Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 12, 1894. u—— MINDING THE BABY, You betcher life dis ain't no cinch t' hustle here all day : An’ do d’ work an’ tend d’kid an’ have no time to play, While ald udder kids is out a-playin’ roun’® a’ bl ock, : An’ dough me work is finisht, yet I hast’ sit an’ rock. Says ma: “Now rock d’ cradle, Kitty Anu, An’ look out fer d’ haby, Kitty Ann, Fer he's yer little brudder, An’ youse hasn’t got no udder ; Be sure t’ mind d’ baby, Kitty Ann.” Deyr playin’ ring-a rounder, an’ at hop-scotch 3 | fair as a flower, and the heavy coil of I kia tell ye, I wonder ’'fI Sey sneak would he wake up n’ é Cheewiz! I'se been a hustling here since al- most 8 o'clock, 3 An’ now it’s 1 but still I s’pose I'll haf t’ sit an’ rock. I wish dere wasn’t any kids. D’y ain’t no use a tall, : Except to bodder folk and keep dem in all day, an’ bawl; ; Aw, naw, dat’s alla bluff! Fer he’s de bes kid in d’ block, An’ dough it’s radder tongh on me, I'll ches’ sit still an’ rock. An’ so ches’ rock d’ cradle, Kitty Ann, An’ look out fer d’ baby, Kitty Ann, Fer he’s yer little brudder, An’ youse hasn’tgot no udder, So ches’ youse min’d’ baby, Kitty Ann. --Jehn H. Lewis in New York Sun. ————— STANTON HARCOURTS ROMANCE. “Have you never been in love ?”’ said the child, gravely. ; “No,” replied the man ; and a faint smile crossed his face at the memory of the bundred and one flirtations which had flickered at different dates across his career. “Oh, but yon must have been!” con- tinued the child, earnestly. “Every- body falls in love several times before they marry, mamma says. Mamma says that I ehall be in love several times before I marry : but that is nothing at all, and then I shall marry and eettle down.” “When do you intend to marry ?’ said the man, scrutinizing the pretty child more closely: *You are scarce- ly old enough yet, are you 2" “Ch, yes,” she said eagerly. “One of the Princesses was married when she was just sixteen, mamma says, and I am nearly sixteen.” “Indeed. Perhaps you are engaged already ?” “Well, not exactly. You see, he wants me to marry him in two years, but we are not exactly engaged. Mamma wouldn’t hear of it, because he hasn't left school yet, and I haven't geen him since; but if he asks me again at the end of two years, we shall be engaged—properly.” “Do you want to marry him so very much ?” “N-no,” after a moment's thought. “Not very much. 1 haven’t thought about it. It takes too much time to think, you see. But it would be nice to be engaged. One would be able to put one’s hair up regularly if one were engaged, I should think.” The man glanced at the tawny mane which she pushed impatiently back over her shoulders as she spoke, It would be a pity, he thought, to antici- pate, even by a day, the moment when those glorious tresses would be deliver- ed over to the ill-treatment and eclipse or hair-pins. “If I were engaged to you,” he said, “I should ask you to keep your hair down as long as possible.” “Then I won’t be engaged to you,” replied the girl naively. “Besides, I don’t even know your name. I don’t believe that it is really Brooks of Shef- field—I have spelt Sheffield with two f’s : is that right ?—because I heard that lady, the one with the very yel- low hair, call you something else. What is your real name? You must write it down here.” She was engaged in selling tickets for a raffle at a country bazaar, and she indicated to the man the sheet of paper whereon she had written the names of the ticket-bolders. The seventeenth epace on the list was in- scribed with the words “Brooks of Sheffield.” The claimant of that pseudonym took the pencil which she held out to him, and signed himself “Stanton Harcourt.” “And now you ought to tell me your name,” be said. “My name is Rosie—Rosalind Alice Jane Devine—and we live at Wey- bridge. Do you knew Weybridge ? It is in the part called America. I am staying here with the Harlands. Do you live here ?” “No ; I am just down for the day, staying with that lady, the one with the very yellow hair,” “I see. I suppose you are in love with her? Not? Well, I am glad! Would you mind taking care of this for me while I go after that man 2” She kept on coming and going in the course of the afternoon. It was evident that she had privately estab- lished Stanton Harcourt asa sympa- thetic friend who might be honored with the duty of buying tickets for her raffles, and a safe depot where valua- ble property might be left with securi- ty. She talked to him in her queer way now and then; but she had a keen eye to bueiness, and was contin- ually darting off towards some new face with an appeal for her raffle. Stanton Harcourt. moreover, ce mented this friendship of a day by pre. senting her with a large painted screen which he was “lucky” enough to win in one of her raffles.” “Iam so sorry you don’t live at Weybridge I” were almost her last words to him. “It would be so nice. Perbaps you may come there, though?” Shortly after that Stanton Harcourt went to Norway for about six weeks, and enjoyed all the pleasures of rough- ing it, including horrible food. After that he joined a yacht and started round the world in a slow fashion. One way and another it was not until three years after that country bazaar that he found himself once more settled in London for the season: “Who is the beauty of the year?” he said to a friend at Lady Gleolyn-| don’s ball. } “Lady Rose Verden,” replied the other, “Lord Salterton’s daughter— presented at the May drawing-room.” “Is ghe here ?” ; “Yes. I'll point her out to you ; im- troduce you, if youlike. Do you see that tall girl in blue, the one with the beautiful hair. passing us now ?"’ Stanton Harcourt gazed in the direction indicated, and owned to him- self that the opinion of society had not erred. He saw before him a tall bean. tiful, fair, girl, whose height overtop- ped that of most of the men, while her figure was so- gracefully proportioned | that it was impossible to demur to an inch of her stature. Her face was as her hair suggested tresses that would cloth her like a mantle were they once unloosed. “Introduce me,” he said ; and so in time, Sir Stanton Harcourt was intro- duced to Lady Rose Verden. She turned a pair of loveliest blue eyes upon him, and inspected him not without curiosity. Then she smiled, disclosing two rows of pearly white teeth, Stanton Harcourt conversed with her for a few moments, Then she said, suddenly :— “So you have forgotten me altogeth- er! Or is it that I am so much changed ? Ishould have known you anywhere. Don’t you remember that bazaar at Kirtleton three years ago and how you told me that your name was ‘Brooks, of Sheffield,” and.I told you that I lived at Weybridge? 1 did then. And you gave me a screen |” “I remember now,” replied Stanton Harcourt in amazement. “But—but —I ought to have recognized you, of course; but I am sure I have an ex- cellent reason for not doing so. You were a pretty child then, but now you bave grown into a—" “Now, you of all people must not flatter. Remember, I regard you as an old friend, whom I can trust. Don’t you remember how I trusted you with my things at the bazaar 2 I got such a scolding at the end of the day for it. They said I was too forward. Did you think me too forward ?” “The only thing that I cannot under stand,’ replied Stanton Harcourt, evad- ing this somewhat delicate subject, about your name. You told me, ifl remember right, that you were Miss Rosie Devine Wasthata joke like my stupid one of ‘Brooks of Sheffield’?” “Papa had not succeeded to the title then,” replied the beauty. “In fact we were very far away from it, and very poor ; but, as I daresay you know our cousin and his two sons and grand- | son were all drowned together, poor | things when their yacht went down in a great storm off the north of Ireland and then my father was the next heir through his mother: The title is one of those very old ones which go to women 8s well as to men. You know what I mean. Then we took the name of Verden, the old Salterton name, a8 well as our own.” “I gee ; and Shortland clipped the name, and told me merely that you were Lady Rose Verden.” At that moment a tall, handsome young man came up, and claimed Lady Rose for the next dancer He was a very good looking man, thought Stanton Harcourt, and seemed to know it. H's big black moustache was curl- ed till the ends pointed to his ears; the expression of bis really fine eyes seemed to say ; ‘‘See how irresistible I am, and worship at the shrine.” Involuntary Stanton Harcourt turn. ed towards Lady Rose to see how she was affected by the arrival of the new- comer, and whether she would obey the mandate of his orbs. She said a few words to the young man apart, and seemed to demur to his claim. If so, however, he must have insisted on it, for she laid her hand within his arm, and, with a parting smile to Stanton Harcourt, was lost in the crowd that filled the ballroom. In the next minute he saw the pair whirliog around the room. It was quite evident from the expression of his lips that the good-looking unknown was not wasting a monent of the op- portunity that fortune had afforded him. Stanton Harcourt felt an unreasona- ble sense of anger rising in his breast against this young man, who, afterall, had only availed himself of the ordi- nary privileges of the ballroom, which was equally open to Stanton Harcourt had he been ready [to seize it. But then Stanton Harcourt had given up dancing. As a rule, hedid not go to balls: His presence at Glenlyndon House on this occasion was solely due to the fact that Lord Glenlyndon was the head of his tamily, “Who is that young man,” he said to Lady Glenlyndon, “who is dancing with Lady Rose Verden 2” “Oh 1” that's Count Karl Chirafoun- Charafau, the son of the Prince, you know ? He's attached to the Austrian Embassy, and I also think that he is attached to Rosie Verdeu. What a beautiful girl she is! I shouldn’t be surprised if there were an engagement in that family soon.” This suggestion made Stanton Har- court feel that he almost disliked Count Karl. “I think 1t is a great mistake for Eoglish girls to marry foreigners,” he gaid. “Don’t you ?” “Well, I don’t know," replied Lady Glenlyndon, whose first husband had been very far trom an angel. “Some Englishmen are just as bad as foreign- ers, and some foreigners are just as nice as any Englishman. Besides this man comes of a very old tamily, and will be enormously rich, And Lord Salterton is by no means a millionaire. The estates are not large; the wid. ows got most of the personality, and he has two jointures to pay.” It was then that Stanton Harcourt for the first time in his life thanked Providence that he was wealthy. “I am twenty-five years older than her,” he owned to himself. “Bat, af- ter all, what does that matter if che ) | loves me 7?’ At the end of a month he came to the conclusioa that she did love him. Certainly, she had encouraged him to think so, She had introduced him to her parents, and asked him to call. He had arranged various parties to the theatre, to dine at Ranelagh, to San- down, and to the opera, to all of which she and her mother had graciously consented to come. It was also true that at the meet of the Four-in-Hand Club Lady Rose had appeared on the box-seat of Count Karl’s coach. But then Stanton Harcourt contrasted her manner towards him with her behavior towards the Count. With him she was always at her best, always brim- ming over with liveliness and good spirits. With the Count, however, she was often tongue lied and dull, seem: ingly unable to carry on much conver- sation, and ready to turn to anyone who addressed her. “The Count bores her,” thought Stanton Harcourt. “He is all very well as a dancing partner, but his eternal brag and sentiment are getting wearisome to her.” He waited his opportunity ; and he had to wait some time, for it was the most difficult thing in the world to se- cure a quiet tete-a-tete with her. She was in much request, having so many friends, and living in a perpetual whirl of gayety. Besides, people had abso- lutely no sense or discernment. Often and often, when he thought the right moment had come at last. some loud- voiced boy broke in on the quiet cor- ver and dragged her away or distracted her attention. At last, in despair. he wrote to her asking for a private interview, as he had a matter of the utmost importance to reveal to her. To this letter she sent no answer, but meeting him in the evening at a party, told him with a smile, that the whole thing was very improper, but if he would call on the Friday at 4 o’clock—well, she could not promise, but it was possible. He walked home in a state of such ecstasy that he was almost oblivious of his surroundings: The result was that at the corner of Hertford street he was knocked down by "a furious han- som, stunned, and so severely injured that he was taken up for dead. He was not dead, however, though he hovered for a long time between life and death. His constitution triumph- ed at last and he began to get well, His first thought when his mind re- covered its equilibrium was that he must make haste in order to make up the lost time. As he became convalescent. friends were allowed to see him. He inquired eagerly after the Saltertons, “Oh, they are in Scotland ! You see since Lady Rose’s wedding —" “Lady Rose's wedding!” almost screamed Stanton Harcourt. “Which Lady Rose do you mean ?”’ “Why, the daughter, of course—the beauty. She married thai Austrian fellow, Count Karl Chirafou-Charafau. Of course, you've been ill so long, poor chap! Don’t you remembera tall, dark man with a mustache, who was always very much in attendance ?” Stanton Harcourt’s brain seemed to reel as if again under the influence of delirium. ~~ Rose married !—to that Austrian | Why, she loved him! And if she loved him, why had she married another ? “A capital match, of course,” con- tinued the unconscious friend. “And, entre nous, [ am told that itis a very good thing for Lord Salterton, who might have had some difficulty in meeting his creditors if his son-in law had not proved obliging.” : In a flash Stanton Harcourt saw it all: his adored was a victim, a pale sacrifice on the altar of filial affection. While he was lying helpless and sense- less unable to speak and declare his love, the pressure of the inevitable had come upon Lord Salterton, ani the heartless father had commanded his daughter to save her family at the price of herself. No doubt he had urged that the man she loved was at the point of death, would never rice from his couch again. In the mean- time here was this Austrian, rich, gen- erous, devotedly attached to her. Why shouldn't she save her father’s honor and provide for herself ? She ~anld not wear the willow forever fora wan to whom che was not even engaged. Stanton Harcourt nearly fretted him self into a fever at the thought, and so great was his meatal anguish at the picture which he had conjured up that it seriously delayed his recovery. It was a year before Stanton Har- court met the Countess Chirafou Cha- rafau, and he was spell-bound at the sight of her. She was then at the height of her lovliness, and her charms were enhanced by the magnificent tiara of diamonds which crowned her bair+ She showed no trace of sorrow, and, true to the law which forbids a woman to show her feelings, she re- ceived him with none but the most or- dinary emotion. Stanton Harcourt, ou the other hand, v7as pale and hag- gard from the effects of his illness and excitement. When the Countess ex- pressed her sorrow for his accident, he almost broke down. It seemed to him that he must throw himself at her feet or die. Fortunately he resisted this impulse, and limited himself to inquir- ing when he could call. Then his hour would have come. He would not reproach her. She must have suffer- ed enough without that, But there should no longer be any secrets between them, Later in the evening he heard the Countess’ voice and his own name. “Poor Sir Stantou,” she was siying, “I was quite shocked to see him, Of cours?, 1 have always known that he was old enough to be my father, or older. He was quite old when I was a child. Bat now his illness has aged him go terrible that I hardly knew him, and his beard is quite white: Sir Stanton Harcourt did not go to see the Countess on the day named. On the contrary, he went to the seaside tto brace up his strength. anl recover from this crushing disillusionment, ——Read the WATCHMAN. Driven Mad by a Skull, Eugene Humphrey, a Young Artist, saw Its Hideous Grin on Every Face~Could Paint Nothing Else—~He Became Suddenly Insane in His Studio at Vienna.—Now He's In a Luna- tic Asylum. During the past month one of the most promising of the young artists in New York was taken to the Middle- town asylum for the insane and locked up as an incurable and violent lunatie. Eugene Humphrey is the son of Dr. James H. Humphrey, who for years had a large practice in Brooklyn. ~ Eu- gene in his boyhood developed a decid- ed taste for art and displayed a certain amount of artistic ability. His father, however, wished him to be a physician, and personally laid the foundation for his medical education. About two years ago Dr. Humphrey died, and on his death-bed implored his son to com- plete his studies. But Eugene, after much deliberation, determined to aban- don the medical profession and to be- come an artist. At first he essayed landscapes. Then he determined to devote himself to por- traiture. To this end he decided to go to Vienna and become a pupil of Prof. Borst. After much persuasion and a liberal fee Eugene found himself in- stalled in the old man’s studio. The professor forbade him to paint from the living model. “What do you know of form ?”’ he sneered, ‘Learn first the structure of the human body before you presume to clothe it with flesh and blood.” Eugene began patiently to paint from the skeleton. The skull, with its pol- ished cranium, its eyeless sockets, its eternal grimace, fascinated him. As he worked he involuntarily wondered how his father would appear by. that time. He had been dead for several months. Was his skull like the one he studied? Eugene thought not. Cer- tainly no two skulls were alike. So he concluded, and the thought haunted him that whatever individuality a face possesses depends solely upon the skull, 1ts contour and conformation. After a time Eugene was permitted to employ a model—a beautiful girl of 16. As he observed her face, with its curves and dimples, Eugene found it difficult to believe that beneath this beauty lay the inevitable skull. He painted eagerly ; the sketch progressed. Before the light became obscure the girl arose and ad- vanced to the easel. Her face grew ra- diant as she gazed atthe unfinished por- trait. “I am not as beautiful as that !” she cried delightedly. Eugene was elated. It seemed to him that with the completion ot his ef- fort he would become famous as an art- ist. Eugene was now seized with a frenzy to work. When twilight came he would impatiently trait for another day. When finally the picture was finished Eugene threw down his brushes with a triumphant exclamation. The portrait was a masterpiece, and even Borst could not restrain his enthusiasm. He show- ered his pupil with congratulations. From that moment Eugene believed himself an artist. He conjured up a series of future triumphs, all due to his tireless study of the skull. He had re- course to his father’s library. Night found him reading and rereading books that had formerly been so distasteful to him. He made himself believe that art was based solely upon truth, and truth existed only in anatomy. Behind every face he discovered the skull. His first success emboldened him to convey, still more distinctly, the idea of structural values, The result was he produced a portrait so strikingly spiritual that it suggested the resemblance of a shade. Eugene obtained an order from a young widow whose wealth and social po- sition guaranteed a liberal remuneration. Every day for a fortaight she visited the stndio, but Eugene seemed unable to fasten her individuality upon the can- vas. The fortnight over, he was in de- spair. He had not allowed her one look at tho sketch, and it was impossible to do so. Eugene became disheartened. Borst called upon him one afternoon at twi- light as he stood before the canvas won- dering at his own incapacity. “What! You have taken to paint- ing mummies, eh?” exclaimed the eccentric old man. “Tell me, do you visit graveyards ?”’ and with a laugh he slapped his pupil on the shoulder. ‘‘Then you do not think it resembles her ?”” Eugene said sorrowfully. “Her ? Death more than anything else, or his bride, it he has one. My boy, give up your painting for the pres- ent. You've been working too hard. Take a vacation. Frankly, I'm sur- prised at you.” Eugene was overcome ; he sank upon the sofa. “The skull. T studied that. Now I see it. I see it everywhere. In the countenance of the child, the girl, the woman Yes, the skull is the begin- ning and the end.” Then he sobbed aloud. Borst, seriously alarmed, en- deavored to comfort him. It was thus that Eugene's madpess evidenced itself thus suddenly and witk- out warning. A protracted illness re- sulted, and then he slowly recovered health. Still feeble, he requested that his palette and brushes be brought to him. His wish was granted, and a model was procured. He painted dili- gently, with but one result—the skull. His insanity permitted him to see noth- ing elce. He rapidly grew morose, and finally dangerous. He was sent back to New York. Here he grew worse daily ; he became violent, then threat- ening, and he was placed in the asylum. ESR, -—A boy who was recently sent to a boarding school has just sent the follow- ing letter to his loving and anxious mother : “I got here all right and I forgot to write before. It isa very nice place to have fun. A feller and I went out in a boat and the boat tipped over and a man got me out, and I was so full of water that I didn’t know . nothin’ for a good long while. The other boy has to be buried after they find him. Hig mother came from Lincoln and she cries all the time. A hoss kicked me over and I have got to have some money to pay the doctor for fixing my head. "We are going to set an old barn on fire to- night, and I should smile if we down’t have bully fun. I lost my watch and am very sorry. I shall bring home some mud-turtles, and I shall bring home a tame woodchuck if I can get 'em in my trunk. DASSRRASOENR Knewledge Spreading. Illiteracy in the United States on the Wane Among Native-Born. Iiliteracy in the United States is principally confined to the foreign-born and colored citizens. From the statistics of illiteracy in 1890 it appears that of the total popula- tion 10 years of age and over in 1890 12 per cent, or one-eight, were illiterate. Ten years earlier a similar proportion was 17 per cent. or about one-sixth, showing an immense reduction in the proportion of illiterates. This reduc- tion has taken place in the ranks of the native-born whites and of the colored, while among the foreign-born the pro- portion bas increased. Thus the pro- portion of illiterates among the native whites was in 1890 6.2 per cent. and in 1880 8.7 per cent. Among the colored the corresponding proportions was 56.1 per cent. and 70 per cent. Among the foreign-born, on the other hand, the proportion of illiterates in 1890 was 13.1 per cent. and in 1880 12 per cent. an increase to be accounted for by the ex- cessive immigration of the decade and by the character of much of that immi- gration, which consisted of the lower classes of southern and eastern Europe —Italians, Huns, Poles and Bohe- mians. The illiteracy of the country is, there- fore, mainly represented by the foreign- born and the colored elements, and by the latter in much greater degree than the former. Considering the entire pop- ulation, the states in which illiteracy is most prevalent are those of the south. Mason and Dixon’s line, the Ohio river, and the thirty-seventh parallel of lati- tude separate the literate from the illi- literate states. North of that line the proportion of illiteracy ranges from 8.1 in Nebraska up to 12.8 in Nevada. South of that line it ranges from 14.6 in the District of Columbia to 45.8 in Louisiana, if we except Oklahoma, which was largely settled from Kansas, and carried Kansas education with it. Indeed, throughout the cotton states the proportion ranges high, being 40 per cent in Mississippi, 41 in Alabama, nearly 40 in Georgia, and 45 in South Carolina. In the northern states, throughout New England and the Up- per Mississippi valley, the average is between 5 and 6 per cent. Making Reparation. They Lynched the Wrong Man, But It Was All Right in the End.’ The cowboy was telling some of his thrilling experiences, including several incidental lynchings. “Those lynchings are dreadful,” ex- postulated a mild bred listener. “Can't git along without them,” said the cowboy. “But they are wrong.” “Great civilizers, though.” “The wrong man suffers times.” “Not very often.” “Didn’t you ever help hang the wrong one?” “Never but one in all my experi- ence.” “Dreadful, dreadful | No reparation could be made in such a case.” The cowboy looked at the listener with contempt. “You don’t know us people,” he said. “Why, we fixed that up to the entire satisfaction of everybody.” “How could you ?” “Well, we apologized to the widder the next morning ; and a month later the leader of the hangin’ party married her.” “I don’t see how she could have done such a thing, and so soon, too.” “‘The cowboy became reflective. “Well,” he said, in a balf-bashful, apologetic way, after a minute’s thought, ‘‘mebbe she would have waited 60 or 90 daysif it had been anybody else but me,” ani the listener did not pursue the subject further. ———————————— A Terrible Dream. Mr. Blank is Tortured With a Sleep Fear That Unmans Him, some- Mrs. Blank went shopping, Mr. Blank went with her. No one can ex- plain why he went for she didn’t posi- tively compel it, and he is stil regarded as sane! He went anyhow. She wanted buttons. Those at Jen- kin’s store were too small, much too small. So she went to Kahn’s and Poznanski’s and the Merchants’ Sup- ply ; then to Poznanski’s and the Mer- chants’ Supply and Kahn's, At Jenk- ins again, thcy showed her the same buttons and she found them too large ! Blank guessed it a case of expansion caused by the heat ; it seemed hot to him | She got almost to another place —not quite—for they saw her coming and locked the door for the night. She went home. That night Blank’s hard breathing woke his tired wife, and she woke him in turn. “What's the matter ?”’ she demand- ed. “I—I had a dreadful dream,” he gasped ; “I thought we were both dead, that you had gone to heaven, and that I—I hadn't I”! “How perfectly awful,” she cried, grasping him convulsively around the neck, to be separated and-—-"' *“We—we weren’t separated,” moan- Blank with a shudder; “I—I could have endured that! But no—no! I dreamt that you were to be allowed to go shopping forever, and that I was condemned to go with you. Taking no Chances. Colonel Ingersoll once called upon the Rev. Philips Brooks, and the great preacher received him at once, although he bad declined to see many distinguish- ed preachers. “Why have you shown me this marked distinction ?’’ inquired the colonel. “The reason is simple,” replied Dr. Brooks : “If those preach- ers die, I'll be sure to meet them again in heaven; whereas, you had gone away and died, I should never have met you again. I thought I had better take the chances.” ——The latest victim of the balloon and parachute fully was a woman who made an ascension at a New York state fair on Saturday and managed to fall a distance of 1,500 feet. Every bone in her body was broken. The state legis- latures should make such exhibitions | unlawful. ———e ee -SSS For and About Women. Redfern’s latest bit of tailor-made primoess. It consists of a loose seamless backed coat, in smoking jacket form, with a plain skirt to match. Revers and cuffs of velvet give it a feminine touch. Mrs. Klock, of Denver, is making a big fight to be elected to the Legislature of Colorada. She has no fears as to the result. The stiff, high collars, particularly when worn by short-necked women, are being accused of producing nervous headache. They press at the back di- rectly upon the sensitive base of the brain and compress, often to the point of injury, the veins and arteries of the neck, frequently causing a congestion that ends in headache. A markedly handsome walking dress, lately seen was ot burnt brown tweed with a horse cloth vest in red and yel- low. The plain skirt was gored with a wide bell sweep at the bottom, which was finished with a heavy inside front. fold of brown corduroy.” The double- breasted jacket came “but little below the hips, and had a slightly V-shaped opening with a narrow turn-over collar and small revers ; it was to be worn either buttoned or unbuttoned, so as to show the snugly-fitting plaid vest. The sleeves were a neat compromise between French bigness and English tailor smallness, und the buttons were of horn and enormously large. Another, and a very agreeable feature of this jacket, was an appreciable absence at the tail back of the ungraceful frilliness at pre- sent (one marvels why) so much worn. Whatever kind of costume you are making, says the New York Recorder, put revers on it and you’ll be in fash- ion. Take for instance, an accordion -plait- ed corsage of soft canary-colored satin over it will be fitted an outer waist of black satin or velvet, attached at and slashed from belt to shoulder into inch and a half stripe which are jet-edged. Sometimes these “surtouts” or over- bodices are slashed into elaborate de- signs, but the straight lines are best for full or short- waisted figures. Only a well-hung skirt can be effec- tively trimmed with the giant bows which just now are so popular. The hats are trimmed to give asquare effect by placing bows, rosettes, paquets aigrettes of small fiowers, tufts of feath- ers or whatever you have for garniture in four strongly accentuated separation to mark the corners. The same with the neckbands. A loop or rosette is placed on the collarette before and behind each ear which gives the head the effect of being boxed in ribbon. Miss Alize Catlin, the nominee for Superintendent of Public Instruction for the State of Colorado, accompanies Governor Waite on his stumping tour. One careful mother teaches her child- ren never to fold their arms across their chests. She says it must of necessity tend to contract what should, on the contrary, have every thing done to broaden it. Instead of this common practice, she insists that the growing children shall, in standing, contract tha babit of crossing the arms behind the back, alleging that as much good will come from this habit as harm from the other. The variety of furs to be used this winter is simply endless. Everything from skunk to tiger skin will be worn (by those who can afford it,) while even the little sable throatlets are still well to the fore, but, despite their cosiness and their new name otf cravate Russe, they are not precisely a novelty, but will maintain their naturalized success until something equally neat, pretty and be- coming takes their piace. Boas, with the exception of short black feather ones have taken a back seat, I am not sorry to remark, while in their place will be used the deep capes and wide collars, that are not so easily reproduced in cheap furs and moulting feathers as are those long floating abominations, boas. Skirts seem to be made more exorbi- tantly wide than ever and are pretty evenly balanced by the fully-trimmed bodices and voluminous sleeves that are still en regle. The latter by no manner of means appear to increase; on the contrary, they maintain their old struc- ture, caught up here and there with rosettes or tagged bows, or left floating fully from shoulder to elbow, set in at the armhole and spanning the shoulder in a series of very fine plaits, Plain skirts, with just a band of checked black trimming, edged on both sides with a narrow line of fur jor fancy mohair braid, will be accompanied by charming blouses of velvet matching the bias fold and ornamented down the front with a single broad Norfolk plait with three jeweled studs, or more sim- ply fancy buttons, in gilt or silver set shirtwise and at equal distance from neck to waist. The sleeves of velvet are full, at the neck a dropping of lace is knotted at the back, falling in two short ends. A cape en suite will be as’ necessary a portion of a day gown this year as a coat ‘to match” has been for a good many seasons past. Several new models for autumn cos- tumes show round waists, bias cut, with deep yoke, shirred back and front. At the waist line the material is laid in tiny plaits over a close- fitting, boned lining. Skirts are generally of the Godet, pat- tern, left plain or trimmed lenthwise with jet, ribbon or velvet cords. No- tice is attracted to the new leg-of-mut- ton sleeves, which are wrinkled from el- bow to wrist, like long suede gloves. A great deal of velvet, in the form of panels, bretelles, suspenders, crush col- lar and belt, butterfly bows, ete., is used on the new models. A tobacco brown serge has an Eton jacket fastened warmly in front with three hooks, the points spreading a lit- tle at bottom and the revers making the blouse of checked brown and white silk visible above.