Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 16, 1902)
12 TOB JOMAITA DAILY IIEEi SUNDAY, TICBIUTAItY 10, 1002 4- IN THE DOMAIN Of WOMAN. WARM WEATHER WARDROBES. Fabric for Garden Parties, for Lnaehron and for Fall Dress. NEW YORK. Feb. 14. It would require a feminine stoio who united the principles of a dress reformer with the environment of a savage to live oblivious Just now to the attain charms of the muslins, dimities, mercerised lawns and various weights and widths of grass linens, msdraa and batistes that have come to town. That there are feW or none such abnormal women ts proved by the excited, pleased and enthusiastic arowds of the sex that barricade the muslin and needle work flounces bars been pre dated for their especial fend harmonious decoration. For example It la possible to bur white wire net Valenciennes figured In black and white lawn bands and edgings upon which runs white embroidered vines that bear delicate black leaves and fruit. Just how this approved combination ess be most effectively made Is showa In the groups of two dellclously prsttjr dimity gowns. The one for a matron Is white figured la a black globule pattern and re lieved by yoke and sleeves of white lawn embroidered la little black fern fronds. Bands of white lawn worked In black out line the base of the yoke and garnish the WW A ORACKFUL fTBATnTBVENINO DRE83. Maters every morning and select and pur chase with eager relish until evening shades and the shops' abutters bar them out. The dressmakers, who usually take a rest from aeedle driving and fitting appointment at this Urns, groan over the fact that every customer la clamoring to have her thin things said a p. From the content of the vtttng and sewing room It would be easy to believe that the hot waves of July were Bear, and what excites the Ire of the sartorial artists ts the lace and the elabora tion that is being lavished oa mere cotton gauze. . Lost Tlrtae. ' Simplicity is a virtue that the muslin gowa has wholly lost, for what with its tacks and Insertions snd applications, shir ring', boleroes and embroideries a dimity costs almost as much to make as a fancy wool suit and It goes against the dress rklng grata to offer up so much effort the altar of a mere cotton thing. Ac cording to one mistress of the thimble, who report sixty-five muslla msdrigals on her hands, lace. In the form of flat applica tions, is to the muslin gown what baking powdor Is to biscuit. To be very modish a must trim not only with lace, but omblns plain with figured muslin, and any woman who la a grandmother can button -the wlet of her tight dress In the rear. limp and lovely mercerised lawns are almost the up-to-datest fabrio your money sea. buy. They are sot expensive; they look their very best founded on coarse white India tinea linings and they are printed In the most beguiling art shades and designs. Tw Illustrate this Uxt a picture of an Ideal combination, In plain and figured lawn of this nature Is given. A study In green ts the color scheme. The treatment la la flat applications of Hauresque Inser tion, which Is a soft beige In tone, and the fullaesa at the hips, shoulders, sleeve tops and head of the deep todf flounce la secured by plentifully gathered tucklngs. There la, by the way, nothing ao expensive r complicated In this little gown that the purs of the stenographer and the fingers of an amateur could not buy and make It up, Mawrssqus lace Is most modest la price and one of the potent Inducements te the purchaae of a mercerised lawn Is that tt looks best for being made up by hand and packs ltks a spun silk stocking. A word of commendation Is called for by the hat that crowns ths model's head. Tfcla la fabricated of white linen braid attuned la back, bound with a brim bsnd of black velveteen and ornamented with roses snade of clearly gathered loopa in thin Liberty satin ribbon. Paaalalimea at the Dimity. The possibilities offered by the satin Striped, figured and uoAgured dimity are imply limitless, though ths tendency Is steadily In the direction of combining black With white where the dainty outdoor toilet la concerned. This is a contrast for which bo woman la ever too old or too young, too stoat or too thin, too rich or too poor. To meet the demand for taateful arrangements la black and white the manufacturer have put forth not only bewitching white dimi ties, and lawns, -and linens delicately tamped or embroidered la black, but laces foot of the skirt. A toque of white hair cloth striped with bands of black baby velvet rlbboa is the fitting crowa for this crisp and springlike gown. The companion frock Is a whits grass lawn set off with, tucks. In ths yoke and at the knees of the skirt, and with applica tions of black and .white are net Valen ciennes. A big bow of soft green peau de sole ribbon garnishes the left shoulder and gives just the single not of color that all these contrast gowns for young girls should display. A Gaad Grass Llaea. Women who hare an Instinct for dress know that ths cornerstone of every spring A BAND BROWN LINEN MER LUNCHEON. FOR A 8UM- wardrobe la a brown grass linen. A good erase linen caa rush In where silks and satins dare not tread; that Is to say in trains, oa yscht decks and under burning suns, and yet an all around properly de veloped grass linen caa excite admiration at a garden party and appears to the great est advantage at a summer luncheon. A really smart lines Is this season trans parent, but tough as mosquito netting and tt Is usually atrlped or figured. The sand brown and golden tans lean to association with green, and the few that are not figured are made up over green founda tion skirts. Let the seeker after truth, as revealed by the grass linen, look on the pretty picture of the gowa that is always welcome and serviceable. This Is a browa transparent linen, striped la a goodly tint of green, and tt Is made up with a heavier tinea embroidered la dots of green and with coarse ecru Arabian lace. A white lace Louis XV hat with a crown of flat pink roses and foliage seems the natural accom paniment to so seasonable a symphony. Evelatloa la Rvealaar Dress. The dressmakers boast that a genuinely new Idea Is In process of evolution tnto a practical novelty in drees. The Inspiration was first mads manifest In the models of evening gowns that have come" over re cently from Paris. In Paris the dress archi tects lay all their emphasis on the under or lining skirt. Ths overdress Is simply a misty veil through which the glories of the foundstlon petticoat gleam with a mysteri ous and interesting charm. ' The foundation skirt Is for ths ball or dinner gown of the very rich woman, a superb and brilliant brocads upon which is flung a silk muslla or Zinana gauss of somo neutral tone, such as fog gray, pearl gray, antique green, etc. For the less extravagant woman a taffeta printed in bouquets of dassling roses serves a ths drop skirt and on this Is hung a chiffon, silk laWn or transparent liberty crepe of a faint color and the rest of ths story is told In lac applications. To present the Idea yet more clearly at tention should be directed to the dinner drees of the associated sketch. This Is an orchid gown. The foundation skirt I printed over with lilac, red and yellow orchids of peculiarly daring tones and ar rangement, but a wonderful dim painted glasa effect la aecured by the over drapery of after glow yellow chiffon In which a broken skeleton black ring is woven. Heavy tea-dyed Irish crochet lace is artfully ap plied to skirt and bodice and through a max of narrow yellow chiffon flounces crisp and curl about the foot. The final garnish ment of the bodies is a scarf of black panns ribbon, enhancing the white of the shoul ders and falling In a single knotted streamer below the wearer's knee. ' MART DEAN. 1!00, when shs discovered houses snd tombs of sos b. C. At the next meeting of the American Archaeological Institute Miss Boyd read a paper on her work of the previous summer. It was heard by Mrs. Cornelius Btsven- son of Philadelphia, for many years secre tary of ths American Exploration aoclety. 8hs Interested other members of the so ciety and funds were raised to send Miss Boyd bsck to continue her work last spring. Miss Blinche Wheeler of Providence, who hsd studied at the American school at Roma, accompanied her. Their landing pines was Candle, and thence they pushed back for sixty miles into the interior, rld- mer playgrounds snd kindergartens, have collected a nature library which Is loaned to rural schools, sad hsve been so effective In rousing public sentiment on the sub ject of the beautifying of HsrNsburg, that a commission is now working to Induce the city to vote a loan for municipal improve ments. The plsn for the lstter includes ths beautifying of ths river front of the Susquehanna, by the construction of a splendid boulevard and other means. Mia Mlra Dock, the moving spirit of the work at Harrlsburg, hss recently been sppolnted a member of the Pennsylvania State Board of Forestrr. Ths women of Tsrpon Springs, Fla., S41AWS ISDER HAMMER. Feataree ef the Anna! Sal at Bride by the Coasaaaha Iadlaas. Ths annual distribution of Comanche In dian brides ha just occurred at the Saddle Mountain mass Ion, In southern Oklahoma. Fifty of ths prettiest women of the tribe were sold at public auction as the wives of tribesmen who bid them In. This barbaric ouatom was to have been discontinued by ths Comanches last year, but It went on more boldly than ever this season, being conducted under ths very eyes of the white settlers. The festival of the Comanche "pony smoke," as this ceremony is called. Is of more than passing Interest. Seldom are so many young squaws auctioned oft as was don this year, but the surplus was great and needed thinning out, according to the head mea of the tribe. Their parents, re fusing to keep them any longer, the girls naturally needed homes somewhere, and It was deemed best by ths medicine men to auction them off as wives, the highest bid ders to tske their choice. Big Bow, a mon strous fat and ugly redskin, acted as the auctioneer. ' He was assisted by a number of medicine men, who performed the mar' riage ceremonies after ths sales had been mad. . Five hundred Indian gathered at the Saddle Mountain mission last week. This missloa Is located thirty miles directly south of Mountain View, and on - the range of the Wichita mountain. The girls who wore sold had been confined in a lodge for tare weeks prior to this meeting and were well fed and extremely well groomed. They were all clad tn gay color and their hair arranged In perfect Indian fashion. It was plain to ses that their parents bad P re- Dared them to bring fancy price. The rlrls were In various moods; soms nystsr leal, others calm, and not a few delighted with ths experience. Among others was a daughter of the fa mous Quabnah Parker, the noted Comanche Indian chief. This daughter, whoss nam is Amy, had displeased him by attempting to run away and marry a white man, and a cowboy at that, so Parker decided that ths best thing would be to sell her at auction. This is the first tlms Parker, who is counted by his whits neighbors a highly cultivated red man, haa ever allowed any of his rela tives to be sacrificed at the auotioa block. But the wrath of an Indian parent knows bo bounds. Bad and silent. Amy Parker was led to the block for sale. The first bid was eleven ponies. Jack Wild Horse, a well-known scout of the tribe, was the bidder. Hs was Immediately raised by a rival, likewise a scout. This latter claimant bid fifteen. Others thea cut tn, and Miss Parker was run up to fifty ponies. Her face grow pals when she saw that Wild Horss was deter mined to get her, as he ts knowa as the most desperate ssvsge oa the reservation when drunk and angered. It Is said that he ha killed three wives when drunk. Wild Horse, however, won the young squaw for sixty-three ponies. The stock was turned over to Parker, and a medicine man mar ried Wild Horse and the squaw according to the Comanche rites. The couple then went to El Reno, where a regular marriage llcenss was Issued to them and the cere mony repeated by a pale-face minister. Al though ths marriage took place only three days ago, a dispatch from Law ton says that he attempted to commit suicide after fall lng In an attempt to kill her new husband. Other young women objected quits as strongly as Miss Parker did to being auc tioned off, but It did them no good what ever. Big Bow went ahead with the sals until every one of them was sold. The lowest bid made for any of them was twenty pontes. This wa ths price paid Tor a half' breed woman who hsd bees married to a white man, but the latter having died, she reverted back to her parents again. In all ovsr 1,600 ponies changed hands In the three days of ths big bridal auction. Not for many years have the squaws com' mended such spirited bidding and big prices as la this latest event of Its kind among ths Comanches. m Is the joy of the household, for without it no happiness can be complete. How sweet the picture of mother Mid babe, angels smile at and commend the thoughts and asDirations of th mother bending over the cradle. The ordeal through which the expectant mother must pass, how ever, is so full of danger and suffering that o oaa iorwara to tne hour when she shall feel the exquisite thrill of motherhood with indescribable dread and 11 Ft!?1? woman shouIJ know that the danger, pain and horror I child-birth can be entirely avoided by the use of Mother's Friend, scientific liniment for externa use only, which toughen and renders yuauia ait uie pans, ana assists nature in its sublime work. By its aid thousands of women have passed this great crisis in perfect safety and without pain. Sold at $1.00 p. bottle by druggists. Our book of priceless value to all women sent free. Address BfUlinOM lUaVLATVH 00 AUmmtm. , IT 0S MUM I a TWO DEUCIOUSLT PRETTY DIMITT FROCKS. A WOMAN ARCHEOLOGIST. Mix Boyd's Researches la Aaclent Greece. Miss Harriet O. Boyd, professor of archaeology la Bmith college, la the only woman ewho over received a permit from the Greek government to excavate the antiquities of ths country. It Is not always an easy permit to secure, and It was tin heard of to grant It t a woman. But Greece could not refuse Miss, Boyd. Bhs wss the only American womaa who. want to ths front to nurse the Greek soldiers during the Oreco-Turklah wsr la 1?T. A student In thi American Bchoe of Archaee logy at the time, she abandoned her studies when the war broke out and offered her servloes to the government. There wa a furore of admiration ever the patriotism of ths bright, young student. Queen Olga gave Miss Boyd special permission to go a nurse, aad, upon hsr return, after five mon the at the front, personally decorated the American girl la recognition s of her services. Afterward, when ahe modestly asked the Creek government if shs might not go over to the Island of Crete and dig a little. It was Impossible to refuse her. Her first excavating was dons la ths spring of lng on horseback, straight away from rail roads and civilization. Into a country in habited only by peasants. They had a pack train, but they did not transport many supplies, preferring to trust to those fur nished by the peasants. They could buy chickens and rice, mutton and wild rab bits. They hired the peasants as work men, and Miss Boyd had under her a force varying from 30 to 100 in number. She kept the books, called the payroll and paid the men herself. The majority of them received 25 cents a day, but those trusted with the more delicate operations com manded 40 cents. Riding over ths country In her search for clues word was brought Miss Boyd from a peasant that he could guide her to a place where there were old walla and pottery fragments. , They followed the peasant to a spot where the stones looked as if they had been placed la 11ns tor a wall. Three daya later they had opened houses, laid bare roads j and bad discovered nough vases, bronzes and Implements to make It certain that they had found the sit of a Myoenaean city. - It was an ex citing moment when, they caught the first glimpse of these wails, buried from human sight hundreds of years before the Christian era. Within half a yard of the surface they discovered a plentiful supply at bronses. They uncovered In all an acro polis and fourteen houses, laying bars m section of this old Mycenaean town. Their finds ars bow In the museum tn Caadla, the Oreek government not allowing the re moval of any such -objects from the coun try. The discoveries are valuable as throwing light upon the life of the My cenaean. They found a great abundance of household Implements, showing ths do mestic life, and indicating that they were an eminently peaceful people. built and furnished a much needed public schoolhouae, which It then turned over to the city, and reclaimed and beautified the uncared-for cemetery. In Rochester the women have transformed the schoolyards Into bower of beauty. In Denver the women secured the placing of seats at watting points on the street car lines and of rubbish cans at corners. They secured an antl-expectoratlon ordinance and the establishment of district libraries in the suburbs. They have conducted a sum mer playground and kindergarten and have raised aad expended many thousands of dollars tn the art decoration of the school houses' interiors. 44 MUNICIPAL HOUSEKEEPERS. Improvements Wrong-tat by Women la x Several Cities. Ths first annual convention of ths Ameri can League for Civlo Improvement held at Buffalo recently revealed the large amount of useful work being don by women all over the country along line of city and village Improvement. The experience of the St, Paul women la perhsps the most notable. Under the lead ership of Mrs. Conde Hamilton, a womaa of wealth and high social position, they have accomplished marked results. Their first work wa to secure ths passage by ths legislature of two bill providing tor the planting of trees la cities and the cutting of grass oa vacant lots, ths cost to be as teased against the property owners. They mad a complete canvass of ths city with regard to tt sanitary connections, filing written reports with the health department. It was a hard and monotonous task, but as a result, after a long fight, ths contract system of removing garbage. In which poli tic figured rather than cleanliness, wa don away with and the matter was given over to the health department, Insuring ef ficient service. The women secured, after a good deal of trouble, a city ordinance requiring the In spectlon of- dairies, which created dissatis faction among soms of the dairymen, be cause they could no longer feed their cows on "mash" from the breweries. They failed In abolishing ths bet nolr of all city im provers, ths billboard, but secured ordl nsnces modifying ths nuisance. But the chief work of the St. Paul women was oa ths city charter. It was a new charter. In corporating many Improvements la the city government, but antagonising certain great corporations, like the street railway, gas and electric light, companies. Everyone said that tt would never be adopted by the peo ple. But the women threw themselves heart aad soul into ths work and carrlsd a campaign of education into every home in the city. The best judges, lawyers and other leading mea of the city placed their service at the disposal of the committee aad the women arranged meetings at every school house. They printed the charter In brief, with explanatory literature, la BwedlBh, German and English and saw that it was placed In every house. Oa election aay they had high school boys st the polling place In each of the 114 precinct of tne city to remind the voters to vote oa the charter and show them how to 'do It. That night the first election news announced pon the transparencies wss, "Ths' charter is adopted." "... . The work of the St. Paul women is troi cal of that of women all over the country. In Carlisle, Pa., ths women havs recently nougat an old fair ground and turned , It into a park. In Keokuk. Ia.. the women erected a fountain, planted S00 trses along a nsw boulevard and reclaimed a nark which had beea allowed by the city to lie m wests. In Spokane. Wash., they have distributed great quantities of shrubs, small fruits and flower seeds among ths children of ths poor. In Harrlsburg, Pa., ths Women have interested themselves in Ina- provsd ordinances- av maintained sum Firlli ( Fashion. An odd and pretty foliage hat ha the entire center, or crown, of green leaves and the edge set around with black, roses. Fashionable dinner and tea table cloth are edged and inserted with renaissance. cluny and guipure laces and the prices for the best qualities range very high. Napkins Corduroy is havlnf a great raae in Paris In tones of brown and pearl gray, trimmed with fur and Japanese embroidery. Lace laid onto fur is a suitable trimming for such gowns. Light flannels with narrow satin strlnes haua been Introduced for shirt waists. They are slratlv made and worn with the double white linen collar and soft silk tie. The bolero shows no slam of leavlna- us. but If It does it will yield to full bodices in oft fabrics, the fullness wrinkled Into gathers in a slanting direction and held in place Dy handsome buttons, it belts are made of the same material a the bodice they are very narrow. A pretty, simole and stylish hat a. wtrla sailor, broad of rim and rather high of crown of a fancy straw, bound with an other fancy straw, is trimmed with black crepe ribbon with a black satin edge. This ribbon is wide and Is carried snugly, but in accldentl folds, around the crown of the hat, and finishes on the left side with a big rosette-like bow. - There are white frocks for child run msrls Of the all-over embroidery ml urn mamnm Maey are, perhaps, but these are never very UIHISCUH7 tn ine macnine work and seem entirely out of place upon children. . When a nine reamer siitcning, wnicn is so easy to do, will give an air of handwork, and is as popular as It Is now. It Is too bad to put children Into machine-worked frocks. ' Far aad Abant Wosaca. General Zachary Taylor, 77 yeaVs old, lives in wincneeier, va. une was educated in Philadelphia. Mrs. McKlnley will .shortly receive a copy, sumptuously engrossed and bound. of the resolution of congress on the death oi ner laie nusDana. Mrs. Oliver Ames supports, at her own expense, a full bras band at ths Oliver Ames High school of North Easton, Mass., an institution or ner own planning and provision. ( Mrs. M. A. Crosier of Indlananolla has just started on her twenty-first tour of the woria. one maae ner nrst in iss. Bits has crossed the Atlantic ocean seventy times, ascended the Pyramids a dozen times and has explored nearly every Interesting nook of the old world. Beaora Juana Roes de Edwards Is the Helen Gould of Chile. Bhs shows her love A GREEK MEHCERIZED LAWN AND LACE COSTUME. for her country . by building schools, churches, asylums, Hospitals and dwellings for the poor. Her grandfather and her husbands were Americans, ' who helped the Chileans to win their Independence. The two successful bidders for the fur nishing of the woman's hotel to be erected In New York are both women one. Mrs. Mason P. Davldge, a daughter -of Bishop Voltrr, and the other. Hint. Molka Kellogg, an opera singer. Both fitted up model rooms aa a sample of how beauty and comfort could be combined aad both were so much liked thai the contract was divided. It Is exnerted thst the most resplendent diamonds at the coining coronation will be worn bv Ladv Londonderry. For several generations the Londonderry diamonds have been in ful blase. As far back as lftJb It was records by a fashionable diarist that "Lady Londonderry as Cleopatra was in a dress literally embroidered with emeralds aud diamond from, too to tW RMTABLE-TJOEHEfr Should bo Pitied Not Blamed Men Don't Understand How They Suffer When They Ory,Oh,Dont Speak to Me." All manner of extravagant expressions are possible when a woman nerves are overwrought. The spasm at the top of the wind pipe or bronchial tubes, "ball rising in tho throat," violent beating of the heart, laughing and crying by turns, muscular spasms (throwing the arms about), frightened by tha most insignificant occurrences are all symptoms of a hysterical condi tion and serious derangement of the female organs. Any female complaint may produce hysterics, which must be re garded as a symptom only. The cause, however, yields quickly to Iydla E. Pink barn's Vegetable Compound, which acts at once upoa the organ afflicted and the nerve centres, dispelling effectually all thoso distressing symptoms. it 1 j'Srd Mrs. Lewis Says: "I Feel Like a New Person, Phvslcallv and Mentally. Dear Mrs. PmKHaM : I wish to speak a good word for Lydia IS Plnkham's Vegetable Compound. For years I had ovarian trouble and Buffered everything from nervousness, sever headache, and pain in back and abdomen. I bad consulted different physicians, but decided to try rorr medi cine, and I soon found it was giving me much relief. I continued its use and now am feeling like a new person, p-.stcally and mentally, and am glad to add one more testimonial to the value of your remedy." Mas. M. H. Lb wis, 8108 Valentine Ave., Tremont, New York, N.Y. Writing to Nth. Pinkham ia the quickest and surest tray to get the right advice about all female troubles. Her address is Lynn, Mass. She advises women free. Following is an instance: Mrs. Haven's First Letter to Mrs. Pinkham. MDEi, Mas. Piskham: I would like your advice In regard to my troubles. -1 suffer every month at time of menstruation, and flow so much, and for bo long that I become very weak, also get very dizzy. I am troubled with a discharge before and after meases, have pains in ovaries so bad some times that I ean hardly g-et around, have sore feeling in lower part of bowels, pain in back, bearing-down feeling, a desire to pass urine frequently, with pains in passing it ; have leucorrhoea, headache, fainting spells, and some times have hysteria. My blood is not in good condition. Hoping to hear from you, I am, Mks. Euni. Have, 2508 South Are., Council Bluffs, Iowa." (June 3, 1899.) . Mrs. Haven's Second Letter. s' 1)EA3 Mrs. Pttkham : I wish to express my gratitude for what you hare done for me. I suffered for four years with womb troubles. . Every month I flowed very badly. ' I got so bad that I could hardly do my work. . Was obliged to sit or lie down most of the time. I doctored for a long time, but obtained no relief. I bepan using your remedies Lydia l Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, Blood Purifier, Sanative Wash and Liver Pills and now feel like a new woman." Mbs. Emma IIatut, 8508 South Ave., Council Bluffs, Iowa. (Feb. 1, 1900.) $5000 REWARD. We bars deposited with th National City Bank of Lynn, HMO, which will be paid to any person who can find that ths sboio testimonial letters are not genuine, or were published before obtaining the writer's special per mission. ydis E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mis. BEST PERSONALLY CONDUCTED TOURLST EXCURSIONS TO (Cauforni Three Excursions Weekly VIA (Scenic Line LEAVE OMAHA Wednesday Friday and Saturday Daily First-class SleeperThrough to San Francisco via Colorado, passing the Grandest Scenery of the Rockies and Sierrs Nevads by Daylight. Direct Connections to Los Angeles. City Ticket Office, 1323 Farnam St., Omaha. A SKIN OF BEAUTY IS A JOY FOREVER it. T. FELIX G0URAUD S ORIENTAL CREAM. OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIES. Rsmovss Tan, Plntplss. Vrsaklea lloth Patohas, Rash and Skin dls aaa, aad svsn 't blMOlsh on bssuty. un Q a JL """V ff years, and la so harmless wa lasts It to bs sure 'I Is propriy mads, Aoospt no oouuwr- fslt or similar Dr. U A. Ssyrs said to a la dy of ths haul-toa (a astlsnt)! "A you ladle will use them, i recom mend UOUKAUD B CKBAM' as. the. leaat harmful of all the Skin preparations." For sale bv at 11 Drugflsts and Fancy Oooo Uealera In the U. 5. and Europe. tKHO. T. HOPKINS. Vroa, 7 Great Jones St. K. T. T XJ m ' J -" m fc: y Strengthens tUflMitll'Mk Mil World Famous Marian! Tonic It Is found especially useful In Nerroua Troubles Dyspepsia, Malaria, Consumption, Over work, Indigestion, La flrippe, Nervous Trostration, General Debility, -Tardy Convalescence and Throat and Lung Troubles. AU DruftKUts. Rcfus Substitutes IKitdienUtensils 'HAYING THIS TRADE MARK. St:!:: J a.:-.1r ! 1520 k t ; KINDS'? Cbumei n the enamel) are Sife We claim purity and Safctyind Substantiate this claim with' Chemists' Certificate. Not the blue label need bv a (sad ailly sustained by recent U.S. Circuit Court dscisioa) t distia uish our absolutely pure Agate Nickel-Steel Wars. Tnis Isbsl is pasted oa every piece ef aeauia tu Ware. JswhM titmnmf fttimih ear UU, sav, I Jrt tt my udirttt. ( , LALANCB 4k OROSJEAN fiFO. CO. saw VOBK ARE SAFE. Deputy Stat Veo4 Iaapaotor. fi. L. tUUACCIOTTI, D. V. Si CTTT VETERINAJlIAJf Offloe aad Infirmary. th ana IsititUv&a t$s sj