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Show SONG CF LIBERTY. v- Ode bi v 2- - :-- J j Late Ideas for Costumes That H ve the Sandlin of the Smait Ect Juliet Cap a Favorite Form cf Hjad gear. one hti,f the she i i the us d will cold water ami utri uc.il or fold" in unij ah ninth Horn c u Handkerchief Kimono. be dhnotbed Put tiumg,. on a n oi i Handkerchiefs as material for gar- ing luiaid and I'i n, p n pievent ments of various sorts are continualadhering end ihe ie ult win he a never in are but demand, ly growing himlt asie v,k!i t an he more attractive than when made up smooth, Bl tedded . ,i cut any dliicuUj into a kimono such as the one illustrated Those used for the model are Kid Belts, Hand P nted of white Japanese silk with border 1icad, sin g.t hells of white lid of blue silk dotted with white, but hive dt lie it e true, lie-- , of gold tor there are innumerable ones from tlcir detoidtiuu I lieu e ait otic r which a choice can be made. Those whuc kid hes daiiitilv li i.id dt toi 't of linen with borders are pretty and eel with fit wus d. ne m welt - t d hs launder satisfactorily, and tl.it are .always tm wear sjtt illv h nl-odealers are also showing a conslde'-a-bili white hn w , s, woven for purspecially variety 1 t - t If fl. J In ( w e. It 1 III he ts w th itafnc't t 'lliier ori nm . atiou' Vtiv ci i re it L its ej l.tavv In a, si t hurl It's ai to lee ng dull ha for smelt t i!or s' sit- - and the wnh plain white relished kid e.ne harness Inn Kirs still lit. eel e. clu ve pan image if a-- - when stiamcd feen n inufts caiefuliv is c i ainpialdt to mt a "iN who aie weaij of the oic'inary ill inis Mich as lemonade Crust cof lee is mm e hi the same manH-- i only whte hi ml It Milist'tufed for blown i -- White Frroee With Lace. i nor fee is one t e season and is tl lit ii srle f th novtU is of I j e e 11 e 1 Sumircr P.szza Gowns For elaborate suirrnei it ilets all the gauzes and thou weaves of wool and silk are called Into play Chiffon cloth mou.sseline, vo.le. veiling oh f foil louisine ami meshalliie are tl is season s lead rs Alessalin" and chiffon louisme have both bi en lr ught tut in a host ot diet ts Amt ng tut thui louisines chicled changeable am trees cannot he list by the nunutactinei enough In chiffon flu re are stunning patI terns combining wide satin snipes Design by Mny Manton arid big discs made up of graduated poses of the sort. The handkerchiefs polka dots Tie flown od cotton nets are Joined on indicated lines and are have had a big sale and will be atied so adjusted as to ft rm deep points in later oil summer verandas Tlie-'fronts, back and sleeves, while the W ell the nets are made over an neck edges aie turned over to give Interlining of net which veils the silk S collar effect. To make the kimono foundation. for a woman of medium size will be Coioied nets aie used for filmy required five handkerchiefs 20 inches frteks for both old and young women square or. If preferred, it can be made A Irock of this kind seen lately had from material with applied banding, a shut of organdy veiled with nit. In which case 3 yards 22, 27 or 32 over which the outer skirt hung All or 2 yards 44 Inches wide, with 12 a4 weie of the same delicate shade of yards of banding will be required. rose pink. , ,V'?ov;rA j l Wc r i fmwM pro-vhh- d e. The Juliet Cap. For dressy occasions there is no prettier ornament above the rirlish face than the Juliet cap, familiar to every admirer ot Shakespeare's heroine. This dainty garniture Is especially effective with the low stj le of ha dressing now in vogue, particularly When the hair is gathered in a net at the nape of the neck. The cap ts not a cap in the strictest sense of the word, hut a net woven from gold threads, or tiny gold oeaus. studded with small gems; or It can be made from small pearls, rhinestones or other gems. Beads, pearls rr other J W D(isu by luy ilantor charmli gly dainty and effective The very pretty gown illustrated shows the mateiiai trimmed with applique of cream Venetian lace and finished wnh frills of ihe softer Llerre in the same shade The combination of tones is a satisfactory as well as a fashionable ne. and the material lends itself to lucks with singular success. The Iilc-- e is made over a fitted foundation ami dosed invisibly at the center front, but when made of mus lin or other washable fabric, can be left unltned and aiso allows a choice of long or elbow sleeves The skirt is cut in seven gores, the front one being extendi d to form a yoke at skies and back it is tucked in groups are stitched to flounce depth nad graceful fullness and flare beneath that point To make the gown for a woman of medium size will be required: for the blouse 4 yards of ge Rub all rusty places on iron with kerosene oil. V icker seats and hack of chairs are easily cleane with salt and water Varnished woodwork can be easily cleaned ard brightened with crude 01i. material 21, 3T. yards 27, or 214 yards 44 Inches wide; for skirt, 10 yards 21, Any brickwork rlrsed off with ammonia and water and tnen carefully 9 yards 27, or 554 yards 44 inches wide. dried will be wontiei fully brightened by the process gems should be exceedingly small, so A few drops of alcohol rubbed on Bulgarian Embroidery. that the general effect of the mesh Is the Inside of lamp chimneys will reBulgarian embroidery is now being and gauzy light move all trace of greasy smoke when utilized for belts, with mountings of The cap is worn directly on the water alone Is of no avail. A belt of linen embroidered in kid crown of the head, and droops graceAlcohol rubbed Into a carpet will Bulgarian tints and pattern, and edged fully toward the back. When a curl effectually remove a varnish stam. with narrow, stitched bands of patent ia worn over the shoulder, It Is some- This should be done after the is especially striking for times followed by loops and ends of has been taken up and shaken. carpet leather, wear with a linen shirt waist suit. the pearls. Correct Thing in Gloves. Acceptable to Invalids. Lace for Ankles. To prepare brown bread coffee for Pique suedes in white and pale tints A pair of lace medallons, left over a sick and are new arrivals. The tan gloves of person take some from the summer frock, can be put to crusts of brown bread andpiecesthem this season have dry very little red in In use excellent trimming stockings in a slow even until thoroughly hard their composition. The woman who to match the gown. Place in a morar and knows selects something ranging beand crisp. For Instance, with a pongee gown pound. Then pour boiling witer over tween the c.eam and pearl tints and piped with lace medallons, a plain pair them and let them soak for about fif-- mole color or beaver brown. of tan lisle stockings were made very smart by the use of lace medallons, one just above each Instep. A SMART LITTLE COAT. They were first appliqued on the scocklngs with silk thread, in very fine stitches, then the lisle beneath was cut away, and then edges of the stocking buttonhole stitched closely and finely to the wrong side of the Worn with brown suede medalion. shoes, they gave a dainty nlshlng touch to the costume. 31 Told in Her Boudoir' simply exquisite. The modern rail coat tips the scales at less than one pound. A small collar finishes the neck of many fashionable jackets Not ruchings, very fine, are smarter than those made of chiffon. ate among the very Forget me-not- s charming hat trimmings Sleeves aie as elaborate rs oyer and still bouffant bcow the elbow. Silver, especially antique, is among the smart metals for buckles. The 3 S30 or Frerch blouse s the latest idea in black taffeta coats. muslin picture bats Embroidered are among the pretty lingerie hats. Circular shirts, cut in three or more section, are among the latent models. Franklin Pierce. Concord N H. James Monroe, lies in Hollywood cemetery, Richmond, beneath a canopy. He aUo ded on the anniversary of the signing of the Declaration, the -- S out ev tlie cr Be sep - 'rate thou, And. guid - ed by sea, free. of Hope the flag fly g'-- and Lih - er of Lib - er - v said. A ms - cient Hand, Let Let nionii - tam range r nd To Wash - ing ton whose tv. ty. -- JE2 K. Polk. Nashville Tenn Presidential cl air, James Buchanan, at Wheatland farm, near Lancaster, Pa , on June 1, 1868, and is buried at Lancaster beneath a messy stone on a side hill overlooking the coundied try to side snow capped hill s glad - some The first President to receive a monument of national character was Lincoln This stands In the Oak Ridge cemeteiy at Springfield, 111, anj consists of a platform of granite, fiom which rises an obelisk. Around the base cf the obelisk at each corner are groups of bronze figures typifying the great struggle of the Civil War, and above these In front Is a statue of Lincoln. The whole is in the neighborhood of one hundred feet in height. General Grant's close of life at to flowing tide, Be All cleave the skies then the land of bail' fifst Son of i V tv Lib - er-t- vs.: Rfprain tp Let truth tit - Sr . a bound and vir - tue reign, And strife -- be-)o- thy m on Riverside and the mausoleum drive. New York, costing probably more than any other in this country, and numbered among the finest In the world, has been visited by many persons. He died July 23, 1885. The body of Mrs. Grant was placed beside that ot her husband in 1902. The mausoleum in the Lake View cemetery, near Cleveland, containing the bodies of Gen. James A Garfield, who was shot by Guiteau in Washing ton on July 2, 18S1, and who died on Sept 6 of that year, is also a national monument visited by many persons from all parts of the country. The body of President McKinley, who died at Buffalo on Sept. 14, 1901, from the bullet of Czolgosz, lies in the receiving vault at Canton, Ohio, awaiting the completion of the nations monument, the plans for which are now under consideration. wf Cies a; t i - bor ssjsr tiers To flee, Fa our God, z9z:fzs. fir S Poco r I raise tlier. t ,-L the strain. And sin" r the song of Lib nt er ty- - ZWd 31- r - i Copyright 1904 by Rev SERMON DID HIM GOOD. Queer Kind of Barrels. The scarcity of wood suitable for the purposes of the w ine producers of California has led to the manufacture of vessels cf other materials than wood. At the big winery and distil- I I F P Duffy DIARY OF A REAL BOY, Churchgoers Homely but Very Effective Comparison. The late Father McGoldrick of Dorchester, Mass., was one of the greatest pulpit orators in the archdiocese and always took delight in seeing what effect his sermons had upon the lowly members of the congregation One Sunday, while leaving SL Peter's church, where he had been stationed many years, he met a parishioner who, touching his hat to the reverend gentleman, said. "That was a beautiful sermon you father. It did me a preached power of good. Im glad of that, responded the clergyman. Can you tell me what particularly struck you? What was the mam point? Well er I dont rightly remember I dont Just exactly know. I ah ah what's the use; sure, I dont remember an Individual word of it Sorra a bit of me knows what it was at all, at all. And yet, said Father McGoldrick, with a smile, you say It did you a Its Perusal Gave Father Insight Into Many Things. There is a certain kid in this city, who is keening a diary says the Philadelphia Telegraph. The book was given him last Christmas by a relative, and his father had forgotten all about it until he accidentally found the volum j the other day Curious to see what his small son had written in It. he opened the book and found tnat the diary had been faithMly kept. Here are a few of the entries: I am 9 years old Looked in the glass, but whiskers aint sproutin yet." Sassed a boy. Got llpkt. Pop borrowed ten cents for that makes 81.15 he owes me. Worder if lie ever get it " Jimmie stole my balL I lickt him for It. "Ast Pop for some of my money and he giv me a nikll. I want that doler. We feloes got up a baseball club Ime picher. If I bad that doler 15 I oould get a unaform. power of good. "Pop got paid today and giv me my So it did. Father; Ill stick to money. Mamma horrid a doler that. Bother these people anyway. A felo cant save Now, tell me how. Well, Father, now look here. nothin. Ast Pop about banks. I want to Theres my Sunday shirt that my wife is after xashing, and dean and white put my money ware carfair aint so it is by reason of all the water and saarse Got lickt again. boap that's gone through It. But not a drop of water or soap or blue lias There was more of this, but Pop stayed in it, dye see? And its the had read enough. As a result here same way with me an' the sermon. was a conference, and now the arIts all run through me an dried out, rangement is to pay 5 per cent a week but all tbe same, like my Siwday interest, and settle every payday. The shirt, Im the better and cleaner for kid got his unaform car-fai- r, it. work. mouth. Medicinal Remedies. Imaginative remedies in use in China are scorpions, dried silkworms baked toads, wasps nests and cockroaches. At the end of a considerable catalogue of similar prophylactics Dr. Norris observes that, though his list Is far from complete, it will show through what a varied range of thought Chinese ideas have moved in attempts to relieve the diseases com mon to humanity. Perhaps the most curious of all preventive medicines is the soup made from a black cat which Is drunk by blacksmiths in Canton to prevent burns from hot metals. Where Horsewhips Are Prohibited. There is a notable law in force in most of the large Russian towns concerning horses that deserve? special mention. Among the curious things that arrest the attention on arriving in Moscow Is the entire absence of whips among drivers of cabs, carriages, and all sorts of vehicles. There is a law prohibiting their use. There Is not a single whip in use in Moscow. The excellent condition of the horses attests the benefit of this humane law. Nothing can exceed tbe beauty of the sleek and well groomed horses used In the carriages of Moscow. Largest Map in the World. The largest map in the world Is the Ordnance Survey map of England, containing over 108,000 sheets, and 200,000 a year for twenty costing years. The scale varies from ten feet to of an inch to the mile. The details are so minute that maps inches having a scale of twenty-fiv- e show every hedge, fence, wall, building, and even every isolated tree in the country. The plans show not only the exact shape of every building, bnt every porch, area, doorstep, lamppost, railway, and fire plug. Construction of "Big Ben. Zachary Tailor's grass grown grave Ixird Grlmthorpe, pe"r, clockmaker, at Springfield, Ky , five miles from Louisville is marked by a shaft, church restorer and in one sense fathbv a portrait statue, erected er of the English bar, has just celeIt was as by the Strte of Kentucky. He died in brated his 88th birthday that he crowned the White House on July 9 1850. For Mr. Beckett a time bis body remained iu a vault his fame as a clockmaker by designin Washington. ing and superintending the construcTwo Presidents have died at Buf- tion of the great clock at Westminfalo. The first of these was Millard ster, known as Big Ben which is Fillmore, who died there on March 8, not only one of the largest in the a world, but a most accurate time 1874, and his body hes beneath obelisk cf the mod keener orjshed Coming. Brooke, an Englishman 22 years of age and huite marriageable, is about to pay a visit to this country. He is a son of the countess of Warwick. w ho as I ady Brooke was a fellow guest at Tranby Croft with the prince of Wales (now King Edward) when the famous baccarat scandal It was she convulsed all England. who told of the trouble of outsiders, A Bunch ot Fire Crackers. A lit firecracker in the hand isn't Wages in Spain Low. TVages are very low in Spain Farm worth two in the pack There is no use pulling the trigger laborers get about $1 50 a wdek. The women who work In vineyards do not after the gun has been fired. Do not look a gift cannon in the ge? more than 15 cents for ten hours' one-eight- h Den-lso- Titled Englishman Lord tnis earning her nickname of "the babbling Brooke. i j Knew Where He Slept. John L. Sullivan, at his recent Boston benefit, said to two schoolbojs who approached to shake his hand: Boys, if you want to get on do your work. Work is the only thing to make men happy and successful. Dont be like the lad who worked so bady that when his father wrote to the boss of the concern asking where his son slept, the answer sent back was: Your son sleeps in the shop in the daytime, but we don't know where he sleeps at night. I A Lih-er-- la-- zs 1891. , As Illustrated the material Is nut br own taffeta, combined with tan color and trimmed with little ornaments of braid, and matches the skirt, but all the materials mentioned are equally appropriate. To make the coat for a woman of medium size will be re quired 4 yards of material 21, 8 yards 27, or 19t yards 44 Inches wide. Th Om sanity. Hysterics Is often the sad product of a high temper. For all these reasonable" reasons the mother who successfully fills her role uses her authority over her child and teaches her to control her tem per. Andrew Jackson. taken up and placed in Its present resting place His widow lived until Design by May Manton. w James Imaginative Jaunty little Etons made of pongee, silk and the like are among the smartest wraps shown and are exc cedingly attractive, whether made to match the skirt or of contrasting ma tenal. This one includes a stole collar, that provides the broad and droop ing shoulders, and Is made with deep pointed sleeves under which the full ones of the blouse show to advantage. - i in land and was burled - in New Yoik. In 1858 his body was removed to Richmond with public ceremony A domed canopy by supported Grecian pillars and erected on a lery of the Italian Swiss agricultural raised platform of stone, the whole colony at Asti, Cal., the greater porchanged suggesting the seat of some oracle, tion of the cooperage is beingwith to cement lined glass. spellers the old fashioned tombstone from wood from An expert over the bones of Andrew Jackscr. Italy has arrived to It Is on President Jacksons estate, do the work, and It is now being connear Nashville, Tenn., the Hern'tage. ducted with rapidity. Eight of the He Bed on June 8, 1845. largest tanks are being lined with The body of Martin Van Boren, the plate glass about half an inch in cce'-sor of President Jackson, who thickness. The tanks are square, with rounded dieti on July 24, 1862, lies In tho old Dutch cemetery at Kinderhook. N. Y., corners and oval tops. Cement will be employed outside the glass Interior the town in which he was born By stretching the Imagination one instead of wood. The glass, to fit the could find a resemblance between the curvatures, has to be blcwn to order, and is very expensive. The tctal storlog cabin which figured so prominently m the campaign of "Tippecanoe age capacity at the Asti warehouse and Tyler too and the vault in which and winery is 13,250 000 gallons, and contemplated will lies the dust of William Henry Harri- the Improvement son, on the bank of the Ohio river, materially Increase it. Philadelphia at North Bend, Ohio. The vault is Public Ledger laid in regular courses with a flat d Child. The cover President Harrison died, after Outbursts of passion exhaust nerbeing in office only one month, on April 4, 1841, leaving the reins of vous energy and make enormous degovernment to the Vice President, mands on the vital force of the body, besides exposing their victim to the John Tyler. A square pavilion of simple design perilous effects of extreme excitement on the grounds of the Capitol of on the work of the heart. The indulgence of in liability or of Tennessee, at Nashville, overlooking the citv, shelters the graves of James the habit of gloomy broodings lowers Knox Polk and Saiah Childress, his the whole tone of health. wife He died on June 15, 1849, and The line which divides extreme, was find buried in the yard of his passionate anger from insanity is home A few years ago his body was narrow and ill defined, so narrow and that there is always danso ger of a passionate disposition, when freely Indulged, bearing fruit in Infifty-fift- tj Making Perfect "Noodles. Nothing puzzles the amateur cook quite as much as the contrariness of noodles. Sometimes they mix up nicely so they can he role-- t and cut In full perfection at other n.es tney turn Into a sticky, soggy mass, utterly impossible Ar tnfallble rule Is to sSr- many a New England church spire Beside h's body lies tint of his wife. President Pierce died Oct 8, 1869 The only bachelor w bo occupied the Sweet-Tempere- Tortoise shell is the newest hade of brown. Sleeves widen and shorten as the summer comes on. Silks strewn with mauve orchids are Stre Costume of Mistral Voile. Voile in its fashionable varieties really leads the fashiorable procession In the spring and early summer The mistral voile has a gowns. coarse canvas weave with a rough, crepy surface, and lends itself well decorative purposes. The little Eton opens with a roll shawl collar over the lingerie blouse, a narrow black and gold braid being effectively used for trimming The skirt is cut with double effect, the upper portion pointing in frort, laldier fashion, and rourding up shapely to the back. A deeply kilted flounce applied beneath a double band of braid gives he correct flare at the foot this being maintained by a narrow band of princes haircloth on the diop skirt or petticoat. ern type in Forest Cemetery The menoml placid over the grave of Franklin P ere in the cemetery at Conceit! N H, is like that of Mount McGregor Is well remembered, tat ' -- of intelligence probably could tell of! hand where the bodies ot rao- -t of the long line of sovereigns of the ' ught little isle aie buried. It is sate to say that one would need mote than the lantern of who Diogenes to find ail American could name the buiial i laces of over half a dozen of the twentj three Presidents of the United Ft tics who have died It is a fact woith stopping to think about that the body of not one of the chief executives of the United States lies within the limits of Washington, t! o capital of the country. Tins naton has no Westminster abbey Wien (Hath has removed the chief exteutives of the United States, thev have been buried In nearly all cases at thj homes which they had left when thev assumed offce Probably the tomb of no President, or of any American, is bitter known to he people of the United States ! an that of Washington It is a simple, vineclad vault of brick on his estate at Mount Vernon, the coffins of the first President and his wife within heing protected from vandals by unostentatious iron barred gates in the entrance. Plain obtlisks of the old fashioned tjpe flank the shaded brick walk leading to the entrance. Washington died on Dtc. 14, 1799 A plain obelisk marks the resting It place of the dust of Jefferson stands at Moniiceilo, his estate near Charlottesville, Va , and was inscribed with this epitaph from his own pen: Here was burled Thomas Jeffers' fi the author of the Declaration of Independence, of the statute of Virgina for religious freedom and father of the Univeisity of Virgin'a, but rel'c hunters have chipped much of it away. who The body of the President enunciated the famous diplomatic piinciple for the guidance of the western hemisphere which the United States is undertaking to enforce. - 1 of old this orb had made. And raised t.ie earth from er here from ev - r laud, From bond age chains for . ' An Englishman rJ - - t Rtm. Arranged byF -- srr When Col b- - .s' ga-l- i 1. 2. I r- t -- qrEra All F P Tri ft. tntlistoso -i .1 Ul |