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o i o e o Al i d TOT TS AL A PAGE ETGHT "IN THE NEW NECKWEAR! UPSTANDING FRILLS SEEM TOl HAVE LOST POPULARITY. Medici Collar, on the Other Hand, Is Very Much in Evidence—Guimpes Occupy Important Position in the Wardrobe. Neckwear has taken on decidedly new lines. Few of the upstanding trills are seen, although the Medici collar continues in evidence. The new neck fixings are developed of net and sheer white linen, and are quite lovely enough to please those whose hobby is attractive neckwear. Some of the chemisettes are of al- most mannish severity, and they are worn with the vests of brilliantly col- | ored silk. These, however, are not becoming to all types, so there must be other designs of softer lines for the woman who demands fluffy neck- wear. A chemisette trimmed with coin- shapped buttons is made for sheer white linen. The collar flares away from the neck, and is hemstitched an inch from the edge. A pleated frill borders the revers and three crochet- | ed buttons ornament each side of the chemisette. Dotted tulle in its transparent love- liness is the material chosen to evolve a charming scalloped fichu-collar. The scallops are buttonhole-stitched, and | the frill is gathered through the cen- ter. Two frills of lace are stitched under the outer scalloped frill, and a cravat of orange-colored moire ribbon adds a pleasing note of color to this piece of neckwear. Of an extreme style is a vestlike neckpiece of sheer white linen. The collar is unusually high, and the | turned-down portion has sharply point- ed corners. Strips of black moire ribbon fasten the vest in front. | You cannot help but admire the charming fichu collar of dotted net combined with black ribbon velvet illustrated. Double frills of the dot- ted net have a strip of the velvet through the center. This is tied in a flat bow at the waist line, | Guimpes will occupy an important position in the wardrobe of the pres- ent, for almost every frock requires a chemisette or guimpe. White linen forms the basis for the guimpe of se- vere lines. The chemisette has verti- cal tucks and feather-stitching orna- menting the front. The mannish col- lar has a line of feather-stitching near the edge, and the cravat is of striped silk. In case your frock does not require a chemisette, the separate collar with long pointed ends will supply the touch of white to the neck. It is made of white linen, and the cavat is of emerald-green moire ribbon. Neckwear is such an important fea- ture of the costume that it demands a great deal of attention. It frequent- ly supplies the individualizing note, 80 | you cannot be too particular when choosing it. IN FASHION’S REALM Jet earrings continue in great favor. ! Dull black pearl seal is in demand | for handbags. Narrow gold belts appear on the new pannier gowns. Even fichus are edged with tiny box- Dlaited frillings. Long gold tassels finish the pointed backs of rufied wraps. The most charming foot ruffies are Been on taffeta gowns. Collars on some of the new suits are made of wide, fancy braid. Some of the new flowered crepe dresses have coatee fronts. Some of the newest handbags are made of brown antelope skin. Plaited skirts are seen below the low-set belts of the new coats. Striped and plain linings are as much seen as flowered linings. An elaborate new nightgown is of | Striped nainsook and has lapels. White chiffon collars beaded in Vivid colors are a delightful touch. Handwork Chic. The demand for loosely woven fab- | Yics, whether of wool or cotton, or the | two in combination, is responsible for | fome of the most attractive linens | and crepes this season. It is to be Temembered that materials of this Sort lend themselves readily to handi- Wwork, such as darning, crochetting and Outlining. A little handiwork goes & long way toward giving a costume *le and individuality. | freely over a broken trinket as they "do over the death of a friend. ! stinctive love of beautiful things! Ll 222’y " In Our New Patent “Easy-Opening-Box” “Twist the Coin” Rl e T I I T T I I T I T I IIITY 7T YY) PIIIIIIIIIIIIE A e LI L I L o T L QL LU Y22 2 L L L R ddideddeded » HONEYMCCH TROUBLES 3 0€09000000000900000000002 It was near the end of my honey- meon. Mary and T—back from our trip to Montreal and Quebec—had halted at a sum- mer hotel in the Adirondacks. There was a lake dotted with snowy lilies almost be- neath the window, and the boats rocking by the shore had tempt- ed me for hours. “Let me row you around the lake, Mary,” I sug- gested. “It's a bully day.” Mary merely 1e said, and bit her lips. ly won't!” I declared. “I'm no sclo honeymooner. What's w rong, ? You haven't really been your-' since we got here.” To my consternation Mary burst in. to tears. ‘at Scott!” I exclaimed, thor oughly bewildered. “There certainly is something wrong. Is it anything I've done, Mary?” Now tears always arouse a horrible sense of guilt in male humanity. For one thing, a man, unless his experi- ence has been vast, is greatly inclined to exaggerate the cause of a woman’s tears, and women cry sometimes as For another thing, having heard from fem- inine lips that most of the lapses in! the universe are the result of male stupidity and clumsiness, he feels mor- ally convinced that his sex in general is implicated—and himself in particu- lar. This brings him logically to the stern conviction that, for all he's for gotten it—with the care-free habit of men—his offense has been atrocious. The tears have effectively done for him. By dint of much gentle questioning, I elicited from Mary the alarming fact that I had admired a girl's hair while we were driving up the mountain in the lumbering old stage. To be quite truthful, I'd nearly for gotten my casual remark. “Don't you remember?” reminded Mary, looking away. “You said her hair shone like beautiful copper in the sunlight.” “Why, so I did,” said I at last. “But, Mary, I never saw such hair on a girl fn my life. And such quantities of |7 i “It was most llkely pounds and pounds of false hair!" eried Mary, very white. “Oh, Pet The last was a wail, and Mary beg to cry again. And then—stupid doit! I began to see. Mary was jealous and, trivial as the cause had been, she had nursed it into flame. “Mary,” I sald, after an hour's peb. ting had brought her again to a sub- dued good humor, “do you honestly mean that you don’t expect me ever to admire another girl's beauty?” “I—I don't like to hear it, Peter,”, ghe admitted. “At first it simply made me furious—and then it made me cry. Would you like me to say that some other man was awfully handsome?” “Why not”" I asked in some aston- ishment. “Certainly, I'm not fool enough to think I'm a prize winner lnl appearance and that you will keep your eyes glued admiringly on my face for a lifetime—?" “Then you think I'm a fool!” flashed Mary. How women pounce upon a man's careless diction and twist it into a mortal affront! I “Goodness, no!" I protested. “Mary, | do be reasonable. It's this way. Ad-j niration of a beautiful thing isn't al- ways personal. Surely, we may some- times admire beauty in others, just as we admire a beautiful picture or a beautiful statue. It's the human’s in- But Mary couldn’t see, and before I was through I had lied gallantly and told her her hair was more beautiful than the copper hair of the maid in the stage—when it wasn't. It was thiat| or more tears. Why, oh, why, does a man's lmper sonal admiration of another woman's beauty fire his wife to antagonism and jealousy? I can't for the life of me| see Mary’s viewpolnt. After Four Years of Discouraging HUSBAND RESCUED THE F. F. DALLEY CO., DESPAIRING WIFE Conditions, Mrs. Bullock Gave Upin Despair. Husband Came to Rescue. Catron, Ky.—In an interesting letter from this place, Mrs. Bettie Bullock writes as follows: “I suffered for four years, with womanly troubles, and during this time, 1 could only sit up for a little while, and could not walk anywhere at| all. At times, I would have severe pains in my left side. The doctor was called in, and his treat- ‘1 ment relieved me for a while, but I was soon confined fo my bed again, After that, nothing seemed to do me any good. 00000000000000000000000000 L A GRAND LITTLE SEGRET By AMELIA DRAKE. “Aw, and is it you, then me darlin’'?" cried Grandmother Kelly joyfully, as her favorite granddaughter tripped across the room and dropped a kiss on the top of her head. “Sure and it's yerself I was wishin’ to see, be- lleve me. I was thinkin’' ye'd be along to see your old granny on her birth- day, even though there’s so many gay things you could be doin’ instead. It’s the good girl you are, m' darlin’. “Ah, but it's the fine, grand birth- day I'm after havin’ the day. And the fun and the laughin’ I've bad over it, m' lamb. Belleve me, m’ darlin’, but it's the quare things they do be givin’ a person these days. Just listen, m’ lamb. What, then, in the name of all that's merciful would this little, dan- glin’ bit of lace and muslin be that Margaret Riley was for giving me?” “A which, m’ darlin’? Sure and you'll best spell it for me. “J-a-b-o-t. And it's the grand twist you've got to it. And it's the cute lit- tle dangler when all's said and done.l It's that pretty and dainty it ud make you glad you be living the day. Sure and it'll look fine and grand on lhe! little blue frock you're wearin’ of a | Sunday, m' darlin’. I “And, of course, I'm givin’ it to you. What else would I be doin’' with it? “And did you ever see such a grand little cap as your Aunt Maggie was glving me? Believe me, there's few caps as grand you'll find anywhere, Sure and it's a bawdweer cap, they're ; telling me. It was a fine joke Maggie and me had over it. ‘Sure and where would I wear it, Maggie? I was askin’ | her. ‘On your head, ma,' she says, ‘when you be resting in your room in the afternoon’ ‘But there's nobody to see it, Maggie.' I says, ‘and what's the use of being dressed fit to kill in 8 bawdweer cap when there's nobody to be lookin’ at it? “And did you ever see the like of the little fairy handkerchiefs Nellie Grogan fetched in to me this morn- ing? Faith, and I thought to myselt St At e M Sabbertils il “It's a Good Girl You Are.” Nellie must be thinkin' I was in me second babyhood to be givin’ me such & wee bit of a handkerchlef. But I never let on to Nellie like I thought it was a trifie small, for she's that touchy I would never dared to say such a word. ~“And it's_a glove hapdkgrchbief, 1 had gotten so weak I could not stand, |and I gave up in despair. At last, my husband got me a bottle of Cardui, the woman’s tonic, and 1 com- menced taking it. From the very first dose, I could tell it was helping me. 1| can now walk two miles without its tiring me, and am doing all my work.” If you are all run down from womanly troubles, don’t give up in despair. Try : Cardui, the woman’stonic. It has helped more than a million women, in its 50 years of continuous success, and should surely help you, too. Your druggist has sold Cardui for years. He knows what Ask him, mend it. Begin taking Cardui today, it will do. Write to: Chattanooga Advisory Dept., Chatta Tenn., for cla Instructions on your case and 64-page book, Treatment tor Women," sent in plain wrapper. Medicine Co., Ladles® Homae 162 you'd say? Wen, wen, well; did you ever see the llke of that? To stick in me glove, you say. Pray tell mo what good a handkerchief would be ' to me if it be stickin' in my glove? Far better let little Sadio have it to play dolls with. was sayin' to me only this morning that it was to be her doll's birthday the morrow. Ah, but she's the cute young one. I'll just put the little fairy handkerchief in the pretty little box and hand it to the child for her doll when the morning will be coming, “And just look at the grand, big embroidered washrag Mrs. Riley, next door, was bringing in to me. Faith, m' darlin’, what with the fairy hand- kerchief and the giant’s wash rag it was the grand laugh I had over me birthday presents. “A guest towel, 1s it, m' darlin'? Well, what do you know about that? Sure and whoever would a thought it could be a towel? It's glad I am I never let on to Mrs. Riley that I was never knowing the difference but that she was giving me a washrag. She'd never got done givin' me the laugh for it. And so I'll just hand it to your mother, m’ darlin’, when sghe comes in to see me. “And look now at what your Uncle Tom gave me. A five-dollar bill, m’ darlin’, youngsters to the movin’ picture show and a bag of candy for each of them into the bargain. “Did you ever hear of anybody hav- ing such a grand birthday, m’ lamb? Sure and I think I'd best live to be one hundred and have a couple of birthdays every year. “Giving my things away, is it? And pray why shouldn't I be givin’ ‘em away? Isn't it myself as has the right to be a bit selfish on my ninetieth birthday? “Unselfish, you say, m’ darlin’? Sure and you've got a holt of the wrong word, m’ darlin’. Come, put your ear clost and listen. It's myself as do be gettin’ three times the fun I do be entitled to. There's the fun of getting them and the fun of keeping them a bit and the fun of giving them away. “But, remember, it's a secret, m’ darlin’. It's yerself I'll be trustin’ not to tell a soul what an old cheat your granny s, and her ninety years old and ought to know better."—Chicago Dally News. The Camphor, Quick! Margaret and Van were breakfast- ing together late one morning. Van was hungry and Margaret fractious. “Van, how can you eat 8o much?” demanded Margaret, irritably. “Oh, I'm a Van, you know,” re- turned he good-naturedly. “I can carry a good deal.” “Yes,” retorted Margaret, “you're 8 regular carry-van."—Indianapolis News RHEUMATISM MUST c You can talk all yon want sbout remarkable eures, but you simply caa’t have rheumatism after you use GE-RAR-DY RHEUMATIC REMEDY because it gets at the canse of rheumatism ~dissolves the uric acid in the blood—throws the poison out of the system. 50c¢ and $1 per boitle at druggists or write us direct, GE-RAR-DY LINIMENT, when uved with chis remedy hastens the cure. "lt‘o 5 The Phil P. Cresan Co.. Ltd.. New Orleans. 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