The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, June 17, 1906, PART FOUR, Page 42, Image 42

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    mMW ' IliiiiillC jililiitf .AMI? 7f Mpl fi
KVKR overload little ones with
too many clothes in Summer,"
say doctors. "Keep them' coo!.
The shops offer every .maunex of flimsy
fabric for making up. the little garments
with which to keep the children cool, and
all manner of ready-made garments are
Khown in the same shops, all the way
from a complete layette, varyina; in price
from a trille over iM o something over a
thousand each, to clothing worn by girls
and hoys until they cast aside childish
things forever.
Clothing is so cheap that It hardly
pays to make tip the little frocks and
underwear for the babies unless one
really has the time. When time is no
consideration It more than pays to make
the things at home. Better materials
ran ' be had for the same amount of
money and often for lews insuring bet
ter wear and better looks. Then, too,
the garments made at home are fitted
to the child and have the charm of per
fect fit often, but not always, secured
In ready-made clothing.
The babies will want a number of sim
ple nainsook and dimity slips for morn
ing wear, with just a bit of fine needle
work around the neck and sleeves and
a hand-made hem. In the afternoon finer
grades of the same materials with sheer
linen lawns make tin charming infants'
Th
e lvionev rroDiems or tne
No. 3 W ise K.-tpenditure for Summer Clodies; Fabrics for Hot Weather
NO ONE is as insistently confronted
by tho problem of how to dress well
upon next to nothing a year as is
the woman who goes out to business.
"Whether she be old or young, it becomes
nece.ssary for her to dress -becomingly,
suitably and inexpensively. She has no
time to sew and furbish up things for
herself save such time as she may steal
from needed hours of rest and relaxa
tion. In the ease of an elderly woman the
matter is simplified. She may dress in
conspicuously in black and seldom get a
new gown and little notice will be paid to
her if lier gown Is well made and neat.
The young woman, however, must dress
well or she will be talked about dispar
agingly by other girls and, perhaps, by
young men whom she seeks to please by
Iter dress. She wants to enjoy the pleas
ures of social life and she likes to look
well snd feels unhappy If she can not do
so. She hasn't time to search from shop
to shop for those things which her lim
ited income may buy, yet she must have
them.
One of the most sensible dresses that a.l
"business woman can get in Summer is a
dark blue lawn or muslin of some kind.
They appear with various sizes of dots
and figures and vary In price from 5
cents to 12 cents a yard. They are cool,
inconspicuous, do not get soiled and are
Invariably neat and becoming. A girl
who paid To cents for such a dress was
admired wherever she went. Men and
women thought her gown must have cost
a good deal because it was so dainty and
becoming. She trimmed the yoke with a
little narrow lace Inserting, sewed rows
of It around the bottom of her sleeve, al
ternating with groups of small tucks, and
trimmed the bottom of her skirt with
more rows of inserting, put on in a wavy
pattern above two narrow frills of the
material, one of which edged the dress.
,The lace was bought in a bunch, the
hunches selling from 25 to 35 cents each,
and Just enough was used to lighten the
dress without making it appear conspicu
ous. A little lace around the top of the
collar, aud a white and dark blue hat
complete a costume which was always
smart looking, because well made and be
coming. Dark blue lawn; selected with discre
tion, always looks much more expensive
than it really is. This makes a good
business shit for hot days, and the waist
may be made a mere framework worn
over a thin white shirtwaist, if one wants
to look "dressed up."
For cooler days and bad weather the
business woman will find a suit of bril
liantine. siclllienne, mohair, or alpaca
all about the same thing under different
names extremely useful. Alpaca usually
has a smoother surface and it sheds dust
and water with equal Impartiality. It Is
a cheap, yet nice looking fabric, and
makes up into charming pleated sRirts
as well as the gored skirts with seams
stitched on the outside a little way in
from the edges. Circular skirts should
be avoided by the business woman. They
always sag and require the constant at
tention of a dressmaker to keep them
even around the bottom.
Alpaca and its kindred fabrics do not
mkj up well into all sorts of blouses.
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V V J SSfninh.pCh VSV i" -rTe.r vis.tin, ad afternoon wear the V j v
7k. V 1 I orate the style and arransemem of trim- "ttie ladles Iook very sweet In frocks 1IUV J ytft' ' '
W Q1B0HK: 9 I mmn i M nimnte that nw t not struck of white lawn, nainsook, cambric and Jir - -f , V. WWl
dresses, trimmed with groups of tiny
tucks ' and insertings of delicate wash
able lace. Medallions of very fine swiss
or batiste embroidery set in the fronts
or down each side the fronts of infants'
dresses add much to their beauty. They
should be bordered with narrow insert
ing or with fine feather-stitchinjr or herring-boning.
Dresses made in this style
and of these materials may be worn by
a child of from three weeks to three
years of age.
Another and more general s.tyl-5 of
dress for children varying In age from
'-' to 12 years is the attached waist and
skirt. It is made very long walsted, the
belt of the dress coming to the hips
In dresses for very little children, and at
the waist line for older ones. This style
of dress is very easily made. It requires
tucks at the shoulders, both in tho back
and front, or else a yoke. If the dres is
The smart, cool Summer waist should
be Just a low bottom of a waist, reach
ing as far as the bust and cut In an ir
regular shape at the top in the way
most becoming to the wearer. It should
be trimmed around the top and have side
pieces, like wide and daintily shaped sus
penders, trimmed to match the top of the
dress, and with bits of trimmed pieces
for sleeves hanging from the shoulder.
This, attached to a trimmed belt, makes
a cool and dainty waist to wear over a
white shirtwaist. "With this dress should
be a coat reaching to the waist and with
coat sleeves reaching to the wrist. Both
coat and bodice might be trimmed with
stitched bias folds of the material and
buttons to match it in color. The coat
should button high up the front. Such
coats can be smartly made and serve ad
mirably in wet weather as a protection
against rain as well as being Just the
thing for. cool Summer days.
If the cost of laundering shirtwaists is
a consideration, a bodice of the dress ma
terial may be made partly fitting, with
short sieves and a square or round neck.
It might be finished off with piped panels
of the material In front, and trimmed
with buttons there and on the sleeves.
This would only require a bit of lace in
the neck and bare arms or lace sleeve
lets. These may be washed at home and
patted out with the hands if one does not
care to iron them. .A dress like this will
be serviceable from early Spring till late
in the Autumn and would do for a "Win
ter house dress as well.
Black is the best color for such a gown,
since it may then be worn with various
coats and waists, but next to black, dark
blues, greens, grays and browns are
pretty in these materials. Gray is not as
good as the other colors named.
A belt of leather, or of the dress mate
rial, or of silk, may be worn with a sin
gle frame buckle of brass or silver. These
two costumes would serve a girl through
all the warm months of the year for
business, but she will need a dress to
wear to the theater and to attend dances
and dinners in, since recreation la an ab
solute necessity to the woman who works.
Foulard makes a most admirable theater
and going-out gown. It is more dressy
than pongee, never crushes, is suitable for
many occasions, and wears admirably. It
can be worn Summer and Winter and
happens. Just now. to be in high favor.
Very pretty satin foulards can be had for
60 cents a yard, and there are cheaper
varieties. The material is wide and stands
cleaning, and even washing.
Have the skirt made simply, so that
change of style will not affect its smart
appearance, . and have the bodice made
quite prettily, with lace In the neck and
cuffs and perhaps a bit upon the bodice,
although that is by no means necessary.
It may have the neck and sleeve, bot
toms so constructed that they may be
taken out, and a simple edging of lace
upon a short sleeve and slightly open
neck will make the dress suitable for an
informal dinner or evenings in a hotel
at some resort.
A foulard gown will cost about $6 for
the material, and there are plenty of
good dressmakers who sew for $2 a day
and can make up such a gown in two
days. Some can almost make it in one
."HE SUNDAY
for best wear the tucks should be narrow
and interspersed with lace or enibroldory
inserting.
Simplicity is the keynote of smart
dressing in children and even where the
workmanship upon a dress is very elab
orate the style and arrangement of trim
mings is so simple .that one is not struck
by any effect of overdress and merely
admires the dainty finish of the dress. 1
Many mothers make for children of
from 6 to 13 years of age and sometimes
for older girls, as well little shirtwa:sts
which have dainty yokes and deep cuffs
of lace, or lingeries or fine embroidery.
The rest of the waist is perfectly plain
and straight. Over these is slipped a
little dress cut low In the neck and made
with short sleeves. The dress may be of
plain pique, linen, pongee, voile or even
calico, but the dainty guimpe ami neatly
finisihed white sleeves give a pretty
touch to the dress and save it many a
laundering, since a child always soils the
neck and sleeves of a dress first. The
little white guimpe may be worn with
any sort of dress. Sometimes it has no
trimming beyond a few tucks ana an
edge of lace In the neck and cuffs.
For morning and school wear little
ginghams and linens are the nicest
things possible. Pique is good, except
for really hot days, and simple mus
lins are excellent all Summer.
It is smart to make a deep hem upon
Ljirl in Dusmess
That Give a Becoming Kffect.
day and leave the finishing touches to
the business woman to put in at night.
Veilings and nets are popular for gowns
of this kind, but they are not practical.
Veiling soils quickly and requires expen
sive cleaning, and It also crushes. Net
crushes, tears and never wears well.
For dances several kinds of gowns sug
gest themselves. Very delicate organ
dies make up charmingly for simple even
ing wear, and may be worn over slips of
the cheapest cambric, instead of silk,
without betraying the difference. At
tractive sashes or silk belts can be made
of good silk or satin, dainty slippers
and gloves may.be added, and the whole
outfit come to a mere trifle.
Organdies cost from 12 to 25 cents a yard
for very pretty qualities. This is a price
at which more expensive qualities may be
purchased if one only takes the trouble to
look over bargain sales. Gowns do not
require as much material this season as
they did last, and such an evening gown,
with its trimmings of Valenciennes lace,
will cost very little.
The business woman who can afford a
more elaborate evening gown than organ
die will find figured lace net of good qual
ity very useful, or one of the liberty sat
ins, or voile or crepe de chine. The latter
fabric is associated with afternoon and
house gowns, so that it Is not easy to
make up a really -smart-looking evening
gown of crepe de chine. The other mate
rials make up well, however, and clean
and wear well. The net must be of good
quality, and either white or cream color.
It should be hung up, since net is apt to
crush in folding, and great care must al
ways be taken of a net gown in order to
preserve its freshness.
Liberty satin can actually be washed
and ironed at home without showing any
ill effects from such treatment, so that
it makes a very durable gown where one
wants something that will wear a long
time, stand making over, and, eventually,
dyeing.
Pongees also recommend themselves
to the business woman, because they
may be made so prettily, and also so
simply. They wash and wear well, and
are cool and light. Pongees serve all
sorts of purposes, according to the color
of the gown and for other silk gowns
and voiles pongee makes up into the most
useful possible separate coats.
The business woman who owns a smart
afternoon gown of light wool, silk or
crepe de chine is confronted by the prob
lem of requiring shoes the color of her
gown. This is an extravagance which
few can afford. It is possible, however,
to have spats made Of pieces of the dress,
and these may be worn with black or
white slippers and serve as dressy-looking
footwear.
As to stockings, lisle thread hose wear
well and are cooler than any other sort.
Nice qualities of lisle thread look about
as well as silk, and in simple colors,
worn inconspicuously, they will do for
any gown.
Neckwear is so important a considera
tion with the business woman that she
cannot pay too much attention to it.
There are many tempting displays of
neckwear, and the wise woman will se
lect lace of a washable kind, for she
knows that she can always launder lace,
while embroidery requires more attention
than she can give it.
A narrow edge of white net. pleated
or laid in a fold at the tops of stocks,
OKEGOXIAX, PORTLAND,
the little skirt and sometimes to fin
ish the hem with fancy stitches, if the
material is of a nice quality and the
dress is white or light in color.
Kor visiting and afternoon wear the
little ladies look very sweet in frocks
of white lawn, nainsook, cambric and
soft, sheer linens. The skirts may be
pleated, box-pleated or gathered to a
narrow waistband of beading, through
Which ribbon mayrbe run. If . desired.
The bottom of the skirt is smart if
embroidered by hand in some delicate
trailing flower design ending in scal
lops at the bottom. The scallops show
beneath them a frill of lace.
Another fetching method of trim
ming little skirts is to form small
panels around the bottom by Inserting
lace in regular lines at the sides of the
panels and with pointed or scalloped
effects at the bottom. If a bit of em
broidery is made in the middle of each
panel so much the better. At the bot
tom of the skirt a lace ruffle should
finish the hem.
Vf ry simple ways of trimming
dressy skirts is to Insert rows of lace
above a hem or ruffle, or else to make
the entire skirt of a wide piece of
embroidered flouncing. In this case
the flounce around the shoulders of trhe
yokes should be of the same flouncing,
cut narrower, of course. It is still
prettier If the flouncing is shaped so
will keep them clean for some time, since
the net may be replaced, and lace edges
are saved in this manner.. It Is quite
smart to wear narrow folds of net or
chiffon above the edges of stocks.
Narrow tabs and butterfly ends, as well
as shaped tabs of lace, are all smart
methods of finishing off lace stocks. It
will be found necessary, also, to sew lit
tle upright bones in them in order to keep
them neat. ,
Stocks made of two kinds of lace a;e
smart, and bits of left over lace may be
utilized in this manner.
If a dainty piece of neckwear is needed
a boa may be made of knotted loops of
ribbon sewed all over a wide strip of
lined satin just long enough to pass
around the neck. This kind of boa will
wear better than any other sort, and will
always look pretty. It may be made of
cheap ribbon and furnish pleasant em
ployment for an evening at home.
The working woman's gloves are a con
sideration. She will find black and white
lisle thread or silk the best for Summer
wear, but she will need to keep them
forever mended and washed in order to
have her hands look always neat and at
tractive. Plain gloves are always in
better taste than fancy ones.
A woman's Winter garments should be
of good material, and so she should con
sider how she may save upon her Sum
mer wardrobe, which need never be of
expensive materials In order to look well.
By, selecting materials with judgment, a
business woman may procure a number
of thin Summer dresses. But cleaning
should be considered before any are made
up, since upon their freshness depends
their beauty.
"The Xantucket Sleighride."
New England Magazine.
For the young American of means, who
has sporting blood in his veins and longs
to try a new and novel form of hunting,
there is a great chance now to engage in
one of the oldest forms of big game hunt
ing known, and in a field which has not
been fittingly exploited by .the amateur.
To the man who has exhausted even the
delight of the 60-mile-an-hour automo
bile, there is an unlimited field. The
chances are if he once gets an opportu
nity to taste the unbridled and terrific
pleasure of a "Nantucket sleigh ride,"
he will view his auto machine as a tame
thing ever afterward. The Nantucket
sleigh ride is so common an experience
with whalers that they are prone to
speak of it in disappointing, matter-of-fact
language. Bui, for all that, there
isn't an old whaler of them all whose
nostrils will not dilate with zest when
he thinks upon It, and the landsman who
ever has had the rare fortune to experi
ence one is not likely to find anything
else in all the rest of his life that will
not seem tame compared with It. Few
landsmen ever have the opportunity.
When a while-boat lowers to fight a 60
foot whale,, the business is too Important
to encumber the craft with unskilled pas
sengers. And not many landsmen would
really care to go, even if they could,
when they behold, wallowing in the sea,
the huge thing that is to be attacked, ,
Remembered the Date.
Chicago Tribune.
Striking Coincidence Mr. Gotsum
Maria, how long has that young Smooth
ley been coming here to see Nellie?
Mrs. Gotsum Let me see. Tou remem
ber when the papers published that story
about your having sold a gold mine for
half a million? Yes? Well, as nearly
as I recall it, that's the time when he be
gan coming.
sort, sheer linens. l nc sKtrts may oe lilts .r ; N. . - ' sr "S i llll 1
JUNE 17, 1906.
as to bo' quite deep In front and back
and narrower over the top of tho
sleeves and around the shoulder. Square
drapery, like little boleros, may also
be fashioned out of this wide flounc
ing around the blouse -of a child's
dress. In any case It is always pretty
to have lace in the neck.
When the H oneymoon
IT IS never agreeable, and it is often
painful, to be brought suddenly
down from the seventh heaven of ecs
tatic bliss to the sordid level of this
prosaic old earth. Thus the return
from a wedding journey sometimes
marks the beginning of a tragedy
whose climax is the annihilation of
love.
In any event it draws the dividing
line between poetry and prose. But
alas for the newly mated husband and
wife who lay aside their rose-colored
glasses for good and all when they
come face to face with the stern reali
ties! The honeymoon trip may be nec
essarily brief, but the honeymoon
should end only with life Itself.
It is not until the "ice cream and
cake and kisses" part of the matri
monial programme is over that tne
newly married pair begin to see each
other through, clear, unprejudiced eyes.
For the furtherance of his nefarious
schemes Cupid throws a strange glamor
over his victims when first he ensnares
them. But once they are married he
turns his attention to fresher game
and concerns himself with them no
further. So sooner or later the spell
of his enchantment Is broken.
It is when the inevitable moment of
awakening comes that the measure of
the awakened is taken for all time. If
love be strong enough to stand the
sharp test of disillusion and still re
main steadfast, and true, there is little
to fear Tor the future.
The world was, on the whole, a hap
pier world before it acquired the wed
ding trip habit; when the young people
went straight from the altar to the
peaceful seclusion of their own roof
tree and began their married life In
the genial atmosphere of borne and the
sweet spirit of mutual helpfulness.
There were not so many frills about
getting married in those times, either.
Nowadays much of the sacred signifi
cance' of marriage is lost in the fuss
and worry of preparation. A vast
amount of money and vital energy are
frittered away in meaningless display,
and the newly wedded pair are hustled
oft immediately after the ceremony to
begin their life together amid unfa
miliar scenes, and with nervous sys
tems quivering on the brink of abso
lute wreck. '
Wrhen they finally return to take up
the routine of ordinary life fortunate
if they have not meanwhile bored each
other almost to extinction it is gen
erally to find themselves marooned on
a desert island of brand new f urnitUTe
and hopelessly useless wedding pres
ents. There is not a redeeming taint
of faultlness anywhere to relieve the
deadly monotony of glossy veneer and
silken upholstery.
During their brief absence the bride's
over-anxious mamma has thoughtfully,
if also unwisely, provided for all pos
sible and impossible contingencies in
the way of housekeeping. The house
or flat is as clean and fresh and dainty
as expert bands and loving thought
could make it. Indeed., its glaring fault
Is that it is too fresh and clean and
dainty.
Moreover, its air of absolute newness
scw&2v?v'r
A simple and "easy way In which to
make a dress for a child of almost any
age is to-run two or three rows of
Valenciennes inserting around the
lower part of a lawn skirt above a
deep hem. Run similar, rows around a
plain blouse and make a flounce of this
sort for the shoulders. Gather the top
and completeness is distinctly irritat
ing, for it makes It perfectly manifest
to the owners that there Is nothing
whatever in It for them to do.
All of which is essentially and griev
ously wrong, for idleness is inevitably
a breeder of discontent. A siege of
housecleanlng and "getting to rights,"
with the turtle doves roughing it for
a while like ordinary mortals, is just
the thing to bridge over the gulf that
yawns between the romantic past and
the prosaic future.
There Is nothing like the mutual in
Cost of New TubD rapenes
IN THE new washablo table covers and
house draperies a note has been struck
which phould bring joy to the heart of
the woman of aesthetic tastes and slen
der means. Nothing could be more at
tractive to the eye or more suitable for
general Summer use In town or country
than the table, lounge and pillow covers
of heavy Austrian cretonne, showing
large and striking designs printed in vivid,
red, quaint Dutch blue or a charming
olive green on a pure white ground. For
the Summer dining-room they are precise
ly what Is needed to impart the desired
air of combined coolness ' and comfort
which Is bo often lacking.
These goods, which are warranted fast
color and will stand almost any amount of
ordinary wear and tear, are to be obtained
at a price which practically places them
within the reach of all. A table cover
two and a half yards square costs about
$2.50. while a tea table cover which is
somewhat smaller and is stamped in an
appropriate Japanese pattern in red and
blue costs rather less. Lounge covers
come at $3.75, and pillow cases of average
size at 4S cents.
Full length window hangings to match
these being equally suitable for portieres,
may be purchased at $3.75 a pair. As all
of these articles will, with ordinary care
and proper laundering, last two or three
seasons, they cannot reasonably be con
sidered in the light of extravagance. At
the prices quoted, however, the goods
must be hemmed or otherwise ' finished
at home. -
Pure linen covers of heavy grade, print
ed in less flaring colors on an ecru ground
and carefully finished in every detail, ere
more expensive, but also more distinctly
artistic.
The designs In these specimens are va
ried, showing in some the conventional
ized fruit and flowers of the pre-Raphael.
ite school of art, and in others the small
arabesques and geometrical figures seen
on an old-time sampler.
Taffeta cretonne, mercerized taffeta and
carnation cloth are new washable fabrics
designed exclusively for drapery purposes,
end all are extremely handsome, the silky
finish giving to the surface a luster and
richness which are highly effective. Por
tieres of these materials are made chiefly
in cream white or the art shades, among
the latter the popular Alice blue and
reseda predominating. In some instances
they are printed In a conventional all
over design, but the choicer specimens
are made of the plain material with bor
of the flounce several times so that it
may lay flat, like a round-cut yoke.
ow around the neck. The rest of tue
flounce should hang loosely, forming
a fancy finish to the top of the dress.
Kdge the neck with a frill of lace
and finish short sleeves with a lace
frill below an inserting of the same
sort of lace. This style of dress is
very cool and may be worn without a
guimpe on hot days.
Pongee dresses are pretty and use
ful for little folk and the skirts are
seldom trimmed at all, unless by some
fancy stitching above the hem. The
blouse), on the contrary, are trimmed
with drawnwork, lace and little gal- '
loons, both inserted and applied, and
the sleeves and belt make up in elab
oration for any plainness in the skirts.
Shoes and stockings should match pon
gee dresses, both in colored and white
vai leties. Tongees wash well and wear
well, but nothing ever looks quite as
sweet upon a child or feels as cool as
a tub dress of some thin Summer
fabric.
Little coats of pique or linen,
trimmed to match the lace on little
white dresses, are smart and useful
for the child, and the thicker white
coats may be braided In some attrac
tive design. Pongee coats are smart
with pongee dresses and should al
ways be provided where the climate is
as changeable as ours.
Sashes have come Into style for little
folk, but they are intended for even
ing wear. Day belts are very simple,
being mostly of white or black glossy
leather, while most drtsses merely
have i narrow belt braided or feather
stitched, or else a strip of embroidery
or lace beading.
KATHARINE ANDERSON.
Trip Is Over
terest In pails and scrubbing brushes,
in the opening of packing cases and
the hanging of pictures, in the laying
down of carpets and the putting up
of curtains, for successfully starting a.
lifelong comradeship. Compared with
the blissful period which preceded it,
it may seem somewhat unpoetlc, but,
like the cold spray after a warm bath.
It Is a splendid bracer. - Also, as bal
anced against the fledgeling house
wife's culinary failures which every
body expects it possesses the rarer
and more alluring charm of novelty.
ders printed In an exquisite Dresden pat
tern and edged with fancy silk braid.
Striped and flowered jute Is a pretty
and serviceable medium for Summer dra
peries, or for living-room and bedroom
use the year around. It also makes a
most artistic wall covering, applied in the
same way as denim or cartridge paper.
It is seen oftenest in charming Watteau
designs, printed in the sofest and loveliest
tones imaginable. It costs So cents a yard
and is just the right width for a portiere.
If employed- for this purpose, the edge.
should be finished with a narrow fancv
braid.
In line with the popular demand for
linens and cotton is the revival of th
fad for Bulgarian embrodleries in the
way of table covers, centerpieces, bureau
scarfs and pillow covers. These embroid
eries, the best of which are the work of
Bulgarian peasant women, though many
are but machine-made Imitations, are
wrought In red and blue or brown linen
crash. The designs, which are mosUy
arabesques, are massive and striking. All
of these articles are inexpensive, and a
they are worked in fast-colored cottons,
and so can be easily laundered, they form
a very desirable addition to the store of
fancy household linens.
Never Trouble Trouble.
Anna R. Henderson In Leslie'- Weekly.
There's a cheery little proverb
It is very well t-j heed.
In a world where pain and sorrow
Are quite plentiful Indeed.
.If you would not have them double.
Then keep this well In view.
To never trouble trouble
. Until trouble troubles you.
Don't think when torm-cloua inner
You are certain to be drowned;
The very darkest tempest
May quirkly blow around-.
And up above the blackness '
Shine evermore the blue;
So never trouble trouble
Until trouble trouble you.
Ofttime a gloomy morning
Preredvs a sunny day:
So. without word of waminc.
Our trials !lp away. ,
"What pangs we oft have suffered
From ills we never knew!
So never trouble trouble
Until trouble troubles you.
Quit counting all the brioyes
You mav never have to crorM.
Quit ellmhln-t all the ridces
of future pain and loss.
Trud-fe on and do your duty.
To God. and ronoene true.
And never-trouble trouble
Until trouble troubles you.