rs n PRE TTI] . Peworradic: Wad, Beltefonte, Pa., Oct. 23, 1896. PAX VOBISCUM. GRACE DUFFIELD GOODWIN, When I die, shall I dream Of my radiant hopes all agleam, Of the sunlight that touched the brown depths of my stream? When I die, shall I grieve For the dear, bending faces I leave, For the close-tangling meshes of love that they weave ? Ah, not so, Let them go— Hope, joy, even love that I know, Best of all the calm feeling Of rest that is stealing Thro’ soul-fibres strained with the burdens we bear. Just to be very still— Void of will ; Just to lie like a stone, . Hours alone ; With no knowledge of Heaven, no thought and no prayer, With this blessed new frecdom from being, From willing and doing and seeing, From loving and hoping and sighing; Done even the last act of dying; Of all things bereft; Nothing left— Not even the need to draw breath,— This, this is the resting of Death. —Harper’s Bazrr., THE FUGITIVE OF TEZCO. BY EDGAR MAYHEW BACON. I pushed through the thicket of forest undergrowth cautiously, and paused to take breath only when I had crossed the roots that bridged the morass of the Callio. Hidden in the shadows of a wood so dense that the eye could hardly penetrate a hundred feet, I yet could imagine I heard those shouts of my pursuers which had urged me to almost superhuman speed two hours before. “Down with Arroya ! Seize the rebel !”’ When such greetings as these are punctua- ted with a patter of rifle-balls one natur- ally feels cold, even in such a warm clim- ate as that of our republic of Tezco. He forgets that he is wounded, and that the hastily applied bandage does not prevent the spilling of some precious blood drops along the way, to decorate the leaves of the plantain and stain the bayonets of the prickly-pear. The cactus thorns are sharp, and the vines are all atangle with cruel fingers that tear and wound, as my scarred hands and tattered clothes could testify ; but then—DMonez was much more cruel, and the steel of his followers much sharper. His followers! Even asI ran for my life I could not forbear a smile at the grim jest which made Monez’s followers mine for the time. I thirsted, but I did not dare to turn aside for any spring or watercourse, nor to linger except to get breath. The foot-hills with their refuge in the old Indian silver- caves, were before me, and must be reached before nightfall. This was not exactly what I had pictured to myself as the result of the day’s advent- ure, but it was the fortune of war, and must be endured. No doubt they were quite right when they termed me a traitor and a rebel, for soI was. But if any at- tack and desperate effort to displace Monez and reach the presidential chair had been successful—as it almost was—I should have been hero and conqueror and libera- tor, and all the other fine names which we Spaniards know so well how to bestow up- on a fortunate general. I did not blame Monez at all. Naturally he did not like to have a trusted general turn his troops against him and strike for the presidency. It was like a bolt out of a clear sky. That was a brief revolution even for this land, where no one hurries ordinarily, but where passion puts into men’s blood the sudden energy of a panther. How often we have laughed at the impotent fussing and fuming of Northerners who have vis- ited us, as they have been met at every turn of business with the suave, leisurely ‘‘Mangna, Senor.” But if they stay long enough and outlive one of our revolutions they find that we sometimes catch up with to-morrow in a very surprising and energet- ic way. These things I thought over as I ran— not swiftly : the tangled vines and masses of fern and roots did not allow of anything like that. My ancestry is Indian as well as Spanish, and the ability to run all day without exhaustion is a proverbial trait ; but with a wound, and in the basin of the Callio! One must sce that ground to ap- preciate it. I passed a stream, sluggish and dark, into which the alligators slid from the wet banks. I had to search sometime for a log on which to cross ; a serpent was enjoying his siesta there, and rather than disturb him I sought a second one. Great red orchids brightened up the gloom of the rank foliage like flames. On the other side of the stream I found a wild orange-tree, and drank its bitter juice as I ran. Itisa rare tonic. I remember too that a flock of parrots began to scream after me, for I had disturbed them in that repose which all tropical things, except the insects, enjoy at noon. I thought for a moment that Mon- ez’s men had found me. How vividly. all such things are impressed upon the mind at such a time ! Thinking about Monez and the affairs of the morning, I did not blame him at all, as I have said. Bat then—my position ! A general in the morning, an insurgent chief at noon, a fugitive two hours before sunset. That not only making history, it was condensing it. If Monez could only lay his hands, those red hands of his, upon the rebel, he would make short work of him. A priest (for form’s sake, because no Spaniard would deny a condemned man the consolations of the church), then a row of riflemen, an officer who stands imper- turbably and smokes his cigarette while his subordinate counts, a white adobe wall with a black figure casting a shadow al- most as black upon it. and a long box at his heels for him to fall into. Pah! What makes one think of such things? I was hot and feverish with my wound, and that must have been why I was thinking, always thinking, 28 I ran: and thoughts were not always pleasant. Of course any.one would do the same as Monez if his enemy should fall into his hand. I would. I have done so. If Monez had hecome my prisoner, I would not have been fool enough to spare him, and he was well aware of that What I detest in the President was not his se- verity, but his mismanagement of the af- fairs of the republic. He seemed to think that the treasury was only an extension of his private pocket-book, and everything in the country merely subsidiary to his indi- vidual interests. Well, we were the patri- ots, and we struck for our country and glory ; and people may sing ‘‘traitor”’ all they like now: had we succeded, they would have built triumphal arches for us— ‘the bills for which the President would af- o terwards be expected to settle. Monez never forgave me for aspiring to the hand of his niece. Santiago! Does the dotard expect to keep her always like a bird ina cage? He boasts that he is pure Castilian descent. Thank God, I am not ashamed of the Indian in mine! But Senorita Pepita loved me, and that made it worse and worse. That would sign my death-warrant if nothing else availed. What hurt me more than anything else was to think of those poor, brave fellows, with their white faces turned up to the pitiless sky, in the market-place where they fell. There were only fifty of them, but they were fifty heroes, and if I live I will have a life for every one of them. They were the flower of the army, and Monez will miss them and me in the next war. Tor hiding or for stratagem nothing can surpass the forests of the Callio ; hut for flight, no. I would almost as soon think of making speed through the interminable meshes of a folded net. Yet there had been some progress. My hands burned with the cowitch-and nettles, my feet were torn by the cactus, my clothes were in shreds, and my head almost bursting with the terrible heat and fatigue of the day ; but the helt of woods that lay between me and the foot-hills had narrowed so that I knew that I could reach the silver caves before the short twilight was over. There were tracks at one point where a tiger had trodden on the moist ground in the morning. I could imagine his Majesty returning that way at night, and sniffing along my trail to discover who had the temerity to cross his. I did not féar him : there were arms in the cave. An open, rock-encumbered swale told me that I had nearly reached the foot-hills and safety. It was a weird, terrible place, full of haunting suggestions and symbols. The trees that enclosed it formed a massive wall of shadow that was like the black sides of a tall canon. The vines that clung to them in fantastic meshes were huge and black, twisting in and out like snakes. But the most singular and terrible features of the clearing were a number of rudely carved rocks, graven into forms that were partly human and partly animal. There were the symbols of the eagle, the tortoise, the wolf, and the serpent, some half embedded in the earth, and others overturned, but all terrible ; while central among them stood a monster with bulging eyes and wide jaws, his rough tongue protruding upon his shaggy breast. How often had that horrid tongue been smeared with the warm hearts of victims killed in sacrifice—war prisoners dismembered by those savage ancestors of mine in this their sacred grove of the gods ! I think the sight and the thought almost reconciled me to the idea of the adobe wall and the line of riflemen and the long hox. The silver caves at last. The sun was sinking as I reached them, and the twilight is so short in our part of the world that I made haste to secure myself against intru- sion. Then I did not fear until the mor- row, and with the morrow I would be again on foot, seeking more distant fast- nesses, where I could gather around me again the remnant of our faction and wait for better times. There were a few scattered huts on the mountain-side, and the Presi- dent had a country house not far away, but I knew that no one could find me so late. However, I barricaded as well as possible against wild beasts, for I had no desire for an interview with a tiger. The cave was not entirely unready. I had caused preparations to be secretly made for such an emergency. There were wraps in an inner chamber, where one might also build a fire at night, when the escaping smoke would not betray him. The air of the cavern was very chill and damp after the heat of the Callio basin. This was a natural cave, into which ancient workmen had come with rude instruments to get out the precious metal. As a consequence there was an incongruity between the glittering points of stalactites that hung from the vaulted roof, thrown into relief by a back- ground blackened by the smoke of many fires, and the rich peacock markings of the emerald and indigo silver quartz that ran like a helt across one side of the cave. There was the drip, drip, drip of water somewhere ; I did not care to seek it just then—a little stream by the entrance had refreshed me, and a bottle of aguardiente on arock shelf close at hand was much nearer. I lay in the skins and puffed my eci- garette, saw the fire light, and heard the water with the perfect animal comfort of a well man who emjoys rest because he had been tired. The events of the day seemed very far away now that I had put the montana be- tween them and me. I am not one to in- dulge in emotions, either retrospectively or in anticipation. What ¢3s moves me. That is enough for me. If I killed a man in anger to-day, I could hardly recall enough of that passion to-morrow to enable me to recollect why I did it. Like most of my race, I feel strongly, violently perhaps, but I do not treasure stale emotions. So I lay half comfortable at least, in my refuge, and considered that I was a fool- ish fellow to try to jar the world as it moves on its axis. However, I must plan. Not much to do. ‘‘A short horse soon groomed, ’’ the negroes say. At break of day to be up, get as good a supply of food as I could, and strike out for the mountains. To-morrow ? To-morrow would be a festival of the church, when thanks would be given to celebrate the victory of my enemies. Had I won, the church would have celebrated my victory. How they will avoid that dry blood in the market- place as they parade ! Somesuch thoughts ran through my mind. Yet I knew that when the priests and the acolytes and the choir and the maidens carried the Bambino in procession, and chanted their pretence of peace and good-will, the widows and the children of those who had fought across the square with me would check their tears and hush their sobs. Would Pepita be there? “Would she think that I was dead ? Would she care ? I could imagine Pepita, with that little head of hers so perfectly poised, belonging on her own shoulders and nobody else’s her mantilla worn as no other woman could wear a crown, and the jasmine in her hair, the same ; no movement or look or pallor to show that she was hurt. Yes, she would care, but she would rather die than show it. That is why I have always loved Pepita : she is not proud—she is pride. Of one thing I was assured—no holy festival would prevent Monez’s sending his hounds in search of me. I must not fail to be off by early morning—sunrise at the latest. My arn began to pain me a little when Thad time to think about it, and I rearranged the bandages. Just a bullet wound, with no bones broken ; it'was soon nore confortable ; the bleeding had been slight, and fortunately it had been my left arm. It seemed very late, but I had really that she always placed there for me, just been in the cave only an hour or two, when I heard the voice of a cat, an ocelot, perhaps, or even a jaguar, crying outside of my barricade. There is one peculiar thing about the members of the tiger tribe ; no matter how big and fierce the animal may be, she will make the saddest crying and moaning, like a child in pain, till I have known men leave a camp-fire and go out into the forest, persuaded that it was a child crying. I had no idea of going out- side, but I went as far as my outpost and listened. The creature must have jumped or fallen into the little pit in front of the hastily made wall. It was so near that I could hear every sound, and wondered that the throat of a beast could so simulate the wails of a wounded human being. AsI tried to catch a glimpse of my visitor through the chinks between the rocks, I distinctly heard, ‘‘Jesu, Maria, save mel”’ Of course I did the unwise and unac- countable thing —acted on impulse, as I al- ways do, and tore down enough of my wall to get out, nor ever stopped to think what a dilemma I was putting myself into till I was lifting a pale, black-eyed boy of about ten years to my skin-pile near the fire. He had fainted when I first came out, proba- bly with fright, and when he came to him- self was too dazed and weak at first to think much. But I thought ; I considered what a fool I was. Here was a sprained ankle orja broken leg, or Heaven knows what other injury, to take care of for a night, when I needed sleep for my journey on the morrow. Then what was I to do with him? Leave him? He would starve, of course. Put him outside again ? The wild beasts would make shorter work of it, but not short enough. The unpleasant alternative, the least cruel thing, would be to kill him myself and make sure. I do not like to shirk a duty, but the duty of killing a child in cold blood pained me. I could no more run the risk of Monez’s men finding that boy than I could risk their not finding me. Once a wild chimer- ical thoughts crossed my mind, only to be dismissed with a smile at the childishness of it. That was, to stay there with the lad and risk capture. My life has cost so much that it must be very valuable. It is so tome, at least, and my pity for the boy did not reach to any such lengths of sacri- fice as that would imply. Having made my resolve to kill him in the morning, I felt easier, for it was an unpleasant ques- tion disposed of. After that I dressed his wound, a sprain, as well as T was able, and then slept beside him, and the last thing I recollect seeing in the firelight was those great eyes staring steadfastly at me. I woke with a sense of something un- pleasant to be done. Ah, yes—to put that poor little brat out of his troubles, so that I could go on with mine with a clear con- science. I turned over and looked at him. He was staring at me with those big eyes as though he had never been asleep all night. He spoke to me. “You are awake,’’ he said. Now there was nothing special in the words but the, voice was so like Pepita’s that I felt a thrill down to my finger-tips. But I said, in as quiet a voice as I could command : ‘Yes, I am awake. How is your foot ?”’ ‘Better ; but I cannot move it. Did the Madonna send you to help me? I fell down, and then after a while I said a prayer, and then I found myself here.” Believe me, I found it hard to frame a reply. I did not forget what I had to do, but I wanted time to think. I rose hast- ily, repaired the fire, and began to get breakfast. While I was thus engaged I came near him, and he said, anxiously. ‘You will not leave me, will you ?”’ I crossed the cave, pretending not to hear him, but with a feeling that I could not quite account for. ‘It is a festival to-day,’’ he said, ‘and I know you want to go to see Bambino, but you will not leave me, will you ?”’ Still her voice. My God! what else could Ido? I went kneeled down by the boy, and before I knew it the words were out and I had given my promise. “No, I will not leave you.”” Then things swam around me for a while, and that line of riflemen seemed very near, for I knew that I had signed my own death-warrant. They came after me—or after the boy—I never knew which—Menez’s men. I knew they were seeking me, but they seemed more delighted in finding him. It seems he was the son of some rich man, and I had wasted my sympathy, for he would have been cared for anyhow. I could make no stand when they found me, for I was sitting on the skins with the boy in my arms, and before I could put him down and turn they were upon me ; besides, the odds, eight to one ! I never saw men so astonished. One would have supposed that they had seen a ghost, or at least that they had no thought of finding me. And yet, in spite of all my effort to escape, I was almost gay at heart when they led me back—not the way I had come, but by a more round-about route, by the road—to the town. For just as we were starting, the boy put his arms up to me and said, ‘‘You are good, I love you, and I hope you will have a happy journey.’ The boy said that, but the voice was Pepita’s, and it sounded in my ears and sang in my heart all the way. In the morning we entered the town. Pepita was there with the others and saw me come in, and her eyes blazed as she met my gaze without flinching, as I met hers. Oh, I was proud of her! She would not show those people that she was hurt, though they should wring her heart, any more than I would. And yet I knew that she cared. When I was brought before Monez I accepted a cigarette from the officer who had charge of me. Monez said : ‘‘Citizens, this is a des- perado who has tried to overturn the state ; a general who has led a rebellion. A price is on his head, and he has been condemned to death. Having the power to condemn or to pardon, it has seemed to me good that this man, who has wrought so much mis- chief, should be shot by a file of soldiers.” There he stopped, and while the women stood outside and the soldiery nearer, there was a movement to take me away, and for a second I caught sight of Pepita’s face again. She smiled at me, and I answered her smile. : gate Monez continued, in that even, unim- passioned tone which he knew so well how to use : ‘Listen. Although you agree with the justice of the sentence I have pronounced, yet you will also support me in deferring the execution of it until the close of the ceremonies and festivities of this holy sea- son, which have already been too much marred by bloodshed. We therefore remand ‘our prisoner to the charge of our faithful Juan Rodriguez.” For the first time I shivered. Rodriguez, in spite of his nobie name, was as miserable a dog as ever licked the platter of a ruler, and I knew that in the world I had no more bitter enemy. I had signed my own manual upon his face once with a sword, and as I looked upon him now, the scar that traversed his visage like the bar sin- ister that should have been there grew livid., Juan Rodriguez, my enemy, who would not hesitate at any infamy, was to be my jailer. In other words, I was to have no public execution. The President, under pretence of letting me languish in prison, and afterwards giving out that I had escaped, would avoid the danger of a popular out-break attending a public exe- cution, and’I would be at the mercy of a henchman in whom hate and ferocity took the place of conscience. So be it. Shackled as I was, I was led away, amid the growing murmurs of a large portion of the people, and I under- stood better than ever why Monez had not risked an execution. Other things I may describe to you, but not the filth, heat, suffocation, and pestilen- tial atmosphere of one of our tails ; first, because it would shock your sensitive ears, and second, because you would not believe such horrors possible. I passed an eternity of thirty-six hours there, at first dreading and afterwards hoping for the assassination that I knew would end the game. At the end of the scond day, when I had reviewed the events of my past life, and failed for the thousandth time to feel con- trition that I had put many. poor souls out of the way of such torment as this—as I waited, I say, for the final appearance of Rodriguez, with his scarred face and his knife, a priest came to me. Short of stature he was, cowled and sombre, a forerunner of death. \ He had come from Monez, and I was ; prepared for the confessional, only waiting till Rodriguez, who stood scowling by,. should respect the bearer of the President’s ring and retire. But the priest stopped me with a gesture of his hand. “Wait,’”” he said ; ‘‘the President de- sires first your confession. You are scholar enough to write, or shall I write for you ? This secular confession shall in no wise conflict with the more private account you shall give to Mother church.” ‘‘But Rodriguez— ?”’ “Will respect this seal : besides, he can- | not read.”’ The tone was carefully disguised ; but there was a familiar note in it. In spite of my shackles, I sprang to my feet. ‘‘Pepita !”” I whispered. ‘‘No,”” laughed the voice behind the cowl: ‘‘only Pepita’s cousin. Read— read I” He unfastened my shackles and thrust the paper into my hands, and I read : “To-night, an hour after midnight, the door will be open. Fear nothing, but come out. Turn to the left in perfect silence and caution, till you reach the palm-trees by the well.” He was gone. I tore the paper into small pieces before Rodriguez’s return. ‘I shall write no confession, ‘‘I muttered to myself, but I could see that he had heard me. At the appointed hour I rose, and cau- tiously pushing the door of my prison, breathed the heavy night air. To the left. Three hundred paces and I had reached the palm-trees by the well. There stood the little priest. I knew him now for the son of the President, the boy whom I had saved. The slight limp with which he had entered my cell and the voice—‘‘only Pepi- ta’s cousin’’—told me all. He took my hand and led me to where two horses were tethered. “Two ?’ I said, in surprise. ‘Yes. I go with you.” ‘‘But your father, the President ?’’ The little monk pushed back the cowl, and two glorious eyes looked into mine. “T am not Pepita’s cousin,’’ she said. New Mouth. Made For a Pittsburg Man—A Rare Surgical Operation, A wonderful surgical operation was per- formed at the Homeopathic Hospital yesterday by Dr. E. R. Gregg, of High- land avenue, East End, assisted by Dr. L. H. Williard, of Allegheny, and Dr. Hoffman, Shadyside. In the records of sur- gical operations very few cases of the kind are to be found, one in about a century. The operation was the opening of the stom- ach from a point on the left side near the lower ribs and inserting a tube through which the man could feed himself. The patient is a German named William Affholder. He is 45 years old, and until a year ago had never been ill. A cancer de- veloped in the cardiac end of the stomach and in the oesophagus, resulting in a strict- ure of the oesophagus and preventing him swallowing food of any kind. He wasa strong man and when admitted to the hos- pital two weeks ago weighed 275 pounds. Being unable to take nourishment of any kind, except by injection, he was slowly starving to death, and before the operation yesterday morning he was a mere skeleton, weighing only 115 pounds, a loss of 160 pounds in two weeks. His suffering by be- ing unable to swallow and plenty of food about must have been more intense than ordinarily in cases of starvation. The operation was resorted to only when the last hope of forcing food into his stom- ach through his mouth had failed. The ob- struction being near the stomach, the method of using a tube and syringe could not be resorted to. Affholder was perfectly willing for the operation to be performed ; he was anxious for it, so that his terrible suffering could he ended either by placing food into his craving stomach or by death. As soon as he had been placed under the in fluence of ether Dr. Gregg made an incision betweeen two muscles on the left side, just helow the ribs, and slowly separated the tissues without cutting them until he could make an opening in the stomach. A rubber tube was placed in position and a small quantity of nourishment injected. Affholder stood the operation better than had been expected, and when he revived he showed little signs of shock. It is not proposed to leave the tube in the opening as a permanent arrangement. It will be allowed to stay, however, until the wound heals about it. It will then be withdrawn and the abdominal muscles will close up as tightly as he could close his lips. When he is hungry he can insert the tube himself, but before putting solids into his stomach he will first have to mas- ticate them. He will never be able to swallow anything, but, unlike those who are fed through a tube or an opening in the throat, he can enjoy the sense of taste. His life depends upon the cancer. He need never starve to death.—Pittsburg Post. How He was Hoodooed. ‘Robinson Crusoe had a pretty tough time of it in some ways, didn’t he ?”’ “Naturally.” “Why naturally 2” ‘‘He ought to have known that Friday was unlucky.’’—Chicago Post. ——The old silver dollar of 413 1-2 grains fills the bill exactly. So long as it was a legal tender, it was an honest dol=- lar wo 100 cents, and had the ring of the true metal. Remonetize it, and it will be again what it was for cighty years— worth one hundred cents.—Chicago Tribune, Jar, 15 1878. A Candy Sale. For the benefit of small and niodest so- cieties-that are already planning how they may with the least possible outlay realize most of their Thanksgiving boxes, I should like—sufficiently in advance of the day— to submit a little plan.that we found de- lightfully successful a year ago We were just a little band of King’s Daughters with alms far exceeding our purse strings so that we distinctly realized at our preparatory meeting that what ever scheme we embarked upon must be the least pretentious possible. The expenditure and receipts given be- low will give those who wish to go and do likewise, information on every point in the undertaking and will enable them to see where their outlay is exceeding the amount strictly necessary to carry out the work. Confectioners’ sugar, 17 IbSuaceeccennne. Granulated sugar, 9 Ibs English walnuts, 4 Ibs Almonds, 2 1bs Pecans, 2 lhe Dates, 4 Ibs, Peanuts, 5 q Peanuts, for salted peanuts, 4 gts. CocoanNt, 1 ID.einisianmsienssi esr 18 Chocolate, 34 1h.. Peppermint” extract.. Vanilla,........ 05 Wintergreen 05 Eggs 14 doz 14 Indian bas 35 Boxes, 50.. 1.756 Paper bags... .10 Butter, 32 0h... on 13 7 boxes of candy, at 23c 36 clam shells of salted peant PORE vi seens ot isn ian snide dries 528.55 Which left in our exchequer cxactly $21.00. These are the recipes : CHOCOLATE FUDGES. Two cups confectioners’ sugar, one-half cup milk, 2 squares baker’s chocolate, but- ter size of a walnut. Beil eight minutes, remove from the fire and flavor with one- half teaspoonful of vanilla; beat fixe minutes, pour into pan and cut into squares when cool. COCOAXNUT FUDGES. Make the same as the chocolate, using one-half pound cocoanut instead of choco- late. No flavoring. NUT CANDY. Three cups of confectioners’ sugar three- fourths cup milk ; boil ten minutes ; add one pound pecans broken into small pieces ; beat four minutes pour into pan and cut into squares when cool. PEAXUT CANDY One cup granulated sugar, one cup chop- ped peanuts; melt the sugar in an iron skillet (which retains the heat) ; add the peanuts and pour out very quickly. Mark into squares when cold. PEPPERMINT DROPS. One cup confectioners’ sugar, one cup water three-fourths teaspoonful pepper- mint extract. Afterit begins to boil try in cold water until it forms a soft ball. Remove from the fire and set in a dish of hot water. Beat two or three minutes and drop quickly into buttered plates. WINTERGREEN DROPS, Make the same as peppermint, using one teaspoonful of winter green extract. CREAM CANDY. White of one egg and the same quantity of water. Flavor with vanilla and add confectioners’ sugar until thick enough to knead. Knead until smooth. Remove the stones from dates, fill with the cream candy and roll in granulated sugar. Cover the blanched almonds with cream candy and roll in granulated sugar. Mould some of the cream candy into small flat pieces and press a half of an English walnut into each side. In addition to these one might like to in- clude butter scotch, which was not on our menu. If so, the following is an excellent recipe : BUTTER SCOTCH. Two cups granulated sugar, one-half cup of molasses, two tablespoonfuls of water, one tablespoonful vinegar, butter size of an egg, boil until brittle when dropped in cold water. Pour out quickly and cut into small squares when nearly cold, Wrap each square in oiled paper. - Except for the peanut candy a chafing dish offers the very best possible facilities for candy making, and for the fifty pounds and more used at the candy sale two chaf- ing dishes were entirely adequate. » The Widows’s Pensions, These promise to cuta big figure in the pension budget. Some of them—the majority, of course—are all right, but there are others that are utterly without justifi- cation. President Cleveland at the close of the last session of Congress vetoed a bill giving a pension to a soldier's widow who had married again, and had noright, there- fore, to a pension on the score of widow- hood. The soldier under whom she had the original claim for a pension married her after the war, and when he died she married again, and claimed a continuance of the pension, with a secoud or third hus- band on hand. Congress granted the pen- sion. They tell strange stories about the soldiers’ homes, as to the marriage of the old soldiers to a class of speculative women who frequent these places. The veterans have not long to live, and the marriages are for the widow’s pension that comes af- ter his death. In the Atlantic Monthly for October Chas. M. Elliott has a paper discussing the pen- sion question, with special reference to such widows as have the happy fortune to live long and prosper. He states that as a cousequence of our great war, which piled up a national debt of nearly $3,000,000,- 000, the nation has paid $2,000,000,000 in pensions within 33 years, a single genera- tion. At the end of last year the pay- .ments on the national debt and pensions aggregated about $4,535,000,000. Mr. El- liott is not so unpatriotic as to complain of pensions that go to disabled persons. He thinks that, although such expenditures are unproductive, they are ‘‘just and in- evitable.” But pensions that go to per- sons who are not disabled, men or women, Mr. Elliott says, are in the main, “not on- ly unproductive hut demoralizing.” “A grave social evil,” Mr. Elliott con- tends, is created by pension laws that pro- mote the marriage of young women to old men ‘‘as a pecuniary speculation.” He thinks it is plain that some of the worst evils of the pension system will go on for a hundred years to come unless the laws re- lating to widow's pensions are changed for the better. In support of this opinion the Atlantic contributor cites the fact that on June 30, 1895, only 21 of the pensioners of the war of 1812 were surviving soldiers or sailors, while 3,826 were widows. This is conclusive proof that matrimony occu- pied the attention of many of the veterans in their last years on earth, and the' same thing is going on now iu a very large way about the soldiers’ homes, and, of course, elsewhere. The army of veteran soldiers is decreasing, but the army of widows is booming. The difficulty is to find a rem- edy.—Record. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. How the Venus de Milo would have grinned could she have seen to what favor she would have obtained in ’96, when the whole fashionable world is striving after waists such as Mother Nature intended for her women, and not the hideous hour-glass forms so long considered beautiful. To be ‘‘laced” is now considered the height of vulgarity. Fashion, frivolous as she is, does, once in a decade, strike some- thing sensible, and this is certainly one of the times. Faney the human figure being expected to show the neck and waist of the same proportion ! Those who are trying to live up to this false ideal must have grown into deformity. Itis quite natural the waist should be smaller than the bust or hips, but it need not be strangled. I’ew of us are constructed on the lines of the ideal woman, so that much of our beau- ty form depends upon good zorsets. These are of primary importance. All modistes any preference, provided the corset is suit- ed to the figure wearing it. What is needed is a corset allowing plen- ty of room at the bust and on the hips, in- terfering in no way with the breathing and catching one in just below the ribs. They are injurious to health and most unlovely. In Paris the shortest sort of corsets are worn. Every corset should have at least two laces, preferably three, so there will be no straining at certain points. The bolero at present in all its various forms attracts all the attention of the dress- makers ; every patron desires a bolero, and it takes an ingenious brain to devise so many different styles. I have a theory that you can pretty truly tell the state of a woman’s intellectual powers from the style and color of the clothes she wears. And in saying this, I mean the women who have the time and means to choose the garments which they like, for often women of taste and refine- ment are so restricted that they cannot se- lect what seems to them suitable and be- coming. It is disgusting to see the extent to which some of the sex go in this matter of dress. I remember of seeing a woman on the streets of one of our cities whose ap- ‘pearance exactly accorded with my idea of ‘‘dowdiness.” She wore a satin brocade of an intense emerald hue, trimmed with a pink approaching magenta, and I really pitied the woman for the comment she was inviting. : Then some women seem to have no idea of the ‘‘fitness of things’ They think nothing of wearing evening dresses to trav- el in, and the most elegant dresses to work in. A woman whom I have met several times on the stretts wore an all plush gown of a crushed-strawberry color—a beautiful dress in its place—and a white felt hat trimmed with a multitude of long white plumes. There may have been some good reason for her wearing that dress at such a time, but I cau think of none, unless it be that suddenly reduced circumstances left her with numerous rich gowns to wear out ; or perhaps a wealthy relative be- queathed this wonderful bit of apparel to her, and she must be dutiful and show her appreciation of the bequest. There are too many girls in business life who seem to be entirely regardless of the necessity of having ‘‘quiet’’ dresses for bus- iness hours. If I were a business man seeking a young lady assistant, I would make it a point to notice the general st yle of the garments which the different appli- cants wore, and dismiss all those who were at all ‘‘loud”’in appearance. If a girl is neatly dressed in an appro- priate gown of subdued color—one which does not attract your attention involuntari- ly by reason of its showiness, you may be sure she has a large stock of common sense, and is capable of a great deal in a business way. On the other hand, if her hat seems about to topple over with its load of decorations, and her dress is of such a brilliant hue as to make one feel dyspeptic, make up your mind that her mental faculties are not of the highest order. Speaking of hats, the ‘fearfully and wonderfully made” headgear of the past season reminds one of the dandy of the Fiji Islands, one who has nothing to do but to wander idly about, plucking flowers of every conceivable color with which to dec- orate his head. Are we yet civilized ? I wish our girls would think a bithls more about the matter of their attire ;-and they would if they fully realized the important part it takes in others’ judgment of them. As Dr. J. G. Holland says: ‘‘There are few habits that a woman may acquire, which, in the long run, will tend more to the preservation of her own self respect than thorough tastefulness, appropriateness and tidiness of dress, and certainly very few which will make her more agreeable to others.” In direct contrast with the wide, untrim- med skirts of last season are the narrow, oddly garnitured designs shown at this week’s openings. Paneled and slashed ef-. fects are prominent, heavy braid over satin being used in the trimming of more than a few woolen skirts, while the flowered and brocaded evening gowns have the skirts garnitured with bows of shaded ribbon, streamers of lace or rosettes and puffings of chiffon. An extremely pretty sofa cushion seen lately was of empire green denim with the pattern outlined with white cotton soutache and novelty braids and the corners finished with large, soft - rosettes of white point d’esprit. . Another one of blue satin, em- broidered in gold, had a heavy gold" cord all around it, finished with a trefoil at the corners. There is almost no limit to the use of the jacket idea in autumn gown designing. The jacket is seldom a real one, dissociated from its gown, but merely a pair of wings stitched into the side seams and rounded or pointed to jacket shape in front. As pret- ty a model as any isa gem in the cigar- brown tint which has been vogued by the latest Royal trousseau in Great Britain. The skirt issimply cut and the vest is mus- lin, confined by a wide black satin belt and collar. The bolero is silk covered with coffee-colored lace, and, instead of being rounded off at the corners, it is brought down to two points in front. * = Perhaps the prettiest fabrics of the au- | tumn are those reddish brown mixtures { which present a warm appearance, temper- | ed with threads of black, and trimmed and | faced with black. If the complexion will | stand it, that is the chic combination of | the moment. | The new sleeve is in a bad way. In its present form it consists of a tight, wrinkled pipe nearly up to the shoulder, where a ridiculous little puff conceals or accentu- ates it. Asit is, it is nglier than the leg- o’-mutton sleeves of two years ago. declare this, although few of them have —