The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, September 24, 1902, Image 3

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WOMAN'S
REALM.
A NEW FIELD OF WORK.
Duties of Superintendent of N stare
Study In the Vacation Schools,
For sis weeks or no In summer M!s
Knte Bnumann hna one of the oddest
occupations of any one In Philadelphia.
As superintendent of nature study In
the vnrntlon schools she not only ml
pervlscs the nature work done by the
mnny classes, dut collect noil dis
tributed the specimens needed In tench
Ing 3000 children hundreds of roots of
all varieties, steins and leaves, flowers,
fruit and vegetables.
Three days n week she Is off Id the
country from early morning until sun
down, hard at work. Three days she
spends distributing among the schools
Her excursions take her far beyond
the railroad and trolley lines, Clnd In a
comfortable working dress, she does
miles and miles of walking over dusty
lanes, her eyes wide open for plants
that have sprung np by the wayside
beyond the fences, so they may be
legitimately appropriated. Sometimes
she mast mount fences to gather twigs
and leaves from convenient branches.
Occasionally there Is a tree to climb
where coveted specimens are far be
yond the reach of he crooked handle
of her umbrella.
On certain days the superintendent's
trip is to the woods and fields In search
of wild flowers. On others, armed
with a large basket, she visits friendly
fanners to solicit garden and orchard
products, or again, she follows the
course of some rream to hunt for nee
essary water plants.
The burden she brings back to town
at nlgbt may be forty pounds of leaves
pulled from all kinds of trees, or hun
dreds of twigs bearing pears and other
fruit, or a basketful of potatoes, beets
and carrots, dug up with their leaves
and all.
Distribution the following day Is not
an easy task. The schools to be sup
plied He In widely separated parts of
town. The residents along her various
routes have grown accustomed to see
ilng her pass by with her odd bundles,
and everywhere she Is known and
greeted as "the teacher."
"Of course," said Miss Baumann.
"when I took np the work four years
ago It was much cosier. There were
fewer schools then and not nearly so
many pupils. Nowadays, if It were not
for the kindness shown me everywhere,
I simply could not undertake it all
alone. Every one becomes Interested
at once when I explain my errand. The
farmers want to insist on my having
even more than I need, and when our
lesson is to be on cultivated flowers,
the big city florists Ml my basket to
overflowing. Then there are mnny
kind friends who are always on the
lookout for specimens to send me, or
who are generous about assisting me
when my load Is a very heavy one."
Her first work begins early in the
spring. Then sho is abroad in the
woods looking for acorns that have
lain underlie snows all winter and are
In good condition for sprouting. These
serve later on as splendid examples
. of germination for the younger classes.
Later she starts gardening in her back
yard, planting cucumber seed, so that
the vines with their young, tiny fruit
may be shown the children, as well as
larger specimens contributed by the
. markets. Peas, beans and oats are
also planted in small boxes, a box of
each Just sprouted to go to every
school. Philadelphia Press.
How Wrinkle Come.
Enough is said of the trentment of
wrinkles to make us all wise to avoid
them, If wisdom were enough.
But wrinkles, like love, will find out
a way, and in spite of massage and oils
and balms, wrinkles will set their deli'
cate seal of thought and perplexity
upon the forehead and under the eyes
and abont the Hps.
The reason of wrinkles, any one will
tell you easily, is years. But why is It
that years make wrinkles? What con
nection la there between the fight of
time over our heads and the fine trac
ery upon our features?
Here is the explanation as well as a
layman can give it:
Underneath the skin, in the flesh, are
imbedded multitudes of little muscles
that hold the flesh and keep it as wc
my "solid and Arm." The skin also
lias a certain muscular power of con
tracting and stretching as necessity de
inands, and which depends upon what
Is called the tonicity of the skin.
As years creep along the muscles
weaken and grow lax, no longer hold
ing the flesh up Arm and bard as be
fore. All the lines in the face droop
therefore with age, and. the flesh has a
tendency to fall down In little ridges.
. Just the same thing happens to the
skin. It loses its contracting power
and relaxes. Then come the little
wrinkles. It will be seen then, that
wrinkles are due to changes in the
, constitution of the skin Itself.
Anything that acts as a stimulant
upon the skin, keeping it active and so
keeping np the tone of the muscles, will
tend to prevent wrinkles.
But even If they do come, why should
one be unhappy? Tbey are as honor
able as gray hairs. Tbey Indicate
thought as . well as years; they give
character and dignity to the expres
sion. j Freckles and sunburn have bad their
i day of being fashionable. Whi tint
wrinkles? Tbey are beautiful, if we
only think so. New York News.
Kadis embroidery.
Among the latest fancies In fashion's
realm are gowns of all over English
embroidery mounted over colored silk.
One over pale lnk has the skirt bill
In three deep ruffles, and a jacket
hodlce showing front and undorsleevei
of embroidered ecru batiste. Thi
olioker Is encircled by a pleated scan
or pink tnousseliiio de sole which tlet
with ft simple knot In the front, snyi
the Chicago Record Herald. This pur
tlcularstylo of crnvat is one of the nov
elties of the season aud appears on f
number of elaborate costumes. A
lovely chemisette Is of tine white bn
tlste, with yoke behind ending on th
shoulders and the front pieces fuller1
to this. Butterflies of embroidery and
drawn work trim the yoke and run
down the rront of the blouse. The lit
tle cuffs, which ore unstarched, tucked
and edged with Vnlenclcnnes lace, nr
fastened by a single small white
crochet button, and these buttons are
used to fasten the front of the chem
isette. The soft tucked choker has a
pleated cravat tied loosely about it
This Is made of the batiste, with the
ends finished with Valenciennes lace.
Woman as a Wage-Earner.
As a wage earner the American
woman adds largely to the country's
output of energy; as a consumer she
creates two-thirds of the demand, with
Its Inevltnblo result of supply; as an
Inventor, designer and manufacturer
she enlarges the variety and activity
of the world's market; and as a crea
tor she enriches the imaginative prod
uct of the world. In all these, it Is Im
possible to divorce her Interests from
those of man, or make her more or less
than an individual with an Individual's
place and power In the community. To
ask whether her elimination from the
commerce of the world would create
a greater vacuum than the elimination
of man, would bring us back to the
elusiveness of abstract and general dis
cussion to which the Amercan woman
can no longer be relegated. It is not
as woman In the abstract, but as worn
an the Individual that she is to be
reckoned with, for It Is as the Individ
ual that she has won and that she will
maintain her place as a commercial
factor. New York Po9t.
How to Bo Charming.
A woman can make or mar her at
tractiveness. Bhe can, by on utter
disregard of hygleulc laws and a neg
lect of toilet accessories, In the opinion
of Home Chnt, lose entirely that chartn
of face and form that nature obviously
Intended should be hers. A few drops
of soothing lotion will transform a
pnlr of rough hnnds Into soft ones:
systematic care of the complexion will
keep it smooth and ward off wrinkles,
and on eagerness to rend clever book!
and to know things, and a lively In
terest In the current events o the day,
will brighten the eyes ns nothing else
can, except It be the sympathy of the
mnn one loves. The woman possessing
this knowledge Is fnr more charming
and attractive thitn she In whose path
no beautifying whims have ever come.
And the womnn who applies this
knowledgo Is the one who will develop
Into the entertaining. Interesting grand
mother of the next generation, as
dnlnty and as youthful as was the
mother of the past generation.
To Train Colored Olrle.
A training school for colored nurses
has been established In Charleston, S.
C., by a colored womnn physician. Dr.
I.ucy Hughes Brown, a graduate of
the Woman's Medical College of Penn
sylvania. The Bouthcrn people seem to
take kindly to this Innovation, and the
enterprise Is highly commended by the
Charleston press.
Kilt Pleated Oowii,
There Is much that Is chic about the
gowns that are kilt pleated, both skirts
and bodice alike, and worn with n
wide soft silk belt or sash. Some of
the light autumn cheviots in heather
shades and the soft neutral tints nre
especially pretty and smart lu the kilt
pleated models.
ModUli Materials.
Materials that are to be in vogue are
noted with and without a crepon sur
face and Include a number of silk and
wool weaves, veiling, batiste, crepe do
chine, collenne, crepe, albatross and
similar lightweight stuffs.
Changeable moires are an autumn
novelty.
Wide tucks as a border on parasols
are very pretty.
Waved satin ribbon is a novelty for
trimming skirts.
Velvet bat bindings arc often over an
inch deep on the outside.
The buckle and the toque mnko Co
lonial ties quite fascinating footgear.
Sashes and ties of real lace are the
prettiest as well as the most expen
sive. A faddish hatpin is In old jsllver ia
the design of an Indian in full war
paint
Snowflake homespun and long-haired
camels' hair are two materials for au
tumn wear.
Dark blue or black cheviots, sprinkled
with white polka dots, are the new ma
terial for short skirts.
In some of the shirt waist suits em
broidery is as elaborately applied to
the skirt as to the waist.
Gaudy colors appear in bats, parasols
and veils, but In general gowns the
colors are very delicate in tint and
blend nicely into one another.
A beautiful tea gown Is of the softest
make of stamped pink velvet trimmed
with endless Intricacies of tucks and
Insertions of taffeta and chiffon.
BICFOOT, THE GRIZZLY, DEAD.
Re Is Thought to Hare Killed 10OO Read
or Stock In Hit Lifetime.
Blgfoot Is dead. Only the remote
ranchers of the Pierce City district in
west central Idaho know the real sig
nificance of tho news. Blgfoot Is a
grizzly and Is supposed In the Inst eight
years to have made owny with 1000
bend of stock.
Itlgfoot' methods showed remarka
ble uniformity. One blow from his
monstrous foot would kill the strongest
steer or cow, and dragging his prey to
a secluded spot Blgfoot would cat the
choicest portions. He never gorged
himself, nnd before the stockmen dis
covered his loss the bear would be
many miles owny.
Here he would kill another cow and
disappear ngnln. L. C. Roberts alone
lost twenty-one head Inst season, the
work In each case being attributed to
Blgfoot.
Henry Shrlby, a cattleman and
range rider of Knmlab, Idaho, gave the
following account of Blgfoot and his
operntlons.
"Blgfoot was the biggest grimly 1
ever saw, nnd I believe the biggest that
ever operated In Western Idnho. I
nnd other cowboys have seen hi in of
ten enough, but generally we only had
our range revolvers on us, and were
scared to tackle him.
"His beat was between Snake and
Salmon rivers around Whlteblrd In a
wild mountain cattle country, and I
calculate his average was 123 or 130
cattle and horses In a year. Frobably
be has enten 1000 head of stock since
first the traces of his big feet began to
be noticeable In Idnho County. I don't
know how old he Is.
"Blgfoot was wise even for a grizzly.
He would kill a cow at one clip, eat
what he wanted, and never come back.
That was his cutest trait, and was the
one that saved him for so long. He
would kill a three-year-old steer with
out trouble. At one time there was
$ 1500 on bis head, nnd I think stock
men will give about 900 now for his
death."
Blgfoot was killed at Welppe. He
was sleeping In some brush when
Frank. Peters, a Musselshall miner, ap
proached, and as the monster raised
himself on his haunches to see who the
Intruder was Peters shot him. Peters
Is now collecting the reward offered by
the stockmen.
The bear weighed 000 pounds. Pet
ers will keep the hide nnd the famous
foot for trophies. Ho distant Is the wild
Idnho County stock region thnt it was
five days before the good news reached
Lcwlaton and Walla Walla. New York
Suu.
Scientific Housekeeping.
The Chicago Housewife Assoclntlon
Is evidently determined to put domestic
service on a scientific basis. Its latest
move In that direction Is to appoint n
stnndlng arbitration committee of
three members, to which Is to be sub
mitted nil question of dispute between
mistresses and servants. The decisions
of the committee nre to be binding on
both pnrtles to a dispute, the penalty lu
cose of a recalcitrant mistress being
expulsion from the association, while a
servant who falls In her duty will for
feit the right to refer future employers
to the headquarters of the association.
Every mold on completing one year of
service In the family of one of the
members of the nssoeiutlon is to bo
given a diploma, nnd at the end of the
second consecutive yenr is olven h
choice of a seal on her diploma or n
rnsn premium or 510, with an addition
si prize of $5 for each succeeding year.
The association is to establish an em
ployment agency, and its constitution
provides that a maid, taken 111 after
four weeks' sen-Ice In a family, shall
lie ennuea to rree medical ottontlon.
The efforts of this association to bring
order out of tho present chaotic condi
tion of domestic service are worth the
attention of women In every city in the
country.-Harper's Weekly.
About Bella.
It was a long fixed Idea thnt silver
mixed with the bell metal Improved
me tone, uui tnis is now considered In
correct. Two slmriilnrlv an-ont luilla n.
St. John's College, Cumbrldge, ore said
co nave a mixture of silver, but If true,
this Is not believed bv mninetunt
thorities to be the cause of their beau-
tirul tone.
This Idea led to the atnrv nf h. mnnii-
Tamllo concealing the silver given him
oy tnanemagno nnd casting the bell In
the monnsterv of St. Pnni nf tnf..-i..
Metal, whereupon he wos Btruck by tho
i-iitppor ana Killed.
In the nluth century bells were made
In France of iron. They have been
?ast In steel, and the tone has been
found nearly equal In fineness to that
of the bell metal, but Imvim, i.. . i
bratlon. was deflclent in length, and
iiicK gmss Dens have been made which
ilve a beautiful sound, tint
tie to long withstand the strokes of the
lupper. uentlemnn's Magazine,
Tha Lap. of Time.
When two married men who haven't
leen each other for some timo m.,
ne of thorn always says, before they
leparate: "Let's see, how old Is your
Jldest now?" and then, after be gets
the answer, be adds: "It is aston
ishing, isn't it, how time does flyr-
suuiervuie (jiass.i journal.
For tha Fnrpoaa or Identification.
According to the Dublin tii cy
press a luborer at Dawnhum Market,
who ran brass plus one and a hulf
inches long up the extreme nd nr tit.
tails of two pigs, for the purpose of
lUKuuui-auon. nas been liued one sulll
Ing and costs on a charge of cruelty.
A Pitiful bight.
The most Pitiful sight In tha world I.
s man who has exhausted life at twen
ty-eve. New York News
household
jVflatters
Conch For Verandas.
Tho hanging conch Is a new nnd
salient fenturo of the modern porch.
It Is not a hammock, being a much
more comfortnble nnd trustworthy
thing. Mdde nt home, the constituent
ingredients of the hanging couch In
elude nu ordinary woven wire spring
ana a comfortable mnttrcss, suspended
In a frame by swinging ropes. The
frame may be of canvas or of wood.
A Red mom Decoration.
Ono of tho newest nnd smartest bed
room decorative schemes Is to have
green woodwork, with wall covering
or Japanese wisteria and green leaves
with pnle yellow ceiling; green pnlnted
or stained furniture, Jnpnuese rugs or
Japanese matting on the floor, Japanese
yeuow pottery on the wash stand and
emier pinin yellow "or lavender cur
tnlns nt the windows, over white mna.
lln. The result is novel and striking
in me extreme.
Temperature of Ovens.
The proper temperature of the oven
for various mixtures often rpmnlne a
perplexity to the young housewife after
otner details have been conquered.
Here are a few suggestions: A cake
Which IS made With butter needa a
moderate oven; a cuko made without
butter wants a quick oven. For small
cakes and cookies the oven should be
moderately quick. Cakes that have an
nuimxiure or moinsses burn more eas
ily than others, nnd should be watched
closely. They renulre a moderate oven
If the cake browns too quickly after
going mto tue oven there Is too much
neat, uetnove a lid rrom tho top of
the stove or put Into the oven a dish
containing cold water.
A Shampoo Mixture.
A very good shampoo mixture Is
mode thus: Lay a cake of the purest
soap obtainable In a pitcher. Add one
pint of bolllug water and stir until
a good lather is formed. Lift out the
enke of soap, and. If the hair is very
oily, add one teaspoonful of bicarbon
ate of soda, but under no circumstances
ammonia or powdered borax. Wash
the holr and scalp thoroughly with the
shampoo mixture while It Is still warm
and rinse with warm water. Do not
rinse the hair In cold water. The sud
den change In temperature is bad for
the scalp, and hnlr, too. If the hnlr is
exceptionally dry, a teaspoonful of
sweet almond oil may be added to the
last rinsing water. '
Colored Tablecloths,
Colored tablecloths are being revived
lo a certain extent for supper or lunch
eon cloths, but nre never used for din
ner. One of blue denim is cool nnd
pretty, with a centre piece and dollies
of drawn white work. One of cool
looking green nrt linen Is very attrac
tive also In Connection with oreen
china and white flowers In a green
glass vase for a table centre. Plain
lavender linen shows efreetivoiv trih
pnnsles, heliotrope nsters. or sweet
pens lor tue norai effect aud blue and
white chlnn. Red or oranco linen mm
be used for supper, especially In fall.
witn wuito china and geraniums and
nasturtiums, with their leaves, for the
flowers. With caro to keep a har
monious color scheme and fitting flow
ers theso colored tablecloths may be
made to produce a pleasant change,
originality and individuality without
offending good taste In the least.
t RECIPES a 'a
reaches and Rice A simple dish for
tho children's dessert, nnd one which
will usually bo liked by their ciders,
consists of a thick layer of rice spread
with sections of Juicy peaches or with
berries. It Is eaten with cream and
sugar.
Vanity Tuffs Boll one cup of milk
nd thicken It with flour to make a stiff
dough, then add three eggs unbeaten
one by one, beating well after adding
each; tlieu add one tablespoon of melt
ed butter; drop small spoonfuls Into
hot fat; when brown lift tbeui with a
skimmer ou to brown paper; sprinkle
with powdered sugar and clnuamon
mixed.
Sweet Pepper Snute Remove the
seeds nnd tops of six peppers; wash
them In cold water; put them Into boll
Ing water and cook slowly half au
hour; drain; put two tablespoonfuls of
butter lu n small pun; when hot turn
In tho peppers; cover the pnn nnd cook
slowly twenty minutes; serve over
chopped meat cakes that have been
boiled.
Potato Croquettes-To two cupfuls
of hot liccd potatoes add two table
spoonfuls or butter, yolks of three eggs,
half a teaspoon of salt nnd a few
grains of cayenne pepper; bent thor
oughly; shape iu balls ond roll pointed
nt euds; roll lu flour; mark in three
places on top of each with a knife
blade; fry lu deep hot fat; arrange ou
a hot platter; garnish with parsley and
serve hot.
Moulded Eggs-Butter six or eight
tlmbale moulds; sprinkle on the bottom
ond side chopped parsley; break one
egg Into each mould, being careful not
to break the yolk; sprinklo with" salt
and pepper ond a bit of butter on
tho top; put the moulds In a pan of hot
water pnd bake In the oven from llvo
to seven minutes; turn out on a platter
and serve with a cream of tomato
sauce or serve on ; round of buttered
toast
Foloaa Aacleat Sport.
Polo Is probably the oldest of athletic
ports. It has been traced to 000 B. 0.
BRACCIN' 'BOUT OUR KIN.
Ob, how I tnve to talk and brag with my
wile nbout our ktnl
f toll of dad with pride and glee how
sriart he'd niters bin;
t tell nhout how he cud shoot, as far ss Be
end see, '
An' bore s woodcock, through the neck
upon the highest tree.
Then I just spank my knee,
An' shake all o'er with glee.
I tell- nhout how Uncle John cud give S
veil an' Iran
Into s crowd en' scatter them jest like a
puck o' sheep;
Hon-, if a nun who knovrcd him not would
try hi ground and stay,
Would git knocked in to morry morn, then
DacK to yiateranyi
Then I je pound my knee,
An' wife she laughs with me.
All grnndnds, ancles, stints jei' all th
kinfnlkfl f kin Hrntr
From out the years I fotch 'cm forth an'
on em Drag and brag
Big lawyers, statesmen were my kin prize
fifflltera. tmnlcera rich.
Knife swallowers, an' hunters great big
injun cnicts an sicli
I brag on all with glee.
An' wife she joins with -me.
But now an' then I do git tired a-talkin'
'houfe the kin.
I find no trait to be admired in ennything
I yawn an' gape an' stretch my arms an'
VOW I fntlat turn in
When we no, she begins to brag, and
urogB mjout ner xini
Then nerry little glee
From her. an' nnn. fpnm hi.I
J. Noel Johnson, in Cincinnati Commer-
mai-iriDune.
Visitor "And what was your offense,
my good man?" Convict "Madam. I'm
doing time for reckless outomoblllng."
Brooklyn Life.
Blanche "Did you port owing to a
misunderstanding?" Rose "Goodness
me, nol We understood each other
too well." Tlt-Blts.
"He says he fell In love with ber at
first sight." "Perhaps I can be of serv.
Ice to blm. I know a first class ocu
list." Philadelphia Bulletin.
Grandpa "My father used to tell
me that oil work and no play mode
Jack a lazy boy." Horry "Did he? Is
that chestnut as old as that?" Puck.
The man who shouts that times are hard.
V III I . 1 1 t. '
iuu wui unserve mil oil
Is looking for a berth in life
Particularly soft.
Washington Star.
McJIgger "The robin Is a very timid
bird, lsu't It?" Thingumbob "I guess
so. At any rate the average restaurant
cook can make it quail." Philadelphia
press.
It Is certnlnly a mystery how office
boys, with their confining duties, and
only four grandmothers, all told, an
quire their exhaustive knowledge of
baseball. Puck.
. He had a little pile of "rocks."
Likewise some sporty blood.
He put his "dust" in watered stocks
Alas! Its name is mud.
Philadelphia Record.
Kitty "D'ye r'aly love me, Dinny?"
Dennis-"Do Oi love ye? Faith, Kitty,
Ol'd do anything to live wld ye the rlsl
av me lolfe, aven If Ol knowed 'twould
kill me this minute." Philadelphia
Press.
Upton "Who Is thnt mnn? ne acts
as If be owned the earth." Downton
"Oh, he'll get over thnt In a few days,
He's a good fellow at heart, but be has
Just been on a vacation, and ho rode
both ways In a palace cor." New York
Weekly.
"Yes, I still hnve the first dollar I
ever made," sold the groy hnired pas-
senger. "The Idea!" exclaimed the
traveling acquaintance, "and how did
you keep It so long?" "It wos very Ira
perfect, being my first, ond I've had
trouble In passing it." Philadelphia
Press.
"Is Mr. Fusso much afraid of mi
crobes?" "Well, I should soy bo
washes the antiseptic gauze gloves be
wears In an antiseptic fluid before he
even bandies the sterilized glass that
contains the boiled aud filtered mlnernt
water he Intends to drink!" Baltimore
Herald.
Ignorance of Onraelvee.
Practically every man knows the size
of bis collar, practically no man con
namo the sizes of all bis other habili
ments. This Is (be mature Judgmeift ot
a haberdasher's clerk of long expe
rience. "Nine men out of ten we have
to measure for their gloves. As to
socks, the average man knows that bis
slzo Is neither tho largest nor the
smallest, and that Is about all. Cuffs
we guess at, and In underclothing there
enn bo a good margin of error without
nny serious consequences. Some of the
stores give away little souvenir tablets
on which a man can make memoranda
of tho sizes of all bis clothes, but I
never knew but two men who carried
tlicin after the first week. Another
queer thing which I bad occasion to no
tice in another way is the number of
men who don't know their height and
weight, things which you would thluk
every one would keep track of." Now
York Post.
Faote About Nitrogen.
Annual importation of nltrutcs for all
purposes, 1,200,000 tous per year.
Necessary for the preservation of
mankind lu the year 11)30, 12,000,000
tons per year.
Visible supply of nitrates In 1030
through natural processes, 000,000 tons
per year.
Shortage of supply of natural nitrates
In 1030, 11,400,000 tons per year.
Pressure of ultrogen upon each
square yard of the earth's surface,
seven tons.
Necessity of nitrote manufacture
from the air In 1030. 13,000,000 tons per
year. new York World.
The best cork comes from Spain.
which has 620,000 square miles of cork
areata.
itfkti
AND
New York City. Black ond white Is
the favorite combination for separate
blouses, many of the season's most
beautiful creations being developed in
these fashionable colors.
The waist illustrated is made of
Ivory silk crepe embroidered In large
black polka dots. It Is mounted on a
glove-fitted fentherbone lining thnt
tiADIBs' FANCY WAIST.
LADIKS' DRKSSINO P ACQUIS.
closes In the centre front. The back Is
plain across the shoulders and drawn
down close to the belt, where the ful
ness is arranged in tiny pleats.
The full vest is Included in tho right
shoulder seam, nnd permanently at
tached to the lining. It fastens Invis
ibly on the left side. The vest is made
of plain white erepe trimmed with
alternate bunds of ecru lnce and black
velvet ribbon. Similar trimming Is
applied in the back to simulate a
round yoke.
The full fronts ore nrrnnged In three
backward-turning tucks which nre
stitched down for some distance and
provide becoming fulness at tho bust
Tho waist blouses stylishly over a
black velvet girdle.
A high collar, decorated with ecru
lace medallions, completes the neck.
The elbow sleeves ore shaped with
Inside scums only nnd tucked to fit
the upper arm closely.. Puffs, formed
by the fulness below tho point where
the stitching ceases, are gnthercd and
arrnnged ou narrow tace elbow bands.
Useful DrcaelngT Sacque.
To make the waist In the medium
size will require one and one-quarter
yards of forty-four-lnch material, with
three-quarters of a yard of contrasting
material for trimming.
Albutross Is a material much used
for dressing sncques this season, and it
Is a little more satisfactory than flan
nel, ns It Is not quite so heavy. The
fabric Is shown In the lurge Illustration
In n delicate shade of violet, trimmed
with two widths of black velvet rib
bon.
The garment is shaped with shoulder
and underarm seams only, nnd has a
plain square yoke, back and front. The
full backs nre gathered at the upper
edge and applied to the yoke. At the
belt the gathers are arranged on a
band, and the garment druwn into the
figure. . A smooth adjustment Is main
tained under the arm.
The full fronts nre applied to the
lower edge of the front yoke and fall
In long, loose folds over the bust, A
comfortable rolling collar completes
the, neck. It Is edged with a narrow
pleating of albatross. The neck Is
fastened with black velvet ribbons tied
la a bow with long ends.
1015 fog
The sleeve Is shaped with Inside)
seams only, fits tho upper arm closely
nnd flares In a graceful bell at the)
wrist. Hulf wny between the elbow
nnd lower edge-tho fulness is gathered
and fastened beneath a bow, over
which the sleeve droops prettily.
Bands of lnce beading run through)
with narrow velvet ribbon finish tha
collar, yoke nnd sleeves.
To mnke the dressing sncquo In the
medium size will require three and
three-quarter yards of tweuty-soven
inch material.
Two Shades of Bine Pied.
Two shndes of blue In a gown, one
blending perfectly Into the other, ore
frequently seen nowadays, and this
does not apply only to blue, but also
to other colors, and If properly blended
the effect is beautiful.
Tallow Coming Into Favor.
Various shndes of yellow are coming
Into favor. They appear In laces and
embroideries, also In gowns. Delicate
tinted chnmpngne color Is the favorite
of these shades.
.d
Ialny White Frock.
The frock shown here Is developed In
white silk with tucked moussellne and
point de Venlse lace for trimming. Tha '
waist Is mnde over a fitted body llu
Ing thnt closes In the bnck, and is cut
slightly low at the neck.
The full fronts nnd backs are gath
ered anil arranged over the lining. The
underarm seams are Joined separately
and the silk forms a stylish blouse)
over the sash thnt ties In a bow at the
left side. A collar of Inserted tucking
completes the neck. It Is of unique
shaping, and gives a broad effect to the
shoulders.
The sleeves nre short, full puffs that
are arranged on narrow arm bands
from which depend frills of silk,
Tho skirt Is gathered at the upper
edge nnd applied to the body portion,
closing ot the buck. It Is trimmed with
a gathered flounce thnt gives a smart
flare to the skirt.
Bauds of lace ore applied on the
sleeves nnd nt the top of the flounce.
The dress Is simple and stylish. It
may be made of lawn, dimity, Swiss,
or nny fine wash fnbrlc,nnd Is also ap
propriate for cashmere, albatross, veil
ing or chnllie. If the collar Is made Of
the same material, It may be trimmed
PRESS FOB A Ontli.
with rows of French knots or feather.
stitching.
To make the dress for a girl of eight
years will require three and one-quar
ter yards ot twenty-seven-inch material
K 1