Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 12, 1893, Page 15

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' THE OMATA DAILY BE E: SUNDAY; , MARCH 1 FEMININE FADS AND FANCIES The Girl Who Knows It All Contrasted With the Pensive Maid. THE CIGARETTE MANIA IN Dlatrimonial Chances Reducod to Flgures— Tomtoolery of Lawmakers— Rulnbow & Styles— ine Trimmings. Have you among your acquaintances wne particular individual of the feminine gender who knows it all? Of course you have, for her kind abounds in wholesale quantities, and your o would have to be very restricted if you did not hap- pen tomeet once in a while one of this disagrecable species. The strange part about it is that the woman who thinks she knows ENGLAND This other kind has o way of not seem- ing to know that you are there at all. She will stand and look out of a window and seem as absent-mind and oblivious ¢ matter how hard you try to get yourself attracted by the girl whois breaking her neck to fascinate you, that quiet figure over there keeps a-drawing and a-draw- ing, and you might as well give up fir \is sort ¢ 7irl is often not as placid ut least she keeps leading she isn't, . as she seems you on to thir Among the favorit ccupations of the n woman who earns her own live to be that of newspaper me have estimated t nd women en journ This estimate ridiculous on ace of it. mate would probably mor all the men en active is That osti- than cover ged in journalism in the United States. There are said to be in fact loss than 250 women journalists. At least that is the statement of cent authority, Elizabeth C. Jordon, in Lip- pincott “There is a distinction,” writes Miss s i M Jordon, “‘between newspaper writing and the Philadelphia Ti A8 ® | \vriting for the n.-“J[.u"..-yv.q. and the one least informed on the subject she | vounglady who ‘does a littie space work’ chooses to debate upon. Thosé who are | in the intervals of her social or business really competent to give advice and state | engagements was not considered in the opinions are usually silent unless their | compilation of these statistics. The 250 sentiments are absolutely drs 1| writ who have been eons ) of them,but the woman who ki all | newspaper women in the best according to her own estimate aivs her | the word. They hold staff positions on views with a lavishness that makes vou | journals of good standing or they have Jong to s h an action were | had ence which fits them for permissible. such positions; they rned She riles y y. she never | to recognize news when they he 1d rubs you the ri und if she says a y know how to pr nt it to the pub- thing is black you arve with a | in the most attractive form; they can desire that it is white, even | judge of its comparative value and the though you know for once she is right, and that black is black. She poses as an authority on fashion, religion, social laws and customs, the rules of card playing and the scionce of housekee If you touch on theosophy she is v with you, ready to correct ment you may make. If you ds the intricacics of polities she can give you points on the tariff or the silver bill, and so impresses yau with ir own in- finitesimal knowledge of things in gen- eral that before long you actually hate the sight of her. She is not popular, the woman who knows it all, and unle she once in a while will admit an allow a correction such a one i to narrow the circle of her acquaint- ances to those very fow unfortunates who cannot by any possibility get away from her. * : ¥ Tt is confessed at smoking is a recogni ee_in many ladies’ boudoirs of . The habit has become so s a cor- respondent of the that the present season has even bolder innovation at sever iongble dinner y have been served ettes’ with the gentle- men’s cigarettes or cigars. For several months the sale of 1 s’ ¢ ties by tobacconists has been a recognized branch of trade. Although th habit has been inereasing for s 1 years, it is less than a year since the small, mild, gold tipped little cylinders, openly marked and sold as “ladies’ cigarettes,” have been on the market. A society accused the em- incess Maud, the daughter of the prince of Wales, of being leaders in the cultivation of the feri- nine appetite for nicotine has been unrebuked. Prin Maud has a defender this week in the proprictor of a Piceadilly cigar store, who may be described as court tobacconist. He declares that Prine Maud does not smoke, adding, significantly, that he would be pretty sure to know if she did. He says, however, that he knows plenty of socief nen who do, -including at least one princess. It was an e aggera- tion, he explained, to say that it has be- come the rule of high society to @ the ladies with cigarettes after dinner. It was not yet common for ladies to smoke in the company of men, but there had been an astonishing increase within afew months in the consumption of ladies’ cigarettes. Ordinary observation confirms this statement. Returning from Paris by the Club train the other day, I noticed that two of a half-dozen ladies in the dining car smoked cigarettes with their coffee. Z » *"y Stat! s show that a law of chances governs in the vast majority of cases the ages at which men marry who are en- gaged in certain occupations. Work- men and artisans take unto themselves wives at an earlier age than those whose vocations are of a more intellectual Xind. Thus, miners, textile factory hands, laborers and artisans marry at an average of 3’01“‘5. Of these, the miners are first in the fleld, more than 100 of every 1,000 of them securing wives before they have become of age. Workers in textile fabrics run them close; then come shoemakers and tailors, and they are followed by artisans and laborers. Farmers and farmers' sons consider 25 early enough. Commercial clerks seck the pleasures of matrimon at 26, Shopkeepers and shopmen pos me the rapture a little while onger. Professional men and gentlemen of independent means rarely care to encumber themselve even with so d wife until the; ciightful a burden as a have toed the line of ars. Though the rich marry at a more ripe age than the working fraternity, they continue mar ving until long after the last named have ceased to wed. Whereas fourteen miners and twenty-five artisans in every 1,000 mar between the a and 40, near 100 of the professional and independent class do. It is explained in this way: The rich like to see something of the world and its ploasures before settling down to_sober matrimony. A laborer has ncither desire nor opportunity for it. When he has a house of his own, and a wife to look after it for him, he has attained, perhaps, to the height of his ambition. It is said a man is neither physically nor mentally mature until he i and if this is true, it stands to reason a man at that age should be bet- for fitted for the duties of a husband and ‘ather than a stripling of 21, 5 s The passive style of girl, the ve about whom other girls can see no at- traction, is the kind that is almost dangerous. She has a way of just fold- ing hev hands, standing still and looking at & man out of half-closed ey s that makes him feel awfully queer.” Some- how she can do more just standing still than the jumpy givl can do getting all over the pla There is something about her passiveness that is inflamma- givl ml'y, as it were. A man gets a crazy desire to see what she will be like when and then, instead of “rousin, , he gets *“roused” himself, and there is the devil to pay, and it is the man that pays and not the placid irl. She is as "placid when you have one with you Jn-ung as she was at first, And you never are really sure whether she knows that yoa tried to kiss her or not. 1t is this doubt that makes it so likely that yot take one or two more plunges at the same girl. That is why these placid 50 dangerous and expensive. But it's neve any good. She looks at you with those sleepy, quiet eyes, and you are as far off S oV There is another kind of placid girl, She iszot Ukely to be quite such a dan- gerous one as the kind that looks at you. amount of s newspaper: they if necessar t should be given in a n edit their own copy know something about can distinguish the waste of ma @ on but one side of their paper; they know that a news- paper office Is not a drawing room, and that they inot expect drawing-room rs in it; they have learned that the highest compliment an editor can pay his woman associate is to treat her asif she were a man, promptly repri- manding her on a blunder and giving her a word of praise for good work—if he happens to think of it. * ¥ Red haired blondes are rather The Indians worship red haired people, regarding them in the light of children of the sun. There have been poets who have gone into raptures over red hair, and called it *sun kissed.” According to a legend of old, the'devil, who tempted ous hermit in the desert, appea him in the form of a woman ied in a veil of the d st red ' which, as we are informed, “turned and twisted around her bosom like snakes of copper.” The moral of this story—for all stories must have a noral—is that red haived beauty is the most dangerously seductive of any, for his satanic majesty would not assume such a hirsute covering were it not that he considered it the most captivating web of all others in which to inv the soul of man. 1In this case, howeve regiously failed to accomplish his dark design, for the hermit refused to be smitten by the fascination of the tempt- ing siren who had ed his path. Curiously enough, though red hair is and has been symbolic of intense passion and cruelvy, it is also emblematic of the most innocent pur It is a color in which opposing extremes seem to meet and blend. %" The American nation exhibits in its heterogeneous character the results of this divinely directed law, without the operations of which -all other means toward the developmentof a common impulse of patriotism would be hindered and crippled, writes John Lambert Payne in an article on “The Secret of Happy Marriages” in the March Ladies’ Home Journal.sAn appeal to statistical facts is here opportune. By reference to the con- sus returns of 1881—those for 1891 being will be seen that there e then living in the United States 573,434 persons having native fathers and foreign mothers, and had native mothers and fore o These figures, while clearly establishing the fact that I had just indicate show the nature of the intermarriages which had taken place up to that time. It was a significant thing that the affini- ties formed between foreign men and na- tive women were considerable more than those between native men and foreign women. * s The pluekiest school teacher in Cone ut, and as pretty as she is brave, is Effie Walcott of Newtown. She teaches a small district school in Land's End, two miles from the Hawleysville station on the Housatonic railroad. She lives in Newtown and goes to Hawleys- ville on_the train every morning. On Wednesday, the day of the recent bliz- zard, she found that there would be no train, owing to the road being blockaded with snow. Wrapping her cloak closely about her, pinning her skirt up to the height of her knees, with a pair of rub- ber boots on her feet, she started out and walked the distance from Newtown to Hawleysville, a little over ten miles, and then to the school house, two mil, further on. She suffered no incon- venience from the remarkabie walk, and won the hearts of the district committee by her plucky exhibition of endurance. Py . v is told of Mrs. Morton's tact and courtesy, quite equal to the tra- dition of the Lady Washington's crush- ing a teacup on purpose to relieve the embarrassment of the guest who had in- advertently broken one of her eggshell cupsin his large and caraless hand. Mrs. Morton has a set of exquisitely painted doylies from the atelier of a noted Paris artist. One of her political dinner guests after dipping bis fing, in the bowl, drew out the priceless filmy square and crushed it into a ball, trying todry his hands as he talked learnealy with his hostess. Mrs. Morton smiled with a serenity for which it is hoped the recording angel will give her credit, and said: *Such flimsy doylies are useless me give you another—but you know the fush- ion.” Andthe greatful politician a cepted the napkin and never knew his mistake, pretty sto * e Children's frocks nearly all savor of the Empire style. In faet, they are re- productions in many instances the older costume: A dancing school costume for a young miss of eight was a fitted slip of “torquoise blue silk, cut square in the neck and filled in with a drawn guimpe of chiffon From the low ne falls a loc tunic of white gauze or chiffon, quite | like the dinner dresses of the elder si ters, veiling the costume, the only diffe, ence being in length. The sleeves are long and full to the wriste with a chiffon covering and white shoulder frills and a profusion of blue ribbon bows and sash ends. he dresses as a rule are shorter in the skirt, almost to the knees in girls of 6 or 8, being more in the French and English style. Double skirts are seen even on these diminutive costumes, and shoulder frills and capes imitating the | elders. . The princess of Hawaii, who is in this ocountry pleading for her throne, was christened Victoria Kawekin Kaiulani of you as if you were her maid: and no | | Kalaninuiahilapalapa Cleghorn. father, Archibald Scott Cleghorn, was a native' of Scotland and was Hawaiian : wmeral of customs when Quoen | Lilinokalani was deposed. Her mother new dead, was the Princess Like Like and sister of the late King Kalakaua, The princess is in her 18th year, is tall | and slender, has a dark complexion, soft brown e and features that suggest | just a suspicion of Kanaka origin. Up | % the recent revolution at Honolulu, Kafulani was but a school girl at South: ining and sentiment go, an English girl, b u.v Those legislators who are making fools of themselves by introducing bills to prohibit the wearing of erinoline know nothing of the force of fashion and the nature of women. American ladies are as sensible as they are beautiful and can be safely trusted to regulate their costumes to suit themselves, being as- sured in advance that they will always suit American men. It is their grovi- dential peculiarity that they look lovely in anything—clinging skirts, wide skirts, poke bonnets, flat bonnets, soft laces, men's shirt fronts, no matter what, 80 long as the sweet face smiles above and the tiny boot peeps out beneath. If wo have to enlarge our doors, stages, cars and sidewalks so as to accommodat the lad to walk about in erinc that will be a small pr pay for the privilege of pleasing the fair women who are the sunshine of our lives and give us an angelic foretaste of heaven here below. Such a be X ildering display as the new spring goods make. Was there ever suel a variety, such a wealth of choice In single store may be noted among the new productions an almost countless variety of fancy silks. There are pom dour, satin damassee, broche tolle de soie, satin de chines in seeded designs, taffcta raye, Pekin omber, satin duchesse, washable surahs, habuntani bengaline, muscovite, armure faille and quite a novelty, paillet de soie. This is not all by any means, but so high sound- ing are the names of new fabrics that it is impossib! to learn them all. All these varieties appear in as many differ- ent colors, the newest being the opal, roi, aloes, platina, cerisette and salambo. The Ophelia tints are pointed out as most desirable, side of which are shown two other new tints known as coquel and Etamines, hernanis, pointilles gonals are common terms in new ristic stor e Among the many charact told of W prises ther he recei a commission gown which a red 'to bave absolutely unique great man spent the night consulting with his collaborateur, but the idea refused to materialize. Weary with their fruitless toil, the three tists stepped out on a balcony to rest is one of ived for a fancy and forget disappointment in a garett “Voila! it is the dawn,” said one Ciel! it is the dry cried Worth, and * with its subtle harmonies of gray with gold, was the succe * and violet and rose shot through s of the ball. *"x Miss Louise Tmogen Guiney, who is creating quite a sensation as a pla; wright, is a Boston girl and rece her education in a convent. She is one of the youngest and brightest writer engaged in literary work today, posse ing great intellectual ability and uncom- mon scholarship. She is a daughter of the late General Patrick Guiney and in- herits her literary talents from her father, who was a man of parts. In ap- pearance Miss Guiney is more scholarly than beautiful. She is earnest and sym- pathetic in manner and Las a low soft voice, a valuable trait in woman. Miss Guiney's translation of “The Crust of Society” is making a tremendous hit. She also has an original play on the Boston boards which brings her a splen- did income. * \ ' “‘Attend all ye who list to hear,” cries he New York Sun. The consensus of conservative opinion justifies the order- ing of the spring gown without a hoop. What the summer will bring forth no seer dares foretell. The cholera and the crinoline are both imminent and for the latter there is no quarantine. While emancipated womanhood agitates its right to manipulate the affairs of state man_legislators in the parliament of fashion formulate the laws governing the hoop and its reign. It is said that Patii’s mail oxceeds that of acabinet minister, and_that a great number of her correspondents seem to have the idea that Craig-y-Nos was in- tended for a foundling asylum, and that the diva’s chief mission in life is to fill it with cradles. All sorts and conditions of babies are offered to her. Every in- fant prodigy that ever lisped ‘‘Home, Sweet Home;" babies with black hairand babies with blonde locks: babies with blue orbs and babies with eyes as dark as the diva’s have been generously offered her, until, if she had taken but half of them, she would be vfficiating in the capacity of matron of a children’s home. ) " A very smart way of dressing the hair is the tight little wad directly in the back of the head. This has a center as smooth as satin, and is bound around with a smooth or plaited roll of hair. It is the sort of hair one would arrange for riding, knowing that there would be no danger of escapement. It is a very knowing sort of coiffure, justas last year was the smooth, tightiy-braided, but larger coils, that occupied the same position, but not strictly becoming. There have been tendencies toward the revival of the Cadogan braid. This is a braid started high at the back of the head, carried down w the nape of the neck and turned under, where it is fastened by a bow of ribbon or an orna- mental clasp. This is especially becom- ing to young girl Fushion Notes. Purple and violet gauze veils are the very newest style. Ribbon rosettes of gold and colored enamels are mounted on large shell hair- pins. Women wear as many rings on their i as they can. Rings ave a perfect A jewel fastened on the forehead by a gold” wire is worn by London society women. Evening silks cent effc atr show avariety of opales- Satin ribbon is popular as nming material Ribbons, particularly in satin faced velvet and gros grain, were never more stylish for trimming on gown Tt would be almost worth while to have inoline come in order to see how the yele girl grasps the situation. Long coats with full skirts to the khees of black satin will be among the favorite street wraps this winter, bi are pinched up, rolled up, twisted up and turned up in every imaginable shape. Most of the dresses that are now being mude have.no darts at the top of the skirt, the fullness being gathered into the waist band. Corselets are as fashionable as ever, and they are made of all kinds of ma~ New liats have fairly wide brims, and | Hor | 'torials—wool, silk, port, England. She had gone in_for everything usual with English school | | girls, and become, so far as English qlvet, brocade, em- broidery and lace. £ Dainty embroidery is the distinctive feature of new Parig lingerie Lace seoms to have lost ivifavor for the trim- | ming of underwear, Bluck and_white ixa fashionable com- bination, and many/ hlack dresses have white vests or plastrons introduced, with very often fine jot giMiles. Plumetis, a Frenchadotted Swiss, with tinted designs, is .ane of the dainty things sure t form at_least one gown in the wardrobe of the summer g The return of the sKawl is prophecied. A suggestion of it has appeared i scarfs of lace or velvet, that encircle the shoulders and hang to the foot of the gown. The long shoulder scams of the 1830 styles do not meet with much favor, but the skirts very full around the bottom are making th way toward more gen- eral recognition. A new bonnet has an enormously high poke front. The sides come down well toward the ears, and there is a pro- nounced cape, which is evidently the forerunner of the old-fashioned gy psy bonnet, A new dress for a girl is in princesse shape, with full sleeves, i 1 cuffs and nds of trimming from shoulder- seams to the hem of the skirt in front. This is & one-piece suit, and appropr for a girl of 6 to 9 years. A pretty trimming and on quite new for a ball dress consists of ng row satin vibbon crossed to form a deep work, while at each intersection is a tiny flower or bow. This ornamenta- tion is pretty in colors over white, A pretty and stylish evening dvess has atrimming of a twelve-inch flounce of lace headed with three pufls of soft silk; another has three ruffles set a little dis- tance apart, each one headed with u narrow riohon tied in knots at intervals of a couple of inches, Challi silks and flowered will, as a rule, accompanied by barmonizing | , which will used for puffed sleeves, cape collars, folded belts, ruffles and other rative acjuncts. sathered, notched, plaited and plain bretelles appear upon very many of the simply made spring dresses of ‘medium weight fabri The gathered bretelles impart the revived sloping effect to the printed muslins, fancy China and dotted” suiahs he shoulders: the plain bretelles some- what narrower, yet they give breadth to the shoulders and slenderness to the waist. Square lace in the Anne of Austria style ave worn on children's dresses as well as being the latest ad- junct of a grown up dinner costume. A pretty little evening dress for a young girlof 5 is a straight Watteau costume hanging in folds from the shoulders to the knees and gathered or smocked around the neck, leaving a self-heading as a neck finish. A novelty bonnet Kas a round crown, not nnlike that of a small turban, and a collars brim of velvet or sitk ‘made on ribbon wire or other fine wire and laid in side plaits. The brim igslightly spread over the front and may be-bent down at the sides as best suits thig style of the fac These soft brims are. exceedingly man- ageable. They can be shaped to the face and made to produce almost any effect desired. Many of the new pocketbooks are made large enough §6 'hold a handker. chief, well as a few.cards and money, as few dresses are made with pockets. The most favored are the morocco books of all tints, from cream and pearl-white, gray and tan to match the gown, Rus sian blue, dark blie and very brilliant red. Card ecases come.to match the portmonnaie, yet it is a convenience to have both in one 5 All sorts of blossoms are made in vel- vet in fac-simile of nature and their edges tipped with glittering frost parti- cles. Quillsin plain or shaded colors are greatly used. Gold sequins are used in evening dress trimming as fringes or sgunglcn, and a charming bonnet made of overlapping gold spangles was seen. The entire bonnet was composed of this solid “‘coat of mail” in spangles and had for ornament only some rosettes of black satin and a bunch of small plumes and black velvet strings. Feminine Personals. Miss Eleanor Dean of Boston landed a 126-pound tarpon with rod and reel the other day. The youngest lady in the new cabinet circle is Miss Herbert, who presides over the home of the secretary of the nav Miss Avery of Limonia, Fla., has offered 160 acres of land and a cottage to be used as a home for orphans under the direction of the W. C. T. U. Mrs. Anna E. Field has been drawn to serve on a petit jury in the federal court in Minneapolis, the first instance of the kind in the history of the state. Princess Margaret of Prussia received from her godmother, the queen of Italy, as a wedding gift, a tiara of diamonds said to be worth not less than $50,000. A fortune teller who lived at Roselle, N. J., died recently, leaving an estate valued at over 340,000, nearly all of which she had acquired in the course of her busine Miss Dangerfield of Auburn' is the president of her class of eighty-six mem- bers, eighty-three of ‘whom are men, in the law department in the University of New York. She isathorough Latinand sreek scholar, and has tagen a course at Cornell. Miss Edmonia Lewis, a negro sculptor of Paris, is to execute on the order of the negro women of Allegheny, Pa., a bust of Phillis Wheatley, an educated negro woman who lived in New England a century ago. The bust will be sent to the World's fair. Mrs. Dow, who ewns and manages such large street cay j{hterests at Dover, N. H., is said to be not only the street car magnate, but ulgp “a skilled house- wife, a judicious mother, a good shot with a gun and pistel- a fine swimmer and the possessor of: property worth $200,000," Mme. de Lesseph. the wife of ‘“lo Grand Francais,” can write equally well in French and English. She wrote a novel several years agb and published it anonymously.” She_is collecting her husband’s private 'paj and corr spondence, and prffoses, it is said, to © a book explatming and defending his course in regard ¥ Panama. Mrs. Louise J. Bamey, wife of the re- tired millicnairve carybuilder, E, E. Bar- who owns twodsrge James ver estates and recently purchased the his- i estown island, has just given ciation for the Prese of Virginia Antiquities that part of the | island “on which are located the old church, graveyard ana other historie landmarks. Long before Elaine Goodale went as a missionary t the Indians tobecome the wife of an educated savage, Delight Sar- gent had tried to convert the Choctaws | and Cherokees in Tennessoe and Georgia, and married E. C. Boudinot, who was & prominent figure in the land troubles between the Cherokees and the United States. After the assassination of her hushand, Mrs. Boudinot wentto Troy, N, Y., where the vencrable ludy died a vation | 2, 1893—SIXTEEN PAGES, Burano had the s stitch in guipu making which had been supposed to be lost to the world faculti until she could impart the s lacomakers of the newly | sehool in Venice, ret ostablished every head in si with hey ) 1 out guns looking for each and Unlike the Dutch Process 0 Alkalies —on— Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’S BreakfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soluble. "n has morethan three times | the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or " . Sugar, and is far more eco- nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED, Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & C0., Dorchester, Mass THEBEST WAY T SE3UAE SA1 ACCOMMODATIONS FOIR Ti \World's Golumbian Expositi 18 THROUGH THE { Write for Descriptive Circulars. { 910 The Monaduock, D I WAS BIG. I WASFAT. I FELT MEAN. I TOOK PILLS. ITOOK SALTS. I GOT LEAN. few day ago at the age of 92, Queen Margherita of Italy has a pas- sion for beautiful lace. It was discov- ered that & bedridden old woman in Handsome Women Can Lose Weight Fast. Homely Men Look Better if Thin. Try Dr. Edison’s System. No Dieting. Band worth Twice the Money. Oftice of H. M. Burton, Hardware, Cary Sta- | 4, 1803, tion. Til., Jun. 1 Dr. Edison—Dear Sir: T am well p your treatment of obesity. The band twico the money it cost, for comfort. reduced my weight ton’pounds. [ welgh 2 vow, and [ did welgh 265, Yours truly, H. M. Buntox They Are Doing Me Cood. Earlville, 111, May 2; L Loring & Co: Inclosed find §2.5) for which please send mo the other two bottles of Dr. Kdison’s Obos. ity Pills. Ihavo used ono and thiok they are doing the work. M. HALEY, I, 0. Box 7. ° i Talk So Much About Your Pills. from them | nd me 3 bottles C. 0. 1%, aid ob J. MORIIS. 408 Por: Streot Feel BetterandWeigh I3 Pounds Less Goshen, Ind.. Sept. 15, 182 Gentlemen: nclosed [ send you 81, for which you please send me three botties of the obesity pills. taking the fourth bottle and feel very much better and welzh 13 pounds less taan when i began takiog theai. L wlil continus your trantuent. MRS, J. C. MeCoNN touth Sixth Streat. An (ndividusl whose height is 5 feet 1ioch should welgn 125 pounds i 3 15) 5 feet 8inchas 5 feot 10 inches 1] Dr. Edison says: It may bo wall to point out. that'in my experience, which s necessarily very sid rable. many troublesome skin diseases such. zone. proriasis, uticaria, otc., are prim. 0d by b sity. and ad tha fat and fiwh iy ity Fruit Saltand the Tections have almost magically disappoare: ‘I ho Obesity Frult Salt i u; Piils 81,50 lor 8400 ot this t our fall (3 Loring & C , orlng ()mpany . New York Cley. FITSCURED From U. 8. Jowrnal of Medicine.) Prot. W. L1 Pecke,who makes aspecialty of Epilepsy, has without doubt treated and cured more cases ths suyliving Physician ; his succes have heard of cascs of 20 y g cured by h Tle publishesa valuable work on this disease which he weads with a large bottle of bis absolyte cure, free to 8oy sufferer who may send their 1,0, bnd Express ade dress. We advise anyonc wishing a cure to address, Frol. W, IL. PEEKE, ¥. D., ¢ Cedar 5t., New York, et of one particular | The queen had her lifo prolonged and hor restored by good food and wine to the Susan B. Anthony declaros that she | | was impelicd to remain an old maid by 200 I | noticing, as she strolled through a New A | England’ graveyard vears ago, the con- of the stantly recurring inscription, “Sacred above | to the memory of A, 1« of the late Z She then and there took style mental fronclad oath to remain forey X unmarried rather than have her ex- clocks istence recorded for future generations 3 simply as the * of some man must be Mrs. Sanford of a rural distriet in closed | Tennessee aspires 1o be the leader of | fashion there, and Sunduy s | out at into church wearing hoops y | sneored, hor husband took it up, and | $4.00. | very quickly half the male portion of They the audiencé were engnged in punching c there will be several widows before the atfair is over. e —_ The Rev. Sam Jones has begun a three weelks series of meetings at Koko: Ind A tabernacle ¢ has been ereet e | ol | il e | (R pable of seating 5,000 persons | 1 Chicago Entertainmant Bureau | | MAX MEYER & BRO. CO. ESTABLISHED 1866. run 8 days and strike. Solid Walnut, I'ITME For thoughtful houscheepors to seloct n now, nccurate and fine | | CLOCK | From among our immenso stook of the handsomost designs to be found in Europe anfl America, for - Our Grand Closing Out Sale Isnow goingon. A fow of our reduced prices. Black Ennmolod Clocks, Hanging Clocks helizod Iron Clocks S Cles Murbio ¢ ware, guarantesd best manufacturars, at § | | | | | l N. B We also offe and be conviucea | MAX MEYER & BRO. C 16th and Faor BOOK ever issued, andtypical of the great Columbian year, A Mirror of American Horticulture to date. 20 Pa i te new engravings, The cover design, skeiched above, printed in ten colors and gold 18 of real artistic beauty. It § tells the whole story for the Garden, Lawn and Farm. _Our ever blooming ~Cannas, § Leat Calia, Callfornia Sweet Peas, 7' We offer a few BARGAINS to ' introduce our Plants and Bulbs 4Grand Tuberou Begonias nd separate lors for d0c. ;B Gladiolus named, W hite, 1low, Striped, Searletand Pink for 25c. Splendid Cannas, each named, inciuding mous Madam Crozy, only bc, These be had clsewhere for lcss than 81, lis Johnsonil, the scarlet and white. 1.00, only 6k, 8 Grand Roses, LESS THAN 1 PKL Sweet Peas Eckford's, 100 1Pkt Nastartium Aurors, . be.[and new runr vy o e above”secures he ful ureser: VAUGHAN’S SEED STORE .cucres; SIVEN AWAS FREE mation concerning flowers at the [/ PRICE 1 Ekt. Ransy, Imp, German, . 15c. Jupert, Wonler of the World, 2 1 Pkt. Mignonette Gabriel. . 10c. our catalogue, nd complete! 26 BARCLAY ST 88 STATE ST, CATALOGUE MA" The Wonderful Twelve-Row Puzzle. ir, cannot be had elsewhere, 1 Pkt. Carnai e, I o Tl vk WLl The entire collection, 5 pkts., with catalogue, 24¢. |World's Fair Edition. Write to-day, ED FOR ONLY 6 CENTS, We offer Valuable Prizes for its Solution! ll’nol. then at once call upen the lcading Furnishing Goods Dealers Have you had one? gy i who i sunly souwih one and” Ereg of gost, What Brand is on your collar? IS IT THE (EM 25¢. BRAND ? . IS IT THE ! (Con& (0. 20c. BRAND ? ! Itought to be one or the other; they are the very best values to be bad for the prices. Ready-made Shirt is a sure fitand will suit you, CLUETT, COON & CO. vanoe i The i | " ‘We make it and we know. Prizes for first solution received from Omalia up to and ineludin warded to followingz numes and adrosses: Amiel Maznuson, Rankin, Omuha Nur. Bank; W. C. Wakeley, Stand 1rd Oil Cc Wheeier, Douglas and 15ch 'sts.; W, A, Fostor, 1014 Faroam st : ton Block: W.'A. Picl. 16th and Douglas sts.: C. A, Dewu, Gea. (. Cooper, 00 J ones st. Without money andwithyas To the SICK Aro not woell, an have 1) money or timo to sve 1 1+ or | Cutoatthename print »1 hary TRIPANS on NEW IMICAL CO., YORK Pastodton a postal eard Write your own nsme 91 tha other siteof t rdi pat it in the Post Offf stura mall you will zet w lettor an ) | somene licinothat will 40 vo 1 Try 1t und tellycu | Food. fitends. —— LISTEN TO THE REPORT OF CAMOLE JUNIPER, i LADIES UsE | ! Camole Juniper | I without fear of any bad results thereafter. It 1s safe. relinbie and harm L, Succeads aufter I all other reedies have fa! i s Maunufastured only by the ; : CAMOLE JUNIPER CO., | e o~ So'd by dru sts OMABA, | DrDOWNS 1316 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. The eminent spsclalist 1n nervous. clironke, privaty, bl istered graduate n medicine. asdipiomys Al 0ortif tarrh. 103t manhood semiast 0813, 1 a1l formy Of prevats di 2l Now tLreatment £or 1034 Of VILAL pawar, a a9 may by troatal at homs Mediolue or Instrumants 393t by @A OF BEPra Ll 422uraly PASKIL, 1) M AFAS 10 37, UN3 prsInalinteryiar prafaccal. Consnltailo (cas Gortesp Flesulbife 3attree. Odeaholrs)a m 0¥ p.@. Sualaysl) s 10 13 m. adurinary disey show. is stilitreating wib 2 Book (Mys cular.

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