Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 22, 1916, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1916,
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i
WOMEN CAN FRUIT
FOR THECHILDREH
Tot at Child Saving Institute
to Have Fruit to Eat This
Winter.
CARDS ARE SENT OUT
, By MELLIFICIA-Auj. 21.
When you are enjoying the t
i licioul fresh fruits of the lummer or
( the choice contents of your pre
:' tervrtl fruit jar in the winter, do you
' ever think of those who cannot in
dulge their liking for fruit? Do you
ever consider that the health of some
' one else beside yourself demands the
f eating of wholesome fruit? The lit
' tie ones at the Child Saving Institute
: need a large amount of fruit in their
- simple diet, for children, almost mre
than grown-ups, need light, refresh
! me foods. An effort hat always been
' made to provide this necessity for
them at luncheon and at the evening
meal. But those in charge of the in
: ttitution have all they can do to per-
form their regular duties and have
little time to spend in canning fruit
. This has always made the winter sup
: ply of canned fruit inadequate.
. In an effort to remedy this lack
Mrs. Charles Kountze and her help
ers are tending out to at least 300
persons cardt bearing this request
''Will you please save the Child Sav
ing Institute one or more jars of
each kind of fruit that you can this
summer?'' They are tending these
requests with the hope that from
the recipients of the cardt and their
friendt a liberal response will come,
and the seventy little tots at the home
will show their gratitude by. whole
some, hearty growth.
At Happy Hollow Club.
Those who entertained at supper
t Happy Hollow club last evening
were: O. P. Goodwin. M. M. Robert
ton, H. D. Brown, C. Vincent, C. J.
Lyon, E. Millard, R. C. Wagner, S.
R. Ruth, W. McAdam E. F. Howe, R.
M. Switaler, Don T. Lee, C. fi. Nit
wonger, F. H. Garvin, H. M. Rogert,
L. M. Holiday. R. M. .West. L. M.
Talmage, W. R. Watson, C. C Sad
ler, C. H. Bewsher, J. Drummond, W.
t. raimatier, w. H. oarratt and A.
B. Currie.
Reservation! for the married folks'
dinner-dance Thursday evening are
beginning to come in. Edward Phelan
has a reservation for seven. W. H.
Garratt and L. L. Hamlin each have
reservations for six, and H. E. Dan
iel hat reservations for three.
Tuesday evening W. F. Wright will
nave a party ot twelve,
At the Country Club. :
A number of tupper parties were
given at the Country club last eve
ning. Mark Coad had seven in his
party, six guests each were enter
tained by J. T. Stewart, W. Farnam
Smith and J. A, Cavers, E. S. West
brook and R. C. Howe had foursomes,
D. A. Baum and G. C Wharton each
had parties of five, and Mrs. F, B.
Johnson had three guests.
The second golf match for the Bur-gess-Nash
trophy wat played at the
club today.
At the Field Club. '
A group of girls wat chaperoned
at dinner at the Field club Friday
by Mrs. C E. Coleman. Tboae present
were;
atlasee :
Annaeelle Sinclair,
Katbertas atat
Ruta Casslay,
Adelaide Carawllo.
club as the guests of Miss Mary Still
man. Miss Mitchell will entertain twelve
guests at luncheon tomorrow for Miss
Williams; Wednesday Miss Geraldine
Hess entertains informally, and
Thursday Miss Virginia Stubbs and
Miss Angela Shugart give a kensing
ton for the same guest.
Tea for Mrs. Abbott.
Mrs. E. Carson Abbott entertained
at afternoon tea today for Mrs,
Catherine Abbott. A color scheme of
pink wasvused in the appointments,
and garden flowers were used
throuahmit thi rnnme A r V I
jumper and Mrs. Franklin A. Shot-
well assisted, lhose present were:
Alftsriumee Mr1aliise
Katherln LaHHrth. Carrie Craven.
H. T. Cn.,k. Sarah alrCardlr,
Lola Corhran, will Huff.
t)avld C'rnairtnn, w. H. I.ar of Salt
A. V. Sholwgll, I.am Clly,
Henry ruin!,. . . I., V, AnifM,
F W. Jurfion, . T. Gould,
Mleaes yiiws
Margaret Frailer of Katlikri furrlM
Fori alailleon. Ia.; of Niw York.
Surprise Party.
Mrs. O. J. Hlavka and Mrs. J. G.
Krause entertained at a surprise par
ty in honor of their husbands Satur
day evening. The evening was spent
in playing games and dancing, and
Mr. George Scotland sang several
numbers. Fifty guests were present.
Hlu
Balhar Connolly,
Oledra Crooka,
Heeel Johnson,
Arllna Abbott,
Helen llnolalr.
Those who had small tupper parties
at the Field club Sunday evening were
J. A. Tilton, Victor Sylie, C. S. Mont
gomery, Dr. W. J. Bradbury, Gail
Adamt, J. E. Wilson, F. L. Tubbi, J.
B. Carver, R. H. Manley, James
Trimble, Frank Boyd, E. C Hutch
inson, F. L. Sturtevant and twenty of
the younger men. '
Tuesday Mrs. Allan Parmer will
have luncheon party at the club. .
Interesting Guests Arrive.
Mrs. Nathan Mantel hat at her
guests at her cottage at Carter lake
Mrs. Mendel and her daughter, Mitt
Rosalie Mendel of Chicago, who are
in the city on their way home from
Manitou, Colo. Miss Mendel it the
author of numerous storirt for chil
dren. She hat been engaged in writ
ing talea for little folka for a number
of years and finds it most fascinating
work. This week her lateat work,
"Spark on the Farm," will come fr.m
the publisher. In a short time sev
eral other books with tuch interesting
titlet at "My Book of Fish," "My
Book of Animals" and "Aesop's
Fables in Rhyme." will appear
Miss Mendel and Mrt. Mantel met
about nine yeara ago at Manitou and
the friendship hat been continued
ever since, .
Luncheon (or Mitt Jonea,
Mist Lillian Johnson entertained
the local membert of the Tri Delta
sorority and several out-of-town
membert at luncheon at her home to
day for Miss Jessamine Jonea of
Minneapolis, who is visiting her
cousins, the Missel Verna and Ruby
Jonet. Decorations were in the
sorority colors, silver, gold and blue,
carried out in yellow asters, and
place cards of silver and blue. Those
present were:
afleeee
Jeeaamln Jonas
J Misses ''
Malay Hal.
Varna Jonas, I
Hernlc Thomas,
Rillk Waller,
Ruth Welsh,
Rubr Jonas.
ot M InaeaDolte.
Oerlrude Sturm
Of N.hawka.
lseurlne Wlniert
f Llnroln,
Orac Olbsoa, -
, On the Calendar.
For Miss Ruth Itgen Fritz of San
Diego, Cal., who it the guest of Miss
Grace Gibson, Miss Gibson will en-
. tertain at an afternoon party tomor
row. Miaa Ilgen Fritz wat among the
Juests at the luncheon given today by
litt Lillian Johnson for Miss Jes
samine Jonea of Uinneapolia.
Popular Viaitor In Bluffs. '
Mist Roma Williams of Grand Isl
and ia the much-feted guest of Miss
Mary Mitchell of Council Bluffa, both
girls having attended Ferry hall in
Chicago at the same time. Miss
Mitchell gave a dinner at the Coun
cil Bluffs Boat club Friday, when
Miss Williams arrived; Mist Anna
McConnell gave a tea Saturday after
noon and today the girls came over to
, Omaha for luncheon at the University
Social Gossip.
Miss Elizabeth Bruce returned yes
terday from St. Joseph, Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kuthton ar
rived Saturday from an eastern trip
The Misses Carrie and Helen Mil
lard returned Sunday from a trip to
Estes park.
Miss Alice Rushton, Miss Katherlne
Gould, Mr. Leslie Putt and Mr. Virgil
Rector returned Saturday from a mo
tor trip to Lake Okobojl.
Personal Mention,
Miss Fahne Clare left thlt morning
for Chicago to be gone an indefinite
time.
Glen and Boyd Schicketanz left this
morning for Magnolia, Ia,, to be gone
iwo weeks.
r. H. Mors of till Mavis strsat has (ons
to Laramie, Wyo., to visit his daughter,
Sirs. w. C. UoConnelk for two or throe
weeks i
Mrs. Louis S. Reichenberg haa re
turned from Chicago, where she was
called by the sudden death of her
mother, Mrs. Max Reichenberg.
Mr. C. T. Taylor leavea today for
V ' ?: ,0' ,nree mo"ths' ttay.
Mr. Care J. Moore left Sunday for
a tnree weeks' trip in Colorado.
Miss Gertrude Sturm of Nehawka
anq Misa Maurine Wingert of Lincoln
arrived thia morning for a ahort visit
with Mist Lilian Johnson, a Delta
weita ueita sororty titter.
Girl Workers
Who Win Out
Tkt Maid Who Leartud Hon
to Mate Good
BY JANE M'LEAN.
Cella wat what it known at a maid
of all work. That it, the cooked,
cleaned and washed for her livlna
Sometimes she fared well, and some
time! there were places where even
her simple demands were refuted and
then it was ahe was forced to move
on and learch for a new place. She
aid not demand much, She wanted a
clean room and a little time to her
self. What Celia really needed was
understanding. She did not mind
hard work, for the waa strong and
well, but ahe liked an occasional kind
word and cheery smile, for even in
her simple mind those things meant
life.
Wh.n eh. k.l. . .h l.t.m
....... - ".-'. unv iv ,nc intelli
gence office after losing her last place
we woman grceico. ner none too
pleasantly. i .
"Whv rlnn'r wit, anar-lalt In aAm.
" - - J ....... , I, uhic
thing," the said quickly. "I have po
sitions lor cooks and ladies' maidt.
Do VOU thlnlr vnn rnntrl
thing like that?''
Celia knew that the could not cook
elaborately enough to go out at a
cook. Sh rnnIH An iwll M.h l-
ordinary requirementa, but her tpe
cialties were nothing extra. A ladies'
maid she did not want to be. Weren't
there any positions for general house-
wumr sne uiquirea iimiaiy.
"I have one here, five in family,
minister's wifn. Thinl vntA i:b
that?" And the woman looked un.
"It II be hard, but you might at well
try it."
"Well, they want you right away,
here't the address. You can go right
up. And once more the woman bent
over her huge book while Celia made
her way out to the street.
ine ttreet tnat Lena had on the
slip of paper was not in a fashion
able neighborhood. A tired little
WOman with a luni.t far nnmnmA U
door to her ring, and the smiled very
sweeny- as ane saia:
"You must he the new maid. Won't
yoir-tome right in? You'll fine!
things pretty well upset, but I have
had so much to do ail alone."
Celia amiled in response and fol
lower! Ih lift! UfftmaM ... t-4. .
verv nfain v.ru pla.n little . .2it.
f , "-.J v. iioiv IWIII Willi
a comfortable looking bed and a pic
ture oi a oaDy nung over a little oak
dresser. .
"This is your room. The nursery
is right down the hall. I have three
children." and the little woman's face
lia-hterl nn aa if tl..t .
the dearest in the world. "Would you
like to tee them? They are getting
ready for bed now. I put them to bed
at five-thirty every night." . "
t,ena naa never been treated with
Such, an air nf .r,ali.w l.rn. U
made her fil harmi,. anml.n...
- - - . "-rr ' iiiiiuw, auu
she did like children if they were nice
tmiuren.
J'Here they are," said the mother.
"Donald, thia ia (.lie .h.'. ;
help mother take care of you. Say
now aa you ao, nowara, ana baby,
eant you tmile a little? Thit it my
little girl, Rose Marie."
The children all crowded about
Celia and again that little feeling of
- - " " v F - v usi "tail, nucr-
ward when she waa following Mrs.
townsenn uownstairs sne said im
pulsively, "I think I'll like It here."
"I hope you will," waa the quick
response. "The work won't he easy,
but we are all verv hannv th.-
. j 11 , .., .in.! a
plenty to love.
And celia resolutely squeezed hack
a tear, a little chary of showing that
She watt Atllv nnillrh tr, frv K.P,H..
she wat happy.
, In the City of the Dead
A view of Petra's tombs.
These pictures are printed by permission of the American
Museum of Natural History. ,
y II l" nil it in m twin ...I , nsnai j tl!' S J.Vl B
I ifrntatssnmsa-aairiiarsiat as, -innin raairiTn.- mam n-JL . ,-mM ftjj, f"
By GARRETT P. SERVISS. A giant 1 fc -tw " D i I
r-T1TTTiniToTirilT-TT--l'll' ' J I It lllllll lj ajMI a. Ill ;
"ffiMM rSfy,.T- i itaasejiaiiii ";
One of the most extraordinary
placea on the earth is a valley near the
northwestern border of Arabia, con
taining the "dead city" of Petra, the
Biblical Sela, meaning "rock." It lies
eastward of the remarkable deores-
sion of El Ghor, or the Wad-el-Araba,
a strange cleft in the earth's crust
which hunt northward from the Aka
ba arm of the Red Sea, and contains
in ita deepest part the Dead Sea,
whose surface is nearly 1,300 feet be
low sea level.
At tome time in the geologic past
the rocks fell away along the line of
this depression, leaving a "fault" in
the crust. It it bordered with wild,
barren mountains. .Near the Mount
Hor of the Bible a way exists leading
from El Ghor to a basin among the
mountains which constitutes the val
ley of Petra. This valley, surrounded
by steep and rugged slopes and per
pendicular precipices, ia of an "L"
shape, ita enclosed plain covering
about one square mile.
A more secluded and unexpected
site for a city could not be imagined
and yet there was a time when Petra
contained, it said, 100,000 inhabitants.
and when it certainly enjoyed great
commercial prosperity and was adorn
ed with costly buildings of architec
tural splendor.
The most signal natural feature of
Petra is a gorge, or canyon, a
mile in length, hundreds of feet deeo
and in places only ten feet wide,
which serves as the entrance way into
the now abandoned and ruined city.
it it very ditticult to get into the val
ley over the surrounding mountains,
so that the crooked gorge it like a
gateway in the shape of a long, nar
row, high-walied passage, which could
easily be made absolutely impassable.
.through the gorge runs a stream
which abundantly supplied the city
within, and was in former times
carefully restrained within its banks,
while a tunnel through the rock pro
vided for the overflow and prevented
inundation. The gorge is now partly
choked with rocks and debris accu
mulated during many centuries, but in
the days of Petra'a splendor it waa as
well cared for as a street.
At present Petra is onlv a acattered
skeleton of a city, haunted at night
by jackals, and partly occupied in the
rainy season by wandering tribes with
their aheep, goats and cattle. The
floor of the valley it covered with
brbken and dispersed ruins, while the
steep wallsa encircling it are honey
combed with innumerable tombs,
many of great size, and magnificently
sculptured, and all cut out of the na
tive rock, a kind of sandstone, which
glows with color red. rose, ourole
and yellow.
In addition to the tombs, manv of
which have been partly obliterated by
the wear of time, there are, also cut
out of the solid rock, a number of
large temples. One of these, the
Deir, has a facade about 160 feet in
length. In the wall of the entrance
passage itself is cut a beautiful tem
ple, called the Khazneh, whose col
umns, capitals and other architectural
details' excite the admiration of all
who aee them.
Some of the architectural features
of the ruined city date back to the
timea ot the Nabataeans, who were
A giant
urn
carved
from solid
rock in
Petra.
Note the
size as
compared
to the
size of
the man.
contemporary with the early king
dom of the Israelites. Others are
Greek, dating from the days of the
Greek domination over Petra, and Ro
man, for Petra was once an impor
tant city of the Roman empire, and
was visited by the Emperor Hadrian.
It owed its prosperity to the fact that
it lay on the great caravan route from
the east to Europe, but after the rise
of Palmyra, the desert capital of
Queen Zenobia, Petra began to de
cline, and its commerce was diverted.
In the early centuries of our era
Petra was Christianized, but the
Mohammedians afterward drove out
the Christians. It was captured by
the Crusaders, who built a citadel,
some of whose ruins are yet to be
seen, but they abandoned it in 1189,
and after that it sank into ob
scurity. While in possession of the
Crusaders its fame had gone all
over Europe, but from the end of
the twelfth to the beginning of the
nineteenth century it was virtually
forgotten and no European saw it
until Burckhardt, the celebrated
traveler, visited it in 1812.
Still, on account of difficulty of
access ana ot danger trom the wild
cnoes living in its vicinity, it was
teen by very few travelers during
the whole of the nineteenth century.
Within the last . decade, however,
the Turkish government has made
regulations that have removed many
of the obstacles to visitors. Among
the most recent visitors to Petra
are Lee Garnet Day and Joseph
Wood, Jr., who describe their visit
in the American Museum Journal.
Does It Pay to Be Neighborly?
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
Are you one of the people who have
lived for ten years in a axeat anart.
ment house and have no idea who oc
cupies the floor above them, the floor
below, or, perhaps, even the apart
ment across tne nan r
nowadays very tew people are
friends with the "folkl next door."
The kindly little world in which peo
ple snarea tne joys ana sorrows of
the neighborhood hat grown from
simple town wayt to over-dignified
city ones.
Down in the village from which
your grandmother came you shared
whatever of good or ill came to the
people in the houses around and, in
cidentally, their butter, or eggs, when
you happened to run short; and there
was a great deal of happy warmth
in hearts and manners,
City life has changed all this. Now
you don't know anybody until you've
been introduced, and, unless you
want to lose your social position, you
put on your hat and gloves when vou
are going to the shop around the cor-
neri
The chill, stiff, alarms- attitude nf
the average fashionable street in a bio-
city is calculated to make a newcomer
want to emigrate back to the countrv
or even rto tne swarming slums where
everybody knows everybody else.
There can be nothing more dis
heartening than the chilly state of
things .which meets the family com
ing in to the city from some warm
little village of 10,000 gossipy, inquisi-
mmm .11
Iced Bouillon
By CONSTANCE CLARKM.
For dinner tomorrow why not try
jellied bouillon? which sounds elab
orate, but it simplicity itself to pre
pare. This can be made with alfy
stock, cleared, or it may be made with
beef extract, to which add to a quart
of clear stock one-half ounce of gela
tine dissolved in cold water. Strain
and chill, add a little lemon juice
and flavor to taste.
Stock for Bouillon Put into a sauce
pan about two pounds of neck of veal
and a knuckle bone, cover with about
four quarts of cold water, add a little
aalt and allow the stock to come to
the boil, then remove the scum and
add four or five onions, a bunch of
herbs, such as parsley, bayleaf, thyme,
about a dozen peppercorns and four
or five cloves; ttmmer this gently for
three, to four hours. ' Strain off the
stock, set atide until cold, then re
move the fat and clarify. Put on ice
until firm and serve in chilled bouillon
cups. Garnish the top with whipped
cream.
Tomorrow Delicious Fruit and
Vegetable Pickle.
tive, but altogether neighborly and
inenaiy people.
Sitting in lonely, lofty dignity and
ignoring all the pleasant people about
you seems to be considered quite the
correct thing in the city. It isn't
correct it's only dreary and foolish
and stodgy and altogether absurd.
Dotted all over our land there are
villages where the kindly country
wayt are still enforced. There 'people
drop into each other'a houses at all
houn of the day and 'night in the
happy fashion of genuine friends. No
one is ever too busy or too cold
bloodedly absorbed in his own affairs
and his search for money and position
to refuse a lift to a neighbor who
needs help over a rough place of
sympathy with aome one who is
bursting with good newi he "just has
to tell."
One of the tragedies of city life is
that far, far too many of us have
learned to be cruelly suspicious of
people we don't know and so are
afraid to give the benefit of the doubt
to folk about whom we have not an
absolute written guarantee of respec
tability. A few years ago in the middle west
men used to boAst that they always
believed a man honest unless he
proved himself a thief. But in the
big cities the rule seems to be to be
lieve people thieves until they prove
themselves honest! Can't we recover
some of the old neighborliness of
heart and spirit which will make it
possible for us to give a friendly
greeting to the people who live about
us? Can't we learn to feel that the
joys and sorrows, the hopes and fears
and the movements, great and small,
of those who have been brought close
to us in the congestion of city life
are really close to our hearts too? -
THE
ORIGINAL
3i'!aTW'1"4
l-t .. m,. . ' - -at . - .T .ni.n-.-
Tht Food-Drink for all Age
Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form.
For infante, invalids and growing children.
Purenutrition, upbuilding tbswholebody.
invigorates nursing mothers and the agcd
Mora nourishing th-n tea, coffee, etc.
Substitutes Cost T0U Same Price
A$k for and Get Jfq
Skinners
THE HIGHEJT QUALITY
EGG NOODLES
ii AgHtd) Book free
SKINNER MFG.C0L 0MAKA.U.JA
IMCUT HACMONI HCTOOT IN aMIKICA '
Breakfast in the Summertime
Breakfast in summer should
be a lighr and nourishing meal, to
dainty that it will appeal to the lag
ging appetite and sufficiently substan
tial to supply the needed nutriment.
Fruit is a good beginning to the first
meal of the day, and at this season
of the year nothing is quite to nour
ishing as cantaloupe served in some
vay. Eggs are always a welcome
lorn ins dish, and cooked au gratin
ey will appeal to the jaded appetite.
Cantaloupe with Raspberry Centers
gire au Qratln Oatmeal Bread Coffee
Corn Hread,
Eggs au Gratin.
Boil six eggs twenty minutes. Let
:em cool, then remove shells and
ut in rather thin slices. Butter a
tallow, earthen baking dish, place a
lyer of sliced egg, enough cream
auce to cover and a layer of grated
merican cheese, then repeat the
rocess until the dish is filled. Bake
i a hot oven ten minutes.
Cream Sauce.
The sauce required in the above
ecipe, which is equally useful for
lany other dishes, requires two table
poonfuls of butter, two tablespoon
ils of flour, one cup of scalded milk
and salt and pepper to season. Cook
ie butter and Hour until smooth, but
o not brown. Add the scalded milk
lowly, stirring constantly. Cook for
nree minutes.
Corn Omelet.
Oreen Bjan Salad.
3lacult Buttermilk
Pears
Four eggs, four tablespoonfuls
SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES.
Fox-Buonamici
SCHOOL OF
PIANOFORTE PLAYING
For circular address the Registrar, Wes
leyan Building (Copier Square) Boston.
milk, half teaspoonful salt, apeck
paprika, two tablespoonfuls butter,
one and a half cupfula cooked corn,
two tablespoonfuls butter.
Make a French omelet of first four
ingredient!. Before folding spread
corn out on one side of omelet and
dot with butter. Then fold, garnish
with parsley and serve hot.
Minced Lamb on Toast.
One cupful meat (chopped), one
teaspoonful salt, speck paprika, three
tablespoonfuls butter, one and a half
tablespoonful flour, two cupfuls stock
or water, four pieces of toast.
Harmless Means
of Reducing Fat
Many fat people fear ordinary meant for
reducing their weight. Here ft in extra
ordinary method. Extraordinary became
while perfectly faarmleu no dieting or ex
ercise are necessary, Marmola Prescription
Tablets are made exactly in accordance wit1!
the famoua Marmola Prescription. A re
duction of two. three or four pounda a week
is the rule. Procure them from any drug
gist or if you prefer send 76 cents to the
Marmola Co., 864 Woodward Ave Detroit-
WicK . far a larora rutv
HOTELS AND RESORTS.
WHITE MTS., N.H.
MAPLEWOOD
MAPLEWOOD, N. H.
High Altitude. Free Irana Hair Ferae.
MAPLEWOOD INN
Opposite Hetsl. Capacity 145.
Terms Moderate.
Superiar ta-Hole Call Cmitm SOM yards.
Motorists' Meat Radiating Cater ia Mta.
Bookina Office, IIH Braedwar, New Vera.
Also Maplswood N. H.
VIRGINIA COLLEGE FOR WOMEN
Koanoke, Va.
In the Valla; of Virginia, famed for health
and beauty. Elective, Preparatory and full
Junior College courses. Music. Art. Expres
sion. Domestic Science. For cataloc apply
to the President
HOTELS AND RESORTS.
HOTEL PURITAN I
w)mmonvreajTnAve.Doaton
The Distinctive
Boston House
The Purftan is one ot the roost
lumallkalMtela In the world,
....,.,teM.,.gSSi
A
3 w
isevnoj
p
Si8Iif2
dark NtarJmcluon BtmUmd
The Hotel Success
of Chicago -
VOUK busy day in Chicago
can best be managed from
the Mew Kaiserhof.
The hotel's excellent service,
f its convenience for the quick
transaction of business, its
proximity to theatres, shops
and public buildings make it
the ideal headquarters lor a
crowded day.
450 Rooms $1.50 up
With Bath $2.00 up
a. i IT I
See the
Wonderful East This Year
For variety of attractions, the great cities,
historic places, and mountains, rivers, lakes
and ocean resorts of the East afford an un-
iivaicu vaumuii.
Low fares to a few Eastern points follow:
$55.80
. M.t
. 42.45
. 42.4$
57.3
, Naw York and return
Boston and return
Buffalo and return
Niagara Falla and return .
stuanuc nry ana return
Portland, Me., and return 52.9
Montreal and return '
Toronto and return ."!!!""!! 4e!l
Ticket! on tale June 1st to September 30th.
Milwaukee & St. Paul
RAILWAY
Three train daily to Chicago, Including the famout steel
equipped "Pacinc Limited." Direct connectioni with
trains for all points eatt
fiouftij 7VOCJ Automatic Bloc Sltnal Egulpmm
Tfcketa. Heepint ear reaantations and hill information at
1317 Farnam Strsat. Onjiha
EUCttNE DUVAL. General Anal
I