The Fulton County news. (McConnellsburg, Pa.) 1899-current, May 27, 1903, Image 6

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    Hrc. ri fc. toHy moQuroenti
-There,, by humble tooe,
In. 'iV'roplil HwW UnKnov
It
err
"He
loiinkr
ypn or
H bri?2-
v -
V
V i: i: Y Memorial
I)ny Is celebrated
with Impressive
ceremonies in Ar
lington National
Cemetery nt Wash
ington. Standing
upon the steps of
tit-n lit I fill Ailing
tnu House retlee
tlons erowil thick
The grass-grown
ind fast u.ion
one.
Hounds, with
their
gleaming marble
Itiiernilnaljly. nml
ilabs, stretch away
:he wind plays an eternal dilge union;;
:he bough of the n ntinellng oaks,
(low vividly it ail comes hack the
lorrllile carnage, the desolated homes,
'.he broken hearts and bodies. Happily
:be most of those who wrought nnd
luffered nro beyond tin' blighting nicm
)ry of It now. anil from that baptism
)f blood nnd lire the Nation has risen
itronger and better, one and ludlssol
lble forever.
Vet It is not quit-' forty years since
1 President, whom the assassin's hand
1 waited, stood on lli-so same steps
.vith :hu l.iad of the. OnarUrniaster's
department. Ceneial Meigs. The one
'jnd just let, inied from visiting some
)f the wounded men In the tents 'hat
:hen occupied every foot of ground on
:liis noble old estate, while the other
mid remained heiv. ti!l--d with anxious
iiouyht whicn i;. superb view- extend
lig tieforc him and on every side but
iervel to embitter. It was by no
Iieatis the" first time he had s"en It, for
le bad been a long time friend of Gen
;ral I.ee, am! Arlington belonged to
',e by right of his wife. Mary Custls,
tole elr of her father, (ieorge Wash
ngton I'arki 'ustis, adopted son of
4 VAA-TUH 1-IIOTOOIurH Or OEKEHAL
OBANT I9f TUB TIOKSBOBO DAYS,
Jtujge and ir-aditon of Martha Wash
Ingtou. But tbo old friendship In
Meigs heart for tils quondam comrade
la arm. th brilliant und lovable Lee,
was turned to vindictive bitterness.
HtralKht across the glistening Poto
mac, beyond the long bridge over which
the two had driven, glittered the dome
tad the spires of the Nation's CapltoL
tfl
1 - , - . ,
..,y-.y. '" ' ' '. - . . '
- fir srt-t f.j.
-fi vrwt A J -....
Arlington House -Tbs Old Lc Oansloa.
. rokep Tr)fci pur oMier'ded
Ve ne'er rornor.
erf tL -r r: I.
r,-vr r.l i vi . n . ..I
iov, o'er Mike,
9ur on?ripp- to our dcoxl
?
the objective of the Confederate forces,
as Uichmond was of the Federal. Its
preservation was of vital necessity,
and there was uo place of better stra
tegic value for such guardianship than
Arlington, directly In front of It. on
the Virginian bills that skirt the Poto
mac. It was not strange, therefore,
that the gates of the mansion had
scarcely closed on the retiring I.ee fam
ily after the fail of Sumter than they
swung open again when the tlrst army
called by Lincoln marched into the
grounds and bivouacked beneath the
stately trees where, later, some of them
were to lie' asleep forever.
Hut It was not n question of Wash
ington's protection that troubled the
Quartermaster-General on that spring
evening In '!4. for the batten d old
Forts Mcl'herson nml Whipple, scarce,
ly a stone's throw away, told of Their
ability to bold tlietr own. It was a
much more serious problem in his esti
mation that demnmbd immediate so
lutionsepulture of the t'nion dead.
The matter was Indeed a pressing
one. The dally list of deaths from
wounds nnd disease In the hospitals In
and around Washington was very
large, and the utmost limit of accom
modation .SiMiO -had lust been reached
In that city's Soldier's Home Ceme
tery. Moreover, murmurs of resent
ment line, angry protestation had
Sarcophagus Containing; Unknown Dead In Arlington Cemetery.
reached the department from the peo
ple of the North for the Improper burial
of her sons who had ralleu In such ap
palling numbers from the ranks of all
the armies. Nor could these protesta
tions be Ignored. Policy, if not human
ity, required that some sort of action be
taken at once, for from these very peo
ple must be drav.n further recruits.
irant had Just declared his Intention
of "lighting It out on this line," nnd as
an earnest of his sincerity the roar and
thunder of the nwful Battle of the
Wilderness could even now be beard.
Sixty-four thousand new men would be
required to fill the place of those who
helped the great General to win the
famous victories of the next few
weeks. And the man who so brilliant
ly contested every one of them and
every inch of that lino was Itobert L.
Lee.
"lie shall never, never return to Ar
lington, no mntti-r what the Issue of
the war may bel" exelnimedMelgs, cs
the Prrsldctit rejoined him.
Senrcely were the words free from
his lips when a squad of men ap
proached with a melancholy burden
stretchers with the bodies ot a dozen
soldiers from out the tents.
"Set them down," commanded the
quartermaster, "(hiptaln, see that all
tho dead at Arlington ore burled In the
place. Uejtln there," nnd be pointed to
a terrace n dozen yardr away.
In such wise the greatest of our na
tional cemeteries Tvas begun. Oddly
enough, with a meaning these forty
I years have revealed to us, the first body
over r-ulch the brief but touching ser
I vice was read was that of a Confeder
, nte prisoner who had died of his
I wounds In this loved home of his Idol
Used Southern General,
j There are more tiisn 10,000 graves
I here now. Heautlful the place Is still
1 with Its mighty oaks and elms and ten
tier greensward, but ll In t ho beauty ot
dead, find tlx slghlni. (if the Avimls
and unties of birds hut make r lie sllenc
more profound. On t In trim re where
the first Intel incuts were made, com
missioned officers now Hp, the olhcrr
I nxlng neon removed to t lie lower part
of tin grounds, where sleep the mum
nml tile.
Straight In front of the mnin entrance
ADUIKAt, FAMtAUL'T.
to the house under tho shadow of tbf
Mag lies that idol of his command, lien
oral Sheridan, nnd by his side. Admiral
Porter. Over the former lias been
raised the finest monument in the cem
etery. It Is of beautifully polished
granite bearing on lis face a bronze
Hag nnd a medallion head of the hero
who rests below. Only In thp otllcers'
section Is nny deviation allowed from
the prescribed plain marble or granite
slab, hut here friends nnd States are al
lowed to contribute and select, and
many fine monuments attest both love
and pride.
Along the terrace, a little to the
south, in the midst of n flower garden,
where the names of many brave men
appear In particolored (lowers, rises
the Temple of Fame, u handsome struc
ture in whose stone cornice upmolding
the dome Is cut the country's grtatesl
nanus Washington, Lincoln. Grant,
1'arragiit. And on the pillars, too, are
deathless names that thrill us as we
read them. Is It. the names or some
thing else for which they stand that
moves us so? Close beside this temple
as If to emphasize this question. Is an
extremely simple oblong pile of granite
a sarcophagus In which lie the bone?
of over 2tt(K) soldiers, which were col
i looted during the last years of the win
' from all the battlefields within a radiu.
of thirty-live miles of Washington
Many of them were sadly deficient Ir
th i- number of parts Jhnt go to mnl:f
UP II Well regulated nki lelnn nml ,l
course, identification wasn't thought
or, yet they were faithfully gathered
together, separately boxed and placet!
In that massive tomb iu the shadow ol
fume.
Unique among nations stands Amer
ica. In thus honoring her citizen
dlers. Unique also is the beautiful but
sua Holiday that Is upon us, for every
one of those eighty-thrre national cem
eteries and all others where slumber
any who took pnrt In that awful war
will be invaded by n flower-laden army
to strew there sweet emblems of peace
and Immortality, ami not the least
beautiful part is that now and here
after they who bear flowers will be
quite as Indifferent as the shcpcri
thermelves whether they wore blue or
gray uniforms In llfe.-Martln Cur
tis, In the San Francisco Chronicle.
ChMrer) etger, oj. .
Wor)dcr bout,
Tri DecortJtiop Day?
Lirer)i MN tr&.rg,er-
LibtcQ e.r;U you'll r)C6.ri
Of our ojoriou country,
To itv crtldrei) de&rt
It SoVea, our tourjiry,
AqcI our i.lVe rna.de tree;
Saved lo hioKew rjonor,
Purc&l liberuj-
Honor to our soldiers ,
TnfcJ wa rotYvfr fr nnui
I Wit I) our tltLQ b.nd llowcrV
I Or) Deccjrft.ltorj Dtkj.
The STORY OF THE TRAIN ROBBER
A "Rcd-Hcaded,
Humanity . But
I-:ipulse Once.
"WHAT C - A -
THIS is n hit of the unwritten
history of tho Southwest, un
worthy of preservation save
(, for the thread of human in
ieresc inextricably Interwoven wrli and
lighting tip Its sombre passages. It is
given as near iis-mny lie In the lan
guage of one of tin; chief nctors lit
the drama, my friend, the train robber,
the only man on record who served
n life sr-htence at Columbus, Ohio, for
one offense and a live-year term at
Fort Leavenworth for another simul
taneously nml was purged of both In
hout thiee years.
l!ut the details o." his primes, con
viction, punishment and successful
l;!gal battle for liberty are another
tory nt:d It has already been written.
That the present story M l:ot couched
In the vernacular of the alkali and
agebrush melodrama Is due to tin
fa.'l that the man who told it Is a
graduate of tho University of West
Virginia nnd ns a condition precedent
to becoming a knight of the road was
prosecuting attorney of a:i Oklahoma
tounty In the early days when the
(licking was better' than it Is now.
He was not an imposing nor n par
ticularly heroic figure ns lie sat In the
dingy old cliy room nnd told his story
to the accompaniment of n tloz"n click
ing typewriters grinding out late copy.
He was a red headed, live-foot scrap of
humanity viLh the prison pallor on
his countenance and the prison taint
enveloping him ns a garment, but he
had n cold, steel-blue eye, a fighting
Jaw snd a mouth tlint closed In as
Mrong and expressionless a line ns the
two halves of a steel trap. As ho
talked one could understand how In
the free and lawless atmosphere of the
short grass country even a normally
conscientious man, Jiot on the trail of
ids brother's murderer, ns . he hnd
been, might through a combination of
fortuitous circumstances and nlavistlc
Impulse, become In turn n hunted out
Jaw, lie wns but five hours out of the
United States prison at Fort Leaven
worth, and the reason for his being
there and the manner of his release
made his story news. Not ,n thrilling
possibly, as the telegraph stories that
used to come in over tho wire when his
"gang" was alleged lo be terrorizing
the twin territories, but Interesting ns
marking tiie clove of an ep! s )de In the
vlnt'.hig of the West.
"And I guess thit'Il be about all." he
ia'd, as he finished the rccl.nl.
"Hut surely there must lie some in
cidents during all that tlun? to which
you can revert without regret," was
suggested.
"Well, yes," was the response, nnd
n reminiscent look came Into his .eyes.
'Them was one case that doesn't give
me unmixed gilef when I think of It.
One day during the recent unpleasant
ness I was In Western Texas on my
way to California by an unfrequented
route, ns main traveled ronds wer a
bit dangerous to me at the time. I had
been in th? saddle thlr'.y-slx hours on
end nnd without food for n day, so you
cr.n Imagine how glad I was to come
upon a solitary dugout with a rusty
Ktovpipc sticking up through tin roof,
th first I had seen for three days. I
called for several minutes before any
one came, but finally the tloor slowly
upenetl nnd womaii stuck her head
lauvIoLtsly out.
"Say, she wns a picture of poverty.
Thin faced, gaunt to the point of atten
uation, tlrissed ns far ns I coul l judge
In n single scant calico garment, nnd
barefoot. Several to-,v le ndeil kids
Willi Reared faces were pc-pIns; out
from behind her and holding ou to her
JrcM.
" 'lld!n.' she mponucd faintly to the
usual saluatlon of th: plains.
"'I've rede a day wh!io;:t eating ami
rim nearly famished.' I s-ild. 'Can't
jwiii (!x nie soate diuinr? I'll pay jou
well for it."
" 'Strange;-,' she report, 'I'd be
luiglily glad to, but there r.lu't a thing
t 'tit oa th: place and we're pretty
hungry t;urse!ves.'
"I'm reasonably hardened, but the
1 ok in that woman's eyes nnd those of
the kids ft the mere mentioti of food
touched me, and hnving learned that
tho nearest runcho was twelve miles
nwny I rode over there and back as
fast as my tired cayuse could carry me,
with bneoa, spuds, flour and conVe
tnougU to last n week. Man, It was
pitiful to see those hungry kids chew
ing a raw bacon rind to stay their
pinched little stomachs while the moth
er was cooking something for us to -vat.
Well, wo all gorged ouriselws. and af
ter supper, stimulated by the fond and
coffee, lh woman told me their story.
' l .hud wondered where her husband
r.-ns, nnd -she told m. lie had gone n
tveri before over nbut WJ miles cast
where a man owed him some n-.uney,
nnd she had expected hliu back for sev
eral days. Her supplies were exhaust
ed, and she and the children wero In
desperate straits when I providentially
drove up. She wns sure something
must have happened to li'-r husband,
nnd the worry about him was added
to her other troubles. It sDfms they
had formerly owned a little farm over
In Eastern Texas, but some Bhylock
of a cashier In a .country bank bad
made them a small loan and closed
them out when they were unable to
pay tho, Interest. Then thfy drifted
around for a year or two, nnd finally
stranded high and dry in that dugout
Jn the short grass. I left her some
money and wont on the next morning,
feeling mighty chesty over tho thought
that I had hplped some one out of the
hole, hut I remembered the name of the
town nnd Uk bank, and mndo up my
mind some day I would break even
with the cashier for robbing those peo
ple of their home.
"About a year later I wns In a little
town In Knstern Texas wllh a couple or
friends. I had business at the bank,
and ns I sieppca in the door It just
struck me thtit was the town where my
friends of the dugout bad been touched,
Olid that the fellow sitting ut n deik
behind the rolling was lb one who
turned the trick. I didn't like his look
anyhow, I leaned over nnd looked at
ldut (or a minute wlihoiu speukuig,
Five - Foot Scrap of
He Had a Kindly
:-: ::
3VE jE OIF1 IT.
nnd finally he looked up nnd snapped:
" 'Well, young man, whnt do you
want?"
" 'You,' I said, and Jumped over the
rolling. He wns rattled and when I
told hi in to back himself up In a cor
tier nnd stay there he minded like a
good Imi.v, nnd stood Mill while I wasted
valuable time telling him what I knew
of Ids misdeeds nnd family history. I
broke even on thnt fnrm lonn. Ky the
time I was through with him anil his
Institution the town was popping pretty
lively, nnd the boys were yelling for
me to come on. Every blamed citizen
of the hamlet snd n few 'nesters' who
were rank outsiders felt privileged to
take a crack ut us, nnd one of tho boys
wns winged. But ive got hlni on ills
horse nnd retreated In good order.
"They were n persistent bunch, and
we had lo stop every Utile while nnd
kind of brush them back, but they
hung on till we got across Ited Itlver
nnd nwny. Another overland trip to
Soul hern California wns in order, nnd
soon I wns ngaln In Western Texas,
this time with my friends, nnd we
stopped nt the same dugout over night.
The man wns nt home nnd didn't act
ns friendly as I thought he ought to to
the man who had kept the wolf from
Ills door, but I never thought anything
of It, ns we were not n particularly
pretty trio io look nt. The next morn
ing when we woke and went to look
after our horses the mnn was gone.
Well, we snddled up right away, but
almost before we could mount here
come a sh-Tiff and n whole posse coml
totus after us. There was some lively
shooting, and the last tiling I noticed
wns that skunk who had piped us off
standing In the doorway of the dugout
smoking peacefully. He wns clearly a
non-conibntant, a coward as well as a
spy.
"We had a running fight for twenty
miles, but our hors;'s were fresh and
the posse was mostly made up of 'nest
ers," who don't liktf the smell of pow
der, and wo finally shook them off and
com limed our ltitr minted Journey to
California.
' 'I'm coining this way just onen
more,' I said when w-:- made camp that
night, 'and I'm going to get that un
grateful hound who gave us away."
" 'Oh. don't fret yourself.' replied onp
of the boys, 'he won't be there. I bust'
cd his hide as we rode away.' "
lie paused nnd rolled a clgaretto
Willi the deft touch of the true plains
man. lit it. inhaled the smoke deep Into
bis lungs villi evident satisfaction nnd
nonchalantly blew a curiously Involved
series of nebulous blue rings before he
went on.
"Ingratitude always ditl grate on
me," lie continued, "and I've always
thought that 'uoster' got what was
coming to him. lie's one Illustration
of the saying thnt 'a man's sins will
find him out," nnd well, so am I. but
that's another story." Kansas City
Journal.
The Japanese, up to forty years ago,
had a very silly custom. They vaci-lu
nted o:i the tip of the nose.
Iu rural parts of England the cool;
pours hot water over the threshold nf
tr the bridal couple have gone, In or
der to keep It wurm for another bride.
A curious device Is the dispatch
boom invented by an army captain. Its
object Is to carry messages between
in cannon shells so arranged as to burst
nt the rlsht time, thus disclosing thii
message.
Tlie Iowa Indians In Oklahoma have
a bed quilt that Is novel iu the extreme,
nnd not the sort of n thing a man
would wish to shop under. It Is five
feet squure, anil made entirely of hu
man scalps. It Is one of the most sa
civd relics of the tribe, und is sup
posed to cure any disease.
In the tropical northern territory of
South Australia travelers need not
carry a compass. Nature has provided
a living compass for them. The dis
trict abounds with the nests of the
magnetic or meridian ant. The longer
axis of these nests, or mounds, Is al
ways In n perfect line with th? paralel
of latitude, pointing due north" nnd
south. Scientists cannot explaliw -this
peculiar orientation.
A rubber-yielding vine growing In Its
uncultivated state Is reported to have
been discovered In the PIJo Mountains,
in Honduras. The vine grows to a
length or about 100 feet, varying In di
ameter from four Inches to two feet,
nnd is snld to produce rubber in con
sldernble quantities and of excellent
quality. Analyses made by American
and Euorpeau chemists suggest that
the new plant yields rubber of a supe
rlor quality to the Para rubber, which
Is so extensively placed on the market
at the present time.
In the primitive villages' of tbt
Andes, scattered through Pern, Bolivia
and Ecuudor, the descendants of the
ancient Incas depend upon the "klpu"
for keeping all their accounts. It was
In use when Plzarro conquered Peru,
and the Andean Indians have never
Improved on it. It, is the oldest known
form of bookkeeping. The "klpu" Is
simply a collection or knotted strings.
Illfferently colored strings denote dif
ferent articles In dally use, and ten dis
tinct knots the ten numerals. In the
absence of a written language It Is a
mnrvt llously perfect system.' Large 1
transactions are conducted u accur
ately by It as If double entry bookkeep
ing were employed.
A VrUn Illat. .
Make the most of your opportunities
or somuouo else vlll. Philadelphia
Worfp
llecord, ,, , , L
New York City. Coats made with
stitched straps are much in vogue ami
are exceedingly smart. This very at
tractive May Manton one is adapted
STBAPVED (.'CAT,
to suitings of nil sorts as well as to ma
terials used for gtnerul wraps, but Is
shown iu tan colored covert cloth
stitched with cortieelll silk.
The coat Is made with fronts, back
and under-nrm gores and Includes
seams In both fronts und back which
extend to the shoulders. The neck Is
finished with the regulation collar nnd
lapels and In each front Is inserted a
convenient pocket. The sleeves are In
the smart tnilor coat shape, but with
novel roll-over cuffs. ,
The quautlty of material required for
the medium size is two and three-quarter
yards forty-four inches wide, two
und a half yards fifty-two inches wide.
ltrix F.lnn With Mote Collar.
Loose or box Eton Jackets make a
f en t tiro of advance styles, nnd will bp
greatly worn during the season to come.
The very pretty one shown in the large
drawing is made of black taffeta, with
trimming of applique cloth, held by
fancy stitches, which is exceodiugly
smart, but etanilne, cloth, peau tie sole
nro all appropriate and tho design Is
suited alike to the odd wrap and the
costume. The trimming might be
heavy lnce of uny sort, applique or the
material ,braidetl, braiding being one
of the latest whims of fashion.
Th.? Jacket Is made with back nnd
fronts only and Is fitted by means of
Ghoulder and under-nrm seams. At the
BOX ETON WITH
neck is a collar which Is broad at thp
buck and shoulQers, bjt forms stole
ends at the front. Tfci sleeves are iu
bell styl? and short enough to ullow the
full ones worn beuenth to be seen.
The quantity of material required for
the medium size is three and three
quarter yards twenty-one inches wide,
two yurds forty-four iuelws wide. '
Rij!a Tor Children.
Gathered skirts aro always fashlou
nble for very small children, and In all
materials look well. Tucks that can be
let out nnd hems that have the same
ndvautuge nro a great saving, for even
If there is a mark where the tucks and
hem were let down. It can be bidden
under bauds of either jjIbIu linen or
embroidery.
Full gathered waists to wear with
gulmpes are the best for small children,
for the yoke and sleeves, are always
soiled long before the rest of the frock,
nnd constant laundering, even the moat
careful. Is not good for colored mus-
! Tint her smarter muslin and lawn
frocks or mode with yokes and sleeves
Instead of gulmpes, thus marking the
dltfereuce between au everyday and a
"pnrty" frock. Pittsburg Dispatch.
ItntlarsleeT Effects.
"Mauy of the Uondsomo new dresses
show elaborate undersleeve effects. If
well held In these are pleasing. Too
soggy and droopy schemes, howevei,
look positively, uutldy, especially ror
the street. Old alerves may be made
thus modish very easily. A handsome
blaiK broadcloth was thus treated.
Tho sleeve was ripped up tbo back
seam to the elbow. A runic of black
chiffon was ct In, pu3 fnshlou. Eatb
ilu of it was one of b'aek silk point
da Vcnlse luce. The edges of the cloth
were hidden by an applique of Oi leutal
embroidery like that on tho cuffs and
ot the frouts.
A Word Al.ont flllk.
Though the Continental looms Con
i.nutt to turn out any amount of tnQeta
It Is said that the coarser wenvus will
h'j the thing next autumn. ArmuresJ
nre looked upon us wing one of the
coming favorites. Tho great demand
for tatfetc Is quite as much due to, Its
desirability for llniurt ns Its vogue In
carmen . All tbu sheer etamiues ai
over a taffeta foundation, and thli
nloue sells enough taffeta lo make It
appear the silk of silks.
Twine Lars on Silk Cln.
A novel putt dress Is of t-nstor silk
crepe. The bolero, which Is but n deep
pillf, droops over a deep draped girdle.
There's n liberal showing of twine
luce. On the skirt fiat finimces of t!ib
lace nltcrnnte. with the bias lloiincei
of the crepe. There's no finding n
color lovelier than this delicate simile
of tan. In reality It Is too light to lie
called castor; castor, however, stands
for richness and delicacy of color, and
ton Is often nu ugly shade.
Tacknt Am Short.
In splto of what is said to the con
trary, short Jackets nro being made to
order at tho tailors, nnd being pur
chased ready-made by those who arc
fortunate enough to be built In "stock
sizes." Long coats nnd tbree-qunrtei
lengths were ull very well In cold
weather. Hut for a t-un-nbout cos
lunie the short jneket Is much liketl,
and so, all but Indispensable.
Nerkwnar NwnM.
A Windsor tie in washable striped,
silk is cool nnd neat for summer w?nr.
Blue nnd white, "crab-red" and black
and red and white, and a clear and
brilliant given nnd white are among
those seen. The crisp bow is already
tied, nnd as the silk Is rather wide it
falls out in plump outlines from the re
straining knot.
HaoiUoina Satin Clnlln.
The hack of a black Liberty satin
girdle bos four handsome cut stcej but
tons are ornaments. Ou both sides
but at a little distance, are three steel
buttons and then two buttons." It
makes a piety finish to the belt nud it
fastens with steel clnsps.
lint Wing SloKven.
Bat wing sleeves are among the lead
ing fen turps of demi-tollet bodices and
offer themselves In particularly pleas
lug aspect. The cognomen Is n most
happy Inspiration, as their graceful
lines are singularly akin to the contour
ot their namesakes.
flreim anil Gold.
A bracelet that Illustrates tho fad fot
green and also the incoming fancy fot
a jour work, consists of greet; balls al
ternating with roudelles of gold open
work.
Frlngea on downs and Coats.
Fringes will be considerably used oo
Qcliiis and berthas. The old-fashioned
net top bullion fringes are appearing
on gowns nnd coats.
STOLE COLLAR.
Woman's Three Pie re Skirt.
Skirts made with deep graduated
flounces that ure arranged Iu shirring
ut the upper edge ore notable among
advance models and will be gre.itly
worn In all the thlu and pliable mate
rials which are so fushlomible, silk,
wool, linen nnd cotton.
The very graceful May Muuton model
Illustrated includes wide tucks at the
lower edge of the llcince and Is shirred
over heuvy cords. Tho materlnl of
which the original Is made Is voile, lo
the lovely shade known as mals or corn
color, and the finish machine nltcluug
with cortieelll silk.
The skirt Is made Iu three pieces nnd
Is laid In tucks at t't sides and back
which give a hip yoke ftect. The f fi
nes ut the back Is laid in In veiled
plouts nud the flounce 1 seamed to the
lower edge.
The quautlty of nin'erlnl required for
the medium siz Is twelve and hret
quarter yards twenty-one inches wide,
THRXa riKOC fiKTBT.
ten' and three-quarter yards twenty
seven Inches wide, ulne yards thirty
two Inches wide tr lx and three-qunr-tor
yrd fonty-f'tm-Uadiftwida.