Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 17, 1909, HOUSEHOLD, Page 3, Image 25

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 17, 1909.
What the Women Folks Are Doing
t i
i
77. I
A Si'. I
olleate Made ( sob a.
lie cook win soon rival the
physician a a promoter of
health, and the competent, edu
cated housemaid will demand
both respect and good pay," la
tn prophecy of Mrs. 8. V.
the owl securely to the card wun a til up
of fish flue and paint In with sepia a
wee brancb of pussy willow on which owlet
murt appear t perch. Write Just above
the bird In fancy lettering, "Moo's Hoo?"
and below It the name of the guest who will
occupy the cover. These make very cun-
of Philadelphia, president of the Ting seat Indicators and cost practically
n auxiliary of the National Baptist nothing.
' v..
I,, ...,..u nu aeureiary 01 an association
tne protection of colored women.
Domestlo science," says Mrs. Lay ton.
Is a despised and undeveloped art. It la
onsldered degrading because It has never
been considered worthy of lnvesturatlon.
Tho girl who has the knack of making
ribbon flowers has a never failing sou roe
of dainty place cards. A spray or even
a single blossom of this exquisite botany
attached to the conventional card affords
an air of complete novelty. A pretty plan
Scientific research has shown bad cooking to us tlnted carl n with rlb"
and unhygienic housekeeping to be a source bon f,owert ' darker shade of the same
of disease and unhapplness. The era of the eoyT BaIe lavender card with violets;
real cook is at hand pal plnk w,tn w'- ' In places where
"We are told by science that more per- " not a"y to '" the tinted card a
Sons die of Intemperate eating than drink- C" t f"hloned from rou art P"1"
Inc. Intemperate eating does not always brushed over with water color.
.. m.. i,n.,i. uln soft camel's hair brush.
cats eating.
"If college women could be brought to
realize the field both psychological and
sociological opened up by domestic
career they would not be so scornful of Its
so-called 'limitations.' The trained mind
Is better able to analyse the needs of home
and study do-nestlo conditions than the un
informed mind.
"My plan, which will shortly be carried
out In the new training school to be opened
It is a pretty fancy. If there Is time for
It. to make the ribbon flower in the form
of a single blossom, as a pansy, wild rose,
marigold, with a tiny sachet tucked away
In the center of each. Guests retain the
flowers as souvenirs.
Where there Is nothing but cardboard
on which to fall back novelties are still
possible. A tiny easel cut from the board
or from heavy paper which stands at the
guest s cover and bears his name has an
air of originality which Is very pleasing;
In Washington , on October 19 by the Or wee palettes cut double, so as o stand
Woman's Auxiliary of the National Baptist
convention, and In our school here, Is to lift
domestic science to the level of a profes
sion. "The cook should study chemistry, physi
ology and should know how disease Is pro
duced and spread. I believe the maid
should study architecture and know enough
of sanitation to prevent Infeotlon in homes,
and a nurse should not be Just a witless
person whose sole duty Is to see that
the baby docs not fall out of bed. She
should have the elements of trained nurs
ing and kindergarten teaching. She should
be able to care for, restrain, teach and
amuse her charges."
Mrs. Lay ton does not think these re
quirements excessive or far-fetched. She
believes that the present dissolution of
homes, on account of lack of adequate do
le help, will lead to a new era in the
ttnt girl history. Persona will realise
that untrained and unskilled labor Is as
unprofitable in the home as It Is In the
fctory and will pay better prices for edu
cated servants.
The Octouer Bride.
Why the June bride in song and story
to the approximate exclusion of all other
brides?
alone, with little dabs of different color
along the edge and the names of the com
pany also In color, are extremely effective.
Any shade desired can be made to stand
upright or to hang over the water glass
by the simple expedient of cutting It double.
Cardboard cut In the shape of small,
old-fashioned envelopes and shaded with a
few necessary lines, addressed with the
name of the guest, are very quaint and
pretty. For a woman's luncheon fan shapes
are easily done.
Very attractive place cards for any spe
cial festival are easily made by choosing
some symbol of the season and cutting It
out In heavy white paper or cardboard.
Thus, a sheaf of wheat, an apple, or any
fruit, with the name of the guest on it, Is
appropriate for Thanksgiving. A holly
leaf, an evergreen wreath, or Santa's Jolly
old features In profile for Christmas. Very
little skill In designing Is necessary, as an
advertisement picture or anything of the
kind can, be used as a pattern, and no
shading or color whatever Is required.
Another extremely successful plan de
vised by a hostess about to entertain peo
ple who did not know each other very well
was an original combination of favors and
place cards.
She chose for each expected guest a little
Not that we have anything whatsoever io-cent favor, the right name of which when
to say that is not all In praise of her guessed began with the same letter as that
bless her! and warmly appreciative, of 0f the guest to occupy that particular
course; but why, Inquires the Washington cover. Of course, the correct name of the
Herald, should she bej idealized far be- article) was not always Immediately ap-
yond that saccharine standard vouchsafed p,rent, several terms being possible, and
her no luss deserving sisters? ln workinK out the corresponding Initials
As a month of beauty, promise, and Buestat became familiar with one another's
gladness, uctooer nas iar me oeiter oi it
when compared with June. The plain, un
varnished truth Is, June la a pretty lazy,
hazy, languid month, and while It la upon
us It Is something of a bore. Marriages
scheduled for June are largely products
of February, March and April speculation.
Distance lends enchantment to the June
time, as brutal as a recital of the facts
may seem to those of ardently sentimental
persuasion. Anticipating June la an un
alloyed, sweet delight; realising It Is a
painful awakening. We doubt not that
James Russell Lowell was siting tight by
a, cheerful winter fire when he wrote:
O what Is so rare as a day ln JuneT
Then, If ever, eome perfect days.
But October! There Is a different story.
Weddings planned for that month are
wisely conceived and all but Invariably
happy in' every circumstance. The golden
rod, the chrysanthemum, the yellow and
gold and red of the changing leaves of
the forests these furnish a setting for the
picture such as ne'er was dreamed of In
the sixth month's poor philosophy.
October one dearly loves to be alive; ln
June one merely does not wish to die.
We sing the October bridal May all that
life holds sacred and most dear be hers I
Grand the Inspiration that prompts her to
choose October for her wedding day Oc
tober, when
Earth Is all In splendor drest;
Queenly fair, she sits at rest.
While the deep, delicious day
Dreams its happy Ufa away.
names. Flowers, comlo new-art animals,
or almost any Inexpensive trifle could be so
used.
Orlclaat riaco Cards.
A dainty name card that ean be made
at home for a woman's luncheon or formal
dinner Is easily gotten np as follows:
' short length of pliable wire Is twisted
Into the shape of a circle or an ellipse
and fastened by doubling the ends over
and twisting them neatly down. A spray
of smllax or. prettier still, of some tiny
flower is then twisted around the wire in
and out until the circle Is covered and a
miniature floral wreath is formed. A
tinv card border, with a narrow silver
Women Writers In Fraucs.
Of the 23,000.000 women In France a pa
tient statistician has discovered that 8,000
use the pen more or less profitably. Of
these 1.6O0 write novels, (00 school books,
100 poetry and the remainder are miscel
laneous writers, of whom 800 are Journal
ists. Fifteen hundred belong to the French
Society of Authors and sixty to the Society
of Dramatlo Authors, but very few French
plays are signed by women.
Of the 800 who contribute to the news
papers, only twenty write' on other topics
than fashion. One of the latter, the Mar
quis Guy da Bolshebert, It is curious to
note, is an authority on military matters.
She Is, by the way, better known as the
novelist Manle Anne de Bovet
Some fifteen years ago there were only
about six women ln French Journalism, and
If they have Increased It Is not because they
have found the path easy for them every
where. There are among them women with
brains that are quasi masculine, who have
shown their power to surmount opposition.
The moat gifted woman writer In France
today Is Daniel Lesuerr, who la now vice
president of the Society of Authors. An
other very clever woman writer la Pierre
Coulevaln (they nearly all take masculine
pseudonyms), whose pictures of cosmo
politan life, and especially of American
manners though she has never been In
America have earned for her very warm
praise.
Another woman who Is as bright and
clever as she Is modest is the Journalist
Jane MIsme, who is at the head of the
feminist progressive organization, while
Paris' latest dally newspaper, Les Nou
velles, a very serious and sober organ. Is
directed by Mme. Marguerite Durand, who
was formerly associated with Severlne ln
either as a means of livelihood or an as
suagement of sorrow? What Is there In
the making and selling of hats and rib
bons that Is so soothing? No one can
doubt that millinery Is a panacea, else so
many disillusioned wives of the upper
classes would not occupy themselves with
It. One of the latest to engage ln it Is
Mrs. Le Galltenne. She has found her
errant husband difficult so gossip says
and no one can doubt that as a house
mate he might be quite unsatisfactory,
and therefore Mrs. Lie Galllenna finds her
self happier to live apart from him. She
Is reported to be on good terms with her
husband, but with distance her regard
grows greater. She says he Is a poet and
an artist, "one of those men on whom
there Is no counting." One would gather
that from a very slight knowledge of his
slender output. So she has opened a mil
linery shop in Paris. Yet Parisian mil
liners are said to be the finest. That may
be, but Mrs. Galtlenne made a regular find
In Brussels. When the average woman
reflects that "tasteful hats" are offered
for sale at a dollar apiece In Brussels she
can see that Mrs. La Oalllenne would In
deed have been a simpleton to let such an
opportunity escsps her. She saw her way
to a good living at once, contracted with
the milliner to furnish her with any num
ber' of such hats, hired a shop In Paris,
offered her dollar hata for a handsome
advance ln price, with the agTeeable re
sult that she presently found herself coin
ing money. Her customers, so the San
Francisco Argonaut says, are very select
those refined women who would think
It disgraceful to be referred to ln news
papers as "prominent" and whose Idea of
dressing Is to be "Inconspicuous."
No Hailng ml Bryn Mawr.
In her address at the beginning of the
fall term at Bryn Mawr, Miss M. Carey
Thomas, the president, said, In jfart: "The
year la marked out for me from other
years by the decision of the students of
the college, through their self-government
association, to do sway with what has
been a blot on the fair escutcheon of
Bryn Mawr and give up once and for all
the silly and ungenerous practice of teas
ing, embarrassing and hectoring the
younger and tnexperlenoed students.
However slight this hectoring may have
been. It was uncivilized and barbarous.
This practice, which had come to prevail
only ln recent yeara at Bryn Mawr It
did not exist In the earlier years of the
college has prevented my Idealizing the
sophomore class as I should like to."
She Could Lecture, Too.
The Women's Republican club of Denver
has nominated Mrs. Dewey C. Bailey as
Its candidate for congress next year. Mrs.
Bailey does not expect to have to serve,
however, as she does not think the repub
lican men will Indorse the nomination.
She Is an excellent speaker and Is said to
be a typical western woman, with tact and
resourcefulness that many men congress
men might envy. She Is president of the
Women's club of Denver, and the wife of
the United States marshal of Colorado. It
Is said that any woman elected to congress
will be able to name her own price from
the lecture bureaus, which would gladly
engage her.
rfiteaii
mWmsSmm9Mm tMmWfWihttmi r EIa!W
i in ..1,1 v
or gilt border, with the name of the guest that feminist paper, La Fronde-ill-starred
written on It la attached to the little wreath, because It came before Its time.
The productions of the poetesses are
largely erotic. The arlstooratlo poetess who
haa the largest following is the Comtesse
Mathlea de Noallles, whose works certainly
show some talent, but all of them are fer
vent disciples of Francois Coppe and Jean
Rlchepln.
whloh hangs over the rim of, tho water
glass or rests against It when guests sit
down.
Amusing little cards which can be
whipped up In an Idle afternoon are deco
rated with peanuts everywhere obtainable.
One sheet of white cardboard will make
the cards for a targe company. For each
card fashion from a peanut a funny little
owl by marking In beak, eyes, wing feath
ers, and so on with Ink or sepia. Attach
Htlllaery aa Solace.
Why do " "ladies," when distressed In
"mind, body or estate," ny to millinery,
' i
Caoyrlf at Mob, Ksbe Cemat 0a
KabO Style) BIO A splendid sjodel tot vary (Itsht
. m. . f ...ktla ki.a,a.i anil Hjinvllai irimmM wt f h
Sia4e M aits MUMS, CWs iw . t
DRESS atyle
has come to
mean corset
style. You must
have the right corset
if you7 expect to
make the right appear
ance. You'll never
find another corset so
certain to be in style
as a Kabo.
A Kabo Corset is al
ways made to nil the re
quirements of the very
latest fashions in gowns.
This is made possible
only by our Paris con
nections. We lead all
others in corset style.
Kabo Form Reducing
Cortcti are perfect la com
fort and results. '
Kabo Maternity Support
ers are a great blessing' to
women who expect the Stork.
All Kabo foods are par
anteed by the most liberal
guarante.
Kabo Corset Co.
Chicago
Leave Prom Faahloa'e Notebook.
Royal In effect is a gown made entirely
or cioin oi goia covered with lace of the
palest tan shade, sparsely embroidered
with gold threads.
White fox is the fur beloved by the
young girl, and as a novelty this season
cord and tassel trimming in white silk for
both muff and boa has made Its appear
ance. The fancy for jetted and beaded effects
of all kinds has led to the introduction
of the umbrella with d'rectotre handle
fashioned with a small caboohon of Jet on
the top.
Jabots are shown ln Chantllly and Span
ish black lace and Jabot and stock com
bined of frilled white maline over black,
while the transparent stocks of net and
chiffon are set off with artistic touches of
embroidery.
Blaok chiffon broadcloth was used to
make a handsome draped gown which had
little to relieve Its severity save a row of
slashes bound with blaok satin, which
opened to reveal a band of satin in bril
liant Persian colorings. The slashes ap
peared on both bodice and skirt.
The marabout scarf has a rival this
season in the scarf of chiffon, crepe,
moussellne, satin or velvet edged with
marabout. On the pelerine order are shoul
der wraps of satin ln white and bright
colorings bordered with black or brown,
marabout.
For the tailored shirt waist are seen
short ascot ties of white linen, some em
broidered heavily, others showing, the
daintiest of French stitching, all In white.
A touch of color Is also seen on ascot
for the school girl, lavender and rose being
the tints most ln evidence.
Velvet Is extensively employed for street
suits. Usually it is some dark, plain shade,
but occasionally a novelty velvet and an
old favorite brocaded velvet are seen. Of
this class is a three-piece suit, ln which
the princess gowns is of black velvet,
thickly sprinkled with white dots, while
the coat Is of plain black velvet lined with
the dotted.
Mourning neckwear Is mors varied and
effective this season than for some time
past. Stocks, ascots, Jabots and turnovers
appear In a variety of suitable material
either all black or black and white. For
Instance, a smart blaok moire ascot Is
shown with a white linen stock and a
turnover of black Ottoman silk finishes a
stock of -white pique. Again turnover col
lars and puffs of white linen are edged
with a narrow band of black and with
deeper cuffs is a set of hemstitched white
linen showing large French knots ln blaok.
-Chats
Aboat Wornea,
Miss Margaret W. Bartlett and Mls
Louise L. Hartlett of Hartford, Conn., have
left for China, where they will become
teachers In the family of Liang Tus Ten,
acting president of the Chinese Bureau el
Foreign Affairs.
Miss Elizabeth Ooldsteln, who has Just
been appointed sanitary inspector In
Boston, Is the first woman to hold such
an office ln flew Knglhnd, and excepting
Jane Addams the only one in this country.
Mica Ooldsteln had been engaged in set
tlement work for several years before
receiving her appointment.
Mrs, Irving Parker Mills, who ran for
school director at Upper Montclalr, N. J.,
was defeated ln the primaries, her op
ponent, a teacher at Columbia, winning.
For months Mrs. Mills has been eleotlnn
erlng and most of the women were with
her, but the men voted against her. She
can run Independently, however, if she
wants to.
Miss Ruhama Ckldmore, who was re
cently re-elected foreign secretary of the
United States Geographical society, has
held that office for twenty years. hha
represented the society at the International
congress held In London in 1897, on which '
occasion she assisted the late Baroness
Burdett-Coutts In receiving the members
of the congress at a garden party.
Mrs. Charles Hanrotln of Chicago, speak
ing to the Woman's Trade Union league
at the national convention, said that "even
today the larger number of women workers
are unorganized, and many have retained a
prejudice against such forms of organiza
tion. Women are, however, rapidly learn
ing the potency of united effort, it Is
effective In education and ln philanthropy,
why not even more so ln economics which
is far more concrete and visible?"
Those women who do not believe In the
Woman's Trade Union league should
ponder over the report of Dr. Devlne in
"The Pittsburg Survey," ln which he
sought to convey some idea of the reuse
of poverty and degeneracy of the Pitts
burg workers. The third chief cause, he
says, "Is still tower wages for women,
who receive, for example, ln one of tho
metal trades In which the proportion of
women Is great enough to be menacing,
one-halt as much as unorganised men in
the same shop and one-third as much aa
men in the union. And this fact Is true
of every great city In our country wherever
1 wgtuen are unorganised."''
Cools the Scalp
A DOCTOR'S ENDORSEMENT
"My scalp was in places covered by patches of dry,
scaly material and Itching was Incessant. Since using
Herplclde all these places have disappeared, my hair
la soft, smoo'.h and growing. Hair lias grown in spots
before but thinly covered.'r T. A. MOORK, M. 1).,
Duncan, Arisoso.
TOPS TAitlWO KAIB, CAUSES A XTEW OBOWTH
"I find that the use of Newbro's Herplclde stops
falling hair and cause a new growth. I shall cer
tainly continue It." MRS. JAMES STEEVESON,
6 Delano St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
A
Prevents Falling Hair
A SCIENTIFIC ACHIEVEMENT
The world pays tribute to originality. Everyone
wants the original. No matter what you are buying,
one always see'.:8 the original article, the real
thing, the one that's genuine. -
Newbro's Herpicide is the original remedy that
kills the dandruff germ. The announcement by
Profs. Unna and Sabouraud of the discovery of the
dandruff germ presented a problem and that prob
lem was "how to kill the germ." Herpicide solved
It. Herpicide was the first, the real genuine germ
destroyer.
Send 10c ln postage for sample and booklet on "The
Hair and Its Care" to The Herplclde Co., Dept. l De
troit. Mich.
One Dollar Bottles are Guaranteed. Tor Hale at Drug
Stores. Applications at Oood Barber Shops.
SHERMAN & McCONNELLL DRUG CO., THE OWL
DRUG CO., Special Agents.
Stops Itching
THE OPINION OP A PBOM1NENT ATTOBNET
"I have been using Newbro's Herplclde for a num
ber of years. At first I used it for dandruff, but
since my troubles from that source have ceased I have
continued for the pleawlng effect it has upon the head.
The use of Herplclde means a clean scalp, a good head
of harr and a coat collar free from the appearance
of grease. It la a luxurious habit hard to break off
when you have once bcome accustomed to It."
GEO. Q- BINGHAM, Atty., 116 S. Commercial St.,
Salem, Ore.
SEES
Styles and Shapes in Furs for Winter Wear
which the designers
EW1 YORK, Oct. !. Furs prom-
Nl Ue to be particularly lnterest
I lng this season and, sad to tell.
Little furs will not do for the
smartly dressed woman this
winter. Her neck furs have swelled In
stze and her muffs, already large, have
gone gay(y on Increasing tn size to the
verge of caricature. Indeed, they often
topple over that same verge, and some of
the extreme models, though beautiful as
specimens of fur and furriers' skill, are
absurd as dress accessories.
The most marked tendency In neck furs
is the widening Into scarf and shawl
one sees, too, two short haired furs use.'
together. Thus a wide soft sCarf of chin
chilla may have a wide border or severau
narrow bands of sable or mink (and sur
prisingly charming In color the soft brown
and gray appear) or blue fox may be com
bined with ermine. Unless cleverly man
aged these combinations are far from suc
cessful, one fur detracting from the ef-
fill bLm,
1
1 mm M
I U7VU , J UJI
brimmed hat of velvet, silk, felt, beaver
or even of lace, net or metallic tissue.
There are some turbans entirely of fox,
put they are In the minority. Turbans
on the Cossack order, with the lower part
pf fox, a draped crown of velvet and a
trimming of stiff egret or other brush,
like feather, are smart with fox neck fur
and muff, and a wide brimmed velvet
hat trimmed solely by a foxsktn draped
round the crown la also good. The tur
ban of the sketch which accompanied a
Set of black pointed fox was a chlo model
with draped crown of dull silver lace and
cockade ln several shades of green velvet
In the shorter hair furs more liberty Is
allowed the milliners, and sable, mink,
ermine, chinchilla and breitchwans seal,
etc., are used not only for trimming but
for crowns, brims or whole hats.
The Henry IV., and Henry II., lines In
which Carller delights, are made up with
fur1, crown of fur and brim of silk or vel
vet, very narrow on the right side and
turned up sharply against the crown on
the left side. Crowns of fur, with soft
draped brims of velvet, tulle, etc., make
smart heavy turbans, setting low on the
bead, as do all these turbans.
A lovely set ln mink had a little cape
of mink brown lace over which the mink
pelts dropped, the skin set closely to
gether around the top, but parting to
show the lace with the shoulder flare.
The muff was made m the same fashion
and the turban had Its brim of nvnk
and its draped crown of velvet the same
color.
Fur and velvet or fur and satin are
often combined in muff and stole, as well
as In the hat, the fox and satin set which
la pictured on this page giving an Idea of
the sort of effect
achieve ln this line.
Even more attractive than the camblna
tlon sets are some of the exquisite sets
all In rare fur. We have seen one of these
whose price . was monumental, but justi
fied by the beauty of the furs. Fine Rus
sian sable was the fur a fact that alone
explains the thousands asked for the set.
A very wide straight stole, soft and
easily draped as velvet, was meant to be
draped softly around the shoulders, fall
ing over the sleeve quite to the elbow
and reaching almost to the floor in front.
It wa lined with self-oolor brown chiffon
and a little dull gold lace mingled with the '
chiffon frills which faced the edges.
An enormous flat pillow muff, lined,
showing a little of the chiffon and gold
facing In Its openings, was untrimmed, and
a hat or turban of the sable with low,
wide, round crown arid soft narrow brim
drooping all around, was untrimmed save
for a white aigrette at the left front This
hat sat very low, like the sultan's tur
bans, quite concealing the hair save over
temples and ears and a glimpse of fringe
or wave above the brows.
A similar set In chinchilla was turned
out by the same maker and lined with soft
amethyst chiffon and dull silver lace.
Costumes trimmed In fur and with neck
fur, muff and hat to match, are the verv
height of the mode, and eharmlng things
are done with the Idea. Often a separata
neck fur Is done away with and there Is a
big fur collar on the costume coat. Cuffs
of the fur are added, and a wide band or
several narrow bands on the skirt. A muff
and hat match the costume In fur and
color scheme.
Beautiful breltschwans redlngotes with
collars and cuffs of ermine or chinchilla
are accompanied? by big muffs of the er
mine or chinchilla and hats or turbans ot
this trimming fur and black velvet
CUT OUT THIS ENTIRE ADVERTISEMENT '
shapes. The chic stole
now does not He, flatly
on the shoulders; it
drapes, suggesting,
however faintly, the
shawl lines which are
having so great
vogue. ,
These shapes, especially when carried to
extremes, are not generally becoming, the
effect they produce being a thickening and
shortening of torso, but a tall, slender
woman can wear a draped stole or fur
mantilla gracefully and well, and all
modes seem made solely for the benefit of
the slim woman. '
Luckily, good furs always look well, 'even
if they are not built up on the very latest
lines, and well dressed women will tran
quilly wear their sables and marten and
fox, etc., ln last year's shapes. For that
matter the fox furs, always popular and
beautiful, do not lend themselves to draped
effects and, save for occasional models
widened by the addition of another pelt,
are on about the same Hues as those to
which we have become accustomed.
Much fox will be worn, Paris having pro
nounced emphatically In favor of the blue
fox and Bllver fox. while the white aad
black fox and a new foxskin dyed a lovely
soft taupe brown are already selling
rapidly.
A fad of the season Is the trlmn.lng of
the wide shawl stoles and dolman shaped
fur wraps with contrasting fur, the short
hair furs being aa a rule trimmed in wide
or narrow bands of lung hair fur, though
fc? CENTS
AND
THIS
B UYS
OUP0N
,CAPB AND MUFF OF MINK WITH
BROWN LACE, A SET OF POINTED
FOX AND A SET OF GRAY FOX WITH
VELVET.
fectlveness of the other rather than adding
to It; but soma very quaint and beautiful
scarf, muff and coat sets are shown ln
combination furs. ,
Fur occupies so Important a place In the
new season's millinery that we shall see
more of these three piece sets than ever
before and every milliner and furrier is
already showing beautiful models of this
type.
The fox Jurs are much utied for such
sets, but In fox, stole and muff are usually
untrimmed save fur soft knots or bows ot
satin or velvet, the designers evidently
reasoning wisely that the long glossy fur
Is at Its bent without ornament. On the
hat the fux Is ordinarily used as a bani
trimming; encircling a turban or wide
A(piw;i(AGi
'av sssss SPrKi ":&3T$K
OF CS&fer -1)
HOKfHOTpAiMEaoiiR
This Coupon is good at all Leading Grocers and will be accepted until
October 24th. 1909. Not good after thai data. '
- INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CROCERi
Accept this coupon at the faeo Talus of Be, and return it to your jobber,
along with tho TOP FLAP of tho carton (cut from the package so sold.)
Only tho one on which tho arrow appears will be accepted, and
bo coupon is good unless accompanied with this Flap.
The Chamberlain-Myert Milling: Company,
1930 Grand Avenue, KANSAS CITY, MO.
NOTICE:-CUT OUT THIS ENTIRE ADVERTISEMENT TO HAVE
IT HONORED Br YOUR CROCERYMAN.
I