Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 25, 1909, Page 27

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For and About Women Folks A Mother's Duty. WRITER in the Cirele mag azine sets out the following practical ways in which the average woman can protect her home from disease and raice Its moral and physical standard refusing to be ignorant. Enlighten- the watchword of the twentleth century, must be wriften over her heart. She can refuse to be blinded by appear- ances; it Is in her power to demand true knowledge of the facts surrounding her; torpor and apathy must be unknewn in her home. By ment, By stirring up her husband and sons to vote and take an active Inter betterment. She can influence and her times through them By demanding cleanliness and fresh air in every department of her home at what- ever cost. By placing her children under the care of a reputable physician, and abjuring pat- ent medicines, headache cures and sooth- Ing syrups ms dangerous By intelligently studying the question of food supplies—purchasing only where the surroundings are sanitary, and as far as possible only such articles as are protected by the pure food laws. By bolling all drinking water where there Is the slightest doubt of its purity, and all milk In hot weather, if advised by the physician. By screening her house from flies ana informing her children of the menace they are to life, showing how easily typhold and other virulent disease germs are carried upon their feet and wings. By insisting upon fourteen hours of sleep daily for her children. This sleep taken in a well-ventilated room and upon a clean bed in itself will protect the children from a jaded, overtired nervous system, one of the great dangers of city lite today. By acquiring a knowledge pf the funda- mental facts of physiological history, so that she is able, when the times comes, to open for her children the mysterious door of self, leading them past the dis- asters and tragedies lying in wait to be- tray Inexperience. If the average mother will embody these few principles of life in her home she will be making her country a valuable con- tribution indecd, the most valuable fn her power--one hcalthy, normal, cnlightened home on which to draw for its future rulers and leaders. The home Is the center of the country's strength and—let her not forget it—it fs the mother who is responsi- ble for the home, in clvie her ecity How the Indlan Woman Shops, Few white women can extract more pleasure from the purchase of house- lold nocessities, or make of it a more protracted dissipation, than the Indlan Wwonian, says a writer in the Delineator. In search of guudy blanket, highly cel- ored calico and gingham, multi-hued handkerchiefs with which to turban her head, or perhaps a pair of shiny storm rubbers to wear over her mocoasins in bad weather, she spends more hours than she does dollars, driving the shrewdest of bargains, One pecullarity of the Tndlan woman shopping 18 that she will deal with men clerks only, educated Indian women ex- cepted. Frequently she will cross the street to another store to make her pur- chase for no other reason than that a man is there to serve her, the rival shop having made the mistake of sending a girl clerk to learn her wants. If {he clerk can speak “Chinook,” the universal jargon of the Indjan, so much the bet- ter; she will walt patiently for hours to secure his services. The Indian woman shopping is never in & hurry. Pointing to a pile of aress #00ds she exclaims, “Eneh,” and the clerk proceeds to tap each bolt until a satis- fied “ITuh” convinces him he has hit on the desired one. Carefully feeling the cloth the Indian woman, after many min- utes, bargains for a couple of yards. She pays for it and slowly moves on to the adjoining counter, where the calicoes or ginghams or percales tempt. Tha bolts lie in fantastic profusion before her, but she patiently waits for the clerk to han- dle them one by one, and after a half hour's deliberation she purchases a few yards, once more settles her account and moves on to the next counter. So she goes through the entire store, paying for each article as it is bought, until the sunlight fades, the electric light globes twinkle and the day's shopping is at an end. Probably she has spent & cou- ple of dollars in four hours, one peculiar feature being that the large purchases have been made more quickly and with less bartering than the small ones. A Woman Farmer. Though Miss Clara Webb of Oregon, is an educated woman, a musiclan and widely travelled, she finds no occupation more alluring than farmiag, She spends her time In the management of the large farm her father, A. T. Webb, bequeathed to his daughters, twelve miles from Portland, Ore., and for all she is a woman there are few finer model farms than hers. Miss Webb goes upon the theary that since wun inferlor animal eats just as much as ore of the best breed, and is worth much less, It pays to keep blooded stock, 80, too, with frult. Ten of the 200 acres of land in the Webb farm are 1aid out in eherry trees—the fruit which has brought Miss Webb first prizes at innumerable exhibits, medals at the Pan- american exposition and' cups at the Lewis and Clark fair. Also the 1,200 trees in this orchard yield the owner an Income larger than that brought by the crops of any two or three of the adjoin- ing farms put together. Last year the trees bore tons of cherries, lusclous fruit averaging three and on: f inches in clrcumference. Miss Webb intends to set out another ten acres In cherries. Miss Webb sees to it personally that This institution is the only one in the ceptral west with separate bulldings situated in their own amvle grounds, yet entirely dis- tinet and remdering it possible to classify cases, The one building being fitted for and devoted te the treatment of noncontagious and nonmental diseases, no others be- ing admitted. The other, Rest Cottage, being designed for and devoted to the exclusive treatment of select mental cases, requiring for a time watchful eare and spe- cial nursing. " S0ld by Myery-Dillon Drug Co., Beaton Drug Co., The Bell Drug Co.. Malnes Drug Co.. Omabhi Clark Drus Co.. Cousell Blutfs. her orchiards are kept In first-class com- dition, and likewise keeps the closest wateh t her wheep, pigs, horses, cows and pastures. Dressed in a sensible cos- tume and stout, high rubber boots, she is here and there and everywhere about the farm—*into everything” she says, “pig pens, sheep pens, horse stables and plowed ground. If my foreman needs a hand 1 want to be ready to turn in and help him, and I don’t mind the dirt. Wh should 17 It's clean dirt.” Now she is found superintending ihe Ing of a floor in one of the pigpens, now taking a turn on the potato planter. now feeding her beautiful Lincoln sueep. The hoge on the Webb farm are aristo- crats—seventy-five Poland-Chinas. One year-old, which captured first prize at the Pacific Natlonal show in Portland last year, could, Miss Webb says, be brought to 700 pounds for exhibiting pur- poses. The 100 sheep on the farm are pure blooded Lincolns, so jealously cared for, In dry sanitary sheds and the best pastures, that they are kept free from disease, in spite of the fact that sheep are prome to disease in that climate. Miss Webb's sheep bring her a hand- some profit. They shear from ten to fifteen pounds of the best wool, and then they are very prolific, and they are al- ways in demand for breeding purposes. Twelve Jersey cows and a flock of Plymouth Rock chickens complets the stock, though of course there are horses. Miss Webb's own saddle horse was General Shafter's/mount in the mil- itary parades in San Francieco following the Spanish-American war. Oriental Giris as Stude Oriental girls lend themselves easily to all that belongs to the aesthetic side of academic training, says Presldent Mary Mills Patrick, of Constantinople's great school for girls, in Harper's Bagaar. Al- most a1l are good students with wonder- ful memories. They are especially good lingulsts and are very clever at dra- matics, They often devise thelr own co tumes and manage their own stage furni- ture and scenery. Classic plays have been given by the Greek department from time to time in which the music of the choruses had been written by a Greek, who has made an exhaustive study of the musle of the anclent Greek drama. Se- lectlons from Mollere and Shakespeare are presented iIn French and English at difforent times by the literary sacleties. Many of the girls are musical and there are numerous congerts by the college horus. The departments of art, archaeol- gy, and history have speclal advantages in the surroundings, so closely connected with the rieh past of Bygantium and Asla Minor. The curriculum i similar to that of colleges In America, with its work in blology and physics, English and math- ematics, peychology and philosophy. The college I8 non-secterian and makes no at- tempt at proselytiging, but the moral in- fluence is strong and direct. Co-operative Living. Bach passing decade sees a larger and larger share of the life of the child trans- ferred from individual to co-operative in- fluences, says Everybody's Magazine; In other wards, transferred from, within the home to outside the home. We have al ready observed that the same law of d velopment exists in vespect to certain other elements of home life. We have seen how productive industry, once located largely in the home, has almost entirely departed from it. We have obseryed how tho arts of housckeeping have begun to dle in the home and to be revived in domestic sclence courses outside. Simultaneously, naturally, there has arisen a great demand on the part of housewives for foed already cooked. This applies not only to cereals and breads and canned vegetables and cammed fruits, but to moats and fish. In one of tne Chicago department stores, last year, the manager of the grocery de- partment sold more than $200,000 of cm@(- en croguettes, salaml sausage, cervelat sausage, Bouthern hash, mutton stew, veal chops, fried perch, fried frogs' legs, com- bination salad, bolled ham, beef tengue, fried oysters, baked white fish, bologna sausage, deviled crabs, and so on, all ready to eat. Of course, even $200,000 is a emall amount compared with what a city as large as Chicage spends a year in food, hut it shows in which direction the tema- ency setting. There is probably ten times s much cooked food sold In Chi- cago today as there was ten years ago. All these changes tend to contract the scope of the home, but it does not follow that they tend to destroy its vital prin- ciple. Three women stenographers employed in New York went into partnership about five years ago and bought & farm of some twenty acres in Conmneeticut. They began by spending their vacatipns and week- ends on the farm. Now they are com- muters and derive a little Income from apples, chickens and vegetables. “Two of us are from the west and the other is a southerner,” said one of the three, quoted by the New York Bun. *I think it was loneliness that first attracted us te each other. “Weo had seen each other for several months in & New York lunch room be- fore elther got up courage to speak to the other. You know how such things progress. From speaking we got to talk- ing, then making dates with each other, and when the summer came we managed to get our holiday at the same time and g0 to the same place In the country. “It was only two short weeks and the city seemed terribly dusty and hot when we came back. From wishing we eould 80 into the cpuntry for the week-ends we finally began to think out plana, “We looked nto the matter of renting and buying small country places near New York and all during the winter di- vided our energles between saving our earnings and looking at places offered for sale. When the spring came we had set- tled on a Connecticut farm offered for $1,200 on almost any terms, “The heuse was out of repair and every- thing on the place had been neglected. It belonged to tha estate pf some wealthy woman whe had taken it in payment for a debt and no one had ever cared enough about it even to close the door of the dwelling house. Iits enly ocoupants so far as we could learn had for several years been siray animals, generally goats “Well, we got the place by paying 3600 Gown and the balance ln monthly instal- ments. After paying that 8600 there wasn't another $100 between us, but we all felt that we owned the place the rest once was easy. "I can't say it proved eas taken all together it has proved both pleasant and profitable. We didn't do much that first year besides having the place thoroughly cleaned and giving the dwellings and outbufldings & good coat of whitewash. “It s surprising how pleasant becomes when once you have a real ob- exactly, but saving Ject to save for. The year befpre it would have annoyed me very muah not to be #ble to have & new hat or to to have to wear the same sult weekdays and Sundeys. These seemed very Lrivial matters, compared with fitting up our home The three of us used to comment about different girls in our offices, how silly they were to spend their wages for such trifles. In order to be able to save a little more we took twe furnished rooms together and got our meals ourselves. It is surprising how much a woman who knows the rudiments of cooking can save that way. Why, we used to compare our expenses with what they had been when we boarded and feel as though we had been shamfully cheated. “It was a pretty tough pull that year, but when the time came for us to move back into town none of us wanted to go. After a while we succeeded in getting a indeed, APRIL 25, 1909 man and his wife to take the two rooms at the back of the house free of rent for the sake of having some ene with us nights, “We got him by giving him ten acres of land free of rent. In return he worked the garden, cleaned up the orchard, bullt chicken houses and did the thousand and one things that make the difference be- tween a place and a home. That year we sold vegetables, eggs, chickens and ten barrels of apples. “Since then the produce of our farm has been steadily increasing. Having patd for the farm we are now making it not only self-supporting but profitable. Last years we cleared $10 on chickens and eggs, $340 on apples, six hundred-odd dollars on vegetables and $1% on butter and milk. We bhave only two cows. The dairy and the orchard are my province. The south- ern girl devotes her time to the poultry, while our western friend looks out for the vegetables. “Bvery department is run on striot business prineiples. Each of us keeps books that are open to the others at any and all times. 1 know exactly how much each bateh of chickens hatched from the incubator costs, just the other girls know what the harvesting of the apple crop amcunted to. “When we bought out our farm there were abominable and wasn't a trolley within several miles. Now one of the finest automobiles roads in the country passes in front of our gate and there is a trolley within two ménutes walk. “This has not only increased the value of our property but it has brought us nearer New York. We get to our work in just half the time we did that first year wo made the break from furnished rooms and oil stoves, “1 don't want -you to think we haven't worked for all that we have. We not only have had to work and deny our- selves, but we had to keep at it for two &ood long years before thers was even a glimmer of a chance of getting out of the woods. “Now that It is all over and we have a g00d, comfortable home hesides & divi- dend producing plece of property we all feel that it is well worth all that we haye given up for it, if anything should happen and one of us should lose her position in town she would not be penni- less. She would have a home and a third of the earnings of the farm. “That is a great point to be considered, especially by women. Though we are all earning good pay In pleasant posi- tions we are all looking forward to the time when we will have laid up enough to retire from business. the rvads there ki il Japanese Husbands Are the Best. The recent outburst of race antagonism in a Pacific coast city, directed against an American girl for marrying a Japanese, lends interest to the public sertion that apanese husbands are the best in the IS Newbro’s Herpicide PRAISED BY PAULA A. EDWARDES Paula A. Edwardes, the well-known theatreail star, writes as follows: x and & ' Very truly yours. ¥ oof Signed Now York Oity. —mnot enjoyed by other: heeded. too late. fluffy. Delightfully refreshing. Send Detroit, Mich., for sample and booklet One Dollar Bottles Guaranteed HERPICIDE do not aco e N R T T AR R TR AT “I am oharmed wtih Newbro's Herpicide. It is @ refreshing hair remedy, producing & beautiful 1 : fuxuriance of growth: at the same time keeping the scalp free from dandruff.” Good results from the use of Newbro’s Herpicide mean as much to one person as to another, but on the other hand, the fact that leading theatrical stars prefer Newbro’s Herpicide is an important point in its fa\'s)\'. Professional people have an inclination and an opportunity o diseriminate in their choice of toilet remedies and their opinons should not go un- The extraordinary success of Newbro’s Herpicide is due to the simple fact that it kills the dandruff germ. While other remedies treat the disease that results in hair loss, Newbro’s Herpicide destroys the cause of the disease, after which nature grows the hair, if it is not Chronic baldness cannot be cured, but before the hair follicles are too badly diseased, one can, by careful treat- ment and intelligent sanitary care, keep down and ulti- mately destroy the tiny vegetable growth [dandruff germ] whose continued presence in the sebaceous glands of the scalp means hair destruction, Ladies become enthusiastic over Newbro’s Herpicide, because it brightens up the hair and keeps it light and Stops itching of scalp almost instantly. 10 cents in stamps to THE At Drug Stores. t o substitute p Applications at prominent Barber Shops. SHERMAN & McCONELL DRUG CO,, Cor, 16th and Dodge Sts. THE OWL DRUG CO., Cor. 16th and Harney Sts. Special Agents. PAULA A. EDWARDES. HERPICIDE COMPANY, Dept. L., When you call for world,” made by Mre. the eminent Japanese chemist and scientist, for many years a resident of New York Yakamine, wife of Mrs. Yakamine was Miss Hitch, daughter of one af the old southern famiiles before she met \the doctor, and Is a stanch de- fender of international marriages. “No woman In the world is more pro- tected and better cared for than the wife of a Japanese,” she sald. “The Japanese husband is conslderate, faithful and pa- tlent. It is his philosophy, his religien He Is a home-loving man and naturaily he 1s thoughtful of the little attentions to his home and family. Every woman loves these little ttentions. Plenty of women prefer kind words and the thought that they are appreclated to diamond HE coats for small girls are more than attractive this spring, for though the lines remain much the same, details and materials vary and an ex- coeding daintiness is the order of the day. ¥ine lingerte models are as smart as they are impractical and wherever modish garments for children are shawn one finds these dainty sheer coats, fresh, charming, summery, calculated to muss and sofl with distressing readiness, but undeniably suited to babylsh wearers, All are elaborated with fine handwork, but some are more intricately adorned than others. Fine hand tucks, Insert laces, delicate hand embroid- ery all play their part and many of the lovellest models, but by no means the least expensive, have only the hand embroidery and embroidered scallop edges for orna: ment, no lace being added to the design, Occasionally one finds a model other than the straight, full coat with deep collar, but the pret- tiest things are on the latter order and the departure from it lose In babyjsh- ness what they sain in originality. The model lilustrated here, with slightly shaped walst and wide cluny lace bordering the fronts, is 2 fine and besuti- ful little coat, but it has not the charm of the models of straight line. More serviceable coats of tub ma- terials are made up in pique, the soft French pique, of white or pink or blue, often with hand embroidery of white and sealloped edges emhbroidered in white, and there I3 a plque with fine heneyeomb or check ve, which makes up very prettily, Real cluny lace and baby Trish are used upon the pique when lace 1s required, the heavy Trigh orochet bead- Ing glving good ef- feets In simple mod- els. White pigue, embroidered in color is seen, but is less de- sirable for all-round wse than the all white, In sitk coats for the very little girls one finds rather more varlety than usual Some adorable little models are shown in delicate shantung, tussor and other pongee weaves. These are made up very simply, eoften with & view of laundering, for the ma- terial will launder . excellently if proper care is taken to aveld fading the gdelicate color, One straight Jittle model, full from & yoke, is bordeped by plain hems feather stitched by hand In white and has & deep collar of hand embroldered lngerle avd rings. If a Japanese sees some little ploce of jewelry, ornament or painting he thinks his wite would like, he takes it home to her. It fs this sort of thing—the fact that he has thought of her during the day— that makes her happy. “Contrast the American and the Jap anese husband under the same circum- stances. An American husband comes home from business tired, nervous and hungry. Something has happened to the oven orsthe cook has allowed the roast to burn. He is likely to become very im- patient over the delay or the spoiled din- ner. Under similar circumstances does a Japanese husband lose his temper? In- deed he does not. He says pleasantly, out of consideration for his wife's feel- ings, “Well, perhaps there are eggs In x Spring and Summer Wraps Are Pretty and Varied valenciennes lace. Another has & collar of the silk, with baby lrish insertion set Just Inside the hem and still another has edges of tiny scallops emboidered in white and a design of hand embroidery bordering coat and practically covering the collar. Bengaline is a silk favored for dressy coats for children, and is as a rule made up upon lines somewhat severe, with a lit- tle hand embroidery or heavy iace for trimming. Some pretty models are quite plain, with only lace collars and big pearl buttons for relief. The heavy Ottoman silks in fine lugtrous soft quality and Bayadere stripes make very handsome plain coats. Among wool materials, too, corded weaves gare frequently chosen for the child’s coat, and the season offers a large assortment of these corded or cotele ‘wooll A smart little coat shown by a Fifth avenue outfitter of children is of rose pink Bedford cord, trimmed |n wide white silk brald and fastened with white Brandenburgs, and another is of light LINGERIE COATS FOR LITTLE GIRLS. blue corded wool, with a military looking trimming of narrow white braid loops and buttons down each side of the front and on the sleeves. For small gi frock days o tional white missible dalnty three, Chie up in wools, s past the first ors other than the tradi- and pink and blue are ad- though nothing else s ever so and as essentially childish as these short little coats In biege tones are made broadcloth, Bedford cord and other and the soft dull blue and rose and brown shades are llked. Some extremely pretty models are in brown and white, bralding or white embroldered collars and cuffs of pique or linen, lightening the somewhat warm tones of the modish brown, White braid is good, too, on the rose and blue shades, but of course it makes the coat less serviceable because more easily solled, and the more practical models con- fine themselves to self-color or adjustable white collars and cuffs. Some very cunning coats of red scrge are attractive offer- ings for general util- ity purposes, look- ing childish and yet being dark enough not to show dirt quickly, and there are good models, teo, In dark blue serge, brightened by a lit- tle red or light blue and gold or white, but, as has been sald, all these col- ored coats are for children a little older than the tiny girls for whom the sheer lingerie coats of the sketches were de- signed For children from 4 to 6 there are knowing-looking lit- tie tallored coats eut on the same gen- eral lines as the top coats of thelr el- ders, stitched strapped and buttoned with uncompro- mising tallored severity, and occasion- ally they have plain collars of wel- vet or of corded sflk in a shade darker than the coat, by way of a relleving note. Models of thig sty'e in khaki brown, in bei in @ warm dark blue, with white pear] buttons, or with pear) buttons match- ing the cloth, have been very successful in one house devoted to childven's interests, and this same house has turned out very aunty little plain coats of the popular black and white shepherd plaid or block check which succeed in looking childish in spite of their somber coloring Another model Jaunched by this firm is a straight coat of pique with collar and cuffs embroidered in English openwork, scalloped and buttonholed, and a scarf of satin ribbon run through wool embroidered eyelets in the pique at the walst line and( knotted at the left front i It is predicted that the favorite colors for summer, aside from the usual amount of white and string color, will be yellows and browns. the house, and after all better for us to eat.’ “If there 1s anything that will fn- crease rather than diminisn this consid- eration for his wife it Is the fact that Jupanese women are just beginning to o into business like their American sisters, With this change the men will too, that should they not treat wives well the women can leave them and earn their own livelihood. o far no such threats, I belleve, have been put into practice, but it has been unneces- sary, for it is born and bred and trained in the Japanese men as part of their re- ligion to treat their wives with respect and courteous, thoughtful attention. “In Japan matrimony is bullt on a sort of equal rights plan. Husband and wife have each his and her duties = and his and her particular rights and priv leges, and neither one would think of e they might be croaching on the other's well defined rights.” Coihar Leaves from Fashion's Notebook. The high ruche has quite disappeared, but_the little frill is still worn at neck and wrists. Some of the cabriolet hats with deep nattier blue faflle and large Toses as trimmings are charming. Semi-fiting coats allled to the princess gowns or high corset skirt are much fa- vored, and {he corsage must match the skirt in color, even if It is the blouse type. There are signs that wemen are begin- ning to weary of the very high neckband and ruffle about the throets, and the little “turn-oyer collar of embroidery or lace makes & welcome change. Ash gray cloth gowns relleved with pip- ings of black sifk paplin and touch of emerald green velvet at the edge of the collar and cuffs are among the exclusive tajlored productions of the season. For the motorist there Is a new shaped bonnet that seems to be all crown and 1o brim. One model on these lines is fash- foned from net in prunella shade, with plpings at Intervals and the crown' edged with two rows of gray fancy straw. The climax of ugliness would seem to have been reached at last In the eceentric millinery of the late months, and this in spite of the appearance of really charming straws and unusually lovely trimming ma- Who Kayser their pink There remember. gloves desirable. the hem. found 2 guarantee in each pair. Does terlals. The preference seems to be for inverted pot crowns, every imaginable pot shape and size being included in the latest inventions of the milliners. The straws themselves are soft, highly finished and very light in welght. Many of the best require iittle trimming. Crush and “fluted" Tagel and Tuscan straws are among these. Those in burnt tones or In pale butter color are among the most pleasing of the really summer hats. An artistic fad in motoring millinery is to have the vell of some color that forms a delightful harmony with the bon- net itself; for Instance, a nut-brown vell on a tomato-red straw bonnet, a mole color on nattler-blue, or a mauve on ele- phant gray. A_dainty summer hat seen recently was of Milan braid in natural tone, A band of black velvet was draped across the mod- erately high crown, and the drooping brim lined with shell pink moire, was encircled by u wreath of rosebuds set In green leaves, Chat About Wome: A Choctaw woman who fs prominent in club work is Mrs. J. R. Harrls of Chick- asha, 1. T. She was educated in the east and Is cne of the most intelligent women of the territory. Mayor Alexander of Los Angeles has set aside the second Sunday in May as mothers day, to be observed in that city, A moth- ers'’ fund is to be started from collections taken up on mothers’ day, and this will be used for the support of destitute mothers. The governor of the state has been asked to issue a proclamation concerning the matter. An iIndirect result of the American oc- cupation of the Philippine islends was the organization recently of a club for women in Manila. More than 1000 Filipino women have been enrolled, and the club proposes to take an active part in charity work, having already established a depot for dis- tributing sterilized milk and a hospital for afling infants. The leading organiszer of the club was Conception Felix, a Filipino woman, who has been admitted to the bar. Winifred Sercombe of Minneapolis all aroupd the world alone, and re cently she has heen telling how kind she found the people of the countries through which she went, and how easy it is for a woman to do this kind of thing without being troubled by the heroes one sometimes read about, but seldom sees in real life, who pursué selfrespecting women to their annoyance. Mrs. Sercombe found nothing of this in all her travels. Not Want Gloves? not a woman in all America who doesn’t want Kayser silk gloves. You've worn them since you can The finish and fit, and the patent tip, were all that made silk But many a woman gets inferior gloves because she doesn't look in ” Patent Finger-Tipped Silk Gloves ‘We publish the facts so you may get what you want. Kayser gloves, for 25 years, have stood fer the utmost in gloves. They have met your ideals in finish, fabric and fit, You have You want them always, for they cost but the price of the common. The way te get them is to look for the name in the hem, Short Silk Gloves, - 50c, 75¢c, $1.00, $1.25 Long Silk Gloves, 75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 JULIUS KAYSER & CO., Makers, New York e e e

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