Newspaper Page Text
Iudaci: L A27ý Hats That Look Cool. 'II" .. . . ,:,.r' ,, , ,:' .- q ,, j lr to w1 * : ' ' deg,.; !.:.' tha;t I c.1 l. amt us:,. min< n::l ;he j'ys o3 f sun hrlllilr. It !:Ik :.l the s iur:e ! hait iha, ,', hinf tI, -e t%%,,. dulill: Ite nill the ' : :I } :', ' .T ,', t Nr n.111,in4 l1 v'.ely lnew .'t` InaIl -uinIll* r Ihtlurs iill lal "se:ter - shade that are trielened with rihbioe rose.tt.s that lok like wondler ful. ".~1 ly dis.coiverled iiowr ferins. Pin.a, is made for them among the new r:riatls in the millinery shp,. but white ard bllack till most of the mll Ilner. hori.on Just now. 'lThe lublle is already lutte.d with vividly colored headwear for ")ports and ~-ountry wear, so that. even with an a a!:encheh of whtlle-uld-iblack liat. at the height of sumllier, there will be no dl(arth of color In headwear. The three hats shown in the group pictured here are types of the new style'. A milan sailor that looks as coo! as a breeze from the sean has a crown of pure-white satin and a nar row hrim-binding of sathin. Its trim ming is a wide collar of white gros grain ribbon with a fiat double bow at the front. Thep oft felt hat is In a pale greenish yellow shade with ribbon col k:' . 1 . 1 1 1 ii Blouse and Jabot Join Forces. The Jahot. having atcomplished a triumph in fashions, after the manner of conquerors has compelled blouses to adapt themselves to Its way of thinking. Its way of thinking is, that necks should be covered with high. wrinkled collars of the filmlest and softest of laces and the finest and air lest of net and crepe. And that ample cascade and ruffles of these dainty materials shall fall from the high col lar. The jabot knows no rival in pop ularity so far as neckwear is con cerned. A new blouse for midsummer, shown in the picture given here. accepts the mandate of fashion and betters its chances of success by joining forces with the jabot. To do this successful ly it changes the usual order of sum mer blouses and fastens at the back instead of at the front. It is made of georgette crepe and is quite plain, like most late models. There Is a group of five tucks at each side of the front Skirts Have Deep Cuffs. A rather new idea in skirts is being shown in some of the smart New York shops. The material, gingham, col ored voile of tinted linen, is made rather full arounl the waist, but slight ly nar,-ower at the hem, which is turned up in a cuff which sometimes extends even ten inches. Underneath this deeply cuffed skirt Is a full pettl cost of white mull or organdie. The bodies of these frocks are mande of the tw materials, one of the most succeas tul beingL a sort of full unsasit chesm :vr aril tailored rosette in ribbon at thti. sotue <olor edged with a silver .rd. .1 lr,"ty hut of white rel-p georgette h: I a xitnarriw droopin i brinm, faced %th 1 IaIk , ' l vit. The ul.per brim cveritin of 'crtep, 1 soft. falling lie yond the brim edge in a narrow drop, and the top crown Is a soft puff of erepe. A fan of plaited rilbbon-white grosgrailn-p-l sedl against the side ro, nll and ia bar in three pale colors of yarn, put on in long stitches, pro claim this a new idtea-the latest fancy of soetll clever creator of new things in millinery. Of White Silk Wool Tufted. The novelty of the season is the c'onbintation of white silk and soft shetlland wool which Is Ilbing seen in the smartest millinery. This Ilat Ihrimlnlte sailor seen in a shop down town is of white taffeta underfaced with black and the round crown Is dot ted all over with tufts of white wool like the seed pods of some great flow c.r. A dash of black occurs in the two fiat tabs slipped into a slot in the brim. extending from the shoulder to the lbust line. The sleeves are somewhat full and gathered into deep cuffs. All seams are hemstitched and the Jabot is fintshed with a picot edge and decor ated with hemstitching. The too-slender woman will welcome the high neck and the blouse fastened at the back and especially the full front of ruffles and frills that fall from the collar. Although the designers of styles profess to ladore the slim figure and the long-neck. hblouse styles for the past year or so, have been much bet ter adal:pted to full n,,cks and the rounded lines of plump figures. The estabilshment of two universl ties for South Africa. one at Pretoria and the other at Cape Town. is being urged by a government comuission. --- - ----- ---- --------. isette with a bretelle girdle of the colored goods. Careless Management If the term "carelessness" must be used. it might well be applied to man agement which permits hazards to ex 1st; but surely no;t to the injured themselves, for self-preservation is the first law of nature, and it Is Incon ceivable that anyone with rare excep tion should wilfully permit or cause tnjuw to themselves.--. Weaver nwear, in IndustrialY Nanagemeat JURY REFUSES TO CONVICT WOMAN Split on Verdict Where Unwritten Law Is Invoked in Defense. KILLED SISTER'S BEAU S-crd Trial is Orere "y -. ',' o I-:st! s Acco:ed , F u',J GL lty in F.rst D .e or Acqutt2Ji : r . i " ' t a . ..! }:1 . - . t :1: ' r.' :i_,11, i." "r: , t " ' th. rulini ', . ' .J . K'I l l 111.1 - h:..'I : I i, -t,.. . ,i , be .*'i". . .'.1 t - rl"- h r i, h,' , : -r Sgr.. r :i.i.rllti d. I, e altl w i . : terunt. deg,. ree fur tihe j 1r. tit Eider. Unusual Features of Tragedy. The arur"· n-taue Ijrroe. I l.inli. rne eIlt tra ..y.l I a, a ,l ,1 ! tJt ,, . ] i -eu l e, iti lihu te that Nl,-; , IM ,Kiri rk'ieebht. :ig.'- twitll h' i'-t hr .- , T:..1 -trikir gly : , rlty. ., as h.int. r .-'i a: Unu1 a Iotirear ant Talled! i..1; take her ril inri. 'Th'e l nii""r" ;t t .. Kinlderkneelit family .11d. n.t ,hk., h:. The father, a brothr itlland Ml .. l. a i -ter iof Mary. sirspeI ." iti In .: Intentlo. ars nt t(ein rg "f the T :he el-r:lly lan.t winter the Kin ,lrknei.- Miss Lena Fired 7w. Shots. on ani'd succe, edd fore au time. The several clandestine meetings followed. and on February 5 Mary disappeared -from home. Miss Le a Kln.,erkneebt Tand her brother located and followed the couple as they alighted fronm Rich fardso's car, they began an argument. Mi e Fired Two Shots. MIss Lena Ored two shots and when she, her sister and brother startel for home, flichardhon was standing by his car. Later Richardson found that he had been shot in the abdomen. Hie died two days laeter. Miss Klnderknecht insists that she did not know she had shot her sister's .swneetheart, as there had ,een no out cry anil she saw no iloorl. Miss Mary Iexplained to the authorities that shi :lik-d lichardson hbei-rase he- hadr gli en her flowers and candty and had a 'ar.iter autoRothllhe." "COINER" PULLS A NEW ONE Subtle Hypnotic influence, He Says, Counterfeiter. it Los Angeles.-Subtle hypnotic Infiu II enaces working subconsciously on the ,t mind of a man who was out of work w and needed money badly, caunsed John Kly to become a counterfeiter. liii c werld story of how mental suggestion d caused him to matke bogus coins of it small denomlnatlons failed, however, e to give him his freedom and he was if sentenced here to five years in prison. e Kly said the imprint of a half-dollar IC in the mud brought the first criminal thought. Next came a display of i.n e tlsts' molds in a window. This was followed by a desire to test his ability. With a silver plating out8t and home aitee mold he inlisheod several had hal-dollars. His landlady duemanded rent. Ie had no money andy decidJd to give her the bad coins. whirh hle accepted, and the colns fell into the a hands of the police. Rich Man Handles Potatoes. Scranton, Pan.-When a carload of seedg potatoes designed to help plart extra large crops this yeril was pl--i up in the railroad yards in this iity. early the other morning, through a strike of the freight handlers. Mil lionalre Benjamin Throop turned freight handler, took o ff his coat, and went to workl transferring the potatoes from one car to another, so they could( reach their destination at Clark's Sum mit, In the heart of the farming re glons. MIr. Throop had advanced $3,000 to get the potatoes here, and did not want the farmers seeking them sh. AS A CH!LD INT ER'P TED IT. , 1, . [ S a " '1 ' ," ,, I. , -h , i .' 4 . .! P.f .. , . _ . ,' u , t!L,. 1" "' ,.r in !h. ' "I .I ,.1 ,0: It ,i..r, , , ." " uzz -"L. u li th.n I °:, i1. ,l that ah..t I r,:ll. did .,ay '' a. thif : 'If ,1 :ur, nlt tuir, r.;ula:r iln it tn.ruI;i,' I -i tll hI ,' ti b rlip }.u frolu tih r, ý-ftr. "--\,"a Yr1. '"il.'". Out of the Question. 1,. For :I n ,lo lill . ris ,lll. ir. Ift 11 J 1- : 1 i ! o I -,i" . *,; t ,, t : 6k , I:n a, t-h ,e tit " v;! ' ll. t :1 'ruP ti*:i :rt t" it is t'. Yply lrtf,,u ,! kio hledge of the ('1 ', 1,1I iii :1: . 'li:--iS s, II. i I'" TESTED HUMOR. I.dltor-I can't use these Jokes. Jokesmitt--That's odd. They've been u3sed by all the best papers In this country. Un eoetific Barbarism. The savage mind was narrow. That's how it came to pass Men used a poisoned arrow Instead of poisoned gas. Started at the Back. "Ive begun to read that novel yon loaned me." "The first chapter Is peculiar, isn't ItI" "I haven't come to that yet." Cart efonre the Horse. She-You never take me to a show any more. He-You spend so much for theater gowns, there's nothing left to take you there. Then It Happened. "What made you think he would propose to me?" "Why. when I refused him he said he didn't care what became of him; but, perhaps, he wasn't serious." Not Very Comforting. "l)ohbln.. the art critic,. has roasted my pictures unmorcifully." "Ion't mind that fellow, lie's no lblti.:s 'if his own; he only repeats like a ia;rr-t ltl t others say." A Safe Bet. Sock.son luskin-Il'm going to play Othello. Rooky.,r Beotts-Dldn't know he wasI 'uunin'. I'll bet he's a ldark horne! Two Chances. Hl-Whant do you think of this new aurtomohile gun for modern warfare? Dix-Fine. If It doesn't shoot the enemy. It will run over him. Fishing for Compliments. 1 ('ritl--That'q a beautiful p'ltare. The Artist-Youn must he shoa lghted. Critic--Well. I guess I am. Safe. "Duhbson lhas been calling on the Twobhble twins and sans he doesn't know which one he'll propose to." "If [tubsnm know what the Twobble twins think of him, he wouldn't have to ,bother about making up his mind. [I1 couldl propose to either one without Srulnnitng any risk of having a wife or his hands." A Different Tramp. Jack (somewhat of a pedestriann)--I Kidder-What did you do with him? Mean Trick. "Are you still taking exercise In your room'?" "No. I found it didn't pay." "'That's strange." I Not when you understand the cire camstances. Some fiend in human I form greased the handles of my In dian clubs and I broke a forty-dollar mirror." SJealous. Dodge-I hate a man of ue idoe. Wedge-Naturaly. Nao ems Skis t b sMsed LONG LEGS WIN BRIDE FOR MAN Mistake of Manufacturer of Ar tificial Limbs Results in Happy Marriage. S. t 1, ',, : ('l".- A tuez t'Ie in t 1. " 1 t, :1 i ' . i. t " ,i I'1 , :1 . ' , '1 - ' 1 I' I M r Won Bride by Long Legs. di lik], fir a ih,,ri mnt . .1ftr :1 tui e s,,'++id -nt h.l nllt . S.ent to a ft. P.t1l ulll - ft I'tu e ,r la ir o f , ,l ,n ]t , . III t e tl 1" f ae, but a ne."\ pi Ielrk had llixel tweo orders :m ,l .llinl re oilfld lalir it long ones. W,'haln the errer vwals (lisov.er'el tIhe' ':. Paul firms wrote to both Iwt enl . lltk Ing tlheml t., return their leg%.. The' tall icnlluz r1eturnedll the short less. but co. weird waas r,.e.lvel from ,*,John. Anl in vestigation sho\wed that JIohn's in er.useld hleight hlad retsulted in his nar rinse andl thect he weouil not return the long 'legs for anlly consildrlltloll. SNAKES IN THE BARROOM Vision of Rum Demons Clears Saloon, but Owner of Reptiles Is Held for Theft. l'ittlaurgh.--J. M. Weaver. wiho sa:ys ihe he<. no lchomle but likets Louisianall, causied wild excitement in a saloon in this city. lie <ntered with a hI, and placed it near a table. lie or dlered a drink. An instant later a young man who was lounging against the bar and discussing the submarine situation uttered a wild yell and dls appeared. His auditors beht'ld 13 snakes wriggling about and sought tu ,ble tops for cover. While Weaver was scraping the ;reptiles off the bar a policeman en ter.'el and placed him under arrest. W\eaver admitted he stole the snakes from a earnival company, and was sent to spend several weeks In a work= house. SHOT OUT H!S WIFE'S TOOTH Husband Blew Away Aching Molar While "Fooling" Woman With Gun He "Didn't Know Was Loaded." 4'heater, 'a.---Charles Wright. shot through his wife's cheeks and blew out an aching tooth, while attempting to ,nmhke her forget her mnisery. When trrested he handed the revolva'r to the authoritels andl said that Iee "didn't know it was loaded." Mrs. Wright had been complaninieg of the' tootllechllt'. Producing the gun. Wright suid: "liar'. I'll sloot that tooth out." "UGi ethead," said Mrs. Wright, Ilagh The maeen pulled the trigger nal, his wife fell to the' floor with t bullet, Idle through her cheek. GIRLS WHO LOST ARE MOURNERS AT WEDDING Cleveland, O. - Weddling meourners are the latest addition to Indoor sports among thie so 'lal elite of this city. They made their appearance at the weddlng of Dorothy Kreps and Arthur Me-Arthur. society favor Ite.i. The plan calls for each girl whlo has ever been coourted by the groom.ln et'en though he dlil It lhalf-heartedly, to drive to tihe weddcllng dressel In black andl 'nrrylng a black handkerchhief. iltejeted male luitors ha:ven't followcd suit as yet. READ BY LIGHT OF GUN FIRE American Serving as Sergeant In Brit ish Army Tells Some of War's Queer Phases. New York.--Serleant Arthur (. Empey. an American who served in the llrlti-h arny a year and a half be fore he was wunded, t~hl rnemlenrs of the New YorLk University Alumni as sociation that Intense bomlardments raging along the western front give sufre|ant light to read a newspalper il the first trench. Emlw.y said army chaphnins hold servi~es sometimes on gun carriag,, with one eye on the Bible and the other on German airplanes. The Pr-s dlans, he said, are the most feroelous Sghters, with the Bavarilans next and Se 8uoms thrLd. A" rye &T 2$ rr ZIG 4·a """ .ý a "<" '" 3 PA`.ACE L~·AA T x I I.::- la neiL I.::L. If - li t:lln ltl " \ :Ii i lli lllll'-' ' ..h ':I- IItI. , Iu iili 'iri: :a ini . nee :.r.'-Iin v 'i lh:' l ,ilnl ,r . Th ' "'." ti , ' .:l . in 1 .t i ii h.i ditr . l I, r ':, . 1 , .'1 . ... s ii 1 i i \1l, h: ,\,- rli lt ;n ly t rri, l 1 i. I r\ f a: h,.1t!. ; exit.ri 'i. S4 o r I t n iuTlirie, : ,i c a lar:n\ \\:- I:n it,' l II :I: 'I l:i:i n , ' leirt f the. T'I ,lb.tan r,,livi;;,, W,1 ,hinl i;t:e: a11; E'.':r. j' -a: ,",l ,t.rl ri lI., 1i1tna t''r, :t ,1 thi' la\\ \3< ri:: l ly _ .\ i l\.' ni'nt ti'il It lrt islth i\ - ,leit i, cil tnr,.r ('lst re,..l Y enil l1ll-l'i" l ." ,Itll ..l (lhi ,':11.11: I ,f 'lI ,'ilt. ". ' rl:il }'I: r' ;ign . l 'l ,' r 'if the m' - f Tibetltlt' t hw arll. ips 1 I.. " 1 '1.-t rtn cr.": - ing t i ni r Ii'itii ir he', s if riuntaiini thci oiz sitil :\fl tinte e lorr irul triblt of the ehi:. ry and lh' j.hl.u.y of the rllnns or l.:,,.asts ihl 'ld in ,re" ping his region l ., i,, wn tir tIhel r:l- r of tihe w,,rll, %it i lHel nry 1.. 'eteri"n . ine Grit. Tih et I. :, rctically treelessci cnl bit terly cil- ifor the lmountaiVns herel rlh gre: i.t altltudes and natllure prie isent i her \ilest and mo ist repellent ieitIs. 1!.e rhggedneo s oif the land sueae Is . leatr.l In the pesple lthye sol-ves whc ', re, very low in the seil. of n rmvilizatl;. p exar slunorer of this lit tie-known ,'nttYry sastlo in his cr:ibing e htlIt ure for a ir I "ever son 'h vrying scales of rtu mnlkil to :': Tibetan is entitledr : to the araan \ itiout chi: it would re ipitns silhe to ia l.mine :t embople nre i, n lIghtened .:nd harharou . savage awl degloraded i all the t at thvagery asnd drealgradatnt imply. One who has ncver seen a t an nomad lon hibes native henth cTta hare no conception of hisn unpleasant appearnnce; the swarthy complexion. long black hair, phierelng coal-black eves, half-naked figure \' +th man en rmlit spear slu Ing on his back ner and it ty mantchlock in hisl tind. makes the beist figure for n p:i:rnter I ever isaw. then opportunity plresents itself to :,,tuck anti plunder : .mnall caravan \i, ithoaut chance of r are tance glorious blravery, but at the first n how of anggr tleon, or even the feeblest of Ieal dann~gers, he is the trlienest cow ard." Many Small Tribes. The T!i-itans are composed of many small trIll-e, varying in cst to-ms. nnn nerls and even language, bhut held to gether by the religious domnation of the Dalni .nma, for in goiverment Tylwt Is I, theo eracy almost pt.re and simple. Their habits of life are ind. - c ribably tilnthy, antid mnirnls, nc'cording to WVeste'.ii standards, have no exi st ence. .,:, one writer who has lived among th o hn for an tme: 'The .~tshe of eatnl is connm n to nill Tiletayn. For :a;,ny months I Ie\twl among tltlha to hir witness to thlir dipping t,,e.ir hants up to their wrists In lile di-io. eating, sheep' in bt-i. nid sleeping 'c n ler tentsl l c ellwling i:s v.' m n engle .,leed by thi ir filthy c :e hits. rThey nar .t ilonous d ll will ea int eill time. liu a I -. ee.t. then li . l\ n ;:l i dleep Ilkn. lreite l n." for their :'f lleen, paticllccrly t ri lI thme eme'' whichteld, fortis thr ta. Ti:n of !lfe , to kill a hluse is i.,:l.I iidered if moran l -ra which imay cointlin the slayer's ,ill to an eternity of horrible punishmn tat. Wretched Lot of the Women. Th traveler cannot full t.o he Itrutk by theli hardness and miseiry o" the TI beta.n wolan's lot, saylls the rit,,r -ust valuable commodlity. he is trite-il. definitely worse than that cof dowimestic Food Conservation. plain. For she hadl certaiin cr.ilsc . rcr lacin iuen of cheek, pnal certiun lutck Oscar-why call all dogs italor?-si ously gorged it down. Then, led by his mistress. he icft thi' restaurant as If seirnething very un usual had happeened. "Food conservation'." murnureit l ti. fat man, who was starting upoci his record variety of ple.--Columbus Err' aing Dispatch. Good Humanity. One of the largest American indus owzma oncemrn has a re~onrly or S: I . \ try t ,- ,, " ' + ,, ", 1 I.. tit d ll'Ai r. - , - ' i t. , the {s . . ', . ,, t , i.T * 'r - . f , th t h a t q 'i ,, -t1l, r l r !h elasin: for a tI 1",,:':1 i at 'tll r labor that that 1 h:che or u:trfare. Te wo:na he toie ie rtie 1.e letion of her oi ,tr l" l:ls. *tIC e I. stI tl o nlike a la ,w to t.I e hi tthest hbler. The rites of 'death ntl htaW very curit t:. When a chief ore h.edy i tast:itented to a stake a4 pl, tie to 1he attackis of besi. i irIAsi in ther belief that olI ti 1ti:rts ,f his ioly will he After t!::it. wlhat ren a!ns is ctr :l Ti l, :hes placed In raic atll Thix.e kith .'intros and hurtical u'." i, ,a in htlirines. llou Te. motee nt isreputable dartr L.:.'. tie i:ieitai of Tibet. is le lhy the fataous trte of RsaitaI I, .t,, latt..ckers. the mca weh ,i!.i'. i tet ne .atlin is to break l .lides of, te lald. A nmoe Mta er type of hitmanity cannot bt. Edterd. tnt they live In the fdIdal haveli. Filthy in appearant"e tnaked. loth ed In obsall ae rA pieo'ile live in hiousts un&t to hm he^. The. veil wt ich has for elntrl den Tibet frotm the rest of thlle lan been lifted. h t the Spe tliI ventl h:.,s not been IS ptblkl.aF v ory oe.t MAN IS TAKEN AT OWNM li Humility Is Called a VirtsA N Ceases to Be One If It WO, ied Teo Far. Humility is called a virtal. l unlee- ca.rried too far. A mr' atlly taken at his ow rest I nal:es tooe, little of bhtleslf. beI ly to he thought of little wtri 1 unduly humble man willN Il strength of character E 1I ecs. lie will have little I1Uti regeoesible IrNsitloo. hiie too great oplTe. d I pelf standls in the way of mNUS rent humillity is worse. al~s I 1taukee .lournrut. Coceit -l many lt.~nks in life oandl mIui uat of :t Ann; too mUch NON l tin revv toe the needed I l unInt. I'hnelt in a child 1i 1cte. l v l Ih, w he comes .t.. witc ecther hlldren In in ld. 1 iitie eto put Upon him blu : inferior-a dism W t. i l l ,1 1 a tee neglected. A C I rrileleled in spirit fii t I is t .E iven teachel uIU faiu to sIee hatt is the iI hil1l ail to give him the 4 lmeit i needs.rc r ewa e d h eloxin :t child's self-coofldee rable injury may thus be 0l :'rain hilen to feel that he io :tidii is able to do h rt tam to do. Think well & Ilelait'l landlords are lat froith raisi.g ren Ita et.ney by tinants. ',ih :,Itl manner of plt IE l ar ,, i, ln ri , froll-n the' th trp. c, I tL 1 S , It t\\ ht ir produ the d Ic: r: .l I o hing atI I all. t 'hit t *I. Thne by pl0owI s - At tl e wlild We. , , hli ,i pr. thu der t' "SIel-l ltidk5Ofll ll