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b I Irist Allen has rather liant 1o glance. were placed in the delicate face of James Brown ¥ expressing a g emotion. Yvette Guilbert, Fougere and Anna Held have dark eyes, that flirt with an audlence #o that every man in it thinks e s the special target of the look. Nordica has the large, wide-open eyes of the fdeal Brunnhilde. Sembrich's > eyes are bright and dark; Loulse Ho- mers soft and brown. Iritzi Scheff's eyes are full of roguish expression, the eyes of the coquette who with a glance Eyebrows are not necessatily & part Jemie pae enoact of the eye miniature, but eyelids and lashes are. Half-closed lids are sig- yebrows, which n character that a por there, and rian, called ralnbow of when the strung strife should be mod- k and taper to a point in Herder, the o penc bow of chi merriment. r brown, and though expressive. Kthel g eyes are her chief be or ge and blue. abeth Woodson though she says they T oPur® she was o baby: Mary Y the fashionable t never ls, o8 would be The eye r and pearly, gl devotee of t “Pink eyes’ Dhs Gertrude Atherton’s g0 with gold Bonner's eyes are da ton's. E: with Igts of life In their Crosby’s a be 3 18 tat 2 woman’s r or husband would like to preserve something of Jia darling that is distinctive of her. What could be st is said to possess the smallest es of any actress, on the modern are so full of life t they place in the gray. The inteflectual a cold blue, but It Ella Sexton has brown Craft Deering's eyes are A woman with expre can command a great deal of admiration it she is not beautiful otherwise. etimes women with small eyes e more expression in them than e large-eyed woman has. The sparkle of humor, the t the warmth of passion—often thege are lacking in a large eye that, merely from color and shape, would be called upposed to be Iways so. Mabel y were not remarkabie for size, but ould ever forget Cissy's wink? A miniature of that wink, with or without a jeweled frame, would be priceless. No voman has eyes quite 50 exqui: cerulean blue as those of L Russell. Nobody could mistake the twinkling orbs of May Irwin for those of another blonde. That is why the eye m| ture promises to be a fad that wil cdie s0 quickly a other socie re is something in the possession of one of these pictures—the eye of a wi sweetheart or friend, husband or 1oy or. When it reaches our city, the I of beautiful eyes, there is no er that it will not be popular. S perfect. Ore of the first things given the art student to draw is .the eye, and it is extraordinary how few of them at once manage to sketch a per- fect orb. It is next to impossible to give ex- pression to a sculptured eye. , But the of painted portraits always have They seem to look at us s pleasantly, sometimes cold- times reproachfully, but they some form of emotion. uze portraits al- en type. Mel r's details of lash and brow. ts become the to.find ways show the It rule th fitting N ) to place their perfect or to have them pho- tographed “for future reference.’ The most beautiful eyes In socety, in the writer's opinion, are those of Mrs. James Folls—Mary Belle Gwin that was—so liquid in their dark brown 7 /i e n hile Which wears for us the swestest smile : =0, W. Hoimes. WHEN IT IS TOO LATE e~ DEATHBED repentance may his or her own memory of the swec perhaps count in another and y better world, but it certainly X does no good for the living. It people have been brutally unkind, niggardly 50-01d in word and deed, if no consideration of those who are near By Kate Thysom Marr o that is the loving trib ute of the living to the beloved it were rank hypocrisy c weep for th lives by s o dea: » 1 little systematic pursuit of any pastime or - occupation. Retrospecticn ~and_intro- tion have i nce , and unknown crimes become after spending a t period behind prison doors. Ing that a few most revolting ¥ it of actual hate where only love should have flouri: hed ree pinned ov, justice epentance. bing 2 Had L v sued the which re ance, b fear trifling daught In a perse o 48 it is unreasonable. pronounced rep seem that the Lord sh anxious to welcome such his realm of the p d of encourage do more rood ns on a deathbed - because r to face the Almighty in t ¢ that you have not want "the earthly veness to the divine condemnation, If the ® injured one on earth forgives the great T ali-sceing Judge may be equally merci- sized by a cash equi 3 A deathbed repentance is nothing more than . a hysterical outburst caused by the fear of death.. Many you knowl- peopleawould ney kind and a single thought of ck ng a mode of lite had they not been caug! the act and repentance has not to them as a voluntary offering good, but has rather been the have had death had scared them beyond con- trol, through unfurling its grim, dark shadows; they would never have thought 'of the hereafter as long ns heaith and i enabled them to enjoy the fun and folly of a riotous living. In localities where negro pop- ulation adds its quota of crime there is nothing that ever prayed and sang and shouted to the Lord like old-fashioned coon under the e n e i el e ||k|,nl ‘h; stilled lies £ provemes on former environme: parenta the objes it is the hysterics Of fear after being o ask if they of the gallows. “De good Lo'd am takes on a plous streak n crazed mah frien’!” shouts your ebon-hued WIth fear of the consequence of a If he expected the Almighty to act as ply s . The man who, dyi: drum major and meet him with a lying helpless and incapable of voli- brass band and drum corps attach- tion, sees only the al phan ment even on this side of the river magoria of his past o Men a heart “can be of ' The flowers that make such nificent display will not warm 10, still heart that found no flow. rs, only weeds and thorns on the busy, living wayside. The lights that burn’ over the dead will not brighten gloomy path trod by Ighted with despair, The ch your heart so hun. fort of a son or daughter, who refuses &ld in the greatest hour of need, whose hearts for years are steeled to every cry or throb of humanity, eannot ex- pect to wipe out the memory of y: of injustice by simply expressing gret when death forces the udn n from all too stubborn lips. Children may be and often are un- grateful, but parents are just as often cruelly unjust, and it she parent robs gers will not warm (hat same when your funeral procession w its saddened way. begins to. 1 erates or ace and women convicted of the tuates individual acts or the former