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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, AUGUST 16, 1903. PROPERTIES MANAGED, W. FARNAM SMITH & CO. Manage Estates and Other Properties Act as RECEIVER, EXECUTOR, GUARDIAN AND TRUSTEE for CORPORATIONS, FIRMS, INDIVIDUALS. and fiscal agents of CORPORATIONS. 1320 Farnam St. Tel. 1064, GOLD AND SILVER PLATING. OMAHA PLATING CO., Bee Bldg. Tel. % y GARDAGE. RBAGE CO., clenns removes Earbage o ANTI-MONOPOLY cesspools and vauiis, and dead animals at reduced prices. N. 16th. Tel. 177. LAWNMOWERS. BHARPENED, P. Melcholr, 15th & Howard C. R Hx-:FuN’.IAa'm N, Joth st Tel. 70 o\ ys this month. Cut prices on keys Mo 818 ———eee e LOST. MARE, chestnut coior, weight : ilght ‘spot on face. When lost had blan ket on; %th and A streets, South Omaba treet. ral reward. or %2 Douglas str oral reward. andle bearing E. Colby, 213 Lost—Mds1 3 owner's nate. Return to 16th s and recelve $ ST—_Brown Irish Water Spanlel, top- L Toma Yellow halr ‘on leg; collar with name plate on; liberal reward on return 10 Taa"St. Marys Ave. Lost—Md56 16x LOST or stolen, surveyor's leveling instru- ‘ment in north part of city: $5.00 reward for return of Ifl|ml‘ an ‘l(l(\ questions 0. '35 N. 30(h street, city. . TORt—463 16x LOST, lady’s gold watch, Elgin works. ‘turn' to Anna McCormick, 2319 Chicn and receive $25 reward TLost—503 LOST, tan _colored mastiff dog; name, Bruiser. Return 3126 Chicago 8t and re- celye reward o8t M50 22 MEDICAL, speciallst %' years' practic esldence telepho DR. W. women_and_children; Office; 2206 Cuming. R ¥-3196; office, B-2636. DR. PRIES, German graguate, renowned for his skill and experience In confin ments; cures sterility, long standing di t arfes, cures painful retarded or suppreased.menstru ‘rom auy cause, recent or of long standing. Ladies who' have suffered for years, hopeless and dejected, Wwithout operation or the hospital personal interview is impossibe case fully, inclose stamp and advice will promptly be given. Address R, Pries, M. D., 1312 Dodge St. Omaha, Neb. LADIES, our harmless remedy relioves without fall delayed or suppressed men- struation. For_free trial address Paris Chemical Co., Milwaukee, Wis. BADIES! Chichester's English Pennyroysl Pills are the best. Safe, rellable. Take no other. Send dc..'stamps, for particulars. “Rellef for Ladies,” in letter return mail. sk your dru‘sm. Chicheste: Cnemical Co., Philadelphla, Pa. U%UOR HABIT cured In three days. Pay ‘when cured. No hypodermics. ite for eirculars. Gatlin Institute, 22 8. Nl“h.n MUSICAL. THOS. J. KELLY, voice. Davidge Block. =30 OSTEOPATHY. The Hunt Infirmary, McCague Bldg. .T. s Atzen & Farwell, Paxton Bik., 0i-7. T. 138 DRS. FINCH & MILLER, 1 8. %th_St. | ~18 | Ghicago Local DR. GRACE DEEGA Tel. 2646 GID. E. & ALICE JOHNSON, osteopath Suite 515, New York Life Bidg. Tel %:I AP —— PATENTS. H. J. COWGILL—No fee unless 413 8. 15th Bt., Omaha. Tel. 1756, PATENTS Sues & Co. Omaha, Neb. Ii- lustrated patent book free. Tel, 1023. M_570 N15 . 8@ N. Y. Lite. i1 suocessful, ~-162 PAWNDROKERS, BAGLE Loan Office, reliable. accommodat- ing; all business confidontial. 131 Douglas. — 8 P R G AN | 8 | Stoux City Passenger. LEGAL NOTIC) BIDS FOR COAL. Sealed bids will be recelved and opened Aug. 20, 1903, for the delivery of ten cars of anthracite coal, at once, f. 0. b.,, Yank- ton, So. Dak. All bids must be paried by a ocertified check made 10 J. A. Beifeld, Sioux City, Iowa, on some solvent bank, for $310.00, ' to be forfeited in case party falling to the signing of con- tract and giving of bond, J. A. BEIFELD. Sioux_City ASA-176-M RAILWAY TIME CARD. Towa 10N STATION—10TIL. AND MARCY. Union Pael Leave. 40 am 53 3 BE gd 33 Overland Limited he Fast Mail. CaliforniaExpress Paclfic E£xpress Hasterr, Bxpress .... The Atlantic Express. The Colorado Special. Chlcago 8pecial .. Lincoln, Beatrice and Stromsburg Express..b 4:00 pm North Platte Loca a 8:00 am Grand Island Locai....’b 56:30 pm Ohieago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, Chicago Daylight ,......a Chicago Fast Bxpress. i a 4:20 pm a11:3 pm 7:10 am g 2388 puy pasy 233 8333 | Chicago Limited ... Des Moines Fxpress. Chicago & Northwestern, ““The Northwestern Line, Fast Chicago .. 3 iy Daylight St. Paul Daylight Chicago Local Chicago ..... Local Cedar Rapids. Limited Chicago . Local Carroll . Fast Chicago . Fast 8t. Paul. Fast Mafl ... Locals8ioux Cit o Norfolk & Bonesteel.... Lincoln & Long Pine. Chicsge, Rock Island BURRER® pEpoE® Son®mues ol Swm- 29 © g33 8 3 Chicago Daylight L't'd.a 3 Chicago Daylight Local.a 7:f Chicago Expreas biL:6 Des Moines Express.....a 4:30 pm Chicage Fast Ixpress. 5:3% pm WEST Rocky Mountain i't a Lincoln, Colo. Springs, Denver, Pueblo and West . W, veeosth 1:30 pm Colo., Texas, Cal. and Oklahoma Fiyer ......a 5:40 pm Wa Bt Louis Express sees 8t. Louls Local, ol Bluffs . Ilino Chicago Chicago, Minneapc St. Paul Limited Minneapolis & St Express . Chicago Lo Chicago Expre: Missouri Pacifio. 8t. Louls Express .a10:00 am K. C. & St. L. Ex.......a10:50 pm gt ory WEBSTER DEPOT—15TH & WEBSTER 29p 338 %0 am ‘Cannon Ball" am b10:35 pm 210.35 am Chicago, St. Paul, Omaha, Twin City Passenger. Minneapolis & .a 6:30 am & 9:10 pm A 2:00 pm all:% am Oakland Local... b 646 pm b 8:45 am M url Pacl Nebraska _Local, Via ‘Weeping Water. b 4:10 pm 210:35 am Chicago & Norihwestern, Nebraska and Wyoming Division, Black Hllls, Deadwood, Lead, Hot Spring: 8 3 m a b Wyoming. Casper and’ e OUEIAB ... ooree ... 3 p Hamiioas, “York, Uavid oo ¢ 4®pm ity, SBupe for, Geneva, Exeter and Séward....b 3:00 pm b 5:00 pm el e URLINGTON STATION—10TH & MASON Burlington & Missouri River, Leave. Wymore, Beatrice and e b # D B'B‘O d Express. b clolorado Ve mouth Rellevue Bellev Kansas City, St Blufls, Kansas Cit 8t. Louts Fiyer........"a Kansas City Night Fx..a10: Chiengo, Burlington & Quiney, Chicago Speciul. . T:00 am Chicago Vestibuied Fx..a 4:00 pm A 9:18 am »:06 pm Joseph & Couneil Day Ex Chicago Limited. Fast Mall.... . a Dall b Dally excent Sunday. d Dafly except aturday. e Dally except Monday. STEANSHIFS, HMERICA LINE Bleamers of 12.500 Toos ROTTRKDAM, via BOULUGNE Balling Wediesday ai 10 A. M. Al Potadam ...}, Noot Rotterdam MOLLANU=ALEIICA LINK, 60 Dearborn Si., Chieag: arry Moores, 1601 m a.. C. Rutherferd, BB Fersam o, J. B Hernoide 1502 Famam st PLUMBING, DALY & SON PRACTICAL PLUMBERS steam and gas fitters; jobbing neatly done; all orders promptly attonued. Tel. 4l 2306 Leavenworth. e e ——— RUG MANUFACTURING. OMAHA Rug Factory, 132 Leaven. Tel, 2068, ) T e ——— SHORTHAND AND TYPEWRITING, A. C. VAW BANT'S school. 77 N. Y. Life. il OM. Van Stor. Co., 1811 Farn. Tols, 159832, STAMMERING AND STUTTERING CURED, Julia Vaughn, (% Ramge Miig —t e e ———— TICKET BROKERS, CUT RATE raflroad P. H. Philbin, 145 Farnam. 'Phone 78 —-Tid e e NNERS, tickets everywhere. G. B. KOCH, t1a and Mapie. } MEDIUM, SEND 2c and stump. with date of birth, and get trance reading of your past, pre ent and future. 1 tell full names, 'date age and date of marriage, speculation, di- vorce, changes. etc., and te'l whether the one you love is truc or filse; guarantecd satisfaction. Address Mme. De Vere, Lock Box 915, Kansas City, Mo. 52 16x - - UPHOLSTERING, —— —e INIBHING — OMAHA FURNITU AIR WORKS. 01 Farnam. Tel M N 454 B4 ~ A.0C.0xg, A. M., L. B, Pres., Omaha. Puox. A. J. Lowey, Lrice. When You Write to Advertisers remember it only takes an extra stroke or two of the pen to mention the fact that you saw the ad In The Bee. LABOR AND INDUSTRY. The St. Louls World's Fair operations employs 500 workmen. The United Staies produces fourths of the cotion of tae world. South Africans bought goods val.cd at $25,780,000 from the Uniied States in 1.0. The national headquarters of iae in- ternational Unlon of Journeymen Larbers is now in Indianapolls. The free empiv) ment burcaus of Ch.cago are to be abuudone cont court decision. The Order of Kallway Telegraphers re- poris b3 melnbers admittes in the six months ended Juiy 3l Forcign countries are buying $5,i00,000 worti Wurla of our typuwriters a year. About 17,04 operatives were involved in the Luwell (uuss) texiile strike, which Las cu:t 1n wages atout #1,3.0,00v. It {8 estimaicu that neariy all the pine taber nuw growlng In Miinesota (about 0,000 fect) Wl within the next Litzen ye.rs. American teicgrapa iLsruments click in Siberia and 1N itaiy, Wiule our telepnones aro “nelioed’ \hrolgn by the Cninese, East Inolemen and Kgypians. The miners' stilke ul lust summer seems to have promoied tarifiy habits among the workers. the W.kesbarre News re- ports that not lcss than 6,60 new savings Bccuunis have been vyened in Wilkesbarre Lunks since Junuary 1. ‘The building three- strike In New Jewelry WOraer: Cutse Cne emplosor le- nand of the waik ag workman, . e narged ' for no atest Xy {any wa 1used to hsed b delegate tuat ber Of the upion, be payment of his unicn au. | "1he value of the manufactures con- { sumd In the Unlied b.ates amouals to J00Ut EL00000K & Yoar, aud of th.s | ‘Atmeiican manulacturers furnish % ana | foreign manutact About & per ceat, | While the mmount which American manu: facturers export fust about equais thut which loreign mandfac.urers send inlo this couniry Accopding to the editor of the Railway Nows, the pay-rolls of the railroad comi- Danies of the United States have becn in- Gr-ased during the past twelve mouths by the sum of $100,0000. Of ihis amount Probably $50,000,w0 is accounted for by \ho Cnlargement of the working forces which Was required by the natural growth of the Dusinces of the country. A constitution and set of by-laws waé adopied 8¢ the Trcent convenilon in Man- hattan of ihe Commercial Telegraphers' Union of Americs. Rssolutions were pAtced 10 raie 30,00 as & fund to bs Used for taking out injunction proceedings 5 l»:a" that may discl o clmlfl except as & last saten nglng to & union; de- '.n‘h:‘lnn-h.. |and I have thought: , 43 & result ot = re-| Ui our cash regisiers and s...,000 | be cut and ma:keted | PATTI'S ADVICE TO SINGERS Recounts Her Own Rules for Preserving the Voice. IMPORTANCE OF AVOIDING STRAIN “The Golden Rule In Singing Is to Spare Yourself Un{il the Volee is Needed umd Then Never Give It Al Out.” The following article on volce preservation was dictated by Madam Adelina Patti to a correspondent of the Saturday Evening Post and was revised by her for pubileation in that paper: People who cultivate the volce have widely different ideas on what constitutes the best method of its preservation. If I gave lessons 1 should cultivate the middle notes and the voice of the singer would be £00d at tho age of 100. The whole harm to a voica comes in push- ing it up and down, In trying to add extra notes to its compass. “How high can you sing?’ appears to be the question. But what about the founda- tion part of the voice, that fs, the middle notes? My success s founded on those notes, and there can be no enduring success without them. How many can sing very high and yet cannot sing “Home, Sweet Home!" Some pooh-pooh the idea of the difficulty of that simple melody. But it Is more difficult to iing “Home, Sweet Home" than the waitz song from “Romeo and Jullet” because of its demands upon the development of the volce. Without the beautiful middle notes there s no cantabile, and upon the proper development of these and the avoldance of strain by forcing high and low notes the enduring powers of the singer depend. High gymnastics are very beautiful, but lose the middle notes and you lose all. The very high and the very low notes are the ornaments, but what good are Gobelins and plotures It you have no house to hang them in? The tremolo, one of the most objectionable and unbearable of vocal faults, is but a phase of this forcing, and comes of the spreading of the vocal chords through straining. How often the question has been put to me, “Miss Pattl, how high can you sing?" “Are you at it, too?" The middle voice is the one that you need to sing with. I sing comfortably. It you want to sing for years, do not strain the natural compass of the voice. That s like living on capital. I have al- ways lived within my income and 1 have always had something to put aside. The question of success' or failure as a singer is simplified by self-judgment and discrimination. Many volces are not worth the cultivation, and that means time and opportunities lost. Very often students wear out their volces with overstudy before they appear in public. They destroy the freshness of the voice by singing too much. A Golden Rule for Singern, As to the length of time to be devoted to study, I myself do not give more than fit- teen or twenty minutes to it dally, and these few minutes I devote to scales. It was my brother, Mr. Ettore Baril, who lald the foundation of my singing, and bis method today is taught by my nephew, Alfredo Barill. My brother-in-law, Mr. Strackosch, taught me certain embellish- ments and cadenzas, but it was to Ettore Barill that I"owed the foundation as well as the finish of my vocal equipment. With him I studied solfegglii, trills, scales; the chromatic scales came naturally. I think 1 was trilling when I came into the world. My golden rule in singing is to spare my- self until the volce is needed, and then never to give it all out. Put it in the bank. I do not push my volce for the pleasure of the moment. If you are prodi- 1 of your powers at such times, the next time you wish to be generous You cannot. There 1s an old Italian proverb that I hold fast to as my gulde: “Who goes slowly goes safely; who goes safely goes far”’ 1 have always fol'owed that course | |in the use of my voice. Consequently I have it at command when I need it. I never sang when I was not well cnough, nelther did I sing when I was doubttul of the condition of my voice. I simply went to bed and sald that there was “no one in. Managers came, besought, pleaded and en- | treated, but I was not well and I would not #ing. The opera house might remain closed, but if there had been opera then, there would be no opera now. One instance I remember well when it proved most difficult to refuse. The king of Prussia, later the German emperor, Wil- Mam' I, had arranged a_court conmcert in which 1 was to sing. Although everything had been prepared at the palace, when the day arrived 1 did not feel well and refused to go. To Meyerbeer was given the un- pleasant task of conveylng my refusal. But the king did not resent it, for he came to hear me when I next appeared. During the performance he asked: “Miss Patti, what casea you to be 111?" “Your royal climate, your majesty,” was my reply. The true secret of preserving the voice 1s not to force it and not to aing when one ought not to. In the matter of diet and its relation to the volce I can only say that I have been able to eat and drink in moderation any- think I like. During & performance I do not take anything unless it may be a little | ehicken soup, nor at such times do I teel ke eating. Eating after singing I consider injurious, for one is then always more or | less fatigued. | Careful About Meals. | 1 never make a point of having my din- | ner at 3 o'clock en the davs that I sing, | nor could 1 ever understand why some singers tnsist on this plan. I dine half an hour before I go to the hall for a concert, and as 1 do not appear at the beginning of | the program I have at least an hour be- tween dining and singing, which interval ! 1 always find quite enough. It Is too fa- | tiguing to attempt to sing on an empty stomach, and though some indulge in eat- | ing after singing, I have always avolded | suppers at home in the middle of the night; late suppers disagres with me. | 8o far as denying myself is concerned, I { have not found the siightest diffculty in | giving up anything that it is unwise to in- dulge In. At one (ime I dieted for four | years. That was, however, not due to the demands of my volce | Over and again it has been said that I | never speak on the day on which I am to sing. This is not by any means the case. I talk all T want, but of course I hold no receptions on those days. Fresh air and plenty of 1§ Is of vital im- | portance 1o the singer. Every day that is not too inclement I take from two and a | halt to three hours' exercise In the open { air, driving and walking. To this regimen 1 attribute In great degree my good health and powers of endurance. There is neth- ing lke Tresh air and exercise for keeping the volce in good order. When sodden days dripping with rain come, preventing my going out-of-doors, I feel quite another being than on those when I follow my course of exercise—the best medicine and the best tonic possible for a singer. When a singer is about to enter upon a public career there is one potnt to be con- sidered—that of fitneas for concert or for opera. 1 think if you can sing in conoert, if you have feeling and discernment, you can sing in opers, though in my opinion some who are good in concert are by mo means fited for opera. The operatic stage demands 50 much of everything—voloe, knowledge of singing and acting. Bvery- thing has to be calculated; even a wrong step or two during a phrase will bring one into the wings Instead of to she front of the stage. Ease of movement, dramatio tnstinct and feeling are all necessary of response with the opera singer, and yet without them a fairly good voice may bring to Its possessor a degree of success on the concert platform. Again, the de- mands on personal appearance are far more exacting on the operatic than on the con- cert stage, though equally of decided ad- vantage to those who fortunately command them. Another most fmportant gift and one absolutely Indispensable to success in opera Is presence of mind, for on the stage | it 1s always the unexpected that happens. In my early career I knew no such thing as nervousness. 1 had nothing to lose then, but later It was different. When I had made my reputation I grew more and more nervous, for it Is one thing to. bulld up a reputation and another thing to sustain it. Not alone on the stage, but in the audi- torlum, incldents are continually arising | that demand of a singer an absolute self- control, command of memory and voeal powers In the face of distractions and of danger oftentimes fatal in their aspect. On the very night of my operatic debut some- thing of this kind occurred. It was at the Academy of Music in New York, on Thanksgiving day in 180. 1 sang the title part in Donizettl's Lucia with Brignoli as Edgardo. A man had hung his coat care- lessly ober the front of the gallery and a plstol in the pocket went off in the middle of the performance. For an instant every- one stopped still on the stage, then we went ahead again and the audlence was reassured. What Presence of Mind May Mean, Another accldent, more serious in the possibility of its consequences, happencd at Bucharest. A man had climbed upon the irons at the side of the stage to get sight of me. He slipped and fell on a poor woman who was standing in the wings. 8he was badly hurt, and her crles resound- ing through the house caused someone to call “fire.” In an instant the excited audi- ence was In a panic. The thought flashed through my mind that a stampede for the doors might bring death to hundreds. ‘It 18 no fire!” I called. “It is nothing.” And 1 began to #ing “Home, Bweet Home.'" Before I had half finished the first verse the audience was quieted. Another time, in Vienna, I was singing in Lucla and had just begun the cadenza with the flute in the mad scene when my long, fiimsy sleeve caught fire in the gas. With- out stopping, I tore it off and finished the arfa. But that time, after I got behind the scenes, and everything was over, I fainted, Once 1 was singing in this same Lucla with @ tenor as Edgardo whom I had never seen. As Fdgardo and his brother are dressed alike in the first scene, when I ap- peared on the stage I did not know which one I was to aing to. Already my music was sounding from the orchestra. “Which is Edgardo?" I asked hastily. “The one to the left,” was the answer. And I hurried toward him, sipging as I went. Yet another time there was demand for presence of mind in an episode of a dif- ferent description. The opera was ““Trav- Iata” and the tenor a forgetful one. In the duet In the last act he suddenly began to sing my part. In a flash, I had to take up his untll, as suddenly, his memory re- turned. When the curtain was rung down he thanked me with tears in his eyes. It was the second incident of the kind that had happened to him, and the first had not been eo fortunate for both singers. CELIBATE FEMALE TEACERS, Pointed Comment by the New York Independent. The recent decision of Justice Maddox of the supreme court of Brooklyn that & woman has a right to get married without thereby forfeiting her position as a teacher 18 a slight check to the prevalling tendency in all parts of the United States to place education of the young entirely in the hands of unmarried women. But the theory that it 18 unproper for any but malden ladies to be teachers has become one of the fixed ideas In the American mind, embodled in the school regulations of many cities and incorporated in the unwritten laws of most of the school boards, so that it will be a long time before it will be rooted out. In the meantime all that can be done is to watch the effects of this curlous experi- ment, according to which the cultivation of the Intellect is held to be the pecullar duty of the sex which has been the less dis- tinguished in intellectual achievement, and the training of young men and women for the practical work of life is to be done chiefly by the most immature and Inexperi- enced portion of that sex, Celibate femi- ninity hias been the object of reverence, and even worship, among varfous nations from the remotest antiquity, but no nation before | has intrusted to it a practical monopoly of | the most péwerful instrument for molding the life of future generations. This custom is doubtless one of the many things which our modern schools have nherited from the medleval church, but we have modified and extended the theory, for now virginity 1s consiCerea not so much as a state of superior sanctity, but as & pedagoglical prerequisite. We have adopted into our public schools the Cathollo idea of celibate teachers, but whereas in the parochial schools the instruction of the boys by the sisters is confined to the lower grades, in the public schools few men are found, except in the high schools. It would be {nteresting to know why women teachers are forbidden to marry, while, ex- cept In the ease of scholars and fellows in Oxford and some of our eastern colleges, the men teachers are permitted to marry. One would think that if there were any rights_common to both sexes, the right to marry would be one of them. The Roman Catholic church forbids its priests to marry. The Greek church re- quires them to marry. Which of the two is the better policy to adopt for our public school teachers, If, as scems to be the case, we cannot bring ourselves to consider this a private affair, and not a state? There would be much to say in favor of the Greek in preference to the Roman plan, for an unmarried woman or man is to some ex- tent undeveloped and rarely possesses that well-rounded and stably poised individuality 80 necessary in a leader of youth and which | our achools as perfect as possible. Is more often attained by those who have lived fuller and wider lives. There is a certaln very undesirable attitude of mind which is called “old-maidish,” and is with reason so named, potwithstanding that it oftén survives in married women, and I8 found in some men, whatever their matrimonial status. Since pupils get much more from a teacher than from what she teaches, it will be Interesting to see if our | predominately feministic education produces |in time any noticeable effects on our national characteristics. Those who have read Prof. Munsterburg's interesting essay comparing the German and American school systems will remember the emphasis with whigh he states his opinion that one cause of the superiority of German schools s that the teachers there are mostly men. To be sure others say that the two or three years' gain of the German schools over ours is due to the metric system and pho- netic spelling, by which the greater part of compound numbers and spelling, which is such a terror to our chiidren, is made unnecessary; but we must consider all these alleged advantages It we would make School teachers are not hired out of charity, and whether a teacher s working to get money to buy chocolate creams, to o to Europe, to get a trousseau or to support an 1dle husband fs none of our business We must have the best teachers for our children, and if it is proved that celibate females are superior to all others, lot us carry out our present policy. There are, of course, certaln very difs- agreeable occurrences inevitable to this policy. Some teachers hide their marriage certificates in thefr trunks and continue teaching under their maiden names until, worn in body and shattered in nerves, they are ready to proclaim their change of state. Others continue in the harness until, worn in body and shattered in nerves, they are no longer fit for matrimony. A few, Te- markably few, when we think how many thousands of school and government em- ployes are under this regime of compulsory celibacy, fall victims to the temptations in- cldent to the unnatural conditions under which they are forced to live, Down to the pit, or up to the throne, He travels the fastest who travels alone. 1s the way Kipling expresses the tendency of the times. There is no doubt about the first phrase of the couplet, but the second phrase we still regard as unproved, not- withstanding the traditional bellef in the sanctity of celibacy. But, if we disregard the destination, the last line may be true. The army, the navy, the church, the col- lege, the railroads, demand single men in | at least some departments of thelr work. Marrfed women are being shut out more and more from useful employment, and children are not allowed In city flats. It is no wonder if the young man who is enter- ing on the race of life decides to discartl ell such incumbrances as wife and children, which might hinder him from making his best speed toward the prizes he sees before him. In almost all parts of the United Statas the tendency is to hire a larger proportion of women teachers for all grades. As a result our normal schools are becoming fe- male seminaries, and people are already coming to look upon teaching, at least of children, as an undignified and Improper occupation for a man. Not long since a young man was arrested for wearing woman's clothes. He had been employed as & woman in teaching in the public schools and was doing good work. He was a thor- oughly competent teacher, but he had found that it was impossible for him to get the position for which he had qualified himselt and do the work he liked except in disguise a8 a woman. Now this really is putting our young men who desire to be teachers to a great Inconvenlence. A woman's dress is neither hyglenic nor comfortable, and the bills for shaving must constitute a serious expense. The teaching profession is appar- ently to become In the near future a mo- nopoly- of female celibates. " TABLE AND KITCHEN Menu. BREAKIAST. Jeed Plums. Breakfast Cereal. Cream Poached Eggs. Creumed Potatoes. Laplanaers. Coffee. DINNER. Boulllon. Roast Spring Chicken, Giblet Gravy. Mashed Fotatoes. Baked Tomatoes. Caulifiower, Cream Sauce. Tomato and Green Pepper Salad Hamburg Cream, Cheese Wafers. Coftee. SUPPER. Crabs a la Creole. Toasted Muffins. ' Layer Cake. Reclpes, Peach Cottage Pudding—Cream to- gether half a cup of butter with one cup of granulated sugar; add to this one cup of sweet milk, two eggs well beaten and two cups of flour measured after sifting once and to which has been added two level teaspoonfuls of baking powder and half a level spoonful of salt. Into this mixture stir thinly sliced peaches after re- moving the peel, three medium-sized | peaches-will be suffictent. Butter a pudding | dish and place the mixture in it and bake half an hour In a moderate oven. Serve with any suitable sauce. Peach Pastry Shortcake—Prepare rich pastry crust. Roll out thin| and bake In three crusts in ple pans, When done allow to become perfectly cold. Pare ripe julcy peaches, slice, mash and | sweeten, spread this mixture between the crusts and place in the lce chest to become thoroughly cold. Serve with cream either whipped or plain. This is an Inexpensive and deliclous dessert and can be inade in winter from the tanned pescles Peach Cobbler—Take a large agate pud- ding dish and Mne with o thick rich crust. Fill the dish with peeled | and sliced thoroughly ripe Jjulcy peaches. Sprinkle over all one cupful of granulated sugar, and half a teaspoonful of ground cinnamon, the juice of half o lemon with a little of the grated rind. . Cover with a thick crust, place in the oven and bake very slowly untll a rich brown. This dessert may be served hot or cold, but will be found much nicer cold with whipped chilled cream. Peach Cream—Mash one cupful of peeled and mashed ripe peaches through a sleve. To this add as much cream as you have peach pulp, sweeten it with two tablespoon- fuls of sugar and beat briskly until the cream is light. Serve In tall slender glasses. Tea. a Married Women however, by the use of great liniment always prepares the body for the strain upon it, and preserves the symmetry of her form. Every woman covets a shapely, pretty figure, and many of them deplore the loss of ‘*heir girlish forms after marriage. The bearing of children is often destructive to the mother’s shapeliness. All of this can be avoided, Friend before baby comes, as this Mother’s Friend overcomes all the danger of child-birth, and carries the expectant mother safely through this critical period without pain. It is woman’s greatest blessing. Thousands gratefully tell of the benefit and relief derived from the use of this wonderful remedy. Sold by all druggists at $1.00 per bottle, Our little book, telling all about .this liniment, will be sent free. The Bradfield Regulater Ca., Atlasta, 60 Mother’s Friend & Will It Ever Stop?4 - /ill the never-ceasing aches of M the back ever stop? Many a suff- % ferer mentally asks this question n after vain efforts to find relief and cure for backache. There is a cure, but you can’t expect % to find it unless you know the cause of “that bad back.” Most backache pains come % from the kidneys, and the : seat of the trouble must ¥ be attacked. Plasters, liniments and lotions may relieve the ache, but will not cure, as 3t they fail to reach the 333333323333 cause—the Kidneys. DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS Cure bad back and every kidney ill—rheumatic pains, sleeplessness, nervous conditions, diabete, dropsy, gravel and all complaints of the Kidneys and bladder down to 4 that dread destroyer, Bright's disease. A safe and sure gy remedy, endorsed by friends and neighbors. " Can you ask for better proof than this— OMAHA PROOF. Mrs. Michael Tosonery of No. 505 12th street, says: ached so severely that I could hardly stand it. I have 1 that I could scarcely move and to stoop was an utter add to my misery, trouble with the kidney secretions existed and I was constantly trying something to cure me, but a cure never came. My hus- 4 band got Doan's Kidney Pills for me at Kuhn & Co's. drug store, corner 15th and Donglas streets, and after taking them for a week, much to m my surprise and considerably more to my gratification, the long stand- g ing trouble disappeared. Send anyone in Oma: to me if they want a n personal recommendation of Doan's Kidney Pills.” 'V\ m W 333 = m m “My back often een at times so impossipility. To m [ Py LN m Doan’s Kidney Pills are for sale at all drug stores, 50c a box, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. (SHREDDED _ WEREAT M/ BISCU|T§ ¢ ~ $ 5:}‘3?\2“—( N N “Rlen R M Sold by I ) : @w—»r"\ .Q?'(l)lccx' Health for the. R N NN During the foetly, Colic, VARICOCELE A Safe, Paiuloss, Permanent Cure UARANTEED, 30 years' experience. NO money acoeptod until patient 18 well. CONSULTATION and val uable Boox Free, | y mail or at office. DR. C. M. COE, 915 Walnut 5t., Kansas City, Mo- Mot KEEPS THE BLOOD COOL 8 Per Menstrual Suporession e sovett PEN-T AN-GO nown specific S0id in Omaba by Sherman box; 3 boxes §5. well Drug Co. Mell orders Slled. Trade suppll hot prevents ¢ gummer C All druggists nths, digests food p holera Morbus. Cramps, mplaint and Diarrhoes Five Trains a Day o Chicago v \’llw Chicago & North-Western Railway,over the nly double-track railway between Omaha and Chicago, offer to the traveling public the best of everything in the way of the modern couveniences of travel, The Eastern Express fast train, leaving Omaha daily 5.50 p. m,, ardving Clicago 7.15 next morning, with an admirably arranged equipment of Pullman draw- ing room and tourist sleeping cars, free reclining chair cars and standard day coaches, butfct ing and library care, and dining cars (a la carte), is one of the most popular trains in the West, The Overland Limited electric lighted, with buffet smoking car, standard and compartment slecping cars, cbservation and library car, leaves Omalia daily at 8,15 p. m., reaching Chicago .00 the next morning. . Other through trains leave Omaha for Chicago and points east at 3.40 a.m, 8.00 a. m. and 11.30 a.m, Information as (o schedules, rates, sleep- iag car reservations, on application H. 0, CHEYNEY, Guwna. Actwr, . f