—— A—— fm T'S amazing “carrying on” fing! No matter the way cottons are this season—amaz- what hour of the clock it may be, morning, noon or midnight, yes, midnight, for evening cottons are front-page news just now it's cottons which are holdirg the cen ter of the stage. The sensational debute of piques, lacy cotton meshes and such, at the most formal of night events and the enchanting rol2 which emproidered organdies and sheerest of, cotton nets are so dramatically playing to night ly audiences are not the only per formances of cottons which are caus ing the world of fashion to sit up and take notiee, for sports are staging every whit interesting a program during the daytime hours. cottons as They're smartest when they're tal lored, that is what designers are say ing of tte stunning cottons which are darting hither and thither o'er tennis court or trailing a lively ball o'er golf ers’ green or holding a rendezvons with the fashionable set out at the coun try club. This feeling the chic simplicity of tailored effects is re flected in the preference which Is be Ing expressed among college girls for the shirtwalst frock has net a frill or a furbelov about it. As sum. mer advances these neat trig little tallored cotton shirtwaist costumes are appearing in increasing numbers They are making seersucker and the meshes. Puttoning them primly op to the neck, and making the skirts youthfully slim and straight— Just a few little godets, perhaps, set in about the hemline or a skirt of fit ted gores or maybe just enongh pleats let in to give movement Then again if you are keeping tab for which them of pique, of modish cotton too, freedom of the doings of smart cottons find your quest on will you realm of coats. Trey are the newest thing out in the way of a summer wrap, are these coats, either three quarter or ful' length and made of the swankiest mesh cottons, or cot ton tweeds or the diagonal patterned cottons which are 80 modish just now. And they are making them of wide wale pique too. If you are casting about for some thing stylish to wear that can go sailing, golfing, to the tennis courts or on to the club house porch, here they are In this picture. Each is a sheer durene mesh, washable and simple in line This particalar weave has a sort of honeycomb effect which is very attractive, but If you are get ting several sports cottons, and of course you are, you might vary them by making another of your frocks of the very handsome durene diagonals which tailors to perfection and looks every Inch strictly up to the moment in chic One of the fetching the model to is that it whic things about the right here pictured has that shirtwaist look we were talking about a mo ment ago. mode o* the belt. You will like up and it will fall slim silhouette wh fortunate, slender and there are just front to make one The little widened soft self-fabric the skirt. Stand into the narrow ich is the pride of youth. Sit down enough pleats in feel at ease y jacket to the left couldnt be buttons, revers, durene mesh and Really a ward robe without a bellhop jacket or two does not qualify as being complete this season. bel smar all, (© 1932 Western Newspaper Union.) JACKET ENSEMBLE Ideal for summer wear 1s this jacket ensemble of soft yellow and beige tones In cool pointed crepe. Coat-Dress Is Featured Now in Every Fashion It's difficult to tell a coat from a dress these days. The coat-dress ogo. fon affects not only street dresses And daytime coats, but practically every other type of costume-—evening wraps, evening dresses, beach costumes, bath. robes, The new coats are often buttoned to the hem, like dresses; streel dresses are cut to fly open when one is walk: tng, and are provided with colored slips to earry out the effect of n cont over a dress BLACK REMAINS IN FAVOR WITH MILADY Those who fashions of sit in judgment on the the world are not the flighty individuals they may seem to be. No matter how many fanciful ruffles and frills they Invent. ne mat ter how many brilliant purples and reds they produce, no matter how unsettled in the matter of skirt lengths and walstlines they seem to be. there are always a few old faithfuls among tteir ideas that are never deserted. First among these is the all-black dress. Strange as it may seem. while it is the old reliable of every ward. robe, It is many times the smartest dress of the lot. The summer version of the all-black dress Is appearing In Paris in lighter weight fabrics than usual FLASHES FROM PARIS Fringe reappears on evening frocks. Drum-shaped bellhop hat is fa- vorite theme with chic Paris mil liners, Leading couturiers stress style Importance of cottons Capelines of large proportions with shallow crowns top sum mery frocks Chantal sponsors dance frocks nf tailored cotton pique. Mousseline de sol, often called silk organdie, is favored for sheer frocks, Velvet shoulder capes top print. ed chiffon frocks, Street Clothes Have a Simpler Line This Year Women, this “year, set great store by their street clothes. There is the demand for simple, wearable clothes that draw & smart line between the severely tallored line and the softer line that marks the afternoon mode. Neat suits with dressmake: touches, simple frocks with effective detall and a matching little jacket or cape let, these are the favorites of well dressed women, Cotton Scarfs Hand-blocked cotton scarfs to wear with cotton sports clothes are a nov. elty worth pursuing. They are most effective, TALES CHIEFS KEOKUK ‘By Editha L. | Watson Black Hawk slapped him across the face with his clout, The Sauk and Foxes severed thelr union on his account, and both tribes ridl. culed and despised him. He was an In. triguer, false to In- dian ethics, who left nothing stand in the way of hls ambition, Yet he established the Sauk and Fox claim to what Is now the state of Jowaj Keokuk there Is a monument city which was the Capitol at bronze bust of Indian. Keokuk well-named, for word means “one who moves about alert.” It is said that he was one Washington this very un-Indian wns for his unusual gift for intrigue, unnatural to the race which of speaking with but one tongue. It was Keokuk's great ideal to be come the leader of his people, the Sauk, although he was not a member ruling clan, He became showed ability, and 14 keeper, or host, rendered at the wns and tact, given full play, eaused his become center, ‘ping In the back- xerted his wiles, nst each other yet igpected friend of ing. he became the auk assembly, and go no! need to assert Rim. me vital problem, war, however julred prestige. ; agreed that the Rock river 8 Agree "es the the country utral stand on at he nding among lost all who keenly dis ile In vital af ke a stand. he {lowers and went tion TT is It of Keokuk's he tribes, who here ined a lukewarm sort beran before Black Hawk . and after a ries, the Niinols filled his forces ing strugs Indian or him, —_ Kook cially regain his leader. ived so cleverly Into the thelr in After the to offi war, It was then, when stout-hearted the intel fare council, ing The Foxes, who had protected him, joined the Sauk In derision of this no doubt that Keokuk for ere is dearly his deed which earned him otherwise, This, his real aim. the result is still in his of Keokuk's, A speech flattering and oily: we never tasted before: It is the wine which the white men make, who know how to make any thing: I will take another glass, asx I have much to say: we feel proud that we ean drink such wine, . 1 talked to our young men, who had the hearts of men: I told them that the Great Spirit was In our councils: they promised to live in peace; those who listened to had eounsels and followed our beothers, have sald thelr ears are closed, they will live in peace; I sent thelr words to our great father, whose ears were open, whose heart was made sad by the conduct of our brothers; he has gent to thelr wigwams; we thank him; say to him that Keokuk thanks hm. . . . 1 want to see him, I shall be proud to take him by the hand, 1 have heard much of him, his head Is gray, [ must see him; tell him that as soon as the snow is off of the prairie, I shall come. What I have sald, T wish spoken to him, before it's put on pa- per. so that he shall hear It as I have sald it: tell him that Keokuk spoke ft: what our brother sald In council today, let us forget; he told me to gpenk ; 1 spoke his words” Keokuk died In Kansas, at the age of sixty-eight years, Thirty-five years later, hiz remaine were taken to Keo- kuk, Jown, and a monument erected over them by the citizens, (©. 1932, Western Newspaper Union SOME USUAL TYPES OF HEART FAILURE Undue Physical Exertion Among Them. A certain rate and strength of the heartbeat is required to pump the blood through the blood vessels at a rate sufficient to supply oxygen and food to the tissues and to remove wastes, A heart that for any reason beats slowly or too feebly or stops entirely fails to meet this ne- cessity of life. ‘This is heart failure, Slow and feeble heart beat may in the normal person be brought on temporarily by excess action of the heart nerves. This will lead to wenk- ness or actual fainting, but not to death, because the condition Is usual- ly very temporary, More serious causes of heart fall- ure are: Injury to the heart muscle itself; Injury to the blood that supply the heart muscle, or in jury to the valves in the heart. In this last condition the heartbeat may be as strong or stronger than usual, but the work done is largely wasted, due to the Incompetency of valves Valvular usually due to bacteria the and, by Injury, the same kind of distortion see In sear tissue In other the body. If this occurs people the heart may en larged and more muscular, thus com pensating for the leakage of the valves, In older com pensation does not take same Another ty be caused In cally too vessels growing on valves causing as we parts of become people guch lace to the degree. pe of heart the untrained treme and prol In such ea r become “~ en ——— nO this disease Is marked the heart re- ceives Insufliclent nourishment and the sensory nerves of the heart may be jrritated to a producing the excruciating discomfort called “angina pectoris.” The normal heart, however, 18 a pretty tough piece of meat. A bul let may pass through the walls with. out stopping lis activities, The in juries may be repaired by surgery and the organ function almost as well as before, degree Teddy Bear Sanctuary Koalas, known colloquially as “na tive bears,” real live teddy bears in soft, plush-like fur, have lately be come the object of special solicitude, both official and privase, In Aus tralia, For several generations no occurred to could Australians that gearce, epidemic got ever become But a fatal among them some years ago, killing them by thousands. is now forbidden, Even more prom ising Is the setting aside of weii-su highly only these attractive marsupials but and chance for their lives, animals Platinum Mist Platinum is like water by caused to evaporate the wnia Technology, precious probably the world's mist, thin vapor condenses into films upon & It Con them virtu tiy : § imoeather than dew it muentiy, over fibers, converting then ” a — amine Mercolized Wax Keeps Skin Young Cet an ounce and ues us directed. Fine partides of seed skin peel off until all defects such as pimples, vey spots, tan and freckles dissppesr. Biin is then soft and velvety, Your face locks years younger. Mereclizsed Was brings put the hidden besuty of your skin, Te remove wrinkles uw one ounce Powdeped Farolite fissclved in one ball pist witch bhasel. At drug stores, “Company From America” Appreciated in Orient Anybody might claim to be widely known and appreciated for whom a native of Shanghal would bulld an addition to his home, hopeful of a visit some time, That's just the posi. tion in which Dr. Samuel J. Braden- burg of Clark university and Mrs. Brandenburg find themselves, When Dr. H. Blakeslee reached Shanghal recently on his sxion for he hunted Was a stu man wing he George mi Unele Sam, formerly The Doctor Blakeslee a "Fou wht x g Clark young and sald Doctor and Mrs, promised to visit day, and he had the rooms ready for their from America” for whom best 8 none the Orient.—Warce coming, “company the too good in ter Telegram, Sheep ulturist Russia Leads in Should the Russian agri to his sheep first class breed altention be decidedly serious. Accord investigators of the Depart- Agriculture, Russia nas sheep now apy other in the world, but the greater an type mparatively inferior the southern prospective stock ment of than Country unimproved rs In i higher than last ion of the econo Takes the Ticket AN thie rie regularly. these plementary vitamin D, * Firm flesh, x, »