Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 15, 1916, Page 9, Image 9

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    liihi ni-.r: imiaiia, wmjawhai, maim h io, jjmo.
Health Hints -:- Fashions - Woman's PFor A: -:- Household Tomes
. - . , , .. , , . .... j. .
TTT
Prepare for
Coming of Peace
Br ELL. WHKfLFIl WILCOX.
Copyright,' 1916, Star Company.
During Christmas season th following
telegram was received from th daughter
of a famous general:
"Is not spiritual and mental prepared
ness more Important to the country than
any plan of military preparedness, ami Is
it not the duty of the American press
to consider this question?" H. K. M.
That Is what is the matter with the
world at the present time Its lack of
spiritual preparedness. Over In Kurppe
for forty years there has been but one
thought in the minds of some of the
countries, and that has been preparation
for war.
America Is now preparing for possible
war. From a letter written by a seafar
ing man, familiar with all the ports of
the world. Is taken the following:
"1 was In Australia when the war broke
out. At that timo I said all the world
was suffering from a terrible disease,
which I called armamrntitls, and that
ir was the only remedy. That the
diFcase - wa virulent and a medicine
K.ld have to. le in ken in large
doses. T are having rather more of
tha medicine than I bargained for, but
if we are not cured, I hope we will, at
least, bet the better for It.
"But when kaloMism Js dead wa still
have another heartless giant to face I
mean commercialism. Kalserism says
that the highest Ideal for a nation should
Lo powr, dominion, ten uor.ai aKKrun-
disement. The aims of commercialism
are markets; their capture and reten
tlon and wealth In the aggregate, never
mind about Its distribution.
- VA sorry spectacle, but worrying about
it does not alter It. We can only try
to 'tune our souls to symphonies above
end cound the note of love.' We have a
,'unker class In this country. They oppose
every means of social advancement: they
held up their hands In horror and said
the country would be ruined when the
old age pension bill was passed, prvidlng
about 11.28 a week for the deserving over
70 years of age. They said wo could not
possibly find the money. Now wo are
spending more on war In a week than
the pensions cost In a year. '
Where will It endr But still I suppose
whatever Is, Is best."
Meantime from a little theosoprlcal
leaflet there comes this comforting state
ment: Ages ago there came to the world
a group of souls whose main mission In
Ood'a great plan was to work wherever
workers were most needed. Through in
carnation after Incarnation they have
been pioneers In many great movement
by wnlch humanity has benefited. Choos
ing not always the greatest glory of bril
liant achievement where the world's ap
plause might be won, they have Instead
UtTU wIlIIiuh v -
In the lesser work which la often tha
grerter la- the'"Maate'J eye.' " "
May. the Server link mora closely
together "the aervera" wherever In
America some, of these souls be
born. . so that all may again
work together In tha pioneer move
ment of preparing for the coming of the
great Teacher. May the server be worthy
to be Ills servant
In an hour and a moment that wa know
not of the Great Teacher cometh. It la
well for us to think of spiritual prepared
ness. It would be well for us all In the
dark and troubled times to realise that
we ara surrounded by "clouds of wit
nesses." It would be well for us to read
and ponder on the words of that great
man. Sir Oliver Lodge, wherein ha states:
"I tell you with all the strength and
conviction I can utter mai wo uo v-.
after death: that people over thera still
take an Interest In what la going on here,
that they still help us. and know far
more about things than we do, and are
able from time to time to communicate
with us."
' And here Is what another great soul.
Anna Besant, Bays of tha need of
spiritual preparedness: this Is her form
ula to repeat often: -
. . "I am a link In the golden chain of
love that stretches around the world, and
must keep my link bright and strong.
'So I will try to be kind and gentle to
every living thing I meet, and to protect
and help all who are weaaer man raj
elf. "And I will try to think pure and
beautiful thoughts, to speak pure and
beautiful words, and to do pur and
teautlful actions.
"May every link In the Golden Chain
become bright and strong."
.The "New Civilisation." dream of all
the world's idealists, based on peac and
co-operation, with brotherhood the in
forming spirit. Is seen by Mrs. Besant to
be already appearing on the horlson.
Uke a mighty priestess of old. she cries
to a bleeding and suffering world, "Kn
ure, for your salvation draweth nigh; It
is even at the doora! Nothing to regret
and nothing to fear." she tells us;, for
we ar only witnessing the passing of
the old order that the new may arts out
of Its ashes.
work In their own way. helping to pre
pare the awakened for the coming
Teacher. Thla Teacher will as surely come
as the war camo. It Is well to awake
when He comes. It Is well to be ready
to do the work He may ask us to do.
Are you ready?
Advice to Lovelorn
By Beatrice Fairfax
CIV Ills I p.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a girl 1 years
of age. About five months ago I made
the acquaintance of a gentleman two
years my senior. We have kept steady
company and he has been very attentive
and a stroi.g feeling of attachment has
developed. He has often expressed his
love for me. Irately his love seems to
le vanl-Mna and I feel w are drifting
part. There aeeme to be no reason for
this strange Indifference and I am broken-hearted
about the Hole affair.
ANXIOUS RENE
When a man tire of her. the wise
women accept the Inevitable. The love
of 19 or n 1 not the serious thing the
love of older year may b. Tour friend
U probably flekl and prefers a change
of sweethearts every few months. B
plxd you found him out In time, and
don't uHe up your energies trying to win
bin hack. If h Is not th sort to re
main loyal, don't worry about him. On
Hie i.'ilu-r hand, don't look for" trouble
and nag at him for his seeming neglect.
Spring Woos Winter :
I WY' - : r n 1
f-: 1
Love and
the Pay
Envelope
Br BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
Each day there come to m num
erous letters, which read something liku
this:
. "I lov him so much that I can not
do without him. . He Is earning 115 a
week and has good prospect.. Do you
think we dare risk marriage T" '
It 1 hard not to be a little cynical
about th young woman who tell you In
on line that ahe can not live without
hef beloved, and who In th next wonder
If she can risk marrying him on his
present salary.
An absolutely big and fearless lovo
would probably plunge a girl Into mar
riage on a very tiny amount of money,
and it would teach her wonderful ways
and mean for making that money do
1th a royal unselfishness and lack of
mercenary feeling.
But It is just as well for the world
that lov Isn't an overwhelming fore and
that most of us do stop sanely and
sensibly to consider the matter from a
point of view that Is not mercenary, but
only Just practical.
No woman has the right to marry a
poor man unless he is convinced of
several things.
First of all, sh must love him enough
so that cheerfully and uncomplainingly
she will "do without" for hU sake. Sh
must know that ah will be willing to
wear year before last's made-over dress
when other women ar buying week after
next pictorial fashions.
Kha must be sure that when John
comes home tired from his day's work
sh can meet him with good cheer and
not with a whimpering weariness of a
woman who day' occupation ha netted
her a backache and swollen feet because
her husband's day' occupation ha netted
him only 12.
She must know that she 1 going to be
cheerful if her hands ar red and swollen
from dishwashing and her eyea a little
tired from mending torn clothe.
. When a woman ha passed her own
mental examination a to her fitness to
be th wlfe of a poor man, she must
turn to a consideration of the poor man.
Is he to be respected? . Is he a worker,
a man of self-control, good habits and
ability, a man who will always do his
best to provide for his family and who
will not console hlifiaelf for his Inability
to get ahead by sliding backward?
When a woman makes up her mind
that the poor man she loves Is a worker
and a hustler, and that she herself is a
chaerful manager, she Is safe to go ahead
and marry him. Ixve and th pay en
velope have to b balaneed in your own
personal scales. On the love sMe there
are emotion and durability of feeling and
desire and congeniality, and on th pay
envelope side ther ar faith and cheer,
common sense and loyalty to throw Into
the scale. t
And whether you marry a poor man or
not, my dear' girl, depends not at all on
the general advice I give you, nor even
on such a practical consideration at
whether h la earning !Z, It or Jt a week,
but entirely on what you and he can do
with that sum.
Curt up accounts lov and the p.iv
invtiopo. How do they balance'.'
'Slipped In between the days of driving flakeg and bitter wind
and still, glassy cold, comes sometimes a gentle day with a warm
..breath In it from somewhere; an under rumor of sunshine and
flower-scents; a remote breathing as if sleeping summer, curled Ilk
a dormouse In Its nest over the edge of the world, had turned and
sighed and half awaked!
The plainsman dreams of the Chinook and sniffs the air. There
is the ghost of a perfume of turned earth, purple and rlcft. Under
foot It Is lush and warm.
The squirrel who cornea for his breakfast mysteriously capers
and romps and scuttles about like a baby kitten after a bit of flying
feather. He somersaults and flicks his little body, shaking it off ,
his feet with mirth and scampers and barks with the urge of a heady
something that is tickling the heart under his little gray vest He
puts his tiny hands on his heart and listens. ,
It la summer calling, we reckon. The birds Idle and atretcli
wings on the sunny porch roof all the huddling pose vanished,
quite. The starling English that he is takes his bath in lc water
and whistles like a gamin thereafter because it Is warm la the sun
and his wet wings will not glaxe with ice. Something is up.
Just spring wooing winter! Somewhere he is murmuring his
lovelines, bidding her melt .her frozen heart and come with him. To
day she is listening a bit with thaw at her heart. But tomorrow
who can tell! She will be cold tomorrow trapped In Ice and snow;
glacial, gleaming coldly and not hearing at all fascinated with the
glitter and flare of the anoy crystals in her scepter.
And summer, stirring for Just a space, will have lapsed again
into snug slumber.
- Spring woos winter but the still la cold.
NELL BRINKLEY.
Beneficient Germ
Br ADA PATTERSON.
The human body is like a community.
It ha good and bad citizens. It con
tains good and bad gurma. If there are
enough good germs to conquer the bad
ones the person possessing that body Is
healthy, Just a If a community has a
large majority of citizen It Is prosper
ous and of great repute.
Well conducted women's club ar bene
ficient germs In any community. They
widen women's Interest. They teach
thera humanity. They train them In the
duties of cltlsenshlp. You doubt it T Let
m recite some of tha recent activities
of women's clubs. Not one club, which
would give you a chano to reply: "But
that la only on woman' club;" to make
th trita observation: "It is th excep
tion that prove th rul." I choose at
random instances of what club (women's
elubs). have recently don la cities re
mot from each other, extending a chain
of good work reaching from on coast
In America to th other.
At Dallas, Tex., the club women have
combined to establish headquarters where
employment will bo given to the mothers
of small children, mothers who hve been
deserted by their husbands and mother
whose husband are dead. Th erubs
are projecting a plan to extend this
work into an Industrial home of forty
two room. t
The club women of Kansas City ar
urging a reformatory for delinquent
women. They ar going shrewdly about
it, for thsy ar circularizing the candi
dates for municipal offices and are re
serving their replies. Those replies will
b published.
The women club of Northt Carolina
started th first stata-wlde movement
for a celebration of th Bhakespear
tercentenary. Folk danoea, play a pa
geant under the auaptcea of th clubs
will be educational featurea In moat
cities cf that state and an tmpetua th
study of th greatest of dramatists and
humanists will thus b given.
Club women have been th most active
factors In abolishing th smoke nuisance
In all cities. arcnMIng to tha report of
'lie fornii r xmoko itn-i-cdor of Chicago,
su i. com- ;
in W omen's Clubs
Osborne Honnett. Women, alive afways
to th menac to health, and agreeing
with prominent physicians that smoke
kills more person than does any one
single disease, hav been persistent in
their demand for It abatement, and
they hav succeeded. "The women of
America ar th leader of th move
ment to abolish th smoke nuisance,"
Mr. Honnett report. ' ..aide from their
Intelligent recognition of th peril that
Inheres In smoke, women, who are nat
ural economists, have discovered that the
damage to household articles by smoke
is about tJ0 a year for each family. With
managerial wisdom they hav determined
to stop tha leak.
Th ancient canard that woman I
woman worst enemy ha long been
dead. It waa re burled lost month when
Florence King, a Chicago lawyer, of
fered to give twenty-five delinquent girls
a borne for a month, and placing them
in vocation schools w tiers they could
learn honestly to support themselves.
This was an initial atep in the move- 1
nt by Chicago club women to pro
vide a large country home and achool
for "unfortunate girls. The world of
women has swung far In the orbit of
progress sine th poet wept over "One
more unfortunate." and pointed out the
hopelessness o, her state. Her atal is
still sad, but no longer hopeless.
"Get th children off ths streets' is
the slogan of the IUiode Island Federa
tion of Woman's Clubs, which Indorsed
a plan that eaeh woman should actively
interest herself In ths nearest street
child and help th gamin to education
nd entertainment In leas perilous spots
than the city's highway. Th federation
also Indorsed th federal Keatlnga-Owen
child labor bill, for uniform legislation
against th employment of minor In ex
hausting, life-draining employment.
Th club women of Quitman, Ua, hav
prevailed upon the city council to beau
tify tha city' twenty-one park and hav
set th example by contributing shrub
and ros bushes to b planted In th
school grounds.
Yet we hear that women hav set pub
lic cpirit, nor the faculty of citlscimiilp.
By Ncii BHnkiey
Copyright. l!l. Intern ! News Service.
Carnivorous
Lovers
By TUB OLD OIRU
Lav and lnfluano don't go together.
Although both ar catching, people seam
to prefar not to get th gvrms mixed.
That, at least, la how I explain th com
plete solicitude In whloh I was allowed
to languish last w.
It explain also why I was driven for
company to read th modern novel no
body In their senses would want to read
th modern novel unless driven to It by
microbe. v
But even In thla occupation I
found no balm In Ollead. I dis
covered and discoveries even of old
things ar always Interesting I dis
covered th carnivorous lover. By this
gentleman I mean not only th lover who
finds his loved on good thing to eat.
but who proceeds to do It.
"HI lip war glued to bars, drinking
In her very Hf." How's that for a start T
On can really understand th feeling of
tha damsel who, a few pagea back, looked
forward to something Ilk this happening
in th following manner:
"Th great moment when he was to
hold her In his arm grow nearer and
nearer. Eh waited for It with an almost
Intolerable anguish of Joy, a flora flam
of anticipation." X hop that flam burnt
her up when th great moment cam.
It la too much, I suppose, to hop that It
burnt th lot up. Including th novelist.
Joking apart, lov, according to tn
modern novelist. Is an awfully painful
business. When you ar not having your
face devoured by kisses you ar having
them rained on your throat, or poured
down your neck, or something equally
uncomfortable.
When your lover 1 more Inclined to be
a vegeterlan than a man-eater, h gath
er the rip fruit of your lips, or ha a
good meal off th peach-bloom of your
cheeks; (30 cent a large box). In lea
effusive moment he Just has a nlbbl at
anything that' going, but It's upon th
expanslva lover that th novelist gener
ally expands.
WhyT
I can only Imagine to show th girl,
whst they miss or gain for I hav yet
to meet the real-life young man who wal
low In sentiment up to his neck, n4 x
peots th real-Ufa girl to spoil her clothes
nd her appearane wallowing In It, loo.
For there I nothing so doatrlurllvo to
clothes an1 complexl-n as lov-. Every
body who has been jp against a kiss
knows. You can't ue.tiaui;:' register a
kis without lesving soma evidence -f Its
existence behind.
Luckily th real-life y-jnng man, .'udg
Ing. both by first and second hand x
perlence, betrays but llttl Inclination lo
din off hi lady-love'r complexion.
"I say, awful bore, sitting here- whst ?"
nine out of ten of them exclaim after
ten minutes of solitude, the soft, and
Hophy. "Iet's go out nd do some
thing." Which not only shows his good
sense but his good Intentions.
Tastes differ, of course. Them may be
girls who would sooner bav purple
kisses than a glass or two of th real
Burgundy; but. speaking aithout
prejudice, I prefer a cool kiss, a eorr-rt
lover, and a good cabaret, to any of
love's tangihold.
A Sur Sign
Grocer Th honeymoon is over in th
hous on th hllL
Assistant How do you know
. Oiwer Th brid has Just 'phonod In
an orlr for onions. Birmingham Ac
Herald.
The Salt
of Life
r woods MVTriiissox, m d.
PART I.
One servio which chloride of sodium
renders In the body la rather a curious
one. It waa learned thousands of year
ago In th stern achool of experience that
salt was one of th absolute necessaries
of life, not merely for human beings,
but for all domestlo and many other
animals.
This has been burned Into' th language
of every race and continent In such
terms as "the salt of life," "attic salt,"
"not worth his salt," "below the sslt,"
etc. Wages were even paid tn sslt, a
our term "salary' still Indicates, and
salt taxes mere one of the surest and
cruelest means of raising revenue, be
causo people, particularly the peasantry,
must have It or go mad.
Hut It was also known that thore were
some peculiar exceptions to the rule of
indlepeneahleners of salt. Many savage
tribes, particularly In rather far north
ern latitudes, care very little for It.
wh le even among domestlo animals
some aperies, degs and cats and poultry,
foe lnstane, eltner have no appetite for
It or positively dislike It. While on the
other hand, cf course, horses, cattle and
heep on pasture become almost crasy
for salt If deprived of It. and most tropi
cal tribe will take a man's life for a
handful or salt.
Ho.ne twenty years ago th gieat physl
ologlxl Hung mad a careful study of
these discrepancies and analysed speci
mens of th blood and of the urine of
hundreit of both animal of various pa
ries and of human being deprived of
er fed on largo amount of common sslt.
He succeeded In finding a full and com
plete explanation of these apparent dif
ferences and proving the utility of sail
as a separate substanc In th diet, al
though hi finding .hav not yet pene
trated the Intelligence of several school
of so-called diet reformers.
The first thing that he discovered was
that the natural appetite for salt de
pended entirely upon th character of th
diet, and that, roughly speaking, those
animal or tribe of human beings which
lived solely or even chiefly upon flesh,
which, of course. Include fish and game,
bad llttl us for the salt-cellar, because
they received a sufficient supply of thli
precious substance for their bodily
needs In their food, aa this consisted of
the flesh and blood of other animals,
birds and fishes which were already suf
ficiently "salted." No carnlvoroua ani
mals, either wild or tame, car for salt,
nor usually salt meat.
This explains at once why It was that
th hunting tribes of our American In
dian In the north and northwest cared
very little for aalt and only used It when
they happened to hav som chano sup
ply of hominy or pumpkin or potatoes.
Their favorlt flavoring, In fact, for stews
and ragout of meat was not salt, but
sugar, which th squaws would shak
Into th pot eagerly If they possessed It,
In th form of maple sugar or can sugar.
Upon their long hunting trip th
brave frequently carried a cake of maple
sugar tucked Inside their hunting shirt
with which they flavored their venison or
trout. Just a w would with salt arid
PPPr.
On th other hand, th broad rut
could b Is Id down that herbivorous ani
mals and human race who Ilv largely
upon a vegetbl diet wer absolutely de
pendent upon salt and suffered severely
in health If they could not get It In eon
sldrabl amount.
Thla was Illustrated not merely by moat
of our domestlo animals, but also by th
fact that deer, elk and bison were eager
for salt and - cam scores of mile to
alt Uoks to secure It, where our pio
neer hunter would most basely II In
wait and shoot thsm. But her at first
sight was a puasl. bcau grain, fruit,
root and most other vegetable sub
stances all contained considerable
amounts of common salt (chlorid of so
dium), enough. In fact, to furnish appar
ently a sufficient supply for th needs of
the human body.
In-Shoots
It 1 possible for marriage to b a
failure without th a'd of th barber
shop manicure, but you cannot mako
som wive bellsv it
Th man who set 'era up freely In th
bar room, will generally give an eloquent
sermon on economy If his wlf asks htm
for a dim. . .
Proper prld In th horn town is th
kind a man feel when a tax receipt ha
Just been handed him.
When th henpecked man finally
awaken to th situation h is too old to
do much kicking In hi own favor.
Ther 1 no limit to th affection that
may b bestowed on th man who Im
proves on acquaintance.
Ws hav a lot of respect for th man
who begin It: "Did I ever tell this story
bforr
Don' Merely "Stop" a
Cough
ta ThlagT that Csatts It
aa th Cooak vrUl
at Itacll
A cough Is reallf ene ef our best
friends. , It warn us that ther is
flammation or obstruction in a dan
pus place.. Therefore, when you git a
bad cough don't proceed to do yourself
with a lot of drugs that merely "stop"
the cough temporarily by deadening- the
throat nervea. Treat the cause heal tli
Inflamed membrane. Her is a borne
mad remedy that get right at th cause
and will max an obstinate cough vanish
more quickly than you ever thought pos
sible, Put 24 ounces of Pine (BO cents
worth) in a pint bottl and fill the bottle
with plain granulated sugar svrup. This
gives you a full pint of tha moat pleasant
and enertive cough remedy you ever used,
st a cost of only 04 cents. No bother to
frepare. Full directum with Pinex.
It heals th Inflamed membranes so
Eentlv and promptly that you wonder
uw it does It. Also looaen a dry, hoar
or tight cough and stop th formation of
phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes,
thus ending th persistent loose oougU.
Pines Is a highly concentrated com
pound of Norway pin extract, rich in
guaiacol, and is famous th world over
for its healing effect on th merubranea
Te avoid disappointment, ask your
drupgist for "2U ounce of Pinex." and
on t seeept snvthin- els. A guarantee
of absolute satisfaction, or money prompt
ly refunded, goes with this preparation.
The Pines Co., It, Wayns, lad.
Household Hints
Add salt to the water In which black
and white cotton goods a re washed.
All salads should be soaked In salt and
water to destroy animal cula or small
worm.
Crpet ar brightened and their color
preserved If wiped with clean cloth
wrung out of salt water.
Ink stains from carpets and table
cloths (if fresh) can removed by suc
cessive applications of dry salt.
Baths, wash basins polished slat and
stone slabs ar quickly cleaned by rub
bing with dry salt before washing.
Psnrlng shoes and other light-colored
.hoes may be cleaned very atlsfactorlly
In th following manner: Tak a pier
of flannel and dip it Into spirit of win.
then rub th shoes with the grain of th
latin, changing the flannel every time It
beroniea dirty.
EARL LIGGAII BIDS
DIET A FAREWELL!
Clever "Charley Chaplin ' Ar
tist Took Tanlac and Eats
Real Food.
He lias Gained Ten Pounds
On would think that h is th real
"Charley" to see U Earl IJggan In his
baggy trousers, little derby, hobtailed
coat and "gunboat" shoe, twirling hi
bamboo and going through the antics of
th famo.is Charley Chaplin. Mr. XJg
gan enjoy his work In mimicry hugely,
but ther ar som esrthly thing h en
Joy mors, especially haalth, and h see
that h ha th best h can secur. He
live at StIT Douglas street, Omaha.
"I hav been an extreme sufferer from
Indigestion," Mr. Liggan told th Tanlac.
man yestarday. "I cam to a point that
I could not eat anything but cracker
and milk. I was nervous and run down
and finally had to go through an opera
tion two years ago In Virginia, My kid
ney and liver wer In a bad snap and
I had headache constantly and a bad
tnst in my mouth."
Tanlao relieve all forms ef stomach
trouble. Including nervous dyspepsia,
which I th severest of all. Th nerves
of these dyspeptic becom vary much
worn, wblt they must endure other dis
tresses, such as excesulT gas, bioatrng. .
sour stomach, palpttntton, cold, clammy
hands, poor circulation, awimmtng of th
head, twitching of th muscles, burning
In th back, pain In th throat and stom
ach, eoated tongu and acid ulcer in th
mouth. Nervous dyppata use them up
quickly If they do not get relief.
"Mr. B. T. Kate, a friend of mine, ad
vised m to tak Tanlao, as It mired him,"
continued Mr. Llggan. "I got my first
bottl of Tanlao in old Virginia about
six months ago. I cam her In Septem
ber and had a bad spell with my stom
ach, and nothing helped me until I found
that Sherman 4k McConnell had Tanlac.
In two week I was abt to go to work.
I now tak Teniae regularly and . you
will never find m without It
"Trora my own personal expensive I
find that Tanlac Is th only remedy that
will glv permanent relief.. I work every
day and feel good and at whatever 1
want. No sour stomach or headache.
"I hav gained ten pounds of flesh In
thr weeks and am a well man."
Tanlao la being specially Introduced In
Omaha at th Sherman McConnell drug
tor. lth and Dodge 8t., by th Tan
lao man, who explains th use of th
medloln and make known th results
that may b expected.
Teniae may be obtained In th follow
ing cities: Ashland. Oona's Pharmacy;
Blu Spring. B. N. Wonder; Benson.
8chlller-Bttl Pharmacy; Central City.
Schiller Drug St or; Orand Island. Clay
ton's Pharmacy; Weeping Water, Meyer
Drug Btor, Advertisement.
V4U(c n Mr
tJVt ( J ?2UJ & t 1
" Is r aswitanal ih a I
Low Prices Easy Terms at
LOFTIS BROS. & CO.
No. 278
t7 Finest quality IMamond. perfect
In cut and full of fiery bril- J A i
llancy, 14k solid gold mount-)4II
Ing. Specially priced at....r v
Terms S4 a Month.
0rs Daily Till t.1L Starit Tin 9 30
ll or writ lor tlluatrstc eaulna No. 03.
rtices rfila 1444 ns 0.1, e .11 ,..
P0FTIS
LziEROsica:;;.
THE NATION aL
CREDIT JEWELERS
404 Lilt !U Onus
(Near aarf ttrsat)
HOTEL!.
Hotel-
Marie Antoinette
Broadway, 6Cth and 67th Sis.
W TOgl crrr.
SITUATED in th moat con
venient location In town.- Mod
ern In etery detail, absolutely
fireproof, within ten. minutes
of th laaing department
stores. s'.0i and theaters.
Convenient to Pennsylvania
and Grand Central Depots.
Rooms, with Bath,
$2.50 Per Day Up.
Suites, $4.00 Per Day Up.
aoous ai.so via pat trr. ;
Rextaurant of Unusual Exoallanca
H. STANLEY GREEN,
. Managing Dlrctor...
Terms: )
94 a Month. K'jV