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Show Till? 2 Tumour's otil son will some day be the earl of Winlcrton. The arc a great Sussex family which has its seal ai Peiwinh and has pro--i bled the nation with many notable admirals snl ieople of that sort. Mrs. the Countew Tumours sister-in-laof WLiterton. ia sister to the high an.l mighty duchess of liecleuth. At the t time the llun. Mrs. Are her Tumour's only son is a clerk iti a hank, while his moihcr expends her taste on the wants of customers who climb up Bond to the second flisir of No. 29 street, where she has a blouse and bonnet shop. Beside the lirasa plate announcing "The lion. Mrs. Tumour" and the goods she has fur sale, which Is placed aL the from entrance, there is a large showcase some eight feet high lit up with electric light which stands literally ou the street. Mrs. Dtigdale of the Dug Jains of North Wales, a famous and exclusive old county family, has kit her riaht to attend court by preferring to take a cash Interest in dairy produce, fur it Is she who supplies ulun and other public schools with thiir regular quotas of butter. Izidy Rachel Byng is another, for she has opened a bound shop in South Molt :m sired. Mrs. tTiaries Thyitne, whose h mdiand is a cousin of the Marquis of Bath, also places herself among the ''Ineligiblcs" because she makes and sells buttons. She has nut au ordinary factory for this, her buttons lining or a sitiialily sridorruiie sort, exquisite pleiw of embroidery worked with gold and silk threads, which cost a small fortune each. Mrs. Thyme was niece of James MacNeti Whistler. Mix. Tur-imur- b SOCIETY WOMEN WHO KEEP SHOP (in-sen- Copyright. 1904, by Curtis Drown. used to If London, April written about a few English women of title who had horrified aristocrat y by going into business, in imltaiiun of the n Bond famous linen shop meneJ street by the Countess of Warwick. But in the last two or three years a b ut the same length of time that high feagambling for bridge has been a ture of fashionable London evenings the number of women bearing distinguished old English names who have gone into business has become so grear that society scarcely notices it any uih more. There has ueter been another year since tile South Sit Bubble luirst that so many iteorcssea. to say nothing of women of lesser lit le, have been plunging in stock z. One dowager countess, truther of the Ear! of Rnssyn. is inmobankruptcy pnuepill lifts at this tuenl on necount of unlucky speculaIt ere could he tions, and hair a dozen named who are known to Ik hanging by their eyelids on the etgn of failure, foock speculators by the uo.i'u are getting iiitrudm cd into exclusive circles in exchange for tips, and. tin the other band, seteral noted hostesses one in jmrilcular are known lo keep afloat by aid or etiinmissiona from promoters on sales of shares to their friends. Owing partly to the gambling craze among fashionable women in London, partly to the general liusiiiesa depression here and partly to the alealy Increase of lavish exiiendit tire in Ihe race for social distinction, lliere has been no time in yearn when so many laindon society women have been hard op end ready to sacrifice tradition and to rub elbows with lire "common folk" In the daytime for the sake of keeping tliovc them in the evening. CUT OUT OK COURT. According to nil nceonnta, most, of the millinery nhupn in Bond street nn i Regent street are women owned. In tuirt at least, by whose names apaar two or three lime a week in the precious society column of the Morning Pont. An American countess is said to be a heavy shareholder in one of Ihe largest dry good! stores in Ixtndon, and another titled draws the whole of enormous income from a brewery. There Ik one bitter, biller penalty that has to be paid by the gristocrat who goes in oiienely for trade one that to a woman still trying to keep her place In society or to wriggle Into a still better one means a great deal. She is forbidden at court. Aa twain aa she opens a shop the doors of Ilia Majestys drawing room are rlmtrd to her. The king and queen, theoretically. turn theif narka upon her. and her aame pauses forever from the lord chamberlaln'a books aa an eligible at le r sourL" A II lied woman may lie a doctor, writer or teacher of bridge; she may ell motor rare or puppy dogs on a do ninny of the greatest of litleJ ladiea In these days for the sake of extra pocket money; ahe may even make lamp shades and bead necklaces to sell privately among her friends, and the host and hostess at Buckingham Palace will aland ready tn receive her. llut let any trade lie done boldly In a place of business, or let the would-b- e eligible' marry a man In trade, and queenly and kingly recognition comes to a sudden termination In theory. But to tbla rule there are excepiione that always havs puzzled tbs regular attendants at the drawing room. Kor liiainni e. Lady Maple went to court and her husband mid bedsteads and pieces of tape at his shop In Tottenham Court run !. l4uk of scrutiny on the part of the lord ehamlierkiin may aerounl'for other and more notable oversights. For liislance, Mrs. Oswald Chapman, who keeps a restaurant and docs her own rooking, ban lieen seen at court since she went into business; and yet when .Lady Duff Gordon wished to go to court she was refused because she has a dressmaking business that Is carried on under the name of LurlR" fl'IlE HONORABLE BONNET SHOP. The Hon. Mrs. Archcr.Turnour is one Of the best know of those society worn-- n whose enterprise baa condemned them to view Buckingham Palace only Irom the outside In the future. Mrs. iirnotir's husband In the brother cn the present curl of Wtntertim. pnrt as :hlh earl lias only one son. w ho In very lelieaie. It Is not at atl Impossible that rum-missi- on . LUCII.K Intdy I luff Gordon, the wife tif Sir (losmo fluff Gordon, the fltth baronet of that name, is one of the most alof titled tradeswomen, though site is known to the outside world only as Liiclle." the dressmaker. Bhe began her trading career in a very small way. After divorcing her firs husband, who was the secretary of the Turf Club, and finding her Income reduced In 95 a week, she no) only fell compelled lu make her own gowns, but sought to design and make some lor her aristocratic friends. From doing every stitch herself she advanced to Ihe (mint of taking a woman to help her at her private house. This led to the selling apart of a proper, workroom, and a the btisinesa" grew this clever dressmaker look what used to be the Arts dub. In Hanover square, and ia now moving into itnpueing premises at the other corner of Hanover square. It waa afier her arrival 4a Hanover square that site married Blr Cosmo Duff Gordon, who ia one of the fencers in London, and who owns an extremely pretty place in Scotland railed Mary cult, Thrir private house in London Is one of the tiniest In fashionable Belgravia, and la In truth one of Charles ll.s bunting lodges. The wonderful taste th.it has made the name of Lucllo" one to swear by in the world of fashion has all been brought to bear upon the decorating and furnishing of tbla pretty liuie house. The walls of some of the rooms are washed white, while outlin: ing the walnscollng and running tp over arrhea and doorways goes a trail cut out In atrliies of green Ivy from an ordinary wall paiier and pasted in tb walla It now adorns. For to i,ady Duff Gordon material la nothing; taste la everylhlng. Twice a year, at the beginning of spring and autumn, Lady Duff Gordon invites to her dressmaking establishment her friends anJ many of her husband's to see the latest modes she has are designed, and her models, who carefully chosen for beauty and carriage, parade up and down and In and out of her aalona In all the newest nibfngs. One of the queerest feature of Izidy Duff Gordon's busmen la her practice of giving soulful names to her creations Himes' that would remind a mere Irreverent man of the titles that R certain famous eomiKmndcr of cocktails in New York used to lie credited with giving tn his blends. One or JjSdy Duff Gordon's most siicressfiil A gowns was actually christened dear, dear desire, and a beautiful one that ran Ihe from jhe deepest, fullest blue to the brightest orange waa railed Sunset or a distant shore." "The laughter of spring" was a massing of pale pinks, and another wonderful ercatkm was A little ripple ou n moonlit sea. Lady Duff Gordon frankly conferne that site far prefers to dress American women to any other. She says they hava taste and they know when a gown Is perfect and will leave It a It is. Besides which they know how to carry a gown as It should be rarrled and do not detract from the poetry of it. On the other baud, this tilled dressmaker rnndemus the Englishwoman's taste. best-kno- w e MORNING EXAMINES, "She will rave over a dress, say how perfectly delighted she is with it, and so on." nays Ijuiy Duff Gordon, yet when 1 see her in s box si the opera or si dinner arty that Englishwoman will have stuck some odious bow oi lulored ribbon on it and marred the whole creation. Lady Duff Gordon is the sister of Eleanor Glyn, who wrote "The Visits of Klizalicth" ami "The Reflections of Ambrusine. and who L famous also as a beauty crowned with a glory of reJ-gahair. It was in iter houor that Mr. Van Alen returned to New York last July to prepare both at New York and at Newport for six weeks of entertaining on a marvelous scale. "You shall have the best time that any oue ever had in America. were Mr. Van Alen'a parting words to Mrs. Glyn. though the fulfillment of the promise was frustrated by renewed ill health contracted at the corouatiun durbar. KINS A RESTAURANT. Among other traders who cannot be recognized at court are LaJy Wilkinson. who has started a bonding house, and Lady Hampden, who haa opened a nimilier of dairies in Jxindon and gives them ihe name or tilynde cream-eriefrom all her supplies coming her dairies at Giynde In Busses. Mr. Jack C'nmming. the daughter of Sir Thomas Andros tie la Rue, has forfeited her right to be invite d to Buckingham Palace by trading as a dressn name of maker under the Machinka in Dover street. Her husband alno has joined the rink of traders, and la a house decorator. According to the lawa that obtain, Mrv. Oswald Chapman, the daughter of the late Sir William Hardman of the also figure Morning Post, should at among those no longer eligible court, for when bad times came she turned her hutisehoU management talents to account, and has now built up an excellent little business in the restaurant line. Thia started by modestly inviting typewriters and other women employed near by to taka their leas in the drawing room of her little flat In Victoria street a suggestion that met with such a ready resisinse that Mrs. Chapman liegan providing luncheons for them at her home until the business grew mi large that she was obliged to fit up luncheon and tea rooms off Victoria street, where one can obtain n lunch of meat, vegetables and pudding for the modest sum of IS cents. This is all rooked by Mrs. Chapman, her little daughter, aged 15, and any other of her aristocratic friends who are willing to help hqr la the kitchen or to serve and wait upon the hungry customer. It la not an uncommon sight to see one of these little aaaiat-an- ts drive up In a carriage for the purpose of giving a helping hand during the Tush of the midday hours. Mrs. Poppy," Chapmans little daughter, though hard at work with culinary still problems during the morning, continues her education in the afternoon. At 8:10 p. m. her serving apron ia discarded and aha goes with her French governess, or on alternate days with her German instruct ld well-know- res. SHREWD AMERICAN COUNTERS. By general consent, the hardest business head among the peemsea la that who waa Adels Grant of New York be- -, fora she married the earl. She never has linn known to lay out a cent without getting a fair return fur it, and never has been caught, like so many on wildcat of the other peeresses, Mb ernes. Bhe holds shares in n number of dry goods concerns, and la generally understood to be heavily Interested in at least two fashionable millinery shops carried on under assumed names. Aa she doesn't keep shop in parson, however, she Is not excluded from court. Two yean ago it was reported that this energetic counteas waa going to start a laundry. As the laundry was not forthcoming the report waa credited to aame correspondent" Imagination; but, aa a matter of fact, the count pis entertained the idea seriously, and lately has taken It up again so (hr as to sand two men around to inspect the London laundries and report In the generally unsanitary conditions which prevail In them. As non as the report is ready the countess purposes to ask for municipal regulations improving the condition o women who work tn laundries, and i( ahe Is not successful in this, I understand that site Intends to go Into the business herself, not necessarily for nut profit, but for sake of wiping some of the wretched plates in which laundry work la now done and giving employment to tho women who would be thrown out of work. The countess doesn't care much for l,ondm society, and has no town house of her own. Her busliand lias no head for business, so the counleM manages the estate herself, and looks after a lot of charities besides. f Dont Try to Keep House without an Alaska Refrigerator OPAL TKC king r REFRIGERATORS SNOW WHITE HIM NMC OSK CASES wmi com ihm With warm weather coming how will you keep the butler, meat and other food materials fresh and sweet unless you buy a refrigerator. and why postpone I pttrrlisKlnK and thereby fail to get Ihe full season benefit ? Take our advice and inirehasc now from Ho: i Ogden furniture Carpet Co. The Alaska Refrigerator is cliar-coh- ! line, throughout siul when once exiled remain so. You pttrha.e one of Ihe.--e linusrhoM nocesnft ies for $7.50 up to $75.00. Fr family use we recommend refrigerator. Why? Because has already given excellent results and has made us friend; it is compactly built, requires but lit- - Hji ii. tie le esq is to nicely finished that it is an ornament to he culinary department of any home. non-conduct- from $50 to 5150. OGDEN FURNITURE & CARPET COMPANY ' HrRUM P1HGREE, Manager. Exclusive Agents for Ogden. Lord Curzons comcniplaied visit to the Andaman island will be the first n which a viceroy has paid to that since the assassination of tha Earl of Mayo by a convict on tha Sih of February, 1872. This narrow strip of islands, extending southwards from Cape Negrals, contains some of the moat beautiful scenery in the East. The last view on which Lord Mayo looked from the summli of Mount Harriett, the sun sotting over the Labyrinth islands and the barber of Port Blair below him, haa few equals. Kor strategic purposes in 17X1 during our wars with France, the Andamans Bewere annexed by Great Britain. fore that time ihey were know n merely as a resort of Malay pirates and as being inhabited by ferocious savages. After the annexation a small penal settlement waa established by Lieutenant Blair in the present harlsir of Port Blair. It throve exceedingly well till, in an evil moment, the governor-genera- l was persuaded to transfer the settlement to n large harlsir In the north of the group, almost surrounded by mangrove swamps, where the slrk and death rates were so high that the place was closed in 1796. Tn 1X1' 4 that northern harbor. Port Cornwallis, waa made tlie rendezvous for tho fleet proceeding to Burma for the first Burmese war. Captain Marryat. the novelist, distinguishing himself by bis arrangements for watering the vessels under great difficulties. DISPOSAL OK CRIMINALS. The habit of the Andamanese of massacring the crewa of any ship which touched at their islauds led the government of India to consider the need of a reoecupatUin. Owiug to Ihe outbreak of the mutiny the scheme for that step hung fire until the close of 18&7, when Dr. Mouatt was dispatched to examine the harbors, so aa to find one suitable fbr a penal settlement in which the convicted mutinoera could be kept a safe distance from India. The harbor of Port Blair, Lieutenant Blair's original choice, was fixed on, and in April, 1858, Dr. Walker, the newly appointed superintendent, arrived with the first batrh of convicts. The records of those days are marvelous reading. There wraa an insufficient garrison, there were hostile savages, there was sickness, end a turbulent and a desperate body of criminals, the adequate control of whom necessitated the sternest discipline, this combination of elementa favorable to unrest culminating in an attempted rislqg men were hanged for which elghty-alIn one morning. Thq Indian gaol system which Dr. Walker endeavored to introduce waa ineffectual, and there followed a period of losa severe discipline, during which quiet waa restored and the opening up of the country begun. Under General Stewart (the late field marshal Sir Donald Stewart) the settlement was reorganised on slrict but just lines,- From 1878 to 1890 great strides wre made In the development of aurh natural resources aa the islands possess, and the general health and discipline of the community were satisfactory. The government of India, with n laudable but a misguided desire for reform, decided In 1890 to reintroduce the Indian gaol system as far aa possible. Orders were given to build huge cellular and associated gaols. The discipline was to be more strict and repressive, the old Idea of making the settlement a reformatory rather than a prison appeared to bo abandoned, and all progress waa stopped. Among other changes the deportation of term convicts to the Andamans was forbidden. General Stewart had held the opinion that a settlement composed entirely of life convicts could not be safely worked with the small guards supplied, and the government of his day acceded to his request for term convicts. Lord Curzon had only been in office a few months when this question waa resubmitted to him by the superintendent of Port Blair, who found the tame difficulty which had been experienced by General Stewart. General Stewart's arguments were again considered. The viceroy cancelled the orders passed by the government of his predecessors, and has permitted term convicts to be transported. Much la anticipated by the local authorities at Port Blair from the expected visit of Lord Curxon. CONVICT LIFE AND NATIVE RACE. The life of a convict In the great Indian penal settlement la not unduly harsh. Fur six months after his arrival he is in a cell In n prison, and afterwards works for eighteen months in an associated gaol. Should his conduct be good, he join one of the many gangs who clear jungle, cut firewood, make roads and do the thousand and one jobs necessary to the development of a colony. After five years, always with good conduct, he receives a small allowance of money, paid monthly, and spent on permitted luxuries. The man may be in domestic service, or be a petty officer in charge of gangs of convicts. A life convict may, afier ten ticket, years, obtain a may marry, may receive an allotment of land, and may live a fairly free life. The convict may also, except, in bad rases, obtain his release after twenty years and return to India, a wise enactment which was passed by Lord Northbrook and which gives the ''lifer something to hone for, thus relieving the settlement from the danger which would arise front a combination of a large nimilier of dcKperaie men. ('onvirtK may lie seen in many plarea hut only in the Andamans and even there in very uniall number now -- are tn he met the Andamauese. one of the most interesting scientifically and most ''harming personally of all savage races. Ture negrltoa, with ebony black skins, the blackness extending to lips, nostrils and the roofs of their mouths, small, with bends and feet, and without in many Instances the typical negroid feature, the Andamanese were long a puzzle to be learned The Malaya said they were the haruans or monkey neople. while Vareo Polo and others attributed to ers were euro that there natives were camihas find tin to fifty years ago of "S"y t" "'f them the ee. rv lev who had entered shipwreck. As independent Inquiry in different countries was made, however. It waa ascertained that there had Inhabited a large portion of the earth a great neerl'u race, living a nomadic life, and that of 'his race the traces x finely-shape- We are also se'Iing the Opal Refrigerator, which has lining pf opal as a Ranges in valu: . OGDEN. L'TAII, MONDAY MORNING. ii d 'ATRIL IS, 1901. of which atiil existed, the purest specimens were the Andamanese. Probably the oldest race of unmixed blood on esnh, with tradition! reaching back to the time when its islands formed part of the mainland of Burma, thia people is uuw rapidly becoming extinct, the inevitable result of its contact with "civilization," aueb as n setilemeut of convicts must bring. The Andamanese have always been ferocious through Ignorance and fear, and they have Buffered much at the bands of Malay slave traders. Cannibals they never were, and when once known more pleasant companions in their own jungles and on their reefs could not be found. The Jarawa tribes have still resisted all attempts on the part of the settlement officials to establish friendly relations, and only in 1886 waa the tribe on the Little Andaman subdued. An interesting island about 75 miles from Port Blair la the quiescent volcano called Barren Island, n perfect specimen of n marine volcano rising abruptly from deep water to a height of eleven hundred feet. The outer slopes are covered with jungle, and only on the northwest aide, where a rift in the hill- occurs, can the Imposing central cone be aeon. It was last active about the year 1830, but no accurate records have been kept. When Dr. Mouatt saw it in 1857 it appeared much as at present. ILAE OK ORIGIN OF CYCLONES . Under the same government aa the Andaman group are the Nicobar islauds. which He farther to the south and form the remainder of the chain from Burma to Sumatra. They were formerly the property of Denmark, but were occupied by the British in 1869 In consequence of the piracies of the d Nlrobarese, a cruel, lazy. race. For some yean a small penal settlement waa maintained island aa a branch of the one at Port Blair. But the sick and death rates were ao high, and the troops in the garrison suffered so greatly, that the settlement was closed, and only n native agent now represents British authority. On Car Nicobar, where the natives are the most enlightened, is a mission station, and n little headway has been made there against the cruel superstitions of the people. Unlike the Andamanese, who are solely hunters, the Ktcobarase own groves of cocoanut palms and other fruit trees, and have a small trade with Burmese, Malays and other. Masters and owners of vessels declare that the two groups of islands are the place of origin of the cyclones which annually work havoc among the shipping of the Bay of BengaL With such a reputation and with little natural wealth, as far as Is at present known, one of the fairest spots in the empire will, it seems probable, remain a penal settlement and nothing more. Malayo-mon-golul- oetsTDIg m suns Wherever I go I have my lit lie scissors with me," said a young woman who cuts silhouettes for n living while waiting for fame as a portrait painter. The scissors are small and harmless looking, you see, but I have chased the wolf from the studio door with them. I lake them with me even when I go to church. One Sunday morning 1 attended a service which was being conducted by Bishop Potter. I was very much interested In his sermon I really waa but ha had such a fine profile for cutting oat! I had to do it on the aiy, of course. I was at the end of the pew away from the aisle, which waa a help, and then I held In my lap an open hymn Jtook In aurh a position that nobody waa likely to see the adaaora and paper If his eyes were where they should be, that is, on the Bishop. Every time he turned hla head ao that I could get a good look at hla profile I made a cut. I suppose It was wrong, but I finished the silhouette during the prayer, and If I do any It myself, it waa a good nize thia?1 Why. of course 1 do.' she answered just aa soon as she had glanced at the silhouette. "But how did you get it, my child? Where hae Mr. Sage been? I told her then about my running after her husband down town, and she was mm-amused. It is really very good.' she said. My only rritldstn 1h that you hare siren him a little too much hair.' The truth was that whether 1 had given him too much hair or not, 1 had given him very little. " 'Well, you see. h had his hat on.' I answered, 'so 1 couldn t be sure about hla hair. I thought he might like to have the benefit of the doubt. 'I'll tell him about that, she said, laughing, and I shall have to buy the portrait to give him an Idea of tha impression he made on n young Indy. This la a matter that will Interest him very much. I told Mrs. Sage that she ponld have he silhouette on the condition that he would allow me to make one of Vr. She consented. This is the way I added Mr. and Mrs. Sage to my por1 have been at big resorts like Atlantic City which families from tha country visit, and have dune lots of elderly husbands and wives It ba always interested me to notice that In many cases where they are quite old rnysicai umnre AND Private Lessons in Boilor By Wm Selby (Young Kd at the Gymnasium, 33 McCovi Mtu Street Another Month of Our Sale j j : And Finds Us With Quanti- ties of Goods ON HAND Yet . e e eign cities. ACTIVITY IN IDAHO. Mr. T. R. Cutler arrived from Idaho yesterday, where he has "pent, several days looking over the building operations of the Fremont county sugar factory at Sugar City, the work at Sugar City townslte, and the farming operations of the two. sugar companies. He reports everything in flourishing condition, and says the activity around Sugar City suggests a regular bee hive. Since the spring weather opened, building operations have taken on a sort of boom. One hundred and fifty masons and steel men are today at work on the . Fremont factory and the force will he I beets ia going on briskly both around the Fremont factory and at the Idaho Falla planf7 and indications are that both fartnries will have ail they can do to tmke core of the crops. Tbe Fremont plant from present ndicationa will be ready before beets are harvested.. At Sugar City the building up of the new town la going on rapidly. The y brick business block, which the George Romney Lumber company ia now erecting for the Townslte company la well up and will be flnlehed within the next 0 days. The premises have already been leased to six business concern. including a hardware store, grocery and dry goods, wall paper and paints, a clothing house and n butcher shop. In the upper story J. H. Wallis will establish tha Sugar City Times. One merchandise store has already opened in Sugar City and Mr. Cutler says he was surprised to note the extent of its sales. Opposite the business block ia being erected n bank building and hotel. The bank will be conducted by banking interests already at Rex-buand St. Anthony, Including Messrs. Bowerman, Flamm, Comstock, and others. A 'buKding to be rug aa a restaurant la going up next to the hotel. The Oregon Short Line haa contracted to build a rock depot at Sugar City, and the stone is already on the ground. Two lumber and hardware firms have bought lots opposite tbe depot Sugar City poetofflee will lie established at once, either in the business block or tho bank building. Nine lots have just been sold for a grain elevator and warehouse which will be built immediately. Mr. Cutler atatea that 30 dwelling houses have already been finished, and six more In process or building. Including residences for the head men of the sugar company. Messrs. Mark Austsln, J. B. Gaddle and Walter Webb. Wc Must These Goods THIS is Probably the Longest Siege of Low Prices in Ogden two-stor- Ladies Fancy HOSIERY in Boundless Profusion. Our Entire Stock of Hosiery is Complete and Goes at COST. yds. 4,000 of Elegant Patterns rg 1 -- 4c two-stor- y The LADIES' WAIST Line fa Moat Complete and Cost Means Very Low Prices. An Inspection of Our Well Assorted Stock Will Convince Any Buyer How Cheap We Sell floods. Reese, Howell & Sons. The Man ' Who neglects nr fails tn secure LIKE INSURANCE puts a dent in hla head whore the bump of hope should be. Did that ever occur to you? LET'S TALK IT OVER. one. Thia la one way I have of adding to my collection of profiles of prominent persona. I tack them up or spread them out on my table when I'm at a fair or exhibition. A good many of the fares are recognised and they help business. One noon I happened to be walking along Nassau street near Wall with a friend who la a stenographer. Oh. there's Russell Bags.' ahe said. 'WhereF I asked, feeling for my scissors. 'Why, just across the street. Don't you see him? That old gentleman with a sort of hungry look.' I hurried over and for nearly a block walked along near Mr. Sage, gazing at him as if it waa a case of love at first sight. I even followed him into a building and an elevator where I got a comfortable, quiet look at hia fare. Five minutes afterward I was in the hall finishing lit silhouette. At n charity fair st tha Waldort during the same month 1 happened to see Mrs. Sage, whom 1 knew by eight. Oh. Mrs. Sage, I called out the first 1 time she passed my table. have romething to show you. Do you recog- trait gallery. their profiles and expressions are much alike. "It was at Atlantic City that a woman came up to my table, glanced at the black silhouettes 1 had tacked up, and exclaimed: 'Why, you don't make pictures of anybody but darkies, do you? "1 have been plying my scissors a good deal lately at children's parties, making silhouettes of all tie small guests for a certain sum from the hostess. I can cut about thirty an hour. "It is hard work fur me, but lots of fun for tbe boy and girls. 1 have often seen them exchanging portraits in fashion. Some quite a sentimental have begun to make collections. At Valentine time I waa unusually busy and before Christmas I got up a lot of calendars with silhouettes In col- ora of whole families, that of eat h in- dividual being placed over the month in which he or she was born. These 'calendars would be sent to a member of the family who was away, or to relatives, and they made quite a hit because the idea seemed to be a new one. go you see there is more in silhouettes than you might imagine at a first giant. At any rate, they keep the pot boiling, and some day l am going to make them pay my way on a trip abroad, both on the steamer and in for- . John L Herrick State Agent Des Moines Life Insurance Co. Underwear . . . Sale . . . Beginning Saturday, March 13, w. will place on sale 350 suits N underwear. This underwear la what wa call seconds, as it la the goods on which our new hands are taught to knit For this reason we are closing them out at what tha labor coat ua to have them made. The quality Is of the highest, but the bnlsh ia not up to our standard. Wa have them In Saxony. Worsted, Wool, Cotton and Mercerized. Corn early and get your pink. Be sure you eome to the right place, ae thera are two factories in town. Our factory ia between 32nd and 33rd streets, first door north of Con soil dated Wagon and Machine company. THE OGDEN WORKS KNITTING 2274 Wash. Ave. Ogden Order Your Ice From The Citizens ice Co. Successors in the Ice Business to Parr Bros. Coal and Ice Company. M. L Jones C03I and Ice Company John Farr Coal and Ice Company Mountain ice Company Office Basement Reed Hotel. . 'Phone 71-- Y. Largest Plant, Bast Service, Purest Ice and Lowost Prize We Guarantee Our Customers Ice Throughout the ENTIRE SEASON. |