IF I HAD GIFTS I wrre Kina of Fairyland And had tha rielit to nay low blc8Rinan ahntild be aiied around IJown here, irom nay to nay If I might Rive to each and all Whatever giftii I chose .What ahoiild I give, my little boy, To you, do you suppose? Not hoap of gold nor mighty ship To nail the ocenn blue. Not wealth to mnke of other boy The hired staves of yon But ruddy cheeks and apnrkling eyes, A laugh that had the ring Of honest pleiiHure in it, and A heart for everything! SHOW it wd, ors IN the Far Went, particularly In the For Southwest, the newly ar rived settler often find) that he linn strange neighbors not only Indians, but white desperadoes, who nre morn to be feared tliiin even Utes and Apaches. Two young friends of mine good. Steady, New ICiigland born young men were so unfortunate us to buy liuiA In the vicinity of nn especially ugly nieniliei of this outlaw fraternity. They bad been brought up to obey the law, and respect the properly uud rights of their neighbors. They could be bravo enough in the defense of any just cause, yet they dreaded and shrank from the use of deadly weupons against a fellow-being. I'lain, fanner-bred boys, CJllbert and Chntlcs Small had, by steady Inbor and economy, saved up a capital of $1700. Willi this they emigrated to Colorado and started a small stock farm, llfteeu miles from Alamosa. By availing themselves of the Homestead ace and the pre-empt ion law, lliey se cured a tract of 31!) acres of land lying upon n creek, with a range extending back over the bills which was not likely to be taken by other settlers. At a point a short distance below, where a mining trail passed them mid where they judged there would In time lie a railroad, they built n frame house, which they opened as a hotei, and In which they also kept 11 stock of grocer ies. Some eight or teu miles from them lived a man named Peter Ilergit, who professedly worked a mine, but whose place was really a rendezvous for ren egade cowboys and other desperate iMiaracters of the Jesse .Tames type. It was Intimated that several dar ing robberies had been planned, and also that Clate Walker made it one of his stopping places. Walker was a notorious gambler and dead shot. He was supposed to bo the leader of a band of train robbers, and was said to have killed not less thail ten men In various affrays. It was said, too,., that occasionally, when times becume' too monotonous because of the lack of excitement, he would kill a man "for fun," just to keep his band in. He had a pleasing; habit of riding through small towns and camps, shoot ing promiscuously at everybody he saw, to keep up the terror of his name -a matter he appears to have been vnin of. It will seem well nigh incredible that such a man should be allowed to es cape justice and to run at large. Such Is the ugly fact, however. In scores of similar cases, owing, probably to the circumstances that n officer likes to attempt the arrest of these despera does, who generally carry two, and sometimes, three, heavy revolvers, and are marvellously quick and sure of aim. As nn example of the wonderfully rapid and accurate shooting of some of those frontier men the writer re members seeing a cowboy at Baton, New Mexico, ride his horse at full gal lop past a telegraph post to which was planed the round while cover of a paper collar box, and lo.l;;e four balls from bis Col Cm pistol in this small jiurk while passing. Afterward he entertained us by throwing lino the air, one after aunt her, a handful of peanuts, and crnkitig each as it fidl with a single bitilet. Then he did the same thing again, tossing the nuts up rapidly, and twirl ing the revolver round his forefinger after every f-hoi. Finally, throwing the nuts up more slowiy, he replaced bis pistol In Us sheii th at his hip after every shot, druwing it for eaeii suc ceeding nut, iind did not miss one out of six. This shows the accuracy and quickness of aim of many of these lawless fellows; and such u marksman was Clute Walker, who added to his reputation, moreover, the more mur derous one of being a "killer," which, In the phrase of tills section, means a desperado who will shoot a man upon the least provocation. Our two young stockmen had heard of this border monster, but their first actual ac quaintance with hlru began the first week after putting up their sign,. "Small Bros., Hotel a-d Grocery." Walker chanced to pass one morn ing, and seeing the new sign, and by way of calling attention to himself, reined In his horse, drew his revolver, and opened lire on the sign, shooting the first letter, "S," to pieces. Then, dismounting, he kicked the door open, and walking in, demanded a "cock tall." Gilbert, who chanced to be Inside at the time, told him civilly that there was no bar In connection with the house, for, true to their borne princi ples, the young men bad determined to keep a "temperance bouse" a greater auomuly In the West than many may at first suppose, "A temperance house!" shouted Walker, and he vented his astonish ment and disgust in a burst of oaths and reviling. "No man shall keep a hotel with nothing to drink In It In these parts!" he said. "If you don't have liquor, and good liquor, too, the next time I call, I won't leave a whole dish or a whole bone here!" And as a foretaste of what he would do he kicked over the table and smashed three or four chairs by way of leave tukin - , TO BHINC. If I were King Fairyland, With none to any mo nay. O, little girl, what think you I Should bring to you to-day? Nny, I should bring a'-ros the sea From some knight-ridden strand No mincing little "nobleman," To ask you for your hand! I would not raise up castle walls Where you should be the Queen, Rut I would let you play with dolls, Still artless and serene. And I would uut within your heart The everlasting grace That lifts n woman out and leaves An angel in her place. S. K. Kiser, in Chicago Times-HcralJ. With such a customer on their hands It Is little wonder that our young friends felt very 111 nt ease. Still they were bold men, nud were determined not to be bullied Into keeping rum; so they went about their business ns usual. Nothing further was seen of Walker for two weeks, when one morning, while Charles was getting breakfast, Gilbert having gone out to look after the cattle. The tirst hint that Charles hud of his visitor's presence was ini otlier volley of shots at their sign board. This time date had shot Ihe second letter to pieces. It was apparently ills way of knocking. Immediately af ter he kicked the door open. Under these circumstances It Is not very strange that Charles stopped out of a buck door .:t about this time, and went behind the corral, from whence he heard Walker llrlng repeatedly nud a great smashing Inside. When at length the desperado had taken his de parture it was found that he had made a complete wreck of the crockery and furniture, and In the grocery room l:e had helped himself to tobacco and emptied his revolver nt the kerosene barrel, which, tapped In half a dozen places, wus deluging the Hoor. I shall not undertake to say what the duly of my young friends was; whether they should have resisted the outrage and defended their property at the risk of their lives or moved away from so dangerous a neighbor hood. What they did wns to get out of sight whenever they saw Walker coming, and let him do his worst. It chanced ihat after a time a second cousin of my young friends came West to see them. His name was Forney, mid he was then a student nt the military academy nt West Point. He dropped In upon the' Small broth ers quite unexpectedly one afternoon, and it Is needless to say that they were very glad to see him, and that they passed a very pleusaut evening. Nothing was Raid about Walker, for Gilbert and Charles, having nn hon est pride In their ranch, were loth to let I.loutennut Forney know how bad ly they were off In respect to neigh bors. The desperado happened to come along, however, the very next morning. Charles and Forney were sitting In the dining-room wh'.'n Gilbert came rushing In. having seen the gambler coining up the road. "Old Clate Walker's coming!" be ex claimed. "Put out at the back door!" Charles leaped to his feet, but our young West Pointer rose more leisure iy. "Who in the dickens Is old Clato Walker?" he nsked. "A regular border terror! A desper ado! A killer!" exclaimed Gilbert, "lie's likely to shoot uny one of us at sight! Come on!" "What! Hun from your own house?" said Forney, surprised. "Why, what hold has this fellow on you?" "No hold whatever; but he's a dead shot and n double-dyed murderer!" cried Charles. "You don't know him as we do. Come along with us nnC get out of his way." "Not 1!" exclaimed Forney, who per haps felr that his military reputatioi was at stake. "Take your two guns and stand ready la the kitchen. I'l, stop here and see Mr. Walker." lie hurriedly took his revolver from his overcoat pocket, then stopped tc the window behl.id the desk on t Jit counter. Willi his customary oath, the gamb ler and dead shot kicked open the door and slnme In. The young lieutenant Mit on the high stool behind the desic, apparently reading the newspaper. He did not look up. "Hello, you sneak!" shouted Walk er. "Where are the tender kids thai keeps this temperance hotel?" "I think they've gone out to hide," suld Forney, carelessly turning lihi paper. "They i-uid there wns u man eater, a regular anthropophugus, com iug, and they were going to hide some where." Walker stared. "Veil, well!" he ripped out. "If you ain't the freshest kid I've struck In ten years: Bight fresh from the East, aren't you, young f idler?" "Yes," suld Forney, moving the pa per. "I'm from the Kust, und I'm pretty fresh, I suppose. I'm a younf! fellow, but I'm a pretty nice one." "Dou't you give me any of your lip!" thundered Walker. "Do you know wrc I am?" "How should I?" said Forney. "It none of my business, fin only here on a visit. I don't care who you are." The bully flushed, stung by the care less contempt in Forney's tone. "Suppose," he muttered, tuking n step toward the counter, while a mur derous gleam crept Into his eye, "sup pose i were to tickle your Adam's ap ple, with my dirk; whut then?" "Then I'd Bhoot you dead for the scoundrelly hound you are!" exclaimed the young cadet, sudden presenting hi cocked revolver full In Walker's face "Move stir a hand and I'll shoot you like a dog!" "The first man thnt ever got the best of me!" gasped Walker; "and you a little whipper-snapper from the Kust!" "No matter what I am," said Forney, sternly. "If you move a hand, l'i; shoot you! Gilbert! Charlie!" Th two brothers, who from thi kitchen had heard the above dialogue, and were several times on the point of taking to their heels out at the back door, now entered guns In hand. "Cover him, Gilbert," snld Forney. "If he stirs a hand, put a load of buck shot through him. Now, Charles come and take his pistols and his knife." Having dlsnrmed Walker, they marched him out of the door and around the house Into the cattle cor ral In the rear of It. This corrnl wns built of ndolie bricks, the wall belnp from seven to eight feet high, and In closed a space about eighty feet square. They gave him no chance to get the start, but kept him covered with gun and pistol. They gave him a chair to sit on, however, nnd there he sat nil day, watching the cadet nnd Gilbert, .md they him, whllo Charles rode post haste to Alamosa to swear out a war rant for Ids arrest, nnd summon the sheriff nnd his posse to take him. The officers, homing so dnngercus n ruf flan wns renlly waiting their dlsposnl, were not slow In responding to Chnrloi Small's summons, nnd by three o'clock that afternoon the young lieutenant had the satlslncilon of seeing the "bor der terror" taken Into legal custody and marched off to Jail, But, ns Is too often the cose In the Far West, the prisoner was lynched instead of being tried nud convicted ol his crimes. lie wns tnki u forcibly from jail "by a mnsked party from one of the mining camps, the third nlghl after being lodged there, nnd hanged, w lthout any form of trial, to the neat est tree. Lieutenant Forney had proven him, self a hero, and was greatly respected for what he had done lu bringing. Walker to justice. Waverley Maga zine. Must I'ut the Itlame on Homebody. The young mnn hnd returned from his wedding trip, nnd wns again at his desk In the office. It wus the day after his return that the Junior partner called him to his desk nnd said: "Now that you're married, Mr. Quills, I trust you will be considerate In your treatment of me." "I don't quite understand you, sir!" exclaimed the youug mnn, In surprise. "Oh. It's n little early, I know," ad mitted the junior partner, "but there's nothing like taking time by the fore lock. I suppose you haven't been out late at night yet?" "Certainly not, sir." "And It's none of my business If you have. But when you do stay out some night, be considerate. Uemeinber thnt I have a reputation for fairness nnd humane treatment of everybody in this oillce that I would like to retain. Don't tell your wife that you're sorry you're late, but that that slave-driver at the office piled work upon you to such nn extent that you had to work right Into the night; don't tell her that the tyrant you work under gave you onc-and-six-pence for dinner, and told you that you would have to post all the books In the office before leaving for the night. Just Invent some other excuse, you know." The youug man thought the matter over for a minute or two, and then asked, anxiously: "Well, if I should bo late, what shall I say?" "Oh, put Is on the senior partner, ns I do. He enn stand it." Tit-Bits. The Abuses of Advertising. A conspicuous example of the dese cration of natural beauty nud gran deur has been the placarding of the historic Palisades of the Hudson, near New York, with advertisements of real estate, merchandise, and medi cines, says the Chenango (X. Y.) Her ald. Happily public sentiment has been orotised ugainst the particular offence, nnd it lias in the uinin been discontinued. This is but one of the thousands of grand passages of scen ery that; have been despoiled by the slgnwrlter's Inartistic and vulgar brush which ought to be stopped. Where there exists law, State or muni cipal, It should be evoked speedily nnd ellectively to put uu end to this spe clcs of vandalism. In tlu absence of legal remedy It should be combated with an aroused and enlightened pub lic sentiment. The owner of property, whoilier in city or country, who allows it to be made the medium of this par ticular variety of public offence ought to be made to feel the effect of public disapproval. The spirit -which prompts publicity in the mutter of business Is, of course, to be commended, but better results can be obtained through advertise ments placed lu the columns of estab lished newspapers and other legitimate publications than lu the resort to that lorm of scenic desecrutiou which Is of fensive to public taste nud against which the public is making a vigorous protest. In a Hurry For American Bhots. A man carrying a dress suit ense plastered all over with foreign labels, and wearing a suit of tweed that fitted him like a gunny sack, rushed Into a shoe store near Broad street station and called for a pair of American shoes. "I've been abroad for two years," he remarked, as he kicked off n pair of thick-soled, shapeless-looking shoes about three sizes too large for his feet, "and I've landed-Just got Into New York this morning, and hur ried right over on the first train. I want a pair of shoes that fit me com fortably, and yet look like something." He got them and went out vastly pleased. "That's nothing unusual," remarked the proprietor, after he had gone. "They don't know how to make shoes on the other Bide." Philadelphia Itecord. Spirit or tha Age Is IT act-Finding-. "Although It has been the century of the widest conquest, It has been the century also of tho greatest toleration, of the keenest human sympathy, the most active helpfulness; In an era of action and of freedom, man has be come a brother t j man as he never be came lu eras of meditation and au thority. It ha been tho century of heroic fact-finding, the century of the emancipation cf thought from mystery and dogma, ard of the yielding of pre cedent to exwerence. World's Work. ESCAPED FffOM SIBERIA REMARKABLE STORY AND THRILL. INC ADVENTURES OF AN EXILE. The HuA-erlngs of Frank Oryglaszawskl, who Hu Bent to tha Mines For Far tlclpatlng In the Rebellion of the Itus alan Foles. Here Is the remarkable story of the exile of Frank Gryglaszewskl, who was sent to Siberia on account of his participation In the rebellion of the Hussliiu Poles against the Imperial Government In 18(!3-tl."., who nre five times wounded by Ilusslrtn bullets, who wnlked seven thousand miles through Arctic Ittissln nnd Siberia In chains, who escnped his enptors by a method almost miraculous, nnd re traced his steps for seven thousand miles along the great Siberian rond, "During the two years 18031804," aid Mr. Grygln, as he is now known, "sixteen hundred political prisoners were executed in the prisons at War saw. My two brothers, who were cap tured, had been too prominent in the revolutionary movement to remain long unidentified. At their trial they were sentenced to die together, and I stood among the Polish prisoners nnd looked on while they were being shot to death. My own trial enme soon after. When I wns led out by the guards I was Informed that I had been sentenced to n life of banishment In Lublin one of tho uttermost provinces of Siberia. . "Late In August the) transport left St. Petersburg, and nt tho end of three months we arrived at Tobolsk, Just ov er the Siberian boundary lino. Our lino of march wns along the? great Siberian rond, of which much has been told and of which so much more enn never bo told. The prisoners wnlked lu chains, nnd were tied to one anoth er to prevent nny one escaping. In front, to cither side and behind the guards marched, with loaded muskets uuslung. Their orders were to shoot any .who attempted to escape. "Following the main Hue of inarch came the 'telegas.' These were rough wooden wagons without springs. If a man fainted or dropped lu the line from sickness ho was loaded on one of these until the next 'etnp,' or sta tion, wns reached. Here a stop was made for the night. "Even during the journey of three mouths in Kussla there was much dis ease nnd dentil In the transport on ac count of overcrowding in the prison ers' rooms. But It wns the hospitals that we feared tho most. Time after titue I have seeu men drag on uu til they dropped dead In their tracks rather thnu enter one of these hos pitals. "Long before we reached Tobolsk the horrors of what was to come hnd dawned upon us. The pittance which the Government granted us for support was smi'll enough, nnd permitted our buying only the coarsest kind of meat nnd Hour. But for many days before our arrival at' that city the oflicers In charge hnd withheld the greater part of the allowance, nud no one received more than three or four kopecks a' day. After we had talked among ourselves I was selected to present the griev ances of the transport to tho Governor of Tobolsk. This I did when occasion offered. He Immediately tlew into a most violent rage, nnd roundly abused tho officer iu charge of our party. "I wns stripped to the waist, and two soldiers were detailed to give mo a hundred lashes with the knout. I wns benten accordingly until I fell In n faint from pain nud loss of blood. At the conclusion of my punishment salt was rubbed Into my wounds and I was thrown on n 'telega,' where I was left to recover my senses. That the ex ample might prove even more elllcleut the officer ordered that I receive on my bare back twenty lashes with the kuout before the transport entered every great towu. "In the 'etnps' the vig'lauce of the guards Increased, If uuythiug, nud under no conditions were the prisoners ever allowed to leave their room. No water wus allowed, except for pur poses of cooking nnd for drinking. The penalty for tho Infraction of the rules wns death. "Tho women nnd the children num bered at tirst about two hundred. The children died llrst, then the women. As long as nny-of these unfortunates could hold up they stayed afoot; then they took to the wugons. "We pushed on through the winter, spring- and summer of lHii.". The pris oners had dropped off from lidOO to 10D0, and with the coming of the win ter of 18(i5 only nbor.t eight hundred were left alive. One day the prisoner 'next to mo procured a sniull Kulle a mere play thing, fashioned for wearing us n wntchcharm. With this he managed to sever the arteries of both wrists. As he held It In his hand for u moment while tho blood began to How, I reached for It and quickly concealed It by sticking the blade lu the burk thong which bound me to the prisoner opposite the dying nmu. "When the guards stopped the trans port to drag the suicide away my pockets were searched. No pointed Instrument was found about tne and the Incident was soon forgotten. But with tho knife I managed to slowly saw away the thongs which bound me to my neighbors on cither side. On tho morning of December 0, 18051 have alwuys celebrated the day as my Fourth of July having severed my bonds and awaited a favorable oppor tunity, I broke from the transport and ran. "I was muflled up In the some great coat that I had worn from the hospital, and my feet and hands were heavily covered, as was my head. Tho guards were ulso encumbered, and I had run perhaps a hundred and fifty feet before three or four shots rang out almost simultaneously, and I fell. My fall was due rather to chance than to Intention on my part, for as It hap pened the bullet which struck me could not have knocked me down. For some tlmo 1 lay In he suow motion less. "I had learned while with the trans port that It would be useless to at tempt to escape by going East. Ac cordingly I turned back upon the road over which I had come. "If I had been supplied with weap ons of any kind 1 might havo been comparatively safe from the attacks et the wolves. As It was I was forced to sleep at night tying myself in trees along the rohdslde. Living In this fashion I followed the trail for six weeks, growing weaker day by day. Finally a blinding snow storm came on. Feverish and confused, I wan dered from tho trnll nnd lost my way. That night I ascended a tree with dif ficulty, tied myself to the trunk nnd went to sleep rather, I should say, I must have waxed Into Insensibility. "The fever must hnve seized strong ly upon me, for when consciousness returned to me lu the movulng if I may cnll It consciousness I wns dim ly aware that my hand wns almost frozen, while I thought thnt I had heard the sound of rifle shots. Some one came tinder the tree and spoke to me, I felt myself be"lng untied, nud for six weeks I know no more. "I was In the exile home of two Rus sian university students, who were serving out a term of some years for having been suspected of plotting ngntust the Government. They hnd been hunting on the morning that they hnd found me. "I followed the rond n year, and came In the spring of 1807 once more to the city of "Tobolsk. Here I ob tained, through the agency of friends, a disguise, and here I wns furnished with additional funds. "I pnssed the Austrian line In safe ty, nnd, learning that my mother nnd only sister were living nt Cracow, I made my way to that city." There Is little more of noteworthy In cident In the life of Mr. Grygln. For a while he lived In Cracow with his mother, but his proximity to the Uu3 Rhin border made his friends nnd fami ly advise thnt he either enter the Aus trian nillltnry service or leave the country. With $50t) in gold ho bndo n last farewell to European shores nud sailed for the United States In 1870. He wns then but twenty-three years old. In Minneiipolis young Grygln went Into business ns a contractor, in 1888 he wns appointed Assistant Su perintendent of Public Buildings un der tho Harrison Administration. After leaving the Government service he traveled extensively throughout Cen tral und South America In the Inter est of American capitalists, and In 18!)3 he accepted the position of spe clnl land ngent to Alnskn for the In terior Department. New York Herald. CURIOUS FACTS. There Is a well at CarlsbrooUe Cns tle, Isle of Wight, lu which the water stands 170 feet below ground level. Yet drop a pin into It and you will distinctly hear it strike the water. A spiral chimney, lHO feet high, has been built near Bradford, England. Tho chimney Is square in cross-section, and euch layer of brick Is shifted three-sixteenths of an Inch out of place, thus giving a peculiar twist to each side of the (Hack. It is tho law in Maine that tho boun ty for bears shall be paid when the animal's nose Is shown. In New Hampshire the cars must be exhibited. Some enterprising sportsmen living near tho border of tho two States get a double bounty by collecting on the noses In one Statu and on the ears In another. Of the few Chlnnmcn, compared with the population "In the Celestial Empire, who reside In the United Stntes, not inn.uy take their departuro by the American route. If a China muu gets tho notion somewhere in tho nlghborhood of his cue that ho Is listed for a world beyond the present one, he makes baste to get home and find n resting place on the Oriental side of the Pacific Ocean. A pocketbook mode from the skin of a murderer is In possession of the New Jersey Historical Society. . A man named Antonio Lo Blanc in 1S:W killed a man, hU wife and a servant, nnd tried to kill a daughter of the same mail In order to get n gold watch which belonged to the daughter. Lo Blanc wished to present the watch to his sweetheart. Lo Blanc was bunged in Morristown, where u public park Is now located. His body was turned over to a physician fot- dissection. Tho pocketbook was for years the property of Sheriff Ludlow, who hanged Lo' Blanc. Fannie O'Kennon, daughter of Feter O'Kennon, died recently nt her fath er's home In Matoaca, AVest Ya. The doctors say she died of old oge, al though she has Just celebrated her twentieth birthday. She was remark able from tho fact that she had not grown In stature since she was two years old, and her faculties nt tho time of her denth were those of a child. She was only two feet two Inches tall, could only articulate such words as she could when two years old, played with picture books and in every way acted as a child. Her face, however, was wrlukled like that of nn old woman. Herlousness of n, German Olllelol. Not long ago an American resident in Hnmburg hud a funny experience of tho seriousness of German official dom. Her pug puppy barked friskily one evening from his ploco In the frout garden at a scud-Intoxicated custom house officer who leaned against the pnlllugs. The next morning a ponder ous document was presented to tho owner, which ordered In pompons terms that "tho dangerous dog" should be kept In tho house, under a penalty of $125, until tho official veterinarian should pronounce upoii his condition. For ten dnys poor puggy was kept In the house before the State veterinarian found it convenient to call, and he was then gravely freed from his durance, as the Inspector found him "not suf fering from hydrophobia nor iu dan ger of biting." Jo Honor of Her Mew Cork Leg. Near Sallna, the other day, tho friends and neighbors of a youug wom an who had met with an accident pro ceeded In a body to her home aud through nu eloquent spokesman pre sented her with a cork leg, after which there were music, recitations nnd a supper. The local paper lu giving an account of the affair, delicately notes that "tho next day the donors were re joiced to know that the limb fitted ad mirably." Kansus City Jouruul. - THE E!T& Of FASHION) New York Clly. Every woman real ises the advantage of a wnlst that can become decollete or high ns occnslon requires. Tho present style if guimpes for nil ages makes such a trnnsposltlon ensy of accomplishment nnd enables both the high nnd the low styles to be equnlly effective. The very pretty Mny Mnnton model Illustrated can be mnde with a guimpe or permanent yoke nnd sleeves ns pre ferred, nnd Is suited to nil soft silks crepes, nets, laces nnd the like. In the original, however, It Is of apricot satin Alglou, with trimming of velvet ribbon in a darker shade, and remov able gulinpe of cream guipure over white satin, nnd makes part of a cos tume of tho new nnd wonderfully beautiful soft silk with satin finish. The foundation for the wnlst is a fitted lining cue with the usual pieces, which should be carefully and thor oughly boned. On it nre nrrnnged the yoke, simple back nud full front when the bodice Is to be worn high. Whether the wnlst Is to be worn high or low tho right front laps over the left In surplice style, und tho double frills edge, tho low, round yoke nnd run down the edge of the opening to the waist, two extra ones being arranged nt the ni-iu's-cyes to form short sleeves, Narrow ' velvet ribbon edges these frills, nnd wider is made iuto bows nt the right shoulder, the neck und thy waist, with a loose, soft strip connect ing the two Inst. When worn high the neck Is finished with a stock that closes invisibly at the centre buck. To make this waist for a lady of! medium size four and a, half yards of material twenty-one inches wide, or two yards forty-four inches wide, wiU be required, with cue and seven-eighth yard of all-over lace eighteen inches wide for yoke and sleeves. Woman' Tliroe-uurter Coitt. As genuine winter hns become ." fact the demand for the comfortable warm coat has niado Itself felt. The May Mnnton model shown In the lnrgo drawing Is smart nt the snmo time thnt It fulfills all the demnuds made by Jack Frost, and Includes many od mirablo features. The original Is made of tan colored melton, with col lar, revers nnl trimming of mink, but mode shades, brown nnd black are all In vogue; all fur Is correct and many excellent models lire mnde still sim pler with collar of cloth and reverp of penu do sole, or velvet or both of cloth braided nd edged with fur. Tho coat is cut with a modified box front uud half-fitted buck, which In cludes under arm gores and provider the perpendicular Hues that are so generally becoming. The fronts are under-faced and roll back to forin the revers, and the collar Is In curved sec tions that fit the neck comfortably and provide the correct flare. The sleeves are two-seamed and in bell shape They are faced at the wrists, and mny be finished with or without the culTs The coat is closed in double-breasted stylo with handsome buttons. The front and lower edges are finished wltb machine stitching In tailor style. To cut this coat for a woman of me. dlum size three nnd one-eighth yards of material fifty Inches wide will be required. FIunIi Kevlved. Plush, a fabric which has been out of style for some years. Is now revived SVENINO WAIST. ny some smarc tauors, wuo can in a v inchc way mnke almost anything "go," pro- J terlal twenty-" y wj(ic vlded that it be In good taste. The B yards thirty-two "",. M bond around the bottom of the skirt I and thrce-quai'tt ' re(,uircil. is a feature of a tailor-dress. It can lunches wide, ww TJ-' .i be of plush ns well ...... need not be straight. hut ' Tot ns a wnvy border. The wi,i,i J TinrMftr ttnr ob r.,.. ... ' With a cloth gown use ,, ' velvet or nlush. . ",nl" ns n linriW fne n . . 11 or A ,. .tucj SKrti The Vogue In .lewrlrv Everything In Jewelry, M " lets and earrings, teems ' ' ion, nnd long gold chains sot win, els nre very much vtnm of ennmeled gold set In nt J'i Ihe entire long!!, for,,, on, "ll which is set rortu as nPVV t . are more attractlve.and tis not ,', snry thnt they should i,e kind In one chain. Young Kin, d, In n chain which is hm)K ,vi k charms, given to them from tin time by their friends. The I.lHlo KW, Instead of using lm,',0lV which Is fult nnd loos,. ,US (1 Into n narrow, tight eiilT, tmm dhdes prefer to semi li,n . . with the sleeve teriiihintiuK j, ! ..o,,,.,, v.uiru hip iiiiii. a,.e fl This begins Just above tli (vrl falls almost to tin- kiuicklcs, resembling an old-fnslii0 1 It Is a lacy sheath for tiu. !,,,. palm of the hand. It , 0. keep them fresh If made f ,vll,(, An KsHxpci-iitlnK Will, Tossibly is exasperating n wi was ever drawn was thnt of Sit. Maynnrd. a fatuous lawyer In (in of William HI. It Is si'iid that 1 liberntely worded his will In ai;. ous terms, so thnt. several fine i tlons which iind disturbed him ii lifetime might be decided In cutir tor he wns dead. Hosiery to Mnlrh, Hosiery to match the drew i latest fad, nnd ns if this wcr. enough it must be Inset Willi littl tifs of luce like the trimming costume. Voiiinn'A IIoiim (lon-n. The careless, 111-lltting wriippe fallen into deserved ohlivlou, I tasteful homo gown In ' which 110 sensible woman 1or nut. The sinilile. but em-lh-'l'1 Mnnton model shown lu me - panying cut, Ills closely tit " i.t f t ilu front, wliei' held by a ribbon nt the wnlsi shaped backs nndjmut'r" ,rlv nil (.ITlu-t- 111" fill'llllenil'SS HI and the soft folds of ilie front :ij versnlly becoming. -s fh""'11 i. i I, ,.ciimi.i'i iii dahlia I II, 1,1,11,1 l1-llllWlltll anil " ' uiiifr nm f-niiiil v ntim-oP'"1" MM... .,!iii.ni;J lllll'k. with uu gore. Ilts smoothly, i'"1 ' Is made over a slant limni. almrln ilnrta TIlO sUeVCI seamed, and roll over to tutm J the wrists. The neck i .. i (,n.iiiw collar that omitted when desired and one j worn In Its stead. x ii.i t,,r n womnn 111 cut linn !, , dlum size six and a hid' 'aru A THItEE-QUARTEH COAT. A HOMS 001 ' mir fi'wmi
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