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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1906)
THE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 14, 1006. 6 For and About the Women Folks 123 Trait f Anrrlni Wanti. V TIT A lafnat on the nwu- T 1 llarltie of American omi,( W. "What woman was In her su periority to all men th American woman waa In hf uiirlorlty to all other woman, Bh had beauty. ah had mind, tha had manner, aha had money, th moil in ' tha world, and without doubt ah had tha IWMtMt vole in th world, aa ah had ofun rlnoed In operatic long, but ah i had not always thought how to us It In 'liar dally speech. i "Fcr this reason alon ah anmetlmea ) apok through hr noM, th twanged, aha ( whiffled, ah snuffed, eh whined, sht whined th brilliant things which sh waa always Inconteatably saying. Th catbird, which could outdo all th other songsters of tha grove when aba would, and repro ' duo their oharacterlstlo note with an art : beyond their nature, sounded the oat from whloh sh took her nam when sh uttered herself In th careless Mil of the Intimate life, or of th unguarded moments when ah was not addressing th public "It ha ben mid that American prim Joan, who spoke Italian aa divinely as Dante or Petrarch wrote It, spoke English M If they war rclUng th 'Blgelew Pa pers.' The American woman became the i Jest of clumsy English caricaturists, who ' sought to shadow forth In our Ineffective orthography thosa delicate nuance of the nasal accent, and when ah exceptionally ' uttered hereelf as clearly and purely In her 1 natlv tongue aa ' sh did IA any foreign peach, sh waa apt to be told that on , would never hav taken her for aa Amerl- marher, who is an expert In foreign ex- before" Justic of th peace, who held ration, and opportunities for becoming change and who writes many of the let- them for trial. good wives and mother hav been loet In ters on exchange for th firm. Sh com- Th woman who caused all th troubl th progress of women In business. A girl mands a good salary. for th would-b "spongers" was Mr, that ha th ability to succeed In business On of th difficult positions In a Urge Elisabeth Heine, who had been comml- ran leaiti to b a food housekeeper, but commission house Is thst of cashier. Yet aloned special polio officer and provided ah ha not th tlm for both. Moreover, a woman held this position In on of th with a star and a club. sh who has been used to th bustle of biggest houses in the street for a long Mrs. lieln took her post Inside th fair business seldom likes th exsotions and time. A. A. Houseman A Co. had Miss grounds long before th hour for opening confinement of housekeeping. It sh I Jennie Pierce In that capacity for years, this morning. She had not been on duty married and ha a horn sh will be apt and sh only left th house recently to long bofor sh spied a foot extend cau- to fall back upon th nearest delicatessen go with another one at an Increased sal- ttously over th top of the board fence. ahop that save so much trouble, but It ary. Her salary was In th neighborhood waited an Instant and saw a limb and a a mixed blessing to b abl to buy vry of $10,000. ,r toIIow- A rnn dropped lightly to th article of fobd so conveniently. Home- Ther Is on woman who occupies a ground and looked around. mad food tr best for th health. School unlqu position In Wall stret and sh Is H 0' b"t fiance at th Insld of to pr,par atlrts) for th dutle of hous- Mrs. Kngnnla A. Qaylord. Mrs. Oaylord tn lnclosur when firm hand was Isld keeping; and for motherhood ar talked of. Is probably th only woman bond broker uoon hl houldr. ' Tn.y may soon become a necessity. Of In the country, Just as Mis dlles Is th "Tou r vnitr arrest, sir,' exclaimed a (,ourB nothlng can tak th plac of th only woman cotton statistician. Bh I 'mlnln volc. and the unlucky Individual rood QA Wliy of n0rn instruction, where a hustler and knows the valu of bonds looked Into a pair of piercing black eyes. ir,i actllaUy grfw lnto way of a perfect a well a. any man, and. what Is mors Pf,0'" hu ,IIht'y b! !l Ther. sr. ttlll such horn., to th point, sh know how to plac th.lr briht ,tar Mterln on the brat of his but tn 9tLttA ,n other work, value In a pleasing light to the purchaser, c.p!? . , . ... . . and they will need quick and expert prepa- Th result Is that sh sells many bonds oh a" not rtoed. and he Ml4B for th. CRrM) of th nou..hold from """" lo thoee who Will be able to give It If th so, you aon (! exciaimea in woman and makes a large Incomo from her com missions. ntinnia nf ttnuaehnM arlence really ma ' . , , a sh gave th prisoner quick jrk that ., 8h I very religious, and all ovr th .,,.-" K,. . , ' ..,, terlallae. ar arrtd, and X guess you'll com right ' tl, , w York. aiong witn m, so tner. bow. Tnty wr- WMtln ft fw Idle moment T,tt" " " y t th women' Dcpendenc league in m man was dragged to th office of th as- r-,t.. . walls of her ofDc are hung Biblical quo tations, with a few religious dont's also. Sh ha the confidence of many bond houses, and In this way many a good commission Is placed in her hands. Probably th highest paid woman em ployed in any house In th financial dis trict I Mis Carolina Van Brunt. Miss soclation, where he made arrangement for his trial tomorrow. Fifteen other person suffered similar fate during th day, and whta th fair Van Brunt I th cashier of S. H. P. Pell op,n, Vlila lt lg not ,lk.,y th, any wl "A a womanly womsn, with womanish ways, I want to propos Mrs. Pahlgrcn for our next president," said Mrs. Peter F. Rhlnelander. womanly woman with 'can woman. , "Now it is said that all this Is to be changed, and no admirer of Amerloan ; womanhood can feel that It Is too loon. It 1 said, but with how much truth on ' cannot avouch, that a movement 1 to b made for reform along the whole line by those supreme agencies of civilization the women' club and that hereafter any woman who rends a paper hrough her ' nose will b expelled from her own club, and rendered Ineligible for any other club In th whole federation. ' "This Is a matter where, as In most other matters, th vice must be recognised and extirpated In early Infancy. Perhaps a mothers' convention, specialised to the of flo by th confederated woman's clubs, would be the body best able to deal strenu ously and finally with It. ! "We are supposed here to be speaklntr of ; American women, and we do not spesk ff American men only because nothing good Is to be expected of them until their mothers and wives reform. Hirt who has not known Harvard men, Tale men, Colum bia men. Cornell men, who twanged and whiffled and snuffed and whined and whinnied along with the falrent and dear est of our women? Ther are worse, If anything, and they are unlike our women In having other faults than those of enun ciation. "The reform which we understand Is about to be pres' hed must begin at home, and th child at Its mother's kneos must not h suffered even to sny Its evening prayer through Its nose. The child must bo fallowed vigilantly from Its uprising to its downlylnp. and must not he sparM In a single Insfanco the correction which It has Incurred." Women laPwnil Street. On that great battlefield known as th Wall street district there are women who match tholr brains against the brains of men, and" who now and then win, says the New Tork World. . In that district there are -thousands of stenographers of the weaker sex; also clerks, messengecra and even private sec retaries who wear skirts. These young women rarely come Into the limelight, and are contented to fight a good fight, to tak the losses with the victories, and. If beaten, to turn and fight again, noping for a-victory next tlm. A few of these brainy, young women have been forced Into public notice, and While there hav acquitted themselves well. It will be remembered that the private secretary of H. H. Rogers Kath arine L. Harrison by . her shrewdness kept tho secrets of her emplooyer when th lawyers of the state of Missouri tried to wrest them from her. No man can see Mr. Rogers without first seeing Miss Harrison, and this little woman gets 110,000 a year f.r guarding the secrets that many a man In Wall treet would give ten times that amount to know. With E. H. Dutton & Co. Is probably one of the highest paid women In the treet. This Is Miss Mae K. Giles, tho cotton expert. Her figures' are watched for with the same eagerness ns those of the L'nlted States Department of Agri culture. She has been nearer right than almost any other expert. If the figures over a period of years are taken. She la wonderful statistician, and not only does she put the figures together, but she gathers the figures through 10.000 cor respondents scattered throughout the cot ton belt. With H. Knickerbocker A Co., members of th New York Stock exchange, Is Mrs. " Helen M. Knickerbocker in a confidential capacity. She doas as much business as any man in th street,' and handles it In a manner that no one would know It was a woman ha was dealing with If business were carried on by letter. Foreign exchange Is pn of the things Of th street that few men really under stand. It Is a r refit In Importing gold, tn buying and selling bills of exchanz, and many mun of the street do hot even Bttempt to understand It. With C Schu macher A Co. Is Mrs. Suianne II. Schu- "JUDGING FURS" A New Book on an Old Subject, Road with Interest and Easy to Get ' The country : doctor probably make I better combination of common horse sens mixed with scientific knowledge than any ordinary man. At any rate his example may well be followed touching the u&e of furs for health. The successful country doctor wear furs generally he owns a fur overcoat (or a (ur-lincd coat) and he wear it, too. In th northern climat a fur garment Is a health necessity . People get along without furs at they get along without many things, but a man t wardrobe is not complete with- - out a fur coat, and, with th other tide of the house bo argument is necessary every woman need furs sh needs them foi health; , she ought to hav them for comfort and sh wants them for their beauty and style. . (Nothing adds so much to th effectiveness of idrets a furs. A pew book, nicely illustrated and easily tead in a half-hour written from th view 'point of the purchaser and wearer of fur - 'rather than that of the dealer or manufacturer, ' jis Just from the press, published by Lanpher, 'Skinner 6c Co., th St. Paul fur manufact urers, whose product ii on tr: in the leading ' - Tctall store of every town in th Northwest , and sold from Main to Oregon. Thit book u called "Judging Furs." rjlt any of our readers have any interest, in fun, cither for themselves or at presents to . Iriends men, women or children this book it worth asking for which it all it costs. 'A mention of this paper will be appreciated. (Writ to Lanpher, Skinner 6c Co., St. Paul, and they will tend you th booklet and the 'barn of th nearest retail dealer who tells Lanpher Tuzt.'lr0 ' ' v a r .nr......t..f niinM....r H-o n n my m -who la th womnly woman with Co., and draw, a .alary of I1J.00O a year, try t0 ,aln ntrano oept through th wom4nih way. rouwl, or Mr. Dahl- " gat whr th quarter ar colleoted. ..v. r t.mtrok Wood al- L'alost Formed by Widow. 4 . rnT aakd Mr. Pmbrok Hooa. ai- Seventeen Chicago widow ar to b Wornea ravadAiiotbr Field. wUh n t0 correctness of - homeless and eompanlonles no mor. That A nw field for th trained nurse has bn P",tm- K they will not be If th Widows' aseocla- recently opened up and a way for her n- 1 ,,op w u not nc'"RrJr rof ms Uon. Incorporated under the law of Illinois, trano therein pointed out by on of th ut th4t 1 m t0 m"c.n b 10 sucoeodn In Its purpose of erecting a perm- prnfesstrin. Th pioneer In this Instance Is aneht home In which they may abide In Mrs. Jennie Morgan Walters, who has en pear and. comfort. tered the rank of women embalmers. Mrs. The project, which the slate hss sane- Waiters was formerly superintendent of th tloncd, contemplates tha erection of a Williamsburg hospital. Sh I a graduat refer to myself In so glowing terms. "Oh, very well. It Is Mr. Dahlgren. She Is th perfect one." "Th mnt exqulslt creature In petti coats I Why. my dears, she even washes a iviiiu, vwiitviii J s in ma vrt w hum w a rm i in t iiiitiim i iiusii iaa diiv aar av sji ntiittw . . fo a i ( building which will give the bereaved ones of the nurses' training choo! of Memorial witn perrumea op. well gT Hotel. Th woman ouvnlr fiend would be In clover were she permitted to register at a the outset It Is announoed by tha Inter left the rank of trained nurse to go Into gwel, ncw stag hotet wncn wm open In n that the organisation Is to be ex- a profession that heretofore ha not' ben jtw York City In th course of a lew a plac to live, accommodation for their hospital and was for a tlm supervisor children and a market for th product of ther. their Industry. In answer to th question as to why she At Ocea elusive In Its nature. It will have no plar entered very largely by women, Mr. Walt for divorcee or other Interlopers who can rs said: not furnish credentials. Only those whr "I have felt for a long time that ther husbands have died will be allowed to en- was an opportunity for the trained nurs ter the palo of membership and their con- In tha rank of embalmer and my expert nectlon with the project will continue only ence has shown me how much they are ap- toilet soap, and, listen, a curling poker for o long no they can maintain this record. predated In this new role. Th trained the mustach. The guests, on registering. Widow Amelia Tenney, ii8 I. Sntle ave- nurse Is, as a rule, a well educated and wm be required to leave a small deposit nue. Is the head of the undertaking and refined young woman, and her training fit f0r the return of the goods, save the Blip president of the organisation. Widow her without much extra preparation for th pers, which ar given aa souvenir. Kmma Field, 1W1 North Kedtle avenue. Is examination she Is required to take In or- the vice president ; Widow Emma Wasser- der to become a licensed embalmer. It I gard, 1225 Wabanaia aventie. Is the oecre-' a calling suitable for women, though not weeks. The Hermltag on Forty-second street, hear Broadway, will provide each of its transient guests with a night robe, a pair of ' slippers, an Individual box of tooth powder, hair brush, comb and fine tary and Widow J. Morris, 1153 North ave- one which many women would choose. My popularity. Leaves from Fashion Notebook. Fringes are once mora making a bid for The cashmere weave have com out this nue. Is the treasurer. The chaplain is work Is confined entirely to embalming Widow Emma Kerr. 3540 Paulina street, women and children. I expect to lecture winter In so many new rorms anfl so many Among the others who have enlisted ar on this subject before nurse- training Sses thJw !'s nothing ! muclTprettlcr ThaS Widow Prlle Cain. 3550 South Hamilton classes In two or three of Brooklyn' hos- they are. street; Widow Maria Gilbert. Thirty-sec- pitals and I hope to Induce other trained Mousquetalre glove are popular, even ond place; Widow Mary nalan 1902 nurses to Join m. and beoom. embaJmers." lg Milwaukee avenue; Widow Nellie Plerc 6TTt' Drexel aventie; Widow rather are worn with pale-colored gowns. which, bHng distinctively evening gowns. .re naturally made with short sleeves. , . - wvn ui- MAH - . uecoifeue gowns nre in Deuvr iavor lur work of embalming, so hire men for thla a orU of "u,el- n(1 the rturn o( tho gown cut ever so slightly low Just ons Brooklyn has a number of women under Margaret takers, many of whom are licensed embalm Crok, Oak Park, and Widow France Melt, ers. but they do not care to do the actual are naturally made with short sleeves 21 Hart street. Promoters of the enterprise assert that It task l. n-,v..t frnm Vilr Intontlnna tn lirff Mri PVnnrln A. ftlniuev la tnnlhaF vnman remove from th CollarlesS gown Of lat or encourage matrimony. They have made embalmer. In fact, Mrs. Olassey was the giVT wTuTjoy""'" th" ' " ti e entrance fee fl In order that all may first Brooklyn woman who after the organ- only a few white winter wraps ar used join, and they expect that the benefits will lsatlon of th State Board of Embalmer, for very young girls, unless they are nf a be mutual. But the social side of the situ- received a license. Mrs. Glassey waa an un- material that will stand repeated clean- .... , , tngs. Ana even tnen there I not nearly stlon will not be overlooked, especially at dertaker for three years before sh became th ervlee In a whit wrap, with It un- tlils juncture, when 'money Is needed to an embalmer. In her threa year' expert- mlstakable air of evening festivities, as csrry out the plans. ence she say that she realised that women ther ,B ,n one " aolor- . h.. m thi. rnf.inn .n .h. h ' ?"? girl who can war thin thing , -- ---- witn impunity in tn dead or winter th received the same appreciation of her labor prettiest thing sh can don. is nil-white, duc mere are nunareas ir variations oi mai same all-white from t.io sterntyped dress of sheer lawn and Valenciennes lace to a clever little dress evolved from yard and i.iu'i.ni-11 A Woman Cashier tn Bank. All the bank cashiers of th United Btats a. Mrg- Walters. ar not men. The exception to this almost Another woman who volcea the same en unlversal rule i found In Joplln, Mo., tlment ,j0 Mr. oiassev and Mr. Walt. where M V. F. t-hurcn, as caenier or , Mrg R Berwln, who ha been tn thl yards of wide embroidery edging. the Bank of Jonlln. with a number of women assistants, has carr!ed on th busl nem of the bank successfully for a number ou, undertakers. of years. Aside from the president. T. w. work for nine years. Mr. Berwln 1 a resi dent of Brooklyn and Is employed by vari- Blua and brown and red are tha three color upon which the changes are rung, th prettiest of th brown tones really no mor tnan macule color deepened a uuk. Mrs. Margaret O'Connor h probably th Among the red shadM have come the pretty . . , , . ... dahlias and wine shades over which Paris Is so enthusiastic. But a good strong red Is the shad ottenest used. As lor blue. Cunningham, formerly mayor of Joplln, and flrgt womftn Brooklyn who entered thl the Vlco president. Phil Arnold, no men n-nf-.-inn. aha took the munlnatlnn ahntit have been employed In the bank for al- ten year ago and since that tlm has been ol1 blu and navy blue have lt between liieui. A thousand new tints ar about a tiew frreen, "eplnard" (spinach) they call it over he seas; castor (a dozen new shades of It); marine a blue with more blue In lt Bos of Her Husband. most a score of years, and yet It Is known vefy BU0CetgfUi. a one or the mosi sunsianum inuuiuiiuna in Missouri. ... . . - i , 1 t, Mm. ,t The BtOCKnoiaers OI HIO ueiiik i ' ' 1 J u- , . . , , v hi, iiibi.nc 1 uiuvt Willi 1 1 iu i n uiue ill 11 ' " " th .om. -mDioves of their Boton na8 one won,,n who ls ally her ,h h a , , conspicuously mlt that to the v.omen oye or their hu.Dttnd., g, ( by vrtue 'of that mygteriouli beauty Institution they owe mucn or us succem, The young a(ly lg Mrg- raior Carliele enhancing weave; chasseur, a new strongly and si Its growth calls for a greater num- , , ,h ..,.,., ,..,- soft blue It's Impossible to describe thcnil w e .nlnvr. women are conKantly '."IV: w . Jl But everything Is softened and "sombred" ... . - ,. VL irita imuui; auiiuui ui liiv cii kiiu ino added to Its executive staff. Into a beauty far more alluring than the charming wife of Principal Fred H. Ripley brash tones of yester-year. Chlfron and chifronllke clothes of past seasons lend themselves well to these new trimmings. They are found in all the new evening as well as afternoon shades, ttlnc Seventeen years ago Mrs. Church entered , h Tvnrfitn aehr.nl f WnaiinHni th e-mploy of Mr. Cunningham as house- Mrg Rlpley araws about $85 a week of keeoer. She then became teller, and for a th tr.-h-a wn.lth. ahnnt tiun mnr time occupied both positions. Finally her Rnnum than Is charged by the man who bands of satin or of velvet to match th ciotn nnisn most or ine new sKirrs, weigni ing them Into graceful folds, as well as acting as a substantial hem. The most striking idea shows a single band nine inches deep, although two bands are also used, a lower one of four inches, supple mented by a second a few Inches above, that measure an Inch less. For evening, th new color Is "peach pink" more like the palest orange a deli cate though rich shade that Is a boon to brunettes. The latter are also lucky in tha reappearance of coral as on of the Ben- She resides with her husband at 1247 son s most fashionable shades. For blondes mere urti pum anu uiue, bimi j nnu lui- lectiveiy. in eitner case u tor ineyy ia good work was rewarded with the pro- nag recentIy become her "hubby." motion to the canier s pest, one oara Al agg)gtant superintendent 1 virtually so fnrMnated with the work that after her a iuprvLor and Mrs. Ripley Is In reality marr!are to Mr. Church she declined to her nugband' superior and could "flr" resign her position with the bank for th nim In a minute If sh saw fit. attractions offered her In home life. Sh yirg- Ripley is a young woman of pleas- and her husband now live at the Keystone ng. personality and Is spoken of by her hotel, where she Is relieved of the distaste- admirer a one of th most brilliant ful dutle of housekeeping. women of th Bay state. She has been In tst year Mrs. Church represented th many venture In the business world. Bank of Joplln at the annual seesion or the American Bankers' association In Commonwealth avenue, Washington, and was conspicuous as the If Mrs. Ripley taught school Instead of generously touched with a fin shade of only woman representative. Sh wa being a supervisor she would be Ineligible, soft Roman gold. In the form of embroid- ' -w A .h. mnff1,IHnn of her anrrlln. tn th. r..l.a ffh. .hJ 'fY or CODWeDIlK lace. ltn, ui pai? ruunuiy - blue may at last appear in arunciai ngni rmort. when It was made known that th mtttee, to marry, but sh escapes the non- bank with a capital stock of M.0W had a .alty by being out of the "schoolma'am" iurplus which was at that time exactly class and I $4,500 a year richer thereby, fifty times as great. Thl surplus now. "T" . however, lu fifty-four -times as great, D.e.d.n.. of H...k,,fl., , "Fifty years ago." say th Chicago Woman Tor Get Bnsy. ' Journal, "a knowledge of housekeeping Sixteen men came to grief it Kewanee, wa handed down from mother to daugh without that cold Insignificance to which their favorite color so often sink. j What Women Ar Doing. Mrs. Roosevelt announces that her daughter, Kthel, will not make her debut until she ls 20, while Mrs. Ut-orge J. Gould says thaat her daughter, Marjorla, now 18, must wait a year, and Mis Gladys Vanderbllt and Miss Dorothy f.yette fit, grounds to avoid paying the cared for. But. nowaday, girl, who would i."" u n&tU llLTr 1 th5Up,.ror; price of admission. have stayed at horn and learned to keep they 'entered society. And what made their grief all the mor house hav been attracted to the business V Frauleln N'lerlgen, who ls employed aa a bitter wns tSiat they were taken In charge world, whose dutle leav them no tlm policewoman by Norway, ls on duty on by an Amaton police woman, who. despite for household care. Ther hav. been "ft rcuTtural' V," thel$ depperate struggles, marched them gain and lose In thi shifting of occu- ment station, a drill ground and a quarry. How Artists Use Lines in Pen and Ink (Copyrighted, 1908, Herbert Kaufman.) I I Th Bee today present a prob a. I lem mn lntri,ntii than anv at those which have preceded It. That it was the Intention of the artist eu a. uuse discussion as to his meaning ther can be no doubt, for he gave hi picture no name, lt I susceptible of several in terpretations. The Bee suggests a few of them and would be glad to have Its' readers express their opinions as to which of thtmo tiny favor. It has been remarked before In thla series of articles that It I a simple and easy matter for an artist to draw a single figure, or a prcture the mean ing of which Is obvious, but that to make a f t w lines of th pen present a pictorial problem, especially a problem of the f.eart, i a work that taxes the power of th greatest artist. . In this connection It I worth th stu dent's while to compare the two side of the picture; on the right 1 a wealthy girl, sitting In a drawing room of which every detail tills Its tale of luxury. There I a grand piano, a richly carved mantelpiece, family portraits, flower:), a brons stat uette, a Chippt-ndale chair, a dainty table with book and flowers. On th left la a hall bedroom, Uss than six feet wide, with th cheapest kind of a bureau and a com mon chair as 1U sole furniture. . Th young man must be poor to occupy such a room; but he must bs aocustomed to good society, for he has th face of a gentle man and t dreased tn th conventional evening costume. The big book upon th bureau suggest that he may be a law stu dent or a struggling young doctor. And all that aeparates thsm ls eighteen Inchea of bricks and mortar) The student should obscrv th excel lence of the perspective, th vanishing point 1 .mi a level with th top of th two heads and in th center of th wall, and to It vanish th edge of the bureau, th molding of th wall, the shelf of th mantel and th front of th piano. A studei.t cannot be too careful about bis perrpectlve, for a slight error will ruin an otherwise good drawing. The safest way Is to sketch th object In pencil and to correct their perspective by ruling pencil line before drawing In Ink. And now for the problem. Do th young people know each other? Why are they sitting in atttitudea of dejection, so near to each other and yet so far away? Is the wall mere brick and mortar or is It sym bolic? If so, of what? A man standing beside th writer says the young people are lovers, hav been out to a theater or party, quarrelled, parted and are now sit ting consumed by regreta Another man says sh ls waiting for hrm to call and he Is worrying because his poverty doe not permit him to ask her to b bis wife. The writer I Inclined to take the view that they' do not know each other, ar even Ignorant of each other's existence, thougn living In adjoining houses, and that he Is In hi lonely boarding house hall room, I Ittlng dreaming and longing to hav om such girl aa sh to call upon, while sh. In her splendor, 1 also lonely and sitting dreaming of th manly young fallow ah would Ilk to com a-woolng whll all th time, did they but know It, their Ideal ar lea than two feet away, hidden only by a "party wall," through which a sort of telepathlo current perhaps Induce their mutual dreams. Another suggestion la that th "party wall" 1 symbollo of th riches that keep th man from making th girl hi own. Each on of th sug gestion ha much to be said In Its favor. In th article last week th student waa warned against filling his picture with ex traneous detail. In order not to detract from th main figures. Thla plctur la an Illustration of th valu of minor details when usd Intelligently, for, observe that th whole perplexing problem of thl pic ture hangs upon thes details. Th carv ings on tb mantelplec, th revolutionary ancestor upon th wall, th fluffy chiffon In which th girl la dressed, th dainty statuette upon th piano and all th other accessories ar what express to th ob server' mind th idea of the luxury wltb which the girl I surrounded, whll th very bareness of the man's room, th hard squareness of th bureau, all Indicated by flat masse of straight Unas, tail of th poverty of th youth. The details. In this Instance, do not detract from th principal figure; they explain thtm and at the same time emphasise the problem that so many people will discus when thsy get their Be this niornlna Re Sal Greater Values Than Ever Before Offered at Our OlOVSiJ To force the selling we are offering even greater price inducements than wo havo ever before made realizing that the time is short when we shall occupy our NEW STORE we are prepared to make still greater sacrifices so as to be able to open with an entire NEW STOCK. Every day from now on as the stocks get lower and lower and more lines aro broken they will be offered at but a fraction of their real value. LACE CURTAINS We herewith quote prices of ft few of the good values represented in our drapery de partment, which consist of the odd lots of lace curtains, some of which are mussed and slightly soiled, having been shown as samples. These prices are only a criterion of the many bargains throughout the store. x $10.00 Brussels Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair $5.00 $12.00 Brussels Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair 6.00 $15.00 Brussels Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair 7.50 $18.00 Brussels Laca Curtains, removal sale price, per pair ............ 9.50 $27.50 Brussels Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair 13.50 $35.00 Brussels Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair ..20.00 $8.75 Battenburg Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair .. 4.25 $50.00 Battenburg Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair ....... .20.00 $16.00 Arabian Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair 8.00 $4.25 Cluny Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair 2.10 $10.00 Cluny Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair 5.50 $25.00 Cluny Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair ...12.50 $7.50 Irish Point Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair 3.50 $5.00 Irish Point Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair...- 2.50 $6.00 Irish Point Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair 3.00 Our Store Is Full of Such Bargains As These Ingrain samples, 36x36 inches, bound on each end, making good serviceable rugs, f removal sale price, each .. aCae 50c Hassocks, made from Brussels and Velvet carpets, removal sale price, each -"JC Hundreds of traveling men's samples of Axminster, Velvet and Brussels, li to V2 yards long, bound or fringed, make nice rugs and are worth from $1.00 to C $2.25, removal sale price O JC Short lengths of Inlaid Linoleum, worth up to $1.75 per square yard, removal salo C price, per square yard ,.0JC Best quality Oil Cloth, 1 and 1V yard widths, worth per square yard up to 50c, OMp removal sale price ......M..M.."2w Miller, Stewart & Beaton 1315-17-19 Farnam Street. Chases Hit The Possessor of Superior Energy and Unlimited Capacity for Hard Work Old Dutch Cleanser , Tak the hard work out of kpln things clean. For til klnda of cleaning; where you use water and a cloth or brush, lt ls the only right and proper thing to use, requiring less help from you, and giving far superior results to any of the old fashioned cleaners. lUc Bold In large sifting top cans at all grocers Bent FREE on request, the helpful little booklet, for Housewives." THE CCDAirr PACKING CO., O. D. O. Dept, South Omaha, Neb. Hint It I her business to sea after the rovern ment property, and keep excursionists In order. She ls reported to maintain perfect order ana meet an requirements. Miss Ida Pi mo ft, attorney and counselor at law, is tn nrst woman lawyer to de fend a prisoner In the Brooklyn courts, Kha made her first appearance last week, her client belns a man accused of fraud in pretending: that he could recover a stolen horse. Evidence waa strongly against the accused, but Miss Pi muff by clever cross-examination so tanKled up the plaintiff that the court ordered ac quittal. , It is said that the First Methodist church of Albion, Mich., Is to be equipped with mirrors, so that women attending service can see for themselves whether or not their hats are on straight. This is said to ba a response to the objections brought forward by some women who were requested to take off their hats on entering the church, but replied that they could not put them on straight when they left th church, without glasses' to look in wneretore the mirrors. The queen of mountaineers, Mrs. Bullock Workman, has added one more thrilling experience to her record of adventure by accompanying her husband on his great climb of 21,000 feet in Kashmir. Mrs. Workman ha several times climbed over 21,000 feet higher than any other woman in th world. Th rarefied air at these great height ha considerable effect on her. Sh finds It distressing to sleep at night beyond an altitude of 18,000 feet. Th diminished pressure shortens her breathing and she experiences severa headaches. But, curiously enough, tha headache leave her after 21,000 feet. The most famous expert in deciphering addresses in the dead letter otlice in Washington ls Mrs. Patty Lyle Collins. Her services ar counted so valuable that sh has twice been sent to Europe for rest and recreation that her health might be maintained. She has held her post for twenty-five years; in her division she has thirty-two under clerks. Her mlnJ has been so trained for her work that though shelves are filled with city direc tories sh knows the names of a great proportion of the streets In the leading cities, so that sh ls often able at a glance to substitute the right one on a mis directed letter. She Is a fine linguist, as of course she must be. Tha amount of money that reaches the dead letter office very year ls astonishing. In one month this year tha dead letter office took charge Of 4046 drafts and money orders and 28. 000 postage stamps found in dead letters, and ther were , 04 letters containing cash, th aggregate being 6.3S 9. In all 7(1,100 letters were received at the department during the period. 'VISITING Our Wedding Goods are the recognized standard, the engraving being done by skilled craftsmen. Insur ing perfect satisfaction and the latest aud most fashionable sizes. On request samples will be sent by mall and orders executed Just as satisfactory as If ordered In person. A. I. Root. Incorporated 1210 Howard Street Omaha. Nebraska A 8kln of Beauty Joy rorever. R, T. Fella Osursud's Oriental Cream or Magioal Beeutlfler. Km, was Tu n . . W STm. am. fr.ttiai, Mas P.icket, few attx4 lit twl I 67 yttri, tn 4 la so hartult-M w teUtH tnbesurett It rt;ri ttiJ Accept nooouiUef It It K .UiUJ iwf. Dr. L. A, 6rr Mid U I Uif of tb kut ton pLeco a you Udia WU U4 tilt-to I ricuDiiittl 0araM.ta Tmbm u tht Wart ktrnrul f U tU km brtrmiuMit." t -r ! t7 til dnijuiat ud r -vac? Oocxia Jt.wra la tha Uil 6ive. Cuiut tit urf L21T.H3PUIS, Prcf, 37 Giut im Strtat l-sTut IHlSSglSILK mtMPM SR9BSB Tkaw nua and tnaatiral Silk. t .... t-..ln i. ... suun en biuomiu iraa to ruu paittn awt choicest eullrriiuu of twUliaat wlon taea togMhat, )um write on s h&1 caid or wtir mown oa mm born, with juor una and a.'".M wniu-n plainly aiul .D4lllolU.S-IfcKI.lNO CO., Dlllt let. 14tt, Millord. onl., au4 joa will ranalT. bj mura Bull four Lucky lllrlll Nlont with a. abort uraraadiDS Abeulntrly treaauS a Burprlaa l'u kttfc tlm will al.ow 7o ow eaatli fou aaa MS BUk fcamnaim wiiuout aaaeuat to yoa.