on Thanksgivia’ day ! anything like it!” Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. |, 1893. RETROSPECT. The roses were not just so sweet perhaps, As we thonght they would surely be. And the blossoms are not so pearly white As of yore, on the orchard tree; But the summer has gone forall of that, And with sad reluctant heart We stand at rich autumn’s open door And wateh its form depart. The skies were not just so blue, perhaps, As we hoped they would surely be, And the waters were rough that washed our at, ‘Instead of the ld calm sea 3 But the summer has gone for all of that, And the golden-rod is here ; We can see the gleam of its golden sheen In the hand of the aging year. The rest was not quite so real, perhaps, As we hoped it might prove to be, For instead of leisure came work sometimes, And the days dragged wearily ; : But the summer has gone for all of that, The holiday time i- o'er, And busy hands«dn the harvest field Have garnered their golden store. The summer was not such a dream, perhsps, Of bliss as we theught 'twould be. And the beautiful things we planned to do Wentamiss.-for ycuand me; ‘Yet still it has gone for all of that, ‘And we lift our wistful eyes To the land where beyond the winter snows Aunether summer lies. . Kathleen R. Wheeler in Lippinegtl’s. A TARDY THANKSGIVING. MARY E. WILKINS. “1 g'pose you air goin’ down to Han- pah’s to spend Thankegivin’, Mis’ Muzzy.?” The old lady who asked the question was seated in Mrs. Muzzy’s best hair- cloth rocking-chair, which had been brought out of the parlor for the occa- sion. ‘She had a mild, tiny-featured old face, wore a false front of auburn hair and a black lace cap decorated with purple ribbons, and was knitting —putting new beels into some blue yarn stockings. . The answer she got to her question, delivered in her prim, purring, com- pany tone, made her jump nervously. “No; iI ain't goin’ a step—not if I | her tone a little. know what I’m about |” dun-colored hair. features and would have been pretty if it had vot been for a pitiful droop at the corners of her mouth, the dullness of her eyes and the dark rings under her cold, exquisitely neat kitchen and kindled a fire in the cooking stove and made herself a cup of tea. Though she was living alone, every meal was pre- pared and eaten with religigious exacti- tude. She spread a white cloth over the table, put on some slices of bread, a little dish of quince sauce and custard pie. Thea she sat down with a sort of defiant appetite. some She had finished her bread and sauce and begun on her pie, when the kitchen door, which led directly out- doors, opened, and agirl of twenty or so walked in. “How d’ye do , Lizzie 2” said Mrs. Muzzy. “Pretty well, Aunt Jane,” replied the girl, listlessly, and she sank down in the nearest chair. She was a tall, slender girl, with She had delicate them. : ‘‘Hev some custard pie?" “No, thank you; I am not hun- ’ gry. “Hev you eat any supper ?” “I den’t know—yes, I think so— some bread and butter,” “I saw young Allen go by here "bout 3 o'clock, ridin’ with that Hammond girl,” remarked Mrs. Muzzy, eyeing niece sharply. . She only looked at her aunt in the same way as she had done before, with an expression of misery too helpless and settled to be augmented. “Yes,” she replied, “I saw them.” “She's a pretty-looking gal. Fer cheeks air as red as roses, an’ she had on a handsome bunnit.” “Ves? “It’s quite a Jong time since he's been to see you 2” 4Yes.” “Never was such complete uuresis- tance to a tormeator, if tormentot she meant to be. “Well, 1 wouldn't mind anyhow, ef I was you.” said Mrs. Muzzy, looking at the girl's weary face and changing “Let him go ef he wants to. Jest show him you don’t The words shot out of Mrs. Muzzy’s {Zeer ” mouth as it each one had had a charge of powder in ite rear, and the speaker went on jerking the stout thread through the seam she was sew-. ing. "he was squarely built woman, compactly fleshy. There was a bright- The girl woke up a little at that “Show him I dod’t care!" she cried, passionately. “He knows I care. Tt would be a disgrace to me if I didn’t | care after I've been going with him for three years; and he leaving me for a new face. It's no use pretending I red color-en each of her firm, round | don’t, I don’t see why folks tell me to. cheeks ; there was not a vague line in | My heart ought to be broken, and it ber whole face; her mouth opened | is.” and shut unhesitatingly end fairly; and she looked out of her small brown eyes directly, with ne circumlo- cation. “Mehbe you air goir’ wpto your brother Andrew's then 277 ventured the old lady feebly. “No Mig’ Field, I aio’t agoin’ to Andrew's outher. I ata’t agoin’ newheres, “Bat,” parred the old lady, “ain't you afeared you’ll be awiul lonesome? Lor’, I don’c know what I should doef it ware’t forSarah an’ her children an’ on a Thanksgivin’ Day. Toe be sure, you ain’t got any children an’ grand. children to go to, but thar’s your sister Haunah an’ here, an’ Andrew an’ his, and dt kinderseems as if brothers aa’ sisters come next. “Thar aint no use talkin',” said r ute look l:ke another girl. Jane, why ? I never heard of such a “I’d hev more sperrit.” “Would you? Well, I'm made dif- ferent, I suppose;” said the girl, and her face took on its listless expression ag: in, Her aunt finished her second cup of tea, and began to ciear away the ta- ble. ‘“Are you coming over to our house Thanksgiving or Uncle Andrews ?” asked Lizzie, after awhile, with some faint appearance of interest. “I ain't a-going nowheres; I'm a goin’ to stay to hum an’ do my pig- work." “Pig-work ?” “Yes, I'in a-goin’ to hev ’em killed Tuesday.” Her surprise made Lizzie for a min- Bat, Aunt Mrs. Muzzy, in a loud clear-cut voiee. | thing! Pig-work on Thanksgiving “I .ain’t a-going to Hannah's to | Day!” Thaoksgivia’, an’ I aint a-goin’ Mre. Muzzy braced herself up de to Andrew's to I ain't a-goin’ to hev any Thanksgivin’ to hum. thanks fur, as I see oun. could go to meet’in Tharksgivin’ mornin’ an’ hear the sermon, an’ then get down to turkey and pluw-puddin?, an’ be a-thankin’ the Lord in my heart for lettin’ my husband fall off the scaffoldiin the barn an’ git killed last summer, an’ for lettin’ my daughter Charlotte die of a quick consumption last spring an’ my eon John two years this fall, I might keep Thanksgivin’ as well as other folks. But I can’t, an’ I I ¢'pose ef I |] Thaunksgivia’, au’ | fiantly. ' quoth she, “you think you're down as I ain’ got nothin’ to give | fur as anybody kin be because you've husband, year, an’ that was more than any bean, an’ I've lost my daughter, both of em this year, an’ two yearsago this fall my eon John, an’ [I don't see as I’ve got anything to be thankful for. I ain’c a-going 10 keep Thanksgivin’ Day an’ eat tarkey an’ plum puddin’. I feel enough sight more like doin’ pig- work, an I’m a-goin’ too.” *Look a here Lizzie Munroe,” ost your beau. Well, I've lost my that I'd lived with forty The girl's dull eyes seemed to catch ain’ta-goin to purtend I do. Thar’s one | a gleam from her aunt’s. For a minute thing about it—I ain’t a hypocrite, an’ never was.” “What air you a-goin’ to do, Mis’ | Muzzy 2? b “Dot” Mrs. Muzzy sniffed. “Do! I'm a-goin’ito stay to hum, an’—do | ¢t my pig-work.” Tae old lady’s small-featured coun- tenance, from its very mechanism was incapable of expressing any very strong emotion, but it took on now a look of gentle horror. her knitting work, and her dim blue eyes seemed to take up the whole of | | her spectacles. “Lor’ sakes,, Mis’ Muzzy! Pig-work 1 never heerd “I don’t keer. got to be done, an’ I might jest as well do it Thavksgivin’ day as avy other. I feel enough sight more like it than eat- in’ turkey an’ plumpaddin’, with all I’ve been through. she looked strangely like her. Muzzy’s passionate, defiant Aired don’t wouder you teel so. don’t care about eating turkey and plum pudding either—I’ll come over and help you.” She dropped | minute. flected in another looked differently to Mrs. nature ber niece’s more unresisting, 1opeless one. ; “Well, Aunt Jane,” she said, in a one like an echo of her aunt's, “I And—I Mrs. Muzzy looked startled for a Perhaps her own spirit re- jer, “Well, Lizzie, jest as you like,” she eaid then, “I'll be glad.of your help : It’s considerable to do pig-work all | alone, an’ 1've never been used to it" — The pig-work has | with a sigh. “Well, I'll come, Aunt Jane.” There was a long silence; then the girl took her ead face out of the door, and her aunt, having set away the last of her tea things,” went back into her “Ain’t you a-goin’ to meetin’? “No.” “Lor’ sakes!” The old lady fell to koiiting again in a mild daze. Mrs. Muzzy would have been too much for her in her best || days ; now she almost reduced her to | f lunacy. neighbor, living about a quarter ora [8 mile distant, felt for her the attraction |s which weak natures often feel for the strong. She was very fond of ‘drop- ping ia of an afternoon with her knit- Still this old lady, who was a | had two immense face looked sadder this morning. warm sitting-room. The kitchen fire was going out, and it was growing cold. : Thanksgiving morning, a week later, was gray and cloudy, and the air felt ike snow. Mrs. Muzzy’s kitchen was ull of steaming, glowing heat. She iron kettles on her tove, and wae busily cutting pork into mall bits to fry oat. Lizzie was there helping, too, She had come over early. Her sad young The ting work There was not so much | cold gray light brought out all the pit- difference in their ages as one might | tiful, She had probably been weeping in- thick at first, either, although Mrs, Muzzy wasso much younger looking. | drooping lines more ' plainly. tead of sleeping the night before, Her Her daughter, who had died the spring | dun colored hair was put bazk plainly before, had been a schoolmate of Mrs. Field's Sarah. The old lady often accepted the in- |s vitation tostay and take a cup of tea, | z but to-day she shortened her call a ittle. g ing day rankled ia ber mind, and she wanted to go bome and tell her daugh- |'n ter Sarah. : hair crimped. The *“pig-work” on Thanksgiv- | over her slender shoulders trimly, and she wore a little ‘white rufile aud neatly ; grief did not with her manifest itself in uuvtidiness, thongh he never criniped her hair now, Liz ie looked like another girl with her Her dark print fitted in the eck, , She was cutting pork, too ; her wrists, though small, were tusculan, After she had gone Mrs. Muzzy | and she worked steadily and effectively, went from the warn sitting. room into though with a pathetic indifference. Mrs. Muzzy’s firmly set face betrayed little of it, but she really eyed her niece from time to time with furtive uneasiness. She had an inner consciousness, ever present to herself, that ber state of wind was highly culpable, but she un- dertook the responsibility for herself with sullen defiance. It was another thing, however, to be responsible for a similar et:te in avother. Lizzie standing there, with her dull hopeless face, indefatigably cutting pork, seemed to her like the visible fruit of her own rebellious nature, “Hev you seen Jenny Bostwick lately 7” asked she, with a desperate determination to alter her niece's ex- expression. “No,” replied Lizzie, slowly, “Joe hasn’t left ber. They're always to- gether. I can’t bear to go there.” “I know,” said Mrs, Muzzy, with quick, sympathetic recogaition of the feeling. “I felt that way alter John died. 1 couldn’t bear to go into Mis’ Mann's, because there was her Ed- ward—she’d had him spared, an’ my boy’d been taken.” There was something startling in the frankness, almost shamelessness, of the girl’s avowal of envious misery, and her aunt’s instantaneous sympathy with it. It was as if their two natures were growing more and more into an evil accord. About 10 o'clock the tront door-bell rang. “You go to the door, Lizzie," said Mrs. Muzzy ; “you look better’'n 1.2 Lizzie took off her apron and went obediently. Time was when the tinkle of a door-bell conld make her tremble all over, but she was calm enough now. It was six months since ‘George Allen had been to eee her and she bad given up all hope of his ever coming again. Mrs. Muzzy heard the door open and shat, then a murmur of voices in the sitting-room. One of the voices was unquestionably a man’s, low pitch- ed and earnest. Lizzie’s seemed to break into sobs now and then and once she laughed. Mrs. Muzzy start- ed when she heard that; she had al- most forgotten how Lizzie’'s laugh sounded. “Who on earth has Lizzie got in there ?”’ she muttered to herself ; but she was a woman who could keep her curiosity in check. She went steadily on with her work till the sitting-rocm door opened and Lizzie came out. : But was it Lizzie—the girl with those pink cheeks and radiant eves and that dimpling mouth 2 Mrs. Muzzy laid her knife down and stared at her. “It’s George! George!” said Lizzie in a happy, trembling whisper that seemed at ready to break outinto a scream o! joy. ‘‘He’s come to—to take me up to his house to dinner. I'm going home to change my dress and get ready.” She was trembling so she could hardly move, but she began pinning on her shawl in joyful haste. “Lizzie Munroe,” said her aunt sternly, “you don’t meau to say. you're goin’ on with that tellow after all that’s happened ?” “Yes, I am; he come for me. Great tears of pure delight rolled down her cheeks. She had her hood on now and turned impatiently towards the sitting room door. “Come for you! I s’'pose ef he'd got married to that Hammoud girl an’ come for you you’d gone jest the eame |!" cried her aunt with coarse sarcasm. “Yes, I would,” cried Lizzie reckless ly, her hand on the door knob. “I don’t b’lieve but what that Ham- mond girl's given him the mitten, else he wouldn’t a’ come I wouldn't play second fiddle tor any feller.” “I would for him!” cried Lizzie, as shameless in her happiness as she had been in her misery. She opened the door a-crack and peeped in. Then she turned to her aunt, her eyes like stars, her cheeks fairly ablaze, “Good-by, Aunt Jane,” she said. “I’m sorry to leave you alone with the pig-work. You'd better change vour wind an’ go over to mother’s for din: ner.” Mrs. Muzzy vouchsafed no reply, and Lizzie went into the eitting-room and shat the door. Pretty soon her aunt watched her and her truant sweetheart hanging down the street. Lizzie was actually hanging oa to his arm, in broad day- light. i) don’t see where she took such a disposition,” muttered Mrs. Muzzy. “Not trom my side. 1’d never have made such a fool of myself over a feller.” Then she went on with her pig work, righteous indignation and ecorn against Lizzie mingling in her bosom with rebellion against the will of the Lord. It had always been her boast that she wasn’t one of the kind of woman who are forever dropping things and getting burned and scalded and cuiting their fingers. She thought there was no kind of need of it, if anybody had | her wits about her and didn’t fly about like a hen with her head cut off. She was to prove, however, to-day that ber boasting, for one occasion at leart, was vain, ) She had lifted the first kettle of boil: ing lard off the stove in safety and de: posited itin the sink. The second— how she did it she never knew, whether the sudden weakening of a muscle or the slipping of a finger occasioned it— she dropped bodily as she was lifting it from the fire. Nove ot the hot fat went on the stove or there would have been a worse com- plication of disasters. It landed on the floor and Mrs. Muzzy’s right foot. She lost none of her resolute coolness with the sudden shock and agony. The kettle was scorching the floor; you could emell the burning paint. She lifted it on to the stove hearth and cast a distrustful and indignant glance at the molten grease spreading over the floor. j ; Then she had, luckily, a pair of 4 ecissors within reach. She sat down | and cut off, with convulsive shivers of | ing birds, and the prices have fallen pain but grim determination, her shoe and stocking. The toot was shocking: | y . 8 oT lips tien |, ly burned. She set her Jips hard when | issued, gives the reals vian experiment she saw it. “A halt winter's job,” said she. “Well I” She dragged herseltiu her chair with | one foot, hitching herselt along into. the buttery, to the flour barrel. She powdered the wounded footthickly with | flour and hitched back. | “I'nere,”’ said she, that’s all I can! do. There ought to be oil and band- | ages and things, but I've got to sit still. | I wish somebody would come. | Then she eat there in silent endur- | ance, io the midst of the grease, which bad ccoled, and formed a white coat- ng over the kitchen floor. Her foot was amass of torture. She did not have long to wait for help, however. She had not been sitting there half an hour wien she heard quick steps on the frozen ground outside. “Open the door, Jane,” called her sister, Hannah, Lizzie’s mother. “I've gol my bands tall.” “I can’t," responded Mrs. Muzzy, “you'll have to do it yourself.” The door opened atter a second. The caller who had a large plate in each hand, stopped short in utter dismay as | she took in the aspect of things—her | sister with her floury foot and pale | fac: and the lard on the floor. “Why, what have you done, Jane,” she cried. Mrs. Mazzy looked up, and actually smiled, the first time her sister had seen her for many a day. “What hev you got there, Hannah 2? asked she. “Why, I brought you over some Thanksgivin’ dinver, but I guess you won't feel like eatin’ any now.” “Yes I do. Bring it here.” “But you want somethin’ done more for your foot. Did you tip the bot lard right on to it? Don’t it ache? Hadn’t you better wait an’ eat your dinner after the foot's been seen to?” “No, Hannzh, I want it now. I want to eat some turkey an’ plum-pud- din’ afore I'am an hour older, an’ keep Thank-givin’. I said I wouldn’t, but the Lord got ahead of me an’ I'm glad he has. Bring it here an’ I'll eat my dinner, an’ then, maybe I kin hev somethin’ more done for my foot.” Her sister gave in then, and Mrs. Muzzy, her forehead wrinkled with pain, sat there and eat her Thanksgiv- ing dinver to the very last mouthful. “Lizzie's feelin’ happier,” she re marked once. : “Yes; George came to take her to his folks’ to dinner.” “Well, I'm glad of it ef she’s goin’ to feel any better.” “Yon would be ef you was her moth- er,” said her sister simply. —Harper's Magazine. What Shall “Touch”. Hercis a Brand New Game For Little Chil- dren. In this game the first player is placed it the centre of the room and blindfold- ed. But before he is blindfolded ke is told to look about him and notice all things in the room. After the handkerchief is tied over his eyes he is told to turn around once and then say aloud what he expects to touch by walking straight forward with his hands outstretched. Of course, it is great fun to ses him go and touch the table after he said he expected to touch the rocking chair. He may ‘look’ and then be blind- folded again : he may try three times (0 touch objects, turning around, of course each time. Kuch little player in has three “tries.” Afuer all have tried, if it isa party, there is generally a tray of little cakes brought in, and those players who have touched the objects are expected to have all frosted cakes full of plams ; the others have little plain cakes. Most grown people would get little plain cakes.—New York Press. A Thanksgiving Prayer. Our thanks go up to God at this thanksgiving season, not for the extra- ordinary mercies, but for the ordinary goodness of hi: hand. There has been no peace after war, no respite after pesti- lence, no escape from a great danger. Blessed is that people which has no ex- traordinary experiences, but which develops in peace and prosperity and abundance the course of its own un- eventful history.—New York Indepen- dent. OYSTERS WITH BacoN.—Select large, firm oysters, and drain them for half an hour in a colander. In the meanwhile cut thin, or shave, as many slices of breakfast bacon as you have oysters. Fold the bacon around each oyster, and fasten with an ordinary wooden pin, | such as are made for toothpicks. Lay them in rows in a large pan, and put them in a very hot oven for about sev- | en minutes. Serve hot, on toast. If the ovsters are not very large two can be put in cach piece of bacon. BUCKLEN’S ARNI1CA SALVE.-—The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises Sores. {Jlcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblain, Corns, and ail Skin Eruptions, and pos- itively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac- tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box, For sale by C. M Parrish. —— Connecticut farms raised so many turkeys that the marketsin that State have been glutted with the Thanksgiv- proportionately. —— For a sore throat there is nothing better than a fiannel bandage dam pened with Chamberlain's Pain Balm. It will nearly al ways effect a cure in one night’s time. This remedy is also a favorite for rheumatism and has cured many very severe cases. 50 cent bottles for sale by * F. Potts Green. ‘The turkey was tender and all in place ; I did the carving and she said grace. | Kissed her, too—and she did not grieve . | “Lord make us thankfu! for what we re- ceive!” | the original amount. Throughout the Sree of charge, on application. pondence on agriculiural subjects is de- | sired. Address Experiment Station Notes. Bulletin No. 24 of the Station, just by Professors Waters and Caldwell and Mr. Weld upon the question of the most profitable amount of food for a milch cow. In these experiments, ten cows were fed a ration beginning with 8 lbs; of grain and 12 lbs. of hay and gradually increasing up to as bigh as 19 lbs. of grain and 27 lbs of bay per day and bead, and then gradually decreasing to experiment, accurate notesswere taken of the amount and cost of the food, the amount of milk produced by each ani- mal and its butter value as determined by the Babcock test. Perhaps the most striking lesson of | the experiment is the demonstration it | gives or the profit there is in liberal feeding. The cheapest ration used cost | 18.8 cts. per day and produced butter | valued at 26.5 cts. making a net profit of 7.7 cts. per day per cow. An increase ' of 2.9 cts per day per cow in the cost of this ration made the daily value of the butter 31 cts. and the net profit 9.3 cts. per day or a difference of 1.6 cts. per | dey per cow in favor of the more costly ration, In other words, the farmer who attempted to economize by feeding the cheaper ration would, with a herd of 25 cows, save $217.50 per year on his feed bills, but would lose $337.50 worth of butter that he might have produced with the mcre costly ration, sv that his ill- judged attempt at economy would result in a net loss of $120.00. The cheaper ration, moreover, is what would ordinarily be considered a good ration, and the majority of dairymen would be likely to feed less rather than more, yet the results of this bulletin show conclusively that with such cows as these, the more expensive ration was really the more economical, A further increase of the cost of the ration, however, to 251 cts. per day gave no further iucreasein the butter product, and the net profit was thereby cut down to 5.9 cts. per day or 1.8 cts, less than with the cheapest ration of the three. In other words, the experiments indicate that there is a certain medium ration for each cow which will give the greatest net profit and that any altempt to economize by feeding less than this will result in a loss, while, on the other hand, it is possible to feed a cow too much as well as too little. Generally, however, there is more danger of feeding too little than too much. The experiment also brings out in a striking light the greatindividual differ- ences in cows and the great importance of a careful study by the dairyman of each individual of his herd, both as re- gards the amount of milk and butter produced and the co-t of feed consumed. The net profit yielded by each one of the ten cows used in this experiment was the greatest on the medium ration, but it varied in amount from 2.2 cts. per day to 24 cts. per day, equivalent, for a milking period of 300 days, to $6.60 and $72.00 respectively. The increased profit coming from the better feeding, too, varied greatly with different animals, some responding promptly andfreely to the increase, while on others it produced but little effect The figures of the bulletin show likewise what great differences in profit there may be between cows producing very pearly the same total amount of milk and butter per year. For ex- ample, the records show that last year. Marguerite produced, 6,512 Ibs. of milk and 296 lbs. of butter. Ramona produced, 5,459 lbs. of milk and 279 Ibs. of butter: By the customary standard of compari- sen, Marguerite would have been regard- ed as the superior animal, barring dif- ference in breeding, ete., and would bave commanded the higher price. On comparing the daily net prcfit returned by these animals, however, we find a re- markable difference not indicated or sug- gested by the butter and milk records. Assuming that they remain fresh for 800 days and taking the average net profit per day of all periods, we havea yearly profit for Marguerite of... ........ : $31 50 Ramona of..... 5 On this basis, at the end of six years, which, for this case, we assume to be the productive life of a cow, and disregard- ing the offspring, they would have made a total vet return ot I £189 00 .. 369 00 This means that Marguerite would have yielded ten per cent. compound in- terest on a purchase price of $106, while Ramona would have paid the same divi- dend on a purchase price of $208. Again, in the case of Bianca produc: ing 5,656 pounds of milk and 232 pounds of butter lust year, we have the follow. ing exhibit: ; Avérage daily net profit forall periods 4.9cts. Total net profit for one year,........ .§14 70 Total net profit for six years,......... 88 20 | The reader may regard these as ex-! treme cases, and yet thev were selected | from the ten animals used in this experi- | ment and there is no reason to doubt | that as great differences might be found | in any ordinary herd. { The annual reports and quarterly bulletins of the Station will be sent, ! Corres- | H. I. ArMeBY, Director, Pd : State College, Centre Co., Pa. | 8 For and About Women. Miss Sareh Freeman Clark has donat- ed to Marietta, Georgia, a library build- ing, mn addition to 4,000 volupies. The building is a miniature reproduction of the great circula ing hbrary building of the British museum. If women with red bair would only study how to use it becomingly they would he proud of the distinction of having it, instead of dissatisfied with their fate. There seems to be a general impression among women with red hair that almost any shade of blue can be worn by them, because as an general thing, they have fair and delicate com- plexions. But, as a matter of fact blue 1s the color above all others that they ought toavoid. The contrast 18 too violent, and the combination is not harmonicus. The shades mosy suitable to be worn with red bair are bright, sunpy browns, and all autumun-leaf tints. After these may be selected pale: or very dark green—but never a bright, green—pale yeilow, and black unmixed with any other color. Solid eolors are more becoming to red-haired pe-ple than mixed colors, the mixed colors nearly always giviog a more or less dowdy appearance. In fact, red hair is. usually so brilliant and decided that it must be met on its own ground, and no vague, undecided sort of things should be worn with it. : pr— Singularly becoming to the foot that hasn’s a high instep is a dancing slipper of bronze kid, crossed with a trio of gold-spangled straps, the space between each strap being filled in with a puff of old gold satin. It is as well to take notice that the long boa is apparently shelved. Not that itis to be fcund in the market, but what to do with its dangling ends over all these godets ? Decidedly, the long boas do not go. But what does go, on the contrary, is. thie short tippet, the little marten with head, feet and tail, that reaches round and caresses the throat, and makes a centre or hub, as it were, from which all the godets ray out. It 1s delicious. There should be a muff with it, all tailed like a row of scalps hung to dry, and a tcque edged with the same fur and having a pompon of tails. i This little outfit needn’t cost: much, and makes elegant accessories to any toilette at any time of day. A waist of velvet with skirt of cloth of another color is in great favor this season, as geen in a beautiful gown at the horse show, with a full gathered corsage and basque of green velvet worn with a skirt and over-skirt of tan-color- ed wool. A large round hat of green velvet completed this tillette, and the gloves of very pale yellow dressed kid were stitched with white. — Mrs. Anne E. Brown, whose will was admitted to probate at Quincy, Ii, recently bequeathed $300,000 to: public charities. To her father and other near relatives she left $1,000 each. Among black dresses worn in the afternoon few are all black, bits of ealor —turquoise, emerald green, or cerise— appearing somewhere in most of them. The gown of black already noted, with & round waist striped lengthwise with openpatterned braid, lined with a color, and falling in four tabs in front, is in such favor that it is being copied in black peau de soie with silk braid or jet galloon over cerise or torquoise-blue ribbon. Worth makes beautiful gowns with an over-skirt of black cloth simply bound with velvet, but showing facings of cerise satin falling low on a black satin petticoat broadly striped with cords and pointille with cerise. The round waist is double breasted, with revers that extend up as a collarette across the back, the front filled in with a plastron of cerise satin covered with black pussementerte in very open meshes. The white satin collar has a stock and cravat of white lace. Hang- ing Russian sleeves of eloth turned back with satin like that of the petticoat tall almost to the wrist on cloth sleeves of the same pointille satin. To complete this unique gown is a belt of black Liberty satin knotted in front, with two long sash ends falling straight to the foot, lined throughout with the glowing cerise satin. This sash is 10 or 12 in- ches wide, and is tacked to the skirt at intervals, that it may move with it gracefully as the wearer changes posi- tion. With the immense sleeves and revers that are now worn no woman’s ward- robe is complete without a cape. A most becoming one was of dark green broadcloth, with a yoke and deep rufile of dark green velvet. The cloth was trimmed with two bands of silk cord lace insertion. The velvet ruffle was edged with a ruffle of lace akout two inches deep and over it was a full roffle of the same almost as deep as the velvet itself. The high collar was bordered with black ostrich feather trimming, making the ensemble elegant. chic and delightfully uncommon. Another one likewise seen on a living model was of black velvet cut into two full capes, the upper one falling in a jabet effect over the shoulders. Each of the capes was edged with ten rows of the narrowest and finest jet I have ever seen, while the collar was formed of a thick ruching of black satin edged with tiny jets. A thick rosette was set in front, while long ends of ribbon finished with jet spikes fell to the bottom of the gown. The whole thing was lined with rich purple satin brocaded in tiny figures of black. The University of Chicage put wo- men on the same basis as men, whether students or teachers. Its History and Political Science Club has two or three young women on its list of officers. The ultra fashionable hostess has the loaf of bread brought to the table on a large carved wooden board, accompan- ied by a good sized knife, also with a carved wooden handle, and slices are cut as they are called for. Individual butter plates are used, which the maids- in-waiting pass to her when a fresh sup- ple of bread and butter is needed.