HIE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: 'AUGUST 5, ' For and About Women Folks 6 Woaaea Wn Live Aloaje. OMKM living alone have a bad trick of trying to save money at the expense of their meals. Economy in food la right, up to a certain point after that It be- w eomee folly. Worse yet, they try to save labor In washing dishes, and when that means not cooking a thing because It Is too much trouble to wash the pan afterwards, that woman's digestive future is In a bad way. The worst of this sort of shirking Is that the light housekeeper often works harder to save work than she would If ahe bad things decently and In ordr. Especially is this the ease with young women who get their breakfast before starting out on their day's work, and who come back at night too tired to care for anything but a cup of tea and a piece of bread If it rests with them to prepare It. This may be economy for a little while, but let a young woman's system once get run down and nothing will accomplish this sooner than not being properly nourished and there Is no limit to the list of fear ful diseases that He in wait for her. The actual money cost of having enough to eat la so small that comparatively few working women have to deprive themselves Of tne necessities in the raw state; but the trouble of preparation often seems alto tether too great for a family of one.. Then, solitary meals are not conducive to enjoy ment, and are apt to be a good guide to In digestion, and Its attendant train of evils. It Is a woman's duty almost her first duty to provide herself properly with in ternal food. Baker's bread Is cheap and.eeisy, but It's nourishing power is meager. And Sweet things that look so attractive in the pastry cook's windows are vain de lusions. They do not taste half as good as they look generally, and they take the place of nothing else, being merely extras, not substitutes, to say nothing of their in- digestible properties. If two or three working women can club together, there will be a surprising sav- Ing. The same fire, kettle and filling of it, will make the tea for three as well as for one, and the division of labor makes eaoh one part aeem so much eaaler, even if ahe actually does more if she were alone. Men, as a rule, will pay more attention to the simple rules of health, but then they are leas fastidious about their sur- roundlngs. And they are not apt to fee) that ter- rible nervous strain that makes the aver- age woman think she must sucoeed in put- ting herself on an entirely self-supporting footing, and help everybody else related to fesr, aU at one time. Woman Becomes Expert Miller. Fewer places looked mora dilapidated than did the Red Mill of Been tel villa. Pa., and the farm adjoining it when Mahlon Reltnauer and hla brt,i fnrm-i. t ...... Indls. of Huff's Churoh, took charge of it as their future home. There was de- ,mand for repairs in every direction Be- itnauer waa working might and main, and the task was getting beyond him. , "What about the miur asked Kelt'- nauer, one evening while the pair were At their supper. I "Oh. don't bother about that mill! If jrou will see to the farm work I will keep that mill ln good trim," was the reply ' fiha not nniv ..1.1 if k... -i.- i word, and ever since the Red Mill has been entirely in her hands during the busy sum- mer season and haU of the Urn during the cold winter days, . , 8ha rapidly acquired a thorough know- . ledge of everything pertaining to the grind- lng of grain, and today the "Reltnauer Red MU1 flour" is known throughout the . hlatorlo Ealckner Swamp region. Her mill ,U a brick structure, three stories high, and .very floor Is filled with the wheat and .corn which the hundred or more farmers of , the vicinity bring to have ground. , When the farmers arrive at the mill. , they are met ' by Mrs. Reltnauer. She Is strong and musoular. and when the ( heavy sacks of grain reaoh one of the up-' per floors, hurls the burden through the ' open doorway with great ease. " She loosens the rope and pulls the cog to the hopper, and with another turn of her arm the open end of the sack 1 thrust Into the hopper, and the task ta completed. She has mastered her work In every ro- "spect. She even cut. the min. spect. She even cuu the millstones, chip ping rrom twenty to thirty little furrows j to an Inch, a task which many male mll .lers have great difficulty in accomplish ; lng. When she makes flour she is always very j particular that the reel is in the proper condition. She has mastered the needle "part of the milling Industry and when the fine sievelike silk fabrlo that Inoloses the 'reel gets punctured she gets to work and closes U up in a very systematic manner. Mrs. Reltnauer Is S3 years old and la the .picture of health. She Is the daughter of a carpenter and was born on the farm. Where ahe ttm.mA t n An rwitAn While her chief Ingenuity lie. around the i.nnr m .v.. .. , - r Hii.iuiuim, ana ftuu CHW- ,ble of doing needlework, and while the millstone Is whirling she often sits near by making clothing. , There are stlU a great many Pennsyl vania German people who object to the patent process roller flour and who will use ( no other than stone-ground flour. In keep , Ing with early customs, every farmer ex pects to bake hla bread from flour made of his own wheat. In this respect they are 'very particular and they always sow good, t clean wheat, ao that their flour will be . nothing but the purest article. t Mrs. Reltnauer begins her day's work . during summer time a little before 5 o'clock , tn the morning. When she arises she hur . rledly grinds a customer's grain and then , retracea her atepe to her kitchen and geta , breakfast for her husband and daughter, , When her morning household duties sre , over she again goes to the mill, and usually , spends the forenoon there, till nearly U when she attends to her dutlea get- , ting dinner. When the mill work la press ing she devotes the balance of the day to the latter. She la accustomed to grind a great deal of buckwheat flour, for during the autumn the Pennsylvania Germans of Colebrookdale . and Douglas townahlps raise a great deal , of It. and are particular to have the flour Of their own buckwheat. While her milling and domestic duties keep Mra Reltnauer rather busy. she. how. ver, finds some spare moments to devote to trade Journals and to scan the market news of the dally papers, and Is rather well posted on the prices of grain, so that the farmers come and consult with her aa A Shin of Beauty la at joy Forever. DR. T. Folia Ooursgd's Oriental Cream or Megloal Beeutlfter. lUmvne Tta. Pin pita, llll, MM ktlS DlaruM. Ai Tvy eiil b..uly. sm! il lm .tctle. ft l sw4 u 1 I fM, tu4 t M kvaNl mi lMllt l bur Is profttrly tetml tuetKioirr ti ot umlm . Ir i, A bo te u t U Urlf Ot til kM At yus MH 1U SM tfcMk OMTaefe rma1 u n Km LmM W J tu aaMwau t.autkTUnuus fr 6-jtM uifl is tae liut4 attM,cua mA Xurte m j at sjv rciusTLsyof, v m j rot. iik to svhnther It la an opportune time to Mil their cereals New York World. Mm. Hadlwg'aMoa'e ef TJureee. But perhaps the mnt Individual dreeaer tmont Parisian octree la beautiful Jane Hading, who haa lately taken London by atorm in the flowered alike and patch and powder of I .a Pompadour. From the very beginning of her atage career Mme. Hading realUed that here waa a difficult figure to dress, and ahe wisely refuaed to oon form to any tradition!. Beyond the alight support of a narrow walat and hip girdle aha weara no corsets, and her simply colfTed head, with it maaa of dark hair d reeled at the nape of the neck, atlll denlea the cury wiglike tetea of the hour. Thla almoat rellgloue neglect of coraeta la aald to be Inspired by a fear for. her beauty, which thla lovely, If somewhat Indifferent artist believes would have more wear and tear with the stiff discomfort of stays. Every great maker realltea her need In thla respect, and from the plain tailor gown which ahe wore In one play at the Oa.lety, to the many aoft tea gown which aha afTecta always, everything hang from the shoulders. In fact, Mme. Hading Is said to have Introduced the tea gown In Paris, and like Mme. Bernhard, she knowa the graceful allure of sleeves whtoh are not too big. The tailor gown worn by Mme. Hading at the Oaiety has aerved as a model for many women of different figures with a dlataste for corsets. Comprising a plain princess skirt, and an almoat skirt-length redlngote, half fitting, with slashed sleeves and cavalier revers, this toilet showed the picturesque actress at her best. Big velvet buttons in a deeper red than the cloth of the gown ornamented the sleeves and front of the redlngote, there set in simulated buttonholes of white satin pip ing. A rich blouse of antique lace waa won with this gown, every Ir.oh of which expressed the graceful Hading loosenesa. full neck and sleeve ruffles of the lace glv- lnft the ,ook of c""'"- luxury which she lovM About nw throat and ande. Many of Mme. Hadlng's loose odd coats and mantles also serve as valuable suggea- tlon t0 makers great and small, and to ner ascrlbod the revival of the little cavalier eapes which some of the big houses are putting forward for autumn and winter. In "La Pompadour," Mme. Hadlng's gowns are of the old board-like silks, one gown with raised flower em- broideries against pale blue being a thing of Indeeorlbablk magnificence. The splen- did laces employed with these toilets are said to be real, the patterns employing the formal baskets and looped garlands and miniature frames of the long ago. Make Veranda Place of Comfort. Each year sees the veranda becoming more and more an integral part of the house beautiful. It Is no longer considered merely an adjunct of the building, sparsely settled with a scraper, a mat and one un- emPromls,n CT ns BevT u"ea "av " a neltered P,ace t0 dry the or constitutional In the winter, or set the hrdran tub in the "" ln ,u vo,uUon " become the very neart of th D0UM ,n ummer, while in wlntr n:loed ' Glass, comfortably heated, filled with palms and flowerlnc. l,ant8 ,u fIoop covered with warm rugs and weU uPpIled wlth a,y chalr" and " tab,e for Prio11'1. verT delightful bit of the tropics comes to Mohammed ln p,ao of MohLmm,,d truing down Sahara or acr0M tn nUnent t0 flnd K OM ta free t0 plan ona would like It, a broad and noble veranda tmdlnT around at least three aides of the hoUB and descending in the middle of the ' front by a feW wld ,nd low 8tep to 019 Uwn- wouId "m ,dsaL Ir- " ,n th" "JoritT ' th Pla mu,t taken M thft budr 'eft ,ta POtblHUes for comfort may be enhanced or lu defecta loesed over by the woman ho puU har heart ,nt0 ,ta rearrangement. 11 e" ,tnout -rlng that all textiles and ' urnlture employed on the porch should be waterproof, as far as possible. 70 m nd K a d ,doa to arran tn couch on tn ,lde next tne hou" 41,4 have It ln box form, so that on rainy days and at nlght any P,llowa or cushions that m,ht lnJured by dampness could be put ,nt0 Hammocks are the natural lonnglng place for a veranda room, and lhat ma)r be " luxurious and picturesque and piled with as many cushions as fancy and piled with as many dictates and the purse allows. A canvas hammock having a canvas can opy and provided with a spring will be ap preciated at the seashore, while no ham mock la more comfortable than one of the old-fashioned barrel ones, especially when fitted out with a light soft mattress. Swinging seats or sofas are a delightful adjunct. One that la pretty and picturesque can be made by cutting off the legs ot a small reed sofa and suspending It by log chains, which may be purchased by the yard at the hardware store. With pretty cushions a seat of this kind would be ss useful and comfortable as an eastern one, vn." not " P''turelu' Rattan or rush furniture Is the most serviceable and attractive, but one can get on very well with ajiy substantial, com fortable chairs and a steady table with a drawer that will hold writing materials. A low portable table, that may be uaed for games, sewing, I o'clock tea. plenty of footstools and round cushions for the steps, complete the essentials, but there are ny number of accessories that may be added at discretion. If there Is an aged person or Invalid In the family, a hooded bath chair, affording perfect protection from draughts. Is a groat comfort. A screen that can be easily moved about to Intercept a too vigorous breese; a water color one of the porous ollaa, .beloved of Mexicans swung In a corner, where a glass of water cold aa one from a fountain spring Is always ready for the thirsty; a stand of reed or willow for holding golf clubs, umbrellas and parasols are all of service. kill Cheats Death. Donning sgaln the nurae's cap. and gown which she laid aside eight years ago on the occasion of her marriage, Mrs. Wil liam Vaughn of Souderton. Pa., has been the moat aaaldloua nurse In the Medico Chlrurglcal hospital since laat week. At that time, ahe name to the Institution from Souderton with her husband. Dr. William Vaughn, after he had been attacked with oolloid appendicitis. Dr. Vaughn waa taken 111 last week. Diagnosing hla own ailment as appendicitis, he called on several -other doctors, who decided that colloid appendicitis had set in.. i Realising the seriousness of his Illness- colloid appendicitis Is fatal ln from alx to fifteen hours the physician called hla wife and told her that he waa about to go. to Philadelphia o be operated upon at the Medloo-Chiruglcal hospital, of whoae aahool of medicine he la a graduate. Mrs. Vaughn, who Is a graduate of the Samaritan Hospital School for Nurses, In slated upon accompanying him. The trip waa made on the earliest train, while the hospital authorities were told to have an ambulance In readiness at the Broad Street 8 tat Ion. Arrived ln this city, the sick physician was hurried tn the hospital, hla wife at hla side all the time, and put on the operating table at 6.10, sis hours after tbe dread dis ease bad first attacked him. The operation waa entirely successful, sad the dqetor Is well on the road to re covery. But hla ooevalearence la chiefly due to the solicitous car with which his Discounts From 10 to 50 23 Pw Cent IHscount on Tapestry Brussels Rugs, both Floral and Orien tal designs. 20 Per Cent Discount on all rooin slied Body Brussels Rugs. 20 Per Cent Discount on all Wilton Rugs. 20 Per Cent Discount on all Axmln s1er Rugs, both small and large sizes. 25 Per Cent Discount on all Fibre Rugs, both room and small sizes. 25 Per Cent Discount on all sizes and grades of Smyrna Rugs. 25 Per Cent Discount on all Tap estry Brussels Carpet. 25 Per Cent Discount on all Axmtn ater Carpets. 23 Per Cent Discount on all Wilton Velvet Carpets. 25 Per Cent Discount on all Body Brussels Carpets. 20 Per Cent Discount on all Ingrain Carpets. 60 Per Cent Discount on all Fibre Carpets. 00 Per Cent Discount on all Straw Mattings. 25 Per Cent Discount on all Printed Linoleum. , 23 Per Cent Discount on all Inlaid Linoleum. N Discounts From 10 to 50 wife surrounded him. She had forgotten none of her professional skllL Colloid appendicitis is, fortunately, a rare form of affection of the appendix. Unlike the usual form of the disease, it is not caused by the lodgment of a bit of solid matter In the appendix, but, rather, by the growth of matter whloh develops gan grene so quickly that an operation Is necessary almost as soon as the first signs of the affection are noticed. It la oured as easily by the surgeon's knife as' the usual form of the aliment, but its danger lies ln the rapidity with which it spreads to surrounding organs. Philadelphia North American , Beallght and the Hoose. Sunlight Is nature's most health giving scavenger. A house without sunlight is unhealthy and unsafe for human occu pancy, and It la necessary not only to have some sunlight, but to have as much of It aa possible. It Is, of course, not feasible to admit the direct rays of the sun to every room of a house; the typical plan of all houses Is square or rectangular, and at leaat one aide of the house is en tirely beyond the reach of the sun. The other three sides, however, can receive more or leas direct sunlight,' and the prob lem of the plan Is thus reduced to ar ranging the varloua rooms so that the amount of sunlight is adjusted to their uses, and it must be sunlight, for mere light itself Is not sufficient; the rays of the sun have curative and cleansing prop erties that nothing else has. It Is generally admitted that a southern exposure Is the best for all houses, and should te obtained whenever possible. It is Immaterial whether the entrance be placed on thla aide or not, so long aa the rooma most ln use open onto It. In dwell ings of average slse the entrance front will also be the front on which any Im portant room opens; but In large country houaea the old distinction of a front and back to a house haa disappeared, and. In stead, we have the entrance front and the garden front; the service and servants' quarters, so long regarded ss characteristic of the "back" of a house, may be rele gated to a side end or placed In a wing that abuts directly on the entrance front. In such cases It must be well screened and Its purpose thoroughly subordinated. American Homes and Oardena. Mra. earnest Embroiders. Though the name of Carnegie might sug gest being "too rich to be comfortable." Mra. Andrew Carnegie, td, the. wife of the Ironmasters nephew, doesn't think the How ArUsls HEN a man's ln love, the whole world looks rosy; every cloud takes the form ot his swetheart's face or drapes Itself Into the tangles of her hair. The lovelier w the aspect ot nature, the nearer It ap proaches to the semblance of ber who Is his goddess. There la no glory In earth or aky or aea that compares with that ot the sunset. Aa the giver of light drops to bis couch, he illumines everything with gold or rose; he shoots his rays among ths drifting clouds snd dyes them with tinc tures that no palette ever dared to bear. It la tbe lover, alone ln the glory of the aunset, that Charles Dana Gibson has por trayed so well ln tbe picture that accom panies today's pa pec Alona upon the barren shore he kneela ln adoration, for above him floata the vision of hta goddess, conjured out of hla own heart. It la true, but none the leaa real for that. All the sand snd rocky maaa that rises upon the coast Itself taking the form and face of the adored one, are bathed ln the glow ot the dying day; the sky is vivid with golden light and a maaa of clouda twists Into wind-blown spirals that to hla amorous Imagination take tbe face and form of his lady love and her splendid mane of hair. He Is In an ecetacy of adoration. He kneela at ths edge of the eea, his hands clasped, his face turned half way toward PLAIN AND Miller, Stewart & Beaton's Removal Sale. 4 V Our REMOVAL SALE has. aroused the greatest interest of any bargain event that has ever been held in OMAHA. It seemed that everybody wanted to get in MILLER, STEWART & BEATON'S Wednesday, and it is an acttial fact, though provided with nearly a double force of salesmen, we were compelled to keep hundreds of people waiting hours to be waited upon. Our store was literally parted with OMAHA'S tent pecfle striting to uevre the bargain ulieh cvr removal sale offers. We want to impress upon you very emphatically that this is not a sale of a day or a weiky but thit it will continue in force as long as we remain in this location and that every discount we name in Sunday's paper will remain in force during the life of this sale. Neglecting to profit by the opportunity this sale offers you is practically the same as passing by money in the street- We could hardly put it plainer ; and though the expression may not be elegant it is an absolute act. Scan thete items and note the discount: 25 Per Cent Discount on Lace Cur tains. 23 Per Cent Discount on Lace Bonne Femme. 10 Per Cent Discount on French Vel our Portieres. 25 Per Cent Discount on Armure Portieres. 83 l- Per Cent Discount on Snow Flake Curtains. 23 Per Cent Discount on Lace Bed Sets. 23 Per Cent Discount on Lace Door Panels. 25 Per Cent Discount on Tapestry Portieres. 25 Per Cent Discount on Silk Por tieres. 23 Per Cent Discount on Festoon Draperies. 50 Per Cent Discount on Odd and Soiled lots of Lace Curtains. 25 Per Cent Discount on Rope Por tieres. 15 Per Cent Discount on China Silks 15 Per Cent Discount on Japanese Silks. 15 Per Cent Discount on Shlkli Silks 23 Per Cent Discount on Colonial Nets. 10 Per Cent Discount on Shades. MILLER, possession of 4 big income should preclude the Joys of the simple life. What she en Joys most Is sitting on the plana of her summer place at Magnolia, which com mands a superb view of the sea, and doing needlework. This summer she Is embroid ering seat coverings f,cr a set of Chippen dale chairs. As soon as she finishes a cover a chair is upholstered and set out to be admired. Some members of the summer colony profess to think Mrs. Carnegie's love of needlework a surprising fancy in a woman who haa sought Mag nolia for recreation. "Why shouldn't she do aa ahe likes and sew instead of. playing bridge T" demanded a woman who was championing the old-time accomplishments at a luncheon the other day. New York Press. Little Black Taffeta Coat. A smart little black taffeta coat la made in two sections and then Joined and la bor dered all around with Inoh-wlde black vel vet ribbon. It has a .jvalstcoat effect in white silk fringed with delicately tinted moss rosebuds In pink two Inches apart. The upper part of the coat is a short sleeved almoat close-fitting Jacket, out woll away from the neck and sides to show the waistcoat. The sleeves are extensions of the body of the coat and end a couple of Inchea above the elbows, the inner aeams, underneath the arms, being open two Inches from the armholes to the bottom. This section ends below. White lace ruf fles somo six Inches deep are attached to the inside of the sleeves and fall below the elbows. The coat is lined throughout with white silk. New York News Lad lea. News ladles have almost reached the stage where they will require maids, be cause in this progressive age an exquisite toilet and spectacular effect la the drawing card for some of the hundreds of feminine vendors of newspapers ln Ootham. Some times when a man is purchasing an "ex ter" from a newslady the thought strikes him, "Oh, It me mudder would only see me now!" then he pigeon toes himself away. What would a Pittsburg ncwsle think of a young woman ln peek-a-boo shirt waist, Yvetta Qullbert gloves, Mam Belle Champagne slippers, with possibly a touch of rouge on her cheeks, selling pa pers which ahe carries ln a portfolio? Pittsburg Dispatch. To Teat Divorce Opinion. Mrs. Kate Trimble Woolsey Is a busy woman these days, and she Is likely to be busier atlll next October, If her divorce club, or whatever she Is going to call It, Use Lines in the beautiful vision, for, aa with Dante when he met Beatrice ln heaven, the alght la too daaxlltig to be borne with direct gase. The emotion of this lover can be ap preciated only by thoae who have loved deeply, Intensely, and only by them can the picture be understood. Thla Is not for the trivial lovers, nor for thoae whoae emo tions are of the mild and unexcltabie order. It Is for the Petrarcha, the Dantes, the Paola dl Mala testae, those to whom love la a consuming passion, a devouring flame. All the poetry and agony of passion are expressed by Gibson in this picture. The man la drawn In the rnldst of Immensity, because he Is oppressed by Just thla feel ing of Insignificance In the presence of so much splen lor. The vision of beauty fills the page aa It fills the man'a soul; It casta Its radiance over the earth and the sea and the ahore Just aa It casts Its glamour over the man and Ma heart and his mind, making them and hltn glow with tbe re flection of Ita glory. To the artist this picture especially ap peals by reason of the perfection of Its suggestion of color. Paint Is not needed here, for the simple pen and Ink have been given all the color that la necessary. No writer can explain how thla combina tion and eontrestmf of lights and shades POINTED FACTS 12 H Per Cent Discount on Ruffled Swiss. 20 Per Cent Discount on Drapery Hardware. 13 Per Cent Discount on Florentine Silks. 20 Per Cent Discount on Tapestry Furniture Coverings. 25 Per Cent Discount on Bobblnets. 12 H Per Cent Discount on' Em broidered 8w1rs. 12, Per Cent Discount Plain Swiss. 25 Per Cent Discount on all Fringes. 83 1-3 Per Cent Discount on Short Lengths of Silk. 1 23 Per Cent Discount on Sash Nets. 12 H Per Cent Discount Dotted Swiss. 23 Per - Cent Discount on Madras Curtain Ooods. 50 Per Cent Discount on Odd Lots of Fringes. 10 Per Cent Discount on Offlce Sup plies. 80 Per Cent Discount on Bed Room Furniture. 25 Per Cent Discount on Combina tion Bookcases. 20 Per Cent Discount on Stationary Bookcases. RO Per Cent Discount on Odd Wood Beds. STEWART & 1315-17-19 Jfarnam Street gets under way. Just at present Mrs. Woolsey, who Is said to be wealthy and an author. Is devoting a considerable part of her time to writing leading women of Europe and America, asking their views as to the most practicable way ot defeating the United States supreme court's late de cisions affecting divorce. To test the con stitutionality of the new law, Mrs. Wool sey proposes to make a test caaa of a di vorced man and woman, who will present themselves before some clergyman to be married. If refused on the ground of their divorces, they will apply to the state to cancel the clergyman's license. Mrs. Wool sey also proposes to stop some weddings at which the officiating minister asks, "Who glvetb this woman awayT" and to protest to the courts against the religious sanction that makes possible a condition strictly prohibited by law. Mrs. Woolsey's Icono claam even seeks to place violent hands on that time-hallowed atatement, "With all my worldly goods I thee endow," and she will aak the courts to compel the husband to turn over hla estate to hla wife wherever thla formula has been employed ln marry ing them. In her proposed club Mrs. Wool sey seeks to give the conventions and laws bearing on marriage and divorce a thor ough overhauling, for, as she Is credited with observing, "When women flnd that the thirteenth amendment applies as much to the woman seeking divorce as to a woman In any other relation, they will loao no Urns In applying It. New York Tribune. Th Last Rose of gammer. The pillow erase still rages unabated, putting forth new fads and fancies with each passing moon. The latest wrinkle la to collect pillow covers from aa many dif ferent cities as possible, so that the cosy corners shall become a bit of cosmos. Now Is the time to prepare these ae cessorlea of beauty and comfort for the couches and chalra of the dena. Bolting cloth and chiffon lend them selves for the most charming and artistic ahow pillows. They are filled with the rose petals prepared the same aa for the pink petals, and green rose leaves may be painted or embroidered. Through the sheer, silky cushion the pink flush of the rose petals Is plainly visible. Shadow work la specially adapted for embroidering these dainty materials. The sides -of the pillow are trimmed with pink baby flounces or fringed pink ribbon of narrow width, which may be cut to resem ble petals of the beautiful flower. A cheaper perfume cushion la easily made of cheese cloth or crtm. They are Pen and Ink la made to auggeat color, for thla la the acme of the craftsman's art, to be learned only In long years of atudy and practice. vBut It doea not take an artist to see that the band of light ln the sky behind the adoring lover Is pale but vivid gold and that thla gold ta reflected upon the sea. Nor does it taks an artist's eye to see that the background of clouda Is violet deep. Intense violet shading to purple ss It recedes from the light; nor that the cloud forms ln which the lover sees his queen are rosy pink where they suggest her face end neck and shoulders, and a tangle of gold with swirling purple shad ows where they suggest her hair. The light on the shore and the rocky Image of the women are yellow with pinkish tints, and the deep shadows of the rocks are deep, brownish purple. The artist also sees a splendid elabora tion of twisting curves, the traditional "Una of beauty" tortured Into the manifold complexity of the woman'a hair. Blown by the wind, toased by the currents of the upper air, with the sun-daaale sifting through a twist of It there, and throwing another strand of It Into shadow. Juat aa a woman's hair la toased on a breesy day at the shore such ta the effect of Gibson's masterly lines. These were drawn with splendid sweeping strokes oX a pen held at arm's length. CONCERNING BO Per Cent Discount on Parlor Ooods. Lot 1. 83 1-8 Per Cent Discount on Parlor Furniture. Lot 2. 20 Per Cent Discount on Rockers. 83 1-8 Per Cent Discount on Morris, Chairs. 83 1-3 Per Cent Discount on Velour and Box Couches. 23 Per Cent Discount on Bed Dav enports. 25 Per Cent Discount on Medicine Cabinets. 50 Per bent Discount on Clocks and Cabinets. 83 1-8 Per Cent Discount on Kttche" Cabinets. 25 Per Cent Discount on Library Tables. 00 Per Cent Discount on Porch Fur niture and Go-Carts. 25 Per Cent Discount on Brass and Iron Beds. 20 Per Cent Discount on Springs. 83 1-8 Per Cent Discount on Early English Goods and Desks. 23 Per Cent Discount on Leather Couches and Rockers. 20 Per Cent Discount on Mattresses, Box Springs and Pillows. BEATON stitched with pink silk. A ruchtng of pink silk, satlne or mallne to match, finishes the sides. Sachets filled with the leaves nre used for the dresses, where the lingerie Is kept. They are heart shaped pads of mousseline de sole or Persian lawn edged with lace and filled with the sweet rosy leaflets. For the bride there could be nothing more appropriate as a gift than a set of these rose sachets. There are also the dearest little cor sage envelopes to pin to the Inside of the corset cover. They are cut oblong ln shape, like an envelope, the rose leaves; concealed In the Interlining of pink silk; emitting their delicious odor from the place of hiding. The fold of the envelope haa the initials of the owner embroidered upon it, and the edges are ruffled with real vaL lace. Many dainty conceits may be formed for the dresser and toilet for the reception of these sweet petals so long relegated to the use of the rose Jar alone. Women Suffrage. There has recently been an agitation for woman suffrage in France. Dr. Ellsa Tchenhaeuser of Berlin ln a report Issued some time ago refers to a satisfactory ex periment at the Antipodes. The elections, she says, were never conducted so quietly and with such good order as since women have had the vote. Women only give their vote after a very conscientious exami nation of the moral quality of the candi dates. La Petit Journal. Freaks of Fancy. Georgian toilet sets, ln the willow pat tern ln old blue, very quaint ln shape, are especially designed for colonial bedrooms. An odd and Inexpensive gift Is a teaspoon of Dresden China with hinged silver lid, that Is perforated to be ussd as a tea ball. A unique foreign night-lamp clock haa Its mechanism In the base of the pedestal, causing the globe of plain white glass, on whtch are marked the hours, to revolve past a stationary pointer. It Is made of finely-chased brass. Neat and compact motor luncheon bas kets are now being turned out by a number of firms. There are the individual baskets and the baskets a deux, which have long been on the market, but the manufacturers are now turning out the most elaborate hampers for the use of a large party. New china hatpin holders have a saucer, like baa and a covered vase-shaped top all in one piece. The top is perforated to af ford a resting place for the pins. Ideal heads and hunting scenes form the deco rative motifs, done In a number of color combinations to mutch milady's bedroom. The collar Is made of Jet, gold sequins, pallettes In pastel or Iridescent tones, and a number of strands attached to a flat Jiiece hang down ln front. Chemisettes of etted lace and lace or net, studded with gold sequins, turquoise beads; and etc., also have borders formed of deep fringes of the beads, sequins or Jewels. Beads and Jet collars are now made with strings of the trimming hanging Mr down the front of the bodice, quite past the REE TO YOU-UY SISTER treatment complete trial 1 sod If roe should wia W continue, It will com iou ouly about II tMaiM m. week, or lata than two wnu a d&. It will not Interfere with your work or nucubation. iiut seed ase yaur earns and aadreaa, tctl ma hoe treatment tor your eaaa. entirely free, In plala wrapper, by return Bull. I will also send you tree etCMt.ur book 'WOMAN'S 6vN MtDiwAL ADVISER"! Itu exi.ifcneorr iitusireUons show ing why wosueo auOer, and bow they eas easily cure tbeaitelvea at boms. Every won.a saould have It, and leant to think tar barest!. Then when tbe doctor aaya "Yoa must have aa opera tlon,' yes eaa decide for yoaraaif. Thousands of women bare cured tfiaseelTee with ajy tome reauedy. It cures all. eld er yaweg. To Mothers of bsitf biers, I will espials a aluipie hooe treatment whk:t speedily and efleotually cures Leucorrboee, Green Blckness and Painful or Irrsjulsf afacstraattoa ln Young ladles Plumpaass aod health alwaya result from ita use. Waerever yoa Uve. 1 can reler yua to ladles ol your own kooality who knew and wUi giadly tall any suHorer tbat this tWaaa Traatasset raaliy cars all womsb'a diseases, and was as wouaa. wall, strong, plump and roMisfc. Juat s a ana yeur aMrM, and the free sea Cars' treataasut 14 yours, also the kHk. Write today, aa yutt suay but eea uue otter eseta, Adams Una. M. SUMMER, Bos 414 r a.-. NoU- Dam, ladU.4UA1 Discounts From W to 50 Discounts From 10 to 50 bust line. This, of course, Is directly the middle of the collar. The collar, cut very high at the sides and back and eloping downward ln front, has n ileslgn with which Ihu Mn.1an Mtrv n.la a New vases, of Tlvoll art glass made of glass of prismatic oolors are more than usually showy. The decorative patterns are produced when the glass is blown, and la done by layer work and the clever use of acids. Some come ln antique effects, while others are bright with Iridescent hues, and still others give the idea of a porcelain body, although they are entirely of glass, ln shapes ti.ey range from the usual ones to those that are ecoentiio and of the school ot art nouveau. Even the celery tray has become elevated in its notions, and Instead of standing per fectly tlat on tho table, as heretofore, It has taken on the fashionable standard, and Is now raised on a base six and a half inches high. It certainly looks odd to sea the familiar, very flat, long, narrow celery tray extending on each side of a tall, high, foblet-llke baae. Another very recent of urlng In popular-priced cut glass is a flower vase of the Dolly Vardcn shape, nine Inches In height and the same width from flare to flare. It Is mounted on a live Inch base. A French Idea in furnishing a nursery Is to hang the whIIs with embroidered linen, so arranged that It may be readily taken down and washed, after which it may ho hung again. It is an attractive, cleanly Idea, but It would aeem to Involve almost as much labor as a fresh coat of paint or a new wall paper. Altogether one rather feels that If sanitary methods are to be carried to such an extreme painted walls, which could lie washed down at Intervals with very little trouble, would be found moro practicable for most houses. Lrfice blouses for the moment seemed to have taken a very remote place in the sum mer wardrobe at the beginning of the sea son, when the craze of the lingerie blnuwe gave slight opportunity to any other kinds to be heard. But the lace blouse haa tta place, nevertheless, which cannot entirely be filled by the blouse of lingerie, no mat ter how elaborate and dainty. The lace blouse has a fitted lining ot silk and it is bound to be a mure dressy garment than the lingerie blouse. The French shops are now showing manv elegant lace bodliea suitable for wear with silk net or fine cloth skirts. Religious Notes The French government this year refuses the usual reduction allowed to bodies of sick Dilgrlms traveling to Lourdes. Rev. William Charles Hengen has re signed his charge at Trinity etiurch, Wheaton, 111., and accepted a tail ta Trinity parish, Ottumwa, la. Most Rev. Archbishop Ryan has person- a Catholic probation officer attached tu the Juvenile court of Philadelphia. The active fourth department of Cuyle avenue chnpter of the Kpworth league of thla city has reserved one even Inn each month fur the next year for a literary and social evening. Rev. O. C. Poland. D. D of Bt. Taiil'S Methodist Episcopal church, Nlag.tra Kalis, a graduate of Boston university, has been elected vice principal of Oeiiesee Wes leyin seminary. Lima, N. Y. Rev. W. P. Merrill, D. D., haa gone with his famtlv for a summer outing to Made line island, Lake Buperlor. He will resume his pulpit In the Sixth Presbyterian church ot thla city on fcuuday, August 28. free se Vee aae Ivery Sleter Suffering) A from W emu's Aliments. I am a woman. Jkoow woman's suffering, hare found tbe cues. " 4 wUi mall, tree of any eharga, BT burnt toesM eat wiia full tnstruetloas to atiy suOorer rroavt wooieo's allnjcoia. I want to tell all woiwia about thla curs you. my reader, for yourseit roof daughter, your mother, or your eiater. 1 want te teil you how to curs yourselves at some wltbovs , tbe help ot a doctor. Men ceanet understand Wem eu'e sunerloxa Wbat we wooden koowfrefiexa Barlenc,wekoow better than any doctor. I knew that ur home treatment Is a eaieecd sure eure Iu LsuoerrbsMorVtbltuaaiKbargsajlllcafsUM.uls piecemeal or fslllog 01 lutwtsit, freloae, seaaty or Vainltl Pei-toes, Utrrlae or y vartoa 1 aqiera or Qrewtbsi alto pains la ths head, back and w Is, bearing gewa lasilngs, eerveutasM, creeping foci trv dd ths srlns. melancholy, owlrs te err. bet flash, weariness, kldaey and bladder trewMc bsre caused ky waaaasMss peculiar to our aea. II want to seed you a compute Ua deya' treataaaot aatlrsly tree to prove to you that yea eaa care youraolf at home, easily, quickly and ure!y, hemember. that It will cast yea aeihlae to slv tbe you suflur if you wish, and I will send yos the