Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
- 'S FOR LITTLE WOMEN. (for children, a novelty that has found af . place at once, and the dresses made ally Springtime Finery of fine French dress flannel, cashmere or eiling are charmingly decorated in needle NEW YORK orked designs of closely mingled and of frocks for 5 and various colors. The blue gown under dis- attractive bazar. 1t & a pi ission I8 a pure sky tint, and its fretted enterprising dry goods b does order | edgings show delicate touches of rose green one for the benefit of proud and ambitious and black cunningly combised. A belt of mammas, who will stint their own ward- | rose-colored suede worked in tiny turquoise robes in order to garnish the plump per- | heads is the only ornamental feature not | s of their youth ighte This | supplied b s self-decorating costume conviction 15 st e who enter An extreme wash ik suit In the department of f the big e pinkieh lilac and cream white is the fitting poriums where ready-made Rowns for g assoclate for the blue velling All the | of all ages are f winter f Mlac stripes show at op of every pieat | fons and fabr isappeared, | in the skiit, and scattered violets appear in and it 1s ke pringtime to | the embroidersd bands that enclose the | stroll among the decked With | panels of cream silk on the skirt and picturesque little tollets of lght twifled ist. The sleeves are consecutive puffs | flannel, Abbess cloth ling, crisp Swiss | of white silk, braceleted with straps of the and crepe Nublenne. Constructed on larger | cmbroidered violets, and the protty little | llnes any one of these charming Kowns | maid wear n-worked cream white lisle would be suitable for the most fastidions | hose with her black kid slippers debutante, for the child of the day does Hostery and Jewels, | not dress a moment behind the fashior The craze for white hose on children is Encrustations of lace nno, boleros, | unaccountable, but none the less does it paste buckles and buttons, taffeta ¢ row, and the lace-like hose of whi skirts, lingerie tuckings of silk muslir 1o are the latest fashion. Perhaps white | A WASH SILK SUIT OF LILAC AND CREAM PURPLISH WHITE tiosel chenille and lawn undersleeves all |stockings play an important part in the constr of the little miald's costume, and the fash fonable dressmakers for children do not blush to ask $35 for a tafeta walst for a girl of 10, or $125 for a knee-long frock for child of 13. These, however, are excep- tions to rules that obtain in the shops where pretty ready-made suits are for sale. Buits, too, hoasting all the latest and most lwportant features in children's fashions Open-Thronted Waists, Five litle women are sketched this week in the most recent fnery their fashions have to show. Though every one of the gowns shows an open throat, they do not all tion pretend to be dancing costumes. In fact, only one, and that one with the short sleeves and the lace mittens, is arraved for a party, while the necks of the others &0 to prove that the mode now is in favor of showing as much as is admissible for health's sake of pretty round baby throats Until a girl is 15 her play and school gowns should be shaped thus, and there Is a very declded tendency toward cutting sleeves off at the elbow. This is u reversion to the fashion of the children’s grandmammes. who wore low-necked and short-sleeved suits summer and winter, and nounced immune from colds and consequence. The dress of the little girl in the single eketch, who holds her accordian pleated emplre skirt in both hands, is a most fn- expensive and pretty frock of corn-colored crepe Nublenne. point is inserted in sharp, zigzags and points about the hem of the very full jupe, whic is attached under the arms and across the bust to a very short Josephine The walst is well-nigh hidden by a very wide collar of the imitation poipt. Under this collar {8 laid a lining of yellow chiffon which 1€, all about the edges, made fast to the lace by a braid of gllt. Lace of the samo weave and with the same lining as the collar forms the tops and cuffs of the sleeves, whilo full bishop puffs of chiffon fall out from the elbows to the wrists Buch is the empire or Josephine gown as worn by a 7, 10 or 12-year-old to the dinner were pro- chills in walst a or lunch table when there are guests and to juvenile entertainments that are not dancing parties. Deeply incensed would the owner of such an empire gown feel {f & carcless individual referred to it a Mother Hubbard or a Greenaway The Dancing Group. A very captivating little figure is the chlld in the dancing group that wears the green velvetéen bolero. Her skirt s of cheerful, verdant green Abbess cloth, tucked In clusters from the waist half way to the knees and then garnished along tho edgos with a band of embroidery done ‘n green and gold-colored silk on white. Of A darker green velveteen the Dbo- lero s made, and trimmed with needlework of the same type' as that used on the skirt Undersleeves of cream white Chinese crepe flow from the closé arm casings of the velveteen jacket and dark green hose and patent leather pumps, adorned with tassels of tinsel, com- plete the attractive costume. The companion of this w wears a white Swiss dancing gown tucked and encrusted with insertions fmitation Mechlin lace; about the walst gilded lace band serves as a belt and cherry 1l-dressed child flnely of u velvet ribbons are caught on the right shoulder and at the waist line by paste buttons Hox Patterns for Children In the sedond group a gown of tucked and embroidered blue veiling is shown. Such a sult as this comes as a single and special dress length, cut in prepured and embroldered pleces and folded in a box These boxed dress patterns are new things | Childbearing is a perfectly natural func- but it is robbed of its terrors where i ““Mother’s Friend"” ue liniment, applied externally, relaxes all the muscles, so that The Ordeai IS Easy s Priend! it money." tion, t the virtue of ““Mo is known. This unic WILL BOLT, of Lynnsville, Towa, writcs: # Mot haarelieved my wite of il cramps, which makes THE BRADFILLD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. | down 1 on cre sh | An imitation cream Irlsh | gp500 methods of treatment B fresh air | | single AN EMBROIDERED ING. BLUE VEIL- cleaner and quainter more in harmony with the mode that has revived the sleeveless low-necked gowns for small children, but truth compels the admission that thin little legs are not shown off to advantage in anything but black coverings. and Jewelry for children must needs be dis- cussed, for the reason that the twentieth century mamma does not hesitate to give her little girl of 6 a watch and chain, rings and stickping that her grown sister should envy and wear. Recently it has been no- ticed that the bairns of the very rich wear less and less of this cruelly inappropriate decoration, and now the jewel casket of the kindergarten graduate contains only a string of dull gold or coral beads, from which hangs a tiny gold heart locket and (bis ornament only brought forth when the occaslon seems to justify tal splendors of dress MARY DEAN. IMMUNITY FROM WIN it CO) geestions for People Susceptible to Chilling Blaxts, years suffered from | violent which several times threat ened to end fatally claims to have attained fmmunity by the use of pure d water as medicine and an ordinary horse brush for currying as a morning and evening ex Owing to a vous break was obliged to consult New York famous for his original and After laying the subject of diet and he said “You will also go to gome big department store and purchase for 85 cents a horse brush with which you will give your whole body a thorough rub bing each morning before you.bathe. As soon as you rise you will fill a quart pitcher with drinking water and sip it slowly while | dressing. At night do the me thing over again, omitting, of course, the bath." The cold water was easily managed and soon became indispensable, but at first the A woman who for colds ercise. ere ne he physician, down the law on horse brush seemed to tear the sensitive | skin. Having absolute confidcoce in her physician, however, the patient persisted, | at first barely touching the bristles’ to her body. Within a few weeks she was not only able to do the currying most vigorously, but really anticipated it with pleasure. The signs of the first winter cold drove her in | haste to the doctor. The great man of | medicine refused to supply her with dru | He questioned her as one would a child | her windows open at night to drinking water regularly and taking her upon all of which she passed a examination. He said Then you been indulging in holiday over. eating Whenever you eat a heavy ainner, and let it be as seldom as possibl omit the next meal and substitute a quar of water You can't take cold get into condition for it."” This she did and the cold failed to ma- ture, and although she has frequently left undone those things which ought to have done 1 vic 1, and paid a pe alty proportic to her carelessness has never since suffered from a really lent cold ot bul to colds Cold water washes the as to leavin as inless yo she vio- | of living which 1 body is Inimical forms of disease. manner_simply off the in- course, a well nourleh as well as ot} taken in stomach, carrying jurlous acids which generate there and which allowed to circulate through the blood impoverish it, thereby weakening the uny system s 1hi; vitality of the person. After washing the blood clean as it were, the next thing is to induce circulation. This is done by means | of the vigorous curryiug, which, besides bringing the blgod to the surface to resist | external chill, also opens the pores, allow- -+ mailed free. HE OMAITA DAILY o BEE;: § JANUARY 27, UNDAY, v{fi‘\,fi\@"'vh could have been done at a reasonable | kind in a college boarding house at Fargo. L) |outtay. Bu onstruction means rebuild [ N. D, the women under observation being | { |k and the great expense has prevented | eleven in number, all but two of them un @ | the change fer 20 years of age. In welght they ranged Another element that has had a decided [ from 100 to 145 pounds, the average being L] @1}.1}« t on the sale of ingrain carpets,” said | 126 pou They represented, as regards | the salesman, “is the falling off in quality. | birthplace, widely different reglons, three Nearly all the manufacturers make stock| haviog been born in Norway, two in On- | on order, that is, they make the goods only | tario, two In Kansas and one each in fowa | after they have )ld. The competition | Minnesota, Pennsylvania and Vermont. On By MARGARET L BRICGS. ing impuritios (o cscape. Then the daily | has been so great that b cutting of| the whole, however, they were considered a ath finishes the work | prices is often done before ales can be ef- | fairly typical group of girls for that part of _ The woman who has banished colds by | fected, and when the order is finally booked | the country oL AL ot means o Irinking and currying | the goods are made in Keeping with the These young women were remarkably eco | ‘ 0 n g wor o L e vigilanee of the woman who hopes to get the best \ laims to require much less clothing than | price. The merchant gets his carpet at a | nomical, the amount paid for food belog a | ‘ i AL I I2IIEE. OULJOR tormerly. In terror of her health she built [ low figure, but it worth only what he | Itttle less than 14 cents a day for each of | !ife must be eternal. It must be always directed foward the vital matter breastworks of flannel which proved | pays for it. Of cour this 18 bad policy, but | them. Meat was not stinted, constituting of her own health This ix found to be essentially true of wives and utterly useless when the assault came. | the men at the heads of many of these car- [ 15 per cent of the edibles, and hore again [ 4 but it wco she has gone in for the home-made | pet concerns are not business men so much | appeared that fatal feminine weakness for ULLSE, DUE dt 16 19 SeUes 05 thotty 10 I8 SqUALY "t ot the youtige: product in heat she finds that she is Dow |as they are carpet makers. They came from | sweets, sugar belng actually 12t per cent | Women, because if they disregard health when they are young they pay auch warmer with legs clothing England, north of Ireland and Scotland, and | of the total weight of provender consumed. [t , r e penalty in mature years neessant work and incessar orry s Ihose who intend to put this simple cold | began in this country with a loom or two. | However is a first-class fuel for the 4 S . Mgl A G oure in b " | it is a remedy for | They were frugal, industrious and conserva- | body machine, and the North Dakota girls | P the history of millions of women. We look upon the devotion of a another evil, should remember that | tive, and maay of them built up large con- | certainly had the appearance of belng well | woman to her home and children as a beautitul thing: it i< beautiful, the watcr taken with meals does not count at | ¢e into which they introduced their old | nourished. They ate surprising quantities |y anrnest the w § 4 ' Al it does rather to be added to | Style methods, but they made and sold great | of dried fruits, by the way. “Protein” wa e woman the greater the beauty of it, but if this woman the side of the enemy. It must be taken | Quantities of carpets, and made money as|somewhat deficient in their case—only about is earnest about the dally routine and disregards her owu health, it is a before breakfast and again just before re< | Well. But they could not keep up with the | two-thirds as much in quantity as it ought | zeal without sense and has n sure reaction tiring, and a whole quart must bo sipped | Procession, and the other styles, straw mat- | to have béen—but it s known that, to a Oite within say threc-quarters of an hour. If|tngs and rugs have played havoe with the | certain extent, fuel stuff, with which they ne of the great pitles of life is that ill health comes to just the ) cold water ohills one the temperature may | 108% business were oversupplied, will take the place of | women who do not seem to deserve it; women whose lives are useful bo rajsed a little until this dificulty is over- | A trade journal in an article on the sub- | the muscle-forming material o e uld haye great symp. ! o womnt come. Some good cheap distilled water is | Ject of the decline in the inzraln carpet| Each of these girls obtained every day _ A 1Y gredt Symipathy for the woun who boldly cffers up best where there is any question of the | busiess says (on an average) 11-10 ounces of protein all life and strength on the altar of household cares and in the rearing purity of.the water supply | "“The present demoralized condition has|from the animal tood she ate and 11-18| of her children, but sympathy alone will not bring back to the Mhre 1s one other essential point to be | been prophesied agatn and again. Now the | ounces of that muscle-forming substance in [\ 5o s T TR LR S0 U, SO remembered by those who would escape | People who have been guilty of skinning | addition from her vegetable diet. She ot 10 health she sucritices so frecly, it will not belp her to complete her Hite ol e well a drugs. By (he free cireu. | thelr goods are in a fix. They cannot offer | 8% ounces of fat from the animal food and [ Work: we can be sorry for her all we like, but unless we can induce ler to Tation of the blood much impurity 1s thrown | A lower price than the standard makers | about one-sixth of an ounce from the veg- | reglize the mistake she is making, he p . off through the nores. It fs therefors im- | AFe 0Ing, and they cannot further cut the | etable food. From the latter she derived 2 lic is making, her family wiil lose her help just at the b SRl I gt - 4 - Bl - time they need it most. It does not necessarily follow that such a woman ( vates some Impuriiy fn the Bleod, thel 18 will work and worry herself into an untimely decline, but it docs mean addition to the daily bath the clothes worn that she will u r for she infit herself for being the kind of mother and helpmate » SHULRATDATT S R R or being the kind of mother and helpmate whe ! to prevent reabsorption to the skin. Of rounds out the eharacters of her children and wakes her home an attractive course. cl worn during the day should pla never t it night Women expect to fade: they secm to anticipate it. Just a little of t EARRINGS HAVE RETURNED, eternal vigilance they show toward thelr nily given o thems will el Wy TR keep them well preserved to mature yvears, and fortity them for a Their Favor. and happy lite in advanced age. How infinite I« y After having been laid In the receptacle | o i LRl L L B L 7 T KYUONI IR (s duin PELPS BE I the than the one that wears worien out with the worries of every day breaks ] earring has b restored to the favor of them down physically at thirty the fair sex and erc long it will be as con- Vol are wr e L A UL L olumes are written these days about the duties of women, and about her Vesie: Driwcesess Gvcked. Shetssives Wi mission in life, but the real gospel of woman's success is the gospel of health such gaudy ornaments AIl things g ] f 4 g8 may be added to the life that is ded on the basis of perfec Of one thing the public may rest assure B s s Bt Dk b AL AT L g health, But how shall a woman be healthy who has some disorder of the doibg back to the days ot slavery. She'is feminine organism, and whose physiclans are unable to give ler the treatment much too clever, and she realizes that that cures. Any physictan will prescribe f ¥ 1 f B N e i Any physietan will preseribe for a woman that is ill, and fow bt ey I AL of them ever give permanent help to a woman with a serfous displacement fashionable earring is a little scrow affalr or other real trouble of this nature. It does indecd look hopeless o wo in which the setting is not visible and only R G tbie 14 seuhy ARATHNS B0 men who want to be well and strong and who lose sight of the one way that car Those who thought of the matter at all were convinced that neither they nor their children would ever live to the resurrec tlon of the earring. But the twentieth cen- tury mald is extremely versatile, one can never tell just what will do next. Per- haps that is one reason she is so attracti Jewels have of calling attention to themselves and incidentally their surround- ings. It is needless that this fact has been known to the feminine mind since biblical m queenly wife of the great English publisher, factories into Brussels or tapestry mills it with three ik ent dents at The A GREEN ABBESS VELVETEEN CLOTH BOLERO. WITH A WHITE SWISS DANCING DRE TRIMMED WITH GILDED LACE, times. Rings are worn to attract " one’s glance at the pretty hand which they | quality of their fabries without making them | nearly 123, ounces of starch and sugar, adorn, necklaces advertise a shapely neck; | too rank to be marketable. These men | which, with the fat, go for fuel. The fuel why, then, not wear the earring to set off | came dangerously near making the name of | energy that came from the animal food was a well-turned ear Philadelphia ingrain a term of reproach.”” | 1,023 calories, and the fuel energy from the That 15 the line of reasoning adopted by | The depression in the ingrain carpet busi- | vegetable food 1,626 calories--a total of 2,660 those who favor the revival of the fashion. | ness has had no effect on the other branches | calorie And there are many who are not afrald o | of the business which are generally good.| The cts give an interesting notion of put their theory in practice at some of the [ The new possessions make few demands on | what is required to keep a fairly active large afternoon and cvening functions. For | the carpet manufacturers. Straw matting | woman agoing—the amount of fuel needed 50 far the decoration for the car is not seen | usually takes the place of carpets afier|to run her body machine, and the quantity on the street and it certainly seems more | these have been in use a short time. of muscle and blood-forming stuft used up fitting to reserve it for the handsome re- | “The bugs and other insects,” said a[in repairs. Of course, if she takes little ception or ball gown. depler, “would probably prefer the carpet, | exercise and does no muscular work worth Mrs. Oliver P. Belmont and Miss Gerry | but for the people who live in the tropics | mentioning she will get along very well on were the pioneers in New York. They ap- | there is little comfort in carpets.” a lighter diet. On the otber hand, if she is peared at one of the large balls recently SR - - s a washerwoman or engaged in any other —_ WSS R ABREITAY EREEBAT arduous occupation, her demand for “pro- Tris Have HDeen Make | tetn” and fuel materials will rise propor- & Study tionately. the Sabject. oM .\\l.‘nthlnmun etter 1o the 8t Louis TR R HoURe LNEOoRY =) The finest table linen s usually finished The food of the American girl has fur- | with a plain hem. nished the latest subject of inquiry by the [ Both empire and princess effects will be government dietary experts, who, as the | conspicuous among evening gowns formed result of & sclentific investigation, aver that | Of.delicate or dlaphagous fabrice s Lo hat | Tgiiver- pointed fox fur which is Mberally she bas an inordinate appetite for pastry | RN With Tong white hair 1s ane of the and sweets; that the desire is quelled to | n'imber of comparatively inexpensive furs some extent 'by a plentiful allowance of | Which are used this winter for neck scarfs fresh fruit, and that, while she show and lurge direstolre mufte i s BRS ERA hile she shows B ™y oy wedding sowns In Louis XIV atyie tendency to large indulgence in butter, this | ara”made of the . wonderfully ~beautiful weakness ought to be encouraged rather | weaves of creped fvors-white satin. The than repressed. Butter, being a form of | Fowns ate trimmed with frageries of * fat easily digested, 1s good for girls Very fashionable stock collars are made One fact definitely ascertalned is that, for [ of white satin ribhon, with tiny lines of a given amount of bodily activity, a woman | gold brald put on at intervals, or thase of Blkck bebo veivet ribbon standing vertically requires just about four-fifths as much I LT e Toop, held with a food as a man When she is at mo te | gmall gold or jewel button. work, her food must furnish her every day | 1 taire imond_as an engagement ind_colored stones of d one ces of stuff to | TINg hae lost caste ¢ ied hm|m"' tane 19| Tty Kinde are uscd wnd in all forme, fr: muscle and blood and enough fuel | Guinuy with a colored stona in the centor (for running the physical machine) to rep- | and diamonds surrounding .One voung T Who becamo engaged not lonk g0 2,800 “‘caloric A caloric is th \ and wore an opal for braved superstiti amount of heat required to raise the tem- pop betrothil FnK perature or one centimeter of water 1| [eavy, lustrous, molred brocades in : 2 degree, and the fuel materials are chiefly | lovely monochromes, Ifke 1y, palest | AN ACCORDEON ATED EMPIRE | gtaren sugar and fat | 1ou Toae e grocn and bersian mutfsc, ar 3 I % y once more in vogue, to the At delight ¢ FROCK The most notable cxperiment made by the | dowagers as well as younger women, These = | experts wa ake Erle college, Ohio, ew Lyons we es, however R nd with very handsome pairs, each earring | RCHS WiS & oy ke ‘;‘ \”|Ar' In Oblo, | B v In appearance, are nevertheless as | consisting of a single gem ¥alan 8 ‘I““ l"' YaDe o “'H'”“ ar l”““; soft and flexible as peau de sof e Then came Mrs. Alfred Ha sworth, the | Women hAs & fAcu composed of i 1 th st of exclusive opera and other e he | Comen, who board together with the stu- | it Aper are long, stately gurments B W am-white officers’ cloth with a velvecy commons. To avoid disturbance Her gowns and jewels are the envy of all . trimmed with bands or elaborate e Now York.— A pair af faul. | of the ordinary routine, the girls were not | Qb ‘ot fillisre gold embrotderies or T e T told ahout the dietary trial, which was con- | sliver and spangles in palm, scroll and bow- less pearls generally grace her ears, BUt| g oooq without their knowledge. The aim | knot designs lined with gold- s they give place to superb tur- | Eored matin and the b oves and cape quoises was to furnish ap appetizing table, with | Soited Mt o onty trimmes. g plenty ous food, at a cost not ex- dsome Radnitz costume, worn re Mrs, Caroline Rober Mrs. MacLeod, | P1eBty of nutritious fo A handsom 18, Cavbiing Bdera Aot rs. MacLeod, | o\ oqiny 25 conts for each person. Bvery- | cently rdica morning concert i tiss Lily Wanamaker, wore earrings | 4 n 0 0 O C 0 ohed before and after | Waldorf-Astoria, was formed of do during the recent Bernhardt performance g e s | panne veivet, with a smart Louls XIV cont B ladelnnia . Both were peatls. Mius | Meals and samples of the various articles | ot tho samé, ' opening over a biouse of B : : 8. Miss | o were analyzed, to find out how much | cream-colored lace, strapped with narrow Hyslyo Hawell, who is lways smong e [0y e forming material, etc., | velvet bands. The clrcular skirt waas un- first to adopt & nmew style it it pleases her | {26! 8tuff, muscle-forming material, Yimmed. The revers and spreading collar faniow madk hab aDICArARae’ st Mrn: Qsorke | HIF/0ARIAIEA to:the pokind, | 6f the Jacket were covered with chinchilla : L e penr One thing the girls would have, and that | fur. Ensuite with this costume was i low- Childs Drexel's ball with a diamond ghit- | O U0k the &lils w0 G e ox- crowned platenu hat of woft gray French tering in each ear {i3ne frean irulk for REeRuIeN G felt, draped cach side with very handsome So the woman who cares to wear earri | pensive and the management opposed the gray ostrich plumes, with a large oblong ROING WOMAR N0 ORLER ar earrings | qyigence for awhile, partly hecause fruits | buckle of Jewe kold circling the hat has a good precedent for so doing. The only [ ot &t A S e "But the medic- | directly in Tront. A 'larga directolre muft quostion is, will tho majorlty of women |21 B! hIEbIy nUtFILIGUR. ¥ otgray fur and white giede gloves, stitched bravely submit to th vl T B | inal value of fruits as an element of dlet With Biack, complete this very elcgant and Avely submit o the plercing process 484 | ooujq not be denied, and, furthermors, it | attractive costum e public s advo- | way ascertained that tho eating of them Lol ¢ fashion of u day that is gone? | j,eoned to some extent the craving for| apg Ja of the Inta : RS | candy, which with many, it not most, | President South DECLINR OF SNORALN, »ung women seems to be chronic. Per- | Florida. Her health 18 | n b 18 b e the fruit that does it, | Mme. Nichols, who i8 ono of the wealth- Why Thix Kind of « Han 1 iaps It 1s the acid in the fru jest members of the French colony ving “01d Fushioned Anyway, the faculty was obliged to vield | iy pondon, amassed her fortune’ in the “Why do we sce 80 little ingrain carpet? |and thenceforth 15 per cent of the table | restaurant busineus. 8he began her money ness, and is thete no demand for that class | luxuries of the sort . 3 BELOLIAR 0L AD8 QXS 0% of so08s | It was noticed that many of the girls ate | home {4 herself very rich and These questions were asked recently by a [ more of the regular breakfast when they | owns thiee | e’ fineat plantations fv ul customer in the carpet department of one | had fruit than they did when no fruit was | uig fie Wakefleld g of the large stores in New York | served. Another thing observed was that | “'Mrs Worthington Babeock, who 18 to Your questl how 10 the sales- | the students did not care much for heans or' break’ tho bottle on the how of the new i i e native e or | Dattleship Onlo, 18 o stepduughter of Go man, “that you are a New Yorker. If you |Peas. They were natives of the middl battleahlp ONlo, 18 & & P tha et mocl Ivel in the country or ‘out west' or ‘down | West—a reglon in which such legumes are | Woman of the present adiministration south’ you would never have noticed that | used to a comparatively small extent that stute the demand for ingrain carpet had declined, | this was an important matter, ingsmuch as [ Miss Octavia Coskaline Carroll, whoto . iy “ | gcath was recently reported trom Po for there the old-fashioned vard wide goods | peas and beans are extraordinarily rich in | §8ih W% FIRERUE ERGIN of Cirrolt of o till i use and are only a trifle loss | “protein”—the stuff that makes blood and ! Carroliton, and one of the founders of the Popular than they were before the day of | muscle. If the college bad been located | Holland ' 'Dames ‘and Daughters of the Some {ngrain carpet Is made in New Bug- | Tun up the “protein’ end of the dietary to qiilful amateur photographer, and she has land the New York Tribune, but about | & high point % most interesting collection’ of pletares Sent. of the ‘product somes from| At the Lake Eile fnstitution, In the ab- | Fhe embress talcs snab ehots st the Bourt Philadelphia, and the condition of affairs | sence of peas ana beans, the bulk of the guuh'ef (" crown prince when he ap: in that place was doscribed by W. P.|“proteln” had to come from the flesh of peared for the first time on parade as a full Symonds as “the that has ever been | animals and so it I8 not surprising to learn Officer of the Kuards b i experienced by any man in the business. | that one-third of the tuble money was spent yile snaamement ring of fhe now. A The last six years have been anything but | for meats and fish. It has often been (ning in conncction With the engagemer sfactory, and this promises to be a |alleged that women eat less meat than men 1 with the weddiy 1owas Impile fitting climax to a modern Joseph's seven | do, but th riment did not bear out helthar very" ATk, with the lean years, as applied to the ingrain carpet | that theory, the proportion being about th \ia, A settl Fueh T inore industry same as that consumed by the average of ving than - that many yo The tapestry, Brussels, velvet, Wilton and | ten clubs of male studen 64 14 | Henbes withaus & Jrmente of weath Axminster goods have been reduced in |similar fashion. Consumption of butter ran yify SEERE FOLY SN o0 M 4T {ce, the patterns ure more “sightly,” and [ high. but, as alrea ald, 1t 18 o very | ghaping the pr i & se facts, together with the demand for | wholesome kind of fut, though expensive, | cliareiie, wh " part ‘ot the in. more artistic floor coverings, have caused |and a liberal allowance of it is to be recom- |y i vaara WitD & 1l g T the ingrain sales to shrink ac- | mended because school girls are apt to eat ha hita found m b turers have seen this condition grow, and | les in other forms than would be good ri to b habltal cigatentc wsers. Mor many of them would have converted their | for them ayer. Khie Ben R e raabany (0 the o experts made a study of & similar efforts for reformation, has lelped so many other women, The veal help for all sueh troubles is found in Lydis tabl E, Mrs ize some day the the uterine disorde Pinkham's Vege Compound. The woman who looks askance at Pinkham's medi truth of this state multitude ind tries all other methods will rr ment. Why can she not take warning from ol women who have straggled all theiv Hves long with s and left behind them to their ehildren a legacy of nervousness and u of eniory | DN mi . There is o fact egetable the ten more absolute than that Lydia Pinkhaw's ¥ i culming und is nature’s ideal assistant in building uj strengthening organism, enabling it to throw off disease, the nervous sion and bringing health wherever it is use the wor who prides lerselfon vigilanee seareh out the truth of these statements, ‘There is nothing which will do so much to help her maintain her usefuluess toward her family as acurate knowledge of how (o preserve her health at every crisis in Lor life, THE FAME OF MME. RUPPERT HAS NEVER BEEN EQUALLED»BY ANY OTHER COMPLEXION SPECIALIST ‘The most imitated woman {n the world Tue Discoverer oF FAck Breack MME. A. RUPPERT’S Face Bleach Removes Permanently PIMPLES, BLACK HEADS, FRECKLES, ECZEMA, MOTH PATCHES, SALLOW- NESS, and WRINKLES NOT CAUSED BY FACIAL EXPRESSION. D oes_not_cover up but removes the blemish. Face IBleach BRIGHTENS, CLEARS and BEAUTIFIES the COMPLEXION Improves a_Good Skin_and Works Wonders with a_Bad One. ITS MERITS KNOWN THE WORLD OVER. USED AND RECOMMENDED BY REFINED PEOPLE EVERYWHERE. Absolutely Harmless and cAlways Successful. ve Mme. Ruppert's Face Bleach shown to you, anner of using and wonderful results explained, ed it is what you need for your complexion. We always carry a full line of Mme, A. Ruppert's Gray Hair Restorative, Egyptian Balm, Almond Oil Complexion Soap and Hair Tonic. Call and have thelr merits explained to yon, Ask for Mme., Ruppert's book, “* HOW TO BE BEAUTIFU It Drop in and d have its so0 you will KUHN % CO., The Reliable Prescription Pharmacists, SOLE AGENTS. | A SKIN OF BEAUTY IS A JOY FOREVER | DI, T. FELIX GOURAUD'S ORIENTAL | CREAM, OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER. | AdSense 1} Removes Tan, Pimples, | | 4,8 Freckles, Moth Patches, 548 Hash and Skin dise i vase, and every | A monthly publication full of good thing £:3 ulemish on besuty, | teraely told. That you may bocome ao g; 2 A e ‘atoaa | QUAinted, send & dina—coln or stamps—foi i the test of 8 sample copy. It you've already seen it, you H years, wnd la #e want it; you'll get It for a year if you send el Veure it | @ dollar (o Ad Seuse, §3 Fitth Ave, Chicagin is properly made, A Pt no counters [ oot Wiyl winelow's Soot Eayre sald to & Ha r over F1F #1758 the Naut-on Mi MOTIERS | « patient) DIEN WHILE TERTHING, "W As ,u ladies will use them, 1 recom. I It BLICC LS v“ "‘UH 8 the nd ‘GOURAUD'S CHEAM' as the ll)flll ”I(‘l“ -;“M ( l\l‘ , ALl \\‘;, il ", R il the Ski eparations.” r W ) COLIC 1 iu the Lest rem. g meul of 8l e e Bind” Fancy Goeds ody for DIARRIOIA. Sold by Drugglats in * in the U. 8. and Europe By e ot e world! b wire g anh i oD T, HOFKINS, P £ Winsiows Sgothin Syrun,” dic p 2 take no other kin Twel “tv #1 Great Jones Wt., N. Y. jaka ! h nty-five '