Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 14, 1895, Page 20

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1895, has been studying musie in New York City | are heralded by returned importers as Just adop! . Shattuek's W THE DOCTOR'S COLUMN. with the fntention of goiag on the operatic | the fashionable features of the autumn and | Manual” as its authority {n parllamentasy |y 2. Chjcago. -My nervous sysiem s somae stage. She will be in Ghicago during the | winter seasons. procedure, thereby following the example of | wiiit impaired. nggvivatal by the use of whiss summer, and in the falli will go to Paris (0 | The belt buckle ie here in all ts glory. | the New York Federation, which did the | key. tobacco nnd othet excemses. FPlease advise continue her studies. The latest in the way of an inexpensive | samo thing last autumn. A new edltion of | M® uf & remedy adapted fo my ¢ In Kentucky & man has brought sult | yuckle is of filigree silver set with imnitation | this hook, revised and enlarged by Mre | ~ Take Testine, in five drop doses, thres agiinst a young woman for breach of promlse. | tyrquoise, This, fastened to a belt of white [ Shattuck, fs te be fssued soon | times daily. Regulate the bowels by use of ‘The gallant man threatens to have the young | g y hrolithic Salte, once or twice a week | ¢ , 18 very fetching. Lovers of 8ir Waiter Scott are now pr DA Veerk g o J mmmfw@mmmm@mmmm@@mmm@lMMWMMMWMMMMH.Wflmwwmmmmmflwwmwmfiwwwmwwuflm.wmw 4 ouble if he d h "hila.—Take Testine ve dro) threaten trouble It he dona it The Judke of | poG"sril cglored silk and In Tale thread | of one of the great novellevs mont valued | o 8 . K. Phila—Take Teatine in five drop PARISAIN MODLES, looks upon France not as the center of the | that wil be required. ,\.’n‘r“man:vnm(u“m:;:l- says (he Jury shall be! composed of women, | ave lengthwise atrips of insertion extend- | and intimate frionds. ~ Seotle lite was a8 || (G iC! et Gy L o orld iro erely, o eres u ork as comp om \ -t o6 ad. bire sanda | dramatio 4y ovels are fa ing, Ane ks en Curdine, The K for & 1 the Novelties :l-”n’{ I‘m:fllfl:‘l:ulrrn:-m plx|fl’|<‘:'l‘|nT“rll\y\'n» r: :I\rl:n":',’p«::rmng Zwe will say—of bookkeep- | they being eligible for jury service under the | !NE up over the instep and circular bands | dramatic as his novels are o g o or Sammer and the Novelties | whom 1o ceurrences ance 1 heart, in three drop doscs, for the same 5ove. Lo deaN e the supple curves of tone recalls one of its most thrill . 3 Por Autamn correspondingly diminished influence. Neither | ing, artificial flower making of the like, there | W constitution ol (o8 ahBre s ey s SO RE S £ e vy when he steod, as | Ume’and in same manner. A dose of Nathrolithic Salts once or twice a week ette nor Louls Philippe reminis- |Is simpl comparison. stion A . Vi ess | seom " h PARIS, July d—Thers 18 & ceisls in dress, | Marle Antoinett nor Louls Philippe remints- | I8 siuply no comparison. =~ The suggesuon WOMEN DIUM A ERS, Mohair will prevail as a very popular dress | scomed, a ruined man Wauld B KEVIRBIN: S, concos Interest greatly this larger clientele, | heretofore made as to women going Into & —- material for fall and autumn house gowns, | F. H. the Nawab Shums-e-Jehan, Begum | "yt "¢ “phijg.—lease state a remedy for gase The late style has exhausted ftselt and need | (ot G "hiiher what it is that fs interest- | dening as a busines: has Mwaya }-rwleum}"fl Working Up a Proficabie Trade at Summer | 410 cont and skirt costumes for the stre of Murshedabad, and widow of the late | (ric dyapepsia and constipation? 1 ; 18 & start fresh on a new. Which I8 10t ing the world? At any rate, thie much is :::‘ur«:-’lur'\luln’:" . ;:"‘r':j!‘““'r""x‘r‘““‘,"'(‘ ::.r:;.'-lnz‘.-r"“hl:: Resorta This material will appear in heavier welghts | Nawah Nizim, has made a donation of | muko Nathrolithic Salts, one taespoonful easy as saying Jack Robinson, or as|clear. Parls has seen this spring ll"("’hl”‘""‘"l such enterprises not only require, to ‘begin “I suppose your business fn these things | and with a very high luster, and of aimost & | R#.25.000 toward buflding the proposed Hostel|jn “hair tumbler of water half hour before making novel garment out of an accidental | epoclis many tmes brovght to lIKht and | ieh enternrines wet euiy teulion 0 WEL | drops oft after people gt out of town for the | corded weave. for the Indian female medical students | yreakfast and dinner, three times a_weeks miscut, though the majority of folks may so I'"‘""(flI \:"“‘"“";":" Gl Wk g da il | searén'of a living does not possess, but they | Summer,” said a New York Advertiser man | Half sleeves made of lawn, muslin, net, in- at. thie Campbell hospital, Caleutta R o | Cerebrine, extract of ‘the brain, in five-drop think. ey, " turbans and dervish | als0 presuppose -an amount of business ex- | to the head of one of the largest firms dealing | sertion and lace are this season frequently icgum wighes. that the ifostel"should e | doses thrée times datly For much Is to be considered. Theremust | [Flowered 'fabrics, turbans And RN poricice which Is rare anywhere, but pe- | in sporting goods in the country, nodding to- | WOrn indoors with gowns which have an ar- | €4 (64 (e Lady Elliott Hostel [ vd -~ Am troubled with pime be, for one thing, an understanding between | #kirts are of the east, the €8st HEE OV | ouliarly rare among the sex which s Not|warq g display of tenni e warapher. | FANKement of very convenient removable | ~Miss Mary Garrctt of Balimore. who fs | pios oo my ta e RUERCSE 0 cure, the dressmakers and the manufacturers, o Is In all men's minds. - Fhey tpetld Of CEREL orinarily given a business training. ard a display of tennis and golfing parapher- | ;.. Ferom 'the elbow downward. The arm | generally conceded to be the richest un- [ Take Nathrolithic § in two teaspoons that harmony shall exist between the mate- | of Chitral expeditions, of Pta NiotIoe ot HOW TO LEARN LY thows through the transparent substitute with | married woman in America, lives fn the | ful doses in a tumbler of wafer twice a week Fial and the form. Much also 18 to be sen- | from the Soudan, of Japanese victories, o y LBARN. . Jut you don't suppose right, was the | pretty effcot plainest and least ostentatious way. She has | before breakfast. Use borax and water as sitively felt; for if a style s to run the le- | geographical parcelings out of Asin to the | Usually a woman facing the world with the | = 000 S0t DR BIPRRE e R ato a <o are made | M0 hobbies or pet extravagances wnd devotes | lotion; & teaspoonful of borax to A quart gitimate cycle of a style, which is to say a | west, need of extracting trom it & subsistence for | AISCT, VL vou think as we ourselyes used 10 | - Dressing-casee for stateroom use are ede | 0o or moncy and most of her tme o | of warm water course of two or three years, it must reflect THE LATEST FANCIES. herselt has only her two hands, a plentitul | gy b yoce ghoked up for the summer rush. | ore beucd with white tape and embroidered | the development of varfous philanthrople and | R, A. C., New York~T hurt my back by o stone soclal condltions. Varlous things have been Isot sleeves are In o fair way | [EnOrance of ‘most things and an earnest | (TE8 hEYe Sto Summer rush: | are bound with white tape and embro SAESNTTInA) NEHEHSH falling on’ it, and am afiadd of spinal disease, tried and abandoned. The moment is dimi- | AL 1ast the glgot sieeves ave I8, & T0F WER | desire to labor. | For such & woman the best Last summer we got a new idea that we | i white linen floss, with the names of the 3 B of disappearing. _Poor old leg o on, cult. Fashion all spring has been turning over | has hung on well; it had its wirtves te0 advice is to seck a place as ssistant either | A7¢ EOME to boom this year. It came in one | contents of the various. pockets and ome | Fannie Croger is the literary sensation of | qupo 5 003 | fo a florist or a truck gardener, or else as- | day With one of our traveling men, a pretty. | gentiment like “Bon voyage" on the outside. | the day at Berlin. She has only written one and over the modes of the past hundred years | it Was susceptible of a great variety of ‘lfi“' 1| sistant to the head gardener on some large Tr{xlls;:{ Young, Juing, wuo_ tured oo g be | manl g or 80, t0 see If among them are any that may | 0ne could distinguleh in a fashionable 8%- | yrivate place or in a park. Her work in [ hi8 sister. She wanted to try her havd at o i Doukor form. some of them | volume, just published, containing four short | tigq ‘hot bathing and frictio p Tl s besker torm, some o the | 5t . BABARCI SLMELE OW | o o, bnaing”Tften wic urki %erve as a polnt of new departure. A num- | sembly the Worth gigot, severe and simple, | groon houses should be quite as valughle as | traveling for us in the summer, and it was | L0 0 rooms to hold clusters of tropical | dlfeady celebrated, ~ Some other tales lad W. T. PARKER, M. D. and iike an old Venctian siceve; the Morin- |, mup's fn potting, watering, fighting in- | 1ot &N casy mauicr to tell her that she prob- | EEe O O ims, or o few long-stemmed | been read at conversazioues, and hud BeEH | " L A( tateors of IRGUIEY. Oh. Sediea) Blossier gigot, which bubbled over deliclously | foite. picking and packing flowers, vegetables | ably Wduid not be worth her salt to us. Still o o o roup of equally | much admired. She fs an Austrlan, Is the | gubjects directed to the Columbia Chemical at top and was gracefully slender below: the | or eryit transplanting and making cuttings; | that was what we thought and we had to re- | American i (e IRl PR ade | daughter of a civil engineer and has been on | Company, Washington, 1. C., will be an= Rouff gigot, which broke out into wonderful | {iqeed. the ordinary quick witted, deft fin | fuse to give her a salary and explained to | long-stemmed Hhes TRESE BEEEE I8 G the stage, swertd free, either in these columns or by butterfiies or bows; the Felix sleeve, ete red irl would find sueh duties far easier | NF that summer was not our scason for trade, | of a Ih‘kh‘.\ v]' ished _pal w”'nw ST Mrs. Ada Tims Klocker, the noted turf- | mail direct. One, at least, of the new leeves that would | thay learning telegraphy or bookkeeping. T.is | OUF business being done in the main months | crystal, and make a very ¢fsc prosure. | woman ~trom Independence, Ta,, hasn't a ™R \ "NT I ON everybody has got & bish p sleeve everybody | yer duties out of doors would be qually “But she was o of the persevering | made of striped gace silk patter ned with m‘" race meetings. Her services are preferred i have ot one, and all will be sald and | lnt and pleatant by the caroful stuly of | kInd. an age-end young woman, with con- | rosebuds. The large sleeves are set on be- | [U¢ CECRER [€r, REEUCER Rre, BUECTRCT | Tho most wonde: ful therapeutic done. Or, so it seems, for it is all of a|the methods of her "”l”‘””’\ of the ways of victions and the courage of them. She said [ low the shoulders, giving the IKIKU.'.P":' t, correspondent, and when she was making re- | discovery since the days of Jenuer, WHdth to the wrist, and ts there confined Into | planta. und of books upon the subject. whe | People often find themselves in the moun- | which threatens to destroy the one comfort | RRUIBOREIE MG WD A0€ (R MEFLHE BT oo b npIn paliatisl e e a band. However, there Is no knowing | might without diffculty fit hesself for the | tains or at the s i the country | of full sleeves. ~The back is finished With & | gought” and employed by all the leading| For diseases of the brain and nervous What the dresamakers may do when It comes | pluco of a skisled head gardener, who 18 well | Minus half the implements for playlng games | frill of black lace which forms a busaue, and | SR 80 Country. LR to the pinch, for their resources are inscrut- | paid for his knowledge and who does no—or : “E'"‘” v"\HV:fl f;' l:l others 1‘.:: or break | a wide luce cape-like flounce starts on “:','. Mrs. George William Curtls, the widow of | MEDULLINE, o from the Bptaal Cord able. scarcely any—manual labor at all. Lhowithiey statted 'with othetdibebome son. | side of tie. frontiund hixngs fellTRCFOARRMES |\ S 0inGieq aulior, easayiat and! BHOIAT, ¢ cpilcpsy, Locomotor Ataxia, ete. ANOTHER SLEEVE NOVELTY. AS A SOURCE OF INCOME provide the means of |" ik, bt cannot stioulders: ’ & il may be seen almost any of these fine summer | CARDINE - From the Heart. Another new sleve, with more seeming | oo (oo T icence and ambition | do o at the 2-cent country she The midsummer silks are here and elting | afternoons driving a spirited team of horses For diseases of the heart, possibilities in the way of design, is that |, cor WORCR B G L0 the profession | “This we belloved to be true after she |2t Prices to tempt al womankind — TECE® |on Richmond Ter Staten Island. Among | TESTINE, For premature decay. which has been transformed out of the bal- | (et \2 U SPRACHC BRATE 0 oF parks and | spoke of it, though It had not occurred to us, | 4¢ dainty white taffetas, showing & GO0 | her nelghbors Mrs. Curtis has won almost | OVARINE, For disnscs of Women. loon, and drops to the elbow like a doubled | o EEIGCRET 08 B B s nds I8 ona of | but we told her we could not infringa on | colored stripe and a shower of ANAISUREH] s much renown for her good horsemanship | THYROIDINE, for Eczema und impurities of rufle. It is cnormously wide, and i par- |y AR G50 O G T ahd it i a busine s | our retail customers' trade, and that she | Dlossoms; wash Indlas, which are co8l SUC|as she has for her deeds of kindness and the blood. ticularly beautiful when accordion plaited. | L8 DS, PG SCETMIO in this country, | better see some of them. refreshing In color and design, and BOrgeOus | churity to. those fn need and distress. Dosc, 8 Drops. ics. Two Drachms, $1.00 The blouse should be plaited, too, and as [ GefS PR BERELE 0 ntry life among She did, and came back to say that they | Plalds in faint des ur‘ lilaw and green | " Nellie Murphy of the Antlers hotel, | ALL 4 BEBAV IO EheR the edge of the l-\u\xl~v rn“Hx llll a line \;”\"l;“"' \Wealthy increases and there is an ever-grow- | would not give her a salary and woud not ”'"‘(‘i:“:“““""”" L DERIOL R UILIN AR Colorado Springs, is sald to be the only LS edge of the sleeve, the effect is somewhat that | 0 pajiaf of the value and Importance of [ allow her commission enough to make it | *! L1 woman room eclerk in a large hotel in this | F arin cctions d o of a cape. In a delightful gown for Trou- L.‘.’Fh in towns. For this prnfmlmh\“f s in | worth while. She proposed o become one | Large sailor and Marle Antoinette collars of L For Malarial Affections and all inflamma 0 Of | country. In England the position is often | tory diseases of which fever is an accom- ville ie seen this idea in modification. The | a1} yonorable and well paid ones—wide knowl- | of our retail customers herself, and I ac- | velvet will appear upon next season’s BOWDS | yeoiq by women, and travelers will remember | paniment. Of inestimable value in neural- <kirt is of aipaca, pale mauve, the blouse | eqge and native ability are required, but | ceded. I had beecme so intercsted in her | and costumes exactly jn the same style a8 | pow they have little tea parties in the rooms | Kla: for sick headache a specific. of mauve mousseline de soie, accordion | these are two qualities within the range of | ‘sticktoativeness’ and general air of knowing | those of lace, lawn, and grass linen are NOW | yugt back of the office. There they drink tea | I'ViCe, Per box of 20 pills, te; 1007pllls, §2. plaited, and falling over the belt all round. | women as well as of men, and there {8 | what she was about that I offered her a line | worn. They will be silk-lined and inter|ang eat bread and jam, at the same time NATROLITHIC SALTS and the sleove is an accordion plaiting of the | nothing in the nature of the profession which | of samples to start out with. lined with crinoline. Some of the newest | kooning an eye on the office window and a | For habitual constipation. torpor of the mousseline, that falls to the elbow and A';‘xnu\\- it unsuited for \\mnvlu; 1.-41[0\-«1. the 1 'l\l was the middle of the summer before | sailor collars that nm-n||1|m||)""'"““”‘Y‘ “‘M" lookout for the wants of guests, "““';l! Mlmurh'l’n of‘ (‘M“H\'l‘r. ';v-nlnvhe. 1830 DRE confined round the armhole with a huge puff | wonder is that hey have not heretofore seen | she began, but she did amazingly well. costumes fresh from Europe have tabbed or A ! cer learn to | EAStric © dyspepsia, intestinal ' dyspepsi — of decp violet satin, wide over the arm and | its special adaptability to their needs. “This summer she has bead ont miice the | stoll tronts lnstead of sharp-polnted ends |, THOR® 1AREIng geniises who nev DA want of appetite, languor and debility. AS ber have been set up to try what the public | growing narrower underneath, sling shape. Here no manual labor at all is required, | first summer hotel opened, and when she | that reach the belt. pleasure that May Wilkins Is of TR ')‘-.'\’.3«":«\(- o bm}lg’b“ S| 188 10 fquss. would have to say to them; models of the | The upper edge of this puff is set in the | but an accurate and extensive knowledge of | was in the other day she told me she meant | myore is a new hat for garden parties shown | disposition. She says that she can write Lk Sl e Louls XVI. and of the 1830-40 period mainly. | arm seam. violet belt. The neck has pearl- | the nature and needs of plants is necessary, | to go south next winter to the resorts there | \Ttha most exelusive shops. It is a picture | 1,000 words a day easily enough when sne 1o | COMUMBIA CHEMICAL COMPANY, And thus far these tentative models have | .yprojdered mauve passementerie set in and | & capacity to draw working plans, a knowl- | and travel the vear round. Tt dla made of filmy white itk mull with | obliged o do so, bit N paan Ler aneiy Wasnington, D. been the only novelties of the season. shaped in a sort of gusset form, with a point | edge of the best methods of draining, sod-| ~‘Yes and no. She does and sho doesn't o “',“',' cation of delicate white straw toward | of necessity to keep her at work Slu-' is REJUVENATING OLD STYLES. in back and front, building it up to the ears, | ding, laying down toads aud paths, and a follow the methods of the man drummer. ‘(‘,‘]‘" ‘adge of the brim. The straw ls very | not “strong-minded” in other ways. She is Among the principal revivals have been|and over this turns a muslin needleworked | taste for dceign. All this can be a 'lu‘:;‘d_ Ste works like the smartest traveling sales- | |8 ©HG 00 (00 otk design. 1t gives an | fond of open fires and of doing dainty fichus, turbans, long shoulder seams called | Valois collar, with very original effect. by any woman of taste and capacity. She | man, but we do not get any expense account \ffective finish to the cloudlike loops of mull. | feminine handiwork. PA RO ZE of 1830, and flowered materials. .Close caps are at the top of many sleeves, | can famijarize herselt with the relative vir- | for cigars or drinks on her route. She goes | effective ‘“ Ry (A WHICE AT A 00 | L TRAres KFaval Vorskent Ave: Rixal . The fichu came from the wardrobe of Marle | Which throws the fulness down low on the | tues of blue stone, gravel and macadam; | to the varlous hotels, takes an advantageous | The hat ls entircty e d present five Russian women Antoinette, which wardrobe, of the Triunon | aem in 1830 style, and ae it gets more and | learn the proper grades for the fall of water, | rocm, shows her samples and takes her or- trimming but the loops and ends of }null- who study astronomy in their native country. period, was early in March laid before Par-| more the fashion fo cut shoulder seams very | the best slope for terraces, the distance at | ders. As she turns in orders for more good Some new and very pretty “picture” dresses [ One of them is Countess Bobrinski, who is istans'in @ play at the Porte St. Martin, o~ | Joie" {jicce caps furnish a good way to | Walch trees should stand from one another, | than do many of our small retailers, there for gummer luncheons, garden parties, pic- | quite rich, and spends a great deal of money Medulline, extract of sthe Spinal Cord, In five drop doses, three times daily. C. r sale by KUHN & CO., 15th and Dougla quisitely reconstituted by Doucet. Every- | jonki, iesE Fiy RaaCCao i nIRY, nd the proper season for setting out the sev- | 1o reason why she should not have' the low- | nics, and similar occasions are made in|for astronomical purposes. Three = other BB (810 0 thens coitumer: Baold the new | o nen down s ';;P‘:E("‘]rl \':,‘.]'(','\,g“" L& eral varicties of hedges. She must know | est net prices, and we give them=o her,” tolonial, chatelaine and other unique styles. | 1adies, Mmes. Maximova, Teplijakowa and styles! It Is Doucet that has lanced the NECK DE! what kind of grass grows best under the heavy | Tais glimpse behind her back of the sum- | The full skirts are simply but artistically ar- | Bronskaja, are busy with the study of the | o oo o000y mode! But it was not so. The movement | That opera bouffe neck garniture that con- | ghade of trees; what sort flourishes in the | mer girl drummer opens up a line of prom- | rapged, and all the “pleture’ portion displays planets.” The fifth is a Mrs. Shilowa. Their ! sing a e following Louls XVI. dwindled down to the fichu, and | sists of a magic bunch under each ear has | peating sun, and what d will lace with its | ising possibilities for the smart young busi- | jgelt in the bodice essays were so satisfactory that they have | Nebraska factories.[If you cannot find what this soon merged into a variation of the little | died the death from exc When such u‘lxr- woven roots a steep incline of earth. She | ness woman. A dealer in all the details of | yy.co dresses are made of i . silk-warp | been labeled “important” by the Academy of [\, want, communicate with the manuface Bhoulder capes familiar for two vears | ing comes to be hung like ausages in the | must be aware of the preferences of vines | the toilet table, from hand mirrors to cold | aeite. cioth - o fayetts Hilver-biua, | Sclences. past. Clearly it is not a reminder of Marie | shops at a few sous u|-{‘ "‘o H“ld-u’ I*"ll'n' for sunny or shady sides of walls; of the cream, is going to send a young woman round | oo Toaam color, or nun' In the medical department of the Uni- | 'urers as to what dealers handle thelr goods. Antoinette that the public wants.™~The long | Elegance has supplanted it with the Valois, | dry s vi s % z to the summer hotcls to supply those who | ™" s i it | versity of Michigan the two who stood high- > 7 E shoulder persists, particularly In evening | that is to say, with a turn-over collar, Cuffs | misture necessa \ an- | have run out of luxurious necessities of fem- | The Delft embroldery on coarse linen With | ext were Meiyil Shie and Ida Kaln, girls M___fl;‘” B e N T dress, but It always sugkests 1530, and has | may be worn or not, but the collar is obll- | other. She must be an authority on the best | inine life and do not have the fascinating, | Its handsome sutching in shades of biue | from Kiukiang, China. They are probably BEMIS ( Bt VAL faubhsd the staus of anbibllation | gatoryi it I the latent chic. | methoa of treating a and just how and | high-priced summer shops of Newport or Bar | Orlental cotton, is likely to remain long In | {he only two co-eds of their race in America, S OMAHA BAG CO. Its sole significance appears to be a reaction [ The burning and difficult questions of how | when pruning is desiri A “quick eye to|Harbor to buy from. fash'on. The bunches of flowess in one co™n°r | anq are noted in Ann Arbor for their ability from houlders (hat have been too high. The | many godets to put in one's Skirt can be | see the possibility of any natural features of | A big New York wholesale clothing house | and the transverse band across the opposite | ang “brightness. They came to Amerlea turban idea, of more interest, is developed | shortly answered by side plaiting the skirt | the land that is to be laid out is also most | has had one of its largest routes in charge | angie give an effective appearance to a tei- | three years a at the solicitation of Miss in certain hat trimmings, where the band is | all around, or by gathering it all around, as | necessary. of a woman for the past two years. She | cloth, which is still further increased by the | Howe, a miszionary from Ann Arbor, and drawn tight under an overhanging crown, | some extreme elegantes do who wish to be ONE WOMA VIT. goes over the ground herself, visiting the | border, a sort of shell pattern which, when | hardly knew a word of English. Each is 2 Ry : and tied at one side with an unpretending | 1§30 throughout: or by plaiting it around | o0 o Foe RIS R L g | 01 customers of the fiem for which she | the surrounding linen is cut away, forms a | years old, and they graduate next year as BREWERIKS. bow and a feather thrust uto the knot, like | the front and sides and having five godets | tnder ths AneClon 18 & VECRHIREE SR travels and introducing thelr goods to new | series of well shaped scollops round the | M. D.'s. ' Their plan is to return to China S that worn by Marie Antoinette in a familiar | i the back, or, finally, by having it plain in hundreds of dollars in a fruitless en- | dcalers. edges and spread the Christian gospel among thefr OMAHA BREWING A\SOUM]OV portrait by Lebrun. Also in an evening coif- | front, a wide box-pleat on each side and | many Wunfrets 8 BEEER G ERETE B The claim being made that a woman In | yorc elogant are the open fronted Jos>phine | countrywomen as y onaries, fure, with chiffon tied in a rosette on one | godets from thence around. Width is the [ IGaVOF to fll Mp & WERE TP ted away the | Such a capacity would have a number of L AT S LR A I A et iibeiedtii e ‘ Ca load shipments made In our own refriges side’ of the head and & scarf passing thence | on1< real necessity. e R e Tovtinie It A womas | ARDOYihE" experien nedlidEvasiDiank: wio- g | o8 BONNEEIACE 00 TRREREL o EEREE L WOMAN MUCH THE SAME: rator cars. Blue Ribbon, Elite Export, Vienna across the top to end in another knot on the % NEWEST FABRICS. cartloadstof ‘earit o It. A Wopan |a handsome young widow, was asked about | fota silks. These make beaufiful tea gowns L B SAME Export, and Family Export, delivered to all other side, a mass of curls being pushed for- THE NEWES 3 who had just ~set up for Wer-| vy I have found men universally ready | Worn over blouse fronts and petticoats of Ward of the roseties ovor eaen Sak. in s way| Everything s unbleached and the talk is |self as a ~ garden designer chanced |4\ 1 MENE SRURC MER Bnitersally ready | ngpy"yellow or rose pink China silk bor- ks i suggesting & portrait of Lebrun herself, As |all of “string” color. A model dress has the | to visit the Juse ~and begged o be | onoiin“Gaman's manner makes a bid for. | dered with two rows of cluny lace insertion. COrFEL, to the flowered fabrics, they possibly give | skirt of string colored canvas and a bodice | allowed to try her hand on the spot, which ok Woman's manner makes 8 bid for | The sleeves are in bishop's style, with deep | Oh, thou of Grectan-Helles long renowned, o & more sign of permanence than the rest, |and gigot sleeves of string colored taffeta, the | she dug out to form a shallow pool into Nike a sbit-brained woodio T shauta b | frills of Iace falling from the elbow. The | Thiee thousand vears have passed, sweet CONSOLIDATED COFFZE C) though it would be rash to predict a conquest ted like one, but I've had respectful | back portions of the gowns are en princesse, | gince fi haraldeatwithtioy R b 4 'y for what nes been tried %0 many times and treatment and a good stroke of luck in | with a narrow but deeply pleated Watteau | The freaks of nymphs, the gods of ancient | Coffee Roasters, Spice Grinders, Manufacture has hitherto failed. g business from the first. fold falling from between the shoulders be- s Germun Baking Powder and German Dry THE MANUFACTURER'S DIFFICULTIES. was a saleswoman and found my | low a lace yoke. ;:fll'";\;m;lli‘n”IT\_h“'l“l H\";l'{’!m y Hep Yeast, 1414 and 1416 Harney Omaha, Neb Often enough In the last 100 years the man- 3 health failing. My physician advised my | giyiish costumes of pale buft colored linen | Of direful jewe ufacturers have pressed figured stuff upon being In the open air. I didwt know how | guck with small dots of black scattered over | The sculpiure e, 4 the public, but never with any permanent 3 to do anything but sell goods and [ had to | ;o cyrface are made with full untrimmed | Stand of the g the maid divine, e RONNEEE e ranit han. not. boors it (o6 o on earning my living and that of my | W SATIOGE AR IRC W, T e slightly | Byronic lov repasia’s ancient line, DRUMMOND CARRIAGE (). dressmakers, nor conscientiously with the > : little by, so T suggested going on the roa. | ST, €10 005 SCREL RIU, Q0L o rERlRiElolys RUd R HOrS AR brebls B T e Chnt mrs it Do auiaine % The head of the firm was amused, but 1 | tabbed: b ot Halad Sprungy BUE EubPaTilinen and DAl beacing exife on thele lle, i Wes 8 n ) asked for a trial and. finally. got it and | that are finished with five rows of the narrow- | Where Niads ronmed and fiery Sappho sung; | own make vehicles, and well lop buggy for assimilate them. % Saked pat tr ¥ 11 aet black ribbon, which also borders the edge | Land of devotion, and Calypso's name, £0.00 besides. Write them. 18th and Harney, i R i since then have had no trouble In keeping s g ; 3 eyt ihodtel = n England there is to be noticed an effort \ 2 1l (HobiaTeal mariie ool aaRE e R walals s of Pinder, and Minervi's fame; | = to put flowered silks upon the fashion by 3 é my place on the traveling force. LAl e traw | Wake not to glory or to mortal scars, artificial forcing, but the movement will coma A 3 3 4 ; “It seems to me that my line of woman's | of the mutton-lei sleev The yellow straw | Or'ever rouse” the thunderbolts of walrs. : BRI s iy he morement bl eom 2 £ ® ) cloaks and outer garments generally can be | sailor hat en suite is decorated with a band R AR e a3y 2 ! #old much better by women than by men; | and loops of wide black velvet ribbon, and a 1 S. K L[L“A PREE R LD = Thos only opnortunity for 3 o d women wear them and women see their | cluster of field daisies of the ‘black-eyed e & . £o0 A8 208 § B good points better than a man can see and | Susan” variety. = . S 95 Soid ixecal (Tlour, By e g \y S - L oy gt i B &7 S SR e o anon s | WIS IOYSI, sehool mums crush e ¢ B, Manmser " omtm . sle at the expense 7 - ‘| \ = y are heavy things to handle, | racent is the one which st prese: se Shine fc aj and note reform’ = e = ! R s e s S \ b s ks by | ol the oo i mu bresnt st e £ Wity s woe st wave, |~ omwrromn Faoronia 5 i 3 \ hotel to help me, or some one wherever 2 i . NS ;| The gladi: g hts, Biill = \ o o predi degree of ce 3 e e o e it \ oo 1 M 107 me. 7" "M || ary o prdic, il ny oo of coiny | S e S o | OMAHK UPHOLSTERING (0. 4 g 16 unpopulprlty, 3 B 1 2 Much better, thank you, aven't been Dioe SR ORE . O ittt | Hauled taut is she, newly madg, | i’fi."‘l‘;fih‘.‘t‘ 5“.‘1[.‘:]“ ::‘ not v\‘i"{‘x‘xml"”\“ o elic | AN S A R ! budgets :;r g... i ‘l'lrll"(‘\l.llll' o predict the | To fathom facts or start a hew crusade. Manufacturers of Parlor Fumiture, Lounge have been made (0 help the Industry by wear- 3 going ‘on the road’ I did what most women | revival of the Louls XVE anl we ' Don't never doubt, bt min has it R L P e g AN bave been made (0 help the indueiry by wear. / st would do, arrived in Chicago, tired and [ may safely expect the appearance of the 3 S IALILON 1| RYAste HRalerEOIs: l.x“e“ mxk;m\t”":_; 3 |’|‘|\-‘; m]:‘-‘( men's dress / 7 train sick, ewallowed a mouthful of food, | 0ld-time gowns in the early autumn. To nd Island, Neb, G e ‘ e I even more antagonistic to decorated stufls - / §e o \ drank two or three cups of tea and started | be sure, they will be modified somewhat, Al ICE AND COAL. nea‘:] s thal ((J) “I(;““""\l'll. It 1s ll_l)t'hil as [ ' out on my work. But I soon learned better [ and gracefully adjusted to suit present n- CONNUBIALLTIES, TR T TSRS EhHy A outer o k::}ku;oum(l:”1;:;-:‘1‘\;10”{::: / than that. When I have been traveling | ditions of taste, but that does not alter the —_ SOUTH OMAHA ICE AND COALCO. SRR R0 e, Jook o imiore peatty. tiah Ak veral hours now, I Test on my arrival, | fact that fashion is to repeat herself, even| gwitzerland grants one divorce to every h b = a Turkish bath, have a good dinner | if it is not quite on the old lines. i AR : domen, and even the: high patronage of the FA O A e LR R e - :m‘m,\ tyo marriages; an comparel “m.] one prince’ of Wales, which has been solicited JULY PROMENADE TOILETS. fobios tos Anl tossh ! sh ues that rival the eob: a midsummer | to 132 in Holland and one to 6577 in England 5 i MEN id vegetables and the things | v pi Sitiie ing tone ¢ cannot make such an Idea acceptable to that o A , sky, pink like the chang'ng tones of the after | An Alabama judge has created consterna g0 to the civilized light dinners we are : ¢ g fashion. If it is tried one of two things 3 which the waters of the spring were col- | ot 7 ners We are | glow of sunset, greens (hat repeat every [ tion among the bachelors of that staie by will happen; either it will be dropped as soon | Lo e, TN} .N"\",,‘}(T.y‘:."M"(",\X&',;:ir‘.,p}fl £0 8% | lected. This she filled with the Bgyptian 'l:fl‘fJ‘,.”“‘““‘:; ‘\f‘l‘lh‘“‘,;:.',’,’.‘uf",‘.'.',’",{,’“"‘lf‘"’;"l'\‘,g varying tint of turf and foilage, grays like | deciding that if a man puts his arm around 88 the novelty ceases to amuse, or else it | (0 14Ve Only & ¥i it 3 | papyrus plant, pink and white lotus, biue [ Pacy™, o gkt LRy, the morning mists of the ocean, and every | the waist of a marriageable woman it is ' 4 a bouffant blouse front of mauve gauze. High ¥ 2 good and be nourishing. e next morning » | ON WORKS. Wil modify the form of men's dress, develop- | 1o BHEER PO LT CCqlowork collar and | Nile lillies and common pond lil'ies. Gold | [ giare in on my rounds and I sell more concelvable de of brown—these are the |prima facie evidence that he has proposed to 3 ing the vest into a long skirted ‘waistcoat | MO0 | fish were put in to keep the water clear. | goods than if I'd gone about it fagged out | Summer colors favored of fashion, most fre- | her. anufacturing and Repalring of all kinds of such as was fashionable when men did for- [ “"RN (01 on worn, but mostly for skirts | and forget-me-nots, lilies of the valley and ey haiira. quently seen in union with other tones,| The bishop of Coventry, England who re- | machinery, engines, pumps, elevators, printing merly wear brocades. Which it is likely to |, APACH * i ferns planted about the edge, and at once the he. traveling salesmen them- | friendly or otherwise, black in many cases |cently got married, madé everybody laugh | preses hangers, shafting and couplings 14 alone by fastidious people. It makes a useful v th g be there is no need to ask. “ 2 2 3 % 4 ok unsightly marsh was transformed into a thing | g, are plame for the curres dea | acting as mediator, this sombre dye being |on his return from his honeymoon by preach- | and 1408 Howard-st., Omaha. skirt; it looks like silk and is much more & are to blay nt idea ¥ [ 0 The form of garment that suits decorated ¢ gt i : of entrancing beauty. that a ‘drummer’ must spend his employ- | brought into requisition even with the dain- | IN& a sermon on the topic “The Penitent’s S ___ durable. But near the face it does not look : D ploy e < - fabrics s looze and flowing, 1t fs sum- | Jurable. Hat Bedt (N8 Ot Boral, & is un- | Of late there is a tendency to revive the | erg' money ‘treating’ all the customers. A | tiest tints and {rabrics, ite presence imparting | Return. PHOENIX FOUNDRY €). clently unconstrained by fitting not to sug. | 30 Well: Wke bt tefCe it reian U IR Mo T old beautiful fashions of the formal garden | good many purchasing firms have long since | character to every clas of material, whether | The wedding of Dr. W. L. Vroom and Miss | : gest a cutlcule and to allow the qualities of | (TOWRME Whien fackets are made of it they | Vith s trellises, alleys, rose-cloisters, clipped | begin to think t it might be their owu | dlaphanous or substantial. Blanche Miller the other day in the old [ Firs Hydrants, Water and Gas Pipes,specials, the texture to be displayed for themselves, | have facings of silk or velvet, or even cloth, | hedges and geometrical beds, and for these | ;oney that paid for these treats. Anyway, -~ ~ Paramus Dutch church at Ridgewood, N. J,, | Boller Fronts and Fittings, Street r'y. Thus the decoration will seem to enrich the | Mave facings of L 00 VOVE B REE Glods | the * taste and capacities ' of the Woman | I have found it possible to sell goods with: Feminine Notes. was the first wedding in the church since that | wheels. Architectural lon works. fabric and not the person. Such garments | o N¢Te 18 v P designer are especially fitted. She can In | gut bribing the buyers and instcad of | ~Mrs. Willard, wife of the English actor, is | of Aaron Burr and Mrs. Theodosia Prevost, [ I6ih-st., Omaha. those tho orient has shown us, ‘and. the | for general wear than an alpaca skirt and | fesiener tre @RECMY ST 08 GO o | Gt BT ehasers out to see the sights | founding in London a convalescent b for | 113 years o, h ® | mus suse. But do not choose black; a | he cre create pleasance,” as a » purchasers o see the sights | founding in Londol onvalescent home for | 113 years ago. e aesthetle idea fn them, is at the opposite pole | Muslin blouse. P % | Elizabethan age used to call these tiny gar- || ite often invited to dine with their | actors and actresses. The olst celebra p 1 v 4 eflecting surface is particularly horrible in | Blizabethan age Y am quite often th the s 5 he custom of celebrating gold and sil- RON lrumEII::L-»rlwd at by western dress. EMASHBR G hnd white alpaca | dens, which will grow each year M beauty, | familles.” The Misses Brice, daughters of Senator | ver weddings belongs to Germany. The sil PAXTO & VIERLING IRGN WORKS. 2 AND COMFORT IN DRESS. ¥ Manufacturers of all kinds of cotton and bure lap bags, cotton flour sacks and twine a spece fulty. GlI-616-618 S. 11th-St. 2 parts of city. W 2 \ SPICEN, BAKING u.m e stic and Steam Coal. We have the best, e 1601 nam-st. Telephone: Office 873, yard, 1766 J. A. Doe, General Manager. IRON WORKS, is being very much worn. DA CONE * | and ‘be a sort of lovely outdoor dwelling Noveliies for the Boudolr. Brice, will make a bicycle and kodak tour m}\“ wedding occurred on the twenty-fifth Jufaciurery Of NISHliadturol [amn ok s sures to evel neral | Foundry, Machine and Blacksmith mifll:‘u{xerf&;ru“:ex‘r:::;li::l.fi“uln‘.fl:;trlum pun; PR I:\“llml::‘ “lll‘l‘~Illli‘~'h§{'::“m'd peasures L0 eVen | o 4.ineo little chest of quartered oak or | the rural districts of France during the com Work. En fs_und Contractors for Fire ; RS . o most modest home : 9 St that, but to be fifty years married was a | Proof Duildings. Office and works: U. P. Ry. vy bt A A e LIZABETH BISLAND. satin wood is a novelty and If one is a col- L3 sort of event in & family. The houss was | and So. 17th street, Omaha. anniversary and most people could celebrate BKirts are the fachion. — The latest skir;|A New, Practical and Profitable Profession | — m— lector, a necessity as well. o liss Margarct Carlyle of ‘oronto, Canadi, | uite covered with garlands and the neigh- = : = rays out like a whirling dervish. Therefore * Women, | What Women Are Dolug. Fitted with lock and key, It proves a safe "W:“I:“.d T m_jw_m '\'n‘r ‘:‘J':"m’_ bors from far and near were assembled. MATTRESS. COTS, CRIBS, flowered fabrics have at this moment more | Among the many flelds of industry occupied | | Quite ““"‘“""‘;“‘fv:‘:u:“;(:"'r"\‘:“; ‘l:;““'"‘"m‘:)“'f receptacle for the costly treasures which the | dorsed by the Woman's council, The residents of Salem, Ga., claim 0 have | s s each year by women, that lovely, flower- | iin"'(iirts” reaching only to the tops of | IDdustrious person is EeUing (ESURer—per-| Thig year the number of women who ex {0 the prixD [aLaeD ARIAREILIAN 1R Hhe) hers L. G DOUP. bestarred field, the garden, seems to have | their boots without attracting especial atten- I“"'I:T.v“(-:[.i’:“‘.:-‘ 'II‘;_T"Y":'““‘.‘hv.‘:""‘f‘,};"‘?‘-"mgh | BIVI 0 the Champs Elysees salon is 751 | died there recently at the age of 104, 'They | Manufacturer Mattresses, Spring Beds; Jobber been strangely neglected. And yet there is | tion toot wide and. two:fest long: if made. to it was 312, The nuntber of pictures | point with pride to the fact that the old man | Feathers P . N. lth and Nicholas none in which, In many respects, she is by | Mrs. Baker of Dickinson Courthouse, Va., | diac MY G G0l mugt be- regulated by women admitted is double that of last | gheyed the scrivtural injunction to such good | & s her own nature and that of the in-|aged 60 years, has just been a "".‘"‘("fi",‘ i R TR tor, | St Hymll‘ln fore his death e was the father YT TV T T dustry more fitted to succeed, and not only | f1der in her district, which is one of the| “rpye”prettiest ones are made of quartered Bmma Nevada has an S-year-old daughter, | of more than children. (804 dust ¥ | wildest In Virginia. ; ; ) which | MiEnon, who is said to rival her romantic | Magistrate Hause of Jeffersonville, Ind.. | “THE MERCER CHEMICAL COMP. Y to succeed in an industrial sense, but suc- | i g : | 98k with panels ot wetin waod. upon wiion | Mignom who & ssld o Tvel her TomAnus| = Maglstrate Eause of Sereronvie: Ine |, MER CHEMICAL COMPAN veed in finding at the same time that great | Jean Ingelow, whose poetry has charmed | 4 dosign has been etched, usually in various | hamesake in the witchery ancing, her | broke the record on the 1, when he destderatum—a congenial, delightful —and | the world, is now living in retirement in | colors, possibly a gay cavalier and his lady | birdlike voice and her d ng beauty. married sixteen couples Hv'm.m.,[mn-.l 8| Manufacturers of Fluid Extracts, = Elixi healthtul occupation. England. ‘She recently said: “I have lived | oy, or cupids and a bower of roses— any | Miss Gertrude Pearson of Boston has re-|very busy day, as seven of the = voung | Eyrups wnd Wines compresced triturates hype: Perhaps she has been frightened out of | to thank God that all my prayers have not | design that Is effective will answer the pur- | c2ived the prize for the best written work in | men had paid his fee in advance fn order to | GiTLe oinha . this sphere of labor by the spade, but the | been answered.” pose. A motto—your own and your coat- | general chemistry out of a class of fifty-two [ secure the'r place fn the coluimte AmOUE | B = spade is not so deadly a weapon as she might| A schoolmarm In Massillon, O., who bas | of-arms must form the decoration on the | Or more students of the College of Physiclans | the cagtitates Sors A Romes (Ove, anto et MINERAL WATER, imagine. Thousands of women in Europe | been teaching the rising géneration ever | top of the chest. Put in one corner of your fand Surgeous. vinle Mol Moore 'at - Loulaville, © BAGh |, 8 work In the flelds with spade and hoe and | since the year 1815, was recently given | morning room or boudoir the chest will cer- | Blanche, countess of Rosslyn, in memory | M4 been marvid before S SR B0 (OH KEDESSA MINERAL WATER CO. plow, and, though Americans as a rule pro- | pension of §350 per year by the Board of | tainly adorn ghe spot amd elicit many an |of her husband, and the duchess of Suther- | CWAreR. T OF€F 10 MEEE LR, SEOHON d A fess themselves shocked at this feld labor, | Education of that city. exclamation: *Oh, how ‘pretty, and what is | land, in meniory of her father, the late earl | OO0 ; L M0 So. 1th st, Tel 2. Medessa Minerad the latest and mose careful statistics prove | Mrs. Shaw of whistling fame has a rival in | It for?” It is always €0 nice to have a | of Rosslyn, have enriched Rosslyn's famous | €TV 0 00 poo Do, | Water Carbonated, unequalled. lain for table that not only is the death rate very low in | the person of Miss Erroll Stannope. She is | novelty to introduce to a friend. chapel by the addition of two beautitul | ¢ v ‘:" B Oy TS0 | A HASHIGAN d. the communities where women are employed | known as “La sifleuse charmante,” and she | Stil another new thing—a charming little | stained glass windows. “’f',"f:, AR, honeymoon he left her to seek - = ==t out of doors, but that the sons of thess | plays or whistles to English audiences. frame made of osk for holding photographs, | Princess Nazle of Egypt, one of the most | ;4w § PHET BERRCECN, T4 Cterred writing ATCH, FIRE SERVICE, agricultural mothers when drafted into the [ mhe chief marks of age in Adelina Patti | that Is, just four pictures. It is one frame | jutelligent and progressive women in Europe, | uti”) o pecame ashamed to write at all o army are taller and have better chest and | are observable about her throat and chin. In | With four divisions. The pictures are slipped | is a constant laborer for the advancement of | Mrs. Doyle had a daughter born and affer RAPH arm’ measurement than the sons of the | giper respects her youthful appearance is|in at the back, and each one has a glaes | her sex. She s now arranging an exhibit | Gaifing nearly five years without hearing | 213 nartact arateotion 1o paosrty: MEAR women who stand behind the counters of the | that"or s Woman twenty years younger than | over it face, The affair is really four | of the work of Egyptian women at the At- | from her husband, applied for and secured | jno i Tast thing on earth| JKeduces insure shops in town, or who sit at a sewing | she is, frames in one; it is hung upon the wall and | lanta exposition hine f r ten hours a d DI H b S i t : pe | @ divorce. ghe lived a single life with her B rgalfor i, W T A (08 AR 08§00 A0S R CATY LIR elia Sternec) vente snder | the little shelf which forms the upper par The duchess of Cleveland, mother of the | daughter in Buffalo. Two days ago & Bing and forking in. fertilizers, raking, or =, Amelia Sternecker has Invented a fender daugh T will be Elven & trial by | Of the frame, serves nicely to hold some | prime minister, is engaged in writing a life | stranger sought her out and revealed himself even driving a horse cultivator {s not nearly | fo (Folley cars which Will be €iven a Hal BY | {rifiing ornament, perhaps a lttle vase, with | bf Lady Hester Stanhope, who was an inter- | as her former husband. planaiions w }uch 1:.,, work as moat pwl‘(lle lwl“l’"d» but 17 years of age, but has had a passion |3 few flowers. ~Our English friends are quite | esting figure in soclety as well as in history. | made by Doyle ani the couple came to thy KATZ- \HIN (.U There is no more muscular exertion required | o chine: ~ 1y - 5 » devoted to this style of framing pictures of | The duchess is a thorough literary worker, | Falls on the 2d inst. and were again united e required to drive & bieyele up niil, or | foF machinery since her early childhood. tely the: ve beel d 00! st not be expected for some — A 10 stand upon one's feet all day at & counter | A Chicago woman was fishing from the pler [ [2ImALe triends ARG Inaly they. BAYY heen A34.her Sook muat Rk be expected for some A pomre T Manutucturers. of Men's and Hoye Clothing, loom. at Glenwood Springs, Wis., and brought out ke A e L A abitucs of cil western race tiacks from | Pents. Sbiria wnd Querelis it th et AFTERNOON SEASHORE GOWN. o oo G WITH HEAD, NOT HANDS. | (Wo fine perch at one haul, which so exclted Fash on Notes oady ey Bomaraet waw ra-glacted prsh || HAIIOR 6F 001 ENAEE TS AT, SR = es s there, then, X s e her that she backed off the other side of the he very newest ribbons have edges of et | 3ent OF he B A O lard | i s ‘apta ce, the ansas than uulnel hnviw‘:;f:l; Y “}mm AN l( Leaving such questions aside, however, the | pio. in eight feet of water. She was promptly m"'m_ 7.0 & Jet | injon. Lady Somerset and Miss Willard | the “gag" t Captain Rice, the Arkansa & struggle on ! of | work of a woman in the garden need vot be 0 4 have both conditionally accepted invitations to | horseman, has been ruled off the tu . \ D form and the eastern ideal of decoration? I|a great muscular strain at all. Head gar- | 5cUed by her attendants. The fish got| "oy gk crepe-lisse ribbon is another | gneak before the fifth meeting of the &reat | pulling his whiskers.” Few sportsn [, know nothing about it; those that live will | deners rarely do the heavy drudgery, which (4% novel variety largely used to veil trimmings | apti-glcohol congress, to be held in Basel, ter known than Captain R. R. Rice, one | Manufacturers of all kinds of aner ki vee, but I may venture an observation. is accomplised by day laborers, and gardens | A woman drummer for 4 §t. Louls vinegar | of prilliant color. Switzerland, August 20-22 Whose most valued possessions ls his tre- | Sl Hoxes, Sample Cases, Mailivg Tatise, st The field from which fashion draws its | apcer being once plowed and harrowed and | Manufactory is touring the northwest on a i AR e L L S AL MAL, . ictaria ward | 9 Mh0se DAoet valuad possess) - | Wedding cake uni 1 v boxes, dragkis Inspiration e immensely larger than it was. | the manure .I.N,,.‘,' in in the spring require | bicycle and in stunning Parisian bloomers. m“f"":’h:;wmllmxrrx"m'.l‘f k suits are combined Ml’b_x”u:‘r “x'f}',ff.r.u:p’f;u';lm Yisra, Nors dous orop of whiskers. They roach be- | audjeelry ” voxes. 150510 donew-it, umfl Qnoe Paris fashion catered to a amall num- | very little more of such labor during the | She started trom St. Louls last January and | ©0, . ses with en 1 herself—one taken s an Infant in long robes, | 1nfrequently een waving through between BHLKT FACIORIES, ber n a lmited area, and the mass of the | eutire season. Planting seeds, weeding. hoe- | had reached Seattle a week or so ago. She | Hiack silk blowses WS CHOAmARe, ISHER | UG OO RGP e quohicas of Kent at | Wis legs when the captaln standy fucing g world wore a costume that never changed: |ing, transplanting, potting, pruning, clipping [ $ends postal cards ahead of her to the | and sailor collar, brier-stitched with white | & D! 5 T ceedingly | #m breeze. Captaln Rice, besides h e once & soclal incident that concsrned France | and watering are all work which &ny aver- | Grocers. or pale lilac are worn With afternoon cos- | the age of 15. These prints are exceedingly | Kmart it J. . EVANS---NEBRASKA SHIRT €D, OV RALL FACTORIES, o « own {mmense cot- he clothing adds | #tring of race h wis i - alone eould color the mode; but now fashion | age healthy, well developed woman can do| Mrs. May T. Barris was for several years | tumes of half mourning. good, and the style of the g g O ktion near Little Rock, and i% one ch to their picturesqueness. f the most popular men in his vast clr- Eaclusive custom shirt tallors, s for the round globe and all women- | without strain or excessive fatigue, and once [ a resident of Lincoln, Neb., and a student at | Rich and stately redingote costumes with [ HEc . . of the m y sive o m lock wpon it ufi w0 & clientele lhnlwu garden is ia order for \.hu‘nuo-. 1s all | the State unlversl For three years shg | braided cloth or plain velvet tablier fronty The Massachusetts State Federation bas [ cle of acquaintances, 1615 Faruamest. Telephone Wb . "

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