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10 OMAHA, SATU DAY, MAY 28, 1910 Women's CORSET COVERS worth up to 50¢, at— 18¢ Well made of good materials, embrold- ery and lace trim- med, various styles. Women'’s Colored WASH PETTICOATS Wide embroldered flounce, an extra special lot for this nale Genuine Heatherblooom PETTICOATS worth up to $2, at— Hundreds to choose from Children’s ‘‘IDEAL"’ WAISTS Every woman knows the value of these walsts. always sell at 25¢, special— Children’s SKIRTS Slizes 2 to 10, plain tucked and hem- stitched worth up to 35c, at— Children’s DRAWERS worth 15¢, at— 9¢ Ages 0 to 7 years. tucked and stitched OHILD'S ROMPERS worth 35¢, at— In plaip and fan- ey chambrays and nghas Special One Lot of Odd INFANT'S TRINKETS Many of i trinkets aro mainu facturer's samplo Made to sell as high as 98¢, worth 75¢— i E at, eoh— 38¢ STORES 19¢ eat Annual Sale « Muslin Underwear Saturday will be the greatest day in all the year to buy undermuslins. We have been preparing for this annual event for months, we hav. made a number of fortunate special purchases and we have never before been able to offer such grand special bargains as these: hem- Combination Garments Corset-cover and drawers or corset cover and gkirts, made in one garment— 45 69 gootl quality, carefully sized... C' c Combination Undermuslins \Corset cover and skirts or corset cover and " drawers, in one garment—lace 98c and embroidery trimmed....... Combination Undermuslins . Fine Muslin Underwear Elegant skirts, gowns, chemises, drawers and corset covers, made of the highest qual- ity fabries—elegantly trimmed with fine laces, embroideries, ete.—many fine styles to select from at...... 81045 Fine Musiin Underwear Elaborately made muslin underwear—made of soft sheer fabries—beautifully ribbon trimmed, also finished with deep flounces of lace and embroidery—scores of $l 89 fine styles; specially priced.......®ke Women's White Underskirts Deep flounces of. heavy embroidery and rows of lace, with wide ribbon trimmings; very exceptional val- ues, two lots— 82,50-52.98 Y Corset\coverrand drawers or corset cover and skirts—beamtifully made $1 45_51 89 . L] and nicely trimmed...... Genuine Hand Made \ FRENCH LINGERIE \ At About'} Less Than Regular Prices * All these garments were imported ex- pressly: for this sale through our own foreign office. They are special purchases made from Hrench commissionaires and include many sample garments—all hand made. P8¢ for flne French Chemises and Drawers, for hand made French Chemises, s(}n'v;‘u‘r)- and Drawers. $1.98 for hand made Corset Covers, Drawers and Chemises. $2.50 for genuine hand ers, Corset Covers, Btc. 2,98 for elegant French Gowns, Drawers, Chemises and combinations. 3. for Combination garments, Gowns, Drawers and | Chemises. Other' elaborate Combination Garments or pieces— at . vereirieeees e 85,00 up to $19.00 NOW AL . . vAii Odd Lots of Women's Gowns, Corset Covers, Drawers and Skirts These undergarments are worth ag high as 76¢ each, speclal, at Undermuslins at 45¢ Well made garments—nainsook slip- over night gowns—walking length skirts with embroidery and lace trimmed flounces—umbrella draw- ers, with deep lace ruffle 45c Undermuslins at 98 Night gowns and chemises of nain- sook and soft cambrie—slipover effects - with French embroidered yokes—skirts, chemises and white petticoats with wide 98(: Undermuslins at 69¢ s Gowns in empire and kimono 'styles —chemise in extra long skirt length —white petticoats with rows of iace insertion—drawers in umbrella or regular styles—fine : assortment—on sale 69c {1 TSR b M RO Corset Extra Size Undergarments For Stout Women Skirts, Gowns and Drawers; cambric and nainsook gowns; high or-low necks; slip over or button fronts —akirts cut wide through the hips; deep flounces and tucks and embroidery; drawers, extra wide cut, beautifully made, at— v 98¢, $1.39, $1.89 x&nde French Gowns, Draw- —dainty corset covers, lace trimmings, ete.— chemises and short skirts. . a2 Sweet Corn Season A, Opens with Haughty Prices 26c Lilac Talcum ..... 7 26¢ C. L. Grave's . c Tooth Powder. . 19¢ $1.00 Genuine Ideal Hair Brush, Brndeis Stores Sale of Drugs and Cameras 14c AReal Camera Bargain for Saturday A $7.50 Seneca Camera, 4x5, 1 plate. hold- er, 1 tripod, worth $1.50, all for $5.98— “!l:l’:l? "‘;6:‘!‘1"0“ i am; 's Sowy blest. ihod 11b. 20 Mule Team Borax 6 cakes Ivory Soap of the list, a large supply giving them a reachable price. In fact you can get pine- apples at 10, 15, 20 or 25 cents a plece, acs cording to size Sunday Dinner Menu, Boulllon. Panned Chicken. Creamed Potatoes. Buttered Beets. The!Sun’ i ‘toucli. Sl o “The tomato neyer ac- quires its full and most perfect flavor,” says Pro- fessor Tracy of the United States Departmem of Agri- culture, “except when ripened on the vine, and in A full sunlight.” Here is one secret of the unrivalled quality of ! ! Tomato Soup 5 It is made from choice New ersey tomatoes perfectly rip- ened on the. vine.t,?:nd Ihe’n psl ?.ummgd‘mtdy; so that all their enticing natural flavor is retained. Every ingredient used is equally choice, fresh and perfect conditioned, And they are blended with a skill and care worthy of their quality, . Money back on any Campbell Boup fhat does not entirely sule s 21kinds 10ca can Just add hot water, bring to a boil, and serve, Cambell’ Boak [ the bty Rowse wer-present ad. | we send You a copy—free? Josxru Camrnrr Comrany mden N J Look for the Cherry Salad. Cheese. Waters. Maple Ice Cream. ake. C Coftee. Cherry Salad—Ose pint can cherry julce, one cup canned cherries, one dozen pimento olives cut in rings, one small cupful of celery, one-half cupful of black walputs, one envelope powdered gelatin. Heat cher juice to bolling point, over gelatin pour three tablespoonfuls of hot juice, stir until dissolved, then add remaining juice. When cold and just beginning to thicken add other ingredients. Pour into oblong pan to mold. Serve In silces on lettuce leaf, with wafers and mayonnalse, to which whipped cream has been generously added. Wil serve elght. It you go to' market early and take with you a fat purse you can have it now— sweet corn. The first representatives of this great American delicacy have arrived and are worth—well, almost thelr welght in gold. It will be very much like eating pearls to indulge in the succulent cereal. In round numbers the corn can be obtained for % cents a dozen. Then, there are apricots, too, which may be had for the trifling sum of % cents. These likewise aro the first of the season. The third delicacy among the new . ar- rivals is gooseberries—not the common, plentiful, home variety of gooseberries; not the Booseberries for preserves, jams and spiced concoctions; no. the gooseberries that the Indlans hawk from door to door; but gooseberries whose price makes them aristocrats; gooseberries 20 cents a quart. Pineapples belong now to the other side Strawberries cling to the same price, 16 cents a quart, and while this is not as low as the housewife llkes to have them before she dons her preserving garb, it might be & good thing to begin preserving. There is a large question as to whether or not the price will be lower this season since the home-grown fruit isn't going to arrive. Cherries are 40 cents a pound. The supply of cherries, likewise, is certain to be short this year, since this fruit, too, was nipped in the bud. Lemons also are high—25 cents a dozen. Head lettuce of cholce variety is now in the market, prices ranging from 4 to 15 cents. Beans are 10 cents a quart, peas 15 cents., Egg plant is 10 and 20 cents. Rad- tshes ‘three to five bunches for § cents, | onlons two bunches for § cents, lettuce two | bunches of § cents, turnips 5 cents a bunch, Tomatoes are 80 and 60 cents a basket of 10 cents a pound, new potatoes are 35 and 40 cents a peck, cucumbers are 6, 10 and 15 cents each; asparagus is 6 cents & bunch, two or four bunches for 25 cents, according | to quality, | There are plenty of chickens In the mar- ket, hens retafling at 2 cents a pound;| fresh brollers, 60 cents a pound. The wholesale prices are: Roosters, 13§ cents; geese, 16 cents; ducks, 20 cents; turkeys, 26 cents; hens, 17 cents; springs, 18 cents; fresh brollers, $6.00, §7.50 and $9.00 a dozen. There Is likewise little change Iu butter prices, which are 26, 25, % and 33 cents a pound. Eggs wholesale at 20 cents a dozen; retail at 2 and 26 cents. SPINACH A WHOLESOME FOOD and New for Pre- paring Greens. Greens form the most just now. They include spinach, shep- herds- sprouts, dandelions, endive, lettuce and ‘many wild herbs which farmers use freely, but which, owing to the un- wholesome food Everything in +Pork Chops, 124¢ _Spring Chickens ......13%¢ Pork Roast ...........10%¢ 8 lbs. Leaf Lard.........96¢ Cudahy Rex Hams .16%¢ 2,000 1bs. Bacon L 1TY%e Veal Roast, 11%%4¢ and. .. .8%¢ Veal Stew .........i....68%€ _Fall Lambs Legs . A1%e Steer Pot Roast .8lbe Choice Lard A2% e 1 We, Close.at 1. P. M. Monday, | Decoration Day. ‘DELIVERY ‘WAGONS LEAVE AT ‘ 10:80 A, M. ANDSP. M. Eatables Here GROCERY SPECIALS 18 lbs, Sugar ... 10 bars Soap .. 2 cans §ifted Peas 2 cans Corn-.., 3 cans Tomatoes . cenann We will demonstrate National cuit goods all day. Butter, Eggs and Cheese. Pkg. Creamery . 3 Strictly fresh, No. 1 Eggs, the very n cartons 20¢ Pure Peanut Butter, in bulk ..20¢ FRESH FRUITS We sell nothing but the best selected ¢ Bls- fruits and vegetables, Our prices are the lowest. We have a shipment of the finest strawberries in Omaha, which will be sold at lowest possible prices. Don't foget we sell seeds—the very best. 1610 Harney St Phones, Douglas 2144 and 945, Ind. A2147, familiarity of town markets, are not often shipped to the city, The spinach is the vegetable most gen- erally cooked as greens, and dandelions and beet tops are close successors. There are three varietles of spinach—the rough, smooth and round. They are medicinal, with a slightly bitter flavor. Much of the spinach sold on home markets ls grown In frames by the market gardeners. It is forced under glass, making & rich crop and a profitable one, as it is in demand all the year around, and the canned article 1s more or less in favor, 1 The marketer should not buy any but the best. It should be crisp, clean and free from . straw, Insects, dried leaves, etc 1t thrown directly in cold water it freshens and then it must be picked over and should be thrown into a large pan under the hydrant, where, the running water helps in the washing, Drain well in a colander Dissolve half a tablespoontul of soda in warm water and pour over the spinach with hot water, cooking twenty minutes. | A number of® appetizing recipes for serv- ing spinach are gleaned from Olive Green's “How to Cook Vegetables.” Bolled Spinach—Clean thoroughly, sprinkle with salt and cook In a large double boller without liquid; or put Into a cover sauce- pan and steam. Drain and chop® season with butter, pepper and salt and serve with a border of poached eggs or put into & tightly covered saucepan and it begins to cook reduce the hea in & colander and season to taste, Bolled Spinach with Cream—Prepare ac- cording to direction given above, using a well seasoned stock for liquid. Drain, chop and reheat, seasoning with salt and pepper and molstening with ' cream and butter. Spinach Balls—Press all ' possible llquid from ‘& cupful of cpoked and chopped spin- ach ‘and reheat with two tablespoontuls 10¢ Willlams’ Shaving Soap.. 10¢ Chamois 3 cakes Colgate's English Process Soap, Zsc athoi 26c” Rubifoam ........ 25c Sanitol Tooth Paste. $1.50 Orlental Cream .. 26c Bath Powder 60c Milk Weed Cream . 60c Java Rice Powder. 50c Pozzonls Powder b50c Locust Blossom or White Rose Perfume, per 0z. .... .29¢ 76¢ Rubber Gloves 10c Shinola, C S $1.00 Traveling Cases, special, at $2.50 Leather Traveling Case, at $1.79 6c Owls, ... Gc Capaduros 10c_Official Seal. Sc Henry George. 26 Montanos ... 1 complete developing out fit, consisting of 2 Japan trays; 1 ruby lamp, 1 printing frame, 1 developing powder, 1 dozen card mounts, 1 toning . powder, .1 pkg. hypo, 1 measuring glaes, 1 dozen BUPPLIE $1.00 4x5 Plate Holders $1.256 6x7 Plate Holders Two dozen Post Cards. One pound Hypo. . $1.00 Ruby 89¢ Foousing Five-inch Tr $1.60 Tripods 4xb Plates, per Drying Rack to hold 1% piate at 4x5 printing paper, 1 roller, and 1 manual of in- structions, Lamp Cloth mmin 400 special 140 Granite Trays; speclal. 17 $23.00 View Camer: b We do developing and Finishing. All work guaranteed. We make enlargements of any small negative, all for A Free, Free—A $10.50 Camera Absolutely Free to the amateur submitting to us the best print before Saturday, June 4. get rules regarding this competition. Call at our photo department and It costs nothing to enter. CAMERAS. Buster Brown No. 2.. $6.00 Filmett (Senecs $14.00 Seneca, 3% x6%. $17.60 BRANDEIS PHOTO DEPARTMENT—SOUTH SIDE, NEW STORE. ful of cream. Season with salt, pepper, sugar and mace. Take from the.fire and add two eggs well beaten. Cool and shape into balls with buttered spoons. Simmer In bolling water for five or six minutes; drain and reheat in cream sauce, to which a few capers may be added. Buttered Spinach—Cook two quarts of spinach according to directions previously glven. Drain and serve with melted but- ter, or chop fine, press out all the liquid, reheat In cream sauce, season with a lit- tle grated nutmeg and at the last add two tablespoonfuls of butter! Chartreuse of Spinach—Butter a mold and line it with thin slices of hard-bolled eggs. Fill with chopped, cooked spinach, well drained, pressing In firmly. Put into & pan of hot water and bake for a few moments. Turn out and serve hot with cream or drawn butter sauce or cold with vinalgrette sauce. Individual molds may be used. Moided Spinach—Chop fine two cupfuls of cooked spinach, pressing out all the liquid. Mix with a tablespoonful of flour cooked In butter, and salt and pepper to season. Cook for five minutes, press into small buttered molds, turn out, garnish with slices of hard-bolled eggs and serve with cream sauce. Puree of Spinach—Prepare according to directions given for cream spinach and press through a sleve. Cook to & smooth, thick paste and serve. Spinach Souffle—Mix & cupful of cold cooked, chopped spinach with the well- beaten yolk of an egg and stir over the fire untll the egg 1s set. Cool; then fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs. Fill & buttered baking dish or individual soutfle dishes and bake for ten or fifteen minutes. Serve immediately, or mix two tablespoonfuls of chopped, cooked spinach with the beaten yolks of two eggs, & table- spoonful ‘of melted butter and salt and pepper to season. Cool, mix with two or three tablespoonfuls of cream and the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs. Turn into & buttered baking dish and bake quickly. The ‘cream may be omitted and the whites of two eggs used. Spinach a la Allemande—Eoll for ten miputes in salted water; press dry, chop fine and reheat In butter. Mix with bread each of butter and flour and & tablespoon- | a8 \ crumbe fried (a butter, or with drawn but- ter sauce, or cook the cleaned spinach in a double boller without liquld, seasoning with salt and melted butter. Spinach a la Itallenne—Chop a very small onlon fine; fry in butter and-add two ta- blespoonfuls of bread crumbs or flour and one cupful of stock. Cook until thick, stirring constantly, seasoning with salt, pepper and grated nutmeg. ' Mix with half a peck of spinach, cooked according to di- rections previously ~given; reheat and thicken with two eggs well beaten. 'Gar- nish with bard-bolled eggs, sliced and quartered. SUPPRESSING NOISE IN HOUSES Interesting Results of Test Conducted by an Investigator im Germany. Nothing escapes the German spirit of ex- perimental investigation. One of the latest subjects of it is the suppression of noise in dwelling houses. A Hanover professor named :Nussbaum has given his attention to the matter for nearly twenty-five years. He has experl- I mented both in the laboratory and in pri- vate houses. 18 that the more solid and tough and strong the building material .ds the more quickly and loudly it conveys sound, and fts con- ductiyity can best be with a plece of metal. The higher the tone the greater the conductivity. The professor made many experiments with partition walls. He found those of tiles and cement transmitted sound most and those of solid clay least the two comes the wall of ordinary brick, and the more the brick is burned the more nolse it transmits. A quickly hard- ening lime mortar 1s to be preferred to a clay mortar. One experiment showed that when & floor was covered with sand and cork mats spread over it hardly any noise penetrated to the room below, but that when the cork mats were joined together by any material underneath nolses were at once perceptible. How, of the plano or violin in the neighboring flats to be excluded? The professor's re- ply 1s & suggestion ‘to treat cell as he treated -successfully his telephone cell, namely to line them with & layer of zinc or lead—New York Sun, One point he has ascertained | tested by strokes | Between | | absent it may be asked, are the sounds | WATER COMPANY ASKS WRIT AGAINST SEWAGE IN RIVER Says City Cannot Collect Fine for Impure Water When Garbage Goens in Above Intake By sult filed In United States court; the Omaha Water company demands injunction against the city of Omaha to prevent the dumping of sewage in the Missouri river atove the intakes of the water plant, and asks that the ordinance fixing & penalty on impure water be set aside. The water company contends that the city is dumping sewage and allowing waste and dead animals to be heaped on the river banks, and while this rractice obtains can not demand & penalty for impure water, The city ordinance In question was recently passed by the council, It sets & fine of $,00 a day &s the penalty for serving the city with water below a standard of purity sutficlently high to satisty the city chemist. The new North Omaha sewer is discussed in the petition. This sewer, It s alleged, drains not only & large area of_the city, but also carries the waste from Imméanuel hospital where various water borne dis- eases are under treatment. The sewer empties six miles above the intake. The history of the water company is set fortn in the petition with special attention | to the contract of 1880, along with the con- tention that the actions of the city allegeq impalr this contract. No date has been fixed for the hearing in the matter of the application for an injunction. Judge Munger will leave Fri- day evening on a short fishing trip, to be | al days, and nothing will be | vev. done in the injunction matter until his re turn. Mest Wonderfnl Healing After suffering many years with & sore, Amos King, Port Byron, N, Y., was cured by Bucklen's Arnica Salve, Ze. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Keep Cnamber Liniment on haod. It is an antiseptic liniment and causes wounds to heal in less time than by any other treatment Bee Want Ads Are Business Boosters. GOOD BUYERS Always try to get the best possi- ble for their money. Are you a good buyer? Have you tried our refined coffee? It's steel cut with all dust and chaff removed by our new machines—The only ones in Omaha . IT'S THE BEST POSSIBLE—A COFFEE FOR COFFEE LOVERS, Mocha Mixture, 35¢-—3 1bs., §1 Excelsior Blend +,.,.:... 25¢ W. L. MASTERMAN & COMPANY COFFER MEN." MAIN STORE, 313 §, 11th St Branch st Public Markel, 1610 Marney, LI A TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER' One Dollar Fer Yeas. A