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New York Society at D ALPH PULITZER, eph Pulitzer, of the Just pner son of Jos owner New York World, ha: written for Harper's Ba three soclety. and edit These reate considerable excitement in society for Mr. without gloves. For of the 400's dinner Mr. Pulitzer sa seem to ¢ subject writing mas Bazar, Now will come the suprems test of the cold and in a state of collaps and women have in the first part of the dinner ot evening's higher success, These men enjoyed one another's society in the sym pathy of a appetite wh cluded more delicate affinit out the rest of dinner their common soclal r The papers on New York destined Pulitzer has handled his tyink necessary to make you example, in 1 I the Christ- was fed b; - ing cup. three wardresses with a feed- governor came to her and told her that he had received a letter from the home secretary in reply to a petition which she had sent, In which he said: “I wot interfere with the magistrate's de- cision and have given the prison author- ities every power to use what force they take food.™ ter, she sald, she started another hunger strike, but was forcibly fed, and on the Friday morning when she was she was taken to the hospital and surrounded with water bottles. She remained in the hospital until her rel pre- Through- inter- remarkable beautifl Thers young woman, lives in Chicago & blessed with a course was continued with the aids and gnq wonderful giift, of whom the whole accessories of a rapid and varied sequUence world will hear in a brief period of time. of dishes. After dinner the men had their She is Miss Ellen Von Volkenburg. After cigars and Wall Street, the women their wiinessing a single performance of & play, clgarettes and clothes, as habits to occupy ralates their attentions. to face, mind to mind, with neither food, the Chicago Record-Herald, she But now they sit facs can repeat word for word every accuracy , every inflection, every gesture, every tone nor cooking, nor dress, nor stocks to serve of volce and every detall of stage busi- as distractions and allies to their conver- They sit in the regions of pure Will their minds groping toward charming young woman, most gracious of bridge manner, most unassuming and apparently sation. thought. one another along a tenuous ness. Miss Von Volkerburg is a thoroughly of words, meet and find companionship in wholly unable to account for her unusual mutuality of mental Interest? Will thelr tajlent, which is as mystitying to her as tastes in common soar from oysters authors, from artichokes to from canvasbacks to composers, pease to poetry? Or will their minds, like bables walking without furniture, toward one another, meet in dizay con tact, and, having fallen painfully to eartn, crawl eniffling piteously back to their re. spective nurseries? No one will ever know, for at this to it is to those who have witnessed her dem- architecture, gnstrations. trom She has large brown eyes, a clear olive skin, wenderfully beautiful teeth ® and a lithe, strong, healthy body. While toddle there is always much animation in her faco - there is also at times a look of seriousness . that makes one feel that there is something - about her that is not given to many. She is exquisitely sympathetic and there is ever present an apparent note of extreme sen- moment, when Opportunity stands smiling sitiveness. Inscrutably with hands behind her, hold. ing in either palm success or failure, there ‘play show,' - \"When I was a very tiny girl T used to she sald. “It was always comes @& strident twanging and through that I lived in Fort Wayne, and, of course, the door at one end of the drawing room the best plays did not come there. But my march mind negro aders, minstrels, provided to Kuests so that they need not face the or- deal of interesting one anothe With muffled exclamations of reliet they for the most part sink on rows of chairs, fortune-tellers, mother used to take me to the theaters, amuse the &nd after seeing a play I could not rest un- til T had ‘played show.” When we lived in hotels, as we have most of my life, the women guests found much amusement in my performances and it was a part of my permitting their minds, agitated by the 38{ly routine to give parts of plays to a prospect of aimless activity, to relapse into the receptive attitude of being entertained. Those whose acquaintance is verging on friendship talk clothes; the hopeless fashion in hats just coming in, yet how, one will have to wear them; one’ another dressmaker has, little circle of women. “My interests have always been in the- atrical events and theatrical people, though I must confess that I know very few of them and almost nothing about the of course, : ac he footlight. But Bow ve actual real life behind the footligl dressmaker is becoming, who was once so reasonable; what stunning models who has jubt moved to Fifth Avenue. They inform one another of the latest dressmaker in Paris the drama attracts me strongly. If I go to the ftheater in a condition of mental repose, I absorb every word, every detall, every volco sound. Sometimes I have se- lected particularly important plays which I wished to catch entire. I have gone to t0 whom respectable women &re Just be- ynem n a state of nervous excltement, sinning to go. They give one another ad- dresses in Parls where Bet such custom. i Fee the Sutfragettes. British suftragettes disorderly conduot usu prison fare, preferring starvation an ald to “Martyrdom.” prison authorities resort to force in feed- thinking I must try to remember. I found they way one can y ,ouiq not. The subconscious mind which ruch pretty things so ridiculously t4yes this all in for me must be tranquil. cheap; but they do not give one another the addresses where they actually do get pretty things ridiculously cheap. Those they keep sacredly to themseives for foar of spoiling the shop with too much It must be at peace. all comes to me. ‘Then, afterward, it I can't explain it. It 18 just there, stowed away somewhers, complete and perfect. I saw ‘Zaza' when I was 14 and repeated it when I was 20. “In Ann Arbor some time ago,” -said she, “I was visited by an actor named Emmet Kirk. He rather doubted my sent to prison for claims, I belleve, and wanted proof. He ally refuse to take prought with him the manuscript of a one- 85 got play which he had just completed. The Conraquently manusoript had never been out of his own OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: NOVEMBER 21, See to It that your florist uses discre- A man once used buttercups, golden | rod and llow chrysanthemum at an Irish | wedding, and the bridal pair started om | their tour a day late. The family had to | wait for a coroner's permit. Don't worry it the mald of honor looks prettier than you do. Remember, you're | the one who got him. Never bother with unessentials. Have your troussenu as complete as pos- sible, but not many of each kind. Then make him replace every article as it wears out. Otherwise you may never have so | many elothes again. | Don't let him order the supper after you leave on your t Take no chances with | your health. He s still incapable of con- nected thought. Tt s not good form to be too specitic in acknowledging your gifts. Say some- thing like, “Thank you so much for your timely present,” rather than “for the $.38 | g0ld clock.” etc. Besides, you can keep it | and give it to the next bride. Probably that Is how you came to get it In the first place On your first at home day serve rofresh- ments first and often to his mother. 1f you can make her sleepy or iil early in| the afternoon you will have a chance to talk a little yoursel, Remember, above all, you are the real show in the main tent. He and his mother are (he necessary evils, he being necessary | and she belng—perhaps not as mean as she seema, tion, America’s Charn for “Immigrant women will not organize into trade unions” says Ellas Tobenkin, writing in The Survey for November. And the reason, he says is because organization | means recognizing that she is an employe, | a working women, and may remain a| working women, secking to uphold a cer- tain standard of living and treatment. This admission, however, the working girl will | never make. It clashes with her soclal | aspirations, with her preconcelved notion about the superior position which woman | holds in America; a notion which she got | in her home village from fabulous and highly colored storles in sentimental jour- nals, or from luring rumors spread by agents who travel through these villages and encourage imigration. Ninety per cent of the girls from Slavic nationalities come here at an age when dreamland is still a reality to them. Secretly each one hopes to become the queen of some American's heart. It s not the factory, the shop, not the hundreds of glant chimneys of the stockyards which lure girls from the wilds of Lithuania of the fiery melody of Hungary. It is the American home, the American regard for womanhood that charm them from their homes, —— Chat About Women, Miss Alice Fischer traveled all the wi from New York to Cheyenne, Wyo. to cast her vote in the recent elections. 'The trip cost in the neighborhood of $200. Mrs. G. W. Butler of Troy, N. Y., 18 ambitious to win the trap-shooting cham- plonship. She is one of the best wing ghots In ,the country, and in 'the last months has shown great im; In steadiness and sccuraoy, oo Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont has offered 1n prizes for the best essays on the subjac: of "equal suffrage written by the pupils of the Wadlelgh High school. = ‘The Tmmigrants. is hi ime that the oft repeated claim that—‘‘chronio baldnese ocan heltt:\::n‘:ilghb:‘m:d away with Qha old :nnounc;m::;efi‘:rl; n:ht‘;x :!;u:;ni I‘a' gree! . The claim is untrue, an - Iinu‘:e: gx{uny p‘:ncpt;:‘t..os' ore the chances they have to prevent baldnv?,.-u. The groatest mfi: toward nll:l. u\;in)nh(gllmlnltl‘:(n u& b;lz;l:.fiu;‘;: the discovery by Prof. Unna, of Hamburg, orfiuny :th B about him), that most hair loss is due to an invisible, X tab) iterally a ‘‘dandruff germ,’” producing a highly te:::r“i'\:;‘l‘gi:::s:?ll hehg::te{t stride to-;r_:l “’Tl"mif’»‘v“é";?{)%’i}'iffi‘ is ry of a prophylactic flud calle: R . '}!‘?:'i l;‘é,e::l:ll‘cfi:‘i“to::duigent y used—will destroy the dandruff germ and pmw“l‘i::;fl-“i:l:’i. the original dandruff germ destroyer and ita:xtrmr- dinary success—for dandruff and falling hair, also dull, brittle an. lv‘““"" less hair—has brought out many imitations. Even the old line hair ‘‘growers’ and hair *‘tonics” now claim to kill the dandruff germ. Quite a tribute to Herpicide, isn't it? Anexquisite hair dressing, Stops itching of the scalp almost in- Don’t wait; Send 10 cents in stamps to THE HERPIOIDE COMPANY, Dept. L, Detroit, Mich., for sample and booklet. One Dollar Bottles Guaranteed. At Drug Stores. When you call for HERPICIDE, do not accept a substitute. Appligations at prominent Barber Shops. SHERMAN & McCONNELL DRUG CO.| Special THE OWL DRUG COMPANY Agents Bqual Franchise soclety of which Mrs. Clarence Mackay is president, is offering hue is one of the many variations of the pompadour rizes for suffrage essays to be compets or by students in practically p.“ the w.l‘E leges of greater New York. Half a dozen girls from the secondary 8chools of Paris have been sent to Eng- land at the expense of the French nation for a two years course of study. All fees and expenses are paid and each girl recelves an allowance of five francs a month. The first year 18 to be passed in scholastic studies and the second in ob- taining a busines training in a commercial house. Mry come, hands, and he knew that I had no possible means of access to it. It was a weird Y story about an absinthe flend who dreams Pty NS from I must confess who several weeks ago lost his sight In both eyes, is the heroine of the hour in the village these days. Despite the faot that she {s mother to a 1-year-old babe and s not robust in health, she has taken up the work of her husband and dally I conducting the classes at the school over which Mr. St. Claire formerly presided. Miss M. Cary Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr college and chairman of the committee that has gathered statistica concerning college women in the United States, reported at a recent convention of the ~assoclation of the college alumni that when men and women were educated together thers were no more marriages than when the sexes were educated apart. Her report showed also that college women had an average of 3.6 children each, while non-college women had an average of 35 children, although college women married later in life. College women choose better husbands, the report said. s S Leaves From Fashion’s Notebook. Silks are more prominent than for many Small bows are replacing the large ones years. for tying the young girl's hair, The walist line has been lowered but the Glace gloves will be worn more than the tinlest bit. suede with evening costumes this season Jet trimming After many years of hard service, the has gone completely out of ing the fighting women. A full account of the feeding by force has been made b a Miss Burkitt, hour, Contrasting facings are a feature of the latest winter hat The daintiest new hat with Irish crochet laoe Lace trimming on hats will be combined with much furry material. Eyelet embroldery has more or less taken the place of net for blouses. style. Tassels are tensively than dressy gowns. It is expected that there will be a grad ual return to the elbow sleeve for lingerie walsts being used even last season more ex- for trimming pins are headed Burkitt sald that she had undertaken three hunger strikes—one of elghty-one *L0FY: He took the manuscript of the play hous, one of seventy-six hours and (e And Tead it through with all the dramatio last of twenty-four hours, She began her S°Stures and regular stage manner of hunger strike as soon as she got to "Pesch. In onme part the absinthe flend prison. Attempts were made to induce OPNS & safe, takes out a bag of gold and her to take food, but she refused. then lfts & chalr and crashes it to the On the Tuesday she was taken to the floOr. When ho had finished I started hospltal kitchen, which she described as With the/ opening speech, He tells me L S R e The long velvet and fur c last winter have season Waisteoats of silk are appearh; sreal winter. ats 8o popular survived for the new plain satin_or ottoman Bdward St. Claire, wife of the Wel- €/ Wit thy' coriug’of IR Appleton, Wis., ' school principal, upon frocks of sapphire the torture chamber, two doctors, matron. They forced her to sit Mloctors where there were followed the text word for word, and I four wardresses and the Moved about just as he had done. When in = Icame to the safe incident I went through chair, her head was forced back and the the same busine but when it came to between them forced her lips lifting the make-believe chalr I couldn't open and poured what she bellevd to be do it meat julce and milk through the orevices of her teeth. however, attempt they gave up. The prison doctor then forced the nasal Bhe dld not swallow any, and after half an hour's vain “T still have the money in my hand,’ » 1 sald to him. ‘It is heavy. I must put it scmewhere beforé I pick up the chair,’ He was a bit astonished, and so was I 1 It was something he had not thought of tube up her nose, but she struggled and wnen he wrote in the play business.” coughed, was taken back to her weak condition, but later she w conveyed to the torture echamber, there were three dootors in the nurses and matrons. head back and used the feeding cap. She refused to swallow and then stomach pump “was mentioned. One o the doctors pushed a gag In to her mouth ©us and they did not succeed. She “Naturally Miss Von Volkenburg meets cell in "‘;::: many people—particularly men of scien- where addition to She again pro- tested and resisted, but they forced her tific turn of mind or with an interest in matters psychological—who like to inquire conoerning her almost uncanny ability to reproduce the entire text of a play, and Who feel an inclination to seek the source the If hor wonderful powers of imitative in- ¢ terpretation. This produces a strange nerv- sitiverioss that makes her most and forced the tube down her throat. She Unhappy. was utterly terrified and in a cold per- spiration, and after a very little time the @8 Some strange freak," tube was removed. The feeding cup was &ppeared In her eye. “I have such a horror of being regarded she sald as & mist t fsn't that I fear again placed to her mouth and this time investigation, for I do not, I have given she swallowed a good deal of milk and proof of my abllity over and over again. brandy. Every two hours afterward she But to have sclentific men look me over as It I were not a normal being seems This lnsutution s the only one in the central west with separate buildings situated in their own ambvle grounds, yet emtirely dis- tinet and rendering It possible to classify cases. The one bullding being fitted for and devoted to 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 & time watchful care and spe- clal nursing. hideous. I would give up my work before I would be looked upon in that light. R is such an unpleasant thought." prasi g A Wite’s Bonus, A merchant married & girl with whom, in more than ten years of wedded life, he had only one reasonable cause for complaint, relates the Baturday Dvening Post. Bhe was thriftless. To make her thrifty, & regular weekly allowance was glven her. She was to spend the money, pay the bills, keep the accounts and bother her husband in no way, nor ask for any | more money. He agreed to pay & bonus of 10 per cent on whatever balance she could show had begn saved &t the end of each month. The first month, under this plan, her bonus was 15 cents—she had saved exactly & $1.60. As management grew more familiar, however, through | overseeing the whole operation, instead of | just the outgo, she was able to put by 10 or 15 per cent on her $30 allowance, and this with bonuses and interest, aver- aged more than $150 & year for several years. Dnring the past four years the . ‘finmm rs. NETTIE HARRISON'S 4-DAY COLOR. It Is the only entirely successful and satisfactory paration for the purpose. Simple - Harmless - Certaln. Sold for 20 years, recommended and used with satisfaction by thousands. Contains no lead, sulphur or other harmful Ingredient. If *‘dyes”” and ‘‘restorers’ have disappointed you, try this. It never falls. $1.00 At all first-class druggists and DRUG CO., SHERMAN & MoCONNELL Oor. 16th and Douglas Owl Drug Co., 16th & Xarney, €0, Omaba; Claf | 4opred thinking it might have been him. husband has turned this money over often and to great advantage in his business, using it to discount bills and giving the discounts to his wife. Should anything happen to him now, either personally or commerclally, the wife would be independ- ent for several years on his accumulation, Hints for Fall Brides. In the first place, it is best to marry him in the spring—if you can hang on to him that long. Fall wedding anniversarios are too near Christmas to be profitable in years to come. But if you must be a fall bride, remember there are a few general rules that go strong at all seasons. After entering the church do not look at the bridegroom any more than you h to. Retain your lllusions as long as possi- | ble. Besides, he probably isn't quite so much of & fool as he looks. It's his first offense as a bridegroom, and It's up to | you to see that it is his last. indeavor to repeat the formula and obey” with a serious expression. It is not quite tactful to let the minister see you smile He's married, you know. Don't imagine the best man is looking t you with admiring eyes. He's only *honor Concerning the Blouse Costume HE matron may get along with- out separate blouses, but the girl will have her plentiful sup- ply of them, and no matter how many one-plece frocks she may have, is lost without her coat and skirt and blouse costume and her comfortable lingerie and silk blouses for ordinary wear. How 1s she to Indulge in all the fascinating neckwear fads if the separate blouse is eliminated? And how Is she to make one or two expensive costume blouses for wear with her tallored frocks to last through the winter if she hasn't plenty of attrac- tive and becoming and washable lingerie blouses to supplement the more costly ones for ordinary use? We have talked of the separate blouse before this season, but the models increase, and so does woman's interest in the blouse problem, If we may judge by the numerous letter of inquiry we receive. Three of the blouses sketched for today's exhibit are lllustrative of a type which is undergoing a renalssance this year, For the last few years the silk blouse has been under & cloud. There seemed to be no mid- dle ground ‘twixt the lingerie blouge and the sheer dressy blouse of chiffon, net lace, etc, but now.designers are bringing the desplsed silk blouse once more to the front, and while & majority of the dressy costume blouses are still in sheer materials one sees Innumerable smart models In crepe, cashmere de sole, fallle, moire and other more or legs substantial silks. Theso silk blouses are not, however, on the old shirtwalst lines. These are re- served chiefly for the tub blouses. The silk model of the best type is simple of line, a distinctly tatlored coat and ekirt with Which it is to be worn, but it must have ®ome original and distinctive touch which will set it apart from the commonplace blouse shoddily made and sold by the hundred. Cachemire do sofe s liked by’ the bouse makers because while it has body It is very light in weight and lends ltself read- 1ly to tucks and draping, etc. It is to be found too in all of the most modish colors and shadings, so that one can match al- most any suit material In it Rivalling the silk cashmere are (the crepes—meteore, charmeuse, Rejane and & dozen others whose names one cannot remember but which are all softly lus- arous, supple, and despite their light welght calculated to render excellent ser vice. On these crepes and on the silk cashmere a little hand embroidery done in order of the materials adds immensely to the effectiveness of the blouse, and & little hand braiding 18 also effective The latter can, of course, be secured more cheaply than the embroidery, and often #00d results are obtained by using sou- tache or other braid in a fashion so simple that any seamstress can apply it. One of the blouses ilustrated here i3 an ex- ample of such treatment. It was In & soft, dull satin, but could be made in any silk with body enough to stand the comparatively plain front. The thres plaits on the shoulder break the plain lines becomingly and the fulness below the bust is shirred softly into the draped girdle. Soft-color soutache, black Soutache or soutache in the color of the material can be used for the sim- ply applied trim- ming, and the lit- tle buttons are of dull gold or jet The way in which the brald 1s ap- plled gives a sur- prising amount of smartness for & minimum of labor Frills and jabots are introduced upon many of the tailored blouses, and if not in creamy lace or not or lingerie are in chiffon matching the blouse mate: fal, with perhaps an under frill of white plaited chiffon or lace. Many of these frills run down the side front, the blouse opening down this line, but other models open frankly down the front, and the frills too take the center front, usually falling to a point a little below the bust line. The number of such frills, with or with- out stock aitached, which the shops dis- play is legion, and although some of them are expensive, others quite as daintily ef- fective comparatively reasonable in price, 50 every well dressed girl manages to have a plentiful supply of these ac cessorles with which she can furbish up even the plainest or oldest of blouses into some semblance of freshness and modish- e In almost every case the blouse is re- leved by white at the neck. The day of the one-tone fad is mercifully past, and even the women most slavish in matters of fashion no longer find It necessary to look their worst in a frock or blouse whose unbecoming color extends up to chin and ears. The best looking biouse models, how- | v even are ever, have the shallowest of t ramsparent gulmpes, the body of the blouse often extending quite up to the base of the throat, so that only the transpar- ent collar shows, and in any event exposing but a few Inches of white guimpe, GROUP OF BLOUS | though the blouse material below may be cut away and filled in with self-color net, chiffon, lace or other dark transparency, through which bold-colored embroidery or | kplen: | self at a small cost — —3= by any dressmaker, and thero 18 another good model, much on the same lines which several of the Fifth avenue firms are recommending for tailor wear. This model, however, has the suit material running up on the blouse, much after the fashion of the lower section of & silk blouse plctured here, and the close long cuff is also of the heavy material The silk blouse to which reference has just been made has much cachet, despite its simplicity, and where the plainness on the shoulders and of the armhole is not becoming to the figure several piaits may be laid on the shoulder and the sleeve, set into an arm- hole instead of being cut In with the side body of the blouse. The arrange ment of the black satin cravat and the note of black satin on the cuffs and in the girdle aud much to the smoothness of this blouse. The third sketch needs but we have seen it cop side body, set on as a shoulder, and found the effect rather better than that of the surving band, which Is difficult to adfust smoothly and inclined to break. absolute in front one no explanation. d with a plaited yoke or epaulette Many of the new coats are lined silk of the same shade. as formerly wit! White is not use The ruffs made of chiffon and ribbon are mnore Herviceable if on a foundation of crinoline A checked sllver and black enamel bute ton is used on a handsome tallored sult of shepherd plaid. Heavy ribbed ottoman and moire siiks are belng used for the construction of the separate coats. The touch of vivid color across the front of the walst {s one of the latest of costume detalls. The newest sweater or undergarment de- slgned especially for the motorist is & semi- fitting waci shape with a couple of pockets in the basque. A little cravat to finish off one of the new fur-bordored gowns segn recently was made of strands of brown chenille come pleted with mink tails. A _smart felt hat fo a charming shade of pearl-gray wreathed with a garland of small flowers and follage, all made of bebe ribbon entwined with a band of gray velvet. A smart edition of the wadded motor potticoat seen recently was in a soft, rose- colored satin, with a wide design at the foot in @ much deeper shade. This desikn was outlined by a row of machine stitching to keep the wadding in place. At the edge of the skirt was a narrow kilted flounce in the darker shade of satin. a young girl is in Health and Beauty Hints BY MRS. MAE MARTYN. Mrs. E. B.: It {8 your own fault it peo- ple think you are older than your hus- band. You should not be careless about your personal appearance. You can easily ‘get rid of that sallow, coarse ap- pearance of your skin and maki your- self appear several years younger by using & lotion made from 4 ounces of spurmax, 2 teaspoonfuls of glyeerine and | a half-pint of hot water. This lotion will | give your olly, shiny skin & pink, youth- | ful appearance. It does not show ilke | face powder, but lasts longer and _ta| Id for cold sores, tan, pimples and freckles. You can buy spurmax at any drug store and prepare this lotlon your- 1 am sure after you have once tried it, you will like it very much and use it @lways in place of face | owder. It is better and has proved e a wonderful whitener and skin beau- tifler. — Anna G.: I agree with clear, youthful eye and admired. Most the eyes proper eye tonic, whic ing for the you A bright, is always attractive girls neglect to give care. Very few use &n | I think essantial in car yes I have found the fol- lowing tonic to be fine for weak, tired| and Inflamed eyes: Go to your druggist and get 1 ounce of erystos and dissol it in a pint of water. Use two or three drops in each eye night and morning. It| will not smart. This inexpensive eye | tonic will do you lots of good and relley gold lace gleams vaguely Very simple little chiffon wear with tatlored suits are made In chit- fon to match the coat and skirt, laid in tucks, elther pin tucks or pin| tucks alternating with quarter inch tucks. This tucked chiffon is lald over lace—valenciennes of bold design, chantilly—and is untrimmed, inch band of self-colored at the blouses for vertical cream alencon, save for an satin finishing throat line or a little be- low and running down the left front where the blouse fastens. Little satin buttons and loops are set | along this opening and a plaited frill of | the chiffon falling over a soft frill of the | cream lace finishes the edge of the werq the neck lapping front. The sleeves have & tn, undersieeve or cuff at the wrist with & | narrow band of satin finishing the over- sleeve. There is & satin girdle and & little guWlmpe of the creamy lace. This (s an admirable model, easlly made you of that dull, tired feeling above the | eyes. - E. J. B.: Everyone admires a beautitul | head of hair, and it is easy to have it if the halr {s properly cared for. Try sham- | pooing your hair every two weeks with a teaspoonful of canthrax dissolved in a | teacupful of hot water. You can get canthrox at any drug store. It lathers abundantly, cleans the scalp thoroughly, | stops all irritation and makes the finest kind of a shampoo. Boap s dangerous to use on the scalp, as the alkall in tends to kill the hair. Canthrox m the hair soft and glossy, dries qu and is now being used very extensively by the best class of hair-dressers. When | prepared at home, canthrox shampoo is | decidedly inexpensive. All druggists han dle canthrox o Francls M.: You can't expect to re- celve the same attention &s your chums as long as your health is s0 poor. Nobody | admires a young woman with pimples all | over her face. There is nothing like good | health. T sallow, common look on | your face shows you are needing & good tople. This can be made by dissolving 3% teacupful sugar and 1 ounce kardene | time 1, addlng enough boil- | sult 1a % piot alk | 4 tablespoontuls ake @& full quart of teaspoonful before each meal and before retiring. This tonic will restore lost appetite, purify the bloo: give you a healthy body and put life an color into your face. "I find this tonic very efficlent in arousing the liver to normal action, removing liver blotches, pimples, and other skin eruptions. Mrs. B J.: I receive great many le ters fuat like yours from people Who a troubled with dandruff, itching scalp and falling hair. It is ceriainly not & pleas- ant thing to feel that you are losing your once beautiful tresses. 1 invariably rec- ommend the use of a hair tonic made by dissolving &n ounce of quingoin in & half- pint of cold water. Try .his tonic and it will stop all irritation and your hair from coming out, remove the dandruff and re- store your scalp to & healthy condition. A V. W.: To make & greaseless come plexion cream that will be entirely bene- ficial and not encourage growth of hair on the face, mix 1 ounce of almozoin with i pint cold water and add 2 teaspoonfuls glycerine. Stir and let stand for an hour or so. In all my experience I have never found anything to equal almonzoin jelly @s an ald to beauty. It is excellent fo hands and face, massaging, re- moving freckles, tan, wrinkles, blackheads, and dirt from the pores of the skin. It remedy smaller ow the many any r found for makin unsightly pores yes, which are troublesome to ladiés. You can get almozoin drug store. R. 0. K.' A fat woman is certainly de- werving of pity, eltl in soclety or busi- ness. She can't help but feel miserable and out of place. The best remedy 1 know of to reduce your flesh without dieting is made by dlssolving 4 ounces of par- notls in & pint of hot water. Tuke & ta- blespoonful three times & day before meals This preparation Is harmless. A triend of mine who used it, reduced her welght 12 pounds in two weeks. Mrs. C. V.. You can stop that terrible itehing from your ecsems by using & lo- tion made by mixing 4 ounces of luxor, of ‘alcohol mnd a half pint of water. Apply this three or four times & day and allow to dry. Repeat until skin s restored to a healthy condi- tion. This remedy s splendid for sait roeum, rash and other skiu eruptions. I have seen this remedy trled numerous with surprisingly satistectory re- (Adv.) Y