THE COURIER. N 1 v. Jffice. iei... Profeaaional Directory. tor. Benj. F. Bailey "to."- B1 ISfta? &enln,.b, appointment. Snnda,. IS to ftS&bAl0 P m I Dr. J. B. Trickey, I Refractioniat only 1 Office, 1035 O street. 10 t J-Ito 9 to 12 a. m 4 p.m. DENTISTS office 63o.Louls N. Wente3.D.S.JB&SS3i alMl I sollthitreet. I office oiiver Johnson, D.D.sJre.?oTreerHatIe'',l ) 1 1105 O street Phone. ..LlOiS-j Dr. Rllth M. WOOd. SIS So. 16th St. I !ours: f 1 JA.M. ; S to 4 P.M SUMMER OUTINGS via. "The Burlington" TO HOMDO. Mill HHD II BUCK 111!!. to $18.60 IS $I5.HM$n.J0,$l4.00 $14.30$J7.50 i 31 a $18.50,515 00 $21.50 $18.25 & 3 5 U $15.00 $18.85 2 ft3"" 0.g $15.00 Ml 88 P - $25.00 $19.00 $30.25 12 -?? ra $30.00 $32.00 DATES OF SALE. Aug. 1 to 10 Sept. 1 to 10 June 18 to 30 July JOth to Aug. 31st All tickets sold at the above rates are limited for Return to Oct. 31. Call and get full information. City Ticket Office 6or. 10th and O Streets. Telephone 235. Burlington Depot 7th St., Between P and Q. Telephone 25. Finest Shoes that can be Made. on Everything. SANDERSON'S 1213 O Street i id Ypu Eo 1 S know a woman to put her foot g 3) in it who was not glad of it? if We mean the 8 porosis (nn si. mm ft 9 Sold only by a iBSIER X ROGERS, i 1043 O St., I (5) l.!Hkln NjeUpflfA W c F. H. PIERS0N, Qrain, groMsions and Stocks. 1035 K St. . Lincoln, Nefar. 1043 O St., l.!Hkln NjeUpflfA W miJlif inuioarva gs &n5 $9999999 Cycle Photographs J Athletic Photographs J Photographs of Babies J Photographs of Groups Exterior Views 2 i sZmjtSwi&nJA 3 9 THE PHOTOGRAPHER 129 South Eleventh Street. J These panels are on opposite walls of the chapel and lead up to the Resurrec tion windows over the altar. The en tire work occupied two years, a single head often being composed of a thou sand or more pieces of glass, all care fully selected as to color, and accurately fitted together. The most recent work eleven figure panels representing coin making is now being placed in the new Philadelphia mint. This department of women workers has varied from eighteen to thirty-five in number, and has proved beyond question that women are not only equal to, but especially fitted by nature for this branch of artisan art work. They are paid at exactly the same rate as the men of equal skill who do the same work. These men receive more per week, because their hours are longer, and they are able to produce more in a week's time; physical strength and endurance being in this, as in all other occupations, an important factor in the question of comparison between the work of men and that of women. CLARA WOLCOTT DRISCOLL, Tiffany Studios, 333 Fourth Ave., N. Y. Bookbinding. A letter from Mies Starr of Hull Houae, Chicago, contributes to our re port the following lines, which have im portant suggestions for those whose aim is to do the best work in bookbinding: "There is some danger of the old and dignified craft of bookbinding becoming a modern 'fad.' Becaupe it is not one of the great arts, acknowledged to re quire years of patient effort, it is assum ed to be something which can be learned in a few months. The truth is that a year of constant work is the least time sufficient to master the craft, and there are but few competent teachers who are willing to take women as pupils. Mr. Cobden-Sanderson cf London takes a few pupils, and one is indeed highly for tunate to be received by him. Several of his pupils will doubtless be ready and competent to take pupils in the near future, probably in New York or Chi cago. "Women are received by some French binders, but under disadvantages. It is possible, however, to get instruction in Paris. In tooling, the French technique is acknowledged to be the beet." In the revival of the artist-artisan's work, with which the new century has come in, no art craft shows its influence more than that of hand book-binding. Two years ago Mr. Cobden-Sanderson, one of the greatest binders of the pres ent day. said: "Women should do the best work in this craft, for they possess all the essential qualities of success patience for detail, lightness of touch, and dexterous fingers." Women today are Droving that he is right. There are at present in America a small number of women who are producing work which compares favorably with that of the best binders. Two binderies, east and west, are al ready established where women may work at all the processes of this exact ing craft, and where they may learn to bind a book with a perfection of detail which can not fail to produce a satisfy ing result. Other successful workers are returning from their studies abroad, and soon hand bookbinding, which offers so large a field to women for skilled labor, will have its trained teachers and workshops in every city in our country. FLORENCE FOOTE, The Evelyn Nordhofp Bindery, 115 East 23d Street, New York. Leather Work. The revival of decorative leather work has opened an exceptional opportunity for woman's artistic activity. So much eo, in fact, that the commercial oppor tunity has been forced and the market flooded with inferior work. In the pres ent reaction there is no longer room for the cheap production, though an ample field remains for choice, conscientious, individual expression, both in reproduc ing the old leathers of Spain, Italy and the orient and in contemporaneous conception. Our women have recog nized this opportunity, and from New York to California they are producing leather work worthy in dignity and strength of the material to which it is applied. Leather applique has undoubt edly reached its most artistic develop ment through Mrs. Burton of Santa Barbara, and women are producing strik ingly original work in leather carving and coloring. I mention only the names of pioneers in the various styles of work, as space is somewhat limited. Historical tradition, process, tech nique and design must all be considered in legitimate leather work. Indiscreet use of ornament and the lack of technic al precision result in so-called womanish work; but we are fast outgrowing the galling, comparative judgment of our work, "not as mere work, but as mero woman's work," and in leather, as in every other branch of art, woman is winning a worthy position for herself among individual workers. THE MISSES RIPLEY, 434 Fifth Avenue, New York. Home Weaving. Among the arte of manufacture, that of weaving is one of the most indispen sable, and covers the widest range of usefulness. Formerly this was a do mestic industry, and there are btill cer tain art qualities inherent in domestic weaving, which are impossible to ma chine manufactures. There are industries of production or manufacture, either indigenous or pecu liarly adapted to every section of the country, and there are women's clubs, with art committees also, in every sec tion. Whatever is the traditional or dominant industry, from silk raising to rag-carpet weaving, it can be made either beautiful or profitable and popu lar by the knowledge of these selected women. CANDACE WHEELER, 115 East 23d Street, New York. Arts and Crafts of the Indian. The decorative arts practised by the American Indians when wo came among them, far from being fostered and developed by our presence, have greatly Buffered, and in some cases have become extinct. Contempt for native production was implied when we ig nored them, generation after generation, until the Indians themselves turned from the beautiful handicrafts of their ancestors. Today the young people of a tribe are rarely skilled in basket mak ing, the traditions of this ancient art being kept alive chiefly by the industry of the old squawB. Some of the arts and crafts of the IndianB are hopelessly lost, othere are perilously near extinction, but may be preserved by prompt and judicious aid. The government Ib ex tending a helpful hand through the In dian commission. Basketry is to be re vived in the Indian homes and regular ly taught on the reservations in the government schools. This will furnish the Indian with a natural and congenial source of self-support, thereby preserv ing his self-respect and promoting his physical and mental well-being. Of all Indian industries basketry is the most characteristic and varied. It is inter esting, decorative, and readily adaptable to civilized uses. The Indian basket weavers have never been surpassed. The old and artistic weaves are fast becom ing priceless. A museum recently paid 1300 for a Pome basket. We Americana annually pay thousands of dollars for imported baskets that could better be made at home by our needy and neg lected Indian wards. The Navajos have the foundations of self-support laid in their blanket weaving, which needs only (Continued on Page 10.) 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