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EBRUARY 27, 1921—PART 4 NDAY STAR; WASHINGTO. " = A Bans Finished for Change INEW COIFFURE INFLUENCES MILLINERS Reviews of New Books " T v A r ’ i 3 - .l:easu s ppearance IN DESIGNING F SEASON S I I EADG'“'AR THE LIFE AYD WORK OF SIR WII. . vd fiavors of Talian Intrike : ry A I I I ; 5 LIAM VAN HORN oW 0 the tmagic it of Ventce. in brs d : . ; vaughn. Tlustra Ne : The story § i1t Kn- ek B, = 8 s The Century Company 2 Borpise 3 S @tk of “Builtding Will Probably Start This = | o o did ana 1 = 5 . 2 s e e G story of one of the ARG R ’ & Spring—Attic to Be Made a Full Story, el ey ATIONS oF s s, at bottom, mere i < . . . - e - i S, Crockett 1) s the First 'Change in Fifty Years. s e T e SR R A sonality of a very human and lom.i oknowledged var S fes * Treasury®imilar; to the present building. Tt | ble man. Sir William Van Horne buiit | |1 ven ) o At fime o] cXtended about 340 fect-on 15th street Filiam Ves Bomns bUllchihe death + building, which, a|3n8 to a depth of about 170 feet. with s s == SR time, has been added to an a colonnade of about thirty columns. ¥ spectacular achievement and one n: young > altered to medt the new and £ % * % that involved incredible resou and r«jr_v‘un on this &ype increasing demands'of the THeSs | tnhampered by finsncial limitations, | Eame identined with tha Industsis s (o0 Youthiul recital of ox- ury Department; is about to undergo | &7 o i B RIS e biifed_with halinduatrial s in ) her change, the first ko:affect, Ma- | gignéd a- building. which, -when ! S iStaton of ol EtCerti et ot ey e et : erislly its general outward appear- | ished, would have cost abeut $1.500.- {he, through the urgencies of his experi- | had her wwn e since the completion of the pres—"o., By making the bullding some- {ense in Canada, took on the citiz cided st - structure over fifty years ago. w less -extensive and -elaborate of that country, receiving i te @8Y structure ove | than .planned. | twas completed in j omFantl itlelithrouch “this - fa0 . The attic, which has served @8 31842 at a cost of $600,000. - | when his car, “Saskatchewan™ R eroom for ¢ld filés, with a few | -While the Philadelphia architect, i William Van Horne upon his last jc 3 ’ o PO J Seee and laboratars operated’ by | Thomas. U. Walter, falled to win out {nex it homed back to the Hlinois town | s et : e e can s short, | I _haiting the construction of the 1 OrLTaliet Torithe Tone vent eI 1s ot : Erec upon iie internal reverus horeat new bullding, he did have the honor ! story of a versatile man, as well A 0 G0n WIS aon AER oo, 1y:to be made into & full Story, cover- of drafting the plans. which were {sTeat one. If he had not been a ro. his other world, according Lo b, $4% the entire building, which will | later csrried into effect, in_develop. mhalier; he might have been an authority | denizens, poascasen ot s o it taen consist of four floors, in adaition | 1€ . the bullding as it now stand st o e i p o L iOmn, b lecas s o Bees . ora he' work was begun in. July, 1855, early poverty, of tireless enerzy, of flam- (hough substant ‘ d subbasement. The : ¥ poverty, less en flam sbstant iglly, e the basement and subb: ent. Congress having appropriated $300,000 | ing zeal, of 4 forward-moving goal. In e plans for this work haVe just been|for the building of the south wing, a word, it is one of the stories t will, g eompleted, and it 18 expécted ' that which was completed in September, jand should. supplant the old tale: T quest e odeling will begin early in|joel,, The civil war halted the work military heroes. Th . features e remodeling B for a time, but it .was shortly re- the early American with Ceeil { °f intel v ere Mo the spring. Walls for the-new floor | sumed. The west wing was then \ e i plencers, mith Cectl | power, sincerity and ¥1il be erected within the ‘Balustrade, | Started. and, extending to a line of | long list of inventors and explorers, be- | PETSIx e i t distances from it of four to Bve and| (e Present north facade, was com- longs to the constructive forces of the| 1 yond & half feet, thus making the general| Adjolning this west wing, at the :"“;’l‘tflflix:hfl“«'%?" 'k';ngh{ place : appeararte conform more closely to{mnorth end of its east wall, was the story of perfectly unbretentious Elizabe Ihe Treasury annex, acrods Pennsyl-| WeSt end of the old State Depart- | ple presentation. i L P Miss Muffei” op ; oy The top | ment building. In November, 1366, . ] rEe I D ‘ ¥ania avenue to the. morth, Pl this building was.razed to make way . ERES ENENIES N ORIn OwE N e floor of which is also of lesser di-|for the north wing of the Treasury = > Vicente Blasco lIbanez, Translate i the *3 rensions than thé rest ot the build- | building, which completes the present ) from the Spanish by lIrving Brown Bl S INOW: . , : z 'x';'s':flfxf"c vg.m- its completion, in - / J / New York: k. P. Dutton & Co. S alien mo. Considerable diffculty was experi- | amoynted 1o s6. 105 0s Ulding had i | The prince was saying. “Man's|Mide a decided s enced in making the architectural| The Greolan style of azchitecture, 4 Sreatest wisdom consists in getting Deople, designs for the new floor; througlhi| 25 hesun by Rebert Mills, was, of 4 4 Michael Fedor Lubimoff, this, satiated | fter this Inability to locate the earlier draw- | GavFic: nued. The building to- with 1ife ‘ men, job ot ' y x day measures’ 260 .by 466 feet. The S ’ 2 P i ife—money, women. idleness.|Job rut o fngs upon which to base the new de- | north, 'west* and south facades are - = The story begins with this turn to live AR A i fns. | The first architett's plans, as|adorned with larg % /- : point in the career of Prince | "7 of fi - e porticos, the pedi . . | tialiy well as of those who designed sub- | ments being supported by eight mon- - - K 1 Michael, the point at which, gather- | 4uile o, stand’ & mequent changes and additions, were | olithic granite columns, while the & 3 A {ing a group of disciples about him-| IS sporadic flair of hers o the 1 fiot to be found, and-it became neces- | east facad ornamented by a lofty . 5 self, ho organizes them into an order! S!OT¥ Roes o a delightfully fanc sary to maeke actual measurements | colonnade. of . thirty massive sand-| ° S % e i . pamed according to the title of this| (Ul War. reve the simplicity an before the new drawings could be|stone columns. The granite pillars, . . i romance. The period of the story is! Charm of Pen ough the wrap Bade. pilasters and blocks used in the new. N : the present, fronting immediately | PiN8S of reputation that Arauge T * % * *® e ;{ D-]:tnadu;'no from Dix Iuhnd.lnu.r | ) ,“Jp?h u.»‘ close of the great war. li‘f\fs.\"‘”' d upon her. A delicata 3 ock| e., on salling vessels. i il i Prince Michael has moved out of | € Spirit carries Penelope fo Some of the leading architects, of | “mrpq of : picking up the work _ y - k enormous wealth into something like | W4Td 00 & tide of dreams —a dredn ! their day have been employed-in the ::c‘"u’ fltm-l-hv.wwiner left off was 3 3 poverty. This is a moment of light-| world -::d lovers and, at the las Steccmenl construction’ of fhis build- gned to Davl McClelland, a : o | ening the boat, so to speak—of throw- | M¢Tely the promise of a single drean Bfecem: : Th. stretching back | Yo%, York architect ' While in New i 4 | ing overboard every scrap of needless ( “OMInE truc 3 m, and its growth, str L3 York Mr. McClelland was engaged on 3 - A | cargo. Women loom large in this| —_— eyer-almost a century, is an interest-|a nuniber of office’ buildings, and| . . 7 jeasement of the craft. The sumptu- ' story, especially to the many|Some of the prominent 5th avenue \ . Gt > {ous tale, following the fallen fortunes | ‘sshington admirers of the .clean- mansions and ‘other beautiful homes, X A of the Russian prince, is. in effect, a . $ut, classic lines of the building. incinding the country .residence of / V' A ldrama of readjustment to the new ! ] P The first buflding :to house the | winlam _P.’ Clyde, the shipowher: 5 world created out of the remains of | . ; g Mortimér L. Schiffs 5th avenue and o \ = war. Some of the time Senor Ibane i AP¥easury upon the rempval .0f the E 3 % = s I Zz| During the month o < W country homes; Joseph R. De ‘La- 3 5 follows the story of Prince Michael. | lists whic. ! of February the - from Fhiladelphia. to. Wash-! mar's house, the Rockefeller mauso- ; AA Some of the time he moves out into | column tobe e appeared lon, n 1800, was designed by an|jeum and nnmeroys other monu- ; 4 ; =S ./ |the world aspect of readjustment ;";”"‘" have been ace ish_asobitect, Georga Hatfeld. | mental buldings. He has been in / ! 2 4 with political and economic. discus- | Thic materiis iiol of located at the mortheast corner | the- office. of the supervising archi- v j . 3 sions to illuminate the process. And . M 5 will appear ) ~the present sits. It was completed tect for twelve years, engaged on . all the time he dwells with passidn h pumber of the month 1M, but had ene glowing defeot: |drawings for about a hundred of the : love on the stage that he has set for | &pmiieat; be obtained free upon ‘was not fireproof. It was partially [ Dost offices .bullt in that perlod, as 3 , the development of Prince Michaels | The 1iire “-r library. destroyed by fire {n 1801, dsid i 1312 | Well as custom snd court houses and future; and this stago s, in the main Loniyone. o1t o D e the rning wWas completédd by the &3 some point on the Mediterranesn. a !learning and earning - oo 0 S tian many vatusble Socaments and| . - . : ) region' from which this distinguished | may weil te A DinE." and that thi files having been comsumed, with the ( £y |200r, 1o not able to”separate him- |niad “man e kbt L Sailding. o Sl ¢ 2 It. Some of the most remarkable | therefore. contains books and reg "l 1he governmeae bad nattsernse HER LETTERS. plctares B8 {ie sty 2nd 1 Borders L i i e lesson, though there wis sofme ex- ‘ novels of Senor Ibanez. In this pow- | o ofessional man to leave th ©uie_over a century ago, When fire- {erful novel of human motives and | onks of the fullowers and himselt construction had mot advanced (Continued from Fourth S action one still gathers 0 S R g aders in b ) L3 up gorgeous | particuls to-its present stage. The next T;ul-s- T——'fi-* ipictures of the Mediterrancan. P “‘r;"“f“]“""f-l ‘-‘“‘“»"l[\vls of per- ury building - went the way of its| By the way,” she said. T don't N £ ped Here—the beeke predecessor in 1833, but this time nldoum you, you know, but it'a better ]THE,EGAO‘%); BARQUE AND THE pmr.flwml\«}m’ raises poultry - possible through the heroic. ef- to be on the safe side. Have.you kept i g GRAV By Seumas [ JC0U0RSIONE automobile man. us weil e ‘Mroasary emploges te | the letters I wrote you?" : { SO New York: G B Futnants | ol nonite “run or hr st b gave practically all of the réeords. * “Yes.” answered Plerre Virien, after ons. s mu{;‘f:l'c or the student o e R A Cfoday Mored in| 3 moment's hesitation, for, as & mat- : A remarkable power of delivering |ics or chemistry, R UCS PR the present Treasary bullding. Thel ter of fact, his mind was far away. g 2 [ z characters into print, still warm and| -Some may say that expe 3 A eacat Tressary bul e TP Chon, e thets back 1o ’ . 5 . - “|alive, lies in tnis author's work as | the’ hest teacher el e e M o8 emciency engineers of *modern | por L S R e T e ¥ trivmph in this respect: Mortimer | loarne onme e i, 404 the man whe . msiacas. Nevertheless, and '.8pite | then in anolher, and then in & tnivd: = s Hehir, the weaver, had died. So]outetrinmes oy ‘T %Ay Wil e far e hasty reacucs, smany-fthese | Turning: suddenly o Charlotte. ms | s 4 ; Meehaul Lynskey, the nailmaker, &nd | advantase. of the . acramuiared Lt old. records will from_time té time | said. in appealing tone: . : : Cahir Bowes, the stonebreaker. had | perience of other oa hiated ex- to light. Notable.in thif iagis| ‘Yowre'not in earnest o \ come in search of the weaver's place | done the Same thing ne io- trmne - ¢ finding of & PO 4%, about my giving them + PRat in with his ancestors in Cloon na|to do and probably have done it et B Frankiin's cxpense account/ cev-| a little cruel.. They are si] of you 1 Morav, the Meadow of the Dead. The | ter. Many of these r av. Sug 2tn wizistey omesfTRacom-| hive felt’ story s taken up entirely with the | their experishors i booke. vesitcy , of the Unfted Stages to| ¥y ong to a buried past. . pu of ese ancients over. the: against : e . choringec] Mce.e:: e 7K | soXou are asking me to make -’tr'en : 1ying-down place of the weaver. The hflp:.[orp‘l‘;imllmrdmml‘;‘t:hshg‘v«‘-,'"‘f Evidently. government: aemtn i SSTNCEL 4 Eift of in-seeing and picture-words | ways of reducing costs and in man, those days were granted -ualimited | *T thank you. Pierre. for your gal- 2 of straight attack make an aston- | wavs helping men to conduet therr expense sccounts. Many of tha dtems | 127ty but 1 think you exazgerate. £ = Y 3 f | ishing artistry of this homely theme. | business along more efficient line faciuded and the enormity of.ths bills| She stretched out her hand. A BROAD HAT WITH POINTED CRGWN.OF PEACOCK BLLE STRAW . The = Golden Barque” is what in|and thus imcrease their profire. g presented und paid By Unele Sam peCome. xive them back 16 me—those TRIMMED WITH FLAT WINGS 18 S#GWN ABOVE AT THE LEFT. | America wouid be calied a canal boat | it ik "iidn Wi sefih 1o e n g . 51 X betwe o | hi g ofes: » Would shock present-day offcials. No | 20OT lettors which have no mesming | A POKE SHAPE OF CELLOPHANE CVERED WITH SMALL PASTILLES oDen| bodiesiOF mater . Aun i Sl Bishear omnos Inenten at taxi bill ever mounted to .the heights y dead things. . . au- | highest point of efficiency who tries “ reached by Franklin’s bill,fa% car- * e %% IN BRIGHT COLORS, ABOVE AT RIGHT. . | thor makes of it a world in itself{to find the rizht and eass way (v Fiages There were such ta et | r1ERRE Y. BELOW AT RIGHT, A HAT OF BLACK MILAN TIED AROUND WITH Ioen walk ita fenkth with dreams 1o do a thing bLefore he attempts it as tailor's bills. hundreds “Ao afs | P s ":":‘;d 5 ;I:rnu.h the RIBBON AND WITH A TRAILING VINE OF LARGE PINK ROSE: R iceTis SBQ commonidaya werk | T sl R - spent for table linen for Mi: . . taking preeau- - it | expect cep ahead without and others: wines. dinners and’ mahy | tions that she shouldn't ses exactly 2 f ; . 5 {fod Lar Dlaces =te dranmortediby. it current Businies Witeniure than e o e el e e st b : BY ANNE RETTENROUST BB e hesadreisamestad | throush £O _exotic | traveler in nee land would e a8 doing.. He was j frag: es. Just a series of pictures | pect to k Biex to aronad envy oo 1 el wenr: ehe gaked, noted by, the milliners 3t/ 1h8|. sne scventers o e vove. ot Unguished artistry applied to plain | who arc lost were biind fir e, . ; : ; dvantage of the poke shape - Jeite-apparrat iyt the TeW sépablic He shut the sectetars and took a present time is that bobbed li; that it gives room for delicately e _|STENOGRAPHY AND TYPE- ¢ mean oatad 7 ) eardiar, ¢ .. - v Bair, will soon be a thing of |arranged coils of hair at the back of \ THE SIXTERNTS OB o WRITING - - v , my friend, lot- .| the past, so.far as adult fashions are|the crown. Eear jn mind—in passing > X a y . m'm‘ilml,.‘?.fi‘.m.l"'., you ‘have "%"f‘ L T k::[’ 3 ed i R *|Ginat the payche was dominant at J l}xl.imx*g::?crfi i 221 Birch. C. E. The Vocabulary Mek hed a grester imperfanceto these ‘pang which’ rdly: though! & I - by e period of the directoire. It was a R 16 “lassica itage of the i i ocabulary Method b i ‘momer Z gy A ust as the bobbed coiffure was|late eighteenth ntury intes ta- Middle Ages.” etc. New York: Th of Training Touch Typists, ZHW - % ,'“f,".‘:.?:,}:;"‘u"‘@,’?w“ thes | ine. e la 5. (e Mot e S eel- | more prevalent in Paris than it was|tion of the clamsts Greclan mode of 4 Macmilian Company. ], B Cangreas for.aafe kegplug. arioa | ton .‘“‘"‘ “"‘lf.?lde the ‘thought | in our American cities, so the passing :;':lzr:r";:.:“z'::";' The.ciasslo “;"“k' z % T e iiwo ol & U imten or ”‘%%2' “e‘nl;gr:\l:)‘: . 7“15'(:'1"” i 8#l° for the reference of Ligforians o ssthle’ “rapprochement). | of de of “hair. ment | oring b xoblem jof edd cov= 2 e special student who has already | p 0" © er. ZF-M386h. o o | that one tealizés” how st ement).|of this mode of “hair. arrangementiering by wearing fillets or bandeaus possessed bimself of th Reigner. C. G. Classified Dicta ey T el OWeYe. | liens.of. ot ave. tecn™ £ortaln | causes more remark there than it does [or covering the head with filmy veils, R 20 Trontt oF that pemariamie poeach | Drills. ZF-R274c s {hae there ts Yot much of docdmentary | ep i latters for & fow ey, ‘o | here. Almost every letter that comes |Put this did not suffice the French the sixteenth century. Upon this | Reigner. C. G. Graded Dictation Tests ' Paftment dnd the many inatcessible | 1028t ToMorrow—I . progiise I will | tho French capital commenting | IomeD of the directoire period,. any broad foundation the author here ob- ZF-R274g. . 2 ® | end them b you tom rom the more than it would the woman of oday. jectifies the leading lines of Remington Typewriter C ] @ernersof the present-Treasury build- | “°IF {USe?, 10 7o tomorrov. on fashions mentions the fact that|™gi¢ qs'not imagine that all or even| - In this period by way of 3 study-or| tng th S Eemritar Combany. Cal- The third autempt to buiid.§ Treas | But that in chlldiah ks g | the mode in pussing us rapidly a8 itia predominant number of the'French |sive ones of wood with ebany finish—|over -with bright-hued flowers, ap-|its influential writers and Chinkers. | ice. 1814, ZkoRos; STaPhic Serv- wEx. bullding called for Orepraor cons | Ofend you, but— - . - . ol is possibie fox such a mode 10 DasS. |or American hats are poke shapes or |and they are set with rhinestones. | pears frequently, and one or two of It is an exclusively intellectual sur- | Smith, C R 5 stfuction. and this buliding se: e T noTubsed. Attes |ATd, WhED it passes it will be” for feven remotely suggestive of the di-| Tossibly the ease with which these|the milliners are turning out smalljyey covering the humanism of Ttaly | Touel i S s 2 ‘micléus for the presest hullding, | ihe placid tone hiCt the " frst er {good. One camnol still retaln thid|rectoire. Side by side with this ten- | devices can be adjusted will bring to| poke shapes covereq over the crown from Petrarch and Boccaccio to Mach. pusheEspemriting. ZHAW-S f : e ng. | the Plasid tone phich, the frdt Dart | comfortable coiffure for dayimer 04 Licney ia another quite different. It them the contempt bred of familiar-|and the top of the brim with small |iavelli ~The investigation covers | fo Gosterits. and the. bistorically Taoteer FlerreT i e, said 1| even When the hairdressers supply the| hats ‘made to be worn with afier; Ny nO oesnsicommonplace anq eV iThete 1o tendencytoilasial trim. Ttnerne and that of France as well |Grifith, I S. Teaching Manual aud ous. kDA > have'told you y plans are. .1 1 psyche knot to eek out the T 2 - .. |ming on the under brim of the hat Crasmus _embody the | Industrial Arts. [RT-Gr i . ) 2 & S sctuslaysyche empire. These. hats havi t had t js a safe prediction that the fair- |, 5 o 23> |German cultyre of th < 2 Arts. IRT-G¥Tat. *= % & ¥ (TR ueter ae o8 2gain, I can't, | shorn locks. i aiso | oPPOTtuNity to show 8 ave not nad|iy small shapes in black lisere or|amd R 1ine With this is the hat faring}rrance, Rabelais. Montatgne anq Jonn | LUA0U: € A American School Toy- Following’ fhe birnidg’ of thé sect| your Toyakty “to. Eive me. whet | moms o O e the. huir ‘worn | OF_In our own northern citfes, but ap- milan will be Eeneral favorites with | o (he 1800, overed Smpy Wit Sl |Calvin ‘are leaders. 'The second vol- | jRr.n Novelties 'in Wood. | oW Treacurs” bulldtugCongress ap- | SMSUIAN't-any longer belong to you. s e D o effiet, The ar|Pear under the mare favorable setting | [OFSh of taste for carly sPring Wear| gorgeous display of flowers beneath: e o ihia schiolarly and interesting Marden, O. 5. The ¥ e 3 o s - is s he English e Ma . 0. 8 e Young Man Iinter- prop: le“ $100.900 : !&?r;,lhe “cotu- [:oranors, 25 Dlaln_words, my dear | rangement that seems o be foreing|” Whether we wear our hats droop- |, FTom exery indication black will be Sometimes a large, broad - brimmed [of'the time. with the e £ Business. 1905, HEL Mg mencemen( of s firepreo? sthuctuse. | show mome feelin; - o ane, 2 ing at the back or the sides; whether| il high favor for spring. Although > ~|fluences upon this cult i ced, Mrs nior Wage S 3 . < . of .animosity, 5 version of the psyche—a psyche 2 € ray i chod S rangement of ribbon about the crown i ulture, with the -, Junior Wage Unlike the custom of pdorindi + e e o ome ve: z P they are mushroom in shape or flare|SFaY IS still chosen by some of the | (Y w 2 " native growth-of letters und. - 33 no 1imit was set for the" taeat up«‘,ffi.’l thoagnt ChimgteL Settis " angry,” | skillfully: polned at a rathef’ iUl or ine fuce, like wn immense halo,| %000 milliners the excesaive popniar e o, sametimes i roses | Reformation and its effects, under the . Vocational Educa iture. There was-‘onb Temard In|. 'There was a moment of areasiness ::-‘l:eg.cml::ylh"&“c‘r:\:":. OF the head. | there is no ‘abatement in their tén- ‘l;ytzg 'J;Z: :;"‘t";x:;-l,]l\:‘;"rk ‘f.fi:,m;‘,;} Langing dowil $6 the shoulders. il growth of philosophy and Science.. A 3 St which the * Congress. howeven, did |—“0f.the sort which precedes a con-{If heose, ¥o o vour | dency to fit down well over the head, . i omen gy F % . valuable ‘study for a particular con- . - ¢ , you may regard your g | in town. Tt is a rather pardonable i sideration of the si = Compare favorably with ihat of fo. |Mlet. Charioite fdReted and a wrinkle | heas as w siobe, with your chin a |and the woman who clings to an old- |y ¢ ") ; Meration O he Bixfeenthicentury. MISCELLANEOU: day: it was able to devote itself to|sMowed in her farehead. .She looked | A ote-" Then the 1 che | fashioned fondness for wearing hats e R . i oc L R be et IS < . B ks long discussions. The commitiee | "0 aFgTessive that Pierre de.cldne?lklo Pt Lol n’:lr,:l:‘poi‘:. A arrange- | NEN on her crown is as out of the SO %“'.L"’S.fi'p'.‘-’r"‘&?e‘ considered especially appropriate for| FOLAWD AND W THE siNorITY . K. J. Leather. 1915 TQL- O o e | Y e sioroiny” Afois, fecided to] comles at the nerth pole. An AITaREe | picture .am she. has been for many | hue that predemipates swhere hats are|he tea”Bour “hat, ‘and there are| New Tork: Breminn Geodhart.| . Adid Be 5o lacated..in. the vicinity of .the | through the drawers. : | e (bt Tor most women 1o wear,|Seasons past.. Undoubtedly in the|sola from bargain counters for $9.98. | smart women who prefer the simpl SSIok Brentanes Civil Service Chronicle, N. ¥. Fire former. buildings. a3 to permit of an| “WIil You.give them to me™ de- S vears toscome “this period” in milli-! The thought that five out of ten wom. | p men who prefer the simple} In response to persistent agitation| CPartment 3 us In- vainterrupted view along - Pennsyl- |manded Charlotte. fmperiously, nery will stand out as the one When|en who ride In the subway and half | Diack of Bfown.hat of milan or liserelin the United States, President Wil-|,, Struction. UY-C4sstm Jama avenue (rom the Capitel to' the | No'” anawered Piecre, with every| Obviously the reason why - tlilsj womer hid ‘most. of their eyebrows | the stenographers in town are wear- | SOMPINEA IR fine lace imatehing| son, you recall. appointed a commis- | Flebeer: G- J. Elements of Stratexy White use. -Robert Mills was pr-nrw resolution. change in hair arrangement is 8o .im-{ With their hats. 5 | ing a certain type of hat is very good . E e milli- | sion “to investigate the charwes of UCA-Fi52e. BY. chosen as the architect, and befare t ia unheard of. Porant o the milliners Is becanse,( As for the technique of the new|reason why one should wish to avoid | Ners offer A very £00d model 5hows | yersecution of the Jew: _— Fuertes, L. A 1 O {he congressional eommiltee, in 1318, Suppose it ig:” . 4 Dhether they choose 10 look at it that | hats, perhaps ‘one of the most inter-| that type of hat. even though one is| % INIan crown with o brim made of| government Th:w:xv;:rh:f[‘hhe. e Dogs. RKTL P‘Q!:'zf' e ok ntim: ow the site was finally ‘And I came to'ge you in such a|way or Dot, one of their chief prob-|esting things to report is’'that thela subway habitue and is quite proud plaiting held in at| o, " e co i is Dok | Gotdman, O < ined when he ssid “the. pre. | friendly spirit i *| Jems ‘is ‘to make hats that -will fit| blocked hat is coming back into its|of the fact tha: and 1s quite proud| he brim and laid over a silk bound [Was the counsel to this American |Goldman, ¢ clss position of the buliding was de- | - Plerre made no response. ‘He was|comfortadly - and, convenicntly thelown Moreover, thia blocked rat in of, TanNer. toneds & s00f MoRos" | wire ‘frame for a.crown: A iroselte o i ook Haeltimairen: | 108, 5 termined by the g’?"fi: 'dl;v.-eflk ons n"r.'fi“u-;nm.d:n:fi;réd with himaelf | women who arc to wear them, . . faurs pre-eminently lisere or milanl, But black takes cars of itself. Tt o e S shotee mazed rintonie s"vm(,“‘made“;“"f!“f petspnal op R . . nt"—] nt Jackson. | In, . Wit e bobbed head or the r | For'many seasons the so-called made[never seems to suffer social taboo St s author in thi Zarth, S ¥ o President Jaéiudn Wa# not Elven:ts | . For the last time—will you give me | in bobbed Effect their problem was not | hats have had things all their own| from ovetpopulanity, | {loops falling down to the shoulders. |capacity. It is, in effect. a diary that Hawker. H. G. and Griev, awaiting the determination: of eom. | the lettersZ® S | dimcult.” ATL that (he crown ‘of tho|way—a fact which had its advantages | s 1 ;TR isimple -Dblack oy brown hat|gives immediateand intimale pictures| " Our Atlantc Attempt. mittees. -He had unbounded faith in .f“y'rlthe lullhme—\o. i hat had ‘to do was to make room forlas well as its disadvantages to the * ,f:g‘orc‘rlninl‘:{n:?m%:.\c a fnlhl of fof conditions in Poland during the|Hochwalt, A. ¥. The Fointer and th hia own judsments, was without fear) e;— monsleur, aifice you are not St d show. no considera-| woman who wore hat eString: color, which has many of the |30 OF @ Gnot, oF ru ot W;‘ ?P.;‘ period of the commission’s investiga- ftter in America. 1911. RETD -TQ possessed boundless energy. All | the Kallant gentieman whom I expect-| tion for, pufls; curls or castly dishev. [ In favor of the made hat, the hat{advantages of gray, is coming fo the 12 WPC OF ML 10008 OTER, SCECEC | tion. In addition to its original de- ] :"r;n;t:hthleen::np:.ohim(y“m gfn. . . I shall take other meas- fli\d roflsbon l:rb lohfen::év)‘wla;:‘ iy :rodx;(-n‘d b”\ sewing straw or braid or h;rebh“ the new hmn] wnrn no chance | Jd o d Rats in France rather than fi‘ sign of studying the relations of the lection of a site. | UTS! : = number ¢ hats raping silk or other fabric on a can.|of being over-popular for many a fpbtoit Hesd e Jews to the new Polish sta 23u Becoming impatient at the. delay As you please.” {in Pans fate off the hafr at tho.baek, | vas shape, was the fact that if month. sl coufighs. ~ Somchow wel sull cling to) L stale e el A A The 533 e Soming impatient, ut the delasi| T'small tell everything to the man|ond tne reason given for the XISt | were mot able to find. the shape vou| . Many more women are aware of the | (e I0C8 (RaL it we wear elaborate | Commission accepted hearings from Expert Paint Mixer over the ground ome morning and,| ¥hom I expeet to. marrv. He willlence of these hals is that they ac-!wanted you could get v B i ilic maraitin abades wre jo|[CoTknior costiyi(urs weijapet bave @ Tt Lithuanians. the Ruthenians and| * : Planting hin cane im the northeaat | KNOW how to compel you to return my | commodate the hair claborately ar-| i, “_pmfium"‘l’,‘ie dfi;m-‘d"“s"hg; ;\:'; high favor with the French hat mak ylha: mhkleepmn.n\}e mwear) our simple | the White Kossians upon this qu | Matthews, I How to Paint Signs \ corner, said: “Here, right here, I|letiers . e DAk of the head AT taie e oaics e delred e e And| re than have & very definite ldea|Unts BUC usually only with eimplstion. The ‘hook|therefors. presents/ | and Sho Cerds TRECMH want the corneg atome laid” ~ And| . O be ! q pther way of accommodating the Heir| fanc 25 to what mandarin really is. The|SUest drese. In Fars vou will sce fulwithin its limited scope a generalMichaels, E. D. Cavy Culture. RKTG- $here the corner stone was Jaid. “harlotte. trembling with anger, got | is to make the crowns much mare * % ok fact Is that mandarin is used rather |TPats Worth more than a member of|survey of the minority races of Po-| MsX. But Jackson wad alsé-a President| 9P llnd.'llk!d to and fro. There was|roomy, and this may be done by way|. X . aguely to cover a whole range of | ity “gimpie little hats ofbs”k N ‘g land in respect to the government of | The Painter's Magazine. Nineteen e o rate without hoiee™t!a gleam of vengeance In her eycs. She | of a crown that Is large in.every re- | This was a decided advantage to|shades. 1t is like capucine of a sed-|ihu¢' any clever little milliner mi ald | Poland itrelf. As an appendix. the; Ninety-five Taint Questions An- Congress in agreement with his poli- | St37ied 107 the door. SrestTor only in one, in poke.style | the small milliner who could not. es-|son or so ago. There are mandarinpit'e $0% Ca"00% for a hundred francs | BUthor Eives an admirably suceinct| —swered. SIQ-P168n. § eise. In March, %, a_Philadelphia wn,;‘h;:rg :;:;:'al.h' exclaimed, | that bulges toward ‘:h-- bzck‘-i ¥ I!f‘"lfl“}' in war days, have secured a|shades that are a decided rose With| % inently becoming and well fit- | SKetch of the history of Poland, add- | Roth. W. F.. and Corman, C. T. Rab- Srchitect, Thomas T, Walter, was se. Tepronchfully, as » mappeared. Mfany hats have been Drodueéd fn|wide variety in ready-blocked shapes. others Eoing all the way down theliing with pomsibly afrill of lace a5 |in o this a review of the Jews in| bt Cultire and Standard. RES- ured by the comimittées on publlclno” of “”reu watched her go in a| Paris with very larxl«;.l Lr?;(mk but | He rlslox‘k in trade did not have to be|color scale to a rust shade. their only trimming. Many an Ameri- | Poland together with a synopsis of 27 buijdings and grounds and .a reporti .. & - . for some reason or other the Amer-{so large when a few hours- might| While the blocked straw shape is |, 4 He= . = o > L] B e et "ns i What & meas T made!” he said. “Her | jcan_ milliners have been Wedr$ of) transform canvas and wire, braid or|eoming back into its own and straw gom wolnes when yoamue suo e e DO seriies i wiiich tne iWachare 3 D Weel BhS Wen Mas- Ravly.begun Bulldthy nof onl letters—her letters! I couldn't tell her | these. large crowned hats for Amer-|silk into a hat of the latest contour., is more evident in the new hat Ai y bound to | Jews of this country are divided. The ufacture. TMW-W197w. | T o O ind toaterisy | the truth. The devil take- me If I|ican women. They say that American| 'Kor the woman who likes to dabble St has been since pre-war days | wear Opprey of Daradies (housh he |book is a conclse, authoritative and - T e aatone Trom ‘Aquis creew | know what I'dld with them or where | women do not like the crown thit is|in millinery herself there is always| ooty any abatement of in. |IMEht have known that the smple |readable summary of personal obser- Cy +| they are! big and full, Time will prove whether|an advantage when blocked shapes|terest in fabric hats. Crepe de chine 5 vho = vation. study and interpretation of i E SRR heen Setrmln o —_— B mot the importers have been £00d| are in vogus I hen s D L e it 5 wihihy tor e Ametleani o Bhp (KBoWS tHel the eniioct imatums. pE sure of 1he §upPOrt of Congress, ¢ ogue. Even when she pays a| « . s led i Calye of the simple hat even with 2 > : paychologists. food price for such a hat there is an| as spring and summer dress fabrics | elaborat e oty T . NCE 0o bolalioniis 'Mu“n\':‘:mli:":r:&xtl;-r ::'or:fplz{:d Showmfl Him Up. The dressmakers who swear most|(onomical advaniage in doing this| Of serviceability and style, are being Shea & T e French Critics ags | MEMMO. By Joseph 3 b“t \: ifla.‘f“;"-‘m«(. (oflld"-”‘ A rt Frimm b e R Lo SRS faithtully by everything that ema-|and adding ones trimming one's self— | used for warm weather hats. Simply|prone to think nard. New York: ecause the bolsheviks repudiate | aia) b Gred (o he conatenation of; ,\ NE ¥ awyer was talking | nates from Paris, fecling“something | that is, of course, provided one has|trimmed sport hats of these silks ran Ceagnany. the enormous French loan, the fireproof office buflding.| _2POuUt & corrupt politician. ot unlike BO5E 10!'.\mer|van design- | that heaven-sent ability to arrange | have appeared at the southern resorts s This romance projects a line of mod- | The speaker was Count Georges de i werer mm,%me ot this prs:| «We showed him up.” he chuckleq, | ‘05 TRiher poch-pool Irllx.'kld-udu{ thejand adjust a feather, 'a wreath of giving _every indication of general Baked Apricot Whip. ern action against a medieval back- | Kellner, a millionaire Belgian manu- oy Y . . | directoire -styles in frocks and sults| flowers or a'bow of ribbon, an ability | popularity among well dressed wom S s e A e ¥ work. while the iporary cessallon|-almost as neatly us Lotta Golde|and wraps. ~Thit is, of course. be-|which is born, not made. and which|en later on. Etamine is a new ma-| Wash well one-half pound of dried| hand, love. On the other. it is indus- | . debated in Cony P & ng | showed up the profligate old ear). cause the American designers have | all the training in the world will not|terial with milliners that comes from |gpricots and stew slowly until the | trial and political agitaiion. The cir- he went on. “doesn’t e B - ‘How did It come about! a friend | been pushing the directoire type of | produce if one is born without it. France. Made of cotfon or linen it, o . i cumventions of the age-old emotion openly admit this, but the fact is In August. 133§, the new buildi 5 . water has all evaporated from th PR e b P Beigllienl of the family asked, ‘that Gobea|dress within the last few .months,|~ Another feature of the new hat|BSUBEeSts grass cloth in the openness e m them B ey O O A ) i o : as practically -CoMpleted. with 138|Golde's daughter refused Lord Lee:| while the krench have not. But the | fashions that will come to the aid of | and lighiness ot its weave. ‘and It |Then chop or put through a colander | quality of (he: days of the BOrEias, | me trme e ire ot o s ey do Seoupation by the Secratary of the|!2rdl 3 directoire idea in haw is a different | the women who find economy In man- londs itself to all sorts of interesting land add one-half cup of sugar and|The conspiracies that swarm about | 4¥ that the:wife oF e Formch Soa- S eseoTstary of the| - <well, you see. another friend of proposition. e French milliners | ufacturing some of their own hats|trimming devices. Sometimes Narrow .. . over the fire until the sugar|Mmodern industry and government are net minister declared to her recalci- troll he 2 the family answered, Lotta Golde is|are Quite strong in their sypport of | is the numerous ornaments that have ribbon is woven in and out between < BAT | jeep in secrecy and murderous in de- | trant husband the other da rol u‘;rl Attbrney Genera! and the slightly dezf, and when the earl pro- | this period. They go frankly to the|been made for hats this season—not | the open meshes of its threads. melts. Stir well and then set to cool.| gign. Indeed, the background here| o« .p, = = . gommiasioner of the general land of-| SURIHY STCh SN NS, (R0 eorl Pro-{old cuts of styles wofn judtibetore | feather or flower ornaments that need | American women have a reputation | when cold add this to the stiffly-beaten | frequently envelops the action, be- roiare sl Bills= e Simon ce took place that sume month. -|the “empire for their ‘inspiration.|expert handling to attach—b %|in Paris of belng very partial to the | whites of si i orias | sine, six hats, @ pearl necklace, some “This. bullding, shich in modified; liditing for & charity drive, and so ut orna. ! hites of six eggs. Turn into a well | coming in itself foreground and prin colhis_buliding. Which in_modiflea) liditing, for e charlty drive ind e|Thers are s number of so-called tri_| ments like glorified hatpins that need | all-flower hats. This spring the |buttered cake mold and bake in a|cipal role. An exciting romance, [gowns for Deagville, and 5o on—und - f g corne shapes that seem 1o be inspired | only to be stuck into the hat at an|French women seem to be outdoing |moderate oven for about half an hour. | nevertheless, manages for the greater | I warn you. Gaston, I won't recog- nize your government unless you rec- Present-structure, faced on 15th street;she had promised her money in an-|by the maxculine hat of the day and!effective angle. These are often 3 i 2 3 3 » 3 7 ‘made | us in thelr fondness for this type of | Turn out on a plate and allow to.cool; | part' of the time to hold its own 48R4 presented an appearance quite :tlu- direction. the poke bonnet furnishes & motif|of Jet—though there are less expen-'headgear. The toque, covered alllserve with whipped cream, against the insistence of the old es-' ognize by debls.”