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TIE baby hat will be all the “go” this summer, There 1s absolutely nothing distinctive character, elther. T “superior looking about it. It 1s a simply, childish end childishly simpie — From early morn to dewy eve the summer girl will wear her bebe and lingerle Y Ittle hat. hats. One quaint conceft shows them fashioned from the sheer and silky ma- We wonder what irl it was who firat borrowed the headgear of her little|terials—the organd mulls, tarletans and such, both in the plain and the toddling sister of “half-past four" or “going on seven?" Finding {t 80 em-| printed fabrics, these to match her quaint and fluffy gowns of the same materials, | of tho design. fnently becoming, no need to marvel that she lost no tine whatsoever in having And the way in which the clever milliners are getting up these hats, so simple There are several cunning devices ani yet In harmony with the design. But the it reproduced for herself. and becoming! Sometimes the entire crown Is of flowers, daisies, popples, crushed | wants to look her best possible—and who among us does not, pray ?7—will not hes!- But all the girls, from sweet sixteen upward—and downward, too—will carry | roses—almost any flower that blooms {s used, while the brim {s of rows upon rows| tate to make uso of. ‘this style hat to perfection. Fashioned as {t usually fs, on a stlken wire frame, it| of lace, of plisse chiffon or ribbon. ‘There 4s an old axiom to the effect that pink above the face ts very trying. ean be bent to sult the contour of any face, and that without losing a whit of tts) Others, again, have the crown Just one huge puff, cleverly tacked at Intervals, | and so it {s, when massed as a solid color without relief. But the fluffy whit: 1 Mag VA the upper brim overlaid with flowers or petals, while the under brim is made to{ bebe hat will prove unusually becoming to either blonde or brunette and even te represent a facing of some other material, which, while {t offers a contrast, {s| the girl who 1s betwixt and between, she whom the French euphontously term flufty ruffles, fall ig over the brim and! chataigne, if a pink lining be used in the white hat. ant) 2 draped in the flowing folds, while the edge {s covered thick with the ruched frills, 4 conceits which the girl who alwW@yS) these having the edge in wavy lines with the ruched ribbon applied lavishly. softening the contour of the face, are never omitted. They are the essential part} = The parasol 1s built in pagoda shape in just the same fashion, the upper part , And the white parasol, too, can be made a means of grace and beauty in the same fashion; but where a rose-colored or pink parasol is deemed expedient, make ‘| {t @ point to see that the silk fs not of extra heavy texture, nd I po Not LIKE THis DID YER Evert HAT A LOVELY NAVE ASLOWER THinsT T'vE gor! TIME Im YER \: ) THIS 1 B Ray G Poor Bai % sA RADE u eS Tne Ipeall I NEVER KHEW A YALE Bey INALL my Cire tlt the Week’s hbife in the Metropolis. WHY PAY RENTS SOME DAY IT MAY BE possiace TO KEEP ON bs a> MOVING IN unaccont ne *P. The Visit of Yale’s Sociologists. By Cartoonist Flinn, “A THANKLESS TASK, | A KNOCKOUT, oes © “EHok out foh de man dat axes yoh| Belle—What's the matter, Algy? aoe FOR advice.” sald Uncle Eben, “H| Algy—A thought Just struck me, 60 won’ give you no credit if things go) I’m putting !t down to remember it. 2 > fight, but he's mighty U’ble to hold you| Belle—It must have hit you hard, for peconaibie it dey go Srrone:le=yawhinn: | tse knoekse you quite silly.—Half-Holl- The Police Parade— with the Lid ON. a a o a fant to go ¢o a Christian Sc Me ej dence, but I know you are not doing/did when anything annoyed him, for| ‘fam only a wenk and foolish woman UZ meeting. Of course you won't) what is right he was of a proud and independeni | whom you can {mpose upon and bully,| “Not at the expense of my self-re-| 1 , want to go. You are not inter- ever mind me, Never mind that] spirit, we used to send brother Willle | but you eannot silence my mother, nor| spect, Mr. Nagg! [will w my old ited in anything that interests me, Mr.) your conduct is breaking a loving heart, | from the room. you cannot awe my Uttle brother Willie, rags and took Ike a beggar woman 7 {Mv Nagy. But you have a duty to he was #0 fond of papa hi | even if he is but a boy of twenty-six than do that. hy well, never mind! T want to bo| society, In (ils house ty a mera lad. Hy Cleny would not think of being econ- w-Tauch daidwant? ted when I die, but I know it)is only my baby brother, itis true; only y “1 don't find any fault, Mother was yomleal and saving ke Tam; you will never mind, If you are going to ‘be done. a boy of twenty-six and outgrowing his | here last night, You knew she was/not even chat with me on any pleasant | haggle and question, I am wo proud i is ever done to please me. I] strength. But what will tho effect be |coming to borrow some money and you| topic of the home. to beg or beseech you jon his charactor when he knows of your | deliberately stayed away, I knew why,] "I have five dollars saved toward a} ‘i can have 8 if T will give you $2 rfecming In at all hours 1t 18 because my mamma won't cringe to} new dress—which I need, goodness | out of it for lunch money till Saturda ; “His ts an Impressionable nature: he | you, No matter what you do,for her| knows—because If I do not save and| “Two dollars for your ch? Not Were you last night? Why) !s innocent of the world and its wicked | she ts still calmly majestic, and doca| pinch and scrape I would not. get a rag | with my money, Mr. Nagg! You come home? What kept you! ways; and yet, such 1s the influence of | not hesitate to criticise you and yout] to cover my back! “Way don you go to the food show gt your exaniple, that he Is following Mt. | ways. Sho means it for your own good.| “Yet you go downtown every day to|at the big department store? You can ton you, Mr. Nagg.| "To-day I detected him teaching the | You would prefer some one who would | business, and I never know how much | walk around and eample things and pre- d a double life you| parrot to swear! ask favors of you with fawning words, | money you epend, to buy, and b; t= : ‘ “Ah, why should he be punished? It Loaheeaienl 0 and Weare not doing}is not bjs fault. It fs his environment. ow what ypu; “Why, when poor dear papa was alive f-j and started to swear, which he Nagg, but what do you do fo: t do for her. She will tell you what she| more. thinks et you “t can have whatever I want, you Mrs. Nageg and Mr. — in Their Daily Nagg-fest. # « By Roy L. McCardell.) itis sont suit tty «| NET Siig Rmetrmme kind, you sa “My mother will not be under any| ‘Yet you know every cert you give] ting a spoonful of nearfood here and a| others through the umpire. It is not I 7 y that th ehould be ai obligations to you, no matter what you| me, and I would aot dare ask you for! spare) of pipcet oat there, and a acyl a Terie unt the fevening paper)-Send her now,.—Stray ‘Tommy—An old fool—Pittabung: flee | He | The Foolish Habit of May Moving, , By Cartoonist Long.~ UNFORTUNATE JONES. MODERN REQUEST. Clerk—Pleaxe, sir, can I have a week’: | ‘Tis little that I ask of fate— By Cartoonist Powers. | vacation? _ Alife exempt from harm, bs Employer—What's wrong with you Axhorse, d dog, a pleasant mate, now? And a little radium farmt ween with Influenza and ten days wit THE TEST. A sprained ankle, I declare there's al- ways something going wrong with you, Jones.—Stray Stories. {The members of @ baseball team v Have nothing to deplore; Thelr friends can all the seagon through —— y Be counted by the scor ‘OL course you wouldn't, You would EASY TO LEARN. —New Orleans ‘Time ner waste your money and let me| She—The Russlan tongue is awful, ee en get a good lunch for nothing, and t only "You ¥ about two hours, dn't do anything of the fen’t it? ———__— He—Yes, but what a language for CONTRADICTORY. ; GAMBLING BY MAIL. college yells!—Philadelphia = Evening Neer Meru Fy contradictovg, | ind of a + is 2 s pnovation In the game of bridge} Bulletin, it Biashovea tie other, (mlenenaney raul bye male ere arse nie No USE LOSING TIME. dreamed that he couldn't go to aleep—' ® ent cities having been arranged, the Pittsburg Dispatch, four select an umpire, who deals four} Fond Mother (listening to baby's a ries)—What a sweet-toned yolce she hands and mails one to each. The game | © a SIZING JOHN UP, hen proceeds in the usual way, each|hag, dear! She'll be a splendid sliger. player communtoating his play to the| We must send her to Italy to have her ‘Teacher—Now, children, we will pares voice cultivated. the sentence, ‘John’ refused the pix” Husband (irritably, from behind the}|Tommy Jones, what is John? K wotte, ~