mimvmmfcms&Jiivm i-WaTt&$mmt&xmS&& tmmmntnj -ftmim, T If "VW FWs . J,..&fw . ,l ?. "Liberty Bell" Shape lwBP55 jrfi " i ir"" 'mi n fcjPFyjryptv j&T Tffyyyf,. y " ' ck2!Baf5SHHBBBBVBB bbbbbbbbbm bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb1bbLbbbbbuib1bbbVBhBHBiv V bbbbE-B vH - - n BBBBBBBBBBBK '' Vmlk .. BBBBBHfc;. s4"s ):"- lli tr- A bbbbbbBl. ' -- VjbW- Vs V.. l'liotOKruph by Hummel, from TiilS plqunnte and patriotic article of headwear in both comfortable nnd becoming. It Is the first of tho fall fashions to reach these chores Trom France, where It was es pecially designed for the "Lea Belles lilies Aniericanes." BAG FOR DRESSES OR HATS Makes for Comfort In Traveling, and Also Preserves the Articles Enclosed. A scheme which a girl will find a great comfort in any place where she has insufficient closet space is a bag to hold her lint or her dress. In travel ing It Is well to take one or more of these bags, nnd In a camp they are al most indispensable. A girl can very quickly mnko nil she wants of them, unci if stio wants to economize space they can bo mado of sllkollne, which folds up Into tho smallest kind of a package. Is light In weight and very in expensive. For n hat, make a bag three-quarters of n yard deep and half n yard xvlde, with a drawing string at the top. Tho bag Is hung up by this string and the hat Is kept free from dust and out of the way. This measurement Is for a hat of ordinary size; If your hat 1b nn unusually largo one the bag must be larger. For a dress tho bag should bo about llvo Inches longer than the dress it self, the width being a little more than enough to slide the dress In easily. When camping It is best to put one's traveling dress and hat into these bags and leave them there, for they are seldom wanted until one 1b ready to leave. In making the bags for camp ing there are some advantages In us ing cretonne instead of sllkollne. Be ing so much thicker, it keeps out the dampness better, and it is often damp enough in a tent to have a rather dis astrous effect on a hat. SIMPLE AND ATTRACTIVE This simple waist is of marquisette or voile trimmed with a beautiful lace or embroidery and fastening at tho Aide with buttons and loops. The sleeves, cut in one piece with the body of the waist, are trimmed to correspond. n To Pull Bastings. Few persons know that an otdinary orangewood stick, such as Is used for the nails, is the best Instrument for removing bastings. A scissors when used Is very 'apt to cut or tear the garment. Procjure the stick at any drug store. Underwood & Underwood. The shnpe of the hnt elenrly resem bles that of the historic liberty bell. The material Is a rich brown plush, and the willow plume Is white above, shndlng off Into a hue matching that of the body of the hat. It Is one of tho Benson's favorites. SHOES FOR LONG TRAMPS Hlnhly Important Part of Equipment When a Girl Contemplates "Roughing It." Girls who have had little experience In outdoor life often do some foolish things when they begin to try this form of enjoyment. One wny In which mnny of them lnterfero with their own comfort Is by going on n trnn.' with the wrong kind of shoes. A girl who has played tennlt, and found the soft, rubber soled shoes comfortable will think thnt they will surely help her to enjoy a tramp; but they nre tho last thing to wear for a long walk, as these girls hnvo found to their cost. They come homo wMh their feet aching and the calves of ttlo legs tired out fiom tho lack of jie spring Unit Is given by heels. Wrlk lng with n Hat, heelless shoes on n rough rond Is extremely trying, and ono can feel every stone through the toft rubber soles; nnd these tired feet nnd legs will feel even worse tho next day. Quite as bad as the tennis shoes are low shoes with thin soles and high heels. These tire the feet and may sprain the innkles. The only shoes that are really satisfactory for "rough ing it" are strong high shoes with thick soles. The strongest ankles need support In rough walking, and it is often wet in tho woods. The girl who has once tried the two ways of tramp ing will never again be persuaded to wear low or thin shoes. Paris Bridesmaid Gowns. A shepherdess effect was shown In four bridesmaid gowns recently turned out by Paris makers. Tho un dersllps were of a thin white silk trim med with scattered wreaths, about the size of a saucer, of tiny pink rose?. Over these fell tunics or pale blue chiffon, which mellowed the flowers until they wero the dimmest blush. Tho broad hats wer wreathed with tho posies held by a vast butterfly of thin white lace, and there were small knots of tho buds on tho blue slip pers. Suit Coats. Suit Jackets for autumn and winter will remain close fitting about the hips and bold to the straight lino form. At present there is no arbi trary denree regarding the length. Models considerably shorter than the 26-Inch length, and somewhat longer also, are among the new models. Hut the length mentioned is;a happy me dium. The feeling Is that with the ap proach of, winter the tendency will be to lengthen the Jacket, with perhaps a revision to the short effects again In the spring. Hunter Oreen. As the season advances the vogu for emerald green noticeable for some months past appears to bo on the de cline, hunter green, a softer, more pleasing tone, being substituted. Scarfs of hunter green satin are draped around tho crowns of outing hats of Panama and peanut braid and gracefully looped at one side. Scarfs of striped and checked silk, such as may be found at the neckwear shops, are also utilized as drapery for out ing hats. T&LCSori ANDOTHElte Citics2l Automobile an Aid Q. -"M ( TJ f .fii t-SUSfg Ti " N-:V YOItK. Tho nutnmobllo ns nn aid to criminals Is likely to figure luumlncntly In future. Out In the west It linn been used for a year or more by tbo robbers of villago banks nnd the looters of pontnfllccs. Now It hna brgun to figure prominently In this city. Two weeks ngo a Jewelry store at Sixth avenuo nnd Thirteenth street was robbed of a tray contain Ing poino $10,000 worth of gems by one of three men who had driven up to it In a tnxlcnb. The man smashed a window, abstracted a tray of diamonds and shot dead the clerk who had rushed to the door on hearing the noise of tho broken glass. No trace of the criminals has been found by the police. The next night a red tnxlcnb, be lieved to be the same nnd contnlntng three men, dashed into the village of River Edge, a few miles from Hacken sack, N. J., and while a severe thunder torm was raging the safe in the post f-A I If "! A-fc .CVX I J . V - 7. MWW''. JiUf 'N-..Mf - Kjfc Nagged Husband Gets Law's Sympathy BOONE. IA. Judge R. M. Wright of Fort Dodge, presiding Jurist of this Judicial district, has handed down a Icclsion which is regarded as a most remarkable legal document. Coming, as it does, from a JurUt who is kindly, home loving, and a tender-hearted old man, it is all the more remarkable. Judge Wright recently listened to the evidence in a suit for separate maintenance. Ills kindly face betrayed nothing of what was to come In tho opinion handed down. He says that if the good Lord ever made a man who could live at ease and comfort with the woman who was aulng he would like to Bee him, for he would be a phenomenon. The opinion has been read by all attorneys in this city nnd is attracting much attention. "A bright, capablo and fairly good looking woman," says the Judge, "has obtained a divorce from two husbands on the ground of desertion and has two or three times brought actions for divorce against her present husband, based on no Just ground, needlessly putting him to groat nnd Inexcusable expense in paying costs and attorneys' fee on both sides. "I have given this case much thought, care and attention, and have Playground of Idle NEWPORT. R. I. Newport Is a place that la consecrated to pleasure. The people who have their summer homes here represent the acme of wealth and fashion and exclusive so ciety in America. With the possible exception of one or two local chari ties with which they concern them selves actively but unobtrusively their sole occupation during the months that they live in Newport is to amuse themselves. Photographers have tried to get pictures while the idle and fashionable rich were disporting them selves on an exclusive beach, but in every case they were detected and their apparatus smashed. One corner of the beach is reserved for children tho children of millionaires. Everybody who is anybody at New port Is ardently devoted to horses and horseback riding or pretends to be. To Leave Lonely CHARLESTOWN, MASS. Jesse H Pomeroy, known for almost four decades as "the boy murderer of Bos ton," and held by an earlier genera tion to bo the most desperate criminal abnormality of the age, Is soon to leave bis cell for greater freedom in the state prison here, after having spent 37 years in solitary confinement. This announcement was made when it was declared that Governor Foss, im pressed by evidences submitted to him from many sources of the great change in Pomeroy's character, has decided to allow the life convict to enjoy many of the liberties granted well behaved prisoners. Governor Fobs will never grant Pomeroy a full pardon, and It is gen erally believed no other governor ever will take such action; but to give the man who has Inspired dread in the hearts of even his keepers ever since the day when as a fourteen-year-old boy he was thrust Into a "punish ment" cell in the Cbarlestown prison, any portion of the freedom enjoyed by tractable convicts is considered evi dence of a transformation in the crim inal's make-up. Pomeroy's greatest champion has been bit mother, now a sad faced, OWkTlJW LM.M kvf)MiSWI to City Criminals oilier mir cracked and the contents triKi ti. The villagers learned of the crime the next morning. The ery next afternoon tho eamo tnxlcnb, apparently, nppenrcil in Illcccker stieet in this city nnd one of ItH three occtipnntH entered n shod Htore nnd held up the proprietor. Owing to a miscalculation the robber wan not successful In obtaining any cash, but he succeeded In escaping all did his companions In the nttto. This series of crimes in such quick succession has nlnrmed the pollco, who see vnst possibilities In the nuto mobile as an nld to tho criminal ele ment nnd they feel utterly unable to cope with the situation. The nutomo bile, criminals, ns proved In the Jewel ry store cnBc, arc prepared to com mit murder to protect themselves from capture. A thing that makes the hold-up man willing to draw his re volver Is the eoso with which he can use Ills weapon without attracting at tention. A single revolver shot or even n volley of them In a city street attracts little attention now compnred with n few years ngo. Tho automobile Is responsible for this. All day and all night long, all over the city, thero are automobiles giving forth explo sions that sound Ilka revolver dis charges. tried to find from the cvldenco soma way whereby I could decide In hei favor and award to her some money for maintenance, but I have been un nble to do so. "She has badgered her husband with annoyances, some of them small, but nil of them humiliating to the last degree. At tho end of it all I am forced to the conclusion that the do fondant was practically driven from home, nnd thnt ho wns fully Justified In leaving It, as life there for him had become not merely extremely difficult, but Impossible "After the plaintiff hnd threatened to shoot him he was Justified In notify ing the merchants no longer to extend credit to plaintiff on his account, and after his repeated trials ho wns Justi fied In pneking up his little personal effects and leaving the plaintiff and in afterward refusing to go back to the sheol he had left." Rich in America Therefore tho horse show each sum mer means much to fashionable New port. It is n far moro exclusive affair than tho tennis tournament, for the latter Is not only a public but a nation al event. The horse show Is moro select and perlinps the most peculiar tliiiiR about it is that tho horses ap pear to take a more keen Interest in what Is going on than the persons who own them. One of the scenes of most brilliant social life at Newport Is Alfred Van derbllt's place at Oakland farm. His garden parties are among the mile stones of the summer's progress. These gatherings are undoubtedly the finest expressions of summer social entertainment In America and -are most beautiful to look at. The women in the smartest of smart frocks, the men in summer garb, the retinue of servants moving about these make the life of the picture that Is set in a frame of shady lawns, with the splen did mansion as a background. Ono or two bands or orchestras make muBlc that is pleasant without being obtru sive. Even the most rabid proletarian could not glimpse the sceno without falling under the spell of Its charm. Cell After 37 Years white haired woman rearing her sev entieth year. Althoufh denied even the right to see her son and having to accept tho truth of the fact that he was regarded all over the civilized world as the most atrocious example of a wanton murderer, bis mother never faltered in her faith in bis In nate goodness. Pomeroy killed two children, a boy and a girl, after treating them with barbaric cruelty. He inveigled other children into isolated sections, stripped them of their clothing, tied them to trees or upon boards and then beat them until they were unconscious. Ho delighted in sticking pins into their unconscious forms and cut them deep ly with a knife. When this Juvenile monster, then fourteen ycara old, waa finally run down and captured he barely escaped lynching. His youth alone saved him from execution. WULfa - ( "ash"! jWj: i lip!: No Wonder. "Wlint's our husbund bo nngry about?" "lie's been out of work si weeks." "1 should think that would suit him Brst rate." "That's- 111 lie's Just got a Job." BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS FREK Hfnd Volnini feir fl ftnnilr if in toff ihole Ml (lolil HmtumM'il lllfllulut, Klowpr ami Muttii Tout I'nrOM bountiful rolnrt iinl Inti-lli'M di'Muni Art l'ul Card Club.TJl Jucktuli M., Toprlu, Kaiiaaa Is not making others happy the best happiness? There Ih Joy In helping to rnew the strength and courage of ooblo minds. Amlol. Many a mini who claims to be self made lias n wlfu who superintended the Job. zjhsicx-g. fi i ? L'EajJKiIH UUOHXl nmffii-nw!rwiiTiTffnmi'firin.,7iWff-r.r-T ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT Airgf fable Preparation Tor As similating IheFoodarKiRetJula- ling the Stomachs and Dowels of Ktav Promotes DigCBlion,Chcerful ness and Rest. Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not Narc otic Mr,j ttOUOrSAMVUnmm Ifj i i Ampin Smd' JUSmnm AHUM Jyn tnd Amirmimt MjXlmk3t4tm WfrmSttd CUtdSmf t I AoerfcclRcmedv forConstina im .V Ml lion . Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ncss and LOSS OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of Tire CeNTAim Company, NEW YORK. i 8 w m 'Guaranteed under the Foodaw Sxact Copy of Wrapper. fL&:425 PfSsito mil PBBsmSS IBS WEBB"' JSSBLnSg!'KlIB LINCOLN SANITARIUM Sulpho-Sallne Water Feature of Hospital Conducted by Doctors Everett The Lincoln Sanitarium, Fourteenth and M streets. Is one of the oldest hospitals In this part of the state. It was founded in 1BU3 by the two Dra. Everett. It Is now managed by tho founder, Dr. M. H. Everett and by Ms on nnd nophow, Drs. 11. H. Everett and U. W. Everett. The sanitarium takeB all cases .of non-contagious diseases. Its preaeM capacity is being enlarged by a new building and that capacity will be Jus! about doubled In the near future. This is the third time that the business has grown to the point of demanding new room, One distinctive feature of the sanitarium is the sulpho-sallne water. The hospital has the fortune to have at Its disposal medicated waters of high curative property. The sanitarium building proper contains a large salt water plunge, a4 baths of various kinds. It Is equipped with all the usual surgical, ! trical and medical aids to the sick. VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOMB, 1 W. L. DOUGLAS 2.50, 3,00, 3.50&M.00 SHOES WOMEN wear W.L.Dooghu tyli.h, perfect fitting ,ay walking boots, because they give long wear, same as W.L.Dougku Men's shoes. THE STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEARS The workmanship which has madeW. L. Douglas shoes famous the world over maintained in every pair. If I could take you into my large faclories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W.LDouglas shoes are made, you would then understand whv thev are war ranted to hold their shape, fit better and wear Ion ger than any other make for the price I CAUTION Tho Knnln hava W. t IourIm gJUliiwiJ nam and price itBin pod on bottom I M TOO cannot obtain W. L. Dourli aha In four town, write for caUlof. Shoe tent direct ONE PA I It of mr HOYS' ?,SM.50a rom factory to wearer, all rbarast prepaid. VT.I SW.OO ailOKS will positively out wa OOUOLAJ, 14A Hpark Sb, Brockton, Mass. TWO fAlKSof ordinary Bojra'slMea ? 11 W wee?.- mux wok jlwHLbMbKmjv JBBflCvl ' it M BBBHM B Don't Persecute Your Bowels C .lilt rnfrinrf ! anrl tiurftl(w Tt. 1 sVM..l 1.--1. ..-.-,. - . -r "w riDTrD'C IITTfC vinn-n" fcinnu ' LIVER PILLS Purely venerable. Act Kenny on mo liver, rinninntr mle, m 1 toothetlirttcllcat memlir.ineoMfir. I liowcl. Cur I Contlipillon, nillomnm, Sick Unit. rh anil Inillf fillAii. mllllMil fcnnw. SMALL IMIX, SMALL DOSK, SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bear Signature CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA tMNmraNiMn. iwtmwtt. iJSow aillllllllllHIIIHBIIIBBtl ! nn.; ..n t i tt S RnADTFD'O '!JBr VITTLE nr h i v r h f I ar m " i 4-V3TI m$ w- 18$ fBfefsfjyBKlBBHBBKfS M "4afafjBBBBBBBBVnjBBBBBBaf .' .S iWrVi:?-:-::. '' C BBk. BBBbW I V;::.-- I 0BBBfc vi'iiea uiy niuw wiu picoev euwiu upi But Phoebe upward wriggledt TVm Lily White with Faultless Starch." And ail the Pupils giggled. m CkIi KV Packtu - Aa licrU Bosk 1 CtuUita u I r i ' M '' i V I ; i 1 1 V I ifl I I 19 il CHilUMaawBSMssyejBjBjiBjsaaavsMeiJi H(01aHMtfdeWtai4MWtM ELI. -..- tu ,j p. 31 J LT" "rt Tr.tT ,. ,jr I fl ",H''Wl'jJfJ ( r J . t wAsfeaa ft2Stgr, - t imiiri if nn ia fimiwn i i