Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 20, 1910, Page 9

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* ‘ ok | THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. |WANT-ADS] FIVE (’r‘NTS. FlaBRL'AHY 20, Repeating Tomorrow Omaha’s Most Brilliant Silk Bargain B 5 BENNETT'S BIG SALE SUCCESS -8$1.35 MIRAGE SILKS AT 85¢ B 5 Undoubtedly the finest silk bargain to which Omaha women were ever invited is repeated Monday. “Mirage" silks, known from coast to const as the richest and most beautiful member of the entire semi-rough silk family, is again on sale at 50¢ a yard under regular price. There are half a dozen other trademarked silks following in the wake of the “Mirage"” success, but none can compare with its beautiful sheer, soft draping tendencies, or its splendid wearing qualities, yet the price is considerably more. Our second shinment with twenty-five new shades is in Opening Up Daily New Arrivals in Bennett's Stirring Monday Sales SP I e L dhdy IIZ E S I S Year's Newest Shades tor Suits and Dresses An Instructive Exhibit of Authentic Modes Shantungs and Pongees, those quaint oriental weaves, are at There need be no uncertainty and no indecision any longer. (!M.\ll.\ 7 SU 'l),\\' .\l()l(NINH. (OI’\' lflllL Better Than Ever Flouncings All-(l;ver 2 50 Emb'deries Monday will be made notable for its extraordinary embroid- ery opportunities. St. Gall, fac- tories send to America no bet- ter values than these. No mat- ter if you don't expect to use or make up embroideries until summer you owe it to yourself to come for these. 6,000 yards agaln, new, February Sale White Goods You buy white goods now much lower than later on, Our best special purchases go in the February sales. Hosts of women again at same price that made our previous salc such a tremendous success. The genuine, $1.35 irage" silk, with trademark on every plece— Monday, yard 85c. have provided summer needs here since the sale opened. You'll do well to come. White Lawns and Dimities— batistes and madras; large line of choice, new patterns; 22c §00dS, At 1 1..uvn.s Sheer Batistes 27«inch, In check patterns; also stripe and check lawns; 30c and 36¢c goods, at crisp, eino 4 i { " A Linen Crash Sulting—30-nch; Bl tovearne. Tue: v their zenith of popularity this year. For street lwear thg{k;xolr;n The fashions for 1910 have been determined, the accepted styles tho best 50 quality, yd. {singly fine, Swiss goods place in the American woman'’s esteem above all other silks. No have come and in ) 'l see reflocted the White Poplin—36 inches wide; :‘:.?an'n‘,r dresses, combina- in tomorrow’s show’ing you 1 s most popular for summer where in the country are they sold for so little as at Bennett's, Thousands of yards in all the new shades for Monday. 20 PIECES PONGEES—Suitable for coat suits and dresses, It's shown in reseda, delft, copen, tan, grey, catawba nnll prune shades; 36 inches 49c wide; every yard made to sell at $1.25; in Monday's sale, at TOKIO PONGEES—This Is one of the leading domestic silks, and is brought out in a great range of rnlnn: it's 25 inches wide, and a dollar value; yard, at . ... GENUINE IMPORTED -unwl NGS—Made In far-away Japan on hand looms —Here's a fabric that is as soft and launders like linen, and gives 69 Thont sevvice; 5O pidces on suls Monday; at . bYC POPULAR tion skirts, ete.; values 59c. All-Over Embroid- eries---19 Pieces You'll surely want a good sup- ply when you sec them. They will sell largely for waists, so quantity can't last long; val- ues 76c. This entire lot of flouncings and 25 pick of the best styles from the great designers. No February showing here has ever been so varied and prolific with rich econ- omies. The styles that have the approval of all the expert buyers and authorities are now at Bennctt's. We know of instances where the identical numbers shown by us have been marked $10 to $15 higher in other stores, and they really look worth it. Bennett's policy, however, is always for fairest of prices. These new suits are made of beautiful materials, either in plain weaves or conservative patterns. They have the newest 32-inch length coat, finest silk lining and long roll collars. The skirts are beautifully. pleated— $19.50, $25, $29.50 and $35 suits and dresses ......25¢ Linens 72-inch all linen Damask; new pat- .. 980 0od 1.09 17x34- terns; $1.25 grade, at 22-inch ali_linen Napkins welght; $2.00 Towels, uality . linen; Crepe all fnch; 19¢c goods, at 180 1lc all linen Crash, red border S0 SHEPHERD CHECK WOOL SUITINGS Wiavers Wil be Shepherd Checks are widely used this Cream Sultings—The popularity of the Domestics on the tables, at ’ 7 , ; ¢ spring. You see them in Women's| white taflored w T e ----------- Suits, in Dresses, In Walsts, in Little| S0Ut® (@iored Wool sult ls strong as Little girls go in raptures over these etk 4 g A it 4 Boys' Sults and in Reefers. We show | inch cream serges and 52-inch Pan- charming styles in wash dresses b s T Mot 1 nhwlfie wrlelll) I;llag:)lchlz"‘v‘:r ous siz¢ | anag worth $1.00 and 69 Hlunke'lu' all’ wool, 8 lll:le mw.a. ecks; mostly N 5 g wl . . th $7.76, specla :n ch C20 | B AVERR RS S L ] There isn't a mother anywhere who wouldn't be just as delighted over them as BT RN g R N, - A Fine Treat the children. Never were more pleasing styles shown. You'll find it re- clearing at Spring Suitings—New fabrics are ready | Fine French Serges—You will be ab- .49 freshing to find so many fetching new ideas. No line that is so sadly neg- Outing Flannel; t0 piecos, ] ( 25 Z h HOWs SWS hAYE & gl ALgS DLIOYE) A0l Y s r:“,f,fii},‘:,‘; o 'l:fifs lected by most stores. Another important feature is the material and mak- L R o MR | C Zepnyrs elty check and stripe materials; some| serges for spring \ ing. Every dress is made from standard materials and finished as carefully 10 e of prettiest new Nice Long Lengths One whole EGYTIAN TISSURS A table just inside 16th street en- trance is stacked high with them others in subdued Greys are particularly in solid shades, two-tones. well represented, with all the new blues, tans, rose and other shades everywhere. They are very fine, all wool and extremely soft in texture. We show them in all the leading shades—Nothing quite so appropriate February Sale Room Rugs as you yourself would do it. Think of the convenience of buying these dresses all ready to put on and wear, at prices scarcely more than cost of materials— 2 to B-year and 6 to 14-year sizes— spring wash dress fabrics; all .00 | for the one-piece dress, Ladies' Home Jouraal Pattern neat "chieck and strine Styles A %00 T AT I. .. $1.00 3?%17‘25 No. 5086-5004 59C. 75C SI 00 31 25 sl 75 tO $2 50 very desirable for girls' dresses. ! o Every plece 25c quality; we also \ 2t R include 36-inch madras; all go Monday, &t ........c0000000 10¢ Two Days’ Grocery Specials —New, thin, absolutely fast color ' goods, in checks and \ stripes; pinks, blues, lavender Following prices apply | Tten's Soda and Oyster | by L TR L 25 Every housekeeper will hzeml'n)".nrn‘fll»d for econo- lo to 33&7 on. -1_} orders” for Monday Crackers, 18-1b. box $1.15 4 A mlies are great on over 300 handsome new room- and Tuesday: Marmalade Bow By e T c size rugs. Every kind and style at.saving of. (4 Bennetts Golden Coffes. | Orange . Sugar Mar ............... SPECIAL SALE BED BRASS AND IRON B P Rnavie B i Ripggainia s (IR . N speclal jar DAVENPORTS $30 Brass Bed, reduced to no.oo Bennett's Challenge Cof- | Blue Borax Starch, Ib. pk et #insh and Ohase Leather | 335 Bress Bed, reduced to $88.00 Sl b Rthbii Pl W CLINCT S By zc ‘ e $25 Brass Bed, reduced to $16.80 Bennelss Teas, assorted | Rex Lye, 3 cans mner ets at No. 1960, was $50, Monday $30.00 | $8.76 Iron Bed, reduced to :uio kinds, nernlb‘ . 480 i And 20 Stamps. 5 3.75 Iron Bed, reduced to $1.98 And 60 Stamps eanut Butter, 2 jars 20 No. 440, was $60, Monday 835.00 | ¥ Bennett's Teas, assorted And 10 Stamps, Austrian China Dinner Sets; a No. 439, was $55, Monday $32.50 NOTTINGEAM CURTAING Kinds, per Ib. &....... 38 | Diamond Crystal® Table ’ handsome pattern; full 100-plece No. 2028, was' $45, Mond 00 A special big lot, new.spring lines And 50 Stamps. Salt, 2 sacks .. ..100 ] set, with fancy rose decoration. X BTSSR » Monday $36. —3§9¢ to $8.76— zo% Tea Siftings, 1b. pke. '“b" And 10 Stamps. ' We have lnd it at "8'603)“6 Ll ey B 0. B 882, was $48, Mondn) 922,50 | Al reduced 3 Capitol Pure’ Pepper, % clb. | Bennett's Capitol Oats, 0 well worth {t—Mon- : ur hair goods section on th ! " iy AR R BB e ) ‘ g% Sox 3 ) sil {84 wanad sopssqries t TaghiendBie cotpflibes. Gou.- Rioe—2,000 1bs. Jap Rice, Toc quallty, 4 Ibs.. Try on a pair of Dorothy Solid_ Bra pare our prices with any others about town. We save you G guniity, Souon” Take | Tl W I B . engraved me entire lines. Monday, specially atiractive — Californta" Table Rofl Raspberries, can 20c Dodd Boots. No need to 2 e R fongay. specially ot Raleina™ on the' stam; | Mans Olives, qt. Jar"..a50 I ¥ thb choi e daatk { } HEh; our usual $2.00 18-fnch nu(url]l wavy real hair Jmectal, o R S A et e "f' i tell you of the ;‘ 01ce “‘f" )" line, to close, each ..... 20-inch natural real hair wavy s § Doubl mi % | ot ¢ 3 4 3 Fudian P = Baskets— S4-Inch matural wavy real hilr switches; wpecial at: {eRpubIs Mo, (on BUL: |, DiAagud O -.?:,f,’:wg,."';,"'; or and materials, nor of the i Has o unigue Navafo desoration; AL O R R M O Double stamps on Gran- | cans,’ for Lo 880 superior style and finish, complete with Hning -0%., . ulated Sugar. oyal Honey, 100 size, at, b | and’ €hatns, fOr .......... #90 $idn b, paedrel wavy caal his anitohiss Lapecial Hypo Washing Powder, 10 | 8 for ... .. 0.0 88 nor the comfort and glov ds—Wer: 3 Mo et L SPOR o 24 535 b , 10c ‘Sardines, 3 cans ‘ . et 5 7 (e oo s‘.aé Ziineh Washable Rolls, regular g valuck, at .. : Keystone Lye, 10 cans 280 for .. 5c like fit. Monday, cholce Trbun Pads, for newest stylo of hair dress, all :.:.:n‘%-a: Capitol Minceineat, 3 pkgs, | Daledet Cherries, '§fc bot- Bazthen Ouspidors—iazed L T A L 8 he SPRING Qpartetly Style Book. ... OF IS & St s mlih i v Y by o tle, for ......880 ek C 3 260 VAIUGH &L, <nrssnroenin 15¢ Silkc Hair Nets, extrailarge, 411 shades, at. 100 The Si ‘M;m'f'l;‘ Anl' o L 20¢ And ‘10 Stamps. Initial Raising, '8 Dkgs. 880 Spring lines are in. AR R T of them never goes above 25 cents and |here is no worse than it was at the other [the bags to the elevator, but they didn't LESS PAY FOR ‘VOMEN HELP seldom more than 10 cents. There is one |places. That is the reason I stick. Other|even look at me. 1 had waited on a lot * regular who lives In the house who gives |girls are for running fll’flllnd, bollevmg nl people from Boston, but those were the Some Things You ant to Know — B oy SR ST (S e TS Vet i e ¢! Tips of Waitresses Smaller Than the |sets and puts another customer at her |I've given up hope In that line. “Boston people don't pay tips, or If they 1 Men Get. table she docks me for the whole week. “The place where I think a chambermald | do they are so small you have to look in | B | “It takes close paring to pay my I;Wm is better off than a waltress Is in getting ;\"_llyurbhand twice to be sure of them. " Loulslana Law rent, buy food enough to keep me from |clothes. I seldom have to buy my clothes. he best tipper is the western man after Bl . NEW PHAS’R OF AN OLD PROBLEM going hungry, keep up my burying insur- | We are not required to wear a uniform, he returns from a trip abroad. I have had ance and give me the clothes they want|only white aprons. Aprons are about the|such men to tip me twice within the c lat ook sad Todnl us to wear. When I manage to save a few | only garments I-have to buy and now that | morning. Hand me a quarter when I en- Louisiana 1s the only state in the union |ownership of the earnings of a married |the people are the ideals of the ancient| Complaints About Food and LodmIn&# | ..\ . qqliars 1 put them in bank against|I have stayed over a Christmas 1 have |tered his room and another when I fin- which has a system of law exclusively its couple. The code proceeds on the theory Roman law. The first laws that were en- Supplied in City Hotels—Cham- the time I shall need a new pair of shoes had enough of them glven me to last sev- ished and was going out. The same man own. In all the other states the jurispru- | that in the great majority of cases the hus-| forced In Louisiana were the edicts of the hermaids Deites . Oft in SF Ve 10 ey & dostare Bl A who three months before had stayed in dence is based upon the common law, which | band 1s thejwage-earner of the partner-|realm of France and the ‘‘customs” of els Reo “Our aprons, caps and cuffs are fur-| “Of course, the clothes don't always fit | One of my rooms for a week and never is thelr equal heritages from the English | ship, but assumes that the wife's activitles, | Panls, which were extended to the province BIahod Aoe ikl uE food: it we: hive|mie.-but by trading for things wivén the|#iYen me's-cent, founders of the republie. The civil law, which prevalls in Louisiana, is based upon the Code Napoleon, and that in turn rests upon the old Roman eivil law. As both the . common and the clvil law have the same object — the safeguarding of individual right and liberty—there is not at bottom so much difference between the two sys- tems as might seem at first glance. The divergences are largely matters of pro cedure—of the methods by which suits may be instituted and conducted. For example, in the United States courts, and in the | his helpmate. though confined within the walls of her home, are of equal value and Importance. Therefore, it is held that one-half of all| the money which he may earn shall go to| However, property inherited | | or acquired by either member of this part- nership—called technically the “‘community” —1s not subject to this ‘division, but be- | comes the exclusive possession of its reciplent | Of course the law wife or husband any which one or the other does not give elther | right to property of them may have | | this ediet, of Louisiana by Louis XIV in 1712. These “customs" of Paris were complled in 1510, in somewhat tardy obedience to a decree of Charles VII, directing that the then un- written traditions which had governed the Jurisprudence of the various provinces of his kingdom should be reduced to writing for the guldance of his judges. When, | some sixty years after the publication of the ‘“customs” of Pa were committed to paper, they formed a work | of some sixteen titles and 362 articles. In addition to the “customs,” a number |t | \cent, g00d wages in this place. than yesterday It is $22 a month and our food, NEW you 80 YORK, Feb. invest the morn 19 ‘Mary, is 1t? Muyyy answered. how do | y given you as tips?” the diner asked the waitress In a restau- rant where all the service s rendered by | young women. “How do I Invest It, an eat and clothes to keep myself de “We get very It was no longer that the manager told me three In food that | to wash and fron them ourselves. As we only have two of each and have to have them clean every morning, you see how often we have to wash. “Between the washing and the cooking of our own food when we get home nights there's not much time we have for the en- joyment I have heard people talk about our having. I've heard a lot about walt- resses going to dance halls and spending thelr evenings at Coney, but it's seldom I meet any that have done it. If I take in other girls we seldom get can't make do. It is the same with shoes. We don’'t get as much as the waltresses downstairs, but we have clothes given us and our evenings, excepting once a weck | when we are on watch, are ours to do what we please. The money I get after buying | food I put in the savings bank in the hope |of some day getting enough to go back to | the farm." | In an apartment hotel where the two- room and bath apartments rent for $150 a anything we | “They get In training over on the other | side of the Aatlantic and keep it up. Only over here they feel they must give more money. A quarter over in my country | would be & very large tip, here it is small for @ man, but as much as the majority of chambermaids get in the average hotels, | 'm no gratter and I don't complain about | not getting big tips, but before 1 got in | here 1 414 complain about the bad food | they gave us and the crowded rooms we had to sleep in." The head walter in this same hotel was , Al : 3 2 a week in tips I'm satisfied and $3 would |MOnth when taken for the season the higs ' v courts of practically all the other|ucquired prior to marriage. and the com- | Of ordinances which had been adopted by | meals a day. 1f you could only see the | & Wk n s 1'm sauistied ar mfn onlte | chambermaid said her wges was §25 4 | 5,210 (/M€ In charge of a restaurant where *mtu there s & law uide and An|murity is dissolved by death. Moreover, | the French government from time to time, | food, for you could never eat ft. Bvery | S0 T5 GO o T gl T U month without food or - lodgings. She | the service was done by waltresses. equity side, and the two may not belat the timle of marvage the parties may | Were applied to Loulsiana. Of these the |day last week we had beef stew and po- | oo "ake moned B B CoRt KROW S0y Norwegian girl and has been in this | 1) er. @3ked If he had noticed a difference confounded. In the Loulslana courts there | make & contract whereby there shall be no | Most Interesting was the “black code.” |tatoes in their jackets for dinner and not | WOMa™ 17 4 ¥ country seven years. |In the size of tips glven men and women fs no equity side but the law and the | coamunity between them. but each retain |flrst promulgated in 165, for the govern-|once could I make myself take & second |* =" = | ilve tried places where they give you | “f’,!l[:,"' in restatirants s opligg: equity may be passed upon in the same pro- | the exclusive ownership of thelr earnings. | ment of slaves. All of these laws remained | mouthful of either. Shamibeeiatnt "‘, the same hotel, She comes | f00d and lodgings,” she said. ““They are | pjac ”-‘vl"”‘ """" as large. Why, in the i ceedings by the same judge. In the latter event the contreet must be | i0 force In Loulslana down to I When | And the tips that 1 get and which the | J 800 BoE o and remains untyl | 81l the sanfe. You have to share a room :,fl: w Afln A had girls under me I never ¢ The Louisiana law diverges most widely | recorded in the mortgage office, whera jt | the province passed into the hands of | manager tells me should make up for the e AL Shopidid .| with from five to three other gir! | kpew & slngle instance where. more tha SUain VTh DOthatt e Dok’ | Alatardne | 4 p. m. weekdays, leaving two hours earller m three other girls and the | 4 quarter was recelved. There rom the common law in all that relates to | may be viewed by third parties, who might | Spain. year Don Alejandro|gooq which I can't eat! Thein sélfsame | > 0/ food is never fit to eat. I'm no grumbler. | gon for it so f AMER. RS N0 T the family. In the common law the em- |otherwise suffer from their ignorance of | O'Rellly, the new Spanish governor, made | wonqerful tips that you are always hea A e ) 8Vthe. hatl ‘to| bUC' thafe's £008. you. ean't eat’ St 88 | neberti e e I T coylq ne axbeptihe Inaividual i R extensive changes not only in the law, but ple i ” have fourteen rooms and the b Fou general bellef that women don't need as phasis falls, upon the man as an Ing i | the status of the couple. b 1Y i S B X Ing about. Today the largest I've had was |\, ‘atter she began. ‘“Generally my |there's beds you can't slecp on. That 18 | much money as men. Se tar Bt qhocs o 45 e Fm;‘h ke s v o g % v g hllle s el t:::\mpu: :()uruf el o, | B-eent plece from a table of six preach- | oomg are full, though I have but seven|What I Kot in those other places. went, the girls gave just .:m.:;:‘; !:rmc: law, he is viewed essentially as a member | jonq)1y careful of the interests of minor 3 A ers that took two hours to consume the | P $ ! od, it no ¥ o L | nka Besn: thaitamtaiative Body sl regulars. This is one of the few hotels in New | better, than the men wh 8 the 9 uislans ‘there 1 5 g \had been the legislative body of the prov- & ! The 2 en who replaced them. ;xm; ..\'f.'"','.‘,....,f.':";fi;u::'e.b:y B e helra. For instance, it provides for w [ ince since 1713, and substituted the Cabildo, | {2PI¢ 9'hote tunch! The other tablés has | “ione of the regulara has a‘' mald and|York where you sleep out and get your| “Oh, yes, the girls had to &0. The hotel HERA Bt & Teator (o disnome Al i Dot is known as the “family meeting.” This|, " omewnat similar organisation, with |P2\4 e in 10 and 2 cent pleces. . three rooms and a bath. She pays me own meals. Of course your wages are not | changed hands and the new propristor g s ’ is a councll appointed by the court from | ,iper more extensive judicial powers. They say it's because we are In a|.onig o week if I get in every morning|large, but with the tips I manage to get | didn't Ilke the looks of girls In the dinin, erty s restricted to certaln fixed ProPo™ |ayony the relatives or near friends of the woman's restaurant that the tps are so ity o H . R nder thate LrdRaod e Baale e : OV Rallle alao sansad! aiasate R REE S it ! while she {s at breakfast and finish be- |a better room and have nearer what I want [ room. He sald it dldn’t look first class, ke patia M on father or | PO Which exerclues a sort of general| 'y "yooiareq chiefly relating to the in- | Put 1 have a man what comes rég- | fore she returns. If I fall to do this one|to eat than I have anywhere I have ever | Perhaps that is the reason the patrons Vithaw dren, but leaving a father or|g,pervision over his corcerns, and to which & 4 |ular ever night to get the table d'hote |gay out of the seven she gives me only a | been. didn't feel that the: a mother, or both, must leave one-quarter |y “orecutor must report, and without the | Stitution of sults and the method of pro-|ginner What do you guess he pays me? | ou: 16 1 on) thrton's » | b ley should give large of his estate to them. ‘It at his desth, be ot SEEI0r PR BRI R tor can | cedure befote the courts in clyil criminal | w0t R S8 TE BEL e B e | Guarter. Ml Swice 3.0t potbliig “The tips are about the same as they are [ /P " i faves ciiidren the parents are eliminated b " ! actions. These were taken from the laws | y My other regulars have single rooms. |other places. I am the only maid on this The men came in, and though the food take no step vitally affecting the adminis- |service in courses, too. One night When | gnq three of them glve me a quarter a | remained exactly the xa as forced heirs and the children take their \ur Castille and the laws of the Indles, L4 q i floor and have seven two-room suites apd | actly the rame, the same people tration of the estate, [ all my tables were filled I brought his|week. The others give me 10 cents or a gave larger tps. The wa, " place; In which case, if the testator have > i | whie in their turn, were based upon the | k { L five single rooms to attend to. All have | ges of the girls Regarding the nature of wills, the Louts- | g ' VAED y salad with the meat course and he com- | quarter when they think of it, which is were less than the men recefved, oply one child, he must devise to thap |, o o T Tl by expliclt, and for | O3 Span sh Fueros, dating back to the | Jained to tHe head watati . When'1 shtwed 3 J | baths. As this Is a transient floor 1 have | f5 eived, and I can ~ child at least one-third of his estate; it he | M 008 0 BUARHISHY SEPIET R TV | seventh century, upon the Partidas ot |} Red ' C1e MRt FHEE HIGH | A e [ M08 Very often. The transients seldom tip | only & few permanents; this winter only | ¢ NO reason for that, unless it is the y ‘ has two children, he must leave them at | '’ 'l"‘ V("d LI pegrisione. SEnimt o0l Alfonso the. Wise.. and. upop. .the . re-- | S IRANGKSr 'the 4 SR0cK B | m«“"mm'”;“m more/than a quarter, and usually 10|y, One is a lady, all alone, who pays e \dea that women can get on with less AN lcast one-half; while if he has thres or ::_“'v:l:;"\‘_‘h:‘: refpias |‘:‘ oumamarth | copulaciones” of the sixteenth century. | !¢ my‘ s PATING RALY ToR. anees "“_“_’;;l g AL Sols | me 50 cents a week and gives me what Is L::]’:‘ 7 o It may be m false idea, but I o. he cannot give them in his will 1 0 v O'Rellly intended this compilation to serve | 5 . o pal ““This is when they stay a week or 1onger. | 1oy oyer. fro, el hreak- 1en & woman, it makes no differ- L] more, h s Wil lee8 | 116 “olographic will," regarded by some | " me consider tips. | latt owgn, Sram. hav braakfeat;, Fav bpepk than two-thirds of his property for the instruction of his judges only until Those that come for a night or two never ence how attractive she . iy 4 1, goes In as a nder the Louliana 1aw & minor marry. |°F, (M ablest lawyers in the state % the | they had acquired some familarity witn | “THen I'o another outside regular 8 |think of paying @ chambermaid. They "::‘w':r:"’;‘:::‘;x ARG ey :::”;“f“n”“::‘ waltress she has to take less wages from fag withaut. the gonsent of his parents| e setisfactory form ot "‘0;"]""_"" .fl'” the Spanish law, which was, of course, |\20Y. Who comes here in her carriage. She | seem to think my work Is paid for by the | coreee o mo | the restaurant ana smaller tips from the may be disinherited. Chattel mortgnge, | Lo Pop ion- There 1o a wil “wholly “';"mn into effect as soon as practicable. As |{4kes the table d'hote dinner, begins &t | notel, and so It s In a way. We get $14| 00 © " Pl R R et e “Mi public, T B ja & matter of considerable prem: | T dated and signed” by the person mak- | the Spanish law was based, like the French, |6 and seldom gets throush before 8. What |a month, with board and lodgings. The | ~The other permanents are & l e he common law, 15 unknown | M6 It Another form of will may beiupon the old Roman civil code, they were |[She doesnt’ eat she slides in a little box board is bad. Our room is large, with | pay same amount, All Snarled Up Agatn, ::""l";ul'."m'm_ Prior to 1908, when the | lctated to a notary. In which event it I8|similar, especially with regard to matri- | 8he brings for the purpose and takes it |two outside windows, so we know it 1.“:““;1":‘:"“‘:";."‘; ‘:"“:{ RO ""’“““:“ "_*:"- | Mr, Makichrakes nad'sust been ntregucea b 2 43 aturs Amended the code, women known as a testament by public act. monial rights, testaments, successions, ete., back to the hotel where she lives, for her | healthy, though there are six of us iIn it ng room. y ha {otih dals Gabutaate’ | The notary 1s prohibited from offering any ,and the transition from | about five times as much as the the dog. Every night I go by and scoop up the lady d . e’ 16" the and we have no place to hang our clothe ed not tell y, ] could not legally be witnesses to a Will. | g geqtion during the preparation of this|other worked comparatively “ll‘l‘t‘ehl‘r)dn::p cents she leaves for me. and only tundrv::mr tor the :u. ® | but 5o long as they pay me regular 1 am le1 ’zlh‘m"l‘a:l HaZop Mite GUIMIC" he 1n gosernl, the l:“""‘:.':m::d" In all the | ;e¢rument as to the manner in which the i to the population of Louisiana. | *“Those are the two worst, but the best | ‘“The work Is not hard and the house. *atisfied and grateful | subpose. of eauras, it .‘hry:y..m‘.,:‘.’ .:n?..,y"' & ‘ provisions respec! "" et .. _"""r"k‘ | testator shall dispose of his property; and | Louisiana I8 not free from freak legisla- | keeper 1s considerate and the guests, tak-| ‘‘The thing I don't ltke is when the tran- | tell you--and I am sure you kl‘:ow 1 ::,“u: ably solicitous (o Protect them even rom i cage he should violate the law In this | on. It has & Jaw fixing the size of carts |/ ing them all in all, are polite. If the food | sients come, call on me to do & lot of extra | mean it—though 1 Aid mean that I wes t.'::'r“‘;:::e:"'w:‘mnl"m“ & .m::. b m:"» regard, the will Is volded, but the offend- | in which firewood may be vended in New |have the rear portion screened off for the |Was so we could eat it I would not com- | Work in the way of hooking them up in the | happy to—to—make your acquaintance in . Ing official is made responsible to the heirs | Orleans. Another forblds anwene from ris- | use of colored passengers; but as no speclal | plain of the size of the tips or the amount back and dusting their clothes and then |this Informal—though, to be sure, it's e ried woman bormwlr:l :";,Mv With which | who shall thereby be deprived of theirsing from his seat during the performan sort of screen was provided .for the act,|of the wages. If you are going to do good | B0 off without so much as saying good- |formal, and quite properly so, for there s to pay her husband's debts. A married | peritage, at & theater. Still another makes It a|the rallroads supply one elghteen inches work you must have food enough to keep |by. That Is the way some of them did me |"OLhing so enjoyable as to witness the woman may not, In fact, borrow money | The character of the Loulsiana law isq serious offense to entice away from his | long by fous or five inches high, which, |up your sirength. That is the way my |only last week opening—I should say the unfolding—of the or allenate her property at all except With | most readily understood from an examina- | employer any hired man or apprentice. | hooked on the back of one of the’ seats, |tips Ko, buying food to take the place of | ‘They were & party of four In my two |PTEMALUTe, or, rather, of the immature— the consent of her husband or a judge. | tion of its history. From such a study one | There Is an anti-high hat law which I"uuuur!llunuhly complies With the letter of | that we get downstairs and can't eat two front suites. They has expensive| " '8 the word I intended to use, of or, in some instances, With the approval|may learn, better than In any other way, | vigorously enforced at all the theaters, | the law, though plainly Violating the spirit| *There I8 no use going to the steward |clothes and a-plenty of ther and. were | OUPHe=in this delightful and conventional of bot how diverse are the elements out of which |and the Jim-Crow street car law is much | of it. about It. That has been tried by several |going day and night. They were nere | UNCUON to—to stand with reluctant feet, One %¢ the most benevolent provisions | the existing code has been forged, and how | In evidence in New Orleans. This last BY FREDERIC J. MASKIN. Kirls and they all got fired. This is my |nearly three weeks. When the Koing time | 100, KNOW: Where the—I beg your pardon, of the law s that which detormines the | deeply Inrained in the mental prosesses of | cited statute provides that every car shall | Tomorrow—0reole Cooking. KOINg Ume | Miss Glizgard, but one of your hairpins is fourth hotel in New York and the food |came I helped them pack and took two Of | coming out."—Chicago Tribune. 4

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