T TT TOTT r w By John THERE Is a certain watering place lo Scotland, oud lu thnt place there Is a winding path which loads to the sea. At the top of the cliff facing that path there is ft house whore boarders are re reived during the summer months that Is the scene ot this story. At the time of which I write nil the occupants of Cliff House were more or loss interested In a little comedy that was being played out In their midst. Comedy or was It tragedy? For a boy of twenty to be fooled nnd led captive by an unscrupulous woman, simply for her own ends, may bo a comedy from the woman's point of view, but it will certainly end ia trag ;dy for the boy. Nevertheless, Hush Cameron being Sis own master nnd alone In the world, til those among whom for the time helng bis lot was cast, waited placidly for tho Inevitable denouement: all save lis hostess, Mrs. Miller, the friend of bis dead mother. In a small sunny room at the back ,if the house Mrs. Miller snt thinking one morning in July. Her eyes were ixed with a far-away look upon the lills that lay In a dark ridge against the horizon. Her Hps were com pressed, her brow knitted, her atti tude resolute nnd determined. Suddenly the sound of footsteps in the hall caught her oar. Rising from ler seat she went to the door, and railed : 'Mr. Howard." John Howard, the only permanent hoarder at Cliff House, nnd cashier in (he bank In town, came in, a tall, spare man of thirty-five, with a plain hut pleasing face, and n manner that tamped hiin unmistakably as a gen tleman. The troubled look passed ?rom Mrs. Miller's brow as he en tered, and she greeted him with a smile. "I have been thinking of Hugh Cameron," she said, as he came up to :he window where she was seated and leant against It, looking down at her bent head, with the coils of soft brown bnlr only partially hidden ly her wid ow's cap. Grace Miller had been a widow at twenty. The man's face clouded. "The boy is very dear to you," he remarked, cynically. "Very." was the brief reply. The cloud deepened perceptibly. "That he Is considerably your ju nior does not matter he is handsome, fascinating and rich." She rose from her chair, and stood beside him, laying her hand upon his arm. Her voice trembled as she spoke. "He Is the only son of a 3entl friend who was dearer to me than a sister." "Yet you have never seen him until within the last year." "That makes no difference. I owe (t to his mother to care for hor son," she answered. John Howard did not reply. A stray breeze fluttered the window curtain nnd played with a soft tendril of hair that had escaped from beneath Mrs. Miller's cap, but her thoughts ware only of tho boy. "Mr. Howard John " she said nt last. "I want you to help me." "In what way?" he asked. His tone was without enthusiasm. "To help me to save Hugli Cameron from tho woman who would ruin him body and soul. "How do you propose to do It?" "I have a plan. I cannot send her away from this house he would fol low her. It Is useless to expostulate with him he would not listen. No one has any authority over hiin." "Well?" "There must be a counter nnd a stronger attraction. Nothing else will save him." "Where will you find such?" Her face Hushed. Her bead dropped, but her voice was firni. "In myself," she said. He looked away through the window ngaiu to where the lights aud shadows played on the soft, smooth turf, nnd the bees droned drowsily in the sun shine. Her proposition did not strike him as too self assured or egotistical, for to him slie had long been the one woman lu the world. She gathered courage aud went on. "I do not think I am biased by van ity. All these years since I have had this house I have str! eu, as you know, to make myself look old. By my cap by my dress, by uiy general style, 1 have done this." Ho nodded acquiescence. No man kuetv better than John Howard how beautiful Grace Miller could be when She chose. "But but If I leave off this disguise, If I allow myself lo look my best, if I put on one Mela tho considerations whleh have prompted mo to kill my youth" "Yes what then?" She laughed a soft, low laugh, from which nervousness was not entirely absent. "Then I do not doubt thnt I could take the boy from the woman who enthralls blin." "And when you have done so, what is to follow?" he asked in a bard, dry voice. Having undermined Miss Mnrtm' vile Influence. It will be a comparative ly easy task to cur the Infatuation which has been tho mer.ns to that end," alio replied. "And what ii to be my part In tho play?" There was wlstfnlnoss and yet con fldeuce lo her explanation. "I want y.m, who know thi vonl facta of tbu ae. to stand between me nnd the mis 'presents Men or even lander which may arise from my ex pertinent." "I follow you In every particular fcut one," be ss'.d, "supposing you fail to cure the boy of the Infatuation or aay the love for you which ia to be part of your plan what would he be bettered r He would be bettered by beln un fler the Influence of a good woman In tead of an nttfly unscrupulous one. But I shall sot fait" A At CD f M(S VS Gritton There was not a shadow of hesitancy In hor tone, but the man doubted. "I judge by past experience." bo re turned, quietly. "You have been for six years trying to cure mo and bnvu not succeeded yet." She looked down: her color came nnd went swiftly; she had no answer ready. "How do you explain that?" ho per sisted. There was a faint flicker of a amile about the corners of her mouth, but she suppressed It sternly. "Perhaps It Is because I have not been sufficiently In earnest ia trying to do so," was her reply. His grasp tightened on the small, soft hands he held In his. "Then why will yon ujt give up try ing aliogether, Grace?" he asked quickly. Put to this question he received no satisfactory answer. Six weeks had passed nway. Tho season was almost at an rod. Already the numbers were considerably thin ner on tho beach, In the gardens, nnd on the golf course. Mrs. Miller's housi had been crowded since Juno, but during the last xviek two leaves had been taken out of the dining table, aud the gas had not been lighted in the second drawing-room. In the balcony of Cliff House cn evening In September Hugh Cameron was talking to Mrs. Miller. Tho moon was nt tho back of the house; the balcony lay la the shadow; Inside the open wludows all was silent nnd de serted. There wns tho last fete of the season nt the gardens, nnd the guests had betnken themselves thither. Mrs. Miller lay back in her wicker chair, hor face white and set In the dim half-light. While the soft swish of the waves stole up from the beach below, nnd the distant strains of the band were wafted on the fresh even ing air, for tho first time she realized to the full the strength of the torrent It wns her duty to stem. With Flor ence Martin, a coarse, loud voiced, vivacious blonde, the boy was simply Infatuated: but for his youth and in experience he would never have been her prey; but Grace Miller bad touched his higher nature, and to her he had given the best love of his life. So in the still twilight hour Grace Miller recognized that sho must listen to what Hugh Cameron had to say, aud that she must answer him as a man, and not as the boy she thought him. Mrs. Miller," he said, in a hoarse broken voice. "I can be slloyit no longer; you know that I love you." "As I loved your mother," she re plied, "and as I also love you, Hugh." ut tho boy was not to be turned aside. He knew exactlv what hn meant, nnd he intended to say It. :o, be answered firmly, "not in the least as you loved my mother. I love you ns a man loves tho woman ho wants to marry, the one woman ;i tue world. There was silence for a moment. then her words were as firm as his own. "Eur a man does not marry his grandmother." she expostulated. Cameron drew a stool near to Mrs. Miller's chair and sat down at her feet. "Grace, you are too goad a woman to play with ine," he pleaded. "What has your conduct to me these last few weeks meant?" Again she hesitated. Then she de cided not to fence the question, not to equivocate, but to tell him the whole truth. "Hugh," she said, gently. "I saw I knew thnt your intimacy with Miss .Martin could only end In disaster, mignt possibly spoil your whole life I tried to turn your love towards mv self." She had not anticipated the effect of her words. The boy leant towards hor, his face glowing, his pulses qulv oring. ".My darling," be whispered rantnr. onsly, "and now that I do love you?" 11 was a uittlcult moment. Grace Miner braced herself to face It. Tn fervid tones she spoke to the boy of the claims of duty, of tho briefness of love, of the beauty of life apart from the tender passion, of the fact that man is designed to be something bet ter than a womun's plaything. Cut of all she said only one point lmpri-ssod Itself upon the listener's mlud. Grace Miller did not love him, and never could, and never would, lie did not answer. He sat still, &az ing out on the sea with eyes that saw nothing, and yet every detail of the scene was burnt in upon his brain as he looked-the dark heaving waters, tho silver streak of moonlight, the silent, peaceful night. "Hugh," said Mrs. Miller, ircntlv. at length, "Hugh." He otarted na If from a dream nnd rose to his feet. Tho moon bad passed the corner of the house, nnd lighted his clear-cut, handsome features, and hi beautiful, almost Italian eyes. There was something In bia manner that made Mrs. Miller shiver as she glanced at him. "Is there a true woman on earth?" be cried. "I knew from the first that Florence Martin waa false, even while she drew me to her I hated her. But you I would have ataked my Immor tal soul on your sincerity." Mrs. Miller's heart was beating Into her throat; a choking sensation over powered her. It never occurred to her that he would view It In that light She caught his hand In hers. "It was for your mother's sake, Hugh," she panted, "for your mother's sake, to save you from one wbq was utterly unworthy of you." He turned upon her fiercely. "In what are you better than she?" he asked, passionately. "She fooled me so did you. You have acted lie; yon have broken my heart and you tell me It was for my mother's sake." Then without another word be left ber. In the little hollow on the beach be low, as the long hours crept on to ward the dawn, tho flowing tide stirred the shells and pebbles with a gentle rythmical motion. The grace ful tendrils of seaweed nttached to the rocks floated back nnd forth nnd back in the water that had returned to thera once more. Slowly, slowly the Incom ing flood drew nenrer to tho foot of the cliff, where, ou the hard dry sand, a man lay face downwards. Nearer and yet nearer It came to tho motion less form with a soothing, caressing murmur ns to a tired child until It broke upon the fingers of the out stretched band nnd stilt the silent figure lny rigid nnd undisturbed. When tha morning dawned, nnd the little white aniled boats left tbo shore In the glad sunlight of the opening day, there was found, at tho foot of tho cliff, where the winding path leads up to Mrs. Miller's house, a man's bat with a piece of paper pinned In side, on which wns written the one word "Gocd-by," and the hat was Identified as that of Hugh Cameron. So it came tr pass that In one single day Grace Miller's hnir turned white. Co nlso it was t'jat when a month later John Howard, before leaving for Glasgow, for a position iu one of tho principal banks iu that city, nsked her once again If eho would bo hla wife, she answered she bad no heart for nintriiiiony and no love for nny man. Thus in ono short month she lost the two persons whj were tho centre of her world. Time passed awny. Then, after two years, one blustering autumnal day. when the waves wero breaking on the beach with n sound like thunder, John Howard came again. He entered Mrs. Miller's own little room and stood before ber. Her thin, worn face, nnd dark shadows under hor eyes struck a chill to his heart. 'Grace," he blurted out, his love In his voice, "are you still grieving for Cameron?" She looked up at him, smiling through her tears. "Why should you think I am still grieving for any one?" she asked. He touched her eyes, her forehead, her cheek. "You forget," she answered. "Time changes one. "It Is eight years since you first knew me, John." He drew ber nearer to the window and studied ber face as If he would read her very soul. "The boy is still nlive," he said quietly, i saw him in London last week." She started nnd turned very pale; then swayed slightly as If she would have fallen, but she did not yield to Howard's supporting nrm. "Tell me nil." she said faintly. Still with his eyes upon her face Howard went on. "After he left you that evening he spent the night on the beach, but walked to the junction in time to catch the first train to London in the morning. Ho left his hat, with the paper lu It, ns a means of reveuglns himself on you." Then he asked the question that was burning on his tongue. "Grace, do you care for Cameron?" The pink stole back Into her cheeks, the light Into her eyes, the smilo to her Hps. "I, care for him more than nny cne lu the world, except" "Yes," he said, "except except " "Except yourself,'' she replied. The words were uttered under her breath, yet they reached his ear. He bent his bead to look Into her eyes. "Reflect what you are saying, Gra.-e," he urged. "Once you did not care for me at all." Her lashes dropped upon her cheeks. "I always cared," she whispered. "Then why did you answer 'No' fur six long years.?" "It was a woman's 'No,' Joto." "And now?" "If I have grieved it was not for Hugh Cameron nlocc." "Then for whom, sweetheart?" He took the answer from her liis, but It was not given in words". Waverley Magzaine. Commerce llnled bjr the Tide. For some twenty centuries, the com merce of London has drifted up with the tide, and down with the tide. Tho strenuous Romans of old found a town of the Britalus at Liu-dyu, and con quered It; and the strenuous Saxons conquered the town the Itnmnnu lm,t left. Tho strenuous Danes made them selves masters of the Saxons, nnd then came the strenuous William of Nor mandy, and built the massive tower over .hare to dominate the city and port. But In London to-day tho com merce still drifts, and Is steered. Nono of the great ports of the world has had a longer or more varied history; It is tho heart of the greatest of commercial nations, and the cradle of the mistress of the seas; but It is still regulated by tho tile. It Is at last well proved, this philosophy of drifting nnd steering. Who can say that It will not continue to rulo the world for another 2000 years? Its methods ore not brilliant, but they are sure. John Corbiu, tn bcribuer s. Madagascar pgpr, , One of the oldest tribes of Madagas car has the secret of niuklcg a peculiar but beautiful and lasting paper from the pulp of a native shrub, which they guard very Jealously. Each family of the tribe is provided with a few sheets of the paper, on which ore recorded the family traditions, and beyond this It Is seldom used, except for transcrib ing the laws of the Mohammedan re ligion. Sometimes under ' pressing necessity, they will sell a small quanti ty of It. It Is said that the process of making It was discovered by a Mohammedan who was shipwrecked there In the middle of the ninth cen tury, and desired some enduring ma terial on which to copy bis water soaked Koran. . A Koath of Mondays. As each day of the week la observed as Sunday by some nation, a month of Sundays is just an ordinary month. The first day of the week Is our Chris tian Sunday; Monday ts the sacred day, of the Ferslans; Wednesday of the As syrians; Thursday of the Egyptians; Friday of the Turks, and Saturday la the Sabbath of the Hebrews. Detroit Free Press. WALLER'S AWFUL TBIP EXPEDITION ACROSS SAMAR. P. I BY HUNCER-CRAZED MARINES. Living on Stray lngs nnd ifonts For Day Maria Inaane by All tha Miliary of the Adventure, ttia Major In Command Killed Two Natives. Major Littleton W. T. Waller and Lieutenant John II. A. Day were court martialed nt Manila on a charge of killing two natives without trial on the Island of Samnr. It has been urged in exculpation thnt the horrors of a trip across Snmnr drove Major Waller innd, nud below is given the first official report of that disastrous expedition. The Eastern mall has brought the report of Major Waller on the famous expedition conducted by blm across the Island of Samnr. Major Waller's reports arc formal aud do not go Into details, but ihe news of the affnlr is contained in a report from Lieutenant W. R. Shoemaker, U. S. N., who con ducted tho relief expedition that suc cored tho marines. After detailing tho arrival In the American linos of Captain Torter nud Lieutenant Williams, with a portion of the men. tho report says: Captain Porter nnd LIcutennnt A. S. Williams, in conversation, gave mo substantially tho following account of their wanderings: "On Janunry 1. being then on half rations, with very little food left, Major Waller decided to split the par tyhe taking Uftceu of the strongest men nud pushing on for Basey, nud Captain Porter following his troll ns rapidly as possible with tho main body. "On the sacoiid n native came back from Waller with a note stating that he. Waller, had given up the idea of getting through aud would return, und directing Porter to make directly for the river nnd build rnfts for the entire party. This Tortcr tried to do, but failed to find wood that would flout. "It was mining hnrd nt this time, nnd tho river was about ten feet above Its normal level and running with vio lence. As Major Waller did not ap pear, Porter sent Captain Bearss to ascertain bis plans, then return nnd re port. Bearss failed to return, but he reached Waller nnd went on with him. "On the third, I think, Porter pushed ahead to get assistance with eight of the strongest men, leaving Williams to follow with the crippled aud lame ns far as the boat, secreted on the way up, to be used in an emergency like the present. "Porter reached the boat, but found she had been damaged and was unfit for use. So be started on a twenty-five mllo 'hike for Laming, reaching there with three men on the afternoon of the eleventh. Five men had given out, but. Jiving on two dogs that strayed their way, they finally reached tho post. "Th? relief expedition, under Lieu tenant Williams, First Infantry, on ac count of the height of the river, was unablo to get uway until the morning of tho fourteenth. Williams deserves the highest praise for bis twenty-five miles' fight against the current and up the rapids, hauling his boats along by hand n good part of tho way. "It was not until the morning of the seventeenth thut be reached the starv ing marines lu their last stopping place near the river. Their condition nt the time was terrible. For days no man among them had strength to curry a rlflerlrle. Nine of thein bad either gone crazy or had fallen by the troll, half dead from starvation nnd exposure. "It bad rained steadily for eighteen days. Lieutenant A. S. Williams had made every effort to get them along, but had to abandon them. He could only gave the men who were able to reach the boat by the river, the prob able point of arrival of the relief expe dition. "He got th?re on the night of the sixteenth Inst., bis party having been without food, except roots, the pulp of plants, nnd a very few sweet potatoes, for fifteen days. "To further complicate matters the native bearers, about thirty In number, became sulky, practically refusing as sistance to the white meu. They would build shucks as a protection from the continual downpour for themselves only, aud knowing the cdibla roots and plants were more skilful In ob taining food. "A time came when no white man could carry a rifle, nnd those not lost were In the bands of the natives. Un der the ultered condition it required considerable diplomacy on the part of Lleuteuunt Williams to handle them at all. "Just before reaching the river two bearers tried to kill Williams, stabbing him about the chest with a bolo. He tried to shoot, but bad not sufficient strength to pull the trigger. "Then they tried to kill him with his own pistol, but did not kuow how to work the weapon. W'llllaius was rescued by a few of his men who tot tered up, armed with sticks, and the natives took to the bush. "No Filipinos were seen In the re- glon, there being no food. The relief party saw some coming from the dl rectiou of Herinane, so it is probable that the Insurgents about there got wind of the desperute condition of the marines and were hurrying up to take advantage of It. Belief came just in time. "It took practically all of January 18 to get the sufferers, thirty-one in number, including two officers, eighteen on stretchers unable to move, across the river aud out through the surf to the vessel. The job was finished at 0.30 p. iu., and at 7 we sturted for Tacloban district direct, as an army surgeon at Lanang said thut an hour saved iu truuslt might meuu an arm or leg to some. We reached Taclobun at 8 a. m., and the worst cases were at once transferred to the hospital. "The others, Including eight or ten natives, not Included In the above total of thirty-one, I transported to Basey, seeking Major Waller. His party ap pears, from the statements of the of ficers, to have been reduced to nearly the same extremity as the other. They bad practically given up hop when the opportune capture of a small boy, the only native seen, resulted la their get ting through to the coast." THE FORCE OF VIBRATION. . An Architect Tells Why a Fiddle Can Hhake a rireat Building. "What force least expected does the greatest damage to buildings?" a News representative asked a well known architect. ' "It Is difficult to tell. But I will venture to any thnt you could never expect violin playing to Injure the walls of a building. Yet thnt Is cer tainly the case. There have been In stances when the walls of stone aud brick structures have been seriously Impaired by tho vibrations from a vio lin. Of course these cases are un usual, but the facts arc established. The vibrations of a violin ore some thing terrible In their unseen, un bound force, and when they come Tn contact with regularity they bear their influence upon structures of ston, brick or Iron. Of course It takes con tinuous playing for many years to loosen masonry or to make Iron brit tle, but thnt result Is obtained. In the great Masonic Temple in Chicago I have thought of what the result might be If ft man would stand on the first floor, at the bottom of the nineteen-story light well, and play there continuously. Tho result could be more canlly seen there than almost any place else, because the vibration gathers fores ns It sweeps upward. A man c?.a feel the vibrations of a violin on an Ironclad ocean vesse nud at the same time be unable to hear tho nuslc. It Is tho regularity of the vibration which means so much. Like the constunt dripping of wnter wearing away a stone, the incessant vibration of the violin makes Its way to the walls, and attacks their solid ity." "But why doesn't this vibration af fect the player?" "Because n man Is a flexible object. He can give way to motion and re sume his place ngnlu. A fin me build ing would not be damaged by vibra tlon, becnuse the timbers nre flexible. But It Is different with masonry. "You may hava noticed that a dog crossing the room will shake the en tire building no matter how smulr a dog. A dog can shake a suspension bridge. There are some great and valuable bridges which dogs are never nllowed to cross, except when carried. You see, in that case it is the regu larity of the vibration that is so pow erful. The dog's movement is a fixed and positive institution. The first step on the bridge is not noticed so much, but every step comes Just alike, at the same interval, and with the same firmness. The force gathers momentum, and each step makes the bridge sway more. But there Is an other way that it may perhaps be il lustrated better. As you sit thero raise ono foot partially on tip-toe. That's It. Now work your Uaee up and down rapidly and regularly. See how everything la the room rattles and the floor shakes? That illus trates the dog step's power better than anything else. You nnd I nnd all our friends could not jump up and down In this room nnd shake tho floor as you have just shaken it while sit ting down nnd using only the force of one leg. It Is the regularity of tho vibration which Is powerful.". Indian apolis News. Why Not Vlvleect Babies. The same arguments which would lead us to vivisect the Inferior dumb animal would lead us to vivisect also the inferior human animal, says Henry C. Merwln, Iu the Atlantic. A grown dog is equal in intellect to n child a year old; it is at least equally suscepti ble to pain, and in point of love nnd affection It Is much the superior cf the child. Why not vivisect the child as well as the dog? A criminal, though superior in Intellect to the dog, is not or may not be, his superior from tho moral point of view. Why not vivisect blm? In classical times human vivisection was practiced upon a lurge scale; and it would be easy to construct a plausi ble argument In favor of it. We take the life of a murderer; why not vivi sect him? What right has he to be be exempted from torture any more than an unoffending dumb animal, who is equally susceptible to puiu? Besides, It Is a fact, to which attention has often been called, that, in the Interest of medical science, It would be much more profitable to dissect men alive than it is to dissect horses or dogs alive. In other words, it would "pay" better. Tho vivisection of dumb ani mals Is defended oa the grouud that It "pays," and it Is bard to see why the vivisection of criminals could not be defended on the Bamo ground. Shull not one criminal be put to torture, if thereby something may be discovered which will prolong the lives of many Innocent, or comparatively Innocent persons? Beggars In Borne, Everybody who comes to Romo must expect to be swiudled and disappointed. There are many Illusions, and you will be greatly disappointed when you ap proach them and they fade away. You will be swindled by shopkeepers, hack men, peddlers nnd everybody that you have anything to do with, and the beg gars will annoy vou with their per sistence like the fakirs and flower girls that follow you upon the street, but all this is a part of the experience of everybody who comes here; only such annoyances are greater In Rome than in most other places. Begging is a pro fession, as In every other Italian city, aud the profits are much larger, be cause there are more strangers to ap peal to. None but Inexperienced beg gars ever approach a native Roman, because tbey know It Is useless, but they save all their energy and pathos for strangers, particularly Americans and English, whom they follow with the greatest persistence. William E. Curtis, In the Chicago-Record-Herald ; Maeoasnl'l Watch Mania. Slgnor Mascagnl, the composer at "Cavallerla Bustlcana," baa a positive mania for watches, of which he la said always to carry three in hi pock ets. One la of gold, with bis monogram In diamonds; another Is of silver, and the third, which Is of huge proportions, U ot nickel. ... MSB New York City. This stylish blouse a made of Russian green Venetian, wltn white peau de sole trimming. It Is adjusted with shoulder and un- wishes' oibeov jacket. dcr-arm scams only. A deep pleat ex tends from shoulder to belt in the back, tapering toward the waist lu V -shaped outline. The same pleat appears In front, giving a becoming breadth to tho shoulders. This effect is especially appropriate for slender girlish figures. The fronts nre deeply underfneed with silk and rolled back to form revcrs which meet the tufn'-down collar in notches. Several rows of machine stitching are used to finish the edges of collar and revers. The jacket Is provided with a circular skirt portion, which may, however, be omitted If preferred, and the waist finished with a narrow belt. The sleeves ore shaped with upper nnd tinder portions to tit the arm close ly and flare In bell effect at the wrists. LADIES' EMPIRE GOWN. They have slight fulness on tho shoul ders. Smart garments In this mode may be made of the same material as the skirt for outdoor suits. They may also be developed In broad or ladles' cloth, melton or cheviot, with silk or velvet trimmings, and worn as separata Jack ets. To make the jacket for a miss of fourteen years will requlro one and one-half yards of forty-four-luch mate rial, with one-half yard of contrasting material for trimming. Graceful Empire Gown. Soft, clinging fabrics, such as liberty tatln, crepe de chine, Loulslne or silk veiling are used for the graceful Em pire gowns, which are constantly Gain ing favor lu the fashion world. The toilet Illustrated In the large tiravg 1b made qf mauve silk crepe with ecru Chantllly lnce for trimming. The upper portion of the deop fitted yoke li tucked and a broad band of lace forms the lower part. The neck is cut square nnd finished with narrow .lace beading run through with violet velvet ribbon. , The full skirt Is gathered at the up yer edge and arranged on the yoke, a imooth adjustment being maintained under the arms. The crepe falls In long, graceful folds to the floor and the skirt train slightly In the back. An elaborate lace trim ming adorns the bem of tho gown and forms a deep point In front. The sleeves are trimmed with tuck ing and luce to conform with the yoke, providing broil Hues at the shoulder that add couderably to the general, effect. They are gathered at the lower edge, and adjusted on fitted lac cuffs, ovor which they droop stylishly. To make the gown In medium size will Require five and one-half yard of forty-four-inch material. Sprla- Faaclea. Scrollwork effects In braid. Ropes of sllvar spangle oa light mnnx- Vines of frosted silver spangles ot white lnce. I The use of heavy and fine lace one gown. Silk "tape" ribbon sewed on in leaf like figures. Fringe, in silk, chenille, ribbon vol! vet and silver. Straps stitched only on one edgrj tne otner being leu loose. Squares of lace with black velvet rIV bon thrended through the meshes. A largo knot of white satin rlbbo; on the blouslng front of a blue coa opening over a vest of rich luce. The girlish "Newport." The new Jacket called the "New port" Is tnado of fawn colored glac taffeta. It Is long and tight fitting pleats giving the needed fulness, an Is strapped with bands of sarin in a! darker shade. On the collar there art medallions of ecru lace. Fin For the Han. Larger effects nre the rule tn ha! pins, some of the most striking belnt the long pearl ones, which are orna ments nnd hat pins combined. Boms women wear two or three In various farts of the hnt. Novelty In Stocking!. Black stockings with a vertical stripe consisting of a small floral de sign In two shades of pale blue art among the novelties In hosiery. One of the Late Fancies. One of fashion's latest fancies Is the! Gibson waist, which Is especially ef-l feetlve when developed In white or! colored moire. Plain waists of this I kind show the fabric to splendid ad vantage. The Gibson waist illustrated is rondel of oyster white moire, with tiny black I velvet buttons for decoration. The I foundation Is a glove-fitted feather boned lining which closes In the cen tre front. Broad pleats extend from shoulder I to belt back and front, tapering to ward the bvlt. These pleata are the essential feature of the Gibson waist, and give a broad effect to the shoul- ders that Is very becoming to slender figures. The back Is fitted smoothlj across the shoulders and has slight fulness at the waist, arranged in tiuy pleats. A perfect adjustment Is maut-j talued under the arms. Tho- fronts are plain and fasten In visibly in the centre. Hows of black velvet buttons are placed directly on the edges of the fronts. The machine stitching and buttons are extended on the collar in an uninterrupted line, the collnr closing in the back. The bishop sleeves are fitted with Inside seams and have comfortable fulness on the shoulders. They are gathered at the lower edge and ar ranged on deep, fitted cuffs. A narrow velvet belt competes the blouse. Peau do sole, taffeta, corduroy, satin, French flannel or heavy waist fabric such as .pique, linen or madras are X.ADHS' OIB80K WAIST, appropriate for the mode. Glbact waists are reldom trimmed, machlr" stitching and' buttons being the uu. finish. To make the waist la the medlu: size will require two yards of thirty slx-lneh material.