The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1890-1908, September 13, 1908, Image 20
frfWlfiF IwlFlf
E,c ''in b~* c.3c. LllLi dLuJ-iuLsfliii \i
pall Suits apd
proeHs for Qlpildrei?.
Blue apd Overalls
ttye pauorite Suits
of tl?e fittle 5095
of tl?e /T\illio9aires.
Par
By Boys still '9 r< ?55?5-
Ope-Buttoi) Qloues
Bare firms.
IT !• wonderful bow the ’ Pl<l<ll<Ml milk*
the whole world klo. They nrnnn •
common sympathy. and ilio s common
f> dlgristlou (**y* my flippant husband
Cbollyl when (hey baw| on a train
V.rPn Min clothe* of the American young
•?er go to prove that In thalr atttlnd*
toward / rtlldrrn all rlsaee* of people bar*
fflcss A pen which they aim* A quaint
aort of almpltclty la tha standard for chil
dren's clot ha* aod If votes wart counted
amoni tha little eone of tha rich and tha
little lada of the no-if It would aoon be dis
covered that of all the aolta In thrlr ward
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ASrik? Z fk ' 1 fi J
Ifet [& mm
iMwf sis„
My If
s«|wC h 1
wjiif j j \v\ i\
I 1 1 \ 1 u
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th* h*h* hoy* lev* thetr “bin* t*sns H
Bo*t- Rt#b hla **llor cult is not •© 1m
ports nf a po***B*toa to th# young Amor
less si ar# hla or aml I a la rbU‘h ha romp*.
**d In whlrh ha play* that ha la a rarpan
•ar. a plamher -Jaek of-all trad**. In fart.
€>• a graat eosntry aatata at 1-ano* nr
Tssode th* ann of t|ta millionaire who own*
It aad th* ton of th# bk an a gar who rvio#
It ana ha mud plaa aid* hj aid*, aarh In bla
hi Da Jaaoa Non# as hahlaa ara horn
anoba. and nalttar ara thara any who raal>
la* thalr Inferiority to tha Hch. Th*
small ton of tha gardanar or mauagar nsv*r
tno«rt that h* la i#o* Important than hla
llttla n> worker In tha mud. A« Cholly
tal.a mo. I am gattlng to ha a Roolallat.
hut why not? In England ao many ladle*
•f tltla ara allying thamaaWaa with tha
laboring rlaaa I rawamhar tha part llttla
codger, th* ton of tha oo#<’h.Ban on Mr
P. ▲ B M tdanar a magnlA.*#at aatata at
Ashßoum# In .'coosylvants On* day P A
II waa making a tour >f Inapootlon. Tha
part youngster followad him #v#rywh#s#
• Walt my llttl* mai," aald TAB. “don’t
yon know who 1 inf "lr oouroa Ido
Too ro th# man who r* « It W fathor •
rorrlagoo ”
Of ©ouroo thora ara poorl# who tako
porttooior polna to oollghtan thalr obtldraa
la rognrd to thoir superiority of hlrth
Hut ( holly aod I har* l**on moat roraful
M to Irt llttla ('holly hoow that na <>o
loag (a tha Pour Huadroft It ta. I thlnh.
rat hoc aloa of na. oonaldarlng that Mm
lioorg* WT. Vaadarhllt norar allow* tha
goramaoa to addrao* bar llttla daughtar
without ualng bar full uma, ktlaa Cornalla
*tui van ant Vaadarhllt It raolly. «>«• ta
Witnh of It, W aacoodlagly aloo as na whaa
you tnho Into account who tha It nicker
horhora am th tart our hutlor. ftniroiy.
hoo a hoy. who la far morn upptsk than
aur awn doar htddl*
hMuaha* tha U(Ua rhUdroa hors uador
r^f—l
J
//vWrm
f'Ar \rr r' \
I If, y(/’if 11 t-'■ rV \
"the Il*d Whit* and -Blue’’ have dmiorraM
inatinctfl amothrrad lator In Ilf*. Thay nil
•♦* th# atmpl* clothe* for boy* and girl*
In tha magnaltioa and paper* Thay. hy
thalr own rhlldlah choice, hart h*li»*d to
evtaMUh !b* faahlona Than* ara. to ha
aura, ala hot** tc rlothaa that ar* #h»oklng In
price, and thay, I #upp« *a. ar* mor* Inter
aatlng to rand al»out, but altnpl* atilt* and
frock# for tha klddl#* ara now In atyl*
Than anothar thing, and thl* I* rral’r
droll Th* Importer* bring ovrr th# moat
©harming llttl# anlta, tho*# for hoy# not
yat In trou*#r* b*!ng much Ilka thne* for
th# girl* Th* ault for broth*r la )ti*t a»
dainty a« Wtat for alatar, and motbar think*
It'a perfectly aw**t Bonnie, how*v*r,
doasn't agr*a with h*r, a# ao*m •• h# no
th** that It la Uka alatar'a lu any d*tali
whatrvar
I ahall n*var forg*t th* dar. about two
y**r* ago. that 1 t«>ok llttla ("holly Into a
amart ohop on Fifth avanna (little ("holly
la. you kn»»w. a ratu ark ably big boy for
hla nga I'rarybody •*?# that renlly thev
narar aaw anything Ilk# It Tha aal#«m#n
In tha atoraa alwaya aay §o In particular*
Wall, aa 1 waa aavlog. I took llttla Cholly
In to buy a ault. I picked up on* with a
round Dutch nock ll* triad It on and
•aama.l wall plena**! until I happ*u*d to
•ftp that th* on* with hlu* rlbTwm* would
ba ao awrat for my alatar'a glrll*. HtOp
Prudanca Armour. Wall, wh*n my angel
child Cholly heard ma »nr that tha other
ault would h* nice for hit coualn Prudy,
ha gave a whoop of rage, almply raara*l up
on Ma hind leg* like a tr ta Knlckerlnvch*#,
and aald ha wouldn't juat Ilk# hla father.
tittle Cholly la ao clever!
Sow I’U tali you about aom# of Tha
thing* I'm going to buy for him thla Pall.
1 » ippoa#* It will h* mor* lulrraatlng If I
leave out tha plainer thtnga and chooa*
tha rlothaa that ch'.ldran In our art are
mor* apt to have Wb*o llttl# Cholly go*a
to Dodwortb# to dance, ha wears, for
aiampla. an Eton atm ith* that to ttlua
tradon G I<la llttla white ***ta ara a**
running It* haa a llttla high hat, a
’*•11 her,** for Dvlai occaaloua and whan h*
g”*a to n party, ha muat afterward* make
a anil, or rather imva bin augravad card,
white hla govern#*# aita below in the ear*
r tag* The** rarda aunt he absolutely cor*
met. In tbnpa they ara oblong Uka tho*#
hla fnthar haa Thay mutt ha atactiy on*
and on*eighth inch#* high and two and
one eighth inch'*# wid# Trudy, my nle-e
nine ban bar bits of pnatabonrd Thane.
In • hap*. am llha her mother's, our and
ann half Inch* atgh and lw* inch*# nlda
Bui, com* ta mutant bar It. aha had thou;
A—A Scotch Highland Drees of the Sort Worn by Douglas Dobinson and Lewis
Nison, Jr.
B A Girl's Sailor Suit of Dark Blu' Serge with Tie and Sash of White Silk or of
Scarlet Silk if Desired. Pleated Skirt Ldged with Rows of Soutache Braid. Gold
Buttons and Embroidered Anchor.
C 1 weed Suit with Single-Breasted Norfolk Jacket. Golf Stockings for Fall Days.
D A Cloak of Rose-Colored 1 afleta or Cashmere, with Collar and Cuffs of Em
broidered l inen.
& A Winter Paletot of Raspberry-Colored Coachman's Cloth. Revers of Sealskin.
White Vest with Gold Buttons.
F A Party Frock r>f Empire Mode’, of Voile Batiste. Short Tight Sleeves and
Flounce in Deep roin*
G—An Eton Suit with White Ve-t so- Dress Occasions.
when ah - ' was only two year* old They
were always used to attach to little gifts
she was supposed to send For that mat
ter. though, rny Boston bull. Matthew
Launcelot II (his mother was Peggy
Aristophanes I ot the r»nwsnn K •nne'al
had little carda engraved with h|s name.
little Cholly 1 * school suit, to be quite
up to to morrow, should have a Norfolk
Jacket that 1* double breasted, and
without a belt. But. as good authorities
a n r**e, th<* coat Is quite as stylish If single
ereflated and with a belt as hitherto Just
now, while we are up at Lenox, he Is
wearing stocking* with plaid tops (see II
luairation C.i I rrnlly think I ahnll have
him wear them wUru w* raturu aud wh«u
h# g.»#« to #chtvol.
All 8u tutar th* abort took* with plaid
topa ware worn hy children younger thau
my laddie. Tay wore ever ao pretty, in
pure white with a plaid hand at tha top
In ahadra of pink, cream color and hlu*.
th* pink square* Juat matching In color
tha moaqulto bltra on the fat llttla Irgn.
And than th# glove#! I ne'er m* any
thing ao droll aa the arnall non of Mr and
Mr* l awi« Jarhii W m I v. .* up at Ih*
dog *how at Oedney Parma. Howard Wtl
left’a place he waa walking hand in hand
ithe kiddie. i moan, not upward» oatwweo
hla good looking parrot a Ilia frock waa
law at the n*ck and had abort aieecc*
and there were one button glove* on hla
poor llttl# * a patty cake*' aud abort eocka
on hla tong little lag* I never could get
aw k-u ihoUjf ta wear lu* wo# w>uuua
rlr»r#« vrd th# «l<*#»vr|p*« ault* Tittle
Cbo?|r clover.
Then rhr.'lr hn, Mn «<v.trh nijhlnml
rn.tume Itr* plrfnfe A! Anflrur rnrn»*tn.
whnn hft .ftw Mm. he wa» n hmtr
I'iille IttfleeA Th. r.wl, Vl.on. alwnr,
Are...A lh.tr hr. T In R.ot.h ITl.blnnA ....
Itmi.. nnl n.n,ln. R.Mnnnn. th, PrMl
fl.nl’. hrnth.r In l.w. ... m.iir hronirM
up In n S.nt.h ...tnm. H. lived, mn
•in.fv, m Kl.hflnld Sprlnun. *nd all m»
.nuntr. bnr. n..d to .nf.h him .very
.hunt, th., e.t nnd Jont pln.h nnd pln.h
hi. fit llttl. npv.r dt.nmlnff fhnt h, d
grow np to marry n ,|,f. r 0 f
whom «„ ,1,, j,,,. of Tp , Mr tlMnl
A. for .nfior »nlf,. th,., n ,v,r go
«nt of ,1,1. Choll, h», on, for dr.n. np.
mrol, „ f wh!( , b , n|f , ||n#
Mg four ln hnnd tl. .f riel bln,. The
an.hor on Ih. -V" nnd th, nnrimw coll.r
bn, f,Ath,r Rtltrhlne of pul. blue.
Another „,|t of thl, eort I .n w on >fr.. n,
Voreelgb’, ,o n . bnf r.,ii, it horrid
nnd Ju.r think that bo, I, two yean older
thnn my rholly ,nd w.irn a ,nlt a whole
• lr. .mnller. An everybody enye. little
(-diollr I, n likely tint n nd a. everybody
also snrs. he hsn suvh ehftrmlng legs.
Anntoml.nl prut,. Is, you know, quite
proper In eoelefy Mre. Leslie Cotton, the
srtlst who recently pnlnt.il n picture of
the King us n p|ii n clothes nun. showed
me. for esstnple, s portrnlt thnt she hsil
utsile of two Itt'le girls. nunnlng hrr
flngcra along thalr nil in Itiuba of locomotion
ahe anld: ‘Thai’ didn't come ont well In
thla photograph made of the painting, and
It’a a sham*, for rc ally they arc charming
legs ” Well, to return to Mrs. I»# Vor
ivlgli'a boy. hU Bailor ault tand hla leg*
aren't a tilt charming) la of white moire
atlk with collar ami cuff* of coffee-colored
prince** lac*.
Th* Jollieat aallor ault* of all arc thoae
of aartr*. atilctly nautical In style, aud
l!kc th<*vi* w tlch the n«*na of Mr. (iawrge o.
Uuuld ha\* always worn.
lmt I mustn't run ft) so about th* *tyie*
for boys 1 must make haste to tell you
all about Trudy a clothes The other dny
alatar and I bought her th* sweetest party
frock you aver saw. It la tuad* In Kmplre
sty e, and th* pointed flounce at tha hern la
l>cwitching, ns you may note lu itlustra*
Uon F. I think ah* is beautiful. Every
body aay# ah* la mor* Ilk* ma than her
moth*. I think, my self. »he la much like
Hi*, ari **> unassuming, not the least olt
cobcclted. Tht igh. would you ballav* It,
aha *ent * paragraph to ciiy Kubjevta,
a aoclaty paper. t*lhng all about bar {tarty,
*bo w*ra 'auiong thoae pr*»eaf and bow
beautiful auc looked
1 Ilka the Ktuplr* model for children
Th# eitreuic.y long waist aud ballet
length skltl scan lu *o many ( ranch models
at* not greatly favorvd by Auiaricsa
mother*. >\u school. Trudy, of courtu,
ha* a »allor ault. aud ih* very latest
modal from Tarfta. 'Than 1 Ilka th* coal
s**u in dlu*trati*»o l> It i* d*«igu*d from
a luodoi mad* lu London. It U fur a
child from ait to twelve year* otd. Th#
coal may ha cut from roac-colored taffeta
or from a aoft caahmcr*. Th# collar aud
cuffs are of embroidered linen. This la
•Implicity at it* sweetest. The cap* for
children la London ara all copied from
tboMr aeen la pa I a ting* by th* old Mas
term. Tha Uouiuay caps are lovely lo
F'gu«* 1C on* a*a« a glrll* with a caouoo
tvab boauat laving rosettes at each side
over her ear*. Her paletot Is of coach
mm » cloth, raaberry red la co.or acd
ttuiabad off with straps aud cioin bauds
\ 1 / /■ '
a T\ c T?Tp\\\ M /TTriITX e r7 3
Sabli? for [jttle Qirls. Ja^ts
U/itb Qlui?y faee.
Sailor Suits of U/fyite (T\oire SilK
Si/r\pli<;ity at
Itc, Su/^t^st
•9
for
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vTJj'a • * > c;af[L, n j
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I
The white rest hn«: gold buttons and the
tope revers «r« of sealskin.
A sensible fad among the people of our
set Ih to dress (he girls, even lu bitter cold
wenther. In fine white pique. They wenr
heavy ulster#, but the white aklrt' shows
below the coat. Mrs. |)e VoraelgU. always
*o craty to be In the limelight, went a
bit too far. Her little girl had a bright
scarlet coat, a ucarlet hat and old-time
pantalets (modified n bit), showing De
r.enth her coat. You any. perhaps, you
don't believe it. Well. I really aaw her on
Fifth avenue and the nurse had a nig
Irish blush on her face. 1 think It'#
shocking to put pantalets on your baby
Jnat to become socially prominent. I
simply had visiting cards, a diamond col
lar and little things like that for my dog.
Matthew* Launrelot 11.. Id order to make
the society papers notice me and give me
more apace.
So many of the sisters In society dress
exactly alike One hears of the Sherman
twins (Irene and Mildred); the Pratt twins
(Constance and Beatrice), and they are not
twins at all. The two elder daughter* of
C arias Steele (both schoolgirl*), though
one Is much tuber and older than the
other, both wore beautiful pique frocks till#
Summer exactly alike to an embroidered
polka dot, with black aallor bats. The
Hutch necks were ao low they looked like
adult decollete. These ault* were beauti
fully embroidered, but the pique tailored
auitt* for Winter have uut a scrap of em
broidery or Insertion.
The daughter# of Mrs William K. Van
derbllt. Margaret and Barbara Hutherfurd
(children of her second marriage i also
dress alike. In Winter they wear quaint
round boo beta, suit* of heavy cord
uroy. and carry big muffs. One baa fuzzy
crimps standing out like a big ball of fluff
at each side of her face, and the other
has curia of the old-fashloued aort that
are brushed over a stick.
Mnnj of the little walking aulta for Fail
have coats oi a bright red, or of some
other gay color, worn with a dull striped
gray aklrt that haa a band at the beta of
the same gorgeon# color a* the coat. Often
the hat. the jacket aud thla gay l»and Ap
plied on the grav aklrt are of the aam*
color Above a band of bright red. for
Instance, cloth of bright red U often ap
plied in a Grecian key design.
Trudy a llttl# coat of ermine for dre«s-up
e#i astoua has a deep shawl collar of heavy
Irish lace through which black valxet rib
bon l» drawn around tb# shoulders below
the high rod collar facet! with black sal.tt.
Her bonnet is of the Irish lace with corn
colored bows of aatln ribbon at each side.
Th#n hrr father tof course, b# has mlt-
Itousi bought her a wonderful brown eblf
feu ciivnk tl Is made of layers upon layers
of the (limy muter‘*l. Shadeu of golden
urov. u over tboaa of w;ru and un and from
Jhj[s2
AfX.
WjsMMm
rTW
r
/
biscuit color to cream color are laid one
over the other and this Is lined with
sable fur. Just think of chiffon lined with
fur! Then she has a suit of the new
color called antique green, and the little
Jacket, all but the sleeves. Is lined en
tlrelv with Cluny lace. Prudy was bom
with a diamond-studded spoon In her mouth,
hut In spite of the sumptuous linings, as
I tell my sister, she'll see before she dies
a little of the seamy side of life. Prudence
Armour we named her, after an ancestress
who came over In the Mayflower, but we
forgot that Armour translated from the
French means “love." and sneh nuns poor
Prudy has had to endure about prudence
and Imprudence In love. Sister really weeps
One society paper even printed a pun about
It so mean to have a child misrepresented
In the press at «o tender an age!
Hoth Prudy and Cholly yon know go to
Dodworth’a dancing school—the famous in
stltutfon where those of only the finest
family may learn to courtesy In the proper
way. Mr Dodwortb Is n great-nephew of
the great Hod worth, who led the orchestra
when Jennie Lind sang In Castle Garden.
When the little girls are presented to their
elders they must bob up and down, and
when they enter the room at dancing
school, they stand at the door and make a
long gliding bow with skirts outspread held
In the tips of their fat little Angers. All
the boys at Dodworth's, as did their fath
ers. work for au order, a bit of blue rib
bon called “The Golden Rule.” Little Van
A New Consumption Germ Discovered
AI.ONO. patl,nt ~rt,s of ,ip,rlm,nts
by Dr. Cobbett At Blytbewood.
England, hare r,v,al,d some remark*
able and unsuspected fsets about conamip
tlon. or tuberculosis of tbe lunjtw. In the
first place there are really two diseases
and two distinct kinds of germs whlcD
hitherto have beeu treated as one and the
same.
Tbta confounding of the two diseases Is
the cause of many failures of cures and
experiments In the disease, according to
Pr. Cobbett. The germ that causes ordi
nary tuberculosis of the lungs, or consump
tion. hns been found to be entirely different
from the bacillus that brings about tbe
dreaded -galloping consumption."
To treat the two In esactly the same
manner.” says Dr. Cobbett. "Is a. mnen
a mistake as to try to catch dogs and
cats with tbe same sort of traps. Von
might catch plenty of cats with a trap
placed on the top of a backy*-d fence, but
you cvouuld never capture a dog that way.
-The slow, or common, case Is tbe hopeful
kind. Taken early there la no reason why
any such case should not yield entirely to
treatment Er,ah air and good food art
all the weapons nature needs to mike
necessary repairs and oyercome the enemy.
“The germ of tha galloping' yarlety la
not hopefui —ln faet. It Is doubtful If tbera
ha* ever been a cure. Yet np to data the
two cases hart been treated aa one sod
the same, and henc, th, conflicting report.
"fr'ortuuately- the expert rneut, effectu '»
disprove Koch's trie* that ovu, aud ha
Th, Motorist', Aid.
"No. sir." said the motorist. ' tb* airship
Is utterly Impractical."
"Do you speak as s sclent Ist V
"No. air. A. a man of an eiperUnc.
Suppose yonr engine breaks or your gaso
line gives out aud leaves yon stuck away
up yonder In a cloud bank, how are you
going to gc. a team of horaea to pull you
outT' —Washington Star.
for Boys.
derbilt Whitney, Harry Payne Whitney**
boy. Is one of the aspirants. I laughed so
one day when I was there with little
Cholly and Prudy. Between dances Van
derbllt ran acroaa'the room. Just as though
the whole world were green fields for small
feet without any ballroom floor. “That Is
nrtt nice.- said Mr. Dodworth. "Cross
the mom as a gentleman should.” 80
w lth nil the visitors, and all the pupils
seated. Vanderbilt crossed the great hard
wood tract with all the courage of his
great-grandfather, the doughty Commodore.
Now my Cholly he did the same thing one
dnv and I tbonght he'd be expelled, for
when the reprimand came he shouted, 'Td
like to sec you make me.” If It weren't
that his father Is a Knickerbocker, dis
grace would have followed, for children In
curably boisterous and saucy are often ex
polled from the school. When we go to
dancing school, we mothers sit around the
room and our boys must bring np each
cbuih In turn and make a formal introduc
tion. but I must say that Cholly does better
at arithmetic than at dancing or intro
ducing. And he could tell, too, at an
early ago, whether sugar was up or down
(stocks, I mean, not candy). Little Cholly
Is so cldver!
man tuberculosis are different diseases. It
we were to believe this view, to what iw
pose would be all the attempt, to prevent
tubcrculou, animal, being used for food 0,
to supply milk!
But now that we know that osen respond
to the two different strains of human vlrnt
exactly as other animals do. .hat these two
strains breed true In cows as uey do In
man. sueb an Idea Is nntenable. " a n ust
continue to try to stamp out ‘ubercnloala
in cows because this Is tu Impor.aot source
of Infection to man.
The Important point ts ratsed. how eah
we be sure which type of virus he patient
Is suffering from? If one -ends to a rapidly
fatal Issue, while tbe other ends to enrs
Itself, this la a most Important oolnf t,
settle. At present It would appMr to w
only possible by carrying ot elaborata In
oculation experiments Yet -efor, a min
who Is found to be suffering from tubercu*
losls alters his whols carter .let w say to
go abroadl It should be determined whether
h« belong, to the bopeles, or „p«ful typ,
of ease.
"Until ease, of tuherenloals are hna lie.
criminated, all conclusion, na te tha mcceia
attending different mode, vs r.atmeot me.
be vitiated by a fundamental fallacy.
These results also explain many -pparent
vagaries of tuberculoal. ivery nedlral
man ba. met with uheapected auecceso. d
equally unexpected failure, la hla ..'tat
incut of this disease."
A Trophy. ,
Twr country youth* w*r# on s rt»tt ts
London. Th#y went into th# British Mu
*#um snd there **w s mummy, over which
bung s csrd, on which w*s printed ”B C.
*7.”
They were very mrnttfled. sod on# ssld*
•*Wb*t d«* you ni«kc of It, BUI?"
"Wall." *#ld Hill. I should ssy It wss
th# n«m>r of the motor csr that klll*d
Uiß."-*Tlt BU*