Local News, 16 Apr 1910, p. 2

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lid 'Eli ,I i 4 R tb tI that •xquistt. abide, moat faahtonab3e. Vu. newe.t dna. fabrici " . U I IE( , I ' _____ _ , am t_f 1--- qw siM W in -- w -- d n-b-ri uj b _r- adbhu d.-4 Se w*n-' ...'d&, .i l W bee - --II, md .- ---I-: Tb. taat.r a rasa rus. 1 d.bi h --or, h. .ts bihlid. _a_L Tb. mas who i cub eecuulat.. So wr)Rk) on bli brow, . - ".v ) - - ------- -_____ ,* •r • 4;,.. riLi '. - -14t. I--- ;q ;:zi,: .: . . V - -- ____v--_ --r---- _ - - ; -- -- . * . -- ihirt band and plu tha beck to tha dl. ot thi band In front. Lay tbs I on a tabli or ')$b.r flat aurtac. it side out, with tha front breadth a. Smooth out all cream.. a,4 lay I flit. Then bql at th.' outar -- and roll each aid. toward tha ter back until the roll. mwt. Eu I W17 the hang at the ekirt Is not ir.d. there are no wrlnkl•i and the It breadth Ii emooth and flat. It ikirt a too long for the trunk told vrr near the top and plac. a roll IpelEe piper under th• fold. *d, anijñ 1in!Ahwr in --- . _ 4Nrt7 afl th• interieting things writers say ire about lb. men. ==- The p.opl. who ire cvut•ot.4 are m.t,I thu. who don't know any b.t• I.'. ____ 2::- •'I'h. way of the trinsgr.e.or I. bard." It ought to be, after all th. travel that baa puse) over It. In England a dog ueed to guide a blind prson will iooti b. about the only thing .zempt from taxation. - -:-- - --- El It hardly •'emi posaibIi, but porn. old folhi .ay they can remember when butchers uied to ilve away liver. Tb. bachelor has much to b. thank ful for, q'v•n It It. only Uio fact that it'. a lang time between leap years. . - =-. .- Born. men have a lystem br making money. Mr. Hokefe1ler a gtllng to Idot one for the p'irpoee of giving his away. Born. p.01,10 work on the principle that when buatn.is a good there I. no ni'i'd to huatle, and when It I. bad there 1. no ua'. r . 01 course you read what happened to the Chicago man who hoorayed be caui hia wit. bad gone to the coin• try Moral: 1)ont talk too much. -- -*- - - James A. l'atten, when be warn 1n trrvIewed In New York on Lb. coat of lh1ng. sald the American WOI)ie wire totj extravagant. Hay. your eoup bL'fle•. 11 the rickl an Integral part of tl. hen'i produtlvIty?" auki a Hoe• tots ap*r. Not xlccea.arIly. (io.. ober era riiay have noted that file roost- •r of the flo(k doic the moat caekllng. p1.7eR1e Opes t• *.II•. Fifty z.rs there were but few icp1oymiht.a open to wom.n, end 44 ulti tralulug In preparation for wr was almo.t unknown. in ,v.ry class of work to-day women with chill and haloing *U command good aalar)st Wai are undoubt•dly hIIh.r than tb.y "I-. fltty yeara ago,, but th.jveet Of living is much great.r.,O.•ri1 averages of wue, In computing 1W abeolut. gum to men and womin. us of litti. use. En almoet every 1N4 I few r.c.iv. high waje., and therstift average. conceal tb. wage. ot a bji• numbir of workers. Again, the worth of wag.. depends upon the cost 1I? Ing and Inc'oin. frum wag d.p.nds not on what a woman receives p? day. but upon the number of daye In Lbs yr she Btat.m.flta of wages are vitiated by the blu of opinion of tho.e who interpret or coI l.ct data. Reformers often estimate wages lower than they are. to show the need for retorm. Suporters of po)itIcal adminlitrattona are t.mpt.d to atatement. as roseate as poesibi. a.id often misleading. As to occupation., women are In the majority In only nine, VII, musician. or t.ch.ri of fl)usIC, school teachers, boarding house keepers, houeekep.rs, aundrenc., nUrses, servants, ituing rapher. and typewriters. Among In. occupation. In which there are aboit a, many women is men, U nearly as (Ian be estliii*tcd, a:e: Acting, arihilecture, journalism, music, goveromafli employ'mcnt., Janitor service, ageD. cle., booklwcptnl, salesmanship. iien oraihy, typesriting, telegraphy, tale- phone service, bakIu, pottery, ronfeetionry making and silling, clock and watchmaking, bookbinding and pho t 01 ra p ii y. Many new vocation. are being I--a t her caut lousi) , liii I iuceit l)y, takrn up iJy W()llICfl. 'l'hcy ar cutting and s'ttliig gyms, han,mer)fl brial and aflvcr, and working In iold. flee k"pIng, T)I(IP.hrOO?1I culture and fruit ani poultry raising art' i,rofltably pure 1(1(1 poultry ralsliig ani protitably pur• v.ntsIIpplag and Lbi cea W bad ii mlødt.1. sotics. Rang•4 aocordlq to class. hiintIg tin h. r1ht lid doss not wsit one s time, ' , -- - --+. airs Y..'d Was. q. ?iI1I4 lb. girl who openly boasts of the married mm who are Iu ovs with h.r. Th• girl who esys ab 'dot.e on children," but whoes email brotharl sad .I.t.rs shun her. The girl who Is horrtfld b7 calling a epedé by its "right nam.,' but whoes taste In literature Is lurid. Th girl who ii car.I.ea to return imall loan.. This habit may 4,ring from heedl.ean..e, but It .aN watch- lug. She who dress.. lavishly on a email Income. There Ii a distinction between looking well on a little and cutting a eplurge on nothing a year. The girl who gushes over her love for her parents. wbII• abe 1.1. her overworked mother mend and launder for her, and spends more than her ta ther can afford. Rh. who is pelubed evi for ahaw views--and a •ight when caught un• awares. The man who contemplate. matrimony should make it a point to 'p. hI. Angelina off guard. Bhe who Is •ugary sweet until iii. thinka she ii alone. Far better be like at alligator ar with the roughness on the outside than recemble the tempting wild plum with bitterness within. Hhe who has great tales of her pTOWPSa as a worker, but who never sees any work to be don.. The real workera of the world rarely discuss what they do, and n•ver need jogs for its doing. Whel Hak.. he C'harnet.g W•as. 'oman Is moat charming when abe ii brliht and animated. A tear may arouse pity, but it ii a amle that corn- mnnil. admiration. She must not be awayI sparkling--that I.. monotonous noLa_ rWi2 zav*i. i -- - .I,e. Ugb*sin ketae.. .1... Pe.tee. .. s,dsd Wat so Ovssk. Thus problem. were put up to forty harvard professors by Mr. Or11h. a ltghtatq calculator, at I print.. qals, lay. I *tIS dtsptch.to (ha New 'Voth World: •'My Stithiny Ii Aptil U. II LW MEt tlm• my birthday comes on Eu ter Sunday I shall be 10 pm' ceit old than nest April, how old am I newt" And yet again "If on that East.? birthday the population of Boston 'U so p,r cent mere than the cues of all the numbers from 14,107 to lbs sizi prime number above, sad they should all celebrste my birthday by gtvtug me U many Easter eggs t 41 cents a do.. en, what would be the compound in terest on the money at S per cent from that day until the next time my birth- day fill. on East.r lundayt" OrtMth said he could solve them without putUnipen to paper. He was not challenged. The profauoi have been it work OD th• problama .ver since. -- Properly It wu Mr. Ortmth who was being quIss.d, and not the professors, and it WI. only at the close of the bearIng that he so unkindly turned lb. table. on th.m. He had been In vited by Prof. Juiia. C. Coolidge of the Harvard mathematics department to demonstrate hi. abilities, Profess. on and In.tructor. all expressed their amassment at what they saw. The questions came In rapid fire, to be an ewered offhand no le. rapidly, while at a tar slower rate the qutlou.rs sought with blackboard and chalk, eight of them at a time, to verity their. correctness. Nattier blue, bds fair to be .. it In the a d alike. Tulle is to be worn not only a. a 14 SUditlOn material of many dresses, bit *1 the triwming and decoration of D ,ny Piomi dainty shirt waists, fastening II Ider a plaited fH)) in the center 1 iit. rr niath of printed bordure ba rate In pretty colors. 'Ith the double blouse of chiffon and a coritraiting material a plies. or lace t, ill Ii worn when a jacket fl slipped o for outside wear. In ready-made petticoats modern I er cloth Is most used for top., p. c It gives ample warmth without , hjiIionable bulkinesi. I)rpth or color is one of the pro- at,towobflae have already bess or- det'541 W• do not know IIt where hi gets his figuree. but accepting them w. uture to ny that at least three. uflba of these purchasers would be better off every way It they would pir maasstiy garexe their "homicide wag on.." a. Shorty hayes rails them, and l'SeOlUtely walk some mu.. every day. En these and oth.r Items of direct is trhrIgaElc. a vast lot of p.ople ha no defense, hut must cry "mee cuips," and We..cb lb. hiadusee of critics. But Mr. Hill did not mention thi chief Items of American extravagance. There are eom• bill. which an not paid dl. iletly over the couDt•r, but which are, n.rertb.le.e, paid and tremendously paid by th• peoplel Take th for Instauc.: A considerable bunch of as sorted European noblemen who are re Iat.d to us by marriage, and whose gambling debts and prIncl7 dle.ipa tone are, in fact, paid for by lb. pro ducr. of America. Flocks of foreign owners of American securities who, through our always lncomp.t.nt flnan vial syitem, bav• a morigaga cinch upon eur ehlf pr.p.rti.. and every year draw out of our country Im measurable money. The vast taxatto Indirectly levied upon people by pr.da tory monopollee through which a few at. made to flourish vilely great" while the masses are correspondingly dcplc(ed. And, flnaliy, the grafter, the inexpressIble grafter! Ah. be I. an extravagance ind.'ed! In meaaurIn his cost wi must not rsckon his per sonal dealing. alone, hut the ultimate effect of his pernicious example---how onr gratter begot. a whole brood oi grafter. to follow him and multiply lar cenle. on every hand for the people to pay for as certainly as they pa lhclr grocers bills. Am Individuals the people cannot afford to be spendthrift. As a collective society they cannot at lord to be robbed by rni.governments --and pcrhai If the latter evil were promptly cured the former would not be found so great. Is AX OLD-YASHIONKD WIlE. Mr•. (ha..herlalpi, (hawi asd ?e.• •.4 l(..bai.d'. Jr.atrat AdIr.v. Now that "Joe" Chamberlain 1. be. fore the public once more. his wife Ii In her element, a London corrupond cnt of the Hostun Ulobe says. Hinc. the first day of h'r marriage abe ha. alany. becu of opinion that her bus- llefl(j IS (1I' gr"atcst man on earth. 41rs. Chamberlain Is a revelation to the t'pfral m()Cl4'ty WOJIlIfl. Ilince hi. IJnss she ha. never been ieparatI lrcm her huaband for a aingle day. III. corspanlon, chum, nurse, mecretary, factotuni, and, now that he Ii better, his inhL)Irer, ire roles which Mrs. Chamberlain flit. all the tim.. Hhe Is aware that he never is so happy as when he a before the public and abs r.vcla In any chance of rattfying his ambition, tboutt the anxiety that be may overexcite himself Is eternally ith her. lEer hinds are more than tuU at the present .ndeavo'twg to beep •Jo." qtitet, for, like an ofd war horse that wants to dash to the front at the IIIHil Of )owder, co does the venerable atitciman pine to be in the thick of the political fray. At a country house wham the Cham• berlain. were itaying loins time ago a man who took Mrs. "Joe" into ilin ncr tried the, ta.ual iutifrc con. vrraatlon with her. lb be n on the new plays. •1 have not been lmIi(te a theater for nearly four years,' she (rankly ac knowledged, Then he turned to books. "(t'ë ag.. aidre I read a novel," .h. eald. "Mr. Chamberlain (bee not care für them. Tb. book. he lIkes deal with (ravel, science or history, and I have grown fond of them, too, becauce he I.." "Afterward this man maid to hi. hostese: 'Talk of oldtaihIoned wives! ('rickey! Mr.. Joe Chamberlain takes the cake. I thought there were none of her port left. Bbs a almost enough to tempt a man Into matrimony." RometInes at a wedding one gets a glimpse of Mrs. (Thamberlaln---almost the only festivity at which she I. ever seen. he wears alwayi a lov,Iy frock with I'ari. Indelibly written, so to speak, in every fold of it. $he looks .l1ht ifl(i almost girliab and her frten(1. all know that If they want to curry favor with her they must talk about "him." Edison aays that in another 200 years there will be no ncdy, but all will Wire In luxury. Th*'rr' ii irrat (.mtort Iii this, as aft.'r another thirty of forty years tiiore most of us will biivt- nothing to do but wait. :. I- . -_ - E -. - Till NEWEST aid. STYLES IN HAIR DRISSIPIG. Wt are . ornphl,,!ng of the increaae(1 rOst of IivIn, I'it Iii Canada they are f1I1fl It rril moe rzp.niivq, to die. Ihe voat O butal hav1g Increased lu i.et c'tit. If this state of things pie yule herr. we will be in a dilemma, I Qutw$n A sate method of flr)ng shots 1 mine. by electricity has been devised. Japan haS. now more than 200 tele phone excbane., more than twice the number It had two years ago. LtaL, (OIL *YIJ twiSt. Tb. nuznts'r o( medical stuilpnts hea U-- )IiI.sIjIiIn.g dartng the list ten 75'dlIr iiglr requir'iiienta for grad- UAttVtl and 'he' opening of new fields of scientiSo r ,eftrçh h.vø trIbUtP(I to drawing men away from the profeslion. Among the reasons also must b-. reckoned the general advance In popular medical eductlon, which tend. toward preventing people from needing duct o ri. Railway engineers In Bohemia begin w'flh a salary of 11*2.70 a year wh(ch Ii increased $40.60 every second year until the maximum, $52710, Ii reached. (OILS A(? totS rLAITR. Rice atancis flr.t In the Siam. agriculturel products. crage yearly export of rice for five years has amounted to c,tI.I ONLY. tons. Fashion is replacing the huge turban coiffure with a softly marcelled erowu. around which are wound salt flit coils or braid., and occa.tonally a ri or two, or maybe (hr.'.. The parting on the forehead Ii not clearly dc- .4, being merely formed by the undulation of the hair. Fancy hairpins, 1wbted ribbons, gold and silver tissue, and circieta of small leavcs make a frI .as%ni addition to these soft coils and plait.. -- -- -- . -- . :'z. - .- =:_: :.- - list ol The av the last S48,38 WI', Who Ii "Too (loqd" for 5fl. No man ever yet gOt married with. out proclaiming humbly, at least to his personal friruds, that he had toun4 a girl who was too good for him, and In a aenso he Is usually right. Never. theleu, to proclaim it Is a lefthanded selleompliment, for it be selected a girl who was not good enough for him. It would not speak very well for his judgment, good taste, and seltreipeet. Ut course, such a statement Ii usually moonshine, and yet withal a perfi.ly 1iop.r ante-nuptial tram. of mind. It should not be ov.rL pqriipten4 however Unless a mau gAs civsr feeling that hi. wife Is better than he I I.,, there will be trouble sooner 0' later. A Ism to trot aloni •epdll' and without friction must be e%ciil matched. To insure a happy marrle I life, it must be dlseove're(l reasonahl lout) after the ceremony, that one at I. just as good as the other. Tb L ouiht to be admitted whethcr It Is ) or not, for the same neonsisten y which will cause a man to marry i ;lrl who ii too good for him, • ill cau.e him to divorce hcr becaup. he Is not good enough. On the ot band, it she is really too good a4' should keep It to herself, for he • 11 be sure to thlnk she I. not gto1 enough it she insist. upon beIng uflsidered too good. Anyway, comparison. are odious As a matter of tact, no woman ii lou good for the man sie consents to m ar TI. i-.katuT-.p of this winter. One be In deep blue blacks which have ned to steal the tone of Hamburg 3. apel. S Recently published figures of the 1907 census show that the population of the O•rman empire then amounted to 6172O,52. ct whom 35,S37,445 were living In the towns, while 2L$S3,O11 were living in the country. In 1SS7 the population of the region now em braced within the German empirs amounted only to 1,B8,647. Iklrt. of new corsets ire long and ose and they aru' pulled farther In the sual way by stocking supporters at Iae front and sites and often at the •ieb I Black latin gowns are smart this aeon, but they are veiled with tunfri I w)broidere(i net of chiffon, cover- II with a Jer.eyiike bodice of heavy rnbroldery net and jet combined or lb with jet. and wearing; the perpetua' flashing at diamond. fatigues the eyes. Rhe must hive her sober moments, it only to throw into higher relief, by contrast. the moments when she ii gay. A Ofl)ifl II always ('harming when she 1. tender and sympathetic. Hbe may (IPIXIe when she I. merry, but when abi ii gentle and tLIT1 of sympathy she enchants the man's heart. Probably sl charm. the molt when she Ii most un conscluui of her power. A woman Is really amiable when she I. gcjtjtJ.fa. tured. Barcaim may amuse when It I. d4rccted against some one else, but it does not win any one's heart. Good temp.', Ii an attraction even in a plain woman. When a woman has that, in addition to her other winning qualities --when ahe I. natural in her manners, not .cllconiclou., animated, tender, ariil gentle--then indeed she ii charm. In to all the world, S'urImII.m ot lb. n...Iea. MlrscqIv• lCv.Ims 5*41... r1ehI.-Tt.. A prominent Jewish merchant ct New York declare, that when he came to this country from Europe years ago It was for purposes of business, and tIat he ha. devoted himself to buelne.s with success. Hut now, be says. Jews at another type are coming--Jews more interested In thing. of the mind and Ideals; thinkers and students The reports of ill the college. md other Institutions of learning bear him out. The schools are filled with eager learn Cr' of Jewish blood, who keep in the forefront of their classes. The old traditions of the rice seem to be re viviug on the new soil of a free country. S.-- ---- ': A Jers.jr justice Oflc' uptetitly said that a boy wasn't worth, to money. more than Si. Judge Wheeler of Bridgeport has just refused to accept I verdict of $300 damages for a boy'. death is IniuMelent. The law 1. al ways Interesting, but it. adminl.tration ii not always consistent, Prome, an airship; draining, the act St flying in an airship; drom.'r, one who drom. These are candidates for admission to the dictionary. They have already been adopted into news piper Engleh, and on. hears them occa.Ionaliy In eonveytlon. They come from the Greek word meaning to run, sod are abbreviated from an older form, serodrome, which has b.en In sic several years. It ii to be hoped 'hat hippodrome and dromedary, which ha,. been drotning a long time, will sot object. James 3. Hill, who Is a highly tal. snt.d railroad man and a mod.rately accomplished sociologist, baa b..n till lug Minnesota hardware men about the foolish •itrsvsgaqce of lb. American peop).--hew t_ have rushed to the ett$u, bought automobile, and spent money right *0 Iafl with a free beadi II lbs male *p. Hill I. r)gbt1 There a. q,*t) tat most eqp1.--by ,:.. hr th ==.--v. gradually Sequired iabfta of ntrn*ut living which have ne bees w1b% olssome and eon. ,.ee1Th te 1I well-being. We t and b'tsk . mneh r .ltWr stomneb or ,.tss. WI w.)d ha etrosger and qer4t,nd U wa w.r. .Impler and aori iWtemI.w We would p*sbpNy bq eeb U1ne.r, toe, ft we essid aihi sp ir mt4d. to d ems. .14* i.it 4'auret.d nØWehI4 sow e1m e'.) ab%'4 lbs 'SI S the Isno !K11.p gilt Wb wish et *ad Ii lbs ma rthIr 91 we conji pu ol ; --I Lbs 0I Ill _.d. Sr. IlIfl esI as.st. 1 lb. bI l t abs p,sst r $$O Jo London a cçn'ny has been form. •d to introduce and .nrouragiu thà us.- of electricity in the poorer districte of the city. The company agrees to wire and supply any apartment o't three rooms and over with tantalum lRmE, chargIng 8 cents a wesk fot each lamp from April to Heptember and '7 cents a week for the rest of the year. The lamps, however, must be renewed by the consumer. Rotith Africa ha. a brand new na tional anthem. The country ende.v or.d for some time to secure a composition suitable for that purpo, and out of 150 composItions the work of flerthold Kapolowits was chosen, and the c*ti.en. of Johann.iburg had the first opportunity of hearing It perform. ed after It had bhn formally accepted. The composer Is not a profeeslonal mu- sician. He Is a civil engineer. Hundreds of Hindoos are pouring Into Han Joequin County, California, and probably In the hope of securing work at onci most of them have 41*. carded the turban for American hats, much to the surprise of the more 4, veut of the race. Their religion ha. heretofore kept them from discarding their turbans, but the late arrivals ap pear to hive been coeched in the art of becoming, to a certain extent, Amencanlied. Miss 13.ie A. Dwyer, who I. at present employed in the library at Manila, was one of the first women ap pointed to a place In the congressional library in Washington. It is said that because of Miu tiwyer's emclency oth. CT women were appointed to rsspon.l ble poits In the congremional library and later she was sent by the govern m.nt to assist in establishing libraries In lb. Philippine Islands. She ii . gradUate of the Woman's Law School of Washington. Miss Mabel E. Sturtavant, at Brook fl.ld, Mo., winner of the Braun around the world scholarship, completed the four-year cour.q at the high school It-. three' years, graduating as vaiedicto nut. Sb. warn also the winner of (ous scholarships, one In Baker University, at Lawrence. Kan.: one Ira Kansas City University and lb. curator's scholar- ship at the University of Missouri. Miss Sturtva4t taught for two ysejs, spent twe more year. as oeshler th' builn.. hoe.. 'and thin •ntir. lb. University Q(, Missouri. I cannot fix my mind today On what I heve to do; A picture haunts my Inner eye (.)t waters swift and blue. My fingers Itch to st a fly, The bell. of memory chim. And (all me to th. woods and fields, For this is fishing-tim.. I dream of mossy •t.pptng..ton.s In amy amber brooks, of grassy hanba with blossoms bright And silent, shady nooks, Where I forget the world of toil And wash away ite grim. In crystal Thpth. of running streams That sing of fishing-time. I long to I.. the sunfish play, The minnows' merry eeho,l, The trout beneath the shelving Or In his favorite pool, And all the ill,,, flnny folk That throng the wat•ry clime; so hand me out lb. old bro roes I be.p for flshlng-tlm --t..dlee Weekly. Th. *•rlcaa Woaa. The women of America are wonder- tell Their versatility, acuteness, iglendid mental energy, high Ideals, *)'m grasp of subjects, added to their cLarmtpg manners, tasteful dress, graceful deportment, are refined and feminine to a degree. We all know the brainy, masculine woman the wu'ld over. Hut the American, while she may be .rns.acullne In brain and alertness, is iko femlnine--emotional, it you like--- In her makeup. Bbe is a truly charm- lug type. rh. American woman a also very lractical, very inventive. She devel. or's an Idea, and she works out her Idea to Its utmost possibilities. LI may be only a new sort of neck-band supporter. but she does not belittle her hobby. Bb. brings her imaginitio Into her work. Abe may be utilitarian, but the succes.tul business woman La artIstic to her finger tips. ---London Ezpre.s. •sCt..s sad D.uaah.te.. iCv.iI such simple things as a but tofl 154 buttonhlle require proper treatment to insure neatness, When I'uttaISg or unbuttoning a garment. rorclsj the button across the width of buttonhole will soon tar out the latter. Yor the same reason but- tong with only two holes are better than thee. with tour, and should be so placed that their boles will be on a )lrl• with the length of the buttonhole. Eve with a four-holed button, one ssstrem 55W1 through only two-- thae on the farthest cornere, r,..h 1w a ('klN. Oftin we make the misLaki of tbik ing frooks for little girls ought to be fluffy with lace and ruffles: but the truth Is that almost every child shows to bettor ndvintage in simple cloth.., and It, Inatied of spending money on yards and yards of trimming, a bettir quality it malarial Ii employed, the dr.e,1ss.retabia,neoeu. 0,4ev In *h• Pantry. $ethJuIs$mt.4Sbtly na paltry or dissi U a swWbr of tin lid, plteed .ssIy N S shelf. . Os. wema haas,lDm. this elect by nailing a iirrew milp of wosi to cleats sbetfl II. IS udor her high o.b.If lb. ry'. In LW Ipsee thuWmsde lb 1 V. a11,ed. The handle. prs. bank 4 •1 I .e..l. 'Elmer," mid a mother to her straano.. lIttI• so., "I'm awfully Ur4 .1 th• 11 ye. maui." I.-- F11IIS awful,, tired of the sites y aki Ii trying to 11105 a. ..i.. j make, mamma," rejoined lbs uby cbq.--ieago News. Accordion pleated chiffon cloth In the new, d.licatp, pinkish Iavhnd•r shade forms the overdrapery of this gowp, It Is decidedly Russian in tend. •urf, with Its .omewhat blouse4, ItilI bodice, Iii cloee-flttlng belt at the nat b4aI waistline and it. smock of chiffon eu4tug well Wiow the knees. The foudatlos Is of soft pink satin, this us. of lavender and pink together gi,. lag Lb. twlItoued cloudy .ftect which I. one of the most distinctive touches of lb. .es.on. Bends of dull, bros gold trimmiig outline the peek ott). bodice, forming the ile.ve trlmmts audb.Jt. Arlbboeofsottpoldme. b run through the uptur4 tli facing of the imoch and tied In a soft b. in the, bash. This effectlv•Iy designed bodice for demltollette occasion. is of black ninon, with Veut yoke and sleeves of crab-n net trimmed with narrow jet iniertions Hanging jet ornaments a1 pear In front suspended from a bend of jetted neck thickly spangled with small jot sequins. A blouse of thu port is not beyond the ability of a good borne •ea;ietrem ii she Is at all capable. _______ W.wlh W.h. An excellent mouth wuh may be made by mixing I ounce of carbonate of ioda with one pint of water. Bottle for use. Altar cleaning the teeth aa usual, tines with a little of this llqui4. It baa a Sue preservative .ft.ct on the tu4 a1*pn. Lb. • L P.rb. 0.. reason lb. women are forging shad St tbs•m is that 1h m speed .. mush tisse leighiag at lb. maaer In hIeh a woman pcfl. 3. r' . \A j ':•'. -4 Sow ,• yeN a To t•Id a IN. ekirt property for socking and t• aveid the ore. diwn lb IdI. it Lb ti*l breadth, taatss . I. ., *L ' _; , I Reltsl*ss D,•lae(l•ss. of the Eaglisbapeeklng religious communities of the world there ar fl.:$o,000 Eptsc.p&lans, 1S,Uooe )(ethodiita of all descriptions, 11400,000 Roman catholics, 11,110,000 Presby. tertaq of all ducr1$1as SWOOG Baptists of eu i..ctrp(ai, L1IOA* Ooegregationilists of all description., 1,uO,000 Fr.e ThinWq, 1,500,0W Lutherans, 1,00,000 Ya1tu1aas, S,SI• 000 belonging to minor sects and 1?. 000,000 of a• partlealar rsIIgles, . I.. ;: 'I. *ke Prilis. In mu7 ceom the rumer of th. sew. tug meebla. Is hard to adjust. To gather fly iode, simply lengthen the s111h to ama or eight ii the Inch, and stitch. The thread can then be drawn tight and the trill madi am 1fl U 4..Ired..: ' C,. ., "I. -I.. 4., -. . 'I I . .. I. - , I ', ' . -S ' , . - ., . . ,,. ,- ., ..*. , .L• P' heitiou: ' These hair tnrba worn by many of 1W wen wwI4 make •zcdle4i•e' s I. $. ' . I ' . . - . . %-c. ... Li: p

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