January 1. If For and About the Women Folks TI1E OMAHA ILLUSTRATED DEE. MUa Hrl Coald'a Gifts. kUT of her abundant wraith Ml IfeUn Oould hua Rlvrn irnruiy to various philanthropic object. Among the bnenclarlea men tioned by a writer In Leslie's y. tha Tounff Men s Christian im- . 1 11 jn stand firat. In the lat wven ysura M.ta Oould haa riven the organization 1760. (t, including a, building for the men at the Brooklyn navy yard. All branchea of the work of the organisation have had tier approval and aid. Beildea fostering ita efforta In other field, Mica Oould liaa quietly encouraged the establishment of an rex latlona of railroad men along the "Gould line," ao that there are now eighteen bulldlnga at dlrlnlon point along the?e roads, coating from U.OnO to J25,XiO each. The railroads and Miss Oould have con tributed about half the coxt of the struc tures and the men themselves and cltli'iis of the different localities have given the remainder. During the last six years Miss Oould has donated twenty-tight libraries to railroad associations, costing from K) to tl.nriu each, bealdes sclf-playlng pianos, talking machines, collections of stereos copic pictures, etc., which make thr-sit buildings more attractive as resorts for the men between their runs on tlie roads. Miss Oould has not only been Interested In providing with the best equipment thesn "club houses." now numbering over 2"0 throughout the country, but also In per sonally encouraging the men In temperate, Christian living. When, some time ago, she attended a meeting of the railroad as sociation members', at which there were J.000 present from all parts of the country, hsr presence and her practical Interest In all that concerned the welfare of railroad employes had such a decided Influence that the secretaries of the associations urged her to visit their organizations. Tha Kerr Woman of Sixty Plus. The new woman of 60 is now a fixed fea ture of city life. Sho la welcomed, more over. She wears the same style of hats that her daughters do and her Interests are correspondingly youthful. There may have been a certain tenderness In the former woman of 60 In her lace and violet bonnet, which la larking In her suc csor with her Napoleonic beaver turned back defiantly frotn her brow. But as a change from conditions that existed for merly, the new woman of 60 adds much to the beauty of out-of-door life, even If she may not bring the same grace and gentle. ness aa her predecessor to her own fire- miAa One haa aren this new wnmxn H,.rlr,r ih holiday season wandering through tha shops with her daughter of 20 or less, the two dressed with so little difference In de tail that they might be sisters. The de butante of IS by the side of her mother of 38 seems very much like her. When twelve years more have made that maiden a matron and her mother a grandmother there will still be little difference between them In looks. "Now that we have accepted the new woman of 60," said an amateur sociologist quoted by tho New York Sun, "we have to accept also the newer woman In tho next stage of her development. She Is well, tho woman, over 60. Say that she hua reached the 60s or passed beyond them. Is she an agreeable substitute for her predecessor? How many white-haired, unnmlablo look ing women one sees nowadays, covered with feathers and furbelows and wearlnjr clothes that are much too young for them. I see them fighting their way Into theaters, elbowing themselves through the crowds in tha Fifth avenue shops and calling harshly In rasping voices to girls In tho stores. Are these women the results of the new women of 50?" This critic's views may be extreme, but It Is a fact that elderly women are seen In public much more than they used to be. Nothing seems to daunt them now. They Jump In and out of crowded trolley can with a pretense of youthful alacrity, and they aparkle with gems at the opera the new woman of SO plus. She may be poor and yet affect the same Jauntlness that the Fifth avenue dressmakers try to provide for their customers who are over 60 years young. "It may be an Improvement to have old women looking so much younger," the sociologist continued, "but I have observed that they try to substitute for certain rec. ognlzed charms of age what poorly re places the original gentleneas, tendomesa and contentment where are they In tho hew women of more than 60? "It may be that the ability to wear a black Jet hat with three ostrich feathers on the aide waa not possessed In former years by women who had long passed Into the grandmother clus. But those earlier grandmothers had some other traits not possessed by their successors, and they were the qualities that made old age, rest ful and lovable and, above all, revered." The l'ayclioloKy of Clothes. With reason Mrs. Catherine Waugh Mc Culloch uscribes one secret of Mrs. Chad wick's power to the Impressive character of her dress "Tho woman who wears good clothes." says Mrs. McCulloch, "and ruMles and wears a smile, can make a victim nf any man she chooses. Mrs. Chadwick did what a shabby-genteel woman could not have done." "Of course, this abuse of power does not militate against the wearing of good clothes." comments the Chicago Chronicle. "It only shows the power of dress and Its psychological effect. The woman who la well gowned, whatever the condition of her puree, has an Immenao advantage In every SAVE YOUR FACE Age. sickness, overwork, trouble tV)c deadly enemies of woman's dearest treasure (her beauty and complexion) are reudered well nigh powerless by MRS. NETTIE HARRISON'S LOLA MONTEZ CREME A treat scientific discovery a food for the skin, replacing wasted tissues, filling out wrinkles, causing the skin to throw of! what is unhealthy and discoloring, and to assume tho beautiful transparency and velvety softness of youth and health. Tot lasting three months, 75c, stall druggists. II yea bars any defects 61 skin, scalp or ganaral luaiib., writs nt Corraspomieocs solicited Mrs. NPTT1B HARRISON, Dermatologist 40 Oeary At-, fcaa FraaUato 1 J West 37th At, New York City for gale by Sherman McConnell Drug in, a. w. tor. win ana uoage, umana. Beauty Strength reals Worker, Nervous, rstlui, weak ana Car era sees restored is BSSII TABLETS Tbev Indnea restful .lean, rnra Vervoasneaf.. Btoiueea, Kldue aod BledJYr ttuntle, and pro duo Plarneneee. Iireortn and Vitality, tuue up sue nerves ana aurirr me oiooa. y Mall sl.ee, r S fcee -7S mu LrniUrt Liver fill. S eta. Fee aaapls Tablets, enclose 10 cwnts THE NERVAN TABLET CO., Cincinnati, 0. t-'ur sale by tJeatoa Drug Co. fx n VI .lit km 1 . 1 ERVAMl 1V aV M station of life over the woman who Is com monplace in her dress. ' But let no woman think that loud, ob trusive clothes fill the bill. Theae betray the parvenu, the would-be aristocrat who has not yet "arrived." The successful woman knows Just how far to have her clothes Impressive without overshadowing her personality. They are her aids, her subordinate, not her superiors. They ex press what she wishes expressed and ar reticent when she wishes to keep silence. "Mrs. Chadwick understood to perfection the art of dress so far as using It as a mean to the one end she had In view was concerned. She worked men, not women. She dressed for men, not women, and therein lies a difference not easily defined. "Sensitive as the average woman la to the effect of dress and fond as she may be of wearing fine garments), she Is not as easily Impressed and 'taken In' by tht well dressed woman as Is the average man. She is more critical aa o details, and she knows from her own experience that effect Is constantly studied and may or may not mean a good bank account. "Still, if hard-headed business men have repeated experiences with women nf the Chadwick tj pe they will soon become as discerning and as wary of women who wear 'good clothes that rustle' as they now are impressed and misled by them. It will then be necessary for feminine tricksters to don garments of the Hetty Green type and work their methods In humbler guise. "The rustling gown will not always prevail." Two Notable Aged Womea. Mrs. Hannah Sturdevant of Bergen, Gene see county, N. Y., has compassed 101 years, with a clear mind In a sound body, reads without ghisses and has no notion of stop ping yet awhile. For her years ahe might have been a Daughter of the American Revolution, but it was her grandfather who waa a revolutionary soldier. The least we can do to these venerable persons Is to give ihcm the honor of noticing their sur vival. Not so old, but srtlll remarkable, Is Mrs. Lemuel Bangs, who at 91 la the active president of the Methodist Episcopal Church Home for Aged Women at Amsterdam avenue and Ninety-second street, Manhat tan, and Is not only vigorous, but hand some, plump and rosy of complexion under her abundant white hair looking rather like 60 than 90. Mrs. Bangs says she has no dietary has in fact given no thought to the matter, but always eats what la set be fore her, according to the Scriptures. 6he i. if,...i i n .erair. w k not 1" public matters; she reads constantly nr.d carries on her own considerable corre spondence. She bathes dally In cold water and has for many years. She has a lively spirit still, and as she whipped her children when they were naughty, they did not fall to rise up and call her blessed, also accord ing to the Scriptures. She says with em phasis, "I have not been the placid and be nign creature many of my friends think me to be years have cast a glamor over me which have obscured my very visible de fects." When she was young she worried; now she worries no more, trusting In God. Meanwhile, her administration of the aged persons' home la thorough, while she Is friendly with all her charges. And she goes to market every day to cater for hei family. How to Get Rid of Him. Here are some of the rules Edmund Ttu sell once read to the Eclectic club on "How to Get Rid of a Lover": Step often on his feet. Move your hands a little every time he opens his mouth. It will make him nervous. Always ridicule men he admires. Let him aee you conversing with superior men while he sits bored and unnoticed In the background. Do not move when he attempts to em brace you. Should he offer a caress turn a little aside. Aak him to love you when he is tired. Never laugh when he laughs. If both should happen to laugh at the same time show that you are not laughing at what he Is laughing. When he wants to tell you a story Inter rupt him with another one that has nothing to do with the one he Is about to tell you. Find fault with all plans he makes for your pleasure. Ask him continually for things he cannot give you. Housewives Work Too Hard. "I hold that that class of women In America (the hard-working housewives) Is not only hard-worked, but Is far too much over-worked." writes Emll Reich in Success. "The number of house-servants in the United States Is not half so large as that In little England. This entails on enormous amount of household work to be done by untold thousands of American housewives. I know It; I havo seen it for years. In factories. In public libraries, In poatofflces, and other stata offices, In pri vate offices, and In the infinite number of schools, American women are working very hard, frequently to the detriment of their constitutions. But herein la found the great difficulty In summing up correctly the btate of women in a given country. The hard-worked, the over-worked womwn are of the tame type and class all the world over. They do not constitute- the distinctive type of womanhood of a coun try. We must estimate them, not by what they are actually doing, but by what they are aiming at. The very American house wife whose husband has heretofore been unable to give her sufficient "help" will, as soon as her husband Is financially suc cessful, turn out a type -totally different from what she has been. It is this ever present tendency toward the distinctive American woman-type, even in the lowliest of American housewives, that constitutes the essential feature In American woman hood. As in Kngland there Is no bour geoisie proper, not bfcauee there are no middle-class families, of which, indeed, there Is no lack, but because In every KngllBh middle-class family there are an ever-present desire and a restless ambi tion to get socially out of that middle class; even so there Is in America no real bourgeoisie woman, owing to he unmistak able, Inerudicable tendency In evtry Ameri can woman to reuch tho type of that American woman whom my critic think they cun restrict to a limited number with worldly Inclinations." Here Is an Ideal Iloase, Lecturing in Philadelphia, Dr. Robert Ellis Thompson described the city home of the future. He said it would contain no stoves. Cooking will be done by power, the building will be healed from a central plant, elevators will run from cellar to garret, and breakfast, lunch and dinner will be supplied from co-operative centers. The era of scientific cooking on the co operative plan haa been inaugurated In Bergen, Norway., where for nearly a gen eration cooking haa been banished from the home, and all receive their meals from co-operative centers. Not only will the house of the future be cleaned by power, but the dust will be removed oy a pneumatic rxhauat sys tem. Streets will be cleaned In like man ner, and the dust and dirt will ta carried away Into the country, so that country peo ple may yet vlt.lt the cltlea for a breath of fresh air. Woiaea 'Agree Sot to Kiss. A little red button worn by some S00 women, old and young, married and Indif ferent, amnop the leading social sets of the f'lty of Mexico marks a new departure, or rallirr m div ateu in diu.cii. This lit tle, round, red button signifies membership I In what Is known as the Antl-Klsstng league. Members of the league take solemn pledge not to kiss each other. In public or private, but put It on the ground that kissing is ' contagious, or. rather, the means of conveying contagious diseases from one fair Up to another. There Is nothing visible to the naked eye In the constitution of this league against kissing other than members of the female persuasion, and In fact the practice, aside from the supposed danger of Infection, Is decidedly, to the male aenre, not only de plorable, but unnecessary. When one woman takes two or three minutes of time in a street car to kiss three or four other women before alighting from the car she certainly violates the golden rule of mak ing all those passengers wait. How far this new. league will conduct Its offensive and defensive campaign remains to be seen. The Same of Womea. The Lambs are represented In a collection by two valuable relics, one a Quaint little visiting card upon which Is Inscribed in a good, round hand, "Mary Ann Lamb," with a note underneath to the effect that it was written by Miss Lamb July 6, 1840, at the age of 74, and Charles Lamb by the or glnal manuscript of his sonnet on the Christian names of women, a charming bit of versa written to Edith Southey: In Christian world Mary the garland wears; Rebecca sweetens on a Hebrew's ears; (Quakers for pure ITIstilla are more clear; The little Uaul by amorous Ninon swears; Among the leader lights how Lucy shine! What air of fragrance Rosamond throws around! How like a hymn doth sweet Cecilia sound! Of Marthas and of Abigails, few lines Have bragg'd In verse. Of coarsest house hold HtUff Should homely Joan be fashioned; but can, You Barbara resist, or Marianf And is not Clare for love excuse enough T Yet, by my faith. In numbers I profess. These all less. than Saxon Edith please me I'avei from Fashion's Notebook. Chinchilla and ermine form an unusual collar with stole, ends of the two furs. Gloves of pink and lavender and other pale tones have three pretty imitation pearls for buttons. The smartest muff Is big, broad, flat and flexible, of black broadtail with deep bands of chinchilla on either side. It mutches a coat of the two furs. There are many coats of squirrel skin for the little people In all gray and In grav and white. They are serviceable and do not appear to overdress the wearer. Tall beaver hats are out for the women as well as for the men. But the woman iiium ue young ana a beauty to wear hers. ?.r 11 ,s.a Gainsborough In shape, white and inmmeu with whit plumes. other riv in no-ht hri. . n..i. l".nr gloves in light shades have a little scallop or contrasting color showing at tho lower edge of the wrist, and the buck is stitched to match, a pale lavender with a cream glove possibly. The shades vary. There Is a variation of tho two-stone ring, In which two diamonds or contrasting atones are set diagonally. Instead of the simple claw setting the two stonea are set deep In the gold, which curves down on either side to the body of the ring. Smart new collar and cuff sets Tiave the cuffa am well an the collar with a stiff un der piece. This ta as deep as the upper side, and buttons once st the lower edge, The turnovers to both collars and cuffs are broad, of butcher's linen, and embroidered with a fine floss In different designs. The stiff under side obviates the necessity of wearing an under collar, and In the cuffs holds the sleeve of the waist smooth. A pretty fancy for the woman who likes something different In gloves are those with narrow gauntlet cuffs, embroidered with steel beads. They are to be found on both black and white gloves, the black being stitched with white and the white with black. The gauntlets are regularly turned down over the cuff of the gown or reversed, turned back over the hand. They are but little more than an Inch wide and the em broidery is charming. It Is said that tho beautiful Mexican drawn-work is really as much the product of the sweatshop aa any ready-made cloth ing put together In a tenement house. The work Is given out by the agent, done by the poorest of women and paid for at the rate of 7, 8, 9. or at tlse most, 13 cents a -day, though the profits made by the men who manage the business are very great. It la estimated that the buyer pays $40 for a cloth that cost the manufacturer at the rate at the outaide of .12 cents for the day's work, ninety days for the piece. A Brooklyn woman haa nrpsented 'her nuxnana witn a I and haa had anoth babv-tooth solitaire rlnsr .efrnade for heraef f Thl fond Brooklyn mamma garnered two first teeth one of her first-born and the other the maiden effort of baby No. 2. The teeth were twins as far as color and appearance were concerned, and mamma thought them more beautiful than any gems she had ever Keen. A Jeweler was let Into the plot, and, seeing a great field for fortune-making In this Infant Industry of Brooklyn, he did his best. The little bits of Ivory were mounted on gold circlets, with little diamonds set on each side. $i Chat Aboat Women. Mrs. Elizabeth Ryle, who has Just died In Patersun, N. J., during her lifetime gave $300,000 to charity. The free public library In her city she reared to the memory of Charles Dunforth. her father. Miss Alice M. Robertson, who haa been appointed postmistress of Muskogee, I. T., has done much for the Indians, and rained the funds for building the Nuyaka Mission school. When the treaty of peace was made with Creek Indiana she acted aa secretary. Mrs. Emma A. Smith, believed to have been the first woman telegraph operator in this country, Is dead at her home In West Chester, Fa. She had been an invalid Tor the last fifteen years and was 73 years old. one waa inviien tn isbn to unveil the Morse monument In New York Cltv, but waa un abl to participate owing to Illness. Mrs. Hmlth waa the first woman to send a mes sage to the Pittsburg telegraph ofllee, where Andrew Carnegie was then acting as messenger boy. Columbus. O.. has an Anti-Women Stenographers' aocletv, whose object Is to creiite n sentiment against the employment of women as stenoetaphers. The cocletv claims thnt during the lnxt ten ve.trs ft 3 divorce rases have been filed hv wives in the courts of the Vnited States, naming their husbunds' stenographers as core minndente. Tf the facts are as claimed they strlklnglv show, at least In one In stance, tho effect of woman's Invasion In business. - The new ladv mayoress of London Is old fn shinned In her taftes and hnhlts. Prior to her occupuncv of the Mansion houae. since her huslmnd's new honot-H ehe llvod In an old fnahlnned house In Highbury. She Is sn expert at crocheting, hut hr xpecial hobby Is lHcemakinr. and hr r work Is verv Pne. She Is f.nd of pn'ili'nlner. nnd during the wnrm months spends much time among her plants and flowers. Mrs. Penrv will not accompany her hus band on his nent trin to the Arctic. Not that she does not wish to go. for she Is n hsrdv trave'er. but because LleutenHttt Peary Is going to tnke such chances this time n. h never took before and he does not w'sh his wife to share the peril. Mrs. Penrv was a mnet valuable member of the expedition In which ahe took part. Stmnsr. eouravemis and determined she we a willing to take ber share of privation and danger, refusing to accept any odds because of her sex. Mrs. Ingehorg Nelson, mother of the Min nesota eenntnr, baa reached the late twi light of life, having passed her 90th blrth- TVEPY IS It healing and brings Bend for FREE THE DERMA IS THE FIRST 1AW Of WOMAN 11 uttv &.J1 mm i i vii iTF towokwelP day. She Is In good health and spirits, however, and passes much of her time carding and spinning wool, which she learned as a child In tha mountains of Norwav. The old woman follows closely the career of her distinguished son, who frequently visits her at her home in the vlllnae of Deerfleld, Wis., twenty mllea east of Madison. The old Nelson homestead there haa been much Improved by the sena tor. who has taken great pains to make It an up-io-aate larm. The European papers tell of a curious custom among traveling women. It appears that the women when ataylng at hotels or the like do not care to exhibit to the pas sers along the corridors the exact else of tneir reet, so they carefully carry witn them a couple of pairs of tiny, delicate shoes, which, Instead nf the ones they are wearing, they place outside their doors for the servants to take down and clean. - All the big boot shoDs In Paris now make a specialty of this tiny footgear, and a pair or two form a portion of the trousseau of every up-to-aate brine. Mtana women are said to have the smallest feet; Peruvian women come next and the American girls are a good tnira. OIT OP THE ORDINARY. Seven of the world's twenty-four greates; mountains have never been climbed. renoHlts In the national banks of Phila delphia are now $48,00,000 greater than they were one year ago, The government carries the names of about 10,000 boys between the ages of M and 19 on its payroll. Moat of them are employed as special delivery messengers The man who has the highest situation In the world Is the station master of the Gornergratt terminus, near Zermatt, 10,660 leei atiove sea level. Tulare lake, In California, once naviga ble by steamera, is now perfectly dry. A man on foot can cross ft safely at any point and In some places the ground is hard enough for a1 team to drive over. Tho cause of this condition Is the draining of Kern and King rivers of their waters by Irrigation canals. Justice Jollne, who holds court In Cam den, N. J., haa his own- Ideas of how to Inflict punishment on offenders. Two young fellows who had been relebrtlng Christmas too soon were before him for breaking the peace. He fined them $35 and $50, re flectively, and gave them seven months in which to ray. dividing the penalty Into monthly Installments. Each had to give his note, signed by a responsible surety. On the same day he sentenced a wife beater to two years In state's prison. There Is probably no more remarkable couple In the United States than Mr. and Mrs. Walter T. Carpenter of Richmond, Ind. Mr. Carpenter is now M years old and his wife Is only a few months his Junior. They have been married nearly seventy-one years. Both are still active and drive in their carriage to the Quaker meeting, which they have attended for many years. Mr. Carpenter cares for his own horse and occasionally rides on horseback. For fif teen years they served as superintendent and matron of Earlham college. Scientific Investigation has discovered that that troublesome disease dyspepsia can be cured at short Intervals by ex posure to Intense cold, followed by hearty eating. M. Raouel Plctet, a Swiss scien tist, produced an artificial temperature of between 140 and 160 degrees blow sero In a pit. He then exposed himself for a brief Interval tot this temperature by lowering himself Into the pit. On emerging he says he found himself Intensely hungry. The process was repeated several times, and us a result he declares he waa cured of chronic indigestion, from which he had suffered for years. At Essen. Germany, In tho great Krupp gun works, which are situated at that place, there Is a hammer that weighs fifty tons. This hammer works In connection with an anvil weighing eighty tons, which, in turn. Is placed on an anvil block weighing 120 tons. Prof. Schumann, a "trained flea man" of Berne, Switzerland, visited Essen and the great war machine works a few years ago. I'pon return home he set about making a model of the great hammer, which should be complete In every detail, but on such a minute scale that the ham mer could be raised by a flea instead of-by a 100-horae power engine, as In the original. In its completed state this wonderful minia ture model frame, hammer, pulleys, etc. weighs but one and a half grains. The hammer and anvil are both of solid gold, the pulleys of German silver and the framework platinum. REXIGrlOl'S NOTES. Dr. James D. Barbee, a leader In south ern Methodism, la dead at his home in Nashville, Tenn., aged 72 years. According to the Congregationalist the average Congregational minister djes at ths age of 87, after thirty-ulx years of minis terial Bervice. Rev. Dr. Henry Lesley Steves, who has been elected president of Carleton college Bt armington, mo., naa oeen pastor u Trinity MethoJlat church of St. Louis. at armington, mo., nas oeen puior or me Hitr. Seraflnl Is to-be made a cardinal of Mexico, In appreciation of his latest work in bringing about harmony and improving the discipline of the churches in that coun try. Rev. Charles E. Rice, who has been on leave of absence from his post In Alaska because of ill health, haa taken charge at Skagway and oftlciates for the army at Fort W. H. Seward at Haines. A meeting of representatives of the offi cial bodies of all the iiuptlat denominations In America haa been called for next month in New York City. A general itaptist or ganization of a fraternal character will probably be the outcome. The baptists of the world are to hold a congress In London next summer. The work which was done with the American troops during the Spanish war by thu Young Men's Christian association Is being duplicated among the Japanese soldiers. Twelve Christian workers wl.l be permitted to accompany the troops for pur poses of visitation in camps and hospitals, and to maintain Young Men's Christian as sociation tents at the great military camps, where stationery, liternture, games, music, entertainments and religious services will be provided lor the men. The will of Father William Kroeger, Priest and healer, who died recently at :plphany, 8. D., disposes of a fortune of $.'5o,uuo, accumulated In the last six years while administering at the same time to tho physical and snlrituaJ Ills of patients from all over the United States, lie built the whole town of Epiphany, including a tdlng Ul 7h nijni-iit.il ana a nig sanitarium. All Una property, witn the rest or the estate, Is left to Father Kroeger s niece, who has been his faithful assistant. Kecause Father Kroeger engaged in the btislnest of healing iiiiyjii-Hit. tut wen iin spiriiimny ne nerume invoiveu in aimcuitiea witn tne cathoiio church. 11" was refused an assistant priest to help In the work of the parish and with drew rrom tne congregational duties Mors or Leas Cynical. No man has ever succeeded In keeping a woman's love by preserving it In alco hol. If every man profited by hlB own mis- takea most of us would be rich. The woman who blenches her hair de serves to marry a man with dyed whis kers. When a woman is outspoken her hus band Is generally out-talked. In politics fuctions speak louder than words. Every blush isn't the genuine pink of propriety. People who say mean things don't al ways mean things. It may be that a woman stoops to folly because she is naturally stupid. It's easy tn be an optimist If you ure not married. New York Times. WOMAN B0PN WITH BEAUTY THE WISE PRESERVE IT Any woman way see ber mirror reflect a pure, soft, white skin and a beautiful compleiioa if she daily uses DERMA-R0YALE SOAP. possesses highly antiseptic, soothing and qualities ; corrects sain imperfections, the bloom of youth aud beauty to the cheeks. Keeps the skin of babies pure and healthy. DERMA-R0YALE LOTION cures eczema and tetter ; removes blackheads, freckles, pimples, redness, sun spots and tan. Soap and lotion combined clears the skin of all impurities and keeps it perfect. Used by womeu of refinement everywhere, ' book of portraits and testimonials. - ROY ALE CO., Cincinnati, Ohio. a a. 4 . at - a - (tsta, or ssa f ss aralsrsd aireot. We Will Buy A 50c Bottle of L.quozone and Give it to You to Try. We want you to know about Llquo zone, and the product Itself can tell you more than we. 8o we aak you to Iet s buy you a bottle a full-size bottle to try. Let It prove that It docs what medicine cannot do. See what a tonic It le. Learn that It does kill germs. Then you will use it always, as we do, and as millions of others do. This offer itself should convince you that Llquoione does as we claim. We would certainly not buy a bottlo and Rive It to you If there was any doubt of results. You want those results; you want to be well and to keep well. Ami you can't do that nobody con without Llquozone. We Paid $100,000 For the American rights to IJquozono. We did this after testing the product for two years, throtifrh physlclnns and hospitals, after proving;, in thousands of different csrcs, that Llquozone destroys the cause of any germ disease. Llquozoue has, for more than 20 years, been the constant subject of scientific and chemical research. It is not made by compounding drugs, nor with alcohol. Its virtues are derived solely from gas largely oxygen gas by a process re quiring immense apparatus and 14 days' time. The result is a Liquid that does what oxygen does. It is a nerve food and blood food the most helpful tiling in the world to you. Its effects are THE XXTH CENTURY rS j V qThe highest type of FAMILY SEWING MACHINE the embodiment of SIMPLICITY and UTILITY the ACME of CONVENIENCE. q Of Its many ralu&ble and unique features The AUTOMATIC TENSION RELEASER com mands notice. It Is a veritable boon. Raising the presser-foot automatically releases the thread ten sion and allows the work to be FREELY WITH- DRAWNno breaking of needles possible. . De pressing It instantly restores correct tension. Sold Only at Singer Store, 1514 Douglas St, Omaha, Nebraska, . If you are just starting in business it will pay you to invest in the best stationery to be had. It will create a favorable impression from the start. TELEPHONE 1604 A SKIN OP BBAUTV IS A JOY FQgeVEsT. DR. T. FELIX OOURAFD'S CRIKNTAl CREAM, OR MAGICAL BEAUTIVIEB BemoTes Tsn, Pimples, Freckles, eiuui i-Mu-.nus. suttu. ana csin diseases, anil every blemliO. ,ou Maiity, and leSss detection. II Firs etuad the test o( 6 tears, aud Is so harmless ws taste It to be sura It is proof rlrmads, Aeoentrto counter felt of similar name. lr. L. H.iyre said to a lady of the nauv ton ia vatlcnii 'As jou ladles will uii Lh.ro. 1 rsoommsad 'flsuriud's. Cram ' M tbs least nannfnl of all ths skin preparations." For sals br all Dro((i.ts and Fansr Ooexla iMalsrt In tha It. t., Canaila. and furopsi (LRU. T. HOPKINS, Pre, f. 17 treat Jens iu, N. 1 For wrrhai, Gleef luoorriHi, Ipefmstoe that, PltM tn All Unheal!, Issasl Olsckaroes. NO AIN. NO BTAIN. NO STRICTURE, FRCeSVRINOt. srA Bar rrsrvraMv SM7 Dl.asiea At Draff 1st, or seal to ear address for Si, MSIV0ORMFS.CO., Isntsslsr.O.li.l A. Evory Woman ! laitTMteM na nouia idow MARVEL Whirling 5pry Mm mini Xuctum. HMtAftf H-MuM COnvsMUat. I isvtiy. 14 re-re If Le can If Le cannot suoalr a. K . BL, a.in no atber hut send il.io B fa , nut asua staiap to UI.lraidBu.a-wild. Ill-res full aarusularsaud dliartutis In- Valuable to l.itiee MsSIKI,! . rarkU-ew. Saris. For sals tr CHARTER'S VRVQ 'TORES, )tn ant cmcago ts : no umsns. win ana n ajuai Council Bluff, ttta 4na MUu sis. fcUHN CO.. UlB su4 Uouetuu straW 4?3 B,ai . far r-ir a V w re.sJ.lkeM. V TZr-" IflO Ml. t IBJI. -jr W " ...v A exhilarating, vitalizing, purtfylne. Yet It is a germicide so certain that we puh llsh on every bottle an offer of for a disease genu that it cannot kill. The" reason Is that germs are vegetable; and Llquozone like an excess of oxygen - Is deadly to. vegetal matter. There lies the great value of Llquo zone. It Is the only way known to kill germs in the tody without killing the tissues, too. Any drug that kills germs Is a poison, and it cannot be taken in ternally. Every physician knows that medicine In almost helpless In any germ disease. Germ Diseases These are the known germ diseases. All that medicine can do for these troubles is to help Nature overcome tho germs, and such results are Indi rect and uncertain. Llquozone attacks the germs wherever they are. And when the germs which cause a disease are destroyed, the disease must end, and forever. That is Inevitable. Anthtn Ahrtii Aaam!a Pronchlin Blood PoiRna BrluM'i Dlaeu Bnwftl Trouble Cough Colili Consumption Collo Croup Constipation Catarrh Oncer Dysentery Diarrhea Tlar Fever Influents KI4ner Diseases L Grippe Iucorrhes Liver Troubles Malaria Neuralgia Man Heart Troubles PI lee Pneumonia Pleurisy Julnir Rheumatism Scrofula gTphllll Skin Diseases SEWING MACHINE r B "Follow-the Flag " Holiday Rates TICKETS ON SALE Dec. 2t-25-26-51, Jan. 1-2, 1905 Homeseekers' Rates ' To many points in, the South and Southeast. Tickets on Bale First and Third Tuesdays of each month. tow Rates to Ml Winter Resorts Tickets on sale daily. Shortest and Quickest lloute to the South and Southeast. For full information, call at Wabash City Oiflce. Harry E. Moores, G. A. P. D. 1601 Farnam. I tomca TrosM 1 Tbrnt Troubles TuNrrulots Tunmr I'lcMS Vrkivl Women's Dlim'l - 1 ..-.rytip.tii ! Fwt-joii ' 1 0onorr-oirt All diseases that rln with lever-all "sir Hon all catarrh all contagious diseases-!! ths re tails of lifeure or poisoned blood. In nervous debility Liquorone arts ss a vltsilter, sct-ompllshint what no drugs can to. 50c Bottle Free If you need Llquozone, and have never trl?d It, please send us this coupon. We will then mail you an or der on a local druggist for full size bottle, and we will pay the drug gist ourselves for It This Is our free gift, made to convince you: to show you what Llquozone is, and what It can do. In Justice to yourself, please, accept It today, for it places you under no obliga tion whatever. Llquozone costs fiOc and $1. CUT OUT THIS COUPON for this otrr mar not gpr'r sslri. r"lllwt the blanks and mall It to the Llquotons Com psny. 4J.S-4M Wabash Avsnue. Chicago. My dlseass Is I havs never tried l.lquoione. but If yo will supply mi a soc bottle free 1 will taks It. Give full address write plainly. Anv phcuMan or hospital not yet using Llquoioae will be glsdly supplied (u r test. The 'Best of Everything THE ONLY DOUBLE-TRACK RAILWAY BETWEEN THE MISSOURI RIVER AND CHICAGO Please See LocalColumns for Extraordinary Holiday Rates Tlokat Offlbsi 01 -1403 FARNAM STREET. 4 OMAHA. T.l.ka.s SI4-SSI TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER Duly On Dollar a Year. 1 I BAKER BROS 4