1 " if t to Tin; r.EK: omaha, Saturday, .January 1010. 11 fSVornan's Work -:- Fashions -:- Health Hints -:- Household Topics M Shit I J,av n a . V i Consciousness oj Love Varies in Sex By UK. MAX NORDAt. llfalthy and natural love In always dearly conscious of Its purpose. It Is the longing for the possession, the de- innnd for that union which Is sble to 'Tins about the origination of posterity. Tii strong Individuals love sets free Im pulses that are sufficiently powerful to j triumph over every opposing with and overcome every obstacle. In Individuals with real wills It does not have this ca- j Vrtcity; the emotion continues to be sub-( Jctlve and does not become converted ; (;. to actions. I The strength of the love of any being, outrht, therefore, not to be mentioned by1 the exertions which It puts forth In order to acquire the beloved; for the niagnl-j tude of those exertions depends upon the strength of his love. It must, neverthe less, be added. In Imitation, that In the jilthy and normal person, all the brain fitters are developed tn pretty much the , me proportion, so that Individually we e weak wills and will also hardly pos- rven the Instinct or love to sny marsen extent, whereas, those Individuals whoj are able to love violently will nlso. as a rule, put possessed powerful wills. The difference In the importance of the j two sectors, so far as the maintenance! of the race Is concerned, also causes cor-j responding differences in their amatory! lives. The part which the woman plays) is bv far the more Important. She has j to supply rue wno.e maier.a. .or i... mation of a new being, to elaborate completely within her own organism, and. above all, to Impart to it her own quali ties. Just as she has Inherited them from her forefathers. Man, again, only supplies the stimula tion to this tedious and difficult, hay. heroic work, upo which the quality of the work in question Is to some degrees dependent. Just as In truth also. To cite an example, the same dynamite burns harmlessly or flares up brilliantly, or ex plodes with terrific force, according as it Is respectively set on fire by a live coal, or a lighted match or an explosive. Woman possesses a more distinctly de veloped Idea of the man who Is organi cally necessary for her, and will fill up life, nor does she allow nerseu io ... -. .a a nnMinr'A trilfl a ho reaauy muuucu . herself with a substi tute of a totally dissimilar character. Should a woman have once found her Ideal It will be practically an lmpoawbll ity to renounce it. as her emoyons rial from her consciousness every other kind cf contents, so that she is henceforth able to do nothing else except love, places her will, her Judgment, and her imagina tion at the disposal of her affection, and utterly refuses to allow any attempt on the part of her Judgment to struggle asalnst the emotion by the help of In telligent conceptions. A woman has an instinctive sensation that she ought not to make any mistake, that any error would have alike for her self and her posterity results that could not be made good, that it would under all circumstance draw along with It the lavish expenditure of a comparatively large amount of organic labor, and she is. therefore, extremely distrustful and careful to avoid the possibility of such an error. In the case of a man, the matter Is quite different. He may quite easily make a mistake, because the mistake, so far as he is 'concerned, haa no orgwilo results at all, and can be made good, so to sneak, the very next minute, that is, so far as he shares to the preservation of the race la affected. For the same reason also his Weal of the woman who will organically complete him with much less plainly typified, and he is, therefore. JL apt to fall in love much more quickly and easily, with the first nice woman Xw he meets. For the same reason, also, he J I , love much more frequently, relln- I qJfeh much more easily, forget with much less trouble and his love oan. with comparltive ease, be controlled, sup pressed and even completely vanquished by his Judgment. Mothers' Sacrifice Altogether Too Great Sacrificing herself for the family is the "daily bread" of many a mother. "Every mother knows more Is required of her than she should give." And yet' she gives it. Do you wonder why? Love prompts such self-denial. For her family so near and dear she "gives way," elimi nating her own wishes, pursuits, and comfort. But should she always do this? No, most assuredly not. It la not right continually to shut one's eyes to the ethical question Involved; mothers wish It were right to yield one point after an other, and finally do yield, hoping they are not doing wrong. Probably every good mother has erred in this direction more than in any other, But her loving devotion should not lead her constantly to efface herself, while other members of the family go on un concernedly taking the self-sacrifice of ther" as a matter of course. Such renunciation is bad for every member of the family. Each should as sume his or her portion of the burdens, preventing as far as possible the widen ing of the gulf that divides their inter ests, and separates the social and edu cational life of parents and children, if mothers could realize what opportunities for character building are lost when the way of the child Is made too easy! A child cannot learn too early that to 1a for others is a privilege. If his efforts sre sppret-lated, the consciousness of hav- ing performed a helpful act will so en- nance his personality that he will bs more eager with each opportunity to lend a hand. A mother should at all hasards resist narrowness. For her family's sake, she should "keep up Interest'" in her own life, its aspirations. Its Ideals. The do mestic woman wants a happy home, and the surest way to achieve this Is for her to be happy, but this she can hardly be if her own desires are being persistently thwarted. She must live for ethers, but this does not mean she must deny herself all of the time. We know women who are models of devotion, thoughtful, sffco llonate mothers all the time, but they persist in "keeping up with the pro- lilon;" and this is doubtless the real ( ason of their successful home life. Her- Jrt Bptncer once said, "Every creature s happy when he or she Is using fully hi ' r her powers. nave tnat in mind, tnen 'it e prorer Valance will be found In family J.fe Mothers' Magazine, Anita Stewart's Talks to Girls No. lbThe Use oj Cosmetics By AXITA STEWART. (Copyright. IMS. international News Service.) A great many girls ask me If I believe In the use of cosmetics. To this I reply. "It depends on how artistically you use them." Certainly nothing could be more re pulsive than a woman daubed up with powder and rouge until she looks like a whlted sepulcher with red roses painted on It. On the other hand, art may be come the hand maiden of nature, and do s much to improve the human counte nance as it does when It transforms a scraggy field into a lovely park. I have seen hay-colored hair turned Into glorious golden tresses by the Ju dicious use of i little peroxide. I have seen sallow checks flame into beauty with a touch of rouge. I have seen a characterless face transformed by the darkening and emphasising of the eye brows, f Purely' in surh cases the use of cos metics should not be condemned, but ac counted unto i woman for righteousness. Certainly there Isn't so much beauty In the world that we can afford to throw any possibilities of it away, and, to my thinking, a woman simply hasn't got any right to be ugly !f there is anything she can do to prevent 11. The Bible says that none of us by tak ing thought ran add a cubit to his stature, but certainly by taking thought woman can cud a lot to her good looks, n(J tn.te-d of h,-mln v., ,nr Antrim . we should be fllleq with gratitude to wards her for presenting a pleasant spec tacle to our tyes instead of a repulsive one. We think It Is permissible for a woman who has a living skeleton figure to pad her clothes, so she won't look so bony, and for a feathrbed woman to lace her self down so she won't appear quite so fat. Why then the criticism of the woman who puts a few Improvements on her face and hair that nature was too stingy to give her in the first place? Of course, In the old puritanic days the unu was supposed to nave a monop oly of rouge and a "painted lady" was beyond the pale of respectability, but nowadays that' fcilly theory is exploded, and whether a woman "makes up" or not is a question between her and her mirror and not between her and her con science. As I said before, I see no objection to it. Indeed, rather a virtue In it, since few of us are born with such an equip ment of good looks that we don't need a few additions, but "make up" to be ef fective must be a case where art con ceals art Rouge should not be plastered on like paint on the tide of a barn. Powder should not be applied in a way to sug gest that the face has been dipped in a flour barrel. Eyes should not be blacked unUl they look as If the woman who owns them had been In a fight. Yet you see these caricatures of hand-made beauty on the streets every day. umu you. gins, you are going to use cosmetics to do so with restraint.! and to study the fine art of improving nature in such a way that it will all seem natural. And another thing, girls, don't use your vanity cases in public. Tou wouldn't manicure your nails on the street car; Little Bits oj Modern Science Rise oj Man Through Stons Age By PROF. HENRY F. OSBORX. President of American Museum of Natural History. (Conclusions In His Book. "Men of the Old Stone Ag-e." Hcribner's.) The rise of the spirit of man through the Old Stone Age cannot be traced con tinuously in a Single race because the races were changing; as at the present time one race replaced another, or two races delt side by side. The sudden ap pearance in Europe at least 35,000 years ago of a human race with a high order of brain power and ability was nota leap forward, but the effect of a long process of evolution elsewhere. When the pre historia archaeology of eastern Europe and of Asia has been Investigated we may obtain som light in this antecedent development.' During this age the rudiments of all the modern economic powers of man were developed; the guidance of the hand by the mind, manifested in his creative in dustry; his inventive faculty; the cur rency or spread of his Inventions; the adaptation of means to ends In utensils, In weapons and In clothing. The same Is true of the aesthetic pow ers, of close observation, of the sense of form, of proportion, of symmetry, the appreciation of beauty of animal form and the beauty of line, color and form tn modeling and sculpture. Finally, the schematic representation and notation of Ideas so fur as we can perceive was alphabetic rather than pictographio. Of the musical sense we have at present no evidence. Th religious sense, the approlation of some power or powers behind the great phenomena of nature, is evidenced In the reverence for the dead, in burials ap parently related to notions of a future existence of the dead, and especially in the mysteries of the art of the caverns. I lneM "tep '"dicate the possession iof certaln generic faculties of mind sim- "r lo our own- na this mind of the i pper Palaeolithic races was of a kind capable of a high degree of education we entertain no doubt whatever because of Zemo for Dandruff You do nut want a slow treatment when hair is falling and the dandruff germ la killing the hair roots. Delay means no hair. Get at any drug store, a bottle of semo for 26o or 11.00 for extra large size. Use as directed, for It does the work quickly. It kills the dendurff germ, nourishes the hair roots and immediately stops itching scalp. It la sure and safe, is not greasy. Is easy to use and will not stain. 8aps and shampoos are harmful, as they con tain alkali. The beat thing to use Is semo, fur it Is pure and alae inexpensive. Zemo, Cleveland. 30C r V X t 1 i 'tt V Miss Anita Stewart ready for winter's snows then why powder your noseT To see a girl calmly pull out her powder puff and her Hp stick and begin to touch up her face at the theater or in a restaurant is not only bad form, but disillusionising. It gives the secrets of your toilette away, and that's something a woman should never do. A" clever woman should the very advanced order of brain which Is developed' In the highest members of these ancient races; in fact, it may be fairly assumed from experiences in the education of existing races of much lower brain rapacity, such as Eskimo or Fuegian. The emergence of such a mind from the mode of life of the Old Stone Age is one of the greatest mysteries of psychology arid of history. The rles and fall of cultures and of Industries, which la at this very day the Basket Store f.'o. 35 Open XTAVEZ. OKANOXia, sweet, seedless Uarge 98-slze, dozen. 34o 124-slse, 890. Smaller sls-s down to ISO a doseu at moet of the stores. Hulk Heedless Raisins, lb lflo Oreclan (Currants, bulk, lb 14o iJromedary liates. pkg .....So I-'iira. pkx.. 80, S for 83o Lunch Paper, roll 4o and 7o Pure Fruit Preserves, 83-os Jar 800 Cooking' Figs. 11). loo, 3 lbs. for 880 Tip 1'aucake Flour, pkg Bo Pure N. Y. Buckwheat, lb Bo 10 lbs. for 4to Log Cabin Syrup, pint, 81o qt,, 3ta H-gaJlon size 7 Jo Comb Honey, per comb 16o Corn Starch, pkg 40 Mince Meat, pkg. 80; 8 for 83a Walnut Meats, lb 480 McLaren's Peanut BuUer, lb. ...Ho Hulk Ktarch. lb., 4o, 3 lbs. for lOo 7H lbs. for a 5o Toilet Paper, roll, 3o, I for 60 Princess llneapple, nothing flmr packed, large cana lo Macaroni, pkg., 7o, S for I9o Peters l'aste Shoe Polish, can. . . .40 Hull Frog Polish, can 40 Vulcanol, can 70 Salt, 6c sack, 3o 10c sack, 6c 20o sack for 13a Bottle Pickles, sweet or sour.... So for 85o Fruity Jell Dessert, pkg. 80, 3 for 820 Ink Tablets, lOo kind 7o Pencils, 6c kind, 40, 8 for...... loo Tomatoes, large cans loo Standard Corn, can 70 Jap Rico, 4 lbs. for 850 Bulk Oats, lb.. 4o; 8 lbs. for 8&0 Early June Peas, can 70 Cider Vinegar, gallon lo .Apple Oder, gallon g0 CREDIT 18 AV EXTORSIVE LUXURY; OUT THE CASH HABIT. ASR rOR OMR OI OUR LA ROE FRXCR X.IBTM. JU8T OUT. Aoll BASKET STORES PIO POEK LOINS-Fresh, Not Frozen 107 FRESH DRESSED CHICKENS ll3i Young Veal Roast It He Young Veal Chops 14 Ho Steer Pot Roaat 10c, 9e Steer Steaks lfte Mutton Chops 14 He Hpare Ribs 9 He Salt Pork e DsllTsriss to all parts of the city. Mail orders filled at ones. THE EMPRESS MARKET fpji. Wooluorth Bo nnl Kk- Store. "flJ South Kith K. Tel. I. :H)7. always keep people guessing, but she can never do it if she does her bcautifylag In public Make good tiee of your vanity cases, girls, but do It in private, and do it arils- tlcally. Pretty is as pretty does, you know. And that is doubly true for us girls. outstanding feature of the history of western Europe, was fully typified In tho very ancient contests with stone weapons which were waged along the borders of the Somme, the Marne, the Seine and the j Danube. No doubt each invasion, each conquest, each substitution of an Indus- try or a culture had within it the lm- j polling contest of the spirit and will of I man, the intelligence directing . various ', industrial and warlike implements, the superiority either of force or of mind. Soon at 24th and Fort Sts. late Nut Butter, Jar 80 Pumpkin, large can, 80, 8 fr...83o HATS TOU TKIXD OUR TIP BRAND TAB LB 8TKUF Pyramid Hoap Powder, 2 5: pkg. lBo Pyramid Soap Powder, 6c pkg., 4o S for 106 Cider Vinegar, bottle 7o Household Ammonia, bottle 7o White Borax Nap. hoap, bar . ...4o, 3 for lOo, 7 for 8 Jo Lighthouse Cluanser, large cans, 4o Sweeping Compound, lb. So; 17 lbs. for 86o lUO-lb. drum for... 91. IS Sanlflusli, ran 19o Chloride of Lime, can 7o Cracked Corn, 100-lb. bag ....$1.49 Shelled Corn, 100-lb, bag S1.40 Wheat. 100-lb. bag $1.88 Bran, 100-lb. bag $1.07 Shorts, 100-lb. bag -....81.33 Kaffir Corn, 10o-lb. bag $1.47 Oaf s, per bu 53(i Cove, Oysters, can 7o and 140 I.aijte bottles Tip Cat h up He No. 8 cans Pork and Beans, can, eo, ii for 8 So History rovers, lurco or small... 80 History rings, 2 for So Bradley Paint Sets 83o Toasted Coin 1'iaWi'H, nkg Bo rarlna Break fust i'ood, pkg Ho Kconomy Flour. 4S-lh ha km ..91,43 MXAT DEPARTMENT Best rkg. Butter,. . 89o, and 33o Bxt Tub Butter, lb 31o Crisco S3e, 4Bo, 90o Best I-ard, lb lBo 2d grail Lard, lb 130 Select Storage Kggs, lb 83o Fresh Fkkh 33o Skinned llama 15Jc Extra Lean Breakfast Bacon. for 1894c 6ugar Cured Bacon 18 4c Fresh Oysters (no water) per quart, at soc Veils By THK JKHTKK. 1 like the Ingenuity of the feminine mind. Its originality runs to eccentricity often times. 1 admit, but It never stands still. It will have something novel at sll costs. U Is. this feminine mind, like some little busy bee Ihst Is always nt work ac cumulating fresh Ideas In the realms of clothes thai can be used for the entlclnit of male tilings. My metaphor seems little mlxeJ, but, then, the feminine min i Is never exactly logical, so It can pass. They call it the Yashmak veil, this latest feminine Innovation; at least, that's what Daisy called It the other day when I set out to investigate the problem (though the circumstances lending to the Inquiry are nothing to do with this article, neither shall them be told here.) After all said and done. Yashmak la near enoueli to go on with, although quite Incorrect to describe this new veil. The Yashmak of the east Is used for tho pur poms of hiding all the face ex cept the eyes. in other words. It s a sort of 1-niav-look-but-you-mustn't-touch Idea. We In the west work In slightly dif ferent ways. The western Yashmak Is run on entirely business lines. It ends Just above the mouth, thereby placing no annoying re strictions upon the wearer, should she want to smoke cigarettes! There Is certainly some sense In this new veil. The old style was a continual source of Irritation to its owner not to mention those who might bs with her. A pronounced Inconvenience at meal times, and, perchance, an even more pro nounced Inconvenience at other times l when it was not only herself who had to he studied for feeding purposes it has never been really entirely popular. The new type should Insure success, it fulfills its mission, which Is, 1 am told, to safeguard the complexion. And It cannot be said to In any way Inter fere with the business that tho wearer may have in hand. 1 have never really liked veils, I con fess, but 1 have no sort of quarrel with the so-called Yashmak. After all said and done, it is at least frank and truth ful In Its purpose. Of course, strictly speaking, a veil at heart Is only really a subtle form of coquetry. I don't candidly believe It was originated for the purpose of preserving the complexion. It was used primarily as a sort of en-courage-the-curlouslty-not-to-mentlon the appetite idea. "Art is, concealment art," once more, which as clever little maidens know. Is tho secret of woman's dress. However, the new veil serves both pur poses, and therefore we men shouldn't grumble at It. should we. Daisy? ? OLD-TIME COLD CURE DRINK TEA! Oet a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea. or as the German ' folks call It, "Hamburger Brust Thee." at any phar macy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour I through a sieve and drink a teacup full I at any time. It Is the most effective .way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, relieving congestion, i Al" loosens the bowels, thus breaking i C"'1 t once, 11 ' inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore harmlees.-AdverttsemniiL I o to Skraasi : mil mmm There will be "something doing" in Drugs, Toilet Goods. Candies and Cigars Red Cross Hand Cleaner Large 10c box f Saturday for. . . . Pure DRUGS, Fresh Witch Haiel, large bottle. . . . Wood Alcohol, large bottle. . . . Hlnkle Tablets, 100 for 15c 15c 19c 25c Alcock's Porous Plastors. . Broroo Seltzer, 10. 39 and 3 5o Carter's Little Liver Pills Genuine Castorla, 36c kind 60c Doan'a Kidney Pills Father John's Medicine Fellows' Syrup for $1.25 Gude'a Pepto Mangan.. 25c Hill's Cas es r a Quinine. . . . Horllck's Malted Milk, 39 and.. Arom. Castor Oil, 25c 29c Tablets 35c ( Honey-Ol ) .... 100 Blaud'a Iron Tonic nils 2 doz. Aspirin or Capsules, for 100 2-graln Pure Quinine fo';"'. 39 c We sell Homeopathic Medicines Nearly fi.ono Items In this line alone. TOILET GOODS Ir1res for Saturday EOc I'ompeiaa Massage Ceam, for 29c 5 cakes Ivory 19c or Wool Hoap, 26c Sanitol Tooth Powder, for. ... . 50c Java Rice Powder I0e' Rlckserker'a Cold Cream $1.00 Madam Hair Tonic, for 14c 29c 29c Yale's 59c Genuine 14c 26c Holmes' FroeUUa, for Sherman & cGonnell Drug 60. Corner 16th and Dodge Streets. Corner 16th and Harney (The Owl), Corner 24th and Farnam (The Harvard). 207-9 North 16th (The Loyal). Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax Dnsi't n X.irrot St laded. near Miss Fairfax: I hsve been mar ried for several months and during thst time we have not spent one evening apnrt. How can we learn to trust each other? I have no real reason to mistrust mv hus band except that he teases me bv being attentive to lilt Is In my presence. He shs thst when I am not niotinil he does not think of them. I wouldn't think of flirt ing wtih any one yet be thinks that I look around rt every man t pa's. A tlKADKR. What you both need Is a sense of pro portion seasoned with a little humor. Suppose your husband dees talk to an other girl or pny her a few compliments prohnbly In the oack of his mind there Is always a consciousness thst he prefers you. Since you married e.tch other you probably care more for each other than for acquaintances and friends, but that does not mean that you must become so narrowly absorbed In esch other that you have no fresh outside Interests with which to stimulate your love. Jut.t go ahead and see a little bit of otaVr people, and when you find with what relief you return to your own fireside you will see how silly was all this nonsensical introspection about whether you trust each other or not. v Win t?'s GtfCkTtiT Connnr TfOLasaie iUllGFilUl Coffee. Delicious" JSuUepflulv 4vj . 413 rail PIO FORK LOINS-Fresh, Not Frozen 10 FRESH DRESSED CHICKENS ll34 Steer Tot Koast 10c, Oo PlK Pork. Butts.... J f 12f4c Young Veal Roast ..lUc Young Veal Chops lHc Lamb Lefts Uc Mutton Chops 14 He Spare Ribs Ofc Salt Pork 9 Ho Deliveries to ell parts ef the oitjr. Mall orders filled at oaee. PUBLIC MARKET JS.0. fti? JUL Deeply cut prices Sat urday on 20 best Sell ers in Proprietary Medicines 12c 79 c 12c 19c 34c 34c 84c 98c 14c 69c Llstrlne, 12s,' 10t 30 aud Mentholatuni, (genuine) . ,. 60c rape's Dlapepsln 25c Packer's Tar Soap $1 Plnkham's Compound ..... 60c Pebeco Tooth Paste Sal HepaticA. 10. 3 it and 50c Syrup of Figs 50c Scott's Einul- bion 26c Tic. for tender feet This Shinola Outfit 17c The above complete Shinola Outfit, with dauber and wool polisher, Saturday Have You a Boy Problem? It cannot be solved by arith metic Solve it by feeding him Shredded Wheat a natural food that makes his body buoyant with the en ergy of youth a muscle and brain-builder contains the life of the wheat in a digestible form. Builds sturdy, robust boys and girls. Serve it for breakfast with hot milk. Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. - Ti-I'L.' 1. .. m i i Skinned Hams ...15!4c Extra lean Hreakfa.il Bacan lHc Sugar Cured Bacon. . .. . .13fc SPKCIAIi From 8 to p. in. Umb Chop, for 5c Front 0 to 10 p. m. Pork Chops, ' for lOo PRESCRIPTIONS Bring us your "hard' prescription containing rare or Imported drugs They will be quite "easy" for us. 59c 14c 29c 14c 64c 34c 64c 34c 34c 14c Mr. Smoker. answer this question: Where else In Omaha can you get your choice of about 100 standard brands of cigars by box or pocketful at wholesale prices or less? Ho w do we do it? Simply by mak ing "round quantity" pur chases, for cash, of first hands. Some Special Specials KV10UY SATURDAY 10c Rol-Tan, 5c 25c for 10c Cubanolds, 4 for 15c Ileynaldo 4 f Orandlosos, each, IvL 50 Henry $1.65 10c George for . 5c Reynaldos, 3 for Box of 50 l CE Little Toms. . P 1 ,DO Box of 60 Ma of 60 Ma- qp Regalias, 3 1 sOD nila Free delivery any where In Greater Omaha or Council Bluffs. Telephone your order. 17c I s r