OCR Text |
Show ONE BY THE TURKS. sole, The sleeves plaited mousseline ofdepuffs.-iThe Latest, are a succession NOTES OF THE MODES. TRAFFIC IN CHILDREN. needed little discernment on the part Chicago News. of the Turkish troops to perceive that In Dance to Them Hire all. the Kurds were not warriors at LATEST STYLES IN THE WORLD A Model. the Street. Throwing off all disguise, the soldiers FASHION. OF is model A presented here that stamps The attention of the Society for the of the Sultan entered the villages, baywhich it is a part as sterof dress the onet and sword in hand. The bugles Prevention' of Cruelty to Children is ling, and which is very dressy as well. Bonnets children Summer for the Rhinestones traffic in to the sounded and the cannon boomed. singular cheviot Is the main fabpalled Summer-weigunderGown A were on Gown this in city An that Dressing piteous, been cries has Opera With which going ric, but sleeves and center boxplait awful an York New save the for that Tender are of silk, the latter ornamented with Gray My Ladys Lingerie for some time, says standing nothing old to the difficult now cut steel buttons, which is not usual. d upon them, gather Girl Fashion Notes. World. It will not be the calamity was i behind The remainder of the front as weli as evidence of it, as ail that is needed villagers who had been left as bethe 1830 sleeve caps are laid in side and to came tumbling out of their houses to follow an organ-grindrhineNORMOUS plain. Ribpleats, but the back is left the soldiers with calm ferocity applied stow a few nickels On him judiciously beat the joining is as bon such placed stones, garniture the torch to the buildings. These old On Friday Afternoon a reporters atnow have fore peasants flung; themselves pitifully at tention was attracted to a crowd suron the swelat One Hunthe feet of even the common soldiery, an organ-grindof the rounding front ling are street and Lexand Twenty-Fift- h crying We are loyal! Seel These dred minstrel showman, our tax receipts. For Gods sake spare ington avenue. The man was accomare now accorded We love the Turks.! Oh, do take panied by a woman, who played a of honor as .place us God! burn dont Good us. on the central attracmore or less in time with the pity alive! tion of. little bondoleful wails of the organ. In front r Organ-Grinde- ? HOW GARDOU WRITES. n -- rs The. Great : ORE HORRIBLE RECITALS OF BUTCHERIES. A r . ht The Bloodthirsty Follower of Mahomet Hacked Their Victims to Pieces and . Burned Them, Ally Heartrending Walls of the Dying:. NCIENT, medieval and modern history, should all their records be rolled into one.have no tale more dramatic and horrible than that of the outrages on the helpless peasants of Armenia at the hands of a ferocious Turkish soldiery. These atrocities stand forth in the annals of Christendom las the very essence of cruelty, and as an instance of what the still uncivilized Turk is capable of accom- plishing. " T The civilized world stood shocked and appalle4 and the great powers of Europe stepped in and began an investigation; Then followed a demand upon tlie Sultan of Turkey to put a stop to these atrocities and to institute such reiorms in his brutal government as would forever end another butchery of his Armenian subjects. And now the bloodthirsty Turkish despot defies all civilized Europe and refuses to to prevent a repetition of the persecutions and horrors of Sassoun. The story, brutal as it is, and exhibiting in! the minor telling of it a lust, rapine and violence that could hardly be Imagined, is all the more remarkt able because it Is not war. Had the Armenians been fighting His Majesty i the 'Sultan and resisting his fanatical troops, some shadow of excuse; might there bei But, Instead of this, when the (Turkish brigades appeared in the country the Armenian men and wopien ran to themj like little children: and gathered under what they thought - were protecting wings against the (ravages of the marauding, savage hill tribes, ' J , . Red-IIalre- er ed ap-ipear- er tam-bori- ne , of them were several children dancing. Thd crowd, out of sympathy with the little ones who were apparently enjoying the. music so much, was not niggard of its pennies! After playing about five minutes .the wandering minstrel the moved on to One Hundred and Twenty-thir- d Professor Bangleys Flying Machine. The Langley flying machine. It is reported, flew a distance of 1,000 feet, at a test, down the Potomac a few days ago. The machine is now propelled by storage batteries placed under wings and moves independently of any control from the float from which the flights are made. It Is now believed v that the machine will fly great distances. Professor Langley has already the same f avenue. street and There the same performance was resumed. The singular thing about it was that two little girls,x scarcely more than ten years of age, who had danced . nets that are a glit-ter of stage jewelry, for that is all the stones are, though they are called big names and cost enough at the milliners! to scare a theatrical costumer out of his senses. Indeed, , the clever actress can bring out all her best stage paste, her queen girdlfes, and such; adjust them to the new condition of millinery, and cut a swath to make, the richest envy. It is always safe, however, to use such baubles sparingly, and spangles will, in most cases, afford quite as much glitter as is desired. The accompanying sketch displays a bonnet whose brim is embroidered prettily with spangles and topped by a band of Iape Braided straw Is the base of this andxfor other trimming toward the front there are silk rosettes, violets and leaves, while in the back there is a puffing thdt may be either pale lavender chiffon or of mousseline de sole. Tiny lace hatssiook very like the soldier hats, children' make out of folded paper, only the peakof the crown is much reduced. A pair pf bright roses are stuck up against theAppright brim, an inconsequent roll of bright ribbon lies against the hair, and perfiaps in the corner made by the turningAif the brim there is placed a flare of feAth- ers, or an upright horse-ha- ir aigrette, Becomingness is the sole object anj thA hat as a hat !!s merely an airy Sailors with extremely high box crowns and narrow brims are worn without trimming, and if they, are becoming are safely stylish, bur they remind one of j N . in-terf- ere .HftPirfurt- - f r (r .. ' j' W;, : - ; I; ' v 1 VV U i uO T-- r.' J.-- V , 5 . . C. I 5 : tv. Ay's r - . J S- ', ; 7. - the! Kurds. ; . of sleeves I? and-thei- t lS3h likelr to corc for this I cf the attentioi eercage dently s year, ad to be rl la this c every st Tbe UB acreage Too littl Russia t the area IT DID LOOK SUSPICIOUS. caps, and' the skirt r entirely plain. ; . Lingerie. My Lady Exceedingly dainty and soft in texture are the new nightgowns, t which, like dresses, have grown very big In the sleeves, and very wide in tlie skirts. They are often trimmed; with a flounce around the bottom of the skirt, and some of them are furnished with an entre deux at the waist line, through which a narrow ribbon is run, which serves to draw in the fullness ;to thex Batiste, linen lawn and India are the materials most ofteq used, Apd never should any starch appear In Hieir folds when! laundered. One of the prettiest examples noted had a u K.' . Nevertheless the Overcoat Tranzactloz Was Perfectly Legitimate. A robust young man; wearing a thlci terra cotta overcoat, and a cpnsumptive-lobkin- g an overcoat, lefta somewhat companion, mlmn well-know- Chesnut n street cafe together at a late hour on Saturday night says the Philadelphia Record. The fcrmer generously tendered his warm outer garment to hij j shivering companion, who grateful! accepted it for the walk home. On turn-tnthe corner of Sixteenth and Locust streets the pairj were closely scrutinized by. a big policeman. Arrived at hii home, the thin! man returned the coat to his stout friend, and the latter start-ed hack toward his hotel . on Broad street. When he reached the corner ol Sixteenth street the policeman grabbed him. Pretty slick guy, you are! hi claimed; but Im on to that little overcoat racket. I giiess you got his pocket-hook- , g too. v 1 ..." r. t - " sfr. - - mi- "1 . What do you mean, sir? demanded the indignant citizen. You just take a ride to the station-housmildly urged the epp, and tell the sergeant how you J H e, ,.at One Hundred and mwm r , t , managed to get into that other mani overcoat. ; Protestations were in vain. The mad overcoat, had man, with the terra-cott- a to submit, and only the presence of hii thin friend, whomhe promptly senil for, saved him from a cell. street Twenty-fift- h and Third avenue, reappeared at One Hundred and Twenty-thir- d street, alhad though when the organ-grindmoved away from One Hundred and Twenty-fift- h street they; had gone in a direction opposite to him. From One Hundred and Twenty-thir- d street the musician and the woman went to One Hundred and Twenty-fir- st street, between First and Second avenues. There the same two children turned up. They always formed the nucleus for a dancing party. The children were poorly dressed and their toes peered through the ends of their worn shoes. Their pale faces showed that they were very tired. .. "Are those your children? asked the reporter of the Italian. No, he replied in a surprised tone, girls of my friend. When pressed with further questions the Italian said that a man whom he knew in Spring street, near Mulberry, Ricardo by name, made a practice of v out to organ grinders children hiring whom he knew at 50 cents each for an afternoon. The children liked the work,' he said, were well' looked after, and were always at home by 10 oclock at He believed; the parents got night. half of the money paid the agent by the musicians. He did not, think he was doing anything in' violation of the law, for the children never complained. The supply, the Italian said,, was airways greater than the demand, Do you make money by this :r r scheme? For answer the Italian jingled a lot of coins in his coat pocket. This proved that he was making money and that the New York publio, loves children. : J er i i : i railroads j j ftur . I n Without a sign, without a signal, while tbe peasants were yet falling them as! the representatives of governmental authority and as the military delegates of their monarch, the Turks cut andtflred, Cut and fired again. No novelist s pen could depict a tale of torture half so graphically as comes down in the simple ungarnished statements of the few survivors that somehow made tbeir way beyond the reach of bayonet; bullet find sword. The blood that was shed has hardly yet grown cold, but even now all Europe Is ablaze with shame and regret that such cruelties could be perpetrated lion . c jlortH eec-en- d l ' Sardous way of working is as H;. lows: The moment an idea occurs ic him ho puts it down, and all the variccj notes, documents and particulars whi, have to do with this idea are joined together, forming a sort of dossier, Vh the idea is crystallized into dramatic Shape, Sardou wTites a scenario of a few pages, giving the skeleton, as ii were, of the whole play. Then he puts the work aside.! All his various schemes axe treated in the same way. He has at the present day from seventy tc eighty dossiers In his drawers, out oi which eight or ten plays will come. So when he has to write a drama ct comedy, he only chooses. For instance Theodora .w;as written fifteen yeari after it originated in the authors mini As soon as Sardous choice is made reads over all jthe accompanying notea and documents! which pertain to that play and then he begins to write the drama or comedy act by act, scene by scene, as they come into his mini When he has done this preliminary work he rewrites the piece on large white quarto paper. The play la then reduced and condensed. It fs this manuscript which is given to th copyist, to whom is Intrusted the care of putting it in shape. . All this writing is ordinarily done at Marly. Sardou ie not disturbed there as he is in Parl3. . f f va? matt Scientific Fashion. j . - Dramatist IluUds : i Choatpa Fee of 8200,000. A group of members of the legal J 4 pro-- , fession wre talking about the income-tadecision, when some allusion wai made to the size of the fees that wert paid to counsel employed to fight th tax. I have it! on the best authority," said an eminenj lawyeLfrom New York, that Joseph Cfhoates retainer in thi .case was $100,g4o, with the understanding that if th decision of the court was favorable to the opponents of thi tax he was to get $100, 00(J additional. Washington Post. x j f ; . ; -- an obstreperous bump on a log if they are not becoming, so beware! Sailors with moderate crowns are trimmed about with a close wreath' of wild flowers, made by the blending together of bunch after bunch of daisies, marigolds, primroses and violets. The wreath is po soft and thick that it almost covers the hat, only the edge of the brim and the top of the crown showing. Florette in Chicago Inter Ocean. ' As Others See Us. -- - t It Is a pity that we cannot see as others see us. So far as mere our-lv- round yoke of alternate narrow lace Insertion and batiste puffings, ending in a standing collar of the same. The yoke was outlined by a ruffle of batiste tucked in tiny lines and edged with narrow lace. The sleeves were full and soft, and gathered ini a band Just below the elbow, and finished with a ruffle to match1 that in the yoke. A side hem edged the skirt. eAlthough so simple this was a charming model and easily made at home 'at a trifling cost, whereas the price- of the ready-mad- e article was $8. es .I',-".-- All In Tender Gray, j in .these Christian modern times; A commission of inquiry, formed of delegates of Great Britain, France and Ruse sia 'has been on. the. ground weeks, and has actually visited the g scenes of the tortures. All the other European powers are r v ' ready to act with them. There is little of previous history to rehearse, little explanation to be made. The story of the outrages stands out in broad detail. The feeble defense has been made by those close to the Sublime Porte that the savage and nomadic Kurds themselves were alone responsible for these dreadful crimes. That this is not so can be proved by the fact that early in June, a year ago, the Turkish government commenced to send brigades to Armenia and to reinforce them by detachments of savage troops, men whom It was fondly elected would shoulder all the responsl-ilit- y for what was to be attempted. In broad daylight the deeds were rdsne. At dawn the little villages of Semal, Shenik and Aval were attacked by Kurds and by Turkish soldiers, disguised as mountaineers. There had been no provocation, no excuse even for retaliation. The day before a few Kurds had stolen some of the villagers sheep, and the ' shepherds, naturally, cond h&d enggsd Jn a flict with them to recover: their property. Four to one the Hamidiehs, the Bakranlees, the Rishkotlees, the aud Zilanees, together with the 'disguized troops of the Sultan, outnum-bertb.3 Armenians. In terror the i v i lving in their alarm the for-som- death-dealin- ! i -- hand-to-han- Khi-aale- es el i wounded behind. 14 It wj.3 thru the atrocities began. It spent more than $50,000 in the experimental iwork; he believes that before long he will he able to build a practical machine. All of the recent tests have been for the purpose of developing certain facts in relation to propellers of different size and shape. It is understood that Alexander Melville Bell and Alexander Graham Bell,' the Inventor of the telephone, have placed at Professor Langleys disposal a sufficient sum of money to enable him to work freely without fear of financial embarrassment. A Lazy Mans Device. girl ap- was composed of gray; satin ribbon, three Inches wide, alternating with creamy white lace, with a beautifully finished edge, which lapped over the selvedge of the ribbon. About the nfeck was worn a dog collar of silver. The sleeves were Immensely gigot, the tightly fitting lower aim buttoned with silver ornaments to match the collar. Gray silk stockings, gray suede slippers, with a bit of silver embroidery,and gray suede gloves completed the picture, which any girl may duplicate for very little. Ex. j For the Summer GirL The general revival; of wash material for gowns will be an; interesting phase of the summer world of fashion. A fetching cotton fabric showing fancy stripes on dark and light blue grounds is known as marine twill. All bouffant effects should be left entirely to, the thin woman, who needs them and can wear them, with good results. Tall women may wear long capes with good results, but those who are short or of medium height should wear them much shorter. Among silks taffeta has the preference for spring and summer wear, as it is of light weave and is produced in a great variety of effects. Crepe ribbons are; made with . satin edges that often contrast in. hue with Crepe, which is very soft and is particularly effective In stock collars. Fine laces' will be used for trimming gowns of India muslin. It is a novel decree of fashion that coarse laces are most suitable for use on brocaded taf- j Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the only true blood purifier prominently in the public eye today. $1 ; six for $5. HoodS Pills family Fter-Jlnilie- r cathartic. pill 23c. an! ASK YOUti DRUGGIST FOR i red-hair- ed j is becoming ex hausted. by reason of Impoverished blood. Give new life to the vital fluid and the nerves and muscles will grow stronger, Ilotods Sarsaparilla gives strength, because it makes pure, rich blood. Remember The ! erous quicksand at the bottom he was afraid to undertake it. He hung his coat on a post near the well and went into hiding for a few days." His neighbors, missing him and finding his coat near the well, surmised that he had sunk beneath the quicksands; so they worked with a will to find his dead body. After the well had been thoroughly cleaned out in their efforts to find his body, the wretch suddenly came back. bone-boilin- ; j Tho Describes a dangerous condition; because it gieans that tb vitality - Near the little town of Clare, Iowa, lives a man who had a well that needed cleaningi, badly, but fearing the treach- . auburn-haire- d peared at an evening party not long ago in a simple gown- which made her look like a picture. It was of sheer 'gray organdie made over ipouse-gra- y the outer skirt being very full satin, and edged with fluttering ruffles. The blouse ' Begging an Industry. There are numbers of villages in Russia in which begging is the staple inLIFES LITTLE IRONIES. dustry. No one does anything else. It is stated in the labor commission report The Indians will very boon be, on 'the on that country that nearly 3,000 out average, the richest people In the counof the 3,500 persons in the districts of try. Some tribes of them are now worth Inzar and Saransk are beggars, and several: thousands per head. A man in Auburn, Me., just had to that the whole' population of the village sneeze the other day when his mouth of Marinin live by means of begging. was full tacks. One went And these are by no means isolated down his of carpet the doctor got it but throat, cases. In many other districts preciseM out.;.. ly the same style of things prevails. Theres a good story afloat of a man In a real beggars village, all the in- who has a 5,000 Bank of England note habitants, including even the starosta, and makes a good income renting it out and other local dignitaries, are enrolled for weddings, where it appears as th lV in a company, which is divided into bride's fatherss gift. Customs near offlcers recentparties. These parties go out in turn ly seized a lot of human Belgrade bones consigned on begging picnicsi The booty they to & Vienna g house. bring back is regarded as common had once belonged to Russian They and property, and the population depends Turkish soldiers who fell In the war of 1ST 3.. upon it for their support. Lewis Pierce of Batavia was wounded twice in the last war, and has been A ship canal is proposed from Elliot struct once, twice shipbay to Lake Washington, in the state wrecked byatlightning sea, and smashed and a of that name, and company has been crushed id several runaways. Th was crushed. organized for the undertaking. day a , A? certain Tired best Dys pe ptic.Del icate.Inf i rm and AGED PERSONS York. JOHN CARLE & SONS, New stfiBBE A SPECIALTY IOISON fill tiary BLOOD cured in 16 to So days. You canpermanentlf be treated home for same price under same gviaran-- y ty. Iftoyou prefer to come bere wewillcon tract pay railroad fareand hotel bl lie, and we fail to cure. If have taken mernocnarpe.if cury, iodide notali, and you still have aches and pams. Mucous Batches In mouth. Sore Throat, Pimples, Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers oa any part of the body, llalr or Eyebrows falling out. It Is this Secondary BLOOD lOISON we guarantee to cure. We solicit tbe moat bsa nat cases and challenge the world for This has al rar bufuea the skill of the mostdisease eminent phy" cians. 500,000 capital behind our uncondl tioual guaranty. Absolute sealed oa sent proofs rnvUcftion. Address, COOK JillMKDY CO personal appearance is concerned,? IS a great help, but unless one has a very complicated reflector there Is no chance tc get an idea of anything hut the front view. The opera girl who knows she is to occfapy the first seat in the box recognizes the fact that the most conspicuous part of her toilet Is the back of her gown, and her coiffure, and with the aid of her maid and her three-face- d mirror, she dresses herself Temre, CHICAGO, ILL. accordingly. But the ordinary woman Cut out and send this advertisement, r who dresses herself for shoppings or church, too often forgets that there Is A SURE CURE FOR PILES nearly half of her gown which she is msknrwn by moiuture like perspiration, caos unable to see, even with the aid of her intenae when warm. Thi form and UiindTbleeiihand glass, sphere is a story to the efmg or I roi.ruuins Piles yield ut once to DR. fect that a certain young man said of PILE REMEDY which acts directly on parts affected, absorbs tumort, a young lady of his acquaintance: I jays itching, effecting a permanent cure. Price s often think Id marry her, but her shoes tiuiggists or mail. Ur, liusunko, Phila.d&. Xa. so dress look bad and her always doesn't fit in the back. Fullness of fetas and similar fabrics. , 3 of are kind The fancy pompadour silks are made pleats any dangerous : L..t Ail LLbE for the back of a bodice, and up into exceedingly dainty parasols. Ecf t Taau-In time.byrup. Bold br should be stitched down very tight, if These come In pink; blue, yellow and used at all. The dress here shown is white grounds, with d garflarured silk with a pointed yoke of lands strewn over the surface. ; ' ; i ; trlm-'min- OS 1 ga a chine-printe- I drur-rlst- isittiji . v abo of fight will tacbed ta |