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Activities and Views of Progressive Women in Various Walks of Life Father Not Boss of Home. THE OMAHA SUNDAY BE APRIL 4, 1900, " h v o off with be naturalized by the Japanese home des lowing et of reasons from the girls who work, says Colller's Weekly, many writers which inecludes stenography, commercial dredging thickly with crushed maple sugar l";l;|'l'!‘h'u’:-:; :“"m:(- :Hy‘vraf\:vh:n‘m: oft WHE B nhtarlng N Rore eal W HAT the father of a family is no think that women should not vote overlook certain points which are necessary law, banking, Fnglish and kindred sub- Hiitle powdered clnnamon and foid berfect ease o compiai: pAciment. She wes born ad beoue " longer its lord and master is ~Women are uninteiligent about political to a just consideration of the question. As jects, are women over in turnover form. Bake about twenty mremindCotn Jreception et In Rmeried, bot 1or & IO NE Jot e ¥ a ¥ but Yokosuk: the declaration of a New Jerscy mutters and unfit to vote no one indlvidual or corporation, more than In the hookkeeping classes there are minutes in a hot oven ba of the same material s the gown, but Yokosuka, ¢ v an absolute requirement Is that it must be Three hundred young women of Chicago court n & case uhique In the Women have a higher sphere another, I8 to blame, it Is the world In about as many women as men. A very Hn an absolute reauireme o Three hundred young women of Chicag Judicial annals of the state. The ‘‘Women ought not to hold office. It general that must be blamed or justified. large proportion of these women, Who AP gepves from Fashion's Notebook. RN VRGP RS U S reen, : court was called upon to decide takes away dignity. It would make women With many notable exceptions, the world pear to have marked out a business career pagiey A or narrow rouleus are Cinating. Eome of them are as large as a larger proportion 1m:m T; w;:v.r'bc’m the question of parental authority as be- neglect the home. tends to frame its customs #o as to work are college bred, and many others are high Iy inc yrated in the design on u\m‘r.wr':'nd‘"arr made of the Vtr;::u‘ln:‘r‘:;‘:; :‘r;; m\|m;-:~ly‘::‘|"':;'nmmnu-d T :‘m. g tween husband and wife where there was ‘The publicity would be detrimental to out the greatest good to the greatest num- school graduates. Ome reason given for the neweat of the embroidered Daste set in silver for the centers and normal sehosl CondNd that niseteen-twen: no separatior or divorce, women ber. The Individual must be forever sec- this tendency is the overcrowding of such fancy with regard to slesves DIOWR OF purple enamel, according to the tleths of girl puplls are taller than thelr R e Teeoan . o n onidary to the commion go o ofessions as teach| e eghry s color of the material of the coat or cloak. mothers. Arthur F. Willlamson, secretary of the W Omen are incapable of organization. ndary to th nmon good. The question Professions as teaching oo e, faney with regard to sleqyss color of the matorial of the coat or cloak. New Jersey Bteel company, in Rahway, . LD® country is not ready for it may then be stated thus: Can we blame y quarreled with his wife and declared he was going to do as he pleased. “He in- formed his wife that he Intended to place their three children in a boarding school and break up their home. On February 9, Kose, the 7-year-old er, KAD Wel, tu- oo o o the fashions In feminine waist lines in Is 1t be blamed ETOtesque as to divert the attention of , tapestry blue and a brown shada Ghinese reformer, Kang Yu Wel, Is a stu: Tennessee can boast of but two women P g P B2 b and better people. Is it to ame termed cannelle are promised considerable 9¢nt at Barnard college lawyers. One is a Presbyterlan ughter of the Willlamsons, was taken (0 fear and trembling,” observes the Washing- ¢, not framing fits customs to attain Others from the religlous exercises. They v ® Thorhlld Mamberg, WOmAN, other a Jeyess. Of the two, Miss Marion the Elizabeth hospital to have an operation ton Herald. “Mayhap we are tiptoelng in : performed for adenoids. On February 14 Mr. Willlamson removed the little girl from the hospital and took her to the school of uttercup yellow. T 0% Mrs. Taft's name now heads the roll of fore the court of civil appeals and argue 1 0f we would like to know a few things In con- it be admitted that the general result ts _The pring hats, in fact, are the worst Sl and Butteroud doiiow. Fhe now m yonttary® membe Daughters of & case. Miss Wolf argued about an hour ‘”,:h""MW' M\"',‘lm" . T'"’"’[‘""&"' ; 4 Pection with it, albeit we may Ko About the right one, then the world is justitied examples of extravagant fancy and mon- wre aptly called tissues® and Ohio. &he was elected at the recent meet- and s said to have held the attention of en Mrs, amson came to New York our hunt for information clumsily and in and consulted a lawyer. The lawyer pro- cured a writ of habeas corpus from Justice " # A strikingly effective hat on the mush- _ Mrs. Winnifred Sercombe of Minneapolis Mims Beesio Bernstein has just been ap- ‘What are the women driving at in re- The world s Justified in saying to woman: 108t fall. Those seemed then evils soarcely room' order Is of fine chip olosely dotted has reached New York City on her WaY pointed a sanitary inspector In Bosto.. The Platgek requifing the Misses Metcalf 0 gpect of their waist lines, anyway? Only “For you business is but a preparatory endurable, but fashion has brought us with the little velvet blossoms of the wild home from a journey around the world. appointment is sald to have been lar bring Rose within the jurisdiction of the g little while ago it was away up under s others that we knew not of. forget-me-not, while a deep wreath of the She has had no companion, carried no re- court. The court appointed M. Linn Bruce referee, and much testimony was taken, the husband trying to show Mrs. Wil \lamson an incompetent mother, while Mrs. Willlamson brought testimony to refute that charge. The case closed on March 12 and then Referes Bruce recommended that the child be returned to her home on the ground that the husband was not entitled to absolute authority over his children, but that in all matters involving their educa- tion and bringing up the wife has equal rights. The Biennial Convulsion. The National Soclety of the Daughters of the American Revolution is preparing for the biennial convulsion which it calls an election. Its Continental Congress will open on April 19, In the new Continental hall, reports the New York Tribune, and then will come the tug of war. The contest- ing parties may best be designated as Mc- Lean and anti-McLean. This has been the line of cleavage ever since Mrs. Donald McLean, the retiring president-general chal- lenged the tradition which made official position & qualification for the chief of- fice in the gift of the Daughters, and the breach has been Immeasurably widened in the last year by the honding of the so- clety for the completion of Continental hall. This was Mrs. McLean's profect, and was bitterly opposed by the enemy, who could not be convinced that the president- general cared as much for the completion of the nall as she did for the honor of having it finished during her administra- tion. The edifice is intended as a national headquarters for the soclety and has been years in bullding. Last April it had ad- vanced little beyond the walls. Part was covered with convas, and while the annual meetings were held there it was under cir- cumstances of much discomfort. The bulld- Ing fund amounted to $300,000 and Mrs. McLean proposed that $200,00 additional be borrowed so that the bullding might be finished within the year. The proposal was the signal for war, in which personal wnimosity against the president-general jolned with the fear of going into debt, and aftes the measure went through some “Women can get all they need by In- fluencing the men of their famlilies and acquaintance.” ——— The Waist Line. “We admit we approach this subject of where angels fear to tread, but we are profoundly interested in this matter, and great disorder. their arme; now we are Informed that it 18 to drop In one fell and emphatic swoop to a reglon somewhere around and about their knees. Why this precipitate readjust- ment? Are they trying to fix It so that they cannot possibly make over thelr dresses that have one or twice been worn? Or are they seeking to fashion a thing that may simply be reversed and put on upside- downward, and thus serve an economic turn? We confess we are not able to guess which, 1f either, idea dwells In their minds. “Maybe, however, they are trying to see how many different locations they can give their walst lines in a glven space of time, and intend letting it remain at the knees merely a trifling week or so. And when they are ready to make another move, are they going to put the waist line back amid- ships, where it Lelongs, or will they cut it on the bias—whatever that is—and try that out? “We are not captious, In the least. It is posstble the whole thing Is none of our business, anyway. We will go farther, and admit we may be moved by that emotion supposed to bo possessed by womankind exclusively—plain, old, unvarnished curlos- ity. It is a pretty puszle, most assuredly. “Why are you chasing your walist lines around in that fashion women? Because?” phisd <y A Boomerang Speech. Mrs. Wilkins Freeman, the brilliant novel- 1st, condemned, at a luncheon In New York, the cynicism of Guy de Maupassant. “He was a cynic, in a measure, because it pald,” she said. “The French, you know, like cynical, pessimistic things as we like sugar-and-water, sentimental ones. I don't know which taste is the worse.” She knitted her brows. “But Maupassant,” she sald, “was per- haps a cynic from choice. He liked to say, ‘whether it pald or not, that all women are alike. As for me, whenever I hear a man say that all women are ailke I am con- vinced that he has recently had an experl- ence with one of them that is by no means to his credit.” Sseiveres Pay of Women Workers. In deploring the fact that women are usually paid less than men for the same the world for not encouraging women to give up the proper feminine ideals of home- making by making them even-handed com- petitors with men and independent of them? The world especlally needs two things, more and better homes and more those ends? If it be denfed that this gen- eral result is good, then it may be denied that the means to gain it are good. But If in not encouraging too great a divergence from whatever will conduce to that end. school, a stepping-stone, partial service. Your faal work Is to be wife and mother. Be employed at any useful work so long as that seems best for you individually, but remember that you are endowed with a higher capacity for service, and there 1s need for your work in the home.” To give emphasis to this dictum, and to keep it hourly fresh In mind, the world, per- haps wisely and kindly, declines to en- courage woman overmuch to prefer an in- dependent life. It is difficult, it not impossible, to speak in general terms of the problem of women In business without seeming to counte- nance many flagrant wrongs. In presenting this view It fs not to justify any known injustice the reader may have in mind, but to afford a perspective which may enable us to consider universal tendencles. ity il Women Accountants. One line of work which women have re- cently taken up is accounting. There are sald to be about twenty-five women en- gaged In this work in the United States They have come into this fleld within the last two or three years and have met with unexpected success. It is hard work, but it fs far more re- munerative, according to a writer in the Bookkeeper, than any other of the pro- fessions in which women have heretofore engaged. A director in a leading commer- clal school of New York suys: “I know of two women in well known concerns who have mapped out and put into operation a complete new system of financlal methods for their employers and who have even been entrusted with big funds for profitable investment and whose advice has been followed in many other ymportant business undertakings. The num- ber of such women who have proved their ability and Iltking for this responsible and remunerative work is steadily growing. It offers a splendid field for the woman who 1s not loath to accept responsibilities and who has a Mking for the hard work it entalls and who is ambitious. Nearly all the commercial schools show a steady Increase in the number of women students over previous years. One of them reports that four-fifths of its students in the regular business course this year, Man's Reflections On Millinery, The movement in some of the churches to Induce the women to remove their hats during the services is reasonable, says the New York Times. The things many women wear on their heads nowadays are 8o are %0 big that they obstruct the congrega- tion's view of the pulpit. They are grossly inappropriate to a house of worship. strous in execution. They compel the male observer to sigh for the very big hats of These pot- ke effects and Inverted baskets covered with artificlal flowers and plants that seem to have been derived from the Inferno have no beauty at all, and when the Rev. Dr. MacArthur says they make thelr wearers 100k like gargoyles, one infers that he does not care for gargoyles. ‘Why should decent, comely gentlewomen permit themselves to wear such things? The dictates of fashion, as fashion is formed by a band of milliners in France, are not recognized by the laws of nations. It 1s never in good taste to dress in the extreme of fashion anyhow. A sensible man does not change the block of his silk hat from year to year, or the cut of his morning coat. As for the churches, they should compel the women to leave such hats at home before going to service. St. Paul's remark about uncovered female heads in church does not apply. Modest orfental women always wore vells. Fancy that outspoken apostle looking down from a platform on a sea of such hats as the spring of 1909 1s producing! It seemed last fall that the milliners had done thelr worst. They have shown now that their devilish ingenuity surpasses the imagination of plain folks. Sirloin Steak a 1n Soyer. Remove flank and fat from a sirloin steak out about one inch and a quarter thick; baste with butter and sprinkle with grated bread crumbs mixed with fine chopped parsley and olives. Flatten with a broad-bladed knife wet in cold water and brofl over a fire that Is not too hot about twelve minutes. Remove to a hot dish, sprinkle with salt, spread with three table- spoonfuls of creamed butter mixed with a teaspoonful of lemon juice, a teaspoonful of parsley and a tablespoonful of fresfi horseradish. Bran and Maple Biscuits Rub into one and one-half cups bran mixed with the same quantity of whole wheat flour three teaspoons of baking pow- der, one teaspoon each of salt and sugar and three tablespoons of shortening; mols- ten with sufficlent milk to form a soft dough. Roll out on the bread board to half an inch in thickness, cutting in three-inch circles. Brush over with melted butter, transparcnt and reserve the trimming for the lower half. The new colors for spring are exquisitely shades of mau flowers, pale blue tipped with pink at the budding ends of the sprays, and the dull, leaves, all in velvet, surrounds the come a comvert to perfumes, , Interwoven almost like a broad plait soft, uncertain, French odors; and she uses e satin ribbon in pale mauve. them In a French practical and fascinating novelty is Aarticle of clothing strongly, the long, sleeveless coat designed for wear with the frock of soft silk or sheer ma- ich grays and bilues, quest for coat novelty is one made of gunmetal the size smart, little turned-over collar 18 of a quarter and crossed with gems which always fashioned from flimy fabric , it is_extremely effective in some datk and thick material For smart, tajlored suits and more dressy costumes, purple in varying shades, prune, typlity the wearer's lucky month Miss Kang Tung Pih has made a walking Sreniy Preaching the gospel nd lavender, blush-rose everywhere as she went. arisian a_daughter of tha tour of §70 miles, of woman suffrage fragile, gossamer quality and INE of the soclety which was held at the Waldorf-Astoria. volver and met with no rudeness. Queen Wilhelmina, who has recently be- different odor. Miss Estelle Finch s the first woman to profers the She scents each but with a Copenhagen has hirthday of one of able women, an & n educator women in Denmark. Qriffin was the first to be admitted to the bar, but Miss Wolf, who was admitted only two days lator, was the first to appear be- the five judges much more closely than is customary. due to Miss Bernstein's unusual qualifics tions. She' wan born and. brought up th the north end of Boston, which corresponds with the lower east side in New York, and she not only For several service house. understands the people and their needs, but also speaks thelr language. years she has been pi secretary to Meyer Bloomfeld in the civie ust celebrated the 60th nmark’'s most remark- Ida Falbe-Hansen. has spread over all Scandinavian countries, and her influence in educational matters is pronounced. She is considered one of the mosat brilliant SQUARE-DEAL Is assured you when you buy Dr. Pierce’s family medicines—for all the ingredients entering into them are printed on the bottle- wrappers and these are attested under oath as being complete and ou are paying for and that the ature's laboratory, being selected from the most valuable native medicinal roots found growing in our American forests and while potent to cure are perfectly harm- less—even to the most delicate women and children. correct. You know just what ingredients are gathered from Not a drop of alcohol enters into their com« position. A much better adgent is used both for extracting and preserving the medici» nal principles in them, viz.— pure triple~ refined glycerine. This agent possesses in- trinsic medicinal properties of its own, being a most valuable antiseptic and antiferment, nutritive and soothing demulcent. Glycerine plays an important part in Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery in the cure of ‘indigestion, dyspepsia and weak stomach, attended by sour risings, heart-burn, foul breath, coated tongue, Koor appetite, gnawin e stomach, liver and all the above dlstressmg ailments, the “Golden Medical Discovery” diseases of the mucous membrancs, as catarrh, whether of the nasal passages or of the stomach, bowels or other organs. dred derzngemcnts of tl Besides curin is a specific for {lfld to this sovereign remedy if its use be persevered in. asal passages, it is well, while takmg constitutional treatment, to cleanse t Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. worat cases. In coughs and hoarseness caused by bronchlal throat and lung affections, except consumption, the “Golden Medical Discovery” is a most efficient _remedy, especially in those obstinate, hang-on-coughs causcd by irritation and congestion of the bronchial Even in its ulcer; In Chro the “Golden Medical Discove e passages freely two or three times a day with Dr. This thorough course of treatment generally cures even the () feeling in stomach, biliousness and kin- tive stages it will ¢ Catarrh of the " for the necessary mucous membranes. The “Discovery” is not so good for acute coughs arising from sudden colds, nor must it be expected to cure consumption in its advanced stages—no medicine will do that—but for gl the obstmate, chronic coughs, which, if neglected, or badly treated, lead up to consumption, it is the best medicine that can be taken. J To find out more about the above mentioned diseases and all about the body in health and dis- case, get the Common Sense Medical Adviser—the People’s Schoolmaster in Medicine—revised and of the chapters even went to the length of withdrawing their subscriptions. But Mrs. McLean overrode all opposition, and Con- tinental hall Is now practically finished. The issue now fs whether the McLean policy shall be sustained or condemned. The Picturesque Coat Still in Vogue Mrs. Matthew Scott of Bloomington, IIl, a very strong Mclean partisan, Is the ad- ministration candldate for president-gen- eral Mrs. Scott, who is a sister of Mrs. Adlat E. Stevenson, snd otherwise allied with officlal elrcles, Is the widow of a wealthy coal dealer, and since her hus- band's death managed his business herself. The McLean party says that her business capacity ls remarkable and that she Is therefore just the womsn to attend to the business detalls ccnhected with the com- pietion of the hall. It can see no reason why she should not be mcceptabls to all, but this Is tar from being the feeling of the other side. The cpposition, which centers in New York, has not yet secured a candidate, but intends that one shall be forthcoming in due time. Mrs. Charles E. Hughes. wite of the governor of New York state, was asked to stand. but declded, after some consideration, that she was sufficlently oc- cupfed with her official duties. Mrs. Sarah Piatt Decker of Denver, ex-president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, was approached, but she has taken so little part in the affairs of the soclety that she did not care to assume a leading posi- ton. Mrs, Truman Newberry of Michigan was & third possibility, but she has now gone abroad for an Indefinite period. Mrs. Willlam Cumming Story of New York was also approached, -but 1s tco much involved In state politics at present. Rumors of all kinds are afloat about the presidential contest. According to one, Mri Taft has been asked to stand, but she is not even a member of the society. The name of Mrs. James S. Sherman has been used the same way, but as yet she has not been approached. Vassar college has unjustly been accused of dodging the issue on such vital ques- tions as soclalism and woman suffrage. A committee has canvassed all the stud- ents in the college and collected the fol- Why Is Fat 1s it because one is born with the ten- dency? Or is it one of “life's trials”, or is it due to just plain, hearty appetite? The doctors say not any one of these phrases the question correctly. They say fat 18 because the fat person's digestive organs are defective. Such organ: it seems, don't change the fatty food on by stout persons into heat and energy, 33 they should. Instead the food fats pass on into the system unconsumed. Hence fat lay accumulate under the skin In yulet spots, such as the chin, abdomen, shoul- der blades, etc. Lot the digestive defect be corrected and the formerly fat person goes back to his or her original shape. You can prove this on yourself. Beventy-five cents will secure from your druggist one of the large ription Tablets re- cently licensed for sale by the Marmola Company of Detroit, Mich. Take one of tablets after each meal and at bed- and the demonstration starts right t Very soon you will ex new sense of digestive comfort " iightful feeling of lncr energy which should be followed In ason by o anodia), iniform decres ¢ your fat During the demonstration perlod yo and drink s formerly, remember tablets need no help from either dieting or exercising, nevertheless the dally loss nmum approximate ten to sixteen ounces \ da \nw WHY is it you t 80 thin? Why n the fat just seems Lo slip away, leav- auur flesh smooth, firm lnfl wrinkle- lul Simply because larmola corrects that digestive defect, thereby stoppiag further fat accumulation and enabling bedy forces to mle dissolve et S already gathered HE evening coats of the winter would seem to have sald the last word concerning grace and beauty in such garments, but new materials, new coloring = new detalis enter Into the models brought out this spring, and one is forced to say ‘loveller than ever be- fore,” just as one has sald the same thing at the beginning of each season for several years past. The cult of the picturesque cloak has grown like Jonah's gourd in the last ten years, and since picturesqueness in this province of dress has been achleved at comparativély slight expense the at- tractive eveming coat is no longer the luxurious possession of the few, and al- most any woman with even the slightest pretensions to being well dressed includes at_least one such garment in her ward- Tobe. Of course there are coats and coats, and many of them have prices running up to monumental figures. Lavish hand embroldering, real lace, etc, will soon make of crepe or satin or chiffon an edi- tion de luxe, and some of the models we have secen this spring, despite an alr of simplicity conferred by thelr flowing un- broken lines, are most extravagant crea- tions, but fortunately it is not necessary to go into such extravagance in order to have an effective cloak for evening wear. The summer models, too, are less costly than those of the winter, because they do mot demand warm Interlining. Many of them indeed are quite unlined, while others have merely plain linings of self-colored or contrasting satin. Possibly the very best of the less ex- pensive evening cloaks for warm weather wear are the ample capes, plain or slightly draped. With a good pattern such as is easily obtained even an ordinary seam- stress can make one of these capes suc- cessfully, and If the material is beautiful in texture and color It is hardly possible that such a wrap should not be graceful and pleturesque. For winter use & coat with sleeves is warmer and more practical, but It is, too, more difficult to make on attractive lines. The double width crepes, satins, broad- cloths, etc., are excellently adapted for the circular or draped cape, and this scason there are innumerable new candidates for such uses among the modish materials. The satin cloths, Ught and supple as crepe meoteore, lustrous as eatin, if a very slight additional warmth Is given by a wool back, are ideal cape and evening cloak mater- lals, and there are numerous kindred stuffs. No trimming save some neck fin- ish is needed for the circular cape, which falls in full clinging folds toward the bot- tom, though fitting smoothly over the shoulders. A hood may be added, or some hood form of trimming. and handsome fasteners of some sort may be applied to the fronts; but effective embroidered banding or collar finish motifs, such as may be found at any trimming counter, will supply all the trimming really needed. Delicate hues with metallic notes In the neck finish are dainty and attractive over summer frocks and are usually chosen by youthful wegrers, but some of the sma test capes we Mave seen have been In neutral and deep tones. One in a smoke gray satin finish ma- terial, which appeared to be crepe meteore, was trimmed round the neck with & heavy embroidery ¢f gray and dull gold, had big fasteners to match and was draped up over the arms, the fullness being held by ornaments matching the other trim- ming. The cape was lined throughout with a dellclous carnation shade of rose, which showed only when the full gray folds were thrown back or fell aside. Another gray satin cape, lighter in tone and more on the ash shade, was trimmed in gray and silver and lined with a luscious yellow between corn and apricot. Among the dark capes was a striking Paris model in some sort of rather heavy satin surface crepe of that intensely dark purple dubbed ralsin—a purple almost black—and was lined with a soft shade of rose which harmonized exquisitely with the darker line. Shawl-like, draped capes or cloaks have been turned out by some of the best Parls- fan designers, and some of the smartest of these are constructed of exquisitely em- broidered Canton crepe, with fringe for trimming. Superb old shawls are some- times used for coats of this sort, but it s possible not to buy double width Canton crepe embroidered ali over in melf-color and oriental designs, and this crepe makes up beautifully into the draped and shawl cloaks or capes. Handsome knotted slik fringes are mov- ing this season and form the natural trim- mings for this embroidered crepe. Of course artistic draping s the keynote of success in such models, but some of the simplest effects are among the best, and, glven the beautiful supple material, it seems as If any one should be able to so arrange such drapery, as, for example, appears In the shawl model illustrated here. Stunning ornaments to hold the fulness at back, sboulders and fronts are sasily found, and heavy cords are often grace- fully assoclated with these ornaments. Among the expensive cape cloaks of sim- ple arrangement are models of satin, quite plain, save that the upper portion of the cloak, over chest, back and shoulders and upper arm, is almost solidly embroidered by hand in self-color. Rich and beautiful effects are obtained in this manner, and sometimes, as In the model of the sketch, the embroldery runs down from the shoul- der to hem along the arm line. This special model is a most attractive one, the embroidery being done on net in soutache and silks all In one tone, while the body of the cloak is of satin. A gray- 1sh mulberry hue lined with palest creamy pink was the color scheme of one of these embroldered cloaks, but in this model the embroidery was done directly upon the satin, and here and there a glint of gold thread shot through the mulberry silks of this embroidery. More complicated models are made up in combinations of embroidered net or lace and satin or crepe; and entire coats of embroidered net or lace promise to have much popularity during the summer and are shown In many artistic draped models as well in straight falling, simple lines. Chiffon and marqulsette too, are favorite materials for semi-transparent summer evening cloaks, designed moj for beauty and grace of line than for warmth, though they do supply more warmth than one would imagine when thrown over a de« collete ovening frock on & warm summer night. EVENING COATS OF CREPE, CHIFFON AND BATIN WITH LACE EMBROID- ERY AND FRINGE up-to-date book of 1000 pages—which treats of diseased conditions and the practical, successful treat- ment thereaf. Cloth-bound sent post-paid on receipt of 31 cents Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. mailing only one-cent stamps to pay cost of TH E present is emphat- ically the age of the man, who exults in the strength of his good right arm. 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