Demareaic Wald Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 7, 1892. THE DAGUERREOTYPE. You hev to holt it sidewise Fer to make the likeness show, -’Cuz its sort uh dim an’ shifty Till you git it right—'bout so; An’ then the eyes winks at yeh, An’the mouth is cherry-ripe. Law! it beats your new-style picters, This old diggerytype ! Thar's a blush acrost the dimples Thet burrows in the cheeks ; F’om out them clumps of ringlets Two little small ears peeks ; Thet brooch thet jines her neck-gear Is what they used to wear ; A big gold frame thet sprawled around A Jock o'—some one’s hair. "Twas took ‘fore we was married, Thet there—your ma an’ me, An’ times I study on it, ‘Why, 't fazes me to see Thet fifty years ain’t teched her A lick! She's jest the same She was when Sadie Scriggens Took Boone C. Curd’s name. The hair is m2bby whiter ’An it was in it, But her cheeks is just as pinky, An’ her smiles ain’t slacked up none. I reckon—love—er somthin’ » Yerluminates her face, Like the crimsont velvet linin’ ‘Warms up the picter case. *S I say, these eyardboa’d portraits They make me sort uh tired, A frjunip forf upon yeh ike their very lips was wired ! Give me the old diggerytype, Whar the face steals on yer sight Like a dream that comes by nighttime “When yer supper’s actin’ right. —FEva” Wilder McGlasson in Harper's Weekly. Sa. — “JADIS,” Over the flat fea country there were white mists rising. It was already rowing dusk, but it was not going to very dark this summer night. The weeds had been cut and drifted down stream in thick masses. A thin middle- aged man stood by the lock gates, watching an approaching boat. He was dressed in country clothes, but he had not the air of a countryman; he was pale, and had a look of experience. Save fox the regular sound of the sculls everything was quite still, save for the man at the lock gates and the solitary occupant of the boat there was no one in sight. It was a wide, flat, desolate scene. The boat was rather a heavy tub, and the man who was sculling was tired and out of temper. As a rule, he was thought to be a distinctly brilliant and and genial young man; but he wanted to get on to Nunnisham, which was five miles beyond the lock, that night, and he had been delayed by the weeds. The gods had given him extraordinari- ly good looks and many other good things ; enough to keep him genial, un- less, as on the present occasion, circum: stances tried him severely. At the lock he drew into the bank and hailed the middle-aged man who still stood watching him. “Hi! what are the weeds like above the locks?” “Very bad, sir.” The answer was given in a serious, respectful voice. The young man swore gently to him- gelf. “Is there any place near here where I could put up for the night ?” “There is only a public house, sir. I am the landlord of it—my name is Hill. I ‘could give you a bedroom, a little rough perhaps, but” “Good—a bed and some supper— capital ! That is the only bit of luck I've had to-day.” As he was epeaking the young man picked up a small koap- sack which was lying in the stern of the boat and jumped out. He made the boat fast and joined the landlord on the tow path. “It is thisway. You will let me car- ry that for you, sir.” As they walked along the brilliant young man—his name was Philip Vince—chatted freely. He was taking a holiday up the river and was to have joined a friend at Nunnoisham that night and then gone on with him the day after. He told the landlord all this and aleo surmised that Hill was not a native of the fen country. “No, sir,’ was the answer, “I was valet to Sir’ Charles Sulmont. You have perhaps heard of him.” Philip had never heard of him, but said that he had, “When Sir Charles died he left me a little money and I married a maid who was then in Lady Sulmont’s service. I bought this house with a little assist ance from: her ladyship and settled here. I was very young then and 1 have heen here eighteen years.” Philip gathered from further talk as they went along that Mrs. Hill was dead, and that she had left one child, Jeanne, a girl of seventeen, who lived with her father. When they reached the inn, Hill showed Philip a bedroom —a large, comfortable room, and be- gan to make some apology about sup- per. They very rarely had any one staying in the house, and there was nkiing left but—here Philip interrup- ted : “You would be doing me a kindness if you would let me have supper with you and your daughter. I hate soli- tude. I mean, if your—if Miss Hill wouldn’t otject.” “If you really wish it, sir, I should be very pleased; so also, I am sure, would Jeanne.” Hill was a born valet; he had the manner; if he had lived out of service for a hundred years he would have been a valet still. When Hill left him, Philip looked around thé room and congratulated himself. Everything was very neat and clean. Thelandlord was a capital fellow—a little solemn, perhaps, but still a capital fellow. This was far above the accommodation which he had expected. Just then a light footfall came up the stairs, and Philip caught a snatch of a French song. The song stopped short just before the footfall passed his door. Philip conjectured that this must be the daughter, and that it had been a French maid that Hill had married— hence the name Jeanne and that snatch of song; also that the daughter had been warned of his arrival, and had gone to put on her prettiest dress. All of these conjectures were quite correct. And yet when Jeanne entered the sit: | o oat [3] ting room, a few minutes afterward, and saw Philip for the first time, she was so startled that she showed it slightly. Philip was also a little surprised, for a different reason, and did not show it at all. He had thought of the possibility that Jeanne might be pretty, and she was a beauty—a brunette, childlike in many ways, but with a woman's eyes. Her voice was good, and her first words showed that she had some education. It took her about ten minutes to get from decided shyness to complete con- fidence. Philip was feeling far too good-tempered to let any one be shy with him ; he made Hill and his daugh- ter talk, and he talked freely himself. He liked the simplicity of everytbing about him ; he had grown tired of for- malities in London. He liked cold beef and salad, for he was very hungry, and —yes, above all, he liked Jeanne. What on earth were that face and that manner doing in a riverside inn ? She was perfect ; she did not apologize too much, did not get flurried, did not have red hands, spoke correctly, laughed charmingly—in a word, was bewitch- ing. Really he was glad that he had been prevented from going on to Nun. pisham. Toward the end of supper he discovered that she was wearing a white dress with forgetmenots in it. The table was cleared by a native servant, who seemed all red cheeks and new boots. Iill went off to superin- tend the business of the inn. Philip was left alone with Jeanne. She told him to smoke and he was obedient ; he also made her tell him other things. Yes, she had been to school at Nun- nisham—rather too good a school for her, she wasafraid, but her mother had wished it. Her mother had taught her French and a little music. Music and drawing were "the best things, she thought, but she liked some books. She owned that it was lonely at the inn. “I am glad you came,” she confessed frankly. “Jeanne,” said Philip, “I heard you humming a line or two of ‘Jadis’ be- fore supper, didn’tI? I wish you would sing it to me.” She agreed at once, crossing the room to a little cot- tage piano—rather a worn out instru ment, but still a piano. The melody— plaintive, gentle, childish—of Jeanne’s sweet voice and the sadness of the words with their quaint, pensive re- strain, did not miss their effect— For nothing further here 1 burn A joy once lost cannot return. My At asks only to be blessed With an everlasting rest. He thanked her; he had liked that very much. “Why,” he asked, “were you startled when you saw me?” “Because you area dream come true. I saw your face in a dream last night-- as clearly as I see you now. All this timeI have been feeling as if I had known you before.” “Really ?”’ he said. He had not quite believed it. ‘How many things come true! One says things about the short- ness oftime or the certainty of death so often that they lose all meaning; then when one grows old or lies dying the platitudes get to have terrible force— they come true.” She was struck by that; she kept her eyes fixed on his and he kept on talking to her. He did not, as the time wore on, always mean quite 80 much as he said, and she meant much more than she said. That is a common dif- ference between a man and a woman on such occasions. It seemed to her now that for the first time she really lived. After Jeanne had said good night, Philip had some chat with her father about her. “I expect that she will be engaged very soon, sir,” he said; ‘‘a young man called Banks— William Banks—is anx- ious, and has spoken to me, and she likes him.” “Now, I wonder,” thought Philip as he went up stairs, “whyghe never even hinted that to me. M'yes, I see” Nextmorning after breakfast he went away, taking with him a few forgetme- nots, a pleasant memory and just the faintest possible feeling of remorse. They all faded. a imi og # Eroha% Jeanne had seemed so quiet and de- presced of late that her father, in order to cheer her up, had invited Mr. Will- jam Banks to spend the evening. ° Mr. Banks was a small shopkeeper in Nunnisham, and considered to be no mean wag by’ those who knew him. Yet he felt unableto cheer her up. “Supposing we had a bit of a toon, Jen- ny,” he suggested at last. She was quite docile. She played one thing after another. Suddenly she began ‘“Jadis.” “I don’t understand French myself,” Mr. Banks remarked, “but the words of a song don’t matter,”. She bad nev- er thought much about the words her- self before. But now— Since no more his-love I be Nothing further pleases me. Her voice faltered a little, but ehe sang on to the end of the verse— - My heart asks only to be blessed With an everlasting rest. Yes, the song had “come true.” Just there she gave way and began tocry a little. A week afterward Mr. Banks an- nounced that his attentions to Miss Hill were at an end.—Speaker. Andraw Jackson’s Prophetic Words. From Jackson’s Farewell Address. The corporations and swealthy indi- viduals who are engaged in large manu- facturing establishments desire a high tariff to increase their gains. Design- ing politicians will support it to concil- iate their favor and to obtain the means of profuse expenditure for the purpose of purchasing influenc in other quarters. * *% % Donot allow yourselves, my fellow—citizens, to be misled on this subject. The Federal Government cannot collect a surplus for such pur- poses without violating the princples of the Constitution and assuming powers which have not been.granted. It is, more-over, a system of injustice, and if persisted in, will inevitably lead to cor- ruption and must end in ruin: TERRAIN - A ——— | ——Grasshoppers ' contain formic acid worth sixty cents an ounce. Who Invented Kissing. The word ¢ is Anglo-Saxon, and may indeed, be taken as an instance of how pleasant Anglo-Saxon can be. The philogist assures us that itis allied to the Gothic “kustns,” a proof or test, and to the latin © gustus,”’ a taste; which suggests the old saying that ¢ the proof of the pudding is in the preein’ o’t.” The same gothic kustus come from the verb kiusan, to choose, from which one would imagine that among the Goths Kissing went by favor. According to Prof. Skeat, writing with all the austerity and scholarship of an expert, a kiss is “a gust a taste, a something choice. Rowena, the beau- tiful daughter of the Saxon Hengist, is credited with having introduced Kissing into these fortunate islands; but it seers as if that, had the natives been so utter- ly unenlightened, the Romans could scarcely have failed to anticipate her. The Romans had really a delightful word for a kiss—osclum, which came from os, the mouth, and meant a little mouth, a sweet mouth” “Give me a sweet little mouth’ would be the phrase used when a good little Roman boy ask- ed his mother for a kiss. Our English word occurs pretty neat- ly in its present form in Anglo-Saxon, Dutch, Icelandic, Danish Sweedish and German. And thisis worthy of note, because natural as kissing may seem to be, it is a pratice unknown to the Aus- tralian, to the Maoris of New Zealand, the Papuans of New Guinea, the people of Tabbati, the negroes of Central and Southern Africa, Botocudos of Brazil, the savages of Terra del Fuego, the Laplanders and the Eskimo. Most of these benighted mortals have not got beyond the low stage of rubbing the noses. Kissing points to an ancient discred- ited belief in a veritable union of spirits a belief common to all the Aryan peo. ples that the breath of a man was his soul, his spirit. Spirit,” is breath, and “ghost” is a ’’gust which possibly accounts for the cold air that is said to accompanying apparitions. If, then, the breath was a divine thing —the soul and spirit of man--is not easy to understand how naturally Kiss- ing came to be a veritable communion, a commingling of soul with soul ? —Boston Globe. Sp ——— A Solid Silver Statue. Ada Rehan to Be the Model for a Valuable Fige ure at the Fair. Cuicaco—A statue in solid silver, eight feet in height, costing $50,000 and standing upon $250,000 worth of gold compressed into a pedestal, will be one of the exhibits at the World’s Fair, from Montana. The pedestal will rep- resent the largest lump of gold ever seen. Sculptor R. H. Park will receive $10,000 for the model. Never in the world has a statue of heroic proportions been cast wholly in precious metals, except, per- haps, one of Cleopatra, the exist- ence of which was never authenticated by the most expert silversmith in the country. Miss Ada Rehan has consented to be the model for Mr. Park's statue. He will go to New York next week for the necessary study. Miss Rehan is con- sidered to be one of the most perfect types of American womanhood, her ar- tistic ability also enhancing her value as a model, which is to be viewed by so many thousands. The figure will rep- resent Justice standing on the globe with advarced foot resting on the con- tinent of North America. In her left hand she holds balances equally poised one side of which is filled with gold and the other with silver coin. In her right hand she holds the sword with arm extended. The figure designates ideal womanhood. Cost of the Homestead Riots. The Sixteenth Regiment Will Probably Soon be Sent Home. Adjutant General Greenland will leave for Pittsburg to-morrow morning, and before. his return it is expected that the Sixteenth Regiment will be relieved of military duty. The Adjutant Gen- eral apprehends no further trouble at the Carnegie works. The Homestead affair will entail an expense on the State ap- proximating $400,000. Warrants have already been drawn for the payment of $282.899.93 for the payment of officers and men, commissary stores, quarter- master bills, horse hire and other inci- dentals. The Fifteenth Regiment, with- drawn from Homestead a few days ago, is entitled to eleven days’ pay, and the Sixteenth has not been paid since the 9th instant. The bill of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company against the State for transpor- tation expenses is $52,000 and other rail- road expenses will probably reach $15,000. The aggregate cost of the Homestead outbreak will exceed Gover- nor Pattison’s estimate about $150,000 owing to the long service required of a portion of the State militia. Japanese Parties. Coming to the fore are Japanese par- ties, unique little affairs in which .deco- rations and gowns are closely copied from those of Japan, and refreshments are served by well-gotten-up Japs who pass around English danties in Japanese guise. The hostess receives her guests in a gorgeous costume which would do credit to the swellest Japanese modiste, and standing beneath a huge Japanese umbrella. The rooms are adorned with fantastic fans, umbrellas, lanterns, crepe paper hangings and curious plants, all of which show at # glance that they are treasures of Japan. The table is set with Japanese dishes and paper napkins bearing mystical lettering, while tea, sardine sandwiches sweet biscuits, waters, fruit, conserves and tinted ices in the form of odd-look- ing blooms are served in quaint little receptacles. Before leaving every guest is presented with something unique in the way of a souvenir, the originality of this depend- ing upon the ingenuity of the hostess Re ——————————————————————— — My husband is the dearest and most considerate man in the world.” ‘How does he show it?" : “He knows I hate tobacco-smoke in the house, and so he goes to the club every night after supper and smokes there.” The Voyage of Columbus. On August 2, 1492, everything was ready, and the crew were notified to embark, to awate the uncertain mo- ment when a favorable wind should permit the little fleet to set sail. Noth- ing so benefitted that solemn hour as a votive procession from the caravels to the*monastery, to which the eyes of the mariners turned as to a spirtiual beacon, brighter than any that flared along the headlands. This pious duty performed, the crew returned on board the caravels, where they patiently awaited the order to sail, while Colum- bus retired to the monastery, eagerly to watch for a favoring wind. Columbns kept all sail on his cara- vels during the night of August 2. The old salts of the crew looked for a favor- ing wind at starting, and Columbus’ eager ‘watchfulness was not to pass un- rewarded. From the height on which La Rabida stood, he scanned sea and gky with steadfast gaze, like one of those seabirds, pres2gers of changes of wind and weather, clinging to the scar- red and storm-beaten cliff. About 3in the morning, while the stars yet twink- led 1n the skies and all earth slumber- ed, the awaited breeze sprang up, bring- ing new life to the discoyerer’s veins and quickening the throbbing of his heart. The pines murmured as though hymning the dawn and the waters rip- pled as thohgu heaving with the breath of love and hope. Columbus awaken- ed Padre Juan, and he in turn the child Diego, and the three repaired to the chapel in quest of heavenly aid and religious solace for the approach- ing pangs of separation and for the fateful voyage. As in the boandless ether shine the stars, so the lamps flickered in the little church, lighting with their rays alike the courses of the ocean and the pathways of the souls. The monk put on the priestly vest- ments and celebrated the holy sacra- meat of the high altar before the tap- er-lighted Virgin, The hour had come, and Columbus resolutely descended to the shore, plucking himself away from the em- braces that held him to the land like some deep-rooted oak, for the sail-wings were ready to bear him to the realm of sea and sky. He soon reached the whatf, and as the dawn broke in the East the flagship majestically run in- shore to take the new Argonaut on board. The fluttering sails, the hur- ried maneuvers of the crew, the boat- swain’s whistle, and the cries of the sailors as the ships got under way an- nounced a spaedy departure, and at- tracted the early risen villagers to the shore in#heir natural desire to witness the scene, and to bid farewell to depart- ing friends and loved ones. When Columbus sprang from the skiff on board the caravel, and the anchors weighed, a shudder ran alike through the departing sailors and the leave-tak- ers on the strand. Where they were going they knew not, but as their west- ward course after leaving Cadiz and Canaries was to take them far beyond those lately won islands, none knew whither they were bound or the direc- tion of the voyage. The cross floated above the flagship, which bore sea- ward toward the unknown, seeking mysteries perchance impenetrable and inaccessible to the human mind and unconquerable by human will Early in September they left the Canaries behind and plunged into the abyss of ocean. It was growing urgent that Columbus should do this, for in the eyes of his companions the most ordindry phenomena became celestial warnings. In the clear, half-Andalu- ries rose the deep-furrowed violet cone of the volcano of Teneriffe, crimson eruption, like the new sun springing into birth, shooting its iris tinted flames through clouds of smoky ashes, with terrents of stony fragments like falling meteors or glowing like an incandes- cent milky way—all this filled them with dread, for they deemed the flaring mountain some vast Cyclops, imprison- ed there by the Divine hand at the ut- termost portals of the known earth, to bar the pathway to the unknown world, Columbus showed them the error of their superstition, and how the self-same phenomena were repeated on the familiar shores of Etruria, Italy, Sicily and Greece. But although their dread was speedily tranquilized by his marvelous eloquence, an unforseen and tortuitcus occurrence threatened to re- vive their fears and to wreck the plan through uncontrollable panic. At length a favoring easterly breeze sprang up, and the ships sped arrow-like on their course. The land soon sank from view, and the explorers found them- selves alone with sea and sky. As the astute Genoese well divined the dread which the ever-increasing distance was certain to arouse, he kept two log-books, oue for himself and the other for the crew. In the former he recorded the actual run, in the latter a lesser distance, by which device he diminished the fears and restrained the impatience of his susceptible shipmates. By doing this an unforseen complica- tion arose. Their sure guide, the com- pass, that ever had pointed fixedly to the north, began to waver. Although this phenomenon had been known for two centuries—though many say it had never been observed until then—the crew gave themselves up for lost, and imagined that for them even the one fixed point was shifting, as though God had cast them oft. Columbus recog- nized the necessity of explaining this phenomenon as he had explained the volcanoes. But the explanation was not easy, for while the volcanoes were possible to understand or explain the variavon of the needle by any familiar fact or experience, The caravel was better fitted for the task of discovery than any other bark of that day. Stout and big enough to withstand the shock of waves, it was at thesame time sufficiently light and shallow of draft to enter-the mouths of rivers and to tack with ease in narrow channels. According to nautical au- like others already known, it was im- sian, half-tropical nights of the Cana-| ET A TT Te erally given in Columbus’ time to any vessel of burden, whatever its size and strength. “A long and narrow side- decked vessel, with a beak at the prow,” says our dictionary of Castilian authorities, to which we turn as to an oracle in the matter of nationalidioms. This definition, in truth, cannot be bet- tered in its first part, if able nautical treaties are to be trusted. But when that classical dictionary adds that a caravel has three masts of nearly equal size, with three large lateen yards and sails, some emendation seems needful ; for though the three ships of Colum- bus were called caravels, only one of them cerried the kind of sail thus de- scribed, and that was the smallest and trailest of them, the Nina. Our dic- tionary is also in conflict with the clas- sic texts of seamanship when it asseris caravels to be dangerous because of their shallow draft, being easily capsiz- ed unless their sails were quickly trim- med, when unimpeachable masters of maritime science and experience de. clare them to have been stanch and stout enough for the needs of those times. The Columbian caravels were at most of 80 tons burden, and had a square poop surmounted by a high cas- tle, to match the smaller castle at the bow. Square sails were sometimes carried but caravels were generally lateen rigged. Nevertheless, the defi: nition of one versed in those matters makes the caravel of larger size than is commonly supposed, and describes them as stanch and fleet, with high castles at stem and stern, with three vertical masts and a bowspirit, the foremost and mainmast being square- rigged and the mizzenmast carrying a lateen sail. Some assert that they could make but 28 leagues in a day’s run, others as high as 72 leagues.— Ex. Nancy Hanks’ Great Mile. Horsemen Hugged Each Other and the Crowd Yelled for Joy. INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 29.—A Senti- nel special from Terre Haute says of Nancy Hanks’ great achievement in beating all the world’s records yesterday kite and otherwise, by trotting on the Terre Haute regulation track in the marvelous time of 2:04, that there was present one of the largest crowds ever seen at the track. Crowds came on the trains from all sections of Indiana and the eastern part of Illinois, Terre Haute was given up last night entirely to Nancy and she can have anything in the town, even the Court House. Every- body sings the paises of the wonderful little mare. $ The track was in great condition, the day was refreshing and cloudless, and when Doble came out with the mare looking as fine as silk, the ovation he and his fleet-footed queen showed com- pelled him to lift his hat. Nancy went at the first effort and came down to the start like a whirlwind, keyed to the master effort by Doble. Around the track she flew as she had never done be- fore. Everybody in the grand stand seemed to believe this was the trial of trials, and when the mare came in un- der the wire in 2:04, a shout went up that lasted fully ten minutes. It was simply indescribable. Horsemen embraced each other in the exuberance of their joy. Men jumped over the railing on to the track, and in the twinkling of an eye the horse and the driver were surrounded by a yelling frantic mob. Doble was taken up in the grand stand in response to demands for a speech from the enthusiastic throng. He started to tell Starter Walker what to say for him, but the noise was so great that nothing could be heard of what Walker wassaying., Doble him- self was so overjoyed that he had reach- ed the condition bordering on speechless- ness. Itwould have been doubtful it he could have told where he was. The feat yesterday was, over the same track on whick Axtell beat the world’s stallion record in 2:12, and sold immediateiy af- terwards for the enormous price of $105- 000. Yesterday's work will be some thing for trotters to shoot at for some- time to come, and the officers of the Terre Haute Trotting Association are delighted that the Terre Haute track has demonstrated its claim to be known as the choicest and fastest track in the country. —— Miss Mary E. Wilkins, a mos successful writer of short stories, who has recently come into prominence, cherishes an ambition to become a playwright, and for some time past has been at work upon a piece called “Giles Corey, Yeoman.” She has chosen for her subject the Salem witchcraft delu- gion, which has also furnished the theme to Mr. McClellan for “Purtania,” and the play is as sombre in tone as were the days which it depicts. This play, it is said, has been read to sever- al managers, but as yet no arrange ment has been made for its. production. There is no doubt that any piece from Wilkens's pen would command a great deal of interest from the people” who have been familiar with her artistic and truthful delineations of New En- gland life and character, but to make her work successful it will be necessa- ry for Miss Wilkins to draw with a stronger pencil that which she has em- ployed in her short stories. It is to be hoped, however, that she possesses a great and undeveloped dramatic talent. Omaha Wife—¢ What under the sun are you doing ?” uband—*Trying to tie this string around my finger. “Why, I did notask you to do any errand.” “No. This string is to remind me Wea | have nothing to remember to- ay. ; COT — «Have you a book called ‘Pansy Poems ?”’ Yes, sir” “Gimme all you have.” “Certainly sir. You must have a great admiration for the book.” “No, I haven't. It was written by my son, and I'm protecting the family name.” k AE ERR, A Max's OPINION,--Too many wo- men have an idea that they must laugh at everything a man says.—dtchison thorities, the name of caravel was gen- Globe. The World of Women. The black moirs are great favorites, and in dark colors, cordelines, ottomans and watered silks will be very popular. Old-fashioned shoulder bandkerchiefs of very thin silk or crepe de chine are worn with the ends crossed and tucked into the belt on either side. Those who have recentlp come from the shops of the leading French modistes in Paris declare that during the coming season buttons will be much used as a garniture, Four big Dresden buttons appear on both sides of the stylish Bolers jacket, which to be in perfect accord with, the dictates of fashion, must be oie by a slender figure. : Velours miroir(mirror) is thinner than the usual silk velvet and reflects like a mirror lights and shades, and is much liked for sleeve puffs and belts on silk and woolen dresses, Extremely becoming to slender neck-- ed women are the frills and flattings of velvet which, when worn with pale cloth costumes, complete a distinctly modish tout ensemble. The heaviest cloths and the roughest fabrics in the market are made into deep triple capes, ungainly enough to. look at, but which, when donned by a sweil-looking woman will present the nobbiest appearance. Upon the color card for autumn are to be found fruity tones and dead leaf shades. Mahogany is to be an especial favorite, and in blues one may find everything from a rich Russian blue to the commonplace navy. It would have cost $3,000 to do the work which has been undertaken grat- uitously by Mrs. Dora Wheelar Smith upon the ceiling and freize of the Wo- man’s building at the World’s Fair. The entire design will be original. Among the new things for wedding decorations is noticed a pair of white satin slippers trimmed. with silver and filled with choice flowers. These shoes are placed upon a drawing room table. A gift ordered for a golden wedding is a pair of Louis Quinze slippers of yellow satin, filled with orchids. Louis Quinze coats of. very graceful shape are imported from Paris for au- tumn wear and also for the early win- ter. They outline the figure without fitting too closely, and fall open from the throat on a deep vest of em- broidered cloth or rich brocade. They are about thirty-two inches long. By wearing pure wool next to the flesh the necessary warmth is given with fewer clothes. Physicians and women have become aroused to the importance of light weight clothes, and manufaec- turers have aided them in every manner in putting upon the market a variety of” well-fitting underwear of all kinds. Ropes of jet mark many of the im- ported robes, which appear in very heavy dark cloth. These jet ropes are carried down the sides of the skirt and garnish the bodice very effectively, standing in wires loops upon the shoul- ders, encircling the stiff, flaring collar and running crosswise upon the sleeves. Scotch plaid surah blouse is the cor- rect thing at present, and will be for the approaching demi-season. The blouses are usually carefully fitted, made on the bias of the plaid, and the latest touch is a cravat of flock silk or satin, like the old time neck scarf of our grandfathers, wound twice around the high collar band, and tied in a knot with two ‘tears’ in front. From across the water there comes a capote for the theatre which is a mar- velous blending of colors. Pale blue velvet, covering the low crown, is over- laid with silver net showered with emer- ald drops. At the side two long loops. of emerald velvet rest flatly against the crown, while a thick cluster of peacock feathers cut very short and covered with a web of silver threads, nestles amid the: folds of the blue velvet. New waist coats of Scotch plaid surah or shot taffeta are made to be worn with: open coats that have skirts and also with: the shorter jackets reaching only to the waist-line, similar in shape to the Eaton and Russian models. The gay waist- coats have a loose blouse front of the silk, with a turned over collar and broad ends to tie in a large cravat bow. The back is merely of silesia. The short jackets are made variously of black or blue serge, Harris tweed, Bed- ford cord, velvet and Venetian cloth. Lemon crepe is the foundation of & very beautiful dinner dress, which blonde or brunette may wear with equal grace. The skirt is plain, this serving to make more striking the bodice. Heavy jet suspenders cross the shoul- ders, and jet is used so plentifully upon the lower part of the flowing sleeves that the pale yellow background .is in- visible. A lemon tinted belt ribbon is. studded at intervals with large jet but- tons, and the ribbon bows which punc- tuate the front of the corsage are also sprinkled with jet. Pointed shoes (and of course every shoe is pointed nowadays), as every body knows,must be a size or two longer than the foot within, and the majority of women go about with the toe crush- ed in, and therefore wrinkled in a fash- ion that will make any shoe ugly. How much better it would be if they would only take the pains to stuff the toe with cotton, and keep the leather up smooth and firm; it is all a mistake to suppose that the wrinkled appearance is desira- ble, because revealing that the foot is so much shorter than the length of the shoe. At a recent reception one pretty little lass wore a costume which was striking on account of its simplicity. A cherry strewn satin-like fabric was fashioned into a long, loose-flowing robe, falling from the shoulders to the ground in graceful lines. To one side it was looped upover a turquoise biue underskirt,with a bunch of ripe red cherries, and upon her curly locks the girl wore a quaint litile blue velvet Priscilla cap, which was so dainty and chic that many of her friends avowed their intentions. of having one just ike it. ‘Who knows but that Pris- cilla caps may be become an important addition to the evening gowning?