TI1E OMAHA ILLUSTRATED DEE. February 12, 1D03. sAVEfor and About the Women Folks YOUR FACE Ate. sickness, overwork, trouble flinc 1aHli nmi rA iL-nmin'B dearest treasure (her beauty and complexion) are rendered weu nign poweness 07 MRS. NtTTIE HARRISON'S LOLA MONTEZ CREMB A jreat scientific discovery a fowl for the skin, replacing wasted tissues, fil'iinjf out wrinkles, causing the skin to throur cfl what is unhealthy and discoloring, and to assume the beautiful transparency and Telvety softness of youth and health. Pot lasting three months, 75c, atall druggists. If rrm (Mr say defectaof afclo. acalp or nrt aialta, writ ma. Correponlnca solicited. Mr. KRTTIH HARRISON, Dermatologist S 0ary u, San Fraociace 1 J wtt nth St.. Nrw York City Tor sale r Sherman St MoConnell I'rua CO., 8. W. Cor. 16lh and Dodge. Omaha. A positive guarantee that Uricsol will cure your rheurnatis m goes with every sale. Sherman HoOrmnell Prnr Oo., 16th and Dodfe 8U., Omaha, are authorised to jrive to every purchaser of six bottles of TJrlesol at $fl.50, a positive guarantee that Uricsol will enre your Rheumatism, rjrlcsol Is the preat California remedy that dleeolves the uric add deposits and remorse the caoss of rheumatism sad gout TJrlesol will not harm or Injure any part of your body, on the contrary it will tone up the stomach, create an appetite, stimulate the liver and kidneys, remov ing the excess of urto acid that causes so many ailments, chief of which Is rheu matism. Write for booklet and diet list Thd Uricsol Chemical Oft., , lat Anralaa, Cat. I I KEARNEY ! I MILITARY i I ACADEMY I A hoarding school for boys. S Home life. Thorough Instructions. " fi Small classes. Military training and discipline. Gymnasium, Ath- letics. Prepare for College, for the Army, Navy and Civil Service. M 2 For catalogue address 2 ! Harry N. Russell, J I . Head flaster. m I .' KEARNEY NEB.. UeHRwIWE 33AKERBROS II I jU III r-3J&$t i 1 , ' In ' '"tf'ttWt 1 fl ' In f.ti iv&.iWik 1 111 fJERVAN TABLETS Indus restful sleep. Car Nervoutn.es, Stomach, Kidney nd Bladder troubles, and produce Plump- , cm, fittMgih and Vuaiiir. Mold by DinaTftsts. By mail, 11.00) or three boxe, W.7B. Alto NKRVAN LAXATIVE PILLS 28 ct. tor sample Tablet, enclose 10 emu to The Vervain Tablet '.. C'lnclaaeti, O. For Sale by tha Tleatoa Drar Co., and All Druggist. A Profltable Baalnra. HE dointT up of "fine undrrllnen Is I far more Important In these days jL I than Ironing; a shirt, and a food living await, the woman who cares to learn this art and prac tice It In the rltlP. When thrse articles are wushed and dried, the ruffles and trim mings should be dipped Into weak starch and rolled down tightly, keeping all starched end fine portions Inside. Iron In about an hour. First of all. Iron ths sletvrs. then the rufTlea at the bottom, then the Wk, and finally all the ruffles and trimming; and the front, says Mary Taylor-Ross In the Housekeeper. With sklrta and drawers, the rufllcs first, and then the body part. Any crimping or flut ing must be done laat of all, after slightly damping the ruffles over again. When Ironing circular ruffles, always "Iron with the thread" of the goods and the ruffles will not aag. For white skirts and for dresses a skirt board la a necessity; It should be about fifteen inches wide at the bottom and narrow down toward the top to about nine Inches, and should be about five or five and a half feet In length. It le much better to purchase the folding aklrt boards, being less expensive than having a carpenter make one, Cover first with an old blanket, folded double, and then with a length of white muslin. Tack the blanket Into place underneath, bat merely pis the muslin cover to the blan ket. By packing this very closely to gether the pin. will hold the muslin cover smooth, and ItSs an easy matter to change It every week. If one doubles a petticoat from front to back, In order to aave labor, always smooth the front, or Iron only to ths fold: then open the skirt and smooth the front., as leaving thla fold In Is apt to make the skirt stick out In front when it la worn. A very little board, long or narrow, with a pointed end. la useful for Ironing shirt waist aleeves, shirt bosoms and many small places In children's garments, and this can be easily made at borne and cov ered. Bheets are generally Ironed double, and they should be folded lengthwise, for thla la exactly opposite to the way they are hung upon a line.; It distributes ths wear and makes them laat longer. How la Shut to Know. The declaration of a Chicago club woman that "a girl should be careful not to marry a laiy man" contains a large amount of good advice,' but, like most good advice, It Is a difficult matter for those It Is Intended to serve to maka practical us of It. "How Is a girl to know, for example," says the Chicago Inter Ocean, "whether the man who aeks her to marry him, and whom ahe thinks of marrying, Is laay or notT Bo far as ahe can aee ho la active enough. He is not too laiy to come to see her seven nights a week, ana satnougn she cannot say as much for herself, he never yawn., even though he a1ays alx nights out of the Seven until ner iamer la heard to drop hla shoes on the floor overhead for the third time, or her mother calls down from the landing ana wants to know If that was the milkman she heard at the kitchen door. Ha doea not appear to be lasy wnen ne TL.ik nut with her. for If it be a moonlight night he would walk with her until she fell from exhaustion, If shs would let him. Hs exhibits no signs of laslneas when he sees an opportunity Of doing anything for her parents; he has volunteered to at tend to the lurnace time and time again, and he has even promised her little brother to take an afternoon off and umpire a baa ball game. She knows that no matter how late hs aits up at night, no is down at ths store before I next morning, and that although hs Is almost tired to death when hs aults work for the day, he Is willing to take her to the theater, or to a bail or to a skating rink, whenever she ex presses a longing for such recreation. Now, if a year or two arter ene marries this young man shs discovers that he can hear her splitting the kindling wood in ths cellar while he lies (ln bed; can turn over and sleep like a baby while she is getting the breakfast; can smoke In the Morris chair she gave him while she is washing the dishes, and that he .Is un able to call with her even upon the people next door, because his work. Which Is easier than it used to be, fatigues him so. la she to be blamed for not knowing that he wan laxy when she married him? "If four years later, when, to help things along, she has taken a few roomers and a few table boarders, and la enjoying what Prof. Patton calls "economic. Independ ence," be finds that he la unable, any longer to work for a living, Is she to be blamed for marrying a laay manT "Supposing that she prove to be so economically Independent" In time that she Is able not only to meet all the legiti mate expenses of the family, but to supply him with money enough to attend the league base ball games and to play tha races, and that she ia forced after a time to send his breakfast up to him In the morning, or to hire another man to help her with the heavy work, la she -to ba blamed for having married a lacy man? 'The fact of the matter Is, the girl who marries has no means of knowing whether the man she marries Is going to be lazy after ahe marries him or not. And such Is life, as our eminent sociological thinkers almost Invariably fall to aee It." F fit F ' 'j-tf-VCit TABLE V-mmrn- - -l a p-a uno WILL POSIT1VKI.Y I RH 1 Kidney and Liver Disease. Rheumatism, Blck Headache, Kryslpelns. Bcroftilu, 'a- urrh. Indigestion. Neuralgia, Nervousness. Dyspepaln, Syphilitic Dlm.-as. Contitlpn tlon. 12,234,660 people were treated in 1903. AU druggist. S Turned Out S30li ft. os suii otU). ft. O. F. tkwfor wring, km Tt W vn y. J. 4. m. Hiua asanas, vnut, M Bak KVJQ W rleulb. Tfce. ruter. it jwe, wniet, smshm D PI rv ur Tsr ami MtUr, Hi WmsHWt, IMaUibB) n MMH M 1 f rn4. ft 9 fcsaSss f rr CMfxrWeis) llsMulrvtl. Knry-fcuslT be labteWftrs), wMftce. ! 4ft MrJ IMUl fo4M 14) M f iaU4 ftttk ,ek, HIr. Nick! U4 Metal I ad tig. Me 17 FlMkwIavMl nreis. Ml i tr hrarm. 0te all VrrTth1. nwtusM. I f TM mUttOU. WriWsMes rVrCal, Agwura.,U ler. .AMie. Every Woman . is lntriad n, shntild know MARVEL whirling Spray new tarlul ! Imjff ''iia!lSr H Do nimliuplltt)l MiRttI,. iMaii n lUaMriMlbu.k-M.. ItrtrM fftlll h.HI,llltH.bl ,4lrtA I... p wmmm uw ajviv ru For sale by BCHAEFKlt s DltUO BTOHE8 ttith and Chicago sts.; go. Umahu, and N au.j i ounui Mium. sin and Aluln sis. KUUN CO., I6tii and Douglaa ktrt rJii CMicMf sren-n rNALiSH lYUUYnL PILLS 4lBUiS). " w K . T ITT. ' rvAK. Alis M-liauVa I ..llau. aS tl , m iK rv I. bwi, . . i . . iklMHkM l .Va .tkar, Soft.. Snrm aabUlaUaa M Imlls. aa k, t at braaia. ar aa4 . ia aaH ParWrnLra, 1 aatlaaaaial allBra'i" ,. 'rfc.i.r I kra.Ual Cal amaaa Bw a , y newer things msde of paper are the women's and children's hats, whle,h are produced In great variety, ranging from svnbonnets of paper, made In Imitation of glnghnm. that sail for 2S cents, up to hats of the most Elaborate deelgna that aell for $3. 8ome of these more elaborate hats may have about them some real ribbon, and per haps tulle, but more of fhem are made of paper wholly, Including flowers, feathers and all, the paper materials used being built upon the ha frame and attached to the hat. These hats are mad In every style and In white and In all sorts of colors and combi nations of colors and In every variety of trimming, hats suited to any and every sort of costume. Iadlaa Girl Stadylne Law. Miss Laura Cornelius, an Oneida Indian girl. Is now In Los Angeles, Cal.. preparing to study law. It Is said that she will be the first woman of her race to enter a law school as a student. For some years she was a successful teacher In the Bherman Indian school, near Riverside, Cal., and resigned to begin tbs study of law. She has much .Influence among her people. When the Indians were removed from the Warner ranch In Ban Diego county last year and there was talk of their offering resistance, this educated young Indian woman went among them and. It la said, accomplished more to effect their peaceable removal to their new r Ner vation than all other agencies combined. Miss Cornelius' purpose in studying law Is to be of help to her people. As soon as she Is qualified she will give legal counsel and advice free of oharge to her kindred. In looks ami bearing ahe shows her an cestry. To her native grace she adds the charm of culture and refinement. Her face la attractive and pretty and is without the high cheek bones of the average Indian. Her skin la a clear coppery olive. She haa raven-black and. abundant hair, large, lus trous eyes, a thin now with sensitive nos trils that quiver when under strong excite ment Her head is carried proudly erect and she has a graceful, gliding walk. "The Indian as he Is now mill soon be a thing of the past," she said in speaking of her plans; "and with his going the world' loses much. It Is necessary for him to Join ' In the race and scramble for the mighty dollar and keep up the dally grind of work. "It sounda very fine to apeak of the equal rights of all cltlscns of this great republic. But ths Amerlcsn people, with all their boasted superiority antl generosity, should hang their heads in shame at their treat men of the red man. "I am proud of my Indian birth and blood. But my people must conform to the new order of things and In this transition period they need good and Intelligent advice and guidance. And it Is to this work that I In tend to devote my life." Club fofr Servant Girl. A Boston Idea ia the club for servant girls which has recently been opened In the heart pf the prosperous Back Bay dis trict." The announced object Is "to pro mote mutual respect between employers and employes, to Impress on the master and mistress that the servant has certain rights and must be treated with due re spect, also reminding the girls of the rights and Interests of tbelr employers." One thousand servants have already been en rolled as members, and 800 families have promised their support and pledged them selves In the future to engage only mem bers of the club for service In their homes, writes Robert Webster Jones In the House keeper. , While the primary object of the club Is to establish more friendly relations between 'eervant and employer, it Is also Intended to provide the girls with a pleas ant place of meeting, where they can en . tertaln their friends, develop their moral and social status and And agreeable and harmless recreations. As a philanthropic institution, designed to make happier one of the moet Useful clauses of workers in the community, the servant girls' club, wisely conducted, ap pears an admirable Idea. Workers In fac tories and other great establishments are often provided by their employers with similar means for Improvement and recrea tion, but servant girls have not enjoyed such .advantages. No fault can be found with the club when organized for such purposes. But as a means of solving the "servant problem" we have little faith in It. The question is one that must be set tled by the Individual employer. Mutual concessions and a desire on each side to do the right tiling will help In Its solution. Practicing the principle of the Golden Rule would settle the Question tomorrcTw. Disrate Over Horn' Ideal. "Is It the presence of children or of the dog and cat that constitutes the Ideal home?" This was the question that divided the Irving Park Sorosis yesterday, reports tha Chicago Tribune. "Too much affection often I lavished on the family dog," contended Mrs. 3. C. War ren. "They are poor aubstltutes for chil dren, eipeclally around Christmas time.1 In my opinion, there is nothing more pathetic than the solitary bachelor dining alone on Christmas day and throwing the morsels to hla do.;." , "A home ia not a home unless it haa a dog and a cat In It," declared Mrs. II. K. Turner. "To round out the Ideal home there should be a hume aiyi a cow In the barn, besides the household pets." "Cats are the prerogative of old maids," came a dissenting voice. "And how about the husband?" clamored another. "Is a parrot essential to an Ideal home?" Inquired one woman. Further discussion was cut off by tha gavel. As to the composition of the Ideal home, the consensus of opinion was us follows: Love, confidence und respect between hus band and wife. Children. Doks and cats. Harmony. Religious atmosphere. Artlstlo touches. Home cooking. A well regulated schedule. Suppression of argument. Any woman who could live up to the foregoing category was. In the opinion of the Sorosis members, mistress of an Ideal home. Lessons in cheerfulness and clean llnessa also wero drawn from, tho Japanese. As to the main essential authorities dif fered. Borne mentioned husbands, some dogs and cats, and others children. "The gentle influence of flowers," de clared Mrs. A. D. Ritchio, "is of grtat Im port in building up th right kind of a home. We also have been brought up in the belief that pies like mother used to make and home-made bread are the essen tials of a home. Every human being ought to have a home." "Does she mean bachelors?" whispered a young woman in the rear. "Watch the birds mate In the spring time," continued Mrs. Ritchie. "After the billing and cooing comes the furnishing of the nest. Pieces of Btring, scraps of excel sior and bits of rag go toward the making of a coxy home. But the wedding presents, the sofas and chairs, tho cups and saucers, are but the shell of our own homes. Un less, like the birds, husband and wife bill and coo, home exists only in name. After the billing and cooing stage comes family love and hospitality. Cheerfulness should be an element of hospitality." "No married woman ought to earn her own living," was the argument of Mrs. Warren. "She ought to be happy and live on her husband's income. Children are use ful as preventives of divorce. We all are entitled to our own opinions, but, for good ness' sake, let us stop arguing in the home." "Women," declared Mrs. Wilcox, "some times try to sew and cook when they don't know anything about the business. They think they are 'keeping busy.' They are wasting time. Haphazard homes are our worst falling. Wo should serve breakfast and put the children to bed on schedule time. "Feed your husband. It Is a sin not to' give him enough to eat. Doclde on his diet, even If you have to use six kinds of break fasti food. Swing a girl's clothes from the shoulder. Don't let her have too many flounces or sho will have nothing to look forward to. Tell the small boys that the Japanese bathe every day." After a lively debate as to why woman was created Mrs. G. E. Colby closed the discussion with the declaration that the is the "general of tho home," and as near per fection as anything in the world. Women MkM Workers. "When we speak of the night workers "of New York city,", said a man who Is one of them "of the printers, of the surfaoe and the elevated and now the subway car mch, tho hotel and restaurant and saloon men, the telegraphers and the bakers and the market men, the policemen ujid the fire men, the telephone men and thej newxpaper men and so on we have in mind men only as a rule. Yet there are nowadays a Hints on Latest Fashions For the accommodation of readers of The is now kept at our office, ao those who Bee theae patterns, which usually retail at wish any pattern may get It either by call- from 26 te 50 cents each, will be furnished lng or enclosing 10 cents addreiised "Pat- at tbs nominal price of 10 cents. A supply tern Department, Bee, Omuha." newer Thlna-a of Paper. Paper table covers may now be had, as well as paper napkins and dolllea Table coverings huve long been made by gluing together crepe paper, which can be bought In long rolls of any eoler or shade desired, and, like paper printed with border or all over iletlgiiH, the borders being festooned or otherwise treated for greater decorative effect. But now there are offered paper table covers of a single place, designed for out ing or picnics or luncheons. They are forty-two by seventy inches and ara printed in designs llko there to bo found on the paper napkins. Tliry are made with de signs appropriate to various occasions, as, with violets for a violet luncheon; pink roses for a rose luncheon, and holly for tha hollduy season. A luncheon set of paper containing a table cover, twelve napkins and twelve dollies, all printed wlfi the same design, car be bought for 25 cents. There are now msde 600 or more cotillion favors that are In part or wholly of puper, these favors compriplng an almost endle.s variety of things, and ranging in price from t cents to 3 apiece. There are also made paper flower of every known variety for the adornment of the home, and for the decoration of entire Interiors. Including flowering of vines, and that aort of thing. But ' the moat asloniahing among (he S'S ' j ilJ l -w A Stem OP nRA JTY 13 A ,'PY FOBVPf , VB. T. ft M X OOUKACD'S CKIKTTTAt, ,uu,jauii;i, VSAUXlFIJtat moTeji Tta, rimpln.Pracklaa, dUM!, and ttary Muilta .00 Inauty. Ml J tOMdeiafltlan. II lUiad Ika ut Mfr,4 la o hat lulaia w Uat It lo b aiu U i irofrly ma4. Aeon ma auunlaf. hit f ttialUt bate. Lr. L. A. Nn i4 to a ln.lr of ah kaiife von ( uiueiiwi , ' laala Will Uaa I haa, I r m a a a la prarMwat," ' cjr Uou4 iMaiais NO. OT1-LADIEB' SHII WAIBT. 12 to 42-Inch bust ifTTOnX . T J m - ail tk a Uk laaat aaraiful ot rof aal ,j all Iru(lus and fancy I flRO. T. MHIhy rV il &.ut JcitN Ik. ft. fc NO. NO. 4388-MTTLB GIRL'S BLOUBB. Slavs, 4 to 12 years. l 01l -I.ADIFS- PRKSHTNQ SACIC : to 4.'-ilicu but. NO. 48 27 LITTLE OMR'S COAT, cists, X to 4 year. great many women who work nights and sleeps days, Juct aa the night working men do. "There, for Instance, are the scrubwomen, plenty of them, who work at night In great office buildings, cleaning after the tenanta have gone; the women employed In restau rants and In restaurant kltchena; the little army of women employed In telephone ex changee, the women nurses employed In hospitals and in homes; women stenogra phers and typewriters; the matrona In po lice atations, who work as the policemen do. In relays, eonie by day and some by night; the stewardesses on ateamboats; the wo men's cloak and hat room attendanta; women cashiers In drug stores; bakers' wives who help get the bread and rolls ready for early customers, and ao on and so on. Then there are last, but not least, the women newspaper sellers, who sre up and out long before 'daybreak to get their morning newspapers. "The men, to be sure, still count up by far the greater number, but at a moderate calculation there are some thousands of of women, a very fair brigade of them, regularly ao employed, who are entitled to be enrolled In the city's big army of night workers." Iearea from , Fashion's Notebook. Myrtle green IS a favorite color In silk petticoats. A new lease of life Is predicted for the linen collar during the coming spring and summer. Pendant or hanging spangles, suspended by means of a wire loop passed through the hole, are novelties. The amethyst Is the fashionable leader In the minor Jewels, the rich dark stone being the most expensive. Black beaver and taffeta hats are much In vogue, white peacock or pheasant plume representing a novelty in trimming. Hand-etched buckles, In varied and artis tic designs, are destined for consldf. ub.o popularity, according to fashion o. aic.es. Galyx leaves make an Inexpensive and excellent decoration for the timing table. If kept in fresh water, the btlght green, yellow and red hues of the foliage will ba preserved all winter. A new shape of plnoushlon is three cor nered, with a large bow on the flat aide, which is nearest to the lookinggloss. A spray of flowers In ribbon or silk is worked' on it, commencing near the bow. There is growing a wide divergence be tween the tullor-made gown and the walk ing gown. The former will he plainer, ehortor of skirt, and generally speaking more mannish than we have been accus tomed lo of late. For young women the simple short skirt and bolero Jacket seems the oest kind of a spring street gown. These skirts clear the ground by several Inches and are unbur dened with trimming. Many of them are even destitute of plaltlngs. A fun-shaped nightdress enso is a pre ferred style Just now, with a wide sash bow whore the sticks should bo. The case is of brocade or lace over satin. Either a thick cord or a plaited lace edges it, and some times ribbons are run on to simulate the sticks, but the big bow ia always in evi dence. A very smart model In walking suits haa the princess skirt and bolero. This Is a style more becoming when the Jacket is worn than when it Is not. There is some thing a llttlo suggestive of tho corset In the tightly-fitted girdle of the princess skirt. But then a walking suit Is meant to Include a Jacket. If the upper garment Is removed In the bouse It Is only a tempoarry mutter. At the same time the Indoor eflect of a walking gown is important. Most of the boleros snd Jackets are tight-fitting, short on the hips and sharply pointed in front. Tho collars are cut low to show the blouse or the gulmpe of the blouse. Chat About Women. The first statue to be erected In honor of a woman physlclnn In the United States was unveiled in Fullerton Memorial hall, at the Art institute, Chicago, when Die friends of the late Dr. Mary Harris Thomp son presented a portrait bust of her to the institute. The Women of savage' tribes have not Infrequently a wardrobe consisting of furs which would be worth from $5,000 to $10,0(0. Grundeman, the explorer, relates how one fair Greenlander wore a dress of sealskin wlth h00d t tnat costly fur. the silver fox. The garment was lined with fur of the youhg seal otter, and there was a fringe of wolverine tails. About $800 Is probably the average worth or the drese of Indian women on the Columbia and Fraser rivers. At a voting contest held at an Irish fair in London the marchioness of Ava re ceived the grtiiiest number of votes. Her husband, who was Lord Terence Black wood, Is Irish by descent. The marchion ess was Miss Flora Davis of New York Bhe was voted "the prettiest, the nicest and smartest." At a voting contest held at a barar given for hr benefit of the French sisters the popular prise was awarded to the countess of Essex, whose husband Is the earl of Ehbsx. The countries was Adelo Grant of New York. She was called the smartest" lady present. When she was ConsUelo Vanderbllt the duchess of Marlborough had a sweet voice not remarkable for Its timbre, but pleus- ,, ,!,. , enocK ner muslral In structors a little by displaying a decided Hklng for the quaint melodies of the old plantation darkles. Now. even as a stately and dignified duchess she lows to sing thehe old ballads and the more modern coon songs for the entertainment of her Mends, and she has made the melodies so popular they have become nil the raire in the families of the nobility. The ducbeii pf Westminster hns taken thm up, and fo has Princess Henry of Pleas. President Roosevelt has great admiration for Mrs. La Follette, wife of Wisconsin's new senator. The beginning of this regard Va,,?g . Irnm an occasion when Mrs. La toilette and he were fellow guests at a reception some time ago. They were standing In ona corner engaged In conver sation and eating Ice cream. He was do ing the bulk of the talkhiR and he was an attentive and unwavering listener "Suddenly I discovered," snvs the proHl dont, "that for the last five minutes I had been pouring Ice cream down the front of her hnndsome evening gown. Sho had known it all tho time, hut hnd not Indi cated it by even the quiver of an eyelash pr by the sllithtext change in (he smiling, interested expression upon her face; she had simply been ton polite to Interrupt me by word or look or move, no matter what ,iai'!it-iii-u to me gowtl. ' HOW in BACKED Undoubted (Pliability is Ex pressed in Omaha Indorsement. Wlmt you wont in homo Indorsement. The burking of tho people you know. Omuha imiof for Ouuihu people, That's what follows here; Surely no better k backing can be hud than the following statement from Mr. Oeo. A. Wells. 413 South ltfth street, employed by C'uas. A. 1'egau & Co.'s, says: "I always bad slight blad der troublo, but for three years It be came worm1 nnd sometimes alarmed .inc. Accompanying It there wus a weakness across the loins, particularly la evidence If 1 over-exerted myself. Always uuxlous to try any new remedy which might brlug relief, when Ms I. Flick, watchmaker on Cass street, adrlsed me to una Douu's Kidney 1111, emphasizing his advice by stating they Lad cured hlni of kidney trouble, I bought a box at Knhu &. Co.'s drug store, corner 1Mb a and Douglas streets.' It did exactly as It promised. Tho trouble disappeared." Tor sslo by all dealers. 1'rlce BOc per box. Foster-MIIburn Co., fluffalo, N, Y sole agents for the United States. Remember the imiue, Douu's, und take no other. EVEPY WOMAN IS BORN WITH BEAUTY- THE WISE PRESERVE IT Any woman may see bcr mirror reflect a pure, soft, white ski a snd a beautiful complexion If she daily uses DERMA-R0YALE SOAP. It possesses bichly antiseptic, soothing and heaHnir Qualities : corrects skin Imperfections, and brings the bloom of youth and beauty to the cheeks. Keeps the skin of babies pure and healthy. DERM A-R0 YALE LOTION cures ecrema 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 women of refinement everywhere. Send for FREE book of portraits and testimonials. s TUB DERMA-ROYALB CO., Cincinnati, Ohio. IS THE FIRST LAW OF WOMAN " ". r ill rVf v afa at w WJW B TOLOOXWEUL r THE XXth CENTURY SEWING MACHINE K. " V. NN qThe highest type of FAMILY SEWING MACHIN E-the embodiment of SIMPLICITY and UTILITY the ACME of CONVENIENCE. Expert vSewing-Machine Repairs Also sewing-machine oil of absolute purity and the best Needles and Parts for all machines ' at Singer Stores. Sold only at SINGER STORE, 1514 Douglas St, Omaha, Neb., and 438 North 24th St., South Omaha. 1 i Keep pace with the times. The day is past when any old sort of stationery would do. It must be the best to be had unless you want to lag behind. TELEPHONE 1604 PHILLIPS' SCALP LOIiOi! A guaranteed remedy for nil unhealthy conditions of the scalp. Prevents itching. Eradicates dandruff. Stops falling nair. If you have'a healthy, well nour ished scalp you will not be BALD HEADED c Phillips' Scalp Lotion is a per fect tonic, containing no oil or acid, and produces first a healthy scalp nnd then a glossy, luxuriant head of hair. 4wJk yentr barber for an application , Phillips Medical Company, OMAHA, NEB. "Follow tho Flag " LEAVE OMAHA 6:30 P. M. ARRIVE ST. LOUIS 7:15 A. Pel. Dally excursions to all the winter resorts of the South at greatly reduced rate. Ask us for rates, time tables and all Information so when you leave you will know where you are at. . Wabash City Ticket Office, 1001 Farnam Harry E. lioeres, 0. A. P. D Omtha, Neb. . sl