Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
HOME FURNITURE. CO. 24th and L Sts. South Omaha Sells Furniture 20% Below Omaha Prices We have just purchased for Cash a large amount of High Grade Furniture, and while offer the manufacturers announce an advance of 10% in the prices for 1910, we can these goods for the next 30 days at much below former prices. A Large Line of Useful Holiday Presents $21.00 PRINCESS DRESSER, sk paion. . 912,90 e ¥ *SPRINGS at. . On 19 R Thirty styles of Library Tables; from p i S|8 $4.50, at. ... 1; Below Former Prices. i’\vazny\t;\x' N £l Solid Oak $21.00 Buffet. .. SOLID OAK DRESSER.. $6.50 14 SPRING STYLES IN RUGS FOR 1910 NOW COME SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF LOWELL WILTONS IN ALL SIZES 27-in.x54-in. Velvet Rug ... ... .$1.258 || @x12-ft. Velvet Rug........ 27-in.x54-in. Axminster Rug.... $1.45 FINELY FINISHED FULL SIZED BRASS Slz 50 [ BED, 2-in. posts. 35 STYLES OF NEW CHINA CLOSETS, in all finishes— trom $9.715 fromiy. | HOME FURNITURE CO., IN | Well made, full size $ Steel Couch. $28.00 Sewing Machipe, like cut—solid oak s I7 5“ L] case. \ O VN S TN B B AR Special Xmas Line Fine Rockers and Chairs High-Grade Steel Range . $22.50 . $24.50 Stoves Sold on Payments. 24th & L. Sts., Four-Hole for [ 2.90 ... $14.50 | 9x12-ft. Axminster Rug. .. ...$17.50 it R 10-PLY SOLID FELT MAT- T a Combination Book Case and Writing Desk; Empire sfi 6. 75 finish $1.756 Mission Double Plate Rack SOUTH OMAHA Activities and Views of Progressive Women in Various Walks of Life Knew it straining { up. | the canons of modesty or hesi-| 1ven when our finances were most strait- tating i the of | ened 1 managed her mess chicaper mat in the Ney man's mag- | 9aintily made by fs & model | @MY Part of my wardrobe it was on street . clothes. It meant a great deal more to and gives some reasons gt Tetia t m: to have pretty house dresses—every man A dotes on pretty negligees and tea gowns— | than expensive tallor-made suits, I am a model wife cause I have made an absorbing study of my husband. T he is of the m vital interest, while to other 1 suppose be fis a very plain, ev ~day sort of man, as men go. | Perhaps if he were an extraordinary per- | gon 1 would have failed utterly in making of a wife. Being common- Why She ix 4 Model Wife, ITHOUT unnecessarily my duty, however, to “Keep my- | to have. pretty clothes, fals to be sure, but stylishly, If 1 had on | hout ge, wor Tdea W asserts timeliness a an writer to economize she a Interesting is In her, Here arc o reason why 1 think I am because T know how to take of my husband's money. Tt was something he knew very little indecd. He knew how to make a good living and how 1o pay his bills, but thet was mhout as far as he had gotten, When we were first r mode 5 care > me | about people only maryied he was in|the right sor ance both for myself and for household ex- penses, and he immediately large life insuran that length to which his econcern ture went. I knew wha and I felt sure that we nice little sum ally spoke the same language, though not at first did they do 5o by any means, 1t vou will realize that your husb: not only “dear old Tom or Dick or Harry and the family breadwinher, but an adtual a |buman being with a personality and char- took out & the fu o was for the his incoj o to save out of it with ch — 2, vear | find a fascinating occupation spr acter that may be very alluring, you wiil st ading out | se of learning a | m | th re before you—the opportunity little hout @ human soul. In no other relations in life is it given to us to read so clearly and closely a page |ar out of life. All your study, however, wil be of no use to you unless it is going to |fa teach you what to avoid, what to encourage |da and what to condemn, and the way to go about all these things. t — te The Woma th The cry of “Clara,” in A Man'’s World, | that life is so hard, that she has tried |y and tried and cannot make her way un- aided In the world, urspeakable anguish for any man who will pay the rent, is & very human wail. In . | on m; sards of women, and, ves, under the burden that civiliz upgn them. Fate pushes up very hard sometimes, and the 80 to the wall, lg en, who groan | tion 1mposes | against us weaker one the fathers at she longs With|the rent” herself, will be capt the habit of giving me & generous allow- | place myself, our hearts and souls eventu- |a greater or lesser degree there are thou-|fo; ey | mist living te their foothold and are | back of a tenement in |trampibd under the feet of those with more |street, New York, who i aying powe But it is not a ery of the 8racefully, relat the Washington Post. for even in @ man's world the | Well known and well beloved in Washing- ales must fight for existence as well as |ton is this' white-haired optimist, and it grateful news tha Christmas and X alone, o females. Mr. Taft sald In a speech |Will come cently that he hatdd to think that there |Ing hqne women In the world who have to marry (forth no more order to be taken care of, and Mrs. M hers of their duty in provinding for their | Years ha avghters to make necessary, Bui | klndly wi “teoth are on edg, with | Time could ie struggle for existence, and the daugh-,Years ago up the burde awhile heavy, and s up and !flnm; independence of ‘“paying loth to let and strong and the up the task the will wander is go- eminded ry Ledwith is he sed over name, and | her head. ol ee from guile that cruel to her. Fifty-one the home of Mrs. to th The ried to Colone! this u he and s she entered Charles, Carow as baby, g up. m; Roosevelt in London in 18, and Aunt Mary was with her at the time. She remalned a nurse for the velt children, and | aid not leave the fumily until September, | | 1908, when, because of ill health, she it | Washington to make her home with her brother and sister. Cabinet ministers tatives knew Mrs, for her kindnes: rs are bravely taking emsclves, and while Ylara” finds the eeps a little, she tasted the for a nurse > baby once - in a own vas burden too che: nce |as any t is big of heart unless n of an, her 010 Age Swedtened There is a sweet-faced, while-haired opti- iporarily the third floor st Thirty-second growing old senators and represen- Ledwith, and loved her Age did not curdle her nature. Instead she sweetened age and took its bitterness away. Her tenement {room In New York was not luxurlous, and out denying ou ‘There never however. Jack cast his ex here and there with show for it, I found. ous, and he gave or any one who asked One day T got up my courage and had a long talk with him about it 1o him that he make himself allowance as he had done me reat of the money in the bank. the stub of his check-book structive reading for month, and I to draw a wanted to lves very seemed to be much any money to save, almost He loaned nothin Y & recklessly t was v ner- | LOTHES for children of all ages seem particularly pretty this season, both in lines and in ma- a spending terlals; and the little frocks of and put the wool which often look unchild- | like aistinet charms. Of cour mothers who dress thelr little ether in tub stuffs up to the ind nine yea} a the ith winte warm a warmer continual laundering nd If tastefully beby 1 suggesied have on 1 thought would he in- him at the end of a 50 reasoned that if he had check nearly every time he lend mive it would have an influence 1 was right in this. He did not simonlous or any less of a he did grow to be T am a model wife, never allowed passee or slovenly. 1 to my husband On the h» has never had rea me. 1 have grown older has he, fo matter—but 1 bave 1 W was not blessed with much ir g00d looks in the be husband had chosen will from among cluded that I [ DrBens FBancer, SANATORIUM Lk This Institution is the/ only one fo the central west with separate bulldings situated in their own amule grounds, yet entirely dis- tiuct apd rendering it possidle to classify cases. The ome building being fitted for and devoted to the treatment of noncontagious and nonmental diseases, no others be- ing admitted.' The other, Rest Cottage, boing designed for and devoted to the exclusive treatment of select mental cases, requiring for a time watchful care ana spe- clal nursing. eight underw obtainin n W fou but not necessitate desirable in | and daintily »ugh even for or mon va days L Pt e frocks and frocks wi are 1 zood fellow e the haveé nned m four and five The cashmere ok sh e less of & good thing wnd - challie aly been counted | childish materials and many | broadeloths and mixed stutfs ropriate, while velvet, velve een and corduroy are having great popu- larity thi nter i the children’s world as well as in the province of ihe delightful little slan order made of blue The " would mall folk, is highly French there olds, It telt ecause in plain my becom. p! 1 ) duinty colors have ays that 1 owed (b score of my perse dowe grownups. frocks on the Rus- up in velvet usually o brown or green which in anything very somber for rded by. the childven’s clothes and that it usually looks and is becoming to & the w Som, me e my pre of a dark ton - or in black. last seem makers of Is no denying qual child face Th mely white the plcturesque and complexion frock must, of course, be ex- plain in line with a collar of hand- Ince h as Irlsh or Venetian, relleving Coats on this more than the the more velyot mu tr W order geners worn again tind Russian lines liked, too, )t this winte and lews modifi here ¢ overcoat lines are and little trs ot A beau- velvet, with and cuff white ermin Is shown in one of the Fifth avenue shops, | and beside it is anowner blue velvet coat, in a duller blue, with a genulne Russian [alr, and, with neckband and wristbands '01 skunk. A pretty little mods in green broadcloth has a collar [and & rougn, sott, both styles of fuy e are freque used. coat in tly | e royal blue |-tiny collar of pure a warm, soft of sealskin §ray woolen coat Is New Charm in the Season’'s Modes for Small Children trimmed caracul used on some of the chiid coats, though it and wear 50 well as some in gravy Beaver is mats does not furs no rore the very little tots, while mouf may take the place of fur, pure whi ine is ¢ sidered appropriate, and the less elegant coney tve. - For glves some CHILDREN'S FROCKS OF CREPE DE CHINE, good effects. Whole coats of fur we by no means rare [can afford extravagances, the same be sald Nothin prettier thar which nothing is less desirable soiled and bedragged well if mothers truth and content but | ¢ serviceable foll they cannot one and For that matter all white coats, the small child nd hat, but the child than It would be A that last | slves With coats colprs for their wee afford more than the fresh and tradition in connec lothes is an extrava- folly for the to attempt to though if she can compass #uccqed in keep- ma of for cout for white is among the potles i th partm ofterings children's de- The white furs are chid- pretty, casily it all would 1 th o1 ms ish and ot i sofl so that they are impractical cannot 11l white n's keep it for general wear and can be recommended only for children who have other coats and it is sheer mother who must ec parents | follow the rule | th nomiz whose she laundering may | vet she sat there quietly and contentedly | stantinople, h |and gives it to the public for what it small child in white tub froc g0 back furs. This winter coats little children have | they are unquestinably be- warm. One such coat, per- fectly plain and flaring a little toward the bottom, is lined throughout with & bright | satin, and matching it is a little hat | | of close mushroom lines faced with shirred | rose mousseline and trimmed with a chou of rose satin. Brown and gray caracul are used for | | the nttle and there are shaggy | little motor of brown long haired | fur whose name it is difficult to divine, | such metamorphoses do the humbler pelts { now undergo at the hands of the furriers. Coats of corduroy, the soft widewale | kina by pref excellent for gen- eral wear and give splendid service. They | | are becoming, too, as are all the materials | | of velvet finish, and are especially good in the warm browns, either dark or light and in the form and mode tones. These last | shades, however, are not invariably be- coming to child faces, especially when | wintry weather calls for & touch of warmer and of the form or mode cord- | uroy coats 1s much improved by a little | collar of brown fur The same is true of the smart little form | | and biscult coats In soft rough woolen | cloth or broadcloth, but in this case | collar of brown or black velvet may be used instead of the fur to give characte | to the coat For the fae | appeared and o and coats. coats rence, are small girl's hat there is great PIQUE AND LINEN (Continued on Page Ten.) tact, though she saw u She did not regret that her greater days— the days when what she said ant sor thing to a president—were gone and that And when Ethel Roosevelt softly opened | o the door of her room in the tenement house, | wor is unattended, but slipped quietly behind her and put her|veil, and Miss Fry's acquaint fingers over her eyes, the old nurse guessed |fted, owing to the fact that her who It was the very first time. She heard | quaintance sp. with delight that Mr. Roosevelt had sent |did, however word that she was to be invited for Christ- | dlscovery that mas and was to make her Rome with them |*“old maids" in Turkey, and learned th forever. the teaching in the Turkish sch Such women as Aunt Mary need never be |satisfactory to the ambitious. It alone. She has accomplished the most .ulnr}\hm Leliha Hanoum does not tle and charming of all feats—that of grow- |after all—though walks ing old gracefully. There are some people |strect, and earns her liylng—the ¢ who have a rooted horror of growing old, | pronounced but if age were always exemplified as in |may be riding Aunt Mary's case it would be robbed of its| with thelr husbands and paying ca terror, | them. One mentioned who quently traveled to and from Egypt has entertained English women i yet who prefers Turkish ways rathie those of the European. Ye i know English well da a novel in it, and translates books on travel and politics for her husband. This is intere ng: When the recent change came over Tur key the only woman who was appolnted « the committee of public safety Was a g uate of the American school at Scutari the members of the Young Turks' p key.” One of those With whom she e | will speak with pride of the excellent acquaintance was earning her living by |of Mme. Sallilh Bey., Another grad teaching the Turkish language and\ liter- (Who married in Salonika ature in a large school where girls in Eoorlvad il e . upper classes are trained as teachers—since | tions under consid 4% Dreas Turkish”glrls are now more or less occu- assisting her in_publ pied, like those of other countries, fh earn- | in the of the haps, Mr ing their living. This woman also teach y T e in the American college. Miss Fry speaks her prediction of her as the only unmarried woman sup- porting herself with whom she came in con- were i but either quit Miss Fry a woman to do pald w fonal kind Leliha Hanouin believes it ca no foreign langua make the, to her, as 1) are what \ppe she plone P irkish woman of toda seen through the all is guest than sald to Turkish Women in American Eyes. Miss Isabel Fry, who has known many | men and women who had lived for years | in Turkey, and supplemented what she gained from them by close observation dur- ing & few- weeks' stay in the city of Con- written the result of what she has gathered for the Englishwoman is ur has publishe worth, concerning the “new woman in | he tion, husband interast fter all the noted in recent Te (Continued on Page SAFETY RAZORS, the Latest BARNEY & BERRY SKATES TURNING LATHES for Boys Henckel’s Emperor Razor, $2 each your meney away on cheap affairs. Then we have | Manicure Sets, Shaving Sets, Scissor Sets Table Cutlery, Carvers for Game, Roast, Steak Never befor SCROLL SA w s Pocket Knives o iiiors b "l i, silver and pearl handled scissor knives. Combination Hunting Knives. I ur t Knife 8 Remember, every one guain‘eed Tool Cabinets... Manual Training Tools Makes very one warran- ted. Don't throw priced good razors. the Little Folks to the larger ones for For foot power for larger boys o ave we shown such an in patterns. Al prices t line ever shown here. or the man of the ho! some other man's son. best toois in them. Your boy knows show & full line The larg the gift son or but th Just or his thing what he wants. We Remomber, the rush for Christmas shopping is on. Mako your seloction now, JAMES MORTON & SON CO., Don't delay. 1511 Dodge St. —_—