Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 1, 1902, Page 14

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e —————————————————— SUMMER OF VERDANT FASHIONS, ¥reshly Green Color Essential to All Up«to-Date Tollets. NEW YORK, May 30.—~We have bad a de- Ughttully green spring with a promise that verdant tanes will prevall through the sum- mer. This pleasant state of affairs is In no way due to nature's ald, for it is the ot of tashion that began to pAtromize the toge of the verdure. A touch of green is apparently essential with every tollet Nearly all of the new tweed travellng suits | modestly follow the lead of the vells, par: sols, etc., and show a gay green thread interwoven with the brown, grey or hlue mesh. Green-stalped leather Oxford tles are mpre popular with linen sults than brown shoes and every woman who buys & pongee shirtwaist or a pongee gown stands out for green buttons and taffeta straps by \way of appropriate decoration. The Green le Pattera, To make clear to the reader some of the | the | ways in which green does duty in makeup of the ideal spring tollet a eketch |48 glven of two sweetly fresh silk sults. The first of these, the one to the right band, | s & foulard, showing a delicate green bub. ble pattern on a cream white ground. The /lace introduced upon the waist shows through Ite transparent mesh an underlin- ing of green taffeta and the yoke of white 'sllk and muslin is tucked with green sew- g sllk. A wide, fine Yedda straw of a deep cream (n tone bas its crown fairly well covered with big green satin taffets the back and have half o» three-quarter sleovey that are broadly pouched and cuffed below the curve of the elbow. Proper Sport! Dresses, Bleeves, by the way, continue to wax instead of wane in size, and it is amazing | to view some of the new galf, croquet and tennis gowns provided with puffa and cufts that more nearly resemble a court ocaat | of the Ume of Louls XV. A pair of very modern sporting suits are sketched to in- dicate the proper lines on which to build an outdoor play dress. The skirts of both examples show an amount of trimming that a few seasons ago would have excited scorn and derision; nevertheless these models are quite in the fashion and both of them are made of hanfisome, durable apd not too welghty mobair. The sult to the right is a smart gray in tone and trimmed with bands af gray-blue mohair spotted in green. |Large green pearl buttons camplete the | color scheme. The second figure shows a |tan mohair garnisbed with stitched straps of the same and worn with a soft white lipen shirtwaist. The bats in both cases show two at least of the shapes that have wholly replaced the sallor and alpine of sacred and affectionate memory. ‘ An Even Dreas. Fully fitteen years ago an Englishman of | 80 mean order of artistic brain invented the accordion pleated skirt, and, while gores have come and habit backs prevalled and | annexation flounces have exerted their in- fuence with fluctuations, the accordion pleated gown has remained just what it PRETTY, COQUETTISH -~ el dwtitstvni ', BATHING DRESSES. Tttt —_— e e e ribbon. The brim is bound with a green |was In the beginning. Sometimes there are velvet ribbon of a rich young bay shade that exactly matches the big green Francis I plume that richly curls over the left brim. This type of full green optrich feathers grows steadily in favor with the wearers of wide hats and promises to lead the way to & revival of the broad shape wholly trimmed with plum Recently we have seen at country olubhouse dinner parties the combinasiop of the decollette evening dresses ang very wide tulle or straw shapes more or less sbundantly mounted in plumes of the first magnitude. A Chinese Pong Another and most successful study in green has been accomplishbed i the cors- penion figure to the foulard suit. Here ‘We have the etout wearing, cool and In JGreasingly popular Chinese pongee. It irt is agreeably simple in treatment, but coatwsist afforde scope-for the applica- tion of smart green taff straps, etited- ings in green sewing silk rows of green pearl buttons. - The oddly shaped coat fromt Jastens over a vest of string gray lace lald upon & green lining and the girdles, pare- w0l and hat facing concerned are done in the dark rich ebade of leaf green that dom- « lnates the Unts of the apple skin, peapod, " &, that enjoy a lesser vogue. F ‘ leat greey parasol, of the heaviest § 7 momounted on a natural wood handle | taffeta covering finished with u amartest and most serviceable “ssories that a wardrobe can ob- after experimenting wiih pongee ~ lined with plok, blue, black and , the orthodox green linjug bas ed ter popularity than ever. . Tinteed Mull Bodices. ‘The most recent acquisitions of the ehirt- ‘walst countar, where crowds of women Tover al] day, s the little tinted stik mull affalr that is so soft, des) its abundant falds, that thé whole of an_elbow-sleeved example could be neatly packed into & tea- cup of the average sige. At the Ume of writing. the thin ehirt- ‘Walst seqsan has begun and the demand of the women is for semetblag very soft. This is why the silk mull, mercerized English uslins, bastiste and Habutal silk examples ‘outsell the Swiss muslin and Jawn rivals. Btarchless goods are havipg their day end it ® & jox and & wonder to see how ad- .. even. exquisitely, these simply vely germents are tucked by machines. side from the tucks the soft blouses a: wraished with plentiful insets and inser- of lace or the tra t goods s tely embroidered before it is made wp. Nine-tenths of these waists bulton in fewer accordion pleats seen and sometimes [there are a greater number in evidence, but the idea and execution is always per- fectly good fashion and this season it is le fashion for evening gowns and for slender women. Smart among smart clothes {8 the sun pleated gown of cream white creped chiffon, drooped on a tinted silk skirt that is veiled with fine Brussels met. From twenty to fifty yards of chiffon are easlly pleated into one skirt and about & third of that amount into the waist and sleeves of a properly made costume. Liberty crepe and taffeta soy- euse and sllk point esprit and mercerized Puglish muslin and silk mull are all de- lighttul materials for sun pleating. 8o very, very full are all these skirts that when the wearer of one of them moves the creases in the thin light fabric break into & perfect foam of crinkly widths. The proper pleats far this season are deeper than ever before and the bottom edge of the skirt ought to be finished only by the silken selvage of the wide thin material. Stout women who yearn after the grace of the sun pleated fullness, have black creped chiffon masses dropped over white ollk skirts that are covered with two thick- esses each of black net. Daring Tollets for Salt Baths. Ever gayer and more daring grow the bathjng dresses. Double skirts and suits of white trimmed with black stir fem- inine interest along the beaches. A white serge dress set off with stitched bands of dead black mohajr will cateh the eye in & crowd arrayed in colors, especlally if the wearer ties up her fair bair in a cool | black sflk kerchief. There are those who hold that the bathing skirt cut o sim- ulate two flounces s unduly heavy, while there are equally expert bathers who in- #lst that just that welght s requisite to comfart when in the ses. However, that WAy be, the double skirt has come evidently to stop with us for & season at least and furthermore it is bralded. Very receatly & pretty new bathing shoe, lacing up to the knee, where in some secret manner it }h- ms to the garter, bas made its ap- pearance and met with a warm reception. Ia other departments of sport there are even less evidences of severe dressing than about the batbing beaches. Women go automobiling in trained gowns with rether wide-brimmed white hats bound with green velvet ribbon and decorated with big choux and tails of the same. The semi-profes- lonal red bas disappesred, not only from horpeless carriage, but from the golf laks, and nothipg s more significant of & change of heart and of luterest in sport than the Wway the women dress their mnecks. A whack at the tennis balls is taken in a mother should be & source of s pain and rolmmm:z th severest trial is not only m. hour are obviated by the use of 00y Baby Min overgome, the system is made ready for serlous accidents so common to the critic: Every mother feels & great dread of the pain and danger attendant upon the mwost critical of her life. Becomin joy to all, but the suffering a: r incident to the ordeal makes its anticipation ons of m is the only remedy which relieves women of the great hour which is dreaded as woman's painless, but all the danger is avoided its use. Those who use this remedy are no longer dolrm‘mtfl ; mervousness, nauses and other distressing conditions are ‘du coming event, and the Mother’s Adsota, Ga. THE OMAHA high transparent stock of lace or in a per- fectly flat, small sallor collar of lace and bastiste, under which Is knotted a soft, striped Jolaville scarf. Around the out- door ping-pong table gloves are regarded a8 necessary and all the yachtswomen wear stiffiy-starched white patticoats under this serge and linen skirts, Sweet and sensible indeed is the fan of the hour. Tiny white bone fan# decorated fo blue for Yale or Columbla, In red for Harvard and in orange and black for Prince- ton are recommended and sold for pocket carriage. Of bone or cellulold a spring fan is made, no bigger than a shoehorn and much the eame shape. At one end of this nice contrivance a paddle wheel closely resembling an ocean staemship's propeller is set and put in motion by pressing the thumb agalnst a small button At the base of the handle. Touch your thumb to the button and a breeze sprin up. More convenlent and truely decorative than these two new contrivances, that have been especlally introduced for country dances, are the still small fans made of painted pina cloth. The scenes on the ploa cloth, which, by the way, comes from Manila, are all af Spanish or of pure Phil- Ippine sentiment and are gaily colored and spangled. The mounting is done with brown and slightly perfumed eastern wood. Styles for Juveniles. All In purest white {s the new rule for children’s evening dress, so far as conclu- sions can be drawn from a tour of a big shop devoted to juvenile dress and also from one of the first of the young people's parties. Rich mothers show a regrettable tendency to put their emall boye and girls into expegsive white silk coats as well as gowns and suits of an evening or afternoon, when any ftestivity 1s afoot, and every girl is well aware from her cradle up of the uses of lace. Simple Valenclennes edging and Insertions used to be regarded as amply magnificent for any little miss; heavier lace application now adorn the frocks worn from 2 years and up. Sometimes the lace 18 real, oftener It is a handsome and equally satis- factory Imitation such as that used on the white china eilk frock sketched as suited for a girl of 8 or 10 years. White imita- tion Irish lace motifs and rich yoke of the same is all the decoration used on this handsome, but quite inexpensive dancing dress. MARY DEAN. LOVE MAKING IN MEXICO. Tender Passion More Romantic and Ideal Than in Northern Climes. Bentiment as it exists among the Latins is probably almost beyond the conception of the more practical northern nations. The mere fact of their courtship, conducted on such entirely idealistic lines, love bred by a glance, fostered by flceting glimpses or a stray word or two, a profile at the window, a shadow on the curtaln, all at the expense of hours of waiting below in the dark street, these go to show how far sentirgent plays a part in the life of the youths of both sexes in this sunny south- land. It is mot unusual for courtships here to last for years—five, ten, fifteen even. And all that time the intercourse between the lovers s of the most evanescent descrip- tlon, this doubtless eerving to preserve the sentiment and romance for both. A man who loves hopelessly, who never hopes to be united with the object of his pas- slon, yet who will ride for miles at night for the consolation of stopping his horse beneath her window and watching there until the morning, has certainly a vein of sentiment that to many is incomprehensible, A certain man, old now, white-haired, shaky in his galt, was when young most happy in his love affalrs. He was some- thing of a dandy in those days and carried a fine zarape with the long fringe often seen in these graceful coverings. It was his custom, however, merely to throw the zarape over ome shoulder, as his hardy, young frame felt no need of artificial warmth. One night as he stood at his lady's “‘reja’ (the house was but one story, which 1is a blessing to lovers) the girl reached through the bare and bralded three little pigtails in the fringe of the zarape. That was forty years ago. The dark-eyed owper of the tiny hand that made the pig- tails has long been In her grave, but on & sunny morning the owner of the zarape may be seen taking the air on one of the plaza benches and over one shoulder he A GRACEFUL ACCORDIAN PLEATED EVENING DRESS, bears & faded Baitillero with three little plgtatls braided In the fringe. It is told of this same aged beau that Be had once a tremendous affair with a lovely girl and finally succeeded in gaining admission to the house for a tete-a-tete, the family being called away and the serv- ants yielding to the persuasions of the young people. A close and trusted friend was left outside on guard to warn the lover of the family's approach. He had just ensconsed himself snugly in a dark doorway and prepared himself for a long vigll when, to his amazement, the lover came burriedly from the house and, thrist- ing his arm through that of his friend, dragged bim away, declaring that it was all off, that he had suffered the greatest disil- lusion of his lite. “Bul eyplain,” insisted his friend. “An bour ago you swore you loved her better than yourself. Caramba,’ WHERE Tlll TIP FLOURISHES, American Travelers' Expe ce in the English Town of Chester, “As Americans we are all down on the tip system from principle,” said & Michi- gender who has spent years abroad to the Detroit Free Press, “but we must mot forget that it is mainteined as a primciple i Burope. I would almost venture to say that po government over there could run for a week if tips were abolished. It's the regular thing everywhere, but I (hink they have more nerve in England than else- whare, For lnstance, when I arrived ot the DAILY BEE: TWO MuUEL SPORTING DRESSES. old town of Chester I had to tip the porter Wwho {dentified my baggage. A boy called a cab, and I tipped him. I paid cabby regu- lar fars and tipped him besides. At the hotel the barmaid, the chambermald, the tapster and the bootblack had to be tipped. 1 got shaved, and paid the usual rate and a tip in addition. When I tipped the waiter 1 walked out to view the town and a woman directed me to the old burying ground, and held out her hand for a tip. I couldn't enter without tipping the sexton and to look at the old register meant a fee and another tip. There was a woman to show me the oldest graves, and the tip came in again. As 1 traveled over the ground of the dead 1 encountered a well-dressed man leaning over mooss-grown headstone, and we bowed to each other and entered Into conversa- tion. We spoke of the anclent dates and the queerly spelled names, and I was turn« ing away to pass on when there was a twinkle of his fingers. ‘You don't mean {t?" I gasped. “The usual thing, you know,’ plted without a smile. “*But what have you done to deserve a tip? “‘Excuse me, sir, but this is the grave of my great-grandfather, and you'd have missed it but for me!" 1 came down with a coln,” laughed the tourist, “‘but I took care not to ask any- body who did the undertaking at that he re- funeral. He probably had living descend- ants, and every one of them would have expected a tip. CLUB WOMAN'S IDEAL HUSBAND, According to One Authority He Should e a Paragon of Virtue. At the Federation of Women's Clubs re- cently held at St. Paul one of its most talented and experienced members Wi called upon to respond to the toast, “The Ideal Husband,” and warned her fellow- members that if they expected her to fleer and jeer at man she was “the wrong lady to approach,” and continued in the follow- ing strain: “Scorn men? Why, I honor them. What are we that we should cast aspersions them? They reared this khall; they lent it to us; they conveyed us hither; they bullt this city; they harnessed and spanned this river; the whole external world, so far as It appears to metropolitan eyes, at least, is the handiwork of man. At every step we tread his manufactures underfoot. “Men bore through mountains, they ewarm over oceans, they delve in the earth oand dive in the aea, while we follow at a eafe distance or sit quietly at home and eat and wear the things they catch. “The woman's bullding at a world’s fair 1s planned, ratsed, furnished and decorated by man in honor of woman. “‘Men are indispensable to civilization. In fact, they are too capable; their ablilities and energles overpower and discourage us. “In their presence we are selzed with mental timidity and physical Incapacity. When they are mear we cannot throw any- thing straight, nor set an alarm clock, nor carve a turkey, nor walk a plank, nor ¢limb a fence, nor harness a horse, nor put up a stove, nor talk in prayer meeting, nor per- form any other of the more delicate, dan- gerous and intricate offices of life for which nature has refused us the proper facultles. 1 believe the men of the uncultured classes are not so averse to the usefulness of woman, but whatever exciting and inter- esting occupation is going forward your true club husband will gallantly exclaim, “Sit in the rocking chair and let me do {t. S0 we must always wait until they have gone downtown before we begin to move the furniture around. “But this club woman does not belleve in allowing man to have his way. To her men occupy merely the positions of an ad- viscry board and such, I hope, they will ever occupy to this Federation of Women's Clubs. Let us listen to their practical and disinterested advice, but let ue never al low them to invade these precincts with their terrible activity, to cast us all in the shade. Let us keep them out of some- thing. Of course, they can do everything better than we can, but even we need mental and physical exercise; we don't want to be all clothes and consclence. “Meanwhile we exclaim with Hamlet: ‘What a plece of work is man! How noble in reason! How {nfinite In facultles! In form and moving how express and sdmira- ble! In action how like an angel! In ap- prebension how llke a god, the beauty of the world, the paragon of animals!’ “‘“The paragon of animals'—there's the test. When in our weakness we feel in- clined to criticlse the nobler sex let us range him up with other animale and see how grandly he bears comparison—how graceful and subtle when compared to the elephant, how pleasing and accommodating to the bear, how humane to the goat, how logical and independent to the sheep! Na: even on his own ground man surpasses the lion in magnanimity, the fox in acumen, the parrot in repartee, the monkey in ver- satility, the ant in thrift, the fish in self- control, the spider in all that goes to make up & valued member of society. ““The horse s regarded as & useful ani- mal, but statistics show that on a toflsom journey through & brokem country a man can travel more hours & day, more miles to the hour, on smaller rations, than the strongest horse. The mule practically comes Dearest man in utility, but I dare to say that if all the facts were known the man Is more of an absolute success than the mule. “Then here's to the men! Frills of Fashion. Bands of embroidered gee are among the dress trimmings. pen Mohalr, flannel are the popular Sadnihy Boiter t I8 & tiny novelty r the halr, emerald matrix 8 oue of the many popular stones for brooches and belt pins. Lady appies yith flowers acd follage l'nrm one of the fashionable hat decora- tions, Flower boleros represent the latest idea in floral garniture so much in favor this and last season. A new idea Is that the summer hat, parasol and petticoat must matc nearly as possible. Three-strapped tan slippers are smart additions to an evening gown of a castor Shade, also tan shoes, jaced with ribbon. Low shoes which are not much more than slippers except that they have a thicker sole are the correct thing for sum- mer wear. Belts of pongee, with embroidered ends are among the novelties. They are pointed back and front and stitched with red, blue or other desired colors. The lighter tones of suede are bein much d for the more severe styles ol slippers. ‘Sllver grays, fawns, delicate tans and a putty tint being included In the list. The familiar feather quill has been sup- plemented by broader ~quilis of kid or rl's as € suede, some resembling a leaf, the veins being simulated by embroidery in machine stitching. ‘Wild strawberries—replicas in size and oolor of the natural fruit—form the trim- ming on some summer hats. Follage is mingled with the berries in artistic com- bination. In gloves for summer wear there are some of white glace kid which will wash. These cost more than other wash gloves, but they are satisfactory and that s suf- ficlent reason for their popularity. The ‘“carriage bag” is the latest. It is a long, flat leather bag, renembllns a pocketbook. Within are a memorandum WHITE FROCK FOR YOUNG GIRL. book and pencll, a compartment for cards, another for a purse and a small velvet pincushion. The big silk curhlnr cape ig coming In, but it s one of the Viennese novelties. It is a large, long cape, cut so that it does not meet in front. The whole costume is displayed .through the floating open front nntr the neck is caught with ribbons up in immense choux. . For and About Wo! Mlle, Lucie Faure, daughter of the late Felix Faure, president of France, is about to publish a book on the Oxford movement in the Church of England. Mrs. Howard Kingscote, the English novelist, who is lecturing in this country, says that American audiences are anxious to hear facts, while English audiences de- mand to be amused. A Massachusetts woman has been made a bachelor of divinity in Chicago. The title is_slightly misleading, fnasmuch as it probably does not mean that the reciplent of the honor is not wedded to the cause. The most enterprising woman who has been heard of for a long time is the mother of two palrs of twins who was admitted to t El Paso one day this week. It 18 not often that professional and domestic talent are combined in remarkable degree. The women of Montclalr, N. J.. have clegned the streets of the town for the last elght years at thelr own expense, but now the Woman's Town Improvement assocla- tion finds the task grown beyond it with the growth of the town and has asked the city ‘councl to make an appropriation. Miss Mayme Z Boyer, teacher of a school at Pleasant Grove, near Birdsboro, Pa., walked 700 miles to and from school during distance trom her home and miles, from her home duriug the school term of seven months. In 1901 there were completed in Tokio, Japan, bulldings costing 000, to be universi used as a y exclusively for women. Thiy sclence are included in the curriculum. Mrs. Zella Nuttall, an honorary a f the Peabody Museum of American ‘cheology at Harvard, has had a book named in her honor. the long lost codex owned by Lord Zouche of Harynworth, and Nut! ered the existence of had been lost to view istant he original after it 'or centuries. A SKIN OF BEAUTY IS A JOY FOREVER DI. T. FELIX GOURAUD'S ORIENTAL CREAM, OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER. e No Summer Wardrobe is Complete without a W. B. Summer Corset All stores are showing the 1902 models. These corsets are made with especial attention to minimum of weight and maximum of sturdiness. WE ILLUSTRATE THREE “ BEST' SHAPES are made of white batiste of the very w’ B' EreCt Forms lightest yet sturdy texture, and trimmed with lace and ribbons. In these styles : Erect Form 983 Forslight figures = = Erect Form 970 For medium figures ~ = Erect Form 972 For fully developed figures Erect Form 961 For medium figures — - Erect Form 903 Forstout figures - = B. Girdle Corset W. B. Shirt Waist Corset w. i ainty little affair which allows full 18 a great favorite, Does away with un- lay to hips and bust. It is ideally com- ainly ridgesat bust and shoulder blades. ortable and will fit women of slender ade of te lightest white batiste, Lace and ribbon trimming at top d white batiste. bottom, For the average womea. IF YOUR DEALER CANNOT SUPPLY YOU, SEND DIRECT TO WEINGARTEN BROS., 377 & 379 Broadway, N. Y. City Largest Manufacturers of Corsets in the World build and young girls. In piak, blue and Rty )] WORDS OF PRAISE. eople From Many States Say Smith’s Green Mountain Renovator Is the Best Medicine. WAS IT A TUMOR ? JT cannot find words to tell of the good your SMITH'S GREEN MOU: TAIN RENOVATOR has done for me. 1 had doctored for § years for diabetes ¢ the doctors said.) I had a lump in my left side in my stomach and felt at times as If water was forming over my heart; there was a tightness around my waist and my breath was very short. On last Tuesday that lump broke. I became dizzy aml was placed in bed and from me passed blood black and something like liver chopped up, and something Ilike the white of egg, and after that something like threads and today 1 am feeling like a new person and look § or 10 years younger. Last BEN Y Slept Bood on my sore side. 1 have only taken one bottle and a half of ‘the RENOVATOR. All sufferers of discase can surely call this a God-sent medicine I wish you would publish this letter for others' good. (Signed) Mrs. Harry Jacobs, 82 West Third st, Cincinnati, O., April 23, 1902, President Bowman Speaks. +I have taken your SMITH'S GREEN MOUNTAIN RENOVATOR as a tonle and blood purifier with splendid effect. I regard it as the best medicine I have ;z‘ecl;luned, (8igned) E. W. BOWMAN, Presldent Bowman's Bank, Kalamazoo, Nervous Prostration Cure! “Two years ago I suffered from nervous prostration. Doctors sald it was a complete collapse of the nervous system. I doctored for 7 months and steadily rew worse. 1 got so I couldn”t eat hardly anything on account of indigestion. elghbor ladies and friends would say “My, you look bad!' One woman sald to me, “I can see death stamped in your face,’ and I really belleved it. I was so weak and nervous 1 could hardly walk across the room. 1 had a cough and night sweats and told my husband 1 belleved I was going to die of consumption. I saw SMITH'S GREEN MOUNTAIN RENOVATOR ndvertised and began taking it. Did not feel any effect from the first bottle, but felt a change before I finished the second bottle. I took in all 6 bottles and I can do as much work now as any woman in the city. It has made me feel 20 years younger. It used to be I couldn’t sleep. 1 can go to bed now at 7 o'clock and sleep soundly tlll morning.” (Signed) Mrs. W. W. Helm, 21 Mayne St., Huntington, Ind. An 0id Man’s Gratitude. “T am 80 years old and since I was 18 have been subject to billous attacks and gostiveness, At 70 I began (o feel a lameness in my limbs and it kept growin worse. 1 began to have dizzy spells and my legs felt weak and sore. 1 coul not walk 20 rods without resting. 1 saw an advertisement for GREEN MOUNTAIN RENOVATOR, and reading that it was especlally for rheumatism, procured a bottle and took it as directed. 1 did not feel much rellef from my rheumatism, but the dizziness was gone in part. After the second bottle 1 was certainly better and I continued taking it until I had used 5 bottles, I then stopped for 6 months and took 3 more bottles. “For the past year T have been as free from rheumatism as I ever have been in my life and T want to tell suffering people that GREEN MOUNTAL RENOVATOR has done for me and say that a trlal will do the same for anyone. (Bigned) Ephraim Plerce, 286 Lincoln Avenue, Cliftondale, Mass. Duluth, Minn., Man Had Ecze! “I have been troubled for 9 months with eczema, and although I have taken only one bottle of your GREEN MOUNTAIN RENOVATOR so far, I am so much relieved from this trouble that I can slecp soundly all nlsh( Before I began Its use 1 would lie awake for hours with the awful itching.” (8igned) Harold Wohlstrom, 2402 West Second St., Duluth, Minn. The Knife Left Her Weak. “As T have taken 3 bottles of your GREEN MOUNTAIN RENOVATOR with such great improvement to my heaith, 1 feel disposed to inform you for the benefit of‘others who may be unable to fina rellef: UAtter a surgical operation and tryln rellef from the use of GREEN MOUNTAI} fainea more than 10 pounds in welght.” (Signed) M. 1B rite to any of these people if you wish the facts verified. Every RENOVATOR we sell 1s under our absolute guarantee to benefit or mone RENOVATOR, cures Blood Troubles, Nervous Diseases, Dyspepsia, and Liver Trouble. KldneY Hoes mot contain any polsons and acts gently thoush quickly. and let us tell you more about the great Vermont tonie. THE BOSTON STORE, Sole Agents all kinds of medicines, I found more RENOVATOR than anything else, and Inez Abbey, Grand Rapids, ttle of refunded. ndigestion, Call today sley- price FOLLOW THE FLAG 1601 Farnam Street §C New City Office WABASH ——Best Line to—— ST. LOUIS HARRY E. MOORES, G. A. P. D, Lv. Omaha 5:15 p. m, Ar. St. Louis 7:00 a. m. BROWNELL HALL Graduates of five of the best known calleges of America included In corps of instructors. Music, Art and Modern Languages taught by women of oxtended rostc lunu in European’ capitals, under the imstruction of the best masters. Gives s general sducation and-prepares for any dollegs open to women. | Prinoipal's cer Cate pdmits to colldge. =~ Out-door sports, splendid gymuasium under direction o Tessional Luatructor. 'MISS MACKAE, Principhl m": 3 O — o ——— T TN —

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