THE OREGON SUNDAY. JOURNAU - PORTLAND, SUNDAY- MORNING, JUNE 14, j08.
Colored rbroidery'
apd Soiftaq Braidip
potipd 617 I)apy'
. F35t?iopabI modek.
:. I Ope Bgtr ip tl?e
K Jrapsparepey of Jfyelr
H
VAVB f you "realised thst th. ad.
varfca wave of the daring, mueh
diseussed And critif (. a,-...
I their French' oman h.a
, j , - V I J I-V
J out; shore. .
If you havo J an, : 'observant ' ey.
roa ann6t fail to. hav. no-leed the
aueer laaWnwa of ttU,season' skirta
That mean a discadlng of fair Amer
ica,'. Iinderaklrta. Or th. really shock
ing sbae-nees of tha aew tulle walafa
SoV perhaps, y.u have not yet aeen
, thla strf-Uag ; articl. oif clothlarof
mc4othlp: when you do, prepare to,
fclush. ' , ' . . -
.lav fBlor,pat!duia instaiee we'
aav ' gon th Frenchwoman on bet
$w. , . She Baa uf f icient reticence to
irear bebeata her absolutely trtnspar
ewt r alat a ; aUp of woven, allk fleeh
ooloted, lit la true, but still coneeallnf.
Pa fhta aide of the water women see
pa. 'reaeoa foi . hiding their much-em
broldered iBd tmef llhrerle. They wear
Cheao diapBaootia net waiate with
hnterreolaa; allpa, The reault la eorte-
yrhaX ata tttag. . ,
rVTbat waiata of washable tlitle divide
nth, the waiata of French linen crepon
("the honors of the season of 180S la
rery, evident. Both are absolute nov
. eltiea of this year, although the walsta
I of crepoa haye a more decided vog-ie
among smart women by reaaon of their
:; eicluslveness. Thia material cannot as
YJ. b bought here by the yard, its
output being oontrolled by a well
known London house, so ft ia only In
the more expensive imported waiata
that it la to be fonnd.
This ie a pity, aa it. la delightfully
T arlsp and cool and baa what would be
a atrong recommendation to the aver-.
K woman 4t requires no . ironing. ,
Real cluny. Jinen torchon or Irish laoe
ie UBed in making up. thle crepon, aa
more delicate lacea would not be In
- keeping with th. somewhat harsh
weave of the material. Irish beading la
, often effectively used to ouUlne the
. mvn fits.
" - WaehaMe tulle, so-called, la nothing
r nor leas than flee washing , net.
:-terUlBlf funning a. to' alack"?
clothes as the law uUnwi v
r elusive houses aro eeh day makta
up waists of this i material. Th?y
well, which ii all that concerns thi
the
average modiste. Pronrletv of !
, la not within hef province.
Toucan see one of these waists II.
A . . B" waists 11-
Jastrated ill trie Hkoroh lfttrA r
tr; ;. u B. w-u tetterea a.
Parisiennes are lust now disc o niT.
quite Indiscreet amount of ink la inJ inir,V tl 7,... - or ln ."' rem" ;,pIK"' is still to remain rashionable.
. i swathing their necks and chin. iS.t i? Xd" .ju5t,?ow nKlf h not Wafets tlevoid of any insertion or em
P.' hUrh Tun behtaS thai?"-. iwCeSf- S2a I'll -UnP"he h" f.P''?. thin waist, broidery. ma-Je only with fine hand-run
ruchlngs of soft muslin.
V4.' hatha. l.a,,
'" 'H will have sufficient fortitude to tl
. wirv
really tot weather cornea
- -1 wub w i it-ii Liia
t lUBr . cornea remains to
r
with th. nrst warm days New York
' 4,1. r jii.ni.iiji r f "
throats - hChis hr,? Jtwy'( red
J IfiihiorSriteimM PS ,,n,t?nne
or rashlpns extremea- AH winter have
, coUara been ambitiously cllmbing-up.
HGW MUD
. VfawweaeLVeaai a a a.1 a
DESCENT investigations and experl-
tnenta by scientists in Europe and
I America have brought to light
1 A V soma extremely interesting dis
, fc . coverles as to the reason why
' - soma of the natural hot aprlngs and
-"- rand baths produce the remarkable
" cures whlcl have been recognised, but
not thoroughly understood. The famous
1 curative springs here and there through
out Europe" and the waters of the fa
mous government springs at Hot
. Bprlngs, Arkansas, have been discovered
to be naturally charged with radium.
Xt Is the radio-activity of those springs
" which coma from the bowels of the
f- earth and produce the cures and explain
Why a series of baths taken at home in
: " your own bathtub do not produce the
. same results as . the same number of
baths taken at the . fountain bead of,
rthe natural curative springs . which
' , come out of the earth charged with
' ; tedium. "
; ,?, ' Especially interesting - experiments
' ' J with the famous mud - baths have
' brought to light the reaaon for the
. - well-known curative properties of the
inud. The famous mud baths at Mud-
lavla. located at Kramer, In Warren
. county, Indiana, have for a long time
-t excited scientific interest, and their
'"' ,' " curative properties have recently been
, t inveetlgated and teited. with very ln
' tereatlng results. ' '
- The Indians since their earUest flays
. have appreciated and need the mud
: baths, a proved by the numberless flint
and bone relics found all about the mud
" ,1 and often In i. Many a rheumatic
bravo lost his rheumatism and his flint
" ax at the name time In tho depths of
'! I iludlaria. . -
Before tba Indian, the mound build
er used the mud back to the dawn of
; humanlty.and - all that time and. until
very recently; nobody knew , why the
mud was good for the body.-'
. The mud was known to be magnette,
and many attributed the medical duali
ties to vague effects of magnetism oa
the the system. .
Were this tlie case it would be easy
to make Just as good mud out of fine
-' Iron filings. Of course, there is lithia
present, but the properties of lithia are
- thoroughly known and do not account
..: for -the mud effect -
i Not until very recently has the secret .
eorae out. Almost everyone knows that
the bluod 'is: full of corpuscles, some
r-ii anil some white.- The red corpuscles
' atten.l to the business of carrying y-
en from the lunge to all part of the
ml y. - - - .- - . v
'Tia white ones have a variety of Jobs,
. most important ones.- For one thing
t, they are polictimen whose duty is the
capture end eecutln --on the spot of
. dangerous germs. They are scavengers,
i , too, -ho tloii up odds and aada of '
MlMlM .Pot... m?
gSir at" K "nMnt0iha
r T at back. Now comes the other
ti,l.e,neof "mP'et-Iv bared throats.
'ih .wld t""' collars and
Z. tllAnoi,ed u"(Jer thp. chl"; rh-'
thev .,ar r,r-n . . a
h-f- .T "1 .1 wl," COHA couars or
I"r uor.rnauo.aulia-: .. it is, 1 sup-
n JL,, 1. ana .aensiwe style, hut
one woefullv Innklnir in inirt.iiu
i.,i . djuhiwioi.
Bared throntn hlm in
"Wl"2- ..L . -
w . . .
Miiraeia snow wpii-mnnewi. tnim ni
color. Colored tmbroiderv..
01
vk and vni ma ba
mnt nnnniopt minnaa- t
: " ' " M I : w . waiain i llilin-
Kercnier nnen m way satisfy. ns to
the eye. openliaKen blue Is prhHPti
-opennagen . Blue Is prhnp
J'10 coInr Par .excellence for embellish
,n wllltf waiets, but a dull rose pin
and subdued violet are also verv coo.
Colored enibroldary design worked t
V rnOil -
Colored embroidery designs worked tri
BATHS MAKE WONDERFUL CURES
l
waste which would soon clog us UD and
dni. The v)tal organ finds it difficult
Poisons, too they must pick up and te drive h thick blood over Ha usual
carry away. Wherever there is k dis.- eourse when there are all sorts of im
turbance of anv kind about the bndv, nedlments hlnr-kincr thn u-nv Th, li.nc.
thene little corpuaclPH eo hurrying,
. tuu i ictj up, renuuu. Km germs,
uruig iooa ano straighten out the trou
ble These thlnKs they are doing in
everybody s system at all times, and if
the artny of corpuscles should alt go
atrJi" at once " weuld promptly ,
ale. Though Hie corpuscles never go
on strike, they sometimes shirk their
work, or certain parts of it, and when
they do we are all k and allinir
RiKht here In where the Mulavla mud
t omen in. W hen the human body is ment. Waking these little warriors up eo
liberally plastered with tho mud the thoroughly, Tias a quick and marked ef
wnite corpuscles all over the body sit feet on this eenter of trouble,
up and stake notice. . .. . . Tha kidneys, relieved of some of their
As manv i f ihuml ...... vn.b Me taaHin. . . ( nu i n
from th. work ,.u7;r-un7wriM
wnia
" una ciiit-r mi MhAA wh nh
. i j . ' ' d -i-
acid and oii,-r
COrrCftnnnrl to H ut arA v. .-.t..
...r..
fn the Htroets a : i ( i mukA thmi wav a
the skin. ' "
Thy travel through the arteries of
inn oonies, whlrli are sort nf nihvav
whh i, are sort of subway
expre8e for their especial benefit, if you effectually block all the pores
hoon they rliaup,. from the express into by varnishing or something of the kind,
a yeln. which t a sort nf local-train, -death will follow with extraordlnAry
and from tl.ut Into a capillary, which swiftness. The mud treatment, brlng
you mlj-iit call a surface car. Atlast'ing the white' Corpuscles to it in such
tiirv i-.avo to e.'t out and walk. enormous numbers, immediately raises
lint this d.H-sn't happen untfl tha the tone of the skin and all Its millions
s-Kii, It-is-lf Is nached. The corpuscles 'of Sweat glands to a high pitch. The
ei'. . their v..-, through the fixed cells .response to' this treatment of the skin
oi thebo.lv. ..f which creatures are con-'l shown by Its freer perspiration and
stru.-ted, iu-t aa .a building Is made of
"; . ai last mey arrive at the outer ;
w. h.f sKin, wt.ere the cells ore . na
imni and u.urh.
Hera ihey dump their load of gcrmaV
rertise, poison, etc., and load bp with
mma and other elements of the mud
nl start back through the skin until
J,"' re''h the blood stream . again.
Oradualiy they deposit the litbfa where
it win dissolve urlo acid and calcareous
deposit- n.i the other things where
they will do most good. "
The remuval of waste and deposit
r-om the suerlal and velnous capillaries
PACKING THE
PATIENT
IN MUD AT
MUDLAVIA,
. . . ..... . .;.;:, -.' . ' ," , , .. .
; ' 'J-?..;;' j. '! i .! ,. ' i' '. 'Al ,V ':
0117 m ttm being a com-
blnation much eeen.
Hut not alone In embroidery I- 'he
Inevitable "touch of color'- ued Minute
neck .bows of vividly colored satin are
"uacneo xo wie oaee or the. honed col-
tor-in front, and little bows of color
ei-e strewn about on the more lacy
' s.m,.HU n..i.i
" a iairmiv carviec
rfa it -ii. i..
iiKn. very orten
trimming is :.-
tho.otiw extreme of great
tuck a and to Inert with bdnc at f-v-
iremeiy gooa tyie.
trio Tl,Mt.. "v.
i j a
- ,,
IMriVIT ".tUTHUUi MifjeVtJH UI1H flJl.
In watMa like this run we nee tho
fflsrntt of the romtnff of the lonir dleevrs.
- ror, tnstteod or tn nleevesi ivefnff lhow
k op even Hhree atiHrtcr lnvrth. tiiev -
TT1 A CytW tho ItPiut hina unlln In n
tucked , band euff. which 'is sometimes
relieves the heart of a tremendous bur.
too, find It hard to thoroughly expel
ni iiie-giving oxygen rrom tne
tne
Thla i Why a course of the baths has
ucb an effect on the iie.ni.
: A patient with' sluggish heart action
and laborious breathing notices his
heart and lungs working as if they
had been all tuned up after a course of
mud treatment. The liver is affectet
especially and ' the kidneys about aa
much, The human liver swarms with
white corpuscles, and the mud treat-
back to a rested and healthv oondltirffi
. ' .-. . . . . . - '
fttF wn nn iner rftn. witn romniri.
tlva aaaa d mnra -ii1r t He. n Viair li
aaaa mnra mrtrir tnan than i
formerly under at rain.
-Th akin of tha boilv la not Mnk
upon as an organ by the average per-
son. Tat so important is the skin that
Mn. Tat BO
.to Its ready response to .changes of tem-
us reauy rwponBo 10 .i-rianyes or xem-
rature. The pores do the work which
lur meant them to do arid contrlb-
th.lr ahar of labor In rllvln th.
peratura, 'ina pores ao me worK which
ut
body from po sons. yalye of the cotton croo of the United lnJL V.B"3lx.Ll ?L?liat f0T JP.
i oe lormaimn nr ire mua o epos 11 ai Htatea and exceed h mlninn. th aI.i, "bb never vwii oua auroaa. xne and
LM"ilavia V Is a wonderful coincidence, of out antir. wi,.-Y JUon vIu, ehefs ther. refuse to put a - top crust bv
unlike anything discovered In any ether Holism. n . i. ;...,!;. .. .r. on it, and call it a tart or a tartlette. vi
spot. For eenturies the group of Uthla 000 acres) considerably leas than Tone- ?i.p,a' 0- tbe n,Tr m
iour. .ut Iti Vaters. wwch",ha SS h V etS T "aJ?tf K&V ' NSr'Twill they ever .alt and oentMir "jSi
slowly percelated through a rich eg- atandard. .nn,t. .k.;. i aa". IT dishes Sufficiently to please Americans, use i
e table hume lying in th. valley below pis. and up to th. hishest Vtanriu Tt or en, with dinner, , or keep sea
ii. ins neposi. inougn eommnniy Kumps. Holland is almost a svn m lnolr wmes loeo, or ao many ? other tninga
ATransparent Waist of Whits
Washable Tulle Worn Without an
Under-Slip.
B Colored Embroidery Is Used
of This Season's Prettiest
Models.
C French Crepe, ' Combined with
Cluny Lace, an Exclusive Novelty
of the Season.
D Braiding on Sheer Linen Lawn It
Effective,
E Charming Waist of Alternate
Strips cf Finely Tucked Mull and
Valcnciennj Insertion.
earth, soft is silk, soluble as auger,
and without any sand or grit In its
composition. , n physlral . properties it
differs fromi tha soil of any other
hhowii resaon, i eay nothing or Its
ra-e medicinal virtues.
IMILLIOXS IN SWAMPS.
Those In Ijoulaian
Support All Holland.
boundaries an area' which is In its prea
ent condition aa useless to ita people
a. a corresponding area on the. high
Yet. accordln to the Southern rsrai
sTm"e7hTn'g Ter 7TotOoT-cT is ?he
iniiui
jv j ur HCIl III! an ' t. ijss wui mi ,
-.k-.ki. " lit . " s
.ui. - .
th ri,r.ta HA-iA. .ui.i
i-V "2" "-1
sunoortimsr th. A-ni.t .taiiZl
Dooulatlon in " tiViI.-bT.T.TJ.'
Population nf S1A
S?f MS!
of cultivated land, omitting entirel the
urban population of New Orleans .'
of New Orleans
"I'on wnat me alluvial lanas
are now donK. the nndrained lands of
Louisiana lands today wholly unoccu-
pied are capable of supporting, not
tsased upon
what the alluvial lands
counting
the cities
wHV-. WA..M avlot
there. Over 3 .00.000. a DODulation ex-
eeding any one of 40 stateB Of th.
imertcan rMon. '
American Union.
Cultivated as the suear' district of
Iouliana now is the annual wealth
production would nni. ?: :I!lX
STvlth a cultivate .iMZ
gjw.yW.lSi1 fiir
Egy:
: trici
xnan me one under dlscutiHinn nnnnrla
10,000,600 peotda not "ih T'lS,, .
t.oanm or American standard, but Inc.
the population suddokkh i th. mm
mll.T-aKut" thV??? HXnd!
h. 1.... ..--jl ...? ,n .nu'pu.
this country, and we are buylns a con-,
1 nually Inoreaslng proportion of Egyp-
lan cotton oVery year. ,
";i"im a more vaiuapie cotton
than OUr atandnrrl . ntnr . hut I, im'
,t 1... . i - ' " J " I " r . .
-v,, .u . uiin our aea tsiand eolton.
It happens that Sea Island cotton Brows
...Pitut-"".'. th J?ea c1' ,8n1 "f
.!?. J; w.,,lft,v hfl nou?'
: , xa-nj wiraj utBus,
when one draln.d, to duplicate In
pounds and to exceed In value all of th.
long staple cotton " rroduced n ,th.
oj ld, Egyptian Included.
Beyond Question the drainage of th.
remaining marehee and ewatnpsjn the -
United States is the most Important It
M-wM ' mivjmeni awuuag mm, ana
ie.w. to thK..i "v'5.k" "D,. ?f the "nrnalon-'Tn th.- m,' et Thack,
On 1 Iftfl Bnn ..:-.7." . "Hotels that ha v. eon. nn In t.x.nn. .nl re worth as much at
duces fulry one-sev.nth as T muSii'iofto they are even Importing American cook. VVla'a oortrtit
as does the whole United Btates; that f of the speoiai difheg Intended for Amer- X , t0oiud
"'ire or cotton in i-gypt - , -. . ' ? - ii.j u In (tu a
is worth tunmilm,..!. a, ..... I. tmirMn vnnun ,h aieo, ana in.itseir a
II
S
M&
sure to be done by the present gen
eration. Scores of drainage projects
re now actively under wav. and thou
sands of acres have - already been
brought under cultivation with most
eatlsfactory results,
Th production of these new lands
?r.exPSI11?1 t,iat f l,h (,d9r cultivated
pruuueuve aeiia.
and except where reclaimed by compa
nies jur me purpose or sale they 'are
rarely offered at any price. Here the
drainage movement Is getting momen
tum, and it will not atnn until nh
' . Louisiana has become the richest agrl
Alone Could cultural community of its size in the
yru. f
PIE IX EUROPE, MAYBE.
Mow pispogitton to Cater to Amer-
Jctui Tftfitl Abroad.
' frnm tl, v., '
om,n " ECoffl.r. th. great
: t -tt jv stuuiius Clisa
- ..n . . . . .
' - w, Aiioi tvaua
frnricant of Ui ChADra that haa
av thhnM, w t. V- '
m it . I..
considering the ideas and preJu
7!" 1
own. nation:" fir mny-years hST do!
iJtltS:
y??'l AfDyiJI.'" lJ? hAtel
."7:1.f,u-""vjn. P D.?Je,
heHa friltara Wh AtttAV j
taM in minA ii
t 'lr aS.3 T.miS1 "ifii1;
iTfifSS. f2L "n118 ot head
Hi - in. -?,.,. .Sr.taKf?8t
""l1 - "" iMauppcr.
.r: L".L. JaX .a fl" .ev"n .nar?
v-..ax . . ' w
f ifiiai"f thSl L .plf' W V1-
i1? ,"eei vB?cc-., ,n -,he for-
IT " iT 7 , xr " mo lor-
f.JS? h?tw: Nevertheless t there is -ery
aou" that before he returns h.
ul' t.r aven th.: pi., myatery,. for .
knoWight
SW ? U0B
me greai summer invasion or Amer.
cfl n'.fP
Mon somewhat endfejt -has becom.
ccVsarVto catertmeV.ew "usteZ
n,.. h..'. . ..ljl.,.,... ...
abroad are the cause of the Americanism
ing of time-worn and fossilised customs
tn regard ta everything rf rom cooking to
nairaressmg. jngnsn cooxery has been
nj. I.. . .nl V.-,h .-.. ... .1 -v.
.WW ' T J . ' . V. 1 , V. ' I . VJ I y 11IHI
ror nealtny Amerioan tastes, and the
result la that tha Vlahomet. r. Mnln.
h mountain to study the mysteries
ot clam chowder, bake beans and above
an American pia v
.. ,. L
v .-ir.v t -i-
' .HOOK and iiyln.
- Prom the Denver Republican.
It Is said the form of the fishhook
has not been changed 'in 1.00. vears.
is suspected that the structuro of
ispecieii inai me siruciuro or
story, la very, anolent likewise.
ut. sea
propel; Qrepop apd
Uaabl Julie tfye fup
ffouelty- Uai5t Tai triaj J
of tfye
Me ART OF
By Elbert Hubbard.
I
KNOW ft man who became fairly
wis ana not ebsuraiy crest,
through writing, for several years,
to a woman of brains. Th. adv.nt-
age of writing direct to aome one
who thinks Well of you, instead of a
daily them, for profM.or
who doesn't Is that th. lov. letter 1.
vitalized with spirit, whereas the dally
theme is stuffed with straw.
Then when one gets in the habit of
vitalising what he writes instead of up-
holsterinV it. ha is well on the road to
1"Sfu"?S.ra ie no end ' to this wUandlTvk
! SuV'Sh. advtnlS" Vk.enina outers Just like Thaokeray---only differ-1
the mov la that von ara not in so
much danger of geltinjr run over and
ground into the dust of despair by the
automobile or somebody .' atnbl-
To be around into th. duet of desoatt
la not pleasant for Any individual who
is ground, nor tor those to whom he
relates now it all happened. Th. only
man who is safe Is the maa who is in
notion. . .
Thackerav never wrote a letter that
wasn't literature. Hla letter were like
ruses wnn m aw upon iun i
with the perfume of flie morning.
Yt"? know what Cajlyl. said o
erson's visit "It was like a v
rse wltb the dew upon them -touched
Of Km-
window
flung open to ajsure. That
tiuua v asc. is au aaui b. a b
is what
every letter ehould be. for a lptter is
ni visit from a friend,
TOu eee, I am sssuntlni
TOu see, J am sasuntlng a gooa deal
hero I am assuming that people only
write fetters to their friends. We will
not ' hwra mention those uMpeakabl. .
persons who write anonymous letters.
.i . .
f?ih."alifltRie,ltf3
"7,:" ZVj-'LV-.xlu,
v. wnose verooM ana
i j.i j t
lUDiriiiTQ misHives a.r bixudiv envw
SfAiK?ntloln PUhdry and divers pin-
about Thsckerav-he Mver bad
or rhetoHoak eurled hair, literary
moss, por.booky celslor,- He ..Mil
I. -w. Th.' ATt oitt "of hiS
f.nd7 ."noVr thlVexK of thi
ti&- gor.b"'arV,d.tr?ct?yt
pacn,arm - - - pny peow on , wn ia
wrote hooks and l.ttera
,7hackera wrote books ana letters,
of W. frl.n
Neman whm
iivi t. Pnrini at' tha
auction as hla
V"n."".r...
eVennnf-B atet
n ur set of wisdom
nugget or wiauom
The Thackera
n !,.. ,
iv stvle of letter Is nrettv
harlottV Bronti" Tbl
lieve, was tha first to write Just ike th.
master. Bha loved him. so well that It
nearly broke her heart when she
him eatina cabbose, and her cry was,
'Oh, Mr. Thaeky, please-don't."
. In America. Gene Field is the first
example of a Thackeray leUer writer.
If you have letters written l lfleldT
hang on to them, they will hell th. re-
celver to pay par.
Robert Ixiuls. th. beloved, wrote lef-
celver to
.r .C. r.i ' t. ..... .7..i.i.' .3 una form or a apoon. thougt
wsu uuun aa, is lliawvi iua aaw livu va Aft.. i . ... . . ai
Thackeray', perionallty, A Thackeray
iv.iv. i. 110 ill a
edged on either side with little plaited)
ruffles of tho same material - On
strictly tailor-made waists of heavier 1
linen are to be found the manly stiff j
cuff a, wlta buttouholea and euff links. '
Braiding on very thin materials a an
effective primming for separate waiata.
bat than, on; what la braiding not need
Jtlet nowT Both Una soutache and coro
nation braids are used In carrying Out a
design, and embroidery ia "sometimes
combined with the braiding. Medallions
of fine white net, embroidered" In flower
designs, are Inserted In some of the
finest waists, the embroidery extending
on to the material of the- waist and thus
firmly holding the medallion In.
One of, the 'most charming lingerie
waists seen this year is shown on the
figure lettered "E." It was composed of
Valenciennes lace insertion of bold yet
delicate design and strips of mull of the
finest quality of exactly the same width.
Each; one of these strips was finely
hand-tucked in vertical lines. The waist
was so cleverly contrived that body and.
sleeves were apparently cut in one.
This was made possible in the Joining
of the mall and lace. A tiny yoke of
Valenciennes insertion broke the . out
line In front and a finely plaited Jabot
and frills edging the ' threo quarter
ajeeves gave tho nnismng toucnes.
Bach year the cry goes up that the
separate white waist Is doomed, but
each year sees it gayly blossoming. The
truth of the matter is that it has too
manv overpowerlngly
K
jood
points for s I
the average woman to
ae woman to alve It ud.
Cool-
ness, freshness, adaptability, comrort
(hey all speak in- its favor. Iong ago
the ordinary, everyday feminine re
belled against a continued encasing in
otlffly boned waists. Then was evolved
the shirt waist. Today white waists
with colored skirts are not worn on Ihe
street by well-dressed women. To meet
this difliculty we have the Jumper dress,
which, for much the same reasons aa
apply to the shirt waists, retains Its
hold on popularity. For wear under
tailored coat suits nothing but a se
rate white waist la practicable. J
fashionable modistes frown on them as
thev will there Is no doubt that white
waists will be with us for some time to
come. .
Models of separate white , or oream
colored linen skirts sent out to us by
foreign designers are made ' extending
far above the natural waist line, thua
f lvina the fashionable short-waisted ef
ect to even the separate skirt. This Is
not to be confused with the corselet
ekirt Which was done to death several
veers ago, for in this case the skirt
only suggests, not outlines, the natural
waist line. It is built on a ciroular
model, without trimming, short, with a
deep bem. On some models a front
?anel, tapering toward the top, is seen,
his ia an Improvement, adding slender
ness to the lines.
WRITING
ters of love, too a dash of wit, an
idea, And a handicap. . .
TO perpetuate a naiexui inoujni oy
wrltinir i
naoy. tfo say the spiteful thing Is not
5? 7 w !U?f.iB two'iS.
SQ0n ar(J Mt u afloat on the sea of
time neverl '
V V Tot'onf?
the ,oul of but th BOul of art andi
every good thing. A beautiful letter is
c,i"7r?.t!n ' 'Hl.l'Lm nf"T!
4 1 does not consist ol U pages and a
P03cr'Pt- T c.
Robert Louis, ..Qen. F?ela, Btevie
ent and three of these, men are SUU
J"8",?, V?I?..'U h?u5?h
In VhJE, i5 II ilZlSS
iWT&JSSS tTsi
Drollxltr
crowoar un-
Slr Isaao
Newton s will do the rest.
Tha world needs glad tidings. Send
messages that will lubricate th wheels
of Ufa. or none. ' 3 :
A letter from a friend why, it Is a
window flung open ta the aauret
PLATED TIN- SPOONS.
CAmvl.a rl.1mMl Wruu.iuai .
t "--- -
. volved In Production. 3
From New Tork'Suti." T t
Her. is on. way . of maklpg ' spoons.
,J 1 iii . j .7 .1
process describe being Used In the . J
manufacture of on. variety of tlnplAed Si
- 8 fc.. v-e. I
spoons. . -- .1
110 villoma, v. , 1 . iu.icum. trvm
hlch these spoons are made comes In
Lonf tbln strips of.
in. .t A .Ai niit - r..g
iwim viixii ita ui dicci uiiou a u III
ui.i.-..,. mu . a i .
or ntfm feet in length and of width
!Els!Br.,, 1,n th Pon
l." .... . .,'... .......
Wehie which euf. off Viie? "ol
winc-i. ? for making .a spoon.
".1, sr -mU.-fla.
'tfi'bUt&r. but through
,! whtrh rl th- etol
"ake it thinner In those parts Of th.
Dlank that sr. ta form th howl &nrt th.
handle of the spoon and thicker in the
tha SDOon will b.
made, ao that it will be the better abla
br tn b"dlng strain that will be
r rom me graaer ine oianir goes into
. ,Kir.k i, in ..
t rrom this
at. i- -ie
boWl- of .
then in still
i at last vnn
have the spoon in Its oomplet. spoon
2 5!J?1 9 .
Candidate, he come along, . . '' ''
Bhakln' hands so frVe; a
Got a grip dafs mighty strong,
, An friendly as kin , - i , -i .
Can't remember when 1 has i'
Felt eo proud a when, " -'"
: He stood up an" 'dressed me as ' ' :
x Teller cltlxen.- v- . -f
Washington SUil ! .
- -