11 ' i TT-fl-'r ml: Embroidered Chiffon Gown Things You Want to Know American Yolorl- liarjr SurKeoiis. .vs. TUB HKEr OMATIA. "WKPXfDAY" SKITKMBKTl 7. 1010- 1 f t ' ' v - f ' -'" ' I, ( ;.J - a . . iT Sf '" :':'.'--" I ' ' f ' J " ' ' t' ' ' ! ' 1' i ' ' . U - t ' J - "J I . S ' ( t ' I . ' -V - f . I 'It '( i - h . y- ' f - ; ' v V , - " ' . f , , .-. n tltm in n Ideal gown for the tj'pe of In r""11"'11 . touch of color with MQ Altvfaita froolc. Th budlce la sea.mlHa and drapod i h -nrwfil surplice ftuthion crona the bust; the aktrt, slightly ffath- Brightside and His "Cluba'-'ara being formed tn a number of foreign olties .to do away with the wearing of hats," JDrifhtsld observes, while 'Vfithos's- boy proudly exhibits FaslUon's ti&teat outbreak la the form of a wonderful IVIlo-treen headiiear. "Wby . didn't you sprliigr that bofore I squandered twg bucks for this lid?" queries Son,, in a hurt tuna of voice. " didn't suppose European faKhlons would Influent ygu," explains Father. "It'a a, long1, way4 from Broadway, all rtsht." wrm Son, "but a atunt like that appeals to ma. A Shoot-tho-Hat club ought to fro ilk not cakes along the Great White Way," . . g'TtMMM v'bb hat' . societies say It is a superfluous arUulo of man's wearing ap parel and . oan be easily dlnpensod with," continued rather, . "All wa have to do In this town to shake 4A Hds Is to walk past the Flatlron build ing,". auioroBta Son. "That ought to make a good location to initiate the members." "Buying ' a vfeat," ' cnhrpialna Father, "Is one ofi tlie hardost tbimrs I du In thn llna of purchasing aonuHhlnR to wexr." m 'trouwa wiin men s hats," says San. who la'a aartorlal exnart. 'In tht tiiav are all built about alike, while almtvit every yap has a different pattern of face. For example,', these open face chaps who hiW most' jf tljelr Works w hen they smile can I bone v- be aa beautiful In one uf tlvKMv Vpancake' effect lids as your little Willie, with hla Napoleon BonaporU pro file." ' . - . "Uvry. . Bcason I acera to have t so throu:k the same harrowing experlnnen when selecting Uh, "avers Father. Ttilsla atniut the time of yer when the hat ton) re niK)d with a pej,lo-atri.-k-n bunoh vi niarrtnd non. all trying to lo,Jt pretty tn. litis thoy know their wives will boyvtt ts BO(.n as they hit the front pon." ijotiarua Sn philosophically, whlcii doaan't add U his parent's ease of jnlnd at the approaulrin crlHls. "'hen I take" the hat salesman's s.lvioe I alwaVs have to bring it back the next day.'V niuuruM -Futher. "If I sa my own Iludgmeant It usually turns out juft a bad." "Why dun't you try one of th.., new ayle, picture hats?" Is: Son's suaB.stion. "rictyre haLa?" rejieets Father In a dosed way, "I thought that was a style of the iftirely feminine headgear." i kf.ii fwu uijuoy mi mis laai," urges kjo. Uf you want tn gallop along In front oi me proceaahin you've got to pry loose oue those painted beauties. They make a pig- Hit. with the dames. I'm willing to ueU" a oinaU sum that Mother would mtmifr sand -yeu back to take another ehajye- If Jita .buy one of the scenery va- thoaS'lUs for their own UKe." 1 ttr such, a hat would be too showy for a maa of my years," hedges Father, nriid, finished with a wide hem. Violet colored pantiles in an elaborate design are embroidered on hem and bodice. Arti ficial flowers of the nnme hue, worn In the girdle, complete the ensemble. Boy Iluying Lids to Please rifle," Their Latest Tabloid Sketch. THE YEAW-Y UXPEClENCt. who had a faint suspicion that hla off spring Is setting a pltftiU for him. "It's funny," muses Son, "how the wisest men refuse to take advice on buying a hat, and then go out and get Btung any way. The only thing for you to do. Pop, Is to Join the '8hoot-tha-H.it' bunch." In that way you oan sidestep the bother and save the mnsuma at the same time." "The money I might save In a year going without hats wouldn't amount to much," declares Father. "If the women could be Induced to form 'No Hat' brigades, how ever. It would prove a great boon to hard working husbanda" "When any hubby gets so he can coax wife tt) pa8 up buying lids you can make up your mind that he's a clutp with a hyp notic eye and the lady's In a trance," as serts Son. "She'll come out of her slumber some day, too, and when she does," con cludes the tynusehoiJ adviser, "little bright eyes will buy out an entire millinery store in order to get square." (Copyright, 1310, by tho N. T. Herald Co.) f Daily Health Hint 1 Olive oil Is an extremely useful article both as faod and medicine. It Is useful to lubricate internal pas safes and is soothing after poison by corrosive substanoes. . Kltrhts Days. And nov the kitchen's In a mess o'er ev'ry thing the green Juice tickles; But think of winter's happiness, ' With wlfey's chow-chow and her pieklea, T. E. M. TPXr TH' COUMTit-r NtKT WEEJC. NO 1 I MoltE RACMELORj I.ITE tOft TOST I . uoottrt-r THOSE 3I3CUITS '' r V f vtLL. HOV 1 2k X 1prrt? I'VE &CT IT. VOhJER., lT S LMC6 fS CHAeri. r WHISTLE; OH. THZrira VJ0WEt. in MLTO TKfc VZ-AZ-- COPYRIOHT, 19101 BY THE The Boss of the : Establishment i .. BY AMERE MAN. The wife of the Boss of the Establishment was dreaming, not those unsubstantial dreams bred of Imagination and an idle hour, but the real thing which comes from sleeping on your back or eating injudlc louly and too well. Suddenly the . telephone bell rang with that Insistent , clamor with which the op erator revenges herself in the small flours for the tragedy of her own enrly waking. The Boss' wife, aroused from her dreams, slid Into a dressing gown, and 'with the blind Instinct-of the New Yorker staggered to tlus telephone, . Expectant as she had learned to be of the false alarms from. Hackensack or Haverstraw, and patient as she was In getting them transferred to the numbers they really sought, she was surprised to hear the voice of the Boss himself, who went to work with the sand hogs and quite a little after the bankers and brokers were going down town. "Hello," ., called the voice of her wide awake spouse. "Why haven't you wished me many happy returns? Don't you know It Is my birthday?" Sleepy as she was the sentence woke the wondering lady to rigid attention. "Really!" she gasped. "I never forgot it before. Why, how can it he? I 'don't un derstand ltl But never .mind, come home early and we'll have a real birthday party. And at any rate" she prevaricated swiftly and smoothly "I haven't forgotten your birthday present. No, I won't let you guess what it is wait till you see It. By foy." She hung up the receiver in a hurry, It would never do to let the Boss surmise that she had actually forgotten his natal day. And yet there was no doubt that she had committed this crime of crimes! "What shall I give htm?" she asked her- Items of It must be admitted that the fashionable overeklrt effects generally are not becom ing to short or stout women, no matter how attractive they may be when worn by figure of the opposite type. There Is modification of the mode, however that may safely be attempted by even pudgy women, Tho skirt was plain and smooth fitting over the hips, and then a straight length of the goods was added at the belt covering, the back and sides, leaving a panel effect In center back. This drapery was Just turned under and hemmed all the way around, and than caught back at each side and held down to the skirt with rosettes made from tho gboda The orerskirt Just melted Into the skirt proper and, the rosettes being of the dress goods, there was absolutely nothing to break the long line, consequently the model could not fall to be becoming. Pretty and simple ars the dancing frocks for girls this season. There Is an absence of elaboration. At a boy and girl dance given recently tte prettiest frock ass worn by a girl of 18. It was of Ivory Jac qusrd mull, the skirt gathered into the belt and held down below the knees with a scarf of soft silk drawn through a buckle made from small pink roses ylaoed on the left side. The baby waist was confined with a bH exactly corresponding with the band on the skirt, and the round Dutch neck and the short sleeves were edged with tiny roses. A half wreath of the flowers passed around the head from ear " flesK'. JUT 1 UlSH X rtftJSOriE " crTHW PrZjxi. IT UOuLP rtrMCE 1 V SHOR.T WORK or XHSMfcS.BT J QLL-( 3 U- 60 3Y ft 3S0TTLE a rvooe. viia j: (hw-z aoBs. tr it works iK, 1 i (H"AA IP (T Cl-AM5 - Eviy evi I ALL evett. Keep thiis TH6 TtrtES NEW YORK EVENING TELEGRAM rNEW.YQBK HERALD . t, VERY MEEKLY THE BOSS . OF THE ESTABLISHMENT DIIA8 HE WAS self. "Scarf pins', cigarette cases, cuff but tons" rapidly her mind reviewed the ac cepted catalogue of wifely presents. "No, he has all those. I guess I'll look In the morning papers and glance over the sales." With this truly feminine ' Instinct she seised the advertising sheets and began to scrutinise them with a shrewdly ap praising eye. Suddenly her gaxe was diverted from the blatant headlines of her favorite merchant to the modest date line of the newspaper "NEW YORK. Sopt 1. 1910." "Why, It's not his blrtnday at all," rhe exclaimed. "He's two days younger than he thought he was. His birthday Is Sepr tember 8." Nevertheless the opportunity to shop was not to be overlooked. Alligator card cases were going at ruinous prices,' according to i ' ' ' Interest for the Women Folks to ear. It was owed its success home-made frock and to the simple lines adopted. , . - Exceedingly smart looking separate coats are being made up from the soft, thlok blankets thata res old In the shops for the purpose. They are so warm yet so light In weight that they are comfortable for walk ing as well as for theTr Original purpose, automobile wear. The pale tan and the wood browns ars the preferred colorings. Just now the trimmings are of black satin and gilt buttons, but later on will be seen fur oollara and cuffs. Already a handsome coat on this order has been seen, the collar and cuffs being faced with skunk. The negligees in ohlna silk ready for fall wear are so staple In design this season that any woman who knows how to sew could make her own. Scalloping Is very much in evldenca this year on everything, and this hand work Is the only decoration seen on some of the prettiest and most practical of the new negligees. For in stance, a pale yellow In a substantial quality of china silk was cut in long, flow ing lines like a full length box coat, and closed a little to the left side. The neck and the entire light edge ' were finished with a button hole scallop worked In yel low silk, while the kimono sleeves showed the same decoration on their edgea A new petticoat for fall wear Is of Ira ported moreen, very light in weight and of excellent quality. The moreen Is In moire r so Mem. SO mc& JIT IT L-ITTLE !Ea. COO. AH RifihU Retervid Women) He Decides, Are the Most -Forgetful of All Creatures. -.J the solemn asseveration of firm. . her "favorite So the 'Ross.', wife sallied into. the marts of trade and purchased a bargain birthday present for her lord. , Also she ordered beefsteak, potatoes au gratln and green corn for dlnrer a cull' nary birthday ode which the most poetic of chefs could never surpass, At 5 o'clock the Boss' 'latchkey admitted a grieved and disappointed, man "Happy birthday," called his wife as she skipped to the door. "Huh," . growled '. the Bos?. "I might have aa many birthdays as Methuselah and you'd never find it out." As he spoke he took from his pocket an evening paper. , " 'It's the little things In married life that, count," he read from file wife's favorite newspaper oracle; 'the flowers on her birthday, .'the new hook-on the annl versary of her . wedding.' But none of these things apply to the husband, of- course, He's lucky if his wife remembers the day he died." Silently the. Boss' wife conducted her spouse to the dinner table. Before the array of corn, his favorite potatoes and the rarest of beefsteak the Boss' wrath' melted to a gentle melancholy. "To think that my wife should forget my birthday," he observed. "To think that I should have to remind her of it over the telephone. To think" "No," Interrupted the Boss' wife; "don't think in advance. You dear Idiot, you were born on September S the day after tomorrow. If you don't believe me, tele graph to your mother. But your, present Is In our room on the bureau. Go look at it." ' ' And very, meekly the Boss of the Estab lishment did as he was told. (Copyright 1910, by the'N. Y. Herald Co.) effect and the deslgo of the skirt is novel. Tho upper -portion fits the figure smoothly to well below the knees, being most care fully gored to Insure a perfect fit for the dress proper. Well"below the knees the skirt meets a sectional flounce showing clusters of tiny tucks and novel cording, the lower edge finished with a ruffle. The colors are navy blue, wistaria, Copenhagen blue and black. The price Is IS. 28. ' A Sllaht Mistake. "It's curious to observe," says a Maryland man, "the manner in- which many illiterate persons prosper, I once had business that used to take me at intervals to a certain place on the eastern shore. On one occasion I went into a store there, the proprietor of which could neither read nor write. While I was thefe a man came In evi dently a regular' customer. "I owe you some money, don't I?" he Inquired. "The storekeeper went to tfce lloor and turned It around so that the back was visible. "'Yes," said 'he; 'you owe mo for a cheese.' , " 'Cheese!' exclaimed the customer. I doh't owe' you for any cheese!' "The storekeeper gave another look at the door. " 'You're right," said he. 'It's a grindstone. I didn't see. the dot over the "i" In the middle.' " September Llpplnrott's. The Ky to the Situation bee Want Ads. The American Veterinary M"dlcal asso ciation of the I'nlted States is now tn ses sion at San Franrlsco. This association hits a membership of about 1.000 of the 4.000 veterinarian in the I'nlted States who are eligible. It Is probable that no other pro fession In the I'nlted States Is less crowded thHn that of -the veterinarian. There are only about twenty schools teaching veter inary medicine In tho country and only fif teen of these are sufficiently thorough to entitle their graduate students to tHke. the cavil service examination under the I'nlted States bureau of animal Industry for the various government positions to be filled by vetei inHiians. There are more than iHJ0.000.CO0 domestic animals In the I'nlted States, not including cats, dogs or poultry. Yet there are only !,000 students In the veterinary schools of the country. On the other hand, while there are H0.0fl0,o0 people In the I'nlted States there are nearly ift.ono students of tnndlclne. , Before ' 1SH1 the practice of veterinary medicine was given over largely to black smiths and rural horse doctors, none of whom had more than a very sIlRht empiric knowltrixe of the difease of domestic ani mals. In that year the association adopted a requirement that to be eligible to mem bership an applicant must have been grad uated from a school requiring at least three terms of six months each for It course of study.. This tended to give the practice of veterinary medicine a profes sional standing ana while in recent years some little difficulty has been experienced iu combating the mushroom schools that have sprung up In many quarters, the de cision of the bureau of animal Industry to recognlso certain schools has tended to overcome this evil. At the last meeting of the association held In Chicago a strong resolution was adopted looking to the stamping out of hydrophobia. This resolution declares that all dogs running , at large should be re quired to be muzzled, and that any dog ap pearing off the premises of Its owner with out a properly adjusted muzzle ought to be shot Immediately. Another resolution ex pressed great faith In the work of the medical fraternity with reference to bovine tuberculosis and declared It to be the be lief of the veterinary profession that tuber culosis in cattle can be transmitted to human beings and that the course of the milk sanitarians of the country looking to ward the elimination of tuberculosis from the milk supply Is to bo highly commended. veterinary medicine has been pursued as a science since tho time of the ancient Egyptians and Greeks, although from the time of the destruction of the Grecian em pire until the establishment of a veterinary school tn Lyons in 1762 the profession was at a complete standstill. Durlnn the dark ages there was little attempt to carry for ward the work that had been so well begun by the Egyptians and the Greeks. The possibility of the tntertransmfssion of dis ease between animal and man was sug- gesiea nrst by Vegetius Renatus, about the time of the dawning of the Christian era, and although he possessed none of the equipment which has enabled modern meaicai men to study the relation of animal life and disease,' ho discussed the matter witV a 'thoroughness and an In telligence that has made his name a land mark in the history of human and veter inary medicine. . In many party of Europe and In some of the Important cities of the United States hospitals for animals are maintained. At the London zoo there Is an Infirmary for the treatment of the denizens of that In stitution. Lions and tigers are treated like cats, while wolves, hyenas and bears are treated as if they were overgrown dogs, The rhinocerous responds to the kind of treatment accorded the horse, while the hippopotamus Is found to demand such therapeutic care as Is given to the pig. ' Some veterinary surgeons are paid highly for their services. One of these is Alfred Sewell, canine surgeon to the king of England. He -wears the regalia which shows' that he holds a position of no small rank in the royal household and often goes to St. Petersburg and Berlin to prescribe for the pets of the csar and the kaiser. He Is a great believer in the rest cure for pets and often prescribes a trip to southern Europe for the dogs and cats of royalty. On these trips ths royal pets are accom panied by their , retinue of attendants to make sure that all goes well with their charges. It is said that there Is a pet cat known as Dr. Ginger, with headquarters at Belle- Neglect of the Skin is Wrinkles may bs caused by neglect of the skin as much as by Illness or worry, and the latter Is an Infallible short cut for having them. When a woman worries, the muscles of her face become tense, stretch ing the skin, which goes into lines. As women will worry till the end of time, It is a wise one who treats her complexion to ward off wrinkles. Water is drying to the natural oils of the skin, without which the complexion will not stay firm and fresh Wherefore a water bath morning and night might be called sufficient uslngs at other times such agents as will be strengthening as well as cleansing, a combination by no means Impossible to have. Such Is a lotion made trom sixteen grains eacli of powdered ollbanum benzoin and gum arable, twenty-four grains of Jordan al monds powdered, six grains of ground cloves, eight grains of ground nutmeg and four ounces of deodorized alcohol. The gum arable, ollbantum and benzoin are dlsolved In the alcohol, the cloves, nut meg and almond previously being mixed. The two mixtures are combined, standing for two days tightly corked, and occasion ally shaken. At the end of two days, three-quarters of an ounce of grange flower water is added and the whole Is poured through coarse muslin to clear it. Thjs Mquid may be used frequently through the day, always letting the applica' tion dry on. When used to cleanse, the first application must be washed off, put ting on a second Immediately after drying the SKin. Another, adapted to the sams use. Is made from one-quarter of an ounce of oil of rosemary, one dram of oil of lavender, fifteen drops of oil of petit grain, two drams of tincture of tolu, two gills of rose water and three gills of rectified spirits of wine. There are mingled, and the lotion Is considered to be an excellent tonic, using It frequently on the face. It must be remembered with this, and all other gentle agents, that they act slowly. Ths complexion will be neither clear nor fresh In one week or two. It will be sev eral months before any Improvement can be noted, for the action la slow, being there fore, the mors lasting. Those which quickly affect ths complexion ars necessar vue hospital In New York. The doctor had the misfortune to gel a fish bone In its throut, so it performed an operation, known as trachestomy. on lis own throat. The only instrument used were the claws given It by nature, and the only antiseptic was the frenuent lickings with Its own tongue. Dr. (liiger 1ms entirely recovered and stands at the head of the list of animals perarinB upon themselves. Preventive medicine Is no less a science with the modern veterinarian than curative medicine, and In the last decade Or two splendid results have been obtslned from precautionary measures. Before the pro cess of Immunizing northern cattle to the Texas fever, few thoroughbred cattle were shipped to'ths South, because of the fact that from 70 to 90 per cent of those shipped died within a comparatively short time af ter their arrival on tho southern farms. Since the perfection of this immunizing roccss there is no difficulty of shipping to southern points, and the cattle and dairy Industry in the southern states has enjoyed remarkable development. A method of Innoculatlon of the lille aaatnst rinderpest has pmved to be highly successful In ' South Africa, and It Is believed It will re volutionise tho cattle business of the dark continent. Tho V tilled States Bureau of Animal Industry has been one of the lead ing forces of the world In the Investiga tion of aninml diseases, and has perfected vaccines for the majority of the contag ious and infectious disease to which animal life Is subject. It Is Interesting to note that the packing house business recognizes more than thirty animal products which are used as medicine for human beings. If there were no other reason for the careful veterinary Inspec tion required under the Meat Inspection law to Insure healthy meat products, the guaranteeing that these thirty remedies are pure would be sufficient reason for the maintenance of this Inspection. How much we are exposed to danger of the communi cation of animal diseases to human beings, through these remedies, Is shown by the case of suprarenale. It requires the sup rarenal glands of 100.000 sheep to make a single pound of suprarenalln. If any one of those sheep was suffering from a con tagious dlseaso it might be spread to thousands of patients upon which that pound of suprarenalln Is used. This prepa ration is used in connection with dellcato surgical operations for stopping the flow of blood, and cost more than r,000 a pound. The veterinarians have no patience with the. well-meaning people w ho would put a stop to vivisection amd other forms of ani mal experimentation. They, along with all other medical men, agree that the greatest triumphs of medical science have come about through animal experimenta tion. They tell us that all our knowledge about the regenerative growth of tissues, the union of fractured bones, the activities and functions of the Various organs of the body a thousand 'things essential to medical progress have come about through ex experiments performed on animals. Above this it Jias served more, than anything else to lift the dark cloud that . formerly ob scured all matters of infectious disease, and has burst the bonds of, thralldom In which the human face has been held by such diseases. ' The agricultural colleges of the country nearly all have provided courses In the care of livel stock, In which are taught the fundamental principles of veterinary medi cine. The students who take these course are of course not well enough equipped In veterinary science to become registered practitioners, but are taught enough to enable them to take all the precautions ol preventive medicine, and at the sams tlm to treat the thousand and one small ail ments to which animal life Is heir. There was much supersltion connected with live stock diseases in years gone by. Some thought that the. poor, rundown con dition of certain cattle In the farmyard was due to hollow horn, and a system o( treatment was resorted to. In many cases tuberculosis was the real ailment. Hollow tall was another disease which the pro vincial attributed to certain of his cattle. The majority of thin, raw-boned animals are In that oonditidn either from the rav ages of tuberculosis, or else from the lack of attention, and hollow horn and hollow tall are now believed to have been little more than euphonious excuses for empty , stomachs or decayed lungs. BT TBBSSBIC J. SASXIK. Tomorrow International Bwlinmlnff Con. test. . Apt to Result in Facial Wrinkles ily strong and not Infrequently, when one stops applying them, tho later condition of the complexion becomes as bad as it not worse than, It was originally. MARGARET MIXTER. He Saved the Train. A brakeman who had not been long em ployed was going up a very steep grade on his first run. With unusual difficulty the engineer succeeded in reaching the top. At the station, looking out of his cab ths en gineer saw the new brakeman and said with a Blgh of relief: "I tell you what, my lad. we had a Job to get up here, didn't we?" "We certainly did," said the brakeman, and If I hadn't have put on the brakes. we'd have slipped back." September Llp plnoott's. Persistent Advertising is ths Road to Big Returns. . THE PROOF. Why do you call him a literary genius? He doesn't write aucfe extra good tuft "No. nj dear, bu( tcaell.it fill