Cape May Herald, 5 November 1903 IIIF issue link — Page 6

Ar IDOL. OF_CLAY.

«hM dUl »Lo str. lor bar waddUc rln«?

All that a wuaiao mar !

Wbaldld «tiu to lb« fi*»; brtoj v

Oaljr aa Idol ot day.

All lb- ••—« dr-amp of bar (Irlbood yaan.

All tbai a baart could bold.

All of b«r boim aad aU of b-r lean.

All of brr •milo nod aU of b«r Icarc,

For oca Ita'a circle of cold.

Told »ba tba world of «br WMar pha«T.

Ab. no 1 U lib a pmlilnir fao-

Hba rloibnd bar Idol fro* brad to trot

With ib« carmvaU ol brr arara-

IIrr it,.

t ih-jr'w

- ka|d

— Maoo Waiermaa.

him. bow Mm loved him yafl Nor did ■ha blame him for what happened, tor ■he had Invited her rich friend to vlali her. And than when ah* vra* an Cased In home duties left them to each other, and her friend had atolen her Icvar. Womanlike, ahe blamed the other woman la the caa?. and let the

man co free.

She had reran!ly beard of bla wife'r death, and allowed berwelf to dwell on bla memory ha ahe had not, done In many yearn.. Now that he waa free would to? seek ter. cow that ate had love and fortune both to give him? She could not know of hla hard cruelty tc the a oman who had Juat died! hla petty pen>e;utioce—she wet:Id not have believed them If*that woman could hnte riaen from her crave to warn her. She waa In lore with cn Ideal. l.bokiric out on the nlsht and ita raccracta the aaw him comluc toward her with the indifference with which oae l>: hold* an ordinary paaaerby. Surely love U blind. Her ejea reeled

A tall, narrow, prosperoua ai peerlcs ! on the spare fliturc. alichtly beat, and man with a wt il-deOncd scowl waa leit aaw no hint of resemblanre to nny one by th- express flyer at Noonah mat Ion. j she Iiad known. Her heart aad as fc- walled, v^llre in hand, no I throba were accelerated by not one looked afiout him with the air of one | thrill, and when the bell pealed and who -as not altogether a stranger. Ob- the vibrations reached her the thought see lag a public conveyaccj he beck- Indifferently: "Some man to ere f»rhuned as one accustomed to tiring obey- er." ed to the man In charge, and manliest- Her father and mother were attended no surprise when that individual In* the weekly prayer meoUng. their

FREAK OMIESM.

healthy and thrifty condition until the

Tasting a Cow.

When tasting a cow and that la what should be done* with all dairy cows, ■tan with less grain feed than tba cow needs, adding a Illle. aay a quarter of a pound per day. If ahe la In good condition, and continue ihla for a month or even two months, keeping an accurate account of the feed consum'd and the quantity of milk she yields, and note if the Increase of the flow la In proportion to the Increase In the amount of feed you are giving her. In this tea*' the real value of every row can be accurately arrived at. and whether they are kept at a proflt or loaa.—Tri-State Farmer.

Dairy Hints.

The farmer who wishes hla wlf# to excel in outter-making must do bla

poaa tor which It <

From the minute the calf la born It should be watched and trained jus! aa a colt that givaa premia# of extraordinary speeo If inletidad tor the dairy the animal should be so fad and trained that it will put fat Into the milk pall la preference to laying It on to Ita riba In order to nuke a good appearance—appearaate does not cotin: for anything In the dairy. It la Vh* amount and quality of milk given la return for the food consumed that makes the animal a desirable one. The feed should be such aa will produce

bone and muscle.

Why Sell Yourty Stock. Have you considered whether It U to your Interest to aell the calves, colts or pigs at present prices or to keep them to get the proflt of the stockman —to utilize the pastures, grain flddr and odds and ends that would be lost and that can be made to enrich the farm? Would it not be better to feed that feed to stock, both of which you

took bis own time to respond. Noonah p.-ople were slow and independent, and the newcomer hod not forgotten

that fact.

•'You don't seem la any hurry to get a fare." he sold, peevishly, as he stepped Into the vehicle. "You didn't expect maybe that 1 wux a-guin to drive up-oh the platform, now did ye?" drawled the driver, "where might ye be wantin' to stop

sole dive

part In selecting and breeding cows, j have been In the habit of selling give them butter-producing feed, pro- ! fed and so contributing to the other vide comfortable stables and take rare | man's profit*, and to the building up ol In the milking, os milk la very sua- ! the fertility of hla land Instead of ceptlble to odors and may become unlit your own? The calves might sell for tor use simply os a result of a fllthy J from ten dollars to fifteen dollars at floor or a dirty cow with an unclean ; weaning time. One year later they

with all their wealth j u dder. l*alns should be taken to e

tract the last drop If possible at every j milking. Not only should this be done i became- the milk last drawn la the j richest, but that cows may be made to i maintain their Cow much longer when ' pains are taken at each milking. This I Is a matter ot great Importance to the | dairyman, as it determines the proflt

j or loss In bis business. Angoras for Rough Land.

The attention of owners ol brush

should weigh at least seven hundred and fifty pounds, which, at tour cems Is thirty dollars. Now to make title weight very little grain la required Just make use of the odd pastures, the extra grazing of the corn ang small grain fields In the summer and autumn, then the rye and wheat In winter and early aprlng: also the fodder and straw that was previously wasted. These little odds and ends If used add to your bank account. Colts—horse or mulo—aell well at weaning time.

opportunities. The servant* were or guasiplng-ln a remote pm of : the house, and Agnes did not feti It im- | Iterative that she should answer the | door bell. tJo her former lover walked out of her life, probably for the last | time. For when her father (ound blf j card nnder the door that night, with ; hi* hotel addrecs penciled on the edge | he thrust It Into bis pocket fer a fat- | ure inspection, when he should have

"Take me to the beit hotel" | on his gias c*. and forgot all about It "All right. I'll lake je to the Co- | And the Hon. Arnold left Noonah In

dtimbua Git up. Jinny, get up. Jack, high dudgeon over the sl'ght. i of Mricuhll ^ lo uae of the ] r >rv«ktttf nn<i making aeatraoie Say. rf you bov enny Uaggidge the Yet. if !h=: .««. cairuUtiug man I ln enhnnctnfc UicJ • tock ' M,,rh ,bem weU ' Uk0

exprtrs wagon will fetch it up.' ; ahould com. bock and ask her to At the hotel—a fine new building— j marry him Afcncs Merritt will coaaldtbe landlord advanced with a flourish- 1 er herself blessed beyond her deserts. Ing air of proprietorship to address a There are women who love the hand stranger, then started, and welcomed tha! xniteg them and And tbelr greatbis guest by both hands. ; er! happlr.es-. In martyrdom. Of such "Mr. Arnold!" be aald. effusively. "I i ir the l.ingdem of heaven—Mr*. M. L. knew you a* soon as 1 laid eyes on i Rayne. in Chicago Record-Herald you! And—let me see—It's jo years to a‘day since you left Noonah." I The Late Yellow Hammer. "How-do. Rani-ora. how-do?" the ' Recently the Journal gave an acruef! Spoke fretfully and coldly. 'Titne ; count of t ie death .rf Yellow Hammer, hasn't stood still with either of ns. You on ,. 0 f the Jew remaining Modoc laknow ! live In Washington now." 1 dlans. who was killed by lightning' "Yes. sir; yes. Mr. Arnold and you j while riding In his wagon along a have done us proud there. Why. sir. | street in Oswelo. The following

fend* has been dlreutcd by the oommls- lhCTe *• «*««'■ k^lng. • . I breaking and making desirable work

' goat in reclaiming and eohanctng the< ««*. «»*'•*> “>em well, lake extra

value of unproductive brush or weed- | P"'"* liking, rpb them up until Infested land*. Goat* live on weeds I team, then you can and brush, the products oi nature, j « nd *bould have a fancy price, when labor* and toll are required to Who knows Inti what etas* colts wUI furnish food for other animal* develop? Riga may be easily and They destroy the weed* and Mrulx j fbeaply kept, until the feeding period,

that choke up and hinder the growth

you got us an appropriation tor a new j unique biography, or obituary, of Yelpoetoffice to be built in the near fut- ■ lor*- Hammer Is gtveu by the Baxter

ure—1 hope to live Ul! I get my letters j springs News:

there. Yes. sir. Cong^ssman. Senator "Yellow Hammer was a good In—and now—" Jinn before he died and waa one of "I'm not in office now. Ranrom. My j the features of the big Baxter reunion, private Interests demand all my atten- | where he annually gathered the remlion. Besides, you know. I am alone : naut of his tribe and held the familiar in the world—neither wife nor child.” I war dances of his people In a big Cog"Ah, yes. sir. I've heard. She was ! User tent to the admiration and enjoy a fine woman. Mrs. Arnold was. and ; raent of thousands of visitors, very handsome., too—If you'll excuse; "Yellow Hammer was of royal 4>k>od. me for saying i^" , being a younger brother of Shack"She was very extravagant. " said | Nasty Jim and first cousin to Princess the widower, the scowl on his face in- I Mary. When he was brought here tensity mg. ■‘dreadfully reckless In her | from the lava beds of‘Oregon, after expenditures—why. Ransom, she was pi* tribe bad been almost obliterated the *nost expensively dressed woman in their war with’the United States. In Washington, where all the women , Yellow- Hammer scon became rvcoo . dress like the dickens." | tiled to civilization, threw off hla "But, Mr. Arnold—beg pardon—h'm blanket and feathers, ana took up the —hadn't your lady a fonune of her white man's burden with store clothes, own?" la plug hat and a white woman tor A •Tea. Ransom, and I inrected her j wife. He Joined the Quakers at first, money to the best advantage but she | but said they were not quick enough ■pent a lot of it foolishly. However, i for him. and so he went Into farming ■he'* gone now. and It can't be helped." j and horse trading, with an occasional and with a cress, dejected look Mr. venture in the wild west show bus!

Arnold with the preflx of "Hon." to bis | ness.

name, followed bis host to the best i -Tae deceased married a whit* room in the hotel. i woman of good family and was an af 1-atcr when he had dined he asked fectionate father, a -kind-and Indul some question* about old-tini" friends I gent husband, a fa'r Christian, a good In Noonah and led the conversation medicine man and a moderate drlrfk

until be asked casually: "What ha* becomes of the Merritt*? I suppose Agnes Is married by this time? The last I beard of them they bad gone abroad. Have they return-

ed?"

"Yen, Mr. Arnold, and they're rich now—brought back a beep of money from an estate that fell to them in -the old country- They do aay say Mr. Merritt might have had a title but the old man's true blue American—no titles for him. And Miss Agnes has never married, t&ough we all know she had plenty of chances." He looked slyly at Mr. Arnold, who waa disposed to be communicative. "Tea. Ransom, she came near being the first Mrs. Arnold. It was ber own fault that she wasn't." lied Arnold glibly. Few of tu know ourselves as well aa other people know us. "Know thyself." remains Greek to the average man. AU Noonah knew that Robert Arnold had thrown Agnes Merritt over for a richer glrL Ransom told of her father's Interests In various flourishing enlerpurises, and of their Improved style of living. This was merely a confirmation of news Arnold had already beard, which bad Indeed brought him to the place be detested—Noonah. A cold smile wreathed hi* face and a calculating, light shone In hla steely eyes, as he reflected that Agnes had probably remained single tor hla sake. Agnes Merritt sat alone In an nnlighted parlor looking out oo the gathering night aad thinking, thinking. She had only to reach out her hand to loach the wall and flood the room with a soft electric glow, but she prefei red the Uncaring twilight punctuated by •he twinkle of the town* lamps below and Ibe earning stars above. The Intoxication of the hour, when daylight dies in the beloved embrace of night, was upon her—she was < with tho past. jDn the eve of her thirtieth birthday 'Der thought* want > the time off ter betrothal to Arnold. How

In appearance he resembled Paderewski. and like him was quite effi rient on the Indian drum or tom-tom He was ala-ays pleasant, affable, cheerful, and a great favorite with the children: he was remarkable for his industry and indefatigable energy, al ways willing to work. and. never bor rowing or asking a dollar In charity. He set an example many others might follow, and will be missed by hla nation more than any other men in It-'

Kansas City Journal.

Speke Too Lata.

Judge George Gray of Delaware, -bo la building up a unique repots tion as an arbitrator of strikes. Is a graduate of Princeton, a member of

the class of '6!).

Talking one day In Wilmington

Judge Gray aald:

“There used to bo a Princeton Jan jjfor named Jerome McWade, who was as witty and amusing a chap as I have ever met. Whenever you would strike McWade. be would halt you, and toi three or tour minutes you would have to listen to some odd yarn or othet that be would relate as though it had

been a personal experience.

“ T saw a funny Irishman In a taw, t ern last night. Mr. Gray,' be aald to ma one morning Tbla Irishman sat by the Arc reading a newspaper and suck ing raw eggs that he took, one by one. oat of a paper bag- He paid no attention to anybody. He Just read and sucked as though he waa alone

la bla room at home.

" ‘AH of a sudden It happened that he got a very bad egg. and before be knew what he was doing, be hotted a little live chicken. The chick chirped aa It went down, and U}e Irishman

salt! phttoeophlcaUy:

"•By the powers, my friend, ye

ahpoke too lata.' *

Tba maximum endurance ot a UInrb gnn la «Q0 11 rings, while the «• Inch gun may be;fired upward ot MOO Uaaa without Injury. ,

of the grasses, and convert the rough lands Into fertile meadovrw and provide food for cattle and sheep. In a prairie country, when a blue grass meadow U choked out by bushes, a herd of Angoras will aoon convert It Into fertile and productive pasturage. They arf at home upon the aage brush of the arid plains a* well aa the'hills of New England—American CultKa-

Good. Clean Garden Saeds.

In earing tomato aoed. we Jake the (omatoee ■ when they are thoroughly ripe and remove the seed pulp. This is placed In glass Jars, covered with water, and set away. The object is to

separate the seed from the pulp.

very little corn, by using alopa, gleaning the small grain after harvest and pasturing clover. And ao all along the line. Make your farm a factory

of some kind.

Fattening Calves on Skim-Milk. Prof. Roberta of the Cornell station, claims that to fatten calves successfully on sklm-mllk. and grain to supply the butter fat. the calves ahould first be fed a moderate amount of new milk for a few days and then sklmmllk should be gradually substituted so that at the end of a few weeks the calves -would be fed entirely on sklmmllk. If seven pounds of commeal Is mixed with one pound of linseed meal, old process preferable, it will make a

. fairly good substitute for the butter occasional stirring of the contents of | fata of the new milk. This meal ahould

the Jar Is beneficial. After two or. three days pour off the liquid, leaving the seed*, and add fresh water. After this la repjated two or three times, or until the waste matter la removed, place the needs on cloth 'until thoroughly dry. when tfiey are put away until planting time. Cucumber and melon seed may be treated In the same

army.

In saving bean* or seeds of like kind, we always leave unpicked what we think we shall need for seed, thereby saving the best for seed.—Herbert W. Taylor, Boston Cultivator.

Mexico's Floating Gardena.

While the City of Mexico la eight thousand feet higher than aea levs!, there are in the vicinity several lakes xnd marshy tracts which require extensive drainage operations. The Vlga canal la one of these great drainage systems, and upon It are numerous barges which transport farm and garden produce from the market gardens to the city. Flat-bottomed boats, propelled by a pole, convey passengers

to the floating gardens.

The gardens are located upon marsh

land quite similar tc the tule lands of California. The soil la composed of decayed reed anJ grass room, being entirely of vegetable mould and quite fertile Ditches al frequent Intervals drain the garden* and furnish means t

of communication by canoes and small 4ta^e l ^ fi ta.

boats to the larger canal, and thus to tha dty. Here are the great market gardens, where vegetables are grown tor Mexico’s consumption. Here, too, are grown the magnificent flowers which form one of the principal attractions of Mexico City, tho flower market being a wonder In the quantity and exquisite beauty beth of the Individual tropic flowers and the magnificent floral forms, which are mads with great taste and skill. Street cars also connect the city with the village# upon the Vlga canal, and they are well

well patronised.—Agriculture.

The Feeding of Calves “ r How to properly feed the calf la * matter of great Importance on any farm where calves are raised—be It one or a hundred. It must first be determined whether the calf la to be used aa a beat animal or whether It la to taka 1U place In the dairy and be one of tha Individual cows that

can be classed ones. Whan this

whole plan of feeding ahould be such aa wUI make the animal beat suited for either purpose. It should always be borne In mind that tha proper growth and development of the calf, no matter whether tt he Intended tor beef or dairy purposes to folly aa important aa the care of the mature animal, tor It la next to ImpoeelMe to make good ot poor young stock. *The - la to keep it in a

be fed in very broad bottom trough*, ao that the calves will be compelled to lick It. thereby Ineallvating 1L Car* should be taken not to feed too much sklm-mllk. Xhe very heat quality of fine clover hay ahould be placed where it will be accessible to the calves at all times. To properly fatten calvas either by tbit method or by letting tnem have new milk from the cow or otherwise, it ahould be remembered that for at leaet two weeks at the beginning the calve* ahould not be fed all they want but ahould be aotnewhat restricted If the beat results are to be obtained. The last two week* before sending the calf to market the feed may he Increased and the calf given all If will eat provided the'bowels are not affected. Success will depend almost entirely upon the watchfulness and the skill of the feeder. Af the calves get to be four to six week* old. very often they will eat a few roots, but they ahould in no case have many, it will take some two weeks longer to make good calves by sklramllk feeding that It would by giving new milk. Success will .be due to the Judgment and watchfulness of the man

who ha* the calrea In charge.

Farm Notes.

A good silo la absolutely air tight. Teach sitting hens to be fearless of your touch, but be gentle In yoar

sentlally a requires a

Cream ripening is < chemical operation and

watchful care.

If possible, com should be ripe enough that the ears are glased af the lime of putting it Into the silo. It coats but little more to feed a pure bred than a scrub, and the proflt from the former Is throe times that of tha

latter.

Pullets Intended for laying should receive special care. Feed on dry feed and keep away from male btrda.untU

November.

A writer aaye that fowls kept to yards of moderate Mae suffer lean from disease and lay more eggs than those on the range. Be careful to keep your calves out of the cold; they soould be quartered In the barn out of the damp. A chilled calf la apt to natch cold and die. Foul odors In milk contracted from the air In the stables, from the flood eaten, or from filth dlnaoiveu. can be removed by any system of aerathm. Some points which good cows nodally have, but not always, aa the thin ■11m neck; tha clean, well cot up

tall. While clover hay ta ona of the bast feeds, the remCa can always b* secured by feeding It 1a connecdoa with grata. With dairy cows wheat will aa-

lAteresti

Rut a Mouse on Your Hat. A correspondent, aays the London Mall, write* that tt our leaden of fashioa must teve something killing to wear they might do society a good turn, os well aa check the wanton destruction Of birds by substituting the common mouse or glossy black beetle, which would be sure at least to attract attention! The Wired Sleeve. The wired sleeve Is a threat from Dame Fashion, and. tt rumor may be credited^ her handmaid, the modiste. 1* stealthily creeping thin wires, light balr<lot j and what not up ber sleeve and every one else'a After a season of comfort we are evidently returning to a winter of discontent, when our ■poor arm* are to be encased In armor of a sort. From the absurd top-heavy sleeve of years ago. we are swung to the bot-tom-heavy one called Japanese, and giving one's elbow the shape of a balloon. The climax Is approachim;. ao look out tor the stiff lined wired sleeve of voluminous proportions.— New York American. The Broad Roll Sailor. The "broad roll anllor" ailudee to the pretty new felt hats of silver gray, prune, dark blue or brown, a shade conspicuous in autumn millinery. These bats are particularly acceptable to those who wish a flat tpp surface. The toreador and other plateau shapes covered remarkably becoming In fancy straws last summer There waa no crown risible, or If Its presence was detected It was Inverted beneath the brim like the crown rest of an Oxford student's cap. A sliver gray sailer with a "broad roll" has trimmings of a plush-facing: scroll-work of silver braid and the milk white breast plumage of some sea bird Is laid os flat as possible slightly to the front of the middle Ct the big brim top. Love Interest Dying? A convention has forced practically every novelist to discuss the love-mak-ing of a man' and a woman, and to marry or slay them before nnally laying down his pen. Conventions, however. sometimes die natural deaths. Can It be that this excessive end unnatural regard for "the love Interest" will likewise ultimately subside? Startling modifications hove taken place in the novel-heroine. An Evelina, as the central figure of a modern novel, would be a preposterous anomaly. Whereas, this once tt what wooden young lady had formerly to be "fair as an angel” or "black as a gypsy" and. In any case. “Blender ax a reed” and not more than eighteen years of age—her iialr may nowadays be red and her eyes of almost any fashionable color. Occasionally she freckled, frequently she la plump. She practically never swoons, her bosom rarely heave*, and on scenting a proposal she conceals her emotions with flippancy, rather than displaying them by a "cheek mantled with blushes.' Even a lame imagination can foresee the day when the novel heroine may, tt she chooses, be fat. fair and tony, with no personal fascination whatever and not a becoming gown In her wardrobe. And a bold fancy picture tfe time when the heroine may marry, casually, In the first chapter, and be chiefly cerned with her new linen aad silver rather than arlth the bridegroom.— Olivia Howard Dunbar In Bookie

Fads Worth. While.

It la a pleasing sign of the times that society women are more and more Interesting themselves in pursuits which are distinctly "useful.' The day has gone by when polite «ceompUshmenta alono occupied the attention of ladles of position, and to be able to do anything more practical than warble indifferently, paint In water colon or “punch holes and aew. then up again." as the process of embrold ery was-once described, waa considered

positively vulgar.

’Nowadays women very rightly''regard all this kind of thing as waste of time, unless music or palhUng or embroidery reaches a certain standard of excellence. So. happily, women with leisure ana means and a desire to cmHoy their fingers profitably, are seriously taking up such work as bookbinding and photography and the beau-

tiful art of enameling.

Princess Charles of Denmark usually binds with ber own hand*, and In many pretty fashions the hooka which ah* proMata to bar friends Photography U a bobby which has been tak-

roysl family, and to a delightful for any girt to pursue. But ao far enameling la a fancy work practiced by doubt than aa exhibition recaetly held ta London win ILJte hardware to be

t>T

When one menially compares the Berlin wool work atrocities and pallid and hopelessly incorrect flowtr studies and seabapes done by the early Victorian specimen* show.-) s* the work of the mix.ern society woman, tt 1* Impassible to deny fbxt we jire a great improvement upon our pr.-!*-«B»or», at any rate so far a* anisui ability to concerned.—Gent iewoinan. The California Girl. The California girl already atermgea taller, heavier, sirongrr than ber Eastern slater, writes Charles F. Lummto In Good Housekeeping. Scientific measurement* in California and eastern college* a few years ago showed that the California undergraduate surpassed the New England girl uf the home age la almost every measurement —with ten cubic Inches more lung capeclij. and a superiority In tested strength (bark, artci. legs and cheat) of TIC-Z to 41*3.7. But she ha* smaller ftet and waist. It would ce strange If this were not so; and the disparity must increase cm the type evolves and fixes. We shall presently have a n*-w species of the genus girl- Puelli Colifornta The California girl bos a fairy godmother whirl) her name It to Nature. She hath all seasons lor her own. and stepmother Weather. The California girl .on ride, drive, swim. walk, golf or picnic, any week In the year —any day, except the twenty or so when It ralus. it to never dangerous nor uncomfortable out of door*, and she Is out more than any other Atneriglrl. Quite as vital as this, she never ho* to breathe Impure air. day night. No wonder she build* a chest like Juno. And her amazement when she find* what people breathe In winter in the east is as great as her pityNot only the climate hut the scenery of her state help In the development of her. physically and mentally. There to no other land In the world with such a range and variety of outdoor nature of the noblest type. Another advantage of the California girl Is that she can—find generally doe*—eat more sanely. Fresh vegetables. fresh fruit, fresh fish, every day in the year. For oysters, every California month has on R. and these amiable bivalves are as good In summer as in winter. Strawberries every week in the year. And this makes for better dljustion: and presently the California girl .will have a stomach all her own. Fashion Notes. White to most elegant. A sea foam dress Is charming. Pastel tints are more delicate than ever. Full little chiffon roses deck one gown. Water lilies in chiffon and silk fascinate. Pale blue to among the very good

3 match the coat are h good

Colors t choice. Pearls are lovely in rich gold embroidery. Triple skirt effects are among the novelties. Pink plush ribbon to lovely on ■ pink beaver. Fringe with Van Dyked netting to a quaint novelty. Leather (fine kid) makes.one of the smart trimmings. A very' few roses adorn some of the prettiest dress bats.

One magnificent dress to composed of

rer topping rows of chenille.

Russian blouses (mujtks) distin-

guish some Imported creation.

Bunches of full osctrlch plumes ora

among the very rich trimming*

Brown, ranging from its darkest tone to a light fawn to the most prom-

inent color among dram fabrics.

Soft glace silk, quaintly suggestive of our grandmothers' day. ta delicate tints of blue, pink or pole yellow, are

very -fashionable for house gowns.

The latest ribelinee are more furry than ever. The solid color effects are far and away In the lead, with two-

_ _ toned effects the next best Plaids en dp by "most" of the ladles of our • trl P“ 0,1 Tt * w - bat *** ««*

The color scheme noted in a numer of the la teat crentag stuffs to a revival of the Louis period. This to n combination of pale yellow-or straw color with pale blue and pink, A

TiZt.