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Show toERED p SILKS ARE POPULAR; WASH SILKS FOR I.IWI P mm um uoa but she thought it Inconsiderate of to die In her house. She bad expected to begin a series of dinner dances Immediately, and this necessitated a period of mourning, however called for mora brief. Mourning clothes, when her trunks were albursting with fresh Paris ready hi m - ...narloiia of the Inerens- s rones 01 siccu. ins 18 notl("enble 00 green Plt,ed ' .jully ID tl'e anra, uuy puiierneu smart for m irnlfh are so decidedly wear. Silks which pnttern Zcl backgrounds with bright green as often, If otifs are seen perhaps oflener. than any other combina "... V fr tion. in likewise cm-"Li- the more lightsome green Is widely featured. stunning silk which fashions the In the picture Is tn tones of --een with beige for the background. L are used on the bordered colors w silks are receiving consld-(rtblattention this season, which is e Bordered stricflv formal fashions cashing. f, That same enthusiasm for shan tung m,d kindred washable silks, which has been at topnoteh point all season in the adult world of fashion finds Its counterpart In the children realm. Shantung Is especially adapt able to little folks' wear. Tor Its laundering qualities are Incomparable. With such a wealth of beautiful color Ings as this attractive silk weave offers, its lure to the designer of styles for the younger generation is increased. Now that the use of two or more colors together is an outstanding trend of the mode, the idea Is being put Into effect with gratifying results. In the styling of frocks for little girls. For WNU Service (Copyright by Evelyn Campbell.) irtili.tuimmniit.iM A' ' Linda Haverhill's father, dies when she Is sevenne'er-do-we- Yi teen.... .. CHAPTER ,. 1 ll, . Continued 2 - iff- 'Do? They do everything. Live? They live everywhere," He sent his long, white band, fine as a woman's, In a gesture that indicated all that vast sweep of the city apart from their own environment. "They have been arouud you, child, all ot your life, only, of course you never saw them, you never would you never will. They built the houses you live In they paved the streets. They spun the cloth you wear, the food you eat is bandied by them In a hundred ways all this passes through their hnnds, yet you have never knowingly seen them!" He stared, struck with this stupendous thought.' Linda looked puzzled and faintly distressed. She felt as If she had been caught mocking at something which after ail was not amusing or ridiculous. She was more thoughtful than girls of her age usually are, and there was novelty In this viewpoint that caught her attention. But before she could reply the procession, changing every minute, yet always the same, had claimed her wonder again The music came fainter and fainter from tts distance. The best and showiest of the bands had gone by, and the tail of the comet was escorted by the leftovers of drums and fifes. There was not a splendid automobile to be seen and no bowing. The tail silk bats had become extinct. Patrolmen appeared on corners. They shouldered the crowd, and women and old men began to garner their flocks of startled awry children. Before long It was impossible to tell where the marchers and the crowd were divided, for the street was a maelstrom of pushing, worrying bodies, striving against one another for the right of way to nowhere. Authority lost patience. Behind the brown awnings, safe and sound from all this flurry, in Cousin Amy's fine house on the avenue, Jim Haverhill talked to his daughter and used the sight they had Just wlt-n- e sed to point his lesson and send It home. "Look down In the street and you will see life. I could not show you a fitter picture If we walked through all the galleries of the earth. Those poor fools grubs you called them I Would the crowd crmie out to watch them march? Who cared or watched, after the band and the cars and the unl forms went by? It's their one day of the year when we our kind are out of the city and they can play at calling It their own. Yet even then they've got to resort to fine feathers to make their own little show worth while. Poor, grubs! Smart butterflies Let 'era dig and sweat and struggle until doomsday and they'll never be half as Important to the world as a red coat with a dancing stick. That's life. Linda- ."It doesn't seem fair," she remarked. be sneered, "of course. It "Fair, tent fair. Nothing Is fair. And It Is humanity Itself that encourages As Ions a; men breds unfairness. have eyes, they will be caught with As long as they have ears, color. they would rather hear music than groans. It's the parade that counts, Linda, my love. And they've learned It the people who want to get things done. You can put yourself over with a brass band and a bow when you might crawl on your knees to the edge of the Red sea and never be beard from." Linda, who. at sixteen, owned sables that were much too fine to be worn had already untJ! she was twenty-five- , brushed close enough to the swamp of poverty to know its chill breath. They lived In Cousin Amy's house that summer; slept In grand mahogany beds; but they used the servants' sheets, and there was only a grouchy caretaker In the basement living rooms. Often she carried secret packages from the corner grocery hits of food that did not require experienced cooking. She did not like this. There was something fearsome and frightening about It much too near the grewsome procession that walked. After that day she listened attentively to all her father had to say. He tried to crowd all the dubious wisdom of his past, into the few days thai remained, and she readied for It avidly. , muni j Stunning Bordered Silk Frock. to in regard to both dark and light eaves. The gay peasant prints which tare so enhanced the sports realm their wealth of color and design last weeks, play up the border note In every key. The Intrigue of ordered materials is not alone In their aj colorings, but the opportunity they ffer for' ingenious treatments is one it their chief attractions In the eyes 4 ambitious designers. It Is very that the gown in the picture was ayled with a view to displaying the irder to best advantage. in regard to the new georgettes and iiiffons for fall, we may expect to see iliem run with narrow stripes and with liese evl-iff- li marked with interweavings threads. Stiff silks are being featured In collections. These Include taffe- - arioLsly metal "f e the attractive dress In the lower picture, the Paris designer successfully works shantung In contrast, using del blue for the yoke and the wide border at the hemline, with natural toned for the tody of the dress. The two colors are worked together with hand fagoting, thus giving the frock au The transparent exquisite touch. horsehair hat worn is In matching blue. Shantung Is contrasted In various other pleasing ways, tn the making of Juvenile frocks. A most wearable type which features two colors Is the kilt pleated ensemble, for which the skirt of one color shantung is made to button onto the blouse of another, with the Jacket matching the former. Navy blue or brown shantung with blouse In sunflower yellow, lime green or hyacinth blue, or perhaps Patou $ Y 1 (Mi.-- A fkV"' Ill I wr'M . --:- --- i V in: U 1 lj m ' i -7 M - ,,.,. '.-;- ' A A . Two Cunning Costumes. ' fulllp, " niolre and duchess sntln. trend toward elegance Is manifest early glik sliowlngs. All signs ,ln' to elahorutely designed fabrics. ' "1 of weaving is to be revived ru'lier ptuphnsized In Iwoche treat-"J"'of stiff silks, in novel Jacqunrd Wlternlngs, In formal Eighteenth cen-brocudes. fabrics for evening be n distinguished with ad the elegance 'he " r elaboration at the' command of artints of the loom. It Is j an accepted fact that thl fall lnJ winter will gee the observance of rose (shantung tomes In nil these colors) makes a charming suit for the Junior miss and tier younger sister. To be very modish a hat oi the two silks should .top this ensemble, using one color for the crown and top brira. facing the latter with the other tone. Another practical coHt tme of shantung for the little girl tops a frock of white or natural color or any solid pastel tint with a separate Jacket of bright print shantung or a contrast Ing monotone JCLIA BOTTOM LEY. one-piec- e ((& liJO. WMtarn Newspaper Union.) ' Amy Ralston returned to America three weeks after Haverhill's death. She was very much annoyed. Not, or course, because the poor creature was dead she admitted that no one of the life forces end she knew that the end bad to come to every one SB Kills he was among the quick or the dead. "There Is the daughter." she said speculatively to her husband who whistled off key but was much too wise to offer suggestions. "A girl like tha may be a frightful responsibility or an asset, as her poor father would nave said." But when she saw Linda In her slim black, poised with a gentle grav-It- y that placed her grief tn a sacred secluded background, the first pleasurable moment of the whole sad affair l i tie nr Woria v , Selling Insect "Pi et as a good showman always exults over beauty. "She looks like her mother, wl;o was a fool, or she never would have married Jim Haverhill, but If this child is as clever as she looks" Linda was clever. She was not yet seventeen, but her mind was twenty-seve- n a mind as keen and super-refine- d as her lithe body. She knew of life as a game tn which cleverness and Bavoir falre counted largely, and V- AT si? v ill w O into Bteneo loot War Put Heavy Burden on Women of Esthonia Women of Esthonia are among the busiest on earth, according to Miss Clara Roe of New York, a recent visitor to that tiny republic. Between her home, her Job and her public duties, the time of an educated woman in Esthonia Is severely taxed, she says. Many such women have two or three public duties, a Job as wife and mother, and another as wage earner. These Esthonian woman are carrying heavy responsibilities. Esthonia lost Its men heavily In the World war, and in Its struggle for independence women must now help to do the work of their nation. They also work In the fields, repair roads, streets and railroad tracks, work In brickyards, lumber yards and In building construction and perforin other laborious tasks. If they sought to use their political power to the fullest, they could outvote the men. Every one is public spirited, carrying two or three Jobs with pride Instead " of complaint. home-make- r, Polytecunic College Utk ud cf Engineering kWiiaa Sit.. Otkluut, CaUaraU The Great Engineering School . r' of the West EstablifxJin 1894 Om $100,000 PUnL . Chtrund a f (farce 19" All subjects omitted. courses tlioroupri practical in Elwtrlral, Mecluuitcnl, Civil, MinKtruotiirnl & ArrhitNstoral ing, New courses In Aeronautical and Airplane Knjrineerlnit. Special couieH in Airplane Mechanics, Auto Mechanics, Maehjne Simp. Electric bhop. Ignition, Uutterr. etc. Steam Complete Electrical .. and Tenting Laboratories. Savo tml two yun timt Students assisted In financing their courses. Write tor 'res catalog. . W. E. OIBSON " President , 'S? fjipJwi(3 J black txmdt Hit contains a special insect rcpellant. presented Itself. "The girl Is a beauty," she exulted THE STORY K Keep Insects AwayOutdoors! toilettes. It was comforting to reflect that only the family and a few old friends knew about Jim Haverhill and whether Evelyn Campbell FlithtoUorJy in this yellmi can with th W. T. WOOD Registrar Foundation for Belief Concerning Third Match "The Girl Is a Beauty," She Exulted, as a Good Showman Always Exults Over Beauty. she calmly regarded her youth and beauty as trump cards. The girl was not romantic; she was free from silly complexes, and she had no heroes. Her lips curled when some one spoke of movie gods, and she was never known to read a modern novel. But with all this Linda was a charming creature, polished and 3ne. CHAPTER II "Poor Jim's Daughter" When the sad business of erasing Jim Haverhill was well over and Cousin Amy's house was coming out of Its coma, Linda put on her close little hat one day and went to see Senator Converse. There was not the slightest diffi cultv in getting an Interview As she followed the clerk through one room after another she thought how rich and powerful the senator must be. The carpets were like cushions under her feet, and everything gleamed with shining surfaces and silence. Only very Important man could command silence like that in the heart of the city. Senator Converse was extremely warm and sympathetic In his greeting, He heaved his ponderous body from his swivel chair and waddled to meet As his hot. limp hands closed her. over hers she felt herself smothering She looked down in embarrassment and discovered that his feet were enormous long and Hat and encased In heelless patent leather shoes thar accentuated their shapeless unpleas antness. "Poor Jim's daughter," he wheezed, leading her after him "upon my word ! I have Just learned why didn't yon telegraph me at once? I would have come or sent" He fell Into a long silence looking at her in surprise. There Is a multitude of superstitions which have become thoroughly Imbedded in the race, and are observed seriously or humorously according to the individual temperament. Some people will not accept the third light from a match because The It signifies death or disaster. origin of this superstition Is more understandable than some. In time of war when a soldier lit a match it revealed his whereabouts to the enemy. The sniper who saw the light lifted his gun to his shoulder at once. There are three stages to firing: Ready (cock the trigger), aim (gun at shoulder) and fire. Therefore, the third soldier to receive a light from the match was the one visible when the sniper was ready to fire. That is how the third light from the mutch came by its sinister significance. nrl WIN MallM VOUt tlffo Omulmfnl cure aczunm. Price 51 .25, FreckteOintment remove freckle- Used over forty year. $1.U6 and 6Te. Beauty booklet aentlree.Aik your uealex or writs beautiful. Temptation scorns nobody.. Self-tru-- Is the essence of heroism, Emerson. A ties. mask of gold bides all deformi Dekker, They never fall who die In a great cause. Byron. Sympathy Is something that must never be asked for. Whale Leather Cloves Out Women of Europe are again finding the wlmle an aid to their wardrobe. Whale "leather" Is being used In making fashionable gloves, and style leaderes have approved the new material composed of the intestines of the huge swimmers. The new gloves are delicately soft, but so tough that it Is almost impossible to wear them out. The whale has not contributed to women's styles since the days of the whalebone for corsets. Chicago Millinery Center The world's busiest millinery cen ter, by virtue of a $50,000,000 a year business, is claimed for Chicago by the Chicago association of commerce. In the three departments of manufacturing, wholesaling and retailing millinerv. the city stands supreme. More than 5.000 persons, mostly women nnd girls, are now employed producing ltats and millinery accessories. - Trouble never sneaks up an alley when it meets a man who Is looking for It. A good Judge of human nature Is not so foolish as to find too much fault with it. people are blessed for one thing : They seldom talk behind your buck. Loiiu-anouthe- d . Until you go camping you cannot renilze that one can be comfortable without a shave. Timid people try to figure out that there Is something wicked about the pastimes that rough men like. No photographs will look so ridiculous In future years as those showing the fashions from 1025 to 1020. man may attain success so lHte that be Is half mad at the world for recognizing him so tardily. A In life Unwise Friendships Isn't It amusing, the variety of In"A great man who chooses feeble terruptions a man will get when he Is friends." said HI Ho. the sage o trying to tell a story he oughtn't to Chinatown, "may find himself In the in mixed company? situation of one who seeks to make a You Can't Outguess Them sapling do the work of a crowbar." "But madame, you cannot marry Washington Star. again. If you do, your husband has Romance in High Life clearly specified in his will that his she fortune will go to his brother." Doesn't the "What's delay? "Yes, that's so. It's the brother love the duke after all?" "They are I'm marrying." rage Gates. that searched." bis title having (TO BE CONTINUED.) Uniformity in Spelling Making Slow Progress Of ail the hundreds of languages In the world Spnnlsh Is recognized as the most perfect phonetic. The ItalThis ian tongue Is a close second. Is why these tongues are among the easiest for foreigners to team. The French academy has made some progress toward a uniform spelling of French, but the system Is yet far from perfect. When It Is remembered that even Shakespeare spelled his own name in 30 different ways, It Is not hard to sympathize with foreigners and elementary pupils In our own school i who face the difficulties of mastering the multitudinous forms of spelling. Perhaps some time a uniform system may be adopted by English-speakinpeoples, but it will not be soon. Kansas City Star. - Hal Sizes Hut sizes are fixed ny measuring the length, inside, from front to buck, and then the middle width. Add together, and divide by two. The result Is the s. McBRIDE'S. HIGH GRADE AUTOMOBILES Buys for Cash all Grades of Cars. Sells fully guaranteed cars 60 days service McBRIDE Specializes in Latest Models all makes new or reconditioned. McBRIDE always has a large stock of, Late Model Automobiles on hand Including Packard, Chrysler, Cadillac, Graham-Paig- e, Hudson, Erskine, Chevrolet. Willys-Knigh- t, Dodge, Essex, Plymouth, Pontiac, Studebaker, Ford, him first if you want to BUY, SELL or TRADE. McBRIDE'S Cor. 7th South ft Main SALT LAKE CITY McBRIDE says see |