Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 328, 2 October 1911 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, BIOS DAT, OCTOBER 2, 1911.

PAGE FIVE.

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Social Side of Life

I Edited by ELIZABETH R. THOMAS Phone 11 21 Before 11:30 in Order to Insure Publication in the Evening Edition

POWER. Power is the goal of every worthy Ambition and only weakness comes from imitation or dependence on others. Power is self-de-reloped. self-generated. We cannot increase the strength of our muscles by sitting in a gymnasium nd letting another exercise for us. Nothing else so destroys the power to stand alone as the habit of leaning upon others. If you lean, you will never be strong or original. Stand alone or bury your ambition to be somebody in the world. The man who trios to give his children a start In the world so that they will not have so hard a time as he had, is unknowingly bringing disaster upon them. What lie calls giving them a start will probably give them a setback in the world. Young people need all the motive power they can get. They are naturally leaners, imitators, copiers, and it is easy for hem to develop into echoes, imitations. They will not walk alone while you furnish crutches; they will lean upon you Just as long a you will lot them. OCTOBER IS HERE. October, with its many weadings and Its revival of activity in club and social circles, cauie Sunday. October is fast becoming as popular with brides as its old rival, June, and indeed there could be no prettier setting for a wedding than the brilliant fall colors, and no more attractive decoration for such an event than the stately chrysanthemums. A number of prominent young people have announced their engagements and it is rumored that there are more to follow. Prc-nuptial affairs will naturally follow and the month promises to be very lively with these events. The clubs, too, both social and literary, will all hold their initial meetings this month and club work will bo begun with a rush. The opening meetings are usually very elaborate affairs. These events together with the numerous parties that are given throughout the winter will no doubt tend to make Richmond a social center and keep up the city's reputation for sociability. . MI88 CAMPBELL HOSTES8. , Miss Marie Campbell will be hostess Tuesday afternoon for a meeting of the Tuesday Bridgo club at her home in East Main street. CHURCH RECEPTION. The session of the Second Presbyterian church will hold their quarterly reception tonight for the members and friends of the church. All who are interested In the church and wish to spend a Boclal evening will be welcome. Program and light refreshments served free to all. INITIAL MEETING. The initial meeting of the Domestic Science asoclatlon for 1911-1912 will DO held Wednesday afternoon of this week with the president, Mrs. Benton Addlngton at her home in Glen View. The subject for the afternoon will be "The Home Greater Than the ; House," and will be presented by Mary Doan Hole. This is one of the most prominent organizations in the City. On the coverlet of the year book the following by Ellen H. Richards is found: "Home economics aims to focus all on daily living, doing one's duty, at the time and not looking over one's shoulder for a gift. To revive the pleasure of doing well what is done,. and perhaps, more than all to give a belief in the nobleness of this body of ours without which the aoul cannot express itself and show that money and time are well spent only when they minister to a fuller development of both." BETA PARTY. An elaborate house party was given last evening at the Beta Phi Sigma fraternity at their fraternity home on ths corner of Sixth and Adams streets. Punch was served throughOut' the evening and also a threecourse luncheon during the intermission. The house was decorated beautifully and excellent music was fur- . nished by the Moonlight orchestra, The guests: Misses Lucile Smith, Margaret Oenung, Dorothy Shively, Helen Nusbaum, Mary Wiles, Babe Marsh, Edith Utley, Hazel Lottridge, Burnette Billlter. Bernlce Billiter, Loneta Utley. Elizabeth Williams, . Carrie Vey, Agnes, Hunter, Helene ' Hunter. Bessie Seiger, Edna Ross, Clara Fousrt, of Muncie, Minnie Goldrich, Ines Knott, Winona Knott, Beatrice Kemraer, Mary Bradford; Messrs. Charles Vey, Philip Holman, John 8tewarf, Seymore Marks, Lyman Wine, Robert McGregor, Roscoe Theibert, Frank Caldwell, George Glaise, Theodore Rademaker, Paul Neal, Oakley Marquette, Edward Ixve, Herbert Bartell. Harry Beebe, Albert Landis, ; Darl Miller, Harry Shaw, John Kalis ton, HUlard Garrison, Harry Shildi meyer, George Wagner, Jack Butler, .Henry Simon, Russell lllatt, "Ape" Chamness, John Kiley, Sweeney Wol- , oott, William Grist. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Houston, Earl Newhouse, Floyd Rosttkrans, Harry Hamilton and Walter '!' Tttkey. Marion Chronicle. - ' DINNER LAST EVENING. Dr. and Mrs. George Ferling entertained with a charming dinner last evening at their home In South Sixth street as a courtesy to the members ot the Summer Sheepshead club and their husbands. The table was beautifully decorated with scarlet sage and . with ferns. Covers were laid for Mr. ad . Mrs. Sol Prankel, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wlckemeyer, Mr. and Mrs. EdWZTi Klute, Mr. and Mrs. George Reid,

Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Stover, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Turner, Dr. and Mrs. Ferling and Dr. Colburn. The hostess was assisted in serving by Mrs. Ora Brubaker, Miss .Edna Ferling, Miss Rose Ferling and Miss Mazel Mashmeyer. Dinner in several courses was served.

MEETS TUESDAY. Mrs. William Wood will be hostess for a meeting of the Spring Grove Sewing circle Tuesday afternoon at her home In Spring Grove. MEETS TUESDAY. The Ladies' Aid society of the South Eighth Street Friends church will meet Tuesday afternoon in the church parlors. TO GIVE SOCIAL. The Ladies Auxiliary of the Knights of St. John's, will give a progressive euchre party Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. B. A. Kennepohl, 128 South Sixth street. All members are Invited to attend. Sixteen favors will be given. TO INDIANAPOLIS. Mrs. Ora Brubaker has gone to Indianapolis for a week's visit. HAS RETURNED. Miss Sadie Smith has returned to her home in Cincinnati after having visited with Mr. W. T. Davis at her home in Shoridan street. TO INDIANAPOLIS. Miss Clara Hardesty and her guest, Miss Inez Cole of Karlham, went to Indianapolis this afternoon to see Elsie Janis In the "Slim Princess" at English's. New Castle Courier. RETURNED TO INDIANAPOLIS. Mr. Philip H. Robbins, who Is attending law school in Indianapolis returned to that place after spending the week-end here. WAS IN TOWN. Miss Mildred Phelps, society editor of the Muncie Star, was in town today. TO VINCENNES. Mrs. George Coale, accompanied by her mother. Mrs. George DUks. has returned to Vincennos, Ind.. after a few days' visit here. Mrs. Dilks will visit with hor daughter for several days. HAS RETURNED. Mr. Glen Ellabarger has returned to St. Ixuis, after having spent a two weeks' vacation inthis city the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ellabarger, 303 North West Third street. TO CONNERSVILLE. Miss Ethel A. Thomas returned to Connersville last evening after having spent the week-end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Thomas of North C street. GUE8TS HERE. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Ellabarger and daughter Miss Katherine Ellabarger of St. Louis, Missouri, spent Saturday and Sunday here, the guests of Mr. ond Mrs. Edward Ellabarger, 303 Xorth West Third street. MEETS TUESDAY. The West Richmond Friends' church Aid society will meet Tuesday afternoon of this week at 223 College avenue. Members are urged to be present. HAS RETURNED. Mr. Perry Hamilton has returned from a two week's business trip. TO GIVE A "SPREAD." The Sunday school class of the First Methodist church taught by Mr. J. E. Parry, and which was the loser in the contest for membership, will give an entertainment and "spread" for the members of the First M. E. Sunday school, Wednesday, October the eighteenth. HAS RETURNED. Miss Orpha Tolle has returned to her -home in Kokomo, Indiana, after a pleasant visit here with Miss Blrdella Reber at her home in South Fourth street. MEETS TOMORROW. Mrs. Edward Klute will be hostess for a meeting of the Sheepshead club Tuesday afternoon at her home in South Fourteenth street. WILL MEET WEDNESDAY. The Teddy Bear Euchre club will meet Wednesday afternoon instead of Thursday, the usual day for meeting, with Mrs. Sol Frankel at her home in the Reed Flats. MEETS THIS EVENING. The first meeting of the season of the Men's club of the First Presbyterian church will be held this evening in the church parlors. All members are invited to be present. SPECIAL NOTICE. To the members of the Athenaea Literary society: Owing to unavoidable circumstances it will be necessary for members of the society to furnish their own means of transportation to the axst meeting oi the society, Friday October Sixth, at the home of Mrs. Garwood Iredell, East of the city. Will those who have automobiles and carriages kindly remember those who have no means of conveyance. Mrs. Sarah Stutson, President. Mrs. Almeda Hockett, Secretary. OF INTEREST HERE. The following from the Washington letter to the Indianapolis Star is of interest to friends here: The Dennises have picked up the most exquisite Buhl furniture in Washington from the banks of Lake Como. Not that it was exactly tossed up by the tide, either. It drifted to that ro-

mantle section from an ancient plaze in Rome. Btihl, you . know, or maybe you don't know, is the name of the Frenchman who invented Buhl. . He lived in Paris in the seventeen hundreds and did thinks for Louis the Sixteenth, executing the most wonderful cabinets, tables, etc., in tortoise shell, intricately Inlaid in arabesque designs with brats. The Dennis trophies, dating from 1750, are museum pieces. They could not be exported without a special permit from the Italian government, the Italian government being mighty particular about its ancient art works, holding all such stuff as sacred and inviolable. This same sumptuous home is newly furnished forthwith rare paintings and statuary from Rome. There is the famous "Crouching Venus," a full-sized replica in palest marble, whose Grecian locks are slightly tinted yellow by a new process. There is a Sappho, with manuscript in hand, whose draperies as tight-it-ting to the limb as those of the girls of nowadays, are of a translucent olive-tinted marble, while the classic lady's complexion is pure white, her fllowing tresses a dainty blonde and the laurel wreath upon her brow approximately laurel wreath color. We are painting the lily and gilding refined gold these days. Mrs. Dennis will entertain handsomely this winter. She is a lavish hostess.

SOCIAL POSITION. The social which was to have been Riven Tuesday afternoon by the Ladies of the Reid Memorial church at the home of Mrs. Cramer has been postponed. LITERARY SOCIETY. Mrs. Roy will be hostess for a meeting of the Progressive Literary society Tuesday afternoon at her home, 50S South Tenth street. The program will he as follows: Leader Mrs. King Response Quotations from Riley Boy Scout Movement . . . Mrs. Bennett "Daddy" Written and composed by Mrs. Chrisman and Mrs. Bueli. Comparison of Eugene Field and James Whitcomb Riley. Recitation "Intry Mintry" Field Mrs. Chrisman. Recitation "Afterwhiles" .... Riley Miss Fetta Song "Little Boy Blue The Child in the Home . . . Mrs. Gloin TO DETROIT. Mr. Willard Jessup and Mr. Roy Compton have gone to Detroit, Michigan to remain until Wednesday. MEETS TUESDAY. A meeting of the Christian Woman's Board of Missions of the First Christian church will be held Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. O. N. Garriott at her home, 707 South B street. All members are invited to be present. An interesting program will be presented at this time. PHI DELTA KAPPA DANCE. Twenty-five couples attended the dancing party given last evening by the Phi Delta Kappa fraternity, at its chapter rooms. This is one of a series of dances that will be given fortnightly by the fraternity. The hall was decorated in the fraternity colors, black and red, and the walls were hung with many fraternity pennants. The young people enjoyed a program of twelve dances. Marion Chronicle. MRS. GULDLIN TO TALK. The members of the Domestic Science pssociation were invited to Cambridge City this week to attend a meeting of the Helen Hunt club at which Mrs. Guldlin will speak. Mrs. Grace Julian Clarke in writing to the Indianapolis Sunday Star has the following to say concerning Mrs. Guld lin: Mrs. Olaf Nicolaus Guldlin of Fort Wayne, who is to lecture on Tuesday at the Y. W. C. A. has been a prominent figure in the General Federation of Women's Clubs since the Boston biennial in 1908, when, at the eleventh hour, she took the place' of Mrs. Virginia C. Meredith on the program, the latter being unavoidably and unexpectedly detained. Mrs. Guldlin, who is always ready and full of enthusiasm, especially on the subject in which she is most interested, made a decided hit on that occasion, and was rewarded by being given the chairmanship of the household economics committee, a position which she still holds. She has visited clubs in all parts of the United States, and has made her department one of the most wide awake and useful in the federation. Mrs. Guldlin is by no means a woman of but one idea, being thoroughly interested in all of the activities that are engagaing the attention of women today. She and her husband have lately donated an eight-acre playground to Fort Wayne, which they also have equipped with swings, slides, poles, etc. Fort Wayne, by the way, has three playgrounds, all of them due I primarily to the activity of the club i women. Mr. and Mrs. Guldlin are anj other couple working hand in hand for i the betterment of civic conditions. J Not. being blessed with children of ; their own, they always have had sev eral young persons in their home for whom they stand sponsors, as well as one or more whom they are sending to college. Mrs. Guldlin will present the subject of the approaching San Francisco biennial at the State Federation convention in this city on October 26. "In th'is. old th'tes wiion t'ley off people's henris the tr.-un of events proceeded on out modern idea." "What was that." "The block system." Baltimore American. Making Sure. Highland Ferrymau (during momentary lull in the storm) I'm tbeukiu'. air. 111 Just tack yer fare. There's no say in what mlcht happen tae us. London Punch. Berlin hHs 1,001 streets and seventynine bridges, not including railroad bridges.

MMEL PAQUfN'S GOWN.

Worn by ths Great French dressmaker. PAQUIN MODEL IS BBOADCTUOTH. This strikingly handsome three piece costume was designed by and made for Mme. raqoin, the head of the great Parisian dressmaking establishment that bears her name. The skirt wraps tho figure just about as closely as possible and does not bespeak increasing width in skirts. The narrow petticoat cr underskirt is of white broadcloth, with ornamental straps of navy blue cloth placed at equal distances to form inch and a half stripes. Over this is posed the tunic, which opens at the left side to reveal the striped petticoat. On one corner of the tunic is a large motif in soutache, together with ball buttons in white pearl placed in double lines along the edge. Dancing School WrapVery much on the order of a Red Riding Hood cape Is the little wrap seen In the illustration, which Is especially designed for wear over the dainty lit CAFX OF VBOADOLOTH. tie dancing school dress. The hood i a fine protection against th wintry winds. Broadcloth or any rather heavy material is suitable for the cape with a pretty silk lining for the hood. A Georgia Woman Inventor. Mrs. Gertrude Smith of Valdosta Ga.. has recently invented two kitchen devices which will be of great gooc to housekeepers. One of these is ; coffee and tea strainer, the other : percolator, nnd both m.y be used wit! the ordinary teapot or coffee pot. "The two new inventions av mone;. as well as time, the inventor clainvand Mrs. Smith Is being besieged b;. inventors and manufacturers for th right of sale of her useful articles. Mrs. Smith's invention, which Indi cates a practical interest in bouse hold affairs at this time when women are so generally cbnrged with care lessness in this direction, is most refreshing, and she has been invited by the Atlanta committee to exhibit her inventions in the woman's department of the Appalachian exposition, which be held in Kjaoxville, Tenm, early iu September. Forty-six years ago James B. Earl, of Denver, a veteran of the civil war, put in a claim against the government for $2.31, that being the amount waieh his pay check was short. The bill was paid the other day. C. H. HADLEY Meat Market Pfcont 2591 123S Haia

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WHY THE flECESSITY

Its Atrocity Was Again Terribly Illustrated in Austin Flood Horror Is Lillian Russell Beginning to Show Her Age Now?

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. The peculiar atrocity of barbed wire again came into conspicuous notice in Austin, dispatches from that fated town stating that a lot of people who might have escaped over a high fence

that separated the upper portion of surprised." the town from the lower, dropped back These reflections were the afterbecause of the pain attendant upon math of a contemplation of a picture grasping the wire. jcf Lillian Russell. A new picture. A If there was ever any necessity for i profile picture, the use of barbed wire to mark divis-1 ,f , miaR js fltU, obsved with tho ion lines between properties, either in . degire tQ retain m? adoration of that rural or urban communities, in the bHc whk,h hag for decndes more thickly settled pans of the coun-; d, ntfanoetU at ner try, it has long since passed. ! carefully canned youth, she will not On cattle ranges and on the plains; have her profile impinged on a plate where conditions are more primitive, ! ty the inexorable camera.

barbed wire may still be utilitarian. But in towns like Austin it can hardly j be justified. Its barbarities can be illustrated in Richmond by a walk about the fringes ; of the town and in its suburbs. Th? pleasure one may have in the exercise and the charming views which obtain hereabouts, is continually spoiled by ' bumping into a lot of barbed wire stretched over some place of egress j without any apparent reason, or trip-! ping over these wires which have sag-; ged and whose sharp points go through the shoes. The use of barbed wire for fences ought to be prohibited. Disasters like that at Austin bring into startling distinctness the helplessness of men in the grasp of some great natural force. And might shake the most loyal belief in the goodness of the Infinite. It is said that not a sparrow falls to the ground unnoted. This is reduced to the status of a mere epigram when vieed in the light of such overwhelming horrors as that at Austin, Johnstown, San Francisco and Galveston. Class, nor sex, nor creed, nor conditions, nor age, nor race are respected All are swallowed up in the inexorable maw of nature. All alike go down to death without warning. Innocent lit tle children, men hoary with sin and crime, the beautiful, the gay, the sad, the happy, the unhappy, the deserving, the undeserving, the hypocrite, the time-saver, the priest, the pagan all alike are grist for the awful mill. The last ditch of the pious "it is all for the best" causes an ironic smile. "He doeth all things well," sounds like an empty platitude. Explain it how you will, you cannot convince of its justice. The truth is that every religion, every creed, every scheme of things which has for its radiating center the supremacy of Man in the universe is nullified by some great cataclysm like that of Saturday. At Galveston five thousand people were swept into nothingness by a tidal wave. These forces make no more of human life, either individual or in the aggregate, than one does of the speck of dust that is flecked off the sleeve. Whether or not force is blind, or whether- intelligent in its operation, has never been divined. It can only be measured by results, the wake it leaves in its path. That this is destruction of everything material, and annihilation of everything human in its way, is admitted. Natural force is a Juggernaut that grinds animate and inanimate alike under its wheels. It makes no distinction between the thing with what is termed a soul and the thing that is said to have no soul. Man and tree are alike. Either in the way of its pro gress is hurled aside or beaten down. Oblivion awaits that which obstructs In the least degree its onward sweep. The most confirmed orthodoxy wav ers in the face of an inexorable Fact. It is useless to deny that we are the 6port and plaything of natural forces. Some of them have been chained to human uses but only in part only with vague understanding of their extent and their power. In the light of those tremendous catastrophes resulting in indiscrimi nate human annihilation, the questioning intelligence cannot prostrate itself before the god of Justice. For Justice is a man-made god. And, in the supreme crisis, he turns a deaf ear to his creators. Very few people know anything about the status of their profiles.

StampSpecials FOR WEEK OF

58 80 Stamps with One 20 STAMPS with one pound Coffee 35c 5 STAMPS with one pound Coff" 30C JO STAMPS with one pound Coffee 25c 25 STAMPS with one bottle Cxtract 25c 40 STAMPS with one pound Tea 50c 45 STAMPS with one pound 60c

Crushed

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OP BARBED WIRE ?

the We look into the mirror and see a more or less pleasing reflection, but this is generally a full front view. Take a hand glass and examine your side-face carefully. In common parlance "you will be No longer will those of her own sex who vociferate their lost adolescent charms bang on her printed words in the beauty column. Nothing shows the onward sweep of ugly time like the profile. The sagging chin, the hollowed cheek, the flattened j temple, the flabby ear are displayed to their greatest disadvantage "on the side," to make a bad joke. 1 There are other curious things about profiles. Psychologists have wasted printer's ink and magazine space on certain phases of facial comformation. For is it not true that many people's profiles are unrecognizable to those familiar with their full face? And is it not also true that the right and left profiles in the same individual may differ so radically in effect that doubt might be cast on identity? This was the case with McKinley, whose two profiles were lacking in similarity, so much so, in fact, that they could have been thought to belong to different men. This might be turned into a study of those different personalities that seem ingly inhabit the same human struc ture. A sort of visualization of the Dr. Jeykell and Mr. Hyde that is said to lurk round the corner of every individual consciousness. Very few persons have effective profiles. But that many think they have may be seen by a visit to any photograph gallery. A beautiful profile is the rarest thing in facial make-up. FADS AND FASHIONS NEW YORK, Oct. 2 The latest importations from Paris make it clear beyond a doubt that greater fullness in skirts is the latest dictum of the rulers of fashion. Of course, the change is by no means sudden. There is merely a gradual transition, but it is noticeable even to the inexperienced eye. To be sure, the average frock is straight in line, but here and there one sees the double skirt, the triple skirt, the skirt of tiny frills, and the note of fullness becomes more insistent as the season advances. The great fashion designers of Paris are beginning to bring out models in which fullness has a decided place. Narrow flounces ara seen on the hems of frocks fashioned of chiffon and gauzes. The straight wide hem and the band of satin finishing skirts has claimed the attention of fashionable women for so long a time that a WILL MONEY HELP YOUf IF SO, CALL ON US. We will loan you any amount from $5.00 up and take your personal property as security such as household goods, pianos, team, wagons, etc. Your loan will be arranged in small weekly or monthly payments to suit your income and so small you will hardly miss the money. If you have a number of small bills outstanding, call on us and get the money to pay them all up and have one place to pay. All business is strictly confidential Can Baking Powder 50c JO STAMPS with one box Soda 10c JO STAMPS with one box Jelly Powder 10c 10 STAMPS with one box of Corn Starch J JO STAMPS with 1 cake Sweet Chocolate .. -10c 10 STAMPS with one box I. X. L. Starch . 10 STAMPS with 1 bottle Furniture Polish 25c lbs. & Pacific Tea Co. Phone 1215

D Phone 2550 H Take Elevator to Third Floor. II

change of this tort immediately caBs

attention to Itself. There will undoubtedly be an effort 'on the part of the more fashion makers to widen the aklrta very perceptibly; but thi is not likely to be taken up, at least during the early season. Frills of Valenciennes and narrow laces will go to give new skirts the desired fullness. Yet even these are soft enough to hang perfect:iy straight; bat give a delightful frou frou effect without actually widening to any perceptible degree the general lines. A dainty model of flounced all muslin had a group ot lace frills set close to the hem. The bodice was almost entirely of lace, with three overlapping frills of lace forming a fichu effect A sash and girdle of soft peach-pink sat in completed this simple but handsome costume. Width is also introduced in some cases by slashing the skirt on the side from waist, to hem and inverted point of some contrasting material or trimming. Pleats that lap under and only are noticeable when the! wearer walks are another way of obtaining the new line of fullness. The coats of very short hip length seem to have pone entirely out of fashion, which will be gratifying to many women who found those coats exceedingly becoming. The belief -that t'hoj new coats would be more closely fitted seems to have been without any foundation, however. There is a slight curving in of front and side lines on some of the new models, and there are, of course, certain belted and girdled models which are loosely held In! but the average coat keeps its loose,, straight line and its shortened waist j line in the cack, an effect usually ob-? tained by slever cutting and handling of the side sectons and various seams. ' That the kimona sleeve has every intention of surviving the change of' seasons is evident. Even among the best of the imported models one finds It, and the domestic models unhesitatingly confess allegiance to It, but! long sleeves are a feature of some of the most successful frocks and blouse models, and it seems to prophecy that! the ultra-modish woman of the winter will choose long sleeves for her daytime frock. One of the best models seen, a black ' cloth stunningly embroidered in blue; and dull yellow of a sulphur tone, bad a long close sleeve of black chiffon with a little finish of embroidery un-t der the chiffon where it fell over the hand, and with a fold of yellow chiffon; and a shorter fold of blue veiling the; very top of the sleeve and disappearing under the embroidered cloth at! the armhole. Other models showed the ' upper part of the sleeve slightly full; and joining a long, close cuff or an upper sleeve with close under sleeve.; A chic velvet frock of fine stripe in green and black had its sleeve done as far as the elbow in the velvet and comfortably loose though not fulled. Just above the elbow ft belled a very little and was continued by fine black net for a depth of perhaps four inches. The net was drawn into a close band of the velvet, which headed what may be called a long, close cuff formed by two sections of net separated by a band of velvet. In Japan, among the poorer classes, fully one-third of the marriages end in divorce. "The Bitfest Little Store in Town Unusual Display of Fall Jewelry BEAUTIFUL CAMEOS are here to stay. Set in Brooches, Scarf Pins, Bracelets, Rings, etc. Diamonds, Signet Rings, Necklaces, Cut Glass. Extraordinary fine line of Railroad Watches, also watches to suit every purse. Fred Kennedy JEWELER 526 Main Street That FEE! For Horses BETTER tnen OATS CHEAPER than Corn Omer G. Wfcefcn FEE 3 AND SEED S

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