MADELINE (Visions, visions of the night. Wherefore are ye given? tempting is your fleeting light As a glimpse of heaven ; Temptmg, our bat too brief smile. Angel of my vision; " " liinaer, linger, then awhile. Make my heart elyaian. Spirits, in your silent flight, i Prieethood of the starry night gey what are ye preaching? : Why this music? Who are these Looming now before me. Born upon the wandering breeze, Whispering softly o'er me? SUNDAY morning, while Mrs. Wllklus wag at church with Tommy, Mr. Wilklns, la defi ance of the social ethics of Lake Hill, put on bis overalls, and, rake In bond, attacked the carpet of dead leaves that covered his lawn. He knew that bis wife would make a icene If she caught him, nnd he knew that bis Sabbath-breaking would fur nish another argument against subur ban life, and he anticipated considera ble guying from bis male neighbors, and yet, In spite of all these misgiv ings, be raked the leaves Into rustling piles and watched with dogged satis faction the columns of blue smoke that rose among the oaks from his unholy fires. Wilklns had employed seven different "hired men" since spring. None bad stayed more than a month, and none bad carried away either the esteem or s;ood will of Mrs. Wilklns. Most of them were worthless, some dishonest, some lazy and some lacked that regard for the proprieties which the woman of the bouse insisted upon. So It came to pass that Wilklns bad a hard time get ting, to say nothing of keeping, a ser viceable hired man, and when the leaves began to fall his lawns, gardens, vines and orchard were In Bad case, his chicken-house needed repairs, bis coal cellar was empty, his winter kindling was unehopped, and bis loyalty to su burban llfo was tottering. Therefore he bad defied all precedent and on Sunday morning attacked the work with bis own hands. I Ww&w$Ex If WATCHED THE COLUMNS OP BLUE SMOKE. While he was bending over a' russet mound of leaves be beard a voice: "Mister, I'll clean up that lawn for meal." It was a low, strong voice, musical of tone nnd so opportune that Wilklns let his ruke fall and looked about. The stranger was a tall, lean young man, dusty from a long walk, but trim and clean as to clothes and person. "I'll Just go you," said Wilklns, open ing the gate. The big fellow walked In, dropped his coat on the ground, and fell to work without a word. After getting back Into his Sunday garments the man of the bouse watched his res cuer. The latter, had laid aside bis round, felt lint, dlsclcslng a bullet bead, closely shared. The worker's clothes, new, cheap and coarse, 111 fit tho wearer, and as Wilklns watched him swiftly and silently clearing away the dead grass, weeds and leaves, bis heart misgave him, and he murmured to himself: "An ex-convict, I'll bet." Mrs. Wilklns soon came home with Tommy and eyed the stranger askanco. When she had noticed him eatlug heartily but decorously, and had ob served that he knew the purposes of knife, fork and spoon, she darkly hinted to her husband that there was "something mysterious" about the new comer. When Wilklns felt sure that bis wife hadn't guessed the probable truth he resolved to offer tho man a job, and as the latter passed out the walk toward the road, he stopped him with: "My friend, I like the way you work, and I like your looks, and If you'li Stny I'll give you $4 a week and your board, just to keep up tho place, teud the cbickeus and the furnace." "Thank you, sir, I'll try it," was tho answer. "You don't keep a horse, and I won't have to go to town?" "No. Just stuy here on the place, and do whatever you see necessary," explaiued Wilklns, fully uutlerstaud lug the man's dislike to going Into town. "All right, sir. My name is James Green." ' Wilklns showed the tall, gaunt fellow over the place and pointed out the room over the carriage bouse where he was to sleep. Tommy, who. was tun years old, trotted after them, deep ly Interested in the straugw. Of course Mrs. Wilklns dldnH apfmrre of ber husband's choice. She "fJt aw that there was something wromj" Know ye little Madeline, My sweet, my brown-eyed daughter Sings she now the songs divine, 0 er the living water Where the bright birds stoop to lavs In the crystal river In the iris-crested wave Flowing on and everf Visions, villous of the night, 1 would hear her story Bring her in your silent flight, Bring her back in glory; Bring her with her songs divine, Though the angels sought her Little, laughing Madeline, My sweet, my brown-eved dnnchter. -Robert Mackay, in the Home Magazine. about Green and as days went by be proved himself a splendid gardiner and a most useful person In divers unex pected ways, she was grlevlously dis appointed. What enraged her most was Green's taciturnity. Every effort of tho cook and bouso girl, prompted and encouraged by Mrs. Wilklns, failed to elicit a hint about himself. At meals be was as silent as the tomb. During the day he kept busy at the back of the two-acre lot, at night be sat In the barn doorway, telling stories to Tommy and smoking bis pipe. Between him and the boy there sprang up an extraordinary companion ship. The man, silent with all others, began to tell bla little comrade the rarest and most extraordinary stories of shipwreck, of battle, of wild. beasts, birds and adventures of all kinds. He knew the habits of birds and In sects, of reptiles and fishes, and these ho explained to Tommy with infinite care until the boy came to dog bis footsteps and sit beside him at all hours. The carved wooden toys, plaited whips of horse hair and leather and deftly fashioned bows and arrows that Green made for Tommy were the won der and envy of the boys of the neigh borhood, but they convinced Wilklns that bis hired man had spent much time in some penitentiary. Mean while, as day by day sho failed to penetrate the atmosphere of mystery which surrounded him, Mrs. WInklns grew more suspicious. When, she found out that be didn't want to go to the village during the day, she con' trlved errands that would take him there. At last he quietly but positively refused to do her bidding, explaining that Mr. Wilklns bad absolved bim from any duty but such as he could find on the place. He had been two months on the place before he spoke more tUau a dozen words to his employer. He had worked well, asked no fuvors, made no mis takes. Under his asBlduous efforts tho Wilklns place had taken on new signs of prosperity and beauty. Then he came to Wilklns one evening aud said that he d like to spend one day In Chicago. He wanted to buy some clothes, be said, and would like to have his pay. There was $12 due him, aud Wilklns bad only a bill. "All right, Green," said the big hearted suburbanite, "here's a twenty. You can bring me back the change; and, let's see, here's my commutation ticket. It'll save you paying railroad fares." Mrs. Wilklns overheard this talk, and when Green was out of hearing proclaimed her husband a fool, a waste ful, gullible, stupid fool. "That man Green will never come back," she snapped. "See him!" point ing ncroes ti e lawn. "He's not even going toward the depot. He's a tramp, maybe a murderer, and he's gone off with your mouey, and your ticket. Wilklns, you're a nimpleton." Wilklns was a little doubtful when he noticed the course taken by bis "model hired man." The next evening added to his misgiving, for at sundown Green bad not returned. Mrs. Wilklns began to gloat when the 8 o'clock train bad passed, and -there wus no sign of the mlsslug gardener. Then the doorbell rang, aud the girl an nounced "a lady to see Mr. Wilklns." He found a youngish woman, with much Jewelry and very pluk cheeks, smirking at him as he entered the par lor. "Mister Wilklns," she began, "a lady fren' o' mine what lives out here tells me theys a man workln for youse, an' If I ain't much mistaken he's my bus band. He's a tall, sandy feller, don't talk much, aad he's done time at Jollet, and '. Mrs. Wilklns entered here. "What do you want wltH him?" asked the lady of the house. The visitor was beginning to explain when Wilklns beard footsteps falling faintly on the walk outside. U slipped quietly out t the room and Into tha yard. Green was coming up the back steps Into the kitchen, when Wilklns stopped him with: "Well, I see you're back oil right." "Yes, sir," said the gardener, pulling out the railway ticket and $8. "There's your change and the ticket." Wilklns noticed that the latter wasn't punched. "I walked," explained the man. ' "I don't like trains." Wilklns led him across the lawn and told him that there was a woman In the parlor claiming to be bis wife. "A blonde, vulgar-looking woman?" said Green. "Yes. She's In there now, talking to my wife." "Well, sir. If you'll Just let on that you didn't see me this evening, I'll be grateful. I'm tired now, and I don't want to see that woman, at least not to-night. Please say that I'm not here, and won t be back until to-mor row." So Green slunk off to bed, and the blondo woman was sent away, prom ising to call again. In the morning Wilklns found Green's bed unrumpled. On the coverlet was a new leather whip, with a card Inscribed "For Tom my. Good-bye." The Wilklnses never saw or heard of him again, and Mrs. Wilklns never knew that he had come homo that night with the change and the ticket. "I always knew he was a scamp," she said, proudly. "I knew he'd run away and he did." "Well, I don't blame him," mused Wilklns, lighting his pipe and smiling at the memory of-the blondo woman with the brummagem Jewelry. "I'd run away myself, under the same circum stances." John 133. Ruftory, in tho Chicago Record-Herald. Tramps on the Cars. The box car Is often entered by springing the door off Its iron way at the side opposite the seal. A party go ing one way will do this for a party going the opposite direction, and then, when all are In, springing the door back again. Since everything exter nally Is In the best of order, long trips may be made In this manner without disturbance or Interruption. Now and then the prisoner Is ex posed to danger of starvation. A case of this kind has been related to me, where only the accidental visit of a train hand saved a man from death. The brakeman Inspected the Intruder's papers, and, finding that they showed him to be In good standing In bia union, took him out, fed bim up, and then re placed him to finish bis Journey in peace. The hero of the Incident Is a printer, who has been leading a settled life now for thirteen or fourteen years. But he says he still feels a longing to be off again whenever spring comes. A railway accident, whether by water or fire. Is a very serious affair to passengers of this sort. You have doubtless read more than once, as I have, of tramps drowned like rats, or burned or crushed to death while stealing rides In this fashion. Riding the trucks. Is done In various ways. A locomotive engineer of my acquaint ance has Bhown me tho precise spot from which he has taken out two men at one time. It was on the rear truck of the tender. They were rest ing, face downward, on the truck beam, with Just eleven Inches of ver tical space for their bodies, by actual measurement The Independent. Luminous Flowers In France. Luminous flowers aud fruit are the latest novelties In tho decoration of French homes. The Idea was obvious ly suggested to the Inventor one Na tional Fete evening, when the boule vards were decked out in their gala garb. Garlauds of electric blossoms were first used to decorate the streets of Paris on festive occasions during the Exhibition of 1900. They were at once voted the most effective orna ments of their kind ever imagined. The Idea was developed, and tulips, violets, roses, marigolds, a dozen sorts of flowers,wlth a glowing ball of elec tric light enclosed In their petals of brilliantly enameled metal, now blos som fortu In the trees of avenues and in the shrubs of gardens whenever Paris has a public fete. A little extra refinement of workmanship has suf ficed to adapt the luminous flowers for home decoration, Now all really modern Parisian drawing rooms are converted Into magic gardens. Every where, of course, there Is the usual profusion of fresh flowers. But the natural blossoms appear to havo ac quired a supernatural radiance and glow. On closer examination It Is found that here and there artificial blooms mado of suitably-tinted glass have been placed, In the hearts of which shine electric lamps. Tho same electric flcwers are used together with luminous fruit for the dinner table. They are. In reality, artificial fruit, wonderfully Imitated lu delicately-colored glass, each containing a tiuy elec tric lamp. London Telegraph's Paris Telegram. Ancient Saxon Monuraenta. In the churchyard at Bewcastle, Cumberland, England, an Isolated spot about twelve miles from any railway station, Is a monument built 1230 years ago, bearing the Inscription: "The flrBt year of Etgfrith, King of this realm," I e., A. D., 070. Another Inscription (Kuulol on the west side says that It was set up as a "Standard of Victory In Memory of Alchfrlth, latojy King" (of Korthuinbrla), who played so Im portant a part in the' history of the time. An interesting account of the cross Is given In Bishop Browne's work, "The Conversion of the Hept archy." He says that the Inscriptions "are the earliest examples known to be in existence of English literature," and, "looking to the Importance lu the his tory of the world of the conversion ot Eugland, there Is no historical monu meut In these lands to compare with the Bewcastle Cross." The shaft as It stands, is a square pillar composed of a stnglo block of gray freestone fourteen and one-half feet high. 'The cross head Is gone, but when entire the monument must have been about tweuty-ono feet high. The Village Gossip. A village gossip has a conscientious feeling of duty well performed when she can tell you how many pieces the banker's wife bad In the wash.-New York Press. - - LIFE OF THE MINE MULE QUEER TRAITS OP THE BURDEN BEARER OP THE UNDERWORLD. tils Marvellous Intelligent and Skill In Avoiding- Dana-era.AU Re Wants Is a Clear Track He Has a Certain Brava do Aboat niin Too. The mine mule, the sturdy burden bearer of the underworld, has enough of "tho abnormal about his nrnke-up to induce curiosity, if not admiration, In the average person's mind. In the sunless black, the unwearied night, this Erebus of the beasts reigns su preme. His sinewy shoulders, Jist behind the long, flapping ears, tug down and up the tunnelled caverns and there seems something of the mys tic and the magician about him as he stands Immovable In the deep darkness of a pasasgeway or cut-througb.The pit mule, as bis years grow, assumes a fine Indifference to trivial matters. His life has been so full of half -averted tragedies that ho has uelther the time nor inclination to bother about the small things. His drooping ears would not move an inch If the cage fell five feet away from hlra. But he does not leave his stubborn ness nor his brains behind bim. Ho can knock enough front teeth out of a driver's head to spoil his chances with any girl In the county deep down In the dusk of a heading Just as easily as he would on a country road at high noon. Ills accuracy lu gauging dis tances would make an excellent me chanic of him were he not a mule. He has a certain bravo about him, too, which runs Into a cunning deviltry as he grows older. If the lights go out he Is sure to run away with a trip down a grade, and If It does pile up In a wreck the mule Is almost certain to be the only thing which escapes un harmed. Many of the mines in the Connells vllle coke region of Pennsylvania are shafts, running from 200 to 700 feet deep. To get the mule on the cage Is not a pleasant duty. As soon as he smells tho warm nlr from the pit, sometimes accompanied by streaklngs of steam on account of the difference of temperature between the nlr from the mine and that outside, the brute plunges and attempts to escape. He Is usually put upon the cage by sheer force. Sometimes ho Is blindfolded be fore being dropped to the bottom. The trembling animal Is taken from the bottom of the shaft to the stables. These are located at a little distance from tho shaft bottom, and In the Con nellsville region are lighted with elec tricity, arc cool and very much superior to many upper world stables. The mine mule is obliged to keep uis nead under very trying circum stances, and he is lu a short time a much wiser animal than his brothers nbove ground, whose every movement Is guided by rein and voice. There Is no harness worthy of the name In a mine, and never any rein. The mule Is hitched to a singletree, which is at the end of a long chain or rope. Thero are no holding-back straps. The mine mule's business Is to pull when ho Is on an up grade, and to keep out of tue way on a down grade. His won derful sagacity Is shown In bis accu rate gauge of the speed of the wagons behind hlrn. He maintains Just gait enough to keep his rope well stretched and never allows It to become en tangled under his heels, nor docs he get his heels caught under tho wagon. Just a bit stolid one would think the mule until a mine wagon gets away. Then he shows his brains. On he gal lops, sure-footed us a chamois; over the crosstles, over the ditches and waterways, over the steam pipes he pounds, with a roar llko an avalanche behind him. A clear track Is all he asks. The agility of the mine mule was well demonstrated once In the mine of Leisenrlng No. 3 in the Connellsvllle region. A gang of workmcu were put tiug in an air line, and had their work ing truck on one of the main headings. Suddenly the laboring men heard a low rumbllug up the heudlng. All the trips were being switched off on to another track while the men wore at work, but this one seemed to bo coming nearer. It grew louder and louder. One of the men put his ear to the track aud realized In a second that the trip was coming down the blockaded head ing. The men ran for their lives, leav lug the truck ou the track. As they went they saw there was no light on the runaway trip, showing that It was without a driver. Only a dim safety on the edge of the heavy truck showed where It stood. Like thunder tho run away wagons rumbled nearer, and with a crash struck the obstruction. The laboring gang camo from their places of safety expecting to sec the mule crushed to pieces. Instead their lights flashed on him quietly standing upon their side of the truck! Ho had. In one comprehensive glance, taken In the situation by the flickering light on the corner of the truck, aud had Jumped clear over the obstacle to save himself! His trip was piled behind him lu a crushed heap of debris. A mule, which had been In the pit but a short time, once camo up the malu heading ut Mammoth slope. He had gotten away lu tho mine find started for fresh nlr and green. pus tules. He had to keep ahead of the trip being hauled up by the hoisting engines, aud keep his feet free from the eutangling ropes of tho haulage way. He ulno was obliged to cross from one track to another when the down-going trip passed him. Ho galloped up all the Ioug slope, and when ho reached the top Jumped from tho mouth of the pit Just In time to escapo belu3 hit by the fast up-coming trip. At another mine there Is an old mulo which for years has pushed the cars onto the cage. As soou as the cage Is lowered she puts her breast ngeilnst the car and pushes It off, putting an other ou lu the samo manner. She stands by the shaft bottom Just close enough to allow the descending cage to miss ber uose a couple of Inches, yet she has never been struck. The demands made ou the mules' strength and Intelligence are so lnd'I bly stumped ou their minds that even If they be brought up to the surface for other uses they do not forget them. Wheu two mules ure needed to haul ou an especially steep grade In tho mlue they are hltchej tandem, and when two mules that hare been hitched tbW way In the mine are let loose In the pasture field they .' tramp about the meadow all day, one behind the other. In their accustomed order, nor can they be Induced to reverse their position. This Is one of the after effects of their rigid training. In bis own sphere the mine mule Is a very ungallant an imal. He bates a woman. It may be that he wishes the Pennsylvania State law to be respected, but whatever his reasons, Ho dislikes tho sight of a petticoat In his domain. A hundred men may push him aside and pass la some narrow alley-way, but It Is not wise or safe for a woman to attempt to pass the same quiet animal when he Is not busy. He Is not an argumen tative animal, the mute, and the only way to get along with him in the pit, as well as on the surface, Is to respect bis likes and dislikes. New York Com mercial Advertiser. ANIMALS THAT CO ON STRIKE. And Manage Their Labor Difficultly With Surprising Ingenuity. Men are not the only animals that go on strike. Beasts and birds some times quit work suddenly and make trouble for any one who tries to force them to resume their labor. Often when a large herd of horses are In a field they bunch together under the trees, eat less than usual, are more restive, and are always neighing and rubbing noses. The outcome of such actions usually Is that the entire herd decline to be saddled, or harnessed, chase their attendants, and bite, kick and squall all day. Tho oldest "Jog trotrer," after a "conference" of this kind, will try to smash up his cart and behave like an unbroken colt. Cows sometimes are seen crowding together In the pastures, and then the farmer looks for trouble. They fidget and "moon" about, and when milking time comes they raise strenuous objections to being milked and are about as In tractable as mules. Bullocks, when they get on a fit of this kind, actually are called "strikers" In Eugland, and are likely to become dangerous. Birds are famous for "woman's rights" strikes that is, the females sometimes flock together, abandoning or driving away the males, and refuse to do any "housework" whatever. They desert their nests and will not finish building; they leave their eggs to grow cold and unhatchable, and nothing will Induce them to return. The malo birds grow extremely concerned at such times, but they have no remedy, for throughout the beast and bird creation the male will never attack the female, though the opposite often happens. Warblers nnd starlings especially are given to these "female workers' strikes," and the affair often becomes serious, for a whole district will be full of nests left to rot, sets of eggs abandoned, and even young broods hatched out before the strike was "on" loft to starve. Certain kinds of black ants have little yellow ants which do most of their work for them. Once In a while these little yellow fellows will go on n strike, nnd the "blacks" try to force tuem back to work by cutting oft thely food supply. If that does not suc ceed, they will attack the strikers In force or will make a raid and get an other gang ot "yellows" Into the col ony. But the newcomers, as a rule. Join the strikers. The strike ends by the "yellows" escaping and found ing a colony for themselves, or they give in and settle down to work again. It is a well known fact that rabbits are the most determined of animal strikers. In rabbit colonies there Is nearly always a certain number of stronger rabbits who do most of the hardest digging and burrowing, and about once in every two years these appear to grow discontented and de cline to make the passages which con nect all the burrows In a big warren. Without these passages the assembly Is not safe from stoats and ferrets, and the commonwealth is endangered. But the large digging rabbits give up work and sit about browsing in tho pasture ull day and night, and unless they choose to go to work again, all new excavations for fresh rabbit families have to stop. Field and Stream. Birds Necessity to Man. Man eould not live In a blrdless world. A French naturalist asserts that if all the birds In the world were to die suddenly, human life on this planet would become extluct in nine years. In spite of nil the sprays aud poisons which could bo manufactured to kill off destructive slugs and Insects, they would so multiply that In that length of time they would have eaten up all the orchards and crops in ex istence and man would be starved to death. All that man does In the way of "preserving to our use the kindly fruits of the earth" Is as nothing com pared with what Is accomplished by the vast army of birds which prey upon Insect life nud thus keep It down to a point which permits of the growth of suUiclcnt food to support human life. Take away the birds aud In nine years not a man, voinun or child would bo alive all dead of starvation. The "Keystone, State." Pennsylvania has been called the "Keystone Stale." Two explanations have been given of this name. Accord ing to tho first, tho Declaration of In dependence was trembling in tho bal ance, six colonies having voted for and six agatust It, the vote of Penn sylvania was cast In favor of the decla ration, and thus a majority was se cured. According to the other expla nation tho name was purely nu acci dent. When the Rock Creek bridgo wus constructed, near Washlugtou, tbo stones of tho great arch wero Inscribed with the names ot the States, aud wheu It wns finished the discovery was made thrt the namo ot Pennsyl vania was on tho keystone of the arch, and thus was applied afterward to the State. VUlt Produce Musical Sounds. Many Hub can produce musical sounds. Tho trlgla can produce long- drawn notes ranging over nearly an octave. Others, notably two species of ophldlum, have sound-producing ap paratus, consisting of small movable bones, which can be made to produce n sharp rattlo. The curious "drum ming" mado by the species called urn- brlnas can be heard from a depth of thirty fathoms. New York City. The basque waist, fitted with smooth under arm gores nnd extending slightly over the skirt suits many figures and many mate- BASqUB WAIST. rials far better than any other sort. This smart May Manton model in cludes these desirable features and at the same time has a fancy front and sleeves that render it elaborate enough for occasions of formal dress. As shown the material is Sapho satin In pnstel blue with front and undersleeves of cream laco over white and tiny edge trimming of fancy scrolled braid, but numberless materials and combinations might be suggested both for the odd waist and the entire costume. The lining Is snugly fitted and In cludes double darts, under-arm gores and side backs. The waist proper Is plain and smooth at the back with smooth under-arm gores, but Is slightly full at the front. The vest or full front of lace Is gathered at both neck and waist edgeB and Is stitched Into place at the right side, hooked over onto the left The fronts are laid In three tucks each and arranged In gath ers at the belt. At the neck Is a regu lation' stock. The sleeves are novel and effective. The under portions are faced Into the linings, but the upper portions are quite separate and fall freely over the deep cuffs. To cut 'this waist In the medium size four and an eighth yards of material twenty-one inches wide, two and three quarter yards thirty-two Inches wide, or two yards forty-four Inches wide STYLISH SINGLE-BREASTED BLOUSE. will be required, with two and a half yards of all-over lace for front and un dersleeves. Woman's Slnglo-Breasted Blouse. No other garment Is more popular than the simple blouse. Young girls and women alike hold It the most sat isfactory of all models, both for the suit and the coat of velvet, velours and the like. The example shown In the large drawing has the merit of abso lute simplicity combined with smart ness. The original is made ot broad cloth in tobacco brown and makes part of a suit, the extension being omitted, but all suiting materials are appropriate as well as those already mentioned. The blouse Is eminently simple. The back Is plain and smooth, without ful ness, but the fronts, while plain across the shoulders have the fulness stylish ly arranged at the waist line and droop slightly over tho belt- The neck is finished with a regulation coat collar and notched lapels and a pocket Is In serted In the left front. The sleeves are In coat style slightly bell-shaped at the hands, When the basque ex tension Is used It Is Joined to the blouse beneath the belt. To cut this blouse for a woman of medium size three and three-quarter yards of material twenty-one inches wide, three and a quarter yards twenty-seven lucbes wldo, one and three quarter yards forty-four inches wide, or one and five-eighth yards fifty-four inches wldo will be roquleed, with one- cighth yard of velvet for collar. Mllady's Back Hair. A black bow In her back hair seems a necessity to the up-to-date girl. She wears it at all times, but for full dress sho may top it with a two-loop, frilled bow of black tulle. The ubiquitous black bow Is of somo handsome rib bon, not over an Inch and three-fourths In width, with two loops and two ends. The whole Is never over five Inches across. It goes with every stylo of hair dressing. If the hair be In a bun or a figure eight at the back, It hugs across the centre of the arrangemeut. It Is placed a llttlo lower or, a good bit high er It the twist be the lug-drawn-out sort that continues below the nape of neck. Efen if tho hair be pllod ou top of the head It still brings up lu the rear, replacing the barette, that orna mental pin upon which up to now has klavolved the task ot keeping milady's lovelocks In proper trim. Grog-grain, ribbon is considered the smartest for the purpose. -K Spring Millinery. Many shapes In bats are worn at present, but the majority are fiat and broad. The trimmings are low and add to the breadth, and the hats fortu nately look equally well with the balr arranged high or low." For the spring there will undoubtedly be quite a no ticeable return to the higher crown, but for the moment the low crown Is the ruling shape. White lace hats are worn, inappropriately, with velvet and cloth gowns, but are In reality only ap propriate for reception or theatre wear. Harper's Bazar. A Pink Homespun. The word "homespun" suggests . "hackabout" or general utility cos tume. But this season we have them In true evening shades. The new year brings us clear pink and sky bine homespuns as well as the "water greens," pearl and biscuit shades ranged under the generic name of pas tel colors. These pretty homespuns are treated by the dressmaker precise ly like cloth gowns. They have border decoration of black velvet or dark far, and are then worn to afternoon teas Chiffon, Pink Hoses and Lace. A tea gown of surpassing loveliness is of fine white chiffon over pink satin, falling to the feet, where It rests on a ruche of pink roses. This again Is veiled by a lace overdress, exquisitely embroidered with garlands of pink satin ribbon and chiffon flowers, the whole banging from a berthe of pink roses; a fichu decorated In the same manner,' the lace edged with tiny boulllonncs of pluk chiffon, completes the costume. Aa Evening Gown. A white silk evening gown has a draped front breadth to the skirt, caught up here and there with pale pink chiffon roses. The sides and back of the skirt are side-pleated, the roses being dotted over the entire length and decorating the bodice as well. -" Effective Sleevee. The sleeves of an Empire gown of cream white satin are made with puffs to the elbow of the satin. Over these are angel sleeves of accordion-pleated chiffon, covered with Mechlin lace that falls In a point to the foot of the skirt Child's French Dresa. The long-watsted dress known as the French model suits little girls to a nicety and Is the belght of present styles. The very pretty May Manton examplo shown is made of nainsook with yoke and trimming of fine needle work, and is worn with a ribbon sash, but all washable materials are equally appropriate, while cashmere, henrlet ta, albatross and simple silks are all In vogue for the heavier frocks. Te waist Is made over a fitted lining onto which the yoke Is faced, but which can bo cut away to yoke depth when a transparent effect Is desired. The full portion is gathered at both up per and lower edges, but the waist and lining close together at the centre back. The sleeves are In bishop stylo with pointed cuffs, and over the shoul ders, finishing the edge of the yoke. Is . a pointed bertha that suits childish figures admirably well. At the neck Is a standing collar. The skirt Is circular and flares freely and gracefully at the lower portion. whllo the upper edge Is Joined to the skirt, the seam being concealed by the sash. To cut this dress for a child of eight years ot age five and a half yards of material twenty-one Inches wide, five yards twenty-seven Inches wide, fonr and a half yards thirty-two Inches wide, or three and five-eighth yards forty-four Inches wide will be re- rsK.van pbjess roM a child. quired, with one-half yard o? all-over embroidery, threo of edging and t rt and n eighth yards of Insert: a tJ trim as Illustrated. ..