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Show THE MORGAN COUNTY STAR, MORGAN, UTAH, SIMPLICITY IN BLOUSE BIG PARTY FOR LITTLE MISS ASTOR Just before leaving London for America recently Mrs. John Astor gave a party for her daughter, Alice Muriel, to celebrate the girl's birth day, at No. 18 Orosvenor square. The big drawing room was "done entirely with white flowers lilies and roses. Alice, who Is well grown for her age, wore a beautiful silk muslin frock, rather long. It was frilled with very old lace and with a lace flchu. She wore a string of pearls given by her mother and a locket with her fathers picture in It, with her initial in pearls and one large diamond on other side. Many children came to the party, Including Lady Ancasters two and Mrs. Rupert Becketts four, all dressed alike in sky blue silk with pink rose wreaths. One of the late Mrs. Gervase Becketts girls accompanied her cousins in a white muslin frock and black sash. The duchess of Marlborough, who is making her country home her headquarters now, came with Lord Ivor Churchill. Square dances, which were the feature of the party, were perfectly carried out by the children. Lord Ivor had the young hostess as a partner in country jigs. Mrs. Astor wore a gown of rose silk, with roses at her waist, and during the early afternoon a large black hat, which she discarded after tea. REV. C. S. DAVIDSON RENOUNCES CHURCH The Rev. Charles Steele Davidson, who had trouble In 1900 with his vestry In the Church of the Holy Apostles, Greenwood avenue and Windsor terrace, Flatbush, N. Y., where he was known as the little minister, and whose pastoral activities elsewhere won him repute for doing things out of the ordinary, has taken spectacular leave of the Episcopal ministry by burning his vestments and prayer book at the gate of Montlcello the home of Jefferson. Mr. Davidson wrote out a statement for the newspapers, which he passed around, renouncing the church as the haven of aristocracy and proclaiming himself a preacher hereafter for all the people. The statement contains charges against two Episcopal bishops In Virginia, and then proceeds with reasons for the burnt ottering, which was made, apparently without witnesses. Mr. Davidson made no pilgrimage for this mission, as be has lived in the vicinity of Montlcello since last October, when he became assistant to the Rev, Dr. Harry B. Lee, rector of Christ church at Charlottesville, Va. If 8enator Lawrence Y. Sherman, the junior member from Illinois, la not as busy as a bride on her wedding morn he is grieved. Ke has been In public life ever since 1896, with the exception of about two years, and he became known as such an indefatigable worker that the voters and public officials with appointive Jobs on their hands Just kept handing him something new all the time. In 1896 he entered the lower house of the Illinois legislature. From 1900 until 1904 he was speaker of that body. Then he was elected lieutenant governor and presided over the upper house until 1908. ' Scarcely had he reached home and begun practicing law when Governor Deneen appointed him president of All be the board of administration. had to do was direct the work of eighteen state Institutions which had Sometimes just been consolidated. be would not work more than sixteen hours a day. That was not hard on the senator, who started as a farm hand. Among the institutions under the boards control were the State Hospital for the Insane at Kankakee and the Deaf and Dumb School at Jacksonville. One day an inmate of the hospital called Sherman aside and unfolded a great scheme to aid him. 1 would suggest, the patient said, that you teach the barber trade to one of the mutes in the Jacksonville school and put him in charge of the hospital shop. A silent barber would rest the male Inmates minds greatly. Sir, Sherman responded, "you arent crasy!" And a month later the patient was discharged as sane. Esther Stewart of Aurora, 111, of millions, with a check for heiress $104,000 hidden among the roses of her bridal bouquet, the other day became the wife of Archibald Richards, and her friends and relatives were almost as greatly delighted as she appeared to be. It was only two years ago that Miss Stewart suffered agonies of publicity when she broke her engagement to Robert E. Davie of Boston, a youth who had become conspicuous as the boy broker," and who is now serving a prison term for swindling. All the world appeared to trust the boy broker, Just as Miss Stewart did, until his exposure, trial and sentence. And since then Miss Stewart, who returned at that time from her college work at Wellesley, has been living quietly, away from the limeMiss light la a granddaughter FRENCH KNOT Nothing Mr- - Effective In Embroidery Work and Comparatively EasEFFECT MOST PLAINLY SEEN IN ily Executed. THE SEASON8 STYLE. French knota are so easily executed that a simple description of them Is all Abundant Trimmings and Elaborate that will be required. They are genera ally used to form the center of roses Decorative Designs Allowed, But and daisies, the stitches being made They Must Conform to quite close together in such case, to Fashions Edict create a solid center, and when employed simply to fill up spaces in large More useful than ever is the separ- leaves they are usually scattered conate blouse. Its scope has been exThe size of the knot is regsiderably. tended to include every variety of ulated by the space to be filled, indress and semi-dres- s requirement as dividual fancy, or the floss used. The well as the tailored waists and a num- thread is fastened on the wrong side of ber of novelties that resemble coats or the work with a very small knot that tunics. is afterward cut off, as two small Last seasons effort to Introduce stitches taken very dose together some feature that would connect them serve to secure the end of the floss. with the skirt was uot met with much The needle is then inserted from the acclaim, for the peplums of various under side of the fabric and the thread depths and forms were an undeniable drawn through its entire length. With ugly style and becoming to very few, the left band hold the fabric and the writes Cora Moore in the Washington thread at the same time, catchlnf 8tar. Instead, we find extremely wide, hold of the thread about one inch from loosely draped sash girdles of black the fabric and holding it taut between moire ribbon and of colored satin as the thumb and forefinger. Hold the needle in the right hand and slip it beneath the thread, giving it three or tour twists that will throw the thread over the needle three or four times, but without loosening the hold on the thread. Continue holding the thread tightly and pull the needle backwards to the point where it was originally drawn through and insert it again as close as may be to the same point, still holding the thread firmly, and push it through the fabric to be drawn out on the other side. This will cause the stitches to be held firmly on one side and slightly loose on the other, but the effect is very pretty. Never allow the stitches to be loose enough to be mussy and do not permit them to be drawn back through the hole made by the needle. Attractive Blouse of White Chinese Crepe. the seasons novelty In blouse accessories. Indeed, odd girdles and sashes have played an Important part this year in the sartorial world. With all the absorbing Interest there is In novelty trimmings and elaborate decorative designs, It is Interesting to note that many of the prettiest blouse models show the utmost simplicity. Much of their effect Is, of course, due to beauty of material which soft drap-Ing- s and graceful lines show up to the best advantage, but something also Is to be accredited to the fact that a contrast is always appreciated. An effectively simple model is here sketched. It is developed in Ivory white Chinese crepe, which washes The front sleeves and beautifully. back are attached by hemstitched perling to a deep shoulder yoke that bat Its corners caught together under the arms. The sleeve Is gathered Into a deep cuff that Is finished with a and deep plaited ruffle of trimmed with a dull blue embroidered button and loop on the upper edge. The button and loop arrangement Is repeated on opposite sides of the cross-ove- r blouse fronts Just over the belt A small yoke with an attached low collar of shadow lace fills in the space at the neck. self-materi- For Childrens Dresses. Thin white cotton crepe with Inserts n of baby Irish lace medallions is a for childrens dainty dresses. cora-olnatio- FADS AND FANCIES. hats are much preferred by the smartly gowned woman. Dresses of lace and net often have blue and white eyelet tunics. The surplice line for the neck continues to be very much In fashion. Black and white hemp hats have plain satin crowns and big tulle bows. White and flesh color are most used for crepe de chine waists just now. White embroidered waistcoats are correct with black satin coats and All-blac- k skirts. Vivid yellows continue to be very fashionable for evening gowns and wraps. Jacquard figures are a delightful orcotton tor piece-dye- d namentation crepes. All lingerie garments continue very sheer and close fitting, the trimmings perfectly flat, to accord with the demand for a supple, slender figure. Rose and black, double-faceare the cokors oftenest chosen for the sashes of white voile dresses. Pale yellow voiles have rose or copper color. The easy 'dressing of the neck will continue this fall, the open neck being finished with fichus or ruffs, frills or wired collars of the Medici order. d, Fancy Skirts. When a skirt of black or other dark of John Stewart, the multimillionaire material looks shiny from much wear lumber magnate of Aurora, and it was he who gave her as a wedding pres it can be rubbed with a solution of rosea Her last was the ent the $100,000 check that night pinned among borax and water. This solution refather is T. B. Stewart state senator and president of the First National moves the glaze completely and can Bank of Aurora. be applied whenever the shine returns. The bridegroom, Archibald Richards, was distinguished as an athlete Borax, of course, like ammonia, at college, becoming intercollegiate champion sprinter and captain of the have a disastrous might, effect on some col track team of the University of Wisconsin. srs, so it too should be trie'd first on the wrong side of the skirt Miss Stewart EVER POPULAR UTAH STATE NEWS The county commissioners of Box Elder county have' appropriated $240 to the Peach day committee. Joseph P. Smith, a deaf mute about 30 years of age, was struck by a train in Lower Bingham, sustaiinlng severe, but not fatal, injuries to his head and right leg. Miss Minnie Fairbanks is at her home in Salt Lake suffering from a sprained knee, a dislocated hip and a sprained ankle, the result of falling from the vestibule of a street car. Weber academy will erect a $60,000 gymnasium on the grounds of the work school, and the construction will begin as soon as the members of the board of education decide upon the site. The dedication of the new Odd Fellow home in the recently completed Fraternity block in Ogden will take place about September 15. Odd Fellows from all over the state will attend. d son of William The F. Blanchard of Salt Lake may die as the result of being caught under a marble pedestal which he pulled over while his mother was trading in a jewelry store. John Stanatakis, aged 27, a Greek miner, was crushed by a cave in of rock in the United States mine at Bingham, while operating a machine drill, and received injuries from which he died later. Running barefooted and barelegged through a plot of grass near Salt Lake, Arthur Latham, aged 8, encountered a sharp scythe hid in the grass, and came near losing his life, suffering a deep cut in the leg. Two hundred delegates, representing nearly every city and town in the at state, were present Wedensday Sandy at the election of officers which GLOVE closed the executive sesnsons of the WASHABLE DAY OF Utah State Firemens association. For shooting rabbits without a IK Matter of Considerable Moment to the Woman Who Is Properly cehse Chris Mitchell, an alien, was Fastidious. fined $1 in Box Elder county, and ordered to buy a license. Native or natIn this day of the fastidious woman, uralized Americans may shoot rabaccessories that may be made immacu- bits without licenses, but aliens do not late with small trouble and little time enjoy this prerogative. are in high favor. This means, of Twenty farmers on the land becourse, that gloves that are washable tween Salt Lake and Provo, where have a large following, and it is not there Is one now, is what S. Z. Mitchsurprising that they have. ell, president of the Electric Bond & From England come the soft, fine, Share company, believes irrigation and white doeskins, gloves of exquisite softness and fine texture, with the concentated farming offers to Salt Lake and Utah counties. feel of velvet and the unusual qualiJ. J. Fitzgerald of Park City was fication of washing like cotton. Soap and water does them no harm, and elected president of the Utah State they emerge from the cleansing as Firemen's association for the ensuing fresh as new. These doeskin gloves year at the Sandy convention, with come in the practical one and two but- V. W. Booth of Spanish Fork as first and William Doxey of ton lengths, as well as the longer and Bountiful as second lengths, suitable for three-quartelbow length sleeves. Butches and grocers of Salt Lake Mocha gloves also come in this and Orgeu closed shop at noon Auwashable category, but make sure that gust 20, and partitcipaed in their anyou get the "washable kind, and ask nual outing. The feature of the days the clerk before the transaction is program was the corn roast. More completed. You may have these in than 10,000 ears of Utahs best corn white or the pretty natural color. were roasted on three immense roastChamois gloves, of course, every ers. woman knows about, and they are alJohn Bertallo, 34 years of age, an ways more or less In fashion rather Italian of Los Angeles, was fatally more this season. These too are in wounded with two bullet wounds in white or natural if you wish. And not the and Jim Defloando, a Milonly do they come in the short lengths ford brain, Italian, suffered a badly shattered with one or two large pearl buttons for fastening, and the longer lengths, arm, the result of a shooting scrape but there Is Also a strap wrist style on a Salt Lake Route train near Milthat Is very comfortable and practical. ford. Unless three Mexicans, wanted as Home Colors. witnesses, are located by the sheriff A good rule to follow in furnishing of Utah county, Jim Kalas, a Greek, the summer home, is to use in the liv- held to answer a charge of murder in ing room with gray walls cretonne the first degree as a result of the kiltshowing an oyster gray, or blue and ing of an unidentified Mexican at Colgreen background. In a room with ton last week, will probably escape either of these decorations the chairs prosecution. and tables, if they are of wicker, The tax rate for towns in Utah could be stained a soft gray green. Rooms with their exposures to the county this year are as follows: west and south can be finished in blue Provo, 45 mills; Payson, 55 mills; and green, those to the east and north Spanish Fork, 48 mills; Lehl, 50 in yellow or pink. The walls of these mills; Springville, 48 mills; Salem, 41 rooms may be tinted or papered with mills; Santaquin, 52 mills; American Fork, 45 mills; Pleasant Grove, ray 47 mills; Mapleton, 41 mills. With over 26,000,000 gallons of waDESIGNED TO SUIT COSTUME ter flowing into the city water mains every twenty-fou- r hours, or approxiA code of rules governs the wearing mately 260 gallons of water for every of white footwear, and those rules are man, woman and child in the city, Salt as strict as those governing black Lake is confronting its most serious boots and slippers. Wlth the tailored water situation in many years, owing suits of white serge or linen white to the action of water hogs. buckskin buttoned boots are In best J. Edward Taylor, state horticulturtaste. White buckskin button strap ist, who was sent to Montana by the slippers or oxfords may be worn, with governor of Utah to Investigate matwhite silk stockings, with lingerie ters pertaining to the quarantine of that stats against Utah alfalfa, has reported that the Montana officials are inclined to do the fair thing by Utah alfalfa. Rollo I. Jack, aged 47. of Salt Lake City, was fatally injured at Bingham on Sunday, when ho was struck by a flying rock from a blast Mr. Jack, with a party of friends, had gone to Blngbam on an excursion. County Physician E. G. Hughes has reported twelve cases of typhoid, including three deaths, in a construction camp at Media (Soldier Summit) He has investigated the situation and taken means to prevent the spread of the disease. Joseph Anderson has received his commission as postmaster for Lehl, signed by Woodrow Wilson, and assumed active control of the office Thus ends one of the most Monday. prolonged and bitter contests for a federal plum in tho history of the state. The body of Mrs, Marla Qulst, a frocks of lace or embroidery, though widow 71 years old, was found in a from her the trim white buttoned boots often ac- canal about a half-mil- e company such frocks. Yachting shoes home at Midvale. The coroner de of white buckskin have rubber roles cided that an inquest was not necee and a slight lift at the heel, and there (sary. expressing the opinion that it are also buckskin oxfords for boating was a case of suicide. and tennis. A Great Gift Store fl The no Iwtiog, permanent and valued giiu are irom a Jewelry Store. We apecialize in wedding, birthday, holiday end anniversary gilts; high quality; Idw price. AAU LAftk Cl TV. UTAH EEMOVEDI PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS Do you desire e complexion remarkable lor tbe velvety texture ol tbe skin and free lrom blotches, pimples and blaekbeadsf Our Marietta Treatment for skin imperfections is made for tbe purpose of eradicating unsightly eruptions and to give you back tbe smooth, soft, lustrous skin of childhood. You will find it the most successful remedy. Send $1.00 today for complete treatment and instructions, and oar money back guarantee. Tbe Mary Mack Co., Dept. C. Box 998, Balt Lake City, Utah. A POSITIVE and PER. MANENT CURE FOR three-year-ol- Liquor and Drug Addictions traatoJ as Tkasa b aa aaUdty, m akkasn. L THE KEELEY INmstaiy as HI tor STITUTE 334 W. Svatk Ttaipls Sirs. Ssk Lsks CHy an baa. Night Call for the Dominie. clergymans small daughter was sent to bed supperless just before her fathers return from a short trip. Hearing him enter, some time later, A tbe young lady called down: Mamma I want to see daddy. There was no response from below. A moment later: Mamma, please let daddy get me a drink of water." When that, too, failed, a small white figure came to the head of the stairs and said sternly: Mrs. Hastings, I am a very sick woman. I want to see my pastor at once. Needless to spy her pastor went J Woman's Home Companion. up. He Was Overbid. It was a banquet where a notable gathering of politicians had assembled. A certain aspiring young attorney was among the number, and as he spied an influential judge at the far end of the parlor, he called the head waiter, slipped half a dollar into t)is hand, and whispered, Put me next to Judge Spink at the table. he Upon being seated, however, found he was at the other end of the room from the judge. He called the head waiter to explain. Well, sir, replied the official, fact is that the judge gave me a dollar to put you as far from him as possible. Luckier. "How did you find the roads up around Jingleville asked Corners? Bilkins of Slathesberry, who had just returned from a motor trip. Oh, I wasnt particuflLrly stuck on them, returned Slathesberry. Really. said Bilkins. "Well, I guess youre the only man that wasnt. I wag stuck on em for a whole day last year. Harpers Weekly. The Subtle Touch. Can you support my daughter?" and stand an occasional Yes, touch from her father. Then take her, my boy shea yours! The Ueual Kind. How fast Is your car, Jlmpson? asked Harkaway. it keeps Well, said Jimpson, about six months ahead of my Income generally. Harpers Weekly. A Boy Scout. Willie Paw, what is a boy scout? Paw A woman of 30 who chases a youth of 18, my son. Cincinnati Enquirer. . Consoling Thought. sharp gust took Jones new hat. He stood on Broadway and saw it career down Vesey street on the wings of the east wind, and disappear A beyond recall. Well, he said, a straw will show which way the wind blows, wont It? Advance Information. Young man, we need brains In our business. I know you do. That Is why Im Baltimore looking Tor a Job here. American. Too Practical. Never'couit your fore they are hatched thickens be- Of course, sneered Mr. Crosslots. Youre another of those people who want to take the chief pleasure out of the poultry business. Washing ton Star. A Dead I Shot. never saw a girl that could hit anything she threw at. "Well, you never saw my girl throw a bint Indianapolis Star. In the Discard. Pa, what Is a discarded statesman? A politician who is so thoroughly down and out that he cant eyen sell a magazine article. Kansas City Journal. Folding Headgear. These collapsible opera hats are a great convenience. , So? Yea; you have ao idoa how much room they save in a flat Louisville Courier-Journa- l. |