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Everything Glitters THE goddess of Fash Jon must have had a twlnkl/e In her eye this year when she turned her thoughts toward qpring millinery,' and almost every' thing In hats reflects that twinkle. Colors are reserved and rleh ? they can afford to border on the sedate, for the most comprehensive description of the new modes Js found In the phrase "Everything Glitters." It fell from the lips of an expert millinery au thority, after a study of a great col lection of new models, but Is not meant to convey that everything has it hard brilliance. Hats are radiant with h play of light over surfaces that catch and reflect It. The outstanding feature in spring hats Is cellophane materials, some times alone, but oftener In conjunc tion with other fabrics. Fashion has led up to this brilliant stuff by the vogue for beads and embroideries and, after several seasons of experlment fngv- manufacturers have advanced cel lophane to the^ place of/ firef Impor tance, The new ( hats ? of whatever, material? are apft and light, their lines beautiful and becoming and their colors rich. Laces, flowers, bows, ?ells and handsome ornamejituU pin* are the trimmings featured. The group of model* shown above includes four hats that are representa tive of the season. At the top a chle street hat has a crown of cellophane and a draped brim of corded moire, all in . gray, with two coral pins fey way of finish. It Is a simple but Im mensely clever blt'of artistry. At the right another gray hat of cellophane, with a gray rose of folded ribbon at the front, divides honors with a very handsome navy veil. A lovely dress hat at the left has a body of black halr-brald with rows of narrow cello phane applied and a tlange of mallnes about the graceful brim. A wreath of fine flowers and a generous sash of French blue ribbon completes a bat that every woman loves. A similar style below, of navy hair-braid and cellophane with a wreath of old blue poppies, fulfills the mission of a less picturesque but equally pleasing demb dress hat which Is equal to pfany oc casions Black and brown are great favorites and the refinement of lace and mallnes In both colors Is an allure ment that designers make the roost of. 't* " ~Tt "f " '? f 'V M H coriwoHT anr vmtM ntWArt* umtm ? Tho European Relief Council, which seeks te raise $33,000,000 at the Christmas season, has been formed lor the purpose of throwing the entire charitable energy of the United States Into the vital task otprovldlng food and medical assistance to 3,500,000 children in eastern and central Europe this winter. Representatives of eight' great relief organizations, working inde pendently, gathered overwhelming evidence that the plight ef these unfortu nates should take precedence In world charity until they are saved. The eo-operatlng agencies which form the Council are the America* Relief Admin istration, the American Red Crosa, the American Friends' Service Committee (Quakers), the Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, the Federal Oeuncil of the Churches of Christ in America, the Knights ef Celumbua, the T. M. Q. A. and the Y. W. C, A. The L'nit?>d States army air service c , had twenty-one "aces" In the Workl. War, offlciuiiy eredited with bringing clown twenty-nine balloons and 1S9 airplanes. Five of the American wees Mere killed in action. Clancy Kids We Believe It! PERCY JL. CROSBY ? * U? McCtar* fcwaw fcltuli A mausoleum is to bo eroded in memory of French sailors who lost tJioir lives in the World War; The site will be at some point along1 the Finlstere coast, where it ran bo soon by all jwissing vessels. sfknt vbarh'in mil WuH Clever Koriwr ^ut 1/oot IWU Hint No Wood. Karly In 100* William .1, U?td, tin itniitiitr af Hampden County How a* ' correction at Hprliixflojld, Mass., g?>t away. Though suffering with rheuma tism, Ho had contrived to make keys to saw through chAliii ?* ?ui b?w, unlock 1 1< it> l' ^ scale a wall IS feet high Hobltlo off on fit crutch Olicc time n free man. ills liberty was shortlived, however: within a f?W days he was recaptured ami l a If'en to Boston whore he was sen iimh .-.i for nn old offgnae i?? aorve from fOUP to seven .wars In the .Mas*achu setts State prison. Hut before beginning to serve tl4s sentence he was sent hack to Springfield to finish his term there. Al?.ut nil* y^rs later he was convict ed of forgery at FVesno, Itollf., and sen tcnoed to serve six y<?urs in state prl* son. This term was shortened hut when the (California authorities released him he was re-urrested for the police of Washington, I>, C.. who wanted him on a charge of passing a worthless check for $10,000 on a real estate company and for swindling a bauk out of nearly as much of cleverly forged pai>cr. Daring his confinement in the Wash lug ton jail, pending trial, Held conduct 'od himself in the most exemphiry man ner hut all the time he was correspond ing with friends on the outside, secre te ly directing a 'concerted movement to have himself cleared and sot free. He would write letters that to all Intents and purposes were nothing more than any man might write his friends. In quiring about other friends and men tioning casually various personal mat ters that concerned these friends and himself. The lynx-eyed police soon discover ed that messages of quite a different tenor were interlined In invisible luk in these apparently harmless missives. These secret messages usually gave In structions ito his confederates as to various legal processes for his release. For example, the following message was brought in clear legible characters between the lines of one such letter wh?h the paper was seared in a flame: "If you use a typewriter yourself copy this letter on a typewriter and be sure- to use an old ribbon and an old piece of carbon paper so tha^the letter will have the appearance of having been written a long time ago, as you will notice the date, July If, 1012. If you can't use a typewriter yourself or can't get it done by some one you know? who will keep their mouth closed, tmen write It out with pen and ink, using plenty of water." Despite the best efforts of his friends to save him, he was convicted by the Washington court when his case came to trial and sentenced to thirty years in a penitentiary. "This man should never <be allowed to go free again," said the court in passing sen tence. "He is one of the most donger nus criminals in this country and has escaped from prison repeatedly. In deed, unless the authorities are exceed ingly careful he can be trusted to break out again." ' This arch-crook has been indicted for forgery (In two dozen or more cities of the country and is wanted by the police of several cities, if he lives to complete his present thirty year term. He is a clever, ingenious fellow but it is not likely that he. will ever know liberty a g* In? not for long, anyway. lie is now past the age of fifty, and police records show that he has si>ent no less titan thirty years behind the bars. His criminal ways and his con finement in prison have told on hiin and he is now pltably aged and fecWc' for his years. l>nder various aliases ^-.2ld has operated r in different parts of the country and has swindled banks, busi ness houses anc| private individuals out of sums aggregating many thousands of dollars. Ho employed a particularly effect ire method of disguising himself to avoid capture and arrest. The police say that he had a rubber bag speci ally made to fit about his waist. lie was really a man of slim figure but by Inflating this bag and potting on The NEW EDISON The Phonograph with a Soul " Help Edison Take sortie Mood Change Charts home and make this experiment! LET'S imagine you have just come home f roin shopping. You are tired and nervous. You step to the New Edison Nmd put on an Edison Uj -Chta now Gradually the music soothes you. You forget fatigue ard your "nerves*' disap pear. Yen (eel refreshed acd light hearted. Mr. Kdlson 'n his present great ? research is studying into the effects of music on the minds and moods of men. W ill you fill out a Mood Change Chart, and do your bit for Mr. Edison's research ? M?*ke the experiment in your own home. Come in. Let us give you fl supply of Mood Change ... Charts . Have your family and your friends till them &ut. They will find it more fun than Ouija. If yoM don't own a New Edison, fill out o Chart in our store! Better yet, we will lend you a New Ediaon and a program of Rb-Cmutions so that you win give a Mood Chang* Party in your own home, ? Camden Furniture Company u full -I) rested coat ho could change his appearance markedly, making himself look like a stout man, many years younger than lie really was. At limes lie also wore a wig:, false mustache and sidewhiskers which helped him to throw detectives off his trail. With all his cleverness in forging negotiable paper, in disguising himself ? ml breaking out of prison, however, he could 'not. make crookedness pay. Sooner or Later in each instance the authorities would get him and make him answer to the law for his mis deeds. or his ill-gotten gains ? alto gether an insignificant sum compared with what he might have earned if he had chosen to he honest and law ~ , -r abiding ? he has paid with more than half of his life in all likelihood will continue to pay with the remainder of the, days allotted to him. FKJ3CKLES (Jene Stratton- Porters 's popular and fascinating story "Freckles", in music drama form, comes to the Op era House , Camden for an engage ment of one night on Monday Feb. 14 Neil Twomey,* who dramatized Mrs Porter's charming story has evolv ed a powerful and interest-compell ing song play from a tale whose chief charm lie in its tender simpli city and unaffected naturalness, and at the same time has retained all the familiar characters and important incidents of the story. The almost unlimited scenic possi beilost have been taken advantage 1m* rlost have been taken adveantage of their full value this together [ with a New York company of sing ers and players of unusual excell ence assures an event Of unusual im portance. This is not a moving picture. In His New Building , Mr. G. T. Little, who has recently builtra very handsome building for his automobile business, is now occu pying it. His office has been mov ed from the sales stables to the? new building. The show room is large and well lighted. In the rear is the garage where cars can be repaired The new building is located just west of the sales stables. Hides Gems t'nder Setting Hen. A Gulf port, Miss., special to the Mobile Register, of recent date says: "After making a search of the heme of Will Henry at Pascagoula, Offi cers Fairley and Urie, of this city, assisted by a Pinkerton detective and Sheriff Cutabac, of Jackson county, found watches and jewelry amounting to more than $100 al leged to have been stolen by a ne gro from the Gulfport jewelry es tablishment, into which he and an other had broken some days ago. The loot was found in a chicken house under a setting hen, which the officers claimed was a most peculiar place of hiding. Clarence .Jones, an other negrc, was captured in Biloxi last week, when officers shot him in the leg. YOU CANT DODGE IT ? * ? (jnfc in Awhile Your Ilium! Clogs and Your YHaility Kims Down. T1IKN. I AKK FKmMANGAN You'll I'ick I'p Again Unirkly with Plenty of Ked Blood C/orpusrlcs. Physicians nowadays take a hjood test when you are run down. They count the red corpuscles in your blood If these are too few they give you a tonic for your blOod. It hapjwns right along. They are always on the look out for indications of weak blood. Why? Because they know when your blood is weak your roslstance to di sease is N>w. Your vitality and energy quickly run down. You can tell when your hlood is weak. Yon look pale, feel tired. You are not ill. hut you don't feel right. You don't want to,do things. That is the time to take the well-known tonic, Pepto Miaugan. , ? 1 'opto- Manga n builds red blood oor puwh*s. Physicians have prescribed It for thirty years. l'cptjo- Mian gnu is sold' in liquid and tablet, form. The medicinal valu? is exact 1 j' the same. Take either kind yon prefer, lint he sure you get the genuine Pepto Manga n ? "Mimic's." The full name. "Oude'w Pepto- Ma ngan," should he on the i>ackago. ? Advertisement. Ninety-seven per ?,ent. of Americans die without making a will. N. Si Ya Don'r khokm mow jjNART MV OOC T(MMl? ? ThC OTH(R day' lowreeoA QuMKrCR tM THC CAK6 AN* J(P toer<r in an' flrttwc ir our / i jTMArr fyoTHfN - \ 0<?<W?p a A OOLCAft /M *1 Me cak6^ >n u h/vt J> Ya thwk - ? -Oip?-? 10UW? (x) H AT? M? J C/MP60 IN THE CAK6 I ^ COMdOOT U> ITH A -f Akf A PoonO OF COO flM-ti ? '<* fy/N6T6av C^NTr, Cf4AfV<;e J /J J !> 6r^>> -- - ? . ,0 m ^ *?