X7o irn 1> I I/I? JIiLJL JL...of shapes that go by the name of TMrectotre, Empire or even under more...

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'LARGE HATS I'OK PARIS the bravo woman has penetrated every section oi the hitherto untrodden country, but without avail She found again , the spot where her husband hat; disappeared, and armed with Danish authority at- tempted to learn from the natives what had be- come of him. She was finally convinced that na- tlves had murdered him. but - could- nnd no proof to secure the punishment of his murd»r»r« Finally the disheartened woman retrace 1 her steps and returned to Outer China. Here she en- tered the mission of which Mr. Moves had charge. And there the lone Americans developed a friend- ship which finally grew Into love. The reverend wooer finally convinced the sorrowing wife thai her husband" had Indeed been the victim of savsg* murderers, and last month in Ta-Chlen-lu the be- reaved woman became the bride of a second mis- sionary. . . The news of the marriage has Just been received i by D'js ilolnes friends. \ ; ; \ Over 200 Graduates Receive B. A. Degree- Address by Dr. Canfield, of Columbia, Welleßley"s annual commencement exercises were held in Memorial Chapel on Tuesday, beginning at 11 o'clock, nearly twelve hundred guests being pres- ent. The degree of Bachelor of Arts was conferred by President Hazard upon 214 graduates, the great- est number of whom, sixty, were from Massachu- setts, thirty-two, the next largest number, from New York State, the remainder being about equally divided among the surrounding states and Middle Wast. The Master of Arts degree was also con- ferred by the president vpon the ei o at following nar.ied candidates: Clara M. Benson, B. A., Welles- ley College, '95, of Eaet Carver, Mass. ; Lueasta J. Bojnton, Wellesley, "02. Bradford. Mass.; Elizabeth M. Gardiner, Radcliffe College. '01. Newton Cen're, Mas*.: Helen E. Greenwood. Wellesley. "96, Worces- ter. Mass.; Genevieve C. Hanna, Wellesley, "03. WEHESLEY COMMENCEMENT. Business she would be ready to stay an winter "Most of my friends can't understand why ] am so fond of the camp," she says. "They want to know what on earth we do with ourselves all the time; what we eat. and, above all. if it isn't dreadfully dirty. Well, it is rather dirty, in ont sense of the word, but the dirt is perfectly clean—not the horrible filth of New York. We have sand under our feet, but no dust or disease germs In the air. "As for spending the time, there is never anj difficulty about that. I do Just the same things that I would in New York. I even have my sewing machine here, and last summer I did a lot of sewing. In the evenings we build huge campflres and have the jolliest times possible. Even the rainy days are pleasant, and it is de- lightful to sleep with the rain falling up>n the tent. Not a drop of water ever comes through, though things get damp if they are not placed in trunks, and have to be hung out afterward to dry. After a few days' rain there is a great turning out of clothes and bedding, to the great entertainment of people on passing river craft. "We came over here on May 12, and I have been to New York only three times since then. I have no desire to go, and the men say it is like pulling teeth to get away in the morning." Believing First Husband Murdered, Becomes Bride of the Bev. A. Moyes. Des Moines. June 30.—After searching in vain for two years, with the aid of the combined forces of, the American and Danish governments, for her husband, in the wilds of Tibet, Dr. Susan Cars n- Rijnhart, famous as author and explorer, has final- ly married the Rev. A. Moyes, the first white man she met after she escaped from the wild tribes who probably murdtrtd her firit husliund. The romance of Miss Susan Carson has been DR. SUSAN BIJNEABT SEMABRIEI] menterie buttons, and from the belt fell tw< long ornaments. The under blouse was of deli- cate thread lace, and a good deal of It showed for the jacket hung well off the shoulders anc the short sleeves were ioose and slashed. Th« hat worn waa of brown cr!n. trimmed with » single shaded ostrich plume long enough to g< about the hat and fall to the shoulders. TheM was a little gold tulle forming a cache peigne, but that was all in the way of trimming. - One of the most useful summer gowns is a tailored coßtume In white serge made with somt form of short-waisted Jacket. This new mode In tailored costumes seems to have awakened a strong interest in serge. There are any number of shapes that go by the name of TMrectotre, Empire or even under the more general tern of paletot, but they are all short waisted; that is the essential thing. Even the paletots curve in a bit and that at a point well above the natural waist line. A good many gowns seem to be made without drop skirts, and even princess and corselet gowns have the lining stop below the waist. Of course, they are worn ov r petticoats, perfectly fitting and of harmonious tone There is a sud- den fondness for lingerie petMeoats. but as r. rule only the flounces are lingerie and the foun- dation of taffeta. Still, the lingerie places say that they are selling many fine cambric an i lawn petticoats more than hns been th" case for years. The silk petticoat, once rather a badge of elegance, has become cheapened and apparently In some form is in the reach of every one. With the clinging effects that are desired the underclothing i* of first importance. Almost everything is on the combination idea: corsets are made with silk petticoats .attached. ther« are corset cover short petticoat garments to be worn with a dron skirt, woven drawers and un- dervests In one pitce and corset covers arl drawers! One can really dress with two under- garments, and it depends on the gown to bs v.-orn which two are to be chosen. As a relief from the übiquitous Empire Jacket a few habits en the conventional lines are worn. At the opening of one of the recent picture ex- hibitions a Parisienne who has a reputation for correct dressing wore a tailored suit of light gray cloth made with a fitted habit half cov- ering the skirt and cut with rounded corners. The sides Avere edged with buttoned tabs, and there waa a long vest of antique embroidery opening over a lace chemisette. The sleeves finished Just below the elbows with revera. The skirt was long and. although full, rather cling- ing. It looked as if it had no drop skirt, an appearance that many of the skirts have now. There are somo very fulT skirts, almost sug- gesting a crinoline, but, on the other hand, more skirts seem to have no stiffness at all. On the same occasion was worn a handsome None Smaller than Empress Eu- genie"—Up to Date "Forty." Paris, June 22. It Is amusing: the suddenness with which th< large hat has sprung into prominence; Indeed, at any gathering of smartly gowned women the small hat, so much in evidence a few weeks ago is not seen at all. Although the new style shows large brims, they are manipulated so as to ex- pose a great deal of tho hair, which generally means that they are rolled up or lifted high on one side. As a rule, this manipulation Is In sofl curves, and often the hair is puffed to do away with the necessity of any cache peigne. Flowers under the brim have been the mode so long that the natural tendency is to adopt something else. A brim that curves toward the iace rather than away from It is a great favorite and capa- ble of much variety, for one may see a dozen hats all with this peculiarity, and yet quite different in effect. One of the few small shapes still modish is the "Empress Eugenie," the little boat shaped turban encircled by a veil that Is seen in many pictures of th© Empress. There are a lot of long floating veils on hats of every form. AN AFTE^-.OON NAP. eight. sjtMsj MBjgjlgfjßji waa aa pink and watts as that or a gM af t-.ver.ty. "VThon asked wast the s?crot of her lovely skm was. she tavarlaslß Er.sw»red. "Bochello salts." It seemed that asa took the salts evary day. rtlssoliliig half a tec* BjaaafeJ m a g'.a^s of water and drinking asl solution, now a alp and then a swallow, at ten tervala through the day. Tn© effects upon asf akin and Mood war© certainly most fortunate. , R; ST CURE AT HOWL How to take the rest cure at home without «]„ rupting the family and going off to a sar.at gal Is a problem that has perplexed many a wexsssl mother of a family. That the rest cure may fet undertaken easily and at a comparatively truths cost In one's own home is the message of a writer In "Harper's Bazar." After all, u (2 remarks, probably the chief compensattsm, of \u25a0 sanatorium experience is the inculcation of ess*, mon sense, and that common sense Is dsgsssbsl less uncommon Is evinced by the svigsssj numbers of non-Invalids who Invade tt.» « a -A» torium for the sake, apparently, of leading S simple life. The broken down woman must give urn sjssJ live In the open air as much as possible, anas diet, must drink Quarts of water, must drop cold tubs for two warm baths a week, and most lost and invite her soul. Of course, the inevitable reflection after r-sa |j ingr these health maxims, which, as tfc* \u25a0*-\u25a0!, observes, are so simile that they are cosbssssbl overlooked or Ignored. Is that a woman ;.*."m like the average mother of a family wou.i SS It exceedlnsly difficult to follow them nsJesi she went off and made a business of foQowssa them under the direction of a Dhyalctan. Tan forces that have been at work to bring her to her state of nervous collapse will contmna ta operate and ta their presence she will M \u0084 welmlgh Impossible to relax and diet ar. | aXe salt rubs and drink the right number of \u25a0 u*s« of water. Johnnie will continue to get spUntssl ta his hands. Mary will continue to need beta with her French verbs, Bridget will conttaasS loss her temper with the milkman and aeai pacifying; and the master of the house wa continue to come home from his day's wejfc fagged and] worried and appealing mutely fss sympathy. Under these conditions many \u25a0 woman would use up more nerve force tax to. Ux:r.g than ta meeting tuoso small lull \u25a0ll— fairly and squarely. Ob the other hand, no eas knows how modi one can accomplish with a law of hygiene till on© tries. There are teaoo- ers sj ilqMlga] bjJMbn who malnrstn that eat can eawrclso the body satisfactorily while ea» sa?=: it. aasfi ord'.r.-i.-y vocation ta one's os» dlnary raiment, and they exhibit their Owe) muscles as proof of what they say. Anything taal sjfjl rand to combat the nervous Intensity; nr. tm which most women live Is a good thing. and If a wnrr.an Is resolute enough and penis*. ont enough. Itmay bo that sho can give hersas? a rest cure. If not th© tast cure, under her ewn roof. Certain English reformers are trying to form an organization In London after the psisj of the consumers' leagues, and. judging by their da- The boys and girls of New Zealand must have slngularjy commercial minds. If a tetter written by one young New Zealander. and quoted hi an English paper. Is typical. This hoy writes en- thusiastically of the achievements of a certain football team, the All Blacks, and then observe seriously that th© Premier to very proud of the victories, which "are a splendid advertisement for New Zealand mutton and butter.'* An American statistician who has been In- vestigating the matter says that while s'.r.ffle women are more likely to commit suicide than are married women, among men who MM 'heir own lives the Benedicts are In the majority. And though it Is so often asserted that real love is growing rare nowadays, this statistician de- clares that love is still the cause of all causes of suicide in both sexes. At an exhibition of lacas and silks, held re- cently at Blackpool. In England, the organizers furnished a smoking room where, they an- nounced, "gentlemen accompanying ladies would find coffee and cigars free of charge." It is sug- gested that that might be a profitable plan for the big department stores. Few American men jro with their wives on their shopping tours, but if things were made comfortable for them at the shops, with fre*> cigars and so forth, it might be- come their favorite amusement, and then they would be more reconciled to the spending of money by their wives for pretty things. In the old times people had an Idea that the night air was noxious. They shut their windows before going to bed, under the Impression that it was better to breathe the same air awes' an<i over than to have fresh air when the sun was down. That notion still survives to some regions, but it is disappearing, and now comes an Englishman— a lecturer at the Institute of Hygiene in London— who declares that night a r Is purer and more beneficial than the air breathed duriner the day. He urges people to take their walks at night as much as posstb.a instead of going out when the son Is b'.azing and the microbes holding high revel, and even regrets that it isn't practicable to have children take their outdoor recrea; I . or. at sssssllM PREPARING SUPPtH. FISHING. AT THE SPRING. CAMPING AT THE FOOT OF THE PAUSADES. Camping at rcoi of raltfadef. "The Simple Life" Led by a Colony of New Yorkers in Pict- uresque Tsnt Homes Across the River. To camp out all summer and yet come to bus! ness every day in New York Is the miracle whlei about a dozen New York families- have accom pllshed this year and for several seasons past and any one who is longing for tOmilar ldyllii Joys while bound fast to the wheel of labor ma: So and do likewise. It Is only nec<»sary to pu te an application to the Palisades Park Commie oton for permission to pitch a tent somewhere along the twenty miles of park land on thli Bystan shore. On a narrow strip of beach between th< water and the precipitous ascent of the Pali- sades. Just opposite Spuyten Duyvil. the tent! of these summer colonists have been pitched some of them creeping a little way up th< cliffs, others so dose to the water that whet the tide rises It sometimes comes in and drive* the occupants for shelter to those that hav< taken higher ground. Doors are always open U a friend in need there, and, though the colons Is not exactly communistic it is understood tha( those who have not are always at liberty t< craw upon those who have. ALMOST COMMUNISTIC. "If there Is anything you want that you haven't got you Just go down the beach and get it," is the way one camper put It, "and il the people happen to be out you just walk in and take it." Rights of property are vaguely denned at the foot of the Palisades, and rules of fashion aw of the simplest character. White duck suits are the proper garb for men. but they are suite which never see the washtub. and which In a few weeks become so soaked with oil from the machinery of the launches that they are thor- oughly waterproof. With these are worn soft but stout, leather moccasins, with or without stockings, as each individual sees best. The women cling a little more closely to the con- ventions of dress, keep their shirtwaists clean and regularly send thoir white skirts to the laundry. The children run about in rompers, barefooted or sandalled, and thrive like bad weeds. There is one little fellow who had peri- tonitis of the upper and lower bowel, eo .- bined with pleuro-pneumonia. this spring, and was as rale and thin as a ghost when taken over to th. beach on May 1 Now therr healthier 01 happier child to be found any in two counties. And a heJby of six months - also harpy and rosy, though its mother's fri all predicted that carny life would kill it. Housekeeping is also of the simplest, but has not been reduced to the vanishing point, be- cause the outdoor life is wonderfully improving to the appetite. •I eat five times a day" said Mrs. Georg- Wiggins to a Tribune reporter who visited Camp Frances, the largest of the Palisade col- onies, recently. "I have a good breakfast about 6 o'clock with my men folk. At 10 o'clock I eat again, at 12:30 o'clock I have luncheon, at 4 o'clock afternoon tea, and at 7 o'clock dinner. Then very likelyI have something to eat before I go to bed. Isn't it hard to do so much cook- ing? I don't find it so at all. I like cooking, and I don't have to devise ways of tempting Jaded appetites out here. And there are such delicious things to cook. We get the freshest of eggs and the sweetest of butter from Spuyten Duyvil. The water comes right out of the rocks as cold as ice and as clear as crystal. Itis like the nectar of the gods and makes one wonder how one ever managed to drink Croton water. A little later there will be oceans of berries on the cliff, and later on there will be apples and cherries right behind our tent, all we can eat and lots left for canning. Other edibles and necessaries are brought over regularly every day by a young man who calls for orders and brings the things over about an hour later. A GEM OF AX ICE BOX. "As for kitchen conveniences. I am almost as well off as If I were in the city. I can cook anything I like on my oil stove, and I have a beautiful ice box. Just look at this." Mrs. Wiggins removed some boards in one corner of the dining tent and revealed a barrel sunk In the ground and filled with perishable food supplies. "The sand gets into the food sometimes, commented the mistress of the house, "but we know it is clean dirt and we don't mind. It is quite an acrobatic feat. too. to get things out when they are down near the bottom, but the men are always ready to fish for them, so I don't mind that either. And it is so economi- cal One piece of ice lasts for two or three days. "We can circumvent the Ice Trust, besides pay- Ing no rent." It is true that all of the campers do not get on so well as Mrs. Wiggins. She has the ad- vantage of having camped since she was two years old. and being as much at home in a tent as in the most perfectly appointed house. But no one seems to have much trouble except the unfortunate men who are trying to run bachelor- halls or. rather, tents. There was one such establishment at Camp Frances last year and the occupants nearly starved to death on baked beans and they were canned beans at that. This year they established themselves on an- other part of the beach, and named their Place Camp Perfection, announcing that they intended to live up to that appellation. It Is rumored, however, that their diet is still somewhat over- balanced with baked beans. Mr and Mrs. Wigt?tns have arranged their camp around a hollow square, open on the side next to the river. There is a kitchen tent at the back with bedroom tents on either side, while a fly stretched over the open space makes a dining room. The kitchen and bedroom have floors but in the dining room the sand is uncov- ered. At the four corners of the central awning are placed buckets and barrels to catch soft water when it rains The camp Is not so pictu- resque In appearance as some that have been pitched on the Bide of the cliff, but Mrs. Wig- gins considers it much more comfortable, be- cause the sand is free from creeping and crawl- Ing things. There are copperheads and other vermin on the cliff, but they cannot pass the sand line, because their powers of locomotion are not suited to that kind of surface. HOME MADE FURNITURE. Most of the furniture of the camp is home made, except the beds and stoves. The latter are the best and most scientific oil stoves that the market affords, and in only one camp is there a real stove. That is because there are Ittle folks there who have to- be kept warm on chilly days. Some of <he campers have been sensible enough to take over their mattresses and springs. Others use cots. Nearly every- thing else has been made out of boxes. There are said to be almost no mosquitoes In this paradise of the Palisades. When a land breeze blows they are a little troublesome, but when the breeze l*s from the wattr they are all carried inland. The air is nearly as fresh and salty as that of the seashore, and is almost al- ways sweet with the perfume of flowers from a deserted garden on the cliff. First come the lilac*, and when they are gone there is sweet syringa, and then there are roses and honey- suckles. The birds sing at daybreak in a chorus of Joy, and except for the whistles on the liver there no other sound to break the stillness. It is bard to realize that New York is not a tl)"'*-«nd miles away. tom campers who do not, have to come back to te*m for the opening of school expect to stay fa their tents during October and even No- vember, and Mrs. Wiggins says that IfItwasn't fur Mm difficulty of getting across the ri\cr :o tace the world Bravely, the speaker said, in conclusion, "because of your self-mastery, your in- telligent and efficient desire. Rejoice in frae.lom and think and live and speak for yourself. Fight hard against all that your riper Judgment pro- claims to be unnecessary and undesirable, irrele- vant and Immaterial, no matter what may be its sanction by place or age. Distinguish sharply be- tween the real things, the verities of life, and tho:?» which in the end are but apples of Sodom. Give to the world an example of that self-restraint which goes so far toward making possible strict inte-grity, sincere purpose and earnest endeavor. Remember that she who loves, leads; she who serves, com- mands. Find in all this most true and lasting hap- piness and content, and you will rejoice In your youth and be glad in your old age. and generations yet unborn Khali rise up to call you blessed, be- cause of the new and better meaning which you have given to that strange experience which we call human life." Mrs. John C. Whitin, of Whltlnsville. Mass.. trus- tee of the college, then made formal presentation of the now completed Whitin observatory and house of residence for the observatory staff. This was followed by the announcement from President Haz- ard of the award ot the Alice Freeman Palmer fel- lowship for 1906- "07 to Anna Johnson. B. A., Univer- sity of Dakota, 1903; M. 6., University of lowa, J9W and M. A.. Radcliffc College. 1995; also of the award of the Billings prize In music to Isabelle Chandler, of Marorah, 111., a graduate in this year's class. A SUPERB TROUSSEAU. Some of Paonin's Most Beautiful Creations for Lady Mp.ry Hamilton. Paquin was responsible for some lovely gowns In the trousseau of Lady Mary Hamilton, as weil as for a number of superb toilettes worn at her wed- ding. The bride's going away gown was of the finest white batiste, richly embroidered with raised medallions and Valenciennes lace, which Imparted Just sufficient substance to the full skirt to insure graceful folds. The handsome mantle of moss green cloth hung In soft folds from the shoulders where It was enriched with a trimming of Irish lace in the same shade of green. The bridesmaids* dresses were of white mousse- line de sole, the skirts being niched with white taffeta. The bodices were made with fichu effect In the moussellne, outlining a deep yoke of Alen- Con lace, and had a draped belt of turquoise satin. Wreaths of tiny pink roses with Louis XV bows of blue velvet were worn Instead of hats. Mary, Duchess of Hamilton, wore a mauve chiffon gown, trimmed with taffeta and incrusta- tions of Chantilly lace of the same color. Among other gowns made for the bride by Pa- quin, and showing his unrivalled art at Its best were the following: A gown of green and white check material, with a skirt trimmed in hands of the material, and a bodice with a collar and small lmpl*cement of fine tucked muslin; n navy blue serge gown, trmmad with handsome black silk braids, having a bodice with an lmpieeemcni of line Venice bee «nd appliques of Oriental em- broidery; a pink taffeta evening gown, trimmed with steel embroidery and mallnes and with a high waistband of ribbon aeler. and a white afternoon gown of Brussells tulle, with appliques of mallnaa Bradford, Penn.; Emmellne Moore, trornen univer- sity. 05, Churehville. N. Y.; Alice M. Ottley, Cor- nell. '04. Seneca <"astle. N. Y.. and Bertha E. Tre- bein, Wellesley '97. Xenia. Ohio. James Hulme Ocnfleld. librarian of Columbia Uni- versity, delivered the commencement address. Tak- ing for his theme "The Object and End of Educa- tion." and especially the education of women, the speaker maintained that all worthy education strives to advance the great average line of human life. Sane and worthy education is a power which unites society, rather than divides it; 's a common bond, rather than a dislntenrrattng factor. Educa- tion accomplishes its purpose through what it does for the individual. It recognises that in all mass life th»re is weakness and danger, because the in- dividual is forgotten or labored. Uke all move- ments which seek the higher life, education con- trols the great general movement by its control of each factor. gown of blue satin, rather an odd material for this time of the year, but, nevertheless, very fashionable. The skirt was made with a great many bias bands, starting from the waist line and running about the bottom of the skirt. The bodice met this in a little point, and the pointed effect was enhanced by broad bretelles running over the shoulders. The decolletage was low and square, the bodice buttoned to meet It, and above was a depaasement of antique embroidery over a guimpe of Venice point. The cuffs on the short sleeves were of antique embroidery over lace puffs. The hat was of pale yellow straw trimmed with a lot of bluish-black heron feathers and pale pink roses. The gloves were a pale yellow suede, a tone found in the em- broidery. Taffeta is the favorite material now; It seems to make the bridge between the cloth gowns and summer laces and muslins. The dressmakers state that this is not to be an "all white" sum- mer, and that a lingerie gown must be very elegant to be suited for formal occasions. But women seem loath to abandon white, even if they cannot afford the costly editions of it in laces and embroideries. White, even white muslin, is no longer the pre- rogative of the young, yet there is no doubt that sixteeen looks better in it than even up-to-date forty. The fashion of using browns and greens as trimming to white gowns is a happy one, for it takes away the Infantile suggestion. A be- coming lingerie hat seen recently was trimmed with a long golden brown veil, and the brim was lifted here and there with amber hatpins. The woman who wore it was no longer young, yet the hat with the brown trimming' seemed both becoming and suitable. In all white one would have associated the hat with a baby face. Flowers, if they are well chosen, give an air of dignity to a lingerie hat, and foliage and a green veil are particularly good. These floating veils will undoubtedly be a great feature later on. A lot of them are worn in Paris, but they seem much more appropriate to country and seashore than to town. Exceedingly smart is the fashion of combining two materials, one of them pic id. In the same costume. In the Bois the other morning was worn a walking costume of black and white check made in princess fashion and finished with a short bolero of white embroidered linen. Another and better example of the fasluan was a gown with a skirt of cinnamon-colored cloth, rather oddly trimmed with rows of passementerie buttons down the sides of the tabller to within a foot of the hem, where they met a broad band of passementerie trimming passing about the skirt. The Empire Jacket was of plaid taffeta, shirred under the bust, with the lower part short and flaring In the back and falling in long points to front. It was edged all about with pasasr Dr. Susan Carson is a Canadian, but made her home InDes Moines for twelve years, during which time she took a course in medicine at Drake Uni- versity. Soon thereafter she married the Rev. Petrus Xlijnhart, and together the two Journeyed to Tibet under the direction of the lowa Christian Church as medical missionaries. They penetrated far into the Lhasa district in Tibet, carrying the gospel of religion and medi- cine, and talcing with them the baby born in Outer China. Soon afterward the baby died and was burled in the shifting sands. A month later, while the two missionaries were visiting a native village, Mr. Rijnhart left her to go short distance beyond. The woman thought nothing of his going until a few hours later, when, as he had failed to return, she started to traverse the. same ground. No trace of her husband could be found. She pursued her investigations into a neighboring village, and was set upon by savage dogs and almost killed. Finally, with nothing left but a few rags and her medicine case. Mrs. Rijn- hart made her way from Tibet step by step. A friendly Chinaman who had been Christianized nnally befriended her. and, posing as his wife she managed to muko her escape from Tibet. finally reaching a Christian mission. There she met the Rev. A. Moyea, her present husband. To him she told her troubles, then promptly fainted from ex- haustion. She was nursed back to health, but it was Impossible for the Christians there to do any- thing without the Jild of the Danish government Mr«. Rijnhart returned to America, interested President Root«eyflt in her story, and vpon the re- quest of the United States the Danish government promised to make a careful search for her husband- After a year of weary wait! igr the government rr- ported that the expedition had failed. Danish of- ficers declined to go into the wild interior where the white woman had ventured, and could do noth- !nf?._ -- \u25a0. -v v \r \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0 ' . i r \u25a0 > , Ttien . Mrs. IMJnhart. through * the . aid of the President, secured passports wiilch permitted her to -so among \u25a0 the. wildest , tribes, . and with . only a native"! KU'.J, bturt< a ."second search.'!' Sins* \u25a0 ii»i Dr. Rijnhart is the first and the only white woman who ever penetrated the interior, and her story of her sufferings and wanderings has been told and retold in magazines and books which the intrepid explorer herself has written in an effort to enlist the aid of President Roosevelt and secure funds needed for her search. largely mixed with tragedy, and the news of her second marriase caused Intense astonishment in Des Molnes. where it was believed she would never give up the search for her first husband, in aid of which Des Molnes and lowa friends contributed thousands of dollars. All the power of the Ameri- can and Danish governments was also enlisted In the search, but the brave woman was compelled to carry on her search through the wilds of the Lhasa district almost unaided, for no white man could be induced to face the savage tribes which inhabit the innermost recesses of the Tibet coun- try. WAR ON lItf SECTS, Bed-bus^, Moths. Ants. Fleas—SaDade'sXoa-- qulto Bite Cure and Insect Exierjataatar a \u25a0* Insect life. A world-renowned lotion for ttsj' Ing away mosquitoes and other insects. \u25a0\u25a0] sprayed around. The only article that hasssssej the public's test for over 2(5 years <non-poswas» ous). Pint bottles. 25c: tt gallon. fl.«h gsJasx» 5'».tXX Sallade's ROACH TEHROU »W PCS. 1 ; tively c!enr your house of roacites. Sola nt *i Ib. and 1 Ib. tins; makes no dust. An* 1 ;- \u25a0 m anil grocers, or SALLADL & CO., u.aaufactu«i ers, 122 Odor. St.. X.-Y. \u25a0.-;;._„—-- " >««, KNICKERBOCKER CHAPTER. Knickerbocker Chapter, of Xc\c York CM* Daughters of the American Revolution, wa* t> Ugbtfully entertained on Thursday last by Mi. Simon Baruch. a prominent member of «s»wxsjM at her summer home. The Anchorage, en M Shrewsbury. N. J. About thirty ihisjUiss d W* chapter attended, with Mrs. Tndorlofc ssXoXfsejßj regent, and on tno arrival of the train «.:«=• by automobiles. Before pt orsorting to th« J < the hostess ann was made through the pic* - \u25a0•* \u25a0• sections of Moamouth County. A ssywgf luncheon was served at The Anchorage. £ + hose present were Mrm*. Stewar Hard. BSJBXSs] Duncan. Bolande. Croweli and Philllj > scriptions of conditions In the garment trade over there, they need it An exhibition of sweated industries has lately been held there. In Queen's Hall. London, and reveals a pretty bad state of affairs among the slaves of the sweat- shop. The poor workers, who appear at the exhibition, risk a good deal In doing so—risk the anger of their employers, the loss of their Jobs— though the organizers hope to be able to com- pensate them In part at least If they do suffer by their action. A mothers' magazine calls attention to the 1 fact that the old adage. "Children should be j seen and not heard." has little place In the modern systems of child training, and says It Is quite right that it is so. especially In the ; case of the child with a grievance. Children. with all their chattering, are strongly inar- ticulate when it is a matter of explaining their feelings, and a child may suffer more than the adults around it ever dream over some Injustice. real or fancied, which It would probably have difficulty In putting into words. Ifthe parents are continually telling It to "Hush up." and "Keep still, now!" there is every chance of de- veloping a fairly sulky youngster In time. In one New York home, where the father takes an active part in the training of the chll- : dren. as few fathers do in this country, un- fortunately, no dispute among the children and no grievance of any one of them pass un- noticed, especially if the father is around. No matter what he may be doing, he drops It and Instantly opens a kind of Informal children's : court, getting at the bottom of the trouble by i the gentlest of questioning. This takes some of , his time, of course, but to those children their . father is the Ideal of Justice, a confidant who .' never falls them. Everywhere there Is a tendency an3oar."wotnen | noTradays. especially those of the middle esssssi i to do without the hat whenever it is permissible. but few feel that it is permissible Inchurch, though frequently they would be more " comfortable bare- headed. Apropos. Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Oilman remarked In a recent talk that one of the hardr«: things she - ever did was to remove her hat in church. It was a heavy fur turban, and It felt very burdensome, but all the women in the con- Krenatlr.n had hate on, and would she not be very i noticeable Ifshe removed hers? Finally, she asked hernrlf: "Would I be breaking any law—ethical. moral or civil— if I took off my hat?" And she decided she would not. So the hat came err: bat a It was some minutes before she could get the ' courage to do It. It shows what a, hold custom •nd tradition have upon women even of reason- ably stronjr minds. Speaking of custom, .in tats matter, however, it Is to be noted that in the early days of Christianity no one ssewafej at! religious worship, either man or -woman, with an/ I. head covering. The wear: si hats t>> -women at I cburch wu a later Innovation. \u25a0 •\u25a0 .- . I A, nature lover ought to be interested in the fa4 of raising butterflies Indoors, in what is known as a vivarium, which may consist of a box f ran: cow* ered with mosquito netting or, what is more task* tenable, a box of polished wood, with sides of glass and a movable wire screen top. It is said thai butterflies may be raised In it from the e?g. the caterpillar or the chrysallls. There should be a movable pan for earth and moisture and also a Ja» to hold the species of foliage on which the cater* pillars feed. One who owns a vivarium says that much of the wonderful ways of butterflies can bs thus learned, and that it is a constant delight. An authority on cooking says that a tumbler et red currant Jelly turned into a pint of ice creasi is delicious and imparts an attractive pink tint to the cream. Tea Ice cream has often been served at JnaHsTl garden parties, and those who are fond of tssj Ilk* It Tery much. To make it. mix one pouns} of granulated sugar, one pint of strong, green tea. one and a half pints of cream, a very little) cinnamon water and two quarts of rich milk, ssjs* mer the whole one minute. Bo careful not to sw it. but keep the mixture in motion by gently swag ing the saucepan. Freese in the usual way. Tss) recipe may be used for coffee and chocolate ersea* One-fourth of this quantity will be enough for sj medium sised family, as It is very targe. When selecting turn for the table choose east those In which the eyes are full and prominent. Vg flesh firm and thick, the scales bright end. Has} Itto always a good plan to bay soap to a isxl quantity, so that It will hare a chance to ernes* thoroughly dry before it Is used. Dry ssap :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0» n^chXngeT&ian fresh. Free oachja7gsss| first of it* paper wrappings, as these prevent \u25a0 from drying properly. It '.a \u25a0&, m!stak», ancarSisg to c veteran fcassae. keeper, fei fcssji hM tfcat ire Intended te be onsj mer.:«l treated \u25a0 wltlx anything bat was. To vax* nSsh or ehellae a hardwood Coor of any kind la t \u25a0mAbsji lk«| should not be permitted under aaf drcumatancea - Inevitably the best of thess weal •crappy and blotchy after a while, and then th*? hare to be scraped and bleached— an expensive business, since it ought not to have been neces- sary at aIL C>n no account most water be used oa a waxed floor, as it win only roughen It Trithont' removing; the dirt. Turpentine is the proper cleansing:- medtan. Ci'.B.TZilzs Uttle sUt boxes are the latest achieve*. raer.t sj Us] resourceful woodcarver of Swlaerv land. These boxes, which, of course, are of wood, are surmounted by fanny little men and womea> earved oat of one piece of wood— clowns, market women, mountaineers, fops, school children—anej all painted in bright colors. A Swiss luncheon. with the table decorated in the Swiss colors off led and white, and with some of these may little boxes at the plates for souvenirs, is suggested as. an enjoyable entertainment. Fsw people consider matton fat good eating, yt% Itla a mistake to choose lean mutton, because tIM absence C tat shows poorly fed stock. The fas should be white, not yellow, and the meat should hs> fira and dry. As a general rule, a!! meat she-! be Ann, not flabby. But while in choosing mutton one should look for a x>teco of which th» lean part \u25a0 dark colored, in the case of lamb and ve— the ra:at cannot bo too white. XEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY. JULY 1. 1006 I \X7o irn <ri in s> v I/I? *«/ JIiLJL \\~AL k JL wj' 1> e a I m ' WSTALKS «/f£AL7fl AND 3£AU7Y 'GLEAN 1 ING3

Transcript of X7o irn 1> I I/I? JIiLJL JL...of shapes that go by the name of TMrectotre, Empire or even under more...

Page 1: X7o irn 1> I I/I? JIiLJL JL...of shapes that go by the name of TMrectotre, Empire or even under more general tern of paletot, but they are all short waisted; that is

'LARGE HATS I'OK PARISthe bravo woman has penetrated every section oithe hitherto untrodden country, but without availShe found again ,the spot where her husband hat;disappeared, and armed with Danish authority at-tempted to learn from the natives what had be-come of him. She was finally convinced that na-tlves had murdered him. but

-could- nnd no proof

to secure the punishment of his murd»r»r«Finally the disheartened woman retrace 1 her

steps and returned to Outer China. Here she en-tered the mission of which Mr. Moves had charge.And there the lone Americans developed a friend-ship which finally grew Into love. The reverendwooer finally convinced the sorrowing wife thaiher husband" had Indeed been the victim of savsg*murderers, and last month in Ta-Chlen-lu the be-reaved woman became the bride of a second mis-sionary. . .

The news of the marriage has Just been receivediby D'js ilolnes friends. \

•;;\

Over 200 Graduates Receive B. A.Degree-Address by Dr. Canfield, of Columbia,

Welleßley"s annual commencement exercises wereheld in Memorial Chapel on Tuesday, beginning at11o'clock, nearly twelve hundred guests being pres-ent. The degree of Bachelor of Arts was conferredby President Hazard upon 214 graduates, the great-est number of whom, sixty, were from Massachu-setts, thirty-two, the next largest number, fromNew York State, the remainder being about equallydivided among the surrounding states and MiddleWast. The Master of Arts degree was also con-ferred by the president vpon the eioat followingnar.ied candidates: Clara M. Benson, B. A., Welles-ley College, '95, of Eaet Carver, Mass. ;Lueasta J.Bojnton, Wellesley, "02. Bradford. Mass.; ElizabethM. Gardiner, Radcliffe College. '01. Newton Cen're,

Mas*.: Helen E. Greenwood. Wellesley. "96, Worces-ter. Mass.; Genevieve C. Hanna, Wellesley, "03.

WEHESLEY COMMENCEMENT.

Business she would be ready to stay an winter

"Most of my friends can't understand why ]

am so fond of the camp," she says. "They wantto know what on earth we do withourselves allthe time; what we eat. and, above all. ifit isn'tdreadfully dirty. Well, itis rather dirty,in ontsense of the word, but the dirt is perfectlyclean—not the horrible filth of New York. Wehave sand under our feet, but no dust or diseasegerms In the air.

"As for spending the time, there is never anjdifficulty about that. Ido Just the same thingsthat Iwould in New York. Ieven have mysewing machine here, and last summer Idid alot of sewing. In the evenings we build hugecampflres and have the jolliest times possible.Even the rainy days are pleasant, and it is de-lightful to sleep with the rain falling up>n thetent. Not a drop of water ever comes through,though things get damp if they are not placedin trunks, and have to be hung out afterwardto dry. After a few days' rain there is a greatturning out of clothes and bedding, to the greatentertainment of people on passing river craft.

"We came over here on May 12, and Ihavebeen to New York only three times since then.Ihave no desire togo, and the men say itis likepulling teeth to get away in the morning."

BelievingFirst Husband Murdered, BecomesBride of the Bev. A.Moyes.

Des Moines. June 30.—After searching in vain fortwo years, with the aid of the combined forces of,

the American and Danish governments, for herhusband, in the wilds of Tibet, Dr. Susan Cars n-Rijnhart, famous as author and explorer, has final-lymarried the Rev. A. Moyes, the first white man

she met after she escaped from the wild tribeswho probably murdtrtd her firit husliund.

The romance of Miss Susan Carson has been

DR. SUSAN BIJNEABT SEMABRIEI]

menterie buttons, and from the belt fell tw<long ornaments. The under blouse was of deli-cate thread lace, and a good deal of It showedfor the jacket hung well off the shoulders ancthe short sleeves were ioose and slashed. Th«hat worn waa of brown cr!n. trimmed with »single shaded ostrich plume long enough to g<about the hat and fall to the shoulders. TheMwas a little gold tulle forming a cache peigne,

but that was all in the way of trimming.-One of the most useful summer gowns is a

tailored coßtume In white serge made with somtform of short-waisted Jacket. This new modeIn tailored costumes seems to have awakened astrong interest in serge. There are any numberof shapes that go by the name of TMrectotre,Empire or even under the more general ternof paletot, but they are all short waisted; thatis the essential thing. Even the paletots curvein a bit and that at a point well above thenatural waist line.

A good many gowns seem to be made withoutdrop skirts, and even princess and corseletgowns have the liningstop below the waist. Ofcourse, they are worn ov r petticoats, perfectlyfittingand of harmonious tone There is a sud-den fondness for lingerie petMeoats. but as r.rule only the flounces are lingerie and the foun-dation of taffeta. Still, the lingerie places saythat they are selling many fine cambrican i lawn petticoats

—more than hns been th"

case for years. The silk petticoat, once rather abadge of elegance, has become cheapened andapparently In some form is in the reach of everyone. With the clinging effects that are desiredthe underclothing i*of first importance. Almosteverything is on the combination idea: corsetsare made with silk petticoats .attached. ther«are corset cover short petticoat garments to beworn with a dron skirt, woven drawers and un-dervests In one pitce and corset covers arldrawers! One can really dress with two under-garments, and it depends on the gown to bsv.-orn which two are to be chosen.

As a relief from the übiquitous Empire Jacket

a few habits en the conventional lines are worn.

At the opening of one of the recent picture ex-

hibitions a Parisienne who has a reputation forcorrect dressing wore a tailored suit of light

gray cloth made with a fitted habit half cov-ering the skirt and cut with rounded corners.

The sides Avere edged with buttoned tabs, and

there waa a long vest of antique embroidery

opening over a lace chemisette. The sleevesfinished Just below the elbows with revera. Theskirt was long and. although full, rather cling-

ing. It looked as if it had no drop skirt, an

appearance that many of the skirts have now.There are somo very fulT skirts, almost sug-

gesting a crinoline, but, on the other hand, more

skirts seem to have no stiffness at all.

On the same occasion was worn a handsome

None Smaller than Empress Eu-

genie"—Up to Date "Forty."Paris, June 22.

ItIs amusing: the suddenness with which th<large hat has sprung into prominence; Indeed, atany gathering of smartly gowned women thesmall hat, so much in evidence a few weeks ago

is not seen at all. Although the new style showslarge brims, they are manipulated so as to ex-pose a great deal of tho hair, which generally

means that they are rolled up or lifted high onone side. As a rule, this manipulation Is In soflcurves, and often the hair is puffed to do away

with the necessity of any cache peigne. Flowersunder the brim have been the mode so long that

the natural tendency is to adopt something else.A brim that curves toward the iace rather

than away from Itis a great favorite and capa-

ble of much variety, for one may see a dozenhats all with this peculiarity, and yet quite

different in effect. One of the few small shapes

still modish is the "Empress Eugenie," the littleboat shaped turban encircled by a veil that Isseen in many pictures of th© Empress. There

are a lot of long floating veils on hats of every

form.

AN AFTE^-.OON NAP.

eight. sjtMsj MBjgjlgfjßjiwaa aa pink and wattsas that or a gM af t-.ver.ty. "VThon asked wastthe s?crot ofher lovelyskm was. she tavarlaslßEr.sw»red. "Bochello salts." Itseemed that asatook the salts evary day. rtlssoliliig half a tec*BjaaafeJ m a g'.a^s of water and drinking aslsolution, now a alp and then a swallow, at tentervala through the day. Tn© effects upon asfakin and Mood war© certainly most fortunate. ,

R; ST CURE AT HOWLHow to take the rest cure at home without «]„

rupting the family and going off to a sar.at galIs a problem that has perplexed many a wexssslmother of a family. That the rest cure may fetundertaken easily and at a comparatively truthscost In one's own home is the message of awriter In "Harper's Bazar." After all, u (2remarks, probably the chief compensattsm, of \u25a0sanatorium experience is the inculcation ofess*,mon sense, and that common sense Is dsgsssbslless uncommon Is evinced by the svigsssjnumbers of non-Invalids who Invade tt.» «a-A»torium for the sake, apparently, of leading Ssimple life.

The broken down woman must give urn sjssJlive In the open air as much as possible, anasdiet, must drink Quarts of water, must drop coldtubs for two warm baths a week, and most lostand invite her soul.

Of course, the inevitable reflection after r-sa |jingr these health maxims, which, as tfc* \u25a0*-\u25a0!,observes, are so simile that they are cosbssssbloverlooked or Ignored. Is that a woman ;.*."mlike the average mother of a family wou.i SSIt exceedlnsly difficult to follow them nsJesishe went off and made a business of foQowssathem under the direction of a Dhyalctan. Tanforces that have been at work to bring her toher state of nervous collapse will contmna taoperate and ta their presence she will M \u0084welmlgh Impossible to relax and diet ar.| aXesalt rubs and drink the right number of \u25a0 u*s«of water. Johnnie willcontinue to get spUntsslta his hands. Mary will continue to need betawith her French verbs, Bridget willconttaasSloss her temper with the milkman and aeaipacifying; and the master of the house wacontinue to come home from his day's wejfcfagged and] worried and appealing mutely fsssympathy. Under these conditions many \u25a0woman would use up more nerve force tax to.Ux:r.g than ta meeting tuoso small lull\u25a0ll—fairlyand squarely. Ob the other hand, noeasknows how modi one can accomplish with alaw of hygiene tillon© tries. There are teaoo-ers sj ilqMlga] bjJMbn who malnrstn that eatcan eawrclso the body satisfactorily while ea»sa?=: it. aasfi ord'.r.-i.-y vocation ta one's os»dlnary raiment, and they exhibit their Owe)muscles as proof of what they say. Anythingtaal sjfjl rand to combat the nervous Intensity;nr. tm which most women live Is a good thing.and Ifa wnrr.an Is resolute enough and penis*.ont enough. Itmay bo that sho can give hersas?a rest cure. Ifnot th© tast cure, under her ewnroof.

Certain English reformers are trying to form

an organization InLondon after the psisj of the

consumers' leagues, and. judging by their da-

The boys and girls of New Zealand must haveslngularjy commercial minds. Ifa tetter writtenby one young New Zealander. and quoted hi an

English paper. Is typical. This hoy writes en-thusiastically of the achievements of a certainfootball team, the AllBlacks, and then observeseriously that th© Premier to very proud of thevictories, which "are a splendid advertisementfor New Zealand mutton and butter.'*

An American statistician who has been In-vestigating the matter says that while s'.r.fflewomen are more likely to commit suicide thanare married women, among men who MM 'heirown lives the Benedicts are In the majority.And though itIs so often asserted that real loveis growing rare nowadays, this statistician de-clares that love is still the cause of all causes ofsuicide in both sexes.

At an exhibition of lacas and silks, held re-cently at Blackpool. In England, the organizers

furnished a smoking room where, they an-nounced, "gentlemen accompanying ladies wouldfind coffee and cigars free of charge." Itis sug-gested that that might be a profitable plan forthe big department stores. Few American menjro with their wives on their shopping tours, butif things were made comfortable for them at theshops, with fre*> cigars and so forth, itmight be-come their favorite amusement, and then they

would be more reconciled to the spending ofmoney by their wives for pretty things.

In the old times people had an Idea that thenight air was noxious. They shut their windowsbefore going to bed, under the Impression thatit was better to breathe the same air awes' an<iover than to have fresh air when the sun wasdown. That notion still survives to someregions, but it is disappearing, and now comesan Englishman— a lecturer at the Institute ofHygiene in London— who declares that night a rIs purer and more beneficial than the airbreathed duriner the day. He urges people totake their walks at night as much as posstb.ainstead of going out when the son Is b'.azing

and the microbes holding high revel, and evenregrets that it isn't practicable to have childrentake their outdoor recrea; I.or. at sssssllM

PREPARING SUPPtH.

FISHING. AT THE SPRING.CAMPING AT THE FOOT OF THE PAUSADES.

Camping at rcoi of raltfadef.

"The Simple Life" Led by a Colony of New Yorkers in Pict-uresque Tsnt Homes Across the River.

To camp out all summer and yet come to bus!

ness every day inNew York Is the miracle whleiabout a dozen New York families- have accompllshed this year and for several seasons past

and any one who is longing for tOmilar ldyllii

Joys while bound fast to the wheel of labor ma:So and do likewise. ItIs only nec<»sary to pute an application to the Palisades Park Commieoton for permission to pitch a tent somewherealong the twenty miles of park land on thliBystan shore.

On a narrow strip of beach between th<water and the precipitous ascent of the Pali-sades. Just opposite Spuyten Duyvil. the tent!

of these summer colonists have been pitched

some of them creeping a little way up th<cliffs, others so dose to the water that whetthe tide rises It sometimes comes in and drive*the occupants for shelter to those that hav<taken higher ground. Doors are always open U

a friend in need there, and, though the colonsIsnot exactly communistic it is understood tha(

those who have not are always at liberty t<

craw upon those who have.ALMOST COMMUNISTIC.

"If there Is anything you want that you

haven't got you Just go down the beach andget it," is the way one camper put It, "and il

the people happen to be out you just walk inand take it."

Rights of property are vaguely denned at thefoot of the Palisades, and rules of fashion aw

of the simplest character. White duck suits are

the proper garb for men. but they are suite

which never see the washtub. and which In a

few weeks become so soaked with oil from themachinery of the launches that they are thor-oughly waterproof. With these are worn soft

but stout, leather moccasins, with or withoutstockings, as each individual sees best. The

women cling a little more closely to the con-

ventions of dress, keep their shirtwaists clean

and regularly send thoir white skirts to thelaundry. The children run about in rompers,

barefooted or sandalled, and thrive like badweeds. There is one little fellow who had peri-

tonitis of the upper and lower bowel, eo .-

bined with pleuro-pneumonia. this spring, and

was as rale and thin as a ghost when takenover to th. beach on May 1 Now therr

healthier 01 happier child to be found any

in two counties. And a heJby of six months-

also harpy and rosy, though its mother's fri

all predicted that carny life would kill it.

Housekeeping is also of the simplest, but has

not been reduced to the vanishing point, be-cause the outdoor life is wonderfully improving

to the appetite.

•I eat five times a day" said Mrs. Georg-

Wiggins to a Tribune reporter who visitedCamp Frances, the largest of the Palisade col-onies, recently. "I have a good breakfast about

6 o'clock with my men folk. At 10 o'clock I

eat again, at 12:30 o'clock Ihave luncheon, at 4

o'clock afternoon tea, and at 7 o'clock dinner.

Then very likelyIhave something to eat before

Igo to bed. Isn't it hard to do so much cook-

ing? Idon't find it so at all. Ilike cooking,

and Idon't have to devise ways of tempting

Jaded appetites out here. And there are such

delicious things to cook. We get the freshestof eggs and the sweetest of butter from Spuyten

Duyvil. The water comes right out of the rocksas cold as ice and as clear as crystal. Itis like

the nectar of the gods and makes one wonderhow one ever managed to drink Croton water.

A little later there willbe oceans of berries on

the cliff, and later on there will be apples and

cherries right behind our tent, all we can eat

and lots left for canning. Other edibles andnecessaries are brought over regularly every

day by a young man who calls for orders andbrings the things over about an hour later.

A GEM OF AX ICE BOX."As for kitchen conveniences. Iam almost as

well off as IfIwere in the city. Ican cookanything Ilike on my oil stove, and Ihave a

beautiful ice box. Just look at this."

Mrs. Wiggins removed some boards in one

corner of the dining tent and revealed a barrel

sunk In the ground and filled with perishablefood supplies.

"The sand gets into the food sometimes,

commented the mistress of the house, "but weknow it is clean dirt and we don't mind. It

is quite an acrobatic feat. too. to get things

out when they are down near the bottom, butthe men are always ready to fish for them, soIdon't mind that either. And itis so economi-cal One piece of ice lasts for two or three days.

"We can circumvent the Ice Trust, besides pay-Ing no rent."

It is true that all of the campers do not get

on so well as Mrs. Wiggins. She has the ad-vantage of having camped since she was two

years old. and being as much at home in a tent

as in the most perfectly appointed house. Butno one seems to have much trouble except the

unfortunate men who are trying to run bachelor-halls or. rather, tents. There was one suchestablishment at Camp Frances last year and

the occupants nearly starved to death on bakedbeans and they were canned beans at that.This year they established themselves on an-other part of the beach, and named their PlaceCamp Perfection, announcing that they intended

to live up to that appellation. It Is rumored,

however, that their diet is still somewhat over-balanced with baked beans.

Mr and Mrs. Wigt?tns have arranged theircamp around a hollow square, open on the side

next to the river. There is a kitchen tent at the

back with bedroom tents on either side, while afly stretched over the open space makes adining room. The kitchen and bedroom havefloors but in the dining room the sand is uncov-ered. At the four corners of the central awning

are placed buckets and barrels to catch softwater when it rains The camp Is not so pictu-resque In appearance as some that have beenpitched on the Bide of the cliff, but Mrs. Wig-gins considers it much more comfortable, be-cause the sand is free from creeping and crawl-Ing things. There are copperheads and othervermin on the cliff, but they cannot pass thesand line, because their powers of locomotionare not suited to that kind of surface.

HOME MADE FURNITURE.

Most of the furniture of the camp is homemade, except the beds and stoves. The latterare the best and most scientific oil stoves that

the market affords, and in only one camp isthere a real stove. That is because there areIttle folks there who have to- be kept warm on

chilly days. Some of <he campers have beensensible enough to take over their mattressesand springs. Others use cots. Nearly every-thing else has been made out of boxes.

There are said to be almost no mosquitoes Inthis paradise of the Palisades. When a landbreeze blows they are a little troublesome, butwhen the breeze l*s from the wattr they are allcarried inland. The air is nearly as fresh andsalty as that of the seashore, and is almost al-ways sweet with the perfume of flowers from adeserted garden on the cliff. First come thelilac*, and when they are gone there is sweetsyringa, and then there are roses and honey-suckles. The birds sing at daybreak ina chorusof Joy, and except for the whistles on the liverthere i« no other sound to break the stillness.Itis bard to realize that New York is not atl)"'*-«ndmiles away.

tom campers who do not,have to come backto te*m for the opening of school expect to stayfa their tents during October and even No-vember, and Mrs. Wiggins says that IfItwasn'tfur Mm difficulty of getting across the ri\cr :o

tace the world Bravely, the speaker said, in

conclusion, "because of your self-mastery, your in-telligent and efficient desire. Rejoice in frae.lomand think and live and speak for yourself. Fighthard against all that your riper Judgment pro-

claims to be unnecessary and undesirable, irrele-vant and Immaterial, no matter what may be itssanction by place or age. Distinguish sharply be-tween the real things, the verities of life, and tho:?»which in the end are but apples of Sodom. Give tothe world an example of that self-restraint whichgoes so far toward making possible strict inte-grity,sincere purpose and earnest endeavor. Rememberthat she who loves, leads; she who serves, com-mands. Find inall this most true and lasting hap-piness and content, and you will rejoice In youryouth and be glad in your old age. and generationsyet unborn Khali rise up to call you blessed, be-cause of the new and better meaning which youhave given to that strange experience which wecall human life."

Mrs. John C. Whitin, of Whltlnsville. Mass.. trus-tee of the college, then made formal presentationof the now completed Whitin observatory and houseof residence for the observatory staff. This wasfollowed by the announcement from President Haz-ard of the award ot the Alice Freeman Palmer fel-lowship for 1906- "07 to Anna Johnson. B. A., Univer-sity of Dakota, 1903; M. 6., University of lowa, J9Wand M. A.. Radcliffc College. 1995; also of the awardof the Billingsprize In music to Isabelle Chandler,of Marorah, 111., a graduate in this year's class.

A SUPERB TROUSSEAU.

Some of Paonin's Most Beautiful Creationsfor Lady Mp.ry Hamilton.

Paquin was responsible for some lovely gowns Inthe trousseau of Lady Mary Hamilton, as weil asfor a number of superb toilettes worn at her wed-ding. The bride's going away gown was of thefinest white batiste, richly embroidered with raisedmedallions and Valenciennes lace, which ImpartedJust sufficient substance to the full skirt to insuregraceful folds. The handsome mantle of mossgreen cloth hung Insoft folds from the shoulderswhere It was enriched with a trimming of Irishlace in the same shade of green.

The bridesmaids* dresses were of white mousse-line de sole, the skirts being niched with whitetaffeta. The bodices were made with fichu effectIn the moussellne, outlining a deep yoke of Alen-Con lace, and had a draped belt of turquoise satin.Wreaths of tinypink roses with Louis XVbows ofblue velvet were worn Instead of hats.

Mary, Duchess of Hamilton, wore a mauvechiffon gown, trimmed with taffeta and incrusta-tions ofChantilly lace of the same color.

Among other gowns made for the bride by Pa-quin, and showing his unrivalled art at Its bestwere the following: A gown of green and whitecheck material, with a skirt trimmed in hands ofthe material, and a bodice with a collar and smalllmpl*cement of fine tucked muslin; n navy blueserge gown, trmmad with handsome black silkbraids, having a bodice with an lmpieeemcni ofline Venice bee «nd appliques of Oriental em-broidery; a pink taffeta evening gown, trimmedwith steel embroidery and mallnes and witha highwaistband of ribbon aeler. and a white afternoongown of Brussells tulle, with appliques of mallnaa

Bradford, Penn.; Emmellne Moore, trornen univer-

sity. 05, Churehville. N. Y.; Alice M. Ottley, Cor-nell. '04. Seneca <"astle. N. Y.. and Bertha E. Tre-bein, Wellesley '97. Xenia. Ohio.

James Hulme Ocnfleld. librarian of Columbia Uni-versity, delivered the commencement address. Tak-ing for his theme "The Object and End of Educa-

tion." and especially the education of women, thespeaker maintained that all worthy educationstrives to advance the great average line of humanlife. Sane and worthy education is a power whichunites society, rather than divides it; 's a commonbond, rather than a dislntenrrattng factor. Educa-tion accomplishes its purpose through what it doesfor the individual. It recognises that in all masslife th»re is weakness and danger, because the in-dividual is forgotten or labored. Uke all move-ments which seek the higher life, education con-trols the great general movement by its control ofeach factor.

gown of blue satin, rather an odd material for

this time of the year, but, nevertheless, very

fashionable. The skirt was made with a greatmany bias bands, starting from the waist lineand running about the bottom of the skirt. Thebodice met this in a little point, and the pointedeffect was enhanced by broad bretelles runningover the shoulders. The decolletage was lowand square, the bodice buttoned to meet It, andabove was a depaasement ofantique embroideryover a guimpe of Venice point. The cuffs on theshort sleeves were of antique embroidery overlace puffs. The hat was of pale yellow strawtrimmed with a lot of bluish-black heronfeathers and pale pink roses. The gloves werea pale yellow suede, a tone found in the em-broidery.

Taffeta is the favorite material now; It seemsto make the bridge between the cloth gowns andsummer laces and muslins. The dressmakersstate that this is not to be an "all white" sum-mer, and that a lingerie gown must be veryelegant to be suited for formal occasions. Butwomen seem loath to abandon white, even ifthey cannot afford the costly editions of it inlaces and embroideries.

White, even white muslin, is no longer the pre-rogative of the young, yet there is no doubt thatsixteeen looks better in it than even up-to-dateforty. The fashion of using browns and greensas trimming to white gowns is a happy one, forit takes away the Infantile suggestion. A be-coming lingerie hat seen recently was trimmedwith a long golden brown veil, and the brimwas lifted here and there with amber hatpins.The woman who wore it was no longer young,yet the hat with the brown trimming' seemedboth becoming and suitable. In all white onewould have associated the hat with a baby face.Flowers, if they are well chosen, give an airof dignity to a lingerie hat, and foliage and agreen veil are particularly good. These floatingveils will undoubtedly be a great feature lateron. A lot of them are worn in Paris, but theyseem much more appropriate to country andseashore than to town.

Exceedingly smart is the fashion of combiningtwo materials, one of them pic id. In the samecostume. In the Bois the other morning wasworn a walking costume of black and whitecheck made in princess fashion and finishedwith a short bolero of white embroidered linen.Another and better example of the fasluan wasa gown with a skirt of cinnamon-colored cloth,rather oddly trimmed with rows of passementeriebuttons down the sides of the tabller to withina foot of the hem, where they met a broad bandof passementerie trimming passing about theskirt. The Empire Jacket was of plaid taffeta,shirred under the bust, with the lower part shortand flaringIn the back and fallingin long pointsto front. It was edged all about with pasasr

Dr. Susan Carson is a Canadian, but made herhome InDes Moines for twelve years, during whichtime she took a course in medicine at Drake Uni-versity. Soon thereafter she married the Rev. PetrusXlijnhart, and together the two Journeyed to Tibetunder the direction of the lowa Christian Churchas medical missionaries.

They penetrated far into the Lhasa district inTibet, carrying the gospel of religion and medi-cine, and talcing with them the baby born in OuterChina. Soon afterward the baby died and wasburled in the shifting sands.

A month later, while the two missionaries werevisiting a native village, Mr. Rijnhart left her togo • short distance beyond. The woman thoughtnothing of his going until a few hours later, when,as he had failed to return, she started to traversethe. same ground. No trace of her husband couldbe found. She pursued her investigations into aneighboring village, and was set upon by savagedogs and almost killed. Finally, with nothing leftbut a few rags and her medicine case. Mrs. Rijn-hart made her way from Tibet step by step. Afriendly Chinaman who had been Christianizednnally befriended her. and, posing as his wife shemanaged to muko her escape from Tibet. finallyreaching a Christian mission. There she met theRev. A. Moyea, her present husband. To him shetold her troubles, then promptly fainted from ex-haustion. She was nursed back to health, but itwas Impossible for the Christians there to do any-thing without the Jild of the Danish government

Mr«.• Rijnhart returned to America, interestedPresident Root«eyflt in her story, and vpon the re-quest of the United States the Danish governmentpromised to make a careful search for her husband-After a year of weary wait! igr the government rr-ported that the expedition had failed. Danish of-ficers declined to go into the wild interior wherethe white woman had ventured, and could do noth-!nf?._

--\u25a0. -v v \r \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0

' . i r \u25a0 > ,Ttien .Mrs. IMJnhart. through * the .aid of thePresident, secured passports wiilch permitted her

to-so among \u25a0 the.wildest ,tribes, . and with.only anative"! KU'.J, bturt< a ."second search.'!' Sins* \u25a0 ii»i

Dr. Rijnhart is the first and the only white

woman who ever penetrated the interior, and herstory of her sufferings and wanderings has beentold and retold in magazines and books which theintrepid explorer herself has written in an effortto enlist the aid of President Roosevelt and securefunds needed for her search.

largely mixed with tragedy, and the news of her

second marriase caused Intense astonishment inDes Molnes. where it was believed she would nevergive up the search for her first husband, in aid ofwhich Des Molnes and lowa friends contributedthousands of dollars. All the power of the Ameri-can and Danish governments was also enlisted Inthe search, but the brave woman was compelled tocarry on her search through the wilds of theLhasa district almost unaided, for no white mancould be induced to face the savage tribes whichinhabit the innermost recesses of the Tibet coun-try.

WAR ON lItfSECTS,Bed-bus^, Moths. Ants. Fleas—SaDade'sXoa--

qultoBite Cure and Insect Exierjataatar a \u25a0*

Insect life. A world-renowned lotion for ttsj'

Ing away mosquitoes and other insects. \u25a0\u25a0]sprayed around. The only article that hasssssej

the public's test for over 2(5 years <non-poswas»ous). Pint bottles. 25c: ttgallon. fl.«h gsJasx»

5'».tXX Sallade's ROACH TEHROU »W PCS.1;tively c!enr your house of roacites. Sola nt *iIb. and 1Ib. tins; makes no dust. An*1;- \u25a0 manil grocers, or SALLADL & CO., u.aaufactu«iers, 122 Odor. St.. X.-Y.\u25a0.-;;._„—--

">««,

KNICKERBOCKER CHAPTER.

Knickerbocker Chapter, of Xc\c York CM*Daughters of the American Revolution, wa* t>Ugbtfully entertained on Thursday last by Mi.

Simon Baruch. aprominent member of «s»wxsjM

at her summer home. The Anchorage, en MShrewsbury. N. J. About thirty ihisjUiss d W*chapter attended, with Mrs. Tndorlofc ssXoXfsejßjregent, and on tno arrival of the train «.:«=•by automobiles. Before ptorsorting to th« J<the hostess ann was made through the pic*

-\u25a0•* \u25a0•

sections of Moamouth County. A

—ssywgf

luncheon was served at The Anchorage. £+

hose present were Mrm*. Stewar Hard. BSJBXSs]Duncan. Bolande. Croweli and Philllj>

scriptions of conditions In the garment tradeover there, they need it An exhibition ofsweated industries has lately been held there. InQueen's Hall. London, and reveals a pretty badstate of affairs among the slaves of the sweat-shop. The poor workers, who appear at theexhibition, risk a good deal In doing so—risk theanger of their employers, the loss of their Jobs—though the organizers hope to be able to com-pensate them In part at least Ifthey do sufferby their action.

A mothers' magazine calls attention to the 1fact that the old adage. "Children should be jseen and not heard." has little place In themodern systems of child training, and says It•Is quite right that it is so. especially In the ;case of the child with a grievance. Children.with all their chattering, are strongly inar-ticulate when it is a matter of explaining theirfeelings, and a child may suffer more than theadults around itever dream over some Injustice.real or fancied, which It would probably havedifficulty Inputting into words. Ifthe parentsare continually telling It to "Hush up." and"Keep still, now!" there is every chance of de-veloping a fairly sulky youngster In time.

In one New York home, where the fathertakes an active part in the training of the chll- :dren. as few fathers do in this country, un-fortunately, no dispute among the childrenand no grievance of any one of them pass un-noticed, especially if the father is around. Nomatter what he may be doing, he drops ItandInstantly opens a kind of Informal children's :court, getting at the bottom of the trouble by ithe gentlest of questioning. This takes some of ,his time, of course, but to those children their .father is the Ideal of Justice, a confidant who .'never falls them.

Everywhere there Is a tendency an3oar."wotnen |noTradays. especially those of the middle esssssi i

to do without the hat whenever it is permissible.but few feel that it is permissible Inchurch, thoughfrequently they would be more "comfortable bare-headed. Apropos. Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Oilmanremarked In a recent talk that one of the hardr«:things she - ever did was to remove her hat inchurch. It was a heavy fur turban, and It feltvery burdensome, but all• the women in the con-Krenatlr.n had hate on, and would she not be very inoticeable Ifshe removed hers? Finally,she asked •hernrlf: "Would Ibe breaking any law—ethical.moral or civil—ifItook off my hat?" And shedecided she would not. So the hat came err: bat aIt was some minutes before she could get the

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courage to do It. It shows what a, hold custom•nd tradition have upon women even of reason-ably stronjr minds. Speaking of custom, .in tatsmatter, however, it Is to be noted that in theearly days of Christianity no one ssewafej at!religious worship, either man or -woman, with an/ I.head covering. The wear: si hats t>> -women at Icburch wu a later Innovation. \u25a0 •\u25a0 .- • . I

A,nature lover ought to be interested in the fa4of raising butterflies Indoors, in what is known asa vivarium, which may consist of a box fran: cow*ered withmosquito netting or, what is more task*tenable, a box ofpolished wood, with sides of glassand a movable wire screen top. Itis said thaibutterflies may be raised In it from the e?g. thecaterpillar or the chrysallls. There should be amovable pan for earth and moisture and also a Ja»to hold the species of foliage on which the cater*pillars feed. One who owns a vivarium says thatmuch of the wonderful ways of butterflies can bsthus learned, and that it is a constant delight.

An authority on cooking says that a tumbler etred currant Jelly turned into a pint of ice creasiis delicious and imparts an attractive pink tintto the cream.

Tea Ice cream has often been served at JnaHsTlgarden parties, and those who are fond of tssj

Ilk*It Tery much. To make it. mix one pouns}of granulated sugar, one pint of strong, greentea. one and a half pints of cream, a very little)cinnamon water and two quarts of rich milk, ssjs*mer the whole one minute. Bo careful not to swit. but keep the mixture in motion by gently swaging the saucepan. Freese in the usual way. Tss)recipe may be used for coffee and chocolate ersea*One-fourth of this quantity will be enough for sj

medium sised family, as Itis very targe.

When selecting turn for the table choose eastthose In which the eyes are full and prominent. Vgflesh firm and thick, the scales bright end. Has}

Itto always a good plan to bay soap to a isxlquantity, so that Itwillhare a chance to ernes*thoroughly dry before itIs used. Dry ssap :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0»n^chXngeT&ian fresh. Free oachja7gsss|first of it*paper wrappings, as these prevent \u25a0from drying properly.

It '.a \u25a0&, m!stak», ancarSisg to c veteran fcassae.keeper, fei fcssji hM tfcat ire Intended te be onsjmer.:«l treated \u25a0 wltlx anything bat was. To vax*nSsh or ehellae a hardwood Coor of any kind la t\u25a0mAbsji lk«| should not be permitted under aafdrcumatancea

-Inevitably the best of thess weal

•crappy and blotchy after a while, and then th*?hare to be scraped and bleached— an expensivebusiness, since it ought not to have been neces-sary at aIL C>n no account most water be used oaa waxed floor, as it win only roughen ItTrithont'removing; the dirt. Turpentine is the propercleansing:- medtan.

Ci'.B.TZilzs Uttle sUt boxes are the latest achieve*.raer.t sj Us] resourceful woodcarver of Swlaervland. These boxes, which, of course, are of wood,are surmounted by fanny little men and womea>earved oat of one piece of wood— clowns, marketwomen, mountaineers, fops, school children—anejall painted in bright colors. A Swiss luncheon.with the table decorated in the Swiss colors offled and white, and with some of these may littleboxes at the plates for souvenirs, is suggested as.an enjoyable entertainment.

Fsw people consider matton fat good eating, yt%Itla a mistake to choose lean mutton, because tIMabsence C tat shows poorly fed stock. The fasshould be white, not yellow, and the meat shouldhs> fira and dry. Asa general rule, a!!meat she-!be Ann, not flabby. But while in choosing muttonone should look for a x>teco of which th» leanpart \u25a0 dark colored, in the case of lamb and ve—the ra:at cannot bo too white.

XEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY. JULY 1. 1006I

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