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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1893)
THE OMAHA DAILY BEE * . SUNDAY. OCTOBER 22 , 1893-SIXTEEN PAGES. n MAN'S ' CHAFFED CHATTER English , French and American Women in the Bazars of Paris. HOW THE PAPIS SHOP GIRLS DRESS SO WELL Mr * , llcecliti'i Aclvlee to VnanR Ilonite- breptrt Kijnculrlt nno H rotni-- Ulll W it n Jnp Kem- Inlno Jntthifn. "The American woman makes ono fool , moro than any oMier typo , the resthotics of tailoring. She wants not only to bo clothed ; she wants to bo made charming. A gown to her Is not a single creation ; she looks at It In all Its pafts and understands It. She requires more than moro figure and has a very line taste In tints. "Tho French woman Is much less satis factory. As a rule- she cares for noth ing but fit. She Is Immensely fond of her waist and a wrlnklo there will put her In a passion. But as for shade , cording , braid or buttons , she has no taste of her own. She throws herself entirely on the tailor's hands and takes what ho gives without comment. When the American woman orders she wants to know junt how much braid will bo used and how much fur just what cord aim how many yards and she Ins.lsts on seeing and commenting on the buttons. Now , ono can dress u a stick and his practical cyo may tell him that It is dresbcd an perfectly as it is possible fern n stick to bo , but at the sumo time It is much moro satisfactory , though perhaps more trouble , to null a woman who wants to know the why of everything. no matter how mlnuto. * * Care docs not sit lightly on young shoulders , bays Mrs. Bocchor , and if our daughters marry after graduating , with very little instruction from the homo college , they will of necessity find their first olTorte at housekeeping dishearten ing , but they may be well aspired that time and a , reasonable amount of patience will soon make the "crooked , ways straight and the rough places Bmboth. " A few weeks of extra timoand thought at the beginning of their now lifo will , If they faithfully try it , teach them how to work methodically. It will of neoco.i- sltv bo uphill work until this lesson has been mustered , but by persovorcnce and a little planning for each day's work every stop will be easier. It is a very good idea , every evening when all the work is finished , to sit down and quietly plan the work for the next morning and lor the whole of the next day as far as possible. Bring before your mind just what ought , what must , bo done and fix the mode and time of doing it distinctly. "While dressing the next morning re view the last night's plan , that all through the day it may bo like a map , eprcad out before your eyes. To bo sure , many things may occur that no fore sight could provide for sickness , unex pected company , or interruptions past your control but it is hardly possible thatanything will wholly derange a well and carefully adjusted plan for the day's duties. Many of our young housekeepers are discouraged and repining because they have not been taught before marriage to work methodically. Nothing can lighten labor like method and regu larity. " Lot this lesson bo well under stood and faithfully practiced , and there are but very few that cannot find leisure for a little reading and some recreation , certainly all they need if in a position where the roughest and hardest work can , under suitable supervision , bo loft to a servant. # * A pretty young Salem , Mass. , girl has reccsntly become engaged to a native of Japan , and intends so far to make his people her people and his ways hot1 ways that their future homo in Salem is to bo Iri built and furnished in Japanese style. The building materials.have all been Bhlpped from Japan , and by tho'timo the house is ready for them , art tiles , por- tioroH , wall paper , wood carvings , mat tings , rugs and rare pottery will have arrived to fill it. The vestibule is to bo paved with art tiles , its walls hung with stamped leather , and it will bo reached by a portal lighted by queer little windows dews like those in the Buddhist tomplo. There will bo no doors at all except in the kitchen , but instead open archways formed of boatitifuly snrvcd panels. The chief churactoristio of a real Japitno&o room is its baroness , since h contains no furniture in our bonso of the word , but this Japanese-American dwell ing will bo bo richly furnished with cabinets , Gcreons , curios and hangings that the absence of the customary chairs and tables will not ho felt as a luck. Upstairs the sleeping rooms will bo fur nished hi comfortable American style , "For , " says the pretty bride-elect , ' 'en thusiastic as I am over everything Japanese , I do not intend to sit on the flnnt * { n mv mvn liniiRo ! " Some ono has said somewhere that the mania to learn everything , from clear rtarohlng to political economy , causes women to break down long before their tlmo. This sentiment was at ono time uncomfortably true , but at the present wo feel that the most hopeful prestige of excellence in woman's work and the eafoguard of her powers , mental and physical , IB that she In learning to spe cialize instead of wasting herself in a dozen different directions. Ono of the many beneficent effects of the World's fair of ' 03 is that it has accentuated this specialization of work by placing women In charge of exhibits and upon commit tees for which their individual training has fitted them. When women who manage farms of their own were put upon juries in the agricultural depart ment , and when these who have acted us factory inspectors , or have made an especial study of various textiles , food preparations and decorative objectworo called to bo judges in the manufactures department ; and when such scholars and workers as Miss Alice C , Fletcher , Mrs. Zelia Nuttall nnd Mrs. Cornelius Stevenson were invited to servo in the departments of ethnology mid urchicology ; or when , Mies Emily Sartain , an artist by inherit ance and trulninir , Mrs. Mary llalleck Footo nnd Mrs. ( Janduco Wheeler were placed upon the fine arts jury , ono not only feels that these beleotlons have been wiboly made , but that , in these and other instances , specialization in woman's work has boon givoil recogni tion ana encouragement. Some one who knows her well has said that the reason Mrs. Potter Palmer al- wnyd carries horbolf sobcrencly through the tumultuous meetings of the woman commlBBlonors is that she is always con scious of being perfectly dressed. It is ono of to ) ) ways of women. Many a woman has made her toilet , like Marie Antoinette , to go bravely through the supreme hourof her life , and triumphed. Many a woimm has fortified herself for disagreeable duty or un embarrassing position with u bunch of roses in her bolt. Lifo is never altogether u failure to the woman who knows her bonnet is becoming , And there is no consolation v a in tut bopo of heaven to the ono who knows that her bang is straighten ing out in the mldat-of trying circum stances. * It is a hint that comes from a woman recently returned from n considerable residence in ono of the Gorman art cities , that the closest inquiries should bo m.tdobtiforo taking lodgings or apartments , into the cleanliness of the beds nnd furnishings. "In some of tlio most attractive-ap pearing and apparently faultless places , " oho says , "wo have been fairly driven out after a short stay , forfeiting the rent rather than undertake to accept the con ditions. At last wo put the question bluntly every tlmo , expressly stating that If on trial the apartment was found to bo infested wo should claim the right to move at onco. " Tliia traveler's experience may have boon exceptional ; it is at least actual and as such , perhaps , is a note of warn ing. * A representative woman who has adopted the habit of cross riding , or rid ing astride tlio horse , declares it to bo the only safe and satisfactory way to ride , and she believes that the old way will he entirely superseded by the now. "Who would have believed a few years ago , " she argues , "that women would ride bicycles in our city streets ? " Yet now a woman on a safety does not attract a second glance. " She explains logically enough the difference between the insecure Beat , the distorted spine and compressed chest of the old method and the sturdy , straightforward , oven balance of the now , and she asks per tinently : "Aftor all , what is there in the least degree shocking or immodest about it ? The curves of the figure are thrown into far loss prominoneo and the habit is easily managed by wearing n divided skirt under an ordinary riding skirt oncn down tlio back so that it falls gracefully on both bides of the horso. The coat can of course bo made in the moat conventional style if ono wishes , and equestrienne leggings should al ways form a part of any riding costume. " Fashionable makers of riding habits say , however , that they make almost none for the now way of.ridingand see no signs of such an innovation , although it pre vails to some small extent in England and in our western statoa. * # * The English woman ? Ah , that's an other thing. The American woman comes to Paris to ohooso clothes ; the English woman to buy them The latter has probably been brought up on a single color at least , she comoa into the pluco with a very definite idea of what she wants , says tno Paris correspondent of the Philadelphia Times. If wo ven ture to offer a suggestion that some thing else would perhaps become her equally as well she says very frigidly : "I think I am perfectly able to judge for myself , sirl" ' As for the American woman , she has plenty of mind of her own. She knows very well what she wants , and what she noea not like , nnd she says , so very plainlj , too. Any amount of talking wouldn't ' make her take a shade she thinks not pretty , but she is not bullheaded - , headed about it. She is open to convic tion , and does not cut off a well-meant criticism by any iciness. Then , too , the American woman has some appreciation. If a gown suits her , she says so , and jlist as emphatically as who tells you she dislikes another. Now , a costumer likes this. Money is what ho works for , but a little appreciation with it is a good thing. In a largo indi vidual order particularly lor a person of moro than ordinary consequence every ono who works over the material , from tlio cutter on up to the man who puts on the last button or bit of jur , takes a personal interest in his work , and ho likes to have it appreciated. It is more satisfactory to succeed Tith a costume of a woman who can say "Thank youl' or "How perfectly lovely ! " That's the American wayl The English woman is not at all backward in finding fault. In fact , she often scorns to consider it a part of the process and does so indiscriminately. She receives her gowns always with an "It is satisfactory , but " and then fol lows the criticism. But she never praises. Very often she brings her hus band with her and refers a question to hia taste. Catch an American woman doing that ! No , indeed ; if she bringB'hor husband at all , she loaves him with a newspaper in the waiting room and has her bay herself. * * French women * of fashionable Paris spent a great deal of money on street dresses , sums which would make oven prodigal Now Yorkers staro. It is not so much on the value of the materials used as in the number of costumes. This arises in part from the French love of variety and change , and In part from the dislike to bo scon often in the same gown. Sometimes the French woman overreaches her purse limit and finds her bill so largo that she cannot pay it herself and is afraid to toll her husband. Then wo have to wait while she stints herself of pin money. The reason why comparatively poor women 01 Paris are able to dress BO g costumes ordered avery season by the fashionable Parisionno. At the end of the season the costumes nro very far from worn , and your ultra-fashionable woman hero would not bo been in clothes a boason old , so she soils thorn , sometimes for a song. There are largo numbers ol private agents who buy these and Boll thorn again to smaller dealers. Some of thorn are altered , as far as possible , into a treed imitation of the prevailing style , and bring a fairly good price at ques tionable dealers' houses. Others are boldd by second rate dealers in the loss fashionable quarters of the city and their prices bring them within the reach of the shop girl of the Place Vondomo or tlio brasborio girl of tlio Latin Quar ter. ter.This reselling of costumes has much to do witli the chio tollatH of Paris' poorer women. So fashionable Paris keeps up the style for Its lower classes. The univei > al taste which this fosters reacts , of course , upon the women higher in the bocial scale , and furnishes an ad ditional Hpur to tholr loaders to keep up their cobtumoa the no plus ultra of femi nine fashion. Paris is the center of the world of ta'jR ) , ami will ronmin BO for a good many years yet. It is its cosmo politan character which makes it dictator tater , and it shows loss probability every season of losing the prestige hold for so many centuries. feminine tict. . Mrs. Leland Stanford hai given over $50,000 to the Kindergarten association of San Francisco. There are 0,8:15 : postmistresses under the United States government , the largest number in any ono state , 403 , being in Pennsylvania , and one in Alaska. Tlio census returns from Albany show that there are 8UlKi , workingwomen in tlio capital oily. And among those are ono lawyer , ono pawnbroker , forty-nlno bulooa keepers and seven doctors. Mibs Pauncofoto , daughter of the British ambassador , has decided artis tic talont. Jlor particular onthusiabiu is for miniature palntlng.bomo very credit able specimens of which adorn nor desk in the crlmbon drawing room of the ou- bassy. Queen Victoria insists on her small graudsoua wearing Highland dress when they are with hor. Even the little girls of the duke of Connaught wear plaid kilts , Scotch caps and short jack ets when they nro under the cyo of their royal grandmamma. Before the clover blossoms are all gone gather enough to make n little cushion , nnd dry thorn in the sun. Pill n pillow sixteen inches square , and cover It with India silk in palo green embroidered with clover blossoms and the loaves. An interesting fact in connection with the lifo of Maria Mitchell of beloved memory is that she was never able to overcome her fear and dread of light ning. The hcavona were to her as an open hook , yet this of their marvels was always awful and mysterious to hor. The Archduchess Rainier possesses some pearls of unusual beauty , hut which some tlmo ago "showed signs of losing their brilliancy. ' They were what the exports call "ill , " and ns the only cure the pearls will have to bo again submerged in tholr original ele ment nnd remain in the sea for several years. How felt has boon the want that the woman's apartment house , for which Mrs. Candaco Wheeler and Miss Jnnot Lewis have labored unceasingly , is going to supply , may ho gathered from the statement that over 100 applications are already iilcd for the 140 rooms and apartments that the building will afford. The French Cells in the Women's building at Chicago include a case rep resenting historical characters Marguerite - guorito of Navarro. the fair Gabriel , Marie Antoinette , Josephine , Anne of Austria , the Marqulso do Montcnpan and many other famous p'orsonngcs dressed in their authentic costumes : Two girls llvitog in a coal mining vil lage of Pennsylvania , and who were unable - able to secure employment of any sort , disguised themselves as bovs and in that attlro obtained work in ono of the collieries. Their sox was not discov ered for some weeks after , when , not withstanding their entreaties , they were immediately discharged and sent homo. "I had to learn of my daughter's misery , " said Mrs. U. S.'Grant in an in terview in Chicago , "through the American press. " The Btorios about Mrs. Sartoris' unhappy domestic life are , according to her mother , in a frank statement of which the sentence quoted is the prelude , without foundation in fact. Referring to the "broken sugar candy , " recently upokcn of in those col umns as being served at an English table to sweeten ton and coffee , a corre spondent writes of her experience trav eling in Japan. "At many places , " she says , "with my cup of tea a large , rough piece of sugar would bo handed to me , and after a sip of tea a nibble at the sugar was the proper thing. Fiiphlou Notes. A now tea cozy is an elephant of white felt , with trappings of red. Valkyrie wings in plain or shaded colors have taken the shops by storm. New changeable dross goods show magenta or beet-root red prominently. For autumn riding and driving , buck skin and dogskin gauntlets are popular. Fur roses and other flowers look quite as artistic as they could bo expected to. Satin is ono of the favorite trimmings for very light colored and white wool materials. A great deal Irish-point and various antique laces are worn with materials of all sorts. The newest importations of fancy galleon loon show some elaborate and very ele gant designs. Papers imitating stuffs of all kinds are popular. French canvas and burlaps are perfectly reproduced. The fichu capo with long ends falling over the front of the skirt is one of the features of autumn costumes. Shoulder capes for autumn are made with double fronts in Russian style and enormously full plaited collars. Yellow and black is ono of the most perfect combinations for brunettes , especially those with but little color. Pink and very light green felt hats with dark velvet trimmings and narrow fur bands and coils are dressy favorites in millinery. Decorated leather ana canvas in de signs of griilins , rampant blue dragons on blue grounds , are fine with dark oak wainscoating in hall and library. Mink fur is moro in vogue than over thU year and many pretty effects are produced by arranging the furs in such a way as to form shaded brown stripes. Feather bonnets , hats , turbans and elaborate trimmings are imported in great variety. Some of thcso are so ultra elaborate that they reach the verge of absurdity. The drawing room coiling , should not bo papered , but a canvas medallion painted by an artist is applied with Htucco or "compo" framing to the center of the ivory-tinted ground. A novelty In the arrangement of sashes for children is shown in a dross in which the sash is put in at the front of the Hleovo scams. The bash is brought around under the arms and tied in a loofae bow at the back. Ono of the handsomest dresses of the seubon is of black armuro with lemon- yellow trimmingfi. The garniture ma terial is a brocade and gold passemen terie intermixed. The dress is worn by ii tall and stvlish brunette. Heavy silk cord passementeries in French or Russian military designs ap pear on beautiful winter coata of cloth made by Parisian tailors , and witli these aro.associated dark furs in marten , otter , fox nnd astrakhan. The best halls * are usually hung in stuff instead of paper. Morris tapestry with unearthly dragons in yellow , blue and green are mout admired. Halllloors are of polished wood carved with rugs and never carpeted. Asfantistic a * design as any rational mind well could conceive is a roll of fur coiled round and round , like a cell of hair , and stuck all over with jot span gles. Two olrd claws of jet beadwork are provided for tlio nondescript crea tion. _ Wo couldnot improve ttio < uiallty if paid double the price. DoWltfs Witch Huzel Salve Is the best salvo that experience can produce , or Unit monin can buy. KUVVAl-WX.il * The coffers of the Chicago university re ceived nearly $100,000 ID cash Uouatious ono dny recently. Williams college in Massachusetts and Cornell university in New York are celebrat ing anniversaries nearly simultaneously. Williams college Is a century old. Cornell university lias existed but one-fourth us IOIIR. IOIIR.Tho The general synod of tlio Church of Eng land in Canada 1ms adopted a resolution do- clarln ? rcllclous teaching in the public schools un ubsi'luto necessity in order to ful- flli the true purpose of education or to con- bervu the highest Interest of the nation. The first gymnasium or college for women in Germanj was opened u few wcoks ago September 10 in Carlsruh , the fau-utmueil capital of the grand duchy of Bnden. The course of instruction Is precisely thosatno as in the gymnasia for boys and young men. six years are necessary to complete it. There are now 1M.013 schools in the state of Pennsylvania , with 8,245 male and 17,718 feaialo teachers m charge. The attendance ' 'Imitation ' is the Sincerest Flattery , " We Admittedly , . V " Do the Largest and the Best Tailoring , Business in the World. It has not come to us by accident , it's the result of twenty-five years of schooling in tailoring on a broad guage plan peculiarly our own. We study how to make the best possible clothes , * ' for the least money , A To give you the most , and to get your trade the * quickest , is the plan that has brought us to our present position. These are StringentTimes' ! "You feel that you cannot afford to pay $48 or $80 for your winter suit , and yet you wish to appear as dressy as usual. Let Nicoll solve this problem for you ( they have solved it for many of your friends. ) Commencing tomorrow and during the week we offer that will anchor your trade to us in the future. For < OAOO will make to your order a splendid and serviceable business suit. ( You saw these goods last week at $2B and $27. ) For choice of imported cheviots , silk mixtures , English worsteds , etc. ( We refused $3O for these goods , a short time ago. ) For 00 Well , 'this ' line is a "stunner" - we feel proud in showing it. ( You can't duplicate 'em for less than $4O anywhere. ) Trousers ! Those we offer at $5 to $8 will tempt you to buy two pair. Is it necessat'y to urge you to be prompt in placing your order before best patterns are gone ? There'll be a'hole in the stock by Monday night , at these prices. A splendid sline of trousering for business or office wear at $5.00. ( You'll buy a pair of these in addition to your suit. ) The prices in our window are interesting : ' Non-residents 2O7 please address NICOLL THE TAILOR our mail order department. S. 16th. lists show 503,858 male pupils enrolled ana 400,549 female pupil3 , the average attend ance being 722 , I'M , ft percentaRO of 84. The aggregate of taxes levied for school and building purposes outside of Philadelphia is $7,770,101 , which is exclusive of the stale appropriation. The receipts from taxes and nil sources , except the state appropriation , amount to flO.US3.29S , which sum does not in clude Philadelphia , and the total receipts in the state arc $17,413,301. , Xho expenditures were $10,410,970. JtKLWWUH. The Protestant Episcopal misstonary council will bo held in Chicago OctouerSS to 23. Twelve hundred now Christian Endeavor societies have been organized since the convention - vention last July. A firm in Palestine is engaged in supply ing water from the river Joraan to churches. It is put up in scaled bottles and sold by the case. case.Now Yorlc and Pennsylvania Lutherans will celebrate the 410th anniversary of the birth of Martin Luther. The celebration occurs November 10. On Maul , ono of the Hawaiian islands , there is a Christian Endeavor society with about twentv-flvo active members , bomo of them are obliged to travel seven miles to the mooting , but the attendance is excellent. The bible has been translated Into 187 of the leading Ian guagcs which are spoken oy about 000,000,000 , people. Added to thcso ligures those of the minor tongues it is a fair estimate that the bible is now acces. slblo to fully 1,000,000,000 , , souls. rr. v. nii o.rtnilufr ( a cild tn hft " nf - frpmient - - " U1UUIU11U DHiilUH " ra . occurrence in St. Paul's cathedral in London , It has actually been found necessary to post up a notice warning people against umbrella thieves , and the presence of a detective in the cathedral has been found doslraolc. Most Hov. William J. Walsh , D.D. , arch bishop of Dublin , who was present at the celebration of the silver Jubilee of Cardinal Gibbons last week. Is ono of the most learned ecclesiastics in the Irish church. As n learned musician ho W also noted. The editor of a southern religious paper recently cooled an nrtlclo from another ro- Hgious paper , and then remarked : "If wo were u calf wo would aay 'Bah1 In reply to this. " On the follortirtfc' week the other edi tor remarked : "Our good brother's reply to ourarticlo was'Bahj' the reader can draw his own conclusion. " f The year book of tutooung Men's Chris tian associations of North America for 18U3 has bcon Issued. Thonumbcrof associations is now M'JU.'wlth an aggregate membership of 245,809. Thesa associations own buildings valued at $12,691,000.AlTheir total not prop erty Is valued at tI4,20SH8 ( moro than $1,500,000 moro than the year before. In Protestant Episcopal circles there is much dlsousslon of tno remarkable sermon preached by Bishop Whlpploat the consecra tion of Bishop Lawrc&co of Massachusetts. It was an cloquentvwoa for church unity , and the main thought'sot forth was that the church must make her , appeal to men lu her Master's spirit of loving sympathy , of pity , tenderncs , helpfuliiesi , charity , must study to know mou as they are in daily Ufa and then into human lives by the door of the human heart. The angelus , or bell rung about 0 o'clock in the Catholic ehurihes of this country , is a survival of the ourfew boll. In many parts of Europe H is known as the "prayer bell. " Pone John XXIII , about 1410 , fearing deposi tion at the hands of his people , among whom ho was uurK > pulur , ordered all Christian people plo to repeat three Avcs when the curfew rang to avert the misfortune. He was after wards deposed , but the custum continued. The noonday bell was ilrsl instituted by Pouo Calixtus III. , about 1455 , at a tlmo when the contemporaneous invasions of Ku- rope by the Turks and the appearance of a great comet seemed to threaten the whole CurUtain world with extermination. MME. M. YALE , The Woild's First Complexion Specialist , PIONEER AND CR.KATOH OF DKAUTY CULTURE. INDORSED l > y the CO.VOKBSS of Originator of Steaming the Face. Inventor of tlio llrut Steamlntr Aini.irntus. Ilia only ono iillon < Hl a lutciit at Washington , D. C. Jlme. Ynlu' own beamy will nuvur be forgotten , At10 alio la as fresh and lovely us any beauty of 18. SInio , Ynlu'saro thn only Complexion Remedies sold ua SonvcnlrH at the World H Fair , Beauty Free foj- OpeWeelc. . Lmllua doalroim of becoming beautiful by Helen- title meaiiH , without llm aid of comnc'tlcH , are urgently renm-meil to visit Mine , Ynlo'H Teiuiilu of Ilcauty niul Bee for tlienmelvett her imirvelonn woik In ruutorlni ; the old and mliUUi'-iiBLil to youth nnd cnlllvatiiiir natural beauty , Women of 4O. 60,00 , and iniicli older , II.IVQ BOIIO under Mine , Ynlo'H treatment , looking worn out , Inward , wrin kled and horrible , nnd been perfectly restored to youth nnd be.inty , Tlila may Hcem Incredible , but a visit to the Temple of llcnuty will prove nil that IH clulmetl to tlio entire BallBf.ictlon of any one ( leHlroiiH of Imvlntr their youth reutored or their bounty cultivated , LAST CHANCE TO GEF SKIN FOOD FREE. Ladles buying Complexion ItemiHlles llilH week of Mine , Yam will bo premmti'd with alar of tli Skin Food for rcmovliu ; Wrlnkleu and the trnccH of nkc. This will positively bo tlio last tlmo It will over bo t'l veil away free. Do not forget to call this week. Cut coupon out. FROMOMAHA BEE. This coupon entitles bearer to n Jar of Mine. Yalo'tt Famous Skin Food for ro- niovlnirlnkles niul the tracra of ugo. It will be necessary for u purchase to In made of sonio ono other complexion rem edy In order to fc-ot tlio SKIN FOOD , ns It la very uxpenslvo , tlii < prlcu bclnt ; $1.60 and * t 00 , Tlila Is positively the lust week U will ever bo given away Kreo. so do not neglect getting n Jar Free. Ladles out of town ordering this week will h.ivu a Jar wilt them Free. GOOU FOH ONE WE UK ONLY. CUT THIS COUPON OUT. Ua It matters not If FrockleB Imvo been from youth to old ago , La Freckla will remot u tlio inout Htuli- born cauo In a fuw ilaya. Leaves the Hkln beuutl * Jul , clear uud free from a blemish. Price , $1 , Excelsior flatf Topic * The only remedy In tlio history of the world known to turn gray Imtr back to Its original color without dye ; Btoim It falllntr In 1U houru ; creatca a luxuriant ( -rowtli. I'rlcu , 1 per bottle ; 0 for * 5. IVlfne. Yale's Qulde to Beauty Qhcnaway ( rco. Valuable to all women , Lndlou wrltlne for It pleaBo Bund 0 cuutB to pay POBUKU. Send tot prlcollBt of remudleB UBod by Miuu , Yjlu forculliviilluif bciiuty , LaUloa uao theui BUCCOBB fully at lioniu. lioniu.Wall Orders. When ortlerlnir nocxlH please reelBtor your letterer or Bend P.O. order , bank draft , curtlQed check ( poatu ( uote , Addruaa all orders to Mifte. M. Yale , Beamy am Cotnplcxlou SpeclallBt , IIOOM C01 , KAUI1ACH J1LOCK. COr. ICtli und llouiflau BtB. , Omaha , Neb. P. S. Madauio Yulo'it remcdluB r.ra bold by al ] Cr t-claei drugglBU The original circulating and ventilating Base Burner Gives moro heat , usoa loss fuel than anyatovo mado. Wo will furnish you the proof of this if you care to investigate. Have you soon our Acorn Radiator and our Acorn Oak ? They are the boat soft coa stoves mado. Oil Heaters with wlro gauze odorlosa burners. JOHN HUSSIE 2407 Cuming St. Tel. 1110. STEARNS FRUIT LAND COMPANY , * PORTLAND , OREGON , Dealer In Oregon und Washington lands , Developed fruit orchards a specialty , The Best Fruit Land on Earth in tracts to suit. Homesteads on bettor terras than government homostoadB. For full particulars address THE STEARNS FRUIT LAND COMPANY , 107 FIRST STREET. PORTLAND , OREGON. n ersizef % THE MERCANTILE CIGAR BETTER THAN EVER1 Umle of Ilia llueit quality of lluvuna Tobucco tlmtcua t > o bong-lit. Kqualla everjrrriiircttotb * * MtU * 9TUx Clears MiuiufncttrtJbrJf.U. UlCB UliKCAVll. ! iajoAll B LCTOUY. A.HOSPE J5 I5I3 DOUGLAS' 5TRE.&T