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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1904)
TIIE OMAIIA ILLUSTRATED BEE. Ocrtr. 190. Interesting Stories for the Women Folks Rlac af the flaslaMa M emaau SlFCUgSlNO th decLns of th Tj I "one Kill" n3 her aupwae I craM fcy the tiuinm woman," W VJ Mini Mataf B. Cleveland, man- - itrr of the BuFlncsx Woman c.inie c.f ChJcapo, declirc thai the fie mtnd for femlr.lr.ltr for offlr work 1 constantly lncrecHr.it. and th opportu nities offered the woman ttiorougWy trained in bualr.esa affairs 1 r,ractica:i.v unlimited. No lor.ger, according o Mi;s Clevelaed. do err.rlorera ee lor rerr.lr.lne machlrea whoee labor are covered by a rlvtn num ber of hours, but the demand la for cmeu lr.teliectuaJly eyu:i-pd to vrform mora than routine tasks, to take the Initia tive in matters that may arise, capable of independent thoufrr.s and comment to rrasp the inner workings tf a busin-ss urcanlcatloo. The advantage ol tha woman office employe, according to the same authority, are that: Bhe keeps the confldw.ee of her employ er mote faithfully and Is leas inclined to discuss his affalis and the details of hi business outsi of office hours than ia the man employe. Her work is more neat in appearance. Her habit re more ri-ru'w. She doe rot spend h-r evening in dissipation, and consecjumtly invariably is at her desk on time, bhe rarely is absent from thr oifloe. Illness bring the only excuse which ahe. recognises a legitimate. 6he appear not to have any relativea to bury. She Is less noiev around the tifflce and Is not constantly calling up her "best girl." Filipino Wome. US Dora Hauserman of Evunsrille, Ind., who ha returned from a visit to the Philippine islands, whtre. until a short time go her uncle held the post of attor ney general, ba thl to Bay of the native women : "I wa associated almost entirely with the better clas of Filipinos, and I was surprised at finding them o well read. Almost all the better cl;.sj sprak English. The young women are clever, well educated and soioa are btUllant. They are glad to meet Americans, and it was with regret that I said good bye to them. They are also just about a pretty and Jut abo-.it as Tain aa American girl. The mixed popu lation, the portion having an Interming ling of Spanish In their veins, taJte readily to American styles and customs. When ever you see one of these girls you will see her dressed in styles such as are found monthly In th American fashion Journals. The full-blooded Filipino are different, however. They affect the native dress and show no Inclination to adopt American staples. They have a wealth of rich black hair, which they dreaa very much according to American style. It is not necessary, however, for them to wear rata' in order to acquire the pull now so much In vogt e," Miss Hauserman made an excursion to a settlement of an uncivilised tribe. She said ahe was surprised to flni In the midst of all the savagery an American school, where a great many of the young native were daily attendant. Although It 1 a custom among the tribe never to wash their face, she ay it is one of the re quirement that the children must come to chool with clean face and neatly combed hair. She says the little heathens are taking a great interest in the school work. Baslaeaa Wsnea lat Plata At tiro. Plain attire is tha edict issued by many employer of women in New York City. The edict is empowered quite generally where stenographer and typewriter are employed. Tha reasons for tha innovation ara many, and ought to commend them selves to the stenographers. But th lat ter do not taks kindly to regulations in th matter of dress. Th supply of stenog raphers, however, is much greater than th demand; consequently applicants for . em ployment must submit to the conditions im posed or go without work. In an Interview in tha New Yo.-k Sun aa employer of women gives this explanation of th change: "I believe there ar still offices in this city who Ilk to make a showpiece of th stenographer, just as there art restaurants which employ none but exceedingly pretty cashiers; but they are comparatively few and far between. Th great majority of business bouses hire stenographers to work and they make no distinction between men and wumen. "In fact, in the business world today th question of sex is not considered in laying down rules. If woman wants to compete with i.iuu and do it successfully she must not look for special privileges. "I'ow, in the case of drees, for instance. I think a woman's business dress ought to be neat, inconspicuous, serviceable. Oauzy fabrics, whlc reveal the neck and arm; chains, floating ribbons and flashy jewelry are certainly not appropriate accessories to ' a business uniform. "I remember one day I wanted some dic tation taken in. hurry and I sent for one of the best women stenographers we have. Eh came, and I began to fire off the sen tences, trying to concentrate my thoughts so as to make the letters as strong as I wanted them to be. They were In relation to aa Important deal I was trying to put through and they needed to b carefully "As I went on I became conscious that something was ahnojlne me and I discov ered that It was a rattling, jingling sound, not loud, but incessant. I. l.mked at th stenographer. She was wearing on her wrist a bangle .bracelet, hung with a lot of trluketa, and every time her pencil moved the trinkets started jingling 'Will you pleas, take off that con founded thlngr I said as soon as I located the noise. 'Why in thunder do you want to we&r such a trinket to a business office, anyway?" "At Erst the girl got whlt, she was so scared, then she turned red with wrath. But she took off the nuisance, and she alo took herself off. not to return, when pay day came around. I was rry to lose her. and the experience gave roe a lesson which I have since followed. "It is this. When a yourg woman ap plies for a Job I tell her the rule of th house Is plain attire, high collars, no ob trusive Jewelry. Then if she wants to get mad and walk out with her head in the air I don't care a rap. "I made the discovery long ago that the girl who is very much fixed up in busi ness hours generally works with her eye on the c!ock and puts her hat on at least live minutes before It is time to go. and that sort never becomes valuable to her employer, no matter how smart he may be at her work." When a ni:l Is Ers". Catherine Terhune Herrick discourses thus on the most Interesting period In a girls life: 'The wipe girl needs no advice as to bow she shall benr herself during the period of her engagement. There Is no danger that she will not take it seriously. The risk in her case is that she wilL be so much burdened down with her new duties that she will lose sight of the lighter and more pleasurable side of it. That Is not the happiest engi.remtnt which is con ducted to the refrain of the "Dead March" In "Saul." A man may think it is very charming, for a while, to see his fiancee taV? almost a religious view of the new relationship, but it will not be long before he wi:i crave the cvery-dayness that t&kes fun as well as solemnity into account. "Fewer girls of this type, however, ar found than of the other. Thrre are girls who consider all lr.ve affairs more or lrs as Jokes, even those that lead to mar riage. Their point of view Is determined sometimes by their associates and some times by the part of the country in which they have been reared. In certain section It used to be the custom not to announce an engagement until a very brief period before wedding cards were out. t'nder those circumstance a girl seemed to tak a keen pleasure in concealing her new re lationship from those about ber. I bav known of girls who would not hesitate to deny point-blank the fact of their be trothal, even within a few weeks of their marriage. I once heard a girl say: 'All rr.f fun would be at an end If my engage mtnt were announced. I shall have to live with one man for the rest of my nat ural life, and I- mean to fiy about a littl before I settle down with him.' "One would be tempted to condemn this ort of thing unreservedly were It not that those same flirtatious girl often become the most devoted wive and mothera, and never bestow a look or a thought upxn other men after marriage. Eut. although there are Instances of this kind. It Is a decidedly unsafe rule to fo'.low. More .han this, it is unkind and unfair to all th partle concerned." . Wife of JapaTsFlel Marshal. The wife of Field Marshal Oyama of Japan ia a fitting subject for a sketch of the little known wife of a well known man. Yet the lady ia not unknown In America. Long before she became the wife of th great narrior Sterna tx Tamakana spent eleven year tudj Ir.g in this country, being one of a number of Japanese girl sent her by the Japanese government In 1871 to b educated. She was only 12 years old when the summons came for her to start for America. Even at that age she rhowed the aristocratic characteristics of ber fam ily, on of th military class, her features, the olive of her complexion, the blue-black of her hair and the fine taper of her fingers and beautiful nails all indicating bit blue news of blood. She and the grlls who came across th great sea to this strange land were the ri-st Japan had sent to modern countries to be educated. The little Stematx Is said to have been included among the number os a recognition of her brother's adhesion to the mikado. His father, whom he had succeeded es the head of the house, had been opposed to the restoration of the em peror. She was with a brother when Via was directed to sail for the United States. She was not permitted to visit her mother to say good-by before leaving her native shore. The party landed In San Francisco nnd Stemats came east and was admitted to the home of the Rev. Dr. Leonard Bacon, in New Haven. It is said of her that when In college ah On the Management of Wives MM OR some time past Dorothy Dlx, a clever writer on domestic topics, has contributed to the press prac tical and theoretical suggestions on the management of husbands. Having exhausted the subject she ex pounds her liieas on the management of wives for th enlightenment of husbands. Following are some of tier ideas on that delicate subject: Among the tenets most strenuously In sisted upon as efficacious in managing a husband is the hidden hand policy. Women are adjured to use diplomacy and not force, and to get their way without appearing to do so. They are told never to arouse oppo sition or appear arbitrary, and that victory perches on the banner of the woman who knows how to yield gracefully in Utile matters. Any woman who has ever tried theB wise precepts knows that they corns pretty near being all of the law and the prophets on the subject, but what Is tha matter with men applying them wltk equally good results to their wives? Every body, with a grain of spirit In them, ob jects to being bossed. There's something in the contrariness of human nature that prompts us to rebel against the person who asserts authority over us, particularly if we happen to be married to 'em. The man who announces in a loud tone of vole that he Is th head of the house, and proposes , to manage It, Is always outwitted In th end, and finds a stubborn resistance at every turn that balk him. The wise man makes his wife feel that she can do abso lutely as she pleases, and It always plesses her to do exactly as he pleases She gives him the road because she believes she could have It If she wanted it. Another theory that one would like to see applied from the masculine side of the house is the personal charm theory. Women , are told continually that if they would keep their husband's affection and make home happy for him they must pay atten tion to their looks and to those little graces of person and mind which first attracted him. Nothing could be truer, and every one of u feels what a blow and disil lusioning It must be to a man when the pretty young creature who ha been the embodiment to his fancy of all that was dainty and sweet takes o coming .to break fast in dowdy, dirty wrapper and with her hair don up In curl paper that ah doesn't undo until company comes in the evening. Wheu a woman does that it really ought to be actionable as obtaining goods under false pretenses, but what about a man? When he cam a courting how handsome and swell he looked. He waa bartered and brushed and perfumed until h was Just too sweet to live, end that was the kind of man she fell in love with, not this seedy individual with a three days' stubbie of dirty beard on hi face, lit the funniest thing on earth that a man never even dreams that his wife can be disillusioned and disgusted by his appearance, and Is really far more sensitive to it than he I to hers, because she thinks more about dress and looks. Nine-tenths of the men In th world seem to think that marriage mean the liberty to go slouchy. and shave as seldom as they can. It has always been considered that the supreme test of a wife' good management was her ability to make home so happy and pleasant that her husband would never care to wonder from his own fireside. She has been told, and it is good advice, to always meet him with a smile, to keep the unpleasant details of domestic contre temps and servant broils from a man al ready overburdened by his own cares, and, above all, always to be bright and cheerful and entertaining In her conversation. Is there any reason why these delightful do mestic virtues' should all be femininef Surely it Is a man' business to smile Just as much a a woman's. Tet, there isn't one man In a million who doesn't feel that he is doim? his full duty aa a man and a husband when he gives a few Inarticulate grunts in answer to hi wife' question and remarks, and then absorbs himself In hi paper until he goes to bed. Pretty in teresting and exciting for her. Isn't It? Tet, th man who does thl complain that hi wife Isn't satisfied at home, and Is forever wanting to go gadding off some where. Why shouldn't ahe? Anybody would be justified In wanting to get away from that kind of a mummy. If more men would tak th trouble to try to make home happy and entertaining for their wives there would be fewer women so anxious to chase off to the springs the first time the weather bureau hint that summer has com. Every now and then I hear It said that some man 1 being ruined by his wife's extravagance, and that he cannot ' manage her or prevent It. Well, whose fault 1 that? The man's, almost without excep tion, and the remedy 1 so simple the wonder Is that it suggests itself to so few husbands. Make your wife, your partner. Let her know exactly what your Income Ib. and what your business obligations are. Women are deathly afraid of debt. It one feel that she must do her part towards helping you meet a not, and. my word for It, she will do It cheerfully and willingly, and you'll have no bills to complain of. It is because women ar deajt with so un fairly about money that they are so often extravagant. The woman who never has any definite allowance, and often no money except a little doled out carfare, reasons to herself something like this: "Oh, well, I don't care. I give my time and my serv ices. I am housekeeper, seamstress, nurse and upper servant generally, and I never get a thing but my board and clothe, and Jack always grumbles over them, so I'll Just get th most I can." It isn"t exalted reasoning from an ethical point of Mew, but wouldn't a man feel pretty much the same way about it? Finally, my beloved brethren, be assured that the one unfailing rule for managing a' wife is by kindness. No .-oman ever yet rebelled agninst that. Give her love, tenderness, appreciation, and there la no question of managing. It settles Itself. She gives in because she enjoy It. 1,800,000 People Have Asked Us to Buy Them a 50c, Bottle of Liquozonc. We offer to buy the first bottle of Liquorona. and tfve It free to each lck one who ask It. Ami we have spent over one million dollar to announce and fulfill this offer. Our object has been to let Liquosoue itself show what It can do. A test la better than testimonials, better than ar rumen t In one Tear, 1 ,800.000 people have accepted thl offer. They have told others what Ldquozone does, and the others told others. The result la that millions now us It. It la more widely employed than any medi cine ever was more ' widely prescribed by the better physician. And your own neighbors wherever you are can tell you of people whom Llquoxon hat cured. Not Medicine Llquotone la not made by compound ing drugs, nor la there alcohol in it. lta virtue are derived solely from gas ' largely oxjeen fa a by a process requir ing Immense apparatus and 14 day' time. Thla process hat, for more than 20 years, been the constant subject of scientific and chemloal rerh. , The result is a liquid that does what oxygen does. It la a nerve food and blood food th meet helpful thing In th world to you. Its effects ar ex hilarating, vitalising, purifying. Yet It 1 a germicide so cettaii that we pub lish oa every bottl an offer of fl.ouo for a disease genu that It canaot kill. The reason 1 that genua are vegetables; and Liquozone like an excess of oxygen Is deadly to vegetal matter. There lies the great value of Llquo oue. It Is the only way known to kill genua In the body without killing the tissues, too. Any drug that kill germ is a poison, and it cannot be taken In ternally. Medicine Is almost helpless In any germ disease. It la thla fact that give Llquoeone lta worth to humanity. And that worth Is so great that, after testing the product for two years, through physiclana and hospitals, w paid f 100.0U0 for the American right. Germ Diseases These are the known germ disease. All that medicine can do (or these trou ble 1 to help Nature overcome the germs, and such result are indirect and uncertain. lJquoaone attacks the germ. wherever they are. And when the genus which cause a disease are de stroyed, the disease must end, and for. ever. That 1 inevitable. Bcaama Erralpalaa TvbarauliMls itwrrm Gall losaa Tumor I'loen Colli Ouut Varloaaala Gaaarrtiaa Olaat Woman's IHaauai ail a nam. that bad with tarer all lnltinmi. tlon U cat&rrb ail cooLasioua diaaaata all laa re sults of impure or poisoned tiood. la aarvaua aabmty Luqumod aria aa s vital Uar. ascawiillaulu what as flruci caa do. 50c Bottle Free If you need Liquozone. 'and have never tried It, please send us this coupon. TVe will then mall you an order on a local druggist for a full-size bottle, and we will pay the druggist ourselves for It. Thi 1 our free gift, made to convince you; to show yon what Liquozone la. and what it can do. In Justice to your elf, please accept It today, for It place you under no obligation whatever. Liquozone cost 50c and SI. Aataa Aa -aa feruaeiiltls fcwuoa futaoa briaat'i 1'iaeao 1k1 Troublae Ceaso Coiaa aousumpliaa Colic Croa .4iltlpauoa Catarrh Can oar Vraai toaa Hay FVrar lafluaaaa la7 Blow ara La Oriav Laorraa Larvr Trouhkaa Malaria NaaralftS alauy Haart Ireafcla r.w-hunaonk ewriay 4, mam f.bruotauaaa Sorvl u.a phllhfc, Saia l.ii i ii i Stnaiirh lYaahlae t axua TnkhMs CUT OUT THIS COUPON tr. tlx, onr rav not appear again, f ill out the blanks and mall it to Ui l.lquld Osun Co., iU-tA Wabash Ave.. C hies go. ' My dice Is I have never tried Uquos.on."but'tf you will supply to a sue bottl fre I will taa H. 11 fall adaraaa wilta slaialr. Ani ahTalelaa ar haaptal tana UI ha iadir hmiw iur a hast. r haia haa.ua- had a native Jo: ousnes that was sll-eom-pelling "Always ready for a frolic."" her classmate said. She n full of tun. jet reserved and extremely courteous. She wss quick to appreciate a "boa mot," and, while a bright student, she was not an un usually deep one. She spoke English with almost co accept, except a little Mp when pronouncing "th." Although Singh! Nlyl. another Japanese girl, wjs with her at Vsasar for three years, they rarely con versed in Japanese, declaring It wa too much trouble. It Is told of her that when asked in Vassar if she wished to become a member of a Bible class she a over heard to say to a clsrrr.ate, "They must think us heathen Chinese to sfk us such questions." Her marriage to Oyama was arranged after the Japanese fsshion by her brother while she was still In this country. She saw her fiance only a few times before the nuptial ceremony. Th announcement of ber msrriage, received by many of her friends in America. Wa printed In French cn a very large shet of paper. After her marriage her correspondence with her American chums began to lag. Bom of them taxed her with this delin quency. Bhe replied that her husband had forbidden her to write to America, for she was such a little enthusiast that there wa danger that she might reveal state secrets. It was for this reason that her rollicking letter ceased to come to th American shore. Marquis end Marchioness Oyama hav three children, two sons and a daughter. Press Fasbloas Koteboolt. Feathers adorn most of th early autumn hats. Ostrich feathers ar long, short, light, dark and shaded. White chiffon velour la the newest fabric for wedding gowns. Cashmere Is promised great vogu this season for afternoon wear. Skirt of plain tailored gown ar strapped with self-msterlaL Orange velour chiffon is combined with tohac brown taffeta and velvet. Mauve, violet end heliotrope will be tones seen In evening gowns next winter. Th light tint of s"pricot. fashionable many years ago, I again In favor. Evening gown are embroidered with glit tering paillette and trimmed with tiny flounces. Rose fashioned from chiffon and shaded ribbon make the most graceful of trim mings for ball gowns. Taffeta broche is much in vogu. both In black and colored effects navy, green or chestnut being preferred hues. Shot silks, plain snd fancy, ar used for vest, yoke, and sleeve trimmings, those in checked effect being particularly elective. Chiffon velours, messallnes. taffeta, plain and embroidered nun's veiling and crepe are all utilized for the fancy separate waist. ' Th latest headings for the ribbons of underwear display the ribbons to much greater advantage than those of former vogue. Embroidery consisting of a monogram Initials or favorite flower enters Into th decorative scheme of the most exclusive fashionable lingerie. White ribbon Is considered smarter for underwear than colore. Pink and blue come next In favor, and a few lavender ribbon-run garments are seen. Some ex treme styles show the use of large ribbon bows of a much wider width than Is gen erally u?d on corset covers. A rpecjal walking skirt petticoat is a necesity in a complete feminln wardrobe. No woman can hope to attain the really correct "hang" for her outer skirt without ona. These are on view in a design that clear the ground by about four inche and has one, two or three deep ruffle for a trimming. Pale bine hats seem popular. A blue vel vet youthful model bad a round puffed crown, with a short brim composed of full ruffle of Valenciennes lace. A stiff llttl scarf of the velvet encircled the crown and was tied In a flat bow In front. A similar hat had, in place of lace ruffles, a brim made of triple plaiting of pai blue chiffon. A hat with an the tints of autumn In It, was a smooth felt of an old green shads. It had a broad brim rolled up envelope fashion on th right side and a little lees rolled on the left. A wreath of dahlias shaded from pale straw to deep, rich crimson, crossed the top of th hat and ' extended over the turned-up brims A band of brown and green-shaded velvet encircled the brim Snd a shaded green feather fell over the brim in the back. Among other handsome robe patterns w a peach colored loulslne with a bril liant lustre. Thl was combined with ren aissance lace in a manner not often seen In these gown, which are ordinarily rather conventional In their makeup. The klrt was shirred around the waist and the lac flounces alternated with flounces of the silk. The flounce were not separate, but were attached, the lace pattern running into the Bilk. Groups of tiny tucks trimmed th silk. The largest dealers In human hair In New York, who practically supply the hair crop for the entire country, are au thority for the statement that the demand for this commodity was never as great as It is at present. The result is that the price of all shades and style of human hair Is rapidly soaring upward. There ha been an advance of from 80 to BO per cent within the last three months. The present Indications are, judging from the ise of the crop now being Imported, thst ther will be a still further advance In prices during the winter months. One dealer said recently that it is almost impossible to supply the demand for first class gray hair. A wig of gray human hair of fin quality Is worth its weight In silver, or perhaps even in gold. Chat Abont Women. Miss Mary A Booth of Springfield. Ma., 1 well known in the scientific world. She inherited her love for science from ber father and is one of the few women ad mitted to th Royal Microscopical society of London. The woman inventor 1 broadening her field of labor, t'nder the custody of Mr. Sullivan of the pHtent office at Washington are books compiled by tr.a government of the Inventions of women dating back to 17. Mm. Lehaudy, wife of M. Lebaudy, the aeronaut of Paris, owna the honor of being the first woman to take charge of an air ship and direct the same on it tour of the circumambient atmosphere. This she did in Paris on a recent Sunday, remaining in the air for nearly an hour and making her descent in a moat successful manner. Miss Caroline L,. O. Ransoms of Wash ington Is the first woman from whom the l" nlted Stste government purchased a painting for the walla of the capitol. Mill Kansome, who has lived In the national capital upward of a score of years, enjoys the distinction oT having painted the por traits of more statesmen than any ether woman a mat Led y Marcus Beresford, ho founded England's cat club, is said to have the best cattery known. It contains over 150 feline. She has. of course, th choicest breeds. rare Persian, chinchilla with their bushy tails and Manx cats without any tails ! whatever. Sh has a cat cottage where every provision nas neen mine lor comfort and duanllnena. ventilation and warmth. WhU the bounty of the queen goes to provide lodpings for officers' families, the London Society of Hairdressers last spring gave an exnmition or nair aresaing to swell the resources of the Hairdressers or phan fund, which supports eight little or phans. At the exhibition, which wss largely attended, fifty-three "toneorial artists" ex hibited thiir skill in making up rdffure. tsenty-three illustrating the historic and allegoric side of their art. others showing the mors fashionable styles of the present year. Miss Betham Edward tell how her ayes were opened to French frugt lity many year ago. She had been spending a few dys with the widow of an officer st Pornic arid on returning to Nantes she took a third-class ticket, to the astonish ment of hes friend, the French woman. "1 alway travel first-class. " she exclaimed, "but 1 do not travel often, and I am rich. I have n ln--.me of 3u0 a vear." Of this, Mln Edwards say, "she seldom spent two third. And In this supreme sense the vast majority of French fulks ar rich, ay and often 'beyond th dream of avarice.' " The young women of Portland, Ore., hsve taken jpon themselves the task of dispos ing of the 2i.ju gold dollars which hav ben coined by the government as a part of its appropriation for tha exposition lhe.exius are to be sold for each ar.d one-sixth of the proceeds 1 to be devoted tc erecting a munument to Barajawea. th Indian umin wlo acted as pulde for Lwis and ( lurk and mho twice saved th Uvea of numbers uf tb llttl band of ex plorers. The first coin shade ha born givaa to Miss Rnve!t by the Portland glA. with tb wiaa that she bav it sat as a bit of Jewelry and wax it j 4 October 15th Last Day Of the Great World's Fair Contest 9 PRIZES To Those Who Come Nearest to Estimating THE TOTAL PAID ATTENDANCE GREAT WORLD'S FAIR raid attendance on openlnf day. April 80th. wa 125.TM. Paid attendance during Mar. &42.CCS; June, July, WH758; Augnst, 1.99Z24S; September. 148.033. TOTAL PAID ATTENDANCE TO OCTOBER I, IS04, 7,705,666 Total paid attendance at Chicago World' Fair waa Total paid attendance at Buffalo ran-Arr.erlean Exposition waa Total paid attendance at umana i-iptsiuou was., ,..n.4sai4i ... B.SOti.859 ... 1,778250 WHAT WILL IT BE AT ST. LOUIS WORLD'S FAIR? A beautiful album of tfew-g of the Fair (price 25 cents; la given to each contestant free. 1 V MISSOURI TRUST COMPANY a a- aa SS"" 5 . N ao;- titT-HTal gfrsrife lis? f DTM.lt. fata Certmat ibst, (ha KrU I fair jaMs Baasasri taaaraaraaaa, kas MM af Iimwi atta tala laaaa tTa,0Maa a Sla, ftrr ISa prBn af tka aaarat la lta asalaat aa Osa total Sal ailaaaaaaa at tka saamaaa Sap aaaa layaaillaij ISM, ass Ska aala Savaalt la a la la ssut as taia Saaaaaa ta aa aaU k l aa aaak aaaaaiaf-' Miaa a taa taaiitM aa am la say atraata SUasart tran eiai wf af I.. J traaaunr. rj First Prize. - - $25,000.00 Second Prize, - - 10.000.00 Third Prize. - - - 5,000.00 Frizes are divided aa follows: To the neareat estimate f25.000.00 To the second nearest estimate 10,000.00 To the third nearest estimate 6.000.00 To the fourth nearest estimate 2.500.00 To the fifth nearest estimate 1,500.00 To the alxth nearest estimate 1,000.00 , To the next 10 nearest estimates, each 2.0ij.00 To the next 20 nearest estimates, $100 each 2,000.00 To the next 60 nearest estimates. .V each. . 2.500.00 To the next 100 nearest estimates, 1 25 each 2.500.00 To the next 200 nearest estimates, $10 each. . 2.000.00 To the next 500 nearest estimates, each. .. 2,500.00 To the next 1000 nearest estimates, $1 each. . 1,000.00 Supplementary prises 26,000.00 Total , $85,500.00 ESTIMATES ?mV?-f"mm) 25c EACH 5 FOR SI.OO. 40 FOR $5.00 CERTIFICATES AT ALL DRUGGISTS RICHARDSON DRUG CO., DISTRIBUTING AGENTS, OMAHA. NEB. If unable to get your certificate from your drupg-lst, send your estimates direct to na, accompanied by Post office Order or Money and we will make out your certificates and mall them to you. Addreas THE WORLD'S FAIR CONTEST CO., 6's?.EtSlA.S. HWE- All ESTIMATES MUST be recorded by midnight of OCTOBER 15, 1904. SEE YOUR DRUGGIST TODAY ataaa 1 WOR LD'S FAIR ROUTE Ok IT yTTO 1 I I i I I I i X 5 Elegant Pullman Sleeping Cars, Reclining Chair Cars, seats free. EXCURSION TIC NOW ON SAL A handsome World's Fair folder containing complete information, views of buildings, etc, and map of St Louis, will be sent'free on request to See local agents for further information. T. F. GODFREY. TOM HUGHES, Pats, and Ticket Agt., Omaha, Neb. Traveling; Passenger Agent. . H. C. TOWHSEND, General pass, and Ticket Agent. ST. LOUIS, HO. KETS D A WT1N OP SjgAWT H A JOT fXgVT. it. t. rrtix oorairD's obiektal 1 K.S.A.Jt, UU MAOICAI, BKAUlIsnJCJ rfj , BmoaaTaa,risipla.Pralaa, laa, ana ataijr lilasn. .4no baauty. aja VcaeadaiacUon. U I'AyM wa4 tiia Wat , ui raan, ana at aa bar uilati va Uata u to to aura I Ilia proper) rmaaa, Aooc)4 be aouAlar. ) fait atsillar aua. n. L. Jl. ' ftorra aai4 to a lad? of u haav toa a itiOttuiii I 'At jot Ittlti viii iiaa Uuara, I rata siii 'asanas1' Gnra' a tbm least karotul tf all Um skla BraaaMiaas. I ar aala all IruariM. ai4 faacj feaaiia jiaaur In rtia U. S . tanadaa. aj4 iarvpa. tUJL I. KM, i. U bast Jasst R.1,1 Did You Have a Headache This Morning? SljraderSs Tis Powder Thsn why don't you est at tha root of tbo troubls and prevent it Most he4axhM art) rouht on because tbs bowela ars not working properly. Constipates) oftea cause appeodlcitts. Shrader's Evaporated Craa Caaxiai Frms Aaacaabti Laxative-Fig Powder to pleasant and easy to tak sod has tba power ol tcatly loosen! of the bowels and brio fine about a aatural healthy actios. Trtai da. Ma. SuWa I-raa. jtrm has. Ma, bermai! & McConnell Dr ur Company, Omaha, Dial rtbut era.