OCR Text |
Show THE THEE Vaar Standard Publishing CMC Day ia th SUBSCRIPTION 4ATEB. Delivered br Cimir ia Ogd City, including Buadajr Mora tail Euiniatf, per month.. Sui(l cufia !. to Y MAIL IN ADVANCE. la scat by wall IUoutbidiibiu; of Ogdca. per )rr..6.UO lat quanu!ya la advance.. FEARLESS and INDEPENDENT. The Kxawoer U a auicUy UdcU U peadeat MWPP. aide aa equal TSa isaudfitr kai ao favorites, aad au catfairi Ur yuaiaL It Bill ungivo the avaa uubiaafd sad . prejudiced. UttuuliUkai wili bo ncoivea rela aa all aabjecis prcooaiod kaowa spectful buTtSuTtrua name mu bo published la lulL AU loiton aad couiwuaicaiiuaa signed ty nuia do Ibo plumes, ar tacumad Batata, U Tao ibroaa la too aido baaLoL bravo aiaa sever hides totaled aa assumed name. Dua l oak tho Editor i bo responsible fur abat . ar aakaaiod oE b. ladt-vidual- s, CUBA Subscribers will confer a law ibia office of failure to receive Tbo Examiiur before tboir breakfast. Tbo Moraiug Examiner caa lie found oa aalu by tba Indapondant Newt Co Balt Lako City. Oa all through Iratua leaving Ogdca oa Tba Bouthcra Pacific Railway. Too labia r'aclfie Hallway, aad Tbo Ores id Short Lino Railway. wlU confer a Examiner pairona favor oa tbo management by reporting to ibia olllco whenever they fail to Had tbo papers at ibe designated places. SOLDIER SUITS. A special curreapuiidcni aaa liiure is a ripple oT laughter suing the rounds of (ho army ufllvcr In Washington city ghat threatens to grow Into a state of Ibe moat ardent kllariouc nee and extend lu others lha ntliono nob wear the uniform of our I'nclo Rani, il la 1l nor a recent hulleilii laaued by Ihu depart merit of cuiuniereo aad labor. Jt will bo remembered that a fyw mouths ago Secretary Taft Imported a tHilnr from Lnnlun to design, rut gud cousiruct a uuifmui for our American army. Ai that time lha pieaa uf he cotimry ridiculed the Idea of our having to go to England fur aurh a purpose, and the mllora of this oountry threatened to riso In relielllnu. At the time the la'lura of lamd set up tba claim that all "Americana who prlxe style, quality uml 0i erde:' tbuir clothes from lailura." af one-hal- WILL BE ANNEXED. t. earn-pslg- pm-rlias- e of Frank- uur minima - HEITEMHLK If, Since the day it craned Big Ben has been within a second of the real time, except, of courxe, upon rare occasion when for one reason or. another the cluck ha slopped. Such au accident happened a few mouth ugj. when a workman left piank iu such u position a to foul ike balancing rod of tbs minute hand. It is said that the clock on one occasion struck thirteen instead of twelve, but Messrs. Dent detiy that this la puasible in the ordinary course, and explain that if such a thing hapby a pened it must hare been caused workpiece of iwtal falling, or by a man striking the bell with a large hammer. One of the most amusing of psrliar tnentary incident la associated with Big Bta. Lord Randolph Churchill wageied that he could ru outer Westminster bridge, from St. Thomas' hospital to the cluck tower, between the first nnd the lost stroke of twelve. The wsger wa accepted and at midnight people w Iki happened to be on Wei minster bridge were surprised and amused to set- a nian in immaculate evening dre tearing ueros the bridge a if bia life depended upon it. 1 taa not until the next day that they learned that tbe amateur airinter was a prominent politician, whose name had become a household word throughout the whole kingdom. Ji should he mentioned that Lord Randolph won the wager. Big Ilea was intended to he. aud has proved to be, (he largest, the most powerful and the Uioat accurate public cluck In the world. Twice a day it automatically telegraph its time to Greenwich observatory, and ihu it performance i chocked. The correct time is tudiraied bv the first blow on Big Ben at each hour. To wind up the cluck ia no easy matter. It mean live hours' work for two men on three days a week. At present the clock dial are being cleaned. The workmen are now engaged on the eatsem dial, which a eurioua picture. .The? upper part of ihe face la white'and Wight, while the lower part la covered i thick with a mating of dirt that II seems linpoasible that anyone could have road the Hme fuim auy considerable distance during the day. During ihe past few nimih the electrical staff at Westminster have liecn coudiidiug a numlu-- cf experiment wlih the view of making the lighting of the chk t night more satisfactory, and H I hoped that the "autumn clcauing" which ia now going on will couwiilerably aid llicir efforts. laindon Tribune. pre-acu- r DISCOVERIES Impel tint AT DELOS. Finds of Statues, and Jewels.. House " which Rave f the dwcoveru.' ance TT been made thia month. On August it six large archaic bon ia marble were j brought to light ornamenting aa ea pluuade iu the vicinity of the Sacred iaike of Ulo. Nothing of the kind haa ever Uta found before in C.rcece. In the quarter of the buried town sever! which surround the theater -house a in an excellent lu,u ' na one of h.v. lanr, of on- them coniainiitg jripitaix derw ul fitahnea ffj'j1 date at which the qua Bewde other diiverlcs in marble J and lottery, nuantitiea o g tj were found of a kind ut before been met witL ing day the excavator ca atatue of the . ' llr Jn i destined to make a B -. 1 y the WOrk- cry In particular is of admliahle manship, snd the figure Wmrsartow J,nVK' celebrated nJ V of tbe atatue executed by Thilisko (if Ogden City Apportionment for Coun i Hrodea. ty Convention: Another discovery of the first 1m-- j FIRST WARD. ut that is date this on made iwirtauce No. Delegate ut Dionysus. nature than a head targer ... 2 " at explored the found in was temple It some month ago. aud doubtless or statue of the god formed .. erected iu the temple itself- - The type r, recall that of Bcuitaa, and U the finest Do-l- o antique which the excavations of have yielded for the pawl fifteen 0,110 Seventh . . vears. Tbe flniia further Include the Eighth ,, Statue of a woman beautifully worked,a N inih , a liupucrate mounted on a ring, aud THIRD WARD.-treasure concealed at the 0ae of a cnl h . , forty letra Eleventh monument containing . .. . 1 drachdrachma, drachma, and half Twelfth mas in perfect condition, which will Thirteenth , , . delight tbe auniisuiailatB of Athens, FOVRTH WARD. London Tribuue. Fourteenth ) If teem h. RONG! Bixleemh Seventeenth The story of the observant natural- Eighteenth & ist hoy who posed the arithmetical Nineteenth , rv 1 . Twentieth old an boy reminded has bish.ip FIFTH WARD. luraltai" of a paiiah aehool incident In 5 .. the land of Burn. We were being put Twenty-firs- t fi ...1 through uur pare, he write, ut tbe Twenty-secon7 annual examination, the arlthmotlc Twenty-thir7 test being iu the hands of a farmer Twenty-fourt21 ti niaifciger who wa noted lor hi great Twenty-fiftskill lu figures. Being a bit uf a 14b Ci'.y apportionment ...... duurc I by uo mean figuratively) lie County Apportionment pounced un me. nnd 1 had to face 'the 9 "blackboard." on which he chuiked a Burch Creek S bow llilcriug array of figures, and asked Farr West 3 me iu "aud them up au' give's the hden , . 3 HarrlsvHlc gran total." 1 did so. The great niau smiled knowingly, went up to Hooper, No, X ............ 3o the board, rapidly summed up the Hooper, No. 2 S 1 figures snd wrote in a bold aggressive Huntsville, No. 2 hand" under my sura (he ierijtble Huntsville, No. 3 .., 3 Kaneaville ,, word "rung ! Pall Mall Gazette. 2 Liberty 4 Marriott C PEACH CAHXCURSION North Ogden 3 Plain City, No. 1 4 Plain City, No. 2 19th. Sept 3 Pleasant View X Randall , . VI. 1 Oregon Short Line to Brigham 3 Riverdale 2 City. Specially low rate. Bee ageuts. Roy S 8lutervllle X 3 SEPTEMBER EXCURSIONS. Jntah . . 3 Warren j.. 4 Round Trip. West Weber, No. 4 City of Mexico, dally to Sept. lHli, West Weber Nu. 2 ... 71 3 Wilson gfi9.su. fil.90. Turmto. Canada, Sept. 2l'k Denver. Cidorado Bprlngs, Bept. Tula! number uf delegates. 17.75. JOHN V. Bbl'TH. ' Secretary. k Observation, Pullman sleepers, din- E. fT HBLANISKI. I mg carx. . IH-Io- s irt ,,i..ti..'....i,.i d d h h 1 1 ( 10-1- - 1 W Chairman. Ogfjen, Utah, Sept. 15, PJOU. See- - ifii Talbots Gossip From Paris Reflec- - . i 1. Th Kept divine and her siruxsla fur a "red ribbon" lut sat all by the vara. The and of the question I tint yet. fur It was at a inert lug nf the rabl-fi- 't st llsinbnulllet wlihnur finding a nliiMun. Jt Brland In hi rapai-ttaa tulnlxier nf public luei ruction claim flic right confer the nrrter. while the ruunWI of the Las Ion uf hold the privilege of veto, which it lately exerrlned against th great tetreaa. Bernhardt herself, who is at Bells He leading the quiet. Invigorating life she ha arranged for herself, only follow from afar th pbsse of th ranipMigu fought by her friend much more Ilian fy herself. Clad a a huntrea from morning until tiishL her lea incaee.1 In gaiter, her face expexed to the bracing ea brer me. ihl win art rat the tmre air and aea tutu her "fort." which la transformed Into a He. Ilghtful sunnaer home, only for mealn and la sleep. You will never find her lolling la a rocking chair dreaming or Rather ahe 1 t le found reading. w'aylng lennl or on rxcirainn. walking for hours legelher to render her dnt supple nr In strengthen her V.erree. After aiirh a Ilf nf nveralrain sori excilement a he lead no wuu-t- ri how it Is she due not iriiuir reft Kuatanii, who l:nw a the prlceleee value rf eurh an Inierpreler for hi "Atg'nn." wrote a eharmlng letter ihe uihrr day to the; aye: "Sarah Itrin- fgarplaIn whlh he un not nieiplv liatdt actreee, she I a geniua. We owe to her that evolution In our taste for tbe aeelheilr, for deco- ration and for acenlc adaption. She brought it with her first appesraucr on tbe stage. When w think of it. 'vpgglse that w owe tn her alone mu ever growing love for the refinement of nome. one rom prehension nf the cable Rensisoanre and Ita re- rival In our dres and In our literature. Mure than one painter and writer ho to.ind hi Inspiration tn the teaching of ' hi extraordinary woman. Hew many aura artistic Joys we owe to her! hall not thlaga like these count, and mmn tho uhetlnate hostility of the min-latof Dos Beau Arts prevent remg-Bltid- n of them?" There seins to be Ajt one hop for th great actreaa and er friends, that is to see same less narrow minded man seated In the chair of Dee Awe one who will under-er- a nd tkat. alUiouab she has no class of PARIS. rm-e- Hnr are turning out fur their pal runs! To oiie on the inside workings nf things sartorial It1 looks Ilk (hero would hr a three1 cornered battle in the color world for suprwmary bet a sen brown, blue and gray. For elaborate afternoon costume there ta a shade of light tan with a aueptrlnn nf pinky brown tones la II lhat promisee lo be very popular. Parle, though, father leans inward the gray uuancee. aud a very new shade i : checked fobrlce. A treatment nf these designs that Is must attractive Is the liilrodnctlnn uf duls nf g deeper alMitr tlnm the groundwork. They are not evenly dislilliuteil. hut are grouped In little flgurea which give the checks m a lot of rharacter. As usual, thia full plaids arc pushed tn the fnre only to retire gracefully into oblivion later on In the season. For very young girls, though, there are stunning costume buasling plaid skirt lo be worn with Jacket of plain cloth built along the lines nf the Norfolk model. Hklrts fur the nur--t part are of the plaited variety, and on may now sea them In 11 adaptation uf this vogue. Wo may thank Dam Fashion for unu effects and boletus have by no mesa had their noses put out of Joint by newer style. Wsmen know when mode is kind to them and cling to sensible veto, thit of the clrrular skirt. It played such pranks before high modes as made the couturiers weep. For hang it ever so rnrefully. the flrel wearing was bound to reveal dug eared marks at the sides. Thank the all this Is si an end. Frequently there Is a combination of Ihe circular and platled model, but even In these the rlrrular is so small as to en tlrely rUir.lnsla the possibility of sagging. full this fall Jupes are r-- t quite falthfulnesn worthy a hotter No: tho bolero, good lurk to Its modish Jittle self, still appears on ths smart nulls, nnd with It treta In harness the three-quartsleeve and sweep length skirt. At Dreoell's atelier th ether day I saw such a amart gewn Th navy blue chiffon broadcloth. klit was lang and plaited la panel. At the bottom appeared an effect I v trimming of white opalescent braid about two Incheo wide put on straight. Over this line of braid was a rather fat black silk cord arranged In Greek key pattern.. ' Tha bolero Jacket wee cninpoeod. save for tha sleeves, of row' of Ihe breld. A unique feature ef the n turn ,was a deep girdle of striped green and black silk rut on ths bias and un lined, which went around the waist and over the postilion effect at the back. In front this girdle was adorned with an enormous design somewhat on the lines of a butterfly with Ita wings out stretched and made of dull silvery metal threads.1 It sounds blsarre and theatrical, but I assure you It was a smart' and clever addition to tbe cos turn, redeeming It from the sin of with cause. pnw--rra- , er fur ri ra ah-vli- le . communplaceness. There are reflections of the empire styles to be found in a number of the handsomest tailor mades. Notably, the empire back affected by- - a shortening Of the waist line of the coat rathe than the use of the empire yoke. Ths fronts suggest more than they outline tfie curve of tho boat and walct lino. The question uppermost In tbe mind Of most nf us (a. "Will sleeves be long or short?" Knowing ths unsettled : ; ; at tha renaervatolre. our niag-fuflee- nt Barak lias ualned hy her ewn Intelligent guidance more pupils and actors than any woman professor at the conservatoire will do tn a lifetime. Hut t talk of the fall fashions! Tho hue do In Pnlx nnd Rua Royal are motor and cars many brightening Up re to be aoen standing before ths doors nf famous qreesmakers. Smart Parisians ate back at their chateau outside of Porto, and drive In earh pleasant day to rooault thlr per artls. Aad such dvllghtful confections they a , 4 1 d I f P state of the drees market, I asked I noted dressmaker her at th center uf fashions to give me a "sere tip." Like many of these certainties, fta the dark hone that wins, bat we shall nee wha we shall see. , Tbe authority quote experts to witness three-quartsleeves on dressy toilet and font sleeves on- costumes where good 3 round service is the chief requisite. A to sleeve styles for boons gown, there is no reliable authority on which ghost nf a prophecy may be founded thus parly tw the game. Speckles without the cards, one might venture te predict that the short vnenrh la three --quarter length will Bet be eo J tlrely out of the running. We are assured that lingerie, shirt waist are to be a much worn as ever ! during tha coming ea on. There dreasf however, a decided return silk waist of soft taffeta. The newest of th e bodlcA are do fitting, welt boned and mod with a pointed effect This latest wrrinkle the In, frent. poInU--k sometime brought about with an added girdle, but thp.reklly ger Irieu I .to cut the wplailtaelf luta a deep, graceful point 'dlroetljf to front, .... CATHERINE. TALBOT-er bm I .a,-- , Ihymn.a Cornered Battle In the Color World New Developments In Skirt Modes tions of the Empire Styles In Tawilor Mde Suits 1 f'UpUa enialy pwctaeU shaald 1 a therine - COI NTY t o. A REPl'BUCAN YEXT10N i hereby called to uu.- -; Saturday, Sept. 2. IbOC, at the ruu' court Bouse of Weber county, m deu City, at the hour of 11 o'clm . in the forenoon, for the puijhim- - t, nominating candidate! for the offivi , WrbM, ,uiny g provid(l(, by PRIMARIES for the election of :l,. number of delegates from vacn ii,,ricl 10 a'1 convention, a heit u, -- flt.r dt.bljjUatrj wil, he(1 T,Ua day evening. Sept. S3, at It o'clock The various oiutiici will uut the usual meeting place and coudnv; the pri marie ia the usual maune,. Each district should select a tha. aud certify ii. maB aod f UclcgateirchoieB to the ul L, Deloc. which may be described, from ihe aivhaeoluglrnl point uf view, as the (iercian Pompeii, baa been the scene for some years past of important excavations, carried out under the direction uf M. Holleaux, who 1 at the head of the Freucb school at Athens. It la due to the 11 her II ty of tho Due I d Luubat, a learned American citizen, I " ho i s coiTespemtiug member of the French academy of inscription aud bi'lleslettre. that this interesting work I being continued.- for at one time there was a fear that it would have to be interrupted owing to lack of fund Many valuable find have already rewarded the excavators, including, a magnificent statue of- Ycnu which was unearthed eighteen piomhn ago, Colorado Midland Ry., 77 but nothing hxx iqimjletl the import- - ond South. - CALL FOR REPUBLICAN PRIMAR8 AND CONVENTION, WE- - t lt'5 !, MOHSIXU, fur-war- d ! !: MXIAV diro.'-ganiaed- lo St. James, Frauc-c- , i folium! and Kiaiu met at Ostein aud Issued the once fuuiutis OaieBdmaiilfeaio, in which the forcible seizure or Cuba, if Bpaiu should It rvfime lo sell, was advurated. caused a "world acuBatiun" at the liiue, and came near involving us lu a war with ffpulu. It has always been said TI:7w 0 4! cc u I luring lin Jlni-- e UTAH, l'i' There Is a strong umUirmrca1 of feeling that tho Cuban i rouble wil1 result iu annexation lu (he vciy near future. To possess Culm has been the dream of Americans for mure than a century. Thomas Jefferson, when he was president, several times announced (hat the Cnited State ought to possess the Island, and be reiterated his belief on several occasions after he re tired lit pilvatu life. The dream lived and grew in the lunast of the smith lu the paliuy days of slavery; il was a part of the si heiue of Aarou llurr, auJ at one time there was a very atrung feeling a the auitth lo withdraw from tbo north, arize on Cuba, unite with Mexico and build tip a great slave empire. It was Ihli dream that gave birth to Ibe order of the Knights of American Liberty, afterward known in the north, duiiug the war between the states, as'ilie Knight a of the Cold-eClrrle. Jefferson advucaled the IMisaession of the bland bee.mse It rouuuan'li'd the gulf; lu shivery day It ssnuexatlun was advocated because il Wiiiihl extend the area of Ameiicuu slat cry. ' by iaiorauvs (NiDEX. e bt-v- u roiu-niere- Py. ' hioad t Aui'-ruaus- Pukliihti Ev:y Ai pretty viji loug it has EXAMINEE: Two element that alien Huehauan was president he close of the Civil war. that 11 ihri-expriiueuU entered into Uiad.' icniaiive effer of 2ia',t,itu.",w disastrous them to vender helped Cuba. Spain for In the party politic aad extravagance To ctHisiruclioa and management. BBYAN CAUSED ALARM. COfcl ll,e w tbe mmuey procure of "wild A piotnineut man writing Iron const rueliuu tbe lutrodncthm to, and reported was cat" currency Wasiilug'on a U ia easily discernvalue and deiu resulted unsettling Mt. of the that uileiaiicea ible hero of every kind. buhini-- i Bryan piuce he returned to America moralizing g AU tbcae thing are TM ia are causing great hisby taughi nnd the lcs! nut Sued to out- pany sot ti- one wild the lu tory arc being conned, class uf ellittns. Business uieu the of internal improvement equally uneasy with the politician.-- . day stood This laiti-- r cissa fear that should hi Democratic party everywhere 1 anayed agaiust the scheme, aud it radical ideas pievall all husine incut arlea uu cuoi one the of for not if startling mouths fur would, many . partyism that the same acheme. only many year, be paralyzed and la shared by pi another form, is now brought This aud advocated by the leader of lsUb Kipiibllean and polare 1101 all that same Democratic party. itician. The A so outspoken as Seualor IisnUd ut Virpi eminent Treasury official ha been but in tusking aome calculation a to rouveisation, ginia private with members of their owu what il would cokt, aud a to the prom pail', ficely say the peeilesa leadei1' poci of the ultimate payment for tbo has opened up a voricx llut will, iu government to piirchsue the railruada. alone, and lie says the purchase of the all proliubility engulf tbuir party. The Republican politician are un- railroad would necessitate the pureasy, for they cannot tell yet just how chase of all vessel engaged la or irauepurtatlon, aad strung a hold os the mind of the public tho doctrine of government ownership all piiie line. He puivt out that It 1 ha taken. It is readily acknowledge now forty year since the close of tbo that at first it Is a very catchlug ci v. wsr between tit stales, and yet (hey am always have been year of unexampled growth The masw of the uvlless, ready to welcome dUuocl any and prosperity, yet the got cniuieut f change, anything that promise bright- has nut been able to pay off ly, aud the ltcpiiblirau are disposed the debt contracted during the wnr. lu lake n rather gloomy view of tho Iu round numbers the Civil wsr debt To pursituation and to fear the populace will amounted to two Inlliotis. run after the pot uf gold said to be chase tbe ralhuads would coat at least hidden at the end of the rainbow. ton bilious, lie says il would be utterThis dortrlne of government owener-ehi- p ly Impossible fur the government, great Is not a new one by any mean. and rich thouRh it to float anything It sprung luli ac;ive oxisteuee under like such s debt, but. supposing the tho Whig leadership of Jlenry Clay debt could be floated at three per as it was called In those days, spread cent, tho annual Interest charge would from stale to giatc aud was u hurning he t'lO.idNi.OtPl. "If ut has taken (he Issue In iistrc lhau one political government forty yearn to pay one The general government un- billion of debt, at the aame rato It dertook lu iuaiigiiraie the sytieui by would require four hundred year i.i pontsriieting a great highway fitini Hit! discharge ihu debt created by Ibe Atlaniic to the .MissisHippi rlvci. The of the railroads. But that would opponent a of the scheme based their nut be all. A the country develop opposition on Hie grounds: first, the more railroad will have to be built, government had nu constitutional right and the government would have to conlo enter Into tho building of a high- struct ihem, so millions would be anway; second, rosd building was s mut- nually added to tue debt. ter wholly within rhe Jurisdiction of "BIG BENS" JUBILEE. ihe slate. It was Milne lime before tho aisle of Maryland , Iennsylvani aud Yhginfa would give consent for Stories of the Moat Accurate Clock In the World. tho government lu tuuleriwke the construction uf the mad thruugr those In the course or the next few mouths stales. Big Heu will relelnato it jiilillle. The doctrine spread tlirtHigh nearly the great duck was not acall the stales, but did not get a very tually set going with Its four dial until tho beginning of 18aK, strung fool hold lu any except those la Complete Big Ben was ready iu ISati. At tha: Ihe West, now kuuwn as the Middle time, tower had however, fu. Wes!. Several of those si sics, es- nut been completed,Stephen's and the clock wa pecially Indiana, at once entered upon kept waiting fur over a yeur before an elaborate system of lallmad!, turn- becoming lamdon'a chief timekeeper. Big Hen was marie by Mr. K. Dent, pike and raual building, la every- In- the of Messre. F. Dent A stance lha experiment proved disas- fo., piedeceNaor Strand, and under the terms of trous la the extreme. Jt drove tome hia agreement with Ihe office uf work of the siatt Into bankruptcy and en- Mr. Dent undertook to make and keep lu repair a clock which would 'never tire or partial repudiation. vary more tkaaw second from the Indiana did sot recover from the ef- correct time. Till contract has been fect of It expriiuent until after lha more than carried uut. s'ateiiK-nfor ackno lvdg-t- l tint , as a rifle, are the best ilreasud people iu lha world, and that mure Americana ran afford, nud do get the very beat (here i iu rbe maiket. e NY comes our (Irpariuiiu-- l uf and labor and ld! ua for the year HHia tho total exiiurta of c hulling from England to the I'uited Stales iwly amounted to a beggarly liTj.ooo, sad worse anil more of it, by a good deal the aanie department natures us I hut It has burn the cuslom uf British officials lo enter export of ciutUing lu tbo t alid Slates under the brad of "slops." la grave, honest truth, our army uniforms have been oulnai from bad to worse for several years. The blue uniforms, of Ihc days from JHf-- to 1m;3, was the naiiest ever pm. ou by Mil dirra of this o rsuy ihor country. It la (rue that time the tit was nut all that could be desired, bui the style was atiructlve, and something to be proud of. In lhcae days il la lirad to Urll a soldier from a tramp, wbo had purtolurd the garb uf a neaiccruo la a eurufield and tho impression prevails that when the boys are ejlled upon to dot tho imifonna designed and built under the tamdou liuisiriatiuu not a tramp ia the cuuuiry would trade clothing with our soldier That by Th MCKNINU i called "vsrre fume." or. in other word', smoked gise. As to materials, brnarfrlnih retains II place s first favorite for "best" fiuck, hut there are channins new Yrnnian and rep effscs tlmt si e mai! arn-erwear. Very deeiiaP.r, i.m. art the ai THE HEFT FALL COSTUMES SEEN IN IHE BOIS DE BOLOGNE.. as they were last winter, but they show the same fiaot and help the coats, which, tn a number of Instances, follow Die figure closely, to alt better. These little hip length coats, by the 'ay. are mighty natty with their tiny vests and saucy sodel barques. Eton dp te-th- s fg" - Am d |