Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1909)
5 European Impressions of a First-Tripper By . Adolf Knit, rut or Swedish Immannel Intneraa Church of Omaha. i THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 10, 1909. 1510 DOUGLAS STREET mm 15 tO DOUGLAS STREET s K i "l APLKS. What la there that makn Italy such a land of charma to the traveler? The landscapes do not, aa a rule, offer anything extraordinary. Prim nn r 1 1 vl v inMkln li.lv i. N rather a treeless country. True, there are gardena of luxurious growth, and there Come patches of woods "that feast the eye. All In all, though, the scenery can not be raid to be eminently beautiful, yet vho does not love Italy? i thcjxht of this again and again as I rode across the corn prairie, of Mlltano. a fair copy of Illinois, and over th eswamp and alough lands from Rome to Naples. Here and there certln scenes of marvelous g-lory break In on the vision and delight you entirely aside from the peculiar lovellnesa that historical memories and art give to even the commonplace In Italy, land of charms. Of all these Naples stands pre eminent. tor panoramic beauty of location, ro mantic rustoms cf the people, absence of even rudimentary Ideas of cleanliness, and coral Jewelry, the city of the Neapolitan , bay surpasses all other Italian cities. It ) Is. in fact, sort of a namphttheater by the blue Mediterranean. Then you look a little on solemn, treacherous Vesusvlus etandlng there threatening the peace and Joy of this region of peace and acenlc splendor. Right opposite It at the other en of the seml-clrcle, the Indescribably lovely hill and convent of San Marino bring back present happiness and ease of mind, as a lovely scene always oea. It's a unique experience to drive right Into the namelesaly filthy quarters of the old city. In the shop and business districts on the slopes. How a people that live such a life of squalor can be the artlstlo, soul ful race that the Neoploltans are cannot ba explained in on book or a doien. If you are a wise traveler you avoid and that Is not Pharisaism either touching this populous mass of Naples', if you wish I Peace of mind and body, for they supass one'a former notions of Neapolitan neglect. But when the soft, cool evening comes and little groups of street singers appear on the fashionable seashore boule vard, you could stand till dawn and lis ten to tho strange songs of Naples, those medleys of sorrow and mirth peculiar to this region. Hut you always avoid coming too near the singers. ' At the same time It must be remembered that even In Naples there are spots where culture and cleanliness unite. People of refinement seem to be plentiful In this prosperous Italian seaport. I was very much amused at the notions of our Amer ica cherished by an educated and success ful Italian luwyer, whom I met on one Dccaslon. To be told that the I'nlted States Is a country 1.000 years behind time, and a bigoted land (our treatment of Maxim Gorky oiled In proof) certainly tests one's patriotism. The gentleman appeared to be at a loss to comprehend that the United States could compare wjth Italy In mat ters of, for Instance, religious liberty." I tried to explain that conscience freedom was a true American Ideal, but my recital of arguments was ceaselessly Interrupted by view-points that to an American lacked all force, though thev certainly astounded one. A very great advantage of travel Is the chance of having all your former AUTOCRAT OF THE SENATE Whys and Wherefores of the Power of Senator Nelson W. Aldrich. MAN AND METHODS ANALYZED A Manipulator and Organiser, Ktea. Eyed, Marvelonaly Shrewd, Far Seeing Manager of Men and Things." Out of the amoke and dust of the tariff fight every one, from the president down, has emerged more or less perplexed and uncertain as to Just "where he Is at," and convinced that the most Important part of the fight lies yet before him explana tory and apologetic. Constituents do not seem so enthuslastlcly with them aa they thought. Democrats and republicans, ln surgers and Insurged, all are finding that they lost something of the proper perspec tive at close range, in the heat of the conflict, and are chiefly concerned, Just now. In efforts to convert those for whom they thought they were fighting all but one. Just one of the 600 combatanta knew before the start exactly where he would finish and came out of the fight precisely , as he expected Just one: Nelson W. Al drich the most disliked and the beat abused of all participants In the fray. No Apologies rrona Him. Senator Aldrich has been muck-raked from the cradle up, assailed, arraigned and denounced with more or less fire for so much smoke but he has never explained or apologised and he never will. He un dertook tariff revision knowing perfectly well that he was distinctly "It" and prac tically all there was to It. He knew that he would be personally denounced, . the tountry over, for whatever there was In the tariff that any one disliked. He knew f DIARRHOEA Quickly Cured by WAKEFIELD'S f Blackberry Balsam Head Thla LaHter. I have used Wakefield's Blackberry Bal , sam for over forty years. I am not glv en to writing letters of thla kind. In fact. I never did before In my life, but I do wish to say to you. It bas never failed me in one single Instance, nor any of my friends I have recommended It to. When druggists aay to me: "Here la something Just aa good." I tell them very candidly there la nothing Just aa good. The tact la I have never found anything Just aa good and I never expoct lu. I ran cheerfully reoum niend It to any one. young or old, for all Bowel Trouble. It hue certainly helped me when nothing clue would J- E. PARKE. 151 E. tub. ot. Chicago. Wakefield's Blackberry Balaam bas . ben the surest and safest remedy for i Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Infan- I turn and Cholera Morbus for (3 years. ) jf .While It is quick and positive in lu 'action, it Is unlike other remedies In that it la harmless and does not coa ts! stlpata. It simply checks the trouble 4AfaJid puts the stomach and bowels In M 'Nheir natural, regular condition. Of ' the millions of bottles that have been "" w anlri In the cast 63 years never has a - rase been reported where a cure was i not effected when directions were fol ? lowed, even after other remedies had rolled. Every home should have a bot tie or more on band ready for sudden oks. Full six bottle, 86c, or t tor r.OJ, aTerr her. conceptions of life, one after another, rid dled by the merciless bullets of a logic that results from a conception of things wholly foreign to your own. The attorney belongs to the new Italy of a new patriot ism born of a time when even Italy can breathe air of religious and Intellectual freedom. Few visitors to Naplea omit a trip to Pompeii. How we love the tragic In life, love It, yet fear It. Pompeii partly ex cavated ruins attract men from all coun tries of the earth. It Is a very hot spot In summer, even warmer than Mllano, which has a bad reputation for heat. Put you can spend four or five hours, or a day, of pleasure and profit In Pompeii. Its sights engrave themselves on your memory. You comprehend old Roman life better than In RFome Itself, as here ancient Rome comes to view In a city of wealth, pleasure and progress. In the great museum of Naples the finds are being stored and arranged except the houses and such portions as would give a vivid historical Idea of the actual look of old Pompeii. Many a superb mosaic pavement Ilea there Intact, and fountains and statues remain to enliven the scene. With only a trifle of Imagination It Is not difficult to 'reconstruct the cty In your mind. If only naughty old Vesuvius will be kind enough to postpone his pranks until all the city has been excavated.. He looks rather suspicious though. There must be some good, old-fashioned Roman, though. In the people that persist In living about Vesuvius after all the desolation tt has wrought. But the toll has marvelous fertility, and everything m risked always of course In the hope that the grouchy old mountain will not pour out his vials of wrath Just in that particular direction. v Somewhat south of Pompeii Italy offers a sight which Athena alone can match and surpass, the Greek temples of Pestum, on a very desolate and malarious plain by the sea. Three structures of old Qrerlan art stand there quite near the share, one of them a miracle of beauty and a fair state of preservation. Coming from Rome, with Its pompous, often over-gilded "and gaudy churches, to this Greclarly plain and beautiful severe ' work, awakened In me a living sense of the Inward lecret of high art. beautiful simplicity In Idea and plan. Our Amercan art will never attain to anything like a masterpiece before the Grecian Ideal of beautiful simplicity con quers our rather barbaran Inclination to seek results from wealth of material and over decoration. That tendency runs all through modern art, exceptions, pf course, to be noted. Ah the man of literature must first hie Into classic periods to find high Ideals, so should our men of art train themselves, first of all by the old Grecian models, not to copy them, but to derive the secret of powerful art. Why should flimsy Paris and Parlslanlam be the first dominating lmpressons la an artist's soul. I pasa by the delights of a most exhllt rating trip to Amalfl, Sorrento and Capri, and go on, by a vary tiresome road to the very lovely city of Pisa, somewhat north of Rome. On a plain stands thla once most famous city. Her attraction Is a series of church structures, absolutely unique; a cathedral, a campanile (bell tower), a baptistry, and a "campo aanto the platform, pledged for revision down ward, and the president's campaign prom ises, all for revision downward. He went at the revision with the quiet assur ance which Is Aldrich, and from start to finish he revised upward upward, no mat ter what any one may say to the contrary upward In all features where the upward pleasantly affected the great "Interests" of the country, and downward where the downward was Innocuous or agreeable. More gently than the often quoted rail way magnate, concerning "the public," be cause he la by nature more gentle, Aldrich remarked pf the people: "The consumer be obliterated." And in spite of president, progressives, democrats, platform and promises, be revised the way ha wanted to, passed the bill through both houses, saw It signed by the president,' and left at once for his magnificent summer home at Warwick Neck, R. I., with a genial smile upon his Hps, a merry twinkle In his eye and the very best of good feeling In Ma heart toward every living human being on the earth. No Man's Bnemr. The most disliked and the best abused citizen of thS United States today, with enemies galore the vast majority among them Aldrich is no man'a enemy. He never loses his temper or sends a single vindictive compliment toward his detrac tors, He Is exqulsltlvely polite. He can be gently sarcastic. He Is often cour teously cutting but he never loses his temper. During the last months of tariff revialon, while he was assailed and bat tered by press and public, and moat of all by his fellow members on the floor of the senate, the question was on every tongue: "How does Aldrich keep from getting madT" " Well, bow does heT And bow can be do all the rest that he does? Simply be cause he Is Aldrich. Be he good, bad, or lndlf no, he could not be Indifferent In anything be It good or be It bad in him it la facile prlnceps. He Is a man without a peer and he knows tt. Aa though it were a new discovery It Is heralded against Aldrich that he la a plutocrat as well patent the announcement that a white man la white. It exudes from every poxe-of the man. Some men are born great, some achieve greatneaa, etc. Aldrich achieved plutocracy. Along the path by which he oama there are many little ln cldenta In which muck-rakers revel; but. whether they have the right or wrong of It, Aldrich today la aa unoatentationa, earnest, honest plutocrat. His associations and affiliations are plutocratic. His friend ships and principles are plutocratic. When he frames his financial bill, two years hence, he will not only favor a central na tional bank, bht one that will strengthen the power of the national banks, especially the national reserve banks. He can't help It. It Is his honest oonvlctlon. On the other hand, tils marvelous! y keen common sense Is a balance wheel which his detrac tors fall to appreciate. It Is noteworthy, too, that among his stancheet followers and most consistent admirers In the sen ate are men as far aa possible from pluto cratic tendencies, and so far as general legislation la concerned there Is very litye which ever dangerously appeals to pluto cratic tendencies. It only indicates the general trend of legislative and political positions which Aldrich naturally takes, favoring the great financial Interests of the eountry, aa. In bis honest oaplnion, the beet oourse for national and party prosperity. Net n Leader. Aldrich la often spoken of as the leader of the senate,' but a leader he la not. A leader Is followed because be la popular. Aldrich Is not popular. A leader la a foremost fighter. Aldrich la not a fighter not like Foreker. for example, who would stad by his tuns the mere fisxeeiy (cemetery). This Is certainly the loveliest collection of harmoniously organized ec cJcastical buildings conceivable. Here Romanesque, with slight Gothic additions, triumphs beautifully. The Grecian Ideal of simplicity and conception, and the medieval Ideal of richness of ornamentation meet here In a perfect union. There la every reason for travel In Italy, aa It unites in one land almost all styles of art from the Grecian of 1500 years ago to the latent Italian work, for example, the un finished Victor Kmanuel monument. Mar ble and alabaster things are aatoundlngly cheap In Pisa. We cannot comprehend how Italiana can execute those dainty things at auch low . figures, but the ar tistic genius Is second nature to the Italian. He has Inherited the artistic brains of generations of artistic men and women. Just as the street Italian often shows a refinement of bearing and gesture, which comes as a mental and physical Inherit ance, so even very ordinary Italians, other wise Illiterate and Ignorant, ieel quite at home In artistic occupations. Culture is more an Inheritance than a school product. Italy has one railroad achievement of greater horror perhaps than any stretch In Europe, the line from Pisa to Genoa. Most of this distance laada through tun nels that choke you, nauseate you, anger you and test the very last efforts of pa tience at your command. As a piece of railroad engineering It may be skillful, but travel must not only furnish speed and safety, but comfort la also a desirable ad junct. I imagine that I am not the only person that would like to ask the Italian engineers of that grim road What they meant by creating a line so unpleasant and even terrible as this. My advice to fellow travelers would be to sail on the sea, fly in the air, or walk on foot, anything to avoid the road to Genoa. It is absolutely my most horrible travel memory. - Genoa's location reminds one of Naples, but cannot match the beauty of the Nea politan bay. I went to Genoa for one purpose, only, strange to say, to see a cemetery. The campo santo of Uenoa Is world-famous. It is built In the form of arcaded rectangular structures on a beau tiful htllBlde. The general architecture Is quite good, but modern Genoa understands money-making far better than the creation of truly artistic sepulchral monuments. Commercial realism of often the baldest kind reigns and rules in the campo santo. It Is a north Italian and modern enemy of - the south Italian ancient temple of Pestum. Here and there splendid mauso leums come to view. On the whole the campo santo proves 'how much modern Italian art has fallen behind the great Ideals of the past. It was refreshing to leave the Genoese campo santo, and Its many sentimental and utilitarian and Inartistic monuments for a second look at the miracle of death less beauty, the cathedral of Milano, and then for tlje almost matchless seml-Alplne Italian lakes. One advantage of travel la freedom of choice. You need not take larger doses of the unpleasant than you wish. The world Is full of beauty and de light, In nature and In art. To choose well Is itself an art, and the art of travel may, perchance, not be the least of cul tured pursuits. and ferociously as his chances of success grew less. Aldrich keeps a sharp eye on the enemy and many a time he has beaten a graceful retreat, only to appear again with the same bill under another d less or after some of the opposition had been quietly converted behind the scenes and carry It to success. His currency bill. In the last congress, was lost. Aldrich waa beaten. Another bill waa sent over from the house. When It was presented to the senate, Aldrich rose. In his Inimitably quiet way, and offered an amendment striking out all after the first clause of the bill and substituting what was really his own old bill. The only difference was that in the meantime he had "found the votes" that Is a favorite expression of his and the amendment was carried, supported in conference, with a few trivial changes which made no difference, and became a law. Master of Manipulation. A leader he Is not. A standpatter he Is not. But what he Is Is a manipulator and organiser, a keen-eyed. marvelously shrewd, farseeing manager of men and things; level headed. Imperturbable, un magnetlc, but a man of marvelously dear, cold, dohilneering, executive ability. He knows what he wants and he gets all he can of It. His Invariable calmness and good nature are not artificial. Nothing disturbs him. When tho tariff fight waged Its fiercest and he was made the target for every blow, he would quietly slip away from the senate. If a set speech was under way and there was no chance of a vote, go over to the new office building, where the finance committee has an elaborate array of rooms, shut himself In the one devoted to his Individual use, quietly He down and take a nap. In the proatratlng heat, when the end waa at last positively In view, I came upon the senator looking as eool and fresh as If he were on the deck of his yacht. I said to him: "You must be very tired, senator, and glad that adjournment is fixed." "No, Indeed. I am not tired," he said tariff matter settled: and it is growing a pleasantly. "I shall be glad, for the bus iness interests of the country, to have the little monotonous but I am not lied." and he was not. There was not a man in the senate but looked more fagged. Then when the end came and he started for his beautiful Warwick it was precisely the same as when he took a nap. lie directed his clerks not to forward to him any mail except what was atrlctly personal. He left the whole business behind him, and If I am sure of anything I am sure that he Immediately forgot all about it as thor oughly as he would forget a winter suit when he turned to a spring wardrobe. The following votes showed the same old majority from eight to a dosen which Aldrich held from the beginning to the end, with very few exceptions. Neverthe less, Aldrich left for Warwick not In the least elated, knowing, aa he knew from the beginning, that he waa the best dis liked and the best abused American at large, still shrugging his shoulders and smiling, and when a friend ventured to suggest an explauation. a defense or an apology, always making the same reply, "What's the user1 Solid In Rhode Island. And for the other fellow, too, What's the user Tou may hate Aldrich and you may bit him. but you can't hurt him. For pub lic opinion he cares not a straw. He Is as firmly founded In Rhode Island as the eternal hills. They msy not love him; they may not worship him, but they know that the Interests of the state are better off In his hands than they could possibly be In any other and so they are. He Is as firmly founded In the senate. Insurgents may tnsurge, ranters may rant, earneat and sincere progressives may progress to ill nmcmM "MSI55 tr- BEAUTIFUL NEW DRESSES These pretty dresses are adapted for street or evening wear, made of fino chiffon broadcloths, serges and Kayser silk, in Jersey effects. " Prices S1Q.5Q, $25.00. $29.75 and 533S.OO PRETTY STYLES IN NEW WAISTS The originality of our new models is one of their strongest attractions. Designers have striven to excel in producing these styles, and we spared no pains in obtaining the finest materials and needlework. We direct special attention to our beautiful waists to match tailored suits in all the new shades to carry out the color of the suits, giving the effect of a one-piece dress, made of crepe de Boie, chiffon cloth net and taffeta silk. Prices S3.T5, $5.00, 37. SO. glO.OO and $12. SO NEW TAILORED SKIRTS We are showing' beautiful new skirts in pleated designs, made of fine mannish, suitings and French voiles some are plain, others trimmed. Prices SS.OO, ST. GO, $10.00. &12.SO to $25.00 the limit, but except what Aldrich vol untarily yields to them they will not re ceive; neither will 'they displace him till he voluntarily retires which now seems probable In 1911. Moreover, It Is safe to say that the one thing which will prevent his retirement at the end of the present term If anything prevents It will be the demands of his colleagues, absolutely In sisting that he remain. They will demand It, because It will be so obvious, little though many of them love him, that there is not in the senate or the country a man who can fill his place. Some individual senators think themselves perfectly ade quate and capable, but no other senator thinks so of them. No one can be sug gested who would not have an overwhelm ing majority in opposition. But there must be someone at the head. How He Obtained Mastery. For every combination, corporation, club, there Is a dictator. Neither anarchy nor nihilism could be " without a controlling czar, and centralization or. power is me cause and effect ot successful dictatorship. The senate has always had a dictator and always will have one, and the man best fitted for the position will hold It, In time, if he remains In the body long enough to make the climb. Aldrioh la not what he la by any accident or political chicanery. He came to the senate nearly twenty-eight years ago( from four years' aervloe In the house, and before that he had aerved con spicuously In his state legislature. It Is the Judgment of a lifetime, . of his con stituents, and the Judgment of more than a quarter of a century of his senatorial colleagues weightier than the snapshot conclusions of muck rakers which has placed him where he is. He has reached the position of .autocrat and dictator by the slow process of promotion accorded him by his colleagues, because he was the man for the place. He is aa Indifferent to opinions in the senate as out of it. Meas ures are what he considers and votes are what he counts. If be advocates a meas ure which you favor you will kneel at his feet and acknowledge that ba Is the great est of living statesmen; If not, you will Join the progressives and say all of the other things you can think of. Either way you will be more than half right. But not Clay or Calhoun, Benton, Douglas or Fes senden, not even Webster with bis glgan tlo brain and matchless eloquence, ever possessed the power In the United States senate which today rests with Nelson Wll marth Aldrich. And yet. In that hotbed of legal ability, ha la .not lawyer sub rosa, he la not even much of a acholar. He prefers the reports of the Fall River mills to classlo literature, and commercial interests to signaling Mars. He seldom argues on the floor of the senate, but those who say he does not speak because he can't are wide of the mark. They have forgotten times In history when occasions required him and he rose to them, grap pling the greatest men in the house and the senate and wlnnlng out every time. They have forgouen the time he tangled Bpooner, only three years back, and the ilmes he has forced Bailey from the field. Aldrich can speak when he wants to, but he rarely wants to. He Is better satisfied quietly to dominate. A Smlllna; Tsar. He thinks, moves, acts, speaks, with the nervous alertness of a busy business man which la precisely what he is always erect, always smiling, always with the self reliant grace of one who thoroughly un derstands himself. His hair and mustache are white, his high forehead is bald but they do not carry a sense of age. He will not be 70 till lflll. He is rich beyond count ing, Irrefragably a gentleman, quiet, un obstrustve, always courteous, never cor dial or particularly friendly to the world at large. In business he never takea any one Into his confidence least of all news paper reporters. He is not at all fond of society beyond the society of his home, which, with his absolutely charming wife and seven or eight sons and daughters, has been something closely approaching the Ideal, and betrays the secret of the Inimitable good nature and the ready smile which are so distinctly Aldrich. He la fond of bridge, fond of yachting, fond of being let alone, fond of Warwick Neck. But I believe. If the truth were told a truth, wbjea yota.fcly A14ricU hluisslX HUNDREDS OF NEW MODELS IN Taiaoretd WILL BE SHOWN HERE MONDAY The scope of our display of Autumn tailored suits and dresses is very larpe in everything that fashion regards with favor and in each style you will find that differ ence in fabric, trimming and tailoring that gives to Orkin's garments a coveted exclu-siveness. Plain Tailored Suits There is increasing favor for plain tailored styles and here you will find a grand collection of them made in all the very newest effects, made of finest foreign fabrics and such as the English diagonals, wide wale worsteds, Donegal homespuns, serges, mannish worsteds and a particu larly large assortment in chiffon broad cloths. Prices Q25 to 5G5 ... . Daily through WM PORTLAND , .tlj y wHotSpHoga F p? K I t i i Ifefr- ...... J 'ito'iE j u Mm t at- r'w .fn. i v H ill f 1 ll w II J SZ3U1II and San Francisco, leave' Omaha 4:10 p. m., going via Denver, Scenic Colorado and Salt LakeTickets and berths. CITY TICKET not fully appreciate he Is fonder still of being the target for anathemas, the center of the field, the autocrat of the senate. No man on earth is better posted on prin ciples and policies of finance than Aldrich, and he bas an ambition, before retiring, to couple his name with Alexander Hamilton In a bill which shall place our currency and banking system upon a scientific bafls. a model for the world-whlch Is not today. Beyond that no aspiration, no ambition, no excuse but the Innate and Inherent love of It, could account for Aldrich being what lu is, the best disliked and the best abused man In America Wlllard French, in the Independent. OMAHA LOOKS LIKE MODEL TOWN TO A SAN FRANCISCAN "It la ear Goal of Civic Parity," Says Oscar Hocks, Mlllonalre and Supervisor. Oscar Hocks of San Francisco, city supervisor of that city, Eagle, delegate to the national (onventlon of the Sons of Hermann In Denver, millionaire and many other things, has arrived In Omaha and called to pay his respects to Mayor Da di ms n. Supervisor Hocks stated that the gruft Invostlgatlons being carried on in Man Franclaco were progressing rapidly and that the entire political grab-bag had prac tically been cleaned out. Mr. Hocke will spend several days visit ing In Omaha snd looking over the system ot city government before taking his de parture fur the coast. "I am much impressed with the clean at mosphere and general prosperity of Omaha," said he. "Omaha Is much nearer the ultimate goal of civic purity than -are most cities of ei"' aia I like ll yery mi tourist sleepers OFFICE - 1502 Don't Experiment With Old-Fashioned Hair Dyes -1 Want to Prove the Truth at My Expense - If your hair Is partly gray or faded, Just tell me In a letter Then I will bend to you, without charge, a clear, pure liquid enough for .vDtlc vuo "i'6iuoi tutor to a lock or your hair And that you may apply it easily, I'll send you a special fine toothed coa Each application will bring back a little of the color to the gray hair in a mild, healthful manner until in a few days every gray hair will be re stored to Its original color a color which will be eapecially pleasing to the eye because of its natural appear ance. Then to test the color, take the lock of hair and wash it in any way you wish even curl it with a hot iron. Give it the most severe test you can, and you will find that the color is in the hair through and through, and really la lasting and natural. But don't cpufuse this preparation for an Instant with the troublesome Two Bottlp Dyes, or the poisonous sugar-of-lead preparations having the thick, heavy sediment. They are greasy, sticky and disgusting to use. snd rub off on everything they touch. If you will make this test on a lnck of hair at my expense, you will know KHKItMAN & McCOXXKLL DRI'O OWL, DIU u CO., Iflth and IThB.BBB for Rlltrie Sporting News iresse: Fancy Tailored Suits A very elaborate display of the new models in fancy tailored suits will be shown here Monday. These suits are made of finest import ed broadcloths, English diagonals and French serges beautifully trimmed and hand embroidered. Prices $35 to $125 ''Mm Until October 15 to Los Angole S FAR NAM ST. toothed comb that my preparation is as different from everything else of its kind as day is from night. It is revolutionary in Us scientific perfection. I am going to great expenseTto prove this. The sample Is free, the comb la froe, and I even pay postage, if I knew of any fairer way to prove my claims. I would do it. This free trial offer is made for a short time only, so attend to the matter at once. Address your postal or letter to MAKV T. GOLDMAN, IMS (jolUiimu llldg. bt. Paul, Minn. I'lease state plainly when your hair started to turn gray and what color it was i232' CXX, S, Coiner lOlh and D.hIc St Harney KU., Omaha, Xeb. 8k