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j22&?n 0le?on (Copy for This Departnient Supplied by I the American Lett ion New* Service.) ALL KNOW JACK WILLIAMS Adjutant of North Dakota Legion Department Acquired Popularity While Serving as Newsie. Everybody in North Dakota, and not a few :n bordering states know Jack j ? Williams, adju- , of the Ainerpartment, and his ^ resonant voice. extra, all about j t ., While newsle, ? \? imams conceived a monopoly on all j the city's evening papers which brought nil the other boys into his em- ^ ploy and made monqy for him. Later , he branched out and worked in a news- t, paper press room. He worked up to t pressman, a position he was holding t when he enlisted in the Third En- j gineers for the war. I Forced to quit school while In the o fourth grade, Williams obtained a good f education on the streets and by night .s study. At twenty-one years old he r was president of the Fargo Trades and Labor assembly, a post he re- -i signed to enlist. He went into the army as a private and came out with the same rank. JJe was the first state < adjutant of the American Legion department. POST SELECTS THIS BEAUTY t ? Puget Sound Organization Chooses c Miss Hazel Jordan as One ( of Their Prettiest t A dip In refreshing ocean water every day during the summer and every t week, at least, r during the winter, r makes for the i sparkling eyes ( and exceptional B beauty of Miss v|^ Kr K 1 Hazel Jordan, re- ^ k 8 1 cently selected by ( the American Legion of Seattle. c Wash., as one of 4 I the three most ( the great North- ^? west. Because of the cool, moist air s which blows the year around, because I they swim, skate, ski, float and fly i and do everything else that a real live ! t American girl Is supposed to do, the r beauties of the Northwest far surpass f. those of any other section of ihe < United States, the Legion of Seattle holds. All these advantages obviate i the use of rouge, powder, the lipstick and paint, too, they declare. . Miss Jordan lives In Everett, Wash., on the eastern shore of 1'uget sound. She was the only one of the three girls who would tell, wlllfhgly, her age. She admits eighteen years. I 1 KILLED BY SHELL FROM WAR r Ammunition Expert Is Almost Blown to Pieces in His Own Home " at Indianapolis. 1 Although lie had gone through the ' World war unscathed and had quail- * ~~"I fled as an expert In handling artil- s lery ainintinitlon. ^ Frank M. Kinne, ' f ^ Indianapolis, Ind., > x fy W* recently was near- ' ly blown to pieces ' In his home by a * had brought from ' France. After hav'= v '"K servt>d in an v exhibition squad j ^ ?jjj whlcll gave tleill- | " oust rat ions ot how shells were unloaded and exploded, Kinne was unload- a lng his souvenir shell when the fatal v accident occurred. Klnne's little home was wrecked, hut | his mother and sister, sleeping In an . upstairs rcKiin, miraculously escaped injury. The local post of the Aineri-; s can Legion, to which the soldier had applied for membership following his recent discharge from the regular army gave him a military burial. . 0 c Special Rates to Convention. H Sixteen railroad lines touching 27 h states have granted one-cent-a-mile A fure to th*11 third annual convention of j the American Legion in Kansas City, v <?rt. 30, 81. and Nov. 1. ltate reduc- A tions have been made iiy the following f railroads: Missouri Pacilie; Kansas u City Southern; Frisco; Rock Island; <, Chicago, Milwaukee and St. l'aul; u Wabash; Illinois Central; Chicago s Great Western; Chicago and North- q western; Burlington, Chicago and Al- t ton; Santa Fe; Chicago, l'eoria and a St. Louis; Missouri and St. Louis; Mis- t souri. Kansas and Texas and the I'n- i ion I'acitie. The one-eent-a-niile fare |, zone is hounded l?y Itenver, M in neap v olis. Buffalo, N. Y.. Savannali, Ga., ! r Jacksonville, Fla.. Birmingham, Ala., | New Orleans and 1'ort Arthur, Tex. t Until the Next Day. Mrs. Naggs?1 have no sympatliy for a man who gets intoxicated every Light. ^ | Naggs?Any man who can do that. my dear, isn't looking for sympathy. ?American Legion Weekly. . a f Excuse It, Please. ( Sunday Scliool Teacher?Now what < can I learn from the Book of Num- g I ers? i a i'car Little Ethel?That they're all s ?>uky.?American Legion Weekly. s WELL POSTED LEGION MAN II Commander of Department of Nsw Mexico Knows About Professions Represented in Membership. In his brief career a farmer, tranter. dynamite worker, oil field work- ^ K" ~~~~ er. motion picture <2? operator, h o o k? \ keeper ami lawyer, 1 SSfl tiallup. New Mexieo, came well T J qualified to Ills Big*' state's departliietit of the Atuerieati Legion. lie kno\Vs a little L/<WiTm| about every pro- r* essiuii represented ill the state's nietnlership. Covering all of the United States and Pr imst of Mexico in his travels, Mr. Vf 'hapman settled down to the practice ca f law in New Mexico just before ar tmerica entered the World war. When he did, he volunteered as a mechanic ne uid chauffeur and spent two months n an army motor shop, x lien he was ransferred to a balloon school, but 'n efore he could yet acquainted with re he blimps they moved him apt in. this ( Pr line to tlie company's personnel head- ^ [Darters. He was in an officers' train- a,c iiK camp when the armistice came. 111 Entering Legion work early, Mr. . 'hapman was a member of tlie com- gf nittee which wrote the non-political R* lause into the organization's consti- 'a ution. He i>oils down ids biography o this: "I am a member of the A. \ & A. M? It. I'. O. E., and K. of 1'. si am an American by birth, training m ind inclination; an Episcopalian by ar aitli and a prohibitionist by law. I :ing, dance, play the piano and am narried. What else could I ask?" -a riTLES OF SOME NOTABLES Of general Douglas Haig, "Earl and th Field Marshal"; Beatty, "Ami- Dj ral of the Fleet. D Decorations and titles won by dis- | e< lngulshed British and Canadian 0j tuests at the third annual convention p] ?f the American Legion in Kansas n, 'lty, October 3lt November 1 and 2, ire testimony of their notable records dl luring the World war. ft General Douglas Haig bears the at ltles of earl and fleJd marshal and 6? las the right to use the following let- g, ers, indicating decorations, after his S{ lame: "K. T., G. C. B., O. M.. G. C. V. )., K. C. I. E." m Admiral Beatty's official designation a| s "Admiral of the Fleet, the Right l Jonorahle Earl Beatty, G. C. R., a] ). M.. G. C. V. O.. D. S. O." The correct manner to address the omniander of the Canadian corps in "ranee Is "Gen. Sir William Currle, c< 5. C. M. G.. K. C. B.. K. C. M. G., 0] 2. B.. Principal of McGill university." r{ The participation of Great Britain md her dominions in President HardI Al Ing's world conference on disarma- 11 nent Is believed by national conven- , e< Ion offlelaJs to remove all doubts In js egnrd to the presence of the dlstln-I tulshed guests at the Legion national onventlon. 1 \ SWALE WAS A DISHWASHER I b) 01 Jommander of Legion's Washington Department Licked Kitchen Boss, Then Took His Job. tj The story of how a fist fight made lirn a dish- washer Is told by Thomas X. Swale, com- ~~ nander of the tl American legion's ; % f lepartmerit of the % ;p| date of Washing- ' ''' While the dmvn- x . f rodden bookkeepr of a (Jreat ' . s* o r t h e r n con- tj. ;truction gang. J I| 5wale was cajoled ||& A .Ail nto encounter jK| ! vitli the gang's Asi ; ^ ully. who held the rank of camp i . * ni 1 causer of the pots and pans. The iplit became rough, the bookkee|K?r mocked out the disii washer and the jr oreman forthwith made up for luck | f personnel by assigning Swale to jc rash the dishes until the beaten kitchn mechanic could return from the lospital. After gaining an education, Swale, t twenty-three years and L'lH) pounds, ras the "baby of the Washington legdature," serving for two terms. Dur- h tig the war he served in the army In- ' 1)1 w el licence section in charge of I. \V. \\\ nvoctifrntlnnc in tho Pncifit* "Vnrth- ! ^ rest. He Is a practicing lawyer in euttle, Wash. ID The Verb Salvage. ti The verb "to salvage" did not pass y >iit of existence with the disbanding c( f the A. E. F. Its synonym, "to man- ? ge." is still recognized as part of the j(J unguage of Legionnaires, (ieorge H. (jj inderson |tost of the American Legion it Ardmore. Okla., reeentlv "salage*!" a library of 2,000 volumes. . is in the army days when anything 0j roni a mess kit to a five-ton truck alght have been acquired mysteri- | . iisly with the simple explanation "we nonaged for It" or the equally expres- n< ive "we salvaged it," the post ae- o? ulrcd the library. Paring the war at he people of Ardmore It., collected large number of books to be shipped o army camps for use of soldiers. Pur fter the volumes were Collected and ioxed they were never shipped. They tore discovered recently in a storeoom by a member of the Legion posi tit nd it tlid not take long to salvage tu hem. ^ Legion Posts to the Rescue. 1131-111 V-.\" 1 I (111 .A. r.. r. lilll^ilHM", mllan Joe). 1'nmous sniper witli the jj imerican illIiiy ilnrimr the World wnr ml possessor of the I >. S. I(Yoix tie " Pierre with palm, two other medals, ml :i citation from Marshal retain, (Html himself stranded in Columbus, recently mi his way hack to I'ine v 'leek reservation. The American I.e- " ion posts came to his rescue ami he ecepteil for the time a vaudeville poition in an amusement park. He neat '27 months overseas. | P MPORTANT NEWS ] THE WORLD OVER 1PORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THI8 AND OTHER NATIONS FOR SEVEN DAYS GIVEN HE NEWS _CF_THE SOUTH rhat Is Taking Place In The Southland Will , Be Found In Brief Paragraphs oreign? Lloyd-George has cancelled the pro >sed Irish peace conference at In>rness. The premier, following publiitlon of Eamonn de Valera's "acceptlce" of the invitation, telegraphed e Irish president that he found it ycessary to call off the arrangements r the meeting In Scotland. De Vale,'s insistence upon recognition of the dependence of Ireland as a prequisite to the conference, after the emier's repeated declarations that e conference must discuss this phase i well as all others, brought about the ipture. Negotiations between the Argentine >vernment and American banking initutions for a loan of fifty million dolrs have been suspended, according to uenos Aires advices. The world's Zionist congress, in seson at Carlsbad, Czecho-Slovakia, for ore than two weeks, was brought to 1 end September 15. An important ature to remove Zionist headquarters om London to Palestine or Switzernd was rejected. The membership of the league of naons will be increased to fifty if the ?sembly adopts the recommendations ' the political committee to approve le admission of Letvia and Esthola .. The Dail Eireann, at its session at ublin recently unanimously approvi the reply to the recent proposals t Mr. Lloyd-George, the British rime minister, regarding Irish peace egotiations. Reports from Paris show that Car[nal Mercier of Belgium has been reised permission to cross Germany to Itend the Catholic congress at Wariw on the ground that ^the German jvciumeui. la uuauie lu guai amcc uim ife passage. A tremendous explosion on the forler German submarine Deutschland t Birkhead across the Mersey from iverpool, England, killed three meil nd injured three others recently; assibly many others perished. General Berenguer, Spanish high immissioner, who recently watched aerations against the Moors from the >yal yacht .Giralda, reports that the rst Moroccan guard was surprised by le attacking Spanish column and kill1, the forward movement of the Span- j h continuing without incident. Washington? A movement is alleged to have been agun within the Democratic national -ganixation to make it "bone-dry" jth in anticipation of the 1922 con- * ressional elections and the presidenal election two years later. The overiffcnt is said to be sponsored by iends:,of William G. McAdoo. The administration, without waiting ir congressional action, has begun le sale flf securities to provide funds i >r the' railroads. Car trust certifi-1 ites in tfie amount of $7,500,000 have een bought by Kuhn, Loeb & Co., j inkers, of New York, the railroad ad-1 inistralion announces. mi 4~ ! 1 IlUll&ciU UJ3 Ul Dltl LIUil 1 H UUU iy i 2 built by people of moderate means? j lis is a project the government is now orking on and may be ready for anmincement at the forthcoming unemloyment conference to be held in ,'ashington. Both to afford, employlent for hundreds of thousands of orkers in many branches of industry ad to offer an effective panacea for idustrial unrest generally, the proDsed own-your-own-home campaign is ioked to in Washington as a timely nd practicable instrument. Charges that secret agreement beveen Untied Stdt^s railroad and forgn shipping companies, or United tates lines with: foreign connections, ive caused the great bulk of the shiping board's toiinage to be tied up for ant of cargo, have been made in a iport to the shipping board. President Harding left S^tember 10 l an extended cruise, probably reachg to the New England coast. The senate special committee ^nvesgating mine labor troubles in West irginia was urged in a telegram rejived from Z. T. Vinser, general coun;1 for the coal operators in the state, i postpone its investigations of contions in Mingo and Lorgan counties ntil after the murder and arson trial-; t Mingo county and the grand jury vestigations in Logan county are conuded. Camp Bragg, North Carolina, will' i retained by the army as a perma unt ?tution and will not be abandon^ 1 with the otlier c antonments recentlf mourned by the war department. The imp, it is officially stated, will be?me a field atrillery post and soon i utilized as the headquarters of the lirteenth field artillery brigade. The department of justice, postoffice apartment and congress may underike investigations of Ku Klu Klan acviUes, according to information which Sow Wheat for Pasture. li is best not to sow wheat for pasure any earlier in the fall than when is to be grown for grain, on account f the Hessian lly. Prevent Sore Shoulders. broad, smooth, firm collars will preent nine-tenths olMhe sore shoulder otibles on work horses. Gentleness Pays. Gentleness in the poultry yard pays erhaps as well as anything else. As evidence of the 6-ulre of the (le- i partment to fill vacancies In postmas- ' torshlps by promotion in the service. 1 whenever possible, Postmaster General Hays announces that of the 870 appointments sent to the senate for confirmation up to September 10, 42G or j close to 50 per cent were promotions j from the classified service. The federal trade commission and ! Solicitor General Beck have joined in asking the Supreme court to review the recent decision of the circuit court of appeals setting aside a commission oi*der directing the Fruit Growers' Express, Inc., to abrogate its contract , with certain Southern railroads requiring those roads to use its cars exclusively in the movement of fruits and vegetables to cities along the Atlantic ' seaboard. The senate finance committee has decided definitely that the repeal of the excess profits tax shall be made effective January 1, 1922. This means the tax will apply during the current year. The Committee, in reaching this decision, concurs in the provisions of the tax bifi as passed by the house, and repudiates the recommendations of the administration. The argument for retention of the tax is that the year has so far advanced that the tax already has been passed along to the ultimato consumer, and that its repeal at this late date would be of no benefit to the taxpayer. Conditions throughout the South now reflect a greatly improved t.^ne officials at Washington recently said, both the treasury and the federal reserve board reporting a lessened demand for credit from that section. The postoffice department, starting 1 ...in ~ i.i:~u ? wuiuuei 1, Will I'e-UaUlUilMl LUtJ JJIclL'llL'tt of shipping all monthly, semi-monthly and bi-weekly periodfcals by mall. The postmaster general opines that the change will greatly expedite the d& 1 livery of periodicals to subscribers. The bureau of internal revenue has j issued a ruling which will compel tax- ! payers to file amended returns for 1917 and subsequent years, where "appreciated and inflated values" were used in computing invested capital. Domestic? ' T. C. Partin, recently appointed deputy sheriff, was fired upon from ambush near Pineville, Ky., and instantly killed, is the news reaching Knoxville. Tenn. The British cruiser Dauntless, bearing the bodies of Americans who lost their lives when the dirigible ZR-2 collapsed August 24, arrived in New York harbor recently. Oscar E. Carlson of the debartment of Illinois, was elected national commander-in-chief of the United Spanish War Veterans on the ninth ballot at Minneapolis. Henry James and a woman giving her name as Beulah James, are under arrest at Smithville, Va? charged with kidnaping Margaret and Jack Woodland, children of Chattanooga, Tenn., at Cape May. N. J., July 7. A resolution calling upon congress and the administration to remedy the inequalities affecting women in the j civil service was brought forward as one of the dominant subjects before the national federation of federal employees, in session in New Orleans. Frank D. Roosevelt, former assistant secretary of the navy, who has been ill at his home at Campbell. N. B., has been taken to a New York hospital 1 for an operation. The steamship King Alexander, re- 1 cently figuring in a spectacular drug ; and liquor raid in New York harbor, I after a race to port with immigrants, i has sailed for Greece and carried back i 17 of her would-be immigrants. Buried alive by a mine cave-in, four mine wurhers awun men iaic ucai Carbondale. Pa. A rescue party is at work.. The wives and children of the entombed miners are waiting at the top of the mine shaft. Upon the ruling of President Martin of the Southern Baseball League may depend the pennant winner of the Southern association. Atlanta has protested an exhibition game played by Memphis early in the year, contending that exhibition games aro unconstitutional. 1 That more than sixty Baptist missionaries from twelve southern states, who sailed "from Seattle for stations , in China and Japan, arrived safely at [ Shanghai, according to a cablegram received at Nashville, Tenn. D. T. Rounsville, president of the First National Bank of Dodge Center, Minn., was shot and instantly killed in the bank recently by a man presume dto be a robber. He was captured. "Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them J for this is the law and the prophets,"' j is the platform of Noah W. Cooper, candidate for the United States senate from Tennessee, He is the au- , thor of the famous Sunday blue law. The executive council of the Na-: tional Federation of Federal Employ- i ees have begun consideration of the ; advisability of a libel suit against an Ohio newspaper for the alleged circulation of statements to the effect that the organization is surreptitiously opposing reorganization of the government departments. J. S. Kirby, C. O. Fox and Jessse . Gappings were convicted of the murder , of William Brazell, Columbia, S. C., taxi driver, and were sentenced to death to be electrocuted October 21. These are the men who were brought to Georgia to escape a mob after they had brutally murdered young lirazell by blackjacking and then stabbing him. All confessed the crime. Henry H. Curran, coalitionish-re- i publican, now president of the bor- | i ough of Manhattan, will be Mayor < John F. Hylan's opponent at the polls Best of Fertilizers. Rarnyanl mantire is a splendid fer-1 | tilizer. partly because of its content of | organic matter. The trouble is that ! too little oT If is produced on the av- 1 eruge farm to keep the soil in a high state of i-hftivation. Skim Milk Good for Pigs. For pigs three weeks old or more, 1 1 three parts of skim milk mixed with ' one purr of shorts is useful in keeping them growing. Skim milk may ! J he fed with corn and other hog feeds it: various practical combinations. k IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SundaySchool ' LessonT (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D., Teacher of English Bible In the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) ((?), 1921, Western Newspaper Union.) LESSON FOR SEPTEMBER 25 i REVIEW. GOLDEN TEXT?As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good unto all men, especially them who are of the household of faith.?Gal. 6:1-10. REFERENCE MATERIAL?Gal. 6:1-10. PRIMARY TOPIC?Stories of Paul. JUNIOR TOPIC?Serving Jesus. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC ?Living for Jesus. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC ?Sacrificing for Jesus. * Two methods may profitably be employed In the review of the lessons : of the Quarter. First, a biographical sketch of the Apostle I'aul, such as his birth, home training, education, conversation, teaching and missionary work. . Second, the leading teachings or tne lessons, wnicn may ?e mom; prominent by summarizing the facts j of each lesson and stating the most 1 vital teaching thereof. The first method can be used In reviewing the lessons In nil departments nnd grades, nnd can be easily adapted by any teacher. The second method will be preferred by many in the senior and adult classes. The following Is given by way of suggestion: Lesson 1. Paul was born at Tarsus, of Hebrew parentage. Being brought up In a pious house, he was thoroughly Imbued with the spirit of devotion to the Scriptures. He was educated at Jerusalem under the tutorship of Gamaliel. The chief text book was the Rlble. In addition to his religious trplnlng he was taught a trade which came In very useful later, enabling him to support himself while preaching the gospel. Lesson 2. In Paul's training as a Pharisee, he was taught to love his own nation, to love God's law, and to be zealous toward God, that Is, to have a passion for God and His work. He was a very conscientious man. Conscience Is the law of life for every man, but It needs to be regulated by God's word. Lesson 3. Paul's burning hatred of Jesus Incited him to endeavor to stamp out the Nnzarene heresy. Wldle on the way to Damascus, with authority to arrest and Imprison the believers, men and women, he was stricken with blindness and fell to the earth, and Jesus spoke to him from heaven, saying, "Why persecutest thou me?" In response to the heavenly Instruction he went to Damascus where Ananias baptized him, and he received his sight nnd was filled with the Holy Spirit. Lesson 4. Paul straightway preached Christ In the synagogue. Like everyone who Is renlly converted he began to tell of the newly found Saviour. After a lengthy sojourn In Arabia he visited Jerusalem where he was befriended by Barnabas when suspected by the disciples. Lesson 5. When the religious awakenlrt'? n + A nfln/th nnmo tr? tho ntfpn thin of the Jerusalem church, Rar abas was sent to Inspect it. and seeInp help was needed he hroupht Paul from Tarsus to he his helper. Row Important that there are men like Rnrnabas to hrinp forth from obscurity the men who are best qualified to do the Lord's work. Lesson 6. After teaching a year' at Antioch. the Spirit moved the church to send forth Barnabas and Paul to \ e\nnpellze the heathen. The church sent her best men. Lesson 7. As Paul and Barnabas were preachinp at Iconlum. an attempt was made to worship thern as pods. Their efforts were frustrated by the tact of Paul. Soon after this Paul was stoned, showinp that satanle worship can soon be turned into Satanic hate. Lesson 8. Paul's preachlnp theprace of God to the heathen hroupht on a controversy in the church at Antioch. The question in dispute was: "Shall Gentiles be required to keep the Mosaic Inw as a condition of salvnfIon ?" The decision was in favor of Paul, and so Paul and Barnabas were i free to bepin their second missionary Journey. Lesson 9. The Spirit forbade Paul to tarry longer In the provinces of Asia preaching the Gospel, and by a i vision of a innn from Macedonia plead- I Ing for help, he was called into Eu- ! rope. Lesson 10. The casting out of a demon from a young woman resulted In landing Paul and Silas In Jail. They were miraculously delivered and the jailer was converted. Lesson 11. Being driven out from Thessolonlca and Berea, Paul went to Athens where he preached the gospel on Mars' Hill. The result of his preaching here was that some mocked, some procrastinated, and some believed. Lesson 12. Paul In this lesson sets forth the grand principles which should govern the believer's life, the sum and substance of which is: "Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God." A Krayer. May I never wound the heart of nny faltering child of Thine. Make me to r!?? the little unremembered acts that rjuietly help without intending it. ! fJrant me to hear about the unoon- ! idous radiance of a life that knows i no grudge, hut loves all men because | they are children of my Father, who loved them enough to send Ills Son lo save them. Amen.?Itev. Samuel McComh, I). D. The Hope of His People. The sun and the moon shall he i larkened, and the stars shall withdraw their shining. The Lord also shall roar out of Zlon. and utter his iTice from Jerusalem; and the heavens r.nd the earth shall shake; but the Lord wilt be the hope of His people . ?J< and Id. AMONG NEW SIL THE BOX' EVERY woman socks distinction Ir dress, and is es|iecially pleasec when she discovers a suit thai may justly lay claim to it, for suits must possess considerable stability lr style. They are worn oftener anc longer tliaii other kinds of apparel and much is demanded of them. They are required to vary accepted modes by ingenious differences, without go lug to any extremes; they must be conservative in order to be refined they must be spirited enough to escape being commonplace, and in most cases a youthful flavor is demanded of them The task of choosing one that will ful fill all these obligations promises to be easier than It has been, for fall suits are shown In greater variety than foi some seasons. The launching of several distinctly .lUVoronf silhouettes and their accent ance gives one a choice In coats thai vary much In outline. In length thej range nil the way from finger tip t< those that reach almost to the botton of the skirt. One may choose a mode with a slim, close-fitting body anc long waist, having a ruffled skirt sel on. Or the choice may fall upon the Russian blouse or the box coat anc PAPER AIDS THE IN MANY E 1 I? PHOTOGRAPHS could only por trnv color and light one might gath er something of the beauty of tht many household decorations that are made of paper. There is an amazing number of tilings with which the coun tenunce of a room may be so changed tiiat It is transformed. And there are many small permanent' furnishings that are made at home of paper, possessing as much beauty and more individual charm than those same things as found in the shops. Lamps and lampshades, candle-holders and candleshades, wail panels, portieres, vases, baskets and small lanterns or electric light shades are among them. Tc these the home-maker and the hostess add many pretty ornaments, as occasion calls for them, that have their brief and beautiful day and are replaced by something new. in the nicture above decorations Alt J' for a table are shown, together with a shade for electric lights. The rose is the Inspiration for this pretty scheme, and crepe paper in the American beauty and lighter shades serve to carry it out. As a centerpiece for the table, k wire standard fastened to a cardhoard base supports a cardboard box. This is round and lias a cover. The base, standard, box and lid are cov red with green paper, the lid only on the inner side. Big rose petals are pasted about the insida edge of the White Is Popular. White is featured for both day and evening. There are accordion plaited dresses of white georgette; resort costumes of white tlannel or wool crepe de chine and even evening gowns of white chiffon robes covered with white silver bugies. Besides all white dresses, there are combinations of white with color worth comm-nt, notably a coat dress with undersllp of white crepe de chine, and coat of nuvy crepe. The slip has a higli collar and jabot. For Informal evening wear HOUETTES COAT IS FAVORED i skirts may mutcn tne cunts or they 1 may not. Sometimes they are In checks t or stripes, while the coat Is plain. } There Is enough variety In style to Ini sure becomlngness, but nearly all of I them hove appropriated the flar, Ing sleeve and look to fur and emr broidery or fur and braid for their ) embellishment. Two very handsome suits In the box coat style are shown here, and they reveal that even the straight coat may J be greatly varied. The suit at the ' right is a youthful model with the coat considerably shortened at the back and generously embroidered. It has a band 1 of fur at the bottom and about the 3 ' ?1 ?? ? 1 I- J ?J ntl.V. A..A A# ' sieeves unu is pruvmcu mm uuc wv r the smart, high collars of fur which add the season's own touch to every r model. The suit at the left is a dignified aft fair, also employing fur and erar broidery, and also cut on straight ) lines. It opens at the front In a > curved line that Is odd, and fastens 1 with round buttons. There are many I points of difference bctweep It and Its t companion and It is these small dlfs ferences that give character to suits I and make the mode Interesting. : HOSTESS CHARMING WAYS PMJJ - box and the upper side of the lid. Al together they form a huge, full-blown > rose, as pictured. Small half-open s buds and asparagus ferns are twined ; about the standard. Single roses on wire standard make pretty holders for 1 almonds and candles, and place cards i are still smaller rosebuds with rose i leaves and the name on white card board fastened to the standard. There are many little surprises In i favors that may be concealed In the I centerpiece. The globe for lamp or electric light has a wire frame for , Its foundation, covered first with tls!' sue paper or crepe paper. Little rose ? petals are pasted all over this, and i streamers of paper having petals at their ends fall from the top of It. , ' These are only suggestions lor a rose luncheon?there are many ways for making the light shades and using the { rose petals. CpTUOMT rf VBTUM NtVJWW UMJCH Veils. If your veil Is crushed, wind It around n stick, a broom handle, for instance, and lay it across a sauce pan of boiling water. Let it remain an hour, then remove, and when quite , dry unwind it front the stick. All - I creases will have disappeared. i'atou shows n dross of white georgette i combined with foulard print design or ' black and white in chiffon cire. To Cleanse Marble. A sJioe of lemon, dipped ^n salt and rubbed on marble and washed off nfter an hour's standing, will cleanse it beautifully. Marking Napkins. Everyday napkins should be marked with small hnnd-embroidered initials in one corner. i