Standing 2t morn on the broad highway, 1am a pilgrim, backward going, Where? Ah—where? If there's any knowing Only you can show me the way. 1 am aweary, grave little daughter, Broke is my staff with the steep hill climb, Dry is my flask of the holy water Drained of the rose when the new had sought her Long ago at the matin chime. 1 have tarried too long in the sordid towers ‘That sear the valley on yonder side. Somewhere, child, for the world is wide! Lead, little feet that are light with laughter, Back, far back, ere the end of day. Ion the highroad, stumble after, Only vou can show me the way. —Margaret Belle Houston, in Ainslee’s. THE EXCEEDING WILINESS OF MRS. generals are but slaves to small circum- stances. Unfortunately, in the interval after dinner, in which Mrs. Mimms wash- ed the dishes while her husband took forty winks in his chair on the porch, a Wasp hal assaulted Mr. Mimms. He was tingly made her As a result, she was not only told very shortly that the money was not to be spared—that she had been prepared for—but also that the dress was not need- ed, and, moreover, that she was ting too old and gray to care about such tom- foolery. As her last dress dated back to the meeting of the same Association four years before, the injustice as well as the disparaging nature of this remark had cut like a knife, and Mrs. Mimms, con- trary to custom and to her previous in- tention, had retired from the field with- out further ado. Now she sat and thought it over, and the more she thought the more it became apparent to her that Syram didn't love her any more or he would never have spoken so cruelly. The disappointment about the dress was swallowed up in the pain of shat ge ht. e sight of a lilac sunbonnet coming * along by the fence, usually a harbinger of easure, brought no balm to her soul. e knew that it was Homey Story bring- ing the last number of the Female Fire- side Friend, to which they subscribed in common, and of which Homey, in her capacity of dressmaker, had first glean- ings. Mrs. Mimms had looked forward to Saying to her, with n indifference, whic masked hidden pride, “By the way, Homey, I've decided to buy that gray alpaca down to the store, an’ I want you to come over next week an’ make it up for me for the Association,” and to re- Seiving Homey's shvious congratulations ore. ow this pleasant prospect wa ended. P P omey came up the steps, mopping her ump red face with the a her csunbonnet. She was too hot and hur- ried to miss the usual enthusiasm of her frigd's grasting ere’s the Fireside Friend,” she said, breathlessly. “I thought Ma was never goin’ to be through with it. It looks like the less holt her mind has of things the more she seems to cling on to 'em. She's be’n goin’ over that fashion plate for the Best pars of three days, an’ I'll lay she couldn’t tell a thing that’s in it." Mrs. Mimms held out a languid hand for the paper. “It don't make no differ- ence,” she said, dispiritedly. “I wasn't specially peed in it nohow.” ey lool er surprise. Only one thing could account Suns. a Pi on such a subject. “Ben’t you a-goin’ to get that gray alpaca for th iation!” Shay gray pa e Association! , with interest. The subject had been under animated discussion out tween them some dozen times before. "No; I've decided that I don't keer for it,” said the loyal Mrs. Mimms. “My blue nun’s-veiling is plenty good enough. le think a heap too much about clothes an’ sech trifles, anyhow, an’ I don’t ya go set no Example of fine n’ to the you s Sess young folks," she added, “Yes, your nun’s-veiling is of course,” said Homey, wil parent diplomacy of one too polite to dis- sent y from a proposition. "Well, 1 must hurry back an’ fit Phemie Strickler. She'll be waitin’ when I get there.” HOw she Savin that dress made?" queried Mrs. Mimms, with i ne S, a faint show “Same old tight way that mak look jest like a oy She's be’'n Ck clothes that same way ever sence Jake Kite told her it was becomin’ her, when he was a-waitin’ on her, an’ She was Soult an’ had Some bust mea- sure. n married fifteen rs an’ got eight children, ba rR to eno ge SEX Homey hurried away to her waiti patron, and Mrs. Mimms turned ry tention slowly to the Fireside Friend. Its first page was taken up almost entirely wth the picture of a pompadoured young woman in a low-necked gown, with a Lady Teazle curl over one shoulder and a piece of black velvet around her throat, | { | E it 3) i 7 | ! g% 2 58 i fi B32 i : : 2 £ : 3 § 83 | : £2 le S s258 : | i 1588 gf 3s 1H RsE i fhe + ; i ji E88 i g + 2 i £ 8 g > g 2 3 2 143 TH § | kL i : : 2 i : : f Eg i 8% : 5 g =s F 5 £ Re 3 1 2 “et g ; 52 § 's eye. and went into the e little mirror on top drawers and two wire hairpins that confined her light grizzled hair in a tight knot on the back of her head. With the aid of a horn comb she began to twist and arrange the hair into as near a resemblance to the pompadour in the picture as the scanti- ness of the material and her own unskil- Hines bc Bl a iD © 0 ing, combing, pu or hair that has been parted in y the same line and brushed flat for forty years has contracted habits that are hard to overcome. When she had finished constructing the mpadour there was nothing left for the Py Teazle curl or even for the smallest knot behind. But Mrs. Mimms, her blood being fired by what she considered the success of her efforts, recklessly supplied the deficiency by snipping off a pale blue ribbon bow from her most sacred “tidy” in the parlor and pinning it on so as not only to shield the vacancy behind, but to resent two coquettish loops in front. Then she went into the “comp’ny room’ closet and dived into the cedar chest in which her own and Syram’s best clothes were kept. She dared not sacrifice the blue nun’s-veiling on the altar of a wan- ing affection, as it seemed that it must be her only dependence for the future, but her second-best dress, a brown cashmere of ten years before, which had been turned and made over until it was too faded and worn for anything but rainy Sundays— that she decided she might venture on the extravagance of using. She divested herself of the black and white calico which was her ordinary at- tire, and put on the brown dress, turning in the neck in a very modest V in front, around which she folded a large white handkerchief. surveyed herself. To her eyes the result was wholly satisfying, and a most pleas- ing and artistic variation to her usual ap- pearance. She even ventured upon a bit of black ribbon around the throat, but the feeling that this was going too far | and would certainly be characterized by Syram as “tom-foolishness” made her take it off rather regretfully. She thought it did much to increase her resemblance to the young female in the picture. A glance at the clock cut short her ad- miring scrutiny and sent her hurrying to the kitchen. unaccustomed prep- arations had taken far more time than she had realized, and she well knew that no amount of mysterious attractiveness on her part would atone in Syram’s eyes for any deficiency in the matter of sup- Pe Halt an hour later Mr. Syram Mimms, coming up from the stable with a foaming milk-bucket in ony hanes wi hajted in his progress by the sight of Mrs. Mimms feeding the chickens in the back yard. She had denied even the common justice of a checked gingham apron to the brown It required a great | Then she stood off and | oe — time,” retorted Mrs. Mimms. She wasin pursuit of the advice to “make little mysteries with one’s husband,” and she was en herself immensely. Mr. ms picked up the milk-buck- ets with a violence that sloshed some their contents over the of his over- alls and strode away in a high state of in- ving strained the milk into the row of waiting crocks on the porch table and it away in the cool spring-house over little branch, he washed his face and at the pump and flattened his wiry hair in front of the little mirror which had reflected the decorative attempts of Mrs Mimms—this last an un to the ex- | wholly unwilling concession ! ce of Tish Chapman—and to his wife's call to supper. As he entered the kitchen, he looked appre- hensively around the room, even giving a furtive glance behind the door; but there was no one there save his wife, hospita- bly beaming at him behind the coffee-pot, he was too much displeased to ask further explanation. “Wiii you have a cup of coffee, Mr. Mimms?” asked his wife, in exactly the same tone that she would have used to the circuit-rider. “Of course I'll have coffee,” replied Mr. Mimms, tedly. “Ain't I be’'n a-havin’ it these forty years? What 'd you su; I'd have?” rs. Mimms made no direct reply. “Let me give you a piece of this egg bread,” she said, with sweet cordiality, real good, of I do say it as shouldn't.” in Mr. Mimms caught himself look- ing involuntarily aro the room. The term “egg bread” was one reserved only for company use—the name “batter bread” being the ordinary appellation or the delicious mixture of corn-meal, eggs, soda, and buttermilk, which formed the, main feature of every valley breakfast g : supper. “Yaas, I'll have some of that, too, fer a change,” replied Mr. Mimms, sarcastical- ly, “seein’ as thar ain't nothin’ else to have, an’ a man as is be’'n wrastlin’ with young steers all the evenin’ feels the need of a leetle somethin’ to stay his stum- mick.” “I'm sorry to hear as you've be’'n hav- in’ trouble with the young cattle,” re- marked Mrs. Mimms, politely conversa- tional. Her husband made no reply, and the conversation languished. He continued to watch her furtively as the meal pro- ceeded, marvelling greatly at the change in her appearance, though, mankind, he could not tell where the difference was. “I made a diskivery to-day, Syram,” said his wife at length, “that you'll be interested in.” “What was it?” demanded her husband, briefly. “Guess what,” said Mrs. Mimms, co- | quettishly. She was in further pursuit ! of the little mysteries detail, as she in- | terpreted it. | “How kin I tell what it was!” inquired { Mr. Mimms, irritably. “It mout have | be'n ‘most anything. I can't tell what it was.” “I found a big wasp's nest vp in the front porch roof,” said Mrs. Mtmms,with determined sprightliness. The subject was unfortunate. Mr. Mimms pushed back his chair with a harsh, rasping sound, arosein wrath, and stoad towering over her. “What is the matter with you woman?" he shouted. “What's come over you? Who are you a-lookin’ for, and what in the nation have you got on your mind?” His wife looked up into his face with a sweet and engaging swile, “I was only a-lookin’ for you, Syram,” she said, de- murely. Now, by all the canons of the Fireside Friend, Mr. Mimms at this juncture should have begun to act in a loverlike and affectionate manner. But he didn’t. He stared long, with bulging eyeballs. Then he turned on his heel and went out. On the front porch he sat down in the | chair lately occupied by his wife, and leaning over, with his elbows on his knees, gazed at his feet in deep thought. "1 never would have dremp it!" he said at length. “I never would have dremp it! I've always knowed as how her aunt Jinny went this way, but Sarah's always be'n so quiet and peaceable like. I've hearn as how d disappointment or bein’ crossed in anything bri it out, but Sarah is too sensible to take on so "bout a leetle thing like that. I hope she ain't a-goin’ ter git violent! She ain't that kind, neither, but I've often hearn her tell "bout how her uncle Mace woke up one night an’ found her aunt Jinny a-lean- in" over him with the cyarvin'-knife a-screechin’ out somethin’ ‘bout killin’ hawgs.” Cold sweat suddenly broke out upon the brow of Mr. Mimms. He looked anx- iously down the road to see if he could see anything of old Dr. Lindsay coming along home on his way to supper, but there was no one in sight. In the house he could hear his wife singing as she washed the dishes, and he noted with in- creased anxiety that instead of, “Here I'll raise my Ebenezer,” as usual, she was humming somethi about “Meet me cashmere dress for fear of ling the | when daylight is ng"—a ditty he re- effect, and she was doing her best to ap- | membered to have heard long years ago pear unconscio when he was a man used to us. “Whar've you ben?" demanded Mr. Mimms. “I hain’t be'n nowheres.” | go across the mountain every other Sun- ! day to “keep comp'ny” with her, much | against the wishes of his parents, who “What be you a-doin’ rigged out in| wanted him to marry a valley girl. He them then?" he asked, severely. ' had never regretted his choice. e had Mrs. Mimms tilted her head to one side : been a and “biddable” wife to him, and smiled up at her husband a some- what shy but coquettish smile. "I was jest expectin’ of somebody,” she said. “ ain't a-sayin’ who." Mr. Mimm's eyes almost bulged from !i his head at the unexpected nature of this reply. He set the buckets carefully down on the ground, that he might concentrate his attention n the matter in hand. “It can’t be Bohannon Smoot,” he soliloquized, half aloud. “She wouldn't dike up so for them; and the circuit-rider ain't due for two weeks yet. It must be Tish Cha from over t' Court-House.” Tish was a first cousin of his wife's, who had money in her own right, and of whom Syram didn’t approve because she was too “dressy” anc wasted her money and put notions into his wife's head. “It’s dretful expensive havin’ so much comp'ny. I wish folks would stay to home an’ do their work an’ mind r own business,” he added. ‘I never said nothin’ ‘bout comp'ny,” replied Mrs. Mimms, with some spirit. She remembered with indignation that it had been two months since there had been any one in the house to a meal. The - | close ways of the valley often grated on her more generous Rio : : t, “Then what are you a- woman? Who are you a-lookin' for?” demanded Mr. Mimms, in exasperation. or Mina | | and never crossed him save in the ! matter of extravagant notions in the way of Sress. which he had been prompt to curb. half unconsciously 15 the article As he read on, expression more fixed, and presently a look of . sion began to dawn on his Soun- y ex- treme relief. After be had read it through once he turned back to the and read it again. At the close he the Papss down witli chuckie. al, of all the tarnation fool pieces | that ever I read this beats 'em,” remark- ed Mr. Mimms. "“An’ to think she should have be’n actin’ up to it that way.” “Never mind who. You'll know ingood | Sudgenty a look of noble resolution on of his hard countenance. “So French husband keeps his wife ' supplied with flowers and bonbons, does ‘he? 1 wonder what in the nation bon- ‘bons are? The flowers seemed too friv- of 'olous even for the frivolity of the occa- | sion. As he idly pawed the magazine in his consideration of the matter, enlighten. ment came to him. On the back cover | the picture of another young lady engaged in eating, with great apparent relish, a . number of small round objects from a ‘box labelled “Best Assorted Bonbons” caught his eye. . | “Candy!” he ejaculated, succinctly, and he sei his hat and started down to- and . wards the village. | When his wife came out on the porch | some ten minutes later, he was just com- | ing up the steps with a bulging bag in ' bis hand. It was Mrs. Mimm’'s turn to ! stare. Some half a dozen times in her | married life such a had been present- {ed to her, and this limited experience i told her—or tried to tel! her, for she was 'too incredulous to believe it—that the , bag contained lemon and peppermint stick candy. | "Here's your bonbons!" said her hus- ' band, with something more of indulgence "in his face than it had worn for twenty | years. “An’I think I can manage to git | that thar dress for you—ef you won't make it cost too much,” he added, pru- | dently.—By Daisy Rinehart, in Harper's \ Bazar. | ! | Toget an idea of the prevalence of i “Stomach trouble” it is only necessary to | observe the number and variety of tab- { lets, powders, and other preparations of- | fered as a cure for disorders of the stom- ach. To obtain an idea as to the fatality i of stomach diseases it is only necessary | to realize that with a “weak stomach” a | man has a greatly reduced chance of re- | covery from any disease. Medicine is not | life; Blood is life. Medicines hold disease {in check while Nature strengthens the | body through blood, made from the food | received into the stomach. If the stom- | ach is "weak" Nature works in vain. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery must | not be classed with the pills, powders and | potions, which have at best a pallative | value. The "Discovery" is a medicine { which absolutely cures diseases of the or- | gans of digestion and nutrition. It puri- fies the blocd, and by increasing the ac- tivity of the blood-making glands in- creases the blood supply. It is a temper- ance medicine and contains no alcohol, neither opium, cocaine, nor other nar- cotics. —Every flock of 50 or more animals will be better off under the care of a sheep-dog. Don’t Be a Slave. Don't bg a slave to pills. Every pill user is in danger of such slavery, unless he recognizes the fact that violent purga- tives are hostile to Nature. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are small sugar-coated pills, which act on the bowels, stomach and liver with an invigorating action. They cure disorders of these organs and do not beget the pill habit. it Was Tuned to Play a Costly Air For Banker Fould. Rachel, the famous actress, did not neglect any means of turning a more or less honest penny. In his new life of her Francis Gribble tells the fol- lowing story of a guitar: Rachel first saw and admired it in an artist's studio. “Give it to me,” soe said. “I want to pretend that it is the guitar on which 1 earned my living as a street singer.” The jest seemed a pleasant one, and the artist handed over the instrument. and hung it in her own apartment, where it duly attracted the attention of Achille Fould, the banker. Hear- ing its story, he expressed -° wish to possess it. “Very well” said Rachel, “you can have it for a thou- sand louis.” “Five hundred,” trying to bargain. “No, a thousand,” said Rachel, ex- pressing her disdain for those who haggled. And the banker actually paid a thou- said the banker, ure at the Hotel Drouot and that the into a fit on the floor. Devoted to Duty. “Are you ever coming to bed?’ he called out. promised Mrs. Jones that I'd keep away, and I'm going to know what time he comes home if I have to stay up all night." —Detroit Free Press. Went Further. “Didn't I tell you that when you met a man in hard luck you ought to greet him wtih a smile?” said the wise and good counselor. “Yes,” replied the flinty souled per- son. 1 gave him tbe grand laugh.”"—Wash- ington Star. Forget Them. If you would increase your happiness and prolong your life forget your neigh- bors’ faults. Forget the slanders you have ever heard. Forget the fault finding and give a little thought to the cause which provoked it. A Sensible Start. “My wife has joined the reform movement.” “What does she propose to do first?” “Get some reliable woman to take care of baby."—Pittsburg Post. Room For Improvement. Agent—Wouldn't you like to try our new typewriter for a spell, sir? Busi- I'm employing now, American. sir.—Baltimore nm— A Matter of Measure. “He writes poetry by the yard.” “That's probably why his verse is poor. Poetry should be written by a — Death Frem Imagination. How faith may kill as well as cure is shown by ome of the cases men: tioned by Dr. Charles Reinhardt in “Faith, Medicine and the Mind." A convicted murderer had been handed over to the physiologists for the pur pose of an experiment. He wax told that his hour bad come and that it had been decided that he should be bled to death. His eyes were bundaged. and he was pinioned. opportunity firs baving been given him to see the formidable array of surgical instru ments, the vessels to catch the blood and the other terror inspiring para pheraalia of the vivisector's liboratory A biunt instrument wax now drawn sharply across his throat und a stream of worm water was made to trickle from his neck into a vessel below the operating table upon which Le lay After awhile the sounds, which tad previously been continuous and peur at band, were gradually reduced uutil the patient. doubtless supposing that! te was bleeding to death. gradually lost consciousness. fainted and ex- pired. The Pznama Hat. A popular comedian ut a Lambs club gumbol in New York told a pana: ma hat story. “A young clerk out my way,” he. said. “gave his girl a present of a’ panama last year. Then the day be fore the Fourth he got a couple of comnlimentaries for a picnic, clambake | and corn roast down the river. and he wired the girl: *“*Meet me at pier 13 tomorrow morning at 7. “The next morning as he stood on pler 13 dreaming dreams of love, im: aginiug a long, sweet day of billing and coving. he saw his girl advancing with her father and mother. He was terribly annoyed, and on the boat, as soon as he could get her alone. he. hissed: “What did you want to bring the old folks for? “*Why, Will. you told me to she, said. and she showed him the tele gram, which the operator had made to read: * ‘Bring pa and ma.'"” Whistler Before Whistler. Mortimer Menpes told the following story of Whistler, who was to deliver an address one day to the Society of British Artists: “The master at length entered, faultlessly dressed. walking with a swinging. jaunty stép. evident- ly quite delighted with himself and the world in general. He passed down the gallery. ignoring the assembled members, and walked up to his own Plenic. Bring panama.’ | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. The mind is the master over every kind of for- tune; a great mind becomes a great fortune. At present buyers are giving considera- ble attention to the lines of cloth coats which are now being sold by manufactur ers, says the Dy Goods Economist. Gar- ments made of heavy, rough materials art the most desirable. The majority of these are double-faced, with the reverse side of a plain color, which is used for the trimmings. Scotch tweeds, melanges, ratines, fancy mixtures, cheviots and fan- cy woven serges are being taken by man of the buyers, who expect that they will be the t demand during the coming fali and winter. For walking or shopping the kind chos- en is heavy, so much so that no trace of skin shows through. Such silk, thick asit is, has an entirely different effect from lisle or the best quality of cotton. It is not always “clocked,” but may be if one prefers. Thin transparent silk may be embroid- ered over the instep in black for after- NOGA uke Jf agin Sha Mk is Snider. st: that she is not s to an walking in such hosiery. y For evening, stockings chosen are so fairylike as to be literally gossamer. The lower part may be entirely of lace, or open work so fine as to appear like the latter. There is a fad for light colored hosiery in the evening, with black satin or patent leather ps, but it is notreg- Slatien, shoes and stockings matching as a rule. Any girl whose mother or grandmother has a silk shawl, no matter what the size, | should endeavor to have it given to her. Just now the loveliest summer wraps and matinees are being made from them, and the fact that the delicate material need not be cut is apt to make the own- er more willing to transfer it to the younger member of the family. As the shawl is large or small, it is manipulated pointed OF square. The best effects will be gained in latter, if the wrap is of the smaller variety. It is taken tor granted that the shawls have fringed ed but should this not | be the case a silk fringe as wide as one ‘can afford should be carefully sewed around. If it is impossible to match the color, white may be substituted, although a black fringe on a white shawl is especial- ly effective. If the square is a small one the top is turned over wide enough to form a ‘ border, 12 inches at least. With this still ' back, the shawl is folded squarely in two | up and down. i Then 20 inches from the middle the top | border is tacked together. This may be { done with a pin to try the best propor- tion. The wrap is then put on, the pin or tack coming at the middle of the back of the neck. It is then necessary to have another | tack put on at the bottom of the V form. ‘ed at the back, and the wrap is com- picture. And there he stayed for quite | plete. fifteen minutes. regarding it with a' It requires no lining, of course. Ribbons, or a fancy clasp may be put satisfied expression. stepping DOW | 54 “to hold it together cver the bust. Rachel embellished it with ribbons | sand louis for the worthless knick- ! knack. It is said that he learned the truth when he tried to sell his treas- discovery of the hoax nearly sent him | “1 don't know,” she replied. “I. track of her husband while she is “1 went even further than that. ness Man-— Not if it spells like the one | foot."~Birmingham Age-Herald. i backward. now forward. canting his | head and dusting the surface of the glass with a silk pocket handkerchief. We watched him open mouthed. Sud- denly he turned round. beamed upon us and uttered but two words— ‘Bravo. Jimmy!"—then took my arm and hurried me out of the gallery. talking volubly the while.” mt King's Queer Present For 3 Queen. In all probability the king of Daho- mey's present of pipes aud loin cloths never reached Buckingham palace. On one occasion, however, Queen Victoria had publicly to accept a gift of quite as embarrassing a nature. This was in 1856. when the king of Siam sent a mission to England. On being present- ed to the queen, who received them seated on her throne and wearing her crown, the envoys crawled from the doors to her majesty's feet on their hands and knees and then each drew a present from the folds of his robes. The first object placed in the queen's hands was a silver spittoon.—London . Chronicle. Ctagecoach of the Twenties. Brooks Bowman commenced running an hourly stagecoach between Boston and Roxbury on March 1, 1826. He left the town house on Roxbury hill every day in the week except the Sab- bath at 8, 10, 12, 2, 4 and 6 o'clock and, returning, started from the Old South church at 9. 11, 3. 5 and 7 o'clock. The fare was 121% cents each way. Her Good Advice. They had been courting for only four years when Silas spoke as follows: “1 think you oughter give me jest one kiss, Sary, you know; it's far bet: ter to give than receive.” “You don't say?" said Sary coyly. “Then {it seems to me some folk oughter practice what they preach!” Descriptive. One little girl was telling her moth- er how another little girl was dressed at a parts. “And would you believe it, mamma,” she concluded, “her slip- | pers were so tight 1 could see all the | knuckles on her toes.”—Chicago News. i He Was Playing. First Actress—You say you are hard , up. Isn't your husband playing this | season, then? Second Actreess—Yes, ! he is. That's just the trouble. First A.—~Why, what's he playing—Hamlet? Second A.—No; cards! The Other Extreme. Parke—Poor Pilter! His wife is a spendthrift. Is there anything worse, I wonder, than a wife that's too ex- travagant? Tame—Ob, yes; one that's too economical.—Brooklyn Life. : Thin as a Rail. i “Is he as thin as I have heard?’ “He's thinner. Say. when he tried en a double breasted coni one row of buttons was up his hack." — Exchange. There is nothing so easy but that it , becomes difficult when you dag it with _ Variety is given by making the tack a | little to one side of the middle. The fas- , tening then laps over in front, when the wrap is worn. When the shawl is wide, it should be | folded first three corners, regulation | shawl fashion, except that the top is not ' turned over quite so far. Tacking is the | same as with the other shape. i Rainy days seem to have been invented ' as a test of awoman's crder and neatness. | At least so it seems from the number of ! dilapidated and shabbily attired speci- | mens of feminine carelessness that blos- som with the rain. It is enough to make Dame Fashion add to the downpour with tears of vexation for her flouted fancies to see the disregard of popular modes in the rainy day attire. When the girl who is going out gets up in the morning and sees the cloud veiled sky she immediately hies herself to a re- mote corner of the closet and brin, forth her “old suit.” This old suit is in any stage of decadence, from second best to several seasons back. It may be shiny, it may be faded, or it may be merely hopelessly out of fashion, but invariably it makes the wearer look frumpy and in accord with the weather. Then she meets all the e for whom she particularly cares just use she is not well dressed and comes home with a feeling of having left behind a decidedly unpleasant im- pression. One man was so impressed with the pleasing appearance of a girl he knew when he met her one rainy day that he decided on the spot to win her for his wife. “I met Ruth downtown one gloomy af- ternoon,” he said in relating the incident, “when the rain was chasing everybody off the streets and people looked about as much like drowned ducks as possible. She wore a neat gray raincoat buttoned snugly up to her chin; high, sensible looking black shoes, and the snappiest little hat wound with some sort or red scarf. I decided that any girl who could brave the weather and bob up serenely like a flower that simply reveled in the rain was a pretty sort of girl to win. The chances are she would meet the overcast skies of real life in the same glad fashion.” Attractive rainy day outfits are inex- pensive. The well dressed girl will see the wisdom of spending a little less for her ing gowns and putting the extra amount into clothes suitable for wet days. Side frills will be oue of the prominent items in fall , says the Goods Economist, and will be featured in two effects—those made of materials of a more pressy character, Being fash- joned from very sheer materials and Be She. ent on gowns of or kin- dred materials. Tomatoes With Bacon.—A popular dish in Denmark. Lay large squace crackers in the bottom of a ow pan. On each cracker put a thick slice of tomato— either canned or with salt and , and on slice of i og igh el bacon. pan in a hot oven. When the bacon is crisp the tomatoes are ready to serve. Mocha Filling.—Cook of cream, two- and a heaping soon as it threads remove reluctance.~Terence. from add a quarter of a cup of strong ns Jog BSB SHI