- i I F THE QMAIU SUNT) AY BEE: FEBKUAKV 23, MPS. 3 , Adaptable HfJ ttmin who cannot look well In a t.M gown In Indeed a hop." lesa proposition; tut It would r altogether a mistake to read Into that statement a theory that all women do W.k m-.n i T their tea rown a. Thare Is a tradition. surviving from the ay. of the wrapper, that any one can make . while In reality there la no gar went la tht feminine outfit whose success D"""U,M mOT consummate skill and more artlstio understanding than the tea rown la mode. The knowing- Parisian mav nomlae on her ball gown or atreet gown, but for that comfortable and picturesque gown which she will wear In her own horn. hour or at the Informal dinner aha will boldly go to a maker of unqjes tloned authority and will in consequence PT a price that may eeem extravagant to tha conservative. Exquisite, supple materials, perfection of workmanahlp, harmony of coloring, artlstio grace of line. and. above all. be eotnlngneas are the essentials of the smart tea rown and of lta slightly more prefen tious relative, the Informal dinner gown, which la after all but a comfortable and , picturesque tea gown with accented decol kitaga, an eminently coquettiah and becom ing dinner rown appropriately worn only at one's own table and when the dinner guests are one's Intimate. Artistic Ir.novaUona have brought about within recent seaaona aome ball, dinner and reception toilettes which, though In tended for Informal wear, have the louat flowing lines associated with the tea gown; but these artistic gowns of Greek or ori ental suggestion are too extreme to be generally adopted, and only the audacious i and exceptional woman experiments with them, while no woman who can afford to pay for an effective tea gown need shun It for fear of appearing bizarre. The first point to be considered the vital consideration la the figure of the wearer. Thanks to the elastic posslblli ties of life In the modish tea gown, this adaptable garment may make the best of any figure; but In order to achieve this a 1 mlrable result the designers must under stand the value of lino and know exactly how to counteract by the lines of the gov.n the fallings In the lines of the wearer's figure. In the adjustment of the waist line the accentuation or suppression of the hip curve, the widening or narrowing of the shoulder, disguising or emphasising of tho bust roundness-4n these things lies the possibility of giving grace to almost any figure, and In the handling of these prob lems the successful designer of tea gowns revels. The foundation of the gown, the soft, clinging lining Into which tho figure la moulded, with no hint of tightness, must be very cleverly cut and fitted. In aome chic models one finds only a foundation as loose as the outer robe, but this Is tiuo of tho boudoir gown, the very Informal though often flaborate negligee, .rather than of the formal tea gown. " The French marker of the lattor garment almost Invariably starts with the exqui sitely fitted clinging lining- Then be d.ecs his wizardry with the floating outer dra pery, considering in every fold and de.ai! the neceasltlea of the wearer's figure. Empire modes adapt themselves admir ably to tea gown exigenciea and will be popular In this field after their vogue In other provinces has passed; but the Idea most Insistently urged by the tea gown designers recently has been that of the loose coat or tunic worn over a robe at least slightly defining the outlines of the figure. A transparent coat or tunic of laca or net over a clinging robe of very supple satin or ailk or over a daintily hand-wrsught robe of chiffon, ailk moussellne or net is the scheme most frequently repeated, but there are two very effective models In which the coat or over drapery Is cf velvet sum, silk or crepe, while the under robe Is of sheer material. v A handsome model from Dreeoll has a long, louse, sleeveless coat of pink Liberty Activities Bachelor Visions aad Il!as4ons. BACHELOR, who died In In diana the other day, left the melancholy warning to Ilia kind, "lon't live a batch aa 1 have lived." Many expressions of similar tenor came from the A dying man, who Bought In soulful words to repent for his wasted life, but the senti ment of all were tritely condensed Into the words when by his direction will be chiseled on the tombstone. The Ilooaltr repentant was doubtlesa an Idealist, who dreamed of a queen for an airy castle, while what be really needed waa a woman competent to manage or do the prosaic work of a home. A writer who knows the tribe, aays "the bachelor U an exacting being. He cannot bear to be disillusioned in the matter of his ideal of feminine lovellneas. His devotion to the fair one he has clothed In illusions will stand Just so many blows. Then there comes a time when a straw will break Its back. One Idealist bore the discovery that the bloom upon his lady's cheek owed more to art than to nature, but he si 111 tlurlshed the fatuoua delusion that the complexion beneath its artificial damask was lovely In hue and texture. He attfled a pang when It transpired that the duky shadow In eyelash and eyebrow grew on the end of an eyebrow pencil, and poul ticed his pain with the reflection that the eyelashes were long and the eyebrows well shaped. But when, upon a brisk walk In the duak. when the final word had all but been spoken, she, after hasty pats over her head, besought him to retrace his Steps and assist her to hunt. for her missing curls those dear curls which be had thought so adorable the last straw fill. He felt prepared to see the very features f bis Idol vanish as completely aa he him- Fat Is An Offense. "The female form being capable of ex pressing a supreme degree of grace, should be an Inspiration in our daily lives and lead up to higher Ideals of beauty," taid the art lecturer. "Therefore the fat wo man is an enemy to th artistic uplift for he Is entirely too heavy for any uings of fancy to raise. "J can't understand how any woman will remain fat when it la so easy to reduce one's flesh. In the Latin quarter of fails one never sees a grosa figure. Although th art modela taka things easy, sit around a. great deal and eat Just whatever they please, yet they keep their flesh firm and their figures beautiful. They have a sim ple fat reducer that takes the place of starving and gymnastics. It consists of teaspoonful after mean and at bedtime f tbla simple receipt: H ounea Marmoia, V ounce Fluid Extract Cases ra Aromatic and IVt ouncea Syrup Simplex. That's all. Vhy don't fat, pudgy American women try that? Xt'a harmless nay. ery good for them and will, I understand, take off as much as a pound of fat a day. Any one with a litUe small change and a drug str aajuy caa Lave a decent figure. " Tea Gown Prevails satin bordered by a band of pink ranna, a heavy handsome embroider- denim n mingled gold and silver covering the line of union between satin and velvet. This embroidery, by the may, waa, as close ex animation revealed, skilfully applied In stead of being embroidered upon the coat, and the beauty of th high-priced applique embroideries today enables one to secure excellent effects at cost far less than that of the hand embroidery done to order. The beautiful embroidered neta and th combinations of lace and embroidery are full of possibilities aa tea gown trimming. Indeed, there waa never a time when the picturesque elegance of the tea gown was easier of achievement than 1t is now. Gold and silver are highly valued by the tea gown designers and the lacea and em broideries In which these metallic effects are Introduced are legion. All white and gold or white and silver Is considered ex ceedingly smar- and a Greek key design In NEOLIGEK OP WHITE LINON TRIMM VALF.NCIF.VNKS AND A TEA GOWN BKOIDERED WITH YELLOW ROBES gold or silver bordering a beautifully draped robe of white crepe de chine has decided cachet. One of the tea gowns sketched here could be successfully carried out in white crepe, white chiffon or silk moussellne and gold or silver embroidery, but Is charming, too. In delicate color with relieving white in corsage folds and aleeves. This is an ex cellent model, not too complicated to be successfully copied by a reasonably clever dressmaker. The long, transparent, mousquotalre sleeve Is i sod In many of the latest models, but Is re.illy good only In connection with some such modest decolletage aa that of the gown In question, the V lines asso ciating well with the long sleeve, while the round or rami pronounced decolletage Is usually combined to better advantage with a ahort sleeve. A mere frill or cape arrangement of lace or transparent stuff often serves for sleeves and the wing on angel sleeves which have been making their appearance even In cer tain artistic Parisian evening gowns are es pecially effective In connection with the tea gown, aa are loose draped sleeves of any graceful sort, falling away to show the outside of the arm. A majority of the coats are sleeveless or I 1 f W'w ft . ft-v0 IVWfe'a Wl tlflSf I ' A.99 and Views of Progressive Women in Various Walks of Life self vanished from before her shrine after the search for her lost tresses was over. "The bachelor's Ideal la too often the ornamental feature of his future home, and It never occurs to him that sometimes a Sevres vase serves the purpose of holding the lamp which lights a home and aome tlmea Its construction U such that no prac tical use can be made of it. But he never considers that the Idealist is prone to close his eyes so that he not only cannot tell serviceable from unserviceable pieces of Bevn-s, but is not even able to distinguish between Crown Dresden and common clay. "It often happens, however, that the beaut loui vision which forma the bache lor's ideal materialises Into a wife; that her face is as sweet aa her disposition; her voice aa sweet as her smiles; her hands as lovely in the preparation of an appe tising dinner aa when skimming over the keya of a piano. The bachelor's Ideals find Innumerable equivalents In fact. When this Is not the case the fault lies often with the bachelor. In business he will not ac cept anything at Its face value and with out due investigation, but he rarely ex amines into the useful qualities and at tributes of mind and disposition of the fair one whose laugh thrills him at the theater, whose glances brighten tnc supper afterward and whose accomplishment form a screen behind which he never looks to barn whether they are backed by solid virtues or Irritating foibles." In the matrimonial the idealist as Well as the Ideal must take chances "go It blind." if need be If either would escape the pathetic fate of the Hoosler who re pented too lato. Women anal the Malls. Btsr Itoute' W26, South fass City to Lander. Wyo. That is the official designation which the PosLOfiice department gie to forty miles of mountain trail that runs along the t-p of the coinlnentiil divide In the Wind Itlvcr range of tlie Rocky mountains in north western Wyoming. Over that trail the Vulted States miula pass duily, In both di rections, to connect with other star routes. Star routes are usually sward to triod and seasoned Veterans of the road men who can follow the trail when the Vfikes" are buried under several feet of snow and the only other landmsi ks-the mountains are shrouded In fog and mist. Bui once in a while an txception ts made, for s.kmI reasons. One of them Is star reutj No. C412S. It is operut -d by a veteran, ii-deed. but not a man. Mrs. 8. K. Gllleipl?, who is a Kansas City womun when she is "back home," holds a commU-.ioQ from the Poaloffice department to carry the malls over this route, and fur two years has not failed to deliver th mail pouch at Its destination within the ln.,e sjierlfiad In her contract. To dj this hua not always been easy. Moie than once she has had to abandon her sleigh on the trail, rut the hat-ocas and with the mall bags thrown acruaa the horses' backs push on through a bllssard that obscured every landmark and the road Itself. "Cloaa calls! Well, yes; aome," said Mrs. Gillespie, la aa interview In tli Kan have large draped armholee from which the soft, transparent Meeves of the under robes emerae. but occasionally one sees aa elbow coat sleeve with cuff and frill, after the Louis mode, or a modified kimono sleeve, this last usually opened up the out side to the shoulder. The second gown of the sketch Is a par ticularly charming model, the daintiest and most feminine of tea gowns. The under robs Is In bleu del crepe de chine, em broidered In little applied rose garlands of pale creamy yellow. Over this princess jt :sv-r jr. en I 11 I aWsBBVHlBSBBBBBBBBT I EH WITH BANDS OP LIBERTY AND WITH MANTLE OF VALENCIENNES. robe, whose girdle Is shortened to emplr lines at the back, falls the manteau of Valenciennes, formed from very wide lace flouncing. The falling lace forms the sleeves, though there are tiny transparent under sleeves of clel moussellne de sole. The fichu Is of ciel moussellne de sole, with a bordering line of yellow roses, and this fichu is so draped that it descends to the empire waist line In the back, the lace manteau folds failing straight from beneath It A very charming Hind simple te gown, model, which should be s possibility for any dressmaker, la made on empire lines, the skirt falling from shortened waist line, while the bodice is merely draped fichu fashion, crossing In surplice folds at back and front, V-shaped decolletage bor dered by a Greek design in gold and silver. The same design may or may not be ap plied around the top of the folded girdle and will border the short-draped sleeves. A wide scarf bordered by the Greek key design Is draped in plaits on the shoulders, coming down well over the sheulder point and falls straight, back and front, almost to the bottom of the gown. 8llc voile Is a pretty and serviceable ma terial for such a model, with girdle and acarf In self-tone liberty. sas City Star. "One night In November my driver, who was bringing the mail from Myeravllle to South Tass. didn't ar rive at the hour he was due. I waited until S o'clock In the morning and then I determined to find out what waa the mat ter. The mall for Atlantic, a station four miles out, which he was to take on his return trip, was ready to go. I couldn't get a horae in town, so I took the mall pouch and walked to 'Atlantic, where I left it There I got a horae and pushed on. "About two milea from Atlantic I found one of the mall wagon horses with-trailing harness and I knew there had been an ac cident., .1 caught the horse and went on. Soon I saw the wagon by the side of the road and the Injured driver on the ground. There had been a runaway. The second horse wasn't to be found, so I loaded the mall bags on my horse, and, assisting the driver on the other, turned back toward South Pass. We made It just In time to save a lost trip being recorded against my contract. "The winter of 14 was one of the most severe I had to go through. In April there was five feet of snow on the trail. That month I bad a terrible experience. I started for Myeravllle in the morning with a two horse sleigh aid a driver. The snow was packed hard and the trail perfectly pluln, but we hadn't gone far when it began to snow herd. In an hour a violent bliziard waa raging. When we were still seven miles from the station and the snow was so thick ws could soarcely see the horses the whlffletree broke. We abandoned the sleigh, piled the mail bags on the horses' bucka and went ahead on foot. We dluu t dare ride the horses for fear the extra weight might prove too much for them. The stakea which markert the trail were aoon covered with snow, and we could only fo'low the hones. A horse has a wonderful instinct for following a trail In the worst storm, and they kept the road and brought us into the station, tut my feet were frosen." Mra. Gillespie cares for her own stock, doctors her twenty-two horses.- superin tends the repairs on the wagons and sleighs nnd drives over the route. "I learned to shoot when I first went out there, but I have never been molested," she stid. "though mail wag. ins on nearby routes have been held up once or twite. I have frequently been out all n.gt.t in the saddlo looking for strayed horses, but never bad to shoot anything worse than a rattle snake." Trlbate tu Mra. Bryan. In an address to a womun'a club In Buffalo, last week, W. J. Bryan paid the following tribute to his -wife: "An eajiLirn society woman haa been quoted as being quite solicitors as to whether or not Mrs. Bryan would be capable of conducting her social duties with pro priety. I lake the opportunity of saying tn public something about a woman whose aid to me in my public career I unhesitat ingly acknowledge. She Is a very superior woman. She is a college graduate and Is deeply read la Boany subjects. After our Is A Clhaoce to Save One Half Worth Considering? Hundreds of. people have appeared to think so this week. The opportunity to pet twice ns much for your money or to get every need for half what you expected you'd have to pay next Fall ought to be an incentive to immediate buyingl-ouglit to arouse your enthusiasm. The knowing ones will buy now during this special FEBRUARY CLEARING SALE They'll save handsomely by this forethought and forehand buying, for prices will double or more in a month hence. If you ar 'nt ready far the goods we'll gladly hold them for you and make deliveries later. We deliver all goods in plain unlettered wagons.. CREDIT WITH TERMS SPECIALLY LOWERED. The above Illustration will give you a fair Idea of tlie beauty of this bed. It is of very handsome design, missive tubing and large ornamented chills and Joints. All popular colors of enamel. This bed Is of superior character and offered at an extra ordinary low price. Carpets and Rugs 168 rolls fine Brussels Carpet, firm weave, cq. yard 3JC 68 rolls Velvet Carpet, In lUht and dark tans, o ff yaid JJC 41 rolls Reversible Ingrain Car- pets. wool, linen 41c chain, yard Brussels Rug. 12x, seams, guaranteed, each Wilton Velvet Rues, no mitre .14.97 22.50 12x9, popular patterns. Smith's best Axmlnster Ruus, 12x9, first J A of) quality 4T"U M'Dougall Kitch en Cabinets fr"' All the latest designs are now or. display at our store at excep tionally low prices. There's a cab inet made to suit every taste arid every purse, try the one that suits jour's for 30 days at our risk. marriage ahe studied law and perfected her knowledge In it. To make herself a more complete helpmate to me in my public career, she studied economics and political economy. I unhesitatingly take her advice. Some of our friends yuis me by saying that "she Is superior aa a public man to her hue band and as to social abilities, I have no fear of her ability to conduct herself with propriety and credit" Mayor Tom L. Johnson of Cleveland, who waa next introduced, said: "I am glad of the opporunity to add my voice in praise of Mra. Bryan. She Is un questionably a superior woman. I well re member when Mr. Bryan and I were mem bers of congress. He made a speech for which he was congratulated on all aldea. Some one asked him, 'Lid Mra. Bryan write that fcpeech?' "I remember his reply: 'She might have done ao; ahc is clever enough.' " Women Workers In India. Consul General Wllllum H. Michael of Calcutta wrltea that the government of India, acting upon the recommendation of the telegraph committee, has authorized the employment of women operators. He adds: "Tlie candidates must be between IS and 30 years of age, and tin y must be unmarried or widows. They mus' undergo a training of twelve months In the telegraph training classes, during which time they will re-e-ive $r,.,!5 a month, the same allowance that Is drawn by male learners. Selected candi dates, on leaving the training classes, will be on probation for one year. On appoint ment they will receive the following pay: At stations In India other than Rangoon and Madras, tl3.31, increasing by annual In crements cf W cents, commencing with the fourth ci of aeit lor, to fcX.GE,; at naiisoon, $:e . Increasing to $J0; at Madras. $10, In creasing to 3.31. W rvice will be pension able, and there will be no Lability to tians fer; but resignation will be compulsory in the event of marriage. The hours of work of women signallers wiil be from ,8 a. m. to p. m., but the w hole period of duty will not exceed seven hours in the twenty-four, and tm-re will be exemption from duty on Sundays." Worth on I'.ronuiny. "How can any self-respecting woman clot ha he rtelf In a last year's gown?" asks M. Wortli of Paris, in Harper a Lusar. "If eacii frock, instead of being an epi tome of every fugitive craxe of the hour, be in detail beautiful and becoming, and of good and beautiful material, there will be no reason wi.y, posuiuly with a little alteration, but probably without any at all, the gown aged I, 3 tr even 4 years may not be worn and look admliable! "Never oruer fashiotia that date a dre. a is my advice to the thrifty. When every body is wearing balloon aleeves, restrain your own. When skirts are so attenuated thai walking is a difficulty, say to your dressmaker that ou must have extra breadth tn yours. Moderation is the watch word of the really good dressmaker and exaggeration bis detestation. "One of tea first Uuiks my father, the HI ISiiibSs'L mmt4m Quarter Oak Pedestal Ex. tension Table $17.69 Guaranteed slst hole Steel Range, complete with warming closet, 26.75 Large Oak Heater ... S5.15 Sawed hfjk ': i Hsrtman'i Hot Blast Heater. . . Solid Oak rj J5 M i ss I on y Rocker Jr Of below attractive de sign, broad comfortable back, wide seat, thor. ougbly guaranteed. ! 'tit a ntmv MwMj if"ii N ew Special "5T 75 China Closet JP This China Cabinet Is of our own special design, made of solid oak, shelve grooved for plates, double strength glass, bent end de sign. I4M-I4I6-I4IS founder of the house of Worth, set himself to accomplish was the Semolitlon of the crinoline a fashion that made women not only mountebanks, but a public nuisance. He quietly dispatched It into the limbo of things discarded. It lias never returned and never will. "I will tell you a story that will show you how unreasonably Insatiable some women are In their desire for sheer novelty. It was told me by one of the most re nownded Jewelers In Paris, who remodela the crowns of Europe and has the most exalted among his clients. A woman came to him one day and a sked to see the very latest tiara he hud. It was shown and the design pleased the woman, who said it was really very beautiful. But, she asked, was it new? "Assured and reassured upon this point, she decided to buy It. And then suddenly she put a last questiem to the Jeweler. "How old is it, precisely?' she asked, eagerly. She was told It had been three weeks In the establishment, and great was her chagrin thereat. 'What! Three weeks!' cried she. 'Why, I thought It might have bee-n only three days!' As even a fairly simple tiara takes three months to make, what matter whether It had been finished three days or three Weeks ago? There could certainly be nothing newer!" Where Woinrn Own to Age. In Japan every woman has to dress ac cording to her agej, arid It is pretty certain that such a fashion, if fashion it is, will never prevail In this country. Suppose it were the rule that every woman upon a certain birthday anniversary ihould adopt a certain kind of dress, there would be a forgetting of birthday dates in very short oidei. Li Japaii a toouimi wears gold pins until ahe is 2J. At j the pins axa. white, merely spotted with gold, and at 40 ahe wears plain shell combs. Her shoes are also changed as the ago changes. What Wssus Art Delnar. Mrs. Hariietie WtKid Johnston, a lawyer In New York, 1b In partnership with her husband. Mrs. Philip 1 uipcnuer is another .-sew l ork lawyer who works wiut hr husband in partnership. Al an auction sale in New York last week of early editions of Mra Mary Baksr ti. tdil.V K works, a postal card containing five words "Meet Me at the Depot," was sold for tit to one of her admirers. Henrietta Crosman, the actress, is aoon to depart for India to claim a fortune of $iii,wu left her by her grandfather, and she will abandon Lhe stase temporarily in uder to establish residence tor that pur poses. Mrs. Charlemagne f Tow er. wife of the American ambuooudor to Germany, who la to return to this country In the early siring, finds thai her popularity on the continent la making tier exit difficult So great a success his been Mrs. Tower so cially in the official world of the German capital tiiat ICiiioeror William himself views the departure of Hits brilliant woman with personal regrets. Mra Carolina C. Furbush of West New ton, Mass., has presented to the Navy de partment of the Naval Academy at An napolis, a valuable historical painting by Thomas Birch of the "battle Betwwn the Constitution and the Uuerriere." Birch was an artist of a century ago. and waa on of tho first designers of Lulled Slates IWl L MMMtM, MMmmtttntnt.tMH I J We firmly believe that this Is by far the blrsest Pedestal Extension Table value on sale In Omaha. This table Is made of best selected oak with large qunrter-aawed oak top, brilliantly polished. It ts ery masRlvo, very substsntial asd extra well finished. Mi Double Heating Base Burner, full nickeled trimmed guaranteed, 31.50 .55.95 H u d Goal Heater . . . S22.I5 U-tX V H lm i I toll tali I v it mm - - . sb rav v ar v. -a si im f m u, . .1.1.. a.iiiij ,--r fir ll! ""TtliTi sai'" 1 Comblnstloi Made of selected solid oak throughout, fancy shaped French bevel plate mirror. 11 ts a ouperior mane, case tizjr a very handsome case and sivl m tmmendoiia hirpaln at ih. PV t price. ... B-.- A TX m u mm Feather your nest DOUGLAS ST coins at the Philadelphia mint He painted his naval battle picture In lh:. Mary Boyle O'Reilly, daughter of the poet Jtihn Boyle O'Reilly, is trying to get women ins-ctors for the lodging houses of Boston, In which she save 7o,(KMl live their lives. These houses have bad plumbing and few conveniences for the lodgers, who are young and workers In the city, with few pleasures leyond those afforded by the very cheapest theaters. Leaves from Fashion's Notebook. Calling eli esses are very elaborate, and the nets, silk voiles and finer materials are Impressed into the service. Voile In new patterns is out this spring prettier than ever and more popular. It comes in all tones and is made up as a two-piece suit with a lingerie waist to be worn with the little Eton coat and the plaited skiit. A bow of velvet 'in the back Is one of the dlstlnelive features of the handsome call ing waist. It is made of chiffon velvet and is a twisted affair run through the lace and tied fiat with ends and loops out spread. A little silver thread is used to at tach the bow to the luce. For the nicer waists Hie surplice effect is much in vogue. A wide band of lace is brought down from1 each shoulder and crossed in the middle- of 1 lie front, where it is faslened with a handsome pin. - A bis ornamental button may be used in place ot the pin. All kinds of lace are useid lo inako the surplice effect. A lovely shirt waist in the latest mode is embroidered with stuffed roses which are worked out In silver embroidery. Tlie roses are first done in white worsted and then covered with white silk, after which the silver threads are drawn over them ao aa to completely conceal the ailk and ttie padding. Gloves are growing longer as the dress sleeves are growing snorter. There are gloves that cover the elbow snd part ot tne upper arm, where they are met by puffs of lace. Ovtr these puffs there fall sleeve cups of silk or lace. Every effort la made to pile triinmlnga upon th upper part of the sleeve without actually stuffing the sleeve with crinoline. There Is no denying the fact that for the woman who is going to have only one gown the best selection is a tan. for it holds Its own better and endures more hsrd wear than lhe other tints of brown. There tne, of course, many shades of tan, for one can count in the biscuit tones, lhe twine and airing rolora, tlie burnt bread and the soft yellow browns. With the elaborate dinner gowns the LZ3 1 BSaSaBBBBBSBBBBiaBBBT PERFECT Used by people of refinement E.taUtsUdta T66 by MMMMIMIIMMMIMMtMIMIlH Hartmart's Iron T ,95 bed Special, Here Is an iron bed offered at a price which makes It a value posi tively beyond duplication In Om aha. It Is of handsome design, la made of good stibstant lal tubing and has extra large Joints and post ornaments. It s 4 feet. ii inches wide, and In enameled In various colors of enamel. Linoleums, Mattings, Etc. Best grade printed Linoleum all guaranteed, q square yard tjC Inlaid Linoleum. 8-4xtfl-4. guaranteed colorings, square yard 0C Inlaid Linoleums. hard- .97c Lino- .1.26 wood designs, square yard Imported English leums, superior first quality Japan Mattings, cot ton warn, varri 23c Superior Japanese Mattlnir. durability guar- -anteed, yard JIB r New Special Sol id Buffet An exceptional opportunity; madt of the best selected material, high ly polished, roomy drawers, laige compartment, top set with French plate, bevel edge minor. handsomest shoulder capes and wraps are worn. They are in aoft shades of ovster gray and silver gray and their embroideries are carried out In the same tone'. These caries are not too dressy for street and car riage wear, aa they are all In one ceilor, ao to speak, though they give the costume a wonderfully dressy appearance. A New York nostess Introduced a new feature the other day which mav become popular, for It was both chic and beautiful. It was the wearing of the very short or Josephine sleeve. The waist, which was a lingerie waist of fine lace, was cut off above the elbow and finished with a wide band of lace Insertion. The elbow and part of the upper arm were bare. And the neck was cut rouneling. But to cover up the arm and neck, there waa a chiffon scaif which was 'thrown around the shoulders and arma and allowed to hang carelessly in front. RBLIGIOIS KOTES. Rev. Father D. 8. Phelan. editor of tha Western Watchman of St. Louis, will go on an extended trip abroad after Easter. He will make an Intimate study of Catholic questions and will visit the pope. . President Charles Lincoln White of Colby colle-ge, Watervllle, Me., has tendered his resignation to take effect ut the end of the colle-ge year and has aoe-epted the peisitlon aa associate corresponding secretary of the American Baptist Home Miaalon Society of New York. Rev. Thomas Bourgeon, pastor of ' the Metropolitan tabernacle, London, has made) definitive his resignation of the pastorate, which was postponed from March last year. His health la alill poor. Rev. John F. Frleden. one of the most distinguished Jesuit educators of the coun try, was installed lasl week president of St. Iiuis university. For a time he was president of Detroit college. Father Frleden was born In the grand duchy of Luxem bourg in 1&44. Ir. J. Wilbur Chapman, leader of the Presbyterian evangelistic work in this .country, has arranfted to Join his forces wlih thoe of Rev, Charles A. Alexander In a tour that will take ttiem around thet world. The trip, at planned, will requlrs alx months. Rev. Dr. Ludwlg Holmes, pastor of the Swedish Lutheran church in Portland, Conn., has had the degree of knighthood of the Order of Vasa 0011 f err eed on hini by King Ousts ve of Bweden. The decoration wss in recognition of Dr. Holmes' literary work. 9 m I II vuu li 'I :