as Flo. Boor Wad, Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 30, 1895. GRANDMOTHER. I've read to her till I was hoarse the stories in my papers When the other boys were lighting bonfires down the street; And I've stayed and learned my verses when I heard their merry capers. And I've stayed and said my chapter with restless longing feet. A stitch is always dropping in the everlasting knitting. And the needles that I've threaded —no, you couldn’t count to-day. And I've hunted for her glasses till I thought my head was Spang When there upon her forehead as calm as clocks they lay. But there always is a penny or some candy in her pocket; There never was a pocket that was half so big and deep, And she lets the candle in my rcom burn to the very socket, While she moves and bustles roundabout till I am sound asleep. And when I've been in swimming after moth- er aid I shouldn’t, And mother has her strap in hand, accord- ing to the rule, 1t sounds as sweet as silver, the voice that says: “I wouldn't; “The boy that won't go swimming such a day would be a fool !" Ofttimes there's something in her voice as if she gave a blessing, Then I look at her a moment and I keep still as a mouse ; But who she is, by this time, there is no use of guessing ; For there's nothing like a grandmother to have about the house ! — Walter S. Stetson, in Washington Post. A LAST RESORT. BY ANTHOEY HOPE. “They're admirably suited to one another!” said I. “Oh, admirably !” Flot There was a pausz ; Flo frowned at the fire, I drummed my fingers on the table. I don’t think that we either of us looked very pleased. Yet it was a most fortunate arrangement. “The only thing that surprises me about it,” I observed, “is that Philippa should have done it. I'm very glad, you know, but I'm surpriged !”’ “I'm not surprised about her !’’ said Flo. I looked up much annoyed. “You might be above that I'" said I severely. “I’m not blaming her, Dick. When he likes, Capt. Worsley can be very—" : “Oh, I suppose he humbugged her, about culture and all that. If I'd liked to go on like that—" “Well, Dick ?” “Oh, nothing. Don’t worry a fel low !" “I'm sure that Capt. Worsley did nothing that a gentleman wouldn't.” I was much annoyed at this remark that I said to Flo: “He got oyer his disappointment about you pretty soon, though ?” Flo laughed with extraordinary non- chalance as she answered : “Philippa doesn’t seem to have been disappointed at all about you.” “My dear Florence,’ said J, “I have no desire to discuss Miss March with on,” “Well, then, why did you begin about Capt. Worsley ?” “Come, come, let's say no more about them. We're well quit of them. I don't bear them malice, do you ?” “Not the least, Dick. In fact, I quite understand what Philippa must have felt about you. She likes serious people—people who have high aime, you know. “I have very high aims,” said I. ‘Yes, but you don’t hit,” observed said Cousin “At any rate,” [ cried, “I don’t flirt wholesale with anybody who—" “What do you mean, Dick ?”’ At this point—and- very fortunate was the occurrence— Aunt Maud came in. She has been married to the col- onel for three months, and is recover- ing her power of patronizing persons who are engaged. “I’m sorry to interrupt you, dears,” said Aunt Maud, “but I've got a piece of news. An engagement! Now guess who it is !”’ We neither of us spoke. “Why, Philippa March and Capt. Worsley ! Aren't you surprised ?” “No,” said Flo, viciously ; “but Dick is.” “The precise opposite of that state- ment would convey the truth,” said I stiffly. : Aunt Maud looked from Flo to me and from me to Flo. “Has anything gone wrong?’ she agked, anxiously. But as she-obtain- ed no answer, she went on: “I've been to seen Philippa—and he was there. I never saw a more radiant couple.” At this moment Aunt Maud certain- ly raw a less radiant couple. “Philippa took me aside,” she par- sued, ‘and told me that she had es- caped a great danger—"' Flo laughed—again most viciously. “And was now happier than words. Oh! and when Capt. Worsley was putting me into the oarriage, he said that Philippa was absolutely the only girl who had ever really touched his heart.” “Did he, though ?”’ said I, with a smile of triumphant malice. “Though he didn’t deny that he had felt a passing fancy for one or two oth- ers.” - I slapped my thigh, with an appear- ance of great merriment. Flo had be- come quite red. “So the air’s full of engagements,” beamed Aunt Mand. “It's quite—" “Stifling,” said I, thoughtlessly. “My dear Dick, what a funny thing’ to say ! But I must leave Flo to have that out with you. waiting for me.” Aunt Maud withdrew. Then Flo, with an air of dispassionate curiosity observed : The colonels “I wonder if you think you've been behaving like a gentleman !” HMy position.” eaid I, with elabor- ate politeness, ‘‘is rather a difficult one. When the lady who has accepted my hand not only displays obvious regret at another man’s engagement, but further twits me—" “With your obvious regret at anoth- er girl's engagement. Yes ?" “I see no use in this sort of thing,” said I, with dignity. Nothing else oc- curred to me to say at the moment. “People always say that when they’re scored off.” “I hate girls who talk slang.” “Nobody need stay to listen to it, said Flo, with a curtsey, and she turn- ed her back on me, and looked out of “the window. I'sat still for three minutes. Then stretched out out my hand, took my hat, and rose to my feet. I made some little noise in moving—perhaps more than I need. But Flo did not turn round. ‘Just fancy,” said she, as though she were enjoying a conversation with the window-pane, ‘if this sort of thing happened when we were married ! And unless you changed very much, Tom) “If it were enough for change—"" I began, loftily. “Now,” interrupted Flo, still ad- dressing herself to ths window-pane, “it doesn’t matter. We can just sepa- rate. But then we should have to go on being together. ; Something struck me in this last ob- servation. I laid down my hat. “Gad, so we should !”” said I. “That would be rather queer.” “We should bave to stay in the same house—even in the same room sometimes !” And Flo's graceful back was agitated with a shudder “We should,” I assented. “I sup- pose you wouldn’t speak for the whole evening ?"” “We should have to keep up appear- ances, and seem to be friendly when the servants were there—and—oh, it would be awful!” I put mv hands in my pockets and surveyed Flo. “What should we have to do?’ I asked with curiosity. “Make a loathsome pretense of—of still caring for oae another, I suppose, said Flo, with a groan of prospective horror. “But what should we have to do ?’ I persisted. I wanted details. ‘Should we have to talk ?’ “Yes,” snapped Flo. “Should I,” I pursued, taking a step towards Flo, “have to kies you?” “Oh. I suppose—I wonder why you don’t go !” “And you would have to kiss me ?”’ To this question I received no an- answer at all. But I was bound to ex- tract one; I could not leave the matter unsettled. So I rang the bell. “What are you ringing for?’ said Flo, facing round suddenly. “For the footman,” eaid I, nodding my head. “I should have thought you could find your way out,” and she right- about-faced again. Then William opened the door. “Did you ring, sir ?"’ he asked ob- serving, I suppose, that Flo did not ap- pear to want anything. “Yes William, I rang. I want—" “It's a mistake, William,” came suddenly from the window- “No, it isn’t,” said I. “I must ask William—""' “Nonesense, Dick! It's only Mr. Vausitiart’s joke, William.” “Well, then,” said I, “can we do it without William ? If so, he can go.” There was the slightest of pauses. Then Flo said : “Yes, you may go, William.” Willian, looking somewhat puzzled, withdrew ; and then Flo, much flush- ed, turned round once for all. “I can’t think,’ said she, “how you can be so foolish. I don’t know what you'd have done in another minute.” “I should,” I answered, have kept up appearances.” “Flo's lips twitched a little. it in a moment. * “It is perfectly useless for me,” I observed, plaintively, ‘to try to escape from you. Your resentment is not to be relied upon for a quarter of an hour. I am nearly heart-broken about Phil- ippa March.” “Well, I'm sore about Capt. Wor- sley.” ” ; “But,” said I, “I'm going to be as man. [I’m going to forget Philippa and keep my word to you. Will you put the captain out of your heart ?”’ “I'll try,” said Cousin Flo. “Because you know if, after we are married, you speak of him with re- gret—"' “Or if you seem to wish Philippa had—" “All those terrible things will hap- pen.” “Yes, I know, Dick. Are we really wise to—to risk it ?"’ I knitted my brows. It was really a serious question. I studied Flo's fea- tures, “I'm puzzled,” I answered. “You're very charming, Flo, but—=" “I don’t trust you, Dick.” There was a long sad pause. Flo held out her hand with a gesture of farewell. I looked in her eyes. I took the hand. “It is really best,” said Flo, gent- me to 1 saw “I suppose it is,” said I rather for- lornly, sqeezing her hand. “Marriage is such an irrevocable step,” Flo remined me. “Well, anyhow, it's very trouble- | some to—"" “And if,” interrupted Flo, “when it was too late, when we awoke to the fact—No! G—good-by, Dick I” ged: Flo,” said I much mov- ed. Thus we parted. I took my bat, without a backward glance, started for the door. At this moment, curiously enough, the door opened. William came in. “Please, miss,’ said he, tea’s ready in the drawing-room.” “Thank you, William,” said Flo, in | & very low voice. William withdrew. = I stood medita- ° tively in the middle of the room. Then I put my hat down. “Hang it,” said I, resting my eyes on Flo's face, “we shall always have servants !" * “The servants ?"’ murmured Flo, in destin, : “Why, yes,” said I, and I began to ‘smile. ‘And, if the worst comes to the worst, we must—"" I paused and took Flo's hand again. “We must what, Dick ?”’ she ‘ask- ed. “We must,” I answered, ‘rub along on keeping up appearances.” We were disgracefully late for tea.— Idler. Pennsylvania’s Humiliation. Certainly no citizen who respects the honor and dignity of the common- wealth, no matter whether he inclines to the combine or the Quay faction, or is independent of any connection or sympathy with either of them, but must feel a sense of humiliation at the ‘attitude of Governor Hastings. His latest break is flooding portions of the state with personal appeals, in fac- simle of his handwriting, asking the Republican voters to stand by him in the contest. The appeal starts out with the falsehood that ‘the opposi- tion to me is because I have favored apportionment by “the legislature,” and this is followed by a nugget of truth stating substantially the whole ground of opposition, which is ‘be- cause I favor Hon. B. F. Gilkeson as chairman of the slate committee.”” He concludes with the whine, “If I am right, I trust you will sustain me by your vote and your influence.” These circulars are to influence the re- maining primaries, and are the last despairing kick of the governor of the state. If Governor Hastings had kept his hands out of the fight, as, every sense of official propriety dictated, it would have been shorn of much of its bitter- ness, and the governor would have oc- cupied a position where he could have imposed terms on the wrangling fac- tions. He gave up the office of arbiter for that of a mere tender and annex to the corrupt political machines en- gineered by Mr. Magee and his con- frere, Mr. “Dave” Martin. No gov- ernor of the state ever before so lower- ed himself. He has pulled kis office down with him, and used its power and patronage even to the extent of drag ging the judiciary into the miserable squabble. A proper consideration of what is due to his office should have taught him the indency of mixing in. If he must do it, it should have been as the impartial and friendly arbitrater of both the warring factions. By so do- ing he could have maintained his own dignity, and saved the state the dierep- utable squabble. No matter whether Magee-Martin or Quay wins the battle Hastings is stranded high and dry as a useless bit of political wreckage.— Pittsburg Post. “Hon.” and “Esq.” Custom prefixes Honorable to al- most every holder of the public office, says the New York Sun, yet so far as we know, no citizen, not even an offi cial of the past or present, is styled Honerable by legal authority. In the old Commonwealth of Massachusetts the Governor is His Excellency and the Lieutenant-Governor is His Honor by the Constition. He might, perhaps, be addressed as Hon. All other Hon- orables are so by impulsive courtesy. Happily the President of the United States is the model for the manner of addressing every one of his fellow-citi- izens. To send a letter to the presi- dent properly to-day you must write “Grover Cleveland,” Buzzard’s Bay. To say “His Excellency Grover Cleve: land’ would be an offence against the specific decision of the fathers of the republic. To write Hon. Grover Cleve- land is to follow an old custom without satisfactory justification. It is harsh to charge caddishness against the use of the suffix Esquire, after it has spread so univer- sally among. English-speaking people, but it ought to be stopped, as caddish, as unneceseary and as contrary to the genius of the future. Originally it de- noted a certain one of the many social ranks among the English, which was higher than some and lower than oth- ers. That distinction has gone out; but?it is still used in England to denote a gentleman, as contrasted with a tradesman. A gentleman is Esquire and Mr. is a tradesman. Roscoe Conkling, by the way of condemning this sort of caddishness, and perhaps of throwing a higher light on his individ- nality, once struck off the Esq., which the printer of one ot his speeches had placed at the end of the author's pame. Mr. has still the usefulness of enabling married women to be known as Mrs, but Esq. is a piece of social frippery and should be abolished John Smith is the best form of title for every citizen of the United States, whether President ex-President, Judge, Governor, Alderman or only plain John Smith. ——The Hapsburg blood has run out and if Archduke Franz, the Austrian Emperor's nephew and heir, proves to have dangerously weak lungs, as now reperted, there is no near kinsman equal to the burden of the throne. The Ital- ian heir is an undersized man who will never marry. The Russian heir is dy- ing of consumption. The Hohenzol- lerns blood is tainted, as the Emperor’s infirmities show. The Hapsburgs have no sound heir. The boy Spanish King is the only life hetween the cranks and the libertines of the Spanish Bourbons, who stand next in male succession, though this crown descended this cen- tury in the female line. Half the French Orleans Bourbons who sat at the royal table at the recent marriage used speaking trumpets. Of such is the royal caste of Europe. | ——DMiss Virginia Fair, daughter of | the late “bonanza king,” is admitted | the swiftest rider of all the women who ride the wheel in Newport. China and the Missionaries. Report says that China nas perempto- rily refused to permit the representa- tives of the United States and Great Britain to make an investigation into the circumstances connected with the recent anti-missionary riots, which cul- minated in the murder of several mis- sionaries and the destruction of much valuable property. No reason is given; the simple announcement is made that China permits the ‘foreign devils’ to interfere. ~~ So far as the United States are con- cerned their people have no right to ex- pect or demand courteous treatment at the hands of the Chinese. If China were to issue and enforce an edict de- porting all the Americans now within her limits we would probably complain very bitterly and our protest would not be long delayed. And yet we have treated the Chinaman as though he were a dog, cgmpelling him to leave the country and refusing him sccess here if he once sets foot beyond our bor- ders. Te In various sections of the United States inoffensive and helpless China- men have been beaten into insensibili- ty, robbed, and in many instances cru- elly murdered by ruffians who were nev- ; er brought to justice. Our anti-Chi- nese laws would be a disgrace to a heathen state. The congress should re- peal them at the earliest opportunity. Missionaries and other Americans are entitled to protection ; our govern- ment must give it to them. But it would immensely strengthen its own case if it were to do justice to the Celestials. As for Great Britain she has passed no laws discriminating against the Chi- naman. He is at liberty to go any- where throughout Queen Victoria's do- minions, or to take up his residence therein if so inclined. He is protected in the ordinary enjoyment of the ordi- nary privileges of life. Great Britain therefore, has a right to insist that her subjects settled in China, either as mer- chants or missionaries, shall be protec- ted. And itis highly probable that she will protest so strongly and so energet- ically as to carry her point. China has just had ona lesson. It does not seem to have done its work. If she keeps on getting in the way of civilization she is likely to have some good sense hammered into her. Campbell for Governor. Amid scenes of extraordinary en- thusiasm, and in spite of his protesta- tions that he did not desire and could not accept the nomination, the Demo- cratic state convention of Ohio unan- imously nominated ex-Governor James E. Campbell, Butler county, for gover- nor. The mere suggestion of his name stampeded the convention for Campbell and his best efforts to prevent his own nomination were fruitless. “Jimmy” Campbell isto be the standard-bearer of a united, enthusiastic and reinvigor- ated Democracy. He has a way of be- ing elected in the face of great Repub- lican majorities, and it would not bea surprise should he come out a winner at the November election. He defeated the fire-alarm Foraker in a memorable contest, and has been elected to congress several times from a strong Republican district. Goveror Campbell is not only one of the most popular men in the state, but he is a brainy man as well. He has ideas, and knows how to present them. There is no more gifted and versatile stump-speaker in the Union. And what a campaign he can make with Republican calamity howling and Democratic prosperity as his text. He has friends in all parties and Aco Tors of the state who will work for his elec- tion out of an honest love of the man. He represents what is best in polities, and withal is a very practical politican. Anyone can guess what will happen at the next Democratic national conven- tion should ‘Jimmy’! Campbell be elected governor of Obio this fall. Liberty's Bell. The move of certain gentlemen in Philadelphia to prevent the removal of the old Liberty bell to the Atlanta ex- position is not regarded with favor there. Among citizens generally who have expressed an opinion in the matter the attempt to enjoin Mayor Warwick and councils is criticised as a presumpt- uous thing on the part af complainants. A leading evening paper of Philadel- phia says: ‘There was no more effec- tive lesson for the nations of the earth at the World’s fair than the bell which rang out in clarion tones the action of the Continental congress, and the peo- ple of the south should be permitted to look upon the historie relic. * * * * * *% Jt would bea good thing if this herald of liberty could be taken from ocean to ocean and from north to south teaching the people the lesson of patriotism and love of country, lessons which are sadly needed in some sections and which the precious heritage of the men of ’76 might inculcate more effec- tively than a thousand eloquent voices.’ It would be better to withdraw the bill of complaint und allow the bell to go to the Southland without objection. Explosion and Fire. Siz Killed and Eighteen Terribly Burned at Braddock Tuesday Morning. By an explosion and fire last week at the Carnegie Steel Company's furnaces, located at Braddock, six Poles and Hungarians were killed and eighteen others terribly burned. ——The desperados in Diamond Val- leys, Oregon, who have just murdered fifteen Bannock Indians, including two women, should be arrested and suitably punished. Their leader, who tells a cock and bull story about wanting to avenge the death of his father who was killed by Indians as long ago as 1878, ought to be hanged, and he will be if the people of the county which his crime has disgraced, have any sense of justice. STAIR. —— Whether he wins or loses Ex- Goverfior Campbell will have the as- surance that most people in Ohio, of both parties, love and respect him. It is worth being defeated to get such a nomination as was tendered to him. Pennsylvania Game Laws, The Pennsylvania game laws, revised to date, are as follows : Elk and deer, October 1 to December 15, Spotted fawns, hounding and kill- ing deer in water prohibited. Dogs pursuing elk or deer may be killed by any person, and the owners of dogs that habitually run elk or deer are liable to prosecution. Squirrels, September 1 to January 1 , ferrets prohibited. Wild turkeys, October 15 to Janu- aryl Plovers, July 15 to January 1. Woodcocks, July 4 to January 1. Quails, November 1 to December 15. Ruffed grouse (pheasants), October 1 to January 1. Rails or reedbirds, September 1 to December 1. SN Wild fowl, September 1to May 1. Netting, trapping and snaring, hunting web-footed fowl with any steam or sail boat or craft prohibited. Shoulder guns , only allowed. Pigeon nesting protect- "ed within a radius of one mile, and dis- turbance in any manner during nesting- season prohibited. Sunday and night shooting and artificial lights prohibted. } Salmon or grilse, March 1 to August 15 ; under three pounds protected. Speckled trout, April 15 to July 15 ; under five inches protected. Laka trout, January 1 to October 1. Black bass and wall-eyed pike, May 30 to January 1. Black bass under nine inches protected. Green, yellow, willow rock, Lake Erie and grass bass, June 1.to January 1; under six inches protected. Pike and pickeral, June 1 to Janu- ary 1. Carp, September 1 to May 1. Artifi- cially streams protected for three years after stocking. The Wonderful Effect of Humor. “You don’t look well at all, old man,” said Inkleigh to Pushpen. “I don’t wonder at it,”’ was the re- ply. I dread to go to bed. I not only .cannot go to sleep, but when I lie awake I get blue and have the most horrible thought.” “That’s too bad,” commented Ink- leigh commiseratingly. “I'll tell you what. You take this book. It is my latest lot of short, humorous stories. Just published. You just read them while you lie awake. They'll keep you from feeling blue and down heart- ed at any rate.” A week later Inkleigh felt himself warmly grasped by the hand. He turned and saw it was Pushpen. “A thousand thanks, old chap,” said the latter, working his friend’s arm like a sugar chopper. “What's the matter ?” “That book.” “Oh, yes. I remember. Those tun- ny stories of mine. So they kept you from feeling blue when you could not sleep ?"’ “Blue ?"’ replied Pushpen, recom- menciog the chopping process. “I never slept better in my life !”— New York World. China Brought to Time. Forcigners Are Now Allowed to Attend the In- vestigation of the Missionary Massacres—Six Natives Convicled of Murder Foo Crow, China, Aug. 25.—China has come to terms relative to the in- vestigation into the recent attacks up- on missionaries, as foreigners are now allowed to be present at the trials of natives implicated in the outrages. Six of those charged with- taking part in the Hwasang massacre have been convicted of murder, and fresh arrests are being made. Sax Francieco, Aug. 25.—~Late ad- vices from Tokio brought by the steamer Peru which arrived bere yester- day say the massacre of missionaries at Kucheng was the result of a con- spiracy of vice-roys against foreign residents, led by the deposed Vice¥oy Lin Ping Chang. Loxpon, Aug. 25.—-It is reported that the Marquis of Salisbury has de- termined on decisive action, and that the British fleet will occupy two Chinese ports and land marines to en- force Great Britain's demands relative to the investigation of the recent mas- sacres. ——Mre. Nancy Barnum, widow of Phineas Baraum, the great ehowman, was recently married in New York to Dimitri Kallias Bey, a Greek in the gervice of the Turkish Government. The Greek, who will take his bride to his estate on the island of Mitylene to live is very wealthy, and Mrs. Bar- num bas something like a half mil- lion of her own. They were wedded by a Greek priest Agathpdoros Papa- georgoyoulog, and if he ties a knot as twisiy as his name, tho pair will prob- ably stay married. . ——Li Hung Chang, worth $500, 000,000; John D. Rockefeller, $180, 000,000 ; Duke of Westminister, $100, 000,000; Col. North, $100,000,000, Cornelius Vanderbilt, $100,J00,000, and Wah Qua, $100,000,000 is the way a newspaper sums up the sixth wealthiest men in the world. The Rothschilds are omitted because the wealth of that family, though enor- mous, is held in common and no one member can be ranked with the bil- lionaires, as it were. —— Professor — What constitutes burglary ? Student—There must be a breaking. Professor—Then if a man enters your door and takes a ten dollar bill from your vest pocket in the hall, would that be burglary ? Student— Yes, gir, because that would break me. Cholera’s Awful Disease. Ten Thousand People Slain by the Dread Disease. Since the outbreak of cholera in Japan there have been 25,000 cases and 16,000 deaths. ——1If you want printing of any dis- cription the WarcrMAN office is the ' place to have it done. For and About Women . The styles worn in autumn gowns, says Harper's Bazar, are those of the late summer. Novelties appear in win- ter, when they are required for evening dresses. calling costumes, and the vari- ous elaborate functions of life in large cities. y The first dresses of warmer stufts will have double-breasted waists, basques or jackets, worn with inside plastrons of rich material and color. Blouse fronts and box-pleats will not be abandoned. The drooping blouse effect is so gener- ally liked for the round waists of sum- mer that 1t has spread to summer jack- ets as well, which are now made slight- ly loose and belted to droop, much in ° the fashion of the belted basque of long ago. There are two ways of cutting these jackets, one with open front, the belt passing under it from the sides and disclosing a blouse front of silk beneath. The other plan laps the fronts, making them double-breasted, and letting them droop slightly at the belt-line, where they are’ fastened by four buttons, two .in a row, and these are usually showy buttons of cut steele or miniatures, or of the dress material framed in a ring of gilt or silver. A graceful fichu drapery will be the trimming of new demi-season gowns and many predict that it will supersede the blouse. “It cannot fail to be popu- lar, as it is becoming alike to small and large women. For those who are too slight it can be made to apparently in- crease the size, and it can also be ar- ranged to produce the opposite effect. On woolen dresses it will be made of chameleon silks, of satin or the soft miroir velvet. On silk dresses there will be dear little Marie Antoinette capes of chigon and of many new gauz- es. The Society for the Protection of Birds ot England is rejoicing that at last a reaction has come against the uni- versal use of birds’ feathers on hats and bonnets. When the London season opened in May, every woman wore a graceful spray of soft, fine, plumes, with drooping or curly tips. These bird of paradise feathers were in quantities at every milliner’s. Mixed in the same spray were delicate osprey tips, which had long been in fashion. During the season one warehouse of the many en- gaged in the traffic disposed of 60,000 dozens of these mixed sprays. They are now disappearing, but perhaps be- cause it is announced that the supply of birds is almost exhausted. Mrs. Cleveland's fad is amateur pho- tography and she has in her possession many snap shots at the members of her | household: To put the foot down prettily is to walk gracefully, to seem to have a pret- ty foot whether it is really pretty or not to secure a stylish carriage, to make the skirts hang well and the waist seem long, to—well, to put the foot down well is to secure many of the blessings of life. Don’t believe it when you are told to put the toe down first. The foot should be so lightly poised on the ankle that when the lift from the hip is made in taking a step the foot naturally swings, toe down, so that the forward” part of the foot touches the ground first. “That is very different in effect from stif- fly pointing the toe down and trying to walk that way. Put the feet down so that the heels would keep very close on an imaginary chalk line, the toes al- ways falling a little outsike of the line. The full weight of the body should be on the foot that is on the ground, and one ought to be able to balance prettily at any moment on the single foot that is supposed to be carrying the walker’s weight. If his can be done, it is proof that the body is well poised and well carried. It is of course nice to have a springy step. The girls in the books. usually bave it, and the nice young hero al- ways has that sort. But, no matter how springy the step is, if the foot is put down properly the head will be car- ried along a perfectlv level line and not go bobbing up and down like a ship in a high sea. If the heels follow a line and the toes fall outside the line alittle then the body will advance without any ride pwinging of the shoulders. This ning of the body first to the right and then to the left is a general fault of the walking. of American women, and if the foot is ‘put—down properly this awkwardness will be avoided. Paris dressmakers are concerning themselves principally with the sleeves and skirts of the future. The large sleeve. will die hard, and in Paris they suggest, instead of a single balloon puff, a series of puffs—four, five or six— placed at slight distances apart around a tightly fitted sleeve. This is in the nature of a compromise, as the upper puff is around the armhole, and gives the broad effect now in favor. The Parisienne who adopts Marie Antoin- ette styles accept the close-topped sleeve with a small puff at the elbow and a flowing ruffle around the wrist. But in all the Louis XVI gowns sends to this country he uses the puffed sleeve of to-day, but in moderation, that the anchronism may not be too conspicuous. The full skirt will continue arother season, but with variations. Tablier breadths, panels and flounces are talked of instead of the plain skirt now in fa- vor. . That a few drops of the tincture of benzine into the water in which the face is bathed will prevent the shiny ap- pearance of the skin with which so many persons are affected, especially in warm weather. That a severe paroxy- ism of coughing may often be arrested by a tablespoonful of glycerine in a wine glass of hot milk. As the season advances buttons can not be ignored ; they are appearing on plain and elaborate costumes from for- eign and domestic dressmakers. ‘What is another sure sign of their re- vival is the fact of customers once more gathering around the button counter that has been ¢f late seasons a deserted corner. To be sure, the sales are limited to three, four, six etc., but that is an en- couraging beginning, and the amount is the same as though two dozen cheap buttons were taken.