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Tailored Hat Designed for
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Photo, Copyright, by Underwood & Underwood, N. Y.
A velour hat has been deemed most serviceable by fashion for outings.
The hat in the picture has the wide cravat bow of* stiff gros-grain ribbon as
a side decoration. The hats will be worn very much this summer.
ELABORATE BAGS FOR BRIDGE
411 Kinds of Ornamentation Are Sanc
tioned for These Up-to-Date
Accessories.
The wrist bag which the bridge ex
pert carries is becoming a very splen
did affair of silk or satin, embroider
ed with floss or closely encrusted with
tiny beads of crystal, pearl or metal.
Not infrequently it is of heavy lace,
lined with a silken material or with
a metallic gauze. One model is a very
ong and slender affair of lilac ap
pliqued with genuine Irish lace mo
tifs. About its mouth is a narrow edg
ing of the lace and below that is a
pocket through which runs a cording
of mauve silk and silver threads,
SMART COSTUME
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Silk and wool fancy mixture is used
here, the color of a soft shade of
green. .
The skirt is trimmed at foot with
wide band of black satin, standing up
in deep tabs each side; two rows of
fine silk braid edge the satin.
■ The smart little coat is cut Magyar,
it joins in front to waist and is trim
med each side with satin which is car
ried round the basque. A satin band
about 1% inches wide finishes the
waist.
Hat of Tagel to match dress, trim
med with ribbon bows and a wreath of
small flowers
Materials required for the dress:
4% yards 46 inches wide, 1% yards
I satin 22 inches wide.
which, when drawn taut, firmly closes
the bag. At its base, where the re
ceptacle is gathered over a small
ring, is a long tassel of the same ma
terials as the hanger. The other
model, of rose velvet elaborately em
broidered with seed pearls, is in sad
dle bag shape and has mouths opening
under huge rings of mother of pearl.
Edging both ends and running up the
sides as far as the rings is a fringe
of pearl beads and at the corners are
balls of seed pearls.
COAT SETS OF ULTRA DESIGN
Very Smart Are Those of Crash
Which Have Suddenly Become
So Popular.
Ultra smart are the coat sets in
heavy crash. While a few of them are
entirely of a creamy hue, the most ef
fective are in old rose, delft blue, pas
tel green or khaki, embroidered with
white or black linen floss. This needle
work, which is in a bold design and
done in a close, solid stitch, runs from
the inner to the outer edge of both
collar and cuffs, where the hem
stitched border is very coarse and ef
fective. The collars are five pointed
and so extremely broad that one Van
Dyke terminates at the center of the
back, two Van Dykes fall over the
top of the arm, and the remaining pair
extend almost half way to the waist
line. The cuffs have three sharp Van
Dykes, a deep one running backward
to the elbow, and two shorter ones
pointing, toward the inner side of the
arm. These coat sets are now worn
with plainly tailored serges of dark
hue, but they will be equally smart
looking with the tailored frocks in
white, gray or tan.
Lingerie Gowns Popular.
As the season advances and out-'
door functions become more general,
, some delightful lingerie dresses will
be seen; for in the warmer weather
there is always a great wave in favor
of white. It will not be unrelieved
purity, however, for the note of color
will occur in sunshade, shoe and waist
belt, while in the silk or ninon frock
the lingerie collar and the flounce will
give it the simple touch and charm
which is so characteristic of the artis
tic creations of the moment.
Hats of real panama with .contrast
ing underbrims are the most appropri
ate and delightful for wear with
dainty nkuslin frocks, and they are
quite smart enough for most functions.
For the Sick Room.
To sweeten the air of a sick room
for a patient who is tired of the usual
perfumes, burn a few drops of oil of
I sandalwood on a shovel. Eau de Cm
• logne dropped on a hot shovel also
gives a most agreeable odor. If per
l fumes are not at hand an admirable
1 substitute may be found in camphor,
: a piece of which may be burned by
the application of a hot poker. The
, strong smell of the camphor quickly
■ disappears, taking with it all the close
. and disagreeable odors of the sick,
room.
> ■ —
Summer Luncheon Sets.
For summer luncheon tables espe
cially there are cream crash center
piece, napkin and doily sets embroi
dered in black and blue, black and red,
1 or black and green. The pieces are
all scalloped.
GOTHAM'S BAD MM
Starts Out to Show Oklahomans
Some Gun Play.
Old-Time Westerner Gives Him
Some Real Excitement and
Back to New York
• He Hies.
Oklahoma City, Okla.—Ernest L.
Lucas came ’to the southwest from
New York several months ago to be
a cowboy long enough to recuperate.
After a visit to Texas he settled in
Osage county, Oklahoma, chiefly be
cause he had an acquaintance there
and because it is in the cattle graz
ing section.
The real, old-fashioned cowboy has
disappeared from Oklahoma, but
Lucas didn’t know it, and be had pro
vided himself with all the convention
al cowboy paraphernalia, Including
jingling spurs. He engaged on a cat
tle grazing ranch near Pawhuska, and
the day after his arrival put on his
cowboy outfit and node forth.
Lucas managed to act and look like
a real cowboy while he pastured the
beeves from Texas. Also he met Pete
,Jenkins, proprietor of a livery stable,
who used to be a cowboy and is sorry.
Lucas and other men from his
ranch were in a "bootlegger’s” place
when Jenkins came in. Lucas had
just called for a round of drinks and
he invited Jenkins to join. Jenkins
politely declined. He knew the other
boys and winked at them. Lucas in
sisted, and when the stranger again
declined he drew his big revolver and
ordered him up to the bar.
Jenkins’ eyes grew large and round
and he took the drink without further
protest. Then Lucas ordered him tc
dance, and after a \few bullets had
whizzed close to his feet Jenkins oblig
ingly complied. Lucas had fun with
SEES BODY HUNTERS
L -X—
Man Meets Friends Dragging
River for Him.
Thought Drowned He Had Reached
Opposite Bank in Series of Long
Dives and Was Paddling
Back In a Canoe.
Richmond, Va. —Whether through
thoughtlessness or purpose, Charles
Harding caused a sensation among
his relatives and had it spread
trroughout the city that he had been
drowned. Those who fell for the
story and took the trouble to investi
gate it were a bit sore and preferred
to believe that it was a put-up job
rather than an exhibition of expert
swimming.
Harding, who is known as one of
the mott expert swimmers in Fulton —
and there are some swimmers in Ful
ton —went out recently with a number
of others. First he swam over to the
Chesterfield side of the river, and, aft
er resting for a while, started back.
When about midstream, far from
any of his companions, he disappear
ed, and, as far as they could see, never
came to the surface again. They
waited for some time and then sent
out the alarm that he was drowned.
His relatives were notified and a
searching party was being organized
when Harding was discovered calmly
rowing up the river in a canoe in
which he took passage soon after his
remarkable disappearance.
It turned out that Harding, when in
the middle of the river, took a notion
to do some fancy diving. He ducked
under the water and let himself go
with the current as long as he could
hold his breath. Coming up but a
moment for a new supply of oxygen,
ODD DIVERSION OF CHARITY
When Church People Refuse to Aid
Needy Trio of Vaudeville Troupe
Others Rally.
Shippensburg, Pa.—Because Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Evans and little son,
stranded vaudeville actors, were re
fused assistance by wealthy church
people here and obtained liberal help
through collections raised in pool
rooms and cigar stores, the town re
sembles a skeptical foreign mission
field today, with church and non
church factions bitterly criticising
each other, and those on the fence de
claring that things are going to the
demnition bow-wows.
The Evans family arrived in town
recently, on their way to —somewhere.
The head of the family is partially par
alyzed, and on account of his inert
ness and the age of the husband and
wife, they failed to keep up with the
pace that the vaudeville stage set
them. Anyway, they arrived here
stranded.
Being adherents of a religious de
nomination, they sought the pastor
who, although pinched financially him
self, gave them forty cents and pre
sented their cause before a wealthy
member of his congregation. But the
wealthy member and others neglected
to assist.
The Evanses, discouraged, appealed
to the proprietor of the Sherman
house, who gave them beds, and in
the hotel they found charity. Several
hotel “loungers" went out to the pool
rooms and cigar stores and raised a
comfortable purse for the family and
sent them on their way to relatives at
Steelton. The whole affair has set
the gossip pot boiling.
| AMERICAN STUDENTS MEET IN LIMA
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LIMA, Peru, the home of San Marcos college, the oldest institution of
learning on the Western Hemisphere, is the scene of the third interna
e tional congress of American students, held this month. Many of the ses
e sions are to be held in the handsome Health Institute.
j
7. —
s him for nearly half an hour before
e permitting him to depart.
d Jenkins went back to the livery star
d ble, dug out his old cowboy clothes
s and hat, shook the oats out, and put
>r them on. Then he resurrected the
r- revolvers he had carried when he rode
n the Oklahoma and Texas ranges, oiled
d and hung them in his belt, and put
on the old spurs. He was trans
d formed from a livery stable keeper
sr into the cowboy he had been years
o ago. He found Lucas and his friends
d still at the “bootlegger’s."
?- Lucas recognized Jenkins and his
h astonishment was great, for he real-
«
he took another dive and still anoth
er, until, when he finally tired of the
stunt, he was nearly a mile from
where he left his clothes on the
bank. It was then that he chartered
the canoe and returned to the grief
stricken relatives and friends who
were about to drag the river.
One of his kinsmen, Fireman Will
iams, connected with No. 4 engine
house, was among those who bit. “I
knew,” said Mr. Williams, “that he
would not be drowned unless taken
with cramp, but anyone is likely to be
taken with cramp, so when I got the
message there was nothing to do but
get a short leave of absence and see
about it.”
Though he would not say that it
was a premeditated fake, Mr. Will
iams was very dubious.
FROLIC ENDS IN TRAGEDY
Friendly Play of Sea Monsters Turns
to Bloody Battle When Shark
Is Killed.
New York.—The Caledonia, plowing
■ its way through a bottle-green ocean,
■ was sixty miles due east of Montauk
Point.
Suddenly some one with keen eye
. sight espied the perennial commotion
i in the water just off the ship’s bows.
I All eyes were at once alert, expecting
■ to be rewarded with a view of the
1 usual death struggle between deep sea
1 leviathans.
To their utter amazement and de
-1 light, what should meet their wonder
-1 ing gaze but scores —aye, scores—of
I swordfish and sharks frolicking in
1 friendly play about the ship!
I The swordfish ran their swords be
. neath the bodies of the sharks and
, tossed them high in the air, then
4
Act May Mean Her Exile I
Girl Who Annexed Mistress’ Red
Switch May Be Deported and Sent
to Home in Sweden,
Minneapolis.—Because she wore a
luxurious red switch which belonged to
her mistress, an 18-year-old servant
may be deported and sent back to Iver
home in Sweden. If her mistress for
gives the theft of the switch the girl
may be permitted to stay in Amer
ica.
Policewoman Emile Glorieux, who
traced the switch from the boudoir of
a society woman on Lowry Hill to a
dance hall at 801 Cedar avenue, is ap
pearing in a new police role as the re
sult of the incident. She isn’t em
ployed as a detective, but she has dem
onstrated that she could do detective
work when necessary.
Some time ago Miss Glorieux asked
housewives Interested in the better
ment of conditions of their maids to
report to her when the maids attend
ed dance halls. Thursday a housewife
on Lowry Hill reported that her maid
was in the habit of attending a dance
hall at 801 Cedar avenue. Subsequent
ly the same woman called up Miss
Glorieux and said that the maid had
gone out. She said she wished to see
the policewoman. When Miss Glori
eux arrived at the house she was told
the maid wasn't the only thing which
had left the house; that a red switch
was missing, and that the woman of
the house simply couldn’t go out on
the street without it.
Miss Glorieux went to the dance
hall and watched the dancers. She-saw
20 girls wearing red hair. Finally she
I saw one who answered the description
ized now he was face to face with a
real cowboy. Jenkins ordered the
drinks and they all lined up. Then
he ordered Lucas to hands and
knees.
'Lucas complied and Jenkins sat on
his back and spurred him. He rode
Lucas around the room, down the
dust-covered stairway and into the
street. As Lucas "galloped” down the
street on ail fours, Jenkins took out
his revolvers and tor a few seconds
there was a stream of fire from their
muzzles.
The erod’d enjoyed it. Lucas took
the first train back to New York.
deftly caught them and repeated the j
। performance. The sharks, in turn, i
took playful nips at the swordfish and :
chased them all around the ship. This
continued for an hour, when one of
‘ the swordfish erred in his judgment
; of distance and caught a shark on the ;
1 point of his bony nose, piercing the
; shark and ending his career then and
• there.
With the death of their schoolmate,
> the sharks, becoming infuriated,
turned upon the swordfish, and the
• battle which followed —from all ac
- counts —was indescribably horrible.
I One particular pair of fighters were
- watched by Purser Johnston, who said
1 that the sword of the great fish broke
- off in ramming the side of the Cale
s donia after missing a vicious thrust
t at his enemy. Before the swordsman
-of the deep could save himself by
flight the shark had killed and began
t to devour him.
ftD ORANG-OUTANG MATCHES
' New Yorker Fined $lO for Caper at
Bronx Park Zoo—Keeper Wit-
s nessed Man’s Act.
New York. —Stephen Sepenlnk was
fined $lO by Magistrate Breen in the ;
; Morissania Court for having fed I
, “Baldy," a performing orang-outang in
t the Bronx Park Zoo, a box of matches.
Ferdinand Engelholm, a keeper in .
- the monkey house, noticed "Baldy,"
1 who is a great favorite, stick his long
. arm through the bars and take some-1
; thing, which he placed in his mouth. |
5 Again the orang-outang’s arm went out j
1 and got something else. By this time
Engelholm reached the front of the !
- cage and took a box of matches from ’
- "Baldy,” who had already eaten half j
f of them. The keeper then seized Sep- 1
1 enink and placed him in charge of :
Patrolman Belton of the Bronx Park .
- station.
1 "Baldy” was taken ill. but he is not
1 in a dangerous condition.
of the maid. she asked questions. ;
The girl denied. The switch was re- ‘
moved and there was a trip to the '
police station. Later the maid was
permitted th return to her home, but |
the mistress hasn’t yet reached a de- :
, cision as to the girl’s future.
FED AN ELEPHANT PEPPER
Jumbo II Nearly Killed an Italian In
Tarrytown, N, Y., When He
Stops Sneezing.
Tarrytown, N. Y.—An Italian em
ployed in the railroad yards here is ;
convinced that an elephant has no
sense of humor and no appreciation of
practical jokes. The Italian essayed
to entertain a number of friends last
night by feeding an elephant in a
freight car a pint or so of black pep
per.
The elephant, known as Jumbo 11,
took the pepper in good faith, and the
sneeze that followed nearly knocked
him down.
Enraged. Jumbo II grabbed the Ital
ian with his trunk and threw him fifty
feet away onto a car of coal. The
Italian was badly injured, tiut was
assisted home by his friends.
Money in the Frog Business.
Lansing, Mich.—One of the stu
dents at the Michigan Agricultural
college Is proving that more money
can be made out of frogs than poultry.
This boy has as high as 84,000 frogs
tn his pond at one time. He finds a
ready market and has shipped as
high as 6.000 in one day.
2
■—■ — ■■ - ' ~
RHEUMATISM IS JUST LIKE
ANY OTHER DISEASE
RESULTS FROM CONDITIONS
THAT CAN BE REMEDIED
Whether You Have Suffered for Years
or Have But a ^First Twinge or.
Two, Applications on the Skin Can
not Get at the Cause of the Pain.
Probably just a bilious attack and
a slight deposit of uric acid that was
not promptly expelled. Calomel and
similar mercurial purgatives do not
dissolve and expel the uric acid pedi
ment that forms from undigested, fer
menting foods, and when this poison
ous acid gets in the blood stream ft
spreads through the system. It accu
mulates quickly, thickens the blood,
and settles in joints and muscles,
which then stiffen with rheumatism.
An attempt to cure this rheumatism
must be directed to removing the uric
acid from blood and tissues, prevent
ing the deposit of crystalline urates
and breaking up those already formed.
There have been many so-called
uric acid solvents. They dissolve uric
acid in the test tube, but when they
reach the stomach the hydrochloric
acid present changes their chemistry
completely and renders them ineffec
tual. JACOBS’ LIVER SALT dis
solves uric ^cid out of the tissues,
holds it in solution and expels it in
the urine.
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT is remark
ably successful in the treatment of
rheumatism. It thoroughly cleanses
the system of all fermentation and
uric acid sediment, purifies the blood,
and gives prompt relief.
If you are suffering with rheuma
tism, try JACOBS’ LIVER SALT im
mediately. It will relieve you more
promptly and surely than anything
else. Effervescent and agreeable in
taste. Don’t take an inferior substi
tute. Some preparations very closely
imitate the name, but their action is
; very different to the genuine JACOBS’
LIVER SALT. 1-2-lb. jar, 25c at drug
' gists (by mail, postage 16c extra).
I Jacobs’ Pharmacy, Atlanta. Large free
sample and booklet for 2c stamp.
Meeting Emergencies.
Senator Dixon was condemning a
piece of political deception.
“The thing was as flagrant,” he said,
"as the railway case.
“Two men, one of them very short,
were passing through a station toward
the train gates when the bigger one
was heard to say:
“ ‘l’ve tock a half ticket fur ye,
George. Yer so little, ye’ll pass, all
right.’
" ’But,’ protested George, ‘how about
my beard?’ And he twiddled his chin
beard nervously.
" ‘Oh.’ rejoined the other, ‘tell ’em
it's a mole.' ”
Laying a Foundation.
Little Bobby (the guest) —Mrs.
Skimper. when I heard we were goin'
to have dinner at your house I start
ed right in trainin' fer it.
Mrs. Skimper (the hostess) — By sav
ing up your appetite. Bobby?
Little Bobby—No'm. By eatm’ a
square meal first.
Let’s Be Thankful for That.
At any rate a woman's shoes haven’t
! yet reached the point where they but
■ ton up the back. f
SAVED FROM
ANJPERATION
How Mrs. Reed of Peoria, HL,
Escaped The Sur
geon’s Knife.
Peoria. 111. —“I wish to let every one
know whatLydiaE-Pinkham’sVegetable
a Compound has done
$ forme. Fortwoyears
| I suffered. The doc
| tor said I had a tumor
§ and the only remedy
s was the surgeon’s
| knife. My mother
| bought me Lydia E.
} Pinkham’s Vegeta
^ble Compound, and
J today I am a well and
■ healthy woman. For
"months I suffered
from inflammation, and your Sanative'
Wash relieved me. I am glad to tell
anyone what your medicines have done
for me. You can use my testimonial in
any way you wish, and I will be glad
to answer letters.”—Mrs. Christina
■ Reed, 105 Mound St., Peoria, HL
Mrs. Lynch Also Avoided
Operation.
Jessup, Pa. —“After the birth of my
fourth child, I had severe organic inflam
mation. I would have such terrible pains
that it did not seem as though I could
stand it. This kept up for three long
months, until two doctors decided that
an operation was needed.
“Then one of my friends recommended
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
r:>und and after taking it for two months
was a well woman.”—Mrs. JOSEPH A.
Lynch, Jessup, Pa.
Women who suffer from female ills
should try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound, one of the most success
ful remedies the world has ever known,
before submitting to a surgical opera
tion.
CANCA^
The record of the Kellam Hospital is without parallel
In history, having cured to stay cured permanently,
without the use of the knife or X-Ray over 90 per
tent, of the many hundred* of sufferers from canceg
which it has treated during the part fifteen year*.
We have been endorsed by the Senate and Legit?
tature of Virginia. Wt Guarantee Our Curetv
F^ys/e/sn* trntul fraa.
KELLAM HOSPITAL
181 7 W. Mala Straat, Richmond,