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New-York tribune. [volume] (New York [N.Y.]) 1866-1924, October 16, 1910, Image 56

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A
OIF [FINTEBEST i
MNiE. FRANK, WHO INTENDS TO
ESSAY A FLIGHT ACROSS THE
ENGLISH CHANNEL.
0. WHITHER SO HIGH?
Twentieth Century Woman Is
After Aerial Colrxebs.
In the course of T*n or twenty years it
tnay be as s»>jperf •■• talk about wom
en, who ride lr. '• ■* machines as it
\pcmld be now to °° J d forth or. women
*rho rifle in streetcars. In the year 1310.
however, & woman aviator is still a nov
elty. The International Aviation Tourna
■tent at Belmont Park will be an cxclu
•tlvely masculine affair, and the heroism
of those women ho have begun to mount
up with wings like eagles occasions ■
: JCTKVJ deal or surprise, though It Is hard
to see why it should be so.
Nobody is surprised when women drive
automobiles, and in the matter of acci
dents, automobiles are up to the wire with
anything- that travels. Women are gener
ally ■where the danter is.
It «at not until last November, hough,
that a woman actually went aloft alone.
•Women had frequently gone as passengers
with aviators of the other sex. but it re
mained for the Baronne Raymonds de
Ijaroche to strike out in a new field as
the first "woman navigator through air cur
rents. This she c.i at Mourmelon. By now
she Is a. veteran at the sport. At the flying
contests held in Egypt last spring no one
was more venturesome than she.
The very first woman who ever flew -was
a Flemish girl. Mile. P. yon Pottelsberphe.
She chanced to be on the field as a spec
tator when Henri Farman was making
one of his first exhibition flights. in Bel
gium. A lightweight passenger was
needed, ana Mile, yon Pottelsberghe vol
•unteerefi.
Not very lons afterward, at Turin. th«
French * . tnas, Mme. Therese Peltier,
took a flight with L£on Pelagranpe in his
Voisin biplane. Mme. Peltier was very en
thusiastic about the biplane then, and was
V jrolng to learn to drive it. but she never
it did. Probably the tragic death of Dela
franc* gave her a dislike for the fpon_
Th*. im woman in America, to fly was
Mrs. Ralph BL Van aa Man. wife of an
army captain. She has cine, all sorts of
daring thine- : she- is said to r* able to ride
any horse that goes, and when one of the
Wrights invited her to go aloft with him
near Washington, last October, she jumped
at the chance. Miss KatßCftae Wright,
elster of the famous brothers, has ascend-
Some Ways of the World
The "silence" treatment at West Point
appears to be nothing to the "melting
stway" act as practised by omen when
they want to Intimate to another woman
Chat ehe is cot of their social set.
"I witnessed the latter treatment this
SBimner," said a woman who has just re
turned irom a. fashionable summer resort.
-and I had the satisfaction or witnessing
also the triumph or the victim ever her per
rwcutors. She was a very rharming' girl
Trho had come to the place because she had
heard it was attractive and because it
-was convenient lor the men of her family.
"She knew some of the eligible young men
of the place, so counted on having a good
time, but she aid not court en the lact
that because she knew these men the belle
of the colony would confer her a deadly
rival, and having been ther* first would
treat tier as an intruder instead, of an ad
dition, and a laßcinating one at that. The
men gave fcer family a dinner, invited tile
"SseJle to meet her. and innocently thought
•they bad done th* right thing-, but they had
snerely added fuel to the flames, and be
-Sore two weeks were lip the newcomer was
aware of what she had to lace. t>ne would
■bravely don hex exquisite Frencn irocks
and Join the •women, ■who bowed gra-clousiy
•.t first, but In naif an hour see would be
left alone, and the little crowd ■would have
collected Just a short distance away. The
>*]}* never raw her unless there were men
croend. and then "he would come over
•wit* a ssreet smile and a few intima'<> re
marks tr.at eouia not be resented because
of the boys. Finally, the new girl went olt
to visit, ana was gone Tor six weeks or
more. On her return ehe encouni^-red the
old girl, who was with one of the men, ana
■who accordingly showed fome interest, ask
ing whers she bad been. <>:. hearing the
name Of the place, she said. 'Oh, I know
Mrs. Blank there. She has often wanted
in* to name a time to visit her, co I think
I'll write and go up. for she gives every one
Fuch a pood time. Perhaps you've heard of
J-.er'' Th** tr.Fwer came sweetly, 'Yes.
I've bast been with her; Mm is ray cousin.
and I told her I had met you here,* The
PARK &TILFORD
Fifth Avenue and T^ecty-MX'h Street And H ranch Stores
We call your attention to our Cand> Department
at this, as well as at our Hrant h Stores.
AH our Chocolates, Bon Bons, Caramels and Candies
are manufactured by ourselves.
Only the Purest and finest Materials used.
PRICES: lh
*-*»• Chocolates and Bonbon*, .M)
Peswrt Battle, .35 French CsrsmeU, .W) '
Pepp*ra>mt Dainties, .35 Chocolate Mellow Mftflto, .45
CboeoJste Cream Royals, .45 French Nougat, 'A-\b. Hot .50
-* 5 CbocolsteMuruichinoCherries
Vanilla Walnut Fudge, Jf per box .40
Chocolate Fudge, .35 large box .80
Deliveries out of town by freight and express.
ttmm Catalogue with COMPLETE Price-Lists i'.ad!\ smt psm
n:lle. helene dutrieu, who
holds the record among
women pilots in distancs
and altitude.
Ed with them, but that was at Pau. and
not in America.
Of course, Mrs. Glenn H. Curtiss has had
trips in her husband's biplanes with him.
She, Is her husband s right hand, by the
way. In his work of constructing biplanes.
She attends to the Business details, being
fortunate enough to have a mother who
manages the house, leaving her free to
help her husband.
Women professionals are appearing in
the flvinff field. HGlene Dutrleu is a bird
woman who has filled engagements to ap
pear at amusement fields in a biplane. She
holds the record amMg women aviators for
distance, and altitude, having made a re
turn night from Ostend, Belgium, to
Bruges with a passenger, a distance of
twenty -eight miles, and gone up thirteen
hundred feet. Mlie. Dutrien has done near
ly everything daring there was to do.
More than a decade ago she won the
world's championship for women in cy
cBBC and no woman has been able to take
from her the hour record. She has done all
sorts of trick riding, and nearly lost her
life "looping the loop," so when she cot a
had fall in a Santos-Dumont "Dragonfly"
it did not leaze her in the least. N T o man.
spectators asid. could have taken it more
atnsrslTr
Mrne. Frank, another French •woman, also
has a record for long flights, and is now
planning to fly across the English Channel.
Miss Gertrude Bacon, a member of the
English Women's Aerial League, who has
been one of Farman's passengers several
times, can compare the different methods of
ajcrial tiavelllng from experience, for she
has tried them all— the spherical balloon.
the dirigible ar.d the aeroplane. • For dreamy
delight she chooses the balloon.
•"There is absolutely no sense of move
ment," she says. 'The earth Just drops
away from under one and unfolds a chang
inc panorama. The dirigible exhilarates;
onr is aware all the time tl at this is rapid
transit, but it isn't as exciting as the aero
plane. The aeroplane is wildly, maddeningly
cxcitinr. Very much of it— an hour's voy.
age, even— makes a considerable demand on
tb«» nerves i.nd energy, but for a little while
the swift plunge of it is glorious."
news of this got around through the man,
who had been nothing if not observant,
and the end of th- season gave trie girl or
French Creeks a bettor time than the be
ginning, while the jealous one was treats
to some well deserved snubs. This, how
ever, cannot make amends for a summer
spoiled by petty splt« on the part or an en
vious girl and her little sheepllke clique."
"Wealthy women are not all so lavish in
their expenditures as some persons imagine.
In fact, many of them devise clever little
ways by which they save money unob
trusively, and take much satisfaction In so
doing. Some one asked a smart young
woman recently why he did not buy a
country ; la. ■* instead of renting one each
year.
"Well," flip answered, "in the first place,
I have never found a colony exactly to my
liking and fo have never been willing to be
tied down in any one by owning 1 a place
there. Moreover, the repairs and taxes on
an estate would amount to much more than
a summer's rental, and I should have to
pay wages to caretakers all the year
round."
When the joy of having produce during
: the winter from one's own •farm" was
mentioned her reply showed where her
thrift came in. and was to the effect that
, from the garden of any place she rented
1 she always had enough vegetables to last
i rJI winter. She had an old family servant
I come up (or the express purpose of attend
; ing to the canning, preserving and pick
ling. She also contracted with the farmer
I who supplied her with eggs and butter to
I continue his good offices by express dur
; ing the winter, and she had apples and
potatoes barrelled also. In fact, no Item
of staple food escapes her list, as she gets
even her oatmeal, maple sugar, honey and
native brewed cordials and wines from the
I native sources. She takes the greatest
pleasure in looking up the best makers of
such things In each locality. Nor does he
make her explorations in a motor car. In
stead, she makes u«* of a "good little nag"
and a runabout. Thus t<he keeps up her
Interest in horseflesh. That this gift of
using all her garden grows means a vast
saving of money as well as the certainty
of pure food goes without saying, and
also that th« heads of social but
terflies are by no means so empty as mere
man is prone to claim— and proclaim.
NEW-YORK VaILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY. <^§£* 16. EKO-
BIRD WOMEN.
.MARGARET HOGAN
Barnard Seniors Proud of
Their Blind Classmate.
If tho average college student b© par
ticularly elated at the successful attain
ment of her diploma after four years of
"scraping through," let her reef her sails
by a glance at Margaret Hogan. the blind
underrrraduate at Barnard College.
Miss Hogan entered Barnard in the fall
of 1907 as a regularly registered member
of the class of "11. Previous to this she
had studied in the Institution for the Blind,
at 3-ith street and Ninth avenue. In this
same institution she hes a place open to
her as teacher upon graduation from Bar
nard. She has been specializing in college
in history. She has* also attended manual
training classes at Teachers College.
Miss Hogan is a familiar figure now
about the Barnard campus. She has learned
her way about the halls and quadrangle,
and Biie never lacks friends who are will
ing to explore unfamiliar eround with her.
She is an ardent college girl and a etanch
supporter of "Soangatalia." the Indian
mascot of her class Naturally. Miss Ho
gan is not aide to take an active part in
undergraduate activities, such as sports
and dramatics. But she eeldom misses
playing the role of enthusiastic, if unsee
ing spectator at all hockey and basketball
games. Last winter, too, she was a never
failing "audlerjco" at every rehearsal of
"D'Arcy of the Guards."
Miss- Hogan spent the winters of her
freshman and sophomore years at the Bar
nard dormitory. Brooks Hall. Last fall,
however, owing to her temporary trans- '
THE YOUNGEST CHILD OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.
Thcmas Wyckcff Fennell, son of Thomas F. Fennell, candidate for State
Trea&urrr on the Republican ticket, with his mother, Mrs. Thomas F. Fennel!.
Master Fennell leoks good natured, but he has lots of fighting blocd in his littla
veins. Thrcugli his grandmother on his mother's side. Mrs. Alice Brooks Wyckoff,
who is regent of tho Chemung Chapter of the Daughters of ths American Revo
lution, ho traces his ancestry back to six heroes of the Revolution. Through his
grandfather, the late Ernest L. Wyckoff, he gets some good Holland Dutch blood.
His other grandfather, Thomas McCarthy Fennell, who is still living, was on* of
the lenders of the Irish Revolution in 1868. He was severely wounded m the
battle of Killcloonev Wood and was afterward captured and transported with his
friend, John Boyle O'Reilly, to Australia. Master Fennell has just passed his first
birthday and has been a member of tho Children of the American Revolution
since he was six weeks old.
f*rence from Barnard to Teachers College,
Eho changed her residence also to Whittlur
Hall, the dormitory for the Teachers Col
lege students. Here on the fifth floor she
has a cosy little "den." which serves as
study and bedroom combined. Her walls
are hung with banners and pictures of all
kinds — mostly snapshots and photographs
of her college friends. There is an academic
atmosphere about the place, however,
which is due to her large If limited library.
Mis? Hosran reads and writes by the Braille
and New York point systems. Her library
is composed of huge volumes for the blind.
These books are very expensive and are In
majority supplied by the New York State
public libraries. The state also furnishes
her yearly ISOO for th<» maintenance of a
special assistant to read to her. She needs
no other htlp In her work.
One of the distinguishing features of her
"den" Is a typewriter, upon which she does
her written work for college. All lecturer
the takes with a marvellous rapidity, with
Instruments termed the stylus and ' tablet.
T MRS. GLENN CURTISS, WHO GOES
ALOFT WITH HER HUSBAND.
She also employs the kleidograph. which
is a typewriter for the blind.
This is Miss Hogan's last year at Bar
nard, and she i? expecting to graduate in
June. Sho has no family, but is planning
to be self-supporting. All that she requires
nov/ is her diploma in order for her to se
cure a good position. This fall she almost
decided not to complete the fourth year of
her term. But Margaret Hogan is too
popular about the Barnard campus to slip
away from college so easily. As a conse
quence her class refused to let her go. She
is an interesting girl, with wide interests
in everything. She is kindly toward every
one. and has an abhorrence only for re
porters. "Why can't they leave mo alone?"
is her constant query. She does not see
why the public should be more interested
in her than in any other Barnard under
graduate.
HOTEL HOT 'HOME'
Lots of Comfort hut Xo Rule*
in the Virginia.
Some eighty lonely wage earners now liv
ing in hall bedrooms and eating at quick
lunch counters will have a change to move
or. November 1 into a pleasant, healthful
house, where they can get a room and three
meals a day at very low rates— ranging
from $3 60 to $6 a week. This abode of bliss,
which is located at No. 232 East 12th street,
is to be known as the Virginia Hotel, after
Miss Virginia Potter, niece of the late
Bishop Potter, who is president of its
board of directors, and its name suggests
its character. Tho Virginia is going to
be a hotel, not one of those "homes" where
there are so many regulations and ruies
that it makes a girl homesick just to see
the printed page of them pasted on her
wardrobe door— rules that tell her not to
do her washing in her room and not to
burn the gas after 10 o'clock.
"The plan is," said Mrs. Henry Olles
lielrner, one of the vice-presidents, "to fur
nish a place where a girl can have all the
comforts of home and at the same time the
privacy of hotel life. All the arrangements
will be on strictly business principles, such
as govern any well managed hotel. In
hotels the manager doesn't dictate what
time a guest shall go to bed or how many
callers she may have a week. There will
be absolutely no rules of any kind in our
hotel.
"Any woman or girl over fourteen may
apply for a room. We shall welcome all
kinds and classes. There will b*» poor lit
tle struggling creatures, trying to live on
$5 or ?•> a week. If you want to know
how they do It read "McCluro's" for Oc
tober. That story is absolutely true. I
know it for a fact. But you never can tell
how much a girl earns by the place where
(she lives. One girl who is coming to us
earns 15,000 a year as a buyer. In one of
the big stores, but she supports eleven lit
tle orphan brothers and elsters back on tha
farm upstate. She says she scarcely ha» $.-> a
week for herself. Really, you know, th«
girl who earns $3 Is often better off than
the one who gets $10 or $15. It Just de
pends on how many Invalid grandmothers
and crippled sisters have to share that
weekly wage."
To help those girls who are struggling
to make both ends meet and still wear
clean Bhirtwalsts there will be an abso
lutely, free laundry, where any guest can
do her own washing and Ironing, and a
ecwinß room, with several machines, where
she can make those waists, If she want a
to spend her spare evenings so econom
ically.
If. she is socially. Inclined, however, sha
T^R.Gvillorv Fraras
FOUNDED /723
Furs
Black and White Effects
Many of the most original coats and sets are in effective
combinations of black and white. Coats of Seal, Broadtail or
other dark furs hive hoods or collars of Ermine or Arctic Fox,
or are faced or lined with white Moire Caracul. Handsome
sets are shown in Lynx or Sitka Fox made up with WHite Fox.
| The Judy Muff Bag
One of the quaintest and most picturesque designs ot the
year. The Judy Bag, moderately wide but very deep, is shown
in many attractive variations and in a number of furs. It can be
made up at short notice to match coats or stoles.
Conservative Models
Practical coats and sets in Seal, Mink, Mole, Broadtail,
Persian Lamb, Caracul and other furs. Large and
small sets in Russian Sable, Silver Fox, Mink, Ermine,
s==^^. etc Men's Fur Overcoats. Children's Furs.
Nineteen IVest Thirty-fourth Street
\ Psrts New York Lcndon
II Tel 376T Murray Hill
Clad in the SKins of "Beasts
Women Are Wearing This Season the Pelts of
All Creatures That Produce Fur.
satin corsage turned back to the shoulders
from a chemisette of yellow tulle, In Im
mense pointed revers, faced with seal. Fur
also edged the short chemise sleeves of
satin, beneath which the arms were covered
to the finger tips with tightly wrinkled
gauze sleeves. The same exquisite color
scheme could be carried out by using seal
brown velvet Instead of fur.
In spite of the vogue of fur some women
don't like to wear It round their necks,
and for them a smart accessory has Just
been brought out. It is a wide, soft ribbon
—preferably of black— which passes about
the throat to the back, returning to the
front, where the ends are tucked inside
the coat and fastened. For street wear
also there are gulmpes with the extremely
high chokers, covering up about the ears
and bordered with fur. These are far
more comfortable than a fur cravat. On
indoor gowns the high choker 13 often
finished with a two-inch band of velvet.
Rather too heavy, this, for the house, and
In odd contrast to gowns that leave the
throat wholly exposed.
Such are the interesting Idiosyncrasies
of the present modes, which are so varied
that if a fashion writer dealt with only one
fash. on at a time the articles would seem
to contradict each other flatly. At the
same smart house or social gathering' one
may see the scantest and shortest of skirts
topped by half long coats, or accompanied
by coats matching them in brevity—
boleros, or tiny belted basques.
All skirts this season, however scant, al
low a lengthy stride, but one skirt may
barely clear the ground, scarcely showing"
the feet, while another, finished at even
distance from the ground, leaves the ankles
in evidence, and a third is curved still
shorter in the middle of the back and front.
These last have less fulness than the
others, because it Is unnecessary, and leave
the feet as free as trousered limbs. Neigh
bors to these skirts are others showing
considerable fulness in pleats and gathers,
but always the fulness Is controlled by
deftly adjusted hidden tapes and elastio
bands, and coats, whether long or short,
are shaped to preserve slender lines.
In place of the beautiful inconsistency
of the last two seasons, when, in spite of
cold and dampness, women wore evening"
cloaks mad* of lovely transparencies, lined
only with other transparencies even more
lovely, if possible, are new evening cloaks
shaped of fascinating silks, brocades, gat
ins and moires, and the beautiful satin
faced with other warmly with more
y. if possih'e, are new evening cloaks
ed of fascinating silks, brocades, aat
and moires, and the beautiful satln
i cloths, ail warmly lined with white
pilot cloth, or made with a sheet of woollen
interllnmg placed between the outside and
the silk lining. Besides the warm lining
these garments have .- Immensely wide,
square, or shawl-shaped collars, faced or
trimmed with fur, and made heavier by
fur tails and long beaded tassels.
Knitted woollen garments for the coun
try and for sports are best liked when
shaped after the Russian blouse model.
The body part, beautifully fitted, is orna
mented by its eid« closing of large, flat
pear! buttons, and the different color of
the close knitted, circular band at the neck,
sleeves and belt. Chic to an unusual de
gree, this garment wonderfully preserves
its shape under hard usage. Copied from
an old Italian portrait of the Moyenage is
a new knitted cap. The head sinks deep
Into the round crown, which clasp* It
closely, and the rather wide, double brim,
flaring evenly all around, turns up. sur
rounding the face in most becoming fash
ion. M. A f.
Records of the Stone Age. when men went
about clad in the skins of beasts, might
well be recalled by this ultra-civilized age.
only it is the women chiefly, not the men,
who have taken to this primitive covering.
Never before certainly haa there be^n such
a season for fur as. this, and when it 13
not -worn actually as clothing it serves as
trimming. Perhaps the cold summer of the
fashion capital started the vogue, for long
before It was over women, weary °f tne
dull, sunless days, hastened into fur gar
ments and velvet costumes trimmed wit»i
fur, at the same time donning velvet and
felt hat* on which fur was prominent as
trimming.
The demand has created a supr!y "f new
things In the fur line, or possibly the de
velopment of the art of dyeing the skins of
humble animals hitherto deemed unworthy
of notice In such a way as to make diem
suitable for the purposes of fashion has
created the demand. In any case many
apparently new skins have appeared in the
market and fur is being used in every con
ceivable way both for entire garments and
for trimming.. It i" shaped into long wraps
aad'shorfcoats, with fur 6toles as big a3
garments and muffs that serve as lap
robe?. It bands, borders and hems skirts
and coats, and, without obvious purpose.
stripes them. On Indoor gowns it hems
short, transparent sleeves, edges lace
berthas and. in the. finest of line?, follows
the design of lac* trimming.
To the commonest of furs, such as cat
skin, rabbit and the odious rat. hi^h sound
ing names are given, with prices to corre
spond; and oldtime furs, once considered
fit only to g:vo warmth to ordinary gir
ments, are used in the adornment of splen
did costumes of velvet and si!k. Among
these are the pretty opossum fur ar.rt the
common fur of the pray squirrel, called
here petit giis.
Opossum fur is charmln? on fabrics hoM
ing a touch of brown, and petit aris in its
lovely dark shades is particularly becom
ing to women with praying hair. Mingled
with ermine this pretty gray fur trimmed
a Directotre costume of Mark velvet worn
at the Longchnmp races. The scant,
straight hanging costume was finished by
a round cape that touched the waist line,
back and front. A tiny pointed yoke was
of th« gray fur. an<i a three-inch band of
It followed all the edges: the fronts turned,
into tiny resets faced with ermine, and a
toque of shining black beaver, which, while
clasping the face closely, mounted high into
the air, was trimmed with a wide band of
ermine, with two sharp pointed bright
green quills.
This little round cape i? seen on many of
the new costumes, and is shaped on the
lines of those worn years aeo. Indeed, th*
old and new capes seem to be- exactly alike,
and the woman wise in gowning win has
ten to search old trunks for such dis. ;ir.i f ,l
accessories and restore- them to their ward
robes.
Rather startling, but quite lovely, was
the use of seal fur to trim a dinner sown
of golden brown satin, overhung with
a tunic if gold colored net, thickly woven
with gold beads. This tunic was split at
the sides, and long gold tassels Dulled the
thin fabric into sharp points, which
dragged on the floor. The brown satin
skirt was widely hemmed with sea!, above
which it was heavily embroidt r« <1 in gold
and silver. A wide belt of fold embroid* ry.
raised high In the back, was dosed there
by two fur covered buttons s t inside
frills of gold colored gauze, and low cut
will be more likely to patronize the big:
parlors, downstairs. Saturday night "hops. *
euch as enliven summer hotels; Informal
games and amateur theatricals, teas and
lectures, all these the hotel will provide for
th© enjoyment of the guest?, to say nothing
of all the tup. that Just bubbles to the sur
face naturally when a crowd of girls gets
anywhere. Furthermore, the women who
are planning the new hotel, being women,
have thoughtfully provided against those
other occasions when a girl has company
and wishes to entertain "it" without as
sistance. For such emergencies there are
cosey little parlors just big enough for two.
which will make hospitality on the part of
the guests an easy matter.
Finally, to cap the climax of an already
seemingly perfect institution, tipping will
be absolutely forbidden. No girl will be
forced to part with her hard earned dirties
In order to secure hot coffee or a clean
napkin. For favors from the servants she
must depend wholly on her own charming
personality. The girl who can win devoted
service by the compelling power of her own
smiles ami contagious good nature will not
only advance her own interests but fur
nish an object lesson to the cynical. Com
petition along this line Is tree and fair lor
aIL Th© "grouchy" girl with dimes to
throw away will have to reform If she
wants to get better service than the. sunny
little thing at tha next table who can't af
ford to tip the waitress.
All these delights have attracted a large
number of applicants for rooms already,
and it Is expected that unless would-be
dwellers in the Virginia act quickly th*
hotel will be filled without them.
Among those who are serving with Miss
Potter and Mrs. Olleshelmer on the board
of directors are, Mrs Richard Train and
Mrs. Myron Borg. and among th* con
tributors are Mrs. Russell Sage. Mrs. An
dr«w Carnegie. Mrs. Morris K. Jesup and
Mrs. Jacob H. Schiff.
CATS AND BIRDS.
"If a nuisance cannot be eaten, tax It."
«ays Robert T. Morris in "Bird-Lore." re
ferring: to the suggestion that cats be taxed
Just as dogs are. They do so much violence
among the feathered folk that the writer Is
sure bird lovers would rejoice at this means
of lessening their number, and any one who
has ever seen a motheaten. wild eyed old
tomcat pounce upon a songbird will surely
agree with him. The farmer and the gar
dener, too. who owe so much to the good of
flees of the birds, would Join the agitators
tor th* cat tax. But lest ho rouse th* wrath
Uittdmu
— - — j
Women Congregate
LONDON PLUMES PREDOMINATE
FROX MAKER TO YOU DIRECT
THEY SAVE YOU 50$
AND SATISFY YOU 100%
SEW TOIUC SHOWROOM* CFSTAEiS
I 21 W. 34»h St.. (©DP- Waldorf-Astoria)
366 6ta iv., next 23.A st. tuaael sta.
277 Grand ft-
FUR TALI
NUMBER THREE
Choosing- your furs 19 always » <83~
cult matter. The varle'y of 3kit3 '.3 ex
tensive and th* styles In which tier ars
mad* up are varied. Our sales fore» Is
composed of compered experts la tew
line, who am at all times r*a . a»3
willing to give th<» customer the »■]
of their fc«st Judgment. This. tester
with the fact that wo ar» importers «w
manufacturers with a reputatloa o£
twenty- years to sustain, will. "•
think. assure you that V* l ■*• 113 *
■wisely in. buying your fur» here.
Brasctes in Parts. L*ndca. t#ipi*
23-30 West 38th St.
SETT TORK OR
S<T.<t for Fook'et T.
Tree Booklet Tells
HOW TO GET
X MO>l REM.t>Utt c BEMIDT
Ga!l Stone*. Consti|»tto. St;«s^«* "*«
Troubles. An*mfc». U *»«=«•
NATURAL OLIVE OIL
r-nrwd la vrr uay_th* Natural c^ ■£ a ;aaJ
fec'Jv,. and mor* deMca:* and to* «« uCJ
for tab use. . _
CALLAHA^S
SPECIAL OLIVE OIL
In can* orlv— gtvtß* >°v ■»»• ■» J« « ea *
than in bi>'.tl«s. -„,.. ■&* »-'
Imported In As cam tram li^Vf v- »a*»
mmtstta in quality and ta*t» and or aw»»
rutty. urn •*•• «■•». WSO . ,
At a!l H«»-«*n art Mbs£* iru *. *£*%* W
us direct M you la any au-inti^y
&«ad to a* tor '"** Bookie*.
CEO. C ALLAHAN & CO.
•19 Front St.. rear Beefcnaa .St.. * £
T«l. SS33 Beekasan- E>LMasHH — "**.
of all true spinsters. Mr. Morris b^JJ* ->
add that this proposal Is not mid* wita
Idea, of taxing th© household pet out c.
tstene*. He himself has soma f»Ua*
lings" about th« house, and. therefore. a ;
lenient. Even If beautiful torn "^^
robin -when th«» temptation la great c* »•*
b* forgiven, because h* is good at ."^1
and doesn't know any better Vm**
tramp cat. which nils the ni<ht " JT^
and th* day with murder-he Is » s^f
society, both human and ornithological. —
against him th« tax Is alm«d.
STRIPES IN MILLINER*- _
New modes of using stripes— ** i- * >
white, and blue and whit*— * m ~V ,*.
llnery at© bring devised a* th* 9 a3 nJr
vances. The striped material » F >r
ally satin, and It may serve »* „# a
covering of a hat or as a '* cln * • 1- #
border for a wide brim. A fetcnin*^
model Is a toque made entirely or
and white striped satin and trimireu
a little rose colored velvet ribbon. ||^-
roerous bows and other forms of h>
tlons for hats are also shown in *- •
striped effect is produced by the -'~ A
alternate rows of black *» d
soutache.

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