THE OMAHA ILLUSTRATED BEE. For and About etatwemen (1 nrTr ci"-elnnn. "1L.UB women throughout the coun- hood ahe hu lived her strenuous life on f I try are preparing- prove that the plain and In the mountain of Mon I fnrm.r iriiMint (irnvH Cleve- tana: she haa been kidnaped br Indians Und waa talking through bis tile when he declared In print that club life tended to destroy the maternal Instinct. According to Chicago papers, the club women of that city are collecting statistics designed to show how many chil dren mothers In the federation have. A preliminary count in Chicago clubs shows an average of It children in a total of fifty-four mothers. Four grandmothers polled showed a total of eleven grand children. The national leaders in the club move ment are especially angry because, aa they understood It, Cleveland Intimated that the native born population of the country waa not likely to show any great increase. due to the club spirit. The women declare that they have suffered In alienee these flings just as long as they are going to and that It haa come to a point where patience ceasea to be a virtue. They aay It la un fair and unmanly for Cleveland or any other man to rush precipitately to the con clusion that a club woman does not make a good mother. Circulars setting forth in detail the scope of the investigation, which were sent out from the General Federation headquar- tera. have reached the club presidents in V-ni(-&gO, WI17 n"w wmpilllia, . wain Not only will the number of mothers in the club movement be tabulated, but the number of children each mother has, and their ages, will occupy the attention of the statistician. ' - iA connection with the movement to re fute the race suicide charges that have been made, a general line of investigation I kalnv niirii prtvarlnf nranHnaJlv every phase of wo'rk now being followed by the club women. When completed the statistic will -comprise a eomprrjienslve volume, and will be given to the public. Xoted Woman Orator. Mrs. William Natlmn of New York City wealth from her father, has added enor has achieved a reputation as an after- mously to it by her skillful management dinner orator, rivaling the best efforts of of her possessions; In fact, so shrewd and man in that section. clever is she that the late Jay Gould de Mrs. Nathan has addressed three . na- clai J that if she yked she might amass tlonal meetings of the Federation of Con- wealth compared with which the fortune Burners' leagues, in Los Angeles, Mil- of the richest man millionaire would seem waukee and St. Louis. Bhe haa addressed poverty. women's meetings in London and Berlin, and has received a gold medal from the Liege exposition (Belgium) for her work In social economics. 8tie has been made an honorary Inspector of the Board of Health and has the right to wear an 'In spector's badge. One who takes great In terest In her work Is President Roosevelt, who did much to assist her when he was governor of New York. . Mrs. Nathan never mlxses a chance to speak about this hobby of hers, either be fore or after dinner. And here la her recipe for a good speech, from her own lips: "I can't speak in platitudes. I can't dls- cuss a thing which everybody approves some trite subject like 'Peace,' for ex ample. But when something arouses my aflger or my pique; when I hear something not quite Just or something not quite true; , when I hear something- humorous; when my combatlveness is arousedthen I can say something." At a recent banquet of both sexes Mra. Nathan spoke gracefully, naturally, elo quently, forcibly. One moment she was telling a funny story; the next she waa genic grilling the men for their pompous Assumption of superiority over her own ... . . ' . ' ., . sex. Now .he waa pleading earnestly for , woman suffrage; gain she recounted the H.retoforlnaenLmZ"n .hi STl,,,, T 'fh? L T' 7 Z en Permitted in the galleries of your banquet halls to lis- rn1iIhrmllie?h0rat0,r" fltttrfd th T?T nl'Z , Jm M' J?",' T,:"1 b.: The banquet hall rang with cheere as she started to take her seat. "Don't stop!" "More, more!" cried . the banqueters. , Well said Mrs Nathan, with a most captivating smile. "I haven't made half as good a speech as I am capable of, because the speech Is extemporaneous and I'm 111 nt ease for want of a pair of trousers pockets to put my h.nd. In!" This made everybody laugh till they al- most cried. Another speaker doubled over with merriment and whispered to Mrs. Nathan, "I'm going to have my trousers pockets sewed up the next time I want to be In particularly good form." , t , Wtaii Mlllloaalres. One hears so much, and so exclusively of male millionaires that one is apt to lose sight of the fact that men have no mo- nonoly of million-making and that there re many women who are no mean rlvala to them ln the art o amassing riches. Quite recently Mrs. Herman Oelrlchs, who is aaid to be the smartest and shrewd- est business woman In the world, haa. so they aay. been coining money at the rate of IW.000,000 a year by clever speculation in railway shares, saya an English exchange. ""Mra Oelricha Is a daughter of the late Benator Fa'r. from whom, no oubt. she las Inherited her talent for making money. Only two years ago ahe revoked the power of attorney given to her husband and took ...... . . . . the tnaragement of her affairs into her own hands: ahe sold out all her real estate hold Inds ln Sau Francisco, went to New Tork and, while eclipsing- her rivals in lavish and original , ntertainments, haa found time to make the satisfactory Income of nearly tl.OOU.000 a month. Annh. wnm.n h.,.n.. i. M,- t, King. ho for many a year haa conducted the'Twl 1 do tnelr Christmas shopping a ranch seven times as lare aa the county tlm' U U conspicuously a case where of Middlesex aa very few men living could th, "u'Iy blrd catuhe th -m. The conduct It So extensive is Mrs. King's early hoPP nnd packed with the farm that lt Is bounded on one side by 0101,1 ttracUvo holiday goods which he has forty miles of barbed wire fence; it la ar ample tlme to exal"'n. whereaa later in the hour and a half's drive from Mra. King a eaon tna Btock haa been not only dimln frout door to her front gate and ahe em- lhed but often handled time and again, ploya an army of over K cowboys to tend na who PuU oft Christmas buying to the her 300,000 eattle, and the ponies they em- ,Rst minute, saya the Cleveland Flaia ploy number 1.800. Mra. K ng haa long Ier, not ojily haa a narrowed fl"!d of passed the stage where she could, if need choice, but must also endure not a little dis were, sign her name to a 1 1.000,000 check, comfprt and sometimes real hardHhlp re and ahe can proudly aay that ahe owea suiting from the crush that is always b.tund her riches very largely to her own busi- t( mark the last few days oeforc the holi ness acumen. day, Even locomotion Is then difficult and Mrs. King has a fair and formidable deliberation in choice of goods next to Im rival In Mra Nat Collins, known through- possible. The tremendous crush of Christ out America aa the "cattle queen of Mon- mas week could be avoided If shoppers tana." Mrs. , Collins has had a career of more frequently anticipated the season by romance and adventure such as even she a few weeks and did their buying at a time i vsav vaav m a m a m ItlUVSVi h'wek'tv t m m r rfmlf7Tlmnmn rtnfTri nothing compares with of the suffering an4 danger in store for her, robs the expectant mother of all pleasant anticipations of the coming event, and casts over her shadow of gloom which cannot be shaken cff. Thousands of womeo have found that the use of Mother's: Fricid during pregnancy robe confinement of all pain and danger, and inure safety to life of mother and child. This scientific liniment is a god-tend to all women at the time of their most critical trial. Not only does Mother's Friend carry women safely through the perils of child-birth, but its use gently prepares the system for the coming event, prevents 'morning icknets," and other dis- fl.oo per bottle. Book containing valuable information free. HP) 01 H FT)) The kVedheli teejuUtor Co., MJNt, Women Folks would not care to repeat. From ehlld- and kept a prisoner for months by them and she at 111 bears an ugly scar aa a tne- mento of a too-well-aimed tomahawk. . la later life she acted as cook and scout for a freighting train and spent years traveling between Denver and the Missouri river. "Hardly a day paosed." she says, "without an Indian fight, for the savages were constantly swooping down on the trains and kllHng the freighter or driving away the etock, while at times the buffalo were so thick that we would be compelled to stop our train and shoot among them to drive them away." About twenty years ago Mrs. Collins took to cattle rearing and dealing, and although she Is said to have amassed millions she still personally con ducts her train loads of cattle from Mon tana to Chicago. Mra. Hetty Oreen la aaid to make an an nual Income of little lesa than 1.000,000 by her clever dealings in stocks and shares Some years ago her fortune was eMlmatei: at 10,000.000, and yet this remarkable woman works longer hours and harder In her office than any woman clerk, travels to and fro for a few pence dally, doea her rrin,,.t -rw-tm and eookw and ,ea(Jg ,eneraJly M Spartan a life as if her ,ncome wer l ltuUead- of nearly 20,000 . . Russia boasts a splendid business woman in Mme. Woleska, who Is mistress of hun dreds of thousands of acres of land and a score of villages and small towns. Every day she devotes several hours to the per sonal supervision of her vast estates and In conference with her hundred agents, while no petty detail relating to a cottage farm toe small for her attention Senora Couslno, who owns vast estates In South America and whose fortune Is said to exceed 10.000,000, Is another woman, whose millions are allied to great business gifts. The senora. who Inherited great Newest Fad In Gems. In gems, aa in everything else, there are fads, saya Leslie's Weekly, and the newest fad in precious stones is the tourmaline. Unless you are a Jeweler, or for some other reason have a special knowledge, you will ask, probably, "What is tourmaline?" It is a aeml-precloua atone and one of the most beautiful that come out of the ground. It Is a rival of the ruby in color, but wears much better, approaching the diamond in hardness. Unlike the ruby, however, the tourmaline has the greatest variety of tints of any gem. Its various epecimens have shades of black, white, green, yellow, red and pink. Borne of the specimens of the gem are like emeralds, others have the yellow luster of the topas, and red tourmalines are aometimes sold as rubles. The "new" gem is used in much the aame manner as, for instance, a ruby. The leading Jewelry stores of New York are showing rings and pendants in which tourmalines with smaller borders of dia monds are used. In addition to their color, tourmalines are attractive pn account of their" pure, trans ' T" l""" J.' , , L ,T UM": ftJrZ i r ', TIar y a"d its beauty, the tourmaline la Interesting for anotheP.. reaa Expose this gem to the Koent,en rJa the.. lt t0 ft dark rown' "d " with a warm, bright ,1ht- nly two ott known gems have th m th, ljte Th tourmalin, fad started when lt first tht Prince Henry of Prua- ordinary tourmaline, bring from 10 to 50 Th. ,. . ' . .J.. ever found was recently dug out of a mine In Run rHAsrn nnnnfv r'allf.imia Thu - at the Me8i Qrand. mlna an(, wel hed um carata. lt WM a hug9 yeUow crystal not IeM than eeven and one.nalf ,nche, ,on(t and rour and one.ha,f lnchel thfck California leads all other sections of the worId ln tourmaUne production, and the new and Increasing popularity of the gem ha, glven a iudden lmpetua to the Industry, . A w.,I7rzTTf ,,,., A r M,ter,OM 8or. Washlnft0, " "calls how Minister Wu once talked at a mothers' congress. He told how mothers-in-law were reverenced ln Cnma- Then he said that all the mothers efore him would be mothers-in-law some da- nd . therefore he would tell them aomethlng that they might remember and pront "A Parlor maid," he began, "answered a ring at the door bell one monlns, and a few minutes later ascended t0 hr mtetresa. 'If you please, ma'am.' ;" B&,(1' the trnset lady is downstairs, '8h, lv her name and Bh htt taken , fer o1 nd hat; an1 ,he opened the two clo8eU and rummaged through them, ,nd then "h IoIed at the wlndowa and "nok her head' and Bh rubbed her finger e' the mantel and the piano and then ' h,eI.d " UD to the dust on it, and now , , "ul ., luo m,Blre inierrupiea calmly. 'Dear me!' aha ma IH 'M .k.'. calmly, 'Dear me!' sh said. 'My husband s mother wasn't expected back from Texas till December.' " Barly Christmas Shopping. It would be Interesting- to know how many weary and disappointed people resolva on ch recurring- Christmas evs that next i an oraeal which all women approach with wr vkr ;j..,r;K.Ki. f..- r. to. SNAP SHOTS AT Christmas Attractions Goods bought now will be held for Christ mas delivery If desired. 1 Mj 1 Our display of Clocks cannot be beat. We have them for the Mantel, Dens, ' Bedrooms and the large Grandfather's Clocks, In prices from $3.00 to. We carry the largest variety and most complete fittings west of Chicago. Prices range from $12.00 T 5 00 ROCKERS All th newest ideas and art creations comfortable and substantial, higb. class goods at fetching prices. Onr line of Rockers is the largest in the city, and our prices are the lowest for those that are good. Prices range from $1.30, $1.G0, $1.75, $2.25, $2.45, $2.75 and up. ' Our line of Children's Goods is the best that can be had at the lowest prices. I MsxgQLzine Racks Magazine Racks In all the different woods and a large variety of designs, from $2.75 2 QQ Card Tables, Den Tables, Smoking Tables, Ladles' Sewing Tables, all in a big variety to select from at very low prices. See our display of Lamps and get prices. Attend the Oriental Rug Sale now in full blast in our Oriental Room, Second Floor. Tou will be willing to pay more if we asked more for our goods. Then there 1b no reason why you should not avail yourself of the in vitation to this Great Bar gain Banquet. when both holiday fc-ooda and ahopplng fa- cllltlea are at their best. Moreover aa Chrlstmaa draws near it Is more natural than at other seasons to have regard fo others, and one inspired in any degree with the true spirit of Christmas will give some heed to tho comfort of those " to whom the holiday always brlnga a heavier load than usual of work and worry. The men anft women who assist ln the sale and delivery of holiday goods receive at best too little consideration from the shop ping public and Christmas week means to them a time of enormously increased strain. Early Christmas buying means less work and better bargains for the purchaser and more comfort for those in the stores who minister to hla wants. Men Not Wanted. "No men clerka need apply." This dictum haa gone forth from three great insurance oompanlea, the largest employers of clerks ln New Kork City, who ln the last few years have been filling their offices with young women accountants, bookkeepers, copyists', etc. So satisfactory have the women proved In every clerical capacity that male clerka are not wanted any moro. Not only have most of the leading life in aurance companies gone in for the wbman clerk, but business houses, large and small, up and downtown, are employing women ln positions once considered as lying exclu sively within the sphere of the young man. The male clerk Is being forced out. Hla field Is narrowing year by year. Employers recognize 'fh Is fact and admit lt; but they suggest no alternative, no remedy. It all evolves simply into this proposition: A woman la Just as ekllfuil aa a man clerk and more ao ln many Instances. As a gen eral rule ahe ia more careful, more' faith ful, more honest and she -doesn't drink. Tou hear- auch a statement aa thla wher ever women are employed; and a attll greater reason for employing clerks of the fair aex la given they will work for much lesa money. After all, that ia the main thing. The Debntante Season. Debutantes are unusually plentiful this season, reports the New Tork Gun. What is more, debutante teas, have taken a new lease of life and seem to be highly favored by men. Thla la contrary to the predlctiona made a few years ago, when lt waa de clared that the debutante tea had had its day. At that time other meana were sought to Introduce young women to society, and debutantea aaid with dignity. "No, I am not going to have a formal coming out. Mamma thlnka It la more elegant for me simply to go about with her and receive informally with her on her daye at home. Of course In this way all my frlenda will know I am out." In Jleu of the tea aome girls were launched by the medium of a dinner danoe, others at a ball given ln their honor. But ln their secret souls they all longed for the debutante tea with its crush of young, old and middle aged persons of much social importance; Its heaps of flowers and Its adulation, enough of it to turn the wisest girl's head for the rest of her life. It is generally agreed that at a tea of this sort there must be anywhere from six to sixteen assistants, friends of the bud. none of whom has been cut more than a few montha. ' A last winter's debutant, they, say. Is not eligible. With that rule ln view the coming buds have carefully oooipared dates, planning their Inaugural teas so that each may have the support of her nearest friends. At a reception a few days ago the de butante waa assisted by ten young woman, all but two of whom received with her ln the front drawing room. They wore gowns of different colore, the debutante only wearing white. , The moat approved gown for the debu tante just now ia made of a diaphanous fabric draped over silk or satin, Brussels net, chiffon, point d'esprtt or almost any sort of fine lace and often embroidered with a delicate train of silver, never of gold. Where expense has to be consid C1WSTMAS OFFERINGS Full Furniture elegance at moderate prices is what we offer for Holiday Presents. Our stock is unexcelled. We carry the best, the most artistic and CLOCKS ..$750 CELLERETTES Miller, Stewart 1315-17.19 Fama-m ered, liberty satin, novelty silk 'and chiffon velvet are used. They cost muoh less than the other materials mentioned and are more durable. If lesa captivating. In any case the material must be white, trimmed with white or silver. An excep tion to this rule, however, was a Brussels net costume seen the other day on a debu tante, the flounces and bodice of which were embroidered with tiny pink rose buds. The custom of sending flowers to a debu tante Is carried to greater proportions than ever this year. They come from the debu tante's feminine frlenda aa well aa from her masculine admirera. And the man who geta an invitation to a debutante tea and falls to acknowledge lt with a few cut flowers, at least, lays himself open to the Imputation of being Ignorant of what the polite conventions require on such occa sions or of being dead broke with his credit at his florist's at the zero mark. The menu at a debutante tea of the most fashionable class is more substantial than might be expected. Cakes and tea and chocolate and bonbons are only the trimmings. Two hot dishes at least are included and In many cases claret punch and champagne cup are added to the soft drinks. The custom1 of following her tea with a large dance has been abandoned by thla season's debutante. On the other hand, the custom of dining afterward the receiving party and an equal number of young men. is more popular than ever, most debutantea voting lt to be the jolllest feature of the day. The hour for this dinner, given of oourse by the debutantea mother, la I o'clock, which allows the receiving party a half hour's rest before the extra dinner guests arrive. To Lighten Honsehold Cnres. In wall coverings for the kitchen and bathroom paper with an oil finish is now pi ef erred to the familiar varnish. It looks better and withstands the effect of moisture just as well. A patented contrivance for household service is an egg separator, designed to in stantly separate the white from the yolk of an egg. It is of aluminum and about four Inches in diameter. One housewife who considers the casserole Invaluable gives thla bit of advice concern ing thla popular cooking utensil to her less experienced sisters: "The one thing to guard against is that they sometimes spring or orack on first using them. This is avoided by rubbing the underneath with garlic. This Information was gained from a French chef and haa been found to answer per fectly." Muslin may be bleached by wetting it thoroughly and then spreading it out on the grass in the sun. Repeat this aa often as necessary, or try javelle water. Thla useful mixture la aold by most druggists, but it Is not difficult to make and la much lesa expensive when prepared at home. Every laundress should use it, aa it la very efficacious in keeping table linen and chil dren's white clotbea free from fruit ataina. A email teacupful of the fluid added to a boiler of water will assist materially In keeping; the clothes white and will not In jure them in the least. A marble mantel that is discolored may be painted with oil colore like the wood work to make it less noticeable in the room. Sometimes a mantel et this kind la bronsed in dull green. A atralght length of em broidery may be laid on the top of a man tel of thla kind, but no ruffle ahould be added. To polish the dining table take a quarter of a pound of beeswax (the unbleached will do) and have ready a pleoe of carpet a quarter of a yard square, lined with a piece of cloth and padded. Hold the wax before a fire, and as it meltu coat the olath well with it, and while yet warm t'gin to rub the table briskly. Rub for a quarter of an hour. To make cement for china take a solution of gum arabio and stir in enough .plaster of Purls to make a soft paste. This la quite colorless and holds china excellently. For very delicate china aome people tie the charming in design. The acme of civilized furniture. Open Saturday Evenings. Ladies Desks Our line Is the most complete and best constructed line to be had. We show about seventy styles and designs in all the favor ite woods and their various fin ishes. As Christmas presents they are Just the thing. We herewith mention a few of the prices: Fumed Oak Drop Leaf Desk, very conveniently arranged, J Q 30 Solid quarter sawed oak Desk, with drop leaf, hand rubbed ?op.8h.e.d" .6.00 Ladles' Writing Table, open desk. ln weathered oak, nicely arranged, for. .10.75 Ladles' Desk in mahogany, with drop leaf, one large drawer and shelf below, 13 75 Other Desks ln blrdseye maple, natural mahogany, curley birch and dark mahogany, JQ Q Desk Chairs to match all the differ ent colored desks at prices IT.!:.?. 10.00 OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS pieces carefully ln place with tapes, atand the article ln a saucepan of cold milk and very slowly heat it to boiling point and then move the saucepan back from the fire and lot the china stay in for about five min utes, after whlcn it is carefully lifted out and placed on a shelf till dry. What Women Are Dolnar. Mrs. Caroline Elizabeth Merrick, the author and philanthropist, celebrated her eighteenth birthday1 last Baturday, and waa tendered a reception at the Era club, New Orleans, In which representatives of every woman's club ln that city were present. Mrs. Knox, wife of the Pennsylvania sen ator, makes an odd gift occasionally to some of her more Intimate woman friends a dainty packet containing Ave pounds of butter. Her eldest son. Reed Knox, owns a fine farm near Valley Forge and lt is there that the butter is made. She fur nished the butter for the president's Thanksgiving dinner. Mrs. Ellen Foster, president of the Woman's National Republican association, writes from China that she has visited Wu Ting Fang, former Chinese minister, and says that he has never wavered In his affection for America and that he la pushing his reforms ln his own country. Mrs. Ivy Ashton Root, a niece of the secretary of war, has written a play around the life of Mozart. It will have lis premier ln a few weeks. The play, a poetic drama ln five acts, deals almost exclusively with the great composer's life and Its title will be simply "Mozart." A company to back the production has been Incorporated In Albany, N. T. The author's husband is a Now Tork lawyer. Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt has accepted the office of honorary vice president of the state mothers' assembly of New Tork. In a letter to Mrs. E. H. Merrill of Syracuse, president of the assembly, Mrs. Roosevelt stated that although it was contrary to her custom she would be pleased to ac- j cept the office. Mrs. Roosevelt belongs to no woman's club, with the exception of the Mothers' club. The richest woman ln Great Britain is Lady Mary Hamilton, whose twenty-first birthday occurred the other day. Bhe is the daughter of the late duke of Hamilton. On the Isle of Arran, her ancestral estate. Lad Mary has lived a simple country life, coming very little to London, amd Is Inti mately acquainted with all the affairs and most of the tenants of her great Scotch properly. She is a famous sportswoman and one of the very few women to under take the duties of master of hounds. Mrs. Frederick Schoff. the well known philanthropist, answered at a meeting of the Daughtera of the Revolution an ancient sneer at womankind. "A man," she said, "rose ln a woman's meeting and with a sneer asked why it was that men were not addicted to saying spiteful things about one another as women were. The president answered him. 'Men,' she said, 'are o busy bragging about themselves that they don't have time to attack other men ' " Mrs. -Jefferson Davij. wife of the presl- 1nt of the confederacy, still keeps her residence ln New York, although she goes south during the winter montns. Mrs. Davis is now 81 years old and very feeble, although not ailing. Her old Mississippi homeotead. "Beauvolr," is now the home of confederate veterans and when Mrs. Davis makes a sojourn ln the south lt Is usually with friends. While In New York sbs lives in a quiet uptown apartment hotel and keeps only one servant. She Is far from rich. One of the largest magazine agencies ln the country is conducted by a woman. Miss Jennie Hanson of Lexington, Ky. Some years ao while teaching in the public schools at a salary of M0 a month she began taking subscriptions for the maga zines. Finding that she could make a suc cess of it she gave up her position and rented an office where she conducted the business on a much larger scale. She now owns her office building, to which extensive additions have recently been made, and also a considerable amount of real estate in Lexington. A Skin of Beauty la a Joy forwvor. , T. Fella Oouraud'a Oriental Oream on Megloal aeeutlflen Ranovaa Taa, rlmplaa, frccUaa, Mutt V.icltt, uibuulv. aad da fat d.iactloa. It fcaa atuod ta Utt of a7 yrara. ana U ao kariaicas v taatatl Lobaau,ad 1 brefrlf a.6. A ocapi ao eeuaiar fill of aiudiai r.ama. Dr. I A. S ra aa d to a U.!y of !! aant tun (s alkit i - At you Ivliaa rm uaa uei 1 at Ufa Dial Bid Oeer 4'a rrtta' M 0m taut laraM U U tlB OIM' ttouda It rniu!U r ' r a i xy an cru4.11 at r sot n :- ia Um Utuu bUCawbvovi stud Kiwoi. C2U.HSPLI3, hts. 17 Bust hm Itust lTt Shaving Stands Here is a present any gentleman would ap preciate and it is within your means they come ln great variety. Herewith we mention a few: Oxidised Shaving Stand with Trav, 12x12 round mirror, adjustable, for." v Solid Nickel Shaving Stand with tray for cup, mir ror 1 2x12, adjustable as to height for r i r $8.00, same thing with box. for V, i D solid oak Shaving Stand with door and movable mirror, for aoiia urk snavmg stand, French plate mirror three large drawers, two small ones, n nn one door for cup, price O.UU MOItMS CHAIRS Our assortment of Morris Chairs is now complete and at loir prices that make buying easy. Quarter sawed Golden Oak, hand polished Morris Chair, velour Ci t A cushions, for .if.UU Weathered Oak Morris Chair, reversible, velour 1 it cushions, for lai.UU arms, one for Very fine . Chair, inlaid reversible Others up to MUSIC CABINETS This stock must be seen to be appreciated comprising all the popu lar woods, finished by only the best class of workmanship, artistic and distinctively new ideas in their construction. Newspaper space prevents us to mention only tne prices oi a lew: Solid quarter sawed oak highly polished Music Cabinet, adjustable shelves Mahogany finished Music Cabinets, highly polished, with plain door, for , Mahogany finished Music 'Cabinet with moulded top, very pretty design, for Quarter sawed oak Music Cabinet, full swell front, hand f f polished, French legs, moveable shelves, for.-... tO And up to. j 60.00 Beaton, Street. The "Kantstoop Shoulder Brace and Suspender The Only Brsee that Braces. Produces that military effect so much desired. Positively cures the habit of stooping. ,.,. Womcu', nissea'tl.OO and Boys', all sizes?. ?c Men's, all sires ....$! FOR SALE BY MYERS-D1LLOM DltlG CO., 16th and Farnam 8ts. BOSTON STORE DKl'O DEPT., 16th and Douglas Sts. TUB K.ASTSTOOP BRACE CO., Patentees and Manufacturers. Oakland. CL Two Simple Bad these two dubbing offers carefully. Yon will not hat they are made up exclusively of well known high grade tublications. "We are charging our readers but little more than me-half their actual value. No other publication, no matter liow low their regular subscription price, "can make so liberal an offer. v CLUB "A" TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER, weekly, 1 year. . . . $1.00 Omaha Bee, daily, 6 months 2.00 Review of Reviews, monthly, 1 year 3.00 Cosmopolitan, monthly, 1 year 1.00 Woman's Home Companion, monthly, 1 year 1.00 Total value..: $3.00 Our price for the five only $4.25 all to one address. OLUU tfH" TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER, weekly, 1 year.... $1.00 Omaha Bee, daily only, one year 4.00 Review of Reviews, monthly, 1 year..: 8.00 Country Calendar, monthly, 1 year . 3.00 Cosmopolitan, monthly, 1 year. . . . , .1XK) Woman's Home Companion, monthly, 1 year LOO Total value., $13.00 Our price for the six only $7.50 all to one address. These offers will be made for only a limited time. Do not let the opportunity pass. Send in your order now before you forget it. Address THE TWENTIETH CEE1TURY FARMH1 OMAHA. NEB. Make fx Judicious- COMPARISON and you will decide ln our favor. Our utock Is a mirror of the season. 7.50 up, mlr- 9.75 4.75 tip 12 r -jj, tiMv Quartered sawed oak Morris Chair, hand rubbed and polished, plain velour cushions, broad fat of the "LEADERS," " ' 13.25 design, mahogany finished Morris front, broad arniB, 12.50 .50.00 cushions, for 4.75 .6.25 8.25 All the new Ideas is what our stock presents at all times. All the new designs and creations of the "Fur niture World" as tbey are produced, together with all the newest effects ln cover ings. Gvory Voman unusrssiM sna inooia now Sbont m wonderful MARVEL Whirling Spray Hurttnn. HM Bin a 5f be omnnul supply the lRCL. aecoDt no eUiT. but Mnd alamo fu llluiirmtud book-wM. It (tree fall partloulsrt ftnd .Itrffrtloria In. Vkluabl In isrtlrt. M tHVkl, fXk, na sm st., iew sunn . J) or Bale o HERMAN & McCUNNELL DRUG TO. cor. istn and uoase ate BURN AIR-ST'S CHEAP LVcTt'i CoKamMSaCBuMlaar Air ta I saltan HkMwla Fwaiir fual. bnroa Ilka aaa. tual billa. ho eoal, wood, dirt, aahaa aa wlcs. no vaivaa, aaav oparacaOj aanqaoma, durabla. Vrtil ..oaakr-r, bakar, qtilok worS, . 7oool kiUh.na. 1SOOO Barrl. aam Wloktoaa, VaWalaaa OU. fcaa aad Air Harnrra aold I wrath- AfcENT VA.f 19 -S to Wklr. I KEATt kr MONEY MAkf R. O iro- 'iMtaltlaa, SO dar tHal of.,. kAirw only ifira. rid Mi's. IM., sSOV W.rtd B'l l',, (iarlaaaii, V. When You Wrte to Advertisers remember It only tin as an extra stroke ot two of the in tn me-nion the faot that JOS) saw the ad. In The bee. an nwi Nut inTWDin. w . w, r,M. m mmt ".ft il AR 1 -irt i - ' 1 .1 1 'r,n..nl.nl mm j