Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
f 2 PART TWO EDITORIAL PAGES 1 TO 8 ~ — THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. VOL. XXXIX—NO. 33. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, FOR ALL THE NEWS THF OMAHA BEE BEST IN THE WEST JANUARY 30, .1910. SINGLE COPY FIVE kins, short Dollies, Scarfs, ete., up these left evers we offer them at 100 S, & H. Green Stamps With Each Ton with eagl Domestie nut, ton nut, ton e — F- l cookers at Half nnnlu u‘.‘toaawm h; Loose - Wiles Co. on sale Monday an: b L N O ire e_ss We shall have hundreds of | “Cut Star" Glasses, a wide assort- Oil Bottles, exquisitely cut | Out Glass Pitohers, 2l5-pint Tuesday. ‘::“" fresh "‘“;o‘; ‘Why do Without the convenlences of a fire- rich, sparkling cut glass ment, embracing wine glasscs, splendid $4.00 values, at.§1.76 size, fimest cutting, $5.00 Bennett's Capitol a0 miadey, less cooker when they are to be had so cheap- pleces, such as jugs, vases, champagnes, clarets, brahdie: Sugars and ams, brilllant ue, for .. ¥ oamh, o Flour, sack.. 1.55 And 10 Stamps. iy " We offar two sizes tomorrow, both at Candle sticks, punch bowls, | cordials, sherries, cocktalls, —cutting, $6 values, pair..82.50 | Water Sets, seven pleces, water And 80 Stamps Mt. Carmel Pump- Ralf the regular selling price. Geleries, frultabowls and | ~custards, sherbets, bell tumblers, Gut Xnife Rests, 25¢ values 100 | - jug and Alx tumblers, $)2.50 Bennett's Golden Cof- | kin, 3 cans...... JRSS ookem. Pog 1ot e an oamt | upth 1o $698. & 2 DT WERYY:© Out Wikt - Glasteger ;LA IR cof o TRind 0 Btamps, L| Diamond - Cr SAL oo el o all ‘on sale at— | - dozen—at. each.... Cocktails, cham- | Libhéy Cut Vase Benneits Challense | gapie Salt, 2 Botlers ¥ - d 1 A v"ry good tin- boll- rinds meats Fine Cut Glass Salts and pakiise, ‘““‘h;‘“:’- x‘:‘"“ N AN DE S B 180 And 10’ Stamps, b aka % g M 1 75 clarets, cordia quor Set And 10 Stumps otk ;;'u:?:;wm- $2.25 P R N handled sherbets— | values, at s e o "Zf",‘ék';.”}..:,".‘f 5 quality; widle Shey rice Salts and Peppers, individ- worth to $1.25,..500 | Sugars and Or 50 €0, Stanibe, Initfal Soeded Ratsins %‘:' Forta' Tab Seat—A : uals, cut glass, 26 valyes, PR TR u'.»":“"l“e- sot. Teuh, assorted large | b, o oo 00 - b C i oty T TR 7o am_Plate assortment, 1b...48¢ | Small _Sour ad Trousf sot of 8| pieos Brusnen: iRt o cut, worth, $1.76— | *Fhenr worth 31 "And 50 Btamis. Gosere ., grfi. ' g1 Mi eps - down - dust reguinrly $1.00, at...:.496 R | RO TT R | o Tea Siftings, voull;fl Lipton's Jel ¥ ‘é“‘?'u‘."a‘i‘m Glass Bowls, 8 in. Silver lined Cut Flow- Now Baui ble . TiTgal iz < > P 980 Ok .1 -1 oo 80 er Pots, $5.00 valu Syrup, can 330 And ‘70 ey 360 286’ Cotton Mops 150 7 fond 20 Stamips. ! | Diamond ¢ sour ’ v S 3 AN TN A ... T oyal ue Corn DArs ... .\ £dtd qumntite, C0N8 | 385 BIPAd | Boset e BAR: Ly ElS o 6o | French Cut, 1 AT atoks) And’10 ‘Stamps. &ar, pke. ey 700 M TN § Peanut Butter, iwo And 10 : Dlle dor 480, g Jars ... .......800 f Hippo Washing Pow- gt S And-10° Stamp: r, 8 pkgs.....280 ambler | Mold gt Harfley's Pure Fruit | sterllng Silver Gions ams .. . Starch, 6-1b. box 800 Braag, hickel-pletsd And 2 Stafps. And 30 Stamps. Some Things You Want to Know For fully a third;of & eentury Arizona has been hoping and working for state- hood. At last it stands on the threshold of realizing this smbidon, and it is as- serted that no other territary has come into the union with & more splendid past or a_more promising future. Here irriga- tion is touching the soil as Moses touched the rock with his rod. Here the miner- ologist finds tabulous hidden wealth. Here the geologist sees the world's best story of its own making. Written in books of stone In its canyons and gorges and petri- fied forests, in charagters which the ex- pert may read, is the account that nature gives of the unnumbered millions of years since America emerged from & shoreless sea. The four greatest of sculptors—Fire, Water, 8and and Wind—have united to make Arizona a treasure-house of wohders. The debris of their studios has not been ¢ d away, hence it is the geologist's varadise y Iicre, too, the ethnologist and the archae- ologist find wonderful records of the past. The ethnologlst can picture a peopls ‘who lived but little removed from the stone age. Through the work of the archaeolo- glst he is permitted to/study the sur- roundings of cave dwellers and cliff dwel- lers who lived in times so remote that even tradition s dumb as to whence they came or whither they went. In fact, one won- ders if he does not survey at oné glance the whole existence of man from the time of Adam to this year of grace 1910. The | dry, preserving qualities of the atmosphere have hkept intact ruins that elsewhere might have crumbled into dugt thousands \ There's an accumulation of remnants of Table Linen, odd dozens and half dozens of Nap- lengths of Crashes and Towelings, odd Towels, mussed Lunch Cloths, from our recent sale We want to freslien up the stock, so to clear .15 t0 G %, less > Send us your coal orders tomorrow-— You not only save maney on the coal, but we give you 100 8. & H. Green Stamps ton——Prompt deliveries, too. e by = 2000 Odds and Erds and Soiled Linens from the Sale Pillow Cases, 45 Sheets, 72x90 in., Glass Blankets, 10-4 size, were 7 Blankets, 11-4 slze, were § Wool Blankets, were $5.00 Comforters, 72x78, were $1 Comforters, 72x78, were §1 tions were made we have arranged all piec Pillow Cases, 42x36 in., were 15¢, for were 65¢, for Sheets, 81x90 in., were 79¢, for |4 and 4 OFF| Our February sale for 1910 will top the list as our greatest achievement in cut glass retailing. ever attempted here, the values are also so pronounced that judge Many lines are exclusively shown here At no other time have values been so universally good, and for this reason we bought rather heavily. In every instance the price is a third to a half under value. Those who are replenishing will not likely have another such opportunity to save. 4 Brilliant Cuttings of cut glass is represented. for this decasion. “Mirage” Silk for Five Years Advertised and Sold at | | Commencin the Fixed Price, $1.35, at 50c Yard Less Here Monday 1,500 yards'and 25 good shades. No silk is better known and none so widely used. The magazines of America have for five years been sounding its praises. ‘‘Mirage’’ silk is more popular today than ever. Its soft satiny, glace finish and its sturdy strength have appealed to women everywhere as no other silk ever has. It is very successfully employed for street dresses, after dinner gowns and evening' costumes. Never before has a yard of it retailed under $1.35—that was the agreement the maker exacted from the dealer before he could handle the goods. Now, we are going to sell it to you for 85¢c Monday--50c a yard less than established price. That’s the good news we have 25 Tables and Two Booths of Brilliant Cut Glass in the February Sale 331-3 to 50% reductionson Libbey’s Cut Glass, Stephens & Williams’ Rock Crystal and Venetian white and gold and other leadin res of one price on special tables. 8o s of quality will readily recognize the advantages of buy New Designs i Qe Yol 11¢ Getting your spring sewing underway yet? - New Long Cloths at.......10c upward to 20¢ e tor. nr :l“ We have ready now our new lines of whit¢’| New Nainsooks at.......123%¢c “"""": to "‘:"‘ materials for 1910. There lsn’t & worthy whitg | NeW Dimities at «+ T o upwand to N0c be, for - ! New Waistings at. . 155 npward to 40¢ 168 2o fabric omitted. We show the materfals for | oo oLt T Aot e 53 pair, for | THE WINTER STYLE BOOK— every purpose from dainty ynderwear to the | Noy Persian Lawna at, .15 upward to 7c .35, for . sheerest of dresses Prices In“every instance are | New French Lawns at.....19c upward to 85¢ 75, for . and a Free 15¢ Pattern for. .. .. ..20¢ the lowest obtainable. Now Batlote at...........20¢ upward to 75c nett Coat Stock--the Wonder Bargain of $25.00, $30.00, $35.00 and $45.00 Coats for $10.00. If ever better garment values pleated; fitted or semi-fitted, and lined with best guaranteed satin. Some have the long roll collar, some regular notched collar styles, others are high military collar effects. We must- close out every garment at once. The time to let go has come. We believe we’ll sell most of them in a day. Want one for for you today. Yes, it’s the genuine ‘‘Mirage’’—every piece has the name on the selvidge. ) e el L Rl vadhs oI Lt dior Vit v : s N : : : B i e N DW b. 0 h e ew A4 an Dressmakers and all women are invited to share‘in the splendid bargain. It's 24 inches L ot A S B S et g Pt il R :1 25 81.75 wide—25 selected shades, including white and black—at, yard..................... to hailf usual prices—KEvery them sold up to $40 and T N Kind of skirt; silk, volle, $45, nome less than $25, SILK PRTTICOATS Embroidery Flouncings on sale | Corset Cover Embroideries | Zephyr Ginghams—One case - Ramie Dress Linens—A full sorge, . panama or white | choice, at ......815.00 | $6.50 and $7.50 Garments, ~1,000 yards handsome 24 and wide edges and inser- on sale at half; dalnty, new, | range of colors for spring; serges. '\ | Broadcloth and Serge Dresses AOW At o'y o5 and, 27-inch widths, fine | tions; all new, fresh, crisp | check and stripe patterns, in_|~ imported Scotch goods; 36 $20 and $22.50 Skirts §10 | handsome braided models, | $8.00 and $9.50 Garments, Swisses, with elaborate pat- | goods, In beautiful patterns; | . all the best color combina- | inches wide; identical qual: $10_and $12 Skirts $6.95 | Worth up to $40, 819,50 | now at ......... 5.95 terns, worth 46¢ 25 values to 2%e, loc tions; 32-inch, 25¢ lz* ity usually selling 39 $7.50 and $9 Skirts $4.95 | LINGER1¢ WAISTS Girls’ $5 Coats, for 3195 to bde, at ... c at, yard .. v goods, for ._c | at bo0e, at, yd C $5. and $6 Skivts 2.95 | A fine showing of _new, | Girls’ $12,Coats, for 85.00 offer, makes % and % OFF| s far and away thenost extensive exhibit now. Practically every prominent maker consequently we gre favored by the makers when special price lots are to be had.” Unusual prepara- To simplify the selling Gift buyers will find this an opportyne time. We ahal aous cheap) sellin and § Aside from the fact tha Smallest to Largest Pieces to 4 Off Opening Up the New Spring White Goods ¢ Tomorrow $10.00 Buys Choice of the Matchless Ben- of them. We have about 200 coats, every one new, a fashionable model—the cream of the season’s best styles. The cost to make on most of them was double our price to you. There are black and colored coats, elegantly tailored, plain or Monday for Corsets We will repeat tomorrow last Monday's fine able $2.50 corsets, in the new long lengths. In every respect as good as any $2.50 corset in the store have all sizes......... Bennett's Big Grocery Omaha were made we fajiled to hear 310 A ‘special purchase of very fashion- ; still $L35 also have about 50 dozen miscellan- tyles of new corsets we bought very that have been .”39(',.690 at '$1.00, $1.25 50; Monday, at ' Arizona the single exception of the one which will be formed by Panama. 1,284,000 acres of land one foot deep. average amount of water required to grow of yemiE ago. But Arizona is more than a nature-writ- 1 revord of Bygone ages. ‘It Is as much \ land of tomorrow as of yesterday. The plants of the tropics commingle with those of norihern climes, and the growing things of the desert associate with the frultage of the valley. Nature has stored up min- eral wealth of untold value. Gold, sliver; precious stones, Gopper, lead, sine and coal ure all here. Thete is copper in such quan- ¥utles s to justify the prediction I"‘"d‘ ‘:" | 1ast year's hateh are now growing to ma- ead thet Arizona henceforth will world. ranges The woik of the goyernment In construct- | pass those made by the Salt river growers. ing the great irrigatién project of the Salt | The feathers are among the finest in the River valiey will make this one of the foremost Irrigated reglons of the world \, 4 The famous Roosevelt dam is one of the parts of this project. It is located across the canyon of the Salt river, almost sev- enty miles northeast of Phoenix. It rises 116 feet above hed rock, and is so inter- siced with the side walls of the canyon R it seems almost a part of the ever- Idfing hills, Over 300,000 cuble yards of solla mpsonry, and nearly as many barrels of cement, have entered into its ecomstruc- ton. The water”it Impounds will form the lurgest artificlal lake In the world, with | 30,000 men, and paylng interest on a bonded | debt of staggering proportions, |#tant dams and reservoirs, | well be expected to fival in productivencss the great Gatun dam at| The lake will hold enough water to cover The a season's crop fs four feet, and all but| some ten inches of this must come from the mountains through the rivers |that drain the water sheds. The government | builds the frrigation works and gets Its| money back from the sales of land and| water. The Yuma project Is almost Targe_as the one at Salt river. The Colo- | rado, mad from its viid rush down the| Grand canyon, is impounded and its watecs soattered over the desert, transforming the | barren waste int¢ a land of surpassing | productiveness. It is sald that Arizona has the largest un- broken forest in the world. It lies within the San Francisco mountain and the Black Mesa forest reserves, and contains over 6,000 square miles of timber land. In ad- dition to this, there are other vast tracts of timber that stretch far north of the Grand canygn. The work of the reclamation service is converting millions of acres of land Into a veritable Eden, and Intensive farming will make possible a density_of population undreamed’of in any reglon where irriga- tion is unknown.| Egypt, with less irri- able land than New Mexico and Arizona, with no forests, no minerals, and next to nothing in the way of manufactures, sup- ports a population of 11,000.000 souls; at the same time paying a tribute of 00,000 o year to the sultan, maintaining an army of as | With its Arizona may the far famed valley of the Nilg The Salt River valley ranks with Sooth Africa as & home for the ostrich, and 807 per cent of all the ostriches In the United States are to be found in this ope little section. More than 2,000 baby ostriches of turity, and the best hatchjng and grow- ing records of South Africa do not sur- world, and the profits are large. The birds are piucked every elght months, and & mature ostrich gives a pound of feathers at each plucking. The anuual sale of feathers from each bird amounts to about $31. Governor Sloan states that the“bysi- ness of ostrich growing seems capable of indefinite expansion in all the valleys located like the Salt river reglon, and that the world's principal supply of plumes for milady’s bonnets may yet come from Arizona. The territory of Arizona will make no mean state in point of In fact only ‘ mated at about half billion ‘dol ‘imlnu- sixty banks, every one of which is| ‘Fuld promise that the history of southern Call- ohurch has been the xey with ‘which all the harmonies of lis life have been tuned. | Without stinted form or senseless cant, | but with hesrts full of sincers love to him, | we desire to express our appreciation of TRIBUTE TO DR, J. W. CONLEY to be prospering. There is much | tory il be gepeated. In fact, of | the eplendia services of Dr. Conley during { cormia ulu e r.p;u(.l,d‘ ‘n aq many i Resolutions Adopted by Members of‘ e elart Tears’ pesinre)s An bl CRUTORE. | the people who helped to transtorm south- | First Baptist Church. eight years of beautiful, helpful and ever- { ern Callfornia into a land of weath a | enlarging servicc—eight 'vears of self-sacri- now count of the opportunities that offer there. In the wild sections of ‘Arizona there is | ' a peculfar little animal know | phobia skunk.” Tn its'quest f the camps sometimes It wi) attempt to eat or is followed almost invariably by a fatal | the states of Texas, California and Mon- tana, of those now in the union, are larger. If Wisconsin and Michigan were united | into one state it would be no larger than Virginia and West Virginla might all’ be | placed within the confines of this great | southwestern empire. Utah s trying to get' popsession of a part of Arizona. The Grand canyon ef- | fectively cuts off the nerthern part of the | territory, so that it is valuable only as a grazing country and a region of undevel- oped wealth. Recently the legislature of thé Grand canyon to govern It; and that the cattle, sheep and horses grazed there are owned by tax dodgers who drive their herds and flocks into Utah when the Ari- zona assessor comes afound, dnd back to | Arizona when the Utah assessor would list them. Asserting that Arizona gets no Dbenefits from this country, and that it is physically part and parcel of Utah, though legally belonging to Arizona, it is asked that the Grand canyon be made the bound- ary. But congress Is not in & mood to| subtract anything from Arizona, and the, memorial of the Utah legislature will find | a convenlent pigeonhole in which to repose. It is useless to attempt to describe the | splendors of the Grand canyon. Bvery | great American descriptive writer has ex- || | hausted his vocabulary in trying to picture | 1t Major Powell plucks up Mount Wash- | Ington and hurls it into the canyon, snd 1o the waters are unchecked; then, figur- | atively, he throws in the Biue Ridge and still the raging Colorado goes its way. Charles Dudley Warner, wearylng of de- scription, tucks away the Yosemite in a #idé gorge and calls it lost. Then he | brings back Babylon and its hanging gar- dens and declares their beauty to be mere homliness as compared with the canyon of the Colorado. He can only find & fit comparison by peering into the future and | conjuring up vislons of the New Jeruss- lem, Meoteorite mountain, with its crater a mile across and a furlong deep, présumably made when some comet's core hit the earth, is ever an object of interest. So is the trail worn deep in the adamantine rock by the feot of prehistoric races, telling & story of millions of travelers be- fore the age of tradition. The irrigation cenals of prehistoric races still may be traced by deep-worn furrows in solid rock, where the quiet flowing waters ran on for countless gererations. Arizons will start out as a state with a Population of about 20.00. The actual Ppresent-day values of the territory are esti- to the southern negro. novel way of capturing the nimble prairie | dog. mwouth of its hole. out the image Is taken for an intruder, y'ésolutions drafted by a committee and immediately there starts a one-sided | Pointed for the purpose and voted Friday | ciyie and soclal life fight. While the dog engages In this un- |night at & church mesting as the cordial usual battle range and tran:fixes him with an arro: ficing labor, crowned with blessings be- | youd”computation for our church and city. In the pulpit he has been a master builder, able, eloquent, ' fearless, always speaking.the truth in love—a workman that needed never to be ashamed. With pro- found learning and the deepest spiritual fervor he has expounded to us from week to_ week the richest truths of the Gospel In our homes he has ever been a bene- dletion—a real shepherd of the flock. At the bedside of sickness and pain he has golng into the Yuma region on ac- CORDIAL, EXPRESSION OF EACH as the hydro- | food it visits cowboys, and the toe Its Dbite Regret the Departure of One Who | Has Been an Inspirution and | Him to His New People. of tourists and nose or ear of a sleeper, Commend | Avizona, and Iowg and Tllinois together are | attack of rabies. The prairie dog abounds peen a nfinistering angel of consolation | not greater In size. The New England |and as a tempting mm...e of food It t to) L | and help. He has cheered us in discour- Jew Jersey, Delaware, Marylgnd, % ¢ First Baptist #hurch pays a stout tribute | agement, comforted us in our sorrows, states, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, |the Arizona Indian whaf the 'possum is| f married our,young lovers, burled our be- The Indian has a | !0 Dr. J. We“Conley, who has served it|married our-young lovers, buvied oif bo: for years as pastor.and Sunday lays down | gadness has been & brother, & pastor be- his work in _Omaha to take It up in|loved. Fresno, Cal. This tribute is In the form of | In our A small mirror is placed near. the | When His dogs omes been a tower of L Eahips gam, ap- | Btrength, whose rumpet never gave forth an uncertain sound. In ways safe, wise and considerate counsellor, =lways |ing men with his rare “combination of business tact, Christian courtesy. Dr. Conley belleves that in the providence he has watchman city a close | €xpression of every member. the Indian creeps into .| In most part the resolutions read: Utah passed a memorial to congress in|Which prevents the little ahimal from fall-| We are profoundly impressed wiih the |of God, the time has come when the pas- which it was et forth -that this reglon ls | N€ back into its hole, | fact that Dr. Conley has faithfully agd |toral relations must be severed, and he | . 4 AL e consclentlously discharged every = trudt (has therefore, upon his own initiative, re- owned principally by Utah people; that By FREDERIC J. HASKIN, which elght vears ago he assumed when |signed the pastorate of this church to ac- the territory of Arizona cannot get across |'he first became our pastor. During all of | cept a charge in another city Tomorrow—New Mexico. | that time, services to God amd to this| While we all deplore the parting our When the Omaha Ad Men Sat Down Dine FLASYLIGHT PHOTO MADE AT THE BEEFSTEAK DINNER OF THE OMAHA AD ‘CLUB. i = {mpress- | | very. love for him should impel us acquiesce in a decislon which we co only have made after the most car |and prayerful consideration. Tet us, ther: fore, however deep and universal may | our regret and sorrow, acvept the resign tlon of our pastor, to take effect, as quested byl him;-on the 28th day of Keb- ruary, 1910. Di. Conley's work will abide, for he has been the scholar in the spulpit,’ the philoso- pher in iiterature, the Christian in soclety, the beloved citizen fn our city. In all our In himself the mission of a Christian min- ster. In his new home and field may, goodness and merey crown him and his: may Heav- en's charmed- gifts drop upon him—the prayer of the an€lent prophet of Israel, is | our” prayer for Dr. Conley and his family. | The Lord bless and keep thee; |The Lord make His face to shine upon | thee, And be gracious unto thee The Lord lift up His colntenance hee, And give thee peace. upon | CORNERSTONE DATE PUT OFF | Board of County Commissioners De= cides Not t6 Have Ceremony Until March or April, The Board of County Commissioners | has deeided to postpone laying of the ceme merstone of the new court house until some time in March or April, bLecaws there is more likellhood of favorable weuther then, and the progress of the i"’w building will be, it is hoped, cohside €rable in the meantime. George N. Caldwell of Caldwell & {Drake 1s back in Omaha and makss the same answer as before to the demands of the Steel Workers' union with respect to men emplc e ~ounty comniis sloners have on told reprasenta- T e more tives of the union that the board is with- out power to tell the to employ. “All the steel and iron workers we have are Omaha men,” declarss Mr. Caldwell in answer to the charge that he s pass- ing over Omahans and employing oute siders. comtractors whomn HOW FAT WOMEN CAN REDUCE THEIR WAIS Fat shows a preference for the abdomen, chin, ankles, hips, etc.—the qulet spots— just the places where it can show the most, or worst. What is to be done—exer- clse and diet—aze they the only alterna- tive? On the contrary, they seldom do the work A better plan for reducing the fat is to use the Marmola Prescriptiop Tablet.! One of these after meals and at bedtime 'will produce the requisite reduction without bother, delay or harm. In a few weeks you drop off, as it were; disappear ax quietly as It came; remove uniformly without caps- ing even a suspicion of a wrinkle of dis- tress. Meanwhile, eat and act «as usual; deny yourself nothing. It is not required, if Marmola Tablets are used. Get off (wo-inches of walst line before the month's end, It can be done—certaluly, cheaply, safely. The Marmola Tablet | noninjurious (& belng made afier the f mous fashionable formula— oz Marmola, os. Fl. Ex. Cascara Aromatic, 3% o ppermint Water), and it costs only sev- enty-five cents, the lu'“ case, of any or direct from Mar; druggist, Co., 8 Fuwner Eldg., Detroit, Mich. publie and private polices he has embodied ™ can be loging a pound of fat a day, It will/