I $S'' '-')'' L ' i 0 I X A m necessary as ihe black. With I Good PCSi'JoilS I The Right Machine h s2rSi& L -k Br" SUPPLIES FOB ALL Corner 17th and Farnam Streets CARING FOR THE FOOTWEAR Comfort and Economy Uenierved by Proper Attention to Shoes. LEATHER RESPONDS TO GOOD TREATMENT Rabbinic and OUintf Pradnof Goad Heaults Huttona and l,cn Need Ileplenlahlnit Care of the lloae. No g-lrl would dream of wearing the old rush or wooden sandals ot the ancients. The evolution of the shoe, gradual us It has been, has yet been motit complete. Through sandal and rude footwear made from the hide of wild beasts we have passed, llrst, V) the unjcqmfortable and elaborate slippers of the middle a.jjvs and finally to the perfect footgear of today. Bo entire. Indeed, has been thitf evolution that a Uroek goddess herself was not so well shod as is the modern girl. For sentimental reasons, if for no ether, therefore, the practical girl should eare weil for articles that represent so much thought nnd labor and time, lioing prac tical, however, she would prulably scout this reason and give as her motive for the trouble she takes to keep her shoes In good repair the prolonged life and Improved ap peal mice bestowed upon them thereby. Perhaps, too, she Is right, for certainly ten minutes a day spent In giving shoes a thorough ''beauty tieatment" will work wonders with them. Prevention, however, la better than a cure, and so our practical g!rl pays first attention to the care of her footgear at the moment ef Its buying. In the end it Is really economy to buy sev eral pairs of shoes at once, providing none of them be of pronounced ephemeral styles, .lor rest from oenstui.t wear Is their chief Orchard & Wilhelm Carpet Co. 414.16-18 S. Sixteenth Street Imperial Smyrna Rugs "IMPERIAL" Smyrnas come in all sizes, frcm the small doorway rug to a full room size. They come in every desirable design Ori ental, Two-tone and Delft, in exquisite shades of many colors. For every room in the house there's a suitable "Imperial" to add that "finish ing touch" so desirable. Every "Imperial" is seamless and reversible. OssHos: Tb frnaln perUl" bears ti Tina hr 'l. h "va In ut ans ssi Kara aJ The MACHINES need. Every girl should possess at least two pairs of shoes and two of slippers In active service, to say nothing of such spe cial varieties as dancing slippers or gym nasium shoes. When she cornea home In the evening for the practical girl Is apt to be self-supporting also he should at once change her shoes for slippers, and if It Is at all possible she should not even wear the same pair of shoes throughout the day. Observance of this rule will save her many a time from tired, aching feet, aside from the bencAclal effect upon the shoes them selves. Rub Dally with Vaseline. The shoes once bought, however, the dally treatment becomes more Important., Never, above all, hurl an unoffending pair of shoe Into a dusty closet without a thought of them until you put them on a,?aln the next morning. It Is by no meana necessary to polish them daily; twice a week at the Hands devoted to women Is enuigh for that. Every day, however, the shoes should lie first brushed carefully to remove dust ami then thoroughly rubbed with vaseline, special nttentlon being given the worn places. The vaseline should be left on all night, as the leather needs grease as a re storative, and In the morning the sh,ves should be again rubbed to remove superflu ous grease. They chould by no means be left simply standing In the closet or wardrobe during the nltfht; a tree for every shoe Is Impera tive. Strange to aiy, the more expensive Ittted trees are not so good as are the cheaper Jointed ones, which are much easier to manipulate. As soon aa a shoe or slipper leaves the foot It should be placed upon Its own Individual tree and kept there until next used, always brushing carefully with a felt brush. More than th'.s, a shoe box Is an absolute necessity. The Inevitable dust and dirt of the average closet mean death to tho most hardy of shoes. A large snap lox answers tho purpose admirably. Hinge the, lid on, provide a lock If you wish, and cover and lino the box with cretonne, chintz or wollpaper. In a box ot this slae thers Is room for every shoe and slipper you possess. Cleaning the Slippers. 81lppers, of course, since they get less hard wear, need less care. Besides keeping them always on treea and In the box the only rule to observe Is to treat white and light-colored slippers with a prepared cleansing chalk aa soon as they begin to shew signs of wear. It Is of prime Importance that repairs should be prompt and that attention should be paid to the little furnishings whose con dition so surely indicates refinement or slip shod untidiness. Never let a lace get be yond the days of Its pristine freshness; never leave a Bhoe for one day without a button. Py walking properly on the balls of the feet the heels will never be worn down, but If they are have a shoemaker repair them at once and thus save yourself Hnnoyanee and discomfort. Do not allow a Sole to appear in the sole of your shoe, but ,ive It mended as soon as It becomes thin. iCeep your shoes alwnvs In the best and neatest condition possible. There are other articles of footwear be sides shoes and slippers which need atten tion. Few women seem to think that any care whatever Is due rubber overshoes, which are placed constantly In the wettest and dirtiest places. When they are new ell that Is necessary la an occasional scrub bing with soap and warm water, but after they begin to lose their luster they should be frequently polished with a good liquid blacking. Soap and water, indeed, will not hurt any shoe and a good washing now and then Is an excellent restorative. Csre of the Hose. Stockings, perhapa. do not come atrlctly under the category of footgear, but no sensible girl will neglect them. The small est hole should be darned before It grows with cotton of the same sh:de as that of the stocking. One little known fict is that silk stockings should always be bought with cotton or lisle feet or they will wear badly indeed. Heel protectors, which can be made of small pieces of chamois or kid. easily obtained at any shoe store for a email sum, are great saving on both hose and shoes. It Is not generally known that bits of newspaper or blotting paper stuffed Into shoes or slippers will absorb molaturo bet ter than cotton. Or.e who suffers with feet that perspire will find It a good plan to resort to this method of absorption, which will not only be a relief to the feet, but a savin f to hose. All this seems a great deal of unneces- 1 saiy Uouble. but our practical girl will th PremlevTke World' THE SMITH surely have common sense enough to see that she la thereby saving money always a point with hei-.iot to mention the fact, that she la preserving by a little care the neat nnd dainty appearance for which all girls strive, but which not all attain. Two things mark the lady her gloves and her shoes and the girl with an Innate sense of refinement will neglect neither of them. Keeping the Hands Young. The matter of letting the hand grow old la one that every woman should consider seriously, and before the time comes when It la necessary for her to do eo. Noth ing gives away the age like the hands. And unleen they are very fat and of the pudgy order they begin to show age at a very early date. The hands of a woman of 30 have already begun to look old. Just what happens no one knows exactly. But scon after maturity an almost Imper ceptible change begins to take place in the hunds. The nnh shrinks away, leaving bones and muscles, and the hands lose their shapo. The nails crack and grow dark and the skin gets a weazened look. The hands of a nuut have a way of kfeplng yours, but the hands of a woman grow very old. To keep the hands young requires a hand bath every day. It must be taken when there Is plenty cf time for It, and the hands must be soaked for fully fifteen min utes In water as hot as can be endured; then the hands must bo taken out and put Into a cream bath. This Is nothing more than a bowl of ordinary skin food, made a little thinner with almond oil. If the hands are well rubbed with this every day and If the cream Is allowed to sink In, they will soon grow plump and white again. A good nail emollcnt should be rubbed lirto the nails every night to keep them from cracking, and each day the flash should be well pushed down at the base of thn nails to preserve their shape and keep the moons In sight. Upon every pair of hands there should be ten sliver spoons. There are no hands upon which these moons cannot be o.axed to ap pear. It may be that you have no moons on certain of your fingers, or think that you have none, but they are really there, even though you have never seen them, and they will come out if only you push down the flesh and give them a chance. The nulls sh.uld be shaped to the fingers', and It Is a very good rlan if they ar of the wron.r shape to let them grow until they are long. This can be done by wearlns gloves to protact them; then when they have grown out long they can be trimmed and shsped to suit the fingers. Very long nails are no longer fashionable; neither are atubby r.lls. The style Is a be-twixt-and-between one. Nails that are bleached pir.k with dyes are quite the style again, and to this must be added a very high gloss, for the day of the polished nail has returned. Contrary to the accepted idea, the path of the thin woman In her effort to gain avoirdupois is strewn with rosea, f r r she must do to put flefh on Is to take life easy, stop worrying and eat all the gnoi things that she lonss for. In fact, for the woman who has time to give up to it the training Is one tf great luxury except in the case of the one with whom thi condi tion Is temperamental. For In many case the thin" woman Is the nervous one-she who carrlea not only her own burdena, but those of all about he She worries ard hurries and doesn't give herself time to put an ounce of flesh on her bones, and If by chance during the long summer vacation she added a few pounds of avoirdupois, she Is now wesrlng It off In a mad effort to get her wardrobe ready In moving or bothering her head about the domestlo problem. Truth Telling; Sot Alwara Wis. Norman Hapgood waa dlaeusing Ameri can newspapers. "It's not enough t hi t our papers should tell the truth." he said. "Truth telling in Itself Is not part'culurly wise nor praiseworthy, "Thus a young man called on a young lady one spring morning very early. He had Ma big automobile along He wanted to give the young lady a morning spin through the country. "A little girl, the young lady's niece, answered the bell. ' "Is your auntie In?' s.-ild the young man. " 'Yes. sir,' said the little girl. " 'That's good. Where Is she?" he wtnt on. " 'She's upstairs," said the Utile girl, 'In her nighty, looking over the balusti ads.' Rochester Herald. THE OMAHA SUNDAY HKB: MAKCII PREMIER TYPEWRITER CO. SOMETHING NEW IN SHOES Men Tarn with Eieh of Belief from Pointed Toes to Wide Ones. GUN METAL RIVALS PATENT LEATHER Oxfords Are in Greater Demand and the Regular Styles Will Retire I'atll Winter Cornea Again. After a year when pointed shoes were In the ascendancy, the wider toe returned to its own and will be greeted with aoclalm by the general wearer, although the atyles of laat season were not axtreme enough to cause the discomfort experienced with the same stylo shoe eight or nine years ago. The general trend of shoes last season waa for a straight edge on the inside of the shoe and this holds good with the new shapes, but the toe Is considerably rounder and even the broad "bulldog" lasts will be In considerable vogue. As the shoes will be made wider, their length will be mado correspondingly shorter, and any number of neat and at tractive lasts are being shown among the early arrivals. The popular leather for the coming sea son will undoubtedly be the patent colt, as usual, but the dull leathers, especially of srun metal, will also bo largely worn. The reaction from the highly polished shoes to the more subdued ahades last year waa the feature of the season, and will be omnipresent this year, and the pa tent leathers will be utilized more for full dress and semi-dress functions. It Is claimed by admirers that the gun meta'. and unpolished leathers are more comforta ble during hot weather than the highly po ll: hed leathers, although not as dressy, and comfort is pre-eminently the desidera tum In all lines of dress, according to the present styles. Tan ahoea will be In greater demand than during the laat few years, aa they had an off year last season, when they were worn but little. Indications among retailers point to a much larger sale of the tan variety and stocks have been hard to se cure on account of the inability of the makers to supply the sudden and unex pected demand for this color of footgear. Low Shoes Are Popular. It la to be decidedly a year of oxford ahoea and the lines of high shoes carried will be of the plainer and more conserva tive atylea in general demand. The adop tion of low shoes In this section of the country has been much longer delayed than In the east, but little else than low cut shoes will be worn this season. Their extreme comfort commends them to all classes of buyers uad the high shoe foi spring and summer wear la now a thing o. the past. The styles of oxfords are sufficiently broad to satisfy every taste, from the ex treme novelties with fancy tops and buckle to the plain cut lace low quarters. The button styles will be most worn, however, and conservatism la the keynote of faahlo.i In respect to this style of shoes. The blucher styles will ulso be popular and tasty and the military heel Is still deemed in the best of taste. The solea on all shoes will be of moderate extension, the tendency being aeemlngly to ward conservatism In this respect and, In fact, freakish designs in any particular will meet with disfavor by the more dis criminating wearer who desires to dress with any degree of tuste. Xoi elites In This dear's Jewelry. Last year Louis XVI and Marie Antoin ette styles prevailed, and although these are now Been, it Is the Empire, the art iwuveau and the tireek elements that have recently been the most pronounced designs in Jewelry. They are seen In the beet creations of Parla, for which at present the caliber stoi.es are required. According to the Jew elers' Circular, Paris is more favorable t the caliber diamonds than is America., but their v gus Is IncreajMrg here. ' The sale of biai elets lies ben tremen dous. There hve been linked bracelets and bangles, simple gold engraved ones and those elabjrately set with Jewels. Orltwital effects, callbw Jewel deaugi.e and bu-gv 24, 1007. single settings of seml-prsclous stones. Jade and coral have been specially popular, while the green nr.iah of gold aa well as the rose has been well received. The question of whether bracelets will continue in fashion la one that cannot be answered with abajiute certainty. The flrat movement toward their Introduction began five years b.ho, but it did not re ceive a hearty Indorsement until short sleeves became In vogue. Then braceleta Jumped Into universal favor and they have continued their popularity. Nbxt to bracelets come necklaces, which have appeared in an infinite variety of de signs, from the single stranda of diamonds or pearls to the must elaborately Jeweled creations and from the tiny gold chain with a simple pendant to the festooned chains set with amethysts, pearls, aqua marines, peridots, tourmalines and tur quoises. One Jeweler of prominence predicts great development in gold articles, carved and otherwise treated to secure artistic ef fects. He claims that as the stones are now used only to heighten the effect, the metal ornament will be cf first Importance and the stones will not take the first place as formerly. Apropos of the use of semi-precious stones, it may be stated that In the last two years the increase in the number and application of these articles has been enor mous, and the price has consequently ad vanced accordingly. They are double the expense that they were three years ago and they Introduce so many colors that were never used before that they suggest infinite possibilities for artistic treatment. Of tho semi-precious stones most In use, the aquamarine, tourmaline and the peridot are the three most popular atones. A knowledge of the seml-preclous stones la most essential to the modern Jeweler. The cuttings of stones is another Im portant feature that shows the fluctua tions of fashion. While the round cut form Is eminently the most satisfactory for diamonds and others of the precious stones, the calibre or square cutting now tills an important place. Like the marquise, twentieth century and pear shaped cutting for rubles, diamonds and emeralds, It represent, a feeling of the moment. Rich people can buy articles constructed of calibre atones aa they have money to expend on extremes. Hut while the desire for this style of cut ting may continue for a few years, and while it ia essential to the most artistic designs, the stones being cut to fit the set tingsquare, keystone shaped or otherwise It is a style that will never become univer sally popular. It is too expensive for the average public and there is also the dif ficulty In securing lapidaries. The cushion cutting maintains Its popu larity for rubles, sapphires and emeralds. It la best adapted to these, stones when they are comparatively large, forming a central setting for some showy ornaments. Cabochon atones are alao used exten sively In s'-arf pins, brooches and as clasps for shopplv.g bogs and card and vanity tases. Iirlolettes are sometimes used as Hie finishing touch of a brooch or La Val ileres. but like the calibre stones, they are not destined to a general popularity. The regular cutting for diamonds Is by far the most satisfactory In the long run, as It brings out the brilliancy of the stone to best advantage In all sizes and qualities. The tiny stones that are used In the. work ing out of artistic designs are all cut with the usual number of facets of the diamond cutting. This, of course, ia one of the secrets of their beauty and extreme cost liness. The combination of fancy diamonds is one of the fads that Is being developed by a certain dealer. They are most expensive, but their varying colors amber, rose, cof fee and steel blue-render them charmingly adaptable to ceriain deulgns. Our Una Minstrels. Itones-Mistah W'eLstah. kin yo tell me Je dirt unce 'tween a dude an' a prize dawg? Interlocutor No. William; I am aorry to say 1 cannot answer that. NN hat is the difference between a dude and a prlie dog? Hunea Ie one'a a mollycoddle an' de U'ldar.'a a model cullle. Interlocutor Ladies and gentlemen, Willi your kind permifsion the world renowned vocalist, ilerr Whooperupsli ig will now ring the beautiful baliad, "tits Kind to the Cuok, the Has JTlts." Chicago Tribune. OPERATORS FURNISHED FOR ALL MACHINES Special Viol at HOSPE'S Cood Violin for beginners, with Case, Dow, extra fot of Strings and Hosln, complete 6.00 Good Violin for beginners, with Case, Bow, extra set of Strings and Ronln, complete $8.00 Good Pupil's Violin, with Case, Cow, extra set of Strings and Rosin, complete $10.00 Good Pupil's VioMn, with Case, Bow, extra Bet of Strings and Re in, complete $12.00 Fine "Martin" Violin, excellent tone, with Case, Bow, extra Bet of Strings and Rosin, complete $15.00 We also have a fine collection of rare old Violins at prices from $50.00 up. Old Violins in good condition taken in exchange. Headquarters for "Genuine Padua" Violin Strings. A. HOSPE CO. Omaha 1513 Douglas St. LINCOLN SANITARIUM Specially equipped for moat Thorough Medical and Surgical Treatment and care of Acute and Chronic Diseases Natural Mineral Water Baths (Eulpho-Sallne waters possessing curatlvo properties supplied from our own springs.) Rheumatism, Kidney. Liver, Heart, Stomach and Skin Diseases. J. O. EVERETT, Managing Physician. LINCOLN. NEU. f"Tai flninhn The Illinois Central Trains leave Union Station: 8:30 P. M., Daily. 8:00 A. M., Daily except Sunday. CHEAP SETTLER'S RATES To points in North Da kota, Minnesota and the Canadian Northwest, each Tuesday during March and April. ' CHEAP ROUND TRIP HOMESEEKER'S RATES 1st umI 3rd Tuesdays to same poUits. Tickets and information at City Ticket Office, 1402 Far nam St., Omaha, SAMUEL NORTH District Passenger Agent (1 USES i -'- '- Telephone Douglas 1240 m iaraaios Neb. LAWVi-OEMZTXavr H aVKCKOS TEMCB COUP AWT, a 07 sTortn 17th 8U Omaha. Hi urn SHORT LINE tn M.nnpannltt DR. McGREWSRQO WILL CURE YOU for u PAY WHAT VOL' CAN and begin your treatment now. Men. I'have a treatment especially adapted to all your ailments; 32 yearg' experience makes it possible for mo to cure where all others fail 23 year in Omaha. Treatment by mail. Office hours all day to 8:30 p. m. Sun day, to 1. Call or write, llox 766. Office, IIS South Fourteenth St, Omaha, Neb. i ( i