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The Evening standard. [volume] (Ogden City, Utah) 1910-1913, November 16, 1912, Image 15

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85058397/1912-11-16/ed-1/seq-15/

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;M .VIRGINIA SIOANE WM
fcfiS J
ill '(0 ' ' '
J rs. C. L. Tiffany. . I . "7 ' ',;, C ' $f
SaV?"? KCISNTLY the cngugc
Ksa nient of Mrs. Grover
R&3 Cleveland to Pttjfcssbr I.
JSJ. Preston wns an-JWL-p-jfo
notinccd. Mors is an il
jfcjESjjsg lustrious example of i a
jg college woman who has
Bfccn n devoted wife nutl mother, placing
Br borne and furnily always above ilie
Bvniuour and clnnior of public antPsocinl
HJfc in Winch site inlj-'lit liave had so con
Jpicnous a part.
VuMrs. Cleveland -.vn,s a graduate of
JVells College, an institution wliicfi, al
Bjmugh it does not rank with Hirii Mavrr.
WJnssur and other college having a cur-
fVfjculiim almost identical with thai of
JWicn's college?, was greatly in advance of '
"TSgLP seuiiuuiicc and bnardinjr schools
tlfhieli were lli"ir forormincr? A girl
ijfflfljo went to Wells was regarded as
jgPJoiue " althoiifrh not of quite so deep a
1SJyi as those who presumed to so in for
iTJmui-h Greek. I.tilln and mathematics,
JSTssttheir brothers. Tin' very word college
:-i2gciued to many a little unladylike, Uitt
jjSl'Jrs. Oe eland's grace and feiiiiuimly
g&rere unscathed by her college course.
je5cjj)itc her youth she adapted herself
3tff,ne demands made i;pon her :i( the
S&fcEirsi Lady" and ct an example of
ificioufi hospitality aud domestic devo
joii that won for her universal uppinba
fejloij. After the rr-lircmenr of her hus
j,SSnd and even more since her wldow
SJgJMd Mrs. Cleveland hns been chiefly a: 1
"llnioht solely concerned with the educa
tion and training of her children and the
fj)ljro.of her liome. only appearing in out
ride "matters relating to education and
ffilijjulnnthropy j
9?t is lnleroMiiij; that Mr. Clcchind"s
(Knee is a professor In the very college
'SXjwhich she was once a student. i
HTu the quarter of a century that has'
IVbpscd since France b'olsom. who he-J
Mnine Mrs Grover OIovlIiiik almost ini-j
jjcoiately after her grad-.uuioii. left Wells (
Hlollego, conditions in regard to the edit-,
HTtion of girls have changed greatly, j
fit has boon discovered" that no more,
Warm has come of sending girls to college'
Bjmn of teaching them to rend, an act
Kvhicb ut one time was also under bub
Kjcion. j
Nowadays I'irls are beins entered for,
Bllcge almost before thej are out of the
Iwiirserv. Bryu rhwr, Yahiiir, ijmith and'1
iJtS'elle.sloj all baVe loug li.st-. nullify of the
Jipplicatiou9 being made by luol'beri vrw
Btre graduates of thoec Institiitions and
Hire eager Unit heir daughters sllrfi'ld
Biavc the same alma niatcr. Others wlto"j
Hiuvc not enjoys! a college educa'ion arc
Bager to insure it to their daughters,
Twenty years ago, the Rev. Samuel
Bf. Dike, taking note of the. great in
Hjreasc in the number of girls going In for
light' i- education nt that time, asked :
"What arcall these women going to
H . - ...aal AAA MAllMiillWllI
do? What will be the effect upon' si----ind
upon society?
"Mnrrlase aud :iie life of the home aud
of society will nusorb the larger part of
educated women as a manor of course
I'or It is inevitable that most educate. 1
women of r- II elates will become wive
and mother5! as surely a most educaied
men will marry and become father f
children. Ther" must be subject in
which women will tnkc a deeper interest
than men. Tha place of the family :n
the social order and of women in the
family, and their future n- wive and
mothers, will inevitably draw the atten
tion of women to the family nn.l ihe home
as subjects of educational importanc
in pioportim o their richness in eduea
Itional material and value-ami to their
close connection with ibe-life'of-wontou.-'
Has this prophecy been fulfilled? From
time to time during the? twenty years
the alarm ha been raFsqd that eollege
women were not given In 'marrying and1
rearing families. Ii has formed one of
the favoilte arguments of those who weu
'opposed to a college education for women. 1
Ibut in spite of it girls from nil over thej
country in incieaaing number trooped to
the colleges year by year mul demamlcd
'admission. Alio new colleges were opened
and the standards of the old ones-raised. '
Investigations have been made by vnrl
lOiis college organizations and by individu
als to liud out what percentage of college
i graduate innrry, how many. children they
,hac and other farts relating to their do
.mesticity. Miss M. Carey Thomas, prci-1
idcni of Ilryn .fawr, who has been partic
ulnrrv active iu work of this kind,
calls ntleulion to the fact that it is only
among the ry rich and the ery poor
:lhat practically all the girls of the atn
lily marry. In (he middle classes, from
which In the past oollejic students hac
(bcen almost wholly recruited, only about J
fifty per cent marry, and this Is About the
average of the collcgo girls who ibarry.
I. is also stated that if it is true that
college wmnqu marry Inter and have fewer
rhHdrcn than non-college women, tlmt ten
dency is not exclusively theirs. The di
minishing birtl rale is generally held to
be due chiclly to the entrance of women
into Industrial and commercial occupa
tion If lolh'ge women have few cbiblien. it
is Mini that they gic to these chilihcn
the en re prompted by the highest Intelli
gence. It is dillicult to obtain itifonna-
11- ''':-IIMMmkkwsm
Mrs. W. W. Pcnffield. MjjKw & ifcBS '
Mrs. Grover Cleveland, graduate of Wclis g
College. ' ' ;S
l3tewir
Mrs. W. H. Easlmond. former President
Woman's University Club.
fiolo i T)r.
tion nbout liome life, but one obvious fact
stands out clearly rarely Is a college
woman divorced. Wcllesley boasts that
among all her .thousands of graduates
there a not a divorcee.
This does not inan. however, that col
! lege girls nre too slmilhieed to eon
MVomen Patriots of Greece Flock to Battle Standards
By ryjIKN' of Grecte are raiiyuig to me
W battle standards of their nation in
(:VV a manner which dims by comparison
3leTen tbo Jjcroism of the mothers and
Sffleisters of ancient Athens aud Sparta.
From America scores arc returning, to
tlicir native country lo give their ser:
vices, if need be their lives, in earing; for
tbu wounded in. bailie, feuppljius thq
needs )f soldiers in the lield and Jidtmig
iu every way in which a woman can iu
B times of war.
j TLcre are three women in New York
Pcity why arc organizing these groups into
porps. of nuiHCe, who will be in re.idiuess
,3ro iltpurt on a moment s notice for the
Riieat Of war and home of whom will de
iS)jimrt immediately for Greece, certain that
i'tliorc will be need for export nurses.
'Tfrf The three women who are most deeply
interested in tbi- work arc Mrs. Marie
pI'Eqoiioinid, Mss Johanna L.vberopulos
m and Mrs, Miltiades Mclachnno. Nut oulj
3$iiu these tluee women giving their time
Jgand mouvj to the cause, but if they me
0 needed or if they feci they may be of
Rtfnoic use on the scene ol w.ir Uiej
-riuoi bititate to go,
J Women deplore war," said MM
jiLybuiupulos, "but sometimes it does seem,
fecial It is an evil which may not be avoid
'?cU. Is it not o'; LJccaiise we are en
itiiTlbusiaAtic now that war lm come ii nnial
iifljui be thougut t n.i i w weKomu war. i ei
Klliups Hie ory lieaMesl uosi ot o.iitle lb
f borne bv women who loie Iiiiso.unh.
ijjibroilieif ami sons.
tfjSh '"lbe 'lurks are our i-miiile, and
ifMlboilgli ne wu.U to see ihi-ui driven 1.:ick
Hfroui our native land it s not in any
JWiyoniuii'tt uature to augment or bilng aboi:
fiiifXcrlnK. -nr best elTorts shall be given
MjrAo tbo airengtbenlug and aiding ol oiir
Ht'owi. armies .mil I lie ?olilli;r ot our llo-j.
TObut there will be wuik lo be done for both
tffiflhl terrible conflict. Turkb, O recks, bul-
ganaiib ail alike wi.i be biiccoreu, auu
(there will be no question of iiutlouulltv
I among the wounded. At the same lime
anything wv tan do to aid or checi our
soldiers shall be done though it cost on.'
lives."
"There is scarcely a Greek family In
this country," baid Miss Lyberopulos,
UM . :v I $
fi$! ' '. & "
' MI55 JOHANNA Ly&CROPULOS "
!"fiine iiieinbfr f which did not take
I pari in or Teel the bittcrueus of Hie last
jcouHiel with Turkej. Our fathers aud
aBHBE9SHJBBHH
our uiomers suneren miring mat war anil
ihej I ought for Greeee. imcIi in bis oi
lier own best wii.i. That is what we are
going tu do. It is not fair that the men
bhould bear it all."
Mrs Marie Kcoiiomidy, who is one of
the rurouiorti in the movement to orgauixe
the Creek women who are returning to
(ileete, is the wife of one of the editors
of the PauheHcnic. a New York Greek
newspaper, and is herself a noted Jntir
iial:.st She ireeutly made a tour of rbo
j Ciiin-d Suites. (Hiring which -she investt
gahil the conditions of Greeks all over
tin eouiilr. l'V.- this reason sbe fn
iiiilior with ihe lender of her count rj men
I in all the large '-ities ol Ameiiia and is
especially lilted for the work of organiza
tion. Mm. Keonomldy says that, although
the work of oiganizatlou bun only just
begun, scores of women have already
volunteered and are only awaiting the
call to the fatherland. ,
We are proud in the fact that ;h"
Greek.s nre a tuition of patriots." said
I Mrs. I!conoiuidy, "and cmt.v man and
woman feels that it is a privilege and a
duly to Inc up to the traditions of the
rnc. Most of us have been brought up
lo c.pccl war and have lived in an atmos
phere of war. Moth no grandfathers add
no father and uncle weie soldiers who
i-aVrifd searh of many battley, and all my
life I lime known that sometime war
would ionic again and that I would be
tailed upon to piny my part."
I Mrs. Mililadew Melaebrino is intensely
interested in the woik of organising
.nurses. She is devoting all her lime to
Ihe work and Is sharing Ihe expenses.
!Mrs. Meluehrluo was in Kgynt iu 1SU7
when war broke out between Greece and
Turkey, and she organized several corps
ot nurses and furnished the money to
forward 'ben lo the Gieck iirnij.
The 1 en lee-l trouble ihe women or
ganizer" aie having is in keeping Hie
,uitliuslani of th" women volunteers m
i wise chaniiclx. Many of the women
wisb lo embark immediately and oirer
(heir services ns Individual-. The lender
ot the iiioicMiipni do not fee) thai Uiis U
i lie most t If cell vi course lu follow. 'I hey
believe ihat oigau'uatiou will multiply
Do College Women Make Goodr I
I siiler a proposal from n man who has
ibcen divorced. Last year a Smith col-
lege graduate became the bride of a 'man i
worth many millions who had been ;
divorced only a day or two before, and j
the marriage is said to lie a ery happy
one.
In regard to the domestic idc of ex
istenec. college women are giving it more
attention than they did a few years ago.
Perhaps the icp roaches thai have been
heaped upon them have spurred them to
special activity in this line, or perhaps
il is because in so many of the colleges
departments of domestic science have
been introduced and because the psychol
ogy -of the child has become such a iroml
nent feature in modern education. Or.
after all. il may be that the old belief
that "blue stockings" couldn't keep house
and rear children, which lias blighted the
college woman's reputation, is fading
aw-.iy.
I.nt year when Ihe Association of Col-
lesiale Alninnae met in New York cards:
were h-inded to aH'collcge gtndualcs at-j
E5SarSl35Pf !
liir ML
WW 1
i w$& y.
Mrs. Herbert E. Parsons.
.ending t lie convention on which were
the questions.
I "Do you think that at some timejn
pour education you should hac had a
,speellic iraining for home life? What
jand where?"
, The answers received were in favor of
'home iraining DouuHtic science, it was
I recognized. Is a very different thing from
the old fashioned training for nomc life,
but it is in keeping with the trend of the
tunes.
Mi-s. Mabel Parker Tluddlcston. who
had charge of these statistic,, made the
statement that without some knowledge
of biologv. bacteriology and psychology
women are as much cut qff from llw cur
rents of civilized thought and of right
eous concerted action a? person unable to
read or write hnvc been for past ceu
turios. The New York branch of the Associa
tion of Collegiate Alumnae was so
strongly impressed with the desirability
of a more thorough preparation of the
College girl for the liomeinahms and
jl.oiuckcoping problem, thill sbe would be
likely to face Ihat it asked that the head
line useuiinass ot tile women wlo go to
jGieeee lis liuieea.
Whole families are olTeiing to return
to the falheilund, lbe men to Ugbt. the
I women to nuie, aud the older ilnldren
to help. In I ho In.il Greco-Turkish war
scores tf women were killed by ncn-len'
on ihe bjltlelields where they went 10
ja-.sist the wounded and-Mlle iate tiun
sufferings before the lighting was ami
ally over and bolnry the wounded cuiilil
be leinoxtd.
Whole fauiilics weie wiped out during
the conllitr, but ibis doe not deter the
women of the present generation. What
I heir countrywomen did before thorn they
are determined to do, ami .shipping olllcos
throughout the ci t aie t?N : Jiii-tl with
orders lor p.iMivv to the fatherland fiom
men aud women alike. .
I . .
! FASHION FAlICIEg.
I . - ' r;
A OdT or the lrta aye gatheied at
I Hie wulst and hav6 an elonsateel
1 -pannier.
(Junonjtal la a favorite tutor 01 cmiiiiis
ifiouks and Is shown In xpilg(te bcatle.i
leftcels.
W'nini pale Krwy .satin that soems - to
huc 11 hUi;utloi of plnU liKldtti an ay In
'Iu folds is Hit" material u.sed m uiio'tlier
inuiorted frock, it Iuim u pnu 0f r080
color and a drupciy of steel heads.
' Btonne satin diaped In blacl. chlnTou
tliat has a bordur of ileh pnrplo iiowpra
coinbiuud to form a lianuwoniu cvt-riliiK1
jg.iwn seen recently- Thu budleu wus ul-l
imosl entirely foiniud of old rcold ltL..
' The tailored Moves continue i,L.C,
1 hoi oiofore. but those of oft Mowing ma.
tetiah. show decldad change. lhu 0t.M
sleeve la popular, but lv much modiL.j!
and not nearly so hmya U once w-;u.
I I'lnlled elTccls In cnllilrcir di(qdi..x lry
'as fasluouabb- a ovti. Wbllo tin, droKo
of one mitterlnl thioughout is inot desir
able, there arc many combination!! ot iwo
rn.iterlaU. kiich as a Nor folic ol plain nlut,
; wlln chccKed klit,lu blue nnu white.
of every residence hall iu women's col
leges hnvc n bachelor's degree and be
capable of making her iloriinin an object
lesion for scientific housekeeping as well
is for moral, aesthetic and 3ocial train
ing. It was also asked that the courc In
biology be exlcndeJ.
Of course thcie are still sticklers for the
uld ideas who think that the domestic,
I mining should be n post-grnduate course.!
Just as medicine, architecture and many
other specialized subjects are. or Ihnt it1
should be taught at home The president
of I'.ryu Mnwr hnldri Ihnt "girls who me
to be mothers should be made familiar
with the great iiinri of inherited knowl
edge for which the four years in college
are none too long "
Mis Thomas, by the wav. lin a ri?ht
to be heard, for she was one ot the early
college girls and hns bten in touch with
eoliege renditions ecr since she gradu
ated. "Heforc I went to college," she said
one time. "I had never seen but one college
graduate. I went to ee her with fear
and tremblinr, lest I should discover that
Ishe had horns and hoofs. It was a grent
relief to find this Vassar graduate hand
some and drccs'.d like other women. When
; I went 10 l.i-ipsic to study after 1 had
rrrariuaicd from Gonuil my inothr wrte
'that inv nanif was never mint oned 10
her bj the women ol h-r acqucinjaocu I
Sfifk U ' :$$
losing popularity with the opposite sox, J
however, cannot deter girls from wanting
to go to college. Tlipre nre so inanyl
compensations and, brsides, college does!
not put a bau upon the really attractive
girl, a nil college men are marrying col
lege girls every day. even if there may
have been, a lime when they thought they
wouldn't. ' 1
College girls may still, as n rule, be a j
little older than other girls when theyj
marry, but that Is in line with the tend-1
etiey of the, lime. l'rofesnr I'ranklin
II Giddings. of Columbia University. 1
snjs tii.it is duo in part 10 the fact that I
Hi
fJj I Mrs. Crystal Eastman Benedict.
'$1 m .
Mrs. John D. Haney, President College jfe't
Vomen's Club. 1'Pi " " "
was thoiiglit to be as much of a disgrace
10 my family as thuiigh 1 had clcped with
the coachman."
Since those days Mjss Thonin has seen
girls of the lifshs.st social position enier
the college of which she is the head with
out nny los3 of cast" Miss Helen Taft
was n student (here when her father was
circled to the Presidency
Moreover, she has een them growing
stronger and mom athletic year by year.
jThp tradition that college life tended to
-break down the health of girls has all
.but vnnished
I One prejudice that die? hard i that
college boy, and men in general are
'supposed 10 entertain against the college
trirl Some colleges have this curse rest
ling more heavily upon them I linn others,
tnnd more thnn one girl hns refused to go
'lo a certain college because its (.indents
w-ere said lo be unpopular with the
'students of a man's college not a thou
sand miles away. Uven the fear of
1
I
SJuHsZh 'isV5u? . - T'.w?i
Mrs. Vladimire Simkhovitch.
I they arc more fastidious ibau oilier girl:
!in choosing husbands.
1 Dr. James .7. Walsh, jn commonlln;
I on the lateness of marriage of collcgi
I women and their sninll families, sail
I tlmt occupation with other things neccs
isarily detracts from the care of childrei
and it exaggerated, celibate condition
1 to the limitation of families within nar
I row boiders. At certain periods in tin
J world's history, he says, such women ac
cumulate mid the tendency to cclibae;
or very limited maternity makes itsel
felt and then Ibis clas fails to propagib
' enough of their species to take tlifi
j places in the world. If women's college;
-A...... .-ftA.1
had to depend 'wholly upon the progenj H
of their graduate lo (ill the classes ii ' H
Mircccdiug yr-.-irs The number of .suii'.cnir H
would couslnntly tend to decrease. H
Miss M. Carey Thomas. Presirienl ,Bryn B
Mawr College, who hns investigated mar , . IB
naoi 0; college Q-aduatet. IB
'J'l.e saipo statement, might h;-Tcr.te H
witli almost equal force about college
men. howevpr. IH
Variety of interest and work for th fl
gMierni social velfare which cbaracteri.c H
so iiniiiy college women evidently docs H
lint uilccfcrc with marriage. Mrs. Her- H
1 bert 1'arsous, formerly KIsic CIcw, a H
I graduate of Rarnnrd, who is entitled to H
1 write several decrees after her name, ha
taken a vivid interest in social, sociolog- H
j leal and political matters and at the same H
Itiiue is a model housekeeper aud mother. H
I Mrs. Y. G. Simkhovitch, the head of B
Greenwich House Settlement and on .a H
score of boards ami committees, is the H
mother of two children and has a home I H
in tin' country near New York. iH
Mrs. Charles l. Tid'auy Suds time for H
golf suffrage aud other outside affairs '
'without detracting from her home in- H
itercsts. Mrs. William W. Pcnncld, M
IwIioh' name is linked with suffrage ac- I H
Uivitics and other problems of the day, j H
has lime for her beautiful home iu the H
Miss Crystal Eastman was so busy with jH
all kinds of philanthropic and sociolog- H
icai work that her fellow workers were
'surprised that she had time for anything H
.else, but none of these things interfered '
j willr hCr accepting' (he right man when H
he proposed and she is now Mrs. Ilene- il
j Recently the president of the Woman's M
University Club. Miss K. L. Hooper. M
was married to Mr. William II. Kasl-
I Most of the officers of the college iH
-'Inliinmae n-ociatious iu New York arc H
s j married women. Mrs. W. D. Cameron H
1 is president of the Welleslcy Alumnae M
I Association and Mrs. W. I'ickard, sccrc- ,1
,'tary: Smith's president is Mrs. H. 1 H
s'MacNeil: Mount Ilolyokc's Mrs. B. O. H
.' Hovel; Mrs. Frederick h. Kcays is presl- H
e dent of the YaAsar Students' Aid Asso- H
-elation, and Mrs. Louis Guttmau sec re- H
I lu the membership of these nssocia- IH
virions arc many married women and most IH
r of tbcui could give a report of happy VM
s- homes and well trained children. VM
; Lacquer Furniture Returning to Favor.
?,,,?W;arcACQUUI furniture is
! fxJx:nou c0,,s'crei' extreme
I uMi r'-v ''ebiran'c an'' I,ot on''
J i ywiuc the genuine anlinucs
75ln Incrjuer much in de
1 maud, but Mie old do-
I sisus arf being copied by
(many o' the fashionable cabinetniaVen.
.-'nil interior decorators and special pieces
lure being made to order after the uld mu-
! . I
sen 111 pieces 1
Instead of inaki-ig th- laeitur pieces
new from the beginning. lh.- oesl decora-1
tors are biiyine (.'cuuiii" old pieces iu an-
othor finish, eipecially ouk pieces,- audj
ttten applying the lacquer 60 ,tlial thej
llOe cabinet work of a more cim-eiuntlomj
nge of crnflstnei" isobiiuned. togcriier with
Ihe correct design and proper propor-.
lion. j
I'.otii rod aud black lacuncr are now In I
favor with those w'lio arc concerned wlih'
the furnishing Ihrir house. The ijunon
Aunu plcceii, ijuaiut cublncu, irregular j
topped tea tables. &c, are being sought
tor everywhere aud numbers of them
arc being copied. A very charming
lacjuer cabinet is in the possession of
the Metropolitan .Musetiui or Art. The
piece is of a kind which is now consid
ered mos' desirable both bi decorators and
'i-rrnto f'l-v -fs Vb- piece of lacquer
howii here, which
M rM4Mil&MMn -"and s the cabinc!
IMiP .able, Theme!
I WmL:,J:X&-& a.e mingled -vicl. j
other furniture in;
j Oarf-T U'ioo..llMP '.m n n' V-,'. . , e KilllU" r (1 0 III. '
j Lacquer Tabic Inlaid with Mother of Pearl. one pkve or laciuerj
I i ofli'li used in a!
room hamg uiahoznuy or painted woh1
i furniture. A small room furnished en-;
'tirely wiih lacquer pieces, cnth one of!
-which is work of art. is or course vcryj
beautiful, but is beynud the ranch ,ofany
(but exiicmely 'ong purser.
j To go with this laciiir rurnUuru. wiih
jits fascinating Chinese dbtoratif.ns. theie
are wall hangings. aUo with the Chinese j
'designs, ,uid biadcs for upholstery oim
' harigliir-i. These have black grounds ami j"
I decorations in gold, 6r in sold uiiuu'edj)
Willi eftlor.s iluit liiu'iiiouiru well with tbv;
black aud gold of the Jacaiuor., Wljeu-the
red laciiuer i ued itio.brocmle Tor up
holMtcrlng .1 chair i in ihe sJUp- sl.-aUe J
of red, wiih designs In' dull gold or iui
I ivory and sometimes iu the faintest shade jH
I of H
The black background brocades arc H
mucji more attractixe than the chintzes H
with black grounds. As every one knows H
who has used black for gowns, it is dif- H
(iculr to procure a black cotton fabric, H
especially one with some weight, which IH
is not lackiug in what might be called IH
''quality c fleet." The black chintzes are ' IH
apt to 'be dingy looking, while the baud- H
some black brocades arc rich and lustious, IH
with not the slightest suggestion or diugi- H
It was the Chincio Iacauer from whUh rH
originnlly arose the practice of paintin" jH
fiiiniturc black and dark green and dec- lll
lornliug it with liny bouquets and Adam '
'designs. (biliously 'iioiigb, when the il
Ntyles were reviej tbc ca;r.c iu the ic- ill
Ivrrac of the ongiaal order, b'irst lie IH
I black painted furniture which flourishtd Hl
I in Ihiglaml iu the eighteenth centur.i no- jH
jpenrcd. with its (j tin tot decomtious, aud !H
now has come the lacquer from which, the H
pnlnicd furnliiire .tot its origin::! inspire.- H
SILK FLOVERS AS M
DRESS TRIMMINGS M
iH
"j"HOlGU v.! m deny It. we are allll H
I t. superstitious people. H
Oar superstitions rind plctu:ct;uti ll
panaceas, iowoei. for r.-hlcti we may be jH
Ih.'tnUful, and one Is tlio wearing of while
iiuatnui in soinu way 01 auoincr iu nilne' H
fcuo.l fortune B
Nut only do we Kent It In Us natuial (H
gulc 'u our buttoniioles, but "made" H
beallicr, both In white and lavender. I? H
ihe nuwcti ilbbon iiower. and in counliy H
houea busy nngtis .ir lurnlu? out sprigs Jl
by the luuiclieti. jl
.b attrucilv in coloilns ,:a In form. jH
heather can 01 uied letilm a. ball fioLN iH
ur to edge a low neolrtd bloune, or It ;imj H
bu wum as a lun-j.uu roun I inu.be.td.
l-i erich i.obon ui white an oiirlun of ai H
Inch wide uaiiia ttsclf best lo. lYY 'ah- H
onilig of Mkso iln Hovciei,uin &t,;:if H
tivt.11 covered wpe and srtitu lffi iiU" iH
tie likewise m-cessltin' llH
Make four piitaR oncij u uiu--ufalih unji !H
oop, .uio nnlyii with n cll3U bead ctr.in IB
btol.t tnu cut rlobon ondj of How era ujc.uust H
1 p.ecu of i,ho tlc"Wlre and wind it Intu H
ilaco with ,r !liDt 'green iloss. f. H
,vud noVi-r .irjlor llowrci. enulion tup H
ti a llttlu grupli alein, und oaeh -tem in H
iuin wlrvsl 10 II laiger stem, w'ltu tiu-ae H
ur-er stems 10 maJn aleiu. H

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