes- maker In Parls, has many souvenirs of the | story of poverty to be told all oyer again, | Multiplying the fortune of the Calfornia |over doubtful votes. Every woman over | At that time Miss Herry was residing on | it could not go, but finally Miss Berry | #lons for women and has ASOTEENE Nov- SUPOIns JBugenin's - DATONALS of thelr helress. | 21, who has resided in the electorate, has o | an estate which, according to Human Life, | screwed up sufficlent courage to make a | “'( "0 /0 (TL LT e house in its carly days. At that time $40 The We Richest Heiress. So Miss Crocker can, afford to lose pearl ( vote, whether native or white, and uses it, | was all that was left of the fortune of the | trip to the north that she might tell s o pge - - g “:‘l”"’ ‘.’t:; ;::’Wm-:fi‘u_- was a very high price to pay for a uunnew Miss Jennle Crocker of San Francisco is o with impunity, Even If the|as a rule. Lady Ward, wife of the premier, | southern family to which she belonged. In|of the rich philanthropists about o | She joined the Rifle Guards of Providence, and in the records of & fashionable woman | tho real helress of the west, and all other | necklaces were not found on the following | says that the reason the women of New | taking her walks khe was impressed by the | “Poor | Wwhite "boys and her mountain L. by u special permit trom Governod | . o 2 . 2 Sprague, and, with her husband, went tc of the duy are the following detalls: A |young women of money and millions are ¥ Miss Crocker could lose 300 of the caland have so much time for politics Is | deso’ate condition of thé mountain children. | Echool e front in 1861. Both )llunh‘:nd ..Iid";.,,,: Wwhite straw bounet trimmed with lavender | merely fractional luminaries, asserts the|baubles to thé value of $30,000, jewe's she | because they are not burdemed with the| Their parents, who were too poor to sup-| It was an Interestng story that she | were in the batile of Bull Hun and Mis vibbon and rosebuds, & wreath of | Boston Herald. Miss Crocker has $10,000,000, | mlspleced a few months ago and still have | philanthropic work of other nations. Hos- “n them with anything t the |had to tell, and she told it so well that | Brownell was wounded. She is now the ; - ] | color se J Toscs for evening wear, §.40, and a night | plus probably a wiliion or two more—and | $LO0.00 or so to invest in polo popies and | pitals, veterans' homes and orphanages, | burest necessities of life, and they were|she went back to her puplls with funde | (\-L;‘:n:n;‘:}:":hfiléllfil Lv'\"l.:‘r’f‘ Ifll:;lthlul:\;‘“\ cap of fine lace and lawn, %. some pearl necklaces. Boston Terriers. | chiefly governmental seem fo afford all | growing up in utter indifference to every- |sufficient not only to maintain the school, | pirthday is to be celebrated this weelk at Compare any of these prices with those| Miss Croker inherited $5,00,00 ®rom the! Her brother, Charles Templeton Crocker, | the relief required in a land without poor. | thing pertaining to education. To remedy |but to enlarge it Today the school has | the Jumel mansion on Washington Helghts, the death of her sister, Mrs. | Croker Harrison, she inherited nearly | Price of Women's Hats. The importance of feminine headgear is an old story In many lands, relates the| American Register of London, but in none 1s it more interesting than in Franee, where from (ime Immemorial the women of all classes seem to have given it their particular attention. The Empress Eugenie and the Princess Mathilde, it is well known, were nover women to waste money on frivolities such a8 poufs sentimentales, although the de- scendant of Worth, the first man dress-

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