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Show make a thick cream tauco allowlcd for a pint of meat the following proj portions. Put Into a saucepan a heapl MANSOME OF THE LATEST Ing tabicspoonful of butter and twat level tablespoonfuls of flour, and a DATES OF FASHION. soon as blended pour on a cupful or hot milk, stinirg until thick and. Green Cloth Walking Suit a Fancy f salt to taste; add tho meat! Parisians Blouse of Slcillenne In smooth; and beat until well mixed; If moro Bronze Shade Winter to Do a Sea-- i seasoning is needed, add, then set son of Color. away in a cool place until very cold and stiff; form Into cones and dip in beaten egg and roll in flno crumbs; Winter a Color Seaton. The winter has proved unquestion- place in a tool place until quite dry, ably a color season. Indeed, any then fry In deep fat; stick a sprig of fashionable congregation of women parsley in the end of each Just before thla winter may well be likened to a serving. rainbow, the colors are so varied and Brown Silk Waist. ro delightfully soft. The evening Blouse of slcillenne in a bronze are very faint off tints, while daytime claims, and rightly, the more shade. The plastron is of cream decided shades. Only a brief season agone was It not that we .auded the costume? Now we are all too willing converts to this new fashion for color. Not that white Is ostracized; far from It; but It Is now Invariably seen offset by some color, usually Introduced as a trimming. The black hat Is very often seen with the white costume, and velvet tricornes and toques and picture bats In the lavender and violet shades are tremendously effective with the white frock that has the same color Introduced la Its trimming. STYLES IN SEASON i Sing Praise of Cider . , col-or- a all-whit- e Waving Paradise Plume. The paradise plume, either In the natural feather or some one or another of the skillfully made Imitations and some of these are simply marvelous In their fidelity to nature is one of the best things of the season. The bat Is of seal brown paon velvet, m i3k wu Worlidges Cider Mill of the fabric stretched tight over the brim, with a shirred edge for binding. The crown Is high and narrow, and a soft drapery of brown chiffon faille ending In two reversed loops and caught with a smart Jet buckle makes a good trimming effect. The paradise -plume Is posed at the right side, starting at the crown, and the slender tips fall over the brim. Theye Is no bandeau to this shape, the head size fitting comfortably without. . w- - 1678. Parisian Fancy. (From an Old Drawing.) Hunters green cloth walking suit The buying up by wealthy city resi- bourg, who surrounded their newly with hand embroidery. trimmed dents of Long Island farms containing founded monastic institutions, great Coat appleorchards, the damages caused by and small, throughout the West of the San Jose scale, the gradual dying England, with fruitful orchards, in out of the old orchards and the in- which they planted choice apple trees, creasing price of sound apples has imported from their old home In cider-lovin- g Normandy. nearly wound up the cider business The monkish ciderists in due time on Long Island that, for years, was a profitable industry, says the Phila- shared the fate which has recently bebrethren of delphia Ledger. The picturesque old fallen their liquor-makin- g of the cider in hard hand press that days great Chartreuse, but their horse Tippecanoe and Tyler too" could be mills survived till the middle of the found on nearly every Long Island last century, and the pom vitae, or the farm is a thing of the past. apple of life, still perpetuates their were They replaced gradually by memory in the sheltered and picturthe larger and more powerful mills, esque valleys of the three fair sister when the apples were ground and shires of Devon, Dorset and Somerset, pressed by horse power, and still where from time immemorial cider later by the power furnished by the has been almost the exclusive drink of steam engines. The farmer, finding successive generations of stalwart he could take his wagon load of heap- yeomen and sturdy peasants, renowned up apples to the mill say forty or ed for their strength, activity and fifty bushels and in an hour or two longevity, and an enviable freedom bring back his three or four barrels from gout, rheumatism and other kinof cider at the cost of a cent or two dred ailments. As might be reasonably expected, per gallon, gave up his tedious and and resorted cider has had its poets as well as its exhausting hand press to the general neighborhood mill. In Queen Annes time, historians. Owners of fine orchards of New- some thirty years after the appeartown pippins and golden russets and ance of Worlidges Vinetum Britan-nicum- , and the subsequent publicaother choice varieties of cider making of care of The Complete Cyderist, by the cure tion apples took especial of their vintage, and after finally A Lover of Planting, John Phillips ' drawing off the finished product in sang in sonorous blank verse of the bottles, put it away in storage cellars, soil beloved of apples, and the care where it was kept from one to five due to orchats: years before marketing. Whoeer expects his laboring trees should Cider, in some shape or another, is bend With fruitage and a kindly harvest yield, as old as the time of Tertullian, Be this his first concern, to find a tract and St. Jerome. Worlidge, a Impervious to the winds, begirt with hills. noted authority on the subject, deto the west clares that the name is derived from Let him free But entrance grant the British word seider or the Greek Without this necessary care, In vain He hopes an apple vintage, and Invokes sicera, but a wide gulf doubtless sepa- Pomonas aid in vain. rated the rough but potent liquor made In England, in the valley of the by the untutored contemporaries of Boadicea from the more palatable out- Clysts, cider Is made than ranks with put of the horsemills for apple grind- wine. One ciderist has a huge press which ing, introduced into England during American hydraulic the reign of Henry II. by the pious crushes hundreds of tons of the finest Benedictines of St. Mary of Monte vintage apples. --Augustine . fancy braid and stitching, tight fitting buttoned and cape effect on shoulder, skirt box pleated stitohed and fancy panel front. First Rate Turkey Croquettes. Chop the fragments of turkey with meats, very fine, any other left-ovfor seasoning a small portion adding of bologna, ham or tongue, together with a bit of onion, salt, pepper and parsley to suit the taste of the family; er guipure, bordered with a band ot rutiles of the silk. The puffed sleeves are finished elbows with ruffles oi the material. The girdle Is of velvet. at-th- Opal Dandelions Now. hair ornament of wonderful beauty is In the form of a dandelioa seed ball. Each seed Is a small, white opal, set upon a slender silver wire. The workmanship of this delicate thing Is beyond reproach, as the slightest touch or breath of air will A set it all aquiver. Another ornament is in the shape of a dragon fly. The body is one mass of brilliant gems. A great ruby is set into the head and the eyes are of opals. But all this solidity is lost when it comes to the wings, which are fashioned of a special metal, drawn to the fineness of a thread, and then woven with faithful accuracy to the structure of a natural wing. The effect Is beyond description. At last some genius, at loss for new Ideas, has utilized the wild carrot In hair ornaments. An example Is one flower, the representing the center of a solid mass of opals, the surrounding circles being of white enamel. The entire flower is worked out in detail, and diamonds furtbej separate the natural divisions of the bloom. full-blow- n Coat for Young Girl. A charming little coat for the cut from dark is girl red frieze, In the box style, with double-breaste- d front. The sleeves are bell and flare broadly at the wrists, and for very cold weather an undersleeve can be inserted from the elbow. The collar is high and turns over, monks hood falls from under it, lined with rich red silk. The only trimmings are stitching and large twelve-year-ol- d -- burnt pearl buttons. Velvet and Fur. Brown velvet and fur make a pretty and useful dress. The girdle Is gold cloth, and gold braid is put on In a scroll pattern either side of the front and as a heading to the flounce on the skirt. The sleeves are caught below the elbows with a fur cuff and frills of lace are above and below. To Clean OH Cloth. To clean oil cloth or linoleum nicely, do not wash it more than absolutely necessary. Wipe It over every morning with a cloth saturated 1 paraffin once a fortnight e |