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Activities and Views of Progressive Womanhood der of the Saffragis N an article Mr Chapman Catt, commander-in. chief of the suffrage | rolstering army, In the December Human |n Life, Ada Patterson tells any facts whish cannot fail terest those who watch world movements. | A From president of the National Woman |found Buffrage association she has re tly been elevated to the post of commander-in-chief of the suffrage armies of the world. Her army, recrulted from odd corners as well a8 centers of the wor including its masculine alds and sympathizers lNons. Exactly how man absolute means of learning What Mrs. Catt swerablo argument for suftrage taken from the Declaration of Independ ence. Thomas Jefferson wrote the The argument Is: “Government de its just powers from the governed.” Translated into our easy ! back Iy pacity b would have confessed dolng of two have made it Al night or he would have his things AN excuse inea He called with the wife always in her the English hasband i gine horse of one to another trestment at into the tion and ready at an instant's moral alarm |a to rush forth to the part of |City the world and kill & ¢ This explains the British empire, tra, T may add, it explains | shortcomings of the United States, for he: here having once proviled for the wife in| A few that station of it has pleased of the her to call him, plans offense her mother the left ing M proper place, like the The story of her rough the hands of her father got country papers, and was read by of Mrs. Maether living at Clay on Carrie one fire en- elther would always In the pink of condi- woman sister 11l thought that the young woman mem- tioned in the newspaper accounts might be the imperial |the daughter of her sister, and went to see lored man per con- Into a Fine shapely to in- Dane and but Home. Pittsburg girl has the eyes of Miss Helen Frick, daughter of the st and she poor | favor in | questions established girl, aunt for a reunion of the Chi the identity | immediately daughter o Tribune s Care of & Prodigs Every while Daughter the world justics love aren't altogether lopsided and that the erring brother, properly repentant, hasn't & corner on the famjly 1 man, tor 1e of the has been placed beyond want i A ALy pons B come. Miss Anna O'Nell, most dancers in the *Pirat ballet, which of Pittsburg has years to and having served without dy about sband tore- of Penzance given by the rich girls the benefit of the poor companion Miss with the th off as ha American | still less the tabele Thus the fought meet a man house, time shoot , numbers, a8 to be not for . engaged ax pire T Frick at a salary of $400 a month often || Baddle and driving horses and her own | mesticated mald. She has just taken up her duties | wife would only set them in the coast home of the Fricks. A governor. We Miss O'Nell is of th could it but Pittsburg to 18 the wife tically mil Danghter, the Prodigal stage of the and human there is no of em onee in ala 4 been to in the ho and you utterly m it out husband abilitie appears on regards as an unan do- to show human woman whose colonial gove word south and came to side with he of a rich been dependent the chorus Finds G len as Baby. John Wri; b g dixt Ethel Bvan - L T LT o Pt ot b B 1 lttle girl and 1 formed. hare . 1n | bube of 10 months, was ki i mother and skept hic from home where e < contributien ot | g 1a was her sister (et : dance di consent of the sister,- who i« th ed Mrs, toueh- greeting that welc it Hunt and he : werds fn which it was phra apeech bunker. She prac- arw e 1: “she Qs am take her Dl th tl t has on th and wi fainous being 1908, the dollar the the sa'd, con was of com d ponles. She fs never going ways and who, she And of fastic ana | Maether of Helghts, rememie more her Chicago ed She and inely Adelbert soon after h Babcock of Brookrticld, had met his deughter, th baby" as she appearcd the last she Kvans, baby of womanhood time will answe could he deughters e saw hei wis carried away millionaires became graceful s Luclle R by steamship Tour- faith o outhern oilie mpse of her | when seing anewer will be ¢ meeting v fo1 mother John tou ) once she is never | weapon in hitond her the litie endear s Notebook. lavishes her child. the separation and was told by supply ing which the mother ‘of e B Louis XTI modes rub shoulders with the | quaint Moyenage and stately Renaissance, linked to the firly modern styles of the | eighties, quite cbmplacently, and with but little alteration from theiroriginal form. Nearly every belt must have its large buckle. This important part of the girdie | is sometimes four inches in width, Some | are highly polished, while others are made as a concession to the liking for antique | story czar tried it In rehearsal (tsburg each ther to $2.00 oven be ern women hers 1 James position leadin wo- —— Jaccards Book of (cHad Y rulnous to | se- where to Mr, man, Helghts, as the | man sald StLouis Mo. L etc., stc., Order By Mail Whatever your choloo of Jaccard Jewelry you may be sure that you are not paving one cent oyer the very lowest price for which such jewelry can be sold. You will be surprited how much far- ther your holiday money will go 1f yon consult our *Book of your friends are sure to be delighted with Jaccard Gits. YOUR MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED Send for this Beau- 3 - tiful DiamondRing of [ MERMOD, JACCARD & KING JEWELRY CO, Broadway, Cor. Locust, St. Louis, Mo. Please mail' your free *Book of | Gifts” to vithin measuremeni—you can get It " with & siriug—and wo will " ‘hargon The repatation of The House of Jaccard . Exit the Exaggerated Pompa.do'ur Here is the Coupon, Cut Qut, Sign and Maii itlgl!loday The Red Cross Christmas Stamp decided char- | tions of colffure are almost always a mis- take. of the NLY a woman of acter or & woman of pronounced indifference to personal ap- pearance Ignores the changing |indolent or careless to pay any attention 1 selves theater lovers, or perhaps they were modes in hair dressing. If l\m the change of coiffure modes there Is moved by philanthropic motives; but what- ever the cause, we have the result. The’sides aro flattened, the top Is flat- tened and any protuberance that asserts itself at the back where it doesn't inter- fere with one’s view of the stage. Messieurs the coiffure artists, we make you our hum- ble and grateful salutations! The first expression of the turban colf- fure idea, as it came to us from Paris in the early autumn showed the front hair fringed slightly curled or parted ol rolled very softly back from the forehead'wWwith- out padding under it. Long strands of hair, natural and false, were then swathed flatly around the head, covering it like a cap, the strands not being colled, but merely folded over flatly where this was necessary, and held by big shell pins. An attempt to achieve this flat, uncoiled cap effect—which must, by the way, ex- tend over the front hair almost to the forehead line—often results in an unkempt and slovenly appearance, but perfectly ar- ranged the coiffure has its charm, as have most of the varlations upon this same theme. False hair is almost always essen- tial, few women having the long, even, thick hair required for such \arrangement, and the colffures aro showing many new things adapted to the present mode. One may buy a beautifully arranged turban complete, & cap affalr which may be adjusted over one's own flatly massed hair, leaving but a little of the weare: tront hair showing.! This is perhaps the easlest way for the woman of scanty locks to achleve the modish colffure; and for- tunately these semi-wigs when well made | have an absolutely natural appearance. Or If one does not want to edminate one's own locks entirely there is the nnhuni pad which simply covers the middle back and crown of the head with soft, naturally wavy hair, while one's own hair, supple- mented perhaps with what in other days was called @ switch but 18 new known as a turban twist or turban 'coll, l& arranged in the prescribed smooth colls around the outer edge of the colffure. A wide braid very loosely plaited woman who is too indifferent, woman has discovered beyond |little to be said. We all know her. She possibility of mistake that a certain sim-|wears her hair in an old-fashioned way ple style of colffure suits her perfectly | not because it is becoming, but because and emphasizes her indlvidual charm, she [ghe doesn't want to be bothered with shows profound wisdom in holding to that |changing it, and she will not go to the Bay Ashiess Te colffure through all the changing fashlons. | trouble of making the best even of her old “I bought tea the other day at a Jap-| It lends her individuality and distine- | method. anese store,” said the young housekeeper, | tion, sets her apart from the crowd. But,| yy the course of recent years she has quoted by the New York Sun. *The)We repeat, the absolute fitness of this|,.,;aply adopted the pompadour, and the § [ This little sticker will be sold all over the United States dur- ing the coming holiday season, for tuberculosis prevention. Where you can buy the stamps: Hall Temeions Seasonable Advice, The Consumers' league of Chicago, which as an organization was the first to urge Assoclated Charities, 408 City Stewart Seed 16th, near Capitol Bee Bullding, News Stand. Ave. John Bath, Florist, Boyd Theater Thompson-Belden, 16th_and Howard Bee Office, 17th and Farnar Y. M, C. A, 17th'and Harney Beaton Drug Co., 16th and nam Y. 'W. ¢ A., 17th and Howard Crissey Pharmacy, 24th and Lake Ginters, Dundee Drug Store. Milton Darling, 18th and Farnam Brandels Store, 16th and Dougla 18| Donahue, Fiorist, Farnam, 16 and 17. | Bennett Co., 16th and Harney Mrs, Finley, New York Life Bldg, 812.| Brown's Jewelry Store, 16th Heines Drug Store, Farnam near 16th. | nam Kilpatrick's Store, 15th and Douglas, | Willlams & Smith Store, packages two “Not to be opened weeks until ahedd, Christ- to actual needs. Give chiefly near Iar- having elther usaful- 14th and 16th Dodge. Farnam Lillputian Bazaar, 1616 Farnam Sherman & McConnell, 18th_and Matthews Book Store near Howell Loyal Hotel Milton Rogers, 14th and Farnam snrader Drug Co. 16th and Chicago. Myers-Dillon Drug Co., 16th and Farnam | Shrader, 15th and Douglas, ren Cent Store, M, Dooley, 16th near | Megeathi, 15th and Farnam. 8, Biariie : Pray, 16ih. near Howard Owl Drug C: Sommer Bros., Grocery ot g i Wilke & &Mitehell, Doug Drug Btore roble | Kohn. . 16th and Howard 18th and Farnam Why She Turned Pale. 1414 N. 26th St., South | Two ladies, who had known each other in years gone by, met on the street. Both of them were married to musicians. The of $400,000, The first time stamps we Denver is the first woman to be elected her election to the board Mrs. Greenhut | day recently. Her grandfather, John Al-| Miss Gina Krog, who visited the United | This has been emphatically demonstrated recently. Norway for deputy in the parliamentary | of today it is, “The government Is \ Yocently been elacted to the Board of s 99 banke - @ive a New rair will answer, is #0 pretty. h had a nurse. his mother believing that N 5 to develop and grow. Relleve the strain on in any assembluge, and the i who had been fpad grown W young The | About two years or o ago Miss Babeock |ers fn her behalf and not a cent was AMPLES OR SALDSMAN SENT TO oadabid’ 1o, | of the daughters of milllonalres to try for [ that mother while ago she eloped with Prince Alex- | @ fine cook, an enthusiastic gardener and | [27W0US only by (hé uuexpected return| When the Ethel was 17- | came to her father.—Cleveland Belts are wide, and this, of course, is | i Pittsburg that she had the place of honor | thel was born the mother left him, going | have remarked upon the absurd —— vl gainst neatness can be hidden out picturesquely above the others in the was her mother, and soveral|CNild: but without result. She finally carried into a world age, intelli- evidence In last season, although these T where they now live. season instedd of the uccomplished ma- To look at the diminutive leader—for a | horses and provide you with a maid If you G : ing a trock of black charmeusc, with o most valuable buying guide 2. o e g vity 1 tact The experience o Her briet blography 1s a counterpart of| yeg. eked out an_existence the best way he | Suavity and ftac experience . of [ 5. The plaited frills in various widths jare Dot only enable you to select Appro- e P 4 | stitched lawn and mull Russia, a little more than nii Bastern |even in these days of high priced employes' jured her hip %0 that she has been a | hematitched, is ever printed —fllled from cover to Miller and Mrs, James Laldlaw of New | sometimes introduced in the muff, the 8% b N 4 v % 4 L y 11%, showing beautiful ill And so on Christmas day five years ago|one of the rich old Knickerbocker familles | summit of a high bluff. The cow became | 7 are foolish. God Almighty made' em to |upon tiger skin as the latest lining for #16 a week, earned s a draper of shirt|a competent person as the one Who Was|the death of the cow and beat his daughter valence of the coat with the long lapel. One\ from Boswell's Johnson is quite at 183 Madison streot. ‘She stayed there, |some of the most important and confl- |with the avowed purpose of lynching the left side of a band of Irlsh crochet. The Miss Mabel Boardman hopes thi sale gt R deeply read In Engllsh Ilterature. Since |for twenty years has been the opening of wants to learn the healing art, not for|Various seasons; so I know the value of an In doing this Miss Lemlich will have to|Jéct thoroughly. Sometimes she has held | already possesses (sho speaks and writes |Phere and duties which secure her such a | eted M. D. and can go about the mission to meet an emergency frequently and right- | the Store. I expected him: to return with t Is easiest to pin them. Or, perhaps, N. Y, having been incased in a “hook up | Votched it burn. Then he applied the | women can wear false hair. alone In her hcme and helpless in the | MUCh: s A RieAY A0A SR N r fashion’ v and went Into the street looking for help, | W& before buying.’ e S end offer as proof for the other part of the | “*Nisters before giving an order.” startled h ouseholder presented himself. His |doing Its Christmas shopping early, con- man had found himself hocked up M- ghe |the day to children. and sold under conditions fair and whol 4 y mental and useful big shell pins with | side breadth which ts so much more be S This lostitution is the only one arocery, | s01a to' make money for a charitable cau was during the war, when a bazar was held for that purpose. to the board of directors of the Interna- tional Jewish Home foi l'nnn\xn!lil'»l'r‘ The institution has been open ten years| was chosen third vice president | Mrs. Ann Catharine Minich, who makes | her home with her son, Dr. D. B. Minich, | | ills caused by im, bright, publiehed the first paper and first dron's propes almanac issued in Lancaster county, Mrs shoos than you would ever imagine, and pich 15 very active for her age and | such ills are not onl found in corns, y enlarged joints, etc., but often the eatire States in the summer on her way to the | meeting of the International Council of | Women, has b honored at home by 1 your child Is fratful— (rritable, give its fest at least some consideration by trylng just onoe a pair of tot, now pending. 1t was more throush | e S Mk ETOE] A Iof o, pending 16 was me ot any | "WOLFE'S-COLUMBUS" SHOES otner person that women were given the Just that governs one-half its pe ! t their se Women ”u\wh ll’ suff fl':llv t y ;1 - ! ucation in Columbus, O, is an_ attor- 4 A ragls o describe e ney in the office with her husband. they having worked together for fifteen ye: could sing So spoke » . p You will note the Improvement immediately, be- D o i S RSSLY A ANE Misn ‘g3 Nel) before N. ¥, women should ralse thelr own children cause thess shoes are buflt on nature's lines. ‘She has such good manners Piltsburg enthu ber fatEut: Meth when she arrived on When possible she has him at tie office ‘They insure all five toes abundant room, Give Ask anyone of any “suffrag Ggehed) with her, and when at court he stays with the nerves and promote a correot walk and o t engagell leading woman f The Pi Ing, at | marrie Wright Hunt, the “turpen- |spent on the campaiwn, She keeps mno| o-;rl e. Besldes their healthful qualities m., ;. 80 well gowned rates of Penzance,” eloped in the course vecognized her daughter In spite of | tne King.” Ha was an old, old man; she o |Servant and does not board . t appearance. “Fivetoe” Bhoes et ““"f""“’“ convictions of rehearsuls with Paul Griffey of Denver, long of vears, und began to|YOUNg girl. He hud as many millions as | g R rritatingly aggressive. Her DEALERS ON REQUEST. The Wolfe Bros. Shoe Co. g P i | leading part The ot subse- | ander Tcherdiadieff, cousin of the ot | COLUMBUS, 010, clted by Tan "mm" l“"{”‘“‘ FASHES "" She modestly and | quent reunion (he mother and [Wussia, and when she awoke from her in- e astic friend, is: “She § ¥ hy Aisaope a8 5 AT WO, b el caaTa ek Vi, W girls by Netorm. | daughter the facts In | fatuation he had disuppeared, and $50,000 cultivator of flowers, a tasteful milliner|Of Mis. Griffey, who sid she would hiofydaid "".'I: o “‘“, i A i obnd and dressmaker, and a most loyal filend, | Preak her engugement L4 28 ohr :‘,“:“ b b X g ,h‘“ Room for 1 possessing equally the housewitely gitt | 1P popular was the penniless south- | band proved-to overbearing and dif- joyful news to women who have strug- h back to the residence of her parents. held in American society by you |'®led for smartness with narrow bands Girl Leader to be # Doctor. next the woman, and It was un- | P00 "_f",h“ ”'f s '"H"“d oy e ik ‘f‘“““ h“‘ k : Arpaa at thr waists. Under five inches of { » Jadies’ shirt waist makers of New York |times to take the part of the prima donna|No* cradlel The heart-broken mMmother | indulgence of children ou 5 Clearness of coloring is one of the fan- @ - ”» |cies In the world of dress. Pure blue, Book of Glfts ¥ . | cur divorce fro and we ence and experlence should ¢ prece- | malachite green, steel gray and umecthyst movement. This Is Miss Clara Lemlich, | weeks ago she came to Pittsburg and en- n“‘”';:m“ Ny :’l‘,:"‘ s s ol E e “"‘( e, | have supers | e Bl | 5 3 19 years old, whose enthuslasm was as the | gaged Miss O'Nell under a long engage- 2 u ) 2 sl o oy g B f B Al it T el § CTEUEC- | Maodher, wiho is & wealthy railrosd man.| The reveraal of values, o s (o make the | S Wt ko aos | IDEfORE Buying xcept in millinery. - . : \ S hiEs f Al In the tea room of a fashionable hotel, e a Two years ago Evans drifted into Mount | tron, is as hough sociely. should have ::Ik:r:'nlx:’ll;ul:‘)' ‘4‘;\:‘:;:('l:::1: shI" "vmlmll\ 3““‘ be my companion and teach me to|(Carmel, 11l, from Tennesseo. He brought | foresworn its functions. .This would be h — 2 ot “suspect ~/the | daries -and” slitis lke’: yourself,” ' sal o g o true even were the manners of the debu- | COBt Of black velvet, and a big hat of black dynamic force that fs contained in her |jight haired AR 5 with him the_ daughter he had kidnaped n were the manners of the debu- |y gyo"orouna which swept & circle of blue enable you to do your . o ] fox, caught with @ stunning ornament of buying this year without tiring yourself all out, or beln, o 3 r v Was ngton, where society is falrly rep- Pundreds, yes, ‘tho Falodm ¢ ] could, while Ethel, the daughter, was the 3 tadts ofithe | \.,'A ettt Ml household drudge. He was cruel to her, | Tesentative, goes to show that much is | having an enormous sale for jabot pur-| priate gifts, but secure the greatest ants ¢ lower east side, relates the| , Housekeepers Fine Salary. o, and one day he. icked her|still to be desired in these respects in |poses. They are offered in batiste, in| value for your money as well. It 18 New York World. She was born in Kam- | ” 6 ; | fine net, in” silk mousseline and in hem- the most handsomely fllustrated it & ing, If fine and carefully ey Y Ak nineteen years {and women's success in business, is a thing | cripple ever since and has been forced to A Suffrage Calendar. | exceedingly smart without the lace trim- Ny ::? glgghwenemou- that are b B va'me to the United States, | to make many women pause—at least, to | walk with the aid of & crutch. A suffrage calendar has been prepared | ming. o0 oan's altord to buy your holiday gifts ind, after being here a few years, sent for | consider, says the Brooklyn Bagle. Such| One day last summer Ethel was sent out Pt o |18test idea In these being of rich Per- York, with appropriate quotationse for 'han 20,000 gifts of jewelry: Diamonds D er g . o | slan antique cachemire, the colori: - & Lo e e 'rol::n l“m“c:: her mother and father and |to an experienced housekeeper, to take | entangled in the rope with which | each day. From George Elfot is quoted: | gombling qtoun de Juoy. In Ter. fucther oy Ko CI“"'C"'WI o 2k brothers came to New York. |charge of its mansion. In telling &bout |tethered and fell over the biuff, breaking | mon Lemlich, the father, {s in the [what seems to be so generous a salary for | jts neck | | s neck. inateh ‘(N6 mens | coats, or. indeed, to form the coat itself, | From Frances Willaid: “The honorabie | 1t} toaue ;"m"f"“"t ! ;vu-]n, is & most welcome addition to the |tendered the position was invaluable In|into unconsclousness with her own crutch, | Bentlemen think we want the. earth. No; long frilly jabot is at the height of l_;:‘l y Txlchequer. such a place. As the woman who related | The beating, however, proved to be the end he girl had been here only a fow days |the advantages of trained help employment | or her martyrdom, for the nelghbors heard Some of thewe jfabots are made —with 4 appropriate: “Though we cannot out- | stocks, and are of the finest of batiste and et Atan W e R SRR 19 RS trimmed_with Irlsh lace. Others have no n:t:.:whn: v;orlunl dally, for five months, dentlal positions with the rich, she re- |fa(her. —— at the end of which period she could speak | Quested that her name be not used for pub- ; S frill is usually trimmed with lace at the English well and write it falrly. Today |lcation. 4 e AacauadsLRC LEie SitL, Was swll tared n dge, and some times an inset band of the for by nelghbors, golng from the residence | tne next fow woeks the Irish lace. SR then she has been a student nightly at Jo- |blg homes for the reception of the rich #eph’s preparatory school, fitting herself |from their sofourns in Europe, in arrang- for the ambition of her life, ing for big balls, In superintending some #ain, but to be of use to her people, to (#5000 a year housekeeper. Many times a relieve wome of the suffering she sees|Woman In such a positian has, withip the duily about her In the neighborhood of her |MeMOry of & few years, béen mistress of a make stlll greater sacrifices than she has|Such a position in the home of a .oclal | hitherto. But this little Russian girl does |1e2der until death or some other misfortune not fiinch. The courage that has inspired | N34S made vacant the place. At any rate, | Latin, German, English, Russtan and Poi- | Position.” fsh) still stands by her, and her friends are convinced that it will remain with her #he has determined shall be hees. S S | proprietor saw that I had doubts about |colffure must be beyond contention. Many | chances are that her version of the pom- The Resourcetul Sex. the quality of tea that had been recom- padour Is an exaggerated and mussy one, fully demands the admiration of the less|® ¢UP of steaming drink, but he brought she brushes stringy hair back carelessly resourceful and less courageous sex, relates |® SMall ash tray and a match instead. and twists it In an ugly coll at an un- the Chicago Tribune. We hasten to give| H® threw a pinch of tea Into the tray, becoming angle and then assumes & su- the back” gown, dismissed her mald with | “3Me test to another brand of tea that had But the average woman tries to follow permission to spend the night at the bed- | S/aimed my half hearted alleglance. The Seiture imolle. 8L s grest g lons disiame side of a sick relative. When midnight |{\'*t Sample of tea showed only a small sad with greater or clutches of those hooks—but not hopeless, ‘Which shows,' he said, ‘that the first | A LB ::rv;“.'":::",:: With & resourcefulness which we offer | (€% 18 best. That s an Infallible test, G 7 Molapea Mg am o @8 proof for part of the prefatory state.| The better the tea the fewer the ashes. Sl i . and last year's false Vlatbush was asleep and darkened excopt| "1 100K the ashless tea, ‘of course. Since | hair is langulshing for one faint light on the second floor uf [tNe" I have wondered what the average & residence newly eccupled by a stranger | A™eTICAN grocer would say if customers prefatory statement she made straightway for that house, at the door of which, in answer to her imperative summons on the wite w The * i mnreho‘d’b‘tl hl:(-d. The “hooked up lady" |tinues to Impress that necessity in various | rure .\l m, ascended to the bedroom striking ways. In a circular Just issued It presently descended unhooked makes the following excellent suggestions: Send | markea mas.’ ! sometimes substituted for the cofl but it 4. Choose presents must be spread out and be soft and thick ness or beauty em D some o the worker. | square or rounded Heads. Occasionally Berg PBaney ms'l‘:flv;l‘v.\v«:nl;fl that Christmas is of |one wees this coronet brald pushed very SANA 1 | hot an occasion for display. | tar forward and the front hair drawn back M | coming than side flatness to many women ‘U | ip the central west with separate One sees too the once popular colffure | 4 \ gt - gpteread Ll Rt ieadll o (LT with two wide loose braids orossing ! | Put a Red Cross stamp on amvle grounds, yet entirely dis- || carriage in which were three fine bables— | stamps will reach something like the sum | Mrs. J. B, Greenhut of New York and and has fts sanitarium in Colorado. After | at Columbla, Pa., celebrated h 9lst birth- possesses all her facultles system is effected. veal und gold nw nominated bv the radical party of | by “Guaranteed Good Wear or We drs, Joseph Bachman, the woman who mander chief, the writer They have onme child, and he hos Th5aE 11 oy ok 0t RN the bones and muscles of the foot a ghance s B ol e e ¥ When they met the Yexrli IR S ESI0 LN her mother. She had no organized work- he _most economical, iss O'Ne mportuned by sever: . here were years betweel em Leaves from F $he tray o ‘equal . shtthade b Miss O'Nell importuned by several | bestow \ts | there wer rs between them. A little and a logloal thinker, 4 kood housekeeper, | e Was prevented from \muking herselt | thelr story could not in jewelry was not to be found. Then she . and barbaric designs. &nd 'the ganiin, of' lesderatitn girl with ' the rich young of | ficult o get along with, it4w sald. When| “Many ides Mr. Henry shirred or folded silk a multitude of sins has developed one figure, which stands | Mk rick was much impressed with Miss searched for years for her husband and | be confined to the home circle, und not be | have superseded the drab tones so much in o o Chicage debutante the point of interes octal | the machinery of the strike in motion. DEmiil. Bite o SR THodtl SEO. ofn|| Cr i oy mOYOe (I, GRIORRY P Bl P f Cllri l the other day, was seen a young girl wear- or s as iy years before from her mother. Evans|tante all that they should be in deferdnce, 3 worth $70,000,000 and Miss O'Neil silver rald ORTAIBOL aliver i and Mpstel a8 anxious, or disappointed—that wil enets, in the ‘state of Podulak, A salary of $8,000 u year for elght years, | trom the porch of their cottage and in- | the general education of American girls.” | The lingerle plait- and most complete “Book of Gifts” by Mrs. Clarence Mackay, Mrs, Alice Duer | As an extreme fancy a note of color is before consulting the big Jaccard Book of Gitt for the rest of her family salar, as offered V Wi y L4 lary was offered a few weeks ago by |to watch the cow/while it grazed near the it was | “However, 1 am not denying that women | quest for novelty the Parisienne has hit crockery business for himseif, but Clara's |a woman, the informant declared that such | myans became enraged when he heard of Ve it N ct th o T % aat HAIB LA Eh fayor just now on account of the pre: when she jolned the Educa - Y 1 Educational league, [In weaithy families is employed herself in |ge the occurrences and posses were formed stock. The wide frill ‘s a.acned at the Chat About Women. ®he has an excellent vocabulary and is| To a reporter she said: “My own work ol And this ambition is to be a doctor. She|of the big town and Newport houses at home at 279 East Third street, similar home herself. She knows her sub- her in obtaining the liberal education she|She hes spent several years in the atmos- | until and after she has obtained the cov- The manner in which a woman will arise | Mended, so he darted back to the rear ot with sausagelike puffs pinned on wherever an lllustration. A woman In Flatbush, | touched it with a lighted match ana periar (RS WIGIME. 1% \MRG wahtR hoy. came to Flatbush she diecovered herselt | f'ake of ash the second three times as ey, Soonmmss A=A\ has been sweepin ment she threw a cloak over her shouldsrs |1 InVite all my customers to test tea that gty come to town. With a courage which we | *10Uld apply & lighted match to their tea bell, the new an 'd now astonished and |upon the public the humane necessity of Something seems to to)l us that if a 1. Buy early in the season and early in 3. Ministe 5. Demand articies which have been made and Cought here and there by the orna- .&A%/ over it at the sides, giving a little of tr illlc nape of the neck and brought around tinct and rendering It possible to || triplets, ail girls. The dy g 1t D t Pl & he other lady had been | . o W\ ve o DRESSING THE HAIR |to encircle the head, but this Is a mode classify cases. The one building | In the bonds of matrimony a couple of best suited to the girlish head. being fitted for and devoted to the weeks. | Bunches of soft curls, replacing the treatment of noncontagious and “What beautiful children' much abused puffs, are introduced in some | nonmental diseas no others be- newly married one with of the smart colffures not on the ex- ing sdmitted. The other, Rest || '“Y°&." replied the proud mother, “lat me |not always a safe guide tremely flat turban order, but even . Cottay belng designed for ang || !¢!! you the funniest coincidence. At our| Another point to be " the front and side h‘vkr'ln drawn b:i devoted to the exclusive treatment | W°d4Ing supper the boys who played with |simplicity to which we have already |at the hairdresser's. softly and comparatively close to the of select mental cases, requiring ||/™Y husband in (he orchesira serenaded |ferred. A colffure that s to endure year| For one blessing women may give thanks. | head. S JReEE Ao for a time watchful care ana s him and they played ‘Three Little Maids' | after year must have nothing of the bizarre | The exaggerated pompadour and the in-| Innumerable fillet an e r'am = clal ‘Dursing. from ‘The Mikado.' Isn't that queer?' or freakish, must be natural and must|numerable boldly false puffs which have|ments are offered to accompany the :a: At this the newly married one turned |either be a testimonial to beautiful natural | distorted the feminine head in recent sea-|coiffures. Straads of pearls or other | pale. | hair or a concession to a type of face and | fons and have been ralsed to the nth stones plaited or twined in with the tur- | “Merey!" she gasped. “At our wedding |figure. | degree of awfulness by the type of sirl or |ban braid or twist are much liked and | extremes are likely to |supper Tom's triends serenaded: him, also,| This individuality of coiffure demands|woman prone to single bands of gold or silver gauze em-| |and they rendered ‘The Sextet’ from ‘Lu.|much of & modish woman, for It not only | disappear from the horizon. |cla. "—Ladies' Home Journal. | must be perfectly suited to the Maybe we shall have something worse. | 3 but to the hats worn with it, and there|A general survey of the efforts toward A Paradise for H, comes In the difficult problem of adapting | turban colffures s displayed at any our- 1yt taste is know what personal exclaimed the | women really do not interest. | coming, and one's own emphasized is the [In the bureau drawer or being made over Engraved Stationery Wedding Invitat, lllc‘:ncune'mutl n current docial usuage engraved er and punctually delivered when {broldered in metals are also very popular, | while jewelled and metallic effects are shown in countless styles | Handsome barettes extending around 3 woman England is the happy huntin busbands, the land where on modera comes the men hav hardly any cloth in the Boekman cendancy in the English home. Groomed, well-fod, exercised, never thwarted, and fn- valots and the women according to & writer | For the great capacity | So on the whole it is a safer and simpler to rule, to conquer and to colonize can, he thinks, be traced directly to the male as- ground of | changing millinery modes# to an unchang- ing coiffure, unerring taste tomer. a problem which calls for in elther milliner or cus- proposition to make some concession to the prevatling mode «in coiffure, though ,|it is by no means necessary to subscribe to all the vagaries, and Indeed gxesgera- rent matinee indicates that we shall; but at least it will be a change, and incl- dentally it should be easier for the mati- neegoer in the seat bebind to see around the new colffure than it was to dodge the buge padded circumference of the old ont For the new colffure is flattened at the sides. Perhaps the lnspired artists who got together and invented it are them- the\ back of the head from ear to ear are worh with Greclan colffures projecting in the back, often to an exaggerated degree but always softly and fluffly. Where the pompadour is too becoming to be abandoned, it must at least be modi- fied to a very unaggressive line and apy- thing suggesting & bard firm under sup- port is emphatically to be avolded. Embossed Monogram Stationery and other work executed at prices lower than usually prevail elsewhere. A. 1. ROOT, INCORPORATED 12101212 Howard St. Phene D. 1604