Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, September 01, 1913, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, RALEM, 0BE005, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER L
SCORES B!G SUCCESS
Play Mow Running at Cohan Theater
Taken from Short Stories by
Montague Glass.
"WELL ADVERTISED IN HIS
CLEVEB TALES OP JEWISH
People Anxious to See Character on
Stage After They Have Bead of .
Him for Many Months.
By BEAU BIALTO.
(Written for the United Press.)
New York, Sept. 1. That clever
atoriee, even if they are devoid of
thrillers and plots to grip the attention
of readers, may be made into clever
plays, has been demonstrated by the
instantaneous and phenomenal success
of "Potash and Perlmuttor," now run
ning at the Cohan theater. The play
is taken from the short stories by Mon
tague Glass, built around the trials
and tribulations of Abe Potash and
Mawruss Perlmutter, manufacturers of
cloaks and suits by wholesale, which
for several years have been running in
various magazines of America. Abe
ami Mawruss have become familiar
characters to readers all over tho Unit
ed States, which may account for the
fact that while tho play opened a week
irlier than Broadway usually begins
the season, and the night was one of
the hottest on record, the theater was
jammed to capacity at the premier.
Seats were quickly sold for as far in
advance as ten weeks and the play
promises to be the season 's biggest suc
cess. Plays like "Potash and Perlmutter"
are popular, not because of the drama
they contain, not especially because of
the ability of the men and women in
the cast, but because the public knows
Abe and Mawruss and recognizes them
as old friends when they see the ad
vertisements of the play. Few people
there are who can read who have not
at some time or other laughed at the
antics of tho two Hebrew partners and
their cronies, and thoy want to see
them in "real life." Also there is an
other human quality that perhaps the
jrnKinagers take into consideration, and
that is tho curiosity nf tho reader to
know how a story can be made over
into a play.
Those things which characterize the
immediate success of "Potash and
Perlmuttor" wore noticeable two sea
sons ago when "Gct-Hich-Quick Wall
ingford" was dramatized. Goorge
Randolph Chestor's humorous Btorios
of the fat and jovial business bucca
neer, Wallingford, had appeared in
weekly and monthly magazines for sev
eral years, and whon people beard of
the piny they went out of curiosity and
their admiration of the hero of tho
Chester stories. When people read,
woek after week, and month after
month, the doings of a character cre
ated by a clever writer, thoy come to
feel they know the character, and when
they have an opportunity to see him on
the boards thoy feel almost like he had
"come to life."
Almost every night nowftdays sees
the premier of some new play. The
Broadway season . has opened, and
though' it is early, a lot of the new
plays are being tried out. Some have
been "tried on the dog" in Boston,
Atlantic City, Chicago, St. Louis and
Knnsas City, but many of them first
- see the light on Broadway. Joseph
Hautloy, comedian and dancer, mado
his first metropolitan attempt as a star
the othor night in "When Dreams
Come True" at the Lyric. It wins a
musical comedy that was tried out in
Kansas City and the hnd a successful
run in Chicago. Tho west liked it, but
its rocoption in New York wns a bit
lukewarm. Raiitloy, who is very clover,
Hud has done some great work in sup
porting others, somehow suggested
(Jeorgo Cohan In his singing ami danc
ing, and much of tho music nud action
of the piece reminded old playgoers of
"other muaicnl comedies tliey have
met." However, "When Dreams Como
True" has good qualities as well as
hod and it may hold on until tho fall
rush of importations from Europe
tarts.
"Believe Me, Xantippe," a farce,
opened tho next night and proved very
amusing. This is tho Harvard prize
play that was produced at tho uuivcr
sity hint season, and the roviows in
Now York newspapers cost every thea
trical manager in New York eight
dollars that is the fare to Boston and
return. They all went to see it and
the Shuberts got it. It is now being
produced by the Nhuberts in connection
with William A. BrndV.
been turned into a regular Indian
camp, with tepees, pots, kettles and all
the accoutrements of an Indian habita
tion on the plains. .
Fifty Indians, under the leadership
of Chief Joe White Eagle, were im
ported from one of the western reser
vations to take part in the Hippodrome
show, "America," with which the
amusement place opened its season.
When the aborigines arrived in New
York it was very hot and they de
clared they could never stand the con
finement of a hotel, no matter what
the cost of the rooms or suites given
them. They demanded that they be al
lowed to sleep out of doors, and the
management arranged the camp on the
roof.
WHILE EATING LUNCH
Though the went her continues reason
ably warm, the roof garden season Is
considered at an end, and Lew Fields
has moved his "All Aboard" from the
Forty fourth street roof of tho Weber
l'iebls Music hull on Forty-fourth
street. The piny, one of the frothiest
of summer productions, kept going
mainly by Low Fields and George Mon
roe, had a remarkable ruu all summer
and will remain on Broadway until It
goes on tour Inter in the fall.
The roof of the Hippodrome has
Talk at Some Length to Toilers and
Some of Women Stand on Top
of Motor Bus to Orate.
By CARLTON TEN EYCK
(Written for the United Press.)
New York, Sept. 1. City hall park
at noon time these days is one of the
busiest spotB in Greater New York. It
is in reality "the people 'b forum."
During the luncheon hour no less than
a dozen groups mny be seen in the
place listening to the harrangues of
politicians, reformers of all kinds, So
cialists, Industrial Workers of the
World, suffragists and religious work
ers. With old Benjamin Franklin, Horace
Greeley and Nathan Hale looking down
from their pedestals clearly puzzled to
know what it is all about, the street
erators expound thoir sure cures for all
the industrial and political ills of the
times and luncheon time in the park is
filled to overflowing. A few minutes
before noon the other day a motor Tjus,
like the ones that ply up and down
Fifth avenue and Broadway from
Washington square to Grant's tomb,
dashed into Park Bow alongside the
Franklin monument, covered with yel
low and white bannerB. From the roof
a bugle sounded and quickly the ve
hicle was surrounded by a crowd, for
it is the easiest thing in the world to
got a crowd in City Hall park at noon.
Tho motor bus is a now wrinkle and
they do not know what to make of it
until a woman, standing up on top of
the buss begins to demand votes for
women. Then the vehicle was quickly
deserted by about half of tho crowd. It
is tho latest scheme adopted by the
Now York suffragists to spread thoir
propaganda and every noon and some
times in tho late evening, whon the
woathcr is favorable, tho suffragists
mount a motor buss and go down to
join the other oratora in City Hall
park.
About the same time a hand organ
can be heard at the curb near Brook
lyn bridgo, and a glance there shows
several' women with brilliant red
badges across thoir waists. They are
Btriking knitters, who want more pay
and shorter hours, and thoy are appeal.
ing to tho public to contribute to their
support while thoy are idle in their
fight against the emptors. While the
liond organ plays the strikers go about
among the crowds, collecting nickles,
dimes and pennies.
Pleads for Oaynor.
nut the womon are not the only
people taking advantage of the hugh
noon oay crowds that pour into the
park from tho Woolworth building and
other skyBcmpers in the downtown dis.
ii in. itn vne municipal campaign
wen underway, the advocatos of the
various mayorlty candidates are niak
ing nay whilo the sun shines. In one
ot A bowhiskorod man with eye
glasses on tho oud of his bulbous nose
pleads in strident tones for tho re
election of Mayor Oaynor, whilo some
of his hearers laugh audibly and ask
what about "the lid" on the Great
Uhito Wayf A few yards away, try
ing to out-shout the loudness of his
rival, another mnn extolls the virtues of
John Purroy Mitchell, the Fusion can
didate, and still another self-constituted
campaigner brags about tho prowess of
District Attorney Whitman, even
though the prosecutor lvna turned down
tho Republican nomination.
The most animated groups among tho
dozen or more in tho noon crowds, how
ever, aro those discussing industrial
problems. The Socialists harrangue and
argue with any and all who will listen,
whilo tho I. W. W. spielers are always
In evidence and a few older men en
gngo in heated controversies about "the
initiative, referendum and rocall" al
ways linked together.
"mi an ineso orators going at once,
once can hardly make his wav through
the crowded pln.a at luncheon time,
" orators aro not all, Tho hawk,
ers crowd tho sidewalks at every Btep,
mo or tnree men want to sell books
thafwill make you an American citi
Ki.ll tir ......... i I i .
'"'" una a dozen or
more will sell yon a street guide of
ew iork and Brooklyn for a nicklo.
Others aro selling shoes, poefcet knives,
suspenders, collar buttons, chocolate,
ihoe strings, pencil and almost evorv
nni.nivnl.lA ..-.II V!. . a ...
uujocx irom the travs
that ire suspended from their shoul
ders.
New Brand of Newsboys.
At the Brooklyn bridge exits of tho
subway may be found a new brand of
newsboys,
There are always from half a dozen
St. Paul Man Who Started on Shoe
string and Has Made Fortune la
Is Ousted by Secretary Lane.
DISAGREEMENT AND SUIT OP
OLD PARTNER IS FATAL
Charges Filed by Disgruntled Man and
Result is Undoing of Famous
Photographer.
CHITSD MUSS LEASED WIHI.
Pocatello, Idaho, Sept. 1. Secre
tary of the Interior Franklin K. Lane
announced at Pocatello while in that
city enroute out of Idaho, after an
inspection of projects in the southern
part of this state for Salt Lake, that
he had cancelled the contract of the
Monida & Yellowstone Stage Company
which operates in the national park
from the west, or Idaho entrance,
known as the Yellowstone. The an
nouncement is of interest to Idaho trav
elers, ' including many Boise people,
who have gone through the park over
the Monida route.
The revocation of the contrast is to
take effect September 16. The ruling
marks the passing of F. J. Haynes, a
St. Paul promoted, who from a shoe
string started in the stage coach busi
nens in the park, built his system up
in six years until his company was
hauling as many tourists as the old
established Yellowstone Park Trans
portation company, which is operated
by II. C. Childs, of 'Helena. The Mon
ida company was charged with and
convicted of violating its contract with
tho government by giving a rebate of
so many dollars on each tourist to the
Oregon Short Line railway in the trans
portation of visitors throughv the Yel
lowstone park. Secretary Lane, who
investigated tho charges on his recent
visit to Montana aud the park, is
casting aboct for a new contractor to
handle the stage business of the Mon
ida company.
Is Well Known Figure
F. J. Hyanes, who was convicted of
the chargo of making the contract for
the rebato with the railroad, is per
haps the best-known figure in Yellow
stone park. He owns the official pho-
togrnph rights of the park and made
a neat fortune on the sale of post
cards. Ho has stands for the disposal
of cards and souvenirs at every hotel.
The .charges against him were filed by
W. W. Humphrey, with whom Haynes
was associated when the Monida com
pany was struggling for a foothold.
Thoy disagreed and Humphrey lost In
the courts whe he sued for an old
debt he alleged Haynes owed him
Then ho filed the charges.
Haynes displayed nerve in entering
the transportation business. The
transportation company which owned
the hotelB in the park had practically
all the park travel, which, by reason
of the long drive of the new company,
went to tho park by the northern or
Gardiner entrance When Haynes
formed the Monida company to com
pote with the hotel company's lino,
tourists left the train at Monida,
Mont. Haynes had relays of horses
every 15 miles. By a hard effort he
was able to get tourists to the Foun
tain hotel after a 10 hour ride. The
Oregon Short Line was looking for a
direct entrance to the park, and Haynes
proposed that the railroad be exten
ded on the Idaho Falls branch to
Yellowstone. This was done, the Short
Line building a fine station at Yel
lowstone. This made an easy drive
Into the park and new arrangement
brought wealth to Haynes. His coach
es began to bo crowded, and in 1011
he took his place as an equal rival
of the old-established company. Tho
present order of Secretary Lono means
that ho will lose tho system after he
has brought it into its paying state.
Closoly Allied With Park
Ilnynes' life has been closely allied
with Yellowstone park. Ho wns one
of the exploring party that made the
only circuit of tho park in midwinter.
As leader of that party he suffered
niHiiy hardships and nearly lost his
rife. Haynes' photograpns and re
ports were regarded as of real value
by scientific men.
Representatives of tho Oregon
Short line say the ousting of Hiivnes
would have no effect on tho travel
to the Yellowstone entrance, as the
contract is not cancelled until Sept.
HI, which is the day following the
closing of the park for the season.
Tho new transportation contractor
will have all winter to prepare for next
year's travel.
"CONFECTIONERY".
Centurlss Ago It W a Part of the
Art of the Apothecary.
Curiously enough, the making of con
fectionery originated In a way with the
apothecaries about COO years ago. It
was then that augur was first imported
Into England, and It was then that
"confections" flret became known. For
a time tbey appeared only In medical
form, the apothecaries using the newly
imported sugar as a means of mitigat
ing the bitterness of their doses, la
other words, they mixed their drugs
with it, and therein lay the origin of
many of the sirups and medicated can
dles, tbe ancestors of our cough drops
and lozenges. Tbe cost of sugar was
far too high, and most people were far
too poor to permit of its being eaten
for its own sake alone and as a mere
luxury.
It wns only a couple of centures ago
that there began to appear a new
phase of tbe apothecary's art Con
fections began to be made more or less
apart from any medicinal purpose and
because people liked them, and eventu
ally tbe confectioner's business became
quite separate and distinct from that
of the apothecary.
Although tbe confectioner's trade
may be said to be about 200 years old.
It was only within recent times that it
became a real and extensive Industry.
At first sugar was beavily taxed, and
the confectioner's trude was pursued
upon very elementary principles. For
a long time everything was done by
band. Implements were of tbe very
simplest candy kettles heated on small
brick furnaces, pestles and mortars,
rolling pins and scissors, etc. Tbe out
put wns very smull, and, comparative
ly speaking, sweetmeats of all sorts
were expensive and frequently unat
tractive. All this has been changed, and now
adays tbe most improved machinery
and Implements combine to produce
tbe most delicate and attractive sweets.
Muscles have beeu superseded by en
gines, pestles and mortars and rolling
plus, and scissors have given place to
revolving pans and steam pans, and
mechanism for beating and kneading
and mixing, for cutting and slicing and
grinding, for rolling and grating and
tumping, for crushing ice and freezing
cream and other processes.
While muuy of the best and most
expensive candles are still very largely
made by hand processes, by far the
greater mass of sweetmeats is produc
ed by machinery. Harper's Weekly,
Hopkins, the Witch Finder.
Thougb sum people still believe In
witches, there Is no longer any use for
tbe witch tinder. Englishmen of ear
Iter generations gave this person abun
dant employment, sometimes fetching
the renl expert enormous distances to
cleanse an jitlllcted town. In 1(140, foi
Instance, the mnglstrntes of Newcastle
sent luto Scotland for one who could
Hnd wltcbes, agreeing to pay '-'0 shil
lings ($4.8()i s head for all Unit he con
victed. Ills purtkular method consist
ed In pricking the suspect with pins,
nud fifteen old women were duly exe
cuted as the result of bis visit The
most notorious of witch finders, one
Hopkins, was finally executed as a
wizard after trial by oue of tbe more
painful of bis own many cleverly de
vised tests.
Elizabeth's "Excellent Wash."
Good Queen Bess liked ber ale and
bad to have It Wherever she went
there ale bad to go also strong ale.
Great were Jhe trials of ber host, the
Earl of Leicester, as expressed in a
letter from Hatfield to Lord Burleigh:
"There was not one drop of good drink
for bor here. We were fnin to send
to London and Keuilwortb and divers
other places where ale was. Her own
beer, was so strong as there was nc
man able to drink It" And one quart
of thla "excellent wnsb" of good strong
ale for breakfast, we are told, put
the queen in good spirits for the start
of tbe day's work. London Chronicle.
to a score of the little fellows, all boys
under ten years of ne, who cry,
"Morning paper" at every man and
woman who eomcB from the subway,
but tjjose boys have nothing to sell. In
stead of offering newspapers for sale,
they are begging them.
Tho various newspapers of New York
pay for "returns." That i, they will
redeem for half a cent all newspapers
unsold. The boys who beg the newspa
pers from the subway passenger take
them to an agency who buys them,
irons them out smooth and collects the
half cent offered for each one.
Many of the dontown offices have
rules that employes msst not bring
newspapers into them. Kmployes in
such places always discard thoir news,
papers when leaving the subway and
the little beggars reap a rich harvest.
Hugo's Long 8snttnoe.
For tbe longest sentence on record
we must go to tbe French. In "Les
Mtserables" Victor Hugo bos one sen
tence that runs through a hundred
lines, and earlier In the book. In one
of the chapters deseriptlse of Water
loo, there are over fifty lines without
a full stop. England's record rests
under pfllclnl pntronage, for It wonld
appear to be the seventh section of
the foreign enlistment act, wblcb does
not stop until It has very nenrly reach
ed Its six hundredth word. London
Graphic
Long Llvsd Ornaments.
Ornaments Inst loneer than anything
else that man runkea There are
brooches and necklaces In museums
more than forty centuries old. Mon
uments, perhaps, stand second, and
houses third. The life of furniture Is
shorter still There Is very little fur
niture In England whlcb dotes be
yond the yeor i.MK) Pictures last long
er than furniture, and there are paint
ings still In fair condition which bsvs
weathered six centuries of life.
AHCIEHT8ECRETS.
Priceless Recipes That Are Now
Lost to the World.
COLORS OF THE OLD MASTERS.
TTwy Are the Envy, and the Despair of
Modern Artists, to Whom Thsir
Composition Is a Mystsry Orsek
Fire and Roman Mortsr.
Numerous are the trade secrets hand
ed down generation by generation
from father to son, and vast Is the
capital made out of some of them In
the commercial world of today.
Particularly, perhaps, Is this the case
among the numerous manufacturers of
piquant sauces and the countless vend
ers of patent medicines.
But there Is also. It must be remem
bered, another side to the case. Many,
alas, are tbe priceless trade secrets
buried far down below the moldering
dust of the misty past and lost to the
world, perchance never again to be re
covered. To cite the first example that occurs
to tbe mind of tbe writer, for instance;
what would a Royal academician of the
present day give to be possessed of the
secret held by tbe old masters Ra
phael. Rubens, Corregglo, Van Dyck
and their compeers for mixing their
colors so as to render them Imperish
able and impervious to tbe rnvuge of
time?
The red colors especially of these
artists of a bygone epoch are every
whit ns bright now as tbey were
three long centuries ago. On tbe
contrary, the colors of pictures paint
ed only 100 years ago have lost their
luster and are faded and decayed to
a deplorable extent
Again,' In the world of music, the
manufacturers of violins old masters,
as one may Justifiably term tbem. In
another branch of art treasured a
recipe for a varnish that sank Into the
wood of their incomparable Instru
ments and mellowed it as well as pre
served It
With such extreme, relentless Jeal
ousy, however, did they guard their
great secret that It too, Is lost to all
appeasnnces, Irretrievably.
Rather more than 100 years ago
there lived In a quaint, old world vil
lage In Wales a working blacksmith
who bad managed by some means or
other to bring the welding of steel to
such a pitch of perfection that the
Joint was absolutely invisible and the
temper of the steel ns fine as on the
dny It left the tester's bands. By his
process he wns nble to Join the very
finest of sword blades, and after be
had finished with them they were ab
solutely as good and as sound as wben
they hnd left the factory.
The blacksmith's fume spread far
and wide. and. naturally enough, he at
tained a great reputation, but he made
a point of invariably working in soli
tude. He was offered large and tempt
ing sums to divulge his secret but
kept it obstinutely to himself, and
when his span of life had run its
course be took It with him to another
world.
Tbe ancient Greeks bad a substance
which we call Greek fire and which
they used In naval warfare.
Their method of employing It was
simply this to throw the substance
upon the surface of the water, where
it flamed up and set fire to the ships
of the enemy. What was it?
The only known substance of the
present day that would do this is the
metal potassium, but to set Ore to a
ship In the manner described would
necessitate tbe use of at least half a
ton of the metal. Where did the
Greeks obtain tbe substance tbey used
with such effect? Or how did they
make It? If Greek fire was potassium
the secret of the process Is another
that must be numbered with the lost
The mnn who could disinter the
burled recipe for Roman mortar would
be bowed down to and worshiped by
the builders of the present day. How
they mado It is a profound secret and
bids fair to remain so.
The mortar Is as firm now as It was
2,000 years ago. It has calmly scoffed
at the ravages of time and weather.
The above are but a few-a very
few of the lost and burled secrets of
antiquity which modern scientists and
mechanicians would give much to
learn. London Answers.
10c
Then 8h Got Mad.
"I've never seen the mnn yet" she
declared, "who couldn't be made a fool
of by a pretty woman."
"Urn!" he replied "Of course yon,
I tnke It have studied the matter from
the standpoint of the Innocent bv
stamler "-Philadelphia Ledger.
The Party Llns.
nnhb.f-Wby didn't you come to the
door and let me In? Wlfe-I couldn't
(lenrtre Our neighbor wns talking to
somebody, nnd I wns at the phone.
Clerelniirt I'lnln Dealer.
Few thltiir. are Impossible to 3111
gence ami skill. -Hsmnel Johnson
Probably many policemen have at
heart, little sympathy with the snti-X-Hay
dress order.
When a bachelor makes up his mind
to get married all he has to do is to
top dodging.
Globe Theatr
THE HOUSE OF REFINEMENT
Big Labor Day Program
The Greater Call
3-Reel Eclair Feature ?
The Chinese Laundry
Comedy
Hy Moyer
Cartoon.
Mr. Warren R. Jackson
Robust Tenor
Miss Mable Mansfield
Lyric Soprano
All This Big Show for 10c
Always the Pipe Organ
Globe Theatre
is.:
10c
Etiquette of Today
That Held Him.
One of the young men In tho board
ing house had the double fnult of slow
ness In paying his bill nnd fusslness
about the tnble service. One imirulng
he suld peevishly to the landlady. "Mra
Jones, will yon tell me why my napkin
Is so damp'
"Yes. Mr. Wicks." replied tbe land
lady promptly. "It's because there is
so much due on your board." Brook
lyn Times.
Close,
"You say he Is stingy?"
"Stingy! I should sny be was stingy.
Re never tipped a waiter but once In
his life, it wns on bis weddltut tour.
nd the tightwad gave the waiter 10
cents and asked for a revelpt"-Chl-cngo
Tribune.
Authorltatlvs.
"So you are going to leave your stn
dlo?" "Leave? No. Who told you so?"
Tour lamllord."-Phllnde1phla Inquirer.
Tbe most Important attribute of
mnn as a moral being is tbe faculty of
self control.
Tost yourself before yon start a dis
rtission when you're thoroughlv In
formed you 11 know it's best to iisten.
"A man's wife usually thinks he is
perfect." The poor fool who wrote
that must have bcea a bachelor.
Denies That President Intended It to
Be Order for Americans to Leave
Mexico at Once.
UNITED rSIBS LEABED W1BI.
Washington, Sept. 1. The Mexican
situation was jpracjticb.lfy iinchrnged '
today. Senator Bacon, chairman, of
the Benate foreign relations committee,
conferred with Secrotary of State Bry
an. Later Senator Bacon issued the
following statement:
"The president did not intend that
his statement on the Mexican situation
should bo construed as as an order for
Americnn citizens to leave Mexico.
Neither should it be construed as a
preliminary wnrnig of armed inven
tion. It simply meant that fighting
between the two factions is likely to
become more serious than ever, and he
suggested that it would be better for
them to leave the country
"The president did not menn that
this country will not continue to pro
tect American citizens in Mexico, or
should befall them."
UNITED IHESS LEASED WIBE-l
Hanover, Sept. 1. President Wilson
motored here today from Cornish and
played golf at the Dartmouth College
links. His opponent was Dr. Grayson.
It was learned that the latest dis
patches from Mexico are reassuring
and that the president is undecided
whether to return to Washington tomorrow.
TO BEING THEM CLOSES.
I UNITED PRESS LEASED WIRS.l
Syracuse, N. Y., Sept. 1. Speaking
at a Labor day picnic at Long Branch,
ncrvr here, today, Secretary of Labor
William B. Wilson declared that his de
partment of the government would be
used to bring the worker and tho em
ployer into closer relations. He char
acterized his department as a "bureau
of industrial diplomacy."
A WOED ON DEE3S. j
By Mrs, Frank Leum
The essentials which cnantlmj
well-dressed woman are that iheto
in proportion to her means, U i J
ance with her position and l!t j,:
wears what is appropriate to tlx :
sion, docs not dress conspicuwlr u,
does not adopt exaggerated noteltis,
fashion. The well-bred woman avoidi itor !
ness, overtrimniing and refuiestm!
anything that is Buggestire of I
of modesty. Personal appearand:. I
dress are very sure imlicatiotiofth '
acter. The woman or girl who tow
merely to gratify vanity, pride, to-;:
display, shows what are berehmr
istics and aims.
A woman who may be nlilt loil:V
costly materials ami jewel! im t
wear them in the 'morniog or i
traveling.
There is a happy medium ton.
foolish . extravagance and, ami':
economy in dress. Economiiiig '&
not menn saving in netessirju
neat clothes. Exquisite npitin'ii
daintiness is every one'i doly.ip
bred woman is as careful to h V
undergarments as fresh and ant si'
gowns or hat
For business hours a quiet, lii;
dress of good, durable material b
sirable. A bnsinesi girl who soi
neat, plain dress, bat liri
trimmed, well fitting, neat fit
and shoes, commands reaped it
girl's dress is "loud," her hat nr
laden with cheap trimmings, tit p
claims herself as inexperienced h t-
ways of ths world and not .
mental qualities of a high order, t
aggorated and conspieuoui iflio
tions in hairdrcssing had belt V
avoided.
Tho best-dressed girls do not n
jewelry Cheap imitation jeieM"
in poor taste.
An important thing is to aniU'
use of Bcents. It ia ineicunkk -have
any redolence upon the "
from sachet, essences or strotg r
fumery.
'The faintest whiff of Wirtf
tume is all that may be allow
A clean, pure skin, kept !' '
daily bathing and the constant
soap and water, la an evident ;
woman of refinement anil don
tho addition of a cent.
QUESTION CHARLTON.
UNITED MESS LEASED WH1S.1
Lake Como, Italy, Sept. 1. Attorney
Mellini, representing the dofenso, and
Magistrate Hognon, accompanied by an
interpreter, this afternoon began an in
termination of Porter Charlton, recent
ly returned here from the United States
for trial on tho charge of having mur
dered his wife, formorly Mary Scott
astle of San Francisco. Charlton's
trial probably will start in November.
TEA VERS PLAYING TODAY.
trmiTiD rnsss leased wirs.J
Garden City, L. I., Sept 1. With
W. J. Travers tho favorite, 145 golfers
stnrted hero today in the qualifying
round lor th,i national golf championship.
TAFT EXPECTS PEACE.
UNITED TRESS LKASBU WIKB."
Montreal, Sept. 1. Interviewed here
today, former President Taft said he
aw no reason why tho canal tolls dis
pute with England should not be Bet
tied amicably.
In rural schools in Misouri girls are
organized into "piek-and-shovej clubB"
under the direction of tho National
Congress of Mothers, to aid in the good
roans movement.
Systematic study in citizenBhip 1b
given in the elementary schools of
Trance, Denmark and rinland.
THE DANCING BOO.
By Minna Irrinj.
"On with the dRnee, Irt jF h B"-j
fined," :
A famous pod thnj eirm
mind; i
And though the earth has longheo'
his breast J;
The world at last ohoyi ais P7 j
hc8t' m
His spirit Bpeaki at cabaret ww -
In every place where g,hfr w
With or without the strains s ,
sweet, f '
He pairs them off wi ,urt' j
eager feet.
"On with the dance, let j"? k""' j
r . II
nne i, , :
Is now the slojrsn heard '
dined. , , '
The tango, Texas Tommy, t' f ;
One-step and grizzly i't, ' i
thev not? y. t
The lean, tho fat, the ibiT " j
pate. , . :ii i v
The short, the tall, ths "" I
... Eyrft,e' whs.!
We stand united m 'UD . ,
For everybody's gottlsj I
The daughter of J' ' -
roda has been mr " '
patches don't describe
there must have been ,