Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 17, 1910, WOMEN, Page 3, Image 39

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    TTlFi OMAHA KUNIUV BEE: 'APRIL 17. 1010.
3
"Social Notes From Gotham
Drexel-Oould Weddinf on Thursday Drtwiny Much Attention as the
Union of Many Million! at Well ai of Two Interesting Young; Persons
Some Speculation at to Probability of Another Vanderbilt DiTorce
BV MARGARET WATTS DE PETSTER.
NEW YOKK. April l.- Special Dispatch
to The Be.)-The weeding of Mia Mar
Jorl Gould. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Oorge J. Oould, lo Anthony Joseph trxel,
Jr., of rtilladHphU and Ixjndon. on Tues
day lit 8t. Bartholomew's church, la the
moat Important of the season for many
reason. Perhaps chief anions the la that
ll unlica two of th rUhret famlllea of
America. Mlfi Uould, although a debutant
only two soason'a ago, numbers hep foreign
anltora In the teena, and the wealth and
pOftlt'un of the Drtxein easily gava young
Tony th opportunity to marry Into British
nubility had ha to desired.
It la extremely rare these daya a hen a
girl of Mlaa Mould's atatu In aociety
marries an American. The match seems
to be a very happy one and their ell
inhere Include all of thoae whom we have
been wont to ctane a the ' r out Hundred. '
The ceremony will be at 4 q'doi k. 1"
order that hoi pollol might not Interfere
w lib the plana by attempting to crowd Into
the church the ceremony will be brief and
without the expected ahow. Hut It will
immediately be followed by a reception at
the Uould home, which will more thau
make up for the lark of ornamentation at
the church.
li. U estimated that Mlae Oould will In
herit i0.000.ono and that Mr. Drexei will
Inherit probably t.000.CO. They will ahortly
aall for Bngland to be prevent at the mar
liage of Mr. bread' aleter when ahe la
wed by the Vlacount Maidstone.
Not to be outdone by Mr. Vanderbilt
abroad, Faul 8org Instituted an experi
mental coaching venture between Atlantic
City and New York. Mr. fiorg, who la pas
sionately fond of horses and baa won blue
ribbons at every horse show of Importance
in America, will exhibit at the Interna
tional Horse Show In London for the first
time thla year. He Is aerinusly contem
plating a coaching experiment to be run
similarly to Mr. Vanderbllt'a L,ondon-to-Brlghton
project.
Mr. and MVs. Reginald Vanderbilt have
gone abroad, but only for a short visit.
They will occupy a cottage at Newport this
coming summer. Newport la becoming very
active. Mrs. Henry C, Phlpps, who was
Miss Gladys Mills, will arrive In June to
spend the summer at Newport.
I am sometimes tempted In my simple
fashion to wonder It Mrs. Julian Little,
who waa formerly Mra. Henry Spies KIp,
will not have a hungry longing for Newport
this summer. Bhe and her husband have
returned to Johnsvllle, Cal., where he la
the auperintendent of a gold mine. In
former years Mrs. KIp waa one of the so
ciety goddesses at Newport and her recent
return there must have awakened old mem
ories. But perhaps she may be contented
In the California mountains while her hus
band la collecting gold. Who knows T
Princess Huspoll. who waa Mra. Jenny
Berry Burton of Nashville, will not make
her future home In Rome, where ahe has
resided for the laat eight years, J hear. In-
tsad ahe will live with her parents at
Oakhill, O a. At least so much do I bear
from Indirect discourse, but tha prlneeea
would surely make one lone European trip
a year. Princess Ruspoll la still 1n mourn
lug, baying been left a widow four months
go. Eh spent a little time here and later
went sou tlx,
'
Anthony J. Drexei, Jr.. gave Ms bachelor
dinner at Pelmonico'a tonight and,-, believe
me, 'it was' a Irvely affair. 'Among his
gueata waa his brother, Armstrong) Drexei,
and It required pearly a special train to
bring tha Philadelplilana who participated.
Among those who attended were the Vla
count Maidstone, George H. N. Griffith of
London, K-ingdon Gould and Jay Gould,
brothers of Miss Marjorle; William Rhine
lander Stewart, Julius W, Neyea, Craig
Biddl and John Fell.
Mr. and Mr. Cortlandt Field Bishop
sailed for Europe. As Mr. Bishop Is head
of the Aero club of America and the Amer
ican - representative In the International
Federation of aeronauts, his trip abroad
will .mingle both pleaaure and buslnesa.
Lenox has bidden farewell to the Bishop
A DOZE
FAMILIES
CURED DF ITCH
BY CUTICURA
Showed No Marks but Whole Body
Itched Like a Million Mosquito-
, Bites Sleep Out of the Question
zi Life Became an Inferno.
and they will follow their beaten automo
bile tracks in France and Italy In a long
overland continental tour. Mr. Bishop
cabled a week ago to prepare their Pari
residence for occupancy although they will
pmd but little lime In It. After a short
stay in Paris they will motor through the
vineyard regions, skirt the P rennet and
cros the French Alps Into Italy. They
have ben over this route so often that they
know It as well aa they do Fifth avenue.
Speaking of Mr. Bishop reminds me that
Newport Is going In for aviation thia year.
Wilbur Wright will open an aviation school
In the Rhode Island reaort and doubtless
will have many pupils from the fashionable
families gsthered there.
Mrs. Russell Page, like Mr. K. H. llar-
rlman. Is going to devote much of her at
tention to business in the future. But she
la going to mix business and philanthropy.
It will be remembered that the late Russell
Rage made millions by lending money at
high rate of Interest. Now. Mrs. Page Is
going to establish a lending bureau to al
low needy people to borrow at a nominal
rate of Interest
Miss Madeline Borland and Clarence Pell
have selected Tuesday. May 17. for their
wedding. The bride is one of the three
daughters of Nelson Borland. In the list
ef wedding attendants will be her alster,
Mia Alice Borland, and M. Orme Wilson.
Jr., the latter' fiance. Mr. Wilaon has
made aeveral European trips with hla par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. M, Orme Wilson, of
late years. On the paternal sido he Is a
grandson of R. T. Wilson and a nephew of
R. T. Wilson. Jr., Lady Herbert. Mrs. Og
den Goelet. Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt and
a cousin of the duchess of Roxburghe. He
Is also a nephew of John Jacob Astor and
Mr. Ogllvy Halge of London.
as a dlrorc center, about the same time
that the rumor were flying o thick and
fat concerning Mrs. -W. K. Vanderbilt,
Jr.' Intentions of settling In the Nevada
town. Mrs. Vanderbilt spont the latter
part of the winter In California. Reports
of trouble In the family dste back a year.
fomeone haa prepared a new Joke for the
ballroom for the coming season:
"Is that lady a widow?"
Oh, no, she Is merely a wldoreno."
Miss Beanor Sears of Boston, who tried
to walk 10 miles It fifty-four hour at
Burlingam. Cal., haa always set the fash
Ion for athletic in the Back Bay section of
Boston, in Newport and In New York. She
plays tennis and golf, owns a sailing yacht,
ownes aeveral blooded polo ponies, rides
horseback constantly and goes In for every
other form of outdoor life possible.
Society is hoping that rumor 1a correctj
in saying tnai mra. snncrntii win open
"The Breakera" at Newport this summer.
It is aald that her daughter. Countess
hiechenyl, will be there also during the
season. 1
Willing 8pencer, a son of Mrs. John
Thompson Spencer of Philadelphia, and a
friend of Alfred Vanderbilt, haa Just been
appointed third secretary of embassy at St.
Petersburg.
Au ungallant New York newspaper
started a crusade against Reno. Nevada,
Miss Helen Miller Gould has been holding
a series of week-end parties In her Fifth
avenue home that are being attended by
young women of almost every nation of
the earth, who are students in colleges and
schools In and about New York. One of
the latest of tha functions waa when young
women clothed In the picturesque garb of
China, Japan, India, Mexico, Turkey, Nor
way and other nations mingled with well
known society leaders of the city, who had
been invited to meet them at 4 o'clock tea.
Miss Gould Is displaying a personal Inter
est In the welfare of scores of the young
women from distant nations who are dwell
ing here temporarily. Some of her guests
were daughters of East Indian philoso
phers and men of native renown, while
others were the daughters of poor families.
Many of the young women are earning
their own way through the highest Amer
ican collegea and universities open to
women.
of the state federation, and at present on
of tho eight directors of the General Fed
eration, Is largely responsible for the en
thuslssm and the biill'Ung up of tb local
club, Walt hill being hr home. M rs. Keefe
was endorsed for re-election to her present
office of director of the General Federation.
Most of the departments of the Omaha
Wonian'a club will complete their work for
the year this week. A special meeting of
the directory haa been called for 2 o'clock
Monday afternoon for the consideration of
Important buslnesa. The social science de
partment will hold Its last meeting and
election of officer Monday afternoon at
2.20 In the east parjor. Mrs. Kuellner, vice
president of the Missouri Federation, will
be a guest of the afternoon and will speak
on "Child Culture." Mr. Jolly will give a
talk on "Aa a Woman Thlnketh."
The ethic department will meet at 4
o'clock Tuesday afternoon, thl to be Its
Inst meeting of the spring.
The current topic department will meet
at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon and elect
Its offlcera for next year. Mr. Alfred
Millard will be a speaker, bis subject to
be the work of the Humane society. Rev.
John Williams, vice president ef the locl
society, will also speak. Mrs. Ruth Ham
mond Thlea will give a vocal solo. An
invitation has been extended to all Inter
ested In humane work.
The oratory department will meet Tues
day morning at 10 o'clock at the home of
Mrs. George B. liarr. 632 South Thirty
eighth street. This will be the last meet
ing of the depsrtment snd the business will
be followed by a recital given by the mem
ber and later by a luncheon.
The musla department will hold Us last
meeting Thursday afternoon at 2:15. Re
ports of the year will be given and the
officer elected for next year. Mr. T. J.
Kelly will give a talk on "Music." and a
program will be given by Mrs. E. L. Wag
oner, Misa Esther Duley, Miss Grace llom
mel and Mias Blanche Sorenson. An in
formal tea will follow.
Social Doings at Nation's Capital
Competitive Cake Walking Now the Engrossing Sport Among the Real
Smart Ones Some Talk of Still Livelier Times Among the Congres
ional Set Mrs. Longworth May Ask "Papa" to Help Nick in His
Coming Campaign for Ke-Election Washington Personal Gossip.
BY CONSTANCE CARRL'THERS.
WASHINGTON, April 1. (Special Dia
patch to Tha Bee.) Following the Introduc
tion of the cako walk aa a mean of polite
diversion at Palm beach, Washington so
ciety men are contemplating a series of
competitive walks with challenge sent to
Baltimore and Philadelphia.
Not for many a day ha thl city had a
genuine, old-fashioned cake walk. Aa soon
as the cake walker are selected a list of
patrons will be announced, Including some
of the beet known eoclety men In the na
tional capital.
President Taft haa been invited to at
tend tha horse show which will be held
In Potomac park on April 90. By reason
of tha faot that President Taft make auch
frequent use of the White House auto
mobile and such Infrequent us of horse
the committee, was In a quandary as to
whether tha president would be Interested
In the horse show. Finally they decided to
take the ohance and President Taft re
piled with a tentative acceptance. 1
Miss Lulu Dean Jones of Atlanta, Ga..
haa been visiting member of the southern
colony here. Bhe ha been entertained by
Mr. Taylor, wife of Senator Taylor of
Tenneaaee; Mra. Percy, wife of Senator
Percy of Mississippi, and Mrs. Lurton, wife
of Justice Lurton.
Mrs. Bryce, wife of Ambassador Bryce
of Great Britain, will return to thla coun
try from England In May.
That the next few week will uphold the
promise given by the activity of the last
few week I confidently believed. The
unusually warm weather ba, however,
caused many to leave town earlier than
usual. The congressional famine, who
form So large a part of Washington aociety,
are planning to remain until the end of
the session of congress.
Prominent among those who stay until
the aeaalon la closed is Mrs. Champ Clark,
the clever and companionable wife of the
democratic representative from Missouri.
Bereft of Mr. Clark at thl time the circle
would lose one of its most capable and
attractive members. In the doing of the
congressional club Mra. Clark 1 regarded
aa one of the cleverest of women.
Another Missouri woman who helps to
uphold the social preetlg of the atate In
Washington I Mr. Harry M. Coudrey
Although Mr. Coudrey' residence In
Washington ha been short compared with
tJiat of Mr. Clark', he has neverthelesa
Improved her time to auch an extent that
she now has an extensive circle of ac
quaintances.
Miss Dolly Curtis, the brilliant sister of
Senator Curtis of Kanuas, la a fine
example of womanhood which seem to
typify' th nerve and enthusiasm of the
west. Mis Curtl I on of the very few
women In Washington's upper social life
who can boast of a trace of Indian blood.
Mrs. Prlscilla Owen, mother of Senator
Robert Owen of Oklahoma, haa a strong
train of Indian blood In her ancestry.
Thre of th most, attractive girl of tihe
congressional Bet, although of widely dif
ferent type, are Mis Nancy Johnson.
daughter of Representative Johnson of
Kentucky; Mis Edith. Burnhatn, daughter
of Senator Bumham of New Hampshire,
and M1s Gladys McLachlan, daughter of
Representative McLachlan of California.
Mis. Johnson I a typical Blue Grass
beauty, aa much a belle In Washington as
in her Kentucky home.
Miss Burnham, tha New Hampshire sena
tor's handsome daughter. Is a talented
musician and a thoroughly accomplished
girl. With good looks she combines much
nerve and spirit and has become very
popular In Washington. She la fond of
society and shines at all the gatherings
of young people which she attends.
Miss Gladys McLachlan la on of the
loveliest young women in her Rtate and
has created a bit of a sensation in Wash
ington. She Is blissfully unaffected and
withal one of the sweetest girls to be found
in all Washington officialdom.
A musicals waa given thl evening In the
residence of Mr. F. R- Moran for the
Washington Juvenile club. Misa Evelyn
Wilaon of Portland. Ore., th child pianist,
played selection from operaa; Miss Cren-ne-n,
niece of Senator Teller, sang, and
others took part.
Th minister of Chile and Madame Crux
sailed for Europe today to spend some
time abroad. Later In the summer they
will go to South America for the Pan
American congress.
I rather more than fancy rhat Mrs. Alice
Roosevelt Longworth will have a little
daughterly petition for her papa to aid
Representative Longworth In Ohio in his
political aspirations. What reply the
colonel will make to her request will not be
known until the party arrives In America.
DOCTORS AND DRUGGIST
TREATED THEM IN VAIM
"Th thiUoum BemadlM ar tb beat
H the woriafwa 1 know from xponenoa.
t!)owlais. Smith Wale, about fifteen
y - "jo, farrtliie were stricken whole
iili; a disMuai known as tha tcb,
b -' ru. It la tha tnoet terrible di
a r ft kind that I 'know of, a il
ate Re all through youatoody and tnakro
your lira an inferno, bleep i out ot Ux
juMtioa ailti you fJ a if a million
mosquito weir attacking you at tha
am tim. Yet you .could see nothing
on th skin. Bui th itch waa there all
riht and 1 sinoerelr trust that I shall
tiarer get it. I knew a doan famllie
that wi o affected. Th mole mem
bers and myaclf belcnged to th same
ooitty and, a at ward, it was my dutr
to visit tb aick member one week
for sick benefit until they vera declared
ff. That U bow 1 became to familiar
with the itch.
"Th doctor did their best but their
remedies were) of no avail whatever.
Then tha farnjliea tried a druggist who
waa noted far and wide for hi remark
able cure People earn to him from
all partvrf tha country for treatment
but hi medicin anede matter still
worse, as a last pect they were advised
by ai'rt d to um the Cut leura Remedies.
1 ana glad to toll you that alter a few
days' treatment with Cutlcura Boap,
Ointment and Rcaclvrnt, tha effect wag
wcmdvrful and th result was a perfect,
our In ail oae.
"I may add that my threw brother
three si V, myelf and all our f mills
hare bran uoer of th Ci; Xnur Km.
dieafiir ai'teen or twenty yvis. Thoinaa
Ilugh, ISiO Wl Huron Chicago,
ilL. Jut 23, 1904."
ITMopM KmtuMl aa Iatnl Trattawat fc
' vnwf 1 lu'buu. GktulrPll A3ie
.... ...at-..,
l tJ.e (or
r
bi tMt4 ' r wm T' r'tftiy in
.oi . .1 lm! -i-
I . ST. i jt.-ii.v - M : F ' l6- k" jh
7 4 i,u; V 8 A. Ke 1 1" rum.
t" ( . f '-" . I ' rVv "r- . r jo v.!.
k tu Ci liwiiM ai a
Among the Woman's Club
Election of Officers by the Omaha Club Brings Number of Competent
Workers Into Service Third District Women Have Meeting at Walt
hill Local Departments Expect to Complete Program Work This Year.
T
HE outcome of last Monday'a
election is generally gratifying
to th membership of the
Omaha Wuman'a Club. The
election of Mra. M. D. Cameron
.aa president la especially good.
As recording secretary of the club during
th administration of Mrs. A. B. "omer. '
preceding that of Mr. Edward Johnson.
Mr. Cameron demonstrated that tact and
executive ability so essential to the ue
oeaaful club president. Ill health ha kept
hr out of club work much of the time
since her former term of rvlce, hut she
wa elected by th great majority of the
vet In spit of thia Indicating tfh con
fldence placed In her.
Mr. C. W. Hayea and Mr. L. J. Heaiey,
first and aecond vice presidents, are both
well known aa department leaders, both
having served the current topics depart
ment In this capacity. Mrs. N. II. Nelson,
th newly elected recordm secretary, la
alao a former general officer, having aerved
a treasurer of the club. flh Is also a
member of the club" civil aervlca commit
tea and en of Jl able worker. Mr
Oaorg Bonner, th newly elected corre
sponding secretary, la a charter member
ef th lu and former chairman of Ita
mrtibarhlp sommltte. ghs haa worked
In th art and other department. Mr.
E. R. Hume, tha nw treasurer, haa aerved
a assistant In that office under Mr. Nel
son, and I already In touch with her work.
Mra Mum I also a mamber of th Dun
dee club. Th aomraltte chairmen were
squally well chosen and tha administration
promise t h on of th atroageat.
Th Third district ef th Nebraska Fed
ratio ct Womea'f Club has broke all
records for annual conventions. The meet
ing at Walthill last week was the largest
et held, twenty-eight of the thirty-seven
cluba that compose the district organlxi
tion, being represented. Mrs. Carey of
Bancroft and Mra. Huston of Tekamah
were nominated for district vice president
and Mrs. Fisher of Randolph for diBtrlct
Kecreiary. mose nominations to he con
firmed by the state convention In October.
Mra. Frank Haller of the state library
committee was present and spoke. Consid
ering that the town of Walthlll Is lees than
four years old, the nterprlne of the local
club women In entertaining the largest dis
trict convention of the slate Is most com
mendable. Mi's. H. L. Keefe. former vice
president of the district and later president
The household economics department of
the Woman's club held Ita last meeting of
the year Thursday morning and elected
the following officers for the coming year:
Leader. Mrs. F. J. Burnett; honorary
leader, Mrs. C. H. Townsend ; assistant
leader. Mrs. C. H. Chlsem; secretary, Mrs.
T. H. Tracy; treasurer, Mrs. J. C. Dowllng.
Mrs. A. K. Gault left Friday for Wash
ington, D. C, where eh will attend the
annual Continental Congress of the Daugh
ters of th American Revolution, Mrs. W.
D, Millard being the other delegate from
Omaha. Mrs. Gault was accompanied by
her sister, Mrs. R. C. Beuel, vice president
of the Minnesota Daughters of 1812. Mrs.
Gault la also a member of the Nebraska
branch of the latter organisation and will
represent It at the annual convention,
which will be held In Washington right
after the Continental Congress.
Mu Sigma Woman' club held Its last
meeting of the spring Wednesday and
elected the following officers: President,
Mrs. C. C. Belden; vice president, Mrs. C.
H. Ball let; secretary, Mr. John Hussle;
treasure!;, Mrs. J. E. Rohrbough. The
club will continue It study of English
history next year.
The tree planted by the Woman's club
and the Women' Christian Temperance
union on the lot ot tha Toung Women's
Christian association laat year have both
died and arrangement Is being made to
have them replaced. The triangle at the
northwest corner of the building lias been
odded by th Park board and th Wo
man' club tree will be placed In this
space. Th ceremony may take place on
Arbor day.
Mis Frances E. Smith has been re
elected to the school board at Exeter,
N. H. More than half the vote polled
were cast by women. .
Mrs. Ellen M. llenrotln and Dr. Anna
Dwyer, president of the medical staff of
the Mary Thompson hospital, have been
appointed to the committee to Investigate
vice conditions In Chicago.
Dr. Emily Ray Gregory, who Is at the
hfed of the Department of Biology at the
American college for girls, Constantinople,
is In charge of the course of public lectures
on hygiene and municipal reform open to
the native resident of that city. Borne of
the most distinguished physicians of the
city volunteered tihelr services as lecturers'.
The lectures given especially to Turkish
women are aald to have called together
the largest as well as the mo?t attentive
audiences In tha course.
"- "
The little girls of Toledo, O., are to have
a share of the benefits provided for the
newsboys. Every afternoon from 4 to
the newsboys' building Is to be thrown
open to these girls, tha boys being ex
cluded. A teacher of physical culture is
to take charge of the glrla, giving them
lessons In swimming, personal cleanliness.
good manners and simple exercises In the
gymnasium. This is said to be the first
effort of the kind made In this country.
Miss Huge of Toronto. Canada, recently
conducted a party of Z22 school teachers
to visit Boston and other points of Interest
In New England. Miss Hugts"' father is
the inspector of schools at Toronto and
her mother waa president of the congress
of kindergarten teachers at the world's
fair at Chicago, and for the last four years
has been president of the International
Kindergarten association.
Mls Kstelle Reel, who was for many
years the superintendent of an Indian
school, is a firm believer In tho beneficial
effects of education on the young Indians,
especially the girls.
"The Indian girl of today who has re
ceived an education looks for a much
higher type of man for her husband than
satisfied her mother," says Miss Reel.
"If she does not find him she is perfectly
capable of earning her own living. She
makes a superb nurse. Hospitals which
have trained Indian glrla are constantly
making an effort to get othera. The In
dian girl aa t nurse haa Infinite patience
and forebearance, Is of magnificent phy
sique and uhows not one trace of the nerves
which so often undo her white sisters."
Miss Irene Osgood, an American woman
living at Northampton, England, has what
Is said to be the only bird hotel In the
world. When she first went to live In
England she set asldo four acres of her
grounds and planted the land with every
kind ot hardy tree and shrub that bears
frulta and berries raten by blrda. Nearer
the house she built a pavilion with a tight
roof as a protection against rain and snow
and here every morning she spreads a
m-'al of suet. oats, cracked corn, meal an I
nerds. There are water tronahs which aie
filled mice a day and krpt frexh and sweet
by frequent washings.
Mrs. Eva E. Bran, who has Just been
elected supf rlntendent of schools at Old
Orchard. Me.. Is the second woman to be
admitted to the pi ait Ice of law In her
state. Khe is a graduate of the Blddeford
High school and has been a stenographer
Ini'e 1P02. In that year she waa one of
five women appointed by Governor John
P. Hill aa commissioners to take deposi
tions. Later she became a stenographer In
the offire of ex-Mayor Bradley of Faro. '
Miss Mary Garrett Hay. who has Just
been re-elected president of the New York
Legislative league, la urging the members
to cut short their vacations and be back
In town by September 1 to begin a cam
paign to send men In favor of woman suf
frage to the assembly.
Mr. George Merck of Orange. N. J., the
church work committee of the National
American Woman Suffrage association,
haa formed a church committee In Buffalo,
N. Y. The plan Is to hsve one woman
from each church Interest herself In the
suffrage work, sen what the sentiment In
her parish I and In other way further
the cause of equal suffrage.
Mis. John T. Terry, Jr., Is chairman of
the committee which has charge of the
new lunch room opened by the New York
Woman's exchange In the adjoining build
ing, which Is known aa the Farmlngton
Annex because It was rented by graduates
ofthe Farmlngton School for Girls. The
purchase of the exchange haa been made
possible by Mrs. Jane Townsend's bequest
of (10,000. The new lunch room is all In
grern and yellow and it is expected that
It will be Just as popular as the Dutch
room, which Is In th basement of the ex
change, and since It opening ha been
noted for Ita corn beef hash, waffle and
sponge rake.
Mrs. William Ivins has been elected
chairman of the Interurban Woman Suf
frage council to aucceed Mra. Carrie Chap
man Catt, who resigned the place because
of the preBS of her duties. One of the
plans of the Interurban for the summer la
to hold open air meetings on the beach at
Coney Island and various other point In
New York.
Itr I 'd M
V-M
Psl Barvi f Dajlc y.
Sanatorium
Thl Institution U th only on
lo tha central weet with geparat
building situated In their own
amvl grounds, yet entirely dis
tinct and rendering it possible to
classify cases. The one building
being fitted for and devoted to the
treatment of noncontagious and
nonmental diseases, no others be
lng admitted.' The other, Rest
Cottage, being designed for and
devoted to the exclusive treatment
of select mental cases, requiring
for a time watchful care ana spe
cial nursing.
mm miimmniii,miniipial
' '".twv wr :w 't: v '"i ""ii
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S " I , t i i juiCti r
PR tefci 'Zi j
SnJtn War 1
You Don't Buy "Futures"
When You Buy "Sectionets"
IN the past every filing device every
section hss been mode with much
more capacity than you would prob
ably use when yeu bought It It
meant good money Invested In a
piece of furniture non-productive ef
result. Whether you buy a ti Off " ma
chine or Juet a almple filing cabinet,
which doesn't begin t work all over rrnni
the day you buy It. It Isn't true seen 'my.
In "eotlenet," however, there is no
tied ap aapttal not a penny that isn't
doing Its full share from the atari to
operate your bualnes at lowsr eot and
with greater convenience.
Secttonean at last make modern fil
ing system possible to even the smallest
bualnes. or the one with th lest re
quirement or me prores
eional man or woman
without buying futures
wltbea eatravaganoe. '
"ecttonet" make It pos
sible fr the smallext
business, the business of
growing needs and per
hspa limited capital,
where every cent counts,
to be up to the minute to take advantage
of time snd money saved by moderii
methods, without putting needed capital
Into unearnlng furniture. "Seotieaet"
mav be expanded from th requirements
ef a iortor with one patient to a trans
rnntlnental railroad and everv cent ef
their cost will be an earning cent all th
tjme.
"Bsottonets" are th first big Improve
ment In filing devlra since the Invention
of modern business systems We went ta
tell you more about these "little brothers
to 8haw-Walker Bytem" w . want t
tell you why our whol reputation and
standing In thl community la bark ef
them, why we know they are fitted to your
nepds. why yoa can no longer foregw th
Installation of the modern office rystem
you know you need.
We have something of Intereet te say
also to the biggest business man th
man who think hi present system fill
all requlreinenta. W can show you pos
it ! v p I v how you cn eav money. Won't
you come In and give u th opportunity,
or 'phone and we will do th coining?
In addition to the above lines we carry the largest stock of
high grade office DESKS, CHAIRS and TABLES in the West
We are making an unusual REDUCTION FROM REGULAR
PRICES this month on all DESKS, CHAIRS and TABLES.
Omaha Printing Co.,
Phone Dong. 346; Ind. A-3451.
918 824 Farnam Street,
B.Altmatt&(!l0.
HAVE READY THEIR CATALOGUE No.. 101 '
FOR THE SPRING AND SUMMER SEASONS
AND WILL MAIL A COPYUPON REQUEST.
Ifittif Attnutf." 3411 'anil 351It J glrrrta. Xtta orL '
f
r
A LINIMENT FOR EXTERNAL USE.
No woman who bears children need suffer during the pariod of
waiting, nor at th time of baby's coming, If Mother's Triend Is
used ss a massage for the muscles; tendons snd glands of tb body.
Mother's Friend Is penetrating, healthful liniment which n.notb.
ens th ligaments, lubricates snd renders pliant those muscle on which, tb strain
Is greatest, prevents caking of the breasts by keeping the ducts open, and relieves
nausea, backache, numbness, nervousness, etc. Its regular use will prepare every
portion of ths system for the safety of both mother snd child ud grsaOy reduce
th pain and danger when the little one comes. Mother's Triend Is sold at drug
stores. Write for our free book, which contsins valuable Information for expectant
mother J7r DnADmLD CO.. ATLANTA. OA.
AZntlh FDR SLENDER 1
K !
XrUBMS AZXEBma 5elf-Reducb:g
Why
DO LIVE STORES
EVERYWHERE
Push Nemo Corsets?
BECAUSE The intrinsic value of the PATENTED Nemo features haa made
the Nemo the most POPULAR corset in the world easiest to sell.
BECA USE Nemos always give complete satisfaction in style, comfort and '
wear NO POSSIBLE SUBSTITUTE; and "Nemo" spells true eanumyA
BECAUSE Every woman who is once fitted in a Nemo Corset becomes
a PERMANENT CUSTOMER. That builds up business. . , -j
NEMO SERVICE means HEALTH COMFORT and CORRECT STYLE
AU Nsm Corset at $3.00 and more are finished witk LASTIKOP3 HOSE SUPPORTERS
(10) wkich are guaranteed to OUTWEAR ANY CORSET. ' KOPS BROS., Kfn., NEW YORK ' V