'.'.'.'X- . i . , : 'x ,A ' ' ANCESTRAL 3iOMB KB; of the Washington tET no man fancy bo knows : sport." says Moucure D. Con way, "unless he has fam- llv-trpd nil nnppKtnr nf fefcViJ George Washington." Washington himself knew little about bis ancestors; and the controversy over them all has been since his death. Nevertheless, after the disappoint ments and disillusions which cool the ardor and silence the tongue of the relic searcher lu America, it Is a hap piness to the soul to gather a series of pictures of tho English home ot George Washington's ancestors. In England, when you go ancestor and relic hunting, you find no clatter ing fuetory erected in n hallowed door yard; you find no honored tree cut down to straighten a trolley rond; you seldom find an old church pulled down to be replaced with an over-smart and uupald-for new one;, jou find no an cient rooms with electric lights glaring In the low celling, with single sheets of plate glass making blank, staring faces In every low, latticed window, with old chimneys and fireplaces torn out to make room for steam heaters and gas logs. All these have I found In America In searches for memorials of my own an cestcrs and those of our great patriots, but lu the English homes ot the Wash ington, you see the bouse in Little Brlngton which they built In HKM. and even the Sulgrave Manor in which they lived In l.fcW, unchanged and "unim proved." The trees are older, and some are gone, but never cut wantonly or heedlessly; there are no electric lights and no disfiguring electric poles. The furnishings have vanished, and the rooms are bare, but the houses are the same, and the village surrounding are the same. The Washington came to Sulgrave Manor in much dignily, for the manor was granted to Laurence Washington for bis services to his country and State. Here ho lived with four sons and seven daughters till his death in 158-L lu 100C, after reverses In fortune, Itobert . Washington, son of Laurence, left Sulgrnve with his two sous. Hob ert. Sr., with his eldest son Laurence, took possession of an unpretentious cottage at Little Hrlngton, where they resided until the (leatli ot Laurence in 1010. This cottage still statnls, and Is known as the Washington House. Upon the death of Laurence, Itobert Washington left Little Hrlngton and went to London, accompanied by his son's widow and her eldest child Lau rence, which always has been a family name In America as well as in Eng land. Tho house then was occupied by Itobert Washington. Jr. (brother of the deceased Laurence) und his wife Eliz abeth. Eor the past ten years they had re elded In a small cottage on the out skirts of Hit. village where he Dad erected a windmill and followed the calling of a miller. In this Washing ton house they resided from HUH until March, 102, when they died within nine days of each other, and were bur led at St. Mary's Church, Great Hrlng ton. Over the doorway of the cottage still Is to be seen u large, square block of stotie bearing the following appro priate Inscription: "The Lord glveth; the Lord taketh away; blessed be Hie name ot the Lord. Construct.! KiOO." It Is a disputed question whether this Inscription alludes to the compul sory relinquishment of Sulgrave Manor for this humble bouse, or whether it re fers to the death of Laurence and Mar garet Washington's second son, Greg ory, which occurred shortly aJter Ids baptism and their removal from Hul grare to Brlngton. Terhups both events helped to the frame ot mind which made so sad a choice of mottoes. Ilobert'f wife Elizabeth whs nursed by the widow of Laurence Washing ton, who, upon the death of her father-in-law, Itobert, Hr., In lulit. bad re turned from London to Little Brlngton. When Robert and Elizabeth died this Widow of Laurence again lived- la the . '"tv?f ' Hi. in ... TT"? .r; UM4 ' , 'jtV - - I Washington house, where she was joined by her son. the l!ev. Laurence Washington, lu 104:.. lu that year he vacated the "living" of Purlelgb, In Essex, which had been granted to him In 1U32. In lii."0 mother and son both died, and were buried in the family vault at nrington. The two sons of the Hev. Laurence (named John and Laurence) emigrated with their sister .Martha to Virginia, and John's great grandson was George Washington. I shall not give the genealogical table of the family it had a ques tioned link for, some years but the finding of several wills, among them those of the three emigrant to Amer ica, has given proof to every link In the chain. Washington house now Is occupied by plain folks, laborers. Its internal structure has not been changed the quaint old staircase of oak lead to the bedroom where llobert and Elizabeth died so closely In time to each other. There are new windows, but not of plate glass. In the buck yard an an cient pump appears which is as old as tile house. Another and most pictur esque pump stands on the green. With Its thatched roof, overhung by a great r-"r. ' C.rv.d . T.mb .1 Cf, nnngiQrtj tree, it forms a charming feature in the picture In which tho row of ancient almshouses, the village blacksmith's shop, and the inn. "Ye Old Saracen's Head," make a quaint and serene beauty. You can lind In all England scarcely a more typical scene ot old time village life than In Little Brlng ton. Leaning against the pump may he seen a stone disc siMt-eu inches in di ameter, which to the practiced eye at once denotes a sun-dial. I-'or forty years the existence of this carved cir cular slab was known, but it did not awaken sulllcierit curiosity to excite In vestigation. At last A. L. Y. Morley, the estate agent for Earl Spencer, ex amined the old slab and turned It face upward. He found that Its curving was not only the lines and figures of u sun-dial face, but It also bore the Washington arms, which are: Argent two bars, und In chief three mullets (gules). It also showed the Initials It. W., and the date KilO. This photograph here shown Is the first photograph ever taken of It and tho first sent to America. It seemed like a message from the ancient fum ily, nay. the whole past, to the new na tion which a Washington helped so largely to establish. The letters It. W., I feci confident, stand for Itobert Washington. Tho coat-of arms, it gen erally Is believed, suggested to Wash ington our Stars und Stripes. There Is In this cradle of the Wash ington unother shield of the Wash ington family. It Is in the church of St. Mary the Virgin at Great Hrlngton, the church which the W ashingtons at tended and where they were buried. Along the pleasantest of English lanes they walked the half-milo each Sun day to this church. Everything In the vicinity of this Washington house Is of Interest to the American, and nothing more so than the old cross which stands Just outside the church door, under a superb elm tree. Many of these market crosses bore dial which have disappeared. CEOR.CC AND There Is no dial on It noif, though the square dial block wa standing In 1842. This cross has stood since the four teenth or fifteenth century, and the an cestors of Washington passed under Its shadow and perhaps halted by its steps whenever they went to the church 300 years oro. The base, oMto call It cor rectly) the cnlvary, consists of three octagonal steps, much worn. The shaft Is square 'below, worked to an octagon. It Is In two pieces, the lower set with lead. This church of St. Mary the Virgin Is one of the most Interesting lu Eng land. I shell give only a few particu lars of its contents which seem of spe cial Interest to America, telling first of the Washington tomb. It Is under the chancel floor. Its place Is marked by stone slab with ft long Inscription, which Is almost unworn. For many years It has been protected carefully bv a wooden covet. It bears an lu- any i m.iwan ,A'- '"if mm .1 inn.-... HERE LfETH -THE-BODi OFLAVRENCE WASHINGTON SONNE ft HEtRE OF t ROBKRT-WASHINGTON OF SOVLGRAS lN-THE COVNTIE OF NORTHAMPTON F.SQVlER WHO MARIED MARGARET THE- ELDEST DAVGHTER OF WlLLtAM DVTLKR OF TEES - IN THE COVNTlE. OF SVSSEXF. -ESQVIER-WHO HADlSSvl BV-HER 8 SONNS & Q DAVGHTERS WHiCH LAVRENCE-DECESSED THE IJ OF DECEMBER A : DNI : 1616 Thovthat bychanceorchoyck; of-th!s hast-sioht . KNOW LlFE TO DEATH RESlCNES AS DAYE TO NIGHT B VT AS TH F. SVN HS RETORNE REVIVES THE1 DA YK SOCHRlSTSHALLVS THOVOH TVRNDE TO DVST4-CLAV scription telling that "Laurence Wash lngton lies here." He and his wife Margaret had eight sons and nine daughters. On a brass plate at the head of the stone Is tin following: "Here lies Interred ye bodies ol Ellzab Washington Widdowe wild changed This Life for Imuiortalltte Y 19 of March 1G22 As Also ye body ol Kobert Washington Gent her I.sU Husband Second Sonne of Robert Washington of Solgrave in ye County of North: Esqr who Dept'd This Lift ye 10 of March 1022 After They Lived Lovingly Together In this rarish." It rouses a tender Interest to read ol the twain that they lived lovingly, and in death were not divided. The will of this Elizabeth Washing ton shows that this Little Brlngton home was well furnlslied. She hud am ple linen, tablecloths, napkins, side board and cupboard cloths, towels, sheets and "pillow beers." She hud silver spoons and salt cellars, "a nut to drink In trimmed with silver" (this was a mounted cocoanut), silver bowls and beakers. There are many pewter plates and chargers and platters; and irons, shovels nnd tongs, and, like Shakespeare, a best and second-best bed. with "Turkey-work qulshlons." She had "a pled cow. a pled colt and a young bullock," and she bequeathed considerable sums of money. The Washington arms Impaling the Butler aro cleanly cut, showing plainly both stars and stripes. This tomb Is a simple one, but the tombs of the Spen cers In this chapel form one of the most magnificent series of family mem orials In England. Each arch Is tilled with a great ultar-tomb. it has been the burial place of the Spencers since the time of Henry VII. These tombs ure In entire perfection of preservation. Some have not a scratch on the marble, and the most modern, curved over two centuries ago, Is as clean cut as If from the chisel yesterday. The efllgles of these good knights and their wives form a line record of costume they are grim fashion plates. Other objects ot Interest In this One, old church are the wonderful font. In which infunt Wasblugtons of the sev enteenth century were christened; a curious alms-box und an alms-chest in which valuables often were stored. There also Is one at Sulgrave Church, the oldest In England. The church seats are unusual, being not pews but ancient benches. Each bench end Is carved In whut Is called a "poppy bead." It Is a great, ornamental de sign; one contains the eont-of-orms of a couutry family, the Greys; another has the chalice nnd wafer; another the emblem of "Tho Passion;" another1 has two crests; nuother sounj slgultlcuut foliage; another a bunch of grapes. They are most Interesting, and give an air ot much distinction to the church "ulleys." Sunday Magazine. The largest Bible class in Great Britain Is at All Saints' Church, Shef field. The average attendance is 1,600. HIS HATCHET. fllinrp Hints. cheep will not thrive on nil kinds of oils. Some breeds are very active and thrive only In large flocks, but the large mnllo'.i breeds require good pasturage and will not give sotlsfuctury results if compelled to work over a large area for all they get. All sheep should have dry soils. Eoot rot will occur In n flock that Is.kept constantly on wet land. Rowing; Tan l)rp. As a rule, the majority of ihe farmers sow seeds too deep. Small seeds need just enough covering to give them moisture and darkness. Th.' soil shouM be pressed on line seeds only so ns to exclude the light. Especially should this be done very carefully and slightly Just before a rain. Many of the seeds are lost, and the reputation of some pood, holiest seedsman ruined, In the estimation of Individuals, because fine seeds are sow n too ui-ep, and the soil Is pressed down lo.i hard upon fhem. A great many farmers air- lu too great n hurry to sow seri'.s rr.rly; thoy do not wait for thi ground t i set sufllcleiitly dry and warm. It is hard t.) give gen eral directions that will apply In nil ca.cs.- but. as a rule, the smaller the seed the lighter si -iv.'.J be Ilia sjII lu which tliiv .".:v f.)v:'.. ConvcnLi.t ling Tionlt, Make a cummon Y-sh::;.vd IrotiMi of heavy solid lumber. Make a swing gale of 2x4 timber and one-Inch boards. Take 2'j-lnch boards 12 Inches wide by 4 feet long nnd bor.- 2-tiich holes three Inches from ends. Hang the gale by nailing boards to each end of trough. Attach a latch so thai the gate can be held on either side of trough, l'lace the trough in hog !ut fence. When you go to feed push the gate from you and latch It. Cli-an out the trough and put In the feed. Now pull the gate to you so hogs can eat. This arrangement Is bandy, for the trough can be cleaned or feed mixed without hogs Interfering. - C. '.. Uobinso:!. In The E-iltomlst. Keep Acmulit ni th On)). The farmer should keep some account of his crops, his profits ami losses, and be able at flip end of the year to give an In'elligent Idea of what he Is doing, and then should give thought and study to efforts to improve. This Improve ment may refer to the maintaining of fertility, and this opens up a wide Held of study ns to maintain fertility de pends on ihe wise use of commercial fertilizers and saving of home-made manure, the rotaiiou of crops, ami nil that will aid in keeping tip tho maxi mum fertility. It also will involve n careful study of such crops ns you are producing. There are crops much more liable to failure than others. There are localities where wheat Is a verv un certain crop, and yet farmers continue growing It from year to year, where 'very third or fourth crop Is short as to leave little or no profit. Other crops may be substituted: In some localities rye Is veiy profitable, lu others oats, barley or einnier can be substituted, lint the cases are rare where you can afford to leave small grain out of your list of .crops, as it gives Ih.i best oppor tunity of getting a stand of clover to maintain fertility. Home and Enrm. Prnpor Mlltlon fHftll. A dull, stupid sheep will not lay on fat as rapidly as one of a nervous tem perament. This Is contrary to the gen eral belief, but experience has proved lliat it Is true, say n sheep writer. The bright, clear eye Indicates a good doer. The neck should be compact, ?hort and thick, and Is Indicative of the ronfornmtion of the rest of the body, ft Is also the cheapest part of the car cass, and we ".o not want too much of It. The neck should Indicate strength nnd character, and this applies also to the junction of the neck to the body. The body should be strong ,'hrough the shoulders and along the tip. There should be n good length rib, or well overed with a thick layer of muscle. The closeness of the lib also Indicates the value of the sheen ns u meat pro ducer. When the ribs are close to gether there will be a better layer of meat on tho outside. The whole back should be well covered, with great width over the loins, as from the quar ter to the first rib are th? parts that sell for the highest price in the mar kets. The quarter should be well de veloped on top and back over file pin points, and It should also be well tilled up. We must have good depth of body not that It gives expensive meat, but It Indicates the strength nud develop ment of the whole animal. If we have a good, long ril. we have P good de velopment of the upper oi valuable part. The ewe should be more loosely built ond not so closely coupled. Tje neck should be longer than the rani's, and Ihe head should be clear-cut. And the eye bright, denoting nervous energy. Th Mr. A Missouri correspondent slates that he has a draft-bred fonl to winter. He says he has mixed buy and stover nnd some corn but no oats. He wants to know If he can make the colt grow properly on such n bill of fare. We do not think he can do the young animal any sort of Justice on such foodstuffs. To begin with, oats and bran form the best feed for growing colls. Corn, while better than no grain nt nil, has not In it the muscle and boue-formlng elements that are required to make the frame of the horse. Protein nnd the necessary mineral elements ure sup plied by the outs and bran, whereas In the mixed liny, the stovir and the corn the carbohydrates or starchy mat ters are far too much in evidence. If there Is other M ay, some of the corn should be sold and oats bought with the money received for It. We believe Hint the only proper way to rear draft bred colts Is to give them ;n their flrst winter about alt the nuts and brail tbey will eat up clean three times a day. They should have the very best and brightest of the hay and whatever stover they choosa to pick out of the rack, but stover Is not good food for weanling horses. It Is too course and does uot carry enough nourishment to the square Inch. It some of the bajr has more clover In It than the rest th eolt should have that, providing that It Is bright, well cured and not moldy. If there Is no help for It give the colt the corn and he will do better fhnn he will with no grain nt nil, but If he Is worth wintering nt nil he Is worth treating right, and the way to do that Is to get li 1 m at Teast some oats. Breeder's Ga zette. , ' Row to Ilroy Field Mice. A serious problem on many farms is created by the presence of tlestruer tlve mice, and n new method devls.nl by a 1'iirlslaii scientist for their de struction may serve us as well ns It appears to be doing thoso who manage the farms of France. The mice bad be?o:ne n source of great loss In certain distrlcis over there. As we well know the powers of destruction of these diminutive creatures have been found to be enor mous. They not only ruin ln::ne"...e quantities of livlug vegetables In seek ing food, but lay nwny ample stocks for winter provender. Scientlsls have calculated that each mouse destroys from t weiity-i'otir in thirty-six pounds of plants every year; and aw un happy farmer reported that there were ovrr ."00 mice per acre on his bind. To five themselves of this plague, the people resbrted to asphyxiation, by filling the burrows with smoke, or to drowning by pouring water Into them, or to sprinkling poison about the liehls the lutter method, however, proving most dangerous to domesticated unimals. Finally, the French Parlia ment, moved by the appeals of the sufferers from the Gnrgiinaunn ap petites of these tiny prsts. appropri ated ?.,IMH)( to old them, and the latest pet of science the microbe was resorted to. Dr. Datiysz, of the Pas teur Institute, bnd observed that large numbers of mice died from a certain disease. He collected virus from sick animals, made cultures and found that these cultures, when nbsorbed with the nourishment, produced the disease In healthy rats and mice. This method of destruction has been recently car ried out on nn area of 2S00 acres, nnd has proved most effective. One great advantage Is that the chickens nnd other animals ,i the farm appear to be Immune to the disease, having bee.) In no instance affected during the ex periments. The gov rnment appro priation has been d .-voted to the pur chase of virus, which Is sent free ot charge to nil region', affected. The virus is mixed with salted water and crushed oats are soaked In the liquid. The oats are then scattered near thff burrows. Ten days afterwards, what Is estimated at ninety-live per cent, ot the mice have been found dead iu the llelds. .National Fruit Grower. rhyplrol Vnliie of Ksmynrd Mnnn-'. p For a long time our cultivators failed to get sight ot the mechanical value ot barnyard manure. They found that barnyard manure gave better results In some way than did chemical inniiurer, but could not llgure out the cause. Now, however, we have learned that In various ways the structure of the noil Is affected by (lie presence of the barn yard manure more than by tile chemi cal manure. On heavy soils the ad vantage of barnyard manure over some other manures Is very apparent. We h':vo mentioned In n previous nrlicle the adding of humus to the soil ns one very important way In which the barn yard manure aids the soil. There lire others. One of these Is to lighten up the soil and let in the air, which will be followed by the growth of rootlets to still further.make the soil porous. The hard clay soil Is not easily per meated by the roots of plants, even when It has a good deal of plant food lu It. Tho texture of the soil is ro close that the nlr cannot get In between the particles, ami the plants that try to grow on such a soil make but n sickly development. Now put on somo hnrnynrd manure either green or partly rotted. If If Is thoroughly worked Inlo tlie soli It quickly begins to disinte grate, and n thousand minute paths are made In the soil where tin vegetable matter Ik present, and the nlr llmls n ready admittance. The rootlets nf the plants penetrate these layers nnd find plant food abundant. They send u; the supplies fo the plants, und the leaves of the plant develop greatly and send back material to strengthen '.he roots. It was not before a matter ro much of luck of plant food nn texture of the soil permitting- tho pl.ints to utilize that plant food. It Is n mlstakp to suppose fiat the viune of barnyard manure can be told by the chemist, or that even when wo huve added the water-holdlnr power of the humus we have found Its f nil value. The mechanical edn-t is very great, how great will depend on the kind of soil into which the barnyard manure Is plowed or burrowed. On sandy hind the effect Is not tho snr.ie, but It Is. however, beneficial. If the land Is inclined to be leachy, burn yard manure Is the best kind ot manure lo apply, us It does not permit the fer tility mixed with It to be washed out and drained off. The manure holds moisture, and this 1s n help to the soil in dry weather. It also decays slowly, nnd the fertility Is thus released a little nt a time. During the time this Is going on the crops that have been planted on tho boII are growing, nnd a million little root hairs ure permeating tho soil ready to take the fertility as fast us It Is released- by the decaying fibres, It Is thus caught before It has time to souk down beyond the reach of plants. ' No class of fertilizers will ever be able o take the place of barnyard ma nure, and the more of It made on the farm the better for the land. Farmer's Itevlew, Aracka t Hmv a Dally Paper. Atlantis, the first newspaper pub lished In Greek lu the United States and founded lu New York City twelve years ago by Solon J. Vlusto as a week ly, lias become a dally paper. The editor explains that this la owing to the Increase of the Greek population here, there being now nearly 150,000 (reeks In this country. The twenty-fifth auuiversary of the Introduction of electric traction Into Germiiiiy will noun be ce vtriUd, in Bcillu. New York ,Clty. Waistcoats, tioth -nl and simulated, make a featureof lie latest styles and ore to be noted in many of the advance models. The rery uttrnctlve waist Illustrated Is In Eton style nnd allows of many effect ,ve combinations. As shown It is made f shepherd's "heck trimmed with jluck velvet and combined with a waistcoat and' cuffs ' of white pique which are made detachable, the waist at extending under the fronts only, but .silk us well ns cotton muteriuls .an be used and the vest and cuffs nude permanent parts of the waist whenever preferred. The little chem isette makes u notable feature ond can he of luce, ns Illustrated, or in lingerie itvle as may be liked. At the waist !s a crushed belt which pusses over tin back and fronts, under the revers nnd jver the vest to be closed nt the centre front. The sleeves are the new ones which ure leathered to form two puffs and are liiiished with flare cuffs above the plain ones. The Eton is made with n fitted found 9tion, which Is faced to form the vest, A LATE DESIGN over which the pleuted fronts and buck are arranged. The chemisette Is sepiirule und closed ut the buck while the wuist Itself closes at the front. The sleeves ure In one piece, arranged ovur fitted foundations 'to which the straight cull's are uttnehed, the circular ones finishing the lower edges. The quantity of material required for tho medium size Is live und one-eighth yards twenty-one inches wide, four uud three-quarter yards twenty -seven Inches wide or two und a quarter yards forly-four Inches wide, tlve-eiglith yards twenty-seven Inches wide for wulstcout and cuffs and oue yard of velvet, and live-eighth yards of ull-over lace for chemisette to muke as Illus trated. I)rapfl Hotlti Hacoluet Alt. The draped bodice Is undoubtedly "the thing." It Is us becoming to the too full us well ns to the too thin figure, it brings out the wulst line, and Its folds a cross the bust may easily be arranged so us greatly to lncreuse the upparent size of the flat figure, while by using little material und drawing It close the exuberant figure can be held down firmly nud appear of the perfect middle slxe. The aver nge American figures lack both bust and hips, but the fashions' of to-day are kind towurd those deficiencies, uud the pleuted, shirred und yoked skirts can easily be made to render the figure apparently fuller ut the hips, uud these, together with the draped bodices, ure vustly Improving tho oppek-rance of many women. Fullnaaa In Cuts. There are various uiodes of Intro ducing fullness In skirts. One plan comprehends the scheme ot having ? skirt made with alternate panels plain unl pleated. The pleuts are ar ranged lu groups of four or five and ETON WAIiT WITH vs. sr. finished at the line of the knees with a little strap nnd buckle across encli group. Below the strap the released, fullness expands to widen the skirt St the hem. This model Is beautiful iu golden brown camel s hull' serge. The strop Is of the velvet to match and the tiny buckles are of French gilt. The collarless Jacket Is trimmed with bunds of velvet to match. Daylight Hlu. A lovely street shade of rich dark blue, much used for visiting dress and church toilets. Is Introduced- by tho happy name ot "dayllkht blue." It Is quite removed from the Indigo dyes of navy blue and bus no purplish tones whatever. There are some women who make a practice of wearing blue and blue alone. The new winter silks in "daylight blue" ure un added oppor tunity to such a woman. The Fituhlnnnlile Flnunim. Flounces, on skirts are no longer plain. One broadcloth skirt with a flared flounce shows it . box-pleat set lu with a godet effect at Intervals'. A Wrlnklo Ani-nl C Conts. I'nless one be willing to have the Hue ot the back obliterated entirely, the cape of it coat shouhl stop short at the side back seams. ' ' Itouml Yok Waist. Waists made full below round yokes that ure finished with circular berthas are among the notnble features of the season and are always graceful and generally becoming. This one Is adapt ed to all the fashionable soft materials nud can be combined with luce ns Illus trated, with embroidery or with any contrasting material that may be pre ferred. In the cuse of the model, how ever, the yoke, berthn. cuffs and collur ure of lace and the waist of pale green crepe de Chine, the combination of materials being n peculiarly satisfac tory one. When liked the lining can be omitted nud the blouse attached to the yoke only, but where silk or wool Is used the fitted foundation nl ways means, n better fit. The applied box pleat at the front Is somewhat un- I usual and gives the long lines that suit BY MAY MANTON. the greater number of figures admir ably .veil. The wulst consists of the fitted fonnd utlon, which can be used or omitted us preferred, the yoke und the blouse. The blouse is full ut both back uud front uud outlining the yoke is a cir cular bertha. To the front edge is at tached the box pleat and Jieueuth that the closing Is made. The sleeves are generously full above cults which are finished with frills of net top luce. The quantity of materia! required for the medium size Is Uvo yards twenty ouo Inches wide, four yards twenty- seven inches wide or two and five eighth yards forty-four Inches wide. bound vokb waist wira ;oLiB3. with one and three-eighth yards eighteen Inches wide for yoke, bertha aud cuff and two and one-quarter yards of lac tor frills. - I i