-M' '"' 't,Tp'iWttM xmf,tf L Miwelf i$ for CKmtnra it&t& tfi Ily. An crfect of pluniiiKC Is gained by using dark wnter colors, nmrklng nil over tho body. Jewel Cabinet. An Ingenious little nrtlclo Is n Jewel basket, inado of n squaro box. fitted with jiill box drnwors, each having n imsao partout ring for n hnndlc. It is d? 41 ( Dialling rau wun rancy corners. lu uomo Bneeis 01 wuuo uioiung paper i InM nn n tilnnn nf linnw nnivlhnnt-rl rnv. i tg0P P I coverod with pink or blue silk and Is a dainty accessory for a dressing table. Snap-Shot Album. This is .rnado of heavy gray paper, with covers of gray cardboard or of erei with bright-colored wall paper Ror creteane, mako a pretty blotter. Corners of tho doublo naner or cre tonne keep tho blotting paper in place. Paper Owls. Comical papo. owls aro made of plain brown tlssuo pnper, crinkled by passing through tho hands a number of times. Stuff with wadding, and tie at each end. Cut ono end in a point for tho tall. Lcavo tho other end wide and square for tho head. Sew shoo Wb SNAP ""5!U f SHOTS II soft leather. It may be ornnmentcd with any suitable quotutlon. Box for Ball of Twine. Twlno holders aro circular boxes covered with leather or linen, in deep colors. Little match boxes that arc very charming for men's tables are made of the ordinary match boxes that BREAKS A COLD PROMPTLY Tho following formula is a novcr falling remedy for colds: Ono ounco of Compound Syrup of Sarsaparilla, ono ounco Toris Com pound and one-half pint of good whiskey, mix and shako thoroughly each timo and uoo in doses of a table spoonful ovory four hours. This if followed up will euro an acuto cold in 24 hours. Tho ingre dients can bo gotten at any drug storo. A Nice Hint. "I know what I'll do," snltl tho girl whoso bashful lover would not pro pose. "I'll go out as a trained nurse." "But that is a profession. You know nothing about it," ho replied. "Haven't I had six montliB experi ence sitting up nights with you?" Il lustrated Bits. Important to Mothors. Examine carefully evory bottlo or CASTOHIA a safe and suro remedy for Infants and children, and sco that It TTnnpn 4Yin Signature QiZjtrzjjtM In Uso For Over iiO YearB. Tho Kind You Have Always Bought About One. Mrs. Hoyle What timo does your husband get in nights? Mrs. Doyle About tho timo the cuckoo clock has tho least to do. HaUtual Constipate hi I lay lip permanently otevcomeby proper personal cjjoris vriimrtc assistance bfMictm? iruly IjencJiripA vxa1lwc t-cmcdi'. S vrun o( fifi ami lU'ur ofSftma. vltch cuablcfi onelojorm vcftufar habttft daily .Solnal assistance to tia turc may be gradually ctJSpcnScaVM vtan ho longer ncccjec) as itiottt.lt of vemcaics,wlcn required, arc to assist nature and not to supplant tle naVuv. ol functions, vlucli must depend uUi mutely upon proper ttouvistttnont, proper covt;,ad wrfit livinfr generall. io get it a beneficial effects, always buy the genuine California Fig Syrup Co. only SOLP BVMLLEADINC-DRUGCISTS oaf we only, ruur price 50$ t Bottle Warn v r.H'xxxza KAs&Bki2lli Ltvr STOCK MISCELLANEOUS In erontTarl 1. K. HKt.UM.0 andci rnTDnrvncc I ckcu invn ru l ptr for Ml nt th lowcut prlf k lif I M(niirrkii(ip.. ii n.Aj.ii..ci.i.t I W. T liaucliu mnltea nntl 1I mom ------ -..-.. . .. . .. . - . .. Iiirn'l o.ou nnu (W.ou li(io mnn any nlhir manufacturer In tho wnrlil.tio rniide they liolil ttivlr Kliapo, lit lintter, nnd vtvnr longer limit nny other nuiko. Shcii at All Mcii Jot Cyiry(!iJrf.f t!i Wi.DwjtM n.eo ud to. co out Kilt he V M'Ullxl m ur piift. W. L. StlflM 1.10 Ml f 1.09 Um Nit la th wctM yml Crtlir Xitttf Vtit JtrttmWtlVf rTnlK Nn Aulinltiitn. W. I.. ljuii1 nime Kivl pn-fl II Iuirl on lotlom. Hold eTrTl'r- bhow tnmiltrt (rem fuctgrrto ai rtrtoliho world. rilniru (rcr, to. U DOL'QUS, 18? Spttk St., Brxtiltit. Mt. RAW FURS AND SKINS waiitcil. Hhlp to Nrw York vrhcro hlRlin priori! enn nlwayn lxilinlneil. Wo piiy oxprh lifrcB Hint Rimriuilro mitlufnrtory unJ prompt Hrttlcmontit. Knul for prli'o lint. AMERICAN RAW FURC0..30 E.101h Sir.. New York. nrrillIPP QTARPll tetlo work with nil W. N. U., LINCOLN, NO. 49, 1908. JUST DOUBLE 320 ACRES INSTEAD OF 160 ACRES At futtTier inducement to tettlement of tho wlient-iMiinK ImJj ol Welern Cnnadu, th OnadiiMi Covernmenl im incrctied llio area that my bo token by tomrstrndsr to 320 ncrct 160 free and ICO to bo imrchaied nt $3.00 per ncre. Tlicio Inndj are in the (irnin.raitlna nrcn, whera niiied farming it lo ennird nn with uniiualifed tticceit. A railwaywill aliottly lio built to Hudson I)y,briog inj( the woild'a maiLrtt n thouiflnd inilet nearer theiu wlienl. field, where tclioolj Riid churche are convenient, climate excellent, rail wnyi dote to all tctllemenli, and local markets good. "It would take time to attlmltnte the revela tions Hint visit tutlie itrent empire lylntf to tlie Nortti of un unfolJed nt every turn." CorresronJrmt of A National Mitor, ttio 1l3t!td Wtstcm CttuJ Ol August, I903t Lands may oho lie pinch died from railway and) land curnpaniet at luw price i and on easy term. l'or pnmpliletn, mups and Infonnntloii to low rullwny mtet, apply to Superintendent of ImmicrutloM, Ottuwa, Canada, or til authorlied Canadian Government Accnlt W.V.DENHETr, 101 Hew York Llle Daltdloc. Oniba. HeNraaU. For famoim nud detlctema) C"iidlci uud chceo1a4ea( write to the innktrf or est ivloif, whole mil ur retail. GunUier'a ConUctlorxry 212 Slat Strati. Ihlcaio, AL Ail . t "vl ll?7 buttons on circles of yellow cloth out lined 'with black, for eyes. Attach tho owls to a twig. Made in three sizes, tho birds look like a littles fani- TOP STAR FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE J. Cut out of a picco of cardboard tho form of a five-pointed star five inches long. Cover with gold leaf or silver leaf. For the rays of light take about como by tho dozon, with a piece of stiffened velvet and a llttlo gold paint along tho edges, folded about it and glued in placo to represent a little velvet book. DRESSING THE CHRISTMAS TREE 15 broom straws, dip them in gold or silver paint nnd pasto thorn back of the Btar in bunches of thrco. Tako a pieco of writing pnpor, roll it into a stiff roll, fasten ono end to n twig and pasto tho other end at tho back of ff the star. Tho star may then bo ar ranged nt tho top of tho treo. , Idea for the Christmas Table, A new idea for a Christinas tablo Is a Jack Horner boll. It may bo hung from tho chnndcllor by a splashing bow of scarlet ribbon. Tho bell is mado of red tissuo paper, the bottom of which is socuroly pasted ovor with stout paper. Scarlot ribbons are stretched from tho boll to tho plates, ,ftand at a signal from tho hostess, v given by tbo tinkling of a little In tislblo boll, tho ribbons aro pulled and 9gtho end of each 1b a souvenir. t An Occasion of Great Joy for Both Young and Old. Tho happiest and most exciting time at Christmas for young nnd old Ib when tho treo benms forth in all its glory and splendor. There is great pleasure for tho elders in drosslng it In its gayest raiment. If the full brauty Is to bo brought out It should bo kept until night. It is said that 150,000 Christmas treeB will bo brought Into tho American markot. Hemlock, cedar, pino and spruco aro all good for tho purpose. Tho base oan be covered with cotton batting sprinkled with diamond dust, and evory branch may be laden down with tho samo arti ficial snow. Incandescent electric lights aro becoming moro popular each year as thoy aro safer. However, many prefer tho twinkling of the candles. Colored balls and tinsel aro draped from every branch, and gnyly dressed dolls and toys of all sorts sway in tho air. Then there must be cornucopias of red and gold, filled with candy. Tho largest presents and mys terious packages can bo heaped around tho foot of tho troe. Evory package should be wrapped in whito papor and tied with brilliant red ribbon. Many dollars aro Bpont each year for elab orate decorations, but many nttractlvo and effective ornaments muy bo mado at homo, such as strings of popcorn, cranberries, glided and silver nuts, pa por flowers, etc., which all add to tho splendor of the Christmas treo. Doing Up the Gifts. A now way of doing up gifts which will plcaso all, and particularly do light tho children, is to uso whito tis sue paper for wrappers, and, instead of tying with ribbon, fasten tho paper in pluco by using small seals over tho edges whoro thoy aro folded down. Tho seals como specially for tho pur pose and aro decorated with tiny sprays of holly. If you aro Bonding off a Christmas box put a layor of whito tissuo paper or whito cotton on top of tho packages and ovor this sprigs of holly or mistletoe. Let Children Make Cards. Ilavo a largo box at hand to drop in pictures, fancy papers, scraps of rib bon, and so on to give tho children to mako Christmas cards. You will ho surprised at their Ingenuity. A White Slave Trade By EDWIN W. SIMS, U. S. District Attorney N account of the prosecution of the "White Slave" traders who, Mr. Sims states, "Have reduced the art of ruining young girls to a national and international system." The calmest, simplest statements of its facts are almost beyond comprehension. The lives of the women of the ancient cave dwellers, clubbed and beaten insensible by brutal men, were to be preferred to the lives of these girls who are lured from loving homes to lives of vice. Do you know the White Slave trappers search the Country and smaller towns for their victims? Do you know that they go to Railway Stations and with WHAT WILES they lure fair girls away? Do you know innocent girls are taken to the Restaurants of the underworld, plied with drugged wine and then sold sold for money into the clutches of merciless, pitiless beings? This article by the great District Attorney should be' read by every reader of this paper. Af afim every woman should know; every man should know; every lYlaAHllll) person should read these most appalling facts of the age, writ ten by a man who has stood face to face with the poor, suffering girls, and who has talked with them, looked down into their hearts and read their misery. This man is United States District Attorney Sims, before whom come the most pitiable cases of White Slavery ever recorded; the U. S. government official who has made it his business to hunt down vice, has learned the story of life-misery from the lips of the girl slaves themselves, and now tells the facts as a warning to the public. This White Slave treatise by Mr. Sims is published in Woman's World and we offer you an unusual opportunity to Read It FREE Now in accordance with the free offer below. WOMAN'S WORLD has the larg est circulation of any publication in the world 2,000,000 copies monthly, and in order to maintain this pre-eminent circulation and to demonstrate to new readers that it is the best and largest magazine published today, the publishers will send four issues absolutely tree at once to those who accept the special free White blave Irade treatise by Mr. Sims, men- HON. EDWIN W. &M$ U. S. District Attorney In Chicago, Who Represented tho Government in tho Famous $29,000,000 Standard Oil Casdi offer below. Besides the tioned above, these four free issues contain all the following great features, and many more too numerous to mention: Wli7 faiplc CmtS A CflVIX Tn!s is tno subject of a second article in one of tho free T? llpr 9U 19 J nail UJT issues o lhu WOMAN'S WORLD by tho Honorable Hd win W. Sims, written as was the first " Whito Slave" article, strictly from tho viewpoint of tho lawyer, who finds himself called upon, as an officer of tho lav to deal with this delicate, difficult subject. Hy JOSEPH MEDILL PATTERSON, author of "A Littio Brother of tho Rich," tho Greatest book sensation of the vear. Mr. Patterson is an insider, and this article is a startling exposure of thq follies and sins of the fashionable rich. Mr. Patterson says that wo havo in this country among these rich society people a practical Court; that society women relegate all functions of usefulness, except one the bearing of children and they aro not inclined to discharge this function as tliy ought. The Sins of Society 'The Clirtatlnn Science FnlUi," by Mrs. Clara Loulsu Burnhnni, author of "Jowol Story Hook," "TJio Open Shutters," etc. "Jewel," "The Moat IiitiToittntr Thins; In the World," a faflclnatlnpr symposium by Ocorero AUc. George Uarr McCutelieon, ForroHt Crlssey and William Hodge. "Love Making In KorelKn J.nmlM," by Frank 1 Pixloy, author of "King Dodo," "Tho Burgomaster," "Prlnco of l'lUen," etc. "The Old llunitM and the New," by Hon. Adlal K. Stovonson, former VIce-Prcsldont of tho United States. A comparison of the homo Hfo and influences of today with that of fifty years ago . The Sinn of the rather," by Cyrus Townscnrf Urady, nuthor of "A I-lttlo Traitor to tho South." "niclmrd, tho Hrazon," etc. a powerful Htory dealing with "Tho Gins of tho Fathers visited unto tho third and fourth generations." "My llniuty nnd Health Secreix," by Miss Dolla Carflon. first prlzo wlnnor In tho Chica go ""ribuno'H 10,000.00 lieauty Contest, ulso In World Content. Miss Carson tells tho uecrot of how she 1ms thu appearance of a girl of sixteen, whereas sho Is thirty. "Jieyr ArknnMiia Traveler MtorlrN," by Opio Read, author and originator of "Tho Ar kansas Traveler." "The Jouronl of Julie," the confidential and personal experiences of a young country girl winning her way In a great city. "The AVI Id Iloae I.eiicru," being tho heart secrets between Klalno, Countess of Wycher Homo or tho other contributors to these four Issues aro: Margaret Rangster. Ella The Chicago Tribune Says: The revelations made by United States District Attorney Sims in the WOMAN'S WORLD should be given as wide a currency as possible. The extent of the White Slav traffic and the machinery by which it is-main-taincd should be brought home not only to tbo officials sworn to deal with crime, but to parents sworn under a higher law to guard their .young. As Mr. Sims says, thousands of girls from the country are entrapped each year, and be points out the pitiful fact that the parents of a great majority of these unfortunates arc un aware of their fate. As a consequence of this state of public ignorance, the traffic proceeds unchecked save by the efforts of prosecuting officials, which arc necessarily restricted and temporary in effect. The problem is enormous, but it can be solved largely by educational means. The responsibility for a broad and systematic cam paign of enlightenment rests with the religious and social agencies now existent in every com munity the churches, the women's clubs, the civic leagues, and associations. The press, too, should give a reputable publicity and ex ert its influence directly and on educational lines, to the end that the public may know the gravity of the evil and its conditions. Contributors to Woman's World Jano Addams, of Hull House, Chlcugo; Maudo But llnxton Uootli, of Volunteers of America; Qeorgo Ado, George Uarr McCutelieon, Will Pay no, Ilex XJeach, Chaunooy-OIcott. Margaret Sanirnter, ISIIu Wheeler Wil cox, noswell Mold. Kdwln W. Sims, Joseph Medlll Pat terson, iiarnei jtcbcou opoiioro, jsiiu w. i'caiuo, jviauiia jtutiioni vurren, uyrus xownHOnu iirnuy, jMiwin u, uooiey, oupi,, j'udiiu kciiooib or unicf ko; Robt. I). Anderson, former Asst. Secy. U. 8. -.treasury; ueo. ju. iioucrw, j'rcaiuoni uom- inoromi Nan, uauic, Chicago, and former d rector of tho Mint at Washington; KIhIo mum, mi! ucirvss; ucn. unus, lung, KU win iinimer, ituiik it. mamon, Allen Albert, Opio ltcad, Klllott Flower, Wll iium uouitu, mo riQior; jinn. AUiai I mcvunsuu, j'mnK j.,. nxiey, i composer; Clara IouIbo Uurnlmm jouii jvonurioic uangs. b. Klser. Dr. Wm. A. Kvans, Jicaitu commissioner. City of uiucago, unu many outers Its sentiment is as sweet and delicious ly, nnd Itoso Mary of Strawberry Point (la.), us wild honey. wneelor Wilcox. Iloswell Klold, General Cluis. King, llurrlet Prescott Spofford, Ella W. x-oiiiiin, jviiuuu v tower, ouinioy wnmrino, i' runic it. sianinn. jsuwin iiaimor, Maudo ltad ford Warren, Allen D. Albert, Dr. W. I Waugh, ISUcn Stan, John Kendrlck IJangs and many othors. WOMAN'S WORLD Is printed In colors, 32 to 04 largo pages each Issue, ably edited by Forrest Crlssey, Stanley Waterloo and fleorgo U. Forrest. In ordor to demonstrate that It Is tho greatest reading value of tho times wo mako tho following froo offer. FREE OFFER v&?s wimo oiave anicies y air. rtims, ana an ot tno other teatures mentioned, including tho 53MrJWW wiitisiinasjeccuiuur isuc, aubouueiy tree to nuyono wno win senu only 25 cents now to pay tut Bjjunai tuii.j'oai a niiuutiuiuu, Free Coupon 618 EXTRA. OkRFR a,, everyone wl.o accepts this tpeclal offrr, will, In addition 10 , , " . - tho fren lour copie, bn tent u roccipt for tliolr ubtcrimlon n beautiful lares tlxe picture ot Miss Delia Carton, the 5io,ooo.r I'riio Itaauty, with art calendar for jog Kiiacueu, imi piciuro an caicnuar sent a a reculpt ana for introductory purpotasonly, Woman's World 46-48 West Monroe Street r s ss f x e f yf 1 j y j ' s y s wmm ws wm ""r aVX vr x&s .v S&S .' mr yr S f' jT r j v S SS J i IVa WOMAN'S WORLD 46-40 W. Monroe St, Chicago Send mo free, nnd postpaid, at once. tho a copies tlio Woman's World con taining the ''Whito Slave Trado"treatisobr Mr, Sims, and all tho other features mentioned in your advertisement, I cnclosn 35 cents to pay a lull years' snlwcriptlon totha Woman s World. to commenco nftor receipt of tho four free copies. Send mo as a subscription receipt the Delia Carsoa. 1909 art calendar. , Name,.., , ,.... Add ess M ml t, , vl .! m : V m "T u 1 4 9PI ff.i m e.wi 1 1' V ' "! m j jr.'. r;'4 i. V.-il A' i.V,1.. -r-i-'-r-"'r;---' 3i...HiiWTWtBiir jki, st ,. V . it ,4Jr. ILL&MSii Chicago, III. S Date ;" ' '"