Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 173, Hammond, Lake County, 11 January 1912 — Page 4
THE TIMES.
Thursday, Jan.1, 1912.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS ; By the Lake Conaty Printing a ad PnV. Manias; Comaaay.
Gary Evening: Time; Lake County Time (Country); Lake County Timaa (Evening); Time Sporting Extra, and Lake County Times (Weekly).
Entered at the Postofflce. Hammond, 2nd.. as second-class matter.
Main Office Hammond, Ind....TeL 111 Private Exchange. Call Dept. Wanted. Gary Office ....Tel. ISt
East Chicago Office Tel. 47S-R Indiana Haroor Tel. S50R Whiting TeL (0M
Crown Point TeU (I
MRGER PAID VP CIRCULATION THAN ANY OTHER TWO NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.
tel can afford. In addition to this! owners who rent their properties for Judge Gary's generosity permits the J immoral purposes. " Woman is begin-
use of all of the physical and Intel-1 Ring to take quite an active interest
lectual training departments which in her own affairs, holding that the goes with the association. renting of such property for such pur
poses is a menace to her ctiildren, bovs and eirla. no matter how well
ENCOURAGING SIGN. Bn( rarfi fnr them or for other
It is interesting to note that two lcnuaren, m case ners are so rortu-
of Gary's six banks now show assets nate. and wel1 guarded as to escape, past the million dollar mark. This Is An 01611 she has a Bister's merciful
a very hopeful sign. In a new com- love for the slave slater, whose demunity a bank has, hard work before gradation degrades the name of wornit and the short time that the Gary anhood. When even the submerged financial institutions have been in may hope, the world is getting bet-
hiislnpRH indicates a hpalthv growth I ter.
of the city. The day is not far dis
tant when the steel city banks get
into the two million dollar class if
recent rapid advances continue like they have in the past.
CHICAGO is still cracking its heels
together and jumping up in the air with a whoop because it has a per
fect baby. Shucks! There are hun
dreds of hundreds of perfect babies in the cities hereabouts. "We have
their mother's word for it.
ANONYMOUS communications will not be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and should bo addressed to The Editor. Times. Hamtrend. Ind.
A PRAYER. (live me, drar Lord, the sweet pblleaepay That will enable me, with friendly eye, Tu view the things that hare ao Joy lor mo 1 The vraya of other mea that pas me by. 1 would not frown at folly, solemnwise. And be content shrewdly to eriticls.
(ire me the wide philosophy that flail la each poor Jrat and antic something goods Show me tie that me to other bind., That makes mea lovable, waea. understood. Ton Inns; I've had the narrower wish to be (lad la the garb of cold aasterlty. ;lvr me a fall hi J nut for each common day, Not la vain things beyond my ken and care; Let me believe that down life's darkest way The grime and dust hide something good and fair, Let at Had something la each sordid f seen Of hidden good that la, or might have been. Louis Dodge, In Youth's Companion.
BRUTAL DRIVERS. Time after time has this paper called
attention to the . brutality shown that
noble beast, the horse, by his driver.! THE statements appearing in the
The shameful neglect of the faithful I democratic papers that Ex-Senator
animal in cold weather is also a mat-1 Beveridge insists on Chairman Lee's
ter of regret. Ire-election are just plain, ordinary
Incompetent, brutal drivers who lies. They are bo common and conwould and probably do beat their wives Itemptuous that they are hardly worth
and children, are permitted to take noticing
charge of horses which in many respects are their superiors, and use
them as tbey like, says an exchange. An MINNESOTA paper will be Being, by nature, coarse fibered, echoed far and wide, in this: "The domineering and petty, they enjoy to New York Court of Appeals has ruled the full the power that they are given that a by of ,eisht years is not worth
over helpless creatures. And thev 0'000- Some boys aren't. They
- - i
bear in mind always that a horse can
not fight back.
You can never get a horse beater
to drive a vicious horse. As soon as he finds that a kicked horse will kick
back he refuses to take out that particular horse. Like all bullies, he is a coward and of all grades of humanity
the brutal coward is about the lowest.
WHAT IS NEWS?
grow up to be judges of courts of ap peals."
WHEN a man neglects his wife it
doesn't seem that he should murder any other man who comes around and
takes advantage of the situation. And that's not saying that the oter man wouldn't deserve vengeance.
The Lake County Foil FROM THE LAFAYETTE COURIER
The Lake County Times has Just , 398; Fairbanks, 72;
consummated a commendable journal
isticundertaking in a very creditable
manner. It has made a poll of the re
publicans of the entire county as to their presidential preferences. It has obtained expressions from every city
and town in the county and from dwellers on twenty-two of the rural mail routes. The grand total of the votes thus secured is 3,197. This is
close to one-third of the republican
vote cast for president in 1908, and
upward of half of the republican vote
cast in 1910. To secure such a num
ber of expressions certainly is good
evidence of enterprise on the part of
the Times. Conditions are such in
the state that no presidential primar
ies are likely to be held, and, even if they were, all legal safeguards being
lacking, it is possible the result might
not be as truly indicative of the real choice as the poll the Times has made. So the result of the poll in Lake county quite satisfies one's curiosity as to
what a fair expression of opinion neither Roosevelt nor Beveridge can-
scattering, 76;
non-committal, , 430. The non-com-
mital voter is interesting no lesB than
those who openly name their preference. One particular significance of the poll is the evidence of the strong progressive sentiment. The vote for Roosevelt, Beveridge and LaFollette
combined is 1,708, and, doubtless, of
the 891 votes cast for President Taft,
many of them are by progressives who
feel that the president is by no means an out-and-out reactionary, which, as
everyone knows, he is not. So-called straw votes, when taken haphazard, on trains and hotels, and confined to
particular places ana localities, are
seldom of little value; but when an ef
fort Is made to take a fair expression
of sentiment, in every part of a whole county, the result, especially when a
large percentage of the total vote is
polled, must be taken as a fair earn
pie of sentiment. The vote which is not cast for President Taft would be
highly significant were there some
man who could unite it; but with
throughout the state would be. When over 3,000 voters in a county express themselves the expression must be regarded as a fair sample of sentiment. The Lake County T' mes has long been a strong pro-TaJ 'adherent, ut It did not endeavor, to particularly search out the TaflL sentiment. It is likely the pol? ill seem to most people to be eminently fair. The vote Is divided as follows: Taft, 891; Roosevelt, 823 ; . Beveridge, 417; LaFolette,
didates, and Senator LaFollette un
able to unite the opposition, it is likely most of the vote for these three men
would go to the president were it to com right down to the matter of naming a candidate. If Roosevelt were a candidate, however, there is
no denying that his following would be shown to be strongly in the majority In Lake county. Mr. Beveridge is not a candidate, but the vote for him
is highly complimentary.
HE IS YOU.
THE story that there ar, no desti
thirty years ago a boy was born in tute and needy people around you!
one of the small towns of the west. Uhould n't necessarily Jake you takej
mo pai ems we.tj uuaum iu eeuu uimui jor granted, infre are plenty or to school past the fifth rade, and were J them in your city1 without doubt if
compelled to put him at work at the you care to look' for them.
age of 11. He attended to his work i
faithfully by day. He studied by
night. He earned more than his sal- TERRE Haute has had another
HEARD BY R UBE
The Ilobar Township Girls.
Alice of Deep River Is ruddy and pretty
Ethel of Alnsworth my arms would
entwine.
ary. He came to work five minutes! bank failf.re, the third in a short! Lulu of Liverpool would shine in the
i.. ... . .i
earlv and left it half an hour late. time, waen lerre HJtute auits mlx-1 c"y.
Two of the Chicago papers, the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago RecordHerald, were given the full details of the tremendous good fortune that has come to the Calumet district through the locating of the Baldwin Locomottr ""works 'at East'Chlcago. " ' Although this deal Involves the purchase of 370 acres of land at $1,000 an acre, or a total of $370,000 for the
land alone and will mean the building
of a $10,000,000 plant that will employ il2,000 men and result In addition of 50,000 people to the Calumet dis
trict in which their papers circulate extensively, these papers saw fit to devote only: ten lines of space to the
story.
A reporter for THE TIMES, not a regular correspondent, anxious that
this district be given all of the ad
vertising it could get out olK this big
deal saw to it, without any thought 6f compensation, that every detail of this transaction was given to the Tribune. The result was the greatest Indifference to the story and a paragraph, tucked away off in a corner where it would not be likely to be seen. The Chicago Examiner devoted a full column on the financial page to the story and the Chicago Inter Ocean devoted nearly a column on the front page to a detailed recital of the facts.
The correspondents of the Chicago
papers in this locality have been sub-
ected to much criticism for their al
leged practice of sending out only stories of crime, graft and sensationalism. ' The facts are that certain Chicago papers that are reputed to be conservative will "eat up" a story of a revolting assault on a little girl, a murder or a particularly raw divorce case, srnd staff photographers to photograph the principals, put special reporters on the job, amplify and pad such stuff and then pass up a story
of this kind that means marvelous progress to the region and is of vital interest to every owner of real estate
in this locality. Do certainly Chica
go papers know what is news?
He learned all he could about depart- ing banking and politics she will And Xmy ,s " rare " the comet wlne'
ments of the business in which he was Jhave.iearned a lesson that she needs I Kitty of Hobart is saucy and sweet.
not working. He earned a little and to loam very badly.
spent less. He kept a cool head and
& clean ve hv patina- an Rlepnine ree-
ularly. He knew every morning what
he was going to , do when evening
MAYOR Gaynor's rules or running
a newspaper are about as practicable
came. , When his salary was raised he a8 t0 put n a palr f boxlng g,OTes
lived on the same amount as before,
The Aetna belle she Is nigh, a fairy, Blue-Eyes of Miller is dainty and neat.
But best of all is my Nell In East Gary.
-HENSERT COLDBOTTLE.
IS it possible that some swell East
Gary wren has charmed Hennery, or
to thread a needle. How long would has be tasted the comet wine? if HenGaynor last as an editor if he put nery 8tfrts an,y n"f rcket hl w,fo , . won t do a thins to him. them into effect?
PANIC," read newspaper headlines.
Wonder if it feels any better to be in a
tore her bank roll into bits. Probably
wanted to make it go a long ways.
A NEW YORK professor says United States will be at war in 1930. Good
chance for some Gary democratic vet
erans to get shoulder straps. LiiekUy THE TIMES Appears Early,
"5v.T the moment of going; to press the
Evening Post is authorized to an
! nounce that the purchase by the Bald
win company of a site for a locomotive
plant, etc., etc." Gary Post.
It is a shame they didn't authorize
The Post to announce a little earlle
and not have the "devil" waiting out in the cold streets for. The Times- to
appear and then have barely time t
run his head oft to permit The Post
to go to press.
'Aint it awful? Even the milk bottle
freezes up. MANY a farmer who has an eightquart cow manages to sell ten quarts a day- , STATISTICIANS eay that birth rate is decreasing among the wealthy, but Just the same the stork manages to get in a lot of" overtime work at Crown Point.
WORRY HAS LEFT ITS M AEK ON FACES OF
PARENTS OF RICHE SON'S FORMER FIANCEE
t
?H -
mm
PAK-ENTS. of PEV KICK E 5" OKI'S FlAAiCCff
The parents of Miss Violet Edmonds, heiress and former fiancee of Rev. C. V. T. Rlcheson, have both been under a aevere nervous strain since the minister' contested he murdered Avis Llnnell so that he might marry Miss ISdmonds. They have steadfastly refused to reveal th. whereabouts of their daughter, who .Taa wanted by Jie state ar a win ness against Richeson. Friends ef the family say they wll' forbid Rich eson to seo Miss Edmonds again before the pastor expiates his crime.
"The Clansman," 48 years old today,
Mrs. Alice Hegan Rice, author "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch,'
years old today. Edward Fisher, founder of the Toronto Conservatory of Music, tt years old today. James M. Lynch, president of the International Typographical Union, 45 years old today.
YOU mustn't complain about its million-dollar fire panic?
being worse than one of those good
old-fashioned winters unless you've frozen your ears, or had a few cute
little chilblains.
and put the surplus in the bank. When he was. promoted in position he
stuck by his old friends, and made new ones by working harder than before. He never dodged a responsibility, but shouldered every burden in sight. Today he is at the head of an immense establishment, with thousands of, men under his charge. He is earning more money than the president of the United States, and he is still improving and educating himself.
Do you ask, "Who la he?". He is
the future of what YOU can be. He is I couple
in every farmhouse and every city residence in this great country. He
is on every playground and in every I NEW York fishermen report a
workshop from ocean to ocean, if he mermaid disporting off Sandy Beach.
wills it jo. He is YOU, if you will be Beats all what those hardy chaps can
today what you must be to make the set Into their grog on a cold winter's
man you wish to be tomorrow. He is i day.
Up and Down in INDIANA
SEOOJVD I1IATT TRIAL BEGINS.
Harry Hlatt of Nobleeville, age 26,
charged with the murder of his wife last May, was placed ' on trial for his life In Hamilton circuit court here to
day. ' Hiatt entered a plea of emotion
al Insanity. At the first trial, in Oc-
I er is now held under heavy bond, on a of? charge of murder In the second degree. 42 Luther admits having struck Bauer,
but says' he did so in defense of Bauer's wife. Bauer, he says, was pursuing his wife with & shotgun and she ran to Luther's home for protection. GOES TO PRISOX FOR LIFE. Edward Henry of Shelbyville, 47 years old, has been found guilty of forgery by a jury in circuit court here. His sentence will be from two to fourteen years in the state prison. Last
July Henry filled out a check for Mrs. ' Rosa Spurlln, at whose home he board- ! ed. Intended for her husband, and then
tried to cash it e.t the saloons here. His
defense was that he intended the incident as a joke.
Automobile Aarents' Attention! I tober, Hlatt entered the same plea, and
(Schererville correspondence to Thb I tM 3ury disagreed, necessitating a new
Times.) I trial. The cose will probably occupy
"THE recent cold spell has keDt our ! attention of the court for a week
merchant, George Gard. busy sellinc 1 or ten Says. One hundred and twenty
KANSAS man sues for a divorce because his wife keeps 50 cats and
dogs. This is what may be truly call
ed a cat and dog life for a married
YOU, if the morning hour is bring
ing you the golden gift of self-government industry. He is YOU, If you
are. willing to pay the price of suc
cess in humble, patient effort. And to the young man or woman who says
he is impossible, he is but the story of another's life, the dream of what
will never be.
AWFUL DODGING. Men of both parties who think of "running for office" next fall will do well to study the new law on campaigning the "corrupt practices act." It is a drastic piece of reform legisltion, making it unlawful to hire conveyances for hauling voters to the
THE national democratic committee
conference was nearly as harmonious
as a meeting of the Gary regular and
the unindlcted democracy.
NO wonder that, they desert from the
navy. The name of the new surgeon general is Doc Blue.
Abe Martin Seai "THIS year's crop o' furnace jokes Is
'way below th average, an' o' exceed-
in'ly poor quality. Never take a ham
mer t' a banauet."
SHAME on Muneter, Highland and
Griffith.. Little East Gary eets a car
line and now they won't be satisfied until they get one.
WE realize how small our Lake coun
ty towns and cities are only when one of those New York skyscrapers burn up and the loss is (16,000,000.
Edelwetaa. Bndwetaer or Seal Kit
(Griffith correspondence to The Tinea.)
'SOME of our citizens report having
seen a large and very brilliant meteor Sunday evening which traversed the whole extent of the heavens from southwest to northetist. A peculiarity of it
was that when nearly overhead It dis
charged a ball of fire at right angle to
its course, and which disappeared in the northwestern sky."
The Cruiae of the Water Wagon. FOURTH day Frozen pumps and too
much near beer started Hennery Coldbottle to writing poetry last night. To-
v THE veneration expressed by some! day the water wagon left East Gary
coal."
ONE of our 'steemed Gary contempo
raries now spells it "Gar!" at the top
or me page, proorreauer just come
over from Vienna, eh? ,-'
The Day in HISTORY
IT is true as an exchange says that
there are men who declare they are
not or such or such a man who in
realty do not control their own votes.
SEEING that Chicago lost out on
the democratic national convention a
lot ol us will nave to nave all our
fun now at the republican swaree.
with Hennery, Hy Ball, Bud Wiser and
our proofreader on board. They headed for porter county, but upon arriving there Hennery learned that a temperance crusade would not be needed. Hy
Ball overheard a farmer say that there
THE festive January sale is hop-1 are some blind pigs in Liverpool, so
democrats for Andrew Jackson is
about. as amusing as a republican's
veneration for goshamighty.
polls, treating voters to cigars, drinks, ping nearer to get what loose change Ith' waon WR8 lnen turned around and
etc., and hiring men to do electioneer- tbere was left ,n father's wallet after --.J" "
However, iaiv iui uru k new iriuii nu Just as the merry crew were nearing
ing.
It will take some figuring on the Christmas holidays.
FAIRNESS THE KEYNOTE. The officers of the Young Men's Christian Association of Gary are to be congratulated upon the fair way in which they parceled out rooms to the members who are to reside in the building. There was no sign of favortism. In all there are seventy-six rooms and the first seventy-six young men who applied for rooms participated in the drawing. He who drew number one had the first choice of all the rooms and number two had the second preference.
Congratulations are also due to the young men who are to reside in this splendid structure. At the cost that prevais for a room in the ordinary home they will get quarters that are superior to any which any Indiana ho-
how to "get" the floater without vio
lating the law, truthfully says a con
temporary.
the M. C. tracks they noted that the
freight train came in with that long
WHEN you see a girl dsiled up in I delayed carload of beer which John Mil.
low shoes and furs this weather you
don't wonder at criticism of feminine
inconsistency.
WOMAN'S GOOD WORK. Finding that vice segregation is a failure, Kansas City church women
-- even-tempered tnat tney are
for women dedicated to lives or shame lrritable one day as the next
because men think it necessary sucn conditions should exist, and they have
offered homes and honest work to the! WHAT else can you expect than inmates of the district places. Alto have the weather grow colder a3
as
home to be conducted as a boarding the days grow longer
house, its address to be kept secret
has been secured by the church' women, and conditions are to be so arranged that no sti.?ma may follow the reformed. In addition to this, the women are looking up abstracts and will ask the prosecuting attorney to
ler ordered three days ago. Owing to
the bad weather and the high winds and the fact that the people of East Gary would now need temperance lec
tures more than ever. Captain Cold-
bottle gave orders that his good ship's
THERE are lots of men who are sol prow be headed for the nearest port
(not wine), which happenfd to be
John's stable. Tomorrow Hennery will
take a run down to Hobart to look over the field. He will Judiciously distribute a few temperance tracts and call upon some old friends. "THIS is only one of dotens of similar instances every week, where readers of the Gary Tribune get the latest news of the day in this paper in this
"THIS DATE IN in STORY" January 1J.
1563 Drawing commenced in the first
lottery mentioned in English his
tory, held to raise money to repair
harbors.
Iii 5 First provincial assembly of
South Carolina met at Charleston,
1816 Sir John A. Maedonald. Canadian
statesman, born in Glasgow. Died
in Ottawa, June 6, 1891.
1822 John A. Kasson, noted public
official and diplomat born in Char
lotte Vt. Died in Washington. D
C. May 18 1910.
1861 Alabama passed an ordnance of
secession.
1861 The Burnaide expedition sailed
from Fortress Monroe.
1864 Opening of the Charing Cross
railway in London. .
1ST1 Papl Bedford noted English
comedian, died. Born in 1798. .
1888 Terrific snowstorm in the North
west caused great loss of life and
property.
1893 Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, soldier
and politician, died in Washington
D. C. Born in Deerfleld, N. H., Nov.
5, 1816.
1897 Anglo-American arbitration trea
ty elgned at Washington.
1911 The Chinese National Assembly
was dissolved.
"THIS IS 31V "3RD BIRTHDAY" FTaaklln Simmon.
Franklin Simmons, the well known
sculptor, was born In Webster. Maine
January 11. IS39. His education was
received principally at Bates College
After some preliminary work in por
tralture in his native State, Mr. Sim
mons spent the winters of 1865 and 1866 in Washington. Of late years he has resided the most of the time in
Rome. He .has executed more than 100
THE clankety-clang and Slam-bang iaPer- far ahead of all competitors."
vs. auwau-bVA J V j 111 U'Jl V IU
ear nowadays.
YOU can't fall in, the skating Is!
do -his duty in the case of property ! too fine.
Well, with the old United Press and other things they have, the early appearance of The Times last night saved 'em. CHICAGO woman became angry he-
cause her husband couldn't get work,
Ave witnesses have been summoned
Hiatt quarreled with his wife last May,
and as she started to run away from
him he seized, her by the hand and.
holding her, shot her three times
through the body. He then ran Into the woods and attempted to commit
suicide by shooting himself through the
head. He soon recovered from the
wound and has been In Jail ever since.
EXPLOSION WRECKS HOME.
The home of Charles Knight of. South
I street, Bedford, was practically wrecked today, Vhen a gasoline iron.
which Mrs. Knight was preparing to
light, exploded. Four windows were
blown from the house, and one wall 'of the kitchen was almost torn out. A gasoline stove, upon which the iron was placed, was torn to fragments. The accident occurred while Mrs. Knight
was entertaining company on the sec
ond floor of her home. She had Just
left 'the room as the explosion took place.
TRAIX STRIKES FARMER.
When Wabash passenger train No. 6
reached Lafayette yesterday afternoon
people on ine station platform were horrified to see blood and pieces of
frozen flesh on the cowcatcher of the
locomotive. The train crew knew noth
ing of the matter and an investigation showed that the train had struck a
farmer's wagon near Milmine, 111., a
small town between Danville and Decatur. The driver, Jacob Jennings,
was instantly killed and -the wagon de
moliched. The heavy snow kept him
from seeing the approaching train. The
engineer was unable to see clearly and
believed that the man had escaped with
his life.
DEAD MAX COMES TO LIFE. Andrew Ritzier of Kansas City, Mo.
who is at Columbus visiting relatives.
claims the distinction of being the only
"dead" man who ever came to life in
this city. Ritzier was engaged in put
ting the cornice work on the Bartholo
mew country courthouse here when the building was erected in 1872. He fell
from the roof and landed on a scaffold
suspended between the top of the
building and the ground. It was thought Ritzier was dead and the "body" was lowered to the ground with a block and tackle. Ritzier was stretched on the turf and a sheet thrown over his face. The coroner was notified, but before he arrived the sheet
COLD DRIVES MAN IXSANE. Driven insane by the cold, Carl Fish
er of Laporte, 6S. an ice cutter, wandered six miles out of his path on his
way home after work and was found in
a pitiable plight by William Fall, three miles west of Rolling Prairie. His hands and feet were frozen and he still raves at his home here. Physicians say he will Tecover. ' "FLYER" STOPS FOR CAP. . Passengers on a Big Four train be- . tween Greensburg and Columbus were surprised yesterday when the train came to a sudden stop In the country and then began to back up. Windows went up and passengers crowded the platforms to see. what 1 could have caused the trouble. Finally the train stopped and Conductor Charles Compton climbed down and picked up his cap, which- had blown off. ' Then the
flyer" went on its way.
COLD HIXDERS CORN GATHERING.
Russell county farmers are disgusted
with the weather. Fifty per cent or the corn is still in the fields. When the ground froze the temperature was
so low men could not work. Ifow the
enow has caused aeiay. ii is oi great
benefit to wheat, however.
Times Pattern Department
DAILY FASHICIJ HINT.
portrait busts in marble, many of them was pulled back and evidences of life American military and naval heroes, in- were seen. Ritzier was then taken to eluding Admirals Farragut and Porter his boarding house, where he remained
and Generals Grant, Sheridan, Sherman,
Thomas, Hooker, Meade and others.
Among his other notable works are the
statues of General Logan in Washing
ton. D. C, the Longfellow and Soldiers' monuments in Portland. Me., and the
unconscious for three days before his final reoyery. LUTHER HELD FOR MURDER. Thomas Bauer of. South Bend died from traumatic cerebral meningitis, caused by a blow struck by John J.
itatue of Roger Williams in Providence. Luther, according to the verdict of
R. I. in 1898 the sculptor was knighted
by the King of Italy. Congratulations to:
Lord Curzon of Kedleston, former governor-general of India, 53 years old
today.
Itev. Thomas Dixon, Jr., author ofj
Coroner a. Martin. Bauer was a prominent contractor, holding . many
important contracts with the city, while Luther Is a brother of County
Commissioner James N. Luther. The
men quarreled Dc. 14. and Bauer died in the hospital two weeks iater. Luth-
tA villi i
Ladles' Shirt -Waist.
This attractive shirt waist has two tucks At each shoulder to provide becoming ful
ness. Wide re vers are an appealing feature. The waist fastens down the front. This waist is charming developed ia some soft material, with the revers and chemisette of allover lace. Th pattern. No. ST07, is cot in six sisea, 32 to 42 inches bust measure. To make the waist will requite 2 yards ef 36-inch material. .The pattern can be obtained by sending tea cents to the office of this paper.
