THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRA8KA. LATEST COIFFURES SHOW NEW TOUCHES ! HI THIS MAY BE THE RAIDER OF SOUTH ATLANTIC COMMERCE 1 G AS A Ingenious Disposition Made of Hair Which Is Abundant but Not Particularly Long Strip of Malines Used Effeotually Riding Habit Which Is About the Last Word in Such Togs. Ilcro Is one of those new coiffures Uint dispose of the ends of the hair In Rome mysterious way without coll or hrnld or twist or nny other visible means, except two soft curls at the nape of the neck. Wo look at It U 'admire and to ponder the Ingenuity that made so beautiful a disposition New Departure of hair which Is ubundant but not long. The secret of dressing the hulr In this way appears to be In parting It off In the right way. The front hair for this coiffure Is parted off and combed fonvard as for a pompadour. The remainder of the hair is combed to the back of the neck and tied, and the ends arc separated Into two strands and curled. The front hair Is parted at each side above the temples, and waved. At the top of the head the hair is brought buck in a small pompadour, the ends loosely twisted and pinned to the crown. The side hair Is combed down over the Rldlno Togs A model to which you can pin your faith, if you are contemplating a now 'riding habit, Is pictured here. It Is made In one of the new weaves that have been so much promoted for sports wenr, but probably as good a. choice as can be made for practical service Is covert cloth. A dark tan color in this- material, cut on the same lines as those of the habit shown here, will furnish fts owner with the best of style. She can wear It with the assur ance that It Is correct. Tho coat Is cut on the trimmest of lines and Is as severe as tho urt of tho tailor can muke It. In some of tho new habits coats are a very little longer than In this conservative model. But thl.i a matter of per sonal taste, and a difference of an Inch and if half perhaps covers tho latitude of choice. The waistlines arc very long and tho skirt moderately full. The hat Is less stiff than the regula tion hat for rldlnr, but has not dis placed Its rigid predecessors. Like tho material In tho habit it Is a now cars spread over the back of the head, and the ends turned under at the nape of the neck. It Is held In placo with Invisible wire pins. A single strand above the left templo Is left free, how ever, until a larger shell comb has been thrust In at the crown. It Is brought back over the comb and Its ends urq in Coiffures. concealed by pinning them under the lop of the comb. In this coiffure there Is a short An ger of hair across the forehead, which Is slightly curled. The shell comb Is brightened with two rows of rhlne stones. Coiffures of this character are In evidence at the theater, and there Is a prqtty fashion of covering them, with n strip of the fluent malines as like the hair In color as possible. This is al most Invisible, like a hair net, and Just where It begins or ends keeps one guessing. But It keeps the hair neat and supports the coiffure. for 1917. arrlvnl in the realm of apparel, and Is comfortable and elegant. It IHs the head snuglynnd Is so constructed that it may bo made to measure. This Is a boon to women who have abundant hair. There nre "dress" habits and polo habits In which the most vivid reds and greens demonstrate n courageous use of color In riding togs. These high-colored coats are worn with white trousers, nnd the polo coats are sleeve less. But they are another story. r A Dainty Pillow. Boudoir pillow covers do not neces sarily have to bo embroidered to be dainty. Good-looking ones nre simply lnce-trlmmed. One seen recently had two three-Inch bands of flno cluny In sertion set In diagonally across cither corner, and the effect, It must be con ceded, was excellent. AMERICAN EXPEDITION LOSING NO TIME LEAVING MEXICO. VARIOUS REASONS FOR RECALL Villa Four Times Stronger Than When Troops Crossed Line. May Let Nation Work Out Salvation. Washlnuton Slnco tho war depart- mcnt Issued official orders for tho withdrawal of American troops from Mexico. General Pcrshing'a men navo been pushing rapidly toward the bord er, and tho entire expedition is ex pected to be across tho lino in tno ndxt few days. Tho American expedition went into Mexico in nursult of Villa following the massacre of seventeen Americans by Villa adherents at Columbus, N. M on March 9, 191G. No official Information Is at hand as to whether Villa or Carranza troops will occupy tho territory left vacant by tho Americans, but the belief is strong hero that Villa, who Is credited with at .least 8,000 well armed men and who 1b now said to bo at least four times as strong as when tho American troops went across tho border, will make a desperato ouort to take the territory. A combination of reasons are glvon unofficially for tho withdrawal do. clslon. First was the Impracticability of actually "capturing Villa," as mo object of the expedition was oxplalned to bo In a White IIouso statement issued at the time tho expedition was sent In. Then, with tho border ap parently safe, the demand for tho re turn of the state troops has become moro and more pressing. Moreover. Pershing's present loca tion was recognized as a source of military weakness, both In tho face of Dosslblo attacks on his long flankB and also In the eventuality of a larger expedition Into Mexico. Probably moro decisive than all these reasons, however, was the be lief that the slluation would never bo solved one way or another, as long as Pershing stayed and that It would be best to withdraw nil American soldiers from the stricken country In order to remove any American or antl-Amcrlcan Issue. I other words, thero Is a disposition to leave Mexico to work out Its own salvation without Interference, arid oven to glvo Car ranza a diplomatic victory in tho hope that In some way a stable gov ernment, may nrise there. With the last American soldier out of Mexico, tho Mexican problem can be viewed In a now light. From now on It will not be possible for Carranza to meet American demands with counter.demands for the withdrawal of the troops. Mnfnr truck trains are onoratlns: night and day, bringing stores and equipment to the border. Over BOO trucks are engaged In this service, whllo twenty motor ambulances are convoying tho nick and disabled. Sailors Adrift Ten Days. Willemstead, Curacao. Threo French sailors have reached tho Island of Buen Ayre, off tho Vene zuelan coast, after having been at sea for ten days in a small boat. They were In a starving condition and brought with them tho body of one man who had died. Tho sailors 're ported they were members of tho crow of the French armored crulsor Jcanno D'Arc, and wore carried off their boal by the current. Lincoln, Neb. .Two men and a woman were killed when a Rock Island passonger train hit an automo bile In the southeastern part of the city. The dead: ED LAXON, 40 years old, a garage roan, of Havelock, Neb. MRS. ED LAXON, 40 years old, Havelock, Nob. UNIDENTIFIED MAN, 20 years old. Votes $10,000 to Aid Guardsmen. Bismarck, N. D. North Dakota Is going to take caro of her soldier boys. Both houses of tho legislature passed a bill appropriating ?10,000 to bo used In aiding, military men mustered out of tho federal service who may have difficulty In finding work. British Cruiser Sunk. London. Tho British auxiliary cruiser Laurentlc of 14,892 tons gross has been sunk by a submarine or ns a result of striking a mine off the Irish coast, according to an official statement. Twelve, officers and 109 men were saved. Denver Pastor Fined, Denver, Colo. Dr. II. Martyn Hart, dean of tho Cathedral of St. John tho Dlvlno, appeared in police court here last Friday morning and admitted that ho had left an automobile glvon to him by his parishoners, standing more than tho hour limit on a d,own town afreet, and received n fine of "flvo and costs." "Oh, woll," said the dean, "If no body did anything which ho should not do, this would bo paradise." The court remitted the flno, This Is tho German cruiser Vlnetn, sinking so many merchant ships In the ENTRY IN Two dog-team drivers of tho teams In the "WlnnJpeg-to-St.' Paul the biggest features of the Outdoor CODY'S HORSE FOLLOWS DEAD MASTER Colonel Cody's horse, his favorite mount for many you.i, being led In the great funeral cortege in Denver. The white horse was an object of grout Interest to the thousands who lined tho thoroughfares through which the procession passed. DOliYDE Basra This death musk of Admiral George Dowpj, shown In tlx bunds of Its maker, U. H. J. Dunbar, is tho forty-ninth made by Mr. Dunbar. which Is believed by many to bo the South Atlantic. Other reports say WINNIPEG-TQ-ST. PAUL Northwest, V. Aurenson and Sam Christiansen of Rlvcrton, who will enter, Derby," and a crack dog team. The Wlnnlpeg-to-St. Paul race Is to bo one of Sports carnival at St. I'aul, Minn. The distance is 000 miles. rnmnMiiiitifyynjiirftinisuui V W ' VV-: v Mil TH1 1 vessel that has been capturing and the raider Is the famous Moowc. DERBY DESIGNED NEW QUARTERS II. A. Macneal, designer of tho now 25-cont piece that has Just been putj In circulation by tlfo government. Dyeing Poodles the Latest. The latest Broadway fud Is tho dyed, poodle. Society first took up tho ldcnf and now It Is being adopted by tho nH io-date chorus girls. Three1 front-row girls thrilled Broadsvay tho other af ternoon when they alighted from u taxi In front of tho Hotel Astor, each ) with a small dog In her arm. Ono was pink, another was .blue, and tho j third green. Tho passers-by needed I no signal from the door tenders to cull attention to tho arrivals. The party spoke for itself. The dogs were orig inally whlto French poodles. It 1b I understood that the dyed-lu-tho-wool dog proposition Isn't conlined to any color. They are synchronizing varia tions In the color schemes. Green ears, a pink tail with bluo horizontal stripes Is a possibility. In ono ot tho big (lepurtinent stores receutly; we observed two women, one with an ornngc-colmvd poodle nnd tho othor, tho color of the tuniuolse blue of tho skies, with a delicate tint of pink on "tho underbody. With the coming of Easter It Is exporter that tho fad will have u big Impetus. New York Times. Dumb Animals. ' The manager ot Kldcm's great me migerlt had Induced all tho crowd to become patrons, except one Individ ual who stood gazing up at him with mouth agape, "Right this wiiy, sir, If you wish to see some deer stalking," shouted tho nnlmnl king. "No fear, hid," came tho reply, "I ' was In yesterday and none of 'cm euld ' n bloomln' word."