FF EVER fashions were tuned to make up a perfect spring style pa rade, the modes of the present moment qualify to perfection in that respect Perhaps '* is their high color, for clothes are wonderfully gay and bright this season, or maybe it is the quan tities of crisp white organdie which flutter about the new costumes in way ~* frills and bows and such-—whatever it is, the spring styles are simply fas cinating, What's more tile they offer opportunity to dress to type. Everything's in fash ion, from quaint taffeta and woolens whose colors are a riot, to types so severely .nannish as to muke one gasp at sight of them. Speaking of taffeta, the newest thing out is the rough matelusse weave. It is about as smart 8 looking material as one can possibly select for a “first™ spring frock. It is wonderfully good looking for Jacket suits, too. A most advanced fashion styled of matelasse taffeta is pictured to the left in this group. It is Ino brown, black and red plaid. the colors up hand somwely due to the bhlistery puffed sur which gains for it the name of matelass~ taffeta, ! WeH they are to be expected now that fash ion has brought the Gibson girl to life again. The fact that the hat this modish maiden wears is also of taffeta, goes to show how this material is scoring in everr realm of the mode. How ever, do not forget that a touch of velvet is likewise an Important factor i+ the making of fashions this spring. they every are t mt versa showing face, The sleeves In this instance the flow ers on the modishly shaped chapeau are vel belt and the big bow at the neck. Of is of velvet, for the story of fashion would not ne complete with out its repeated mention, Look to the right in the picture and will get iden to how bright-calored woolens are contrasting their vivid in bicolor and tri color ways Just listen to this of color—livels blue for the hat coarse shiny straw, with a fire-red quill, which the The jacket and and while mixture on the scarf trim. As t« the aundaci this respect spring and course il Jou some ns tones this citation season. nobby of picture fails to show skirt are of a gray with black and red sleeves and for the startling color ous doings of are making summer 1033. Then there is this n er one's spring suit stripes contrasts in for fashion history 4 atter of wheth is to be or not to how senti up. Of course the right dainty som with the del tring colors and other pastel shades which are so fash le this spring. pretty young be furred. It's surprising ment for fur is keeping it must be just which blends exquisitely icnte grays. beiges, miss in has pletured center of our illustration SY ed in tl styled two-piece of dove gray worsted a bon lovely fox. The bow tie of wide gr yelvet ribbon adds a charming touch. Please to note the allover tucking on the sleeves If a garment is not shirred this season or finely knife-pleated. then It is ai most sure to invishly trucked, for designers are doing an infinite amount of this sort of thing. € 1233 the l on most cleverly wears with her youthfully the fur quest at she of platinnm ny be Western Newspaper Union FLOWER GIRL By CHERIE NICHOLAS This dainty little frock is an un usually pretty style for the flower girl who expects to play an important role in a spring wedding. It can easily be made at home at little expense of or- gandie, silk mousseline, chiffon or flat crepe. The arrangement of the pleat. ing Is very effective and quite along entirely new lines. In Paris every: thing that can be finely knife pleated is pleated, in the styling of fashions for grown-ups as well as for children. Vivid Crepes : Crepes are the favorite evening fab rie of the moment. Splashing the palette »f black, brown, red and white, which hae been seen all winter, are pew and vivid tones such as cyclamen manve, eyclamen pink, capary yellow and waler green. HAIR STAYS SHORT, NEW HATS REVEAL i lovely locks. They are made to re veal perfectly waved side hair and leave no room for any chignon in the small erown or back. “Double-up” is the very newest coif- fure being featured by the sinartest hairdressers. [It is the continuation of the popular brushed away-from-the forehead style. The hair is whisked directly back into a swirl and finds its way back again around the ears, or only one of them, terminating there in any one of the many curl fashions “Double up” really gets its name from the fact that it is as smart for the morning as well as the evening a coiffure for the mondaine as well as for the sportswoman. Cottons and Linens to Have Big Summer Vogue All the signs, according to couture activities, point to another big sum- mer for cottons and linens, At pres. ent both cottons and linens that are being shown are puzzling fashion peo- ple, because they so often look like woolens, The natural Mne-color suits worn with darker blouses are a smart ex- pression of this mode, Other details that are registering are the narrower daytime skirts and walistlines that are slightly lowered. Necklines are still showing high tendencies, but an open, square cut is used In a couple of daytime dresses and jackets, Veils Are Becoming More Flippant Than Formerly Veils are more flippant than ever. They are found on tailored or formal hats, accented for color, pattern, or manner of wearing. They may be any length from eye to shoulder. The most plquant novelty is the Talbot style, the vell tying under the chin, Narrow belting ribbon In tailored effects of two and three colors is re marked In recent collections of milli nery Importations. Peru’s Capital Gets New Dress Lima, Ancient City of the Pizarros, Is Transformed Into Modern Metropolis. (Propared by National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C)WNU Service, EMOLISHING . here, building there; installing modern water and sewerage systems; tearing up rough, ageworn cobble stones, putting down smooth modern concrete and asphalt In their stead; opening up new highways both to the mountains and the sen; and develop- ing motor routes to the outlying re- glons of the plain: thus the makers of New Lima are transforming the Per uvian capital, city of the Plzarros, The older portion of the city, as well as the newer region which cir- curnscribes it, Is sharing in the mod- ernization, True the older section Is and must remain an area of one-way streets, for its thoroughfares are so narrow that even street cars must observe the one-way law, Likewise, the sidewalks are so lacking In elbow room that only two people can pass one another at a time, and the one on the outside must keep a close watch lest he be struck by a passing trolley. Old and new fight for supremacy. The blue-necked turkey buzzards have lost their role as the scaven- gers: the ox-cart has given place largely to the motor truck; the old barouche has abandoned the streets to the modern automobile; and the patient, panniered donkey making official in Plzarro's stern the In days goue hy nt had Even old palace is toward me there urge wlerniza- Was no igle name 1 th. Each block had its own particular gnation. The two streets that lead from to the National blocks does wix six different block The municipal auth change all this and single designatior names, gave length, The one tl de Ia Union and Carabaya. But the populace it. The man northwest Armas still have none of whi Wisiness on gide de wanted glore Bale of Shoes in a Peruvian Markel. on Escribanos, and the forth on the next he was doing business on Mercaderes, and they to do quently the Giron de la Union is swal- lowed up by the se i it. These may be named without ernday rhyme or are without indication of but the people cling to them. despite whatever confusion it costs the post may perplex whatever harvest it drivers, block still continue so, Conse veral calles which compose mod they or sequences ; reason, and alphal their tical other the visitor, and How the System Works. Many Interesting stories are told fllustrating how this mysterious sys tem works, One concerns a stranger who hailed a taxi in Calle La Merced and asked the chauffeur to drive him to “Baquijano veinte cinco.” The driver did not bat an eye, but drove like Jehu up Jesus Nazareno, skidded on two wheels into Giron Carabaya, raced around Plaza San Martin, and whirled up through Boza, landing his shaken passenger at the address give en—on the same street, but simply in the next block from where he started! The name Mercaderas tells us of ftreet of Lima and Escribanos or sheltered under the portals on the west side of the Plaza. Calle Mantas proclaims the square where the ladies of Peru's golden past “spent their hus bands’ substance in riotous purchase of shawls, homespuns, Indian textiles, and lingerie.” The history of Lima's past is writ ten In her streets, In names that the municipality long has wanted to wipe out In favor of through desighations and numbered blocks. But the people of the city cling to their streets with a devotion that will not permit con venlence to triumph over romantic tics with the past, In wandering about the old city, one comes upon many an architectural rel. fe of the days of the viceroys; but, umgng all of these, none is more im: pressive than the monastery of San Francisco, There one may be ushered into a porcelain garden where the artistie tiles of the cloister compete with the living flowers that bloom in the earth they Inclose, No one has described more beaut) fully the effect of this porcelain gar den than Mr. F. P. Farrar, of “The West Coast Leader.” “Here,” he says, “is a porcelain garden, a ceramic bor der of springtime, where the blues of delphinium and lupine, the yellow of cytisus and the gold of colchicum, the creamy white of arabls and the mauves of aubrietia, blend into the fresh foliage of the overhanging trees and the azure of the new-washed skies." The charm of the story of the origin of this porcelain garden almost equals the beauty of the ceramic triumph it- self, On a November morning In 1619 a vast crowd had gathered in the Plaza de Armas, for there was to be a public hanging, and these events were Roman holidays for the | populace, The publlie crier had announced: “The Warrantable and loyal Audien- cia of this City of the Kings has con- | demned to suffer a shameful death | on the gallows Alonso Godinez, native | of Guadalajara, in Spain, for the mur- | der of Marta Villoslada without fear of judgment human or divine, Let him who did so pay the penalty! This sentence is to be read in the presence | of all lest they meet a like end! Let justice be done!" Came a Reprieve. The condemned man had taken his stand beneath the noose and the hang- man was nervously adjusting the fatal knot. Suddenly a monk pushed his way through the throng, climbed the gul- lows platform, and handed a parch ment to the captain of the guard After the latter had read it, the two engaged In a moment of animated conversation, after which the padre led the condemned man away and into the portals of the monastery of San Francisco, The crowd, disappoint. ed, hung about the Plazuela San Francisco discussing this strange over. throw of justice and who had denied them their holiday. But later the becume known, That morning the con demned man ha tho would de berating those reason for reprieve open | WAS or the Here seemed to be the the prior saw tt ff woman ie man who had drunken repent his lifelong { in a in & splendid tiles. Xo he hastened these to setliing the to murderer Viceroy ant of the tice In caffold an fee that granted the cor rem wou tie that nso Godinez was § can soe act of mercy his work and threw 1 day “the walls blossom with tures which in thelr mellowness, rich- ness. and seductive beauty rival t of the Alhambra i it is doubt ful if outside of Spain there is to be found a finer example of porcelain en- tablature in the heyday of its art than here” Lima Is peculiarly a ¢ churches, with some 70 in and, with nearly four cent standing ecclesiasticnl hind them, to buying religious ohjects, thedral is a magnificent structure, much larger than Pizarro built, but still not so grand ag the one erected during the early years of the viceregal regime and destroyed by the great earthquake that wiped out Callao, the nearby seaport. The high altar Is of massive silver construction, In the chapel of the Vir. gin is a celebrated image presented by the Emperor Charles V of Spain, and in the Chapel Arcediano an orig inal painting attributed to Murillo, representing Jesus and Veronica, Here rests a glass and-marble casket which is most interesting of all, for it contains the half-mummy, half- hose itself: ity of limits ; uries of out be much given {8 its tradition the people are The the great conquerer, Fashionable Hats Taboo. New worid. Even those women who dress In the latest Parisian elsewhere put on their plain black | mantillas when going to church, some congregations those who come litely to remove them and substitute to be seated, Lima one of the most impressively | beautiful is the famous palace of Tor- re-Tagle, once the home of the mar | guises of that name, but now the headquarters of the Ministry of For- elgn Relations, famous for its brilliant social with a constant succession of lunch: eons, teas, dinners, dances, champan- adas, and receptions, Nearly four cen: turies of wealth, leisure, and oppor tunity have written their impress of culture on the descendants of the no- 4 bility and official classes of the co lonlal regime, Most of the higher class residents, #0 to speak, board with their cooks. The latter are given specified allow. ances each day, and out of that are expected to keep their masters’ ta- bles up to the exacted standard, and to keep the market men with whom doled out to them, * A. Modern Lovers of leisurely travel eannot read without a sigh of the evil days upon which the steamboat has fallen, the steamboat whose traflic was for so long indispensable to the pros perity of the country’s Inland water. ways. It is only a little while since A newspaper puragraph recorded the financial distress of the Hudson River night line, and now we read thx: the day line, which has made the lovell- ness of the Hudson and of the Rip Van Winkle country familiar to gen. plight—sunk in debt. That, the story of the famous Lake Cham- plain line which for 106 years has 150, The automobile has left these bare bones of trafic. Our age de mands the service of speed, and the steamboat which 60 years ago, passed our grandsires’ childhood dreams of all that was imaginable for old fogies and slowpokes, the automobile can make up to some ate lourneying by steamboat, for the another. that can afford istas and reaches that open to us as we thread the Highlands of the Hudson in a steambont: we cannot in a car got view the George's crystal. that panoram haze-shrouded aud the n the the traveler Lake Champlal teamer, Sound lines us those «t 1 close of isles aters or of {1 of EW eep mits the rondacks that mn The bless be steamers | tween Boston and New York survive and there are Indications that they prosper, a reminder of the spacious days long ago when every evening a proud procession of rival Bound boats curved round the Battery in New York, Boston bound, gay with bunt- ing from stem to stern, filling the hearts of children on East river fer- ryboats with inexpressible longing just once to make that splendid voy- ange to the mysterious East, the scene of Bunker Hill and the home of Paul Revere, One of these days, we hope, the steamboat will come back into ers and bays and sounds with nll the dividend-earning glory of the en: shanted past.—Boston Transcript. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers