wf ij'>.n. .i'.'»!.in"j!,..*'f'.n'JKi^^,v|iL<kl^|y'-.\|".wag nMi -41 ' • ~ INTERE S Td White India Silk Frock. 81mpie and girlish is a white India •ilk frock for a 16-year-old girl. The skirt has a yoke effect given by rows of lace inserting and fine tucks. A ruf fle of lace and tucks round the foot gives it the soft, frilly look so dear to the feminine heart. The round waist has a square yoke of lace, with groups -of lace and tucks below. The puffed sleeves are caught in by bands of the lace and finished iust below the elbow with a lace ruffle. :0" Blouse of White Silk. | v Mouse of white silk made with groups of tucks and trimmed at the top, yoke fash ion, between the tucks, with straps of pink velvet, or silk, ornamented with motifs or w h i t e l a c e . T h e standing collar is made with groups of stitching and the little cravat is of pink velvet, or silk. The sleeves are tucked in the same way, the tucks opening out to form a puff at the elbow, and the lower part is trim med with the pink •elvet and lace motifs. Tho girdle is of pink velvet, or 3ilk, fastened with a silver buckle.--Wien er Chic. Making Ribbon Rose. To make a handsome ribbon rose is now one of the most popular of the smart girl's dress accessories. You take three yards of No. 60 satin ribbon in two shades of pink. Three loops two and a half inches to three and a half inches deep, and one end four inches, of light pink ribbon, with two loops or deeper pink ribbon added, form a bow, which is the background of the rose. The single end is tied about the bow and trimmed to a point In this row the rose is embedded. The center of the rose is made of the deeper pink ribbon. A yard and a fourth of this is doubled down the mid dle, and wrapped about a wire stem to form the rose center. Three petals of dark and three of light pink ribbon are added, each two and a half to three and a half inches deep. These are simply loops of ribbon which form the outer petals of the large rose. A spray of rose foliage can be Used to make the effect more realistic. A bow for the hair can be made of one yard of light pink ribbon, with five loops and one end. Four buds made of dark er pick ribbon are added. The stems (with calyx) are bought ready-made. . Calico Coming Again. &£'• is an eld material coming to the fore again, and this is nothing more nor less than old-fashioned cal ico. a calico gown is so out of date as to be hopeless to the majority of people, yet those who keep right up to the mark are looking at the new calico and investing in it. •The special cause of the return of calico to popularity is the shirt waist suit, for calico makes up so very neat ly into these suits. And another rea son is the improvement in the pat terns of the new calicoes which leave so very little to be desired. There come very pretty calico patterns in cream with a little figure and in light blue and light pink and in the darker colors, bfown, green and navy blue. These wash well, wear like iron, and are so very neat that one is tempted to invest so that one can have a pretty ^suit for morning wear, ?>;. : t m U. Sailor Blouse. The sailor blouse Is the accepted favorite fo^, small boys and the jaun ty style shown here is character ised by a double- breasted front un der which the edge of the yoke is sewed. The sleeve is the "navy" style with plaits at wrist and at shoulder. The collar may be pointed or square in front, as pro vision is made for both styles. The trousers are shaped by side, inside and center seams and may be closed with a fly or at the sides. Linen, pique, gal- atea, flannel, duck, cheviot and suit ings in ^general are suggested, using braid or hands or contrasting material for trimming and decorating the ahiel4 and sleeve with emblems. Fried Cauliflower. divide a cooked cauliflower Into small branches and dip them separate ly into some stiff bechamel sauce, whici. has been mixed with sufficient tomato catsup to make it pink, and put them aside until the sauce Is set. Then dip the pieces of cauliflower into beaten egg and cover them thickly with panurette (red bread crumbs), and after allowing about a quarter of an hour for the crumbs to harden fry the cauliflower In a wire basket. . Gooseberry Pudding. Stew a quart of green gooseberries and sweeten well; when cold add the juice and grated rind of a lemon, beat en yolks of five eggs and beaten whites of two; mix all together; beat three whites of eggs and add six ounces of powdered sugar and a few drops of lemon juice; butter a small baking dish, put fruit in and pour Ic ing evenly over the top; bake ten or fifteen minutes. Dainty Cloth Waist. Blouse of pearl-colored cloth made with lengthened shoulders and a group on each side of the front and back. It is trimmed w i t h s t i t c h e d straps of the ma terial, fastened at the ends with steel buttons. The fronts, or n a m e n t e d w i t h larger steel but tons, open over a little waist-coat of white cloth, with reversof the same, which is finished with stitching and fastened with a single row of steel buttons. T h e g a t h e r e d plastron Is of white mousseline de sole. The blouse has a basque attached under the girdle which is of the ma terial fastened with a steel button. The sleeve ts gathered into a cuff, finished with a stitched band, orna mented with the tiny buttons. Taffeta Shirt Waist. When the summer girl wishes to look the most captivating in the morn ing she will appear in either a fresh hand-embroidered linen shirt waist or In a crisp-looking shirt waist costume of taffeta. The stylish way of making a taffeta shirt waist dress is to trim it with medallions of Irish or Para guay lace, with French knots in some striking contrasting color, outlining each medallion. Two medallions are sufficient to use on the shirt waist, which will look smart if^iastened with pearl buttons, which are so much the fashion this season. Bizarre Trimming. Practical frocks in biscuit, yellow and ivory shades are mostly trimmed with black taffeta. But these bizarre contrasts are not effective unless car ried out with consummate skill. Gown of Blue Voile. The skirt is cut in panels, opening at the bottom over long points of white foulard dot ted with blue. The front panel is bor dered at the top with bands of blue embroidery. The blouse is also slashed open over the dotted foulard, and the f r o n t s a r e b o r dered with tlfce e m b r o i d e r y . T h e deep, cape-like shoulder collar is cut in pointed blocks, or tabs, at the edges. The plastron and cra vat are of white taffeta and the gir dle is of blue. The sleeves flare at the bottom where they are slashed open over undersleeves of the dotted foulard.--Le Guide des Couturleres. Effective Hat Trimming. Among popular hat trimmings is the odd sort of rosette. It is made by folding the ribbon half its width, shir ring it and sewing the close gathers spirally on a circular piece of buck ram. This rosette deserves its name, for, skillfully wrought, it closely re sembles a rose. Sometimes it meas ures four inches across and looks like a "very large cabbage- rose. 4. pair of these are sometimes seen at each side of the crown of a sailor and they also form additions to the plateau hats with their garlands of field flowers. Cherry Bounce. Cherry bounce is a species of popu lar cordial used in the South, and kept among the familiar rules of sick-room cookery. Take four pounds of sour cherries and the A«ame quantity of sweet ones. Put them in a wooden dish. Pound them hard enough to crush the cherries and break all the stones. Put the cherries into a stone jar, mixing in two and a half pounds of white sugar. Pour a gallon of the best whisky or brandy over them/And turn the whole Into a demijohn. Keep it corked tightly and shake it every day lor a month. At the end of six months or a year strain it and bottle it. Uje it for a cordial, serving it in miniature glasses. Negligee Jacket. Pretty matinee of heliotrope silk, made with a wat- teau plait in the back and fasten ing a little on one side in front. It is finished at the bottom with three rows of tucks. The tucked yoke is of the silk bor dered with a dra pery, or scarf, of mousseline de soie to match, finished on each side with a rosette and long end. Both collars and the cuffs are of ecru lace, and the full under sleeves are of mousseline de soie like the scarf.--Wiener Mode-Album. THE SMALL BOY DRE88EO IN HIS VERY BEST. 9 S Si tor little boys are exceed ingly chic and pretty, and while fash ions for little folks are generally sup posed to be quite simple and easy to follow, yet they are not at all easy to make attractive. The newest models for small hoys are decidedly picturesque and attract- j. 41 French Flannel and Butchers' Linen. The Russian blouse suits still cling to popularity, but are made somewhat more elaborate, a great many of them being hand embroidered. The three models shown in the cut were sketched from the latest designs. They are simple and easily made, yet stylish and pretty and suitable for afternoon or morning wear. The coat and vest effect on the cen ter figure Is one of the newest designs and is here shown in "navy blue French flannel combined with white silk flannel with a tiny blue figure. The other two are linen suits, which are kept clean and fresh with very little trouble. Botchers' linen Is extensively used for these suits. W.v; ^ \A Vri 3 1 HALE POSTED ON BEANS. Boston's Famous Preacher Discourse! Learnedly of the Hub's Favorite. i)r. Edward Everett Hale comes to Washington once a year to deliver a sermon in the church in which he made his debut in the pulpit half a' century ago. He spent part of his s ime during his recent visit here wltb friends eminent in the scientific and literary world. "Dr. Hale," said ;one of them, "1 can give you a piece of news in which you, as a Bostouian should take much interest. It is that the world's de mand for beans has become greater than the supply." "I knew it would some day," the celebrated divine re plied, "and this fact must be due to the influence Boston exerts on the world. We are the pioneer bean eat ers. Perhaps you are not aware that the reason it has taken mankind so many centuries to learn the worth of beans as a food for human beings is that the nations have unconsciously inherited an. ancient prejudice against them. The Egyptians cultivated this legume extensively, but flnallly set them apart as an offering to their deities. Pythagoras warned his dis ciples against beans. Some historians declare that he imbibed his doctrines concerning beans from the Egyptians, among whom he had been educated, but Aristotle has another explanation. He calls attention to the fact that in their voting the Romans used black and white beans as ballots, as the Greeks used oyster shells) from which we get 'ostracize,' and that Pytha goras, in counseling his followers against this legume, was speaking symbolically, • merely meaning that they should forswear politics. It has taken centuries to overcome these an cient preachments against beans, and Boston, In setting the example which has restored this wholesome food to its proper place in man's diet, has earned additional honors."--Washing ton Correspondence New York Trib une. ONE HUNDRED YEAR8 OLD. Titled British Woman Has Reached Advanced Age. Viscountess Glentworth, a noted Englishwoman, celebrated her one- hundredth birthday recently. "My old friend Pery, in the shape of Lord Glentworth, is-going to be married to Maria Villebois--a fortuflate woman, I think, to find herself a countess after .all." So wrote Disraeli to his sister in 1836. The Pery in question had, by the death of his father, taken the courtesy title of Lord Glentworth, but he died a few weeks before his grandfather, the earl of Limerick. •The untimely death of her husband, after eight years of married life, pre vented Maria Villebois from becoming more than a courtesy viscountess--a title she retained after her second marriage. It is sixty-four years sinca Disraeli wrote, on the death of Lord Glentworth: "The lady survives, but does not find herself a countess after all." Lady Glentworth is not able to walk much and this is the chief sign of weakness to be detected in her at her advanced age. Even when over 90 years old she was daily abroad in her pony carriage paying attention to every deti&Pof life upon her farm. J A Poem From the Cloister.1- She wrote (dear chjld) from London To her sister at Saint Luke (The merry madcap, Alice. To the novice at Saint Luke): "I have Just come from the palace « With a duchess and a~ duke. •'In your poor secluded cloister, O my gentle Geraldlne! W With its round of dreary penhnce. And its ever dull routine-- What think you of the honor Of an audience with the Queen? "A countess went before me, And a marchioness behind, And all the royal chamber With noblemen was lined; And the prince beside his mother Looked upon me fair and kind. "For I wore my snowy velvet, And my set of precious pearls. And the crown of whitest roses Resting lightly on my curls-- Now, was I not, sweet sister, The happiest of girls?" And Geraldlne made answer From her convent by the sea; "God keep thee ever guileless In thy gayety and glee, But bear with me, beloved, While I tell my Joys to thee. t "To-day, my little Alice. I, too, at court have been; • Have entered at a palace And held converse with a Queen, A fairer and a dearer Than any earthly queen! "With wreath of whitest roses They crowned thy kneeling nun. And when the Queen embraced me (My darling little one!) Before the court of angels She espoused me to her Son! "The richest, rarest Jewels He hath brought me from the sky; He hath clasped me to His bosom With a love that cannot die. Oh! tell me, happy Alice, Art thou happier than I?" --Eleanor C. Donnelly, in New York Press. Came Down ?Crab Fashion. P. Norton Goddard, the conqueror of New York's policy evil, told at tho recent dinner given in his honor at the Savoy hotel an odd story of a maid servant. "This maid," he said, "had Just come over from the old country, and she was very green. Everything she did proclaimed her greenness. One of her habits was always to come down stairs backward. "I assure you, It was a funny sight to see her descending a staircase slowly in that way. Her hand grasped the balustrade for safety, and every little while she looked round to see how much farther she had to go. "•Why do you come down stairs backward, Kathleen?" someone asked her. " 'Sure, sir,' she answered, "that's the way we always came down stairs in the ship comin' over.* Isn't It the fashion in America?'"--Boston Post As He Was 8aying. Husband--This cake isn't at all had, my dear, but don't you think there ought to be a little more " Wife (interrupting) -- That cake came by express this morning. Your mother msde it." Husband--As I was saying when you Interrupted, me, there ought to he • Wttlp more of It " ,Why 8he Was Doubtful. • "Yes," related the tattered way farer, "I told de lady in de wayside cottage dat I was a street-car con- due tor out of a job, but she wouldn't believe me." "Why was dat?" asked hlsueoia- pan ion of the ties. "She said I was too polite." ' . Sufficient Problem. do not take much interesj ja baseball?" "No, ' answered Jir. Stormlngton Barnes. "I never, could understand why it should be so hard to throw a ball straight when it is so easy to seucT an egg straight to the mark." He Charged a Battery. "Yes, sir, during the late war with Spain I charged a battery single- handed." "Oh, come, now, you weren't at the front at all." . "I know. I had a job here In. an electric storage plant." t Pa Knew, of Course. "Paw, what's a veterinary siir- geon?" "A veterinary surgeon, my son, Is (ahem) a doctor who examines veter ans to see if they ought to have pen sions. Better write that down some where so you won't forget It"--Kan sas City Journal. 1BHE COULD NOT SE% X% Harold--Do you think it would be wrong for me to kiss you? Mae--I don't know. Mamma told me never to let her see me kissing a man, but she's gone over to Mrs. Bixley's. BROKE FOR FAIR. II Daisy--Baron Nocoynsltl was at our cottage last evening. Maisy--Does he talk as brokenly as as ever? \ Daisy--Yes; I heard him touch papa up for a hundred before he'left Chicago Weather. Marshall P. Wilder and Opie Read were discussing Chicago weather. The author of "The Starbucks" warmly de fended his town as an all-the-yeal> round resort. • "'We have some rare days there in the spring," said Mr. Read in conclu sion. "Rare, did you say?f' retorted" Mr, Wilder. "I never saw any spring days there that were not absolutely raw." Repartee. "Ah!" he said to her over their ice cream, "it is very §weet, but not so sweet as you." "It is soft," she returned promptly* "but not so soft as you." "And it is cold," he concluded,1 "but not so cold as you." Did She Really Mean This? Mrs. Gailey--I really must have some new stockings. Mr. Gailey--Why, you got several pairs not long ago. What's the mat ter with^hem? Mrs. Gailey--Oh! they are really not flt to be seen. An Insinuation. Eudora--'"Young Freshleigh tried to put his arm around my waist last night." Aurelia--"Tried to! Why, wasn't hli arm long enough?" Moments of History. Elizabeth was about to step on the cloak that Raleigh put down in front when a sudden thought struck her. "Has it been sterilized?" she asked sternlj?. It was evident by Raleigh's look of sudden dismay that he had been guilty of gross neglect. "It only goes to show," said Eliza beth, stinging him through her lorg nette, as she was lifted over the pud dle, "how* even one who loves me so much may grow criminally careless." Her View of It. "Pshaw!" she exclaimed disgusted ly as she came to the most interesting part only to read "to be continued." "I don't see why they call these things 'continued stories.'" "No?" queried her husband, politely. "No, they should be called 'discon tinued stories.' "--Philadelphia Press. Wherein They Differ. "What," asked the very young man, "is the difference between a states man ard a politician?" "A statesman," replied the old gen tleman who was long on wisdom, "is a self-made politician, and a politician Is a machine-made statesman." Easiest of All. Mrs. Crawfoot--"Yes, the agent told me these pills were guaranteed to cure sixty-nine different ailments. I hope I won't have any trouble swallowing them." Mr. Crawfoot--"Not if you shallow ed Lis story." Proper Enough, "It's ridiculous to speiak of the 'milk in the cocoanut.'" **Why?" "It is really nothing but water." "Well? What sort of milk do you get in the city?"--Philadelphia Ledger. What He Needed. "What I need is change,'" said the man who was planning to go away for a vacation. "You're eas;,' returned his compan ion. "I've got the change, but I need some bills of large denomination." As Explained. "Why," asked the good Samaritan, "do you permit your wife to take In washing?" " "I wouldn't," answered the man who was born tired, "only she needs the money to support the family." Country Board $4 a Week. S my the--Did they set a good table at that place where you hoarded Jast summer? Browne--The table was all right. It was the stuff they put on it that we kicked about. Due to Quinine. "I never heard Smithers speak so bitterly of life as he did to-day." "Well, he can't very well help it He's been taking quinine for the past two days to break up a summer cold." THE BE8T ONE TP SEE. He--Yes; he's been made a lieutenant in the army. She--lie nev6r saw any service. He:--No; but he saw the Senator from his district. He Loved ln-tense-!y. Miss Debbie Tante--Oh, thank you ever so much for those beautiful ,opera glasses you sent me. Fargone--I hope wheu you look into the present In the future you will sometimes think of the past. Extravagant. '•Crusty old gent to tramp--What! Begging again! Didn't I give you a dime yesterday for a meal? ' Tramp (sarcastically)--Yes, I know, gov'nor; but I overate and 1 want to get some medicine for it. ' Too Impulsive. 1 "Yes, Tomllnson has lost -his Job. He kissed the pretty typewriter. girl before his employer." "Ah, yes. He should have waited to let the employer kiss her first . Tom always was impulsive." po They Are. "Jack told me I was not like bther girls." "That's what he tells all of us. He read somewhere that all women are different"--Louisville (Ky.) Times. His Greatest Need. Servant--There's a beggar at the .door, sir. Goodhart--Well, see that he gets what he is most in need of, and---- Servant--Do you mean that I'm to make him use your bathroom, sir?" Saw Him Fan the Air. , Yaleton--Yes, Miss Barnard, aaw that 1 am graduated my father thinks I am capable of striking out for my self. Miss Barnard--He must have seen you playing baseball. ' Prose vs. Poetry. "Would you be willing to die for me," asked the romantic maid. "Not so you could notice it," re plied the practical youth. "But I'm willing to get out and hustle to make a living for you." Returned HIS Love. Friend--What's the matter, old maal Doesn't she return your love? Jilted One--That's just the troubl* She returned it and told me to give it to some other girl.--Princeton Tigetv*