Bema tc, Bellefonte, Pa., Jan. 3, 1896. wa NEW YEAR WHAT WILL THE BRING. BY FRANK B. WELCH. The old year fades into the past With all its joys and sorrows, With all its barren yesterdays And all its bright to-morrows ; Some hearts regret its hasty flight, Some gladly speed the parting Which banishes the sad old year, So joyous at its starting. tr We bid the dying year good-by And turn, with hope reviving, To greet the New Year coming in With promises enlivening ; - And as we lay aside the past In gladness or in sorrow, We reach out to the time to come And of the future borrow. What will the New Year bring to us— Is weal or woe awaiting ? Will fortune smile in kindiy way Or will she need berating ? Could we but rend the veil of time And see beyond the present, What would our longing eyes behold, A prospect dark or pleasant? —— Ah, it were well would we but take The days as they are given, And make each one a stepping stone To raise us up to Heaven ; Instead we waste the precious hours In blind and fruitless hoping, The while we in an aimless way For sordid gain are groping. The coming year will surely bring Us whatsoe’er we merit ; So if we fail to reap success We've but to grin and bear it. For what we sow that shall we reap, Such is the law unbending Which rules our lives from day to day— Beginning unto ending. r——— A QUESTION OF PRINCIPLE It was New Year's eve in that cold and glorious climate where the snow lies on the bosom of the earth like a protecting mantle from December to March and the nights are crisp and cold, with a resinous tang in the air, due to the forests of oderous pine. New Year's eve and the merry jingle of sleighbells in the little town of Bran- don made a harmonious discord that reached the ears of two people who were having the first quarrel of their lives, and who presented—if they had only known it—an absurd appearance, one in a lachrymose, the others in a belligerent, state. It came about in the strangest way, this quarrel between two married lovers who had establish- ed their lives upon a firm foundation of principle and respect, as well as mutual love, before they took upon themselves the responsibilities of wed- ded life. These were the first holidays since their wedding and they had anticipated a seaeon of quiet enjoyment with each other, and now they were hardly on gpeaking terms. And there was no one to blame but themselves. . It happened in this way ; Alice, Mrs. Eversham, had been very anxious to make her husband, Horace, a New Year's present, but had refrained from prudential reasons. They were saving money to pay on a home and were exercising a rigid economy in which both were equally interested. If Horace went without cigars and other luxuries, his wife gave up having af- ternoon teas, and hired only one do. mestic, who worked by the day. A certain amount was reserved for char- ity, aud as the end of the year ap proached and cold weather brought extra demands, this fund gave out and there were several cases of destitution which they could not relieve, but were compelled to hand over to the char- itable society of the church. Therefore it was at Alice's own sug- gestion that the ecciety got up a bazar for the eale of contributed goods, and “took the proceeds to ameliorate the conditicns of their poor. ; This was the beginning of the troub- le. When the sales were over, they took the things that remained unsold aud put them up at so much a chance. Alice had put ber foot down—it was a very pretty foot—against the proceed ings, but had been over-persuaded that it wae perfectly right, asthe church would sanction it. Still, he only gave a negative consent, for she would neither buy nor sell any of the chances, But when one of her young friends took a couple of chances'for her—a dressing-gown and chocolate set—she had said, laughingly, that if she won they might send them to her address. She did ot eay anything about it to Horace, who was too much occupied with the closing business of the year to attend the bazar, and knew nothing of this lottery feature. She would nct have had him know it on any account, inaemuch as he had been fond of games of chance when she married him, and through her ‘good influence had entirely reformed. That dangerous passion for gambling, which does 80 much harm in the world, had found an abiding. place with Horace Eversham, and was becoming one of the pernicious influences of his life, when Alice eflected a cure which che believed to be permanent. They had been happy and larky as two children, until Horace came home bringing a fine goose. “It's for dinner New Year's day,” he said, holding up the white-feather- ed bird at arm’s length. “Isn't ita beauty—fat and plump ?” “What will we do with goose ?'" asked Alice. “Fat it. My father used to say that a goose was an awkward bird, too much for one, and not enough for two. We'll have a feast if Ellen Jane does ber whole duty in her cooking, won't we, though ?” “Its teathers will make a sofa cush- ion,” said Alice, who had a frugal mind. “I'm beginning to get recon- ciled to the goose.’ “It’s a noble bird, and its cackling once saved Rome,” remarked Horace, sententiously, and then they went to- gether to the kitchen, where the goose was laid on Ellen Jane's spotless white table. When that functionary eaw it, she lifted up both hands : *Ob, but it is a beauty, missis, An’ what a pity that they hed to choot so foive a burd!” a whole > ! 7 ~ “Shoot .~it,”” echoed Alice, ‘well don’t they always kill geese that way?” “No'm, only wan it's at a raffle. I heered me Tom sayin’ as Mr. Ever- sham won it—it's a foine shot he is, I'm told.” A raffle! Alice's heart went down to zero. Her husband shooting birds ata raffle! All her years of faithful precept undone ! “Where was the raffle?’ she asked in a voice that she tried to make firm, and indifferent. “At Little Jake's, mum, in the back yard. There was a big crowd of men, an’ they do say Mr. Eversham was the first one out of the lot to hit the burd, and look how pate he did it—that goose, mum, never knew what kill- ed it.” “You needn't cook it,” said Alice, “I don’t like goose.” “But your husband, mum ? He would enjoy it since he fetched it down with his own gun. It were banked in the snow, my Tom said, with its head sticking out an’ a movin’ it as fast as a flash this way an’ that, an’ every- body that fired at it missed it—" “That will do,” said Mrs. Eversham, and she walked off leaving Jane Ellen staring at the goose, It was New Year's eve. Alice and Horace were only a few feet apart, in reality, but miles of distance could not have separated them so completely. Horace had tried to explain, but had been instantly silenced. “No, no. There can be no explana- tion. You have broken a law of mor- al obligation. You have broken your promise to me,” said Alice. Tap, tap, went her little foot ; there were tears in her voice. Horace felt that he was a criminal, yet if she only would let him explain. He was very angry. There was a ring at the door bell. The two composed themselves to meet callers. The conventionalities of life must be observed, and no one must know that they had quarreled. But it was only & boy with a note, and a pack- age for Mrs. Eversham. It was the dressing-gown from the bazar. The chance taken for Alice had drawn it. Alice did not look upon it with horror. On the contrary, she could not conceal her delight at having won it. But she said coldly as she handed the handsome garment to Horace : “Your New Year's present. it will fit.” “Thank you very : much,” said Horace, his eyes sparkling with pleas- ure, “but I thought we were not to give each other presente this year.” “Why, there's the goose ?” “Oh, that only cost half a dollar— and we must eat.” “This cost only twenty-five cents. I won it in a chance at our church bazar.” Horace threw back his head and laughed immoderately. “My dear little wife,” he asked when he could get his breath, *‘do you know the difference between. tweedle- dum and tweedle-dee ?” “I hopel know the difference be- tween an entertainment designed for charity under the auspices of the church and a low raffle with no other object—"’ “A charity, my dear ; you wouldn’t let me explain, but the raffle was to obtain money for the benefit of a poor family—" ” “Name the family,” commanded Alice, who did not believe her husband was telling the truth, the whole, and nothing but the truth. “The Limpskeys, a poor family who bave recently come here’ I hope “Why, they are the same people for |, whom we got up the bazar” “And for whom I helped raffle oft the goose.” “It’s the principle!” said Alice, “it is demoralizing.” “But, my dear, it seems to me the principle is the same whether it's in the church or the saloon. 1t is to get something for nothing. I got the goose—you got a dressing-gown, which, as it does not cost anything, you kind- ly donate to me.” It was late, and a merry peal of bells rang out the anthem of the New Year. The two fell into each other's arms. “Send the goose to the Limpskeys,” said Horace. “And the dressing-gown, too,” said Alice, with half a sigh. **And when we want to do a charita- ble act, let us -give from our own means.” “Spoken like a dean ! The best prin- ciple in giving is that of sacrifice. We won't make any resolutions, but we’ll try to ‘live upto our knowledge of what is right and true. You don’t care for the goose ?” “Yes, I do very much. It would make such good eating stuffed with sage and onions, and served with apple sauce.” “So much the greater sacrifice if you give it up. And you know that dress ing gown would fit you elegantly, but old Mr. Limpskey is ragged and needs it more.” “He shall have it. And we will be- gin the New Year poor but honest.” Then those two young people kissed and made up, while the bell rang out the want, the care, the sin, rang in the love of truth and right, and the Limp- skeys were the happier for the appli- cation of that often misinterpreted text to do evil that good may come. AERA A Bit of Mountain Philosophy. Drink, and the gang drinks with you ; swear off, and you. goit alone 3 for the bar room bum who drinks your rum has a quenchless thirst of his own. Feast, and your friends are many ; fast, and they cut you dead ; they'll not get mad if you treat them bad, so long as their stomach is fed. Steal, if you geta million, for then you can furnish bail; it's the great big thie! that gets out on leave, while the little one goes to jail. ——Texas has a 50,000 acre pas- ture. The Lead Pencil. A carload of California redwood was recently shipped to Nuremburg, in Germany, for use in the manufacture of lead pencils. Owing to the exhaus- tion of the supply of cedar it has been necessary to find a substitute of it, and redwood seems to be the only kind of wood except cedar with a sufficiently straight grain. There is in this a sug. gestion of the enormous number of lead peoccils consumed annually. Nu. remburg is\the principal seat of the manufacture\of them, which is widely distributed. Tt is necessarily a grow. ing one, for as fast and as far as civili- zation spreads there is a demand for lead pencils. The wore complicated business relations are the more use is made of pencils. On the railways and in the departments of State and Federa! governments they are consumed bythe carload. In the cities nearly every person carries one, even to the small boy, who amuses himself in disfiguring posters and sometimes books, when he can think of no other variety of devil- ment. He gets in school the habi: of carrying 4 pencil, — * 3% * In the early ages he carried a stylue, In a New York museum one may see a pathetic memorial of the long past. In ancient Egypt the slate was of wax epread over a board. To erase an in- scription on it the fingers were passed over it. Inthe specimen referred to there are symbols and beneath them a childish expression of chagrin at fail- ure to accomplish the task, whatever it was, Some one has imagined the little fellow’s head aching, symptom of a fever of which he soon died. - The slate was put away with his body and found with it after the lapse of ages, bearing his marks on it. But pencils of earth or chalk were not unknown in those remote days. The artists used them in their nfonocarome pictures. So did the Greeks. Wet colors came into use about four centuries before Christ and then the brush was em- ployed. Job, wishing that his words were printed in a book, exclaims “That they were graven with an iron pen and lead in the rock forever!” The claim of the territory ot the:Ohio was set forth on lead plates graven with a pen of iron and buried at certain points in the territory. Graphite is called black lead. Were pencils once made of refined lead ? The small boy often has one of that kind, his own handiwork, aud can easily disfigure pages with it. The best graphite for drawing pencils comes from English mines of Cumberland, but an abundance of fine quality is had from Siberian mines. It has to be crushed, though, for it ia seldom homo- geneous enough in the original state to be trusted in the work of an artist. For a long time there was a problem how to cause the crushed particles to adhere without cement, which injured the quality of the pencil. That was solved by pressure. The crushed ma- terial was put in glued paper, with an orifice, and placed under the receiver of an air pump. When the air was drawn off the orifice was closed me- chanically and the mass subjected to pressure, which left it as compact as a block from the mine. The masses thus prepared were sawed into sizes for pencile. People often fancy what the result would be if the world was sud- denly deprived of some small conven- ience the value of whichis seldom thought of. What would the world do if suddenly deprived ot lead pencils ? Unfair and Dirty. A very grave wrong is being perpe- trated against the American public by a reprinter of one of the English com- petitors of the Funk & Wagnalls Stand- ard dictionary—a wrong that cannot be excused by the exigencies of commer- cial rivalry. As is well known, in all unabridged dictionaries it is necessary to give the definitions of certain indeli- cate words. Eighteen of these words (selected out of a vocabulary of over 300,000 terms in the Standard) have been collated and printed with their de- finitions by the reprinter of this Eng- lish dictionary, and circulars contain- ing them are being distributed among teachers, school trustees, and parents all through this country, stirring up a filthy agitation that will end, unless frowned down by the public press and other leaders of public opinion, in set- ting people of prurient minds and child- ren everywhere to ransacking dictiona- ries for this class of words. One of these publications contains such outrageously unjust comments as the following : “About two years ago the publishing house of Funk & Wagnalls brought into the worlda monstrosity entitled the Standard Dictionary of the English Language.” **So far asrelates to its collection of obscene, filthy, blasphemous, slang, and profane words, it has no counterpart in dictionaries of the English Language.” To collect from such a work words of the class referred to and publish them is as greal an outrage as to collect from the Bible the many indelicate words and passages to be found there, or those from Shakespeare (some of these 18 words are found both in the Bible and in Shakespeare,) and then to print and scatter abroad the collection, saying ; ‘See what a foul book is the Bible ; see what an obscene and blasphemous work is Shakespeare’s.” The publication and distribution of these circulars isa gross assault upon public decency. An agent who attemps to exhibit such a printed circular” surely should not be listened to for a moment ; he is a public enemy, 47 should be turned from every decent oor. — Man's Chief End. From the Wilkesbarre Sun. The venerable liar, the oldest in- habitant is telling how different the weather was this Thanksgiving from what it was when he was a youngster. Then, according to his story, the snow was from three to four feet deep, and the cold was intense. Well, maybe if we live to be as old as he is we will lie just that way, too. —— If your religion does not improve your character, it is the wrong kind. THE FIRST SNOW. The robin round the granary eaves, Whisper and watch like littie thieves, And, as beside the hedge you stir, A parse starts with a sudden whirr; While crows—as dark as dreams that come To worry when one fain would sleep— Above the far-off hill tops sweep, Flecking the heaven’s dull gray dome. About the barn the milk cows low, And seem one’s whistled air to know; The horses, Fainnesing, seem to gay, “Why do you loiter on the way ?” The pigs from out the sage-grass bed, Come nois’ly begging at your feet; And never alms-folk gladder greet The one to whom they look for bread. The out work done, you then return To where the blazing faggots burn; There, waiting for the morning meal, A kind of calm content you feel, The sparks fly upward at their will ; The fire sends out a pleasant glow ; And all reminds you, though there's snow, There’s much in life to cheer us still ! — Till T. Hall in Memphis Commercial Appeal. AEE LA RT, A Love Story. Margaret Brockton never for an in- |" stant suspected herself of being a senti- mentalist. She thought she was mod- ern in every particular, including heart , and soul. She was charming, she knew ' and somewhat vain, clever and a little ; mercenary and thoroughly worldly wise and wordly minded. “And yet there were three years when Miss Brockton rivaled any old time heroine of romance in her sentimental attitude. It happened in this wise. One day, when she was 23, there came to her a certain stalwart fellow she had known from infancy and told her what she sl- ready knew, that he had loved her and wished to marry her. Mies Brockton, liking him exceeding well, realizing how pleasant life might be made with his money, his name, his devotion to her and his companionship, and decid- ing that the ecstatic love of which poems and novels treated would never come to ber anyway accepted him. The engage- ment came out duly ; the cups and sau- cers came in. Margaret liked Jack Whittlestone a great deal and found the position of fiancee charming, and all was well, Then the villain appeared upon the scene in the shape of Louis Radcliffe, Jack’s cousin. Louis was a delightful- ly uomodern person who seemed to have taken for his model some of the early Victorian heroes. He was a com- bination of youthful romanticism, elder- ly cynicism and other interesting quali- ties. He had a superb scorn of the conventions, a magnificent belief in bimself and a corresponding amiable skepticism in regard to other people. He ‘‘interested” Margaret greatly, she said, at first. Then she ceased to say anything about him. Jack, not being skilled in the ways of women, did not worry over either his betrothed’s speech or its absence. He knew the new woman well enough not to assert his rights and bid her have less conver- gation with his cousin, even had he wished to do so. Liberty being the law of Margaret's life, and uneuspect- ing good nature of Jack’s, the situation bad every chance to complicate itself. It did so promptly. Margaret, who had decided that fervid and ecstatic love was not at at all likely to come her way awoke one fine morning to the realiza- tion that the universe had in it just one man—Jack’s impossible, poverty strick- en, irresistible cousin, who had laughed at Margaret's feminine cynicism and pretense of coldness, felt that she and she alone could be the compliment to his life. They were both unhappy enough to give them credit for some good intentions, but in the midst of their unhappiress they were supremely conscious of what a trifle misery was compared to the joy of seeing each other. Margaret knew perfectly, in her few sane hours, that she did not wish to marry Louis Radcliffe. She realized that he would develop into a thorough- ly undesirable sort of a husband, even apart from his poverty. “If only I could get oser this,” she moaned to herself, “at 40 I should be wretched with him, at 40 I should be comfortable if not madly happy with Jack. If only—if only I were 40 now!” It was one day when she and Louis bad sat for an hour staring ahead of them at the ses that the climax came. “Why don’t you talk ?”’ demanded Margaret, finding her heartbeats oppressive. ‘Because I cannot say what I wish to,” be answered. Then, of course, he proceeded to say the things which he should not have said, and for a few min- utes the sea and sky reeled before their eyes, and they breathed as if in a trance. After which, according to the sacrificial modern manner, they decided to part, and the next day the com- munity was startled to learn that the er- ratic Mr. Radcliffe was going to Eu- rope. Then it was that Margaret showed how thoroughly lacking she was in the modern, mercenary spirit she had al- ways claimed. It gave her a mournful satisfaction to think that, though she could not marry Loujs—who, to tell the truth, had not asked her to do so—she need not marry Jack. So she broke her engagement promptly and proceed- ed to indulge herself in har great grief, She heard nothing of either of the cous- ins for a long time, for naturally her course of action with Jack had suspend- ed communication between the families. For three years she was secretly us romantic as the most romantic school girl. She thought of Louis constantly and pleased herself by imagining that he, in Egypt or Algiers or wherever he was, must know her thoughts. She was exceedingly happy with her grief. Outwardly she seemed much the same, but inwardly she acknowledged the. sway of love and its power. One evening three years after Louis Radcliffe had gone away she went to a reception. A little, pudgy woman, overdressed and overgemmed, stood by ber hostess’ side. “My cousin, Mrs. Radcliffe, Miss Brockton,” said her hostess. And then, with sudden remembrance, ‘‘You must recall Mr. Radcliffe. He was Jack Whittlestone’s cousin, you know.” And then, as Margaret cordially in- quired after Mr. Radcliffe and said how she well remembered him, sentimental- ism for the first time fell away from her. From that moment she was the really skeptical aid thoroughly “mod- ern’’ woman she had always claimed to be.—New York World. y Poker Flat. 4 The- Famous Old Place Has Dicd Out, as |. Have Most of its Notorieties, Half an hour of slow descent and we reach the head of the canyon by a sharp turn in the trail. At last we are in | Poker Flat, the wild mining camp of 1852, that turned out $700,000-in gold bullion in a single month and then cele- brated the event with a triple hanging. It was Poker Flat, too, that experienced a spasm of virtue soon after the tragic affair, and under its regenerating influ- ence sent forth the outcast wanderers of Bret Harte’s story to die of cold and starvation on the snowbourd road to Sandy Bar. There are no Oakhursts at Poker Fiat now, and “Uncle Billy” has no counterpart in the present popu- lation, for’ the very sifple reason that there are no sluice bores to rob and no money to win over the gambling table. Of “Mother Shiptons,” however, there are several. Our greeting was not cordial. Mr. Rugg laid it all to the snow plants which he had gathered, and, going into mountain lore, told of families that had been separated by taking this bulb of evil omen into the sacred precincts of the home. To carry a snow plant is to have bad luck. Conceal it as you will those with whom you come in contact will somehow divine your secret and shun you accordingly. Your pay streak will peter out, you will never hold more than one small pair, the slickets men from Marysville will catch you napping over a monitor, and most likely your wife will run away with a tin horn gambler, who will turn out later as a confirmed sluice robber— all this it you carry a snow plant. So runs the folk lore of the hills. On the porch of one of the six houses that now constitute the town of Poker Flat a large, red faced woman sat in a rocking chair smoking a clay pipe She wore a short green dress that fell an inch or so below the tops of a pair of strong cowhide boots (to which were at- tached heavy brass spurs), a paper col- lar, cravat and faded straw hat. Thickly covered with chaparral, with here and there patches of wild sunflow- ers and lupine, interspersed with pros- pect holes, the slope presented a scene of utter ruin. Some of the graves have wcoden headboards, others are marked by stakes, while many have nothing at all. There are eight peopie in the town, and eighty sleeping in this ruined ground. Nearly all of them were laid to rest without religious rites of any kind other than the reading of a chapter from the Bible by Charles Pond. Pond was a protessional gambler, but was always selected for this service on account of his fine voice and oratorical effect. “The boys always liked Pond,” said Henry ‘Waggoner, one of the old eet- tlers of Poker Flat. ‘He could read better than any ono else, and so he did the burying, and at times business in this line was exceedingly lively. Twice a year a priest used to come over from Downrieville, but we could not always wait for an ordained clergyman. Things went with a rush in those days and tre climate of Poker Flat seemed to be conducive to sudden death.” Gold was discovered in Poker Flat in 1852, and two years later 2,000 people had gathered in this rich canyon. There were fifteen stores, five hotels, three daace halls and seven gambling houses. In 1856 a circus came to town, and sold 1,500 tickets at $20 each. The following year a man named Jos- lyn picked up a nugget worth $4,000. To celebrate his good luck he got full and offered the whole piece to his partner in exchange for the latter’s wife. The man accepted, and without the formality of divorce proceedings, Joslyn and the woman were married and left town. Two days after he com- mitted suicide at Gibsonville. His for- mer partner left town and bought some land near San Jose. Two years ago, on August 22, he died wealthy and respec- ted at a good old age, but it is doubtful if more than half a dozen people in the world knew how the foundation of his fortune was laid. Henderson's big iron safe, over which the noted faro dealer shed his heart's blood in defending his money in Sep- tember, 1867, stands a ruin by the trail, half buried in the sand, justabove the Bittinger house. Poker Flat will not last long, and when the pioneers have all bean gath- ered to their fathers this lively and ro- mantic camp of early days will be for- gotten and given over again to be a safe and sheltered feeding spot for wild deer.—From the San Francisco Call. Elephant Killing. The Demand for Ivory is Responsible for the Big Animals Becoming Scarce. When we take into consideration the large quantity of ivory imported annually, it is not surprising that those interested in it should at times become somewhat anxious about future sup plies. An authority upon Indian mat- ters some few years back was particu- larly struck by this thought,” and wrote : “It is reported that England alone imports 1,200,000 pounds of ivory, to obtain which 30,000 elephants have to be annually killed, and the world’s supply must, it has been estimated, necessitate 100,000 being annually slaughtered. It may be safely assum- ed that, if this rule of destruction con- tinues, a comparatively few years will suffice to exterminate the African species of elephant.” The assumption is, fortunately for the world at large, quite incorrect. As a matter of fact, our imports average about the same year by year, but there is a very important factor which the Indian authority just quoted has evi- dently overlooked—namely, that most of the ivory that we receive is technic- ally known as dead ivory, that is, tusks which have been: taken from elephants long since dead and stored up in the interior of Africa. Of live ivory, or tusks taken from recently | For and About Women . Miss Marion S. Parker, the first wo- man to graduate from the engineering department of Michigan University, has entered the office of the resident en- gineers and architects of the Astor es- tate in New York city, upon precisely the same basis that would have been granted a young man. Miss Parker stood well to the front of her class in col- lege, holding her place by dint of un- flagging industry. She bas the ‘talent for hard work,” which is sure to bring ber success in this comparatively new employment for women, Revers of many of the new waists are not only bound with braid, but almost entirely covered with a braided design, while basques are elaborately braided, and sleeves receive their share of this trimming. Black and narrow gold braids are wrought together in effective design, and silver braid is also used in combination with black to good advan- tage, while braided designs, showing two different colors, are one of the novelties of the season not to be ignored. Marie Antoinette fichus give a quaint touch to many of the new evening gowns. In shape they are like a three- : cornered shawl, one end being fastened ; to the bodice at the waist line in the | back, while the other two, after being drawn over the shoulders, are crossed over the corsage 1n Quaker-like simplic- ity, or are merely drawn over the front of the bodice at each side, then fastened at the waist line, and the ends allowed to hang over the skirt. Those who have any old-fashioned buttons laid by should press them at once into their service, be they few or many, for they can be worn just at the waist or on pockets, bodices and sleeves, and among the newest trimmings is a collection of small brass coin buttons set in double rows on either side of the waist, descending on to the skirt to the depth of about a quarter of a yard and also in the same fashion on the bodice and sleeves. Indeed large and small, enameled and jeweled, painted and in- laid, be the button what it may, it can hardly be out of place. Many of last winter’s dresses have been renovated by a deep band of colored velvet secured on either side of the waist by ornamental buttons ; but this only comes within practical policy where the slim are con- cerned. Dame Fashion this season shows little partiality ; the modes are suited alike to tall and stout, slender small ; but they need study and assimi- lation. Baits of lemon and oxalic acid remove iron mold and ink. Cover the stain with the powder, hold the cloth over a vessel and pour boiling water through ; then wash in the usual way. Speaking of corsets, few gymnasium- trained girls ever afterward wear any- thing more strenuous in that line than the Empire belts, so-called, which are hardly wider than four inches and com- press the waist not at all. Why, to achieve slenderness they do just what the West Point cadets do, and keep the muscles in trim. The athletic girl has a better covered collar-bone, a plumper and firmer arm, a better poise and a slenderer figure all the way down than her anaemic sister. Even if her waist is as large, it looks smaller because her shoulders are wider 2nd her bust better developed, and she can wear an Empire girdle falling far below the waist, such a girdle gleaming with gold and glitter- ing with gems, as I saw worn last night by a slender girl in evening silks, who five hours before had been going around a horizontal bar line an animated pin- wheel. The worst of a corset: and no exercise is that the combination makes the body fat above and bslow the waist line. To keep the hands white, wash them in a sort of gruel of starch and oatmeal, made by boiling equal quantities of the ingredients with sufficient water to make a thin liquid. After washing rub the hands over with a slice of lemon. At night apply a lotion composed of pow- dered borax, one dram ; glycerine, one ounce ; elder-flower water, four ounces ; shake before using, and after rubbing it into the skin well put on a pair of wash- leather sleeping gloves made with per- forated palms. Now is the time.to start hyacinth bulbs in glasses in order to have them fiower early in the winter. The glasses must be filled with water, so as just to escape touching the base of the bulb. They must be kept in a cool, dry cup- board from which all light is excluded till the roots have grown about half-way down the glasses, which takes from two to three weeks. The glasses are then placed for a day or two in a subdued’ light until the shoots the bulbs have made get accustomed to the change. They may then be placed in a window or wherever wanted. Care must be taken to replenish the glasses with wa- ter as it evaporates. Snowdrop and cro- cus bulbs may now be planted in small bowls and other dishes, filled with damp moses for early flowering. A stunning bodice of broadly striped black and white satin is made with the stripes running horizontally, a very. ef- fective fashion. The decarations ure tiny jet-edged frills of black chiffon, set directly up and down the front. Row upon row of tiny jet buttons ornament tiny straps on the shoulders. Muffs are an indispensable feature of the fashionable costume this season. With all wraps, capes and jackets, eith- er made wholly of or trimmed with fur, muffs are sold to match. Hats, capes and muffs to mateh are introduec- ed by many of the leading modistes this season, the muffs often of unique shape and pretty styles, and are usually made of the same material as that of one’s gown or wrap, with trimmings of lace and fur. Present indications favor the continu- killed animals, we do not receive, com- ance of huge sleeves in the spring fash- paratively speaking, a considerable quantity, There is no fear whatever of the supply being exhausted during the next two or three generations. ——Read the WATCHMAN. | ions, though thedisuse of stiffening in | their construction will take away some- i | what from their former conspicuous ap- | pearance... The newer effects introduced seem to have a tendency to lengthen he lines of the shoulders instead of tanding out, as originally.