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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1912)
CONVENIENT IN SEWING ROOM Handy Apron Will Sav Tim for th. Womaii Who Ha Much of Thl Work to Do. A very convenient apron to don whan la th ewlng room la mad of whit lawn and whit dotted Swiss. Tbla la cut IS lnchc lone and IT Inches wide. Th awlsa la placed over th lawn and both cut rounding on th lowar edge. About nine Inch from tbla edge th awlsa la cut away In a sweeping curve toward the waist line and the edge are bound with narrow blaa banda of lawn or narrow aatin ribbon In aome pretty light hade. Thla forma two openings like pockets, for th upper part of th awlsa la caught Into the waistband with the lawn; this band, by the way, may be of ribbon matching that which binds the apron. In this deep pocket can be slipped the spools of thread, actsaora and pkcea of material on which yon are working. It sol res th problem of sewlnt on th porch, tor In It are held all the necessary mate rials, and It can be taken off and fold ed with the work Inside. If yon wish to discontinue your sewing for ft lit tle while. FOR wTtJW" SOREK.Ji.t AK Choosing a Hat. Women cannot grumble this season at th. unsultabillty of models, for tylea ar so varied that there ar ahapea enough to go round and to set off to the best advantage each lndl Tldual typ of face. Some women have a way of eteot ing their bats rather at random, with out sufficiently studying effect. Now. It takes time to choose properly, and It ce?ds a sympathetic friend or sales woman. One baa respect for the wom an who la courageous enough to ex press an opinion and la not only as automaton paid to sell for some des potic manager. A auccessful milliner la an artist; her assistants should be artists, too clever enough to under stand that their clients ar ther to be suitably batted. Rod Ornes Ball Bine, all Mae. bn-t b'uln t1us m LQ wtteMe Morwi. make the Imunurv Tak Time for Breakfast. Common sense Indicates that break fast should be a substantial meaL enough time should be allowed to eat tb morning men! at leisure and en Joy it. Tbe manner In which aome people gobble down their breakfast la becoming only to an ostrich. It Is one of the great reasons for the ex istence of what Is sometimes c&lled "American dyspepsia." His Labor Doubled. Kostrov, a Russian poet, labored for years translating Homer'e "Iliad" Into his language and the highest c!Ter he received for It was 1.5. which dis couraged him ao much that he threw t'.ie manuscript Into the fire. After warda when he was famous la his own country he did the Job all over again. Said by a Cynic. To talk really well to a woman, on baa to be la love with another. JohJ Masefield. J Smile! That'3 proof that your liver and di gestive organs are working properly but if you have "the blues" feel run down and "half sick" try HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters It will help you stomach to "come back" and make life a pleasure. TRY A BOTTIC TODAY ALL DRUCOISTS Conjugal Amenities. Wife I saw Mrs. Recker tbla morn lug. and she complained that on th occasion of her last visit you were so rud to her that she thought she must bav offended you. Husband Noth ing of th kind; on the contrary I Ilk her very much, but It was rather dark t th time, and when I entered th room I thought at flrst It waa you. Not at All. Because this country spends torn, thing like $10,000,000 year for um brella, Isn't It to be taken aa eonclu alv evidence that our people don't know enough to go In when It ralnaT Browning' Magazine. The Coughs o r ynuaren They may not cough today, but what about tomorrow? Better be prepared for It when it comes. Ask your doctor about keeping Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the house. Then when the hard cold or cough first appears you have a doctor's medicine at hand. This cough medicine Is especially good for children. No anodynes. No alcohol. Many a child is called dull and stupid when th whole treuble la du t a lazy liver. Te firmly believe your own doc tor will tell you that an occaalonal dese f Ayer's Pills, sugar-coated, will do such Children great desl of good. Ask him, jsafte ay tw . o. ana co., umi, - Q 5TAMT9N .sftftwa. . ji 7A SYNOPSIS. At the berfnnlns; of great lutomnWI race the meWianK- an or tha atercurv. Stanton's maehine. drop dead. Htranse youth. Jnn Kloyd. volunteers, mn.l to ao- cepted. In the reel during th twenty four hour raoe Stanton meets a stranger. Mis Carlisle. who Introduces hsrself. 1 ne Meivury wlna race. Stanton receive flower from Miss Carlisle, which he Ig nore. Stanton meets M'e Carlisle oa a train. They alinht to take walk, and train leaves, gianton and Miss Carlisle follow In auto. Accident hv which Stan ton la hurt Is mvsterlous. Kloyd. at lunch with Stanton. tells of his boyhood. Stan ton aa-aln meeta Miss Carlisle ana they dine together. Stanton comes to track k. but makes race. Thev have acci dent Kloyd hurt, but not aerlously. At dinner Kloyd tells Stanton of hla twin sister. Jessie. Stanton tMM-omes very III and loses consciousness. On recovery, at his hotel Stnnton receives Invitation and visits Jessica. They ko t theater togeth er, snd meet Miss Carlisle. Stanton and Floyd meet asatn and talk business. They agree to operate automobile factory a a part tuts. Kloxd becomes suspicious of Miss Carlisle. Stanton again visits Jes sie, and they become fast frVnds. Stan ton becomes suspicions of Miss Carlisle. Just before Important race tires neeoe.i I'T Pl.niUIl Cir fl r iirrnin i ,. traces the tires and brines them to camp Vurlns; race S:anton deliberately wrecks his car to save machine In tra.-k. Stan ton and Klovl thrown out and lose con sciousness. Two wei-ks later Stanton awakes, and believes Floyd dead. Miss I'ar'Me admits she was responsible for accident to Stanton and for his previous Illness. They part. Stanton visits Jes sica, and much of mystery la unraveled. CHAPTER XII. (Continued.) The acute question pierced deep. Out of Stanton's suffering leaped th truth In cry of vehement pasalon and force. "I do not know! Jessica, Jessica, I do not know! I want both. I love you. I want you for my wife; left with him. I would have missed you. If 1 cared for you because you wer like him. If I see him now In you. what matter? I tell you I want you. but I shall want him all my life. I want th one who rode beside me. th one who stood with me through rough or smooth, the one who knew me and I him I .want my comrade. Jea Floyd." The naked strength of rain, the fierce outcry of savage bereavement left the atmosrbere swept to primi tive clarity, free of all small things. Th girl drew herself erect, even her lips co!or!e.-s In her absolute pa"r but her eyes meeting him on hla own ground of desperate honesty, and raised her hands to her bead. Stanton saw her lace sleeves fall back, and a zigzag scar start Into view on her slender left arm. Like bands of silk ribbon she unwound tb heavy braids of balr and flung them alde. letting mass of short, boyish, bronze curls tumble about her fore head. There was no mistake possible, ever again. He did cot know that he spoke, yet his cry reached th street below. "Floyd! Floyd!" "I am Floyd." "You" "I am Jessica," The room reeled giddily, his vision blurred. And ss bis composure went down In chaos, ber courage roe up to itd his need. "Tou're goln" to tak !t bard." com passloned her earnest voice. "I'M been doln wrong to you. whll I thought I waa only burtin' myself. I'm sorry." The lisp, the soft excitement born accent so blent with memories of splendid peril and comrade risk, fell on ready ears. "God!" breathed Stanton, and sank Into a chair, dropping his face upon bis arm aa It rested on th little tea table. "You've got to bear It; there's only me. But that's the only way I've de ceived you, Stanton." Th rustl of her dress came strangely with bis came In those clear tones. "All that I told you of my life Is true, except Jes. My father had to have a son. an' be made me one. At first, when I waa little. It was for fun he called me Jes when I bad my boy-clothes on, an' played there were two of us. But when we found that all th country aide, all the factory bands, every on except my nurse believed Jes and Jessica twins, we let It go on. It made It easier for him In tralnln' m to be his partner. For he said I was man fit for that So Jes studied an' raced an' worked with him all day; In th evenin' Jessica wore frocks and frills. We lived alone In th big bouse; It was so easy. I used to dark en my skin a bit; that was all. You're not llstenln' you want Urn to think It out" He neither moved nor contradicted. Tim for readjustment be did need, for realization of this and himself. Standing, ft slim, upright figure, she gav It to him. waMng whll the little Swiss clock on the mantl chattered through many minutes. "When my father died." ah re sumed, at last, "after I found out that I wasn't goln' to die, too, I saw Jes waa able to earn bis Hvln' while Jes sica was liable to starve. I bad It In my blood to love that work. I suppose; I told you once that tb very smell of exhaust gas drove me out of myself with speed fever. Every racer knows It, you know It, that feelin'. So I got a place In the Mercury factory; n' that way I met you. I don't know bow to make you understand!" He Interrupted ber ruthlessly, al most roughly, aa be might one hav spoken to Floyd; not looking up. "What of all that? You ar you, now. You've let me think you dead for two months you left m In belL" "No. no!" she denied In swift de fense. "Not that I never guessed that you could believe m dead; I thought you must know me Jessica " "How should I know? You never came near me. Th Floyd I knw would bav come." th bitterness of those desolate nights and days choked speech. Ther was a pause, filled with som Strang significance beyond bis fathoming. vSSr' )ELEANOR M ImH INGRAM v II J jm rcym i icnctuj etc. (U fa-SitaJw,flsaaMiswiiiir T couldnt come." she deprecated, ber low voice broken. "You're makln' thla hard. When I was picked up atunned. an' taken to the hospital, aft. er w went off the bridge, they found I wasn't Jes. They talked of m tb newspapers printed stories about Stan ton' mechanician they said, they said you knew I was woman when w went West" Th movement that brought Stanton to his feet was galvanic. II under stood. Anally, In on blinding Cash of full comprehension; understood tb doctor, the nurse, bis fellow-drivers' embarrassed reticence, and Miss Car lisle. Understood, too, that ber had been Buffering acute as his own. And In the man's hot outrush of protection Jes and Jessica wer fused Into one. They'll talk to me." be grimly as sured. "I'm not shut In hospital, now. Why didn't you send them to me? You knew I'd come to you " His sentence broke, aa bis eyes caught and held hers; Floyd's ayes, straight and true In spit of the girl's scarlet sham burning In either check. I knew. yes. you ar that kind. But how could I tell you would want to come? How can I tell It now? You'd se me through safely, anyhow. I'm rememberln" that you dismissed Floyd for one falsehood, an' I've tricked you for weeks." He drew a step nearer ber; the puis which had commenced to beat through blm the day they started for Indianapolis and which had ceased two montha ago, suddenly woke anew with a long ateady stroke. Tbe old rich sense of life ran warm along bis veins. "What of you?" be put the question. Brut enough I've been to Floyd. Per haps he had too much of m for you to want more?" She gasped before th challenge, then abruptly flared out, powder to spark, defiance to mastery, aa ao often on track or course. "You're mockln' me. Ralph Stanton! An" I won't bear It. I've told you too often that I cared, trustin" you'd never know the rest I ought to have kept away from you. an' I couldn't do It I never meant you to know I waa any one but Jes Floyd. I meant to te your partner an' mechanician all my life. I bated bein' ft girl. But you came her an' found Jessica when I wasn't ex pectin' you. When you asked me !f you might marry my sister, there at tb Comet factory, you almost killed me. For then I did want to be a girl, j your girt Yes, I'm say la' It, an' 1 "You'r Going to won't marry you, I won't I gav Jes sica chance, an' you didn't lov ber, you loved Jes. I couldn't be bappy any more, either way. I n tired of wlsbln' tb Mercury had fallen on me i i Much Ado About a Penny Took Matter of Presents Into Thalr Own Hand on Silver Wedding Anniversary. Evcryoa who has got several gift exactly allk will appreciate th shrewdness of this Ozark coup! who. In th matter of presents, took thing Into their own bands. "Speakln of being thrifty," said HI Buck, "reckon Cy Wasaon and hi wtf. that cam her from Iowa, about tak tb prize." "How's that?" asked tb strangsr who waa waiting In front of tb black smith shop whll bis bors waa being shod. "Well, you Cy and Mlrandy wanted to celebrate their silver wad ding. Tbey bad never celebrated any anniversary before because, as Mlran dy told my wlf, th sliver wedding ii tb Drst on wner tb present would b worth mor than tb victual. "Even then tbey worried ft good deal for fear everybody would bring plckl fork or butter knives. But after a whll they bit on an Id that work4 Drst rat. you'd better go; Tm cever goln t see you again." "You're going to see me." corrected Stanton, slowly definite, "forever. You'r going to marry nie today." Mi lilted ber face to Mm as be stood over her, the girl's piteous beauty of It the boy-comrade' direct mi, dor. the mechanician's unmurmur ing obedleuce. and he saw her trem bling whose courage rualihed his own. "IMn't make ni imlt'sa you ant me, truly." she whimpered. "Wer plajln' scjiiare. now." Hla reply waa Inarticulate, th et presblon which leaped Into hla eye waa that vt(h which h one bad looked at Floyd across th cup of chocolate. Only now It cams with th flerc movement that crushed her sup pi figure In an embrace blending ev ery passion to be spent on man or woman. "Jesa. Jess comrsde Jess, lov Jess!" After ft while, she mad th last essay. "You'r sur. Ralph?" "Hush." "You'v lost your racln' mechani cian." "I'm not going to race; w'r going to Buffalo to open the Comet ftutomo Ml factory." "I'v known you very mlnut; you didn't all know either Jes or Jessica." For th first time since tbe Mercury car changed tlrea on the Cup race course. Stantou's blue black eyes laughed Into the gray ones. "I'erhap not. but I know Jesa Stan ton. Oct your hat and fur and com sign your contract; we're team mated for the long run. my girl." THE KM). An Expert Name Manufacturer. At ft dinner In Now York William Ray Gardiner. Jh advising expert, scored neatly off an irVrrertlsing fad that baa of late been rather overdone. "A young couple," he began, "bad been blrssvd with the advent of little son, and th wife, at dinner on evening, said: " 'What shall we nam our darling. Jlmr "Jim wrinkled hla brow and re plied: " 'Well. I ubmlt Chllda. Flrstbornlo, Thebol. Allours. Sunn. Ourown. Our ownson ' "But at this point his wife shut him up. He could, of course, hav kept on Indefinitely. You see. he wss on of those advertisement writers who In vent new names for breakfast foods, tinned soups and patent medicines." Some Time to Wslt On evening an Irishman chanced to drop Into a quiet meeting house of the Quakers, and b-lns rather aston ished as to what nu. iii.it of place It was. resolved to remain quiet and listen. He Kehaved with remarkable decorum until a broad It'm. no doubt moved by the spirit, informed bis hearer: "I have married a wife." evi dently being about to use this as ft text . Tat was excited and called out, "The divll y have." Thl Interruption rather confused tb young nun, but he continued: "I Marry M Today.' have married a daughter of th Lord." This was too much for our Emerald Islander, who exclaimed: "Sit down, y spalpeen! It'll be long tlm bet tor y se your father-in-law." "They wrot at tb bottom of tb Invitation, aaklng'th folk not to buy presents until tbey got ther, for tb Jwlr from liuckey Hrtdg would b In th yard with full lln of sil verware, and no two pieces ftllk." "Tbat was clever," said tb stran ger. "Picked out tbelr own presents, you might Bay." "Yea," said HI, "but that wasn't IB best part of It. W learned afterward tbey dickered wltb tb Jeweler and got blm to give tbem 20 per cent, on all b sold." Youth' Companion. Caus of Lsprosy Ascertained. Tb long discussion over th bacil lus of leprosy (It has heon going on ever sine Honsen claimed discovery of th specific germ forty year ago) appear to b ndd. Work during th last year or two at tb leper col onles of Guam and Hawaii seems to bav proved that th lepra bacillus I th ral caus of th disease. Optlmlstls. It I better to b picked to young than cannad too lat. Judg. FROCKS FOR EVENING 8UITABLK FOR THE YOUNG O.IRL ATTENDING COtLEJE. Need Not 0 Eapenslve. but They Must Be of Pretty Material. Suit able te Her Agj. and Per fct In Fit. KV Yt'liK. The young girl il...... ,w litiuril. 111 Inn school rliouUI bo piepnrod going ay ' ' I for tlio frwjuoiil social vvi'iilngs I and special festivities that will surely url.o wiili a protly ovoning two. Theao gowns need not be pensive- Indeed most schools for girls forbid th wearlug of flaborate mid cosily ruliuent by the students, but tho gown should bo Indisputably "evening" gown affairs of special protttness and delicacy of color for dresaup occasions, and each gown should be accompanied by ft pair of matching slippers and slocking ftnd by a band or fillet of aoft ribbon, or soma similar ornament for lb hair. The two evening gown doscrlbed today are essentially girlish In type, with simple lines and modest docol letage; but they aro nmda of soft, rich evening fabrlca and th colors are girlishly light and d.tlnty. Model No. 1. as planned here. Is built of pnl pink cliartueuse In com blnatlon with shadow or filet lace of creamy tone." A dollar and a half charmeuse should bo selected, a any cheaper quality of satin will lack the softness and rlchnens of texture do slrablo In a draped evening coatume Select ft very faint pink chartueuse and a creamy, rntltor than pure whtto lace. If you w lah to achieve a ! "Fronchy" effect. Tale pink and ! cream are always lovely together. and deep pink with garish whllo should alas bo avoided, as the com blnatlon la perilously apt to bo Hutch rather than French Matter of Lining. Tho frock Is luudo up over ft soft thin lining, which may bo of pink ln tlsto, wbltu nainsook - or of tblu pink silk, if ono cans to pay the extra price. Waist and skirt are Joined, the ( fastening coining at the stdtt of the lac panel at the. back, and In th gathers of tho skirt Just below this point Make tho waist lining rather loosn and hook It up tho back. The neck la rounded out In girlish fash ion, sloping away well at the sides, but being rather IiIk'i and close to the thri'at at front and back. Tho arm hole are l.-irK" and th shoulder lines long, the short, lHse sloi o being set Into the armholn of th" lining These I ali-eve aro cut In ono piece, and should not reach over tho elbow. The ' lace band is h. t nt tho end f the 1 sat in iiinl r.ot over It to produce a ! do! lento effect. The laco panels front and bark are simply strips of tho wtdo lain Inser tion, and either shallow or llli t luce may bo used. They should bo laid over similar strip of tho pink rliur meuso and attached to Hid waist lln tng, the lower part if the luce and satin being gathered softly Into the waistband and tho round nork finish ed with an Inrh wldu band of the satin. This band should not be rut on the bias, or It will not fit smooth ly. When the waist has been stitched up at tho shouldt-ra (but not at tho side seams) lay it out on paper and mark around the oval whirl) the neck opening will makx This will gtve you ft guide for the binding of satin. For the Lace Panel. The lace panel at the bark should be hemmed or faced down one side and hooked down to small flat eyes placed on the lining Finally, drape the charmeuse over the lining, carry ing long strips over the shoulders on each side of the panel from th back of the waistband to the front The strip should he turned under two or three Inches at thn outside edge, the fold extending over tho top of the sleeve. Similar folds extend over the lac panel at thn inner edges of the satin strips and the satin Is gathered Into the waistband at thn back and back and front. Tark and bllndstltch tbe satin to the lining so that It will hold Its plnco without showing any definite stiffness; tho whole effect should bo soft, loose and graceful, and the waist should suggest a loosn, easy fit. The skirt Is rut from a two piece pat tern, the top bolng ;f the lining mate rial, and thn skirt should bo two yards wtdo at thn foot. At the left si.., the satin reaches somn Indies above the knee, while at the rliht side It rearhes not quite a high as the knee. This emphatic slopo of thn skirt trim ming will a. 1. 1 much smartness to thn llttlo costumn. Thn laco Insertion follows thn slope and the Insertion Is not gathered, but slightly eased along, so that It hangs gracefully over the narrow skirt. Thn pannler tunle. la also cut In two pieces, but several extra Inches should be al lowed at thn sldn sams. and also nt the fold In front and back when rut ting out the tunic, (lather It at the top. cutting thn placket nt thn left sldn of thn back among the gathers to correspond with the opening of thn walvt at the sldn of thn panel. The tunic should be flve Inches longer than the space It Is to cover, gathered slightly at thn lower edge and looped up und'-r. In Delicate Pal Blue. Model No. 2 Is an Inexpensive little frock In thn dellratn pale blue color that I always becoming to young girls. It Is rnadn of taffeta, with a bodice of pnle blue chiffon under a little bolero like Jacket of the taffnta. A soft, chlffony weight of taffeta should bn selected, and the rolor UNCONVENTIONALITIE8. "You're a sort of forty second cousin of mine, are you? Well, I nevsr lend money to relatives. Clone the door as yon go out, will you?'' "Dink, the only thing I dislike about you are your looks, your ac tions, and your conversation." "We'd gnt along most amicably, old chap. If you would hibernate In th winter and go to the north pol In the summer." "What I dmlr In you, Bijulnchley, should b ft delicate baby blu. Shadow or Vftl. lac will fticord well with th dainty glrllshiie of th frock. Th skirt I four got model, slightly gathered t h top and meas uring Iwo ml ft hulf yard at th foot. It I trimmed with ft bnd of corded shirring Just below III knee. and lb skirt U Intended to reach to tlm ankles Hold frock described lo ilav allow fr an nkli ltigtli skirt. If the skirt Is shorter. little e ma terial will answer. Tit corded shir ring Is made of ft Ma s"r'P silk, four Inches widn. turned In at the ednes over cable cord. The shir ring should not ho ton full, and the baud inty be machine stitched, or sewed on by hand over th shirring stitches The belt la also ft shirred, corded band, with rosettes at front and back The back rosette Is ft small round afTnlr. flMlalied with ft covered silk button The rosette at the) front Is made of loop of bias taffnla. shli red along one eikn. over cord. Th drawing up of the silk over th cord, st the Inner edge, gives th "loop U rounded shap. Thl frock fasten down th center back, on of th taf feta trapa fastening arm ft trine, under th rosette, th last thing. Th bodte I made of tucked chif fon ftnd If th tuck ar et well apart and run by hand th frock will bn more dainty. It will be well to mount Ihe tucked chiffon over ft lit tle lining of thin net. but thla I not absolutely necessary. Mak th bod Ice In threa piece. loosely fitting front and two backa, with leev set Into rmhole Th iWm extend Just over th elbow and I finished with a band of lac Insertion and be low this a little hem of the taffeta. Cut of th Ovarbodle. The only complication thla gown will offer to the homo dressmaker 1 In the cut of thn taffeta overbodlce or bolero At the back this Is simply In the shapn of two broad strap, which are five Inches wide, covering the shouldor seam from armhole to round ed out neck; but In front broadening out to form surplice crossover fronta Kxpertment flrst with a piece of old material to get the overbodlce right. Ksi h sldn will require a length of ma terial long enough to reach from the bark of the waistband over tb shoulder and down aaaln to the front of the waistband Tbla strip Is per fectly straight at one edge the edge at the outside of the shoulder. At th Inner edge the strip Is straight (and flve Inch wide) from the back of th waistband up to the shoulder. From this point the material widen In slanting rut until It I at least 11 Inrhes widn where It gather Into the front of the waistband to mak th surplice. Put strings of the lace lnsr tlon across tho top of Ihe chiffon waist between the allk shoulder straps Modl No. 1, pink rharmnuse and cream lace youthfully combined; to tal cost. 110 12. This frock will re quire In thn IHyear size l1 yard of charmeuse, id Inches wide, at fl 60 a ynrdr 6 yards of thin lining material at about ir, cents a yard. 3 yards of wide laen Insertion at K0 cents yard; of a yard of narrow Inser tion at 20 cent a yard; three pink silk roses at 25 cents each. Model No 2, a pale blue evening gown of girlish design; total cost. I'lm. This frock will require In th IHyear size, fi yards t.f yard wide taffeta at SI a yard; 1' yards of shadow Incn at 21 cents a yard. Pretty Home Dress. The Illustration shows a good horn dress In Hurbar brown rough serge. Thn skirt I trimmed at foot by handsome many colored design em broidered on a black satin ground. On the bodice, which Is Magyar, tb embroidery Is used to niitllna th square neck and Is carried down th left sldn of front to end of basque; thn sleeve are trimmed to match. A band of black satin nclrclea th waist. Material required. HVt yards serge n uirnei wuin, 3 yards trimming. Is the easy, natural, onnffected man tier In which you can swear to II," "Muggieton, I don't wonder that you and Oromtey are not friends, lie's a gcntieninn." An Economist "I notice that as soon a you bav smoked" a cigar you use the atub of It to light anothnr. Don't you think It I harmful to amok so continuous, ly?" "Well. It may b; but match coat money." J" ; t A J S . ' rii; -jsi'i It : I ' .',- ' ' mm : NEW VK R K lNSnorpy HOTtL rovisio Maun ir maiPsSZwrn tZ NOTK KKDITKD KAlls Most f.ntr.lly 1,1,4' utnty wsista. Whltft satin waist r, ,,.,. , 1.!nty. but It 1. to b. fr.r,h'! th. d.lntln... of .ucn .J b very evanescent Bo only th. ftft Who can afford the soni.wbat kilt cost of constant ar ei...i dulg In whll (.tin f,n Mnlrt ' laVtslat Bill SB o a a ..If. Tb.r. I. ft .psc.i tin that come for the wh,. waist, but th best of tub Mth! must b handled with extrsm If It I to survive en one Uund.rla. nd retain It pristine st,r and rick! ne of texture. Wash th wa.habu atln la .oft water and suds of stir, wbltft soap. Wring t ot ao4 rrt It not, but rinse In severs! dear tool water, and Iron when almct' drv with thin muslin betB th, M nd th Iron. 8o only will y H th luster and th tcitur ta. wMu sstln shirt w t-,t (Vies P. II Plus lt ... ,m, m rb.i )... vUm blue. IWI t .ouTsZIZ iii be aes slir. 1 8V th Pins. A rood Idea after buying g sips. Of new plus I to cut on lln. off st ft tlm and Dot to dlv into th hoi. paper at one. A sewing batxst hould hav It pincushion wall iqa, piled with pins, and when sewlif t box should b near at hand Into whlti II th pin ran be tossed In hurry, ay th Philadelphia Time la tela way th floor will b spared Its nl pin collection when sewing com around. A pin tray or small plncotklsi should fc oa vi ry girl' or wamso'i bureau, and the pins should be nt Into these at nlrht. when, perkipt, ft pin or two will hav to b Ukei out of th stock collsr or belt IV pins used In pinning on a veil sfcooH always t put back In th vllla after It baa been carefully folded 11 and before placing la th haOol or bureau drawer. ItMtisr wttt Knit . W'n-' -sft ati e-rriip lae Deal f - r i i.agfu la f Ullug t WxltU.lf S(IMll. Now Comas th. Golf Faker, A ball pla) d by a golfer at YYestos. upr J'ar irt k skylark, so read, and rut the bird head off. To. hould hear ua tell our story of lb golf ball which stuck In a bird's betk In th mlddl of Its flight, Tbs bird flew off wltb the ball to Ita Boat, for tunately for th player. Ilia bird Ud mad It Deal la th next hoi. Lot don Glob. Tlm to Bll.nL Epcllly when th.r I idt meul rlf. In ft community hold yof tonga. Th time U rip for e dal; ry on talks, equally T on. repeat, and th lmplest rsmarl Is distorted out of all semblaae si truth. Keeps louqu.t Fresh. A ronplllabl. flower vase, to ft coraag bouquet fresh whll. H Is being worn, ha bn lav.nud tj French woman. fragile Kid. .... i . l Infant sflf ID.r. tm m man ii tallty a moni chtldr I th taNdi Uon. JUf. WOMEN SHOULD BE PROTECTED Agalnat So Many Surgical Op eration. IIowMr.Bthune and Mr. Moore Escaped Eikeaton, Ma-'Tor sever i yeari IJ fere.1 cverytblnf,. I was In bed I 1 AmV at S UBi. or nu"i- -every month, sad weak I could bardlf walk. I cramped had backache headache. WO w en nervous and wu that I dreaded to anyone or hav wf nnemoveinthsraoi' The doctor fTB .rim medicine w - at Uioee Ume. fti.U puiu.u.- MSiS I 1 1 saM.tlmtlougu.-. Uiftt, ftml wnen I" "":".'..vtg. told him ftbout LydiftK. etabl. Compound nd what D for hi. wif.. iwm wn ir-ftS j Now I look Ut. picture of he alUi v lilt. It, too. I c.n do my own ho. my grtlen, nd milk "' entertain company and mj-y ? ff can visit when 1 choose, and wai m aa .ny ordinary woman wr"'f month. 1 wish I i5S ufTerlnu vrimian nd irirl. Dethune, Bikcston, Mo. , Murrayvlllo. 111.-" I dl.l'Lkham'.VcP.;.;l.l-Co( for a very lad case of f ''"' tJ nd it mad. m. a w",m"Ltor health was all broken ntt aid I musth.v. n pi;r""(lh.7dedll ready to go to the hospital, "aA so that iWan taking your-Corng I got ftlon .0 well -JVjeV doctor, and wa. laved frnnr -J- Hon."-Mr. OIAW.M MoCB. " No. 8, Murrayvlllo, a.i.v-vV- 2.r WUI I. y 1