, carelessness. ing eyes. a Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. 8, 1894. HALLOW EEN. Before she passes through the gates which op en On noiseless hinges for each coming guest, . October, decked with golden erown and cope And rich with treasures of autumnal quest Pauses, and bids her couriers to await The final pleasure of their royal queen, Who fain would witness mortals celebrate Their Hallow e’en.— From distant places where their footsteps roam, From childhood’s Eden and its charms aloof, Her regai summons brings the exiles home To swell tha mirth beneath the ancestral roof ; ; The mellow fruitage which her days have stored, The ample cellars of the earth between, She brings to grace and cheer the festive board Of Ballow e’en. The lamplights flicker as the merry jest Wakes echoes on the laughter-laden air ; The smiles upon each countenance attest The sweet enjoyment which their owners share ; The sprite of jollity, enthroned above, Commands the changes of each act and scene. As through the gathered guests his envoys move On Hallow e’en. * * * * * * * * * Youth strives amain toread its horoscope Behind the vale which dims the Future's glass : While Age, grown wiser with advancing years Views each attempt with countenance serene, : Till with the midnight’s signal disappears The Hallow e’en. 4 —Anon. r——————— HE FORGOT. BY AGNES ETHEL HOUSTAN. He was a fine, handsome boy, tall straight, and manly aod with an hon- est look into your eyes: He was so bright and promising, too, and there was such a future before him if only— And just at that point people al- ways sighed and shook their heads. Ah, that troublesome “if!” How many a young man might have made something of himself but for an ‘‘if” that hung about his neck like a mill: stone and dragged him down. You could not have been with Roy Delton very long without finding out just what the trouble was. He was always genial and friendly. It was no fault of temper, you may be sure. Sometimes his friends thought that his temper was too easy, and that in his careless gayety their warnings and re- monstrances made no impression on him and were forgotten as soon as they were uttered. You see, that was Roy’s trouble—he forgot. “Going fishing, Roy?’ his father said to him one morning. “Well, be sure and shut the pasture gate as you go through. You left it open the last time, you remember.” “All right, sir,” he called back with a frank smile that made his mother think him the handsomest boy in the world ; and presently his merry whis- tle was making the woods and valleys ring. He came home that evening with a basket of fish, and cried enthu- siastically : “Qh, I've had the jolliest day! I never did have eo much tun!” “Iam glad you enjoyedit,” said his father, grimly. “My day has not been 85 pleasant. I have worn myself out trying to remedy the results of your You left the pasture gate open this morning and all the cattle got out. Dick and I bad to quit work and spend the entire day getting them back.” “Oh, I'm awfully sorry 1” exclaimed Roy with a dismayed look. “I fully intended to shut the gate, but I must have forgotten it.” Aud he looked really sorry for a minute or two ; kat his father heard him whistling before he reached the house, “Roy, did you fasten the door of the corncrib 7 asked his father one even- ing, when he had come in from his evening work. | “Yes, sir—thatis, I think I did,” was the ready answer. “You had better go out and see,” urged Mr. Delton, but Roy replied in his careless, confident fashion : “Oh, I'm pretty sure I closed it. However, I'll go out and see before bedtime.” Bat the next morning, there was the crib door standing wide open, and there was one of the best horses in the agonies of death because it helped it- gelf to corn and had eaten too much. “I don’t know why father should be go angry with me.’ Roy said to his mother. “He ought to know that I didn’t do it on purpose ; I simple for- got.” Mr. Delton came in at that moment and heard the last words. He was very angry, and it must be acknowl edged that he had sufficient reason. “That ie always your excuse,’ he said. “You ‘forget’* Does that reme- dy tbe evil, or keep you from repeating it? You are always doing some mis- chief by your carelessness, and then you eay ‘I forgot,’ as though that set: tled the whole matter. 1 can’t help thinking that such conduct is the re sult of pure eulfishness and utter dis- regard of others.” Roy stared at his father with widen- Never before in all his life had such things been said to him, and he was deeply mortified and eonsidered himself aggrieved and humiliated. For two or three days afterwards he went about with a cloud on his face, and at last he told his mother: “] suppose father thinks I am not fit to stay on the farm, where my mis- takes do so much mischief. The best thing 1 can dois to accept Captain Sinclair's offer and go into the tele- graph office.” And though the subject was die cussed with great earnestness for two or three weeks, Roy finally bad his way and went. His father was. very grave through it all, and just as Roy was starting he took the boy aside and said, more seriously than he had ever spoken in his lite : “Roy, yenr mistakes have hurt me a great deal, in time and work as well as in pocket. They have caused me a great deal of anxiety and annoyance. Never mind about that now. I shall never mention it again. But there are vocations in which mistakes cost more than money. They cost human life. The railroad business is one of them.” Roy went away, but ‘that little speech went with him. He thought of it all the way to town and 1t was with him many and many a day afterwards, as he sat in the telegraph office at the station and learned to manipulate the key. For once in his life he remem- bered a warning and it gave him a sense of his own responsibility that he found very irksome. And yet, strange to say, he felt quite trinmpbant be- cause he had made no mistakes now. “Father was very impatient and never did me justice,” he said to* him- self. I suppose he sees by this time that I am not so bad a fellow after all.” He was so bright and so full of energy that learning was like play and hesoon had the business mastered, and, as he wrote to his mother, was only waiting for an opening.” Ina chort time the opening came. A station agent was wanted at a little town up the road and Captain Sinclair recommended Roy for the position. “He is very young,’ he said to the superintendent, “but he is a bright fel- low and understands his business. I think you may trast him.” And so Roy found himself in charge of an office where he shipped and re- ceived freight, sold tickets and was ex- press agent telegraph operator and everything. That is what he wrote to his mother. The letter that came back was very kind and encouraging, but through it all ran an undertone of anxiety. The position was a great honer for him, but go much depended on his being care- ful, and now he must not forget ! “They must think I am a child,’ Roy muttered impatiently. : The dignity of his position had made him more confident of himself and more restless under advice. He was not the first young man that be- came somewhat arrogant over his suc- cess. Such arrogance sometimes needs a severe lesson and Roy’s lesson was coming. An excursion train went down the road one morning to a town forty miles below, where was to be a great picnic. Half of the towns people at Roy's station joined it, all in holiday attire and with a tumult of happy talk and laughter. While the young sta- tion agent stood on the platform look- ing up at the coach windows regret: fully—for he was young and he loved fun and holidays—soteone leaned out and slapped him on the shoulder. “Roy Delton, as I'm living!” cried a familiar voice, and Roy looked up and recognized one of his old-time chums at school, who had gone out west with his family years ago. Almost before they had clasped hands the train began moving, but the friend shouted back: “Say, Roy! I'll stop off when we come back this evening and spend to morrow with you!” And the train rounded the curve and was out of sight. All that day Roy thought of nothing but the pleaure of meeting his old friend and the many things he would have to say to him when he came came back. Old Percy King! What times they bad had together. He grew very impatient as the time approached for the train to return, and was so preoccupied that he scarcely comprehended a message that came clicking over the wires : “Side-track 48, excursion train, and wait for north-bound special.” He answered with the usual “0. K.” and thea hurried out to meet the train and Percy King. Such handshaking and rejoicing as there was. While they walked about with their arms over one another's shoulders the train moved out and Roy wenton talking and looked -after it with uncomprehending eyes. It was ten minutes afterwards that be thought of what he had done. He was talking about his father, and then he said : “I used to think father was hard on me, but [ was rather careless, I sup: pose. How-ever, I'm well over it now.” And then he remembered ! Percy was amazed to see him fall back into a chair with a ghastly pallor on his face. Almost instantly, how- ever, Roy sprang to the key and called up the next town in feverish haste. “Forty-eight passed bere by mis- take. Detain special,’’ was the mes- sage he rattled off. The next moment came the answer, sounding like a thun- derbolt in the quiet office : “Special passed fifteen ago.” Without a word the young tele- grapher turned and went into the inner office and locked himself in. He would not listen to a human voice, or look into a buman face. He had dropped into the first chair, and he sat pale to the lips, and chilled as though he were turning to stone. His friend was outside, knocking on the door and imploring to be let in, but he did not hear him. He heard instead, over and over again : “There are vocations in which mis- takes cost more than money. They cost human life. The railroad business is one of them.” A horrible picture was before him— a picture of toppling engines and crush- ed cars full of mangled human bodies. He could hear the shrieks and groans as plainly as be could hear his own pame ringing around the world in ac- cents of execration. He could see his own ruined life and his father’s bowed head and his mother dying broken hearted. Aud yet he had only repeated the of- fense that had spoiled his youth. He had intended to do right, but he forgot: Strange that a moment's forgetfulness ghould be fraught with such conse quences | Ifonly he had trained him- self to remember before forgetfulness became a crime ! minutes He had been sitting there, how long he knew not, when the shrieking of whistles ‘and the rumbling of car wheels - aroused him. Were more trains passing to rush into that awfal scene awaiting them up the road? He arose, weak as as old man, and totter ed out on the platform. And there, backing slowly into the station, came the excursion train, with the special following it. Not a car was splintered, not a wheel was broken. The excur- sionists looked curiously from the win dows’ and a golden haired baby leaned out and threw a kiss to him with her dimpled hand. One of the trainmen was hastily ex- plaining, but the young station agent was dazed and scarely understood. He heard something about a ‘hot-box,’ which had stopped the special, and so the excursion train had time to work the air brakes, though there was not a distance of six feet to spare between the noses of the two engines. “Somebody has made an awful blun- der ; it will be all day with him when it comes out who he is,” the man added significantly. The next day a young man, with a face so haggard that he looked ten years older than his age, walked into the office of the superintendent. “My name is Roy Delton,” he said. “I am agent at Groveton, I made a mistake yesterday that might have cost two or three scores of lives. I have come to resign my place and you may do what you please by way of punishment.” And then his overwrought nerves gave away : and he fell at the superin- tendent’s feet. An illoess of several weeks followed, and two of those weeks elapsed before Roy koew that he was in the com- pany’s hospital, with his mother al- ways near him. Duringthe days of convalescence he did a great deal of thinking, and once he said somewhat sadly : “J never realized it before, mother, but now I know that it’s no excuse to say 'I forgot” People have no right to forget, whether it’s a case of shut- ting gates or stopping trains. And the worst of it is thas the little things, such as gates for instance, finally grow into big things with human life invol- ved in them, and the fellow that ‘for- gets’ finds himself ruined.” Perhaps it was a good thing after all that the superintendent happened to be visiting the hospital that morning, and that he was standing near the door of the ward and heard that little speech At any rate he went in and said very kindly for him : “Young man, you may report at my office as soon as you are able. Your lesson has been a severe one, but I think you have learned it. At any rate I'll try you again. EST An Attractive Window. The head of the house had told the new clerk to .try his hand at window- dressing. ‘I want you to make every woman on the street look at this win- down,” he said. The clerk went at it. He made a curtain of solid black velvet and hung it close inside the plate glass. «What on earth are you doing ?”’ ask- ed the senior member. “Making a mir- ror of the window,’ said the clerk. ¢If the women won’t look at that they won't look at anything.” The clerk is a member of the firm now. ———— Ruskin's Hatred of Chrysanthemums, Mr. Ruskin was asked if he did not admire chrysanthemums in the quad. Now, he liked nothing abnormal or artificial, and he regarded the produc- tion of chrysanthemums as an unhal- lowed attempt to grow flowers at a sea- son when nature meant that there should be noflowers, and so the start- ling answer came . “I have chrysan- themus.” ERATE. A Philanthropist. «lixense me,’ said Meandering Mike, as he paused at the kitchen door, ‘but hev ye got any work ye want done in exchange fur cold, vittles ?” “Yes,” was the prompt reply. «All right,” was the reply, as he turned away. ‘Good dey.” «What made you ask the question ?” «Why, sometimes I meets men that wants ter work fur cold vittles, an’ I'm so kind-hearted that I like ter be able ter tell"em whur they kin be accom- merdated. TTS He Did Not Advertise. A man from Pocatello, Idaho, recent- ly sent to Salt Lake for some furniture, His local dealer, hearing of this, called on him and seid: “I had these same goods. Why didn’t you buy from me ?” “What, did you have them ?"’ was the surprised rejoinder. “I never thought so; but I saw an ad of the things I wanted in the Salt Lake papers and sent for them.” The moral is apparent. ECE, Two Sides to the Question. “You must go to bed now, dear. You know the chickens all go to roost with the fun,” “Yes, but then their mamma always goes with them.”’— Boston Beacon. CATR, The Hopeless, Helpless Widower. There is nothing on earth so helpless as a widower who has spent all his mar- ried life wondering how his wife would manage to get along if he should be taken away. Sr A RATT Kentucky is complaining of a scurcity of water. It seems an odd plaint from Kentucky, but whiskey can’t be made without water. ES, Of the 26,383 recruits levied the Bavarian army in 1893, only were unable to read and write. for six ——1It is said that Maine women increasing in height. Six footers not unsual among them, SE ——_—— are are And now is gone the summer girl, With all her fancy frills and flummery; Sassiety outpours its soul Upon chrysanthemummery. «Living Pictures.” Stronger proof of the degeneracy of the theater could not-be furnished than Lady Henry Somerset's exposure of tha tableau vivants in the Palace theater of London. Just before sailing for America 1n August, she attended this theater in order to personally satisfy herself as to the character of the per- formance which was being conducted by many, but which she had condemned in her last annual address. As this is a question in which good women the world over are concerned, and as there is much probability that «living pictures” will be introduced up- on the “boards’’ of American theaters, we desire to give our readers a good portion of Lady Somerset's appeal to the authorities of the theatre and the women of England. A stronger and more delicate presentation of the sub- tact could not be made. Her article, which was first published in the Wo- man’s Signal, has been widely copied in the English press and favorably com- mented on by every paper that stands on the side of morality. Lady Henry says : Tos learned that they (living pic- tures) verged on indecency, and that public opinion ought to be roused by them. But my worst surmises did not come near the actual fact; and so strong- ly do I feel, now that I know what these living pictures really are, I have determined to desert the shelter of anon- ymity in order to make a personal ap- eal to woman in my own name. The tableaux are many of them harmless, and in a manner picturesque. Itis on- ly to a few that I wish to call attention, but those are simply outrageous. In them young glrls are posed with no other clothes at all on them but tights from neck to foot. . For the first time in a Christian country, our broth- ers, husbands, sisters, sons and wives are bidden to assist at an exhibition of un- clothed women. . . . These tableaux violate every artistic canon. It is a sham nudity, not spiritualized and made ideal by the hallowed creating hand of genius, but palpably gross and disgusting in its suggestive flesh-colored skin tights. I suppose people would make a protest if it were proposed ‘to expose women in uaveiled nudity; but the artistic apology would certainly be stronger, and for myself I cannot see that the humiliation to the performer would be greater. This film of gauze is but a silly lie,a sort of quibble by which the thing may escape being called by its right name. No one who sees but must agree here is the gravest insult and dishonor that has been put upon wo- men in our time, for that atlast we have, in letting women make public merchandise of the beauty of their bodies, surpassed even the Oriental standard of female degradation. . . . . I am speaking now not of lithographs, but of living girls—young women whose modesty and purity are of just as much account in the sight of God as the vir- tue of the highest in the land, whose dishonor is just as much a blot and in- famy on the community as would be publicly tolerated insult or outrage on the most royal of princesses. That this thing should go cn under a popular au- thority (London county council) is to me incredible. . . . No prize fight could be one-half so brutalizing, so de-civiliz- ing, so degrading to the most sacred in- stincts of humanity as this public pag- eantry of shame. ... The time for speaking out has come, and I earnestly call upon every one who has a voice that he or she can make articulate to join in a protest against this unholy thing. The current number of the Woman's Signal contains, besides many indorse- ments of the above noble plea, an edi- torial sequence, which, by the well- known ‘‘ear-marks,” we feel safe in saying was written by Mrs. Mary B. Willard, who is editing the paper in Lady Henry’s absence. Old-time read- ers of The Union Signal will be glad to read our pioneer editor's spicy remarks on a London paper’s comment of Lady Henry's appeal, so we make no apology for giving the article in full. The com- ment which furnished Mrs. Willard her text is as follows : «It was morally certain that when ladies began going to these places some of them would be shocked and would say 80.” Mrs. Willard then moralizes in this wise : This is & naive confession, from which a good deal may be extracted. First, that up to date “ladies” have not been “going to see’ the living pictures ; sec- ond, that in the everlasting certainties of things it was written that only their ignorance of this sort of public enter- tainment prevented an earlier exposure and condemnation of its character ; that in its secret heart the world expects women to speak out, to raise her voice against iniqity of all sorts. no matter how cunningly it may be devised. The unconscious testimony to this fact cught to give courage and force to woman’s speech and pen. Nay, more, it lays obligation upon woman to know the truth, however dark it may be. and to drag it to the light. The world waits for such service as this, and the cause that demands it is neither man’s cause nor woman’s, but the larger interest of human progress. A good housekeeper tolerates no dark corners in her domain for the accumu- lation of dust and germs. Air and light and brush and broom are her preven- tions against vermin and disease. Shall che not look as well to the ways of her larger household, employing the same methods that have played so large and successful a part in her housekeeping ever since the world began ? The trou- ble is that we have had ‘bachelors’ quarters” so long. And the sole occu- pant has been so intent on his arma- went, his argosies, his money-gathering and labor saving, that he could not be expected to minutely investigate and care for his cupboards and cellars. «It was morally certain’ that the housewife, coming to her kingdom for such a time as this, should begin by peering about, looking tor herself into the dust holes and vigorously taking her broom to them. (“I thank thee, Jow,for teaching me that word.”) What is expected of you, oh, woman, has now been made clear to you. You will have only yourselves to blame if things go wrong. This is the program : Pry inte every dark corner of evil. Trace bravely to its source every symp- tom of moral disease, cry aloud every menace of danger to the household’s health, and spare not the spiritual plum- bers and fitters that try to face you down. Study the daily bills of fare with a mother’s tender conscience, and if there's death in the pot, say so in plain words and without mincing wat- ters. Watch thou in all things ; do the work of an evangel, make full proof of thy ministry. May Mrs. Willard’s beautiful ser- monette cause an arousement of woman on both sides of the Atlantic. “Prying into every dark corner of evil,” may net be the most comfortable of occupants, butin this way only can sin be era- dicated. Since writing the above, it has come to our notice that living pictures have already been introduced into a Chicago theater, hence, it is high time that the temperance women this side of the At- iantic were joining their British sisters for the extermination of this hideous iniquity.— Union Signal. ES The A. P. A. and Catholicism, Statistics Which are Interesting to Both Sides. The opposition of the A. P. A. which is organizing on this coast, against Catholics and Catholicism, and the strength which that organization is gaining and promises to exert in poli- tics, renders the Catholic directory for 1894, which has just been issued, giving the statistics of the Roman Catholic church in the United Sates, of unusual general interest, Every diocese furnishes its own fig- ures. The Catholic population in many of the dioceses is approximated, and in the absence of exact figures the compil- ers of the directory are unable tosay just how many Catholics there are in the United States. Tne directory gives the number as 8,902,033, but Catholic authorities claimed last year that there are at least 12,000,000. The country is divided into 14 ecclesi- astical provinces, each of which has one archdiocese and several dioceses. The dioceses number 72. There are 17 arch- bishops, including Cardinal Gibbons, and 71 bishops. In all the archdioceses and dioceses there are 9717 priests, 7231 of whom are secular clergymen and 2486 regular clergymen, that is members of the orders such as the Jesuits, Franciscans and Redemporists. These priests preside over 8729 churches and 5704 chapels and stations, places where a resident priest is not stationed. There are 8 un- iversities and 25 secular seminaries, in which 2075 youug men are studying for the priesthood. The priests of the religious orders have 61 seminaries that are educating 1457 candidates for the regular priest- hood as members of their orders. There are 172 high schools for boys, 668 high schools for girls and 8732 parochial schools, which are attended by 765,388 children. In 258 orphans asylums 29,- 626 orphans are cared for. The charita- ble institutions number 753. The total number of children in Catholic institu- tions is 860,356. i —— Successful Railroaders Bottom. Start at the That there is a chance to risein the railroad vocation is evidenced by some interesting figures. Somebody has tak- en the pains to look up the records of 128 general managers, taken at random from the country at large, and it has been discovered that no less than 105 worked their way from the bottom to the top rounds of success. They com- menced as clerks, operators, rodmen, brakemen, etc. Cnly 53 began any- where near the top of the ladder. There is a great deal of moral in this. It shows how the railway service bas progressed of late years, and that, gen- erally speaking, the way to get to the top is not by favoritism or influence, but by starting in at the bottom and just climbing. While occasionally there are rank instances of favoritism, cases that cry aloud to heaven the unfitness of the occupant of some position, placed where he is by family or plutocratic in- fluence, but such only go to prove that the standpoint is personal fitness for the position. The fact is, it is becom- ing more and more necessary every year in railroad work that every man must stand on his own merits, or to borrow that homely prover, every tub must stand on its own bottom. The exigen- cies of competition demand this. No- where is the business race keener than in the railroad worid, and the official whe doesn’t know his business, or who doesn’t look alive, so to speak, will be distanced by his rivals and soon found out. Itis comparatively necessary that he be abreast of the times, or he will get left. ——— What restless creatures the hu- man family are. None seem to be satis- fied with their lot and general sur- roundings. One man is struggling to get justice : some others are flying from it. One man is saving to build a home; another is trying to sell his building for less than it cost to get rid of it. One man spending all the money he earns in taking a girl to the theatre and sending her flowers in hopes of eventually mak- ing her his wife while his neighbor is spending all the gold he has to get a divorce. The eastern man wants to go west and the western man wants to go east. The farmer wants to go into the city and the city man wants to go into the country. The man in trade wants to get out and everybody not in trade wants to be in. The old wants to be young and the young want to get old, ani so it goes. I —————— A ———.— ——Among all our exchanges we do not find any one of them that gives as much attention to the good of the town and the movements of the people in 1t or those visiting here as do the home papers. All three are public spivited and anxious, it seems, to do the best all round. The city papers do not record the births of your children or write up for future keeping and reference the bet- ter side of the dead, and yet the people who expect most from the local papers usually send away for their job work and urge others to do so. No better work and no better prices can be had out of town than right here Patronize one of the home offices and help the printers as they help you. em—— — No other sarsaparilla has equaled Hood's in the relief it gives in severest cases of dyspepsia, sick headache, bil- icusness, ete. jeweler’s For and A bout Women. An imported dress of brown cawel’s hair is an excellent model for street dresses for girls of fourteen or sixteon years. The drooping blouse front and the skirt are cut in one piece, to be com- pleted by a hort bolero jacket that reaches low on the belt, and has for its chief feature a large square collar of yellow moire. The skirt, which fastens in the back, is lined with percaline, reaches the ankles, and has thres godet folds in the back. The blouse front falls in a box-pleat, stitched lengthwise, on a bias belt of the moire. The little jacket is of simple shape and has very large sleeves, The costliest fur in the markets of the world is that of the sea otter, and it is year by year becoming more expensive. At the London spring sales of the pres- ent year one of these beautiful skins brought £210, and yet the size of it was only about six feet long by two feet wide. The first step toward the revival of the bustle has been taken. This is shown in the new organ-pipe skirt. It is the skirt of the season, and resembles in a marked degree the bustle of the past. The skirt is very full, lined with hair- cloth, and arranged in four or two box plaits at the back. These plaits stand out prominently and are padded ten inches from the waist line. Over the hips the skirt fits with glove-like smooth- ness, flaring toward the bottom. Stock buckles are the vogue this fall. The jewelers’ windows are filled with them, and a stock of velvet caught in front with a gold buckle is considered a present not to ba despised. The buckles are dainty, delicate affairs. Many of them are of gold and enamel combined. Heart-shaped buckles and golden circles have taken the merry maids of Gotham by storm. Small side combs are worth the consideration. A. pretty de- sign seen had a row of stones set a3 if in connecting squares. Lightly raised gold tracery in amber combs is artistic. The present mode of hair dressing promises a continued use of these small side combs. Miss Ellen Dorteh, of Georgia, it is said, will be rewarded for political work by being made the Governor’s private secretary. The position carries with it a Major's commission. How will Miss Major Dortch strike the Mugwamp ear ? To be clothed correctly a woman must possess at least one costume in rough goods, the pattern of which must be either in checks or plaids. Beige colorings are the most correct. though there are some specimens shown that rival a horse blanket, both in tone and texture. Only a woman who was per- fectly certain of her ability to carry off such a frock should attempt anything of this sort, and even then she ought to own dozens of gowns entirely different in character, unless she wishes to be identified continually as the woman in the jockey costume. Quieter effects are much more elegant, evidencing a perfect taste that has to be imagined rather than felt in the choice of the essentially “loud” designs which edge them side by side. Camel's hair, that standby favorite of our mother’s time, now comes with an illuminated ground, in which dull brown, green and red mixes together in composite rich- ness. Silks are exceedingly chic, either for street or evening wear. An especial beauty, which comes in a half dozen different colorings, has a background of solid tint, with large and small dots composed of fine black and white weav- ings. This black and white mixture in turquoise blue, eminence or T1038 is particularly fetching. To bezin with, there are going to be some very stunning wraps seen on the street. One which gives you an idea of the eccentric sort of loveliness that will prove attractive was of bluet broadcloth with great applique figures of black sa- tin studded with jets and the entire front covered with broad double bands of lynx, the same fur being used in the trimming. Feathers boas are a positive rage, and 1, for one, am really glad that they have come to replace those little far neck scarfs that were only stylish without being pretty. When fur is used it is in the form of a light band collar with puffed-out pieces at the side, in exact copy of the collarettes of velvet that have lately sprung into favor. The stock and belt buckles of gold filigree, enamel and paste jewels are all the rage. No lady feels that her ward- robe is quite complete without one or more. These buckles hold the crushed stock collar with its puckered ends standing up like fins on each side of the chin. Some are heart shaped, some like two crescents crossed, others like linked rings, and some and perhaps the most effective are just simply oblong golden slides. The belt buckle can be put to so many uses. It can to-day hold the feath- ers on a felt hat, tonight drape up the fluff of tulle and lace on a dancing frock, tomorrow adorn the neck of the wearer or hold a knot of ribbons on her cloak. A handsome gold buckle is really a use- ful adjunct, and if the fashion has not died out before the holidays it will make a suitable present forall your lady friends and one well appreciated. A new sort of epaulette is longer than it is broad and 1s set in the armhole and exteds over the entire top of the arm. In fronttheend torms an exten- sion in a line drawn straight across the finger from arm to arm. When such: a line marks the decollsttage the effect is startling in its suggestion of extreme width. The epaulettes are held up and in stiff, smooth shapeby the rounding of the big puffed sleeves beneath. Lace finishes the edges of the epaulettes and falls from the edge of the low neck. There is every prospect that braid will be very largely used during this season, both on dresses and on coats The plain sdirts will be trimmed with either one very wide braid or three, or perhaps, five narrower, and for this purpose military braid will be very much in re- quest.