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Show i . ;v 1 t - : .: ;. - . .,''. " .,. '. - , , " i WILLI over' with tinsel, 'laces for everything street are as fine as cobwebs, Ho material can be stiff,, -- TbUT" the a Mr. William A. Eaaford will" answer fluestions and give advice FREE OF COST ori all subjects .pertaining .to the subject of building, for the. readers of this 1 paper. On account of his wide experience der It and Jthe baseboard behind it This manner Of living necessitated a large kitchen, but we have learned a .things, bj experience and one ol as F:dltoT, Author Jand Manufacturer, ha these bits of knowledge has led us Is, without doubt, the highest auflvadty,, building smaller kitchens. these all 4fqulrlca: dntp A 'visit to the cook's cabinet .ot a to William A. Radford, No. 178 Weal -e-n-all - Bubjeetar-Addres- .) ; , In the middle west, where the win ters are cold and longer than we like very popular, partly be the stove and rep.ch everything cause It Is so easily heated and partly by Via riia a rilopo nftfaBOflrv U u ovt tint U J In iica iuv uui becatise It presents' a good appearIn ance spite of its comparatively low cost. It is 25 feet by 3S feet on the groflnd and is full two stories. In XedEoom DedRoom height, a size and shape that works up well Into rooms, hallways, closets, etc. This makes a good deal when . you come to live in it year after year. We all know of houses that are not rightly proportioned. They have jomejrooms TEat are jmall when they ought to be much larger properly to accommodate,, the furniture necesjl e.dEoom sary for a good appearance and for the convenience of the family, as well as for the accommodation of friends, I CLOSET for we cannot live alone. We often find this very trouble in the living room or- - dining room and in these : eases the mistake is nothing short of a nuisance that will prove annoying as long as the house stands. Other rooms may be small without Second Floor Plan. interfering wtth ,mir good nature, some of them ought to be small. for everything; and if he is agood We have learned, for instance, that a workman everything is in its proper targe kitchen really is not desirable, place, so he can reach a fish plank, because a small culinary shop - Is a beefsteak broiler or a bacon skillet economical of labor,- as It saves- steps,-- instantly j and 4h- same- - bolda-goo- d fact that becomes doubly Important through the whole list of culinary when the wife and mother Is the only utensils. A single cook will prepare one ,to perform the many kitchen du- a meal for twenty hungry sailors in ties necessary to the feeding of a one of these little box Kitchens when the same man w;ould' want three or growing family. Our grandmothers traveled many four helpers if he had to do the 'same weary miles In going back .and forth work in a room 20 feet square. -- ' becoming V, V, -- V ; i , v. i U.U kJV W0AI4-O'- - Jl! 3 -- kMv i ft----- - 3Y,,?f'i5,urr.v iYII 1 hj 1 . the dread Italian Camoi rists of - high and low degree, secret society, thrives and will goodItaljyi8an(l 'bad, sachems and IE Camorra, in-fa- ct, - st't jsH''afe; - " a confor effects are'stm c,lingingT-th- e WHY WOMEN RIGHTLY CLING TO tour of the body, which Uie great artists declare to be the most dlvlns PREVAILING STYLES. of God's creations, must be revealed. What Is the result of all this beauty 7 For the first time in her life womao-resent- s the talk of new styles; w.lta Graceful Lines of Present Fashions ail her strength she4t holdlng on to Are Not Lightly to Be Given Up the effects that banish . middle Bgdi Really a Debt Is Owing to take a dozen years from the , really the' Harem Skirt. aged and make the genuinely young seem like of .the gods. The Up to this moment the air has been fashions ofdaughters 1S30 may return after filled with rumors gf radical changes otl Ml,! I,ni ikAi! KittT t."Bn i1fior1- S .... ., c , n nmll n lnnlre . . .nn .... vuiMiiiiKi.i uitniuciuic ui iwnai sun young, uin we will "j'pun, uiiii grni-fiuiWe them. bay nTfecogtilze fscl the' makers 'themselves have tem. acquired the habit of beauty In dress porarily given up .the fiRht for decided 4md ft' willbe a hard one to break. changes, And are bending all their efThe illustration presents an evening forts toward making the styles we gown with some of the season's most have more beautiful. Manufacturers, moBt charming points, and Important too, are helping on the good Work, and and, as may be seen. the. stjrle hs frpm whizzing looms come . velvets, been i largely influenced by the skirt. The material of this stunning costume i is satin charnaeuse ln shade of blue so faint as to seera aK . most white. The bodice Is yelled 0e with dawn'plnk eh!ffonf4 covering the front breadths of, th skirt The train, oddly enough, Is of I the unnovered blue charmeuse. Tha harem feature comes in with the slash ht at ing 'of the skirt, which l this point with a large gold butlrrfly; hi the opening hangs a deep fringe-oblack chenille, the same note being T9 pea ted In velvet for the belt and chou. ; The little modestie at the front of th , bodice Is of plain white tulle caught t together with a gilt bauble, and th undersleeve bands are of gllt embrold- ' ' ered tulle. Plain ivory white or satin, or the J same material in a delicate color, with, j -- lake vessel will give a good idea oi the value of close quarters when get ting a meal ready' for - a hungry crowd. The cook at such times is a busy person. His little box- of a nt They took Fuccl. the chief, Naples so TonX outlaws. as the profoundly depressed and De Marihis. whose insoleure had conditions of economic and in- - drawn down the lightning; they took teileetualpoverty-aubslstbuliheand., Prof. Rani, treasurer of the Camorra y at- lar gewJILny.er- - Jie able . and a district leader of the old s'cTioriTT aandb-skIrV-orBthebodice-dg- er to understand how, in spite of the a gambler, a bon vlvant, a scholar of a handsome as la j be would ment of gilt, was' high degree of civilization of our mod- sort; the gre: t ErrlconeAtfano the as combination this present style ern times, the Cambrra can easily com- arrested in iew York. Others, too. Chiffon velvet and plain Telling ovei , more neglimit daring Tobberies, assaults, atro- were taken in the-ni silk are other rewarding materials', cious murders and other excesses of gible men, thieves, bad husbands, day J "lady If young but the gown is Inconceivable ferocity end still have sleepers, pickpockets, kidnapers, and or youthful matron the train haOet- - r beViearla of of Chiaia the and the rogues complete certainty ter be cut pointed, as this cut Is far ing left systematically unpunished, re- the larva of the jails and the more stylish just noVthan the square -lying partly on its members' secrecy, slums, That romance might not wholly : finish. r;1iZ ' ; i Naof which is the very gospel of this crim- die, they netted a blithe. girl inal association, partly on the weak- ples, Maria Stendardo, and kept her Tortoise Shell Combs. . f to decorate the iron cage of Viterbo. ness of public officials. For every are causing wom w3oifrure fashions five These For lay there axe cSti'gnT yeaTS" prisoners that en, to bring forth Oid KiieoccJiroitcti, are other thousands who will Tome"to In Irons. Many of thenl "died." pins that have been- iald away the king's carabineers, urged by the front. As happens on the mortow ... years. of a deadly battle where the etat the relc'ntless duke of Aosta, made While these may - bit? eootl ln Ha ' them. the the by Day has caje-been dispersed strong gainst by majeur they are apt to be dull and of clondVf shrapnel, the caldets are promoted in day the astounding Abbateiuoggio, the i appearance. masses to the higher ranks; and the traitor, revealed new secrets of the soto If very bad they should Camorra's cadets, bolder than ever, ciety. Jeweler or manufacturer .pf 'shell good are eager to excel their leaders. Twenty of the prisoners wore indict' . for repclishing. asrn a frrp.it tadv of ed for these various crimes disclosed Fivf at'home To brighten thb.v the One after Abbatemaggio. Ka.ilna rirnv nut tn tnkp thp nir oil. wipe dry, cover w!Uj whiting or a. in the Villa Nazionale, that strip of er they were bought up and tried in good silver powder andj)0sbi;wlth . various other the after twirls. One '''' .'park by the sea. She was 'blithe and "'V. .. .' chamois. anrsent back to Bmiling, for royalty was to drink tea Tlrey weTencquiTted In condltloa shell To good keep In only one case did the carawith her at five. There came riding Jail. silks, gauzes, tulles that look as If wash it frequently with tepid water, evithe a convictioiroii bineers, fecure by a big man, all gold chains and diaUiey bad been spun by the fairies. then polish with a little olive oil on a monds, on a young horse. ...He. was. De dence furnished by the informer, and Indeed, since the days of the French piece of flannel tr chamois. Marinis, boss of one of the election that conviction has been quashed by As shell is brittleit should be carefabrics have never been more districts of Naples, a plumed chief of the court of appeals. handled espccially.not subjectec' now tlan and, fully sumptuous besldesp Five are charged with the murder of the Camorra. Was the great lady's to' sudden changes of temperature. , with the tbey great comport require"and are his wife. The others coachman at fault? In any case, Cuocoio When not sure If your shell Is reai ment of Uie hour youthfulness. Frail there was a collision and the mighty being tried for "criminal association" gauzes are not put It too near a flame, as, it do over traced exquisitely in other words, for belonging to the politician was rolled in the dirt. Habe celluloid and explode.. ' . y with are threaded cut may velvet, veilings roh-- afatr-Jurgln- g hlacki Camorra. Themaximura pe'inltyfor gotOo-h-la stream of blasphemy bubbled from this offense by Italian law, four years' The accused men have his mouth!. He cursed and spat Into Imprisonment. MAGNIFICENT FUR COAT W0RKBAG MADE OF RIBBON in " been, prison five years. already her carriage. ' Origin of the Camorra. As much of it as could be told the comes from kamora con- Novel and Handy Affair Can Be Made Camorra great lady told the duke of Aosta. Quickly From Yard of Wide That indignant prince vowed to pull testation. The word that gave Its name ' Ribbon. to the formidable and long establishdown this toppling insolence. I :. ed Tryptogamous- - plant of Neapolitan What the duke of Aosta' did was to life Is Castilian A novel workbag that has added adneologism Imported v go straight to the king. .When his into the Spanish dom- vantage of being quickly made up. is through Naples majesty was heir to the throne he ination. constructed from a yard of wide.rib- t lived for many years in Naples. None It we think of the Iberian pen in ucn. preferably Fix or eight Inches, better than be knew the power of the sula, that coun ty of bristly sierras says the Washington Herald. . Camorra; none better than he knew and The bag is in tour compartments, deep valleys arranged In tb that his ministers looked to It for a of a saw, full of precipices and, all drawing on the tame string. The shape governmental majority in Naples; but therefore, very rich in natural hldin? ribbon is folded In half, then three be said: "Stamp them out If you can. If we consider the peculiar Lfolds are trmde at elther.side until the I am with you In this fight." And king p)aces V features of these regions, we ribbon is equally divided In space to physical and duke planned the war. on the can easily understand how tbey af- fonn four compartments. was no Camorra. There pretense of forded the best opportunities for the ...Sew thejelvaes together In pairs " trusting the magistracy of; the police' thriving of the gamurl tSpanlsh brig to piake four divisions, each four and i.j i , both, with Camorra cor- ands of .the the in Overcast Incheshalf forerundepth. sierras), banetjt The work was given to the ners and ''ancestors of the dreaded ruption. edges neatly with Ony stitches. This army1. Notably It was given to the will leave there top folds, which are ' C&niurrlsts. Neapolitan military police more notably still to Not a passei by nor u vehicle escaped cut for a depth of two" Inches front Capt. Fabrout of the Carabineers, a their watchful eye am! llu-ihet" Htber cdge.. Hern narrowly' and cover amart young Roman 'officer, ail brain so that traveling or going from with a tiny silk cord If you wish a claws, and pluck. . one jiioejt;aflotlit'i o.ti busies And the chiefs of the Camorra took for VhaTj4'v':Crocht't elKbi "Kmafl "Tings of brass oue. wtthout any Impwssible the air of the Villa Nazionale on their with the ferocious watchers of Hit j with bone embroidery ilk to. ing jt thejf-taik- ed . politics . . and 4 taj .... ... W k f cither the mnnpy he had with yrrronlze with th colors bag. crime in the smart Cafe Jortunlo In him or the of (he business that r!ew a ring to each corner of the four profits the Gallerla; they supped at Santa Lu-;- ia had" taken hirn on his It ' Journey. bags and then run a double length of and took their ease. Th fey Neither narrow ribbon, which was, therefore, necessary. tooynie tc Ullk knew por cared that Fabroni, captain tertns w ith the.br.ltrta'ds; so micb sc end. will open and either from pulled jf the carabineers, was at wc-rIhftt in time a regular tariff of at once V bags hey-did notltnow thM Fatr ra dues 'aifa'greed'uHn wttti ih( j'Do"not nee tod soffa'rlbboh" The t ronihad Joosed among them a laborers, and , Khepherds. h miners heavy flowered effects with satin edRbinan, hound-- e Capezzuto. etc, ana w un me maii-oux;ii- e mr iiif edges are pretty and will stand np- In and out of the dark boles of the the of travelers, passage according j ight when opened, which makes It Camorra this devil of a man-- Slipped their social importance and Handing; Kasler to discover contents. sometimes posing as a criminal, a fu."Whenever ' there was a d'fference oi ' gitive, a beggar, till they laid the oath opinion upon the division of some :" ; Renewing "a Hat.', ...' of the Camorra on him and told blm tting.-th- e and You may not know how well a light things best untold. But the true work pronounced his decisloh--s- o much to beaver hat will wash. Put the hat into faevdld was to find a traitor. And what so tnnch to tfie other; the re- AJarge' one, the " ' Ibanjjfarjm, water cmtainlng a traitor! mainder.the best share, of course; be- aoap powder and pat It with the hands, Get a' Camorra Chief. longs to the judge by 'right of Car changing the water fqur or five times, .": morra." " of . chiefs the Camorra then rinsing In as tn any. . To dry, lay Thereat Very different from their Andalusjiaii as flat as possible cover with Aloth were quite at- ease. Errtcone Alfano, who had been the chief sJhcT 1893, ancestors are their present degeneraU anV li;on. When pressed into shape resigned (hat high post and contented descendants.:' The modern honorabU and partly dry nothing so quickly himself with his district leadership of socletjc drawsjis. Jncomf xhleflyjrroB, process as an. electric fan. m Mnrit nonular Of winter of women, lays the Philadelphia North Ame l the Viearla, He1 even made. trip to theft, from the exploitation Umdon is the full length oat la rald ' on g'ambllni Then, to flnff up- - the nap, beat it New York, where he. was feted and from organized ural musquasn unea wiu banqueted.;: Fuccf feigned In .tlk steas, houses", fr6m usury extorted ffom rich minutes with a small switch. Tblr11? pi fcr its rich effect It who will been have men, a .purposely seem Then the blow fell. One; night the young long process, bat theJfat '' i. ; ': empreM.'x.J ;V"'. ; arabloe'ers- - fathered In over two score. led astray.;,;. ew. took as good a , ei:er-tarfve- T iff j the-wor- ld -- '. et -- foa the-almo- st 1 --' Mean'-while- r n ' fr Jackson boulevard, Chicago, 111., andfonly iielose two-cestamp for reply; tcet-u- IS 1 " . , be-se- rfervir ft ! I ' I ) -- i,"a hi I" v ' fatA ,a s 4 . Compare one of those large large kitchens that were kitchens with the little roomy and cool in summer and roomy and cold in winter. They had a few kitchen affair in this house plan of 9 feet 6 by 11 feet 6, that may be helps in the way of pantries, ilteheu.afeinets and reached quickly from any part ol the other modern conveniences such as house and that communicates through' are considered necessaries now, but the pantry with the dining room in fashion. the most .therf3vaaablg.wood-burnlng..cookAnother advantage in this style of Ing stove and a benerous wood box which the small boy of the family house Is the small amount of room was supposed to keep well filled by taken up in hallways, especially the working nights and mornings between upper hall. You land in the middle ; of Jthe house with doors almost withschool hours jand bed time. Those , kitchens had in reach that open into the different to be scrubbed once a week and upper rooms. This hall is well lightswept every day, a cleaning task of ed from the large window at the turn There was a In the stair; and it is always warm no small proportions. big. flat, heavy table in one corner from the register or radiator in "the without a knife drawer and the pan- hall below. house should cost not This tries . were generally partitioned off more than $2,000 in most localities nt In the most awkward ways possible; sometimes in opposite corners, which the present time. Good, high-gradbuilding materials and construction could be had at that figure, top. across -- . , FIT six-roo- - e Love Beaten by Locksmith. A locksmith and'a blacksmith play ed an Important part In the wedding of Miss Mabel Stevenson to George ,inimoEm. I Worden in her home at Silvermiue, a KrrcHEM suburb of South Norwich. Conn. In cldentally Miss .Stevenson Isn't, ready to admit that Howard Alkenrwhaserv. ed as the bridegroom's attendant, Ib deserving of a title. Soon after the 20 members 'of tne wedding party nd the officiating ' HAUL, n Stevenson's home Mr. Aiken picked up a dog collar to which was attached an automatic lock. Jokingly be placed it about the jeck of the bride. The lock snapped. Mr. bers-- of Wo rde rian ! m ost-- of t era '' FbrtM for hunt4 y vainly party the key. There werevDP tools in the house wlthwhleh.to open the lock. - When the hour set for the ceremony came Mr.. Worden summmoned an auPlan.' First Floor , tomobile, placed bis bride Into IC. climbed ber ad dashed to a back forth and rvqulred traveling ar.d the blacklocksmith1 town. The y -- I f "- ' .: . ' - - -J - I h-- ' ; ' - ' . I') m I l he-tn- the-wedd- t iHg . . great maay times la a process. People seemed to live to fetch and carry .In those days. Thejr, carried burdens of considerable weight into kitchens and those v big were stored . some o( the packages there for future us. There-- was a barrel of apples, bags of potatoes and flour, bin,' all;f whlch had to be fetch-and-carr- ;t,k.rr' --i smith' Jmljed at the bfide's predicament, and between tbem they succeeded In filing off the lock and the bride returned., to the. waiting gatheriDt ra her home and was married. , "H!i Staylnfl Powers.-- 1 ; serious 'th , matter with your lather's lungs, is there; Jerry ?';; ' "I should say not! He's been cough aoved at cleaning time. The wood box had to be hauled away from the Ing for S? years, and be caa oougl ' V7 un- - loader bow than ; trail so. the floor could be cleaned "Nothing i . I . ,. : ., .... - . - - - i, - '). J . r - ' bar-sierra- s' tors, ; , cordr -t- soft-foo- I j -- Camort-ist"interene- - a , r .''.'- '. - t - nt twi;: -- li'.coat -- ' T'.. '": 7 ' ' r |