J A REST The torrent rnsliv with frenxird might To rest on the quiet plain; The m-nlanche roars in its downward flight, Then century sleeps again. The esg-le that sweep with tireless wing O'er the dome of a brassy sky, At Inst must droop to the "pine's that cling To the crest of the mountain high. 3u )u yWiir iH 'I , vv T "" AXXOC5A, nn Indian liny of the tribe of the Cni'iir I d'Alcncs, was silting one ' evening with Aakloo, his lit tle tister. ut the cilp- of the forest on the shore of Coeur d'Alctio hike, and was tolling her a favorite story, when at one of her interruptions he laughed Jind leaned carelessly hack n:id looked straight Into the eyes of a cougar. "If I were drowning yon would swim out into a great lake. too. rik Crand f a titer Cray Beaver did, wouldn't .you':" the girl asked. She spoke indig oniiii.v. for that day she had heard tin old ;i;an say that hoys like Kanuoga, who went to seliool lit the reservation, instead of into the forest, eottld never be brave Indians, and she was sure that her brother was very brave. It was her show of Indignation nnd her eager confidence that caused him to l.v.vgh row are! to loan lute!:. She waited, but he did not answer. With both hands clasped over liis copp.-r-colored shin, nnd one bare foot raised slightly above the log on which he was sitting, ho stared into the :-eat restless eyes that looked down at him from tiie nearest limb. He was with out a weapon of any kind, and the cou gar was full prowii, witli n body dry lookiiig and gaun: with huugo:-'. Although Its giauco was for the mo ment fixed on him he could see that It had been watching Aakoo and that Its inieroet wus still centred In her. as If it had chosen her for Its victim, lie was seized with sudden fear that she might move unexpectedly and thus pause the creature to spring upon her. yet he sat there seemingly tillable to speak or to think what ought to be Ooue. "Yon would, wouldn't you?" asked the girl. Her voice broke tb fascinat ing spell of those terrible eyes. Kan- "HELD UP noga knew that she would turn in a moment to see why be had not an swered, and In order not to direct her attention to tho panther he lowered his glance and met hers. But there was something in his face Hint made her afraid, and lie looked with startling intentness far beyond her, down the long, darkening stretch of deserted shore, toward the skla covered tepee by the spring1, where Mar-tnla. their mother, and Sis-soa-ka, their father, lived during the hot sum mer. "Stand still!" said Kannoa. as calm ly as he could. It cost him a great ef fort to remain quietly there, without looking up, when he knew what was overhead, but the effort canned him to think more dearly. "Shut your eyes!" he said suddenly. "What for?" asked Aakloo, fright ened still more at the unaccountable change Is his voice. For a moment his fingers tightened fonvulsively over his shin, then grad ually relaxed and unclasped. He low ereij his upraised foot, moving It slow ly, very slowly, down beside the log. onJ when it rested firmly In the sand iie reached cautiously forward and uught the girl by the arm. "We shall play a .iew game," he mild then, and the stranpe. eager suggestion of a smile that flashed over his face reassured her. "Oh!" the er claimed, and at once shut her eyes. Kannogt now looked steadily at the coua, while he turned his sister ubout so that she faced along the shore. "Walk as slowly as you can with your eyes shut," be said. She started slowly enough, but the fierce eyes overhead began to watch her Intently again and to grow rest les, while a yellow foot advanced un easily along the limb and broad tawny Jaws stretched farther and farther Cownward as she moved away. E'tt Kunnoga silently held up his hand and waved It in the air. At this the panther's attention attracted by the unexpected and rapid movement, was withdrawn from the girl. "Oo faster," said tho boy; "go fast er." 4 Olie was out of reach now; br could . -I" 1 1 1 f liiiiPiiiMirir!fiiiiii!iiii iff mm i SOMETIME. The life we live and the ram we run. The sorrrow and doubt that rend, Sonie d.iy the victory lost or won Will come to n quiet end; For mad the torrent and str.inn the wing, And fearful the headlong Hipht. Yet time the end of the day will bring. And after the day the night. Lowell O. Keese, in (an Francisco Bul letin. . St t - V't I, i -mmmnm . i r -Blhi rv. I i j li Hi.' ' i. I' III V Fi II I i'jiit liTri'i. vi r : v'.m'A'wnuj i? vy ju .nj m II ii'mwur sh i . , I I tell by the fainter sound of her bare feet In the sand. "Run!" he called. "Open your eyes and nut. Inn don't look bark, and don't stop till you stand ill the tepee with ! .Var-tnla." 'is that all of the new game, Kau- noRii?" .she asked, doubtfully. "No." lie answered; "there Is more." Meanwhile he still rat 111 the same place, watching the cougar and hold ing Its attention by the constant move ment of his slender arm and of his grimy, t:iitred sleeve. When Aakloo was at a safe distance the sense of his own danger came sud denly upon him. If Sls-sos-ka would only come with his rifle or Cray leaver, an old man Mow. but still a great hunter. If he had only told Aakloo! He turned his head and looked after her. Down the winding track of sand beside the still lake, both grown a dull gray In the evening light, ho saw her miming, and he knew that long before she could reach the tepee he would be beyond the need of rescue. Me had turned his head for only nu instant, but In that Instant the cougar had crept nearer and Its long tail had begun to swing slowly. stealthily, from side to side. Kauuogn saw no hope of escape, hut with every sense alert he studied his desperate chances. The panther lay crouched with Its head toward the forest, while he sat facing the lake. When he had care fully measured the space between them and the distance to the water he jumped away from the log and ran di rectly under the panther. The animal instantly shifted Its head, ns If to leup down from the other side of rhe limb, but the boy did not appear there, and It iurued with mar- a mm niS IIAXD." velous agility before its great yellow body shot out into the air. Kanuoga was crushed down under its weight, but he had reached the lake and fell where the water was nearly knee deep. He felt the panther release its grasp Into order to And Ami footing, and when he raised up for air discovered Its dripping head little more than an arm's length from his own. Then he took a deep breath and lay down upon the bottom, hoping that the pauther would leave him. ,t stood there, however, watching ever him and waiting. Ho started to crawl out from shore, but It seemed to hi in that he had hardly mover when heavy claws sunk Into his leg nnd dragged him bark. Then, without letting go lis hold, the panther Immediately shifted its posi tion and began to drag him out Into shallower water. He made desperate efforts to hold fast to the lake bed. for he knew what the end would be if he reached the shore, b-.!t his tiugers only plowed through t sand. The sharp point of a rock that tore him as he was dragged over It gave him hope; he grasped It with both hands and clung with nil his strength, but In an Instant his fingers were dig ging vainly in the sand again. At last he raised his head for air. The panther at once let go of his leg and came at him with open mouth, hut It moved slowly In the water, and Kanuoga, by a great effort, stood up. Then the beast sprung upon him. The boy bad nerved himself, how ever, and fell as far out from shore as he eould. When the feeling of dizziness that followed the shock had passed he found that the panther held his arm In Its mouth and was swimming that Its feet did not touch bottom. Then, in spite of the terrible pain It caused him, he pulled his arm down 1111(11 the cougar's head was sub merged. Very soon It released Its hold. Then the Indian boy stood up again, and this time he became the aggressor. (Irasplng the slick, wet 'feud ' with both bunds he forced It dep Into the water. The panther's luet touched bottom, and its violent struggles threw him down, but he got up an a in & nnd held the glaring ryes nnd the red mouth with Its white teeth tnore care fullyJust under the surface of the lake. Kanuoga became very weak and his legs trembled feebly under him, but he was thankful that they were long, for h could stand with his head In the cool evening brecxe while the cougar was drowning. At first the pnnlher ninde fearful sounds ns the water filled Its lungs, but these presently ceased, and nt last It hung a dead weight In the boy's hands. He let It sink then and loos cued n stone from the lnke bed to roll upon Its hend. His wounds were slight, but painful, nnd the terrible battle had so weak ened him that when he reached the shore he fell exhausted, with liiB face toward the tepee. He could not see Aakloo now, nor even the ennoo that came In n moment to where he lay. (!ray Heaver and nn old friend, pad dling out from camp, had called to the girl as she ran on the shore, and had hr.ighfd when she told them why she eould not turn her hend to look after them. Then they had seen the boy ond the cougar In the edge of the lake, and their puddles had swung faster and witli stronger slrokes than they had used for many n year. When Kanuoga opened his eyes Gray Heaver leaned over him and spoke gen tly: "Aakloo will understand that game better when she Is older." he said. And across n narrowing stretch of water the boy saw her waiting with .Mar-tnla. Hubert W. McCulloch, in I he Chicago Hecord-Herald. Paris Pnatnt Stories. Pome Taris postal stories ore going the rounds just now, says the Paris Messenger. One of them has refer ence to a letter posted nt a little coun try place In France to the Minister of Public Instruction, Purls. The sender did not put a stamp upon It, knowing that (Joverninetit officials' letters are carried free. The provincial lady official, however, evidently not knowing this, put a stamp upon the letter nnd sent the postman to collect the fifteen cen times from the sender, whose name by some mysterious means, the secret of which is in the possession of her sex, she managed to discover. Another anecdote relates that a well-known Pnrlslnn lawyer sent a letter to M. Milletund nnd put a fifteen centime stamp on It, evidently forget ting that a stamp was unnecessary. Now, the letter wa3 over weight, and the postoflice people, apparently think ing only of the stamp and not of the Minister's privilege, claimed thirty centimes excess. This, of course, Sf. Millerand declined to pay, and the let ter was sent back. The unlucky send-' er was forced to take It back and pay the thirty centimes, making in all forty-five centimes out of his pocket, whereas had he put no stamp nt all It would have been safely delivered. The Ilearth Cricket. Mr. James Rehn, of the American Kntomologlcal Society, has made a special study of the cricket life of Philadelphia. As a result of his stud ies, he writes: "Most Americans were formerly fa miliar with no other cricket than the black field cricket, but recently a light brown species with bars of dark brown on its head, has made its way Into our cities, and this visitor is none other the hearth cricket, the friend of Caleb Plunimer and John Perryblngle. It cannot be denied that we have always had, so far u we know, the little min strel; but recent yeurs have seen a very great Increase in their numbers in and uround Philadelphia. Ills chirp Is quite different from that of our black crickets, and he shows a great preference for the vicinity of a stove, where he soon lts himself be heard. "Tho hearth cricket Is found over the greater part of Europe, Inhabiting dwellings nnd outbuildings, but the insect particularly loves the vicinity of a Ore, such a situation ns Dickens graphically describes in his 'Christmas Stories.' "Philadelphia Record. l'le-Eatlng For Odd lleifons. School teachers sometimes ask their pupils queer questions, If one may be lieve a story told by the youngest mem ber of the Wlthlngtou family. His mother one morning discovered a shortage iu the supply of pies, baked the day before, nnd her suspicions fell upon Johnny. "Johnny," she said, "do you know what became of that cherry pie that was on the second shelf in the pun try ?" "Yes, ma'am," he replied, "I ate it. But I had to." "You had to." exclaimed his aston ished mother. "What do you mean, child?" "The teacher asked yesterday If any of us could tell her how many stones there are In a cherry pie, and I couldn't find out without eating the whole pie, could 1? There's just n hundred and torty-t wo." Youth's Companion. An Old KueIiis. At the Farme colliery, near Glasgow, !u Scotland, there is an "atmospheric" or "Xecomen" engine, which bus been at work drawing coul since 1S01). The cylinder Is open at the top, and the pis ton Is packed with hemp and water. A man works a valve, which alternate ly admits steam to raise the piston and wuter to condense it, so that the weight of the atmosphere will push It dowu again. With the exception of one of two cog wheels broken by acci dent the engine Is exactly as it was when originally set up, nearly 100 years ago. It is the oldest engine at work In Scotlnnd. The cylinder Is thirty-two and one-quarter inches in diameter nnd has a sixty-seven-inch stroke. It Is run at tweuty-seven rev olutlous per minute, and develops a'oout twenty-seven horse power. A C implicated HuutlQff Aocldeut. An iinuiual accident occurred In tba woods ut A'epheusou. George Itlch nrdsou shot a deer and the bullet passed through the animal and hit a treo. From there it glanced off and hit W. Kverhardt. It struck his wrist and hit tho guu stock; fi-0m which It glanced off and e; tered if.he man's mouth. Inflicting a serlou Vouud. Milwaukee Ia!ly Xe WAYS OF THE BRIGAND ' HIS MANNERS HAVE NOT CHANCED MUCH IN A CENTURY. A Standby In Fiction and Art tin I Vul Krljr Practical in His Choi en Profes sion Why He Plunders How Jtapo laon Conquered. The following article was written for the Washington Kvenlng Star by William Elliot Grlffts, LL.D.: A new Macedonian cry "come over and help us" rings in our ears. This time It Is a womnn's. At the opening of the twentieth century the same situation confronts us ns that In 1801. Then collections were taken In the churches to ransom American captives hold In the prlsous of Tripoli. Iu Mohamme dan countries the name of the young United States was the synonym for poverty and impotence. To-day In the same region the Vnltod States means wealth and weakness. On the fid of September. In the Turkish province of Macedonia, on a road frequently traveled, our country wotnau, Miss F.llen M. Stone, and a party of eleveu other persons were surrounded in a mounlaiu defile by thirty or forty Bulgarian brigands, who spoke broken Turkish, wore Turk ish clothes nnd had their faces ntnsked or blackened. The Bulgarian brigands (or were they Turks?) were politely careful to dismiss the English clergy man, his wife ond his wife's father, but. In hope of a large ransom ($110, 000) they kept the American lady. The brigand Is a prenucleut charac ter. Long before the days of Barab has he was In old Greece and Koine. Indeed, without him much of their fas cinating mythology would lose point. Every laud has known him, nnd after he has been properly hanged, broken on the wheel, or boiled Iu oil, his ex ploits form tho staple of nursery lore ever after. The folk lore of China, Japan and India Is ns full of him ns is the England of Kobln Hood, Jack Shepard or Dick Turplu. In a Japan ese Inn one bathes In n tub named af ter a knight of the road, who was duly cooked according to law. Burma has It Dneoits; Syria knew Its patriot spoilers of the Koman, whom Herod rooted out of their lairs only by lower ing down the face of the cliffs great boxes filled with warriors. Even yet the way to Jericho offers work for good Samaritans. To travel from Athens to Marathon the student must go armed to the teeth, itnly Is the classic home of the brigands, with Spain ns a near rival. Who does not remember the brilliant picture of Hor ace Vernet, In which the French dra gon In Calabria pistols the patriotic and picturesque robber? Along the Rhine Schluderhannes Is tenderly cher ished. The Spanish Jose Maria, the French Cartouche, the Italian Pezza are still the fascinating theme of fire side story. Indeed, what would art. fiction and the operatic stage do without the bri gand, with his peaked nnd befeathered hat, his chromatic jacket and flamboy ant sash, and a whole latticework of black ribbons on his leggins? Who does not remember the ditty, "On yon der rocks reclining?" Is not that gen tleman, ever on the decline, none other thnn Brother Devil, or Fra Diavolo? It is the brigand's business to recline on the rocks and wait for his prey. He lives with the sportive goats. The high hills are a refuge for him, as well as for the coney. Indeed, so much is this chronic loftiness affected by the brigand thnt popular etymologists, liv ing In Englnud, who remember Roder ick Dhu and the general tendency of the Highlander to lift cattle, would de rive the word from brlgant, a High lander, and this from brig, a hilltop. But, no! Our friend, ever personally rich in decorative elements, Inhabits more genial climes to the southward. His name, iu its true derivation, ex plains why he Is often so popular, con sidered a patriot, the alleged cham pion of the poor and the terror of the unjust rich. Down nt the root, the Italian word means to be ambitious, to be busy and strive, to achieve grand things. Ouly as the gentleman on the hllltap Interprets these terms to the disadvantage of the traveling public does his name have a bad sense, and mean robber or pirate. Next to cap ture, his business is ransom. Indeed, brigands in the Middle Ages were ba rons, and the later feudal system was a sort of licensed brigandage. In the days when soldiers hud to get their pay la the best way they could which Is largely the situation of the Turkish army officers and soldiers to-day-ransom was a regular busluess. To day It may seem a terribly large sum to pay ($110,000) for an unmarried American lady In middle life. We ask, where are the knights errant! Yet think of the fat hauls which were made iu the past by kidnapers or ab ductors of some sort of Richard I. released on payment (In values of to day) of $2,000,000, or of King John of France, ransomed for $10,000,000 paid in installments. Do we associate the brigand with vulgar thieves and pickpockets? How do wo Injure innocence! Our com mercial Ideas vary from thoso of the kidnapers themselves, or of those who look back tenderly upon them. Usu ally the brigand Is a gentleman of property, as he certainly is of standing in the local community. He exists ouly where government Is weak, and where anarchy prevails more or less, as It has long prevailed la Macedonia and Bulgaria. Usually be is iu collu sion with the authorities, and his plun der Is often shared by the military, es pecially the unpaid military, who are supposed to exterminate him. Tba bri gand Is usually a. very religious man, and eminently orthodox, with a con science void of offense. He follows bis business In order to pay bis church assessments. He vows to the Vlrglu or some favorite saint to burn so many candles or offer so muny prayers, ac cording to the amount of booty collect ed. By a Urge ransom be hopes all the more t glorify his God. Not only Is this true iu Culabrla, In Spain, In the line from Vicuna to Naples, and all over the Levant, but even Bur mese, Chinese and Japanese robbers are devout to the last degree. To this day In some parts of Italy and France, Napoleon Is held in exe cration, because be niado the roads safo and compelled tho abolition of the romantic profession 1,7 bavins every brigand proini'.tly shot, whether he committed murder In the name of the church or for more selfish motives. P.rignadage Is a disease of govern ment, and brigands are the parasites that fatten on the dying body politic. 1; cannot exist wl'.ei'o law Is equal nnd government honest and strong. We must not be too hard upon th Turks, because such an episode of, road robbery has tnken place within the Sultan's dominions, lest he and others might Inquire whether, even in this proud land, our transcontinental express trains are not sometimes held up by robbers. Miss Stone was kid naped while going between the vil lages Bansko and Diumin in the Hal kan Mountains. For twenty-thre. years she hns traveled safely throng Macedonln and Bulgaria, having spent during the last year no fewer than 14-1 days In touring with Bible women ant) training young girls. Amid such a variety of languages she has found that English Is the oest for unity Id education. There are home lessons for the Amer ican people Iu this new Macedonian cry. When n century ago Mohamme dan fanatics In the Bnrbary States kept ail Christian captives for ran som, compelling even powerful Euro pean nations to pny heavy Indemni ties annually. It was the American navy that blew to nloms this scheme of brigandage on the high sens. Our uiivnl captain humbled the llarbnry powers, vindicated the Amerlcnu right to travel and trade, and thus set a pre cedent to the whole civilized world. In 11)01, despite nil our self-conoelt nnd vanity, the United States Is still In Turkey the synonym of wenlth and wenkuess, since a few years ago even a Secretary of State hinted thnt the American missionaries should leave the Turkish empire. Yet yield one point to the Turk and he will glndly take all. If the United States cannot protect peaceful missionaries. It can not protect our commerce or citizens anywhere. y& facts Ui As early as 1734 a bloomery forge was erected at Lime Rock. In Litch field County, Conn., by Thomas Lamb, which produced from 1500 to 700 pounds of Iron per day. A blast furnace was afterward added to this forge. Iu 300 years the average length of human life hns been doubled. In the sixteenth century it was between eighteen ond twenty years; at the close of the eighteenth century it was a lit tle over thirty years, and to-day It Is over forty years. Edward Beaupre, of the Province of Assliilboine, Canada, claims to he the tallest man In the world. His exact height Is seven feet ten and three quarter Inches, and he Is still growing, and expects to reach the eight-foot mark. He is twenty yeurs old, wears a No. 21 shoe and a No. 21 collar. The Danish postman wears a rather elegant uniform of dark cloth and rich braid. The service is said to be excel lent In every respect. The uniform of the Bulgarian postman Is of dark blue cloth with gilt buttons, nnd green col lar nnd cuffs. The French postman also dresses In dark blue, with very narrow red facings. J. M. Longyear, of Marquette, Mich., who built himself a palatini homo at a cost of $300,000 in that city, has be come so embittered against the city for allowing a railroad to run so near his property that he will move the house, stone by stone, to Boston, which project will cost him almost as much as the house Itself cost originally. A few years before the arrival of the Plymouth settlers lu Massachusetts Bay, a very mortal sickness raged with great violence among the Indians In habiting the eastern parts of New England. Whole towns were depopu lated. The living were uot able to bury the dead, nnd their bones were found lyiug above ground many yeurs afterward. The Massachusetts In dians are said to have been reduced from 30,000 to 300 fighting meu. In 1033 the smallpox swept off great num bers also. Savac Diplomacy. During the recent convention of col lege presidents aud scientists who make up the Association of American Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations, Dr. G. W. Atherton told a story of Captain Pratt, the distin guished educator of Indian youth, which convulsed the other delegates. Some one had referred to a resolution "Iu due aud proper form, reduced to writing." Dr. Atherton replied briefly in the quiet, coutalned manner befit ting the President of Pennsylvania State College: "The gentleman's ref erence to a resolution 'reduced to writ lug,' suggests to me the story of an Indian boy and Captain Pratt. Iu the course of some cogltatlou over the bay's disregard of the precepts of our civilization, Cuptuln Pratt asked .the boy of what he wus thinking. "If you please,' answered the Indian, 'I was thinking of a dream I had last night. I dreamt I went to heaven, and wheu I ot there 1 saw a great big black board; and, Captain Prutt, your name was there iu big letter. Yes, sir, your name was there, written iu your own hand.' "Washington Star. Wby ths Snow la Not Black or Bad, Why is the snow white? Is a question frequently asked. Because black suow would be dangerous, so would red or yellow. These are "warming up col ors," aud they change the suu'a rays to beat. Such suow would soon melt aguiu and prove a very poor protec tion. But whits suow throws back the sunlight la Just tho form lu which it receives It, and thus the uuow cau be long ou the ground. Throw dirt on the snow, and its dark color quickly makes It eat Its wuy In wheuever the sun shines ou It. After a snowstorm, oace let the horses' feet mingle the dirt of the loud with the snow and sleighing will soon be over,--Professor S. C. Schmucker, lu )!m Ladles' Huiuu Journal. . .... - New York Clty.-Louls XVI. coats, with all their plcturesqueness of big revers, hip pocket lnps, turn-over cuffs and lace trimmings are among the sea- 111 1 r n w ' -,0. wm xsm: LOTJI8 XVI. COAT. sou's favored designs. This highly ef fective May Mauton model Is cut In the most fashionable Hues aud Is adapt ed to velvet, velveteen, handsome cloth nnd silk, either with skirt to match or in contrast. The original makes part of a costume, the material for which is hunter's greeu velvet ond Is trimmed with bauds of mink nnd large Jeweled buttons, the rest being of brocade and the revers, collar nnd cuffs of Irish crochet over white satin. The waist portion fits snugly and Includes single bust darts. The skirt Is seamed ou ut front nnd sides, but cut in one with the back and the pocket laps are attached at the seams. The vest also Is closely fitted and Is joined to the fronts which are extended to turn back nnd form revers. The sleeves are in cont style with roll-over flaring cuffs and the neck Is finished with a deep turn-over collar. To cut this coat for a woman of me dium size five nnd one-half yards of MISSES' material twenty Inches wide, two and three-fourths yards forty-four inches wide or two aud one-fourth yards fifty four lucbes wide will be required, with five-eighth of a yard twenty Inches wide for the vest, one yard of all over lace for cullur, revers and cuffs, and four and seven-eighth yards of fur edglug to trim as Illustrated. Misses' Long; Coat. Long coats, that completely cover the gowu, make eminently stylish, com fortable out-door garments for young girls and are In the height of present styles. The excellent May Manton model, shown In tho large drawing, is made from Oxford cloth, with simply stitched edges, and is serviceable at the same time that It Is fashionable; but plain or covert cloth In black, grey, tnu, brown and dark green nnd cheviot ore all appropriate for fair weuther couts.while waterproof fiulshed cloths are admirable for rainy days. - Tho cout is loosely fitted without a scant at the centre back. It fulls lu unbroken lines and muy bu plain across the shoulders, or when desired, the applied yoke can be added ns showu In the small sketch. The neck is fiulshed with a regulation cout collar and lap?ls and convenient pockets are Inserted lu the fronts. - The coat sleeves are fin ished with becoming roll-over cuffs. The closing is effected invisibly, by means of a fly. To cut this coat for a miss of four teen years of age three and one-hulf yards of materlul forty-four Inches wide, or three yurds llfty-four lucbes wide will be required. Risen From the Itaubs. Promoted from tho ranks of skirt flouncing, flare rutlles are rising in the scale. They aro now aa accepted mode of "finishing the sleeve of a cloak or Newnmrket. The sleeve Is normal at the ariu-klzc, a.: J only in creases slightly lu Us proportlous ut the elbow. Nevertheless. JilBt below the elbow It Is much e;:tcndtd lu the graceful lines fciven by tluro ruflles. The upper oue is moderately wide, the second 11 ud IhUJ are Increased lu pro- f 7 L MP - 3J portion. Flnre ruffles are finished with stitching. They are near relatives to the rippling revers of fur seen on some "Louis" coats. The undulating ripples take away the severity of a cloth gar ment. Whlto Sstln Linings. How many of these new jnckets have white satin linings! Sometimes bro caded silk appears when a rich cape of sables Is tlung bnckwnrd. The llu lug Is pretty sure to be white. This daintiness Is nil very well for wenrlng over a light theatre waist, but It Is anything but economic to wear a white satlu lining over a dark cloth waist. The dark cloth Is sure to come off a little on the white satin. The heat of the body will surely help to rub off a Utile of the crimson, brown, green or navy blup or black wooleu upon the white lining. Gray does not seem to vub off, but other colored woolens are apt to do so. Pretty 811k Sachets. Little silk sachets are to be found In many designs. One of the prettiest varieties is of silk, a small bag, em broidered with forget-me-nots. While handwork Is expensive as a whole, there are many small things done by hand which are lu good taste. Ollt Metal Kuckltts. There are buckles made of gilt melal over n background of black satlu rib bon, the metal part belug jeweled. Woman's Evening Waist. Full waists of light fabrics made In baby fashion are In the height of stylo for evening wear aud ore both charm ing and almost universally becoming. The very pretty model Illustrated Is of loulslue silk, iu a soft shade of pink, banded with black velvet ribbon and finished with a drapery of pink tulle nt the neck Over the shoulders are blnck velvet straps, covered with em broidery In pluk and white and held by fancy ornaments. All soft, pliable materials are, however, appropriate, aud tho waist can be raised either by being made high, with yoke and long sleeves, or low with elbow sleeves, hav ing the shoulders cut away or not, as shown lu the small drawings. LONG COAT. The lining Is carefully fitted nnC. closes at tho centre front. Tho full soft back and fronts are simply gath ' tred at upper nnd lower edges and arranged over the foundation. Tho ex tension straps - are cut In one wM. tho waist and covered with any de sired materlul. The tulle bertha Is shirred on Indicated lines aud arranged over the neck edge. Wheu yoke and sleeves are desired they can be made of the same or contrasting material, either as a separate guitupo with the lining for a foundation as part of tho waist. The elbow sleeves are both fashionable and cut on exceptionally good lines, bb tho puffs fall exactly at the elbows, so allowing perfect free dom for the arms. To cut this waist for a woman of medium size, two yards of material twenty-one or tweuty-seven Inches wide, or ouo and seveu-elghth yarda tVajftKO WAIST. forly-four Inches wide will be re quired, with two and one-eighth yards of all-over lace forj yoke ami long sleeves, oua and one-half yards for elbow Bleuvcs and oue vard of chiffon or tulle for bertha Y uut to st . t 111 Juki