Tiirc omatt srxnw rick.- ftciwuiy in. mis. 3 B What Women Are Doing in the World p H ( lull Medium,. MOS'DAT-MeettiiK of the Omaha Wo man's club at 2.-.M o'clock. Young Wo man's class In rJuropean History at 7:30. rt'ESDAY MectliiR of the Oratory de partment of the Omaha Woman's lub at the Itomc of Mrs. J. It. Osborm- at 10 o'clock Persian History class In the Public Library nt 10:30. MertliiB of the I'entury Literary club of South Omaha at Library hall at 2:30 WEDNESDAY Merlins Of the Litera ture department of the Omaha Wo man's club at 10 o'clock. Women s Christian Tcmuerance union feUeiutln. meetlnK at the YounR Women's rhri tain Association at 2:30. Meeting of the Dundee Woman's -lnb at the home of Mrs. D. 1. Johnson at 2:.V. MeetlnK of the Clio club at the home of Mrs W. D. Petri vaJ. rttl'HSDAY Meeting ' the household economics department of the Omaha Woman's club at 10 o'clock. FRIDAY- rYench History class nt the Public Library at 10-30 o'clock. Meeting of the French department of the Omaha Woman's club at 10 o'eloi k ROMIXKXT members of Omaha Woman's club will be guests of the women of Lin coln this week. The third state convention congress will attend. One of the large so cial affairs will he a breakfast at the Lincoln hotel Friday morning In honor of Mrs. Philip Moore of St. Louis, ex presldent of the General Federation of Woman's clubs and vice president of the National Conservation congiess. Other honored guests nt this affair w 111 be Mrs. P. H. Colo of Omaha, Mrs. T. J. Gist of Falls City, Mrs. H. L. Keefe of Walthlll, and Mrs. J. II. Morehead. Mrs. K. R. J. Kdholm of Omaha will be the representa tive from the state tuberculosis associa tion at this congress, nnd will be one of the guests at this luncheon. Other delegates who will attend the Conserva tion congress from Omaha are Mrs. M. D Cameron, Miss Kophemla Johnson, principal of Rrowncll Hall, Mrs. J. A. Dahlmun, Mrs. W. O. Paisley. Mrs. William Herry, Mit. ('. J. Roberts, .Mrs. Mrs. Charles Rosewntcr, Mrs. Thomas II. Matters and Mlsi Margnret Guthrie. There will be a meeting of the state schollnrshlp committee, of which Mrp. I1'. H. Cole of Omnha Is chairman, Friday morning at the Lincoln hotel, Lincoln. Other members of the committee are Mrs. T. J. Gist. Mrs. Apperson of Tekamah and Mrs. Gist of Falls City. The advisory inemberH are Miss Annlo Miller of Lincoln, Bishop Boecher, Bishop Williams. Prof. Graft nnd Dr. Jenkins and Chancellor Avery. Mrs. Charles G. Humphrey of Falls CUV. received her official appointment last week as state editor for Nebraska on the staff of state editors of the Gen eial Federation of Magazines. The ap pointment comes from Mrs. Harriet Rlshop Waters of New York City, man aging editor of the publication, and Is made ujki tho recommendation of Stnte President Mrs. T. J. Gist, her recommen dation being endorsed by the executive hoard of the Nebraska Federation of "Women's clubs. The magazine Is the official organ of the General Federation of Women's clubs, nnd as such circulates all over the world In tho department of state .news, each state has its state editor, who has charge editorially of the club liappenlngs of Im portance throughout her state. The Qen eral Federation Magazine further out lines her work as follows: "State editors Miould assist the sectional members of tho departments by gathering Important material, especially reports ns such from state conventions, etc." The Omaha Woman's club will meet Monday afternoon at 2:80 o'clock in the club rooms at Twenty-third and Harney streets. The program will be given by the art department, of which Mrs. W. II. Hancock is the leader. Mrs. Edith L. Wagoner will give the musical part of the-program and Mrs. A. W. Bowman will talk on "Venice." NEBRASKA EDITOR G. F. W. BULLETIN. The oratory department of the Omaha Woman's club will meet Tuesday morn ing at the homo of Mrs. J. H. Osborne 1622 South Thirty-second avenue. A talcntlne program will be given and each member of tho department will give an original verse on "Ijcive" and "Lovers." 'i his department of the Woman's club will give the program nt the Mother's club of the City Mission, Thursday afternoon. The household economics department of tho Omaha Woman's club will met Thursday morning at 10 o'clock In the club rooms. Haaa Lovett will give a taltf on "Klectrlcal Appliances." Tim literature, department of the Omah: Woman's club will meet Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock In the club rooms. Mr Joseph Polcar will be the leader and will 1m assisted on the program by Mrs M. I. Cdineron, Mrs. N II. Nelson and Miss Grace Conklln. The French department of the Omaha Woman's club will meet Friday morning at 1 o'clock In the club rooms with Urn leader. Mrs. Hen S. Uuker. The young woman's class In European history will meet Monday evening In the lecture room of the public library. The Persian history class will meet Tuer-Jay morning at 10 o'clock In th publl- library. The French history class will meet Fri day morning at 10:3 o'clock In the. public library. Tho Dundee Woman's club will meet Wednesday afternoon at the .home of Mrs D U Johnson. Mrs. Hathaway will be the leader of the meeting and Mrs. Brad, ley will have the current topics. The Omaha Woman's club of the rail way mail service will meet at the home of Mrs. R. G. Allertou, 5H Damon street t'ourull Bluffs, Wednesday afternoon. A patriotic program will bo given. Mrs. V li. Paxton will glvs a reading. The Clio club will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. D Parclval Mrs. Noyes will be the leader of the afternoon and will rend a paper on the life of Thomas Edison. Mrs fihepord or.d Mlis Kvans will assist Mrs Noyes. In the rprt df the organization of nffrage club lo Falls City, there has occu.-rd an error; the puperj quote Mrr. T. J. Gist, ftats president of Women's Clubs In Nebraska as saving t 'at the General Federation at San i'raacljeo endorsed the suffrase fxurtlt sn-eet -.rr nirmhn of both, week are still open rr Hesitation llm I mi i i h put In had .lpie.l as his 1 post and iorp Is ln ued. Regular meet- sub tots offered art hi tvilows Pomes-, motto. Kmi. he thou im good Ami tint ' Ing ot the Woman's Relief corps at the tic science, sewl-ig. 1 1 Ins palntiu. metal n man vho could portra in toiu' she-r ' urn mi .vrmy or tn Republic memorial ami leather craft worn. Kntllsn for for room In the court house on Tuesday, elgti girls, composition. litiglUh lllefn- Fcbrtlnry IS. . ture, German, chonw. dramatic club, first aid to the Injured and millinery. The. Business Girls' i!ul of the Young lble classes, which are free to all. are Women's Chtlstlan association, consisting klven In: "The Life t Christ, ". "The of sixty girls, will have charge of the l'k of Acts," "The feoojal Message of services on Sundav The regular meeting i Jesus." "Tho Poetry of the Old Testa- In the auditorium will be addressed by ment" nnd "Tho International Sunday Rev. K R Curry it Calvary Baptist church. The subject will be "The Mens ure and Motlxe of : Noble Life." nnd there will bo special music. At 5:30. fol lowing the set vice, the club will be hostesses at the customary social hour. Am voung women In the city are cordially Imlted to bo Willi us In tliee meetlh&s On Mondnv evening, February W. will cccur the February patty, which Is given every mouth to the association members and their girl friends. Further announce ment will be made rxt Sunday. Kducatlonal classes, organized last School Lessons." Mrs. Josephine Preston, the new state superintendent of public Instruction for Washington, is the flist woman to hold that office She was elected on her mer its as an educator, she hud served two years as county suiierllttejidetit of schools In Wnlla Wnlla county. She Introduced the cottage plan for ruial teachers, and nrt In the rural schools, and gave valu able encouragement tr the civic center Ideas In school life, sht was so efficient a county superintendent that tho people decided to prom ilc hel. MVS1 C movement, that Is Incorrect: what Mrs Gist said Is as follows: "The General Federation in its biennial session at S.rl Francisco took no action either for or against suffrage, but it recommended that tho study of political economy In prep aration for citizenship be considered Mrs. Gist was asked the question by the speaker of the day and the above Is her leply. criticisms from the Furopean papers. In cxery plnce they were presented they The Century Uternry club of South I 11 '"'P'1 sensation, and In many were Omaha will meet Tuesday afternoon at I B" &JJfc. AUli 2:33 o'clock In library hall. Mrs. Wat kins will be the leader and Mrs. Bray ton will nsslst on tho program. The subject will be the life of Oliver Wendell Holmes and his works. WO great American newspapers I geance. The blessed ecstnev of the '.ait week devoted a page hideous! I sny, 'exquisitely hotrlhle.' for each to a --evlew of the works aln cun nt once b exquisite and horrl of Arnold Sclionberg, the Aus- ' ble: consider toothache and its first trlnn composer, who recently cousin, neuralgia. And the borderland brought forth such scathing between pain and pleasure Is a territory hitherto unexplored by musical com posers. Here you suffer the an guish with the fictitious character In the poem. 1 wondered that morning It I were in a nervous condition. I looker! Philip Greeley Clnpp wrote the review for tho Boston Transcript, and James ugliness with such crystal clearness la to be reckoned with In these lopsy-lurvy times. To call him 'crtuy' U merely amusing. No man is less crazy, few men are so conscious ot what they are doing, and few modern composers boast surtr faculty of attention Concenttatlon Is the keynote of his work; concentration or condensation format, concentration of thematic material to the vunlshlac iHilnt; and conciseness in treatment, al though every lteenoe Is allovveil In modu lation. "Uver compiler has his aura; the aura of Arnold Schoenberg Is, for me, tho ,itmi of original depravity, of subtle ukUiidss, or basest egoism, of hatred and contempt, of critellj. and of the myntle grandiose. He Is never petty He sins In tho grand milliner of NlcUsche'a Superman, ftii'l ho has the courage of his chroiuRllrs. If suoh. uinslc-maUlnR Is ever to Uccoitui no copW, then I long for Death tho He leaser. More shocking still would be the suspleton thnt In time I might be pc.r sunded to like thU ttiuslc, lo embrace, after abhorlug, it." In addition to tho atuive nil article In the New Music ltevlew by M. D. Calvu i uressl, Is noted the fact Sohoenbcrg's string sextette, opus i! . which was tlr'st I performed In XWS3, aroused astonishment , and Ire. hut has since met with recog nition even among detrnctots of his more ncetit output. In 11HIS, when the Hose quartette performed In Vienna his second slung quartette nip. K'.l, detractors nnd supporters actually came to blows In tho concert room. Mrs Schoonberg's "Hand book of Iliirinotiv ' s spoken of as being "one uf the most adinlrnhle hooks ever written on the subject of music." Rut a man may have high creative Ideals and Milt not write In n way thnt will not disappoint others whoso Ideals arc Just as high as tils own In an article on the Special Announcement! MlhliH't. inn. of tho ,.filiiltu4i.t''M Ntiiimcliftat nbout me In the siiarsoly filled hall; poo- , ,,, .,,,., 11, !,.. .,. I.. ,v...t.tni - . ' . . . ""' I'"'" v...ni.,i i, iv Kivni v, i i ...-, , .... ., ,.. . ,v in im in n i oi r iiiiie. .ii. nie sat still: tiipy iiliili t wriggie; peruripa clue us Prof. Paul II. Grumman of the Univer sity of Nebraska, will be the next lec turer Oil fllP .qllllfppt if ii-ntiinu niiff.... Iii riitmiiu ri, i.v,i t.-- i.i... . ure merely his own means of expression '- - -..,..ii , i impulse; nuuieiy r, . . , . .. 1 . has engaged his rervlces for Thursday ! "P xc"w ''nll,fT tpw r " afternoon. March 6, at the council chain- ! th",kH Wc" "f 1,18 ort,1,pl,tra ni"hers, ber in the city hall. Prof. Grumman has i whk''1 Hro wrll,'" tur '" orchestras, given courses of lectures on llterarv I 1,1 hls orr,lesr'ltl01'- Hchonberg does not ... . i ,,,, i,.r ntmp a block chord in instruments of one- M,t ...ll...... ..f I.I.I..I....I .....1 .. rt.,n . .1.. ...i .... ... .. . -I11 ,Mll,,,lt l"ii..niii,t liiriiKiui', mm 11. v.- ,. fc. iv . , "Ty ., '""""'their souih wriggled, let on mo wuari vonrilnK for introspection nnd secluded su nun qiiuimiuiis irom nis hook on f 1Pn tho lost souls dlscinbarkeil nnd ,cdtiion " thereby giving a v harmony. He brings out the fact that his , wr,,t am, inniented. Schonberg , Ul M schoenberg's favorite mood. pupns nave great esteem ana arrection 1 )S i su, t myself, the crudest or com for him. and that his latest works are but , ;H)SPrs, for he mingles with his miistr a grauuai uevelopinent of his theories and sbarp daggers nt white heat with whlcl topics lor three spAsmm in thiu .mi.- The last year he was Includcl In the C. 1 ,one color: lllB av sc't'ct', n" ,,,p 0,e" N. Dletr. course, unde,- the ausiHces of I ,"ol,ls f tho el,ord OIld arra"KfS t,,,m the public library. Prof. Grumman has I t,"'I,' "roper lm,a,lre' ,vllll training prepared n lecture on xuffr., unrt .i J f,,octl ,he Instrument best suited to give clures himself much pleased to present ' ,h" ''"'P'"1813 ,,eHlr,s for nnch com- strongf it in Omnha. "I have found Omaha ! ,,0"e,lt' Mr' C1h"P com"irps Srhoribers SvKl of audiences so Intelligent nnd responsive l,ie,mB- ww- ' synipnonic that I am always pleased to appear be fore them," he said. The Equal Franchise society extends an Invitation to tlie ptibllc to be present and admis sion will be free. poem, 'Pollens mid Mellsande,' Is similar s slmi terllnc drama, except that Hclionberg dared to be vigorous where Debussy did not. Both aru Innovators In menus of expression, both uro sensitively reflective In casts of , i, - thought, both are careful and delicate The Frances Wlllard union of Woman's Christian Temperance union U'1'" '" l P"l't f the epithet, met ut the City mission Thursday after- 1 "'lls- hciiunuerg orten incKs charm, noon. The program was in charge of I)pt)U!,sv sometimes lacks backbone. Mrs. H. N. Craig. Rev. Mr. Haas gave ' 1,1 sn"wl"K that beautiful mnslc (I use n mil r... n-...,,... n,i. ! the term nfter duo consideration) enn. was given at tho meeting of the Mothers' ! "" nlr, circumstances, he composed Arlstotlelan formula, purge the soul club of the mission ot elements In themselves ugly, Schon- through pity anil terror. I felt the terror. The Frances Wllla'rd union held its i U"B deserve great credit as n pioneer 1 '"'t Pity was absent. Blood-red clouds he pares away tiny slices of his victim's flesh. Anon he twists the knlfo nnd you receive another horrible thrill, all the time wondering over the fute of lunar Pierrot and hold on, here's the first clue. If this new music Is so dlstractlngly atrocious, what right has a listener to bother Pierrot. Perhaps Hclionberg hna caught his listener In the musical net, for to be hooked and nutted by the stronger volition of an artist Is the oh- all the seven arts. How does Hchonherg pull off the trick? In the sixth verse of the Madonna the flute, bass clarionet, and violoncello were so cleverly handled that the color of tho doleful verse was enhanced, the mood ex panded; perhaps the Hebraic strain In tho connser's blood has endowed h'm with the gift of expressing sorrow and desolation and the ahnmltiutlon of living. How far are we here from tho current notion that music Is n consoler. Is Joy breedlng. or should, according to the In opening to music a field that wns I swept over vague horizons. It was a new opened to architecture by the Gothic land through which I wandered. Anil movement, to painting by Rembrandt, to i so It went on to the end, and I noticed sculpture by Rodin, and ages hack to as we progressed that Sohocnherg, despite Scott were the speakers of the after- literature by the great masters of trag- his ugly sounds, wns master of more noon. Mrs. Blanche L. McKelvv was tho i od5'- Not t0 recognize tho artistic value than one mood; witness tlie shocking leader of the parliamentary practice. ' of ,llat wl'10" 's the reverse or 'pretty' cynicism of the gnllows song 'Die durre- This society Is planning a press social 1 ls a to of childishness which the art I Dlrnc nlch langcn Hnlse.' Such iiiumIo j regular meeting Wednesday afternoon at the home Of Mrs. A. C. Anderson. A suffrage program wns given. Mrs. George Covell nnd Mrs. Carrie Dawson Charles Wakefield Cndninn has ml diessscd an open letter to the country, suggesting a Congress of American Mu sic for tho Panama exposition In Han Francisco. Its object would be lo "show America nnd the wot lit at large tho pro gress of American muslclal creative art. Its struggles and achievements, Its' pros cut scopo and possible future; to aid the cause of tho American composer and to mtii re a hearing for the best of his works through the undoubted prominence of a musical congress." According to Mr. lOrlp Delatnater of the Chicago Inter Ocean the three days with morning, afternoon and ! in- sessions, outlined In Air. Ctidmi. . 1 1 n. is entirely too short. It would be much better to demand three weeks with three concerts a day for tlie systematic presentation of his congress. It Is rather peculiar wiien one stols to ' think of It, that nt the great expositions I that nre held, excrything else that Is I made by American Industry and ability I Is given mine prominence tlinn American I music. There nre usually the big band conceits and organ lecltals. but the music j Is for tho most part like music every- ! where else, all foielgn, except for a lit- I tie short encore or Hinall number tucked In at the last imrt of n progrnm. Since 'pHE remodeling and decorating of this entire store, now going on, will permit us to give better display to our goods, and will thus enable buyers to choose more readily and advantageously. Through (he new iirniiigcinctilH tho entire first floor will he devoted (o tho drupeiy nnd decorating dopnrtinontH. The second floor will he given ovor to Oriental mid Domestic rugs. The space for tho Oriental coverings will he much larger. Racks will ho installed, where rugs will he shown by natural or artificial light. All other floors are being shaped to meet the demands of the new stocks. By March 1 many carloads of furniture, ruga and draperies will be on our floors, giving us one of the finest assortments in the middle west. All that remains of tlie old stock will bo placed in our bar gain basement at prices you cannot res'iHt. Through tho now arrangement, this store will assume tho sizo that wo wish for, and wo will begin to servo our customers as we wish to servo theui, giving, at all times, the host values, tho best service and the most careful treatment. No matter the price always in plain figures the values will be tho best for the money. Every day whilo this now stock is boing intro duced, during March, there will bo special values here in tho various lines. Watch the papers every day for announcements. Beaton & Laier Co. 415-17 South Sixteenth St. (Continued on l'nge Eight.) Now is Your Chance! Wo aro making this special prlco to get you nftmillltltnil II ' 1 , 1 1 nil," tiHIf Irtilnllnn n .1 It I'-HrSnlA. ,., .lnll,. Vv. , .v.''v ,HrlMiarl8A Qola Orowns (83-lc. oola) ta.oo 5r.??trflsifSMAi!A Bridirs Work Ba.M ?n&u?i : - - ilil?jJ rlr-r.,,,. ' : 5STS- Irf xui Etrota wiwiont rain boo l '' '.' W, v"is?W xni dov prioaa until ranrou lotn. so get busy. VS MMtir'sflr AJl Work anarant0- W OK.. WITHERS Bushman Blook. Boom 3 lotu nnd Douglas. Open Evsnlngs to 0. Fbona Douglas 3084. AMIS to he given In Jlnrch ut the home of Mrs. James Dalzell. The young people's 'branch of thl so ciety will give a Lincoln program Sun. day evening at the Southwest Methodist Episcopal church. The following women have been ap pointed by Mrs. Gist as delegates to the conservation congress: Mcsdames K. II. Cole, C Vincent. Iv. R. J. Kdholm of Omahn; Mrs. K. U. Drake, Heutrice; Mrs. Jilanclie Cattle, Seward; Mrs. 1). B. Cropsey, Kalrbury; Mrs. U I. Cowan. of music can well nfford to outgrow." Is shameful 'and that's the precise effect ty ! I wns after' would the composer trl- Mr. Iluneker begins by expressing his umphantly answer, and lie would bo right musical prejudices In order to purge the j What kind of music ls this, without minds of his renders, nnd then says: innlody. in tho ordinary sense; without "I fear nnd dislike the music of Arnold t themes, yet every ncom of a phrase con Schonberg, who may he called tho Mux , triipuntnlly developed by an adept, wlth Stlrner, of music. Now the field being i ut a harmony that did not smite the cleared, let in see what tho muMc of the j 01ir)4, lacerate, figuratively speaking, the new man ls like. Certainly he ls the hardest musical nut to crnCk In his generation, and tho shell Is very bitter In I the . mouth." Ho heard "Tho Songs of I Pierrot I.unalre," the works that werej Ashland: Mrs. J. N. Uagan, Hastings; j BO caustically criticised by- the Herman Mrs. Klla Hessey. Kearney: Dr. Susan Press. "A lady of plenstng appearance, Plcotte, Walthlll; Mrs. Carrie Peterson. Aurora: Mrs. W. M. Wldener and Mrs. H. W. Lindsay, Lincoln. Mrs. Carrie Peterson of Aurora, lco president of the State Kederatlon of Women's Clubs, Is the guest of Mrs. F. II. Cole for the week-end. She will ac company Mrs. Cole to Lincoln this week, where she Is a delegate to the state con servation congress from Aurora. U. S. Grant Woman's Hellef corps were very pleasantly entertained on Tuesday afternoon ut the home of Mrs. F. . Bryant. The old soldier fiddlers enter tained tho company with music and the hostess served dainty refreshments. On Thursday evening, February 20, I'. S. Grant post and Woman's Belief corps will be entertained by Mrs. Sweazy and Mrs. Dlffcnbuch with a Washington and Lincoln birthday program at the homo of Mrs. Sweazy. H75S N'orth Twenty-I eardrums; keys forced Into hateful mar riage that am miles nsiinder, or else too closely related for aural matrimony, no form, that is, In the scholastic' fonnul sense, and rhythms that nre so persist- I ently varied as to become monotonous I wllnf tfltiit it tllllal T r.tuinl I l,lu ,!.,, I dressed In Pierrot costume, standing In , . , .1 , . . front of some Japanese screens, began to C"" P" 'l'" , "'""l , "'1 ,,lnCkr" Intone about a monstrous nioon-drnnken of ", .. ."by,"n f a 1 world and described Columbine, and al- I morW" "ul' U,p "mn 1,1 t,,e tho ! ways with a refrain. A waltz of Chopin I fal,,t 8W'et a(l0Ta of nn 'nP"S''ll'', - followed In verse and part first ended ""'"' u,m U1P 8lrul or ," na" ,r""' I with there are seven of them, each In hiffon and Messaline Silk Worth to A 0k A resses $19.50 ifviii Bergamo? (see the Gull and poem). There Is no melodic or hnrnionlo line, only n series of ixilnts, dots, dashes, or phrases that sob and . sTeam, despa'r. explode, three parts ended with one entitled 'Madonna,' nnd another, 'The Sick Moon. The musicians were concealed behind screens (dear, old Mark Twain exult, blaspheme would have said 'to escape the outraged . "I give the conundrum the go-by, l j audience,) but, ach Gott! We heard them, 'only know that when I finally surren- we heard them only too clearly, , dered myself to the composer he worked What did I hear? At first the sound of I his will on my fancy and on my raw ; delicate china shivering Into a thousand I nerves, nnd 1 followed the poems, loath luminous fragments. In the welter of j Ing tho music nil the while with Intense tonalities that bruised each other as they ! Interest. Indeed, I couldn't let go (he passed and repassed. In the preliminary grip of cnharmonles that almost made the ears bleed, the eyes water, tho sculp to skein of the story for fear that I might fall off somewhere Into a gloomy chasm nnd be devoured by chromatic wolves. freeze, I could get a cintral grip on Neverthelcfs, when certain of the Kchoeii myself. It wns now music, or new ex-I berg compositions reached me from qulsltely ncrrlble sounds with a veil-1 Vienna I eagerly fell to studying them. Just a little oh your FAC and MAN. 3& J Monday we place on sale IJ00 of tho most charming chiffon and' mossaline silk drosses, made up in tho prettiest and dain tiest of now styles, in splendid quality fab rics. Many dainty party dresses and danc ing frocks in the lot, in leading colors, pos itive values to $19.50, at Dress Skirts in Whipcords, Corduroys, Wool Serges, etc. worth $8.50 to $5.00. Splendid now models, skirts in all loading shades, at $48 Cloth Suits Worth to $12.50. Final cleuraucn of cloth coats In good m a stylet), colora and fab- y A AU rice, at 34,98 nd WT Tailored Suits Worth to $15.00. Final clearance of Hults In Bplondld P j A A fnbrk-H, stylos and col- We Are Showing the Newost Spring Suits and Goals HIIiK MKSSAMNK I'ETTK'OATB. Worth $2.50. Splondld UiiRllty, all fliQn yfVlf f ft msm run 1 Si will keep the skin ns smooth as velvet. You should -apply it mornincr and night: ulso before and after exposure to the weather. HINDS HONEY AND ALMOND If you've never tried It, then there's more real benefit and gratification for you in the use of each bottle than you can now imagine, First of ell, It's perfectly pure and free from anything harmful, it's not sticky or greasy, and cannot possibly grow hair. It's so easy to use, (no massaging) apply it gently with the fingers, when the skin is to be softened or the complexion improved, 'twill cleanse the pores, stimulate the circulation, and make the skin clear and fresh. It cools and heals chapping! soothes and relieres babies' chafing and rash keeps the much-shared face in fine condition. Hindt Cream in bottles, SOe; Hindi Cold Crtam in tube, 25c. Your dealer selh It. Do not tske a substitute. For Froo Samplco you should write A. S. HINDS, 150 West St Portland, Maine s'TT'isn.T 1 V' sv M A 25c j y Ulngham Aprons, worth 60o, full drofls bIzo 30fi Waah I'otticoulB, wortli 60c, at lOt Long lClmonoH, worth to $1.50, nt 59ii Silk Hoot Hobo, worth aOc. at. . lOd Women's Shoe: Worth $11.00 to $4.00, black and tnn, RiinmetiilB, buoiIgb, volvota. cloth tops, patents, otc. at S1.98 and 51.48 The m weltf & I g-9-9 A'o S3T OMAHA m m HOT8K DHKSSEB. Worth $1.25. Qlng lianiB, percales, chani brayB, otc, all stylos nnd colors, CO- at. CREAM Ninety per cent of the circulation of The Omaha Bee goes direct to the homes paner delivered to tho homo reaches tho whole family, every day, rain or shine; fitreot sales vary with tho weather and the whims of tho roador. Tho advertiser must have hiB adver tisements read hy the same people alter day. The value of a paper that is deliv ered instead of sold on the street is the fact that it iB reud by the women and women do most of tho buying. Tlie reading of nn nd now and then does little good; it is' continuous ad vertising that pays. The paper that goes to the homes brings results for the advertiser.