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FAVORED STYLES FOR SUMME R. pretty figured yellow silk muslin shirt, s coat, to speak technically it should be os im Dress Mate- |called a coatee, affords a very satisfactory view of a grey green satin moire ribbon and Decoratfons. rial NEW YORK, M belt clapsed in front by a Florentine silver y 23.~Foulard has beem | puckle. The belt, in color and material cholce material for the | matches the little four-in-hand necktie and accepted as the gorrectly professional ping-pong frock. A J the buckle shows a couple of Cellini eupids smart pin dotted, or minutely figured, | caught in chains of silver roses. eream white, satin twill foulard, built up | The companion frock has a jaunty little | on the lines of a decorated shirt waist suit | Grand Prix coat, worn over a tucked white je about the highest expression of taste at| lawn shirt. A wide fold of black satin the tennis table 1affeta ribbon goes about the walst and Is There are subtle differences to be detected | held in front by a pearl buckle colored a Tetween the foulard shirt’ waist suit that | rich and jewel-like blue. The buckle's 18 intended for general wear and the equally | tongue is gilt, to match the gilt and blue sott, silken and pretty frock that fe de- | enamel buttons that adern the coat's shaped signed to meet the requirements of the new | fromts. and overwhelmingly popular game. To any- one who desires to see the ping-pong dress at its best attention must be directed to the green and white foulard with the ball pock- ets of etitched white suede hanging on either hip. The skirt of this gown Is tn all The Coat of Many Cuts. Here we come falrly and squarely upon the question of coats and thelr importance. Never before have so many coats, of so wide |a varfety of shapes, seemed essential to the proper costuming of womankind. 1Is respects conventional save in the folded } ., ", ‘:huppr.r With ST o0 ead that she triple box pleats that un down the 10Ner ), . o0 4iready begged, borrowed or stolen Mpe of either hip. These pleats hang close | 4, 1 opoy gor o “basque covert coat,” and when the wearer stands with heels to- bhaving got this desire of her heart has she gether, and they spread to give her longest | ;o0 415 gighed after a knee or heel-long Spep full freedom. The walst is, to all - | p) tasteta “surtou yearned for a tents and purposes a shirt waist with &} . ..om or tan lace hung “Victorfa” and ehemlseite of white taffeta that is stitched | poigiv hought a silk “frocks and frills,” or — M T tallod and tucked moire “Eton.” Thesc by the way, are just a few of the coats on the market at present. Thewe ie some difficulty in deciding as to which type predominates. The basque cov- ert comt is meant for morming wear and is the handy andy for summer time. The volumMmous taffeta surtout, that may hang loose or fit the figure partially, is supposed to be particularly designed for the auto- mobile and the unspeakable dust its whiz- 2iag wheels arouse. The Victoria s the indulgence of rich, ehowy, carriage folk, and the frocks and frille and talled Etons are worn by everybody on all occasions. 1t 1s to be hoped by autumn the rage for s0 wide a vartety of coats will have some- what subsided. The present mad extrava- gance in feminine dress was recently fllus- trated by the heap of nineteen trunks plled in a railway baggage room and claimed by one small lady. She bewalled herself the responsibility of such & wardrobe and de- clared that one vast trunk wes filled with wraps only; another, somewhat smaller, was packed with neckties, chiffon boas and tulle sashes, while a third was filled to the brim with silk and cotton petticoats. Colored Shoes. With the unquestionable decline in the popularity of yellow shoes it remains to be seen whether a warm welcome awaits the new green, and red, and grey leather shoes of this season’s introduction. Theese are made up in Oxford ties and Colonial street slippers. The color of their leather s not aggressive and their shapes are most conservative. The dress shoe of the season s beyond all dispute the Colonlal slipper, made of patent leather or black A MUSLIN FROCK. with green, and yoked in at the top. A THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, s —————"01] N THE DOMAIN OF WOMAN. | flounces are decorated with fights of hand | embrotdered butterfiles and trails of field | lowers in their natural colors. Such skirts [are for use under duck and linen gowns | and for all but evening costume. The wash petticoats have routed the summer silk skirt. In the evening, when the colored cot- | ton skirt is put off, a gorgeous white lawn | affafr is assumed, or a sweet white net or esprit petticoat is donned. The white cot- ton esprit petticoats are good investments. They wash perfectly, take the starch beautifully and form the most buoyant toundations for silk, muslin or lace gowns. For Fashio e Bables. Again we see well dressed little girls | wearing white stockings with their plain cotton and linen gowns. Evidently there are mothers who approve of this mode, ( though not yet do we see any but the merest {bables who wear the white hosen with | dressy costumes. Black hose, half silk, halt | lisle, is esteemed the fashionable foot cover- | ing for little maids in short and very much frilled skirts. Wide fringed satin surah and satin taffeta sashes are the girdles most esteemed at summer afternoon parties whereat embroidered Swiss muslin con- tinues to be the most modish toilet. A captivating needleworked muslin tea party trock is illustrated. The yoke of the walst |is spangled with white dote and the base of the yoke and edge thereof, the edges of the flounces and the sleeves are enriched with a needleworked finish In Louls XVI pattern, instead of plain scallops. Quite the most recent outburst of in- fantile gorgeousness is evinced by the costly and beautiful white embroidered Swiss mus- lin coats made upon tinted taffeta linings. For toddlers of high degree the cap Is bought to accord in color and needlework pattern with the coat and under the trans- parent frills of the handsome wrap, sketched to {lluminate this text, full taffeta ruffles are gathered, their edges finished a trifie longer than those of muslin and button- holed in rounding points. MARY DEAN. MA x 20, 1vUE. A CRABBING COSTUME. in the gravel again, if the incident had already passed out of her mind. The dis- concerted Frenchman could not get away tast enough.” CAN TAKE CARE OF HERSELF. No Danger of the American Wom Golng Astray While Abroad. One of the American commissioners to the Paris exposition scouts the idea that Ameri- can women traveling abroad require chap- erones. ‘“‘Whatever the convictions of so- clety may demand,” he says, “‘the American gentlewoman, even though she is budding into womanhood, is perfectly able to take care ofherself abroad in conditions which to the woman of the continent demand a chaperon. “I was coming down the Rue des Nations one day when I noticed a particularly good looking and well dressed American girl sit- ting upon one of the iron chairs that were piaced everywhere about the grounds. She was drawing pictures in the gravel with her parasol, looking at no one and not striving Baring collar of oak leat green taffeta falls upon the shoulders, and this good celor is sepeated on the cuffs of the half sleeves and forms the belt. Straps and bindings of stitched white taffeta and big greenish mother-of-pearl buttons, with a beit buckle of the same, are the only other decorative wmaterials used on this distinctively graceful Russian eslf, and finished with buckle or big bow as the purchaser may please. Most of the daintier types of out-door Oxford ties are made with Colonial heels, some- what pointed toes and a big bow of black ribbon fastens at the top of the lacing or an unusually wide black ribbon is used as lacing and form the broad bow over the in- little suit. ‘Waist Bands and Buekl: There is noticeable everywhere & strong “feeling,” so to speak, for walst bande and ‘buckles. The wherewithal for the girdling - of_her svelte or too sufficlent waist is a matter of the Intensest moment to shopplag femininity. The belting counter has be- interesting and crowded as that devoted to neck wear. Fancy buckles shaw Do decline in publie value or in jeweled tmportance. Some of the newest notes are struck with buge gilded, silvered and bronzed leather buckles, that have tongues of metal to match. The strap that eircles the walst is then of leather, to harmonize with the showy buckle, or a length of wide, easily crushed and shimmering satin, taffeta sibbon serves the purpose. A startling importation, seen very exclusive shop the other day, was & big square bronze leather buckle, studden wiih turquoisd dots and threaded with a broad turquose blue satin surah ribbon. - Another buckle, that is bound to clalm fts dozers of ardent admirers. are the mussel ard clam shell belt clasp. Some of these ve- flect the glorious tones of the matrix opal; some are set in Cape Nome gold or are thickly studded with diamond eparks end fiash from among the gluss-encased treas- ures of the fashionable jeweler. It would be invidious to clalm any popularity of the step. The dress Oxtord, for nine women In ten, is of patent leather with the highest pos- sible skirt dancer heels, pointed toes and exaggeratedly wide lacings. For ping-pong a tidy little viel ki@ Oxford, with three bands of rubber across the sole and & rubber- clad beel or a broad buckled Colonial tle with the rubber sole strops and heel caps, are recommended. A very gay new Jancing slipper, just out, 1s & patent leather duch- ess shoe, with the big inatep flap of crim- son or green velvet, crossed by a long nar- row gold or cut steel buckle. When She Goes A-Crabbing. There 15 a surprise In store for the wild sea waves that race along the fonable beaches, a surprise in the shapd of new bathing suits, made of the wooliest white, grey sandy brown veiling. The mesh of the veiling that is used is as coarse as the weave of a coffee sack, and the pro- fessional title of this goods is wool-bur- laps. Its welght s nought, through Its coarse mesh it sheds the water as though it were greased, and it dries while you go gossiping on your way te your bathhouse. Crush brown and cream white straws, of & fine Itallan braid, known in England as Thames hats, have just come over for beach wear on this side. They are as close woven as Indlan baskets, and can be fast- ened under the chin for erabbing, on which narrow girdle over its wide rival; women display a marked liking for both and showy clnctures are adopted with coats and gowns altke. excursions they promise, as in Florida, to be extensively worn; the suitable crabbing or clamming gown being & sandy brown wool-burlaps bathing dress. The Wash Fetticoat. What & vast amount of admiration, needle work and hard money is being spent on the gay wash petticoat. The white A Shantung Pongee Frock. A case In point is displayed in the two summery costumes shown in the Rroup. Here we have a pale grey veiling to the right and an cqually pale Shantung hongee | ypgerskirt, with its pretty embroidered to the left. - The pongee is garnishad with { novers is not nearly good enough for the stitched bands of iselt and worn with 8 | pypgred and one women who want color; consequently we had cousters full of ging- ham, percale, lawn, pongee, wash madras, wash mohair and dimity petticoats, rang- ing In price from $1.50 to $15, $25 and $30. Those at the first-mentioned price are good enough and pretty emough for a queen They are tucked and abundantly founced and ‘well cut; the expense of the others lies in their shaped flounces of imported French gingham, encrusted with motifs of Irish point, or they -are hand-made and the SUMMER MODELS are In the stores now. They are wonderfully made corsets, 8o light that the figure docs not feel their welght and yet sturdy esough to give the most satlsfactory wear. Al W. B Summer Ercet Forms are made of our own special white Dasiste which is as tough as canvas and as cool a8 Ret. Choose from the following models : " 983 for slight figures ¢ $L00 8 foe madium Sivives 1 100 923 for developed figures 150 96} for medium figures : 3.00 908 for siout figures ;250 M yous denler annet » ppiy yousead divect to v in any way to attract attention. I observed IN DEFENSE OF THE CORSET. Pronounced a Very Useful Article, bat Mueh Abased. Most of the {lls that female flesh is heir to, according to many physiclans and all dress reformers, bhave their source and origin in the corset. Some indignant re- formers have aven declared the corset the invention of the devil, delivered by him to | his agents, the Paris dressmakers, for the destruction of humanity. Now there has arisen in Paris a defender | of the corset, who is in no way ronnecl!di with the dressmaking trade. He is a phy- siclan, whose speclalty is hyglene, and his | name is Frantz Glenard. In the current issue of the Revue Scientifique M. Glenard lays down these three propositions: First—The corset hae its reason of belng | from the esthetic viewpoint. Second—Esthetics and hygiene may be | reconciled even in the corset. Third—The corset is of use and value In certaln maladies. M. Glenard admits that from a hyglenist | often these statements are somewhat audacious. His justification of his third polnt must be passed over here as chiefly of interest to physicians and attention confined to his firet and second. Clothing, he asserts—and he appeals to the researches of the ethnologist for proof —was originally adopted neither for protec- tlon against the weather nor out of modesty, but simply from a desire for adornment. As civilization advanced the clothing of the sexes was differentiated to emphasize in each the quality most ad- mired by the other. Hence man's costume has tended more and more to straight lines, signifying strength and act| Woman's has tended to curved lines, signifying beauty and sup- plenet The corset is an attempt to pre- serve the curved outline of the walst and even to accentuate its fascinations. It may not always be successful in this effort, but it alms at beautiful result and may be made to produce that result. The two enemies of the beautiful in woman, M. Glenard asser are nature, which us woman grows older tends to de- stroy her youthful curves and to approxi- mate her figure to man’s, and fashion, which in the attempt to ecorrect nature and preserve the charms of youth, often A FULL VISITING COSTUME. a Frenchman of the Boni de Castellane type eyelng her and I lingered, being just curious enough to desire to see what would happen. Discovering that she was unac- companied, he approached her with perfect self-assurance, and, with a politeness so exaggerated that it was insolence, made her & low bow. “She eyed him calmly and not a muscle of her face moved. The broad and silly com- pliments he began to pay her were received with the same stony stare. Slowly she unclasped her pocketbook and, searching among her chenge, took out cinque centimes, or 1 peany, and gravely handed it to him, as though she mistook him for a beggar asking for alms. “‘Ob, non, nom, mademolselle, he ex- claimed, flushing. Thereupon she shrugged ber shoulders and fell to drawing pictures goes to excess and produces an inartietic and unhealthful condition. The ideal corset, he declares, should modity and improve nature without slavishly bowing to the excesses of fashion, which becomes inartistic when it attempts to do too much and to go too far. He is certain that such an ideal may be realized and that such a corset would be hyglenic- ally valuable as well as artistically effective. In other words, M. Glenard upholds tne use of the corset and condemns only its abuse. That Is precisely what sensible women have been doing for several cemtur- fes in practice; without injury to them- selves and to the delight of all beholaers. They will doubjless be gratified to find that for their practice there is now scien- tific justification and authority. PRETTY SARTORIS GIRLS. Inherit Disposition and Good Looks of Their Mother. As the only daughter of General Ulysses 8. Grant, Mrs, Nellie Grant Sartorls occu- ples a spot of her own In the hearts of Americans, us was shown during the ill- ness from which she has just recovered. The many who know her personally are especlally gratified at her return to health. Mre. Sartoris is a few years beyond 40, but continues to look ten years younger than ehe is. Since her return a few years ago from England, where she lived while her husband was alive, Mrs. Sartoris has resided in Washington and bas resumed in gne Is a bowknot and on another & fleur o 1is. Chalk-colored cloth _which white and pale gray and does not really belong in either class {s a fashionable fabric. Putty and cloud gray are among the favored shades of the season. Volle, transparent enough to show the glimmeér of a silken lining, is another Teat favorite. There is a certaln dark lue voile of a metallic tint which Is worn over green giace with excellent effect. The Dresden dimity skirt fs the newest in petticoats. The ground Is plain or colored, with floral decorations In delicate or gray hues. A plisse flounce or double frilis of the same material finish the skirt. A pretty, simple little blue bodice made by & smart taflor is stmply tucked in & cluster of fine tucks in the upper part of the front. Op either side of the tucks a band of lace insertion of a cream shade is set in, running down as far as the tucks, and the stock and bands of the sleeves are of the same lace, which looks like point de Paris, One of the most dellghttul of rings brings in the famliliar serpent, two of them in tact. They face each other at the back of the ring. “In the top of each head is a good-sized dlamond. The eyes are small, reen stones, and between the two heads s a turquolse in cabouchon shape, round and deep, as big, perhaps, as a large pea, which 18 ‘a good ‘size for many stones, but not large for the turquoise, which is more of greater circumference. This stone fs unusually fine and the ring very beau- ul. verges on For and About Wom Mrs. Clara Klldare, the only white woman who was killed in Guatemala by the earthquake, was a native of California. Miss Mary Morton, youngest daughter of the former vice president of the United States, devotes most of her time and her large income to thé benefit of unfortunate children of New York City. Mrs. U. 8, Grant and Mrs. Sartorls will spend the summer in Coburg, Canada, where Mrs. Grant bought a beautiful cot- tage last yea They will have with them Mrs. Sartoris’ daughters, the Misses Vivian and Rolemlay Sartoris, who have recently returned to Wa winter with relatives in Englan s a favorite summer resort for army people. A memorial is to be erected to the mem-~ ory of Mrs. Fuster, the prison philanthro- i8t, who recently perished in a hotel fire n New York City, and President Roosevelt has sent the following letter to the com- mittee: “I gladly inclose my subscription to help erect a monument to Mrs. Rebecca Salome Foster, better knewn as the ‘Tombs Angel.' It is a very real pleasure to testify even in so small a way to her work.” Mary Peden, 15 years old, of Miles City, Mont,, prevented what might have proved a serious rallway disaster four miles from Miles City last week. She saw a bridge on fire on the Northern Pacific_road and, kno g that passenger train No. 2 was almost due, she rushed to the stable, mounted a horse and loped madly in a race agulnst tine to the station there. Sho notified the agent, who held the train four hours, ) It is declared that Miss Marle Andissner, an Austrian woman of fortune and soclal position, the only fema) tourist who ever crossed the Andes. Miss Andissner has just left New York for her home after an extended tour of the new world. Last March she was In Rio and, though 50 yea) old, determined to make the overland tri to Peru.. For a good part of the journe she had to be strapped to the mulé whic! D she rode. The youngest princess at the coronation services will be Victorla Alexandra of Wales, who has just kept her 5th birthday. She was the st charming of all Queen Victoria's dlamond jubilee gifts, the great- randdaughter in succession to the throne. he little earl of Airlie, who is in his 9th year, will, it is sald, be the youngest peer to take part in the coronation. The father | of the boy died leading & cavairy charge in South Africa over a year ago. It wag gravely decided last Justice may hit her husband on the head with a stove lifter without belng adjudged guilty of giving sufficient provocation for divorce. Mrs. Louls Hartman deemed it necessary to regulate her spouse and while doing so employed the domestic implement named, giving him one smart rap on the head: en his stepson threw him downstairs. Louls appealed to the court for relief from such a strenuous home lite, but his honor gave the decision noted above, holding that the assault did not establish cruelty within the meaning of the law affecting limited divorce. week by some respects the position she occupled as Nellle Grant, the most popular girl in America, The unaffected nature and sweet dispo- sition which has gndeared Mrs. Sartoris to her friends and which made her “My Sweet Nellle" to her Hlustrious, father has been inherited by Rosemary, ber youngest daughter: Miss Sartoris has just passed ber twenty-first birthday. She has recently returned from England with her sister, whose engagement to Archibald Balfour was broken after the wedding preparations were well under way. The sisters are devoted to each other and are scldom separated. Miss Sartoris was educated at private English schools and at Georgetown convent, Wash- ington. She is especially accomplished in musie, for which she has shown an aptitude since infancy. ¥riy An attractive green straw hat is trimmed I"l'i. white hydrangeas with a little green oliage. Pearl buttons lend the finishing touch to collars, cuffs, revers and strappings on tatlored h dresses. A clever milliner has introduced a new form of buckle, having all the &ppearance of straw, but actually made in enamel. Very beautiful is & hat in which wistaris is the flower, the purple wistaria, outlini the edge of the hat, while the crown filled In with white . frutt tulle. rrant lar oSSR CITIL SRS 1O PORNAY [ for ucn-nnx velvet bows of the hues of the e. L little suede card cases are ¥ ¢ Sinet s stnalh e R e o dlamonds se! = e -PONG DRESS FOR OUTDOOR TABLE TENNIS, A CHARMING P! s sy N arean of Brooklyn that a wife | OVERWORKED WOMEN Should Beware of a Serious Organic Break-down. Take Heed in Time. The ordinary every-day life of most of our women is a ceaseless treadmill of work. 2 How much harder the daily tasks become when some derangement of the female organs makes every movement painful and keeps the nervous system all unstrung! One day she is wretched and uttorlfz miserable; in a day or two she is better and laughs at her fears, thinking there is nothing much the matter after all; but before night the deadly backache reappears, the limbs tremble, the lips twitch—it seems as though all the imps of s:l;n were clutching her vitals ; she goes to pieces and is flat on her ck. No woman ought to arrive at this terrible state of misery , because these symptoms are a sure indication of womb troubles. S he must remember that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is almost an infallible cure for all female ills, such #s irregularity of periods, which cause weak stomach, sick headache, ete., displacements and inflammation of the womb, or any of the multitudes of illnesses which beset the female organism. If there is anything in your case about which you would like special advice, write free!{ to Mrs. Pinkham. No man will see your letter. She can surely help you, for no person in America has such a wide elflwrlence in treating female ills as she has had. Address is Lynn, Mass.; her advice is free and helpful. i ) pl M\ P o \‘\‘\ e TN = Mrs. Richard Dixon wrote to Mrs. Pinkham when she trouble. Her letters are here printed. “DEaR Mrs. PINkmAM:—I have suffered for four years with pain in m back, and a terrible bearing-down fecling in the lower part of my bowels, .mi at times the abdomen seems to swell and becomes very sore. I have terrible sharp pains in my ovaries and am very nervous, also troubled with leucorrhcea and irregular menstruation. I have started to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, but I do not feel much better, so I thought I would write and ask you what to do. _Please answer soon, as I am a great sufferer and long to get relief.” — Mgs. RIcHARD Dixox, 11 Farewell St., Newport, R.I. (Jan. 11, 1900.) “DEAR MRs. PrngmAs:—I want to thank taking your Vegetable Compound, Liver Pil as directed by you, my backache and terrible pains in ovaries have disap- peared. I feel that your Vegetable Compound should be used by all weak women.”"—Mgs. RiIcHARD Drxox, 11 Farewell St.,Newport, R.1. (April 11, 1901.) ‘Will not the volumes of letters from women who have been made strong by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound con- vince others of the virtues of this great medicine ? ‘When a medicine hasbeéen successful in more than a million cases, is it j7stice to yourself to say, without trying it, “I do not believe it wouid help me " ? Py Surely you cannot wish to remain weak and sick and dis- couraged, exhausted with each day’s work., If you have some derangement of the feminine organism try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It will surely help you. MEWARD. — We have deposited with the National City Bank of Lynn, $5000, which will be paid to any person who can find that the above testimonial letters , OF were published before obtaiuing the writer's speelal per- ydia E. Pinkham Medloine Co., Lynn, Mass. Graduates of five of the best known colleges of America included In corps of tnstructors. Music, Art and Modern Languages taught by women of extended resl: pean’ capltals, under the instruction of the best masters. Gives good fon ‘and prepares for any college open to women. Principal's certifi- Qut-door sports, splendid gymnasium under direction of pro- MISS MACRAE, Principal, Omaha. as in great you for your letter of advice. Sincs , and using your Sanative Wash, RICKLY ASH BITTER CURES CONSTIPATION. dence in Euro general educat cate admits to college. fessional instructor. A SKIN OF BEAUTY IS A JOY FOREVER . T. FELIX GOURAUD'S ORIENTAL R D CREAM, OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER. P Removes Tan, Pimples, Freckles, Moth Paiches, Bash and Skin dis- an == g W o It has stood test of 54 harmiess it to be is properly made, Acoept no counters teit of similar hame. Dr. L. A. Sayre said to & la- dy of the haut-tom DRINK A u @ 5. 1 recom et £'As you ladies will use them, E mend GOURAUD'S CREAM' as the least harmful of all the Skin preparations.” ¥ for Fancy Goods White Ribbon Hemedy le by all Druggists an ealers tn the U. 8. and Europe Cam Con ame e vd FERD. T. HOPKINS, Fr cottes (Bout pationts kuo 87 Great Jones St., N. Y. White Riobon Remedy will cure or stroy the Aiseascd appetite fur alcoholic sumulants, cons ¢ Lhe patlent Is u nrmed n.nbn-\: e uppler,” r-:u;l e Ue o druniird. “Lmpobeibie for wif- b Vs P oy ) o e tive tor alconolle )| PP (3 N |one w nave an appetiie or. wicool lyuvis after using Whi c Eav.seu by memvers vi w. Lo 4 U Mrs. Moore, Press Superintendent of the Womun's _COristlan iemperance unlo Veniuis, Cal, writes: "L have tvsted Whi Kivbon Remedy on very ow ards, and the cures have becd many cases the lemedy W & 4 cheertully recommend & Hibvun Memedy. Momoers vl our unlon are Jellghted o find & pracical and economi- cal treatment to ald us ii VUF Lempersnce LG = L ord pany. secretly. i endorse Whoite i A. Cowan, of the Woman's Temperance Union, “states: 4 know of s0 many fl( ople redeems m the curse of drink by o White Ribbon Hemedy that | ~arnestiy request you to give it u.m.n" uc;.:l:‘( Triar package free or by mail s1. riar package tree by Wil T (he Woman's Christian n), 28 Tremont 8, Baos in' Omaha by cur PRIC oxue 47, 8. W. Cor. 16th and t.‘b?'n. Omn:lnhvtr-d FREE to any part elty. the use ing or calling on Mrs. years secretary B e I B s Every Woman anteed 1o cure Stomach, Liver and Kidney | " Complaints, Catarrh, Pains In Back and| 1 m Bhoulders, Neuralgia, Loss of Memory ¢ Coated Tongue, Blotches or Pimples on the Face, Rheumatism, etc. 30 days' treatment e, All drugsists. - WiLeoxX TANSY. PILLS Yor % years the only safe an Fomale . OF foF a1 troubles PR e T 80ld by Sherman & McConnell Drug Co., 8 W. Cor. 16th ana Dades Rte. Omaha. o, Y or le Ly SHEOMAN & WCuessll, DRUG VO, Corner Sixteenth and Dodge strects, Omaha - o i s e o iSRS