Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 113, Hammond, Lake County, 9 October 1912 — Page 4

UUUWUMtt- fat AW

THE TIMES.

Wednosdav, Oct. 0. 191 L

NEWSPAPERS By Tfcw Uke Count? I'rlnf inc aad Pfc.

Ttie LK Couat Times, dal.y except Sunday, "entered e second-class natter June JJ. lvS"; The Lake County Tiroes, ja!ly except Saturday and SanCay, enteiirj Feo. 8. 111; The- Gry Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. , The Uk Couoty Time. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. I&, 1811; The Time, dally txceyt Sunday, entored Jan. la. 11S, at the poatofSce at Hammond, Indiana, 'i niir tnt act of March $. 1J7A Entered at the PostofBci Ham ice a 4 lad., as cona-cissi matter.

rilKKJUK IM Rector

AlHtllTlSlVU liulldlnc

OFFICES, Chicago

PCbjlkcatiox urrices, Btanoid - Mid!nf. Hammond.

lad.

Hammond (private xcn i.ce) ...... Ill (Call lor dftiitB-ea i wante-a.) Gary Office Tel. 1ST East Chicago Orfiee Tel. 649-J Indiana Harbor Tel. S49M; 150

Whiting Tel. 10-M

Crown Point TeL 3 Hegewtsch Tel. 13

Advertising- solicitors will be seat, or rates ariven on application.

It you nave any truuDie getting TBe

Times notify the nearest of3e and BAve It promptly remedied. ' y LARGER PAID IP CIRCL'LATIOJI TEAS A.T OTHER TWO M3W1PirKlU 1ST THE CAMIMET REtilOT

II V S II MI'S PHIN T. (In reply to virions articles in women's magazines on "How to Keep Husbands Home Evenings.") Day in, day o-Jt. In giddy way 5 haste, nor does my sprej abate, Ty ball, bazaar, bridge, banquet, piny I break all records while you wait! Yet, Lst some mink 1 strike a unit, or that I kuv.) the gadding slant, My acts I'd Uko to vindicate - I'd like to stgy at home, but can't! My wife count? that a wasted day Wherein she fails to ocasummateSome plan to nil wilh functions) gray Those hours when rest I contemplate. Ho, also, seasons prove the trait; Sea, mountain, lake on notice scant, We're off to do the thinjj I hate I'd Ilk to flay at home, but can't! Perhaps I'm of uncommon clay, And in a perverse form create. With social lnst ncts quite outre. For hermit s cell a candidate; Hut shall mine be a nomad's fate Or gypsy van my home, supplant Still, where she leads 1 follow straight I'd likti to sta," at home, but can't. UN VOL Friend, coma with me commiserate; In this my wife is aibnmnt, And I perforce capitulate I'd like to stay at home, but can't.

T 1

ANONYMOUS eoromunieatlons will sot be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and shoii'd be addressed ta The Editor, Tims. Hamlaond. iDd.

433

For WILLIAM HOWARD

TAFT.

Against FREE TRADE A.D FREE SOt'P.

Hammond Commandery, No. 41. Special conclave Monday, Oct. 14th, S p. m. Work; in I ted Cross.

Hammond Chapter No. 117, T5 A. M., regular meeting Wednesday, Oct. 9. P. M. and M. E. M.

THEN AND NOW.

Old resident who originally came

from Missouri writes us a letter call

lng our attention to several increases

in the cost of living. He savs in

part: "Why In the '70-3 the price for erecting a log cabin In Missouri was three or four gallons of w hi s key."

Yes that may be true friend, but the whiskey was worth it in those

Uuj-3.

Ham who

THE clarion voice of Col. J Whiskers Lewis of Chicago

speaks for the down-trodden working man is hushed long enough for him

to describe the $5,000 worth of jewels he had stolen the other day.

the Post by the Taft management, at immense cost i.-i completely nullified by Mr. Ulythe's articles in each issue. This week he declares, after a rigid

investigation of the middle west, that in all the great Republican states, the fight is between Wilson and Roosevelt. It is safe to say that ninety per cent of the Fosr.'s readers accept Mr.

Ulythe's conclusions."

the fickle weather vane so much that no one can be blamed for expecting anything from the Indianapolis Star. At least, we are glad to hear that the Star is to remain for Roosevelt

ana Assistant uemocrai neveriiige. Glad,, very much! For on November C we shall all be able to see what little, influence the Star league had in Indiana.

IT pays to be at least on speaking terms nowadays with a coal-dealer. He can hold jou down if you aren't nice to hini.

"LISTEN to medical expert.

tor but suppose a sleep?

your wifo." says a That's all right doc-

fellow needs the

AND if President Taft is opt imbt ie as well as confident, why pray should the rest of us be gloomy and downcast?

VOICE OF THE R E O P L, E

AMERICAN MARINES IN NICARAGUA UNDER ADMIRAL SOUTH liRLAND HAVE TASK TO SUBDUE BARBAROUS REBELS LED BY GEN. MEN A

rs

BOSTON E3E says that athletics is

causing the feet and legs of our wom

en to grow bigger. Hut feeling that these things are none of our business we absolutely refuse to worry.

MAN discovered a theft by remem

bering the number of a $1,000 bill.

Wonderful memory! We can't re

member the numbers on our $1,000

bills for ten secenda.

ANY one who wants to get his name In a newspaper can do so by sending a Roosevelt straw vote to the Indianapolis Star. If it is a Taft straw vote, don't waste postage stamps.

rOOR CAMPAIGNING METHODS. As this paper has so often pointed out Preside at Taft has been poorly advised by those who stand close to him and another example of the fact is the way in which Secretary Hilles his right hand adviser is foolish iv

spending money to boost his cause and yet at the same time liberally contributing thousands upon thousands of dollars to a magazine which is fighting him tooth and toe nail. As the South Chicago Calumet points out: "President Taft's management for the last month has spent thousands of dollars for page advertisements in the Saturday Evening Post. This is the leading progressive journal in the

United States and has probably done more to create sentiment adverse to the president than any other single publication, or than an aggregate of many others. "Its editor, George Horace Lorimer, organized the protests against Postmaster General Hitcdicock'c ill-timed retaliative measure, which was intended to cause great expense among publishers of second class mail matter, by rating all advertising sections as in another class. Mr. Lorimer succeeded in making this plan so unpopular that the government receded from its determination.

"The Washington correspondent, of

the Post, Samuel G. Blythe, is so Intensely pro-Roosevelt, that he cannot accord President Taft 'even third

place, in his summary of the coming election. Mr. Blythe is one of the leading contributors to the voluntary

corps oi special writers, who ure flooding the country, with readable

matter from Roosevelt's headquar

ters.

"The page advertising placed Jn

POLITICAL GREEN GOODS. It is tlbi intelligent voter, not the political sheep, who is going to decide matters November f. In no cam

paign In the nation's history has there been a situation as complex as

the present or one which calls for a more intelligent reasoning by lha individual voter. And one thing the party leaders are forgetting ia that the average voter of today is vastly more capable of reasoning for himself

than he ever wf s before. He has had a better education; his means of information have vastly improved and he has learned from long experience just what balderdash the. political stump speakers and press bureaus are putting out says the Joliet Herald. For instance The-voter knows that there is not a political party which

wouiun i tate a nig donation lrom a "trust source." No amount of denial would convince him that a $100,000 contribution would be "turned down," except perhaps unc"er the lime light just now turned on. It was a mistake for Mr. Roosevelt's managers -;o deny the source of contributions and allow the Taft crowd to put them in the hole with Mr. Morgan's evidence. It was a tactical blunder to first deny and then, when forced to admit where the money came from, to fall back on such a statement as the Chicago Tribune apologetically puts forward that "Mr. Morgan gave the money voluntarily and was given no promises In return." Wouldn't that. make anv one

laugh? For .long yea'-s all the political parties have taktn such subscriptions. We have no doubt Taft would take them, Wilson would take them, Roosevelt, would take them, yes qrtd we would hate t think what a Debs finance committee would do if it gof a chance. The silly thing about it all is the

denial of what, the sensible voter

knows is a fact.

GARY AND THE BALKANS. Who would have believed it ave years ago? ' When the Balkan war alarms sounded a great change came over tho fort ign laborers at the aCJry steel mills. They at once laid down their picks and shovels and the humble laborer of yesterday became the trained soldier cf today. They showed traces of their previous military training by ther excellent marching in Broadway. They showed their patriotism by enlisting at once for one Servian regiment had 013 men enrolled in two day's time. And the Bosnia, Herzegovina, Montenegro, Greek. Macedonia, Bulgaria ami Lika sons formed themselves into as many battalions bringing the total Gary reservi-is up to 2.702 fighting men with a thousand more willing to go if necessary more men than there are in the whole Indiana National guard.

Should hostilities ensue there is every reason to believe that Gaiy will throw a whine brigade of reservists into the field. And who ever thought that the sand dunes and scrub oaks of six years ago would be sending three regiments of fighting men back to

Silt. IMir.WIMrs STATEMENT. Hammond, I ml.. Oct. . Editor Times; Will you kindly permit me, th touch the columns of vour

paper to give my Hide ,.,f tile matter 1 -dative to my action and my connection with the affairs of the Stewart Machine Manufacturing company of Hammond. In this connection I desire to say that I was not present in court during the hearing for th.- application of a receiver and kiw- nothing of th- evidence given to the court on the application for a receiver and on which the court acted; 1 also desire to pay that 1 am not now, mr have I ever been cither an officer or a stock holder or In any way financially interested in the company. it is true that in the rest: la r course I business, with the best approved security, the institution which 1 represent loaned to tho Stewart Machine Manufacturing Company the sum of

two thousand dollars ($2,"iM, but that same instead of being disbursed by my. self was usul and pai-1 out by and through Mr. W. J. .Stewart, president of the company; 1 had no interest or

control over the money borrowed after the loan was made. The distribution of the money being no concern of mine, nor of the institution which 1 represent. I save it no more attention than I would have given any other borrow iiinnf y. The purpose stated by the borrowers of this money was that this money was to be used for the payment of old labor claims and material billa contracted by the former management of the compa r T believe that at that time Mr. A. TI. Tapper was president and Joseph Wei? was secretary and treasurer; I also believe that they together with Mr. Otlo Knoerzer and J. J. Huff was ammif Itf? board of directors. I fail to see w hy this should in any way enter into the Application for a receiver, or be the subject for a receiver. These bills, for which thH loan was made, havinK- been contracted some time before the loan was made by the institution which I represent, and it seems to be treneral knowledge that the liabilities of this company Is much

less today than It was at the time that these bills were contracted. Yours very truly. E S. KM Fit IN E.

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Rear Admiral Southerunu at the leit, and band of Nlcaraguan rebel In spite of the presence two thousand American marines in Nicaragua under Rear Admiral Souttierland. the rebellious elements in ttat unhappy country continue very active. On several occasions they have given battle to the marines, who are protecting the property of Americans and other foreigners. It wa- not at the beginning the Intention of our governmet to suppress the revolution In Nicaragua. The marines were sent there primarily to protect American interests. However, the rebels have committed so many acts of barbarism that President Taft feels they should be crushed. Unless Americans do this other countries may insist upon landing troops In the little republic and putting an end to the barbarities which have shocked civilization, and incidentally worked Injury to fcrelgn Interests

participate in a European war?

"RED paper absorbs heat and saves the gas bill," says an exchange. Tell it not to the gas company however.

IT was James Whit comb Riley' birthday yesterday. Hope you didn' eat too much birthday cake Jim!

ANY OBJECTION? Now that the political fight is about over and the republicans, democrats and assistant. democrats are sill loudly proclaiming victory let's all take a recess, walk out in the country and see if we can't shake down a few hickory nuts, or pick up a few mushrooms. The ayes have it.

TOUCHES AM) POSTERS. Editor Times: liefore accusing- the members of the progressive party in Lake county of tearing- down or destroying picture of candidates of another party, would it not lie well to fcet the truth of the matter? 1 am credibly informed that the telephone company operating the line, in Lowell, order d their men to tesr from their telephone poles, the pictures and posters nailed thereon, because the tacks or nails used to fasten them were dangerous to their linemen, sometimes eaufdne- their climber to slip. Would it not look more neighborly for the stand-patters to allow their friends to us the torches in parade, pi nee some of the members of the new partv had helped to pay for said t.o-ehes? . DINWIDPIE.

A WORD FROM

CALIFORNIA.

isi:

THE democratic newspapers now

charge that Bevt ridge was under the

influence of liquor on the floor of the

senate which shows that the political

pot Is warming up.

REMEMBER that one cut tle-'full

of coal is worth more than nil the po

litical warmth and 'feat you can pack into four months.

WON T MAKE ANY DIFFERENCE. Time and time only will tell

whether the Indianapolis Star has

sold out and flopped sgnin. It professes to be deeply insulted because the story has become widely circulat

ed that the paper Is ta change its

policy. We fail to see why it should

take umbrage. The paper has jumped from pillar to post so often; it has straddled the fence so many times, throwing both logs on one side and then on tbe other; it b,a, imitated

HOW HAMMOND LOOKS. Some time ago n manufacturer, seeking a location in Hammond, dropped into town to look things over, "1 want to live where my business is located, " said lie, "but I could never stand it to live in this town." He was taken to the Countrv Club

f'c- lunch and shown the park and residences on I oh man street and changed his mind about the town. His first impressions were bad ones. A traveling man who 1 ad been visiting Hammond f" the past five tears said in a burst of confident; -j to a man he did not ktn'.v lived in that city: "Hammond is a h I of a place. I get out rf it just as quick as I can." Asked on what, he based his impressions he said: "Railroads running

right through the heart of the busi

ness district; tumble-down business blocks on the main busines.; street. Lidewalks so narrow that po more

than three ne-rsons can walk abreast 3nd n bum looking tow n generally." He admitted that he had never

seen the residential districts and he

judged the town by the Centra! bloen. the old Heintz block, tho Hohman block, the Kleigehe block, the Rimbiich property and scores of other obi shacks that seem destined to prevert Hammond from forgetting its past. The business district of Hammond has improved in the past five years an .1 will improve more in the next fie years. But it lias a mightv poor foundation to work on. tl has no Broad s p y, to begin with, and the city (initials are so lacking in progrji-s that they won't even favor ornamental street lighting. What Hammond needs is a few funerals, a grand celebration and possibly a good fire and then it will be ready for an awakening.

Pasadena, Cal. Oct.

The Times, Hammond, Ind. Pear Sirs: Enclosed find my check for $.f0 for one year's subscription to your paper. The paper is coining reerularly. which is better than I expected (as it Feems difficult to get papers from Hammond ri'-ross the mountains), but The TiMtOrt d .'s sho koin thru. Am very sorry I am unable to send you sorp of our beautiful California sunshine weather. From ail reports you no doubt could use eomo of it. You will find enclosed a clipping which I took from th-j Los An steles Her aid while the ('.. A. H. Encampment was held here last month, which may be of interest to some of your readers, est'ecially Adam H. Khert, who is also a pioneer of (lib son. Ind.

Any news that I can pick tip here

that wou'vd be of Interest to you, will he fria.l toVend it to you. Tell my Inquiririe; friends that I am helping to 'turn up the beautiful roads hereabouts hut not to exceed 20 miles per, as they have some elegant stop watches here. Yours truly, J O H X C. LAYENE, (I love Lear Hammond, But Oh, You Ca 1 i f orn i a. ) ll ro is. the clipping: Among tile old s.ol Hers who display witli pride souvenirs of the days when they were the heroes of the nation, Comrade James H. Finney, of Kentsaw post has a faded ribbon which he has cherished tenderly for years and will hand down to Ids descendants. The ribbon I" one of the badges circulated during Lincoln's second campaign for the presidency. At the top in red are the words. "1,'nlon Candidates." with a picture of the White House underneath. Farther down appear. "For President. Abraham Lincoln." w i t h pictures of Lincoln and Johnson perpendicularly arranged in medall-bms sin rot, p. led by crossed P.agv llelow ara the words, "Johnson for Vice President. Peaeee Through Victory, Amnesty, Kmatieipition." The printing-is-done In red and blue.

Mr. Finney came to Los Angeles from Gibson, Ind.. in and lives nt 2S3 East Sixty-first street. Los Anpreles.

Private Leo Payne is lyin at tho point of death in the West Laden Springs Hospital tor.tirht. He became ' despondent and stabbed himself above the heart. There is a sdiiiht chance for his recovery. His home. Is near Waco, Neb. j M VY INDICT FOR I'.KMHV, ! Asserting that several cases of bigamy have occurred in this county because of the fai;ur of persons obtaining divorces to pay the costs before remarrying, the grand jury at New Castle will start an investigation tomorrow. There, are eighteen instances on record here where, divorced persons have remarried without having settled costs. The .arand jury will also tieirin the Investigation of the killing of Kd Pines by Carl Nicholson and will take up alleged illegal sales of intoxicants. ,MVY Ol ST 47 FROM III I RCH. Expulsion is threatened forty-seven male members of .t. Stephen's Church benevolent Society at South Lend, who have renounced their allegiance to their church to follow the Lev. Victor Von Kubinyl. The ultimatum was delivered by the Lev. Mr. Valarery, of the former church and the dues of the estrana-ed

members are, beinsr refused by St. Stephen's Society. The Lev. Mr. Valargry bases his action upon the necessity of members of the society being- Roman Cat holic. TELLS WII'H LIFE IS F A I LI" RE. lavln a note to his wife in which he stated that he was going- far away, that his life had been a failure and that he, bel ved he was gor.s insane and that he was tired of living and mlirht kill himself, Frank Sham, of

New Albany, .f years of ae, left home last nii?ht. Mrs. Sharp reported his disappearance, to the police, but a dilicent search failed to develop any clew to his wbe reabou t s. EM JN LEU'S UODY IS FOI ND. The body of Etifa'ctns J-:. Smith, chief engineer of ties government, towboat Smoot, who disappeared front the boat last Wednesday morninir. was found at New Albany in the river today a short distance from the place where the

j boat was moored when lie disappeared. He had been asleep in the engin room

and disappeared d-irina the absence, o

the watchman, who was prone but a half

an hour. It. is believed that ho got up

in his sleep and walked into the river. His mother and brother live at Tlunt-

lntrton. W. Va.. and he formerly lived nt Lipley, o., and later in Cincinnati.

Smith was ts years old and unmarried.

VOTES t: YIN ST FORFEIT I' II E. The City Council at Evansvillvt tabled

a resolution pr-sented hy iTesid.-nt f-il lb Mii'.er, to forfeit tho .street car fran-

iiso of the public utilities companies

after a heated debate in which citi-

afcns partcipated. Representatives of the Socialist party opposed the forfeiture because it would mean only the grunting of a new franchise and they prefer that the city operate under the old franchise with proper regulations until the city is able to enforce municipal ownership. INVENTOR CI ItiC ARRESTED. Frank L. Clark, inventor of the socalled Clark perpetual motion machine, has been arrested under an indictment of the s-rand jury charging him with obtaining- mon-y under false pretenses. He Kave bond for $l,0e0.

BETTER get your felt boots. It is going to l:e mighty hard standing at Armageddon these; days.

Up and Down in INDIANA

SPEND DAY" IS CONVOY WORK.

Members of the, Twenty-third Infan

try at French Lick put in the day with exercises in the eonvoy problem. TO

morrow there will be close order drills

by battalion and by company. Mrs. E.

F. Glenn, wife of Colonel R. F. Glenn arrived in camp today from Fort Benjamin IiaF"efi.

marryine: fever there belnf; one wedding Sunday, five banns published, and three engagements." Hegewiscn correspondence to Ths Times. flood chance for some of these eugenics enthnsjisasts to pass around their literature. PP.OC.LESSIVE party bulletin print that .lane Ad lams is the greatest woman of her day. And if Jane hadn't espoused the hull moose cause It would ha e been some one else. ALMOST time for the Gary fashionables to be Hashing: tickets for another charity ball. Those who rent full dress

suits and Paree gowns please take notice. CIUCAdO Tribune states that new. p-iper men are above the average in

telligence. This ia quite true and we will bet anybody ten pesos that twothirds of the Trib's staff are Intelligent enough to laugh at some of the political stuff it prints. GARY Chinaman will vlote for Olovnor Wilson. Been "belly nine" man. This is one result of Wood row's books, books. AFTER sulking for twelve years Spain has flnaly male up with your Fncle Sam. This Rives hopes that thft old feud between Itobertsdale and Sties 1 It a I'ark will be patched up. WHAT'S become of the old fashioned campaign song that the kids used to sing In the Cleveland-Harrison clays and which would now run "Taft is in the Whitehouse talking- to the ladies, Teddy's in the kitchen wasting nigger babies?" HE I NO of the editorial ilk we havr a natural aversion to poets but we didn't forget James Whitcomb Riley's birthday. ' Gripehy's Station," "An Old Sweetheart of Mine." "Little Orphan Annie." and "The ipi riwtmmin.' Hole" make life worth IK leg. IT Is funny to see the way La Porte is tryinc to break Into print with those six Greek restaurant keepers she is

trying tg send to tne Paikan war, ELKHART s so hifalutin now dayp that it refers to one of its back street alleys as "Temple Court." YOl" may critize the plrl who chews gum in public but the fellow who uses the word "dope" in connection with news or information was also brought up near a shanty. HON. Lillian Russell rw says for the loidies to cultivate their souls. It may be all risht but when a lot of them get on to the epirltuelle racket they get. a yearning for soul mates. A. C. H- -In answer to your incjulry will say that the Hull Moose company ia the only subsidiary of the steel trust that doesn't pay dividends. IX the meantime while you are chang inn your P. V. D.'s from the flannel ones kindly remember that Gary has changed the names of a lot of streets.

1D03 Floods at aPterson, N. J., damaged property to the amount of $3,000,000. 'THIS IS MY r.'.tTII I1IRTIIDAY." I. liarle A, lr"ii(, Charles A. Prouty, chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commision, waa born in Newport, Vt., October 9, 1S53, and graduated fro Dartmouth College. In ISTo. In the same year of his graduation he was selected by the late Professor Samuel P. Langley, for many years secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, as his assistant at the Allegheny observatory. In 1S82 Mr. Prouty was admitted to tho bar of Vermont and engaged in the practice of his profession until named a member of

the Interstate Commerce Commission by President Cleveland in 1S96. In January of the present year Mr. Prouty was promoted to th chairmanship of the commission in succession to Judson C. Clements of Georgia. Congratluations to: Camllle Saint-Saons, the eminent French composer, 77 ytars old today. Major General Leonard Wood, chief of staff of the United States Army, li years old today. Edward W. Il.-k, the Philadelphia editor, 49 years old today. Sir Francis J. Campbell, the notr-d blind scholar and educator, SO years old today. Henry L Movers. I'nited States eenator from Monana, 5ti years old today. Captain Alfred Dreyfus, the central figure In the celebrated "Dreyfus affair" 53 year "hi today. Right Rev. Lthelbert albot, Protestant Episcopal bishop of Central Pennsylvania, til years old today. Right Rev. George, Gauthier. the new auxiliary bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Montreal, i'l years old today. William Loeb, Jr., former secretary to President Roosevelt and now collector of the Port of New York, 46 years old today. Dr. Knit! Fischer, noted German medical scientists and educator, 60 years old today.

Times Pattern Department

The Day in HISTORY

j H EARil L BY 1 RUBE iw mil mi pw.i f '' an-yf.jryrrc t

til In the new blonde-haired Eskimo country you ran get a wife for fishhooks, rown hery in civilisation, the $$$ bait will land 'em. PY the. whiskers of St. David' Mictigan City's bishop may move to South Rend. A body is always losing that which it needs mst, THE younir people of St. Florian's

Catholic church evidently have the

"THIS DATE IN HISTORY." October i. 1 514 Marriage of Louis XII. of France and Princess Mary of England. 1612 First comenceaient held at Harvard College. 1R6S Lishop Iaval founded the seminary at Quebec. 1757 Charles X. the last P.ourhon king of France, born. "Died November , IMS. 1778 Mission established at San Francisco.

1779 Count Pulaski mortally wounded

in the attack of the Americans an

French on Savannah. 171 Allied American and French forces began their attack on the British at York town. 139 Rear Admiral Winfiebl Pcott Schley born near Frederick, Mil. I bed in New York City, October 2, 1611. 1S47 Slavery vca.9 abolished1 in the Swedish dominions. lSib First overland mail from CaiL fornia arrived at St. Louis.

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DAILY FASHION HINT.

9

Lady's Wai-st. Here is a delightfully pretty waist and nice design for d-velopmeiit in white wash silk so popular for waists just cow. The mojel is a simple one to carry out. The closing is at the left f-ide of the front, and the neck is completed witli a pretty turndown collar. which is nicely fashioned of lace or all 'Tcr. The pattern. No. 5.007. h cot in aiei 32 to 42 inches bust mec, sure. Medium Size will require 2l yards of SO incll material and of a yard of -2 inch allover. 1 he aftove pattern can he obtained bj

ling 10 cents to the olhte ot 'Lis pupet

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