THE OMAITA! SUNDAY BEEi JUNE 3, 1900 0 'Beatmiy Nmc. Yale's Almond Dlaatom Complexion Cream GREATEST TOILET LUXURY MADE Cleanses, softens, purifies, whitens tnd beautifies the skin. Soap and water only cleanses superficially; a little Almond Blossom Complexion Cream Should be applied every time the face and hands are washed. removes the dust, toot, grime, smut and -smudge from the Interstices of the skin and makes the surface smooth as Tel yet A dally necessity at home and abroad', a treasure when traveling by land tit water, or when on an outing of any kind, and particularly prized at a sea side or mountain resort Protects the akin from cutting winds, burning rays of the sun and every Injurious effect of the elements. Prevents and cures ab normal redness of the nose or any part of the face, and that purplish hue due to exposure to cold, also chapping, chafing, cold sores, fever blisters and all Irrita tion of the skin. It Is the greatest known specific for burns; takes the fire out more Quickly than anything else, soothes, heals and prevents scars and suppuration) Indispensable for use of Infants and every member of the house bold. An exquisite natural beautlfler. A grateful application after shaving. Excellent for massage purposes. Now m two sizes; prices DO cents and 11.00. OVm SPECIAL rRICKS, 4Be and 7a vnva dept. OOHrSEXTATlOS FIUCB. 1 i Inoisa Mr Mmll Km Tale free at Air an all nattoa pwuining to Hwltb a4 Beasty. HE. TALK'S BOOKS ARB FRKB. shaeld bY bu af Mma. Yala'a Book. Thar contain tha moat rallabla Inform' tloa m UBAUTT CULTURE ebUlnaala. Wrlw Cat a appf at eoee. Thar ara fraa. Aaflraaa MME. M. TALB, W riith An., Naw York City. Old SkleMi Doesn't oompromlsa with ditrt. It cleans cleans thoroughly and quickly, and with very little help from you. Available for all kinds of cleaning, in every department of the household. Sold In large, sifting top cans. convenient. At All Grocers 10 Cents Sent FREE on request the handsome, illustrated booklet, "Hints for Housewives," .con taining many practical and valuable helps for the house wife. Address: Tha Godaiiy Packing Co., 0. D. C Dept. South Omaha. Nebraska. For and About Women Folks lAl I M 1 assist with (h electrle light baths. T hara to visit the three female hospitals la the first and seoond cabins, which have of course special attendants, and to go where the doctor requires. In short, I am a sort of 'Handy Andy.' I set to know everybody on board during- a voyage that la to tar, In the first and second cabins. Passengers treat me very considerately and altogether It Is a very pleasant sort of life. "Sometimes I have had charge of patients all the way across and occasionally I have to accompany ono to the hospital on ar riving. During my first voyage to Europe I had a very serious case to cope with. A young woman in the seoond cabin fell In love with a young man on board and within three days the romance developed Into a serious stage on the young woman part. The young man, on the contrary, decided ha did not wish to marry. "At 11 o'clock on tha evening of the third day I was summoned to the young woman's cabin. She was thought to have pneumonia, but she looked to me as if she had taken poison. The next day when the doctor called to see her she was In the act of taking a spoonful of powder which she held In her hand. I was summoned and, testing the powder, found It was mor phine. "Then aha became unconscious and I worked over her with the usual herolo treatment for three hours before I brought her bock to life. You can Imagine that this event provided enough excitement for me the remainder of the voyage." RmI Rooms for Men. M enterprising department store in Philadelphia, realising that hus- 1 bands tagging their wives on shopping tours are entitled to consideration and sympathy. evolved the happy liVs, of establishing rest rooms for men, and has already achieved a degree of laudatory publicity that comes close to the admiration heroes command. "This resting place for men." relates tha Chicago Tribune, "Is conspicuously labeled and a pretty entrance leads to a snug ana cosy apartment, amply provided with easy chairs, newspapers, magastnea and novels. In this quiet retreat, removed from tha business and noise of the store, the happy man may rest and read or sleep while his wife does her shopping and the minutes or the hours, as the case may be, pass away. If she la a quick shopper and knows what she wants he can read his paper. If, on the other hand, she is uncertain what sho wants, he can read his magazine. If, again, she Is merely looking or hunting for a bar gain, he can spend his time over his novel. "Masculine sufferers from the shopping habit will hall the rest room for men with delight. To the average man nothing Is more wearisome than enforced shopping. He la the victim not only of his wife's ex asperating slowness, but of floorwalkers' hustling, of cash boys' antics and of' sales women's Impatience. He Is In everybody's way. He knows he Is an object of pity as well as of general oontempt. Ha la dragged about by his strenuous wife from counter to oounter and from room to room. It makes little difference whether she Is shop ping for herself or shopping for him. If for herself he stands In the midst of the rushing crowd, pushed this way and that, wearily listening to the conversation with the saleswoman or listlessly watching the latter as she pulls down roll after roll from the shelves. If she Is shopping for him he Is plied with alternate questions by hla wife and the saleswoman calculated to dis play his Ignorance. He Is made to view himself In mirrors until he Is sick of the sight of himself. If he has any manly spirit he dares not display It or start any family disagreement or sharp discussion In the presence of the superior being who la selling the goods, and who maintains a dlplomatlo neutrality, but at the same time Is determined the customer shall buy. "Away from the atorm and stress of the bargain counters, out of the din and tur moil of the aisles, man may rest and let everybody work but father.' He may sink back Into luxuriant easy chairs and rest In the serene confidence that he will not be disturbed until his wife la through and nothing remains but to settle the bills. It was a kindly, humane and thoughtful Idea, this of the rest room for men in the blar stores. Hitherto everything has been done for the comfort of women, nothing for the sad-eyed, weary-limbed, nervously over taxed husbands who try to follow their wives through a shopping ordeoJ." Portia Otit of Date. If Shakespeare's Portia, with her eloquent plea for mercy and her scathing denuncia tion of Shylock and hla greed for the pound of flesh could have been present In Chicago a few nights ago she would have undoubt edly been forced to take a back seat and admit that Miss Bertha Duppler, who spoke at a banquet on "Modern Portias, " waa her superior. "Times have charjred considerably since Portia's day," said Miss Duppler, "and it Is unnecessary now for a woman to go dls. gulsed Into a court room to plead a case. This Is a different age. It Is true that Portia made out a pretty good case against Shylock, putting up an argument against v v , . """" -" 1Ued familiarities that many know exist threw his claim nn tha nnnnil f fleah Rut ... Th Destiny of Women. The first . requirement in the Ideal of a woman la that she shall be a satisfied woman, and that she does not at all wish to be anything but a woman, wrltea Pastor Wagner In Harper's Basar. The creed of pessimism and despair Is, "It were better not to be!" yet I would give no more for, "I would greatly have preferred to be something else!" Woman should not be satisfied to accept herself at this valuation, though that, doubtless, la better than to revolt against her fate; but she should appraise herself, feel the high dignity of her position, recog nize the advantages of life under the special form In which she receives It, and which, In nobility, Is equal to that bestowed upon man. In a word, woman should have the courage and pride of her sex. We often meet young women who would like to be boys. In speaking among them selves of certain others of their set they say: "There Is a girl who ought to hnve been a boy; she is a boy lost I" There Is no harm tn this Inasmuch aa it Is no more than a joke and a fashion of speaking. It amounts to saying that certain young girls have aptitudes which ordinarily are characteristic of young boys. But these have never prevented a woman from being truly and gracefully womanly. What we wish to Indicate and stigmatize here is silly scorn of that which we already possess; a refusal to put It into operation, to employ It, and the dangerous Illusion which lies In thinking that we should have done greater work In this world if Qod had wished to make ua something other than that which Ha has desired. The American Mother. "American girls the world over have a position all their own," says the Philadel phia Press. "They are chic, they are clever, bright, sparkling, most of them pretty, and most of them have, deservedly, a boundless confidence in their powers to take car of themselves.' At the same time, tha foreigner's shock at the, unre strained liberty wa give our daughters la not without Its aoupcon of reaaon. What does do harm are th unrebuked and per- L r-3 OF lAi.llisllNJ ill LEI. STEwMT S0 We have decided to close out our immense stock of ORIEN TAL RUGS before JULY 1ST. Nothing to be reserved. This collection embraces all that can be demanded by the expert ORIENTAL RUO FANCIER. Kermanshaw, Ghoravan, Muskabad, Tabrez, Bokhara, Sparta, Khiva Rugs and many other in room sixes; also Persian Hall Runners. Kazak, Daghestan, Mosul, Ouendje, Bokhara, Senna, Shirvan, Carabagh and Antolia Rugs in the smaller sizes. The equal of this collection is seldom seen in the West. Prices will be cut . to the limit. An opportunity to secure a REAL ORIENTAL RUG at the PRICE OF THE DOMESTIC. We hav thousands of dollars invested in these goods, and while the demand is large and the prices are advancing we feel it will be to our advantage to close the entire stock while in this location. We Move to Our New Location, 16th and Howard, Sept. L 1315-17-19 FAR NAM STREET BEAT 0 in do you suppose her plea for mercy and all that sort of thing would go In a court of Justice now? "No, Indeed. Th modern Portia, when she beards a stern, unsentimental judge tn his den, has to have facts and figures to make any Impression whatever. Tears and pleaa for mercy are of value no more. The original Portia had an easy time of It to what tha modern Portias have. She won her case by a beautiful speech. We must win ours by facts, plain and undisguised. "And If the old Portia Is gone and lives only In beautiful memory I hope and be lieve that her successors are of a type that is proving their right to compete with strong-minded men. and is one to climb the In our smaller towns and villages, famili arities offensive, giggled over between the girls and hinted at by th boys. The girls make good wlvea and mothers, but th bloom has been brushed forever from th peach. "The earn possibilities of unbridled as sociation and companionship exist far less In cities than in the country towns,- but It partakes of even a more reprehensible phase. Th world moves on apace, and we cannot Judge our bonny girl of today by the regime of a half century ago. Olve her liberty and trust her, by all means, but a mother haa not fulfilled her duty, and she has not her daughter'a confidence, when that daughter spends hours from home In the early evening. An ounce of ladder, slowly but suroly, to the top of the prevention Is worth a pound of cure. The a DR. WESTMAL'S SENNA LIVER PILLS A PILL WITHOUT A PAIN. For Deranged System CONSTIPATION. UlLIOl'SN ESS,, SOTTR STOMACH. SICK HEADACHE. NAUSEA. NfcsKVUUoNEajd. TOHP1D LXVtR. ::o Post raid. JHERUAU McCCrElL DRUG CO profession of law." When Miss Duppler concluded her ad dress the students gave three rousing cheers in her honor and voted her the charming successor of the original Portia. Woman Mountain Climber. A daring mountain-climbing exploit Is planned by Miss Annie S. Peck, famous woman Alpinist of Providence, R. I., who sailed from New York last week for Colon. Alone, except for such natives of Ptru aa she selects for guides. Miss Peck will attempt to climb Mt. Huascaran, said to be the highest peak In the Andes moun tains. She will make the climb equipped with scientific Instruments with which to de termine whether Huascaran is of greater altitude than Mt Illampu, which haa an estimated height of 21,600 feet. In 1904 Miss Peck made an attempt to ascend Huascaran, but did not succeed, and lays the blame of the failure in part to the presence' of two male mountain climbers who formed a portion of her party, and refusing to proceed all the way to the top. She Is planning on the present climb to equip the native guides with Esquimaux clothing as a protection against excessive cold, for upon reaching a height of 1,900 feet on her first climb the temperature was 30 degrees below sero. Miss Peck haa no fears for her own safety or health, she said, and feels as It she had "determination enough to take me up twenty Huascarans." She holds the distinction of having made the highest climb on record upon any moun tain In the Western Hemisphere, when ah ascended Mt. Sorato, also an Andean peak. This latter mountain la on of a tre mendous chain of peaks which form th backbone of th Andes, and of which Ml Huascaran Is one .of the least known and most Imposing. In addition to American mountain climb ing exploits Miss Peck has asoended the Matterhorn, the perilous Five Finger peaks In Tyrol and several other world-famous mountains, Marta Nora. Miss Selma Henkenslefken of New Tork holds the distinction of being the first American gradual nurse to tak up a sea, career. Th Amerlka of th Hamburg-American line Is the horn of this pioneer sea nurse. Slater Selma, aa she la called on board, is vary well known to all the cabin passengers who have traveled with her on the big liner and Is very popular. ' "How do I like being a marln nuraer " said SUter Selma. "Well, it Is On. I waa never seasick, my duties are not disagree able, and I meet so many delightful people. Then on the other aide 1 have so much op portunity to travel about and when I am her I can pass the time with my family, so that I am pretty well satisfied. "My work keep ma on duty from t o'clock In th morning until at night. First I have two hours In the gymnasium, where I advice women paawngere what : form of eaexeik to take. Than I Lav to wlsa mother makes the home pleasant for bar email daughter, and finds that the pleasanter way to her daughter'a confidence Is to make he home an open sesame to all the child's friends of both sexes. Make th child's horn the rendezvous of her friends. Allow her reasonable pleasure un rebuked. Avoid disagreeable and dampen ing espionage, but, withal, exercise a care ful and Judicious chaperonage. Encourage your small daughter's confidence and as she grows older a wise mother finds the happy medium by which she can acquaint the child with the dangers of unbridled asso ciations and teach her aelf-protectlon un tainted by self-consclousnefs. Too many mothers shirk the rather dilSrult task of fashioning the truth in such wise aa to enable the child to realise the perils of the future which must be avoided, and yet leave her untrammelid by a half knowledge of social evils which beset th fact of th unwary. p Theorlea Exploded. Tim waa when the college girl was looked upon aa an ethereal being, so occupied with the delights of mental gymnastics that such ordinary things aa food and drink were -matters of no moment to her. But such theories are exploded when tha contracts for the season shew that meats and fowl ordered for the Woman's college of Baltimore Included 22,000 pounds of beef, 6.000 pounds of ham, 11,000 of fowl, 7.0C4) of mutton and 7,500 of veal, with other provi sions In proportion. Including 600 bushels of potatoes, 280 cases of 'canned goods, with 1,000 pounds of butter, 4,000 dozens of eggs, ) years of age and her mind is as alert as that of a business man In his prime. Mrs. Sambucettl came to America with her husband from Genoa fifty years ago. From the bearer of a fruit basket she be camo through her own efforts one of the richest women in St. Louis. She has trusted to the advice of none, but has followed her own judgment When aaked the cause of her remarkable success she said:' "Hard work, closa application, careful and right living and ambition. "Any woman can make a success In th business world if she will keep her mind on business and not on men and foolishness." Mrs. Sambucettl still takes an active part In the administration of her large business Interests. , Leave from Fashion's Notebook. The separate gulmpe, the chemisette and the undersleeves are necessary adjunct of this season's frocks. One very attractive girdle seen recently was made of corn-colored silk, elaborate with Japanese embroidery and finished with two buckles, one at either side of the front, underneath on of which, of course, th belt fastened. No matter how expensive the frock, nor how beautiful. Its effect Is made or marred by the t jssoriea which accompany It; and, needless .o say, these some accessories are not by any means the smallest Items In the expense account. There are so many of the colored neck ruches In evidence everywhere that on hesitate about Investing In one. Still they are convenient and Inexpensive, and with out something of the sort one's costume seems Incomplete these days. Among the prettiest of the summery boas Is a flat one of tiny milk-white ostrich tips Interspersed with cascades of creamy lace. The boa. proper, or stole It realty U, reaches only to the shoulders, but the colls of ostrich tips and the cascades of the laoe fall unfastened from these for an other yard or so In fringe fashion. The return of the fichu and Spanish scarf, for which the Princess Kna is accountable, is hailed with joy by the woman who alma at the picturesque in her dress, but it muBt be admitted that the average American woman has not the knack of wearing either of these gracefully. The fichu maaes her look dowdy, and the scarf, unless donned for a head covering In the evening, gives her a stagy appearance. It Is a new conceit and a pretty one to use these chiffon scarfs as sashes with th soft, diaphanous frocks. To shape them to the waist as well as to render them more durable, used In this manner, they are made up before they are put on, boned, girdle fashion, with the boos and loops at tached to one side of the back, where they conceal a row of hooka and eyes with which to fagton It The old engagement bracelet has been superseded by another and more sensible Bort which may be removed by touching a tiny spring with a hairpin. The snake bracelets are massive affairs, though usually of one one coll, and are the most satisfactory sort for holding the long gloves in place. Very few dainty slender bracelets are seen, the eetentatious only having a decidedly greater vogue. . Apropos of waist decorations there bids fair to be close rivalry between the straight narrow band, the aash and the princess ftlrdle. At present the latter Is several aps ahead. The princess Is a compensa tion for the princess skirt which is de cidedly ugly when worn without Us top gar ment It is tttted at the waist line, and, n Improvement to any figure. Is a positive boon to the unshapely woman, especially It made as some of them ar with an alaatlo band through the center. Th sued belts and girdles are most appropriate for wear with shirtwaists, although those of moire, bound with suede or leather, ar likewise popular. of an out-of-town house pretty, yet if broken, the loss is not great and easily replaced. Besides, Its sturdy, rather coarse efleot blends well with the mission or se verely plain furnishings now fashionable for Informal summer houses. Very unusual In shape la a chocolate set of French china that would prove a very acceptable gift for a June bride. Instead of each piece being tall and high, as la so familiar, the cups, while taller than a tea and coffee cup, are decidedly lower and broader than must chocolate cups, and the pot has quite a spread at the bottom and at two-thirds of Its height rounds out into a decided bowl shape. The decoration Is rosea and azaleas, accentuated with a little gilt Chat Abont Women. Six queens smoke the empress of Aus tria, the czarina of Russia, the queen of Roumanla. queen of 1 Gift for Jon Bride. A. so-called "flagon" shape is the latest In black coffee pots. An exceedingly long, curved epout is the salient feature. Th latest finish for decorative china table pieces is called the "satin" hnish and sug gusts by Its smooth undergloss the surface ut that material. If on is looking for attractive yet lnex iitjiKiiti lavois tor card uarty prizes, quae 1,000 gallons of milk, and with 1,300 pounda uelightfui lltuu canines uc uon, iu quaint of coffee. 120 of tea. J7S of chocolate and P" . jr. 14,000 of sugar among th other Items. It Is not ao poetical to think of the college girl as sitting down to a substantial meal as It Is to Imagine her as regaling herself on a diet of thin air and philosophical ab stractions. But, after all. It is much more comfortable to regard her as she regards herself merely as a normal human being with a normally healthy appetite. $ Station Beautlfler. Mrs. A. E. McCra of Chicago may be said to have originated a profession which haa no particular nam nor haa she an official UU. Sha might be called a station beautlfler, for ber work consists in making more pleasing to the eye the station grounds and buildings which mark the ways of railroads. It is twelve yeara since th railroads be gan in any systematic manner to beautify their properties. Their first attempts were modest ones, but they proved satisfactory and the work has grown until today Mrs. McCrae Is given carte blanche by the road which employs her a to designs and ex penses. She travels tn her private car and Is recognized as one of the number who contribute to the welfare of th rail- Plenty of gold and a dash of color dis tinguishes sont moderate-priced cracker Jars, 'l'hey have broad bauds of gold of the light snade known as coia gold around tu lops, and pooping through or edging lue goiu are very natural loaning rosos. While Crown Derby Is generally recog nized as being among the most costly and most beautiful dinner services, their efforts seu to have exceeded even themselves in the most exquisite and extravagant design tor the dinner table on view. U'bes or In raised and encrusted sola in comoinaUun wltu Lcauuiully baud-painled flowers. Spoon trays of fancy shape are prererrea the ex-aueen of Spain, the taly and the queen of Portugal. Every morning Mrs. McKlnley drives to the tomb of tier martyred husband and places (lowers there, bo far as can j observed, she Is Just about the same as when she lived In Washington. Very few people see her. Mrs. McKlnley Is con stantly attended by nurses. Miss Ada Olatfelter of York, Ind.. IT years old, has Just oompleted th task of planting thirty-five acres on the farm of her father. She Is the daughter of the late A H. Olatfelter, who waa killed a short time ago by being caught In the wheels of a thrashing machine. The only male member of the family Is a crippled brother, and the work of farming 150 acres was left to th young man and young woman. Miss Lucy B. Ernst of Philadelphia has received a Carnegie medal on account of the bravery she showed In Pike county, Pennsylvania, last summer. A boy was bitten In the ankle by a rattlesnake. Mis Ernst opened the wound slightly with a penknife and with her lips drew out the poison. The Cart.ogte medal Is the second she has received, the boy's parents having flven her a handsome on shortly after he lad was bitten. Baroness Burdett-Coutts recently cele brated her ninety-first birthday. Since, as a girl of 23. the bulk of the vast fnrtun of the Coutts family was placed in her hands she has labored unceasingly to utilize it ror the benefit of mankind. The poor children of the east end of London have .been her special care, while th Church of England has received largely ' r nuuiuy. uui uaroness Burnett Coutts' charity has been so varied and ex tensive that it defies enumeration. Charles Dickens was one of her earliest friends and advisers and It was under his guid ance that she first visited the most squalid quarters of Stepney and Whltechapel, now brightened by her benevolence. Religious Notes The first deaf mute In this country to be come a nun la Miss Etta Mae Holman, who was recently received Into the Domini can order at Hunt's Point, N. Y. Dr. Judah Leon Maames, rabbl of Temple Israel, Brooklyn, N. Y.. has been selected the successor of Rabbi Qotthell of Tem ple Emanuel, the largest synagogue of the reformed Jews of New York City. He Is not yet 80 years old. Rev. Reuen Thomas of Brookline, Msas., has been Invited to preach the Jubilee ser mon of the Berkley Street church, Liver pool, England, In July and to preach dur ing August in the City Temple. London. Rev. Dr. William Howe, who will be 100 years old tomorrow, addressed the minis ters of the Baptist conference In Tremont temple, Boston, for half an hour on Mon day, standing all the time and speaking with a clear, strong voice. Rev. John Francis Lee, pastor of th Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Zlon church of Norfolk, Va., is attracting muoh attention In the south aa a poet, many believing that he la the coming negro poet of America, taking up the minstrel harp dropped by the late Paul Laurence Dunbar. Rev. W. L. Watkinson, D. D., ex-presl-dent of the Wesleyan conference, editor and author of distinction, aa well as a great preacher, is to visit this country this summer. He will be at the Winona as sembly during August, will preach at Cen tral and Plymouth Congregational churches, Brooklyn, In September, and will lecture at Union and Rochester Theological seminaries in September and October Rev. Edward J. Vattmann, a ma th United States army and a mem the Insular bureau, has arrived In Clncln- nltl with eight Filipino students, who will make their home In that city this summer for study. He has been a notable figure In publlo life and made two trips to the Philippine islands as representative of th lata pontiff, Leo XIII. Madison C. Peters, the clergyman and author, was talking to a group of young men. "Half the wrong things you. chaps do," he sold, "you only do because, they are forbidden. If you didn't know they were wrong they would only seem to you disgusting and repugnant. I strolled on spring morning in a beautiful park. 'Look here, I said to on of the guards, 'why do you have ' Keep off the grass" signs ail over ajor of lber of by many housewives to the universal ingu, tn- p.Pka Tou don., Beem to enforce the vase-snsped holder. A trio Just on view ai taiy -n0 ,ir,' said the guard. 'The ob- of a very dainty, long ana sienaer octagon shape, only the slue are .uoui i "- long, the angles at each end being eUges curied over in most attractive lashion. ihey ar decorated in very delicate Uoioi designe. Some Bavarian china, decorated In straw berries, ween is especially appropriate at this time of the ripening of the luscious straw berry. These are chocolate sets, berry bow is and dishes, compotes, cups and sau ecrs, aiui tea ana fruit piates oil which tne reprouuctloiui are Bo true as lo be almost tantalizing, almost pel feci In detail and coior. One of the newest outputs of Sutherland pottery U artistically colored and orna mented in scenic enecta. A vase called .umbering has a luinuer camp s:ne for Its decorative luotlf. while anotner, lu very oud pltcner shape, very hioad and Hat at i, ociLuin. wan a s.enuef iia.uuie anu Ject of the signs is to cause the people to more thoroughly enjoy oeing on tn grass.' " Th. work which Mr. MeCroe doe. Is the""" Worsea" TroVkl oT old carried on the year around, aa th winter country" scenes 1 a candlestick in old-time month are spent in the warmer state. sporui-oll lamp Bhap. , Inexpensive, yet extremely attractive, I Dolns Buslaeaa at OO. a little fern dish of green and yellow pot- Mrs. Marina Sambucettl of St. Lout. I. U.r, that ha. a Dutch called th Hetty Uren of that city. Bn Is n2 is just th thing for tha dining ubl A Skin of Daury la a Joy Forovor. DR. T. Fllx Ooursud's Oriental Oraam or Magloal Beautlfler. Raaarte Tss, pimat, FrcSi, kota yiclt, ,!, u ails IWaMt, aaa avsry D.a,u& os bssmr. ana da las d..UIOD. It W tuo4 ika ttat af 67 fin. sad la ao saru 'ae wa Uxatt lolav.;tt is imparl mita scoapt nooaunirr fi u af sjklin taa-e. Pr, L. A fearra aali to 11 af ua kr tea ( aauaui "i yu ladli riaa U.tm vsaoajBiaaa OeeraaS'e Cnrnm' aa the Htat barnrf.1 af aU Ut Mia arpwtioea." F asit by all drus"'u im j saw tWeda Oaaiare la Ua V tut auiaa, Oauaoa a4 Kwutw. lT.OUS, frsA, 17 fcMt turn Strait In !s4 . .. SHOE FOR MEN The "Friedman Shoemaker" LECTURB No. 12 The brat Stores in every Hamlet, Town or City are anxious tobe "ATLANTIC" Agents. They know that the "ATLANTIC Shoe is O. K.. in every Respect They know that it is upholding a 52 years' Reputation for "Good Shoe Making." They know that it will bring to them the best People of the Community. When a Dealer sells "ATLANTIC Shoes you are safe in trading with him as it gives him the Stamp of Reliability, Progress and Success. The "FRIEDMAN SHOE MAKER" leaves you in "Good Hands" and hopes for your Feefs Sake" that you will always wear the "ATLANTIC Shoe. Be satisfied with nothing but tb "ATLANTIC" the fees Product of the Orestes. Shoe Market oo Earth. Aak your Dealer t fit you today. MAKER 'Piedman A CONTINUED SUCCESS FOB 51 YEARS STLOUIS ONLY I HOUSE. IN IQ000 HAS SUCH A RECORD pokane AND efurn Is Every Day from Juno 1 to Geptember Final Return Limit Oct 31, 1906 Liberal Stop Over Privileges. Vis th Great Northern Railway "Th Comfortsele Way" Inquire further of F. I. Whitney, P. T. M, Bt. Pul, Mlna. or Nearest G. N. By. Afeut. Ask th nt for sslllng Uts of th "M1idssMU- sttvd "Dakota," Seattle to Japao sad China- TO "Follow the Flag" Exceedingly Low Rotind Trip Rates Decatur, III., May 17th to 24th $15.40 Boston, Mass., May 31st to Juno 9th $29.75 Springfield, 111., June lb-t to 4th $1123 New Haven, Conn., June let to 4th $33.33 Louisville, Ky., June 11th to 13th $1173 Mexico City, Mex., June 25th to July 7th $533 Boston and New Hrn trip Uoket. fooa n boats tvoroaa tsk Bri. Hhff or both directions, without Sstra ohai ioait aneal and bartha. kton arvast allowed at Detroit avnd Niagara Fails. For descriptive booklet, time-tables, sleeping ear rrrtiona. and alt Information call at Wabash City Ticket OAua, 1101 rnnmm St, or addre Harry E. Moores, G. A. P. D, Wabash R. IL, Omaha, NcSx