Newspaper Page Text

THE SUN, SUNDAY, MARCH 34, 1912.

COQUETTISH WRAPS

OF TAFFETfr

Lone fonts of Changeable Colors

Sometimes Trimmed With

Heavy Lace.

HEP ANT) BLACK DESIGNS

full capo was rather attractive, though

tho oolorltiR was hard,

Paris is cofiucttliiR with black and red

combinations till spring, but Mephis

topholan associations with this color

scheme will not down and most of tho

models exploiting It seem more suitable)

for tho staRo than for tho pro monad o or

salon. In whlto taffeta-that supple,

lustrous taffeta wlilch Is so lovely In

white and delicate lints lined with ivilest

plnknnd trimmed with self-conllngs anils

frills tho model was Infinitely more likable

than in tho black and red,

Model In

White Wraps

-Conts With

Hoods.

for Summer

One tires of tho word taffeta this spring

nnd yet It I the refrain of overy fashion

otig w there's no escaping it.

Vrn are m.iny women who will not

weir tafleta, but thero Is no showing

of liew things in frocks or millinery or

coajt In which thU silk has not an Impor

ting rolo and no a fashion chronicler must

ne.i fall into taffeta talk. The fad will

1 allocking!)- abused. Cheap taffetas

cannot bo handled gracefully, they wear

lov

Sin

route includes nix small towns and more

than tlvo hundred regular customers.

Mrs. Carter personally supervise all tho

details of tlio business, often milking tho

cows and distributing the milk among

her customers.

Wellesloy Collego Is said to have more

graduates In the mission Held than any

other woman's collego In this country,

(lertrudo Chandler of tho class of 1MB,

now Mrs, Mychoff, was tho flrstlWcllesloy

missionary in tin Held, She went to Horn

liav immediately nfter taking her degreo

In the (lrur fhw irradllatff I from Wettowlnv

i lie- college represented in tjm mission

Homo of tho chitigeable taffetas In 1 Held of every country in Asia with the

r and tnoy aro not neautuui. uut,

is bo3t, tho resuscitated silk is really

ly and genuine; artists fashion de-

tful things from it.

me of these delightful things material'

In coat form. and though some aston

Inch' ugly taffeta coats and wraps are

Khrfwn In tho shops there are others that

reconcile ono to the flood of taffeta.

liong coats of changeable taffeta In

d.irV or medium colorings are numerous

ii mi are usually self trlrrimod with the

chirred cord bands, quillings, fringed

niohings or pointed frills bf tho silk which J

one always associates wun tarreta, but

m-cationally ono finds a coat of this class

which shows little or none of the self

medium tones with luiaint blurred floral

design which are among tho handsomest '

of tho taffetas, aro mado up Into long I

coats, but though handsome nro hardlv

so practical and adaptable as tho models

In plain ono tone or changeablo taffeta.

CharmeUMs and tho other soft Batln

finish silks aro still favored coat materials

and somo particularly lovely models of

such materials nro uhown In tho decn

Ivory, biscuit and champagne similes,

with hand embroidery or lace In tho sumo

color and with handsome fastenings mado

of cords of tho silks.

Thoro aro many beautiful coats of

white charmeuse or dull finish satin

too, coats lntendod for daytime rather

than evening woar during tho summer

months. The smartest of thoso am mado

rather simply, with buttons and cordlngs

of the'satin and with or without a little

stiwMo exception of Corea. lhero nro

Wclletfleyjmlssioimries scattered through

fsouin America,-npaiu, ino I'liiuppines,

Mexico and Africa.

Miss I.nthrop of (Iranby, Mass,, is said

to be the largest breeder of mico, rats and

guinea pigs In tJiU country. Hho sells the

representing thirteen States; a cam

pus of 100 acres, seventeen buddings

and an endowment approximating $1,

000,000. The trustees have announced

that Whcaton will never be a large

college. In tho report prepared for the

Legislature tho trustees said:

"A womnn's education should In

clude not only usual routine but such

subjects as hygiene, sanitation, nurs

ing, fond values, home decoration,

household acounts and business law."

Miss Kleanor M. Colleton is one of

the two teachers appointed to make an

Investigation among tho children of the

public school of lloston for the pur

pose of learning how the schools can

become most helpful In giving vo

cational Instruction. One purpose of

the Investigators Is to find out why so

many children leave school before grad-

n . H V fX, Ii REVIVING HOME

i

trimming and Instead is trimmed in some

no of the heavy laces, macrame, filet,

i iuny or combination lace. This lace

may hn ued in n sklrtband and collar,

or may merely nppear in one of the huge

handsome collars, or perhaps may form

most of the upper part of the coat.

On exceedingly good model sketched

for this page had its handsome heavy

lae trimming applied in nn original

wav At llr.-tt glance tho lace seemed

merely to bo In the shape of nn unusually

lars collar, but a second glance revealed

th fart that it ran around the body of

th rnat in bolero form.the draped taffeta

Mv lrjng set in Itetween the lace of

the Khnulder and the under nrm part of

tli incket

l aager and sloping away gradually

fre- i vin bint lino instead of crossing over

f " ' 'ik the coat just described was

a tr 1 chameleon taffeta of soft brown

md greon and red tones, rich yet not

vid This model was bordered by a

Iin of fluffy marabou Just outside a band

of corded shirring and had odd little sleeves

vrv short and finished by a deep frill

of llj.

Particularly coquettish wraps of black

tifTta ar among tho imported coats

"hown at some of tho openings and are

is much inantl ns coat, the arms passing

thr nigh draped openings Instead of

,iop.-,.s and the lines suggesting a rather

fu enpe cut away in front and with Its;

fu)Ms hold in around tho bottom of the

"a by a bordering band of corded shlr-nr-

or other self trimming. Some of

iJi.n wrapw have hoods of the slfk and all

ir 'it the lightest, softest and most lus

tf - of taffetas, so that, with the aid of

ri'. -tys Miey escape any hint of balloon-

ilk." fllllliess

'mlar models. would bo attractive in

cn nn light colorings for Bummer eve

ning wear, and apropos of coats for such

pun oss one of tho daintiest taffeta

r ii shown by an upper Broadway firm

"'i s opening day was of pink taffeta

trtrrmod in pink ruches of tho silk. The

w i was cleverly made of two straight

is. Dm ends brought up from the

' a' "i be caught to tho fronts in front of

'h n-m. funning a sloove opening and

Kl'-' g nn effective drapery movement.

'n hood of softest not and laoe, with

tlnv flower sprigs tucked In hero and

! e along tho beading of the bordering

'rill, fell out over tho shoulders and

l'w in tho back, but could be drawn up

on- the head becomingly. A more piquant

'limner evening, wrap for tho dobutante

"''en for her younger sister It would be

fcar-l to find.

s this same opening there alto figured

ft .del in black and red very similar to

U ne In white and pink reproduced

!.' and on a slender figure the ourioua,

Miss Mildred Chadsey haa been ap

pointed chief sanitary Inspector In Gleve

land, Ohio, and will have charge of the

city's force of sanitary polloe. lnoluding

two sergeants, a woman inspector of

factories and workshops and about

twenty-five sanitary patrolmen. Miss

Chadsey was put in charge of the tene

ment inspection last Maron and l said to

have shown so much tact and diplomacy

in handling the work, together with such

a knowledge of building matters, that she

was promoted to her present position.

Hor salary is $1,800 a year.

INDUSTRIES.

PLAN BIGGEST SUFFRAGE

MEETI HG EVER HELD HERE

Equal Franchiso Society and Its

Supporters Will Jam Car

negio Hall.

MANY SEATS. TAKEN NOW

Mra. Clarence n. Mackay Will Preside

and May Speak Tho Others

Who Will Give Addresses.

Ilomespuns, Baskets, Pottery and Tapes

try Turned Out by Craft Workers.

From Handicraft.

From the home industries of Canada

come beautiful homespuns In wool and

linens, Voven and dyed by hand, which

are oharmlng In color and texture. These

are being used by two of our United

States Industries in making children's

frocks and dressing gowns.

The Old Colony Union at Bourne, Mass.,

and the Aquldneok Cottage Industries

of Newport, R. I., find difficulty in filling

the demand for theso handmade gar

ments, which are distinctive in design

and showing an application of needleoraft

to wearing apparel which lifts It quite

out of the position it UBiially occupies.

The Flasket Shop in Belfonette, Pa.,

produces baskets made by the towns

people under the direction and from the

designs of able craftsworkers who have

tieon In their town, aided by an expert In

getting the best results In dyeing. The

settlements In many of the large cities

are gottlng good results In needlecruft

nnu in mailing ponery. Mhe Uohemian

Needlework Oulld In New York and th

Paul Hovoro Pottery In Boston are notable

examples.

I l l , t a 1 , , ,.... t . "i.y iHuoauiDH IliaUO IU

neavr, naociBome men nuoui inn collar ammais aimosi exclusively lO laboratories i tho Adirondack hr ths o-iiMoa' .i..

ami Biooves, ooino oi uin oobi louidiig wiiero inoy aro usei ior oxporimeniai in ineir nomes irom special deslens

have no trimming at nil navo the satin, i purposes Sho has raised as many as , Pamela Coleman Smith and under the

but are gracefully cut and lined with ,t;.llt thousand mico mid h x hundred nblo direction of Mrs. Oeorge Notman

,,lu n.,,l i,in- i ,v, .ini,,.,, , l"K" ' "in' year miss i.uiiiriip i inn ii-iiwiihiiiiiu miiniuien oi weaving ana

' . j .cautions persons wiio think of entering nro good from every standpoint. Mnrin

There have been big suffrage gatherings

In tills city this wlntor.but it is planned to

have the Equal Franchise Society suffrage

meeting at Carnegie Hall on March 29

outdo any of them. Mrs. Clarenoe II.

Mackay will preside at the meeting and

probably she will make a short address.

The object of the meeting is to raise funds

for the maintenance of the circulating

library and reading room of the Equal

Franchise Society at 8 East Thirty-seventh

street. ,

On the platform with Mra. Mackay will

be the offloera of the various suffrage so

cieties, men and women. The speakers

and their cubjeota will be: Dr. Anna

Howard Shaw, 'Women aa Human Be

ings"; Dr. Stephen Wise, "Woman and

Democracy"; Mra. Rheta Childe Dorr,

"Women in Industry"; Miss Ines MU

holland, "Women In a Republlo"; Miss

Mary Agnes Best, "The Ignorant Vote."

Among the patronesses are Mrs. Philip

Lydlg, Mra, Frederick Nathan, Mra. Anna

Oarlln Spencer, Mrs. John Porter Shan

non, Mrs. Thomas B. Wells, Mrs. William

H. Young, Mrs. William B. Bolton, Miss

Cora Van Norden, Mrs. Myra h. Butler,

Mrs. Honry Wise Miller, Mra. Howard

Mansfield, Mrs. Edgerton Parsons, Mrs.

W. J. Ehrioh, Mrs. W. A. Delano, Mrs.

Ruth Lltt, Mrs. J. O.. Croswell, Mrs. Alex

ander Blair Thaw, Miss M. E. Wood, the

Misses AUco and Irene hewlsohn, Countess

de Tavara, Mrs. Victor Sorohen, Miss

Margaret McKlm, Mme. E. L. .do Parenty,

Mrs. Charles S. Smith, Mrs. Everlt Maoy,

Mrs. Wallace Irwin, Mrs. E. Einstein,

Mra. Honry Mills Day, Mrs. Edward

Thomas, Mrs. J. Milholland. Mra. William

B. Shepherd, Mrs. J. B. Dickson, Mra.

John Honry Hammond, Mra. Kenneth

Crawford, Mrs. Churl es K. Carpenter,

Mra. Henry S. Gibson, Miss Mary A.

Sheldon, Mrs. Henry Vlllard, Mias Louise

Maynord, Miss Mary Vroom, Miss Eleanor

Frlck, Mrs. Charles 'Feohhelmer, Mrs.

Oeorge W. Alger, Mrs. Carr Van Anda,

Mrs. H. Dlnkelsplel, Mra. Earl Bitter,

Miss Clara B. B pence, Dr. Belle Thomas,

Mrs. II. H. Holmes, Miss Altoe Rlgg

nuut, Mr. Charles 8. Brown, Mra. Charles

I. Guy. MUs Enid Yardell, Mrs. William

Adams Brown, Dr. Sarah J. MaoNutt,

Mra. John Graham, Mra. W. Holdan

Weeks, Mra. Jose Edward ChaTM, Mra.

Oeorge D. Pratt, Mrs. Schuyler Warren,

Mrs. Chaunoey Stlllman, Mra. James L.

Laidlaw, Mra. Robert Ooelet, Mrs. Wln

throp Burr, Mlaa Mary J. Hay and Mra.

F. T. Daltiel.

Among the patrons are Magistrate

Peter Townaend Barlow, Howard A.

Colby, Oeorge Foster Pea body and

Frederick Nathan'.

Boxes have been taken by the Woman's

Suffrage party, the Equal Suffrage League

and the Women's Political Union. Tb

following1 also have reserved boxes:

Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay, Mra. Philip

Lydlg, Mrs. John Honry Hammond,

Mrs. J. B. Dixon, Mra. Robert Ooelet,

Mrs. A. Barton Hepburn, Mrs. Wallaoe

Irwin, Mra. Henry Wise Miller, Mrs.

Bourke Cockran, Mra. Howard Mans

field, Mrs. Carr Van Anda, Mr. and Mrs.

Oeorge Foster Pea body, Mra. J. Mil

holland. Miss Louise tfaynard, Mrs.

Wlnthrop Burt and Magistrate Barlow.

Boats in the auditorium will be f 1 each.

Seats in the balooniea will be free but

reserved, and they may be obtained at

the headquarters of the Equal Franchise

Society in East Thirty-seventh street.

The meeting will start at 8:15 o'clock,

but after 8:30 no seats will be reserved,

and the meeting will be thrown open to

the public

Blocks of seat sections In the bal

ooniea have been reserved for settle

ment workers, trained nurses and teachers.

Twenty-five seats have been sent to the

Teachers College.

The ushers on the orchestra floor will

be fortv Barnard srlrla. Thev will wear blue

sashes blue la the color of the society

with "Votes for Women" printed on

them. The ushers in the balooniea and

gallery will be men from the Men'a League

for Women's Suffrage, of which George

Foster Pea body la president.

Announcement will be made at the

meeting of a series of lectures to be de

livered at the society's headquarters In

April by Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, 'who

will speak on "My Early Struggles"; Mrs.

Richard Aldrich. who will apeak on the

life of Clara. Barton; Mrs. Stanton Blat h.

who will talk on the are or tier mother,

Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Ida Rusted

Harper, who will speak on Susan B. An-

tnony. ,

FISHING FOR COAL

.!(!."&

A MANTLE OF ROSE TAFPETA AND GRAY MARABOUT, A CAPE OF WHITE

TArrKTA LINUU WITH KIM) AM) A CLOAK OF TWO TONED

SATIf-AND LACE.

pompadour or pony designs. the business to consider their neighbors,

(lood lookingconts of black charnmuso ii iho dogs and cats of her own neighbors

are made up on similar lines, nnd then' have proved tlin worst trouble sho has

too havo tho flowered chiffon lining. llml to ntviul against.

Tho lightest and sheerest of rough silk

to ordor from special doslgns and with

tho colors dyod to harmonize with any

surroundings thoy fill a need long felt

by interior decorators.

the

O n Dry Goods -Camets-Upholstery twO

Paris Models-

We Are Showing in Our Salon de Robet

Representations of the Best Models of the

Noted French Creators for Spring and Summer.

ORDERS FOR REPRODUCTIONS NOW BEING TAKEN

MUCH BELOW THE REGULAR SCALE OP PRICES.

Also

OUR OWN DIRECT IMPORTATION OF COATS A5D WRAPS, 07

VEILIHG, SATIN ARD E0LDQIRE; HANDSOMELY TRIMMED.

48.00, 65.00, 75.00

Imported Marabout Neckpieces

STOLE AND CAPE STYLES, OF VERY FIRE QUALITIES JUST RE

CEIVED, IN NATURAL COLOR AND BLACK, INCLUDING MANY HIOR

CLASS NOVELTIES ESPECIALLY SUITABLE FOR EASTER WEAR

OFFERED AT THE FOLLOWING CONCESSIONS FROM THE USUAL PRICESt

CAPES OF MARABOUT, tape fringed, tabled . -

ends. Usually $6.50 to Si 1.75 4.73, 3.95, 0.25, 0.73

CAPES OF MARABOUT and Ostrich combined, .

tainted ends. Usually S6.75 to Six.50. 4.73, 5.93, 6.75, 9.00

STOLES OF MARABOUT, 5 strand, a Tarda long. . - '

Usually S6.50 to Six.75 4.93, 6.75,' 9.50

STOLES OF MARABOUT and Ostrich combined, aa n mm

5 strand, 2 yards long. Usually $7.30 and S9.50 O.UO, .CO

English Mohair Suitings

A SALE OF UNUSUAL IMPORTANCE, CORSISTINO OF 3,000 YARDS OF

SUPERIOR QUALITY MOHAIRS OF THR SEASON'S STYLES TJT

STRIPES AND MIXTURES, THE MOST DESIRABLE COLORS, INCLUD

ING NAVY, WHITE AND BLACK.

Regular Si6, St.aSt iS qualities, 65C yard

Linen Suitings

3,000

YARDS TU8SOR- WEAVE. THE NEWEST TN LOTTOS FOR THIS

SEASON'S COATS AND SUITS; all pure flax: yarn dyed, fast ooler. Colors

Sky, Cadet, Nary, Flak, Gray, Greco, Lea&er, Old Sees, Catawba,

wuiaria, neno, -ima sm wmte. 10. 1

Refulaxly 50c., OC 7rd

MONDAY AND TUESDAY

Dress Trimmings

2,000 YARDS EMBRACING AH EXTENSIVE VARIETY Of THIS

SEASON'S PARIS CREATIONS, AS WELL AS OUR REGULAR

STOCK OF lXCLUstYR ROWELT 1ES FOR STREET AND EVER IRQ

USES.

Regularly 75c. to S15.00 23 to 7.50 7rd

NOTE -Fifth Arenue States stop at our ltth Street Entrance.

Wedding Stationery

Approved forms of Invitations, Announcements

and At Home Cards, engraved in correct style

by skilled artisans. Easter Cards.

DEMPSEY & CARROLL

22 W. 23 STREET NEW YORK CITY

PsaasrlTsala aUrcrs Which Supply

Farmers on Their Banks.

When ooal Is needed on a Pennsylranla

farm 'bordering the Susquehanna Rlrer

little Johnnie doee not grab his ooal hod

and scoot for the cellar. Instead he

unfastens bis boat, pulls out Into the

river and fishes till his hod la overflowing.

To be eure Johnnie doesn't flan with rod

and line,, nor yet with a net. His ap

paratus consists or a wire eooop, anaped

like a shovel and not dissimilar to a mkw

now net, with an eight foot handle. And

his boat is a broad, flat bottomed affair,

sometimes square ended and sometimes

with sharp bows, built like a soow, with

h maximum of canacltv and the mini

mum of draught: for the ooal fisher's catch

is usually made in shallow water.

And the catch is unlike any ooal you

ever saw. This run of the river ooal

nnmea in all sizes, from little flakes to

chunks as big as your head. But mostly

It Is mailer than pea ooal. Coal from the

ef the river bottom give tt no lodgment

against the swift current, no pleoe t

Imbed itself. But in a sand bar it oan

burr itself like a clam. Partlols after

particle oomes to rest here, each adding

to the size of the barrier, like ooral In

sects building a ooral reef by the deposit

of their own bodies. Every freshet

sweeps down great layers of ooal,- de

positing it either in some sandy bed or

In the watery coal bin formed by a dam.

How far this ooal travele cannot be

told exactly. The first supply oomes

into the river in the region of Wilkes

barre. Twenty-five milea below Wilkee

harre. at Neeoopeok, they dig river ooal.

Twenty-five ml lee further downstream, at

Bunbury, the coal fishers are still busy.

Here a second supply of ooal empties

into the Susquehanna with the Inky waters

of the Bhamokln Creek.

Another twenty-five mllss dusjuaUaasa,

at Liverpool, one still finds the ooal fishers,

delving like so many oyster tongers: and

little fleets of ooal boats move up and down

the river at Harrieburg, another twenty

Ave miles below. So that for one hundred

miles at least the bed of the Busque

hanna la dotted with little ooal piles.

Bo, too. are the shores bordering this

stretch of river. For every farmer has

his riverside coal bin. m boarded in

space by the river bank, alongside whloh he

can moor his boat to unload. Frequently

the farmer has several bins, for Be sep

aratee hie ooal according to sua by means

of screens with meshes of different widths.

Hard by lie the ooal boats, each with

Its lone Dushlne Dole, its sieve like shovels.

and its anchor pins. For when Johnnie

goee to fish for ooal he anchors his boat

at riant an alee to the current bv mum

of two pieces of iron pipe that he thrusts

aown into we nver nea uirougn iron

rings on the side or his craft.

IU J

for srery oeeatUm

Spring and Summer Gowns,

Threc-Piece Suits and

Loose Coats.

ONE-PIECE DRESSES.

BALANCE THE PIOUM.

allsucM WITHOUT ALTERA!

This, wonderful drsas has

destsaad ti

inaad to at at

ORS.

parftetei

thNufk maay years' expsrtaasat. aad Baas larsst

ITV1

AND COMPORT.

use mt Tesretas. crepe se Cktae, Use a.

peases, serse, eteflle, rolls, Swlu, giwmhTm,

a"V""2! nrrnotn orttttt 110.71 us

Lint oasasort NttUf lilt up?

7P.Si' Y.KBORTEJWTIONS. We spetlalus

sap ibis vsi iivuiar luiai. jMsuiuisLnivrjnn sr ns 1

aDUfaotnHBV nn & i

! and MlUnr direst to the wsarar. enrPhiCES

AT LEAST A THIRn TWfi .I.. .1...

whsre.

Ulostrated estalec tr seat vat ef town free.

LANE BRYANT, UST,T"-

WASRINOTON BBIaBTB, B wiT 1M SI.

Then he takss his eooop, whloh is reallr

a wire covered frame, and brings up a

scoopful of the river bottom. He rests

his shovel handle on the aide of his boat

and moves his load back and forth throu ah

the water, like a gold miner washing a

pan of ore. Thus Johnnie washes out the

aad. The residua la almost purs coal.

In a day Johnnie oan dig several hundred

pounds of ooal.

or wool Sponge In white lined with color

makes smart cover all coats for summer

and reversible materials ore miulo to nlvo i

much tho 'same effect. White,, with a

MM Ilossln Marlon Coats, B. A Vassar,

1007, hni received the Allco Freeman

I'iiliner fellowship founded In 1903 by Mrs,

t, in i ... , - c ,, , i ,!..

1. HI1UIJUM III DUSlUll IHH1 ViriUlIlB ,.,u,. j .1,,,-

au liicomn of tl.fKKi. MiBM (outs Is the'"..

tioolc written hyu man lo enter

ten years hko In Kt. Petersburg-, 'would not

oiisp. mis was, however, a voracious

A Man Hater's Library.

From the London Chronhlt,

Misandry ocralonally has Its uses. A

Iwila-avow. who ril-H

... .. it,, ii,i-tiiii,i ,ji s . h.i. iiiin lujiin i. lilt,'. . ..... '.

paw corn coior iuiiiik, collar nmi onus. Jl()()(T f ,j10 Mary ft. Ive-. fellowhhlp in i le" 5 'm

is a oomblnntlon often wn nnd ohnrm- philosophy for limiMl ut Vitlo.

...ft.j vww. f i roauer una wvn t iv pnoujrh to Battsfr hor

aiillK lWin ui nwu, iirirrwujr nutuii 111117111 - r.. w...- i mi umn im imii l 1 1 n l IUl,

in while ami crenm and strlnR color, I versity of (.nurorniii iiRRreKnted more

inset with heavy laco to match the linen thim half a million dollars. Mrs. Knther'H

llrst Kilt wat tjm Matlier (latn nl tlio iel

Kntph nveiiun entranee to the university

as a memorial to her husband. Mint en

dowed two professorships, each for $120,

ihK); provided two hook funds, of J25.IHO

and $Hi,y'K, and Kavo t20'i,i'0 1 lor tho ereo

Mcm of u hell tower of white Branlto,

color and more or less elaborated with

hand embroidery, have boon brought

over by all tho importers who caler to a

fastidious clientele

On her death her lihmri wna rnun tn

eontiiln nearly In.ihk) volumes-all written

by women, I his was said at the time

In l the most extensive collection of this

kind ever formed.

WHAT WOMEN ARE DOING.

Mrs. Maggie Carter of Wakefield, Mass,,

started in the milk business nine years

ago with one cow. To-day she owns a

herd of fifty Jerseys, Her dally milk

Wieaton, the newest woman's col

lege, was founded by Mary L,yon as a

Klrls' seminary at Norton, Muss., more

thnn Boventy-nve years oijo. At pres

ent It has an enrolment of 226 students,

FACE

BOOK

FREE

WRITE

In plunnlnc your

pretty clothe, do not

lorret your FACR.

NOW Is the HKflT

time lo llfhten Dabby

kin, remove wrinkles

and blcmlihts.

Dr. Pratt Is a rrd.

uste physician, lias

the best and quickest

methods and irealetl

eiperleoc. Writs,

llPSBrMSway, N.T

mines is bright and shiny and all angles

at reflect tne ugm.

IUver coal is neltlier angular nor shiny

that refleot the light,

Every piece of it is worn down, buffed,

rounded off like a beach pebble, with an

exterior as dull as ground glass.

To the

heap of river coal looks

rile of black pebbles. But

t be oraoked open and the

exactly like a p

let a niece or it be oraoked on

ahlny heart stands forth like the meat in

a hlokorv nut

Despite this apparent difference be

tween mine and river ooal, there la really

no difference at all, or rather the differ

ence, like beauty, is only skin deep. For

river ooal is simply mine ooal that has

gone overboard, saya Harper't Wttkly.

Ever since men began delving for ooal

the operator has cast aside aa refuse

thousands upon thousands of tons of

good coal, flung it out on the culm beeps.

What is his loss is the gsln of the ooal

fishers In the river below. Into this

stream, by way of its feeders, the moun

tain brooks, ooal is washed by the rains,

which gnaw deep gtilllee In the faces of

the culm banks. This "blaok sand" thus

washed into the brooks turns them to ink.

Fcr, after all its years and miles of

rolling, river ooal oomes eventually to

rest on a sand shoal. The stony parts

"Wtmr hm Gneque and hmvm u BttUr Flgun."

THE NEW

La Grecque

CORSET

embodies all the up-to-date

requirements of Dame Fash

ion together with the

usual La Grecque excellence.

Seeds fitting, by stpert eertetiem, $3.30 to $25.00.

L VAN OXDEN CORSET CO., 4S WmI S4A St

, . aceai Tlsst Take aaeveter,

ir

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