Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1909)
.THE OMAHA SUNDAY REE: SEPTEMBER 10. 10W. Brandeis Stores show the newest styles and the most dependable qualities in all Fall Merchandise. Our own forces of buyers in Paris and New York secure us the best goods the world's markets offer. No other store is equipped as this one to satisfy your demands for fall apparel. We buy in greater quan tities than others and we arc giving the advantage of lower price? by designers nnd makers everywhere. r AN EXTRA SPECIAL FOR MONDAY Embroideries at 15c 25c Yd. ON BARGAIN SQUARE 18-inch fine embroidered flouncings, skirtings and cor set cover widths jSwiss, nainsook and cambric all choice, new designs worth 11 , T) GLr iit ana up to 50c yarcL--at, yard . . . 121c Val. Laces 5c Yard Fine French anri German Val. laces and insertions dainty, new drslgns many to match an. worth up to 12 He yd., mC on bargain square at, yd J Lace and Dress Trimmings Elegant Bilk embroidered, bead ed, jeweled and metallic ef- r.'.'.. 50c to $10 4.")-inch new silk waisf and dress nets black, white and new colors. Auto Scarfs and Veils Chiffon, Crepe de (liine, Mesca line, Japanese silks, in floral and Persian effects, also elegant hand run Spanish lace scarfs, at, each $1.59 po $15 Munsing Underwear No other underwear compares with the Munsing. It leads In Quality, always fits well, and combines so much real comfort and wear at a moderate price. We are exclusive agents for this cele brated underwear vests, pants and union suits at 50c to $2.98 Kid Gloves in New Fall Shades rerrlns KM Oloves. Extra quality Grenoble kid 3 pearl or 2 radium clasp fasteners, In all the new Autumn shades double filet or Paris Point embroidery all sizes. We are Hole agents In Omaha JejCQ for these French l and vlnvoa nnlf . - esBT PI , I' " (On Bargain Square.) Short kid gloves in tan, brown, gray, red, black and white, also English walking gloves worth up to $1.25, at, ff)o pair IiC Th New Styles are Delightfully Unique Autumn Millinery No previous season has ever shown more graceful styles and more models that are both unique and becoming. Well dressed women realise the value of striking Just the right note in their millinery, and not being satisfied with hats that are "nearly right." It Is because Bran dels styles are absolutely correct, and Brandeis good taste Is Invar iably that the well dressed women Insist on buying mlllrnery here. We show this season every style that la accepted In FaiMs and New York. The new clone fitting1 draped tur bans are the reigning favorites In fashion circles. These little hats are smartly trimmed and offer a great variation In style treatment. Big hats are blgr as ever, but are different In shape and trimming from previous seasons. We mention a great group at 2i 5 f J w Scores ot charming styles in street and dress hats at vlfl Brandeis, for vplvr Many stunning and practical new fall hats at the very mod- C erate price of CPD September Sale of Silk This department is one of the. most complete west of Chicago. An assemblage of the smart silks as sh awn in Paris and New York markets. Our Yard Wide Grand Prix Dress Satin Messaline In 24 shades taken from the Paris syndicate shade card, including pastel, cream and black. The name stamped oo every yard with our guaran tee to wear two seasons. First showing cf this superb dress &4 TA tfJ.rJV 24-inch silk IVngaline very soft and clinging specially tailored for street wear. Also every tint in this quality, at, &4 )r P1.0J silk Monday; price, yard Sapho silks, Bonnet dress silks, Tresca FVeres and Cio 27-inch Cachemire de Soie, Crystal dress . silks, Crepe Meteor, 04 A A etc., at, yard tfl.VU yard. BLACK SILKS SPECIALLY PRICED 50c Black Peau do Cygne, Messa- lines, black dress taf fetas, satin de Chine, fancy satin stripes. 69c 27-incL Teau de Messaline, 17-inch black dress taffeta, 36-inch black pongee, black Moire Antique. bargain sq. A Great Purchase of Rugs ON SALE MONDAY AT WONDERFUL BARGAINS We bought these rugs at a remarkable reduction from an Eastern manufacturer. This is a splendid chance to buy a fine rug at much less than the regular price, 9x12 AXMINSTER RUGS, WORTH $25.00, AT $17.50. c These Axminster Rugs are shown in a great line of attractive patterns. They make beautiful rugs for parlors, living room or dining room. They are perfect in every way and are genuin $25.00 -51750 values, at A Remarkable. Bargains Monday LACE CURTAINS Brandeis is known to give wonderful bargains in Lace Curtains. We never offered more attractive values than these at the opening of the season. Two cases of drummers half curtain worth up to $1.00, at, each Big lot full slza lac curtains soiled worth up to $1.60 a pair, at each 15c slightly 25c Full size musllne and Swiss curtains worth up to 75c a pair, M f at, pair T JC Bobblnet curtains trimmed with Batten berg edge In white and Arab, ff25 regular price $1.75, Monday pr. .$1 Mission and filet curtains range up to 60 Inches wide and worth up to CI 50 $2.25 pair, at pr Cable net, Colonial and bobblnet curtains, in Arab and white, all new fall patterns, some worth as high as $3.50, q i at, pr Brussels net, cluny, filet and novelty net curtains; there are curtains in this lot worth as high as $5 a pair, (T 198 your choice Monday, pr Portiere special Full size tapestry bor der portltres in all colors, worth fl up to ft pr., at pr vf brand: There Is a strong demand for all colors of velvets, either for dress purposes, hat and dress trimmings, coats, Jackets, etc., velvet cords, soft and clinging newest colorings 24 inches wide, at, yd Boulevard and Vel Duvet Chiffon vel veteens in 32 different "T C CI shades, at. yd $1.00 P 003G-inoh Cache- mire de Soie, Peau de Soie, Feau de Gant, Brandeis spec-, ial 3(J-inch dress taffe tas, worth fully $1.50. BLACK DRESS MOIRE Suit able for all purposes Alligator patterns 24 inches wide, also blacks very special, yd., $1.15 Moire Velours, Antique and Fran coisblack and all colors, at, per yard bargain square 79c Specials m Fall Dress Goods HERE ARE THREE GREAT LEADERS FOR MONDAY $1.50 54 Inch foreign dress goods; tailored fabrics, chiffon broadcloth, diag onal tailor suitings and Preialey's celebrated crav enette, 54 Inch serge. 79c On bargain square 4 4 to 50 Inch dress materials; Victoria suitings, Bedford cords, fancy cheviots, tailor suitings, wool taffetas, and French poplins. 98c In Main Dress Goods Dept. 44 Inch to 50 Inch wide satin Solell, French serges, two-tone Bedford Cords, satin striped fancies, etc. SUPERB SHOWING OF AUTUMN DRESS GOODS New arrivals in 54 Inch Catele diagonal Theodora wide wale suitings, Theodora chiffon broadcloth, sponged and shrunk, George Mesmln Austrian satin Dlrectolre Buitings in exquisite colorings spe- fl a (Tl ftC cially priced, at, yd P $iJD PARIS SHOW OF FASHIONS Scene at the Fall Opening at a Fa mous Dressmaker's. EAHLY VIEW OF COMING MODES M .i-nleifiil ion Displayed in ; Ciorj;couB SrMliiR The Manne ! iulns Who Show Oft the Costumes. , PARIS, Sept. IS That the new tariff has already had a distinct effect on the num ber of costumes ordered by American women is affirmed by one of the directors of an establishment whose name la known to every one of the sex which Is perfectly willing to suffer If It may be beautiful. 'pl-ovldrti, however, that'the suffering does r.nt entail obedience to what all over pur chaplnv; Purls for the moment Is spoken of hh an Iniquitous proceeding on the part of lh home government. If feminine walls could he curried acrcss the ocean It Is llk. lv- thut a certain elasticity of procedure would be Instituted at the custom house. ; "It Is always the way." she affirms "philosophically, "when the American tariff 'goes thtoui'h Its usual rhango at the be- ginning of nn administration. There Is a j.ri!t hue and cry. The traveling publlo Is jmnile frightfully uncomfortable for a time '.a 'id the home voyage spoiled with the pider of custom house Infection. "Purchasers are wary and orders are . less In number. But It It a situation which docs not last. Just as soon as the sensa , tlun blows over a few detentions and selx- urcs have been widely advertised and the government has shown Itself tremendously .fpeir.etlc, tho furor dies out and affairs l-o on Just the same. "From the Parisian point of view this continual change Is very unfortunate for the American ladles. One of our customers has voiced the sentiments of many by say ing that lust as long as Paris can give Iwomen more artistic costuming and a wider range of selection of materials that 'cannot be secured In Anerica. Just so long the buying will so on hero and the gov ernment Is simply forcing Its citizens to tricks ami deceiis. There Is no mora) sense In the average feminine mind, I have 'dljcoiert d ' by many years dealing with them. Alv customers tell me that every char.ee tney can gel to take advantage of ll ' government they will ndop." The speaker Is connected with a dresa n.aking establishment which has so many orders, in spite ot the new tariff, that it Sanatorium This Institution is the only one Id the central west with separata buildings situated in their own amule grounda, yet entirely dis trict and rendering It possible to claaslfy cases. The one building being fitted for and devoted to the treatment of noncontagious and DoomenUl diseases, no others be ing admitted. The other. Rest Cottage, being designed for and devoted to the exclusive treatment of select mental cases, requiring for time watchful car and spe cial nursing. can scarcely fill them. It has been visited In a line of march that haa covered much Parisian territory and much time. Among the house visited are Callot Soeurs, Paquin, Doucet, Agnes, rrecoll, Worth and others whose names are household words to the dwellers of Lonely Gulch. They are nearly all situated In the vicinity of the boulevards and one can walk easily from one to another. Several hours are spei.t at each, for the exhibitions of th coming season's fashions are no less In teresting than the methods of display and the people congregated to see them. The salons of these establishments are catalogued with other Parisian attractions, with churches, picture galleries, theaters and cafes. When one Is not admitted to the openings It Is considered a great ad vantage to have been allowed to make a casual survey of the show rooms and other public parts of the buildings. Louis Qulnze and Seise styles prevail In most of them and the principal salon leads to other salons, some times a suite of four or five rooms comprising the reception part 1 These rooms are panelled with gold and white. Rococo decorations and the flimsy prettlnesses of Pompadour, Du Barry and Marie Antoinette days are at their best; draplngs and carpets are of expensive ma terials, but neutral In tint, so that the colors of the gowns shall not be spoiled by contrast. The Inner curtains are usually of real lace or made for the house ex pressly. Mirrors line the walls extending from floor to celling, and In these the re flections of beautiful young women In beautiful gowns, of costumes thrown hur riedly over the arms of the "omnibuses," are repeated a hundredfold. There Is one room panelled In gold and white and the carpet is dove gray. Tht walla, bas relieved with garlands ot roBes In white and gold, are inset with bevelled mirrors and the ceilings support enormous chandeliers glistening with hundreds of prisms. People walk about as If at a re ception given to royalty. Gilded chairs, tables of marquetry and enamelled wood and velvet divans break the monotony of splendor. There, are no ornaments, no bric-a-brac, no pictures, nothing to distract from the focus of attraction the exhibi tion before the crowd of Invited guests of the very last shriek of Paris modes. The premieres which take place In these establishments begin about the middle ot August, and for the limited, number of In vitations there is much competition and wirepulling- Cards for the first days are only sent to well known patrons, buyers for houses whose favor means hundreds of Ihouxauds of dollars each year, celebrated dressmakers whose word is ultimate in their home cities and to hociety women who buy direct from Paris itself. In th.se as seiubliis you may see a member of liuro pean nobility, a wife ot an American mil lionaire, hobnobbing with men and women whose keen glances and crisp valuutlons mark ;' i .r.:-1' i ?' adorn and the reH.iiML..i..i a iuj placed in their hands. Cards are more often refused than granted, even to those whose demand for an extra one would seem to be equivalent to its receipt. When given the exact de scription of the person for whom the In vitation is required must be supplied. The fear of having novelties copied and cWeap- ! ened before they are fairly on the market j is reason enough for this excessive care. ' Thtre was a time when tnls rula was not ! strictly enforced, but experience teaches in this as in other matters, and the easily swinging doors of the houses of several years ago are as unknown today as Is the easy credit formerly obtainable by Ameri can women of the wealthy class. The en ormous bills that American dressmakers allow their customers to contract are un known In the old world. A limited credit ' la permitted only. If royalty has a greater leeway the secret is careruliy guarded, and tbe lUrtat that a woman will take away her patronage and that of her friends, so often made In the new world, haa less than significance here. The story that the Worth house was saved years ago, when the combined at tack on Its finances by the Franco-Prussian war and the commune nearly de stroyed It, by the order of an American millionairess is still historic, but In the same breath the director of the house who admits this will not admit that the same thlrg could happen today and states that the fortunes of Spain and of the South American countries, of Russia and of Asia tic court circles pour into Its coffers with a liberality as marked as that made no torious by Americana. "Let a stranger come to one of these houses today, no matter how elegantly gowned," says another manager Inter viewed, "no matter with what display of equipage or letters of introduction from In fluential patrons, the short delay that Is asked for while she waits In one of the many reception rooms or Is engaged In preliminary conversation with one and an other of a courteous staff is really taken advantage of to discover her exact status by a method which is carried on here with the perfection that marks the espionage of the most watchful and tricky city in the world. "The recent panlo in America Is respon sible for the Increased care displayed In dealing with your wealthy class. Some of the failures had far-reaching effects, as far as the boulevards. At present all the modistes keep In their business offices de tailed memorandum concerning the finan cial standing of every woman who buys largely of the establishments In Paris, but this custom is followed as well by Jewel ers, furriers and even the antique dealera. One American writer not long ago com menting on this fact observed, Thus Is the Bertillon system applied to society.' " You think of what another writer has said, giving modern Paris an accurate de scription In calling it "the Market of Vani ties," as you take your allotted seat in one of the salons of a celebrated establish ment on the occasion of one of these pre mieres. It is half past 10 in the morning, an early hour for fashionable women to be visible, but there Is already a crush at the door, nearly ever seat Is taken and a sug gestion that in a few seconds the space alloted to the standees will alsa be crowded. On your way to your chair you have had the pleasure of listening to the arguments, entreaties and final Irritation of a fashionably gowned woman nut un known to the pages of "Who's Who," who cannot believe that the mention of her name will not be sufficient fur her admis sion. She suggests at length payment fur her seat, a generous offer paralleling a pur chase of an oivhecira chair fur the opeia. This too is blandly refused. Hhe mentions the names of a long list of purchasing friends extending from New York to San Francisco, but even the prestige of the ab sent is insufficient to aid the present and she has finally to aoce.pt defeat. "If she would come back in a few days," says the voice of a Fifth avenue dress maker at your elbow, "she could obtain admission. The rules are relaxed, the won't see Just the same gowns, but there will be plenty of beautiful ones exhibited then fur the second presentations. Of course now only the very select ones are on view. In some of the houses the Ger man representatives are not shown the models until tevtral days srter the Ameri can clients, for the reason that their near ness to Paris makes it possible for the cohtumes to be copied Immediately and ex hibited before the modes are fairly ac cepted here." , The spectators admitted to this function show an unconcealed Interest. If a new play of a popular author was to be given the faces would not be more animated or expectant. People stand about the walls and in packed corners for hours without showing fatigue. Women are In the ma jority, but a fair sprinkling of men separ ate the mass. They are mostly of the commercial class, buyers, representatives of celebrated houses In Europe and America and a few of the leisure class, who have risked (he ennui of a morning with wife or Bister to catch a glimpse of the celebrated mannequins on duty girls who are famed for some special beauty of face, figure or grace. If not Including in their equipment of feminine accomplishments all three. The hush that precedes the entrance of the first mannequin resembles that which preoeds the rising of the curtain on the opening act of a much-advertised play. The only space left In the suite of rooms Is the aisle through which the girls are to walk, and In addition to the guests are many members of the dressmaking staff, who have come from fitting and finishing rooms to note if every detail is correct. They carry their weapons, of office, long shears and spools of thread, pencils and pins, their workaday skirts and pluln blouses are covered with aprons, tnerr hair Is neatly, but not fashionably, arranged and their figures are In striking contrast to those of tha impels, and yet your guide explains that a position of this kind in the establishments is often the outcome ot a beginning there as a mannequin. . This may explain the look of Intent In terest on their faces as they watch the procession of beautiful girls and note the ohsl and ahsl of admiration which fre quently break the silence. At other times the staff shows to the studious glance the Indescribable knowing manner of the Parisian business women, who, with cold, level glances, appraises your exact finan cial value and with courteous words and smiling lips that belle the glance compli ments you for your residence on the planel while she permits you to see the absolute Inutility of attempting to get the best of ti alned Judgment In any particular. The mannequins enter the room with the peculiar gliding walk that Is learned in the show rooms. It Is designed to ex hibit every artistic line of the costume, every aesthetic draping of material. It Is as distinct In Its way as the wnlk of the spear girt in a musical comedy and once learned Is never after forgotten. Charming as the gowns are you are les interested fur the moment In them than you are in the wearers, whose manner is as perfect in technique as if gained by the instruction of a stage directir. In spite of the fact that even the dinner and ball gowns are shown In the daylight rather than by artificial light the manneeiuins are all made up, the lips heavily crimsoned, the eyes blackened, the brows delicately pencilled. There Is no rule of coiffure established; each face and style Is studied and the hair arranged to suit. One has a multi plicity of little curls and puffs through which garlands of ribbon or flowers or perhaps a flat wreath of ivy leaves is run. One is simply arranged In the style made famous by Cleo de Me rode; one head la wound about with strands of loose hair, a late novelty ut hair dressing, another has the equally, popular braid, a profusion of puffs and not the slightest vestige of the pompadour, which seems to have lost its popularity although it is by no means rigidly excluded. The girls walk about the rooms slowly and without apparent knowledge that they are scanned admiringly, curiously, pitilessly, as the case may be. fume times they walk close to you and stand for a full minute with wide open eyes, absolutely devoid of expression, looking Into yours, an4 then turn slowly and walk away. It la noted that some of the French men, blase as they are, look a little em barassed by this unexpected attention. One of the mannequins, a figure with soft plumpness and childish contour of face, weara only debutante gowns and changes from ono to another with the usual rapidity of these establishments where perhaps five hundred costumes are exhibited by a soore and a half of girls at a prmleera. One time she appears In a full skirt of tulle made over rose satin; down the panel of the front semi wreaths of rosebuds are fastened at regu lar intervals, clusters of rosebuds are In the full flounce at the edge of the skirt and the corsage, slightly low cut Is simi larly decorated. In the golden hair a wreath of rosebuds follows out the girlish effect. She carries in her hand a white chiffon scarf hand painted with tiny rose buds. A. tall, stately young woman, wears regally the gorgeous opera coats; whose elaboration of wonderful linings and ma terials of one thickness of chiffon over another, each a different shade so that a peculiar mother of pearl effect Is produced, seem to strike about the highest note possible in beauty and delicacy of design. Some of the coats are of velvet reaching to the edge of the train, with exquisite linglng of contrasting or harmonising satins, trimmed richly with fur, and heavy as the material Is and though made with a generosity of design, a peculiarly cling ing effect Is obtained. It is an effect which seems to run through every style of gar ment for while the sheathlike dress seems to have had Its day and fullness of skirt Is revived, there Is yet preserved with wonderful skill the graceful appearance of the adhesive gowns. One of the most beautiful girls Is spoken of by your guide as the teagown manne quin. She Is voluptous, dreamy eyed. Her floating walk Is the perfection of grace. The negligees she displays so effectively are Impossible to describe. They are creations of wonderful tulles and soft silks and moussellnes. The laces are exquisite enough for a queen a wardrobe and the piicen suggest the same destination. One is nf h snft mauve with clouds of rosy tulle draped over It and the mauve lining, itself lined, shows while the mannequin steps softly about, little touches of pale green. The price is J1.000. and you are asked by your guide If you do not consider ila bargain. Wliile this special establishment does not deal to any extent in lallor made suits a few are shown; one especially likable is of a soft grayish green tweed Willi loii; coat almost to the edge of the skirt; and the big collar Is of the Napoleon, directolre type. The sklit shows the French disin clination to encumber the figuie wall b.lts and buckles, especially when the cotume is of the rigid, severe style. It continues the style of the spring and summer in making the belt a superfluity l.y the height of the skirt. The evening gowns are worn by a young girl, whose hair is simply parlid and rolled back from her forehead, this simplicity ending, howeer. in an elabuiation of puffs and curls at the back. It Is orna mented with a black velvet ribbon aid with nearly all the gowns she wear a short necklace nf black beads, cut jet, which makes a striking contrast with the pastel colors of which most of the gowns are made. An Intrepid person of the masculine per suasion looking ut a mannequin gowned III a black charmouse gu n for after noon whose fullness of skut is taught in by a sash about the knees, so that only very short steps can be taken, Inquiries how it would be possible fur a woman to wear that style and board a Broadway car. The Frenchwoman to whom he la addressing his Interrogation looks at him Inquiringly. "Tram, I mean," he explains. "Tram, monsieur? But the French women do not ride on trama." A aylph of a girl, one of the most beau ful of the mannequins, who wears a gray chiffon evening gown which looks as If hundreds of yards of the soft material were draped about her without the use of a single snip of the shears, la stopped by a stout German women who la at tended by a grizzled personage of middle age whose old fashioned devotion to her does not prvent hlB taking an Interest which Is scarcely fatherly in its seeming, of tho pretty mannequins. They are explained to be of the Imperial family of Austria. The woman has on a short skirt which unconsciously follows the new fashion of fullness about the waistband. Her corsage Is of heavy cream satin covered with bro caded roses and her hat to the American eye looks like a cross between a Jeffer son market vegetable stall and a Grand street bargain In "trims." She notices her husband's admiration and that ap parently nails a moment of Indecision, for after asking the mannequin to raise her arms, to walk backward and to stand here and there, she orders a duplicate gown made for herself. It Is also learned that there Is no such thing as a "rational" dress designed for the coming modes nd that the dresses for the winter are more feminine than ever. head for fear of breaking his hand and he could not reach any of the rigid parts of the automobile with hand or foot to roll It far enough away to escape before It Jumped back on him. He did manage to put hla foot against the hub and give the machine a push, but it was back on his neck like a flash. The automobile never worked more per fectly slnoe he bought it, Mathewson said afterward. In spite of the drag of the fric tion against the floor and the wall, the big driving wheel kept revolving at high speed, Jumping sideways a little now and then and grinding down Its owner's chin until he could move and get tho smallest part of his neck In chancery again Instead of his head. When Mathewson's neck was scraped raw his wife revived and, following his In structions, removed the plug and cut off the power. Her husband was too weak to move and had to be carried Into his room when help came and the real Juggernaut was rolled away from him. Nsw York Herald. AUTO TURNS A NEAT TRICK Clutches Owner by the Neck and Hands Him a Close Shave. Robert A. Mathewson spent an exciting half hour on the flooor of his barn in South Norfolk, Conn., while a rear wheel of his automobile revolved rapidly against his neck, cutting his hair and digging a furrow in his skin. He could not get up because his head was on one side of the wheel and his shoulders on the other and behind his head were the floor and the side wall of the barn. Mis. Mathewson had brought about this unpleasant predicament for her husband by fooling with the mechanism while he was tinkering with the rear of the ma chine. She finally threw In me reverse clutch and the machine gave a leap back ward, knocking down Mr. Mathewson and pinning his throat against the floor and the wall. Mathewson screamed to his wife to pull out the spark plug, but she was past aid ing him. As soon as she realU- d what she had done she fell In a faint. Mathew s n yelled and struggled in va n. He could not touch the wheel which was trimming all the hair off the vide of his Dyspeptic Philosophy. When a conceited woman says "Dear me!" she undoubtedly means it. Some men can't stand prosperity, while others never have a chance to find out whether they can or not. When a girl Is lfi and you tell her she looks IS she feels flattered, but don't try the same tactics on her when she Is 25. The lawyer who takes a breach of prom ise case realises that It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.' A short answer seldom helps things along. There may be plenty of room at the top. but most of . us are too fond of crowds. Flattery may be counterfeit, but It fre quently passes where truth wouldn't New York Times. Mark to His Belief. After the operation for appendicitis was over and the patient had recovered from the effecta of the annestheilc the skillful surgeon looked around for his watch. It was nowhere in sight. "You don't think, doctor," anxiously In quired the patient, "you eould possibly have sewed It up in " "lrm afraid I have. It was lying on no. It wssn't. I've found it. I had laid it down In my hat." "Well, that's luckl" "It la Indeed, my friend" said the sur geon with a sigh of relief. "That watch cost me $1&0." Chicago Tribune. Pavement Philosophy. Many are called, but few give their right names. . 8onie peoples' barrel of fun has hoops around It. . There are none so busy as those who won't work. , ,,,. Lots of cussedness Is excused nowadays bv calling It Bumcb.dy'a way. There He people who ''''"vr card" who play pretty good hands all their 'Vhe bigger the man the smaller he has to make himself to ke-p out of the limelight of publicity. Houston Post. AB" Becoming a moth... snouldba a source of joy, but the suffer ing incident to the ordeal O C makes its anticipation one or VV dread. Mother' Frleid is the only remedy which re- livfo. unmcn nf miirh nf the pai.i of maternity; this hour, dreaded as woman s severest trial, is not only made less painful, but danger is avoided by its use. Those who use this remedy are no longer despondent or gloomy; nervousness, nausea and other distressing conditions are overcome, and the system is prepared ror inc tuiuint tn "It ic unrth its weight I in gold,"saysmanywhonave llYI giotbsrs BaailrU fie. HI BBJLD FIELD PECULATOR CO. AtUata, Cs.