Be lefonte, Pa., Dec . 18, 1891. AFTER AWHILE. “Come, Freddie,my son,it is time for prayers!” I called, and heard with a smile, : A faint little yawn and a voice from the stairs : “Yes, papa, after awhile!” 3 Dear sleepy voice, since I heard it last How many a weary mile I've wandered away from that dreamy past Into life’s great “after awhile.” With bursting heart as I musing stand By that little grave alone, I feel the touch of his vanished hand, And listen to each loved tone. I feel the gold of his sunny hair, And thrill to the old glad smile; . And, dreamily sweet, from the angel's stair, Comes the whisper, “After awhile.” After awhile, when the days are spent, And our steps grow faltering and slow ; When the eye is dimmed and the forehead bent, And silver’d with sifted snow, We, too, shall sleep, and at morn will wake From the mists and the shadows gray, To see on the heavenly hilltops break The dawn of a lovelier day. O wonderful faith! that cheereth us all, When the step of the angel is nigh, While the mornings rise and the sunsets fall, And the stars set their lamps in thesky ; Ineftable mystery, boundless and deep, That giveth us, wearied with toil, Like children to rise from onr Fathers sleep, When He calleth us—after awhile. —J. R. Parker. a ————————— JENNY. It was night. The cabin, poor but warm and cozy, was full of half twi- light, through which the objects ot the interior were but dimly visible by the glimmer of the embers which flickered on the hearth and reddened the dark rafters overhead. The fisherman's nets were hanging on the wall. Some homne- ly pots and pans twinkled on a rough shelf in the corner. Beside a great bed with long, falling curtains, a mattress extended on a couple of old benches on which five little children were asleep like cherubs in a nest. By the bedside, with her forehead, pressed against the counterpane, knelt the children's mother. She was alone. Outside the cabin the black ocean, dashed with stormy snowflakes, moaned and mur- mured, and her husband was at sea. From his boyhood he hud been a fisherman. His life, as one may say, had been a daily fight with tne great waters ; for every day the children must be fed, and every day, rain, wind or tempest, out went his boat to fish. And while in his four sailed boat he plied his solitary task at sea his wife at home patcued the sails, mended the | -nets, looked to the hooks or watched the little fire where the fish soup was boiling. ~~ As soon as the five children were asleep she fell upon her knees and prayed to heaven for her husband in his struggle with the waves and darkness. And truly sach a life as his was hard. The likeliest place for fish was a mere speck among the breakers, not more than twice as large as his own cabin—a spot obscure, capricious, changing on the moving desert, and yet which had to be discovered in the fog and tempest of a winter night by sheer skill and knowledge of the tides and winds. And there—while the gliding waves ran past like emerald serpents, and the gult of darkness rolled and tossed, and the straining rigging groaned as it in terrcr—there, amid the icy seas, he thought of his own Jenny ; and Jenny, in her cottage, thought of him with tears. She was thinking of him then and praying. The seagull's harsh and mocking cry distressed her, and the roaring of the billows on the reef alarmed hersoul. Butshe was wrapped in thoughts—thoughts of their poverty. Their httle children went barefooted winter and summer. Wheat bread they never ate, only bread of barley. Heavens | the wind roared like the bellows of a forge, and the seacoast echoed like an anvil. She wep’, and trembled. Poor wives whose husbands are at sea | How terrible to say, “My dear ones—tather, lover, brothers, sons —are in the tempest I’ But Jenny was still more unhappy. Her hisband was alone—alone without assistance on this bitter night. Her children were too little to assist him. Poor mother ! Now she says, “I wish they were grown up to help their father!” Foolish dream ! In years tocome, when they are with their father in the ter pest, she will say, with tears, “I wish. they were but children still 1”? * 0% ® ow * Jenny took her lantern and her cloak. “It is time,” she said to herself, “to see whether he 1s coming back, whether the sea is calmer, and whether the light is burning on the signal mast.’ She went out. There was nothing to be seen.—barely a streak of white on the horizon. It was raining, the dark, cold rain of early morning. No cabin window showed a gleam of hght. All at once, while peering round her, her eyes perceived a tumbledown old cabin which showed no sign of light or fire. The door was swinging in the wind; the wormeaten walls seemed scarcely able to support the crazy roof, on which the wind shook the yellow, filthy tafts of rotten thatch. “Stay,” she cried, “I am forgetting the poor widow whom my husband found the other day alone and ill, | must see how she 1s getting on.” She knocked at the door and listened. No one answered. Jenny shivered in the cold sea wind. “She is ill. And her poor children | She has only two of them ; but she is very poor, and hae no husband.” She knocked again, and called out, “Hey, neighbor!” But the cabin was still silent. “Heaven 1" she said, “how sound she sleeps that it requires so much to wake her I” : At the instant the door opened of itself. She entered. Her lantern illu- mived the iuterior of the dark and silent cabin, and showed her the water falling from the ceiling as through the open- ings of asieve, At the end of the room an awful form was lying—a woman stretched out motionless, with bare feet and sightless eves. ITer cold white arm hung down among the straw of the pallet. She was dead. Once a * strong and happy mother, she was now only the specter which remains of poor humanity after a long struggle with the world. Near the bed on which the mother lay two little children—a boy and a girl—slept together in their cradle and were smiling in their dreams: Their mother when she felt that she was dy- ing, had laid their cloak across their feet and wrapped them in her dress, to keep them warm when she herselt was cold How sound they slept in their old, tottering cradle, with their calm breath and quiet little faces | It seemed as it nothing could awake these sleeping or- phans. Outside the rain beat down in floods and the sea gave forth a sound like an alarm bell. From the old crev- iced roof, through which blew the gale, a drop of water fell on the dead face and ran down it like a tear, * * * * * What had Jenny been about in the dead woman’s house ? What was she carrying off beneath her cloak? Why was her heart beating ? Why did she hasten with such trembling steps to her * own cabin without daring to look back ? What did she hide in ber own bed be- hind the curtain 2 What had she been | stealing ? When she enterad the cabin the clits were growing white. She sank upon the chair beside the bed. She was very pale ; iteeemed as if she felt repentance. Her forehead fell upon the pillow, and at intervals, with broken words, she murmured to herself, while outside the cabin moaned the savage sea. “My poor man | Oh, heavens, what will he say ? He has already so much trouble. What have [ done now ? Five children on our hands already ! Their father toils and toils, and yet, as if he had not care enough already, I must give him this care more. Is that he ? No, nothing. I have done wrong —he would do quite right to beat me. Is that he? No! So much the better ! The door moves as if some one were coming in ; but no. To think that I should feel afraid to see him enter !” Then she remained absorbed in thought and shivering with the cold, unconscious of all outward sounds, of the black cormorants, which passed shrieking, and of the rage of wind and sea. streak of the white light of morning entered, and the fisherman, dragging his dripping ner, appeared upon the threshold, and cried, with a gay laugh, “Here comes the navy |” “You!” cried Jenny ; and she clasped her husband like a lover, and pressed her mouth against his rough jacket. “Here I am, wife,” he said, showing in the firelight the good natured and contented face whicn Jenny loved so well. “I have been nonlucky,” he continued, “What kind of weather have vou had ?” “Dreadful.” “And the fishing ?” “Bad. But never mind. I have you in my arms again, and I am satis- fied. Ihave caught nothing atall. I have only torn my net. The deuce was in the wind to-night. At one mo- ment of the tempest I thought the boat was foundering, and the cuble broke, But what have you been doing all this time 2 Jenny felt a shiver in the darkness, “I 7?” she said in trouble. *0h, nothing ; just as usual. 1 have been sewing. [ have been listening to the thunder of the sea, and I was frighteq- ed.” “Yes ; the winteris a hard time. But never mind it now.” Then, trembling as if she were going to commit a crime : “Husband,” she said, “our neighbor is dead. Ske must have died last night, soon after you went out. She has left two little children, one called Wilhelm and the other Madeline. The boy can hardly toddle, and the girl can only lisp. The poor, good woman was in dreadful want.” The man looked grave. Throwing into a corner his far cap, sodden by the tempest : “the dence I" he said, scratching his head. “We already have five children ; this makes seven. And already in bad weather we have to go without our supper. Wha shall we do now ? Bah, it is not my fault ; it's God's doing. These are things too deep for me. Why has He taken away their mother from these mites ? These matters are too difficult to understand. One has to be a scholar to see through them. Such tiny scraps of children | Wite, go and fetch them. If they are awake, they must be frightened to be alone with their dead’mother. We will bring them up with ours. They will be brother and sister toour five. When God sees that we have to feed this little boy and girl besides our own He will let us take more fish. As for me, 1 will drink water. I will work twice as hard. Enough! Be off and get them ! But what is the matter ? Does it vex you? You are generally quicker than this.” $i His wife drew back the curtain. “Look I" she said. Translated from the French of Vietor Hugo for Strand Magazine. EL ais No End to Democratic Leaders. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. The Democratic party does not often suf- fer from lack of leaders,and in the present Congress it will not, but rather may suf- fer from their superabundances. Besides the candidates for Speaker there are many Democratic Congressmen who are well fitted for leadership and who might well be candidates for Speaker if qualification for the post alone suffic ed to bring them out for it. Mr. Wil- son, of West Virginia, would make an ideal Efpeaker. The Breckinridges would make excellent ones ; so would Holman, who is one of the oldest mem- bers. Able men in the House are abun- dant, and it chould make a great record in this Congress. —-There is no sweeter music in heaven than the song that goes up from a grateful beart. All at once the door flew open, a Home Made Gifts and Candies, A Few Ideas for Christmas. A writer in the Home Queen tell us how to make a “Heathen Chines” The foundation for our Chinaman is peanuts. Select eight for his body arms and legs fasten them together with a strong thread then lay him down while you make his clothes. First of all come his tiny trousers, made of black silk, very full and baggy ; a stoutdrawing string confines them to the place where the waist ought to be a stitch or two to keep them in place. The sack comes next, and for this use a gorgeous yellow silk or 1nch wide ribbon is best, for it needs no hemming. Cut a piece suffi- ciently long togo around, and sew up the seam ; cut down a slight distance on each side for the sleeves and put these on with a few tiny plaits. A drawing-string for the neck com- pletes this becoming garment, and the gentleman from the land of the Rising Sun is ready for his cue. To make this, cutout a round piece of court plaster—black, of course—ruan three strands of thick black wool through it, paste it to the back of the head, and braid the wool to form the cue. Now put in the featurers—slanting al- mond eyes, a line for the nose and an- other for the mouth. A writer in Youth's Companion, des- cribes a catch all thus, Get three bas- kets of ditferent sizes, one piece of No. 1 ribbon of a pretty shade, and twe.ve coins or any pretty little ornaments. Cut four pieces of the ribbon, each measuring sixteen inches Fasten one end to the largest basket a short distance froat the top then measure four inches of ribbon, and confine to the next basket then four inches more and confine to the smollest basket, leaving eight inches of ribbon. Fusien the other pieces of ribbon to the basket in the same way at equal dis- tances apart, around esch basket. Then sew the four pieces together to forma loop by which to hang up. Make bows of ribbon to decorate the s.des, making one end long enough to hang a iittle below each basket, on which attach an ornament. A pin ball requires two pieces of silk or satin of two pretty shades, each three TR nar and onehalf inches square, seven-eights | yard ribbon one inch in width, a very litle embroidero silk, two rings and black and white pins. Cut flannel or other heavy material into strips one inch in width and roll | very hard until you have a flat roll three inches in diameter. Fusten the end securely aod cover with thin cloth to keep in place. Then baste nicely the pieces of satin on each side, folding a little over each edge, { which is then covered with the ribbon, feather stitched on each edge. The two rings are crocheted with the silk and sewed on each side of the ball, ' | through which fasten the ribbon and tie in a small bow. On the ball stick pins, white on one side and black on the other in rows about one-half inch apart. If you wish to make French vanilla cream break into a bowl the white of one or more eggs, as is required by tha quantity you wish to make, and add to 1t an equal quantity of cold water ; then stir in the finest powdered or confec- tioners’ sugaruntil it is stiff enough to mold into shape with the fingers. Flav- or with vanilla to taste. After 1t is formed into balls. cubes or lozenges, place upon plates to dry. Candies made without cocking are not as good the first day. This cream is the found- ation of ali the French creams. MARGERY’S MOLASSES CANDY. Take two cupfuls of molasses, one cupful of sugar, a piece of butter the size of a small egg, and one tablespoon - ful of glycerine. Put these ingredients into a kettle and boil hard twenty or thirty minutes ; when boiled thick, drop . if a few drops in cold water, and the drops retain their shape and are brittle, it is done ; do not boil too much. Have pans or platters well buttered, and just before the candy is poured into | my handkerchief in. them stir in one-half teaspoonful of cream of tartar or soda- If flavoring is desired drop the flavoring on the top as it begins to cool, and when it is pulled the whole will be flavored. Pull until as white as desired and draw into sticks. PEANUT NOUGHT. Shell the peanuts, remove the skir, and break into small pieces, or not, as preferred. Take two cups of confection- ers’sugar and one cup of the peanuts. Put the sugar ma saucepan, and as soon as dissolved threw into it the nuts, stirring rapidly. Pour quickly into a buttered pan and press into a flat cake with a buttered knife, as it cools very quickly. SPICED CHOCOLATE. Take two cupfuls of brown sugar, one-half en pful of grated chocolate, one- half cupful of water and a small piece of butter. Add spice to taste. Boil these ingredients, and when nearly done test by dropping a little into cold water. Pour ino buttered pans when done und wark in squares. ' NUT CREAMS. Chop almonds, hickory nuts, hutter- nuts or English walnuts, quite fine. Make the French cream, and before adding all the sugar while the cream is still quite soft, stir into it the nuts, and then form into balls. bars or squares. Three or four kinds of nuts may be mixed together. ORANGE DROPS, Grate the rind of one squeeze the juice, taking care to reject the seeds. Add to this a inch of tar. taric acid ; stir in confectioners’ sugar until it is stitf enough to form into small balls the size of a small marble. These are delicious. orange and STIRRED CREAM WALNUTS, Take two eupfuls of sugar, two-thirds of a cupful of boiling water, and one- half salt teaspoonful of cream of tartar Boil until it “threads, cool slighty and beat until it begins to thicken. Stir in chopped walnuts and drop on tins. MAPLE SUGAR CREAMS. Grate maple sugar, mix it in ties to suit the taste, with French cream, adding enough confectioners’ sugar to mould into any shape desired. Walnut creams are sometimes made with maple sugar, and are delicious," quanti | | | { | | | bought it for a lump-shade.” A Well-Deserved Rebuke. The man who disregards the rights of others will certainly come to grief. We have met the young man of whom the one mentioned below is a type. We would not wish him ill, but we feel con- fident that if he lives long enough he will see himself as others see him. Oneday a smart young fellow with shiny shoes, a new hat and checkerboard | trousers, boarded a street-car in a west- | ern city and stepped to the front plat- form. He pulled out a twist of paper and lighted it, and began puffing a con- centrated essence of vile odors into those who were obliged to ride upon the plat- form if they rode at all. One, a plain old farmer. couldn’t stand it, and stepped off to wait for the next car. When he reached the station, the young fellow was there before him, and it happened that the two met at the restaurant counter. i “Got any sandwiches?” called the young man to the waiter. “Here, gim- me one,” and he tossed outa nickel, | and then proceeded to pick up and pull apart evervone of the half dozen sand- wiches on the plate before he found one to suit him. The farmer, who bad been waiting for his turn, drew back in dis- gust. Finally, he found something which the fingers of another bad not fouled, and presently followed the loud young man to the car. He found every seat occupied, including the half of one on which were piled the young man’s gripsack and overcoat. “Is this seat taken ?”’ he ventured to inquire. | “Seat’s engaged was the curt ans-! wer, with a look meant to squelch the | old farmer, who went into the smoking- | car. That afternoon the same young man walked into the office of the governor ofthe state, armed with recommenda- tions and endorsements, an applicant for a position under the state govern- ment. He was confronted by the same plain old farmer, who recognized his traveling companion of the morning without anv trouble. Glancing over : his papers, the governor said : “Hu-m, yes: you want me to appoint you to so-and-so. If I should, I guess’ I might as well write my own resigna- tion at the same time. “Wh—why so?” young fellow. “Because I saw you pay fora street- car ride this morning, and you took the platform of the car, You bought a sandwich, and spoiled the plateful. You | paid for a seat in the train,and took mine, too, and if I should give you this | place, how do T know that you would | not take the wkole administration 2” me ———— Wore It on Her Arm. stammered the i Mrs. Gregg had one of the prettiest weddings that ever took place in the Massachusetts town in which she lives, But there was one odd incident of the | occasion which a few of her friends who | are in the secret recall with much amusement. Althongh a lady of quiet | taste, Mrs. Grego wore something which | certainly no bride ever wore before. Her wedding present from her old friend Dr. Jameson was an exquisite affair of lace, embroidery and white sa- tin ribbon which he had brought from Paris. 1t came just as the wedding par- ty were starting for the church. “What a lovely bag !"’ exclaimed the bride, “I am going to wearit. That will please Dr. Jameson,” and, slipping the white satin strings over her arms she thought no raore of it until after the ceremony. “That is a beautiful bag, and so odd,” “I never saw a’ bag like it. The material is beautiful,” commented some of her friends, “I suppose thestyle is new,” Mrs. Gregg. “Dr. to me from with it.” “Did you put anything init 2” asked Dr. Jameson, who had been listening to the conversation with a smile that was suspiciously near a laugh. “No,” replied Mrs. Gregg. “Ill put What—why— why, there’s no bottom in it. What is it 2” Dr. Jameson ? “Well,” replied Dr. Jameson,” “I | . | replied Jat eson brought it Paris. IT am delighted And it was a lamp-shade, edged with lace and drawn up at the top with white satin ribbon.-— Youth's Com- panion. Against Mixed Drinks. A Barkeeper Says the Poorest Liquors Are Used in Fancy Decoctions. Have a Manhattan cocktail 2" “I think I will,” answered his com- panicn. “I wouldn't if I were the barkeeper. . “Why nut 2 both asked together. “Well,” replied the man behind the counter, 4f vou never taken mixed drink you wiil never he cheated. I have been too long in the business not to have learned some of the tricks in the trade. It issuch an easy thing, after knowing how, to palm off cheap liquors ] under the guise of strong and spicy | flavors. You ean't fool ‘a man who | takes bis whisky straight, hut very few know what they are drinking in a cock- tail. It is usually cheap stuff. The fact is most bars are run with poor and good liquors. The worst is al waYS | used in the mixed drinks. Tt is quite | reasonable, and is such an easy thine to | gull tipplers. Did yea ever stop to | think how much whisky is put into u cocktall ? That fuct alone oaeht tr tell an observant man that he 1s not getting the best.” : “I think T will take a little straight | liquor,” said one of the men, “So will I,” remarked the other. The honest barkeeper had converted them. mtn NUR "FT — you, remarked , ‘The literature and, dress during | the last ten years, would form an im. | posing also would the collection. Equal- | ly carious and 1mposing also would be | the col.ection of all the empty bottles used in the last ten years for Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. a — “It lends them all,” is the gener- | al reply of druggists when asked about | the merit of sales of Hoods Sarsa- parilla. ——Narrow trimmings of tiny over-' lapping spangles. .Chang, the viceroy , drooping that which issimply within "of pleasure ; for, as he is himself fond of | Li-Hung-Chang 0 Ee mares The Greatest Man in China. From the St. James Gazettee, It there is at this moment in China any man who more than another has power to control the agitation now making head against Europeans settled in that country, that inan 1s Li-Hung- of the empire and ‘“‘President-Secretury” of state. “The size of a tower” says a Chinese proverb. ‘is ‘measured by its shadow, and great men by the number of their enemies.” Dreaded and obeyed, «I,- Hung Chang is the powerful arbiter whose word 1s law to 450,000,000 of hu- man beings. future, and the other, deep-set in resign - ation, he regrettully turns towards the | past. By what feelings, based on a | sense ot self-preservation or obstinate reliance on old-world prejudices, will he i be swayed in his action in the present emergency ? On the ancient historical heights from which he contemplates our modern civ ilization, this most humble scribe of Hawabii sees in it naught but the evan- escent creations of a day, subject to the eventuaities of all social and political conditions. ern races, before whose eyes for aces pust a continuous panorama has been passing while they themselves have re. mained encrusted with their old-world feelings, customs and prejudices. Li-Hung-Chang is descended from a race of conquerors ; his high muscular stature shows it. Jn his expressionless features, in the furtive depth of his in- telligent look, the studied reserve of his words, in his unimpulsive courtesy to strangers, race is evident and the politi- cian 1s revealed. In his thin lips, his ! wrinkled forehead (looking like a block of carved ivory seasoned by time), 1n his lids (veiling when necessary the expression of the eyes), in his fea- tures drawn and puckered by the inces- sant preying on the mind ofa single | aspiration, ever keenly alive but cau- ‘ tously restrained, one can tiace the working of that powerful mind which ‘guides the destinies of the Celestial empire. Draped in long black silk robes, his wiry, supple frame 1s unbent by age and the weight of public affairs, | His sobriety is proverbial ; and of all the charm of life which attract other men, he cares only for power and disdains 3 the region repeating “Flowery paths are no At the outest of his t long.’ political career followed in the foos- steps of Tseign-kwo-Fau, whom he was destined to succeed as viceroy as Nank- | ing, and who died without leaving a sin- gle enemy behing him ; having, accord- Ing to some of his satirical countrymen, suppressed them all while he was “alive, The Cheap Wax Dolls, Progress of Manufacture in Germany From the Plaster Models Up. Nine dolls out of ten are little Ger- man girls. In whole districts in Ger- many the country people spend the winter in making dolls, tilling their fields in summer. The cheap wax doll, commercially known as “composition wax,” such as may be bought at retail in this country for twenty-five cents, furnished perhaps the best idea of how dolls are made. A “modeler,” who has nothing further to do with the making of dolls, makes plaster of Paris models of the styles of heads and limbs most in demand, and sells them, singly or in sets to the peasants who make ‘the dolls. Throughout the winter, father, mother, and all the larger children unite in mak- ing papicc mache from these models. The legs and arms are dipped 1n flesh colored paint, and the painted shoes are | put on with brushes. Tnese various parts together with the head are fastened to a cloth body stuffed with sawdust, and dolly goes off to the factory, where the more artistic work is done. Her limbs have the proper tint, her body is as true to nature as necessary, but ner head is still bare, her cheeks are gray, and her colorless eyes express no intel- ligence. An expert workman in ihe factory, holding dolly by the foot dips her head and shoulders fora moment in jmelted wax, and she emerges from the bath the composition-wax doll of commerce, When she is sufficiently dry she passes into the hands of a girl operator, who quickly paints the pink tinee upon her cheeks. Another girl adds the blue eyes, still another the eyebrows and eye- lashes, and so she goes through the hand of a row of girls, one girl for each tint. the whole process taking about six hours, for there are delays while the paints are drying. girls are expected to ,aint 10 gross, or nearly 1,5000 dolls complete. quires rapid work, and the girls receive about $1,75 a week each. Flowing locks of mohair are fastened to the head, und dolly is ready to America. : smear What Is a Kiss, Some time ngo the London Tit Bits offered a two guiiea prize for the best | thousand | definition of a kiss, Seven ans vers were received, The prize was awarded to Benjamin J. Greenwood, of Pulse Hill, London, whose definition is here given : “An dusipid and tasteless morsel. which becomes delicious and delectable in proportion asitis fl vored with love. Tae tollowiag are some of the best of the other definitions sabmitted. “Chat which yon ewinot give without | taking, and cannot take without giv. ing." Something rather dan gerous, Something rather nice, Something rather wicked, Though it can’t be called a vice, Some think it nanghey, Uthers think it wrong, All agree it's jolly Though it don’t last long.” “An article that is always accepted, and (im) printed, but not always pub- lished.” “A demonstration of love which will dry the baby's tears, thrill the maiden’s heart, and soothe the rut « feelings of a tired wife.” rr —————— AND Less SENSE —— Yabsley: “Well, you area beauty! The idea of you try- {ing to whip a man twice your Size! I thought you had wore set se-" Mudge. “1 huve” — Indianapolis Journal, An Asiatic Janus, he | turns one face inquiringly towards the | He has all the astute east- | In six hours six | This re- | emigrate to | BERYL The World of Women. Silk braid fringe for wraps and dresses, White satin ribbon oy tull-dress bon- net. : Beaver edgings to trim f.wn cloth gowns. Striped flannel sgzhtshirts op wear. Mertar-bourd ors boys. Princess brocade gowns for g home wear. Single bamboo fire-screns filled in with China silk. Short white face veils of figured or | applique lace. Kate Field says that American wo- men spend $62,000 a year for cosmetics, most ot which are prisonous compounds, The “Lady Mayoress” of London, as | Mrs. Evans is called, was chambermaid in a country hotel in Kent when she | married the present Lord Mayor. Jessie Benton Fremont is reported ag being engaged on an important piece of literary work, which has engrossed Ley | attention for the lust six months. The pioneer woman stenographer of 'Eogland, Miss Mary Beauclerk, is said to be a belle as well, and to spell her I heaux by the witchery of good work- | manship. Mrs. Taylor, of Little Washington, | Pa., is known as the Oil Queen, because . she has accumulated a fortune of $3,000,~ | 000 by personal investments in the Ritch. "ie County fields. Queen Victoria pays her private sec. retary, Sir Henry Ponsonby, $10,000 a year und gives him a house, rent free, Sir Henry is a smartly dressed, well pre- i served man of 66. { Linen cuffs are worn considerably With tailor dresses or with cloth toilets less severely made. They are fastened with link buttons in the inside of the arms, and aresmall and close, as of nec. essity they must be. For ordinary wear, the skirt and long jacket, with a soft blouse worn beneath, is very popular as a walking and house gown combined ; and short bodices are certainly gaining ground for home wear | but principally made with real or simu- i lated corselets. | Veils arealmost universally worn both | with hats and bonnets, the most elegant, , and consequently the most expensive, | being made of real lace; while excellent { imitations and charming sprigged and also to be found, | embroidered nets are black, white and cream being the oniy permissible colors, | Fancy blouse waists to be worn at | breukfust, lunch or at home evenings {couldn't ve prettier than they are. They are made of silk muslin, crepe de Chine or emb.oidered gavze in inzonceivably lovely colors. Some are soft silk and lace with a colored ribbon twisted twice around the waist und knotted in front. Ita girl goes to a dance she must have dancing shoes or he miserab oe. Here are some novelties. Morocco shoes with jet butterflies on the toes may be had in bright red, light blue, old gold and in gray. A eatin shoe, which is just us piquant as itis pretty, has a rather high front, embroidered on both sides, and long silk laces that are twited several times round the ankleand tied in a bow. Another example in satin is covered with a fine network of gold. Beavers and white Mongolian are the fashionable furs for trimming children’s costumes. A pretty coatfor a little maid of four or five was of white diago- nal serge, with a white fur cape tied with white ribbons'and a full-trimmed bonnet to match of white velvet with a puckered brim. Pretty children never look so pretty as when they are dressed all in white.” Servicenble coats for every day wear are of lambswool cloth in pile blue, gray and scarlet. They are cusy- looking ard beautifully warm, Whenever there is a very high polish on woollen goods itis well to distrust them. They have probably heen fin- ished by pressing them over hot rollers or calenders and a drop of water will re- move the finish and leave a spot. In order to nike such goods of value they must be sponged. Lay the cloth, yard atter yard, on a board and go over it with a sponge dipped in cold - water till it is thoroughly and evenly wet through- out; it need not be drenched: Lay it in a sheet. Two sheets may be necessa: 1t it is a very long piece of cloth. Fold it in the fold of the goods as it came from | the shop, but lay a smooth piece of the sheet between the folds. Begin to roll it at the end and roll it up evenly and firmly in the sheet until the cloth is all rolled up. Let it remain over night, In the morning press it on the wrong side with a moderately hot won until it 1s perfectly smooth and nearly dry. Then. | hang it on a clothes-horse until 1t is thoroughly dry. winter iudent caps for small ressy | | | i One of the most churmiing ‘women to | be seen in Washington is Mrs. General Sheridan. So yoatuful is she in appear- { ance that it makes one wonder to see her | daughter, a rosy, well-grown young | miss of 13 stand beside her, almost as {tall a her mother. I With her girhsh, graceful igure,some- | what pensive, beautitul face, and the | sweet blue eyes that hold a friendly smile, the young wid w of General. | “Phil” Sheridan, the nativn’s hero, is an. | exceedingly attractive indy. | Some one said awhile ago that Mrs. Sheridan and Mrs. Roscoe Conkiing pos- I sessed in a greater degree than other widows the art of wearing gracefully the "long window’s veil, Both Mrs. Conkling and Mrs. Sheri- ' dan are exceptionally elegant gentlewo-. | men; and in her own house, in her plain. | mourning dress, with deheate white | bands at neck and wrists, Mrs. Sheridan raakes a picture not ty be forootten. This house is on Rhode I-iund avenue in Washington. Tt stands on a sunny corner on terraced ground ; itis a square struzture three stories hizh and of mod- est comfortable exterior. ludeed, it is an exquisite home, filled with objects that recall Genera! Sheridan. From the entrance, rooms open to the north, south and east. These are arranged with dainty touch, and among the many sou- venirs they hold are swords, arms which the dead General wielded in the battles he won, and pictures of him in bronze, oil, or crayon. A great medallion in bronze and a life-sized portrait in oil, both representing him in full military uniform, attract the immediate notice of those entering Mrs Sheridan's home.