R Tire omaita Sunday bee: jura is, inon. if 41 I I i 1 Activities and Views of Progressive Women in Various Walks of Life R Pat A war Powder, llneator, K3HT on the fiesh trail of the portacce of presenting a good appearance, mnts made under contract for puMiclnstl- Thp w?l't. a,H drawn ft warnln against face powders and It la really an ass-t In business. Hut tutlons, the only exception to the rule being ..e" ilk 'Hi,. I," ,hi i.i-u vr uiut-au 01 me Ie- being well dressed doe not necessarily the London county council, which does partment of Agriculture comes mean expensively gowned. Here la a prac- manage to secure adequate wagea for per the edict of Mis. Rachol Ben- tical list of clothes you ought to have on eons employed on lt contracta. gamlnl, principal of the Wash- coming to the city and the price at which Nearly all of us realise the Im- that the lowext wane were paid for ar- with short paniem and a pointed pirdle. rin over a hiiuhio bnve tho Eli.lie of h was shaped and nunle on foundation, there wan a second Kinlle of Ington Irving High school, New York City, you can obtain them: loruidding students to powder their coun tenances with "beauty spots." Ml. ln gamint did not merely gays "Now, girls, you will please your dear teacher by re fraining from the employment of these purely superfluous adjuncts to beauty." Such a mild caution as that would only provoke giggles and result In universal talcumlnlng. What Miss Bengamlnl Is sued In the form of a proclamation was One cult, coat and skirt $18 no One dark shirtwaist J.25 Three white shirtwaists IX One crepe de chine or taffeta even ing waist f GO One pair of walking boots 300 One pair of house shoes 150 One hat 6 00 One extra skirt 6.00 One pair of overshoes .75 Reflections of a Bachelor Girl. To a woman, love Is the bread of life; to a man, Just the Jam on the bread. Somehow, the moment a man has sur- softly folded organdie, knotted at the left with the slashed ends falling below the hip line. Sleevpe were rucked and rinse luting and reached Juft above the eibow. What Women Are Doing With more than bass, dalce, perch. 10.WO trout, pickerel, pout and eels to her rendmd the key of his heart to a woman credit as an angler. Mrs. Marancy Strong, he begins to think about changing the lock. ol1 lnv" claiinto being the cham- , , ...... P'on flsherwoman of New England. Flattery Is the counterfeit coin In which n. T ,, , . . ' Ir. Louisa Martlndale, a factory Inspec- most men expect to pay for real kisses. tor in Ireland, in to be one of the speakers Pon't try to kill a man's love by starving t the International Council of Women at It out; overfeed It and It will .oon die of ft .l5"21- ,!er topic " chlld Mrs. Nancy M. Johnson of Washington woman spend two hours was the first person to take out a patent Total t;.25 Incidentals, which lnoluude handkerchiefs, tnnlFestton. 'I - nil nko hl, ...... - - . . . kill, onllira alnua, ,I,IU. . Why doeS who appear. In class room with her face "HI round out your list to an even . 0UrI1 ber and decorating herself rfe a'naofflceTkeook'mrt hl powdered, or bedlsened with hideous little ror the ""' Wnlc,, Prhap. the most w"h abv ribbons. Just to see a man In patent In 1M3 and sold the rights for 141.600. court plaster spots, will have it washed off important garment on this list, a Scotch order to tell hirn that they never can be Miss Mary Ij. Phillips has Just won the before the class. She will .tand up At her tweed or '(i "erK to be recom- anything but "platonio friends?" Jl0"? ?f,.,fhe ,he unlv'r!",y desk and remove the powder, et cetera, tended, as each wears well and does not The man who pretends to laugh at love Mi. AImlra Catherine Johnson, "a -fudent with a towel." spot easily. The hat should match the pre- and to scorn women Is like the small boy In the college of letters, was the first of In explaining her stand In ih .t.., dominating color In the suit You will "who whistles In the dark-because he la the student speakers at the recent com- P'alnnner stand In the matter, . ... . . .u ,.u mencement exercises. Her subject was Ansa uengaminl said: 'It Is very dreadful that this has be come public, but I cannot gainsay Its truth. It makes me ashamed of myself to think that I have allowed such a trivial matter to become public. However, It Is true. I don't think It Is girlish or becoming for a girl to powder. I don't approve of It. way. pronaoiy nave some or tnese ciotnes on afraid. "California's Swinish Inheritance hand that you can use, but I earnestly ad- It Is difficult to tell Which most embar- a Pennsylvania girl, MIhs Isabel Flnley vise you not to take a lot of half-worn rasscs a man, his first tete-a-tete with a of Morrlstbwn, has been decorated by the clothe, to the city, as they will be In the woman ho is Just beginning to love or his SI''?, "?nu'?,ofhoI.taiTf0L',rr "V1''" v at Messina. She has nlso been made an last ieie-a-ieie wun me woman wnora no nonorary member of the Wueen's Hoard of has Just ceased loving. ' Beneficence and enrolled among the bene- If a man could stick to his wife as he of tho for Insurables at does to his favorite brand of tobacco, divorce would soon become obsolete. When two people begin to analyse their Representative' at National Council. Mrs. Mary Wood Swift of Berkeley, Cal., will represent the National Council of hyglenically or otherwise. I don't Intend Women of the United States at the fourth to let girls powder their faces In this meetlnv of th wnn.n r .11 i., in To. school. They come here to Improve their ronto, Canada, June 15 to 2L This meeting tmol,on" they vivisect their love. minds, and while they are here they must Is the quinquennial congress of the Inter think of their brains more than their national Council of Women, faces." Mrs. Swift Is president of the national pnd V marrying the woman who shatters American Olrla and Titles. council of the United States, which Is com posed of about twenty of more national Mrs. Margaret E. Iangdale of Cambridge, Ma.s., has Just given the ThUMps Kxeter academy J.",0,000 to found a scholarship to be known as the Charles K. l,angdnle scholarship. , Mrs. Lnnirrlalo's husband, the late Prof. Charles K. Lnngrlnle. was for many years the dean of the law faculty of Harvard and this scholarship Is to com memorate his work. the pedestal and stands alone. Tho opening of a woman's club the other Why Is It that when a man has done onv in t.ork. Ireland, caused a sensation. A man begins by looking around for a woman who can stand on a pedestal and v.. io tmomt ui kuuui twenty or more national - -- When the usual Huh iirno ,, J The responsibility for the present hu- women', .ocleties, uniting for concerted anything particularly inhuman he always for thpl nVspapers announced the 3n,. miltating slave trade In which rich Amerl- aotlon along lines of mutual agreement, remarks, "Oh, well, I'm only human!" ty In bulletins. They drew glowing pie can girls are sold to the titled decadent, such a. the movement for international A man's heart Is hardened by the water tures 1 of bankrupt hjisbands sitting at home . . 1 . , . .. , , nurfinie ineir negiecieu orrsprlllg when of Kngland and the continent is almost peace and arbitration, the vote fox women, of a woman s tears, but sortoued by the they sh0uld be nt work, while their wives wholly the fault of the men of this coun- tc. There are about 3,000,000 women mom- sun of her smile. In cosily furnished club rooms staked their try, writes Anna A. Rogers In the Atlantic ber. in this great coalition, which Is the The most delightful part of a kiss is the !R"' ""ed 2s hnvw lh,PH L",b,h""'? an excellent cuisine, good livery accommo dations, golf links within easy reach and cosy rooms set apart for bridge and smoking. Monthly. This opinion Is offered only after largest and eldest group of tho kind In any moment Just before taking. Helen llow years of observation and consideration of ,an1. having been formed In 1888, the year land. our social conditions, and after a natho. W whlon. the late Frances Wlllard, Busan logical study of American men. Tholr onen Anthony and other leaders of the last Leaves front Fnnh Ion's astonishment and chagrin at this pheno- century got together and organized It and ."aUKe fsmonaCr.eBt Notebook. weaves of mena would be vastly amusing were It not so pathetic. Our men have a helpless In ability to see themselves. Nor Is the re sponsibility of the mother lost sight of, for iu uiimnuunsi cou.iu... io ies man ,.- 0a cloth, a fabric that was in use 000,000 women. It Is estimated, will be rep- thirty of forty years ago, has been revived, resented at Toronto. It makes a serviceable tub frock. A frt.t.r of Oen.ml In.rA Wn .nri . or w-ear wun a lingerie irocK is a uimr.ii- EELIGI0US NOTES. t( . m w a . v 11 XLXS JUL WW S V V W BCESTE R is rrriB l-.r a Til COSSETS i jPKTAILSHOWINO THC WONDCRrUU "ADJUSTO REDUCINO.DKVICK IF you are very stout and wish to conceal the ex cess flesh, as fash ion decrees, you must wear ad ADJUSTO. If you are of( tfiA full ficriirn type and would appear stylish and graceful, just try the ADJUSTO. . t And if you are of.onlyrmedium build, but require special support and extra corset strength,. the. ADJUSTO will meet every requirement.' ADJUSTO BATIST ECCORSETS are ideally adapted for wear during the approaching' warm months, being cool, comfortable and serviceable, and. may be procured from leading dealers. PRICE 3 (batiste. orcputilK Ask.toTseelStyles 61 U 615. 621 and 625. J ROYAL VORCESTERACORSET CO. 18( Market ST, CHICACO " MA KERS ALSO OF BON TON CORSETS '3 TO 12 Royal Worcester Corsets 1 to 3 )v a v. i . th0 w"8 ot the late Ambassador John handsome, bow of white lace, and a band " -"' "'. Swift, who reDresented this country at the around the crown to correspond. does In Europe. She Is the outer ottadel Swift, who represented this country at the W'v" ,.-. f Julian Mr. Swift h lon knn . Pr which must first succumb to his studied , ,,, ., .. ,. ,.. , ?ay', .a charm. ' This outer citadel Is carried with aston Father Vaughn, actor, priest and dra matlst. died at a Drlvate sanitarium In a large Janesvllle, Wis. He came Into promliu-nce a year ago because of his writing a play, "A Woman of tho West." T-te wnt nt ntm A pretty fair-haired girl wore, the other time leading man for ModJeska. and It linen gown 01 a Bnaue uwntou the devoted flatho le netreso t-1ii lng moilel of black tulle, set off b lace, respon shade between r sol belt Curious and Romantic Capers of Cupid ' .uutu wun uiyiuiuaiiu itoucn. rum w KiiaKi ana olive, wun a tie 01 son purpie .lrc. y,im , ,,.. ,i,.. . ,h v,-v. lshlng ea.se, as he quickly discovers, and for three reasons: The mother Is easily in.,.n,.ni.i i. . i .. : .. i I . v. . a nH hliiA Btplne.l i 1U 11 11 il a lie 1 1 nf biua ... .... Bu-de ,th" p- p, bu-ttonB. Miss nuth Sullivan has attended Temple first council of women on the Pacific coa4 u connected wlth ,plup. Baptist Bible school, Washington, n. C, her home being In California. web-llke threads are the feature of the 'or t,n years without missing a Sunday She la a woman of fine presence and nBW veils, the effect being that of a splder- and this fart was emphasized recently by dnzzled; her social foundations do not go crest abllltv and her leartershln ba hn w"b Punctured by square spots of varying 150 of her friends, who complimented her . . "- " ' " S-re" aDlilty, ana her leadership has been Bli6e tnd importance. wlth a ainn(.r g)ven n the banquet hall of w Ilelri-ss Mnrrlet Chanffear. was said by an Intimate friend of the shrewd. A well-ordered French household 1T1I the pluce of the chauffeur, lamiiy mat ner Droiners now r-uno m .."o "I"" "-'"i"" " Albert Hall, usurped by Mr. n' tlht whlcn might De maae 10 nav u iwo omisr umn mm. Daniel Cupid the big touring the marriage annulled would be useless. The best test of a successful marriage la car of Miss Elizabeth B. Berg- o see whether, at the end of five years. doll of Wynnefleld avenue, Marrlatte Customs la France, husband and wife would. If time could be heiress and daughter of the late In France marriage Is a family affair. t back for their convenience, repeat the down deep In the class to which she almost marked by tact and energy. white shantung makes a charming res- the church. After the banquet a gol.l Hergdoll, a wealthy brewer of Phil- The parents of both parties interest them- experiment. It Is safe to assert that mich Invariably belongs; her husband has made tauraut or vlHltlng toilet. One seen lately locket was presented to Miss Sullivan by adelphla, swung out of lovers' lane Friday selves deeply. Family affection la atronger would be the case In a larger proportion every dollar of the lure of those millions, A Capable and Happy Woman. thekfrt Inlet'wlth hoarse flmt'net'bral'ded ' N- Klchards on behalt of the school. 0f last week and stoered straight for the in France than In England. As an example, of French than of British marriages, without which there would not be this It la not later than seventy -five years n fine cotton braid and embroidered in Tne work undertaken by the nenedlctlnes road to matrimony. an English mother, speaking of her daugh- -1 i problem to solve. Second, the women who W that the Ideal life for a lady was: Bilk, all In white. !T'PeKi"11 Uie JL,v,,"0,n ,of ,.y"1na,e T,1',1 The lrP waa -ulck- ""en and surprls- ter's marriage, says: "We have lost our Bmrd Fools ay Sweetheart. To sit In a parlor omari irayenng coats are maae 01 iiis- pt'- ih. ..i , r Vh h v mg. and the capstone of a pretty romance, daughter." A French woman, on the other n unsopntsucatea country gin, Tresn And sew a fine seam. 't,!1 w "J ,"iruL. .J .7.'", Rcrintur.s published hv Ton riement vur Hall was engaged by the Bergdoll family v-nfl. ,.. h(,r fri,.nd. We have aained a from her native hills of Sweden, had Now, one can be a lady and do almost green or mulberry-colored silk. Brown In 15t2, will take about ten years to ac complish, and It has been estimated that It will cost about J50.000. So far the re vision commission, presided over by Abbot Oasquet, has reprinted a copy of the Latin Scriptures without any capital letters, punctuation or divided words. Prof. David W. Marks, who died In see what a given man really la, who esti mate him at all justly, who begin even to understand men's social standards either In this country or Europe, are rare ln- poplln piped with anything, always provided she Is suf- Sicilian and silk canvas relieved with bands ftnionti. rw v, i. rai, w. hi of black linen or in navy, with the same deed. The American mother la clearly out ,,. h ... w.kk - , ' adornment, are also favored. - . . - clerer enough Is Miss Clara Webb of Ore- Affected carelessness has irone out of gon. There are few places In this country fashion. Even the summer girl, the girl hand, tells her friends, "We have gained a son." heartbreaking watt of fourteen hours for Marrlmre settlements in. tn thla country ln arrival ui mo man sno came s,w of her depth at the start, as unfit as a child to counsel her daughter. She la not enulnned for It. It Is not her work In - . . . erai. Is as neat as a ptrlecl-ntung costume equtppid lor it. it is not ner work, in Bhe pieaB8B ana ln aB western and breesy and a hair-net will make her. No wo.uan, dally Intimacy of the young man and Miss Elizabeth, It 1. said, quickly devel- conflned t h- weaUn In FranC4 miles to marry, at the Union depot In St, they are as essential preliminary to every aui -.k, . ,- , .... ,, .u,-. devoted to tennis, golf, and sports ln gen- . . ""' eral. Is as neat as a ptrfect-flttlng costume marriage contract. Even the peasants save Alone, In a strange country, the girl was oped symptoms of affection. This became apparent to the members of the young Wimn v " a fa rti 1 r an4 TTo M it'a A I aVi a fiAr1 Nothing daunted, the young couple con- "fully t "ower their daughters, and will on the brink of despair when her long the third place, that subtle relationship of fc Btate as Oregon, she Is doubly fortunate however elaborate or extravagant her London recently, was probably the only tlnued their courtship less openly. Last on no MCI,u,lt a06 a on-ln-UW without vigil was rewarded by the arrival of her sex which European man of any age !n thls resDect. Mll(B Webb lB Bald to be fn. ' fashionable unless she presents an Jewish minister who held a place with the Sat,lraay. Miss Bergdoll became of age and th trlctest Inquisition Into his financial future husband. His appearance was so always have the art of establishing with educated, a musician, and to have had the has acoulied that characteristic the rest la Ha was tn vears old hnt wi' a memw,r Inherited $200,000 under -the terms of her "tanam. nis prospects ana aim aoiuuea ohanged by the appearance of a luxurious N EW YORK, June 12. Concerning sleeves, as concerning tastes, there Is no disputing, this sea son. Or rather there Is plenty of disputing, but all to no pur pose. Apparently each of the a woman of whatever aire, their attention. ,,ni,i re tnvai k,, ., n .11 ,v, of minor Importance. their quick courtesy towards women, their ways ln which she might use her faculties, tlon "tha't 'became" fam5us",?ec2nUyCwe?e habit of listening absorbedly when a she prefers farming. Her father, on his evening creations of organdie, one blue woman epeaks-all this la .0 abaolutely death, left hi. large farm to hi. daughters, tind falmest' btoF ttoh new to the American mother that ah be- and Mis. Webb manage. It. After think- white made up with ribbon and lace lnser- comes hypnotized by.lt and can no longer lng the question of what crops she should tlon. The former had a full Bklrt, plain, distinguish truth from falsity, or a mere possibly select as specialties, she deter- - national point of etiquette from a personal mined on fruit, and having a strong liking thouh'hltiilneaa and delicate tenderness of for blooded stock .he decided on rearing feeling. cows, sheep, hogs and fowls. Accordingly 3 ' she ha. planted ten of the 200 acre, ot the Manly Training; for Girl. farm to cherry trees, and aha has tons of Our training of girls approaches close to fruit, and has won prises at local exhibits, the Idiotic, claims Katharine Eggleston In medal, at the pan-American exposition and the Woman's Home Companion for June. cup. at the Lewis and Clark fair, and the The average girl, from the minute she Income she receives from the sale of the leaves her dolls to go to kindergarten, till fruit 1. reported to be larger than that she matriculate, at college, is told about brought by the crop, of any two or three men and men", work never about women, of the adjoining farm, put together. Of Th,e kindergarten songs and tales are about course, she has fine .oil. equally of course, grtait flon makers has his own pet Lincoln and Washlngton-and even the pic- she attends personally to her orchards and iieaB on the giyg BUbject and has no ln- tures of animal, show the lion ana rorgei uny unaersianos ineir cuuure. one also tentlon of betng bullied out of his position the lioness. In older childhood she I. closely watches the condition of all her live We started out last fall with long tight taught to build sand fort, instead of good stock. She take, prizes on her hog. and sleeves, showing slight variations on gen- old-fashloned mud plea, and even the lumi sheep. The latter bring her a handsome erai leg of mutton iJnea-a mutton leg. ln arithmetic dwell on "Billy." marble, profit, both from her fine crop of wool and shrunken at the top and clinging closely and "John's" apples, to the total negleot "ale. from her flock. The New York yet BUgSeBtln(r the old ,lnes b lt t ' of his sister. .Tribune', account of her Myi: lng Bhttpe. x mougquetalre ettect Wlt9 Later still she goes to high .chool and "Dre.aed ln a sensible costume and stout, mucn ln tvidenco t00i flrBt al(1 for tha learns history with all 1U Ideal, ot brave high rubber boots, she 1. here and there makers who had been forced to part with men-and here again the woman's .hare and everywhere about the farm-'lnto their beloved elbow sleeves and had not of quiet courage la completely over- everything,' she says, 'pig pens, sheep pens, yet formulated their Ideas on long sleeves, shadowed. She learns carpentering, al- horse stable and plowed ground. If my one still sees sleeves of this type, but though she ounnot cook an egg or sew a foreman need, a hand I want to be ready they are not mportant factors of the seam. And she know matlcs and 1 short-changed by tne now ia louna supermienamg me laying a BortB of revolutionary folds and fulnes butcher. She learns political ecenomy, but of a floor In one of the pigpens; now tak- BBB and lengths. doesn't know who are the member, of her lng her turn on the potato planter; now The pIaln ,ong Bleeve mo,erateiy c,0Be own school board. Mis. Eggleton'. prlgnt leeaing ner oeauurui Lincoln sneep. flM, end the cloM tucked leeve .. . ... Thl. ttvnlmJn. hur iief. AKIlltv will- ... uo article conciuaea; "... Btm UBedj though the latter is almost in- "11 your Doy waniea 10 o - - v - -.. evltably accompanied by some sort of over- . . 1 1 .w. . . Th.r. I n r. ''Mini," In knalnua " v. vwk a ai .lit, ecu 1 1 irn the "younger class." havlna- been the first father's will. She Immediately left the Similarly, the parents of a young French- growth or golden whiskers that she failed clergyman of his faith to cast aside, tn an home of her mother and purchased a home man who wishes to marry will satisfy to recognise the man a. he approached. It n-ngiisn congregation, some or tne antique for herself, secured a marriage license themselves about the prospect, of their wa. only after he had called her some of formed kind. He was recognized as one ana married the man of her choice. presumptive daughter-in-law, and alio a the pet name, of their sweetheart day. of the learned men nf his time, but was As Mrs, Hall, however, is of age and point utterly neglected ln Britain about her that she realized that It was her lover and not a university graduate. Changes in Sleeves Come 'with the Seasons possessed of an Independent fortune, It health. fell weeping on his shoulder. - French parent, of the middle classes are Blx yearB ago even Nelson and Thea An far more careful about the bringing up of deron parted ln Sweden, after a courtship their daughter, than 1. tne caw here. Whlch had begun ln childhood, he Coming However good her prospects, the French t0 tne new world t0 B,ake , 0m6 for the girl's education Is on more practical llnea whQ proml8ed t0 become his wife. He than that of the English girl. She learna wa 23 yearB 0,d then and Bhe waa Thfl prospect was dismal at first, for the de termined vounir man. but ha evontnnllv consequence, the young bride step. drrted to tne northweBtt whore ne found encouragement among hi. own people. Taking up a homestead tn Lake county, nine mile, from Two Harbors, Nel.on worked like a Trojan to make a home for tucked closely all around and left to fall In a frill down the outer seam. Slneves cut ln one with the upper bodice or so trimmed that they Beern to be so cut are extremely modish, and this idea la very often developed ln filmy sheer stuff, which Is drawn down ln soft surplice folds from shoulder to bust. where It meet, a bodice or culrasse of heavier material. The sheer material, tulle, chiffon or whatever It may be, Is wrinkled or gathered softly - . ..ui iiiiinyiiaui iftuiura Ul ill nd finally, her education finished, to turn ln and help him, and I don't mind Bleeve BituaUon. We have gone far bevond is all about the higher matbe- the dirt. Why should IT If. clean dirt' that tiret vendure. have broken out Into and a neighbor told you to put him to There 1. no work ln a carpenter', .hop by way of prep aration, you would think your neighbor J ... I,... . n . , A ri mtlt JWiriMlrtAl1 VOIirMlf crazy when you train your daughter, who whlott th oor ve. and work In thl. coun ts to be a wife and mother (and nothing " h r "vealed from time to time pis to be a ue ana 1. uw. . Investigators, they fall short of the can get away from the grim statistics that ,, , . vraatsbopa Abroad. Shocking a. are the conditions under "Makers of Our ... horrors Dlctured MHH AA.n t. uuinntnli inn A- wo,.."", m ' " K 7,",, "a V Clothes," a book by Miss Clementine Black cenitence. the higher education and all . . other argument, in favor of oo-educa-tlon). precisely a. you Ualn your .on, who will enter soma profession or trade, there to first earn his own living, and then to provide for a family yet unborn. The one to bear the family and to rear It, the other to provide shelter and comfort 0m Btarted lor lliuwmr ul lilKl laumj, w trained precisely ln the same way." Clothes for Vacation Trln. on thl. page, all made from frock, for which the famous houses of Paris are re sponsible, will give some idea of the lati tude allowed In thl. matter of the sleeve. In the first place It need not be long. An elbow sleeve or a three-quarter sleeve may be altogether correct, provided the and Mr.. Carl Meyer. The author, spent reBt of tn BOWn u chl enough to stamp B,eeve wUh months In the home, of the people, and ,l i ! s viniage. all their evidence, they say, 1. first hand. A "hort ''le'v 0,1 '''lover frock and a Seven shillings, or 1.70, a week of hort ,leev on new Bna distinctly modish seventy hours was found to be an average rock ara two al"eret things to the eye rate of pay among the workers Invesil- of tho beholder and the consciousness of gated, and there are many who get lees. th6 wrr- n ' the badge of necessity, as a "presser" ln a factory ln8 oln9T independence. "Vanity of van- at t shllllug. pence a week, and. "had a lu" ine snort sieeve as a rule clings quite closely to the arm, though It may be draped, but even this Is not Imperative. lot ot trouble to get an increase of I .hilling a week. She earn, this magnl- - ln ,V,II. ..itin- . v.... Whenever a gin pians to go anywnt. . . v. , ....... ... a rrecoll frock seen th. othr rtv v,. . .. v, ui uwu m uvi, 11. vBuuwiw ivuui lur livium ..w. . , seventy nuurw a ween. Anuuiisr in man age. to pile up ( .hilling, and a half (about .he confront, the problem of are many little things ln the way of clothe, you will have to arrange that won't cojit much, but will add materially to your comfort, say. Ruth Batchelder tn the De- CA.&arwVDAiiCY. Sanatorium Tbla Institution U the only one tn the central west with .eparate buildings situated In tbelr own amule grounds, yet entirely dis tinct and rendering It poaalble'to cla.Hlfy cases. The one building being fitted for and devoted to the treatment ot noncontagious and noamental diseases, no others be ing admitted. The other. Rest Cottage, being designed for and devoted to the exclusive treatment of select mental cases, requiring for a time watchful car and le clal nurtlrg. a short sleeve frankly full and open at the bottom, with soft frills of creamy lace $1.90) a week by finishing waistcoats, and aIIln from under Its edge, and sleeve. I. Informed, when she asks for an Increase draped Into large arm holes are by no In pay. that if she la not content she van m" out of the running. A full sleeve go In very soft materials Is held ln at inter- All sort, of petty exactions are practised val lrom olnt above the elbow to the upon these poor people by the "sweater.." WIW ' encircling satin cords. They have to pay for their machine, and An dd effect that ha. crept Into some cotton, and even have to pay for having of the modish loug sleeves U the lntroduc- ..-.. 1 1 - . ro nnAa.ln I. tinn nt fullnAaa 4na n t.A II . .,.u - Duno.iu.- " " " -7 , - band, above the elbow and one below typical case; jne wue 01 a uoca laoorer vtu iiiuiik upper tim lower arm. this made very cheap waistcoats for a fullness la usually obtained by laying a 'sweater" and reported which seems few horizontal plait, along the Inside seam scarcely credible that .he could make one at the elbow, and in soft material the full- In three-quarter, of an hour. In one week nesa affords comfort ln bending the arm she made thirty, and thereby earned a without looking bunglesome. while a sleeve little over 11 shilling. ($2.65). But she had ciOBB fltting all the way down Is sure to to pay 1 shillings to th. buttonhole maker. mean dUcomfort , bendmg. thB arm. Xn a smuing ana a nair ror ner macnuie ana I..1, m. .t,lllnn n MAt.n .!! Ptful 1 1 f 1 I. . " " ' " " often Joined below the elbow ner wcmnj wage 10 .uuui fx.v. "Driven by extreme poverty and the hunger of ber children," the book say., cooking and housekeeping as careful the English girl is taught music. A. a Into her new house knowing exactly how to market, how to manage her servants; how, If neoessary, to go Into the kitchen herself and prepare a tasty meal. TJ. V. V.vll. I. l.nnmn.nKln 1 IM. t it , . . , , Miss Anderson. During, the devastating extravagant that her British sister. Where , , , , ' " " . , .,,,, . sprena 01 inn lurmii iires last xau jxeison'S the latter requires 16 shillings a head tor weekly housekeeping, the former will man age admirably on 10 franca ' The French woman doe. not regard her husband as a mere money-making machine and her house as a place merely to Bleep tn. Aa soon as she ts married she 1. her hus band', partner In buslne.s as well a. tn private life. She conlders It her duty to farm was ln danger ot being wiped out and, the work of year, burned up, but only a few thousand feet of lumber was destroyed. Two months ago Nelson sent back to Sweden for the girl he loved and she was so anxious to reach the side of her sweet heart that .he traveled night and day, around the arm ln mak(J herif acquainted with every detail er landing In New York. Arriving at the numerable sleeve, of this sort are to found among the summer mod els, but the fas tidious ate at tempting to escape from this popular ized Idea and ex perimenting with various novelties In sleeves. Another type of full undersleeve Is on the order of the one Illustrated here, with an easily fitted oversleeve of the bodice material extending down well below and fin ished by some sort of flat turned back cuff, while below la a soft puff ot sheer material gathered Into a tight band cuff. Very wide bands of fine cobwebby lace are set Into some plain close sleeves of chiffon, net or other sheer continuation of the bodice top ef fect, no armhole seam showing. The same Idea Is car ried out tn soft crepe, silk or simi lar material, with the difference that the fulneg. from the shoulder runs down to meet a girdle or skirt top of her husband's business. Union depot Miss Anderson expected to No French husband would dream of tak- find her lover waiting, but through mls- tng any Important step without consulting calculation, he failed to get there until Ms wife, and her advice Is often amazingly 10 o'clock at night PRETTY NEW SLEEVE DESIGNS, material, the laoe and forms the body of the bodice. encircling the arm, with one of the wide Other long close sleeves have the plaits of the bodice shoulder continuing down Evening frock sleeves, when more than a mere wisp of tulle or laces, may be either short and close fitting or softly full, after the fashion ot the two pretty model, pto- the sleeve top almost to the elbow and tured Here. The snort, ciohe-niung sieeve hiding the armhole seam altogether. From ' almost always open up the outside, with under the last of these tucks starts a tight plain lower sleeve of the material or of sheer material, with perhaps a line ot trimming running along the outside mam and around the bottom. This line of trimming Inset lace, em brlodery, little buttons or what one will Is very much In evidence and frequently upper sleeve not full, but easily fitted, is to a long close lower sleeve or cuff, the fullness of the upper part being shaped Into the cuff "she work, long hours when .he can got . v' "v uru:" extends on up the shoulder to the collar, work enough, but often she has no work to do." Th clos fitting transparent sleeve ef All through the tailoring trade, the In- or cnuion or .inpea nei wnicn bow, and ts of use ln vesttgators found failing wagse. Itf many gives an lmpreaaion of tucking, but is less the sleeve clonely. nuu th rat nf nv hurt hHn raducd clumsy, is too convenient and too eajillv in . . .v, v. At . tnada m full nnioWiv i ... . wreaths around the shapes, and with a "" "" " " " ' - someming exireme.y sou i. sometimes knot ot ribbon complete the trimming, Sometimes, however. It runs only from the wrist to the elbow, or half ay to the el- haping this part of trimming running up each edge and some fanciful device for holding the two sldaa ln place, or perhaps with lace or chiffon filling In the opening and holding the aides. The two full sleeves of the sketches speuk for themselves and are unusually attractive models. Dark net or chiffon laid over white lace makes pretty sleeve, and filling, for a very low-cut bodice, the laoe rising above this cork tucked, to form a becoming collar. Roses are the favorite flower. In the millinery world. Small one. form full Ill-Fitting Silk Gloves There's no pleasure In gloves that don't fit, as you know. Yet they cost just as much as the Kaysers."-1 Gloves that don't fit are usually gloves that do't wear gloves that lack finish, too. They are inexperienced makes. The way to avoid them is to look in the hem. See that your gloves are marked "KayBer." Then you get the gloves which, for 25 years, have been the standard silk gloves of the world. A guarantee in every pair. u. Short silk Cloves 60c. 7Sc, SUM, 11.23 Long Silk Gloves 75e, $1.00, $1.23, $1JE JULIUS KAYSER It COH NEW YORK. Makers Patent Finger-Tipped Silk Gloves a i v M w