MORE ATLANTIC LINERS REQUIRED CONGESTION ON EXISTING STEAM SHIPS ON ACCOUNT OF CANA DIAN IMMIGRATION. It is reported that eight new Trans Atlantic liners are under construction for the exclusive use of the Canadian Trade. These are being built by the White Star, Canadian Pacific and Cunard Companies. The liners to be built for the White j Star are to be of the same type as the i I.aureutic and Majestic, and will re place the Canada and Teutonic. The Cunard Line's new steamer, Ascania, has already completed successfully j her maiden voyage from England to ] Montreal, and her sister ship will be launched early next year. It is predicted that the Canadian Northern will not be slow in following the example of the other big concerns, as it is a matter of common belief that ! Canada, more than any other in the | world, will be the country of the fu- j ture. and the best field for investment by shipping interests. An otficial of one of the companies already building steamers for this trade told the American yesterday that the ideal steamer for this service | is the two-cabin boat, having acnm- | modation for second-class and steer- | ape passengers only. "We do not expect that the $5,000 cabin de luxe class will travel be tween Canada and England very ex tensively," he said, "but the business j that is to be obtained there will be I Immensely lucrative, and for the next i lea years the eyes of the shipping world will be riveted on Canada. The Panama Canal, undoubtedly ill re ceive a lot of attention, but the busi ness in that route will be nothing com pared with the Canadian trade for the immediate future. Panama will de velop and become bigger in the years to come, but at the present we are most concerned with the tremendous tide of immigration that is being di- j verted from the United States to the Dominion. “The farm land of the vast North West is the attraction, and while this flood of immigration is at its height, the Canadian Government exercises a strict censorship over the class of im migrants admitted In this way they are drawing their future citizens from j the Northern countries and have j shown an unwelcome face to the peo- j pie of Southern Europe "—Advertise- ( ment. In the Day of the Billionaire. A brilliant New York lawyer said at a dinner at the Lotus Club apropos of certain trust magnates: “Thanks to watered stock—and wa tered stock is criminal abroad—these i men are indeed rich beyond the dreams of avarice. “If the watering of stock is allowed to keep on we’ll hear our billionaires talking like this some day: “ ’Hullo! There goes Jones in his ■ 300 horsepower car. Do you know j him?’ “'Do 1 know him! Do 1 know Jones! Why, man alive. Jones and I were struggling young millionaires to gether!’”-—New York Times. FREE BOX OF BISCUITS. Every reader of this paper can se cure absolutely free a box of assorted biscuits by simply cutting out the cou pon from their ad appearing in an other part of this paper and mailing it to Loose-\Vilt?s Biscuit Co., Omaha, Neb. The firm is thoroughly reliable. Take advantage of this liberal offer and write them today. His Limit. Bridegroom—.viy darling, i feel now I will be the better man. Bride—But you can't be the best man. The average man has a lot more to say about what he is going to do than about what he has done. loafs the Use” waiting for Nature, alone, to bring back your appetite, to make the liver active and the bowels regular? Some assist ance is needed and ‘HOSTETTER’S iStontaeh Sifters is really “it.” For 60 years it has helped in cases of Indiges tion, Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Colds, Grippe and Malaria. We Urge a Trial Today AVOID SUBSTITUTES Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely vegeta ble — act surely but gently on the liver. Stop after d.nner dis tress-cure indigestion, improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM C1mbw?« i nd beautifies the Promotes a luxuriant growth. 2* ever Fails to Bcstore Cray Hair io its Youthful Color. Prevents hair filling. fiflc. ap*1 ) at Prngriwts. Pettits £ve Salve QUICK RELIEF EVE IHOUaLES W, N. U., OMAHA, NO. 9-1913. Simplicity and Smartness in Two Up-to-Date Garments Velveteen Dress. Walking Costume. VELVETEEN* DRESS. Very simple yet at the same time smart is the dress we show here; it is in tobacco brown velveteen. The shirt is plain: the bodice is Magyar, with crossover fronts and plain basque; it fastens in front; the vest of tucked net being fixed at left side by press studs: a lace collar finishes the bodice, the elbow sleeves being edged with a band of fur. Hat of velvet to match the dress; it is trimmed with pale blue ostrich feathers. A large stole of black fox completes the costume. Materials required for the dress: Seven yards velveteen twenty-four inches wide, one-half yard tucked net, five-eighths yard fur. Walking Costume.—This costume is in champagne-colored Venetian cloth. The skirt has a wrapped seam down the center of front, with the lower edges cut sharply off, leaving a V" shaped opening, which is filled in with material on which are sewn rows and rows of black satin ribbon; this also trims the coat on the revere and at the wrists For the collar, black satin is used Hat of black-satin, trimmed with a champagne-colored feather ruche. Materials required: Four and one-half yards cloth forty-eight inches wide, about eight yards ribbon, one-quarter yard satin twenty inches wide, five yards silk or satin for lining coat. WHITE EVENING GOWN Evening gown of ivory brocade with draped skirt. The corsage is draped with black chiffon. Don'ts for the Nursery. Don't shut up the children in the night nursery at bedtime with never a door or a window' open. Don't stop what is called transpira tion through the skin by enveloping the children's bodies in feather mat tresses. Don't cover up the heads .if the lit tle ones on cold nights, as they did in old days, knowing no better. Don't let your nurses run away with the idea that, because they are not go ing to see anyone, the bairns need no washing before being put to bed Don't put several children to bed in the same room. New Perfume. A rose perfume that is not musty, but that carries in itself all the fresh ness of the garden, is a French scent, and though it is of fair price, it is so fragrant of the very basketfuls of blossoms which it must contain that it is refreshing as well as pleasant. It is named for the red rose, and con jures up a picture of the new buds, which resemble the bride roses in size, and are of reddest hue. It has an elusive daintiness about it which at once marks it for the lady's use. Spring Jacket. The spring jacket in the making is said to have a length of 27 inches, which is longer in the back than in the front. It will have long slfeeves and will button high over the chest for the spring season, but. it will prob ably b<- lowered as soon as the warm weather sots in WRISTBANDS BACK IN FAVOR Old Style Revived, Though in Much Daintier Fashion Than Those of a Few Years Ago. Dail the old-fashioned wristband! It s in again. Very much so and you're not strictly up-to-date if you doll t possess at least one specimen. I heso bands, which take the place of bracelets, but are much daintier, con sist of strips of inch-wide velvet rib bon long enough to go once about the wrist. On the upper side of the arm. the strip of velvet is .secured by a pair of inch-square or inch-long ob long clasps of engraved gold, ham mered silver or carved ivory. That is to say. the simpler sort of wristbands are thus clasped. The more expensive kind are made of platinum or of gold or silver thickly encrusted with tiny jewels or gems or set with a single large jewel or gem, surrounded by others of much smaller size. Fre quently several kinds of jewels orna ment a pair of wristband clasps and again a single diamond or pearl is im bedded in the center of a square of precious metal. It Is possible to have a pair of the large old-fashioned cameo or coral earrings made over into wristband clasps, and, although in former days a single bracelet band of this type was rarely worn, nowadays it is com monly seen. Many women who have inherited a collection of old-fashioned ornaments are having them made over into bracelet clasps and usually the task is neither difTicult nor expensive. Tail Trimmings on Millinery. According to the Dry Goods Econo mist, tall trimmings continue the rage and in some of the imported models this idea is carried almost to the point of absurdity. Among the most effective models now being shown in which the tall trimming idea is employed is a black Milan sailor with the brim gently rolled at the left side. A tiny fringe of black goura outlines the brim and from the edge of the brim at the left shoots upward a tall black goura aigrette bent at the top in loop form. The tall trim ming idea is also strongly emphasized in this market. Question marks ol feathers, ribbons. ccrd3, etc., long pointed sleeves, flat spear-like orna ments of velvet and of various fancy silks, aigrettes of small flowers close ly packed together, and long spike like jet ornaments are all utilized In this fashion. Linings. Green as a trimming, especially an eighteenth century shade of green, will be a feature, particularly as coat linings tor velvet and fur. Yellow and orange are also popular for this pur pose Much can be expressed in a coat lining.) Many of these linings are works of art in themselves, and a lin ing denotes proper appreciation of de tails which augurs well for the essen tial. A fascinating effect noticed in a tailor made ccat of chestnut brown tweed was a lining of olive green sathi with a piping all round inside of a nattier blue shot ribbon. Metal Coin Purse. An attractive novelty in jewelry is the tiny coin purse of perforated met al which holds dimes and nickels. It is strung on a fine neck chain or worn at the end of a narrow black silk rib bon. Aristocratic Resorts on Piccadii iy Street Are Passing. Grounds Upon Which They Are Situ ated Are Now Too Valuable for Purpose—Old Organizations Seek- ! ing New Locations. London.—The most famous street i of clubs in the world is likely before ; long to lose its character. The utili- ' tarianism—sometimes described as ■ Americanism—which introduced ice j and electric subways into London's daily life, has decreed that Piccadilly j shall no longer be sacrosanct to clubs. : They will have to look for other quar ters. In the very heart of clubland a large hotel will shortly be built. Negotia tions are in progress 10 acquire other sites in Piccadilly for similar pur poses. Theatrical managers, even pic ture show proprietors, are casting en- I vious eyes upon stately houses, when in the old days the "three bottle" men ! were bundled decorously into horse cabs and sent on their drunken wav 1 rejoicing. The leases under which the older clubs secured tlieir prem ises are expiring most of them are. ; according to English custom, for nine ty-nine years. The majority of the Piccadilly ch.b> only pay a mere song for their homes In some cases the original owner of the property was a member of the club and leased the land or building lor a "peppercorn,” or nominal sum. to his own organization. Such de scendants of these generous folk as Sir Richard Sutton, who owns a good deal of the .and, look at the matter in a different light. The value of Pic cadilly sites is about J">0 per squart foot. I5v evicting a club the owner if the property in question automatic ally acquires a small fortune, either by building himself or renting to sortie enterprising hotel, store or the ater. The subordination of the picturesque lo llie utilitarian in Piccadilly will probably be complete within the next ten years. The trend of business and of traffic in London today is toward the West End. Centers half way be tween west and east, which formerly -urged nightly with crowds, are now deserted. At the moment the Ritz nd Berkeley hotels, which stand half way between Piccadilly Circus and Hyde Park, mark the limit of the hotel man's daring. Cp till now he has not encroached upon the row of clubs, the Rothschild houses and that part of Piccadilly between Bond street and ! Hyde Park which ends in the grim mansion where the great Duke of Cavalry Club, London. Wellington was stormed by a furious mob. The wedge has been driven in, .ml the scaffolding, which announces the erection of the new hotel, sounds the death knell of Piccadilly as the world's greatest street of clubs. The older clubs will be hard put to lud new quarters commensurate with their dignity. Instead of looking out tpon a really magnificent park—the section of Piccadilly I refer-to is and tan tie only built on one side of the street- they will have to retreat to luieter streets, where the outlook only s likely to be other people's windows. Even here they will find it hard to pay the necessary rent. There is some talk of turning Dorchester ! House, rented by Whitelaw Reid, and | he Stafford and Spencer houses into clubs, but this would probably prove oo expensive. Since the advent of he fashionable hotel restaurant the popularity of club life lias steadily de I dined. With a few notable excep [ tions. the average London club is in rather low water financially. The old lays of waiting ten years or more for election have departed. Two or hree old clubs have broken up and | others have amalgamated. LOST DIAMONDS IN MUFF Woman Causes Commotion on Ocean Ship—Search Is Made and Jewels Are Found. New York.—Three days at sea. Mrs. .Minton Cushing caused a commotion on the steamer Hermudian by charg ing that some one had stolen dia- I mond rings worth $2,000 from her j Jewel box. Stewards and passengers i were all closely questioned, but there ! was no clue. As soon as the vessel j arrived here detectives were engaged 1 to work on the case and they were j going through Mrs. Cushing’s luggage ' Tor the third time while the discon- 1 solate voyager was explaining how ! futile was their search, when the lost 1 j rings were encountered in a pocket ! Df her sable muff. Then Mrs. Cush- j ing remembered that she had put • them there. MAN OF 104 AS STUDENT Veteran North Dakota Farmer Enrolls as Pupil of Corn and Clover Convention. Grand Forks, S. D.—William Hug gins, one hundred and four years oid, has enrolled as one of the students at the North Dakota corn and clover con vention, to be held at Grand Forks soon. Mr. Huggins is a pioneer of this state, having come here from Can ida many years ago. He is interested n diversified farming and says “a young man should always kea? UE with the times.” V Don’t Let Catarrh Get the Best of You If ycu have catarrh and are neglecting it—you are doing a great wrong to yourself. In time it will undermine your whole constitution. You cannot begin too soon the work cf shaking it off. Doesn’t require any great effort. Begin today. **J Feel Uitc » Kenr Woman ’• Mbs. I'enj. I lake, of Tort Dover. Out., box 8«. writes: ** 1 have* been a great sufferer SPor Aeura from tnroat trouble, ettarrh, indigestion, female troubles, bloat.ng, constipation end r**r^ou8’iG3R-at tunes I would be in bed, then able to t? up again. Was under many different doctors’ care, ai d would get belter for a liit.a whik*, then i would go down with enronic inflammation all through me- For nineteen Ttarc 1 kail thi3 poiFcn ir, nry Vioed. After trying pearly t verji’ . ng I got worse. I re: d »n The People's CommonSense Mod.cai / m iser of Dr. Fierce a Golden Medical Discovery ai d It. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. 1 have Taken the * Golden Medi cal j- .-'overV* and ‘Pleasnut Pellets,* and have used live bottles ef Dr Sage's Catarrh Remedy. 1 am now able to do my work and walk wit . pleas ure. i fe«u like a new woman. X enjoy everything aroa-.d n.e» pr.d tnar.k Goa lor letting me live ione enough to find some thiug teat made me w w. agum.’* has a curative effect upon all mucous surfaces, and hence removes catarrh. In Nasal Catarrh it is well to cleanse the passages with Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy while using the “Discovery” as a constitutional remedy. Why the “Golden Medical Discovery’’eradicates catarrhal affections, of the stomach, bowels, bladder and other pelvic organs, will be plain to you if you w ill read a booklet of extracts from the writings of eminent medical authorities endorsing its ingredients and explaining their curative proper ties. It is mailed free on request. “The “Discovery” has been put up and sold in its liquid form for over 40 years and has g» • r of attention and sell them for highest pricey ..r till your order for Feeders wiih best class « f block at market price. GIVE l?S A TK1AI*. THE PAXTON HOTEL Omaha. Nebraska „ --EUROPEAN PLA?' Booms from 11.00 ap single, 75 cents up double CAFE PRICES REASONABLE RUPTURE CURED in a few days without pain or a sur gical operation No pay until cured Write UK. It KAY. 307 bee Hlilg., Omaha, Neb. Consign your HORSES &. MULES to WALKER & BLAIR Union Stock Yards. S. Omaha, Neb. Phone South 679. Auction Sales Even Monday MURPHY DIB IT Auto and Wagon Truck Builders. Ke pairing. Painting, Trimming. Buggy Wheels repaired and re rubber tired. Write us for price**. -Id years m the buMiie'stt. Andrew Murphy & Son, Omaha COTTON SEED PRODUCTS We sell all feed used by the feeders, in car and »«.n lots. Our prices are right. We buy empty sacks. FEEDERS SUPPLY COMPANY Live Stock Exchange Bldg. South Omaha Ths“BELl”Sign Is the symbol of state wide and nation-broad telephone service. Bell Telephone lines reach nearly everywhere.