THE OMAHA ILLUSTRATED BEE. For and About Women Folks r Irvrlanrf on Woman's lnls. lOTlMER PRFFIDKM ukj .u rLKVKIiAXD indulges In h'jtirt-lo-hi.nrt lulk cm wm;m s club in the curnnt number of III" Ladled' Homi" Journal. Ml. . Iceland tayi fhr trend of aorrmn'a rluhs I discontent with hom life ami mother iiwd. and all the consequent labor and sacrifice He regards them hi auxiliaries In the movement to secure for women the rlRlit to vote and otherwise participate In publle affairs. Mr. Cleveland sty: "I.ft It here be distinctly understood that no sensible man has fears of Injury to tlia country on account of auch participation. It la lt dangerous, undermining effect on the character! of the wives and mothera of our land that w fear. At a recent meet ing of these radicals a high priestess of the faith declared: 'No matter how bad the crime, a woman commits. If she c an't vote, and Is classed with Idiots and criminals and 1 un h ties, she should not be punished by the SHtn Jaws as those who vote obey." This was said when advoeutlng united ac tlon on the part of the assembled body to prevent the execution of a woman proved guilty of the deliberate and aggra vated murder of her hushand. The speaker In reported to have further announced us apparently the keynote of her addressi: "If we could vote we'd be willing to be hanged.' "It is a thousand pities that all the wives found In such company cannot sufficiently open their minds to see the complete fitness of the homely definition which describes a good wife as 'a woman who loves her hus band and her country with no deal re to ruin either.' And what a blessed thing It would be if every mother and every woman could realise the everlaatlng truth that 'the hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world.' "I do not include In the club movements those which amount to nothing more than woman's association or co-operation In charitable, benevolent and religious work. T speak more especially of the woman' clubs of an entirely different sort, so nu merous that In the Interests of their consol idated management a 'National Federation of Woman's Cluba' has been created. "I speak also of the vast number of asso ciations less completely organised, but not lesa exacting of time and attention, whose professed purposes are In many Instance Hie intellectual improvement or entertain ment of the women composing their mem bership. "The danger of self-delusion lies In their supposition that they are consulting the need of relaxation or the duty of increased opportunity for Intellectual improvement, when In point of fact, and perhaps Im perceptibly to themselves, they are taking counsel of their discontent with the hum drum of their home life. "Iriqurstionably thie tendency is partly due to the widespread and contagious fever for change or rearrangement which sowns to leave no phase of our people's life un touched. I believe it has also been largely provoked by the Increase of club life among the husbands and fathers, resulting In tho neglect of wives, thus creating a condition of man's guilt which tempts retaliation in Kind. "No woman who enters upon such a r tallatory course can be sure that the man she seeks to punish will be otherwise af fected than to be mad more Indifferent to home, and mora determined to en largo the are of his selfish pleasures. Cheerlessness will Invade her home, and children will bu deprived of the wholsoraeness and delight of an atmosphere which can, only be created by a mother's loving presence and ab sorbing car. "it must be abundantly evident that, a agencies for retaliation or man's punish ment, woman's club are horribly misplaced and miserably vicious." The VrvmVm Part. Uoa't make either the boy or girl blush by teasing tljem about love affaire. No doubt they have love's young dreams and Ideals'. Guide tbem so that they shall have proper young associates of both saxea at home, and never notice tho extra lime spent In adjusting neckties and trying to cultivate whiskers, or, if a girt, the extra tare about clothing; and It given to melancholy and other morbid mental symptoms plan a plclnlo, horseback ride or mountain ollmb, or get tham Interested A 81 n ef Beauty Is a Joy forever. T. Felix Oou Oream or M 'OesraaaVa Cream' at trio nrtparaitnni.' For sale oooot imwi m lot usitxi reud'e Oriental egloal Beeutifler. ftamoraa Tan, Plmplat, Frecalaa, Moth Bath, sod bain Dlstaiwa, aoa avarr Dlfmiu on beauty, sad da. flea dtiiectloa. It haa ttood the teat of 7 years, and la ao harmiaaa wa taatatt to be aim it la properly an ad a. Aocept nooounlrr fttt of aUnilar name. Ir. X,. A. Sayra Bald to a lady of the oaut ton is patfrritl i "At you ladlaa will nee tlirm. I reaomnend the fou harmful "f all the bv all drasmnta and TancT- Atataa, Canada and Europe, iHia.T.HOPUS.Prop, 87 Brat Join. Shad, Km Tori BEAUTY TO look well take cars of your complexion. Uonot alkrw un Sl Jh ily pi ra pies, blackheads, tan, el freckles to blenlah your skin, Derma-Royale will remove these Ilka magic. t-urri rcierna ana itntr. I'aedwtth DiRMa-Rovals Soap, a perfect tkta ts insured. rxnaa-Koyale .' Derma-Koy ale Soap, .IS Portraits and testimonial sent oa request THE DERMA-ROYALB CO.. Cincinnati. 0 Fes sale by Btem nrusj Co., 16th ens reman, Omaha, aad all draaclate. Superfluous Hair Removed by the Mew Principle ."w vpanminB- inn lacrr11yt. rav uj n . .. , J Dd teiuiaorlea. 1na era onrd fa the SURE WfiRO of the oneratora and n.V.. raciarere p Miierls la not. tt la the onlr aieUiad which lalndorMd bi phraloiaaa, aurfaom derota'aloswia medisal leurnala and nrT....,, toaauaa. Sonalet n-aa. In plain aeated en mope Da Miracle mai ed. aaaled in plain wraa far. fur gl.00 by IH Miracle rkawiteal Co, lull rerk Ae. New Tore w aiur bark without jeaetlon (no red tipe) f it faila to d 4 , eioMd for tt. ror aaia hf all arat-elaaa drui. (Uia, cepartuect atona aad Doston Store. Full Information will be fur nished people, who desire to upend the summer on the IJanch, or take a camping trip through Yellowstone Park. Hackney horses and Polo ponies for sale. Address, RANCHMAN Care the paper. in gome ujfful employment, says Vr. Kate Lindsay In li is Housekeeper. If the youth ran be led to settle on soma future 1 if purpose and bn Induced to plan und prepare for It, half the battle is won. A worthy life aim Is a beacon light which will guide the young Into the safe haven of good health and good habits. The mother's work for her daughters should be to teach by precept and example self-control and the need of dlreating life's words and acts by rule founded on correct principles instead of the Impulses and emo tion.". Teach them to respect themselvss too much either to mutilate their bodies by wrong habits of dressing, eating, drinking, idleness or dlsetpatlon, or their minds and morals by vain thoughts and Imaginations or giving away to nervous hysterical out bursts of passions and emotions. Tell them of the terrible life destruction and disasters that have resulted from scrtamlng at fires and raising a panic, even when there was no rauxe for excitement. Encourage t lie bewildered youth to speak freely of his doubts, fears and skepticism to futhor and mother, and don't make him feel that they and the Lord both look upon him as a doomed, Incorrigible reprobate. The Waster did not reproach a doubting Thomas because he must have absolute sight before he would believe. Premiums on Babies' Mvea. The new mayor of Huddersfleld, England, has promised to give to the mother of every child born during his year of office a prom issory note for 1. payable one year after birth, If the child lives so long. His object, aays a writer in the World of Today. Is to prevent the wastage of child life by making It worth while for the parents to be careful about their children. After con sidering the French system of offering a premium to children who had lived a year he hit upon his present plan, because the "proper time to secure the child's welfare Is to have the mother's help from the very first. I could not at first see quite how 1 could make a premium effective In prevent ing the child's death, which was what I winhed to do. Then there came to me the happy thought of giving to the mother, as soon as the child was born, a properly legal promissory note, payable twelve months after date; and on the note I thought I might get In some good advice." The promissory note Is prepared in due legal form and Is accompanied by "The Goldan Rule for Babies," the whole docu ment being printed In colors and the shape of a certificate. The following is a copy of the note and the Instructions following It: FOR THE BABT. Lmigwood District of the County Bor ough of Huddersrteld. Name of the Naby Date of Birth Name and Address of Parents THE OOLDEN RULE. For the Life and Health of the Baby. "Feed with the Mother's Milk: The Mother's Milk is the natural food AND THE BEST." Twelve months after date I promise to pay to the parents or guardians of the above named child the sum of 1 on pro duction of proof that said child haa reached the sge of 12 months. Signed Mayor of Huddersfleld. For every baby fed on Its mother's milk who dies before the age of 3 months, fif teen babies die who have been fed by other means- RULES FOR THE WELFARE OF THE BABY. When the mother cannot suckle the child it should be fed on new milk and water mixed in certain proportions according to as. At first half milk and half wster. with a tc-sspoonful of cream and a little augur Thji, as the child grows older, lesu water to be added. When cream cannot be ob tained a small piece of suet may be shred ded Into the milk. WHAT TO DO. Alwaya feed the baby at regular intervals every three hours. Always keep the baby very clean. Always batha (or sponge all over) the baby once a day In warm water. Always let the baby sleep In a cradle or cot; a wicker basket makes a good cot (er even an empty packing case). Always use fullers' earth to powder the baby, not starch or flour. Alwaya attend to the baby when It cries. The baby cries for one of three reasons: (1) The beby is hungry, or (2) The baby Is uncomfortable or some thing hurts, or (3) The baby Is ill. WHAT NOT TO DO. Never give tho baly aooimng syrups, fever powders or anything of that sort. Never give the baby bread, or sops, or gravy, or any other food except milk, till it Is more than 7 months old. . Never give the baby skimmed milk or milk that is not perfectly fresn and good. Never use a feeding bottle with a long tube. Nobody can keep the Inside of the Never carry the baby "sitting up" until It is 6 months old. Never neglect to send for a doctor if the baby Is 111. Babies are soon overcome and easily die. Flreleas stove (or Housewives. Every housewife, says George H. Mur phy, United States consular clerk at Frank fort, Germany, knows that a pot of coffee can be kept hot for a considerable time without the aid of Are, simply by wrapping It In a dry towel In order to hinder the escape of heat. A tireless stove, or hay box, is a further development of the same Idea, which Mrs. Back, wife of the di rector of the Industrial school at Frank fort, recommends 43 a most serviceable article of kitghen furniture. At first Mrs. Back used the box merely for the purpose of keeping finished food warm, but It was not long before she dis covered that the process of cooking con tinued in tuc box. She thereupon extended Its use, making a series of experiment which resulted in pleasant surprises. She soon found that she could rtnish in the box all boiled and roasted meats, sauces, fish, soup, vegetables, fruit, puddings, etc. Of course the box cannot be used for beef steak)', cutlets, pancakes, and the like, ar ticles whose chief attraction lies In the crlspness resulting from rapid cooking on a hot fire, but when food of this kind is being prepared it Is a grest comfort to the housewife to know that the rest of the meal Is ready and hot In the box. In grneral. It Is found that two or three minutes of actual boiling on the fire is amply sufficient for vegetables, while roasted meat requires twenty to thirty minutes. Most articles should remain tightly closed In the box for two or three hours, though they can be left there to keep hot for ten or twelve hours. If neces sary. Rice, drted beans, lentils, dried fruit, etc.. should ilrst be well soaked in cold water. After being allowed to boll for from two to ftve minutes, one to two hours In the box will prepare them thoroughly for the table. Cabbage should be prepared the evening before It la 10 be used. It should be placed in the pot with very little water, cooked well In lta own Juice, and put ovcrnlg.it In the Imy-bux. Just Uefurn dinner cat the following day it should he warmed on the stove. Cauli flower and other soft vegetables should bu merely brought to a boil and then placed for an hour or two io the box. Soups are greatly improved by being allowed to develop for two or three hours In the hay box. The hay-boxes now being offered for sale In German stores are usually lined and partitioned with hay, felt, etc.. and the receptacles are furnished with covers which can be securely locked. Such box. -a are useful when food is to be transported for Instance, from restaurants but there Is una serious objection to thuiu their im movable felt und uplioUtery may become moist und mouldy. A home-made hay box alll usually be found cheaper and more practical. Any kind of pots can be used, although earthen ones hold the heat best. When the pots have neon placed in the box wlihout lifting the lide, they should bs covered alth a pillow and the lid t once securely closed. The chief advantages of th hay-box may be summarised as follow ; 1. The cost of fuel can be iediuel four fifths or even nine-tenths. 2. The pots are not made difficult to wash: they are not blsckencd, mid they will lait a long time. I. The food is better cooked. 4. Kitchen odors are obviated. 8. Time and1 labor are saved. 6. Men and women working In the fields or having night employment can tuke with them hot coffee, soup or an entire meal. 7. When different employments make it necessary Mr the various members of a family to take their meals at different hours this can be arranged. 8. The kitchen need not be in disorder half of the day. 9. Warm water can always be had when there Is illness In the house. 10. Milk for the boby ran be kept warm all night In a pot of watar. II. Where workirgmen's families live crowded In one or two rooms the addi tional suffering caused by kitchen heat Is obviated by the hay-box. Leaves front Fashion's Notebook. Odd and pretty stickpins are of pink tourmaline rimmed in gold. Yellow and mauve Is a combination seen in both dresses and hats. A new chatelaine attachment Is a mir ror In frame of openwork sliver. Stiff, fiat handles have the preference in bags and leather covered frames are more popular than ever. Shot silks In soft rose, wood, vlolot, ame thyst, pale blue, biscuit and opal colorings, are fashionable for afternoon wear. Soft muslin gowns In delicate colors are being made with white lace or batiste em broidery yokes and g-ulmpes. Couch covnrs of linen that look very much like glass toweling have made their appearance this season. They come In a sort ecru shade with stripes of red or blue and are fringed. A belt novelty Is of striped patent leather red and white and blue and white being a favorite combination. The stripes are about a quarter of an Inch in width and the buckles are plain and generally of dull gold. Novel notions In shoes are the straps that button crossways over the instep in many tones of brown, with llg-ht pongee to the deepest chooolate. Many of these are laced with ribbon of exactly the same color. There Is nothing very new this spring In mourning hats, except that the crepe trimmings are softened by being mixed with dead black Bilk and black auills or wings. The broad hat of mourning la no longer In good tapte. For the traveler la a collar box of suede, lined with silk. It has a stiffened bottom and closes at the top with a draw string. The fashion of matching every part of one's costume is being carried to the ex treme limit this season. For summer hangings French portieres, showing a floral border and accompanied by a valance are much in demand. So, too. are the East Indian light weight fabrics with their charaeterlsiic colorings of red, green, orange and yellow. Now that summer Is on the way a con venience for tho porch tea table that lias lstely mftdn Its appearance Is rtty cer tain of appreciation. Tt is a kettle screen of crystal, threefold, framed in sliver and Its mission ts to protect the alcohol lamp from tha breies tlvat frequently - nlav such havoo with the frame when tea making is attempted on the lawn or porch. There never was a time when the guimpe unii'irmm pari in the rash Ions, although In old fashion plates of thn fifties one sees Innumerable examples prac tically Identical with the present styles The revival of ruffles and frills is boon to trie thin women who have sometimes amino 11 nimouii to wear ummr muslins t,. ' . i.me ran nnve a thin sown fashkm rumoa and be very much in Dm -tT- I CARPET J& FURNITURE COMPANY- J W BBB Fm TLM1DS W E1H5C Sale of Oriental Rugs Chat About Women. Ttw.".!?' th 'ecently elected officers of the SrjSnfad,myr,"' Fr"l8ln S.'hliemann, flon In France" Qcrman Toners' assocla- Slf0".6"" Burdett-Coutts. the world's Ju?i!e,t womn philanthropist, who has given nway nearly 25.iifi.oon. ncarlv all her possessions, will on April 1 celebrate lier ninety-second birthday. ? An American woman who has qulcklv alnert the favor of royalty in England and or whom Queen Alexandra is said to have v need a strong personal regard, bears no titleMrs. Frank Mackay, the daughter of a rloh lumberman of Minneapolis. Minn. The empress of flermany has sent fifty one diplomas, each signed hv herself, to the women noises and employes on Norm Brother island who distinguished them selves In the work of rescue at the time nf disaster to tho General Slocutn last A task begun fifty years acn has Just been completed by Miss BuxIb Stoneslfer of Hanover. Pa. In 1866 ahe hegan making a ratchqullt and after sewing for half s cen tury she has flntshed the household article which Is a model of neatness and beauty. It la a nine-square quilt. Hx7 feet in size, and contains patches of fabrics made scores of years ago. Miss Olive Gearhart. lii-year-old daughter of District Attorney Cicero Gearhart of oiiummiiui k. r nan aiaeo ner ratner in his law office ever since she was 10 years of sge. When about 14 vears old Miss Gearhart was Intrusted with a Jl.rOO check and sent with It to a nearuv town, where she had the eheck cashed and returned In time to use the money In the consumma tion of an Important deal. Hhe is now do ing all the office typewrltltur and assisting generally In the affairs of her father. Miss Frances Benjamin Johnston of Washington has been honored bv the Im perial Yacht club of Germany through its American subcommittee with the title of "official photographer" during the preparn tlons for tho transatlantic race for the kaiser's cup. Miss Johnston has earned fame before by her Illustrations of historic events, such as the sinning of the peace treaty betwen Ppnln nnrl the United Statee and she has recently been decorated by the French government for her artistic work in photosraphy. Carpenter's Letter (Continued from Pg Five) opportunities lor the training of young en gineers. We have all sorts of mechanical difficulties to overcome, not only in carry ing on the work itself, but from the lack of materials and the working over of this old stuff Into new. Such things bring out a man's Ingenuity and develop his brain cells Indeed I do not know of a better school for an engineer graduate thnn right here on the isthmus." French Hospital Supplies. Speaking of the old material, quite a lot of tt has been used by tho sanitary depart ment in one way or another. This Is so as to mattresses. The commission found a great lot of old hair bundled up in tho warehouses. It was put into u vat and boiled aad cleaned. The result was 50u good hair mattresses, ahlch did not cost over U apiece. They couid not have been bought at home for fivo times that money. The sanitation officers needed a laurel), .and It nould have cost them I7.000 had one been ordered from the stat'js. They took un old boat at La Boca and by an expendi ture of .U0 fitted out a veasol which docs very well. The Heme department required a float to carry their disinfected clothing und baggage similar to the ones used for that purpose at Havana. They took an old hulk with a crane upon it and It serves the purpose at one-third the cost of a new float. French stationery. Among the other valuable things left by the French is a great amount of stationery. They bought things by the ton, and this was so of fine drawing paper. In tho base ment of the administration building ut Panama lies a carload or su of drawing sheets, each as big as a center table. The draftsmen tell m there Is more than can be ustd for all the drawings that can pos sibly be mad for the canal work, and that tiia remainder will be aorth thousands of uollars. In the same bseinu, there are printing preset and lithograph pre?es, all of which have been "brought into use by the eomnvts nirin The canal printer work night and da. lliey make all the hlanks uswl n the All the best products of the Orient, nud at prices within the reach of all OUR OWN IM PORTATIONS. Monday 0ie Divy Only We place on sale a large stock of DAOI1ESTOX SIIER VAN RroS. In all sizes, many worth as high as $30.00, for $13.50-$15-$18 Our Carpet Department 7Sc tor Alyic All of our cut pieces of Linoleum, enoush for incut any room, conies six fet wide and nice styles, extra heavy quality, worth 75c per square yard go at, this week only 80c for 55c These are the best grades of Linoleum, never sold for less than ft per square yard; twelve feet wide, also six feet wide to match all go this week only at, per square yard ' 47!c 55c 92k Special in Wilton Velvet Carpets $1.35 for 92ic All our $1.25 and 11.85 Wilton Velvet Carpets, with or without borders some fine floral end many Oriental dpxlans AI.I; NKW, NO OL.P STOCK-go on sale MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ONLY, Our Drapery Department We are showing a complete line of Grilles, Corners snd Brackets for doors and windows. The stylet are new and very decorative, the finish is unexcelled and the price unprecedented. t 35c per foot, for 25c per foot. Golden Oak Grille. 12 inches deep, square finme. spindle and ball, Oftri regular 35c per foot Jw 85c per foot, for 50c per foot. Golden Oak Grille. 12 Inches deep, scroll oVHgn, regular 85c per 30C Porch aid Lawn Furniture Summer Is nearly ut hand and antici pating your wants, we are prepared to show the largest and choicest stock of porch and lawn furniture ever shown in the west, nnrt at prices every otie can afford. We herewith mention aoine of the Kod value. AIJ, NEW, NO Ol.n STOCK. S-piece porch suite, unmet hlus uew, natural finish r-ed with weathered oak finish frame. Arm Chair 3.35 Arm Rocker 3,75 Settee 6.25 3-pIece solid oHk porch suite, finished In forest green, with double CHne iteais and seat back. Arm Chair -5.00 Arm Rocker 5.50 Settee. 10.00 8-pleee (weathered oak porch I Arm Chair. suite, with shaped slat seat and Arm Rocker. slat back. ( settee Large Arm Rocker, reed back, weather proof seat, finished In light color, each Very delicate shade of green and red Rockers, something new color, weather proof scats, each Solid Oak Porch Arm Chair and Rocker, dull forest green tlni uiinoisxereo. wuii jap mailings price, eacn , Porch Swings and Settees of various kinds, colors and sizes varying in price up from In flu . 6.25 ..6.25 IO.OO 3.00 3.75 8.25 2.00 Curtain MaJeriaJs For Monday Only 15c regular price, Colored Swiss", 36 Inches wide, fast colors ri ly '. - 10c White Figured Grenadine for Window Draperies, 45 Inches A fir- de. for ..vJfc Monday only 15e regular price, White Swiss, dotted and figured. 36 inches wide, for ; 30c White Grenadine for Sash Curtains, 3( Inches wide, combining beauty and service 55r Will. $1.50 White Figured Grenadine for Window Drapery' or Bed Coveting, OOc inches wide JJt LACE CURTAIN SALE-$6.00 for $3.95 FOR MONDAY. TCE8DAY and WEDNESDAY we will put on sale one lot of l.a'e Curtains of every style In our varied stock worth up r Q to 6.00 per pair go at J.51LJ jajSflS3ySatSsypgg DONG! BUNG, 1 mm WRITE US A LETTER, ao truly tti fraakly, la ttrlclttt tssfldtsu, tell s all year iraptons troubles. Wt will sens' Prrt Atvitt (Is tilts Mis tartlopa), tew ft curt ttas. AMmi: Lad In' Atvlaory DtMrttunt, THE CHATTANOOGA MEDICINE CO., Ckittioaogi, Test. The Kne I! of Health ft V v m r ra n is tolled for many a poor, miserable woman when she enters the married state. Thousands write: "Have not seen a well day since." The manifold duties of married life are too hard for most weak women, but relief is easily obtained by just taking a Has Cured A Million Women. No other medicine in the world has done so much good to sick women as Cardui. It relieves pain, cures abnormal discharge, pulls up dragging womb, makes childbirth easy. Remember, this is the medicine you have heard so much about. It will restore your health as it has restored health to a million others. Ask for it. Get it. Take it. Every druggist sells Cardui in $1.00 bottles. "t c. rr J IT1 Writes Mrs. B.J. ChrUman, of MsDniTllle, N. Y "and for four years had I aUIiereCl UniOla msery. to wear a supporter for my womb, which bad come down and crowded everything before it. loould hardly walk, snd could not ride stall. After taking two bottles of Cardui I gave up my supporter, and since beginning my fifth hpttle I can be on my feet half a day at a time and do not have the bad feeling that troubled me formerly. Cardui hat done me to much good that I would llkt to tell It to every suffering woman." work; they print nil the reports and upon the lithograph presses the are reproducing drawings and plans. There are hundreds of letters presses scattered through tho warehouves here, and there arc also about six tons of steel pens so rusty that they are good fur nothing. Some of these have been shoveled out Into the ocean, and tho balunce, one of the builders facetiously sh.vs he Intends to use for making steel concrete. French ICmira vniiauces. Tlue six tuns of pens give one an Idea of tho extravagant methods of the French. During th earlier years of the canal tlicy pought everything in enormous quantities, snd the belle is current that tho clerks tevelved a commission on their orders. Money flowed like water, and purchueers were careleri.-ly made. For instance, at ono time a quantity of bulls and screws were ueoded uf a special pattern. A model of wood was madfl to indicate the shape and the wood ttas painted black to hhuw that the acrews were to ho made of iron or steel. In Issuing the order, however, no mention was mads of tho material. It was simply stated that the goods were to be according to sample. A few months later they came on, barrels and barrels of bolts and screws made of wood puinted black. They were according to sample and had to be paid for. A Klfteru.Thouaand-Dullar rig I'rn. Some uf the greatest extravagances were III the buildings, Ordinary cottnges stand un costly cement foundations. At tho An con stables there is a bath tub made for the borate which Is 15 feet wide, 75 feet long and 4 feet deep. It Is o arranged that water can be easily let into it. It was the custom of the French engineers to have their racing ponies washed off in this way Instead of currying them. There were also costly chicken coops, and what t Judge is the costly hog house on record, Hiding up Ancon hill the other night I discovered it. I had passed the hospitals and took a road that led off into the jungle, supposing It would bring me down the .hill on the other side. The road was paved ar.d guttered, and Mr. Johnson, who was with me, estimated that it must have cost at least $11,000 a mile to build. We followed it, and its end was a pig pun. And kucIi a pig pen. It was '-'" feet long, 1U0 feet wide and built entirely of concrete, with lion bupports upholding a gal vanned roof. Tho peii was divided Into compart ments, each of which had Its cement trough; and it waa, all told, large enough to Jiave aecommodated Mi hogs at one time. 1 asked Mr. Johnson utrnt It would cost to build such a structure, and he implied that a low estimate would be tlu.Oco. Ulmilar extra vagancc.4 are to be seen everywhere. .New Kotda for Fauiuia. Speaking of roads, the commission Is rap Idly building them about Ancon hill. They will construct a highway to the Savannas., a beautiful rolling country four miles from i'anunia City. Tho road-making tune guidg on Is through an old stone crusher, which tho supervising architect has erected on the side of Ancon hill, below a natural quarry Tho rocks are rolled down the hill onto a receiving platform, and thence fed Into the jaws of tho crusher, being distributed by a shaker Into the several sizes needed for rock foundations and road work. Tills crusher was made up out of old material left by the French. The jaws came from ouo place, the steam engine from another and the pucauvllle. cars and track from a third. ' Altogether, they form an excellent machine, which works quite as well as though Its parts were all new and freshly Imported from the steles. 1'ltANK Ci. l AKPEN'TKIC at PATEfefrmCCRTPPtD Silk Cloves A guarantee ticket "with every pair i rinu -c? 3nanes 0110 a.ww ix "K4YSFR " gloves outwear all others. Beware of the "JLST AS GOOD" kind. m m .-nm mr ,r-rasasa ml -1 IM TUC FREE EXHIBITION OF THE HISTORICAL TAPESTRIES THAT RECEIVED THE GRAND PRIZE AT ST. LOUIS These tapestries, each measuring 4 4 x 3i feet, are beautifully wrought In colored silks; they are faithful copies of original paintings Illustrating notable events in the exploration of the Mississippi by La Salle and his associates. . "By lufhority of the 7niud State ' AWARD " For the excellent character of the designs; the execution of 14 the work in the delicate and artistic shading, shown in figure and " landscape; the expression of faces and attitudes, produced with "the accuracy of the artist's brush; the perspective observed the "wonderful fidelity of detail in the reproduction of dress. The " flesh tints in the faces and the light in the eyes; the hair and "the features arc so skillfully depicted as to warrant the belief "that it is the work of the brush and not of the needle. The "high quality of the work merits the most unreserved praise; the "advance made in applying to artistic creations what was first "intended simply for the useful, marks an Era in the World's " Progress as weH as in the development of the Sewing Machine." "The advance in this regard in these machine tapestries is both "notable and gratifying, creating a new industry that maybe "claimed as distinctively American and reviving a classic textile "decoration formerly restricted to the few, but now available to "the many." THESE TAPESTRIES SHOWN AT THE SINGER STORE 1514 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. THE K1HDTHAT DCMT WtAft OUT j at tlx latter ends . Jf you find ,t the name t!pjf4tA you hove Vhe oenutne . tinouestionoblv beat silk olove ever made. DC niwm TABLETS ndui:t ri-tful tieep. Core Nurvoiisneas ritnmteh, kidniy and Bladder tro ib, anil product I'l'liup ot, Siren h snd Vitality Noli! y Irurslsls. Br irt'l.tl.ifii or lliri aax". lo NERVAN LAXATIVE PILLS 2Srt or aamvle TaBlrit, pnlo 10 cm a to Til ervan Tablet Co, t lorioaat L O. lor sal hy Beaton lru Co., ISlh and Karnaai, Uuiaba, auai all djrusalala. I ty" ""(11 1 wtTIIJ!. u o x i o n a4 1 1 ith Fa OiMtrrtiCM. Oleet. LtMcerrkatt. Satrmtltr. rhot, Plltt tns All Unhealthy Seausi Oiacatratt' no rain. no -tTlN. NO STRICTURE. Met SVRINGC. tr Sap Snttta af DlaM.tl At lir.,iiu. ar Mot u any sddraaa for SI. MSlVDOM MtO CO . Is ocaalar. O . L t