r c v.--. vv-:.;- - l't 1 - i . '-.-w .'.' - . .' " . ' - m, .'Hq .... - .. , - -i,r--,. -' .r ..51 w f- f,,. . ! ..-. -,' - I fvVTn ,r--' . ;N;Hii - v.; TUB FAMOUS MODEI ROOM IN THE HOME OP THE NEW YORK YACHT CLUB. OlcUTime Cameos for Girls i N OLD-TIME romances the hero fill ot tho 8tory was Pretty sur JLjJ some time In the course of it, to present the heroine with a tMVliitlffil ra mfn pntnthinir nnHr:t that he had picked up in his travels, a cameo with a foundation of delicate sea shell pink. Just the shade of the girl's own delicately tinted cheeks. Perhaps the girl of today wears deeper roses In her cheeks, for she Is a healthy-creature, hut she will not object to the same beautifully toned and carved cameos. She may have any number of them, for they are being made up for her In all the ways a twentieth cea tury girl can desire. Let any girl who thinks that cameos aro not coming Into vogue visit the shopa where antiques of any kind are to be found, and If there Is a cameo in the collection the proprietor will ask her J30 or J40 foe It without moving an eyelash. And It ia the identical kind of a pin that a few; years ago, if it were an heirloom descended from grandmamma or great-grandmamma, she would have put aside without a thought Hut the dealer in antiques knows bis business, and he knows that with a, revival of the old styles of dress, and with the reappearance of old-time materials, nothing Is more appropriate in the way of Jewelry than the cameo. The old-time cameos were mado up chiefly in brooches, but those of today appear in many other forms. The largest are for belt clasps, and there are stick pins of cameos, cuff buttons in the pret tiest shapes, cuff links and flexible brace lets which are charming. It is the carving, not the color, which counts In the cameo, and that beautiful pink in which the romancer delighted may be had at the same price as the soft brown shades. It is all in the cutting, and the girl who, perhaps, does not care so much for this as to have her cameos match the gowns or accessories that stie Wears milts herself as to color. bracelets are, perhaps, the newest things In cameos. Tbey are formed of small me Balllon cameos, some of the stones being pink and others having the foundation la hades of brown. These are linked together In a way which makes the bracelet flexible, and the reault Is a pretty trinket which can be bought for U5. Some of the medal Bon are l!tU larger than the other forming larger bracelets, but the price la pauaJly the urn. Pins range Is Mze from tho small stick pin through tho variety of small brooches up to the larger ones as big us those our grandmothers wore to fasten their fichus at the throat of their broad embroidered turnover collars. The girl of today wears theso same pretty things, and the cameo pins can be used in the same wuy. Brooches range from $5 up, set In gold. Tho large cameos in belt claps have an ornamental setting of silver or silver gilt. The kllver is effective with the cameos. Smaller cameos are used In pairs for belt cla&ps. Small oval cameos aro mode Into cuff buttons or studs, and others form cuff links made after the style of other modern cuff links. These cameos come, most of them, from Naples, whero they aro cut by artists who learned tho work In boyhood. The big shells from which they are mado go first into the hands of a workman whose busi ness is to cut them to tho best advantage, so that every Inch of the shell which can bo carved Is utilized. Tho Inside from which cameos cunnot bo cut Is used for other pur poses. Interesting llttlo trinkets are made from this part queer little pink or brown dogs, and pigs and other animals which have lings attached so that they may be worn aa ornaments. They cost only SO cents. Substitute for Brooms Chicago 1 mnklng a stand for an ad vance In housekeeping by the Introduction of the "vacuum cleaner" as a substitute for brooms und dust brushes for the re moval of dust and Iho accompanying mi crobes from the residence. The broom and dust brush stir the dust up, spread It through tho atmosphere for easier Inhala tion. The "vacuum cleaner" is a method of sucking the dust out of carpets, cur tains, etc., as they lie or hang, and con veying it through rubber tubes to an exhaust cylinder, and thence to the fur naco lor incineration ' i - Tiiin-.n-i, -A fry 3 -..W; Vront Row W. W. TTartley, "wTh. OMAHA HOWLING CLUB, "Row--W, O. fVivrV C. M. T.nrtt. VL. R. "Kmian (Capt.). H. W. Lehnmnn. K. W. l'ogg. WINNKKS Ob' THE 1X3 C'HAMPIOHSUU'-Photo by Heyn. t