Valuable twala f1tffm Mnrn. A Jeweler say that valuable family Jewels are almost never worn liy their owners; they are kept In safe deposit vaults and are not iid more than half a dozen times In half a rentury. Ladles have them conleil and always appear wearing the Imitation Jeweis, which look quite as well. "Why." ho added, "a lady would net dare to ap pear always In the valualilo gems she Is known to possess; she would be robbed and perhaps murdered for them." Repairing a Marklnloah. To mend a mackintosh procure a small tin of India rubber cement or dissolve some strips of pure India rubber In naphtha or sulphide of car bon to form a stiff paste. Apply a little of the cement on the surface of a strip of the same material of which the mackintosh Is made, which can be purchased by the yard or In remnants from, the waterproofers; also apply a lhtle cement to each side of the torn part, and when it begins to feel tacky bring the edges together and place the patch nicely over and keep In position by putting a weight over It until quite hard, which will be in a few days. The Rich Man'a Wife. The man of wealth marries a woman who is beautiful and gracious; one who will bear his name proudly. Her home la , handsomely appointed. She fits into her environment as a statue In its niche. At her command are ser vants, horses and carriages or auto mobiles, in this mechanical generation. She Is privileged to trade upon credit and dress for her position in life. But too often her puckethook con tains less than the woman In moderate circumstances, whose husband has a salary and gives his wife a stated sum to live upon. The rich wife, if asked by members of her club for a dona tion, must consult her husband first, She has no ready money, and frequent ly is obliged to ask him for paltry amounts. She is humiliated and be comes embittered; her dignity is low ered. Sometimes she employs deceit with which to obtain resources from him. And her thought of her hus band's parsimony soon kills all her teni '-rness. Susan 13. Anthony, in the Independent. The Vanity of Woman. "Take hold of a women's vanity," said a married man, "and you can lead her where you will." He gazed dreamily, smiling to him self, into his lemonade glass. Then he resumed: "My wire discharged her servant girl last month, and said that iu order to have the work done well she would do it herself thereafter. And, by Jove, she did. She cooked and washed the dishes, and ruined her temper and spoiled my happiness, for I can afford to keep one servant, and I hated to see ,,,her doing all that unpleasant work. But I could say nothing to make her stop until I thought of her vanity, and as soon as I thought of that I knew 1 had her. "'Jane,' I said at breakfast one morning, 'your hands don't look like they use to. Your fingers are rough, and your nails seem to be ragged and discolored. Do you manicure them as carefully as you used to?' " 'Of course I do," said she; 'and they look all right, too. There's nothing the matter with my hands.' " 'I know better, Jane,' said I. 'This rough work has told on them. I doubt If you will ever get them back to .their former fine condition.' '"Oh, you're talking foolish,' cried tny wife, frowning, and I said nothing more. But when I got back home that night a new servant girl was in the kitchen, and my Jane sat before her .dressing table with her manicure set" Philadelphia Reoord. filrle Maekemltha. A webb of poetic romance always lias been, woven about the "village smithy," but it has remained for a aturdy blacksmith in the neighborhood of Leeds to introduce the daughters of the smithy into the romancer's dreams. This blacksmith has tight daughters, and has reaied them all ey the side of the forge and anvil. At present four are at work in his shop. The other four wielded the hammer for aeveral years and then left the business to take up the duties of run ning homes of their own. Every day these four daughters of the master smith are to be seen at the anvils fol lowing the trade of their fathers. ' They are up early and spend the work ing hours in making gas books broad, bent nailB which are used by plumb ers for fastening gas pipes to walls. It is not such a hard task, yet the work requires great patience and en suring strength. , The heavy part of the work is per formed by a machine worked with the foot After the mechanical device baa finished its labors the fair black smiths, with sleeves rolled up, put the finishing touches on the hooks with a hand-hammer and get them ready for market The girls are fond of their work. They toll on a piece-work basis, and the ingenious blacksmith .culls each a "full hand." Baltimore American. Two Cowna and a Nut. dainty gown is of white voile with narrow strappings of white glactJ to outline the deeply-pointed skirt flounc , and a pleated bolero effect on the toodice finished oft In the . same way and cut short enough to allow t) glimpse of a soft fulness of ecru batiste. This is eventually caught into the close bondage, of a waistband of white glace, whose bow ends nt the back give something of the effect of the fashlonablo coat tails. A col lar of cent batiste nnd lace also puts In an app?arnnce, nnd there are touches of brown on the white silk tie, where brown velvet baby ribbon is threaded through tiny circlets of l.tce and divided by minute blossoms allntlng with gold. Another graceful frock Is of tur-quolse-blue cambric elaborated with a design of the most diminutive leaves embroidered in unite, and forming a trelliswork all down the front of the skirt, while at either side its points are edged with minings of Valencien nes lace, and the skirt Is further trimmed with strlpe3 formed by embroidery and lace. The deep col lar of white lawn and lace Is fastened with a smartly knotted tie of white silk embroidered with spots of blue, and the accompanying hat Is a pic turesque affair of black straw with a long scarf of pale blue satin drawn round the corner and tied at the back in a bow whose ends fall to the waist, while curving under the wide brim at the left side Is one pure white ostrich feather. New York Commercial Ad vertiser, Jnatlca to Atepinothare. Most abused in the public estima tion of all the members of human so ciety is the stepmother. It Is there fore with a certain thrill of satisfac tion that we read in the dally chroni cles that in the slow evolutions of Justice one stepmother al least has been vindicated. She is not the terror that tradition would have her to be; she Is not heartless; she is not it:ii-!: she Is not selfish more than are l'.ioat mortals. She Is simply a good, t et age woman, doing her best as she sees it. Such Is the typical stepmother whom novelists and oilier perversely developed Idiots have taught us never theless to loathe. In this case the stepmother had an excellent opportunity to prove her self devoid of narrow maternal preju dice. ' It was one of those families in which there are three brands of children, to use a common commer cial term. On both sides it was a second marriage. The husband had his particular exclusive set of children, nnd his wife hers. Then there was a set that Jointly belonged to them both. Now, to this meritorious step. mother's view, each of the exclusive rets was os ungovernable and as mis chievous as the other, and both with equal vlclousnesa pitched into the third. The set that wa9 Joint property had put out of Joint, so to speak, the noses of all the rest. The stepmother of traJUion would have shielded her own exclusive children. But this stepmother was the real thing; hence the difference. She found it Intolerable that the youngest set of children should be the Ictims of both the older sets, and she said ho, and declared that she herself wan nt the mercy of the latter. The law stepped in at her request, and it is to be hoped that its Intervention will les sen the hardship of her lot. In many savage tribes the step mother Is held In superstitious rever ence and fear, and yet the simple wife has less liberty and more drudgery than with other races. We, with our civilized pretense of chivalry, treat the Htepmother nearly always ungenerous ly. In most cases she has more diffi cult duties to perform than a first wife, and It is not at all certain that she does not as niton perform them well. There have ben stepmothers, and there are many in the world, who were or are among the sweetest, most pa tient and most devoted of womankind. Many a good man can look back and trace his soundness of character and his success In the world to a good stepmother. Honor to her, we say, as much as to the other kind of moth er, where she deserves it Philadel phia Times. Tartan plaids are the latest novelty In dress goods and silks. Jeweled studs caught together with tiny Jeweled chains are to fasten thin white waists. Silver tissue is employed as a back ground for many of the fine laces and embroideries. Wash belts, with harness buckles ot brass, are a smart accompaniment for shirt waist suits. Ruffles and neckwear of accordion- platted chiffon edged with petals of flowers are very dainty. The new cameo patterns appear on Bach buckles of shell. Buckle, sash pin and brooch form a set Alexandra clasps for stocks have medallion centers, with two flat books on each side, through which the ribbon is run. An all black shoe is extremely smart. It is made quite plain, with out any stitching or trimming, of patent leather. Bits ot red coral strung between links of gold compose a long fan chain, which would be effectively worn with a thin white gown. The garniture on some beautiful new evening d reuses consists of large roses of Bilk and applique or chiffon linked by gold garlands. A lion's bead in rose gold baa tiny diamond eyes and teeth and holds a large diamond between the wide open Jaws. This fierce little object is a novelty in brooches. 11113 THE WRATH OF THE BtE. Whan Mho l ea tea lha Present Iterance I..., to Sara lha Hereafter. The bee, essentially so pacific, so long-suffering, the bee which never stings (unless you crush her) when , looting among the flowers, once she has returned to her kingdom with the waieii monuments, retains her mild nnd. tolerunt character, or grows ag gressive nnd deadly dangerous, accord ing to whether her maternal city be opulent or poor. Here again, as often happens when vie study the manners of this spirited nnd mystutlous little people, the provisions of human logic are utterly at fault. It would be nat ual that the bees should defend des perately treasures so laboriously amassed, a city such as we find In good apiaries, where the nectar, over flowing the numberless cells that rep resent thousands of casks piled from cellar to garret, streams in golden sta lactites along the rustling walls, and Bends far afield, In glad response to the ephemeral perfumes of calyces that aro opening, the more lasting per fume of the honey that keeps alive the memory of calyces that time has closed. Now this Is not the case. The richer their abode the less eagerness they display to fight around it. Open or turn over a wealthy hive; if you take care to drive the sentries from the entrance with a puff of smoke, it will be extremely rare for the other bees to contend with you for the liquid booty conquered from the smiles, from all the charms of the beautiful azure months. Try the experiment; I prom ise you Impunity, If you touch only the heaviest hives. You can turn them over and handle them: those throb bing flagons are perfectly harmeless. What does It mean? Have the fierce r.ma'.ons lost courage? Has abund ance unnerved them, and have they, after the manner of the too fortunate inhabitants of luxurious towns, dele gated the dangerous duties to the tin happy mercenaries that keep watch nt the gates? No, It has never been observed that the grentest good for tune relaxes the valor of the bee. On the contrary, the more the republic prospers the more harshly and severe ly are Its laws applied, and the work er in a hive where superfluity accu mulates labors much more zealously and much more pltllesly than her sis ter In an indigent hive. There are other reasons which we cannot wholly fathom, but which are likely reasons. it only we take into account the wild interpretation that the poor bee must place on our inordinate doings. See ing suddenly her huge dwelling-place upheaved, overturned, half opened, she probably imagines that an inevitable, a natural catastrophe .Is occurring, against which it were madness to struggle. She no longer resists, but neither does she flee. Admitting the ruin, it looks as though already, in her Instinct, she saw the future dwelling that she hopes to build with the ma terials of the gutted town. She leaves tha present defenceless to save tho hereafter. Or else, perhaps does sho like the dog in the fable, "the dog that carried his master's dinner round his neck," knowing that all Is irreparably lost, prefer to die taking her share of the pillage, and to pass from life to death in one prodigious orgy? We do not know for certain. How should we penetrate the motives ot the bee, when those of the simplest actions of our brothers are beyond our ken? Maur ice Maeterlinck, in Harper's Maga zine for August. What Taatera Coat Trailaainan. As a manager ot a huge supply es tablishment of the "stores" order, let me say that unless you were in the business you would find It impossible to realize what an aggregate amount customers of the "tasting" kind I do not now so much refer to legitimate tasters, who sample butter and cheese cost a concern like this, and much of this tasting is nothing but barefaced pilfering. Bays a London tradesman to London Tit-Bits. Not to speak ot the articles these people take the offenders are general ly women, I am sorry to say the ar ticles such as raisins, nuts, biscuits, a grape or two here, and a strawberry there, hundreds and hundreds of them will balf-covertly help themselves to a peach, an apricot, or a blood orange, and when they have several children with them, all scattered about a shop and doing the sanio thing, the matter becomes serious. It happens in scores ot cases that the articles taken in this way exceed the value of those bought by fourfold. If a word Is spoken to these people, their Indignation, mock or real, is a sight; nothing can exceed their effrontery. It has become a serious question one that is going to be debated with others ere long by West End trades men for it is calculated that we lose a total of many, many thousands a year by these tasters. We regard wo men who deliberately allow their children to take expensive fruits in this way, and then refuse to pay, as almost creating a tendency to shop lifting. "Silly Blllv." "Silly Billy" is a term often used by mothers when chiding their children, yet how few know tha origin of the term. The Duke of Gloucester, nephew of King George III, of Eng land, was feeble-minded and was called "Silly Billy." A funny story Is told about a vlf.lt he made to a lunatic asylum. "Why, here is 'Silly Billy,'" said one of the loonies. "Gracious," exclaimed the Duke, "that man knows me!" A keeper, who did not know who the Duke was, remarked: "Yes, like all lunatics, he has his lucid Intervals." Rock salt la mined and prepared for use in the States ot New York, ! Kansas, Louisiana and California. tfOy&EHQLD HINTS I'nttlne Itnwn Minting. A housekeeper, who has mad" ths experiment discovers that matting may be sowed like carpet and put down belter and easier thnn In the us ual wav with matting tacks, t'ndtubt edly this method would increase tho wear of the matting if It were neces sary to take It up often. One or two liftings of matting are apt to tear it unless the greatest rare Is used. To Waali null. Light fur rugs can quite easily be cleaned or washed at home. To dry clean, well moisten some sawdust with tenzollnc, and rub this well In, chang ing as It gels soiled, says Home Chat. If washed, make a nice suds with soap Jelly and hot water, in which you can comfortably bear your band (a heaped tablcspoonful to a gal lon, and a teaspoonful of borax. Let It soak In this for half an hour. Souse up and down in' this, then wash in a weaker suds, with only halt quantities of soap and borax, and rinse in luke warm Water. Press out as much water as possible, or run through a wringer; well shako, and hang in the shade to dry. When half dry, rub well between the hands to soften it, and again well hake. Leather for Deroratlnn. Leather has not been for many cen turies so extensively used for decora tive purpose as It is today. With what might be termed the renaissance in household art that begnn about 25 years since came a more general appreciation of rich Spanish and English leathers that were found on antique pieces of furniture. As a result leather has become more beautiful and It Is admirably adapted for the facings of walls as well as for the covering of various pieces of fur niture. In many instances these leathers are reproductions of the old Cordovan. Many kinds of skin are used, as some are too coarse of grain to become flex lblo enough or to take the finish de manded for certain purposes. A successful dining-room has re cently had Its walls completely cov ered with an old yellow leather illum inated with dull gold and bronze. The leather Is applied in panels and tacked on with large dull bronze-headed tacks. The frieze Is of stamped leather, which Is a bit more brilliant In tone. Over the mantel is a panel ot plain leather, emblazoned with the family crest. The furniture in this room is of old walnut unholstered in the old yellow leather, the coat of arms on the back and seat. The library In this same Iioubo Is al so done in leather. The color used, an old dull red. The chairs are covered with embossed leather; the table, a mastive affair, is completely encased In leather. Chicago Record-Herald. cifffoL -a -m e Rice Omelet To one cupful of cold boiled rice add one cupful of warm milk, one tablespoonrul of melted but ter, one teaspoonful ot salt, and a lit tle pepper; mix well and add to them three beaten eggs; put a little butter In a frying pan and when hot turn in the rice mixture, let cook slowly; put In the oven for a few mlnuteB: when It is cooked through told it in half; turn out on a hot platter and serve at once. ( Cheese Pudding. Take a cup ot grated or chopped cheese, a cup ot bread crumbs nnd a cup of milk, one egg beaten, a teaspoonful of butter, half a teaspoonful each of salt and mixed mustard and a dash of cayenne. Fill a buttered baking or pudding dish with alternate layers of cheese and bread crumbs. Mix the egg, milk and seas oning together and pour over the top and Lake until it is set like custard. This will require about fifteen minutes, serve hot Camelon of Beef. Mix together one pound of chopped beef, yolk 'of one epg, one tablespoonful chopped pars ley, one tablespoonful of butter or beef dripping, two tahleBpoonfula of bread crumbs, one nnd one-half teaspoonfuis ot lemon Juice and one-halt teaspoon ful ot salt and a little white pepper; form into a roll seven Inches long; lay this on a piece of greased paper; wrap the paper over: place the roll in a baking pan and bake In a quick oven halt an hour, basting three times with melted butter; remove from the oven, place on a hot platter and serve wttii a brown sauce made with the fat In the pan.. Cucumber Soup. Pare three good Blued cucumbers and two onions; cut them in slices crosswise. Cover with a pint of boiling water and simmer slowly until soft, adding more water if needed. Rub the vegetables through a sieve, pressing bard to obtain as much ot tho pulp as possible, using the water in which vegetables were boiled to soften the pulp. Return to fire. Put a pint of milk and a pint ot clear slock in double boiler to heat. Rub two level tablespoonfuls of butter and two ot four to a smooth paste and Btlr into tho liquid. Stir until smooth and creamy, then add the vegetable pulp ind water. Season to taste with salt and pepper and a little nutmeg if you , like and cook five minutes and serve with croutons. ' mo"o fire horses. tmnoaalhU to Kaap Them In a.eaaeneo' Condition for tho II aril fttralne. The rush of a fire engine along the street Is something that will cause even the most blaso citizen to stop and look. There is something Inspir ing In the sight of the great horses tearing along. The horses appear to be athletes of their kind, and many stories have been written about them and the keen perception they have of their dnMes. It will surprise) most persons to know that these horses are not athletes in the meaning that they are always In condition and hard train Ing, and also caiiBe surprise, that their lives are comparatively short. Jacob Durrenberger, the superintendent of horses, who looks after the fire horses of the city of Buffalo, says that most of these fine-looking animals are soft as girls. Tho very confinement they have to undergo In being ready for a call at any moment takes them out of training, and while they are good for a short spurt they are never aa hard ened as (the average old hack that Is pegging around the streets all day In front of some sort of a delivery wagon. The very best horses obtainable are bought for the service and many are rejected after being a few days in training. Speaking ot these animals, Supt. Durrenberger said: "It does not take long to teach the horses to discern Just what Is wanted of them, and many even get to know what calls directly concern them. But big and strong as they appear, and as they are, they are not the equine ath letes many folks Imagine. Down town they have many runs every month, and In the outlying districts the rails will not average a dozen In the same time. The animals In a suburban engine house have more chance for exercise than those In the heart of the city. The runs are always heart-breaking, and it Is queer that most of the ani mals first break down over the back. The big engines are very heavy, run ning Into the thousands of pounds, and even with three horses pulling them it tells across the back In a very few years. That Is how most of them go, and when they are unfit for the fire service they may yet be most serviceable animals for lighter work. "They know their business, and, as far as a man ran Judge, take a great delight in making the runs when the gong taps. One horse will teach an other, and two old timers with a raw recruit will help him along and push hint into place If he appears to be let ting the excitement of the occasion get away with him. While the down town runs are never very far, they are made at great speed, and the wrench, for instance, when a big en gine slips from a car track is a greater strain on the horses than most people Imagine. In the outlying districts the horses have longer runs, but fewer ot them, and generally the apparatus Is lighter. But whether In the outlying districts or downtown all of these ani mals are in confinement. "When they make a run they run hard, but they do not get enough ex pi else to keep their muscles hard, and they are flabby. For Instance, they are taken out and ridden up and down the block for half an hour at a time, but that Is scarcely as mucfi ex ercise as a man In prison gets dally to keep him In only average condition. These horses have the hardest kind of pulling to do when they are called on for work and a very lazy existence In bet wee u. The resUlt is that the strain ot their pulls and runs breaks them across the back after they have been but a few years in the service, ' "Once in a while one hears ot some old fire horse that has been years In the service, but the chances are that he has been a giant among his kind, or that, although working In the depart ment, he has been doing somo other la bor than pulling a big engine, I know that the general idea Is that the fire department horses are the best ath letes of their kind, but a little think ing over these facts about bard runs and no exercise will convince any one that they are using up their1 vitality every time the gong is rung. Then, again, they often have to make long, :old waits when a big fire Is actually In progress, and that Is not good for them. If a horse Is fairly Intelligent he will learn bis lesson In a very few days, and anything a horse learns he Is proud to do and show off. Hence the leemlng avidity of the engine horses to lump at the tap of the bell. There are borseB who can tell, almost before the harness has been snapped on them, whether the call Is for their district or not, and the excitement will die away on them as soon as they know they will be returned to their stalls." Buffalo Times. Hon a Fly ratctiar. The keeper of the cam Ivor a house at the Zoo led a group of visitors to the outdoor quarters of the Hons. "Look at that fellow over there," he said. "It's interesting to watch him catching flies." The lion lay beside a little puddle that the rain of the night before had made. He dipped his paw into the tlcky mud and then extended the member and lay very quiet. The paw served as a flytrap. Flies lighted on It and stuck fast; buzz all they would, they could not get away. And the lion, after a dozen or two were collected, calmly crushed them and prepared blB paw again. "He does that every year," the keep er Bald. Philadelphia Record. Big Arlaona. Arizona exceeds In area the follow Ing ten states combined: Rhode Island, Delaware, Connecticut, New Jersey, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Ver mont, Maryland, West Virginia and South Carolina. New York City. Dnrk blue linen Is Used for this stylish shirt waist, villi white linen and bands of embroidery for trimming. Two deep pleats extend from shoulder win misses' fanct oibsom blocse. to belt In V-shaped outline at the back, and the waist Is smoothing adjusted under the arms. The pleats in front correspond with those In the back, nnd nre stitched their entire length. The waist closes In double-breasted style, the right side fastening on the left 'with large pearl FANCY WAIST AND buttons, two rows of which trim the fronts. A white linen collar completes the neck. The bishop sleeves are shaped with lnsldo senms only. They have comfortable fullness on the shoulders, fit the upper arm closely and nre gath ered at the lower edge on narrow wristbands. These are finished with flaring cuffs to match the collar. Smart blouses in this mode are de veloped In pique, cotton cheviot, per cale or gnlatea, heavy wash fabrics being preferable, as the pleats should remain stiff over the shoulders. To make the blouse for a miss four teen years will require one and three quarter yards of thlrty-slx-lnch ma terial. For Calling and Chureli, For calling and church wenr nothing Is more appropriate than a dark blue nud white figured satin foulard com bined with white. Such a dress is il lustrated in the large drawlug with all over lace nnd white penu do sole trim mings. The waist Is made over a glove-fitted, featherboued lluing that closes In the centre front. The back is plain, with slight fullness at the belt. It is fuced with lace to a round yoke depth.' The front plastron Is permanently attached to the right lining and closes Invisibly on the left. The, right full front is arranged in a deep box pleat at the lower edge of the plastron and also fastens under the left front. Double bertha collars fluish the Bides ot the lace front and extend around the back below the yoke. They are trimmed with white bands aud similar Straps edge tho fronts In vest effect. A lnce collar completes the neck. The sleeves nre arranged iu four in verted box pleats that are flatly stitched from shoulder to elbow. The puff's formed by the fullness below the elbow are gathered and arrauged Iu deep poluted cuffs ot white peaa de sole, over which they droop grace fully. 1 The skirt i shaped with five gores, narrow front and Bides and wide backs. Vbe closing is made invisibly at the w mmmm B- ollJJI- la 1 . a. u c. V av centre back muter two Inverted pleat that nre flutly pressed nnd present a perfectly plain appearance. The flounce Is shallow in front, but graduates to a considerable depth t the bnck nnd gives n stylish sweep to the skirt nt the floor. Lace Is ap plied nt the top or the hem as foot trimming. To make the waist In the medium size will require two nnd one-quarter yards of forty-four-lnch material, with three-quarter ynrd of all-over lace. To make the skirt In thn medium size will require five nnd one-half ynrda of forty-four-lnch material. Dnme-fthaperi Paraaols. The latest Imported parasols nre dome-shaped, nnd nre of medium size. The sticks are of natural wood, with crystal, porcelain or natural rustic handles. Snfr moire Is the material and white or green the color. Palo Gray Etamlna Coat a me. The costume Illustrated is made of pale gray etamlno over pink silk that shows through the open mesh of the material nnd lends a tone of color to the entire toilet. The waist Is made over a glove fitted, fentherlioned lining that closes in the centre front. The bnek is plain across the shoulders nnd displays slight fullness at the belt, arranged In tiny pleats. The vest ot stwl embroidery Is per manently attached to the right lining nnd closes Invisibly on the left It Is wide nt the neck nnd tapers to a point at the belt. A hrond sailor collar finishes the neck nnd forms long revere FIVE GORED SKIRT. in front. It Is edged with a frill of gray ribbon. The sleeves nre fitted with Inside seams only, have slight fullness on the shoulders and are adjusted on deep pleated cuffs, over which the sleeves droop gracefully at the back. The belt Is of green velvet ribbon fastened with a silver buckle. In tho skirt five well proportioned gores nre fitted smoothly around the waist ami hips without . darts. The fullness iu the centre back is arranged Iu an underlying pleat at each side of the closing. The gored portion Is cut off below the knees and lengthened with a cir cular flounce that flares stylishly at the lower edge. To this is added a full-gathered iiounco that gives a wide sweep to the skirt nt the floor. Bands of embroidery are applied at the top of each flounce. . To make tho wa st in the medium size will require one and three-quarter yards of forty-four-lnch material, wltni tucked waist and fivi oobbd sxinr. one yard of all-over embroidery. To make the skirt In the medium sice will require four yards of forty-four-lnch, material. l-nJ V 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers