Till: OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: XOVEMBEK IS, 1906. For and About Women Folks VtAinnn In n pellln tablen. T.'spncially interesting are the-, is Jj;.SHIK IlAMlI-TuN of Ma- cards If, as s frequently the cose, tho hns- Mcon, Mo., IS yenrs if age and tess lerself has designed them. Perhaps out of school with diploma as they pre witter colors, perhaps pen and Ink, 'I n speller, proposn to ehnw Ptof. and not isms of Artistl.; worth at that, p. Jones, another Missourian, thiit but they may have a quality of being his rl.inn to tha championship in not well applicable In a humorous way, und Un founded. Frof. Jones puts out Ills spelling fact that they wera done by the hostess bluff annually, and for thirty-two years jxiHj-id without being called. Miss Hamil ton .s acceptance startled tho pedagogues cuf the state and n. warm spill is antici pated. The professor's rules of battle nro these: Ordinary English words, churl y pronounced by an expert, and written down by tin; Coiiii-stan'.s; each contestant to get tnm". w jrri3; much to run four hours cnt.nu O'jsly, tio cheering till r. suit Is anncunced; winner to get mw unabridged dlstlonary, tin tho fly leaf of which the loser will write: "Th's Champion Fp'dlcr of tho World." The peoplo of Mncon nre rating Miss Jsie upon tho '.nick. They have fi mr.'-h cT.fMriv-p In hr ability to spell lh.it tiuy have offered to pay n 11 tho exjirnscs of J'rof. Jones' transportation to Macon, 1'idtj-' Tilm like an hur.orrd guest while th-re, and Tiave the brass band serenade) him In the contingency of his winning. Slnrrled 1,1 fe and I1nliie r Mnersh I p UoklIIa I.cew wm the first woman to gain admittance to the New Tork bar. After her marriage- to Travis Whitney, nlso a lawyer, tho law firm of J,oew & Whitney was formed, and Is now In active pTictlre. Writing on tho 3uhject of married Ufo and us!rvei partnerships In the New York World, Mrs. Whitney says: All married couples In moderate circutn sj'.ances, who are congenial and Interested In tho samo line of business shouid form partnerships. Why not? At pr.ent there are twelve married rnuplis In N'ew York prm'ticini; Jaw together. They have all been re.iso.t ebiy successful, and so far as I lrnow not tin) of the partnerships has been dissolved. In a partnership of this character the members of the firm are dlrctly Interested In the success of the Individual. This nat urally leads to unselfishness. When a woman has carried on a pro fession before marriage It Is selfish of the husband to ask her to abandon a possible brilliant future and to settle down to homo duties! This woman has worked hard for what she has won, und IC she is fortunnt enouirh to marry a mnn whose profes sional Interests run In the same channel tm hers, tho most natural result in tho world Is the forming: of a partnership. Common Interest In their profession draws tho husband and wife closer to Rerther. This la not .1 matter of soul af finity or anything of tho kind. It Is Just practical good sense. When at home, there Is a theme In which both husband and wife are equally Inter ested. The wife Is capable of speaking In telligently on subjects that claim a hare f her husband's attention, and In every sense of the word she Is Just what she Is meant to he a real helpmate. I have often been asked If the woman In business must not necessarily nee.loct her home. This question Is quite foolish, for no business woman of good Intelligence need In the least neglect cither her home, her children or social duties for business. A woman of good business ability Is ca pable of thinking In a well-ordered way; m a! .s them interesting to her h. ruelf guests. Many women use year In and year out their embossed dinner cards, either with merely a monogram or with the family crest or the name of the family home in on? corner or at the top, but a card more Pertinently suited to tho occasion shows a greater pei tonal Interest on tho part of the heirless to her g'lerts. It Is an art sueos fully plied among some of tho younger students the designing of dinner cards. One little Klrl not moie than 15 yoars old has aceiulrcd a clientele of con siderable worth for her dainty wotur color.. She made in the beginning a fvtv of oriclnal di-. i.jn and put th' :n on the market in ono of the (lt iu ttnent stores. Since then eh hus had regular orders for tiicm and at nus time ot me year sne cannot conjure scarcely spend J5, depending upon up ideas enougn to supply tne demand. library for nearly aJl our reading. Tor gan:e dinners at the country club or "Wo wive certainly j:5 by doing less en- In the out-of-town house there are unique tertalning than formerly, cards done in water colors alter some of ! haw saved nbout VQ by keeping a the well known paintings of the hunt or niald only half the year, where formerly the chase. wo kept one all the time. I have her elur- Tittlc pen and Ink sketches of the guest lag the summer and fall, when I do not himself Is a favorite Idea of aome hostess wish to be In the hot kitchen and do want who Is fortunate enough to possess a young to be out-of-doors. We save perhaps $15 type of women, but what's the use giving them.' it would simply give many women the blues. Thero are Greek statues which suggested to the artists the new type of model, and there are. New York artists who hnve declared that the women who pose for Ihetn tnut have those character istics. Inerense of llonaelmld Hiifiir. Harper s Baar has been publishing dur ing thu last Mimmer and autumn an ex ceedingly Interesting and prartiml sym posium in which Pazar rcadeis t 11 how they ore meeting the Increjisi d expense of living In cities where there Is no cor responding Increase of Income. The fol lowing instance, from the December Hi lar. Is a typical one: "The expense of living hajt Increased; our Income has not. This Increase ha been met by us In the following ways: "We give almoat $:3 less to the church and to various benevolences than we u."-.k1 to. Formerly wo spent about $.5 a year for magazines and books. Todav we the friend who la an artist with the knack of taking a snapshot sketch either from ' a glimpse of the guest or from a photo graph. This form of card causes much merriment. a year by not going to so many enter tainments and concerts. Indeed, we have cut thoFe out almost entirely. We simply cannot afford them. "We spend some HO bus for vacation Kor the children there are quantities of fr travel. pretty and interesting pi ice cards, and therj "J Kve perhaps 2G a year by making Is nu'.hiiM will, ii provokes good cheer and ov'r own ''lothes which frlmids give so' i.ibillty so quickly at a tableful of youn folks as name enrds on which are good conundrums, l'.irh guest reads his conun drum to the others and they all try to guess the answer. The question Is written on the reverse side of tho card and only the child's name appears on the front. Another form of place cards for children In a line from a well known poem or quo tation. I'sually there Is someone who can set the young guests right when they all have made a futile attempt to place the line correctly. nie ror ti:e cniioren, wncre formerly we were a 'customed to buy them ready tuudo. It means lots of work, but It Is much cheaper and the clothes wear better. "This accounts for about $215 of the $-45 that must 1e saved on arcount of the Increased cost of living. The other J30 Is money that we do not save. Where form erly we tried to put away $) to JliK) for a rainy day and for old age. now the best that we can do Is to save JTiO." V. SpanWIiiK B" Corrective. l'rciinrlDg for Thanksgiving Turkey. Tho Housekeeper for Xovember gives ad vance Information on a subject of vital Discussion of tho "spanking" question has ,nnortance, as follows sot tho Iowa mothers' congress agog at After removing the pin feathers, hold the the Unitarian church. Pes Moines, la. Nu- turkey over the fire and sinffe oft the re- merous are the urgumenta pro and con malning hairs. A little paper laid on the upon that mode of discipline. The state- roa range, or aJcohol placed In a dlh will inent of principles by the secretary, Mr."", remove all hairs without making smut on W. R. Kd wards, that children should be ,e sj;in. -vith a sharp knife, cut through talked to as if they were men and women the scaly part Just below the leg Joints, lay and no spanking done by the fond parents on tne edge of the table and with a quick provoked the discussion. blow downward break the bone; this leaves "Siianklng brings results." said Truant etiflltierit fesii over the Joint to prevent th Otliccr J. C. Bryan, who addressed the bones from burning, and the flesh and kln congress on local condltons. "Take away fron shrinking off the bones. Cut off the fear and It would be impossible tu discipline head Just at the neck; with 11 sharp knife the child. Logic Is all very well, but It is cut out the oil sack, which will be found spanking that brings results." in the rump. Slit tho skin In a straight "Spanking la a live topic," said one of the line over the back bone from the shoulder high officers of the congress who is Inter- up the neck, turn it bark and pull out the csted in the question. "Personally, I be- crop and windpipe, then cut oft the neck llevo In It to a degree. I am thinking of bone close to the shoulders, leaving the skin ono child at thla moment for whom to my nttached to the bird. The Intestines arc nund it Is the one proper education cor- usually removed from the bird by the roctlon. Of course, there is wide difference one who kills It; but tho houseke-eper must she will select competent people to at- opinion, but I think it I, a fortunate look to see that the lungs and kidneys are tend to her house, and her social duties will becomo more of the character of those her hushund enjoys. She will forgot all about the frivolous, petty circumstances that make so many women unhappy, for thing that Mrs. Edwards has given Out her removed, for tho market man seldom does views, radical as they may appear. this. The giblets are the next thing to be seen Sobriety lu America. 4 . . ,,... In ,, . Agnes Slack, the honorary secretary or ,h ' . . - ' ' .... the World's Woman s Christian Temperam-e , ,.,,. ,,, a portant matter. Lnlon- suld NeW ,Yrk Lvltues clo,h' whlch 18 Pp," to washing, as I have not yet aeen the overbearing attl- that ia one the " h h1rh b the ,ater method Etar,s the Julces an1 tude that some people have predicted for a of the Americans, a fac with which some ,egsens tne flavor woman who Is In partnership with her hns- ot them may not be familiar Two quarts of "dressing" will be re band. In fact, as far as I have observed. "You ar0 far ln advance ot GrMlt B,r' lulred for a turkey of moderate sire, and through the medium of worldly affairs two ln nlnny way!-" she sald' "loT one lhl"8, bread used must be at least two days lives are brought more in sympathy with JOU httVP locul ,tlon' for wh;ch we urc old. Biikera' loaves nro better than home each other if both are working along tho now "Shtlng desolately. Our licenses are b!lkod brca(1 icaue tlfy are ilghter. rare same lines to the same end. Home and in tlie liar,ds ct mals,ra,e" who in8tcud off the crusts and soak them for fifteen office become the center of united Interest. ot being elected by the people, are ap- minutes in warm water; squeeze well and It la a woman's utter lack of knowledse pointed by the lord lieutenant of tlm n(j,i finely broken to the crumbled interior of her husband's business affairs that has county, who is, in his turn, appointed by of the loaf. To this add salt and pepper caused many divorcesthe Inability of the the national government. Thus the grant- to suit one's taste, making quite a decided wife to understand In any degree the trials lug of licenses in any particular locality flavor as It cooks Into the flesh: finely nnd tribulations through which her hus- is entirely beyond the control of the reoplo chopped parseley, celery and onion are band lias had to pass during the day- of that locality. But it Is not enly in your added next. To a quart of the dressing al and ctmseeiuently her unsympathetic attl- temperance legislation that you are ahead lew one esrg and one-fourth cupful of tude toward one worn from business cares of Great Uritaln. You haven't got the cus- melted butter. If one wishes, one pint of and tho toil of the financial world. toms and prejudices ot hundreds of yeais raw oysters can be ndded. Prollcd chest If women are going into professional life, to combat. With us social suctoms are the nuts, chopped finely and pressed through and undoubtc-dly they will continue to do greatest difficulty we have to overcome, a seive, are liked by many persons, but o, why should they not try to help their You have some of thnt here, but not to their flavor Is much better if used in eon husbands us much as they can? Surely it anything like tlie extent we have. For In- nection with a boiled rich dressing than la an Ideal state of home affairs when bus- stance, I have been much etruck by the w,th tne bread mixture. If these- ara used Inesa and domesticity are shared by both small amount of drinking In the hotels. omlt a" seasoning except tho salt and the husband and the wife. Prrfiimra of Qnccna. During her recent visit to Paris, Mar rherlta, the queen dowager of Italy, made rtensive purchases of perfumes, and tlie papers reve-al that her favorite essence la violet. This has brought out a discussion of tho perfumes usl by the queens of Europe. . It It alleged that the czarina spends in Farlj no less timn 80,000 francs annually on perfume, creams, soaps and toilet waters. Violets Is her fnvorite also, and larjru quan tities of It tii put up in (tasks especially for her. She la ao fond of perfumes in general, however, that her rooms are dally sprinkled with essences of elder, Jasmine, narcissus or tuberose. Sometimes the atmosphe-e is so charged wi'h scent ns to be almost In To one of the most fashionable hotels 111 P''PPpr.' Hoston I noticed only three or four people Ft" tne "p cavity, sew up and fold taking Intoxicants. In linden half the back "P0" tne shoulders of the fowl, turn peoplo present would have been taking ,n ,llp pinions under tho wings so that them. America is to bo conKratulated iJso ,nPlr "et acroe the back. Kla,?e ln having no barmaids. These are a great dressing in the body to fill two evil, not oi.ly because of the harm dono third fll- as tIle dressing will swell and to themselves, but because they decoy ,he cavlly cooked. Then truss and vn.,,, men Inn the saloons. Thev are em- "" "nc..e miner, eireoging with ployed for that purpose and ure chosen for their personal attractions. Again, the women don't drink us much here as they do In llngland. At least they don't do It so Dubilcly. I have been told that they are accused of drinking too much in pub lic, but utter being accustomed to seeing the women go Into thu saloons like men It seems to me that women In America don't drink at ail. "You haven't a fiftieth part of the drink- tolerable to other people entering the npiir:- on Su:"i:y ,hat 'llU would flour: place. In large pan und (111 up with boiling water, rooking l.i hot oven and basting every '.ifteen minutes, using the watr that is In the broiling pan. Clean the ltver, heart and gizzard, and with tho nock place in the p:in; the heart and liver will cook more quh-Kly than the gizzard and the neck, and must be removed when done. After the first hour and a half the beat must be reduced and tlie cooking be nvre slowly. I'or il Ten pound turkey it will men'.s. For the preparation of the czarina's toilet waters violets .uv b!-clally plucked between 5 and 7 o'clock In the evening, be cause la h. r opinion that U th hour when the flams give forth the most exquisite odors. live with- ,i, v,.,., .,.i ., v...,, . . , . iu.i t.t.u i.iii--kti ii I J loin nuuia, allowing fifteen to twenty minutes for It to The 11MI7 ;lrl. Artists will soon announce plans for the Hi'', r'rl, nncl. ai a cotneiu:nce. excitement ubltlns In iiiciichloni. Tho knights of tlie brusli und paletto have practically decreed out your Sunday closing laws.' heat throf ch v.hen first put into the oven. After It bejius to cook it needs careful watching nnd baatins, for the success of tlie turkey in the c.tivfcl cooklnn. The bird should bo tunic.l so llict all sides nny bo t-venlv browned. The ncn nniti i.a l.m Queen Alexander of England Is addicted ,hllt the new type of bl'iut:-' ehM "ol ba enough to Cuu.; off tho water, leaving a to the ess-bouquet, the formula for which rnaseullne, and that her first requisite shall as used by the Kngllsh royal family, is said be !'nr'-t'' The minute you look at her to be a secret, handed down from father to wl" "'e t ut na ''"f08"- Tne 6""' son since lSJS. The components are said v,:'1 be ertremely simple, although to bo musk, ambersiis, roswater vlo'et sne may not be an exixinent tf I'ustor h upuir s doctrine, in oi .tr words, she is going to lo .k as If she wvre very simple. Absolute perfection ln the art of sweet No Bargain Event in Omaha Has Held (he Public's Attention as Long as MILLER, STEWMI & BE4T0N'S !1L- .i-L The approach of Thanksgiving is a reminder that our REMOVAL SALE is opportune we are offering price inducements not to be found elsewhere. WHY? Because every article in our present location (with the exception of a few lines we were obliged to accept which are intended for our new store) must be closed out to enable us to open our new store with an entire new stock. Don't imagine that our stock is in a demoralized condition, for such i3 not the esse we have just moved the entire content3 of our last warehouse to our present location every article is now on display at our FARNAM STREET STORE. We are prepared to furnish some of the greatest bargains we have ever shown, and the next few weeks will witness some great price cutting. From now till Christmas our store will be alive with bargains in Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, Lace Curtains and Draperies Dining Room Furniture $4G.50 Weathered Oak China Cabinet, panel J r AA glass door, with wrought hinges, for tO33 $L)9.00 China Cabinet, weathered oak, vie- fl A fit j-ant piece of furniture, for fl"'eIU sjtfiMlO Weathered Oak China Cabinet, ono C (fj piece only 1svlvf BIG LINE OF DINING ROOM CHAIRS-1, 2 and :? of a kind, at half price. ' Large Stock of Dining Tables In Solid Oak, highly polished, pedestal cen- f Z PA 1J,JV ter top, claw feet, each tension Table, very desirable piece, for. Extra fine quarter-sawed oak square Ex- tQ AA Sideboards $125.00 Sideboard, very massive, with fluted Pilaster, large mirror, has wine cellar and secret drawer, one drawer lined for silver, finished, hand- CIA 41 fl rubbed and polished ZrJJ V9 $1 riS.OO Sideboard, early English oak, highly finished interior of solid mahogany, has wine cellar, 1 lon drawer for linen, 2 cupboards, small secret drawer, sil ver drawer lined, extremely large mirror, JQQ Solid quartered sawed oak Sideboard, with roll top, swell front, 1 drawer for silver, lined Tfl f)f A BARGAIN -O.UU Others from $75.00 to ..$1C00 Some Removal Sale Prices on Lace Curtains and Portieres 6.00 $11.00 Brussels Lace Curtains, removal sale price, per pair $13.50 Brussels Lace Curta it removal sale f AA price, per pair fiUsllvl $14.00 Brussels Lace Curtains, removal sale 7 C A price, per pair vlU $10.00 Brussels Lace Curtains, removal sale JP C A price, per pair 9JJ Odd pairs of Nottingham, Irish Point, Arabian Net, Battenberg at ONE-HALF PRICE. N Art Squares and ART SQUARES These are the well-known Jackson make, all wool fillings, mercerized cotton warp, made in very choice oriental and floral designs, suitable for din ing room and bed rooms. $6.00 Art Squares, 7-6x9, removal sale L A price rf " $7.00 Art Squares, 9x9, removal sale P AA price "" $8.00 Art Squares, 9xlO-G, removal sale A A price UUU BRUSSELS RUGS Choice designs in Oriental and me dallion patterns, colors suitable to any decorations, reg ular $18.00 quality, size 9x12, removal 1Z fA sale price JU Brussels Rugs $32.00 Brussels room-sized Rug, 10-6x11-10, A A A removal sale price tnf33 $26.00 Brussels room-sized Rug, 10-6x12-2, A A A removal sale price UiUU Special Values in Portieres $7.50 Annure Portieres, in shades of red, re- rj J?A moval sale price, per pair $7.00 Armure Portieres, in shades of golden C C brown, removal sale price, per pair JJJ $7.00 Armure Portieres, in two-tone red, re- CCA moval 6ale price, per pair vi JU $5.50 Armure Portieres, in shades of green, J C A removal sale price, per pair.. 'Jil $4.50 Armure Portieres, in two-tone green, T CA reinoval sale price, per pair JJP Room-Size Rugs $33.00 Brussels room sized Rug, 10-6x12-9, A A removal sale price i3)3 $25.00 Brussels room-sized Rug, 10-6x12, re- 1 O C A 'moval sale price 10JU $19.00 Brussels room-sized Rug, 9x12, re- f A A moval sale price fiOlJ Axminster Rugs $33.00 Brussels room-sized Rug, 10-6x12-9, A A removal sale price wOsUl $35.00 Axminster room-sized Rug, 10-6x CA A A 12-6, removal sale price vriUvF $35.00 Axminster room-sized Rug, 10-6x10, IP AA removal sale price wi J3 $27.00 Axminster room-sized Rug, 8-3x10-6, A A A removal sale price SUsVfU $23.00 Axminster room-sized Rug, 9x12, re- f Q C A IU.vJU moval sale price Mi kill IS k ii il OT9 kwmt lot! 1315-17-19 Farnam Street rich brown sediment In the pan, which will make a most delicious gravy. fir Ins for liuoarkfeprri, For burns, lime water, beaten up with sweet oil, Is sn excellent ointment for pain ful burns. I'ur chafing use powdered starch freely after rathlng and drying well. If housewives who dislike finding worms ln the upplea would first put the fruit In cold water they would find tho won.is would leave the apples and come to the sur face of the water. Common alum melted In an iron ppoon over hot coals makes a very wtronu cement for joining- metul and glass together. It Is a firm r.tte thing for fastening lumps to their Ktnnda and for stopping craekd ln their L.ibec To whlltn clothes take equal parts of spirits of turpentine and paraffin and shake well together. A tubiespoonful of this mix ture added to the snnpsuds In which the clothes are boiled will be found to bave a most cleansing effect. The dlfllculty of cleaning gas globes Is largely duo to the ormumntal roughness of the glas and It Is olten hard to clean them witn soap and water, even with the addition of soda. A little salts of lemon added to the soapyuds will nuke the tatk easy. A delightful mixture to sprinkle among tlie clothes that are laid aw.iy for the time is one ounco each of powdered cloves, caraway seed, nutmeg, mice and cinnamon and pix ounces of powdered orris root. Kill tinv bags of rl.eoe cloth with the mixture and scatter them through the chests and trunks. A rusty screw sometimes seems so tightly tued mat Its removul seems Im possible. It will be quite easy If a red hot poker Is held to Its head for a short time. The heat will cause the screw to expand and thus enlarge its hole slightly. When it Is cool again It will he its normal size and may be easily removed with a screw driver. Miss Elsie Plants, daughter of President Samuel Plants of Lawrence unlveiauy. Win., and Irwin Church, giaduate of the university, are to receive next Jan.iurv CarneKle medals for saving the lives of three girls who had broken through the Ice of the Fog river In the wluter of 1SM-03. No spread Is more useful, few look better and none Is more easily Isundered than one of pique. lis cust, too, is in its favor as It is most Inexpensive. Its special advantage is Its light weight, which makes It easy to launder as often as every two weeks tf desired. They are really uainty In appear ance, either In the very line or medium wrtpes In which they are to be bought. They can bo easily made at home. When oilcloth begins to lose Its shiny surface II can be improved ln appearance and made to last much longer by being varnished with glue. Wash the ollc'.otU thorouuMy and let It dry. At night when, the tnilllo of the day la done no over It with a piece of fhinnel dipp'-j n glue wster. Choose a nlie, dry day for this and then the Kl"e will he i ml. o hard by morning and the oilcloth will lool; like new. Tha glue water injst be prepared some time before It Is needed by putting a email quantity of glue In a pint or so of water and letting it stand on tha vtov till dissolved. Jasmine, orange flower i.n.l IcvcnJ. r. Queen 'VYIIhelmU or Th,- Netherlands has a less complicated tasle. She uses half a litre a day cf It. How Artists Use Lines in Pen and Ink She uses considerable fancy sop, tollot simplicity will be one of the features of creams ana powder. Ghe tukes n warm bath of seven minutes duration daily, fol lowed by a cold douche She Is very proud of her beautiful complexion and tak.j every lalns to kti-p it iiniuiiMrtd. 33 HAIX.ES DANA GIBSON' S picture which accompanies today's paper ia actually a portrait of a fa mous beauty. The plrl who posed fur It '.vns one of the most popu- Moveltirs lu Dinner I nrili, Kven at tho most formal dinner parties Eiany of the hostesses of today Us plain cards aa an additional decoration for their A Skin of Beauty i a Joy rorevor. DR. T. Flix Oouraud'a Oriental Craam or Msgioal Beeutltfar Rmimm Taa, fXnr'M 4d. JV .., Mts p.i.s -5 v v ii. ul bi a D. 1 I'S DMutT. Uia i! IMill.kll'L II bj lUCMl ij ttt ot AT yrj, ml It t hiru.:r w t t'U t.lKurri t pr I'i't ru-' CX.U..I 'i Ictl of till.)!. mf. Dr. L. . 0is w lJ, ef u h.. t. a is ii. i ' At TOU 11 n:ti u I ' - I TfCeUtT.l h' lerRH4s ("",' tk lcM bun f'.l i f ) il Uu"Ja i..l lu tj U-.U.! MUM, 4 Iftlitl Kl.rv.f- :.lJ.T.HC?i:.H3,F;-s 27 D-.l J- S'M k. U lf E 7.tA the '07 hi art-breaker. It Is not a Maud Muller slmpllcitv. savoring of r.ew-mown hay, but an artis.ic simpltcny. 'lie pirl .,,,. anioni: artists before she won of next year will he tall and blender. She t,,, fame by becoming the wife of n.uy have t i retort o Mile. Ch uniw.gna p!ttsburtt millionaire. Her rare and heels- at.d to stre'.rhir.g -x. reist-s. ami sh p(uant beauty appealed to artists, for It may have lo wear a Mgh :.i. :y Jane top- wag Ju-l wlwt they wanted. Good models Ln. t, but. in all ov-rtf, tilie must be tall. are airlicult tj tlnd. and this was a gem. blie will be di-r.-rent from any other type 6he often for Olhson, and her por- i.f f. minlnlty beiore htr. She will be beau- Xruli ,,iay recognirted 111 many of his tiful !f she n.akes her liyure conform to r(cturea, but this is the moat characteristic the mold of the urtists, and the beauties of al, nr,a gjsj the best likeness, of lius year wiil be compelled to quit the lt lb A dulnty little fae, full of char- J b. acter ai.d exipllsitf ly drawn. Her eyes Artists' models iy e now busy pr. paring llavl. aIl expression which tolls Its own themselves f.ir the new-woman scheme. gtory; a e can U;ie and tantalise till a The llump ones are reducina their avoiidu- nma , )ulif rraay; she Is fond of fun has a pole and taking lessons lu the art of stand- bnght wit and is u thoroughly good fellow. In? perfectly still without moving tlielr y.lt theie are unsounded depths ill thuso "tootsies" about. I'nhss she Is a restful eyes thnt suggest Infinite posaibllities ln the girl she will not fill the bill for next year. Wily of love. WhlU she Is a type of the Accnidin ti a prominent artist, many pro f !;.! ii a 1 models ure taking double lessor. In maxiasjo Ore kind develops and the other lake off &up"rrluous flsli. The new fashlcned t-"iil wl'ii the new figure has some ohurplv aeremuutiMl cl.aractrtsihs. Her shouldees are I road not like those of a fullback. I ut sooil ui d broad. Measure ri l.u.-i 1,1.,! nihiTvlne. l.iive bien ati- i.oui.o'.l by New oik aitists for the new ccKiuette, there Is no malice In her co uuctry. And ohc looks as if she might cling as the Ivy to the oak were she to love a man who really loved her. What a daintily-shaped face It Ik! Ovtl ns a child's, with an imj udent little round-d chin arid a saucy Up-tilted nose. I'lor eyes nre full of fire, smouldering, but threaten ing to bt.'rst into fl xme if but slightly wu.ned. Hr moutu u liko a luncluns cherry, ripe to be picked. One often hears a mouth described as shaped like a Cupid's bow, but one rarely ses such n mouth. Here, however. Is a perfect specimen. The line that marks the Joining of the llpa is a double line of beauty. Ideally perfect, over which the upper Up rises full and red and recurved like the heavy petal of a crimson rose, while the lower protrude slightly beyond lt and invites kisses with fair prom ise of generous welcome. lojt there Is something about the face which ossurue the man of experience that her kisses are not to be plucked like cherries from a tre, but must be earned, and that before they can be won th seeker after them is likely to meet with many tantalizing repulses, for she is a capricious lltil.- woman and fond of teasing. Those lips would ripple Into laughter and those soft ch.ks would melt Into dimples with very slight provoca tion. She is veritably a fascinating Uttio witch. The way ln which this face is drawn Is sn excellent sample of Gibson's best style. The lines which give form to the features follow closely tha natural lines of the face, nnd there Is a little attempt at crots hatrhlng. The lines upon the cheeks are admirable in that they give all the effect of sotu.csu. The Lines upon the lips are curved Just suttlcti ntly to give tlie effect of the smooth, rounded surface the mois ture and U.s redness. It Is thu ln.ioj.t triumph of pen and ink drawings to bo able to suggest color, and these lips cer tainly look deep red. The student will do well to observe the way ln which the tip of the nose, the nos trils and the shadow of them upon the upper lip are handled, with how few lines i and with what precision. To appreciate thoroughly the excellence of this bit of drawing the picture should be plao d at a little distance and looked at through half closed eyes, when the lines will vanish and leave only soft shadows, as soft as if mads with a brush. The hair is a masterpiece of strong, broad drawing. I"Vr it a heavy pen, prob ably an old-fashioned quill, has been used, well filled with Ink. Tlie lieavy lines ra diate from the point above the forehead And form waves of massive lock, falling softly over the left eye, drawn bacl; loosely over the ears and rolled In a great wave over the top of the head. They have been drawn very rapidly, with a free arm swing ing from the shoulder and elbow; such lines are Impossible If the hand tie held sillily. No one can describe how the ex presolon of the eyes, which In this picture is so striking. Is produced; this can be lenrood only by long prurtl:e In drawing from living models. Such a picture ss this has value lint slone as a work of srt, but as a portiait of a vsiy famous buauty. 1 CLEANS LsLrge Siftiig-top Cans scou&s Old etch .eanseir SCRUBS POLISHES TtSM AT ALL GROCERS 10C An attractive booklet. "Hints tor Houewveh" KllEE for the uklng ADDKKH8 THE CUDAHY PACKING CO. WflVH O. D. C. Dpt. Bo. OuuUta, Neb. kS'-'LZJ