THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1917. Personal Gossip : Society Notes : Woman's Work : Household Topics Since society has nothing hut in vitation to lecture in its card basket, what can it do but make of the lec tures society events? That is exactly what happened last evening when Sir Rabindranath Tagore addressed the people of Omaha. Matrons in hand some evening dresses were seated to rieht. to left and before the sneaker. Dark shades predominated. Late in the evening dinner parties began to flutter in and take their places on the balcony. There handsome gowns of i pink and white were most in evidence. One of the most attractive groups included the members of Mrs. F. A. Nash's dinner party, given in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Meredith Nicholson of Indianapolis. These later formed Perhaps society men were inclined I to plead other engagements last eve- II ning, however, for when the gay groups began to descend to the sup per rooms to follow the lecture with dancing, many prominent matrons slipped away to their waiting cars and were whishked home to hubby sitting by the fire in comfort. Tomorrow evening will see a diver sion from the lecture series in the shape of the Brownell Hall benefit dance. .Dinner parties continue to be planned'for this event, which promises to be highly enjoyable. Keservations are being made constantly and the committee has been so busy making arrangements that one member paused in the midst of a skating frolic to help the good work along. The music is expected to be unusually good. Mr. and Mrs. George Brandeis are giving a dinner party before the bene fit dance at the Fontenelle tomorrow evening. Their guests will be: ' Sfaaars. and Mesdam-a K. A. Wlckhstn of A. V. Klnslsr, Council Blurts, Mr. Fsrn.m Smith. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wheeler will also entertain at dinner preceding the dance, as will also Mr. and Mrs. Howard Baldrige. Mr. Luther Drake and Mr. and Mrs. V. II. Yohc, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Gamble, Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Shrenk and Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Powell One of the large Dutch treat parties will include: Dr. and Mn. C. A. Hull. V Juaire and Mrs. w. A. Redlck. Ileum, and Meidaraea W. R. Mchn, Jamsa Love Paxton, M. H. Sprague, W. A. C. Johnson, Wilson H. Low ' NMdimxc - Mrsrismas Arthur Retains Ion, P A. Nash. llrr Msssrs. 1 u . B...kt U..WJ U,al,i 8 Lucius Wak-lry'. W. T. Pan. Jantoa Banauuef, M Entertains Mothers. . . I Mrs. John Guild entertained at an p informal tea at ner nome tnis aiter noon. The guests were mothers who were invited to call to meet her small rranddauehter. Miss Laura Jeannette liliradcn. the baby, with her brother, pommy jr. and her mother, Mrs. 1 nomas llraden, arc visiting their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Guild. Mrs. Braden and the children leave Saturday for their home in Den ver. Dinner for Nicholsons. I Mr. and Mrs. Clement Chase are en & tcrtaining at dinner at the Blackstone this evening or Mr. and Mrs. Mcre fdith Nicholson. Mrs. Charles T Kountzc entertained the Original I Cooking club at her home today, when I Mrs. Nicholson was the guest oH I honor. f Dinner for University President. I President George R. Grose of De l-Pauw; university, Greencastle, Ind Swill visit Omaha January 24. Former L n r- ...:n . ;nn.r m x aum oiuueiiib mil ui, at the Blackstone at 7 o'clock on that day. Mrs. Charles Wright is in charge of the affair. Clalrmont Bridge Club. Mrs. E. L. Champ will entertain the members of the Clairmont Bridge club a .week from next Tuesday. Mrs. George Carter was hostess of the club Tuesday of this week. Bridge for Visitor. The Misses Irene and Beatrice Coad entertained Mrs. Thomas Hey ward, who is visiting her mother, Mrs. R. B. Busch, and Miss Clara Hayden, the guest of Mrs. Thomas Flynn, at an informal bridge this afternoon. Sorority Meeting. Mrs. J. E. George was hostess Tuesday afternoon to the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority at the regular bi-monthly meeting. i ' Engagement Announced, irs. Catherine O'Grady announces thj engagement of her daughter, llipU U.rmrrt in A Vnn Italian The wedding vt til take place the latter part oi inis raomn. ElenU of the Day. The Pi Tau Pi fraternity will give a JSancing party this evening at the Blackstone. when seventy-live couples wfjl be present. The decorations will be in blue and gold, the fraternity colors. pleasures Past Airs. G. O.. Leitch entertained at dinner at her Carter Lake cottage, "Idle Hours." Wednesday evenine in honor of Mr. and Mrs. John Edward Ctfnners of Havre, Mont., who are vkiting here. On the Calender. ?,Dr. W. F. Callfas will entertain at a informal foursome luncheon at the University club Saturday. Mrs. Lucien Stephens is entertain ing two tables of bridge very infor mally at her home tomorrow after noon for Mrs. Robert Forgan of Chi cago and Mrs. Herbert French of Louisville, Ky. Personal Mention. I Miss Louise Goodrich leaves Fri day for Des Moines to attend the pre nuptial affairs and wedding of her cousin, miss inistie Davis, ana air. John Corley, which takes place Jan uary 20. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Chamberlain of Clarks, Neb., are in the city making a few da irs visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Alexander, on their wav south for a month s sojourn. Mrs. Louis Allen of New York City is visiting her mother, Mrs. Bertha Goldgraber. and her sister, Mrs. Frank Sniffle. - i The Misses Florinda and Lenorc Young of Macedonia are visiting friends in the city lor a lew days, j Mrs, T. F, Marshall of Carbondale. WEDS ASSISTANT RECTOS AT ALL SAINTS. - ..... v III., arrives the first of next week for an extended visit wilh Mr, and Mrs. B. F. Marshall. In and Out of the Bee Hive. I Mrs. Caroline Olsen of Wisconsin is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Thor Jorgensen. She expects to make a two months' visit. Mr. and Mrs. Charles- E. Reese of the Reese Jewelry company, left for New York yesterday on a five weeks' buying and pleasure trip. They will stop enroute in Kansas (ity, Chicago, Detroit. Cincinnati, Rochester, Bos ton, Philadelphia and Washington. Mrs. Elias Vail of Poughkeepsie, N. Y arrived this morning from Indian apolis, where she was matron of honor at the marriage of Miss Lucile Green to Mr. Joseph ScharT, jr., of that city. Mr. Vail was one of the ushers, but he will not arrive until later, when he will come to accompany his wife home. Mrs. Vail expects- to be with her mother, Mrs. A. B. Jaquitl), for about three weeks. Fashion Hints Oxidized silver net plays an im portant part in connection with eve ning gowns. Cerise is a favorite color this sea son, and on the list also are dull and bright greens, lemon and deeper yellow. Dark blue gabardine, velvet and satin makes the most effective one piece frocks for formal and informal wear. The bead bag is quite the most no ticeable dress accessory this season, and none are so much treasured as the old-fashioned mesh bags which first saw service two or three generations ago. Cream and coffee-toned collars of broadcloth or chiffon are fashionable with dark tailored frocks and are a bit more chic in suggestion than pure white neckwear if the costume is a semi-formal one. While many dresses of the after noon type are made to suggest but slightly the waist line, many others definitely define the waist shaping, so one may be in style whichever type one chooses. Dark fur figures on evening gowns. Rabbitt is being dyed to resemble chinchilla, and has a delightful effect with dove shades. Chenille is in evi dence in the embroideries on crepe de chine, especially in violet and navy blue tones. Lovely "party" frocks for wee girls of toddling age are coral pink' chif fon with lines of little while beads embroidered over the hems and other details of sewing. Silk thread match ing the chiffon is used to sew on the beads. Paisley neckwear is having a vogue, but the bright colors of paisley must be used with discretion near the face. A collar of black satin and paisley silk, overlaid with one of cream thiffon, is both smart and becoming to the average woman. Wing effects at the back of evening dresses are distinctive; they are gen erally produced by tulle draperies, and these arc often garnished with metal threads; they float gracefully about the arms, and also fall over the train at the back. A particularly chic blouse has a novel shoulder yoke cut in one with portions of the front, the rest of which are slightly gathered, the junc ture of the pieces being maneuvered with those little open work seams which are so decorative in themselves that no other trimming is required. ' Lisle stockings come now in the soft Scotch plaid patterns so fashion able for sport wear, with dark brown sport boots of glazed kid, and these stockings are more comfortable to the idea of many wearers than the wool woven stockings sold for winter sport wear. The knowingly gotten-up sport girl wears a loosely cut, belted coat of colored pontine with cap to match. On its reverse side this ma terial, which has a smooth, waxed, waterproof finish on the outer side, is of silk or cloth and sometimes the two sides contrast in color, A good many of the best looking winter sport coats arc of pontine and always there is the becoming, rakish little hat to malch. ' . Art forind Grt Skinner5 THE HIGHEST QUALITY EGG NOODLES ' J6 Hedpt Book fire j SKINNER MFG. CO.. OMAHA. U.SA IMCUT HACAJI0H1 rACTODY IN AMCKKA '1mm & , ' ' . i r '4 " ' ' TCrm wsr - jo- MRS. ROBERT S. FLOCK HART. Timely Fashion The girl who drives her own car needs one of these pontine motor caps, with its beaver lining and convertible earlaps. She need not fear for her ears, because this practical item is so made that it covers them and hugs close to the neck. It is gored and the scams joined with a narrow cording of the pontine. The Wives I Might Have Been By JANE M'LEAN. Once, long ago, I had an idea that it might be thrilling to marry wealth. I was young, you see, and I looked at the thing from just one angle I could buy as many suits as I liked a season. It's queer the way a girl's family likes that idea of money, too. After I had annexed Ray, as it were, mother would carefully remark:. "You might have Ray in to dinner on Sunday, Anne," and the first Sun day Raymond's mother asked ine to dinner it was quite an event every one was ready with a little advice. Raymond had a skimpy little car that looked too small for him to drive. 1 used to tease him about it a lot, and one day he arrived at the house to take me out for a drive in a new gray racer. Of course, that helped, too. to daz zle me with his possible opulence un til I discovered that it was his father's car. and Raymond had only borrowed it for the occasion. I began to sus pecHhat things were strange when I discovered that he asked me to many entertainments that didn't cost him anything, such as club'dances that he would have to pay dues for anyway, or auto parties. But when it came to first nights, or luxurious boxes of candy in special wrappings, Raymond was always conspicuous by his ab sence. . . I would never repeat this incident at all if I were the kind of girl who can't get along without things of this kind. But 1 can. I can have just as good a time on a sandwich and a cup of coffee as I can at the very stnn ningest dinner, if I know the man who is with me is giving me the best he can afford. But I despise a stingy man. It always seems to me to be sordid to quibble about spending money that one can afford to spend. And then right in the middle of my affair with Raymond I was stupid enough to get the grippe. Anyone who has ever had the grippe knows that it is anything but pleasant. I was awfully sick, and as cross as two sticks. People were so kind to me. Everyone sent me flowers and jelly, and fruit, and although 1 was too ill to enjoy anything, 1 knew what peo ple thought of me and it helped to make me feel a little better. When mother brought up a box of flowers from Raymond, I actually sat up in bed to untie the strings my self. I'm sure 1 don't know what I expected to find, but what I did find were six straggly carnations, and I looked at them, and then looked at mother, and thcnll just put my head down in the pillow and laughed and laughed. It's hard to explain how 1 felt, but Terry Walsh had sent me a perfectly huge hunch df violets, and 1 knew it was extravagant of him to do it, while Raymond, who was so able, sent me six carnations at a time when one just throws caution to the winds to express sympathy for a person one cares about. It was terribly funny. And so when I got quite well, I re- Jused Raymond, quite definitely and quue lirmiy. "But Anne," lie protested, "you led me to expect that you cared. Why, I had the ground all selected where I would build our house. I don't un derstand you at all." "I don't understand myself, either, ' I said quite simply. "But you see we're just not suited to each other; you ought to be glad we discovered it in time. - "That's just one of your whims," Raymond said furiously. "A girl never cares how much money a man spends on her, these days, she just takes it all and doesn't think he's serious." "I honestly believe you mean what you say," I said laughingly, and ac tually he did think that he had wast ed all kinds of money on me all for nothing. I Toilet Goods Should be chosen with much eautlon bsoaasa many Inferior and harmful artleloa are on tho narktt. Host toilet article! are used to beautify and whan of poor qual ity of oars lhT pni imm aa oapoaita affect L iht rat. ISth amal Henrard Sta. PIwm Douglas . 17 Hint By La Racotueuse i ' ' , jr til ' ' A , I ' - , 1 i - rffftlfr-irrriiiiim i i , Building Chimneys By GARRETT P. SERVISS. "Why Is It whn you IIkM up a krrossne lamp It Jturtis with s hrtKht flam when It has th Klaiw ovor, but it Hinokrs when the glass Is removed? A. V, .Newarli." If you hold your hand a foot above the bare flame of your lamp before the glass is put on you will feel no great heat, but when the glass is on the heat becomes intense.' ! his shows you that the glass acts as a chimney, confining the air heated by the flame, and guiding it in a narrow current upward. The heated air rises because it is lighter than the surrounding air. and, as it rises, colder air comes in at the bottom, from all sides, to lake its place. If you study the construction of your lamp you will see the open ings are left around the flame, under the bottom of the glass chimney, for the purpose of admitting the air that rushes in below lo replace the heated air that is going up and out of the chimney. Now, combustion, or burning, can not be maintained without a continual supply of oxygen, which combines chemically with the heated gases from the oil, and the needed oxygen comes from the air, about one-fifth of which consists of pure oxygen. If the same air is continually ex posed to the flame, the oxygen will quickly be all burnt out of it, and then the flame will expire. . If the supply of oxygen is too small the combustion of the carbon carged gases arising from the oil will be incomplete and the flame will be choked with smoke, which consists of only partially burned particles of carbon. . That is the situation when you have lighted the lamp but have not yet put on the chimney, for then the air( from the surrounding atmosphere docs not flow in fast enough to main tain the needed supply of 'oxygen. But the moment the chimney is set in nlace a draught, or current, of heated air begins to ascend through I it, leaving room at the bottom for fresh air to come in, loaded with oxygen, and the fresh air will come in because of the pressure to which it is subjected by the surrounding at mosphere. Thereupon the flame brightens and steadies because now there is con stantly enough oxygen on hand to produce complete combustion of the rases. The brilliancy of the flame is principally due to minute particles of carbon, denvea irom me on, ana heated to a bright incandescence. ' Chimneys arc one ot the most use ful and interesting inventions that man has ever made. They are of wider and more essential importance than anything that Edison, or any other great modern inventor, has con trived, but we do not know who made the first chimney. In a primitive form they must be almost as old as the human race, for a fire could not be made to burn with any regularity without draught to keep up the sup ply of oxygen. The first chimneys may have been natural crevices in the walls and roofs of caverns which were gradually improved, artificially, as men perceived, without thoroughly understanding, how they acted. Then, nrobablv stones were piled together to form rude chimneys, as a skilful camper piles them today to cook his food on the seashore, or in the forest. Indian wigwams were turned into very smoky and ineffective chimneys by making an opening in the center ot the root. It takes an engineer to make a WE FEATURE F50EN5T A IX -s" I WW ALL COLORS ,- INEQUALITIES FOR MEN, 55c to 51.05 FOR WOMEN, SOc to $2.05 FADDEN & BITTNER Sit South 16th Street. LIKE A NEW WOMAN Mrs. Louiso Watson, of Vienna, III., writes: "I hare received go nnch benefit from the use of CaaDtn that I wish to ten 70a When I waa a young gtrl of twenty-one I became ran down. I was. . . , caused I think by my having taken cold. I was In much pain at those times ind usually had to go to bnd. . . I bad bad head aeons and backaches ind a dreadful bearing down pain. . . I can't tell Just who told me about Caaoui, but. . . I began to use it . . The Tery first bottle helped me and made me like a new woman. . . I truly thi&k there is ne remedy like Caaoct. . ." For forty years Cssdui has helped women In Jusl luch cases as this. Try it. It may be just what yon need. CARD-YOU-tYK Love-Testing By DOROTHY DIX. Professor Munsterberg of Harvard university has invented a machine so delicate that by registering the pulsa tions of the blood m some subtle way it can tell whether an individual is ly ing or speaking the truth. If the famous scientist wants to render a deathless service to mail kind he will devote his talents to in venting some instrument that will en able us to tell whether we arc really in love or whether we just think, we are in love. That would do more to allay hu man misery than any other one thing on earth, for the greatest danger that menaces our peace and happiness is the likelihood of thinking ourselves in love when we arc not of mistak ing a passing fancy for a permanent passion, a hectic flush for the devour ing fever of never-ending devotion, and of marrying under that illusion and finding out when it is forever too late thai we had made a fatally false diagnosis of our feelings. This mistake is most natural. It is the inevitable result of our edu cation, for from the time we arc old enough to understand anything we are taught, directly or indirectly, that to love and be loved is the main busi ness of life. Every novel we read has love for its theme. Every play depicts some phase of the tender passion. We glorify weddings, and a halo of ro mance hangs about even the most commonplace couple if they are be trothed. Now we all start out in youth with an excess of emotion, and a super fluity of imagination and romance, and backed up by all this teaching about the beauty of love, it dooms us to make errors that only too often end in the shipwreck of our lives. We arc in love with love and we go about, like Mr. Carnegie with his libraries, seeking somebody whom we can endow with our affections. In every woman, no matter how unsuitable as to age, social position, or character, a youth sees the pos sible SHE. In every man. no matter how ineligblc, a girl beholds the pos sible HE. All of this' is very exciting, but it is also very misleading and dangerous and it is no wonder that young peo ple so often make the mistake of fancying that they are in love when they are not. If you will hold your finger on your pulse, and imagine you have a fever, it doesn't take long to work yourself up to a high tem perature. It's the same way with the heart. Any man and woman who keep their attention centered on their emotions, and-who are always on the watch tower looking out for an affinity will see it in the first person that heaves in sight. , They delude themselves into thtnk- ood chimney, and he must under stand many of the laws of nature'. Modern factory chimneys are. tri umphs of scientific construction. They have to be made tall in order to maintain a large, hot fire, and the heated air and gases pour up through some of them with the velocity of a hurricane, fifty or sixty feet per sec ond, or from thirty-five to forty miles an hourl It has been found that the velocity of the ascending current in a chimney varies, other things being equal, as the square root of the height of the shaft. This shows why in order to get a very strong draught the chimney must be made very high, for accord ing to the law just stated you must quadruple the height to obtain double the velocity. If, for example, a chim ney fifty feet tall should give an as cending current moving twenty feet per second, you would have to make the height 200 feet to have a current moving forty feet per second, and the shaft would have to be 450 feet high for a current of sixty feet per second. But the actual results depend upon many controlling circumstances, and I am informed that ten or twelve feet per second is about the average veloc ity in a good factory chimney. A modern chimney, whether for a factory or a house, or even a kerosene lamp, is an object lesson in practical science. Shape, size, proportions all these things, and many others, have to be carefully calculated and ad justed so that a skillful chimney maker is an indispensable member of society in this scientific age, infinitely more admirable than a gun maker or a whisky distiller. Everybody appre ciates good chimney when the win ter winds begin to snore. nnni at cut uvhl PRICES We save you $1.50 EBONY n:YZrl" COAL EBONY, Lump, Egf and Nut, par too . . . 87.0O The coal without a fault for all pnrpoaas. SPECIALTY, all siaas S6.50 N"'" R, hand picked at S7.00 .. all sixes.... $7.50 T, all siaas pride $8.00 WHITE ASH, aootlau. $8.50 ROSEWOOD Hard Coal, for furnace and hot water plants. Holds fir for 24 hour without attention, per ton . $11.00 All Coal Head Screened. Call us for price on all grades of steam coal. ROSENBLATT Cut Prica Coal Company Phono Dotty la 530. 0 USID0 TSARS I The Woman's Tonic AT ALL DRUG STORKS S-K I Machine Would Save Misery j ing they are in love, but it is no more I the real thing than a pack thread is 1 a steel cable. I The elasticity- and adaptability of the youthfulhcart arc bath amusing and pathetic. There is nothing in petticoats between the cradle and the : grave that a boy cannot imagine hini I self in love with if given half a ! chance. One young fellow, whose guardian angel must work overtime protect I ing him, has confided to me a succes Ijkin of only loves, lhat comprise his school mistress, his landlady's daugh : ter, a bespectacled blue stocking who ! lectured on Ihsen. a chorus girl, a ; business girl, an athletic girl who can j walk twenty miles without resting, i and a fluffy little fairy who is all lare and ribbons and who never stirs out j of her rocking thair. And this affec- donate youth's name is Mr. Legion. I And the real woman is yet to come I along. Nor is it a whit different , with women. Any girl with a head full of novels can fancy herself suffi ciently in love with a good-looking chauffeur to elope with him, or a drunkard lo marry him to reform him. or a youth who is making five dollars a week .to starve with him. And sometimes she does marry him before she finds uiit that it was her imagination that was touched and not her heart. That's the pity of it. The trouble with these fancies is that they do not last. They are only a momentary illusion of the senses, a passing attraction that amounts to no more than one's appetite one day for fish and another for fowl, and the tragedy f life tomes in, there being no way of telling whether this desire is ephemeral or an eternal need. Propinquity and environment are the two demons that have caused more mistakes to be made in love than anything else in the world. It is so terribly easy to imagine your self in love with anybody not posi tively repulsive with whom you are thrown into intimate association. It is almost impossible to keep from thinking that you are in love with anyone with whom you sit out a dance on a moonlight night while you listen to the music sob and sigh in the distance, but your feelings in such cases are no reliable guarantee of the state of your heart. You are simply slopping over with sentiment, and it expends itself on the person nearest to you. ! And we are at the mercy oH S 5 Have you ever tried "Swift's Premium" Oleo margarine? It is made in clean, san itary factories where only the best materials are used and comes to you as pure and wholesome a product as was ever on your table. It will delight you at first taste. Swift's Premium Oleomargarine combines purity and a fresh attractive flavor with a substantial saving. At this time of year this healthful, pure-food product will please you and materially reduce your food bills without any sacrifice in quality. You simply purchase a product of known merit ify All-SiccI , t .lUl I I L-S-J at ! these vagrant emotions, for science, that has weighed the earth and meas ured the distance to the stars, has not been able to even guess at the wav oi a man with a maid, whether we shall love, or hate, six months from now the one we adore at the present mo ment, nor whether the touch of a hand that thrills us to the core of our being today we shall shake off tomor row. If there was only some way by which we could infallibly test our af fections and tell whether we are in love for keeps or just in love pro tern, t we should all be happy though mar ried, for divorce is only the answer of those who have guessed wrong. But there isn't. Not the wisest of us knows when Cupid means business and when he is just playing tricks upon us. Snlendid tor 1 f Bad Coughs, Colds, S RrnnfhiHt 2 , V . ...... 11 All laexpenalve Henae-MaoV Haa- Q rdy Glvee Snrrnt, yulcafst V Relief. (9 Anyone who tries this pleasant tast ing ' home-made couch syrup, will quicklv understand why it is used in more liomes in the United States and Canada than anv other cough remedv The wav it takes bold of an obstinate cough, giving immediate relief, will make vou regret that you never tried 4t be fore. It is a truly dependable cough remedv that should be kept handy in every home, to use at the first sign of a couch during the-night or day time Any druggist can supply you with 2t,4 ounces of Pinex (50 centB worth). Pour this into a pint bottle and fill the .bottle with plain granulated sugar Isyrup. The total cost is about M cents and you have a full pint of the most effective remedv vou'ever used. The quick, lasting relief yon get from this excellent cough syrup will really surprise vou. It promptly heals th' inflamed membranes that line the throat and air passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, loosens the phlegm, and soon your cough stops entirely. Splen did for bronchitis, croup 'whooping cough and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a higblv concentrated com pound of Norway pine extract, combined with guaiaeol and is famous the world over for its healing effect on the mem branes. To avoid disappointment ask for "21i ounces of Pinex with full directions and don't accept anything else. A guar antee of absolute satisfaction or monev promptly refunded goes with this prep aration. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne. Ind. which sells the wnole year round at a reason able price It is sweet, pure, clean. Not touched by hand in making or packing. Fine for cooking and baking. In Daily Service Begjnninf January 8 via LOUISVILLE tf NASHVILLE R. R. and Nashville, Chattanooga (f St. Loui Ry. Chicago 11:30 A.M. Today St. Louis 2:05 P. M. " Jacksonville 7:30 P. M. Tomorrow Only one night on the road. The fastest schedule to Jacksonville. Drawing room, compartment and observation sleeping cars and coaches. All meals in dining cars. Low round trip fares. Diverse routes if desired. Write for illustrated literature, reservations or information. P. W. MORROW, N. W. P. A. S32 Marauetlc Bld(.. CHICAGO. ILL GEO. E. HERRING, Di. Psss. Ajt 304 North Broad ST. LOUIS, MO. iiisUifj