THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 2$, 1P09. Activities and Views of Progressive Women in Various Walks of Life E Edirrntlnn at Mother. ,N DIICI'SRINO the "Older and Newer Ideals of Marriage" In the American Magasln. ITof. W. I. Thomas ftf Chlcasro rlalma that to handle the child wisely the mother ahould be aa wise aa society can make her. Ha says: "The mother should bo educated both in life and In the schools, and the solid tude and provision for her education hould certainly not be leas than for that of the scientific specialist. At the age of perhaps 8 the child brain Is practically aJl In; he l shoTt only In experience and practice. He can understand any abstract principle and any piece of literature, from the theory of evolution to the Hamlet of Shakespeare, but when he spends his time with an uneducated nurse or an unldeaed mother he goes to school and even to col lege with a mind o barren that one of our great college has actually Introduced a tutorial system by which an Intelligent Instructor practically lives with the boy nd attempts the reparation of a misspent childhood. "It Is also true that there never was a time In the history of the family when It stood so much In need of an Intelligent mother. Formerly life aa a whole was largely comprehended within the family. The Industries and arts, education and re ligion were carried on there. But theae In terests have now been abstracted from the home to such a decree that the Timlty situation la left rather empty. Business pursuits keeps the fether away from home most of the time, and even set very narrow ltmlta to his Intelligence, and It Is. there fore pecullnrly Important that the mother should be fit to represent the Interests of life during that prolonged period before the child makes his connections with the outer world. ' "Morality Is with reference to the wel fare of ioclety, not the appetites of the Individual, and a theory or practice which restricts the Interests of the mother and thereby stunts the life of the child Is. In the profoundest sense of the word, Im moral." v Boosting; lie of Gas. A new way of earning money has been opened to women by the gas companies of the large cities. They are sent to private houses and apartments to explain the use of the gas range and of the meter with the object of teaching economy In the use of gas. According to one of these teachers It la a position requiring tact as well aa the special knowledge they are paid to diffuse. "It Is always possible to make a woman feel humiliated when you call to show her how to do what she thinks she knows how to do herself," one of the gas emissaries Is quoted In Popular Mechanics, sa saying about her work. "Possibly she has complained to the gas company that the stove will not work properly. "The reason may be aha does not know how to use It, but It would not do to tell her so. So we proceed to find out the rea son and do It so adroitly that she still be lieves the fault was with the range and not with her, but at the same time has learned enough to make certain that there will be no future oomplalnt." Where the Idea ef this new department originated Is not known. Chicago has just claimed the credit of It, but the gas com panies of Philadelphia, New Tork and other cities also have suoh departments and advance counter claims. In Philadelphia the staff of women go from door to door or make special visits If called. Among the bits of Information handed out by the teacher Is the declaration that many women make the ' mistake of trying to light the gas at the same time they turn It on. A, second or two should be allowed to elapse before applying the match, so that the gas can expel the air. This makes the Vkitme work hatter and saves ar&a. Another economical expedient to which many women pay little attention la the simmering burner. When a saucepan no longer needa the entire heat of a burner it Is only necessary to transfer It to the sim mering burner to leave the large burner free for something else and to save gas. Result of Investigation. An Atchison. Kan., girl, relates the Globe of that city, had a proposal of marriage Sunday night, and asked a week to think It over. She went to all of her married sis ters. One, who used to be a belle, had three children, did all her own work, and hadn't been to the theater or out riding alnoe she was married. Another, whose husband was a promising young man at the time she waa married, was supporting him. A third didn't dare say her life waa her own when her husband was around, and a fourth was divorced. After visiting them and hearing their woes, the heroine of this little tale, went heme, got her pen. Ink and paper and wrote an answer to the young man. Tou may think It waa refusing him, but It wasn't. She said ah could be ready In a month. " A Dream la Bnttone. discern the outlines of a shape he must be a mind reader. The fO butt inn are one of the accessories to the ecclesiastical gown. To be strictly accurate, a few hundred cases are merely "applied," and run up and down the straight expanse of woman like so many racers making for a goal. But from the neck of the hem of the skirt there are bat talions that require the hook. The ecclesi astical in many of Its phases keeps close to the original. The robes of Archbishop Farley In some church ceremonial could hardly be distinguished fiom those of the femlnlno memb.rs of a congregation. Sim pler forms Imitate the priest's cassock, which, being absolutely guiltless of fullness at any stage, gives the unpleasant sugges tion that the woman ha dropped her skirt somewhere by the wayside and is escaping In some phase of that mysterious "under neath" to whl?h Misa White refers. Miss White wji strong in praise of the cassock for the suffragette, believing It to be Just the costume "to run away with." For the antla Miss White pointed to the gown of the middle ages as a symbol of being behind the Mm?. Traits of College Girls. The original argument against "the fe male mind" wae that It could not cope with the college curriculum. Now they seem to think that the college curriculum cannot cope with the female mind, says Madge C. Jenlron In the Delineator. We have It suggested In all seriousness, as the dean of women at Chlcano notices with demure acidity a recent report, that women should be required to take more work, to offset the extra drain, executive, Journalistic and athletic, which comes upon man. But, after all, the work of the university girl Is not Just what It seems, any more than is her apparent capture of the uni versity In numbers. It needs no Account ing for. It la the heritage of her history. On sees In her scholarship the same deli cacy which Is to be met In the life of wo men everywhere, which makes It so dlffl rult to organlzo them against any labor bi e, which keeps them tied to miserable marriages this natural tendency to do what Is set before them, and to do It, If not necessarily with distinction, at least to go on doing It, find, for the moat part, with devotlrn and thoroughness. The very certainty of this Incllration I Its limita tion. A college girl reads what Is In the course; sh dees It all and she does It well. She may say to you, with an air of flnalliy If you talk to her about Thackoray: "We do not hnv Thackeray until next year." A profersor at Kansas said that he found his girls studying bocks, his boys studying subjects., , There Is another quality in women which I deceiving, and which makes for good woik, but not for the best. They have. It Krmi, a certain esthetic sense, even Intel lectually, which prompts thetn always to torn out a thing which Is neat and nice to look at. A professor of sociology told tne that he waa reminded anew of this quality with every set of theses which cam up to him. He read the first five of women, each time, with a new delight. They were so complete, so finished, so smooth and filed down. "But I can read fifty of men with loss weariness than fifty of women," he sold. "If they are not so well done, they are fresh. It may not be good socio logy, but It I Tod Barnes, and I have not read Ted Barnes before." Married Wosaea Who Work. Widows, 800,000 of them and more, were earning their living In the United States In the year 1!). And married women, like wise, to the number of more than TO.O'X). And divorced women, likewise, to the num ber of more than en.oca, One million, six hundred thousand of them altogether! .. Theee widowed worklngwomen, the.e married working woman, these divorced worklngwomon, together, were a full third and more of the grand total of 4,800.not American worklngwomen, U years cf ig and over. In the United States In the last census year, says Everybody's Magailne. How many women were there, 3B year of age and over, In the United States in 1900? There were approximately J,700,000. And how many married women worker, widowed women worker, and divorced women worker were there? There were approximately 1,500,000. Which 1 to say that In the total female population of the United States, married nd unmarried, working and not working, rich and poor, JS year of age and over. In the year 19(0, on woman out of every eleven had passed her wedding day and nevertheless was a breadwinner. Makersof Millions. One of the most Interesting chapters n a book Just published In London,, "Road to Riches." by Thornton Hall, is that en titled, "Women as Maker of Millions," and a good many Of the heroines are American. Probably no one knew until thl admira ble compilation Was published that there' were so many women who have made mil lions as the result of their own efforts pr discoveries. From th many stories which the book contains are reproduced the following: "A notable pioneer among women money maker I Mrs. Herman Oelrlchs. daughter of Senator Fair. She had, It Is true, a large fortune to begin with, but about four years ago she took the management of it Into her own hands. "She sold out all her real estate holdings In San Francisco for $2,500,000 and went to New Tork to pit her brain, a a money maker against the most astute and daring financiers In the world. "Instead of losing her fortune, a was confidently anticipated, she added to it to rapidly) by successful speculation that within two years she was $20,000,000 richer than when she started her campaign, and la Increasing her millions so quickly that It I said she will one day be the richest woman In the world. "A a woman Of business Mrs. Oelrlchs has a formidable rival In Mrs. Ella Rawls Reader, a woman who at one time ad dressed envelope In a New York news paper office. "Four years later Mrs. Reader waa head of the largest reporting agency In the city, and Was preparing to start on her brilliant careed as a financier, in which she has fought singlehanded some of the cleverest and richest men In Wall street. "Here are a few of the achievements pf th's wonderful woman, who Is still little advanced In th thirties, and who Is de scribed as pretty, with a fascinating smile, a gentle voice and manner and a charming personality, "She organized a $10,000,000 railway In op position to J. Plerpont Morgan, wrested from powerful rivals a concession for a railway through the dominions of the sul tan of Johore, settled a South American revolution at her breakfast table, entered Into competition with Wall treet to con trol the copper Interests of Peru, and fought President Roosevelt over the ques tion of San Domingo finances. "Quit recently she made a most roman tic marriage with an Englishman within a fortnight of meeting him. The story of Mrs. Nat Colllne, the "cattle queen of Montana," Is romantic. "When but a school girl she was captured by Indians, kept prisoner for months and compelled to witness the tortures of her fellow Captive. "After her release she spent a few year aa cook for a freight train between Den ver and the Missouri river; 'hardly a day passing,' as she says, 'without an Indian fight, for th aavagea were constantly swooping down upon the trains, killing the freighter or driving away th stock.' ter case a mrther and two of her child ren were laid In on grav. In talking of one of the triple funeral Mrs. Wer.tzel recalled a cloudburst many years ago that resulted In tbe drowning of three members of one family at Mau ser's Mill, near this town. Mrs. Joseph Wentsel. daughter of Jacob Mauger, pro prietor of the mill had gone from her home here with her five children to help pull flax at the old homestead. A cloudburst about eventide had swollen the mill race, but Mrs. Wentael's brother. Henry Maugrr, felt confident be could drlv her and the children across In safety, so they could reach home. But the water engulfed the velvet. It Is tied With snlpTuir yellow rib bon of a decidedly novel pattern, brocaded all over with a broad design In self-coloring and a border of velvet. Veils are worn taut and trim about the hat, oomlng genernlly under the chin. For this arrangement the veil is first adjusted to the brim of the hat. then drawn down over the fsce, and the lower edge pulled under the chin and to the back, where It la fastened under the 1-alr by mean of a tn, and th end are then drawn up In the back to the brim, where they are tucked away In aa small a compass as possible. For motoring there are long chiffon veils with striped satin border that cornel In a variety of light and medium maaea ana In a plain color. A decided novelty ia the double motor veil. This Is a big square "Later she acted as scout to an expedl- f th cnIdr,n wenl drowna. that completely cover th. hat, all the , f ull- tlon of gold eeker traveling to Montana. ,h,nll, ,, ,h live, of the nww bri" lathered down In the back at jp, mne. th.n tw.ntv v.srs Mrs Col- After ,hrll"nK truggl the live or the th , tn k nnd elthrr tic or For mor than twenty year Mr. Col- children, their mother and the p)nn.d securely at thst point. Thl. double Una ha been engaged In the cattle trade, superintending her many larg. ranches and herself accompanying her trainloads of cat tle thirty-four carloads to each train, and all her own property to Chicago. Bhe doe not know the number of her cattle. They are too many to count' " About twenty years ago Mrs. Annie Kline Rlkert was left a widow In San Francisco, almost penniless and with a young daugh ter to support. "But she had a clever head and a brave heart, and although she knew no more of mining than of mathematics, ah boldly aet out with her S-year-old girl Into the Mojav desert to th neighborhood of the Silver King mine In search of fortune. " 'For over two months I walked out from my tent every day across th desert to the mine with my little daughter to prospect she with a little toy hammer. " 'One day at sunset, as I was about to start back to our tent, discouraged and al most ready to give up, I heard my little daughter .creaming, "Mammal Mamma!" I went to her and she called out, "I have found some rock exactly like the specimen Mr. Pearson had at San Bernardino." " 'Mr. Pearson was a man who had come up from Mexico and had shown me speci mens of silver ore. Sure enough, she waa right. I knocked off some of the cropplngs and took about twenty-five pounds back to my tent. "When I reached It I found some men who had stopped on their way from San Bernardino at the mines. I showed them , my rock. They exclaimed: "Tou needn't look any further; that rock will go from $4,000 to $5,ono o the ton." They wore right.' " And this lucky find Was the foun dation of Mrs. Rlkert's Immense fortune. Of the women who own millions which they have not made the number Is great. Probably the wealthiest of them all are Senora Couslno, a Chilean woman, whose fortune Is said to be $20,000,000; Frau von Bohlen, the heiress of the Krupp millions, who is credited with $75,000,000 and an In come of $200,000 a month, and Mme. Creel of Washington, who, with an income of $5,000,000 a year, Is content to wear dresses at $15 each. Weeps With Every Weeper. A peculiar fascination to attend funerals that seemed to have charmed her when a little girl and which she has been unable to resist In her long life of over 81 years, has given Mrs. Rebecca Wentzel of Potts town, Pa., a reputation far and wide as a mourner for everybody dead. "Laugh and the world laughs with you; weep, and you weep a'. one," doe not apply to ber, as her record of attending 4,007 funerals attests. . - ,: In her carefully kept diary she has noted that of these funeral there were' fourteen double ones of children, eleven where hus band and wife were burled together and seven where three of one family were In terred at the same time. In one of the lat -driver were saved. Despite her advanced year and her In creasing physical Infirmities. Mrs. Wentsel Is still a familiar figure at funerals here abouts, and says that as long aa she I able he expects to hear the preacher' solemn, "earth to exth."--Phlladelria Record. Leave from Fashion's Notebook. Russian net Is employed for choice trim mings and also for aleeve. Quite a new arrangement Of feathers en hats is for tour thick and short ones to start from the center of the crown to the brim, forming the only trimming on the hat. The colored veil to match the hat will tw, milt much worn aa ever. These come In two s'.vles, that of solid, color and the ot color combined with black. Both are be coming, but the combination of color with black Is newer. A pretty evening gown Is of many layers of chiffon most cllnglngly and artistically drfiped. In shades of flame, auburn, bronze and pinkish plum, exactly the coloring of a tarnished tea kettle, trimmed with beau tiful copper embroidery. Crystal and metal trimmings are the newest decorations of afternoon and even ing costumes. Trimming Is chiefly con fined to a bodice of a gwn, though there is noted a tendency to trim the skirt, but always In the same color as the material. A pretty little hat for a girl Is cf the new chip In a round shape, In color a pale sulphur yellow, trimmed with masses of flowers In water blue tint and of pale blue veil la made of white or colored chtrron, with an outer covering of black octagon net. Rage for yokes, for It la the exception that a frock of any description Is not con structed with a yoke, is responsible for the very practical Idea of the transforma tion gown. The tunic yoke, too, helps out. Where the yokes are so small, as many of them are, only the flnoat of lacee and nets are to be used, and there Is an opportunity for delightful bits of hand work. A silk, In one of the soft blue shades that hordor on the burnt tints, is very suitable for wear, both afternoon and evening, and a happy design consists of a five or a seven gored skirt brought high up to meet a bod Ice of the same silk, with the yoke cut deeply rounded, to allow for the Insertion of a tunic yoke of gold lace or gunmetal, either of whlrh Is effective with the blue. and the decolletage finished witn a coraing It own silk. What Women Are Doing:. Miss Alma Bturtevant was recently ap pointed clerk of the county court, in Boulder. Colo. She is a native of Maine and moved to Boulder county from that state three years ago. Mrs. Nora Stanton Blatch de Forest, granddaughter of Mrs. Kllaabeth Cady Stanton, Is snld to be equipping a factory at Newark, N. J., for the manufacture of electric condensers. Mile. Claire Ducreux, traveler, lecturer and writer, In a talk recently before a branch of the Alliance Francalse, snld that the American woman, with her type yet unformed, Is one of the greatest factors In the new clvlllzat'cn that America Is giving the world, and upon her appreciation of her opportunities as an Irdrpendent factor and aa a helper of man depends th strength and weakness of that civilisation. Mrs. Mary Cnrr Moore and Mrs. Alice Harrlman of Seattle are preparing to give a suffrage vaudeville. The libretto wa written by Mrs. Harrlman and the muslo by Mrs. Moore, who ia described as having sung her way through a suffrage cam paign In California. Artlng upon petition from Bayslde. A. C. Hanklns. uperlntendent of street clean ing In yueen. has appointed a woman a collector of aahes and garbage In th May side territory. The appointee la Mr. Mary Tlerney and she Is probably the only woman on the New Tork City pay roll In that capacity. Dr. Mary Wolfe, superintendent of the Slate hospital at Norrlstown. Pa., has un der her supervision more than o patlenta. She Is recognised as one of the leading alienists of this country, and was selected by the government a few years ago as one of Its representatives at the International consress of alienists which wa held at Antwerp. LreMo Miss Fmllv Boynton of Colorado, wl-o is rnly IS year old, hss a record at a mountain climber. She recently ascended long's peak, commonly called the American Matterhom, which Is 14.271 feet high, scorning the aid of a guldo, even at the dat gerou point. The feat would be a difficult one for a man. Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, the flrat woman medical practitioner, ha Just celebrated her eighty-eighth birthday In London. OlrU In these days who wish to study medicine have no Idea of the great fight that wa neceisary In those early dny before a woman had ever attempted to break Into the profession. She took her degree, the first ever given to a woman, at Oeneva In 1849. She wa born In America, and ten year after "he got her degree she went back to America and received her degree In New York, and then afterward in the ustial wy In London. me to a twoonsnina major in the moun- tlll Ilnnt In Georgia Graveyard. "Could you direct distiller?" said the tain region. "Don't you know Georgia' gone dry? "I do. That's why I want a distillery." "Kin I trust you?" . Sure!" "Well, go down yander to the old grave yard, an' wait In the dark o' the moon by the dead cypress an the ol' slate tombstone what you can't read the name on. till you hear somethln' like a scrltch-owl holler, an' I'll oome to you!" Atlanta Constitution. Chiffon the Season's Fad T HE manufacturers of chiffon have reason to pour 4 libation to the gods of fashion this season. The demand for this material promises to be un precedented unless the maker ot mode flatly deny their own children and refuse to live up to th laws they have laid down In their early aon model. It 1 extravagant, of course, this fad of the chiffon frock, th chiffon coat, etc, for chiffon seldom goes unadorned, and thl filmy material Is beautiful In th smartest models by a wealth ot handwork embroid ery, 'braiding, Inset lace, eto. Moreover, chiffon must be used lavishly. No skimping In the soft, graceful folds. No sparing of material In the draperies. Bet over against these objections the beauty of the material. Its ideal draping qualities and the fact that the heavier quality of chiffon, known as chiffon cloth, wear surprisingly well in spite ot its sheerness and comes out fresh and lovely from frequent pressing. bottom. Over this frock or slip, for It 1 little more, and the coat I joined to it, not separate Is a loose graceful coat of smoky gray chiffon, a little short of waist, finished round the edge In gray silk, braided finely and lightly In gray and sil ver and fastening with big braid orna ments of the gray and silver an odd com bination which sounds bizarre, but is In fact very lovely and not conspicuous. More pften the chiffon coat Is In th oolor of the frock with which It Is to be worn , and made separately from it Maurice Mayer, always keen about nets, laces, chiffons, etc., has several good models of this type. One which our artist has sketched 1 in one of th new blue which have th greenish ton as sociated with th peacock hue, but ar much softer and duller than the more Vivid peacock blue. One might call them peaoock blues dashed with gray. The frock of chiffon I almost entirely hidden by a coat of the chiffon falling through which the faintly defined line of the figure show. An Impractical garment, so far as warmth or servlcs Is concerned, but most graceful and becoming; and, after all, one does not want warmth In a handsome summer afternoon costume, Black chiffon coats of this character, which may be worn over different summer frocks, ar attractive, though the coat and frock en suite are the smarter thing. Some of the black chiffon coats are, like the one of our sketch, trimmed hand' somely In fine jet, which supplies tfle needed weighting. The arrangement of the jet embroidery In the model Illus trated here, was particularly effective and yet easily achieved. Mora sever models also are made up In chiffon. Such a coat as this Francis model, for example, straight of lino and without full folds, but beautifully hand embroidered in dull, old hues. The chif fon iti iilf is of ash gray and th coat ac companies a frock of soft gray satin, the whole we find the chiffon preferable. No other material gives lust the cloudy, veiling . . m ... k. tiK w i inf e 1 1 e v i The bachelor who look forward to an Easter wedding should provide himself with a buttonhook. Not one of the masterful kind that seise a button and yank It into a far distant hole across rolls of pro- tn. naw thin coats and testing flesh while the victim hnlda In her sheer costumes, but on breath and. In the words of Miss Elisabeth A. C. White, president of the National Dressmakers' association, "lifts her form," for, while woman in her most tantalizing mood will number on her frock (00 buttons foi hubby to toy with, there will be nothing tight this season but the "underneath" (again Miss White, who told the dress makers' convention about It yesterday at Masonto temple. Sixth avenue and Tw enty third street). If the strings in the "under neath" slacken "the whole of you" slip every time you put your foot down and the flesh harden. A Mis White explained, when the. waa any annoying excess in the front elevation of the feminine figure the stupid dress maker of other days just "kept taking gathers" till she "made a little pocket to put it In." This la no longer necessary for when Miss White gets through with her demonstration (on living models) ot how you should put on your eorset your gown will take the entire responsibility on itself. If on casual Investigation the onlooker can And then It is th mod. There I th In traight, oft told from th shoulder wlth a jjttle of the same embroidery about only unanswerable argument In Its favor, and at the bottom running down in long Some sheer, lovely marquisette and points almost to the hem of th frock, vinrirt materials share honors with chlf. but sloping up at front and back. The fon in the designing oi coat Is bordered widely by self-color embroidery and a deep collar falling out over the shoul ders Is almost wholly of this embroidery. The softness of the material prevents th fullness from being In any way bungle some and the em broidery weights the chiffon down into clinging lines, so that the effect is that of a cloudy veiling, Check Your Fat Hold It where It Is, or tuke off some. Tou can do either without disturbing your meals or your ease or your digestive or gans. You can do it without physical risk, mental effort or danger of a wrinkle. 'Sounds well, but these are words only." you say. True, but there Is a nation full of Indorsers of theae words, so your pro test, while natural. Is feeble, prove It Write to the Martnola Company, Detroit, Mich., inclosing 75 cents, or. Utter still, take that amount over to your druglst and get one of the extra large cases of Marniola Prescription Tablets. You will find It generously filled. Take one after meal and at bedtime, and within thirty day you should be losing a pound of fat a d.y, without disturbance, as we 'aid, of dither your mauls, habit or organs. Fact is, the statements are not t be den'.ed. for the tablet ar an exact dupli cate of the famous fat-reducing Marmola Prescription: One-half ounce Marmola, ounoe Fluid Extract Caaoara Arumatiu and IS ounces Peppermint Water, which ny druggist will tail you la the World s Fair sued si winner la lla class. rJilL I! I xquuritel o f t n contrasting surfaces in the same oolor. Drecoll baa put forth some original and lovely models in fou lard, chiffon veiled, lie uss a bordur dot ted foulard. For ex ample there la a cling ing simple frock ot soft old blue satin foulard with white water dots over Us surface and a border of big gradu ated whit dot. Th plain skirt 1 limp and long and w trimmed av for tb border around th THREE CHIFTON COATS WITH M1TAIJ.IC AND JET TRIMMING i the bodice, which 1 largely of chiffon. In all whit some beautiful coat and frock chiffon model are made up, though apparently all white la not to play so Im portant a role this season- as it has in some past summer. Whit silk marquisette was the material used In a Jeanne Halle model whose skirt had much fullness below a smooth deep yoke, and whose loose, long straight coat waa lavishly ornamented with embroidery of satin cord and Irish crochet. Another whit shear coat and frock was elaborately embroidered In fine white soutache. One of th exquisite new green, delicate enough to (uggeet the very first baby leaves of spring. Is particularly effective In chiffon cloth, and a summer frock of such green chiffon la In making In one of the workrooms Just off Fifth avenus. The straight long prlncesse frock Is draped slightly across the front and sides and shirred in the middle-back, the skirt width at the bottom measuring perhaps seven or eight yards. Six yards is the moderate skirt width tn the new models, and when the clinging fronts and sides Join the revolution already inaugurated by the skirt backs we shall have ten and twelve-yard skirts. That time has not yet come, but that It la coming within the year none of the initiated seems to doubt, and meanwhile no wise woman Is leaving a scant back In her spring frocks, no matter how unwilling she may be to give up the clinging dlrectolre Unas. But to return to the green chiffon. It is trimmed with self-tucking, satin buttons and loops and Inset bands of a fine cream ret embroidered In tiny gold dots, and for wear over it Is a long loose coat of the chiffon, sleeveless, satin trimmed and fas tening with big effective satin ornaments. A big green hat, white faced and trimmed In masses of whit roses; a green parasol lined with white, white glove and white hoe are to complete a costum which hould be a refreshing sight on a hot sum mer day. This coat, by th way, Is an unusually full modvl, but draws ia at a shortened waist line with several lines of narrow heavy oordnd puffing instead of falling In free folds, as do many of th heer coat models, Oause butterflies, spangled with silvsr, ttl, gold or Iridescent coloring, nstl In the hair, and have a bright and charming effect Treating The Wrong Disease Many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease, another from liver or kidnev disease, another from nervous prostration, another with pain here and there, and in this way they present alike to themselves and their easy-going or over-busy doctor, separate diseases, for which he, assuming them to be such, prescribes his pills and potions. In reality thev are all only symptoms caused by some weakness or derange ment of the organs distinctly feminine. The physician, ignorant of the c$ of suffering, keeps up his treatment until large bills are made. The suffering patient gets no better by reason of the wrong treat ment, but probablv worse. A DroDer medicine like Tir Pirrre-'e Fa. vonte Prescription, directed to the cause would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dispelling all those distressing symptoms, and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery. It has been well said, tliat "a disease known is half cured." . Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is a scientific medicine, carefully devised by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate system. It Is made of native American medicinal roots without the use of alcohol and Is perfectly harmless In its effects In any condition of the female system. ine "Favorite Prescription" is unequaled .nd is invaluable in allaying and subduing nervous excitability, irritability, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms, St Virus's dance, and other distressing, nervous symptoms com monly attendant upon functional and or ganic disease of the distinctly feminine organs. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. One to three a dose. Easy to take as cndv. T www m - tVERY woman ought to possess Dr. Pierce's great book, the People's Common Sense Mrdica) Adviser, a magnificent thousand-page illustrated volume. It teaches mothers how to care fn their children and themselves. It " the best doctor to have in the house in case of emergency. Over half a million copies were sold at $1.50 each, but one fret copy in paper-covers will be sent on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to pay the cost of mailing m, or send 31 stamps for a handsome cloth-bound copy. Address the publishers, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main St., Buffalo. N Y As a powerful, invigorating tonic "Fa vorite Prescription" imparts strength to the whole system and to the organs dis tinctly feminine in particular. For over-worked,"worn-out," "run-down," debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seam stresses, "shop-girls," house-keepers, nurs ing mothers, nd feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nerv- NEWRBO'S HERPICIDE The original rtmedy that "kill tht dandruff germ" -A txquitite hair drtning. n n v. a wuv.isv mm mm TXzl XiASXBS OBJICT to a gummy and sticky hair dressing or on that is full of sedimentary chemicals in tended to dye the hair. The marked preference for a clean ami dainty preparation, particularly one that overcomes exeesHlve oilinesa and leaves the hair light and fluffy, la reflected In the enormous sale of Newbro's Herptcide. Discriminating ladles become enthualaatlo over its refresh ing quality and exquisite fragrance. ( WOK-aT TO BI rSETTT must have pretty hair. The features may be quite plain or even homely, yet If the bead Is crowned with an abundance of beautiful hair, at tractiveness will not be lacking. The Poet says: "Fair tresstss man'a Imperial race ensnare." Herptclde gives the hair a charming distinctiveness that is characteristic of no Other hair dressing. DISEASED MAIM A UIUTOMTUWB. Unsightly or diseased hair is a misfortune In more ways than one. There is the actual Injury to the hair follicles and the consequent loss or thinning of the hair; this may cause diseases that sometimes follow a removal or thinning of nature's protection to the head. A diseased condition of the hair affects woman'a disposition to a marked degree. If the hair is dull, brittle and llfnless, owing to the pres ence of a mlcroblc growth, the effect Is to dampen one's spirits and cause a loss of interest In personal appearance. The use of NewLro's Herplclde overcomes the ravages of the dandruff microbe, after which the natural beauty and abundance of the hair will return as nature Intended. Almost marvelous results follow the use of Herplclde. Gentlemen will find Newbro's Herplclde In us at all Important barber shops. BTOPS ITCHINO OF THE 8CALP ALMOST INSTANTLY "Regarding the merits of Newbro's Herplold. an article that your agent left a trial bottle with me to teat: I have prescribed it in several inatanees and have had favorable reports therefrom In each case, (Signed) RUTH M. WOOD, It D. Lincoln, Nab. DEBTBOT Til CAUSE TOU BSMOTB TM E1TEOT Rend 18 cents In stamp for ampl to THE HERPICIDE COMPANY, Dept. L, Detroit, Mich. On Dollar Bottle Ouaranteed. At Drug Store. When you call for Herplclde, do not accept a ubtituta. Application at prominent Barber Shop. o 4 i a j SHERMAN & McCONNELL DRUG CO, 16th and Dodge Sta. Special Agents, -j Taz OWL DRUG CO., Corner 16th and Harney Sti.