IN THE FOREST. Cover me over, forest wild, Wind me about with windy bought, Mnks me, O Mother, your broken child Who strayed from the beautiful house Who atrayed from the path with pine-needles brtmi., From pool and clearing, wild rone and brier, And in the stone kiln of the terrible Town Was burnt in the Human Fire! Take me! my torn heart fitfully bents Kven at your touch, with its ancient pity- Huh in the Brain the crowded streets, The million eyea of the city 1 But dream not now, O Mother of me. Your child will bide in your strange wild beauty No, he baa tasted Ktermty, Whose awful tide ia Duty I He knows the Sorrow of Man; he knowa Ilia is the World where the Man-tides dr-'-Jut oh, to-night, with wind and wild rose, Mother, he is uplift! But oh, to-night, with the brown wild dusk. Bluebird nnd chipmunk, dusk dimmed, nigs starred, Let his shattered hands your glories pluck, Mother, till he sees Ood! , , James Oppenheim, ia Curreat Literature. 30O0O0OO00O0O0OOOOOO00O0O00OOOOOOOO0O0OOO0OO00COOO A Perilous Chase. BY FRANKLIN WELLES CALKINS. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC 500 "The closest call I ever had, I b'lleve," said my old friend, Buck Rayner, who had trapped for fifty nine years, and who at seventy-eight would bave scorned the title ot "old," wasn't in chasing game or hunting Indians, but In chasing a Bteamer, though Indians enough were mixed In. "I was wintering out thosa days with Bonhomme, who had a trading station on the Yellowstone, and an other. In charge of Pierre Le Beau, across on the Missouri. Bonhomme owned a little steamer, La Belle Julie, which we called The Belle. One spring, Just after she'd pulled out of the Yellowstone landing, bound for St. Louis, a big string of Blackfeet, who'd got disgruntled with the Bay traders, came down from 'cross the line. "These fellows had a heap of robes and pelts to trade, and Bonhomme wanted his steamer brought back. He picked me to go after her, with two smart horses. He expected me to head The Belle off at Le Beau's, where she was to stop a day for more lading and to wood up. "I knew I had some pretty hard work cut out for me, and 1 was off in an hour, riding my best cayuse and leading one ot Bonhomme's. Across country was only about one-third the way around by the river; but the steamer would make ten miles an hour day and night, and she had a half-day the start. "I would have made It all right but for a streak of fearfully hot weather. As It was, I melted down my own horse and got to the Missouri, which I struck about two miles below Le Beau's, with Bonhomme's best about pegged out. "And as I reached the bluffs, there was that little steamboat coming down river full tilt, on her way to St. Louis again! I larruped my horse down to the river bank and swung my coat over my head as the boat went by. Nobody paid the least at tention, and I felt disappointed enough. I was to have had a hundred dollars if I brought The Belle back. "Well, I started to ride up to Le Beau's, crossed a creek in a timber belt, and ran plump Into a camp ot friendly Rees. Instanter I made up my mind tc get a fresh horse and make a dash after The Belle. "1 knew the river was crooked be low, and there was a chance for a good horse to overhaul the boat, when I determined they should take me board, even it I bad to swim out in her front. "I hustled into the Tillage, found Its head man, old' Many Bulls, and madd my wants known in a Jiffy. The chief scowled in thought for a minute or two; then he sent one of his boys Into a willow thicket not far off. The boy was gone two or three minutes, and came back leading a "cn-and-whlte callcc that looked right to me. Him I trade,' said old Many Bulls. 'You give knife, I swap, Pointing to a horn-handled bowle in my sheath. "To get the leathers off mv lath fed mount and onto that sleek calico a the work of another minute, and again. When I got up onto we high lands and felt the good, firm ,wng of the Ree pony, carrying me along at rocklng-chalr gait and ten ""Its an hour, I wanted to yell for Joy. "Three or four miles away on my "got I could see The Belle crawling "ng the arm of a long sweep to eastward. After a half-hour of hard 'unking, my calico had proved his iud, and I had settled down to a "em ChM9 wUn tn cei.tainty 0f sue i me end. inen unlooked-for things hap- h.i k.' 1 WM rld,n alon tn ,evel anrt heling draw and ravines. "?a wltn low butte twenty miles neaa- as the goal in my eye, when a out , blanket Indians popped ih, u on m' ,ert na two or uree hundred vm. .u.h f..",They were wlld fews of the be Uk? 'rt that lone trappers i Ber Clear of- The bunch ii,7 . """"on- to cut me off on my hoist, trVeI- 80 1 llfted trom u rid! Blort-barreled, big-bore d..: my n,y hootlng-lron In those tnl.' f" ,wun the muztle around --- mem. "Tha f-11 c-nf . """"a jia no attention as. Th" , lat0 kind of commotion jogged on toward me, Jabber- abon M"nl a little excited aoout something -. ., ..... I h.)i-.i luomaeires. and .1. ,m " a rMPtful distance "4 iHn-talked 'what did they want?' as I rJ!!Ult WM urPr," or not. Just n.i. .-- we, OI HIS Chsnnna. ... 1 . . . L,J"eI?1 t him and caiico. their horses, undecided; and then, as t was passing, they Jerked their bows to the front and let off a flight of arrows. One ot .the feathered sticks grazed my elbow and chipped my saddle pommel, and another tore my shirt and made a nasty scratch across one shoulderblade. "That was pretty good shooting at a hundred yards and with my horse going like the wind. I turned In my saddle and let a bullet go among them which knocked over a horse, but do no other damage. "Their prompt attack at such range and In the face of my rifle was a surprise. It was evident now that they wanted my horse alive. They had aimed all their arrows at me. In a twinkling it came to me that for once a bunch or Indians was in the right and I was in the wrong, though unintentionally. "My pony which old Many Bulls had brought forth from the willow patch was one he had stolen or taken up as a stray, and really belonged to one of these wild fellows. That had been the secret of my quick and too easy 'swap.' 'It was nasty enough business any time to have a swarm of hostiles on your trail, but to be chased as a "When I scrambled to my feet and got the dust out of my eyes, there lay my rifle with Its hammer knocked off and a cracked stock. 1 picked up the useless gun and ran down the ditch at top speed. I knew the river could not be a grat way off, and If I could stand off the Indians till I could get Into the current I deter mined to swim for It. "There was no . use in trying to find a hiding-place. I had not run morn than a hundred yards when I heard the yelps of the reds overhead, and knew .they had sighted mo. They were keeping even pace along the heights of the washout. "Three times I saw the dust fly where their arrows struck the near slope on my right. But for fear ot my rifle, which of course they didn't know was useless, they would have swarmed into the ditch both above and below. "When I was nearly out of breath I came upon the mouth of the wash out, with the muddy current of the Missouri stretching across fifty feet below. In the same breath I saw a hard, narrow trail upon my left, an antelope trail, whore the animals had come around the steep face of a big bank nnd down to water. "There was a sharp turn of this path close at hand. Glancing up, 1 saw that I was out of sight ot the reds for the instant. Snatching ofl my hat, .1 sent It sailing into the cur rent, then dashed around the curve of that path. "If I could fool the Indians long enough to round a bend under that high bank, I thought I might slip into the current and get quite a way across before they sighted me. That would lessen the danger from arrows, and once across the river among some cottonwoods over there, I believed they wouldn't swim directly across In the face of my rifle. It didn't look as If there was a place very near where they could get their horses into the river. So I took hope again for a minute. "But the hope was of short dura tion. When I had passed the first turn ot the path I found the bank of the bluff curving In the wrong direc tion. I ran on for a hundred yards, and the path came to au end. A big slice of stony bluff had caved off and taken the trail with it. "I hugged the bank and listened tor a moment. Soon I heard Indians on the bluff over my head, then oth ers in the mouth ot the washout. They had me trapped on that broken path! If I should slip into the cur rent they could shoot their arrows down at me from all along the top ot the curve. Modern World in Too Much of a Hurry. The Wise and Weighty Words of Processor A. LAWKTNCE 10 WELL, the New President of Harvard University in His Recently Published Work on the Government of England. "The modern world Is in a hurry. Not only docs It measure the wisdom of a course of action by the results, but It wants to see those results. It demands of men and ot policies rapid success. Conversely It Is not content, when something Is wrong, to see whether natters will not right themselves In the natural course ot events, or even to watt until the subject has been thoroughly studied. It seeks an immediate remedy and often graspB at the first plausible suggestion. Nor does it look far ahead for the signs of future trouble, because it is busy; its hands are filled by the work of the day. . In short, the world Is prone to deal only with things that are pressing and obvious, and there fore to treat symptoms rather than causes." downright horse-thlef was galling to the soul. And there wasn't 'any question about the Intentions of these fellows. , They meant to have their horse back and my scalp as the rent on my ubu ot him. They got right after me, though not at top speed. The rascals knew that my mount had had a stiff run and that they could outwlad me. So they settled down to a stern chase, Just crowding me on to nine or ten' miles an hour. I reloaded my rifle, cut away my blanket, and let that and my coat fall to the ground. "I looked lor the smoke of trie steamer, but there was no sign ot it to be seen, though I strained my eyes again and again. The chase was leading over a high plain, and the river valley, some where off at my left, had sunk out of sight "I concluded I might as well die where I was. So I hugged the bank closer and kept an eye out for In. dlans. I put a fresh percussion- cat on my gun tube and picked a small Btone out of the bank for a hammer. By that means I could take a shot and possibly bring down an Indian at close range. "Two Cheyennes presently put in an appearance, following me along the path. They dodged back out ol sight when they saw my gun swing round. Presently I heard them ihoutlng to their fellows on the bluff, who, like themselves, couldn't see me without exposure to my bullet. "I had two minutes of quiet sus pense. Then down came a big boulder, bumping past within flv yards of me. More shouts told me that at least two pairs of eyes were I watching my position, and twe "After an hour's run. the butte at tongues were elvlna directions. Thret which I was aiming seemed no nearer ! or four more big stones came over than at the start. I lost confidence in my knoweldge ot the lay of the land. Behind me the Cheyennes were coming on in a string, tour or five within a hundred and fifty yards, the tall-enders a half-mile behind. My pony was tiring. He bad done at least fifteen miles at a rattling gait. Suddenly he set his forefeet and halted, nearly pitching me over his head. That was bis way of Bay ing ha bad done enough. His flanks were heaving and his knees shook. I Jumped off, got behind htm, and turned my rifle on the nearest Cheyennes. "These halted to wait for their crowd to come up. So I gave my mount a couple of minutes to get his breath. I couldn't do moro, for the Indians would have circled me in five minutes. "When I got into the saddle again I knew that something in my favor must happen soon or my chance of saving my scalp was small. I ran the pony another mile, and be was near the end of his endurance. I waa look ing for soma swale or dip into which the bank and one of them struck within a foot ot my head. "There were acres of boulders anri loose stones along the bluffs, and it was necessary to get away from that bombardment quickly. I was Just about to slide Into the river when the moBt welcome sound I ever heard rang in my ear the whistle of The Belle! ' "This was fallowed, like a signal to fire, by the crack of rifles, and ) flopped over on my face to see ttu steamer, a little way above, racing down toward me. "Her men were behind her wood ranks, popping at the Cheyennes. Her captain, at the wheel, had seen the Indians on the bluffs, bad put ur his field-glaBs to see what they were doing, and had discovered me. "Well, the Cheyenues were driver off, and I was taken aboard, about as lucky and as tickled a fellow, 1 reckon, as you ever saw. It's a tact that I hadn't thought ot the boat since tumbling into the washout, though I should bave figured that she was due to be along there in a I could drop to make a last stand, little while." Youth's Companion, when, in a flash, I came upon one of those deep washouts which supply Saving Time, the Missouri with most ot the mud it' Woman (at agency, to prospect! v carries south. cook)-"Wouldn't you like to com "My horse was staggering, and the and see my bouse and look around? nearest Cheyennes were within fifty , Then you would get an idea of tht yards of me when, with a final lift, place." I pushed the blinded animal into that Cook "Has your last cook gone, big ditch. It was a reckless plunge,, ma'am?" the desperate choice of a man fairly "Yes, she left me this morning." run to earth, "My horse and I simply tumbled into the crevasse. The calico lost his feet on the steep slope, and we rolled, slid and plowed, oae oa either slope of a sharp ridge, to the depths a hun dred and fifty feet below. At least "And did she come from this agen cy?" "Oh. yes." "Tbln oi'll watt and talk to bar." Chicago News. Founds a Scholarship. Mis. Margaret E. Langdale, of Cambridge, Mass., has given the Phil lips Exeter Academy $50,000 .to found a scholarship to be known as the Charles E. Langdale scholarship. Mrs. Langdale's husband, the late Professor Charles E. Langdale, was for many years the dean of the law faculty of Harvard, and this scholar ship is to commemorate his work. New York Sun. Collection of Dolls. The Countess de Blonay Is said to have the best collection ot dolls In the world. Her collection has JuBt been on exhibition in Brussels for the benefit of the Calvary Guild. The oldest dolls came from the ruins of Nineveh and were presented to the countess' great-grandmother by Queen Marie Antoinette. The most striking dolls in the collection are said to be the Flngo dolls from South Africa. New York Sun. In Giving a Shower. The natural embarrassment which a shy girl Is apt to experience In find ing herself the object ot an unexpect ed shower was obviated at a recent function of this kind In a simple and amusing way. The gifts were all needfuls for the kitchen. They were brought In packed In a large hamper, and as each was taken out, the bride and un married girls of the party had to ex plain the uses of the Instrument or appliance In question. Some of the guesses were divert ing in the extreme, explanation of the simplest dippers and lifters often go ing wide of the mark. The group of matrons and a few trained hus bands present were kept in shrieks of laughter. New York Herald. The Fan-Parasol. The folding umbrella, walking stick and sunshade, combination pieces of furniture, and transforma tion gowns, are all old stories, but the fan-parasol or parasol-fan, as you will Is the latest novelty designed for killing two birds with one stroke. Instance, at least, fairly Incurs the forfeit. From its opening sentences, one smells the tract. American di vorce! what more fruitful theme for the British (or American) moralist? It may be cheerfully admitted that Mrs. Ward has made a .ad picture of it, with her two selected Instances. But it Is disconcerting that she should have handled her material with such vehemence, such violence. Her hatred of the sin far .too plainly extends to the sinner. And her Indictment ot the "States" is so specific that it is Impossible not to take Daphne as, to her mind, a representative American. Consequently, her success In making Daphne a hateful person, ill-bred, pre tentious, egotistical, peevish, strikes one as a little malicious though, no doubt, unconsciously so. The whole thing might have been done on a higher plane, less crudely should have been so done by this dlstln- ! guished commentator on human af fairs. H. W. Boynton, in Putnam's, Opportunities of Clubs. Many girls conic home from college with a violent attack ot .the woman's club fever. We believe In using the club as a, means to an end, not as an end in itself, says Ruth Cranston In the Delineator. Organization Is essential to efficient, co-operation, and this is the Justification ot the woman's club. Every one knows what a power for reform and civic integrity some ot the women's clubs of America have proved to be. If none exists In her own home city, she may even be am bitious enough to organize one. How ever this may be, the secret of suc cess as a clubwoman lies In not over concentrating, In using the club as an Instrument for reform, not as an ex cuse for neglect ot home duties. Lecturing to women's clubs offers possibilities to the college woman of ability, who has something ot interest tc say and knows how to say it. This is, moreover, a very satisfactory and powerful way ot Influencing prom inent women to undertake various civic and Federal Improvements which would otherwise never come to their notice. Indeed, tho life of the modern COl- e-S CL9 a. C-3 1 Indian Cliutnee. Half pound moist sugar, quarter pound salt, two ounces garlic, two ounces shallots, quarter pound dry ginger, two ounces red pepper, quarter pound mustard seed, six ounces stoned raisins, one bottle ot good vinegar, fifteen sour green apples, six ounces ot tomatoes. Chop the garlic, raisins, shallots and tomatoes. Wash the mustard seed in halt tho vinegar and let dry. Then add all to the apples and sugar and boll slowly for an hour and a half, then add the other half of the vinegar and let cool. Bottle or place In glass Jars and seal. The coal bill of the United States Fn. - I reached tbt bottom of the washout, Navy during IMI amounted to t some seconds the bunch sat, I never saw the pony again,. 14M0- It is the invention ot a French wom an, and the importers are preparing to spring it as a surprise for next season. Open, the sunshade looks like the ordinary article ot its kind, inclining a bit to the Japanese. Closed, It still appears as a sunshade. It de sired. But, press a tiny spring, and lo! the rod has shortened to half its original length, the handle has doubled up, and the covering has wrinkled Itself on the ribs In even, regular undulations, and there you are with a pretty round fan that Is Just as serviceable to create an arti ficial breeze as it was a moment ago to protect one from the sun. New York Evening Post. Bags Match Costumes. No matter how good looking a leather purse or handbag may be that Is of smooth or pebbled leather, It Is not as first class as the new suede bag fringed at the ends. The smart thing is to have one of .these to match the costume. T"e bag has a ragged effect by reason of all the fringes cut from the leathiv hang ing from it. It is not stiffened in any way, and Is carried by two lo-ig loops of the'Buede. On some of the handsome ones there is a monogram ot semi-precious stones. The imitation turquoise Is especially used for this wo.'k. In shape these bags are square, oblong, rounded at sides Mid bottom and cut off sharply at top. some clasp in the regular purse way, and others have a deep flap that catches with a patent clamp over which is a large uncut stone. The prettiest ones that are seen are In the natural suede set with blue stones, and the peacut blue and green ones heavily fringed, with the monc r am in green and blue crystals. Philadelphia Ledger 1 a era rltl lo rlntnrmlnnrl fat mnro Vw ' herself than by her environment, and her work should be decided after careful consideration ot present and future situations; but even if the de cision results in failure there is no reason for discouragement if one's effort has been fruitful. College teaches courage and self-reliance; life teacltis Infinite patience and hope ! for the future, and leads the disheart ened out of the depths of discourage- I ment with the cheering words, "Begin ' again!" i History in Tabloid. Ily ELBKKT HLlIIlAItl). During the Revolutionary War Hoger Morris, of Putnam County, New York, made the mistake of sid ng with the Tories, A mob collected, and Slorrls and his family escaped, taking ship to England. Before leaving Morris declared his Intention ot coming back as soon as "the Insurrection was quelled." The British troops, we are reliably Informed, failed to quell the Insur rection; and Roger Morris never came bark. Roger Morris Is known to history as the man who married Mary Phll- Ipse. And this IhcIv llvos In history 1 because she had the felicity of hav- i Ing been proposed to by George ; Washington, it 1h George himself who tells of this In his Journal, and George, you renipmber, could not tell a lie. George wa twenty-five. He was on his way to Boston, and was en tertained at the Phillpse house, the Plaza not having then been built. Mary was twenty, pink and lis some. Sho played the harplschord. Immediately after supper, George, finding himself alone In the parlor with tho girl, proposed. He was an opportunist. The lady pleaded tor time, which the Father of his Country declined to give. He was a soldier, and demand ed Immediate surrender. A small quarrel followed, and George saddled his horse and rode on his way to fame and fortune. Mary thought he would come back, but George never proposed to the same lady twice. Yet he thought kindly of Mary, and excused her conduct by recording: "I think ye ladye was not In yo moode." It was Washington who formally confiscated the property and turned it over to the State of New York as contraband of war. The Morris estate of about fifty thousand acres was parcelled out and sold by the State of New York to settlers. It seems, however, that Roger Morris had only a life Interest In the estate, and this was a .legal point so fine that it waa entirely overlooked in the Joy of confiscation. Washington was a great soldier, but an indifferent lawyer. John Jacob Astor accidentally es certalned the tacts. He was con vinced that the heirs could not be robbed of their rights through the acts of a leaseholder, which, legally, was the status of Roger Morris. Astor was a good real estate lawyer ; himself, but he referred the point to : the best counsel he could find. They agreed with him. He next hunted up the heirs, and bought their quit- i claims for $100,000. He then notified the parties who had purchased the land, and they, In turn, made claim upon the State for protection. After much legal parleying, the case was tried according to stlpula- H ousehold JETjI ....Matters To Remove Dirt. To remove dirt from brown boots llssolve a little saddle soap in warm, toft water. Put the boots In this and with a piece of sponge wash the boots thoroughly without making the leath er very wet. Wash off the soapy wat er and dry In the air. Then polish the boots in the usual way, Detroit News-Tribune. Quaint Little Clock. An odd little clock Is In the form of a crystal ball suspended by a leather strap to the top of a stirrup iron. The iron, which Is really of silver or gunmetal, stands on the desk or dresser on the metal base on which the foot rests when one rides, and the clock swings from Its tiny leather strap. This would make an ideal gift for the girl who rides and drives and loves horses. New York Times. Washable Rugs. The washable rug is being manu factured by fingers proficient in the use of tho crochet hnok. Any of the materials, old or new, cotton, silk or wool, which are suitable for rag car peting, 'may be used for the crocheted rug. For a thin rug adapted to bath or bedroom, variegated cretonnes combined with plain colors are pretty and durable; figured ftannelet makes thicker and softer rugs. Strlpa for these rugs are torn about half an Inch wide and are sewed together. New Haven Register. llark For Lids. The tidy housekeeper finds the many lids of pots, pans and kettles needed lu the kitchen a problem to arrange with any degree of order and neatness. They cannot bo hung up, many ot them, owing to the shape, will not He in a pile and they are woefully un handy In the dresser drawers. A bright woman to whom the lids were as the hosts of the evening has now solved tbequestlon In a way both easy and Inexpensive. She got a length of strong wire, stretched It across the pots and pans shelf by means of a couple of nails, and on this the lids accompanying all the cooking utensils are neatly ar ranged. The wire supports them perfectly, and the even row of shiny tin things is by no means unorna mental In addition to its handlu; New York Times. - S. Shelf Covers. Have you ever peeped Into the kitchen of some German hausfrau and been enraptured by Its immacu late cleanliness, not to say the va rious attractions that make you want to linger there? The German matron never hidei tton. with the State of New York df- her own exclusive workshop; she does rectly as defendant and Astor and the , not screen off Its very door as If sh? occupants as plaintiffs. Daniel Web- were ashamed to own such a room. Bter and Martin Van Buren appeared . it is to her the most important In her for the State, and an array of lesser home, as Is evidenced by the scoured legal lights for Astor. pots and kettles and by all her little The case was narrowed down to ' efforts at beautifying, the plain and simple point that Roger ' ner cioset shelves are covered, not Morris was not the legal owner of the with manila or lace paper, nor with a sr 1 cy di Putting On a Veil. "There is only one proper way to rut on a veil, madame," said the tore woman of a Fifth avenue millinery hat Bhop to a customers who had just bought one ot "our Imported models" made in a large establish ment on lower Broadway, The forewoman, who was very magnificent and condescending in her manner, then proceeded to take a veil at 11.50 a yard, cut off a yard and a halt, wave It about to shake out the folds, get the exact centre and place It under the lady's cbln. She then fastened the lower edges at the back of the lady's neck with the barrette out of her hair. Lifting the upper part of the veil, she placed it smoothly over the brim ot the hat and fastened it at the oack. It was certainly the best way of fastening a veil, as there were no ends over the face and the veil lay smooth and taut from the brim to the tight band over the neck. To lift the veil, one had, ot course, to tske out the barratte, but veils which are put on in this way last a great deal longer and look bet ter than when they are laid around the brim ot the hat first. New York World. Mrs. Ward oa Anaeriraa Divorcee, If Harper's Is not to be particularly felicitated on Us latest serial It Is not to be greatly commiserated, either, upon Mrs. Ward's apostasy so far as "Marriage a la Mode" Is concerned. H" fablt of holding a brier has al ; eatailtd its rlaka, snl U this The general trend of the hat brim Is downward. Never were linen suits more popu lar than now. The princess costume is a feature of the season. Simplicity is tho keynote in chil dren's apparel. Jade bracelets with dainty silver or gold deposits are among the nov elties In Jewelry. The silk skirts are very tight fitting to the knees; then a full sun pleating is used as a finish. The princess, both fitting and semi fitting, the dlrectolre and the empire are all holding their own. Necklaces of small cut Jet beads will be worn much by those wbo favor the collarless gown. Real pockets, long and fiat, are concealed beneath the trimming on the sides on many ot the tailor mades. The big hat hangs on in spite of all the attractive forma ot headgear .that have been designed to replace it, and still Is predominant In dreBS effects. Paris has a new skirt, known as the "reasonable" skirt. The back Is furnished with two pleats, which give a certain fullness where it is most needed. There is a new skirt made upon dlrectolre lines which Is partially di vided, but which Is so carefully hung that when walking the division is not evident. The new "pepper and salt" feathers are much worn in conjunction with a toque of sorrel green velvet, this color combination being much favored. Cotton Bedford cord is to be had In a wide range of colors. It Is similar to pique In appearance, but different enough to appeal to those wbo like a change. The deep pointed bodice Is already heralded by the reverse position of the pointed girdle which Is beginning to turn downward at the front rather than upward. White edgings for waistcoats are having a tremendous vogue this sea sou aad men are wearing them not ouly with dark suits, but with light ones as well. One of the late favorites with motorists la F.nglaud is the knitted turbsn with long Shetland veil at tached for tying over the ears and around the tlroat. The fashionable plume Is very thick and curls over at the tips, so thst two or even three of the old -'n kind will be renulred to product ' ot the present vintage- estate, and that the rightful neira could not be made to suffer from the "treason, contumacy and contraven tion" of another. Astor won, and as a compromise the State Issued him twenty-year bonds, bearing six per cent, interest, for the neat sum of $500.000 not that Astor needed the money, but finance was to him a game. New York American. painted oilcloth, but with homespun linen resembling our coarse crash, Thrs is fastened by a few buttonholes slipped over some small china knobs at the back of the shelf. The cover hangs down, lambrequin like, over tho front edge of the shelf, and It Is on this fall of linen that the German pots, pans nnd kettles are re produced In cross-stitch In a nice Delft blue to match some of the plat ters and soup plates that stand in rows on the shelves. The patterns appear only at Intervals, and the lin- In Defense of Critics. It la thn business of tho dramatist and producer to provide plays that I en- ' finished by a row of coarso but the public is willing to pay money to Bee. There is no difference of opinion as to that. The business of the critic , is to inform tho public whether or ! not, In his Judgment, it is worth while to pay good money to find out If It likes the play. The managerial and playwrltlng intelligence doesn't sub scribe to this definition of tho critic's j function at all. It Is convinced that , the critic should write only favorable ( reviews, closing his mind to all the weaknesses and defects, bending his efforts to persuading the public to pay good money at the box office so ; thst It may judge for Itself. Probably the only critic thoroughly satisfactory to theatrical Interests would be one who could be persuaded 1 to accept the views of the press de partment. There are such, I believe, j certain newspapers being controlled by considerations of dramatic adver- Using and of exclusive theatrical news i stories. But the Public That Pays feels this when it doesn't know It, and the reviews thus directed have but little weight. Hartley Davis, lu Everybody's. tonhollng along its straight edg. The Danish do these nice household bits, and the goose and gnnder are populur designs for outlined work on many of their hanging. Boston Post. Song Bird and Critic. Mary Garden, at a dluner In Phila delphia last month, took a musical critic very cleverly to task. "You write long criticisms," she said, "and you employ long, technical words; but really, you know, you miss tbe whole spirit of the music. "You're like tbe Darby widow," said Miss Garden. "Her lawyer said to her, consolingly: " 'You'll get your third out of the estate, madam.' " 'Oh, Mr. Brest!' the widow cried. 'How can you say such a thing, wltn my second hardly cold in bis grav' Washington Star. Lord Roberts a Collector. Tbe fact is not generally known that Lord Roberts, who celebrated his golden wedding tbe other day. Is a great collector ot curios. His charming bouse, Englemere, Ascot, Is literally crammed with odds and ends picked up from time to time, nearly all of which bave some Interesting Itiocolute Caranit'la. One-half cup molasses, one cup sugar, two and one half cups milk, flavor with vanilla. Boll fifteen to twenty minutes. Pour in greased tins and cut In squares. Fried Hire. Cook one cupful ol rice In three cupfuls of milk and a little salt. When tender put Into a deep dish. When cool cut In slice, dip In flour or egg and crumbs and fry. Hntitin Pie. Coverone-third pound raUins with water and stew until soft. Make crust at usual. Cover bottom crust thick with flour, add raisins and sprinkle with flour. Add three tablespoonfuls of juice from stewing and one glass of sugar. Cream of Aapttragus) Soup. Put two ounces of butter In a saucepan, with three tablespoonfuls ot flour; stir well and molbten wltb three pints of white (veal) broth. Put la tbe equivalent ot half a bunch ot as paragus; add a boquet (parsley, eel- n,W Ihvma nt V. . u 1 , smI. . . . . - . . . . ... . 1 iu tuie. doii toorougniy tor thirty minutes. Strain and add a cupful ot cream. Serve with cooked asparagus tops ot croutons (bits ot . toast). Lettuce Balad Slice lettuce Into a dish together with several onions; hard boll three eggs, fry until crisp three thin slices of bacon and add to salad; take yolks of one or two eggs and mash with one tablespoontul of sugar, teaapoonful of flour, one-halt story attached to them. One of the most curious of these Is teaapoonful of mustard, one teaspoon. an Irregularly shaped piece ot dirty ful of salt, some pepper, dilute wHh white rag which greatly putties sll , water and one-half cuu of vlneatr who behold It for tbe first time. It It the flag ot truce which General rron'e ttnt In toannounce hit v Hr st Psardvbtrg. TU Site. Stir this into baron grease on stove it stir 'Jntll It thickens; thn nour prr lee. Garnish d'sh wl s'tred gtft. Must be ttrvsd Imiped'vtt'-, -