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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1918)
TITS OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 29. 1918. j IUcLUBDOM mm Heads Business Girls' Study Club MONDAY I J .1 A IP. E. U. SlSiernooo, cnapier t I W Welch, B. S.. Mrs. I hostess, 2:30.' Red Cross Conteen corps, Y. W C. A.. 2 d. m. pTUESDAY- i Business Women's club, Y. W. C. A, 6:15 p. m. American War Mothers, Board of Education rooms, 8 p. m. , Sojourners' club, Malva , Shrine, Mrs. M. M. 1 Graham, hostess . Jewish Women's Relief so ciety, Lyric building, 2:30 p. m. FRIDAY Tea given by Woman's club, public, speaking depart ment, at the Blackstone. Liberty chapter. O. E. S., Masonic temple, 8 p. m. SATURDAY Omaha Story Tellers' league t luncheon at Blackstone, 1 P. rn. AS A war-time measure, re freshments will be placed in the "non-essential" class at the meetings of Daugl ter of the Ameri can Revolution, Major Isaac Sadler chapter, this year. As nearly all the members are giving all the time pos : sible to war work, there will be but "I few meetings of the organization ' during the coming season. The members will meet together just enough to transact the business of the society and to keep in touch with each other, but all protracted meetings will be set aside for the !, war work close at hand. If,' . Social Clubs. ',' ' Sojourners' Club of the Matva l White Shrine will meet Tuesday , afternoon st the home of Mrs. M. ( 1 :: p if ; I : ft-I J I M. Graham, 4J18 South Twenty- j f I second street, in the South Side. As- f sisting the hostess will be Mea ldames W. G. Nieman, W! S. Mc f Clintock. C. L Talbot and D. H. Brewer. Liberty chapter. W. D., O. E. S., will hold a business and social meet ing Friday evening in the Masonic temple. Tuesday at the home of Mrs. A. C Grilfen, the Kensington club of Fontenelle Chapter O. E. S. was en- tertained by four of the descend ants of Logan Fontenelle. These characters were impersonated by the hostesses, Mrs. A. C. -Griffen, Mrs. H. L. Helfrich Mrs. R. A. Gold- ing and Mrs. A. B. Anderson The rooms were decorated in In dian bead work of all descriptions. Soon after the guests' arrival Fon tenet's people were announced and the Jitrance of Mrs. Golding as a ' "chiej" followed. Mrs. Grii'fen and ' Mrs. Helfrich beating a drum mono tonohsly soon followed with Mrs : . Alrjfersen. who gave a regular In- Mrs. Griffen responded to an en core with the civilized interpreta tion of the dance, after which sou venirs containing water color sketches of the scenes and quota tions from the Songs of Hiawatha were presented each guest. A group of Indian songs was sung by Miss Amanda Tebbens and a reading. "The American Forest Girl." was given by Mrs. Ander sen's mother, Mrs. F. G. Russell, of Gilmore, Neb. Grand Island Club. Woman's clubs all over the state re reorganzing for the year's work nd from the outlying towns comes reports of th$ first meetings of the season. The club of Grand Island held their first meeting for the year Friday, September 20. As this is the comhined Federated Mothers' and Teachers' clubs, the meeting was held in the Lincoln school building. The Lincoln club were the hos tesses of the afternoon. Mrs. 0. D. Wright, retiring president, read her iporl of the year s work just closed and introduced the new officers. .Miss Mussleman, instructor of music in the city schools, gave a paper on community singing. Leaders of the civic department. Salvage department of the Red Cross, gave reports. A reception for the teachers o be given in the near future was planned. X P. E. O. Sisterhoods. Chapter B. S. of P. E. O. Sister hood, will meet Monday afternoon at "Cherrycroft." the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Welch. A report of the convention recently held will be given, as this is the first meeting of the year. Mrs. W. F. Hogue will entertain chapter B X of the P. E. O. Sister hood at luncheor at her home, 4723 California street, Tuesday. Omaha Woman's Club. First program of the musical de partment of the Omaha Woman's club will be given October 16, when colonial music will be presented. Officers and leaders of the public speaking department. Omaha Wo man's club, will entertain at an in formal tea at the Blackstone, Friday afternoon; New Meeting Place. Meetings of the Douglas County Council of Defense woman's com- mittee and the separate committee on Americanization will hereafter be held in the county court house, the first on Friday morning and the later on Tuesdays. Lunches During CamivaL Temple Israel Sisterhaad will serve luncheon and supper Wednes day at Fourteenth and Farnam Streets, and luncheon Thursday. Central Congregational church will conduct a lunch room from Monday to Saturday on Fourteenth street between Farnam and , Har- iHAHT-srefFettS 'rrvr Miss lieuiah . Hall is the new president of the Business Women's club, the first meeting of which will be held September 17 at the banquet Friday, at which about 125 were present. Mrs. E. A. Zabriskie's or chestra and Mrs. Grace Poole Stein berg gave musical numbers. Miss Cecile Lyon acted as toastmistress. Tlie first program meeting will be hfMd Tuesday evening. Rev. Thom as Anderson will give a lecture on "Rreaking Down of Religion in Ger many." There will be special music. Miss Fay Rasmussen will be leader. The work for the year will be studies ,,in the history, literature, music. 4rt and present day condi tions of our allres. r.ey streets. Hot coffee, baked beans and sandwiches will be served. Woman's Club. Benson Woman's club meets at the city hall Tuesday with the sur gical dressing class, and a business session will be held at 3:30 for members of the club to plan for fu ture program work. Jewish Relief Society. Mrs. Frank Judson will address the meeting of the Jewish Women's Relief society, Tuesday in their rooms in the Lyric building on the Liberty loan drive. Train School Mothers' club met Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Julius Koch. 427 Walnut street to elect officers for the coming year. Officers of the last year were re-elected. They are: Mrs. Jutius Koch, president; Mrs. John Carney, vice president, and Mrs. Ed Leon ard, secretary and treasurer, An all day session of the Belles- Letteres Literary club at the Knights of Coumbus hut tat Fort Omaha Tuesday, beginning at 10 o'clock a .rn., will take the place of the regular meeting which was to have been held at the home of Miss Helen Anderson. Foe Pillages Belgian Factories Belgian labor will be greatly ham pered after the war, for the Ger mans have pillaged the factories of that country. The factories of Ghent have been obliged to give up copper, iron wedges, belts, cables, pneumatic tools, lathes, and planes. More than twenty steam boilers have been sent from Ghent to Ger many. Business houses are also being forced to give up cast iron, steel, pulleys, gears, and reserve parts. Japan Has Girl Sea Captain A young Japanese girl has obtain ed a license as sea captain. Her name is Tatzu Imamizo, and she received her training from her fa ther with whom she sailed the In land Sea. When she applied for license the authorities hesitated, for she was the first woman who had ever sought recognition as a skipper As there was no provision permit ting discrimination on account of sex, the license was issued. Sentence Foley to One Year in Pen for Automobile Theft Charles Foley pleaded guilty In criminal court Saturday to the theft of a Ford car from Ed Sheehan on August 7. and was sentenced to one year in the penitentiary by Judge Estelle. TRAK1 YOUR HAIR AS AN ACTRE S JOES No class of people devotes as much time to beauty as do actresses, and no class must be more careful to retain and develop their charms. Inquiry develops the information that in hair care they find it dan gerous to shampoo with any make shift hair cleanser. The majority say that to have the best hair wash and scalp stimulator at a cost of about three cents, one need only get a package of Canthrox from your druggist; dissolve a teaspoon ful in a cup of hot water and your shampoo is ready. This makes enough shampoo liquid to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. After its use the hair dries ranidly, with uniform color. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are quickly dissolved and entirely disap pear when you rinse the hair. After this your hair will be so fluffy it will look much heavier than it is. Its luster and softness will delight you, while the stimulated scaln gains the health which insures hair growth. Adv. 0 FISTULA CURED Kcctal Dlwin Cored wttbuut a micr torvirai Kwratioa. No Chloroform of Ethrf ucd Cur uaranlee4 PAY WHEN CURED Writ for rlioiu trated book on Rrrtal Diism. with name and testi monial of more than I 00S prominent people who har been tnnanentl rured DR. E. R. TARRY 402 Bes Euiidini. Onuha, NeL. ft-Hfr-M H-H-'W-M-M i a ,, ,, ,, f t j, ,. i .M. i . i fl i "Ladly With tin CeiiBpkflDn" f By BEATRICE FAIRFAX The lady with the matchless com plexion at the Atlantic City hotel crowded the world war off the map as a topic of conversation. The men would be comfortably seated on jhe piazza, their -hairs tilted at just the proper angle to dis cuss long distance strategy in win ning 'the war, some one would be holding forth on barrage when "The Lady with the Complexion would come along, and the war as an issue would fade away in a mut tered chorus of: "Never saw any thing like it in my life!" "It's too good to be truel" "Looks like one of the figures in the hairdresser's window 1 The women did not say much, but hey looked at "The Lady with the complexion trom every angle. They made it a point to meet her in broad daylight, under the scorching sun that flooded the Boardwalk. They studied her under the electric light. One of them got a moonlight vie and said the matchless skin looked queerer than ever. And an enterprising lady from Chicago got a snapshot, because, as she said, the camera sometimes escaped things that escaped the naked eve. Bowed but Never Smiled. "The Lady with the Complexion" bowed to everyone, but never smiled at any one, never became impatient when the waiter let twenty minutes elapse between serv ing soup and fish, did not look dis tressed when the sailing party was four hours late and everyone sup posed they had been drowned. In short, she never permitted herself the luxury of looking human under any circumstances. As far as the milk of human kind ness uas concerned, or the vitriol of human anger, for that matter, she might have been a statue of Bud dha. A statue, in fact, could have taken lessons in repose from her. And strange to say, despite the milk and roses of her skin, rich, bronzy hair and great regularity of feature, the lady was not at all good looking. One of the men said she had a sort of embalmed look that made her too spooky. And one of the women remarked: "She makes me think of one of those perfectly canned fruits that grocery shops use as window displays." And so it went all day long. Then one day a genially battered looking woman, presumably in the late forties, turned up at the hotel. In repose her face was a network of lines, but when she laughed or was interested she looked like a girl. All Sparkle and Animation. This woman was all sparkle en thusiasm and, somehow or other, when "The Lady with the Com plexion was in sight, motionless as a piece of bric-a-brac, everyone un conciously looked at that wrinkled little woman, who was as efferves cent as a bottle of champagne. And some one said she made such an agreeable antidote, after looking at the canned beauty. It soon became patent to the knitting cabinet on the piazza and its male counterpart, the long-dis-tance-strategyrboard. tnat there was some connection between these two women that were as the poles of femininity. She of the complexion regarded the wrinkled one with an expression more nearly approaching terror than she had yet displayed. And the wrinkled one seemed to flash back an answer to the other's S. O. S., "You have nothing to fear." The mystery grew, the tension got on the nerves of the knitting cabi net and the long distance strategy board it was like spending one's vacation at a thrilling movie with the denouement never in sight. The "Lady with the Complexion" was beginning to lose some of her poise, and the knitting cabinet plied the wrinkled one with toasted marsh mallows and chocolate creams, but she wouldn't say a word, except that she and the lady Buddha had met before. The Advent of the Daughter. Everyone stopped reading de tective stories, the movies palled, even the auction sales were dull compared to the hotel mystery. Then one day the husband and six-tecn-ycar-old daughter of the Wrinkled Lady came to the hotel, and behold the cat was out of the bag before sweet sixteen had t-ten the first pound of chocolates offered by the knitting cabinet . ' The embalmed looking lady and the wrinkled one had been school mates, and the latter was four years the junior of the other, who "will never see fifty again," said the enfant terrible, biting two cho:o lates at once. y "But what's the matter with old perfect what gives her the waxed fLwer look?" the man over draft age inquired. "Oh, that's a long story," sweet sixteen began. "Once on a time she used to look like everyone else, thc.i she went u. for face culture." GOSSIP OF PEOPLE Seldom hasthe difference between the causes for which America and Germany are fighting been illustrat to their country. Abraham Lincoln's letter of sym pathy and condolence to the widow A baby daughter, Gwendolyn Ruth, was born to Dr. and Mrs. Adolph Sachs Tuesday. Mrs. J. R. Lehmer leaves Tues day to spend several months in the east and with her niece, Mrs. Rob ert Forgan. and Mr. Fortran at 157 East 81st street. New York. Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Weller, now in the east, are expected home November 1, and will be at the Blackstone. Mrs. W. H. McCord returned Thursday from Rochester, Minn., where she has been with Mr. Mc Cord. Mr. McCord is much im proved and out of immediate dan ger. Mrs. W. A. C. Tohnson returned the first of the week from the east. J tided while flying a few miles south east of Mather held near here late Tw Letters to a Mother Contrast Between Words of Lincoln and the Kaiser Typifies Difference Between Democracy and Autocracy. president and breathes democracy in every line. A contrast appears in a letter from the kaiser to a German wo- ed more forcibly than in two letters man. Mrs. Meter, of Delmenhorst to mothers who sacrificed their sons . Oldenburg, who has lost nine sons it. the present war. The two letters speak tor themselves: The KalseraLetter, His Majesty the Kaiser hears Flyer Dies in Fall. Sacramento, Cal., Sept. 27. Sec ond Lt. Arthur Thighen of Ala bama was instantly killed and Sec ond Lt. John Booker was slightly injured when their airplanes col Mrs. A. V. Kinsler. who has been in the east for several weeks, is ex pected home today. Mr. Tohn F. Stout and daughter, tin s i ms i . . . von i you mean icuiturr asicea Miss Gertrude stout, expect to leave a knitter purling wit!, care. inext week for Cambridge.' O.. and rather calls tt that, and she had Louisville. Kv.. where thev will atrocities done to herself to look spend several weeks. that q .eer look." The Rev. and Mrs. John E. Flock- "Atrocitiesl" chorused the knit- hart have returned from Lhicago ting cabinet and the long distance and are at the Colonial. strategy board at ones. "Um-umphl She had her wrinkles all filled up with paraffin and where her double chin was loose she had a little piece taken out." "You don't say so well wasn't she the tricky little Hun," mused the man above draft age, while the knitting cabinet relaxed. At last they were in possession of the mys tery, the mystery that had seemed to threaten - their constitional rights to health, wealth and the pursuit of happiness, for they all knew that the lady with the com plexion was years older than they were. Something there was about that petrified beauty that made her seem older than "She," and yet they coulden't just put a finger on it and describe it for the horrible unnatur al thing it was. "Mary," said the man above draft age, "Come out on the Boardwalk and I'll buy you something. Your honest wrinkles look good to me." Defense Chairman to Roost Liberty Loan ! ' ' ' ' . , Mrs. Harold Keller and small son, will arrive the first of the week to be with Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Keller. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Willis have returned from their summer home at Lake Francis. Minn., and have opened their home at 2565 Crown Point avenue. Floyd M. Smith, jr., returned last week to St. Paul school. Concord, M. H. Russell Peters will return Sunday evening to Cornell. Mrs. Harold Pritchett h,as leased her home and leaves this evening for California. Miss Menie Davis and Miss Daphne Peters, who went to New "ork to study reconstruction work, ha-e taken an apartment at Morn ingside, near Columbia college. Mrs. F. H. Davis and Miss Eliza beth, leave Wednesday to spend a month in New York at 14 East Six tieth street. Mrs. W. S. Poppleton has been the aruest for some time of Mrs. Charles H. Brown at Great Barring ton, Mass. Mrs. W. R. MeKeen has been spending the week in Washington. Mrs. Pryor Markel will make her Lome with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kitchen, during the ab sence of her, husband, Captain Mar kel, overseas. Mr. W. K. Potter of San Diego, Cal., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Webster. Mr. and Mrs. A. De Long of Los Angeles, Cal., are expected in several weeks to be :he guests of Mr. and Mrs. Webster. i io,. iai ;.a i,i juta, ot t,.e L ni versity of Nebraska, chairman of the State Council of Defense, woman's committee, is the principal woman speaker for the Fourth Liberty loan drive. Miss Hrbkova will make a tour of the state, speak ing on "Halting the Hun." "Call of Today." "World War and We," and "When Will the War be Won." Miss Hrbkova begins her tour October 2 at Beatrice. October 3 she speaks in Aurora. Where Style and Economy Meet LOHRMAN'S The Reliable Ladies' Tailor 433-35 Paxton Block To keep my tailors busy during the hot weather, I will make up some very stunning coats exact reproductions of original Imported Models. Come in and see them for yourself and Same from $15 to $20. It will pay you to investigate. I will also save you money on your Fall Suit Make Your $$ Have More Cents. I 34 !&W a chronic BUILDING UP OUR WOMANHOOD Given Up to Die by Her Friends, a Young Lady Recovers Her Health and Increaiea Weight 45 Pounds. A Powerful Nation Needs Strong Healthy Women. A nation la no stronger than its women. Hence, it is the duty of ev ery woman wheth er young, middle age, or in advanced life to preserve her health. If you arc sick and suffering dont wait until to morrow but aeek relief at onee to dav. T o m o r r ow vour illness may take turn. There Is remedy for almost every 111. Thousands have found Peruna to be that remedy as did Miss Clara Lohr of 21 N. Gold St, Grand Rapids, Michigan. She writes a friend: "I don't need Peruna any more. I am all well after taking six bottles. I weighed ninety pounds before I started and was poor and weakly. I had such a cough and splttinur all the time that I never expected to recover. My friends gave me up. I could eat nothing. Now I can eat and weigh 135 pounds. I most thankfully rec ommend Peruna to my friends." Miss Lohr's letter is an ! inspira tion, a message of hope to suffering women. It tells you that you too may be strong and well and vigor ous. Peruna may be had in either liquid or tablet form. Ask your deal er. If you value health, do not ac cept a substitute. Dr. Hartman's World Famous Peruna Tonic is what you want. The Peruna Com pany, Dept 79, Columbus, Ohio, also publish Dr. Hartman's Health Book. The book is free. Write for it Your dealer will give you a Pe runa Almanac. Adv. -A-I-N-S Not brute strength wins in time of war and in time of peace. The college trained Individual has ilways been in demand, but now the demand far exceeds the supply. Opportunity is now given to every working man or woman in Omaha to secure a college education. UNIVERSITY OF OMAHA NIGHT SCHOOL Opens Monday, Sept. 30. French Spanish Latin Journalism English .iljrebra " Phone W jb. 4845. COURSES Psychology Mental Tests Short Hand 24th and Evans. Radio Work Telegraphy Typewriting First Aid Drawing Other Courses riven on request Bixby, who gave five sons to the fnat you have sacrificed nine sons Aaaas I he Minn urip i r t . I r.i . I nauuu muk in iws i m aerense oi tne rainenana in tne k own wnerever tne tng isn ian-, present war. His Majesty is im guage is spoken. It speaks from : menseiy gratified by the faa, and in the great heart ot the martyred . recoenition is pleased to send his ' f I pnoiograpn, wun irame ana auto graph signature." Lincoln's Letter. Dear Madam: I have been shown in the files of the War Department a statement of the adjutant general of Massachusetts that you are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which should at tempt to beguile you irom the grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I can not refrain from tender ing to you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Re public they died to save. I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your be reavement and leave you only the ! cherished memory of the loved and : lost and the solemn pride that must i be yours to have laid so costly a ' sacrifice on the altar of freedom.' today. DONT LET THE JARS GET THIS HEADACHE Ring IS DlCCM WlNG-BtCAUif it'".o damp HSR6 IN TKIi t".l HOLD WW DEVELOP ON rnumn r.nmc! 3cr,ui veretTWE, IF AFTER IEO FROM THE 3ARSTrt RCOiorc iv,r PUB8ER RlNCJS . AND IF THE sous one mePT in a dmp place uufrc rut ftUPBERS WAV DECOMPOSE. I The free canning book, which the National War Garden Commission at Washington will send you for a two-cent stamp to p?y the posfge will tell you how to avoid this. Omaha Air Pilot Injured x in Plane Smash on Coast Lt. Ralph F. Coad was injured in an airplane accident at Marsh field, California, according to information received by relatives in this city Saturday. No details of the accident or the extent of the injuries wer( given in the message. llitllllllMllll!lllll!llllllllllll!liilllilllll1 I Adequate Window Lighting f 5 selles merchandise. We sell all all kinds of Mazda lamps. I ? Nebraska Power Co. I ' i i i ii i ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Skin Without Wrinkles Now Easy toHave There' no cxeui for anj womin hir ing wrtnklei nuw. It has been found that a simple mixture of eajcolite and witch haiel hi remarkable action upon the deepest wrinkles, no matter what their na ture, whether caused by worry, habitual frowning, debilitated condition or the ravages of Father Time. This harmless remedy, which anyone can easily make and use at home, acts both as an astrin gent and a tonic The combined effect of tightening the skin and he'ghtenlng ill vitality is to immediately affect every line and wrinkle, keeping the cuticle smooth and firm as In youth. The proportions are one ounce saxollte (powdered) to one-half pint witch hniel, ingredients which are found in every drag store The aolution should be axed as a wash lotion. It is equally effective in disposing of flahbtness of rheek and neck, as we'l as sagging below the eyes. Ad. P ilLltiUJl WlH I illO WrtK We have been giving facts and fig ures snowing where the Woodmen of the World furnishes the best and cheap est insurance consistent with safety, but NOW we want to impress upon every one who calls himself an Ameri can and who cherishes American ideals and institutions founded on Liberty to BUY LIBERTY BONDS so that we Americans and our sons will have some thing left of value to insure after this ' "T is over. "imnwl stay et oi;L -it -fetff for all particulars phont cr call on COL C. L MATHEIt, City Manager Phones! Office, D u. 470 O $ce, 801 W. O. W. BUg. Home, Benson 3S4J Home, 2704 65tn Ave. WOODMEN OF THE WORLD HON. W. A. FRASEIt, Sowreiin Command. OMAHA. NEB. iiiiiwiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiiiiBiiiiiiiiiiiii.n .3SL iwituMHiHiimiiiwii iwiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiinanwiiaP mm ' a a m ewey - ' t i-r4 ft XITT Colorado Springs' Finest and Largest Hostelry CHARLES A. SCHLOTTER, Manager. European Plan Restaurant Famed In the center of the city, surrounded by fifteen acres of garden and park. Golf, Tennis, Motoring. Garage. Turkish, Electric, Russian and Vapor Baths. Autumn is the most enjoyable season for motoring in Scenic Colorado. The Antlers Hotel Colorado Springs, Colorado. i i IS Delightful Climate Absolutely Fireproof A' y 3 Xuti;"'' -S TT" ('AXIL ft aIV vXf ' r i. Mall II M " - . J i.uiues.L , It rtttauMsj y34fss i SffM? I, r Opened September 15th, 1918 HOTEL CONANT I k c-- I ' m i 3 . - 'iu g i mi,..-"i OMAHA WELCOMES YOU Newest Most Con- veniently Located 250 ROOMS-250 BATHS S3 ED iin))))un 5Q33.r)uia ! "3 rm.. rrrrcttC mmmmmm ii W Room, with Bath S2.50 IOO with Bath S2.00 4 $2.23 100 with Bath SIJS0 A S1.7S Rates, $2.50 and Down S2.S0-S2.3S-S2 00-Sl.TS-Sl.80 4 1 6th and Harney Streets IN the very center of the shop ping and theatre district on direct car line from all depot. Thoroughly fireproof appeal ing in appointments and service. iaae Hit CMf Yieeir Omaha Horn Conant Hotel Co. cr Furs DeLuxe Be Certain that the Final Smart Touch of Your Furs is the Very Best Quality. Quality is one of the most important fea tures in choosing Furs the style, workman-, ship and all may be ruined by inferior quality. Let the fur rier be reliable and he will choose Furs of quality and combine them with style and workmanship, giving you a genuinely smart garment. For your own sake we urge an early selec tion of your FURS. Conditions indicate a marked advance in prices, but by choos ing your garment now and having it held you will save this advance. BUY FURS BY COMPARISON Furs DeLuxe 19th and Farnam Southeast Corner r YOUR DUTY TO BE ATTRACTIVE Have Pretty Dark Hair "La Creole" Hair Dressing la tha original hair color restorer, and not a dye, Applying it to your hair and scalp revives the color elands of nature, and restores your bair to a beautiful dark shade or to ita natural color. It is the onlv hair color restorer that will gradually darken all your gray or faded hair in this way. No matter how gray, nrematurely erav. faded or luaterw less your hair mlpht be, "La CreoU" Hair Dressnig will make ft beauti fully dark, soft and lustrous. "La Creole" Hair Dressing will not stain the scalp, wash or rub off, and Is easily applied bv simnlv combine or brushing through the hair. Don't be misled into buying soma cheap preparation. USE "LA CREOLE" HAIR DYR for gray or faded hair and retain tha appearance of youth. Also used by gentlemen to impart an even dark color to their gray hair, beard or mustache. For sale bv Sherman & McConnell Drug Store and all good drugstores everywhere. Mail orders from out-of-town customers filled promptly upon receipt of regular nnce, $1.20. ' La Creole Hair Dressing is sold on monev-haek guarantee. HEAVY HOISTING E. J.DAVIS 1212 Farnam St Tel. Deoi 83