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Show FCUND THE REASON. CORWIN owft BovS Military Suit Both Stylish and Useful Fancy Waist to Be Made With or Without' Fancy Bolero-So- me Recipes of Value. or ground hanllv of the tailor-maddor of things, yet not quite a reception toilet. e A Guide to the Height of Heels. Thera are four different heights, with ns many different names of llie military heel ulune. As a guttle to those who want to be right un the subject of heels, remember the following: Up to one ami Inches a heel la a military, up to one and inches it Is a Cuban, above that it la a Spanish heel. When It goes above two lnchi-- It la a Castilian. The French hods range from r to two inches one and usually and are called Louis XV. The Du Barry heel ruus from two to three Inches and quite a few women wear It. Shoe Retailer. niic-quart- flve-eight- one-quarte- Boy's Military Suit. Love of the military la Inherent In every normal boy'a composition, and clothes that suggest the soldier are sure to find their way to hla heart This very stylish little suit satisfies that ambition and well suited to dally wear. The model li made of dark blue serge, stitched with oortlcelll silk e and trimmed with braid and gold end la worn with a belt of braid tied at the left side, but a plain belt of the material or leather can be substi hut-ton- Wire Salad Baaket. A wire salad basket Is a very useful piece of kitchen furnlthre. It is a kettle-shapebasket with a small nck and a ball handle. After thoroughly washing the salad it is put In the basket and shaken until every drop of water has been shaken off. Then basket and all Is put near the Ice to crisp the leaves. Oil will nut cling to wel lettuce uud unless thn leaves are well coated with oil the dressing is a failure. New York Evening Post. A Mix plaster of parts with vinegar Instead of water and you will find It excellent to stop the cracka In the wall. Jars and bottles that smell of onions will be quite sweet and odorless If left out of doors filled with sand or garden mold. After rice or macaroni la cooked place in a colander and drain off the water, then quickly turn cold water through and you will find that the stickiness, which la so undesirable, will be prevented. To boll egga for Invalids, bring the water to the boll, then take the saucepan off the fire and place the egg In it for five minutes. This will cook the egg perfectly without rnakirg the white hard and Indigestible. It la also well to boll an egg Intended for a young child in this manner. Cold milk pudding can be used to form extremely nice dishes and, when tastefully arranged, will certainly disguise the fact that they are made up of ends which would often be waste fully thrown away, or eaten with distaste because so unappetising to all save the ravenously hungry. Useful Fruits. tuted it preferred, and mohair and Figs, dates and prunes are all timeether light weight woola are quite as much used as is the serge. ly at this season, and make valuable The suit consists of blouse and addition to the ordinary bill of fare. knickerbockers. The blouse la made Each of these fruits should be thorwith back, fronts and a center front oughly washed before using. If yon have never had graham gems that is applied over them and held by brass buttons. At the shoulders are with dates for breakfast, try this reIf 4t will not be called cipe sad ,. true jnlUUrx. straps and the aeek.is finished with the characteristic collar, for again: Beat the yolk of one egg while the sleeves ere plain and trim- with a half teaspoonful of salt until med to harmonise therewith. The lemon colored and thick. Add to this knickerbockers tit smoothly over the one cupful of milk, halt a cupful of hlpa, but the leg portions are drawn boiled rice, a cup and a half of graup by means of elastlca Inserted In ham flour and half a teaspoonful of the hems and bag becomingly over the melted butter. Beat the mixture until knees. At their upper edges are it ta bubbly. Then add carefully one-quart- waistbands by means of which they can be attached to any underwaist and pockets are inserted at the sides The where the closing Is made. blouse is dosed at the front, the center portion being buttoned over onto the right aide. The quantity of material required for the medium else (6 years) Is 1 yards 27 inches wide, 24 yards 44 incise wide or 2 yards 62 Inches wide.. Fancy Waist. Full waists worn with fancy boleros arc cxiri-mcland allow of many charming anil effective combinations. This one allows a full waist of liottci m!1 mull wilh slashed bolero of pule green uioussellne taffeta, which inatcbcM the skirt, but there are numlierli.'hK other materials that are equally desirable. Veilings are always pretty made with waists of either thin, soft silks or muslin and very nearly all the season's fabrics can be utilized. Thn yoke of lace with collar to match makes au attractive feature and Is finished wilh lace or other banding when the bolero Is not used. The waist Is made with a fitted lining on which the full fronts and back are arranged and Is closed Invisibly at, and on a line with the left edge of the yoke which is hooked over onto the left shoulder seam. The sleeves are wide and full finished with double frills, and can be made full length by using linings to the wrists and lacing the lower portions to form raffs. The lashed bolero Is cut In one piece and Is arranged over the waist, being The quantity of material required for the medium size Is, for waist 4)4 Joined to it at the lower edge beneath the full belt yards 21 Inches wide, yards 27 Inches wide or 2)4 yards. 44 Inches r lace; wide, with H yard of for bolero 1 yards 21 or 27 Inches wide or yards 44 Inches wide Short Sleeves and Gloves The fashion of short aleevea la, of course,, going to make gloves an Important and expensive item of the wardrobe. The wrinkled suede gloves will undoubtedly be worn, and the glovemakera are showing some novelties In the shape of long wrists embroidered with fine beads or silks, or Inset with lace. The latter are especially pretty. The short sleeves may also be given a little Impetus to the fashion of wearing lace mitts, which was tried last season with lit- cupful of chopped dates, one teaspoonful of baking powder, and the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs. Fold In, but do not stir. Fill buttered gem tins half full and bake In a slow oven. tle success. DOTTED NET AND LACE. n ear-torl- runs all criss-cros- s like and zig-zasaw teeth, and coinin' around three turns mare there was the cow and calf again. Says I: 'Old gal, you; I'll shoot you. But there wasn't no use doing that, fer she wasn't really Interferin wilh me. Then I went around a couple o' more turna, and there abe waa agin, still lowerin' her head and lookin wicked like. By gosh, old .gal, says 1, that'll do for you. You come to me, an' I'll settle you. But she didnt do no Interferin', ao I didn't either. So 1 went turn. to fishln' for an haur, and after I had Corwin promptly retorted that he caught two or three hundred 1 come knew many people had come to Ohio hark down stream, and darned if from Connecticut, but he had never there wasnt the calf all alone. It before known the reason for their seems the cow Vaunt after me, but coming. after my little dug, who was In the Russian Gamblers. iKiat, but who had swjmmed ashore while I was fishln. That moose cow The spirit of gambling seema ta followed the dog clean Into Peevy's dominate all classes in Russia. Re amp. and was eatin' cold oatmeal out cent official statistics show that more of a pot on the hearth when Peevy than 2,000,000 roubles (about 330 came along, and she was scared off. 000) are each year apent on playing-card- s Peevy was too surprised to shoot. In the land of the czar. Tho Anyways, he didnt have a gun." monopoly of the manufacture of play s belongs to the Czarltza Marla charitable Institutions, and aa Income of 1.700,000 (280,000) a year la produced, the coat of manufacture being only 300.000 roubles ( 50,000.) London Eugenie in Her Glory From an article by Clara Morris In the Bookloverx Magazine we dip the following description of the Empress Eugenie, the Empress of Sorrows, as Miss Morris quotes It from one who waa connected with the American legation when Eugenie was In the height of her glory and who was permitted to escort her to her carriage on the occasion: She was greatly addicted to wearing all the varying tones of lavender; but one shade of mauve a pinkish mauve she seemed passionately fond of. She wore It that day. The sun was shining brilliantly; the air seemed full of that suppressed excitement, peculiar to Paris. The empress gown was of a transparent stuff women call organdie' a white ground with a wonderfully natural looking flowef on IL Then tills thin flowered stuff waa worn over an under-sliof mauve silk there seemed to be yards and yards of it; It billowed all about her and fairly filled the open landau. Her slender little feet rested on a cushion, and they were gleaming In Mr. Albee'a Opinion. e, Alpine, Cal., June 6. Mr. T. M. our postmaster, has expressed aa opinion based on his own experience which will no doubt be of Interest to many. Mr. A! bee Is a man of few words, but bis well known truthfulness and uprightness of character adds much weight to any statement he makes. He says: The first box of Dodd's Kidney PlUe that I used convinced me of their good qualities and 1 used altogether four boxes with the very beat results. I can heartily recommend this remedy." This voluntary expression of opinion will doubtless find an echo In many homes in California for Dodd's Kidney Pills have been making some miraculous cures in this state. From the evidence already publish- ed it seems safo to conclude that thin medicine will be found to be a perfect cure for rheumatism, urinary trouble, backache and any and every form or symptom of kidney complalnL Al-be- mauve ailk and open sandals of black satin. From the vague, rosy purple maae of drapery the cleqr lines of her stately body rose; round waist, superb shoulders, queenly head, the pale blonde hair crowned with a bonnet composed entirely of violets, a great bunch of violets upon her breast; and over all a tent-lik- e sun shade of mauve satin, flounced all over with white lace, lined with white silk; while cunningly between mauve-outsid- e and whlte-lnsld- e was stretched a pink silk Inner lining, so that when the sunlight struck fairly upon the parasol an evanescent pearly-pintint fell upon the fair face beneath it And when the great open landau rolled swiftly toward the Bols, It was as If the carriage was full, filled with the plumy extravagance of s the lilacs bloom the poignant of vloleta massed beneath the loosely petaled opulence of the purpled fleur de luce! From thla tremendous mass of perfumed bloom her lovely face smiled forth, as though the prodigality of spring had been personified in her. k per-fum- Colonel's Unique Collection. An Austrian colonel has just dle'd, leaving to the Army museum, Vienna a collection of 60,000 papier-mach- e soldiers In the unforma of most ai miea, past and present. Ocean as Motive Power e A writer In the Parle Revne dee Deux Mondes, M. Gaston Cadoux, has drawn a fancy picture of that happy time when London, Paris and Berlin will be lighted and warmed by electric energy derived from the sea. In those economic days, sea mills will skirt the shore; they will convert the rise and fall of the tides into electricity, which wires will conduct to the capital cities to do work, to Illuminate and to warm. No more miners, we may suppose, pursuing their dangerous vocations under ground, and to more gas lights polluting the air we breathe, London fogs will and smoke-ladehave ceased forever. Aa the moon does In a single tide, on bnt a short stretch of coast line, more work than all our steam engines, here la a limitless anpply of energy. The Idea la charming, cot the least delightful part of it being the satisfaction of yoking the old satellite to our machinery and making her run our trains and drive our factories! Hitherto the least available natural source of electricity has been the aea. n fancy for a woman of medium size will be and required C yards of materia! IS. 6 greatly liked. The blouse Is full at yards 111 or 2s yards 44 inches wide, both upper and lower edges and Is with 4 yard of lace for yoke, made over a fitted foundation, be- 2 yards of lace for frills and S yards tween which and thn net is p.n Inter of silk for the full belt by all-ov- aa they raanot reach me file local application, " " ' Tibare la only too way to ranln. Engineers What la the longest word In the to atworld? I am not rash answer that to question, said tempt a well-know- n author. There la a certain Welsh name of a place which reaches me every now and then, and which I have printed more than once, which ! sufficiently formidable. I believe that the patient and serious German! have turned out some verbal monatera, and It may be that the Chinese, the Russian and other races with whose literature I am unacquainted have produced series of linked letters long drawn out which are called words. So I carefully abstain from saying wbat la the longest word In the world. But 1 think I may venture to suggest that there arc not many words longer than one whii-- may be found in Liddell and Scott's Greek lexicon. Here la the modest trifle: - - - at Twilight. Eight thousand men nre required to light the city of New York for twenty-fou- r hours. The result of their work la beat seen In the gloaming. Lower New York between 6 and 6 o'clock In the afternoon of a business day puts DmfnrH la rau-e- d Ilf an Inflamed condition uf Ibo Biueoua llnlni: id ilia Kiuurblin tube. When tbia tab la liiflaiiird pc have a ruiiilulnx anund or Im- e hoarluir.aad at ben li la entirely ckmd, perfect the Inflammation can bn la the raaun.atid find more difficulties In Ueaf-steii- nulr,a In Ita normal conditaken out nnd ihli tutu be deatmyrd fmerer; nine tion, hr arias will caa-ot d out of ten am liy aiarrb. which In nothing but an Inflamed cumllilon of the niiinnaaurfnoea. Wr will itlre tine llumlml IMIar. tor any cars of Deafnem (earned liy catarrh that i ;innoi ho cured end fur Imilara. free. by Uati'lCaUIih Cure. Toledo, O. I. J. CIIKNKY the way than occur to dreamers. Lord tun Kelvin showed, years ago, says the London Telegraph, how hard it would be to get any power economically out of the rise and fall of the tides on the seashore. Ten, or in some cases a hundred, times as much might be done with a tidal river. The rise and fall of the tides between Gravesend and London would represent an enormous amount of power; but It ao happens that the Thames Is required for other purposes. Mr. Sutherland, In that Ingenious work Twentieth Century Inventions,'' calculates that the waves of the sea would yield in a few second! as much power as a tidal force elevating and depressing the water level, say, eight feet, would do In as as many'hours. The Infant born yesterday will be a very old man before he sees London lighted and warmed, to say nothing of other little requirements fulfilled by the power of marine tides, or currents or waves. three-and-twent- Word Is a Mouthful New York stitches are equally fashionable Deafness Cannot Be Cured V nmatliuti-aa- l elltokatakccliumniokirl.lcplkossuphopLatfoperisteralektruunoptcgkphaloklg- bum! lug Tit-Rlt- narrow-strappe- lelpranodriniHpoirlinmnt'-ilpl.loparnum- - of I didn't Interfere with her. Bartlett'es Brook, you know, with me, so Now, lug-card- Lepadotemacliosrli'.chogaleokranlo- strips Simple all-ove- lace-trimme- o Uncle Ned Abercrombie, a noted Maine guide, who comes from the Rangeley lakes, told the following story while in Boston recently: "Did you ever hear about me and the moose cow and calf? I was up to Ieevy's camp at Moose lake Moostlick. we call It and one day went down the river to the dam to git a canoe. 1 wore fetchiu' It up, and Just as I were goln to beach to git out of the way of some men gain' down to mend the dam, right there on the shore stood a moose cow and a calf. She lowered her head like she wanted to charge and defend her calf. Says 1 to her: Old gal, youve got a nice bossy and you got the longest beard I ever saw on a cow, but you ain't Interferin with me, and I ain't goln to Interfere with you. Then 1 started up Rartlett's Brook with the canoe, and cornin around a curve there was the cow and the calf again. Says 1. Old gal. I'll give you all you want with my gun If you toiler me any more. "But the wasnt Interferin much p No waists of the season are more lining of chiffon, hnt the fitted founda-tlo' Is optional and can be used or charming and attractive than those made of the many pretty nets In soft not as may be liked. The broad cream and champagne tones. This shoulder line of the yoke is eminently Irish Crochet Coat. one Is slipply dotted and Is combined graceful and the full sleeves, with A white Irish crochet coat Is exceedwith a yoke of heavy lace which their ample frills, fall over the hands In made with a smart ingly style deep makes an admirable contrast but most becomingly. To make the waist collar of white linen, trimmed with medallions of the lace, and haring the lace sleeve made with turn-haccuffs of the linen and also finished with d A undcrsleeves. fluffy coat of this style should be worn with a linen skirt trimmed with lace Insets. It would also look well with a skirt of white mohair, with the soft, silky finish. But then the cuffs and collar of the coat should hnve white silk substituted for the linen. It Is quite the smart fad of the day when wearing a lace coat to hare the With the Irish hat made to match. crochet lace coat a while pleture hat la good style with Jhc flaring brim faced with the conrso lace, and an ostrich feather caught through the brim and drooping over the hair at the left side. If the wearer feele that a touch of color will make the hat more distinctive It may have the crown a mass of green leaves or formed entirely of pansies, forget-me-not-s or blue hyacinth blossoms. Paris Facts and Fashions. In Paris they are wearing ths basque again; the Jaunty little short ooat always finds favor with Parisians. In brown, black or gray suede, with silver or brass buttons, this Is about the smartest specimen of art we can have, worn with a cloth skirt of the same shade, strap-pe- c with suede. Fuede is beyond the price of the average amateur, which is fortunate, for it Is a fabric which ctin only he successfully manipulated by oxrtrt. Then, again. In Paris the tweeds, plaids, plain cloths and serges are cut with a short, full bolero nnd cape-liksleeves, and worn with a wide kid hand. Corduroy dl.l not have a very long The frocks. run among tailor-inadvelveteen which boasts a mirrored effect and narrow stripes Is much smarter. A good many of these have been made with a regulation bodice anil a skirt which Just cleared the Explanation for Emigration from Connecticut This story la told of tho famous Tom Corwin: During hla first term In the Ohio House of Representatives, about the year 1823, a bill to atop tho whipping of criminals was under discussion. Corwin, a native of Kentucky, ardently advocated the repeal A member of the of the old law. House who had come from Connecticut. was active on the opposite sldei He urgpd the retention of whipping aa a punishment, and asserted aa a strong point In favor of his contention that he had noticed, while living in Connecticut, that whenever a man waa whipped, in execution of the sentence of a court of justice, he immediately left the state and did not re- Old Unde Neds Moose Y Bold Dm,'-'1-!- tilt, :r- -- -. Etiquette of Turf Colors. A curious usage of the turf is one which ordains that, when once worn, the cap and jacket representing a patrons "colors become the property of the Jockey. If, as frequently happens the owner wishes to retain them ns a memento of a successful race, he mnat buy them from the employe to whom, perhaps, he gave them but nn hour or two before. Pino's Pure la the best medicine we ever need for nil affections of the throat nnd hunts. We. Q, Szisui, Vanburen, lnd.. Pub. 10, IMS Fishermens Schools. now in Belgium four Instruction of fisherschools for men. Tin; pupil arc taught how to read weather charts, how lo make the best use of currents, what the bottom of the sea is like, how to make their own nets, liow to manage a boat in s storm, how to use the latest Inventions in the line of fishing apparatus, etc. There are about 2.10 pupils now There arc il-.- J oklopelelolagooslraiobaletraganopteru- by Tnka Hall'a Family I'llla fur cumnlpatlon. these In schools. hire. Wlnalnw'a Soothing Syrup. For rhlldrea C'rUiliiy, aoftrna the puma, rrducca tar SammaUun, allaj a pain, turn wind lullu. Seabocuc. - gon. 1 hope I have copied it correctly, but there may be a slip here and there, and life is not long enough to write it out twice, and the good printer. In whom I have the utmost confidence, may be excused if he stumbles now and then. In English It ought to have 177 letters there or thereabouts. In its original Greek form the let tera would not be quite ao numerous, as ch. pa and 'ph' are represented by one letter. The word la used by Aristophanes, who was a comedian, and who therefore must have hla little Joke, and some of his little Jokes, by tho way, are not quite nice. As to Its meaning, the learned lexicographers state that It Is 'the name of a dish compounded of all kinds of dainties, fish, flesh, fowl and sauces.' "It would look well on a menu and I should like to hear a badgered waiter trying to shout It down a tube or a gentleman who ha already dined fairly well bawling It out toward the end of the banquet here Kissing Is Unknown. It has long been known to ethnol- ogists that among many primitive tribes and races the practice of kissing was unknown. Among the Lappa and the Maoris, rubbing of noses oc- cupied Its place. Tho average natlva of Japan, a country which promises to take so Important a place in the making of future history, still knows nothing of the practice of kissing. Demand the Utah Hand Made Horae O .aV' ( rm; 35 3 Collar from your dealer Superior to. the machine made You will never have trouiil- - with erne hold 1 SALT LAKE PHOTO SUPPLY CO. . long-sufferin- g on its purple and diamonds. No city ever wore surh diamonds or so many of them before. The silhouetted towers blaze with electric Are, while In all directions, over bridge and terry and elevated road, radiate trailing lines of light Kxi S1t l.r-tir- c l,kdrraki( Drain WMITU Sko ! south j 1 salt lake citv ALFALFA SEED BAILEY j ! SOS CATALOSUU nd main, 01 E. bent A SONS South SI., Salt Lake Cltj are headquarters for the beat quality Alfalfa Korda; uImi Uraaa usd Harden bauds, Orula Rot. ale. In coed bualuuau 40 yuan. MaN ore on girua ipuolal allualioe. |