OCR Text |
Show THE EEAVT" W. U. Klii wink, CCjr.'TY Kd:tor Manager MILFORD Leather Belts in Paris news UTAH The earth la one Mg, hard, unchart ed rock to the crippled aviator. Chinese Days of Mon- SEARS Former Head of Numbered Chicago. u eoiiMitulinniil froveruiin-n- t in China wlii-j- i duled liiiek to a coujt d'etat was brought about as a result of the ignoIni the radicals lv by minious defeat at ll:- - li.mds of the Japanese in 180G. But no real c libit was tier imnli until two years ago, when an imperial edict was i i.nl on 1, 1J06, promising the mi'. ni merit. This was brought about a who went abroad anil studied by the Ir.tielitig eomiui.-- i ivt, Kuii-Vii-W- It is estimated that out of a por illation or to.ooii.ouo in Great llrituin, IS, 000.000 are either under or on the poverty line. c have a The world over Ann reputation fur doing things. That's why the foreign avlutora at ltheiins accord Curtiss so tuucb resHct. ei, id the nature and llie working of various constitutional governments, ami who, on their return, recommended to the throne for the preparation of grunting a constitution. many reform Society must he Improving since the Since then many both on the part of the government and activities, great varloua scorching denunciations it has in regard to the adoption of a conthe on the of are Newrumen from part noplc, received. The news id of a representative assembly. port that there Is a lobster famine stitution and the cst.alili.-hi- who $25.-000,0- 17 wide-brimme- d iiit-rs- , iis Sears, years, took charge st his farm st Gray's Lake, 111., the other day. At five p. m. the man whose financial career would have been meteoric had It not been for his quiet way of dong things was out in the fields supervising the work that the 20 men who came an hour later were to accomplish before sundown. Wearing straw hat. overalls and sr If he were accustomed to them, Mr. Sears surveyed his model farm as if it were the only interest he had in life. He refused to turn from It and maud. HE MOVJIMK.T for W. Richard made in of the threshing ganizi-- Don't hesitate to tell the census taker your age. He baa aw urn to he discreet. Mail-Ord- has retired from business with By TA CIIIEN YEII When the army balloon corps la or high privates will be In de FAR...LH House, Who Retired with $25,000,000, Works In Fields. archy Surely Rule AS HAPPY inea.-utrc-s vi.-ih- m there. People may not he able to explain rationally the popular sympathy with a Jury that declares a aian insane w ho recltea poetry, but the sympathy la there, all the same. Women who have won farina In the government lottery can tr unmarried doubtless get all the help they need for harvesting their crops without applying to the employment agencies. The scramble for aoclal prestige at Newport has caused a French visitorI to revive an old Gaelic witticism: doubt If the people would take anything like ao much trouble to get Into heaven." It has been estimated that 40 per cent, of the children under eight In the public schools of London drink liquor more or less regularare ly." And yet American children called precocious. Whether these uctiiilics tire prompted by the sincere desire of a changu in the governmental system is auoilicr question. The people, at for irresponsible monleast, ure in earnest to snlislilute of locul newspapers. tones well the in is This sentiment portrayed archy. No newspaper, whether it is reserved or radical, supports the existing government in its entirety; and, more than that, almost all newspapers have one obj'cct in common and that is to strive for a representative government. As the iiewspuia-represent public sentiment, we can very well infer how eager the people arc in looking toward a constitution and a representative assembly. That the Chinese have now lieen awakened from the long slumber is. fact. The question which think, nothing short of tin umnnpli.-lu--d The is how soon they will have a constitution. them at liccn ami hv tin? lime made government has, again, repeated and dodge But sis there are still many conservatives in the repented cmphulieally. overnnient it is only nutiirul that promises ure broken as often as they are made. If the jH'uple of the cclca-iempire will maintain the rate of in the near future the prowigri-ssand must vindicate the will gressive con-rou- ts piv-ki- it al , on the conservative element. The latest calculations course of Halley's comet, approaching Who says that Chinaman the earth, exhibit no point of peril for for it and Still, comets aspiring avlaiort. flying machines both have been known tp do things out of the day's run. they have started a for tubercular children. Most of the sessions are held In the oien to act air, and the children are said Their a were picnic. If as having they routine work takes In systematic care of the teeth, breathing exercises, gymnastics and the shower bath. In Chicago school There la something very pathetic in the picture of the little shah of Pernla trying to kill himself because, frightgradeur. he wanta ened nt his lonely ' his parents The emptiness of high times rcyi! 'honora In thesesoulstormy a of child, to the even trlkea when he ban to pay for them with his human needs. LFRTHFR MSW WITH Vuntn le Farls loves the pulled-iwaist line. While she has held brayely and long to the skirt on many of her gowna, and. Indeed, with an ardor not known in America, ahe has grasped the opportunity with the very first gown that admitted of It, to put on a leather belt, and a close one at that. Bhe haa worn thla belt during the summer with some of the foulard and lingerie gowna and with the beat of her linen morning frocka. She haa strained a point to wear It with dressei that were scarcely built for It. In this particular fashion period through which we are passing, the belt Is frequently Impossible with the princess of the rnoyen age, except It be the loose leather belt of the silken girdle run through slots opened beside the princess panels. The pulling in of a closely fitted princess Is about as awkward as anything that could well be Imagined, but the Parisian woman, who always finds her opportunity, has worn a shaped leather belt successfully with a model like the white pique shown In n high-walste- d half-fitte- d The cut of this dress, although Including the long hip and suggesting the watteau plait from yoke to belt, is such that It admits of a decided waist line. This shaped belt of shiny leather is made of three pieces, which fit It about the figure very snugly. , The straight patent leather worn with the striped linen morning frock, although made of one piece, la also an outlined belt and fastened with a square leather covered buckle. Now, the French woman oversteps the mark when she wears hey beloved shiny belt with the fitted foulard gown of princess cut, but to her the girdle aeema an Irresistible accessory. Parisians always feel privileged to perform remarkable feata In fashion making, but fortunately the sensible American is given to adaptations. She will, in all probability, wear the extreme patent leather, but instinctively with gowns made for it; with models having a blouse and skirt and a distinct waist line. The leather belt la at Its best worn with a turnover collar and a or with a Puritan collar and Windsor tie. Richard W. Sears. look backward over the 17 years that have elapsed since he left his post as; telegraph operator in Redwood Falls, business Minn., to start the that has grown Into the greatest In mail-ord- the IN DECORATING THE HOUSE to-da- four-in-han- d Several Simple But Most Important Only a very limited number of people Principles Which Should Be Understood. really enjoy what is called classical music. Brand opera is a bore to the average There are a few principles, simple person, yet many people profess to admire but most Important, which should be it in order to seem as cultured as their understood by every woman who sets neighbors. A few days since 1 was 'in out to be her own Interior decorator. Do not hang curtains of one color Washington, D. C., and strolled down back a wallpaper of another. against Maof the Treasury building, where the If possible to avoid do not put difrine bond was entertaining the public. It ferent papers on the walls of rooms or tewn,de aJfway it a most excellent band and tlmr tfildlng'booffc If It Is necessary, the character of hardly a more competent aggregation of By DR. PRENTISS HARRELL musicians in the country, On this occa- the rooms, to have slightly different kinds of let them he as near sion, however, the selections did not em- alike as paper, in color. The design possible brace any popular airs; all were does not make so much difference. Do not Join carpets of opposite colof the classic, cold, unmclodious order and not a number eliciting any Classical Music Enjoyed by Few . applause. wlte-beatln- g THE it BANG IS HERE Farmer AGAIN Will Be Worn by the Jority of Women Next Winter. world. I. "I'm awfully busy, he declared. have to look after the threshers and I haven't get this work done any time to talk about myself. Never did have," he added, with a merry twinkle of hia eye. is not - ' frock' the picture. ors. When It Is not possible to have carBaltiband near A few nights later I liennl Signor Taseas playing pets alike In rooms Joined by wide more, and what a dilTcrcnuc was there! Every piece of the enthusiastic openings, a rug should be laid over It Italians was applauded to the echo and encore after encore was given. the seam to hidebeautiful as they are, Oriental rugs, There was a rendition of tlic airs that tlic audience knew the familiar should be used with discretion. In a room they are in music is what catches the people nnd the bandmen threw into their small, many-colore- d other. at each "howl" to likely with all souls, their work the fullest measure of animation. They played when used to are good very They as if tlic music gave to caih performer the same amount of pleasure it light up a one-ton- e room. busiof the did the heurera and 1 think this, after all, is the surest way of achieving brief experience In hia ness of ruling an awakened people, success. TUSSAH SILK WAIST. the Shah Mohamed All has prolmbly when tlmea are learned that there I believe that Jesus Christ was a teachwise people do best to adopt the motHe to: "Anything for a quiet life. er conic from Gixl, and though the dochas bepn offered a pension of $75,000 trine of eternal punishment is awful I a year If he will restore the national Jewels. The likelihood Is that he will accept it uHn II is authority. If it were take the offer and retire Into ltussla. possible to believe otherwise I would gladly chauffeurs do so; nor can 1 comprehend the state of of arresting The work when they can he caught and lining mind of any man living upon earth who them for speeding goes merrily on, can take any other ground. hut with no appreciable diminution In In In the descriptions given of the misery A prln little change the sjieedlng. In of the wicked and of the happiness of the clple might work a great chungeautocustom In this respect. If the righteous material sv mliols are employed. mobile were arrested and fined and fine of the Fire consuming the flesh and worms that held for the payment different a wear soon would die not are the strongest material symbols things ' aspect. of misery; gold, harps, white robes, symA new use was promptly found for bols of bliss. It is not more necessary to believe that these are other than the new Lincoln pennies. It seems, symbols in the former case than in the latter. The figures employed of according to a Washington account, conthe doom of the wicked are designed to represent the greatest possible that they are In great demand by in thiir babies to to present gressmen misery, nnd those applied to the destiny of the righteous to portray the e districts, as the first Issue will st conceivable bliss. In time rare coins. This use of highe is an error to think and a misrepresentation to allege that those In It is pointing significant the penny the fact that in spite of Its great who hold the views herein set forth the doctrine tlrat life is a probation achievements this Is the age of small ending at death must needs bulicvc that the majority of the human race things especially babies. will Ih lost. Infants, irresponsible persons, all Gods true children in A New York magistrate wants the every age and country, even those who doubt if they lie true to the light of the whipping-pos- t Blouse of tussHh silk trimmed In an establishment which is in them, form the multitude that no man can number. on account of the great number or way with fagoted banda of original cases in his district. It g the tame material. The jabot Is of Is a pity that there Is not the like ofthe silk and lace. A flying machine would be invaluable wives ficial sympathy for The sleeves, trimmed to correspond, In this state, where the whipping-pos- t have a tucked strap of the silk on the on a north pole expedition. has been established by law and pracliven in its present form it would serve outside, finished with the lace. tically nullified by the sympathy, for to carry one much further and, of course, some occult reason, being given to the Use Twisted Cotton. faster limn any other means of transportawlfebeaier Instead of to his victim. Some women waste their time In festher-stltchlntion. dainty garments with A curious source of wealth Is reThe embroidery thread. embroidery I do not a mean that trip could be made ported by the French consul at thread being soft, when the garment In lies It Tonkin. In upper to the pole and back, but with a ship as a la laundered It Is pressed Into the maMonptxe, wood mines. The wood originally was base the range of exploration would be im- terial and loses Its individuality. a pine forest, which the earth swalTwisted cotton, which conies by the lie some In mensely widened. lowed cataclysm. They ball In various nunihprs, and which In In a slanting direction and sandy One could chart much undiscovered Is sometimes used for crocheting. Is soil, which covers them to a depth of country with little effort and with mathe- the most satisfactory thread with As the top about eight yards. which to do this dainty work. matical accuracy, branches are well preserved. It convulsion the 1 geological am a firm believer in the value of airthought Remedy for Burns. which burled them cannot be of very commercial for acrvice, such as the cnrrvinj A simple remedy for burns is made and warfare in lighter ships wood furnished The great antiquity. af messages and of light mail and for the more venturesome class of trav by adding to a cupful of olive oil a by these Umber mines Is Imperishteaspoonful of carbolic add. Apply able and the Chinese buy It for coffins jlers. Sandago soaked in the mixture. It 'might have been supiiosed 'that California had enjoyed her share of earthquakea; but now while Mexican eltlea are partly In ruin and Spain will la reporting tremors, California esat having feel herself fortunate of recent date, shake the with caped which woe so gentle that there were and San people In San Francisco It. feel did not who Joss riQRmtiQ Sears, who haB announced that he Intends to devote the rest of his time to hia family and hla farm. Is only 45 years old. He was a telegraph operator of a wayside station when an eastern watch manufacturer sent him a watch with the privilege of returning Ms- - Although much protest was made It If he could not sell It He found last winter shout the that he could sell that watch and of the bang" across the forehead. It many more. So large did the watch-tradseems to be rather firmly Intrenched he established become that now. resigned hla position and went to MinThe majority of women will wear neapolis. It this winter. In large measure It Two years later he came, to Chicago-anwill be becoming. It will compel began the business career that women to lift from their foreheads ended recently with the sale of hlr mass of hair, now stock In Sears, Roebuck & Co., to that the fashion, and substitute it with New York syndicate and hla retirea tiny, wavy fringe. ment .with great wealth. It Is absurd to cut the hlr to make Mr. Hears' family la enjoying the this bang. One can buy It by the farm life as much aa the head of the1 piece In any hair shop and attach It houne. Hia four children two boys under ones own hair by an Invisible and two girls hare been reveling In rural domesticity and any they want hairpin. One should be extra careful not to farmers too. get It thick or stralghL The poodle bang, once so fashion- HALL OF CHRIST IS UNIQUE able In the eighties of the nlnteeenth century, also promises to return. It Aula Christ! at Chautauqua, N. Y. has already done so in Paris, but of Its Kind In Only Building there it, like the wavy fringe, only World. the accompanies the flattened pompadour. Both of these have been introduced Chautauqua, N. Y. The dedication to give softness to 'a forehead from of the Aula Chrlstl or Hall of Christ which the hair has been lifted, and of Its kind In the also to give a showing of bair under the only building took place recently in thla city. world, the hat. The one who first proposed the idea They should never be worn with 16 years ago. Bishop John H. Vincent, the hair severely parted in front. gave the dedication address. Thfs new budding to be devoted exWhite Net Frock. to the study of Christ, was clusively A standard white dress, and the a cost of about $40,000. The at erected most advisable if you are making It contributions to Its single largest la the point d'esprit or fine erection were $10,000 right now, from the Massey wash net, for the very obvious reason In Toronto; $5,000 from Mies that the whole season Is no longer estate Gould and $3,000 from the esHelen before you, and you, therefore, will tate of X. T. Arnold. 0 The last not want to make a dress for summer for Ha completion was given by only. The point d'esprit dress Is a at a single meeting last most useful an well as a beautiful lit- Chautauquaa The building Is constructed of tle dancing frock. If It be made In year. white Roman brick, stone, steel and one of the pretty fluffy ways that white terra cotta. The windows are these sheer dresses naturally call for, all of historic significance presenting the yoke and lower ileeves may later in chronological order events In be removed pnd a bit of lace added of Christ. as a finish. With the addition of little All the books which have been writ wreaths of artificial pink roses or ten upon the life Christ, including a small bunches of red rambler rosea, large very dealing with the library the frock will be Ideal for winter interpretations of Christ, and Christ in ethics, in social science and la h' low-hangi- to-b- . $12,-00- the-lif- eve-nlngs- A Ribbon Plnholder. For this pretty pinholder five differ ent lengths of 1 satin ribbon are suspended from brass ring crocheted over with heavy embroidery silk. To the ring Is also attached a bow of the satin ribbon, just by way of decoration. The lower end of each ribbon Is looped through a brass ring and hemmed.- These rings are not covered. To make this an acceptable present, each ring Is filled with safety pins, slipped on and clasped. Two sizes of black pins may be' used and three of nickel, Including the very smallest shle.d pins. Gingham Cushion Covers. Pretty cushion covers ure made of dress gingham In plain colors, old rose, Alni- - blue, green or yellow, to correspond with the color scheme of the room. The covers are in white to inclose Inside the edge nnd are finished with buttons and buttonholes, so thnt they can be laundered when necessary. feather-stitche- d l si "tV" Aula Christ), or Hall of Christ. modern civilization, 8 re soon to be collected in one morn of this hall. In another room will be collected and placed in easily accessible files copies of all the engravings or other pictures of Christ which the art of ages hrs brought within rcarh. In charge ol the library and engravings will be e curator. A beautiful main audience room will be used exclusively proprlale meetings. Already these meetings are being held in the new building. Latr courses in study are to be inaugurated in the lire, worcii-andeeds of Christ and in the results of his teachings. These courses ate to be conducted for both old and young A special service is to be held In this building st least once a t the entire year. fr -- Learn to Relax. Relaxation Is the secret of taking the mental, moral and physical kinks out of one's system In the warm weather. It will take all the unsightly lines from your fare and prevent new ones from forming. month-throughou- |