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\ 4 HEW eaid Mr. Jerr. “If we are not P. exite snyeneres soon we shoul get & couple of steamer chairs and go up on the Foot, It should 4 and cool up there tn the evening. “Not on this root, jumt stores up heat a day and lets tt out at night. en't there a board wilk urcund? asked Mr, Jarr. “1 that on all these first-class apartment-houses had a board wali on the root." “Board walk!" sata Mra. Jarr, superctiiously. think this flat house fs an tmitation of Atlantic City? stood “Do you And ' It ian't my Idea. of @ first-class apartment- “You didn't’ answer my queation,” sald Mr. Jarr. cre is a board walk over the tin in places, ten't there? I thought I eaw it the time we were up there when litte Mille was walking on the ledges.”” There's a walk up there mrour4 tha place where the tenants hang up thelr clothes,” said Mrs. Jarr. “And as evertbou- ‘o these flats have a different wa @ay we will nlways have the decorations of sscsebody's laundry when we take the alr of an evening there.” Gee, You needn't be ao more about It," wald Mr, Jane. wen Vt way anythic It asked Mra. J “It wasn't what you it was the extremely unpleasant way you wat tt," replied Mr. Jarr, “I think It's awful warm in (igese rooms, and I read so mu: fr the papers about Now Yorkers using the roofs on hot cight that I merely Ruggested it, make any suggestion of any kind tn this house but what you & f you made any suggestions that pertained to our comfort ot well-being Perhaps they would be received ¢ ntiy,” sald Mra, Jarr, t when you go @riAshily out with » men friends on a . OF wherever Fou go, and then tell me that the roof of this house, a roof that’s used to dry thes on, 1s good enough for me and the children, then I do object, and rightly @: “How did I know that It wasn't nice up there?” asked Mr. Jarr. “I know @at lots of people do une thelr own roofs as cooling-off places in the evening. Bome of them are fixed up with potted plants and lanterns and easy chairs and Bammocks and folka go up there with a pitcher of claret lemonade or something 00] to eink — “You mean beer, wisy don't you sey tt?" sald Mra Jarr Me “I moan what ever people want,” said Mr. Jarr, “If T wanted to drink a glass of beer on the roof or in the garret or down tn the cellar I'd do it! the matter with your’ “It you went up on thia roof,” anid Mra. Jarr, “the janitor would be up t> order you off, because he'd say walking over the tin would make it leak, and then @ tin roof makes a terrible noise when you walk over ft, and people on the Moors would shout impudently up the alr shaft that If we don't stop rubbering @own at them they'll shoot us, and the tenants lower down would say we were up making fun of thelr family washing and would complatn, I'm afraid your plan of sending us up on the roof to be insulted while you were off having a food tire at one of the real roof gardens Isn't very alluring to me, Mr. Jarr "Oh, very well,” groaned Mr. Jarr, “I'm sorry I apoke, I can't aay anything tn thin house but what {t's misunderstood. If the roof is as you aay it is, why of course, I don't expect you to go up there.” “Oh, you wouldn't care what i was like, You wouldn't even go up to wee!” Geclared Mra. Jarr. “All you thought was to in trolleys up to Fort George, or go to Staten Island or Coney Island on a ferry- boat to see the seaside shows, while your poor wife and children were up on a baking hot roof looking at other families’ washing and nearly sweltering to death.” “Cut it out!" shouted Mr, Jarr, 'm sorry I spoke, As long as I live I won't make another suggestion around this house. I never thought of it the way you thought of {t. I have no Idea of going anywhere any time unless you and the children can come along! Does that satisfy you? “It does not! snapped Mra. Jarr, “You are just like every other man. You try to get your family out of the way and off your mind while you are away somewhere having a good time, You can't fool me! The root indeed! The idea of suggesting that I take my children up on a hot tin roof among clothes Unes and chimneys and ventilator pipes while you are off somewhere enjoying yourself selfishly and alone This picture wo presented to her imagination had such a depressing effect on Mrs. Jarr that she cried. Whereupon Mr. Jarr grabbed his hat and slammed eut of the house. ‘When he returned later in the evening the servant girl met him. “Mrs, Jarr told me to tell you,” said the girl, “to come right up on the root as soon as you come in. She's up there with the children and it's nice and cool. Mrs. Kittingly has her guitar up there and some of the other tenants are singing songs “Can you beat it?” said M?. Jarr, But he climbed up to the roof and greeted Hello! Enjoying yourselves?” The Practical w #« Housekeeper ‘The names and addresses of To-Day’s Ten Prize Winners are given below with the Prize-Winning Suggestions. Day ; $10, Prizes. } in jwidth of the strainer) and gather around the edge of strainer, On the $1 Prize, handie fasten a rosette bow of yellow baby ribbon, ‘This will make a pretty sunflower cushion when hung up in }room MARTHA BODDIS, Recipes. Tipsy Cake Take @ half-doren #t cakes, @ half-p.und of ah je emall sponge Lied almonda: Dianch thum end stick them Into tre A gponge cakes; pour a pint of sherry 10h street, Williamabridge, N.Y. wine over th: cakes. Make « creun of! Clean Comfortables. $1 Prize. one one two tablespoonfuls of cornstar pint of milk, half a cup of #ugar, teaspoonful of vanilla, and t bea! Most people tave trouble keeping bed comfortabies clean, as it ip not wise to dl "| wah them too much, or easy yolks cf two regs. Ine olve the cor |. ave hal my comfortables Png etaren in half a cup of water, put milk | ‘ en tho stove untll {t bolle, then.add the | 294 they are as clean as when bought cornstarch, sugar, vanila, and Jaet, the |! Get & few yants of cheesecloth and eggs. Do not let it get too thick. Poar| make @ sltp-cover the same as a pil- TER over the cakes also. Tien make | low-case It is eamy to remove and " beaten wh tea add SSE frock ot Te oe eager und one| Wee? When eolled. I also cover my tablospoonfer of vanilie. spread over |™a:trene the ame way. tp. Be mire and put all in & baad | Nol diva. This te delicious cany. Ko * fherman gtreet, Ravenswood, Cold Fish a la Parisienne. $1 Prize, | Drawing Threads, $1 Prize. Bot} a thick alice of halibut weighing | When drawing thrends from linen cub bout two pounds to serve eight people. | white soap on te cloth and the work Crt_in pleces two inches square, and | will be much more esally gocomplished. lay eavt peice in the centre of a tea-| When making eyelet embroidery, if « plate on four crisp lettuce leaves, with |ptece of white soap ts held under the tem ¢@nde together. On each leat lay | materia! and the stiletto is alowed to one of the following: half « peeled to-|pmas into tt muoh better eylet can mato, a spoonful of potato salad, one|be mae, as the soap giver »« slight of cucumber salad, and « few asparagus | stiffmess to the cloth. tips, which have also been marinated -in GRACE V. Mrs, BESSIE WILSON, MeoNiel avenue, Inwood, L. L | Little Devices. O8MOND. ¥ dressing. On the fish place a Spoonful of mayonnaise "mae Accord: | No. 11 Fire street, Broakctyn, ing t nod reotpe, and sprinkle |G, A Hee A hay Er nersley over ally Any | Summer Dresses. $1 Prize preferred vegetable, may be used in| 1¢ your summer dresses, lawns, those mentioned, suc rad- fohes, Seisry, cocked pans, Deans, cali. |%™embrays, Mnens and lace, set fowes or bool. | This ts ® delicious dish | “mussed” or wet from rain, you can lor 8 ooOMpany supper ce” en "3 bd PANY MUPPCT einaTein, |fremuen them up by taking one tes spoonful of elastic starch to one tea No. 0 Kast One Hundred and Thirty f ie Cuptul of lukewarm water, dampen mtath airect, Maw York Cuy, with @ mott rag on, the righ ide and press with a. hot tron on wero For the Children, |Side You will And your dtemen look like new. ‘This can be done both before How to Clean Clothes. $1 Pr and after washiog. Heeswex your jo Spread the dress vo clean over an iron- | Rood —atarch will never Ts ORORGE . SHARPLES, Sag oars or Seite, foram thoronytty: No, GT Twelfth street, Brooklyn. then wet A cloth in tea and rub the garment, Werttng the cloth trom time| Table Economy. fo time as neceamry, When fmished . fron the dress anc it will appesr like | ASParagus. #1 Prize. — Mrs, O. H. VRBA, | Save the water in which asparagus 12S Bast Seventeenth street, New York, | has bern polledilliit makes delicious $1 Prize, | 0%? Cream aaparagua: One pint of ng phat ese wet be dernea| Aepereaus water, halfspint of silk bolled together; then mix one table- @t Knese any more, cut above and be-| yooontul of butter, ane of flour; add Tt'e@ tin roof, and What's et an excuse to go riding around! The Newlyweds d's Daily Magazine, Wednesday; SHHHSHDSSDAES HOODS ST ODOM PHD HHS Pate OA ONE sine vee RABY TAKE CAF PXKET BOOK WHILE MAMA GES SEE WH S AT FRONT poor DONT LET r 4 MONEY BABY, MUSTNT! ———— Darrow Continues covery of the Maker of Marvels, Dr. Schermerhorn. —— Encepha we came. Tuere an aged seafaring person, i THE MYSTERY: | cee cc tee oe By Stéwart Edward White Undertaking that required no art—and in “the course of hie recital touched and Samael Hopkins Adams. Copyrighted 1907 by MoCluce, Paiilips & ——— Intguities. An uncharted island: one that he could have ali ror his own; you may guesa whether Dr. Schermerhorn was interested. i “That iss for which - : OE oamamae | me hat ao U2 Sods dh linger scientist, vie |!0Ng-In-vain sought, Percy,’ he said to rae: Nenad volcanic isiand in the Par|™M¢ tn bis quaint, link-cham style of Uifie in order to conduct pertain’ mysterious speech. ‘A leedle prifate volcano- With him ts nia assistant, Percy atory to ourselves to hay experinns schooner Totally un- Darren. The # chartered the schooner | known: undescribed, not-on-the-chart- ing Lass ( eee pes on. Ralph Slade. paper man, t e-found, To-morrow we start. 1 make « list of the things-to-get.’ FOOD, DEAREST! —\THEY SAY iT- : the Strange Story of the Remarkable Dis- upon yonder little cesspool of mfernal | voleante | MAN WITH HIS Bitt. COME HERE A MINUTE m the purpose of those carpet tacks. He had something {n mind: if there wus anything en which he prided himself, tt was his practical bent, But the list Dever got any further; {t ceased stiort of one page in the ledger, ae you may have noticed. I outfitted by telegraph em the way aocrees the continent. “The dootor dXin't ask me whether 4 6°. He took ft for granted. That's probably why 1 didn’t back out Nor 414 I tell him that the three life tneur- | ance companies which had foolishly and trustingly accepted me as @ risk merely on the strength of @ good constitution were making frantio efforts to compro- | mise on the policies, They fe burt, those companies; my healthy condition had ceased to appeal to them. What's & 004 constitution between earth- quakes? No, there was no use telling the @ootor, It would only have worrted him. Besides, I didn’t believe that the feland wes there I thought It was « myth of that stranded ancient mariner'a| imagination, When it rose to mght at the proper spot, none were more as- tounded than the bad risk who now ad- dreams you. “Tet, I mist say for the island that (t came handsomely up to spectfications Down where you wert, Glade, you didn’t Bet & real insight inte tte disporition But 4h back of us there was any kind of ection for your money. Geysers, hell- spouts, fuming fissures, cunning little | extne porom ot hove snrye ach : Duc = to" find, Darrow. A yolcanle, @uplion has oseu! ‘i ‘out Pha ORE of 'Darrow’s piddina any wntenesn te “ook. In the cave.’ The @rup- fier has covered the cave mouth with rock Verwhtt Sie" Stuleer’s: torpedo expert,” ub hie gay into the cavers ie) found in “the cavern: ‘anks to confront Blate story of Dr. Schermer- ‘Taken to the Darrow begina t horn's experiment PART 111, CHAPTER VIII. (Continued.) The Maker of Marvels. “ XEN suddenly the great idee that was to Dring him successes, and cost him his life, came to him, The bowels of the earth must hold the se cret! He took up volcanoes. . . Does sii this sound foolish? It not if you knew. the man. He was « mighty enthusiast, « born martyr, Not cold-Mooded, ike the rest of us ‘The VERY pow and the prectios of the dangers of Geediiest disease the fe wery I caution all Ing eny man to earnestness his sincere love for you Defi thing, keep your kisses for the man whi He Drinks Too Much. able neither to explosion= nor heat me eternal, inner source. Radium, if you choose, only he didn't eall it that Radium tteelf, a4 known to our modern |mcientixia, he regardes aa the barmions plaything of peadle with time hanging heavy on their hands He wasn't «! force tn plapoint quantities: he wanted |bulk resulta, Yet I believe that, after all, what he acustt was « port of bigher power of fadiun. The phenomena were related. And he had some of tat gon promi: position and I want you IT should ak him to atop ing, aa. tie for me? Yew, eno Her Friend Is Jealous. Dear Betty . NE friendship 1 hope eiwaye retain Ween trite. ‘Ho began bis list, as I remember Gratory 0B the jalpnd the with three dosen undershirts, @ galion Belov, “Inaike enees aie, jot Pennyroyal for inseot bites, a box of ave, containg © fcr | amsorted Aistyhooks, thirty pounds of tes rpisthorm seit ibe cheat 8nd DA, {o and @ case of carpet tacks, When 1 Pee leaan the chest « pines hadn't anything else to worry ever, 1 orth, Tney are seized ‘and, drown. the echoonel"s Hee 'uinconsctous Uunt{ pleks tied Btates cruiser Wolv oflicera the ‘tens ‘bie ato Shd ‘Dr. Trendoa mo aa awk | Gieoantinue the correspon tink: | id he would do anything | If you fee) you know him well HAVE & very dear qi) @riend whoee There te @ young gentleman of ber BETTYVINCENTPo THE DANGERS OF KISSING. then some doctor or ecientist denounces kissing as injurious ¢o health, because of inoculation by disease germs, But the Kise Gisseminates is that of love Thet my Young women readers aguinst aliow- whom they are not engaged to Kies them. You young girls perhaps don't know how susceptible you ara But men do, and unless you maintain your self-respect and keep them at « distance they will be apt to take advantage of It, A kiss sometimes means everything to a girl j@ man it means Uttle or nothing, Let @ man prove by his devotion and his To fore you allow him to kiss you. If & kisp means nothing to you, and you give your kisses carelessly, then all | the finer joys of life will be closed to you. If you would have them mean any- © will offer you hia heart and life ry. | Dest to te my friend of this corre spondence, and run the chance of mak- fre was in his votna Dear Betty ing ber feel hurt? She wae piqued please. Thank you. AM a young lady of twenty-two and/when ne heard that he had even “We chased volcanoes, There was « am deeply In love with @ gentieman, | called. Or had I best let matters drift, theory under it all. He believed that 1 often feel that life would not be and mm keep the friendship of both | voleantc emandtions are caused bY A) worth the living without him. He only, parties? Perhaps he will become tired mighty and wncomprehendel energy.) nas one fmult-—that is, he sometimes, of writing; men are eo fickle Or, ae & womething that achiever resulte aecri>-|iayey a glass too much. He has a very last means, would you advise me to| If you don’t care for the young man | ety such J think you fad better: stop wriling. You do value the girl's friend- fale and vou will lone TK wu con tinue. | Yhey Meet on the Stairs. Dear Betty 5 % proper for me to raise my hat when I meet a young lady living tn wae house ae L eince we have low knees, machine or back siltch top| Saparagus water and mllk to thle sow trat ‘1 acquaintance who has taken her out| newer been introduced, oF \ to > ¢ | 26 of pitehbl uo spoken to nd vottom einer, Tonks muuch better) ly, Cook ten miputes, potabpy ge - mane, Seeeee 9 2 gig} E land aleo called upon her eoonsionally.|each other? 1 meet this young lady than « lot ol | = | t t Mre FRANK EB. CANTOR, 199th sitesi and Brcedosy. |aey sbewt-twenty thousand Giaaes' |90# bas always given me the impres: | pretty nearly every day, either on the No. & Gpencer Court, Lrookiyn, * rize,| Worth, Maybe thirty, For use? Mo; ston that she cared for him merely a@| stoop or on (he stairway, and 1 am much T d Bread Scraps 1 Eivtae, | oithee bck commpariona: 3 jute a triend. ‘This gentleman recently left |embarrasse! as to what my e(iitude he Be room. Lf any white briad tw lel over 40 Bo!) yes we chased volcanoes, I became |the city on a bustness trip, to be poke whould be coward her 1 do not care to ‘Pincushion. we $1 Prine, | poem it ewes. bt sek In tenld walet: |used to eamping between samaple Ralls VAlll Ovtober, During ble last week in| eve tee stove 4 reletiqnghin wit her ’ £-wery Qainty pinoushion can be made|and putein dish. Ad rom breed |of all known varieties. i got eo that |towns ereatly to my aurpriee, the ealied |as I have reasons for believing that wien, Mi desired. Me tw already keeping co t Or Soling & (00 strainer and covering | Ite, & Nite lemon jules and rind | the fumes of @ sulphur mateh seemed |upon me twice, Be algo desired, un ready keeping company with 5 the holes wits some heavy dare: | 220 aD ewe or two. ir uBtll mixed, | like « draught of pure, fresh alr. Wher-|}known to my friend, to keep Up & oor: eocther young man, but ef ghe same after A 4 poonful at & lime and) over any of the earth's pimples showed |rempondence while away. This we have| time de not wish to pane by ber os w for brown, | signs of comme to head, there were|done, ‘They ave simply tendiy, chatty | dummy-dum, JOMUN B. we, Part in the trouble, By, jetiert Now, the girl in question You rates your het to « bad poh Lepiven only ’ have wot wo na wo at ee et” aa oan” Hale ms Pace oraterlets with half-portions of molt lava ready ¢o serve hot: more gases than you could create in all che world’s chemical laboratories; in fot, everything to make the place a paradise for Old Nick—and Dr. Schermerhorn. He brought along in his precious chest, besides the radium, eome sort of raw material; also, as near es I could make out, @ sort of cage or guardianship scheme for his concentrated essence of cusmedness, when he sheuld @et it eut ef the vel- cano. “In the fret seven months he putter- ed around the litte fumers, with ao occasional excursion up to the main crater, it was my Guty te follow on end Greg him away when he fell unoon- scious. Bometines 1 would try to get him before he was quite gone, ‘Then he would become indignant and fight me Perhaps that helped to lose me his confidence. More and more he withdrew Into himaeif. ‘There were days when he spoke no word to me It was lonely, Do you know why 1 weed to visit you at the beach, Slade? I suppose you thought I was keeping watch on you. It wasn't that, it was loneliness. In « way, It hurt me, too; for one couldn't help but be fond of the old boy; and at times ft seemed as if he weren't quite Almself, Furdon me, tf I may trouble you for the matches? Thanks, * * * “Matters went very wrong at Umes; the Mootor fumed like his litile craters; | rowled out winded, Lauetl ve Sethe tired Chern oui. ‘Then again the damon of work would drive him with thong agG apur; he Woukd rush ¢o- craters, to bie laboratories, to his ledger for the pur- pose of entering unintelligible com mentaries, He had some peculiar con- trivance. ike @ misshapen retort, with which he collected fromthe torieta. Whenever I'd hear one of mo amas, I knew i was bad day termpera- mental “It got to be & year and ® quarter—« year and a half, I wondered whether we should ever get away. My tobacco was running short. And the bearing of the men wae becoming fdgetty, My Visite to the beech beoame quite inter esting—to me. One day the dootor camo running out of his laboratory with @o brigtt a face that I ventured to ask him about departure, “Net eo jong, now, Pe: i he enid, tm tla old, Kind manner. ‘Not eo long ‘The first real suceess, It te made. We have yet under-gtire-control to| Dring ity bul it tee made. “‘And about time, sir,’ sald L Tf we don't do something soon we may have trouble with the men.’ Bo? eaid he in surpries "But they |eould do nothing. Nothing.’ Ho wageed | bis great head eonfidently, ‘We are armed, Bo are ther’ | | armed,’ he repeated ‘Such ae no man Was ever lermed, are w , He checked himself abruptly and I've ainoe wondered ppend had ‘the men 4 have been worth | iked away. W nat would have ttacked us. It wo: seeing, and—and surprist Yes, I'm quite certain it would bi sur: | |pristns, Perhaps, too. I might have) learned more of the Great Bec and yet, | don't know Ite dark a bint here th | mere glinte of lett . 1 put ‘Ab, thank you." CHAPTER IX, The Achievement. | Fr’ some moments Darrow aat gas | | ing at the table before him, His cigarette tip glowed end tatled | Some one suxsonted drinks. ‘The gap- tain aaked Darrow what he would have, | bat the question. went unnoted ‘How 1 passed the next six months | could hardly tell you.” he beeen again quite abruptly, "At thmes I was bored. Ceantully tured, Yet the element of | mystery, of uncertainty, of pndertying peril, gaye @ certain gest to the affair In the periods of @ulnese | found some | amusement in visiting the lower oanp and balling the Niga@r Gade will nave told you about him, he gossesmed quilt |& tund of Veodoolam) he possessed more re 1 gt Carouge with tm, WE “Yes; if he had lived ¢o return to his country, I fancy he would have added considerably to Afro.Amertcan witeb- lore, “You remener the vampire bata, Blade? And the devil-firest Naturally I didn't mention to you that the devil- fire dusinees wasn't altogether es clear to me ee I pretentied. It wasn't, though, But et the time it served very well ag ap amusemem. Al! the while I realized that my eelf-entertainment was not without ite element of danger, woo: I remember glances not altogether friendly but always @ ittle doubtful, = tue awed Even Handy Solomon, praction, as he was, hed a scruple oF two of superstition tn his make-up, 01 which ene migtt work. Only Eagen— Slade, 1 mean—arus beyond me thers, You purzied me not a little in those days, Since Well * * * “Did I way thet I was sometimes an- | noyed by the Goctor’s attitude? Yes; it seemed that he might have given me « Uttle more of his confidence; but ene can't judge such « man as he was. Among the ordinary affairs ef lite he had relied on me for every detail, Now he mas independent af me Independ- ent! I @oubt tf he recnenibered my ¢x- ence at times. Bven in his blackest moods. of depression he was sufficient unto Hinpelt. | Tt wae strange. 01° ° How he did rage the day the chemiXals from Washington went wrong! 1 Wes weehing my sbirt in hot water pring whep he came bolting out of the \sboratory and kecied me aver, I aane out pretty indignany HODOP SPS IS SSH HDHP PSL HS POSH HHSH HHS HESSHH HPSS HHHPOOS Their Baby & By George McManus DA-DA! DA-DAcDAt THE VOLCANO’S GREAT SECRET OF LIFE AND DEATH > %, xe? Not at all. He just aput~ (ored. His nearest approach \er- ence seemed to indicate a desire that I mould go back to Washington once and destroy a perfectly reputable firma of chemists, Finally he calmed down and took it out in entering #& tn hie daly record. He was quite of Uiat dally fecord and rem: ed (o waite ‘mt on en average of once a wet “Then the chest went wrong. Whether ft tad rusted a OF, or whether uo Gheméoela had got in’ thelr work on ¢ hinges, I don‘t know; but one day professor, of his own inittsive, reco; nized my existence by lugging hie box ee in the apen and asking me to fix Previously he had empied it. “It was rather a complicated thine, an Inner compartment over which a_hollow cov T consec ome chemical There wer ch gu to hold It 09, sompound or many oYnor openings, by a similar hollow door, My business was with ocr the heavy “It should shut and open softly, fently,” explained the Professor. ‘80. Not" with-a-grating-sound-to-be-secom= Danted,’ he added, with his curtous ef- fect of linked phraseology, “Half a day's work fixed tt. The id would stand open of itself until tipped. at a considerable angle, when it would fall and lock, Only ‘on the outer sheli ‘as there @ lock: ¢ Ditor erattamansnip.| Che YM & Hood " ‘o, Perey, my boy,’ eald the doetor, kindly. “Phat will with aumclent antes? our treasure. When we ob! Percy. When ft entirely fing completed shall be.’ And when will that det I asked “God knows,’ he eald, o Bod kr aaid, cheerfully, "ty (To Be Continued.) Success is merely « matter of doing the right thing at the right the A butidle of concek, Cordelia, Is § woman who is wrapped up In hereslf. —Chicago News May Manton’s Daily TON FASHION IMPORTANT—Witte ware specity sine Pointed Paragraphs, OO many men mistake notoriety for fame Only « simple man tries to act unneceavartly etrennowaly A boost when needed is better than « pull that tent Once tn & while the voters get busy and elect an honest man Those who are fancy free are free to fancy what they please ie York, Sue so conte oun ws amas fn cuss nae Fashions UMPER WAISTS ace emmentially, youthful in etyie and comequentiy are peoullarly well adapted tet) young girls This one te of cheoked cotton velling with trimming ef white nem piped with blue, buj it would be charming for finen lawn, for all the Washable materiais, and alte rakes 4 Most satiefactory mode! for lightwelent Wools, voile and the like It i worn over @ separate guimpe, which can be of ince or lingerte material, as Mtked, and means very little warnith, whe ever the fabric, while the possessic of « drem that pot newessil laundering ‘s often a great boon even There_are tucks at the oulders the ebaped band Antshes he neck, while at the wa: pointed gindie. ‘The quanuity of the sixtecn-yoar ize ke 2% Coss tn midsummer yards #8 yards 42 .0r 114 yards 44 inches Wide, a4 yard ming ined: wide for the trim- tern No. BTOL is cul in lees for firln of 14 and M years of age. mame 906 widens