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Show A ti y s V. VI j The Womans Corner. The relation between parent their children are too sacred, too and sections of the Inti- ahlch the shirtwaist I same THE, material from 3nTASE la made, or in mate, and personal. t be subject to some contrasting1' fabric. Thera are the supenrlsloa of others, says the Innumerable shirtwaist stuffs that will Let the be appropriate for thle mode. Woman's Homs Companion. young mother study good models and KUkonM ud Bwatlfd. week for light and .knowledge wherAn Imported bodice of great beauty ' 1 ever she may find them, but let her be Is of novelty silk and chiffon. The chary of Inviting keslstanc from any pattern has stripes of coral on a white Alfred Noaslg, the librettist of outsider, however ' wise that person ground, with dull blue, shadowy, DresMansru, In speaking of Mr. Pademay be. In the matter of governing den effects all over the material. The Pade her children. She has no right to sub- waist la made with bolero fronts and rewski as a composer, says: r ject them to the pain and mortification a collar trimmed with an ap- rewski, unlike other virtuosos, is of Submitting to an, authority which plique of point de Venlse lace. The called to a higher productivity than is spurious and unnatural. A child full front Is of accordion plaited white that of mere interpretation. His artissuffers extremely from any exposing chiffon, strapped across with, two tic activities began with composition, of hi weak points, and often feels a broad bands of velvet- - ribbon. The and the flavor of composition is tb dumb, bitter shame at being openly belt la of velvet, extending up In a chief charm In his playing. Known talked over; but nobody Suspects this, point on the back of the waist. The principally a a song and symphony - )theatricalT TOPIC'S turn-oye- -- i because he has no capacity to describe tils sensation. Bodie of Whit The knell of the separate waist has often been sounded, yet It still survive and flourishes. Truly, It Is too convenient and often attractive a gar ment to be easily dispensed with. A charming theater bodice one of Corne's creations is of white glace taffeta, stitched in red, and trimmed with Persian silk. - In this model the sailor collar Is of the broad, turn-ove- r Persian taffeta, with a wide border the The blouse Is color of watermelon. laced across the front with silk cord The nd tassels In Persian colors. belt is of fine folds of the taffeta, closely stitched in red, and Is broad and pointed In the back, narrowing toward the front to an inch width. The chemisette and r standing -- collar are of the fine folds of taffeta stitched in red and braided down the middle. The sleeves are full at the elbow, the deep cuffs consisting of the stitched The folds and braided trimming. blouse la fitted to the figure by several little darts extending from the waist to the bust These are feather-atltcbedn red and finished at the top with ar-d composer, his piano pieces have always been very popular. This class of composition, however, permits but a one-siddevelopment of bis gift. His unusually good treatment of the voice and excellent declamation in hla Mlcklewltx songs; the Inexhaustible Invention of his variations; the delicious tone effects In his Elegy; the grandeur of bis tone painting tn his Concerto; the intricate but lucid construction1 and effective Instrumentation of the Fantaeie Polonaise are admired by all composers.1 Paderewski has felt his need of living out his most characteristic gift to its fullest extent; of sounding in mighty accord all the strings of that musical Instrument, his soul. Prom that impulse has sprung his last great work. Just as he achieved the heights of mastership through the emotional and dramatic allure of his playing, so he will give of hla best aa a composer of ed or WoTelty Bilk sad Chiffon sleeves broaden below the elbow, and there is an undersleeve of whits chiffon with cuff of velvet and lace. On all fancy bodices Corticelli spool silk Insures a correct finish. The sailor blouse, slightly puffed at the waist. Is quite popular. Large collars and revere decorate nearly all bodices and efhelp to give the fect which is desired in. the fashion ble figure. The extremely long waist-eeffects of the past season are now a bit modified, but a decided dip le still given to the waist line tn all modish gowns. A variation In this style has recently appeared In an Imported model, the wide belt, of which is shaped in a sort of square, back and iroad-sbouldere- d music-drama- ." Hlta Ann I Irlih. The praise which has been so lavishly bestowed on this pleasing actress has no doubt, been In part called forth by her extreme beauty, but ahe la also a talented artist Miss Irish Is a universal favorite, and in her career tn'ay d front Cllnglnt Gown The smart gown this season must be more cllngtng than ever In effect, A--i'and this feature Is emphasized In tbs ! new form-fittinor serpentine skirt, an attractive example of which consists of a closely fitted upper portion, held back by elastic traps and lengthened by a -r-ippled, graduated, circular flounce, and Is further distinguished by two long back IUbonU Tmaey Bodies gores that may be plaited or gathered This pretty bodice can be at the top. This skirt may be made aaatly copied at home, using Corticelli with or without the dip, and In sweep J allk for all fancy atltchlng. or round length. It Is extremely effective when developed in 'velvet or ' .1 1 , , Mod to BhlrtwoUta . corduroy. f 4 J " Shirtwaists and shirt blonee ar numerous as ever, and new modes apLlttta Nw la Tall. pear constantly. The woman who af- - In veils there is very little that 1 fects severe tailor modes will be new, yet there le great variety. The pleased with a design that la given a large chenille dot with a thread of distinctive air by a abort back and gold or white silk marked in at one front yoke having an irregular lower elds of It Is ons fancy. There are edge; below the yokes, there are also email chenille and velvet dots, three narrow plaits stitched for a varied in also, forming different patshort depth In front, and two applied terns on the net, and there Js the veilplait at the back. The blouse sleeves ing with a border of graduated dots. sun completed with- narrow strap-band- White dots, with the black ones on and the standing collar, which black net, forming a sort of fa removable, may be given a pleasing design, are an example of one of the finish by fancifully shaped turnover novelties. g five-gore- tow-head- s. - , v C'"ntniola Allen was engaged aa hU roles Dee-dem- os - old-tim- e -- rail-fenc- e DAINTY DANCE FROCK. stage, and the picture shows that the be said to hare met with few disappointments and no sadness. In private life she Is Mrs. Dodson, wife of the gifted English comedian. The of Miss Irish call her the moat beautiful woman on the - American title Is not entirely undeserved. Mr. John Draw. This successful actor, the son of the famous Mrs. John Drew, made hla debut In his mothers theater. Arch SL, Philadelphia, In 1873, as Plumper ' In Cool as a Cucumber." Hla rise In the profession was rapid, and in hla e. S! This dance frock of pale pink organdie la laid In' point of deep tuck wit girdle and fichu are of lace, and a lac la appllqued on tba breast. It will be worn by one of the aeasona accordeon-plalte- debutantes. d ruffle. i 1 ; , rtl a' coat-of-arm- s, aa 4 fire-wate- 4 ' V here was an old legend Aboafe AND SNAKES Indiana. INDIANS which the Indians believed. It such letlady, appearing In I started to tell the story to" Baker, la In King Lear," TELLS OF AN but Just then a couple of shots were Uo," Juliet in Romeo OLD PLAINSMAN DIRE FROM fired and I beard a dozen warhoops at PERIL ESCAPE as Neodamla In The and the foot of the bill. Tbe Indians we Gladlar JThen 1 played tn Othelhad left behind us that morning were with I lo says Mlgg Allen. Endeavoring tn Escape From Tfcstr Bed coming np the hill, firing their gun was alvJrvous during the smothEaemlee, Two Mea Crawl Into a Dea and he used to get so whooping and yelling like mad. ering "'insause of Lmdleroea Baniesaekee of Ending Save me; BUI, Pm afraid Pm excited- 1 Ny turned my face aide-waIke dreakaro. I a small rpace open ungoner! Oh, wbat a fool I waa that I didnt know enough to atay la Chat so hr side of the pillow der tb Well, I see the President has se- dron! Ouch, Im hit again! shrieked that I but even that breatbisf 1) would get closed up lected my old friend, Judge Baker, to Baker, fill the vacancy existing on the Su Come, let's find a hole and stand under the energy of Salvlnl. 'em off, I said. "I can knock two or Bench of New Mexico," remark preme bad found that he Then, e scout three of them over before they can get killed &e(tona without cause, In his ed Bill" Llddlard, an remnrtd b)U(j throw himself wildly and plainsman, now living in Omaha. us, If thats any consolation Come on, a than for the position all youre worth a dosen dead men. upon th V. I used to. wait for this "Bens good We found an old eave and In it we and I guess hell give aa good of hiieas with fear and trembright plecs satisfaction aa any man that could be went, both of ns trying to get in first. ling; Satts tall was always so named, but I remember tbe time when We crept on all fours for thirty feet awfuHf rtlc One night the death hi fceo and Juliet met with be wouldnt have given SO cents for hts or more, during Which time we eonld cent an odd 4nt. Some practical Joker ebam-- of holding down that or any hear the Indians yelling and whooping-outsidI finally caught sight of had pctnk In the bottle from other chair. It waa about twenty year ago, fellow standing near the entrance, and which drank the poison, and aa when tho Indiana were hunting scalps I' was Just on the Joint of sending him Romeo, ktg made a feint of drinksd. contents, every other Friday. I happened to be to tbe happy hunting ground! whea norant the of ing, It at Chadron at the time, and Ben came Baker shouted: face on my threw e, it splashed Groat Caesars ghost! What's this and butfc white gown, an occur-ren- o to me and wanted me to pilot him car crawling over my legf Where thing I Bad vhlfli usure you, necessitated the didnt Laud. through an stasiul harried demise on my much about taking the job. as the In- ar you, B111T I knew in a second that w had dians were pretty mean Just then and part" - Y-I had some other matters to attend to, crawled Into a den of rattlesnakes, for but Ben said hed have to make th Bimbi F mm. trip, and he just couldn't get along Thfttslf child actresses who havs without me. Ha pressed me eo hard reachtrf' Mure distinction, and are that a bargain was finally made, and a now litfnu too long to give In full, few daya later w struck out from but fcONthe noteworthy are Ellen Chadron, well provisioned and with Terry. J Marlowe, Cecilia Loftue, plenty of presents for the redskins. Made Rdrtaba Kendal, Eflle Shan"A couple of weeks before we started non; BiJmleron, Fay Templeton. Elon this trip two men had been up that sie Ue'xind Grace Hopkins. Beway and bad succeeded tn cheating the sides tbe Ethel Barrymore, Maude Indiana on a trade for pelts. They got Adana a Annie Russell might be away with their plunder, but th In Included, i young were they when dians were as mad as hornets, and Miss their stage debuts. they vowed they'd kill the first bunch of Russell vis girl with her hair In a palefaces they ran across Aa Ben and long Irakvhen she swept the coun- 1 had heard nothing of tha trouble we try Is heralds In 1881, and she walked right in to the trap, as R wars had been the stage In email parts On the second day out we hadn't seen a sign of an Indian yet, mind you . dosen ,1 could hear em shaking their rattle I caught sight of bind on 0( uz, I0 I says to Baker: In the trail, redskins rounding a bend Lie down, yon big galoot and play coming towards us, about a anil away. youre dead. Don't yon know a rattle- We rode along aa unconcerned a could anake won't bother a dead man? How be and soon met the Indiana. Baker long have you lived la this country, thought that a good chance to get on anyway T the good side of them so he ran hla Wa both lay on th damp floor of band down In tbe saddlebags and the cave for about ten minutes It' fished up bandful of glass beads and seemed like tlx weeks to me with the some tobacco. snakes crawling all around us and all Much heap magnificent; make pa- over na Finally I could stand it no poose look purty, said Ben, offering longer, so I grabbed my rifle and made the Indiana a lot of the beads Tbe break tor the mouth of the cave, red devils only grunted, ebook their to die with my, boots on, preferring heads, and never once offered to take lighting Indians, to staying In thera. them. Just as I stepped outside a big 8 lout Red man heap tobac, amoks with buck met me face to face. Extending paleface brother, remarked Baker, of hla hand he said: " How coolahT Indian heap glad to faring an old buck a package of Bull Durham. see white brother. Bear Eagle smoke Ugh, wah! Tobao heap bad medi- brother! pip. cine,' was the only answer, Just then another Indian came out I thought It waa mighty tunny they from behind a rock, extending ble hand wouldn't accept anything from Baker, and said: so I thought I'd try my band. Th In" Red Dog heap dry; drink much diana looked at me curiously . with r, and then half a dozen more their bands hid under their blankets, nobbed up and wanted me to give them but refused to accept any presents, some tobac, bac. When I saw how they acted I knew Suddenly I heard a noise behind me, something was np, and advised Baker I looked around, expecting to find anto get ready to pull our freight other there was Baker, but " It we wont get out of thla soon, such aIndian, and never saw. When he you sight I said, wa might as well count our went Into that cave with me he had beads and map out plans for fording long hair and It waa black aa th botthe River Jordan when we get to It tom of a coffee pot, but whea he came ' Do you really think theres any out. It was aa whit aa th driven danger? Inquired Baker, with chatternow. ing teeth, We gave tha Indiana an the beads -I told him I thought, wahad got and tobac wa could scrap up, and then ourselves in a nice mess, but advised track out for Chadron, for Ben conhim to brace np, put on a bold front cluded he didnt want any more Bad and wed make a grand bluff to get Lands tn hla From that day to this away. Tbe Indians did not molest ns, I'v been called Rattlesnake Pete, and but I kept my old Winchester handy In to tell you the honest truth 1 often , tor s d years. Maude Adams first case Td have to use it have to atop and think wbat my real Wa traveled along until about noon. name la" appear on the stage a bah, and was 0 fully grown when she appeared 4 Dot Bradbury tn A MidStill Sluflnt. Mm Ethel Barrymore was night 1 08. Adelina Patti, aged 57 and not a bit a only I 'hen she charmed playgoers afraid to say how old she la, gave her the mu Servant In "Rosemary" in her concert In Albert ball, London, annual one of th nuclei ompany, and now, not ago and was greeted by long 1! ucces! stars, she Is yet only 22. crowded house. Th wonderful little woman does not look a day over 45 and M May rur la Wew Terk. waa In splendid voice, though of course . Robr kantell, it is said, has patchnearly everything ahe sings nowaday ed upV agreement with hla divorced 1 sung In lower keys than In daya ot wife, ti ?Rby he can hereafter appear It Is ovfir forty year alnca ah yore. In Nev York without being arrested mad her first real debut in Covant for no ptyment of alimony. Mantell Garden theater, London and th crithas bei barred out of New York for ics say her rendition of the jewel song ometBi ( like ten year. from Faust" waa aa near perfection aa It waa over a generation ago, when nee- - Bmb Owls she sang . Marguerite" to Mario Fredrie de Belleville is to act one Faust of the t 'it masculine roles in the play Hall Cj has mad for Viola Allen the Future mt Boaerths Bnm, from hj latest novel. The Eternal Th purenaser of Hogarths House, City.' lieutenant Colonel Shipley ot Orov The Fer-Fleld-s ar to burlesqno House, Chiswick, who announces hi "Th ffrl and the Judge " th Fitch Intention of preserving It a "on ol the landmark ot tb parish," will be play In wMch Annie Russell is acting. remembered as the victim in th From the descriptions of the drama atprinted Is the New York city pepere Shipway Pedigree Case," which tracted eo much attention some time it la a rick subject for such treatment. ago. The peculiarly audacious swindler Charles Wyndham denies a report whom he had Innocently employed to h that contemplates dividing his time elucidate Jhi pedigree and to prove hla for thi ftture between London and forged claim to an old New York city, although it Is underwent along, and aa he evidence his stood M lettled that he Is to coma sums managed to obtain considerable here apl next season, for a brief was found out he before of money rate." BattlMuk tour of th principal cities of the East, London Chronicle. Mary Mmnering would seem to havs Baker looking over bis shoulder every wera redskins abandoned entirely her projected profew minutes to see If the Tm Stump Oat BmeUpoa. . duction of a play made from McCutch-eon- s following us. presenty wt came, to authorities ot Ontario are health The of those one not of Graustark," for she tb summit of peculiar, to smallpox out of th keep mounds which one sees so trying now aay e will stick to "Janice Merdisease where th camps, lumber Bad remind in the nta Lands, edith" season, when she will frequently one It gets a ravages terrible makes produce tt play Fitch Is to make for Ins one of the pictures of the Pyramids foothold- owner of forty-the Already tower of or or th her- Babylon, 01 Egypt, camps have arranged for med- No plf of the season In Nsw York In fact almost anything can be im- two ical attendant and hav erected suitcity reeld more of sincere criticism agined of them. Tho hill on which we the one anywhere able building la which to isolate stood was tha highest of an adverb nature than Tha Uncaa smallpox appears In welcome ilfra. Hatch, produced by aronnd. I had Just called Bens atten- patients In disease Is scattered Mrs. Fisk; but tbe entertainment la tion to It, remarking what a fin to- tha camps. Th a large part of Onatrio and through aid to be such a popular success that boggan slide the side would makes, Canadian other province and th told and the Baker well, extra "kfli. soon 'performances are anknew the place considered. are well of precautions nounced. I the bill was sacred to certain tribes this career he has supported Adelaide Nielson, Edwin Booth, Fanny Davenport and other famous stars. In 1879 b Joined tha lata Augustin Dalys company, and soma of bia greatest successes were mad while he waa leading man of thla famous organisation. Of lata years Mr. Drew has starred with his own company. Tbe Sulvtal. VM Alima During the elder Salvlnle last tour In odd-shap- 1 r |