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COME ON 'N, JUS' HAVE FUN ALL DAY. FRESH AIR'S CALL 1 bppy Children. Fr-e-pd from Tenements, Ramble in Berkshire Country?One 1 kindred in City Wistfully Await Vacation Trip. you are ;n Stockbridge I your way to the sleepy lit ,:,. of Interlahen and motor ov between the plai MBM V i reach the crot roftd*- at the entra?e? to the villa sign: HI LEN-S 110MK. N PI WING. SI OW DOWN. Take its advi< tOl as you swii ajm\ you'll see them I Kl strong. ? and ? ? before you ha' ! up in the ci >-o-h. look! T! ]_d> i and by the tin re it there will t t r>> mmittee ot from twent p to greet you. : owd as you i ask him >n, as, for instance you? Where do you com . ?loi:.g here *" H In 1. i auawei J hnny Fresh Air ar Ui over there i ??We're from N' York; got sent hen it's a swell place t'.] | ill day is jus' have fun re two weeks. . we do all day? Diflf'ren ry day. Oh, yc oughta seer iw ride of us o" lunch. Gee, i an' we cat ? , -. ?y day. Th? the goili . : '? ye seen our lake" ' ? come " It's or.'y abe ful nice an' Yell see the '-.;. .-tone if yc the cows in the Aw, Susie wus, ? ?hi ;.'-'? Oh, talk about i lawn pan ice cream. Susie ad to " ' Par ly had ' 's I c'n co. -?'Ow, 'cause in the I bet .. hundred dollars . Me an' ' other ! . the ' ? goin' ir boy e was ' there Ins' year, and all the boys pot ?op crean soda I hope they do this year. "I'o you have to go? Well, come again, an' I'll tell ye some more things we do, What 1 told ye ll on'y part." Whei >ou hear Johnny tell it con ?rmed from time to time by Susie \ou will be reluctant to yield to the honk-honk of the motor horn that - you have loitered long enough. You will be reluctant hocauae Johnny will make you believe it all as he tells it. The enthuaiaan of the good tine ho is having will light his eye, domi? nate hie geaturea, throb m his voice. Buppoae you had lived all your life ip a tenement street, had tried to have fun there amid its crowds, its trucha, its pushcarts Suppose thut, and then suppose ngain that you had been tranaported iron that to the heart of the Berkshire* and let loose for a fortnight amid their freedom and their beauties. Do you 1 you could put conviction into a narra? tive like Johnny's 1 Well, these suppositions are both true. What's more, Johnny is No. 400 ?>n the list of tenement lads and laa lies whom Tiie Tribune Fresh Air Fund has transported from the tene? ment ?-tree:, to !nt? rlnken and set down at St. Helen's Home for two weeks ?'? happiness this summer. One hundred others are to be sent there before lehoo] opens in Septem? ber. Want to help pay their railroad lares at $1 71 ? ?.'"NTH!. | IRiniNK **_*_**_ AIR n M>. . J?p,r- .\ . s. r. t? . Presbyterian l Idschaapton.... . R A ajiton. N Y." \ *! -' . M ' *' M . . "Q R W.". Mra A. I'. KlnfsUr.J . u <f put tltbed, i les?*". T W s . ? ' ?. s n.. Aiisuat 14. . II? I , Kerf . . . V r'e n?mr. W. H. 8 . 'Of". . .' bm . . f (atUOffai . i: M a . . a H i: . ' f Bui ?- . Mr- ? 'I"i':ii!tn-<'!i . . Mr- ?>-. ?r I'. IrelstI 1 . Me .?'. 0. W "? . Mian M?rj 1".- ;?- Ko, m-on. . . H . . M Djrs- . ? ?,'kiiowlrdse in Tribune".. A ' DaUileli. . . e Herben . -? 'ta?rl?:i Sun.l?? x. y. ? " . 1 w . . . ?? . e*i. . : friend". G. W. (? . . ' iiitne". . r*. Hekombe. . I! II r MlM la . ' ton.DO , v., ?n -, S? IJ.OO l?.00 lU 1.0 ie.ee ! I N ?e.oo '' 10.M 1. 10 On ?a i? 10 00 5.00 I S.00 3 00 3.00 . 1.23 1 00 1 "" , 1 -i'i i ce 1 M i so 1.00 so ..???I I .. ' 14. 1915. l?e.WI xx ? ? tions, preferably by check or ? r. should be sent to the -h Air Fund, The Tribune, fork. AT 10!. SUFFRAGE HER ONLY WORRY "Women Main's Superior Now; Hope They Never Get Vote,"* Says Mrs. Yourth. fourth, ' : ? ' ? ? ? -"or Mrs. "anti." "Women right? than ! hope they ? will mean v with ! lake n care ' ' ... ? nntry when she She eon and candy store ? . years. She has ? getting ber r to two years ,.) worn triasses. it her can see >-e her pitrht be C' us Can Make Town Dry. '. .1 . "tug. 16. This nni ? rod that it wer t?> make the town dry five weeks. The town ** population maik ? ?? I rat elaai borough. jurisdiction over '?..?: re on '.' hile a number of poo? lit after ; that ? M-d until 1916. Save The Baby Use the reliable HORLICK'S ORIGINAL Malted Milk -pbuilda every pert of the body efficiently. End'jTeed by thousande o? Physidana, atotliers end Nurses the world over for o>otm ihan a quarter of a century Convenient, no cooking nor additional Bulk required Simply diaeolvein water. Agrees when other foode often fan. ????-V- from, HORUCKS, Rocht?, Wit, Who ftubotltute la "lue t aaQeod" ?a* HORUCK?, th? -*jr),la_| YELLOW RALLIES TO CHARM VOTERS Suffragists Will Make Whirl. wind Finish of Campaign During September. Remember the mysterious advertise that appeared everywhere in ?'an a year or so ago "Watch ' >r it; it's yellow"? Mr.-. Norman de R. Whitehnuse, the ? . expert of the Empire Statt . gn Committee, is making a ?-imi lar announcement. But this time it ? i\is that are coming; it's suf? frage parades. ?tuber, the month when the yel fall, is to be the month of ?allies. The Woman Suffrage party has decided to make these ral? lies the biK feature of its campaign for success November 2. The women are to parade, parade and then pa ? *V I.ike the oldtimc politicians, they will parade at nif*ht, under flaring torchlights. Not exactly torchlights, j but they will carry yellow balls of fire in the shape of lanterns. Yellow capes will top the white dresses they are asked to wear. . September 4. il the date of the first yellow rally. The lower Fast Side- will be the place. The parade will 1 form at 7:45 p. m. at Seward Park, ?g at fli'.o, it will pass through Broadway, Cannon Street, Ea.-t . Houston Street, Avenue B, Seventh *. Second Avenue and East Four ? teenth Street to I'nion Square, where i there will be speeches. On Thursday, September 2."., Harlem will have a yellow rally, starting at Claremont Avenue Brooklyn is to have . two, the first starting from Warwick | and Fulton streets. On September 18 a . yellow rally will form at the Williams? burg Plaza and march to the Carnegie i Library. Woman'H Suffrage Party. Neon, i :r ? Xf'eti I D?Utft, *WtHW*__ dsf a- lloe'i '..???. i I ?. m. Men'? !.<??*< nferenoe it V?.|e? for i . ;,-;.'? W . ?.?r"! 1 t. m. French committee m?rtlr.g it ri-V? | l.r??lQU?rifr? tt Kant Thirty-fourth etMM 3 to 5 ?. m. -? ??? I ? " ' '? Dbtrl ? ?\> Mertee ?t boos t" a-itTragiat?. tu ? Orixa. S ?. in. street mee-tr.tx ?' AmatenUm A renne k i?. ??tM-.?h m ? ? ? ? a' i ?. ?? III AiMiu* ?tid At.antic .-. Hrooklvn S 30 ?. m. Twerity-setenth Ateembly nui ri-t - - meeting ?? hwr.e "f I*? 1?-'. M!? E. C. Fraln? T WaH Kl?'!*'!. 8-reet 8 30 ? m. tmeenttamt? A?srmUy DUtrl?-l?Out rt?v>r mre'lhf ?' Ninety ali'h S"e*t ?'.?! Bmultti Women's Political I'nion. ? ?. ir. ?Mr?"': s it r?J?ir.g ?h"p Winner. *.V>b (Mise, . I 30 ?. ir.Mra-Ui.it st Eighty ?Iglu h Street _.4 , Tl-?r- Altana t?.4 Blxt'-sUUi Butet sod ItUxd l-MBUh_,_? American Mothers Have Forg'otten Their Children's Noses?We Are a People with No Sense of Smell, a Perfumer's Indictment. Miss Ann Haviland, Perfumer de Luxe, Regrets Thal We Do Not Appreciate Smell as the Most Civilized of the Senses. By SARAH ADD1NGTON WHKN Mary Jane is a tiny bu she is given a ball, whi she balances precariously I tween pink wrinkled lingers ami an i determinate thumb, and thus does s learn to fot 1. At the same age she given a dose of ipecac, and as ll wriggles her tongue and squeezes t her face her parents cry rapturousl; "Oh, see, she knows it tastes diffe cut!" At five she is taken to syr phony concerts to develop her sense music and carried to art galleries see beautiful pictures. But where, c where, does Mary Jane's little not come in? What training does that in portant organ receive? If it is a nose to be admired, the it is merely gratefully ncknow ledgt ? powdered and tilted whenever cookin cubbage is to be detected. If it is ur duly large, or exaggeratedly carmin or quecrly contoured, it is deplored an powdered and minimized. But that' all. And thus while four of the ser.se are cajoled and urged along, that fift one, the sense of smell, is utterly nee, lected. And this is one of the greatest grief of Ann Haviland, artistic perfumer whose business it is to perfume peo pie and homes and theatres accordini to their kind, and to whom the sensi of smell is as essential as the othe: senses. "It is the neglected sense," she said in her Fifth Avenue laboratory, "an? perfuming is the neglected art. Tin middle class women in the United States are perfect bores when it come? to perfumes. They simply have no ??lea of what perfume can mean. They want heavy, sensational odors that stun the senses instead of stimulating them. They don't seem to get the meaning, the feeling, the spirit of perfume They buy all kinds of strong stuff and drug the air with it and imagine they enjoy it. Why, they don't even know how to apply their nose to a flower!" "How does one apply one's nose to a flower?" I asked, meekly, with a pict? ure of "The Woman and the Rose" somewhere back in my mind. Smelling flowers always seemed to be a delicate and artistic process, not to be attempt? ed by an amateur. Here were pointers. How People Treat Flowers. "Why, moat people crush a flower against their nose, and then sniff for ?Kar life. But odor should be carried by an air current, and the flower should therefore be held at a slight distance from the nose. Haven't you noticed that you smell better out in the open air? Don't you know that outdoor odors carry much further1 An Indian can smell anything, you know, because he merely stands up in his canoe and smells. He doesn't jab thincs up to his nose, "But. more than that, people should think when they smell. I tell thei to smell with the back of their head' 1 Perfume has an intellectual appea j Only most people confuse their pel , fume Ideas rather sadly. For cxampl? most women won't have heliotrop : because it's lavemler, and they thin that's aged. They entirely overloo the fact that heliotrope has othe j qualities; heliotrope I always give t thinking people, not to old people. Smell the Lost Sense. "New York women have spoiled thei sense of smell, I think, by artificia living. Western women I find mucl more appreciative. They are more will ing to have the pure, natural, d< licati flower perfume simply because the; can smell it. "And men. no matter what they say adore perfume. Of course, they don' like the heavy, cheap sort, and that it the source of their long-felt objection but of true perfume they are verj sensitive. I usually give them verti vert, put up in Chinese jars, with bi| mannish labels. Once in a while thej come in here done up in lavender 01 ' lilac out of their wives' bottles, but I | soon talk them out of that." "Perfuming is an art, but just hon does it compare to other arts?" 1 asked, knowing full well wherein the psychology and the science lay, bul wondering about the art principle. A Futurist Trend. "Perfuming follows futurist art," replied Mrs. Haviland, "and by that I mean the color side of futurist art. I am perfectly mad about color, and as I think color harmony I think perfume harmony. Am I making myself clear? Well, take Poiret's colors, for example. They're what I call true. And in ex? actly the same way that he achieves truencss in color I try to make my per? fumes true. Now, not all people like Poiret, or futurist art, or my perfumes. But when they are educated they do. And just because at first they do not is not sufficient reason for condemna? tion. All persons don't enjoy lettuce, maybe, but it's a good vegetable. "Most of my customers are perfect delights, of course. 1 rarely have a man or woman who is hopeless on the subject of perfume. Uy hopeless I mean the kind who want lilac because they think the lilac bush is a pretty bush, not, because it means anything to them. But still there's a long, long way to travel before the sense of smell in America will be what it should be, what it was in the Orient, and what it I is in Europe. There is one function of odors that we all ;eem to get, though, anc that's the function of association. We can remember our friends by the i perfumes they use better than by the 'clothes they wear, as well as by the quality of their voices. And weTl grow to appreciate our noses more as |wn smell more. Now, you can sniff The Modern Mary, quite contrary, in the person of Miss Ann Haviland, picks her posies to some purpose and brews subtle perfumes. lovely odors in the theatre I've just i in public as well as at home we can finished perfuming the Maxine Elliot teach the nose to do what it should Theatre for 'Nobody Home' so that do smell." Do You Eir_ow That the newe t veil for motoring is of chiffon ami net? The fine mesh is arranged to drop ov? *e be? tween brow and chin, 10 that the mo? torist gets plenty of air. while the hat, coiffure and throat are protected , from du-.t by the chiffon which comes at either side of the net. To make ! one of these motor apparel ace? ; take an ordinary chiffon square veil and cut away from it inside tho ? ajour stitched wide hem enough ma j terial to cover the face. Then, in its place, in.-ert the net. If the edges of : both the materials employed for thi-? ! , veil are first closely overeaat to join. ', them neatlv wiil be perfectly t That the nicest slip to wear under evening gowns in malines, chiffon or lace is made in two pieces instead of [ cut in princes; manner? The soft, thin silk or satin use 1 tor the slip is I ? cul into a skit* of four traight ? deeply, hemmed and then decorated with garlands or trailing vines in rib? bon embroidery. At the waist line the skirt's top is closely shirred to h heavy self-cording at the base of a fit led, boned girdle, whose ajour stitched inch-deep hem comes in line with the nrmpits. Below the hem comes more of the ribbon embroidery, and to its upper edge is attached doubled lengths of ribbon, which meet and are bow knotted on the shoulders. That the girl "kiddie" cannot be ut? terly happy this summer unless she is given a gar?len set in cretonne? The outfit consists of a low-necked and elbow-sleeved frock apron, a long hag to hold the miniature rake and hoe and a sunbonnet. The brightest cre? tonnes are used and the color of the grounding is repeated in the braid binding the edges of the apron, bag and bonnet. Doubled output for 1916 re? duces prices as low as $1975 As thi.s town has electricity it is a practi? cal Detroit Electric car town. Long stretches of paved streets are not a neces? sity for this car with its great power and remarkably easy riding qualities. Detroit Electric owners have demonstrated that it is just as good for interurban motor? ing as it is for driving about town. August 15 we reduce the price $600 to $725 per car Remember?therse are the same high qual? ity cars as our 1915 models plus a score or more of 1916 refinements. Even while lowering the price, we bettered the car. In the 1916 Detroit Electric, you will find ?we believe?the top place car of its type. We urge you to match ir? if jroa can?in el??--anc?, quality, atility, or value in the entire cloaed car field ?gasoline or electric. This price reduction is poeei blc only bcxaui-e of doubled output. You get these savings Our doubled production leads to many economies in all overhead expenses, in purchasing, in advertising, in sales cost in engineering. All the savings effected by our larger operations we hand on to you?? and take our benefit from doubled volume, Here are the 1916 prices Model 61 4-1*? ?a ?agir Broo-him (Former^ %i 600) ? ]?>*ow Model 60 7Vr*Bse. Duplex Dt?tc Broughsn* (Formerly 13.000) ? f40w Model V? S Pasa. Raer Drive Brougham (IormtrtyU.950) ? *r*sj0w Model 5* TV Pas?. Front Drire Brougham ?'Former/*. $?.950) ? *M0W Model 57 4-Pbss. Rear Drive Brougham (Formerly U.850) - **iiow Model 56 VP-ua. Cabriolet {FonrmejUASO) - j-^ Y.Q mamr rtanm etartee (b??u_ ..._.._. Um mmtmte?e?tt warmem etae? '?^?l.i.u.hl?* ?? ametienmtx* tira?, me a>?BB?I ?quipoM?? $1,97$ $2,27$ $2,225 $2,250 $2,175 $2,07$ The Ideal Electric Car. Investigate Its Possibilities Garaging can be had at moderate rate? at the LJectric Garage. 62nd Street and Central Park West. Demonstrations solicited and cheerfully given. ANDERSON ELECTRIC CAR CO. OF N. Y. 20 Ceatral Park We.t, at 62nd Street. S. W. MENSES, Mfr. Brooklyn Office: 342 Flatbush Avenue MR J W. MARSH. M-rr. T-i-phon? I7JI. rolumBua Proapect. In Honor of the Thousands of Visitors in New York The aJohn Wanamaker Store Will Hold During this Week A SERIES OF L?TTLE FASHION OPENINGS which will give to waiting America the first hint of the mode for the Autumn and Winter of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen?a season which will usher in not only new fash? ions, but an absolutely new silhouette. The NEW Silhouette It is a far cry from the balon sil? houette of the season just passed. The waist is smaller and while the hips are not actually very much larger there is what the French call "an illusion of hips." The NEW Corsets More important than ever before! The first of the autumn corsets?some beautiful Parisienne models have just arrived. They give the smaller waistline and are a trifle higher in the bust. A young woman will wear one of these new corsets in the Louis XIII. fitting room on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday from 1 1 until 12, and from 2.30 until 4, so that women may see exactly what the new silhouette is. French Corset Salons, Third floor, Old Building. The NEW Millinery Military fashions of today and mili? tary fashions of by-gone days have in? fluenced /V.s* moths' to such an extent that one sees a turban copied from those worn by the officers of the first Empire, side by side with Georgette's Turban Turco. Caroline Reboux gives us the Turban Bouillonne, and the distinguished buckled hat of the p?riode Napoleon. Jeanne Lanvin presents a petit calhit a jugulataire. These originals, together with adaptations of French models, are having their first showing in the French Millinery Salons, this week. Second floor, Old Building. The NEW Gowns Wing skirts. A variety of sleeves; a Worth original shows them full above the elbow, and very narrow on the forearm; others flare widely at wrist. Ribbon velvet is used in bodice trim? ming. An Agnes original shows a wonderful little gown of jet and spangles and net in sapphire blue and black. The NEW Tailored Suits A decided Russian note is struck in fur trimmings, embroidery, and coatee effects. Lanvin (original model) makes use of plaid cloth, lined with a brilliant red. Black is a feature of the new models. The NEW Blouses Our Paris office sends us frequent shipments of the new French blouses which we speedily have copied, so that the Blouse Shop is full of the new and often exclu? sive models. The Autumn showing of dark and claires blouses is fascinating. Neptune satin and soiree silk, both washable, compose many of the very late fashions. Third tloor. ( ?Id Bldg. The NEW Coats Callot and Cheruit have designed tweed coats straight in the front and straight in the back, but at the sides they have been faithful to the new silhouette?"the illusion of hips." Beautiful coats for every occasion in this little exposition. .Adaptations of these models will be shown. Second tl?*or, < dd Bui Young Women's NEW Fashions Adaptations of the always youthful models of Jeanne Lanvin and Jenny; a certain radium silk dress with the Premet bustle and a delightful serge princess skating dress are among the new things presented. The new silhouette is illustrated by the suit coats; even the very tailored ones show a tendency toward fullness over the hips. Second floor, Old Building. The NEW Neckwear With the pinched-in waist and the accentuated hips, comes the high col? lar, which this season will take the form of a striking band of black around the throat. Only a few days ago, we received this neck? wear from Paris. Main floor, f'ld Building. The NEW Gloves Exclusive ship? ments in New York of Paris Rey nier gloves, hand sewn, in fine French kid and suede. New gloves, too, of softest English doeskin. Main floor, Old Building The NEW Shoes Plain black with cloth tops and long slender lines. The Shoe Shop has them. Main floor. Old Building. The NEW Lingerie fine hand-made and hand - embroidered under? clothes are in Little French Shops. They have come so recently from Paris that they stand for the latest ideas in lingerie needle? work. Third tloor, Old Building. Lxqui-.it?" Italian silk combination suits with tiniest French chiffon rosebuds and French forget-me nots are shown for the first time in the * Silk Underwear Shop, Miin floor, Old Building. UOHN WANAMAKER!