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g S I il ST Reviving the Flower Hat EW YORK, brought out contingent at prove nothing summer Jan. 15.—Hats for the southern this time of year In regard to millinery, but at least they offer suggestions, and this year one must admit that some of the pos- sibilities suggested are delightful Some of the shapes are absurd, of courso. That Is always to be expected, nl the same thing will be true when late sp-ng | has revealed all that the millines have | planned for the season; but, on the other | hand, many of the shapes are delightful They are but modified versions of what | women have worn during the winter and if truly novel and original shapes are Inunched in the spring, at least no forerun n of them appears now; but the w.nier shapes take on quite another alr when chey | blossom out In tulle and straw and {lowars, and here and there a tendency but hinted at in velvet has been carried | further in summery materials. For exam- ple, we have seen a number of hats torn- Ing up frankly in the back, though they are the exception, rule is the hat roil- ing up at one side and down on the other or rolling 'high one side and Tower on the other Big hats are usually in the majority in summer millinery and in advance exhibits of summer millinery for the south, though | carly spring always brings out an abund- ance of small hats suitable for wear with tailored trotting frocks. Just now the big hat in straw and In tulle is most in evidence, but there are a good many at- tractive turbans and a few narrow brim- med high crowned straw shapes of the | Henrl 11 order. Tricornes and bicornes have, It is sald, run their course, but they have been made up in straws, chietiy on large lines. The flower hat, which 1s a perennial fa- vorite at this season and bridges over gracefully the gulf between late winter and real spring, is revived now In turban form, following to a considerable degree the lines of the populas winter turbans, though with a tendency occasionally to rise higher in the back than in the front | and not to sit so low on the back of the head as have the winter turbans, One of the prettiest flower models we have seen was In exquisitely shaped roses | velled in black tulle and trimmed with an enormous bow of black tulls on the left side. Another with the line rising toward the back was all pink camelias, beauti- ful waxy things shading from white to deep pink, and it had a bow of black chan- tilly posed on the left side. Still another was In pansies of all the glorious purple | and yellow tones, but was partly swathed in smoky gray tulle and trimmed in a big knot of the tulle. Flowers and tulle, flowers and tulle, this combination is reported over and over again and in many forms. A large hat of tulle has a wide shirred brim drooping in front &nd turned up in the back. The crown ls| an enormous full' one of the tulle falling | far out over the brim so that only a couple | of inches of the latter shows. At the left| side’ a mass ~of ‘roses mestles among the tulle. Large shupes in"Leghorn or fihe novelty straw have big stitf crowns and wide brims which roll boldly at the left side and | droop at the right. These are trimmed in | various ways with silk scarfs, velvet, flow- ers, wings or what you will, but among the | prettiest of them are those which, like the model (liu rated here. have a wide band of black or dark velvet encircling th | high, wide crown and flowers laid, loose, ugainst this velvet o be or beaver on the usual model in leghorn light blue instead around it were massed morning glorles in all thelr beautitul «colorings—soft and lavenders and blues /and whites Another leghorn hat with wide drooping brim was also wreathed in thick clustering morning glories, but this one had no vel- vet band and at the left side there was a big soft bow of light blue liberty satin Entire crowns of tlowers combined with broad, drooping or rolling brims of leghorn or other straw are shown and there are innumera- ble large hats in shirred tulle, with tlower trimmings and often with large bow of the tulle, Black ‘ace, too, has been extensively used by the milll- ners, though usually in connection with but an had its velvet of black, | Roses | ehanting band in are choles, en pinks and straw. A medium- | sized French hat, for example, had a large draped crown of fine tlexible straw and a brim of black chantilly turning up sharply against the crown at the left and held by a big bow of the black lace. Hats in colored straw swathed or velled in lace and trimmed with lace bows are in some cases very chic indeed, and we | have grown accustomed to this veiled color through the winter fad of the black lace veil draped entirely o almost entirely over the hat. Big sallor shapes with brim slightly roll- ing are made up iIn rough straw of all colors and aie trimmed with scarfs or occasionally with wings. Shaded scarfs in the coloring of the straw give smart ef- tects, all white, Fancy tasies have and feather the hew wings, thelr quills place in milli- and purples but some of the best models are in | tan- | nery, though the first hats shown are al- ways prone to run to flowers, probably as a protést against winter and all pertaining | nd the feather trimmed hats come | to it, with early spring. Some of the new feather | ornaments are lovely and some are | passingly weird Huge, rakish, which trims a fanc big quills like the one black hat illustrated here are often beau tful in coloring, it | absurd in sige, and many of the new models show feather ornaments running off at a wild tan- gent toward one side, | | [ I A FLOWER TUR- BAN, A HAT OF BLACK TULLE, | STRAW AND BLACK LACE AND ST RAW WITH ROSES. atter the fashion adopted for some of the | late winter models, a fashion calculated to | make things unpleasant for the person who sits next to the hat's wearer. An occasional model whose trimming is posed quite in the back follows a tendency | distinctly marked in the winter hats, but this movement is less marked in the south- ern hats than it might have been ex- pectbd to be and it remains to be seen what spring will do with the idea. Straw turbans, built much on the winter lines, are sometimes smart looking for wear with tailored costumes, but no matter | how soft and light the straw it has a| hardness of line and contour which | | makes the straw turban less successful than the winter models of fur, beaver or velvet. “MURPHYDID IT” , 'SWEET-EDWARDS AUTO CO. ‘Standard Automobile Co. (it i i "VI I\I\MIA‘HIW" -t'r a-,/n|"1 i I i |u .,y Mfl“ il x-,‘ ¢ aw'""“' i i (i i lw.-‘ THE OMAHA BEE’S DIRECTORY OF AUTOMOBILES sur- | Roadster, 4 oyi, Touring ‘Car, 4 cyl, § passenger Touring Car, § cyl, 7 passenger Coit Auhmillo Co., 2208 anam 8{ s ER TANKS ui PUMPS | J. M. PINKERTON, passenger 1,100 luo BO The CHAS 6§82+ Bunlol lulldlnl. 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Bulok and Olds- moblile Cars, Liscola Branch, C. B. SHORE, Manage: Nebraska Buick Auto Company Omaba Brasch, mlmh‘- llflmh‘lluun What the Women Folks Are Doing Mexico's Henutiful Women. OST Mexican women of the upper class speak both English end French In addition to their native Spanish, writes George F. Paul in Travel magasine P Perhaps the greatest charm of the upper classes Is thelr extreme kindliness of manner. Harsh language Is| unknown; their words are sweet aid subdued. The most beautiful women In Mexico, one will be told, are found at Jalapa, a charming city half way between | the mountains and the gulf. If disappointed in these, the seeker is directed to the ‘twin | city of Orlzaba. Finally, as a last resort, the charms of sunny malds of Oaxaca @ Mitla aro mentioned. In the streets L. Oaxaca may be' seen the pecullar headdress of the Tehuantepec Indians, for this city 1s on the border land of the isthmus that bears that 1 A for- midable array of stiffy starched lines encircles the head and acts as a frame- | work for a face that shows rugged health In a climate where it Is always summer, clumsy sleeves and choking collars would make life unbearable; hence they are not shown in the fashion plates. For over 30 years the utpil has been the traditional dress, and will probably serve as the model for 300 years to come. The garment 1s kept of a snowy Whiteness and especiaily | on feast days and Sundays, is its immacu- | late purity the greatest care to the Yuca- | tecana. The mestizos, or the halfcastes of Merida are justly famed for their beauty With this goes a certain pardon- able pride by the fact that they | 1ive In a portion of the ity by themgelves. | Many a Mexlean woman partly owes her lithe figure erect carriage to the water Jar that she fills at the publle fountaln. She makes a pretty pleture as she skims along under the well polsed | burden, her garment fluttering, her supple | body swaylng in rhythmic movements, 1f | anything could and will destroy the beauty of such @ pleture, It is the beauty and { | | is »mnipresent FOR FALLING HAIR man or woman whose hair is be- | coming thin and “straggly”’ and falls out every time It Is combed or brushed can make at home a halr tonic that will nour- ish and strengthen the dying folicles Just get frop your Aruggist one ounc of beta quinol and one-haif pint alcohol, take home and mix with ' oneshalf pint warm water. Some mix the qunce of beta quinol with & pint of bay rum. Either receipe will prove beneficlal “to the hair for it is the beta quinol that puts the hair In healthy condition and keeps it so. | The care of the hair deserves as much | attention as the cave of the teeth. Beta | auinol prevents dandruff. Use ‘this tonle | ry day until the hair and scalp are in | satisfactory condition, them twic and halr will remain long, abundant ond glossy, Adv. The your | erone of . | their | plained Miss Lathrop, clgaietle. Mexico hus several monster factories \that ¢urn out thousands of clgarettea every hour. It Iy no exaggeration to say that one-fifth of these cigarettes will be smoked by women. To Yee them | smoking, one does not have to penetrate to the inmost patios of their home; the woman who boards the train at the next| station will have her cigarette kindled before the conductor appears for ticket; the next woman to cross the sunny plaza will be puffing cigarette smoke into her sleepy baby's nostrils; the wrinkled ltving, will spend half the morning trying to light her clgarette, when the wonder is that the match in her does not set the lottery tickets afire stead of the cigarette. 1t s int types in- The stately senora. her eves bent gracefully about her, her mantilla drawn closely about her face, sweeps by us. Grade- ful senoritas come lightly tripping .Iunu black eyes sparkling under lace mantil'as wound coquettishly around shapely fans dividing attention with oftly they enter and, knoel reboso is there, too, more beautiful sister, The Americans who complain so bitterly of the big hat nuisance in the theaters would be miserable in Mexico, where the women wear the most enormous pleture hats T ever beheld. As ususl their faces were powdered to ghastliness. and they had a tawdry, overdressed air, but at least there were bleached blondes among them, for the Spanish women all wear own pretty black hair, which forms the proper frame for their dark, handsome tages. The pretty girls are exquisite; the slendor aval of the face, the cheek, over superh eyes, glowing at once with passton and tenderness, the low forehead with its rippling mass of dusky hair, the slender neck, the lithe form, step and the dainty foot, make those girls like & poet's dream of darkly brilliapt lové- liness, not to be measured hy any type with which we have been hitherto tamiliar. oot o Penston Mothers, Educate Politiel Julla Lathrop of Hull House, Chicago, proposes a new way for spending some of the state's money. In Founders' Hall, Institute, 8t. Louis, where she lectured for the Alumnak assoclation, Miss Lothrop ad- vanced the idea of pensioning the working mother, who takes care of her children, abandoned by a husband apd father “Mothers are pensioned successtully In New South Wales and in Switzerland, prayer book. She of the kneeling beside her no ex- ‘and the working force of Hull House is striving to bring about such legislation in Niinofs.’ The speaker also upset the time-honored theory that & child is better off with fts mother under all circumstances than with @ father under the most favorable con tions. According to her reasoning. father, able to provide for who sells lottery tickets for g | trembling fingers ! resting to compare the different heads, | the rich olive of | the long sweeping dark lashes | the springing | Mary a child, can give to it & more normal future than an econo- | mically incompetent mother. Orphan asylums came in for a gentle rap |on Miss Lathrop's part. “They are too rigid | whereby the child lgses individual development, rop. | She also advocated that the question of | in their rules, every chance for sald Miss Lath- her |public charities should have a place In| gl principle shali be carrled. | political lssues, and that every politiclan [should be acquainted with the rudiments ‘ut the problem, PSR Proper Care of the Plano. In many households there Is not a piece | of furniture that is mor neglected ‘lhhn the plano Anyone who has ever studied the construction of a pianoforte knows that its mechanism is most delicate, | intricage ‘ana sensitive. 1t Is wonde! | | sorely no |on her prayer book, her black robes falling | then, that It requires a great deal of care | and suffers severely from neglect Some people think that they are treating their piano well it they have it tuned once | or twice a year, says the New York Tribd | une. It should be tuned at least four times Yo prevent loss of pitch and should be kept &t concert pitch all the time. To raise or lower 1t & half tone means to spoil it irre- mediably, say the authorities. | It Is almost as important to place the plano well as to keep it tuned. It should not be put too near the wall, as this ab: sorbs the tone; it should be put near the finer wall rather than the outer, to pre vent dampness or cold from affecting it Dampness ls a stanch enemy of planos— it rusts the wires, rots the felt, splits the hammers and makes the keys stick. A changing temperature 1s almost as danger- ous and too great heat, such as is caused ¢ the proximity of a radlator or fireplace, has also Its bud effects: Heavy carpets | mutfle the sound; that is why music rooms should always have hardwood floors and why planos should be placed cn little glass insulators if possible A plano should be kept free from bric- a-brac, plctures and lamps, becuuse they | 1! tend to make the tone metallic. So often | when & note Is tinny or tremulous it iy because It is sympathetic vibration with some object on or near the planc When the pedals squeak they should greased (not oiled), or a little talcum | Powdet may be puffed into the hinges. Broken hammers, if not badly damaged, can be repaired with hot glue and bound | with cord ana broken Ivories can be mended with 1 little househoid cement Yellow ivories can be cleaned with alcohol They need much light in order to keep their whitcness; that is why one should | not dlways leave the cover down. | { Rediscovering the Home, A progressive transfer of functions from the home to the school, comments the Sur- | | vey, has resulted from our d:termination | that the cbild shall have the best possible | ehance; that he shall, if we can bring it | about, grow up straight and strong and fitted to live & noble and successful life | her | doing family errands. | hear the story | heavens $1750 Fnuy Eul pped h l:yl.. 40 H. P, W. L. HUFFMAN & CO,, 2025 Farnam St, Distributors INTER-STATE AND ACCESSORIES . Jackson = Dotrolt Electric IMPLEMENT COMPANY n uncll Blutfs, lowa, Coit Automobile Co. THE PAXTON-MITCHELL CO. ~ToMosILEs Storage and Repairs Dou 2318 Harney Street. —A-2011 Maso MIDLAND MASON FRANKLIN R FREELAND BRU3, & ASHLEY, 1102 Firl m St REO FORD, PREMIER ATLANTIC AUTOMOBILE co,, Atiantic lml l:nuncll Bluffs, Invu Slevens-fluryea cldllllc Stanley Steamer. BABCOCK ELECTRIC 2026 Farnam Street. 2209 Farnam Street PEERLESS SMITH, 2207 FARNAM ST. | R R. KIMBAL R. R. KIMBALL, 2026 Farnam St. Electric Garage DENISE BARKALOW, Propmlu 2218 Farnam Sire In its class without a peer. C. F. LOUK, State Agent, 1808 Farnam St. APPERSON SALES AGENCY Apperson 1102-4 Farnam St. BAKER ELECTRIC- HALLADAY m Wood's Electric DRUMMOND 2024 Farnam St WHITE Steame Ford Motor Co0., 157 aen s, naa, b Locomobile % And it all looks on the face of it like one process. The child needs education; he needs industrial training; he needs play- grounds, protection from disease; he needs food; It we can supply one why not the rest? Why, indeed, must we not supply the est to make the one—the conceded one, popular education—effective? The question seems simply how far a sin- Is it such In truth, or is there somewhere an invisible line beyond which we are no longer dping what we started out to do, but something else, or are undoing it? Obviously there must be somewhere such a line it the existence of the home is of importance to our purpose. For If we de- (1t more in a shop of this sort than any where else. At times it's hard to get a customer’s attention, she's £o busy watch- ing What the women on the other side are buying. And when a sale is completed | and a woman walks out with' her new | boots on, watch the others. Every eye fs | fixed on the newly clad feet and if the | wearer happens to be smartly dressed | there'll be & spdden demand from the oth- ers to be shown shoes of the same type. I think it's for that reason that women are so particular about not having, holes in thelr stockings wherl they buy shoes. Men | don't seem to care.” MRS Halt Billion in Candy. prive it of its attributes the home must| The American woman cease to be. | sweet tooth, notes the New Yofk Press | Neither In London, Paris nor Lerlln do you see so much candy eaten during the | Edward Bok Is the authority for \y..\mu\llnev performances in the theaters, nor | latest Maude Adams story. It scems that a | are the confections made to serve the pur- ittle girl of 9, wno lives in Trenton, N. J., | pose of informa) gifts to glrls so much as saw Miss Adams play “Peter Pan’ two |here. But it is rather surprising to learn ago. She wrote Miss Adams, telling | from a member of the breed of indefatiga- but in the stress and shuffle of | ble statisticians that the people of the is known for her Nellie Didn't “Miss Out.” years | | season are studded with Sts., St Louls, Mo.; 215-217 N. Brosd Bb, piled for membership. Among the women who are leading in the movement & Mrs. Beverly B. Munford, Mrs. Charl V. Meridith, Miss Mary Johnston and Miss Glascow. Miss Jeanette Miriam Tex., i the fleld Chautauqua work. in Jewish history I to those who join th terature and the Bible. the ecircles have been started in towns there were a Scarfs are being draped even more elab- ‘A“T“M“B“.E cn“PA'v orate than last summer, , There Is @ predominance for the fur- X ; ' @ less than half cost. ~All these cars have bees trimmed velvets for cold weather wear. | caretully overhauled and are In first clas runuing | “Branch Houses—i8th and Pine Opals are very stylish this winter, espe- | Mo. 1701 Mals 8t., Kansas Cit clafly when set in a necklace or brooch, on dresses and hais 18 se everywhere. Falr motorists weaiing variations of Belts for street costumes are very wldc; 1580-1354 Michigas Ave, | Tiny faces of foxes head some of the | order. ~ Write for free copy of our latest Times Weit 48th 8t., New York City; 28 Bands of gold lace arc often worn around the “granny ¢ covers nead and J. J. DERIGHT €O, wn Flmn st INTERNATIONAL 25ERy l “ C ROADSTERS High-Wheeled INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER . i, U, AUTOS company-Omaha. shown. Some of these semi-precious stone Pockets are large and much trimmed and have large buckles. Opera hoods are less I evidence than was Chicago, L expected by fashion prophets Largest firm In the world dealing in new and second hand utomobiles. 400 high grade cars at hatpins to go with fur-trimmed headgear. | square Dulletin, contalning expert Infofmation about Rhinestones and crystal embroidery are |uicmoblies, aig ISt of many of the cars we have being lavishly employed on evening gowns. | %'} E Pailadelohis, Pa the head wnen the evening gown is decu lete, The use of dull silver and gold ornaments ears, 1t seems that the crystal and gold bugles Goldberg are to supply much o che trimaung tais secreary of Jet- of the A course of the first of- soclety, then In some places The popular white to be had with trasting colors. Three-plece fur ang gray collars and sweaters are cutfs of con- sets are now In vogue. theatrical hurry received no answer. Yet|United States spend little less than 500, | the child's faith In her actiess never wa- | 000000 a year on candy, and, of course, the | vered | greater part of that amount is spent by | About this began saving her |or for women. Dentistry items are allowance for unnamed purpose. The | included in the tables compiled by the allowance was 6 cents a week, which she |statisticlans. For several years it has increased occasionally to 9 and even 10 by ’meu an acknowledged fact that the United \\'xalu consumed as much candy as all the when Miss Adams was play- | rest of the world put together, but ry Woman Knows!' at the | 1407 the candy appetite has grown to such | Empire theater, during the holiday weeks, | an extent that the United States now ac- the little girl persuaded her father to take |counts for just two-thirds of the ner fo New York., She had accumulated [candy output of the civilized world ( #4.12. The object of the hoard n ap- | It is not generally known, however, that | peared. The $4 bought just 1% vioiets and | Immigrants are the greatest consumers of those_ylolets went 0 Miss Adams at the | candy in America. In New York fully one- | Empire theater, And now tragedy | half of the city's candy bill is sald to be | occurred. paid by the men, women and children of the tenement house districts, and that be- | comes all the more ignificant when the difference in ices between the Grand street and the Broadway candy stores is taken Into consideration, Physi s who are aware of this almost inordinate appe tite for sweets among the poorer classes say New York has every reason to con- gratulate itself that it has brought oniy good instead of evil results. Not cars ago most of the candy sold, espe- cially in the smaller stores, was almost polsonously impure, injurlous aclds and dyes being used in the manufacture. Med- | feal men say that If candy of that quality had been eaten In the quantities that candy Is eaten today it would have had a terrible effect the health of the gen- | eration now approaching maturity To- day, however, it Is reasonably safe to buy candy anywhere and its consumption | is especlally advocated in temperance c cles as minimizing the likellhood of the | growth of a taste for drink —P Fri of ¥ Chiffon is evidently vogue Stunning fancy gun metal collar pins are time she not an A year later ing “What v since entire the Through somebody's error that was sent with the reached the star, and she to thank the Iittie Trenton and walte faith in her goddess sorely tried At this polnt enter Edward By dinner in Philadeipnia he happe nn‘ told by the little flowers neve knew of no one girl went back to after day, her note k. At a 10 over- an aunt of the little girl Mr. Bok knows Miss Adams and he that domething ought to be done out incriminating himself he the narrator the name of which, in part, was Nellle, and her parsnts address jn Trenton. The outcome of ail this was that when Miss Adams plaved Tren- ton there was a surprise for Nellle. The opencd and out of the opening an enormous photograph ‘of Peter Pan with an autograph Inscription and an | invitation to come behind the scenes at the end of the performance. Nellie cepted. many knew with drew out of the litde girl, on came ace o e on. in a Shoe b Cur Women shoe Shop. In for @ tremendous e proverblally alesmman, curious,” said the but I think they show i where number of Jewish people, but no church, and it has served to extend the religlous services by organi- zation. The work is purely educational, Miss Goldberg says the effect of the work s to lessen prejudice and as an example vs a_circle was formed in Bible and his- the Unlversity of the South last the hat, of course, trio. Swordlike hilts, fashioned of tortolse shell, are among ihe Siriking looking hatpins of the hour. it is belleved that the coat will come In witx spring. Petticoats fit very and hips, They are leti of the front Large pleces of gowns and wraps, gloves and and even on stockings The old-fashioned jet links and fasteaed un again. "T'he revival of XVI period has little fan, often making the third of the vogue of the short tne first hint of snugly about the tastened a littie waist to the g Ward Howe Is sald to be responsible for the election of jeorge H. Fall as mayor of Malden, Mags, {During the campalgn c of, Mr.' Fall's opponents wrote a letter saying that hough Mr. Fall had served In the legisia~ ture he had done nothing to attract at- iention. Mrs, Howe rent an immediate answer reminding the voters that it was Mr. Fall who introduced and carried through the legisiature the bill making mothers equal guardians of their minor children with fathers. Mr. Fall and his wife are bath lawyers and their eldest daughter recently distinguished herself in the Boston University Law school ape beading are brac wire ct, made appearing the fashions of the Louis brought back the dainty hand-painted About Women. 1 Chat Sheila O home s Miss whos Irish gl caused o stir in aeronautic cirel at Britain by the announcement that she shortly will attempt to fly across the Irish ehan- nel in an aeroplane. ‘I'he machine she will use I# a byplane. Julia H. Guiliver, a graduate class of Smith college and Rockford college, Rockford, notified that she has been ofticer of the French academy of Frane The notification can through the JFrench consulate. She been a pioneer In in ducing courses in women's Miss Bitsy Mass., who secutive ye Bedford ord career not _only young h ast of the firs president 1L, has be ppointed o DnBens FBasey. SANATORIUM et Pk This Insutution {s the only one ip the central west with separate buiidings situated in their own amule grounds, yet entirely dis- tiuet and rendering It possible to classify cases. The one building belng fitted for and devoted to the treatment of noncontaglous and nonmental diseases, no others be- ing admitted. The other, Rest Cottage, balng designed for and devoted to che exclusive treatment of select mental cases, requiring for & time watehful care ana spe. cial nursing. voeational co B. Wifislow of New Hedford Legan her thirty-fourth con- ¥ _as 4 member of the Ngw hoot hoard recently, has a réc an @ “suffragetie,” for she hus served in puoiie ive office lo an any other woman, but at eacs recurring election she Has gone o the polls and cast her ballot for herself Mrs. Benjamin B. Valentine been elected president of the anizhd suffrage club of Richmond, Va he club may be sald to have bounded into existence almost in one night. The women of Richmond had always shown themselves violently opposed to giving the ballot to women. One prominent woman mude a break by proposing such & eclub and within a few days the organization was formed and women of all classes aj has newly "ot Just