0 TI 1 E SPRINGFIELD ' NEWS PAGE THREE IN SUMMER HATS White Llngcrio Headgear Likely to Return to Favor. lorn of th Smart Summery Milllntry It Formed From Burnished Llsor Straw. Willi (lie prominence bing given ly great French milliners to the broml bi IniiiH'tJ Imt of nuthjue leghorn with ribbon streamers or luce trimming, we need not bo surprlned, observes a fash luu authority, to see the white llngcrio hat worn 13 years ago with tho sim ple muslin dress return to popularity. Koine of tho summery lints are formed from ln rn ImIm'i ero HI raw, wlili no trlintiiliig oiherthan a nar row velvet ribbon il moil about tho crown ami t ! In u tiny bow ut the bni-k with long (lowing end. Kuiti model inn jr huvo Mini II bunches of fruit or flower tucked under the brim, an It M-em Unit there I no ten dency to depart from u bit of drooping trimming nt the side. Lnce Is lined more sparingly thnn Inst summer ami In It logical place for I he real dress Imt. Varnished rll boun nil varnished straws stilt are smart with glucinium or simple frock. A wlk brimmed h1ny struw lint, with a broii 'I gln.fil ribbon c-roHMlng the crown ami ending In loop or fringed I'm) nt either side, U decidedly ut tractive. The true spirit of summer appears In Nome of (ho Miopia straw hats by our own American milker. Very lovely to wear with a singer white frock I one of bright green horse Imlr with a drooping brim, rut wide at the side nnd short- In the buck nnd front. The only trimming I n wrt-nth of green leave going across the front nn.j extending beyond the brim on either nlde. With tho movement for four sen sou In ihl country Iho hirge. sum inery Imt will doubtless grow In favor. Thl Indorsement of 1'nrl nnd the Keiidlhg oer of tunny large shape to be copied fur thin mhlMimmor season will dotil.tU-M hnvo n very definite CHIC FROCK OF WHITE CREPE This very pretty frock of white erepe I embroidered In moit winsome flow ers and Is an outfit that Is sure to ap peal to many women. h r- v-iN : fca A GREEN SUMMER IS INDICATED r Brilliant Hues Popular on Atlantlo City Boardwalk for All Kinds of Apparel. Green In all Its varied hues, In lints, frocks, uport outtlts, Bweuters, penrfs und even stockings, wns the llonrdwnlk color recently when thou sands revelled In gorgeous sunshine. Mnny forecast n "green nummer." Observant strollers wero over whelmed with tho conviction that nine out of every ten small women hnve a predilection for large hats with lit tie trimming or ainull Imta with a superabundance of decoration. Flapper are going In for brlmless licndgcnr, with nn enthusiasm akin to tho funcy of their big sisters for the adaptable snllor In all Its variations. Ko far ns appearances go, It would have been la gross exaggeration to sny thut some of the secretly plain ' skirts contained the minimum two yards of fabric. Common-sense heels never were so popular with so many of those who STYLISH BLACK SATIN WRAP i r Of the modish black satin, but dis tinctive in cut. Is this redlngote from Paris. The wide sleeves are as con venient as they are graceful and charming, for they prevent the satin from being too warm for a aummer wrap. y bearing on the efforts of our own mil liners to erente n detmwid for renl Hummer lints nt this time. It "would aeem iiiuieresMiiry that nny grent amount of effort ahoiild be expendeil to develop four si'usons In clothes. They Miould exint logleully. I!ut here In America they luive uoU There bnve priictlcnlly been only two fU'imoiis In millinery. KEEP SEWING BASKET HANDY Convenience Should Be Available In Bedroom, Sewing and Sitting Rooms as Time-Saver. Keep n completely stocked aewlng bntiket In liedroom, Hewing room and Hitting room. In this way u nny quick Hlltcl.es tun be tuken, which would not hnve been Ink en If everything hnd to be hunted up. - In tho Hilling room bnsket, keep a piece of pickup work and when nn un exx'ctcd culler comes, ihls can be worked on, when one would not fee nt liberty to tnke time to huut up the things. Also keep u sewing bng rendy with a piece of work nnd necessnry threads, etc., so Hint when you go out to cnll or visit there Is always some thing ready to take with you. This Is a llttlo extra expense to begin wiin, as It requires four pnlrs of scissors nnd four thimbles, but It amply re pays In the end In the extra amount of work done. Complexion Brushes. Every precaution should be taken in iho cure of complexion brushes. The skin of the face Is extremely smiKltlve ond. If nny dirt Is allowed to remain in tho brush. It will lodge In tho tiny nores of the skin, r.leni Ibhes result which often take many months to heal. . After thoroughly washing brushes they should be nbiced In the sunshine. After a thor oiigh drying, be sure and place them where the dust cunnot reach them. formerly regarded French lieels as the only kind possible for noardwalk wear. The "military" heel for the time being has displaced Its rival of foreign derivation and there Is less complaint about "Jionrdwalk feet." Hundreds of large women, large In itnturc, by adopting tho walstless frock with the linked girdle have qualified for plnces iu the "trim" dl vision of their sex. A riiiladelphlan assorted that Philadelphia women this spring ore manifesting a penchant for colors quite unusuul with many of them. A naw decree from Dame Fashion's court, nupersedlng tho shoe-color man date f(r hosiery, authoritatively ex plulns why a great ninny silver-haired women are wearing stockings nnd slippers to blend with their coiffure. - To Mend Gloves. If gloves are torn buttonhole edges of the torn places and close the rent by running your needle through the loops of the stitches. SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT By F. A. IN YOUJl HOUSE. t YOU are not a careful reader of the lilbla you may have the Idea that all the miracles which' it details are In the New Testoment, but If yon will turn to the fourth chapter of II Kings you may read an enter taining story of one of the remarkable things performed by hllsha In the nitiltljJIoatlon of the pot of oil. Ellsha performed many miracles, but of them all this one Is perhaps the most Interesting. A widow, one of the wives of the sons of the prophets, tells Kllsha that her creditors have come to take her two twins as bondmen In settlement of what she owes. Ellsha asks her what she has In the bouse which might be available to settle the debt. Her reply la that her only possession Is a pot of oil. At bis direction the wotnan sends her sons to gather oU the empty re ceptncles in the neighborhood and when they have been brought she obeys the command of Ellshn that she shrill pour from the pot of oil Into the empty vessels and this she con tinues to do until all are filled and then she sells enough of the store of oil to pay her debts nnd there is sulll clent left to supply her and her sons. . What hnve YOU In YOUIt house? The trouble with most of us Is thnt we never value very hlgldy the possi bilities of whnt we hnve. The apple on the high brnnch al ways looks bigger nnd fairer to us thnn the one In our bond. The Job Ihnt the other fellow has always seems easier und more satis factory than our employment. The other man's lot always seems phasiinter thnn ours nnd his pros pects nnd chnnces brighter nnd more nttrnctlve. The trouble Is we do not pmirly exnmino nnd truly estlmnte nnd wise ly use what we have "In OUlt house." Success Is made up entirely of whnt we hove and bow we use It. No man was ever born who did not .have the possibility of success. No man ever uvea who uia nor hnve plenty of opportunity to suc ceed. The mnn who snys "I never hnd a chance," Is Just lying to himself as en excuse for his failure. Lord I?ocon said, "A wise man will make more opportunities than he finds," nnd thai is much truer thnn the famous poem Senator Ingalls wrote thnt pictured opportunity ns knocking only once nt a man's door or the picture which Itabelnls drew of Opportunity ns a womnn with a lock of hnlr on her forehead but with the hack of her bend completely bnld; mennlng that Opportunity must be grasped ns It conies toward you for once It has passed there Is "nothing to seize. Every day has its opportunity. Most of us think that these every day opportunities are not big enough to bother with and we wait and wait, thinking that something tremendous will come along and ask us to ac cept It. .M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 THE GIRL ON THE JOB E now to Succeed How to Get 5 Ahead How to Make Good . 1 By JESSIE ROBERTS jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin LIlllCAIlIANS. THE demand for the trulned li brarian Is on the lucrease. But many young women are leaving the regular library to take up allied work that pays better. The new demand outside of the reg ular library comes from big business corporations who want their business organized. Special literature of all borts Is part of their dully material, and they see the need of a proper In dexing for nil this material, and for milking It available for Immediate use as the books In n library are available. Asldo from the bigger concerns are suclr clients us a lawyer or a doctor with n large practice. Such men will often have a whole lltrary that Is use loss unless properly Indexed. Many women who began as librar ians are now holding excellent posi tions, where their Ubrury training proved the esseutlu! Iu their uew work. As the librarian can as yet look for ward at best to hardly more than $1, 600 a year, the best trained and more ambitious women are following the commercial path. Itut a librarian's training ts proving to be excellent for other work. Many Walker If the widow hod decided, despite the directions of Ellsha, that the pot of oil had no possibilities of solving her financial difllcultles, she would have lost her sons to her creditors and the whole plan of the restoration of herself and her family to happi ness and comfort would have mis carried. It Is well to know accurately Just whnt our resources are. We should know Just what we are capable of accomplishing and then be sure thnt the accomplishment Itself Is 100 per cent of our possibilities. . I-ook through your mental house nnd your physical house ond you might even take a hurried glance at your moral house. See what Is there of which you are not making the fullest and most profitable use. See, too, what is there thnt should NOT be there, that Is hindering In stead of helping you, and get rid of It. Maybe you have o lot of oil quite ns valuable as was the widow's and are laboring as she was under the Impression thut you are without re sources. The old-time miracle can be repeated In YOUIt case, If you go about It In the right way. (Copyright.) SCHOOL DAYS fiSfc -0m TE CHEERFUL CHERUB Ktrp pkyed or y We; Tke $ood t-nd t.d iKtA etch yewr brink's Vorvt rest witk rre. A tJll mv iob Ii just toKt-ve ro kroker strings girls do not stop at organizing special libraries for their new employers. They go on to become heads of depart ments, undertake the Installing of bus iness systems, of filing and cata loguing, and even run offices of their own. (Copyright.) O tfolHcfKooPook When we y we are undone, we mean only that we have weakened and run up the white flag. We are contented because we are hap py and not happy because we are con tented. Uurke. SOMETHING GOOD TO EAT. ArUDDINQ that you may give the children Is: Noodles and Ham. Butter a baking dish and put Into It a layer of cooked noodles, cover LYRICS OF LIFE By DOUGLAS MALL0CI1 BRAVERY. ALL bravery Is not In death. However glad and glomus To breathe the gases' toxic breath, Among the clouds a bird to be. Or to go gown within the sea Oh, It Is brave to battJe thus. And yet not all of bravery. There Is some bravery In life That never wins the world's applause: There Is no thrill In dal'.y strife To set our pulses leaping high Yet braver men may live than die, May suffer more In some god cause Than they who now la slumber lie. All bravery Is merely this: To live or die, as fate demands, Dut living, dying, never miss The duty Conscience makes ri plain : To know the right, the right maintain, Although it lose us life or lands And pay no recompense but pain. To face old Death amid men's cheers. Yea, that Is bravery Indeed But to fight on through losing years. Some unencouraged task to do. Believe when none believe in you. In public smile. In secret bleed May God not count this something, too? (Copyright.) with a layer of ham or any chopped meat, then add another layer of noodles, add enough thin white sauce or broth to moisten, cover and bake until well heated through. Frozen Pudding. Beat the yolks of six eggs until light, add a sirup made of two cun f tils of sugar nnd one cupful of water boiled for Ave minutes. Beat one moment, take from the fire and beat until smootlt, chill, add one quart of crenm, a teaspoonful of vnnllla and freeze until mushy; then add a pint of fruit that has been crushed and put through a s'eve. Tenches ore especially good, or any fruit finely mashed. Freeze and let stand to ripen. (. 1921. Wtitern Nwpper Union.) ' o Odd Marriage Customs. In nil Slav weddings the bride la fetched by the bridegroom, emblemat lc of the time when bis forebears car ried their mates away forcibly. At Albanian weddings it Is correct for the brldo to weep aud show great reluct ance to leaving home. The bride groom must present the Bride with a handsome dress for the marriage, no mntter what his circumstances are, so that It Js known by all the guests that the dress the bride Is wearing bhows the taste of the bridegroom. O Apples Go to Every Continent Apples grown In the 1'aclflc north west have been exported to every con tinent, Including Australia. -O Somehow Its dirtieult for a man to believe that he Is as good as he ex pects hU wife to believe he Is.