Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 13, 1910, Page 11, Image 11

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    11
r,AYj t u 1 1 t 1 vv rv- trfw
1
An Autumn Evening Gown
Things You Want to Know
Tli (toTrrnmcnt t
Vik lVHrtinont
I'rmnitMxc l.nlior.
nn: p.f,t:: omatia. Thursday, octorur w. 1010.
ffilcSi
A
; k'--'-. "..
---.
'4 t l
If im rnilr ;iiwn 1 not of velvet, half
of It will bo thin yenr. l'or example, this
frooU of mamlarln blue atln, embroidered
In Bold, had Hlieves and a deep flounce of
black velvet, the flounce falling above a
Daughters of
7-1
S V-.i. v.'
V ; -4
Miss Heatrtce Harraden. the EiiKllnh
tiovelUU la a well liked In tlila
country aa in eel native land. She la the
ounteat dauKfvtor of ;he late Samuel Har
raden of London, learned man who was
an authority on muwlc and the fellow of
aeveral leading- Kilentlflo socletie.
iiirlqir har earlier years Miss Harraden
found In he.r father. her sternest critic. She
derived Die freateit benefit from his in
IrHectual companlonehlp and baa been
5- rd to Bay, (hat. havlnn once passed
. rouuh the fire of her father' crttlclsin,
noihluit else mattered.
.Via Harraden wao turn in London and
received the first part of her education In
Iresdeu. Afterward ahe worked for some
time at Cbeltrtuham collide under Mis
lk-ale, and afterward studied at Bedford
c)llee. Londun. l.i i.i slie lec.lved the
dogree of bfcchelor of aria from London
university, not only In classic, but In
mathematlca
luiinu all tills buy Uiue Mis Harraden
found leisure to do some literary work and
to master the violoncello. She 1 nasalon
aiely devoted to music. A gieai deal of
unsigned literary work came from her pen.
After taking her degree she wrote several
short sioiles for magazines. Soon after she
n Mr. I.ynn Union, the Un.lisu novelist,
who gave her the warmest encoui atemenr
Militant Blackwood also trengthened her
V - :;:- Aft?
t,- .. sT ......' ., .- 4
le.lj
r' (4 Vi'IU
I eo! utlon to write
ynfoitunately. soon (jfter he had ac-
oiml a tory from her called "Tim fm.
Mender," Mis Hanaden fell verv
ill and lost the use of li. r right hand
through ie anUre failure of the ulnar
ner by overatrain In writing and playing
the 'cello, she was sent to Switierland. but
on l..r i. torn fell III again, ruder the ad
Vine aaiU caru of a piislUsu who under
1
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i
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x
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'
. ."? .' . J .; ..:.
' f ? t s
- ... ft.-,.. H
1 - . MManNwwMKM
1 4 ,4 , '
trulllntf iklrt of blue satin.
The sleeves are close and lonn, and In
combination with the niuure decolletage
and jia 1 1 !y bared blioulders produce a
quaint, old-fashioned effect.
Famous Hen
j
. i'-: r i . V
stood her nervous temperament ahe re-
xalned a certain amount of vitality and
was induced to resume work.
Writing; was a difficulty, as sha was too
Irritable for dictation and disliked the type
writer. ' Ships That J'ass In the Night"
was, then fore, written with the greatest
dilficulty. Her maiiuscrii t a a neat
and fine as rhailotle Bronte's. The book
niado an Instant suciesa here and in Eng
land, far eclipsing Miss Harraden' first
success, a little book for children, "Things
v ill Take a Turn."
Her later works Include "In Varying
Moods." published In 1X1; "Hilda Straf
ford." in IviT; -'I'litold Tale of the Paat."
a second book for children, published In
l'.'7; 'The Fowler," in m; "Katherine
Freiisham." In lmtf; "The Scholars Daugh
ter." In l:m. and "Intel play." in lm. Miss
Harraden mikes her permanent home in
London, although she travels a good deal.
(iip right, l.'io. tiy the N. y. Herald Co.)
r
Daily Health Hint
J
This wise old ad.ne was entant In Rome
durlna' Ihe an, 1,'iit republican days: "If
thou would.-t lengthen thy days, lesson thy
lllHi J."
rrjk-.rras.
F.ich tar the millinery show
Make.-, life se.-in smew tiat sunnier.
In. hats can no lai Ker, ao
They try to make them funnier.
T. K. M
i' rsistetii Adei Using is the Koad to Ulg
licluius.
on
Tms tlii, o r 1
MOkE.OR AM I
OREAMlNG? NO'.
I'h NOT DRErVhA-
NG ! "THERE IT
fra nnnm
lUUILMMJU
Whow in
Wur (krAbllv
DID I GET
HERE?
OM'. wwjaj
tl 4 i If
anieii -ataMsMgimiMIM-ilMiici, 44
I AM I ON A riM H 3
I ; : I EL ? 1 AM! r,nl t U
r A. l -'7 V- f V ' : " M! IS . V K N J
1 U V
The Boss of the Establishment
BY AMEHK MANiN.
The Boss of the pBtabllshmcnt turned
the key In the doorof his new home at
Mountalnvtlle. He did not have to dodge
anything as he entered a pleaslnt? re
minder of the fact that he no lonijer dwelt
In a New York flat.
On his way up from the station the cedar
hedges of adjacent homes had sent him
perfumed messages of peace. Neighborly
dows had waKged friendly tails and sniffed
his garments with unqualified approval.
The man who lived next door had offered
blm a really good cigar. There was, In
fact, no flaw In his happiness; nt least
there was none until his ife, appearing
suddenly in the open doorway, observed In
the laconlo tonesof tragedy :
"Mary's gone! She went this morning!
She doesn't know ten persons In New York,
but she said she was lonesome. I didn't
pay any attention to her complaints and
when I went down to the kitchen this
afternoon I found a note from her saylnn;
that she couldn't stand It any longer and
that she had gone! And she has!" added
his wife sorrowfully, "that's the worst
of it." .
"The best of It, you mean," the Boss
retorted cheerfully. "I never liked her,
anyhow."
Thus llRhtly he deposed of an admiration
of yeurs. "But you mustn't take these
things so seriously."
"My dear," replied the woman solemnly,
"If you had the faintest conception of the
Servant problem in surburban towns you
would not speak so. We are to use one
of your favorite, remarks 'up against If
and there's no use pretending anything
else."
The Bos laughed derisively. "You've let
some of these people around the neighbor
hood frighten you," ho said. "The servant
problem Is entirely of the employer's mak
ing. Treat a girl properly and Blie'll never
leave you."
"How about Mary? I Just rave her my
last year's suit thla morning and I mli;ht
very well have worn It on rainy days.
Bhe's a miserable, ungrateful thing!"
The Boss' wife, as her lord perceived,
was dropping tears of vexation and disap
pointment. "I'on't you care about Mary," he urged
reassuringly. "I'll bring you out a cook
from town tomorrow. This servant prob
lem Is all nonsense. There iBn't any. Give
a girl good wage, a good home and de
cent treatment and she'll stick until she
dies and then her ghost will come back
and Ret on the Job."
"I hope you're rltsht," the Boss' wife an-
Items of
"Have 1 told you of the hot water rest
cure?" a woman asked another recently.
"No? I regard it a quite Invaluable, for it
will relieve nervoua tension and make a
woman look and feel fresh even after a
busy day.
"Hot water compresse are very refresh
ing and toning In many different case of
Illness. I am not prescribing for Illness.
I use them when my eyes are tired and my
brain feels dull In other word, when I
am fagged.
"I take off all tight garment and make
my couch ready to lie on. A piece of rub
ber cloth 1 put over the pillow and at the
head of the couch a little table on which
la a small ga stove with a basin of water.
The stove is not essential, but It keep the
water from growing cold.
"Before lying down I sip a cup of hot
water slowly. Heat In the stomach helps
to take away blood pressure from the
head Then I place a square of soft wblie
flannel In the water, wring It and place
the cloth at the back of my head, bandage
faabiub. This lucaaa that the pad 1 on
Hi I IT UST BE AN vj Ul I
C117TH r j I A K r nk I1 L II
SOMETHING! PE
-CLARE I'll HAVc
0 GET UP'.
WHOA! COME back.
.HERE! WHOA!!!!'.'.
!
I I ll
1 El
'A t-jf'- W W
"TTlrWHOA! IF I HADj
1
Tina (3 YCXJT?
NEW COOK.
swered rather soberly. Her tone Implied
that she knew he wssn't.
"Of course I'm right," the Boss acqui
esced eagerly. "It's funny how the most
competent woman will be floored by the
servant problem. It takes a man with
some Idea of tact and diplomacy to deal
with It. Don't you bother your pretty little
head about Mary's successor any more.
I'll attend to It," he ended grandly.
"All right, I won't," his wife solemnly
aurc-ed. But ahe spent all the next day
wondering what measure of success would
reward his boast fulness.
It was 5 o'clock in the afternoon before
she knew. At that hour her ear, already
attuned to he country noises, detected the
Boss' footfall on the piazza. After him
lumbered something which made the tread
of a baby ' elephant sound as if soft-pedalled.
Suddenly the door was flung open.
"Hero'a your new cook," the Buss an
nounced triumphantly.
The Boss' wife looked up from the desk
at which she had been answering a dozen
"Situations Wanted" advertisements.
A young colored woman, very tall, very
Btout and tremendously overpowering,
smiled condescendingly into her face.
"Ah'd like to see the kitchen range!" she
proclaimed, with a hint of Iron beneath her
velvet tones.
She Inspected the range and promptly
declared It wouldn't do. A new one must
be Installed Immediately or she could a t
stay.
The Boss' wife promised this' Improve
ment meekly.
"Ah's not used to workin' In no kitchen
without linoleum on the floor! I reckon
Interest lor the Women Folk
the pillow. Then I wring out another cloth
and put tout over the top of my lace, press
ing the material In closely eo It will lie
over the eyes and touch the temples and
face close to the nose.
"As soon a the compress show a sign
of growing cool 1 replace It with another,
and I continue for fifteen minutes and
sometimes longer. At the end of that
time I get op and bathe my fuco thoroughly
in cold water, to tighten the skin, which
ha been relaxed by the nat treatment.
Then I darken the room and lie down a,,itn
for fifteen minute After that 1 am as
fresh a can be.
The treatment 1 simple, but as a rult
It acts fa vol ably. .Most of tin- exhaustion
a woman has Is from the nerves, find if
they ure relaxed she lakes a fresh lease of
life for the time."
The maribou scarfs are so delightful tint
it is impossible for the average woman
not to covet their possession. The newest
I fitted In the back with several ta.ls. an
additional beauty, that women will w.ll
lUfciy v- for. la buck or natural, a
' vlTUIt Iklv VA.aV-'fr .'
I 1 1 1 r r ,i
4 fm- m i . (S t . .-r. l 3
:.l -II f llL t u w i i n
l"i 1 r c w i
i M , 'J I. -
S -IF -
UMP.
BUMP
iwhoa!
lMATi JUST
Wl'T BLAME THE
LOOGE! I ATE A
fWHAT I
THOUGHT IF
RAREBIT AFTFK. I
TDUWENI 10 m WA OVEKAI
iLODOE TO-fJII MAPE nE 1(1
NIGHT! JHvPREfn.
I
i'n.'laii ' i If .
" 4 SXt
He Invades the Kitchen and Starts
Some Necessary Reforms.
J
I got to have some," she added.
The Boss' wife promised a second time.
Ana Cora such was -the nume uf the
dusky giantess forthwith settled down to
her work and cooked an excellent dinner.
"She's a pearl a black pearl," declared
the lady admiringly to the Boss.
The Boss smiled In reciprocating admira
tion and settled down to his slippers for
the evening. Dozing comfortably over his
evening paper he was nevertheless roused
by his wife's mention of the new paragon.
"She said she had arranged to spend the
night at her cousin's after she got through
her work, so I told her she might go," the
Bosb' wife volunteered.
"But she has no cousin In Mountalnvllle."
the Boss protested. "She told ne at the
employment agency she had no relatives!"
The Boss rose and began to pace up and
down the floor.
"See here," he said, gazing through the
door of the dining room, "she's got all the
dishes piled up In the butler's pantry, and
I don't believe she intends to wash them
tonight! You go tell her that won't do!"
"No," said the Bobs' wife firmly. "I'm
afraid. You tell her she's known you so
much longer than she has me."
The Boss quailed. l
"Why shou'ld 1 tell her?" he answered.
"You know I never Irterfere In woman's
sphere! Tell her yourself!"
The Boss' wife, with chattering teeth but
a set purpose, descended to the kitchen.
Cora listened to her remarks In gloomy
silence.
"Ah don't believe I'm goln' to like it
here," she announced. "Ah's worked for
the best families In New York an' nobody
never told me nothln' before!"
"Perhaps you were a little abrupt," the
Boss commented. "The girl'a new and you
mustn't expect everything from her. I be
lieve I'll talk to her. You've got a great
deal to learn about treating' servants, my
dear."
The Boss disappeared Into the eullnnrv
depths and the next moment the midnight
Venus appeared In the living room.
"AhVn goln," she announced, firmly.
And then suddenly she turned to the Boss'
wife. "Ah don't mind you, ma'am," she
said, "but Ah refuses to take orders; from
any man person!'"
Cora glanced significantly at the Boss
and added: "Ah'l ceiok breakfast and then
Ah' go." And she strode from the room,
shaking the chandelier a she went.
"There's no uch thing as a servant prob
lem, is there?" the Boss' wife asked
serenely.
But Die Boss merely glared and glared
and made no reply.
(Copyright, 1910, by the N. Y. Herald Co.)
J
maribou boa of four strands each, two
yard long, trimmed with fifteen tails,
costs il.'M. Without the tails prices besln
at MOO. 1'eiur strands Jolud with strip
of shirred rh.ff.in make a f is'inating scarf
and, bought ready for wear, will cost from
i u,niu. i ne Drowns, tipped with white.
are a little more expensive, but they are
mor effective.
Pe t of Saxon scalloped I nens are of
fered by a Urge Broadway ste.re at very
moderate prlivs, considering material and
workmanship. They are mad- from pure
f.at linen with firmly buttonholed scal
loped ciig, s, w th an o, ,-n ee,-t of em
l ioidery above. The elollis conn- in both
round and square shapes, in siz, s from
six to twelve Inches, pr cewl from 7 to 22
cents. Center piece measure from eigh
teen to thirty-six Inches and e-ost from :w
cents to 1 i,. (Hal tray covers, beginning
at inches, are 10 cents each, and go up
to 30 on's for size 11x20 inches Scarfs
are cluhte-n Inches wide an 1 vary in pr.ee
from w cent tu ft accoidiug tu sliu.
The Department of Commerce and l.nhoi'
Is a sort of iiiiiyall for bureaus ami gov
ernmental activities which do not fit 'n
elsewhere. Corporation control, labor af
fairs, Immigration and n.iturallz.itlon,
census taking, statistics eif commerce, the
interests of manufacturers, the welfare of
navigation, the safety of steamboat traffic,
the warning of mariners, fish propagation,
const and geodetic .survey and the regu
lation of standards of measurement, are
some of the tilings with which the depart
ment deals.
To the bureau of exirporatlons Is as
signed ihe dulv of examining the opera-1
tlons of Interstate corporations, other than I
comtmin carriers. This bureau uses as Its
"tig stick" a weapon which Herbert Knox
Strlth, the commissioner of e-orporatlons.
terms "efficient publicity." The bureau
examines the records of all corporation
doing an Inters. ate business, and In lm
pirtant cases voluminous reports showing
all the dotal 1 of a great business. Notable
examples of this are Its Investigations of
the Heef trust, the Standnrd Oil company
and the Tobacco trust. It also has In-ves-tlg.-ited
the steel and Iron business of the
country and many other Important In
dustries. Most of the big prosecutions of
trusts have been based on data gathered
by this btireiu.
I'pon the bureau of labor has devolved
the task of gathering statistical and other
Information relative to labor problems.
It does not aim to remedy the Ills of the
laboring man, but to gather data which
will enable other agencies to act intelli
gently in trying to cure them. The
bureau's reports deal with labor's relation.'
to capital, its hours, Its earnings and
means for promoting the material, social
and moral prosperity of working men and
women. Ha data relative to the relation
of wages and prices constitutes one of
the basis upon which the tariff legislation
of the country Is formulated. It ha
studied such questions as working men's
Insurance, benefit funds, the employment
of women and girls In telegraph and tele
phone work, retail prices, child labor, In
dustrial accidents and charity relief. It
also has investigated the relation of dusty
occupations and tuberculosis.
The bureau of Immigration and natural
ization has charge of the coming of aliens
Into the United States and of their effort
to become full-fle-dged American citizens.
One person In every three In the I'nlted
States Is an Immigrant or the child of an
Immigrant. Frequently 6,000 Immigrants
arrive in one day, and upon some occa
sions the average Is 5,000 a day for a full
month. This gives the Inspectors only two
minutes to each Immigrant, and a question
must be asked and answered every second.
Only one Immigrant out of a thousand la
excluded. However, the lines of restric
tion are being drawn tighter every year.
The head taxes collected from Immigrants
more than support both the Immigration
and naturalization uervices of the coun
try. As the law now stands an Immigrant
may come Into the l"nlted States If he is
not afflicted with a loathsome disease or
Is not likely to become a public charge.
The statistics of prisons and eleemosynary
Institutions show a large proportion of
alien Inmates, and the Immigration service
hopes to have the law changed so that all
who are "economically undesirable" may
be excluded. The total money brought
into the United States by Immigrants
amounts to about $17,000,0u0 a year, or
nearly $113 a head.
The heavy Immigration from southern
Kurope Is attributed mainly to the promo
tion of the steamship agencies of Europe
and the professional money lenders. They
make large profits out of the Immigrant
business, and even If they have to carry
some of the Immigrants back, It still
leaves enough profit to make the business
worth while. The immigration service
wants a law requiring all steamship com
panies to make oath that they will not
encourage Immigration, with a refusal of
clearance papers as a penalty for Its vio
lation. One of the most troublesome things
with which the Immigration service has to
deal Is the smuggling of Chinese Into the
United States. Sometimes they slip In
from Canada anl Mexico In sealed refrig
erator cars or In the refrigerators of din.
ing cars. At other times they come hidden
in coal bunkers, chain lockers, forepeaks,
and other unexpected parts of ocean going
vessels. The immigration bureau esti
mates that one-half of the Chinese now In
the United States have no right to be here
under the law. There la also a division
devoted to the naturalization of Immi
grants. Another division seeks to furnish
immigrant with Information which will In
Dainty and Modish arc Hats
Seen in New Autumn Display
It certainly will be a woman's own fault
If she wears unbe ooiulng millinery this sea
son. Never before, perhaps, was seen such
a dlvc-slty or shapes, all equally modish,
a is present in the new fall display.
Ivtiige hats ore worn, but so are small
ones. The drooping brim on the mushroom
order is correct, but not mure so than the
brim that flares off the face a little to
the left or directly In front as considered
becoming to the wearer. High crowned
hats, suggesting large Inverted bowls, are
been by the side of hal crown a flat as
a saucer, while narrow brim and deep,
broad, scoop brims vie with each other for
favor.
At present the popular shape Is the me
dium mushroom medium In every way. The
round crown Is not too high nor Is the
brim too deep. The trimming la moderate.
It will be a twist uf velvet around the
crown caught Into upstanding loops at the
left side, finished with an ornament, eir If
the ornament Is very handsome, It Is often
the hat's sole decoi ation.
The newebt In the larger shape has u
wide brim that scoop both back and front,
the latt'-r being supported by a bandeau
resting upon the hair, which brings the
brim eier the face in front. Taken all in
all the hat Is riot unl.ke a modified Dolly
Yard, n, larger, bjt showing the same co
quettish hues.
Another M.ape that Is n w has a fairly
low clown and broad brim, slightly droop
ing. The tiluimJug cousist of u wreath
made fiom uncurled ostrich feathers, show
ing freinds of the feather on one side of
tlie qiill only. In some way the ends of
the feathers are almost brought together
U form circles, which are then sewed In
wreath i ffect. When plae'ed on the I at,
only a little of the crown and about two
inches of the brim are visible. Only a tall,
stunning looking w'uiian should attempt
such a piece of millinery, but every woman
who sees )t will covet It, whether becom
,ng to her or not.
A very smart hat In a moderate size
hows the lines wf the Napoleon. The
crown Is round and the brim. In three t e
llons, tallies up sharply on e.ic.'i side and
at the back. The trimming ceinslsts ef a
plume paitaing directly over the crown
duce them to go to section of the country
where they ran be readily assimilated and
used In the economic development of the
nation.
The bureau of the census Is now a per
manently organlzeel Institution which gath
ers statistical data on every sort of ub.
J'ct. In an ordinary ear It prints nearly
toon pages of statistical information. Its
Inquiries relato to such suh.lee-t a mar
riage and divorce, religious bodies, inanu
faetur.Ks, vital statistics, etc. In the cen
sus years it gathers the statistics of iku
ulatlon. agriculture, mines, quarrle and
manufactures. This retiuires 8.10 aupervl
sii s and tlvOnO enumeiators. In the work
of tabulating the returns, Jo.ooO.Otm popula
tion cards are us.d. and ao.OnO.OUO family
cards. There are punching machine which
punch from one to holes In each card.
One hole tells the line of the person for
which the card stands, 'another the color,
another the marital condition, etc. After
the cards are punched, they are fed Into
tabulating machines, where an electrical
connection s formed nt each hole which
tells Just what information each card con
tains, i ho machine then records and tabu
lates this Information. The statistics of
agriculture are prepared on adding ma
chines. The statistical abstract. Issued by
this bureau, is the finest comendlum of
governmental ftalistli-aJ Information In the
world.
The bureau of manufae-tui cs Is the agency
fur the collection and dissemination of In
formation with reference to foreign trade
opiiortunltlM. Operating In conjunction
with the consular service It gathers every
sort of information that will enable the
Amorlcan manufacturer to extend hi for
eign trade. The bureau of navigation hit
charge of the enforcement of the law
reference to the Oeration of the Izt.OiO ves
sels In the American merchnnt marine, with
the exception of those law which relate
to steamboat Inspection. Thla Inspection
Is made to asoertaln the aea-worthlneaa
of vessels, the safety of their bollors, tholr
proper equipment with life preserver and
other protective appliances. Nearly 400,000,
000 passengors are carried annually on
boats reporting to this bureau.
The lighthouse board look after the
lighthouse's and lightship of the coast
of the United States. The bureau of fish
eries has thirty-five hatcheries, and eighty
four Bubhatcherles, auxiliaries and egg col
lecting stations, it propagate three spe
cies of marine fishes, five specie) of river
fishes, seven of great lake fishes, and fif
teen of Inland fishes. Over 3,000,000,000 fish
and eggs were distributed last year. The
bureau has done much for the preservation
of oyster Industry. One-half of the world'a
total production of oyster Is gutlu-red In
the Chesapeake Bay and It tributaries.
The oyster feeds on diatoms, microscopic,
animals of the sea, and the government
has been, growing these diatom for the
benefit of the oyster.
The coast and seodetlo survey surveys
the harbors and coast line of the United
States, establishes Its Mexican and Cana
dian boundaries, issues charts, pilot charta,
tide tables and notice to mariners. All
the Information we have abbut the depth
of water In the various harbors of the
country and along the coast is gathered
by this survey.
The bureau of standards has an Im
portant function to perform. All mechan
ical progress depends upon accurate meas
urements. There must be Instruments for
recording the Imperceptible Jar of a dis
tant earthquake, the millionth part of a
degree of heat, etc. Thla bureau keeps all
American standards of measurement. The
parent measurement of length In this coun
try is an exact copy of the world's na
tional standard meter at St. Clouds, France.
It 1 kept In a room perfectly ventilated,
carefully lighted and of an even temper
ature. The steel tapes used by the coast
and geodetic survey are made of Invar and
have only one-twenty-eighth a much ex
pansion through heat a steel. The stand
ard by which they are tested Is kept
packed In ice in an underground laboratory.
The standard of measurement of the bu
reau are as accurate for all other kinds of
measurement as those for length. In addi
tion to Its work In maintaining the standards
by which all American measures are reg
ulated, the bureau of standards tests every
thing that the government uses, from the
electric lights with which It offices are
lighted to the Ink and the paper upon
.which Its records are kept. It also does
testing work for private concerns upon the
payment of established fees.
By l-KEDEBIC J. HA.SKIH.
Tomorrow The Oovernment at Work
XL Tb Smithsonian Institution.
from front to back, the quill secured by a
handsome ornament set with mock Jewels
or a knot of velvet, or sometimes both. A
hat with crown of white isatln and brim
faced with black velvet was trimmed with
a black plume starting from a knot of
royal bluer velvet pinned with an ornament
In dull French gray silver mounted . with
the topaz.
The little frill of lace peeping from the
brim of the hat seems to be absent from
the smartest and most expensive mlllnery,
but the mob cap with frill of lace to b
placed on the head before putting on th
but Is often sold with the frllle-ss hat to
be worn or not. us preferred. These cap
are taking the place of the evening hat
and are retain, hI If worn to the theater,
as they are unobstruslve, therefore unob
jectionable to others.
Velvet Is used for covering more than
ever, black velvet espeelally. In trim
mings, feathers predominate. This Is al
ways a favored decoration for winter hats,
but more are seen this year than ever.
When the feather Is not straight, un
rurled and alteigether skeleton like. It Is
very handsome, always wlllowed, and some
times twice. Two of these will form the
entire trimming of one of the large hats.
KLJZAlii;TH
Derision from the Beach.
The man who doe not need credit Is ths
one who most often get It.
If the necessities of life keep on increas
ing In price, It will soon be cheaper to llv
on the luxuries.
It 1 not hard for the man who speaks
only kind words to swallow them.
A sensible girl would rather that her
lover have a business plant than a family
tree. ,
When wemien get on the police taff,
what will become of the plaln-eiothe cop?
Kiss. should alway be taken at their
face value.
Woik and failure are often the parents
of success.
Children are not the only persons who
need guardians these day.
The poor man seldom ha to prov his
honoty. Jud(