=n an. 31, 1896. » AT LAST. When on my day of life the night is falling. And, in the winds from unsunned spaces blown, md I hear far voices out of aarkness calling, My feet to paths unknown. Bellefonte, Pa., Thou who hast wade my home of life so pleasant, Leave not its tenant when its walls decay ; O Love divine, O Helper ever present, Be Thou my strength and stay ! Be near me when all else is from me drifting, Earth, sky, home's pictures, days of shade and shine, And kindly faces to my own uplifting The love whizh answers mine. I have but Thee, O Father! Let thy spirit Be with me then to comfort and uphold ; No gate of pearl, no branch of palm, I merit Nor street of shining gold. Suffice it if--my good and ill unreckomed, And both forgiven through thy abounding grace— I find myself by hands familiar beckoned Unto my fitting place Some humble door among thy many mansons Some sheltering shade where sin and striv- ing cease; And flows forever through heaven's green ex- pansions The rivers of thy peace. There, from the music around about me steal- ing, I fain would learn the new and holy soug, And find, at last, beneath thy trees of healing. The life for which I long. — Whittier. DADDY JOHN’s NEW CLO’ES. There had been a royal firein Dad- dy John’s cabin, and there were still a great bed of glowing coals when his daughter, Liz, called bim to dinner. Daddy warmed bis thin, blue hands at the fire and the sweet smell of the cornpone and the fragrance of the cof- fee were very pleasant to him. His old, thin, wizened face wrinkled into gomething meant for a smile. “The Doctor woman's bar'l hes come I’ he eaid. “I gedn it on Jule Fraley's wagon,” replied Liz, her dark, weather-beaten face lighting. “Come an’ eat yer dinner, Dad!” she added. L “I’m a’comin’,” quaved tie old man tottering forward and pulling along an old splint chair. : “Whar’s thet piece er saddle-blank- et?’ he croaked. “I hed it er ridin’ Pomp,” declared Bud. “You git it mighty quick,” said his mother. Bub brought a tattered sheepskin . which the old man carefully folded in the chair and then sat down. That part of Daddy John’s apparel which came in contact with the sheep- skin was attenuated as to the fabrics that the interposition of the worn fleece was most comforting. “I've got ter hev some new clo'es Liz,” eaid Daddy, presently. She looked at Bud. “Bud wants some new clo’es power- ful bad, too, but he eats such a heap, pears like I cayn’t never git him noan.” “Bud kin git erlong,” said the old man testily. “Don’t yer reckon the doctor’s wo- man’s got clo’es in her bar'l 2 asked Liz. “I reckon. But mebby ther ain't nary thing fer me.” “Ef you should go up thar’—— “I ain't er goin',” interrupted the old man, almost angrily. “Doctor woman's al’ays been good ter we uns an’ I don’t aim ter ax her fer ary thing. His feeble hands trembled as he took his torn hat. “She’s got plenty of everything,” said Liz sullenly. “It dou’t differ I ain’t er goin’ 1” Daddy John went out. “Daddy ol’ays wuz a fool,” mused Liz, as she lit her pipe. “You go an’ help yer grandad pick up taters,” she called to Bud. Bud, sauntering lazily toward the potato bank, saw eomebody swinging along down the mountain toward the eabin. | — “Thar’s the doctor woman’s nigger er comin’ attar you, grandad,” he called. Daddy Jobn set his spade dowa pars and leaned forward on the hand- e. ‘Comin’ attar me ? You'se a plum’ idjit, Bud.” But he stared from under his shaggy brows aod breathed hard as the hand- some yellow woman came up. “Howdy, Sally I” “Howdy, Daddy John !” “Bankin’ up ver tatters ?’ “1 reckon.” . is was shaking all over and felt sick. “Got some permaters yit, Daddy? ‘Gi’ me some | I wants a permater pie I does.” i “Yis, vis,” said the old man, short: y. ; “Doetor wants you to come up thar, Daddy. She’s got sumfin fer you’se outen her bar’'l.” #Yessum. I'll come attar I gits my taters dose banked up.” Sally started off with her tomatoes. “Tell her I'm obleege to her,” called Daddy’s cracked voice. ; “What my missis wants to throw away good clo’es on that pore white trash fer, I don’t know,” grumbled Bally. “Me an’ Jake could er made use 0’ all 0’ them things.” Daddy John went on with his work. “Ain't you er goin’, Grandad ?” cried Bud. “Yis, I'm goin’ right now.” He toddled off to the cabin washed his hands at the porch and dried them on a bit of burlape. The doctor was watching for the old man. He gave a queer pull at his tat- tered hat brim as be came near. “Howdy, Daddy John! I'm right glad to see you. Come in.” He stood at the edge of the hearth gazing at the barrel. The doctor smiled. “Your bat is getting pretty old, Dad- dy. Tbe brim is torn and there's such a big hole in the crown. _| saw him jump off the train. Daddy John looked down at the hat in apparent surprise. “Yessum | Hit’'s plum wore out, sure 'ouff.” “Never mind,” said the doctor. “I have such a nice cap for you,” show- ing it to him.” “Made of soft fur and with ear-lap- pets to tie down.” The old face altered. Weary years. “Try iton, Daddy | Now, is it not nice ?. You won’t freeze your poor ears this winter.” “No, malam! Thank’ee, ma'am | I reckon I'd better go now.” “Wait a bit. u needsome shoes, Daddy. Here are some—good ones.” “Mighty fine shoes, mighty fine,” mumbled the old man. “Now, you need some soft; warm socks, Here they are. You want to put them on, don’t you? Come ‘in here, And now I must go—go—oh, yes—go to feed my chickens. But there's one thing more. Here is a nice pair of trousers |” . “Doctor !” “It's all right, Daddy! They will just fit you, I’m sure.” Such a droll figure awaited the doc- tor’s return. A litle gray old man, his small spindle legs rattling round in the fine black trousers, his ragged, faded calico shirt abashed in such company. He looked at her speechless, his wrinkled face working. She smiled at him, : “I have a vest here for you, Daddy, and I'll give yov a clean white shirt to take home.” “Doctor I" the old man gasped. “I cayn’t” —— “Don’t worry, Daddy. vest.” He put it on, tugging weakly at the buttons. “Jest what I needed,” he muttered, huskily. “You look very nice, Daddy. There's only one thing more, and here it is—the finest, warmest coat in Bun- combe county.” ; She held it up by the shoulders and he drew it on, ; “Now, is not that a lovely coat ?”’ He stroked the soft cloth gently, pulling at the front with his stubby fingers. : “Tvs lined with silk,” said the doc- tor, “Daddy, I should’nt know you.” He looked down at himself in a dazed way. Then he started. “I'd better go home, now,’ he said, hurriedly. But at the door he stopped, his griz- zled faee flushing. : “I never hed nary suit o' clo'es afore. God bless ye, doctor.” He caught her hand. “I'm so glad to give them to you, Daddy,” she said, softly with tears. The next day Jule Fraley came up to mend the roof, and while he warm ed himself at the fire be told the story of Daddy’s return home. “We wuz a pullin’ corn, me an’ Liz an’ Bud, an’ [ seen the ole man er comin, down the hill, an’ I says: ‘Look you Liz! Is thet yer dad ? “Naw! says Liz. ‘Thet ain’t dad. Looks like old preacher Freeman.’ “Sure nuft—he did look pint blank like ole preacher Freeman. An, we watched ‘em tell he cros=ed the branch an’ when he clim’ up the bank he staggered a bit—ye& know daddy's mighty onstiddy on his legs—an’ I koowed who hit was, an’ I said : “Tig yer daddy, Liz." An’ Liz was plum outdone 'at she didn’t know her own daddy,” concluded Jule, indulg- ing in one of those silent laughs pecu- liar to his kind. z He went up on the roof presently and the doctor came out from time to time to overlook the work, always charmed into lingering by the wonder- ful beauty of the landscape. The house sat upon one of the foot- hills of the great Appalachian range, east of the French Broad, Looking west one saw a wooded, undulating country rolling away to the valley. and.there stayed by the mas- sive wall of a great mountain that rose far into the blue, Along the mountain side the rail- road made its way over high trestles and red clay embankments, and at times one caught the sound- of the whistle, the rumble of wheels and saw the train rush along, small in the dis- tance, like a child's toy. All at ouce there was a shout from Jule Fraley, and at the same instant a shot rang out. “Thar’s a convict got off,” cried Jule when the doctor appeared. “I It lost ten Try on the The doctor shivered “And they didn’t stop 7” “Why, no, but the guard fired on him. They'll send a party back when they gits to Baltmore, an’ offer a $100 reward fer him, likely. Don't I wish Icdgitit.” “Will he think ?" “I reckon. They gin’ally does. He's tuk ter the woods now. They "al'ays does when they makes a break. But he'll git an outing, anyhow. Dog- goned ef I biame ’im.” “Mr. Fraley, where do they go when they escape like that ?"’ “They lays in the woods. Mebby they knows niggers that'll feed ’em and give ’em clot'es. They're al’ays in a mighty hurry to get shet o’ their striped suit, and ef they do sometimes they git away fer good.” Daddy John came once to visit the Doctor, wearing his new clothes, and then he paid visits to all his kinsfolk and old neighbors, and the queer path- etic figure in the fine black suit, weak- ly climbing over the hiils, became a familiar sight. Then one night a terrible calamity befell, and the next morning it was known all over the settlement that “Daddy John's new clo’es’ at come in the doctor woman's bar'l had been stole.” get caught, do you Horseman, riding to town, drew rein and discussed the theft for hours. | Every other woman put on her sun-' bonnet and called on her next neigh- bor and then the two went together to see Daddy John. So it’happened that when the Doc- tor arrived she found the house so full that two of the women arose and sat on the floor to offer ber a chair. There was a curious stillness in the bouse. One of the-women whisper- ed: “Hit’s jest like a buryin’, only thar ain’t no corpse.” Daddy John was sitting by the fire, huddled together, the picture of mis- ery. Ive los’ my new clo'es,” he quavered. “I'm eo sorry, Daddy John,” said the Doctor, taking his hard, bony hand. “I never hed no new clo’es afore,” he croaked, piteously. A few frosty tears dropped on his grizz'ed cheeks. Liz took up a corner of her apron and wiped her eyes. All the other wo- men solemnly dipped snuff. “They-wuzsech fine clo’es I" mused the old man, “The coat hed a silk linin’. Doctorsaid it war silk. An’ the purtiest buttons I” “An’ them clo’es could a’ been fixed up fer Bud when Dad “got done with 'em,” said Liz. Vo The old man paled with sudden pas- sion. ~ “ILain’t er goin’ ter git done with em !"” hesaidin a high voice. “Bud shan’t have 'em. Doctor woman give ‘em to me. I never hed no new cloes afore. But I aio’t got=’em now. They’re stole.” He broke down into tearless sobs that shook the old chair. “Don’t cry, Daddy!” all the wo- men called io unison, and they shed a few perfunctory tears and passed the snuff box around. “You don’t uce tobacco in any form, do yer, doctor ?”’ asked one. The doctor admitted that she did not, and they all looked steadily at her, trying to realize the phenomenon. Weeks passed and Daddy still crooned over the fire in utter dejection. Oid age, poverty and loneliness, un- bappy trio, were his ecole companions, It was now believed that the clothes would never be recovered. Out in the woods one frosty morning a heavy foot crashed into the dead leaves, and a big chestnut, falling, struck the owner of the foot on the nose. ? “Hi! Dey's drappin’ all de time, an’ dey’s a heap better’n co’n.” He sat down in bis tracks and filled his pockets and shirt-front, eating vor- aciously the while. **Reckon I'd better be gwine now,” he said presently. Rising he picked his way, like a cat, through the underbrush, climbing con- stantly till be reached a spot where a huge bowlder cropped out and over- bung the mountain side. Its crest commanded the whole valley, and its shelving underside made a cosy shel: ter. Thick pines crowded up and con- cealed the entrance. The convict had been so sharply buated that he had been unable to es- cape from the neighborhood, and it was in the boldness of desperation that he had chosen his retreat 80 near the state road that he could hear the voices of the country folk as they pass- ed to and from town. He sat down to cogitate. “Ef I could git word to Rosy, or git ter Rosy, I'd be all right ; but Lordy! I can’t do nary one on 'em.” 7 The train whizzed out from ting and whistled sharply along. The negro grinned with pleasure. He was so much a eavage that this nomadic existencesthough hunted and tortured by fegr, was sweet to him. “Howdy, gemmen !"” he chuckled, as peering through the pine boughs, he recognized some of his fellow-cor- victs on the train. “Don’t you wish you was me? Plenty grub, heap 0’ pew clo’es and no work to do. Ho, ho!” He rose and drew out a bundle, un. did it. viewed its contents with a ser- ies of laughiug explosions, and then presently doffed his stripped suit and arrayed himeelf anew. “Mighty fire clo’es fer a fac’; costa heap o’ money.” He soltly patted his limbs, twisted his neck to get a glimpse of his back and creaeed all bis black face into one big smile. A mirror would have made his rapture perfect. “Rosy won't know me in dese yere. She'll tek me fer a preacher jest from confunce.” He change back to his striped suit, and tied up his bundle. A sharp wind sprang up and drove before it drops of icy rain. “Golly I” muttered the darkey, “Ain’t it cold ? I'll resk a fire arter dark.” Down on the doctor's farm every body was hurrying to get the erops under shelter. The last load bad gone in when Jule Fraley looked up at the sky. The clouds were rolling up like a curtain, showing the far mountains a deep intense blue etched with an am- ber sky. “Durned efit's going to storm, after all,” said Jule. Suddenly he straightened himself, “Bud I” he called, sharply. “Look you—on the mountain. Ain't that yer smoke ?"’ Bud could see as far as an Indian. “Yes | Thet's smoke.” “Ther ain’t no bouse thar ?"’ “Naw. Narry house.” Jule walked away briskly. Two hours later five men parted the umbrageous pines and tip-toed cau- tiously toward a small opening under a | great rock on the mountain side. A whiff’ of warm air stole out to them. A great bed of coals glowed redly, and with his feet to the fire, a negro in convict dress lay eound asleep, The men had their guns ready. One pointed his piece upward and a shot tore through thegtree tops. The negro was on his feetin an in- stant. jesty’s plots and machinations, judging “We've got you !” said one, He looked from one to the other and his face grew a shade lighter. “I eurrender, gemmen ?”’ he said very calmly. Shortly alter this event Daddy John reappeared in his new clothes. He wore them almost constantly for a few weeks and then they were suddenly retired from public observation, and Daddy went about looking as if the ecarecrow in the cornfield had stepped down from his perch and toddled off to seek winter quarters. The doctor was puzzled. When, at last, she questioned Jule Fraley, Jule shook his head mysteriously. “I reckon I kin tell yer ef yer won't be put out about if" “Well, well! Do so!” “I reckon,” in a bushed voice, ‘“’at he’s keepin’ of em ter be buried in.”"— New York Tribune. EATER Cured by Sun Baths, Happy Recovery of a Paralytic Through a Re- sort to Exposure. The liveliest passenger on board the steamship City of Peking was Hum- phrey Kendrick, of Los Angeles. He had just returned from Japan, says the San Francisco Chronicle, a country that he loves, because a few years ago it completely cured him of paralysis. When Kendrick found that he had lost coutrol of his limbs he determined to.spend all the money he had to get relief. It was easy enough to tell what brought the paralysis upon him, for the first stroke came soon after he had a bad tumble on horseback. The animal fell i a way as to catch Kendrick squarely beneath it, severely wrenching and spraiot his spine, Kendrick found that be >was much better in hot weather, and this led him to go to Hawaiian islands. He was 80 much better there when it was hot that he concluded to go toa till warmer place. Somebody told him that the south coast of Japan in the summer was the place. For many months duriag that bot- test of hot summers Kendrick engaged in a most unique attempt to regain his health. For days at a time he would lie positively stripped to the skin in the hot sand on the seashore of Japan. He got so that he rather liked it. As the days passed he kept getting .bet- ter. Then he took to seeking exerciee. A donkey was secured and Kendrick, stark naked, would ride the animal up and down the beach. It was al- most too hot for the beast, but Ken- drick did not eeem to mind it. The re- sult was complete recovery. Kendrick came back feeling like a schoolboy and much infatuated with the country of the Japs, Churches in Mexico. They A ppear-to Be a Particular Object for At- tacks of Satan. The churches of Mexico seem to be a particular object of His Satanic M the month of a feast from the manouvers made ab premises for his benefit. or 30 before the day or we an old man with a fife, boys with drums, a population with stfCks and tin pens, as are inclined follow them, march round and while co) ore often the volunteer part of the tchestra does not amount to more than two or three boys, yet the commissioned portion of the good army never cease their laudible work, but solemnly con- tinue their noise and pedestrianism ur- til relieved by another trio. And the object of all this good work, the less Christian part of the neighbor- hood who have not temporarily moved will tell you, is to keep away. the devil and his imps from the sacred precincts. The priests who dictate the cantations and the peopie who support them never seem to think that so much monotonous, uncouth jangling would more probably drive off the patron saint, with his re- fined musical ear, than frighten an un- cultivated imp by nature adapted to such entertainment. e———————— - “A Lean, Long, Gray Old Rat.” The shrewdness and sagacity of aged members of the rodent family have been demonstrated in numberless instances, but an incident recently witnessed by Superintendent Tyler of the City Hall is worthy of remark. The yard of a house adjoining a stable on Seventeenth street, above Fairmount avenue, has been infested with rats for a long time, and a few days agoa member of the family set a large wire trap in the yard. Mr. Tyler was seated in a rear room of a Grayson street house and watched re- sults with great interest. First one rat scudded across the grass and took an ob- servation. In another minute a dozen little rats came trooping along with the evident intention of sampling the cheese. Just then a lean, long gray old rat, with his tail chopped off, probably from a previous experience with traps, appear- ed and chased all the little rats away. The old fellow kept watch all the after- noon, and effectually prevented a single rat, young or old, from entering the trap.— Philadelphia Record. He Stacked. A traveling man just home from a far western trip has brought with him something new 1n linguistic noveliies. “I was eating dinner ina restaurant way out west, he said, ‘and as I fin- ished the bustling waiter girl scorched up to me and asked in a fast express sort of tone, ‘Do you want any dessert ?’ ‘Yes, I will take some,” I answered. ‘Well, then, stack I’ she demanded in an imperative tone. ‘Stack!’ T re- peated, thinking it was something new to eat. ‘What's that ? ‘Why, pile your dinner dishes up,’ she impatiently explained. - So I ‘stacked’ all the little dishes on my plate, and she scorched off with them and brought me three kinds of pie, two kinds of pudding and some frozen custard.” — Louisville Cour- ier Journal. Shopping. “Aren’t these beautiful 7’ “Exquisite. What are they—buttons | or dessert plates 7” Economic Value of Biras, | The economic value of birds is un-' told, says the Fortnightly Review. This fact might be placed beyond dispute if it were possible to prepare two tables— | one showing how many wire worms it would take to destroy a mile of turnips, : Sow many grubs to ravage the wheat | harvests of a dozen farms, how many | insects to strip the leafy glades of a forest bare, how many to spoil the fruits | of wide orchards—-the other recording ! the faet that these very numbers of in- | sects are eaten by a few bumble birds in | the course of a year. That the result | would be conclusive evidence of the! bird’s value may be safely foretold by a | glance at a few facts which bave already | been brought to bear upon the question. | In the spring, when there are clamor- | ous young birds in the nest, the house sparrow returns every three or four ! months, each time bearing spoils in the | shape of insect food. Calculated at its | lowest possible value—that is allowing | only one insect to each journey—this ' thankless task represents tens of thou- | sands of captured insects as the work of | one pair of birds as one month. Swift firers like the swallow that hawk for food 1. the air may rank higher, they slay their hundreds of thousands. But Mr. Fowler quotes an instance which will show how far below the maximum is this computation : “Ope day a martin dropped a cargo of flies out of his mouth on my haty just as it was about to be distributed to the nestlings; a magnifying glass re- vealed a countless mass of tiny insects, some still alive and struggling.” ‘Who could vie with the birds in such feats as these ? It is a sorry sight to see men trying to do their work. One gardiner by dint of continued watch- fulness and patient endeavor, with his own two eyes, dim compared to those of a bird, and his own ten fingers, clumsy in such work in comparison with bird’s beak, may contrive to cope with the in- sects in a conservatory, but a hundred en, each argues-eyed and equipped wih the arms of an octopus, could not protect the crops on a-large farm. The arts and the craft and the sciences have tried, but they fail to supply any insect killer balf so sure as a flock of hungry N birds. N SS What is Home S$ A prize was offered recently by Lon- don Tit-Bits for the best answer to the question. “What is Home ?” re are a few of the answers which were re- ceived . Home is the blossom of which heaven is the fruit. a A world of strife shut out, a world of love shut in. 7 The golden setting ip” which the brightest jewel is mother! The only spot earth where the faults and failings“of humanity are hid- den under a tle of charity. The place-wWhere the great are some times small and the small often great, The-father’s kingdom, the children’s For and About Women . Few women raise their gowns grace- fully. Velour is the most artistic of drapery stuffs. = Don’t forget to cover up the canary at night. Flowers and wings figure largely in millinery. If you have a good maid, don’t im- pose upon her. The summer gir! promises to bea very fluffy creation. The petticoat that rustles is a joy to the wearer’s heart. The new taffeta silks are perfect masses of woven bloom. Veils are no longer worn with their superfluous width gathered in folds under the chin, but must be draped a tiny bit below the chin, care being taken the edge is always evenly trimmed. A badly worn, untidy veil can literally destroy every virtuea forty dollar hat may posses. Blouse bodices are most fashionable for ball and evening toilettes made of transparent material, but dresses of richer and heavier stuffs have tight-fit- ting bodices with a wheel-shaped, plaited or gathered basque, cut long or short, and divided in front. BANGs RETREATING.—The photo- graphs of a decade ago or even of half that period back look curiously old- fashioned now. Itis the heavy bang which then prevailed and which. has now almost disappeared that gives them their air of antiquity. The straight bang departed long since. The heavy curled bang belongs to past history. And even the light fringe, to which the possessors of high fore heads have clung, is retreating. It is being thinned, trained back, pinned off the forehead with’ side-combs and all that will re- main on most brows before long is a | light curl or two to break its severity. , — QUEER EcoNoMy.—“The most amu- sing instance I can recall of the effect of of a suddenly acquired fortune upon a pet meanness is that told by an English author about an old woman in an alms- house who came into & million by a chancery decision that had been pend- ing a hundred-years, says Miss Baylor in “Lippincott’s.”’. She bought every- thing that money could buy—silks, vel- vets, laces, furs, estates, carriages, horses, soi-disant friends even. She threw away her bank notes every. thing imaginable, in a kind of a frenzy of possession. But when it came to tea she suffered, she debated, she chaffed, ise, the mother’s world. Where. you are treated best and you grumble most. A little hollow scooped out of the! blagk Bohea.’ windy hill of the world, where we can be shielded from its cares and annoy- ances. Wives Should Remember. That air and sunshine are potent aides to good cheer. That the home should be a republic and not an autocracy. That a good cook is the root of health and happiness. That cross words spoil the home more than muddy boot-tracks. That upholstered furniture and heavy hangings are germ collectors. That there is nothing which makes the heart grow fonder of home than oc- casional absences from it. That better is a room where there is disorder and cordiality than a dustless apartment and cold welcome.—New York World. ER RT II. Leading Him On. “Josiar,” aid Mrs. Corntossel, “would you fight ef they was a war ?” ‘Yes-sir-ree,” was the earnest reply. “Every time.” ; *‘An’ git up in the gray dawn ter the sound of a bugle an’ not make any fuss ‘cause ye didn’t hev nothin’ but hard tack fur breakfas’ ?”’ ‘Course “Well, I'm glad to hear it. Ef ye’re willin’ terdo all that, ye surely won’t have no fault ter fin’ ’bout gittin’ up at $ o'clock ter-morrow morn’n an’ light- in’ the fire, s0’s I kin cook ye some pan- cakes that wouldn’s be despised by no- body.” His Own Figures. Heard at a heap of dry goods labeled $1.69 . . Irish Woman (with a baby in her arms) —Phwat is the price of them ? “One dollar and sixty-nine,’’ politely answered the proprietor. “Which are the $1 and which are the 69 cint wans 7”? “There are none at those prices, ma’am.”’ “Shure, thin, ain’t thim yer own fig- ures 7” Migjudged. " “I hope you will not spend this dime for rum,’’ said the generous man. “Rum !” rejoined the grateful recip- ient. ‘Do you take me for a Yankee sailor? I'm a bawn Kaintuckian, sah.” Just Wait Till He Puts It On, “I’ve planned such a delightful sur- prise for my husband.” “Really 7’ “Yes; he has a summer cuit nearly a8 good As new hanging in the ward- robe, and I've put a quarter in one of the vest pockets!” Awfally High. ‘Was it 8 high tea ?”’ “Well, I should say so; nineteenth flat—seventeenth door frow the ele- vator.”’ —— What is that which increases the | unfastened, more you take from it ? A hole, i but never could make up her mind to buy and pay for, at one time, more than a ‘quarter of a pound of good She would have felt beggared by a pound of any tea at any price ; it has always been so precious to her that she had lost all sense of its intrinsic value. Perhaps it represented to some extent the bright unattainable, without which life has no zest.” So long as sleeves do not decrease in dimensions capes will lose none of their deserved popularity. Jaunty garments, reaching only tothe waist, are worn even on the coldest days, a chamois jacket worn under the waist making this possible. The richest materials are employed in fashioning these garments. Following a popular English caprice, costumes of red corded silk of the ‘“'stand-alone’’ quality, red Terry velvet, and rod bengaline are made into fur- edged tailor costumes for receptions, calling, and even for bridesmaid’s cos- tumes at church weddings. Very many people have a decided antipathy to this color, but on a dull leaden winter's day red in some of its tones has the effect of a tonic. : Very bright colors appear upon the fronts of gowns worn upon the prome- nade. Brilliant cherry, orange, yellow, green and other striking colors are used in velvet for stock collar and vest or plastron front. Instead of velvet, how- ever, very fine qualities of ladies’ cloth or broadcloth are used, the cloth being braided or overlaid with spangled gimp or silk appliques dotted profusely with iridescent beads. Goon CoFFEE.—Some one asserts authoritively that percolated coffee, or coffee made after the French fashion, possesses none of the nerve-stretching qualities of the drink when it is boiled. A cup of drip coffee is really soothing, and puts one to sleep rather than sets every sensibility to the tingling notch. Most expert coffee makers look upon the boiling of coffee as they do upon the boiling of tea—a killing process that should never be permitted. Says a French woman: “When a woman boils her coffee she sends the aroma to the attic and a .muddy and bitter sub- stance to the dining room.” Coffee should be bought in the browned berry and ground just before use. Chicory has no place in a coffee mixture ; they claim that a'little, judiciodsly blended with two or three varieties of the coffee berry, is an improvement, is not sus- tained by the best authorities. An ex- cellent blend is one peund of Java, two to four ounces of Mocha, and the same quality “of Rio, Maracaibo or “Mar- tinique. The best substitute for coffee is ground wheat. Rye is harmful, and should never be used. A color of muslin and lace, with cuffs to match, can hc made very easily by cutting muslin strips of the desired width and edging them with cream lace on both sides. Then lay the muslin in triple box plaits and fasten them in place about three-quarters of the dis- tance with a little silk stitching, allow- ing the fullness to spring out between the plaits. These make very pretty fin- ishings for any house dress, but should always be kept perfectly fresh. If made of good material, the plaitings can be the goods washed and ' plaited up again, as good 8s new.