Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. 6, 1895. GONE TO HIS LITTLE BOY BLUE. (Written Upon Reading of the Death of Eu- ene Field.) That Littie Boy Blue who wandered afar At sound of the angel's song Stands still by the beautiful Zales ajar, While around him the children throng. There's a smile upon the little boy’s face As, waiting for papa, he stands And welcomes him there with ababy grace, And holds out his little hands. Like the little toy dog all covered with dust Who kept his vigil so true, : And the little toy soldier, all red with rust So has waited the Little Boy Blue. He has wondered why papa has stayed away From where all is pure and bright For he wanted him so to join in his play In the beautiful Land of Light. Ah, deep in the hearts of world-weary men Is the tale of the Little Boy Blue, And gentle tears come to their tired eyes when They think of the toys so true. As the little boy went at the angel's call In his dreams at the end of day, ; So the Master, who loved the little ones ali, Has gone to his own, far away. : —N. A. Jennings, in the Evening World. JINNY GREEN'S JEALOUSY. The Greens were the aristocrats of Whittaker’s Row, and this, aside from the intrineic merits of the case, made Jinny Green's jealousy an interesting epectacle to her neighbors and friends, especially her friends. Whit- taker's Row iteelf is rather an aristocrat, in a comparative way— which is the only way any of us get to be cousidered aristocrats at all—among the small streets which hem “it in, Spruce and Locust, Fifth and Sixth, is a square fairly honey-combed with lit- tle alleys which try to be courte, and courts which try to be streets, and threading through those unsightly strips of pestilential-looking houses, flanked by ash barrels and garbage heaps, and an occasional stable or two, youcome upon Whittaker’s row with a gaep of surprise. It has a picturesque, foreign look—- not owing so much to the houses, which are merely pocket editions of the conglomerate red-brick-and-white- marble style of architecture for which our city is juetly celebrated. It is partly the (again speaking compara- tively) abnormal cleanness of these dwellings, and partly the long, low, whitewashed wall opposite them which bounds the ancient graveyard of St. Mary’s church, lying in its gray grim- nees and green freshness under the very windows to remind the occupants that in the midet of life they are in death. So far from disliking the rather close proximity to tombstones, the people of the Row consider it rather an addition to the landscape, and Jin: ny Green’s mother often eaid that it was the “bit o’ green” which first led her to move into No. 5, five years ago. Five years ago Jinny had been a slip of a “teever,” distinguished from the rest of the girls who romped arourd the square playing “London Bridge" by her neat even stylish clothes, her good manners and her quaintly precise way of speak- ing. Now thatehe was 19 and work- ing in a laundry, where she earned $5 a week, she wasa full fledged lady, which made the thing she afterwards did seem the more dreadful. No par- lor in Whittaker’s Row could approach the eplendor (principally made up of cleanliness) of the little nine-foot room in which Jinny eat at the machine by the window sewing on her trousseau summer evenings, while it was etill light, while Charlie McLane leaned over the window &ill and talked to her and the Morrison woman watched him hungrily from her doorstep. “Stop sewin’ an’ come out on the front with me, Jinny,” he would beg time and again, and Jinny’s hazel eyes would snap roguishly as she obedi- ently stopped the wheels and answer- ed with alacrity. “Cert’n’y, Cha'lie: it's only puttin’ oft the weddin' a day or two, an’ it suits me ag well.” “But it don’t suit we!” Cha'lie would declare with much positivenees. “Nothin’ short of death’s goin’ to stop that weddin’ from comin’ off on the second of September. Just, the same, I want you to come outon the front with me. We'll buy dresses an’ plenty for Jinny McLane.” So matters would be compromised by Jinny’s putting away her work and ‘Charlie's coming inside and spending an evening full ot felicity and shy un- seen hand-squeezing in the dusk of the spotless little parlor. Not that Jinny was ashamed to sit “out ou the front” —i. e., the doorstep—with her lover; but she knew that if she did it was ten to-one that the Morrison woman would stroll down to them, and, failing of an invitation to sit down on the step, staod conversing comfortably and at .great length with Charlie for the pure "pleasure of seeing Jinny’s face shows more and more white in the fading light and her elight shoulders tremble with impatience and "her lips quiver with hurt pride. Why this exhilarated her like a draught of flery liquor, Maude Morrieon _ possibly could not, and assuredly did not, explain to her- self - Charlie McLane earned good wages and wae much respected of men and desired of womaun in Whittaker’s Row, though Jivay and her mother might easily have been the only one who knew that be made them by “working round the whart'’ at Dock street. In the lenient and philosophical environ. ment of Whittaker’s Row, the question, “What does he or she do ?* Is not so frequently asked in some otlrer circles, for there are those whom it might embarraes. Of these were the Morri- son woman, who lived next door to the McLane’s and the Hendry man, who rented a room from her andj was said her (and sundry other ions.) He had bad eyes and a heavy\moustache like a theatre illai ye carried about #im ent odor of liquor. liquor sometimes a more or less The quality of“ 1 other beer, and quite frequently some- with the Morrison woman again and pain, and yet again, their feet seemed treading down the fruit and flower of poor Jinny’s love-dream and pressing out the dark wioe of hatred--a draught which had not yet become sweet to the lips of “that there saint,” as Maude mockingly termed the girl who thought it wrong to dance. To make up for Charlie's defection Dolph Hendry was overly attentive to her, a sight which added fuel to the flame of Maude’s recklessness. To. night she fully lived up to the remark of crippled Mrs. Carr, who lived next door to the Greens, and knew every- thing that happened and a good deal that did not, that “that Morrison piece was a devil,” “You'll lose that hat,” said some- one to her as she flung her great white flaunting-feathered leghorn around by the string on one agitated finger. She smiled into Charlie's face. *‘I guess Charlie here wouldn’t let it get very far, would you 2’ - “Course not,” said Charlie gallantly but thickly, Dolph Hendry’s promise of “no liquor’ having been broken, as was to be expected, and Charlie, to Jinny’s acute anguish having appar- ently forgotten his intention of taking the pledge on his wedding day. How much a minute can hold ! It was barely twenty seconds after that that a piercing scream burst from Jin- ny Green's pale lips. A quick turn of a supple, wicked brown wrist had sent the hat over the railing and almost simultaneously Charlie McLane had leaped after it. A moment’s breath. less suspense, while the echo of Jin- ny's shriek quivered in the air around them,and Charlie's face and outstretch- ed arm appeared above the surface of the dark Delaware. ‘Here’s—your— hat,” he gasped, holding it out to Maude with a triumphant, adoring smile—for her, and her alone—and even more trinmph, though no love, shone in thesmile Maude flung back to Jinny over her shoulder. “Take care,” called someone, “he’s slipped again |” and with that smile still on his face—all in that long, aw- ful minute—Charlie McLane tell back- ward into the river, followed by the heavy plunge of Dolph Hendry’s body and Jinno’y cry: ‘Oh, save him, and I'll do anything in the world for you!” Jinny Green sat out on her front with vacant eyes looking out on the long ranges of semi-neglected graves beyond the little white wall, going over two things again and again in her mind. Since Charlie McLane’s death a month ago she had not been able to realize any fact save these two, and had stayed away from work in order to be better able to grapple with them, “My girl's not long for this world,” Mre. Green would say to Mrs, Carr, wringing her hands, while the more outspoken comment of Whittaker's Row was that there was danger of Jin- ny Green's going “silly.” She was no longer the trim, bright-eyed Jinny of other days; her hazel eyes looked out hopelessly on a desolate world from a haggard face, and one of her hands. was always smoothing the other as aimless. ly as they did now, while she mur- mured : : “No grave ; no grave!” This was one of the two thoughts which poesessed ber mind, turn and turn about. Her lover lay neglected and in darkness, in soine unknown spot in the bed of that all-devouring river. No stone to have cut with somecom- forting inscription ; no eoft green mound to cry over and deck with flow- ers—while here were graves on graves, unvisited, uncared for, unknown save to the angel of the Resurrection, lying wasted under the unjust sun ! The other thought was that she must forgive Maude Morrison. She often laughed aloud as she told herself this, it seemed go absurdly impossible. Any- thing but that, good pastor ! who paid 80 many and such anxious visit to Number Five, going away with a text in his mind: which he did not quote to Jinny, for whom be reserved the Gold- en Rule and some of the Parables : “Love is strong as death; but jeal- ousy is cruel as the grave.” Those two smiles! She always saw them before her—the one tremulous with a tenderness that was not for her, the other flashing in insolent recogni. tion of that tenderness—both aimed like two stabs at her heart. Take those two smiles away from her vis- ion, her memory, and then she would forgive Maude Morrrison as a ‘“‘profes- sor’’ should. A night or two later a night police- man, strolling through Whittaker’s row about 3 o'clock saw something which sent his none too courageous heart in a flying upward leap to his mouth. Now, it there were ghosts. but the white figure which lay prone emong the dark grass on one of the amcient graves in St. Mary’s yard,shak- ern with terrible sobs, was moaning very humanly. “No grave ; no grave I” she wail. ed. “Che’lie, it she was to find you ard give me a grave for you--and stop that smiling--I'd never say a word. I'd forgive her, willin’ly. Cha’lie, you're smilin’ yourself that way--an’ you un. buried—an’ 1 just can’t bear it!” The policeman knew Jinny and her story. He lifted the delirious girl very carefully and carried ber quietly to her owa door with a few whispered words to her mother that the sharp neighbor- ly ears might not overhear. The next day Jinny was tossing in a raging fever, murmuring incoherent nonsemse. It took the fever but a short while to set its deadly seal of possession’on the deli- cate frame ; it seemed to her mother only a day or two before the doctor formally gave her up and the pastor came on a hasty summons to comfort the afflicted parent and endeavor to assist Jinny to make her peace with God and Maude Morrison. quite rational now, and listened with varied—one day it might be gin, an- thing as pretentious as brandy or fine wines ; but there was an overpowering sameness about the quantity. He was said to be rich and to live in Glou- cester, and in confirmation of both these statements he frequently came over from that festive town in his own yacht, in which be took the mere care: less feminine spirits for short dails. He had once asked Jinny Green, but she had declined with precipitancy and trembling. The Morrison woman was a bad one, go Jinny said when the bitter poison of jealousy bad begun to work in among her Christian principles. There is no telling whether this remark preceded or followed the sneering one of Maude Morrison that Jinny was “‘a good un— too much of a good un’’—this referring to Jinny's conscientious attendance at the Methodist Mission, where she was a pillar of the Sunday school class. Yet, set in the midst of a solitary wil- derness—or the exclusive society of her own sex, which she would have considered much the same thing— Maude Morrison would have been a fairly good-natured, well-meaning, well-behaved individual. But “seems like I cyant eee a man ’thout takin’ an interest in him,” as she herself ingen- uously put it. She was one of those who loved some men more than oth- ers ; that was the only difference. Some women are made that way. The one she loved inteneely, wildly, openly above others was Dolph! Hendry, but that did not keep her from laying siege to Charlie McLane's heart until Jin- ny’s jealousy became the talk of the neighborhood and everyone watched with deep interest to see how it would end. If eyes were stilettoes it would have ended with a death-stab to Maude Morrison the night she kept Charlie from an appointment with Jinny,made within her hearing, by detaining him on his doorstep with a request to tie a strip of rag around her finger, which she had just burned over the fire, ‘and bein’ my right hand, seems like I can’t do nothing with my left,’”” as she plain- tively explained. It seemed a case on which to exercise common humanity, and Charlie bungled over it long enough to feel the fascination of close proxi- mity to a brilliantly, dangerously beautiful woman, beside whom Jin- ny’s pink girlish prettiness was a poor and a pale thing. He did this while loving Jinny with all the strength of his feeble fickle heart. Some men are made that way. Jinry stood waiting on her step for just five minutes, with her hazel eyes sending messages of unfathomable hate, love, scorn and fury toward the two absorbed figures at the end of the row. Then she turned slowly, coldly, toward the door—for the “fronts” of Whit- taker’s Row were encompased by a cloud of witnesses-and lingeringly clos- ed it ; and she threw herself down on the pretty rug of raveled rag carpet, snatched her little Bible from the ta- ble and laid her face against it, as if to silence the lips that trembled with words of rebellious hate with the re- membrance of the religious vows that had passed them, and her slight form shook in a very whirlwind of dry sobs. “My poor pretty I” gighed her mother---an old-country woman unsuit- ably stranded in Philadelphia slums. “My poor Jinny 1" “0, I'm wicked !” * gasped Jinny. “Mother, when I see that woman plas- tering over Cha'lie, I feel murder in my heart ; but, oh, she’s a sight wick- eder'n me!” “They have their reward,” quoted Mre. Green from the little Bible, brely fitting the words to the case of ber cherished daughter's rival. Just then a face appeared at the window-— Charlie's. “Ready yet, Jinny ?” he called cheerily. Jinny sprang to her feet and faced him. It was too dark for him to see ber tears. “Take Maude Morrison, Cha’lie McLane! I'll have none of your money spent on my circus-going.” He had wanted it to be a theatre, but Jinny would not go. “No, you've missed your appointment. I've anoth- er, here at home with my mother 1” She had a third person, however, to talk to after Charlie had disconsolately walked away with his hands in his pockets. This was Dolph Hendry, who removed his hat. “Even,” Miss Green. Fact ig, I call- ed to ask if-if you would like to go up the river tomorrow night on the Twi. light. I've bought ten tickets, an’a party of us is goin’ to take the plea- gure trip. Maude Morrison's goin’, an’ Charlie McLane, an’ of course, since he’s your intended, I though that you...” He paused diplomatically. “Will there be anythingto drink ?” asked Jinny waveringly. Maude Morricon had asked him the self-same question, oddly enough, but Dolph Hendry promised that there should not, and Jinny agreed with some palpitations of conscience to go and save her one ewe lamb from the clutches ot the wicked wolf, who, she wished with all her heart, would ap propriate Dolph Hendry and be satis. fied therewith. That mext night's trip! None of the ten who went will be likely to for- get it. The beauty of the scenery made faintly appareat by the thousand specks of light which twinkled along the dusky shores of the Delaware, the rollicking strains of the band music were little appreciated by the party from Whittaker's Row, most of whom resolved themselves into passive epec- tators of the drama which they dimly surmised was deepening from comedy into tragedy. Hazel eyes against black, youth and simplicity. against exper- ence and guile, burning jealousy and | unconcealed misery against cruel cool- | ness and self-control--iv was hard run- | ning, and the battle almost foreordain- ' ed to the swifi. Charlie McLaneseemed to have lost her spiritual director, interspersed with mother’s quivering voice joined in, hig head completely, and as he danced It was a scene which sunk into the k mind, and as much of Whittaker’s row as could be accommodated in the tiny bedroom looked longingly at the dying girl, who seemed already of another world. Only that slight bond of human jealousy kept her kin to them and now, as ata breath,it was to be dissolved, for in obedience to the clergyman’s fervent appeal she'at last bowed her head in resignation. Some- one was hastily dispatched to bring Maude Morrison to receive Jinny’s ab- solution, and the hymn swelled trium- phantly. “The dying thief rejoiced to see That Fountain in his day,” but Jinoy’s mother broke down and hid ber face in the white coverlet, leav- ing the minister to sing no alone, Maude Morricon had been more than horrified at Charlie McLane's death, and repentant, too, though “bardly green enough,” as she would have eaid, to give expression to her regret. Had she not been in supersti- tious fear of a dying person’s eye, and had not her mind been very much tak- en up with Dolph Hendry at that mo- ment, she might have returned a dif ferent answer to Jinny’s messenger than that she “wasn’t hankering fer anybody’s forgiveness, that she knew of ; Jinny Green could die or get well without her ; she wasn’t coming.” Being very young, and knowing no better, the envoy tiptoed into the room where Jinny lay waiting for the silver cord to be loosed and the golden bowl broken, and whispered the brutal mes sage into her ear while the singing went softly on : “And there may I, though vile as he, Wash all my sins away, wash all my sins away—" “Stop!” screamed Jinny. All eyes turned to look at her, as she sat up in the bed like a pallid figure of venge- ance. “I ain't agoin’ to forgive her now ! I ain’t agoin’ to die! I'll live to make Maude Morrison’s heart ache as she’s made mine ache, and hreak as she’s made mine break. Oh, you needn’t look at me that way, Mr. Scott ; I don’t want to die and go to heaven now ; I’ve better things to do!” There were those who said that the devil entered into Jinny Green from that very hour. Certainly health en- tered into her, and in ao incredibly short time she wae about again, as changed a girl as Whittaker's row, which stood by and marveled, had ever seen. Her mother wept silently and out of sight and waited in miserable certainty for a judgment to come upon Jinny. The pale, pious, timidly pretty girl was transformed into a young Juno with erect and rounded form, an inso- lent ease of manner unmatched by that of Maude herself, a brilliant color, which Mrs. Carr whispered was paint, and splendid hazel eyes in which smold- ered an ever-present ambition which made them shine like living coals. The Methodist Miesion never saw her again; she went freely to the theatre, and learned to dance like one inspired. The men of the neighborhood, who had scarcely ventured on a word with the old Jinny, were captured and kept in tyrannous attendance on the new one. She grew handsomer and more reckless and more incomprehensible every day. “Jinny,” croaked Mrs. Carr, “there’s such a thing as cutting off your nose to spite your face.” “S’'posing you hate your nose more’'n you love your face, what then ?" was the query. “Jinny,” moaned her mother, “you'll come to a bad end, an’ you a perfes- sor 1" “I ain’t a perfessor no more,’ she retorted, “an’ I'll come to the end I'm aiming at.” What that end was, Whittaker’s row was not slow in surmising, and it was rather pleased. This was the perpetra- tion of an eye-for-eye, tooth-for tooth revenge on Maude Morrison, by taking Dolph Hendry away from her. He bad always had a lingering liking for Jinny ; in her new role she was even more to his taste, and Maude, whose whole tempestuous being bowed down before him with an adoration hardly less than that which Jinny had lavish- ed on her dead and apparently forgot- ten lover, was well-nigh frantic. A few of the neighbors warned Jinny to beware of knives and poison, and she laughed, lightly and insolently, said, “Dolph, do you hear that ?"’ and made room for him beside her on the door- step. That night he dared to put one heavy arm across her shoulder and give her a sounding kiss, whereat she gave an inarticulate cry and fled before his as tonished eyes up to her own room. Here her mother followed to find her lying face downward on the bed, sob- bing as if her heart would break. “Jinny,"eaid her mother with des- perate calmness, “I want you to listen to me for a minute. You want to take Dolph Hendry away from Maude Mor- rison. You know yourself—'' this was the first time Mrs. Green had been cruel—*‘there’s only two ways a wom- an can get another woman’s man away from her—to kill him or marry him. I don’t suppose you've set out to kill Dolph Hendry. Be you going to marry him 9” “No, no—yes—no, a hundred times over !” moaned the girl on the bed, the sickening memory of that hot kiss still fresh on her. “I don’t know, mother |” “Don’t you know ? Don’t you know what your life would be after you’d married him ? A swearing, drinking, quarreling man, that'd beat you eyen while be loved you, and stop loving you for a whim; desert you, like enough, and till then lead you a life She was! the hymns which he raised and her . that you can’t imagine now. You can’t imagine it, because I’ve brought you up to be a lady, and nice, and edu- cated, and religious—and you that | i never kissed any man but Charlie Mec. | ' Lane, to let Dolph Hendry be the next! | won’t marry | Oh, promise me you ( ! him 1” a meek calmness to the persuasion of | Jiony trembled violently as though under a spell, and the voices of her mother, her dead lover, her forsaken church friends, and all who had link- ed ber to her old quiet, pure life, eound- r———— ed in her ears like a trumpet-call of warning which she dared not resist, Like onein a dream she answered, ‘| promise you, mother ; I'll not marry him.” Lg Dolph Hendry heard of this some. bow; likewise Maude Morrison. Maude almost trembled with a joy which her experience told her would be of uncer- tain continuance, being founded on nothing more stable than a girl's word. She, too, realized that only death or marriage could make her sure of the man whom her hungry affection covet- ed. A royal revenge indeed had Jinny Green's jealousy conceived ! It was the moment for a master-stroke; Dolph Hendry, burt, sulky, disappointed, and even drunker than usual, listened of morose compliance to her plan that Ye should take out a license immediately and marry “the only woman that ever loved you, Dolph ; that will-o’the. wisp of a Green girl don’t know a man when she sees him,” Whittaker’s Row was disappointed —not at the wedding, but at the bride. Its sense of poetic justice called for Jinny Green at the altar, even though it felt her after-matrimonial unhappi- ness to be more than assured. The wedding took place at the Methodist Mission at 12 oclock at night—this was Maude’s fancy, and Dolph was in. different ; after which the guests were to escort the happy pair to the wharf, whence they were to set out in Dolph’s yacht, for Gloucester, where they would make their residence for a while at least. Time was too precious to waste in formulating more precise plans. Jinny, alone of Whittaker's Row, did pot come tothe wedding. Had she not vowed never to cross the thres- hold of the Mission again ? Mr. Scott thought, as he united the well-assorted | couple, that now there might be some hope of this old-time lamb of the flock shedding her black fleece and coming back to him. Maude’s voice, from excitement and triumph, was scarcely audible asshe made the necessary re: sponses. There was something almost weird, however, in the still darkness of de- serted streets into which they emerged after the ceremony, and it almost seemed a funeral procession which wended its way to the pier by the river, where the white sail to Hendry’s boat showed like something eerie. “Sing, can’t somebody ?” cried the bride- groom, sharply, and a boisterous song was commenced at the end of the line. At the landing Hendry spring into his boet to see to the sail before handing in his bride, and started back with a superstitious scream as a woman's figure darted up from the shadow of the cabin, in which she had been ecrouch- ing, and cried exultantly, “Dolph, wouldn’t you rather have me?” Maude stared like oue fascinated at Jinny Green, robed from head to foot in white, which wonderfully set off her splendid figure and sparkling young beauty. Jinny took outa knife--not for Hendry, as they thought for one startled moment, but for the rope which tied the boat. “Shall I?” she asked the stupified Hendry. “Quick, choose--it’s me or Maude !” Jiony was ine younger and more beautiful, the more daring, the less ex. acting of the two, His resentment by a dim consciousness that he had been dragged into this marriage by Maude. Snatching the knife from Jinny, he cut the rope and set the boat free—not a moment too soon, for Mavde had frantically thrown herself forward al- most into it. “Give me back my husband,” she shrieked. “I'll have the law on you, Jiony Green; he’s just married we with.this ring!” “That's all you'll ever have of him!” t.unted Jinny. “As for the law, we're off, and 1t’s not smart enough, nor you either to find us.” The wedding party looked helpless- ly about them. Secretly, most of their sympathies were with Jinny. Also, there were no boats with which to pur- sue the reckless pair, who were even now drifting from on the current. “Remember about Charlie McLane!” called Jinny to Maud, who stood watching the white sail like a statue of despair. For this a blow from Hendry struck her face. ‘Shut your mouth about that,” he growled jealously, and at the same moment a voice called from the shore, “Jinny Green, think what you're doin’!” and her soul in her turned sick—the soul she had sold for the fearful revenge which she knew would henceforth enwrap her in burn- ing flames of shame and pain and poi- n her life like the robe of Nessus, +he days and years which were to come rose before her like a vision of horror, from which she shrunk tremb- ling. What of the black river water as a refuge—the bed wherein Charlie slept? She bent forward, to see in fancy on the dark glassy surface that fondly-loved face—but, oh, the smile, whose memory had once driven her almost mad] And Maude's cry rose faintly from the shore, ‘Jinny Green !" give me back my husband!” No. never! was it not for this hour that she bad fought against death and conquered ? “Faster!” she urged Hen- dry in a shuddering whisper, without looking at him. “I'm the most miserable woman that ever lived I” sobbed Maude Hen- dry, flinging herself down on the boards and burying her face in her arms. : . “No, you're not,” said one of her neighbors, gazing atthe boat whose swift keel cat the waters with guilty haste, and the figures that showed dark and defiant against the dim gray sail, till both were out of sight.—By Louise Betts Edwards in Phila. Times. An Honest Answer. 2 “Any insanity in your family ?’’ ask- ed the examining physician. “Well,”” said the man who was applying for life insurance, “my wife says she must have been crazy to have ever married me.” ! a EE A AA ES A TE AR For and About Women . — The public building at Milwaukee, a more extensive institution than many larger cities can boast of, is managed by Miss Theresa West, and she has a corps of assistants composed exclusively of ex- perienced young women. ne Children must be taught what the parents wish them to know. Teach them truthful, gentle ways, and they will be true and gentle. Ifa boy hears bad language from his father he will re- peat it just as certainly as he has a tongue 11 his month’; and if a little girl hears her mother gossip, she will gossip the moment she meets a playmate. People who devour their food like cattle must not expect their children to have nice table manners. Gentlemen and good women are home-made. There is nothing on earth for which one ought to be more thankful than for having been brought up in the atmosphere of a pure home. Such a home may be defi- cient in material comforts. A man as sturdy 8s an oak once said : “I was the son of poor parents, and from my youth up was inured to self denial and “hard- ship, but I do not remember ever to have heard a word from the lips of eith- er my father or mother that was not as it should be.’ Better such recollec- tions than a great inheritance, Great use is being made of small but- tons for trimming, for outlining lapels, sewing down the edges of folds, and in the tight portions of the slesves. several dozens being frequently lavished on a single garment. A distinguishing feature of some of the new bodices are the short basques. Fancy velvet and figured silk coats are much worn with plain skirts, and for these buttons of a very elegant sort in cut steel, simill, painted china and enamel, are needed. While most people admit there is nothing better for the scalp than a thorough brushing of the hair morning and night, many will not persist in this and are constantly asking: what will make the hair come in when it is fast falling out. - Many of the best hair dressers and barbers are recommending rubbing pure greasein very thoroughly every night. In several instances this has proven very effectual and a new growth of short and strong fuzz all over the head has been the result. Many children and some of an older growth areseverely troubled with dan- druff'in the scalp, which always makes the head and hair look dirty. "This can be removed by rubbing pure greese in every other night, washing thoroughly once a week with hot water and tar soap. For one who has a heavy head of hair, the remedy is nearly as hard as the disease. Worth has made yellow the color par excellence for the beautiful and those not blessed by the gods. He said one day to some prominent ladies gathered in his saloon that a homely woman was beautified by yellow and a handsome one became radiant in the reflected rays of the sun’s brillinncy. . Dress a sweet-taced elderly lady in a modish gown of black crepon, a coat of astrachan, with a muff to match, and put on her beautiful silvery hair a smart bonnet of royal purple velvet, decorated with a rich white lgce and a cluster of black ostrich tips, and she is gowned fit for any cccssion. A distinguishing fea- ture in muffs for middle-aged women are the tassels of silk hanging from the sides ; it is a revival of the quaint old fashion, and exceedingly fetching. What we used to call the three-quar- er length coat, only two years ago, hardly exists now. Practically there are three lengths for the winter cloaka. First of all the jacket, coming only to the waist, and always provided with enormous sleeves ; then the short sack double-breasted as a rule, huge slecved and made of chinchilla or some rough hairy cloth, with full but short basque effect at the waist ; and then there is the long cloak. But where the jacket and sack admit of little variety in shape, the long cloak is infinite in its variety, from the loose and lace-decked opera wrap to the snug and military looking coat, broad-braided and big-buttoned and flapping at the skirt. By all odds the most popular investment of the season is the sack coat in chinchilla or rough cloth, coming barely to the hips ; and for the very good reason that it is not immoderately expensive. A better reason commends it. Less short as it is, it weighs enough for a woman to car- ry. Hot milk for the complexion has proved to be of the greatest benefit and many women say they owe an improve- wen of their complexion to the constant use of hot milk applied every morning and night to their faces. Here is what a8 woman prominent in the literary world, and whose complexion 1s equal to 8 young girl’s says: “When I am frightfully fatigued from the rush of the life I lead, I get a gallon of milk for 30 cents and put it in my bathtub, add- ing sufficient hot water to cover the body. I lie in this mixture for ten min- utes and come out feeling. thoroughly refreshed and with a new life to the skin, which, previous to the bath, had a dead look.” A little kerosene is an excellent thing for cleaning a zinc bathtub. Apply with a soft woolen cloth, then wash off with hot water—no soap init—and pol- ish with powdered bath brick. A novel costume is of brown cloth with touches of black. The skirt hangs full and plain to a trifle below the knee where three tiny piping of black satin head a broad yokelike piece that flares about the feet. At intervals the satin pipicg, placed legnthwise appears upon this flaring piece, accompanied by rows of tiny black satin buttons. The bodice is especially graceful. It consists of a close-fitting brown velvet corsage with abbraviated skirt and belt. In the front the velvet is gathered at the throat to form a full yoke effect, below which there is a pinafore front of the cloth piped all around with the black satin. The sleeves are leg o’mutton, the tiny black buttons reappearing at the wrist. . :