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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1908)
" f s , ( V THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING. APRIL' ' 5. 1003. TWO MUST' THE LIVES Terrible Experience of Mrs. Karl Jatr Witk Snorty an Indian WKo Mur-crcd Her Huatana-Women; Plunge Into WooJs an Over Routfn Countr to Rcack SettlcrVPalin PENALTY. FOR ONE T By Bert Huffman.. ' half century In that wild region. In ... jh-, a.tnM bf lh Alaskan summer the girl, Marlon Tbeatnont Kll I wvHHoiua ' - winter an arpt ner wiuowaa lamer east: tb long, undulating line or company at hi loualy home la th sea boach. stretching Uk a alug- north. .- r ' - . w-.eg. - hMna 1 1 r , aha Mil Vm it Yalta an4 ' . , - glsll Serpent lying at a ml to ,hort co,rt.hlp nde, bftlr -,,., mountains' feet; th hushed waves of ; at, Seattle. Thev apent their honry- the UM raclfle' lapping gently upon moon at Wind' Point.' fishing, hunting 111 .hr the .nM,, .n1 aolema ftna following tha beach In har ranee. , tha shore: . tha wWurt tna soi eras wlnUr rmm9 nd .,. th(y. lingered. quiet of tha Ahtskan twilight settling lh, northland lura held them and they, down like ft pall upon the land; a decided to remain at Blind Point and .moulU.r.nampf.p on that desolate "sence outpost of th northland; a rquat figure atates." . hovering over the dying embers and a The winter paaaed quickly and wlth- ' inr vole Drofiuung tha vrry sano out Incident.' For weeka and arm . tity of wild nature. In a vow that con- in on tha no on ram to the poat and cerate th apeaker'a Ufa to saeklng the couple enjoyed an unique honey- 'revenge upon th white men foi a moon In th vaat Alaskan aolftude. brother a murder. , Spring cama on and etrsggllng In .-Such la tha setting of this atory of diana brought In their fur- and flail for the northland a true atory that aur- Bale. Occasional whit hunting parties tmeses for thrilling experience ihe paaaed up the coaat and It tnllea distant wildest fiction ever written about th at Tonka another trading poat waa . ' Alnekan frontier, atarted. Aalde from- the occasional -ahdrty ia a "Cak village" Indlnn hunters, a few Indiana th llttl party at hi Ind Point. Alaiika. Jlo wua bora at Tonka and Karl Jahr and his orld . Snd th h.dow of th. Alaakan coast M Blind Point the r.jrlon wag tfaaoUta. rang. He had flahed and hunted dur- Only the silent mountains to the asl; ; in th entlr 10 ysars of Ma life In only th far flung; waree of tha Pacific a Mttvl TmSunttli aa beach eruol to tha w. at and north and aouth th , wtthlna radius of 6 miles of his birth barren beach Una. . , plare. UntU h was I years of a U had never seen a whit man and ,At Blind Point , wlfandVl b?bTbVw.rh A eanoe ho.r.n. thre. ak rlllsg" drltahts In life. Indiana was tied at th beach below th H had aold his fnr and nin w Klldall house, at Blind Point, that halfbreed traders at Blind Point and , unoha-rved bv Kaxl Jahr or had lived a monotonous praoeabl. al- vning. unooerea Dy ksti janr or jnot inanlmau Hf. until on day hi hi brlde It was dim twilight every (miner waa alaln hr whit hunter. . where, Kven th husky doaa did not Then a new tnsplrstlon seised Upon see or hear the Indians' movement. Shorty" a new motif burned In his And when sbout 19 o'clork at night, as hreaaL a new oal waa act bfor hi Jahr and hla wlf war preparing to re .lint h-m. a new obl't was bulldVd tire, an unearthly erreamlne- rom two ki. knrimtL Hla life Indiana broke th silence near the great r.t in a new mould. H became log dwelling. It startled them for. an ' a new creature. Plan- Double Kfllinf. InaOint to the point of consternation. but being accustomed to surprises In th wild north they were Boon outsid of the nous to learn tn cause or tn Ther on that night of suffering, as nolaa and the trouble. lie shuddered about hi smouldering fir Jabr rushed out unarmed. Utile think , ng of the peril that confronted him and nil th hnrhi after Covering th Corps hi. brlda. In nlrht drum, i-autlonlna- him of a murdered brother with th kindly In a woman's way, followed closely be. tundra, h felt th Impute of his hind. first genuln resolution and b vowed 0 . Ruae. that h would tak th HvaKOf tw v7 U8C- ' wlilt men to pay for on brothers It wag a tub of the Indians, murder. And he kept tha voW. . "ghoriy" had conjured up a plan to weVtk, "hrireat 'flrerCJ draw th. whit man out Into th shad- of the on dwelling- houao at P-lInd ow of th night and before Karl Jahr point Alftoka. It waa the night of had taken a doxen step toward th May 1. 1904. their first wedding annl- fighting savage. "Shorty" -drew his versa r? rifle from under a fisherman's 'coat, She had been reared on th Alaskan which he wor and ehot him to death coant her father. Mitchell Klldall. har- before his wlf could Interfere, lng followed th salmon rannerlea for Seeing her husband killed th whlt r m k (ii Ik vV; -;vVi. ; . X m.kA k.i lt th tiniiaa riiir- hr tlmntl niliit Iwvtr. tlut aha ril nrnarhad Cmlltlnual V.' AS II Cam Wlthllt v aued by th Indian and In th Instant ld that sli must keep going If all apeak lng distant' ah tried to xpllii which it .required, for "Bhorty" to. un- reached th hunters' caiup. . - her plight and finally as he understood faaten tha heavy door which sit had Ho she preeaed on lu th night, fol- har" terrible atory he asslstad Iter toll) rloaed behind her, Mr. Jahr crept under lng cloae to th beach to kei p In th boat and rowed, to th hunUr'g camp. -. th bed and waited breathlessly, ipect right direction.' and yet following th where ah loat consciousness on coming lng Instant death as soon as th blood- deptlmber to hid her from th In- Into th cheery room with Its great Jog 'thirsty savage should discover her hid- dlsn, who ah feared might . tak hi fir crackling In the fireplace, r lng place. . boat and follow up the-byh to tnter-- - i : ' Kaiiinv ta find hap 1n tha room th cept her flight Fearful a waa her rl r - t . j- v '' Indian ruhd out of th hous. taking .condition and terrible aa waa her stif.--' " -vw... -w. , , . ( i with him th rlfl and two reolvrs, ferlng. ah mad good progreaa. Fallen ' Jlr dripping, night dress waa T i th only arm . at th poet. 11 ran trea war climbed over, rocks wart ,... '.i(h.. tut on. around th houa aeveral time, think' tread upon, although they cut her feet, v and warm, dry clothing puj oo, lng the woman muat be cloae at hand. and one ah waded a atreanv which wag and aftr rubbing and warming. nr Keeling tha utter helpleaaneaa of her waist-deep and icy cold. - , limbs, h was restored to conscious position and knowing that certain death ' . ' - - ' . M . ... . " v j hu- . awaited her If sh lingered, Mr. J.hr Mugt Crogg Flat.. . "y V ?M" nd oM her t0l7-f crept from her hiding place In time to r . , band's murder, of her escape, of - her :- ae "Shorty" run down th beach toward . Just befor day ah. cama to a-wlda frightful Journey through th' timber , Ktd' Ish'rHfu,.' bV r arolVd'thlf.on'i whlI hid "d V" th mvA " lM piping out of th hous sh ran in. around thlo long flat, which reached Mn, . ; , V." ) '," . an . opposite direction, barefoot and far Inland, sh . would bar to-, travel xa sturdy men brought out a boat : bTIprnmVenr,'wi,chir,nl?,: Wk.n. h.r aboard startad to Blind ' beach, h stopped to conaldor her aitua- l,on- wblI rosg H through mud and p0nt to recover th body of Karl Jahr tlon. Bh was alone. Her buaband lay- lc kn-()eep, it was but .two miles to and to captur th murderer, tnurderedi at th doorway of their bousa tha farther aolld ground. ' ,- After rowing out a short distance Bh had no arma.. Help waa not tobj... Bh heaiuted bfor plunging Into th they, were picked up ' by a eouthbound .; had In that wild region. It waa II mud. Sh knw It might b waist, coast steamer and th party waa -landed , miles to th nearest camp, and tha rout Kys nok-deop. In place. It waa oov- at.lillnd Point, to. Ilnd th body of th t lay oyr atony, irosen grouna across rd with lay water for a great part of murdered mun just aa It had fallen II naror. it' naa not siruggiru. lly had bn th murdrra aim. heart-broken wlfa and her hus- remalns were brought out to n or h t lay ovr atony, 'trosen ground across with ioy watr for a great part of murdered , swollen streams, ley hill aides and roud tho distance, and was murky, grewaom hours. bai t ','!on": th beach. and terrible to look upon In . tha earl 0 deadly J - But It-waa her only fcap and sh , dawn of th morning. - fcut she ovuld suf- vTh h ." Started, barefoot, shivering In her this tt no more than ah had already Suf- band's re iiiauv. uit-.-,- ,ir . nair un.nwiu. mi rerao. so she plunged into th vsst mua Juneau and a paty went in aaarc : Heart leaping in rear ana corunernauon. lake and trusted to fortun to guide her. -Hliorty.? th murderer. Next day ., , ' . ,.,., oiuinDitng at times in tne ioy auma, was cantured whll lelurly rowing up Alone in tbg Wilds, v.- " . sh fell and plunged her arma Into mud th beach 10 mile from tha scene of ; i. . . . and water . to th armpit a, but- ah his crime. H landing tner atone, almost naaea. atruggled on. Her feet and Ilmba wers" . Ha waa taken to. Juneau, whara-h ; h rigor -of a -northern' wlntar' biting now numb and ah could not, feel tha waa tried for th murder, and upon con- hr limbs, a murderous savog seek- "tinging mud In the rut on her feet vlctlon waa sentenced to serv years In, to alaV b bar buaband dead sue- n3 anklea. It required all her nervous In th federal prison at McNeill's Island, tor to alay liar. hr husband dead, sue- ftn(1 physical force to make rrogre where he Is now confined. - cor mUes away, and between her and through the trrlbl flats, but at th end In th trial it waa brought out by that succor-tulles of Inhospitable wll- of -an hour she reeled upon the solid several Indian witnesses that "Shorty ' darneaa. with not even a nath ta guide ' g"und at the farthr aid, within two had taken the vow to kill two whlt IV? InA JLAtl VL -S.M.I -. reckoned, of the hunter's men In revenge for his brother's mur her, and .depending, n her Ball vain--cam p.. , , ,.. der. Karl Jahr was the' w:ond victim tlnct for direction. ' her thoughts for . . Bh lay exhausted and suffering for and "Short y" was satiated. His only that moment were anything but pleaaant a few momenta, but gathering up har regret on leaving his northland horn to contemplate. ,. energy she started on, reeling aa t aha' for prlon- where h would spend per- Khe knew -no prayer, poor girl: she walked, her scanty clothing clinging to haja th remainder of bis llf. was (hat bad beon reared liithf wilds of the her, as if plastered to her limbs by he should be prevented from visiting a north- and. her father'a rough flaher- the ellmy mud of the flata.. : . , , clam bed farther up the coast that suin tnen had been hr prtncrpal companiona; , she now came out to the open beach, mer, as. he had Intended to do In com bo t in wished for a gun that was Ihe uopes of catching sight of a boat, pan y with hla brother. rrff " ' . ; when to her horror end surprise she saw Mrs. Jahr recovered from th effects But . It waa useleea. The murderous what looked to bb an Indian at the wa- of . the .terrible night and recently vls Indian waa watching the house and the t,, -,Jn the dim light she cosld I ted In Pendleton. She resides In Beat- .Jl?'!"?!: tartr bf.c.k-t.iot -clearly dlatlngulah, but she waa Ue. . - ici cioiiih' or in, irra Bf ren WHO in i M.hi.mul imlll , .h. . ilmiut felL aa . - - n wouia oe'siain. bo an siarieo. , .h. In hA n,l.i frightened . eak was bh finally aaw. that It waa a white - Sober as the Judge. . TVnm '. tha Pull , Mill Oasetta. Judge Boyd of f ha Irish bench kept a WHEN IS A HOME NOT A HOME By Blanche ?HS - Rafalska ' w pendent, detached way of living of- not altogether to be condemned. UEN'S. a. home .not.. a home? ... A numerous chorus consti tuting PorUand's , "roomer" mended: there Is never a public par- fered br rooming and lodging-houses. n. inr ;ruiriur wnum consular tnai i it any wonaer, since tne army oi a ridiculous waste of space. A glrL bachelor girls and working women who away from home is increasing- year, that the ion girl ana toward in. camp or hunters is miles up T Sw tinw rr mMnirhV mr thL snd she hailed him feebly. At first e.rJyVPnT.,g". 21 lIlAi1 JT , Jarch-bPhaVp9 & wchVSlact; thrmn .T.rted pplr of ' hi. favorite -pls.n- on th. Xllen tWpeS he? pre-a. lie? ac k and ran f rom th; apparition which desk before him In an inkstand of pe- nlghtdress. drenched by the dripping B".Wwt. ,b ,,.th t'm'r-v 8n? eullar make. When he wanted a sip llmba of tn trees snd heavy ferns, clung called, but he ran faster and her heart j,e took It through a quill pen. while to her even tighten than bar sklnV and aank within her to see her bop of help counsel professed - entire Ignorance of her feet 'were now 'bleodlnar frnm Ana. vanish. . the little maneuver. self-control of the ' JO-year-old Evelyn ens of cutyi and acratchea. When the whlt man reached bis boat 'TM th court truly," he once ssid ', who unaerstooa now io - imc sno sit aown on a raiien tree to ' n l"" u rwi to a witness, wer. you oruna or 1 feeling from thousands think, but -ah waa eo cold she had to the figure standing out . In the. open.; sober. T nt listeners anri anec.ta.tora. and I keen moving to keen warm. (ih. mtnnA beckoning to hlra. She called again and "Oulta aober. mr lord." reDlled tha In -family-style,-and It waa far batter thought! that when ooquetry can 4eaeh for a moment behind a tree to shelter catching her words and recognising-a man, ' . . all around than the unnaturally Inde- a woman aelf-control like that It la from the wlnd. which, although blowing whlt woman m dlatres th frightened And his counsel added, with a loo St up irara mm .uuin, - waa , oilier cold TO nanerroan cam . ivwara ner, oui p. ino inapoti wa louri mm m juu. Marian Thesmont Jahr. Photograph by Major Leg Moorhousev population might answer truth a .ii . awverx. 1 Ik mt J u"y' young or old. is st perfect liberty to rv Jive aw Jilshed rooms, rooming-house style, and Celv her men friends In her. own Toom, year by .a.ll f ' " - Whlfl im f nskoeweiailf ita KawfexAw has Ansa aaevaaHw a sia, uwia s wuiui m vsa u ysjili Ul h t. Ir luue aaaaa esssu m . r eBaai aa as - bbbbi . ' sa ' - t aw esgasBaBB t 1 . . call It home.'" , which Is of necesalty her bedroom, ber one room, is the latest social prob- contrary ine presiaeni ctoiimiu SWW a a . m .ea . . 1 a Bn I maIs am asb relaRil W m fir sPxl n 1 ffZaSMl rvue tK. innn nerann who owns 1 "r" 1 no aura, urunow in a rooming- lem posieoT - , .v reg th avrag pewn wnojswns houaei when you croaa the, Undwoman'e But she la not the whole problem- !bor ne,n lV T'J t0 or,n" his own roof-tree, or rents one for the palm wltn ,f,ver( .he hands yon thfre a" th, 'Ay r.riUS caplUl when It Is right. . exclusive use of his family, realise how the key to your apartment, her respon- wife and children who must be reck- . ' ,en. women and children" there slbllity, morally, ends If a your castle onad. The landwoman uauallv accepts fit A .1 T 1 . . lor the time inn va. ere th. V nar . . .i.iu . w . B L mI-- I f tr- f t ... in a city orPortUnd's slse llvlnr X JTy XlUUlUtr X rtWlN- 1. , ' !Vorn in "Ihe Second Mrs . -Tanqucray and having their being after a certain Young women coming aa strangers diaturh tha other tenanta. nt hut ir faahlon In "furnlahed rooms"? Ber ? th c,ty n 're,h rom home en- hard Mnea for the little roomera! Th-jy lasnion A" "''' ' vlronment with, all Its restriction and are released on parole, and maybe it haps there. Is no way of getting at tne protection. In the most surprising man- isn't a Job to keep them from break total ' figure of residents families as ner take to the free, come-and-go-aa- lng the lawt Never to slide down a' well as unattached men and women you-Pleaa rcmlng-houe. idea, like ralNng; never to slam a door, whlsMe wen as " ducks to water. Time was when wa or stng abeut the house! Not to break who, Dy cnoice r ww v ..u n naa ooaraing-nouses' a-pieniy. Ana a twig og pluck a leaf about the place. rnuine a airay, nunrry aog ca ll ve the free and wonderfully Independ- how they are disappearing, where la or bring .... ..,-t.n - ,v. frntcal roomer tne landlady of yesteryear, she of the or puasy, cut existence of the tyP101 vm"' baleful eye, and her under-fed board- ing it unt By Irene Gardner. T begins to look aa though we were going to become a nation of scold ers. If ws do nothing else, this year, 1108, let ns cease so continually call ing attention to shortcomings of our American people, and begin to empha- r - V 5 : I '. J? -.-..J;.-..-;'TJi' 1 and know the bliss of feo There are thousands Of them nsre in er, tK Mie dejected youth with a But time tames the rfeeire r the ltitie t. , .u .v. - iin. ne our miuSl, ' ana in wvorjr au. viy, .m '"u miiyvn. un unri, enu in a, enuri wniie iney are ... a va. a. .. aKn.ana.M. m4 they might goon living in sucn a man- uw iir m, . iu uuur gmeneaoie to rooming-nouse rules ana -- ' ner without criticism, to the end of th ruffles , on!y .they didn't call 'em regulations; they get used to a new Society a a whole Is no different from chapter, if lately some bespectacled pro- J'Jy'"' "home" every month or so. and they the Individual, and no Individual Is ever essor of social conditions hadn't de- fiTil i?f iiJ . f, k-. fI rr.w n?' R?0 de!ir"l. qui.u ?0:i' permanently reformed by scolding him. elded to put them - in the "problem- P'J.y.that i.,r,alh,?.r. S"?i,ih fc,a?uf of TP! m,f" i?ave b?" V There ta but one thing easier than to class and - treat them j accord ngly. "t'v ha'" A1"' w..1."-? hailtn. k,.')der .1 tl)em , To d0 tha Plnt out the faults of othersand that Therefore, If you are a 'roomer" you house, that near home of blessed mem- subject justice the homeless, unpro- f, o scold them. The parents who ore a social "problem,- It Is to be sup- ry. has been turne into a rooming- tected voung man must not be Ignored. thlnk they M Coing their duty by their lei. Jeanne WarKk tnsalra IIUUBB. Iin 1111 tsUTB HI1U ITBUIUrftnil I nfifr, OflrULiniV IlttIA inslllfAmAnt TCkf .lm i 1 nAM u14 ...1 . . . . -. , - - cniiuren wiidh i lit? y ihjuiu. wuiu, bv.viu mm o mi&y in hie room evnlnr-- for iutl lapse from rood behavior are aiicuiv vntag wunucr ii b rupjfif-ai into rrienaanin ann v. u..kie ii..t v.i uiM.n'a real en- i lure Tho ar. mental in- r feeding many of their patrons. The "' Vr V.ri,iT,n. ineene tnauranre boaraing-nouse waa a Jong way from rapablea. criminally sajne,. Insurance . . . . but In many vital Kleptomaniacs,, loa-cmer wnu mw i- i, .kii.- ,' i. i r -. me trouoie 10 oivm men cunurona rf Cun rrbr. MiK?! tlteZ tE wano'Mal Inl'nood "en d0 Wm mre hirm &d" ,.Bd- Ut,w lnto hlh" w defeoUvVln on way or an- -.J Tlt .tW mXi A 0tiM down and put briefly. Jt seem. Z wouhirpu to '.llame Ton? SlK fohT'eTe hTvee'a iSg tESF $5i Ideas of the home The Christian world .oiaVmlnrUnl newa 'hot off ba " Shi Hs"a ,lon2 w.T towandJ be?' continuously that these unworthy cltl l,as put il Its eggs into one besket; It kept ub 'on the coming and goingi moral, and it ls not a" It Mtralshed en' 1 ln ouJ, mld?5i AVLPSLES stakes Its all on the holiness of ,lta othl girU ana ther. WM nughty little with our old-fashioned Ideas of maiden "wrwJ? S? Jf'XllS R.r?i ffnu1! home. Now the etiquette and prlvllegea that escaped her eagle eye. All court- 1 modesty Then it's bad for the tionT To ignore them and Ulk all the of "rooming" Ufeare totally different ,ni and snlng haVto be carried on faml? dioraWefor ,m boutlr thf. "-"iVJha TwnnM from anythfeg mother and father coun- i; the general parlor. There was a It Is to be hoped the wise men ?on wtrSn? ,L' f?J LL-.UlS tenanoed tinder the parental roof. And deal of it going on. too. but It was who are now agitating the subject will be or helLof. "Im SS??" there's the rub several eerlous "rubs," an ln the open. Boarding-house mar- suggest a remedy, and devise an abode eventh o la a thief to Ulk only in faotr Theresa all' kmds-of inivw as happy as which shall retain the- pltl h ?MJ f In this mode of living. It la not the the usual run of marriages not more of the rooming-house, its convenience lnat the majority of hie . fwnliy- waa correct thing to mingle with your neigh- or less. Taken, all-ln-all, the Influence and a certain degree of Its privacy and deserving of respect. bors-you rather suspect them, and vies was, healthy ; It was near the real Independence with the best feature of w bVick 'Jj1 fura,Vn versa. Names or references are not de- thing, this housing, together of people the boarding-house scheme of living. ?m J ttnenl ,upylnKKCOnBp!c.,liIi? , i t 1 1 - , - place, but we tale so mucn aoout tnem tne worm is lorgetiing umi iney are the other prisoners were jealous of the exception rather than the rule, her shape. This made her eo vain that Let us cease thin scolding and this con she laced herself more and more, and tlnual pointing out of wrongdoing. For one morning she fainted during mass too long have w made the eagle scream Then her secret was discovered tb3 "Greed! Graft! V Monopoly! Extortion! corset was made from raes and stei-1 CorruDtlon."' ... .,. , . wire , used for netting on doors and Why not let the cry be Honesty! Gen- THERE Is not the slightest doubt most sensitive, parts of their body, on windows, and she had been punished erosltyl Faltli, Hope and Charityf the tha flirtation of woman thalr llp" na bapn. They pierce their numerous times, and very severely pun- Do you think this cry would not ring . that.tn ""on ' ears, nose and lips, press sticks Into Ished, because it was discovered that true? Then are you greatly mistaken. Originates solely from her, dean- their flesh, pull out their teeth, squeexe the wire netting In her cell was con- for It must ring true. , to please man, to attract hi their head together that It may appear tlnuaJly out of order. If it didn't, then would our nation be . attention and to Switch hlm. onger LTt&fnf bun 2?u Tutrc " During many centuries women had no ot 20th century, who torture them- as Aa Lr mnh.!f nevestlutt thl rls sS Tet If th world other mean, permissible to capture men ;elvj m nd a""" to -J, kind, o, op gujtry nbrdy. Sh.Suehiu - bette" 'it mu be thit and1to hold them capUves than tholr w?nvtei y 1 ?nd lauha- and no P"""" would e majority of inhabitants are htnet Z .AiJ. it im therefore not P - wringies. times suspect that she is suffering tor- and kind. This being so, let us all flirtation, and it U therefore not, ToUB(r wornen ana ola are iave8 of tureg becauae she Is laced so tight that sing their praises for a while To tell al range that the habit of flirting nas coquetry. I had an old aunt of about she can neither move nor breathe, and the world that humanity is more good Its roots deep In the soul of every 0 years who said to me: "After all, this torture she has to bear through the than bad, more generous than grasping, . nmee rwt of flirting Mi be f, f S ,.now ln tne vry flower of my ,on evening hours. 365 evenings In the more charitable than critical that will , women. , The habll or mrung was on yOUth." year , be true missionary work and help our come an Instinct with women, one or And today, when I myself have Coquetry teaches woman self-control, nation to grow stronger and better with her most tironounced 'characteristics. - passed the 80 years' line, i begin to teaches her to be mistress of herself every rising sun. In Insane asylums you find wnfortun- understand how my old aunt felt. I a"d to suppress and conceal her feel- . To point out the good in life is the ate mad women, wno nave juai mu auu i mum mi ail mai uccause a woman nwi uuwra. in reuuing in in mrai tumui, nejr m wiwcn iu ixuuni signs of womanhood with exception of is 80 years of age she needs to be American papers about the Thaw trial, the bad. Have we Americans forgotten 7 a, 'V! '- WHY WOMEN FLIRT-By Paola Lo'mtroso i 4 r i f;: . ' It . f K- - . . , . s .-t v- - -v -r - -s " . i f'-(, - , , a ' - . -r J . . , , ...'..' : ' ' : .( - ' 1. " J , al . ,'.- , ... .',- . .-" ; :. y-t f. ..r:.' i.,..ti . - t ' ' " J 1 - , ' i-' -f ,v- x 4 . 5 -7 ; - 4 r"V s- , J .'" " Je- ! ' 5 ''if - ? i . t t i y A ' t S l - I -i 4. v S, r i . 1- - MUST GO TO . COLLEGE By Irene Gardner -I SHALL send every one of my life of that sort their birth or financial daughters to college if it takes 8ta,1a,n entitle tnem to. x . . . .. "And what is the result? every cent I make to do It. Mrn,B,iv , ..Vn . V went on tha' man. nearnestlv. - "Ton neert nnlv tn This was said by a man who look about you wherever you go to find is the' father of four bright "fi.ut- The women speak for themselves. the desir to flirt. This habit lasts considered sn old hag, and I think that 1 nave time ana again admired the this? and remains long after every trace at 60, one may still be quite young, of intelligence has disappeared. These Here I want to make the remark that unfortunate beings spend hours looking 1 am o flirt at all. The genius flirts at themselves In mirrors and use as don't discover at all that they grow ornaments anything they cap get hold old. At 60 they still take part ln of. whether It berags or flowers. au the pleasures of society, and speak Another proof that coquetry is found ,of their first ball as If it were some- 5n every woman Is tbe fact that you thing that happened a year or two will discover . it Just as much in the ago. j t-li society woman as - In the poor it cannot be denied, woman is nat- hon girl. I have Just heard a, story rally a flirt, but who would have which throws light upon this. It was thought that coquetry could be used About sn American mUlionalress whoso f0r moral purposes, nwrne' the papers did not hesitate to The director of the Italian states print. ,..-,.ii'- ".."" "' ". prisons, uaaaiso, naa tne following - r .-..-. Th h hither end won AnnA h reive R royal prince ,ln her palace ahe originlal Idea: Once when my father girls, ranging ln age from 9 to 17. Then .urTy like dolls indeed Spending their h-d ordered from her tailor two govmn ylsTted hlm he told him of 'all the he added: "It's about the only hope for time the most foolish wavs "fndn i'" EL"" ""V'ooof'rancsr'Eh S'BS' &".fJ MS.PiE a girl these days unless it happens that because they have so little 'in their ;ownB shoVed: .r: irs, -Attraction, r to flirt and to use every"means he possesses some unusual talent In ?Vf,r-Vwy0Im2 .th,uvgJl ll i fli"efent.,i,r" tuur niwiVM . that case I would educate her along her would have resulted, some desire to the pliik wwa she . looked lik a be- Although they were entirely cut off erjeclal line " read or observe Thev would look Itching five, w-hlle, the, white made from the world, and so to speak never "fa ""t , ... higher "thsS Ttfe ?atelt LieUhflt. en her SPPS" .?. Wf'":--: 'i "vS5.n'.u" a,!S" Si!'c,5?.t ' ' ".v ?WH-," V,BW: 1 inspire those women with whom thev eie annociaiea Wltn 80m than mere social rivalry. "I tell you I wouldn't ha ters grow up to be mature f oer iiieo.'. t-Wi-J-",? 'MZ,miS - iS'tAXXlVrtrr "Ti" 7. lTrS.V". "sc cancanon ier-a.r notnmg definite after th i,.i . iirtiiur fin , uiunnr a.ta atwaj, u . a.ir ar tn iju rruci . i uuio ' uiu - uunirir'i iri ul iu v h ii in iiwh hmh it- rnutr rt rm - r rint tj t- i- t . . mm a . servant t'illed gravy on her dress, and. into the prison,! This, however, did not It they are liable to become 'like the tils- gage my home to Interest them In ome- nf course, tne, young uy- a -u.w- aiscourag uic . tyvwcii pr aunerv, ana ionea zemimne monstrosities that are thing worth v. I'd rather see them dead s iair o mey 101109 iw iiw:cuu't pow- so common nowadays, conditions have thnn th.i !.- .hnii diiiinavroom , iged. jna der. - rrWSr. . white iring, in eht.fHL Th time was when a girl florid and loud In. their pursuit of Vri- to the s !ii(t. i - 0s" , VVf.C "'l'f J 14 e, ', ; it. . t-T. re' a' N l 'f 1 . 1 m a- - '.w Af-t. C 1 V.as' ln;.r.i ! Aat. a.J e.M..IU..e. A. a- ei i. 1 1 , .i 1. ..4nnJIJ ..11 . :... meias to fA.naint their fe. - Anfl nne nriaoner lll rilrl t keen ertia Vu. iw. "B.""la'"Ba . Vu"e.f? limn nave uetr i ttt genu i i coming v..umu,., .h ww WsrMVlUHH iu- wa. i .i-w r;,uo ,,,u u ,. Samia than T"th uarairJng was'rfound one morning" painied red most only one was employed: Now t h I me o en. and who often has to all over the face, and no one tinder- every family keeps help, or if they do afternoon long " 0 ' " ,p,ayea au something more than the ; performance loved t .,w,w IT'.mX h.t .1 . . . rllne wont ja "None of my girls at present show .of a modern dramatic, masterpiece oy ; v!wiieuler on the stage or off, ..'Mrs. anything on the si m floor to Much of the food 9tm h,28.sar' ,n7 Particular talent -for music or any- the foremost English emotional actress Campbell', gowns reflect either the display and use IS. 1- -.2 JSZSLi tefS. . I - boughr ready thing of that sort? They are . Just .t -..-"N y a t,M of ; tha ?ehaMster.-whleh-"Sh 1 Is playing or the great pearls, her 1 whW?2 fineSL'J 'Kht, -nonnar girls.ut: ff- they c2n! f.f 1,1 5 55 hlclv .e, W stTt.ndlngr-' fling ?... W this wkv: Hv 'licking the T walli Tof tneV; cou d live at home tn .h"J' ?? fa ' , . v.. -a - . : . . . ' . . - . . . . ' - ' H.e. nu iiini- DifitNii rr nrin i v rainnr vrnuin i nana -.1 1. j.. -t.. v a binii r virtirr a. .alia ani nAvin tn ra lonminA thv riori onH ha a a rutiv a k - r. .7 , . . n , . , , --.rrV"'... 17.V ?nr .'.JTwh 7 4 whfh theV n.iS rv "rC" t. 1..: ' ."2?"- .! oispiay-tne most serious degrees '"""""I..'rrM rrr tSlV; rrTaT ;i-7, Ti.S we . ootainaa at college than have their ! , I I. 1..1S1. w 1 TLf-t her an :ve (.mi crust ei oread anu, water iv nuwu now il nau umi m.iuw ur ncr "oi urejr uv tn m iiki wnere tne work Ik 1 Rh!f to tiy new waist, is in ner to ret noiq or tne coior. ...... nniieiiv nthualastla wirhloi)r Her-cell was searched from a . . "a, a. W .1, i - I t ,1... -UJU .- . I , " . .T ""! " a .JUBI i. ... . i I t ,.,, . ... -wti , -fMui7i.r. . r- . t:iiuiik oiiu hi mot,. ..." . .uu.t? - " i-, . 1. 1 m , v. bv bu at ureiurM rnnr i.iv., . ... n i iHiM ! . ( .t.... . v. ,uv . u . . a w .a v . . -. anp n i rnnniinn fhi.k -..a. . ii . . i , agl- lLHIs4 er.drih Ja.t word. asth. rrench.puU, or more. " t"aV v".n. '? !;yq""?.plfl,A,E "?other. was brought up n a home where ' spoken In th6 world of fashion and pavceful Burne-Jones lines, lends itself Among the rings which are sometimes 1.. 1 !.-.. navM hare oeen ''tx, -rings and earrings. , Savage' eolor. -Then she had soakod the threads tered on society and clothes, 1,4) lire i.t t afraid, of any pain if In water, ihu.k ' that they can . make them- to nalnt si-tv-er- more -oeauiuui. iiey , .juioturr f. k,j. iinn. 1. ii.. tlon of Jewels in various artistic set- K all WAmaMt - ..- ... HIIRS. .iiuiiwia ml, llvn.m , DT P-U womanaina. . -, . . s . ' .hat Ik, -Rnellah . eotreee never weei-e Whether on the stage or off, . -Mrs. anything on the stage for the purpose of ner noiaoie string or i diamond star and das- wnen tney become a . '.caves, woman had patience enough to pull out I the result? As soon as she leaves the there were manv children and no SelS 5 found this thread for months and get the red high school all her thoughts are cen- was kept She led s ?jfSl-llf tad ha?. Kavave'V-wilnr - Then ahe had soakod the threads tered -on socletv and clnthe. . -rn. 4- rf f p.T25 2.r"S.UL '"X.nfl pain If In-w.tA'T.nd. thlssh now had. used true even If she Isn't a member t what poSsiple' for "he aver.Jelclty glri thes; of I.Sndon as them- to paint her face . - . I ; " te-known as real eociety. Every cl days. 1'U see that myaughters biTCS in FnahSid a Th.v Atiar.rher woman had sctimflv sucreed. of unr ptr hua U leariora n -niin "!v.V-V.r Vr .aTuAn. .P?! m Ji,ngjana,.a .'.;..' ..v; .hi. vi'in. Tnr.-f foe herieir .it ;, -nVth. i;i-- ir.--v-.iKr:.": . ""i"u.,a. ".r. . possiow- wnim even in vv iiiv iunn - a w 'v ivwww v -w -v -- - -- ew vrsi -! ifutuwifi . ,uo jrou 'if rf . wiT.a iQij naaaT .i-v -s xollt 4rss. , - . xne araperieji of which Bh Ss so fond, seen before tha footiiBhtg In a beautiful . If. -iaw.vwblt im IrnAv-a'Tt itlrmirff rlr .AlftnV Of Mri. PiltnrthAll'ai tttflff imeums 'A.f ai)ifrviiln4A kv o o.ttrl-. A LtneikaslHai ,, rnis Is a eood time aa well.'. Buch a life is Im. ami -In the ultra-fashionable salons Show A fondness for ..lincine scarfs of whl,-h in turn .are 'surrounded hr an ; a me u-ni uicanru "oiuou ...v..- .v... uiaiiiniiuuii iiiRnsr iai. - rier euge 01 ueep ,.grren ctnuren goiu . xroirt as a designer of stylear in bat are Invariablyvplctureaqu parte of which are attached three tiny pendants, he Paris creators are Often the lntrlgal designs. . Y i " little flower, each with a lewel ln tha followers and as .an artist who, brings : -It is perhaps superfluous tOI add ths,t- centr.v ,;;s.v-,.-r f v ' - v.v,i . i -