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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1906)
0 THE OMAIIA BUND AY BEE: OCTOBER 21, 1906. TnE WAY TO BE EVER YOUNG industry Seeded to Ward Off the Ein. cf Cld Are. flPS FOB PEOPLE LONG ON YEARS Hair Shoal Ba Ventilate ta Give It Life Rrlathtcnlaa; the Eyee an Clearing the Mela Otner Pointers. "fit whisper to you how I keep mjr rood Mid an actress. "I am 43 and I j"rn wnlsr i'-ks," SHld u for 28. v'-When I 11 first went on the stage I looked my full ae, which was 20. At SO I looked 0 and at 38 I looked 35. Then I woka up, and from that time on I have been steadily "Ulna; younger and younger. "People tell me that I look more youth ful now than I did ten years ago, and I believe It myself. Why should I not? "Letting yourself grow old Is a habit If you fall Into It you will And It hard to get yourself out of It. ,1 had the habit nnd I know. "The drat of alt old ago faults Is that of laslnees. Laalnesa Is the friend of old age. Actresses who grow old are laiy. They have not the spirit nor the Industry to remain young. "I went at tha matter with a great deal of courage. ' I hnd grown a little bit too heavy,' and my skin was a little hit yellow and my hair line was getting queer. I had begun to be an old woman. "Tha hair l!r.e. I will remark, Is that curitus line wb. ch 'a drawn as the bounla-y of youth and old age. It la the line which tha hair take around the face. It Is ever so pretty In a young woman, but an old woman very quickly losw It, "My hair lino was mostly gone. There were great hollows at my temples, and back of my ears tha huir had begun to get thin. "Being an act reus. I knew that I must keep pretty If I wanted to continue to act Bo I took lessons In getting back my youth As I studied I found that other actressca were doing the same. "The beauty parlors are filled with three classes of people. There are actresses, society women and business women. All three realise that they must be charming It they are going to keep up. "This is specially true of the actress Next oomea the business woman, and then the society woman. "I went from the footlights one night to the beauty parlor of a professional. She charges $60 for a night visit. Peril at Carelessaess. " 'Give me something to make me young,' I aald. "That night I had heard some one in a box say: 'She isn't as pretty as she used to be.' And some one In the same box replied: 'No, she is getting old.' My heart was heavy. "The owner of the beauty parlor looked at me with a pitying expression, " 'To bad.' she said. 'It Is almost too late to begin, I fear, but I can try.' " 'I am a young woman,' I retorted with some asperity, 'and there is no reason why I should not look young.' ' " 'Tea,' aald tha owner of the beauty parlor, 'but you have grown careless and a little Bit laty. When, that condition ar rives there Isn't much hope. But w shall see.' Then aha took down my hair and shook It. I could Keel new Ufa coming Into it. " 'J am ventilating It,', said she. 'Tour hair ought to be ventilated for ten minutes every night before you go to bed. It Is naturally .very heavy, oily hair.' , "Then, opening a little bottle of almond oil, aha placed It in a basin of warm water, and when It had become very fluid she dipped her fingers tn It and went all around the border of my hair.. She touched up the hair line very tenderly and lightly, 'Th I I mIiI aha. .norttin. tha flaw hairs to come In." " 'When you go to bed tonight,' she went on, 'be sure to let your hair fly all over the pillow. It Is the best of all ways to sleep. If this feels uncomfortable you can try the college, girl's way of putting up your hair at night. " 'The college girl's way Is to tie the hair on top of the. head with a big aoft ribbon. Gather a lock at each aide of the head Juat back of the ears and lift It up to the crown of your head. " 'Slip the ribbon under It and tie It with a big looae soft bow. This does not hurt the head and It looks very pretty If one Is wakened In the middle of the night' "When she had finished with my hair she tackled my face. Taking a wet cloth, she laid it on my face and neck and, with a UR1 flat Iron she lightly steamed it. "She made very little steam as she did a great you look.- A woraaa a tMlh axe guide to a woman's age. The actress Is iudced also by her hands. The nails must be very long and the moons must show. This Is the prln- clpal thing, namely that there must be long silvery moons at the base of the nails. I have worked with mine steadily until the moons show across the room. It la all matter of keeping at It. Theae moons re on every set of Angers In the world. even though they may never have seen the light of day. I take fifteen mlnutea every morning for the study of the moons upon my fingers. Unless they show plainly I know that my hands are going backward. "I massage some good flash food Into my hands and I work with them until they are Immaculate. They will stay so all day f carefully prepared In the morning. "I believe that the feet should look UN tie. There la something bewitching In a pair of little feet It Is all a matter of cultivation. "I walk ten mllea a day now for this Is part of my restoration exercise In a pair of shoes that are two sizes too large. They are big everywhere and they have nice, comfortable high heels. "At night when I put on my stage shoes I find that I can squeete my feet Into very neat little slippers, with heels that are very French. I can put on shoes two sizes smaller than I wore three months ago. 1 have reduced my weight and my feet got thin when the rest of my body got thin. "The matter of reducing the weight re quires some mention. Eat little and walk a great deal. That la the whole secret in a nutshell. "I drink nothing at any meal, except breakfast. I walk after each meal. If pos sible, and I don't eat sweets. This keeps me slender and good looking. "I weigh Just forty pounds less than I did five years ago. But, you see, my normal weight Is only 125 pounds and I had run up into the sixties. "Don't weigh 190 pounds if you csn help it. It makes you seem so very matronly. Try to keep slender. Tou may not be able to keep pretty, but you can certainly keep slender. , "Yes, and you can keep pretty if you want to. It is really only a matter of choice, you know. And everybody ought to choose to ba pretty." New Tork Sun, Rovcltles la Velvets'. It's a day of velvets, for the suits and costumes worn to receptions and teas- suits made with skirts that trail softly after you, of velvets plain or In some of tha well-nlah Indescribable new color mix wfiih urm aa rftfTarant from anv- 1 thing we've seen before In the velvet line as day Is from night. For velvets have been experimented with Juggled with, you might say until they have taken on strange new qualities. Two colors are combined In a way that seems nothing in the world but a copy of the wonderful new tricks in weaves that have revolutionized cloth and suitings. As that change of weaves Is Impossible with velvet, the effect Is got In some more sub. tie way, but got It Is, no matter how. Stripes and checka and plaids are all echoed In the novelty velvets only echoed, though, for they are kept soft and Indis tinct and somber In tone. Plenty of black and white effects are seen In th?m, ren dered subtle Instead of startling by the soft, deep pile of the stuff. But of course, being novelties, they ap peal only to a limited class, the plain col ore used for nine out Of tea of the hand somest suits. "Velvet" . means not only velvet, Jiut vel veteen as well, for rf you'fei hot too well blessed with this world's goods, velvet suits are an expensive luxury that entail no end Of minor expenses, while velveteen has a j world of wear In It And corduroys are coming to the front having been crowded behind so many other materials for so long a while. Some stun ning French suits are made of It the kind with the wide wale and are trimmed with a lot of little straps of it fastened down with buttons. One brown suit was particu larly pretty, mads without a particle of trimming except these little straps and the buttons. Comparatively few of the velvet suits are trimmed with anything but lace or braid or buttons; nothing else seems to set them off in a way at once effective and perfectly In keeping with tha character of the material. Plenty of them have no trimming at all, the rich beauty of the velvet given ample opportunity to display Itself In the long, sweeping folds of tho trailing skirt. But velvet while Its present popularity Is marked, doesn't hold the field alone at all. Beautiful cloths and suitings have coma out that rival velvet for rlchnecs; broad cloths embroidered in their own color, the OMAHA AND REGULAR ARMY feme Pertosal Iemiiioefloi of the Flat Relations Between Two. DINNER T G RE. ELY REVIVES MEMORIES First Dlaaer la Officers Glvea ay Dr. Miller la Wooaea Khaaty Mora Tha a Fifty Years Age. A few waeke ago Omaha business men and other citlsens gave a dinner to Gen eral A. W. Greely. In doing this Omaha honored Itself. Omaha has hsd a steady friend in Geheral Ureeiy since ha was a military citizen of It as aide on the staff of General C. C. Augur, who commanded this department nearly forty years ago. Omaha and the United States army have been warm friends through its officers and their families since It was made headquar ters of the department. How much we owe to them for giving character and tone to our early social life It would be Impossible to estimate. In post-prandial speeches, and In writings, I have often acknowledged our great social debt to the army. First Dinner to Officers. The first dinner ever given to officers of the army wee given by Mr. Miller fifty years ago In a wooden shanty. In which he did the cooking and the serving; the psrlor, bedroom, sitting room, library anl hall, for greater convenience, consisting of one room. The kitchen was Just outside the main structure, practically outdoors. The unpalnted wooden table stood on an uncarpeted floor of natural complexion. The guests at that dinner were four young lieutenants, stationed at Kearny, who drifted down to Omaha, perhaps on a leave or a lark. Theso young soldiers, three of them, at least, became famous In the civil war, one on the confederate side, and two on the union side. They were Lieu tenants B. II. Robertson of Virginia, who won fame as brigadle general under J. E. B. Stuart In the confederate cavalry; Drum, late adjutant general; gallant Fred Steele, who was made major general, and Marshall Polk, nephew of President Polk, who was minus a leg, which he lost In the Mexican war. Of that gallant group of guests only Robertson, a very pflnco In his own personality, and General Drum, survive. Both live In and near Wash ington. I recently asked Robertson If he remembered that dinner, and got a rich return In the following answer, slightly altered from the text In the omission of a remark which he quoted from my father about Robertson's accomplishments In the waltz, as displayed at a great ball given In his honor at the old Herndon house, now Union Pacific headquarters, in 1859. General Robertson's letter. The gallant general says: Ye, my dear old life-long friend. I re member very distinctly that Sunday when Steele, Drum and "Marsh" (Marshall) Polk and myself lined In your wooden sbanty and vlwlted Governor Izard, who mrormea us tnat he was convalescing, but y r -A, 1L2S Medical Institute 1308 Fartiam St. ZSM: Omaha, Neb. i v?rs," i t". - v f ' : '" i' ' . f 1 Ji T - : : ' 1 f i t - V , , , (. - - -. I ' ' . ... ..f .'...,.' 4 f 1 " 3 1 MUS x i ;-V"'v' ; ft V fsJc- , , ." . .' 1 L. r. Coatee. F. L. S wean jr. L. If., Staples. C. V. Harvey. 7 -sa - v- v " Ls." h ,. , - 4SSW-. . ' f j ' ' I r h ; ;v - E. J. Kelllhan. E. P. Schieg. S. C. KUe. E. F. Andrews. not want to redden the skin. It was not a mowing 'rger ana nenvier rowara long process, but It seemed to sweat the kin and clear It out. "When she had done, this she placed a little Jar containing a white cream In a saucer 1 warm water and when tt Had grown soft, she dipped her fingers in It and maraaged my warm skin. ' " The cream,' said she. Is mads of mut ton tallow, white vaseline and almond oil In equal part a It la a little, too greasy for use every night and a little too heavy. But H la excellent for clearing a skin that has been abused Ilka yours." "She then explained to me that peroxide of hydrogen wculd bleach the skin and that It was excellent for skin blemishes. Shs also told me how to use a little chloride of lime now and-then, being ever so careful pot to gat It In tha ryea or on the hair. " Wa have tn usa these things,' she said, to keep tha akin nlo.' '. "I have taken her advice and have pleached my neck and my hands oftn. I take enough .chloride of lime to half fill a wine glass; Into thla I put a lump of wash ing sods. "I mix all Into a cream, with water and a made different by weaves or some wonder ful trick of color deepened Into shadows or lifted Into lights In an elusive, fascinating way. , , t PRATTLE OF THIS YOUNGSTERS. ' Mother Bobble, how did ' you get ac quainted with tha Uttla boy next door? Bobbla-l licked him. Mother Bobby, do you know why the little chickens corns out of the eggs? Robert I guess they know they'll be boiled If tbey don't The Toung Man (waiting In the parlor) Johnny, do you like candy T The Toung Woman'a Little Brother Mr. Spoonamore. you ought to know beter'n to ask ma a fool question like that Bobble was wearing Ms first trousers, and was as proud as a boy. baa the right to be under euch circumstances, lie felt himself a man Indeed, and was very anx ious to be acknowledged as Mich. But his little stick and I spread this on my hand-. elders were unsppreciatlve. Uncle Harry tt must stay on only a minute and then It 1 had poked fun at him In a quiet way, even tnust be washed off with plenty of water. ' 'There are skins that cannot rtand this, )tut mine ran. To take off the odor I use a tittle aromatic spirits of ammonia. "I whitened up my neck and my hands and I had the pleasure of knowing that the change had been seen and appreciated. But thla Is a Jump ahcd. Ska Learaed Somethlag. . "It was ong aOr midnight when I left the parlor of the beauty-maker, but I fe'.t that I had learned enough to atone for any lack of sleep. "I learned something about keeping the eyes bright. Belladonna Is all very well, but tt hurts the sight, and you can't go on doing tt foreevr. ' "But there are other things that make the eyes bright and keep them so, and there are things that keep the bags from coming in under the eyee. " 'Don't' said this beauty maker, 'sit and look sideways at things. It strains the nerves of tha eyes. Don't try to read unless you can look squarely at the print " 'Don't read In a rocking chair, for It hurts tha eyes. Don't read or aew where the lights move. A swaying tree In front of your window will make you nearsighted.' "I learned also to usa a 1 per rent solu tion of bora powder In my eyee efter a dusty drive. I also learned eomethlng about taking care of the teeth. "I am whitening my teatb with peroxide these day a It makes them glisten. .1 am using a very aoft brush and plenty of tooth silk. "I find (hat the cleaner the teeth are and the whiter you keep them tha younger going so far aa to Inquire what "those thlnge" were.' So Bobble went to Aunt Helen for consolation. "Why, Bobble," she exclaimed, when sho caught eight of him, "how grand you look I never saw you dreaatd like that before.' "I ain't dressed," retorted the boy, in dignantly. "Vesa are pants!" Brooklyn Ufa. An East Bide school teacher, learning that a girl pupil was sick, went to visit her, The good-haarted instructor having called at the child's home before had no difficulty in finding her, though the quarters were at tha top of a densely populated tenement The mother was absent, and the little t-year-old, Susie by name, well wrapped up. was sitting on the elds of the bed. After some talk, the teacher, observing that the child spoke with difficulty, aald: "Susie, 1 am going to examine your lunge." "Yea'm," dutifully responded Susie, "teacher" began to loosen tha youngster's waist After removing It, the teacher found layer upon layer of flannel, which aha un fastened with no Uttla difficulty, satisfying herself that there was no danger of pnru monla. Then aha began to replace the child s dress, wnen Busia gave way to a fliKd of tears. "Mommer will be awful mad at you when she ftnda out." "Why, Susie!" exclaimed the teacher, "what do you mean?" "You've gone and unfastened all my Ban' nets, an' mommer had Jeat got ma all aewed up fur the wlnurr'-axper s Weekly, was "powerful weak!" All these are now deed (Including Van Vllet) exoent Drum, who resides In the suburbs of Washing ton. Omaha was then In its first Infancy, but It was a vleornus nahe. And I remem ber as yesterdny the ball riven me at th ITemdor. houc-. where I danced with that pretty Mrs. Wood. (Is she llvlng?)-Thls reference Is to the mother of Mrs. Judge Redlck. who passed away two or three years ago and who was one of the most worthy of the pioneer women of Omaha Now, have I forgotten the names of mny who were present on that ocenslon besMee Miss Gtlmore. Miss Patrick (Mrs. Baxter), eto.T Less than a year sen I received a visit from Mrs. Joe Paddock. Can yon tell ma if she Is still here, and her address? f r.a.r,,y v'r "Boh" Howard (an early brilliant lawver In Omaha) nowadays. He Is nulte feeble. The scene of days Lang Syne are to me far more vivid than the occurrences of yes terday. How plainly I ran now see vou, and Morton, and Train, hugglns; that tree for shelter from a sudden storm at the ArW Lodge" coal nit. (This reference Is to Mr. Morton's discovery of coal Just south of Arbor Lods-e. of which I mav have aomethtnr to say in The Pee later on.) And dear old John Hth. and Miles Selden. and the English clerk at Kearnv. I have forgotten nothing that happened then. Soma Pleasant Recolleetloaa. General Robertson paid occasional visits to Omaha up to the outbreak of the war and before the hostilities began he called on us at the Herndon house on his Way to " "hii. lie iouna me in a situation of personal discomfort from the panic of 57. I was trying to get to Wash. Ington. The Herndon house failure had left me without a copper cent in the vmm Mrs. Miller told him the story of mv ret needs. Robertson lmmedi with four glittering $30 geld pieces and offered me them as a loan. I declined it. but he forced the money upon me. and. I recall It, left the amount with Mrs. Mll- ler, ana I went to Washington. I stood one day on the south steps of the capltol after Bull Run. General Joe Johnaton-. flag was waving In plain sight at Mun son's Miu. i anew that Robertson and Johnmnn were ootn tncre, and both were near anl dear friends of mine. But I wanted to Robertson and tried hard to get to him unaer a nag of truce through the lata rc. D. Webster, the old editor of the Omaha uepuoiican. who was in the confidential service of Mr. Seward. He d?d his -best to procure a paas for me. but at thatWrtlc ular time of anxiety and peril to the union cause he could not do It. And It thus even- luaiea; rne end of the war led the ren eral to lend me the voice of his pen from Richmond, delicately hinting that he was not rich In earthly possessions. Tha rent need not be told. At a later day, on a trip down the Mississippi, knowing that he was tn Memphis, we traced and followed him into church one Sunday morning. The usher pointed out the back of his head to ma as we were eeated, a few pews behind him, and the renewal of the old association began. General Robert boh presented me to Jefferson Davis, who was then the head of an insurance company la M emtihfa and that Incident was most Interesting to me ana can never be forgotten while I live. mr. uavis was one of the most courtly gen uemen whom It was ever my fortune to meet, and his warm regard for Beverly H rtocerison needed no words from him to emphasize It. GEORGE L. MILLER RELIGIOI S XOTES. "v-, rvt1 C. Hughes, father of the republican candidate for anvan... v- York, waa one of the leading speakers at the nineteenth annual convention of the Christian Endeavor union of the etate of New York last week. Bishop William Benjamin Arnett of the African Methodist Episcopal church and one of the leading lights in that denomlna- non, aiei recently at Xenla, O. He was bom In Brownsville. Pa., and was a warm Klnley v reaent Mc Bishop Henry M. Turner of the African Methodist Lplscopal church entertains and occasionally expresses somewhat orig inal views. One of his recent utterances is inai -lynrmngs, burnings and the mur aer or negroes here are plagues. God Is inniiiina on me race 10 a rive H to Africa, wnere n can ouuu up a great country. Rev. Dr. John T. Rosslter, who recently completed thirty-twq years aa pastor of the First Reformed church. Baltimore, was born at Blue Bell. Moniirnmerv county, this state, and was educated at ina Aiifnuwn (.-onegiaie and Military in stiiuie ana rranfclln and Marshal col lage. Tha congregation of the propaganda, on the recommendation of the bishops anJ archbishops of this country, has created a new ecclesiastical provlare in tue wesl to be known as the archdiocese of Texas Bishop Gallagher of the diocese af Ual- veston is to ba the first archbishop of tliu new yruvuice i V ' 3 i . t A v : - aw.' , f ' v - . " rv Y : '- V r v- a i ,1 . ., - SJi-'-P it t V " ' ItlBa, slV il SI 'I flMirlsV r " ;- ) O. H. Geyner. U. R. Weaver. E. W. Healj. W. T. Upton. A nart of the STAFF of MANAGERS. DOCTORS and CONSULTING PHYSICIANS of the STATE MEDICAL IN STITUTE, the oldest and most famous institution of its kind in the country. Never, before the organization of the STATE MED- ICAL INSTITUTE, Doctors for Men, were there associated together so many noted and skillful Specialists for the treatment and cure of diseases which constitute our specialty. that "IN UNIOH THERE IS STRENGTH" r; wat. never more r u 1 v estab lished than by the remarkable and prompt cures affected through the co-operation of the Successful Specialists of the STATB MEDICAL INSTITUTE, an Institution long established for the purpose of saving the afflicted from the evil results of their own follies or misfortune, and to save them the disap pointment of failure, loss of time and money, often spent in experimenting with new methods, quick cure delusions, no pay until cured deceptions and the various other misleading statements often used for the purpose of ob taining patronage. The State Medical Institute has been the salvation of mul titudes of sufferers, and by Its conservative, honest, upright and clean busi ness methods, together with Its unexcelled equipment and high character, long experience and scientific attainments of its specialists, has established a repu tation as a place where the weak and suffering can go with full confidence, knowing that they will be fairly dealt with, skillfully treated and promptly cured. You are just as safe dealing with the State Medical Institute as with any State of National Bank. Longest Established Institute for Men Hydrocele, Emissions, Varicocele, Impotency, Stricture, Gonorrhoea, Rupture, Blood Poison (Syphilis), Nervo-Sexual Debility, KIDNEY and URINARY diseases and all Diseases and Weak nesses of MEN due to evil habits of youth, abuses, excesses or the result of neglected, unskilled or improper treatment of private dis eases, which case night losses, day drains, impairs the mind and des troys men's Mental, Physical and Sexual Powers, reducing the Suf ferer to that deplorable state known as Nervo-Sexual Debility, mak ing social duties and obligations a hardship and the enjoyment of life and marital happiness impossible. We Make No Misleading Statements HONESTY , Men, if you want successful treatment and honest dealings, why not go to the reliable State Medical Institute, where you are not deceived by decep-. tlve or unbusinesslike propositions. Such statements are misleading and are used for the purpose of obtaining patronage. Honest doctors of recognized ability do not resort to such methods. We do not say that we will treat you without any money for the purpose of securing patronage, and then when you rail demand money payments and notes signed far In advance of reasonable charges; neither do we promise to cure you in three or four days, knowing it will take longer; nor do we try to secure patronage by offering to refund money paid if a cure is not effected, and then refuse to do so. We do not ac cept cases we cannot cure. We guarantee a safe and lasting cure In the quick 06t possible time, without leaving Injurious after-effects In the system, and at the lowest cost possible for honest, skillful and successful treatment. RELIABILITY The Stats Medical Institute does not mislead the sick and afflicted Into the belief that it ls going to give free treatment, or for next to nothing, or for kes than it can conscientiously be worth. The State Medical Institute does r.ot resort to scheming methods. The sick should beware of and avoid any who hold out false inducements In their announcements, which appear allur lDg and In many cases deceive the weak, sick, suffering man, who, like the drowning man, will grasp at a straw in an effort to be saved. How many weak, nervous, drowning, sinking men are grasping at straws today to get cured of their ailments .(diseases), which are dragging them down to the bottom of the sea of despair and misery? Why not awaken to the realization of the fact today that boasting promises of quick cures, misleading statements and unbusinesslike propositions' to the afflicted are but straws that will sink you deeper and deeper into the sea of Mespair. Why grasp at such straws when you can secure tha substantial treatment of the Honest, 6killful, Reliable Specialists of the State Medical Institute, who will sot deceive you with any false promises, but will save you and restore you to health, strength and vigor and place you safely within the boundary line of prosperity and enjoyment of life. SUCCESS If we could see and treat all men when the first symptoms show them selves there would soon be little need for so-called specialists in chronic dis eases, and there would be few men seeking a rejuvenation of their physical, mental and vital powers, and there would also be few marked with the stamp of Constitutional Blood Poison, and the sufferers from STIUCTl'ItE, VARI COCELE, EMISSIONS, NEHVO-SEXl'AIi DEBILITY, IMPOTENCY, RECTAL, KIDNEY and URINARY DISEASES and their complications would be reduced to a minimum. But as long as men continue to disregard the golden adage, "A stitch In time saves nine," and continue to neglect themselves or to exer cise Indifference or poor Judgment in consulting the right specialists at the out set. Just so long will there be multitudes of chronic. sufferers. You should carefully avoid all misleading statements and unbusinesslike propositions, and all uncertain, experimental, dangerous or half-way treat ment, for upon the success of the first treatment depends whether you will be promptly restored to health again, with all taint of the poisonous disease re moved from your system, or whether It will be allowed to become chronic and subject you to future recurrences of the disease, with, the various resulting complications, etc. TRUE SPECIALISTS Don't allow disease or weakness to take away all the pleasure of living. Life Is beautiful when you possess perfect health. You should not become dis couraged and leae your grip on life because inferior and unreliable treatment has failed to h3lp you. Our rpeclal treatment for this class of troubles, which ls varied and modified to meet the requirements of each Individual case, ls a safe cure, tc which hundreds of cured men owe their sturdy health and happy condition in life. Do not be satisfied until you have been examined by the specialists of the State Medical Institute, the best in the country. Consult us and .be ex amined free. Yon may be sent away happy without treatment, but with ad vice that will save you time and money, as well as mental suffering. If you require treatment,, and your case is a curable one, you will be treated bon tstly and skillfully and restored to health within the briefest possible period and at the least possible expense. We will make a thorough, searching and scientific examination of your aliments free, an examination that will dUclose your true physical condition, without a knowledge of which you are groping in the dark and without a thorough understanding of which no physician or specialist should treat you. The State Medical Institute desires to warn all men to beware of mis leading statement by which they may be deceived in an effort to regain their health. , Man's Fitness for Marriage There ls nothing of more supreme Importance to a man who ls contemplating marriage than to know that ho is in a perfectly healthy condition in every respect, and no greater mistake can be made in life than to marry while there lurks In the system some blighting weakness or nolsonoas taint nf nH vat nr hlnod diseases. Anv man whore system has at anv time been nollutprl with nnlmnnni n.u.t. ji.... . ..,u . . . . . . uk V" h.i.... .h.,M u "7.V" o.:r- .;:..1. .:""."-''"-"' uupa mannooa rornius any 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sundays, s . - . ' possibility of matrimonial happiness should consult the specialists of the State Medical Institute inn Cronl Office Hours: uuiiouiiaiiui. anu i.Aaiiiiiiaiiuii 10 to 1 only. If. You cannot call, write. Don't Make a Mistake in the Name and Location of Our Institute. STATE MEDICAL 1308 Farnam Street, between !3th and 14th Sts. INSTITUTE Omaha, Nebraska