ps i En POTTY SSS Deuoreaitc Waly Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 30, 1892. AUTUMN’S THANKSGIVING. Summer is ended; the fair year is dying ; Roses and lillies are broken and dead ; Southward the robins and thrushes are flying; Music and singing with Summer are sped. Gone are the soft breezes’ tender caresses— Gone the long twilights of beautiful hue, When the sky stopped to catch the earth's farewell kisses— : Bose the bright mornings of sunshine and ew ! Slowly, each day are the crimson leaves {all- ing— Each in a few, thrguh the calm, listlessair, Nothing we hear, save the cricket's voice calling ; . Bravely he chirps, through the Autumn is bare, Soon will come days of the wind’s dreary wailing, 5 : Mingling the sound with the chill Autumn rain. This the earth knows, as with hope and life falling 4 Bravely she waits for the coming of pain. Yet not a token of fear or of sadness Jovy the fair earth in these last of life's ays. Now seems the time of her tenderest gladness; These are her hours of thanksgiving and praise. No time so sweet in her manifold treasures As these latest hours of life and joy, Freely she ofters her bounties unineasured, Beauties and riches without an alloy. . Never was sunliwht so tenderly golden, Never were flowers so bright end so gay ; Glittering riches, great wealth anwithholden- Flame through the land in the sun’s gleam ing ray. Thus the earth offers her praise and thanks- giving— Praise to the Lord of the earth and the sky ; Thanks for the joy and the wonder of living, Beauty and gladness of bright days gone ty. Spring’s joyous bursting of leaf and of blos- som, Birds coming back to their fair northern home ; Then will ring outo’er the land the glad chorus, “Winter is over, the Summer is come!” Thanks for the grand trees and bountiful flowers, Thanks for the sunlight, the dew and the rain Summer's bright, glittering emerald showers. Falling like sleep on hearts weary with pain. Now joy is ended, and Winter is coming: Cool grows the air with a soft, dreamy haze, Even the cricket his farewell is humming, Still for past pleasures the earth utters praise. Smiling, the lastof her wealth bravely giving, Say, “Though Winter is coming, and pain, Still 1 have known all the great joy of living; Sometime the Summer will come back again.” Summer is over, the fair year is dying Bravely and tenderly without a fear Sweet is her face as thus she is lying, Are we as thankful and brave as the year? OLD BANJO AND BANJOS BOB Thie is a story of a horse and a man. That it possesses in large measure the demerit of truthfulness is not the fault of the writer. “Yuh couldn’t hev him at no price, pard,” said Gilmer & Salisbury’s super- intendent, “on’y the comp’ny’s goin’ to ull off thie route. It seems like sell ‘n’ my own father to sell Ole Banjo, but yuh kin bev him fer two hundred even plusks. More'n thet, the game don’t perceed less’n yuh hire Banjo’s Bob fer his hostler.” On the way back from Helena, as we sat in the cupola of a caboose, look- ing out over our trainload of horses, Banjo’s Bob told me of his namesake. “He ain’t much fer purty, Banjo ain’t but he’s gosh awful fer good, Fer twen- ty year now I've hed him in my string, an’ he ain't a day older in his feelin’s than he was in 63 down in Kansas. He's thet proud-sperrited I reckon he'd _die rightthar ef he felt the whip. Twict Ole Banjo an’ me hed a race weth In- jung. Onct down on the Niobrary they hed my station held up fer twelve hours, ~an’ me a-peckin’ away weth my Sharp's 50-150, an’ minglin’ lead weth their ca- resses mighty free, an’ then hed to make a break fer it weth Ole Banjo. I jest give him the word, an’ he went through them Comachee’s like a hun- ters’s teeth through a bufiler hump. I got this finger shot off, an’ Old Baujo got a bullet through the tip of his oft « ear thet makes him look ez though he wag swaller-forked. TheInjuns chased us twenty mile, but they couldn’t ketch Ole Banjo. His head an’ tail was ap, an’ he jest nachally set the yearth on fire. 1 sure seta heap o’store by thet hoss. Another time I was hostler at “an eatin’ station on the Cheyanne route to the Black Hills, an’ the Sioux got “over there on a scalpin’ tower. Ole Banjo wae nigh led-hoss in a six team “of the unbustedest broncos thet ever was strung out ahead of a stage. Well, gir, one day we heard the cluckety-cluck of the stage wheels about an Lour be- ‘fore time, an’ we knowed from the way the clucks was a-comin’ so fre quent thet somethin’ was the matter. In another minute here she comes around a little butte, Ole Banjo jest a-pawin’ the air on a level trot, an’ all the broncos on a dead run. They wa'n’t no driver on the box, but Ole Banjo .jest started a-circlin’ round the station :an’ milled ,em till they come to a stop right in front of the door. Thet’s on the dead thievin’ square, T hain’t try- in’ to run no wheezer on yuh, fer'I learned him thet trick way back in the sixties, ‘When the coach stopped we seen the driver in the front boot all dobbled weth blood. He'd been shot “in the head from one o’ them rifles the guvment donates to the Injuns fer sich amoosement. We jest started to get him out when round the butte came a ‘hull war party of Sioux, a-yellin’ an’ makin’ medicine most oomusical. We hustled the team inter the station din- in’ room an’ begun turnin’ loose on the Injune. They was mean’ the comp’ny blacksmith an’ the eatin’-house man an’ his wife an’ babby an’ Vic Smith, an ole buffler-huntsr. We made it plen- ty onpleasant fer the Injuns, an’ Vie he got his man every time but onct, an’ "then he got the Injun’s cayuse. Bat the house wan't much protection, an’ ez the Injuns kep’ pervadin’ 'roun we sorter agreed «thet one on us must go fer help... Ole Banjo hed jest come. in fum an: eighteen mileroute, an’ the last six mile a-keepin’ ahead of a gang of Injuns, but I knowed he was good fer forty mile more, an’ begun gitiin’ him ready, His backbone an’ ribs didn’t stick out so free in them days, an’ I jest thought I would go it bar’ back an’ weth ony a hackamore roun’ his nose. Yuh see, the hackamore was on’y a hair rope weth bucsles to jingle. Well, it come along dark purty soon, an’ I tore up a pair o'pants an’ wropped | ‘em aroun’ Ole Banjo’s feet so his shoes wouldn't clink agin the gravel. When it come plum dark I got on Ole Banjo in the dinin’-room an’ rode out toward | Cheyanne. We hadn't gone fur when ! I see an Injun not five foot ahead. He' hadn’t no idee they was any one on the | hoss’s back, an’ he jest thought things was a-comin’ too easy when good stage- hosses walked into him that-a-way. He put up his hand to ketch Ole Banjo by the fore-top, an’ me all the time layin’ along his neck weth my gua three in- ches ahead of Ole Banjos nose. I wa'n’t two foot away when I letthe In- jun hev it right between the eyes. Well, they ain’t much more to tell. I jest rode Ole Banjo like the devil a-beatin’ tun-bark fer the forty mile inter Chey- anne, I started fum the station at jest nine o'clock, an’ rode inter Cheyanne at twelve, In half an hour we was on our way back weth a squad of cavalry, an’ a little arter four we rodeup on the station, All the Injuns was gone ‘cep- tin’ the one I hed located permanent an’ three others which Vie hed made good, an’ which the other Injuns hadn’t kerried off. But I wantyuh to notice thet Ole Banjo went that eighty mile in seven hours, an’ never missed his reg’lar trip over the route neither. “Banjo’s got a heap more sense than gome folks has got hay. Lots o'timnes he has saved a coachful of o'passen- gers fum goin’ into a washout when the night was so dark the driver couldn’t see the leaders. Oae night up in Mon- tanny it was jest nachully stormin’ pi- zen, an Ole Banjo was on the Deer Lodge trail. Of course he was in the lead, but the driver was a new one, an’ hadn't been told thet Ole Banjo savvied his business better’'n ary driver thet ever pulled reir over him. The road wa'n’t but eight foot wide in places, weth a mounting siraight up on oneside an’ a precipice miles down on theother. The driver hadn't been over the road but once, an’ then 1n the dark, and he felt mighty prayerful when a flash o'light- nin’ would come an’ letzhim lock down in the yearth about seven mile. He sure didn’t feel none gay at the vistas. Bat all at once Ole Banjo stopped, an, the rest o’the team knew enough aot to make ro bluff when Banjo acked fer a show down. The driver done his best tuh git the team tuh move, but they all waited to see Banjo's hard. Finally the driver waked up a passen- ger who was sleepin’ in the front boot on the mail-sack, an’ give him the rib- rong to hold while he went ahead to spy out the trouble. He found a plen- ty, fer he was almost touchin’ a big grizzly bar when a flash o'lightnin’ showed him his mistake. Well, yuh see, the driver hadn’t lost no bar, and the man a-holt o’ the lines swore he never touched but one high place tell he jumped on the box. The driver told me he all to once weighed three ounces lighter'z a straw hat, an’ jest flew over the team. They wa'n’t no chance tuh turn the team, er the coach an’ the hull outfit hed tuh stay thar an’ shiver tell it was light enough to see. Then they shot the bar an’ found it had bus- ted an inside surcingle or somethin’ a- tamblin’ down the mounting. But all the same, I want yuh to notice thet ary other hoss in the lead would a-jack- knifed the team, an’ carried the hull outfit to kingdom come down the preci- pice. He's a good hoss, an’ the man thet ever throws silk inter him er treats him bad hez got tuh make some medi- cine weth me, Joe Bush. He ain't nev- er been outclassed in ary team he was ary into, He's worked in teams where yuh had to go up on one side weth a broad-axe an’ down the other weth a shovel a-knockin’ ’em intuh the collar, but you bet yuh, Ole Banjo wa’n’t nev- er hita clip. His tugs was allus a-draw- in.! Oue bitter cold day in January word came up the line that Ole Banjo was dead. I jumped up.on thedown coach and as I dismounted at Cave Hills sta- tion it was with a feeling of surprise ‘rather than anger that Baujo’s Bob was not at hand to grasp the bits of the led team. But this feeling changed wholly to one of griet as I saw on the sunny side of the station a rude mound surmounted by a headstone of rough boards, With harness dressing for paint, and his finger for a brush, Ban- Jo’s Bob had inscrived the following ep- itaph : HEAR LIES OLE BANJO. The best stage hoss That ever Looked thrue A Collar. Murdered Jan. 3 1885 by Cheyann Bill Throwin’ the silk into him. I bastened into the station, half ex- pecting to see the dead body of Banjo’s Bob swinging from a rafter. But he was made of different stuff. He had used the boards of his bunk for the headstone of Banjo's grave and burned his supply fuel in thawing the clods which he bad blasted out with dyna- mite to make a grave for his name- sake. “Howdy, boss ? I'm goin’ to quit yuh. I like yuh all right, but I haio’t got nothin’ to live fer now bui tuh make medicine with Cheyann Bill. If yuh’ll jest give me my time, I'll go up to Me- dory an’ git my stuff an’ start after him. Monday night a week the swing team come in lame, an’ I had to send out a four team weth Cheyann Bill. I knowed he was too free weth the silk, an’ 1 tole him not to throw it inter Ole Banjo, not on no account whatever, Well, sir, he drove inter Middle Grand weth a spike team, My pore Ole Eanjo was a-lyin’ dead three mile back. They was a rattler in the road thet Ole Ban: jo must ’a ’saw, an’ he crowded over to the off side. Cheyanne Bill didn't take no notice 'ceptin’ thet Banjo was out 'o hne, an’ he raised his whip an’ throwed the silk inter him. It ain't much to most bosses, an’ ain’t nothin’ to eI, it was murder to my one hoss, He hadn't never felt the sting o’ the silk, an’ he knowed as well as a human thet he didn’t ought to feel it. It broke bis heart right thur. He jest give a spring in the air an’ come down in a heap. He didn’t suffer none ’cep- tin’ fer the one lick thet murdered him. Russ Wilsou, foreman of the Eb outfit, come along next mornin’ an’ I hired a mule team of him fer eight dollars a day to haul my ole hoss back to the sta- tion. Russ was mighty uppity about lettin’ me hev the team at any price. But when 1 tole him it was to bury Ole Banjo, he jest let me hev two teams fer nothin’, an’ sent one of his cow punchers to Deadwood to buy dynamie fer blastin’ out the grave, More'n thet, he come all the way over from E6, an’ brought every one of his boys, to give a military funeral to my ole hoss. The obs’'quies was accordin’ to Hoyle, you bet, an’ the boys all fired a salute over the grave weth all tha cartridges in their six-shooters. But I cain’t stay uo longerin sight of his grave weth ! Cheyanne Bill on top of ground. It’ud drive me locced in a week, I've got enough stuff comin’ to strike Bill's trail, an’ I'll never leave it tell I've made medicine weth him. I hear he didn’t dast stop at the end of his run, but kep' a-goin®, and left the coach in the Bad Lands, an’ struck across coun- try for Mingusville. He'll sure make Las first stop in Hele-naw, an’ I may ketch vp with him thar. Anyways, I'll foller him till I find him, Ef I don’t find him in this world I'll go to hell to find him in the next, an’ I'll squirt coal oil on him, an’ watch him squirm while it's burnin.’ I bain’t got nothin’ to live fer "ceptin’ on'y jest that.” Yesterday, more than seven years after Old Banjo's death, I opened a pa- per sent me from Las Vegas, New Mexico. Huge black }ines smelling of harness diessing were drawn about the following article : ‘Cheyenne Bill was shot and instant. ly killed in the Maverick saloon yester- day by a man ‘calling himself Banjos Bob. The coroner's jury acquitted the prisoner, as it was shown that Chey- enne Bill had pulled his gun, and turned loose at him as soon as he entered the door.” In defiance of Uncle Sam’s postal laws there was scrawled immediately under the black lines: “i ged i wuld wake Medecin weth Cheyann an i done it.—Harper's Week- ly. Baxgo’s Bos.” Sn rE AOI The Railroad of the Future Recent statistics tell us that there are now running in the United States alone, says the electrical magazine, nearly 4,000 electrical street cars upon over 2,000 miles of track with as much more similar plant in course of con- struction. These cars run faster, more cheaply and under far more control than do their predecessors, the horse cars. In America this system of pro- pulsion is commercially but four or five years old, and is barely out of its experimental stage; yet it is a magni ficent practical success—with more than $50,000,000 invested in it,—and this under some of the worst conditions possible for railroad work. Some of these conditions consist of very narrow, wheel flanges, rough tracks, obstruct- ed with water, snow, mud, gravel and foreign vehicles; curves as sharp as thirty feet radius, grades as steep as 12 per cent. ete. A service more near- resembling that of our present steam roads is that performed by the City and South London railroad, which is practically the first underground elec- tric railroad in the world, and is al- ready a great success, having during the eighteen mouths of its existence carried wore than 7,000,000 people, with a run of over 500,000 train miles. Although not entirely perfected, a road lilze this forms one of the notoble ob- ject lessons by which we -are learning to travel. In the light of such experiences there is no question whatever about the suc- cess of either a subterranean or an elevated electric road, if properly de- signed to meet the new conditions in- volved—and the running may be at any speed which can be made safe. We may, therefore, in our further study of the ideal railway, positively leave out of the question the steam lo- comotive. Great ashave been the per- formances of this wonderful and beau- tiful monster, he not only refuses to climb ‘very steep grades, but he has utterly failed, in the matter of speed, to keep pace with his improved behavior in other respects. In proof of this we have records of English engines going at the rate of 75 miles an hour forty years ago, and that is the maximum work of our present machines, although they may have occasionally touch- ed a 90 mile rate as a phenomenon. Why He Was A Gereral. At a court sitting in Texas Gen. Smith was called upon to testify, ‘“ Whatis your name ? he’’ was asked “Gen. Smith.,” was the reply. “Were you in the late war ?”’ ¢t No, sir.” “Were you in the Mexican war ?”’ “No, sir,” ‘Were you ever commander of mil- itia ?” “No, sir.” “Did you ever hold a military ap- pi tment ?” *No, sir.” “Then,” asked the lawyer, with a sneer, “how did you get to be a gen- eral 7” : “I gotinto the habit of extending a general invitation to the crowd to step up and have something, and pretty soon I was called general.,— Texas Siftings. Found Guilty of Murder. Mount HoLLy, N.J., September 20. The coroner’s jury to-day found that W. Warner was guilty of the wilful murder of Lizzie Peak, whose throat he cut on Saturday night last while the girl, with friends, was walking along a lonely road. —The coupling of cars on the Bell’s Gap Railroad caused spinal disease to de- velope in Mrs, Sallie McClogky, of Em- porium, and on Friday she rocovered | $6,000 damages from the company. About Precious Stones. Some Interesting Legends from the Distant Post. A writer in the Paris Figaro says: The father of jewelry was Prometheus. When he was cut loose by Hercules from the chains that fastened him to Mount Caucasus he made a ring out of one of the links of his fetters, and in the bezel of it he fixed a portion of the rock. According to Pliny, that was the first ring and the first stone. Hebrew traditivn says that the tablets of Moses were of sapphire, In Hebrew the word sappir means the most beautiful. It symbolizes loyalty, justice, beauty, and nobility. The emerala is mentioned by St. John in his Apocalypse. An emer- ald of inestimable value ornamented the bezel of the ring of Polycrates, King of Samos. The monarch, having been all his life favored by fortane, determined to put his luck to a severe test. He threw the ring into the sea. The next day he went fishing. The record of that day’s sport still remains unbroken. His majesty caught a fine fish and in the inside of the fish he found his ring. That happened in the year 230 of the foundation of Rome, and the ring, considered as a talisman, was placed among the Royal treasures of the Temple of Concord. Emeralds from India, Persia, and Peru are the most valuable. According to their tints and the lustre they are classed as Prosines, Nearonianes and Domitianes. Accord- ing to Suetonius, Nero used to look at the fighting gladiators in his emerald. The stone is the emblem of charity, hope, joy and abundance. It had the reputation of curing epilepsy by appli- cation and of being an all-around pain- killer. . The diamond has always been regard- ed as the most preciousstone. Tt resists the hardest bodies. The Pontiff. Aaron wore a diamond of astonishing virtues. It became obscure, almost black, when the Hebrews were in a state of mortal sin. If the guilty deserved death it be- came red, but in the presence of inno- cence it came back to its original purity and brilliancy. Rues assures us that diamonds breed, and that a certain Princess of the House of Luxumburg had two which had a family in the course of a reasonable time. The same interesting assertion is also made by Boethins. The diamond was reputed as a preserver against epidemics and poisons. It calms anger and foments conjugal love. The ancients called it “the stone of reconciliation.” It sym- bolizes, constancy, strength, and inno- cence. The name of the precious stone in the ring of Gyges has not been handed down to us, but it is probable that it was the topaz whose wonders Philostrates re- counts in the life of Apollonius. An attribute of the sun anda of fire, the an- cients called it the gold magnet, as it was credited with the power of attract- ing that metal, indieating its veins, and discovering treasures. Heliodorus, in his story of Theagenes and Caricles, says that the topaz saves from fire all those who wear it, and that Charicles was preserved by a topaz from the fiery vengeance of Arsaces, Queen of Kthio- pia. This stone was one of the first tal- ismans that Theagenes possessed in Egypt. The topaz at present symbol- izes Christian virtues, faith, justice, tem- perance, gentleness, clemency. One of the rarest and most precious stones is the carbuncle, which is some- times confounded with the ruby, from which it differs by the intensity of its fires, produced by an internal lustre of gold, while under the purple of the ruby there only appear dottings of azure or lacquer. Kthiopia produced the most precious ancient carbuncles. The Chal- deans regarded the stone as a powerful talisman. Legend makes the eyes of dragons out of carbuncles. Garcias ab Horto, physician of one of the Viceroys of India, speaks of carbuncles which he saw in the palace of that prince which were so extraordinary in their brilliancy that they seems ‘‘like red-hot coals in the midst of darkness.” = Louis Verto man reports that the King of Pegn wore an enormous one, which at night ap- peared to be lighted up with sunbeams, The virtue of the carbuncle are resis- tance to fire, preservation of the eyes, promotion of pleasant dreams, creation of happy illusions, and an! antidote against impure air. The ruby is valued highest when it contains the least azure. The largest ruby that history speaks of belonged to Elizabeth of Austria, the wife of Charles IX. It was almost as big as a hen’s egg. The virtues attributed to rubies are to banish sadness, to repress luxury, and to drive away annoying thoughts. At the same timeit symbol- ized cruelty, anger and carnage, as well as boldness and bravery. A change in its color announces a calamity, but when the trouble is over it regains ‘its primi- tive lustre. The amethyst, so called from the Greek Amethystos, meaning “not drunk’’ was a favoiite stone among the Roman ladies. Its principal virtue was to draw away the vapors of ine- briety from the brain. It also drove away evil thoughts and attracted to its possessor the favors of princes. - The opal, fallen from its ancient splen- dor, is to-day called an unlucky stone, evel by those who laugh at old super- stitions, but it once held a high rank among pracious stones. The belief that it attracted misfortune was founded on a Russian legend which found its way in- to France, The Empress Eugenie had a horror of an opal. At sight of one in the Tuileries she manifested terror, That had the effect of lowering the price of the stone. The turquoise is considered as a talis- man in Persia, its native soil. It pre- serves its possessor from accident and in- sures constancy in affections. The val- ue of the turquoise Jepends on its shade and its size, especially its thickness, Those classed as belonging’ to the old rock are valued very highly. Emblem of youth, of sentiment, and tender re- collections, the turquoise may be called the forget-me-not of stone. It breaks on the death of its. proprietor, and it changes when heis ill. This last ob- servation is perfectly true, and is certi- fied to by all lapidaries. The same thing has been remarked of coral. “Not only do precious stones live,” says Jer- ome Cardan, ‘‘but they are liable to get sick, to suffer from the infirmities of old age, and at last to die.” - The most precious of all stones, accor- ding to Dr. de Lignieres, is the jade, ‘on account of its rarity, its extraordinary qualities, and the mystery of its cutting. It was regarded as a sacred stone, and no- | body had a right to possess it except a prince of imperial blood. Argerius Clu- | tius, a famous physician in Amsterdam | at the time of the Renaissance, published | a work on the jade, or nephritic stone, as it was then called, on account of its action on the renal system. At thesame period Italian authors spoke of the jade as osiada, and discussed .its wonderful powers for healing sciatica. The leg- ends surrounding this stone abound in history. Good specimens of jade are ex- tremely rare, and the world is ata loss to know how the Chinese managed to cut it, because itis so extremely hard that nothing can make an impression upon it. Splendid specimens of gray and green jade can be seen in the mu- seum of the Trocadoro. In conclusion Dr. de Lignieres admits the possibility of the soundnessof the theory that precious stones may have healing properties. High scientific au- thority, he says, has established beyond dispute the reality of an action vis, vir- tus, or vita, exercised by a great num- ber of precious stones, leaving out of the question the influence of imagination and al! the phenomena of auto-sugges- tion. Interesting Facts. The mean height of land above sea level is 2250 feet. Chinese physicians prescribe cat's meat as a remedy for lung diseases. An adult laboring man uses up five ounces of bis muscle in the course of a day. No British sovereign has vetoed a Parliamentary bill during the past 185 years. An oil painting constantly hung in a dark place loses some of itz vividness and therefore depreciates in value; The biggest of freshwater fish, the “arapaimi’’ of the Amazons in South American, grows to six feet in length. Tobacco was taken to Europe by the Spaniards early in the sixteenth century was introduced into England by Ra- leigh in 1555. A plant for the "manufacture of hand grenades has been erected in connection with the Natiogal Artillery foundry of Mexico. Checkers or draughts were known to the ancient Egyptians, ard pictures 4000 years old represent a quarrel over the game. James Runciman is said to have writ- ten his “Dream of the North Sea,” which contains 70,000 words, in eight days and with one pen. ‘When a child dies in Greenland the native parents bury a living dog with it, the dog to be used by the child as a guide to the other world. The elevation of Denver, Col., being 5370 feet—over one mile—above sea level, makes the atmosphere rare, dry and clear, there being on an average less than six days each year without sunshine. The largest sum ever asked or offered for a single diamond was $2,150,000, which the Prince of Hyderabad, in In- din, agreed to give the jeweler who then owned the Imperial, which is con- sidered the finest stone in the world. It was on Friday that Columbus set sailed from Palos. Friday he saw the new world. Friday he reached Palos on his return, the 400th anniversary of the discovery falls on Friday and on Friday this country was christened after Americus Vespucius, the Florentine discoverer. It is stated that a long first joint of the thumb shows will power; a long second joint indicates strong logieal or reasoning power ; a thick wide thumb indicates a person of marked individual- ity, while a broad knob at the ead of the thumb is a sure indication of obsti- nacy. . The British museum possesses a cup of almost fabulous velue. It is of gold and edamuel, is adorned with subjects from the life of St. Agnes, and costs for- ty thousand. The cup derives most of its interest and value from the fact that it was given to Charles VI. of France, in 1891, by his uncle Jean, Duke of Berri. : If twelve persons were to agree to dine together every day, but never sit exactly in the same order ropnd the ta- ble, it would take them 13,000,000 years at the rate of one dinner a day, and they would have to eat more than 479,- 000,000 dinners before they could get through all the possible arrangements in which they could place themselves. Among the Slovaks of North Hun- gary the coffin of a young girl is red. In Spain the poorer class useno coffins. A mule, with the dead body thrown across it, or often two corpses, may be frequently met on the way to burial, and, though to us such a funeral seems insulting to the departed, the natives reverently uncover their heads as it passes. a The Gospel of St. Mark, printed on raised letters at Philadelphia in Nov- ember, 1833, was the stepping stone to the education of the blind. It was printed in the old French type, invent- ed by Hauy, but now Roman letters (without capitals, to save space) are used and the Bible is printed in eight volumes each a little larger than Wepster's un- abridged dictionary. A Clever Woman and her Age. A level headed woman who has bid- den goodby tc the first bloom of her youth, but is making out extremely well on the aftermath, has successfully solved the problem of quenching other women’s inquiries with regard to her age. : “Whenever a woman has the cheek to ask me what my age is,”’ she ex- plained, “I always beam upon her and immediately exclaim, ‘Oh, my dear girl I am a great deal older than you are—a whole year at least.’ And then, before she can find time cr breath an- other question, I add, ‘And by the way, what is your exact age, dear. The wo- man, taken by surprise lies heroically of course, and consequently makes me ‘out at least five years younger than I | would have dared to make myself.” RE “Listed,” as the broker says, at ¢100 Doses One Dollar,”” Hood’s Sarsa- " parilla is alway a fair equivalent for the price. The World of Women. “Green’s forsaken. Yellow’s forsworn ; Blue's the color That must be worn,’, Long and short feather beas again, Large plaid velvets for dress access- ories. “Storm” serge in black, blue, tan and gray. Square crowned English walking hats of felt. Long ulsters having triple and re- movable capes, Boston has a woman undertaker, and so has Philadelphia, Foumenne Mrs. Hannah Whitall Smith writes that 1,000 American girls are now studying art in Paris. =~ o-oo ooo w TEAS “There are 1,900 Red Cross Sisters in Russia, says the St. Petersbure Little Father, and there are besides these a considerable number in reserve, so that in case of war there would be plenty of nurses available foractive work, Nine- ty of those on ths force are Sisters of Charity. Miss Mary Pierson Eddy, the daugh. ter of the Rev. William Eddy, the Syr- ian missionary, has resolved to return to Syria, where she was born, to devote herself to the little children of the coun- try and to use all precautionary mea- sures so save their eyes from the diseases brought about by the climate. She is now studying medicine and fitting her- self to bean eye and ear specialist. The well-known oculist Dr. Knapp, is her instructor and she will be fitted to be- gin her work at the mission after anoth- er year’s study. One of the new sleeves—the Floren- tine—is tight from the wrist to several inches above the elbow. The upper part is a full, deep puff, banded at the lower edge. The sleeves and the puff are very often of two contrasting fabrics and colors. The leg-o’-mutton style ap- pears upon some of the handsomest French gowns. The cavalier cuff of velvet trims many of the sleeves of tail- or-made costumes, and a new coat sleeves has a jabot drapery on the back of the arm from shoulder to elbow, and again is made slightly flaring at the wrist to show a tiny undersleeve in the shape of a puff. This daintily-finished model is copied from some beautiful art toilets made for ladies of the court. The undersleeve, to suit various dresses, is made severally of lace, net, velvet, chiffon, dotted silk tulle and India mull. Among famous women who were mothers of small families comes Eliza- beth Barrett Browning, who had only one son. Mrs. Somerville, the mathe- matician, had two daughters and one son only, though she was twice married. Mme George Sands had two children, a son and a daughter; so had Lady Mary Montagu, whose “letters” are so admir- ed in literature, and Mme: de Sevigne, writter of equally famous ‘letter’ in French. Mme. de Stael bad three chil- dren in her early married life; when 48 years old she married a second time and then had another son. George Eliot (Mrs. Cross) was childless, and so was Mrs. Craik, the author of “John Hali- fax.” Mrs. Barbauld, whose prose and poetry were both much admired in the last century, had ro children, and the same was the case with her equally praised contemporary, Mrs. Ople. Short skirts, itis said, are growing narrower at the bottom and wider at top The proportions given by me last week were those of the summer skirt. I have obtained the following .proportions of the skirt for autumn: It is composed of a front and a back, the front slightly the narrower, the seams of the back and front edges gored equally, and gored at an angle of from 15 to 20 degrees. These proportions are important to the hang of the skirt, and also, in case of striped material, permit the stripes to meet, The back is straight, or else is gored at the same angle as the side. The extra fullness in the back is gather- ed under the two large pleats. There are four short gores on each side, but the front being narrower the third gore comes in the seam and the fourth in the back breadth. Another advantage of this cut is that it allows striped mater- ial to run vertically instead of diagon- ally in the back. : Women are all anxious about their new gowns, winter hats and etceteras especially suitable for the cold weather months that are coming. Every one of us will have a jacket—not an outside garment, mark you, but a little Figaro, Toreador or Bolero in our best Sunday- go-to-meeting gown. A genuine Tore- ador costume that would not be at all safe at a bull-fight, yet wonderfully picturesque, is of shaggy cloth, rich in all the tints of the outumn foliage. The little jacket is of vivid scarlet embroid- ered in Persian effects with rich glhtter- ing beads. You will likewise have a buckle on your new hat or you can put one on your old one, but their must be a buckle somewhere, or you will not be carrying about with you the hall mark of imported millinery, The bow-knot chatelaine is doomed--for which let us render thanks—and our watches are now attached to chains of tiny golden links, set at interval with whole pearls Isn’t that richness for you ? ‘Women who have large wardrobes depend to a great ‘extent on garments made since spring for the autumn demi- season, but for the fresh gowns one must have the two following model are given: Scotch tweed in mixed brown makes the first. This fabric will be very much ‘used for street and promenade gowns, the handmade being first choice but too cost- ly for the average purse. The skirt is made after the directions given below. There is a shoulder cape with a wide collar of some eight inches, that turns down up. ' With this in worn a silk skirt of cream ground barred with brown and cardinal. The skirt and cape may be bordered with a silk ruche. The hat is a brown felt with a flat crown of cream guipure lace and a brown velvet Alsatian bow in: front The second dress isa short skirt and garcon jacket with a flaring Directoire, bordered with black revers, ‘worn with a skirt of c.eam and black, and a black cravat. The hat is ablack felt.