TT JiaL rr . . iri aTT"T Hat of Sheer aud Real Lace Things You Yant to Know $i Coniirraslonnt Cam J Format ion . rrroA (hi art Irs. TTTK r.F.K: OMAHA. U:iNT,Sl)AY. OCTORKR 2i 1010. . . . L' - WL - - - ' J 1 1 - ') J 1 . J'- ' '" rr - aa-Tr-VX 1 tr 1 It YV I I I' f ) s"z is. ?-. i : 1 . j Of wiiri only . beauty could wear ! trMnm1)ii!i picture het ucc"tiriilly, but daiiHlnfC niHunlfl'ance Is iiiidcifubla. Real C'liaJitHly lac 1 chirrtd over flame Volored Bilk: a -frill ef lace under the brim irta on t wenrAr's hnlr. ' Half way. u the UU crown is encircled Dottle Dialogues BY WALTER A SINCLAIR. , "tJeten to the re. via tors rave!" exclaimed 'rottlo, as we strolled around the aero drome, amid -the hundreds gathered at the vXlytng nwet. " "Wliatara th; wild raves saying T" X Waked. ; " . , "You-can - feeitr .nothing but 'flying' in if he lr,' she oberved. 'Tunrr how they all inalu; on flying In thai aLtv whea it -wouki be ao much, nicer flylna; undew water i 'or. In a cellax,". I greed. : 'Ut 'cheef' up!, " It ' TilH not l)e Itonc are, some side raottt gt that 'motif? -! dtaoovered to be the real Interest, like 1 Btothea at a horne show and canualtlea at sui automobile race." "Well. I suppose when In the aerodrome &o as the aerodromans do," stie mlnquoted. "If that's overheard It will make an auvo glronie howl," I admonlahed. "I aee nty error plain," ahe admitted, if But tell me, who are; thoae men hanging ground those sheds?" "Those are;, the- men who hang around . the hangers; hence the word," I explained. "Heavens! ' It they have such fine names as hangar for a! shed and garage for a barn, the pet word for house mut be otnethlng grand," she cogitated. "t an Englishman's home U his castle, jt blrdruau's' home mum be his neat," I .haxarded. "' '' ' v "Ur.cage," she suggeated. "In caae of marriage," 1 corrected. "The hangar l the cocoon from which emerges ' the graceful butterfly," tth fighed, poetlcilly. '" 'Butterfly referring to the unfortunate who stubs his front wlincla and butts head first tguinat North America," I murmured. 'None' but the brave devurve the fair," he gushed. "Thafs what (he aviators t,ald when they were 'accuned of taking up paaaengers at $60 a heaif, only they ticlli-d it f-a-r-e," 1 anecred. "Isn't ' this an awful time to have tha flying, "just 'when one gets hungry," she complained. "I should think there would be luncheon parties sitting around on the ground II He at the automobile cup races." "Maybe they afe afraid one of the avia tors will drop In on them at lunch," I re plied. "So embariaaxtng to have anyone drop tin on lunch unexpectedly. Probably land In the pie." "He might fall into the copse," she sug gested. " "Isn't there any fly copse around?"; "Flenty of 'them, and 'uniformed cops, too,' I retorted. ''wiien they form the aerial police traffio squad we'll see real fly cops,'V " "Those mer over there keep talking about horsepower In reference to aero planes," she criticised. ' "Isn't It Inappro priate to speak of horses? Bird power would be more like it"' "IMdn't you ever see a horse fly?" I asked. "How about I'egasus? If you don't believe it, listen to this: ."Baby by, watch him fly! , fee him try It, my, oh my! There ha goes, on his nose, With hia face he hoes!" "Aviation la getting so plentiful," she re- ROUGH ON HUBBY 'Shchaa keett appreciation "of the rldkrvloua." 'Yea Think there t nothing Uba.ber. but-ivy La. the wrarll." I'M. V.i u ... v TV 7" 7 - 5 n by a pleated ructilns of vivid red velvet, and over thin I fentooned a heavy cord of Hllver with an ornament and taaaela on ono side. This hat et fur down over the face, for the head winks Into the high, conical crown. Flighty and FrlToloun hut ContaininK a Few , High Thoughts "DO AS TUB AERODROMANS DO." marked, "that the editors ought to have a special aviation pago." "In a fly paper," I added. "That's noth ing. Out In the Arixona legislature they have a girl pageMiss Ethel Ming, no re lation to Y. O." "Beauty page, no doubt," she scorned. "But what did thit man Juat say about the flights being off on account of too high winds? Why do the winds always blow Juat when there Is an aviation meet?" "Everybody raising the wind, to get here," 1 remarked. "And anyway, remem ber there Is a whirlwind campaign on." " "Regular typhoon," she commented. "Or rather a tycobb, the way It knocked out a pretty fly." "UukIi, woman, the revels are about to begin," I warned. "And when It get'a real exclt!ng I'll permit you to squeeze my hand. Remember, we're In a crowd and dor.'t mistake a total stranger for me, however. See that you seize the right hand." "Won t the left do as well?" she in quired, archly. "That's left to your dlsTeilon " I re sponded. Just then the flight was post poned: (Copyright 19W. by the X. Y. Herald C ) lie Didn't Worry. During the log-train days, bn toe Erie, the local was switching In Midland yard. One of the members of the crew was a green biakeman on hla first trip. Tha ex perienced man handled the switch list and was cutting the cars at the switch. ' The green man was told to catch two cars that would be kicked down the liver track and ride them to the end of the track. He failed to do It, and with In creased speed the cars went off. the end of the Iron, over the embankment Into the 1ver. Just. as If nothing unusual had happened, the new man called back, "send down two more; them got away." Erie Railroad Employers' Magazine. It's a mighty good resolution that you can keep for any( length of time without spoil ing. A l.at leaplratloB. Seated one day at the mirror. I was weary of rata and puffs; Aud mv fingers wandered idly Over the curia and fluffs. 1 know not what I was building or hat I as mimicking. But I struck a sort of coiffure iJKe the head of an Axlec king. It flooded my brow and temples In a most expanplve way; And it lay on iity Corel-11 urn I.Ike an overweight ton ut hay. It fell Into puffy billows. " x Like that foolish old silk floes; It seemed a harmonious Jumble ' Of exci Isiur and moss. It linked all my marcel walngs Into one humpy tkeap: Then coiled In a roly-Koly. Uke a kitten going te sleep. -. I have sought, but I seek It vainly, 1 hat one coif fure so fine That came from the head of aa As tec And decorated mine. It may be In some shop window That atvie I can yet procure: And It mav be that only in Juja 1 shall find that grand coiffure -Ufa, V 'ICrfl i , i ii aeVi i n. SatJl 11 JJlL LUJ : -MJ "Serf MR GROUCM C0UiJl AilK! KAT IT.70U Awl fOU APAIM.HUti? yJl LLR GRoUCrT f WuSE AOTILL Of W TELLOUS CIVIL ) I'U. 3US1 Hftvt t0 SHOW X00 A T LU J "MftVt TOO I V If "TR.lEJ Q I A ' mmmmmmammmm Pft2.rNZ.A I j V . " , I Ijga. OUST "TO SMOVf VtaJt? MIBi UKftT "WrNLK ItKiHT IU tOv Cra'T CtT ' f U0Ie-RUt STVfF PCrtZA IS fU- ) h I TRLSV utTH ftV-ftZA OL BO( rV' g VJOST POUR A TIU DROPS tM NOU TV OOlM TO IF 1 CAtt J"g 'lix Jvrr rooltlrftf A Little ok TMfTT fSfix kwem't tw 001 uoTirjC xf: t. (.THICK HtAD OF tCOW'HOW B0UT ITy JOT1LE WITH X f TU. Trc J t MR SR.CkXH e The Boss of the Establishment; NotrrttSecides' Silence brooded over tha Boss' household. A stranger entering tt for the first time would hare experienced a aubtle atmos phere of melancholy like that which a visi tor from a tiddler world experiences In the geometlo gloom of a monastery parlor. The liveliest, youngest member of the family waa away. He had been gone more than a week now. For Woof-Woof, prince of colllea, had developed a sudden Illness, and the dog dootor had taken him to his hoe.pl tal for treatment. To be sure,, the moat reassuring news had come since the dog's departure. He waa better so much better that Hunday morning would sea him back to his new home. "How do you know he'll be on the 8:30?" Inquired the Boss' wife over the Sunday breakfast cups. ' "Who?" asked the Boas, who had risen at an ungodly hour to meet the return ing favorite's train. Being ashamed of tha weakness, he liked to pretend that he was not thinking of Woof-Woof at all. "Tou know perfectly well I mean Woof- I Woof!" accused . the lady. "You haven't thought of anything else for a week. Why, you even bark In your sleep! The doctor j only wrote that he'd bring him on a morn ing train. Now, there are ten morning trains. Do you Intend to meet every one of them?" "Certainly not!" replied the Boss. Indig nantly. "What do you take me for?" And so saying ha sallied forth to meet the S:W, also tha :, the 1:17 and every one of the morning trains' on the Sunday schedule. "I have a hunch he'll be on the 11:37. I"l go with him tliis time." announced the Boss' wife, and aa usual the Irrational In tuition of woman triumphed. The 11:1? lumbered into the station and a oomet of yellow and black fur shot out of tha baggage car and across the plat form to the Boss' wife. At the end of the comet's tall strode tha dog doctor, tugging at a stout chain. But the. oolite paid no attention to him. He leaped, chain and all, toward the lady, and with madly exuberant barking proclaimed his Joy at seeing her again. j Items of Trifling though ealla may seem, they are in reality rooet Important, for persons who arel not visited assume that their c qaalntanoea la not desired, and the woman who gives such an Impression is usually dropped from tha lists of those she desires for friends. In any way that suits tha Individual, score nhould have been kept of last win ter's visits, and thoaa which a woman did not return before leaving town for the summer must be paid at once, for, while there may have been good cause for omit ting them before leaving the city, there can be none eitlsfactory to tho other per son If tha delay la allowed to contlnua. A married woman, calling, leaves one of her own cards for each woman member of tha household and one each of her hus band's adding to that number one more of tha husbands, which Is tor the host. 'A woman does not call upon a man, so she doea not leave one of her own for het hosteas' husband, but the husband's must be sent, even though the two men may not be acquainted. When a married wojnaa n takes formal cevlia and does not leave her husband's cards with her own It may mean that she no longer Uvea with him, A woman paying social visits in this ooun try during weeks that her husband may be' in Kuropo still leaves his cards. The man's cards need not be left fur any on of the household, unless an acquaint TOW MAKE DtTlPfUY TOO MUCK Or THNT KVTT THE 60SJ txCLAIHEO. BT AM ERE MAN. ; He scarcely noticed the Boss beyond a tentative sniff and the non-committal wag of the tall reserved for casual acquaint ances. Woof-Woof had always seemed to prefer the Boss and this sudden transfer of his affections was hard to bear. - All the way home from tha station tha collie trotted contently beside the Boss' wife, occasionally turning around to ex press his feelings In a disquieting leap of Joy. Flattered by this marked and unuaual devotion the lady petted and babied the dog as she had never done before. She played with him and even permitted him to chew up one of tba new tennis balls. She talked to him, telling him how lone some she had been, while the Boss sulked over the Bunday papers. Never, he told himself, had ha known so light-minded and volatile an animal! Who, be wondered, had invented the fic tion that dogs were faithful and devoted? Why, their love was shorter and more capricious than that of woman! Interest for the Yomen Folk ance actually exists between tha .two. ' Fashion still decrees that a married woman may use cards oontaiiilng both her own and her husband's name; In other words, the "Mr, aud Mrs." While these cost a trifle more to order, the fashion Is really economical, for It means that one card does duty for two. When these are used, a aingla one of the man's will be needed for the boat. Having a day doea not denote formality, necessarily, but merely that visitors will be sure to find one at homo at such times. Women whose domestic ataff Is limited find it easier to have a dY, when they can arrange their household accordingly and be ready to receive easily. When this day Is put on cards' it should occupy the lower left corn, with tha address, fully writ tun out. In the tight. ROSANKA BCHUYI.ER. A woman who . Intends to transplant flowers or ahrubs to a gardn must work quickly, for they must be transferred to new ground in time to take root and grow before th weather geta severely cold, for If the roots have not "made a home," as It were, before frost, covering 'and protec tion will not save them. All perennials, lilies and other similar plants, should be planted la new ground as soon aa they have stopped blooming. Tha seed pvda should be cut oft or the The climax came when, toward the end of dinner, the Hoss asked hia wife If she woulA have a little more chicken. "No." was the self-sacrificing reply, "there's only one piece of wnite meat left and I'm saving that for Woof-Woof He likes it better." "Oh," he does, doea he'." exclaimed the Boas Indignantly and forthwith helped hlmaelf to the white meat, which In his normal moments he considered contemp tuously as food for women. j He took two bites and. then the feelings burst forth w hich had been welling In hlg soul ever since Woof-Woof's return. "You make entirely too much of that mut!" he exclaimed. "You haven't spoken to me or looked at me once alnce he came, and now you want to give him my dinner! I won't have him pampered like that! it'a bad for the dog and It's worse for me! If you don't pay some attention to me and let Woof-Woof alone I'll give him away to tha flint man that will take him! He's a no-account kloodie. anyhow, with no mem ory and no gratitude!" The Boas' wife stared at her lord unbe lievingly for a moment. Then suddenly her head went down and her mirth shot up in a rocket of laughter. He was jealous he. was actually Jealous of Woof-Woof! It was too good to believe. Nevertheless she ' worried all the next day over the Boas' sudden aversion to the household Idol. Would he really cary out Ills theart and give Woof-Woof away? Rather than that she would dissent She would hide her feelings and pretend to a sudden dislike- of her adored collie. At last the Boss' latchkey Interupted here aombre reflections. Ho seemed smiling and happy. Woof-Woof, luckily, waa In the hall and greeted him with every manifesta tion of mad abandon. Carelessly tha Boss threw a package In hla wife's lap. "It's a silver collar for Woof-Woof," he said casually. "Just hi name on It, you know, and then my name and address. I thought we'd better not take a chance of losing him." (Copyright, 110, by the N. T. Herald Co.) flowers should be cut before the seeds form, aa aeeds take- strength from the roots and are merely wait, unless the plants are grown fur stock. Roses may be put In new, but they should be properly cut. Whatever tends to keep tlss strength of the plants and make root growth must be done. Lilacs, honeysuckle and other vines, as well as evergreens, should flourish neit season If planted now. Amateur gardeners Who have xperl mented In transplanting wild evrgieena find that succtrei is moie probable If a large ball of earth Is kept about the roots when they are taken up. To do this the ground about th trunk must first be soaked with water, and then If a spade Is put carefully al around, loosening, but not tearing, the roots, the dirt will be solid about them and tha d.aturbance will be slight. As soon as they are again placed In the ground they must be watered. An old Eng lish gardener la authority for the state ment that "All Joung evergreens should be kept moist during the first year, after which time they will take care of them selves." Bigger. Better. Busier l'lat ia what ad vertising in iita ilea win do lor jour buslutes. The first congress of the Vnlted Ptatesifnlr trial and opr'iItl:n to the constitution unner the constitution was chosen In a hnphsxard fashion that did not arise to the tlian ty of a general rompalan. Ameri cana .'cm to have the habit of belleve'.ntf tha; their political world waa called Into being by a constitution nl flat in the year 1?. Important an that constitution has become in later years, sacred aa It nn is, the people of the country In I7W save It no reverence and were persuaded with difficulty to accept it In the nature of an experiment. During the long quarrel between the peo ple of the American colonies anil the Kng I sh liing the colonists were divided Into two parties, bearing the Encllsh name of whig and tory. The whig were the ag gressive patriots and the torlea were the conservative and cautious loyalists. Whin lie revolution came the whlgs were pa triots and the torles were proscribed and i despised traitors.. After the colonies had won the war and hart become thirteen In dependent republican states untied only by that "rope of saml," the articles of confederation, the torlos were driven Into exile or compelled to abstain from political l activity. Then the whig party divided upon queslions of confederation policy. Hut tor the moat ffart tho people wero selfish adherents to local alate Interests and the rhadow of a confederate government al most entirely disappeared. A foreign shipmaster whose cssel Kan i at anchor In th" I'oloniac river, under th" Jurisdiction cf Maryland, had a quarrel with the wharfniaater at Alexandria In Vlrg'nia. Ills ship was discharging and taking on cargo at Alexandria, and yet he was acting under the authority of Mary land law In defying the Virginia authori ties thirty feet away. This condition of affairs was Intolerable. Kfforts to Induce the state legislatures to grant to the Conti nental congress power to control the tariff and to regulate commerce had proved nn succesaful. But In the Virginia legislature Mr. Madi son brought up the case of the Alexand ria wharf master and the foreign, shipmas ter, and succeeded In procuring authoriza tion for a conference of Maryland and Vir ginia representatives for the establishment of mutual commercial regulations. Tills conference, which met at Alexandria and later moved to Mount Vernon, decided to invite the other central slates Pennsyl vania, New Jersey and Delaware to sub scribe te the same system of commercial treaties. Out of this grew the Annapolis convention, which In turn called a consti tutional convention, which submitted to the people of the states that document which created the American republic. When the constitution was submitted, the people at once divided into two parties, those urging its adoption taking the name of federalists and-those In opposition that of antl-federallsts. By the middle of lh summer of 17S8 eleven of the mated had ratified the ronitiiuilon and elections were held In the 'various states for representa tives, the legislatures chose the senators. and presidential electors were yelecled in five states by the people, and In the others by the legislatures. In some states each district chose Its representative In congress when it pleased, while in others there was a state-wide election day. Most of the elections continued for three days, and the voting wan viva voce. The continental congress after the close of the war had been treated with slight conaiderallon and generally was held In open contempt. Theije Is no good reason to believe that the maas of the people ex pected the nw experiment In government. to succeed. The senators and rtpresenta- tlves elected to congress were so cureless a to delayv their 'attendance, so Unit inoro than a montlr was wattled liu-valn ef foils to obtain a quorum. North Carolina and Rhode Island had not yet come Into the union, so that there were twenty-two sena tors and sixty-five representatives In the first congress, which sat in New York In the spring of 178!). , All of the senators having been elected by legislatures which bad ratified the consti tution, were federalists. Kitty-three of the sixty-five representatives also were federal ists, but In the house there was a tiny minority of twelve anti-federalists who had been elected chiefly because they had been opposed to the adoption of the consti tution. It Boon became apparent, however, that the new experiment was worthy of a Alice Dieudonnee Chase, the oldest of the eight children of the celebrated painter, William M. Chase, i a charming young fAoman, typically American, and character ized by an alert mentality tempered by gracious womanliness. From her father she inherits her marked artistic ability, while her literary skill ia an Inheritance from her mother's people. Her father, William Merritt Chase, one of the foremost of American artists and the Intimate friend of Whistler, har dona much to bring American art to Its present im: portant position throughout tho world. He was born in Indiana, and his early strug gles were heroic. He studied in New York and afterward In Mullch. gradually win ning his place as a leader. In 181 at Paris, and in 1HS3 at Munich, his picture, "The he received the silver medal at tha Paris salon. Other honors have been showered upon hlui, Including the gold medal at the Paris exhibition in 1MX and the Order of, Bt. Michael conferred on him by the prince regent of Bavaria In 19bg. Perhaps his greatest recognition was the Invitation by i the Uffizzl gallery to add hla portrait painted by himself to that superb collec tion of portraltu of artists. John S. Far- ) .... nA il A F TleAlv are the nnlv other I American artists Included In tha collec tion. Miss Chase has studied painting under her father's direction at his studio In New Yors, and. like him, excels In portraying still life, the painting of landscapes and portraits. She la especially clever at sketching and, In a few bold dashes, suc ceeds In catching and expressing the es sential soul of things. She Is an adept In the depiction of child life, and In the Judg ment of many her wortt Is worthy of public exhibition. Her mother is the daughter of the lata Julius Qerson of New York, and with her two slaters Minnie and Virginia Oerson she has fostered Alice Chase's literary gifts. Miss Virginia Oerson Is the author of "The Happy Heart Family" and several other Juveniles and Is the "V. G." to whom Clyde Fitch dedicated several of his plays Hhe designed the costumes for many of his romantic dramas, a well as for the produc tion of ILobert Browning's "In a Balcony," by Mrs. I.e Mnyne and Otis Skinner. Miss Chase Is a skillful amateur actress, f Daughters of Famous Men soon completely disappeared. The new constitution having been ac cepted, but human nature not harlng been revolutionized, the political clans agaia divided on the question of how the consti tution ought to be interpreted. The putty named federalist and antl-federallst, weie continued, but Willi a new meaning. The federalists were those who bellevtd in a strong central governmeent and a looe or broad construction of the constitution, while the antl-feilerallsts were tenacious of the rights of the states and demanded strict construction of the fundamental law. PresMent Washington feared the ill lsion of the people Into hostile political camps anil did his best to keep down po litical agitation. He Invited Into his cabi net Alexander Hamilton. foremnKt among the broad constructionists, and Thomas Jefferson, the lemler of the strict con structionists. Hut this adnilniMi ntlve act could not prevent n liivialon of opinion In the congress which waa chargeU With the business of niaklnir statutory provisions for establishing the niachtnury of the new government. When the time iatn to choose the mem bers of the second congres there was a great cVttl more public Interest than had heen nulilfested in the first election, and this the first 'off'' ye.-ir i ainpalgn--resulted In the elect. on cf fifty-five federal ists ami fourteen ant i-fpderallKts.' The fcl erallht victory eonipieto. but the senate sliowed a change of sentiment that piesaged the coming division, there Uelnfi seventeen federalists and thirteen- antl-feilevnllsts In the upper house. In the firwt congiens the senate had been solidly feile-nliiit. In the second congress that Tarty had a ma jority of but two. The federalists acl.now !elael the per sonal leadership of Hamilton, while th op position was captained by Mr. Jefferson who soon abandoned the title of Antl-l'Vd-erallst and give his following the name of democratic-republican party. The mem bers of the party usually shortened this mime to "republican." but the federalists In derision always called their opponents "democrats." In the fullness of time the nume given In derision -was-, adopted In pride, Just aa was the appelation "Christ Ian." and the party dropped, the co-tltle "republican" and ever , since ban been known athe democratic party. The word republican was first dropped generally In 1K4, but. remained In use In. many states until isr.0. in ITS- Washington was reelected pres ident being supported both by the federal ists and the democrats: Hut the two par ties fought hard for congressional control, and, for the first time, tho federalists were defeated, the democrats returning fifty four members of the house, as against fifty-one federalists, giving a democratic majority of three. But ' the) federalists rallied In the senate where ther- were eighteen federalists and twelve democrats. In the "off" year election of lJM the fed eralists made violent efforts to gain con trol of the lower houae xtt ...congress, but were not successful, the - democrats In creasing their majority froin- three to thir teen. . ' In IT9H O'heral Washlilgturi invtfiig refused a third tetni, tho two parties for the first time went Into buttle with the presidency ui stake, the federalists . supporting John Adorns and tha democrats Thomas Jeffer son. There were tlinn sixteen states and the prei-ideniliil electors were chosen by tile legislatures In ten of them. Adams was elected president, hut the federalists v.ei-o unable to capture the house of repre sentatives, fifty-four democrats and fifty one fi'dcra lists being elected. The fedeial- j b Is ere sin i essful In state leglalative con- le'i. however, and increased . their ma -Jorltv In the seiiut-.", having twenty-one as againxt eleven democrats.. If the democratic electoral voiea had been massed Adams would have been defeated. The knowledge of. tills fact and the posses ion of a slight advantage in the. house of represent i lives caused the democrats to view with suspicion every act of the. ad mlnlstrution. Adams' utter lack of tact contributed to democratic distrust. Thus it came about that the party division was made absolute and federalists and demo crats begun to hate each other. Then came the first great political campaign of our history. BY S-&KDEKIC 9. HABKIV. Tomorrow Congressional Campaigns III Tha Campaign of 1798. ami l,er el fcii;- hi iostUmiiig bi.d posing are, worthy uf a piuf sslonul. f-he usually spends her summers with, liar father and mother at their villa In Florence, Italy, and her winters in New York. (Copyright. ll10, by the N V. Herald Co.) A Happy Moldler, "A soldier of the legion Uay dying 1n Algiers," While a thousand weeplnt women Watched him through a flood of tears, Hut he murmured aa his life blood lib bed at each convulsive throb, "Uee, I'm glad I left the army Fur this moving picture Job." ' P. F. Hormlah In Puck. Woodbines In October. As dyed in blood the streaming vines ap pear. While long and low tha wind about them v grieves; The heart -of autumn must have broksn here. And poured Its treasura out upon the leaves. -Charlotte Flska Bates. AN EARMARK. i 1 knew ov were msuTtrd tat oon m 1, met you. Mr Wed." "How or .v i' 'You wcaj that ipprebieivej look